Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1944 — Page 3
" vi 4
SHARED BY U.S.
"Unions Buy $10000 in War Bonds
x
NEW BLOWS | DEEP IN PAG
WARTIME LIVING— a
Tall Talk of Short Paper
head of the at ihe : oo ie To Come True by Aufumn fon 1a its is. This Is Last Bastille Day, Maniagassa- Island, Two © By Ay smEvieR v3 Under German Rule, Miles -West of Saipan, WASHINGTON, July 14.~Tall talk about short paper has se
S ARRIVE OVERSEAS
rt. form ballots
~~ Writer Predicts.
By LUDWELL DENNY Seripps-Howard Staff Writer »
WASHINGTON, July 14—This is
‘Taken by U.S. Forces.
By UNITED PRESS Powerful U, 8. thrusts were fore-
far failed to come true, but war production board paper boys predic that the normal fall shopping spree, plus Christmas shopping, will bring it home to you. » : ; Retail wrapping supplies are running 50 per cent under 1943. Your department and grocery stores are expected to be so short that anye thing portable without paper will
f State Rue cast .today against Japan's inner | : . - Hoosier boys the last Bastille Day that France defenses, airady breached by the ain 5 net be wrapped. Somie stores plan ml Sores on Sa down wrap= prison ermany, and seizure 0 pan, as American po¢ Norman Melntyre and Mi a stamp system to mark un- | ping and use of paper and papers on a be im " od by Germany, and | | forces continued their campaign to : Son Michael, , , , It sews flere are Wo { J, \" packs board in displays. With 3.500.000 go ballot, ti Ee uh uly Sg Suny neutralize enemy bases in the Irishmen, ages and foil fewer cords of pulpwood cut this : up Marianas and allied air forces re- s d 33 $ ? : The Norman McIntyre household , shoplif ter s. year, an per cent more paper ng Shee 4 by allled arms—the hearts of]. lentlessly pounded widespread Jap-|.. 335 N. Ritter ave. Apt. 4, have Te Joie sie Fo taniry Brown paper needed than in 1943, strict conosing an appli Frenchmen everywhere are lifted in| | anese targets. ted | Something of a peeve on about the upon the arrival of Michael, now| bags Will be so servation plus more salvage is the 7 The new hlows were indica G has interfered in im- | precious that only answer — about 2,000,000 omplete federal, hope after four years of night. in a communique from Adm.|V8Y Germany has interfered in im- almost two, who waits here with his| Pr a 000, llot. * Americans share France's prayers. Chester Te ho alas” dis portant family events for the past mother for the great day. it is planned to Pounds more i the estimate. tate said he al- By long tradition the two republics closed that U. 8. forces had seized [CWO enerations. | Young “Mike,” so named because] Mark them all will bring intensive came fram 35,000 to are friends and comrades in democ- Maniagassa island, two miles west| It 81 started back in world war I, of his father’s nickname, held up| 1iandle with paigns to gather up waste paper for full ballots racy, bound together by mutual sac- of Saipan, and that warships and when a son was born to Mr. and his end at home by buying a war| Care. You can through Boy Scout and American mately 300,000 rifices one for the other. planes had attacked Guam in the | MTS. Virgil McIntyre, now of 3619 N. bond on father’s day. If his mother| Use it again.” Legion groups. Paper troopers ed forces, But more than sentiment is in- southern Marianas for .the ninth |Grant st. At that time Mr. Mc- and grandmother have anything to| Boxes for ice from the local school Will. be, aj Re volved. There is self-interest too— successive day. A Tokyo broadcast |Intyre was serving in France, and do with it, only the formalities of a| Team are al- == oo oo Jeu door, Somiile with P. T, our own. For, without a strong said American naval vessels and |the son, named Norman, was 11 brief introduction will be necessary| '°2dy so short ; our wet ly ere 10 1 and healthy French democracy, planes attacked Guam three times|months old before his father saw when Pvt. McIntyre comes home.| S0Me dealers ask you to bring you weekly paper bundle. there is little chance of a free —l : ; ; yesterday. : « |him. . |The two Irishmen hear quite a bit| YOU OWn containers. Heavy shop- oute not likely to see the Europe or a peaceful Europe rising ! Bombers Strike Again A generation later, Pvt. Norman about each other. : ping bags will be few and far be- | Wheatless Wednesdays of world ¥o celebrate the opening of their new quarters at 1324 E. Mary- | oo tween. You'ré advised to be ready | War I. The U. 8. department of from this war. land st, the Bartenders union, local 58, A.F. of L, and the Culinary The seizure of Saipan gonsti- for fall shopping with a home- | 2&riculture reports that this year's Still. Must - Suffer ‘Workers union, local 613, A.F. of L., purchased $10,000 in war bonds. |tuted 85a jor breach in th Jape Julien to Head made shopping bag made out of a | Wheat crop will hit a new record, Before victory France stil must{ Taking part in the purchase were (left lo right) Edward 8. Miller, aTefs finer defense lines, ahd we : remnant from a chintz drape, | With an extra 50000000 bushels & suffer & great deal And after- Kansas City, international vice president of the unions; Fred S. Read, end hod ol! o 2 Shai L . p - ticking, or a discarded tweed | OVer the estimate carried over 8 business agent for the bartenders, and A. J. Kratky, vice president of e, . egion ost 55 skirt. from last year. . , , The butter ward her burdens will be heavy and| oon ference of Alcoholic Beverage Industries. The conquest of Saipan, which Bernie Tos yng 08 WO her problems i roblem of Nimtiz estimated cost the Japanese The Hayward-Barcus post 55, | 1° formal order is planned to | [yocation” for this o ued The sheer physical p mo 16,000 men, also brought death to American Legion, has elected El- | TeRulate retail wrappings, but | down, and will be down farther building a country shattered by war , and tyrants will be tremendous. two of Japan's top aval leaders— - : mer C. Julien | WPB has given suggestions to re- | for the winter quarter. 73 ’ But even more difficult will be the U S T | H | T O if hw —~ nat oe County Companies Invest commander. task of security, of preventing world UJ» J. | OOIS eo P urn u . , r rs named : = . : sneak attack on Pearl Harbor. They $16,450 5th W are Harry Sny- \ ] war III which a weakened France killed on Saipan July 7 ,450,000 in ar Ber, ry Shy could not survive. years # , % In the Southwest: Pacific, Amer- commander,
RS: } P.M,
P. M. ) P. M.
(0.
TONIGHT NTIL
P.M,
ME 0 PAY
3
hi
_Of this all Frenchmen are think- _ ing today. Some. &t their leaders are
cal force, of better strategic fron-
tiers and buffer states, of keeping
the old enemy disarmed and of making France the biggest military power outside of Russia, of European alliances to put teeth in any international - organization.
1939 Weakness Internal
How much force is necessary, and in what form, we do not know. But we doubt that any Maginot line, even a modern model which blocks the skies, will be sufficient. In-
Loan Campagin.
thinking only in terms of physi-
Torrent of Guns for Soviets
iT. (Que ots Series)
.& By HARRISON SALISBURY United Press Staff Correspondent’ OMSK, U.8.8.R, June 30 (Delayed). —In a clanging arsenal in the Ural mountains, American machine tools are turning out guns and cannon with which the Russian army is breaking the back of Hitler's vaunted Tiger and Ferdinand tanks, In the boom towns in the Urals, of which Sverdlovsk is the “capital,” thousands of Soviet men, women and youths are working 11 and more hours a day at forges, presses, giant
stamping machines and assembly! < lines, turning out torrents of «1 00 AL STUDENTS | mored weapons.
.Janese trying to escape a trap below
casualties on a force of 45,000 Jap-
Aitape on the northern New Guinea coast, i Medium bombers again attacked Wewak, last major Japanese base on New Guinea, while Liberator bombers of the far eastern air force continued attacks through the Carolines. A communique from Lt Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell's headquarters said Chinese troops had opened a general assault on the wall around the Japanese stronghold at Tengchung after American bombers and
‘ican forces were inflicting heavy].
Marion county's seven life insurance companies invested $16,450,000:
drive, more than half of the $28,700,000 invested by insurance companies in Indiana. Totdls announced today by Paul] E. Fisher, state chairman of the life insurance division of the war | finance committee, showed that the surety firms had contributed more than one-tenth of the state's quota of $281000000 and more than $8,000,000 in excess of insurance in-|
in war bonds in the fifth war loan| |
deed the same old Maginot Dsy-/ sturdy, reliable old M-34's—Russia's chology in newer and subtler form standard tank equipped with 85 mm. may be her undoing again. , and spanking new selfEe EC Ee i wot Po ' .| range and ou 1 the ands. ‘he was ivkied, She was sc She) The noisy shops aiso pout out new | weapons—weapons whose deadly efspread. She fell quickly because go ii eness the Nazis learned about the had lost the unity Which once uy Minsk and on the White Russian made her strong. The most gon; These include long-barrelled dangesous enemy was within. | guns mounted on standard 88-mm. To, the old divisions are now! chassis, huge mobile guns and the
added new ones. The most terrible | . +. {howitzers that smashed the German legacy left by the retreating Reich-| ge lines around Leningrad.
swehr and fleeing Gestapo will not = be the physical destruction but the: Huge Production Figures spirftial poison which sets French. This tour of Urals arsenal, staged! | for Eric Johnston, president of the|
man against Prenchman. Make Unity Difficult {Chamber of Commerce of the, {United States, and for correspond-| ding Of personal enemies. |" .< designed to bring home to,
as Vichyites, the the American public facts and fig-
feuds between Giraudists and De
Gaulleists, the suspicions and rivals ries within the De Gaulle regime. itself, and all the other strains: multiplied for victims of military occupation and emigre intrigue, will make unity more difficult. . i Many will think the cure should be a blood purge instead of patient’ reconciliation.
ures regarding Soviet production, but there still remained a Russian reluctance to release actual production figures even though it was obvious after a tour of Russian war plants, built on a scale of the Chrysler tank arsenal at Detroit or
the Pord Willow Run bomber plant, | inen
that production figures would strike
The test of De Gaulle, or of any, error to German hearts. other Frenchman who aspires to ~Accompanying Johnston, I saw a leadership, will be his ability to huge plant which turned out turheal old wounds instead of making bines for the vast Dneprostroy hynew ones, and his reliance dn demo- dro-electric project before the war. cratic processes instead of the semi- Today it is wholly converted to war
dictator methods of the Algiers —like Detroit. Mills which made garet
From these factories come
30 Are Listed in Top! Group for Second
Semester.
Thirty “Indianapolis students at Indiana university were listed on the honor roll for the second semester of the past school year. Those named to the top 1 per cept
were Dorothy A. Ray. Virginia R. Rush, sephin
726 N. DeQuincy -st.; 444 Eastern ave. Anna r e Brown, 5804 E New York Charlies A. Rhodes, 1202 E. Vermont st; Robert A. Danley, 1916 P Meridian st. snd Clyde PF. Johnson, 42 N. Colorado ave.
In Top 9 Per Cent
‘Maintaining averages that placed them in the top 9 per cent were: Lawrence E. Sims, 46 E. 42d st: DorAnn Jaspar, : Mary P. Kelly, 5532 Osk x Kroll, 13¢ N. hd wiings, 331 Ly- : Hazel May Herther, 4415 Carave; P. Buckler, 5347 Park ave: Susan A. Countryman, 5755 N. New Jersey st.; Mary E. Miller, 4705 Carrollton ave.; Esther J. Lewis, N. Riley ave. Mary Walker, 5364 N. George W. Meilinger, R. : Everett, 2312 N. Pennsylvania st: WiiC. Robertson, 2605 College ave.; Joseph E. Coleman, 52¢ W. 40th st.: John
New Jersey st; R. 17; Dan W
P. Graf, 5321 Jullan' ave: Clarence Y. Knowies, 5157 N. New Jersey st; MarM. Davis, 4087 N. Illinois st
fighters sef the city afire with tons| vestments during the fourth war
of incendiaries. loan driye. Mr. Fisher asserted that the nation's life insurance companies
now have invested in war bonds]
Print. Bad News, |$15,000,000.000, or 385 per cent of Too, Women Ask er ===
4 New Honor Groups NEW YORK, Nily 14 (U.P)— | pour new employee groups have Women with husbands, sons and | sweethearts on foreign battle-
fields want .the bad news along with the good, Cosmopolitan magazine concluded today on the basis of a poll conducted among
in the “buy-where-you-work” phase of the drive. They are the House of Crane, Dr. Joseph E. Kernel, Stokes pharmacy and Western & Southern. its feminine readers. 1 Governor Schricker will speak at In answer to a question as’to [the Lawrence township war bond whether all the bad news should | rally at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow night be released the same as the good |in the Drive-In theater, road 67 news if it doesn't give informa. (at Lawrence, Guy M. Peters, chairtion to the enemy, 89 per cent an- [Man of the Lawrence township swered “yes,” 6 per cent “no,” drive. announced today. 4 per cent didn't know, and 1 William H. Trimble, chairman of per cent failed to answer. | Marion county war finance
AUERBACH, RETIRED 55: |
{ monies on a program which will in{clude as speakers Adolph Seiden!sticker. Indianapolis postmaster, ‘and George Ress, assistant postWounded war (from Billings hospital will | guests.
MOTHER LOSES SUIT
veterans be
| master.
MERCHANT, DEA
Mark Auerbach, retired merchant, died this morning at his home at 1544 Carrollton ave. He was 72. A native of Russia, Mr. Auerbach
been placed on the honor roll of | firms that have gone over the top,
regime. . Prancé must replenish strength from within.
FR, JOHN SCHUETH IS DEAD IN ILLINOIS
— The Rev. Fr. John Schueth, who served churches in the Indianapolis Catholic diocese for 36 years, died yesterday at Bloomington, Ill, at the age of 73. Father Schueth was a native of Germany, received his college preparatory work at Theodore gym-
her
Robert O. Lancet, 4415 E. New York st.; Eleanor E. Cook, 345 8. Audubon rd Richard D. Butler, 3039 N. Delaware st Catherine M. Berfanger, 202 N. Jefferson ave.. Arlene A. Parker, 1043 N. Beville ave. Morris Green, 850 Park ave, and Edwin E. Gregg, 619 E. 32d st.
blast furnaces for Magnitogorsk, blooming mills and open hearth (furnaces for the Don basin are {turning out self-propelled guns, heavy tanks and artillery chassis.
came to Indianapolis 50 years ago. He was a member of the Central Avenue Jewish Congregation. He is survived by four daughters, Miss Miriam Auerbach and
{ But Russian plants still turn out vital post-war jobs—power plants
; MAN ATTACKS TWO in ar ih fai | GIRLS ON NORTH SIDE
f Output Up Sevenfold Two young women were attacked
{ - 3 Indicative of the tremendous war|185t night by a knife-wielding man
boost in production, war plants have | While they were walking to their increased their output seven times homes on the north side. '—the prewar production figure was| The attacker, believed to be the 150,000,000 gold rubles, and now it is same in both cases. seized an 181,000,000,000. |vear-old girl on 16th st. near New We inspected the complex basic Jersey st. and forced her into a
| Mrs. Lewis Jaffe, both of Indian|apoils, Mrs. Max Robbins of Chi‘cago and Mrs. Max Nickbarg of Tampa, and four grandchildren.
"RAINBOW DIVISION GROUP ON AIR TODAY
|
The National Rainbow Division association will hold its annual “Champagne hour” broadcast over
|
FOR TWO CHILDREN
i A six-months-old fight over the custody of two tow-headed~boys, 6 and 4 years old, ended in Superior court 2 here yesterday -when Special Judge Earl C. Townsend Jr. gave them to their maternal grandparents. . Originally, their mother, Mrs. Mary I. Kendall, of Tipton, had been granted custody of the chil-dren-when she was granted a divorce in Anderson last December but the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Spell, of Anderson, kept the children at their home. Mrs. Kendall -took the children
nasium in Paderborn and his theological training at Kenrick seminary, St. Louis, Mo. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1902 by the late Rev. Denis O'Donaghue,| auxiliary bishop of Indianapolis. Before his resignation because of ill health in 1938, Father Schueth De War. had served as Vicar of Holy Trinity) Some plants were evacuated from, Catholic church, Evansville; as pas- |the western regions after the out-| tor of St. Anne's church, Jennirigs break of the war and some were] county and of ithe Sacred Heart built here before the war specifically church, Schnellville. {for military production. 'Mazurkov, 39. He has directed a DESTROYED BY FIRE More than 35 per cent of his workers are women, and 20 per cent are
war industries at Sverdlovsk and! Omsk. The inspection included a! trip through the 10-year-old Ural-| mach machine building plant with an annual output of 30,000 tons of | heavy machine equipment before
i
— | A typical plant director is Boris THREE-ROOM HOUSE hine building plant for 10 years.
i
filling station. He ran when an automobile flashed its lights into the station. The second victim was walking in the 1600 block of Park ave., when a man came up and pressed a knife against her back. She ran to a porch. in that block.
BACK NO-STRIKE PLEDGE
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, July 4 (U. P.).— Michigan's 800,000 C. I. O. members today were on record as supporting lab®r's “nostrike” pledge, but only after a wild and bitter debate and demon-
. ! ftation EDKA this evening rom, ay from the Spell home and the 6:30 to 7 o'clock. -
| grandparents had her arrested on a Because of wartime travel handi- kidnaping charge. Then Mrs. Kencaps, the association has canceled {Gall had her parents cited for conits annual convention at Chicago.'iem ne of court and the fight went A local spokesman said today that|,. i ga final petition for their next year's convention may take... jv was settled in a suit here place in Indianapolis. | yesterday.
The program will jointly honor] FOE QUITTING NORWAY
French Bastille day and world war WASHINGTON, July 14 (U.P) .—
IT's Rainbow division now training at Camp Gruper, Okl4. ' | The Norwegian embassy said today.
0. E. 8. MEETS WEDNESDAY {it had learned that all German
Cumberland auxiliary, O. E. S. [troops in the Namdalen-Steink jer will meet at noon Wednesday at the area north of Trondheim in Norway
second vice ~ ¢ 0 m'm ander; Fred Hulgen, adjutant; O s-
finance officer; Clair Brengle, service officer; John Smead, publicity officer; Ralph Klare, chaplain; Harry Ridgeway, retiring commander, historian; Alvin Dorsey, athletic officer, and Oscar Waltz, sergeant at arms.
Mr. Julien
TEEN-AGE CIRCUS
will move into
Pennsylvania railroad.
to childréen under 12 for 5 cents.
~~ STRAUSS SAYS:
MEAT—Red stamps A8 through
Albert Hinkle,
wald Rohlfing, |
TO ENTER 2D WEEK
The circus being sponsored by, the Northeast Youth council and; the Hep-Kat Hall Teen Canteen!
Z8 in Book 4.good indefinitely for 10 points each: - Co CANNED GOODS—Blue stamps A8 through Z8 and A5 in Book 4 good indefinitely for 10 points each. SUGAR—Stamps 30, 31 and 32 in { Book 4 are good indefinitely for 5 (pounds. Stamp 40 in Book 4 good {for 5 pounds of canning sugar, Applicants applying for canning sugar should send in one spare {stamp 37, attached to the applica- | tion for each applicant. GASOLINE—Stamp A-12 is good for 3 gallons and expires Sept. 21. B3 and C3 and B4 and C4 good for {5 gallons, T good for 5 gallons | through Sept. 30; E and El good
filling stations but consumer may {exchange R for E at his local board {if he wishes to purchase non-high-
{way gasoline at filling station. A,
its second week g © D and T coupons are not valid| 3 Monday at Morris st. and the yntjl they have been indorsed in ink| Four tires today were stripped
lor pencil with automobile registra-
A special matinee from 2 p. m. tion number and state. Motorists to 5 p. m. tomorrow will offer rides! should write 1944 numbers on book!
{and coupons.
for 1 gallon; R and R1 not valid at|
FUEL OIL—Period 4 and 5 cou
{pons valid through Sept. 30: AR -*
|changemaking coupons and reserve {coupons are now good. Fuel ofl rations for 1944-45 heating season now being issued. Period 1 good immediately. TIRES—Inspection on passenger automobiles discontinued. Commer= {cial vehicle tire inspection every sig months or every 5000 miles. Inspec= | tion certificates still will be a requi{site in -obtaining replacement tires. 'B card holders are now eligible for grade 1 tires if they can prove exe [treme necessity. All A holders are eligible for grade 3 tires, including {factory seconds, if they find tires which may be purchased.
| SHOES—No. 1 and No. 2 “aire | plane” stamps in Book 3 good ine: | definitely.
STRIP CAR OF 4 TIRES
from the automobile of Anna Kelle ums, 1320 N. Delaware st, while the car was parked in the driveway of {her home last night.
STORE HOURS :—
.) SATURDAYS 9:30 TI
lt
MONDAYS 12:15 TILL 8:45 OTHER DAYS 9:45 TILL 5:18
A three-rgogm’ vacant house at 2543 Lyon ave, was destroyed by fire early this morning. The blaze was caused by defective wiring, firemen said. ‘ : The house, vacated three days ago, ‘ was owned by Homer Browning, Farnsworth and Lyon aves. Volunteer fire departments from Drexel Ganpdens, Mars Hill, Mickleyville and Fleming Gardens fought the flames.
stration among 1800 delegates to
{skilled laborers with 10 years exthe state C. I. O. convention.
! perience.
| E. National road for a covered dish i luncheon.
home of Mrs. Walter McLellan on are being transfered to Germany.
These troops, the embassy said, comprise about one division.
Converts in Few Months
When the war started, he con(verted to war production in a few i months. His giant 10,000-ton presses EVENTS TODAY - {which built Magnitogorsk’s blast: Public sutdoor nevena, Carmelite monasfurnaces and other five year plan| oy Tight. » CC rtlcrek 3 | Sta amateur tournament, Hillcrest) installations were turned to army cy ei ae Billings General hospital, Ft. orders, 30 p. m.
i Harrison, to be opened, 3:3 Another director is Lev Goner, 36,
OFFICIAL WEATHER
ba U. 8. Weather Bureay
Indianapolis Speakers club, Washington director of an artillery plant which was
hotel, 6:45 p lis turning out six times as v Detention Heme auxiliary, program of livguns as in 1941.
a ———— All Data in Sunrise ..... 5:28 |
- {cent are rehabilitated war wounded,
ing pictures, Riverside park. night. : | OCD. sirews, Southeastern and Keystone He said ‘more thdn 36 per cent of his workers are women, compared to
aves, ig shows, Northwestern park at 1:30 5 per cent before the war. Five per
U.S A ¢
hy , AmericaneWar Mothers, Brookside
apler \ community house, afternoon.
Vi » am Togs 2's m...... aa [Dubthe bulk are graduates of Soviet] Teme of Sh ane sre hanes Kepoer, Precipitation or hrs. ending 7:30 a. m. .00 trade schools. i is Délsvaie 8. PP a 4 Total precipitation since Jan. 1.......20.61| Sverdlovsk is the Urals metropolis. EVENTS TOMO Ww ciency since Jan. 1 ...........ci00 1.88{In 1940 it had a population of 75,000 Publis. : RRO The following table shows the tempera-| Which has grown to 750,000. Sblle. sutdosr evens, Carmelite. monasThousands of workers, even those | CP, ®ireus, Southeastern and Keystone
tures yesterday: Hish x 8 3 we 93
8! Cincinna Cleveland ver
/
Low
g2223312a22z22350%38
aves. \ ware Stflaen, Co., ‘style show, Washing-
m. Petrar Corp. P Washington hotel, 9:30
who were draft exempt, have volunteered, for the army. ‘The Ural tank corps, which was organized by workers, turned. out, in addition to regular production, enough - tanks
MARRIAGE LICENSES
vet othe front: TEACHERS TO PICNIC The Indianapolis Piano Teachers association will hold their annual
|
and weapons for an entire brigads,| in the, court house. The Times, | then went to the front. z "| horeicbe. ts wot. raponsibie for strers |
IN INDIANAPOLIS-EVENTS-VITALS
Hubert A. Wilson, 20, U. 8. navy. Beulah { J. Malicost, 18, Amo. In {Leonard A. Jackley, | bara J. Andrews, 19, of Ralph W. -Tresser. 20, of 1643 Ruth dr Ravenswood; Josephine Edwards, 19, of 1908 Sugar Grove. Wilbur E. Bagby, 22, U. 8. army: Elizabeth R. Geier, 22, of 3749 Boulevard pl. Prank Masarachla, 35, U. 8. army; Ruth * M. Stillwell, 19, Huntersville, N. C. Roy G. Taylor, 29, of 2629 W. Michigan; Martha Ferguson. 19, of 2020 N. Bosart. Warner Allen, 28, of 551 W. 27th; Juanita Calhoun, 3 846 W. 2Tth. Kenneth W; nsett, 20, U. 8, navy: Betty J. Yegerline, 18, of 422 S. Parker. William J, Stevenson, 21. U. 8. navy; Viola J. Hackett, 17, Camby, Ind. Vom % nt, 18, ‘of HLS West 0 est. Au ust W. Sin,” nt rs Station; . Sparks, , of 2824 Station. William E. Pope, 19, Bloomington; Ind.; Wilma Nikirk, 18, Clear Creek, Ind. Frank Conway, 18, of 1733 8. Delaware; Margaret dinger, 18, of 1733 S. DelaWalter Dickerson, 27, U. 8. E. M -236, of 1571 E.
navy; Nadine
Apple, 46, of 152 8S. Downey. J. L. McNamara, 47, of 832 E. 11th; Lassie B. Porter, 44, of 1404 Central. Kays 8. Swain, 31, U, 8. marine a 5 ith A. Farrington, 19, of 905 N. - i ~~ BIRTHS " ta Girls nigel Glenn, Chrismins Mibaresr. at.
-
d. Stout field: Bar-| 2049 N. Ruth. dr, | Richard, Joan Millar, at St.
io James, Martha Summitt, at
BK. er. Glenn Gibson, 49, of 5131 E. 9th; La Van |Mary
Boys
John, Mary Agal. at St. Francis. Donald. Elaine Mathews, at St. Francis. Francis. : St. Francis, | Robert; Glendora Hayes. at City, Hugh, Plora Watts, at City, Raymond, Virginia Marti, at Coleman. Lawson, Annetta Smith, at leman’ Charles, Susanna Harris, at Methodist. Donald, Elizabeth Durkhartfenner, Methodist. . Elmer, Cassie Kelly, at 3502 E. Morris, Arthur, Cecelia Kramer, at 4351 E. 21st, James, Louise McDowell, at 621 Maxwell. Sam, Lilly Reynelds, at 919 Camp. Ben, Margaret Sinex. at 925 Chuch. Lester, Vera Wells, at 2818 N. Adams.
° DEATHS
Josephine Walrod, 83, at 1220 N. Kealing; cerebral hemorrhage. James R. Guillet, 23, at City, tuberculosis meningitis. . Edward Horning, 58, at Methodist, pneumonia. Arthur John Rice, 59, at 2040 Linden, cardio vascular renal. . Busald, 82, at 921 Bradbury, cere- x bral thrombosis. Ben Wilson, 80, at 2484 Winthrop, cardio
vascular renal. : Eleanor Maria Holt, 2 months, at 820 E. ; ; K 21st, congenital. a : Clyde F. Bowman, 63, at 4418 Crittenden, carcinoma. : ; Pearl White, 60, at 18319 Woodlawn, acute]. : 3
hepa a 58, at Methodist,
at
Bia. Talon,
Norman Geisendorfl, hemorrhage. 52, frie +0 N. Meridian, car‘Bedberry, 48, al Methodist; ure-|
? ik STRALSS & 00,
10
million or so (or nearby) like comfort
satisfactions
Store — a Specialty Store — and every garment carries with it — the fit, the- quality, the rightness — that Is inbred in Specialized- Clothing Experience. And we try to keep the prices light and easy
— on_the pu rse.
+ - summer living!
the thousands upon thousands of stay-at-home travelers—and back yard vacationists—to the half
in Indianapolis whe would (if possible)
In these torrid days and heated nights— The Man's Store wants te go on record — In presenting — as usual the kind of clothes that contribute to the
of
It's not that we are clever — it's simply because we choose fo conduct a Clothing
