Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 July 1945 — Page 10
Miss Charlotte Cathcart and h both home and happy.
BOZO, the cat's whiskers of the Catheajt gpartments, is recuperating at home today. The big yellow cat of Miss Charlotte Cathcart, 103 E. 9th st. Apt. 4, was found yesterday after. noon in a dark recess in a back ' stairway of. thé Sylvania apartments, 801 N. Pennsylvania st. He had been missing since Friday evening, His mistress was gad and lonely since he was her only companion. But then about 1:30 p. m. Miss Cathcart heard some meowing
coming from the Sylvania apart- |
ments. There she found Bozo, crowded into a box half big enough for his large body. After his first venture from the
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Your Baby May Have 2 Good Reason to Cry
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LINKS PETAIN TO WAR PLOT)
Reynaud san Verdun Hero’ Aided Nazis. (Continued From Page One)
inand Joffre had accused. Petain of
|having no. confidence in the de-
of Woodrow Wilson,
(Continued From Page One) °
{ led to it only if we - seek to avoid
them now. : * “The effort is worth renewing,” he insisted. “I prefer the philosophy | of: William Howard Taft, of Charles Evans Hughes, of Elihu Root, of William Jennings Bryan, of Nicholas Murray
fense of Verdun, and said- Petain was preparing to withdraw his right | flank but was prevented by orders from his superiors. Chaiges ‘Plot'- - The dapper Reynaud, employing
|
er prize pussy cat, Bozo . . «they're |
Bozo had his teeth
rtheart apartments, is face washed and
n
“Ca hi. brushed And, if he's real good, he might |
even get a piece of angel food cake, Ais favorite favorite ti treat.
2 LOCAL MEN DIE ON JAP PRISON SHIP
(Continued From Page One)
{his mother, Mrs. Gertrude Massey, | his son, Howard I. Jr, and| Donald Richard Wil-}|
i Sullivan; a - stepson, liams Jr. Three other Indianapolis have lost their lives—a bombardier | in a plane crash, a marine on OKkinawa, and a navy pilot in the Pa-
men | |
Also three more local men have been wounded on Okinawa. ; DEAD First Lt. Charles L. Goerke, Howard st., in plane crash. Marine Pfc. Billie Lee Conrad, R. R. 15, Box 432, on Okinawa. Ens. Francis Marion Taylor, N. Walcott st. in the Pacific. WOUNDED Marine Pvt. Kenneth A. Robineth, 1430 Astor st.. on Okinawa. Cpl. Alfred Bell, 2150 Gent ave, on Okinawa. Pvt. Armistead Clifton Totty, 1147 S. Randolph st., on Okinawa.
\ (D#tails, Page 4)
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‘all his. famous oratorical skill,
{wound up -his testinfony at 4 p. m,
{he was on the.stand three and one- | half hours. He accused Petain of heading a [“plot” to .get France's separate {armistice with Germany signed in [1940. Even before the armistice, he {said Petain had schemed under an |aura of false prestige to seize Joye: {for himself. Petain, he charged, opposed an
|extension of the Maginot line along |the Franco-Belgian frontier. It was
in that section, at Sedan, that the
lto overun France.’
Gen. Maxime Weygand had advocated continuing the Maginot [orca tone to the northwest along
Butler and of Franklin D. Roosevelt and. Cordell Hull to that of the | congregation of cynics who sit, as | they always have sat, in the seats) 2 the scornful and the unbeliey-| ing.” b Senator Lister Hilly Alabama, senate Democratic whip, termed the charter " a great adventure, a great challenge, a great opportunity to| strive to preserve peace and to pro-| mote the advancement of human progress throughout the world.’ “When we ratify ‘the charter we | Join with the other nations to Ho for our peace and for the peace of the world the things, which we Sap not do alone,” he, said. “We se for ourselves the opportunity deal with and to strive to remove the fundamental causes of war. . . Challenges Opposition “Differences between nations can be settled in only two ways: Counsel and debate among themselves, or war. Under the Charter we join with other nations in providing a
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | Wheeler, ‘Isolationist, Backs - World Charter ‘Reluctantly’
ihe
{French army from going to north
{the fall of France. | He recounted the strife within 1909 the government at Bordeaux, to
443
: | France's. defeat Petain’s first act|
mentary regime did not function |
e Belgian frontier, Reynaud testi-| framework within which counsel and debate can settle our differences and we establish goals for our common pu Sd Hin said it ‘would be “foolish opti-
Blocked French Army “I do nat bélieve France could live | lif led by a man ipspired by a spirit | (like that of Petain and his accom- | plices,” said Reynaud, the premie | in the dark days of France's collapse. He charged that both Petain and Weygand conspired to prevent the
Africa. to carry on the war after
| which the government had fled from | Paris. That led to Reynaud’s resig- | nation and Petain’s- opening of | negotiations with the Germans for an armistice. ‘Desire for Power’ Swinging into his attack on Pe-| | tain, Reynaud said: “It would appear that ever since | | Feb. 6, 1943, when he was sum- | moned by Premier Doumergue, Pe=| tain was eaten by a desire for power. | “As war minister he had only in< significant work done on the north, ern frontiers, and opposed two years | -of ‘military service.” | In February, 1940, he said, Petain told a delegation of workers that “in five months you will have de-| feat and dictatorship.” On March 30 of that year, he said | that within the-last half of May “they will need me.” | The Germans broke through at | Sedan on May 13. During Reynaud's biting attack, |Petain sat fingering his mustache, stroking the arm of his chair, and | oceasionaily mustering a grimace or ‘half smile. “Based on Calumnies” His chief of defense, Fernand Pa|yen, sat immobile and dispassionate {behind him. But as soon as Reynaud | finished testifying, Payen jumped up and objected to all his testimony, charging that it was “based on calumnies against Petain.” Reynaud - charged that with
was to overthrow the republic. “If we were beaten,” Reynaud said, “it was because the parlia-,
propesly. Petain tried to destroy what remained of France's soul.” He said Petain had once said: “We must repeat each gay that we have been beaten.”
Denies Munich Guilt
|
Defense counsel undertook the cross - examination of - Reynaud, | opening up with discussion of the { Munich agreement. Reynaud de- [ nied that he had put pressure on | Czechoslovakia to submit to Ger- | man demands. | Police doubled their security pre- | cautions in an effort to prevent | renewal of the outbursts and dis- | turbances which occurred yesterday. | They erected new barricades in the | hallways of the Palais de Justice | and checked all entrance tickets | and identity cards carefully. The number of police on duty was increased. | Former Premier Edouard Daladier, | Reynaud’s predecessor as premier, I was present at the Palais de Justice, | He will testify against Petain. | on hand,
President Albert Lebrun also was | CHEMICALS FORM GAS | NEW YORK, July 2¢ (U P.).— | Celanese Corp. of America has begun operations of an initial unit of a new plant near Bishop, Tex. for | the first Jarge-scale production of | certain chemicals using natural gas as raw material, it was announced today.
ELLIOTT NAMED [ NEW YORK, July 2¢ (U P).— | Joseph B. Elliott has ‘been appoint- | ed general manager of the R. C. A.
Victor home instruments division,
{it was announced today.
“ISAWIFETO BLAME IF SHE
doesrt know.
These Intimate Physical Facts?
In this modern age of frankness— there's no excuse for women not to know how important douching often is to feminine cleanliness, health and happiness. And how weak, homemade mixtures of salt, soda or vinegar po Nor and CAN NOT give the great germicidal and deodorant action | of zowNITE — discovery of a famous | Surgeon and Chemist.
| No other type liquid antiseptic- | germicide for the douche of all thosetested is 80 POWERFUL yet 50 SAFE tO | tissues, ZONITE destroys odor. Helps | guard against infection. It xiLLs ‘every germ it touches. You know it's not always possible to contact all | germs in the tract. But You caN aE SURE—ZONITE' immediately kills all reachable Serma. Use as dired
mism” to think there would. be no differences. within the framework of an international erganization. “The issue is not whether, we can do away with disagreements, ? ‘he |said. “It is. whethel we will try to solve our differences within -the framework of an organization, or {abandon the effort to solve those | differences.” Administration leaders earlier had instituted a search for orators to put {some pep into the debate. | It got to the point where Senator |J William Fulbright (D, Ark.), one of the Charter’s most ardent sup-
| porters, got up yesterday and ap-|
pealeg for “a little more spirited de- | bate, 'a little more opposition.” There can, he intimated, be too much of a good thing—and the unanimity with which the Chatter has been received is “suspicious.” Roll Called | The goal is ratification by the end of this week. . The fact that the [treaty already is assured for far =| than the necessary two-thirds vote with no organized opposition was credited largely for the lack ‘of spirit in yesterday's opening session Barkley said the only certain “no” vote to his khowledge would come from Senator Hiram W. Johnson (R. Cal), who cast the only negative vote in the foreign relations committee. The senate disposed of only eight speeches in the -desultory opening day of debate on the blueprint for world organization drafted at the San Francisco conference. Connally and Senator Arthur HA
GOOD LOOKING SOLID OAK IN MODERN
{vandenbers R, Mich), the senate's two delegates to San Francisco, enjoyed attentive audiences. Interest waned immediately thereafter. - ‘Within 12 minutes after Vandenberg concluded. during which time there were short speeches by Senators Dennis Chavez (D. N. M.) and W. Lee O'Daniel (D. Tex.), attendance had dropped to 10 members and the roll call was called to get more senators on the floor. NN T'wo speeches later—by Senators Joseph F. Guffey (D. Pa.), and Elbert D. Thomas (D. Utah) attendance was down to 17 and the rol was called again. Finally, Fulbright speke out in criticism. Asserting that. the charter is “the most important document that has come betore this body during the last 25 years,” he urged: “A little more spirited deba little mere opposition on- the might serve to sharpen our —
the true significance of this agreement."
CANADIAN FIRM EXPANDS TORONTO, July 24 (U. P.).—As a first step towards meeting the anticipated increased “demand in Canada for electrical control and distributing apparatus, the Square D Co. of Canada, Ltd., wiil ‘shortly be-|a& gin operations in its newly constructed plant nere, Henry Morgan, president, said ‘today. . SEC APPROVES PHILADELPHIA, July 24 (U. P.). —Oklahoma Power & Water Co.'s proposal to issue $550,000 of 2 per
standing and our appreciation of |
HEAT RECORD OF 36 IS EXPECTED
Only Relief Seen. ; (Continued From Page One)
next five days with thundershowers scattered through Sunday. . Highest temperatures of the summer in Indiana were recorded yesterday as the thermometer hit..100 degrees in Seymour. Coolest Hoosier cities were South Bend, Ft. Wayne, and Marion, where the temperature was a mere 90 degrees. Other temperatures were Terre Haute, 99; Vincennes, 98: Paoli, Evansville, and Columbus, 96; Lafayette, 95; Rochesfer and Cambridge City, 93, and Angola, 91. Most of the Midwest also sweltered under temperatures _ that reached more than 100 degrees in some communities as the weather man termed the current het spell a “decided heat wave.” Two heat deaths were reported in Minneapolis yesterday as the mercury soared to 96, hottest day of the season. Temperatures will range between
the rest of the week, U.S. weather | bureau forecasters reported. Occasional thunderstorms in the
the mid 90's’ and 100 degrees for
cent promissory notes to several banks in exchange for outstanding | northwestern portion of the Mid2 per cent notes which mature July{west will afford only sli~ht “relief |
27 was approved today by the se-/to hard hit city dwellers, ‘curities and exchange commission. The temperature Jeswiuay aver-
Summer store hours: Daily, 9:45 to 5:15; Saturday, 9:45 to I
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TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1945
laged eight degrees above the July 23 Sorel forecasters said. ttest spot in the| Midwest was’ a Minn, where the meércury registéred. 103 degrees. The | temperature in St. Louis hovered 'around the 100 mark, while in East
Scattered Thundersfiowers St. Lous, Tll, a 98-degree held ‘on
from yesterday. Farmers beamed as crops, stunted by a long siege of cool weather, took on new life; -A few more days, they predict, and lagging corn and other vegetables would. be back on “schedule. One case of heat: prostration was reported: at Joliet, Ill. where the. temperature hit 95 degrees; and climbed toward the 98 mark today. - Chicago's temperature jumped from 91 on Sunday to a season high of 95 yesterday.
U. S. Mints Set
Year's Record
WASHINGTON, July 24. (U. P.). —A record average of 46 tons of coins a day was turned out by the U. 8: mirits during the fiscal year ended June 30, Director Nellie Tayloe Ross reported today. The mints produced a total of 4,035,105,101 coins during 12 months, compared with’ 3,066,487,~ 270 in the previous fiscal year. The mints are at Philadelphia, Denver and San Francisco.
EAT MANY EGGS CHICAGO, July 24, (U. P.).— Amcricans are eating more eggs than ever before in their history, a representative of the poultry and egg hational | board sald | last night.
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