Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1945 — Page 2

CREE PERRIN CEE TR

. surrent year through Aug. 2, compared with» r oy .

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, * Uh NR - eA As am AA MANATEE RO ite TL

i

A Weekly Sizeup by the ‘Washington | Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

®

(Continued From Page .One)

Big Three decides she may. But the ultimatum puts certain responsibilities upon a Japanese government. And the report, announcing all "Germany's war potential will be destroyed, holds out ho hope for her Ultimatum, on the other hand, offers Jap industrialists a chance to take part in world trade after their war Industries are destroyed.

a No Letdown MEANWHILE army and navy, according to congressional sources, are going ahead as if there was no chance that Japan will surrender, : Top men in both services warned this week that war probably will be long and costly. It's their business to make sure there's no letdown. Landings on the Jap homeland would impose heavy demands on the navy--as did capture of Okinawa. Land-based planes would have to operate from 350 miles away; thus navy guns and navy ‘aircraft would play major part in covering landings. One of first jobs after securing. of beachhead would be construction of landing strips for land-based planes. Next would be provision for harbors or usable beaches such as we had in Normandy. : Prelude to invasion is well under way. Our planes and navy big guns are aiming at oil refineries, oil storage and communications. German defeat came after we made her unable to fuel her war machine, crippled her mobility back of the front lines. ”

when the point system for discharge was established. Now Pacific G. I.’s get home furloughs only ff they sign up to stay in the~army till war's end, regard« less of their points, Men with necessary points who prefer discharges have to wait thefr turn and shipping space is tight. Priority goes to men who sign up for extra duty. Any soldier may voluntarily extend his period of service under selective service act. Some of MacArthur's men want a U. S. furlough so much they're agreeing to return for the duration in order to get it. LJ

” Advisor for Byrnes JOB OF COUNSELLOR of - department of state may be recreated for Benjamin V. Cohen, Secretary Byrne's close advisor, It lapsed with the death of R. Walton. Moore. If this occurs, state department's legal advisor, Green H. Hackworth, may be named a judge of the international court set up under -United Nations charter. Some influential Democrats now predict Happy Chandler, new baseball commissioner, will hold onto his senate seat until end of the Jap war. Chandler says he still hasn't made up his mind when he'll resign. He's drawing only one salary—that of a senator. Meanwhile reports are that his successor, to be appointed by Kentucky Governor Willis, a Republican, will be either Jouet Ross Todd of Louisville or James Park of . Lexington. Todd is treasurer of G. O. P. national committee and Park was ‘Senator Barkley's Republican opponent in 1944. » =» » Management-Labor ..SENATOR. McMAHON (D. Conn) was most surprised man on Capitol Hill when he read of Senator Vandenberg’s proposal to Secretary . of Labor Schwellenbach for a management-labor peace conference. Three days earlier McMahon proposed the same thing, in a letter to Presi dent Truman. == He decided on‘it after 30 hours of hearings a8 chairman of a labor-management sub-commite tee; is convinced that a conference, properly conducted, would bring better results than new legislation during reconversion.

» » POST-POTSDAM: Premier Stalin's return to Moscow will give Jap ambassador there a chance to learn, first-hand, how - vigorously Britain, U. 8, and China turned down Nip peace offers. It will permit resumption of talks with the Chinese. These, Washington thinks, concern Rusgla’s entry into Pacific war and the question of whether or not she designs on Manchuria and

+ . » ” Germany Ahead ONE OF U. 8. aviation industry’s top figures is preparing a blast showing we've nothing to crow about in technical air devélbpment; that post-V-E day findings by 'U. S. technical men show Germany was far out in front. a This jibes with findings of Mead committees investigators. who disclosed that while Nazis were using jet-propelied planes in numbers and with good effect, army air forces had only two in ETO on V-E day. Forthcoming blast will cite smarter, more extensive German research as reason for enemy superiority; will urge that more be done here along those lines. Aviation industry people say Britain was also behind Germany technically, that U. 8. had No. 3 position. Flights of new 550-mile-per-hour jet plane brought big headlines this week—but failed to obscure fact our A. A. F. did it long after Germany.

" » =. ROTATION furlough plan for . soldiers in Pacific ceased to exist

# s 2 ARMY IS preparing to open its” third “university” for G.I.s in Florence, Italy, with faculty of 50 civilian educators jmported from U. 8. (first two, operating in England and France, have officer faculties). Specially selected G.1.’s will get year’s education, with college credits, in six or eight months. Each of three schools handles 6000 to 8000 students. = » » TELEPHONE shortage is abate ing; production of new instruments will make a big dent in backlog of orders in next. six months.

land damaged a third without loss,

NACARTHUR IN | NEW COMM AND

Given Control of Okinawa Area to Speed Invasion: (Continued From Page One)

terday. The Americans shot down two enemy planes .and damaged a third. | : The Mustangs also destroyed .or damaged 14 Japanese planes on the ground, wrecked 20 locomotives; 50 rajlway cars, two medium-sized ships, eight to 10 luggers and two fishing boats. Japanese anti-aircraft fire downed six Mustangs and damaged five. One pilot was rescued. Ten other Japanese planes intercepted privateers of fleet air wing 18 yesterday during an attack on shipping off Tokyo. The privateers shot down two enemy planes

then went on to sink a 7T00-ton freighter-transport southwest of Tokyo. Report U., S. Plane Down A Japanese Domel dispatch claimed that an American navy patrol bomber was shot down off the Boso peninsula, eastern arm of Tokyo bay, this morning. The plane was said to have been part of a reconnaissance formation of two navy patrol bombers and two Superfortresses. Three Armies Army formes under MacArthur's command now include Gen. Josgpi (Vinegar Joe) Stilwell's 10th” army, conquerors of Okinawa, and Gen. George C. Kenney’s 5th and 7th air forces. The 18th air force will come under MacArthur's command as soon as it reaches the Ryukyus from the South Pacific. In addition, MacArthur's over-all command includes the 6th and 8th armies and other air force units ip the Philippines. Besides Okinawa, MacArthur took over command of about a dozen smaller islands captured by the 10th army east, west and south of Okinawa. & The fact that MacArthur's new command includes “the entire Ryu kyu chain of islands” — stretching from Japan southwest to Formosa— made clear that he would direct all future. operations in the group. Invasion Guess Radio Tokyo has been predicting that the Americans might invade Amami island, approximately half way between Okinawa and Japan, before landing on the enemy homeland itself. - . Okinawa lies 330 miles southwest of Japan, about midway inf the Ryukyu chain. Nimitz has had overall command of the Ryukyus since the beginning of operations against Okinawa. For a time he relegated direct command of the island chain to the late Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, but on thé general's death again assumed personal charge of the group. ; Today’s announcement ended the unusual situation resulting from the fact that MacArthur previously had been given command of the 10th army but not of the island on which it was stationed. Coincidentally the only army commander ‘in the Ryukyus not placed under MacArthur—Doolittle —came out strongly only Wednesday for appointment of a single supreme commander for all land, sea and air forces arrayed against Japan. Spaatz Command

MacArthur previously had been

(Continued From Jage One)

cally and morally. . | Their natural reaction has been to the left. It was the only political direction. in which they could move. Most of them probably do not want Communism as we know it today for it was devised to meet a specific historical and economic ' situation which dges not prevail in any other portion of, the world. Rightly or wrongly, however, these peoples have turned towards Russia because they felt that there alone in Europe an attack was being made on the appalling problems of modern_ living, Whether their approach is correct may be sanctioned by some. The fact of its existence cannot be denied; and is of greater importance,

Now these peoples, particularly in western Europe, have a new pole of attraction. Great Britain has embarked on its own program of change, and, says William H. Stoneman of the Indianapolis Times foreign service in London, they will get it if the Labor party lives up to its pre-election policies.

Clear-Cut ression There was no bloody civil war, no concentration camp for political opponents, no limitation to a single party. No armed guards watched the British voter cast his ballot. Press and radlo were free, and in the main supported Churchill.

No more clear-cut leftist expres-

bsion has come anywhere in Europe

than from Great Britain under thése circumstances. Yet of 640 seats in the house of commons, the Communists have only two. It would be a feeble democracy which couldn't survive such a small leaven. The Labor party, a much broader grouping than its name suggests, may yet stub its toe. British hopes may turn to bitter disillusion, but so far there is no legitimate ground for forecasting such failure. If labor succeeds, Europe will

co THE INDIANAPOLIS - Is Spreading Influence of Soviet in Europe Checked?

TIMES

have the factual demonstration that démogracy can cope with its problems. ‘The natural disinclination of peoples everywhere for the extremes of Communism will-be strengthened. Another Pathway They will be spared the awful dilemma of choosing between reaction or revolution, because another course has been shown to be pussible Linked closely with this are the agreements reached at Potsdam. No one suggests that they are perfect. They are programs achieved through extensive compromise. But for the first time since the war there is a definite, clearly-out-lined plan for the control and administration of Germany by the four occupying powers. : Russia gets much of what it wanted in terms of territorial adjustments and reparations. The determination of all of the Big Three that Germany shall not be permitted again to arm and attack her neighbors is apparent in every line of the communique. First Soviet Limitation

There is another aspect, however. For the first time a limit has been placed on the aspirations of the Soviet Union. Within certain boundaries they are well-defined. Beyond them the responsibility is ours, and that of the British and French. Only if we fail to discover and encourage genuine demoeratic forces within our zones is there likely to be any further extension of Soviet influence or procedure. Finally, there are those who believe this limited: sphere fits as well with the Russian plans as it does with ours. Russia's primary interest is the restoration and expansion of fits ‘wn internal economy. Europe on the verge of revolution would be a continual handicap. Evolving along democratic lines, it would be of great assistance.

Copyright, 1045, by The Indianapolis

Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

SPURNED PACT, LAVAL ASSERT

Claims_Petain Told French

(Continued From Page One)

rice Gamelin when he heard they|

{you to take the phrase out of the

In Africa to Aid Allies. |

a radio speech Laval had prepared and submitted to the marshal in advance. ‘“Yesterday Petain said he told

|Speech,” a juror interrupted. Talks of U.S. Friendship “I have nothing to say different from what I said yesterday,” |Laval replied. “We took “out “the words ‘I believe in’ German victory and left in the phrase ‘hope for.’” “We had the Germans at our

were to be handed over to the Ger-| throats and the allied blockade to

mans to be shot as a reprisal for | deal with at the same time. Withthe execution at Algiers of the no-|out German aid it was impossible torious Pierre Pucheu, minister of | tO assure even minimum living coninterior in the Vichy regime. | ditions.” : . Laval sald that Blum, Daladier, Laval sald he got back 150,000

Gamelin and other leading French- French war prisoners in exchange men were taken to Germany be- {OF French workers conscripted for

| service in Germany e emanded . Suh . Germans: 4 ngs “If France had not negotiated “I asked the Germans if they | ¥1ih Geraany, Way would hag were afraid they were not being | a oe man » a iy oe sl % properly guarded,” Laval said. "The ave or, Gamers. sropabiy. wie i Iv : Sermats Teplied only. 10s. a not thank me, but they must re- : | member if I hadn't negotiated with

He said that “French govern- | : ment authority was practically | ‘De Germans, they would have been

nonexistent” at that time. | taken too.” Mandel Death ‘Tragic’

, Mandel Death “Tragic | INDIANAPOLIS MEN Mier ine ra GIVEN DISCHARGES

Wa gle : Seven Indianapolis men were disHe was my dear friend of many |. coq at Camp Atterbury ThursJA a iis ob &0 asiiation {day under the army's point system, The gle WOR a {two were released under the regula« plain gray pin-stripe suit an gq |ton releasing men 40 years of age

clutched a battered felt hat. Elabo-| 2 OF #7 one focal office; Tevertrate precautions again were taken to} The mer released with 85 points

prevent any attempt on his life. |

appointed commander ‘of all army forces in the Pacific, and today’s

Navy Veteran Dies When Auto Sideswipes Truck

|11th st, walked into the side of] 3 {a trackless trolley at Peansyivanis) against the truck, travelling north-| 4 washington sts, police said. west. She was treated at Methodist hos- | Tribby lived with his parents. iio) tor arm, leg and back injuries. | Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Tribby, 2416 | Eight-year-old Barbara Cox of! Guilford ave. They sald he had gos mt Wayne ave, was hit by a been in the navy for 3% Years. oor yesterday afternoon when she serving as an aircraft mechanic in| ached from the side of her mother the New Hebrides, and had Just|onq ran geross Ft. Wayne ave, received his discharge. He is also ... her home survived by a 6-year-old son, Ron- ge SE

ho wa dvr wom vi wie | NEDAUW Y-12 UNIT

(Continued From Page One)

he was divorced from his wife. Mr. Tribby said his son had left

announcement gives further effect to that move. However, 1t also indicated clearly! that the 20th army air force of Superfortresses in the Marianas would not operate under his direct command, ; The 20th, like the 8th air force, 1s part of the strategic air forces commanded by Gen. Carl A. Spaatz Navy forces in the Pacific remain under the over-all command of Nimitz, Guam dispatches said Japanese planes again have begun to hit back at American forces massing for an invasion of the enemy

homeland. Sent 20 Planes

Nimitz announced that the Japanese sank an American light naval

As 300m as Laval was: on the | OF more are S. Sgt. Harry McLeod,

stand, Judge Pierre Mongibeaux 34 B Io 44 Pte. Howry gS Waiie, prodded him about his statement! 2% Baty V0.) DO. BE.

of yesterday that he had hoped for osn B. Jay 513 W. pay ht Sal a German victory. | y : !

. ist.; T. 5th Gr. Vernomr P. Lamar, Quotes Petain R.R. I; T. 3d Gr. Ernest D. Johnson. | He fired back by quoting Petain 325 W, 44th st, and Pfc. Harold G. as saying in a Vichy speech that Cheek, 1666 Unoin st. they r-d patched up their differ-, The men released as overage are ences, and “we will go forward hand | Pvt. Willie Jackson, 340 Blackford in hand.” | st., and Sgt. Delbert E. Williams, 901 “I went to the Hotel Du Parc| Wright st. (government headquarters in Vichy) | Maj. James L. Richardson, 4824 jon OCt, 24, 1040, and saw Petain.” N. Illinois st, has reverted to in|he said. “Apparently he had been! active service. told that I had seen Hitler at rtp Montoire.” Laval testified yesterday about OAKLANDON WOMAN

T0 WASHINGTON

U. S. Meeting’ Would Be Truman Triumph. (Continued From Page One)

history. that such a pattern was tollowed, At the first session, the President submitted a list of concrete proposals for discussion, most of which were included in the final communique. . ; The list included proposals for: 1, The council of foreign ministers. . : 2. Political and economic prineiples for Germany. 3. Italian admission to the United Nations. 4. Revised allied control commis sion procedure fot Romania, Hun«< gary and Bulgaria. There were a number of other points in the original American proposals. The entire contefit formed the first basis for Big Three action. Churchill added certain subjects, as did Stalin. Only the American proposals were in writing, The President's suggested agenda was worked out over a period of months in consultation with gove ernment experts and finally during his ocean voyage to Europe in conference with Secretary of State James F. Byrnes. President Is Informal

Not all the conference business was done in plenary sessions. Many final agreements stemmed from private conferences between Mr, Truman and Stalin or from discussions by the principals at what nominally were social occa-sions-—lunches -and dinners. One of the most striking notes of contrast during the conferences was Mr. Truman's typical informality and the ceremonious air

delegations. For example, on the night Churchill entertained at dinner for Stalin and Mr. Truman the Russian leader arrived flanked by an estimated 50 soldiers traveling in fast-moving cars, . The President, bare - headed, walked to Churchill's villa with Byrnes and Adm. William D. Leahy, his chief of staff. They were accompanied only by two or three secret service agents,

PACKERS, UNION SIGN CONTRACT

A new contract has been signed with Kingan & Co. Indianapolis meat-packing house, Local 117 of the United Packinghouse Workers of America (C. I. 0), said today, subject to the approval of a war labor board panel, . 9 Thomas Wilson, negotiating committee chairman, said the new oneyear contract does not provide for » general wage increase but provides other changes from the previous contract. He cited the company’s agreement to furnish’ tools, pay for time spent caring for them as well as a cash allowance for work clothes and pay for 12 minutes a day for changing clothes. Local President Metvin E. Morton said the new contract provides for “an extra week's vacation for many, pay for meals eaten while working overtime, pay for the time consumed in eating those meals, liberal sick benefits and 2 cents per employee for. the adjustment of inter-plant inequalities, in addition to $86,500 of .retroactive pay.”

COUNCIL WILL MEET The Indianapolis council 87, Daughters of America will meet at

around the Russian and British].

Buchenwald 'Finger Man' Is

BG 3 INVITED _

12 -

'Only Honest Nazi Newsman’

(Continued From Page One) - -

many's past, American experts have uncovered the story of how Adolf Hitler, Paul Josef Goebbels and Max Amann—working behind a screen of fake and secret companies — destroyed Germany's free press and ‘made themselves rich at the same tine, ; * _ Amann, close friend of Hitler's and the only one of the trio ap-

CLEAR HOOSIER IN NAZI POW DEATHS

(Continued From Page One)

when they attempted to “rush” him, but investigation revealed that he shat after they refused his order to resume work and tried to escape, Fredericksen said. Garland Tells Story "The three 1 shot had been loafing all morning,” Garland, veteran

of the north African campaign, told Fredericksen. “They didn’t pay any attention when I tried to get them to do thelr work properly. Finally they quit work all together. “I was about 200 yards away and had to stay there to keep in sight of the other prisoners, buf by making motiops 1 told them to continue working. : “They refused and motioned back with their hands as if to say, ‘Go to hell’ “When I couldn't get them to g0 back to work, I slung my carbine to my shoulder. They made a break for it, and I yelled ‘Halt’ three times. They didn't and I fired” He said he dropped to a kneeling position to shoot, because of a shrapnel wound in his right elbow received in combat in Tunisia. Has No Grudge “The position of the bodies of the prisoners, Fredericksen sald, indicated that they were running toward a road near the, field whe they fell. - “I don't have a grudge against prisoners,” Garland was quoted as saying. “I have always gotten along with them good and they have said they would as soon work for me as any other guard. Also, I don't have any sympathy for them either, and I figured I was doing

my duty.” Other POWs at work elsewhere in the field supported Garland's statement that they and their fellow captives considered him a fair-minded guard, Fredericksen added.

Soldier's Parents ‘Tickled Pink’

COLUMBUS, Aug. 4 (U, P)— The parents of Pvt, Harold W. Garland were “tickled pink” today, when they learned that the 23-year-old wounded veteran was held blameless in the fatal shooting of three prisoners of war at Ovid, Colo. " . But the soldier's mother, Mrs. Charles Garland, was a little worried because her boy still faced a technical charge of murder under the articles of war. “I'm very happy,” Mrs. Garland said. “We're both tickled pink.” At first, she said, they could not understand why Garland was cleared of blame but still faced general courts-martial charges of murder. “We were hopeful, ever since the first word of Harold's trouble arrived, that everything would turn out all right,” Mrs. Garland said. Previously, Mrs. Garland had sald she was “sure Harold wouldn't have done it unless he was in danger.”

8 p. m. Monday at 1608'% Prospect

the Montoire meeting at which Hit- | lef, Petain, Laval and German For- | eign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop conferred, 2 “He agreed to come with me

old woman was injured today also] spilled milk, eggs and cream over the intersection of Stafe Road 67

INJURED BY TRUCK

{~ An accident in which a 13-year. ;

Z

The soldier's father is an engineer

st. The degree team will practice. |in a Columbus war plant.

|

parently. left alive, is now in the hands of the Americans. Aachen Paper Licensed The Aachen Nachrichten also has received a license to operate, and American army officials hope that it and the Frankfurter Rundschau will show the German pube lic how honest newspapers operate, Amann at one time had both papers under his thumb. He frankly confessed tc interrogators that the intrdcate financial system which he had set up, with Goebbels and Hitler assisting, was as much for defrauding the German governs ment of taxes as for stamping out the last faint signs of a free press.

Amann said the biggest holding company in the. newspaper group was Eher Verlag, which dominated & number of secret companies and created a pool of millions of marks for the bosses. Sell Under Pressure Amann, who headed Eher Verlag * in Munich and wds “president of the Reich's presskammer, said the Nazis never “forced anyone to sell a paper.” However, he admitted. there were a series of laws which might have seemed restrictive to some publish ers, and he said he couldn't be ree sponsible for the activities of all his subordinates. He couldn't help it if they went over and beat some stubborn editor. Amann couldn't remember how much Eher Verlag grossed each year but one of his subordinates, Ildepehons Richter, told questione ers that four of its many compose nents alone in 1942 had earned 42,« 000,000 marks. : Hitler's Royalties Huge Amann said Hitler's Mein Kamp royalties at the war's end were between 10,000,000 and 12,000,000 marks—roughly $4,500,000, The army's team, working to ses up a new and better German press, includes Eugene Jolas, formerly of the New York Dally News; Ted

|

a A dl Aa lt a gia

Pa Gl ed Ae

Meltzer of the St. Paul Dispatche Pioneer, Sgt. Charles Martyn, of the Philadelphia Record and Sgt. Charles Adler, who is the screening expert. we The next German newspapers to get licenses probably will be located in Heidelburg and Wurtemburg;

FINAL PUSH ON JAPAN IS SEEN

(Continued From Page One)

invasion of North Africa ar France in their various meetings. There was no suggestion here c 1 in any other allied capitals that the command shift would include naming of an overall commander for the entire Pacific theater as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower headed the allied operations in Europe. The idea of a supreme commande er for the Pacific was brought up again yesterday oy Lt. Gen. James J. Doolittle; commander of the 8th air force, who recommended such a move without giving his reasons,

LUNCHEON PLANNED Fidelity Review 140, Woman's Benefit Association, will sponsor a covered dish luncheon at noon Thursday in the Holliday bldg, 241 E. Ohio st. A public card party will follow at 2 p. m. Mrs.” Cora Brown, Mrs. Mabel Myers, Mrs, Josephine Coibion and Mrs. Ella Hiatt will be in charge.

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spre wi en mt wy tome CLOSING TRAINING

The body was taken to the city

- morgue, pending a coroner's report. |

Pedestrians Injured f Indisnapolis Street Railway vehicles were involved in two acci-|

junit and damaged another off Times Special [Okinawa early Sunday and sent GREENCASTLE, Ind, Aug. 4-2 fighters against American planes DePauw university's last group of raiding the Tokyo area yesterday. Navy V-12 trainees will leave the, [De naval units sunk and dam-

dents reported last night. At o.nnue hy Oct. 31, in accordance Nusniewn nd Hew Jersey ave. | With the closing of its V-12 unit was struck by a streetcar. The|President Clyde E. Wildman said motorman, Edward T. Jones, was | today. charged with failure to give the| Announcement was also made pedestrian the right-of-way. Mr. that DePauw this year will return Glore was taken to City hospital to its regular two-semester basis with head and leg injuries, with the winter semester beginning! Mrs. Walde ‘Keller; 47, of 530 E. Sept. 21, instead of Nov. 1. as ns i.e | SCHOOLS With V<12 units have done { since 1943.

WORKMAN LOSES ~~ |snccioss ~~ “°° WAGES IN HOLDUP sre ce rome sarBed extreme

. . |auestionable educational soundness,” | Ha seled by ‘Ho hen on Tas | President Wildman said, “and prior night, Thomas Cunningham. 35. of to announcement. of the close of 432 8, Spencer ave. was robbed of our unit, DePauw had decided to his pay envelope containing $46 in| Cru" tO the twWo-semester basis™ | cash and some gasoline coupons, he | Began in 1943 | told police. : Since 1943, when V-12 students An employee of the ‘Infernational | first'came to DePauw, the university | Harvester Co,, Mf, Cunninigham told | has trained a total of 1138 mem- | police he had just walked to Brook- bers of V-12, including the 233

aged presumably were destroyers or destrover escorts. In the first seven months of 1945, however, planes under MacArthur's command destroyed or damaged 2,846,932 tons of Japanese shipping and 1375 planes in 150,000 sorties, he said. Radio . Tokyo, inferentially conceding the effectiveness of the American air-sea raids and blockade, said all available workers were being mobilized for the production of liquid fuel to replace ‘supplies

next day. (for the full conference after Laval's preliminary feelers)

pany him. I told him Hitler had requested a personal interview.”

“Assistants Menaced”

Laval said that on the day he was arrested, in December, 1040, a group of security police “who were former caguolards” menaced his assistants. “Did Petain know of these. police?” Mongibeaux asked. “I do not know,” Laval answered. “I never saw him with them.” He spoke of official annoyance in high Vichy quarters over Petain's alleged failure to delete the phrase

formerly imported .from the Dutch |

East Indies.

MOTORIST FINED $26 ON 2 TRAFFIC COUNTS

Two neglected traffic tickets, one eight months old and (one two months old, today resulted in fines of $26 and costs to Robert Rums,

ville rd. and English ave. when the men appeared and one struck him “in the back with a knife.

U. S. STATEMENT

' WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 (U. P.).~Govand‘ receipts for the

Year Wagan $6,001,197,101 v aatAs1a

© EAT36241 6508301 108 HER

Ska 7,871,785,043

9ipreside in the abserice of the presi-

342 W. 11th st. Judge Pro Tem Victor L. Rigot . fined Mr, Rums $25 and costs on Dean Edward R. Bartl { akin that there will be a aug ated a charge of m 8 a lefi-hana at ‘DePauw next year, as there js | turn at Meridian and Ohio sts. this vear. 1 Dec. 4, and $1 and costs. for DePauw's 1945. football schedule | 2KINg a left-hand turn at 16th will be completed before the sum-! i mer semester ends this year, Presi. | "PT Municipal court 4. dent Wildman declared. Mr. Rums had ignored both tickets until yesterday, when police _|brought him in,

apprentice seamen now enrolled in the summer session.

GROUP MEETS TUESDAY The Irvington Social Circle will

eet at fa. m. Tuesday for a busiz|| PERSONAL ness meating at the home of Mrs. ANS Moderate Cost Laura Sherman, 437 8. Parker ave LO ANS ay Livi ue Mrs. Iva Wise, vice president, will|| A aan Depa

fretide a th Peoples State Bank follow

.

and Meridian sts. The case came!

and asked Paul Baudoin to accom- |

“I hope for .German victory” from

and Arlington ave. | Mrs. Nettie Apple, the victim, was | taken to City- hospital with’ severe lcuts and possible fractures. - She was riding in a car with her husband, Arthur Apple, when it col-

lided with a poultry produce truck.! 2

The Apples live in Oaklandon. Harley Austin, 48, of Rushville, was the truck driver.

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