Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1945 — Page 13
perfect rolls of 5c and 10c quale turday only,
ho1
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—— | 1009, Wool
ING TS
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89° SHIRTS 51 98
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FRIDAY, FEB. 23, 1945
sey
THE INDIANA
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| 3be. Demand St. Joseph Aspirin.
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Other Fine Groups, $22.50, $24.50, $29.50, $32.50
PANTS
Big Choire $2.95, $3.95, $495, $5.08
Daniels as ‘his
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2 SCOUT UNITS T0 BE INVESTED
Charters to Be Given Cub Pack 42 and Troop No. 184,
Charter ceremonies for two new {| Boy scout units ‘will be held this | week-end, scout officials said today. | Installation of the new Cub pack {No. 42. will be held Monday night at ‘Capitol Avenue Methodist
{church and Troop No, 184 will be {invested Sunday night at the New | Bethel Baptist church.
Robert Bain, organizer, and Stan-
{ley Norton, north district executive,
will be in charge of charter pres-
|entation ceremonies for the Capitol |church cub pack.
William Kelley is the new cubmaster of the group, with Maurice assistant. Den Chiefs are William Condit, Eugene Harrison, Stanley Wise, Clarence
Deal, and Richard Clifton.
28 Members Listed
Twenty-eight cubs on the charter Sims, Stanley
Hicks, Edward Sweetman, Harold
\ Wilson, Robert Yantis, James Beck,
Charles Berry, Lloyd Knecht, Danny
| Wheeler, Larry Daniels, Noble | Bennett, Myron Robinson, Lewis | Wright, Roy Brown, Donald Ea-
cret, Karl Stoicneff, Donald Fisher, William Garrison, Harry Bowman, Jack Lynn, Frederick Rippel, James
|Diggle, Larry Smith, Charles Hunt, | George McClellan and Jack Oglesby.
Ceremontes for the investiture of Troop No. 184 will be conducted by Lloyd Byrne, scout district commissioner, and Ken W. Taylor, dis-
| trict executive of Central Indiana
Council. Scouts of Troop No. 112, Im-
__ | manuel Evangelical and Reformed { church; — will
conduct candlelight rites for the new troop. Officers of the new troop who will be in-
master, and Max Springer, William
| Brown, Wilburn Elrod, and Har-| 'old Toon Jr,
assistants.
Commission Won
By Norman Baker
NORMAN BAKER, former edi-
| torial employee at The Indianap-
olis Times, has been commissioned a lieutenant, graduating from the Military Police
Officers school at Ft. Sam Houston, San
Antonio, + Tex. Lt. Baker, the son of Mrs. Sadie Baker, 3049 Park ave., joined few days after
Norman Baker
the services a Harbor.
TRAFFIC INSTRUCTORS HELD AS VIOLATORS
GENEVA, Neb., Feb. 23 (U. PY. Two state police sergeants, E. O. Grueber, Lincoln, and R. C. Beers, Grand Island, paid a routine visit to the Fairmount army airfield to instruct military personnel on the various .motor vehicle laws of Ne-| braska. During a busy day the two police sergeants wer@ tagged by military police for traffic violationsy
SHARES IN' AWARD
Tech. 5th Gr. Louis F. Trefry Jr; {husband of Mrs. Dorothy Trefry,
1212 Bakemeyer st, is a member of | cise a veto.against consideration of
{the engineer aviation’ regiment | | which was awarded the mefitoricus | sefvice unit plaque for superior |
‘| performance of duty overseas.
-
ROEBUCK AND CO.
WOMEN'S AND GROWING GIRLS’ SHOES Reduced! OR MORE
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“For your convenience, the right Moe of every pair reduced will be disia played on ourtables so that you may Y chops more Teadity, ,
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Not all sizes in each - . '
John Marion,
scout=-|
| erans of Foreign Wars,
| at the post hall, E. Washington and | Denny sts.
| Barbara Wahl are in charge of a
Commutes From | Farm toWar Job |
| ALBERT G. WEINTRAUT of { the post engineers at the army | air forces depot, state fair grounds, spends four hours daily commuting from Waldron — 40 miles away : — but still’ manages to operate a 193-acre farm in his spare time. Mr. Weintraut rises at 4 a. m,, drives to Shelbyville, catches J ¥ a bus for In- y dianapolis and Mr. Weintraut finally tages a streetcar to the fairgrounds. He gets back to Waldron at 7 p. m. He is assisted in his farm duties by his two sons, 13 and 15, who attend school in the daytime, ' Mr. Weintraut catches up with his heavy work on Sundays. His crops include. corn, wheat, soy beans, peas and alfalfa and he raises about 200 hogs a year. A son is a seabee on Saipan and a daughter is a first sergeant of a WAC company at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
ALLIED PARLEY PACT FORECAST
Eichelberger to Discuss Peace League Prospects Here Tonight. |
{ By JOE JARVIS Success of the United Nations {conference at San Francisco in setting upwa world peace_organization with American membership was predicted here today by Clark M. Eichelberger, a . director of the American Association for the United | Nations. | He said a large part of the success of the conference would he due to public opinion which today is! “greater and better informed than in 1920 after the last world war.” Mr. Eichelberger is in Indianapolis to address a meeting at 8 p.| m. today at the war memorial building sponsored jointly by the League of Women Voters and the Indiana Committee for Victory.
Verdict by Summer “The conference which convenes | at San Franciséo April 25, will last | about a month.” Mr. Eichelberger forecast. “A satisfactory agreement based on the Dumbarton Oaks pro- | posals will be adopted and sent to | the U. S. senate. By summer we | should know whether we will have | a world peace organization with | American membership or whether | we will return to isolationism. “It is my opinion, however, that | this time we will win because of an aroused public opinion. We have learned through two world wars
that isolationism gives this eoun- |
1 Formerly $9.95 to $14.95 Formerly $16.95 to $19.95
Better JRESSE
‘GO AT DRASTIC REDUCTIONS!
Come expecting to find Better, High-Type Dresses in all wanted materials—favorite styles and colors.
try no protection. We can’t un | away again.” Mr. Eichelberger said he expected the delegates to the United Nations conference to make only a few minor | changes in the Dumbarton Oaks proposals, “these in favor of the smaller nations,” » Method of Voting He asserted that the method of Fvoting on disputes—an issue which had been left undecided at Dumbar{ion Oaks — “apparently was formu-| lated at the'iBig Three conference {at Yalta.” “Enough has leaked out to indicate” he declared, “that a great! | power will not be allowed to exer-|
a dispute to which the great power is a party. Mr. Eichelberger will talk at 8 p. m. on the Yalta meeting and the forthcoming United Nations eonfer- | ence,
| CARD PARTY TOMORROW | The ladies’ auxiliary to Burns- | West-Striebeck post, No, 2999, Vet-| will hold | a card party at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow |
0. E. 8S. CARD PARTY SET Mrs. Lura Van Iderstine and Mrs.
card party sponsored by Queen Esther auxiliary, O. E. 8, at 1:15 p. m. Monday in the Food Craft shop.
LLUNOIS CENTRA
Discontinuance of Indianapolis-Effingham Trains 333-334
Effective March 1, 1948
Office of Defense Transportation General Order ODT 47
provides as followsy 4
“On and after March 1, 1048, no rail carrier * * * shall oper. ate a passenger train schedule on which tM occupancy of seats and space thereon did not aver» age 35 per cent during the calen dar month of November, 1944,"
Train 333 in November, 1044, had an average occupancy of 17.5 per cent, and train’ 334, 17.7 per cent, which is substan: tially lower than the permissible occupancy average.
Accordingly, incompliance w vith theaboveorder these trains now in service, daily except Sunday, on fhe following Sehedle,
20098 pm ly. Indianapolis Ar. 1241. me 30 pa k. Effingham [v" 5:30 am 4 will be discontinued with last
ham and intermediate stations, Wednesday, February 28,1945.
Wlinois Central Sytem
POLIS TIMES
“STUDY NEW OIL TREATY
PAGE 13
CHAPTER WILL MEET
| over the world’s petrbleum suppliés |
over station. WISH at 2:15 p. m.
| Burns,
trip from Indianapolis, Effing- !
HIGH SCHOOL REVUE
Washington high school pupils will present their “Junior Vaudeville” revue March 22 and 23 at the school. Mrs: Elizabeth Hat‘field and Audie Watkins, junior class sponsors, are in charge of arrangements.
Five Washington Students will participate in the “discussion of “Should the United States Have Compulsory Military Training?”
Thursday. They are Mary Lou leader; Joan Ellis, Jackie McCurdy, Mary Fortner and EHeene Treadway.
The following R. O. T. C. promotions were announced today by Benjamin Paris, instructor of the Washington unit: First Lt. John C. Conkle and 2d Lt. David L. Wheeler to captains; 2d Lt. Robert S. White to first lieutenant, and 1st Sgt. Pete W. Sidery, T. Sgt. Floyd M. Dial and Ralph L.- Starks, to second lieutenants.
Kathleen Wilham, Mary Sue Clayton and Joyce Burns placed first, second and third in the annual health contest at Washington.
ITASCA MEETING SET Itasca council No. 337, Pocahony tas, will meet at 8 p. m. Tuesday at Castle hall.
WASHINGTON, Feb: 23 (UP) f= was —under—consideration-
\I
beautiful shoes
44 N. PENNSYLVANIA ST.
~todeyA revised Anglo-American oil realy the senate foreign relations commit-
SET FOR MARY 2jscewee mpi Smo
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MILLER-woHL'S FINAL DRASTIC,
—What an Opportunity!
{ ¢ CLEARANCE
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Beginning Tomorrow you can buy at nearly Half-Price—one-half price and less than Half Price! Come expecting real bargains! You'll not be disappointed!
Formerly $21.95 to $23
Values $4.99 to $1.99
Values $9.95 to $12.95 :
Values $14.95 to $19.95
Another Large Group of
STOUT SIZE
$354
Special Group of
Out They Go
$10
Valu £20.00 _. "2s. om
DRESSES
Reduced for Quick Clearance
SUITS
Note:
handling.
Some of the above merchan- i dise a bit soiled and mussed from
DUT THEY GO! um RE-GROUPED and RE-PRICED
SKIRTS-BLOUSES SWEATERS-PURSES
Englewood — No. 488, O. E. 8, will meet at 8 p. m. Mone day for initiatien,
‘
