Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1941 — Page 6
“PAGE 6
AMERICAN ADDS| A
2 DAILY FLIGHTS
Increased Travel Prompts New Trips to Both East and West.
American Airlines, Ime. will add Wo daily east and west-bound flights through Indianapolis begin-| ning Sunday, F. G. Malbeu!, Ameri cans local sales manager, announced today. The fights will bring to six the number of daily flights through the ' Municipal Airport by the Ameri-! can Airlines anc to 23 the operated by the three airlines serving Indianapolis.
Transcontinental and Western |
total | *
rchitect's Drawing of New Hosiptal
ea x ; RA NS N AER RARE RARE 3 3 RRR Ba ARR EAL BR TR Rt A a a a RRR Ban W AREF IRE EE sass ete LW RE ESR TEE EE EHR RHPA IES SR 1 ha RRR } X RRA RN nN RR
Ain, Inc, operates nine daily fights! A
While Eastern Air Lines, Inc, oper ates eight
American Airlines added two
flights for summer business over a BN :
year
hem
ago and then discontinued fall. Mr. Malbeuf said that increasing activity mn the defense ndustiies in Indianapolis, bringing an increased demand on air travel originating and terminate ing here, necessitated the renewal of the fights. : One will leave Indianapolis at 8:12 for Cincinnati, Washington, New York and Boston. The other will feave at 5:58 p. m. for Chicago making connections for the West and Northwest, Additions of new fights on the T. W. A and Eastern lines are not exe new equipment becomes available in the future.
asi
bend hank ed until
U. S. NEWSMEN MISSING | ROME, April 25 (U. P.).—United
States Ambassador William Philipbs!puilt the factory, then they built the homes,
asked Filippo Anfuso, Chief Secretary of the Foreign Office, today for, Italian aid in establishing the rate]
of a number of American newspaper, development since the 19th ecentur correspondents missing in Jugosia- | industrial revolution started Eng- sewer land and
Via
NOW... SMART 1941 CLOTHES FOR MEN
Here fs an architect's drawing of the new Emhardt Memorial Hospital to be constructed by Dr. John |
W. Emhardt at Minnesota and S. East Sts. The new unit, which is to contain 30 beds, surgery, dressing and X-ray rooms and business offices, will be completed about Oct. 1 and is to be dedicated to the memory
of the mothers of Dr. and Mrs. Emhardt, Mrs, Caroline W. Embhardt and Mrs. Smythie L. MacDougall. |
The unit, which will be the first new general hospital to be built in Indianapelis in many years, will cost about £100,000. The Emhardt Clinic at Minnesota and S. East Sts, will continue to operate in conjunction
with the hospital. D. A. Bohlen & Son is architect for the project.
Bombs May Wreck British Workers’ Homes
But Landlords Continue to Collect Full Rent
[towards the era now calljrow peninsula | mechanized. |mainland. And it is also the story of a little; From that bridge, you can see the industrial island in the heart of two-story houses they call homes [Fast End London. stretching in almost endless and 1t is about two square miles, monotonous profusion down streets That is the story of every big ¢ity [pounded on three sides by a canal, | Which are dead end. Some streets vsla river and the giant underground end at the river, some stop at the You cross a bridge to reach canal. A few lead right up to a -(high wire fence surrounding the | factory. Walking through
BY PAUL MANNING they jutting from
Times Special Writer LONDON, April 25—First they]
of the world this island, which actually is a nar
the rest
these streets worker of this area, vou see bomb damage and deserted streets. But [the bomb damage is not widespread, [just an occasional two or three (houses crushed to the ground. The factory damage, however, was repaired long ago, and now full crews are again working two shifts every 24 hours, | And the workers are living in (their homes again. But these homes are ones which a southern sharecropper would probably sniff at. Two rooms below, two above, with no bath. The two families who share the meager space keep warm {by huddling near a tiny coal grate. | Yet they like these homes better than more spacious quarters in country billets, and that is one reason why evacuated families keep re[turning to the island. | Another reason is the chance of working again in the factory, | The most powerful magnet though, {says Mrs. Jensen, is the curious law that a landlord still can collect (full rent from a home partially damjaged by enemy action,
Although bombs may drive a man|
and his family away from his home in the shadow of the factory, he is drawn back because he cannot afford to pay rent in two places, { When a man survives a bomb, but discovers half his house is demolished, his rent isn't reduced automatically to compensate for the unusable room, Factory workers can't afford lawvers, and until recently there was no other help open to them when they tangled with the law. Now, however, there it the Pilgrim's Civil‘fan Advisory Bureau. Everyone on [the island calls it “The Poor Man's Lawyer.”
{ The men and women who walk
[through the door of Pilgrim House |
fon the island invariably are conjcerned about three questions: {they get a rent adjustment? Can they hold back some of the rent money until the landlord does his share in repairing the bombed | home? ernment aid?
wom. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
the |
[with Mrs. Blain Jensen, the social|
Can |
Are they entitled to gov-|
Boy Scout News—
10 CITY SCOUTS IN 1ST AID MEET
2 Days; Record Crowd Is Expected.
Ten Indianapolis Boy Scouts will be among 1800 Scouts competing in Chicago tomorrow in the world’s
“The Mid-West First Air Contest.” The 10 local boys comprise teams representing Troop 90 and Troop 12 and will demonstrate their skill in the 132nd Regional Armory.
[sel and Carl Halstein, Troop 112,
land Richard Iserioth, Robert Mac-|
Daniel, James Hamilton, Matthew Walsh and Fred Dennerline, Troop 90.
‘Scout Circus Extended
The eight-act Boy Scout Circus to be held at the Coliseum May 18 and 17 is expected to attract the largest audience in the history of the annual event, For the first time it will go on two days instead of the customary one because of the overflow crowd
which swelled the Coliseum last
year.
Circus to Be Offered for
largest competition of its kind-—|
They are Gerald Kasting, Richard | Kasting, Donald Bienz, James Cis |
U S. Plans Gulf Resorts for
Times Special
| CAMP SHELBY, Miss, April 22.| begin on Friday noon for beach|=The Government is going into|/bound groups. ‘the week-end resort business for tation and food will be offered the thousands of soldiers in this—| through special arrangements with in the
| | aires,
the Army's biggest camp United States. Since the Army really works only
[five days a week—with inspection ing Gulf excusions into convoy (maneuvers with Army trucks,
and a few chores around quarters on Saturday mornings a soldier [wants to do something besides | pitch horseshoes in the company street. So, seven recreation centers are |to be established outside coast or | bay cities along the Gulf from New Orleans to Panama City, Fla. Bath« | Ing beaches will be the big feature, | with fishing, tennis, free quarters and nearness to the gayer resort towns, Army doctors and military police will go along. At first each week-end camp will shelter 500 men.
i
|
|
day noon until Sunday night, will
Low-cost transpor-
railroads, bus lines and concession- |
But already there's talk of turn-
A sample problem, for instance might be to rush 500 troops 150 miles from | Camp, Shelby to Biloxi, avoiding contact with beer-parior outposts and honky-tonk skirmishers en] route, and arriving in time for a] daylight attack on the caricatures of European dictators in the shooting galleries, Just now there isn’t much for a soldier to do on leave. Quite a few
save up for trips to New Orleans, temptingly advertised as “The Paris | of America.” But officers whose special concern | 1s morale and morals are not much |
FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1041
Shelby Trainees
ging into the immediate region off Camp Shelby. Beer parlors are springing up along the main highway betwéén Hattiesburg and the camp, Most are incredibly small and shabby,
CAA CONDEMNED BY. DENTAL MAGAZINE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, April 25 (U. P).-The magazine Dental Survey today criticized the Civil Aeronautics Authority for abane doning a nation-wide survey of dental conditions among pilots and charged the CAA is “inclined to under-estimate oral infection as a safety factor in flying.” “The authority has entered on its task of training 50,000 pilots with boundless enthusiasm, but has failed to see the imporiance of dental service as a part of the examination of pilots,” the publi cation said. The publication
called the
If popular, they'll| more worried about wide-open New| CAA's action “in striking contrast
| be enlarged for 2500 to 7500 soldiers.| Orleans than: they are about the|to the rigid standards of the Army
With Col. Roscoe Turner as gen-|
eral chairman the circus will be
| split into eight episodes,
with 1500 cubs marching behind the Scout drum and bugle corps. | The grand entry will consist of 6000 Scouts parading behind massed flags. Games and contests will be the third episode with more than 50 games going at once. Emergency service corps will make {up the fourth act with a realistic hurricane, devastated buildings and the Scouts doing their emergency work, An aviation act with 500 boys | with model planes will be next on [the program, followed by an outdoor scene, a pioneer scene and (then the grand finale, » »
Camp Is Prepared
Camp Chank-tun-un-gi (the Boy Scout Reservation) today rings with the sound of hammer and saw as | buildings are prepared for the an- | nual camping periods. Camp fees remain the same with the $1150 charge for two weeks land $8 for the one week period. Camp periods are June 16-28, June 30-July 12, July 14-19, July 21Aug. 2, Aug. 4-16 and Aug. 18-23 for the Central District. For the first time Camp Rotary | will be operated at the same time. | This camp donated by the Indianlapolis Rotary Club and located near Crawfordsville will be open [ July 27-Aug. 2, Aug. 3-9, Aug. 1018. About 50 boys will be at this camp. Attendance at Camp Chank-tun-{un-gi will be more than 300.
(200 Attend Meeting
The Senior Scout conference tomorrow at DePauw University will | be attended by 200 Scouts from central Indiana, C. J. Carlson, | veteran Scout worker will be a feature speaker, Also attending will {be Robert Busby, Scout executive | director, now stationed at Indianapolis. .
TECH'S SENIOR PLAY | SCHEDULED TONIGHT
“What a Life” will be presented at 8 o'clock tonight in the Technical High School Boys’ Gymnasium as | the annual senior play. The comedy, written by Clifford Goldsmith, revolves around the trials and troubles of a group of | high school youngsters. Produced {on Broadway, the play won fame for Ezra Stone, who played Henry Aldrich, the leading character.
First will be the grand opening
Furloughs now written from Satur- encroachments of vice and bootleg and Navy.”
SAVE DURING
ROGERS GREAT
EXPANSION SALE
YOUR CHOICE
OF A SPECIAL GROUP OF
FORMERLY MUCH HIGHER PRICED NOW REDUCED TO...
We have selected a special group of
our most beautiful, offer at this especia
smartest rings to lly reduced price
to prove conclusively that we offer the most for your diamond dollar. Here is just one of many special savings offered during our great Expansion
50c A WEEK
No Interest and No Carrying Charg
Sale.
LN
Chala
gers & Co.
SQUARE DEAL JEWELERS © © 5 North Illinois Street © ©
I: vou think driving has lost its thrill=brother, it's because you haven't tried Fluid Drive in a Chrysler!
traffic and get the feel of stopping and starting shifting gears. It's really fascinating!
WHY SHIFT GEARS?
Compare These Sport Coats With Any at $12.50 — Sears Saving Price
too good to be true.
when we may come for you.
*
{)
Every man, to be correctly dressed for the occasion, should include a
* *
The Safety Clutch is like a lifeboat on a ship. You will use it very seldom, but you're mighty glad to have it when you need it. A very valuable safeguard for parking . . . for maneuvering your car in close quarters or dangerous places!
smart sport coat in his 194] spring and summer wardrobe. The new Staunton sport coats, in a wide variety of colorful tweeds, herringbones and plaids, can be worn anywhere; to work, to play and to informal dressup events. They give you that smart, well-dressed appearance, yet they
You know, Fluid Drive must be something pretty unusual to attract as much attention as it has. Wouldn't you like to try it yourself? Drive around town, pick the worst
Nobody wants to shift gears. That's why Fluid Drive with Vacamatic transmission is such a thrill. It takes all the work out of driving . . . makes it seem like something that’s
But it is true . . . and we'd like to prove it to you. Let's set a date to go Fluid Driving. Call up now and tell us
tp” INDIANAPOLIS
THERE'S A THRILL FOR YOU
without
IN
FOR SAFETY! Why Chrysler includes a Safety Clutch with Fluid Drive!
are free and easy to wear. Sizes 34 to 44. Other Sport Coats Up to £12.95
Gabardine SLACKS
In a Variety of Weaves!
Worn with eslarful 9%
sport coat, you have Entire Store Open Every Thursday and Saturday Night Until 9 O'Clock
A smart sports en. semble. Contrasting colors, patterns whatever your taste Waist sizes 28 to 38.
950 N. Meridian St.
$815 College Ave.
2008 W. Michigan
ALABAMA AT VERMONT ST.
C.
WILES-JOHNSON MOTORS, INC. RODOCKER MOTORS, INC.
with Fluid Drive and Vocamartic Tremsm.
BUY CHRYSLER!
H. WALLERICH CO.
Distributor Phone RI. 4574
SCANLAN SALES CO.
2217 E. Washington
D. E. WEDDING
HU. 1382 CH. 1"?
BE. 2608 Beech Grove DR. 1644
