Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1941 — Page 5

~~" THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1941

Army Tests Super-M

\ A backlog of needed public works

_ Orleans and Chicago.

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LIST POST-WAR PUBLIC WORKS

Carmody Says Projects Will Call for 5 Billion Annually.

WASHINGTON, July 10 (U. P.) — John M. Carmody, Federal Works Administrator, has established a special division to list public work projects that can be biilt after the emergency “to cushion the economic and industrial shock that follows war preparation efforts.” The “shelf” of projects listed in the FWA’s Public Work Reserve will be those that may be undertaken by local, State and Federal agencies when the wheels of industry begin to slow down after the emergency. Various types .of projects will be included—schools, sewage and water supply facilities, bridges, public buildings, state institutions, hospitals, Backlog of Five Billion

parks, etc.

which would require an annual expenditure of $5,000,000,000 already exists, Mr. Carmody said. Some time ago, President Roosevelt asked that. a public works reserve be built up as a means of offsetting the economic slump that will follow the emergency. E. C. Smith Jr. formerly acting director of highway section of the engineering division of the Work Projects Administration, will head the new organization which will embrace a similar staff created recently by the WPA. Regional Setup Planned Regional offices will be established in New York, San Francisco, New

“This program has two distinct advantages,” Mr. Smith said. “It is undertaken definitely and deliberately at a time when the nation’s resources are being heavily taxed in order to be prepared as never before to cushion the economic and industrial shock that follows war preparation efforts. “Next, it will bring into play and into full co-operation the best efforts of planning bodies everywhere—Ilocal, state and national— in the preparation of a sound, wellrounded out program of work that will be related not only to public needs but to the plans of private industry for re-adjustment and

streets, roads,|

Marion County furnished 140 men to Selective Service headquarters at Ft. Harrison today, as Indiana finished its 11th call period. In all, 261 inen were to report to Ft. Harrison and Ft. Knox, Louisville, Ky. Counties furnishing men to Ft. Harrison today were Marion, Marshall, Noble, Parke, Putnam, Sullivan, Wabash, Wells, White, Whitley and Wayne.

Reporting to Louisville were men from Floyd, Jefferson, Ohio and Washington Counties. The following Marion County men were to report for inductiony today: BOARD 3—Stephen M. Noland, 607 E. 39th St.; Joseph Bloch Jr., 4163 Washington Blvd.; Paul L. Billhymer, 4446 Schofield Ave.; Lloyd P. Robertson, 2141 E. 43d St.; William Dean, 3667 Birchwood Ave.; Leo Francis Welch Jr., 4310 Broadway; Robert E. Hoffman®1 E. 36th

St., Apt. 105; Malcolm McDermott,

future expansion.”

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This 155-millimeter Army field gun and it’s new gun carriage gets its first official road test near Chicago. First of 300 to be manufactured, the carriage can be towed at speeds up to 75 miles an hour. It is regarded as the most mobile gun in the world.

140 Men Enter Army Today From Marion County as State Finishes 11th Call Period

3822 Park Ave.; William F. Fries, 27 E. 33d St.; Portland Lee Abbett, 4338 College Ave.; John Robert Power, 22 E. 46th St.; J. Walker Yarlett, 4757 Washington Blvd.; Russell John Quick, 3001 Washington Blvd.; Harvey Bates Adamson, 4125 Central Ave.; Frank Blice Roberts, 129 157th St., Calumet City, Ill.; Wallace Goldstein, 2932 Park Ave.; George Joseph Steinmetz, 115 E. 40th St.; Robert Francis Herrell, 4509 College Ave.; James P. Highley, 4061 N. Capitol Ave,; Bud Evans Vice, 3726 N. Meridian St., Apt. 31; Harry Leo Stewart Jr., 2926 N. Delaware St. BOARD 5—David Waters Ayers, 722 N. Pershing St.; Torvald Johannes Holmes, 1745 Lafayette Road; Robert Bernard Reynolds, 3301 W. 11th St.; Carl Hayes, 729 E. 11th St.; John Frank Turk, 2615 W. Walnut St.; Joe Bethel Nelson, 1536 N. Rural St.; Emmett Allen Dewey, 558 N. Tremont Ave.; Reva Lee Watson, 1401 N. Holmes Ave.

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BOARD 6—Ralph William Bell, 5850 Beechwood Ave.; John Francis Pesut, 5232 E. 10th St.; Eugene Lafayette Smalley, 929 N. Bosart Ave.; Maurice Elton Reed, 5860 Lowell Ave.; Donald Resener Matthius, 352 S. Audubon Rd.; William Albert Strack, 412 N. Drexel St.; Philip Brown Reisler, 5749 E. New York St.; John Cristina, 4355 Spann Ave.;: James Ernest Mendenhall, 711 N. Linwood Ave.; Ronald Francis Golay, 5148 Pleasant Run Blvd.; Herbert Guy Snyder, 7848 N. W. First Ave., Miami, Fla. (transferred); John Albert Peddie, 838 W. Third St., Madison; Robert Rice Scott, 305 S. Arlington Ave.; Frank Louis Collins, 514 N. Bosart Ave.

BOARD 7—Richard Carr O’Connor, 1423 N. Pennsylvania St.; James Glenn Lloyd, 24 W. 18th St.; Roy Leo Jones, 1101 N. New Jersey St.; Arnold Channon Rosen, 1512 N. Meridian St. Apt 26; Kenneth Harry Shedd, 1530 N. Illinois St., Apt. 50; John Wesley Hill, 1319 N. New Jersey St., Apt. 5.

BOARD 9—Charles John Lawson, 2138 Valley Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal.; Howard Daniel Wood, 4517 S. Lake Park Ave. Chicago, Ill.; John Meredith Harvey, 1043 N. Pennsylvania St.; Branton Fliming Veteto, 332 N. Temple Ave.; Thomas Martin Farrell, 442 N. Oxford St.; Roy Richard Reeves Jr., 453 N. Walcott St.; Richard Thomas Sturm, 1924 E. Maryland St.; Milton Clarence Cummins, 1213 Deloss St.; Charles Clinton Thomas, 961 Stilwell St.; Thomas Edward Griffin, 840 Eastern Ave.; Stephen Francis Lawhorn, 244 Parkview Pl.; Raymond Lee Goddard Jr., 941 Stilwell St.; Charles Thomas Hardy, 440 S. Grace St.; James Vincent Fisher, 206 N. State Ave.; James Francis Carroll, 121 N. State Ave.; Maurice Victor Goodrid, 915 Middle Dr., Woodruff Pl; Edmund Joseph Dwyer, 853 N. Parker Ave.; Wilbur Dale Minks, 544 N. Parker Ave.; Arthur Winford Pickett, 120 E. 13th St., Cincinnati, O.; Donald Robert Miller.

BOARD 10—Chauncey Joseph Mathis, 821 Cameron St.; Joseph Herman ‘Niehaus, 2415 Shelby St., Apt. 18; Clifford Paul Palmer, 1457 St. Paul St.; James Michael Hannon, 1045 Bradbury St.; Carlo Francis Presti, 1838 Olive St.; Eddie H. Huffer, 1848 Olive St.; Willard Leo McCarty, 1018 S. Keystone Ave.; William Edward Griffith, 1516 Nelson St.; William Harris, Freetown, Ind.; William James Simpkins, 2119 Fletcher Ave.; William Raymond Miller, 708 N. Illinois St.; Lanis M, Lowhdrn, 1247 Naomi St.;. Melvin Franklin Haas, 1423 Comer Ave.; and Roy Franklin Dunn, 954 Pleasant Run Blvd.

Joseph Edward ‘Whitsett, 1543 Wade St.; Ralph Seering, 1152 S. State St.; Raymond Leon Hofman, 818 8S. State St.; Hugh Milroy Motsinger, R. R. 5, Box 242; William OC. Kaiser Jr, 1032 Churchman St.: James Wesley Betzler, 1423 Gimber St.; : Edgar Lee Thompson, 1638 Quill St.; William Max Scheier, 1602 S. State St.; Thomas Henry Mattingly, 1333 E. Tabor St.; Leonard Lee Starcher, 1005 E. Sumner St.; Eugene Anthony Presti, 1838 Olive St.; Voris Harley Flake, 1129 Bradbury St. BOARD 11—Forest Dwight D er, 29142 Cherry Hill, Fi iy City, Mich. ; George Conrad Dehn, R.F.D, 1, Elizabeth, Ind.: Anthony Maynard Grabner, 1757 Beeler St.; Frederick Allen White, 1442 S. Earl St.; John Michael Clossey, R. R. 1, Box 365, Bridgeport, Ind.; Jester Conner Rinker, 2201 Morgan St., and Christian Woodrow Mikkelsen, 1702 N. Alabama St., Apt. 7.

Felon-Inventor ‘Meets Law Again

LOS ANGELES, July10 U. P.). —Inventor Herbert R. Kersten's noiseless airplane propeller, which Army experts said would be a great boon to national defense if it works, had better be good. He has been released from an‘other tiff with the law so that he might continue work on it. Kersten, four times convicted of felonies, is a habitual criminal un‘der California law and faces a life term if convicted of a burglary - charge pending against him, He is free on the charge, however, so that he may work on the invention. . The other night Kersten was arrested again and charged with driving while intoxicated, driving without a license and intoxication. He pleaded innocent and his

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES = obile Gun Carriage

sponsors immediately: furnished the $500 bail fo get him back to work on the propell :

er. . PATRIOTIC SONGS POPULAR

BOSTON (U. P.). —Resulting from “a wave of solidarity intense enough to find expression in music,” a new peace-time high for patriotic songs in America is approaching its peak, according to Dr. Alfred H. Meyer, professor of music at Boston University.

I —

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