Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 January 1942 — Page 6

PAGE 8

ASK DAY'S PAY TO AID DEFENSE

Bond and Stamp Purchase Monthly to Be Sought of All Employed.

Every Marion County resident who has a steady job and isn't called | for military service will be asked to | lay aside one day's pay a month for the purchase of defense ponds and | stamps. This was the word passed out | from Washington this week to cam= | paign workers in Indianapolis and other parts of Indiana. Although the purchase of bonds and stamps is a voluntary procedure, Russell McDermott, chairman of the Marion County Defense Savings Staff, said “it’s got to be a day's pay & month from everybody if we're going to get anywhere.”

Organizations Set Up

Sergt. Howard P. Youngs

'Sergt. Youngs, Retired 10 Years, Is Anxious to Serve in Pacific.

The Youngs “unit” of the U. S. hold a special Marines was doubled today when the Claypool Ho- | pirst Sergt. Howard P. Youngs, who tel to perfect solicitation machinery | retired 10 years ago, returned to in their business organizations. {the corps in which his son, RichSeparate campaign groups will beiarg, enlisted six months ago. set up for professional classes and | When last heard from, the son others who wouldn't be reached BY |.,¢ aequiring a leathery neck at the employers’ Organiza fons. San Diego. The father, who had In addition to this, field WOIKe™S garrisoned Alaska, landed with the will be organized in every DPrecilici yyarjnes at Vera Cruk, chased banof the County for a house-U0-NOUSE ues over the hills of Haiti and later canvass to contact every man, woil= loop the Sandino situation well in an and child. hand down in Nicaragua, doesn't Plans Big Demonstration EO ee he a nd Stress St < rement is ended. Eugene Pulliam, chairman of the oe hat his ret . 5 State Defense Savings Staff, is Eager to Fight Japs planning one of the biggest patriotic| ge hopes it will be somewhere in demonstrations ever held in Indian- ihe Pacific. For he is anxious to apolis sometime next month. compel some Jap to eat a piece of Torchlight parades will be sched- paper. uled in every city and town in Indi-| 4 jo o jetter he received from ana at the same time. At the |, o Japanese consul at Chicago in SE , 1923, praising Sergt. Youngs for his S will © ass u B : A : : » : crowds for purchase of bonds and pe in helping raise money for re . Ew pe lief of suffering after the earthstamps. Kiv quake which caused great havoe In re o a brie the Nipponese archipelago in that ontily or SEHN= nly DAyIOous | year. will be asked to authorize employ-|" _ hi ers to take a specified amount out | The ve got to Jy a ne of their wages every month for the NE Serge. Youngs ute . purchase of bonds. Sergt. Youngs was the recruiting Under this plan, employers will officer in Indianapolis for seven buy the ponds for employees and | years before his retirement in 1931. I < 1 | He had been a factory guard in New hold them in trust for them. Castle until recently. His son was Sales Heavy After Attack graduated from high school there.

The purchase of bonds reached an flonored for Service - ' igh hortly after the all-time high = Sergt. Youngs became a Marine

Campaign organizations are being formed to pledge every one who has an income in Marion County, he said. Employers will meeting Jan. 10 at

Photography

ACCEPT ENTRIES FOR BIG EXHIBIT

International Salon’s Tth Show Listed Tops; Details Announced.

By TIM TIPPETT

America’s highest ranking photographic exhibition—the Rochester International Salon—is accepting entries for its seventh season.

The show, which this year re-

| {ceived top listing over all other sa-

lons in the world in the American Annual of Photography 1042, will be held from Feb. 27 through March 29 in the Rochester Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester, N. Y.

The exhibition will be divided into two major classes—one for monochrome prints, including those which are toned; and one for color transparencies amd natural color prints. The closing date for entries is Feb. 2, 1842 and all prints will be judged on Feb. 7 and 8.

Ne Limit en Prints

According to Earl C. Esty, print director, there is no limitation on the number of prints to be selected for hanging. All prints in each class approved by the judges will be hung. Judges for the monochrome sec tion of this year’s salon are Don Loving, A. R. P. 8S, A. P. S A, Chicago; Arthur 8S. Mawhinney, A. R. P. 8S, New Rochelle, N. Y, and John S. Rowan, Baltimore, Md. The jury of selection for the color prints and color transparencies will include Ivan Smitrl, New York City; Alfred de Lardi, F. R. P. 8, Philadelphia, Pa, and Harry K. Shigeta, A. P. A. 8S. A, Chicago. Entry blanks and full details will be sent to any photographer writing Mr. Esty, Rochester Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester. Here is a

bombing attack upon Hawall and | banks and Federal agencies were strained to keep an adequate supply

at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1908, when he was 19. During his active service he accumulated the follow-

of bonds and stamps. | Last week the supply in Indian-| apolis was exhausted and rush or-| A medal for good conduct.

ders were sent to Washington for] Two medals for knowing how to more bonds. The same rush was|shoot.

ing souvenirs:

sis

S

1.

presses were swamped. A slug of lead in the leg from . | the gun of one of Sandino’s men. i i ———————— snc (1150/3, 7 A WASHINGTON, Jan. 1 (U. P)— | Manufacturers of toys, musical in-STORE-WIDE EVENT land 24 other items were ordered WIL by the OPM yesterday to restrict 17 | per cent and eliminate all use of the metal by March 31. | tinfoil, which will restrict the use of tin in thé packaging of cigarets. Q " i [OEEA €) ® 2 effect today. REDUCTION OPM Priorities Director Donald lof tin in 1942 for armament procud CHILDREN'S { duction. Ll lend 12, &, irr 27 ; | which we use 100,000 tons a year— | has been cut off by the far eastern

occuring in other parts of the] pour ribbons for service in that country and the Treasury printing’ many foreign countries. peta ORDER RESTRICTIONS W (011 ON USERS OF TI | struments, buckles, buttons, jewelry their use of tin immediately by 50 | The list of prohibited articles F/7 made public by the OPM includes This order was to have been effective Jan. 15 but now goes into M M. Nelson estimated that the conon ENT/RE Lyfe. OF <crvation order will save 15,000 tons LADIES MEN'S He pointed out that 80 per cent |of normal U. S. sources of tin—of FE Ae RF a WASHINCTON re YOUR NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL

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Back Repair Drive

With war production geing on an “all out” basis, the Eastman Kodak Co. is backing the “Repair That Camera” campaign to help American photographers make the most of what is available in cameras. “There are 19,000,000 cameras in active use in the United States, and there are probably more than §.- 000,000 others on shelves, in closets and bureau drawers,” the company said. “Although there may be a shortage in some types of cameras, there is no reason why these older units cannot be brought back into service and put to practical use.” Promise Reduced Costs As proof of their intentions, the company, in January, February and March, will reduce alt cost of repairs on all Kodaks 25 pet cent. According to a preliminary sur vey conducted by the company, there are very few old cameras that cannot be brought back into usable condition with just a few minor repairs, whether the venerable outfits have been “on the shelf” for a matter of months or even years. In fact, many used cameras need only a thorough cleaning to return them fits which fell also into disuse when to top-notch shape. As for “extra” cameras—those outthey were supplemented with newer and better cameras—a survey shows that the first “want” of men in the service is a camera, and there's certainly no better place than camp for the cameras that are not| being used at home.

Gumdrop Helps Print

Did you ever consider the role of the gumdrop in photography? Well, as most everything, the gumdrop in the hands of a shutterbug, can be put to work. Ever have difficulty in retouching or spotting a glossy print without leaving a dull place where the retouching paint was applied? Here is where the gumdrop (lemon) comes in. Just dilute som® Talens water color retouching paint in enough water to give you the shade of gray you want. Then you wipe the brush over a sliced gumdrop, to pick up some gum arabic, and there you get the gloss to match glossy print surface. So far we haven't heard of a use for all the dust gathering in our darkroom, but it probably has some use besides thickening the hypo.

INSTRUMENT COURSE OFFERED BY TURNER

A 12-week evening course on principles of instrument operation and repair has been instituted by The Roscoe Turner Aeronautical Corp. at Municipal Airport. Classes will meet two evenings a | week in Col. Turner's hangar. Men | will study sensitive altimeters, arti- | ficial horizons, turn-and-bank and | airspeed indicators, tachometers, and various types of aviation compasses. One of the instruments in Col. Turners’ laboratory is the “Scorsby” or “wobble machine” which tests Sperry instruments. This and other instruments have been built by Roscoe McNutt, instrument instructor, who is a graduate of Sperry Instrument School and a master watch-

?

expected to mark & turning point

balance by united American tive capacity playing the chief part.

tion and of final preparation.” Nothing in the an expectation of victory in 1042 nor the hope of any mirthe collapse of Ger thin. But in 1943, in nsidered view, the Axis powers will be on the defensive,

that, possibly in 1043, al-|

James E. Edwards Jn

James E. Edwards Jr, son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Edwards of Brownsburg, has written his parents from Pearl Harbor that he “was not going to get hurt, so don’t worry about me.” He is stationed with the Naval forces at the base. He formerly attended Flackville grade school and New Augusta High School. He has been in the service for about a year. He visited his parents in September.

gin. That is “the assault upon the citadels and homelands of the guilty powers, both in Europe and in Asia.” The interval before such an assault will be devoted to preventing further Axis gains in Europe and the Pacific which will make the task that much harder when the time comes to regain lost ground and move into enemy territory. That is, from the purely military aspect. Even more important will be the allout development of American war production.

Britain, the United States, Russia and their Allies have greater resources than Germany, Italy and Japan, The Axis powers are strained to the utmost, Japan particularly. The latter can partly recoup by taking the Dutch East Indies. Germany and Italy have no present prospects of greatly increasing their production or resources, espe-

RECEIVE FESTIVAL ENTRIES

Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, Jan. 1-—-All entries for the entertainment festival program, to be featured at the annual Purdue University Agricultural Conference Jan. 13, have been received by F. L. McReynolds, director of the event.

-

braced for the supreme test. It reasonably may be

in the greatest

year ends, the democracies hape to

front, with the

resources, energy and produce

As outlined by

Prime Minister Churchill, it will be the year of “consolidation, of combi-

utterances of Mr. Churchill or of any allied statesmen

cially while Russi bars the way to the East. Allied resources, on the other hand, are far from having been brought fully into play. The Washington slogan is “we have just begun to fight,” President Roosevelt plans to spend more than $50,000,000,000, or half the nation’s income, in a single year on war production.

That means planes, tanks, guns, ships and all the weapons of war will be pouring out at a rate the Axis can never hope to duplicate. Under the plan of unified effort now being worked out in Washington, these weapons will be interchanged and used by all the Allies at the places most needed. President Roose velt indicated this when he remarked that it is impossible to tell in advance whether a tank constructed in American factories will be used on the Russian front, in the Philippines or in eastern Siberia.

Canada and other parts of the vast British Empire likewise are increasing production, Even Britain's effort has not yet reached its peak, and will be speeded up by the universal conscription of men and women. As Churchill phrased it: “They have asked for total war.

Let us make sure that they get it.”

and sat with them Judge Scott is serving Court, Washington, D. C,|term in the Washington visited the courts of Mu-|ing been ‘appointed by }

Judge John L, McNelis and | Roosevelt and confirmed bY Dewey E. Myers, criminal| Senate. :

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