Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1942 — Page 21

| EACH ACH TROOP

Firs Meeting i in: Course |

e Lasting Seven Weeks

eld in Lebanon.

Boy| Scouts . began receiving in- : tensiv training in emergency situations: a week after this country entered the war, Today the Ints are ready for any poss : emerge y.

IN on the training list are the| scouts in Boone, Montgomery, Hend- | |

ticks d Clinton counties. The first

ro in the seven-week training period was held It t night at Lebanen. | | s for this ic course are Earl first aid; Wesley Gilbert, ropes, ‘and Baine Freeman, physical education. Other scout leaders will © co-operate.

Ls ‘program has been conducted by the Scout organization for .many years. |The Indianapolis Council trains four or five boys in each troop. Under system the trained boys can § thoi as leaders in a case of Sere

eka the Lebanon Courtare to be held each Tuesday

# ”

Distt Divided

£4) | Ice, Council president, met this v with the nominating committee: for officers of the West Side ‘of the Council. “activity has! increased to ‘extent that ‘the Marion ‘district now is being difour districts. \ who met with Mr. Ice are . J. Meyers, J. M..Stobal, Roscoe Conkle, H. R.' Coughlin, Parker Btn nd Dale Sommers. Meeting eek they will announce the Rave officers. ‘A

»

meeting was held this week the Sotith Side nominating ig composed of Lloyd Byrne, chairm John Efroymson, E. L. Nervis d Robert Bidlack. All- officers the four divisions : are expected to be named and ative in their programs ‘within | the next 10 days or two weeks. | 8 # #8 west Side Scouts meet tonight at the Hawthorne Community Center, 2440 E. Ohio St, for their rally. Special events and competition in scout are .on the agenda. red Le. owntown scout troops meet af the First Presbyterian Church Friday. ng for a business and sosion, + 8 8 8 b Pack at Garden de, holds a charter” night evening. ' A banquet and ent are on the head‘schedule. » 2 8

Hall was selected today {locale for the March 7 Boy Scout Council Rally. It’s the biggest e nt in March and more than 18 fr teams will compete in - events.

ity,

# flit

Don’t be discouraged when yo nagging, painful oo from a functional kidney disturbance. All you may need for Wmisvelous relief is what doctors call. diuretic. help. Try roven, sn «to “take Gold es. nly 35¢. Must help—or money back!

RTI LI TAN W CEA

Town Hall Guest

] r. Ricardo Alfaro

Former Panama President To Speak Saturday At English’s.

“The olidarity and Defense of the Americas” will be the subject of Dr. Ricardo Alfaro, former president of Panama, when he speaks before the In polis Town Hall at 11 a. m. Saturdayiat English’s. For 33 y his country.and the Pan-:\ ierican| ideal in the field of diplomacy. During his palitical career he has been premier of the cabinet, minister plenipotentiary to the U. S. and vice president of his country. After serving his presidential term, he returned to Washington, D. C., as. minister. While ‘holding this position he negotiated the Panama Canal Treaty with Secretary of State Cordell Hull. Col. Alvin M. Owsley will" introduce Dr. Alfaro and will: preside at the luncheon in the Columbia Club following the lecture.

NEBRASKA ALUMNI WILL SEE MOVIE

A motion picture filmed on the campus . of . the University of Nebraska ‘will be shown when the Indianapolis alumni celebrate the 73d charter day of the university's founding. The club will hold a dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. Saturday at the home of the Rev. and Mrs. Orien W. Fifer, 3515 Winthrop Ave. The local celebration is one of many held throughout the world by alumni and former students to mark the chartering by the

|| Nebraska Legislature Feb. 15, 1869.

Mrs. Lydia Gadd, chairman, and Mrs. Homer E. Grosbach comprise the nominating committee for the election officers to be held Saturday. Present officers of the club include William H. Newcomer, president; Mrs. Fifer, vice president; Mrs. John Cejnar, secretary, and Mr. Grosbach, treasurer. Dr. Fifer is vice president of Zone 6 of the national alumni organization and Mrs. Cejnar is secretary-treasurer. Reservations for the meeting may be made with Mrs. Grosbach, Mrs. Gadd, Mrs. Cejnar, and Mrs. J. A.

Fry.

16 FROM CITY AMONG NEW |. U. STUDENTS

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Feb. 18.— Sixteen Indianapolis students are among the 143 who entered Indiana University for the first time this semester. They are: Walter Dawson, 862 W. 27th St.; Joe Dobbins, 205 E. 49th St.; Richard Friendland, 5678 N. Meridian St.! Jack Hanna, 3605 Balsam Ave.; Ralph Hayn, 2009 N. Talbot st.; Jack Jaffe, 5830 Washington Blvd; Irene Kasle, 3201° N. Meridian St.; Paul Kirkhoff, 918 E. Kessler Blvd.; Helen Klotz, 4048 E. 38th St.; Jeannette Le Saulnier, 1347 N. Pennsylvania St.; Leslie Little, 958 N. Audubon Road; Richard Mohr, 5268 Kenwood Ave.; Bobby Moss, 827 N. Beville Ave.; Thomas Reese, 5417 Hibben Ave.; William Segar, 4634 N. Penn-

944 Mills® Ave.

‘Nervousness,

To jelde d, Ha

rs, Alvers. Tell: 7; Case.

‘after time er time grateful men and pen -have béer so remarkably re‘of their distress by Retonga ‘months or years afterward! | “have again come forward ‘to ers suffering. as. they once ‘Retonga relieved their dis-||

loss of}

did 1 tress from. indigestion,

Advertimomant

REGAINED 18 LBS. TAKING RETONGA AND NOW WEIGH 120 LBS.”

. of Distress. ‘Distress From Indiand

gish A Elimination Prompty. States

ears Dr. Alfaro h ¢ served| |

sylvania ‘St, and Robert. Wallace, |

SCAN UNION LINK WITH DAIRYMEN

United Mine Workers Claim

125,000 Farm Members;

. Affects Lewis’ Future.

By FRED W. PERKINS Times Special. Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—Farmer organizers are beginning to look

« |with suspicion at labor organizers.

| The National Co-operative Milk Producers Assn., through its direct ing board, meeting here Thursday, will look into a “membership men=ace” created by the organizing activities of a labor ‘union, the United Mine Workers, which already

as members and says it will have four times that many in a month or so. ' The American Farm Bureau Federation, which embraces more than 500,000 farm families in 40 states,

recently. condemned the aggressive tactics of the mine workers in the farm field. Further steps await a meeting early in March of the federation’s board of directors.

Lewis Figures in Conflict

| The situation holds the threat of a new kind of jurisdictional conflict which might be of great magnitude and affect the future history of minority pressure groups in relation to national legislation and policies. John L. Lewis, head of the United Mine Workers, will be prominent in the conflict. The outcome may determine his chances of heading up a labor-farmer coalition in American politics, which his actions indicate he has been aiming at since he became a national figure in the first few years of the New Deal. Mr. Lewis has not appeared openly in-the farmer organizing drive. But his aides are active. They work through District 50 of the United Mine Workers—District 50 being probably the most remarkable organization that ever has appeared in labor circles.

Activities Extended District 50 was founded to or-

coal by-product industries, and from that was extended to chemicals and many other commodities, including perfume. The link with dairy farming, according to Ora Gasaway, District 50 president, is that such products as plastic buttons trace back to coal, and plastic buttons also are made from casein, a derivative of milk. Some kinds of perfume also have a remote ancestor in coal. _Coal’s by-products, potential and already developed, are so numerous that District 50’s possible organizing field is of tremendous scope— a scope which involves probable conflict with many other unions and now with the farmers’ organizations.

claims at least 25,000 dairy farmers

ganize the workers in coke and|-

When Harry Stevens, dergoing recruit tr Navy at the Great: Training Station, requests that he be allowed to serve wi is brother, Raymond, a petty officer, they'll tell him to sign a slip entitled— ial Order— Brother.” Harry will put down on the slip his brother’s name, rating, and where he is serving. And the chances are about 10 to oné that Stevens : “i brothers will be together very Harry Stevens shortly, because. that’s one thing the Navy tries to do—allow ‘brothers or fathers and sons to serve together. Harry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Stevens, 1117 Charles St. He enlisted three weeks a, He formerly worked at the and Container Corp. | ” ” ”

Accepted as ’Chutists

Gordon L. Hogue, 2712 W. Washington St, has been accepted ‘by the U. S. Army as a parachute trooper, and has heen sent to Pfs Benning, Ga., for training. Other recent enlistments of local men in the Army include:

St.; Wilbur L. Wolfe, 1438 W. Pruitt St.; William E. Maggiore, 1116 N. Capitol Ave.; Gordon :K.| Cohn, 5474 N. Capitol Ave; John W. LaBar, 1446 Spann Ave.; James K.: Evans, 133 E. 224 St., and J A. Kiser, 3060 N. Meridian St,

Serves in Air Corps

Second Lieut. Edward W. Hess, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hess, 5934 Crittenden Ave., is one of those who completed his training and maneuvers Just in time ‘to join the fray : Dec. T. Lieut. Hess was graduated from Lowry Field, Denver, Colo., last’ June, and had been on maneuvers until Jan. 30. Home on leave when the lid blew off, he : was rushed to the West Coast ldeut- Hess the drmament division of the Air Corps. Lieut. Hess was graduated from Technical High School in 1936, and was within six months. of graduation from Indiana University when he entered training.

James R. Turner, 971 N. Delaware|:

and sailed immediately. He is in!

Navy AH mpts to Keep ‘Brothers in Same Branch

15 From Here at Center

Times Special MONTGOMERY, Ala., Feb, 18.— Among the 104 Hoosiers who have entered the Replacement Training Center at Maxwell Field, -headquarters of the Southeast Air Corps Training Center, since the first of|soc the year are Sess 15 Indianapolis men: Conrad Dwaine Abbitt, 4025 Washington Blvd.; Edward William Boyers. 1656 N. Delaware St.; James Leland Carnes, 520 E, Troy Ave. George, Porter Davis, 426 Berkley Road; Jack Julian Flynn, 442 W. 46th St.; Harry Cecil Foster, 43 N. Bradley St.; Claud Luther Harris, 428 N. Alabama St: Albert Johnson, 1125 ‘W. 33d St.; Warren I. Magzeline, 2730 Forest Manor Ave. and Robert DeWitt Morgan, 4504 Broadway. Maurice Leo Plummer, R. R. 1; Elmer L. Regula, 2348 Guilford Ave.; Albert DeWitt Romans Jr., 424 N. Riley Ave.; William Earl Swinford,

5601 N. Michigan Rd. and John}.

Roger Sullivan, 2905 Washington

Blvd.

PUPILS WILL TALK TO PURDUE OFFICIAL

C. E. Dammon, director of admissions for Purdue University, will hold conferences Friday morning with prospective students at Technical High School and Friday afternoon at Shortridge. Prom 4 to 6 p. m. and 7:30 ta 10 p. m. he will be at the I. U. Extension, 122 E.. Michigan St. The conferences refer to students who plan to enter either the sum-

Dr. Bloch of Chicago U. To Address Kirshbaum

Forum Sunday.

Dr. Henry Simon Bloch, Chicago University economist, will address the Jewish Community Center Association’s Open Forum at 8 p. m. Sunday at the Kirshbaum Center. Dr. Bloch takes the place of Miss Janet Flanner, who was originally scheduled by the forum but was un~ able to fulfill her engagement. He will discuss “Taxes, Morale and Your Pocketbook.’ Dr. Bloch

(Dutch and English and among his writings are several papers on defense financing. He is co-author of “Economic: Mobilization,” a pamphlet published by the American Council of Public Affairs in 1940. This is the fifth lecture in the current Open Forum series which is conducted by the Center association. Mrs. David Lurvey, management committee chairman, will preside, . Officers of the association -are: Theodore R. Dann, president; Allan Kahn, vice president; Mrs. I. G. Kahn, secretary; Samuel Kroot, treasurer, and Allan Bloom, general secretary.

CANTEEN OPERATED BY V. F. W. AUXILIARY

The service men’s canteen on the fourth floor of the Federal Building was in charge of members of the Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Sergt. Ralph Barker - Post, , Veterans of Foreign Wars today. Mrs. Mabel Silhernagle is chairman of the group, which serves

mer term, beginning May 6, or the fall term, beginning Aug. 31.

T

To No

Other Instrunfents available on the same plan.

BATON TWIRLING CLASSES

Every Wednesday

741 9P. M. Entoll now. Half

hour lessons, 25¢ ‘each,

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There's satisfaction in knowing that the 6%:¢ revenue tax you pay on every pack of twenty cigarettes is doing its bit for Uncle Sam Every time you buy Chesterfields you get the satisfaction of a smoke that's definitely MILDER, far COOLER

128 N. Pennsylvania

sandwiches and hot and cold drinks to men enlisting in the services.

RUMPET

use at home for 10 weeks!

charge at all for the use of the

instrument. And you get 10 PRIVATE LESSONS on the trumpet, for only $1.00 a week. Start NOW, . . play in your SCHOOL BAND.

Peardons

BY ECONOMIST

sional Engineers will meet ai the’

‘| trends

has published his works in French,|,

“|HOOSIER - ENGINEER

- GROUP TO CONVENE

The Indiana Society of Profes-

Indiana State Board of Eealth Building, 1098 W. Michigan 8k, at 8 p. m, tomorrow. The Suey will study the new mds in’ engineering Gating which vil include discussior of

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| CHESTERFIELDS are mighty important in}

* this man's army.New

. recruit or old-timer... E

they all like the ciga- :

346,666

WILLIAM TRACY and ELYSE KNOX (a Chesterfield girl), starring in Hal Roach’s comedy hit

HAY FOOT.

Our movie stars are doing af grand job selling defense bonds 3 ‘and entertaining our soldiers, Many of them choose Chesterfield to send fo men in uniform. | °

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AT DA

‘Col. VIVIAN J. OLSEN, i ‘Cadet MARIE HOFFMAN of the Women's Defense Cadets of America. This and © similar wi gunizatiohs send