Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1942 — Page 18

the Columbia University pharmacy

corroded and didn’t close after they

a throats stinging.

9 in Hospital. ~NEW YORK, July 8 (U. P)—

Olcuds of greenish-yellow chlorine}

Bus swirled down the street. Pedesgasped and shop keepers slammed their doors and pulled down their windows. ~The scene was near Columbia niversity in New York. The time Was yesterday. The gas came from 8 container, one of four stored in

‘college building since 1918, when it was used for chemical warfare research, + Workmen were pulling the tanks out for scrap metal. The valves on each were opened slightly to deterinine whether the tanks were empty. : Valve Refuses to Close : On one, however, the valves were

4 Were opened. . Spouting gas, it was rushed to the street, down which the fumes

Scores fled with their eyes and

. Seventeen were felled, but police emergency squads treated eight who . were able to go home. Nine, more © seriously affected, were taken to hospitals. , College authorities estimated that Eu aot more than a pound of gas was . in the tank. i ——————— KILLED BY TRAIN + COLUMBUS, Ind., July 8 (U. P.). «John. L. Moore, 81, Hartsville, died yesterday after his automobile was struck by a freight train on the Hi south edge of Hope.

FOR RINGS AND NEW MOUNTINGS

ENROLLED AT GROUND SCHOOL

Quentin Quinn on W. Coast; Capt. Sims Reports; Father Joins Son.

Quentin IL. Quinn, 738 Elm st, now is at Minter Field, Cal.,, where he is receiving basic flying training in the army air corps. He will undertake an extensive study course in the ground school, be taught formation flying and take part in cross country flights.

John Smith Pvt. Crady

LEFT—John Harrison Smith,

boilermaker second class in the

¥ your body does ot have its normal, required amount of Vitamin B; Bs and Iron, you are undoubt- | edly anemic — feel worn out—lack energy ,==have little appetite | —and may be depressed and despondent. Don't continue to feel thispway! If you | iy deficient in Yitgmis B, B

Bo.

NERE'S WHAT SHOULD HELP YOU!

min Bs Bs and lron—as contained in _ - wine—will aid nature in' : sestoring and maintaining oy pep, vigor and Sreroy * of sound, robust health, fhe extent that blood build, iron and Vitamin 8: Ba ficiency is lessened. Vita. contains a very large Smount of Vitamin Bs B; (compare its formula with others) «and ample Iron, which aids Ee rich, red blood. - Always ask r it by name!

"| Claude Davis,

Three Sizes, 1.18, 1.89 & 3.39

KEENE DRUG STORES

‘Meridian and Ohio Delaware and Ohio 811 N. Delaware Mail Orders Filled—We Pay Postage

two years.

navy will leave tomorrow (Thursday) for assignment to a newly completed ship. Son of Mrs. Elizabeth Perkins, Oaklandon, Mr. Smith returned recently from combat duty in the Pacific. RIGHT—Pvt. William Crady now is in service with the United States marine corps at the new marine base at New River, N. C. He has been with the marines for about He is the son of Mrs. Carrie Crady, 931 Park ave.

» ” » The Army Recruiting office here

the following men:

Neal, 2027 Broadway; Riley Junior Finchum, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Finchum, 2720 Forest Manor; Clarence Lee Smith, son of Mrs. Leah Smith, 526 N. Centennial st.;

Box 636; William Henry Moran, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Moran, 1608 Livingston ave.; James Byron Shockley, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Shockley, 7936 Allisonville rd.; Paul Frederick Chapman, son of Mr Emma Campbell, 218 E. St. Joe st.; John Kendall McCain, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse McCain, Kokomo. Ralph Paul Ward, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ward, Kirklin; Doyne Eugene Jackson, son of Mrs. Anna Bugg, Hillsdale; Edward Ansted Huston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emery Huston, Connersville; James Robert Tucker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Burlie Tucker, Lebanon; Glenn Freeman Stidd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Stidd, 1412 Fletcher ave.; George Edwin Lynch, son of Mr. Donald Lynch, 1530 N, Illinois; George Arden Olinick, son of Mr, and Mrs. George C. Olinick, 2467 Park ave.; George Lawrence Hannel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hannel, 956 Dorman; Gold Bernard Kimmick, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Kimmick, 5936 Oak ave.; Carl Curtis Shook, son of Mr. and Mrs, Curtis Shook, 529 E. Lagrande st.; Ray Learner, son of Mrs. Pearl Learner, Kokomo. Keith Darwin Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith, Kokomo; Clinton Dow Baldwin, Nebraska, Ind.] ' Walter Ray Lunsford, son of Mr. Walter R. Lunsford, Westport; Albert Hamilton Dickey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Dickey, Newcastle; Gail Miller Grabill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Grabiil, Middletown; Robert Allen Hickman, son of Mrs. Pearl Swift, 638 W. 43d st.; Joueit Earl Linder, son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Linder, 276 N. Lynn st.; Calvin Ferris Landreth, 1150 Gimber st. Willard Lee Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Brazil; Hubert Leon Kellum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kellum, Anderson; Burl Albert Harmon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Veo Harmon, 1311 N. Belville; Ralph Elmer Woerner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Woerner, 1117 W. 30th st.; David Ayers Hearrell, son of -Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Hearrell, 88 S. 6th st., Beech Grove; Joseph William Chambers, son of Mrs. Katherine Daugherty, Bedford; Carl Herman Campbell, son of Mr. Orlando Campbell, Marion. :

Advertisement

today announced the enlistment of}

Roscoe Oscar Adams, son of Mrs, Goldie

Raymond Everett Blankenship, | son of Mrs. Lesta Blankenship, R. R. 4,|:3

the next two months.

over station WRBI, Columbus. Members of the band include Sergt. Irwin L. Clampitt, trumpet, Indianapolis; Sergt. Charles A. Worland, saxophone, Shelbyville; Pvt. Theodore Olezewski, saxophone, Gary; Pvt. Robert Miller, saxophone, North Manchester; Sergt. John B. Haehl, saxophone, Shelbyville; Pvt. Rollin R. Roller, trumpet, Richmond; Corp. James E. Jones, trumpet, Shelbyville; Sergt. Charles L. King, trumpet, Shelby-

E ville; Pvt. Peter C. Vlasic, trom|bone, Gary; Pvt. Wilbur L. Thomp-

son, pianist, Connersville; Corp. Robert E. Bates, bass, Newcastle, and Pvt. Gail E. Keifer, drums, Indianapolis, EJ ” Report at Great Lakes

Three Martinsville men have reported at the United States Naval Training station at Great Lakes, Ill, for training. They are John Norman Merideth, 17, son .of Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Merideth; Wendell Bruce Bolin, 21, ‘and Lloyd Earl Wagaman, 22, husband of Mrs. Bessie Wagaman., EJ 2 ”

Capt. James Lawrence Sims, 5121 Maple lane, has reported for active duty with the army air corps at Selfridge Field, Mich. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Sims. He attended public schools here and was graduated from Indiana university medical school in 1937.

» 8 8

Pvt. Carlisle Dale Harkins

LEFT—Pvt. Joseph E. Carlile, formerly of the Carlisle Dance studios, now is serving with the Medical Corps of the Army at Camp Robinson, Little Rock, Ark. RIGHT—Dale E. Harkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Harkins, 2044 E. Michigan st., is stationed with the United States Coasy Guard at Honolulu. ”n 2 2 A Hoosier veteran of world war I today is on his way to join his son in service with the navy. He is Maurice Myers, 44 years old, of Elnora. His son, Wayne Richard, is at the United States naval training station, Great Lakes, Ill. Mr. Myers and his son applied for enlistment together but the son was sent on ahead. The elder Myers served in the marire corps from 1916 to 1920 in France, Cuba, Haiti and Santo Domingo. » os ” Robert Dean Ehle, 21-year-old son of Mrs. Minnie Ehle, 713 Fuller dr, has been transferred for radio training to the U. 8. naval receiving station at Boston. A graduate of Technical high school, Mr. Ehle worked at radio station WIRE and wrote the

“Sports and Men” program, a former WIRE Sunday feature.

33000 Miles of War By Raymond Clapper

NEW YORK—JULY 8, Raymond Clapper is now on a 4-week vacation from your paper, but you can still read . him in this week’s Liberty Magazi titled Miles of War,” Clapper tells of flying

| article

k| half-way

| torn world.

DESCRIBING THE

FLIGHT ; excitin my newspaper life,” Mr.

how a sacred cow almost wrecked his lane in Calcutta . . . how it felt to. fy in a streamlined transport over the of Eden .. . how it felt to see ultra-modern American airports in the heart of the African jungle.

Garden

WHAT 18 LIFE LIRE for Ameri ; “soldiers in this j Je? How

his article in In -an “33,000 Mr.

ine.

round a war-

as “the most adventure of Clapper tells

Messrs. Cla

chinery of war?. What primitive lands are called “the white man’s graveyard?” For Raymond Clapper’s answers, read

“HOW SOLDIERS ARE KEPT WELL,” an article by Morris Markey in the same issue of Liberty, tells how the U. S. Army curbs the disease that is the greatest curse of all armies.

“I LIKE BIG BUSINESS, ” writes Thurman Arnold, Assistant Attorney General of the U.S Liberty. But Mr. Arnold ‘also says he doesn’t like big mgnopotiss and patent

THESE TIMELY ARTICLES per, Markey and Arnol the five fiction stories, as well as many othe interesting features, are typical of ‘you will find in Liberty ever) read Liberty |

3

Liberty—out today.

.» in this week's

Reg istering Joy Over Pay Increase

Privates Bernard Myers, J. S. White, J. Wohifart and J. R. Arrington (left to right) register joy on receiving their pay raise from Uncle Sam. The men are stationed at Ft. Meade.

Hoosier musicians at Fi. Benning, Ga., now are entertaining nightly with dance music after months of practice.

They are booked solid for

Sergt. Melville Webster Jr., clarinetist from Elkhart, directs the band and arranges its engagements, which chiefly are social functions of officers and enlisted men of Ft. Benning. It also broadcasts regularly

a. 88

Sergt. Edward. Buris

Edward M. Buris, son of Mrs. Grace Buris of 232 N. Oriental st., has been promoted from private _first class to technical sergeant. He has been in the army one year and is stationed at Duncan field. 2 5 = Report for Duty

A total of 26 Indianapolis men now are undergoing recruit training at the U. S. naval training station at Great Lakes, Ill. They reported for duty last week. They will be “toughened” and then given aptitude tests to determine whether they will be given specialized training or assigned to duty aboard a navy ship, They include: : Oren Delbert Thompson, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Thompson, 1218 Blaine ave.; Neville Jackson Cooper, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Cooper, 812 Parkway st.; Dietz Marsh Dietz, 27, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Z. Dietz, Bratcher Hart, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hart, 457 Haugh st.; Kenneth Franklin Hayes, 25, son of Mrs. Inez Hayes, 3122 Kenwood ave.; Roy Allen Money, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Money, R. R. 13; Bruce Paynter, 18, ‘son of Mrs. Minnie Paynter, 1111 Olin’ ave,; Darlton Melwood Schimpf, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Schimpf, 3319 N. Capitol ave.; Paul Eugene Catron, 23, husband of Maxine Evelyn Catron, 43 S. Chester st.; George Anthony Shaffer, 23, of 3812 Byram ave.; George William Coffin, 21, son of Mrs. Grace Coffin, 3338 College ave., Also Walter Mahlon Howser Jr., 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Howser, 820 N. Jefferson ave.; Joseph Sylvester O’Brien, 19, son of Mrs. Ruth Powell, 1212 E. Washington st.; Alpha Glen Huffman, 31, husband of Genevieve Huffman, 947 Shelby st.; Jack Joseph Edwards, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Jeffries, 3947 N.- Illinois st.; Martin Dudley Gody, 18, son of Mr.

Clarence Edward Bellows 22, son of Mr. Ross Bellows, 1322 W. Ray st.; James Allen Sherber, 25, son of Mrs. Minnie Sherber, 15 E. .18th. st.; Edward Jackson Conrad, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Conrad, R. R. No. 5; Kenneth Leon James, 25, son of Mrs. Harriet James, R. R. No. 20; Wilber Gene Quillen, 18, son of Mrs. Opal Quillen, 28 N. Keystone; Paul Raymond Thompson, 25, son of Mrs. Clara Thompson, 2015 E. Riverside dr.; Arthur Leroy Easterday, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Easterday, R. R. No. 19; Don Arthur, 27, husband of Elsie Louise Arthur, 718 N. Emerson ave.; Thomas William Oaks, 18, son of Mrs. Elsie Oaks, 917 English ave.; Richard Louis Stearman, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse George Stearman, 3333 N. Tacoma St.

LAND: SUIT BROUGHT | BY STATE INDIANS

SOUTH BEND, Ind, July 8 (U. P.).—A federal court suit to test the claims of Miami Indians to land condemned by the government for a naval air training station

‘|near Peru was headed for the higher

courts today after counsel for the

' | Indians temporarily blocked pay-

‘ment of $10,500 to two present titleholders. Federal District Judge Thomas W. Slick yesterday overruled a motion for abatement by ‘counsel for Charles Bondy, lineal descendant of tribal chiefs, and ordered that Mr. and Mrs. Fred Deisch,| Miami county, be paid $10,500 for

|their packet of the condemned

land. He delayed the order until July 15, however, when Mr, Bondy served otis, ‘of appeal. ~

SPEC IAL

{muzzle.

| converted manufacturing plas.

R. R. 6; Fred}

and Mrs. E. J. Cody, 731 8S. Temple ave.; |

Siegfried Line. By JAMES N. DANIEI

Times Special Writer § FT. BELVOIR, Va., July 8.-{

outfit with the kerosene heate time it blew off the lean-to Milly’s house, borrow some

trations for Dante’s “Inferno you have the army’s new thrower. - Considered far better: th

thrower was demonstrated re at the engineers’ school her group of allied military obs and several hundred U. S. arm didates for commissions.

Hits 2300 Degrees

The demonstration opened pine wood clearing with a

on operation. Briefly,"and w revealing any secrets, the weighs 68 pounds loaded and diagramatically, with two ta the firer’s right side, connectin a three-foot pipe length, the proper. At the hilt is a le feeding out the fuel. ' Near other controls for igniting: it gun is fired in brief bursts, th leaping forward in a great whoosh, burning at 2300 ¢ F. then going ‘up in a billiwi cloud of black smoke with © flashes of fire in the center

‘Feel the Heat’ '

Our new fire-spitter is so that a filling station attenda learn to handle it; so safe. from the operator’s end, that glov B are unnecessary.

otherwise nigh impregnabl wherein, protected by ro

sweep the field without exjx more than the eye slit and the: There is just one where American troops will these in quantity—the Siegfricii |

Blasts Pillboxes

The engineers demonstrate: to take a pillbox, a real one Over in the woods, the lesiie a task force fired a pyrotechni: tol in the air, signalizing the |‘ close in” While a concealed me Dinegun crew kept up a steady ‘fire” on the pillbox’s embrasure, f rikers dashed and crawled up fro i the side. First to abandon cov: was the flame thrower, accompari:d by one assistant to open the pi‘ssure valve and a third man to either if wounded. Sinking 1 one knee he shot a blast of liqui! against the embrasure, turnii

smoke and carbon monoxide |

ASKS FOR TYPEWRITER! WASHINGTON, July 8 (U |! War Production Chief Don: Nelson today called on pri dustry to sell to the army an some two-thirds of the 500,000 ¢ writers needed by the armed ices and unobtainable from, :

JOIN UP

IA TIE

lieve]

Gerald Wieland -

What the well-dressed paratrooper should wear is modeled here by Gerald W. Wieland, Technical high school graduate and Eli Lilly & Co. employee. Jumper Wieland received his wings as a graduate parachutist several days ago at Ft. Benning, Ga. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Wieland, 6740 E. 13th st. and received his early infantry training at Camp Wheeler, Ga. ;

Draft Official Can't Get Tires

BOISE, Ida., July 8 (U. P.).— The county tire rationing board has rejected an application by Lieut. Col. Norman B. Adkison of the Idaho selective service staff for two new tires for his automobile. “I wouldn’t mind so much,” he said, “but they claimed it had not been established that selective service is engaged in activity essential to the war effort.”

SUGGESTS CHANGE IN STREET PREFERENCE

The safety board is to recommend an ordinance giving Pennsylvania st. preference over 46th st. at the next city council meeting. The board took its action on the advice of James E. Loer, city traffic engineer. Some time ago, 46th st. was made preferential except where it intersected Capitol ave., Illinois st., Me-

ridian st, Washington blvd, Cen-|

tral and College’ aves. Mr. Loer said the change would eliminate confusion at the intersection. |

Share a Quart. Seis Save a Crown

RAPS ARNOLD:

Charges He Misleads Public And Congress in Fight On Patents.

new YORK, July 8 (U. P)— George E. Folk, special patent adviser for the National Association of Manufacturers, accused Assistant Attorney General Thurman Arnold today of “ignorantly or deliberately” misleading congress and the public about patents and industry’s war production, “Although Arnold has led congress and the public to believe that patents have held up the war program, the fact is that the government has long had power to have anything produced for it at any time, in war or peace, regardless of

patents,” he said in a report tol}

the N. A. M.

“The simple truth is that thel| government could have had plants|{

built to produce synthetic rubber; aluminum, magnesium, optical instruments, chemicals, or anything else it wanted, and it could have used the processes covered by anybody’s patent.

U. S. Had Free Hand

No patent holder, if he had tried, could have stopped the governmant

from using his patented inventions|| in any kind of industrial expansion |}

for government. purposes. ) “Thurman Arnold and’ his associates in the department of justice are engineering one .of the modern miracles of propaganda in the present attack on the patent system and industry’s patent practices. “The patent system is a creation of man and is by no means perfeat, but it is unfortunate that the real issues involved in constructive

companiment ‘of sensational

licify reflecting en the patriotism of patent holders who have been

among the major contributors to

the war effort.”

ARGENTINE CURBS SHIPS BUENOS AIRES, July 8 (U. PD.

—A presidential decree’today pro=

hibited Argentine merchant ships from entering the United States eastern’ coastal zone because of the axis submarine menace.

BIG GUNS STAGE DUEL

LONDON, July 8 (U. P.).—British and - German long range guns duelled across the Dover strait in the early hours today for the first time in several weeks. a il

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EACH. and every month, through compliance with government restrictions, thousands upon thousands of pounds of Champagne Velvet crowns are saved for Uncle Sam . . . enough crowns each month to make - over 6,000 rifles or close to 3,000,000 steel jackets for bullets to go with them.

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