Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1942 — Page 4
-. ‘se uring Outings LOUIS, Sept. 28° (U.-P)— en young St. Louis men | Women ‘have combined the | Salvage drive with their #nd outings and in the past r weeks have turned up eight of scrap metal, most of it 'd from river bottoms and
The: young women scout the tor’ where they are holding ir steak fries and when they. | a piece of metal they call
ago ‘their haul was 2500~pound iron’ beam. They ow have their eye. on six 33t iron rails in an old foot and four girders on a piece
LOAN AGENGES
BUY WAR BONDS
Indiana “and Michigan Put $20,331,000 in During First 8 Months.
. Times Special : WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 —Indiana and Michigan savings and loan
Home Loan bank of Indianapolis aided the government’s war, financ-
331,000 in the first eight months of
associations served by the Federal|f
dredging machinery embedded
a river. bottom.
East Yard—IR-1191 South Yard—MA-8585 North Yard—WA-2481
| J STOKER COAL Specialists 9k Well Seasoned FIREWOOD
§ “IRON FIREMAN" STOKERS | © “LIBERAL TERMS!
~ ®@ Sanitary Pout Lip: . ® No Bottle Wash ® No Bottle Return ® Less Storage Space
“Sold . by your neighborhood grocer and A&P Food Stores
‘OUR 31TH YEAR and ONE OF OUR BEST
Sadianapolis Life Jusurance Som ny o soon enter its 38th . Em is the years has irl ar Complete, efficient service. Thoro! Bly trained representatives, afety, above all else. $26,000,000 has been Da and be: eficiaries ce in force over $125,000 or write for information on your life insurance problem
paid to Insur-
INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSUR-
ANCE COMPANY
Downtown Agencies 1002S Confglidated Hons Office, 2d N. Meridian Street, EDWARD B Presi A. LEROY B, BAum, m sent, Vice President.
Indianapolis bank, Mr. Greene re-
FURNACES—STOKERS GAS BURNERS — OIL BURNERS
and repairing service. Phone for free inspection.
L1-4576
HALL-NEAL
FURNACE CO. 1322-32 N. CAPITOL AVE.
| these institutions loaned $37,510,000
| “Indiana’s Oldest Credit Jewelers
| SPECIAL EASY TERMS {1 Do You Know That We
this year, it was reported today. Fred T. Greene, president of the Indianapolis bank, listed several major activities of member associations and the bank in ‘support ‘of the treasury program. These included purchases by the associations of war savings bonds and other government obligations totaling $8,004,000, sales of $8,424,000 in war bonds to the public and the purchase of $1,550,000 worth of government bonds by the bank itself. In addition, the bank’s member associations retired $2,263,000 of government funds invested in their shares if previous years, to release those funds to the war program. “During the first eight months, the public invested $8,487,664 in shares of member associations in Indiana and Michigan,” Dr. Greene reported, “Over the same period, the associations themselves not only placed nearly an equal amount in government securities, chiefly war savings bonds, but also Sold an equivalent amount.in war bonds in their communities,
Most Qualify
“Including the direct purchases of bonds by their Indianapolis bank, these associations made $2.39 available to the government for every new dollar invested in their shares by the public.” The Indianapolis hank, one of the 12 regional] (banks of the federal home loan bank system, is the reserve credit institution for 218 member associations in the two states. Practically all of them have qualified as agents of the treasury for the isquance of war bonds.
Repayments Gain
Reflecting the increased liquidity of the member institutions of the
ported that up to Sept. 21 repayments by members were $3,336,000 -in%excess of new advances made by the bank since Jan. 1. Members’ holdings of capital stock in the district bank increased by $759,000 since the beginning of the year. They reported cash holdings as of Aug. 31 in excess of $20,000,000,
‘area reduced one-third below nor-
. Guy A. Voorhees, engineer with
’i§ a fuel without soot or fly-ash
dly-ashes and cannot be cleaned yout. very ‘well, Mr. Voorhees said.
Changing From Oil to Coal
ing program to the extent. of $20, SE
mmm seme
Guy A. Voorhees, Hall-Neal Furnace Co. engineer, measures fur-
nace for stoker installation,
® 8 =
Many Home-Owners Here
Converting Heating Units
Because the government has ordered fuel oil shipments to this
mal consumption, many Indianapolis home owners are converte ing their oil heating units to coal burning furnaces, according to
the Hall-Neal Furnace Co. at 1324 N. Capitol ave. There are two ways for converting an oil’ furnace, Mr. Voorhees pointed out. Either stokers can be substituted or hand-firing equipment can be installed. Mr. Voorhees said that eil furnaces cannot be converted to hand-fired arrangements very easily in most cases. In his opinion, it is more practical to use only a stoker in such a case. The chief difficulty is that oil
and oil furnaces have often been designed with long, crooked flluegas passages. These choke up with
Thus it is better in such cases to
substitute: only with stokers.
. There are a great number. of furnaces in the Indianapolis area which are actually coal-burning furnaces with oil units installed
in them. These can be converted either to stoker or hand-firing arrangements for coal, Mr. Voorhees said. : It was emphasized that a trained and experienced heating engineer should be called to do the work. Mr. Voorhees pointed out that there is one make of oil-burning furnace which cannot be converted to any kind of coal burning. Many home-owners, he said, are not quite sure of the possibilities of their own equips ment and thus should consult a specialist before ordering any changes. ‘ The manufacture of domestic stokers has been halted altogether, he said, and thus stocks are somewhat limited. The Hall-Neal company: bought the entire warehouse stock of stokers from another concern recently, thus augmenting: its own supply.
indicating that they can continue their purchase of U. S. bonds and at the same time maintain their regular volume of needed home financing for war workers and others, Mr. Greene said. During the first eight months,
for home financing purposes, the bulk of which was advanced in war production centers.
.TO ALLISON POST
W. G. Guthrie, works manager of the Allison division of General Motors Corp., today ainounced the appointment of J. C. Cunningham as general superintendent to succeed Bert Conway who has resigned to e a position outside of General Motors. Cunningham was formerly assisthnt general Superintendent. He came to the Allison division in August, 1940,.-from the. General Motors overseas operations.
—Avid readers of the agriculture department's “weekly station report of division of dry land agriculture” henceforth will have to lull them-
CUNNINGHAM NAMED [selves to sleep with something else.
who have been accustomed to counting the days between appearances of the “insect pest survey bulletin,” “the agricultural situation in relation to banking,” credit,” and the “bulletin on current hydraulic Jaboratory research.”
what Director Elmer Davis of the office of war informgtion calls “unnecessary information” and—239 of them:in all—has ordered discontinued for the duration.
war information,” as the OWI puts it, Mr.Davis also decreed the cur-
Sleep Problem As OWI Li
WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (U. P.).
The same thing goes for those
“jewelry store
Thrilling or not, they constitute
JIn order to “clear channels for
! e Complicated e . - mits Pamphlets tailment of 284 other government publications and, at the same time, ruled: in. the case of such publica~ tions as are permitted to survive that they shall be distributed only “on the basis of specific requests.” The CWI's blue pencil bit deep and ruthlessly, eliminating such inspirational items as “we have the power,” published by the rural electrification administration, and the agriculture department's “recreational news letter.” The latter’s publishing business was harder hit than that of ary other department or agency. Apparently with a view to locking the stable after the horse was stolen, the OWI also discontinued a “general information: pamphlet” on Hawaii, about which the Ja
had gained. considerable data prior to last Dec. 7.
p to 3 Years to Pay
ALL PURPOSE
| Fish, Poultry, ts, Freeze "yc. ver later het bfices are ‘wah ot get the Some a and Merchant, Ath a
or d s. Have in your
STATE WHEAT LOANS
TOTAL TWO MILLION
Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 28.—Commodity Credit Corp. wheat loans in Indiana amounted to $2,145,054.97
on Sept. 12, the agriculture depart-
ment announced today. ‘ There were 9725 loans. on the
1942 crop of which 1,641,655 bushels is stored in warehouses and 58,711 on farms, the report shows.
- A total of 242915 loans on
Oil Products Put In Glass Bottles
Times Special CHICAGO, Sept. 28.—Substitution of glass bottles for tin cans in’ certain’ petroleum specialty products and lubricants was announced today by Standard Oil Co. of Indiana. Tin plate thus saved will make approximately 8,000,000 tin cans of the standard No. 2 size for military rations. Sprays, polishes, auto cleaners and waxes and cream separator oils are among the products
British Believe May Have Models wha | Go Up Bight Miles.
LONDON, Sept. 28.—Further de-
tails of the Germans’ sub-strato-| sphere plane, the Junkers-86, were! given in the latest issue of The| Aetoplase; British. Sviatien miagh
zine, “The ultra-modern plane comes in two editions, the reconnaissance type known as the 86-P-1, and the strato-bomber, with the designation 86-P2, Both have pressure cabins and are powered by two 1000-horse-power -Junkers Juno-207, six-cylin-der, opposed-piston, compressionignition motors, with exhaust-driven
plane, have a ceiling of about 48 feet, which makes their destruction by anti-aircraft fire, or interception by fighters,. difficult, So far, neither the British nor Americans have claimed the destruction of such aircraft, although
they have been reported over Eng-|Dr. John W. Geller of Indianapolis land on several occasions, flying at|was elected president of the Indiana more than 40,000 feet. Whether or|University Dental School Alumni Nghters that can func- [association at its annual meeting tion at such high altitudes is a mil- (on the campus here Saturday.
not we have
itary ' secret.
The Germans are undoubtedly|ington, who was elected last year,
paying a great deal of attention to the possibilities of stratosphere planes and it is possible that they have other models which will eventually perform at more than eight
. |miles above the earth.
PLANES ATTACK AXIS |i
REAR LINES IN EGYPT
CAIRO, Sept. 28 (U. P.).—Allied planes successfully attacked axis
transport and ammunition trucks|?
along the enemy’s rear communication lines, yesterday, while air ac-
Frederick W. Wright Jr., aviation cadet at the naval reserve avia-
tion base at Peru, Ind., polishes off the number “13” of his plane after
having the honor of making the first student solo flight at the new field. Comm. P. T. Stonemetsz, base. commander, congratulates him after his successful trip. Cadet Wright's home is in Boonton, N. J. He attended Lehigh university and enlisted in the naval reserve last January. He Npuried to the Peru base Sept. 10, afipr pre-Aight walning at Chapel Hill, N. C,
DR. GELLER “HEADS I. U. DENTAL ALUMNI
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Sept. 28.—
was. installed as president’and will serve during the coming year. Dr. J. W. Huckleberry of Indianapolis is the retiring president. Dr. Sumner X. Pallardy of Indianapolis is the permanent secretary.
OBSERVE FRIENDS NIGHT Indianapolis chapter 393, O. E. 8.,
Dr. T. Charles Smiley of Wash-
Morris st.
2,
cored
tivity over the Egyptian battle area|} was on a reduced scale, an official}?
communique reported today.
Saturday night southwest of Alexandria and a Heinkel-111 was brought down in the same area last night, the communique said. allied plane was lost.
WAR EFFORT TOPIC FOR OPTOMETRISTS
“Optometrists in the War Effort”
One|?
will be the subject at the meeting?
at 7:30 p. m, Friday of the Indiana optometrists who will gather at the Hotel Severin.
the Optometric Extension program. He is from Duncan; Okla. He will discuss new procedures in visual » resulting from the demands of the armed forces and defense industries.
"War Bonds 7 ! Jewelry, Heirlooms
You have some of these valuables. Check to see if you know where they are . . . and if they're SAFE!
| YL, ’é
MORTUARY
in a BANK VAULT
aeamsr THEFT, FIRE, LOSS
Every one of you knows of some one who has had a home ransacked or burned; some one who, through carelessness,
has lost valuables or records prized highly. Insurance will
cover some losses, but many things you
will celebrate friends night at 8 p. m. tomorrow at its temple, 1522 W.
[cut Two Days From Fives | Day Outfitting Record ..
On Newest Ship.
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 28 (U,
P.) ~Henry J Kaiser's new 10,500-
ton Liberty ship Joseph N. Teal, which set new world records: from her keel-laying to her delivery to the government Saturday night, was being made ready today to go on
{duty with the cargo fleet.
The Teal’s delivery to the marie time commission just 13 days after her keel was laid by the Oregon Shipbuilding Co., bettered by 168 days the record formerly held by Kaiser's Richmond, Cal, shipyard and improved by two days the fiveday outfitting record held by the Portland and Richmond yards. The vessel broke the launching record of 24 days when it slipped into the Willamette river Sept. 23 after being on the ways but 10 days. The Teal was the 75th Liberty ship constructed and delivered by the Portland shipyard since the delivery of the Star of Oregon one year ago today.
25 DIE IN PLANE CRASH VICHY, Sept. 28 (U. P.) —Twens ty-five persons were burned to death when a heavily loaded Air France plane caught fire in a forced lande ing 10 minutes after taking off from the Algiers airport yesterday on its
placed. Our experience proves that insurance policies, securities, deeds, sbsfragis valuables, records are kepf in two
regular flight to Casa Blanca.
0 0 FAMILIES
PT
OR AIR ; RAID
own can not be re-
a heb
ls te pT i
{or could your iver] lay hands on the ji wanted without searching? The loss of any single one would mean “much more than the rental cost of a Safe Deposit Box. Be Wise! Rent a box today. KNOW exactly where your valu‘ables are. KNOW that they are SAFE! - . ...f
LOW DOWN PAYMENT--EASY TERMS Write Today for Free Information
QUILLEN BROS. REFRIGERATOR CO. 1639 Lafayette Rd., Open Sun., 1-4 P. 0, sme Territories Open for Dealers mmm i
STORING PACKING | : MOVING
144,036,338 bushels of 1942 wheat have been made by CCC. The average amount advanced was $1.14 per bushel, which includes some | transportation charges from . the area of production to warehouse locations and storage advances oh nm shored wheal, BET ce Tonks NX Loans covered 36,963,640 bushels] citrtion of trademark, “Seeman,” class OF YOUR stored on farms and 107,072,608) 45; foods and ts of foods.
CHINA eo BRIC-A-BRAC {|stored in warehouses. ] conn Ss =i : Phone BL" 104; Brain, MA 10 J he 3 sutiay. sachiaiey ‘aad Er The. banks. fed: Below. have. vaults. hich. offer) Hho finest iper ones| {{] . th Np available protection, usually for less than a penny a day.
AIR EXPRESS INCREASES Wison Bros Chicago 1 NEEP’ ‘YOUR WAR BONDS IN A SAFE ‘DEPOSIT BOX
‘Air express earried by American 3 oun Airlines in August increased 125 per SE iy ern; Sol iE DIANA TRUST 80, ~ MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK -
-|cent’ of the same month in +1941, I PEOPLES STATE BANK : SECURITY TRUST o.
packaged in tin cans which Standard will market in the future in glass bottles.
Incorporations ‘
Vi-Jon Laboratories, Inc., St. Louis, Mo.; egistration of trademark, *“Vi-Jon," §: chemicals. medicines and pharmaceu-
Deeds, Abstracts Securities, Records Life Ins. Policies Fire-Ins. Policies Floater Policies Mortgages a Birth Certificates ' Wills Contracts
DIANA ROOFING
& SIDING CORP. So. Captitol ~~ RL 13590
HAN]
Fireproof ‘Warehouse : e RUGS o 8s:
NER
ps ” op
i,
SIL aay
SALESMEN !!
~H you use transit service: ’ or your trips. about the -
~
© AMERICAN NATIONAL NK ~ BANKERS TRUST C0. FIDELITY TRUST C0. - FLETGHER TRUST 60. : TAL
spunisgred with year. :
TIT ry P LTE
