Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1942 — Page 18

2

A "special plea for a small, second-hand radio has come. from barracks 4 of the medical corps’ hospital 2 3 Camp Livingston, La. Many men from Ingianapolis are in this uni The letter was signed by Pvis. Rudolph 3] Monroy, Jack Lowe, Willard” W. Arnett, Elmer L. Mooren, Clifford R. Dyer, Carroll M.

Drake, Steve Panowich and William Bass. The letter said they are not al-

SOMEWHERE sid ‘marked the end of| IN AUSTRALIA| resistance in Borneo. This men h sred | Pagand broadcasts have claimed ocr a ws ani complete control over the Netherin Borneo after resisting the in-|nds East Indies, but Dutch

authorities in Australia still’ revaders for nine months, the Nether .;u0 reports of wounded Japanese lands Indies government informa- :

tion’ service announced yesterday. soldiers being brought to Batavia.

The unit originally was stationed in the Longnawan plains, 400 miles

NEW YORK, Oct. '19.—Daniel Frisch -of Indianapolis was elected .a member of the Zionist Organiza tion of America’s national executive committee at its 45th annual cone vention yesterday, Mr. Frisch presided at a session kb on organization problems and also served as chairman of the membership committee.

U.S. PRISONERS

Hint Death for Our Fliers] ‘Inhuman’ Enough to Raid Their Territory.

Jacobs to Give Address # Navy Day Celebration On Oct. 27.

PENSION GROUP TO MEET

By UNITED PRESS

* Japan extended axis cruelty to war prisoners today by threatening ®severe punishment” for American aviators shot down while bombing Japanese controlled territory. It was implied that the “punishment” would be death. The hysterical announcement of . the Tokyo radio, which was repeated by the Berlin radio, seemed to yeflect the increasingly heavy pounding Japanese ships and ground forces are taking in the _Aleutians and the Solomons from “American planes. It also seemed to reflect ‘a fear that the April 18 radio on: Tokyo and other Japanese cities led by Brig. Gen. - James H, Doolittle would soon be repeated.

Much Left Unsaid Today's announcement was am-

William Harry

Two brothers, now serv Sam in the navy, enliste a month apart. William Edgar Jacobs is stationed

Uncle ss than

air base and has been in service three months. Ee is 17 and formerly was employed at the Postal Telegraph Co. Harry Everett Jacobs, his brother, is back at his post at Great Lakes, Ill, following a nine-day furlough at home. He was employed by the Stewart-Warner Corp. here. “Both men attended Technical high school and are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Jacobs, 1411 Nordyke st.

GERMANS BAIT

at the Corpus Christi, Tex., naval chairman, said

Rear Admiral Randall Jacobs, U. 8. N., chief of naval personnel at Washington, D. C., will be the speaker ' here for the . celebration of Navy day Oct. 27. L. T. Dwyer, Indiana Navy day that - Governor Schricker, Mayor Sullivan and all officials attached to. army, navy and marine corps in this area will attend a public luncheon at the Columbia club. After the luncheon, Rear Admiral Jacobs will swear In a large group of navy recruits in ceremonies on Monument circle. / Other activities on Navy day will Be a torchlight parade through the downtown district in which more than 25,000 persons will march, Participating in it will be civilian defense corps, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign wars. A. F. of L, C. I. O, fraternal or-

lowed to have a large radio but are permitted to hdve a “small” one. Their address is 20th Evac. Hospital, Medical Corps, No. 4, Camp Livingston, La. ® 8 = ? Kenneth D. Crowley, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. I. O. Crowley, 640 East d¥., Woodruff Place, has been selected to attend the naval training school for signalman at the University of Illinois, Urbana, Ill He enlisted in the navy in August and received basic training at Great Lakes, Ill

® 2 #®

Board 9 Inductions

Selective service board 9 an-

nounced tatoday that the following men have been inducted into the army:

James Henry Metheny, ple S. Summit ot.; ; Michael Joseph Lynch, 1028 E. Ohio

Barracks

Ralph Buis Peter Archer

LEFT—Ralph Buis is serving with the army air corps in Oklahoma. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Buis, 615 8. Cole st., he ‘formerly worked at the International Harvester Co. Mr. Buis is a graduate of Ben Davis high school and attended Butler university. RIGHT—One of the Americans in the Pacific is Peter Archer, second class petty officer from Indi-

north of Balik Papan, charged with preventing the head-hunting tribe of Kajakaj Dyaks from raiding | |other native tribes across the Sara-

Indiana Old ‘Age Pension Program Group 7 will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at 612 E. 13th st. The Rev. R. M. Dodrill.is leader.

Judge Louis - E. ‘Levinthal of Philadelphia was elected to the Zionist presidency for the second term,

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8:45

Be the man who STANDS OUT qt his work . . . the man who’s considered FIRST when promotions are in order. Wear one of these husky, smart-looking

Industrial

biguous. It renewed Japan's claim

ganizations, state guard, and army, |st.:. Lloyd Spencer Litten, 580 East drive

that some of the planes which raided Japan had been shot down by asserting: Those among the captured members of the American air force which raided the Japanese mainland April 18 who have been found guilty of inhuman conduct following investigation have been given severe punishment in accordance with military regulations.” Then, Tokyo radio continued, the commander in chief of Japanese headquarters for home defense, had announced - that crews of enemy planes taken prisoner anywhere in Japanese controlled territory, would receive “similar treatment.” It "talked of the death penalty, but did not make clear that this was the %severe punishment.” The really strange thing abcut * the broadcast was that the Japanese have mo prisoners from the American April raid. All the planes but one returned to their “Shangri1a” base and that one made a forced landing in Siberia.

NOBLESVILLE MAN WINS FLYING CROSS

AN AMERICAN AIR BASE SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC, Oct. 9 (delayed)—(U. P.). —Lieut. Albert N, Thom; 23, Noblesville, Ind., a bombardier on a flying fortress, received a distinguished flying cross today from Rear Admiral Aubrey W. Fitch, army and navy air force commander in the South ific, for “severely damaging a Japanese cruiser Aug. 19, off Tulegi in the Solomons. “The heroic action of these two army fliers is symbolic of the cooperation between our air forces,” © Admiral Fitch said. “If we continue this way, we will win the war.” The citations said that Lieut. . Thom and the pilot, Maj. James V. Edmundson, Sanfa Monica, Cal, ran a gauntlet of heavy anti-air-craft fire to bomb the cruiser’s fantail from low altitude.

HEADQUARTERS, ALASKA DEFENSE COMMAND, Oct. 19 (U, P.).—Air medal awards to two officers and 21 enlisted men for “heroism” for extraordinary achievement in air action” were announced today by Maj. Gen. Simon B. Buckner Jr. Recipients included Pvt. Bernard D. Lane, gunner, R. R. 4, Vincennes, Ind.

‘Oh; the food was rich wd it all was FREE! Poor Sandy had fo pass it He almost cried |= but i wouldn't agree With his indigestion acid."

,FOR ACID INDIGESTION

Don't pass up good food if mere acid | ‘indigestion’s ur iguble! For new im-

proved Acid Tablets bring the right kind of two-way relief, bumpers a Fic end and an ingredient desi i Ere Min areas t brings other benefits. First, this ent works without ca gassy ; has a “controlled” action that keeps it from over-alkalizing your stomach and

thereby slowing digestion. this oR makes relief 8. So try y this: When sour

| if Aci Thiers =

Ga.) of the house civil service

"|be sweeping in character and might

8 of |_ SEVENTH SON JOINS ARMY

MOSLEM TRAP

Restoration of Caliphate in Person of Farouk Now Planned.

Copyright, 1942, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

SOMEWHERE IN.-EUROPE, Oct. 19.—News reaching the Near Rkast circles in this part of the world from Germany discloses that while Gen. Field Marshal Erwin 'Rom-

thrust against Egypt, a far-reaching plan to incite the Moslems throughout the world to join the Nazi new order is being concocted in Berlin. The plan involves the restoration of the caliphate in the person of King Farouk the moment Rommel masters Cairo. : The caliphate, which combines, under Moslem religious traditions, |2 both spiritual and material leadership of all Moslems, was abolished by Mustapha Kemal (late president of Turkey) in a law of March, 1923, and the last Caliph Abdul Meguid had to flee to France. .

Farouk Unaware

Although it is believed that King Farouk is perfectly unaware of what the Germans have in store for him, preparations for the proclamation ceremony in Cairo are being made with true German thoroughness. The ceremony, it is said, is planned to be held in the centuryold Alazhar university of Cairo and will be adorned by the presence of the three muftis (religious leaders) Jerusalem, Poland and Serajevo. By appointing a caliph in the higgest Moslem city in the world, the Nazis undoubtedly hope gradually to convince Middle East Indian Moslems to recognize the spiritual leadership of the Egyptian sovereign and: exert, through this medium, political influence over the rest of the Islam in allied hands. Once more it appears that the Nazis are counting their chickens before they are hatched.

RAPS GOVERNMENTS IN LABOR SHORTAGE

WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 (U. P.) .— A house investigation is expected soon to show the extent to which government itself, through large civilian staffs, is responsible for the manpower shortage. Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, national selective service director, says more than 5,000,000 persons are employed by federal, state and local governments, and that is “too many.” Chairman Robert Ramspeck (D.

committee is conferring with representatives of the civil service commission and other personnel units on conduct of his committee's coming inquiry into federal personnel policies. He indicated that the inquiry, ordered by vote of the house, would

throw more light on the effect of government employment policies on maintenance of an adequate manpower supply.

OPA TO FIX CEILING PRICE, ON RAYON SOON

WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 (U. P). —The OPA announced last night that it soon will establish a specific price ceiling on rayon hosiery.

“Any dealer who may be tempted to pay inflated prices for hosiery is now given fair warning that he need not look to OPA for relief if he " {has been unwise in his buying,” the es | OPA statement said. “There is no excuse for any inye | crease in prices on rayon hosiery,” the statement said.

FOND DU LAC, Wis., Oct. 19 (U. P.).—Neighbors have‘ good ' reason for calling Mr. gnd Mrs, Hiram cent | vom of Fond Du .Lac the “war cE | bonds” Their son Howard. today became their seventh offspring to join the armed forces.

tS ——

153; Jersey st.; Harlin Lesley ‘Oghorn, R: R. 3, 0X Conrad ave.; Vern Brown, st.: Lawrence William Beasle , Maywood; William Dennis K Cum land st.;

ave.: . Box a: James Richard Schob er, R. R. 20, xX i 3 ker mel is actively preparing another Melvin Ernest Strietelmeier, 2648 Man Georgetown rd.

ways Charles Joseph Reed, a. N.

dale ave.; McClure st.; High School rd.; penter, N. Harry Giltner, Samuel John Wernke, George Cobon, 309 E. Wi Earl Zeiher, 354 N. Addison st.; Raymond Harris, 25 8.

Kenneth John Hawk, 1710

navy ‘and marine corps units.

» # #

Inducted From Board 11

The following men have been

inducted into the army from selective service board 11, it was announced today:

Marvin Bdward Casady, R. R. Paul Adams Ellis, 2038 x New

775; Grover Thomas Mitchell, 2121 3712 E. Market

ugelman, 23 Bel Carrol ' Denzel Starkey, 1355 N. .+ Eugene Leo Pluckebaum, 205 .; Arnot Froh, 4914 W. 16th ; Robert Eugene Ballard, 134 Moreland Frederick Roy Radcliffe, R. R

John Clifford Bates, Daleville; | 8

1748 | 8

Charles Lester Simmonds, 2346 BroadMount

and Herbert Owen . Welborn,

Omer Dewey Dyke, R. R. ha Eugene Reichard, 1426 S. Jesse Rolland Wood, Menlo E

135

Harris

Donald Eugene Fuller, 24 8. Nine st., and N. Tibbs ave.

® one

Four Commissioned

Four men from Indianapolis and

one from Greenfield have been commissioned second lieutenants in the army engineer corps following their graduation at Ft. Belvoir, Va.

The men are: William L. Bean-

ing, 3820 Kenwood ave.; John Edwin Billingsley, Henry McKinley, ave., and James D. Percifield, 5a¢|8 | E. Lincoln st., all of Indianapolis, and Ralph N. Hart, Greenfleld,

306 Lincoln st; 5843 Winthrop

a

3, Box|Ray

. | Joseph ‘William Ley, 248 S

133; | N/

1 Moyeh 1613 Deloss st, and .1942 N.

Woodrult pl.; Charles Eugene Ellis, English ave.; Wendell J, iI 1326 Carroliton ave.; Jerome Arthur Walker, 317 8. Oakland ave.; Elisha Harold Cox, a Parkview pl.; James Reinking Love, N. Qakl ave.; Raymond Nelson . Washington st.; William Columbus; Walter Dewey . Market st.; James Earl West, 2951 Winthrop ave.,, and Charles Edgar Stephenson, 1235 E. ark et st. Carl Madison Priest, 638 N. Oxford st.: Donald David. Dicks i141 E. Market st.; Leo Wils tN Walcott st.; dt Chiistopher Scoliard, 42 N. Arsenal ave.: : Walter Harold Johnson, 2221 N. Meridian st.; Allen Ransom Lawson, 438 N. Glad-| Marvin A. Trattner, J309% Forrest Sheridan, 1024 John Richard Cooney, ‘columbus; . Rural s Harry Faulkner, 5 N. Keystone ave.; hy William Babbitt; 2812 E. Michigan st.: Donald Ray Wintin, 558 Middle drive, Woodruff

stone ave.; Broadway st.; 20th st.;

3,!pl., and Lioyd Carroll Moore, 440 Bell st.

Ronest Kenneth Adair, 914 N. Oxford William David Turner, 1137 Deloss : Charles Bernard Conlin, 2520 English : George William Pottorff, 1123 E. t st.; oe Sherman n Morgan, 21 N. ng Een Carl Brown, 931 East drive oodruff ; Edgar Alvin Cook, 37 Randolph 2 ’ Dominic John Sergi, Arsenal ave.; Har Franklin ank Hahn, Highland ave.

» # »

: 5 Sent by Board 10

The following mén from selec-

| tive service board 10 have been in-

ducted into the army, the board announced today: William Eugene Todd, Carmel: Marshall Elliott, 816 Harlan st.; Dewey Donovan, 1403 Cruft; st.; Stanley Ira Riddell, 2124 Prospect st., James Anthony Montgomery, 1420 8. State st.; George Carl Bade, 1937 Prospect st.; Norman Day, 1443 Pleasant st.; Richard Scott' Norris, 1209 Laurel 3 Edwin Sutton, 3553 College ave,;* Earl Paul Joseph Trefry, 2343'2 Prospect- st.; Harold Gramm Kendall, 1010 Albany st.; Ernest August Peterson, 1121 Pleasant st.; Richard Rober} Creager, 1 E. Minnesota st.; rman ancis Polen, 1517 Wade st.; Robert Francis Whitsett, 1543 Wade st.; Charles Trusty Jr., 2553 Shelby t.; Richard William Rohb, *1011 Harlan and Carl Edwin" Vance, 1846 Orange st. arom Lester Sars, T43 Oli Webb Stanford, 726 Donald Allen Little, 2024 M

William Arthur

ab : 1 Fredrick Eggert, 1418 E. Tabor st.; William

s2g| anapolis. Archer is the son of] Frank and Cora Archer, 624 N. Ala-

bama st. Before joining the navy last May, Archer was a restaurant manager. Last week his parents received a letter from him saying “all is well.”

Frederick O'Neill, Wop English ave.: Paul Jay Goben, 919 E. Raym mond ene Hubert thie: t.; John Orris Donahue, 1230 olive McCoin, 1818 Dawson st.; Frank Henry Burk 1558 Shelby st.; Harold Samuel Jenkins, 2650 Allen st.; Clarence Frederick ran. mann, 1605 Cottage ave.; Wilbert Rider, 1230 Olive st.; Charles David Yater, 1326 Kealing st.; Robert Frederick Schneider, | 1605 Ho, 't ave.; James William Thompson, 1878 Barth ave.; Wilson Marshall Vannatta, 1116 St. St. Paul st.; Roy Woodrow Brandes, 2621 Allen ave.; and LeRoy Briggs, 1541 E. Raymond st.

SENATE TEST FACED TODAY ON POLL- TAX

WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 (U. P.).

—Advocates of anti-poll tax legis- |

lation face their first major test of strength in the senate today when the judiciary committee meets to consider two bills and a constitutional amendment, all designed to outlaw the payment of poll taxes as a prerequisite to voting in federal elections. .Senator Claude Pepper (D. Fla.), author of one of the bills, said he was confident the committee would report his measure favorably despite the fact that a judiciary subcommittee recently opposed the bill on the ground that it was unconstitutional. Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) is judiciary committee chairman. The house voted, 252 to 84, last

week to ban the poll tax,

Marvel is guaranteed fresh . . . the only nationally sold loaf that dares to print the

“Freshness Date” right on the

wrapper. That’s why you

get oven-fresh bread at the peak of flavor...why millions of housewives agree Marvel is always fresher!

ONLY MARVEL GIVES YOU THIS IMPORTANT FEATURE!

Imagine! No other nationally sold bread uses finer, costlier flour or as much short-

ening and milk. That's why every loaf is so deliciously good, so fragrant, so tender . . . why it pays to Zaste it, toast it, test it by your own. standards!

ONLY MARVEL GIVES YOU THIS IMPORTANT FEATURE!

Marvel is the only nationally sold loaf that gives you all the

health advantages of emriched bread, so necessary in these high pressure times. . . and alse gives you the biggest value for |

your money’

ONLY MARVEL GIVES YOU. THIS

UNIFORM

Sturdy work clothes can look snappy, too. These do. Though they're of tough, iron-like fabrics they're smartly styled, tailored to fit “Qniortably and to° LAST. :

Shirts, Jackets, Pants From Famous Makers

Sanforized Whipeord Trousers Jackets to match, 3.50

Heavyweight Moleskin Trousers

Corduroy Trousers and Slacks Blue, brown, rust and other shades.

H. D. Lee Herringbone Trousers ____. 3.50 Shirts to match, 2.50

Sanforized Shrunk Work Trousers -— 2.39

Heavy Herringbone Work Trousers _. 2.19 Shirts to match, 1.69

BLOCK’S—Downstairs Store

Marvel is the only nationally. sold bread that gives you not a 1-lb. loaf . . . not a 1Y/4lb. Joaf...but a full 1l5-lb. loaf at an amazingly low price. Today, when outstanding ‘value counts most there’s no doubt about it, it’s “America’s Best Bread Buy”!

ONLY MARVEL GIVES YOU THIS IMPORTANT FEATURE! Above all, Marvel is enriched with over 3

1 times more vitamin B, than ordinary white breads . . . plus niacin (a B vitamin) and iron... exceeds ing the Government's minimum standards!

NO OTHER NATIONALLY SOLD LOAF CONTAINS HIGHER ENRICHMENT!