Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1943 — Page 11
Ly nn Ba Lake ot “oft cisls yo er Indiana: Group to Report at fists ass Tor” inereases in certain Camp Bowie, Tex., for IE re lacs ST oot | eoet - Overseas Training. gency, 1941 law providing for the| COURTS—S. B. 905. ea See dud ev” vermiton) Raises, ; “of 5 d -¢contr Sui? Sn ays the period . from $5400 to a vear and salaries b; e q ar g i J 3 exec n of | A h ually ‘to De spent 1 tof a8 yleputies from
Indiana: lis’ hospital unit, their 118-— (Brokenbu ye Raises th : polis’ army hosp! rics of 1 Ms A comprised of doctors. and nurses| issue & mment. oe. Ri . pal court bailiffs from $1800. to. muplelrom ndianapol an parts fe ern on, am ie - 7 f i is 4 other r 1 fod iana residents to tan countie.
year. 148 Re )=—Ri of Indiana; will soon be serving ne aon ition): : ges epeals fees and
vi in of their salaries act of 18 overseas. is | duventle trattic isk violators undar juris-| QE, POS bpiisation to the circuit o- LS—H. B. 106—(DeHoff) Takes The unit, known as General Hos- -
SCHOO! urts. " om 3. (Maehling, Hiestand) —Re-| common school funds and the Indiana uni-|the B. = a pital 32, is sponsored by the Indiana bes | corer "shall oon” SErodne toal Droviaes Yo the teen rom “sad ta pidi| erally 5 Bord ‘of county” commissioners { university medical school and 45 i. Ames of Deprsons are illegible. a aT suspended or who havo| NT, PIRES FRED URdler complete masta 2p doctors and dentists, comprising the 8 by an avit of person ith knowledge 8. B. 116 (Stemie) Specifically prohip.| nance. remainder of the general staff, will of Telative to_the instrument Le) 5 hunting on Sunda towishipe and corresponding. ivi own leave next Wednesday for Camp|™ saps and war in of | f committing bors =Exohinis Sous IBORERTY--8 5. 130 Black) Legal. ships to. borrow mon, Bowie, Tex., for active duty. senool busses “to transport Agricultural | state boys’ school. $ tions and decre issued on transcripts of bulidings or sad There they will join 11 officers of (Chamberta Places Durden the staff, ‘and .the unit will be trained for overseas service. About
to nd dren any at 06 tions already under construction. 200 (Coblentz)--Gives any h of defendan! cases a B. 11-{ganoit) Perils echool auing om Coe to Eas 37, hous: in proving contributory negilsenes.. oy 2; ses mnton) =Validaies: sale of thokitics and designers to take sdvantags housing pro. in the armed {Cobles anges term of | signers and county auditors certain 4th Fodica circuit. and 100 nurses belonging to: the unit [Claftév) will be summoned to Camp Bowie as the
0 Jo. oF those oe I hac in war factories:| CONTTIT ties of Toul otal Wo pe Hl TC) mcipods ot S., will confer degrees at a meeting TOWN. BJ — Provides that the 2s hes of the he B. 384 Br okembun —Provides thai Marion t; board in training progresses. Lieut. Col. C. J. Clark, chief of the university’s medical = service;
ings, and ib, school ul) slat 8 p. m. today at the Broad Ripmist be bull, in ad on to certain s a Tes township assessors tary according to rules and|ple Masonic temple. Mrs. Lucy where in th - county con when h urch 1 nual mooting of the state tax Board and| case Of & vacancy. be the county sur. ssiate their interest shall Be ss tenants ations 5 the administrative puiding | indberg, worthy matron, and Closs increases mileage allowance of . assessors veyor, provided that he is a the entireties and in case of the death| “'g "B85 ( Biddinger) -A uthorizes state | Freeburg worthy patron, ‘will me from 3 to 4 cents. giv BR engineer: Limits compenst tion he} of e Sp thi other become sole owner | poard of education formulate a pro- ’ S. B. 56— (Lucas) — ermits my estate] 22 Ieoeive as 8 $500 oy oH ns e for rnler's dnerest; of Grenied 1s one | & gram of adult ediontion and to provide Side. Lieut. Col. @harles F. Thompson, | title ch us between vil and. shoal ik 8: ree Ganon )--Author-| of tenants in corimon. Newly-elected officers to be in. chief of the surgical service, and| g mp. 68 (Lucas) —Limiis to one “the Suney hy Maj. Glenn Pell, chief of the dental in sice8 op phe. hi service, are planning the Hniv's mass departure. : .Majors and Captains Others reporting fo Camp Bowie
a plan whereby high school credits may obtained by persons who have passed ager purchasing ood| PUBLIC HEALI'H—S. B. 134—(H. JohnI eri and medical supplies To for the nso. son)~—Provides fur sanitation in Hes. with {Wo or moFe cities of the 2d class. will be Majs. Brandt F. Steele, Paul G. Iske, Isidore Kwithy, Jack Pil-
high school age. 1 Woodard) —Permits children INSURAN Pell) —Pro-| 204 > all other food-producing establishcher, James F. Balch, D. S. Megen-
Awards Are Given Those! Completing Special Course at ‘Y’. : Awards for completion of a Spe‘cial boy scout training course were ‘made last night by Dr. John Paul Jones, a member of the ‘North district committee, Boy Scouts of - America, at the Y. M. C. A. ‘© The awards were given to men who have served as scoutmaster, © assistant ‘scoutmaster, + scribe and| patrol leaders of the training troops. Training certificates were awarded to W. W. Miller, 8. G. Moss, Emmert LaCrosse Jr, Marvin Jones, Oscar Headlee and Russell Walden. The following members of the course received reco for completion of the training: R. E. Jenkins, H. E. Morrison, A. H, Mendel, Arthur Cassell, Hugo - Wuelfing, Guy Allread, G. H, Windsor, Ray Cowan, Wark, George T. Carrithers, Allen Cotton, R. T. Fewell, Dr. J. P. Jones, Clifford Moore, Thomas Waisner, A. H. Warne, Richard Williams, D. M. Millholland, N. ‘T. Washburn, A. Lee Caldwell, Norman Hammer,
Claud A. Noggle, H. 8. Cheetham, Joseph Voorhis, William Dickson
ment of . S. ; 8 (Pn sion study Stficials Ihroughou t sta ate report be made to 1945 A, fy ‘C. R. 33 (Ciarrott) Sets up member commiss to be appointe: :
of neni te change nami published * in The county where the petition I 0 be
B. La Ness) Provides hat {ne® Sheriff of ahs county in which
il 2 ally o wed" defense pis plant. | dic a base IPoty § io, or peal salary of Rs
month. i | comires ©: Ek ant oo Lepr po Appearing in the cast of Rg Pi in fhe od “Happy-Go-Lucky” Friday at 8. Southport high school gym sium will be these juniors (front row, left to right), Jackie Nash and Frances Denk and (back row, left to right) William Smart and William McMillan. Other members of the junior class in the cast will be Jeane Mussman, Betty Ferguson, Dorothy Cummings, Cona Harbin, John Wampler, Don Crawshaw, Norman Elrod and Wesley Henry. Mrs. Alice Black is the director.
WOMAN HIT BY CAR, LEG IS FRACTURED
‘Mrs. Gertrude Lux, 3601 N. Capi-
to attend a religious school for two hours per week during the regular school day that the time spent at the religious bo 41s counted as attendance at the public school.
STATE—S. B. 227—(H. Johnson)—Provides that all rules and regulations of gifices, boards, commissions, etc., mu be submitted to the attorney general hot 3heir legality, and. copies must be filed th the secretary of State and the legisEe reference 8S. B. 171 (Garrott) Authorizes secre-
ments; prescribes sanitation standards.
‘PUBLIC SAFETY—S. B. 187-188— (Moore, Stemle)~Companion . bills providing that ld 1a otive engineers to w a le at crossings must not interfere with ordinances of cities and
towns regarding railroad regulations.
PUBLIC WELFARE—S. B. 201— (Stemle) —Increases to (75 the amount county clerks may spend on clothing for persons committed lo insane hospitals.
CE~—S. 136 vides Dew Sma "table of state in-
surance e. : LABOR—S. B. 108 — (FI ~Lucas)— Provides a ‘no-lien” contract sizn must be posted by the owner of premises on which CORSURICIOn is to be done. MISCELLANEOUS—H. B. 42 -— (O'Connor)—Creates a bi-partisan, six-member stream pollution board with jurisdiction to tora. and prevent pollution of state ers.
n ts and provides ‘that cities and towns reimburse highway department for services.
8S. B. 234— (Beardsley) ~Provides that six math afted war a cities woo +18 must provide airplane identification markings ¥here they ean be seen. frem the r
st |Nellie. Whitehead, treasurer; Mrs. Ruth Chilton, conductress, and Mrs. Mabelle Schwarzer, associate d conductress.
and William M. Lohman. {Reports of the district committees were made and objectives set up , for the coming months. Robert L. Mason reported four new troops are being organized and that one cub .pack has been started by the Broadway: Evangelical church.
tol ave., received a broken leg early today when she was struck by a car driven by Earl M. Augustine, 6566 Carrollton ave., at Capitol ave. and 34th st. Witnesses said Mrs. Lux was running to catch a street car when the
accident occurred.
Short-Waisted Figure With Full Bust-
7line Has 'Shifting'
The woman who has a large bustline"and a short waist has a definite silhouette problem that bad corseting only accentuates. Her fig shifts when she is in a sitting standing position. When she is standing her figure looks one way and that way is, generally speaking, good. But when she is sitting her
figure looks another way and that
way is usually bad! When she is
Silhouette Problem
standing her figure looks well-cor- :
seted and well-proportioned because
ow or another, her figure fills t the corset without stretching it : t.
. ‘When she sits down, especially there are too’ many bones in her oundation, her bustline which she
doesn’t need accented at all, is i ~ pushed up into a silhouette which & ly resembles that of a pouter @ Or if there are no bones j
e has too much corset and no:
+ support. The result of this is that bustline sags down to meet the e and she looks like a sack in the middle—and a very soft dle at that!
of the best solutions we have 3
ound for this type of figure is the nt Half Size foundation tched here. In the first place it Sized correctly for the shortwaisted figure and has just the right amount of corset between the bustline and the waistline. It is fashjoned of fine but firm batiste so © it controls without adding any ulk. It has three comparatively hort bones in the front so that it nirols the “tummy” lines but does ot push the bustline up when the gure is in a sitting position. And, most vital of all, it has a lace brasiere that is cut in exactly the right ‘proportions for a fuller bustline figre so.that it supports without giv
g too much of an obvious uplift:|
easy and comfortable without lowing the bust-line to-sag at all. . entire foundation is cut so it when
This relaxation makes the fguic perfectly normal and: at case; does not, in any way, accent the full bustline, the shorter waist. It is 13.50. We have many others at a wide range of prices. If a shorter waistline and a fuller bustline is your problem won't you come in and let us help you solve it? { Sincerely,
Corsets—Second Floor.
L. S. AYRES & CO
hardt, James M. Leffel, Charles F.
| liamsport, Howard B. Cogswell of
NURSE Ho atl This
Ayres’
March 8H thigh a 13th, Nurse Hubbard, national uthority on the care of children,
na lly kn own au
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Infants’
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{lof heavy anti-aircraft fire and
awarded an air medal, -
. | confiseated them. No arrests were | made.
Ingersoll, Russell Hippensteel, Donald E. Wood and Neill J. Garber, all’ of Indianapolis, and Maj. Charles L. Mahoney of Terre Haute. Also Capts. James E. Engler, William H. Norman, Fred C. Reynolds, O. L. Siewart, Thomas W. Johnson, John Haslem ahd C. A. Everett, all of Indianapolis, and Capts. David Engle of Elmhurst, Ill; John IL. Ferry of Whiting, Robert Amos of New Castle, Robert W. Oliphart of Terre Haute, John Hash of Wil-
AYRES’
has the
BILLEOLDS!
Whiting, William H. Lane of South Bend and Frank W. Jordan of Louisville, Ky.
Others in Unit
Lieuts. W. B. Rossman, William Gambill, George H. A. Clowes, Theodore Manse, Donald F. Casely, George D. Davis, William F. Hanning and Doyle F. Pierce, all of Indianapolis, and Lieuts. Robert C. Speas of Bloomington, Lee Maris of Attica, Stephen Johnson of Evansville, Nicholas Topolgus of Bloomington, Robert Rang of Washington, John H, Smith of Bloomington and Dalias Fickas of Evansville. The unit will be prepared to operate a 1000-bed hospital as a minimum and from 2000. to 4000 beds in an emergency. Members of the general staff have been maintaining their private practices while receiving preliminary military instruction one night a week at the medical school. A similar hospital unit served in world war I,
5 HOOSIERS CITED "FOR PACIFIC DEEDS
Five Hooslers, one of them reported missing in action, have been awarded medals for participation in bombing activities against the Japanese in the Solomon islands. Sergt. William L. Hammack of Cannelton has been awarded the silver star for gallantry in action! as a member of a bomber crew on! a mission to bomb enemy installa- | tions in the Tulagi area. Seven| zeros attacked the bomber, one| crashing into it, and the bomber, fell into the sea, carrying with it. the entire crew. Sergt. Hammack was reported by the war depart- | ment on Aug. 4 as missing in action. Corp. Raymond H, Alsip of, Knightsville was cited for meritorious action as a member of*a heavy, bombardment crew which shot. down a Japanese flying boat on Oct. 24, after intensive action over Malaita in ‘the Solomons. ‘The! enemy craft crashed.and burst into’ flames on the surface of the sea. Lieut. Robert D. Spitzer of Anderson and Staff Sergt.. Edwin G. Smith of Petersburg received air medals for scoring direct hits on a transport near Guadalcanal in spite
IN PY BN
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2; Billfold with zipper on two sides, change pocket,
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3. King billfold of real top grain cowhide, slim, trim and very handy, 3.50. epemy - fighters. The men were : members of a heavy bombardment crew. : For his work as a member of a heavy bombardment force of six planes which dropped 12 one-thou-sand-pound bombs on an enemy landing field at Buka. e and shot down six planes, Lieut. Albert N. Thom of Noblesville: ad was
PASTOR TO BE. GUEST FOR LENTEN SERVICE
The first in a Series of Wetnes- | day evening Lenten services will be bel tonight in the parlor of the an eights Presbyterian church. . ‘The Rev. Alexander Sharp, pas-\ for of the Westminster Presbyterian church, will be the guest preacher. Services each Wednesday evening will be led by a different preacher from a local church.
NAB sLOT MACHINES AT K. OF C. CLUB
HE he ed re chihes in a raid on the Knights of Somme; 1305 N. Delaware st., last.
“The raid followed an investigation by detectives of reports that a weekly lottery drawing was being conducted at the lodge. While there] they spied the slot machines and a raiding squad came in later and
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AYRES & COMPANY
*
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