Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1943 — Page 31
yw A The contrac"tion can be ob-
- which conduet :
4 Emotion a Factor
y.
July 31,
‘© position the
Busy Seekin
wn Scientists with the bureau working on the project since last
source. Some of the results are: making up 30 per cent of the solids; 10 per cent soybean meal for gingerbread; meat loaf. formula which substitutes soy grits for 25 per cent of the meat. 8 ” ”
Save Those Brushes
SALVAGE officials in Washington are planning | an intensive drive through retail paint firms to edu‘cate the public in salvage and repair of old paint brushes.
from the hogs of China are no
up by the salvage office.
o 8 =» Bread Upon the Water
meat. ”
Going—Almost Gone
Add more war casualties on
Odds 'n' Ends
army. Shoe dealers can
pression of dehydrated eggs for
Wartime Living
Soy Boar eerie Experts
By BETTY MacDONALD Times Special Writer i y WASHINGTON, June 26.--The lowly soybean has lead nutritionists a merry race in their tireless efforts to trap the bean’s high protein value and disguise the taste of this important food.
individual tests to discover the best recipes for soybean products. In addition to improving the taste, they are trying to extend our meat supply by use of the soybean in various dishes as protein
Soybean grit in vegetable chowder
due to the fact that they aren’t made of hog bristles.
easily reclaimed by following simple instructions now being drawn
LEND-LEASE figures for certain staple products should prove to the doubters that the stuff is going over, that we're not sacrificing in vain. Some of the items: fluid milk products; 344 million pounds of dried eggs; lion pounds of dry fruit; 577 million pounds of all types of dressed
niture, curtail material, clothes hampers, oil cloth, steel knitting needles and tatting shuttles, steamer robes, hammocks, wardrobe bags, metal keys for opening cans. » ”
Farmers will get about 20,000 tons of barbed wire from the army in areas where their fences have been damaged by floods, and WPB will arrange for replacement within 90 days for the
offices to attach to shoes they are selling ration-free because of damage by fire, steam, water or other. accidental causes.
saving of 33,375 cuble feet aboard ship.
g Tasty Dishes
of human nutrition have been October and have made over 1650
New paint brushes are inferior, (Bristles
more.) Pre-war brushes can be
Over 817 million pounds of 85 mil-
the civilian front; hardwood fur-
obtain OPA sfickers at -district
Comoverseas shipments resulted in a
Your Health
Variation in Pulse Rate Is Seldom Cause for Alarm
in Wartime
. By DR. THOMAS D. MASTERS
J People sometimes learn to take their own pulse—and, in so doing, frequently become needlessly disturbed over the variations in pulse rate that they find. Lacking a fuller background of information about
the subject of pulse rate, they are
likely to misinterpret the readings
and give these changes undue emphasis in their thinking. The pulse is a figure shat expresses the number of times the heart
Iheats a minute, The heart is, in simplest terms, a hollow muscle, which contracts Phythimicelly, sending the # blood to all parts of the body along an arterial circuit.
served asa wave : ‘in the arteries, :
fresh blood away : from the heart. With the veins GR serving to con- Dr. Masters duct the blood back to the heart, the circulation of the blood considerably resembles the oil system of a finely regulated machine.
i Changes Are Normal
| Fven recently, the widely varying pulse rate among normal young men has not been sufficiently recognized. The average pulse-rate at rest is about 65 or 70 times a minute, swinging normally between a low of 45 and a high of 105. Physical activity greatly conditions this group of figures. So do a number of other factors, such as age, illness and the kind of disindividual person may possess. Fuhthermore, women tend to run a slightly faster , pulse rate than men. If one lies down, for example, the average pulse rate is 66, with a low of 40 and a high of 100. If he sits, the average is 75, the low 48, and the high 105. In a standing position the average is 82, the fow 54, and the high up to 124.
i Any muscular exertion increases
beats, just as stepping on the gas increases the strokes made by the piston in an automobile. Emoticnal factors can be of astonishing influence over the pulse rate. Anger and fear can run up the number of beats as speedily as running a physcial race. An argument about politics, a religious conflict, or the emotion of love itself can be serious excitants to a pulse rate. The person who flies into tantrums at the drop of a hat nearly always has a higher pulse rate than the fellow who takes life somewhat more phlegmatically. Actually, these differences have nothing to do with the essential health of the people involved.
Not a Health Sign
There seems to be no satisfactory relationship between the basic pulse rate and physical fitness to do work, if the former is taken while the individual sits. There is a relationship, however, between the capacity for work and the rate of the recovery of the pulse after exercise. The greatst variations in pulse rates are likely to occur in persons unused to exercise, but even highly trained athletes occasionally have pulse rates exceeding the norm. By and large, the pulse rates of normal, healthy young people vary greatly from the accepted norms —and the person who is constantly taking his pulse and predicting heart failure for himself because he finds his pulse rate slightly above or below the single figure that he thinks is normal must realize that the rate alone
¥
the number of times the heart
may have no significance.
RATIONING DATES
Canned Goods Blue Stamps K, L and M good through July 7. Blue stamps N, P and Q- become good July 1 through
Aug. 7. Meat Red Stamps J, K, IL, M and N, expire June 30. Red Stamp P becomes good tomorrow; Q, July 4; R, July 11; and S, July 18. All expire
Coffee Stamp 24 is good for one pound through June 30.
Fuel Oil Stamp 5 expires Sept. 30.
3 BOYS, GIRL HELD FOR MISCONDUCT
Three youths were held today on charges of being drunk and disorderly conduct and their 14-year-old girl corapanion was held on a disorderly condir:t charge. Police sought to determine weather the four had been in a tavern and where they had obtained a bottle of wine Which they had in their
© car.
The four were arrested after.com-
plaints that they hurled & bottle from the car in the 500 block of N.
Holmes ave. “A chair, which police
alleged belonged in a W. Michigan
st, tavern, was stuck on the front
~ bumper.
The girl first claimed that she then admitted to being g only
Shoes Stamp 18 good for through Oct. 31. Gasoline Stamp 6 in A book expires July 21. Tires : Second Inspection Deadline: A book vehicles. by Sept. 30; B’s by June 30; commercial vehicles every 60 days or 5000 miles, whichever is first.
one pair
Sugar
through Aug. 15. Stamps 15 and 16 good for five pounds for home cannirfg through Oct. 31.
18 GAIN PLACES ON BUTLER HONOR ROLL
+ Eighteen Butler university stu-
dents have been placed on the honor roll of the college of liberal arts and science for having perfect scholastic records for the second semester, Dean Gino A. Ratti announced today. Each student carried 12 or more academic hours and received a grade of “A” in all academic work.
Students placed on the honor roll are Esther Benjamin, Donald C. Brown, Mary Louise Chappell, Ione Colligan, Diana Galerman, Suzanne Masters, Donald P. Morgan, Betty Lou Murnan, "Helen Noffke, Lillian Park, Betty Louise Power, Mabel Ross, Jon Henry Rouch, Mary Marjorie Smead, Eliz-
abeth Smith, Thomas A. Volkman
‘farm to the open market you will
Stamp 13 is good for five poundsi|y,
| Wilson McCreadie,
7|U. S. BUYS CORN
TO BREAK JAM
885,000 Bushels Purchased By WFA From Three
Elevators Here.
By DAN GORDON
A total of approximately 885,000 bushels of corn have been requisitioned in three Indianapolis terminal elevators by the war food administration in an effort to break the distribution jam that has forced some corn proctssing plants to close. The elevators are owned by the Cleveland Grain Co.,, Early & Daniel Co. and the Indiana Farm Bureau Co-operative Assn. The requisition orders were served on the owners yesterday by officers from Ft. Benjamin Haxrison. The WFA is requisitioning corn in 96 Midwestern elevators, It has been estimated unofficially that about 15,000,000 bushels of corn is stored in the elevators, but officials did not. expect to obtain all of that.
Pay Ceiling Price
The WFA will pay owners the ceiling price and then assign the corn to processors who have been unable to obtain supplies elsewhere.
gardless of previous contracts. Besides Indianapolis the elevators are located in Manitowoc, Wis.; Sioux City, Ia.; Peoria, Ill.; Burlington, Ia.; St. Joseph, Mo.; Des Moines, Ia.; St. Louis, Mo.; Louisville, Ky.;; Omaha, Neb.; Council Bluffs, Ia.; Chicago; Minneapolis, Minn.; Kansas City, Mo.,, and Superior-Duluth, Minn. The WFA believes that the amount obtained will be sufficient to meet immediate industrial needs essential to the war. But the owners of the elevators here aren't as optimistic. They don’t think that this requisitioning is the solution to the basic problem, which is, as they see it, the need for prying the corn loose from the farmer.
“Corn Must Move”
M. D. Guild, manager of the Indiana Co-op, said that “unless ybu can get the corn moving from the
not have broken the bottleneck. The requisitioning is definitely not a cure,” He went on to say that “in all probability this latest government action was a lot of waste motion because the government will probably ‘assign the corn to the very same people that it would have gone to anyway.” Mr, Guild was emphatic in his belief that higher prices were the only way to solve the problem. He advocates lifting the corn price ceiling, and the discouragement of the present corn-hog feeding ratio.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
es Us S. Weather Bureau
(All Data in Central Wartime) Sunrise ...... 5:17 | Sunset ....... 8:18
TEMPERATURE June 26, 1942—
Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. x Total precipitation since En. 1 Te 9:08 Deficiency since Jan. 1
The following table shows t - ture in other cities: Be tempers
Ft. Way Indias cy Kansas City, Mo. ... Miami, Fla.
Oklahoma City . Omaha, Neb. Pittsburgh
FIDELITY GROUP PLANS INITIATION
Initiation of candidates and homecoming will highlight the meeting at 8 p. m, Wednesday of Fidelity review 140, Women's Benefit association. The program will be held in Castle hall, 230 E. Ohio st. Honored guests will include Mrs. Grace Meredith of Wabash, state field director; Mrs. Ella Butcher of Peru, managing deputy, and Mrs. Alta Goodwin of Angola, state junior and girls’ supervisor. Mrs. Alice Wiltshire is general chairman of the meeting, and Mrs.
The requisitions are being made re- |.
Lt. Col. George M. Enos, technical assistant, industrial division, Cincinnati ordnance district, presented the army-navy E flag to the National Malleable and Steel Castings Co. yesterday.
Myrna Loy, a top actress in filmdom, will be on of the principal speakers at the Red Cross murses’ rally, July 3, climaxing nurse recruiting week = which begins tomorrow. ! Scheduled to arrive in Indianapolis by train next Saturday morning, Mis § Loy is now serving as a volunteer worker for the New York Red
Cross chapter. - : A
The rally to be Myrna Loy held in tne gardens of the Ball residence, 1232 W. Michigan st. will follow personal solicitation among 615 nurses in 18 Indiana counties listed as available ‘and eligible by the supply and distribution committee of the state nursing council for war service. Other Speakers Brig. Gen. David N. W. Grant, chief surgeon of the army air forces medical corps who recently returned from Africa, will be among the main speakers. Others will be Col. Walter Jensen, assistant to Gen. Grant; Maj. Ruth Parsons, nurse of the army air forces, and Capt. Juanita Redmond, author of “I Served on Bataan.” As honorary chairman. of nurse recruiting week, Gov. Schricker also will speak. Invitations to serve on the general committee for the re-
Nettie Lotz is president.
EVENTS TODAY
Indiana Rainbow Division Veterans, convention, Hotel Washington, all day. Air crew review, 52d college training detachment, Butler university, 2 p. m. Jim Bradford’s annual outing, picnic, Gregg farms. Wallace Tool & Die Co., picnic, silver anniversary celebration, 1705 Lafayette rd. Universal club, annual picnic, Salvation Army fresh air camp, near Sunnyside sanatorium.
EVENTS TOMORROW
Nurse Recruiting Week. National Education association, Murat Temple, three days, first d Red Cross benefit tennis tournament, municipal park courts. awrence county residents, 20th reunion, Riverside park grove.
MARRIAGE LICENSES These lists are from official records in the ecoumty court house. The Times, therefore, is not responsibie for errors vp names and addresses.
annual
Eugene H. Solomon, 35. of 30 E. 08th; Goldie Vester, 32, of 124 E. 9th. Oliver Simmons: 35, of wi) W. 26th; "Inez Agnew, 33, Owensboro Carl Elton Reddick, 24, 17, Box 582; Beatrice Elizabeth Hors, Ro, of 1928 8S.
Vin 58, of 1245 W. New York; Anna May Meyers, 31, of 1245 W. New York. Maurice Vincent Cunning ham, 26, of 1727 N. Talbot; Marjorie Jane Walts, 30, of 114 N. Kealing. Malcolm LeRoy Caldwell, 21, of 1532 Spann; Naomi Ruth Peelman, 18, of 1326 Broadway. Roy Sylvester Baldwin Jr., 20, of 2864 Forest Manor; Jessie LaVerna Fischer, 21, bo) 2625 'N. Gale. James Jefferson Denney, -31, of 1601 N. Delaware; Mary Jane Staton, 26, of 2538
English. Percy Robert James, 722 N. West; Oni ; Of JUIN, Ritter; Ann-
Lee entme, 36, of 722 N. West Claude Jones, 46 etta Louise Baker, 37, R. R. 12, Box 29. John Joseph Pierce, Fh of 1616 N. Locke: Con Louise Merimee, 34, of 814 william Courtley Hood, 25, Cincinnati, O.;
Merle Dorene Johnson, 27, of, 314 E. Church, Vroqua, Wis. :
John, Josephine Gaither, at City.
N. James, Florence Robinson, at Methodist.
Abraham aulding, 44, of 1 - Northw HP mora. Lee ‘Reed, 36, of
cruiting activities and for the rally
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Herbert A. Bowman, 19, of 1052 W. 18th; Vaughnda Harfleld, 18, of 1426 Rembrandt. Carl C. Trittipo, 18, Lexington, Ky.; Shirley Louise Crooke, 17, of 1953 Adams. Jess Marshall Lee, 26, of 1618 S. Senate; Saioline Mary ‘Gosslee, 22, of 631 N
Pin Wilbur George Payne, 19, of 5627 Winthrop; Wilma Irene Thomas, 20, Clermont, Ind. Arthur Ray Grimes, Madge A. McCartney, 41, tral
Roy Collins Jr., 21, Camp Livingston, La.; Imogene R. Davis, 16, of 412 S. Harris, Earl Raymond Butler, 16, of 545 Dayton; Wanda Owings, 16, Gary, Ind. Walter Virgil Denman, 22, Dayton, O.; Helene Rhea Taylor, 21, Dayton, O 0. Thomas Matthew Hannah, 23, of 5115 E. Washington; Isabelle Christeen Sims, 20, of 2425 Churchman. Robert Herschel Serra, 20, U. 8. army, Indiana Central college; Gloria Marie Coppola, 2, of 1303 Richmond, Staten Island, N. Lee Mitchell, is, of 15032 E. 19th; Dora M. Baldwin, 33, of 1503'2 E. 19 th. Arthur Carl Frantzreb, 23, U. S. army, New Orleans, La.; 23, of 3716 Ruckle. James Arthur Replogle, 30, of 3630 N. eridian; Doretta Jane Hichstetler, 24, Elkhart, Ind. George: B. Burdell, 21, U. 8S. Army, Altus, ; Elizabeth Murphy, 21, of 1537 N. Sen
2 ie. Charles 1. Bisel, 51, of » Sivion; Virginia Walker, 36, of 505 S. Douglas C. Killoran, ne . Haltison; Ruth Rosemary Scjoenith, 20, Detroit c! Henry Russell Thompson, 30, Ft. George Wright, Spokane, Wash. ; LaVerne Louise McDaniel, 21, of 1364 8 Harding John H. Kennington, 26, Camp Forrest, Jenni Dorothy Clark, 25, of 4711 Guilor
54, Plainfield, Ind.; of 1308 Cen-
BIRTHS
Girls Harry, Charlotte Evans, at St. Francis. David, Alice Weasner, at St. Francis. Donald, Pauline Cade, at City.
Woodrow, Dorothy Moore, at St. Vincent's. Clyde, Gertrude hran, at Methodist. Sol, Dena Gernstein, at Methodist. : William, Marjorie Geyer, at Methodist.
18h Jack, Charlotte Logsdon, t 965 W. 20th. Elmer, Elizabeth Williams, at 441 8.
| Russell, Dorothy Jacobi, at Methodist.
Jane Austin. Fear, ;
| Somerset ave., was in critical fondi-
National Malleabls Gets Army-Navy E
In recognition of the individual plant worker “E” pins are awarded. The presentation speech ws delivered by Lt. Richard Morey Jr, U. S. N. R., naval adviser, war production board, Indianapolis. Here Pvt. Donald Wilson, wounded veteran of Guadalcanal, pins the emblem on the shirt front of the company’s oldest employee in years of service,
Henry Theis.
were issued by the governor to the mayors, Red Cross chapter chairmen and leaders in the nursing and medical profession in 18 central Indiana counties. Special arrangements are being made in hospitals for Red Cross volunteer nurses’ aids to assume as much responsibility as possible the day of the rally in order to enable professional nurses to attend.
NAVAL INTERVIEWS TO OPEN MONDAY
Applicants for commissions in the U. S. naval reserve will be inter-
viewed at 120 W. North st. Monday, | Tuesday and Wednesday by a traveling board from the Cincinnati procurement office. Men under 38 having technical training and college degrees are eligible. i Applications may be made any, day in the week to Walter I. Hess, secretary of the civilian advisory committee, who will conduct pre-| liminary interviews without appointment at the North st. address.
W. R. C. 4 TO MEET The past presidents of Major Robert Anderson W. R. C. 4 will have a noon luncheon and social meeting Wednesday at 512 N. Illinois st. Mrs. Nell Pfeffer will be hostess. Co-hostesses will be the Mesdames Grace Vansickle, Lotta Via, Stella Rariden, Jennie Mullikin, Cora Summers, Etna Hodson and Nettie Harmon.
Lowell, Lavada Hutchinson, at St. Francis. Harold, Betty Lee, at St. Francis. George, Dora Rice, at St. Francis. Gelan, Grace Treadway, at St. Francis. Willbur, Olive Jones, at St. Vincent's. °' Albert, Miami Ginberg, at Methodist.
Richard, Sophia Paul, at Methodist. Willidm, Lucille Peed, at Methodist. Robert, Frances Thompson, at Methodist. Thomas, Barhara Werbe, at Methodist.
Deaths Flossie Mae Hicks, 11 mo., at City, bronchopneumonia. William C. Trimble, 41, at City, septicemia. William N. MacIntire, 86, at Long, arteriosclerosis. Hester A. Dolen, 69, at 740 N. Belmont, carcinoma. Susie Graves, 50, at 1129 Harlan, cerebral hemorrhage. Olive Welch, at City, seneral peritonitis. Glen W. Mitchell, 54, at Veterans, uremia. Emily Stiegman Vahle, 74, at 5516 Kenwood, carcinoma. Alvin Lewellen, 29, at Long, meningitis. Belle Harrison, 67, at St. Vincent's, chronic myocarditis. Anna Maris Mulhall, 46, at Long, cerebral tum Paul Goldstein, 25, at 1008 S. Illinois, endocarditis. Martha L. Bauer, 66, at 160 Pleasant Run Blvd, carcinoma. James Michael Phelan, 31 days, at St. Vincent's, pneumonia. Howard Griffith, 59, at 120 S. Berry, coronary occlusion. ’| Mary C. Otto, 70, at 326 Buckingham Dr., cerebral hemorrhage. Anna Noe, 71, at 21 E. Minnesota, chronic myocarditis.
WOMAN BURNED AS DRESS CATCHES FIRE
~ Mrs. Harold Carel, 29, of 702 N.
tion in Methodist hospital today with burns received last night when a cigaret set fire to her clothing as she sat on the front porch. Clark Moberly, 37 W. 21st st, a
passerby ox attempted to ex-
Mr. Theis has been with the organization for 61 years.
In accepting the flag for the company, Stowell C. Wasson, manager of the firm, stood before a plaque of honor on which the 153 names of employees in the armed services are lettered. The scene symbolized the determined effort of the war plant to stand behind those who are “Out in Front for Us.” Seated at the left is Charles H. McCrea, president of the National Malleable and Steel Castings Co, Cleveland, O. To the right is Lt. Morey. During the ceremonies the “Malleable” glee club rendered three numbers. It is an allNegro group and featured as soloist Claudine Smith, who sang “God Bless America.”
Myrna Loy Will Speak Here At July 3d Red Cross Rally
STRAUSS
hearing.
two organizations were heard. Chester B. Camp, director of the bureau of governmental research of the Indianapolis chamber of commerce urged the commissioners to watch “the percentage increase in administrative costs.” He did not protest adoption of the budget. Explaining that much of the increase was due to the distributive education program in connection with the war effort, DeWitt 8S. Morgan; superintendeat of public schools, said that a large percentage of this cost would be refunded by the federal government. In a prepared statement on the emergency appropriations, C. R. Benjamin, executive secretary of the Indianapolis Taxpayers Association, Inc., asserted that $32,000 in the six-month budget is for teacher salary increases over and above those required by the new state minimum salary law. Mr. Morgan, in answer, said that it was necessary to make upward adjustments in salaries of many experienced teachers in order to compensate for the higher minimum salary scale, now set at $1500 for teachers with a bachelor's or master's degree.
INDIANA OSTEOPATHS ELECT DR. H. D. WOLF
Dr. H. Dearing Wolf has been elected president of district 1 of the Indiana Osteopathic association and Dr. Hermann E, Rinne, secre-tary-treasurer. The women's auxiliary, which met in Noblesville simultaneously with the association, chose Mrs. Hermann E. Rinne as president and Mrs. Floyd Magee as secretary.
MAN IS INJURED IN MYSTERIOUS ATTACK
William F. Lowenstein, 54, of 2653 Brookside ave., night watchman at the Omar Baking Co. E. 16th st. near College ave., was slugged and severely injured early today while standing outside the bakery. He was taken to Methodist hospital. No reason could be assigned for the attack and no attempt was made to rob him, J. J. McKinney, 63, of 518 E. 21st st., employed at the Ertel Machine Co., 2045 Martindale ave, was stabbed by a Negro to whom he refused to give a cigaret while stand-
ee Ee by Sv
_ An emergency appropriations budget of $3,132,571.95 for the period from July 1 to Dec. 31, 1943, was adopted by the Indianapolis board of _ school commissioners at a special meeting yesterday following & public
Prior to final adoption of the budget which had been passed tentatively at a meeting of the board earlier. this month, Tepreseniatives of
Operating Schedule for
Playgrounds. City playgrounds, starting Mon«
&
9 a. m, and close on Saturday at 5 p. m. instead of noon during the remainder of the summer, Norma Koster, supervisor, nounced today. Operation of most of the city rec~
With the exception of centers located at public schools and seven other playgrounds where only one
instructor will be on duty from 9 a. m, until 8 p. m. on wesk days. Seven Exceptions The seven exceptions are Riverside,
community center, American Légion auxiliary and Cornelius, They will continue to close at 5 p. m.
with instructors on duty from 2 unThe Sunday centers will be Brook
tian, Douglas, Eagle Creek, Ellen~ berger, Fall Creek, Garfield, George Washington, Northwestern, Rhodius,
land. New hours for wading pools also
Saturday, 10 a, m. to 1 p. m. and 2 p.m to 5 p. m,; Sunday, 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. and 6 p, m. to 8 p. m. at all centers where playground instructors are on duty; through Friday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m., 2 p.m tob5p m and 6 p. m. to 8 p. m.
which will continue to operate until 11 p. m.
OLD AGE 17 TO MEET
ing outside the plant.
Police later arrested a suspect.
McClain’s hall, State and Hoyt
Entire contents copyrighted, 1943, L. Strauss & Co., Inc.
Vol. 1—No. 50
Saturday
June 26, 1943
Dear Fellows—
INDIANAPOLIS GARDENERS have made great progress this past week. . with all the hot weather we've had. . . . Most folks siready have harvested first crops
: A NOTICE |» ALL DOOS
FIRE PLUG THIS WAY
is a new menace. . .
they ought to post signs. . . of confusion about the 6000 unused WPA
. Dogs.
a bomber base somewhere in England. . . -.
Lt. Col.
. What
of lettuce and Coin C.
peas. . . . ‘And in many gardens corn and tomatoes are almost waist high. . Now that- they have just about licked the bug blitz there . Maybe . There is a lot
wheelbarrows .in the city yards sought by
eager Victory gardeners.
officials say they are going to‘be sold. . . . Next day the government red tape prevents . Shortly after noon the other day, overcast skies and a trace of rain brought the high temperature of 90 degrees down 16 - degrees in two hours. . . Word has been received that Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker arrived in Moscow several days ago on a mission for the war department. . 7400 Indiana coal miners returned to work after their third strike. . .
the sale. . .
U. economists strikes,
normal wear and tear were the reasons for the nose dive in war production last month, « « « It was off 10 per cent from April.
* KX KX
Women in the War E ffort—
MRS. EMMA SHADINGER. . . . wife of Guy H. Shadinger, university chemistry department . + is counselor for women at the U. S. Rubber Company’s local . Lt. Elnora Garlow, new WAAC supply officer at Stout Field, was at Pearl . . Her husband is a marine lieutenant now in the thick of things in . Officers who' are to be on duty with the WAAC company soon to be assigned to Ft. Benjamin Harrison arrived in town this « The date for the arrival of the
star mother .. . Butler professor .
plant. . .
Harbor on Dec. 7. .
the South Pacific. . .
week. . .
. « « One day the
director
duction division
. Some drop. . . .
agency,
. According to I. Smaller
floods, taxes, and Indiana.
mander Indiana
A gold director
for the
met in
chief of
rest of the WAACs has not been set. .
But it is expected they will arrive at the Fort . A whole company of them,
% Xx %
What's Cookin’ in the Army—, SGT. ALLEN 8S. GUTHRIE (3620 N. was presented the air medal award “for outstanding achievement in over 200 hours of combat flying.” . . . William M. Smith, former biology instructor at Howe high school, was promoted to S. Sgt. at Camp . Buford M. Cadle (4411 N. Meridian st.) has been promoted to the _ rank of captain in the air corps, ~ Daekett (5677 Qurrolon) is now a major at
shortly. . .
Illinois st.)
Campbell, Ky. .
Aleutian areas. .
Indiana. . W. H. Snyder as chief enforcement attorney’ . W. H, Snyder joined the navy last week. . L. Lawler (48 N. Whitcomb ave.) was men= tioned in Ernie Pyle’s column. . . . Th
Charles (Clipper) Grogan (342 N, . Audubon rd.) brought down a Messerschmitt - over Pantelleria by shearing off its tail + with the wing tip of his Warhawk. . . . Sgt.
Fogleman Jr. (R. R. 4) was awarded
rN %
Names in the News—
WILFRED BRADSHAW, former judge of the Marion County Juvenile Court, was’ confirmed by the U. 8. Senate as Indianapolis
of the War Manpower Commission.
: . Harry 8S. Rogers, former manager of the WPB’s pro-
service here, is
now manager of the government <
T h e War
Plants Corp. for
Henry G. Klein is the new com-
of the depart-
ment, Military Order of the Purple Heart. . L. R, Douglas has been named managing of the Watchmakers Association of"
. Robert W. Crasher succeeds
Indiana OPA. . . + . Capt. Harold
the African desert at an isolated
airdrome. . . . 250 Volunteer workers have tackled the terrific task of mailing out over 3 million war ration books number 3 at the local OPA mailing center, Louis Ludlow celebrated his 70th bir this week.
- » Congressman,
+ J. E. Hall has been appc the production and facilities di
of the Indianapolis WPB.
ren
Indians Still in First Place—
AFTER WINNING 9 games in 12
leading five out
Indians
of
Lem,
eastern road trip.
during the current home stand the 1
Indians left this morning on . + They beat of six, Columbus three out
and Louisville one out of two. . .
are three games ahead of
place Milwaukee. . . , To date won 31 games and lost 15 with a p ~ defended - her . title in No
+ + +» Dorothy Ellis
PARKS TO OPEN 1 HOUR EARLIER
Supervisor Announces New ..
day, will open one hour earlier, at
Mrs. an-
instructor is available, at least one :
Riley, Riverside, Willard and High«
were announced today as follows: .
No changes were announced in n the schedule for lighted play areas,
Indiana Old Age Pension group 7 will meet at 7:30 p. m. Monday at
reation department's 63 summer
fod i
playgrounds will be increased approximately 20 per cent, she said: '
Eagle Creek, Howard and Reisner, Mayer Chapel, South Side ~~
The list of Sunday playgrounds * til 8 p. m, will be expanded to 16. * 5
side, Belmont, Camp Sullivan, Chris-= =
Mpnday i :
the third oak leaf cluster to the air medal for exploits over North Africa. . . . 8. Sgt. James A, Porter received the air medal for meritorious achievement in action in the. . T. 3d Gr. Oscar A. Herbst was awarded the good conduct medal | for exemplary behavior, efficiency and Adelity for service.
