Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1943 — Page 18
PAGE 1R
THE INDIANA
In the Service—
BROTHERS EET AT USO CENTER
Hudson and Elmer Moore Get Together for First Time in Year.
The two sons of Mrs Moore, 150 S. McKim st, the first time in over a gently at the U.S. O. club in town, Va. Hudson Moore, aviation technician 1-c, came to tell brother Elmer, gunner's gooaby before leaving service with the naw Elmer's wife, Mrs Moore, lives at 1819 N. = ~ ” Pvt. Grover D. Puyear Jr. has Qualified for enrollment in the B-24 Liberator bomber mechanics school, at Keesler field, Miss, and has been | advanced to the rank of private first class He is the son of Mr. and Mrs Grover Puyvear, 638 Waldemere st
Bessie met for vear reYork-
radio his for foreign Leona B. Illinois st.
» » = Pfc. Edward J. Barrett has been promoted to the rank of corporal pat the Carlsbad army air field. N M. He is the son of Mrs. Anna E. Barrett, 4259 College ave.
See Dr. Car! J. Klaiber, Opt. D. “Eyes Examined —Glasses Fitted" Easy Terms or Cash IN
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Board 1" Inducts Another Group Into Armed Service
Holmes; William Reichard Jr, oe 8. Lawndale; Marion Senter, 1870 Winton; William Cherry Jr, 5142 W. 10th: Albert Winter, 1728 S. Belmont; Harry Miller, 3218 W.| Michigan; Gustav Thau, 1915 Gerrard; Orland Syphers, R. R. 7, Box 121; Floyd Applegate, 348 Barton: Guy Edwards, 209 N. Holmes; Ervin | iStegmoller, 4204 Jackson: Alfred Singleton, 1526 S. Belmont; Richard Wright, 1417 Earl; Marion Lentz, 4409 W. Morris; David Minnick, 1721 N. Whitcomb; David McKinney, 3451 W. Congress; Robert Leppert, 249 N. Mount; Flovd Burdine, 2437 S. Lyons: Jack Owen, 1310 Kenvon; John Hempfling, R. Box 18; Gordon Myers, 549 Dorman: Carl Clark. 727 Whitcomb and Cecil Mills, 4% 8.
Inductees accepted for duty in the (armed forces through local selective | service board 11 on July 10 are: Charles Davis, 633 S. Waldemere; Norman Ball, 4841 W. Morris; Hubert Achelpohl, 4418 Rockville; {James Ward, 328 N. Addison; Gilbert Howe, 1448 S. High School: Gilbert Oberle, 2334 Roosevelt; James Montgomery, 317 S. Hancock: Frank Kirn, 1431 Silver; James Goll, 1802 S. Vinewood, Harvey Burns, Columbia City; Dale Hasler, 1638 Christopher; Fred Tillett Jr, 326 N. Lyndhurst; Albert Graham, 1341 S. Tremont: Virgil Maxwell, 5861 W. Morris; John C. Icenogle Ir., 836 BelleVieu pl.: Walter Bailey, Ear] Ligon, 40 S. Belle William Harris, 5233 Donald Todd, 318 N.
Bridgeport; Vieu pl. Wavne:
FRITZ GOLDBACH' COMMISSIONED
Finishes Adjutant Course At Maryland Post to Get a Bar.
235
L indley. |
Serve in West
Fritz H. Goldbach, Penway st., has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the army after pleting a course of training at the adjutant general's school at
Washington, Md.
” = Ld
Takes Radio Course
C. DeSautelle McEowen
LEFT: Charles coxswain, son of Mrs. Ben Higgins, New Augusta, former local band | Ft. leader and employee of the band ! | instrument department of Pearson | Co, Inc, is a ember of the coast |guard station at . Hueneme, Cal. | He entered DS a year ago last Enrolled with a new group of August and took his “boot” training | students from armored units at his present station. He is a throughout the country is Pfc. Al-|graduate of Technical high school bert M. Parr, son of Mrs. Lulu Parr,jand attended Butler university, 225 Park ave. who will study to be-{ praHT: Robert McEowen, son of | tome a radio electrician at Ft.) np; and Mrs. Jesse McEowen, Knox, Ky. |N. Arsenal ave. has been graduated 2 nn [from the army air forces bombar-| Aviation Cadet Arthur H. Gard. dier school in Kirtland field. Albu519 BE. 36th st, has rerorted to lquerque, N. M., as an aerial bomthe Coffeyville army airfield, Kas, for basic flving training. » n n Lt. Warren G. Huxley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huxley,
Lt,
com- H. DeSautelle,
|
lieutenant. A graduate of Tec { nical high school he was employed | son of as an estimator before entering the former air forces. Prior to his advanced residents of Indianapolis, has yeu; tfaining he was stationed at the turned to Camp McCain, Miss, after | Santa Ana army air base in Cali[visiting fith relatives here, iis wife fornia.
FATE Spo) 1H ARMY EAGER
meuralgia and neuritis—are mighty happy over |
their discovery of NORITO. Now they have
found a quick-acting formula which speedily |
relieves those exhausting muscular aches and pains. NORITO is trustworthy and dependable —really works fast. If you want to feel a Hin the joy of relief from pain—so you can work ace and sleep in comfort—be wise and try ORITO under this ironclad guarantee. If the wery first three doses do not relieve that cruel pain to your satisfaction—your money will be | Pe raded, Don’t suffer. See your druggist today and get NORITO on this guarantee.
RIT) re BIL TT & ACCURACY J +
% ON EASY TERMS 4 Modern, Stylish, Accurately Fitted
GLASSES
J —Have your eyes examined! Regky istered optometrist with offices at Miller Jewelry Co., Ine.
lace,
ER
j armed forces on July 9:
| 2802 Paris; t | Sidney
¢ | Northwestern;
¥ | Patrick Harvey, 978 Edgemont: Paul Jones,
Serving a tank destroyer unit at Camp Hood, Tex, is Cpl. Donald Frakes, son of Mrs. Leathel Frakes. 5602 E. 21st st. He was graduated . from Warren Central high school| WITH THE POLISH DIVISION. and attended Butler university. in Russia, July 16 (Delayed).—A Cpl. Frakes joined the army April few hours outside Moscow, on the| {5. His brother, Pvt. Ivan C. Frakes great sand plain covered with] Jr, is stationed at Ft. Wood, Mo. [spindly tall pines, a powerful] 2 Polish striking force is being pre(pared to take its position beside [red army units in the fight for! Poland's freedom. It is a fully manned and fully equipped division, making astound- | ing progress after only four weeks | actual training and almost jess. Ww. 26th: frantically eager to hurl
Brooks, 617 W. Vermont; Waiter Smith, < | .; Alex Stout, 2629 Shriver; against the Nazi lines. {| Enoch Mitchell, 1314 W. 25th; Carter Hill, Frank Hailstock, 2811 Boulevard; Robert DeFrantz, 2628 Jan | White, 705'2 W. 27th: Evere | Johnson, 412 W. 20th: Ernest Suber, 2530 Gordon Archer, 1259 W. 25th; John Smith, 546 W. 25th: Charles Myers, 856 W. 27th; George Finger, 1026 {| W. 26th; Aubrey Houston, 2537 Graceland:
T0 ATTACK GERMANS
high school student. Copyright, 1943. by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
” »
Board 4 Inducts
board 4 into
reports
Marion county the |
the following inductees
2913 Boulevard: James
Rudolph Diges, Claude Richmond, | of
| Gordon, 2738 Scofield; 1137 W. 19th; Roland Lolla, Robert Hazelwood, 440 W.
i .,.,- a | |
‘MARINE AIR CORPS GETS 28 JAP PLANES
WASHINGTON, July 19 (U. P.. —The navy today revealed that a marine corps fighter squadron, | headed by Maj. Robert Fraser of Geneseo, N. Y., has shot down 82 Japanese planes with a loss of only | two of its own pilots. This high-scoring squadron. hang- |
445 W. 28th; Carl Williams, 1068 Roache; Norris Cooper Jr., 2319 Paris: John Wal1015 W. 27th: William Dixon, 317 W. 25th; Bradford Johnson, 2627 Boulevard; James Corbitt, 738 W, 24th: George Hopson, 721 W. 25th; Julius Golder, 142 | W. 27th: Don Williams, 423 W, 28th, and Russell Smith, 334 W. 29th.
{ing up one of the best records in |the Solomons campaign, topped off its amazing font by shooting town
DRS. EITELJORG gg B's mi oi aly ios
SOLTIS and FRAY
—DENTISTS 8Y,
Between Meridian St, and, Maro
Phone MA. 0583
HOURS: 8:30 to 5, Sunday, 9
E. Washington St.
lin June out of a flight of 40 to 50 (enemy planes. Fraser, after getting one Jap. was ‘himself shot down but survived. | | Fraser's wingman, 1st Lt. Stanley |T. Synar, Warner, Okla., got one ‘zero, as did Capt. James E. Johnson, Kirkwood, Mo., Capt. Samuel Richards Jr., Bates, Ark., and Capt. Gilbert Percy, Chico, Cal. Barer
tt's Shoe Store,
to 10:30 A. M.
LAUNDRY CUSTOMERS
also is credited with one zero probably destroyed. Credit for bagging | the seventh enemy plane is not in-| eluded in the in the report.
AMERICAN DESIGN PLANES IN BRAZIL
NEW YORK, July 19 (U. P.).—| Airplanes of American design now |; fly the routes of former German and Italian lines in Brazil, according to Dr. Joaquin Pedro Salgado
school at Lowry field, Colo.
"ment
i Ninth st,
[ Mrs, lave.,
| bardier and commissioned a second the G he {ire Insurance Co.
| zens’ Gas & Coke utility before en-|
itself Send bay,
rs Hearne, 628 Eastern ave.
‘at Chanute field, Ill
| home is at 4221 E. 35th st. | ma jor
MEN FROM HERE AT HOME POST
At Armament School at Fairgrounds After Basic In Colorado.
Home, but not “on furlough" the following Indianapolis men who joined the army only to be sta-| tioned in their own home town. All graduates of a basic armorer's the men are now studying at the army air training command armaschool at the fairgrounds. The students are Cpls. Baker, son of Prank Baker, 222 E. former salesman for the West Baking Co.; Glover L. Eilis, former desk clerk at the Claypool hotel, and Bobby W. Farrell, 1655 Broadwayv, and Charles M. Harris, son of Mrs. Marie O'Gara, 27 S. Oriental st, who were employees of Allison. Also Cpis. Donald R. Lannan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Matrin Lannan, 51 N. Holmes ave, who was an assembler at the naval ordnance plants here; Jack McBride, son of James McBride, 1111 Newman st. | formerly with Stokley Bros. & Co.,! and Leo Reid, son of Mrs. Lois] Turner, 1341 Kentucky ave, who| worked for the Packard Manufae- | turing Co. Other Indianapolis men in the personnel at the fairgrounds are T. Sgt. Alfred D. Buschmann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred W. Buschmann. | R. R. 12, an instructor in the armament school and former sales en-| oineer for the Busechmann Co.; S.! Sgt. Roy E. Dyer, 4510 Marcy Lane, who has just returned from the army administration school, Oxford, Miss., to the armanment school to
forces state
Paul J.
1125 | do administrative work for the de- ice Is now on foreign duty.
tachment. Sgt. Dyer, is the son of Mr. and Fred M. Dyer, 2239 College and was formerly employed by
rain Dealer's National Mutual |
~ # »
ment and bombsight
POLIS TIMES
MONDAY, JULY 19, 1943
2 In Air Corps
OFFIGER ‘SCHOOL ~
Takes Petty Officer Course
are
Pvt. Newlon Pvi. Holt
Elwood R. Newton, who formerly lived at 1321 W. 23d st, is a tail gunner a flving fortress. He has been stationed at the army air field at Walla Walla, Wash., since May 16, completing his| last phase of combat training with
his crew. A graduate of the high school at Birdseye,” Pvt. Newton is
the son of Mrs. Clara Newton.
LEFT: Pvt.
on
tered the army air forces two months ago and is stationed at Mi- |
ami Beach, Fla. His wife Shirley is' regimental drill competition and from Washington high school and entered service Dec. 26, 1942,
with him. A former Technical high school student and employee of the | Schwitzer-Cummins Co., he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Holt, 237 S. State ave,
SGT. FARMER IS ON FOREIGN SOIL
One Son Serves in Africa, | Another Is at Texas Post.
The Farmer family of 4046 Rookwood ave, are widely separated. The father, M. Sgt. William T.| Farmer, a veteran of 28 vears servOne | group armaofficer with [the Avengers in northwest Africa, | tops his father and brother in rank. | |He was promoted recently from first | lieutenant. The captain's wife, Mrs. Virginia Anne Farmer, lives in California. A Butler graduate, Capt. Farmer
|
|
son, Capt. Varnol G.,
(entered the air forces in 1940 and | trained at various fields before he
{was sent overseas six months ago. | The youngest son, William D,,
is |
|aviation cadet in Texas.
|
‘M’Murray to Graduate
” ” »
‘school only
{where chief
(Kelly, 356 N. Ritter ave,
Only 9 Weeks After Joining Navy.
Attending chief petty officers’ nine weeks after join- |
the record of
Cpl. White
ing the navy is
Charles E. Janis. Mr. and Mrs. He has taken full advantage of Bates st.,
office and entering the training field Mich. school at Great Lakes last May 18, | he was appointed recruit| petty officer while through indoctrinal training.
His wife
company broke a rifle range record own. Cpl.
of 30 years standing and won the 8Ve.
softball title, | »
The following men will be transHarrison basic training.
ferred from gan st, To Biloxi, ear,
Rapids, Pvts.
Mich,
Cpl. Faukner J. Sims LEFT: Cpl. Frank W. Faukner, former Lukas-Harold employee and {graduate of Ben Davis high school, | was married recently to Miss Lenore | | Larson, daughter of the Rev, Robert | Larson, Spokane, Wash. He is the {son of Mr. and Mrs. George Faukner | Bridgeport. He enlisted in January, | 1942.
RIGHT John Sims, signalman 2-¢, enlisted in the navy last year, He| attended Decatur high school and | /was employed at the C. B. Coombs | Co., previously. The scn of Mr. and | | Mrs. John Sims, Mars Hill, he took | 'his boot training at Great Lakes | and is now stationed at Norfolk, He is a former Times carrier.
son.
| ” " » . | ‘WAC Goes to Camp Hale |
Mildred Louis Thompson, WAC, has been asigned to Camp Hale,! Colo, The daughter of James B. she has.
Cpl. Huckstep
LEFT: Erwin L. White, C. White, enlisted in the air the navy's slogan of “quick advance- Sept. 6, 1941, and has been advanced ' ment,” enlisting through the local from private to corporal at Selfridge
RIGHT: Cpl. Robert W, Huckstep | going | has been assigned to a troop carrier | squadron at Alliance, While acting as company corg- ‘mer Allison employee, he is the son |
RIGHT: Pvt. Charles M. Holt en- mander at the training station his 0f Mrs. Marie Huckstep of Jameslives at
Huckstep was graduated
Ft. camps named for To Camp Grant, (ert M. LaFollette, 3126 W. and Anthony 957 N. Haugh st, Miss.—Albert L. Bur- | troughs, 1421 W. Ohio st. | To Camp Ellis, IllL.—Frank Linwhose mother lives at Grand
John J. Horton, ville, and Robert Rouse, {er ave, will remain at Ft. Harri- into the army
JANIS ATTENDS ee] Em Flying ‘WINS FURLOUGH
BY TOSS OF COIN
J Everett Evans on Leave From Naval Post South Pacific.
Such a little thing as a flip of a determined whether Everett seaman 1-¢, 1433 S. New Jersey st., would get a furlough or remain at his South Pacific post. Because regulations permitted only a small percentage of the crew of one vessel to leave at one time,
coin
son of Evans,
1114 corps
making the choice. He tossed a coin with his buddy, Robart Elfers, 1826 Orange st.,, and won. Everett enlisted in the navy on his 17th birthday, Dee, 29, 1941, and was on the same warship as Robert in the South Pacific. Both went through the battles of Midway, | Guadalcanal, Santa Cruz and the Stuart islands and their ship helped | to cover the landings of the marines in the New Guinea campaign. He will report shortly to a de-
Il —Pvis. Rob-| stroyer base on the west coast,
Michi- | Ry > L. Maurer. At Camp Bowie Hospital
Now on duty with a hospital unit at Camp Bowie, Tex., is Cpl. Lowell V. Brown, son of Mrs, Goldie S. Brown, and husband of Mrs. Adine Brown, 134 E. 22d st. He was reJefferson= cently promoted from the rank of 2121 Shrive- private first class. He was inducted on November 16,
Neb. A for-
1832 Hoyt
”
to the
0% INFRA HUMES
(Chapel of the Chimes®
SAME LOW PRICES
South Indianapolis’ Finest Funeral Home
1234 Prospect St. MA. 9433
been stationed at the third train-
One of the specialists who will be ing center of the WAC at Ft. Ogle- |
Pvt. Seitz E. Hearne Jr.
LEFT: Pvt. Byron Q. Seitz is the son of Mrs. Ursula Seitz, 1710 Cruft,
st. He was employed at the Citi- | i
| tering the army in December. Pvt. Seitz is serving in the engineers in| | Hawaii. | RIGHT: Edward Hearne Jr. is in training at the United States maritime service training station.| Brooklyn, N.Y. is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed-
. # 8 Cpls. Hyman Mandell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Mandell, 913 Kenwood ave.: David B. Morgan, son of | Mr. and Mrs. David B. Morgan, 4161 | Park ave, and Donald F. Dowell, | son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Dowell. | 252 N. Oxford st. were graduated | recently from the aircraft machinist course at the technical Sehoul/
” ” ” Clarence B. LaDine, army medical corps, stationed in Iceland, has been promoted from captain major. A former Indianapolis physician, | graduate of Indiana university | {school of medicine, Maj. LaDine’s | The in Iceland 11
has been
months, ” ” ” Advancement to the rank of set~| geant technician has been given to Cpls. Norman E. Meek. 958 N. | Pennsylvania st, and Gerald G. Bortz, 535 Hudson st. Both men] are in the medical training battalion at Camp Grant, Ill. ” on ” Pfc. William C. Wood Jr., Plain|field, has completed training and been graduated from the AEF training command at Chanute field, Ill. ” » »
A promotion to the grade of private first class as well as enroll-
| tank mechanics at
(ney Jr.
araduated by the armored school in Ft. Knox, Ky. | will be Cpl. David Llovd McMurray, | son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard McMurray, 2436'; Ethel st., who has enrolled for the course recently, » » ” Donnas E. Allen, son of Police Lt. and Mrs. N. A. Allen, 1110 W, 32d | st., has been promoted to lieutenant, | junior grade, in the 17th naval coastal battalion. He graduated from Technical high school and at-|
{tended Purdue university before en-
listing in August, 1042. His wife, Louise, lives here. His father is
in charge of records at police head-
| quarters.
Robert H. McKinney. son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Kirk McKinney, 4419 Washington blvd., was sworn in as | midshipman at the United States, | Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., on | July 10. A graduate of Shortridge high school, he was a member of Ihe; honor society. Another son, Sgt. E. Kirk McKin- | is now stationed at Camp Lee, Va. ” ” »
Home on Furlough
+ Pfe. George W. Elliott, | field, Macon, Ga., is at home on| 10-day furlough. He is the son of Harold Elliott and of Mrs.
» » »
| Miss. | Mrs. O. R. Engleman, 837 N. Temple
{tion at Camp Hood, Tex.
Bessie |
thorpe, Ga. » ” w Pfc. Paul R. Hall was graduated | recently from the B-24 Liberator mechanics school at Keesler field, He is the son of Mr. and
ave, T. Sgt. Harold D. Boyd, who A been in army service for three years, | has been at home on furlough. He is the husband of Mrs. Ruth] Bovd, and father of Phyllis Anne, | 2122 Napoleon st., and the son of Mrs. Louise Boyd, T7ist White river, He returned Saturday to his staHe is with the administration company of a tank destroyer training center unit,
st. and
Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N. Y. Franchised Bottler:
Smith |
s:
Smith. | :
Three men who have been transferred from Ft. Harrison to other
camps for basic training are Pvts. I
Joseph Kanosep. 556 W. ton st. to Ft. Knox, Ky.; Mitchell, 3142 College Camp Bowie, Tex,
Morris | ave.
Fair Grounds.
DON'T DESTROY BROWN
area to save all used brown paper, brown boxes, bags, heavy wrapping paper and waste paper, in order to relieve a critical waste paper short-
age. All forms of brown waste paper |,
Wa shing- | | §
tof and Harold M. [ § 'Keple, 1801 Park ave. Indiana State
WASTE PAPER, URGES WPB
The WPB urges citizens in this | :
GENERAL FORREST
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of Indianapolis
the men resorted to this method of
Jr, Brazilian minister of aeronau- | are needed for conversion into blast-
o.
WE NOW HAVE THE CAPACITY TO HANDLE A FEW HUNDRED ADDITIONAL NEW FAMILY BUNDLES!
1 59, DISCOUNT
CASH and CARRY PROMPT SERVICE
Use Our 13 Conveniently Located Stations
936 N. Penn. 1502 E. Wash. 1564 College 11 E. 16th
501 W. Wash. Lockefieid Garden 232 N. INinois 365 Mass. Ave, 738 Mass. Ave.
802 N. New Jersey 336 E. Wash.
146 8. Nlinois 927 8. Meridian
| tics. He arrived yesterday from [ment in Keesler field, Ala, B-24| Washington in an army transport Liberator bomber school was won command plane. | this week by Pvt. Robert M. Trees, | Salgado, planning a tour of son of Mrs. Herbert Schnepel, 951 | United States aircraft factories and | Irvington ave. | aviation posts, said planes for Bra- | re A —————— zilian air lines were being made in factories in Brazil. E AERIAL PANORAMA
ITALY GRABS TRUCKS, VEHICLES IN FRANCE ny ER
BERN, July 19 (CDN) —TItalian | | the Indianapolis public library, Meauthorities in occupied France are | 'ridian and St. Clair sts, beginning requisitioning all trucks and other today and continuing through next available motor transport, it is re- Monday. liably learned here. Covering almost every phase of In order to pacify French feelings | the naval aviation cadet training the Italians are releasing a great | program, the exhibit also tells a part of the French patriots ar- | dramatic story of pilots, flight crews rested in the last few months in the and planes of the navy air force. area near the Italian frontier. Included in the display are African convoy pictures depicting the greatest mass movement of ships, men and fighting material in his-
GET SCHOLARSHIP AWARD
| ON DISPLAY TODAY
“Cavalcade of Naval Aviation,” a |
ing kegs, airplane parts, victory containers, and other essential military | equipment, Flatten out boxes, stack loose brown paper into bundles. To sell to a dealer, or to give your accumulation to charitable or other organizations, call a collector at MA rket 3321.
Approved by War Production Board | Paid for by Industry
NEW! “BACTERIOSTATIC”
Gaining Great Favor With Women!
Many doctors urge the regular use of douches for women who want to be refreshingly clean—for women troubled by of oienging odor, fiching or discharge. A ucts may be harmful germoa which burn, harden and damage sensitive tissues. But NOT Lydia Pinkham's Sanative Wash! Instead— Pinkham's Sanative Wash is an effective “bacteriostatic” (the modern trend). It not only. discourages bacterial growth and infection but cleanses, deodorizes, relieves minor irritations and
Among the 147 students recently selected by Northwestern university for scholarship awards were two from Indianapolis. They are Miss Shirlee C. Shanefelt, 308 Kenmore rd, Technical high school graduate, and Marting Griffing | Horne, 5254 N. New Jersey st, a graduate of Shortridge high school.
tory.
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ONDS
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roadbeds are "Get thar fustest with the mostest,”" General Nathan Bedford Forrest's famous victory formula was followed by Hitler and the Japs for a while. Now it's our turn . . : and how WE'RE following it... more than 100,000 war planes already in the air... eight million men under arms and more coming up . . . America is turning out the
most of everything. ous America
America is depending upon the railroads to get there first with the most... the most men and planes... tanks and jeeps... guns and munitions . . . food . . . supplies. The long trains speeding by—night and day, week in and week out—getting there first with the most NOW, must bring a smile of satisfaction to General Forrest's ghost.
The railroads are now handling the
HTT OR ASH IMMEDIATELY Pawners
HINTON
LT STS
“id 5 ; ak i 7
| ons OF A
TO HASTEN VICTORY * BUY MORE WAR BONDSI
world's toughest transportation job : : : and it's going to get tougher. Rolling stock and
taking more punishment than
they have ever had to take before. They'll keep on taking it—keep on delivering. And they'll do an even better job when needed replacements are obtainable.
ROCK ISLAND'S Program of Planned Progress, begun seven years ago to serve a nation at peace, is vital in serving the nation at war. After the war when victori-
and her heroic sons will
demand . . . and deserve . . . the finest, in transportation as in everything else, that Program must continue. We must establish now the financial reserve from which to supply the facilities for the finer transportation peace-time America will expect,
As yesterday—and today—so tomorrow ROCK ISLAND'S sole purpose is to provide the finest in transportation.
HH Island
y
