Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1943 — Page 17

7 King Pilots Plane

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of Egypb personally i —— “ Army Now Retaining Only 233 of 900 Over-age Men Called.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 2¢ (U. P).

sob TWA MAY ADD | "Next Shoe Ration May Last Six Mont hs

AASHINGION, Set 24 that the Officials said the new re valid 1 STATE ROUTES - new shoe ration stamp which be- * ‘does not mean the civilian ration | : :

comes valid Nov, 1 probably will has been set at two pairs a. year.” |. m—— 5 have io lait sis months becatise| They explained that shoe periods : of ac ther shortage. At are not on a yearly quota basis, but the validity of No, Senator VanNuys Indorsesiyy cr the enor: on Yoo samp

are adjusted to the available supPl an to Extend Service nitely the validity period of current | ply in inventories and new producTo 15 Cities.

stamp No. 18 which was to have ex- tion Thus, he Period for the new By DANIEL M. KIDNEY

Times Stat Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.—Senator Frederick VanNuys (D, Ind) has promised President Jack Frye : lof Transcontinental & Western Air, Ine, of Kansas City, Mo, to support ¢ (the T. W. A. petition for airline service to 15 additional Indiana citjes. The T, W. A. petitions have been filed with the civil aeronautics board here, Mr. Frye sald, Senator VanNuys’ support came in | answer to the following telegram from the T. W. A president. “May I invite your attention to|

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rived at a new United States airdrome in Cairo at the wheel of a Jeep which the Americans presented to him some months ago,

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LEGAL AIDE

General Appoints

Maurice Tennant To Staff.

Col.

Maurice E. Tennant, well-known

|| Indianapolis lawyer who was retired

ll trom the army this month as lieu-

tenant colonel, was appointed a deputy attorney general today by

ll | Attorney General James A. Emmert.

He will be attached to the state

il | board of health, and assume his new || duties next Friday. I Donald H. Hunter who is entering

He succeeds

if | the army.

Col. Tennant had been on active

ll | duty for a year with the sixth servll | ice commanded in Chicago, being relj | tired in accordance with army regull lations when he became 60 years of

age. . Col. Tennant, a Republican, for-

ii | merly was chairman of local draft ll board 3, president of the Indian | apolis sanitary district and a mem-« li ber of the city council.

Mr. Emmert yesterday "named Ralph E. Allen, of Ligonier, referee

l in the state employment security

department, as deputy attorney gen< eral attached to the state welfare department. Mr. Allen, also Republican, succeeds James P. Wason, a Democrat who has been attorney for the welfare board for many years. Mr.

fl Allen is a graduate of Indiana uniili versity and Harvard university's

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law school.

MISS MALINKA GETS

FOUNDATION POST

Miss Betty Malinka of Gary, who | resigned yesterday as director of the women's bureau of the state labor division, has been appointed

applications - which are being filed | immediately by T. W, A. with the civil aeronautics board for addition. ! al route stops and new routes which, if approved, will provide integrated transcontinental airline service to 15 Indiana cities not presently served by T. W. A,

List Cities on Routes

“These applications contemplate transcontinental airline service for the following Indiana cities and their neighbors: “Gary, Peru, Logansport, Wabash, Marion, Kokomo, Richmond, Lafay« ette, Bloomington, French Lick and Vincennes and are in addition to applications — previously filed for service to Terre Haute and Anderson, Muncie, Newcastle. “Service to these communities and Improved service for South Bend, Ft. Wayne and Indianapolis, Which - we presently serve, would stimulate materially the transportation development of Indiana by bringing closer every major city on our transcontinental route,

Sees National Aid

“Particulars of these applications will subsequently be forwarded to , The data, Including a map showing the proposed new routes, was received by mall, Senator VanNuys said. A letter from Mr. Frye contained the following: “T. W. A'S applications contem« plate integrated transcontinental airline service along its present route. We feel this would be a logical development of our transcontinental system and would be of

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great benefit not only to all elties but to the nation as well.

cality will look to you for guidance in the expansion of air transgor- | tation for their cities,” | Senator VanNuys sald that he will appear before CAB and urge ap- | proval of the T. W. A. petitions whenever hearings are held. ! app —————— { 300 KILLED AT FT. BRAGG | More than 300 soldiers were killed in a battle which was fought, on the Ft. Bragg, N. 0. a

Indiana director. for- the. Nationalljggs

Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Don F. Stiver, state chairman, announced today.

Meanwhile, it also was announced}

that Mr. Stiver, who Is state safety director, would serve as state chairman for the foundation's annual fund-raising campaign this winter for the fourth straight year. Miss Malinka, a Democratic member of the '43 house of representatives, is secretary of the legislative

‘commission created to investigate]

state welfare department activities, She was named to the labor department post recently, succeeding Miss Mary L-Garner of South Bend. Indiana is one of the few states! in which the national infantile paralysis foundation is employing a full-time director.

POLICE SEIZE PAIR IN 60 M. P. H. CHASE

yesterday and placed under high bond following a 60-mile-an-hour

UncLE

streets, Samuel H. Gentry, 20, of 1133 Bellefontaine st, and James C. Gentry, 25, of 1211 Bellefontaine

st, were arrested on charges of]

violation of the firearm act, speeding, reckless driving and driving without a driver’s license.

COMPANY TO HONOR TELEPHONE CHIEF

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nation-wide program planned to secure the greatest possible conservation of fuel, transportation, mane, power and materials. As an Electric user, any res’ : duction in the use of Electricity that you can safely make—without hindering the “war “effort “or “endangering public health and safety—will effect some saving in the coal required to make it. That, in . turn, will mean fewer freight cars to haul : fuel and less man-hours to handle it. Thus more fael, more cars, more men will become a available for the war effort. Every bit of Electricity~no matter. howjsmall— that you avoid wasting; when multiplied b by hun= dreds of thousands of other “patriotic ‘Americans; will make a great contribution to Uncle Sam's \ Vol-.

In the electric utility industry, the installed generating capacity, together with capacity now } under construction, is ample to meet all foreseeable electric needs.

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