Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1943 — Page 15

off and Harper Enter) Training School in

. Teckenbrock 'PFO.EARLTECKENBROCK, wounded on Guadalcanal, May 24, is spending a 30-day convalescence turlough at the home of his parents, Mr. and’ Mrs. Walter Teckenbrock, 2940 Holt ave. Plc. ‘Teckenbrock, who! has been overseas’ 18 months with the field artillery, wears the area bar for Bouthwest Pacific duty, the army good conduct medal and thepre - Pearl! Harbor ribbon. He will report to Spo-

Lieutenant at Cae * Lejeune, N. C.

| Virginia Pilinger, daughter of

Mrs. Myrtle Fillinger, 111 E. 16th; Tat. ysis been commissioned a second | | lieutenant in the marine corps, Yomen's reserve at Camp Lejeune, | . C. Lt. Pillinger has been as-' J to duly at the marine corps headquarters, Washington, D. C . » ” Pic. Carl J. Fries, son of Mr. nd} Mrs. Fred Fries, 1222 N. New Jersey! st, has been graduated as an air.’ craft mechanic ei Seymour Johnson ficld, N. C. . » . Judson PF. Moschelle, son of Dr, J. D. Moschelle, 3233 N, Meridian! st, and Mrs. Anne K. Moseherle, |

13109 Kenwood ave., has been pro- k

moted to the grade of corporal

ed Bilis Teckenbruck kane, Wash.

Aviation Cadet Frederick A. Helt-{ Two brothers, PVT. WALTER . gel, son of Mrs. Bertha C. Heltzel, | TECKENBROCK and 8GT, ELLIS! "2008 W. Vermont st., is stationed at | TECKENBROCK, are also in the the pre-technical school at Seymour army, Ellis, stationed at Camp | Johnson field, N. C. | Rucker, Ala, is the husband of Mrs v yr Beatrice Teckenbrock, R R. 20, and

Pfc. Russell J. Stropes has been Walter, a mechanic in the army alr jiadusind san Atrcrath WeHRIIC | yie | brothers are all former Times husband ‘61 Mrs. Maxine J. Stropes, carriers. : 2420 Central ave, and the son of | » x =» ‘Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Stropes, 5105| Pfc. J. H. Medle, husband of Mrs. jhurgess ave. Marjoria Medle, 1242 McDougal st, . a = =» is stationed at Camp Campbell, Ky. | Opl. Streeter Moller, with -his He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ‘wife, Mrs. Frances Moller, is ipend- Medle, iu ‘Warman ave. ng a 10-day furlough at the home! sot ‘her parents; 765 Riley aye. Cpl - “Moller is stationed at Camp Orow-. FOOD

“der, Mo.

Churchman ave., has enrolled in t clerical school at Ft. Knox, a B7 Selves Survive . nm . CHICAGO, Nov. 26.—American Beginning his army air force ca- | civilians are better fed and better ‘reer, Aviation Cadet Thomas C.|nourished today than they were Collier now is stationed at the Cof- during pre-war years, though many

sodeyville, Kas. alr. field. AOL DASICL st He EHOlF WHF UIE ateti TA the fair

according to Dr. Frank L. Gunderson, executive secretary of the Na- : | tional Research Council's Food and | NS - | Nutrition Board, . Kenneth W. Bush, son of ML| «phere is no nutritional erish and

and Mrs, John W. ‘Bush, 1638 11g probabilities are there will be Broadway, was commissioned & S€C-| one he declared.

ond lieutenant in the army upon!

flight training. He is the 19-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas - 0, Collier, 205. Berkley rd.

force, is stationed at Yuma, Aris.|

w pf COMMENDED blocked for half & mile with heavy, Pvi. Carl H Happersberger, se [thick sludge that at times reached

, technician filth grade at the Clovis, N. M,, army alr ae,

SLUDGE 8 FEET DEEP FLOODS CITY STREET

SYRACUSE, N.Y, Nov.26 (U.P.). ~Tons of lava-like refuse from the Solvay Process Co.'s soda ash plant were being cleared away today after a 500-foot break-through In a

and one hotel,

+ dike yesterday and inundated -the New York state fair grounds, andl the State boulevard, which was

a depth of 8 feet. | Some livestock ini adjacent yards was lost when cattle-cars were carried hundreds of yards by the flood,

Red Cross dissiter units ‘worked

many of whom had to bé rescued from second-story windows of their [nomes.

BRAZIL WILL PAY BONDS WASHINGTON, Nov, 26 (U. P.) —

waste-bed dike caused heavy prop- 4 erty damage and forced more than! 50 persons to evacuate seven homes 3

The waste forced ‘a gap in the ;

: — N t " fr fer ALLED TH Tn HITE W Ys FOR LS oy i; TANG

CANT ™ RAID British Say Luftwaffe Too Weak in Attack in

Foree.

a 3 Walter Cronkite, United Press staff correspondent accredited to the Sth air force, reports In the following dispatch the results of a survey of British alr generals on whether the Nazis could blits ' London Illke the British did Bertin. _

By WALTER GRONKITE . | United Press Niall Correspondent 4 LONDON, Nov. 26. — Hermann || Goering’s ‘tuftwaffe could mount one big raid on London the size of {the latest British blows at Berlin, | but the chances are he doesn't dare | risk it, ini’ the opinion of British air! | generals polied by the United Press today, So | “Many of these planes undoubst- | edly would gét through our de‘fenses and give us a bad | but not many would get back to Germany,” one general sald. | No nation has air defenses capa<| ble of turning back all of a raiding force of that size,” he added, “but

€O0. PER: oon IN GAGE MANUFACTURE , ACCURATE € | GAGES ARE USED TO CHEC v ALL ORDNANCE MATERIEL BEFORE ACCEPTANCE,

ORMING A C ck

Accurate gages to check war products are among the many war try It. materials made in this area, according” te this illustration, one of a y series, by the Cincinnati ordnance district.

——— > ——————— ——— A ee SAI SI

Serve in Army

8. Smith F. Rietel SILAS ©. SMITH, husband of |

Extensive damage was also reported | Mrs. Freda Smith and son of Miley | in’ the army air Torces supply depot Smith, 1502 Earl ave, has been Pro- and the remainder- wis recovered dissipated - over the Russian front, | i moted to’ corporal at Camp Camp "when the suspects were arrested by Reports to British HRY Wa thorY

throughout yesterday aiding victims, all, Ky.

PVT. FRANCIS ©. RIETEL has

i returned to Pt. Dix, N. J. after army provost marshal's- office for this force is not being built up. The spending a seven-day furlough with | North Africa sald today. his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Edward | Rietel, 333 Wisconsin st,

| gers, Nov. 26 (U. P.).—Two Ameri- {ront comes."

{our defenses are capable of making {it 80 expensive the luftwafle daren’t

Won't Take Risk

cosmo ——— —ws! “Hitler at this stage, when he Is’ not turning out replacements of bomber aircraft, is not going to risk

SOLDIERS BREAK Up his comparatively small’ remaining {heavy bomber force in retaliation NARCOTIC WINOLE! ag He's going to hold onto that] for

i an all-out effort against ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Al- jores invasion force when the second’

| can army _sergeants—Alexander Bd. All generals questioned agreed

ith this, They | Pish and Lawrence D, Starr, both ¥ Germany has concentrated her airY fty—tr d leaders or Ne en Casa- plane manufacture on fighter craft | blanca which stole 12,000 tubes of —® defense weapon—since ‘he Are | morphine from the United States heavy R. A. F. raids combined with

army after posing for weeks as un- the Americans’ daylight precision Jarmy ai characters. attacks began doing heavy damage 8ix men and three women of In the year since ‘hat switchover Spanish or French nationality were to fighter production, the pool of {arrested for selling 312 of the tubes German bombers has been largely

| French police as they tried to sell ties indicate that léss than 20 er the tubes to Fish and Starr, an an- cent of Germany's homber strength nouncement by the United States is stationed in western Europe and

| percentage, of gourse,. Increases as The Americans, dressed tn civilian more and. more bombers go down | clothes and supplied with a large on the Russian front sum of money by the army criminal gr

pointed “out that J

Measuring food supplies against

- a»

Give Him ugh) Gifts

this tetas

-0> Brush Set "366 bristled “miliary. k- broshes, clothes brush and comb. 1,00

R b. Pennleigh Ties. The practical gifts) AD Stripes, plaids, foulards, prints. § 79¢

4 ERE c. Brown leatherette slippefs. Flexible

leather soles. Sizes 6 to 11.7

Le

. graduation from officer candidate i... national Research Council's diet| The Brazilian embassy last night school at the infantry schook at Ft. yo qstick shows, he stated, that * Met! announced a plan for resumption of Ft. Benning, Ga. recently. spite partial shortages of certain | Payments on its sterling and dollar pointment as aviation cadet in the tional narcotics syndicate, After] DIES - NAZIS REPORT a = = | foods which are particular favorites, Ponds which Secretary of State army air force, Pvt. Joseph J. Boar- | weeks of lavish entertainment, the y : “Plo Kenneth -E- Hauck 3045 Cen | {he over-all dietetic quality of foods| Cordell -Hull-described as “a mani- man, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph men met the suspects, and ‘gave LONDON; friday, Nov. 26° (U. P.). TS ave. has been graduated from is considerably better than in the [estation of Brazil's earnest desire to 'E. Boarman, 1721 8. Talbot st. 18 them $1000 as down payment for Cardinal Carlo: Cremonesi, 77, an the séa school at San Diego, Cal. | pre- -war period.” “meet its foreign oblizations within stationed at the University of North the’ morphine. {Italian, died of a heart attack in oie the limits of its capacity.” Dakota. | Arrested when they delivered the Rome yesterday, the German DNB

' B v5 — = morphine, the suspects face long News agency sald today. e 7 Giant 7 rend ET Prison, terms. . |_.Cardinal Crem, Who was 8 : i mame ~jborn on Nov, 4, 1884, In Rome, held a EM

“sg pty ERE Rr rigs ar ROweries oT Mh offers 1 18 YaOT

F Jil 5 ON 3 ve 7 Jrishman Fined can. He occupied three honorary "IRL y nh - titles under Pope Leo XII and ‘By Son of Erin

Pius X77 They. were the posta of. secret chamberlain, _domestie prelate "CHICAGO, Nov, 26 wv. P).The Irish had their day in court

{and prelate to the reverend _ponwith these results: IN : Michael McKenna, 58,-a- eabble; nABY FOL ND DEAD NERE

| tifieal chamber. whose Irish temper embroiled him Two-day -0ld Nancy Marie Gamble,

in fistieuffs with ‘William (Smiin’ [aaugiater o M!, and Mn, stornce Bill) Mahoney, a streetcar motor- Gam #4 o i I vas gun man, was fined $20. for disorderly Ad In her bed Ay. e Yi conduct and obstructing traffic by | was taken w the city Morgue, Municipal Judge Joseph McGarry, a third son of Erin, : { Malioney,-a Mayo county man, | told _the jury he had been laid up 30 days by a blow on the adam's {| apple struck by McKenna, who 2 came from County Clare. He said | | the serap started when McKenna's | ear blocked his troller on the | streetcar tracks. | #1 McKenna said sure his cab was | | on the: strestear tracks, but he was “not a to inconvenience | his fare by moving it." As he left the court he observed sorrow- |

d. Tie and Handkecchief Set—the per. fect gift for the well dressed man. J79¢

i tigation d tment, pretended ) Working his way up to his ap- they were members of er CARDINAL CREMONESI

_@. Hose ~Waarite quality, Rayons with: clocks or patterns. 10 10 12.7 "\ 20¢

f. Mufflers—all types wool and rayon

styles. S5%cte | 49 9 Man! s Robes Zin wo warm rm cotton frannels

FRA

i EE

. : . 3 5 v - » : Sante Claus just left his most exciting dolls, fully that the jury included a games and toys! Shop early for first choice. - Burns, a McKefina, an O'Neil and

i» Dufty,.~

~ ¥ STIMSON SILENT oN { TULE LAKE PROPOSAL

| WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U. P). j=Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson declined to comment today on {proposals that the army take over permanently the Tule lake segre- * [gation center for disloyal Japanese+tAmericans, The center has been under the direction of the. war relocation | authority but was taken over temporarily by the army during recent disturbances there. A bill was introduced in the house yesterday. directing the army to take per. manent possession, ’

“ff Astring of cordbeard cons - and frocks to ememble.

Bow Sd Gy

GROW MEDICAL PLANTS . BEATTLE Washington state is now growing successfully a dozen or more medicinal plants, the products of which will replace former imports.

* Chinese Checkers

bey fn for dn ot

get 69 BO rh apes signed, otroctive sel.

Infants’ Buntings ... 1.39

“It makes a fellow feel pretty fine-to-be warm and cozy and yet be the object of plenty of admiring glances. We've won first place in Mr. Baby's affections because for 37 years we've specialized in problems of the very youngest set. We know what babies cry for. We know what Mothers want. We're ready fo save them time, trouble, and money, tool

Infants’ Robes Liens 100

Crib Comforts. ....... 1.98 to 2.98

Absorbent eotton felt covered with attractive. cotton prints.

a. Classic kid d'Orsays. Rayon lined; leather soles. Sizes n to 8. 1 8

- b. Felt Slippers, leather soles. . Brown, oxford. Sizes 310 8. 1.39

¢. Boxed handkerchiefs , . . snow white wi'h eolored em- 3 EE — en d. Chest of cadar wood for jewels or r hankies. 10x5!/,x2%; inches. 3,

_ Crib Blankets, 36x50. 2.49

38% wool,

_—- ed

. Sted nel

Soh appealing : rs to cuddle Jolly fellows 1 69 with Roppy orms ond legs.

Inf. Taffete Dreisos . 1.00 : Sines 1 to 3. Velvet and Corduro Bonnets. . 1.98 and 2.49

e. Lyncrest Full-Fashionsd ery. Sizes 81/3 to 1015. Toe

f. Gowns of Printed saver - plain rayon satin. to 40.

CHENILLE “BEDUACKETS, 189] A menor : > ?

A Ee