Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1944 — Page 10

r Clothes (P| , L, CAGLE smomnoes| NOW OVERSEAS * Burns « : ~~ *Tears |gorving Supply Group in and make your : clothes look os The Mediterranean » go Perfect os ever] Theater. _ MAIL YOUR CLOTHES TO US oe 4 Weil ropuls wa od * [0 OB Ble. 526° ok, bone hy

promptly tutu them paren post C.0.D. is in the Mediterranean theater! HOOSIER WEAVING €0. vith an army transportation corps

Sate Bldg Indianapolis, Ind. | unit that has handled over 12,000. 11 ile 000 tons of equipment since the in-

vasion of North Africa.

*

? Repairs Italy's Utilities T. 5th Gr. Edgar R. Freeland, 8 | electrician, husband of Mrs. Betty

M. Freeland, 5828 Oak ave. is with Dog odors — cat odors — bird oders won's a base section engineer company trouble you if you use air-wick. Just uncap that has helped put back in work-

. +. ing order large city public utility the boule, pull vp the wick, and thats) tems destroyed by Germans as

all. No fuss—no bother. Nothing to light, (po; retreated through Sicily and burn, or spray. This amazing discovery Italy, He is the son of Mr. and contains Chlorophyll — Nature's own sub- Mrs. Homer ‘E. Freeland, 2637 stance found in growing plants, And Southeastern ave.

Jocsuse we, nd Silt Joi wens, “Just one plane , . . and one orophyll, it makes indoor air country- ... in one squadron . .." but fresh. Use air-wick, too, to kill unpleasant t, 5 Sgt. Lowell Perkins it was odors in kitchen, bathrooms, musty The Plane. “The Memphis Belle” | closets, smokestale rooms, sickrooms, and had come home. The European nurseries. It costs only a cent or so a day, | Premiere of the war department picture about the big Fort was held, CL at her home base in England. Sgt.! and department stores. air-wick is a trades peopeing is the son of Mr. and Mrs. mark of Seeman Brothers, Inc., New York 'E. L. Perkins, 2151 Park ave, 13, N.Y, distributors.

At grocery, drug, variety, hardware, chain,

to Great Lakes naval training station after spending a nine day fur-

| Division st. His parents Mr. and

U. 8. 8. Chandler.

Bluejackets Graduate

Seven Indianapolis bluejackets {have been graduated from courses {of specialized training at Great . | Lakes, Ill. The men and their . 1{ schools are Thomas E. Klinger, 514 [Emerson ave.; Clyde R. Johns, 2020 |

Wilcox st.; Paul H. Kemp, 2133 Ox{ford st.; William J. Conley, 3106 Park ave.;, Thomas T, Canter, 105 |W. Arizona st., and Leslie 8S. Mor‘gan, 1717 Lockwood st. all from | basic engineering school, and John J. Beck, 1339 Sumner ave. from gunnery - school.

A CREME

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{ Ensign C. O. McGaughey, for!merly of Indianapolis, has reported to Kearny, N, J. to help put's de- | stroyer into commission before leavling for sea duty. Ensign Mec- | Gaughey, a member of the supply | corps, recently visited his wife, Mil-

Back the Attack

of ‘in Sheridan. He is the son of Mr, Dur ing the 5th and Mrs. Charles N. McGaughey of

WAR LOAN DRIVE aan ol apt. arence . aldwin oO BUY MORE THAN BEFORE

| Bridgeport was among a group of AT THE

larmy chaplains who recently atUNION. FEDERAL

| tended the two-day orientation program for newly arrived chaplains SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSN. Se 180 E. MARKET

in England.

Pvt. Kenneth E. Cushing, son of Mrs. Dorothy Cushing, 1118 N.

{ler field, Miss, for pre-aviation ET a aa III

NN N RRR ee.

8 NN \

Two Twin Beds and Five Drawer Chest— All of Limed Oak

five-drawer chest for..... Generous Terms

BASEMENT STORE

#0 1s 88

| Mrs. William Cloud live at 907]

{River ave. His brother, Harvey, is|

a seaman ‘second class aboard the

| dred, and young daughter, Nancy,

LI-1471 oe | Capitol ave., has reported to Kees- |

Making 46 round trips over the hazardous Himalayan mountains, First Lt. Cecil H. Whaley, who once

studied to be a Hoosier school- § teacher, has become a confident :

veteran of “hump” jumping in his

army transport plane in the China- §

Burma-India theater,

The 24-year-old Indianapolis

transport pilot, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey H. Whaley, 802 S. Pershing ave. even has picked out his own “Shangri-La” high up in the mountains near the China-India-Tibet frontier if he ever has to bail out. And while Lt. Whaley is nearing his 50th long leap over the mountains to China, his brother-in-law, Pvt. Edward Mock, is pushing forward with a tank destroyer unit in invasion territory. :

A Green Pilot

When the lieutenant arrived in India 10 months ago, he was green and a little apprehensive. He was one of a wave of young transport pilots dispatched there after’ Mme. Chiang Kai-shek had gone to Washington and appealed for more help to China. Not all of those who came across with Lt. Whaley are still living, for

Finds Own 'Shangri-La' Hi

Pvt. Edward Mock . . . he's fighting with the Yanks in France.

“Shangri-La” they talk about is a fabulous little valley about 10,000 feet up and ringed by high peaks. “From the air it looks like a lost world, right out of Hollywood,” Lt. Whaley and his buddies said. “Weird pinnacles of rock rise from the valley floor and you can see the mouths of great caverns in the sides of the eroded cliffs. The whole valley is covered by low, velvety green vegetation. “There are a few huts down there so it must be habitated. We don’t

the hump has taken its price. But]

most are alive and on the job.

the road.”

h

know what the place is but it] certainly is many miles away from |

Lt Ceell H. Whaley . . . a’ veteran of 46 round trips over the “hump.”

give trouble, and thunderheads; feared by all pilots, pile up with amazing rapidity, sometimes faster than a plane can climb. Aircraft caught in these terrific vertical currents are terribly mauled and sometimes lost. . Lt, Whaley, who quit college at DePauw university to join the army, picks September and October as the best months for hump flying. December, January, April and May are the worst, he said, because in those months “anything can happen.” Born in Mississippi, the Indian-

| apolis pilot entered the air forces, The hump, according to Lt. Nev. 7, 1941, and went overseas in| The men have been crossing| Whaley, is really a series of five March, 1943.

China under all conditions and on|rocky ranges, each containing peaks| first lieutenant four months ago.

Virgil Clyde Cloud has returned |PY impenetrable weather. The

ro r—

fn EL Promoted; Shifted ROBERT J, FULLER a a0 | WILL STUDY SUBS

{ base, Tenn.

i iF | 3 4

Paul Pitz Maurice Noel

PAUL G. PITZ, former member of the personnel staff at the Curtiss-Wright Corp., has been promoted to first lieutenant in the army air corps at Stout field. Lt. Pitz is assistant classification officer of the command. His wife is the former Roseann T. Fogarty of Indianapolis. : CPL. MAURICE J. NOEL, 1417 Hoyt ave. serving with an engineer

Fo ll ana snl

Tenn, has voluntarily transferred to an infantry division. He has been assigned to duty at Ft. Jackson, S.C.

Pvt. Aaron Holt, 615 W. St. Clair | st., member of a U.S. army engineer aviation regiment, had a hand kin the building of a heavy bomber | base, which was dedicated recently in England.

Harold O. Vance, 2625 N. Gale st., is a member of the aviation cadet pre-technical school at San Antonio, Tex.

Pvt. John Sands, husband of Agatha Sands, Maywood, has been | transferred from Ft. Harrison to an

‘air base in New Orleans.

7 Sr, Aree Fritigy

3

A HOLLYWOOD IDEA in Twin Bed Group

99

A N EXPRESSION of simple refinement, quality and good taste. Your bedroom artistically furnished—but not overcrowded. Furniture you'll be proud to show—and which is good , for a lifetime of service— and then some. Made of limed oak—sturdily constructed—beautifully finished. The three-piece group—pair of twin beds and commodious $99

combat battalion at Camp Forrest,

many occasions have been forced to!as high or higher than Mt. Whit- | He has two sisters in Indianapolis, turn back at the crest of the divide | ney, Cal. Treacherous air currents Mrs. Edward Mock and Miss Vera

|and freak weather conditions often! M. Whaley.

Robert J. Fuller, seaman 1-¢, who

‘recently completed a naval radio |

two brothers in the service. Second Lt. William R. Fuller, member of a

field artillery unit, is believed to

have been in the invasion and Cpl. C. H. Fuller Jr, is at Smyrna air

8. Sgt. John R. Dolan, 1650 W.

{course at Northwestern university, 57th st., has completed an advanced

| Evanston, Ill, is visiting his par- course in link trainer instruction at ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Fuller, Randolph field, Tex. He will re-

|1608 Haynes ave, He will report to {New London, Conn. to attend sub- | {marine school. Seaman Fuller has gation and instrument flying.

turn to the Dodge City, Kas., army

air field to instruct cadets in navi-

(| Chief clerk of the U. 8. army | {special service section of a combat Isupply headquarters in England, | {John T. Burreil of Indianapolis, has | been promoted to technical ser|geant. He is the son of Mr. and

He was promoted to!

RE

Local Soldier Is Chief Clerk

At Combat Supply Unit In England.

Mrs. Frank C. Burrell, 2852 Washington blvd. and his wife, Dorothy Ann, is living with her parents in Santa Anna, Tex. Second Lt. James W. Goldriek, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Goldriek, 4505 Carrollton ave. is at Rosecrans field, Mo., for advanced pilot training. A brother, Robert P. Goldriek, seaman 1-c¢, is serving with the navy.

Lt. Robert M. Freeman, formerly vice president of the Hoosier Photo Supplies, Inc, has been promoted to first lieutenant. He is stationed in the Panama canal zone.

Donald R. Young, aviation radioman 3-c¢, has reported to the naval air transport service station, Ala-

FALSE TEETH

That Loosen Need Not Embarrass

Many wearers of false teeth have suf-

fered real embarrassment because their plate dropped, slipped or wabbled at just the wrong time. Do not live in fear of this happening to you. Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH, the alka. line (non-acid) powder, on your piates, Holds false teeth more firmly, so they feel more comfortable. Does not sour, Checks “plate odor" (denture breath). Get F: at any drug store.

M. Pavey, 2335 Guil- pot in

Cpl. Mack

Bring in the Entire

Prevention of Eyeys iS Wil Save » World of

Trouble Oefforl. KERNEL Established 33 Years STREET FLOOR,

We Close Wednesday

CAMERAS

empty 35 MM.

KNOW the Condition of Your Pam

COR. MARKET & ILLINOIS STS, TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG.

WE WILL PAY Sc each for

ISHING lete PHOTO FIN ComP— SERVICE gularging, Copying!

F.

= ENLARGE a SCR

33 NORTH PENNSYLYANIA ST. LIBERAL ALLOWANCE + EER:

=* ¥ 4-HOUR SERVICE v - 'ASTEST IN

urs. Inc.

OVER LOEW'S

Brack

In Spite of the WHISKEY SHORTAGE

Dont Pay

HERE is a real shortage of whiskey in this country...a shortage that is bound to continue until the Government finds it possible to permit some reasonable allotment of alcohol

for beverage purposes.

| This shortage is caused by. two factors; (1) No whiskey has | been distilled since October, 1942. (2) An unprecedented demand accelerated by hoarding, speculation-and illegal operators.

As has happened in the case of many other scarce commodi-

ties, black marketsand bootlegging have sprung up in whiskey, too.

The responsible members of this industry condemn these conditions just as severely as enforcement officials do and they

welcome and are supporting all efforts to stamp out these evils.

Your Help Needed!

The Federal and State Governments and the majority of the industry are working together to protect you against the lawless element that preyed on America during our nearly 14 years of national prohibition, But to be fully successful... your help is needed for it takes two to make ablack market...aseller and a buyer.

It is not difficult for the Government to control producers’ ‘prices because these are all filed with the OPA, but it must depend on the public to be watchful of the prices it pays.

So, in spite of the whiskey shortage...in spite of the fact that you are not able to buy as much as you did formerly...in spite of the fact that, at times, you may not be able to purchase any at all | w.don’t buy from bootleggers and profiteering black market operators.

| Don't pay a penny more than the Government ceiling price!

Let’s Back Up The Government 100 Per Cent

The Conference of Alcoholic Beverage Industries, Inc., representing leading members of the industry pledges its whole-hearted support in making effective the ceiling prices established by: the Government on all distilled spirits and wines.

HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF AGAINST PRICE-GOUGING

Always refer to the OPA ceiling prices when buying.

a.

2 Pay only the established ceiling prices—not a penny more.

3 Don’t buy from racketeers, price-boosters and other unlicensed agents.

4 Patronize only licensed dealers... those with State and Federal licenses to sell you.

5 Report any violations of ceiling prices to your local OPA district office.

LOOK FOR THIS CARD

in its full size on your dealer's wall the next time you buy. It lists the established OPA ceiling prices. Do not pay a penny more.

V LLL; Qi, / / a 7 Cand Po ws

Yi Lm te

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gEaERstt

NOTE TO DEALERS . . . if you have not been supplied with a full sized copy of this card you may obtain one from your local OPA office or from this newspaper.

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