Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1944 — Page 6
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} In the Service— Serve Overseas Ir 0 oA , | ) : Take Training MADDEN GVEN | Em
STOP wonder. arm PERSPIRATION INVASION ROLE oF b Helen Walker Serving in ; : | Es i pk
1. Does not rot dresses or men's shirts. Does not irritate skin. Gets First Combat Action 3 ; Adjutant Generals is / Soul
ig ) : : | 2 9. No waiting 0 dry. Can be used’right after shaving. : ed In France With | Office. >» 3. Prevents under-arm odog, S Naval Crew 3 WAC Sgt. Helen L. Walker of : EW Seripps-He : > Albert Shrake Harry Shoemaker : helps stop perspiration safely. f ; : ri Indianapolis is g with: the Roland Knox Harlan Coffman Sica GO A pate. ‘white, satisepric, staid EN Charles A. Madden, son of Mr.| PFC. ALBERT SHRAKE, son ofl wAC in the adjutant general's SECOND LT. ROLAND F. KNOX i” Publioan | party Be i ; and Mrs. J. P. Madden, 1407 Lin- (Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Shrake off 0 0 0 “0 7 to K ie|of Indianapolis is taking P-47 ; y : will be 1 less vanishing cresta. = den st. was a member of a U. S./Mooresville, is in Italy. Overseas ad . posite |. nderbolt combat training at | : plank D Amid has been awarded the ? naval crew in the American assault 12 months, the 22-year-old soldier Station in England. Based in Eng- { Strother field, Kan. The son of Mr. ] ‘ . 8 Uhieneby Wh Approval Seal of The Ameri- go n force which invaded France. This was stationed in North Africa and land a month, she is the daughter and Mrs. Z. B. Knox of Spencer, { Nias Shinkn can Institute ot Laundering £ } was his first action with the enemy participated in the invasion of{of William PF. Walker, 113¢ N. Lt. Knox won his pilot's wings and | a tersp 16 for being harmless to fabric. 3 land he has been promoted 'to Sicily. Mount st., and has two brothers in | commission April 15 at Luke field, FB ei Mp es Use Arid regularly. k ages | pharmacist’s mate first class. PFC. HARRY J. SHOEMAKER Ty. Me Hugs O | Ariz. Sa : f Indianapolis is with the am- : ’ HARLAN B. COFFMAN, seaman g Clarence C. Ogle, son of Mr. and Os . : . (advanced training at Coffeyville, By So | Mrs. Clyde C. Ogle, 1720 Montcalm phibious engineers in Australia. Kas. and Pvt. William P. Walker | 2-C of Commiskey, has returned to ing beyond the
: Overseas since April, he is the son | Great Lakes, Ill, after visiting his : st. member of a veteran Liberator] : in the army, stationed at Camp! ’ : nd sroup in England, has been proe{0 Mrs. Mathilda Shoemaker, B. R.| gonjer, Cal, mother, Mrs. Maggie Coffman & The platform
|11, and his wife and two two chil- Miss Elsie L. Cheusde, 823 Bu-| . “Une Hota to stat Sergeant; Sgt. 08. dren, Jerry and Dianne, live at 126] Two Indianapolis men have been| chanan st. # : Appeals to rach has been overseas nine months. [oousie Rve. ee a Lon, Tor i ver ™ er — { a | y i : Plec 44: Buy ajar today AsO and 398 fers Sgt. James H. Cronshaw, 1408 S. | ;
| : camps are Pvis. Harry R. Williams, IAI ARRID Keystone ave., is with a Negro port] Son of Mrs. Marty E.: Mutray, 236
sells toilet goods. pattalion that landed in North | N. Pine st, to Camp Wolters, Tex., | | . Africa with the original assault and CAPTAIN IN BRITAIN 2 Warren M. Lutz, husband of fres al C00 : the armed foro has been there since. {Mrs. Ruth Lutz, 2701 N. Olney st., | — eee to Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md, | > P ’ THREE: Carl W. Nagle, former Butler uni-| ! \ 2 Ment of a pen versity student, has been promoted STN P————TIC—— | Don't let heat rob you of needed sleep. alr-wick Then} Deaciice to captain in England, where he is not only kills unpleasant household odors EA . UW 3g the personnel officer of a replace- | ...it also brings country-freshness to over: Or poll i ment and training squadron of the . | heated bedroons...makes indoor air seem in federal elect 8th army air force. eet | cooler...fresher. Just uncap the bottle and, io! 9 FIVE: “Fa In a recent baseball game before 9 pull up the wick There's nothing to light, fi legislation and
a crowd of 5000 Britishers, most 2 burn, or spray. It also kills hot-weather bo : efforts in beh ; actment.
/ [ tectean bal i gd d | / : BOITH D AY ? cooking odors...freshens perspiration-laden bo geal Ny “ ® was the winning wrong ’ : | vo . .clothes...at a cost of only a cent or so a ls Kachen ders 4 PEN Don forget itl And den forget te choose from | day. air-wick is on sale at grocery, drug, variety, . lity anti-fourt
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. , William P. Nagle of Indianapolis STANLEY Bicker Guinn Cord. A kinds! AR } yo rdware, chain, and department stores. PAT. NO. £320,478 and southwes and has been in the European the- seeuany:
later of operations eight months, | : America’s Smartest Oreeting
*air-wick deodorizer and household freshener is
fully protected by U.S. patent. sir-wick is a trademark)
Pvt. John R. Brinker, husband | Suis bear this emblem on of Seeman Brothers, Inc. NewYork 13,N.Y,, distributors, € Dac
{of Mrs. Dorothy A. Brinker of In-| : N¢ |dianapolis, has been transferred! fj Bvy Fight O'Clock, mild and mele +b & from Ft. Harrison to Sheppard fow or Red Circle, rich and full A) U.S.A. J There is only ene alr-wica field, Tex. His brother, Lt. M. R.|| Bodied or Boker, vigorous & winey . : Remember airwick is the only | Brinker, husband of Mrs. Mary | »+-@F your friendly AGP Store, DAYTON - household product of its kind
Brinker of Montgomery, is with Yoo The mark of ORIGINALITY that contains activated the armed forces in Italy. .
You get finer, fresher flavor!
THIS WAS A RED-LETTER DAY for Jim — the soldier who had lost the use of his leg at Salerno. For this day he walked — strictly alone — for the first time in months. To Jim, it
was a miracle. To the Wac who had coached him so long and so paticntly, he said, ‘Sister,
’
if I live to be a million. I'll always remember you for this,’
To IS A WORLD WAR. The most Working in control towers. Making terrible of all recorded events in hu- strategy maps for invasion.
man history. : : : an histor) Manning the giant switchboards that And this is what the Wacs— the women send combat orders winging to tensely soldiers of our Army—are doing about it: waiting bomber crews. Working in critical hospital jobs. Help- Working night and day at vital jobs. ing to restore the broken bodies and Jobs that will speed the day of liberation spirits of fighting men. —and give us peace again. Working as lip-readers. Helping blind These are the women “they'll never men to see again through knowledge of forget”... ailla = . . : . . . & my, : t Braille. Working as laboratory techni- Gallantly, a new page is being written Matter os e. th Wa, 1 5 for ~ - - So . . ; ; : u » r 3 cians. As pharmacists. As psychiatric as- into American history by the women of f oy a th ’ } : sistants. As ambulance drivers the Women's Army Corps TY Amey; . * Payro, i ; As amb S . m : J F ih 5 War Bong Bonds, UY extpq An ¢
>» We'll gladly send you information about joining the Women's Army Corps. Simply mail the coupon below. Or ask at your nearest U. S. Army Recruiting Station.
ls ot : worl Serve in the ARMY oy fr rt | | Her as a WAC ee
WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS
J FC fn Wn GW So, So, . . — —. —————— _— —_—— ——_— -——" — 9 _— — ——— —— — —— —— — f— — — —— —
THE ADJUTANT GENERAL U.S. Army Recruiting and Induction Section 4415 Munitions Building, Washington 25, D. C. Please check each of the Please send me a copy of the new illustrated booklet about the Wacs . . . telling following, if you... about the jobs they do, how they live, their training, pay, officer selection, etc. Are between 20 and 50 Ol
Have no children under 14
Have at least 2 ~ i : Lr, years of high school
PHONE NO.
HOMER E. «
by |
THis official U. S. Treasury a
