Speedway Flyer, Volume 11, Number 40, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1942 — Page 4

VICTOR Offers Tilt-Back Lounge Chair and Ottoman 29.95 You may have immediate delivery or oiA use our Christmas Lay-away Plan. Walter C. Blase Res. Phone BE 3828-R LI 7555 VICTOR JruMOTURI col* 231-237 West Washington Street

CLASSIFIED ADS All ads for this column must be written out in full, on one side of the paper only. They should be mailed to us or brought in by ten o’clock, Wednesday mornings. Please do not telephone in your ads. Charges: The minimum rate for an ad here is 20c. For an ad with more than twenty-five words, the charge is 20c plus one cent a word beyond the minimum words. Payment must accompany each ad. Coin or stamps Will be received.

HELP WANTED —Ladies for kitchen and dining room, call at Pfisterer’s Cafeteria, 1502 Main Street. _ ROOM FOR RENT—in modern home. Gentlemen preferred. 5530 West 10th St. Belmont 2655-R. LOST—Boy’s wrist watch on school athletic field. Reward. Bob Taylor. Belmont 4664-R. PIANO LESSONS in your home from an authorized teacher of the Saint Louis Institute of Music and a member of the Indianapolis Piana Teacher’s Association. ARLENE ADAIR JOHNSON, Lincoln 1090. FOR SALE—Grimes Golden, Jonathan and Delicious apples, SI.OO per bushel, bring basket. At FOX’S, 3% miles north-west Speedway, Tai. 0129. WORK WANTED—Woman will care for children any time. Belmont 4501-W.

WANTED Curtains to launder, 10c and up. Belmont 3210-J - 3624 W. 16th St., Mrs. Dobbins WANTED —Paper hanging, painting and paper cleaning. Work guaranteed. Miller, 3545 W. Washington Street. Belmont 3140-M. FILM SERVICE—One, six or eight * exposure roll developed and printed, 25c. Reprints from your old negatives, 4c each. Also will enlarge any old negative to Bxlo size for 65c or 5x7 size for 35c. Bring or mail to Speedway Film Service, 5440 Crawfordsville Rd. Speedway. FOR SALE—White Rock Fries, extra nice, 30c per lb. At Fox’s, 3M> miles north-west Speedway, J- Talbot 0129. CdOD'OLD FASHIONED APPLE CIDER, ice cold. Plenty of good apples at Fox’s. 3% miles northwest of Speedway. Tai 0129. FOR SALE—Six-room semi-mod-ern house, 5 acres good land, located in the 5100 block West 10th Street, Speedway City, priced reasonable. Also 6-room modern home, 1300 block Winfield Ave., two car garage, beautiful lot, well shaded, this house is in first class condition. If you want a home, see this one, price $4500. W. A. Booe, 1726 Gerrard St., Phone Belmont 1492-W. ROOMS FOR RENT—If you have rooms for rent or if you want to rent a room, see HERB at Beck’s Drug Store.

Our Boys In The Service We will give you a list of the boys in the service who will have birthdays in September and we assure you that they would appreciate it if you would send them a .card, letter, or a little remembrance. ■ Harry Shultz, September 14th; Free Jones, September 24th; Dale Anderson, September 26th and Jack Henson, September 27th. Private Clyde E. Alma, Battalion B, 139-A, 38th Division, Camp Shelby, Mississippi. Lt. K. E. Amick, 89th Fighter Sqd., Farmingdale, L. 1., New York. Dale R. Anderson, U. S. Receiving Ship. Philadelphia Navy Yard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Prvt. Donald R. Barnes. Headquarters H.D.Q. Squadron 47, Bombardment Group, Will Rogers Field Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

RALSTON’S GROCERY GROCERIES MEATS ICE CREAM 5230 West 16th Street Res. Phone, Bel. 4115

Julian Baugh, Serial 35356991, A.P.O. 1288, % Post Master, San Francisco, Cal. John Blair, V. 6 A. S., Company 1000, Sth Regiment, 50 Batt. U.S.N. T.S. Great Lakes, lillinois. John is the 20 year old son of Mrs. Norman Aufderheide of 1622 Christopher Lane, he has lived in Speedway over a year and has been employed at the Herb Jones Jewelry Store. Carlton Boles, S 2 C U S S Sacramento, % Post Master, San Francisco, Cal. Clayton Brown, H A, 1-2, 2nd U. S. M.A.W.F.M.S., Goleta, Cal. Thomas Campbell, Ordnance Training Center, Camp Perry, O. Walter Daupert (S-2-C) U.S.S. Joseph T. Dickman, % Post Maste. New York.

Ansel G. DeLong, 3rd Sta. Comp. Provisional Training Troop No. 2, Patterson Field, Fairfield, Ohio. Private Glenn W. Denton, U. S. Army, A.P.O. 980, % Post Master,. Seattle, Washington. John J. Eakin, A.S. Perm. Detail U.S. Coast Guard Training Station Curtis Bay, Maryland. Arthur Martin Eisenhart, F-3-C Company 42-328 U. S. Naval Training Station, San Diego, Cal. Prvt. J. Flory, 35254543 A.P.O 1209, % Post Master, New York Headquarters Ist Infantry Division’ Don Graham, 574 Tech School Sp- Sq. 443, Army Air Corps, Miami Beach, Fla. Ist Sgt. Ralph M. Hale, Battery A 27th A.A.R.T.C., Camp Wallace Texas. Homer Haase, Sqd. L, Group 3 A. Miami Beach, Fla. Sgt. George R. Harvey, H.Q. Det. B. School, Aberdeen, Maryland. Lieut. John R. Hayes, Corps ot Engineers, U.S. Army, Camp Gordon, Georgia.

Pvt. John P. Henson (Jack) P.O Drawer, (B), Sonoma, Cal. wt £, r t hur Hi ßbee. Room 406 National Hotel, Miami Beach, Fla Aviation Cadet Earl Higbee Class 43-B, Sqd. C, Flight 9, New Barracks south No. 3, Air Force Training Detachment, Pine Bluff Arkansas. ' Prvt. Raymond Jenkins, Jr., U. S. Army, 740 Langdon Street, Madison, Wisconsin, A.A.T.D. Prvt. Frederick Jones, 35356123 5140 Cornell St., Chicago, 111. First Lieut. A. David McKinley M.D., Army Air Base, Pendelton Oregon. Prvt. John J. Mann, U.S.A. Co. B, Ist Platoon of 27th Training Battalion, Camp Grant, 111. Ist Sgt. Kenneth Martin, Marine Aviation Detachment, Naval Training School, Aviation Maintenance, Norman, Oklahoma. Lieut. L. H. Martin, M.C., 7121 Indian Creek Dr., Miami Beach,

AIR , » CQNIITIONEOI HOME LIKE J CUPEL HOME | 1604 W. Morris St. Market 1234 Office & Chapel Residence of Floyd Farley 4924 W. 16th St. Speedway, Ind. SAVE YOUR PAPERS for The Boy Scouts!

BUY DEFENSE BONDS

The Sign of POLKS

Educational Adviser Suggests Rural Change The little red schoolhouse can bring its reading classes up to date just as easily as schools in urban districts, according to Lois Clark, adviser of early childhood and elementary education in the Pennsylvania department of public instruction. Speaking before the annual conference on reading instruction held at the Pennsylvania State college over the past week-end, Miss Clark advocated that the one-room school teacher group her pupils according to ability rather than grades. “To help each child to do what he is capable of doing, we must free the rural teacher from the artificiality of grade organization and let her give pupils with third grade reading ability books they are capable of mastering regardless of their age or grade level,” she said. Miss Clark recommended three ways to bring about improvement in reading in rural schools. 1. Re-classify pupils according to their ability. 2. Teach reading in other subjects as well as in "reading class,” making sure that pupils are familiar with words found in geography, health, and history textbooks in addition to those in readers. 3. Encourage more free, voluntary “reading for fun” from other books which interest the pupils. Such a program carried out in one rural school brought about marked improvement in reading, better results in achievement tests, and greater interest in books, she declared.

Fla. Cpl. Morris Mikklesen, Bat. B, 26-C, A.T.8., Camp Wallace, Texas. Prvt. John L. Ramsay, 370th Service Squadron, 15084855, A.P.O. 924, % Postmaster San Francisco California. Sgt. Woodrow Mikklesen, 220 E 7th Ave., Apt. 15, Denver, Colo. Henry P. Miller, U.S.S. Wharton, % Post Office, San Francisco, Cal. Ist Prvt., John E. Nelson, Co. 1 6th Armed Infantry, A.P.O. 251, % Post master, New York. Serial No. 35152429. Richard Nelson, Seaman 2nd Class Co. 3, U.S.N.T.S. 87th and Anthony Ave., Chicago, 111. Harry A. Parker V 6 H A 2nd

Class, Co. 595 U. S. Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, 111. John -Ramsay, 15084355, 307, Material Sqd., A.P.O. 924, % Postmaster San Francisco, Cal. Corp. Oliver E. Riggs, 16th Aii Base Squadron, Canal Zone. Corp. Tech. Kenneth Schoenewey Battery C, 173 F. A., Camp Gruber Oklahoma. Booth Scholl, Barracks 8, U.S. Coast Guard, Gov. Island, Alameda California. Edwin D. Servies, Co. 1, 39th Infantry, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Harry E. Shultz, HDQ. Det. 1-X Army Corp. A.P.O. 309, Fort Lewis Washington. Prvt. Allen Smith Jr., 15083013. 368th Bomb Sqd. (H), 306th Bomb. Gp (H) Box No. 3004, % Post Master, New York City, New York. Raymond Lloyd Smith, S.K.-3-C. U. S. S. Suamico % Postmaster New York City, New York. Sgt. James R. Sutherin, Headquarters of 9th Army Corps, A.P.O. 309, Fort Lewis, Washington. Charles M. Stewart, U.S.N.U.S. Seminole, % Postmaster, San Francisco, Cal.

Private Harold Turner, 35251451 Co. G, 126th Inf., A.P.O. No. 32, % Postmaster San Francisco, Calif. Cpl. Frank Wallace. Co. K„ 315 Inf. Barracks No. 1, Camp Pickett Va., A.P.O. 79. , Prvt. John H. White, Platoon 592 R.D.M.C.8., Marine Corps Base San Diego. Cal. Raymond Wilkerson address I later. Prvt. Oliver M. Zeiher, U.S. Army, Co. C, 35th Medical Training ! Battalion, Camp Grant, 4th Platoon Illinois. We want to thank our Speedway neighbors who so graciously contributed to the worthy boys in service through the Speedway Service Club, who did not play cards but gave money for the cause. Mrs. V. H. Bolton. If you know of any Speedway boy who is in service and whose names is not listed, please call Mrs. Ganz Hammer, 2021 North Lynhurt Drive, or call Bel. 3142-W.

Pillions for Allied victory ... or for tribute to dictators? There is only one answer: Buy U. S. Defense Bonds and Stamps.

Speedway Beauty Shop Edith Dickerson Walker 5076 W. 15th St. Bel. 0527

Send him LETTERS HE CAN READ!

w BLACK PHOTOGRAPHS BEST!

Southeastern Farmers Sure of 'Sweetening* Sugar rationing won’t bother some 70,000 low-income farm families in the Southeast. They will grow their own “sweetening,” and four times as much of it on the average as they ever grew before. Thus they are contributing to the department of agriculture’s Food for Freedom program. These families* plans are on record because they are borrowers under the Farm Security program. They live in Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and Florida. Stepping up production to meet increased food goals announced last fall, these families rearranged their farming schedules, and wrote new sugarcane and sorghum “planks” into their farm plans, many for a half-acre patch. When food goals were revised after Pearl Harbor, many of these families decided to increase production to three acres each. They are planning for enough cane or sorghym to satisfy home needs for “sweetening,” with a little extra for Little Peace for Lubeck Lubeck, Germany’s leading western Baltic sea port, reportedly pounded into rubble by British bombs, lies at the junction of two rivers approximately 12 miles inland from the Baltic and 40 miles northeast of Hamburg. Into these sheltered waters, filled with built and half-built Nazi ships and submarines, have poured iron ore, wood, and other raw materials from Sweden; outward have streamed military supplies for Norway, Finland, and the extreme northern parts of the German-Russian front, says the National Geographic society. The ancient city of Lubeck, with its gabled houses, its medieval towers, and remains of a once protecting wall, has known little peace since its birth as a village in 1143 near the pretentious castle of a local count. At various times Danes, Saxons, Imperial Germans, Swedes, and French have held the city.

Love Robs Girl Clerks In four years all five of the personable young women who occupied clerk’s jobs in the court of one judge in Berkeley, Calif., have quit—to be married.

A* F/VF PAY PLAN

AUTO MSURAHCE SIX MONTHS TO PAY i NO WTM COST] Bernard F. Rosner GENERAL INSURANCE AUTOMOBILE FINANCING 1255 N. Lyndhurst Dr. Belmont 2804 TRY CLASSIFIED ADS

BECK’S DRUG STORE 15th At Main St Belmont 2330

Judgment MILK

MAKE SURE WITH SHEAFFERS V-BLACK Shdp WE HAVE IT! If your lad is in the V«»- Mail areas, your letters will first be photographed on 16-mm film and then be reproduced one-fourth size again before he gets it. Therefore-write U.S. Service letters with V-BLACK Skripl It's PERMANENT! It defies dampness. Black photographs best on U. S. Service film I Use it for Christmas mail. WE HAVE ITI

‘Veniee of China’ Marco Polo, who visited Shaohing in the Thirteenth century, described the city as the "Venice of China” because of the network of waterways on the Shaohing plain. These are attributed to the great Emperor Yu who ruled 22 centuries before the Christian era and was a master of irrigation and flood control. He is supposed to have conquered the Yangtze and Yellow rivers and his shrine three miles from Shaohing is a leading tourist lure of the province. Until recent times these waterways served northern Chekiang as the main routes for its commerce in wine, silk, cotton, tobacco and tea. They now are largely supplanted by highways and rail lines. SHOP IN SPEEDWAY

Speedway Theatre SPEEDWAY CITY Friday and Saturday, September 18-19 McDonald carey jean Phillips ‘DR. BROADWAY’ Wm. (Hop-a-long Cassidy) Boyd—Andy Clyde ‘TWILIGHT ON THE TRAIL’ News Cartoon “Saps in Chaps” Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, September 20-21-22 • DIANA BARRYMORE—ROBERT STACK ‘EAGLE SQUADRON’ JOHNNY DOWNS—FRANCES LANGFORD ‘ALL-AMERICAN CO-ED’ Please be in the theatre by 8:30 to see complete show. News Disney Cartoon Wednesday and Thursday, September 23-24 ADOLPHE MENJOU—JACKIE COOPER BONITA GRANVILLE ‘SYNCOPATION’ MARY HOWARD—ROBERT LOWERY ‘WHO IS HOPE SCHUYLER’ News Andy Clyde in “Yankee Doodle Dandy”

In Case of Fire In Speedway Call Belmont 1400 FACTORY RADIO SERVICE On all makes of radios. We also repair all electrical appliances. Our 17 years’ experience, qualifies us to give prompt and efficient service. We have one of the largest stocks of radio tubes in Indianapolis RADIO BILL 1050 West 16th Street hjt Belmont 2484 Stan’s Barber Shop 4905 West 14th Street Belmont 3411 SHOE SHINE BARBERS—BERT, DON, STAN

FOOTBALL SEASON OPENS AT INDIANA Local high school students have again been invited to attend Indiana University’s four football games at Bloomington at a special reduced price of fifty cents. For every five local students who go to Bloomington, one high school faculty member will be admitted at the same price. Students will receive a copy of the Indiana University Athletic Review. Students are requested to order their tickets through their high school principal. Indiana’s first home game will be played at Bloomington, Saturday September 26, against the Butler Bulldogs, long-time rulers of the Indiana intercollegiate conference. The other three home games are: October 24th, lowa (Homecoming) October 31, lowa Cadets; November 14th, Kansas State.

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