Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1946 — Page 17

serves

and navy departs from both in the Their primary ine im, plus individual training is needed. 7 of tomorrow, reTechnical speciale emistry and engi n their respective will bg trained in , It is these types In war, along with industry, business, cialized knowledge le vast majority of ligence, were filled he war just ended. in Indiana are in ie Indiana military 1g them abreast of of this peace-time sical examinations peaking, the navy r to that for the o form a reservoir the strongest bule

be allocated with male population of ower for units ree organization after . It is not anticie a division will be

type units will be industries. Some te of readiness for 1t and training are have a complete enlisted personnel, 1 in event of war, e ordered out.

“olumn’

to drop on Bikind |

+ + « labor in get W. Churchill hot stuff! . . , Fairbanks ” to That Columnist. lang Kai-shek an you what he said th of brides . . , | 0,000 in a floating member the scare H?.. .» .. he was asbah two p. ms an “A” in it. m what his middle ! . . + Ceorge tate . . . White ember of the polo | land on the music }

hammedan . . }

now . . . the has added another | mes . , . ‘glad |

es have risen since ° », insiders say.

be the next queen ~ she won't marry ire and Margaret gether . . . get aid to Louis Mayer

ja-. . . hess rd was once mare jor, that is. . . , Bessarabia . . , |

crats worried over all we scuttle our {ork.

sidency |

w Deal Democrats | President Truman's i strike out the | force compromises posing as a cham- » was most helpful bill—some of the r to ask President

lping to write into

which OPA officials |

he country is going rer regulations and

lon is in his own who is running for

nd apparently has servatives, Senator

e& 1940 convention, icker in 1944. Now

ds best shape of any tional organization, national committee an, Rep. B. Carroll mn one of his lieusouthern political t, recognized as in

[t short. He never

.

b Lead |

ould not make an years. Is it worth ?

r to make atomio ly be “Yes.” Sole pon would give an imperialistic power 1 a few weeks, That Kremlin might well extravagant. But that the Russians effort and sacrifice which wouid cere

h the United States @

swer THINK that the ventive war against » done it when they rces. in Europe and ed’ possession of the

sian suspicions are to do is to agree

search and produce | | te department come | |

ry Dean -Acheson, | would make Russia »mbs as every other re safety for Russia

vertake the deelstve ||

THURSDAY, JUNE 6,

SCOUTS TO GET |

~ EAGLE BADGES

53 To Be Honored Sunday at War Memorial.

Pagle badges will be awarded to 83 scouts of the Central Indiana council, Boy Scouts of America, at the semi-annual Eagle court of honor at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at the World War memorial auditorium. The Rev. Lewis McAdow, pastor of University Park Christian church, will speak and the Rev. U. 8. Clutton, of Tuxedo Park Baptist church, will give the invocation. Five scouts ig 90 will have charge of the Eagle award cere-

mony. Scouts who will receive their

eagle badges are: Kenneth F. Blanck, troop 2; Farris Turk and Don eld, troop 3; James Campbell, George connett, and Robert cPherso 100 s am Jones, troo iam ‘Miter and Thomas

8; William Connel troop 14; Altom, troop 19; Wally Freeman, troop 21; Richard ayer, troo

s 3; Meri Robert D an . Clarkso rt D. B. Orman, troop 42; Willlam Sawyer, ship 47; Thomas Johnson and Jack n= neman, troop 61, and Richard Lyle Harbison, Jack Mayhugh, David Thomas, Leman Ray Stewart and Walter Webster Jr., troop 66. ; Also Robert Barton and Walter L. Mendel, troop 71; George Vonnegut, troop 72: Pete Estabrook, troop 178; Richard Lugar, troop 80; Walter atts, troop 85; ss, David Van Hoff Lewis, Vernon Reid. John H. Sigler and Richard Supple, troop 90; William Wright, troop 92; Ralph Harlan, scoutmaster of troo 4;

B. . Charles Christie Jr, troop 95; gene | or the right one.

Haley, explorer post 106: Nick Oltean, iroop 106; Richard Urbauer, troop 117; Lawrence Church, troo, 144; flliam

ard Whelchel and Charles Kroeckel, troop a5 William Flanigap,, and Jack Phares, tr ; James ver, Porter, troop 342, and David

Northam, troop

COMMENCEMENT SET AT BUTLER MONDAY

Baccalaureate services Sunday afternoon and commencement exercises Monday morning are expected to attract thousands of alumni and students to Butler uni- ‘ yersity’s 91st annual commencement weekend. A processional of 258 candidates for degrees will begin baccalaureate | services Sunday at 3:30 p. m. in the field house. A reception for graduating students and their guests will be he'd in Arthur Jordan Memorial hall following the afternoon

services. A band concert will precede the |books and publications given by annual commencement program the family of the late Allen V. Bus-

Monday at 10 a. m. Dr. G. H. O'Donnell, pastor of Central Baptist church in Indianapolis, will give the invocation and President Frederick L. Hovde of Purdue university, will deliver the commence-

| dianapolis physician, has entered

I. U. RECEIVES GIFT

1946

Doctor Opens.

Dr. Norval CC. Folkening, In-

practice here after three and onehalf years of duty i with the U, 8. public health service. His office is located in the § Fountain Square theater building. A resident of 1301 Woodlawn ave, Dr. Folkening was stationed at U. 8, marine hospitals in New York City and Buffalo, N. Y., and was assigned to temporary duty in the British West Indies. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund H. Folkening of Edgewood.

REMOVAL OF TUMOR RESTORES EYESIGHT

By Science Service ROCHESTER, Minn, June 5—An unusual case of recovery from blindness that had lasted six months is reported by Dr. J. Grafton Love and Dr. C. Wilbur Rucker of the Mayo clinic here. The recovery was due to remgyal of a brain tumor that “interrupted” the left nerve of sight and practically all the nasal fibers

Dr. Folkening

On the morning of the operation the patient was totally blind in the left eye and could not see enough with his right eye to count fingers 12 inches from his eye. Two weeks later examination showed “excellent improvement and return of vision in the nasal portion of the field of the left eye.” Improvement of eyesight also occurred in the less seriously affected right eye. Within three months after the operation the patient was back at his work as repair foreman in a railway yard, a job he had had to quit six months before the operation because of the blindnessswhich had been coming on for a year.

OF MASONIC BOOKS|

Times Epecial BLOOMINGTON, Ind. June 6.— Addition to the Robert Archer Woods Masonic library at Indiana university of a collection of Masonic

kirk, of Bloomington, was announced today by Lawrence Wheeler, executive director of the Indiana | University Foundation. | Mr. Buskirk was a member and] officer of many of the state and

ment address. 2

TIMES SERIAL —

The Heart to Find

CHAPTER 28 ANN WOKE, and stretched luxuriously,in the sun. It’ was late afternoon, and she was lying on the couch in the living room, the window: open above her head, and the fresh sweet smells of the garden floating into room. It was a month since the accident, and she was nearly well. They never talked about it—just once she had complaiped to Colin, #It costs just as much not to have a baby as to have one, and it's much more painful,” but that was the only time they had brought the

subject up at all. ” »

" WHEN SHE had proposed to Colin that they adopt Susie, except for his initial protest that she was too young to take on such a responsibility, he hadn't objected at all. Though always he had been eager to get Ann everything she wanted, now he seemed even more so—and if she felt that Susie would help to take her mind off Her loss, she should have Susie. Ann thought, smiling a little, that

if she had proposed to adopt the story he invented to justify his marentire home, Colin would have let| riage to me, but I haven't a doubt

her. But she didn’t want anything like that—she just wanted Susie. ® = = SUSIE'S FACE, when they told her, would have been ample reward, even if Ann had felt that she was taking on a big task— which she didn’t. Susie moved into the guest room, in the new wing of the house, and tried to make hergelf realize that she had a family at last,

The first night, Ann went in to] say good night, and sat down on

the edge of her bed. “Happy, Susie?” she asked. “It’s heaven,” Susie breathed.

national Masonic orders. T

By Hazel Heidergott

usually had a sunimer job at the university, of some sort — Bibs couldn't leave the campus alone even during the summer, | And perhaps Bibs’ successor at {running the place had the same habits. ” ” 5 ANN SUDDENLY - became conscious of voices—there had been a low murmer all along, but now they | were clearer, as if a window had {been opened. Without actual in|tent, Ann listened, to identify the |second voice. With a sudden little | shock, she realized it was Nina who was in the library with Colin. She didn't really intend to listen, {but Nina's voice suddenly was |raised sharply, and she couldn’ |avoid hearing. | “I know that in marriage theres |always one who loves more and {one who loves less—I wouldn't mind {being the one who loved more, If | Jock loved me at all. He doesn’t. | I honestly believe that Jock isn't | capable of loving anyone but him|self. He doesn't even love Ann, though he has a pretty little fiction {that he does—I don't know what

that it was beautifully convincing.” After a short pause, she went on, rather bitterly, “It's my own fault, you know—when I first saw him I thought he was the most beautiful thing in the world, “and I couldn't rest till I got him. . “Well—I got him. If he weren't my husband, Eddie would have kicked him out of the firm long ago —but Eddie's a great one for family, and as long as Jock is my husband, he’s family, right or wrong.” ‘n ” ” ANN COULDN'T hear Colin's reply, but then Nina's voice came] again—much louder than she usu-|

“We'll have fun together, Susie ally talked, and Ann, could recog—and you'll forget that there ever | nize notes of hysteria in it.

was a time when you didn't belong

to us.” » ” »

“God, Colin, don’t you suppose I know what a fool he's making of me? ‘I'm not blind or stupid. It's

“WHAT'LL I call you?” Susie |humiliating—it's disgusting of me,

asked then.

but I've ;sunk so low that if he

“I can’t very well go on calling even pretended any more, I'd be you Mrs. Drake—but I can’t call grateful. you ‘Mother—it would be too silly.| “I'd be glad to shut my eyes to I could call Mr, Drake Father all the things he does, if he'd only pre- | right—but gosh, you're just a few tend to love me when he's around |

years older than 1.” “You canall me Ann."

me , .. "” and then suddenly she | was crying, horrid gasping obs}

“Wouldn't you mind? I'd like that seemed fairly torn out of her.

that—Ann." “And Susie!” "Yes"

“You must call my husband Co-

lin, you know.”

Susie looked aghast. “I wouldn't | mirror.

dare—"

“Susie! If you call me Ann, you have to call him Colin—under-

stand?”

So they became Ann and Colin

to Susie. Once in a while she called them Momma Drake and Poppa Drake, but that was all part of the fun, ANN YAWNED a little, and reflected that she must take Susie into Seattle and Ret her ready for school soon. ‘ She might take her out to the sorority house, too—usually there was a girl or two there who stayed at the, house in the summer—and

not necessarily drips. Bibs Wyman used to stay there quite often—she

Act.

Ann hurried into the bedroom | and shut the door. n » ” | SHE SAT down in front of the] dressing table, and looked in the]

“Poor Colin,” she murmured involuntarily. Poor, dear Colin, destined by fate to listen to the women Jock had hurt. She felt ashamed |at qaving heard what had not been intended for her, sorry for Nina-—| and above all, grateful to Colin. For Ann was afraid that if she hadn't married Colin, she would be one of the girls now engaged in hurting Nina. og! Or she would if Jock still wanted her. She felt that only loyalty to Colin would be a strong enough defense for her, against Jock, She knew that by the way her heart still turned over at a sudden glimpse of Jock.

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