Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1946 — Page 15

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o- Japan; - Lord United tates; the American nd others who anding of the

pace as well ag qually eminent ...And ‘thro ) scope will udes a number ces abroad are analysis of the

réturn to an 0 War ,.. ahd ld co-operation, and designed

committee are

rles J. Lynn, utive Secretary n, the Rev. R, A. C. Corcoran, rrison E. Davis, L. Kautz, Dr, k, Dr’ Jean 8, As B. Noble Sr., . Page, Jolin K, 1 Sherk, Booth ite, Dr, F. 8. 0, 3, Wright. peace through 1 today as ever,

Aoney

ry artist I

D & beer poster, is weedy youth, f his wrists, was g a cheap single

associated with. . huge hypocrisy And it is hone nce has hired a

and cleanliness, chicanery, Ball e deep-dyed in- ; game and get 1e collar,

rth | d by his statee fans? He gives s fthem nothing u bunt to left?* ds had removed trate on killing

| said, haughtily, first, and for the a baseball myth, nected with the leam spirit, high ve me, patrons, for themselves, test good of che

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st “being the dee wiss folks shifted eriand county. is change by an 802. Under this yught about 1200 ‘hese 3700 acres io river in what extended from is including the located. 3 safely anchored Here they were essful cultivation

colony, once they s that they were apes and wine as knows corns and after they land« +2400 gallons of the famed claret ally famous wine

expect, the fame among the local court weeks, fd nent local gentry Father Morerod’s entatives in cone

th® 150-year-long spot of. southern 1 unique, still a re enduring than

posed

ng out that, after elephone and that good pictuges. nis head and not wht to buy some,

» me the last time ly by chance that is I was about to sr than I did and Between us, we d salesman withe

people must fall nber of firms ehie ek, I ‘have been y different organs e of business,

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lllegal in the prom buy, nor can they 7-can make theme 7 people probably © . The whole a e like this is there is no law

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"TUESDAY, OCT. 15, 1946

DID RUSS OUST CHINESE: REDS?

Report Russ-Backed Republic Seized Province Capital. Q SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS

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~~ Growing Ball State Maps Building Pro

gram

: Times Telegraph Editor An unconfirmed Chinese’ hewspaper dispatch hinted today that Russia aided troops from Outer Mongolia to capture Hulun, capital of Hsinan province, from Chinese Communists. 7 This bizarre report featured a day of conflicting news regarding peace | ¢ hopes in the Chinese civil war. The Peiping Daily News said that seven airplanes with “red stars on thet» wings” landed at Hulun after Outer Mongolian forces recently ow:upied the city, Ouler Mongolia 1s recognized as an autonomous republic by the Soviet Union, Russia recently sponsored the unsuccessful Outer Mongolian application for United Nations membership. Center for Caravans | Hulun is an important camel | caravan center in northern Man- | churia. The Peiping newspaper said refugees from Hulun reported that the city was occupied by the Outer Mongolians on Sept. 30. The dispatch said a division of y Outer Mongolian troops forced | au Chinese Communists to withdraw | ! from Hulun after a one-day battle. It said that preparations were im‘mediately begun to enlarge air-| 4 fields around the ‘city, and that | will henceforth be a!

ulun ison center” between Outer ngolia and Siberia,

‘3d. Party’ Hopeful Chinese “third party” groups attempting to mediate the Chinese | civil war were hopeful today. They | said they had been assured that! 3 Chiang Kai-shek's ‘Kuomintang| ‘@ii} government was ready to make h certain undisclosed concessions to! : g the Communists to bring peace to | China. Kuomintang extremists® at the | same time were saying that the | recent capture of Kalgan would! make it easier for them to per- | suade Generalissimo. Chiang to, at- | tempt a final extermination of the Communist armies. \ 3 Communist Pockets Remain The Communists are now reduced to three main pockets, each exposed | to momentary government attack. | The first pocket is around Yenan, | the Communist capital, and includes some minor cities in Shansi

The rapid growth of the college has necessita

ted the drawing of plans for a new women's residence hall. Tentatively approved, the structure will

be built in sections as the needs arise.

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Already approved by the state teachers college board, this practical arts bu

the Ball State Teachers college campus as soon as conditions permit, ; n :

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ow Exceed Wom LOCAL BRIEFS

province, . en et The. second 1s in north Honan | The Allison Pin club will meet, at | province between the Peiping-

8 o'clock tonight at Sahara Grotto] temple with/the newly elected club! {officers in/charge. The officers are| {John .Wijfiter, president; L. Pease, | vice president; E. Busch, secretary- | treasurer; J. Mclaughlin, new| board of trustees member, and Earl! Traditionally, a teachers college counts more women than men en- N@fll, publicity chaitman. | ed. Ball State has been no exception in years past. /“The dining ‘ foom committee of This season, with some 2300 students, the greatest in history, thé Sahara Grotto. auxiliary will lunch | | ; b ; / lat 12:30 p. m. tomorrow afternoon | I Washington, D. .C, men outnumber the Weined y about 400 ” concerning police radio frequency | Of male students on campus, 1060

For First Time at School

By VICTOR PETERSON Times Staff Writer . MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 15.—The tables are turned at Ball State Teachers college this year.

Hankow and Tientsin Pukow a ways. The third is in north Kiansu | and east Shantung_ provinces.

STATE POLICEMAN TO TESTIFY BEFORE FCC

A representative of the Indiana | roll

ate police will testify before the | | ral communications commission !

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tomorrow | —_/ at the home of Mrs. Sadie Helm, | allocations. (are veterans, 333 of whom are. mar- This cleared the way for suit- oh Jefferson aw. Daisy The representative, Zellon ried. Almost one-third of the mar- able housing for all. The drive was : . Audritsch, is state police chief radio | Fed students have children. _ {80 successful that the college offices operations engineer- and chairman | The record enrollment, which is have Listings of several homes still of the national police committee of 20 Per cent greater than the De be. als, 1 4 d by D the Radio Technical Planning | V10Uus peak in 1941, naturally presh i omeials, Wide y I r board. {sented a housing problem. This | s n R. ORs, presi ent, rea ee Capt. Robert L. Batts, cammunhi- | WaS not unique. Virtually every he Mase tas are RIpOFary. cations superintendent of Indian- School in the nation faced a similar LOOK ne to he jure, aul OFitjes apolis police will also attend the [Situation when terms opened this to aaa oN Pais a Pension | TWe Paris aweerity fusiracto .] hearing along with Capt. Roy O.|fall = ¥ s ge -| Two. Purdue university ctors Smith, Muncie, and Capt. A. J.| All schools were forced to act and Pogonic 8 Bae oa a wey wil 2 ra a) Shwarionly esl, Titus, Anderson, both police com-'act quickly. In the main they fol-|2 pus p ing of the In 5

| z Dr. Glenn J.. Pell) ‘Indianapolis, | was installed president of the American Society of Oral Surgeons at the closing session of the group's 28th annual convention in Miami Beach, Fla., recently. He succeeds

Dr. Van B. Dalton, Cincinnati, O.

|

. : ‘ atterns. Ball Cates the sites of future buildings meeting here today, The speakers munications officers. owas ar Same pa camp of 25 When needed and funds become are Miss Lella R. Gaddis, state I trediels “aR 5 ecuring former army available. {leader of © home demonstration A CASE OF INFLATION. ov, Spade is, or soon will be,| Ihe board also ‘has approved agents, and F. R. Willsey, Purdue

MORE WAYS THAN ONE available for 36 families. The same Four-year-old Richard Mandell. |'S true for some 344 single persons. | 639 N. Tacoma st., paid $33 for two | Drive Successful balloons from a street peddler yes-| ‘To get over the hump, however, | terday and didn’t think much about |Ball State a it until police were called to inves-|of this city to open their homes to/one wing at a time. tigate. [students in greater numbers than Quarters Now Crampéf® Mis. Edward Liehr, 819 N Taco- | before. The arts building will house the ma st., at whose home the child was, The response, was good, but the industrial arts, hme economics”and visiting, let Richard have her purse finishing touch was added by they siness education departments, | ranee Women. to go buy a balloon. ;sbudent veteran organization of the These units currently are confined | He came back into thie house with|college. In a house-to-house ‘can- | (| cramped quarters in buildings not [ Times - State Serviee

two balloons and the purse but $33 | vass, the veterans asked 1000 house- | jesigned to meet their specific needs.. CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. Oct. that. had been in the purse was | holders if they had space to rent Under consideration in .the over- 15.—Robert H. Plummer, member | gone, SQ was the balloon peddler, Ito enrollees, all plan are a men's dormitory, of “ the Crawfordsville high school | = rn |auditorium with class rooms, a faculty for several years, has re\union building, library additions, a signed to accept an offer to become {home economics training house and a member of the teaching staff at], {an education building. (Purdue university. Mr, Plummer | This then is the future of Balf|Will teach in the sociology depart|State which entered the family of ment at the state school, ° sate institutions in 1918 after a eee series of disasters as a private col- . . lege under a number of patrons. Organizations When presented to the state as a gift by the Ball brothers of this! Jadies auxiliary to the International iY [tity, the college had 383 students, 16 Are eio eard party at 8 aig J |focuity members, a campus of 70) dV 13 Machinists hail ais ‘8. Delaware acres and two buildings. |are Mrs, Ray Faust, . Clyde Miley Today the college is valued at $5 "9 Mrs. Albert Ackeret million and has 2300 students, 135 | faculty members, .a campus of 140 acres and 12 buildings,

Allies Charged With Failure To Fulfill Re-Education Pledge

WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (U. P)),—, The allies hav

plans for a practical arts building. [farm safety specialist. The council This will be the first constructed 'is concerned Mith improvement and under the long-time expansion safety of homes, highways and program. Tentative approval has communities. been given a women's residence hall | —— ppealed to the people |of three wings which will be erected! H. H. Wells, president of Wells & Co. will discuss “Aviation Insurance”. today at' 6 p. m.’in, the | Athenaeum at a dinner meeting of | the Indianapolis Association of In-

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_ TAKES PURDUE POST

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Naomi chapter, O. E. 8, will honor past matrons and past phtrons at a banquet Friday night in the Masonic temple he Act matrons and patrons will exemplify the initiatory work beginning at 7:45 p.m,

. als AVOID THE

The U. 8. mission was asked by e made little progress the s

§ CHRISTMAS SHOPP toward fulfilling their Potsdam | see Sate Rnd ag | 1 ING RUSH pledge to re-educate the German to. re-educate the German people

people for democracy and peace, a | U. 8. educational mission

Reich reported today. : It “spent a month in Germany t They . have failed because no this summer and submitted its {proper economic basis for democ- report to the U. 8. military gov-

ac) lists in Gommny, tie mis- ernment in, Berlin Aug. 21. [sion said. 1

was being carried out in the U. 8. to the zone.

For your special Christmas gift portrait you'll wint to look your very best So come in to our studio early. be-

fore the strain of holiday shopping leaves you hurried

. | ‘The’ report, made public. today and weary. It takes very little time to be photographed, | George F. Zook, chairman of the by the state department, recom-

‘group of 10 leading U. 8. educators, | cald that “iron curtains” divide the | : " ’ = ‘orn ’ Wont “Probationary” rehiring of jou Boss of Serpshy IT ae Cor many teachers removed for Nazi different brands of so-called democ. | *Mliations In, order to meet A ACY. Ee ' * |critical teacher shortage. Mr. Zook reported that lack of | TWO: Elimination of the caste economic unity among the four oc-|SVStem in German schools. cupation zones has prevented estab-| THREE: Efforts toward a gradlishment of a German economy “in|ual lessening .of the authoritarian { which, the democratic spirit can des|influence of the German home. i velop and democratic, institutions| It approved in general the edube established.” ++ |eational policies of the U. 8. mili‘Nowhere in the world has it tary government in Germany, par- . been possible to erect the structure ticularly “the policy of turning "of successful democratic self-gov-.control of education back to ernment -upon starvation and eco- German . authorities butj with a - nomic chaos," Mr. Zook said. final veto retained. ¢

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

|1I average was 5200 tons.

(reserved for Indianapolis patrons, traffi¢ accident two miles south of

ARREST UMBERMAN £2. FOR CODE VIOLATION

An. ‘Indianapolis - building mate- | rials firm official was to appear in 4 | municipal court, 4 today on a charge of violating the recently-enacted city lumber code, The businessman, Verne K. Reed4| er, 45, vice president, Ralph Reeder | & Sons, Inc, 2401" Winthrop ave. | was arrested by Sgt. Charles Couch 4 and squad yesterday at the réquest of OPA investigators. He is charged

WAR SHIPPING 1088 TOTALED

———————

The out-of-town man is to have. agreed to sell a trueck-) of lumber to Reeder at over-cetling prices. He posted $25 bond, Reeder was not taker into. gu Police were called to she : er firm by a trio of OPA hs, Howard Jewel, Ralph B. 8, and William J. ' Goodwin, whe - pointed to the truck, which loaded with an estimated 600 square feet of lumper. -

5 lock: S

Sallant Up-Sweep

Find U:Boats Accounted for 2775 Allied “Ships.

LONDON, Oct. 15 (U. P.) ~The "| Ainal box-score for the battle of the shipping lanes in the ‘Atlantic and Mediterranean showed: that the allies lost 2775 merchant ships to (U-boats during world war II, In turn they accounted for. the des struction of 866 German and Italfan submarines, the British government revealed last night. German undersea craft ‘nearly succeeded” in crippling allied supply lines, the official report said. Rev. M. 0. Robbins The worst month of all was November, 1942, when German tor-| The Rev. M. O. Robbins will serve pedoes, mines, and guns sent 134|/as the president of the Methodist allied vessels to the bottom, Minisiersa) suociuion fe Jet, Fought With Discipline The Rev. Mr. 0 “Until the very end the German A wry Memorial Methodist {ORs LougHE with discipline Other officers elected yesterday

(ure the Rev. J. F. Selig, vice presi [ “There was no relaxation of effort, nt: the Rev. Van Ness Campbell,

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lor hesitation to incur risks. Indeed, | 1 on the night before Germany's gur~| STOTT ArERSGIRE SDE. F. Mar render, two merchant ships were | "OP Smith, Program ° Birman. g sunk near the entrance to the Firth | of Forth (near Edinburgh) and a h ARE ARRESTED minesweeper went down in Lyme : | Bay (English south coast), “Had the U-boat war continued | for any appreciable period, there «IN TWO CRASHES little doubt that it would have im-| | posed an increased and severe| Cel strain upon allied resources.” Statistics, carried in a booklet Ind., Girl entitled “Batle of the Atlantic,” | disclosed that U-boats had “sitting Near Portland. | duck” targets off the American east; ! [coast when they: destroyed 39 ships| - Two women and four men were lin the last 19 days of Januaryy 1942. arrested as the outgrowth of two Tuey ok hires more hen they (raf accidents last night and éarly| | aid mines in esapeake Bay. a today. X Near Peak Strength Four of them were arrested dur- | At that time, Germany's U-boat |, 0 an investigation of one accident eer NaS ear iS peak Nyce of fat. Delaware and /Washington sts » Freachec in : . early today. ane, Tgets ers Juiter in roy A car driven by Wilbur Grubbs, booklet reported. Between 1914 and | 20. of 16256 Milburn st., collided with 1918 the “Kaiser's submersibles ac-/one occupied by Alice Wachstetter, | counted for 4897 vésels that aver- | 39, of 3737 Winthrop ave, and John {aged 2300 tons, while the world war Hedgecock, 1540 College “ave. | Police thought Mrs. Wachstetter Altogether—counting submarines, | was the driver of the latter car but mines, gunfire, bombs, navigational | Hedgecock insisted he was driving hazards, and unknown causes—the at the time of the accident. So, podllies and neutrals lost 4786 mer-|lice arrested both of them on chantment during the recent war. | charges of driving while drunk. An Their total gross tonnage was additional charge of having no 21,000,000. - driver's license was placed against — Mrs, Wachstetter. BOBBITTS TO ATTEND Two Passengers Charged FOR MAYOR AT OPERA Grubbs, driver «of the other “car, also was arrested on a drunken drivArch N. Bobbitt, city corporation | ine charge. Two men’ riding with counsel, and Mrs. Bobbitt will rep- | him, Kenneth Spencer, 1720 Montresent Mayor and Mrs. Tyndall at calm st, and Ray Hanson, 745 N next -Saturday’s Indianapolis night Lynn st., were charged with drunkat the Chicago opera. dei enness. This announeement was made to- | : day by. Lawrenc= Hill, local pro-| Miss Mildred Spencer, Hu, of 1906 moter of the coming musical ex Wrisht st. was charged with failcursion, following the release of a|Ufe. !0 have a driver's license and proclamation by Chicago's. Mayor | reckless driving after the car she Kelly setting aside Oct. 19° as “In- Was driving went out of control dianapolis night” and struck a tree in the 1300 block, Enthusiasm in Chicago is reflect. 'LeXington ave. last night. ed by the sell-out of all seats avail-| She was injured siightly in the able to Chicago patrons for Sat-|crash and Ruth Templin, 33, of urday’s performance of “Carmen” (1409 Fletcher ave. riding with her, with Gladys Swarthout, Mr. Hill| Was cut and bruised. stated. Plenty of choice locations! Miss Virginia Lanning, 19, Como, are still left in the block of seats Ind, mwas killed last night in a

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