Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1949 — Page 3

IR na TO mr Fi

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vill follow, is resident, nber of the

Frederick 5 lis, and a ¥ } Abbott, }

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1

| ots Openly Oppose State Control

7000 Sign Church's Official Protest; 90 Per Cent Due to Fall in Line

By United Press A Catholic spokesman at Prague Czechslovakia said today that more than 70 per cent of the 7000" priests in Czechslovakia had signed a protest against an impending law putting the church under state control. | By the end of next week, the spokesman said, more than 90 per cent of the priests will have signed the protesis. In addition, they aré flooding the Central Ac-|™ tion Committee of the National{that an article entitled “Krilov Front with individual protests. |(a Russian writer) or Aesop” was If the report is correct, it means objectionable. that the Catholic hierarchy in| The article referred to Aesop's Czechslovakia has achieved one fable about a wolf who died after of “its main goals. That was to eating a lamb and Krilov's story keep intact the main body of|0f a small puppy who dared to priests in a solid front against bark at an elephant. the lure of the government-spon- 4 sored Catholic Action body. Bolivia The government's bill to take| COL. Alfredo Delgadillo, comover the church was expected to mander of government forces in become law when the national Potosi, charged today that 14} assembly meets late this month prisoners-of-war had been deor early next. It includes the fol-|capitated -by the rebels in the lowing provisions: city. ONE: Government approval of At the same time, unofficial | all priests and higher clergymen estimates set the total casualties | before they can take office. This in the 13-day revolt of the na-| approval might be withheld “on tional revolutionary movement at grounds of political objections 361 dead and 784 wounded. against the candidates.” . ie — } 4 TWO: Imposition of fines up to Chine 1 100.000 ‘crowns ($2000) and jail] THE Nationalist Central News| sentences or both for disgobedi- Agency reported today that! fighting between Na-

ence, “furious’ THREE: Completé state con: tionalist and Communist forces! was underway at Amoy. possible

trol over all church finances, “Salaries according to stepping stone to the island of

was guest of the | old high school winner of yesterday's Fox Stake,

Canton Reports - American Slain

Chennault Pilot Shot in Stomach

FOUR: this law will be paid to clergy-{Formosa. men who are Czechoslovak citi-| zens of good morale, who are reliable citizens of the nation and who otherwise comply with fhe general conditions applying civil servants,

Finland PREMIER Karl A. Fagerholm SL Dartiament tou) Ha In battle that climaxed a stormy ses-| efforts to seize power by means Sion of the House of Representa-| of wildcat strikes and disorders. tives early today. For three weeks Communist-

Killed in ed in Bogota w Legislative Fight

| BOGOTA, Colombia, Sept. (UP) One delegate was killed and four were wounded in a gun

The shooti V \ 7 - * led strikers have harried the na- 5 ng resulted from al . HONG KONG, Sept. 8 (UP) tion's industry and administra- Controversy caused by a presi- Reports from Canton said one tion. The strike campaign was dential veto of a bill advancing American was shot to death and set off by seven Communist-con- the date of the hext presidential two others were wounded serioustrolled unions, three of Which , action from Juhe 9 : , have ended their walkouts. tx BO June 5, 1950. 1o}1y during a quarrel early tnday. Mr. Fagerholm said the re- NOV. 27 of this year. H. D. Harris, 44, whose Amermaining stoppages were “of no Rep. Gustavo Jimemez was jcan address was not known here, significance.” He estimated killed.. Jorge Soto Del Corral, gjeq after being hit by three bul-

the damage done by the strikes Liberal diplomat and statesman, at nearly $20 million. was wounded critically. Also The latest turn in the strike wounded were Luis Bustamente, Plorer. was an order to Finnish lumber- a liberal; Amadeo Rodriquez, Con- William Freeman, a pilot for jacks. to go back to work, with servative, and Ricardo Silva, Gen Claire Chennault's Civil Air no advantages gained and no pay Conservative. | Transport, was shot twice in the

for the time Jost. | stomach while Leonard Clark, a Italy Mrs. FDR Diagnoses | san Francisco explorer, was

THE Defense Ministry charged Red Jitters in U. S. | wounded once in the chest.

lets. He was described as an ex-

today that Russia, Yugoslavia, : Albania and Poland had refused ATLANTA, Sept. 8 (UP)—| The two explorers lived in Canto provide completé details on Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt today ton with Mr. Freeman and his

wife, Mrs. handles publicity for Civil Air Transport. Servants in the household were reported to have told “Canton police "that they heard shots -after an all-night drinking party, “Mr. Clark recently headed ah expedition into remote western Chinghai Provinte and claimed to have discovered Amne Machin Peak, which he said was higher than Mt. Everest.

missing Italians, military and.accused Americans of having a

civilian. ood case of the “jitters” = $ s” about The ministry said 856 Italians onlin nly bec ; they don’t were known to be held as war ause they don

prisoners by the four countries, |Umderstana-it”

Y I The former First Lady was in ugos avia | Atlanta for an address before

THE Belgrade magazine, —Lit--a Southern- conference of Southerary Gazette, was forced to ern Church Women. withdraw its latest edition from She said at a press conference circulation today for “misinter- that Americans “push aside” preting Yugoslav foreign policy.” Communism rather than study A Belgrade district court ruled and understand it.’

(ton.

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State Fair Tuesda irl presented a bl,

Maya Freeman, who

ence wings,

CLASSIC DRESS

Miss Carolyn. Rudy of Bluffton, 1949 Junior Miss America,

and yesterday, The |7-year-anket of roses to Our Time, Grand Circuit race event.

Rites Tomorrow For W. F. Bivens

William - Franklin Bivens, ber for 45 years, heart attack Tuesddy in the Milner Hotel, will be ‘buried in the

Old Cemetery, Martinsville, after pag tomorrow in maneuver by the

services at 3 ppm:

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES In the Service—

¢ Local Men

| | | |

Air Training

+McKinney, Miller Report to Lackland Base for Course

|

of Trade

aii - i PAGE } Lip Reading Class § Local Horses ok

To Open Monday li di d y piano tp we a Wi Top Honors : I B . iy | classes for. adults, school and| waiving Emin Ci P 10 DEEN Sh

Classes in

pre-school children who are hard

of hearing will begin in the Board building next Kk, | sponsored by the Indianapolis Hearing Soclety. ¥ Each of the following classes |ceiving first, ‘{will meet once a week in Room 318. Lip reading class for advance {students on Mondays, 7:30 p. m., beginning Sept. 12,

Lip reading clasd for

lon Tuesdays, 7:30 p. m., beginning Sept. 13. Speech and voice improvement class on Fridays, ginning Sept. 186. Instruction for pre-school ehil-| dren and parents class on Satur-|yo™ negli Pddle Bare. days, 10 a. m., beginning Sept. 17. Np um Other services offered by the moogs Indianapolis Hearing Society in-| Ponies. Pal clude hearing tests by appoint- Puc kiey and Glenholme Fait, .. ment,

lists of approved hearing Glenhoime Talisman And, Glenholme Mes- Ist Blue Blazor., Raymond Wood, Wichita >” senger rgy Stab erro Falls ex, 2d. ahd Barren aste, rton :alds, counseling and soclal events, 33" (0, “Glenhoime Messenger and Glen. Carter, Tulsa, Okla. 3d

7:30 p. m,, be fk

1st:

Thompson,” Colu

Dan. M L. A

36 Entries Place First, Second, Third

D: * pig. Eight horses of five Indianapo-t ton. ex 1st; Tokodah wer, lis owners were among 36 ve-| Senne peanine, Lak igi second or third|Okls place honors in a 12. section] Me Mars Nepal Fi, MR {Horse Show Tuesday at the In-|Sunset King, e Thompson. Mar d diana State Fair. 1m. a id Killearn ‘Bed uty,

3 | pen Stables, Mt, wy Hh Horses winning to placin sl Ameri Saddle Horse Br wi 8 PF EB mar can Sa orsg Breeders

Foy Whispering

lid

lL

3

included: or Indianapolis 1st: Negurgh oh 30, and | Munter-course ombination, owned hy Stone House Sr ewburgh, beginners; Mrs William ¥ 15t: | Mary Deana, Geors

| Adan Athematician. ona ny: 0: seiner, 3d. - J. Junior 3-Gaited Stake Mare, Golds of Totrait. Jil 2 Over | 14.9—Ace's Radiant Charm,

Hunter Pair. ant te pation | RiGiyefeld s Farm. Danville, Kya "ot: Ace's

and Folly's

Polly Parms rmel. 1st, Mathe-| [Linda Lee, Lloyd Teter, Skokie a. 2d, car and Hall-A. be, Ww

Be P ho, Mitchel ham, Indianapolis. And Mademoiselle Windcombe, ovolis and Combination, Mrs. Farm, Indianapolis, 3d.

Harness Show Ponles—Pair h Jomephine A readers Diet pam and Fortune. Mis. Wd] cGrat. igudson, Houston, Tex. 1 anvilles K. 23, Grass yraid of M a Da nville . and Glen. | oney. im p Miss Jenny. na Mrs, Glenn | and Argyll's Third ition a ng Ie . Rantoul, II x ace nd Addition, br Stables, Mt, {ro

- Stoneridee Mr, Chesterland, O,

Fail Cutting Horse Compet!

andl Jere

ton Captain Joseph Crabbe, 1st Mary Kay Bradley, Electra “

Pvt, McKinney Pvt. Miller, |

Two local men have reported to] the Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex. to begin the Air Force basic airmen indoc-

| trination course.’

iR. },

Jimmie McKinney, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. McKinney, 1538 Lawton St, and Pvt. Billy Miller, 18, son of Mrs. Russell R. Miller, Bridgeport, R. Box 375. The men will undergo 13 weeks of intensive basic training before assignment to specialists’ schools. With the Eighth Army on oc-

They are Pvt.

-pupation-duty-in-Japan are three!

local men who recently returned from extended maneuvers, three who have been promoted and an-|

| other who. was recently assigned

to the command. Pvt. Richard Stafford, son of | Mr. and Mrs. ‘Harry R. Stafford, | 412 E. 10th St., and Pvt. Eddie B. Rowe, son.of Mr, and Mrs. Bessie

| Rowe, Greenwood, both members

| the

of the 27tR Infantry Regiment of 25th Infantry Division, rereturned from a 30-day Their |

cently field maneuver at Mt. Fuji.

bar- outfit is stationed at Camp Sakai, | who died of a near Osaka, Japan.

Returns From Maneuver Pvt. Charles J. Allen, son of Mrs. Ollie Sanders, 826 Bates St., returned from a five-day, 35th Infantry |

Shirley Brothers Central Chapel. Regiment in the Lake Biwa area |

Mr. Bivens,

who lived in 1715 of Southern Honshu. He is a sup-|

ply clerk in Co. B of the regiment

Broadway, had suffered a heart whichis part of the 25th Infantry |

ailment for 10 years. He

was Division and stationed in Otsu,|

staying in ‘the hotel because his japan.

immediate family was vacationing away from the city.

Born in Bloomfield, Ind., he had son,

lived in Indianapolis 25 years.

James A. Baker, R. R. 4, Indi-| napolis, and Donald J. NiRol-| 1630 N. Rochester Ave., both] members of the Yokohama En-|

Besides barbering in Florida and: gineer Depot in Yokohama, have

in Phoenix, Ariz.

26 Mr. Bivens was a mem-

Curry's Barber Shop, nois St.

he had been been promoted to the grade of| employed the past two years in corporal. George W. Hopkins, Co-| 8. TIli- lumbus,

Ind., also a member of|

the depot, has been promoted to

ber of the Baptist Church in Par- the grade of private. }

agon, Ind. He was 61.

Surviving are two. sisters, Mrs,

Pvt. Boris Tom, son of Mr. and Mrs, Mike Tom, 225 Bright St..|

Robert Nance, Indianapolis, and Was receiitly assigned to the 65th]

Mrs, ford;

George Van Winkle,

Welch, Chicago.

Clemency Board: Studies Petitions

The mission

Indiana Clemency Com: today" considered peti-|

Penitentiary at and the Reformatory at Pendle-

tomor-

Cases under day were: Scheduled tomorrow:

consideration to-

Bed- Engineer a brother, Charles Bivens, Which is part of the 25th Infantry Phoenix. and a stepson, Charles Division, He is stationed in the

— 4ions of 17 prisoners in the State Destroyer

Combat Battalion,

Kanaoka Barracks, Japan. Another Indianapolis man, Prec.) Paul G: Johnson, husband of Mrs. : Dorothy Johnson, 637 Alabama | 8t., recently returned to Camp; Crawford, Hokkaido, Japan, from a 20-day leave in Camp Fisher.

Honshu, Japan. He is serving with a utilities section in Hokkaido. ‘

Joined SHipmates ° Four Marion County men with |

Division: 122 joined serv the Michi ~ shipmates in. obs ervance of gan City fourth anniversay of V-J Day]

last. week off the coast of Vera

A like number of petitions Cruz. | [was scheduled for study [row

are Lt. (jg.) Doonan D.| 1603 Central Ave.; An-| Clones, seaman reeruit;! Charles H. Carter,

1331 Barrow Ave

They McGraw, gelos J. 716 E. 324 St.; stewardsman,

George . Payne. -George Johnson. Amos ANd Edward E. Collins, seaman, w hite Orn. Goodwiy Maurice O Flaherty. son of Mr. and Mrs Morris E.| fam Boudreau ohert J. Smith, Jan NK Cc Manuel. Herschell Sherwood. William Tee Collins, 108 -8. 13th St, Beech Allen, Lloyd Klase, James A. McGormick Grove. m Vickery. Johnnie Smith, Rein- ’ | Edward 1 ice. James Midshipman John N. Green

Thomas 8 Williams = fan leg Hedg uire “Rolana Pitts James WimSylves hes West, ClarGabriel Malle

——————

Bad Wage Curbs

Will er of

Wit fam Taylorsville, member of the class

1951, U. S. Naval Academy,| was a guest of the City of Cleveland during the National "Air

Races held during the Labor Day week-end. With the Eighth Army in Kobe. |

BRIDLINGTON, England €pl.. John A. Wortman. husband Sept. ‘8 (U of Mrs. Ruth Wortman, 21 E.| kp {UP) Li powertul Regent St., is serving with the| Trades Union Congress . today oc

overwhelmingly indorsed the Labor Government's appeal

British workers to forego further Mrs. J. the nation’s St. vote was fantry

wage increases in economic crisis. The 6.485.000 to 1.048 000.

Ld

to neth Atherton,

cupation forces. « In Hachinohe, Japan, Pvt. Ken-| son of Mr. and| Atherton, is serving with the Regiment of the

Division.

32d In7th In-

fantry.

Star-Kist-Tuna-Macaroni Salad

cA iiiiage

Star. Kist

(CHUNK STYLE ?

Buy Solid Pack or Chunk Style,

Make it in the cool of the morning... serve it in the heat of the day! Wonderful for picnics, luncheons; buffets! Delicious, refreshing — naturally when you take it with Star-Kist Tuna -because only the smaller, naturally better-flavored tuna go into the Star-Kist pack.

Serves .6 for 78¢

| Star-Kist Quality is the Same!

tuna with: 1 cup sliced celery

J LR

a 2 thap. chopped pimiente 4 Blend Shotoughly, and pour over above mixture: Ya cup mayonngise 2:tsp. grated onion 1 tsp. prepared mustard 8 Blend afl ingredients lightly and place in bowl! lined with salad | greens. If desired, garnish with nests of peas in pimiento rings.

Tuna-Macaroni Salad \__

1 Cook until tender in boiling salted water: 1 cup macaroni 2 Rinse in cold water; drain thorolghly.

3 Flake 1 can Star-Kist Tuna (Fancy Solid Pack or Chunk Style) reserving a few chunks for garnish. Then combine macaroni and

% cup sliced sweet pickles

2 thsp. vineger % tsp. salt

772 N. Ketcham|,

STRAUSS SAYS

“Brown — Maroon.

TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!

@

THAT'S THE NEWS FOR 1950— BLACK JOINS THE SWELL COLORS IN

CORDUROY

This is HOCKMEYER Corduroy—which means it's soft and

pliant—no stiffness—no sizing.

The JACKETS are tailored in a Clothing Shop (Town and Campus)—cut and put together by clothing hands—You'll understand what this means, in.the fit and drape and balance of the Jackets.

The SLACKS are by the one and arly DAVID COPPERFIELD —full cut—draped—zipper fly.

The DAVID COPPERFIELD SHIRTS are cut from a special shirting weight corduroy—flapped pockets—with a smooth fit at the shoulders and around the waist—Swell!

In Corduroy—the future looks BLACK!

The JACKETS The SLACKS

BLACK — Green — Gray— BLACK — Brown, Russet, Green, Sizes 34 GRAY, Slate, RED, Cream,

Maroon, Navy — to 40. Regulars and Longs. Sizes 25 to 32 waist. 11.50

(Cadet sizes — 12 to 18, 15.95 (Junior Corduroys — Sizes 6 to 12 Junior, sizes & to 12, 10.98)

—in a half dozen colors, 4.98) The SHIRTS

SPECIAL HEADING! Red, YALLER, Maroon, Green, 16.keep wo oudh

These are Corduroy CAPS— Gray, Brown — Sizes 10 to 22 complete acCORD! & COMPANY — .BOYS' SHOPS SIXTH FLOOR

in the small club shape— 5.98 and 6.98 2.50