Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1949 — Page 15
1 TORSO PET TENET TEER Ew or row A ETN A RN SO RT RE ET NY EN A ey 3 . ~~ — rey ? - - ’ 5 . : ? - 9, 1039 | SUNDAY, OCT. 9, 1940 — THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | . _ - - . | 7 n si e In . 5, . ag Ed Sos New Pastor Junior Historians Rep: Judd io ‘Spach % 2 ACE { P ; By Sovola EE 2. t Ho nner 5 = : : ana Oflis : Plan . Scholarships Rep, Walter H. Judd (R. Minn.) 2 THERB'S AN at 38th St. and Tom explained that doesn’t actually Indiana Junior Historical will be the speaker at the golden 2 we Post Bi. where pecpls to blow their money a Ti wars By od [xatetday 16 State | anniversary ie) ar 2 : § i Poy De Scorer. Siting => University next year for members celebration here Nov. 2, it was On the other hand, there are people out there the button mechanism with Bt Hoosier ,Yigh school history nounced 2 os.of who make money by helping fellow citizens biow he heid in his hand? . 8 fast couple bucks and a half. Its the helpers a man can't be 100 per cen he 3 3 ne Ivey Of Nk look things when he closes eyes each winners scholar-i_ "0 It takes two men to operate a trap for a squad goes off ship contest conducted by the n of shooters. Tom Hilton, Warren Central sopho- i 18 foqiired to do is society. Ju group alse voted lol, 5 2s United States in the SWEETEST WAY on fhe more, and “Techite” Dave Holden, can be con- on a flat steel arm with an participate annual Indiana|” pg, is serving his fourth term " ’ luation has sideréd typical helpers on any of the ive traps. fo keep the bird from slipping ff History Conference here Dec. 10 from the Fifth SWEETEST DAY y, and other T've seen trap dugouts before and have seen out. a So Jo, Wa Yegional megting lets A. eit has been : DID *oUiA De 10 Eb ams a Tot en + ar is orer re of neh Speakers buresu was estab- 2 BANDITS GET’ Saturday, October 15th chairman of li} °- what was going on. What makes the clay birds forward The forearm is back, cocked, ready er alge ie, speakers for) Nr ae This advertisement sponsored by membery fiy out so irregularly, first straight out, then to- flung straight out. The clay pigeo! Ten high 1 ry i g ri to- io the Interest of making every occasion the left and left again and then right? palm of the hand. It fla = schoo representatives American tevedoring Corp. MORE besutitul with PLO 5 ) industry in snaps out. That's the wa attended the meeting at the state day and escaped with $2200 in Your Florist Is as Near as Your Telephone : - New Record Made like a human arm only better Hprazy, |cash from ‘an open safe. : Et of sncour- THE CHANCE “There will be 125 shots . : not. only from came when one squad of five 4 from completed their 25 shots, five shots at each sta- don’t have to squint. You can hardly hear Includes a HY Sopris tion, and called it a day. Three men and two Shots in here.” LOOK! \ Fricidaire! Includes etary ‘of the women took their positions. Seconds ticked by. Why didn’t someone shoot? . 1g : a Snyder. Dave said it would be safe to go to the dugout. The trap with the black Frigidaire! I appreciated his concern but I was making sure Was ready to go. t gave : of the proper time to head for the trap house. Watch the thing and not » double-edged In record time the 20 or 25 yards to the house Of. Mentioned it to Tom . Incl rt of the De- were covered. Tom made room for me to sit down, Same way. Includes ncludes . culture, which Comfort was one thing the buiider overlooked That's one of the bad thi Frigid- a 1 ended . The trap keeps surprising you,” he . = Fricide: 5 e year when he built the trap houses. s aire! rigidaire! ity purchases ’ : Directly in front of us was a clear expanse of; R Joh Bergen f ition, % grass. With solid concrete below, on top and sides] _Ke€V. nn gen. evidenc and a long, narrow opening facing away from the at i! marksmen, it made you feel like you were sitting Jo Take Pulpit, Strout Includes : in illbox. { embers 0 e 1920-23 Price Tr Presbyterian Church will install . Includes a Fricidaire! Sit off ancl Green Controption {the Rev. John H. Bergen, brother Includes a Frigidaire! Frigidaire! Higidaire: in the holdings WHAM! The green contraption suddenly came °f Harold Bergen ‘of Indianapolis. y Credit Corp. to life. The clay bird sailed in a slow arc in front as Hew Pasor n 7:30 o'clock Incki hels of wht, . of the trap. A sound, similar to what you could Unc ay ne il ies oh oe 1B ncludes X Nuon, He DE I I 3 ham-| , arge of a reception for the hew : 9 ; r commodities IE ; " ) |minister following the installa- Frigidaire! fit. Bits of paper fell to the ground first. One sec- 0%: I stocks might ond the clay bird was whole and the next it was| The Rev. Roy B. Connor Jr. jes, which in OM Het pastor of the Meridian Heights N that Britain The arm was tely ol | Presbyterian Church, will preach . — L M IN MBL N out fewer dol- throwing immedia cocked ip, installation sermon. The Rev. and fibers. » and it was anybody's guess where the cam would ys. connor has been ‘giving his ' y ¥ point the trap. This is done automatically. Tom|ye.s { devalua services as moderator of Wallace ill th ? placed another clay target into position. Wham!|gi oat ever since the Rev. Roy E un oy Xo up Boom! Sometimes the clay pigeon sailed in one yor ie He n under- a {Mueller resigned the pulpit. e some layofis piece sty ® hit ne ny nese i would break ,.iireq to become executive secreCoven Sma Ipeces. Yo oF. . {tary of the Indiana Synod. in iin A Placing clay pigeons in the trap is no job for| gy Ho py tor of d up by other a gun-shy boy. There’s something about the con-the Irvington Presbyterian e area. This crete that gives you a sense of security. But there's Church, will give the charge to likely to have also that péculiar feeling that comes from seeing the pastor and Dr. Alexander demands for A Ski + shotgun wadding fly, pigeons disintegrate and gharp, to the congregation. The eo cost of lv- A ‘dood pi Tom Hilt I d hearing an occasional pellet whine. Of course, the Rey. Mr. Mueller: will read the must as 8 re- , 4 900d pigeon . . . Tom Millon places a cay rap going off unexpectedly doesn’t help matters. scripture and give the prayer. n. ba on the Yo to be blown to bits (maybe) a That's one job you just don’t walk off. At least prs Robert Simons will direct kers are still ew seconds later. not while the shooting is going on. the special music. The Rev. C. Srivers at > Franklin Bruce, moderator of the aw 8 e {Indianapolis Presbytery, will preone | Kamikaze By Robert C. Ruark iis
tish worker is onger position | worker, employment in from .1.6 mil48, to 4.1 mil-
po likely to tell -— at the slight-
50.
A.
"the death-dive in a last-ditch gamble.
NEW YORK, Oct. 8 — One thing the Navy learned from the Japs in the Pacific was the value of the suicide pilot, or kamikaze, in destroying an objective when formal means fail. The admission by Capt. John G. Crommelin that he was responsible for leaking the contents of personal, restricted letters to the press makes it pretty clear that Capt. Crommelin fs no hothead, speaking only for himself. When Capt. Crommelin popped off last month that Navy was being “nibbled to death” In the Pentagon, that might have passed as an irresponsible statement by an individual officer and was formally dismissed as such. But Capt. Crommelin’s startling behavior in releasing Vice Adm. Gerald. Bogan’s personal letter to Navy Secretary Francis Mathews suddenly makes all clear. The bigger brass, despairing of more subtle attacks on unification and the Air Force, desperately chose themselves a kamikaze.
Capt. Crommelin’s Death-Dive
IT IS ALMOST mandatory that Capt. Crommelin had the support of the Navy big guns, and that his publicizing of Adm. Bogan’s letter was Having gotten away; more or less, with his pop-off of last month, Capt. Crommelin would be very carefully minding his behavior now unless he was part of a careful plot, with plenty of backing at the top. The captain, now suspended, says he didn’t steal the letters, which means he got them with the knowledge of Admirals Denfeld and Radford, through whose hands they passed for formal indorsement. He says the first withheld his identity only to stave off a diversionary interest in himself, thereby robbing the letters of public impact. Capt. Crommelin now emerges less as a lone eagle in the Billy Mitchell tradition than the unofficial spokesman for his superiors. If Capt. Crommelin is suspended in house arrest it would seem logical also to suspend the admirals who backed him in the scheme. Whatever the right behind Navy arguments against the Air Force, to date the admirals have
" heaped no great credit on themselves in their
methods of bringing their beef to public atten-
What, No Thrill?
WASHINGTON, Oct. 8—I once interviewed a celebrated comedian who was advertising on the radio a breakfast food that came in the shape of miniature buzz saws. Or perhaps it was shot out of atomic cannon. The details are unimportant.
The trouble was that my comic never ate the stuff, himself. He sald it irritated the roof of his mouth.
This may be beside the point of my essay today; then again maybe it isn’t. All I know is that the flour millers are in town, moaning about the fact that people don’t eat as much of their product as they used to. The millers are doing everything they can to counteract this trend.
L. N. Perrin, president of General Mills, Inc., of Minneapolis, reported to the Senate Agriculture Committee that 20 years ago the average American downed 170 pounds of flour per year in his bread and pancakes. Now he eats only 140 pounds. This is alarming to the millers.
Grows Enthusiastic
THEY'RE MAKING the flour more nourishing than they used to. They're thinking up new kinds of dishes to put it in. They're teaching ladies how to cook. Mr. Perrin brought along a book, {llustrated in color, showing some of the things his firm’s doing. It's manufacturing breakfast food of all shapes and flavors; producing ginger cake mix (you just add water), devil's food cake mix, fried noodle soup, apple pie in a package, biscuit mix, and no telling what all else. His scientists have developed wheat starches to put into cherry ple. They've figured an efficient method of making heartshaped cakes for St. Valentine's Day. They've roses-in-snow cake for Mother's Day. Only recently did they come up with goblin chiffon cake for Halloween. Obviously, they're on their
Paul BE. Hadlick, the Senators’ counsel, said he
The Quiz Master
What had the first subway in the world? Dy ad Oy TS aoories
{ £ E Se :
De. John Borris of Apalachicola, Fla, lg cred-
tion. They came out badly on the anonymous letter charging collusion in the Air Force with airplane manufacturers. They looked a little ridiculous -in staging their awn investigation of Cedric Worth's alleged authorship of the accusations, and seemed even sillier when they attempted to draw Air Force Boss Stuart Symington into testimony before their own court of in-
For the last four years there has been nothing but steady sniping between the services, hot and high-powered press relations combat, and deliberate sabotage of each other's efforts toward eminence. President Truman, the late Jim Forrestal and the present chief of defense, Louis Johnson, have attempted to stop the secret squabbles and open rebellions, and all have failed.
It seems to me that this should be the final show-down, with most of the dirty linen on both sides aired and publicly noted. Adjustments toward the right should be made, punishments meted, if necessary, and a final admonition delivered to the boys to quit wasting their strength fighting each other.
No Help to Navy's Morale
IT MAY BE that the Navy's morale has capsized as a result of the victories scored by the Air Force in their wrestle for power, but I cannot see how it has been lifted very high by the recent activities of its senior officers. As a former Navy man I find very little to boast of in the carryings-on of the dignified senior service.
I note that the congressional hearings are announced as closed, which means the public will hear orly leaks and what Chairman Vinson wishes to disclose. I cannot see where much actual security is jeopardized here, unless the brave buckos start to swapping recipes for atom bombs or some such, and I think the public has a right to be in on the row.
We are the people who have to fight these wars for the admirals and generals, and pay for them both before and after. - There's been enough cover-up already, and this is one I want to let the light shine on. —
Comes From Ohio
The Rev. Mr. Bergen comes to Indianapolis from Delaware, O., where he has been minister of a Presbyterian church. He is a graduate of Franklin College and Princeton Theological Seminary. He and Mrs. Bergen did graduate work in Edinburgh, Scotland. While they were there, their son, John, was born. John is 19 now and a sophomore in the College of Wooster. E. V. Bergen, father of the new pastor, lives in Franklin, Ind. Mary Bergen, 13-year-old daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Bergen, will enroll in Howe High School. The new pastor was very active in church work in the community of Delaware. He served his presbytery as stated clerk for nine years and is a one-time moderator of the presbytery. He is a former secretary of the synod’s committee on ministerial relations; helped organize the Delaware Council of Social Agencies and was its chairman. During the war, he joined the teaching staff of the Flight Preparatory School for Naval Aviation Service.
Doctors Launch Hunt for Diabetics
‘Medical Detectives’
Offer Free Tests
More than 800 Indianapolis doetors will launch a “medical detective hunt” tomorrow in an all-out search for Hoosiers who are suffering from diabetes without their knowledge. The physicians will give a free test to anyone who asks for it in
IMAGINE ALL THIS IN YOUR LIVING ROOM
On your living room floor a gorgeous, luxurious rug. And to place upon this rug all these magnificent furniture pieces: A big, superbly-comfortable 2-piece Living Room Suite . . . one you will own with pride and enjoy for years. Three matching lamps—2 table lamps and a floor lamp. You receive also three finely-carved, beautifully- finished occasional tables—2 end tables and a cocktail table. And, as a final note of convenience, a handy magazine basket. In all, 10 great
INCLUDED x12 RUG
items to make up a great group. CONVENIENT TERMS OF 7 QUALITY PIECES
INCLUDED i
Innerspring Mattress and Coil Spring
Ld CHINN B03 NS SELENE ¥
INCLUDED 2 Dainty BOUDOIR LAMPS
4
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NF 4 SLEEP IN
By Frederick C. Othman an effort to find undetected dia{betes cases in order to give vic . [time timely warning. still thought corn was mighty expensive when| The “medical ‘detective hunt” turned into corn flakes. Miller Perrin let his vice|is part of a national campaign, president, Walter R. Barry, answer that one. |Oct. 10 through 16, by the Ameri“Well,” said Barry, “you can take corn and can Diabetes Association which turn it into lquid of the Kentucky variety and, so estimates that there are more converted;-that corn is worth about $40 a bushel. Yay a Juilion phicscted cases 1 hate do any advertising here, but you take our Campaigns similar to the India y anapolis drive are being conThis product, said he, is well worth the price. If it weren't, people would grind up their own ducted throughout Indiana this
week and similar “medical detecwheat in their coffee mills. And another thing: tive hunts” have been scheduled “Take our bisquick,” he said.
é “To make a throughout the country. dozen biscuits out of bisquick will cost the house-| Dr. C. L. Rudesill is head of the wife 9 cents. A dozen biscuits made the old- Indianapolis committee. fashioned way will cost her 8 cents. And if she
wants to save the money, we'll be delighted to sell Herman Danforth, 77,
her the flour.” . ‘Banker, Dies: All Sorts of Inducements DANFORTH, IIL, Oct. 8 (UP)
THE HANDSOME Mr. Barry, whose black hair|— Herman Danforth, 77, first was flecked with flour—I was about to say snow— president of the Federal Land was growing enthuisastic along about here. The/Bank, St. Louis, died today at Sepators were giving him their rapt attention.|this Iroquois County town foundSo were a number of lady reporters in the press|ed by his grandfather. box. Mr. Danforth was the first “It used to be,” sald Mr. Barry, “that many president of the Illinois Farm BuAmerican women, brides and so on, were afraid to|reau Federation and former presitackle a cake. It frightened them. They didn’t|dent of the National Grain Dealbelieve they could do it. ers Association. He organized the “Now women are getting the thrill of their| Tazewell County, Ill, Farm Bulives, making fine, light, fluffy cakes out of our reau. cake mixes.” Mr. Danforth practiced law in The ladies, I regret to report, snorted. It was Peoria for six years after his almost as if they'd given out with a 'ladylike boo. graduation from the University of Mr. Barry flushed. But I think he got the ladies Michigan Law School. In 1917 he wrong. They had no objection to his cake mixes Organized the St. Louis Bank. of whatever flavor.” It wasn’t that at all. He is survived by his wife, What they resented was his flat statement that Louise, two daughters and a son. they got their biggest thrills pouring warm water| Funeral arrangements were not ns is fowisrag cake ingredients, They said, announced. and I quote, e milling industry had nothing| “rm whatever to do with i ey thrills, All| SCHOOLMEN TO MEET clear, Mr. B.? NASHVILLE, Oct. 9—The Rev. . T. K. Smith, pastor of the Columbus, Ind, Christian Church, will
7? Test Your Skill ??? wo key on By following a dinner at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday in Nashville.
ited with having manufactured the first ice in
this country in 1851. « factory Authorized Sales & . ® o 9 % @ Parker “51°.%21* What is the oldest national flag? S Shanti The flag of Denmark, a white cross on a red Eversharp field, is the oldest national flag, and has been ® Esterbrook in existence since the 18th century. . Nama Muitikolor ® & Is it possible for a dog to jump or climb over HOOSIER walls 10 feet high? : PEN SHOP
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| INCLUDED 1949 Frigidaire
INCLUDED 1949 Gas Range
1949 GAS RANGE
unit.
5 3 OUTFITTING COMPANY]
219 E. WASH. ST — MA. 1404 = Across From Court Hous
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