Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 July 1950 — Page 11
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“In a few weeks the sharp edges will be rounded off. This group looks alert.” Well, okay. My impression of the recruits during muster was that the boys meant business as they stood at rigid attention: They'd look better, too, after the uniforms came from Great
Lakes.
Sees Effects of War
1. WENT to the Naval Armory to see what effect the Korean War had on Capt. F. F. Knackel’s men, the pride of White River and th Seven Seas. . : The Old Man is in Washington on temporary duty. He'll be glad to know there is better attendance drill nights. And the jaws of the men are squarer, shoulders straighter, backbones at 90 degrees. My main interest was the new men, or boys, who know little about the Navy, war, monotony, sickening excitement. All they know is their country is in danger and there's something inside kicking up a fuss. You can see the bewilderment in their faces when they scan the test sheets. Their aptitudes will be like an open book when the papers are scored. Not all will be gunners, sound men, radio operators. The kid with the big hands may turn out to be a fine pipe fitter or ship’s carpenter. A perspective test was designed to be completed in six minutes. Several of the boys were through in three. Mechanical comprehension questions had couple of the boys chewing the ends of their pencils. Mathematical ability questions brought perspiration to a few more. Recruits go through eight weeks of indoctrina-
Brand new . . . seamen recruits, diamonds in the rough, ready to be polished.
A Friend Dies
Naval Armory. : \ Chief Cord told me when the tests were over, ; e the group would engage in loading a 53-inch 38. 1 \ 2 » ——
e Indianapolis
tion. For four weeks ihe frst “of the two.| i oslo d Shri fe ied oy ~ MONDAY, JULY 17, 1950
\
respect for the fast-firing 5-inchers.
I h ousanc “You won't need cotton for loading practice,”
medline i Five Spiga Plane Cameras Scout Korean Battlegrounds a
When tke time came to go downstairs, the recruits brightened up considerably. Action is
what they need and the training program is is RY Rs : : Sab wisely set up for that. » { n ur t ; ; i oo CPO Charles Buchanan was the loading in-| Sy X S
| structor. He has a way of introducing the com- . plexities of a machine of destruction that is casy| for the rawest recruit to understand. He told the Nn 0 | p wide-eyed “volunteer” hot shellman that catching| the discharged cartridge would be like catching a baseball. It is in a way. The recruits laughed. Parents of Suspect Face Charges of
‘and were at ease. Recruits present and ready to volunteer for any position on the gun when Chief Buchanan HP Good pointed, were: Walter H. Hadley, Charles R. Receiving 3 Barnett, Richard Walker, Carroll G. Evans, Police who linked a teen-age! Thomas Flowers, James Pinnich, Lawrence Sering, quintet with some 70 North Side] James Westcott, Leon Childers, Leroy Bridwell, burglaries today said the gang’s| W. Lee Allen, Charles Tafflinger, Ray Manford, loot will run into “thousands” | Jerry Mattingly, Don Wallace, Joseph Padgett,/and its destruction will total even Don Schuster and Robert Suhre. | more. i Every position was explained in detail, once. | Three of the boys were nabbed The first practice run was ragged and the crew|in a break-in at the home of! knew it. The hot shellman was a surprised lad|Frank F. Kissel, 4212 Broadway, | when the dummy cartridge slammed out and hit | yesterday and they implicated his padded, asbestos gloves. two other boys, arrested later in| 5 You Sould See in i Ri that the next time their homes. oi they wou 0 better. e powder man and the tray man hurriedly checked with one another jp ons Aants Of one of he boys where the mistakes were made. Really not mis-|felen Kerscher. 31. of 647 E. 11th | takes. Just a little difficulty with the mechanical |g; ais were placed under arrest
routine. Let's go, Chief. charged with contributing to the, Smooth Every Time delinquency of a minor and!
hi i : receiving stolen property. ONE MORE practice round. Another. Getting Loot Caches Found smoother, sailors. Once more. Good. Then the ! t i gunnery officer said to keep up a continuous fire Some loot was found in his; at his next order and not to stop until he said, home, police said, and other caches “Cease firing.” of stolen goods were found in!
Mac, you should have seen those guys go. other homes and in an alley be-|
NEW YORK, July 17—A personal friend of mine—although I had never met him—died by his own hand the other day, and millions must have read his obituary with great sorrow. I am talking about Guy Gilpatric, the literary father of a wonderous monster named Mister Colin Glencannon, an awesome engineer who has cavorted through the pages of The Saturday Evening Post for the last couple of decades. I admired Mister Glencannon to the point of mild hysteria, but I never really understood how The Post could put up with him, or at least explain him away. The Post is an upright magazine, in which no heroine is ever a bad girl, and in which most heroes are paragons. Not so Mister Glencannon: Mr. Glencannon was a bum.
Nearly Always a Winner
NOW IT IS ALL RIGHT to portray a bum if" he gets his comeuppance in the end, but Mr. Glencannon usually emerged triumphant, He was a drunkard and a thief; he wrote bad checks and constantly indulged in swindles; he was perpetually being thrown in jail; he was ever in brawls, and when he fought he used what he called “bross knuckles.” He was an admirer of femininity but fled from marriage. Mister Glencannon, as chief engineer of the S. S. Inchcliffe Castle, wallowed in Duggan’s dew of Kirkintilloch, a particularly violent brand of Scotch whisky and raised merry hell all over the world. Mr. Glencannon fought with his own relatives, especially his cousin Dooglas. Mr. Glencannon had a boundless contempt for any nationality not Scottish. Mr. Glencannon hit people on the head with wrenches, and he squeezed his shillings until they shouted. But he was always able to turn drunkenness, avarice, cheapness, crookedness, violence and falsehood into personal advantage and a triumphant exit. This violates all the rules of the road for contemporary magazine writing, and I was never able to know how Mr. Gilpatric got away with it. And so for many a year my admiration for Mr. Glencannon has bothered me, As a reflection of my own character, or lack of it. I recall, for instance, the presence of Mister Glencannon and his ain dear cousin Dooglas, a seven-foot highlander, at the bull-fights in La Linea.
The performance brought smiles to the faces of tween Park Ave. and Broadway, room. , - In the alley cache, police found The job of catching hot shells is really a far Some of the items taken from there was a way of preventing the loading mech- {Because homeowners were away Aerial view of the Korean battlefront made from a U.S. Air Force reconnaissance plane during an aerial mission over advanced lines, anism of the 5-incher from turning into an angry, |from home in each case, police - = v : > aE : é . i Wouldn't it be something if in our time we |Plete list of items taken from the| y » Starlight Money Youth Slu ed could stand in a museum and look at cannons/homes of Mrs. Charles Putney, | and say, “These things belong to the Age of 6217 Broadway; Harry Cross-| P t g | ¥ 8 { e or in arou { Financial prospects for the : —— eee. | Sweeney, 4440 Central Ave, and ® * , 1950 Starlight Musicals series ap-| uring 0 ark ee ree bo Narriman Await Baby onset. Jersey St. i Y manager, announced today. { - - By Robert C. Ruark King F k of Egypt secretel arried beautiful Condition Fair | g Farou LgYpt secretely marrie ul commoner prince,” which closed its week at $1000 worth of diamonds in the Narriman Sadek last May and the couple may be expecting a baby, the Fairgrounds last night, were Spanish territory by choking the sentry into sub-|j > : , “better than $16,000,” Mr. Ross, An 18-year-old youth today mission. When the cab driver refused to accept 22 Jo Cine Dell VOID bY he Te ra I Oe a re alion, sald, : was in fair condition in General counterfeit Costa Rican coin and three brass Chi- : | nese coins With holes In them as fare, Cousin old monarch and the 17-year-old beauty he is charged to have tendance we expect as the sea-the face with an iron bar. Dooglas jumped mightily into the air and broke Investigators added that the|Stolen from Egyptian diplomat ros + son goes on, we should wind up| James Manley, 617 N. Tacoma the horse-drawn carriage in twain, vandalism and destruction of Zaki Hachim was . performed [Indiana University mathemat- in the black,” he added. Mister G) mile. obicshed to th |valuable loot by the gang will under Biktashi ritual, a sect not li.g professor Kemmeth P. Wil- Advance sales for “The New by one of five men who accosted ster Glencannon, meanwhile, objecied to © | probably total more than the Tecognized by ’ i Moon,” opening tomorrow; ‘The him and a 17-year-old companion to bits and seized a handful of choice tickets. Ini “It's not just what they took but under the |{thor's award for 1949 for his “The Great Waltz,” opening Aug.|8t. early Sunday. a moment of fun, he threw a chair at the matador, |... what they destroyed that will | protection of} {history book, “Lincoln Finds All, have. been satisfactory, Mr., The youths could give no rea-
several senior officers standing in the back of the north of 42a St. cry from baseball. And as I stood there I hoped three other break-ins yesterday. Acie Telaphiold fiery monster for those boys. were unable to obtain the com-| About People— 4 ’ Outlook ‘Good Folly?” land, 4505 Broadway; Clarence : Detectives said they recovered! Gross receipts for “The Student Cousin Dooglas fi | After Attack ousin glas first gained them entrance to home of one of the boys, includ- according to London's Sunday Pictorial, { ; The Pictorial sald yesterday the ceremony uniting the 30-year-| ‘with the kind of improved at-| Hospital after being slugged in Vandalism Cited {Ave., told police he was struck price of admission, so he ripped the ticket booths |i . , Cov oe 100t they kept, |official Moslem {lams received the Indiana au-|p.4 Mill,” opening July 25, andlas the youths walked in knocking him flat. A policeman approached with nt up,” Detective Sgt. Mark | Egypt's royal |General.” Ross said. ison. for the attack, in which
his sword drawn, and Cousin Dooglas spanked him | house. pepsin cai and | 1 with it, tossing the policeman across seven tiers ot | Z¢ ronik said. . | The report Honorable mention at the uni- y \Joung Manley Supfered 3 Spin. Ip. seats. | He cited as an example a $400 oo said that if versity’s author's day observance! OXer S Robbe eed broken jaw. His companion | lyesterday went to A. B. Guthrie, | 1 :
The name of the next bull to come into the ring/Mmovie camera taken in |Narriman prowas EI Maquinista. This caused the Glencannons break-in. He said the boys threw| oe male to assume that this was a Scottish bull, by the|this away in a garbage can. |peir, Farouk is & name L. Mackinister, and hence his slaughter was| The detective added that Pros-| nrepared to an- 2 not permissible. Whereupon the lusty pair pro-|pects of recovering all of the loot|, nce the “se-
| “ , " {was not injured. {whose novel “The Way West { A man and nis wife were
|won a Pulitzer prize; R. E. Banta, : | slugged ly t as they: {author of “The Ohio River,” and] ar p Continued Suggel wm a ww ol N. ey |Ray Ginger, who penned “The {bot Ave.
ceeded to knock out 20 assorted matadors, pica-are poor because the boys gave " reddi i Bending Cross.” | , dors, and bullring attendants. much of the valuable property Coy hoi ne Farouk - 3 w $5000 Bond Set Douple Haocked Tots Tal away to persons not involved in| tirst marriage to| A Hills, 21-year-old music I , | Henry Carr, 34, of 1802 N, TalThe Bull Turns on ‘Em the thefts. [He Uae ae woe a , by ini he radio commentator In $1 Holdup-Beating bot Ave. told police two men | Detectives estimated the boys The case of Bil Roberts, 20- jumped out of a car and knocked
THE TRAITOROUS bull attacked, causing the monarch because she did not|from Ruston, La., today reigned Mister Glencannon to remark that the bull was| Dave committed as many as 70/p.a; 5 son. It was added that/as America’s “Queen of Lions" Year-old professional heavyweight him 04 his wie, Grace, 40 the no Scot at all, but a “feelthy, treecherous, back-|nousebreakings, dating back to tnerwise the marriage could be!for 1950. |boxer charged with robbery in/ground. Neither was injured.
knifing Spaniard,” and Cousin Dooglas then last March. In some instances,|«,sqily dissolved.” . ,| connection with the beating May| Gerald Smith, 31, of 1914 Carknocked out the bull. They stole the trousers from|they said, the boys committed A 4 nt ban of censorship was ae petite Brunel won tie Se 23 of two men, today was con-|{roliton Ave. was treated in Gen{five to seven break-ins per day. : 8 : 3 | tinued to Aug. 4. {eral Hospital for a stab wound in some unconscious Spaniards, to repair their own| clamped over the Farouk ro- convention in Chicago yesterday. ug d police he w: battered garb. Over the afternoon they consumed! The three boys were caught| nance after it was reported he .u y Judge Joseph M. Howard, Mu- bis side. He told police a a case of Scotch. |yesterday when a neighbor saw| ced his royal prerogative to can-| wary Busch, 31, reached in-| Dicipal Court 3, set bonds for Rob. stabbed by one of Ivo Men whe This is a typical exploit of some hundred es- them enter the Kissel home by a/ce} Narriman's engagement to gide a bear's cage in New York's: °rts and Jack Vernon Martin, 20, knock a Cw tried to capades of Mister Glencannon, and none were of | coal chute. Patrolman Jack Her-|zaki Hachim. A Cairo news- Central Park Zoo yesterday and of 9201; E. Washington St. aiso|Dlos bs Ione esterda: any particular salubriousness as examples for the man and Edward Dersch caught|paper reported recently that|gerered the grizzly a slice of charged in the beatings, at $5000 ke Ji rs ey yo ay a3 E kiddies, But for some odd reason Mister Glen-|two of the boys, aged 15 and 14,| Farouk and Narriman would not!pread. The bear took the bread Ach: Pde ane Ben of cannon was never offensive, even at his most of-|as they ran from the house. be married immediately butiand one of her fingers, too. | The continuance was granted + TepOo; g robbed
fensive. Nobody took him very seriously, but ad-|- Carried Gun {would become better acquainted, | . uw at the request of Jesse Peden, de-{ is MiFifOld e ire a x he zy { . mired his lack of basic morality out of the frustra-) ny, third, a 16-year-old boy|according to Egyptian custom. | ‘urs something the matter,” "RE SUONEY. Lon o walked in the 700 block M g g = {who wore a loaded .22 automatic . u--8 Francis Boylan, 28, New York, 8, 0. Ives. 8 ,| chusetts Ave. g ‘
enna
have been times when I would have loved to con-| Q . + | Fleming St, and Martin were : | Mrs. Robert Shorts, 26, Chico,’ rl g ’ e sume half a case of Scotch and spank a cop with | Stuck in his belt, came out of the rs 0 9 asked two policemen today after; entified by victims of the beat-|
| house with his hands up on police Cal., today begged the thief who hey fired several shots and finally { a his club, bust up a taxicab and take on a bull | orders. Other officers later ar-lsnatched her purse to return it forced his car to the curb at thie( i085, Baek J. Callaban; 80, of 328 fe 0C S ine
and Mister Glencannon did it for me. We will all i 4d of lle-long chase miss him sorely, in the future, for the world is so! |She said it contained the $80 she ®Nd Of a .mile-long chase. Loyal, 542 N. Dearborn St. plicated by the trio.
full of good works and high thoughts today that a| 'had saved to have an eye opera-| He Bot his answer at the sta-| The men reported they were Glencannon would have come in hapdy to remind | The boys were held in the ¢ d y Be [tion house. The policemen charged heaten and robbed of §1 each by| Rescue Atte us that mankind is not essentially noble in all his| women’s section of the city jail }10n Per ormed on daughier,inim with crashing through two|a gang of men near their homes.|
acts. [today, pending investigation. They Marsha Ellen, 2. detour signs, running down a In court on a charge of murder] —x {were placed in this section to] 3 patrolman, nearly hitting three was Mack Bacon, 49, of 1213 Ore-| LARK, Utah, July 17 (UP)—
rested two 15-year-old youths im-
Just Cement
~ WASHINGTON, July 17—Remember Farmer
John C. Brown of Middleboro, Mass, and his miraculously mysterious disc which cured most of the ills of man and beast? And also bird? All you had to do was dunk this precious device in a pail of water and Its strange powers would be transferred to the fluid, which was good for practically everything. except possibly dandruff. '* Farmer Brown soon had such a rush of customers demanding the privilege of paying him $17 for one of these items that he had to start a factory. He also incorporated himself as Brown-Cell Laboratories, Inc., and named his product the Brown-Cell Matrix.
Engineers on the Spot NUMEROUS SCIENTISTS claimed this deal was a fake, but many of Farmer Brown's customers insisted their home-made Brown-Cell Matrix water did everything he claimed and more. This put the engineers on something of a spot. After all, Farmer Brown claimed that water so treated caused the earth to blossom as never before, did away with weeds, killed bugs, was good to drink, cured chickens of all their diseases, and generally made this world a better place to live. Business boomed, despite the skeptics. One of Farmer Brown's customers, who put up his $17 in cash and carted his disc away in his rumble seat, happened to be an operative of the Federal Trade Commission. He turned the disc over to the government chemists and engineers, who have spent two long years examining it. They soaked it in water, as directed, and drank
-
‘down an assortment of clients who swear by thea cordon around the area. The!
= | 5 7 a |separate them from older prison-| Los Angeles attorney Vincent other persons, passing three red gon St. He was remanded to jail A fire burning at least 7200 feet By Frederick C Othman because the police station M. Smith paddled his own canoe lights, speeding the Wrong Way without bond and the case con- underground today blocked res- ’ 'has no facilities for segregating/on a 60-mile ocean trip fromion a one-way street and drunken tinued to Friday. lcue squads trying desperately to So FRE ____|youthful offenders. {Cabrillo Beach to Catalina Island driving. Bacon is charged in the death reach five men trapped in a lead the water. It merely tasted wet. They gave it to] The two parents were scheduled Saturday. But the 62-year-old] my, teen-age burglars ate theirjof Isaac Griffin Sr. 62, of 324 mine. : chickens, which got sick as usual. They sprinkled /to appear in Municipal Court 3 man sald he'd take a steamer ;,; chow standing up today after Darnell St, who was stabbed] Searchers held little hope for it on their dandelions, which continued to flourish. this afternoon. home. \a Chicago grocery owner wound-|Satulday. n lone of tvo maintenance men The disc, itself, seemed to be about a foot in Seiate pastas Sepp esipper——s i The attorney lost his bearings ed them with a shotgun when a — {trapped when the fire broke out diameter and perhaps two inches thick. It looked on what is normally a 25-mile/they tried to break into his store. : |yesterday morning. like cement. The G-men broke it open with a Lnmen 0 p {trip and said he actually traveled, mojice said Richard Michaels, | tH - ensors | But they said the second maine. sledge hammer; they analyzed it. They even, iabout 60 miles during his 18-18" Gary and Joseph Keating, 17 , tenance worker and three men tasted it. And by gollies, said they, it was cement. | . rotik X
hour solo at the paddle. “ H {sent down to find their missing ; 1 Chicago could sit “only with dif-| Nothing else. | | “I took the Great Northern foul as the ot wounds! {co-workers might have found So the commissioners in language legal and eymour ore lroute with a stopover at Grand inflicted by Edward Prembacz. e 0 dfiers jsafety in a spot where they could ponderous issued a complaint in which they said—| : |Canyon,” he said. “I think I'll They said the wounds were “pain- get fresh air. without any ifs, ands, or buts—that the Brown- Times State Sorviee {take a steamer home.” ‘ful but not serious.” By FRANK TREMAINE | ope faded for the life Of Lee Cell was a phony. . They slapped the charges on| gpyMOUR, July 17-— Three United Press Staft Correspondent | \200 Nielsen, 38, when it was President Brown, Treasurer George MacAuley and gq hatted gunmen obtained TOKYO, July 17—Gen. Douglas learned that he had gone deep
Directors William A. Dunham, Peter Pascale and potween $2400 and $2500 this. MacArthur called upon the press|into the mine to investigate when
® ; / ® ” Nathaniel A. Sampson of the Brown-Cell Labora-} i J Th J L t ltoday to censor war news itself/the blaze was first reported. The tories, Inc. morning in a holdup of the G. C.| Ol n : © : Imes iS | 8
and leave the Army f to fight tunnels he started to explore had Murphy Co. variety store here. battles ¥ TY Tree io Sght little or no air: 5 Only Molded Cement The bandits, waiting inside the ! 4
. ® entrance, drew weapons as L. H.| ’ He made known his views in THE COMMISSION added in passing that these Van Voorhies, RE and| Of Men in Se rvi ce
| commending the Chicago Sun- Two Draw Terms gentlemen owned no laboratories plural, or singu-itwo assistants entered with money |
| Times for announcing that durlar, but merely a place where they molded cement sacks brought from a bank about | Do you have a son, husband, brother, sister, friend in {ing the Korear War emergency On State Farm into round chunks. ; {half a block away.
military service? it’ will ‘not re . : : . Pe the departure Fed he Times st blish ot $ ; Judge J . wa They charged Farmer Brown & Co. With) There was no violence. After The Times wants to publish their pictures and information | (ang nature of American troop a ge Josephs M- Ha rd today
about their current military service.” The Times particularly movements from U, S. ports
violating the Federal Trade Commission Act, gave! . Te a ot a as Sy jpeiaing the money, they fled In a| | wants photos of Hoosier service people in Korea . . . but we At the same time; a dispatch th¢ Indiana State Farm. 1 to Washington for hearing before Trial Examiner ¥ a fourth man. also want photos of ALL Hoosiers in military service, no matter | 'r.om Korea disclosed that Lt. Bryce Grey, 38, a resident of John W. Addison on Sept. 8. A Cordon Set Up where they are stationed. Gen. Walton H. Walker, com- California, was fined $100 and
Farmer Brown at last re | J The Times will keep a tile on all these men so we can 2 costs and sentenced to 60 days armer Brown at last reports intends to bring, State police immediately threw FEpOrt ThE Tigws of Hoosiers Ti Unilofin Hote Thoroughly, Tt ander. ge ahs ightl Amy. Bad) oF SPEER ting a vehicle a value of their discs, no matter what these high-\car was described as being a 1949| | 2! Will enable us to let you know when thé United Press |York Herald-Tribune war corre. [Under the influence of lquor. falutin’ scientists claim. All they know is that/maroon-colored Ford sedan, with| | CaPies bring us word about them. Usually news.of troop move- | Igpondent, out of the Korean Judgment on a drunk charge was their chickens never’ were spryer. the initials JD on the license ments and news of battles come first to The Times office. | |theater of operations. | withheld. : Should be an interesting trial: Faith vs. plate. | Please fill out the coupon—write any additional informa- | | Ap order from U. S. Army head-| Arthur Highstreet, 50, of 113 Science, you might say, and I'll try not to miss it. One of the three gunmen was| tion on a separate sheet of paper—and mail It with a picture | lquarters in Korea said Miss Hig-| Georgia St. was fined $10 ence and costs and sentenced to 120
The Quiz Master.
described as 5 feet, 6 inches tall, | of any size to HOOSIER HEROES, Indianapolis Times, 214 |gins was to proceed immediately! 2D \ about 40 years old, weighing 160/ | W- Maryland St. Indianapolis 9. /to rear area headquarters and 9aYs for petit larceny. ° High-
29292 : 299 4 All ‘pictures wil be returned . . . and you also will receive | |thence to Japan. No reason was Stréet was charged with the theft xh Test Your Skill ?7?: pounds and dressed in light cloth-| | fom The Times a clipping of the item and picture of your | |given for Bee lof three paint brushes from the
How is the Chinese language read? Chinese is read from top to bottom, then to top of next left column, ob Will a new tomb be erected in Arlington for Unknown Serviceman
the of World War II?
of both. * ¢ .® cheeke is named after a province in what country? : After the Belgian province of Limburg, where
1% was originally made, Goa
ae
What is said to have saved the life of Theodore
Roosevelt when he was shat in Milwaukee?
i RAS Ci
less, smaller than
; op = ro : — ™ | A second was about 30 years What is the scientific name of rag weed, the/oid, 5 feet, ‘nine inches tall, ’ : plant that gives people hay fever? : weighing about 140 to 150 pounds, | Berviceman {or Serv icavoman 5
ia. and dressed in ‘brown shirt and,
P32 light-colored Uh "The. Ahir] INANE +.casssspssisrarssssossesisiseasiitnssssassssissionns Garli¢ is a member of what plant family? igh Pan e third
‘{man was about 30 years old, 5
bg. Hoosier Hero as it appeared in The Times. Miss Higgins said she would CG: C-Murphy Co. Saturday afters (confer with Gen. Walker to see NOOR. Ld {if the order could be rescinded.
| Gen. MacArthur yesterday {lifted the ban his press relations Pretzel Dance,
ama i ficer, Col. M. P. Echols, had im- 3 Ee Os "mA New Twist
Jt belongs to the. lly group. feet, 8 inches tall, weight, about| Branch of Unit or United Press and Tom Lambert| ® PARADE MAGAZINE How big are the stars? : 135 pounds, dressed: In ught-cloth- | |of Associated Press returning to . ing. — | Age. ... Bervice......v0eues BBIP..vvrrarairnniintinsnnrnras, the Korean front. :
The sizes of stars vary over an enormous ,. : i range. The largest known are of the order of| De state police post here re- | 4 ’ 500,000,000 miles in diameter, bigger than the Ported that the getaway car was On Year's Leave
orbit in which Mars revolves about the sun; while| 12% 60 headed northeast out of | Iie was last heard of from. ...ie..ifisessaciosiassssivaevassc, | | Mr. and Mrs. David Mahar, the smallest are around 50,000 miles or perhaps ScYWOUr on a gravel road. | : listed as sellers of a home at ; 5 ie 4 15832 W. Minnesota St. terday, SEIZED IN BURGLARY ie ¥
* * = i ‘were reported as moving to Floriwar was the Battle of Chapultepec? Police today held Kenneth W. : ~~ This was the battle that virtually ended the|Riggs, 22, of 1333 K St. on|
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