Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1950 — Page 17

Vagal

s Make [atches -

tech Bands

FEDERAL TAX

> WEEK

for waiches. of SWfueyt

1g ds to match!

bog IT DIDN'T bother me a bit to cut thelwire on a couple bales of straw and a bale of hay and try a box stall for size and comfort. Although a city boy, the odor of hay and straw, always excited me. In fact, I like the odor of hay better than I do gasoline fumes. 1 You can't beat sleeping in straw and hay. I don’t mean to get the mattress people sore. And it would be foolish to throw your ald four-poster in the alley tonight and go out and get a bale of hay. Let's say you can’t beat sleeping on straw and hay if an innerspring mattress isn't around. Batter than the cold ground. Better than a pool e. Someone once told me (just remémbered, his name was Someone Smith, salvage engineer) that sleeping in the straw was good for aching bones. Takes the misery out of them. I remember he used to sleep with his horse. : The therapeutic powers in the straw, Someone used to say, come from being exposed to the elements and minerals in the earth. It's questionable how much faith he put in straw. After he made a stack of money, §dmeone built a mansion and equipped his sleeping rooms with foam rubber mattresses. The original barn was dedicated in 1937. It was built at a cost of $135,745.45. The addition cost $250,089.97, Stalls and doors are made of oak and the rest of the building is steel, stone, brick and glass blocks.

While we're at it;-let's remind ourselves that the State Fair opens Aug. 31. The Horse Show opens Sunday, Sept. 3. Sources close to the horses have informed me that prizes amount to $50,000 Do I have any offers from horse handlers? There are 120 tie stalls. A horse has to stand if he’s put into a tie stall. A horse my size wouldn't necessarily have to stand. But since all the workmen were gone, all stalls were empty, I chose the deluxe job. Nothing but the best for me. A sneezing fit hit me after nuzzling the straw. Frightened some of the sparrows half to death. Plenty of them flying around picking out home sites. Where you have horses you're going to have sparrows, I guess. I'm not going to kid you and say that sleep came quickly. Straw has a way of getting down

Prosecutor | Dared to Help Stop Gaming

Should Say Which 1 Side of Fence He's On, Sheriff Asserts

{Sheriff Cunningham today dared Prosecutor George Dailey to help = : lenforce gaming laws. with the. 20th

Horsing around . ; . "Mr. Inside” tries the new Horse Barn at the Fairgrounds for size.

your neck. Should have worn a turtle neck sweater. A tail would have come in handy, too. Flys kept bothering me. Traffic noises along 38th St. were distracting. It should be much quieter]

when the windows are in. : A trail blazer always suffers. When the outside, The sheriff, who yesterday said light failed, there wasn't anymore. The electricity h¢ would move into the city to Bragg, N. C hasn’t been hooked up so it was impossible to read. crack down on gaming violations y Kinn alone in a big barn stirs the imagination, [reported to but not acted on by Every little sound is magnified. A piece of straw, on a toe, little or big toe, makes you pull it in. I not afraid of the dark (especially when the lights are on) but in a strange place, I get jumpy. !

Horses Shouldn't Smoke

SMOKING IN a straw bed was out. I did nent a match once to bolster my courage and burn my | fingers. Oh, yes, the water system wasn't operating. Had to talk fast and long to quiet an urge to wander over to Parkmoor and get a malted milk and a couple of hamburgers. v I wish there had been a few horses around. Anything to give the joint some life. Must try it! again during State Fair time. { I don't know what time it was when sleep came. | It didn't come soon enough. Wasn't very restful, either. Kept dreaming about heavy saddles on my back and judges turning up their noses and weird scenes of terrible glue factories. Not one dream about me being Hopalong's favorite charger,

city police, today urged the pros“make clear what side lof the fence he's on.” ¢ { “It’s the duty of the prosecutor Year enlistment. las well as the sheriff to enforce

“If there's gambling in the county, why doesn’t get interested?” He also suggeste Mr. Dailey might put into action {the most powerful tool of law gervice for 3!3 years on military lenforcement,” the grand jury.

Moves Inside City

The sheriff threw a bombshell at city law enforcement agencies yesterday when he announced he would break precedent by moving {inside the city limits to enforce

He became the first law officer to acknowledge existence of a

Smart Aleck Era

{newly formed baseball syndicate here,

lottery and said that

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, July 28—Your baffled agent is rapidly achieving the point where his brain is about to curl into a tight knot, to head into hibernation for an unstated length of time. This {s sheer desperation. I find I am an expert on nothing, and am therefore ill-equipped to dwell in a world where everybody, everywhere, is an expert on everything.

This section of our time, I do believe, will go -

down in history as the smart aleck era. We have been done in by the quiz program; undone by the panel of experts; unraveled by the forum. A recent radio show featured a panel of children under 14 who were discussing world affairs, and another hired a 9-year-old sports broadcaster. Disc jockeys deal freely in global opinions. Politicians now hoard their best rhetoric for appearances on “Meet the Press” and “Who Said That?”

8 Sides to Everything I FIND that no amount of reading can keep

me abreast of what goes on in the world any more, not even in my own small sphere, because

* for every definite opinion there is a rebuttal, and

for every rebuttal a re-rebuttal, and for all the rebuttals there is a board of critics to evaluate and pontificate. There are eight sides toseverything, and most of them come sharply as a surprise. When I think, sometimes, of all the learning that is unleashed on the globe today, my most {immediate inclination is to duck under the covers, hide my head and sob gently until somebody comes to pat my ego with the observation that they are pretty stupid, too. For some time I had been turning to the baseball broadcasts of master Dizzy Dean as a solace for the turbulence of the times, but lately they have been of little comfort. Mr. Dean's magnificent rhetoric has lately become cluttered with grammar, and he, too, has showed tendencies toward expertness. Mr. Dean is now thinking aloud for the batter and the pitcher and even the umpire. He is making forecasts, just like Drew Pear-

son, and is bragging about their accuracy and People who said their reports to crying down their failure to mature. Dizzy is City police brought no action. gradually achieving’ a Kaltenborn approach to baseball, with overtones of Milton Berle, and I.

Today the sheriff denied reports that he is condoning “wide open” in the county while tive service in

It seems today that we have comic -strips tojStepping into the city gaming pic- Alameda, “al.

teach the kiddies about the classics, which is a| sneak punch if I ever saw one. the classics is like a dose of sulphur-and-molasses, to be acquired unpleasantly and on purpose. claim it is a shame to stuff a Shakespearian sonnet down the gullet of a child, when he thinks trustfully that he is receiving a slight inoculation of Gyp the Blood.

I rassled manfully with the problem of atomic energy, learning new words and mumbling over formulae, until I found that the comic stripsi/his men to “stamp out gambling and reported to George Sims were way ahead of me in nuclear fission, and as soon as it pops up.” that the average urchin was twice as glib as a Harvard professor on matters pertaining to uran-|tors in my office, and they mu | jum 235. I quit in the pre-Klaus Fuchs era, and|investigate rapes, murd 1 [| D t Cl ( D ill have gone full cycle back to Tarzan of the Apes.|dents, burglaries and break-ins/in World War II, is still in serv-| ‘ according to his u ay a ose ri S, lice and has not been heard from Lo ea prosecutor has four in-i/for three weeks. | > vestigators, twice as many as I| If there's gaming in the] {county let him go out with his| four men and I'll go along with'i

“] say there's no organized ate of Hope §

A knowledge of | ambling out in the county,

he High School, he says joined the Navy

lotherwise I offer them a sheriff’s in October of car and myself or a deputy to accompany them wherever gambling

Only 2 Investigators The sheriff said he has ordered Ill, he left there

Him I can understand. as well as gaming.

I don’t know how you felt about the McCarthy hearings in Washington but I was never able to| decide whether the Senator from Wisconsin was Dave. a pummeled hero or a noisy jerk. There were too many cases made on both sides, too many] experts retailing conflicting theories. This seems

to be true of most Washington bloodlettings at| , 1nat makes eight of us and

if that's not enough, the prosecutor has the grand jury he can use. I'd welcome the help of all lof them in this thing.” Informed of the sheriff's “dare,”

Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil

IN. THIS golden age of glorification of the smart aleck, I have adopted a technique which prosecutor Dailey said he was invariably results in not being asked back. People puzzled bo

th by the request and sidle up and leer. h DY fhe req

“What do you know about the manner in which it was pre-such-and-such or so-and-so?” they ask, as if I sented. had*pipe lines to the White House and the Kremlin. | “Nothing whatsoever,” I reply, and they leave a time that “the facilities of this] as if I had personally insulted them. You lose a!office have not been available ~~ flock of friends this way, but you pick up a lot|to the sheriff or to anyone else About People— of sleep in the process, and the buzzing is gradu- with a law violation to report.”

ally leaving my ears. “1 don't know what it is the

‘Honest Hoarding

sheriff wants,” Mr. Dailey said. {“If he’s trying to talk to hrough the newspapers unny way to do it.” Mr. Dailey said his office had|

me its a

By Frederick C. Othman

McCLEAN, Va. July 28—My idea was to do a fittle honest hoarding. I'd pluck the rutabagas, the gooseberries and the other results of toil on my acres and freeze 'em for future reference. Maybe I'd even turn our bull into chuck roast and

hamburger.

For this I'd need one of those big white freeze boxes, such as vibrate the rafters on many rural back porches. My bride agreed this was a good idea and also patriotic. She looked over the handsomely lithographed booklets of the leading brands and chose a 14-cubic-footer with both a“ buzzer and a light to warn when the temperature within rose above zero. Then we drove into Washington

with money in our pockets to buy it.

Our first intimation that all was not well came when we tried to enter the parking lot of our favorite electrical appliance store. We ran into a . traffic jam of anxious people trying to get in and unhappy ones seeking to beat their way out. The

store itself was thronged.

Not Much to Sell

began. 3

He called the wholesaler in hope of getting us one special; his man said he was out of ‘em, too. He'd ordered more from the factory; he might get a few month after next, but he was making no

promises.

Our salesman made a helpless gesture at the ve customers milling around the premises. His stockroom was bare, except for a few mismatched kitchen cabinets, a couple of off-brand

vacuum cleaners, and a shelf of attic fans in large no reason to believe there was |any gambling “other than a pick-| His floor samples of television sets, refrig- and-win ticket here and there” in| erators and stoves all bore “sold” tags. a few electric irons still for sale, one garbage! chopper-upper, three widgets that squeeze carrots/the work of policing the county,” into juice, a few table-model radios, and a pair of he added. washing machines that nobody seemed to want!so but because they didn’t think for themselves. He'd sold out of physic washers, which func-/always have if someone comes tion of their own free will, two weeks ago. The almost-riotous condition of his shop re- and requests our aid.” minded him of the days immediately after the last! He feared the situation would get worse before it got better and he wondered, darkly, what | was happening to the vast stocks of merchandise still pouring from the factories. iy that some highbinders were storing a good - A suit was on file today in eal of this merchandise in hope of higher prices, but he couldn't confirm them. P 8 P Municipal . Court

- Nonchalant Chill

AND HE KNEW for certain of ladies buying! new refrigerators the last few days when their can nominee for U. 8S. RepreThen we got back to gentative from the 11th District. He suggested we try the biggest dealer in freezers in these parts. This was a mistake.

He had!the county. “It is not our duty to take over!

“It is true we may do is not the genera |practice. We will step in as

lus with evidence of a violation!

Brownson Sued For Repair Bill

2 against

Charles B, Brownson, charging

failure to pay an old bill. : Mr. Brownson is the Republi_WE FINALLY cornered the salesman who had sold us our automatic sink and considerable other electrical equipment. He was glad to see us, but he trusted we were making a social call. He had nothing much to sell. Nope, he'd run out of freezeroos a couple of days after the Korean fracas

old ones were good as new.

ur ow! ms. 0 wn problems. He will oppose

‘|drew Jacobs, Dempcrat. This outfit said it had none of these items left,” Packard Indianapolis, Inc. nor any idea when it would get more. It wouldn’t|filed the action accept an order for future delivery, even when | accompanied by a cash deposit. Nor would it take $326.27, owing since September, our name and notify us when a new stock came in.|1 . It wasn't interested in our business, or our good| The corporation asks payment Yesterday she celebrated her 101st Mr. Byrnes Korea, Russia/It seemed to be one of the fa-! will, and it was barely civil in telling us so. Sy I guess we can get along without a freeze box. We can eat our vegetables fresh and Was for repair work on Mr.

incumbent An-

charging that

can the rest. And as for the bull, he gets a break | Brownson’s 1939 automobile, ‘In the form of a reprieve. . I'm through hoarding, even above board, for the duration.

Mr. Brownson lives at 35 Pennsylvania St.

The Quiz Master

Mr. Brownson was out of town ® and unavailable for comment, chosen, will en

2??? Test Your Skill 222 Mark Anniversary

expression means Sons of the Covenant. This association was established in the United

What does B'nai B'rith mean? The

States in 1848. * & @

How many people live on Tristan da Cunha? :

> ©

Was Omar Khayyam a real or legendary figure? He was a Persian poet and astronomer who died in 1123 A. D, He was famous for his revision

of calendar. ; of the wii eo ©

Who was “the crazy Queen of Lebation” to Of Mine Explosion whom Whittier alluded in “Snowbound”? - Lady Hester Lucy Stanhope of England. She left her native country, settled near Sidon, Syria, and adopted Eastern customs and dress.

Employees of Indiana's largest’ coal mine went back to work to- o; regional con-

wielded great influence over the Bedouins and day after a one-day annual memo- tests will go to came to be regarded as a prophetess. : eo 9

Is it a fact that people who stutter can some- killed 13 men. times sing with ease? £1 Most stutterers, unable to talk except with difficulty, can sing WRD sas.

[~ By resolution

of a disaster at Kings mine.

many U. 8. cities have a population of a

FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1950

unningha m

.

hallenges

Hoosier Heroes—

{the Far East {with the 46th IAAA Brigade of the Army. He had previously served 18 months

Signal Corps A. G. L. Co. at Ft.

Pfc. Kinman enlisted. in the Army in Nov. a 1948 for a three ps. Kinman

class of 1948.

Mr. and Mrs. George Kinman

of 2598 N. Arlington Ave. are ing with a Signal Service Co. in Many veterans of World War lawfully disposing of 50 pistols.

4 his parents, a0 the Army. IT are still active in the various ge nad handed out the weapons

Ld = o Cpl. John Koster has been in

! police duty.

tary Police Co, His mother

Foe

mone

A 1948 gradu-

1948 for a threeyear hitch. Tak{ing his boo {training a Great Lakes,

st! His brother, Everett, who

ers, acci-|served with an infantry division Serving somewhere in Germany

in Germany,

Germany.

apolis.

Pfc. Kinman, Local Gl, With Forces Mal Ba IS Headed for Action in Far East To Clear Name

Warren Central Graduate Enlisted in Army|, Don L. Kemp is with the = p . nt sy oy In 1948; Spent 18 Months at Ft. Bragg | pA his mother ® cores 0l A

Around the world Indiana servicemen are serving the nation. last letter came Among them is Pfc. Billy W, Kinman who left July 5 for (from Tokyo. His

| Italy is Pfc. Arnold Downs, Who Hic aunt. Mrs.

{enlisted in Jan- W. 8. Kemp lives juary, 1948. »

{who is the son {of Mr. and Mrs, | Emmett Dowhs, | 720% Grove St, {took his basic { training at Ft | Knox, Ky.

t in OcHe was graduated from Warren Oa a » lall laws, including gambling,” he Central High School with the io ,w stationed Pfc. Downs |VeArs. . | Services, was convicted by an there, Fa {Army court-martial in Calcutta,

The 20 - year- Regiment in Japan is Eugene F.

old corporal has been stationed in Trieste, Italy| for 16 months where he is with! the 281st Mili-|

Mrs. Lorene Willoughby, lives at 417% since its formation his office has| Main St, Beech {been receiving complaints from Johan Roster Grove, ” = 2 George Sims, soy Me a3 ast week in June. When last Co. in Japan is Pfc. David W. under orders in arming natives. Mrs. George Sims, Hope, Int. '8 year from he was still in Japan. Montgomery. |The review board reversed the helping prepare old ships for ac- 4

Ibrother, Pfc. Al-

pegn stationed if Germany for

two years. * {letter was dated |before the Century Club in 1948, He has an-_ Fon TB [July 1. He investigated the Trees case lother year of his & : He is the son § and introduced legislation to ree enlistment to ie lof Mr, and Mrs. mburse him for expenses. *

iserve. The 22-iyear-old service- Sad man will have . er completed six SS {years of service pg. Brown |to service Pfc. Montgomery at-to permit him to sue the govern next year. tended Technical High School. ment. :

{California where he has since] “But I have only two investiga- been stationed.

: J a | 8 Cpl. Jack L. Reid is serving|§ with United States Air Force

The 18-year-old’ West Side serviceman was last heard from; _ in Birkenfeld,

He is the son! Tokyo. Base post office and 742d Army postal unit comprised of postal of Mrs. Ger- -

trude Reid, ated from Warren Central in May studied maps, rolled packs and | : : whose address is! of 1946, He began his present learned to disassemble the car-| 00SIers He said there had never been Cpl. Reid R. R. 3, Indian- Army enlistment period in No- bine. The 727th Quartermaster) , %

Charles J. Trees 4 Awarded Right to Sue U. S. for Costs

{| An Indianapolis man today 'was a step nearer the end of & long fight to clear his name of an . Army court-martial. The House of Representatives yesterday authorized Charles J. Trees, lice in July, 1948. 5 _ 4 3320 Carrollton Ave, to sue the | Don attended {Federal Government to regain an schools near PonKemp amount in excess of $20,000 which \ (Salem. After taking his basic he spent to clear his name. 3 i training in Ft. Knox, Ky., he was, The bill was sent to the Senate, Ww.

es 8 = outfit is Co. F.,

: 31st Infantry Another local GI in Trieste, p egiment:

i

at 2046 Boyd Ave, The 20-year-old infantryman volunteered for serv-

Pfe. Downs,

He was sent sent directly overseas to Japan. | Mr. Trees, former lieutenant. He has been in service for two colonel in the Office of Strategie

The 19-year-old youth is serv- India, in November, 1945, of un=

branches of the {5 natives to help him raid a Japarmed forces. anese prison camp at Tavoy, Among their purma. : Number a Sioa The war ended before the raid ho BW action, C2Me off, and shortly afterward bo th A ¢ the Army arrested Mr, Trees, who B® 3 28% had been acting under OSS orders, ar. {He had no witnesses in India, The 26-year- ang was convicted anyway.

old serviceman from Camp Pen- Rounded Up Witnesses

A ” » Serving with the 5th Cavalry

Brown, son of Mrs. L. R. Brown, 5121 W. Beecher St. Eugene joined the Army after, his 17th birthday Lope and took his ba-| B® dleton is sta-| He spent months rounding up sic training at tioned at Ocean-| Witnesses before he obtained a ¥t. Knox, Ky. He] 8/Sgt. Davis gide, Cal. hearing before an Army review later was sent t0| His mother, Mrs. Florence Sal- board in Washington. Maj. Gen. Camp Stoneman, yers, lives at 1461 Dunlap Ave. William J. Donovan, wartime p Cal. From there, head of OSS, sent his personal Eugene Brown he shipped out sa. = representative to the hearing to ’ for Japan the With the 10th Chemical Depot testify that Mr. Trees had acted

A

5

conviction. | | Mr. Trees gave several talks before Indianapolis groups on Army justice. Congressman Ans drew Jacobs heard Mr. Trees talk

Eugene's older Pfc. Montk | gomery, who is {19, has been in Japan for 16 | months. His last

bert Brown, has

In April, Mr. Trees was called ery, 2717 N. to Washington to testisfy before Dearborn St the House Judiciary Committee, Before going in- D. Montgomery which voted to introduced a bill

| Lloyd Montgom-

” s .

Pvt. Frank Gene Sturgeon 1s Hoosier Reservists Hard at Work—

mother, Mrs, i a od corse x xv Gunnery at Camp McCoy vt Sturgeon] Present in Nearly 96 Pct. of Strength; is with the 552d ROTC Cadets to End Maneuvers Today

anti - aircraft outfit, Prior to By LLOYD B. WALTON, Times Staff Writer 5 service in a CAMP McCOY, Wis, July 28-—Hoosier Reservists took ade anti - aircraft vantage of another perfect Wisconsin day and continued practicing unit he was with military tactics which will keep them occupied another week. "Army Head- Units from Indiana were scattered in several sectors of the

quarters in/65000-acre reservation which makes up Camp McCoy. The 331st

| Pvt, Sturgeon

The 21-year-old private gradu- employees took to the field and;

| vember, 1949. | Service. Company got on-the-job!

| fall.

| “The only work Hughes let me do for my money in nine years antiquity to solve these problems tion in th? z2mie manner as the when his wife made a leit turn was indorse the and regretfully say it can't belpio guns. {off the highway and their car paycheck” (four-| done. : Bgures Nagkiy). Russia's return to the United lon under acting commander Maj.| ote but/Mr, Bonham was thrown loafed, unwillingly, and took drama lessons in the interim, | Hughes assuring him he was saving him for “big things,’ Mr.

Mr. Buetel

Buetel sald.

of the debt plus 6 per cent inter-| birthday. est. The complaint says the bill

$ 4 a {impossible to justify further as-/ : Bernard C. Gavit, dean of Indl gigtance to those who oppose the New Attendance Mark * Want Aas ae arapied | ana University School of Law, has! yipited Nations.” he said. | According to Maj. William L. Tim 0 NDA 61 N.| announced that {Harris, training officer for the 2s Wp gc *! three IU law stu- SATURDAY.

‘dents, not yet

{ter nation-wide moot court competition to be, held in Chicago & next October §

ners from-11-eth-

Dean Gavit

. rial holiday marking the anniver- New York in {Area and including 41 frém Inlsary of a 1048 explosion that December for the finals. The con- ® An 18-year-old cat was | rent & Te xp "test is sponsored by the New York willed a luxurious Cali. [9iana University, took part yes. MD — Local No. 5548 of City Association of the Bar. fornia home and $15,000, |terday in a critique on a field United Mine Workers Union| gg... wl SY math pro-|.. A retired Navy captain -problem.they just completed: To-{ observed the second ANNIVErsary g.quor at the University of Cali- .left_$20,000 for the care |day epds their maneuvers. The|

2 of 14 pedigreed kittens: ! 3 fi Berkeley, claimed 1000 “ " - iday will be highlighted when they | hydrogen and oxygen combine in the air The Gibson County courthouse Foray yk a 3) he ® How “ritzy” kittens have ¥y to form water which falls as rain or snow? bell tolled 13 times at the hour p.4 done the “impossible.” In a be Bele os atmosphere is mainly oxygen and nitro- the occurred. suit filed in justice court, he as- wealtns Ag PARADE of is orth serted he has squared the circle,|

Movies ‘Forgotten Man’ siommicn sini) id, 2, Hur Fatally Gets 1st Job Since 194] mis: smme: iermaions

. Buetel, Jane Russell's Partner Hoosler state began preliminary vehicles in Indiana.

In ‘Outlaw,’ Will Star in Western By OPAL CROCKETT Jack Buetel, filmland’s “richest forgotterir man” has landed; The Bishop trainer is a small terday when a milk truck struck his first_job since 1941. That year he tussled with Jane Russell unit operated by compressed air her while she was playing in the 1! in “The Outlaw,” produced by Howard Hughes. Thousands of thea- which fires a steel ball projectile. street in front of ber home, we ters, including Indianapolis neighborhood movies, are now showing |The air pressures can be varied Police believed she was chasing to that film this year for the first time. to simulate different powder a ball when the truck hit her. He starts work Aug. 7 on RKO’s Western film, “Best of the Bad charges. Every field firing prob-| Asa Bonham, 79, Warren, was Men,” and his first starring picture, “Halfbreed,” comes up in the lem can be duplicated on the train-'killed in a freak accident near

n 2 ” In 1805, when she was 46, Mrs. to pay Emma Card of Attleboro, Mass.,| was told by her doctors that she {had less than 24 hours to live.

» d Meet the World's | Nearly 500 ROTC cadets repre-

i itraining by handling clothing and | : : {supplies for the ORC. { N Id IC

" Members of the 384th MP Bat- -

{had a full day of close order drill, Playing in Street

Three persons were dead today |tield artillery units from the|from accidents involving motor

training on the Bishop trainer. | Two-year-old Julia Ann Cline, jdaughter of Mr. and Mrs, Harold Fired by Pressure [Cline, Sheridan, was killed yes-

gr. Its sights are the same as on Ind. 3, about 10 miles southeast We're pretty sure the bet’s safe. the regular field piece so they can|of Huntington yesterday. He Mathematicians have tried since ye set for deflection and eleva-/struck his head on a gatepost

an The 424th Field Artillery Battal- Stuck the DO a EE an Nations means it has ot James O, Freese of Edinburg, window has Seeided ner Ind., practiced yesterday and to. PE a Oe Ji worid war at day on the Bishop trainer in| “ye. posite Zussin 59 Cheago, this time, be- Preparation for next week, when| oo Killed at a South Shore Rafle lieves G o v . they will go on the range fori ad crossing near Gary last James F. Byrnes actual practice with the 105 mm ioht when a ear in which she of South Caro-| howitzers, lwas riding was struck by a train. lina, former Sec-| Capt. W. W. Pence, 3360 Col-|The car had stalled on the track. retary of State//lege Ave. Indianapolis, district|Her husband, Victor, B55, re“The Security parole officer for Indiana gave In-iceived a fractured leg and inCouncil having structions in judo to members of jured shoulder, : ordered opposi- the 384th M. P. Battalion. The —

tion. to aggres- subject was how to defend one- Leb gion _ in North self if attacked while unarmed. VW anf Ads for :

now will find it;vorite subjects on the schedule. Sunday Times ) be

NAMED DRAKE PROFESSOR Indiana Military District, who is Prof, William J. Moore of Des| observing the methods of teach- Riley 5551 before Moines, former Butler School of{ing the Reservists, this year's Religion teacher, has heen made camp has seen a new attendance professor of Old Testament Lan- record set. Reserves from Indiguage and Literature in the Col- ana are here with a nearly perlege of the Bible, Drake Univer-| fect 96 per cent. In past years it sity. {was considered. very good if 60 per cent of the men showed up.

tomorrow and your Ad will appear in EDITIONS of The

{senting 27 universities and col-

Luckiest Cats /leges throughout the Fifth Army

become beneficiaries of are reviewed by Lt. Gen. Stephen

MAGAZINE Sunday. ® Meet these lucky cats, ,

PARADE MAGAZINE ~~ THE SUNDAY TIMES

pe Cw

TA