Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1950 — Page 11

3 slide rule in the hands of a cotton was th atae 1a the le — — — — poms Vie at has sad an.” ands of 4 Sn ear hs fromm the state the PR SE TUBSDAY, AUGOST 1, 1950 ‘ LE “Wall pe ‘ns * this nation. ound Ep cluding the wlll 3% that were sown during : i vio - ina cs : . a Ts lig i : our ; i 5 “ * . [Sos I is Ee ine for breath, Hoosier Heroes— fos; ! While Rep. Poague. pauses or. : 3 Even ss yoi read this the House of Repre- perhaps we'd better examine thst . hort $ PM 3 Teper the probably nu be Yoting on how to . The government supports the price of cottos| Fis : J 'exas, large 3 portion thereof, by the master minds who eo the, Te sone farmers promise to S10 BO ns re : ist er Ta hts In! st Caval me Got Mixed iy 8 cotton allotments. haven t een growing cotton in large amounts as! i ‘ ue EC ong as Texans, demanded that their : % ; - hath Pte. George T, Caine, 18, was yéar be based on that which they w during : y Ji ner recently re-| Pfc. Sohn P. Kizzee, also be r Indianapolis man was : How they Sot 2 mixed 93p with Call the Jost two years. : ne He " Welcome nd to the he. United States Na.|lieved to be serving in Korea, will rectpiity jiiceiea far acon I Japan hin : 3 fae © by the formulae adopted, as interpreted by oC 0% i: The calculators got out their slide’ d Di A TY somplets Lh ree) [HN “Floyd V. Chit. : received this : the slide rule, most counties pf Tor Treted nD rules and their charts, and drew up a scheme to 2 ivision I years ne xy § oy! in Con i by his par- 1 ee allowed to plant only a small fraction of their allocate cotton acreage in California along that| Landing of the 2d Division in| © rye : pany A of the ‘ents, Mr. and he FF usual cotton crop, while one district would get line. But they didn't mention California in the gore; has brought new strength | He 15.23 andl J 38th Regiment . Mrs, John R 8 : 9 harvest 350,500 acres more than it ou her's Hew rules, They only said that any state growing to fighting -GIs. : day ‘leave with the . brother of : He was sta : Cordrey, 7 h ) The explanation of this-ts so complicated that such-and-such an amount of cotton in the last, One Hoosier serviceman who is}. “his patents, ur) Mrs. Catherine *| PY tioned at Ft ville. Be T defy anybody to understand ‘it. By let's listen two years, as compared to the years before, . glad to see fresh and Mrs, ge) ‘Jones, Moores " Lewis, Wash. Oct. 13, 1949 and briefly to Rep. W. R. Poague (D.) of Waco, Tex.,” would come under the new regulations. You still] 4roops is Pte. a MH Fisher, ville. L until July 1 trained st’ FC m1 as he tells what happened. "with me? Carl L. Fisher, of at Pte, Kizzee when he was Ky. a he Solisoruia ruling, Es whieh sim seemed to Texas Acreage Slashed | Son of Mr. and 1 lB a trained Ft. alerted Jor wr © Caine bas { went on: “So they placed us a Ld e TEXAS, as it turned out, came within. Fisher, R.R. 15, 1948 class at » 00a: enlist rs

fore going over-

t who served 5 and I want the record to be clear (Lo: Pipe the Calta figures by 93 acres out of hundreds Pte. Caine in

Box 542, Indian-|} « Technical = High

; : seas to Japan| Pfo. Chitwood oq for three World ’ never felt that we were properly under the he usads, od rem is Actvige 3 “apolis, George Fisher School, Jie juined Ple. Kiztee two. years agoiyears in January, 1049. Py War . gadget, or that the law placed us $ y He is fighting the Navy A0Cwiin ‘Company E, 17th Infantry” He took his basic training at : . there. But rule. Most of the regular Texas cotton “growing \ t training at Pvt. Rodger C: Brandlim, 20, a ae were put there by reason of some districts had their acreage sliced to the vanishing with the island received Be ther taok & 42- Regiment, Unit 1. Camp Breckenridge, Ky. and stationed with Headquarters Bate - . think tions hry a aie o do not ' point, while one distriet--which never had grown Caviky. Divs Great ie course and Was| sgt. Gene E. Harris, a veters graffrom from Jere vay Sir tery, as F. A. nothing to do with the case now, oat has mich SO Jound that Bt was alloted. B00 . Pfe. Fisher graduated in November; 1049. lan of World War H, stationed ati. ne attended Martinsville High BN ™ Init Ba went under it, but it meant that 8 more Ir ever ore, i ~ served in ‘w= Bamburg, Ger: School and was employed at p i was alloted in Texas this year on on Adfeage - Congress. will. straighten this out, Ihave id Pie: Fisher one year Kenneth L. Allison, electronics | many with Com- Mikesells, Inc. : when he last . the county, on a basis of ‘a Wa rear i . Sout, at What gives me jue shivers are those (being sent to the combat Zone.technician 3/¢, is stationed at|pany A, 26th In- Son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard | wrote to his - cotton only; whereas in - Mississippi, in Georgia, eo as fuel or a Te Me DW He entefed the service in July, ug, Submarine Base at New Ton, pr] ted 12 a. ih AA pe 22 He is the son : in No- nple |year-old serviceman is the brother ~.. Ed Sovola, Author of Inside Indianapolis, Is on Vacation. 1045 and 3 alled Sor Japan dort. Conn Mr. BO years Army serve - of Howard Chitwood Jr, 1306 8. Of Mrs. Alberta : Pfc. Fisher, who is 19, attended |, 4 Mrs: Luther ice: be te Belmont Ave. x Brandt 0% | Technical High School before go-|A ison, 548 8. | Sgt. Harris .- nn : Yin yr Bauidon Can i B Jay Br een ing into service. ; t .{was wounded in Pvt. Howard A. Warren, son Eg g . Vine. St, he Was the Battle of the of Mr. and Mrs. Alfreda McHugh, Brandiim, 70% : erent Another Hoosier fighting In graduated ui, Bulge and dis- 11211 N. Persh- Union St.

He enlisted in Pvt Branilim thé. Army “in “October, 1048, ° {trained At Fort Knox, Ky. and | was hipped to Japan last January. : x

NEW YORK, Aug. 1—If you can think of a mind to put “his very best efforts into the race, Korea is Pfc. Cs 4. good _cashpaign slogan for presidential candidate "He sald, "I've been shouting that we have to! Gerald Seacatt. J Floyd Cramer, he'd be mighty grateful. He'd have revive the Republicans—now they tell me I'm the He enlisted worked one out for himself, -if he'd ever had the man to try it. I can’t say ‘no’.” the A rmy. idea it would come in handy. But the first sign He has quite'a few things to recomménd him. | 1947, : he got was when an elephant walked up to the Floyd points out he was born in a clapboard house After taking front door of the Westchester Heights Saving and in -Smackover, Ark., and doesn't come. from a his basic train-

Loan Association wearing on its back a sign that family that slipped a gold spoon in his mouth the| ing at Ft. Knox,

charged, but re- vd enlisted in 1047. Hag Ave,

!ported to Lack{He holds the Tifle ¢ ghiampionship of M/Sgt. Harris (land Air Foro

| this outfit and has a trophy for BORE: Tex. begin

winning the middleweight boxing : orce division matches in the as In- Ie A

chool in May, 1947. He is 20.’ Enlisting in the Navy in Jan‘uary, 1948, he relcetved his boot

» » /Mrs. Hope HAIDA, 957 N, Tibbs 5 AVE, hasn't had a letter from her

training at Great yg Anson ntry. rse said “Cramer for President.” day he arrived. He started his financial career|K Lakes, Ill. He at- : RC the* son of Mr, and Mrs, [8tiOR cOU son, Pfc. John eer Ky, he - was » . ; s It was mighty exciting,” he said, “but that ph bank messenger in New York. He's a member shipped to Ja- tended Electronics School there Perey P. Harris, 2205 Duke St. in 8 D, Graham, 39 slogan seemed pretty uninspired.” of the New York Athletic Club, but not a stuffy pan where he and’ was graduated from the His _and three daughters are training will-pre- of the Air Force, Not Too Much Back round . one. When the admission committee asked him | stayed until his school in Mareh, 1045, : with him. in Germany, hors ng for en- mee Jost ye - g to name his favorite athletic endeavor, he wrote assignment . to a aa 8 + 1 trance into Ar 5 a wa ? ugh -HE HASNT had too much background in down “shooting craps.” | Korea. Pte. tt Sgt. Tainte R. Butler, formerly Elmer 1. Rhoades Jr. is on his|tran a aioal H: A Warren [the Red Cross 2 ; politics. He said, “My Uncle Bud is the sheriff-of His grandfather was once arrested for pro-| Pfc. Seacatt is Bon “lof Anderson, is stationed at Walk-| "8Y byersead’, from Dipl, HO gh d for nisl goment. in| She learned he's Smackover, Ark., but no one else in my family moting horse races on Sunday in Arkansas and With the Medical Company of the/er Air Force Base, Roswell, ash, according clalized work. > been shipped 2 tr ever ran for office. I'm a babe in arms.” thrown in the Smackaver hoosegow. Floyd thinks 31st Infantr ¥: He BE N. M. Sgt. But- kt to u telegram re- Spee ” =» | overseas: { 1 oan Mr. Cramer explained, “I used to go around ° 8 y jer is a radio . veived. by his * a Hamilton Air

telling friends something would have to be done that gives him his background a nice homespun Pvt. Tames R. Andrews’ iast

# mother) Mrs. C.| Ep route to ‘an Air Force Base| Force Base, Cal, to revive the Republican Party.” Those who asked touch. So does What happened when his. grand-{ |... "stated that his outfit was

operator with fC. Boyle, \York-| in Alaska 1s “Pte. Robert B. Holtz | He enlisted Feb,

T father was sprung. Mr. Cramer revealed, “The old. the 509th Alr M d 44 ' him for ideas got a one-hour lecture on the sub- ‘alerted for the combat zone. Ref - town, son of Mr. anci4, 1048, after : v ueling Squad . se ject, but Floyd never recommended that he be gent ran for sheriff and got elected.” Son of Mr. ron at the New He scrved t Mrs. Charles E. leaving Techni. Pfc. Graham

He has some mighty refreshing ‘views for al /draft , Afied for Sor Sowiation h. I didn Presidential candidate. His advice to business is, t rattled when th ’ 8 a 0't" “Do the Job yourself, or government will do iti Sot Siting at his ey put tie Singer on me: phe for. you.” His program for labor includes good hundreds or ] Pp esi When qa laries, plus cash allowances for lunches, Just ike wg pr ope Jatadeq up 1 his onies glia those he allows employees of his bank. Jug, Dresed: it Ter diy ah Moe or : Ave Mr. Cramer's looks aré faintly reminiscent, of 3814 *T went out and aed’ Aoyds Ja in Wendell Willkie and he’s fond of pointing out tion, th . Wen came back to my desk and re i that his campaign for President started very much Visualize myself running for Presidedt.” - + like the oue which nearly put Mr. Willie iu the He didn’t get much time for pondering. Checks . 01d serviceman| yy,’ pis parents, Mr. and Mrs. oo started pouring in and volunteer workers for the Smackover Full of Fans . entered thei... iq Butler, of 2926 KE. 10th| ; : Pte. Holtz Cramer for President” campaign were on his HE SAID, “They're rooting for me back in| Pvt. Andrews Army on Sept.ig 4, 4erson, nb Bx ecting “to be sent overseas p

and Mrs. Ray- | mond Andrews, 1921 Charles St., Pvt. Andrews. is with A Battery, |} 49th Field Artil- rd Exped lery Battalion, {8 riod: in Semen Cpl. Rhoads ho Pe heads Its Infantry Sgt. Butler Der, 1047. |Army for two. years and was The 18 - year- Sgt. Butler re-| a at Ft. Lewis; Wash. His | . nan cently spent a 12-day furloughi,ucny fs the 38th Infantry Regl-

_ Hibbitt, 732 W./ cal High School, - training at i 11th St. Lakeland Base, San Antonio, Pte. Holtz en- Tex., Ft. Bragg, N.C. Elgin listed in the Air| Field, Fla, and Smyrna, Tenn, Force Oct 31, hii, 1949. He took ’ Seaman Robhis basic train- ert Case, 17, has ing at Lackland been in boot San training at Great ‘Lakes, Ill; since June 8, He's in Co. 130 ~ 327 - 36~ 88.

years in the] Navy and went to the BSouth!=3 Pole. with thei Byrd Expedition.

Mexico field, The 20-year-“old airman enIistrd -in the; AAF for a : three - year pe- §

Force:

I em

doorstep the next day. He now has a staff of at Smackover; even Uncle Bud,” altho Uncle Bud, 1849 ang x» {in a few weeks is Pfc. Kentieth E. School at Warren Air Base Mr. Case made least 200 Pgople working on his try for the GOP the sheriff, hasn't helped the i 8 £00 much.| (00k his basic training with the| Gerla Lee Cates, son of Mr. (McKinney, ‘who Pte. Holtz, who 18 17, en his home with presidential nomination in '52. Floyd says when they got wind of it down in| ord Armored Division at. Ft.\gng pre, John Ell Cates, 1236 Cen- | is stationed at for a four year Rite his grandmother, Mr. Cramer sald his wife, Gertrude, didn't Arkansas, folks went to see Uncle Bud and ask Kno% KY tral Ave, is serv- Ft. Bragg, N. C. . EA Mrs, Ada Gramtake too kindly to the idea. She argued she about Floyd when he was a boy. He was sent to Japan lastiy.o' "0 'nuly Jackie Vest, son of Mrs, Hazel mer, 5707 Green-

Jouldnit get to see much of him and besides she Mr. Cramer said, “The only thing Bud came | March. Ther Sillecy. The Laced In| aboard the. air- _ felt a little silly suddenly bécoming the wife of up with was a story of how I ran away from home he Iuela | Manual Hien Jones craft carrier candidate.: Floyd said, “Her reaction when I was 17.” Presidential Candidate Cramer| USS Midway.

a presidential was to go buy three. .new hats. said that’s not exactly true. He was 19 when he .| The 20-year-a at a BaP igs. Cramer If af 3. 2d thats ust exactly | Pte. Willam M. Andrews is sta y

roa or. ATP OR RTA IT:

Ouse fleld Ave. »

Vest, 2546 Lockburn St. has been

{ toned-on

OMAN WES |He won the distinctio of partick scheduled to

‘Relating ’ Love . apd a By john Rosenburg:itusoit Ee on

yA, 11948. After training at Great Lakes, IL; hp was as-

Division, : the ‘youthful. partrooper made a number if - i

leave in July but Naval f

~~ NEW YORK, Aug. D Evans, CR ~The same. ory he a could - ‘applied “eyed brunet hailed by Hollywood tub thumpers as to sorrow, joy—and love. rer. Wrestling in

‘He 1s a of Mr. and Mrs. James M¢Kinn (Dupont. -

an acting “find,” said today that you don’t have to “Love, of course, appeared ic be my problem. "i ; ‘orld VW parent, ir snd 5, be an adult to take part in- a convincing love she said, “because when I made my first re; is v So. roe I1 ships in" Jackie Vest | Simpson, ‘2181 % scene. : X was still a young schoolgirl and had never been . illiam XK. Horr gan, son of “Mothballs.” ae wird Sugar Grove . fpr It's all a matter of. “relating, ” she said. in love, I didn't" know what it was, as far asl Woking ior. heard trom quarter Mr. and Mrs, William J. Horrigan, Now assigned to the USS Ave, Pfe. Warren rs Miss Evans is just 16. At 14, in the title role of personal experience was concerne B t 2 was at Gibraltar. Greencastle, has| Leyte, Mr. Vest was last reported . x Roseanna McCoy,” she made such hot love scenes Instead of personal experience, she said, “I/matches. A soldier from St. Paul, Ind been promoted in France. He is 19. |

“rn be all right, Don’t worry ~~ if I don't write," Everett Frost, 19, wrote home - July 10. He said he was about 75 to 200 miles

He censors felt impelled to cool several of them substituted what I had read in books and what I He joined th iMarine Corps

immediately aft- pyc. Andrews

to the rank of Colonel, it was | announced re-| ‘cently at Tyn-| dall Air Force’ Base.

Col, Horrigan :

~ La Pfc. Robert E. Cooley, 19, son of Mrs. Bertha | Brunnemer, 1828 “Bingleton St, went to Aber

a had seen in films.” ‘Making Love ...Is Easy’ © a. Tt was a cinch,” she added. or in Bale MAKING love before the cameras is easy, she Gets Seven-Year Contract lated ng Badu. vile High

said. She doesn’t undersiand why so many movie IT MUST have been, for it ‘landed her a seven-! School. While in high school, he queens work so hard at it. year ‘contract and. for the past three weeks, Miss was one of the state wrestling

is" serving with the 7th. Cavalry : Division in the occupation forces in Japan. Pfc. Robert Dale Reed en-|’

Miss Evans said she had been taught the “rp. Evans has been given the full buildup treatment cham fons in the spring of 1948. listed in October, i¥: Director of In- Ik deen Provin from the Korean lating in acting” theory—relating the action one accorded only the top stars. { arp 20-year-old Spring v police- 1948. Ge struction - a io Ground, Md., tor : lines. portrays to past personal experiences. "The resulting schedule of publicity ‘apPear-\ man is the nephew of Mrs. Harry |§ When his par- Alr Tactical lowing his fur- Mr. Frost is -

"© “Thus” she said, “if one must be angry, all

the actor | need do is dig back into his memory t EER OF

wn became so rugged, she dollapsed from ex-|

y ARERR A SSH Yo

B. Hunt, Crawfordsville, Ind." School located : lough spent here. : the brother of in Panama City, He James Frost, 530 bed Isat ; mba dossigsa, 1b FeD ERT MRD medio TEAR 1 93: Mh WSs

from him he.Wa$| vyoteran of the first bombing

something. If he keeps this in mind while doing pictures, “Our Very Own” and “Edge of Doom” oy was in Ko» the scene, he'll hate no trouble.” i he 1 C0 ere sus any Is Plc. Ed jy jin Tokyo. mission of World War II, Col. Mr, Frost Tea during TIS LI SLA Er tn Sn . : oe a cu ST

“German Youth Gets Taste of Hoosier

GH: | raved in the st Paul High 8¢hool {in the first U. 8. bombing mis-| Pfc. Cooley ves] security| Harry L

H it li 1 D St Ho Bth, 2500 8. East|} ond. sion when planes from his group : grou p. ; JOvens son yo! Mb, Oo 2] Y ar’ a 4 co Mn rhombed: a Japanese- Task= Pores ~via lung gue sm Su ay Walter: Sp a y uring. & y Fe- Da ie pit a TE {making a landing in the Philip- Winner of the Purple Heart Goens, 1227 NaBy EMMA RIVERS MILNER’ ; jan '

ith the | {pines and three battle stars during his omt St., is serv~“service in Aug-| Michigan St. is serving w A prisoner of the Japanése for| three years in : ling with the ] ust, 1948. HelArrmy occupa- three and a half years, Col. Hor-/ the Army . dur- {Navy ‘stationed went overseas inition forces in rigan narrowly escared the atomic| ing World War | December, 1948 Germany. He en- bombing Nagasaki, [1I, Cpl. Paul E. 8

Times Church Editor Y TALK ABOUT Hoosler__ ~hospt

. tality . pS Ls! FF otto Hetttngbrunmer- —of —Ger=| he RU many can tell you about it. He is|

sted in 1948 and | He.was moved-from the pri Elling to D. 38 semmvmenessasss fase mehednled to spend: rook Hin baste: Fein there to another base short Bi ng ¢ -Day guest in the home of Walter C. I mer In dianapoils Times carrier |{F2ININE at¥ Ft. ly before the bomb was dropped. his SOUGLEY. He old Indianapolis 3 Maas and Mrs. Maas, 1501 Eng-| {Knox, Ky. After Prior {0 service he attended the Te-enlisted in the {serviceman holds -* e) lish Ave. Otto will eat Mrs. ud {apes employ ed In general) = inished ‘his \ University of Louisville for a year/Army last Au- | Jthe rating of Fireman Goons Maas’ good German cooking; she The Hsing hrs training at Ft. then went to West Point, He was gust and - went | fireman. onvines k - was born in his native land. Mr. stationed ith] Knox. he was graduated in June, 1937 and re- overseas May 5. » ’ Maas has served the city fire de- the iy on sent to Germany, ceived his wings in September, He was last ® | Two brothers, Frrok and Rob0 quick - partment for the past 22 years.| Okinawa. : Cpl. Yates had 1938. (heard from. in W - |ert Hickam, are both serving with : Otto will attend Tech High He is with th attended Wags: LN I | Vienna, - Austria, Cpl. Ellington | the U. 8. Navy. They are the sons Bchool and Trinity Lutheran 'Sth A Ca 8 ington Hi ; Yates Sgt. Clyde U. Johnson, 929 according to his of Mrs. Lucy Hickam, 921 N. Liv“Church while he gets the “feel” airy: my a \Sehool forth a orl. Chadwick St. has been transfer- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd O. | Migston Ave,

of . democracy. And the Maas couple, whose children all have! '' grown to mature adulthood, will] have their longing satisfied to “hear a young voice in- the household again.

» ” ~ THE WHOLE experience from the time he left his father’s house in Wiesbaden until the year ends will not cost’ the German lad a penny. He is 20, which may seem a bit mature for” high school. But when “you realize what distance {lives at M37 Norman St. lies between him and his country . City fireman Walter C. Mass ‘and Mrs. Mass will share their | you realize that he can learn a' home for a year with young One Heilingbrunner of Germany. R

red from Wright-| Ellington - Sucibyvise. < Frank, 21, is stationed aboard / Patterson Air or | the USS Juneau and was in Korea tL Force Base, O.| Seaman tin 7 Elliott, DO when. his mother received his last ito Eglin Air stationed at the U, 8. Naval Air |letter, dated June 1. He has been Force B a s el Station at Cor-

in service two years. pus Christi, Tex., | i i

has volunteered, for Korean duty, he wrote his parents, Mr. and | Mrs. H. E. Bl-| lott; 2810 8. Ry-| bolt Ave. ! Seaman EIlli-| ott, who aend it . ed. Ben Davis High School,

| graduated from ; {Manual High | School in Augjust, 1945 and enflisted in the - {Army eon go { | He served two CPl Stevens years in Japan. Discharged in { 1947, he re-enlisted in February, 11950. Sent’ to ‘Camp Stoneman, | Cal, he was shipped . | overseas {to Okinawa.

i

-|. His mother, Mrs. J. W., Perry,

{years prior to his enlistment: “| Pfc. Charles E. Wall, son of Mr. rand, Mrs. Charles Wall, 1340 8. | Tremont 8t., is serving with the «qth Air Base 2 Group, Carswell Air Force Base, Ft. Worth, Tex. | After enlistme g } 7" ice in 1947, Sgt. ig a year uo, ’ 98 4% Johnson who fs | his “Basic train ‘ge Johnson 31 ~has ‘zpent 17. ing at Lackland . , months overseas Alr Force Base in the Pacific, Theater. of OperaSan A toni tos withthe 51st Fighter Squad-,

quarters of the #8 Air Proving} Ground. Since - his- en-| try into the servy- |}

Believed fo Be in ‘Korea is obért Thomas McQueen, boat-|

great deal in a high school. (right. swai " Pex. took: boot train-| i te! right.) ns mate 2/c, ex. : | Seaman Elliott | Frank Hickam Robert Hickam PS, glam. ro = ring amir he wanted to come to the United League, Lutheran youth organi-, Mr. McQueen, who is 26, is the Pte Wall Row a he Air Base Su ssigneq huis hg 1 San Die | Robert, 22, who served 18 ~— on, made through association with Gls States, — zation, placed 20 of the 200 stu- a 1804 Of Mrs, a ten Mat Eglin. Pupport Equadion go. Sal + ——— months in the South Pacific dur- ; , enthusi= overseas, he said. He not only “I think it's important OF sents | Louise McQueen, Washington High School before > 1 Sgt. Melvin W. - ler. 22 in|ing World War II, enlisted at the enjoyed talks well but is both alert and countries to exchange students so 31%: | R.R. 18, Box 400, entering BeVIoe:. i= Cpl. Robert C. Craig, son of] St Melvin ‘W. Tyler, 22, Inj "of 17 and has served’ conariel 30+ friendly. that -people of vafious countries, “Living here as ordinary hign| Indianapolis. He Mrs. Thelma Craig, 1020 W. 4th|® ¢4!! to his wife from- Japan|, sy since. He i8 stationed .me ‘that Otto's father, to: whom Bie re- will understand each other bet-/school students for.a year will was stationed at| Pvt. Richard w. ” Southworth, St., Marion, *is 3 July 10, said he was well but!ghoard the USS Cadmus in Nor

Subic Bay in the who enlisted in’ the U.S. Army stationed at Philippines when last October, is . Camp Drake at his last letter serving “som e-; Osaka, Japan. was written. = iwBeys in Ko- {according to his A veteran ifea,” according bh {last letter. - World War. IZ|to his mother. | However Cpl

fers as “general” was an officer ter,’ was his answer. “But ofigive them an opportunity to see | in the German army. He was asked course there are many other ad-'3 true and untouched picture of | to retire before the usual age be- vantages too.” he added. the American way of life,” Pas-| cause he. failed to conceal his dis- The reply expressed one of the {or Maas commented. “It is a approval of Nazi practices. The reasons why the United Christian common opinion that if the peo-| German lad’s father .and Mr. Youth Movement is sponsoring ples of other countries in this!»

very busy. He. mir folk, Va.

was with “the ; Army Engineers Pvt. Darrell P. Lister son of Service Co., Gen- _|Mrs. Mary Por- - xe ter, 2717 College

“leral Headquarters in Tokyo. -|Ave. and Russell

© "Maas rn in 1893 and 200 such German students; in- world truly understood the Amer- «SSS = = Mr. McQueen Mrs. Clifford Craig’s outft, Sgt. Tyler served J Lyster, French = each ot om Dh Lan two cluding Otto, for a year in the ican way, they would desire it! y +7 went into telson rth,” lthe 1st Cavalry, with the occupa- ing J Mationed Ly y daughters. United States. The government) {for their own. Certainly the place! R. McQueen , Navy at the age Monticello, has been seeing tion. forces in wi e 11 Ze ? + paid thelr transportation costs|to plant such seed is in the youth! of 18. | “I heard fro action in Korea. {Tokyo in 1946 Airborne diviONE OF ne Maas sons, the and the rest of the expense was of ‘such countrtes as Germany.” | “During World War II fie fought | him last Mon- 7 : [He is with Com- and was dis. sion at Ft Rev. Walter C. Maas Jr. will met through churches. 5 | In these words he outlined the 'D Nine battles aboard two. battle. day,” Mrs. South- * Ipany A of the charged in No- Meade, Md. serve as Otto's pasior at Trinity . . \deas of the government and the {ships. Honorably discharged in/worth wrote 8th En g ineers. vember 1947. Pvt. Lyster Church. ‘I'he family also includes TRINITY * cHurCH financed

| December, 1946, he: re-enlisted| The Times. “He , {Cpl Craig en- Oph Cralg [He je-entisted im | lor [United Christian = Youth Move {and was stationed at the Naval wrote, ‘Mom, if Pvt Southworth | listed June 22, 1948 and todk his| April, and re- Sgt. Ty 947 8 § Training Center, Great Lakes, you don't hear from me—more basic training at Ft: Knox, Ky. [turned to Japan. Last August he and was station-

-.. Charles Maas, who will assume Otto from the time he arrived in

his duties aé the assistant basket- New York until he -came here;/ Ment in the student project.

: ball eoach 8 Tech in September, Then the Maas couple took over Then Pastor Maas added WIth 11, for two years. -. {than once a month, I'm OK.” | He sailed for Japan Oct. 17, came home and then was mar- ed temporarily in Pr pr “Folkening and and will be responsible for all his|a twinkie: “Otto has agirl friend - Mf; and Mrs. McQueen have a| Pyt, Southworth.- whe is 19, is 11948. - After {aking cook's “train-| ried. His wife and parents, the Korea. He reFo Mas Deroy Maas. needs until he goes home, in Germany so: no foreign en- | 10-month-old. son, Thomas’ Mec=| with" Battery A of anti-air- {ing he was promoted to corporal. Rev. and Mrs. Grover Tyler, Nve turned to the United states

18 Pastor Maas asked Otto 5s, The - Werastions} sWaipSeriansioments are aplicipatod.” = | Queen n,.. 5 : craft unit,

~ + : )

ion! Craig is 20. {aR R3 Sheridan. “148, a