Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1950 — Page 13

ENTS

a

a —————

lace, just 3, seems to be havin Wallace, 470 S. Meridian St., a:

than in ¢

'd Walton, ¥ chill Firtl vo

‘get it home. Bobby G. / a hard time with his wagonload of melon. Bobby, son of John D. aed from a nally managed to reach [

avid Lynn

-In Reich Orders

- Cape Week-end

By Robert Ce Ruark

NEW YORK, Aug. 2 We ‘have finally figgered out a way to spend the week-ends profitably this summer. We will stay home, curled up with a’ bottle of barley water and a dog-eared copy of Vogue, my favorite magazine. Joe Carter, Vogue's tame bachelor, is going to do my week-ending for me. Joe is a mythical character that the fashion book used to prove something. It is my private opinion that he will eventually turn out to be a Kremlin spy—story title: Joe Carter Gets Shot | at rise—but a more recent exploit had him spending a week-end at Cape Cod. So did I, it happens, but Joe fared a little better than I did.

“Joe Visits the Cape

SEEMS that old Joe went to visit some people

at a place called Dennis, on the Cape. His host was an old friend. Joe had freeloaded with him before, when he owned a house in Westbury— “a large, very formal house with an indoor tennis co a swimming pool, six hothouses, a cutting garden, a -Kkitchen garden, a small laundry, a stable, a tennis pro, a masseur and two station wagons for the use of the guests.” My friends were nowhere so grand. They are named Bob and Jane Low, and the master is a rump-sprung war correspondent turned’ magazine executive. They have two children and a mortgage, in their permanent life, and absolutely no

_ tennis pro. Instead of two station wagons they

own a 1936 Cadillac which they bought for $250, and which is evidently a diesel job, since it uses more oil than gas. My friends are spending the summer at Martha's Vineyard. Mr. Carter's hosts had compromised for a comedown, in housing, but it was ‘till big enough to brag about a separate dining room for the

owner's grandchildren, yet, and. “upstairs there

were enough bedrooms including a sleeping porch,

i! for a‘small boarding. sehool.”

“Tows have no upstairs whatsoever. They

al in the living room, and their guests dwell in water, Joe can nd all my week-ends on the

rmed chicken coop” which is easily large enough to accommodate three Rhode Island Reds

and two dehydrated “Leghorns. Also,

Teaks.

grandchildren sit in chairs with no backs, to en-| courage good carriage. Mr. Low's brood sits in| no chairs whatsoever, They are known as ambulant, or walking wounded, type children. Mad-| § eline walks, and talks constantly, Katherine is too young to talk, but she stumbles around, falling into fires and such, with the aimless abandon of a beheaded chicken. The sea is free, for rich and poor alike, but Iig “would ‘gather that the beach Mr. Carter visited was free of dead lobsters and sharp stones.” At least there is no mention of stone bruises and blood poisoning, both of which I seem'to have acquired. Nor does my boy, Mr. Low, have a cute

bulletin board telling you about cleaning and| Tech, Bro unk Of Supplies at pressing services and the laundry-and-lunch situa- the Air Base in tion. When ‘last seen, Mr. Low had been wearing San Diego, Cal, where he was|

the same pair of pants for 10 days, and lunch was flexible.” We had it onée at 10 p. m. 1 will say one thing in favor of my host. There!

records that “they met on the porch for a glass of white wine and soda—it was far too hot for cocktail.” In Mr. Low’s presence it is never 3 hot for a cocktail. Joe Carter went into rapt -about a host who goes to bed at 10:30, leaving you with a jug of barley water for refreshment. As I recall my week-end, we were all dancing/ in-G-strings around a bonfire at 4-a. m, thumbing noses at sea serpents and luring ships to destruction with bobbing oil lamps, and carrying- on in! general. /

Return ‘Experience’

JOE CARTER is a fairly poop reporter, in that he doesn’t tell me how he got back to New York, but he couldn’t have topped my return experience. After being stacked up two hours, in a fog, over New York, and some more in Boston, we wound up| in a delightful hotel room in Concord, N, H, a

rather doleful spot at 3 a. m, if somebody Will™ Just" ‘PASE The DATTEY

Cape, and one of these days I hope he runs into} the Lows; It is an rr even: for Vogue.

~Sit-Down Strike

Congress ought to shut down today for repairs, with a sign out front: Watch for grand opening,

“Jan. 3.

The gentlemen who wrote this statute, how-

in case we need any new laws passed, or wars declared in a hurry. This in a way is comforting. And in another way it isn’t. My anatomy bears’ intaglio imprints from heads of the brass tacks in the stools of the Senate and House press galleries, Some of these Seats have an even dozen their edges; ofhers have 16.1 have...

Aacks around. BOTH for ‘hours of a rE WHICH Hurts the a ae ie

st I have. not yet decided.

Another ¥ ear of Tacks :

. THE .FOAM:RUBBER JOBS, which Architect

Capitol this summer, will remain in the warehouse until next year, 1 am doomed to Another year of

those tacks. This is unimportant in times liké these and «TRY. complain _does.lead to.an. interesting situation. .Last summer, while Congress was set up.in light housekeeping rooms, Architect Lynn managed to install new ceilings in the two chambers, haul out the girders that had kept the old roofs from collapsing, and put brocade on the walls of the gallery floor. In the Senaté this was golden; in the “Jouse soft and shimndery blue. . Downstairs, where the statesmen do. their work, he_postponeéd operations until this summer. The result is that each chamber on the upper level looks like an ultra-modern movie palace and on the lower like the interior of a Pullman car in

‘Red Leaders Bold Did

"BY DAVID M. NICHOL mes Foreign Correspondent BERLIN, Aug. 2-—Communist

leaders are becoming bolder daily in their “orders” to Germany's people “to defy” the Western alles. i The newest outburst occurred - in Eastern Berlin during a_meét-| ing of. the “National Council” | preparatory to the “National Congress,” which has been called

a i Saalaiae nes. -

dered up for his remodeling of the

tis not to be. taken seriously. but it.

d You Get Key. for Times Treasure Hunt?

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THE INDIANA THEATER . THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . | UPON PRESENTING THIS COUPON YOU'LL HANDED YOUR KEY FREE AS LONG AS THE SUPPLY. | 4 LASTS. THIS COUPON IS ONLY FOR THOSE WHO | DID. NOT RECEIVE KEYS WITH COPIES OF THE

Washington. ki * Fireman Donal

Gol

“Two Sons in Navy: Thir In War Il; Daughter Was WAVE. |.

Two sons in the U. 8S. Navy, one daué to ship out for Korea soon, and the other an Air Technician with five years service |, that's the proud record of Mrs, Flora Brunk, RR. 1 Box 8, Indianapolis. But that isn’t the whole story. Mrs. Brunk lost a third son when his submarine was reported missing in the Pacific during World War II. And. her! daughter, a WAVE, spent more ported up in

two years ommuniin the

{Crise to Cuba.

__sarned

Seaman Buddy Lee Savage, serving -aboard--the..carrier USS Wright, leave Ca rmel Thursday to return to his base at Pensacola. Seaman Savage, who is 20, has been spending most of a 5 22-day leave with his parents and Mrs.

Mr.

“By Frederick tC; Othman

proper word: Now his wor

e poor old architect has got to postpone

old

yooms. The gentlemen aren't talking much for publi-| / cation about their sit-down strike, but the general’ idea seems to be that their temporary quarters last year made it entirely too easy for lobbyists, constituents and crackpots to corner ‘em in the Lorridors. So badly were their ears bent that Intend 16 SHOX to thér od © ; with their private elevators, hallways, and lounges

This leaves Lynn with two lumber yards on] the Capitol grounds, where his new timbers are hy invitation 10. termites and where weeds are king the place of some of the finest grass in Y these parts. :

Tourists Gef Trick Chairs

at the JRIPPle.

“Oph Levis

r a ht-| .. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2~According to the law, the era of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. Startling is the ni six foot seven J n fight: adopted “Hoosier Hero.”

is Cpl. Steve Allen Levis, another year, because the statesmen re- fle a oa the thick of Sav, \

fuse to’ co-operate. The Senators moved into the |battle when his family last heard preme Court room last summer, while Lynn| enor him in 4 letter dated July 17. ever, chose to ignore it, because of the. Korean and Co. attended to the ironmongery in their his-| ‘Technically, the towering 21War, and we can't blame-’em, for that. They're . toric chamber. The House set up temporary quar-|year.old airman is not a Hoosier. figuring on hanging around the rest of the year ters in its Banking and Currency Committee ip enlisted from Weirton, W. Va., | after his gradua-| tion from high

school

is now

THE ARCHITECT also has in stock some new| Korea arly ‘this year.

seats for the public and the ‘press galleries cand new chairs for the Representatives. Those for tie

ERT RES

Oe

TWO Tridianapolis” “brothers are

ishing - his _studies after he enlisted five years i

ago. “He was graduated from Air Technician School at Memphis, Tenn., and now is in charge

Mrs. now lives in Germantown, O., with her husband.

Snack: “Shop n-

tember, But his sister, Mrs. _F leis chmann, "who resides” at 8% 8.

sier resident and ... would appreciate “the privilege of |seeing my kid brother's pictare| lin The Times Hoosier Heroes col-| fumn.” The picture was taken |

Hoosier Heroes—

[TE two Fireman Bronk | jane ‘had been stationed in Japan. {

by

transgérred two ‘weeks ago from | Patuxent River, Md. rs. Brunk lost an older son, | | Robbert Garrison,’ when the sub-| marine USS Trout failed to return from a Pacific mission. Her, WAVE daughter, Johnson,

Betty’

will

letter received by 3 his mother, Mrs. | Mary L. Koch, | Birdseye,

Hayes, was killed in May, 1944, while serving with the 38th Di-| vision of the Army.

™ he: * ‘fighting in Korea in 24] thours” when his i family last heard from him in a letter two weeks ago.

K. Lindsay, 514

Japan, "ito his family,

Lost .- |

{2

A Birdseye, Ind. Jouth is Te-

|

Pvt if

8 n .

Mrs, C. J. Nam, gesser, 209 8S. Oriental St. He! is serving aboard the U. 8. 8. Man-! chester, a light! cruiser. \

enlisted

G Hayes Navy July

James E,

An older brother,

- # - n

Pfc. Harry V. Lindsay expected |

The 23 - yearold Army man is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles

N. Dorman St, and the brother of Mrs. Evelyn Rush, Blooming- pie, Lindsay ton. He enlisted in 1947 and has been in Japan two years, serving with the 14th Engineers Combat

when he last wrote.

in Sep1948. L. F

Summit

a Hoo

tourists are the trick ones that slide back so a serving on farflung fronts.

fellow doesn’t get his toes mashed when somebody.

age -are lined with soft, foam rubber (without! tacks) while the chairs for -the gentlemen are carpentered with cunning. They're not too soft to soothe a statesman into slumber; neither are they too hard to make him squirm. The designing of these chairs took careful | research, field tests and measurements (estimates in -absentia, actually) of legislative posteriors.. 1 Too bad hey: ‘won't get to sit in 'em until 1952.

just clip this and bring it to

. 138 W. Washington St. L214 W, Marylana St E

- yillages and in large factories.”

These elections will not be re-| {mans who. may be arrested . or |echoes the Communin line in cognized in Western Germany but othérwise: involved as a result Korea. the. Communist planners of the ot open defiance’ of the Western

Congress say that about half of allies. the expected 2000 “delegates” will come from Western Germany.

: Among council speakers was ern allies were no longer an ocOtto Grotewohl, minister frei cupation. amy. supporting four “VRE BGIS SBE Times tra

: Echoes Soviet Line

jer,

Pfc. Leroy walks in front of him. The gallery stools in stor- rea and his brother, Cpl. John * Palmer, is inJapan, where he

Plc. Palmer

St. Pte.

G. Palmer is in Ko- last heard from

R.

Germany. They, are the sons of First Cavalry Mrs. Lillian Gib- Division—now in son, 1304 E. 27th action in Korea.

Palmer,

who is 19, is a Technical High member of the School, has been ist Infantryin Japan more Regiment and than two years. has been in sery-| He became an Lt. ice two years. ‘officer at Fort Benning, Ga. He's, His mother said the son .of Mrs. Richard Hilton, it has been four 36 N. Bural St. weeks since she heard from him. | His brother, Cpl {merly was Slationed in Rores, but stationed. wt FL |returne ere in when his 'enlistment ended. He re-enlisted Lawig, ash. a in February. He js 21. enlisted In e

Palmer, for-

=

Mrs. Thelma J. White, 6168 E. 125th St. “ Both ‘enlisted in" the Navy init ~ Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Ameri: | | vansyilfe: Billy in ‘September, lcan commandant in Berlin has | 11947, ‘and Robert in November,

“pun.

"parents are Mr. ‘and Mrs. W. E. Eichholtz, 1508 Spruce St. \ He has been in the Navy 13 F. Eichholtz months, taking boot training in San Diego. He attended Manual High School. . ” » » ~ James E. Moore, 19, seaman, ooldest of 13 children of Mr, and] Mrs. Forrest Moore, R. R. 1, | Martinsville, was | stationed’ in ‘Weeksyitle; No CJ; ccording to his hi

the . theater in World War II; he enpreted odnthe : ; Navy Mar. 25, . James Moore He is a brother of Mrs. Lester L.|

in! Coble, 918 Chadwick, 8t.

te is E. Honeycutt, 22. who enlisted in the Army in 1946, was

in Camp MeGill,

was with the

Lt. Honeycutt, graduate of

Honeycutt

Pvt. Stanley D. Deusser, 18, is

at Ft. Knox, Ky. i Pvt. Deusser, {son of Mr. and (Mrs. Charles R.& 7" Deussér, 5839 E.Z {16th St., attend-@ led Technical 4

High Schéol,

here for Aug. 25-26. TIMES. 3 da The name itself suggests Sin igen elt ; Wi . : ous parallels-with Korea. Com-| Name esvesersriaseressnisisessss Phone NO. cuvaviienss ET munist leaders insist that the! ’. : ! : is : : ot That was: the TCongreas®. wil Fejiepent Ie Address iisiesecersnnsaisaraisess Key: No, sesienaves Billy McLean Ro MelLean last. message rermany and not jus i bert the aren occupied 8 Soviet forces. (When key is handed to you, record number in thé blank | Two Indianapolis brothers are Willi RE : For “Elen above, then give coupon to attendant), aboard the USS Prairie, Saniyon A a The “Council " declaration calls dent of the Eastern German gov- power decisions about Germany | i ta a Rp are gr, Mes : say hol delegates in and cThinent under Soviet auspices. He but instead had become “purely McLean, 17, ‘according to their/6th St, Beech \promises full backing to any 'Ger- intervention troops.” That also last letter, July 23, to their moth-Grove. The let-

ter was received July 15 from Honolulu, where Pvt. Runyon has ‘been stationed.

: 4 oe Pvt. Runyon

‘described Communist appeals for 102: A former National Guardsman, M . ppea or r.-Grotewohl said the West active. Tosista nee. as very serious. Billy went to boot camp at ‘Great. Lakes, Ill, and Robertlar Army in 1949; le was 18 ned in San Diego. : yesterday. Tk ;

ven. Douglas dac Arthur. foyko, Japan,

ast letter. He is he son of Mr

Is. " {Beech Grove.

{was trained at IL ocklandAlr When his leave is up, the uss, George M: Hayes, BM3/c, was | Base, San. Aner will up anchor for Korea recalled 10 his ship Sunday after|s nic. Tex. After to Jelicve another cruiser which w haé beens keeping the waters: wo a that peninsula safe for id the “roof! American troopships. . " PDonal’s brother, Raymond D. According to Mr. Carter's chronicle, his hosts’ go... holds a diploma from

tennial Broad Rippl ”

serving four|{ {years. He has been on board the Manchester since it was commis sioned in the fall of 1946.

to duty with the “Tth Fleet His

European he . formerly re-

lat Y,om a goto,

&

WEDNESDAY, KGOST 2 2 1050

“Bud” Carmichael, 20, wis serv-

ng as personal onor guard to

in

ceording to. his

nd Mrs. M. B, Carmichael, 10th Ave,

Mr. Carmi-

{rom line fight- [crael enlisted in ing" in Korea. | the Army According to a | 115, 1948.

Pvt. William J. Bath wrote Jast

rom Camp Gor- Pl

spending 10 days/y furfough spent ~-of-a-30-day leave in Tipton; “he- reported to Camp. laboard the troop. with ‘his mother, gordon.

»

Floy d Eva ans, St.,

Sgt.

Sgt. Evans

First Lt. H. T. Wilder, who was] igerving with the Military Advi-

Mary Mayo, .

listed Army ber, 1940- and

and Germany

i

iyear-old Army

-l

}

| Oarl Noel

a 2g | Pfc. Shannon H. Milburn Jr. | Mrs. Henry E.| Collier St., Was to return home

ison of Mr, and (Milburn, 3148 8. on his way to Japan from Camp Stoneman, Cal, when his last letter was written, The 22 -yearfold Army Signal Corpsman | enlist.

sided at R. R. 4, Box 328 with his

dred .C. MIDULD. . oo.

» -

Pfc. N. |chutist. with the atte Acbr borne, Division, has been - transferred ‘to the. 31st Infantry Regiment. He is stationed

|Japan, i The - 20-vear-told... Indianapolis serviceman = e¢..tered the army in 1947 and: ha# been in Japan -

since 1948.. He had been: sched{uled to return home in . Septem-

ber.

” » Cpl. Lioyd Snyder, 820 N, Lais now stationed as per-

Salle 8t., manent. personnel at Ft. Knox, Ky. Cpl. previously

Snyder was

; ‘| stationed at Seo-

iul, Korea, in the jeeccupa tion forces for two years, He served three years in the Army, then re - enlisted May. His moth-

khaki, serving at Hamilton Air Force Base, Cal. The 42 -yearold “Army ca-

brother of Pearle ‘Mundy, Camby, and Ralph Butterworth, 526 N. Tibbs Ave. . Scheduled to re-

service. ~

153° 4

aboard USNT Walker. 21 - year-| old Indianapolis soldier re-enlist-iand Mrs. ed for six years|.. in May, after four years of Army duty. is serving in the;

Army. His wife, Mrs, Mary Evans, and, i their two sons reside here at the | Centennial St. address. |

in Octo-§ served in France

{during World War II, The

in

reer man is the

Oct. Mr. Carmichael

Pvt. Bath

The

Hi

the

Lt. Wilder

officer went

Battalion. He was in Camp Me. | Seoul in December.

Carl

Elwood, serving

‘The 19 - year-|St., old Hoosier has] {with the 57th Air in service Police Squadron. | The 22 -year- |

been

since July 17! 1048.

{ [1st Cavalry

Pte. Milburn wife, Mrs. Mil-

A ”

Pfe. Marshall

TTOpl. Snyder jer, Mrs. Maude @. Snyder and his| [been on duty

twin brothér, Floyd, reside at tthe, with thé Air LaSalle St, address. » Master set. Charles J. Butterworth /is how. rounding out . Migibeen in the Air 17th year in. d

Pvt. Runyon went into the regu-|tire- two years C. Butterworth

1

and Mrs, Moulder, Arsenal Ave, Sgt. Moulder entered ‘service in 1942 and served with the 8th In fantry Division © mNormandy

Sgt. 1-¢c Lawrence Moulder is stationed at Ft. Devens Mass, with the Engineers.

The son of Mr. Earl 145 8.

beachhead.

‘he also served as an anti-aircraft gunner in Luxembourg and Ger-

many.

High School's va team is now in

Thomas Murray, son of Mr. and 3 Mrs. J. B. Murray, 551 Vinton

“2413 Cen: is reported on his « way to Okinawa the

I8t, is serving

ship USS Boxer and was 14st

heard —from—in- Rusia]

the Canal Zone. eaman Murray,

ling from Manual

Char

i H

Raymond Mayo N 1948. He is the n

Navy in 1948.18

35. the son of Wil- 2 to lam K. Guy,

2120 N. Wallace St. and the

brother of Anna ‘Rees, 327 EB. §. Noel'joth 8t. mouth d,.. 08. aboard |

Sgt. Moulder

A former pitcher on Manual

"enlisted

Fireman Les-

rsity baseball

n Murray 20,

in 1947, n

Raymond E. Mayo, son of Mr,

les E. Mayo, d

Boggstown, "an brother of Mrs. Charles Riggles; ~ Greenwood, serving aboard] the aircraft carrier Boxer.

is

The 21 -year-

old Hoosier sailor ' ate of Whiteland

is a gradu-

igh School and +n the avy in June, ephew of Miss

Fireman Guy

of. Mt.-and.

tl Robert Lv Terry, 11-8.-Pine. is © serving

old. Indianapolis soldier enlisted in {1948 and went to {Alaska in 1049. {He is scheduled

on furlough this month. ® » Cpl. ‘| serving with the

Division, last reported stationed

[listed In 194 ‘and was sent to Japan in March, “1049, He isthe son of Mrs. Lee

” »

tional forces. The son of Mrs. L. H. Scheffler, 204 8. Arsenal Ave, Pvt. [Willlamson has been in the Army 14 months and is currently assign-

éral Hospital.

Troop 353 before

seas ing {The Times.

} u =

21st. St, has

Force ' in Japan. The 33- yearold veteran has

Force for 11 years and flew in Italy for a year during { World. War II. (He then served with the occupa-

{tion Torces- in Austria before reassignment to Langley ‘Field and transfer to hisisonn el. _|present unit. : Before going into the ‘service, C apt. Howard attended Warren {Central High School. He is a na< ago, he re-enlisted for: additional tive of Indianapolis. -His wife In ational

residing in Japan,

Michael C. Cornwell.

He attended Technical School and was Scout Leader of his_ enlistment. - Pfc. Willlamson left for his overassignment. Nov. 27.1049, The 18-year-old soldier is keepin touch: with home town news through a subscription to attended South-

John Terry

.

8

Cpl. Cornwell

Freeman R. Marshall, 514 {offutt, R.R. 3 Noblesville. Dorman St., formerly a para-|

Yor more than a year Cap {Herbert P. Howard, son of Mr. _jand Mrs. A. P. Howard. 5203 E.

Capt. Howard

tar Mother Offers Mor

Corps, son of Frank RI 1219 §. Pershing ___ Ave. is serving =u in Alaska.

Corps since May, 1949, year - old seldier is. stationed at Elmendort Air Force Base

basic training at Cheyenne, Wyo. sisters,

Alexandria, and Mrs. Robert Frye, 1756 Nelson St. «

of

“170th h battallion sta-|

{cently

enlisted in Italy the Navy in 1948 after graduat- stationed in Alaska for 18 months

\

~HOP,;

"This fur hood is 3 Warm sub-|x the USS Leyte/gitute tof a GI'in Alaska where as a He John R. Terry,

5

apr a : {Btacy East he

Pfc. Robert A. Willi mson took i Te

led to the med- Pfe. Williamson ical department of the 98th “Gen-

High

| 1948, 3 ‘with. the occupa- "7"

Pfc. Robert E.

“the Air

In

‘the 19 §

Pte. a Charles p

He has t Mrs.

Clittora x Sprinkle, son

Cpl. Martin Palmer, ne ec, is

Mrs.

A I

heavy tank

tioned until reat ¥Ft.8 Knox, Ky. Cpl. Sprinkle who is 21, enter |ed service in Ma. served

tion forces in Cpl Sprinkle

and was

|before being sent to Ft: Knox. He is a graduate of Washinge ton High School and a member of Speedway Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, {

oe » Cpl. Robert V,

Oakley, Delaware St, was serving with the army in Australia when his mother received word from him

- Pvt. James E Oldham {is ia radio school at : Ft. Monmouth, N. J., his mothMrs. J. BE, Oldham, 227 Parkview, re-

ports. Pvt. Oldham, who is 18, enlisted in Novem-

ing for Italy. s The 21-year- §

. The parents of Pvt. Robert H, East, 18-year-old Bloomington soldier, believe he is fight with the 1st Cavalry division in Korea. “In a letter received July 12 he tol

awhile because hw h I ers to go ; | someplace. » He FYb East “Ha Member OT tHE Tt Signal Co. and. has been stationed in Japan. 5

2 fiw. a ” Everett Manion, brother

Pie.

{rea when his last | {letter ‘was written two weeks ago. He was serving with the 35th Infantry in Kyote, Japan, stationed ° there the past year..

i » Seaman Apprentice Franklin Ralph Lasiter Jr., son of Mrs. Utha Lassiter, R.R. 8, Box 661, is now stationed at Pearl Harbor. Seaman Lasik ter, who. is -18,

port High School {and left in. February ‘to take boot training at San Diego, Cal. “WN A Cpl. Rollie Gott, son of George A. Gott, — Crawfordsville, is weather observer with the AY Ws

Seaman al Lasiter

both Air Force and Navy. Its the -

mission ¢ air transport Jerspunel