Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1950 — Page 2
N CRANEY
vfordsville and near comes from
maps, diagrams and planResults of the firing line's is reported from the obserin post. Inter-battalion con1s a resul
Oper communis
ons. The supply battery fur-
Executive Officer
pt. Rex Worley, 31, of 210 W. e Bt, Crawfordsville, Headuarters ‘and Headquarters Batexecutive officer.
Around him are.
Ave, battery sergeant - major; W-0 George T. Maxwell, 36, of 607 Main St, and Sgt. Joe Bhubert, 26, of Waynetown; Sgt. Clarke L, Wilson, 23, of 404 T
of R. R. 1, Darlington, and “Cpl. Virgil Endicott, 24, of 709 F. College St, all in personnel.
Pfe. James Kaiweit, 19, of 711! Prospect St, both in messenger service, and Cpl. James W, Proffitt, 25, of 130 8, Green St., mail clerk. Orders speed over lines connected by teams of Sgt. Robert Stark, 28 of 1003'5; Layne Ave, communications sergeant. Bgt. ‘Stark, a veteran of five years in the Pacific, is a lineman “with! Indiana Bell Telephone Co, “Crawfordsville, Printing Workers
Although many of Crawfordswille's businesses are represented within the ranks, R. R. Donnelley " & Sons, printers, draws the majority, - Between a fifth and a third of the men in the three batteries are employed by the printAng firm, When firing begins, under su-| pérvision of Lt. Col. D. C. (Cracker) Graham, 314 W. Market St, officers overlooking the target ‘area report effectiveness of each
ue ‘A mile away, on the firing line, Capt. Lester Carver, 28, of 508 Tinsley Ave. checks with safety officer It.” Ray Fulwider, 30, of
executive officer Lt, Robert Weliver, E, Main St. gives a gun crew the next fire order, Howizter Fired At the command, 8gt. Ivan L. Brown, 30, of R. R. 1, Veeders-
Swenke, 21, of R. R. 7,
X Y, Aug. 8— When 8 shell screams through the Camp Af sky and explodes’ n " the gun crew doesn't ive all the glory for the “hit.” of Guardsmen {rom
s artillery rations. The cooks’ in the food. * i
Far from the firing line siis ¥, 25, of 309 Sheridan
ley Ave. Sgt. Robert Peebles.) R
Also in the office, carrying out! respective duties, are Sgt. Vernon! ~Wlson 26 ar Way neto wn; and
= 913-Cottage Ave. before battery!
At headquarters, : Guardsmen add . their part, =A 80,000 volunteer Reserve officers oo burg, drops his hand. and . Pfc. rations crew, with. ammunition, and men. betwebn Aug. 15 and LOCAL PASTOR TO SPEAK
Crawfordsville, fires the howitzer.
EB . 23, of 1102 Tut
|
(RY wn 25 Ne f > k ; "Frankly, | didn't expect to be satfsfled—but I tried No-Rinse Burt - because I have a big wash and —==—"""time is important. It was wonder~ i ful=the hours I saved; and all the breaking. work of rinsing. was afraid #8 was too good to be true” :
bhagtin ra |
sweet, and looked so gleaming clean! Why, usually I have to use : ‘bleach to get shirts so white.”
Ave, i Pte. Don Gobel, bash Ave. and C, Oceanside, Cal,” a cl 2% | Handor n, 19, .R. R. 2, “bot of eventual destination, Korea. |Trafaigar, Ind.
; ©. Times Balt Writer Member, Toe sult Wee
Norris of lican, has advised Warren Aus-
New Faculty
A stroll in the Hoosier moonlight loses most of its “Pfc. Jack Chase, 1050 S. Whitcomb St. Indianapolis, walks guard at ni Atterbury with Headquarters Co., 38th National Guard Division, of 8i4 Danville Ave. handler; Pfe. Daniel L. Largent, 805 Tuttle Ave, sighter; Sgt. Robert E. Hill, 25, of 226 E. Walnut gun commander, and Sgt. Morris Beach, 30, of 711} Titinots 8t.,, Crawfordsville,
of 908 Vandalia St, first cook. Battery Commander
ments. The crew Includes Sgt. at least 30 days for personal afOthers on the crew are Pfc.|Donald Birch, 25, of Darlington; fairs. : Sgt. Lawrence Rutan, 20, of 605.in uniform when the 16th departs tonight at the 7:30 servic Don/for Camp ‘the ® Assembly
:
: H : A RS] Crawforauyille; Pte. Charles Me-| : Cafferty, and Pfc. Peter
: n Thompson, 20, both of Dara lington. : Was {00 ‘Sweetest Town’
Other Darlington Guardsmen, led by Capt. Edward H, Heim-
1” bach, 27. R. R. 2, Crawfordsville, ° include W-O Royden Paddock, 29;
Hampton, 24;
Sgt. George Yount, 21; Sgt. Carl
says MRS. EARL ). SOMERS | R. Halnes, 21, Lt, John Hauck, i | 20, 1- Sgt. Frank H. Tribbett, rr 1032 N. Tibbs, INDIANAPOLIS at. rhe rer ve are both of nr b IR. R. 5, Crawfordsville. Lt. Marvin W. Maxwell, also of Darlington, called Darlington. the sweetest little town in the nation. The town is located at | the . Honey Cre
of Sugar and
ries
Three men, trapped hy police within 10 minutes after a $50 filling station holdup, were béing questioned today about at least three other armed robberies, Held for pre-robbery charges were John Frederick Woodard, 27, of 2729 N. Keystone Ave.; Clarence Hayes Brandon; 83, of 15084 | vem { Mills St., and T. C. Bolden, 29, of | 71x N. Illinois St. ° George Poulakos, 27, of 3061 N. New Jersey St., identified Wood+ lard and Brandon as the two who theld him up in the Jackson Shell {Filling Station, 38th St. and Col{lege Ave. at about 6 a. m. today. After the holdup, Mr. Poulakos § (notified police and an alarm was | broadcast, Police See Car p cars, manned by "How my mind wes chonged— | Sgt. Orville Gleich and Patrolman when I took the clothes off the (Harold Jefferson and by Patrolline. They felt so soft—as soft as |men Robert Durham and Delbert any wash I've ever had with three {| Pounds, saw a car going rapidly rinsings. They smelled nice and Ion 38th St. at Northwestern Ave. | They gave chase.
Ft. Wayne May Gain
'59 in Census Battle FT. WAYNE, Aug. 8-— Mrs. Dorothy Stolte, head of the local census bureau office, sald today 59 Ft. Wayne residents have reported they were missed in the : regular gensus. -She...sald. the §........8
4 names will _be..checked against
i | i
Makes 10816 | Cold Drinks |
the census and, if missing; will | be added. He This city currently is waging a census fight with Gary for the distinction of
being Indiana's
16th to Leave
19, of
try Marine Battalion, Lt. Col. William €. Smith, com-|
Individual reservists affected towel. Darlingtori by yesterday's national call for was crammed into his mouth,
{for active service yesterday is liam Ross Smith, 27-year-old disGuardsmen: of Headquarters expected to swell the ranks of the
Battery take time out at noon .ompat-alerted local 16th Infanfor “chow,” prepared under the!
shot. eye of Sgt. Theron L. Priest, 20] of 412 Wayne Ave, mess sergeant, and Sgt. Calvin Knox, 22, /manding officer of the more than L500-strong battalion, said the outf fit would move out of Indianap- Sunday night. Capt. Ralph C. Smith, 36, of olis as scheduled on Aug. 28, more R. R. 4, a pressman and stereo- than a third short of authorized Pair of shorts, typer at the Crawfordsville Jour- | ot rength. nal-Review, ‘is battery com-
sets out for the gun emplace- Oct. 31 are expected to be EL The Rev. Warren F. Mathis,
They will probably not be
Allendale
itin, U, 8B. delegate to the United Nations Security Council, to call Russian Chairman Jacob Malik a liar and then prove it so the whole world will know,
The Republican
of the Butler School of Religion for the coming year, Dean O. L. ‘Shelton announced today. ' .
War II, Dr. Nor-
weekly letter to ‘constituents. “As this is written,” Mrs, Hart iden sald, “Jacob Malik, Russia's chief delegate to the United Nations, is still be
States invaded North Korea, that
major in the Afr {Force Reserve, (He has been a
Rep. Cecil Harden . . . Rustion-Has-epuaed: ama war Jthe United States seeks domina.|time we started telling"the I On oe faa tion of the world by militaryin understandable tones that it which. will force, that the United States/is Russia which seeks to enslave
inine years In Pampa. He is a {graduate of Phillips University ‘with a B.DS Segiee, and Iucelyedisshs to destroy the world, that the yellow races of fe urd, br a his Ph, D, at the University of Russia wants only peace while well as the brown, the black and ithe United States wants only war, the white races? ‘Monroe County Sets {that the United States seeks to ~The new faculty member has enslave the yellow races of Asia. bo the Security Council, I believe
“All Americans realize that Jacob Malik is lying. Most of the| and free world—what is left of it—|Ye Re- also realizes that Jacob Malik is North Korean forces in theirs ial event are Gov. Schricker,
Active in Youth Work “If 1 gtood in Mr. Austin’s place
'vouth work and in leadership “training. He will teach advanced ‘church administration, preaching, , pastoral work, city church counseling at the School of
ro Mpg Norris; ~a-
“ONE: Russia calls for Peate, t Russian tanks spearhead the Nevertheless, day after outright aggression against the of ~Okige day; -the-Russtan-delegate South {homa, and a singer, holds a de- his charges. Day after day, those {gree In religious education from charges are printed in thousands yet Russian officers direct thet Phillips. The couple has a son,/of newspapers ; {world. Day after day, radios -repeat the Milik charges in ever =HAREUSEe Known hy mean. aos “Isn’t it about time that War- gressors. American delegate! United Nations,
DEGREE y= ss-<rrriofocnsirmmgrncibrise ! “TWO: Russia calls for peac
throughout ' the North Korean armies. Russia calls
MUNCIE, Aug. 8—-Dr. John R. "Emens, president of Bali ‘State College, sald today Maj. V. B. giving the lie to this outra Schoenfeldt will assume command propaganda? of the college ROTC unit Aug. 21. He will succeed Maj. Robert ¥. Moyer, who was transferred to
“FOUR: Russia calls for peace, starts yet Russian planes are in the] 8e0us gkies over Korea today. | ‘Talk American’
“Isn’t it about time our policy)" “T would also point out to Mr.
‘makers realize that we are losing Malik and for all the world to Business Opportunities. Look un-
* i
| merc
“Homer E
ire-fie Hanes vt the- Korean” ag- diane many
| sities.
make government ponds worthless.
Fall Festival Dates Times te Service
~. . | Monroe County Fall Festival will | be held here Sept. 14 through 16, Distinguished guests who will {attend the 12th annual noncome-
Senators William E. Jenner,
John A. Watkins; Dean Walker, ‘State Superintendent of Public Hnstruction; John W.for! president of the Ménon Railroad, peace, yet Russian guns are held| and presidents and officials of In-
Be your own boss! Buy a busi. ingss of your own! Turn now to the classified columns of today’s Times for a big
~~ Phiste BY Boh Walks. "Tires" 86 romance when the walker js a Gl sentry, ght while training at Camp
Disabled Veteran Short of Men [Killed in Hotel Room
None of the 2200 Hoosier volunteer reserve Marines schedul
SACRAMENTO, Cal, Aug. 8 UP)—Police sought a motive to-
Belfridge Air Force Base, Mich. [the war of words? Isn't it about hear that it is Russia which seeks der Classification 39.
AT Ayres & Ce. ai 4
“the Tatal beating of Wil-
abled war veteran whose body {was found lashed to a bed in his {YMCA hotel room. : Mr. Smith's face was “badly battered,” police said, and it was| ! believed his skull was fractured. (The slaying apparently took place
Mr. Smith was c His ankles were tied with a shirt, his legs with a bedspread and his wrists with a Another pair of shorts
pastor of the Fountain Square Christian Church,
~ DONT
It’s not only unpatriotic, it’s foolish!
There's no shortage of corn, and no prospect of any shortage, as long as the American farmer continues to do the great productive job he has done in the past. And the Kellogg Company: is used to making lots of corn flakes. Because, after all, Kellogg's Corn Flakes is the largest selling ready-to-eat cereal in theworld! Besides, that special crisp freshness is one of the most important reasons why Kellogg's Corn Flakes - - is twice as popular as any other. If you hoard a stack of boxes on your pantry shelves, that wonderful fresh flavor your grocer sold you is going to suffer. If we all keep. our heads, there will be plenty of . delicious Kelfogg's Corn Flakes for all—and they'll taste better, too. So, buy Kellogg's Corn Flakes as often as you need them—but not any offener!
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Pretty and practical for "at-home" wear... . sprightly checked cottons in
your favorite fall tones.
Early EF all by Jacqueline Show iy
A. Zippered front cotton with -»3UPOF. Market pockets to hold...
innumérable things. Red,
blue, or green. Sizes 12 to 20.
B. Brief-sleeved dress with softly
tapered collar; patch pockets and tie belt. Blue, red, or green. Sizes 12 to 20.
Ayres’ Pinafore Shop, Fourth Floor
a rubber foo grain mill we Oil |
“During ra edible oil fac a factory fo tural -
agricul . stroyed in N.
cultural fer Xhynnam, o the productiv culture very
rean towns a resent all th cynicism as : Korean peopl ple is incen: acts of the tions in Kore “The gove ple’s democrs that urgent stop the abc strous crime
committed b,
Agents , Set for
Associ its -1951 mai for Nov. 2-4, Members o appointed fo and meeting are G. E. Si Prudential, Jones, gener: Mutual, atte cher, presid search & R gram; R. W. publications Co., promotic manager, E finance; Ray agent, Penn
“Today’s po since Jan. 1, same date la Cas 1960 ... 7 1049 ..35 New cases each in Aller .and Lake C this year wa. ton. $
