Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1950 — Page 2

I SE NR Sr EAE

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Juvenile Dor ua "Broken Homes Rapped by Editor; Says Men There Because No One Cared

Second of

a Series

'.{ “Our prisons are full of grown

By -BOB-BOURNE ——

Re a delinquents "

That's the way prisoner No, No. 39251, at the Indiana Reformatory|

puts it. He speaks with authority. He was a juvenile delinquent,

He is now 2ditor of the Reflector, Pendleton. In a recent editorial entitled he said:

ke 8 not morons , , , they are grown juvenile delinquents who could have been leaders in their communities with the proper supervision. Needed Direction

“They are now in prison, because no one cared enough about them to give them the direction they needed.” i TNE

Ey

school before graduation or allowed to stay away from school "temporarily, thus becoming juvenile delinquents instead of good citizens.”

Mr. 33251 goes on to explain that the only way to whip delin- * quency 1s through God , . . belief rn faith,

— Lt. Forrest Higgs, Juvenile Ald

_ Division: of the police department; . bears Mr. 33251 out in this. “Very few, if any, children we deal with here,” he said, “have "had religious training.”

Serving 1-10 Years

Mr, 33251 was sentenced to the

‘yeformatory by Judge Saul I. Rabb, Criminal Court 2, in 1047. He is serving a 1 to 10 year sentence for issuing a fraudulent check. Every day more juveniles turn

~ onto the road from truancy to felony. Why? Is it lack of “things to do?” Are they just naturally bad boys and girls? “There are no‘'bad boys, They are taught,” sald Charles Boswell, chief probation officer,

“Children learn by watching) and following,” Mr. Boswell said. “What can you expect from children when they see their parents lie, cheat and steal all the time? “In all classes of families, children see one parent answer the phone and say that the other is not at home. And the child knows that he is. The child ean't, classify big lies and little ones. How is entiate?” Mr. Boswell continued. “What is the child to think who sees his father buy a theater ticket and swear that the child

He ‘continued. IG

Tater to-leave dead: re —

he. or she to differ-|y,

publication of the reformatory at “Tear Down Those Prison Walls,”

Can Be Whipped

Takes Firepower, Teamwork, Guts By ROBERT C. MILLER

ord Bren Staff Correspondent NAKTON

FRO He to akIon

und the] wounded bandaged. : : 80 the Monday morning” ‘quarterbacks today took over the hattle of the bulge to find out how 12,000 Communist troops were killed, wounded or routed. It was the first decisive Amer-¥ can victory of the war. There was no single answer, It was a combination: of team-|V work, superior firepower and guts Seien

“Ithat drove the North Koreans ta i

the Yongsan bulge as far back as the Naktong, killing an esti: mated 1500 and destroying large quantities of guns and supplies, The effect on both American and North Korean morale was tremendous. The Americans proved decisive ly that the Commies can be licked. And the Reds who got back across “the river don't exactly know’ what hit them. The battle was a joint -Army-i¥ Marine job. But every GI and Marine was willing to give a large share of the credit to Marine and Alr Force fliers, They rooted the Reds out with

strafing and bombing from only

100 feet in the air. Such close-in,

cans a hellish weapon. And for every shell fired at them the Americans tossed back

pockmarked by American shells, When the Marines went in determined to show the Army “how it should be done.” But the Army, stung by five weeks of continuous defeat, had no intention of being shown

And the combined ferocity of the twin drives was just too much for the Reds. They have been credited with exceptional military

visual slugging gave the Ameri- John D

20. There is scarcely an acre not|M

battle started, the Mar

miles northwest of

or ors a

i Be So

Sent to Korea

~ British, Aussies ~ Will Ship 2400,

strengthen the ah on bridgehead at nga

Enemy spearhead, thrust at Pusan, knocked out by Yanks (1). Communists mass in four areas (broken arrows) for possible drive against Taegu @ and Pusea. South Koreans capture Hill 800 15

” (forces.

Filipinos 1200 HONG KONG, Aug. 21 (UP)— and the Philippines joined Britain today in announcing they will send ground troops at once to Korea to reinforce Bard fiessed | United Nations

, United Nations commander for Korea, Britain and Australia together will send three battalions, some 2400 men. President Elpidio Quirino of the Philippines said in Manila his reJublic a first contingent of 1200 is “ready for immediate

IN INDIANAPOLIS

passin TODAY

y bi Ee ™ Frais EE “Sie

ao — nitions Women's tr Ae Washington.

rk) or, an Egon: EVENTS TOMORROW

Avlerioad on Indiana Department] orfies, Se Rigs Non! S32 wii Si River Cont graneg, Untics Brethren)

hureh — rhroush 8 emocraile Club—At 6:30 p. m.

entral_ Collége n Luncheon, aypool, gen Washing-

Women's Press Club—Luncheon, Wash-

a

MAKRIAGE LICENSES Robert #. ¢ B_ Vermont:

3 a} , 1710 E, Ohio. 1 or. 3 BN a3, N. ural; onarien ) ar parali

T. MeGinnis, Angrick, 1231 N, Grant; Jusriffing ge Ronald R Ryan, 20. 743 Harrison;

ster, BOYS At St. Vingent’s—James and Virginia

—4s under 6 years of age, when ~ the child knows he 1s 8? wand Now whout the ws' from the child's plgsy “but INAAVertently forgets to replace the money? “The child sees all these things, and he doesn’t forget them. Parents are the world to children, anything they do is all! right,” Mr. Boswell concluded. It is as Judge Joseph O. Hoff-/ mann, of Juvenile Court, said: | “Restore harmony between parents and most of the juvenile delinquency in Marion County will disappear.” Parents Cause Trouble Most of the sad cases from the | records of Juvenile Court deal with children from homes where parents were always fighting, drinking, or not at home, One recent case was one in which, through no fault of their own, the parents were unable to care properly for the children. It was the case of a 15-year.)

pri girl-who admitted intimacies}. wg

with more than 100 men in three months, There were so many, she

sauian SRR a : Are x

hold. The little girl got little,

it elsewhere. Mixed Up Thinking She fell in with persons who

were willing to take advantage of’

her “mixed up thinking” to make money. They would “dates” for her and she would cro MD. the. a ection. .she. needed; even though the affairs meant nothing to the men involved. _ “This is a case,” Mr. Boswell said, “where psychiatric ald would save a little girl. . Our doctors found that she was not really a

bad. girl, She just. lacked direc-|

tion.

“Chances are,” he continued, “she will be a. good citizen with

the proper, psychiatric treatment.”

~ Tomorrow: Blame the the Parents.

Services Held For Mrs. Briner

Services were held this morning for Mrs. Lulu Elizabeth Briner in the J. C. Wilson Chapel of the

Chimes. Mrs. Briner, who lived at

5301 Camden Ave., died Friday in|

her home. She was 60. : Born ‘in Soymour, she had moved here 33 years ago. She was | a member of the Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist. Mrs, Briner is survived by her | husband, Albert W.: three sons, Eugene and Robert, Indianapolis, and Roy, Hamilton, O.; a sister,

Mrs. Ethel Scifres, Crothersville,

and nine grandchildren, Final services and burial will be at Crothersville.

N=.

ILI RALLIES ONLY Direct Alr Service GRAND RAPIDS KALAMAZOO Y2 Fare Fomily Plan Tuesday thru Thursday Call BE-2434 or Your Local Travel

upon themselves to run the a if

~-any, affection at home and sought

arrange

zou Slav Evening, Washington, | R

» 4b, 830 E, ‘ag. i 5, stave, 3 271 Parker: Ursula v v 'RTKer: Dona . Wilkins, 23, 623 B. Woodruff i Mary M. Swartz, % 4:6 ove. olen A. Ely, 3d 334 Mar aA , 41, urch. arion L. Rafaloo, 30, R. E13; Barbara L. Groves, 20, 7608 Pendleton Pk. wie 3. Tinie ah it 8, Warman rT ville, nL : Solum bus, Ind; Rt ot’ Tn a 5 a, 0% . Oxford; John E. Shaw Pauline R. ud ‘n, He tion aries E. Gre of LA, MN Mi Price, 18, 2615 Coll BIRTHS: "TWINS At Coltman--Chaster and Temple Web-

At_ General-—Robert ae Coleman Sol"

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RT rai Doral 3 nd. pa pe fe Bs ann battery, he sald. ~~ | Britain's two battalions — the Bic at ATEYIl and Sutherland|

sid Eh. prt

Sony A J an ar barvly Piencl = EEE Johin snd Chelate Pord; sckett

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Tone;

DEATHS

Wey Jackson, 39, at 3726 Kenleukemia. vell. 60, at General hyper. e . Rommel, 79, 1510 Edgemont St.,

or i. Foland, ss. 13 worare Cyclist, Leg in Casf,

J

Malinda I,

Ave. 8

rteriosc Alwine Kiemer, n,

cerebral

vanis 8. carcinomas.

alte) bod Bh Bae ahd Hetty Pian and Ma: and Maud Etta Cox.

N. Mount St,

mors 19 E. Riverside| Bet Y 89. Lone Hospital, John Jerome Kelly, - 2707 N. Pennsyl-

Ship Movements

By United Press

a

He said thelipino troops were trained in American methods and were fully equipped and supplied. The contingent includes a light

Hell” and the 1st. Middlesex -— already were packing their kitbags in Hong Kong for immediate shipment to Korea. Weld Battalion .| In Canberra, Acting Australian Premier Arthur W. Fadden announced that an Australian battalion will join the two United Kingdom battalions in Korea.

pected to be welded into a three-

gade, complete with its own artillery, engineers and administrative unit, usually totals 4000 men. Volunteers from Britain, Australia and New Zealand ultimately may bring brigade up to full strength. Brig. B. A, Coad was named to command the new force.

Seized in 90 MPH Chase

DETROIT, Aug. 21 (UP)—Apparently Conrad O, Walters, 22,

fered a broken leg in a motorcycle crash several weeks ago. Police arrested the youth, his right leg in a heavy cast, after

The three battalions were ex-|.

Yikzy righting unit. An idles bri-!'

didn’t have enough when he suf-|

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