Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1950 — Page 19

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MA Ds “Tenn:), occupying the chair, observed ——

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"pills. This was a joke.

‘With that remark a ‘Minutes Jnter, Johnny rapher, and 1 were watching the "Crystal Flash Petroluem Corporation bulk plant in flames Pet My p go up We were driving north on Senate Ave. Instinctively Johnny stepped on the gas. In the dis“tance sirens screamed, A block from 16th Bt. we Filled he curb and tha pulice rescub: squad roared past,

stuff. Did anyone get killed? Was anyone in the building? How soon will one or all four of the storage tanks blow? .

Spectators Get in Way

- FIREMEN dashed around, often hindered by - the curious spectators who were being attracted like moths to a bright light. Firemen would earn their money today. How come they didn't look scared? Everyone else was. Chief Roscoe McKinney, wearing white shirt, tie, slacks and dress shoes, directed close operations. He arrived fast. Men on one of the pumpers were removing their helmets and covering up their heads with raincoats. The heat was blistering hot 50 feet away. : Seven automobiles parked alongside the bulk plant, 358 W. 16th St., began to change color. The paint was curling and smoking. Mrs. Mary Williams, 349 W. 16th PI, was helping her mother out of the house. It was directly across the street. Every muffled explosion made Mrs. Williams jump. I didn’t feel brave. In fact, I was thinking how nice it would be to Ehange locations—near Oaklandon dam. Hoses were turned momentarily on the frame homes in the danger area, In a matter of minutes

the street was a maze of fire hoses, Policemen h:

began the difficult task of keeping the crowd back. Goose pimples on my back tried to hide when I thought what a mess it would be if the tanks exploded.

"Bud Sowders, a Big mos i other ways besides size, 275 pounds, hurried up with a case of cold Cokes. The first one to get a bottle was his

yesterday morning from his vacation, graibed Cokes and drained them. .

Freight Cars Tied Up C. E. SHOVERS, New York Central Railroad yardmaster, had a batch of trouble, too. He said 21 important freight cars were held up. He made it plain they “had to move.” But how? Cars don’t roll well over fire trucks and hoses. “We moved one empty gasoline car from the

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1960

Holdup Suspect Exchanges Fire With Officers

Holdup of a trolley bus, fol-

chase through South Side streets, led to the arrest today of an exconvict and a parolee on armed robbery charges. Lawrence M. Carroll, 33, Tyndall Towne was with armed robbery nd violation of the federal firearms act.

Eugene Parmer, 24, was ar-

flames by hand. Empties, you know, are more dangerous than full ones,” he said. Everyone should know gasoline fumes are on equal terms; with e. The seven automobiles were practically burned | out, Suddenly & horn on one began to blow as if the automobile were in pain. A fireman jerked a wire loose on the run. : Flames still licked the sides of the storage tanks whose bases were 10 feet below ground. The situation was under control. Someone said it could have been worse, Lucky the tanks weke full of ‘gasoline so they burned instead of exploded. There's always something to be thankful for, I'll settle for a routine day again. They're wonderful.

Action at Last

By Frederick C. Othman

WASHINGTON, Aug. 25--It was raining hard outside. The gents with the picks and shovels were making a shambles of the Senate chamber and filling the corridors of the Capitol with

- historic dust. The Senators were sitting out this

remodeling job in the tiny, semicircular room where the Supreme Court once met. I dropped in to keep dry, but I stayed for two hours. It was what I'd call a rewarding experience. Paint was peeling from the ceiling, but the statesmen could look out the fan-shaped windows and actually’ see daylight. Without desks to keep the gentlemen in orderly rows, the atmosphere was chummy. From niches around the room gazed the marble busts of some of our greatest men, but I've got to report that the live ones in their red leather chairs looked just as smart as the stone ones on the wall. Furthermore, they were in a businesslike mood.

Passing Minor Measures

THEY WERE PASSING minor bills (important only to the individuals affected) and they did it so efficiently that the clerks had to move fast with their pencils to keep up. The reading clerk took an average of four seconds to intone the title of each measure, except the one for the relief of Nicholas G. Hadjipateras, who was tangled in the red tape of the Immigration Bureau. This took a little longer. Sen. Kenneth anybody with 2 name like that deserved two dutifully. But mostly the ancient and irascible gentleman from Tennessee greeted each bill with these words: “Is “theré objéction? The chair hears none. Without objection the bill is ." This took him five seconds to say and at this rate bills were

The lawgivers smiled

going into the hopper at the rate of one every nine seconds. } They relieved all kinds of people, including those bumped by postoffice trucks and 169 Basque sheepherders who wanted to remain on the job inf Nevada, instead of being shipped back to Spain. Sen. Elmer Thomas (D. Okla.), who won't be with us much longer thanks to a thumbs-down vote by his constituents, spelled Sen. McKellar for 2a while. The white-haired lame duck from Oklahoma had a method all his own.

rested later while he slept at 2510 «N. Alabama St, Parmer's arrest was linked with the holdup Tuesday: night of George B. Vaughn, 2147 8. Pennsylvania St., whose automobile and billifold were| stolen. Uses Shotgun: Stanley Whitlock, 32, R. R. 2, Clayton; the trolley bus tor; was held up while parked at the

{Shelby Sts.

He said a man in a car drew| {up beside him and thrust a shot-| {gun through the car window. ! He ordered Mr. Whitlock to turn over his money, amounting to $31.50. He then ordered Mr. Whitlock to drive away, and followed him down Shelby St. and west on Troy Ave. A halt hour later Pairolmen| John Baker and Michael Burns saw a car answéring the description given by Mr. Whitlock at Palmer. and Meridian Sts. Ignored Stop Order The driver ignored their order to stop and fled. Patrolman Baker fired six shots

Instead ‘of going through the whole official @0d the driver of the car anrigamarole, he'd say merely: “’'Thout objection SWered with three blasts from a

bill's passed.” Bang. And he'd slam down the ivory gavel with the busted handle that has made laws official in the Senate these many years.

Too - Good to Last

ALL THIS PEACE and good will, of course, was too good to last long. Up came a bill authorizing the payment of $50 to each member of the Red Lake, Minn. Indians for lumber sold by .them. It was their own money. - The Indian Committee had wanted to make the amount $100 —still their own money—but the Indian Bureau had said this was too much. “Since when is the U. 8. Senate going to be dictated to by this Indian Bureau?” demanded Sen. Dennis Chavez (D. N. M.). “Should some clerk down there make these decisions, or the members of this Senate?” Committeemen tried to—tell him that if the Senate voted $100 to the Indians, the bureau would influence President Truman to veto the bill. Sen. Chavez was not to be convinced. He demanded justice for the Red Lake Winnebagos. He objected, the bill went over, and the Indians got nothing at. all and ‘won’t until and if the Senate gets around again to considering whether they have a Hight tq their own money.

‘Tip’ on Russia

‘By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Aug. 25—I learned today from a Rep, Walsh, whose front handle I do not know, but who is described in dispatches as a freshman Congressman from Indiana, that we are about

wgt0-do-# great many hard-handed things to Rus-

sia, if, when and whereas, and that we have at least 250 atomic bombs which we will not hesitate ‘to use. - I am gratified at this intelligence from a fledgling Representative, who volunteered same the other day at the 26th biennial convention

of the National Federation of Post Office Clerks

in Cleveland. I suppose I could search out Rep. Walsh's first name from the files or the World Almanac, but I don't aim to take the trouble. The news Seryice d

gather he is of on his surname, MacArthur. “Rep. Walsh—not old Dave—is on the House Armed Services Committee, and he says he speaks officially. He says, quote: “We are not going to continue fighting secondary nations. I can tell you officially that the

like Truman, Eisenhower or

thinking in Washington has changed.

“We shall not allow our boys to fight on six or seven fronts . . . I can say that if the enemy’s

ios “ORrEtAT conduct Continues we SEIU atomic: THETSO ATTY Dut Statenrent or Etrategy has not been volunteered by the Joint Chiefs of

bomb and strike at its heart.”

Sees ‘Deluge of Bombs’

—ME SAID, further, “the U. 8. has the

stockpile of atomic bombs in the world,” and “we i

can wipe out every major city behind the Iron

“Tt won't be just a one-bomb atfack, either,” -

he is quoted. “It will be a deluge, We have at least 250 bombs and 100 ways of reaching Russia. We will get there fast. “It is my belief that Russia will strike somewhere else within a month. I also believe Russia

‘ does not-as yet have the atomic bomb, But they

are on the verge.” As a normally gossipy type, I like to know what our war plans are, and I imagine the postal clerks do, too, but I would be just a touch more confident if the declaration came from Mr. Truman or Gen. Bradley or Gen. MacArthur or somebody whose first name I know without consulting the capital's Aymanach de Gotha.

Walsh Retorts Views Are His Own

And Not Night Club

« Editor's Note—Mr. Ruark oa know Rep. Walsh's first name but The Times did. We asked Mr. Walsh if he had anything to say and he did and here it is: T

Armed Services Committee, a committee charged with the de-

‘By REP. JOHN. R. WALSH Congressman, Fifth District

It looks to me as though Bob tense of this

ud have asked his secretary

cient importance to make ft

such I have had a great deal

I cannot believe that Rep. (no boy) Walsh was chosen to spring the revelations on the multitudes, or that he is a spokesman for the lads who count the bombs we make, or that he can speak officially for that weird state of mind known as Washington. Rep. Walsh is doing one of two things. He is either talking out of school or talking through his hat, and either, brand of blab ill becomes a frosh Congressman. This kind of irresponsible conversation, of which we have suffered a surfeit, has been the handiest, dandiest aid-and-comfort to our little Red friends since the last war quit. : Vainglory is a constant commodity among the Washington Sentzens, Among tattle it. is called

for “in” when Speaking of feet and mouths,

Up to Military Masters

IT MAY BE that the United States has 250

atom bombs, and that the Russians have none, and that we have 100 ways of getting to Russia.| = I dunno, and the top warriors have not been|

inventorying ‘them publicly as of recent months. It may be that we will drop the stuff on Stalin

Staff. Whether we continue to fight puppet wars is a

matter for our masters to decide and wheth thinking has changed in Washington ‘is some-

thing for Capt. Harry to tell us, or for Omar

tell us.

But it is not for a haif-baked Congressman to|

tell us, wrong or right, gossip or gospel. On either count it does not fall into the prerogative .of the likes of Rep. Walsh. This also applies to his estimation of Russia's future plans, which were unknown to our intelligence in.the case of Korea, and doubtless have not been confided to Rep. Walsh by any top strategists of the Kremlin, We are by nature a nation of blabbermouths and the ti has come to clam up. Shaddap. Cease and desist from garrulousness. Hush, pipe down, ‘and knock off. Especially in the case of JToal-bore politicians in the Cucken-putty league.

Scuttle-Bult

!circuitous route.

high political eo irer the “and” is substituted!

Bradley to tell us, or for Stuart Symington to :

shotgun as the cars sped over a

The fleeing car crashed into a,

W. McCarty St. and the driver fled on foot. Carroll was picked up later by Patrolmen Christopher Greenwood and George Heyob at Capi tol Ave. and: McCarty St. Police said Carroll admitted robbing Mr. Vaughn. During the questioning police obtained information which led to Parmer's arrest by Inspector Ralph Bader. Police files showed Carroll was released from prison six weeks ago after serving a term for first degree burglary. His record, ex-|n, tending back to 1930, mcludedl two terms in ‘the Indiana Boys’ School at Plainfield. Parmer’'s record included a term of a year and a day in a; federal prison” for violation of the Dyer act in 1945. He was put on parole last Apr. 7 on a charge of auto theft. Drive to Franklin Carroll's statement said he .and Parmer stole the shotgun and a hacksaw from a house on Southern Ave. Tuesday night. Later they sawed the barrel from the shotgun, then held up Mr. Vaughn and took hjs car, he said. ; They drove to Franklin Wednesday and stole license plates for the car, then,.returned to Indianapolis, the statement continued. Carroll said they started to hold up the Crosstown Tavern, 932 E. 30th St, Wednesday, but “got scared off.” ; sgn Carroll said he met Parmer yesterday afternoon but they had an argument. He drove Parmer home, he said then set out alone

lowed by a bullet-punctuated;

On which side of the acs do you roride? At 21st st. it is just

i d on

Four Dead, 10 Hurt

In State Traffic

All Are Victims Of Three Accidents

Four persons were dead today| | end-—of--his-—run-at-Perry—and 20d 10 others in hospitals from |

three trafic collisions in Indiana.! The dead are: Raymond C. Cardella, 52 Benton Harbor, Mich.

Donald Elbert Scott, 26, R. R.|~

1, LaFontaine (Wabash County). Robert Eltzroth, 34, R. R. 1, VanBuren. Harold Swihart, 36, Rochester. Seriously injured, in Marion General Hospital, were: Mrs. Nellie Eltzroth, 34. Robert Eltzroth, 9. George Eltzroth, 6. Don Eltzroth, 3. . Mrs. Emily Houseman, 27, Maron. Mrs. Evelyn Swihart, 36, was in critical condition in Bartholo-! mew County Hospital, Columbus, ! from third-degree burn$. Mr, Cardella died today in a

fire hydrant in the 500 block of Mishawaka Hospital of injuries! sizzling Equator.

he received Wednesday in a twotruck collision near Mishawaka. | State police reported a two-car| accident near Marion occurred! yesterday evening when a car driven by Mr. Scott collided head-| on on Ind. 105 north of Marion with an automobile driven by Mr. Eltzroth:

Driving Alone

Mr. Scott, driving alone, was Resistance Bands Form in Brush

In the tea shops and sing-song parlors of Singapore Lin Ching {heard of resistance bands forming in the brush. He received his | father's blessing, journeyed to Ipoh and from there was guided to a ‘camp of thatched huts camouflaged behind a wall of surrealistic

traveling north on the wrong side|

of the highway, state police sald. | . Eltzroth-- pulled -six--feet-off + the road to avoid the crash, but; they collided headon, state police said. Eight persons, including Mrs. Eltzroth and their three sons, were in his car. Also injured, but less seriously, were Marvin Collins 9, and Corrine Collins, 16, children of Mr. ana Mrs. Nelson T. Collins, Marn Mr. Swihart was “burned to death in a two-truck collision on U. 8. 31 north of Columbus. He was trapped in the cab of his truck. Clothes Ablaze

His wife, Evelyn, riding with him, gither jumped or fell from the truck cab, her clothes ablaze, and ran across a field to a service station, ¥ Niiere attendants beat out the flam George Deeter. 38, of 336 8. Emerson Ave. Indianapolis, suf-

{fered face cuts. He was driving

the other vehicle, a Federal Lines

K.

on the corner. At 38th St., however, it becomes or a two "T" resident?

Nah Ex-Convict Butler Puts On Airs Farther North

plain Butler Ave., wssorlion to Ave, Take your choice—are

Drive at To Halt liquor 1 {Sale to Minors

3 Agencies Pledge Action; Drinking at Drive-ins Reported

City, county and state officials launched a concerted drive. to wipe out illegal liquor sales to minors.

The drive is an outgrowth of numerous complaints that teenagers become intoxicated near drive-ins, consuming liquor with soft drink mixes.

Malaya Terror . .. .No. 2

Red-Led Gangs Launch Slaughter in Malaya

Bandits Mow Down White Europeans and Loyal Natives From Bases in Jungles

The Alcoholic Beverage Commission disclosed that Police Chief Rouls, Sheriff Cunningham and State Excise Police Chief C. B. France met with officials of the Marion . County Tavern Owners Association to formulate plans for the crackdown. The ABC noted that “reports persist , , . minors consistently obtaining alcoholic beverages... drinking in cars parked in drive-

Korea is only one unis and the tree

control.

-

emocracies,

h

By FE FRED SPARKS, Times Foreign Correspondent SINGAPORE, Aug. 25—Every day—in one of history’s

if & growing struggle be“There Is disorder,” murder and rebellion in Singapore and the rubber forests of Malaya. This is Fred Sparks’ second story of the deadly manhunt with which Communist-led guerrillas strive to break down British

ins.” oni AYR AVOTRS-Cloar-Bernard Doyle, chairman of the ABC, said consumption of alcoholic beverages at these unlicensed premises is prohibited by law, : Joseph Treacy president of the Tavern Owners Association, said

greatest manhunts, Communist-inspired outlaws, operating from parboiling jungle bases, are murdering “white Eu-

ropeans” and loyal natives.

The story of this creeping terror—with local footnotes —is the old story written by the Leninites in China, Greece,

Burma and the Philippines.

Let's look at the case his-

tory of one terrorist now rov{ing the brush on murderous business. By studying his career we will better understand _ the pattern of political banditry in| {Malaya—100 air mijles trom the

Lin Ching was an able-bodied lad of 17 when the imperial forces of Nippon did the “Impossible.” They crawled through the “im|penetrable” rubber-rich jungle to outflank the complacent British, who favored hard pavement. The colonial fat-cats In Sing|apore hardly had time to put down

green growth,

There he learned how to climb a Jap straggler's back . « « place the left hand across the,

mouth, with the right cut firmly! across the throat before gentleman from Japan screech a final “banzai!”

to slow production; snipe from the jungle at the tires of a passing car, then slaughter the driver; pitch a grenade into a sakisoaked geisha party. Lin Ching’s arms were British and so was his teacher—one of the small squad of athletic adventurers who stayed ‘behind—a member of famed Force 136. But from the real leader of the band-—an oldtime Communist Lin Ching learned other lessons which proclaimed two struggles

AS the Rising Sun flag was h

he trolley | bus,

Lawrence M. Carroll

Squirrel-Shooting Eye Helps GI Diop 55 Reds WITH THE 25TH DIVISION, Korea, Aug. 25 (UP)—Pvt. Jolin B. Cheetham, a member of the Negro 24th Infantry regiment, said today that shooting squirrels in Georgia woodlands gave him the practice he needed to kill or wound 55 attacking North Koréans with an automatic rifle.

Mr. ‘Ruark ‘may be.a blabber‘mouth, but I have no reason nation, and as

ing upon all the people to lay

(Children Ashore

89! or. written July 27, must have

d. Back wi

sarong. gu, Lin Ching returned to the 8in-

NEW YORK. Ang. 25 (UP)=— A police helicopter pilot used the

-|slipstrear: from his “flying wind-

mill” yesterday to rescue two childr:n drifting on a raft in the East River. Pilot-Patrolman Harold Behren | tilted his helicopter at an angle

above the raft carrying Joséph

and blew them to shore with a 30-mile an hour blast from its rotor blades. He .reasoned he would swamp the raft if he landed on the water near it.

"Tauro, 13, and Patricia O'Neil, 12,

gapore. docks to bore into labor] unions and help form: “popular fronts.”

But Malaya wasn't buying on

brought back which: proms; ised eventual dominion status-— and withdrawals from India and Burma notarized the pledge. —¥Failing, slipp C. P., after a big Asian powwow, in Calcutta, chose terror as the key to positive power. On June 13, 1948, Bir Edward Gent, the high commissioner, said a system-

Letter From S

Lt. John A. Sears Killed in Korea

MRS. JOHN A. SEARS, 4208 Otterbein Ave., and her husband's parents, received two letters Friday. One was from their husband and son, Lt, John Sears, written just before he headed for the front lines in Korea. The other, postmarked a day later, was from his commandin officer. Lt. John Sears had been killed in action.

® 8 = OFFICIAL WORD of his death

ent.

been taken from his body after

of Death Arrive Same Day

and/came Tuesday from the Defense Departm : His father said -his son's let-

on and Notice

Hoped to Hoist Hammer and Sickle

guns, plus some Red To ym Arg on a Tegal,

ing badly. the]

their gin-and-tonics before the name of the Royal Cricket Club was changed to the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere Friendship Association. Lin Ching calmly continued his waterfront trade, unloading ships of the Yokohama line Instead of the Cunard, But the Japs, like their Nazi comrades-in-conquest, began slicing off “non co-operative” heads as casually as asparagus tips, One morning when Lin Ching was slow to produce his dock pass, a bespectacled Jap sentry slapped him —hard, Ching lost much “face” and In his heart was born a terrible hatred.

the taverns were not to blame. “These minors are buying or acquiring lHquor by any irregular method they can use and, If apprehended, often name an innocent permittee as the source,” he said. Law enforcement officials pledged “a systematic drive to halt these practices.” ABC officials emphasized that minors found with liquor in their possession would be liable: to Sisctplinary action” provided by aw,

Gas Plant Fire Probe Under Way

Plant Built Before

Change in Law Firemen today started an Investigation of yesterday's bulk gasoline plant fire and called it the oT ant potential trophe” to threaten Indianapolis in years,

Fire Chief Roscoe McKinney sald, however, that his preliminary investigation did not indi

|ahiead: Kvict Mr. Jap. Evict Mr. the| Englishman and substitute King c ould stalin for King George.

Actually, the “People’s Army”

roject No. 2 and had as much to do with Tojo's atomized collapse as Abbott & Costello. Bolshevik blah—not bullets—occupled their time. Morning tea was always followed by singing “The Red Flag,” which begins “Pyow yang do hong-chl,” In case

By the time Hirohito hollered “uncle!” Lin Ching was a ha ened Kremlin - liner, despising buddha like his Red partisan colleagues in far-off Yugoslavia despised Jesus.

auled down over the Raffles Hotel,

Lin Ching’s wing: of the “People’s Army” had intended to hoist the. Hammer and Sickle. Forewarned, Britian Tomes were days

atic Murder Inc, had iiquidated 13 “white Europeans’ on isolated plantations and that sabotage particularly on the waterfront— was multiplying. Becurity forces spread their nets

So, for two: years now, Lin "CHIE Tras Deen practicing” the British the cunning jungle tactics they taught him “for use only against Japanese, he The cycle is tragically complete.” British| Tommies are rn killed by British rifles.

. Tomorrow: White residents of Malaya live in constant danger.

Indiana Firm Asks OK on 31-Mile Pipeline

WASHINGTON, -Aug. 25 (UP) Northern Indiana Fuel & Light Co., of Auburn, Ind. asked the Federal Power Commission yesterday for authority to build a 31-mile pipeline to serve seven Indiana communities.

The company also asked ¥FPC to order Panhandle Eastern Pipe-

500,000 cubic feet of gas per day to the project. Northern Indiana now manufactutes and distributes artificial gas to five communities. It proposes to serve natural gas to Woodburn, Harlan, Grabill, Lee, Spencerville, St. Joe and Waterloo, Ind,

line Co. to supply a maximum of

cate owners of the Crystal Flash Petroleum Co., 358 '‘W. 16th PL, {were in violation of any laws. | There 1s a law against bulk

i Lin also matriculated in how 0/was principally concerned with fuel storage places withi slash a rubber tree with a parang p Pay ge» thin the

city limits, Chief M~Kinney said, however, that the plant was built before the law went into effect and therefore not suoject to the law. He added he did not believe safety laws would allow the firm to get a state building permit to

you'd like to try. re-build the bulk station in its

present site. in the neart of a

residential and business district.

Jack Fehsenfeld, assistant secretary of the firm, said the com-

about proposed investigation. He

‘jconfirmed that the plant antedated city restrictions on fuel

storage and said that the corfpany was in compliance with other safety regulations.

aged to keep from exploding” the Chief. sald. “If those had let go there would have been a river of fire through that whole district. The whole neighborhood would have gone up.”

{the Red market, thank you. It For a time it was feared the ‘wasn ina new kind of | Joe in Ching piped theongh intense heat from the blaze 3ad-— liberalized imperialism the foreign .

recurring explosions might spread Are..to. Methodist...

other danger of allowing storage plants in city areas. ~The—Chieflot of questions to be asked” about the .origin of the fire. It started in a “dike,” a six foot protective wall around the tanks, where men were working. He said the men said they were not smoking and that there was no motor in the area. “But,” he added, “the spark came from somewhere.” ’ Four men were injured when

that destroyed the big bulk plant. In recurring explosions, 50,000 gallons of gasoline were touched off and damage was estimated at $200,000.

Four in Hospital .

Charles Riley, 232¢ N. Pennsylvania St, and John Daughetee, 531 8. Laclede St, were still in serious condition. John Latimore, 1843 Highland

Lhe, Hospital. Chief McKinney cited this as an-

“1%. Joh A. Soars , . lilled

Estimated cost of the pipeline |is $511,315.

Wildlife Service Agent - | Transferred to Texas

fledglin in f this large bomber, teres survi. | BISMARK, N. D, Aug. 25 (UP)| Lt. Sears’ wife had planned to : Times State Service - a LE TI on rt a wate oe Bah in teres: of world Justice of the Peace H. R.|oin him in the Orlent, but that In action. LAFAYETTE, Aug. 25—Miton TWO Local Attend 20 80 far as to say unimport- tion for one who has at least = We all have our own ideas |Bonny, Who is 95, charged today was before hostilities broke out. A native of East Orange, N. J,|Caroline, U. 8. Fish and Wildlite Fraternity ant, but I.domt try to be an given some litle thought to a4 lo what should bs done, and that a letter of resignation ac-| They were married here Mar, .., orquated from Technical| Service, will be transterred Fri- Francs M. on sports, world ‘the subject to recognize that how it can be accomplished. [cepted by the city commissioneri5, and spent 22 days together. The| To 1945. ana d8Y to San Antonio, Tex., to be! : Oro To ir Te TI To eat ane. My views, as stated in Cleve- [Was a “fraud and forgery.” last time she saw him Was when in Suge, me assistant agent for the vs. Navy power, and the possi- Soviet Union deploy. our men land, are mine and mine alone, | Mr.Bonny said he never wrotethey separated the day he leftithe Indiana University School ofl, o. puiries of the predator and| bility of Woild War III and and resources all over this but are based upon nearly two (such a letter. City commissioners|the United States. Business in June, 1949. He Wasiroqent control branch of the how it should be fought, by sit- world in a series of little wars, . years of active membership on |had approved thé.resignation this| yr SEARS, with the 24th In. commissioned upon graduation, iservice, 10 ting In the New York Stork and slaughter maim our the Armed Services Committee, They planned to investl-|rantry Regiment of the 25th Divi- activated Nov. 1, then sent to of-| He was stationed Th dat Tne er a an ped. Wu any Ea he ended en 18 is last Jat-{iosi's School a1 It 5 ing Sa lyanuary. 18 as assistant dis2 pe 5 NL i y - a . 3 . . o : 5 e 3 i | all of the problems of today. our greatest and strongest tion society meeting in some (to stay on the job umt ApH, out. OS S08, wae prepaniibis, Mirena, wn ace a 1 am a member of the House yu 5 night club. a 1955, when he will by % gto move up. | © him, SU soda Yeisity, wil £1] the vassuiy h

catas- .

pany had no comment to make -

gasoline in four tanks we man-

in

the spark set off a flash fire.

The injured were still hospitalized today. In General Hospital