Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1950 — Page 56
Red Party Organ Not Found on Local Stands Te LEON W. RUSSELL A visiting Communist would ihave a hard time buying a copy Let his party's organ, the Daily orker, in Indianapolis. ‘If the per is on sale here, The Times|, fs unable to find where. : “A Times r tried to buy one. He walked for hours through ‘ downtown streets, but no one had .. the Daily Worker to sell, (Most newsstand keepers just
ss ireny verre
ALMOST A SELLOUT SATURDAY!
| they didn't sell it. Others acted as if they'd never rd of it, There were curious, suspicious)
raked for the Communist paper. A few responded with a sharp, feritable “No!” :
quest for the Daily Worker he'd "heard in six or eight months.| This lack of demand, he seemed * to think, indicated a lack of sym- _ pathy for the Communist cause. | - An attendant on Ohio 8t. said {was the only one in the nation
. 3 ” - # ’ ” . boss babl 1d | . is boss ow ve conte Battery C First in State {built expressly for the housing!
"Minute Men of 1950." , ,, citizen soldiers of Battery “C" at Fowler.
fore was anything wrong with ah one it. L'buait | and he used to read it him-| « Hoss, local businessman-| ‘self sometimes. To Win Superior Rating | Phlanthroptat. got his share of| { . An Indiana Ave. vendor said recognition that day, too. Col someone, High Percentage of Benton: County Outfit sed to bring around 10 or 15
he used to handle it. | Bullard thanked him for his “un-| | selfish and patriotic move” in! ~~eoples at a time. Sometimes they Are Veterans of World War II [buliding the srmory to Army) 4 _#old, sometimes they didn't. By GALVY GORDON, Times Staff Writer specifications. The deliveries stopped about'al ~~ FOWLER, Aug. 26-"No oie left but us oldsters™ -He: called-his action “just good! year ago. "The age-wrinkled corn belt farmer was talking half to himself Pusiness.” “They ‘won't allow them to as he sat in the service station opposite the armory headquarters Fifth Army’ sent a 52-piece bring Dally Workers In any of Battery “C” of the 393 Field Artillery Battalion. {Army band from Ft. Sheridan to more,” the vendor sald. “It's the His feet were on the pot-bellied stove and he talked about what the dedication, winter uniforms law.” it would mean to lose the “cream of the youth of Benton County” | Were flown in on “rush requisi-| No Legal Ban to the Army. —— {tion"” for the ‘sharp’ looking “C” The man was mistaken. The The armory. an attractive] Luly 1947 ‘and | was the first unit/men. Legion posts and color papers still are carried through glazed tile building with alumi- In the state to receive a class| guards from here and surround__the mails, and Indianapolis hiasTnum trim, is at JK. Washington A” rating and a “Superior”! ing communities took part, no regulation against selling them Ave. and Fourth St, near the| rating by an inspe or-general. | i i «on the streets, : crossroads of this typieal Hoosler|It was the first in the nation to| Inside the armory are displays Capt, Michael J. Kavanagh of trading and agricultural center, [receive its basic weapon, a 43- Of the latest types of basic and the police Internal security divi- Here is the story that changed ton M-40. recofless weapons, walkie-talkies, | sion said no attempt is made to{the lives of nearly every one of Composed of men from Fowler, | FM equipment. suppress the Dally Worker here./the 2000 inhabitants. The towns- Earl Park, Kentland, Goodland,| The armory's flag is something But he didn't know of any place folk read it last Thursday In the Oxford and Brook, a large per- Special, too. The last “Stars and where they can be bought. weekly edition of the Benton Re- centage of the men are veterans Stripes” ta fly over Cherbourg beHe sees a copy occasionally, view, Linotypist Kingston L. of World War II with service in| fore American Jroops ent that when somebody finds one aban-|Stembel set it in type. all branches and all fronts rep: jot yoo the tnd ot ro I. ye doned by a subscriber and turns, It concerns vitally the future resented. lo : He gi —- t of it in to the police, But he didn’t|of Capt. Kingston L. Stembel and] Nearly every one of them works| anne man an of know of any place they are on his more than 150 men in Bat-/in small industries nearby, plow| ertbourg: harbor lor most o open sale, {tery “C." {fields held for generations by the 8 War.
Distributors who provide mag-| Leave Sept. 11 'same families, or work part-time|, Before the alert, members met azines to newsstands said th W in - stores or at nearby canni ifor a two-hour session every Mon- | a. ey, “The men of this battery and/in stor canning. y night, and were paid for this |
do not handle the Dally Worker, others of the 303d at Lafayette| factories. {time only. and never have, land Frankfort have received or-| Youngest member is 18-year-old| "mw 0 10021 unit has the best at] The reporter's search failed! ders to enter active duty Sept.| Kenneth Sell, the oldest is “push-| |tendance record of any in the | even when he went to Commu- fat, eventual destination not| [ing 40." {state and has the largest mem- | nist Party headquarters at 29 8.|known.” | Dedicated Year Ago {bership of any state battery. Delaware St. The office was| Previously the battery was Formal armory dedication, Oct.) ‘apt. Stembel's remark when | closed, and neighboring tenants|scheduled to leave Aug. 19 for|6, 1949, brought a crowd of 10,000 yo first learned the battery was | in the building said they hadn't| summer training at Camp Mec- to the city. Col. Peter C. Bullard, Korea-bound pretty well sums up| seen anyons enter it for several Coy, Wis. | former chief of the Indiana Mil- the attitude of the highly-trained | days, The battery was activated in itary District, said then that to! !men in this outfit.
en - OPEN SUNDAYS | “We are not professional sol:
»
| | i i
{diers; only ‘minute men’ of 1950. {We are civilians ready to serve ‘and to help protect the nation.” |
Many Centenarian: ‘Seen in Future |
| NEW YORK, Aug. 26 (UP)—| The next generation will see | healthy American men and women of 100 or more matching | the accomplishments of today’s | 40-year-olds, in the opinion of Dr., | Charles E. Dutchess; ‘medical di-| | rector of Schenley Laboratories | and president of the American Association of Medical Directors, The age of longevity has ar- | rived in America, said Dr. Dutchess, an expert in the new medical | science of geriatrics, which deals| | with old age. “Average life expectancy at! | birth now stands at 66, up almost | 20 years since the turn of the cen- | tury,” Dr. Dutchess said. “Pros- | pects are for continued Increases In the human life Span. x i {
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Jewish Group Forms Armed Service Unit
The Jewish Community of Indianapolis hag formed from its 28 major organizations a unit to serve the men in armed services during the present emergency. Elected were Louis Marks, tem-| porary chairman; Mrs, Louis Rapoport, temporary treasurer] and William Steinberg, executive | secretary. Plans call for religious com-
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F. S. Pryor Named GOP
Labor Director Frank 8. Pryor, labor union {legal consultant of Frankfort, | yesterday was named director of ithe Indiana Republican State La{bor Division. | Other members will pe Charles |{H. Hartley, Anderson; Robert L. {Rice, Ft. Wayne; Robert Leach, Ft. Wayne and Herman Anderson, Gary. Thomas Colosimo, Gary, will continue as field representative,
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Everyone combatting inf $5 billion in 2a ditional $16 bil White Hou in the bucket— They say th more than $5 that’s all they would vote. Now they say increase bill, - te after Jan. 1, wi to drain off m purchasing po
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