Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1950 — Page 15
izes to 46
NE SE UE
hers
" LAUGHED when I sat down to be edi- § # Arsenal Cannon. High school youngto be much sharper than they were ; could be that I'm not the type. (Not the. type . .. get it?) A wave of enthusiasm rippled the printer's ink in my system when representaof the Arsenal Tech high school paper invi me to be editor for an afternoon. At Arsenal was a chance to put my newsexperience to a test. There was a chance to be a Steve Wilson, fighting managing editor of The Illustrated Press, Big Town's famous newspaper. And what would it be like fo be in the editorial saddle shouting, “stop the presses?”
Asked to Douse Cigaret
4 MISS ELLA SENGENBERGER, director of > publications, and Mrs. B. Louise Camp, publica- *% tions assistant, greeted me at the door and asked me to douse my cigaret. Pinching off the fire, 1’ put the rest of the fag,-at least five drags long, be"hind my ear. Miss Sengenberger thought it would
3
Names 2 Men | ®@ From Here
19 Hoosiers on Latest Defense Department
Figures From Korea
The Defense Department an-| ” a nounced today that four more 0 : ? Te Indiana men had been killed ini Big gun at the Cannon . . . Editors and Korea, 14 wounded and one instaff members of The Arsenal Cannon swamp |jured. Two of the wounded men “be better outside. The new editor began to feel as the editor-for-a-day who went "inside" the Tech |are Indianapolis residents. |
"if he was back in Hammond High School, 1933 S&mpus. KILLED IN ACTION A.D. headlines, dummies, play stories, banners, lead FYt Lawrence E. Kirkley, son| The city room floor was spotless. There wasn't editorials, art. Being the executive type, I dis- ©f Robert A. Kirkiey, Linton. a scrap of paper to be seen anywhere. I was missed each subordinate by saying, “Beat it, a! Pfc. Leo F. VanCamp, son of] waiting for a frustrated reporter to fold a piece good editor enly sets the policy.” It worked. Vernon W. VanCamp, Montpelier, | of copy paper before “depositing” it into the con- Besides the fact that I didn't know what 1st Lt. ‘Arthur J. Shorpshire venient wastepaper baskets. : most of the staff was talking about, my, mind| (Marine Corps), son of Mr. and| Mary Wetzel, editor of The Cannon, intro- Was grappling with a problem to do something Mrs. Walter J. Shropshire, Peru.| duced the staff. Every other student was some different with the Oct. 25th issue. I toyed with! /Sgt. Marcus L. Harmon, kind of editor. Get a load of this lineup: Robert Several possibilities and soon found myself cut- brother of Mrs. Follis Aldridge, | Hales, page 1 editor; Hollace Boyer, reporter; ting out paper dolls to the delight of the lesser napp. | Marilyn Bertram, assistant page 1 editor; Norma executives. os ; . Bryant, reporter; Cecil Tresslar, page 2 editor; The Cannon is a 4-page newspaper. Why not | WOUNDED IN ACTION Mary Lou Butler, assistant page 2 editor; Adrienne stun the schopl by printing a 48-page news-! Cpl. Donnell L. Sutton, (Marine Cogan, reporter; Dixie Allred, page 3 -editor; paper? And print each page in a different eolor Carps), son of Mrs. Elsie J. SutNancy Pearson, reporter; Sherry Davis, page 4 and douse the issue with a special cologne so the ton, 1354 W. 27¢h St.
i
be more appropriate than to have our readers get a charge out of it. The bigger the bang the longer we would be remembered.
porters. Jerry Maurer, head photographer, introduced Charles Clark as his assistant. Mary Black, staff assistant, introduced Paula Vandiver, staff assistant. Patricia Ann Jones and Robert Lee Jones, with no assistants, nodded to the new editor. The first thing that came to my attention was the absence of advertising. A smart lad could “Where are you buying the cologne and gun-|PAnd of Delois W. Laffoon, East make a few pehnies. I immediately appointed powder? I know a place where we can get it Chicago. myself advertising manager. Miss Sengenberger nholesale.” Pfc. Glen L. Sims, son of Homer fired me. The Cannon is an adless paper. Apparently no one took “Steve Wilson” of Sims, Williams. Reporters worked quietly and efficiently. ‘rhe Illustrated Cannon seriously. I fired every- Pfc. Stanley O. Bender (Marine rylly represented in Stories were neatly typed and the spelling was one and went home. On my ‘newspaper when I Corps), son of Mr. and Mrs. Rus: city today.
Laura Leep, Vevay.
Fhe Issue’'s Off to Printer ville.
) . Pfe. Cale M. Ferguson, son of JUST ABOUT the time I had reached a decision, gage] 0. Ferguson, Hammond. 0 eW Miss Sengenberger informed me the Oct. 25th 2d Lt. Donald M. Laffeon. hus issue was on its way to the printer. = MM. Latfeon, hus.
SRE TR
days will be some of the happiest of your life. ripe Corps), son of Mr. and Mrs. ¢ity in the process, Thank you for refreshing my memory and may Earl D. Helton, Hammond. From quarters at
set in type by a downtown printer. The actual printing, however, is done at Arsenal. Editors, reporters and assistants to assistants your sojourn into the Fourth - Estate be sunny kept coming to the desk with questions about and exciting. Tipton.
The Fast Buck
NEW YORK, Oct. 18—The grocery bill tells me that the average cost of chow is up about 20 per cent since we began the police action against
‘George C. McNaughton, mond. view the
Plc. Raymond C. Moody (Ma:|Déadquarters.
By Robert C. Ruark rine Corps), emergency addressee,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Grimes, The
new UN
pupils,
anyhow,- but the mere hint of shortage shoots cago. ! | : : , the price up. Pfc. Richard E. Stults (Marine Friday by air. North Eorea. Hear tell that Jumber is up 2b The suggestion of government control is all Corps), son of Mr. and Mrs. Stan25 per cent, The Air Force weeps into its » 3h the individual professor needs to bulge his price '¢¥ W. Stults, Ft. Wayne. hollers for more money, ompiaining that ris ng schedule. The suggestion that the government now INJURED the costs will deprive the wild blue of 750 F-86 Je must belatedly stockpile, instead of accepting Raymond Milard Hayse, schools included: planes unless Congress showers down. scarce materials from other countries in return (AVY): son of Ray Hayse, FL. Gordon Smith, son ayne. i 1 have read that the government has been for the cash we have, spattered ‘round the globe yn Mrs. Richard bidding against itself, actually, for all sorts of war stulfs like Wool, cotton, rubber, lead, zinc and pig speculators to tack a heavy profit on their tom, a Sea-going Marine, the like—vital truck that Bernard Baruch urged goods. ’ : to be stockpiled at least four or fivé years ago. To countermand this inflation of everything, : Mr. Truman's geniuses tilt your income tax,|
‘Miserableness of Man’ further debasing salaries worth half their old} | purchasing power. They talk weightedly of credit!
Inchon invasion nrartha
last letter received from gion
WE ARE TAKING planes out of the Air curtailment for the individual while giving a wild | Force's hangars, then, as well as bacon and eggs ' go-ahead to deficit financing by the government | ] from the hausfrau’s table, as_well as the critical itself. They control nothing, really—nothing vital
. to the welfare of the individual-—because you can-! m m rces. The high y aterials of defense from all the fo e high control a part of anything. If you control!
cost of lumber makes housing impossible for the .iy.,oq vou must slap ceilings on wa S ) st S ges and prices. poor guy who has been rassling the problem of mp,¢ ain't economic theory. It's simple addition.
the invasion i St., took place. ne
scrawled on
ation by stiffening credit terms for*home buying, he was getting
a o Tae buiaiag, It Base Df Marines on- the beach. Chillun, that is nothin’ : nu . . wiih ‘All of which moves me to remark that only ut ha iness, and has nothing to do with neces the basic miserableness. of man, ever eager for - profit, is responsible for the upsurge of prices Greediness Hits the Budget since the Korean conflict gave the profit-seekers a ready excuse to wield the gouge. The demands of the Korean War have not been sufficient to cut | into your living and mine—not sufficient to de- } mand sacrifice or shortage of price lift. ©
bazooka, a bevy of functional tanks or a division
ably wouldn't get ta write for a while. Mrs. Sutton, 1354 W. 27th St. Box |received word last Wednesday . High. : from the Defense Department SO YOU FIND the answer to American greedi- that her son had been wounded ness in your weekly budget. You must admit for Sept. 25. Cpl Sutton was 22 years MacArthur Ke
i ew old on Sept. 24. ' the record, in view of rumored shortages and A student at Technical. High
more Rd. 277, © Franklin
On Indo-China
¢ - deprivations d bal i ices <n ; TOKYO, Oct. 18 (UP) { It has not been that large a war, in men, ma- P anc. ba looning prices, that some of school, Cpl. Sutton enlisted in the terial’ or civilian mobilization. The meat the lads US are just no damn’ good. Some of us don’t Marines five years ago. eat over there does not cramp: your own stateside &ive a damn for the rest of wus, or for the coun- : 4.48.4 Indo-China situation while putting
steak allotment. The government has caves full of weary eggs and nonfunctional potatoes. A man | I know who runs a southern restaurant told me (ont jump which robs you of your buying power E. 15th St., telling him that he today. f he lately was forced to buy sugar retail, when znd ‘further strangulates your paycheck. The! had been wound- see i there's enough around to make diabetics of us all. actual financial and material demands.of Korea €d at Taegu, Ko-&& Booze, especially Scotch, showed a wholesale on the individual, in view of our past, vast spend-| rea. Almost two price rise and a sudden reticence in the market, ing, wouldn't make a louse blink if they were all! Weeks later Mr. although no single demand on grain has warrant-. in his eye. | Sullivan received . official notice from the Defense Depart-
. 1 ment. By Frederick C. Othman "Ci suiivan . © wrote a Sept. 24 from a hospital ship, the by the fire, where the waiters already had mixed pss Repose. He (in) the sugar and the whisky in the glasses and were gaid he had been dill]
pee ® Ports, MacArthur is
TheSe sources said
rean victory.
Irish Nectar
: "EN ROUTE HOME, Oct. 18—You ever tried i Irish coffee at 4 a.m. an a cold and rainy night in Shannon? You haven't lived. : I'm rolling across Newfoundland at. this writfing on a TWA Constellation and I'm still smackEs ing my lips over that astonishing nectar the Irish ¢ provided at their snug little airport a few hours i and one ocean ago. The recipe is simple: le You take a water goblet with a‘long stem so ; 2 ou’ll have something to hold on to. Into the I think, is too bad. Those passengers who ski . 3 i Rottom of it you sprinkle a teaspoon of sugar. On’ Shannon miss one of the en interludes tinued -4o Rght without reporting i this you pour a jigger of Irish whisky, You stir available anywhere to the traveler. i : : : 3 it. Then you fill the glass to within a half inch After 17 days of touring Europe aboard the Cpl Sullivan, who is 21, joined. - a enn of the top with strong, black coffee, | rT plane, Star of Ohio, the 40 newspapermen who,the Army two years aga, He was Go : , are her passengers have picked up such an in- @ student at Shortridge High Quells the Terrors of Night tredible cargo of merchandise that a stop at School. . 2 ON TO THIS MIXTURE, carefully so it won't
Shannon for more fuel was imperative. I don’t fenmry me : know what gets into a’ man when confronted by ‘mix, you ladle stiff sweet cream to the brim. That 8 4 b Gold Star does it. Now you sip appreeciatively. And silently
salesladies in far. places, but my own manifest others 2 is typical. I-have aboard a gallon jug of Bene- rrow x thank the Irish for inventing such a brew to warm Meet Tomo the inner man and quell the terrors of the night.
dictine, a large Swiss cowbell, a suitcase of dirty i Foi shirts, a Florentine “leather purse, two Swiss Nearly 150 “women wha lost Something else cheered me in Shannon, teo, something with red hair and jeweled blue eyes;
Sullivan
Most of the big airliners these days give Shan-| was able to get around on non the old go-by. crutches. He is now in Tokyo Only when they are heavily laden with pas- General Hospital. sengers and plunder from the far-corners of] Europe do they put down in Ireland.to fill the!
This was the second time Cpl. Sullivan was wounded. The first
watches, a butter mold in the shape of a rosebud, servicemen sons during the: two one of the prettiest sights 1 ever saw. Our plane shop, a cigar lighter that carries its own tank of convéntion of Gold Star Mothers. cut through the blackness over France and Eng- will confuse the customs agents, a OA ra wintews. | president, said the Indiana group Know then that we were about to learn the de- tues, and souvenir brickbats from Begjin. They've tional body. J ment, waiting to greet us. There were rain drops most bought a poodle dog, but desisted at the p Boyd, ng Beach, Cal. had just left the masacaraed and rouged ladies back to the politicians® in Washington. And if 500 members. * e laughed, shook’ the rain from her eyes
one Paris hat, two French berets, four satin world wars will meet here tomorhad soared up from Orly Airport in Paris earller ,o. ous some silverware, handkerchiefs of Principal business will be to land, and eased down in Shannon with the pro- Br mcrean. War, Mrs. Bari Wi We bleary-eyed passengers stumbled down the SOME OF MY ASSOCIATES are bringing ,..opably will pass the resolution’ lights of Irish coffee) and jess she was: This got musi¢ boxes which tinkle the Third Man theme One of the speakers will be the on her eyelashes and, in the floodlights by the pleadings of the flying machine management. | The first Indiana chapter was of a Parisian hot spot, stopped and stared. I'm ¢ (this was a shame), and led us. into Byylounge
maybe dream a little about the Irish beauty with days in Severin Hotel. New of- In the back row are the diamond-studded eyelashes. i ' ~ ficers will bé elected Friday. | Shardelow, president,
neckties, a pocket knife that is a portable machine row for the first annual Indiana in the might, circled once arbung ihe Eiffe]. Tower, Greek lace, and other items which undoubtedly/act on a resolution to admit pellors beating cascades of rain against the Bring Home Souvenirs | Yarling, 3628 Coliseum Ave. state] aluminum , steps to--stretch our legs (we didn’t home 400-day clocks from Germany, Roman sta- a recommendation to the nacolleen in the deep green uniform of her govern- and oil paintings in heavy gold frames. One al-| national president, Mrs. Eleanor plane, they glistened like diamonds. We, who — So we've been sailing along smoothly, like a organized in 1949. Eleven chap-: aid we weren't very polite. : : (Ia : Togs 5 =
vi ~ vai : 2 oR “ -
To 2 A @
Casualty List High School Students fo Visit UN
editor; Danny Power, reporter; Herbert Pigman, Feader would “get fhe roll impact .of the season.| (pl, Keith A. Sullivan, brother ’ : awake er sports editor; Larry French and Gene Herndon, 0 guarantee a full impact, 1 considered plac- of William Francis Sullivan, 317 : : : i i ; ek © Dense vies i J sports writers; Irma Rufner, city editor and Mar. Ing a small packet of gunpowder on each page. . 15th St \ These high school pupils look mighty happy about flying to New York on a United Nations dank - Deage n, vice president : garet Thompson, Patti Spahr, Ann Wilson, re- Since the paper is called The Cannon, what would Plc. Gary T. Leep, son of Mrs. observation trip. Stewardess Marjorie Fadler looks happy. too. has the ch mes Rat pe a pr
= u un - Sgt. Clyde Sherman Burris, son Seven Pu ils lof Mrs. Sophia E. Burris, Jason-
Will Spend 3 Days
Viewing Headquarters $32,000 to carry on the federation’'s religious and educational proIndianapolis was well, if youth- Bram for the coming year.
Seven high school pupils were the federations
. i y - y Seriously, I hope the entire (Marine Corps), son of Mrs. Es- of the United Nations organiza- social service, education, youth, Fall Will I'd rather get my pension next
? flawless, Something new for me. Of course, 1 gant gunpowder on the pages so my readers sell C. Bender, Elkhart. £ don’t ever handle anything but my own copy So _ get a bang out of it, I want action. | M/Sgt. Walter A. Bowsher Jr. beginning a three-day observation race relations, 7 how was I to know there is a difference. Editor's note: : . The Cannon staff was on a deadline. We were Cannon staff enjoyed the afternoon as much as I tella Stookey, Warsaw. tion-—and taking a good,
working on the Oct. 25th issue. All stories are did. Whether you know it or not, high school. (pl. Richard E. Helton (Ma-look at the nation's
2 3 the Hotel ing in the Central Chosen Continue Unusual In Seattle, Wash Clvde © y Cc ard J. aum- Ses . ash., 3 . Ist Lt. George C. McNaughton MCAIpin. they were scheduled to Church. Dr. Howar Foss, charged with reckless df.v-
,Marine Corps), husband of Mrs. Visit UN operations at Lake Suc- Co. iN Ham. cess and Flushing Meadows and '3TY, 2180 spoke.
Return Friday accompanied . Mrs. Hope Bedford Nevitt, teach- bers, business firms and organi-'will continue to be an unusual Pierzchala er and chaperone, left Weir Cook zations. fall. ed an increase. There is no real excuse for a sud- TMarine Corps), son of Mr. and Municipal Airport yesterday eve-
den upward surge in building materials—not yet, Mrs. Frank Pierzchdla, East Chi- ning in a TWA Constellation air- T ' he liner. They will return at 8 p, m. clude the Rev. A. Glen
Chosen for interest - governments and ability to dis- Walter Twiname. cuss sights and impressions after trip, the pupils
p Smith, ' Mrs. Elsfe Sutton thinks that pepnsvivania St. Broad Ripple since the war, is more than enough excuse for-the her son, Corporal Donnell L. Sut- High; "Robert Lee Jawell. son of Was Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Jewell, 951 __ ; : > wounded in In-/gy,gene St. Crispus Attucks High: ee, Shijpebes JrRere duplicaSherman, daughter i in. Korea. Then and Mrs. Folton Sherman, parishes. Co she 3137 Northwestern Ave., Manual: Miss Anna Stout, race relations
him Yas wrien/ Also, Finis Jent, son of Mr. and a group of 100 persons of various s i > MEE N y , . ste : Mrs. Harlin Jent, 2165 N. Hard- races to work together to foster ,,o Pacific Northwest and the Washington High; John goodwill. I. Shonle, son of Mr. In the letter, yg pr gShonle, 32 E. 52d St.; Short- rector of social service, reported
2 ridge High; Jerry O'Dell, son of that the court and probation com- . t scrap of paper. ip.” Rey. and Mrs. Glen O'Dell, mittee sent five boys to a 1950 TY between those two, extending redhead wouldn't name the Yank
hat-hanging since he got his discharge. I see that i Cpl. Sutton told g3nr- kwy. North S amp through the co- rom the southwest wp through responsible for her opinion that rices went up immediately when war with 3327 ' Brookside FPiwy, North summer camp g 2 i ® the government is going to meet the housing situ- up Enki y his mother that echnics ich. operation of individual churches, Texas and into the Middle Atlan- 50 million Frenchmen can be North Korea was joined before we had a decent Cpl. Sutton Drive, Technical High; Judith °F said tic states in which less than nor- wrong. But she said he has con-
Ann Morrow, daughter of Mr. and ready to board ship and he prob- Mrs. Henry B. gen 391 Ta steps are being taken to televise mal rains can be expected.
and Phyllis Lyster, ward of Louis McCarty, R. R. §. F
eps Eye
Douglas MacArthur and his staff of Christ in the U. 8. A. in the {or Army medical service. are keeping a close eye on the early winter in Cleveland. :
try’s future, so long as they can turn a fast buck. Cpl. Keith L. Sullivan wrote his the final squeeze on the Commun- tional agencies will be combined There is no other explanation of a 20 per brother, William F. Sullivan, 317 ists in Korea, reliable sources said in the new council, he said.
In addition to his official re- Warns Building Costs ) getting ail . press reports from Saigon on the May Kill u.s. Program Ing career programs to men why
§ reverses the French are suffering.
Arthur belives the Communists Public must not be permitted to take Said last night that the rising Indo-China by defaut, especiall, cost_of construction threatens to Service offers unlimited possibili- t0 Korea with his troupe to enterin view of the sacrifices and ea- Kill the federal public housing ties,” said Capt. France E. Cope, tain_GI's fighting there said the (pense laid out to bring the Ko- Program. ’
AD CLUB SPEAKER “The Pitch Man Hits the Big said many public housing units Time" will be the subject of David are too lavish in design and conised with the coffee and the bowls of cream. Milligan, promotion director of struction. Pe shot in the thigh and that he WFBM-TV, at tomorrow's luncheon meeting of the Advertising safe and sanitary homes for lowClub of Indianapolis at the -In- income families,” he said. ‘“Nothdianapolis Athletic Club.
gas tanks for the hop across the Atlantic, This, | & ound was minor and he con- Shortridge Seniors Elect Officers
Newly. elected officers fr the 1951 senior class at Sho “Communist technique” of the Today as Seen hy a Hoosier streamlined streetcar. No excitement. Tomorrow, ters in the state now have about pyioh S eal are left a he. ee ion 2 Short idas big lie. : Tope oy ‘ :
you'll pardon me now I think Il take a nap and| ~The group will meei for two, -0i8 Simon, ‘annual editor, and Mart Garstang, vice president. {dominate Congress as is now quarters of the Law School's In-
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1950
|About People—
Nab Hoosier In Smuggling Of French Gold
Caught Putting : Money Into
Auto Fenders
A Hoosier in" Paris and five other persons, including two women, were jailed there today on charges of operating one of {post-war Europe's largest gold smuggling rings. Police said they swooped down on Max Slimme, Ft. Wayne, and the others as they were placing $100,000, plus Swiss and British currency, into fenders of an automobile to smuggle into Italy. = ” =
Music Depreciation Chimes that have pealed 48 times a day for 40 years in Chie cago’'s Ravenswood district hit their first sour note today. Abra= ham Niessen, owner of a nearby apartment building, complained the 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. every quarter hour chimes kept him
se¢cond complaint in 40 years. The
Church Federation to Open mn oni
roast burned hecause the chimes
| ° failed to sound on schedule. Mr. $32,000 Fund Drive Nov. é Deagen added that the firm won't York i . . still the chimes biit might have Leon Lawhead Named Campaign Chief; them play a lullaby to soothe Mr,
. . . Niessen to sleep Group Holds Meeting to Discuss Projects na Leon Lawhead will head a Church Federation Campaign to raise Sneers at Peerage Arthur Plunkett, 64-year-old The campaign will open Nov. 6 and Vancouver, B. C., railway engiNew York close Dec. 3. neer, who just learned he {8 heir Delegates from constituent churches met last night to report ¢, an ancient. Irish peerage cre county-wide effort in the fields of finance. comity, g104 bv King Henry VIII, todav audio visual aids, - said: “They can keep the title excited servicemen’s work and others. month.”
federation » on "
Reason Enough
mightiest C. Oliver Holmes, g president, presided at the meet-
artel, federation executive secregartel ing, eaid his car piled into a
Temperatures to Stay guardrail after a short circuit set
fire to his trousers and he lo=t Above Normal control while trying to beat out By Science Service
flames, , y ry ~ _— ” » ” WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 -— This | . Some Pumpkins \ Co. The extended forecast sec- Only pumpkin ple eaters nec Persons who will carry the chief ti of NVeather cos o. 3PPly at a ple eating contest in esponsibility in the campaign in- 'lon of the Weather Bureau pre- Circleville, O:; Saturday. Occasion O'Dell, dicts that most of the country is windup of Circleville's 44th anJames W. Minton, Jerrus M. Bry- will have above-normal tempera- nual pumpkin show with Gov, L. » Ae tr ¢ P 20 3 ardi 1 in world ant, Mrs. Dorsey D. King. Mrs. 4, aq from mid-October to mid- © ak J. Lausche awarding a TV the Rev. Jo Novembe . set to the champion pie baker I. Al- November, and a prize for the person who can Pacific the gobble a pie in the shortest -time. on
Assistants Named Mr. Lawhead will be assisted hy district heads and teams of solicitors who will receive gifts for by churches, individual church mem-
skyscraper
seph W. Johnston, the Rev.
bert Moore and the Rev, A. J The any their Brown northern Rocky Mountain states o
” : cell. new’ secre- and the northern plains, as well ? of Mr. and Donald B. Awe . finance, a8 southern Florida, however, will One World: . tary of public relation and finance, § Ay ¢ ’ Charles T. C 1all f Th 5819 N.. 0 7. be colder than normal. Souther rt .. Lrancall, o ‘ was introduced. ¢ ormal. SOULREIN craton, Conn. board of select Goodwill Unit Proposed Texas will have the warmest, "( 4av" said the board reThe committee strives to ad- Weather. fused to accept a gift of a United locate There is no prediction for any Nations stand because veterans’ area of the country of just plain organizations objected. He did not of tion of effort on the part of normal temperatures. specify the ohn for their stand. Opposite corners of the country 0 h | I La s : ; will experience above normal rain Qoh-la-la chairman, suggested formation of __, 4 4, ome cases snow—during the next 30 days. Those are
Northwest,
French- Actress Suzanne Dal bert blew an international myth sky-high toda when she annorthern plains, and "way across ey she's A an Amerthe country in southern Florida. ican because “Frenchmen are There is a section of the coun- lousy lovers.” The 23-year-old
and Mrs. Dr. Grover L. Hartman, di-
Mrs. Marjorie Wright The vinced her Americans are better Cathedral Films productions. Mrs, rest of the country is expected to husband material, more handalph Jones stressed the need to 8et aleng on the usual amounts some and an all-round better bet than her countrymen. ” on
train adult leaders in the city’s of rain. - - » "Taint Funny
churches. re The Rev. Paul E. Huffman, : pastor of the First United Luth- Army Recruiters eran Church, struck a note of
Christian unity when he discussed Seek Paratroopers
. the coming organization of the. The Army is looking for vetGen. National Council of the Churches eran paratroopers and applicants
Township
Crisis
Officials at the Indianapolis recruiting station said anyone with previous service in the 11th and the 82d Airborne Divisions could re-enlist. in their old units, Army medical service is offer
Eight major ihterdenomina-
Hope Benny Bob Hope had lunch with Gen. Douglas MacArthur in Tokyo yesThe comedian who went
DETROIT, Oct. 18 (UP) ~ John want to become laboratory techGen. Mac- Taylor Egan, head of the U. 8. nicians, pharmacists, and surgical Housing Administration; technicians, “A career in the Army Medical terday.
officer in charge of the: retruit- Séneral promised him “a growing Addressing the 17th annual ing station here: audience.” : conference of the National Asso- , Hope said. though. that. he did bpd ‘ . . Me y ¢ lis f t ; ciation of Housing officials, Egan first Wie dre pio iy Joe not think anyone could make a sign for a three-year period. Men Korean Communist laugh at this with previous military service pojnt. not even Crosby's horses have the alternative of enlisting Meanwhile in Hollywood, Comefor three. four. five or six vears dian Jack Benny said he will take : ' eo “troupe of enfertainers to Korga and Japan during Christmas holidays. .
“It is our job to build decent,
Ira O. Gumerson’ Services Arranged
Ira O. Gumerson, sales engineer for the -Fatters Feeder Co.| of Cambridge City, died ‘yesterday at the Henry County Hospital in New Castle. He was 61. Mr. Gumerson was born in Beaumont, Kas., and lived here 20 years. He" was a member of the Garfield Park Evangelical and Reformed Sharh, He was n veteran of World War 1. He lived at 1635 Leonard St. Services will be 1:30 p. m. Fri- _. day at the G. H. Herrmann Fukh neral Home. Place of burial has ‘not been determined.
- ing more, nothing less.”
" = EJ Florida ,is getting rave notices «from two former Indianapolis residents, W. F. and Raith Jordan Struby, now © residents of Boca Raton, Fla. The Hoosier couple is sendin? + “wish you were i here” notes to «friends back in IndtanapoHs, complete with picture folders of “The Struby” apart-
Mr. Struby
ments they recently purchased Surviving are his wife, Hazel; from Boca Raton Club. No men-
a daughter, Mrs. Mary Ellen tion is made of hurricanes. Mr. | Grahn; three sons, William E. |Struby formerly was president of John M. and Howard L, all df Packard Manufacturing Co. here, {Indianapolis and “a sister Mrs. ee CI ‘Lena Graham, Columbus. .. Bloomington Attorney
) ‘ +. To Talk at IU Dinner * Labor Campaign Hits George W. Henley, Ricomings WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (UP) ton attorney, will speak at the In|—Sen. Robert A. Taft (R. 0.),/qjana University iaw School {said today that labor leaders seek glumni dinner at $:30 p. m. to(to. purge him from the Senate morrow in the Indianapolis Athland captufe Congress by thejetic Club. His topic will be “En.
“I' have never =een be- Lawyer.” -, a Guests’ will inspect the new
' fore such a barefaced” attempt to
m Jinks, treasurer, and Bill ‘shown by the labor campaign,” dfanapolis Division at Iiinois aad : nN > lhe said. ey ; & [Michigan Sts. from to §p m
(left to right)
- re v i ‘ wo : 4 a
