Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 February 1951 — Page 21
'B. 28, 1951
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Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola
YOU HAVE heard of the ‘Service Men's Center, haven't you? It's a place where soldiers, sailors, any man in the service can go when he's in the city to relax and loosen his tie. It's entirely possible that you have felt guilty that you never volunteered your time during the last war. You thought about it. Just never quite had the time. Tonight the Service Men's Center, the new center for the men in a hew war, will have a formal opening. Dedication ceremonies will begin at 5 p. m. The Governor and the Mayor will be there. The Camp Atterbury Band will play and the public is invited to see the. four-story center from 11 a. m, to 9 p. m.
Today is the public's only chance to see what {
volunteer workers can' do and maintain for the soldier, the fighting man who is too often taken for granted. \ When he’s attacking a stubborn enemy position with a fixed bayonet, that’s different. He's tops. He's America’s finest. The world’s best. The address ofythe Service Men's Center js 111 N. Capitol Ave, across the street from the Statehouse, Former tenant was the Public Service Company of Indiana,
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YOU MIGHT be wondering why today is the first-and-last chance for the public. The military says the.only place a soldier can take off his blouse, roll up his sleeves, loosen his collar, when he's off his base, is at home ora recreation center where the public is excluded except for the workers and approved personnel. If yon don’t get over today and get the bug to see what is going'on next week, apply for 12 hours of special training, submit two letters of recommendation and wait for the call to go to work. Then you can® see what others have done. And most of the others are the same ones who worked at the Service Men's Center during World War II. They are the men and women and young ladies who have an acute appreciation for the man who comes to town and has a choice of a street corner, a bar or a movie. They are the people who not ofly think about doing something but go ahead and do it. They are the folks who will beg for equipment, labor, spend long hours cleaning, building, arranging, painting, baking and serving the men who serve their country. oo oo <> THE VOUNTEERS feel the gratitude of the men ‘who can come in with flat billfolds and have’ a cup of coffee and pastries, dance, place a long distance phone call (collect), play cards, lounge and shoot the breeze, read magazines or listen to records, talk to pleasant and attractive Cadettes. Women sew buttons on uniforms, division patches, mend shirts in the “Sister Susie” de-
It Happe By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Feb. 28—A N. Y. “post office box” scandal—like the old tin box furore—will be a Kefauver sensation. . An ex-police official had a P. O. box where racketeers paid lots of “protection.” Ex-Commis-sioner Wallander “busted” the cop when he heard about it: Now the ex-cop’ll sing to the Senator—publicly, plentifully and, for some cops, painfully. > > BEATRICE LILLIE has day and night nurses. Virus, . Olivia De Havilland's best friends fear for her “Romeo and Juliet.” Her husband spurned Life, Look and This Week stories, He teaches colleagues how to “refuse publicity.” Diana Barrymore's drunk only coffee for seven months. The basketball ref the DA’s about to call (in the bribe scandal) once coached one of the involved players on a Brooklyn team. a» dh id PAT O'BRIEN wanted some advice on doing “Abe Lincoln in Illinois” and called the home of Raymond Massey who made it famous, Mrs. Massey answered and, learning the nature of the call, yelled to her husband, “Hey, Abe, it's for you.” Ge SS COMIC JOEY ADAMS told a heckler at the
Capitol: “You came in here with an empty stomach and it went to your head.” o>
MARRIAGE was being explained by Max Asnas, the pastrami prince, in the Seltzer Room. “It’s like betting on horses,” he said. “Costs you $2 to get into it but you go broke getting out of it.” : SS 2 “TELEVISION is for young people,” Fred Allen told me. “You mean young people should do it?” I asked. Fred growled: should look at it.” 0 o oo COLEMAN JACOBY, Pittsburgh's gift to gag-writing, phoned his wife Vi, the pretty opera singer,. who answered with a bark and a sneer. “What's the matter—what'd I Jo?” asked Jacoby. “I don’t know,” Vi said, “but I'll think of something.”
“No . . . young people
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BOB HOPE asked Bing Crosby when he started singing. “In 1930,” said Bing. Bob replied, “And 1929 was a bad year, too.” GI JESTS: Soldier jokes are back. Geo.
Savitt, Miami, revives this one: “When I was drafted, they tried to put me in the Air Force. They said I was no good on earth” .. . “Our platoon almost got into a brawl, but one thing our Scotch topkick, Sgt. MacTavish, won't stand
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Feb. 28—The possibility of trial and conviction for these basketball players who took dough to dump games is protected by a statute which makes it a felony to tamper with a
ned Last Night
Hy Sto "GI Recreation Spot
Service Men's Center . . .
where a man can feel at home, or dream of home. ,
partment. A housing bureau works hard at finding living quarters for men with families.
The man who paints ca go to the fourth floor and receive instruction or )naterials and be left alone, A complete darkpdom is at the disposal of the photographer. Sunday evenings men are served suppers from the “Pantry Shelf.”
One of the features of the Service Men’s Center is the Hermit Room. Comfortably furnished with easy chairs and couches, writing desks, record player and an extensive selection of classical records, it’s perfect for the man who wants to be alone to think of the peace and quiet that is so important to some.
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THE WORKERS at the Center don't kid themselves or the men that what is offered is a real substitute for home. The nearest thing to home is that a soldier can feel at home during the few hours he is on leave. . Workers feel a deep responsibility for those who were uprooted from different parts of the country and find themselves in the Hoosier capital. When a man puts on the uniform of his country he becomes the fighting representative of every American out of uniform. We're all betting on him to do his duty. There always seems to be more stigma involved when a man in uniform falters. And we applaud loudly cases of “above and beyond the call of duty.” “ Make it your duty to stop in today at the Service Men's Center. .See what has been done. Maybe you can see something that has been left undone and you can lend a hand. The Center .will be open to the public from 11 a. m. to 9 p. m. .
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Post Office Box Scandal on Way
for, is a free-for-all.” {Art Frank, London.) oS ® : BILL STERN, premiering a Hudson-spon-sored TV show on NBC, ‘made a slight fluff: told the listeners, “You can win a mink coat or a CADILLAC.” During a slight fire in Toots Shor’s, Jackie Gleason, observing firemen around the bar, said, “It took three minutes to put the fire out, but three weeks to put the firemen out.” LA THE MIDNIGHT EARL: A reported ‘“romance” between Russell Nype and Isabel Bigley is a promotion buildup by their agent . , . Ken Kling’s TV show planned by Jay Herbert enables you to play the horses—and g win—for “no” . . . Margaret Sullavan sold her Connecticut mansion, perferring to live in Sutton Place . . . Abe Stein the wrestler known as Hassan the Assassin, is being considered for the Harry the Horse part in the touring “Guys and
Dolls” . . . It's a boy for the social Irwin Spiddels . .. Today’s Daily Double: Gregg
Sherwood and Jack Coleman . « « ‘The Murray Weingers are expecting in April . , . Jean Alexander makes her screen debut in Columbia's “A Face to Remember.” GOOD RUMOR MAN: Famous Mistinguette of the legs comes to N. Y. soon after playing Montreal Midnitem: Grace Hartman ana J¢8n Alexander Norman Abbott, Bud's nephew . . . Isn't D. A. Hogan trying to indict a prominent Tammanyite? . . . Elaine Barrie's now a “customer’s man’ in Wall 8t. . , . Milton Berle’s doctors want him to take Mar. 20 and 27 off from TV . . . Sid Caesar's suing Eddie Hanley for doing a woman-getting-out-of-her-girdle bit. Eddie says he did it before Caesar was in show business . . . Henry Slate, the coming pitcher star, now goes into a fourth film, “Rhubarb” . . . Rumors persist that a B'way movie house will close . . . Harry Fender, who left B'way for 21 years, has been offgred a big show—and he'd like to come back. EARLS PEARLS: “Ben Blue reports that a woman's place is in the home—especially if she’s trying to avoid her husband. led TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle told Hal Block She believes in loyalty check, Her boy friend sends her one every week. When one of Lew Ritter's employees asked for the day off to celebrate his silver wedding anniversary, Lew said, “OK, but I hope I'm not going to have to put up with this every 25 years” . .. That's Earl, Brother.
Who Got Hurt But Gamblers?
a crime of its corruption. We wink and laugh at wrestling. We go for the bagged prize fight. We put up with the subsidization of “amateur” athletes. We let known criminals operate ef-
We love
In and See
|
The Indianapolis
imes
About People—
Sally Rand
« Wants to Be
Lady Godiva | She's Competing With English Girls
Fan Dancer Sally Rand today entered competition with hun-
dreds of British girls in asking to
ride naked through the streets of Coventry, England, just like Lady Godiva. Coventry will re-enact the famous horse-back ride as its contribution to the Festival of Britain this summer, Mayor John Howat said Miss Rand had cabled her entry from ‘Montreal, “Has she got Miss Rand. ,.c hair?" the | Mayor asked. “The lack of the { long hair has eliminated a lot of applicants. We must see’ a photograph of Miss Rand. Better be one showing her doing that what do you call it
Why He Lost
In Grand Rapids, Mich., Berend Zevalkink listed campaign ex|penses in his unsuccessful race for ward commissioner. He paid {10 cents for a pencil.
Legal in England | A London bank clerk, Kenneth Clark, 23, received a first-prize check for $210,000, tax free, ina football pool today. His winning ticket cost him 7 cents.
Smelly Enemies Charlie Thompson, a Brown{wood, Tex., farmer, has declared war on skunks which are “smellling up” his farm and eating his {honey bees. “Not the honey, just the bees,” Mr. Thompson said. “They've {eaten one full hive of bees.” He has captured six skunks in traps in the past few nights.
Twitted Beard In New York, Ivan (the Mad | Torturer) Gorky, professional | wrestler, tangled with the law because he was too sensitive about his luxuriant, 10-inch beard. | In a bar, a woman stroked the flowing chin adornment and |Gorky was pleased about it. So {pleased he put his arm around |his. admirer and patted her. Her husband objected and Gorky told {him to “go.get lost.” Results: | An unidentified bar patron was ‘knocked 20 feet when he swung {at the wrestler, a 200-pound truck {driver landed on the floor with a {broken arm and Gorky landed
lin court. { He was released on $1000 bail, ‘and his attorney said “they
shouldn’t have twitted him about his beard.”
Collector's Item | President Truman's now- | famous letter threatening Wash{ington music cri- . {tic Paul Hume (with physical violence has been && sold to David Starring, Bridgeport, Conn. curio |collector. : The letter, written last December, threatened Mr. Hume (with “a punch in {the nose” for (P anning the {singing of daughter Marga: et. { Mr. Hume said he was paid for {the note but “not a large ‘amount.”
Mr. Truman
‘Man Bites Another Man, Seven Stitches Are Taken
A man bit a man here last (night. | Ernest Rice, 40, of 638 Madison {Ave., had to have seven stitches {taken in his throat last night after he tried to break up a fight in the apartment next door. He {told police that the people next door had been drinking and fighting ‘all evening. When he tried to stop the ruckus, a man named “Johnny” {sunk his teeth into his throat, he said.
strip teasé?””
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1951
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The ianapolis Tes if
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The
124K NUTCRACKER TRAPS
a
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| The Times expose sells out in Anderson . . . the editions carrying story of Communist infiltra- " tion in labor unions were bought up in record time in Anderson. Here, circulation man Jim Eutsler stacks additional newspapers in the bus station racks as ticket agent Roy Phillips looks on.
2 La The ndianapolis Times’ expose of Communist activity ' in Indiana labor unions “sold out” the newspaper in Anderson. More than 1170 papers were purchased before 6 p. m. Mon(day, leaving newstands' and drug store counters bare,
EJ
Flash Fire Kills | Gls All But KO'd Chinese
Four Children
Tragedy Hits Knox 2d Time in Month
: Times State Service KNOX, Feb. 28 — Tragedy struck here for the second time in a month as a flash fire iclaimed the lives of four children last night. Burned to death when fire destroyed their log cabin home
were William Stacey, 12, brothers, Homer Clay, 7, and Har-| lan Ray, 2 and his sister, Bernetta Fay, 5. Just 12 days ago another home
sleeping tots, Virginia Lee Read-| ing, 3, and Lee Anne Reading, 15 months, children of Mr. and Mrs. | Everett C. Reading. Their mother, |
blaze claimed the lives of two]
Phe Ciavianats Pe
ii 5: TROOPS, TRA?!
= o ” Two persons, identified as members of a local union in Anderson, purchased bundles of newspapers outside the Delco
Remy and Guide Lamp plants of General Motérs Corp. An official of the United Auto Workerss (CIO) said the union did not “buy up” the paper. Another person, identified as
In Nov. 1 Nig
PAGE 21
Signs of The Times in Anderson 0K $15 Pay
Rise for State Employees
Will Cost $3.7 Million
In Next Two Years By NOBLE REED A ‘$15 a month raise for the state's 10,200 employees at a cost of $3.7 million for the next two years has been voted by the Senate Finance Committee.
| This would raise the all-time (high state biennial budget to a whopping $543 million, an increase of $12 million over the original .spending program proposed in the
{House six weeks ago.
The original budget for the next two years called for $531 million. The house added another $9 million to it for additional |state aid for the schools to pay an estimated 300 more teachers needed to handle an enrollment
{increase of 10,000. Get Sympathic Hearing
Then pressure developed to ine crease state salaries under the threat of mass resignations of thousands of employees who could get better wages elsewhere.
The Senate Finance Committee, headed by Sen. Clem McConaha, Centerville Republican, gave the istate’s workers a sympathic hearing yesterday and then voted the increase. The budget bills were sent to the floor of the Senate last night by the Finance Committee with a recommendation that they be passed with the increased amend- | ments. | The House earlier had voted a $25 a month increase in pay for state police officers. The Senate action would give state troopers a total raise of $40 a month.
Other Items Added
The Senate Committee also added another $300,000 to the budget for half a dozen state bureaus, including $50,000 for the Motor License Bureau to help straighten out the filing system “mess” there and another $50,000 for more employees in the Safete Responsibility division of License Bureau. State budget officials said the increased spending program as it
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a commercial photographer, bought * the remaining Times newsparers in racks in the bus station. «i Hundreds of additional copies of Monday's Times, which reported the infiltration of Communists in several labor unions, were sent to Anderson yesterday and sold out again, this time on an individual basis.
ht Battle |
Artillery Barrage Left More Enemy
Than Any Engagement Since By JOE QUINN, United Press Staff Correspondent
SOMEWHERE IN KOREA,
Feb. 28--Devastating American!
artillery almost knocked the Chinese Communists out of the Korean |
War before they got into it in force, a hitherto secret report re-|
vealed today.
is now in the Senate would dip into the state's $22.5 million surplus to the tune of $11 million. And that's not all. If both houses pass the GOP majority program for other increases, salaries of state elected officials and other spending bills, it will add another $4.5 million to the budget, leaving only $6 million surplus of what once was $73 million. '
Base Personnel To Get Invitation
Mayor, Hale Going To St. Louis
Mayor Philip Bayt and Col. M.
The first large-scale battle between the Chinese and United B- Hale of the Army Finance Nations troops was an all-night fight for Unsan last Nov. 1. The School will go to St. Louis to-
| Americans didn’t even know they|— They | Rock, N. J., commander of the civilian personnel to come and
{were tighting Chinese.
eight miles southwest of here | thought it was a last-gasp tryjastilisry group, sald 1000 Chinese
his PY the defeated North Korean army.
The secret report said the U. 8
cavalrymen and their horses (were destroyed in the barrage. “No matter how many we!
night to invite the Army Finance
live in Indianapolis. The delegation will include William H, Keller Jr., chairman of the Property Management Divi.
artillery barrage left more enemy Slaughtered, more just kept pour- sion of the Indianapolis Real Es-
including the current “Operation Killer.” Anybody's Guess What would have happened if the United Nations artillery hadn
Mrs. Constance Reading, died the|run out of ammunition is a guess.
following day of burns received in| But the big guns held the “human |
the fire that followed a kerosene stove explosion.
Out of Control “They were both tragic things, Starke County Sheriff Lee James said today. He added that fire equipment had rushed to both of the rural fires but that in both cases they were flash fires that were out of control in seconds. | Mrs. Ruth Stacey, 35, mother of the four fire victims, told the sheriff the family retired early {last night. The father, Harlan, was at work in Studebaker Corp. in South Bend. | Mrs. Stacey said she awoke {about 30 minutes after retiring
to find their two-story log farm me series of United Nations with-|
{home filled with smoke. She
gea” of Chinese back from our lines for four hours and 50 minutes and chances are they would
,» still be holding if the ammunition Withdrawal was made withou
had held out. The artillery barrage included 155MM. howitzers, 90MM. antiaircraft guns and chemical mortars. During the barrage, 1982 rounds of ammunition kept the Communist cavalry and foot soldiers rocking. When the artillery stopped, the [“human sea” of Chinese flowed over United Nations lines. The day after the battle, Gen. Douglas, MacArthur announced that Red China had sneaked into Korea and started a “new war.” the Manchurian
drawals from
|dead than any engagement since, ing down on us,” he said. |
| "As long as the ammo lasted, |we held them at bay, But as one| {battery after another fell silent, | another hole was made for the
|fantry fell back. “Firing batteries leapfrogged | back, with one unit providing some artillery support all the time,” Col. Henning said. “The!
{losing a man or any equipment.”
Nicholas Mase Services Arranged
Nicholas Mase, assistant personnel director of the P. R. Mallory Co., Inc, died yesterday in Methodist, Hospital. He was 50 and lived at 904 N. Drexel Ave.
Mr. Mase was born in Port Chester, N. Y. He was employed by Mallory’s three 11 years before coming here 22 years ago. Services will be held at 2 p. m, Friday in More & Kirk Irvington Chapel.’ Burial will follow
tate Board; Robert Walker, representing the North Side Realtors, Inc.; Fred Byer, Industrial Development division manager of the Indianapolis Chamber of Com-
1t| Chinese to rush through. The in-|merce, and George W. Mohr, ex-
ecutive vice president of the Marion County Residential Builders, Inc. There they will be the guests of Gen. E. J. Bean, Army Finance
t {Center Commander,
What they are going for is to |convince civilian employees of the {Finance Center that they can find suitable housing in Indianapolis.
Hobart, Jeffersonville
Sewer Plans Approved The Indiana Stream Pollution control board yesterday approved {final plans for sewer improvements at Hobart and Jefferson[ville. | The board ‘also received reports {from technical secretary B. A. Poole on the progress of pollution abatement programs at Chesterfield, Columbus, Crown Point and
{grabbed her infant son, Archie, porder followed. (18 months, and cried to other (ol. W. H. Henning of Glen members of the family sleeping upstairs to run. Driven Back by Flames
fectively in the boxing business. racing, and we let run as an offshoot of underworld industry. You remember when any jockeys went to jail for pulling a horse on a
sport. Nothing much will come of it, though, if the boys do stand trial, that cannot be reversed by an appeal.
inona Lake. A $1,780,000 bond issue for cons struction of a sewage works project at Columbus was scheduled
in Memorial Park. Mr. Mase is survived by his wife, Ida; a son, William; a daughter, Miss Mary Ann, all of!
Rally Planned Friday By Salvation Army
ally walk
The outcome of a sport is such a fragile thing, from a legal
day the owner said to take it easy? Of course the basic premise of dishonesty is
| Four hundred Salvationists from the central area of Indiana
Mrs.. Stacey ran through the
Hoosier At Sea
Indianapolis, two brothers, Frank
{to be sold today.
standpoint, that you might as nakedly evident in the basketball fixes, as in the |are expected to attend a rally flames carrying the infant. She # 3 and James Mase, Port Chester: TH —_—_D: well accuse a director of tam- football fixes, the RFC fixes, the old Black Sox Friday night in the Salvation 'fied to return for her other _ five sisters, Mrs. Anna Tief, Mrs. Walt Veon to Preside pering with the outcome of a scandal, the Harding administration, the other | Army Central Hall, 234 E. Michi- children but the intense heat and Julia Molino, Mrs. Amerigo De- At R It 'P nel play or a movie. shakedown deals involving statesmen, business- gan St. a widening wall of flames drove Chiara, Misses Mary and Lucy w ou ors il or moderator > " | al eon w
her back.
There is no law against men and athletes. But you have to figure pen- Lt, Col. Herbert Pugmire, state Mase, all of Port Chester, and a people giving other people alties on who got hurt in order to make a crime commander, will preside. The Di-/ The charred bodies of the four grandson. for the Indianapolis Real Estate - money, if the ‘ecipients duly stand up. |visional Headquarters Band of children were recovered by North § {Board's membership panel at.
record the gift and mention it to the tax people.
a WHO GETS HURT, for instance, when you fix
{30 men and the Central Corps | Songsters will give the special
Judson and Bass Lake firemen ;
some 45 minutes later.
Mrs. Anna Boll
luncheon meeting tomorrow noon in Washington Hotel.
In the fine appreciation of a sporting event? The people who gamble get |music, All former members of.the| An uncle, Earl Stacey, 36, and Mrs. Anna Boll, native off B. W. Duck Jr, Paul L. Melaw an athlete should not be more legally guilty hurt. Gambling is illegal, per se. Who else Salvation Army have been in- ap older Stacey son, Edward, 15, " Cedar Grove, died yesterday in Cord, Robert E. Walker and in complicity to lose by gangster bribe than he gets hurt? School spirit? The athletes’ wives |vited to be present. jumped from a window to safety. jeneral Hosplial Her Home Was wayne W. Whifting will tell of is liable for winning through the collége bribe and mothers? Show me damage, apart from eee rb resin eee | They suffered slight burns and at 1916 8. Delaware St. She their “most difficult business which subsidizes him. Money is money, and if spiritual, and maybe you got a case. : Pp ’ |injuries. Mrs. Stacey was treated was 73. transactions.” the college hands it to him under the table, to I have never known a fighter to go to jail Mature arent for burns and shock. A resident of Indianapolis 30 CE for taking a splash, but have seen many such The four children were taken to years, Mrs. Boll was a member
play, what's wrong with taking some more on the side?” I claim to be an honest man, and so have no sympathy for the players who got caught on the take. Talk all you want to about temptation and loose morals and the atmosphere of the time, an honest man is honest and does not fall for temptation. Some of us who went to school during the depression did not become Communists, either,
splashes, and some: recently. Nobody was led
off to vile durance in the Black Sox mess, al- |
though a known gambler fixed it. The foctoall players who got caught a few years bagk didn’t do any time. ’ 7 A crime bespeaks an offense against the public weal. Throwing a sporting eventmerely serves the gambling participants right. It is no invasion
In Sunday Times
Parenthood strains the seams | of courage and character, For parents, willingly or unwillingly, are leaders. To lead well, we must know why and where we are going. In a new column, The Mature
vy
Raymond Funeral Home in Knox pending completion of - funeral arrangements.
Jersey Fire Sweeps
Woods, Threatens Homes PLEASANTVILLE, N. J., Feb.
of Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
A requiem high mass will be
sung at 10:30 a. m. Friday in the
church following services at 10 a. m. in G, H. Herrmann Funeral Home. Burial will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery. The only immediate survivor is
Youngsters Make Big-Time Pay; Read Parade
Movie makers have found that he has more boxoffice appeal than many a glamour girl
although the temptation and the trend was plenty of privacy, no breaking and entering, no murder, Parent, Muriel Lawrence dis- [28 (UP)—Fire raged through four a -daughter, Mrs. Rudolph Milli, He may be handsqme, igi « « + with present. no rape, no mayhem. It does not steal public | cusses the problems of normal lsquare miles of piné woods, de- Preparing a prescription in Indianapolis. | homely. . . . freckled . . /dirtyal “Aero- gs ob: 9 funds or tamper with public moneys, which is | parents and children and offers |stroyed a lumberyard and threat- yo pharmacy Py the am- rr { faced. Valkmaster BUT YOU will not reform the players or the more*than-you can say of the general who cor- | warm, human messages of in- [ened about 50 homes at Cardiff, hibi force flagship USS Mt Aid to Passengers | He's the boy actor who has <orld by dumping them into jail with hopheads rupts procurement or people who misrepresent spiration. four miles ‘from here, last night. Phibious force tlagship . g won the American heart. hn. : Some #nd hoodlums and killers and perverts. You will clients for a public borrowing agency like the The Mature Parent, 2 column More than 300 members of 16 McKinley 13 Jack T. Brandt, Telescopic gangways, electrical- Sunday Parade Magazine wailable in make eriminals, sure, and wreck lives, sure, but RFC. written exclusively for The volunteer fire companies fought hospitalman, second class, USN, ly operated in the walls of the punos you a roundup of Hole , AAAA to you accomplish nothing outside an extra drain on. Holy cow, don't bother me with basketball | Times, begins Sunday in the [the blaze more than five hours.! son of Mr. and Mrs, William ‘Pew super ocean terminal at, |ywood youngsters who earth 8. the guy who pays for jails and the depredations when we got so much big-league larceny around | Woman's section of the Sun- (Flames leveled the John Dobler G. Brandt of 6705 Riverfront. Southampton being built by Brit-| gver a million dollars a year, of criminals, That's us—the people who don’t and about. Call the guilty parties moral lepers day Times. It will appear regu- |lumberyard, destroying two The. McKinley i : . lsh railways, will greatly facili- PARADE MAGAZINE take bribes, who don’t rin through traffic lights, if you will, and dismiss 'em with a lecture, but | larly in The Sunday Times and |trucks and 200,000 boara feet of 1he McKinley is operating in tae the landing and embarkation | © © Comes With a and who contribute to the upkeep of the land. let us concentrate on the big thieves and let on Tuesday and Thursday. lumber with a total value of] the Korean area with United [of passengers and afford protec-| THE SUNDAY TIMES a. ei The structure of sport is too flimsy#o make the petty’ larceny kids swim tfirough the net. - 5 $50,000. | Nations forces. Mn tion in bad weather. ° t | TT — Zh : = : : : ® : 8 ) N » ”
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