Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1951 — Page 24
; of their own. ‘
as HAROLD 8 IS THE
thinking for all time.
of the pigtailed and Hopalong/ Cassidy generation, most of the
came for what they could get out, of i » ” »
AND THE labor they brought
Tous Svonsehol
IRTHDAY of The Great Idea. a group of men said
They told King George III they were through working their lives away for England, and that they were going Hato business for themselves as freé men. a : : ; In spite of the Jongs which oC pledged their fortunes, their {cording gecre-’ are sung in the clear soprano lives and their sacred honor, are tary; Dick Mor-
save what
|government,’ people who settled this country! ooo noitical profit.
HARTLEY
and signed what all men had
‘Fatima Couneil of the Knights
New ofticars’ of Our Lady of
of Columbus have been installed’ by Ji Murphy, district deputy ZT aD deen
is the new grand knight and Kevin Walsh the new deputy grand knight Other officers are Bob Murphy, JF 4 chancellor; Tony
il in the turmoil of trying to e have from “big trying to twist busi-|
{
And that ought to be our re-|
| dedication, saving what we have, and not let it happen again,
| Zainey lecturer;
Lawrence, re
id ris,freasur- Mr. Gohmann |
er; Harry Shutt, advocate; Bob Fax, warden; Jim O’Brien, in !side guard; Kenny Murdock, out-| gide guard; John Hofer, trustee. | Mr. Gohmann appointed Fred! John Furgason, | financial secretary; Bill Mickler,
was virtually slave labor, “signed, poR IT wiLL always want to, general chairman of the five-point on” men, some shanghaied, Who go Jong as men are men, their program. The five chairmen to had to work for their keep a long throats parched for power, their work under Mr. Mickler are Fred
time before they actually got. land! Hard-faet history will tell you,
So today, the wise won't say
‘hands squirming to get at the Priester, Catholic activities; Law-| |sweat-won wealth of other men,
rence Turner, Council activities; Larry Dufour, fraternal activities;
that there was a lot of plundering. it's won. They'll simply stand in| Dr. Charles Seal, Charles Mitchell,
and exploiting in the settlement hard-eyed vigil, and on guard. of the Thirteen Original Colonies.|
The same Was true then as it |} © Eliard Red- Faced
is now. Very few men give another man a break if they've got, the edge on him. They help, but
‘they don't level off with him,
make him equal. ~ - ~”
IT WAS TOBACCO and skins and dried fish, In fact fish were #0 plentiful that landowners overted their help on fish to the point that later contracts for labor sald clearly that fish could be served only so many days of the week. It had been every day. “In the course of human events
Jenny Type
| publicity.
em —————— ———— -
Red Planes
Smack at UN Lines
By JIM 6G. LUCAS Serippa- Howard Raft Writer
TOKYO, July 4—The U.
8. Air Force is increasingly
red-faced about nightly air taids by Chinese Reds on United
Nations troops around Seoul. Not that the Air Force is
afraid the enemy will do much |
«+ is the way it begins, written damage in such raids. It's the principle of the thing. “It's not really a problem except that it doesn’ t look
by Thomas Jefferson, and first signed by John Hancock, presi-| dent of the Continental Congress. And only 12 Colonies signed that day. New York didn't come in until about a month later:
» » » WHAT I AM thinking about are those ‘inalienable rights”
they were after, the right to work and keep the money. And the right to choose how public money would be spent. But when The Great Idea was horn on American soil, one of fts biggest virtues was to keep the state from tax-robbing the people. Most important was separation of the state from business, the loosening of the stranglehold the tax collectors nad on human effort. ~ » ~ 1 HAVE SUSPECTED that we long ago would have had the same - thing. back, -the same plundering and . exploiting: the same political “stavery had it ast been for just ane thing, That i= the toehold every American citizen has on his freedom. Politically he still has to be coaxed, He can’t be driven. And he can throw a government in or out with a lead pencil. But the problem is now what it was then, to keep government from grabbing what man works to create, useable wealth, and to let him have a reasonable amount of the fruits of his brain and muscle. » » » WE WERE LUCKY. The Great Idea has had trouble getting its roots down in the hard soil of selfishness all over the world.
Here—on July 4, 1776, in Independence Hall its hour had arrived.
Today is for rededication to its simple principles of prosperity, which means having all you need It's when men try to get all they want, instead of all they need, and they pluck and plunder other men, that the trouble starts
» ” a
AND ON THIS, the 175th birth day of the independence. the men
“iI think thev
good,” says Lt. Gen. Otto P. Weyland, commander of the Far East Air Force. "I don't
look on it as a serious threat, but
I don't want them to. get away
with anything.”
It’s the old story of the primitive vs. the modern. With all our
planes and equipment we haven't
been able to stop these raids.
Gen. Weyland said the Chinese apparently are using a couple of PO-2's so obsolete they're almost in the flying jenny class. {They can land in a field and he hidden in the weeds and brush. They require no elaborate maintenance and don’t need much runway, They come out on moonlit nights and hug the ground, putputting up and down the valleys and canyons.” the. general said
ruefully, “They drop hand greRBS mnS Sa rk volos ation
simply toss them
over the sides of. the cockpit
jet's pilot was ordered to go atter the intruder. “But the speed differential was too great,” Gen. Weyland said. “By the time our man had located the enemy plane, the jet had overshot. The little guy kept puttputting along.” By that time the enemy plane was-over Suwon, 20 miles south of Seoul,” We called off the night fighter and turned on the searchlights. Anti-aircraft crews umlimbered their guns. “They had him in their searchlights and they threw a lot of stuff, but they didn’t get him,” Gen. Weyland said. “I guess our anti-aircraft gunners haven't had much practice.” When the anti-aircraft failed we put an F-82 in the air. The
pilot had the plane's wheels and,
Bape down to réduce its speed, _.He.got, oR. Lo.] about 120 miles per hour bi he other guy was
making only 75 or 80, and got
though they: may have makeshify away.
bomb racks.”
furan on Searchlights The other night -- Weyland was in Korea the planes showed up.
while Gen.
one of man named Bennett opened an Our radar
Bennett Meets Bennett EDINBURG, Ind. (UP) — A
automobile rental agency. His
spotted it as soon ag it entered first customer was a Camp At-
the Seoul area. We had a night
fighter ta jet) in the air. I—————
4925 WEST Ibth
on ALL
1934 WEST MICHIGAN ST. FR. 9622
"Our 25th Yeor"
PITTI TTT TITY Clearane
terbury, Ind.; soldier named Ben-
The nett. No relation.
ST. BE. 8960
*x ALL METAL GLIDERS with innerspring mattress pads
* ALL WOOD GLIDERS
* WOOD ROK-O GLIDER CHAIRS
+ SUN CHAISES * METAL CHAIRS
> Summer Furniture
* 2-PASSENGER GLIDERS
* METAL OCCASIONAL TABLES with glass tops
* UMBRELLAS * UMBRELLA TABLES * GLIDER CUSHIONS
AS MUCH AS : OFF ON SOME PIECES
EFURNILY RE
olonta
* Free Delivery to your
hol at day 1 ogi
{qualified reserve officers.
the Reserve Corps, the program ducted to acquaint selected candi-| ‘dates with Finance Corps oper-/ - ations and provide the Corps with the students are currently 'ing business administration.
s Start Foro Course at Ft. Harrison
New to the Financé Corps and, .Selected by their military pro- h som Isom, 40, got more than 0 Oca Training rossors at the varions gehoels, the asked for. Isom was arrested on
15 being con “candidates will study forms of;
study-. sentence.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1951" [Time to Sober Up
AN DIEGO, Cal. (UP)—Ran-
a drunkenness charge and asked Army finance procedure. Most of Cary to. get him a 5-day jail Judge John J. Bren-
inan gave him 30 30 days. z
MANY SPANKING FRESH ITEMS ADDED T0 OUR COLLECTION OF TREMENDOUS VALUES!
Drastic reductions and special purchases procured from our many resources! All 100%, Block's Downstairs Store fine quality! Sorry, no phone, mail, or C. O. D. orders! All subject to prior sale!
~ wy
i \ Sports Shop, : - oh Downstairs / “ IN . % Cool Sleeping! 2
~~ 4 Lo -* 8 el
™ “Rayon
ff
bv CASUAL DRESS
This Fabric Ordinarily Found Only In Much Higher-Priced Dresses
Mallinson’s
#
Seersucker
"MILLION DOLLAR SALE”
Men’s Cotton Wash ROBES REGULARLY PRICED 4.95, - ONLY 3.88
convenient pockets,
Men's Furnishings, Downstairs
Fine woven sfripe chambrays for home or beach wear. Theroughly washable; Sanforized to keep their fit, colorfast! Thies Self-fabric sash. BLUE, RED, MAIZE or
TAN color combinations. Men's small, medium, large sizes
5.95
Smart! Cool! Wrinkle-re-sistant! And, WASHABLE! In ths season's most sought after style! Roll neckline, cap sleeves action shoulders! Pink, aqua, grey. Sizet [4 tc 20, 16!/5 to 2415+
Fashion Dresses,
"MILLION DOLLAR SALE"
Boys’ Regular 11.95 to 13.95 SUMMER SUITS
DRASTICALLY REDUCED WHILE
4.98
Downstairs THEY LAST! BROKEN SIZE GROUP! Bays’ sizes 4 to 9 and 13 to 15 only! Alse husky boys" suits, » x ~ & sizes’ |2 to 16. Sport suits, dress suits and Eton tropical suits. aa ss eh .. Out they go at 9:30 tomorrow at this give- away prize! ot a wu ee DPS
Misses’ or 7
Boys' Corner, Downstairs
®
Rayon
BLOUSES 1.59
(2 for $3)
WHITE ONLY! Fine Washable Crepe!
"MILLION DOLLAR SALE”
Teens’, Sub-Teens’ Regular 5.95, 6.95 Summer Dresses
GREATLY REDUCED! WASHABLE
COTTONS AND SHEERS
3.98
hi ah school
plaias,
< 4 } { styl { ' “mart sauaht-atter styles tor i inior ht h nd Smart for SKiIrtTs summer > a y'e 'q a suits. slacks! So nicely ane qiris! Cool, catchy cottons in pla n colors, tailored with setin tripes! Cool summer sheers! Sizes 9 to 15 and 10 to 14
yoke back, simulatea pearl <hank button trim. Sizes 32 to 38.
sleeves
Girls' Shop, Downstairs
Cool Traveling! Wonderful Values!
RAYON KNIT ~ STRAPLESS
GOWNS
Broken Sizes
"MILLION DOLLAR SALE"
Infants’ and Little Girls’ 1.00 to 1.49 Summer Wear
69 3
2
{106 . ai This wanderful Araup (includes hand-sfbraidered hors, cot tan crepe rthumba playsuits in broken sizes | to 6. Also, two-
pec. cotton pajamas in
size | only.
Tots' Shop, Downstairs
Hurry for values!
1.00
Pink! Blue! Maize! White!
Shirred elast top for comfort and peau’ Full cut! The:
A WINK Ang
wash in nee no ren ng! Pack n a small space for traveling! Women's small, medium
and large sizes.
Lingerie, Downstairs
Sa -~
"MILLION DOLLAR SALE"
(196 Prs.) Children’s Shoes
REGULARLY 1.98 AND 2.95 GREATLY REDUCED TOMORROW!
Cool, open-air barefoot sandals!
1.39
Canvas oxtords! Plus od
and ends from our reqular stock of higher-priced shoes. Hurry
for first choice at this Million Dollar Saving .
broken and there are only 136 pairs to do!
Children's Shoes, Downstairs 1
. sizes ars
+ ~
MEN'S BETTER COTTON KNIT PLAY SHIRTS
1.39
Usually 1.95 or mare. Colorful patSSM, L.
Men's Furnishings, Downstairs
terns,
BOYS’ REG. 1.98 SPORT SHIRTS
49
Long-sleeved! Broken size and style
assortment,
Boys' Corner ow Downstairs
BOYS’ 5.95, 6.95 RAYON
“SATIN JACKETS
2.98
Water - repellent! Plain or plaid
trimmed. Sizes 8 to 20.
' Boys Corner, Downstairs
1015’ 1.98 T0 2.98 SUNSUITS and DRESSES
1.33
Styles for little girls, sizes | to 6l/5 in the group! Tots’ Shop,
Downstairs
Girls’ ANKLETS Guaranteed 4 Months" Wear
4.3}
Saft, spun
Turned-down cuffs.
cotton!
Assorted color S$,
sizes b to 11,
Hosiery, Downstairs
ONLY 200 REGULAR 2.98 UMBRELLAS
1.99
15-RIB solid color or plaid acetate covers.
styles w th
Accessories, Downstairs
FURNITURE CO.
47 S. MERIDIAN ST.
home anywhere Indiana.
"
SPECIAL! MEN'S TROPICAL SLACKS iv rs
If perfect would sell for 8.50 to 11.95. . . but the slight imperfections are fedreely detectable! From
2 nationally known maker! Hurry for best selection!
Men's Cloking am
Prin
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Rep:
By HARM United Pres:
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and invento:
cent.”
AT OAK run into "a dents: A woman test was as relatives livi ry. “Yes,” sak cousin living She was ti One of Ru other subjec “Are you fit which ad of the gove The fellov “Yes, I'm He didn't Ridge eithe cause of pol
NEW Y( Frederick lionaire “a causes, ref today to d persons Ww money for Communist Federal Ryan told he, held ir at 1:30 jy Time) unle duce the n
Berne W Of Crash
DECATU Mrs. Denni died today morial Hos suffered in the interse roads sever Berne, Mrs. Stei a car dri Dennis, anc car driven Neither dr Mr. Steines 20, suffered and was t here.
Did At |
OMAHA There are in the N Normandy rent 8ur ican dead
Mr. Soy
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