Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1951 — Page 9
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WEDNESDAY, AUG. 8, 1951
Ohio Guardsmen Start Moving Into Atterbury
Times State Service CAMP ATTERBURY, Aug. 8—| An advance party of 250 of Ohio National Guardsmen arrived here | today to prepare for two-week training for some 2600 men.
The rest of the men will ar- ||
rive here Sunday by train, motor convoy and chartered busses.
The contingent
includes non-
divisional units of the Buckeye is
National Guard.
: Commanding officer of the Ohid § Julius 28
detachment will be Col. Stark, Wooster, O. He is chief of staff to Maj. Gen. Leo M. Kreber, Columbus, O., Ohio adjutant genera land commanding officer of the 37th Division. Gen. Kreber also is expected to visit the ‘training detachment. Largest unit in the training group will be the 166th Regi-
mental Combat Team, made up of ° » alls ang w= Entry Deadline Set Tonight |Phenson answered the request for ® » In State Fair Spelling Bee
Cleveland, Cincinnati and. Toledo. The 37th Division, the largest unit in the Ohio Guard completed its summer training at
Camp McCoy, Wis, July 29.
Two Children Injured In Unusual Accidents
Two - children were unusual accidents late yesterday. Six-year-old David Uhle, 755 N. Holmes Ave., was playing in the yard of the Holy Trinity Church, 2618 W, 8t. Clair St. while walking the edge of a fence, he fell headlong into a steel drum being used as an incinerator, burning his hands, face and body. He is in fair condition at St. Vincent’'s Hospital today. Kenneth Lindville, N. Bellevieu Place, fell into an uncovered well at the rear of a vacant house at 2528 W. 16th St. Removed from the 20-foot dry well, he was treated and released at Methopp/st Hospital for a laceration on his left leg.
3
injured in while playing
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‘Battle of Champions'—
With tonight the entry deadline for the 1951 Old Fashioned Spelling Bee at the Indiana State Fair, a real “battle of champions” was developing for this year's crown. Mrs. Carolyn Holloway, Colfax, State Fair Board member, today armounced receipt of entries from Mrs. Frank Krahulik, last year’s champ, and Gretchen and Carol Grosdidier, sisters who have captured top honors in The Times Spelling Bee the past two years. Mrs. Krahulik bested a field of 32 to carry off the State Fair crown a year ago when she came up with the correct spelling of “Mnemonies,” which, when you smooth it out is appropriately “the art of improving or developing the memory.” A housewife residing at 3744 Caroline and mother of three children, Frank, 10; John, 6, and Diane, 4, Mrs, Krahulik unlimbers her spelling muscles daily through a workout with the crossword puzzles. Carol, age 14, and Gretchen, age
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\FAIR SPELLERS—Entered in the Old-Fashioned Spelling Bee at the Indiana State Fair are (left to right) Carol Grosdidier, Mrs. Frank Krahulik and Gretchen Grosdidier.
are Times Spelling Bee champions and Mrs. Krahulik won last year's
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; THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Stephenson Denies Wilfully Delaying Extradition Case
By United Press ST. PAUL, Minn., Aug. 8--1ll-ness of an assistant attorney genI leral and refusal to pay legal fees Rk (today gave former Indiana Ku Klux Klan leader D. C. Stephenson another delay in his extradition fight. He was ordered extradited by the Hennepin County district
court last December following his arrest in Minneapolis in November on parole violation charges. Further action now has been moved back to Aug. 17. Indiana authorities charged Stephenson violated his parole from a life term for the second-| degree murder of Madge Oberholtzer, an Indianapolis statehouse worker, in 1925. Indiana |officials said he left Illinois for Minnesota without permission Deal Fizzled Out Through his Minneapolis® at|torney, Frank J. Warner, Ste-
The Grosdidier sisters
{dismissal of his appeal, saying the illness of Assistant Attorney Genleral Ralph Stone blocked prompt wa “ : rosecution of the appeal. 13, residing at 1502 Draper, will 2 He also said yen Indiana be among the youngest competi-'44 pay for transeripts of lower tors. For the past two years, the court hearings—needed as evitwo sisters have monopolized hon-/dence by the high court—added
ors in The Times Spelling Bee, [tO the delay.
i id Chief Justice which is confined to grade school| Mr. Warner sa pupils. Carol, now a sophomore at Charles Loring of the Minnesota
St. Agnes Academy, topped the Supreme Court had recommended contestants in 1950 and Gretchen, that he and Mr. Stone try to who graduated from St. Patrick's Work out details in arranging for Catholic School this June, bested a hearing referee. He said they a field of 55 to carry .away The failed to get “some kind of agreeTimes championship last April, |ment from Indiana to pay ex-
An entry list of approximately P€S€s of the appeal, s 50 contestants is expected by the He said since then Mr. Stone deadline at midnight tonight. The has been ill, and that just reOld Fashioned Spelling Bee, which cently the case was turned over will be held in the Women’s Build- to Lowell J. Grady, another asing Sept. 2, at 2 p. m. is open to sistant attorney general. anyone, with no age limit. Entries .. ae . by card or letter must be sub- Fall Victim Fair Mrs. Millie Ayres, 83, of 1501 State Fair and there is no charge E. Raymond S8t., is in fair confor entering. A total of $200, with |dition at St. Francis Hospital the winner receiving $40, will be|after she fell down the stairs awarded to the prize-winning:con- in her home early today injuring testants, her hip.
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