Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1951 — Page 19
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STARTS SUN. Doris Day MOUNLIZE
Heinailor John Ireland
argaret argaret O'BRIEN
SCRET GARDEN
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TTTSBURGH
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Pi To TH HE RACES" S w
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ITTING PRETTY"
Main | {Spesdwaz) BE Imont 5513
“THE FROGMEN"
In Color EAT DIVIDE”
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and Delaware > to 6—40¢c Tax Ine. er Laurie—Color WAS A THIEF HEN 1 GROW up"
Ind at Talbot 5 to 6—40c Tax Ine. Sally Forrest IT" by Technicolor ad & the Cowhov .
nH x CENTRAL
AIR- CONDITIONED Joanne DRU
RINGS THE BELL” ~~
Valentina Cortesa
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RINGS THE BELL” n Before!
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42ND AT COLLEGE
Open Tonight 6:45 R—Piper LAURIE
10 THE RACES”
BE Pe | Lon a1 ti
THURSDAY, SEPT. 6, 1051
Japan’ s Police ‘Army’ Seed Fungus
Professor Honored
Times State Service
LAFAYETTE, Sept. 8—Prof, C., W. Garrick, former head of the department of poultry husbandry|
at Purdue University and assist.
ant chief of the department since! 1940 has been elected a Fellow of the Poultry Science Association.
4
Has 68,500 Members— Spotted Faster
Prof. Garrick gave up his executive duties at Purdue in 1940 to|
devote his time to research and
personne!- training activities.
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TERRA RI at iad) dda ba aes
IIL
DRIVE-IN THEATRE Beqween Clermont & Brownsbur, U. 8. Hwy. 136 or Crawfordsville Rd. Donald O'CONNOR-—Piper LAURIE
"FRANCIS_GOES TO THE RACES"
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GREENWOOD
YOUR * Jauny. DRIVE-IN 15 Min, Drive 8. on U. 8. Rd. 31 Free Kiddies Paradise Playground Open 7:00, Show Dusk, Adm. Adults 50e
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LAST TIMES TONITE :30- 10: 30
and his "HILLBILLY MERRYMAKERS”
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"THEODORA GOES WILD" MAPLECROFT
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DRIVE-IN THEATER Kentucky Ave. & South Tibbs Open 7:30—8how at Dusk ‘Dana “EDGE S—Farley GRANGER
DRIVE-IN THEATRE 9600 8S. Meridian, State Rd. 135 MODERN SUPERVISED KIDDIELAND Opens Tonite 7:00—Show at Dusk Steve COCHRAN—David BRIAN
"INSIDE WALLS OF FOLSOM PRISON"
Jean KENT—James DONALD
"THE GAY LADY" RI. : CREAT PLANE & ROBBERY" PENDLETON PIKE Rd. 67—Opposite Ft. Harrison Box Office Open 7:00 Till 11:00 P, M,
— NOW THRU SATURDAY —— Doris DAY—Gordon MacRAE
"ON MOONLIGHT BAY"
Colpr by Technicolor Steve Virginia COCHRAN GREY
"HIGHWAY 301"
MIDNIGHT SHOW EVERY SATURDAY
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"Strip Tickets on Sale at Kiddieldsnd Box Office for Those Not Attending Theatre 7—THRILLING RIDES—7 Roller Coaster—Horse & Buggy— Boat—Jeep—Merry-Go-Round— Airplane—and Real Live Ponies LARGE MECHANICAL RIDES Exclusively for Children Free Rides as Usual for Those Attending Drive-In Theatre OPEN DAILY 6:00 P. M. SAT. 5:00 P. M.—SUN. 3:00 P. M.
SHADELAND Newest Best COOLEST Drive-In
Drive 7000 FE. on 38th, E. 10th or E. Wash. to 2500 N. Shadeland (S84. Rd. 100)
Free Kiddies Paradise Playground
Doris DAY—Gordon MacRAE
“ON MOONLIGHT BAY"
Color by Technicolor Plus! J. Ireland—Mercedes McCambridge
: "THE SCARF" TWIN-THEATAIR World's Larges! Drive-In Theaire
8000 Southeastern Ave, Southeastern Ave. and Rural Kevstone Ave. and Pleasant Run Bivd.
REE “ois Mcamiy FREE Show at Dusk—Adm. Adults 50¢ Now Four Big Features on Two Big Screens
EAS SCREEN
Clifton WEBB—Joanne DRU
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Rich. BASEHART—Valentina CORTESA
"HOUSE ON TELEGRAPH HILL" eee WEST SCREEN———
Doris DAY—Gordon MacRAE
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Color by Technicolor Robert MITCHUM-—Faith DOMERGUE
"WHERE DANGER LIVES" WESTLAKE
Jan FORTRE U6. LANEY of
defenses.
troops are sta[tioned in southern Sakhalin |Island, just a {short ferry ride from Hokkaido. Russia's interinational legion contains a bri|gade called the [Nippon Liberation Army. It's made up from former Japanese soldiers from
nese if Japan
Fortunately,
© By JIM
And It May Need Them
LUCAS |
-
Seripps-Roward Staff Writer
[row Sea of Japan, Russian para-|
| National |nese officials say the police re-
Mr. Lucas
Manchuria. They're now Commu-
nists, When Japan surrendered six years ago, Gen. Douglas Mac-
| Arthur planned to make it the 4 i dail It fires U “Switzerland of the Orient.” The ny 9a ¥: = constitution renounced war as an instrument of national policy and formations.
forbade armed forces. But since g,,.eq4 that the Reds would cause then the situation has changed. trouble when U. S. forces went
: "Children Japan and the United States - uU de are expected to sign a security z= Unger 12 pact after the peace treaty. It
will authorize us to keep troops and bases in Japan. Americans to fight beside
It will bind Japa-
is invaded. But
eventually Japan must raise and maintain her own armed forces.
No Air Force-
Japan has the
nucleus for & defensive. samy” hs Lhe Reps: her National Police -Reserve. In’
| costing.
her maritime commission she has
ithe beginnings of a small navy lor coast guard. But she has noth-
ing resembling an air force. One thing neither her defeat
nor the new constitution can take
[from the Japanese is their military know-how. Americans who
fought against them in the last war are the first to attest that they make excellent soldiers. The National was created soon after the Korean War started. As of now it's exactly what it professes to
|be—a police reserve to be used in case of rioting. Japan has
three branches of police—metro-
| politan police such as in the cities {of Osaka, Tokyo and Yokohama; (municipal police in the smaller
Police Reserve,
75,000 Authorized
Gen. MacArthur authorized Ja{pan to have 75,000 men in the Police Reserve. Japa-|
serve has 68,500 men, This year the police reserve is about 28 billion yen | (about $77 million). The cost, probably will go to 50 million | yen when the treaty is signed. However, since living standards are still 70 per cent of prewar levels, that kind of tax burden would be difficult for the average! Japanese, Already he is paying about 50 per cent of ‘his income! to the government. The National Police Reserve 8. weap-! ons, is taught close order drill, | spends hours perfecting anti-riot! Originally it was
to Korea. But so far the rural police have been able to handle the few isolated outbreaks. A National Reserve Policeman | doesn’t enlist — he just signs a one-year contract. break it and return home. A few
do. But a majority stick it aut §
and like it. For one thing they live better than most civilians,
No Heavy Weapons
Ex “agarmed with’ American carbines, machine guns, bazookas and mortars. They have no tanks or artillery. About 40 per cent of the Reserve leaders are former army officers. A few are from the old imperial navy and air force. Top men in the old regime aren't accepted but officers below the rank of major usually are admitted. Japan undoubtedly will convert her police reserve into a national army, although financing will be difficult. The present plan is to set up 20 divisions of approximately 10,000 men each. What to do about a navy or air force is a problem no one has tackled.
“WOMEN KNOW! That's why wise homemakers of Indianapolis use The Times Classified ads to solve everyday problems. | Watch for bargains or sell your unused articles. PHONE PL-ara|
| vegetables,
He's free to;
And Cheaper
By Science Service
{ BERKELEY, Cal, Sept. 6—A.
TOKYO, Sept. 5—Japan—about to become a sovereign faster, cheaper method of deter__|state after six years of occupation-—is worried about her mining sed-borne fungus diseases
|has been developed by the Uni-| versity of California College of!
She has reason to be. For more than a year a savage| Agriculture, ‘war has raged up and down the
(Korean peninsula across the nar-| police where neither the metro-|tificial food materials William C. | politan nor municipal police exist. Snyder and H. N. Hansen, pro-
“ By using natural instead of ar-
|fessors of plant pathology, have!
[found that fungus diseases in or}
on seeds can be identified’ about one-third the normal Sn]
Bean straw, peas, wheat seed, !
fresh or dehydrated fruits and dead insects, or soil are some of the natural materials used as food for the fungus. Five to seven days after the seeds to be tested are placed on food material-any fungus growth present can usually be identified. On artificial food the fungus taeks two to three weeks to grow In this rich emdium the fungus {grows abundantly large and iden{tification is not always possible. {Growth on the natural material is more like ‘the appearance in nature,
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ,
[Outdoor Cathedral Gets
Soldier Memorial | * RINDGE, N. H,
(UP) — A
bronze war memorial, intended
{for Arlington National Cemetery,
will be placed at the beautiful
{Cathedral of the Pines here.
The memorial is a statue of
"Jesus on the cross looking with
divine compassion on a dying soldier. IL.eonard Craske, a Boston sculptor, completed the war memorial but died before it could be cast in bronze. Trustees of his estate decided against placing it in Washington, preferring the Rindge loca{tion—an outdoor place of wor{ship created in memory of a
World War II lieutenant killed in,
action,
D Shkunks Goh Gate NEWTON, Mass. (UP) -- Two uninvited guests delayed the start of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde S. Casady’'s lawn party. However, they left without protest when an Animal Rescue League agent arrived. The “guests” were a pair of skunks.
MORRISONS
Indiana’s Foremost
Apparel Shop 20 W. Washington St.
Sept. 9th to Sept. 16
Furnished by
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3348 E. Fall Creek Parkway OPEN 11:00 A. M. TO 7:30 P. M.
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For the Benefit of
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Register for the DOOR PRIZE A Butterfly Barrel Lounge Chair
MITCHELL » i Came mands BLAKE Smugglers Gold' |
NOW THRU SAT. OPEN TONITE 7:00 §|
Inside Indpls. 5 Min. From Home |
"Indiana's Finest” Drive-in 960 N. High School Road Donald O'CONNOR—Piper LAURIE
"FRANCIS GOES TO THE RACES"
Sid MELTON-—Iris ADRIAN
"STOP THAT CAB"
= PLUS COLOR CARTOONS —
WESTSIDE OUTDOOR THEATRE
© 7301 W. Washi—1 Mi. W. Ben Davis Box Of. Open 1:30—Show Stars Dusk
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OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS TILL 8:00
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