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gg: Cmdr. Schneider Ordered To Duty In Washington Commander Tony T. Sthneider USN, the-son of Mr. and Mrs. T.| fp E. Schneider of Hillsboro, Mo., and a wartime combat Helldiver| pilot with two Navy Crosses for) his dive-bombing feats, has re- ceiveq’ orders for transfer to} Washington, D. C., in early June} for duty, involving flying under} | been in; the Tactical Development Section! the chief of naval operations. CDR Schneider has of Air Development Squadron! One, Naval Air Station, Key} West, sinee June 1948 and officer in charge of that section for the| past year. He came to VX-1 from| a oc Line School, Newport, | en E | CDR Schneider was promoted to his present rank in January) 1951. .He was commissioned as} ensign at Naval Air Station, Mi-| ami, in November 1940. A month} later he was attached to VB-9, a/ bombing squadron aboard the, USS Enterprise, which was late! to become famous as “The Fight-| ing Lady” for its exploits in the air-sea warfare against the Jab-| anese. The first. Mavy Cross oa) awarded...to CDR Schneider in} April 1942 for his bombing op-| erations in the Battle of Midway. It was during these operations, | too, that CDR Schneider, then a lieutenant, was forced down and| was*adrift at sea fér three da’ He was finally sighted and r ‘Allies er Red Offensive x" ait AF mole a Biv a a se : Puthon R ; | icp NV, fmm > ‘Kimpo ‘Ue niachan “ie” Fe, ae Vs INCHON § = KX " A ‘Ys Pg SEOUL \Y SAN. M sHoonasong 4 Eo Se ¢ > y: “\SUWON \ chon re ns ys wey ee Yongwo! Sy Chechon ‘. SOUTH er KOREA | | Svea (®) Wirephoto Map} of Japan IN ADDITION TO STOPPING THE COMMUNIST OFFENSIVE in Korea, Allied troops have re-occupied Munsan and Uijongbu (A) north of Seoul. Although Red artillery opened up on Allied positions in the Kapyong area, U.N. forces continued to push forward (B) to Pukhart and the Hongchon rivers. near Chunchon, Russian-type tanks were spotted by Allied ob- the Communists pushed back the servers. To the east (C), South Koreans around Soksa. in the mountainous area, In this area Heavy fighting was reported BULLETINS |INCREASE IN TAXES WASHINGTON, May 23.—(?),| ~The House Ways and Means) | Committee has voted for an in-| ‘Lieut. Covern ‘Reports For Active Duty Here Lieutenant Raymond F. Gov- cued by Al Barthos who later| crease of 12 and one-half per cent} |ern, (CHC) USN, has reported io served with CDR Schneider at! in individual income taxes, It also|the U. S. Naval Station, Key VX-1, | voted to raise the excess profits West, for active duty. He reliev- CDR Schneider also served o1 In both the ‘aircraft carriers USS York. | | town. and USS Lexington, and! his wartime experience as a} bomber pilot with those outfits} Republican committee members ané with a shore-based Squadron | at Guadalcanal andthe Fiji Is-| lands, fitted him well for a brief seven months’ tour ashore as dive bombing and tactics instructor under ComFleetAir at Seattle, Washington. With the end of this duty in April 1944 he was back.again in the Pacifi¢ area as! commanding officer of VB-9 and’ VB-97. It was while attached to VB-9 that CDR Schneider was awarded his second Navy Cross for his part in the defeat of elements of} the Japanese fleet, including the} Battleship Yamato and the Cruis- |} er Agana, in April 1945. Other decorations that he holds are the Distinguished Flying} Cross*Wifi' two stars, the Aid Medal with five stars, three Pres- identjal ‘Unit Citations (the Car- tiers Enterprise, Yorktown and the Lexington) and other, defense and area ribbons. CDR Schneider has been resid- ing at 1707 Washington street, Key West, with his wife and son, P. Ross, five years old. Mrs. Schneider, the former Miss Jean} ;,..., Ross, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Ross of St. Louis, Mo. Prior to entering the Navy he graduated’ from DeSoto, Mo. High School and graduated with) a bachelor of arts degree frorn Westininster College, Fulton, Mo., fax on corporations. | cases, the action was determined on straight party-line votes, And charged the proposals were rail-| roaded through. ” BOMBER CRASHED. TODAY NEW LISBON, Ind., May 23.— (®)—A large bomber crashed and burned on a field today néar here. State police say some of ihe men aboard parachuted | sefely. These included the pilot and a civilian. Altogether, 12 persons were on the plane, which is understood to have been on an experimental flight. New Members New members of the Chamber of Commerce include the Navy E. Braxton, 1221 Packer street. is president; Southernmost Flowers thy Raymer, and Keys Optical Service, street, owned by Truman L. Anjy. | Today’s Horoscope owner, Those born as the day advances a more daring nature. There éloquen prominence and should d attain Conserv the energies as this nature wears itself out and there are -indica- tions that life may be finished in 1939. winter. just as success is achieved. US. Aey Photo via (P) ee LT eae DOERNBACH from Egg Harbor, N. J., comforts his-sobbing Korean charge after the little girl fled from an orphanage to rejoin him in Seoul. for “the child since she was found abandoned in a village last Later he placed her in the orphange but her longing The lieutenant has cared for him caused her to run away 8nd find him. and Gifts, 616 Duval street, Doro- | 423 Simonton| | duty, Chaplain Govern returned | |to Siena College, | all yery well and we who | shake them wear low heels. But es LCDR. Emmett Michaels, Catholic Chaplain at the Station. Chaplain Govern is the son of |Mr. and Mrs. William S. Govern | of Stamford, N. Y. He attended Catholic University in Washing- son, D. C. and studied Philoso- phy and Theology under the aus- pices of the Province of the Most Holy Name (Franciscan Order). He received the Degree of Bachelor of Arts in Mathe- matics from Rensselaer Poly- technic Institute, Troy, N. ¥,,) and immediately aftetwards| went to Siena College, Loudon- | ville, N. Y. as instructor in Math- | ematics. | In, 1944, Chaplain Govern en- | tered the Charlain’s Corps, U. S. | Naval Reserve. He attended the | Chaplain’s School, William and | ; Mary College, Williamsburz, Va., | | for 9 weeks, upon the completion of which he served aboard the Wives Club of which Mrs. Teresa | transport General R. M. Blatch- | ford (AP-153) in the European- | African-Middle Eastern Atea and | Asiatic-Pacific Area as Catholic Chaplain from January 1945 to | July 1946. / Upon his release to inactive Loudanville, N. Y. as an instructor in Mathe- matics and Registrar and Dean | of Admissions: | Right Style Is Needed ToGet Women Volunteers LONDON.—().—Patriotism is are; about to die salute you and all that—but in the Women’s Royal Air Force those hats’ were more than a king could ask of a girl. Those terrible, shapeless hats! The Women’s Royal Air Force could take the girls away from home’and mother. It could make them get uj abr six in the ae i the Women’s Royal Air Force was having a tough time recruit-| ing the gals into those hats! | This is to report that his majes- | ty has fixed the hats. The Wom- | en’s Royal Air Force has given | all of its 11,000 girls new hats. The new hat is made of blocked fur felt, and it has a little peak, | something like the hats worn by| the Lady Marines in the United States. And the women of the} Women’s Royal Air Force can! now appear in public and still be happy. Today’s Birthdavs | Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., board| chairman of General Motors, born in New Hayen, Conn., 76 years ago. | Vice Admiral Robert M. Griffin, born in Washington, D. C., 61 years ago. Mabel W. Willebrarfidt of Los Angeles, lawyer, onetime assist- ant U.S. attorney-general,. born in Woodsdale, Kansas, 62 years ago. : STRONG ARM BRAND COFFEE s jon the exireme east-|: jern flank of the line,|' |where a see-saw bat eke | tle continues between| BATTERED AND | The enemy Jong GA Pee jently i is putting up his *pungam \Y /.4 |Only stiff The Reds managed |’ to cut the east-west! Tow KBY Wood Cliizan (Continuee from Page One) (Continued F: lthiles northeast of/ #7. S7ct Pe | Seoul. h, $16 Whi resistance] Fi Hjort, en nN igh, 29-1 |Chinese Communi O. Ladd jand South Korea | troops. leet chaes 120 SELECTEES: IN 3491 Avenue E; Franc United — street; WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1951 een | by six electric units. And these, ace B, Kirke, 1011 Von 2 1si9| Mi shi ° Is y ; , : Pi street; Joseph L, Menendez, 1419 WIOONS ming Ss of course, eliminated the tell-ta ag i | Thompson ge eas nds, smoke which has undone so many ty T11| |706 White Stre William moonshiners in the past. Sheriff 2702 St te str onio Trujillc al street; Jermain Pau Poinciana Place;;" 1 ee and f Av | 1035 United str 716 Whitmarsh L H Fred Le R.|¥ , 810 Flor lace Johnson, Mardis ; Ralph H. leolm J. J raday Florida; -erez, 903 Packer id Richey arrested Harold Crowe, on charges of possessing untaxed whiskey. According to Richey, Crowe said he got the idea for wit Keeping Richt Up To The Tlie CHATTANOOGA, Tenn,-—(). 121 Holle ed street. {pening is an old. art—but the electric still from advertise », Jt., 1221 Pack-! it’s keeping right up to date these] ments for the cheap electricity in C. Sands, 1011, days. A little native Tennessee} the Tennessee Valley Authority 1 P. Robert j ingenuity and a supply of TVA) region. lterson, ",ower can improve the efficiency P Robert “| of a hill-billy still, no end, i CONCERNING? ancis| covered in Hamilton county by AUTOMOBILES SEE THE oADS is 3 Sheriff Rex Richey, It was deep re.) in the woods on Daisy Mountain 7 WI NS é mote bit of country not far n Chattanooga. 1130 Duvar Sr. PH. 1870-1871 still was heated The moonshine 2433 Fogarty avenue;} = : 3 ren A. Bethel 5 jnighwey trom the sec Fa* C. Stickney, 1113 | Stump| iin sa. Roberts, 25 miles} stapi xe; Rafael J. Her Robert F eo Place: Leo Mc.| Flagler avenue t | im of the 38th Par-|ac* ° GHancue sheet |e, Marathon, Florida Located in the Heart of the City allel. |Harry C. Osterhoudt, 07 Mar.| Mattes Sou RATES WRITE or WIRE a Fi al sas a) Joe Barcelo, 421 Ange street; R 00 S ESERVATIONS Than Allied — rein-| garet street | Julio Lopez, 814 Olivia street i BASONABER R M ee rott, 906 Florid | with BATH and TELEPHONE |forcements rushed up| Milton A. Par and cut the enemy|‘“" supply line at a nar-| row mountain pass. Mus! al theatrical enter {ed almost exclu speaking peoples. comedy. is a form. of inment develo; vely by English Jel Pino, 313 Mail. The Gitizen to Friends Ford Miller Pershing Machin, § | Benjamin C = <j Hotel Hotel Hotel pend. atreel,| Yoga x PE that Goot | go NE rd St. 226 NE Ist Ave, 229 NE, Ast Ave. 9 ieee 80 Ri s 100 Rooms 8 Mario. Avila, 714] AMERICAN COFFEE Solarium Heated Elevator es Erne RCo | an 4 3 BLOCKS FROM UNION BUS STATION 7 Snares ay | —-TRY A POUND TODAY— B15 THREE HOTELS IN MIAMI at POPULAR PRICES ‘ Think of tomorrow when you buy tires today! No one can tell you how long the tires you buy today may have to last you. So when you need new tires . . . get the best .. . get Goodyear Super-Cushion tires. Remember, when you get Goodyear Super-Cushions, you are get- ting the tires that are ysed on more new cars than any other kind . +. that are bought by more car owners than any other low- pressyre tire. 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