Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1946 — Page 14

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\ : 8 year; all other states, | - A W\ U. 8 possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a 4

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[NONARDE Give Light ond the People Will Find Their Own Way

WE RECOMMEND: of the mest difficult jobs facing voters tomorrow “is selection of qualified candidates. : "After studying records of all who seek nomination Tuesday, The Times has prepared its recommendations for information of voters. We have indorsed the persons we believe best qualified on the basis of experience and background. 4 Some candidates are running merely for publicity, Others are perennial office-séekers. Others mierely want a job, Still others lack experience. And among the long lists, too, are capable men and women of experience. Purpose of indorsing candidates is to point out those who, in our considered judgment, we feel to be best of those running. While we are not satisfied that certain of these are the best that could be obtained by the two major parties, nevertheless in our view they are better | qualified than their opponents.

" " r » u n

HE fact a candidate is not listed is not condemnation. Juvenile court is a case in point. Last primary, we

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indorsed Edwin C. Boswell for the Republican nomination. This time, we picked Harold N. Fields, who with support of the non-partisan juvenile court committee has

Hoosier Forum

say, but |

“| do not agree with a word that you

your right to say. it." — Voltaire.

will defend to the death

best chance to defeat Judge Mark Rhoads, whose record

does not meet the test of serving the community's children. | "Co to Polls and Vote: Don't Ld

A bitter fight is being made by the Bradford-Ostrom

faction of the Republican party to control the key law en- | Just Look the Other Way Tuesday"

forcement offices of prosector and sheriff. It wants these positions because they are necessary to keep them in the

| v | saddle.

| that comes to mind as the day to vote ro

By L. W.V., Indianapolis

There was a scene in a movié shown during the last war loan grain. Yes, they show the stupid lls around.’ It was a short | Americans that go over there just

This group of bosses put over Prosecutor Sherwood | dialogue between a French officer and the American G.I. who was |

trying to- figure out just what he was fighting for.

The Frenchman, |

Blue and Judge Rhoads. Analysis of their performance and [atria the retreat of the Nazis, had only one desire and that was | that of Sheriff Petit convinces us that none of these men, Or | to get back to Paris in time to vote. To him that was the essence of}

_ their henchmen, has any place in public office. g » 8» ws 8

| the freedom he had been fighting four long years for. The G.I. had What she is going for. | to admit that he had just not taken the time to vote in the last election. | But, unless somehow we have felt the significance of the privilege up for clothes,

JUDGE Judson L. Stark, former prosecutor with an ex- |of going to the polls, we just seem to take a let-thé-other-fellow-do-it |

cellent record to commend his bid for that nomination, |attitude about voting. French women r | voted for the first time last spring;

spearheads opposition within the Republican party to |jaoanese women cast their vote for ‘machine domination. We are for Mr. Stark. We hope the |the first time just last month and Republicans nominate him and start housecleaning—and |surprised the world at their rethe house needs it badly | sponse to their franchise. American

+ : . women who raised such a fuss to Here, then, is the list of candidates we recommend: |obtain their franchjse twenty-five

VIEWS

ON

THE NEWS

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY

REPUBLICAN OFFICE DEMOCRATIC : the. comfort of the luxury that is|4emocracy ‘abroad. Congress, 11th District theirs and turned up missing in the glogan: Paul E. Tombaugh Louis Ludlow large numbers at the polls.

1t is incredible that at this most

“Democracy means | free elections and free U. 8. loans!”

We have been criticized for not] years ago have settled back Into|shreading a good

definition of | Why not use|

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taken our country everything would have been gone. Don't kid yourself about their conditions. Right now they are yelling their heads off for grain but are sending liquor back to the states they make from our

what they want them to see. Why don't they send an average housewife to find out conditions. Send her without telling these countries

They said England was so hard well, their war brides don't show it although I have not had a new dress for two| years, can't buy a slip, hose, un-| mentionables or a corset in any of the stores. I patched my husband’s work clothes until they looked like a Halloween getup, but we do have all our bonds. The only way to be happy is to work for what you get. Charity | makes a man lazy. When our industries shut down for lack of coal to send to Europe, I quit. I won't give one cent to them when we have so much suffering

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Prosecuting Attorney Judson L. Stark i Judge Superior Court, Room 1 John L. Niblack Judge Superior Court, Room 2 Hezzie B. Pike * Judge Superior Court, Room 3

(No indorsement) {No contest) Judge Superior Court, Room 4 (No contest) (No contest) Judge Superior Court, Room § ; Ralph Hamill v Ned E Corcoran Judge Probate Court (No contest) (No contest) : Judge Criminal Court 5 (No contest) Jacob L. Steinmetz

Judge Juvenile Court

Arthur J. Sullivan Chalmer Schlosser

Clyde P. Miller

Harold N. Fields (No contest) State Senator , - 7 Hoyt Moore yk Raymond F. Murray ’ State Representatives : John G. Tinder Keith L. Johns

Margaret L. Wyatt Katherine Walton Atkins Harry W. Claffey Nelle B. Dowfiey . William L. Fortune Wilbur Homer Grant 4 Herbert E. Hill Booth T. Jameson Della Fussell: Hoss Bert C. McCammon

Mercer M.

Earl J. Cox Wray

Joint Representative Kenneth F. Blackwell

ie Clerk of Circuit Court Walter E. Hemphill

“County Auditor

Alvie D. Killion Mance ; Thomas Joseph Mulrine Anna W. Owen Richard G. Stewart Herbert J. Backer Robert Douglas Bash James H. Bookedis

E. Fleming John W. Murphy Jr

E. Curtis White

critical time in all eur history that we should continue to look the| other way when the men are being | chosen who will lead us during the | years which will see either a.

Chinese Communists are finding and misery here at home. Little it difficult to decide whether %/chjldren without shoes or proper put their civil war peace treaties food, no butter for our children, on a daily, weekly or monthly basis. no meat for our workers. winning of the peace or chaos. We | — 2.8.» Why don't we Americans wake can not have forgotten so soon | If the senate can give “The Man" up and see that charity begins’ at! the suffering endured by the Bilbo two-months leave to cam- home, citizens of conquered countries— |paign, why not extend it to six| MT citizens. 'who forgot to vote into months semi-annually if he is re- “CAN I COLLECT BACK office the leaders who would have | elected. PAY THROUGH MY UNION” kept them strong enough to with- 8 2 2 “| By Dorothy Waiters, 1105 S.- Kappes st. stand the evil forces which led| Egypt has a New Deal according | I was employed in an industry them into destruction, {to King Farouk's press agent. 80 | which was granted a raise retroMay 7 is the day for selection; that’s what became of it! active June, 1943. At present. I am November the time for election. | not employed at this particular $* 8 8 | "OUR INDUSTRIES SHUTTING [place and wasn't at the time they| “KICK OUT OPA; IF PUT | DOWN, WE SEND COAL ABROAD” | paid the back pay. | ME OUT OF MEAT BUSINESS” | By Carroll Collins, Indianapolis, { What I would like to know is this. | By C. B., Indianapolis | Don't you think the editor's note |I was a member of the union at

1 am a small meat packer. Ilin the Forum.laid a heavy hand the time of this employment and {Have been forced out of bustness | Roy Lesher? I do, for you ou ht |! have asked them to pay this back) | lon Roy: Leshe ’ y 80%] nay to me. They say they will not

{by -the _assinine and ridiculous |t0 hear Mr. and Mrs. Average .. 1. pack nay to ex-employees| | multiplicity of regulations of the American tell the same story. Yes, {POF 3 it is rion 1 bios yee |OPA. Many of my customers have {hey believe we are doing too much | oo but I have not even received an fosen forced to close their restau- but they are afraid - to say 80 | cknowledgement of my request. rants and meat counters because I because of public opinion, criticism |; any of your Forum writers know can not furnish them with meat. | OF ridicule. whether I can collect T.would be I know of instances on the city| If the paperswould print Patton's | Jo obliged to hear from them market of certain stand owners diary, the truth would be told that | 11 rough your columa. {being forced to join the union and England did lay down and let the {upon joining the union they were Americans take the losses in both {furnished plenty of meat. I wonder men and money. The money was. “EDITOR'S NOTES SERVE TO if the OPA is the tool of ‘certain not important for that can be CORRECT MISINFORMATION” greedy organizers? learned again, but the men will not | pu. Hiram Lackey, Columbus . | I am an American citizen and return. Christian is the word for the

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feel that I have a right to do| I have my grandbaby and daugh-|,.. .. .. or “Editor's Note” in business * in’ the American way ter here with me. Her income from | 4 ooster Forum. The ignorance of without being forced to join a|the government for the loss of her us wit Ve 0 write too long has

union or be tied to the chains of husband is about $21- a week. Yes, bureaucracy. he sleeps for all time in Germany. Therefore I am opposing the_con- She goes to town barelegged for she | ditions of the OPA and I am in can't buy stockings. favor of the immediate abolition| I don't think these were harsh tof. this vicious anti - American (words but honest common sense. ‘ nations had

| been ignored. The man most unfortunate in education can cast a vote in our democracy and “kill” the vote of the wisest man. The | respect some people have for print-

ed articles is so profound that to

"You know if these

ru { bureau Norman W. Gordon iT

(No contest) l

County Treasurer Louis W. Fletcher John T. Fogarty

5 County Recorder

Side Glances—By Galbraith

(No indorsement) Katherine Price Dunn

County Sheriff

(No indorsement) Lewis Johnson

County Coroner

Roy B. Storms : (No contest). a: County Surveyor (No contest) j : (No contest) * County Assessor , (No contest) : Fred W. Nordseik County Commissioner, First District ——(No contest) Leo J. White

. Gounty Commissioner, Second District ad contest) . William A. Brown

fo a County Councilmen at Large . William M. Taylor Charles O. Joyce

Eugene M. Fife Jr. Raymond Sanders Russell EB. Hutchinson Silas J. Carr

County Councilman, First District (No contest) County Councilman, Second District : (No contest)

County Councilman, Third District George R. Hollingsworth Harry F. Holt

2 . County Councilman, Fourth District y Addison J. Parry : (No candidate) "Township Trustee, Center Township ir | © Henry Mueller | agree with these recommendations or orrow and vote. Then you will |

(No contest)

(No contest) jig

|

GOPR. 1948 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. T. M. REG, U. 8. PAT, OFF.

permit ignorance and meanness to go unchallenged is dangerous, The man who absorbs such folly today may not read answers to it published on following days. All hall the democratic use of editor's notes, Happy is the man who loves to be corrected. ” n » “PLEASE KEEP WABASH SERVICE CENTER OPEN

By A Group of Servitemen Stationed Nearby, Indianapolis

We, the servicemen still stationed in the vicinity of Indianapolis, degire to have the Wabash Service men's Center to remain open after the 31st of May. The loss of the Illinois SMC was a hard blow, but the loss of the Wabash SMC would leave the servicemen stationed in the In-

their friends here.

apolis, want this? apolis?

DAILY THOUGHT

80 when they continued-asking | him, he lifted up himself, and said unto them, He that is wighout sin-among you, let him first cast a stone at her.-—John 8:7. - o ”

Whence do

cting your officials instead of tariping of machine slates. .

5 ’

ut a

a.

itl"

*

“Let's see if we can tee off om this rookie pitcher—he was a second -| though an old man, do wo id + lieutenant in my ou :

dianapolis area na contact with

We, the soldiers ahd sailors stationed here, would have no recreational facilities and no convenient place to lodge overnight. We do not want to become wanderers of Ine dianapolis streets. Do you, Indian-

What is your answer, Indian-

you derive the power

WT NE TAP EOI aa

1 ALWAYS CONSIDERED myself a lucky kid. if, by.any chance, . I found myself standing on the corner of Meridian and Washington sts., when Box’ 45 went off. It was a sure sign the whole fire department would show up. i 0 ) For sheer excitement there was nothing like it around here when I was a little boy. To be sure, the fires very often weren't anything to brag about, but it always paid tq stick around, if for no other reason than -to review the grand lot of horses the Indianapolis fire department had at the time. I guess I was luckier than most kids, for I remember standing on that corner on - three different occasions when Box 45 went off. And on all three occasions I acted in exactly the same way. At any rate, I distinctly recall that as soon as I sensed the significance of the event, I immediately turned my back on the fire and peeled my eyes in the direction of Illinois st. so that I wouldn't miss seeing Dick and Ned round the corner and make their final dash down Washington st.” I'd give anything to see something half as exciting today. My interest in Dick and Ned may be traced to the fact that they were the horses that lent luster to my bailiwick which, of course, is another way of saying that they were the horses that belonged to Engine House 10 located at the corner of Merrill st. and Russell ave.

No Nags Among Them MOST OF THE KIDS around town, I suppose, stuck up for their horses just as I did for mine. However, I always felt sorry for the other kids. They had such a long way to go to beat Dick and Ned, Now that my blood is coursing somewhat slower through my veins, I'm inclined to be’ a bit more broad-minded. Perhaps the other kids had something to brag about, after all Certainly, the W. Washington st. kids around Engine House 6 had something to brag about. That was the home of Tom and Jerry, a pair of roundbellied, full-chested little fellows that somebody, who knew his business, had picked up off the auction block at the Stockyards. ~The tore to a fire like

Be i CLI i Ra tT

R TOWN . . .’By Anton Scherrer SR

. Ardent Fans of Dashing Firehorses

a streak of lightning, especially when Johnny Meadows did the driving, HE : I wouldn't for the world minimize Tom and Jerry's

great performance but, even’ now, I wonder whether

their feat of reaching Box 45, in the time they did, wasn't due more or less to the fact that they had a straight run down Washington st, with no impediments put in their way. , Dick and Ned, I'm sure, could have turned the trick except for the obstacles they had to lick. For one thing they had to make a turn to reach Box 45, to say nothing of getting in and out of the Illinois st. tunnel,,the incline of which was so steep that a streetcar couldn't get up without the help of an extra mule. ' The boys who hung around No. 11 on E. Washington st. had something to brag about, too. Their outfit consisted of Bob and Billy, a pair of sorrels if I remember correctly. With Louis Glass holding the reins, they never failed to give a good account of themselves. For the same reason: They also had the luck to have a straight run to reach Box 45. Joe Keys behind Dandy and Dick looked mighty good, too. I'm really sure they also belonged to the East Side for I remember that they always

approached Box 45 from somewh courthouse, Se yn! tv

No Nags Among Them

COME TO THINK OF IT, there wasn't a nag among the lot. Engine House 1 on Indiana ave, had John and Norman, as lively a pair of browns as ever graced the streets of Indianapolis® “Long” John Miller held the reins, I believe, Hook & Ladder 5.had Old Star and Country; and No. 7 on Maryland st. just around the corner from Box 45, had Fred and Billy, Because of their strategic location, Fred and Bllly were, of course, always the first to arrive at Box, 45. The last to arrive, as a rule, were the two grays belonging to Engine House 3 way out on Prospect st. Indeed, more often than not, they turned up after the fire was out. It wasn't because they were slow, Not at all. It was their hard luck to have to plough through Madison ave, the muddiest roadway Ine dianapolis ever had. I trust that this belated ade mission will square me with the Prospect st. boys for ali the cruel things I may have said about their firehorses.

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Thomas L. Stokes Senate Needs Limitation on Debate

WASHINGTON, May 6.—Senator Taft of Ohio came from a meeting .of the Republican steering committee and announced that the party leaders had discussed way and means of changing present senate rules to limit debate. Nothing was ever more timely, even though the Republican leaders only discussed it. = For the senate has been talking for three weeks now about one thing, the proposed British loan—tons of talk but not a mite of action. And this one of the most important matters that has come before that august body in the whole field of foreign relations.

British Loan Offers Spectacle

SENATOR® TAFT WAS somewhat. vague. ‘The steering committee, he said, had discussed amending the cloture rule “so that various dilatory methods of preventing its action can be eliminated.” Under present senate rules it is possible to talk forever, figuratively. There are only two recourses. One is voluntary limitation of debate, done oceasionally on matters not too highly controversial. Other is mechanical means provided by the cloture rule. Under this rule, procedure is fer 18 senators to sign a cloture petition. One such now has been signed on the British loan. Then a two-thirds vote of the senate is required to impose cloture. That is what is hard. The senate has clung to freedom of debate to protect rights of a minority to full discussion, but it has been exploited to paralyze action, as has been demonstrated so often, most recently .on the FEPC bill and always when the anti-poll tax bill is brought up. ’ Republicans presumably would revise the present

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert

cloture rule to make it more workable, possibly with a majority instead of two-thirds vote to enforee it. There should be, sometime, an end of talk but under present rules the senate is literglly powerless. The interminable debate and delay on the British loan bill have almost distracted Senate Democratia Leader Barkley. The Kentucky senator finally lost both his patience and his temper and demanded a voluntary limitation of debate. As he said truthfully, every senator knows by now how he is going to.vote. From the galleries, it looks most of the time like a Pullman car in the last depression, only a few lonely souls on the floor. Quorum call after quorum cal] has been necessary. to round up enough senators to hold a session. Senators, of course, can hardly be blamed for not wanting.to sit for hours to listen to Senator Bilbo (D. Miss) or Senator Langer (R. N, D.) who talk as if wound up.

Present System Is Travesty

BUT IT'S HARD to get anybody for the more seri ous debate. This is what makes the performance a travesty. In a real debate, with attention to the ise sues, the whole subject could be explored in a reason= able time. What is happennig is a filibuster by opponents who want to hold off action so that the loan bill will have to be displaced by the pressing draft and OPA measures, . Republican leaders designated Senator Saltonstall (Mass.) to draft some sort of revision in the cloture rule to make it more workable. He is comparatively’ new in the senate, and perhaps can approach the sub= ject with a freshness and vigor impossible to veteran senators who have become hardened.

C. Ruark

Aussie Beer Makes Accurate Prophet

NEW YORK, May 6.—About a year ago, in the public bar of the St. George hotel, on St. Kilda road in, Melbourne, Australia, three men officially -terminated the war against the Japanese, thereby scooping the world by a full three months. :

The men were A. J. MacWhinnie, correspondent for .

the’ London Daily Herald, Lt. Cmdr. Alan Brockbank of the royal navy, and myself. I ‘was navy press censor for combined operations in Nimitz’ theater. What transpired was a plece of journalism which

| should live forever.

Shortening the War

MR. MacWHINNIE, a redheaded gentleman with thick spectacles, handlebar mustaches and a khaki tam o'shanter, was morose. He was just back from the wars, and he had an overdose of bad food, tropical itch and bucket-seat travel. He had seen, for the first time in that area, broad expanses of Jap-held territory, and he had broken his glasses. He had been away from home too long, and he had been counting Japs. . “I am definitely dispirited, old boy,” said Mr. Mac.

mistic thing for my paper. Please meet me at the censoring table at the George, for I do not feel that 1 can stand censorship without aid of a liter or so of Melbourne bitter.” Brockbank, a British public relations officer whose duties were to keep correspondents happy, was already at the bar with Mac. They were discussing his literary effort, taking care to blow no foam on it. “Mac's piece says the war is sure to last another two years, maybe three” said Brockbank. “He reckons that we will have to pull every last Jap out of his hole before they'll quit.” «Absolutely right, old boy,” said, Mac. “I've just seen some of the islands your people took. On Guam,

WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By Wi Paratroopers

WASHINGTON, May 6.—American officers who risked their lives parachuting into Yugoslavia to help fight the axis, bitterly resent the Tito government's virtual charge that some of them? collaborated with the enemy. ~The innuendo is contained in a release from the Yugoslav embassy here. Under the caption: “Colloboration with the enemy in Serbia,” an unnamed “American colonel” is quoted as saying, -in-eflect, that the United States would fix the post-liberation elections so that Tito would be eliminjated. Meantime “he asks us (the Chetniks) to continue the struggle even with the support of the Germans.”

War Department Is Accused CQNTINUING THE RELEASE states: ‘There was a powerful clique of officers in the war department in Washington, close to Gen. Marshall, which felt (and apparently still feels) that Mikhailovitch's collaboration with the Germans was ni ary in order to prevent the spread of ‘communistn, But by September, 1944, the course of events must have compelled even this group of admirers of Mikhailovitch’s treason to use discretion in criticizing the movement of Marshal Tito and assuring thie collaboratof's of the “I continued support of the government of the United Blanes” hlet ally The mphlet appare Tn of New ‘York. Aiding to the embassy, 1t is a condensed translation from a volume of 735 pages published in- Yugoslavia. - But what- Amer‘joan officers resent most is that because of the em-

and privilege of a parent, when.

( ypur child) ?—Juvenal. i

.

Bassy's sponsorship, Belgrade makes the slur official.

a ‘a . ol

> A A ol

,

Whinnie that morning. “I have written a very pessi-’

written by Vaso

‘and Capt. George:

for instance, the caves are full of Japs who'd rather starve than surrender. Really, old boy, I can’t see the finish of this thing for years and years.” It was a gloomy piece, but there were no security violations, so-I passed it. For laughs, Brockbank and 1 started to work on Mac, and after two beers it began to take. “All right, all right,” Mac said. last then?” “Righteen months,” said a stranger. : “Six months,” Brockbank said. “Three months,” I said. “Give us another pint o' beer,” said Mac. ‘IN rewrite the story.” . Mac revised his stuff to read that it would probably be over in 18 months and then we beat him down to a year. He chopped it to six months, and we poured another beer. Finally, he settled for three and cabled the piece. to his paper. Next morning one of the Melbourne papers picked it off the broadcast and there was Mac on the first page, under the headline: “Noted War Correspondent Sees War's End in Three Months.” “Oh, my God,” said Mr. MacWhinnie, when he saw it. “I am definitely ruined, old boy, definitely.”

Censors Buy No Ale and Vittles WELL, THE WAR went along and the Japs suddently cracked wide open and MacWhinnie was back in Australia, He had forgotten about his story, until, when the end was obvious his paper remembered the random shot and ‘played it up. When VJ-day came, he had missed it about two days, and was a hero. Brockbank and I gave him no rest, thereafter. bouglit no drinks, paid for no meals. out that we had saved his journalistic career, and but for us, plus Melbourne beer, he would have been a laughing stock.

“How long will it

We We pointed

liam Philip Simms

Resent Tito Charges

8. Musulin, Pittsburgh—now returned to private life —are representatives. Both were with the OSS, and both served with Gen. Mikhailovitch whom the Tito regime accuses of high treason. Capt. Lalich parae chuted into Mikhailovitch’s territory on Aug. 2, 1843, and remained until Dec. 27, 1944, Capt. Musulin dropped on Oct. 18, 1043, and left on May 20, 1944,

Returning on Aug. 2, he went out for the second time

on-Aug.-29-to-report. To insintiate, if not actually charge, that Amer . {ean officers were collaborators with the enemy, they said is far too grave a matter to be overlooked. Both ‘the war and, state departments are implicated. That the United States government will gloss over the mat= ter is unthinkable—at least to the Americans who risked their lives in the common fight against the axis,

Mikhailovitch Being Railroaded. THE TWO MEN SAID they were allowed come plete freedom. Speaking the language, they could and did talk with soldiers and civilians alike, Gen. Mikge hilovitch permitted them to sit in and listen to officerg reporting—which, they contend, he would not have dared to do ‘had he been a traitor. Through them, he requested that American and other foreign corre gpondents be sent to join his army and that Russian, British and American officers be attached to his staff as observers. ~ - Both said, slightly in different langauage: “We are

Americans. - Whether Mikhailovitch is innocent or

guilty 1s not for us, but for a court to decide. We ask only that he be given a fair trial—which he can’t get from the Tito regime because it has siready adjudged him guilty.” =: 7 A J:

MOND

SCHILL SET]

Native of Activ Services J

: postal clerk 1} be held in M

_ chapel at 10 ¢

will follow in Born in Mi ling was 59 w in his reside Active all hi church work reader for f class of Bros and had bee lodeg, Odd 22 years, Survivors a son, Richard Mrs. Paul R apolis; a sist mons, and a | both of Mo grandchildren

SAMUEL E.

Services wi tomorrow in for Samuel F yesterday at 9th st. Bur Valley cemets Mr, Newhc - most of his 1 rence. He wi; at South Gr caretaker unt eral years aj Methodist ch . Survivors a a son, Claud of Indianapol Newhouse, Se Claude E. Ne two great-gra nieces and nt

MRS. ANNA

Services fo tel, native here for 41 St. Catherine 9 a. m. We M. Downey, charge and Joseph's cem Born in |] died Saturda E. Minnesota was the widc Survivors Hittel Jr.; fit gar Kelsey, Mary, Rose one brother, sisters, Mrs. liam Kiel, al Mrs. Joseph six grandchil

OMER B. D

Services wi tomorrow ir United Brett B. Dale, reti tinental Steel will be in Gt Frankfort. Mr. Dale 1 ave. and died cis hospital. Boone count the Universit Modern Woo came to Ind his retiremer pany. Survivors ¢ sie; two di: Kressel, Frar R. Kek, Ir brothers, Wil and Roy A. |

PHILIP S. L

The Rev. ] Swedenborgisz duct rites Peace chapel Philip S. L Superior She years, Buria. Hill. Mr. Lendor in various cif of the Mutu: tors of Public lodge, I. O. in his home, was 78. His sister, dormi, India:

MRS. HARR Services fo of 2001 Mille morrow at 1 blossom mort Mt.. Pleasant Mrs, Hodg in the home Linnie Whit« A native o Hodge had years at 1739 a member of odist church. Survivors, | are another McGuire of George Beas three sisters, Indianapolis, Martinsville of Maywood and eight gr »

MRS. NESSI

Rites for 1 was killed in Friday night be held.at 2 Cave, Ky. «there, She

CHARLES A Services fo ris, retired h be held tom the Acton Burial will b Mr. Morris home in Act one year. Hi A native o Morris had ri and had re from the Mh was -a memb church. Survivors Mrs. Charles Mrs. Willian O., and Mrs. olis; a son, anapolis; tw ris of Acton, . Greenwood, :