Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1946 — Page 12
ndianapolis Times GE 12 Monday, Aug. 19, 1946 ~~ W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ President : . Editor Business Manager i a Bo "A SORIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Owned and published dally (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Publishing Co., 214 W. Maryland st. "Postal Zone 9. Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and ‘Audit Bureau of Circulations. A Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy: ered by carrier, 20 cents a week.
Mail rates in Indiana, $5 a year; all other states, U, S. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a
month. EP RI-5551.
Give Light and the People Will Find Thetr Own Way
dellv-
U. S. AID FOR MENTAL PATIENTS
THE county commissiofiers are wisely looking into recent federal legislation authorizing aid funds for construction of hospitals and health centers. ty “Some steps toward a new hospital must be taken here soon to eliminate shocking conditions in private nursing homes and to relieve over-crowded hospitals,” says Commissioner William T. Ayres. The federal act was designed to give financial aid to states which sought to improve existing institutions or to construct new ones. ; : Health authorities here assert that the county should construct a hospital for chronically ill and senile persons, and that the next general assembly should appropriate funds to improve the present archaic state system of caring for the mentally ill. The county and state are not now meeting that responsibility. They should take full advantage of any federal
or other aid that is available.
—————————————
LEADER . . IN the last few weeks there have been many reports—and they seemed to be well founded—that Philip Murray, president of the C. I. O., has become convinced that national welfare demanded a breathing spell from strikes. Only the other day a C. I. O. publication, “Economic Outlook,” expressed doubt that labor could win widespread new wage increases at this time, and added that even if
promptly in even higher prices. Many observers interpreted this as evidence that Mr. Murray was exerting his influence to discourage a new round of demands for higher wages, at least until his own United Steel Workers’ union contract expires about six months hence. And certainly -the country does need a period of increasing and uninterrupted industrial production. Without that, there is little hope that any government action can halt the advance of inflation. But this week the C. I. 0. National Maritime union began a strike effort to paralyze all shipping of iron ore
such increases were wen-they probably. would be reflected |
'NO,NO! You DONT Seem TO UNDERSTAND! THE BIG IDEA IS TO BRING THE BIRD BACK ALIVE /
Hoosier Forum
—
ER or
oe
"| do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.
~——
aah ai one ml TL ee Re, ah
OUR TOWN .
~ ©
8S, THE BARTENDER, who permit me to call him Tiff, was polishing his Phi Beta Kappa key when I dropped into his place. . “Tiff,” says I, “what do you think of the polemics on gambling nov appearing in the public prints?” i “I view them with mixed feelings,” says Tiff. “Whatcha mean,” says I, not unmindful of my discovery that Tiff sometimes reaches for symbols. _ “I mean I'm frightened," says Tiff. “And I don't mind saying that my fear is rooted in a suspicion that the youngsters collect~ ing that material today haven't the historical background, let alone the philosophical perspicacity, to do the subject justice; with the result . .." “With the result,” says I, taking the words right out of Tiff's mouth. , “With the result,” says Tiff, “that they have their gullible readers believing that anyon: who takes a chance is, ipso factor, a gambler, as if the two were synonymous, Indeed, I have a hunch that not one of the scribblers handling that stuff today is old enough to remember Mr, Hammer.” “Mr. Hammer,” says I, with bated breath:
Enter Mr. Hammer “ROYAL B. HAMMER, a soldier and an ornament to society,” says Tiff. “He was.sul generis not only because he was the last to peddle Louisiana lottery tickets around here, but also because of his persuasive and ingratiating personality, Except for Mr. Hammer, Ben and Phil couldn't possibly have immortalized Indianapolis. “Ben and Phil,” says I, reaching for what Is left of my memory. “Ben Webb and Phil Reichwein,” says Tiff, “the only two .Indianapolis men who ever nicked the Louisiana lottery for substantial amounts. Ben was the luckier of the two. He collected 875.000 on a single ticket. Contrary to general belief, it was Ben and Phil and not the Soliders’ and Sailors’ Monument that put Indianapolis on the map.” “Tell me, Tiff,” says I, “did Mr. Hammer have the nerve to practice his profession in the gpen?” “Indeed, he did,” says Tiff. “He was a familiar sight on Washington st. remember him well. He looked like a big and bulky man, but it proved to be an optical illusiorr. He only looked big because of his bulging pockets which always appeared to be stuffed with important papers. And there was another way of identifying Mr. Hammer. He always appeared to be in a hurry. It, too, was an optical
By Raymond Medsker Jr. Beech Grove The smaller countries represented at the Paris pe
successful peace every country must
privilege to veto any smaller countries are powerless to do anything. tem nothing could be accomplished | at the conferences. The Big Five
and coal on the Great Lakes. That effort, if successful, | could in time cut production of steel, and of everything made from steel, almost as disastrously as last winter's ~ steel strike or last spring's coal strike. This week, also, national officials of C. 1. O. unions, meeting in Washington, demanded that the government roll back prices within 30
new increases backed by strike threats, : SSE i TA PREDICTIONS of another wave of C. I. O. strikes, tying up basic industries probably are premature. At least, we think, it won't come befose the elections in November. That would be too risky to the C. I. O.’s political plans. But
and his statement before the price decontrol board, contained nothing to indicate that he will fight to dissuade officers and members of C. I. O. unions from a course that would surely increase the danger of inflationary disaster. Perhaps he feels that, being their leader, it is his duty to follow them.
GOOD SAILING PRESIDENT TRUMAN has left Washington for an 18-day yacht cruise along the New England coast, and this news displeases some people. It will look to the country, one columnist opines, as if the President cares. little whether the economic system gets relief from its burdens.
way at all. To most of the country, we think, it will look as if Mr. Truman wants and deserves a little rest and relaxation and maybe a chance to hear himself think.
' foundest columnist.
gibilities—not in these days of radio. collapse because Mr. Truman seeks the relative peace anc quiet of the New England coast from now to Labor day
safer sailing chart for the ship of state. earn a vacation and we hope he will enjoy every day of it
VOICES OF WORLD WAR II VW ORLD WAR II, unlike its predecessor, bequeathed u
terror, suffering and sacrifice? Probably not. Perhaps we are yet to come into ou grtistic inheritance from the war.
from the U. S. strategic bombing survey: ~ “Nervous people are going to fortune tellers to as
serious consideration.” . j + Let creative souls ‘go on
Yc Tol
the meter of the mole. A
{cause they are held in check by
-days or scrap- its wage-stabilization program. And Walter |
Mr. Murray's speech this week-to the Washington meeting, |
He hasn't had many such chances in the last 15 months, what with .lgbor.and industry and agriculture and every other element in the economic system yammering at him constantly, each for its own particular brand of “relief.” | That system's burdens, and those of the whole world, probably have weighed as heavily on him as on even the pro- |
A President can never get very “far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife” or from his own momentous respon- | The country won't 1
And perhaps he'll return from his cruise with a plainer,
We can think of no man who has worked harder to
SEL Mo stalwart poem, no durable tune, no deathless prose. Is our generation to stand mute, though it was touched with
4 ! ; Our geniuses, without realizing it, may have caught their first cue at Nagasaki. They may begin to see the shape of things in this report
where they will be safe, economic advisers are recommending rural property as safe investments, and bills in congress _ to replace the government if destroyed overnight receive |
fa] from there to capture the . essence of the 1940s. Let's have the safety symphony, No. A “Melody of Mice” to echo the scuriying of rough the grass, like men racing for lead-walled | shelters. A fugue to fission. A paean to plutonium,
place along that line may lie the master mood
are each trying to hold the other| in balance. Still the smaller coun- | tries come to these conferences be-
Views
The N
lthe Big Five. Such a way to dis-| cuss the peace is fatal in some | | way or other. | The United States, however, can | good at mob rule, { be proud of the fact that they are s
y : it who wanted each country . Repther's C. 1. 0, United Auto Workers union, apparently I RE 3 AEE. wipe, DUH. ; E LE ply BAC oll oS RR CER es I A Ca dewey ODES ARI “with My 'g! rized ‘Teapenin pe CWHge Ber PARLOR dag, if wc aol tal He ST ad contracts signed easly this year, which means demands for have peace we must give each) To Pw A : <Ieountry a voice in the matters com- . Sa
ing before the conferences. The
{if this were done. At least give | especially the smaller countries. | pathize. { We won the war with these a | smaller countries’ help, now let's win the peace by doing the same. | $a wu 3 3 i “ARE WE WASTING TAX > ss {MONEY ON ‘WELFARE’?” | By Citizen and Taxpayer, Indianapolis { There is currently | considerable publicity to the matter of increasing taxation problems,
local, state and federal. Shortly we
being given 2 8
and the people pay
are getting the same raw deal they got after the other world war, Big Five want veto powers while the small countries are forgotten. They you are asking. voice their protest but they get no attention whatsoever. To-have a have an equal voice in all matters apolis? coming before the conference. No country should hold special privileges | something for their people, so that in the voting question. The system of yoting now gives any Big Five the question coming before the conference. In this kind of sys-|pass
"Small Countries Get Raw Deal At Peace Table Again This Ti
ime"
On
ews
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY
American Athenians seem to be! hecial made, having no top on them. They tour different routes each day and the fare is 25c for a
ismcbing
SE
them.
Thus, the about.
A Talmadge-type Georgian is one! ype eos aia . On Sundays and holidays - they
Some farmers were ~so busy in
| OPA soon will be running out of price ceilings to puncture.
purchase from 25 cents and good for. the. entire day, -These tickets ‘are good on peace problem would work better | their fields that they didn’t know | any streetcar -or bus, You. only they were not well off until their show the ticket, there is mo addieach country a fair break, and congressman came around to sym- | tional’ cost or ‘bother about trans-
“LOW CAR FARES
WOULD
HELP AUTOLESS FAMILIES”
By John Wathen, 113% 8. Mr. Railway: I don’t mind pay
What is the matter with IndianIt's about time they do
| |
six for a quarter.
My family and I visited Cincin'nati two weeks ago apd Shey have |Sceme tours of their city, either by These cars are
bus or streetcar.
wo-hour ride.
fers.
Statistics show more Americans [this the people who are working than ever before, but could have they don’t say how hard.
more
| anapolis. =n a
Public Service,
Richland st.
ing
|they. will have something to boast They are carrying more engers now than in all history. {I think for those who must stand up and hold on the best way they can the fare should be only 5c or
‘motorman’ for | his 1
If our city had something like pave no auto P and | know more about the city of Indi-
easure,
“PROPAGANDA WON'T PUSH
US INTO WAR WITH RUSSIA”
shall be deluged with a great deal more such publicity in the election reported ‘Tuesday campaigns. Then there is the hue | agencies are
sure groups to drive through com|pulsory federal health insurance, Murray-Wagner-Dingell
{while their child
the
still further bludgeoning of
: supplying and cry of certatn organized pres- mothers with money to frequent taverns and engage in ‘free love’ the streets. One mother had four chilbill! gren by four different fathers and for example, which would occasion collected $174 a month for their the | support from government
that
ren roam
agencies. He said another go
taxpayers,
“Recorder's Judge Arthur E. Gordon
unwed |
welfare $100 ’ LY e tant: | cue. a month for two of her four il-| We doubt that, to most of the country, it will look that | In the midst of this situation | ooiiimate children. Judge Gordon
Back Down.”
construed as
Our government: Congress passes | By Warren A. Benedict Jr, 2019 Madison av
1s x signs them! 5° the bills, the President signs t | Your Aug. 12 Issue carries the
| headline “Red Compels Byrnes to On the editorial page welfare is on editorial, a cartoon, and a feature article that can only be deliberately anti-| Russian. This all boils down Wal he transposed and finished the piece of music on {deliberately planned campaign to three strings. ; ¢ slant the news, publish half truths| - “What am_ I doing lying here?” Paul suddenly and deliberate mis-statements that ; create distrust, fear, and hatred of |
Russia, and condition us for the| his life on three strings. eventual war with the Soviets that| japor organization. Later he founded the American
Street and
for good ace conference service, but your service to West The Indianapolis isn't worth the price
| illusion and may be attributed to his peculiar gait. For example, it took Mr. Hammer 4763 steps to walk a
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.—The' high-pressure lads of Washington are worried. What bothers them is “the federal regulation of lobbying act” which slipped through almost unchallenged in the mew reorganiza- . tion plan for congress. The act looks simple enough on paper. But when press agents, corporation lawyers, trade association representatives, and the paid agents of organized dogood societies try to fit their own operations into the bill, a hundred questions arise. Nobody today knows
. . By Anton Scherrer
Ben, Phil and the Louisiana Lottery
mile as I have reason to know having followed him one morning from East to West sts, his customary habitat.” | . “Another case of your intellectual curiosity,” says I adoringly. “But didn't Mr. Hammer ever run into trouble,” says I hoping for the worst. “That's what I was about to tell you,” says Tiff. “Mr. Hammer not only ran into trouble repeatedly, but he always managed to extricate himself; and, invariably, because of his ability to differentiate between a gambler per se and one who takes a chance— his very point the newspaper boys can't eomprehend today.” “Any specific examples,” says I. “Plenty,” says Tif. “I especially relish the occasion when a preacher took Mr. Hammer to task for the iniquity of his calling.” : “Yes, yes,” says I all agog, “what happensd?” “Mr. Hammer calmly cited Matthew, the apostle who was chosen by lot.” “Did the preacher catch on,” says L “Yes,” says Tiff. “Mr, Hammer had an extraordinary gift for speaking the language of his tore mentors. I remember other occasions when Mr, Hammer had reason to point to the fact that Fancuil Hall, after the fire of 1761, was rebuilt by lottery; that the Continental Congress of 1717 raised money the same way; and .that any number of early American churches and colleges profited by the turn of the wheel.” “Surely not ohurches and colleges,” says I, horrifled. : “Precisely,” says Tiff. “Why, 1 even remember the time the harassed Mr. Hammer was obliged to cite the fact that Vincennes university ran off a lottery, as late as 1880, in broad daylight right here in Indianapolis—to be specific, on the northwest quadrant of the Circle in the very. building that once served Henry Ward Beecher as a church.” “Tiff, you'll have me believing that America wouldn't be the glorious country it is except for gamblers.” »
More Out of the Past
“HEAVEN FORBID, not gamblers,” says Tiff. “America“is what it is because of men who had the intestinal fortitude to take a chance? “My mistake,” says I, utterly humiliated for having fallen into the same error as the newspaper men. “It pleases me to have made a convert so early in the morning” says Tiff. “Perhaps another of fhe same?” : : “The same,” says I. Tiff set the re-flll before me with a flourish and the classic, but extinct, salutation: “This one is on the house,” :
-
IN WASHINGTON . . . By Peter Edson New Law Is Nightmare for Lobbyists
This is only the beginning. Every person seeking to influence legislation or elections must keep books showing all expenditures, itemizing every expense of over $10. These expense-account records must be filed with the clerk of the house and kept open for public inspection for two years. Final blow is that these financial statements are to be published in the Congressional Record every three months, On the days these statements appear, it's a good bet the Record will be thicker than a metropolitan phone book. Today the number of lobbyists
the answers—not even the people who wrote the thing. Pressure Boys Must Register SECTION 307 OF THE ACT says that it applies to any person who in any way solicits or receives money to influence legislation or federal elections. Anyone makfhig an opén appearance before a cons ea iC i | pd be ; fe fined “Political committees,” as defined by the Hatch act, and state or‘ local political party committees are exempt. z Z 3 ! The lobbying act provides that every person who gets money to influence elections or ‘legislation must register every three months with the secretary of the senate and the clerk of the house. Furthermore, every such’ person must file a financial statement showing all receipts, with the name ‘and address of every contributor of over $500 included. :
REFLECTIONS . . . By Thomas L ~ _Handicapped
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.—Some years ago Paul A. Strachan, himself disabled, lay on his bed ‘with radio turned on and heard Dr. Harry Emerson Fos-
| dick tell the story about Ole Bull, the violinist, When he had a string snap in the midst of a performance,
=
t asked himself. ¥e got up, put on his clothes, shoved aside protesting nurses and doctors; and went out to play He first became active in
your paper carried an item the ..i4 that 4000 out of 18,000 social certain groups .are hoping and| pederation of the Physically Handicapped. other day regarding the expenditure weifare cases involved illegitimacy | praying fer. Of course, those of! -—e ips [of tax money in one section of th€ requiring public assistance.” : |us who protest are labeled as Com- Example of Initiative {country—Detroit. How many of us| 1g it a fair question for one to munists, fellow travellers, parlor HE GOT HIMSELF a little office on the top floor taxpayergp I wonder, read the ac-| wonder to what extent thé Indian-|Pinks, or whateve® it is you call] of the National Press building, started to pecking count and considered the implica-|,n01is taxpayers are carrying a sim- | those who disagree with you. away at his typewriter and plagued members of contions taxationwise attached 1t0|jjar tax load? And will someon Maybe the Russians are open for gress and government officials with personal visits. these conditions? please explain the “security” that criticism. ‘So, for that matter, are| There, with the help of his secretary, Mildred Scott,
under date line of iT (U. Po)" and
“Detroit, Aug. it in part read:
it. accomplished?
Of course, the moral and socio-|inheres in such a situation, and | logical angles were quite apparent.|for whom? Or, is this community | To identify the item—it is the one | and its taxpayers freed of such | so keen on correcting some grave ridiculous taxation? And how was|injustices we might ask that the | Spaniards bé given freedom from
past, present and f
Side Glances—By Galbraith
{India be given a
|
|
8
— WN) wr -_) > ®1 hak Pg i |. {5
r
|
k
|
|
h
|
COPA. 1946 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. WM. REG. U. 8. PAY. OFF,
| 50 many Americans.
By W. 8. Indianapolis |
| stock? The
is a public utility.
. Can't music’ lovers hear j putting a nickel in a juke box?"
- . % . y Pe
SUES hl Ce fol gid fii it at RA
"What's the use of me. wasting my. life scraping. at this violin? ything they want just by
“ # won't ‘let MacDonald. at
Jo
uture.
that master traitor and thug Franco, that the Rundreds of millions of decent chance to improve themselves, and that our own ‘people right here ‘at home be given a little relaf from shortages, instead of squandering our food and ‘materials upon the Italians and Germans who not so long ago killed
Despite. all your propaganda the | people are not in the mood to work | themselves up into another war to save the Italians, Chiang Kai-shek {or some little Balkan country. Why ~don't you take a poll of veterans, students and parents and see how | they feel about it? Sure, they have | sympathy for the oppressed every- | where. But they're beginning’ to develop a little sympathy for themselves, their families and their fel(low citizens right here at home,
| “STATE COMMISSION HAS | TO PROTECT CAR RIDERS"
| Why does the leach-ridden pub- | ic have to be milked more to fat|ten the already corpulent streetcar
public service’ commission, should stand by and help the many whose only means‘of transportation
DAILY THOUGHT Of whom we have many things | to say, and hard to be uttered; he likes to chat with visiting correspondents. In our
\ seeing ye &re dull’ of hearing — 1.
Hebrews 5:1 n
se
the British in a lot of their policies, | who also is physically handicapped, he conducts the If we're]
affairs of this organization. Over four and half years ago, Paul Strachan conceived the idea of a “national employ-the-physically-handicapped week” to call the attention of the country to a great national problem so that millions who are disabled—and this now includes war veterans as well as civillans—can equip themselves for, useful lives, self-supporting and independent. It took three years to get a .bill through congress
Venezuelan Chief
CARACAS, Venezuela, Aug. 10.—President Romulo Betancourt used to be a Communist and a writer. of violent newspaper columns against foreign oil. companies in Venezuela. _ But now he has changed his mind." So he avetred in an hour-long interview in which Venezuela's chief executive frankly expounded on his administration's policies. As president and as head of the Bocialist-tinged - Democratic Action party, he said, he felt that Venezuela would penalize itself if it discouraged foreign investors. “We are now working under an agreement which is hilghly satisfactory to all concerned, —the oil companies, the wrokers and the government,” President Betancourt told me. “The agreemegt runs until the end of 1047.” Senor Betancourt went so far as to state that the oil companies, which dominate the country's economy, are making a contribution to raising living, standards. The new contract, effective last June 1, raises wages 50 per cent. 3
| Outlines His Policies A BECAUSE HE used to be a newspaperman himself,
extended interview, he revealed his “position regarding inter-American affairs and domestie politics: ONE: He is in favor of President Truman's plan
The whote ‘trouble is that we, for arming . American republics as part of a hemiGod «help - a spheric defense program,
However, he believes ar
»
. should be” deniéd to . | & .
PS
« v ’ od - . yf : 3
WORLD AFFAIRS . . . ByErnie Hill
is close to 4000.
Their new accounting to congress must show even
the names of any publication in which lobbyists have caused anything to be printed, and the legislation such publication sought to influence. :
Newpapers and other publications dealing in cur-
rent comment on legislation and elections are exempt. Presumably, radio not ai
Action Long D
they're
stations .are, too, althou a Ma
elayed BUT ANYBODY WHO INFLUENCED a lot of citi-
zens to wire or petition their. congressmen*and who was paid for his effort; would have to register and report on his salary. and expenses.
It doesn't cost anything to register, but there's a
maximum $5000 fine and one-year sentence on first conviction for failure to do so.
Congress at long-last is really ready to be rough
.on lobbyists.
. Stokes
Men Make Record
authorizing the week. It was observed for the first time last year when President Truman issued a proclamation setting aside a week in .October. The President will proclaim this year's observance also in October. Paul Strachan has real help now.in the strong arm .of the government and in Maj. Gen. Graves B. Erskine, marine commander at Iwo Jima, head of fetraining and re-employment administration in the labor department. . nh 3 This agency, which has co-operation of others in the government through an inter-agency committee, is delegated to work with states and local communities to provide opportunities for physically handicapped “with .the ultimate objective of assuring them economic security by placing them in gainful employment.” The. further we get away from the war and the. victory the greater is the tendency to forget.
Disabled Workers Slighted
GEN. ERSKINE SAID that, since end ‘of war, closing down of war industries and return of veterans to the labor market, there Is “a4 very noticeable tendency to slight the disabled worker in favor of the worker with no disability.” : The physically handicapped performed valuable and valiant service in industry during the war, Then, he said, 83 per cent of the nation’s industries employed handicapped workers and reported smaller labor turnover among- these workers, less absenteeism, and equal or higher production rates. :
, v . . “ >. Changes His Mind He mentioned .Gen. Rafael Trujillo of He says arms
dictators. the Dominican republic specifically. will perpetuate dictators in power. At the Rio de Janerio conference of foreign Ministers. Venezuela: will propose that the American republics refuse to deal. with dictators. He would try to freeze them out of power with economie sanctions and political pressure. ‘ TWO: He also will propose an economic charter for the Americas. It will be a program to raise living standards and industrialize backward countries, . THREE: He says his Democratic Action party. is similar to the Autenticos of Cuba, the Socialists of Chile, the Apristas of Peru and perhaps the Labor party of England.
Some Prisoners Face Trial SOME 170 political prisoners arrested ‘about one month ago, he says, are being ‘released gradually. Others will be given trials for treason in clvilian courts. As for former Presidents Isalas Medina Angarita and Eleazar Lopez Contreras, he says he is certain that they would like to spearhead a new revolution to retirn to power. Senor Betancourt was named president after a revolution last October which un‘seated Medina. (Medina is-now.in New York while Lopez Contreras is in Colombia.) 3 Venezuela, he says, does not.want them back. -He predicts an overwhelming victory -for his party at Oct. 27 congressional elections. A ‘new president will be elected after a new constitution is written. Copyright, 1446. by The Indianapolis Times and Fhe ‘Chiggeo Daily News, loa s . : oy -~ i ! i 3
< y : “ i 2
MONDA
WILLI LONG
Founded Here :
William J. ave., founder Million Pop Inc, died y after a long
Retiring fi ing and lumt 20 years ago associated wi years and hi automobile rp in Cincinnat
Mr. Moore Retail Lumb the Capitol Gun clubs.
Services wi 3 p. m. in th mortuary. B Hill. Survivors s C. Moore; a two daughte and Mrs, W. Mrs. Wesley dianapolis; Moore of | grandchild.
MRS. LUCY Mrs. Lucy last Saturda daughter, M 1315 8. Shef An employ facturing Cc menter. mad DeQuincy st ter, Mrs, Cl A native o Mrs. - Parmi Indianapolis member of church. She The Rev, duct services in Trinity M will be in M Survivors t Mrs. Sulliva ter, Mrs, Bla anapolis; a
- of Cheyenne
Inez Gross brothers, Chi tinsville and Bedford, Ky five great-gr
MRS. ANNA Mrs. Anna st., died yest pital. She wv The wife Indianapolis was a native ley was a me gelical and dies’ Aid,
‘Priendly Bib
Survivors a daughter, three sons, Huntington Stanley of Norman G. a= brother, | apolis; a sis ‘of Indianaj children. Services w ner & Buck will be in C rangements
wha the bun wari
His ver course ., Togs ar active | need warm a of wear
Child Th
