Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1946 — Page 1
PT. 3, 1946
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? © : a er - < —r® ! wi 3 » : Ei ; - : Bat pay 0 oS | |" FINAL oi » FORECAST: “Fair and warmer tonight. Increasing cloudiness tomorrow. iE : ia . : : i Ti 7 RIE . NTN EE meme romnermem een | PRICE, FIVE Lsourrs -wowansy VOLUME 57—NUMBER 152 or WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1946 Tritamupie, Tn. ebbnd daly seep Bundy he tite. =
County Young
vi : y ning at a rate that would exceed | ther,” Mr. McClain said proudly eq States will consider the case : any day in exactly seven years. today. “We chased him out on the gjosed if Yugoslavia pays compen- : : : _ School bells rang in the county schools today. Bright and early, Southport high school freshmen greet- = At mid-session, the list registered. tip of a big tree: and he fell in a 3ation for- the property. damaged of the Indianapolis police de ; ed Mrs. Charmion Kaiser, music teacher. Left to rig ht are Edward Bradburn, Joan Wheeler, Gentry Hen- ' declines ranging in the extreme nine creek after Roy shot him.” and five lives lost when Yugoslav 4 partment within a few days, derson, Shirley Burch, David Osborne and Peggy Glenn. points. In most instances, however, fighters shot ‘down ‘two U. 8. army id it was learned authoritatively Sanam , stocks held slightly above their low- | THE MUD was so sticky and the {ransports. , Harvey G. Foster . . . new FBI today the % ost levels. > | water so deep, Mr. McClain added, 5 ’ : chief- here, | . E 4 [est In his first press conference as | Angered because of reports cons
COUNTY TAX GUT UNDER *46 RATE
Council Slashes 9 Cents|
From Budget Requests.
By NOBLE REED A drastic reduction in the 1947 budget and tax rate for Marion county government was voted today by the ¢ounty council. ] The council fixed .4716 cents :as the county property levy for ngxt year, cutting nine cents from, the rate called for by original requests made by department heads. The 47-cent county. rate for next year is more than one cent | below the 48-cent current rate for 1946. Reduction of the county tax levy below that of this year was made
quests more than $165,000 and ‘by | a the estimate on miscel-| “faneous revenues and special prop- | erty assessments more than $100,000. ! Estimates Raised |
Raising the estimates on antici-| pated revenues followed disclosure
_ three, weeks-ago that the county] * treasurer this year had a surplus of {
about $600,000 as the result of increased revenues and collection of additional taxes on special assess-| ments. The council fixed the 1947 county general fund budget. at $2,112773, compared to $2,378,262 listed in the| origina] requests. Cuts in_the general fund budget were responsible for slicing more than 5 cents from the proposed rate and reductions in the county welfare budget allowed another 3':cent cut for the total slash of 9 cents. Only. County.to Cut Rate
“This action makes Marion: coun-| ty the only government unit in the’ state of Indiana that will cut the tax rate for 1947" Addison J. Parry, county council president, said. * | “The coungil wishes to express its | gratitude to county commissioners | as well as to the various county departments, without whose co-opera-tion this reduction could not have been made. Tax Expert Urged “It has “taken the council ‘many months of study of county income and expenditures to arrive at this tax figure. The results showed this tax rate reasonable without curtailing the ‘operation of county. government in any way. In fact, we have raised salaries in many instances.” The council récommended that the county government next year hire an independent tax and budget expert. “Expenditures for a tax expert would pay for itself many times over,” Mr. Parry said. CIO ROW SUSPENDS PAPER LOS ANGELES, Sept. 4 (U. P.) — The Los Angeles Herald-Express,
youth bldg. exhibit hall. before heading for the many stands| gether Aug. 15 in Scott's automobile, | e€ting at Lake Success, N. Y. |ing to the plan he submitted to the dropped by the state. ay king Sergeant or higher, State 4-H dress revue, 2:30 p. Mm. | yho0e Jay enticing candied apples, |The car, driven by Watson, was Had Planned Visit supreme command April 7, 1944—| gig parents, Mr. and Mrs, George while 62 age fling Topstar. svi, : sa 0 Hag, SERIbiL all. of Cotton candy, hot-dogs and other wrecked a few hours later at! ‘This decision probably will nave tW0 months before D-day. Heirens, sat in the first row of the! Political tradition oe publicant age a oh delicacies of carnival days. Midway Brownstown, Lewis said. to be made about the time of the| “I had given D-90 as a ‘target | crowded courtroom and watched, the political “outs” cannot be »’ 3:18 p. m., grandstand. |rides ‘were to be reduced for the “Watson and I were living at/French Lick meeting he told the date for being linked up On the | heir gon through half open lips pected to “love. honor and eS EVENTS TOMORROW | day. / Scott's cabin for a few days and we Hoosier delegation. : Seine.” Gen. Montgomery sald In |myrmyr “guilty,” after each charge the administration in power pro | Farmers’ and . farm organization] Emphasis at the fair tomorrow drove to Bloomington for some gro- Previously the President had given ko Worg gispalahs Aoally, was read. voo~ |while all Democrats certainly are dav. ‘will be upon farmers.and farm or-|ceries,” Lewis said. assurance of addressing the editorial ! oh St Crossing on. the river was Warned of Penalty (not in favor of gambling and not Judging of horses cattle, sheep a b-reemein from far and wide in| i so Wide FO og I po mind summarized ‘both| Chief Justice Harold G. Ward of (Continued on Pace Bo swine. | SAWS: rom Ler and Wile in /Mlon seid Net gel the froccries aha) ke h RRO a dN the United States and British army | criminal court asked Heirens if he on Page 5—Column 1)
+
sters Answer Call of School Bells
Police Shakeup Looms In Split Over Gambling
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; STOCK VALUES Han ors Kill : UST0 \ I~ deat CFB Here) RS | FALLAGAINAS "ior'e >= BILL TO SLAVS [SSRN ON ‘RON LID" | VOLOME SES ">" FoR 2 PLANES fC AFTER PARLEY
~Lhe Lebanon “moniter” is dead, i
% ; Harry McClain said today, but the : Losses Reach Nine Points; search goes on for his carcass. Case Will Be Closed When : After a 15-mile chase through the : i ; Most Shares Holding wilds of Boone ‘county last night, Tito Pays for Lives, Above Lows. Mr. McClain said his assistant, Roy Damages. NEW: YORK, Sept, 4 (U. P.). = Graham of Indianapolis, plugged WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (U. Pl
Stocks today*broke to new lows for the monsterwith a 30-30 rifle. —~Acting Secretary ‘of State Wilexactly one year en volume run- “It was definitely a black pan- jam Cleveon said today the Units
High Officers and Big Shot Gambler Talk Over Syndicate Plan. By KENNETH HUFFORD 4 Mayor Tyndall will order a shakeup in the upper ranks
| The tape fell behind by as much | that it was Lnpossible to recover acting secretary, Mr. Clayton said! "= = = : las four minutes during the morn- the body of the panther. the or bil Eh be pre- i cerning attempts to set up » gams« a ling. At noon it was clear and the| “He's probably floated -into the sented to Yugoslavia in the near bling syndicate and “ocesh wip tit | " market was somewhat quieted at|Dext county by now,” McClain said. | future. He expressed hope that it! ff f town, the mayor laid down his [the iower levels, - “The "residents of Lebanon need could be settled amicably and that edict of "io gambling" &% ® hush- | Leading farm staple markets, | Worry no longer.” said the ex-big it would not be necessary to call in {hush meeting yesterday of the after “early weakness in sympathy same hunter. “If anything else any third party to settle it. EXPERT ON GUNS a,
t (with the decline in securities, res |SDOWs up to scare people, it'll just. Mr, Claytoh sald the 3000 word . The mayor has information thal; A
gained a measure of stability | Pe imagination” w [note given Yugoslavia last night a Ia seers meeting be the = around mid-session when the. liqui- w DN ES : closed the incident except for the ; y's biggest Sampling Speralo and |dating movement apparently ran| “WE: DIDN'T tell anybody what |,nqemnity question. Dalton Transferred to New several police heads was d seve lits course. we were, doing last night,” Mr: Mc-| He noted that Marshal Tito had ° eral days ago in the home of a | Foreign Selling Blamed Clain said,."and there wasn't any- expressed regret over the thooting Post at Omaha. city official to discuss organization hs $ . body around to bother us.” down of the American planes on ol 8 syndicate, | Wall street sources said that un-| “I'd have had hima week ago but | Aug 9 and Aug. 19, and had un- Harvey G. Foster. assistant spe- | One Failed to Show Up 16ading of stocks by big French and people always scared him away.” | 2 cial agent in charge of the local One high police official invited to
| Dutch interests caused yesterday's] Mr. McClain estimated the ~— : break, the worst. in almost nine panther weighed about 80 pounds: WASHINGTON [7 3 G , Sept. 4 (U.P). | vestigation, today became head of efforts to get in touch with him
| years. 2 {and had eyes that glowed “like fire.” radio | The total value of all shares listed | He said he was coal black all over.” . the Indianapolis bureau. were ude via the ‘police L 8
lon the market dropped approxi-| “He looked ferocious in that tree,” °f Problems but Russia appar- | y est decline since Oct. 1€, 1937.. The| Residents of Lebanon have com- | Its announcement on the new paming 2 in ee. or. the Ostensibly the ony board met. 3 jydiume of 303 200 Ne. tie! plained for Weeks that a MONSLEr| y; § note to Yugoslavia said the year, to fhe post of special agent to introduce a new member, George } he since February of this year. that “cries like a baby and Kills| 3000-word document had been in charge of the district office at O. Browne, and acquaint him with
office of the federal bureau of in- the meeting failed to show up and
| | —The state department has a lot |
: ; - The foreign interests bought heav- | livestock” was at large. Mayor Louis! ; A new enrollee at Southport discusses his credits. , . Charles ily in the New York market early Sterling commissioned Mr. McClain, handed to the “Soviet charge Oumalis, Ng dana lis. ‘Mr. Foster 10s “Tendal es oiclbu Weinke and Principal C. C. Leedy. : : {in the war and are now taking their| 10 track it down. : d'affaires.” 3 | qntered the FBI after his When Gen.. Tyndall ‘took office a . {money home, it was said. Mr. McClain said the monster - , a1; The Indiana state fair ended; The township's largest taxpayer, When the industrial Sverage died “near thesCalvin Lennox farm.” A hastily issued correction sald | graduation from Notre Dame uni- 3's years ago he clamped down on abruptly = today for about 13,000" : | : : : it should have been “Yugoslav | versity in 1939. ; | gambling to the extent of driving OT Coble Soin whe International Harvester Co. Inc. slipped below its previous 1946 Jow| but he didn't remember the name of charge d'affaires.” | He has served in bureau offices Slot machines out of the local prithemselves at school desks ratber| "o> assessed twice for Some’ prop= of Fob. 16. he ig uidet came Sdull« the e « x = : ‘at Des Moines, Towa: San Antonio Vale clubs—which have been than inthe exhibit buildings ard erty; which resulted in an errofroft © Co “disgusted.” as one Walll ME. M'CLAIN suid a Lebanon equivocally committed his govern~. 8nd Houston, Tex.; San Juan, Puers IE ever since utd esr on the midway of the fairgrounds.- |$1,700,000. ; [street analyist said, “with th | resident gave him $200 Monday be. ment not to fire on any other for- to Rico, aid New York city. | an : . i i { y e out- | : : | | Ever since, little secretive meet That is, all were back at the books | When the mistake was discovered |jook one year after V-J day” and | cause “he knew I was going to calch eign planes ever if they pass over Police School Instructor | ings have been held in . except those who live in Warren it caused a tax collection decrease (hose whe took a dim view of the iV Yugoslavia without prior clearance. A firearms expert, Mr. Foster has snd means” ol en which “ways township. School there will begin of $15,077. Bernard L. Curry, town | foreign political ‘situation particu- | “I'm going to rest a while now,”| He said it would be neéessary to instructed in police training schools Tyndall's rule he Hous fing Ges. sed next week due to a mistake in ship trustee, delayed the opening {0 1ar1y in Yugoslavia and Greece, | De said. _|confer with the army before the till throughout the United States. The meeting several = tl assessing township property. Thirty [conserve funds, but said that the ie “| “I hear there are a lot of other lis submitted. He did not know how Mr. Dalton, a native ‘of Iowa. only (he Iatest of such meetings of 35 schools were functioning to-| week would be added to the end of . |snakes and monsters loose in Indi- it would be worked out, -- came to Indianapolis from the Des | of sueh mestings. = day. ‘the year. s : lana,” he added, “if there's an| In its note to Yugoslavia last Moines office, where he had been Begins Shakeup Plan | emergency, I might start out-again.” night, the United States made it special agent in charge for three Hearing of the reports that some : | “Frankly,” he added, “I'm a little clear that Marshal Tito's regrets and a half years. of his top police officers might have Atten ance Recor Fal S skeptical about some: of these wild alone were not enough. : , In his new duties he will have been involved, the mayor immediIN AX SLAYING ==" It rejected Yugoslavia's efforts to charge of Iowa and Nebraska. He 8'ely began to plan for his shake ! shun responsibility for the attacks said the new district was created "UP ’
4 on the two U. S. planes and denies by'a consolidation of the two states! ‘When the Mayor starts to revise Truman Gives charges that hundreds of American under a single office. his list of choice job holders in ! ‘ te planes have violated Yugoslav. A graduate of Creighton univer- ‘he department, close observers . » ' § [sovereignty during the past.six sity, Mr. Dalton has been with the confidently predict he will follow Definite No | weeks. FBI for 13 years. the time-worn city hall policy of
Again at Hoosier State Fair
¥ _ Attendance records continued to fall at the state fair today as an Lewis Denies Knowledge of estimated 100,000 passed through the gates, 80,000 in paid admissions. | This breaks the 1940 record for a Wednesday of 75,641 paid entrants, Scott Murder. ; Meanwhile in the National Percheron. show, D. W. Houston, Alex- The note had been drafted in handing out the plums to those andria, Ill, walked away with grand champion honors for a mare. Search for a new Syspeet in} | tect fra) lon felephionie Cy TN : who have ‘voted Sigh” in the past Walter C. Weege, Ixonia; Wis., had the reserve grand champion. { Bloomington's decapitation Warder! To State Visit ton beeen resident SYuman and GUILTY PLEA. MADE Severs nitive} Sections in the ! yO le- James F. Byrnes, ue |
# x. = The two men repeated one-two was launched today a few minutes 1 i i , in the senior division for mares after a man charged with the mur- President Truman expressed nf RNE. tl id. BY DEGNAN SLAYER i I Jurtment, i oy Fair Program three years and older. Marion H.der walked into the Noblesville gret today that he must cancel the | Creer a 5 ae ——e oii) hive; sey regime as : lice chief a Woody, Greentown, Ind., took bothisheriff’s office and professed his in-| tentative speaking date at Prench | 4 ifi lag expe yi ne Bel mime for rt of to ioral EVENTS TODAY the junior championship and re-|nocence. ’ | Lick, Sept. 14. Ta og od He Janie She Hai tay ih lin some Milbads | Education and children’s day, chil. serve for mares under three years.| “I know nothing about the es He told Democratic State Chair-|ocPendents of the unfort vie Heirens Admits 3 Murders, i . 3 | Hoosier child der 13 got u 3 ed A | tims” and to the government itself * ’ say. dren under 13 admitted free. | oosier ren un gO P| Elmer Lewis, wanted for question- man Pleas Greenlee and Robert P.| sor damage to the plaries 26 i Of 199 police appointed, durin Judging of horses, cattle, sheep and | early today. | Ing in the gruesome slaying of O'Bannon, Corydon, president of| S mr : Other Crimes. 1 1931-43, when Chief Morrisse held Wine. : . For it was education and chil- Henry E. Scott, Monroe county farm the Indiana Democratic Editorial BR . L ; [the reins 141 were Dereon vot National Pircheron show. | dren's day at the state fair and they hand, told Sheriff George Michel-| association, that he will be unable INVASION PLAN HIS, By ROBERT T. LOUGHRAN . |, us thew. Only 16 ver Re Styfe show, 10:30 a. m. and 2:30 Were eager to make the most of it.|felder in the Hamilton county jail.| to leave Washington at that time. | MONTGOMERY SAYS CHICAG TL SAl Commu | publicans, while perry . : : ; orgie es Oe O, “Sept.. 4. — William | cans, while affiliations of the p. m., women's bldg. | School Exhibits Unable re or write, wis | President Truman said that d | Heirens, 17-year-old University of | remainder were unknown Grand eircuit racing, 1 p. m., grand-| Although not anxious to be re- told the sheriff he had been told by must be in constant contact with| LONDON, Sept. 4- (U. P.).—Pield | Chicago sophomore, pleAided guilty Democrats Dominais
re-| ; stand, Indianapolis Concert band {his brother Leonard, Noblesville | Secretary of State Byrnes at Paris. Marshal Viscount Montgomery in
% - minded of the approach of school : : [today fo the murders of 6-year-old| ; and vaugeville acts. | eain. thie older i : a | that police were seeking him. They will have to decide, he said, |g dispatch to the war office released i Be wu a Live AE This led to a predominance of Horse show, 7 p. m., Coliseum. |again, the older children noneth - 2 Left Aug. 15 on whether the foreign ministers| tonight said the Anglo-American The youth a + ' | Democrats among experienced -offi«
; Iso pleaded guilty to State 4-H home economics dem- were willing to take a look at some ; «m1. | Paris conference should continue or invasion of France and the sweep to wlan ; cers capable of assuming ‘command, Lewis said that he and a “Bob P0124 burglaries and two dssaults. The result js that 75 police offi
onstration contest, 1:30 p. m. of the novel educational exhibits, watson” had left Bloomington to-|2dJourn for the United Nations the geine developed exactly accord- | Three othei charges of assahilt were ge
Indiana, Hoosiers still were headed pick me up a couple of hours later, personal friend Judge Shermar Min-
Style show, 10:30 a. m. and 2:30 } aH a PY | nkw that: by pleating guty ‘Fe es ————— 3 =" toward the annual event at the 216- “Later he met me and he said ton, U. S. court of appeals, Chi. [operations from the time of the : 'STRI ; P. Mm, Woien's bldg, {acre fair grounds plant after an- hé'd take me to Noblesville to my | cago. |invasion through the St, Lo break- could be sentenced to death, to life! KE HALTS WORK
Grand eiteuit racing, 1 p. m., grand- | brother's, go on to Gary and Chi-| Judge Minton is from New Albany through to the advance across the | imprisonment, or to at least 14. ON G. |, HOMES AT I. U.
afternoon daily, suspended publica- |
tion today in a dispute with - the] and vaudeville acts. wl
. American Newspaper. Guild (C, I.
[ ington.” : ; : 0.), over a union demand for a State 4-H home economics exhibits, JUDGE IN KENTUCKY | ng on. - of the dispatch | fane yesterday by three nationally : ; $100 a week minimum wage scale| youth bldg. exhibit hall ‘Brother Saw Story’ « ‘MORE SUGAR LIKELY The . remainder - o e uispie known psychiatrists. noon today on 280 family housing *
for editorial workers.
OCAL TEMPERATURES
L a.m. . 53 10am.... 7 Tam SoM Ham... 13 8am. .... 5 12 (Noon).. 75 fam . 65 1pm... 76 TIMES INDEX Amusements... 8 Obituaries ... 12 Eddie Ash .... 10! Dr. O'Brien. Jo 24 Boots ........ 21/J. E, O'Brien. 10 Bujlders News 18 |F. C. Othman. 13 Business ..... 22| Politics ....., 13 Classified... 19-21|Radio . ...... 23 Comics ....... 23 | Reflections ... 14 Crossword ... 18|Eldon Roark.. 13 Editorials .... 14| Mrs. Roosevelt 13 Europe Today 14 Scherrer ..... 14 Fashions . ... 16! Science 7. :.. 13] Mrs. Ferguson 17 |Serial .. ..... 13 Forum .. .... 14 Side Glances . 14 Gardetiing' . .. 18! Sports 10411
G. 1. Rights. .. 23 John Thale-.. 4 Meta Given 17 George Thiem 22 Homemaking. 17 Weather Map. 9 In Indpls. .. 3 Joe Williams. 10 Ruth Millett:. 13 Women's: .. 16-17 Movies ...,.,. 8 World Affairs. 14 ad
; i ; t band Pag ; i : : f : | stand, Indianapolis Concert ba {Continued an Page 5~Column 5) cago to pick up some carpéhter’s and served in the senate with Presi- Seine just before he relinquished | Years in prison. Tia Sale Berrien
| 4 Heirens answered: “ ¢ sl fad LOOMI a | tools, then take me back to Bloom- dent Truman. SORRY Of combined ground Jorges| Heirens was a ily B NGTON, Ind, Sept. 4— = ept. 1, ; Work was halted shortly before
{
Horse show, 7 p. m., Coliseum.
dealt mostly with operations of his| , : ! p Under a defense - prosecution units for ex-G, I's who will attend
State 4-H home economics demon- ‘ag When the car was wrecked, Wat- | own 21st British and ‘Canadian! stration contest, 10 a. m. and I BANS KU-KLUX KLA son ran away and he hasn't heard | IN 1941, U. S. IS TOLD army STD, “| agreement, the youth has been ad- Indiana university thia ail oo p. m., youth bldg., exhibit hall. | ) of him since, Lewis declared. Held] WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (U. P.) Ve a vised by his ‘aiforneys io plead The stoppage - was ordered by Stage show, “Victory Revue of] tact lin jail for several days, Lewis went|—The commerce department said FLOUR SICKENS 6200 JAps |Sullty to killing Suzanne and two Robert Milsat, A. F. of L. repres 1946,” 8:15 p.’ m., grandstand. 0 izati ‘L Il D y to ‘Kentucky, then hitch-hiked to! today there was a good chance that ’ ” _. | women. sentative of Terre Haute, reportedly ——————————— rganization "Legally ead Noblesville, he said. Americans will get a more gemerous| TOKYO, Sept. 4 (U. P) —Some| giate authorities agreed to re- In. an attempt to force a closed INDIANA SOLDIER DIES At State's Request. | “And the first I even knew that helping of ‘Sugar after next March. 6200 Japanese ' were ill ia Sous frain from demanding the death Shep. Approximately 250 were made A WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (U.P.).~— . |Scott had been murdered was when| The Cuban sugar crop becomes poisoning ey ua i y- [TOM | penalty after receiving written con-|'“'® by the move, i] Pvt. Robert G. Ball, 17, of Hobart,| pp aNKFORT, Ky. Sept. 4 (u./my brother saw it in the paper and | available then, and it is expected eating flour made from imported | fessions of the crimes last Aug.’ 6, : Ind. died of poliomyelitis a week a d [told me,” Lewis asserted. to be 525,000 tons greater than the |wheat. Three hundred persons were| 1, addition to the Degnan mur- ; ago at Walter Reed army hospital, |P-—Franklin Cireuit Court Ju ge Scott, who left Moline, Til, to seek |Past Year's crop. said to be seriously sick, der, Helrens pleaded guilty to the Iiomes Near Schools Grouped. local health officials announced | William B. Ardery today revoked s.r work in Bloomington, was be- slayings of Frances Brown, ex-| |n Times "Houses for Sale” Ads . today. He was stricken while sta-|the corporation privileges permitting lieved to have been killed three : Li i S hy a g Wave, and Josephine Ross, a house- | oH tioned at Ft. Bustic, Va. the Ku-Klux Klan, a Georgia cor-|weeks ago while preparing a meal| | 7 treet 1g ts masne wife, [or greater efficiency in your child's : poration, to operate in Kentucky. [outside his cabin. His head had ; Sits Quietly in Court Benn Suk Jo Bis more . He directed that, the corporation | "20 cut off with a double-edged RB ih k Th : V 4 The youth sat quietly with his po a, home” is y IT’S A STRIKE : : fon | xe. - y oOCK- rowing ANCA AIS hands folded in his lap during the| Spun: Me school be deprived of rights and privileges ; | | desirable. The advantage to L | The 1946-47 Bowling Season : : , | proceedings. ; dren of* having the’ same : Is Und og of doing business in Kentucky and 2 : Police today found glass globes at the standards, or-shoot out thé| After the pleas were entered As-| methods in a continuously ; I 3 Under Ye déclared the Klan's state organiza-| Silly Notions broken on 17 street lights in Brook- |light with B-B=- guns and sling|sistant’ State's Attorney Wilbert, nated program makes it /easior to | AL HAUSMAN and LAVERNE tion “for ‘all purposes legally dead side park. | shots. ’ | Crowley, told the court the prosecu- learn and leads to a well anced BIERS k -secori honors and non-existent.” roth Orville Hosking, superintendent of | “This vandalism seems, to .come tion wanted to offer evidence in the education. : 4 too ng ® Another brand new fea« : : | . : Rl on yesterday's inaugural league = .| The action followed a suit filed by ture is added to your Times the .park, ‘attributed the damage in spurts. Last month an epidemic | slaying of Suzanne. 2% p ti ) ih g : | program. ... Read about their Attorney General Eldon 8. Dummit all-star list today. Brighten to. rock4throwing vandals. lof it broke out in the parks and’ The arraignment was recessed readily 1 Ye a Bémse convenis ; scoring performances and the: who sought to ban the Klan from. your day with the humor “They-keep us busy all summer we were on the lookout for the while the -overflow crowd was) ent to schools 1 ng to names. of other leaders : operating in, the state The judg- in Palumbo's popular car- long replacing globes,” he said. “It's culprits about a week. . | cleared from the. courtroom. Extra the selection at the innit \ — ment was ‘ordered entered after the toon, “Silly Notions” Try |Almost impossible to keep the lights| “The kids are pretty evasive, chairs were brought in for witnesses | of classification 24 © TODAY AND EVERY DAY |Klan, given under Kentucky law it today . . . you'll be looking |YePAired. - |though. We haven't-had much luck i: Mr. Crowley said the state wanted ° wre TH | ON THE SPORT PAGES OF 120 days or until the first ruling day| for it again tomorrow, “Just” before school starts and |at batching them. Even if we do,'to present the evidence to substanti-| Times Classified Ads 7 of court to file an answer, Saiied}- ha reo after. the parks are closed kids rove they are usually set” free after a ate Heirens' plea of guilty The ~~ Rllov 5551 | The Times toresporid.” :, , Turn lo Page 13, around the parks and heave rocks! brief reprimanding at juvenile aid.” procedure was unusual Phone Riley a Spleen es vedo =n hell ip others Betti a eet fetal isis Go J Canaan Seri Sen ay fs paps ian y : ei a eR se a Cae i Si i wd pe are w= rl wll Vik Liat Sa aaa ig : AE £. a
