Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1946 — Page 1

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Gander, Nfld. 160 milés away, was "weathered in. Just. two weeks

+ It would be a most difficult oper-

Pence: of Russia with the first REAL story about the “little people” of Russia TIMES INDEX i$ rich in Indiana background, i . That's why Hoo= sss 0 Amusements . 14,In. Indpls... 8|siers are looking Eddie Ash ... 30 Inside Indpis, 19/forward to the Aviation . 19iLabor’....... 19|start of his un=Nat Barrows . 11|Ruth Millett . 19 censored series in Boots .:..... 34|Movies- ...... 14|The Times next Business .... 22|Obituaries ... 12{Monday . . . a Carnjval . 20|Dr. O'Brien .. 19|Series of six artiClassified .32-34|F. C. Othman 19 [cles profusely illuComics '...... 35|Political Rept. 20|Strated with picCrossword -... 22|Politics ..... , 2|tures taken by the Editorials 20(Radio ....... 35 Ehthor during’ his Pasiogs 26- 30 (Mss. Rockevals 9 sities i Lr DE 16 Silly Notions 19|@Ptly titled “Inside Russia” , , G. I. Rights. 8 Sports .. .... 30|for it. deals with the lives, the work "Meta Given : 27 Stranahan ',. 30|and even the heartbreaks of the Home Page .. 16) Weather Map 3|“common” people of Don Hoover . 20 Women's . 26-27|Unjon. It is a series gathered by Indiana Saga 20 World . Affairs 20'the author ‘himsel in “living with”

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FORECAST: Fair and not quite so cool tonight; tomorrow. partly cloudy and rather warm,

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1946.

ators a3 Becond-Class Matter at Pos

HUGE AIRLINER FALLS, BURNS

Crash Is Worst Disaster 38 In Commercial Flying | p= History.

STEPHENVILLE, Nfld, Oct. 3 (U.

P.).—A huge'Ml te plane explod-| N

ed against a hillside 12 miles east of here early today, kill- | ing all of the 39 jiersops aboard. ——

A ground rescue party which Admits Grave Differences

fought its way through a wilder- { ness to the scene of the crash of Among Big Four. ! By.R. H. SHACKFORD

the American Overseas airlines DC4 reported by radio to Harmon field| . United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Oct. = 3.—Secretary of

here, from which the great plane bad taken off only a few moments | States James F. Byrnes joined Pre- |

before the wreck, that there were |mier Josef Stalin today in predictno survivors. ing. that ar is mov. Imminent. 4 ] : owever he urged all natio; Hope virtually had been abandoned avoid seeking i oF economic | hours before that any of those|advantages which could only result aboard the four-engined A. O. A.

in war. flagship “Erie,” had survived, as air| .$In Washington, President Truobservers reported the explosion and ian wu : press conférence he had fire which followed the crash had |9iSCussed the

speech with Mr. agn Byrries by telephone and that he! ign small 1» eis .,0f the is in accord with it. Beyond that | the President said he had no com- | It, was the worst tragedy in the ment on the speech.) history of commercial aviation. “Just because war is not im-| 1 Host ot Hose altura om Amer- minent, we must take the greatest an hss Hines th 4 were l .re not to plant the seeds of future | mericans, Ry em Were |...” Mr. Byrnes told the Ameri-| wives and children of Americans can club in Paris. . Suny, am were ‘flying to He reissued his invitation for : . Soviet Russia to join the United The plane, en route from New |g... ‘Britain and France in a York to Berlin, had landed to refuel at Harmon field here, because

BYRNES STATES

treaty for demilitarization of Germany to last 40 years. He said the th term could be extended if the inE vas y ot om terests of peace and security recrash of a Saberis ~(Belgian) ro be lines plane, in which 27 died. ’ Watch in Horror

Capt. James. Johnson of the public relations section of the air transport command here, said the Harmon field tower crew and others watched the big plane make a normal takeoff, under a 5000-foot ceiling, just before 3:30 a. m. Then they watched in horror as| it plunged into the rocky hillside, only 100 feet below the crest of a 1900-foot elevation, 12 miles from the field. The plane exloded, Capt. Johnson said, and flames shot into the sky. There was no way to tell, Capt. Johnson said, why the plane failed to gain enough altitude to clear the hill. Ground rescue parties set out#at once to fight their way through the wooded muskeg terrain, typical rough Newfoundland country, to the crashed plane,

Believe None Survived

One party reached it at about 9:30 a; m., just five hours after the crash. It was-then that air observers concluded, from their signals, that none of the 28 adult passengers, three babies and eight crewmen had survived. Hope practically had been abandoned earlier. Col. Howard Maxwell of Indianapolis-A. T. C. corffmanding officer at Harmon field, had flown over the scene and returned to report, when asked if there were ahy survivors: “It looks pretty grim and quiet.” Jack Shelley, operations manager of American Overseas Airlines here. returning from a similar flight, said the plane was “burned beyond recognition.” Included in List

The crash toll might well have been 40 instead of: 39. George McCall, Newark, N. J, and A. O. A. crewman, was aboard a “dead-head” from Stephenville, but left it here, Sgt. Hanson said that the question of removing the bodies of sur-

Admits Difficulties

Taking time out from the peace conference arguments, Mr. Byrnes admitted candidly that serious differences “existed among the Big Four. These cannot be solved by ignoring or minimizing them, he added. “It is easy to get everyone to agree that war is evil,” Mr. Byrnes | said. “It is not so easy to get| agreement as to the things which lead to war.” “The difficulty is that while no nation wants war, nations may seek political or economic advantages which cannot be obtained without war.” Mr. Byrnes said the proposed Big Four treaty on Germany envisaged a continued need for limited but adequate armed forces, not for occupation but for insuring compliance with the demilitarization treaty. » He reiterated his Stuttgart promise that American troops will remain in Germany as long as.the occupation continues.

HULL'S CONDITION 1S "MOST CRITICAL

WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (U. P.).— Former Secretary of State Cordell Hull is in a “most critical condition,” the navy reported today. The navy said in an official bulletin: “Mr. Hull had a very poor night. His condition continues to be most critical.” The white- haired elder statesman was fighting a grim, but apparently losing battle for life at the nearby Bethesda, Md., naval hospital. He took a turn for the worse last night—-his 75th birthday. The father of the United Nations, who suffered a stroke Monday night, e plane as clung to life with the same deter-

triumphs in world diplomacy. But his age and the effects of two years of failing health length-

w York t0o|mination that carried him to his

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Fieldhouse of the future .

Hoodie School of Slide Rule’ TRUMAN'S AIM:

« This is an artist's sketch of the proposed athletic building“Tor Rose Polytechnic Institute | at Terre Haute, Ind.

OUT OF BOX

Two Singles, Double, Triple Send Dodger Pitcher To Showers.

% By CARL LUNDQUIST Cush United Press Sports Writer

St. Louis Cardinals won the

of three game playoff series with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

The Dodgers went into a one-run {lead in the first inning. Stanky was lout at first after Kluttz dropped the {ball on the third strike. Whitman (was thrown out and then Galan beat out a grounder. F. Walker | walked and Stevens’ single scored | Galan: Furillo flied out. The Cards scored two in second Galan threw out Slaugh-

Ups Enrollment 75 Per Sebi PEG ‘REAL’ WEE

By VICTOR PETERSON Times Staff Writer TERRE HAUTE, Ind, Oct. 3. school of the slide rule. In normal times students live by and with the rule for four: years. | | Today, under an accelerated program, they live by it for three years, working around the calendar. ° | The step-up is a hangover from war years when ‘the school trained army men the year around. They - have continued it for the benefit of |” acks. Of these, 16 have been desizveterans taking courses under the Dated for married students and|G. 1. bili, { their families. > Chief of the slide rule institution| Meanwhile the fuculy has been is Dr. Donald B. Prentice, who has| ncreased 25 per Cent and. classes been president of the school for 15| Nave been enlarged with sessions years. given on Saturdays, through the When asked what pertitage. n= oen. Hoon hon and in the ate sfterLAME ai 8 Sct Ye aud fo for thisYéchnical school found. “Just a second.” was located in the heart of Terre Reaching for a slide rule he did | Haute but was moved to the eastern a little rapid calculating and said: | outskirts of the city some 25 years “This year ‘is the greatest in our ago after donation of 125 acres of history. It represents a 75 per cent ground. increase.” To keep pace with the progresAnd Rose Poly is feeling the in- | sive and ever enlarging school, a crease. Like most other schools campaign is under way to raise over the state it has had to im- | $600,000 for a fieldhouse and dormiprovised to handle the sudden influx|tory. Already more than $500,000 of students, mostly veterans. This has been contributed and plans are vear the enrollment will number | {complete for the structures. about 90 per .cent veterans, some | Construction will get under way 200 of whom are married. as soon as building materials beTo care for the. increase, the!come more. available and restrictions school has purchased 20 army bar- are lifted.

Have You Registered?

( An Editorial )

MONDAY is'the last day for registration of persons who thus qualify to vote in the Nov. 5 general election. If. you don’t register—and if you don’t vote—you are failing in one of the most important duties of citizenship. Failure to vote disqualifies you, ethically if not + actually, from complaining about the kind of government you get. b Regardless of whether you are an independent voter or a member of a political party—BE SURE-YOU ARE REGISTERED PROPERLY. The place to register is in the courthouse. Thousands of voters lost their franchise at the last general election because of a ball-up in the registration records of the county clerk. Let's not let that happen again. Be sure you are registered. The independent voters of Marion county have an especially great opportunity this year to clean up an inefficient juvenile court, to elect a prosecutor who will be what the title implies, to choose their judges and state, county and township officials and legislators. The politicians report marked apathy on the part of voters this year. Don’t forget that apathy breeds bad government.

vivors had not been decided as yet.| ened the odds against him.

Have you registered?

ation, he said, A possibility was seen that they would be buried at the place they died, as was done in the case of the 26 who were killed at the Gander crash scene. A 27th victim

of that crash died in hospital after John Strohm, who has’ come out

-

Beginning Monday, Times Writer John Strohm Gives Readers Real Story of 'Inside Russia’

"write such a “down-to-earth” story | azine, told. The Times today.

. | worked on a ‘house organ” at Terre

the Soviet| Mr, Strohm to tour’ South America was married.

—Rose Polytechnic institute is ol ‘Warns Against Drop in

|

catch of a drive against the left | field fence. Dusak scored on Ma- | rion’s fly to Furillo. Kluttz sin< gled and séored on Dickson's triple to right center, Knocked Out of Box The Cards knocked Hatten out of the box in the fifth. After two were out, Musial doubled and Kurowski was passed purposely. Slaughter slammed a triple to deep right, scoring the two men ahead of him. Dusak scored Slaughter with a single. to Jith fo for the Dodgers. *1 singled But - Klutte, fly halted the

Purchasing Power.

Read an editorial, “More Con. trols—Less Meat,” Page 20.

mn

By SANDOR S. KLEIN United, Press Staff WASHINGTON, Oct.

ent 3.—PresiBehrman went in

- rally. A

x hsing i Ps “Bearman ‘was feblaced > A a pinch thé Povécnment ia Trying! Biter iri the Dodgérs’ “fia

to. | fifth-and Lombardi came in to pitch ‘od in 1874. - Qriginally thie-ihstisnue] Aon Juin trend, “made thes com-. or Brook in ne the sixth,

ments in reply to a news conference! St. Louis pushed Scross its sixth question. run in the seventh inning. KurowHe also read a statement pointing ski and Slaughter walked and adout the highlights in a report ow,vanced on Dusak's sacrifice. Higbe

the Russians free from the| “That's where John really made influence of Soviet propagandists. |his reputation,” William Renshaw, | Writer ' Strohm was qualified to | present Indiana editor for the mag“After . . + for his reputation as a clear- that tour, the management was so thinking journalist was built upon | impressed that John was promoted an earlier series he did as .a free-|lo managing editor.” lance writer after working a short’ . As a sequel ta his magazine artime in Terre Haute. After graduating from the Uni- recognition with his book, “I Livec versity of Illinois, Mr. Strohm{With Latin Americans.” The author's. wife, the former Haute. He quit that job to make | Lillian Murphy of 8t. Joseph's a world tour. depending upon the|County, Indiana, near South Bend stories he sold to pay his expenses. also has had a rich background in Upoxn his-return,® Prairie Farmer | Hoosier agriculture, magazine bought his series, gave | Mrs. Strohm as a 4-H member him a staff job, and soon sent him | won the 4-H National Achievement here to Indianapolis as Indiana Contest at Washington, D. C. editor. A graduate of Purdue, Mrs. After working here from 1938. un- Strohm «was home demonstration til 1940, Prairie Farmer selected agent for Vigo county when she

| (Continued. oun, Page 4—Column , 5), Whitman.

| ticles, Mr. Strohm gained national! MILK, LYE MIXTURE

to write a feries on agricultural Watch for the first article in Mr. life there, ' Strohm's series Monday.

« 3

2k

today

the nation’s economic health by Re- [came in to pitch for Brooklyn. conversion Chief John R. Steelman. Drops Perfect Bunt In reply to a quesfion, Mr. Tru- Mari a fect man said he believed Dr. Steelman | a on opped a Bg was probably correct in reporting oh ins of a play that t meat rt would get oe at ‘the shortage . St. Louis got its seventh and

Worse this winter. : eighth runs and Brooklyn sent in Predicts Surplus Tor Year . .. |its fifth pitcher in the eighth. After The President said this was -not| Dickson was called out on strikes, in conflict with his own statement |gchoendienst singled and Moore got of a week ago that the nieat short-|ga ground rule double. The Dodgers age would ease up in the near fu-|passed Musial purposely, filling the

bunt, tagegd

ture, bases. He said he had never said there Kurowski's single scored Moore would be an abundance of meal. |and Schoendienst before Melton

He did say there would be no meat famine, although a continued short- | and halted the rally. age was expected. FIRST INNING In answer to another question, { he declared that the government] CARDS—Hatten threw out|

is going to be operating in the black Schoendienst. Moore hit a ground | at the end of this fiscal year. single to left. ~Musial flied to Fu-

Previously he had indicated that |rillo. Kurowski flied to Furillo. NO the fiscal year would wind up with RUNS, ONE HIT. a. defi of $1.900.000.000. However! DODGERS-—Stanky was called out e sald expenses have been cut by on Strikes and Kluttz, who dropped be 100,000,000. the ball threw him out at first. . Yesterday's treasury PORT was | Schoendienst threw out Whitman. {Galan . beat out a grounder to! | Schoendienst. Walker walked, Ste-| | vens hit a ground single to center, {scoring Galan and sending Walker {to second, Furillo flied to Moore. {ONE RUN, TWO HITS SECOND INNING CARDS—Galan threw out Slaughter. Dusak got a triple when Whitman failed ‘to make a leaping | catch of jhis drive against the left field fence. Durocher came out to protest violently to Umpire Reardon that Dusak was out at third | on the relay. Marion flied to Furillo, Dusak scoring after the catch.

went to the mound for Brooklyn

{Continued on “Page 4—Column 2)

STRIKE TROOP NEED QUIZZED BY JUDGE

Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell today questioned the need for using state police and troops to enforce an anti-picketing injunction before complaint has been made to the court that the injunction was being violated. The judge raised the question

from the bench while hearing tes- late Singles bo Sener. Dita timony of State Police Superintendmoky i Kluttz,. Schoendienst popped to

ent Austin Killian in the C. I. O.

suit to restrain further use of |Stevens. TWO RUNS, THREE HITS,

troops in the Rex Manufacturing| DOPGERS-Réese was called out Co. strike at Connersville. on strikes. Edwards walked. Hatten, Governor Gates called out state|attempting to sacrifice, forced Edpolice and troops Aug. 5 to “coyer”|Wards at second. Dickson threw out the reopening of the plant after two |Stanky. NO RUNS, NO HITS.

weeks of idleness in a jurisdictional THIRD INNING dispute. CARDS—Stanky threw out Moore,

Indianapolis, Ind. Issued daily except Sunday:

NEW YORK, Oct. 3.—The | H. Walker, If... National league pennant here | Kluttz, ¢

today, sweeping the two out Dicksen,

The score was 8-4.

| Reese = walked,

~ seinen

Nock ia HATTEN Second Game B Box Score

{Cardinals ry Dodgers le

0-204 1008.0

ST. Lots CARDINALS

FIFTH INNING es

SH BB 8B 0 A EB Schoendienst, 2b - § : 1:1 eA tee Moore, of. 5..1.°2."0 8 03:4 3 Musial, 1b.. 4. 1.1" 0-1 “0141 Kurowski, 3h... 2 2 bu ZL Wd ES Slaughter, rf... 3 1 1 0 2.00 0 Dusak; ....:. 3: 9° 2/4 @ 01: 4 1 . 0:0 0°90 0 0, Marion, ss..... 3° 0 ¢ -L:.1..0- 4 23% hewve <8 Jen 31 ECE Pe BEE P.... 50°20 9% 0 1 '§ ‘Brecheen, p.... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. Totals", .5.... 36 8°13: 3.0 4.20 AP BROOKLYN DODGERS 4 AB RH SH BB SF 0 A IStanky, 2b. .... '§ 0 QO i dr BS few Whitman, If 4° 0.0.0 0°02 ¢ Schultz ........ 1 : 0.0 0 “0 0:0 03. Galan, 3b... 42:2 0'0''00 4 F. Walker. rf... ‘3 90° 0 o' 1 0 1 @"° Stevens, 1b..... 4 1 2. 0 0. 0.1H 0 Purille, of...... 4 1 1 .® 0 O40 Retse,ss....... 2°00 "0° 2 @iiges Edwards, c...... 2 0 1. 0 2 0.3 1 Hatten, p...... "1... 0 '¢. 0 6.0 9:1" Behrman, p..... 0 “9 «4-49 "0 0 0/ Hermanski .... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. Lombardi, p... 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1° Marion (Hige, D...o0ui. 8. 0.00 0.00 1 W Melton, p...... 0-0 0 0" 9 0 0 Medwick .'.... 1 0 0. 0 ® 0 0 0 Id WE aYIoRD.. near. 0 0 0.0.0 0 00 Lavagetto, e~4 0.6 1 0 6 49 Totals. .:..... 3274.60 6 OR H

Hermanski batted for Behrman

Medwick batted for Melton in eighth. Lavagetto batted for Taylor in ninth; Schultz batted for Whitman in ninth.

Kurowski 2.

Higbe, 3 in 1,

DODGERS — Edwards walked.] Hermanski batted for Behrman and | was called out on strikes. Stanky| hit into a double play, Dickson to| Marion to Musial NO RUNS, NO! HITS. SIXTH INNING

CARDS--Lombardi went “in pitch for Brooklyn. Dickson singled] off Reese's glove. Schoendienst at-| tempted to bunt safely and was] thrown out. Stanky threw out Moore. Lombardi threw out Musial. NO RUNS, ONE HIT. DODGERS—Dickson Whitman. Galan Walker.

threw out Dickson also threw out! Schoendienst threw out NO RUNS, NO HITS. SEVENTH INNING CARDS-—Kurowski and Slaughter walked. Dusak sacrificed, Galan to Stevens, Kurowski going to third and Slaughter to second. Higbe went in to pitch for Brooklyn. Marion squeezed home Kurowski with a perfect bunt, Highe tagging Marion out unassisted, Slaughter going to third. Galan threw out Kluttz. ONE RUN, NO HITS. DODGERS — Stevens was out, Musial to Dickson, who covered first. Furillo was out Marion to Musial. Edwards forced Reese, Schoendienst to Marion. NO| RUNS, NO HITS.

EIGHTH INNING

“It seems to me the custom has Stanky threw out Musial. Kurowbeen to complain of a violation of kl walked. Slaughter flied to Whitman. NO RUNS, NO HITS,

an injunction and ask the court to order arrest of violators,” ¢Judge | DODGERS—Whitman popped to Baltzell said. Schoendienst. Galan grounded out! The judge referred to a Fayetie | t0 Musial unassisted. Kurowski | Circuit court injunetion prohibitgeg | 100k Walker's pop foul. NO RUNS, pickets from blocking the entr | NO HITS. to the Rex plant. Mr. Killian had | FOURTH INNING

ust testified that he and a t CARDS—Galan threw out Dusak. ] sTOup 0 Marion walked. ' Kluttz flied - to

Dickson forced Marion, NO RUNS. NO HITS. DODGERS — Stevens flied to J Dusak. PFurillo. popped to Marion, ‘SURVIVED BY ‘CHIL D)xurawski threw out Reese. NO A 22-months-old child was treated | RUNS, NO HITS, for burns on the face re- FIFTH INNING ceived when he tried to drink a! CARDS'-- Schoendienst flied to mixture of milk and. a Iye clean- | Furillo. Moore popped to Reese, ing compound. Musial doubled. = Kurowski was The child, Martin Allig, 5364 Win- | purposely passed. Slaughter tripled throp ave. was injured while play-|to deep right center, scoring Musial ing with his older sister, and Kurowski. Dusak bounced a a single past Hatten, scoring Slaugh-

LOCAL TEMPERATURES [ter. Behrman went in to pitch for 6am ....48 10a m . ... 70 |Brooklyn. Marion singled to center 7am . 31 lam ...7 [sending Dusak to third. Kluttz flied 8am ....5 12 (Noon). 75 (to Walker, THRER RUNS, FOUR Sam... 66 1p m.....77 |HITS, :

CARDS-—Dickson fanned. Schoen« dienst singled to center field. Moore {doubled to left, Schoendienst stopping at third. Musial was purposely | passed, filling the bases. Kurowski singled to right, scoring Schoendienst and Moore, sending Musial to third. Slaughter walked, filling the bases. Higbe was removed from the mound. He was replaced by Melton. H. Walker batted for Dusak. Walked fouled out to Edwards. Marion was out, Reese to Stevens. TWO RUNS, THREE HITS. DODGERS--Harry Walker went to left field for the Cards. Medwick batted for Melton. Medwick -was out, Schoendienst to’ Musial, Marion tossed out Stanky. Whitman was out, Schoendienst to Musial, NO

RUNS, NO HITS. NINTH INNING CARDS-—-Taylor went to the mound for ‘the Dodgers. Kluttz singled to right. Dickson struck

out. 8Schoendienst hit into a double play. Stanky to Reese to Stevens. NO RUNS, ONE HIT. \

SUMMARY Runs batted in—Stevens, Marion 2, Dickson, Slaughter 3, Dusak,

Two-base hits—Musial, Moore, Galan. Sacrifice hits—Schoendienst, Dusak, Marion. Three-base hits—Dusak, Dickson, Slaughter, Stevens. Double plays—Dickson to Marion to Musial. Left on bases—Cardinals 11, Dodgers 4. Struck out—By Dickson 3, Higbe 1. Bases on balls—Off Dickson 4, Hatten 3, Lombardi 2, Higbe 2. Hits—Off Hatten, 7 in 4%. Behrman, 1 in %; Lombardi, 1 in 1%}

___Umpires—Pinelli, Goetz, Boggess and Reardon.

tp paw.

would send the world “reeling back

- DODGERS—Galan doubled to

3 0 00

12 0-813 0 00 3-460

in fifth.

{right field. F'. Walker flied to Moore. Stevens tripled to right, scoring {Gulan. Furillo singled, scoring Steve ens.’ Furillo took second on a wild pitch. Reese walked. Dickson Yas taken “out _by Manager Dyer; He was replaced by Brecheen, a south-

Edwards singled to left field, scoring Furillo, Reese stopping at secs lond. Lavagetto batted for Taylor, Lavagetto walked, filling the bases. Stanky struck out. Schultz batted for Whitman, Schultz fanned, THREE RUNS, FOUR HITS.

‘(KE SEES DISASTER IN ATOMIC WAR

EDINBURGH, Oct. 3 (U. P,).— Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower warned here today that an atomic war

into primal darkness.” Gen. Eisenhower ‘received the freedom of this Scottish city in rec ognition of his work as supreme allied commander with a sober Statement of the horrors facing the world in atomic warfare,

HOT STARCH BURNS MAN Samuel Tygrett, 54, of 327 B. Maple rd. received third degree burns on His back and shoulders this afternoon when his wife, Ann, accidentally spilled a kettle of hot starch on him. He is in a serious. condition at City hospital.

4:Bedroom Home Designed for Diversified Requirements

Lower floor alone has all the . facilities of a complete bungalow. Ideal for family with growing children who will soon need separate bedrooms; or one with relatives or frequent guests who will ‘appreciate the complete privacy of the upstairs, . . .

Early possession 4 bid om orth: 3 SEE, Ee Feet room y rooms, Tah bath down, oll, 1 room, 8 years

spacious closet space, bu other features: owners for Sale’ in