Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1946 — Page 1

CT. 12, 1946 xes ovels s Jackson. New a Sond. Now

ung writers in WO new novels, 9 he Fall of Valor,

udience because he se-Letty Fox: -Her - of the love life of

eprinted

Sandburg

200 poems by Carl ublished last Satur rint edition by the g Co. . the book, called Midwest,” originally

volumes, “Chiic rnhuskers.” i oduction . by Lloy

{ the Midwest” contographic illustra=itherto unpublished dburg by Steichen, hen the author was

was also the date dicate the restored andburg in Gales-

ae

seem to hale no ction, that Letty's the continuous nar--conscious girl who erybody and everyretting anywhere. = n 'e “was intended to r,” and although it disappointed and ems, for the most ounced merrily from another. highly entertaining, take her troubles

is like a spotlight, r the landscape at , too, may be the stina Stead. of the author's ine anything out is aither is having his n evening and Letty precocious girl, ene -color stories. s not satisfied w lone; she must tell All this helps acterminable parrative iting hill—H. H,

s Retailer

nmon Pitfalls

atest books received Book Page is “How 1d Operate a Retail eston Robinson, prong at New York unienneth B. Haas of cation office, Wash-

the authors’ preface, lesigned to help the eginning tetailer get start and avoid the Arst few years.” With 1 almost 300 pages of wok sells for $4.35.

IR SERVICE ALS ICURES 8 rn Equipment | E Wash 0 MA Ar ot ”

ery

————"

rd seems inadeur sentiments.

EMUM SHOW h—Murat Temple

.

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| S]] BRUCE [CILIARIS)

40 Whirlwind uel 41 Soft mineral ulf 44 Beverage 45 Grain 46 Vegetable 47 Employ 49 Doctor (ab.) y 51 Area measuye|

i I TOA {RRR or "1b! (i AY be PI ig : J ny ddr)

A wins .. >A | ; i Sale, > e n 1aNapo 1 1 eS FORECAST: Partly cloudy tonight; tomorrow fair and mild. : fa 4 E : : : . “PRICE FIVE CENTS {. | scripes ~mowarnl]l VOLUME 57—NUMBER 186 2 5 MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1946 Entered 4 Secaha-Disae Matter at Bostogiis ane ah

Indianapolis, Ind. Issued dally except Sunday

TRUMAN GOES ON AIR TONIGHT IN MEAT CRISIS

President Is Expected to Make Concessions But Stress ‘Line Holding.’

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—President Truman speaks to the nation on stabilization tonight. He is under severe pressure to decontrol meat for political purposes. He is expected to make some concessions to ease the meat shortage. But he probably will insist that government controls must not be abandoned at this time, The. President's 15-minute dis- | cussion will begin at 9 p. m, In-| dianapolis time. It will be broad-| cast by all major networks. | oo: meat shortage is creating a litical crisis for the administration. The Democratic party must fight] for its control of congress in the general election, three weeks from tomorrow. Meat is the spectacular short item. But shortages in gen-

\

tional commander.”

‘Molotov Threatens to Nullify

$13,500 From PEACE PARLEY ENDS IN BITTER SOVET ATTACK

Loot Is Taken owntown Tavern

TWO BANDITS SLEDGE WAY INTO BUILDING

Gain Access After Holding , Up Parking Lot - Attendant.

(Photos, Page Two)

Unshorn Locks Don't Scare These Purdue Coeds

All Decisions Not Having His 0. K.'

By R. H. SHACKFORD

United Press Staff Correspondent |

| Na |

BR ——

Paul H. Griffith . . . American Legion's “first world war II na-

PARIS, Oct. 14.—The peace conference completed its work today | under the cloud of a final bitter | outburst by V. M. Molotov of Rus- | sia, who threatened to nullify all} the recommendations made here

Two armed bandits sledgehammered their way through the basement wall of a downtown tavern today, cracked open. the tavern safe and

eral have become a powerful factor in the congressional campaign.

Possible Alternatives

Bad news from the campaign battle grounds has been overflowtng the White House. Short of. removing price controls from meat, Mr. Truman could undertake otherwise to ease the shortage. He could authorize price increase or a bonus to move beef into the

® ® =» vim aie { without his approval.

Plans to Provide More Homes

Are Told by Legion Head

By ROBERT BLOEM Rent now, buy Tater was the advice offered home-hunting veterans! Byrnes was understood to be in a

today by Paul H. Griffith, new na Legion,

In its meunting drive to

tional commander of the American

In the last hours of the work on drafts of treaties for five former

enemy states, Mr. Molotov denounced the conference resulfs as “unsatisfactory” and accused the!

United States and Britain of dom- | | ineering and®dictatorial policies, | | Secretary of State James F.

boiling rage at Mr. Molotov's attack. He refrained from replying,

oS the answer to the veterans housing although associates sald it took al-

market. Slaughtering quotas could problem, he told a press conference at national Legion headquarters most physical restraint to keep him

be readjusted upward. Imports of canned and frozen meat could be fostered or awcertificate system might be proposed to assure the raisers and feeders of cattle that they would be protected against any future increase in prices. : Belief that Mr. Truman would * Insist on his held-the-line stabilization program persisted despite heavy blows struck against it. Industry

here, thre organization will strive to That's the way a vast majority of veterans want: it anyway, Commander Griffith believes. { “I couldn't logically advise any {veteran to buy a home the way {prices are inflated today,” he said. (“It has been my experience that {more than 90 per cent of the veterans are. looking for a house to rent, not to buy, and certainly with rents controlled they will receive

members of the wage stabilization. more value for rent paid than for

board have resigned, complaining

tion. Consumers Divided,” Angry

Democratic candidates in the north and east have bombarded Mr, Truman in private and in public for at least temporary meat relief. Labor is divided on maintenance of controls. Consumers -are divided, but many of them are angry. Less than two weeks ago the President approved the report of his office of war mobilization and reconversion that an “early and severe economic ¢rash” would come if prices contin to rise. In indorsing it, the President issued an appeal to the mation in which he said: ) . “I hope ‘every business man, worker, farmer and consumer will tal to heart this sentence from the report: ‘An all-out emphasis on ‘production of finished goods and on preventing a further in-

crease in prices is the task imme- |

diftely before us.'” Three weeks ago Mr. Truman went on record without qualifica= tion on meat. He told his news conferences meat was something . he knew about. Supply Statement Recalled He predicted that early autumn run of grass fed cattle soon would appear on the market to improve the meat supply. The office of war mobilization report a eek later seemed to contradict the President with a statement that the meat shortage would become worse this winter. Mr. Truman said, however, phat he saw no discrepancy. Since thap the meat situation has not improved. Butter is high. Milk has jumped 2 cent or so a quart in some big cities. # Pork is harder to get than beef. Bacon is among the scarcest items.

Poultry is scarce. Cheese and fish

are expensive, All of this builds up into a politic- " al head of steam which can cause an election day explosion. ® ”

Truman Will Follow P. A. Keep Meat Curbs, Says Reece!

* COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 14 (U. P.).| Women's clubs, censured the Presi- communicated all persons partici- | biggest upsets, voled to override | Prietor of the Hotloaf Baking Co. | fense rman B.|dent for “using a radio build-up” pating directly or indirectly in the an earlier Big Four decision to [Said “Sorry, at Presi- (for his message, “(when) any word prosecution of Archbishop Aloysius! leave the Greek-Bulgar frontier un- aPplying for a job as porter at $40 ' Maxim addiess of a meat program. that might be|Stepinac of Yugoslavia, |

~National Republican Carroll Reece said toda dent Truman, in his r to the nation tonight, “probably will follow the advice of the P. A. C. and keep controls on meat.” Mr. Reece, here to address the Ohio Federation of Republican

TIMES INDEX

‘Amusements , 18

Inside Indpls.. 13 Eddie Ash.... 10|Bill Mauldin. 9 Aviation ..... 13{Ruth Mellett. 13 Boots ........ 32|Movies .v... 18 Businéss ..... 8|Obituaries ,..5-6 Classified ..20-22|J. E. O'Brien. 11 * Comics .,.... 23|F. C. Othman. 13 Crossword ,... 23 |Politics ...... 14 Editorials .... 14|Radio. ....... 23 Furope Today 14 |Mrs. Rooseevlt 13 Fashions .... 16 i wer 14 Mrs, Ferguson 16 |Serial ..... 12 Yorum i. 14 | Silly Notions . 13 G. 1. Right§.. 23 {Sports .....10-11] Meta Given .. 17|Joe Williams . 10 In Indpls. ... 9| Wom. 'News 16217

HO LIKE FINE FOOD.

"FOR THOSE W J tiers Restaurant, 144 E; Ohio.~Ady,

oho

La

the normal |

The Legion | made up } ~—

INDICT JONES ON 3 CHARGES

Accused in Jewel Theft and

housing committee, | entirely of world war II

Fruster Jones, 38, whose police records includes 71 arrests, today|

by a county grand jury. | He was charged with manslaugh- |

ing a dope party at 309 W. Ver-|

For his alleged part in a. $35,000! jewel burglary last Jan. 30," Jones! was indicted on’ charges of receiv- |

{curred at the home of Mr. and | Mrs. George Dixon, 4302 Swanson dr. | | In other grand jury action, Wilbur | Howard, 30, was indicted on charges |

scene of an accident lasy May 18. | 10-Year-0Old Girl Killed A truck allegedly driven by How-

had occurred in the 600 block, S.| Illinois st. |

charges were Paul Sanderson, 43, of | Broadway, O.; Turner Harwell, 43, | of 1847 Boulevard pl. Jones. . Sanderson is alleged to have| beaten to déath Joseph Couch in a melee at the Fairgrounds last Sept. 11. Harwell is charged with shooting fatally. Wendrell Fitzpatrick last| Aug. 14," The alleged murder oc-| curred in a Lockefield Gardens] apartment.

necessary could have heen from the President's desk.” “Despite the fact that Democratic | Floor Leader John W. McCormack and many others of the President's advisers have advised him ‘to lift controls, I expect him to follow the advice of the P. A. C. and leave the controls on meat,” Mr, Reece said. > Mr. Reece said Mr. Truman “possibly will use some of his w

issued |

duce the flow of meat to the markets.” : He believed the people were most concerned today with the meat shortage, governmerit controls, inflation, New Deal alliance with: |radical groups, and the housing | shortage. “There is ‘a strong feeling that the {administration is accepting the advice of the radical fringe which rhas precipitated the present situation,” hg said,

what they pay to buy or build.” ~ that the board is ‘unable to func-!

| Times

Death of Woman.

and Willie th

lof the council, announced the de- |

powers to impose a subsidy to fh\, nN

make more homes available

for rent.

veterans, is surveying the problem

anew, he said, and will meet soon|

in Washington with Expediter Wilson Wyatt and other officials to suggest new approaches. One probably will be a push to get more materials into the® hands of investment builders with the understand- | ing they will give veterans rental priorities on the finished housing units, Mr. Griffith said. On the question of veterans em-

| (Continued on Page 3—Column 2)

Head of State Bar May Join

'Tot's' Defense

{that they imposed their will on this

State Service | MADISON, Inc, Oct. 14. — One of Mrs. Lottie (Tot) Lockman's| lawyers in her trial on a charge of | attempted murder, may be the new|

association, it was learned today. | Attorney Joseph Cooper Sr., who

| ter in the death of Mrs. . Vinnell | hag represented Mrs. Lockman thus | tigated Russia for Davis, 27, who died Sept. 4 follow- far conferred with Jefferson Coun-|peace-making motives. \

ty Circuit Court Judge Harry

new bar association head, to assist | him in the trial. | He said he planned to confer with!

held early next week, Judge Nichols| indicated. The trial probably will not get under way until early next year. The grand, jury, which indicted |

ing the toxicologist's report from! Indiana university medical center to determine ' whether mercury

deaths. | The prosecution seeks to prove

Indicted on first degree murder Mrs, Lockman, who held the title|end, there was a desire on the part|and pullman cases, the court will|

of being the Good Samaritan of the Jefferson county hills, administered |

poison. |

SLAV PROSECUTORS

BANNED BY CHURCH

— Excommunication Order Is ly concerned” could vote.

Issued by Vatican.

VATICAN CITY, Oct. 14 (U. P.). —The Vatican--with the approval of Pope Pius himself-—-today ex:|

Francesco Cardinal Marmaggi,

[head of the Vatican's congregation |ed

{

cision of the council todsy. | The - cardinal’'s announcement | said all persons taking parc in the| trial against Archbishop S‘epinac| have incurred excommunication automatically under church law. The congregation of the council is tne Catholic church's highest disciplinary body. Ithas jurisdiction over all canon law. ‘Archbishop Stepinac, head of the church in Yugoslavia during the German occupation, was sentenced to 16 years at hard labor for allegedly aiding enemies of Marshal Tito. The & communication order has been applied earlier to Tito himse'f. Church practice will not name those upon which the ban Is imposed nor will the church appoint anyone to interpret the decree. In dividual Catholics wil lbe allowed to determine for themselves if the excommunication agtion affects them.

ead of State i

{from taking the floor. | Only the formal farewells tomorrow remained to put an end to the conference, It wound up its work with angry, inconclusive votes on the Finnish treaty, the crux of the final clash! between the east and the west. Darkens Treaty Hopes Mr. Molotov’'s final speech threw a dark shadow over the prospects of an early peace for Italy, Ro-| mania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Finland. », In effect he tossed into the waste. | basket the work of the conference] on all issues not previously agreed!

The Soviet Union, he ninted, will ignore even the two-thirds decisions of the conference when the Big] Four meet in New York Nov, 4. ! Mr. Molotov accused Britain, the United States and France of ‘welch- | ing” on their previous agreements in the Big Four councils. He charged |

conference because they had enough | votes to do so. Rapped by Vandenberg The Soviets flared back in the

was indicted on three felony charges president of the Indiana State Bar | closing hours of the: peace con-

ference after Senator, Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) sharply casattacking U. S.

He disclosed that the Americans

mont st. The woman received SeV=| Nichols today and told him he had would vote against giving Russia feral injections of morphine Prior arranged with Charles A. Lowe, $300 million in reparations from | to her death, the indictment states. Lawrenceburg, Ind. attorney and | Finland.

However, the final vote was "1 to] 5 in favor, with five abstentions,

giving the article a bare majority |

ing stolen goods and conspiracy to Mr. Lowe Thursday. , Arraignment end preventing it from going to the commit a felony. The burglary oc-|of Mrs. Lockman probably will be| Big Four as a recommendation. Mr. Vandenberg in turn was pro-|a writ of habeas corpus on grounds |

voked to a departure from his pre-| pared spéech by criticism from K.| V. Kisselev of White Russia. Mr. Kisselev charged “certain eir-

of manslaughter and leaving the! Mrs. Lockman last week, is await-! cles” in the United States were try-

ing .to foment discord between | Russia and Finland. Mr. Molotov sajd the rhain rea-

“We love the unshorn male” is the caption suggested by “Anti-Inflation Headquarters” at Purdue

yo

university for this photo of two coeds admiring the shaggy locks of a: student boycotter against §1 haire cuts. Lafayette barbers, feeling the brunt of the stunt of the student boycott, hdoubtedly will declare the picture enemy propaganda, but Mitzi Meehan and Jozy Englund really don't appear repelled by Gene

Wilson's . lengthening mane.

10C RATE RULING

Other Appeals Announced By Supreme Court.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14 (U. P). —The supreme court, in its first

Gypsy World Seeks Couple

TO BE REVIEWED Who Stole Tribal Jewels

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 14 (U. P.).1 Evans is a widower with six chil-

escaped with more than §13,500 in small bills. The tavern was the Capitol tavern at 152 W. Washington st, The pair gained access from a sube terranean parking 16t to the rear of the establishment after binding and gagging the lot attendant with adhesive tape and dumping him into a parked car. Make Opening in Wall Clyde Gosnell, the parking ‘at. tendant, told police the pair drove into the parking lot about 3 a. m.

and appeared to want gasoline, When he went out to serve them,

—THe gypsy world searched today dren, Mr. Evano said. He became he related, they pointed a gun at

for a beautiful, black-haired prin. cess and a tribal king who allegedly

| $150 in cash. Eli Evano, king of the Evano

| |

king by marrying Mr,

daughter,

death. met the beautiful Princess Pat.

Evano’s| him, took him to the basement The daughter died last level and proceeded to tape him Sept. 21 and the gypsies were gath{vanished with the tribal fewels and ered in Philadelphia to mourn her

| ghey. Mr. Gosnell said they then went

It was there that Evans | to work on the wall between the

i underground parking space and the

business session of the 1946 term, tribe, reported the theft of $2500 in| The old man was sad as he re- tavern basement and quickly made jewels and the cash to police and ported the theft to police. He sald an opening in the two feet of brick promised swift and terrible pupish- word of the theft had been sent and mortar, He told authorities he

today agreed to review an un-

preced

{commission order calling for the culprits if the gypsies catch them | equalization of certain freight rates ‘

} try. {in various sections of the country, |" ices, sald the theft was said.

first.

ented interstate. commerce’ ment would be meted out to the out to the gypsy world by the lay in a parked car, unable to

‘grapevine and expressed confidence move until an unidentified soldier,

"the ctlprits would be caught.

Mr. Evano, the grandfather of the, “The word has been sent” he released him. “The gypsies have been told.’

The court also agreed to decide; oad after Princess Patricia They will be caught

whether Pullman, Inc, may sell half its sleeping car busihess to a Lloc of railroads for $75 million as a step toward dissolving its monopoiy of railroad sleeping cars.

The court refused to enjoin Senator Theodore G. Bilbo (D. Miss, from taking his seat for a

third senate term in January, The injunction was asked by James L. P. Rumble of New York, whe said Mr; Bilbo had for many years advised disenfranchisement of Negroes. The court also denied a hearing to WAC Capt. Kathleen“B, Nash Durant, who was sentenced to five years in prison by a military tri-

bunal for' theft of $1,500,000 worth"

of the Hess family German crown jewels. Announce Considerations Mrs. Durant had asked release on

she was no longer a member of the WAC at.the time of her arrest. .

These were top cases among scores on which the court acted today.

In all instances, the court today merely announced whether it would or would nof consider appédls which

ard struck and fatally injured 10- found in the exhumed bodies of son the work of the conference on (had been filed during the summer. year-old Helen Baker. The tragedy hree Dupont residents caused their! many problems was unsatisfactory|When the court denies an appeal,

| Tan, 20, and George Evans, 39, Har'risburg, Pa., visited his home. Princess Pat was described as a fiery, dark-eyed princess who would have become queen of the tribe upon her marriage, according to gypsy law,

{

SEEMS LIKE INDIAN

|

Sunny Skies Are Forecast For Tomorrow.

| Sunny skies and warming temperatures promised to bring Indi{anapolis residents out of their overcoats which they had donned over the week-end. The weatherman predicted some{what warmer for today and to continue into tomorrow with no -rain| forecast. | | After a nippy week-end it 'ooked as if Indian summer was coming |pack for a second engagement in [the Hoosier state.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

{ seeking his own car,

By the time Mr. Gosnell called police the bandits had a head start

“If the police catch them, they .f an hour and a half.

will be simply arrested,” he added “But if the gypsies catch them they will be tarred and feathered.

Nothing Taken but Cash

*! ‘Inside the tavern basement, the

pair left a shambles. Papers, includ«

“I had hoped my granddav2hter ing war bonds and bank books, were

would become queen of the ti Now that can never be.”

Plaque Design To Win $1000

tion's outstanding football coach.

Local artists—amateur and pro- [Gosnell fessional—are ‘invited to participate | through the hole in the basement {in this national contest and any| Wall and then left the parking lot {number of drawings may be sub- 8s they had entered,

mitted by an entrant. The $1000 drawing award is in line with the annual Coach of the Year selection sponsored throughout the United States each year by The In-

ara newspapers. The top coach is

Coach-of-Year

SUMMER 1S BACK

‘ strewn over the floor. The safe had

{been opened by partially ripping off {the front plate and loosening the {lock from the inside. | Proprietors of the tavern, Steve

| Fotiades of 5828 E. St. Clair st.

e N

{and Jordan Jannetides of 1032 N. Parker st., said nothing, appeared to have been taken, however, except the money, They estimated the in the safe ,to total about

| cash

| The Indianapolis Times and other $13,500 and said the bulk of it was | Scripps-Howard newspapers are go-| In small bills which would make a [ing to pay $1000 for a design to be | sizable bundle for the bandits to | placed on a plague honoring the na- | Carry.

The two also took $49 from Mr. They left the tavern ,

SECRET AGREEMENT ON CHINA IS DENIED

| WASHINGTON, Oct. 14 (U, P) —

| dianapolis Times and Scripps-How- | State department quarters today

| denied that any secret agreement on

». [Selected in a poll of some 500 lead-| China was reached by the United [ing coaches at the close of the foot-| States and Russia at the Potsdam

|&

was because “through the course that is the end of the case. { 6am... 47 10am... 60 ba) season. | conference last year. of the conference, from beginning tol In cases such as the freight rate| 7a m..... 48 1la nm. ....6 | The person winning the $1000] The issue was raised by the 8a.m.....58 12 (Noon).. 65 [prize for the best plaque design|American-China Policy association’ of a cértain group of states to take hear arguments and then make a| 9a m 37, 1pm . 67 | will honor Indiana university's Alvin|in a statement calling on President

ier IN. “Bo” McMillin. Truman to make public what fit ‘WARNS OF DEATH, Designs Due Nov. 10 called a “Secret Potsdam agreement

THEN FALLS DEAD! The I. U. mentor won the Coach concerning China.” :

{of the Year honor in 1945 and the| The association is an unofficial or CHICAGO, Oct. 14 (U, P.).—The| winning design will appear on a ganization of persons interested in Rev. Charles Cockrell, 59, told down- | plaque which he will receive. Far Eastern affairs and says its

up a dominating position and dictate | final ruling. what they considered essential.” The freight rate order was apCheered by Slav Bloc , |pealed to the high tribunal by nine He referred to the Danube mat- (northern states, the governors of

ter, on which the western POWErS | (continued on Page 3—Column 3)

failed in commission to obtain a dii———————— : es apy . board b mclud : f - s at a skid row mission] The Coach of the Year award was| board members include Reps. Clare two-thirds majority of the principle | y and-outers a ; bite ; wih of free navigation, only to obtain SORRY. THIS LINE S that “death comes like a thief in! originated in 1935. Each selected | Boothe Luce (R. Conn), Walter

coach since the’ awards inception|Judd (R. Minn.), and Author Max when death Will receive a plaque. | Eastman. Completed designs must be in The|

smiled, | Times office by midnight, Nov. 10. JUKE BOX OPERATOR SLAIN BY GUNMAN

two-thirds decision in -the full F R J B N T MEAT’ the night.” cohference when states “not direct. 0 0 S, 0 . | “One never knows NEW YORK, Oct. 14 (U. P.)~— will come,” he said. The Slav bloc gave Molotov a big | Housewives seeing 150 men queued| He stopped . preaching,

up In Washington ‘market today |stepped from the platform and fell | Mail or bring entries to { Editor, Indianapolis Times,

cheer whep he said bluntly: SD med there was meat ov supa?l nag 214 W.| Cp , . 5 C est | ASSUM re Was , . ead. Ou BU Beria) iHenqy Ten Wi on sale and began to line up by | Sa | Maryland St Indinngpeiis 9. | JOLIET, TIL, Oct. 14 (U, P.), — Greece will remain unchanged.” the dozens. SEEK LITVINOV TESTIMONY Here are the ru =i sheik nl Police began an intensive manhunt The conference, in one of At the end of the line, the pro-| TOKYO, Oct. 14 (U, P).—De-| Contestants may ube [today for the man in a black sedan attorneys today requested genuity in selecting the theme for! who shot and killed Leahm Kelly, ladies, these men are that former Russian Foreign Minister the plaque. It might be a football 35, Joliet “juke box” operator, while Litvinov be called as a action scene. It might symbolize! i. wife and daughter looked on witness in the trial of ex-Premier the job accomplished by the se-ig. yo few feet away. ’ Hideki Tojo and other top-flight lected coach who receives the plaque | Kelly's wife, Alice, 33, told police | Japanese war criminal suspects. which “acclaims -his selection On| (ye sedan followed their car into mmm | the basis of skill as a football teach-| {he driveway of the Kelly “ome |er, ~reputation for sportsmanship, | 1st night. As Kelly stepped out

Weird Story of ‘Space Ship,’ |aelievement in competition, influ- of the car, his assailant fired six

| ence for the welfare of football, and | times with a 45 caliber pistol.

Fol lows Méteoric Shower n relationship to his players.” Police Captain Willlam Kwasne-

The only lettering allowed on the|iskl said he believed mem of LOS ANGELES, Oct. 14 (U. P.).— object,” with something that looked COACH

drawing are the words: some rival juke box eoncerr ht OF THE YEAR AWARD have shot Kelly in the hope of The Los Angeles Daily News salg lice wings had appeared over the in a story from San Diego, Cal. to-| “i%:

Presented by the “muscling in” on his business. | *“It was shaped like a bullet and |

Scripps-Howard Newspapers A suitable space for lettering-in i day that many persons there be-|(¢ oft a thin vapor trail behind it,” | the name of the winning coach, the G Coal lieved a “space ship from another|the News quoted William L. Nabers, | vear and a paragraph detailing the as vs, Loa . planet” had tried to contact earth|gSan Diego county hospital attend- | reasons for the selection must be oe during last week's showering of} ant, as saying. : provided somewhere on the design. ® How natural gas is threatsale by two suburban shops where | meteors from the Giacobini-Zinner| Meade Layne, editor of an oc- The design must be suitable for ening to replace coal as the hopeful, hungry customers began | comet. cult publication called the “Round reproduction, through use of a die nation’s basic fuel is relining up four -hours before the| At San Diego. authorities sald Robbin,” was reported as putting a on silver, bronze or other metal. The ported today by Times. doors opened. {they received no reports of such a medium to work on the supposed design will appear on a plaque. Writer Richard Lewis. A There was .a mountain of freshly | phenomenon and were frankly sighting. The medium claimed it! The design must be of a size that o It's another story of post cut meat totaling 10,000 pounds, | skeptical of it. Police said they had was a “space ship named Careeta” can be reduced to 10 by 15 inches. war America . . . and how | and the customers wanted it. There received no calls at the time. from an unidentified planet the either horizontal or vertical, Actual the trend may affect Indi- = was no quibbling about prices. Al The Daily News said at least a| News said. He added the “ship” size also 1s permitted, anapolis and Indiana. ' crew of 17 butchers worked at top dozen persons testified that on the|didn't land because “they're afraid| The drawing may be in ink, pen | wu speed. ' - Inight of Oct. 9 a “large and weird|of the reception they $' Ty” : P. ak x » i: J : ; , Xo § Lid t » A »

\ ; *

its |

changed. {a week.” tia After Greece insistently demand-| The line quickly dwindled to 12 “strategic rectification” of the applicants. frontier, the issue finally was sent back to the Big Four without conference recommendations.

BUY BUFFALO. MEAT 35 LBS. PER MINUTE

MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 14 (U., P.. --Thick, red steaks and roasts—cut from grain fed buffalo—were bought by meat-hungry Minneapolis house~ wives today at rate~of 35 pounds per minute. : . The Buffalo meat was placed on

cil or wash-drawing.