Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1946 — Page 3

30, 1948

wn

'r- Rep. Joseph setts will be

al. Post has Senator-Elect of Rhode Is 5 the second department, o

organized

CRETARY |

won't press n of three as)s which fore ace was denied 1e department ed anyway, so now but titles ivision chief, ” nsumer credit ean the fede is surrenders. permanent, aue 2 credit. The ommendations that power to redit will ease

en for such a . Wolcott (R. chairman of nmittee, is on

» ommunications ling under in its history, first attention plications and andard broad-

time for P-M re plentiful. ther the cume t serve public r largest pose M station per= industry still trickle of F-M

nmission memstill far ahead ouraging progcan afford to

s 9 LRTMENT and organizations tep closer tomilitary train-

ierican Legion s four-months 1—endorsed by y convention— s looking for a

ment tactfully egion leaders flat commite ish them. Pres1e Legion and send their top iepartment, sit conferences at aining will be d by Gen. Eis-

studies already ess than six ining is waste y. After these ed to veteran tment is cone

army plan, ARING HOUSE D 8 0,324,008 Camm 24,600,000 Week ...$ 39,532,000 cee oves 104,507,000 Hota $196,196,000 rs miets 540,343,000

i } k g

| Famous French Lick Ho REPORT PRICE

. GIVEN ESTATE 13 $4 MILLION

Hostely and Spa Were Enterprise of the Late

8 0 PET

di

edd So I

& — Ryo LE

SATURDAY, NOV. 80. 148 _-

Senator Taggart.

The world-famous French Lick Springs hotel, a monument for half a century to traditional Hoosier good living, changed hands today. It was sold by the Thomas Taggart estate to a New York hotel reported price of

syndicate for a $4 million.

The sale covered the hotel, its spacious grounds, three swimming Pools, two golf courses, private airport, riding stables, three mineral springs, the Pluto Water Bottling works, a dairy and two large herds

of Jersey’ and Holstein cattle. Sale Made Personally

The sale was made personally |

New,

2

Thomas Bath, South Bend who

More than 500 Republicans honored Rue J. Alexander,

Among those at the dinner included (left to ri and Lt. Gov. Richard T. James.

x

Retiring Indiana Secretaries of

State Honored

BL Re

Pine Village, retiring secretary of state, and will assume the office Monday, at a dinner in the Claypool hotel last night, ght) Mr. Alexander, Governor Ralph F. Gates, Mr, Bath,

by Thomas D. Taggart through his attorney, Frank M. McHale. This morning, Mr. Taggart who has operated the spa since 1900 told The

BIRL, 12

Times: “Don’t worry. I'm still going to! be around there. But first I' want! to go to Florida for a few days « . . well, maybe a few weeks.” Word around Indianapolis was | that Mr. Taggart would accept the| proffered chairmanship of the syndicate’s board of directors. He said | that he was thinking it over. |

B. Cabot of New York. They were represented by Clarence U, Caruth of the firm of Curtis, Mallet, Provost, Colt and Mosle, New York, and the New York Trust Co. Taggart Retains Home Heirs of the estate which made the sale, in addition to Mr. Taggart, are four sisters: Miss Lucy M. Taggart, Mrs. W. R. Sinclair, Mrs. D. L. Chambers and Mrs. William J. Young, all of Indianapolis. The hotel and spa were the enterprise of the late Thomas Taggart, former U. S. senator and mayor of Indianapolis. Thomas D. Taggart, his son, has operated the hotel virtually since its acquisition by his father, The hotel contains more than 600 rooms, It is set on 1800 acres of rolling wood and meadowland. Mr. Taggart’s home, Mt. Airie, on 200 acres of adjoining land was not part of the sale,

ASKS NEW BUILDING FOR MEDICAL CENTER

Governor Gates said today that the Indiana University Medical Center campus in Indianapolis needed at least one new building. The governor, completing an inspection of the campus, said new quarters for the state board of health were needed. He also said he was convinced that the state | should purchase adidtional proper- | ty near the campus to prepare for| future needs.

8

DIES IN AUTO CRASH FOWLER, Ind, Nov. 30 (U. P). —William A. Dice, 65, Talbot, was killed last night when his automo- |

Boswell.

EXTRA EFFORT

REWARDED!

Joh

pound, Stardust.

committee so

ples State rector

Livestock Exposition Opens

In Chicago.

| CHICAGO, Nov. 30 (U.

P.).—An| Illinois farm girl, who was just 7 The purchasers are the French | Y®4'$ ou when the lest previous Lick Hotel Co, Inc, and the Pluto, International Livestock Exposition | Corp. of Delaware, headed by John was held, carried off the first of the| | honors awarded as the 1946 exposition opened today in this livestock capital of the nation.

WINS PRIZE AT SHOW

niversary

dianapolis At letic club.

Mr. Huttinger

Mr. Patterson

{ Insurance Co. «

Her name is Janet Countryman. :

16-month o It was t

Id he

Delmar,

n Acker

Indiana r, and Browning

A 12-year-old lassie from Clare, Ill, {she won the lightweight shorthorn steer division in the junior livestock feeding championships with an 860shorthorn, first, time Janet had participated ih an international exposition. Around her, hundreds of other farm youths rubbed elbows with interested city folk. They stared at the sleek and well-groomed animals crowded into pens interlacing the 20 acres of show space. James Schlichting, Apple River, Ill, took second place in the lightweight shorthorn division. Bonnie Albright, Great Springs, O., was third. In the 895-pound Hereford class, {the entry of Dorothy Dolf, Remsen, owa, was first; | West Point, Neb. was second, and Richard Gannon, third. James Mills, "Monmouth, Ill., won first place with an 855-pound steer in the Aberdeen-Angus class. Ted Colins,” Albion, Iowa, was and Frances Brooks, Kellogg, Towa, third.

MAYOR NAMES ARMY ADVISORY COMMITTE Fire Mixes Radio,

A Marion county army advisory committee to interpret army pro-

rams for the publi bile struck a bridge on U. S. 41 near FE oo Ba a

; {a lighted match down an open man- = CEO Ej *arstanding of public opinion, |, e in Maiden Lane, he started a SSS (was named today by Mayor Tyn-| dall. Mayor Tyndall said he named the

Bobbie Watson.

Iowa,

ond,

Electric Appliance Co.; Neal Gridef, PeoBank; James Robb, district diI , United Steel .Workers; secretary-treasurer, State Federation of Labo. Gent, 340 E. 60th st.

RADIO DISPUTE SETTLED

NEW YORK, Nov. 30 (U. P.).—

CORN AND WHEAT

as early as next year.

The crop year begins in July.

lion bushels of corn. of corn and wheat: are likely

or not.

bushels.

(fire that fused telephone cables Then—

[by the army in connection with|a downtown radio station. {military organizations within the

state. {jumbled messages and their bells Those serving on the committee rang “flash” signals ominously. include: Other neighboring telephones ponnd, D. Hoover, The Indianapolis | Whined dolefully, mes; the v. OwWar A umgartel, Church Federation; Leland C. Huey,| HOUrs later repairmen brought Capitol Lumber Co.; Walter Shirley, Bhir- | service back to normal. ley Brothers; Guy Williams, Guy Williams & Set. Co Louis Td 8. esale; C, /alter cCarty, Indianapolis News: ol . - Jtariin, George J. TWO NAZI GENERALS ayer Co.: arles , oates, Indiana Union Insurance Co.. Col. ert L. Moorhead, Bobbs-Merrill Co.: James A. DOOMED BY BRITONS Stuart, Indianapolis Star: I. Hess,

ROME, Nov. 30 (U. P.).—Col. Gen. Eberhard von Mackensen and Lt. Gen. Kurt Maeltzer, Nazi commanders in occupied Italy, were sentenced to death today for the Ardeatine caves massacre of 335 Ro-

Insurance Agency

' To Mark Foundin

E. Paul Huttinger, Philadelphia, Pa, will spe at the 15th ;an-! lunch- HTH : eon of the Ray 910 Million Estimated by Patterson agency today at the In-

He will speak on| ; insurance aids in|0f Lake Michigan estimated (oday combating juve- [that anti-pollution measures would

» nile delinquency.

the second vice president of the Penn Mutual Life

SURPLUSES SEEN “=. cv

WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (U. P.). —American farmers today faced the disturbing possibility that there may be surpluses of corn and wheat

President Truman - disclosed yesterday in announcing that grain restrictions had been eased that the United States will go into the 194748 crop year with far larger grain], reserves than originally anticipated.

Mr. Truman said that even if the nation meets its export goals— which many top officials concede is Indi C I improbable—the United States will) SN wa unos Steel have a carryover of about 250 mil-| "iY Cp . 9 lion bushels of wheat nad 500 mil-

At the same time, bumper yields again

next year whether they're meee $9000 NEEDED FOR

The corn crop this year is esti mated at 3;380,672,000 bushels while the wheat crop hit 1,169,422,000

Phone Services

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 30 (U. P.).—When a pedestrian dropped

Subscribers in the Exbrook exthat the average|change picked up their phones and citizen would be aware of activities heard the broadcast programs from

Newsroom teletypes lapsed into |

The American Federation of Radio Artists, A. F. of L. removed a strike threat from the four ma jor networks today following the announcement - that “workable solution” had been found for principal

mans in reprisal for the killings of 32 Germans in 1944. . A British military tribunal brought in a verdict ‘of guilty soon after it received the case. - The trial closed with blackveiled widows of

® Robert Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Williams of 1245 Lawton street, is enjoying a Crosley Table Model radio as a result of being a LEADER in sales in Marion County during a recent contest for Times

issues of the dispute.

BIRTHS

Twins At Methodist—Robert, Dorothy Berkhimer,

the massacre victims crying “death” and’ “hang them.”

IN INDIANAPOLIS--EVENTS—VITALS

DEATHS

Hazel A. Dennis, 47, at Methodist, carcinoma,

LAKE POLLUTION CURE IS COSTLY mht

9

ak |

Industries, Cities. h-

cost them nearly $16 million. is

suit filed by the state of Illinois.

three Lake county cities and 2

have complied with that require-

of incomplete plans others.

The incomplete plans were expected fo be finished by Jan. 15, 1947, when another hearing on the suit ,-is- scheduled to be held in St. Louis, Industries ‘which already have filed stipulations outlining their plans for eliminating pollution of the lake were the Carbide and Chemical Corp., Standard Oil Co.

from

{Shell Oil Co, American Maize Products Co., Inland Steel Co., and Sinclair Refining Co. ?

[sponsor the project.

Regardless of the outcome of the coal crisis, the Indianapolis Christmas committee proceeded with plans formulated thus far. They include a Nativity scene in the east

{Claus and reindeer set in the west

Ibasin, a forest setting for carolers {on the south steps, and a huge | wreath on the north steps. Henry Wade, general chairman, |sald the entire set will have been {completed by Dec. 10. .Booths have been set up in the lobbies of the Indianapolis Power and Light Co. and the Indianapolis Water Co., to receive donations.

cis and rine sn ann OET AT" $215 MILLION

———————— WHY GIRL, 13, MARRIED | GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Nov. 30 (U. P.).—Marjorie Sage, 13-year-old child bride of an ex-convict, told authorities today she married Martin H, Baker, 23, because “I Just couldn't stand the thought of gO~ ing through the seventh grade again.”

et t————————————— NEW DRUG TO GO ON SALE

WASHINGTON, Nov, 30—(U. P).1¥ The civilian production administration said today that beginning next month streptomycin will be distributed for civilian use through nor-

Girls William Little, 107, at 2007 Ralston ave, Carrier Salesmen. EXTRA At City—Frank, Lenora Lulu Jamison Le ie pi omipohs t ity, 1 - a ’ e . . : ' Py - EFFORT not only teaches |A¢ Coleman Raymond, Virginia Bilyou. | bolism ? at Oly, lung em Times Carriers principles of |At Methodift Leo, Rita Snyder; James, Emma Baker, 84, at 435 N. DeQuincy, i : Jeanne Hankins; James, Madonna Scott: hypertension SALESMANSHIP — it brings Scar, Marie Hanlin; Marten, Elizabeth |gendve a Dowins 13, at 2134 Avondale them valuable merchandise et LY Re rnieeandenburg: | "op Meoronary: occliaion 3 ¢ Ss; ! 3 prizes and exciting trips. rg Wook BE Rutledge: Neal, |J0hD H. Stiebling, 58, at Methodist, care

® BOYS

Why not talk over with your parents the idea of becoming a Times Carrier Salesman? Then call ‘Mr. Ballere, City Circulation Manager of The Times, at RIley 5561, for route openings in your neighborhood. Boys outside of Marion county con-

. tact The Times Dealer in your

town. If you have no Times Dealer, write Mr. Herb Smith, Country Circulation Manager ‘of The Times . . . as Times Routes are being started in new towns every week. y

Times Carriers ¥ Have Fun’ ¥ Make Money ¥ Get Basic Training in Business Indianapolis

aks

EE)

The

on Com on Com

Mary Roller, and James, Evelyn Bouché

r. At St. Vigeent's—Darwood, Clara MecClocklin; Robert, Elaine Neal; Charles, Ruth Clifford; Robert, Genevieve Heckman, and Joseph, Edna Sansome. At Home—Timothy, Edna Jarrett, 903 N. Senate ave.

Boys At St. Francis—OClarence, Ann Hupfer; Ray, Ella Conover; Max, B

essie an, and Jack, Katherine Wells. ! At City-—James, Bessie Carter, Wilma Wood At * Coleman-+Arnold, Donna Anderson. At Methodist— Everett, Marjorie Morehead; Chester, Dorothy Kna ; Sldney, Edna Doss; Orval, Doris Wildman Gilbert, Marie Hoop, and Charles, Martha Curbeaux At St. Vincent's—George, Isabelle Middleton; James, Goldie Farmer; Charles, Mildred Burden, and Paul, Juanita

and Perry,

Alice Pear] Anderson Sights, 63, at

cinoma Raymond P. Ellis, 54, at 754 N De Quincy, coronary occlusion, George Edward Mohr, 67, at 3120 Ruckle, T. Riley, 48, at City, cerebral hemorrhage,

Rose Wallerich Brown, 74, at 3777 N. MeSamuel J, Frances L. MacDonald, 78, at 5426 Guil-

Isalah McQuary Pendleton, Hoyt ave., myocarditis.

mal trade outlets,

_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -

tel Sold

Indiana cities and industries in[volved in a lawsuit over pollution

Members of the Indiana attorney general's staff said the estimates were contained in stipulations filed in connection with a three-year-old

Defendants included Indiana,

"LEGION HEAD RAPS

The estimates were made on the basis of stipulations already filed, although only eight of the 20 firms

ment thus far, and on the basis N the | Griffith of the American Legion to-

BEDFORD WOMAN'S |

ww

Morning Liquor Raid.

on an Indiana ave.

charge. . sweating over the safe combination

has no liquor license.

they would “blow the safe.”

e. ; Four Other Raids James H. Roberts, 44, of 435 W. {Michigan st, was arrested on a [charge of violating the 1935 bey- | erage act. { ur other rajds on the Log Cabin

ceived reports of fights, bootlegging, disorderly conduct and other misbehavior, The restaurant for. years has been {a well-known enterprise on Indiana ave, It formerly was operated by the late Goosie Lee, Democratic politician, whose exploits and court appearances are legion, Released Under Bond Today's raid, made with a search warrant, was led by Lt, O. FP. Andrews of the state excise police and Lt. Leolin Troutman of the city police, “> Roberts was released under $250

Speedway magistrate’s court.

LEWIS’ COAL STAND

National Commander Paul H.

day asked for full support of the | government in its controversy with John L. Lewis. Mr. Griffith said Mr. Lewis was “riding roughshod over the rights of 140,000,000 Americans to achieve his selfish ends.” “Whether the government or Mr. Lewis is right or wrong in the legal interpretation of their contract is beside the point,” Mr. Griffith said. “The real issue facing America in the present coal strike hits at the very roots of our democracy.” “The American concept of government, for which much blood was spilled during the war, was founded on the principle of the protection of the freedoms and rights. of all

based upon control source of energy. Commander Griffith asserted the {challenge of the coal strike is “dy-

of a vital

| American to stand by the President, |the government and the law.”

JEWISH RELIEF NEED

ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Nov. 30 | (U. P.).—William Rosenwald, New | York, chairman of the United {Jewish Appeal, said last night that $215,500,000 will be needed in 1947 to carry out an assistance program for overseas Jews. Mr. Rosenwald said $122,250,000 would be used by the joint distribution committe . to aid Jews in Europe, North Africa and Shanghai. An estimated $85,252,000 will be assigned to the United Palestine Appeal for building a Jewish national home and $8,063,000 will go to the! United Service for New Americans, |

the United states, | Mr. Rosenwald spoke before a meeting of the three-day meeting

{

.DEATH HELD SUICIDE

BEDFORD, Ind. Nov. 30 (U. P.). —A suicide verdict was returned today in the death of a 40-year-old divorcee whom authorities

Methodist, cerebral hemorrhage. Frederick Wenntng, 79, at City, infarction Samuel C. Hume, 84, at 3122 Northwestern |

ave, pneumonia Andrew O. Pickel, 66, Methodist, coronary occlusion, James H. Ragsdale, 78, at 526 N. Sherman dr, coronary occlusion, Carolina Lena Reimer, 86, at 702 Weghorst st., cardio-vascular-renal rena E, Spillman, 70, at 1621 Churchman ave, myocarditis

| cerebral |

at

ridian st., arteriosclerosis.

Linville, 60, at Methodist,

pneumonia.

‘ford, nephrosis . “86, at 1727

Hoopingarner, 1265

, 431 , 1022

8. East_st, and David, Beulah Weathers.

RELIEVE SORE THROAT

A DUE TO COLDS i] Bad weather brings sore throats. Be ready with time-tested TONSILINE. re your family of fast soothing relief at once., our druggist has it.

WE WILL PAY CASH 2'2¢ for All Standard Brown

BEER BOTTLES

DUNN BEVERAGE COMPANY

449 W. WASHINGTON STREET 5 Or Call !.I1coln 3435 and we will pick them ||| 2 - ; ‘up at your home. :

had sought her for two weeks.

ously believed might have slain, . Coroner R. E. Wynne announced the verdict in the death of Mrs. Thora Lake, whose body was found In a woods Nov, 18 after relatives Mr,

Nineteen city and excise police were stalled three hours by a locked safe early this morning after a raid restaurant, They arrested one man on a liquor

An employee watched idly, making no move to assist the policemen

They believed the safe contined alcoholic beverages. The restaurant

At last the authorities announced This brought results and the employee unlocked the combination, revealing a large quantity of whisky and win

bond and ordered to appear in the!likely to fall off sharply if local op-

HOOSIER POLITICS... By

Growing State

at the mere mention of a look—a realistic look this time.

easy to understand sary evil, . The old standby, gross income tax, which once was the most practical tax ever to be used in Indiana, Is falling farthur and farthur short of meeting the demands of a growing state in. these inflationary .|times, Through the fault of nobody in particular, the Indiana of today looks for more than ever in the way of state services. Even services now in operation are more costly than ever before,

Views Divergent THE ONLY alternative to cutting services is providing new sources of revenue to maintain or expand them. Republicans themselves still entertain widely divergent views on the sales tax question, ranging between these two anonymous remarks picked up at random: “The quickest way to wreck the G. O. P. in Indiana is to pass the sales tax.” “Illinois and Ohio and a lot of other states, most of them Republican, have passed sales taxes and gotten along fine. We'll have to come to it.” The gross income tax might have been adequate, many Republicans now feel, had not sniping by pressure groups reduced its revenue producing power. Lowering incomes are expected to cut this down still further.

Local Option? WORST of all, another high producer of revenue—excise taxes—are tion slips past the legislature. And the betting odds now are five to four it will While there is still no definite commitment in any high quarter to a sales tax, only a few points remain to stop it. The group or in-

The problem is such, sideline observers believe, that crats in power they'd be doing the same

‘© New York Syndic

POLICE STALLED BY LOCKED SAFE

Make Ong Arrest in Early

Robert Bloem - I

Needs Bring

Renewed Study of Sales Tax

REPUBLICANS who only a few short months ago wereamed

were the Demothing, Th facts are simple and ; even for the many to whom taxes are Just a neces- L

TOBIN HOPE

toucy | Feels Young Leaders

sales tax have settled back to take another

Check Reactiona gl

President Daniel J. Tobin of A. F. of L, teamsters union

tively simple to administer,

feel.

to prick up their ears in anothe:

what the director's post will pay. Taxes Hottest Issue

all, at work,

proach.

general principle.

cal option and the merit system

dividual who will come up with a

Top Radio

ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Nov. 30 (U. P.).—A one-time performance of Shakespeare's Richard IIT presented by the Columbia Broad-

Meeting of the Air were selected today by the nation's

grams of 1946.

English Teachers Select

John Crosby of the New York Herald Tribune who he characterized casting system and the American |88 the “urs trenchant and realistic Broadcasting system's weekly Town [radio critic.

English {organization included the Pacific teachers as the best radio pro- Story, and the University of ‘Chi-

Shows of Year

Mr. Herzberg also paid tribute to

Other programs praised by the

sales tax proposal that will be rela-

minimum of trouble for merchants and wholesalers, and not too much Inconvenience to the public, will give Indiana a sales tax, the experts feel certain. The actual cost won't make much difference, they

While the tax question hangs in the balance in one quarter, another development has caused job-seekers

Although not even a tentative bill has been drafted so far for the proposed new centralized department of revenue, several individuals already have expressed an interest in

THE POLITICAL plum which the new department will bring.into existence with it may have more than a little bearing on whether or not such a department ever is born at The traders already are hard

And when Governor Gates lifts his head from his hands long enough to eonsider relatively minor matters such as the merit system, proponents of a state civil service are reported to be using a new ap-

Civil service now, they are-report- |" ed to be arguing, would have the advantage of freezing a lot of Re- ] publicans in office, even though the patronage folks might object to the !

But whatever may become of lo-

legislative policy makers are becoming increasingly convinced that the hottest issue of the coming general assembly will be taxes—where to put them and how to collect them!

schoo,

1 principal, Newark, N. J, hairman of the radio committee [ican Forum of the Air and Transthe people,” the Legion head de- |° | e ch- i 11, th presented b clared. He charged that an organ. of the National Council of Teach- atlantic Call, bo p y

meeting.

Mr, Heérzberg said the performance of Richard III presented by the Columbia Workshop starring Laurence Olivier was “the program that most helpfully | Porter G. Perrin, Colgate univercorrelated with our work in teach- [sity president, was elected president ing, reading and writing.”

their children, Marie, 6.

{ S , | : Theatre Guild of CIRCLE DECORATION = minority has built up a crush. | of English at the group’s annual |Columbia: The eatre je economic and political power

With erection of the elaborate! Christmas decoration scheduled to start on Monument Circle Monday, the citizens committee was still | namite for American institutions.” $2000 short of $7900 needed to | He called upon “every patriotic

New Home Rises From Tragic Fire for Terre Haute Family

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. Nov. 30 (U. and fatally burned their third child, P.).—Amid a pounding of hammers|Mary Ann, 21 months. The old home and the screech of saws visible! evidence of a community's kindness rose from the ground today. Some 80 carpenters, working in| blaze. relays without pay, gathered around a vacant lot to erect a new home | replace clothing and furniture, for William and Mary Wilbur and William Jr, 4, ag)

By nightfall, the Wilburs hoped

to move in. They ‘watched the work begin from the vacant filling station, where they have been living since fire de-

stroyed their small which assists refugees in reaching | ——————-

suburban home

PEDESTRIAN IS HELD | BOY, 9, KILLED BY TRAIN

selected as

[leave the city limits to fight the

cago Round Table, both presented

The awards were announced by {by the National Broadcasting sysMax J. Herzberg, Weequahic high fo the Human Adventure, Mutual

Broadcasting system; The Amer-

[the Air and John Hersey's “Hiroshima,” which came too late to be considered for an award, both American Broadcasting system presentations.

{of the council last week,

{ burned while Terre Haute firerfien, (acting on city orders, refused to

Neighbors collected $1000 to help

The Wilburs lost everything, And Mr, Wilbur, a bell hop, was so badly burned rescuing his family from the fire that he was unable to work. A sympathetic construction company. official donated building materials, and 80 members of a carpenters’ union volunteered thelr help.

KNOX, Ind, Nov, 30 (U. P.)—

last night and robbed of $42. stickup man who stopped him in freight

UP, ROBBED OF $42

of the United Jewish Appeal’s : Au mobilization conference for next| John W. Long, 28, of 1168 Con- | ter year's drive, | cord st

, told police he was held up tra A | sec

ther Ledbetter, 9, was killed yesday by a ‘Nickel Plate freight | in. The body was found by a tion crew after the crew of the train. found a boy's cap

An

S————————— TRIXIE FRIGANZA IS 77 PASADENA, Cal., Nov. 30 (U. PrP). 5| —Trixle Friganza, who for 50 years

the 300 block of W. Washington st hanging on the locomotive. escaped in Military park. 18-year-old White, of Carmel, was slugged as previ- (he walked near 64th st. and Cornell|

been | ave. last night, police were in- | formed.

youth, Richard

was a top stage comedienne, today

Wynne said Indiana University toxicologists found a quantity of a drug: in the woman's stomach

funeral service should be

in complete and flawless

G-H-HERRMANN 1503 sou cast 8

began her 77th year living quietly among the children and sisters of

. |the Sacred Heaft academy,

We have always felt that the cost of a means of the bereaved family. Here—re-

gardless of how little or how much is spent--all receive the utmost in value and

For Incomes

well within the

service,

«

a

day he was “quite hopeful”} the Republican party's yo | leaders would hold th check tf forts of “reactionaries” to dd the party. “While it is very difficult inate the old antagonisms have existed for years in of many Republican Tobin sald, “I am that the younger men will not permit their pa: be destroyed by fits leaders.” Mr. Tobin sald the yo to whom he referred incl seeing, - progressive men" Governor Earl Warren of nia, Governor Thomas E. of New York, former Governor

Senator Wayne Morse of Orego" “May Cook Own Goose” |

Writing in the December iss the union's international mags’ Mr. Tobin also told the G. O. “must understand that it did defeat labor in the last elect He said labor and its friends di | take a serious interest in the | tion, ’ | He sald if the Rep ans Off on a spree against labor” 3

g

ih

oki |

Tr.

“Now they will be sitting or ,| sidelines and perhaps

with the - Republican -chairme 5

Mr. Tobin said in another ma that labor “may run into tre. within the next year or two” cause of “enormous victories at polls for “that political party © has not in the past been very r ful or friendly as a whole to labor movement.” A Other articles, unsigned by T¢ challenged the G. O. P. to pro “a man whom the American pe can trust with the presidency blamed the Democratic loss to an alliance between the Political Action Committee and Communists,

EE ——————————————— ARMY MEDALS AVAIL WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (U. | —The war department annou: | today the women’s army corp: ice medal and the 1918-1923 a of occupation of Germany m are now available for distribu to all authorized persons. Prep: tion of the medals was defe; because of metal shortage.

——————————————— EDIT PAPER BY CANDLELI 4

NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 30 P.).—Editors and reporters of Nashville Tennessean got out tid MOEENINE newspaper today by ol dlelight. A power cable broke ¢. ing the night. :

wen CLOSED ON SUNDAY uu

ANDREW¢

RESTAURANT 1606 N. lllinois St

Open Dally 6 A. M. to 2 A. M.

Cotton Work

Gloves 1%-In, Mall Port- i able Electric Prill 31 Electric $ | Soldering Irons ... Folding Saw Horse $2 Brackets . 1

27