Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1946 — Page 2
»
vA
ein
-—
Lt
na fi A
mo
Non-Union Strip Mines
Offered Federal Aid
By EULALIE McDOWELL United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Dee, 7 (U. P.).—
Coal - saving restrictions pinched tighter throughout the nation today. The government pushed harder its program. to conserve fast-dwindling coal stocks for the essentials of liv. ing. With the country already under a freight embargo and” other tight
restrictions, the government yester-|
day took these further conservation
ONE: Announced that the dimout of non-essential lighting would
. be extended on Moriday to all areas
of the country depending on coal-
_ burning utilities.
«TWO: Halted iron and steel
‘ priorities because of reduced sup-
plies. This will hit the housing program hardest. THREE: Commandered the bituminous coke supply for the most essential uses. FOUR: Offered special assistance to strip mine operators in obtaining government-owned surplus mining equipment. Some non-union strip mines are still operating and it was hoped additional equipment would increase their production. FIVE: Prohibited suppliers of electricity from using or disposing of any coal in excess of a 60 days supply. 5 SIX: Directed the army to turn over 250,000 tons of, coal for civilian use.
Dimout Extended to All States The dimout now applies in 21
a — y Te Y g
rb ag A aie sesame
|
| |
| TWO PROMOTED — Promotion of two top executives of RCA Victor division was an- | nounced today. Robert Ericksen, above, was named plant manager of the Home Instrument department. Harold M. | Emlein, below, was appointed | local plant manager.
Packard Plant Here to Close
Coal Crisis Forces 2d Major Shutdown (Continued From Page One)
ployment security director in In-
|
|
Ordered Extend
Lewis Orders
kL ot | |
Miners Back
Hints New Strike
Possible on March 31 (Continued From Page One) titative production of coal
such period.” The supreme court met in pri-
|vate conference to consider the]
government request for a swift re-
view of the Lewis contempt case. |
This conference of the justices followed an extraordinary
and United Mine Workers of L.) lawyers.
To Job Monday
| Firemen used war surplus navy | ' baskets
during
| (Continued From Page One)
the window. Others stood at their windows and screamed until they fell back choking in the flames and smoke.
to. remove some. of the dead from upper floors. They built a platform from the top floor of the hotel to an adjoining building and shuttled the bodies across. It was discovered by an elevator
operator, Rosita, who smelled smoke and notified the night manager,
Blackened Ruins
Corridors and rooms of the fifth floor—first to’ be examined—were
75. | blackened ruins . with plaster and]
{minute “meeting of Chief Justice | Wallpaper
|Fred M. Vinson with government child’ A. FI
littering the floors. A
s doll lay in the ruins. Several firemen were overcome by smoke and carried to the hos-
Attorney General Tom C. Clark, |Pital. one of those who conferred with | Fireman W. B. McDuffie, who
Chief Justice Vinson, requested a knew that his sister, Nell, 23, had a | quick legal showdown because the
nation is threatened with “irrep-
room on the 11th floor, fought without regard for personal safety, to
arable injury” by the national coal|get high into the burning huilding.
strike,
The court may announce its de- | !cision, on the government request |that she
But he was overcome by smoke and given oxygen before he could learn had been saved, although
|later today. If not, the decision is|hurt.
— | SU
expected to be announced Monday. The decision will be whether the
peal directly from the district court without action by the court of appeals.
The meeting of the full court fol- | cp oats and towels. Some had never | | been used.
lowed by 15 minutes the conference in Chief Justice.Vinson's chambers. Conferees included Mr. Clark, Assistant Attorney
Joseph A. Padway and U. M W. Attorney Welly K. Hopkins. They refused to reveal what was dis‘ussed at the conference.
The government had emphasized ,f their possessions— jewelery, cloth- to rescue him. One minute he was! states and the Digtrict of Columbia. di&Pa, appealed for extra typists, (#:t speed was imperative because jo Christmas packages—lay in the standing there watching and wait-|
General John F.| |Sonnett, A. F, of L. Chief Counsel!
Crude, Inadequate Ropes As firemen advanced to the upper
preme court will accept the ap-'g.,.c they found mute evidence of Winecof!.
|attempts to escape in almost every | Scores raced from the blazing room. Crude and inadequate
ropes had been fashioned of blankets;
Others were tied to windowpanes or to beds that had been pushed against the windows. Clothing and personal possessions lay on bureau tops. Dresser drawers. had been pulled to the floors as trapped guests attempted to take with them what of their valuables they could salvage. But most
The new order will extend it to clerks and business machine opera- the strike was dragging the natian’s| yepris,
every state in the nation. There are about 12 states which
tars to process an anticipated wave economy to the brink of disaster. | Backing up the government's ur-!
of unemployment compensation
use fuel other than coal for power Claims. The agency's weekly aver- gent request wus a commerce deand these will not be affected ap- 28¢ of 3100 claimants already has partment report made public to-
preciably. But even in these states
any isolated areas which have coal-, THREE: Curtailment of svening would “virtually paralyze” all ma- She had made. Firemen begged her yas their curly-haired 2-year-old| Started burning utilities will be placed un- Activities in the public schools will jor manufacturing industries, and 0 Wait but she was frantic With | daughter. They scooped the child
der dimout restrictions.
been double by local layoffs.
day warning “that a 90-day strike
Woman Plunges 200 Feet Early in the fire, a young woman appeared at a window on the ninth floor and let down a rope of sheets
close two hours earlier the libraries do “irreparable damage” to the na- | [6&T-
The extension mainly will affect 2% Crispus Attucks high school and tion's welfare.
the southeastern states, which had beeri free of restrictions heretofore
at public schools 26 and 87.
because of the hydro-electric facil- [8ht Co. reported that revisions in lasted as long as three months.
ities which supplement coal-gener-ated power plants in those areas.
power will be siphoned from the
"the civilian production administra-|
Great segments of American in- Parted and she dropped screaming |
. | She lowered herself to a window high over the street, protecting her| window of her eighth-floor room. | The report said about 10 million ledge where rescuers were placing from the heat. All of them were | The next thing she knew she was in | FOUR: The Indianapolis Power & workers would be idled if the strike someone elsaon a ladder. But Just rescued.
a few feet from safety. the sheets
tion's curtailment order will enable dustry were already idle today in —200 feet to her death. Now, however, hydro - electric '® 10 continue current service until the 17-day-old strike. The crippling| An ambulance driver, H. E. Craw-
Dec. 20.
After that, further re- government
embargo on freight
ford, Atlanta, said a 4-year-old boy
southeast to the northern coastal ©UCtOns in service must be made, shipments threatened to close thou- 070Pped from an upper story of the states and the southeast will go on affecting principally reductions in sands of plants across the nation,
short power rations.
‘Mother Knelt With Children’
(Continued From Page One)
Girls in Blue” and “Song of the South” at nearby movie houses. A gala world premiere of “Song of the South” was held here a few weeks
Cotton mattresses But some curtains still fluttered unscorched out the paneless windows. : Every wall was burned off to the tile base. Every mirror had shattered under the heat. Water ran ankle deep through every corridor. Stalled elevators hung at crazy angles. And the starkest tragedy of them all—-a woman and her three small children. in a bathroom. knelt in final prayer with dren clutching at her nightrobe. “Tney could have been sculptured. Four bobby-sox girls were found in a siugle room. The only mark. on them was the horror on their faces. Pitiful
her chil-
(lighting, elevator service and dustrial and commercial power.
in-
* Mayor Tyndall, meanwhile, said products out.
| he would be
| bury. {
informed Monday today was 850,000.
{whether the army would let the city Capehart (R. Ind.) predicted in New thave the coal pile at Camp Atter- York that “millions”
Industry had no means of shipping raw materials in or finished The jobless figure
would
Senator Homer
be
flaming hotel and was caught by a n.an on the sidewalk. The boy was believed to have been only slightly injured,
Bursts Into Flames Another woman stepped to a
thrown out of work if the coal Window ledge on one of the top
| The mayor made the plea person- strike lasts 30 days. He urged Pres- floors, paused there a moment with | {ally this morning to Lt. Gen. Man- ident Truman and United Mine Der nightgown shining white in
{ton 8. Eddy, U. 8. 2d army com- workers Chief John L. Lewis to “sit front of the flames. Then the gar- | mander over long-distance telephone down immediately” in an effort to ment caught fire. She leaped toward
to Batimore. mayor he would be done. | Closing of Businesses Studied
see what could
Gen. Eddy told the settle the strike.
mayors found coal supplies almost
The mayor said he planned to BO"€:
store what coal the city -could bor-
empty coal yards in town.
Production in big and little in-
smouldered. from the army in one of 15 dustries was curtailed to save coal
and many plants planned to close
The coal committee considered down completely until the erisis
the possibility of ordering closed non-essential places of business, but first decided to check with federal authorities to determine its powers to make the order stick The coal survey presenied by the committee to the mayor showed 20,1000 tons of coal and .25600 tons of coke held by 87 dealers. This will
She had pe supplied to householders with less
than 10 days’ supply in their basement bins at.the rate of one ton per customer,
Wartime Curbs Come Back
As coal stocks dwindled in Indi- dustrial evidence of somebody's &Na emergency measures reminis- plants planned to remain in opera-
ended. Some schools called off athletic
a safety net,
But she missed the net, landing instead astride overhead power wires that broke her fall. There, she hung. in flames, until she finally broke loose and fell to the ground. No Premature Jumps
There was no evidence that premature jumps were made during the fire's early stages. At about
events, reduced class hours and out- "7:15 8. m., when ladders were placed
lawed night activities. Some planned to close early for the Christmas holidays and remain shut until the fuel situation improved. Train schedules were cut to skeleton size and new restrictions for parcel post mailing became effective, South Bend, third largest city in Indiana and one of the state's most highly developed industrial areas, faced the threat of a complete inshutdown, although most
temporary residence was found in Cent of wartime were imposed cn tion on a limited basis.
every room. A pair of nylons hung over a dresser. A box full of chil-
with soot.
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE For the Day
CQlearings .... 8 1,012,000 Debits FH w . 18,150, 000 w=For the Week Cleatings ............. .. $45,872,000 Debit. .......... 0 129,765,000
Loy it with
in lJ sm—————
. Flowers Telegraphed!
We have always tet
spent—all receive the
level,
funeral service should be well within the means of the bereaved family. Here—regardiess of how little or how much is
In complete and flawless service,
thousands of Hoosiers.
Three neighboring cities — South dim-out orders, dren's Christmas playthings and Bend. Mishawaka and Elkhart — closed until further notice. the little toy soldiers were covered Went under emergency orders ban- vette found coal rationing possible them.
Logansport went under stringent Monticello schools Lafa-
ning non-essential activities as their but not immediately,
Terre Haute Conferences
(Continued From Page One)
He had no comment suggestion by Mr. Kern that ask national union heads for su authority and it was had refused to take such action. Mr. Cartwright had no statement
————————
On those occasions when the spoken word seems inadequate—let beautiful flowers express your sentiments,
2 llllied bridle Aun
F INDIANAPOLIS
For All Incomes
that the cost of a
utmost in value and
On 8 appeared Mr.
|
On Indiana Plan Fruitless
to make on any possible .stand by
{another
(out. 1
for rescue from the lower windows, firemen and policemen on Ellis st. motioned and waved frantically to occupants above the flames. These reassurances from the street appeared to forestall panic for a while. From almost the entire wall of the building. fourth floor to the 15th, came a chorus of cries for help. Some Miss Safety Nets
Although several of the pleading occupants climbed out of their windows—and seemed to pretend to be about to Jump in order to gain attention of the firemen with the ladder—they nevertheless kept their self-control until flames reached
As the fire gained in size, occupants began to be forced by the flames out of one window after | Firemen maneuvered a net ato an alley at the hotel's rear where rooms were first being wiped Jhe net caught some, but missed others, Servicemen, in town for the week-
operators on the Indiana plan. It end, were pressed into rescue serv-
Cartwright
Mr. Kern said he would report the outcome of today's session. to
"| Governor Gates as soon as the gov-
to’ his own appraisal of the plan's gow st
chance of success at that time, Efforts to Continue
might Ce. he have taken the attitude no com-|W8aS set up outside, as ch ‘mitment was necessary in view of coffee station for the firemen and inferred he the unjon's adamant stand.
Streets ernor returned from Washington, ye
D. C. He indicated he would add p¢ ,
A Red Cross disaster station
well as a
their volunteer helpers
Thousands Jam Streets Thousands of persons jamined the | As dawn came the roped streets caused trem®ndous Jams streetcar and bus lines normally | Into the city along Peachtree
Firemen ran hoses to the rop of |
Although Mr. Kern did not sen- fashionable Davison-Paxon depart. | large on what his appraisal would Ment store, directly across Ellis st
be and said he would “continue to| from
the Winecoff, and played |
‘explore” the situation, his attitude Water on the flames,
appeared to-be-one of hopelessness
Grady hospital, the city's munici-
|He returned to Indianapolis with- Pal institution which is only eight
out attempting to confer with oth- blocks from the fire scene,
called | {er union or management officials in Nn every doctor, nurse and orderly {this heart of Indiana's mining dis- fOr emergency detail. At least 50 trict. (persons were treated for burns. |
| |
| oy
shows signs of success,
The Indiana Plan was designed to broken bones and shock at Grady, Indiana alone, : independently of the status of na-.
renew coal production in tional negotiations, The plan was approved Thursday Washington officials of the department of the interior and . by
spokesmen for the solid fuels ad- |
ministration. Key to the entire plan was agreement by the federal gove ernment to relinquish control of
{Indiana mines and return them to
their owners if the governors plan
JORDAN BROS.
CABINET CoO.
Immediate Delivery om AN Sine BUILT-IN CABINETS
' Ses Our Large Displa i] 333 w. Washington St.
v
v
{ | ——————————— - | | |
Hiroro0.66r LH
Electric Fan Heaters
$1 95 Coleman Gasoline Lanterns .. Step-On Garbage Cans ..... Ironing Boards With Pad “& Cover
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___
ed Monday To
a hs atta
-
mrt prmnernaiim—— i —————
Either she or someone else in her 14th floor room had fashioned a legs of one body protruded rope from a sheet and towels and by {from a second floor marquee wo 4 she dangled for awhile from the {looking Peachtree st. Firemen could window. Then, it broke and she Inot remove the remains because fel} . they feared the front wall of the] Two women stood at a window on ‘building would collapse. [the 12th floor for more than two |" A milling crowd of curious spec- hours, They smiled and waved at 'tators were driven back behind firemen who shot streams of water safety ropes by the police. | toward them. | At 4:20 a. m. firemen turned a| The water fell short of their win(high pressure hose on an 11th floor dow. The flames crept upward room -where four persons were from the 10th floor to the 11th, calling for help. From the street then to rooms around them on the the water appeared to be holding |12th,
ways or in the rooms of the hotel. { The
{
| Bodies were sprawled in the hall-
113 Trapped, Screaming Guests Killed As Fire Sweeps Through Atlanta Hotel
back the flames and protecting the | Franklin Feder, New York, a hotel quartet at least temporarily. guest who had left to meet friends | Survivors Given Coffee at the airport only a few minutes Firemen arrived minutes after the before the fire broke out, watched | first alarm. They brought every them. : piece of equipment, including hooks Firemen Lose Fight and ladders, tower pressure pump-| “Look at them smile, when flames ers and rescue nets. This has been are all around them” he said.! standard routine for every down- 2 . “That's real guts.
town alarm since a disastrous fire in the Cable Piano Co. here several| The firemen lost their fight to save them. At 6 o'clock one of the!
years ago when a number of per-| |sons perished. women collapsed. Her companion | | It was charged afterward that picked her up and held her. at the slowness in getting equipment 10 |ginqow a few minutes, where the | smoke was thinner.
{the scene caused the flames to. get out of contra. Then they both fell back into Survivors were given coffee and the room. {shelter at adjoining hotels, the Betty Huguley, 16, a delegate to | Ansley, Piedmont and Henry Grady. [po meeting from Grifin, Ga. all within a two block area of the | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Huguley, threw her suitcase out the | window, put on her coat and calmly | |btek strctare in their night clothes walked bin a narrow protruding
in near freezing weather, | | { window. Two unidentified young women, | 1¢d8¢ $0.2 ladder titres Rdows | from her own.
about 18 and 20, were trapped on It was the second time in the
[the 13th floor front of the building. lsi {last few months that such a ledge | Silh t > i Dietted by. fames, Wey beckoned, 4 saved a life. Fire Chief Styron,
{to the crowd below as if they were : : [trying to make certain they were during a fire at the Piedmont hotel | seen. {here, saved himself by such an es-| Baby Girl, 2. Saved |cape route when trapped on an One man burned to death on the upper floor. sixth floor while waiting for firemen | Many Leap Into Alley +A number of persons jumped into : ild|ing. The next his clothing caught an alley that runs behind the bu (fire and he collapsed into the! ing. Others smashed through a enveloping flames. {metal awning that covers a terrace | - A couple on the fifth floor found restaurant overlooking Peachtree st. {their escape to the ground cut oft | A red haze hung over downtown by flames. In the bed with them Atlanta two hours after the fire
Mrs. W. E. Tribble, Rockford, Ill, ‘up and held her out the window, said she remembered falling from the
Grady hospital. She appeared in a dazed but not critical condition. Her to niece, Ima Dell Ingram Rockford, | was rescued from the same room.
Clothe-A-Child Donors Are Your Good Neighbors
A-Child office. She and her hus-! band wanted to outfit a little boy on her husband's day off. “I take to boys,” she confided, ONE: Today mail a check or make ‘you see, I had five boys—but a cach contribution to the Clothe- theyTe all gone now.” Another woman who took out a A-Child fund tow-headed youngster brought him be used by expert Times shoppers pack a new boy . his .agged to buy substantial garments for jacket had turned into a new hrown needy children. Checks and con- snowsuit and in a fur mitten he tributions should be mailed to clutched a shiny airplane. i Clothe-A-Child at 214 W. Maryland’ In her mind the woman, who prest, ferred the listing anonymous, didn’t | TWO: Make an appointment to outfit just any boy. She was re- | clothe a child yourself. Call RI- living scenes some 20 vears back 5551 and set a date to take a child when she had outfitted another, out to the stores and outfit hini tow-head. Her tow-head had liked “And, when you pass Me Mile-O- airplanes too . . . he had gone over! Dimes in front of L. 8. Ayres, put Germany .in a plane that didn't a shiny coin on the line. The fund come back. will be used to outfit children whom | These are only three of he stories Santa Claus forgets, but the In-|/that lie behind the daily list of | dianapolis Times Clothe-A-Child Times Clothe-A-Child donors. Some | remembers. take out the children themselves, Yesterday a slight. white-haired while others make contributions to | woman who looked like somebody's a fund which is used by Times shopmother came to The Times Clothe- pers to outfit the children.
Others were not so lucky. The first person to plunge death was a girl of about 14.
| (Continued From Page One)
which you can become a Clothe-A-Child patron.
Your money will
bi
|
{
closed each Monday.
LS. AYRES & CO. BALDWIN PIAND SALESROOM COLONIAL FURNITURE CO. RAYMOND COOPER, INC.
_ SATURDAY, DE
Areas Of U.S.
C. 7, 1948
WASHINGTON
A Weekly Sizeup by the Washington
Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers
WASHINGTON, Dec. 7.—Coal strike is now a knockdown and drag-out showdown.
.
: There's no sign of the oft-rumored, backstage negotiations between John L. Lewis and northern coal aperators. They were the chief hope for a peaceful settlement. Fuel shortage will get tighter hourly. Coal lack will do what no war ever did to U. S.—stop all major industry. And city populations are entirely dependent on complex industrial machine which runs largely on coal. Can the country stand it? It cannot.
Coal mines administration will try tactics of mine operators In past: Back-to-work movement with armed protection. It will work
in some places, but with violence.
prosecution of pickets. Unless Lewis relents and chooses some face-saving out, he stands: to lose his union as he did after 1927 strike—but at fantastic cost to U. S. Some Smens of industry, chiefly northern, would be willing to settle with Lewis, He still holds out for his nation-wide
contract. Southern operators are dedd set against it. Final outcome will determine
government's future labor policy. If the coal strike is still on in January, the new congress will go to work with blood in its eye.
Truman's Dander Up
Look for President Truman's Sunday night talk to be tough. Recent White House visitors say Truman has his dander up. In response to a suggestion that he try to work out compromise with Mr. Lewis, the President pounded the table and told one visitor John L. had broken his personal - word, given when the government signed coal contract. Mr. Truman shouted he had no intention “of dealing with such unpredictable man. “He (Truman) seemed about the maddest little saw,” visitor said. Mr. Truman's speech may disclose plan to give federal powers to state governors, by appointing them deputy fuel administrators. Governor Gates of Indiana, who already is trying to bring operators and miners together, thinks this additional power would help put over the “Indiana plan”
"
~ ” ~ With Housing Expediter Wilson Wyatt discarded, government
controls over housing will crumble rapidly. Officials say’ it's impossible to administer controls for a single industry. Look for these developments: Veterans’ priority system will be scrapped. So will limitation on non-housing construction, Present ceiling of $10,000 on new homes will be raised or more probably eliminated. Subsidy payments on materials will be stopped because price ceilings have been removed. n ~
Foley May Take Over
National Housing agency, cover-all bureau headed by Mr. Wyatt, will be continued for the present but will be short-lived. Component agencies then will return to independent status. Raymond M. Foley, federal housing administration commissioner, is best bet to take over remnants of Mr. Wyatt's NHA and expediting jobs. The industry always has preferred him to Mr. Wyatt. Other possibilities are lame-duck Senator James M. Mead (D. N. Y. and Philip Klutznick, former fed-
IDEAL FURNITURE CO.
NATIONAL FURNITURE CO. PEOPLES OUTFITTING CO. ROGERS & CO., JEWELERS
man I ever |
Look for Smith-Connally act
eral public housing administra tion commissioner.
Job isn't attractive because Re-publican-controlled committees of both senate and house plan in« vestigations of the whole housing program under Mr. Wyatt, centering chiefly on his subsidies, expenditures of $440 million * for temporary converted barracks, “super” priorities given federal projects, administration of guar=anteed market program for prefabricators.
Ld »
Mr. Truman will ask congress for legislation designed to spur rental housing, which has sagged badly. He will renew plea for Wagner-Ellender-Taft general | housing bill which, among other things, provides yield insurance for investors in large-scale projects. Also likely to be mmended: Wyatt plan to have RFC invest in second mortgages up to 10 per cent, which, with FHA 90 per cent insurance, would eliminate risk for developers. RFC has rejected this pending consideration by congress. »
Far Behind Goal
Analysis of final Wyatt report supports claim of builders that thousands of houses are standing unfinished for want of mater-
ials. His box-score looks like this: Started to '46 Goal Nov.1 Conventional houses . 700,000 600,700 Factory built 250,000 30,300 Temporary reMBE... 200,000 191,600 Trailers ,.c.o.. 50,000 36,200 Totals ....... 1,200,000 858,800 Conventional figure includes
51,100 reconversions, reducing number of starts to 549,600. Goal for factory-built homes was cut to 100,000 when program lagged. # " »n . Don’t be surprised if the gov-
{| ernment soon announces with-
|
drawal of all except token force of American troops in Philippines. Our forces there number around 60,000, and there's no longer good
| tactical reason for such a large
OPEN MONDAYS
between Thanksgiving and Christmas Store Fours: 9:00 28 5:85 won. waver so.
We will resume our 5-day week on December 30, being
establishment. There've heen growing signs that due to lax discipline of our green {troops their presence has done more to alienate Filipinos’ affection than to enhance our prestige in the Orient. F » » 1 J Watch for President Truman soon to appoint a civilian committee, with church, - school and women’s groups represented, to examine army's case for universa] military training—findings to be advisory to congress.
C7
& y
1 ¥
pasts
5 i
i
~ ‘SATURE
ire Seek 0f Lo In Ho:
Friends, File Pa
By ROL United Press ATLANTA, came to form today at the They game Grady hospits sought were |
called long ¢ heard about tl It was a ling fogether by a The morgue, concrete floor 20 bodies, was to outer wards Uniformed F sisted the livin the dead. The place lox hospital. Bod on slabs, in b the cold floor, | other when the The process painfully slow bodies were ba figured. Relatives Some that w were not uncov one paused at attendant gent This is only where the bod ered. And wh hopefully wher their loved one is forced to t should go to th And so it wet From one hc Morgue to mot Shake of head. Next body. Ne
Killed on After Lear
Death came for Mrs. Lula 8. Bancroft st crossed U. 8. 4 rd. after alight Gene A. Carn town, westbour bile with his w children, said aged woman loomed up in lights. Trying to ave and overturned the car struck ! ing her chest skull. Mr. Cs back injury an was cut on the | 14-months-old t injury. Widow of t Stumph, the tr
Lebanon \
Times 8 LEBANON, In
will be held at home here at 2
Survivors and six children
SD There's
N
