Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1946 — Page 3
Ww a knock-
stage nego~ coal nperasettlement. Coal lack ) all major pendent on
operators In It will work Connally act
etree ath
; administra-
e because Recommittees of use plan inwhole housing Wyatt, cenhis subsidies, 0 million * for ed barracks, given federal tion of guarram for pre-
» ask congress gned to spur h has sagged new plea for aft general among other eld insurance ge-scale proj0 be retdmto have RFO rtgages up to with FHA 90 would eliminrs. RFC has 1g considera-
Goal Wyatt report builders that are standing t of mater-
8 like this: Started to 5 Goal Nov.1 600,700 30,300
00,000 50,000
0,000 50,000
191,600 36,200 )0,000 858,800 ure includes reducing 549,600. Goal mes was cut gram lagged. RT | if the govsunces with- , token foree n Philippines. mber around » longer good such a large ere’'ve heen due to lax green troops lone more to flection than stige in the
vy sident Trunt a civilian urch, - school represented, ase for uniing—findings Ngress.
RARE
~ SATURDAY, DEC. 7, 1946
Tragic,
Seek Bodies 0f Loved Ones In Hospital
Friends, Relatives File Past Victims
By ROLAND DOPSON United Press Stall’ Correspondent ATLANTA, Ga, Dec. T-—They came to form a tragic, growing line today at the city morgue. ; They ¢ame in the front door of Grady hospital, while those they sought were brought in from the rear. They were the friends and relatives of those who died in the Winecoff hotel fire early today or are still missing. One of those in line was a handsome Georgia Tech football player, George Brodnax. He was trying to find his girl, whom he had invited to town for a dance tonight, and her mother. He did not find them here. He was directed to other places in the city where bodies of the dead are being taken. Hospital Corridor Jammed A burly, red-faced policeman stood outside the door of the morgue. He ‘directed the people through the room in two's and three's.
The hospital . corridors were jammed, mostly by Atlanta friends of out-of-town people who called long distance when they heard about the fire. It was a line of strangers, drawn fogether by a common tragedy. The morgue, a small room with a concrete floor built to handle only 20 bodies, was full and overflowing fo outer wards. Uniformed Red Oross ladies assisted the living in their search for the dead. The place looked like a battlefield hospital. Bodies were everywhere on slabs, in baskets, stretched on the cold floor, stacked one upon the other when the space ran out. The process of identification was painfully slow because most of the bodies were badly burned and disfigured. Relatives look Hopeful Some that were burned to a crisp were not uncovered and when someons paused at these remains, an attendant gently moved them along. This is only one of the places where the bodies are being gathered. And when relatives look up hopefully when they fail to find their loved ones here, an attendant is forced to tell them that they should go to the other places. And so it went, all morning long. From one hospital to another. Morgue to morgue. Lift up sheet. Shake of head. Sheet back in place. Next body. Next body. Next body.
Killed on U. S. 40 After Leaving Bus
rowing Line
to an adjoin
Greek Ambassador To U.S. Is Dead
Dies Suddenly After 3-Hour Conference
NEW YORK, Dec. 7 (U. P), = Cimon P. Diamantopoulos, whitehaired, slender Greek ambassador {to the United States, died of a | heart attack shortly before midnight last night. He had been conferring with his premier in a hotel suite. Compatriots said he worked himself to death fighting for his country at the peace tables, The 59-year-old ambassador was stricken after a work-filled day that { was topped off by a three-hour conference with Prime Minister Con- | stantin Tsaldaris and other Greek [leaders at the Plaza hotel last night. | The meeting was breaking up and | ‘Mr. Diamantopoulos was standing! in the center of the floor when he| turned to Mr. Tsaldaris and said: | Active Diplomat | “Now I am going to tell you something you'll enjoy , ..” He stopped short, placed his hand | over his heart and collapsed: Funeral plans were not decided. The body was removed from Mr. Tsaldaris' hotel suite by a New 8»
York funeral home and it was be-| . Incomplete List
lieved it would be taken to Wash-| ington before it is returned to = Greece. / ' / Mr. Diamantopoulos’ death was a Of Fire Victims severe blow to the Greeks. He was ATLANTA, Ga, Dec. 7 (U. P) — one of the most active Greek dip-|partial list of dead in the Winecoft lomats during the war and Post- hotel fire: war periods. At the Paris peace] conference, he was one of the mast | !
AT GRADY HOSPITAL: Willard Jones, Oak Ridge, Tenn. Maxine Willis, Bainbridge, Ga. V. BR. Moady. no address, Dr. Carl C. Rasmfussen, Dag Molhes, Ia. Paul D. Lain, Birmingham, Ala A man named Heath, Rome, Ga
active representatives of small coun. tries and & frequent visitor of U. S. | Secretary of State James F. Byrnes! and British Foreign Secretary! A sandy-haired man in his early 20's Ernest Bevin, attempting to get bet. yr BY" BIYSIH Sanpeg
Death came at dusk last night for Mrs. Luls Stumph, 72, of 157 S. Bancroft st. as she hesitantly crossed U. 8. 40 east at the Post | rd. after alighting from a bus. { Gene A. Carmany, 27, of Hagers- | town, westbound in his automobile with his wife, Emily, and two | children, said he didn’t see the! aged woman until she suddenly loomed up in front of his headlights. Trying to avoid her, he swerved, and overturned. State police said! the car struck Mrs. Stumph, crushing her chest and fracturing her | skull. Mr, Carmany suffered a! back injury and his son David, 3,' was cut on the hand. His wife and! 14-months-old baby, Steve, escaped ' injury. Widow of the late Valentine! Stumph, the traffic victim is sur-| vived by a brother, Harry C. Bd wards, and three grandchildren, Julie Ann, Bruce and Lawrence Mitchell. . Services will be at 10 a. m. Tuesday at Moore Mortuaries Irvington chapel. Burial will be in Crown Hill
Lebanon Veteran Dies ithe ammunition dump.
Times State Service LEBANON, Ind. Dec. 7.—Services
will be held at the Lawler funeral home here at 2 p. m. tomorrow for William L. Christy, 68, a veteran of the Spanish-Américan war and of the Philippines campaigns, including the insurrection, who was found dead in his home of a bullet wound near. the right temple. Friends said he had been in ill health for sometime. Survivors include the widow and six children.
IOS JOY 1 SYN 2 There's Ne bt #
200%
,
{ter terms for Greece in peace]
shells and bombs was believed to have started in a barracks occupied by Chinese soldiers. They use piles of straw for beds.
frequency of the blasts kept rescuers from the area.
donated to a fund to build a West side community house.
arles H. Thruen Jr, Columbus, Ga. Joseph Goodson, Clay Ofty, II,
treaties, Eloise Maison, no address
Shanghai Bomb Depot Explodes cre pa
LS RANERAL Dee. 1 (U. Pom and ‘their’ two children. Mary Malinda, | Underous explosions ‘rocked alld. snd Bil, 3. Ovnzelt, U. 8. N. of Shanghai today. Rohens Say Xitawan, Punsasois, Fia, rey. wn, Fire of undetermined origin McDonald, roared through a large Chinese | authority, apparently ammunition dump in the 100,000-| Jack B. Sherif, seat athletic stadium less than a| Mm. Theo Constangy, Atlanta mile from’ the U. 8. army transport Hg Yaad, Be Jind 2 ray command airfield at Kiangwan. | Sold hotel in 1937 to Robert Meyers group t ith, Rome, G Large caliber bombs seized from | Pha » ‘David. SAVARNAD, Ga the Japanese and new U. S. lend- |, Oat. Dewitt Lane Morrison, Brunswick, lease shells as large as 105 milli- "3 meters went off, starting about 4 p. m. They were continuing to explode at close darkness fell, The blasts reminded residents of : the 1937 battle of Shanghai, M'Walter Baker, Asheville, N Officials predicted the explosions| A. J. Burns, New York would continue throughout the} Robert Lamar Sollenberger, Barmesville, night because of the vastness of | ®frme Adame. Thomson Ga Clarence Bates, Bainbridge, Oa
Mary Louise Murphy, Bainbridge, Ga, Cleveland D. Sisk, Asheville, N. C
. Cox, no address Unidentified woman wearing bracelet inscribed “Lusbidus.” Mr. and Mrs. Peter 8. Knox Sr., Thom-
8 =
, Ga Mrs. John Williams, Cordele, G Mary Smith, Fred Smith, all of Pit:
erald, apparently members of the same
amily
W. Sorrells, Asheville, N. C
living in Atlanta Atlanta, night elub|
a rently from Thomaston, Ga nk B. Hale Jr, W. Walden, Rome, Ga. . W. Beck, Jacksonville, Fis intervals after| Miss Lou Broome, address unknown. ise eb Parker, address unkown Mrs. Sari Miller, Gordon, Ga. Dorothy Tyner, Columbus, Ga, (tenta
The fire which touched off the
Train Wreck Injures 15
Unconfirmed reports listed a few | FMleen persons Were injured joday;
Chinese as casualties but the | Gerailed at - Riverdale,
south of here. | Roy Lamb, engineer of the Rocket, | said the derailment was caused by | signals being misread. The Rocket | missed by only a few feet of ramming into another train as Mr. Lamb threw on the air and the streamlined train left the rails,
Riverside Veterans To Dance Tonight
The Riverside Veterans’ organization will sponsor a “December Dance” tonight at Municipal Gardens. Nick Cracionoiu’s orchestra will play for dancing from 9 p. m, to midnight. Gene Krupa will be special guest, Proceeds from the dance will be
THIEF WANTS TO WORK BOISE, Idaho, Dec. 7 (U. P.) — Bigns of the times: A Boise fuel yard reported today that a sizable quantity of stove wood was stolen last night. An ax and cross-cut saw also were taken.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
BIRTHS
William, Mary Keith; Morton, Alice
| wasn't for my old man , ,
Smith And Dotsy | Seat. | You're kidding.” pave L. Pettyjohn, Mountain Brook, | mOTe & plea than a statement,
Will D. Dickerson, Jonesboro and Doug- | lV.
project accountant, federal public housing | .
- {to live for than you.
C (a discharged family .
Girls At St, Francis—Gerald, Qertrude Stenger: Robert, Ruby Myers; Archie, Mary Morton; William, Anns Thompson: William,
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Campbell, and George, Dorothy Morris At St. Vincent's—Oharles, Clara Feeser: Ivan, Margaret Colglazier; John, Lallian| Knite; Herbert, orénce Poole, and| Kenneth, Catherine Gividen, | At Home--Ora, Louellen Black, 341 Park ave, and Robert Evelyn Hargraves, 1136 Newman st. Boys At COity—Herschel, Ma Dorsey. ; At Coleman-—Grant, Helen Jennings; Wilmont, Coreha Rogers; John, Loretia White, and Elbert, Anna Patterson At Methodist—William, Lois Donovan: Frank, Mildred Wall, Charles, Doroth Bardach; Porter, Leotta Payne, and Paul, Betty Prall. At St. Vincent's—Edwi : Henry, Belle Deckard; Lynn, Goldie Deckard; Marshall, Betty Bonewits; Carl, Annabelle Johantges; C. E., Frances Quandt; Walter, Marjorie Paul Fern Johnson; Walter, Mary liams: George, Julia Painter; Dominie, Madeline Sgro, and Lester, Vada Moore,
DEATHS Thomas Joseph O'Connell; 87, at St. Vine cent's, arteriosclerotic heart, Fred William Buchhorn, 73, at 1817 E Michigan #t., cardio-vascular-renal
: Theresa Kast;
Ciyde olmer Rowlison, 42, at 100 B. Michigan st. coronary occlusion Bettie Blain Tupman, 93, at 3102 Park ave, myocarditis,
»
BODY RECOVERED—Firemen remove one of the victims of the Winecoff hotel fire in Atlanta. Ga. from a window
ing building.
THE’ INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ____
_&
v
Files Through Morgue
Simple Rites Mark Dec. 7 Anniversary
Honolulu Residents Don't Halt Work
By WILLARD D. EBERHART United Press Staft Correspondent HONOLULU, Dec. 7.—8imple ceremonies at “Pearl Harbor today marked the fifth anniversary of the Japanese “sneak” attack on this naval base which the Americans
”
i
will never fdrget. Fre | The navy, whose harbor still | holds the battered hulks of the!
as grim reminders of Japanese treachery, observed the anniversary As another work day. At nearby Hickam field, the tattered American flag which flew that fateful morning and was slashed’ by Japanese bombs was raised by the army air forces at 7:55 a. m., the moment the Japanese first struck the fleld. Concrete buildings on the fleld still are pockmarked from bullets fired by Japanese strafing planes.
Written Inte History
The moment of the attack five years ago was written into history by Officer of the Day Lt. Charles E. Dunn, whose report methodically stated: “5:40 a. m., supervised raising of the flag. “6:00 a. m. checked fjoodlights. “Following {tems are reported:| Japanese pursuit and bombardment aviation attacked this field at approximately 7:55 a. m.” Speaking at the flag raising today, Lt. Gen. John E. Hull, commanding general of the armed forces of the mid-Pacific, declared Dec. 7, 1841, should be remembered “as a day of warning as well as a day of pride.” Serves as Reminder
“It's my fervent hope that the initial costly losses will serve always as a reminder to our people that they must remain physically and mentally alert,” He said, “that the {vast distances that once were a com- | plete protection to our nation are| no longer a to attack.” The Japanese wrecked the Pacific fleet and destroyed 177 army and navy planes. One of the sites
Acme Telephotos AFTER THE FIRE—Ambulances line up in front of the fire-qutted Winecoff hotel in Atlanta, Ga., in early morning after the blaze was brought under control.
Times Serial—
Call Me Liz
THE STORY: Red and Russ drive west on a trip. They pick up a couple of girls in Omaha and spend a pleasant evening. But later, when they get hack to their hotel reom, Russ suggests they drive on through the might instead of turning in,
CHAPTER 16
| his desperate feeling:
It was then Red sat up in his “Russ—you don't mean that. His words were
“Yes, I mean it,” Russ said grim“I'm tired of it all—sick and tired of it all.—X-am all fouled up. No good to myself. No good to anybody else. It makes me feel
Om 1042. that I ought to get out of the way |into his mind.
. make room for somebody who could get something out of life.”
” RED WAS frightened.
More
| frightened than he had ever been windows first and went over to the
He was up against something far
{harder to combat than a Messer. | 2nd took a look. | i schmidt. Something so intangible Mrs. Christine A. Henson, or Henderson, thas he hdd Eo he fo Into Some court that was biatk andl
to lick it. But he had to try, “Russ, you're talking nonsense I don't know anybody who has more You've got money, a job, a future, a grand / . " He almost said, “and girl you're in love with” He didn't stop’ to analyze why he skipped that part.
~ ” » HE WENT on doggedly, “I'd say you had everything that is worth living for. You ought to be kicked
WICHITA, Kas. Dec. T (U, P.).—|in the pants for talking like this.”|
Russel's laugh was tinny, “Yeah
when the Rock Island Rocket was —" he mimicked Red's favorite 80% Off. Russ was fully dressed. mal pace since Oct. 31 because ot 22 miles word. “T know. It doesn't make He was lighting a cigaret and he the TWA pilots’ strike, will be back
sense, does it " After a moment, “I suppose I am a weak Willle. I read a book once about the men who came out here when gold was first discovered in Colorado. “They came across here when this road was an unmarked trail. They ran into blizzards and Indians on the warpath and famine and drought. Seems funny that men could endure all that and keep on going—and here I am griping.” . y » “THAT'S WHAT I mean” Red began feverishly. Russel laughed , again and his voice was more normal now. “Oh, forget it,” he said. “I guess I was just blowing off steam.” They drove through the rest of that night and all the next day. When, they finally hit the outskirts of Denver the sun was blacking out behind the snow-capped ridges of the Rockies. The dusk in the west is short-lived. Street lamps were on by the time they reached the center of town. They tried four hotels without success, the town being full up with a convention crowd. They finally found a room at the Colonial, one convention visitor having failed to claim his reservation, They ate in’ the coffee shop of the hotel and went straight up to their rooms and to bed. It had been three a bed
” ~ » “PIKE'S PEAK in the morning,” Russel said facetiously as they turned In, °
I
RUSSEL said, his—voice delib- | erately slow and casual to cover up| “Nothing 'a moment and suddenly he got the, |seems worth living for—I guess impression that he was alone in the,
that's it. I swear, I'd end it all if it Tam
of today’s observance was the Halawa navy cemetery on Red hill‘ behind Pearl Harbor where lie many of the 2117 navy and marine personnel killed in the blitz. The army lost 226 killed and 396 wounded. Fortyseven civilians were killed and more than 100 wounded.
By Rene Ryerson Mart
| Red was asleep almost as soon {as he hit the sheets. It seemed hours later when he ‘awoke, The room was dark but itnrough the walls from the next one came the sounds of revelry . . , a jconvention party celebrating after
2 War Veterans
petition; equality before the law. But no Russian in his right m
setup these privileges have special meanings, not even related to the meanings they have in dictionaries or in non-Soviet countries. : Take freedom | of the press. In Russian practice it means that any § state or party institution or ganization (and g& there are no others) may publish a newspaper or magazine to
Eugene Lyons {cial views and the authorized in-
| present the offi-
formation in its particular field. Handouts Oyly
The publication must be sanctioned by the proper government bureau and its contents are strictly censored in advance, 8hould it publish one independent thought not in line with the official views of the moment, its editors become candidates for prison or exile. In effect, therefore, every publication is a government publication. It publishes only official handouts or original material carefully reflecting the authorized views. Because a thing has happened, at home or abroad, does not make it| news. News is as carefuly controlled and rationed as views. The readers of this “free press” know only as much as the dicatorship thinks is good for them. Truth, according to the
complete barrier communist definition, is that which
is useful to the state; everything else is falsehood. Or take freedom of speech. It means that you may criticize the conduct of lower officials and managers. The party at times encourages this “self-criticism.” It is useful in uncovering fraud and exposing inefficiency—a weapon in the hands of the central authorities for controlling the vast army of officialdom.
But no one is permitted to criticize the govérnment, the party, their policies or their views as such.
That's sabotage and counter-revolu. tion.
Join 100 Women
As Beauticians
hotirs. Red listened to the loud voices for|
| He yelled Russel's name and his; The heroes were two manly {feet hit the floor. And yet even as| world war II veterans and their {he called he expected no answer. weapons were a magneto ‘bar, an
| He knew that Russel was not in the |other bed even before he pulled on|iron rod and some strands of wire. the light. For two hours, they probed,
® = = twisted and jabbed with the borIN A COLD sweat he fumbled for |. veq tools on the eve of the an-
| ia clothes. All of Russel's "IK! niversary of Pearl Harbor. They | about suicide came flooding back huffed and puffed and murmured under their breath, But today, 200-pound former . army Sgt. Nolan E. Walt and forthe least idea where to start look mer navy radicals Russsll Poster! ing for him. He thought of the Indianapolis were rewarded. They had licenses showing they were full-fledged beauticians, { They joined nearly 100 Indiana! | As far as he could see it opened | ~*Y Joied 2 to take a practical | examination given by the Indiana | state board of beauty culturist -ex-| aminers. Mr. Foster, who worked in a bank, {said “I always liked to fix people's 'hair,” and Mr, Walt said he didn't (know any other business. His {mother has owned a beauty shop | for 25 years.
| The worst of it was that he hadn't
one that was open and leaned out
deep and unlighted at the bottom. | The sweat poured out on Red. He thought about calling the desk and having them send someone out |to take a look in the court. At the {last minute ‘a glimmer of common sense stopped him. He'd better look around first before he {raised an alarm.
*s 8 =» { HE PUT on a shirt and jerked Weir Cook Air Traffic
{on his coat. He was at the ele- To Be Normal Again |vator ringing the bell when, the| Commercial air trafic at Weir
jcar came up and stopped and Russ Cook airport, reduced to a sub-nor-1
{looked surprised when he saw to normal Saturday, N. W. Waldron,
{Red. | TWA district manager, sald today. “Russ—where have you been?! The total number of TWA flights You scared the living daylights out | into, through and out of Indianfof me , , .” apolis is now 17, one less than be“That infernal noise in the next|fore the strike. {room woke me up and I couldn't ——
sleep,” Russ said. “I went 4% | Krupa to Entertain
to the lobby to get some cigarets. | And I made a phone call—it oc-| Gene Krupa, his band and encured to me that the folks back [tire show, will entertain patients home might like to know where [at the U. 8. veterans’ administra-
we were.” tion hospital at 10:30 a. m. Mon-
you at will to spy and inform on
Can't Oppose Order
Suppose the politburo orders that output in your factory be stepped up 20 per cent. It is your right, even your duty, to expose fellowworkers, foremen and officials. who are slack in enforcing the order. But should you dare to say that the order itself is unreasonable or impossible of fulfillment, you will be promptly squelched and punished. Equality before the law is an! empty phrase. Of what value are laws anyhow when the ruling party may suspend them, or issue new ones by edict, at its own sweet will? |
When the tremendous police ma- | chine is a law unto itself. The courts are fair enough in ordinary criminal or eivil matters like theft, murder, disputes over, personal property. But in political | matters there are no brakes on the! powers of the police—and anything is political if the police so decide. Habeas corpus is unheard of in Russia, You can be imprisoned or shot without being informed of your offense—without your family ever knowing’ what happened to you or| why. There is not even habeas cadaver —the bodies of executed people are not returned to their families, Search Without Warrant The police may swoop down on your home and rip it apart in a search without warning or warrant. They open and read your letters, listen in on your phone, summon
your closest friends and relatives. You may be held incommunicado for months or years, and subjected to physical torture, without any legal recourse, As a Soviet citizen, you would be required at all times to keep with you your “internal passport” as identification.
~ » ” HE FINISHED lighting his cigaret and threw the match away. It wasn't until then that the meaning of Red's agitation struck him. He looked at Red and a slow and angry color changed his tn Shortwave to Be Clear, white face. “Say, what the devil " he began angrily, and then
day. For the benefit of bed-ridden/ patients, a public address system | will carry the music to individual ear-phones. |
By Solence Service { WASHINGTON, Dec. 7.—8hort-|
nights since they had been in|
cut his own question short. It was obvious what Red had been thinking. His voice rose, “Let me tell you, Red, I don't need any wet nurse. Get that straight will: you?” Red followed him sheepishly back to their room. Without looking at Russel he took off his clothes and climbed back into bed. He had the feeling that things would never be the same between him and Russel again. (To Be Continued)
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INCLUDING SUNDAY
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Don't Try ih To Exercise Rights ‘Guaranteed’ Them
Privileges of Citizen Are Only on Paper; ‘He Can Be Punished for Kin's Crimes
Eugene Lyons, for six years the United Press correspondent in Soviet Russia, is an authority on its history and system. The sixth of a series of articles Mr. Lyons has written exclusively for the SarippsHoward newspapers Is published today.
By EUGENE LYONS . On paper the Soviet citizen is guaranteed a lot of rights that sound remarkably like those cherished by the people in a democracy. The constitution gives him freedom of speech press and assembly; the might to
IT MIDWINTER TERM
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ind would venture to exercise such
battleships Oklahoma and Arizona |'l8hts literally. He knows from sad experience that under the Soviet
You could not leave your own eity or village for more than three days without official permission. Moving
(to a new home or locality requires
government sanction. Only Favorites Leave As for leaving the country, that Is a privilege limited to carefully screened officials and favorites. An attempt to leave without pexmission is punishable by death. The Kremlin knows that if it opened its frontiers millions of its subjects would rush to escape, Under Soviet law and practice, you may be punished for the crimes of relatives, even if you are not aware of their offense. This is part of an extensive hostage system under which the freedom of wives, husbands, parents, children is endangered by any act against the dictatorship. The system was copied in part by the Nazis in Hitler's Germany, Though the death penalty has been abolished for ordinary murder, it 1s applied to a long array of political offenses. For instance, theft of government property is a capital crime—and virtually everything in Russia is government property. Even
children as young as 12 are subject to these death penalties,
LOCAL BRIEFS
Indianapolis chapter 66, National Sojourners, will hold a smoker at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Hotel Antlers. W. Henry Roberts, deputy grand master, will speak,
Fenwick T. Reed, assistant to the president of Indiana university, will address the I. U. clib at 12:15 p.m. Monday in the Warren hotel.
Baltimore & Ohio Veterans auxlllary will hold their annual Christmas party at 6:30 p. m. Monday in the B. & O. bldg, 220 Virginia Mrs. P. T. Porter, dinner chairman, will be assisted by Mrs.
(H. Bolinger and Mrs. Wayne {| Graham. Rivers Peterson, managing di-
rector, ‘National Retail Hardware association, will address the Indianapolis Rotary at 12:18 p. m. Tuesday in the Claypool.
(e====CLOSED ON SUNDAY ees
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