Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1947 — Page 3
, Republican AS set to ap{11 Mr, Martin to meet cry N's measure.” ter attack on
. E reports ine will hit peace- ) billion this p47, outlook Is mports aren't h our sales dits in U. 8. of about $1.5 when exports n (excluding RA). Imports nated at net on as against --- rts.
imports—and ign" countries Age necessary ds — will be fore Geneva xt ‘month. »
Opponents Taft-Ellender- | are trying to sure was writ- § in national ey think Mr, to look bad if i with adminFact is that by senate last nly slightly in prepared by , former NHA ber of Presiuncil. job is said to )y Berchmans . Keyserling's
Art Shown buck
0 paintings by opened to the Sears Roebuck
council of the pening ceremo= this noon. As ram, Walter I. nt, was awarded [ the paintings ivilian in Indie war. The ex-
to Speak , former misrill describe her , revival meet~ y and tomorrow le Pentecostal io st.
on ~ wait
It and a >n home & Loan ssion of ME Yous
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SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1947 __
Two Pedestrians Seri
Red Cross
Hurt When - Hit by Cars.
Rushville Cyclist Killed on Road 52
Two pedestrians were in serious|g
condition: at City hospital. today. Four other pedestrians were injured less seriously in trafic accidents last night. ? Taken to the hospital here were Mrs, C. H. Gray, 42, of Clarksville, Tenn, and Emily Raggett, 41, of 4038'%4 E. Washington st, injured when struck by a car at Meridian and Maryland sts. Ernest Miller, 41, of 3038% E. Washington st., also was injured in the same mishap, was not taken to the hospital. Driver Charged Louis A. Reimer, 32, of 702 Weghorst st, was arrested and charged with drunkenness, reckless driving, disobeying an automatic traffic sig-
nal, and failing to give a pedestrian:
the right-of-way. In Rushville, 46-year-old bleyclist was killed instantly on Road 53, one mile west of his home, when he wheeled into the path cf
ard automobile, according to state|gS
police. ; The Rushville man killed was i Marry Lushell. He was struck by
an automobile driven by Dr. Lowell Hinchman, Glenwood veterinarian.
Struck by Car
Ines Cunningham, 52, of 3317 Ralston st, and Roy Cunningham, 20, of 3330 Scofield st., were injured when hit by a car at 38th st.
ouse, was charged with reckless driving and failing to give a pedestrian the right-of-way. Police said Richard Turley, 69, of 111 BR. St. Clair st, walked into the side of an automobile driven by Joe Carmichael, 48, of 105 E. 9th
. st. The accident happened near the
intersection of St. Clair and Delaware sts. ; Theresa Roehl, 28, of 3631 Rans-
dell st, was injured this morning when a hit-run automobile collided with one i which she was riding.
Philippines Honor Departing McNutt
MANILA, March 22 (U. P).—Ambassador Paul V. McNutt departed for the United States today on a
flight which will take him across Asia and Furope. He was accorded
a 19-gun farewell salute and mili-
tary honors by the U. 8 army, Philippines army and Manila police. “I leave the Philippines with a
a i a Yoru 2 LoL mn A
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i as nn Ps Rp i
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; Cob ER a. i ag a njure . “ap -» 3 3 + a VR i a
a hermit's existence for nearly 40
when his brother died.
RECLUSE FOUND DEAD—The emaciated body of Homer Collyer was found yesterday when police broke through the boarded windows of a mysterious, crumbling mansion in Harlem, New York. In the mansion, Homer and his brother Langley had led
body of the blind, paralyzed recluse. He was found sitting on his haunches, his knees drawn to his chin. There was no sign of Langley.
Police Await Last Collyer At Fifth Ave. Hermitage
Blind Homer Dies, Langley Missing; Brothers. Hid in Mansion for 39 Years NEW YORK, March 22 (U. P).—A lone policeman guarded the
decaying, junk-filled Collyer home on upper Fifth ave. today, waiting for Langley Collyer to return to the hermitage from which he fled
Homer Collyer, blind and bedridden for many years, died yesterday. Police broke into the crumbling old brownstone mansion and found
pe
2" | terday they had passed their quotas.
in $11,455 with a goal of $6000, and
Acme Telephoto
years. Here police remove the
his emaciated body in a tiny alcove among dust-covered boxes of assorted junk and bundles of old | newspapers stacked almost to the ceiling. A telephoned tip to police head- | quarters told police of Homer's | death. The caller identified himself as Charles Smith. But’ police believed it was Langley. Death Held Natural
It took ‘five hours to reach and |
Pushes Sewer Plan
heavy heart because of innumerable friends here. Yet there is a certain satisfaction that I've been able to, contribute to the magnificent progress being made by the Philippine
remove the body. A medical exam- | iner sald Homer had been dead | about 10 hours. He was 70 years
people toward national rehabilita-
tion,” Mr. McNutt said in a fare-
well speech last night.
“In whatever way I oan be of
service, I'm aé- your call”
Urges U. S. Rout Reds From Unions
SEATTLE, March 23 (U. P).— Dave Beck, international vice president of the A. F. of L. Teamsters union, urged today in an editorial fn the union's publication that the itself of Communists
nation - rid with a three-pronged attack:
ONE: Put the FBI on the trail
old and the examiner said death | apparently had been due to nat- | ural causes. Police said the house was] crammed with junk from cellar to attic. Papers dating back to world war J were neatly bundled and stacked along with other junk. Through it all ran a labyrinth of tunnels and corridors, boobytrapped to foil . any attempt by intruders to invade the privacy of the two brothers. Rats scurried through the dust and debris that littered the floor. ! The Collyer brothers, scions of an old and wealthy colonial family, went into seclusion 39 years ago.
- should be fired—right now,” the
Warns on° Gambling
i WASHINGTON. Ind; March ,22 swe (1. P.).—Authorities posted warn-
of subversive elements. TWO: Rows Communists from labor wnions (the Teamsters, he said, long ago bemned from membership anyone taking orders from Moscow) ¢ : THREE: Outlaw the Communist because it is not "an Amerioan political party.” “Whenever Communists are disgovered Im government posts, they
Both men were well educated. Homer was an admiralty lawyer and Langley an electrical engineer.
Assumes Nurse Role
When Homer became blind and crippled, Langley took care of him with dogged devotion. He went out to get him food every night, making his® purchases at neighborhood delicatessens. - There was neither light, heat nor gas in the building.’ They had the telephone taken out years ago “be- | cause we had no one to talk to.” Their only contact with the outside world was through a crystal set radio which Langley built. on 20 DRngley--doesn'y return; police said they would have to search the place to see if he had crawled off in some part of the house and died. a e—————————————
editorial said.
In\ Daviess County
ings todgy that gambling would not be tolerated in Daviess county. County ‘Prosecutor: Jack E. Hayes | and Washington municipal officials said all gambling devices must dis- | States to Vot
appear by this week-end. ‘On Presidents’ Tenure
Washington's Mayor Frank M.| Donaldson said the move was the | WASHINGTON, March 22 (U.| constitutional
outgrowth of numerous _complaints | P-)- — A proposed
involving teen-agers in gaming ac- Amendment to limit any future] tivities. President to a maximum of 10
«| years in office will soon be on its . . way to the states for ratification. First at Own Fire But there was little prospect that EAST MORICHES, N. Y., March more than a few of the 48 state 23 (U. P.).—Edward W. Donovan, | legislatures would acton on it this 22, a volunteer fireman, was held for |year. : i arson today after he confessed, po-| The amendment will go into eflice said, to setting a $100,000 fire fect only if ratified by the legislaso he could be the first to answer |tures of 36 states, the necessary the alarm. The fire destroyed a three-fourths majority, within the hangar, 10 airplanes and two trucks. next seven years. I
In Indianapolis *
————————————— Re
EVENTS TODAY : Betty Jean Black, ‘and Roy, Sarsh No hu ,
Thom v Inglans (tate. Bascetban tournament, But-| 44 Coleman—Anthony, Ruth vi] Jiines,
0 y geo. «Indians State Bowling tournament, West gids Bowling “leys & Pritchett-Hunt Rosemary Bracken, ‘Grady.
‘Husband and Herself
Indiana State Women's bowling tourna-
ment, Indians alleys. Douglas; Winfield, Lois Shelton; Alvie, Bonnie 0; esse, tie 04d Yellows Minstrel show, 8 Pp. m.,| Reyers, and Arte ioe Prichard. tat BIRTHS DEATHS lizabeth Hansen, 70, at 1827 8. East, Twine “myocarditis .
Af Coleman—Wiley, Maybeth Owen, boy
Girls Francis—George
At Bt, ge, Pe Ge: Alice Hickey; Chester,
\ . en A TIC EE mateint din, $18 Ch (Sg SL 1 se, en. i BRE. Mtr 0 ER, on, 0 inant Ransdell. Tn . _ diabetes mellit
Boys
”
rh Hommel: orgs, Opal endricks, and Thomas, Helen Camp-
Donald, Margaret ‘Jackson; Myron, Ru
8.4Maggie Ingram, 64, at 2335 Hovey, ecar-
cinoma. - Sudie Edwards, 60, at 1008 Edgemont, nephritis. Addie Maley, 08, at 301 N. State, hypertension.
Speedway City
Speedway Oity officials today continued to plan for their city’s new sewage disposal plant little’ moved by action of the Indianapolis board of works and sanitation to kill the project. Yesterday the Indianapolis board turned thumbs down on -Speedway City's plans for annexation of a 47-acre site for a proposed new $300,000 sewage disposal plant. The board asked the city plan commission to stop Speedway City’s sewer building plans because the proposed plant “will not be desirable from the standpoint of the general community health.”
Assembly Act Cited
A 1945 act of the general assembly gives the planning commission in a first class Indiana city the right to approve or disapprove annexation plans of other incorporated communities within the county. However, today Thomas J. Blackwell Jr, Speedway City attorney, said he was certain other state laws would permit the community to build #s disposal plant on the site without annexing it. The state stream pollution oontrol board has ordered Speedway City to correct its sewage system and end contamination of Eagle creek by Dec. 1, 1948.
Woman Kills Father,
LEBANON, Kas, March 22 (U, P.). — Authorities confessed today that they did ‘not know what caused . a “moody” woman to go berserk yesterday and kill her husband, her father and herself. 7 The bodies were found in their blood-spattered home. . Coroner E. ‘W. Tallman said it was a case of “two murders and a suicide.” Sheriff Clarence Duntz said there was no question that Mrs. Clarence Walton had shot her 65-years-old husband and her father, Silas Perkins, 94, and then killed hérself with the 410-gauge shotgun. He said Mrs. Walton had been under a physician's care for sev-
| 0f Fund Goal
obtain before it reaches its goal.
professional
yesterday. First place event to the
60-year-otd
Reaches 68%
Four Days Left For Annual Drive
With four days remaining in the annual Red Cross drive here the organization still has $101,506 to
Workers making their third report of the drive yesterday revealed that 68 per cent of the goal had been reached. Hugh K. Duffield, general chairman, told the workers the report was good in view of illness and bad weather that hampered efforts this week. Some Pass Quotas
Additional groups reported yesThe professional division turned
the clubs and organizations divisions raised $2772 with a quota of $2000. Herbert E. Wilson heads the division and Mrs. James W. Carr leads the clubs and organisations divisions. Others over their quota include Wards 5 and 8 in the residential division, and commercial group A-1 and industrial group G of the downtown division. Winners in the Red Cross garment. sewing contest were announced at the report luncheon
Ammaus Lutheran Ladies’ Aid society. The St. John's Evangelical and Reformed church group Was second. Thirty groups competed in the contest sponsored by the Red Cross production corps. The garments are sent to chidlren in Holland and Belgium.
Heiress to Face Murder Charge
SANTA ANA, Cal, March 22 (U. P.)—Heiress Beulah Overell, 17, and her fiance, George R. (Bud) Gollum “#1, will be formally charged today with the time bomb murder of her wealthy parents, District Attorney James L. Davis said. Mr. Davis and Police Chief R. R. Hodgkinson of Newport Beach said the murder complaints, drawn up yesterday, would be signed and filed
Ye “We have conclusive evidence that this was a deliberately planned murder,” Chief- Hodgkinson ' said. Miss Overell, a University of Southern California freshman, and Gollum, who were scheduled to be married April 30, have been held since Wednesday on suspicion of murder.’ , They were arrested after officers found evidence of a time-bomb blast aboard the -yacht Mary E, which exploded Sunday in Newport Harbor. Authorities said they believed that Walter E. Overall, 62, and his wife, Beauah, 57, Los Angeels society leaders, who were aboard, had been slain before the yacht exploded. Richard Hornby, one of two mechanics who worked on the yacht untli three hours before the explosion, said he witnessesed a family quarrel. The girl and her boy friend “seemed ‘irritable and anxi-, ous for us to leave,” he said. 1 Capt. Tom McGafl, head of the| sheriff's identification bureau, said he had found in the wreckage a ball-peen hammer that might have been used to blugeon the Overells to death. .
6 Children Killed
As Train Hits Car KAYSVILLE, Utah, March 22 (U. P.).—8ix children—three of them brothers—were Killed and three oth-
er persons injured last night when the Los Angeles Limited struck: their car at a railroad crossing. Wilford H. Webster, 55, Kaysville, driver of the car and -one of the injured, said he stopped .at the crossing to allow a freight train to pass and then drove orto the tracks. The car was struck by the speeding. train and demolished. Engineer A. R. Stout said the train was traveling 50 to 60° miles per hour when the’ car, loomed in front of the train. Three of those killed were sons of Rulon D. Barnes. They were Hal, 14; Sterling, 9, and David, 7. The others were Mr. Webster's 10-year-old daughter, Joan; David Sandall, 14, son of Hyrum Sandall, and. Carol Lee Presler, 10, daughter of Leland Presler. er 0 The others injured were more of Mr. Webster's children—
eral. months.
Dorothy, 21, and Dee, 13.
dial 18, iy yg . A le if Pam Hateh, #2, M i Tuyen, , Was
EXPERIENCE
In Real Estate Matters
a ® ’ Frederick &, Cline F-.. + CIRCLETOWER' FR. 3174
Couple to Mark Golden Wedding
mark the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Nester of Plainfield.’
from 2 to 4 p. m. at their home.
Va., they were married March 24, 1897. in Hendricks county in 1902 and’ moved to their present home ° 26 years ago.
ters, Mrs. Ralph Cummings and Mrs. Cecil Gray of Plainfield, Mrs. Herschel Hughes of Danville, Ind. and Mrs. O. W. Arnette of Indianapolis, and a son, Paul Nester of Indianapolis. They have 23 grandchildren, children,
Fourteen Persons Routed by Fire
two |
Ta
{
, WED 50 YEARS—Mr. and | Mrs. Floyd Nester of Plainfield tomorrow will mark their 50th wedding anniversary. ay
A family dinner tomorrow will
The couple will hold open house
Both natives of Carrol county,
They came to Brownsburg
They are parents of four daugh-
and eight great-grand-
Fa Yrs |
Deprived of "Baby: Kills Herself =~ |
SPRINGFIELD, Mo, March 22 (U. P.,).—Her love for her. sister's baby was believed responsible today for the flaming suicide of a 24-year-old farm girl. The third attempt to kill herself succeeded, when Patsy Lorene Price
Held for Thefts
Officers Recover $1000 in Loot .
Deputy sheriffs believed today they have solved a series of bur glaries in Danville, Avon and other nearby communities with
the arrest of four Indianapolisidied of burns last night at a hosyouths, pital here. Her father, Ralph Two of the youths were caught Price, 58, said she poured kerosene last night as they sped in an auto-|over her clothing yesterday and
mobile from a filling station at 4055 touched a match to it at their do
Rockville rd. |Long Lane, Mo., farm, The others were arrested at their; Mr. Price doused her flaming homes, where authorities recovered garments with water, He said she 9 more than $1000 in loot which in- knocked him down when he first cluded numerous automobile acces- tried to put out the flames. Dur- 2 sories, " |ing the melee the house caught fire, Mr. Price and his daughter lived alone at the farm. He said she recently had been caring for her sister's baby. He sald he thought that perhaps she was thrown into emotional turmoil when the sister took the child ‘away, } Earlier yesterday, Mr. Price said, the young womdh fried to shoot herself. She drank some poison earlier in the week, he said, but didn’t swallow enough to cause serious injury.
Held Under Bond Charged with vagrancy and held | inder $10,000 bond each, are Delmus Thompson, 23, of 2834 N. Gladstone ave.;, Charles Frye, 22, of the Tremont hotel, 405 E. Washington st.; his brother, Cecil, 28, of the Hoosier hotel, 446 Massachusetts ave, and Morris Ridenour, 23, of 43 N. Beville ave. . ° Deputy Sheriffs Clarence Coch-, rane and “Garrett Berry stopped Thompson and the younger Frye,
tion, curbing their automobile. | , . Both men were armed. | am er Wins City police questioned a 15-year-| adjoining establishment. fone . Vote . Shot in the arm was Richard] PARIS, March 22 (U. P.).—Prime
| Goode, 36, of 343 N. Arlington ave. Minister Paul Ramadier won a vote
oid boy who accidentally fired aj ¢ who was in the Sheridan liquor|,, .,.a4ence from the French as:
pistol through an Irvington store} wall, injuring a.customer in an]
stopped Delma Bleir, 25, of 3528 N.|serve united support for Fore Parker ave. at 38th st. and Parker |nfinister aon in isn ave. to ask directions. When she Moscow negotiations.
Fourteen persons were routed to
the street in nightdress early today when fire broke out in a two-and-! a-half-story frame apartment aot 1cated an elbow. Gerald. Loomis, 609 E. 12th st.
Ed Felder, who lives in one of the apartments, returned home from
work at 2:45 a. m. He noticed the 11, said they. were followed several
roof on fire and rushed from apartment to apartment rousing residents. . Meanwhile flames destroyed the roof and damaged the back wall of the dwelling. The apartment of Marion Buchanan was gutted by the fire. No one was injured. Causes and loss were undetermined.
Hoosier Businessmen
Named to Council
NEW YORK, March 22 (U: P.) — Two Hoosier businessmen today were named to the advisory board of the newly-formed Collective Bargaining Research council, They were W. E. Clark, personnel director of the American Wool Corp, Wabash, and Edward J. Hoechst, personnel director of the Penn Electric Switch Co. Goshen. Lawrence Stessin, director of the organization, said it was the purpose of the group to provide smaller business concerns with “techniques, trends and standards”
of labor practices to further rela-
tions between union and management.
Leftist Prisoners Slain
ATHENS, March 22 (U. P).— Thirty-three Leftist prisoners were hauled from jail at Gythion in the Peloponnesus by a group of Right{sts and killed, press reports said
replied, one man grabbed her and| jacques Duclos, Communist lead- { tried to force her into the car, po- er in the assembly, announced lice were told. {shortly before the balloting that In jerking away, she fell and dis-| communist cabinet ministers would | vote for Mr. Ramadier. He said the Communist rank and file of | assembly members would abstain, | This face-saving device was designed to give Mr. Ramadier the!
3/79 N. Parker ave, ran to her @sistance and the men fled. | Two girls, one 10 and the other
tlocks by a man in an old-model
Hannegan in Florida
on Roena st. near the filling sta-| (U. P.).—Postmaster General : pale” arrived last night with his wife and a nurse for a “long recuperative vacation.” Hannegan re-
for removal of a nerve.
store, 6133 E. Washington st. The, 1 aoe after receiving a COOKS WITH youth fired the shot in the H. 81 communist ledge of rtoini W. Sports shop, 6133 E. Washing-| iin 8 BACH O Sao | GAS TURNED ton st. The assembly action a d| SOLD EXCLUSIVELY 3 Woman Accosted ppeared IN MARION CO. AT , - |likely to keep Mr. Ramadier’'s coali- | Three men in an automobile|tion government in office and pre- 208 N. Delaware
Dine and Dance
MIAMI BEACH, Fla, March 23
rt an “looking
ently left a hospital after operation
IN OUR NEW
Flamingo Room
EVERY NIGHT (Except Monday)
cir who finally accosted them near tieir homes in the 1600 block of Cornell ave, they reported to police. * heir screams caused the man to fee. Cab Driver Robbed Luther Brown, 24, of 1009 Broadway a taxicab driver, reported to police he was robbed of $9 when &
jy assenger forced him to stop in the 1200 block of Lafayette st. Roy Pauley, 911 N. Alabama st,
ave, he told police. His assailant, who demanded money, took a loaf of bread and bottle of milk and fled. 1.1 a ’ A man Troy Napier, Westview hotel, met in a tavern attempted to rob him in the Kingan & Co, parking lot, The would-be cohber leaped into the victim's automobile, but apparently became frightened and fled on foot, police were told. Charles Roberts, 25, manager of & filling station at 1402 WN. West st. told police two men drove into the establishment and robbed him of $34.
Cancel Schuschnigg Talk
PHILADELPHIA, March 22 (U. P.).—A scheduled address by Dr. Kurt von Schuschnigg, Austrian chancellor, at Temple uni- | versity has been canceled, the university said today. The Temple Veterans club labeled him “undesirable as a speaker.”
Technical . Chemistry Industrial Chemistry Technickl Drawing
Tool Design Human Relations for : ; {oie ™ Die Design Supervisors. iE Survey of Architectural * Operation Planning - a Rs Drawing Technical Mathematics Att ti P nis? Wood Frame Construction Graphical Computations on on are it | Masonry Construction Fundamentals of Mechanics ; ’ SARE Plan Reading Strength of Materials Talk over with YOUR BOY the idea of hecaming » Economics of Industry Heating, Ventilating and Air SY Times Carrier Salesman; then call Mr. Ballere, City Cirem~ Elements of Applied Electricity Conditioning lation Manager of The Times at Rl ley 5551, and ask D. O. Circuits and Machinery Refrigeration . route openings in your neigh “+ A. 0.. Machinery \ General Metallurgy County, coptact The Times Dealer Historical Review of American Principles of Machines no Times Dealer, write Mr. Herb § Institutions oil is Heat Manager of The Times—as History ‘6 Industrial Expansion Psychology and Human towns every: week. Industrial English Relations 1 adusteind bts 10 . . Technical Report Writing Principles o us » 5 2 Fundamentals of Practical Psychology rier Speaking Industrial Materials and Times Car oh Conference Speaking Processes Fe ! Fundamentals of Industrial Building Materials~’ “ Have F un! a Production : Elementary Surveying v Make Money ! 2 v Get Basic Training in
ot - i:
902 N. Meridian:
“SPRING TERM ~~ STARTS MARCH 31
REGISTRATION MARCH 24 TO 29
"COURSES OFFERED THIS TERM:
OUTLTT T T
Industrial Safety Production Control Motion and Time Study
Lincoln 3548
was slugged at 13th st. and College Francisco.
formal support of all his cabinet] ministers and still indicate Communist ‘opposition to his policy in! Indo-China.
MUSIC BY GEORGE FRIEJE
«.. AND HIS BAND... ANDREWS ~~
GOLDEN PHEASANT
RESTAURANT. 7800 E. WASHINGTON ST. IRvington 8378 . . , 8379, &
Indiana's Finest Restaurant ||
Pacific Ship Overdue
HONOLULU( March 22 -(U. P.).| —Naval headquarters today notified | planes and ships in the wmid-| Pacific to watch for the wooden freighter 8. 8. Catherine reported three days overdue from San
Learning Courtesy and Depen dab
the Practical Way
Edward Young, Rural Route 15, Box 198, has been giving the kind of service on his Indianapolis Times route that results in
i |
|
former +
© Purdue-Marott Agricultural Center |
"A. W. COLLINS, District Manager
in i] Jeph oR de . uti ie Gi Fide i
unsolicited letters like the one below from SATIS. FIED CUSTOMERS. Learning to he COURTEOUS and DEPENDABLE will help Edward to succeed
Edward Young Circulation Director The Indianapolis Times
214 West Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Indiana
Dear Sir:
got one of the clocks
our Times carrier. He
house and put it inside
he has a rural route, n name is EDWARD YO
+
courteous. We are elderly people and weather for him to bring the paper
We think he deserves an interview and
Signed: Mr. and
As parents of eight children, four boys and four girls, all married now with families except one boy, we are much interested in the paper % boy carried THE TIMES when it first came out as THE SUN. He was 9: years old _miles every evening. We.lived-on f they put out with-the paper... ..
But I'm not writing this to tell about us, but shout &
carriers. Our ‘
and had to walk two South Tibbs ave. and
sure is a swell boy. He is very it's never too bad clear up to the the door. ] y raise for
o sidewalks, like city boys. His UNG, Rural Route 15, Box 198.
Mrs. Elmer F. Carson, Rural Route 15, Box 196, Indianapolis 44, Indiana.
