Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 December 1947 — Page 11
public spirited | they, through ie Public Servat report, and ly didn't have
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g the Soviet ly to enable 5,” the Army force Talks.” \ permanent
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§ 1 MOREG PATS PEND COPR 1947 EDW, L A WAGKER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED,
NATIONAL 24-HOUR FOrCAST SUMMARY: Snow will fall | Saturday afternoon in the East ern Lakes, the Northern Plains and the northern New England regions. Rain is predicted for the Northern Pacific Coast as onshore winds bring moist Pacific air over the land. Precipitation areas are | defined on Fotocast by appropri- | ate weather symbols. | Weathermen foresee sunny skies in the Southeast, the Gulf States | and the Central and Southern Plains. Overcast conditions will blanket the Lakes, the Middle Atlantic States and the Northeastern States. Elsewhere partly cloudy weather will occur. The Inset Map gives a complete .cloud coverage for the various sections of the nation.
for JEWELRY 1s Tavel's
Watch Repairing
10-DAY SERVICE
TaVEL SITTIN)
4u MARKET ST
| is expected to keep the mercury
| continued cold 30s in the Middle
a
Cold sir sweeping out of Canada
hovering below. freezing in the New England states, the Lakes and the U, S8.-Canadian border Saturday afternoon. Temperatures will rise to the 50s in the rest of the states with the exception of
Atlantic and Uupper Ohio staces Maximum temperature forecas's include: Atlanta, 56; St. Louis, 54; Kansas City, 52; Nashville, 44; Washington, 38; Chicago, 37: New York, 36; Philadelphia and Mil- |
coastal sections Saturday afternoon as the outer fringe of the storm affects the continent. -Fotocast fans will note that high pressure is still dominating the western half of the country and maritime Pacific air is the ruling air mass. The low pressure
Fails to Find B-29,
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FAIRBANKS, - Alaska, (UP)—Army officials today {they were without clues to the fate {of a B-20 Superfortress, missing since Tuesday with eight persons |aboard north of the Arctic Circle. Army and civilian rescue planes, now in the fourth day of their
Dec, 27
trace of the craft. The shortness of
{the Arctic day has hamepered {search for the craft.
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the U. S. Mud air from the south and cold air out of Canada are being mixed together with resulting cloudiness. However, this ow pressure area is giving indications sociation: directors of the Aberof weakening and no further ' amounts of precipitation are ex-
pected.
will buffet the northern Atlantic |p *%iue ...
Pt. Worth .. Yess . Indianapolis (City) sevvvvvnnns 3 Kansas City res antunbunes Los Angeles . Miami sane Minneapolis-St. Paul ... New Orleans ......... New York Oklahoma City Omaha rages
P
San. Antonio . es trough in the Northeast Quadrant |San Francisco
general theory of relativity with its man, was free today on $5000 bond, day will be the annual meeting of [strange concepts that space is Tur S a { aiC charged in a misdemeanor warrant the Purdue Agricultural Alumni As- curved, that everything has al
with “soliciting another to com-|sociation, the Beekeepers program,
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ’ —Dec. 27, 1M47—
! . _!| Dr. D, R. Ivey, Royal Center, will Ecli \ H Photos *1 |preside at the Dairy Association
Sunrise ree THN Sunset 4
{Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7.30 a. m Total precipitation since Jan, 1 Deficiency
since Jan
The following table shows the tempera-
Wayne
ittsburgh
Louis .
| st nie ianse ian marks the most unstable section of |washington, D.C... rmt 000s. 41
Eight Aboard, in " «ic Death Plot Called wa A Misdemeanor
St. Louvisan Held for
‘Soliciting’ to Kill
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 21 (UP)—Chest- Youth Day and Wednesday will be shift, or curving of space. (search, have been unable to find erer B. Winkler, 47-year-old sales-
mit murder.”
The misdemeanor charge
Farm Meetings Open Monday-§ AtPurduell. §
3000 Will Attend ‘Ag’ Conference
Times State Service LAFAYETTE, Dec. 27 — Three thousand Hoosiers are expected to attend the annual Agricultural Conference which will open at Purdue University next Monday morning. 1 Sessions will continue through Fri- | /day, Jan. 2, except for New Year's "| Day, when only essential committee . meetings are scheduled. The conference will be stream{lined again this year due to lack of housing facilities. In general, only business and educational meetings of state and agricultural and home economics organizations are planned. Opening the conference Monday morning will be the meeting of the Indiana Sheep Breeders’ Association | with P. G. Moffett, Indianapolis, | association president, in charge. Stockmen Open Session Other Monday morning meetings will be the Indiana State Dairy As-
deen-Angus Breeders’ Association, the Indiana Draft Horse and Mule Breeders’ Association and the opening session of the Indiana Farm Management Association,
% % meeting at which merit awards will 389 be presented and Dr. J. L. McKit-
{ waukee, 34; Cleveland, 32; De- ture yesterday in other: cities Management.” H. F. Caldwell, Con- | troit, 30; Albany, 22, ad tim High Low nersville, president, will preside at The strong northeasterly storm |gogton ..o....00 000000000000 36 24 (the Aberdeen-Angus directors’ sesWit lashed the Atlantic States |ChCMP.i'IlIlNNl 3m [Son with C. O. House, Arcadia, will continue to move north. |cjeveland 30 24 presiding at the Draft Horse and Winds of 30 to 40 miles per hour |Denver % x» Mule Breeders’ meeting. W. W.
23 (Whitehead, Lebanon, will head the 23 (Farm Management meeting. 35 At noon, a luncheon meeting. of
27 Management Association will be 3 |held, both in Memorial Union. Dr.|
a Economics department at Purdue 33 |will speak at the latter.
Safety Conference Tuesday Monday afternoon the sixth annual Farm Safety Conference will be held, with Larry Brandon, In-
Safety Committee, in charge. The annual banquet of the Livestock Breeders’ Association will be
Union. Tuesday will be Indiana Rural
the annual meeting of the Indiana Corn Growers’ Association. On PFri-
the annual meeting of the Certified as Seed Growers, the
was | filed by the prosecuting attorney's Meeting of the Flying Farmers, the
0
fice after
the circuit attorney 34th annual meeting of the Home | ‘Most direct and most promising” of | ANKARA, Dec, 27
ruled that Winkler committed no| Economics Association and a meet- | felony when he contacted a city|Ing of the Indiana Historical So- | detective by mistake and offered ciety. him $3000 to kill his wife,
Winkler confessed in a signed General Acquires
8
tatement after his arrest
ter he had arranged to meet.
Workhouse.
If convicted of the charge, Winkler faces a maximum penalty of $100 fine and 60 days in the City His bond is returnable in the Court of Criminal Correction
on Jan, 20.
The circuit attorney
turned
-on|
(Christmas Eve that he made the Himself a New Car
offer to James Ogden," a detective, under the mistaken belief that Mr. Ogden was an underworld charac-|/Maj. Gen.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 27 (UP)! Walter A. Wood Jr.,| noticed that the lights of the new! Cadillac he had been driving all day didn't seem to work properly. He asked his wife to get out and take a look at them. In a ruoment she wag back. “My gosh,” she said, “those aren't our license plates.”
The general rummaged through
Winkler over to the jurisdiction of the glove compartment and found
the
prosecuting attorney,
who the registration papers. They
handles only misdemeanor cases, on showed the car belonged to Senate the basis of a Missouri Supreme Sergeant-at-Arms Edward F. MecCourt ruling in 1928 which held |Ginnis who, like Gen. Wood, lives in that the act of soliciting a murder the Westchester apartments. is not punishable as a felony.
‘Winkler's wife, Bessie; 42,
not available for comment.
{married Winkler |after he divorced his first wife. In his statement to police, Wink- SRE 5 said he wanted to have his wife Calls Closed Shop Ban
killed because she associated with ‘Kev’ in Labor Law {other men.
Okl Speaks GI Language
OKLAHOMA CITY, Dec. 27 (UP) {| —Peace, Ralph | Pependrea, nightclub musician, and |gressional quarters that Congress, = Paul Keith Frank, a customer, were might amend the act this year to! brought before Police Judge Gran-|allow the closed shop, ville Scanland on disorderly conduct
it's wonderful.
in 1945 shortly
ahoma Police Judge day described the closed shop ban
Gen. Wood returned the car, exwas |plaining that he had mistaken it She for his own 1947 Cadillac. “No one will believe my story,” he said, “but it’s really true.”
WASHINGTON, Dec. 27 (UP)—| Sen. Joseph H. Ball -(R. Minn.) to-|
in the Taft-Hartley labor law as its “most popular feature” among em-| ployees.” He discounted talk in some con-|
“I don't see a chance of it,” said!
charges. They had called two mili-|Sen. Ball who is chairman of a
E | tary’ policemen defendants explained that:theéy were study the Taft-Hartley law in op‘larmy veterans.
“dogfaces.”
Perfectly good
nology, said Judge Scanland. dismissed.
civilian termi-
Both joint congressional committee tol eration, He declined to comment on the Case | Typographical Union case, now before the National Labor Relations
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Lush Days of 1936 Finally Trip Ex-Bookie
CHICAGO, Dec. 27 (UP)—Harry Carson, 43, drives a tow truck for a garage here, but he remembers the more lush days of .1936 when he “netted about $1000 a day” running a handbook, His memory was sharpened by a federal suit entered yesterday. The
back Income taxes, but Mr. Carson
st.
do about ft, “lI don't know what I did with all that money,” he sald. “I might
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
-. » (Fick, Gorm. 0, wit disuse rors! BACK Up Einstein
of the sun in eclipse and other stars after their marriage. proved today that Dr. Albert Ein- . 62 [the Aberdeen-Angus Association and stein was correct in predicting that
11 [the annlfal ‘banquet of the Farm |snace is curved—that there is an lend to eternity.
2¢ (Earl Butz, head of the Agricultural | George Van Biesbroeck, of the yer- | Topping, president of the New York Masonic Lodge 50 years, a member |, ic gt He was 50, '|kes Observatory, and one of those scientists. whe went to Brazil last| May 20 to study the total eclipse of the sun.
first report on the eclipse today A dianapolis, president of the Farm |a session of the annual meeting ‘of on, Daniel R. Topping Jr. the American Association ,fQr. the Advancement, of Science.
held Monday night in Memorial ing new confirmation of the Ein-|executive,
stein theory, said the test still leaves |James R. Adams, and Vincent Mor- Chicago; Mrs. George Krack, Memin doubt the exact amount of the gan Ryan,
fourth dimension, jand that mass 10th arinual (equivalent.
| De should be arrested on suspicion.
government wanted $324,505.92 in|
didn’t know what he was going to|
Se ie mim Semi se 'PAGENL ; Local Deaths— Services Monday - Rigoks 4 1 For Rev. Morgan Methodist Dies j _ After long Miness Services for the Rev. William G. Morgan, 132 S. Emerson Ave, who : died’ yesterday in Methodist Hospital after an illness of 12 weeks, will be held Monday at 10 a. m. in Fairview Church in Blooming-. ton. Burial will be in Rose Hill Cemetery, Bloomington, He was 72. Rev. Morgan served as pastor of Methodist churches in Otwell, Huntingburg, Howell Church in Evansville, Wesley Chapel in New Albany and Fairview Church in Bloomington. He lived in Indianapolis the last 23 years, serving four years at Woodside Church, seven years at the West Michigan Street Church, and five years at the Barth Place Church. He retired in 1942 but continued to serve as supply pastor of the Arlington Place Methodist Church until his illness, SIN A native of French Lick, he taught school there five years prior to entering the ministry. He was former president of the Indianapolis Methodist Ministerial
Association, 8 member of the relations committee of the Indiana
wo 2 + i", ;
Ne a
CHAIN GANG FUGITIVE — "Dd anything you want with me, but don't send me back. They kill you down there" was the plea Chester Owens, left, above, made to Racine, Wis., police. He was talking about the Georgia chain gang from which he escaped over a year ago. He's pictured after his arrest in Racine, where, with his [BOR committee Of 8 ist 16-year-old wife, right, he had been living since July. She is expecting a baby. Racine |church, 0dd Fellows in Bloomingofficials are holding Owens until they learn if he still is wanted in Georgia. ton, Masonic Lodge and Modern
A li J d c d Woodmen of America. He became rine Judge Sued B G d 80 9 . B. Gaylord, 80,
{a member of the Roberts K Park By Sixth Husband
Church after his retirement. * - BRIDGEPORT, Conn, Dec.- 27 | (UP)—Former movie actress Arline p
Survivors are his wife, Mattie: two daughters and two sons, Mrs { Mary White and Paul Morgan, both {of.. Indianapolis, and Mrs. Irene Judge was sued for divorce today by her sixth husband, Henry J.| (Bob) Topping Jr, Greenwich, co-| heir to tin plate millions.
| Fleenor and Merrill Morgan, both |of Bloomington, four grandchildren
Resident Here Yerkes Observer esident |and one great-grandchild,
Reports Findings For 51 Years By PAUL F. ELLIS Mr. Topping charged that his| Prank B. Gaylord, 2021 Guilford | United Press Science Writer wife has treated him with “intoler-/Ave, an Indianapolis resident 51 aro liC CHICAGO, Dec. 27—Photographs gple cruelty” since May 1, the day years, y
died yesterday in Methodist
Hospital. He was 80. He was born in Syracuse, N, Y. Harold E. Ruch, salesman, died yesterday in his home, 3515 N. 'Illi-
Papers were served on the ex{screen star in New York. [He was an employee of Ell Lilly & | In 1940; she was divorced from Co. since 1898. The new report came from Dr |Mr. Topping's brother, Daniel Reid” He was a member of Oriental | Yanks ‘professional football téam of the Scottish Rite and an elder land a major stockholder in the N.in the ['Y. Yankees baseball team. (Church, The grounds also were intolerable: Services will ‘be held at 3 p. m. cruelty. She reportedly received tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan Dr. Yan DBleshioeck made £100,000 and the custody of their mortuary. Burial will be in Crown |Hill Cemetery. Miss Judge's other husbands were Survivors are his wife, Edith: film director Wesley Ruggles, James|two sons, J. E, Indianapolls, and| Services will be held at 2:30 p. m. Dr. Van Bieshroeck, while report- {McKinley Bryant, New York hotel Francis ©, Connersville; four monday in the Flanner and Bu- 3 Royfl Air Force. Capt. daughters, Mrs. Willlam DeHuszar, chanan Mortuary. Burial will be A in Crown Hill Cemetery, a Chicago radio and phis, Tenn; Mrs. H. H. Kemp, In-| Survivors are his wife, Mildred: |dianapolls, and Mrs. Jack 8S. Wal- | two daughters, Mrs. Virginia Man(den, San ‘Aantonio, Tex. and a ning and Mrs. Marjorie Snively; \brother, H. J. Gaylord, Syracuse. |his mother, Mrs. Edith Ruch; a sister, Mrs. Marjorie Kilbourne, and George H. Brown one grandson, all of Indianapolis. Services for George H. Brown,
| which is ‘ime, and energy are 0 . | who died Thursday in the home of Earl P. Stroube | n p Mm assy | his daughter, Mrs. Arthur Clements, | Earl P. Stroube, 5023 W. 15th St., Dr. Van Bliesbroeck sald that the| |33 Eagle Dr, will be held Monday died today in Methodist Hospital. (UP)—Some at 1:30 p. m. in the Shirley Brothers He was 73. the tests of the Einstein theory on|j90p0 anti-Communist demonstrat- West Side Chapel. BuMal will be] Mr. SBtroubé, a native of Greenspace was the apparent shift mn a gs gtormed Ankara University in Mt. Jackson. castle, had been a resident of Instar's position when -its light COMES | yoday, Mr. Brown, who was 70, was a|dianapolis 31 years. He had been to earth after pasisng a massive| the resignation of lifelong resident of Indianapolis and |an employee of Prest-O-Lite Co. for body, such as the sun. The moon! and battled ® member of the Second Church of [the past 30 years, He was a memand the planets are too small hrist Scientist. ber of the Moose Lodge at Greenmass to produce a measurable aw, Survivors are- four other daugh-|castle and attended the Speedway effect. P : {their march on the Russian Em- We Th HG Baptist Church. “A total eclipse of the sun is re-| P88. Herbert Normann, both of Indian-| Survivors are his wife, Mrytle quired,” he sald, “to make it possible | The demonstration was led by apolis; Mrs, James Ratcliff, Tar-|W.; his son, Col. E. O. Stroube; to record star-positions near (nat the Anti-Communist National Btu- ona. Cal, and Mrs. Ralph Foster, two sisters, Mrs. R. Pollin and Mrs. bright object.” {dents League. It climaxed a week- Burkank, Cal.: his son, George H.|/E. R. Bartley, both of Greencastle; ; . long anti-Communist campalgn In go. 00 5 ndianapolls, and a one grandchild, and two great- d the press and among the students. sister, Mrs, Mary E. Abrams, Holly- ‘randchildren.
Brick in Pocket The crowd massed in an Ankara wood, Cal, Gus Feroer suburb and set out through the 9 Gus Ferger, 2134 N. Meridian St.,
. > Lands Him in Cell town, carrying banners denouncing Thomas McCormick CLEVELAND, Dec. 27 (UP) —| communism among university | Birvices. Jor THOME. .* MeCors a native of Indianapolis, died yesCalvin Coolidge Bass Rey was In |teachers and attacking Premier al Ex orTT Dt ro tc ot terday in Methodist Hosiptal. He Jo ere Soday Devuise poles aldn't George Dimitry of Bulgaria. 9:30 a m ys in the G. H Ya er had spent most of his believe Ages om last night that! : MA . Fi {Herrmann funeral home and at 10 lite here oe was a of the the paving brick they found in his Pays $158 Traffic mes , m. in the St. Catherine Catholic (Zion Evangelical and Reformed overcoat pocket was only to ward Then Kills |Church. Burial will be in Holy Church. He was a graduate of
Pedestrian Cross Cemeter e was 63 [Shortridge High School and Purd off rheumatism. After discovering ; : % | ~YO8s Lemelery. was 64. {Shortridge Hig ool and Purdue a nine-inch knife in another pocket| AT LANT a ib ro! oe Mr. McCormick died Thursday in University. and looking up Rey's criminal |A 40-year-old woman yr (his home, 906 E. Towa St.
4 Survivors are three sisters, Mrs. record, including a conviction for [clon of murder charges hefe today| 4 pa4iye of Dayton, O., he lived | John C. Weinman, Miss Lillian shooting a policeman, they decided | T° driving her car up on a side-
1 codegtrian Jess hére 48 ybars and was employed by [Ferger and Mrs. Lena Hasplel, and walk and KING & pecesti ts |the George J. Mayer Co. 44. years. three brothers, Edward, O. D. and than an hour ahr she paid fines... was a member of the St. Cath- | Harry Perger, all of Indianapolis. u. S Ship in Trouble for six traffic violations. : lerine Church, the Lincoln Mutual] Services will be held in the Flany Police said today that MIs. Benefit Society and the 25 Society. (ner & Buchanan Mortuary. HALIFAX, N. 8, Dec. 21 (UP) Fthel Humphries paid $158 in fines| gurvivors are his wife, Margaret: | ueite sea escue headquarters Was |,, cprigtmas Day on charges of two daughters, Mrs. Paul Michael Grover C. Lytle fs 5 make Sohiact wi ip drunkenness, causing a traffic accl-land Mrs. Paul * Wininger; three| Services for Grover C. Lytle, who 1 gh pa {dent while under the influence of lsons Delbert, Thomas and Eugene| died Thursday in General Hospital, Wrouple 700 miles east of here. intoxicants, disorderly conduct, re-ineCormick, all of Indianapolis, and | will be held Monday at 2 p. m. in
A life resident of Indianapolis, Presbyterian ar. Ruch was ‘employed at the Kautz Stationery Store. He was a former vice-president of the Stationers’ Store where he was employed 16. years. He was a member of the Broad- ¥ way Baptist Church, H
Tabernacle
“8,
advertising executive. In 1815, Dr. Einstein proposed the -
They forced five of “its professors, ps [police and firemen who blocked
WRC LUNCHEON TUESDAY sisting arrest, assault on officers,|s prother, Joseph McCormick, Day- the Moore - Mortuaries Colonial George H. Chapman Women's cursing and driving without an op-iton, O, and seven grandchildren. |Chapel. Burial will be in Crown Relief Corps 10 will hold its an-|erator’s license, Hill. He was 63.
later, they said, Mrs. Georganna Pope | Mr. Lytle, a lifelong resident of
nual Christmas coveréd dish lunch- Only 50 minute? Services for Mrs. Georganna Hol-| Indianapolis, had been a press
eon at noon Tuesday in Odd Fel-|she drove her car up on a sidewalk |
low Hall, 2615 E. 10th 8t. Mrs. and pinned W. L. Lanning, 40, 0 & 13nq pope were held yesterday in assistant at the Burford Printing Hazel Reichman is chairman of the power pole. Lanning died within a the Dorsey funeral home. Burial Co. five years. few minutes.
arrangements ~ommittee.
|was in Washington Park Cemetery. He is survived by one brother, = She was 22. William F. Lytle, Indianapolis.
| She died Tuesday in Flower Mis- — |sion. A native of French Lick, she Terre Haute Tavern
{lived here most of her life and was a : Keeper Robbed, Shot
{a member of the Wheeler City [ Mission, TERRE HAUTE, Dec. 27 (UP)--A : Survivors are her husband, 48-year-old tavern owner was recov- !
Charles; a daughter, Miss Charlene ering today froin a wound caused by Ann Pope; her parents, Mr. and a bandit who held up his place of |Mrs. George Holland: three sisters, business and shot the operator. the Misses Margaret and Alice Jane| The victim was Paul Pickett, who | Holland, and. Mrs Mary Ethel Gib- runs a tavern-restaurant. Mr. |son, and two brothers, Jerry and pickett was treated at St. Anthony's {Larry Holland, all of Indianapolis. | Hospital for a wound in his arm. A ————— He told police two armed men ordered beer, They were the only patrons. They forced him to open A a cash register and took $350. Mr, Pickett said he protested and hit one of them with a bottle. He picked up a chair to throw at the |other and one of the bandits fired WABASH—John L. Paulus, 13, druggist. ® Pistol. Then they ran out and 4 ELWOOD--William J. Walsh, 83 fled in an auto. Amos M arvis, 74, retired farmer SHELBYVILLE—Carl R. Drake, 54, automobile salesman. * Frank Bland, 1 BRAZIL—Mrs. Prances Weaver. 65
79, retired raliway engineer Nora Jones, 12
| tres a |
|
Knox Jury to Examine
Three Fund Cases | VINCENNES, Dec. 271 (UP)— {Three cases of alleged fund short-
William H. Arthur, 75 Robert Ervin, 3
Home of Lifetime Furniture Service
Quality Purniline
1602 Main $1, (Speedway) 524 Main $t. (Bosch Grove)
I.
|
ages will be studied by a grand jury Thomas Kaylor, 83 early next month, it was disclosed Joseph Sheplock, 73 PERU Karan, Smith 4. |today. 3 ‘Louis ah Coti oni Arfelt, James J, 0X unty N me Smedley, 46, ' Mrs, Bettie Shoecratt, 51. prosecuting attorney, said the BickMon Macy Alice Athens, 93 (nell Water Co. fund shortages and - *™" discrepancies in the account of two’ {former county officials would be
Mrs. Muriel Carson, 52.
FT.- WAYNE—Alvey McBride,” 44, ployed by Penn Trucking Co. rs. Donna Boneff, 60.
John Robinson, 62
Mrs, Martha Ann Evert, i) vik examined, | r erling, , employe ) { | Jk. of Wayne Builders Supply Co The jury was scheduled to meet | k TL P| SRR Yoakam. O06 ae { MIS. oakes, h { DECATUR—Michael 8. Essne The discrepancies, amounting to
sner, . | SanTiokn CITY~—Mrs. Bessie Gold- nearly $45,000, were discovered by : GARY --8iller O'Cain, 40. fleld agents of the State Board of
Andrew Juran, Michael Pavillk, 60. Accounts. They covered a period
Gia ili al 11 HELLO, MR. '48-Kid 1948 is bound to want to stick around a while after being greeted by shapely Janis Carter in the style
| b } | pictured above. Now in Rome, making “The Eternal Melody," she's
the first Ameritan actress to star in a postwar Italian-méde film. Ue Mary Be Aiken 18 * of four years, ending Des. fl, 1046. :
$0 oh il ks
Mine
4
“EC
