Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1948 — Page 11
orum
hat you sdy, but]
r right to say it
American, My dear in -and my grandson
thing for the poor are getting stronger country is fighting e we going to land? w atomic bombs on Tits — that is the ’ i
ed 6, Box 418. ans in and around seen and probably ing to get an invesngton to investigate city. If any of you her to visit or for.
—-should-have—been——§-
Let's hope that this Il act promptly and will have a cleaner ich to stay. ttee coming to this estigate the whale nyself, have had a__
in the past months __§
. Bill of Rights. I‘ k and miss several 1 to find out about 1yself.
ing there 1 found
about it that I aid. hing they nad put hing handed down ted to know I wrote ngton and when I rans Administration it, , (and girls) is the s somehow or other among the majority ame feeling. If any r trouble, why not of The Times and his s. part of the VA
islation’ t. hasty ‘special legislany powerful pressure ips by law are creatdividual apts the
ought-io0-discrimina- { later, it will effect According to Cohdown in good times,
in bad times. Such §
business. rent and
ubstantial economic he liberty of the in-
that the ‘influence
on freedom. and the.
by our Constitution, e.". titution. Qur ideals he evil day of abuse ongress need not do their-enjoyment. It
they no longer exist.
~ ~
i
p Si Simms
® ° ’ ISIS 1048: . Var.
ly, Greece, Western
is to remain the iron curtain of the
inaid—to-Burepe— acceed or fail of its
»f the Big Four and stria.
he fate of Germany
yetween the United
ns to come to somé ssia are inevitable '
n steadily mounting a head. Paralyzed
t will either find 8 =
will join the League tions. tated. It is a presi \e outcome is almost
,, the Danube and i, the U. 8. elections. tied, in ope way of
tes may or may not ; will be as decisive
1 \ shall Plan to help
rerican aid to Redost fateful years In
: Ne : ligently offered and
g of the tide.
anet will watch the; why inthe pa
~
NN RS N
A
and
Another. Injured
BOSTON, Jan.-3 (UP)—One man|
was kille®, another was critcally purned and a score of persons fled or were carried over ladders to safety today when fire swept ‘a - lodging rouse in the city’s congested West End. The dead man was not identified immediately, Hospital authorities| said ‘that ‘Roy Van Wort, 42, sustained critical third-degree burns his condition as “fair.” ox Both men were trapped in their
“beds by flames that swept through
the three-story brick structure. Authorities said the building was owned by John Deferrari, 84-year-old former fruit peddler; who last © September; made. a surprise gift of . $3 million. td" the Boston Public Li- " brary. ! Among those rescued over ladders were an infant and a Chinese cou-
ple who had been in the United
States only three months.
Truman, GOP Head | For 3d Tax Clash
+ Absolutely Essential, | - Republicans Say
duction bills passed at the first session of the 80th Congress. The ““publicans are all set to make & try for a tax cut at the second sion beginning Tuesday. The GOP intentions tax reduction bill and quickly were made Speaker Joseph W. ‘Massachusetts, Mr. Martin
“Tax reduction is necessary to increase the take-home pay of work-
ers, necessary to give people the in< - centive to. expand for greater pro-
lin a move to determine whether all
~|disability grounds. Mr. Royall conceded that some which re-zoned the area was intro-
jnrd tax year is not definitely known. However; Democratic sources on Capitol Hill are doubtful wheth- | “‘er-the Prgsident will recommend a
Army Cites Flaw In Disability Law
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UP)—| Army Secretary Kenneth C.: Royall today blamed a defective law for the Army's’ apparent generosity in granting “disability” pensions to high-ranking officers. He recom‘imended that the statute be changed immediately.
wa [Measure Slipped By
In Vote on 48 Budget, Dies Here at 4 States Mrs.
Former City Official Says Zoning Board Turned Down 38th St. Business Development
‘The controversial re-zoning of the southeast corner of 38th and Oil Company here, ied yesterday | {Meridian Sts. to permit. a business development in an exclusive resi- in Methodist Hospital. dential sector was done by the City Council over the protest of the: Zoning Board, a former city official charged today. The official, Mrs. Grace Showalter, former vice president of the native of Lafayette and lved in| {zoning board, said City. Council re-zoned the area at the behest. of Al- Indianapolis for the past 24 years.
tr
"Meridian St. Re
Showalter |
bert Frankel, real estate promoter,
down.
she learned of the Council's action, |
dinance.
nature. Called Repeatedly “Ever e the ground has been broken at fat-corner,” Mrs. Sho~
walter said, “I have been called repeatedly and have had friends
The recopumentation: Was con-| tained in a memorandum made pub- | lic by Defense. Secretary James Forrestal. ‘Simultaneously, Mr. Forrestal announced that he had sent dent Truman the names of] 25,580 Army, Navy and Air Force. officers who have been retired or| Irelieyed of active duty for physical
Mr, Truman had asked forthe Inames, presumably as the first step
the - retirements - were - Justified on
(“human errors” have been made in| approving the tax-free pensions which are equivalent to 75 per cent of an officer's base pay. “But,” he said, peared to the public as a wideispread abuse has, I believe, principally merely the granting of rights prescribed nl a statute which
to thé War Department was thorloughly investigated without disclosing impropriety in the action taken.” that the armed forces {have been too generous with “disability” retirements were prompted mainly by the case. of Maj. Gen. Bennett E. Meyers. The former Air Force procure-
“*“what has ap-|
jand casual acquaintances stop me on street corners and at formal! parties to ask how the Zoning: {Board had let a thing like that 'happen. “ ‘Did time?’ they ask. ‘Did I-vote for it?" I feel that the public is entitled to!
“I should also like to clear the, good name of the Zonjag Board which had no part in granting such a variance nor in: sponsoring the re-zoning ordinance.” Mrs. Showalter said the ordinance.
|duced hy Mr. Frankel himself, after! '
him. a variance of existing use in order to put up the business block. City Council the ordinance was introduced July 21 under the sponsorship of former Councilman Raymond C. (Bud) Dauss. - Passed Aug. 4 The records show it was “passed. by seven members Aug. 4. The former councilmen who voted it were Mr. Dauss, Herman Bowers, William A. Brown, Edward A, Kealing, A:-Ross Manley, Lucien B. Meri wether ‘and Otto H. Worley.
on the zoning board. Passage of the ordinance conin-| cided at that time with council ac-!
the zoning matter was obscured b dur larger issue of the budget.
ment officer is accuséd of “having thad-a-financial-
NEW YORK, Jan. 8 (UP)—Yes-
‘tax cut of any size when he“sends terday was the 99th anniversary of
Session.
his traditional message to Congress|the introduction of ladies’ bloomduring the first days of the new|ers, the Columbia University press
said In its bi-weekly bulletin.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Beauty C Culture.
«Call. Cop-- Information Intornitions] Beauty School
I R Weeh St
(& J LVS 163 N. Hlioois
~~ Watch. Repalr Prompt Guaranteed Service FREE ESTIMATES
ALINSON ol
You Save Because We Save. MEN'S SUITS & OVERGOATS
8” 21" 24” CASE CLOTHES
Ooe. Senate Ave. & Maryliné Sb Open § to :
~JORDAN BROS. End) CO. as ABINE AR _—
1 W. in St.
1 Shown MUSIC
\
USE. Ohio St.- Paul H. Rinne Pres.-FR-HB4
Student
Band Instruments Investigate Our Rental Plan
LET US WASH YOUR COMMERCIAL WIPING RAGS
OVERALL LAUNDRY
2520 E. 12th CH-0294
Ny .
Trustworthy Since 1873
118 N. Penn. St.
IMMEDIATE APPLICATION
No Money Down—3 Years to Pay
| INDIANA: ®gormic Ano 605 8. Capitol RI-1359
|
% WE BUY DIAMONDS #
I Wolf Sussman, Inc,
LER LEB LL
GEO. J. EGENOLF
MACHINIST
181%, w. South LI-6212 ST TE
Why buy orie? Rent one at *
HAAG'S
0 Norrh Ouptiol Ars
ee —————— ‘WHEEL GHAIRS
Cloth ls
SAVE &:%
BISHOP-KAYE FURS Meridian
2nd Floor — 7 N.
Large Seleotion of Hesvywoirhe
~ CORDUROY TROUSERS Grote ort arues ONLY 6.50
or Brown LEON TAILORING Co. 235 Mass. Ave, 52, 55. 20a, *
WHILE THEY 24-P| ECE. SET OF SILVERWARE.
When - Togs Were e Timbs!
°" INSULATED BRIGK | DIAMOND LOANS
VINNIE Established 46 Years uum |
H “nthe They ‘appealed first to the Zoning
nances the council passes.
Astonished, Too : Mrs. Showalter said she never|
denly pass the ordinance «ince councilmen had always followed zoning board recommendations in
the. past... For that reason, , she. said, “she was {as astonished as the property »wn-| ers to learn of the Council's action. ““T trust,” she said, “that this will
(obtaining a permit to build a series)
lof store buildings at 38th and Me-!
RAR BS? Sts.”
pe
|U. S. Disputes CIO.
WASHINGTON, - Jan. The State Department ried to-day--thet-it- had-~blocked™ CIO¢ forts to move the headquarters of the World Federation of Trade Unfons from Paris to the United States.
who accused U,__ 8. diplomats of being “too damhéd scared” to. help American - unions establish better {and other countries. : | He ‘said the State Department
ganization: tobe held in Chicago. A State Department said.- how-
|avowed Communists. U. 8S. immigra-
entering the country.
Lose Lives in Crash CHATTANOOGA; Tenn. Jan. 3
|
{last night | guardsmen lost their lives. Highway patrolmen recovered two charred bodies from the wreckage
| erashed and burned.
| stetinie— wiaiEm—
Shortwave Paths Clear
oo
the ionosphere promises good reception of shortwave radio broadcasts today through Wednesday, the National states.
|B DUE TO COLDS? AE bri
IE
suspected the Council would s1d-|
(UP)=
The charge was made by CIO - Secretary-Treastrer James B. Carey,
relations - with workers in Russia!
|“kept getting inthe way” when the: |CIO tried to arrange for the 1948. |congresé of the world-wide labor or-|
ever that the trouble lay in the fact| | that some federaion officials are
2 Coast Guard Airmen
| (UP)—Naval authorities today in- | | vestigated the crash of a: Coast ‘Guard amphibious plane. near here in which two ‘coast :
lon Signal Mountain where the!
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3—Quiet in|
Bureau of Standards|
REEVE SORE THROAT
Charles 1 Wz 8
Standard Oil ‘Agent - Lived Here 24 Years
Charles J. Mugg, 1421 Berwick
'St., for the past 16 years a com-|
missioned agent ‘ for, the Standard |
A member of
He was 49. the Bridgeport
{Masonic Lodge, Mr. Mugg was a
Funeral services will.be at 1 p. m.
after the board had turned him {Monday in the Speedway Chapel of |
{Farley Funeral Home. Burial will
The Rev.
Mrs, Showalter sald that whitn {be in Washington Park Cetnetery. | Kenneth E. Thorne, 'she appealed to former Mayor pastor of the Speedway Christian George L. Denny to veto the ors Church, will oficiate;
Mr. Mugg is survived by his wife,
He agreed to do so, she said, only Josephine Mugg: three sons, Robert | to learn he had signed the ordi- Mugg, Wiliam Mugg and Johnnie
{Mirable, all of Indianapolis.
Oscar |.
‘Latimer
Oscar I Latimer; 556% W. Wash-!
ington St.,
a resident of Indian
apolis about 39 years, died yesterday
{in General Hospital.
He was 63.
A former employee of the Big| Four Railroad, Mr. Latimer was al native of Missouri and caine here! from Bloomington. Surviving are his mother. Mrs
|
|
1
routine business, befor¢ he became ‘Katherine Holden, and two sisters,| from state e7ics Yor 10 years. aware of its highly controversial Miss Rose Mugg and ‘Mrs. John
Dr. L E Northrup, Veterinarian, Dies
T know about it at the jyiia Latimer, Marion: a son, Wade, veterinarian,
Latimer; a daughter, Mrs. Margaret,"
Smock,
wo brothers, Clarence and Otho
both - of Indianapolis; {know just what did happen and Bo¥; Aran « disability siice V-J Day. . Se Whole aIalr. Wat Bait ae Sleter, Mrs. Edith Lemons, Marion Truman Asked List
aR both of “Indianapolis, and three grandchildren. ° “Funeral services . will be held at!
2 p.m. Monday in. Roy J. Tolin! Northrup had béen educated in the dney” Cook -Academy —in— New-York: He yoo Wriniger, an 7/studied medicine for a year in New o York ‘City and received his degree Otis E. iller Vin* ‘veterinary work at the Univer-| M le
funeral home. Burial will be ny Washington Park Cemetery. , Friends may call at the funera
the Zoning Board refused to give| Ome tomorrow afternoon.
A. S. Mdlvaine Jr.
Funeral services and burial
records show that! == Albert 8. McIlvaine Jr.
/a spec
|
agent for the American’ Surety Co:
Will be held at 3 p. m. today in|
Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. Mecllvaine was a graduate of Technical High School and was a | Une ited in-60-days: member of thé McIlvaine - Kothe
Post of the Ametican Legion. Dost was named in honor of Mr.| McIlvaine's older brother. - © Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Mr. Worley was council's re resentative 08 McIlvaine; a son, Steven Mc! Pp {Tlvaine;- a daughter, Miss Patricia
{McIlvaine; two sisters, Mrs. Arthur P. Holt, Indianapolis, and Mrs.|
tion on the 1948 city budget, so that, <Afl M. Waldron Sr, Minneapolis,
IMinn.; three brothers, Charles Mc-
!
He was 94.
Calvin A. Oyler, a native of How- | Board which was powerless, since/ard County’ and” a resident of; the board can act only under ordi Woodruff Place 368 years, died last | night in his" home, 783 Middle Dr., Woodruff Place, - O. R. Clark A ‘member of Central Christian | Church; Mr. Oyler operated a hard- Paris, IIL, ware business'in Kokomo and later Indianapolis, died yesterday in Los| | farmed near Ben Davis on the site| Angeles, Cal. of Weir Cook Municipal Airport} | before: moving to Woodruff Place. Was 2, and lived here until 1319.
“Burial will bé In Kokomo. Fiti-
| neral arrangements have not been associate of thé Felt & Farrant; | Manufacturing Co. in St. Louis, Mo.,| {Chicago -and- Philadelphia, Pa:
ieompleted.
“Mr: Oyler is survived by a “broths
texplaty adequately vo & puzzled and; rer, -Joe-B:-Ovler,- Kokomo, and-sev~-protesting’ public just what the pro-.¢ral nieces and nephews.
cedure was that led to Mr. Frankel's, Clarence Wrenn
Clarence Wrenn, proprietor of the Waiters’ Club, 307'; Indiana Ave,
was found dead in bed yesterday | ‘at “405 MusKinglin St. He was 65. A deputy coroner said death was
tg used by a hess attack.
nn's body
1 From a visit,
Mr.
as discovered by
Northrup had ‘served as state vet-*-erinarian-and-assistant-veterinarian for nearly 20 years. His home was at 3033 College Ave. [
ican and -Indiana Veterinary As|Tivaine, Chillicothe, O. Heathcote sociations ‘and was a 32d id burn, an Indianapolis resident 25 | the Scottish Rite,
Flanner & Buchanan {when arrangements have been com- A native of Pana, Iii, {here 50. years. “Surviving are two sons, “James |Mrs. John J. Ford, Mrs. Nina A.|Bert Eaton and Arthur Dewey... Ferrell and. Mrs. Helen Friedley; Eaton; three brothers, Ivan J, Miran T. Marie Miller, all of Indianapolis; of Somerset. and George W. Clark, and an uncle, two grandchildren and three great- { Edgar Riley, all of Ineianapolis
pleted.
the ‘Mr.
VETERINARIAN DIES—Dr. L. E. Northrup, former state vet-. | erinarian and a’ member of the | American and Indiana Veteri- {sons, William E. Jr, and Robert E. piling up in the old house to which nary Medical Associations, died [Darnaby III; his father, Robert E. Mrs. O. is seeking to impart - the
nance inadvertently as a matter of Mugg; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Mary yesterday. He had been retired [Darnaby &r. and a brother, Robert “new look.” Book upon book are
be i
Retired From State
died yesterday.
was 72: A native of Elmira, N. Y. Dr. Yea Poi
Retired for nearly 10. years, pr. ison;
That decided him on making his
He was a member of the Amier-
ottish Rite.
and Leonard E Northrup wr
E.;
Baton Rouge, L&., and Ray and-F ©. R. Clark, Chicago, a native of Morris: Milburn, both of Indian- | apolis; Salem, Mo.; a brother, Omer Curis,
| canton, Mo., and three grandchilren. Ms, Lula M. Smith
and former resident of |
He came to Indianapolis when he
30 “years he-was 8 DUSINESS
_.He. was. a. member ofthe Thizty—-25.. [Pirst Street Baptist Church and Herrmann funeral home. {the North Park Lodge 646, F&AM.
Funeral services will be held in!
Surviving are his three sisters,
tion laws prohibit Communists from
7 MW REG PAT'S PEND COPR IMREDW. L 24-HOUR PORE- |
| twin-engined amphibious plane | CAST SUMMARY : After a week
NATIONAL
{ which saw. severe storms batter { the eastern. half of the nation,
fair weather returns to most of | | thie-area east of the Rockies. Precipitation will occur, rain in the northern. Pacific regions spreading east and south to’ become snow and ‘snow showers over the northern and central | Rockies. This région of precipitation ‘is outlined on Fotocast by appropriate weather symbols. Weathermen foresee clear skies | In the Southwest, the Cental Plains and Mississippi, the New | England States and the Florida [Peninsifla. Partly “cloudy - fondi- | expected in, the rest’ of the ates with the e exception of
“tions are
tonight as
10n Sovi ot ‘St ar g one ‘Perry, 65, “ater she returned
rl bh " ne 1
| the. East is bringing a southerly” |
{ Philddelphia and Boston, 22; Cni~ | cago, Milwa and Detroit, 20; Dutt, 15.
THE WEATHER FOTOCAST.- ACME TELEPHOTO
un
a)
pL! arin?
”
md
’\ ” ta M
|. sont wouTH T
SAN ANTONIO «
. _ BROWNSVILLE
~~ onz w Mr, Parsons died at his home in| KODIAK; Alaska, Jan. 3 1UP)--Sn oisit ara son | Albuquerque, N. M., where he had Ominous rado silence today aroused SNOW SHOW wT RAIN lived since 1942. fears of “naval officials that the AND FLURRILS * imotorghip-Spencer, aground on the
A WAGNER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Rites Monty For Printer
William E. 'Damaby.
| Wiliam E. Dargaby, a lifelong apparently are the walpaper artists all over the world. [resident of Indianapolis, died yes
{terday in’ his home, 4421 E. Wash+ ‘lington St. He was 61,
A former printing instructor at
{Hollenbeck Press. He, was a member’ fof the Logan Masonic Lodge, Scottish Rite, International Typo,
Funeral services will be held atiper’ foll) and there are far more, 1: 30 p. m. Monday in Flanner & than 10,000 patterns on the market {Buchanan Mortuary. Burial will be jtoday.” “Hin Crown Hill Cemetery. Mr. Darnaby is survived by two
E: Darnaby Jr., all of Indianapolis. ‘stacked inthe hall, on the beds,
Harry. F. Timmerman
Services. for Harry F. Timmer- She man, R. R. 8, Box 0. who died something prettier in the next book. | last night in-his-home; ‘Monday at 2 p. m: in the Meyer has no answer, {& Abden funeral home. Burial will Sample books around and gets more ets, ‘It is stunning (the lady's word»
in Five Points.
Mr. Timmerman, Service 10 Years AQO dent of Indianapolis. wis a retired |S Subject to change) is for my signs, Dr L.E- Northrup; retired state Fepair worker for the NewYork He Central Railway System. He had been an employee of NYC for 27 horse “blanket,
a member of the St. John's Evangelical Lutheran Church in Pive dumbfounded while the selection gold leaf, tweed. and the bottom of-
Survivors are his wife, Emma; his /daughter, Mrs. Wilbur Meyer; his Say ‘anything, either. Weeks ago he wallpaper smells like lilacs, but not
ters, Mrs. Si
Otis Edward Miller, /hauling in samples and standing Red moons. Sleepy horses. .Yellow Isity of Toronto,-Ontario, Canada. |Rd., died yesterday in rave {with his mouth open. He finally ran locomotives. He was employed after gradua- where he’ was was spending the’ lout of books. tion by the U. 8. Bureau of -Ani- winter. He was 59. » imal Industry in New Mexico. On| Mr. Miller, a veteran of World| THE FACTORY’ said drop down'do with fit. visit to Markle, Ind, in 1906 he| War 1,/was porn in Oregon. and had {to the showroom’ for a look at the the don’t. Anyhow, I thank the Dutch. found Huntington County quaran- been a road contractor from 1921 to ana former. fesident of Indianapolis, tingd for sheep scab and tackled 1942. Three years. ago he Socata the job of eradicating the disease. a partner in the Flesch-Miller Tr He succeeded in having the quaran- tor Co. here, He was a rani of —the-Scottish- Rite. Mr. Miller is survived by his wife, {home in Indiana for the rest of Anna; \his life. | Miller, . Besides his veterinary work, he brother, Archie Miller, and several served. briefly in the State Highway sisters who live in California. {Department right of way section | and had been president of the In- Indianapolis, diana Veterinary College and the have not beqp completed. former Santol Products Co.
Funeral services will be held in $ #
Mr. Gray, a for the Charles Drexler Co .» Inc, 10 lifelong resident x : Mrs. C. E. Milburn or years. He was a member of Assump-:
Services for Mrs. Pearl A. Mil.
Services. will be held from . the 320 8. Gibson St. McGuffey funeral home in Markle. of Atlinta, Towa. Survivors are her husband, Carl!
Mrs. “Eloy Delong oA Funeral | Delong, 2003 Villa Ave., will be. held] A native of Jamestown,
will’ bé in Crown Hill Cemetery. “Mrs, Delong, who was 83, died yes-| Mortuary terday after an illness of a week,
: -grandehildren.
ged] L : 4 Ve t 3 J TF —
FOTOEAST' le seats fp FLIED
ERR SS a | By FREDERICK. C. OTHMAN . ee bata mat am WASHINGTON, Jan, 3-“The Dutch. sent some lovely samples.” the lady said, “but this was a year ago ‘and the paper hasn't arrived here yet." Thank providence for that.’ What we're talking about today is
wallpaper, Too much of. I'm going batty.” So's my bride, . And so youd think
special stuff, Mrs. 0. keeps on drop- 44 bl ping down. ‘Regularly I get: taken k along, : f I mention all this by way of indi~~ 3
Dies at Home
they were trying to meet a Petrillo deadline, the way they're. turning out new designs wholesale, running! from lavender rose buds to wooden Indians to atomic explosion effects, cating that I have become perhaps
with 10,000 variations in between. the leading involuntary expert on “A conservative estimate,” said the wallpaper inn America. And with no {lady FeprEuMng ik binges uh, further introduction I now present {paper factory in existence, “include some pertinent facts about wallE¥wphical Union. ihe hand-blocked papers (up to $50| |paper: pe
It ranges in price from that $50 stuff down to a net design at 14 cents a roll.. No woman ever has been known to select l4-cent wall-. - paper; her steady riffing of the sample book doesn't even slow down: until she reaches the $3.80-per-singlé-roll section. Flame-proof wall paper isn't on the market yet, The kind = that withstands lipstick is scarce, but what female goes around kissing Yulia?
wiit- be- held This is logic for* which a mere male | BI ACK WALLPAPER isn't either He just lugs the recommended only for lining cask-
Winona Technical Institute, Darnaby was secretary of the
Murat Shrine and the,
» . SAMPLES OF most of these are
atop her dining room. table, The more wallpaper she sees, the more wants to see. There might be
for modern’ living rooms. Large The only wallpaper that hr been shipments of wallpaper are arriving selected at our house yet (and this from France. Mostly abstract demeaning squiggles. . Sevenbathroom. Plaid, a triple hybrid in- fifty per roll and, according to my spired by a Scotchman's—kiit, a iady; hardly worth it because they're and Orson lo not _sunfast, rs. He retired in 1938. He was SPorts jacket. I didn't have any-| There is wallpaper that looks like thing to do with it; Just sat there patent leather, mother. of pearl
n St. John's Lutheran Cemetery confused by the minute.
Aa lifelong resi-
was being made.” Walden Pond. Some wallpaper has The poor old paper hanger didn’t DDT built in, In case of flies, Lilac
nts.
Delbert Timmerman; two sis-! {suggested hopefully that nothing more than two years. One pattern Wotitiell and Mrs, Was prettier-than a pale tan; with= shows -drunks-teantrig or Tap posts: d one grandson, Out much of a pattern, all over the] another is silver-colored panthers {house. Tt would last, he said, with- There are zodiacs for ceilings. Pink lout fading. Since then he's been fish. Blue palms. Striped camels
I'll take pale tan at 14 cents. I* imean I would, if T had anything fo Which, of course, 1
Harold | A. Gray
« Funeral Monday | Services for Harold A. nay 5845 N. Keystone Ave. who died yesterday in General Hospital, will be held at 11:30 a. m. Monday in | Peril & Bu-j
P. E Love Dies; | Lng, a Resident
Paul E. Love, 1750- W, Morris St. “died yesterday in St. Vincent's Hos- * |pital, He was 57, = _ | A native of Kansas, he lived here. most of his life and was a machinist
a- daughter, Miss Joyce both of Indianapolis: al
but
* ATTADGEMEAtS: pe in Crown Hill. |
ition Catholic Church.
| Services will be held at 8:30 am, MoRdAY. in-Kirby- mary neat
was a member of
, Will be held at 2 _p..m._Men-_
‘Real Board, the Ey -of Residential Catherine. -Boboski, Glen Dale, Ww. . She was a native, | Appraisers and the Broadway Va.; Miss Helen Love, Mrs. Eliza- | Methodist Church. {beth Buckley, Miss Lois Ann Love , Su¥hwrs are his wife, Thelma and Miss Rosdlie Love, all of Indi- ., and his sister, Miss :Edith- E. anapolls, and a brother, . Roscoe Gray Love, Indianapolis,
ies will be In charge of the l Rev. Almon Coble of Crawfordsville. F orence A. Stewart Services for Mrs. Florence Alice
| Stewart, a native of Indianapolis, Mrs. Lula M. Smith, 2056 Ralston. were to be. heid-this-afterncon-in- mins | Ave, died Thursday in her home. Hollywood, Fla. She was 81. Eloy She was 53, She died Thursday in Hollywood.: ‘where she had lived since movies; from. bre .10 years ago... ti Survivors are two daughters, Mrs 3 Charles A. Stevens and Mrs. Hugh Mrs, M. Knippenberg, both of Hollywood: Jer & Son, Walter Stewart, Cincinnati. she had lived Yia Wiig, Somerset, Ky; ie |0.; three grandchildren and two’ Clemons, -Mich.;- three uneles, Grant STeat-gr andehildren. Perry, Indianapolis, and Arthur and ce Perry, Somerset, Ky., and {one aunt, Mrs: Emma Mc¢Bath, also
was She died yesterday in her home,
; three sons, Robert C. Milburn,
her father, Eugene Curtis,
services for Mrs, she
Ky. had lived "here 38 years. = BETVITes Will BE ’ UT KH Mon =] day in Emmanuel Baptist Church. Burial will be in New Crown. Survivors are her mother,
1:30. p.m, Monday in. G.. om
Schuman’s Bil P sses 1st bt
PARIS, Jan. 3 (UP)~The Nail. Assembly -today--apphoved hy: A & vote of 324 to 246 the frst article s Of Premier Robert Schuman's a fmergency anti-fiiflation bill. The assembly was called into remergency—session—to—take —up—the $1,050,000,000 program. * The Assembly Finance Committee had. approved it without major modifications, Communist deputies were defeated 340 ‘to 183 In attempts to force debe may be ready “any “minute bate on American stopgap aid to now.’ France. The maneuver was aimed The old bridge caved in Monday at delaying debate on on the anti. =| Ader The Welgny or %- “logging fation program. — So truck. | The first article of the bill provides for a special super-tax on excess profits by businessmen, -hop-
keepers, farmers and professional
a daughter, Mrs. Goldie
3 Await Stork, | Bridge Repairs
: cod 2 MEHAMA «Ore; lan 3a UPyasr expectant mothers © po {anxiously today for highway cre {to build ‘a new bridge ope
turbulent mountain stream se ate ting them froma tospitalAs the crew struggled to thrust a pre-fabricated bailey _ bridge tacross the north fork of the | Santiam River, word came from the isolated ‘mountain settlement on’ the other side that the mothers-to-
armel
Services in Lebanon
For Paul J. Parsons men to be used to fight inflation Times Stats Service and ald the national reconstrucLEBANON, Ind., Jan. 3--Funeral tion program, ; vid {services for. Paul J, Parsons, 49, Premier Schuman demanded & , former advertising mari “with thé vote of confidence on, part of his’ | Wheeler restaurants in Indiana and anti- mflation bill. on . ‘member of a pioneer Lebanon family, will be held Monday at 2 p. m. at the Bratton funeral home here,
Fear Ship Lost in Arctic
r————— !
The ridge of high pressure in
flow of “air into that half of the
| country. There are nosub-zero |
temperatures forecast for tonight, but the mercury will drop to freezing in the Plains, the Great Lakes, | ‘the New England and Middle Atlantic States. - Temperatures » li read generally below seasdh yor.
| tu
ICY
casts’ include: Atlanta, 36; Mem. |i
phis, 34; St. Louis, 32; Kansas City, 28; Omaha, 26; New York,
Cleveland and Washington, 25; Pt
The high pressure cell in the fa rar Western states Is circulating |
Plains - southwestward indicates Sales. Up 257 Per Cent
the easternmost limit of- this air,
Official Weather
‘Sunrise 5 = 104
| Precipitation Hi) hrs. end 730 " . m {Total precipitation since Jan, 1 {Excess since Jan. 1
{Atlanta mals, | Bostort Minimum * * temperature ¥ sores {Chicago
iDepver (Eygnreville FL Wayas
| Indianapoli felt) % | Kansas City . {Loa
Now Oklahoma Cit
Pitiebrgh "(San An
shores of Shelikoff Straits north of Kodiak, had broken up and sunk WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UP)~—|The ship was believed to be carry- | The Federal Reserve Board reporte| ing four crewmen. {ed today that Christmas week department .storé sales were 257 per {cent higher than the 1935-39 wver-| T age. Last year's sales were 181 per 15 cenit Higher. The following table shows f the te tempers. 2
re yesterday in other cities Station
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU 4: nd
Sunset
neinnsti .°,, eveland ...
Angeles
Minneapolis a ‘Pant lew Qrisans .
