Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1948 — Page 11
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Festone stone and C10 Sign Pay Contract
CLEVELAND, June 12 (UP)— ‘5,5 othe
The Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. the United Rubber Workers (C10) today . signed their first master. contract, including
1i-cent hourly wage increase, for|
2,000 employees. The contract and
wage settle
ment covers employees in Fire-
plants at
dues check-off, , Severance pay. not worked,
Akron,
"
y ior
overtime
Ie
iii
i 8
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU dune 12, MB. Ly Sunset .....
ia » 34 hrs, ending 7. ham “w Fee 7
precipitation . since Jan,
Deficiency since Jan. 1 na “The | following labile shows he ‘tempera | High Low AY Basra InserRtaI eRe "
the Kingan Wildcats and ,, Railroad teams ‘will battle yj1jeq and 10 wounded “may have at Municipal stadium for! . y of the All-Girlslcrart” The game
Tatared game tomorrow night at Municipal will be between the
Allied Florists and Kenny and
Bab's team, Richmond, Ind., lead-
ers in the Eastern game is slated for 8 Laundry
league. The 45. Mechanic
and Bethel A. C. will play at 7:30, and Hoosier Post
I. W. will meet na at 6:15 p. m.
Mohawk 1n-
Brown Heads T. B. Group |e
SEYMOUR, June % Brown. a local
12 — Charles ent, has
Jackson County Tuberculosis As-
sociation, Other officers are Fred he was sorry he could not comeisents a small fraction of the jobs open for them, they are un- hy iL Jabs Long, 26. of A641 Pdi Nuss, Brownstown, first vice pres- here. He said he would see the quantity the American soldier is der no legal obligation to do so. Ellen Ident; Mrs. W. K. Adair, Crothers- Indiana delegation i delphia.
ville, second vice president; Glenn H. Seward, third vice president; B. Fox, treasurer, and |last night and breakfast with the stems from the adverse effect reinstatement in his former em-
Mrs. Glenn M.
| |
| gpazazssearanse=snis :
I A
ze 11.3. Probes Korean Bombing Incident
TOKYO, June 12 (UP) — The
U. 8. Far East Alr Forces admitted today that. Tuesday's
{bombing of Korean fishing ves-
s in which 14 Koreans were
| involved Far East Air Forces air-
An official announcement said
that a practice bombing mission was airborne: above the Japan Sea off the east coast of Korea at the time the incident was re. ported to have occutred.
“Strike photographs and mis-|
sion reports are being studied and a complete investigation is being made to determine whether these aircraft were involved,” the announcement said.
Stassen Alters Plans To See GOP Here
Former Minnesota Gov. Harold Stassen changed his plans
Mr. Stassen sent word to in Phila-
Earlier, he planned: to fly here
M. Keach, secretary. delegates today.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Fear of War Drives Europe i: ww: + To Train Citizen Soldiers
Economic Strain of Lo ‘To Provide Care for D
Ask Mrs. Manners— Doubts Mate’s ‘Love, Mother Gets Blame
hy nee vor RYE EE ER
THE ¢ INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
"SHOULD I give up my- husband to “his, mother « or r hold
.jon to him as long as I can though I'm not sure he loves me? gulfed the huge Portland-Colum-His mother and I aren't together five minutes before we! fight. He knows this, but still wants me to go there. I was/threatened the $43 million Reynmuch in love with him when I got married
at 16, two years
Columbia Sweeps Over Portland Homes
PORTLAND, Ore, (UP)-——Flood ‘water today en-
{bia alrport, swept over 2000 {homes in North Portland and!
{olds Aluminum Plant. The Columbia River reached a: third eritical crest along its lower | reaches,
June 12|charged today that George, the perfumed wrestler who wows the ladies by entering ithe ring with a valet and a red |carpet, took time lon the chin.
at an Ocean Park, bursting new: dikes and when” the °
Los ANGELES, June 12 (UP)
lA 48-year-old grandmother
Gorgeous
out to clip her
She sald the incident occurred Cal, arena, 150 « pound - matron
Some of the not getting along with his mother is my fault, but! pushing brown water over a vast heckled the 220-pound George
qr the aliens, together with all * |ago, and am still. Maybe it's because I'm so jealous of him evidence, oxef 1a RerR mi: it [chat he seems to think more ‘of his family than me. Fether the Mexicans were smug- not all of it. When I got married I was spoiled but I'm trying hard. expanse of North Portland. ged nto the states as part of a {My husband keeps throwing up to me what I used to do, and his! pitionwide gang operating to mother tries to break us up. We don't have children but are pretty provide cheap labor for farms bad in debt and maybe he is just disgusted. But he won't let me and factories. : work. C, A. 8, City, * three squads of officers seized If you aren't careful you will push your husband after a ge Mexicans, 39 men and a he thinks is mature enough to handle his folks—and him. woman, in a four-story building ou should be asking your Jnothetli-Iaw for recipes. She'd be portly before dawn. Another flattered and you need knowledge of budgeting to help pan escaped by ‘leaping out a mat dieturaged husband you love, window. ‘ way to appear grown-up<-and changed--is Also seized in the raid was it, though you may feel like acting otherwise. You'd wish he ponaldo Sanchez, 30, and his were visiting his mother if he started staying away evenings. vite, Victoria, 25, who said they Asks for Trade Selection Aid American citizens. ’ on were es admitted that he I'M A GIRL, 18, and went to the eleventh grade in Indianapolis rg te north from schools. Is there a trade I could learn ‘besides beauty culture?. ong ito a sau WORRIED READER. miler truck which was found TONIGHT AND TOMORROW—Scattersd shower activity. will result from the J, Fred urphy ao H. Le nataiunan Javits You 1a visit Swern near the west side build- f f at the Central School Office, 150 N. Meridian St, ! joins ront, of cool air from Canada.and the warmer.Gulf air sweeping up from the south cccupational information. They have a long list of trades and Sanches 4234 that. 4. mas Whom meeting. The mercury will read from 10 to 20 degrees cooler to the north of this tp Jeu ig 8 to Anish high school? Ask, about credits 15 to bring the aliens north and| front tonight, Largest of precipitation areas is due around the Great Lakes area. or or hon ‘by Di Mary W H poss ¥ Shay i lon Some scattered showers will also fall. over the Northern Pacific Coast as moist air | “TR ned by Divorce, ory ants a Home 4 ana|the Plutonium Works. so more when the trip was moves inlend. {since then I've been very discontented, I never hear from them,
{though I've written them. Do you know of anyone who would take in a very lonesome girl who needs a mother and let her go I've had some nursing experience, and would ke to
‘be a governess while going to school.
w Pay Forces Nations raftees’ Families
(Second of Three Articles)
“Ty BARYCEUrOpean countries: another war has kept with the
|men who otherwise would have returned to their families long ago. This situation not only weighs heavily on Europe's economy {but threatens the economic existence of vast numbers of its citizen soldiers. Consequently, benefits to men in active service have be-
come a matter of life and death! {to many Euro
peans. The problem is aggravated py deal of attention on the -part of
the fact that the average European Juldiers pay is ludicrous by!
A British private gets about 40 U. 8. cents a day. In France en-| listed men receive 25 French centimes daily. At the present rate of 300 Francs to the dollar| this amounts to 25 cents a month. On the other hand, the French, army is the only one in Europe which provides the enlisted man and non - commissioned officer with free tobacco. This takes ihe form of 4 packages of cigarets or their equivalent in pipe tobacco per week. Uniforms Free = While uniforms are provi free, officers everywhere, and in|
sioned officers, get a special allowance for buying their own uniforms.
lenlisted men and unmarried noncommissioned - officers sleep in barracks, but in Sweden after the first three or four months of their training the men usually get permission to spend weekends with their families. Meals are nearly always taken in the barracks. It can be said that in almost every European country soldiers’ meals are made} up of plain food “but represent the relatively highest nutritional
and decided not to make a per- value obtainable. sonal appeal in Indiana for presi-| dential nomination support.
Yet, nowhere do they even ap- | proximate our GI's meals in either | quantity or quality. This relates
used to. | One important post-war prob{lem of Europe's armed forces
lof compulsory service on the draftee’'s educational progress “land plans.
{system in the Old World tries to
2520 E. (21h
LET US WASH YOUR COMMERGIAL WIPING RAGS
OVERALL LAUNDRY
- GH-0204
|
235 Mass. Ave.
JORDAN
OPEN TONIGHT] UNTIL 8 O'CLOCK LEON TAILORING CO.
In the Middle of || the First Block
BROS.
CABINET CO. Immediate on All Sizes BUNLAIY U ben
8 Ww. ‘Washington st.
~ You Save Because We Save MEN'S SUITS & OVERCOATS $18-715-32}-15--524.16
~~ CASE CLOTHES Cor. Senate Ave. & Maryland Sb . Open. ® ta?
OXYGEN THERAPY ‘This Equipment Can Be Rented of HAAGS ane hy Ag
mitigate this handicap. While lin almost every country college |students can hawve their military service deferred ; help them complete their education, British alone extend the right of deferment to both undergraduate and graduate students who are abroad on scholarships. ' Under the British draft law the military authorities also provide draftees .as far as practicable
their army service. No such pro-
Jlvision exists in the armies of
Continental Europe
DIAMOND LOANS!
4 WE BUY DIAMONDS #
Photopaints
Wélanapalis Blu Print
xy
[ALS DE
05 8. Capitol
| ALUMINUM SIDING
INDIAN
Baked Enamel
SIDING CO. . RL 1359
— 182 W. South LI-6212
GUARANTEED
WATCH REPAIRING
at Our Usnal LOW PRICES Day Service
} PLANNING SERVIOE RU-WK HOME SUPPLY 00.
By y EDWARD J. .BYNG
[training of officers and the re-
Iaristocratic element has
ded New Atmosphere
In almost every European army
“the tion
with facilities for continuing their (ily. ‘Yleducation after the completion of
The problem of general army
“political uncertainty and fear of colors hundreds of thousands of
morale also comes in for a good
{Europe's statesmen today. In this connection the selection and
lationship between them and the men is being. closely studied everywhere, In pre-war days, for example, the. scions of old aristrocratic families in France, Britain and various other countries almost { monopolized the commissions .in certain regiments. As a result, officers and enlisted men often were separated by an unbridgeable gulf of social prejudice. In France since the war the lost {much of its prestige both inside {and outside the army.
| In England, the heroic achieve
certain armies also non<ommis- ™ents of the common soldier in|
the last war have had a decisive leveling éffect inside the army and have helped to create a new atmosphere between officers and men. Army morale in peacetime has {become one of the major concerns of Europe's democracies, |. and the general treatment of the enlisted man has undergone |g, que marked improvement. This general change of attitude finds its most concrete expression in economic protection and relief. - In this connection the problem of continuity of employment for ex-soldiers has assumed primary importance throughout the Old World. While in France, Belgium and The Netherlands employers usual-
[Hoosier Republican leaders that! {primarily to meat, which repre-'1y kéép their soldier employees’ duck Warren Hoyt, 25. of 1555 Shelby
He told me I was welcome to school,
I lived with my mother until I was 12 and then started working 88th annual session of the Grand {for my spending money and living with my father. help
four times but now is un
I know being deprived of a family is tough now, Mary, but think of the sheltered girls deprived of your early experience. They may have to learn about hard knocks later—those things you already know. You've grown up fast so you can take living “on your own.” All you need is a job you like and all those new friendships you're going to make. Visit the Indiana State Employment Service, 257 W. Washington St., about -that job to keep you in school. I'll forward any mail for you. Keep writing to your parents. Honestly, they may be busy and they may think you're so independent you don't miss them.
Choice of Suitors Proves Puzzle :
They're both 10 years older than 1 am. Please help me. : M. R. Let's not have these older men thinking that you believe everything they tell you. Don't take them, or yourself, so seriously and neglect the crowd your age that you understand so well, You don't have to choose your husband right: now, The man whe really loves. you won't let you get away.
Wonders About Mortimer Snerd Tune
. WHAT TUNE introduces Mortimer Snerd? MRS. G. 8, CITY.
number,
- Let Mrs. Manns ‘and readers of the column share your prob. lems and answer your weston, Write in care of The Times, 214 Myariand St.
Ww.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
EVENTS TODAY Av St. ry m., Royalton. Athens, Beverly Steed; Charles, Ma The in "isin Sin Station Mospt 7 meunion—Hotei At_Home- Bdwin, Martha Worley, 505
Indians Distriet—|
Hoosier- Boys’ State—School for the Deaf Tun rer, Clara Sigma ma Delta Tau-(through Sunday) Hotel y: ters. ay: Cornell.
Elmer,
MARRIAGE LICENSES Fred Dents, 19, of 1323 Villa Ave; MarMy J. lott, 18, of 1541 Spruce St. ry of 2832 N: Denny St; Marie Choe, of R. R. 5 Box
Daniel 8. a 24, of 1701 Ne Tinos ; Urte Smolenski, 26, of 200 W.
al SC blomanasilax Anita Sumner Methodist—C
ren Enene Gross
lams; Roy, Willie
Sr ia | Elizaveth Over
mm rge, Dorsthy aa Jo
jax
In Britain, Switzerland and the Scandinavian countries, the ex-| serviceman has a legal right to
{ployment. In England he has a right to {hold his former job for not less!
| Today practically every army than 13 weeks after his return! sw w
from active service, If a British employer dismisses a worker because he is liable to be called up, the employer is subject to a penalty of
for five weeks’ iy Upkeep for Families Military legislation in most European countries also protects the citizen on active service from hardships that his military service may cause to him or his famIn such cases the law provides almost everywhere * for = allow= ances for the upkeep of the soldier’s family, with additional grants for each child or other dependent. Moreover, in many cases the payment of rent and of debts, and
$200, anes hf obliga. | Bdm Na employee Av |
Mary Wakefield, of 660 hy Ralph Batley 25, of 806 Lockerbie aroline Wolff, 19, of lois Sterling r Ross
of Detroit, en Betty J. Sioariaony ow of 40 Central Ave.
Bt Mooreiand, De HN pat: Kathryn Stout, 18, of! Hughes, 20 of 1115 N. Senate orine Houghton, 32, of 2004 N. Donald LaVerne Gatlin, 22, of ms Aw
lst St; Marcia. Jn Hartman, ‘$153 Norwaldo A und G.
* 28, of no Ww. Morris : hort 41 of n ws ] oly Ca Giocin! 43, +
College Ave of 131 N, Noble Bt John A. a Tad os 8. Delawar Donald R. Boom. Williaa og oN Julia
Tiitnots Gtnn, D. Er Br Ries on on™ Shown
Delaware Howard MoCaw, ar So Janet Mas eK inne,
NC Ouktand A oe fie dou *Longecker, 144
Orove, John Gentr) 20 of 418 N. West 8: : Mar. tha Go: of 14062 Byr Louis A. Coben, 35, ot Sie N Riinots 8; Berbers B. Zucrow, 31, of Lafayette,
William Charles Burt, 21, of 1239 N, Dela-
Tome n, Louise 00d: Root, ma Russell,
Forest Manor;
DEATHS | . 3
Ken | Melvin James W Ae. Fl
ARRON =e Jimimts Craig Bryant, p ~ ADERiON Lyman A Sanvenger. »
SE ea Mud Mallie L. Messer BANVILLE sary ‘lla Pearce. . Pam VAAC pftant fom , Hummer,
Ir DUNK Leona. J. ELEN William Alexander, “, York vg ara wi ELWOOD James Lous ‘Shatierly 8. ENGLISH ~~ Mrs. Laura Ferguson, 0, of] | Pont mistress
the seizure of property in settle{ment of debts is stayed. How-
| ever, nowhere in the world is the
serviceman’s economic protection as comprehensive and complete as in Switzerland. - The Swiss sys-! tem of protection for soldiers will be described in the next article.
STREET LIGHTING VITAL Proper street lighting Is a crime preventive; police records show that assaults on women) javerage 646 In darkness for! | every one in daylight.
Stores All Over Indianapolis For Information Call WA-4821
~ LINOLEUM IN INDIANA HOOSIER PAINT
| Rina a L. Faust, 18, of 210 N. Linwood
AND LINOLEUM | Mie 211 E Washington. = BI-8315 | be
Yar Bt. Buialls Deloris Lester, 20, 02 B WATE lim A Riser, M4: M ry Ronald 1 bers som. 31. of 838 Blake Bt Clara C. Denser IR
elms Mae Morton, 19, of 367 W, 14th {Angels Mary Oerardot, four years; Char oe
bert, 40; John EB. Sturgis, 17; M Willie, 3 Benge, 28, of Camby, Ind. | Nellie | Fone x ». la Davis MN ol Bridgeport, Ba. ag 0
Laster Tackett. 2 { Moy nny Leonazd, 18, of 1903 N
sey HUNTINGTON Ford Norris Gotdale, of 81 N of
New ruggist; Mrs. Cecelia Mary Donald dae Dinkel Mn Bt I May Kern, 18, 2303 Pros pect *
Kenneth Unger ™ of 307 N. Cheslar Bt Pdith nai ord, 3 of Ba | N . Chastar 8 a n Duh : JHagiey, 24 Whitt i ne iene E Roscos Booker, 73, tired soal min LOGA
Ra od & | whtrnond'® rs, 42, of 2007 ¥ Miinols st NSPORT—Willinm F. Hanley, Rose Belle Nixon, 38, of 2208 N, Nlinois wank cashier LI on mM ACY-—Cieorge B. Carruthers, #0, IH Zarit, M, of } Tallman Ave. | tir arm he MABISONC Hon rd Dean MICHIGAN CITY tiam Clans, #4 MISHA
Mrs. Nellie Hovarter KENNARD--Mrs
i) KOKOMO-Mrs. Lioyd Horner, oy, 84 LINTON. Eimer
| {
H, Reader. 30. of yin N. Gerard! ve: Louise Parrish, 20, of 2344 Oen-
of 4040 Weaver oF hingron, 18,
. ous Brighs Leach, f 415 MeOarty Bt. Peni Hart, 25, of ° AF MeCarty Bt.
OR EE i vi Mt. v8. En ee s nds gE
Dorothy Mae Harri, 8 or i . M4 Cre Ary Patricia ar [Tn "ti3Ao Tn Alva Hollowell, lien ‘Corbin, infant. UFFALO ~ John
| CASTLE-Preddiy EB. De=Mrs. Anns C. Lees TLAND—Lewis
EAE Mody Mra Orace Miller,
w! Wade, infa nn Bectell, of W. Rollins,
Hedrick, Newman,
Biazos, ™
|alternate resefvoir.
He went to Grove.
I started living with morrow,
THE BOY I loved and I had a misunderstanding and he said he didn't love me any more. Since then IL met another boy here who loves me, but I can’t tell if I love him. I don’t want to quit him, but I still think of the first boy who now wants me back.
Fdgar Bergen writes that the thems Song 1s an unpublished
Vincent's Eimer Velma Poynter:
jobs, Borothy Pray Rich-
923 Prospec Anson: Biake: Richard, tine Rome gays the slugging of Willard Flowers Ray; Douglas, Adaline 2345 h r Anne Woodson, 1341/23, of 539 Birch Ave., last night.
08-0 St Vinoent ¢'s—Bugens, Patrica Beiue:
| Abbie Rebeccr. Amburn. #7, at 1308 coi | City, died
nine
Soli J Sl lik
Berke, “ony
3, bar-
Victor. Stielman, 97;
ra. Eleanor
WERVILLE.~ William oH. Oldham, u
Jisabeth Dell 8: Hn nel Niusm Rautkis, My Marina Bien Kuhn, Jucon js re.
wPrank Zahrt, 73; wi. WAKA-Fred Bragenser, 7%: Mrs. | Prederiok
ay oe deputy sheriff,
Rines, 713; Mrs. Lena
Josephine Passiiet, 8; Harry
A wave of water, whipped with, whitecaps, coursed through a 200.
age dike. a 12-mile, 8000-acre strip of rich,
and suburban homes in the North the Portland area. The crisis was unabated throughout the Pacific Northwest. At Wenatchee, Wash., the lumbia buckled the city's pumping station and left the 12,000 residents with only a single day's water supply, Work crews. labored through the night to tap an
Army engineers said the Columbia River dike at Richland, Wash, near the government's atomic energy plant, was in “crit. feal condition.” Army planes flew 100,000 sand bags to Rich-
State Druids Open Meetings Tomorrow
{ Times ‘State Berviee
i BLANFORD, June 12-- The
Carl H. Marting of {Richmond will preside. Members of the Indianapolis | grove attending the conference
past supreme arch: Louis "Schwartz, past . supreme arch; Charles G. N. Geider, grand secretary; William F. Young, grand treasurer; William F. Bonesteel and Harry Stafford, supreme representatives, -
‘Sharpies’ Glean $180, Ring From Woman
A pair of “slick operators” sue. [10 cessfully gleaned $180 and a wedding ring set from a victim yesterday with promises to split a large find of money with her if] she put up enough collateral for “good faith.” rs. M. R. Marian, 59, of 319 Douglass Bt., reported her loss tolg police after waiting several hours! on downtown streets for the pair to arrive with her promised share of the find.
{Sell Logansport Hotel
‘about his curly blue locks,
foot break in the peninsula drain- his hair was blond,” The water swept over Alexander said.
Bellefontaine St, General in which she rode struck the side of the hridge.
among the
.
. » . “LAST TIME I saw him rassle ‘Mrs, Elsie
This apparently got George's
farmlands, dairies, golf courses (oot for after climbing out the ring he took a ng
sock at her, she said. What's more,
c dizgy snd having headaches ever 0 since.
she declared she's been
The suit was filed here yester-
1 Hurt 2s Cars Crash on Bridge
One person was injured early
land at the request of officials of today in a two-car accident on, ithe narrow Fall Creek bridge on Keystone Ave.
Elizabeth Amonette, 33, of 111! Was treated al
Hospital after the ca:
She was a passenger in the cai
United Ancient Order in the war and I refused to return to my mother because the pDyyjds of Indiana, opens Ra a driven by Carl K. Dougherty, 1v,
environment was so bad I couldn't stand it. different families and friends. When my father came home he remarried-—his third attempt | —-and his wife had three children. They live in a three-room house. to stay but he couldn't send me to I want to finish school very badly. I have two more Years. My mother has attempted m married and works out of the state, They gave me permission to come to Indianapolis to work. MARY.
of 1007 8. Tremont Ave,
Deputy sheriffs said the auto mobile was crowded Into the
I et when the car driven Wil Inciude T. Kari Gest Ir. of oandnaY, White, 3, Honey C.lstruck- the bridge.
11 local Students Get Michgian Degrees
ANN ARBOR, June 12— Eleven Indianapolis residents wer ¢ graduating seniors a. the University of Michigan her: ih the largest class in the ‘school’
istory. They are Vincent Boone ANG: 5650 N. Meridian
mert, 707 E. 44th St; Richaid Carr O'Connor, 137 E. 44th 8t.; Bugens Arthur Sullivan Jr. "wh.
{For $75,000 LOGANSPORT, June 12 (UP) The Dunn Hotel here has been
_|Corp. for $75.000 William Rus-
day.
merly managed Hotel at Connersville.
Police Hold Suspect In Tavern Slugging
Police today held a suspect in
ry, 8.
Corbett Howell, 27, of 531 Birch
a SGeners}-Dn. are, Easter Middie- {Ave., was held on vagrancy
|charges after he admitted hitting
bon, Marjorie Hanson; Inge. Flowers on the head-with.&
bottle as he left an Oliver Ave. CH last night. ’
= Fracture Fatal to Boy
3% WASHINGTON, Ind; ~ 12 Helen Pansler,
Seite; Tn ‘Virginia Hoskins, 3B Sink ot -
{(UP)—Michael Ellis Hays, two-| |and-a-half-year-old son of Mr, {and Mrs. Herschel Hays, Monroe last night Daviess County Hospital of =a ‘skull ~ fracture vreceived when kicked by a horse at his home.
an To eb mT STEN NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS oF. He Mate Board aol Bechosl Comm . +
ct
Notice is hereby given County, Indians; ght Meridian
rs, * res Total INSTRUCTION ..serase rn
Bementary Rehoots igh Schools ....
» n BD OONOPRE .ocivisviresniiisstane
PEST SERVICE nt six 7.
Rohs TG rs, Rriden
le
‘aeille
infant;
f WARSAW-Prank Rr Thomas, a,
! WEST BAD NewRussell Hughes, 37.
Dies in Home Fire . ELKHART, June 12 Meteler: | Sohn - L. Baichley, 60, burned
4 Twine io M Methodist- Cioorge, Evangeline Cave, a Vinesnt's—Raymond, a West, ya
[am Ro Pear!
i
wh sivias. Bherider. 78 oh y fama 38
(UP)
Kintner, county coroner, returned are, Mars verdict of accidental death,
in- . ys Total—8PECIAL PUND TUITION FUND. - a TUITION FUND *
10_ June
Cilae
» SE =k hun Bn Folio Fi SE Se of
sold ‘to the. Continental Ha ling, new manager; announced to-}-
E. A. Groves, Noblesville, sold the property to the hotel concern, members of the national syndi--jcate of hotel. Mr. Rusling for-| 4 the McFarlan
in the -
SERRA sARER RRNA
eras got "Sh
Tolal-AUXILIARY AGENOIRS
er sRsaRr Rana rane
Salaries, Isis sessions
Tm 4922 ir thoop Ave. ANNOUNGEMENTS
§ 100180
$1810, 000 0°
REAR ERNRiaNTh
§ 308,338.77
Beran sanna
mee
Charles A. and Fr uly Ta oh ot the K ¥, Ni A Shares i "iavitad, prin) Crown mL jends may oall after Pn. 4 , 311 dag A Anna, kt :
§ sia”
bane
Ja mame
8 122,0000
Te 5
Ares
a
