Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1948 — Page 1

FORECAST—Mostly fair tomorrow and Monday with not much’ change in temperature.

+

59th YEAR—NUMBER 210

Everywhere Entered as Second-Class Matier sas Indianapolis, Ind. Issued

. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1048.

at Postoffice Daily

1U Student Dies in Crash After ND Game

4 Others Injured; - One Man Killed Here

An Indiana University law student, en route to Indianapolis with two companions from the IU-Notre Dame: football game, was killed and four persons were of injured in a four-car crash on Ind. 37 north of Waverly late yesterday afternoon. 2 A few hours later a 25-year-old pedestrian was killed in’ Indianapolis when he ran into the path of an automobile at 14th and N. West Sts. and a six-year-old boy was injured in another pedestrianauto accident. . The fatally injured student was {dentified by State Police as Sherman A. Onken, 19, of Francesville, Pulaski County. Donald Katzenberger, 21, of 926 N. Dearborn St., driver of the car, was dazed. Another passenger, Richard E. Flynn, 20, of 418 Eastern Ave. was rushed to Methodist Hospital in serious condition. Skids out of Control State Police said the automobile northbound on 37 skidded out of control on a curve and crashed into a Martinsville-bound automobile driven by Rex MecDonald, 42, of Muncie. Mr. McDonald and a passenger in his car, Miss Doris Stalcup, 32, of Martinsville, suffered lacerations and were taken to Methodist where they were reported in fair condition. Two southbound cars following the McDongld car had barely time to jam on their brakes be-

age on the rain-soaked, hairpin turn of the highway.

Two Drivers Unhurt

Drivers of these cars were Louis C. Hiner Jr., Indianapolis newspaperman of Martinsville, and Robert Harvey Porter of 1964. Park Ave. Neither driver! was hurt, but their cars were damaged. Mr. Onken’s body was taken to a funeral home in -Mooresville. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Onken of Francesville, were notified. The Indianapolis traffic victim was Paul A. Newbolt of 3107 Martindale Ave. The car into which Mr, Newbolt ran was driven by Dennis E. Miller, Jr. 24, of 828 Shepard St. Mr. Miller was not held. Plus 18 Others i Thomas See, 6, of 2823 Moore, Ave., was reported in fair condi-| tion at Methodist Hospital, where| he was taken yesterday after be-| ing struck by a car near his! * home. Basil Abell, 59, of 2325 Conrad Ave, was taken to Methodist Hospital with a possible fracture of the left hip, after the car he was driving collided with one operated by Kenneth W. Williams, 26, of 927 Davidson St. The accident, police said, occurred at Oliver and River Aves, At least 13 other persons were injured slightly in accidents involving cars and pedestrians, police said.

Irish 42, 1U 6; Butler Trounced

{

g; Yere®a’42-to-6 defeat on Indiana : University before a record crowd! of 34,000 at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington. It was Notre Dame’s 25th game without, de-

feat. ~-F | , Hoosiers in defeat. gan at Kalamazoo.

$o 7, at Minneapolis. Biggest upset of yesterday’s|

team to a 7-to-7 tie. Major scores today: Notre Dame 42, Indiana 6. Minnesota 34, Purdue 7.

Michigan 35, Navy 0. Illinois 14, Iowa 0. Northwestern 16, Wisconsin 7. Ohio State 41, Pitt 0. DePauw 7, Illinols Wesleyan 0. . y Marietta 18, Wabash 17. Penn State 18, Penn 0. Army 43, Stanford 0. . Hanover 40, Indiana Central 12. Princeton 47, Harvard 7. California 28, UCLA 13. Wake Forest 27, Duke 20. Oklahoma 41, Missouri 7.

(Additional Scores, Page 49)

Chemists Fight to Save Ducks Stuck in Oil

(UP)—More

Twenty thousand dead ducks .already . have been counted and hundreds more were landing

government chemists worked frantically to save them. Officials said an entire winter. flight might die in the oil slick left by a 3 tanker, if the birds - continue landing on the lake. The chemists used a new type chemical in an attempt to “dry clean” the surviving ducks and also tried to clear the slick from "the water.

: NATIONALLY FAMOUS FOR FINE FOO FAMOUS FOR STEAK FOR 36 Y

YEARS

fore they skidded into the wreck-|

! - Notre Dame rolled up its 19th On North Side . Straight’ win yesterday as it plas-| v

Butler anf “urdfie" joined the PO

Western Michigan 20, Butler -7.| | dotoorrees on extra night duty] {last night to check liquor* and! drug stores from 10th to 30th poses. Sts. and HMlinois St. to College! D0 |Ave. to determine if the man was fulfilled the Town Board will is- son and his wife don’t intend to A {known at any of them. The New|sue a permit entitling the trailer- move. |Jersey St. victim said he had -alresident to live in his mobile]

God's in His Heaven, All's Right With Ernie Pyle's Dad and Aunt Mary

Snug for Winter; ‘Life Has Been Good’

By EDWIN C. HEINKE DANA, Ind. Nov. 6— "he approach of winter finds Ernie Pyle’s ' father, Will, and his “Aunt Mary” Baleg as snug as crickets on the hearth. Most of the time they, feel cheerful. All the time they “feel blessed,” as Aunt Mary says. But Mr. Pyle was 81 last Friday and Aunt Mary will be 83 Jurie 9 and their health hasn’t been Ernie’s father. Aunt Mary had a bad cold two weeks ago but she shook it off and is as fit as ever, says her friend and neighbor, Mrs. Ella Goforth. Sometimes Mr. Pyle when he is having one of his bad days wonders: “Why have I been spared this long?”

a. .v “WHEN HE tells me he is discouraged I tell him, ‘Well, Will, your mansion isn’t finished yet; ” says Mrs. Goforth. “He asks me how do you know, Ella? I tell him, well, Will, the Lord aims for you to do something else yet on this earth. He just isn't ready for you. You haven't sent over enough material yet for the Lord to finish it. “When it's ready, he'll send for you, all right. Then he tells me he hadn't thought of it that way before and it cheers him up. “And then I cheer him up more when I tell him what a grand reunion there will be with Marie (Mr. Pyle’'s wife) and Ernest waiting for him and he says, ‘Yes, I've been waiting for that, Ella’ -

= » o “LIFE HAS been good to us. We can’t complain. We've been blessed, but of course, there has been sadness,” Aunt Mary said. ! The saddest part of Aunt Mary's life came when Ernie was killed by a Jap sniper on Ie Shima. Right now Aunt Mary and Will are awaiting arrival of the bronze plaque which marked Ernie's grave before his body was moved recently to Honolulu for its final resting place. They will send the plaque to the Ernie Pyle collection at Indiana University. The best thing in their lives right now is the comfortable Ivanhoe stove that sits in the living room of the whiteframed farmhouse outside of Pana and burns fuel oil. “I still miss the old baseburner which burned hard coal. It was so cheerful. But now I don’t have to carry in the coal,” said Aunt Mary.

= » » “AND IF you want to know what I've done in my 82d year, I'll tell you. “I raised eight bushels of potatoes, dug them out and put them in the dugout that Will fixed up and cemented years ago. I put 27 pints of corn in our locker at Dana. And 23 chickens and 10 quarts of strawberries, all raised right here on our farm. And I canned a bushel of peaches, 15 quarts of cider apple butter, 12 pints of gooseberries, 12 pints of grape juice and a little grape butter.”

Detectives Ordered To Extra Night Duty

He was believed to be the same

football games in the nation was|shabbily-dressed man who asat Chapel Hill, N. C., when little Saulted a housewife in the 1900'gnd the marshal come in. William and Mary held the unde-|Plock, College Ave, two days] feated powerful North- Carolina 28° : |

In both attacks, he forced his

{way into the homes when the {women answered his knock on ithe door.

Check Liquor Stores

too good — particularly w]

Special details of detectives ami fone in P Studer Be lice squad cars searched the|city fathers. ; Butler was near North Side last night for| laced; 20 to 7, by Western Michi- the sex maniac who brutally as- er hgme (recently grown into a two-room house when Mr. Sluder 'saulted a 54-year-old woman in built a gmall bedroom addition) yh Minnesota topped Purdue, 34 her home in the 1100 block, N.!stands on ‘the back lot of his {New Jersey St. |

|

billion dollars, the board of the Indiana State Chamber of Comlegislature to avoid “blank checks” or “open end” welfare ap-| |down a “hard-boiled” spending policy for the fiscal year 1950 | members and their wives of a trip {this summer to Sweden. low their (fiscal) 1949 level.” The 1949 budget calls for spend-

* | StateC. of C.- | A k 0 ili | Welfare Cost Rise : : Warning Is Heard ) By HAROLD H. HARTLEY Times Business Editor FRENCH LICK, Nov. 6—In the next 17 years the government will be paying an annual social security bill ranging from 15 to 20 - a —— 'L f the Rock’ Free | ine merce was told today. { awyer oO e oC ree 16 A encies Dean Mitchell of the U, 8.| * Chamber of Commerce staff, T R 4 BR | Chamber of commerce wait | QO KENEW FOOSIEr KOomance cost of welfare payments due to | . population growth and increasing: “« ¥ longevity. i The board went on record as . favoring ceilings on public welfare payment and urged the 1949 state | | . propriations. : : President to Take Discuss Basing Points Key West Vacation The hoard aiscussed. basing.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 (PU)— {point problems in a panel under) President Truman today laid [the leadership of C. Harvey Brad-| fii presient of ee ws Hollijay 0. Of ‘ncianapois. hich Budget Director James E. | Louis Ruthenburg, president of Webb Bik LEY) hold federal ex[Serve], Phin an Bast presidents penditures “to the lowest possible |o e State C. of C,, { level.” Mr. Webb reported after a talk | with the President, who leaves to- | In Europe, he said, businesaien morrow ‘on a “working vacation” {cannot understand our way oO in Key West, Fla., that he directs |go0ing things in America where ed all agencies on July 22 to “plan [we grant SImost Wlynies non to continue operations at or be|opoly to labor n same privileges to management. | Tomorrow the board will lose ing $42.2 billion in fiscal year endits meeting with 4 morning panel ing June 30. Speculation had put {the 1950 budget at about $45 | billion. But in his July instructions Mr. Webb had said that only where “exceptional circumstances” make it impossible to keep 1950 spend-

|gession covering junior, C. of C. |activities with B. L. Jacobson, | state president leading the dis- | cussion. They will also hear Dr. H.. H. Remmers, professor of psychology and education, at Purdue

SNUG FOR THE WINTER—With food locker and fruit closet filled, fue! oil in the tan< and stove airtight, Ernie Pyle's father, Will, and his "Aunt Mary" Bales are ready for winter at their farmhouse in Dana.

Aunt Mary scoots around almost every day in their 1935 Dodge, going to the locker, attending her club meetings. She’s one of the two surviving charter members of the Merry Housewives Club and goes to the Sunday School meetings and on Sundays to the Bono Methodist Church. “I still get around some although I'm like an old horse. When you get limbered up in the morning you can manage to

some handkerchiefs and several

boxes of candy from the Pyle |

|

Election Bel Gives

relatives scattered through the state. ” n ” THE FOOD is in the locker, the potatoes in the dugout, the canned goods in the fruit closet. On the back porch are eggs, sweet potatoes, turnips, apples, cabbages and a box of homemade soap that Aunt Mary made. The leaves from the maples

|

University.

Clothe-a-Child Drive a Sendoff

—— I ——

| | |

EARL L. KEELER, 415'N.

|Gray St. let himself get thlked

linto an election bet he didn’t

Alcatraz prigen today after

cme Telephotos.

A FREE MAN~Cecil Wright, gray-haired and 41, was free of

& |8-year sentence for a postal robudied law, became a nationwide au-

ing down to, or below 1049 expenditures will higher budget estimates be considered. ‘Hardboiled Budget’ Mr. Webb said after a twohour conference with Mr. Truman that the President directed him to follow a ‘“hardboiled, tight budget policy” that will come as close as possible to avoiding any deficit in the 12 months beginning July 1, 1949.

ments for 16 departments and

go the rest of the day.” blanket the front lawn and | pecially want—a sve,to iv Lig bery in 192% In prison, he agencies, not including the Armed a Ernie's dog, Betty, 10 years old, » i" found himself with $5.00 thority on habeas corpus. Services. Mr. Webb would not WILL GETS out ‘every week sleeps comfortably in the barn, |-eeler x x = a. 88 disclose their totals. But he said

or two. He's nearly blind and extremely hard of hearing. Mainly he goes to Clyde Howard's barber shop. Aunt Mary drives alongside the shop and calls to Clyde who comes out and helps Mr. Pyle into the shop and the barber chair for a haircut.

The stove is tight and there are 300 gallons of fuel oil in the tank. The old clock in the corner under one of Ernie's pictures ticks faithfully. The old witch scowls in the doorway of the little weather house on the window sill. - ” o ”

he hadn't expected very confi dently. “I'm happy over the results of the election,” he wrote The Times, “and I do not care to profit from this bet . . . therefore I am turn-

Plans to Visit Sister in Indiana

In Quest of ‘Girl He Left Behind’

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 8 (UP)—Cecil Wright walked out of

{Alcatraz prison a free man today and vowed to pursue the legal

|ing the proceeds over to your Christmas Fund.”

He enclosed his cleck. -

career he began behind bars 18 years ago to win his release,

Wright, now 41 and gray haired, was handed the papers of

lan old romance with an Indiaga

freedom he studied so hard to get and said he planned to take up

girl that was broken up by his

that in the case of some of the agencies the allotments were below those provided in this year's budget. : ! President Truman flies down to Key West, tomorrow morning, leaving Washington at 8 a. m,, Indianapolis time. Top White House advisers, as

Mr. Pyle's birthday will be OLD FRIENDS drop in and Up to there that was fine, The prison sentence. eo tretopmaretis ——— | well as Vice President-elect Al celebrated officially tomorrow say hello and keep Will and Times Christmas Clothe-a-Chlld|™ pg." sianneq off the prison Pefore he begins studying 1aw,” pen w. Barkley of Kentucky, will with a dinner at the home of Aunt Mary busy with small | campaign is just around theljaunch at San Francisco from the Mrs. Wagner said. accompany him, stopping en

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thomasmyer. Mr. Thomasmyer runs the implement store at Dana. The neighbors will bring their own food and Aunt Mary plans to bring roast chicken, dressing, cake, maybe an apple pie. Mr. Pyle got a lot of cards for his birthday in addition to

Atacker Sought Wheels of Justice Boostin Cost of Living in Trailer .

talk. The Rev. James Neil, of the Bono Church, drops in once every week or so. Mr. Pyle hangs his cane over the side of the chair and dreams of the reunion with Marie and Ernest and Aunt Mary says: “Life has been good. We can't complain. We've been blessed.”

Zionsville Couple Told by Town Marshal Lack of Sewer Will Bring $5 Daily Fine

The cost of living in Zionsville is about to zoom §5 a day for, ™ 26, and his bride of a month, Lillian, 19,| their trailer home to the satisfaction of the > . 3 a

; . 1 According to Maynard Moore, to

parents’ residence. It has no sewer connection.

That's where the Town Beard,

¥

ition

day. He wanted to remind the

wn marshal, the Sluders’ trail-

gift . . . — |

{

|

| |

on

“In view of the very poor elec-

|tion prophecy of your editor I be|lteve he should match this extra

2 # »

corner of the calendar, and those|The Rock” to end the battle he children do need clothes. But Mr.|waged with law books for years Keeler didn’t stop there. He went|until he recently won a federal!

court reversal of his conviction!

robbery in 1929.

nition in legal circles as “the brilliant lawyer of The Rock,” asked

The man who has gained recog-

IDN'T leave an editor for a cigaret, inhaled deeply and a [turned for a final look at the old

{much choice.

{ |

So Clothe-a-Child’s 1948 cam- converted fortress rock | Francisco Bay.

|paign is started—with $10—which| [the folks who buy the clothing!

figure is about Malf of what it will cost to get warrh clothes for

lone af -the 1500 children they esti-|

‘mate will need {

A Ford-Firestone “with Mr. Sluder last Tues- Heiress Has Arrived

guessed wrong about this election) will ’

¥

a.

R \ ; Now, if everybody else who

-do the same.

NEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 6

in San|

good, to get out.”

{Los Angeles “where ‘the movies, help, this Christ vs g 5 |esh said, Wright became one of!

Engaged to Wed i Wright said he will go first to,

ve & = fed some interest” in

“He'll probably stay with mé.” She said that he talked little about his plans to find the girl whom he asked to marry him in

for an Illinois postal sub-station 1943.

“I don't know the girl,” she said, “but she is a friend from his school days in Mattoon, Ill, and he did say he wants to see her.” Becomes Authority The writ of freedom he won

[from Circuit Judge Willian Den-| “Believe me, it feels plenty man resulted from an estimated!

600 applications he prepared while serving out most of his 25-year sentence. During the process, government attorney Jegseph Kar-

filming his story. Then he said, [the best-informed authorities. of he wants to look up his sister,[the law of habeas corpus. ’ Mrs. Eva Wagner, 5008 Calumet) St., Hammond, Ind., and find Beu-| lah Brimbery, the Hoosier girl] he was engaged to marry in 1943 during a brief freedom on habeas PANAMA CITY, Nov. 8 (UP)—

i corpus.

Panama’s Exiled Chief

Returns Amid Violence

After that. he said, he'll con-| Violence flared through Panama

|

route only at New Bern, N. C,, to attend church. He was due to arrive at Key West at 3 p. m. Plan Two-Week Vacation His “working vacation” was expected to last two weeks. The last week he will be joined by Mrs. Truman and their daughter, (Margaret. : At Key West the Chief Exec~ utive will knuckle down to such important matters as: ONE: His cabinet. At least four jcabinet members are expected to {leave—Secretary of State George |C. Marshall, Defense Secretary {James Forrestal, Interior Secre-

{Secretary Charles Sawyer,

day that he would not sit-in the cabinet “four more years,” and {Mr, MaYtshall has: voiced his de[sire to retire. “ TWO. The budget. THREE. A legislative pro{gram, Inflation curbs, civil rights, repeal of the Taft-Hartley

Navy veteran -of World War II| (UP)—A girl was born today to tinue the study of law that took City tonight as Arnulfo Arias. jaw ang expansion-of the social

‘remind him,”

said Marshal|

“¥hat’s ‘all I wanted to do was|at Grace Community Hospital. | Mrs. Ford, 22, is the former|jawyers. An ordinance~passed by the Moore. “If Johnny will make a Martha Firestone, a daughter of| extension: {Town Board last August when few changes he can stay right Harvey S. Firestone Jr. head of tion of his law career. |

the city fathers were expecting there and won't have any trou-|the Firestone Rubber Co. Ford, | an influx of trailers due to in-'ple, But somebody heard abdut also 22, is a younger brother of] sufficient housing conditions, the talk and got it all wrong. |Henry Ford II, present head of}

stipulates, among other things, we don't want anybody to move

the Ford Motor Co.

inaLge had some fixing up to do.|Mr. and Mrs. Willlam C. Ford him through 400 legal tomes he who fled to Costa Rica last Aug- | security program. left behind for future “Rock”just after his election to the presi-|

A speeding car unleashed a

FOUR. Foreign policy.

ition is the proposed North Atlan {tic Security Alliance of ths

Shortly after his release Wright volley of machine gun bullets into United States, Canada, Britain telephoned his sister, Mrs. Mit- the huge crowd that surrounded chell Wagner in Hammond, Ind.|Arias’ house to welcome the for- ern Europe, Ly

“He told me that he is com-imer president. Two persons were|

jand other free nations of West~

The President approved allot-

itary J.-A, Krug and Commerce | Mr, ‘Forrestal indicated yesters

On A University of Illinois dency was ruled invalid, returned /the -agenda for early considera course was the founda-!from his exile in Mexico.

Police Chief Rouls ordered all

wine bottle in his pocket.

The Chief also ordered all effect in two weeks. ' available cars to patrol the area. |

He asked any citizen who might rent bill .begins to spiral $5 a they can find a lot and build a

{know the assailant to inform the

MONTREAL, Canada, Nov. 6 attacker and more south- years old, five feet eight inches bound ducks were being trapped tall, weighing about 150 pounds. like flies stuck on flypapep as He was wearing a dark brown they landed to rest today on oil-|or black “V" neck sweater and a coated Lake St. Peter, 65 miles dark brown or black overcoat

police. In the assault last night, the

victim fainted ds her assailant| fled. She was taken to General around to talk about the situa-'cide. | | Be her exchanges She was able to describe her Belmont ang Cherey 2

Hospital suffering from shock.

as approximately 35

east of here. and dark cap.

Train-Car Crash Kills

|

1

|

i

rley’'s Restaurant, 144 E. OhloAdv. Bobby Miller,

6, Wipes Out Family

cvery hour, as two United States

DES MOINES, Nov, 6 (UP)— Five members of one Iowa family and the' 3-year-old son of their friends were killed tonight and three other persons were injured seriously when a Burlington train crashed into a station wagon at a crossing here. =

The dead were Harry Pulte?

37, Dows, Ia., his wife, Grace, 39,

__|and their three children, Marilyn, D.'12, Elaine, 9,

and Bobby 4, and 3.

day. [fixed in the ordinance for not;

The child, the couple’s first,

weighed 6 pounds 5 ounces. The; ‘No Crow Feast, Fords were married in June, 1947.

ee Be is = student at Yale Giver: OI Inside Pages ’ ; Says President git) : : Nov. — on {President Truman tonight for-

mally declined an invitation to

{that a trailer must have the gyt.” wheels on, and have a .sewer, Mr, Sluder wasn't available for connection for sanitary = pur- comment yesterday, but his mother, Mrs. John Sluder. Sr. are, wanted it understood ~that her

ing back here to stay for a while hit and seriously injured.

When

the - requirements

New Phone Exchange 'Prosecutor-elect promises general crackdown co

downtown Indianapolis within a

"” {few days, Indiana’ Bell Telephone The amount is the penalty home. | ay said today. oo

: | » & ’ What will it be—a house, 8 ,miantic. the new unit, will be, . the Children’s Museum

complying with the regulations.|sewer, or $5 a day? The Sluders yqgigned to about 300 telephones, (Society, clubs, food, fashions, other women's news, Pages 18 to 82) felt he must decline the Post's iniTown Marshal Moore dropped have two weeks in which to de-\ajready installed. Later, “more |vitation to a “crow banquet”

Ithan 10,500 telephones on CL . . . when will we have it in Indianap- foot the President. Woaly ‘wat olis?

cena Page 33 turkey while pollsters and corre-

“We don't want to’ make trou-To Go Into Effect Soon | other political MEWS ....neneeieieenieias .. Page 2 watch political “experts” eat home. The ordinance goes into ble for anybody,” she said. “We're, A "new telephone number pregix| CiF1S school emerging from coal stove era ... a He said "We sould all {willing to abide by ‘the laws, but|, °C} 4.164 to go into effect in a.picture StOTY vou ioniiivnvenss iver ooPABE Bor tomether and make a county And that’s when the Sluder they're going to stay there until |

(General news and features, Pages 1 to 16) “Sugar-Coated Homework” . . . a picture story of {key whenever he pleases.” ' Page 17 Mr. Truman told the Washing- «+ 120 {ton Post in a telegram that he

in which everybody can eat tur-

sess essere nau

“ses e ss serena tress ere

Street Commissioner Maio’s Dead Leaf Drive Hits Snag

Street Commissioner Tony Maio's fall drive to collect dead

{will be transferred to ATlantic and placed on dial service.

|

This unit is the fourth added]

10th prefix assigned in Indian-

(Editorials, politics, world report, radio, entertainment, Pages 34 to 48) to the downtown district since, Notre Dame proves Indiana football supremacy. ..Page 49

{the war, officials said, and is the| (Sports news, Pages 49-53; business news, Pages 54-55; eight pages crow, figuratively or otherwise,” of classified advertising, Pages 56-63)

|spondents who predicted his de-

reat dined on crow.

“I have no desire to crow over anybody or to see anybody eating

the President wired thé Post.

apolis. Pollster George Gallup, who:

leaves hit a jurisdictional snag yesterday. | among other “experts,” was in . i > -“

In his appeal for co-operation from residents in the North Side . TAA: o Lel area between ‘Fall Creek and the canal at Westfield Blvd. ana| Widow With 2 Children Washington Blvd. and the west side of Central Ave. the commis- Wins Rich Radio Prize sioner asked them to place the leaves from their yards in containers NEW YORK, Nov. 6 (UP)—A

Bt mie ene, 3; Sonigiers fst broadly. and pushed their leaves widow with two children won!Garnival Yake ‘era ito the. gutter and we'll into the highway. ’ $26,000 worth of prizes tonight by |Churches pick ’em up.” | L. C. Meredith, the comme. correctly identifying the voice of (Clubs ......e0seeveenssesne 21/RUATK cosasesenseroaneenenns 4 ’ in. Slon’s general foreman, was hop-|Ida Cantor on the radio Program yohn Crosby ......eeeeceesse 44 SCheITer weveeseesesssaasas 34 That's Where the Sag comes ning mad when his men said|“Sing It Again. (CBS). y

Other Features on Inside Pages

Amusements ............ 46, 47 Movies .. veesssse 46, 47 vited to attend the banquet as a {Eddie ASh ....ciecesassensess HO ODItUATIES ..ivcvenaessesssss 16] crow-eating” guest, had | Bridge sesesssrversrnsnensees 20IF. C. Othman .csessevinerere 36 accepted the invitation.-

Business ..c..sceeevisassen 54, 55/ Pattern cesrenssasssssnerese 30 SE —————————— | devinsrnranssnsone JHPOHUCE i vavsvesvsvinvses .. 35 CRUSADER THREATENED

Polit MOLINE, Il, Nov. 8 (UP)—

esasessenssanassanes T cesrrisiecnsntesasanes

Two of the streets to be de-ithey found “more than 250 loads| Mrs. Ellen Dunstan, 42, Of San Fashions .s...........ssses 31/SOCIELY verursrssensnsesss 28, 29/ROMe Of . Elaine nuded of dead flora, 38th St. and of deadleaves in the streets.” Diego, Calif., called by telephone Fash ol i 27/Sports tiveesseasssesssess 49-53/ Van Muelebrock and her daughFAll Creek Pkwy., are under the] Come tomorrow morning, Mr. {by the program, said the “phan-|Forum .........ceecesseene. 34 SUuMMersby cesvesveececaness 36 ter Marie. . jurisdiction of the State Highway Meredith declares, any home own- tom voice” which has been sing- Gardening ...veeevecccessss 26 Teen Page covicvenvnosnanans 25! we Commission. Residents on at least ers following Mr. Maio’s advice ing a recorded code jingle each Hollywood «..ivssceceessssn. 47 Washington ...coceeeeeennss 35 26 Colored Comics *% two other state highways-in the about sweeping leaves into the week for nearly two months was/Home- Page ... vo 30 Barl WHSON «iavesvasasenss 4B : es city outside Mr. Maio's leaf-rak- state-maintained streets will be that of the wife of comedian Juniof Page .. ve 24 WOIEN'S +. ..evsensneeses 17-33] With Today's Times *3 ing area took his instructions too liable to arrest by state police. | Eddie Cantor. |Dan Kidney sesececcasssacss 34 World Report cesessissscesee 35 kis goin ». . T ’ . Bi aA ; 4 . ‘ ® o 2 1 v > * i fo: Y i : of i ’ i

. ; ; ; 4 : } TE ie

Cs > . . Ga an lS a ea

Moline’s slot machine war was: highlighted today by a death note BAIOTIAlS <vevvevvesssesenees 4/SCIENCE ineersrnsersgessss.. 38/HUMIEd through the window of the