Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1948 — Page 1
22, 1948
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The Indianapolis Ti
FORECAST: Clearing tonight, warmer tomorrow. Rain tomorrow night and Thanksgiving. Low tonight, 30. High tomorrow, 43.
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FINAL HOME
[Soures—wowanp] 50th YEAR—NUMBER 226 . > TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1948 ulated 3p Sengieclan Mtier gh Fouetios os
Ind.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
.
Chest to Cut Social Services As Fund Lags
'48 Drive Misses Goal by $248,495
Speedy Decision Due By U. S. on China as Reds Press Conquests
Marshall and Truman Believed To Have Discussed Plight of Chiang
Read Clyde Farnsworth, Page 3
Photos on Page 15 By IRVING LEIBOWITZ Indianapolis social service agencies began slashing their budgets today against the greatest backlog of need since the war as the Community Fund drive ended last night 16 per, cent short of its $1,504,722 goal. Ten divisions of the 1948 campaign reported reaching only $1,256,227.94 at the final dinner meeting in the Columbia Club last night. » The result of failure to meet the goal by $248,495.94 will be a cut in services by the 48 Community Fund agencies. Estimating the situation this morning, Ralph Pumphrey, Council of Social Agencies executive director, said: “Unfortunately, some activities undoubtedly will be curtailed. Agency budgets were drawn close to anticipated needs. We will have to sacrifice the volume of service in order to preserve qual-
WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 (UP)—Secretary of State George C. Marshall's personal report to President Truman was expected today to speed important decisions on aid to China. Mr. Marshall touched on China and other foreign policy problems during his hour-long meeting yesterday with the President, and at a luncheon conference with the Chief Executive and the
cabinet. The Secretary was not Fence Buster
on the White House list of callers today. But that does not mean he will not see the President. Mr. Marshall did announce, however, that he would meet the press at 2:30 p. m., Indianapolis time, today. Reliable informants predicted that future meetings would deal specifically’ with possible United
Truman Maps New Controls On Inflation
Economic Aid
Reveals Plans
—President Truman will present! a “definite” anti-infigtion program to the 81st Congress in January, a presidential adviser said today. | Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, chairman of the President's council of eco-! nomic advisers, told newsmen, after a meeting with the Presi-! dent that Mr. Truman asked him| to head a group of department; and agency heads in co-ordinat-ing the anti-inflation program. His statement was made after! it was disclosed by one of its officials that the National Security Resources Board has drawn up!
wassmvaron Nov. 23 vp) Lucky Turnabout . . . Train Misses Brothers Here
|
oo
Spoilage Endangers Indiana Corn Crop
Purdue Puts Loss Already At $1 Million
llinois Hard Hit;
lowa Fares Better CHICAGO, Nov. 23 (UP)
States action on behalf of the hardpressed Chinese Nationalist government. Factors Outlined However, despite Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's plea for U. 8S. help, it was regarded unlikely that any: dramatic administration formula to meet the Chinese Communist advance would be forthcominges immediately. Fac-
ity of services next year, There is no doubt that need today is| greater than a year ago.” { He reported that failure to
with the situation included: ONE: The necessity for a toplevel review of American foreign policy in Asia. This review would
tors listed by officials familiar
legislation outlining a complete! system of price, man power and other economic controls necessary in case of war.
Details Come Later i Dr. Nourse said the anti-infla-tion program will be outlined gen-| erally in President Truman’s| state-of-the-union message in| January and his economic report! which will follow the message. Detailed phases of the anti-| inflation program probably will}
and in requests from the White
Nourse said.
be presented in special messages! ¥
House for specific legislation, Dr.|
|—Millions of bushels of corn lin northern portions of Illi |nois and Indiana are in dane |ger of spoiling, crop experts |reported today. { Slight spoilage also was ree ported in northeastern Iowa. | Farm experts feared that the {loss might run into millions of dollars. ‘The damage is being caused by lexcess moisture, which seeps {through the corn stalk and into {the cob, making it soft and rotten.
meet the quota last year forcedtaye into consideration the views the board to dip into the War|of “friendly” governments having Fund reserve for more thanistrategic interests in that conti$67,000. Lack of reserve, he said pent. now makes it impossible to obtain] TWO: Re-evaluation of the
additional funds. Communist advances through 4 Straight Failures [Manchuria into North China to The Family Service Association, determine whether Nationalist
which expected to add three case/China could be saved with largeworkers this year to meet alscale American economic and mil-| heavier load, will probably be itary aid. ; forced to wait until next year,, THREE: Careful balancing of) Mr. Pumphrey said. {American interests in Europe and! Despite increased costs of op-|China to determine whether the, eration and added additional case United States could, in effect, ex-| work, Mr. Pumphrey predicted tend the Truman doctrine to| that “no agency will get more/China without spreading Amer-! funds than last year and many ican help too far to be effective. will be forced to operate at much] FOUR: Finally, consultations less.” with Congressional leaders to asRecommendations for the final certain their views on China, and budget will be made at noon to- the chances that any larger aid morrow at the Lincoln Hotel. {project might have in Congress The drive marked the fourth next year. straight y the fund was short | . of its goal. Officials pointed out, Key Rail Town
however, it was the highest peace- |
time amount raised. In aadition, Changes Hands they said, the amount raised was | | 5 per cent more than the figure] NANKING, Sept. 23 (UP)— raised last year. Pro-government sources reported Ralph H. Blanchard, executive [that Nationalist forces today redirector of the Community Chests|captured Suhsien, key town on the and Councils of America, told railway linking embattled Suchow moré than 650 assembled volun- With the Nationalist capital of teer solicitors that “the Red|/Nanking. Feather agencies are no longer, Suhsien lies 40 miles south of| charity from the few to the many Suchow and 160 miles north of| but self-help services to all who Nanking.
on
Hack Wilson . . . 56 round trippers in 1930.
Asked if there will be a specific recommendation to hold back | prices, he replied: “You're 'way| ahead of me.” Report on Pressures He also declined to comment] on whether inflation pressures) appeared to be easing now or whether they are as great as a
Hack Wilson Dies; Ex-Home Run King
Set National League Mark With Cubs in "30
BALTIMORE, Nov. 23 (UP)| —Lewis (Hack) Wilson, i
former | National League home run king, died today after a brief illness. | He was 48. | The squat, barrel-chested former Chicago Cub—whose 56 home runs in 1930 still stand as a National League mark—was | stricken at his home yesterday. |
|He died at Baltimore City Hos-
pital. Doctors said Wilson suffered frequent internal hemorrhages
complicated by a pulmonary condition “similar to pneumonia.” Wilson had suffered a fall in his home early last month and was hospitalized for about. a
need sthem. Everybody benefits| + + « everybody gives.” Award ‘Oscars’ ! General Chairman Stephen C. Noland congratulated the volunteer solicitors and awarded min-
jature Red Feather “Oscars” to Communists have wrecked most of the city’s Druid Hill park swim-|
Capture of the city would give
|the Nationalists control of the! entire length of the Suchow-Nan-|
king railway. However, the line cannot be used to supply the Suchow garirson because the
division chairmen Fisk Landers, °f its bridges.
David M. Cook, Mrs. Easley R.!
he Communists captured Suh-
week then.
year ago. The President's ! port to Congress will indicate] how intense these pressures are] and what should be done, Dr.! Nourse “said. Nothing on the program will be made public before the State of the Union Message and the, economic report go to Congress, Dr. Nourse said. In reply to other questions on
economic re-!
molished their truck today.
would say only, “there will be a| definite program.” {
Teen-Agers Bound To Grand Jury
ing it smashing against a nearby Orders Youths fence. The truck was demolished. | In a similar accident in Veedersburg last night, two other brothers were less fortunate, Gordon Keeling, 14, and Carl
st and Dearborn Sts. railroad
Seconds after D. A. Mann,
Judge Held Without Bond
Two 14-year-old boys charged with the slaying of James Kelly,
| Freight Train at Veedersburg Hits Auto; Two Young Brothers Killed
Two Indianapolis brothers leaped from their stalled truck at freight train crashed into the vehicle. |
his brother, Carroll Mann, 29, of 2749 N, Dearborn St., jumped from {the truck the train struck, hurtling the truck into the air and send-
Took Wartime Job | Brooks, Kingan & Co, worker, on He had been living here since NOV. 3. were bound over to the 11941 when he came here to take rand jury today at a prelima wartime job. He had been \DAry hearing in Municipal Court
serving in recent years as direct v ; € y 3 {ireqor The boys, Wiley Senteney Jr.
ming pool. {1620 Spann Ave., and Mitchell | Wilson was the “goat” of the Bryant, 1527 English Ave., waved
Blackwood, Harold O. Burnett, Sien last week in an attempt to only World Series he played in Preliminary examination in the Richard T. James, Roger T: Flem- encircle” Suchow,
ing, William J. Stout, Raymond
[the 1929 classic between the hearing. Judge Joseph Howard Philadelphia Athletics and the ordered them ‘held without bond. |Cubs. | Mr. Brooks, 27, was shot In the eighth inning of the through the heart as he walked
Keeling, 18, were killed when their car was struck by a Nickel Plate
freight train at a Veedersburg|
crossing. The younger boy was {killed instantly and Carl died minutes late in a doctor's office. h were sons of Mr, and Mrs. | Paul Keeling. In the JIndjanapolis accident, ithe older man’s brother was driving an Alsco Window Co. panel truck south on Dearborn St.
Lucky pair . . . Brothers D. A. and Carroll Mann leaped to safety seconds before a train de-
Locomotive Smashes Truck me te of moran, br. Neue AG Pair Leaps to Safety
crossing today just as a crac
31, of 2747 N. Dearborn St. and
Cut in Raw Mi Price Skips City
Dairies Here Forced To Buy From Outside
Raw milk prices are down, but there’ll be no price cut to Indianapolis housewives in the near future, This was the opinion of local dairy spokesmen today after a 1cent reduction per quar’ in milk
To Lift Tomorrow
Expect Cloud Pall
Mercury Stays at 38
(the
At Decatur, Ill, Lee Gentry of Production Marketing Administration said a few carloads of excessively moist corn shipped to Chicago have sold for as. low as 27 cents a bushel, The government has set the
|loan value at about $1.42 a bu-
shel, But Mr. Gentry said some Illinois corn is so moist that the government has refused to lend
; farmers money on it.
Spoilage Confined He said, however, that most of the Illinois spoilage has been conined to corn already picked, and that there has been comparatively little spoilage in the lelds. Crop experts in both Illinois and Indiana blamed the spoilage on abnormally warm weather, when a hard frost was needed to dry out the corn. Purdue University farm experts said that excessive moisture he gan to show in northern Indiana
10 Hours Yesterday
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
Gam... 34 10am... 4 Tam... 34 1la m...38 Sam... 34 1% (Noon) 34 Bem... 34 1pm... 85
w— The pall of clouds over Indianapolis and Marion County will dispel slowly through tonight
two weeks ago, not only in corn stored in the bins, but iy the fields as well. 3 A spokesman for Purdue's small grains farm said reports indicate the loss in northern Ins diafa alone might total a million dollars, In many , he said, cob rot has set in and is progress. ing into the kernels. In both Illinois and Indiana,
and tomorrow, according to the Weather Bureau. These are the clouds which helped maintain an unusual, 10hour temperature phenomenon yesterday when the thermometer stood at 38 degrees from 6 a. m. until 4 p. m, Paul Miller, chief weatherman,
tures from plunging here. last night, as they did in other cities in the Midwest. Evansville, with
said the clouds also kept tempera-|
farmers were paying as high as $1500 for mechanical corn. dry= ers. Many farmers were improe vising their own dryers, using old coal furnaces and fans set up in storage bins, Iowa Fares Better Some farmers were feeding low quality moist corn to livestock in an attempt to dispose of it with minimum loss. It was believed that the premature fattening of hogs and cattle would affect the livestock market as farmers ship
M. Neff, William McKitrick =< Embargo Halt Harry Reid Sr. f S The truck stalled on the tracks t. and Spann Ave. He! prices was announced in Terre|clearing skies, recorded a low ofthe finished animals to market pst SL Sen vas Dall in She sun at Poilodelphas fesided at i301 Fieishr. Ave, 00 simultaneously they saw, thelaute because of lower raw milk 2 degtee lat ight. and Spring are than usual ia’s| "= : ola] nbound freig aring| price field, Ill, had 22, Iowa appeared to be faring bet- ; 4 |Shibe Park. The A’ \with his wife and 14-months-old| prices. rH. appe 8 Hare ee Crea sssuzs Y. Express {score 1 rn a ot Sa 0 |son. down on them. Both men jumped.| [ocally producers prices have 88 Low Last Night ter. At Des Moines, Al Cook of $8500. i [10 to 8. The A’s won the series. | Senteney voluntarily walked Thrown Into Fence been down for the last two He said earth heat, trapped the Production Marketing Admin. . Other unit results tabulated an al NEW YORK, Nov. 23 (UP)— four games to one. 3 lintg police headquarters Nov. 15 The train hit the truck, spin- months. However, because milk here under the cloud blanket, had istration said “only one or two reported last night follow: Spe- The Railway Express Agency put| The following year, however, (2nd admitted the shooting. He ning it around and throwing it/Production is off, dairies are be-no place to go. As a consequence, applications’ for corn price-supe cial Gifts, $194,521.04, 87.3 per an embargo today .on rail and Wilson bounced back and enjoyed implicated. Bryant as his com- into the fence of thé nearby Ayres ing forced to go into other parts the comparatively warm low of 33 Port loans have been rejected bee ‘cent of quota; dowete wn, $67- air express*into New York City the greatest season of his career. Panion in what, he told police; warehouse. of the state to buy enough milk degreés was registered last night.{cause of excess moisture. 618.83, 72 per cent of quota: rést: lwheére shipping and truck strikes Besides - blasting out 56 home WaS to have been a holdup. Both men said that the signal lo supply Indianapolis and Mar-| A high of 44 was predicted. for hy. Cook, Sogn loan upervisor dential, $81817.57, 87.1 per cent already have . disrupted . was not working, police reported, | on County. {today, falling to 34 tonight. To-| fOr ows, sa e -slaies, corn of quota: public, $57 587.66, 84.8 merce. . F but railroad officials said the, The increased -costs of trans morrow’s high will be 46 degrees, STOP Was the driest and the best De quota’ indusirial,| The agency said the embargo warning light was flashing when Portatigh, registration and han- Temperatures in Indiana will Quality in years. ~Gom wih the was necessary because of a slow- they drove onto the track. { ng as more than offset the ls Jerage 3 to 6 degrees above| ighes moisture conten was
$409,847.13, 79.7 per cent of quota; | mercantile, $200,186.93, 81.5 per down of’ terminal employees. The The brothers are employed by lower cost of milk itself, Win- ra) for the next five days, |[0URd In the northeast section of
com- runs, he drove:in 190 runs — a
1. Fv ae National League record which! still stands. g XCIS |
Firm Principles Needed,
«
(Continued on Page 2-—Col. 2) cause I have two boys.”
® . . | , . the Alsco Window Co. field Hunt of the Indianapolis g Iowa, he ‘said, but farmers there cent of quota; commercial, $125.- slowdown, the company said, be- p Tells Teach Freed mn Sia MN .|Milk Foundation said. the Weathief Bureau sald in a y.iteq until it had dried .out bee ./gan last F rope lelis leachers Three men were injured early long- { 292.09, 91.1 per cent of quota;|® riday after 14 em-| yh Mr. Hunt said Indianapolis ong-range forecdst. |tore h rvesting it. railroad, $8624.77. 80.1 per cent|ployees ' were fired for giving] CASTEL GANDOLFO, Nov. 23 : today wher thely car crashed 1G} dries are béing forced to buy| Normal maximum north for| In Illinois, J. A. Ewing, acting NESS of quota, and utility, $101,807.80, false information on their em- (UP)—Pope Pius said. yesterday Manslaughter charges against a tractor-trailer at U. 8. 40 andj, 0 "tn, B® (00 C0 (0 Uline period fs 41 degrees; south, |state/ agricultural statistician, 92.6 per cent of quota. {ployment applications. |that Catholic education must aim Homer Petero, state excise offi-| Shadeland Drive. | suppl a ie 150. The normal minimum is 29 said/t ked t ays. ol w“ cer accused of slaying a man in| The tractor-trailer, driven by SUPPly ouiside mmediate| 0. (said/farmers hus he corn too day Firms sponsoring ‘the final re-| Employees involved are mem-|at forming “a man of clear, solid |area. The winter period is a|north and 33 south. 800 be port dinner were Allison Division bers of the Brotherhood of Rail- and deep convictions to withstand fis home, were dropped today on|Frarcis Smith, 37, of 2322 N. New|, ° supply” season annuall . ab alt Rd ne of General Motors Corp., Diamond way and Steamship Clerks, the frenzied search for success the recommendation. of DeputyiJersey St, was headed south on, id y Wariner Tomortow Fi d di Chain Co, P. R. Mallory Co. Freight Handlers, Express land the effects of films and other FTosecutor Glenn W. Funk. Shadeland and had stopped for| ox . i It will be warmer tomorrow fin Man Dead in Car oo Merchants Association of Indian-|Station Employees (AFL), the media.” a Polery oh Boiused of {Road 40, Struck Trail 1 Ht areas Here ai 2h oa and Thursday, colder Friday and After Crash With Truck ast, apolis and Kingan & Co. : > = y shootin ert Carpen-| Strue railer thit a rising trend again Saturda erage posant eogans& Co. Dies Se sald. RB was stres. Bia Sop ke a gi wa ter when he found the man at the] A car driven by Carl Wheeler, Se heh are Zable So produce and Por 8 Ye Tawar eh. oak, 0, ot 3:19 3 ° = Petero home, 1824 Wilcox St., on 22, of 3315 E. 9th St. t . : Thei New Castle Opens tive today, cut off all railway Italy. the night of June 5. Mrs. Petero|U. S. 40 started to as right| Milk retails at 21 cents a quart| Precipitation is expected to|;n nis automobile today after it i Gambling Crackdown [SXFrcss shipments into and out| “The deep whirpools of ideolog-|was in the kitchen at the time turn and struck the trailer. [NOW in Indianapolis, compared to amount fo one-half to one Inchigyruck. a Planter's Peanut Co. t spe- Ng race of New York City except for cer- ical battles overwhelm those Whoof the shooting, the prosecutor's Mr. Wheeler and two passen-|20 cents in Terre Haute. In the south of Indiana, and in truck in Delaware St. just north . NEW CASTLE, Nov. 22—Sher- Jain carload lots, according to|do mot have sound principles,” he office Said investigation showed. |gers in his car, Edward Adair, 24 F : K oe Borthern gostion ot the state of Washington St. mina- iff Robert Padgett touched off a|'2€ &8eNcy’s announcement. Isaid. The state based its recom-|of 324 N. Oakland Ave., anda W. T. Feast for a King— abou’. one-quarter inch. | Dr. Roy B. Storms, Marion ingle crackdown on local gambling to- > . . mendation for discharging the in-| Nelson, 23, of 1314 N. Beville! Al Presid 8 Same, rain is expected tomor- County coroner, who investigated, day with the arrest of five cigar Navigation Aid Off Ream Qictment on the contention that|Ave., were treated at Veterans, RS orion ” a5 (UP —~ night and Thanksgiving said gab. otk 2rparently died store operators charged with sell- r. Petero was acting in defense Hospital for injuries. They were! » NOV. ) ’ . . in 1 tickets and punch ' {of His home, that there were no released after first aid. * |—If President Truman wants to T for = PF Tosses Test Plane for Loo other witnesses to the shooting,| The impact of the crash broke have Ei Thanksgiving s A There will be no “go sign” on - and that as an excise officer he|the spring hanger on the tractor-|dinner, he's got the stuff to do t Ai punch boards in either the city Scientists, Equipment ‘Lost’ as Radio Tube Be 0 SarTY.une gun with |tielley, standing % af me.mjt mn ived his sixth n e Inside noice or county if he can prevent it, hind which he shot Mr. Carpenter. tersection until wreckers could ay he receiv s sixth ; : : good Sheriff Padgett said. Goes Haywire, but Old Practice Saves Day Te op Dmmendation washiwe it. Tusnkagiing lurkey, Gen. Clay declares Reds failed in effort to exploit All vg operitorg were Yeleased By MAX B COOK Scripps-Howard Aviation Editor espn DY Sudge an. . ae ar fer obo, German unrest . ... Around. the World. ....ori--PageiS “Tort Pag 3 . ~ : | i i i i under 00 onds lowing he We were “lost” over Indiana—some scientists, a great deal of Baby Girl Fi an S d IeS turkey show. It was raised by A tragedy of inflation . .. Sky-high prices, rents 2 a. y the sheriff and four|yajyaple scientific equipment—and myself. Dapy Ir Finds Harvey Wilford of Elyria, O., and| cripple economy in France....................Page 8 pies, It was on account of a very small radio tube that went hay-! ge . presented to “the President by Charlie Ventura’ t bop t ood f > / ., |wire. And there we were, wandering about the countryside, 5600 Life E levating, members of the Poultry Science oc 'enturas newest bop tunes g news ror Ze Geneva College Head feet up and over a nice solid overcast of Indiana-type clouds. G is’ E | Li f oug [ my ata Club of Ohio State University. wax-spinners . . . Off the Record..............Page 4 wh Di es at A ge of 74 It was a flight demonstration of the.latest all-weather landing | e 5 ar y [] tf FREIGHTER UNREPORTED Bobby Breen “found”; “Disappearance” riles Wisy time, BEAVER WALLS. Pa. Novo navigational 3evises hd tion of navigational aids now in SEER M-—-G———— FRANKFURT, Nov. 23 (UP)—| NEW YORK, Nov. 23 (UP)—| consin officials ....................cu.......Page 10 arette » 2 ‘commercial and military air traf-| process of installation. a baby girl. who The Czech spy ring smashed by The 5500-ton British freighter] : i A a eo A es: fic, sponsored by the Radio Tech-| They will make it possible un- should get up in the world—at U. 8. Army - counter-intelligence| Hopestar with a crew of ey State's property lax Teassessiment may pull Hoosier gang waterboy building Geneva nical Commission for Aeronau.|der 8ll conditions for. an airliner least she started her life on the agents in the American zone of unreported today and may have cities out of financial hole...................Page 10 , College: and later became college) tics pilot to know exactly where he is way up. -. °° Germany was compiling informa-| foundered in an Atlantic gale, the) The Truman Re-Deal last of a series of 10 8 : . regardless of weather and failure| Police Sgt. Joe Klein reported|tion about American occupation : a died last ht of gar po! pa coast guard said. MPANY president, nig OL a] The equipment was supposed to today a ve wi articles Ses eset rs tists estas ane mates e 15 ROLINA heart: ailment in Fovidencs of some equipment. y ry worried man burstitroops, the Army disclosed today. So p take us over a predetermined) The new omni range ground into General Hospital about 5:30| More than 20 spies, all but one! A [a Dou hnut Pilgrims’ Thanksgiving Fete lasted whole week in had od 3 io: course—on straight lnes—and station setup now being rapidly (a. m., asked for a doctor, say-|either native or Sudeten Germans, 1621 “Our T' " by An a ag serv os Oh in Bt bring us back to the Indianapo-|installed throughout the nation|ing: “My wife’s about to have a|were rounded up Nov, 9 by WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 see own," by Anton Scherre r......Page 16. ~~ A rrr to BE BE uments— will give us invisible directions baby.” American agents in the American Non oe, alles Local churches set Thanksgiving services.........Page 17 . while failure of other equipment ® = = and British zones of Germany. te 3 a : z “ i Geneva. But, while one instrument go-|led us off course. ORDERLIES : weren't sass The one who claimed to be non- Jrydocked . J2imen, Bam Other Features on Inside Pages en ing haywire tossed us for a loss| We took off from Indianapolis enough though, for the baby was| German said he was a Czech am. ir a ew : 13,597 Choked to Death of many miles, good old science after marking off a course of 40|born in the elevator on the way|ecitizen. scheme. Amusmts. 12, 13| Editorials .. 16|{National Aff. 18/ Sports .. 20, 21 noked, CHICAGO, Nov. 23 (UP)—Mrs. had other instruments. miles to Kempton, back some 25 uP to the receiving ward. Some of those arrested prob- He lifted the 36-foot Eddie Ash.. 20 Forum +es++ 16{Othman .... 15 Society wees 18: Emily Travnicek, 71, was found They told us at all times ex-/miles to Advance, across some The mother, Mrs. Clarence ably will tried by a special mili-| Vessel up on his crane and |Beauty ..... 19 Meta Given.. 19|Paitern .... 18 Summersby.. 8: Camel! dead in the basement where she actly where we were with refer- 40 miles to Greenfield and then Smith, R. R. 18, Box 443, and the!tary tribunal on charges of acts dunked it, bow first, into Bridge ..... 19 Hollywood. . 12 Radio ...... 11 Teen Prob... 19 had been washing clothes. Her ence to the farmhouses and what- 286 miles to Indianapolis. A irl are reported doing well to- prejudicial to the United States] the Potomac River. Business .,. 10/Inside Indpls. 15/Records .... 4|Weather Map 28 scarf had caught in the washing not beneath us. large map of the course bore a day. All the proud papa could occupation. The tribunal will be The fire went out. But [Classified (22-24 Mrs. Manners 5 Ruark ..... 15/Earl Wilson. 17° machine wringer and choked Ben Tole burtied Sepontes. pogerer mt # say was, “I'm glad it's a girl, be| Sipuintes by Gen. Lucius D. Clay, the launch was almost Comics ..... 25 Movies ...13, 13{Scherrer ... 16/Women's ... 1 ps new com - erican occupation commander, total wreck. Af...
to death. 5
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: Crossword .. 17|My Day «ees 18(Side Glances 16
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