Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1948 — Page 15
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23, 1948 ' : ° » ° . -3 $ 4 é ’ 3] —— | Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovale € 1ndianapoils 11mes | CHES i . 3 ASS HOLD YOUR HAT, check your wings and much of Miss Spalding. The harp is out in front : i get set for a few facts about that “sky bl but Miss ding may fe a tr, 5, 209 y but Mi al ing ; ay be playing ridge. Point SECOND SECTION TU ESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1948 PAGE 15 : 1919 Along with the harp and to make this report OF she may be talking to some clown like me . » ® more than just another report of outstanding While Fabien Sevitzky is stirring up the air in ee etre. statistics, Mary Spalding will be given a promi- the theater. | nent place. Miss Spalding, in case youre a My idea, since the harpist goes into seclusion | : be-bopper or a Pee Wee Hunt follower, is harpist 50 Much, was to see ‘what really gives, on and for the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. She's Of the stage. i ® - " 2 « been holding down that spot for three years, too. I found Miss Spalding talking to Ralph Lillard, The meeting between Miss Spalding and me Percussions, off stage. They were talking about ear in wasn’t what you would call sensational. It went Dridge and how nice it would be if they could, : something like this: ind .a fourth. Most of the musicians in the : 2 “Hello.” orchebtra were warming up. I'm a little bw shy. “Hello.” Nothing much happened until the concert “Are you Mary Spalding?” * began. Mr. Lillard, also’ sitting that one out, *Yes.” bought three soft drinks. Fine fellow. I bummed the same You might think the conversation was dull. 2 Cigaret and smoked while Miss Spalding talked : : : You're so ‘wrong. Ever try talking and dodging about her harp. 3 3 6and 7 a violin bow of a warming-up concert violinist? It weighs 75 pounds without the case, 220 2 Try it sometime and you'll find reciting the Pounds with the case and four dresses (the case ies*® s alphabet can be exciting. Is used as a wardrobe trunk by Miss Spalding E C y and three other orchestra members); it takes ; asy to Converse With 15 mines to tune it before a concert, there praise your A HARP PLA r are s, 47 strings, wire wound, silk wound, Finks. .- for member of any AYR ooiaty best nylon. and catgut and Mise Spalding carries two d, mellow, to, béfore, during or after a concert. You see, Complete sets of strings at all times. That's ste, they play one number or two and they're through, because the strings have a habit of breaking =, Seheley 4 Miss Spalding happened to be in on one number When she least expects them to break. of genuing . that afternoon. She went to Work during the Just before intermission, Charlie Schlegel, d unequalled last selection on the program, Respighi’s “Pines S!a8¢ manager, ‘came over with a hunk of acked by the of Rome.” : a oi we all ate. Bot it thing I cus , 0 See was a plate. ply of aged, : The tomers, naturally, don't get to see Miss Spalding said she listens to the music ir whiskies, when she isn't playing bridge or talking or who agree: worrying if her harp hasn't changed in tone by an unusually hot or cold breath of air. | ES BETTER! When the musicians came off stage, it was| our signal to part company. Miss Spalding to; tune her harp and I to get into position for further observing what a harpist does during a concert. ! My original plan was to bring you such a| complete report that it would even include the ) \ number of times Miss Spalding blinked her eyes. | 3 4 0 That, however, is impossible. Two flutters in. ; % — > aa a row and I had to give up. | Ten divisions of the 1948 Indianapolis Community Find drive reported reach- Four Community Fund workers at the Industrial division table during the din. wi a ert ee? 3 TWnjoWn on, ing $1.256,227.94 at the final dinner meeting last night in the Columbia Club. ner were (left to right) Harold Yeagqy, Edward Bartley, Hugh Frey and Charles during the playing of “Pines of Rome,” a number /'MONJ volunteers were (lett to right] Mrs. W. C. Worcester, Mrs. W. H. Krieg Creighton. The drive ‘marked the fourth straight year the Community Fund was that has everything but a cannon. Mrs. C. Severin Buschmann and Mrs. John A. Alexander. short of its goal. l - en - remem meine nein te a Sinn \ A Breakdown of Figures : | : : AT ONE TIME or another, Miss Spalding, ye ep. MSon Hoosier Assails : smiled, 3; arranged skirt, 5; tugged at sleeves, | 4; turned head to right, 2; to left, 3; curled fore-| . | finger while hands were motionless, 1; touched As Defense hief | briefcase on stage, 1; rubbed hands, 2; moistened ec ora al lips, 4; swallowed hard, 3; rubbed finger under . right eye, 1; looked at audience, 5; looked up a ‘ . se? at Dr. Sevitzky, about 1000 times; cleared Armed Forces Give Fears Splinter Parties throat, 2; bounced slightly in seat, 3; smiled] Unofficial Approval | In Lodge's Proposal at the ceiling, 1; moved thumb in circle at end By LYLE C. WILSON | : of number and sighed. The last statistic was] Sond Frese Statl Uorreapondohf I BY DAN RIDNEY done simultaneously. . | WASHINGTON, Nov. 23—! Harpist Mary Spalding picks out a few plinks Ah, the life of a harpist is rugged. SIttng mee is 5 lusty enthusiasm A I NN 3 The 4 ‘ : “Shi there watching Miss Spalding, the thought struck new electoral plan of Sen. Henry from a little thing by Ottorino Respighi. Among among some important members 4 . : : vp: 7 me that there should be some way to have her| the armed foes t t R Cabot Lodge Jr. (R. Mass.)-might other things during the playing of ‘Pines of sitting on a cloud while she plays. Man, that| armed services to get Rep. Rome," she arranged her skirt five times and would be classy. Another first for the Indian-| ar! SIpSon Sut of Uongress and} result in “splinter parties which J swallowed hard, three times. apolis Symphony, I might add. National oanel. aj secretary «of, would put us in the same plight - . Mr. Vinson is a Georgia vet-| as France” is the contention of eran of 18 consecutive terms in! Joseph F. Ruaa. 3 “a : the House. He was elected Nov.! | r. Rudd, whose home Is In And/or to You By Robert Cc. Ruar [2 to term No. 19. His most dis-| | Evansville, has been using Rep, 'tinguished service there was as! Edward A. Mitchell's office here PE : chairman of the House “ Naval while doing research on the proNEW YORK, Nov. 23—A tremendous public sary, if only to impress the stenographer and Affairs Committee before con- posed Lodge amendment. He exservice has just been performed by James R. Mas- force her to earn her pittance by prowling the gressional reorganization estab- pects to incorporate his material terson and Wendell Brooks Phillips, two gents pages of Messrs. Funk & Wagnall. (See how easy|lished a single committee to deal into a thesis with the hope of rewith eye ever cocked to the common weal. it is? IT could have said “dictionary,” but that's with the Army, Navy and Air! ceiving an MA degree from his They have prepared a pamphlet for the ex- too simple). So, take the sentence: “Every dog Forces. alma mater, Notre Dame Unipress use of the newcomers to Washington, as the has his day.” That emerges as: “In every canine, Despite Mr. Vinson's kinship versity, he said. new Senators and Congressmen move in outlining lifespan is manifested a period of optimum with the Navy, it is understood Gi Basis of Vie the simple processes of turning plain English into euphoria.” ithe Air Forces and the Army ves s o Ww incomprehensible bureaucratic jabberwocky, or “Haste makes waste” is merely “precipitation would welcome him at the Pen- “My studies have led me to | gobbledegook. entails negation of economy.” Hoses are red” e tagon if Secretary James Forres- ’ on : . TR wee oms conclude that the proposed Lodge After an hoyr with “Federal Prose—How to “rosaceae exhibit roseaténess.” “Scissors cut” is'ig] resigns. . : . . ip : rs : amendment to the U. 8. Consti- i a Write in and/for Washington,” the simplest tech- “scissors effect scission functionally.” The sun gn Toughest Job Mi ging Yo tsi img: fesume of 38 ive were Solicitors (left to right) Mrs. John Davies, tution will jeopardize our historic 4 nician can be obscure. This talent for obscuration, rises in the East” is always “solar bodies tend to Mr. ‘Forrestal is expected to| - Ass ohir ey /\ikin, ASS sther ume an Mrs, ertrude Jenks. two-party system,” Mr. Rudd de- § ~ as opposed to the pellucidation of prose, is highly exhibit, with respect to and from the viewpoint of| quit. He is the man who got th . eo lared. “If is true, we might ) © \ | necessary if a newcomer is to succeed in the cap- their satellites, an apparent orientality of ana- toughest peace time job = =~ Hoosiers Near To Habeas Corpus for Cupid: ved Shak a gn tal devel prosd Bas iiw stad 4 iat basis. ving to make unification of the! | > splinter parties which causes the i ede S ays exis 0 a certain armed services come true. Mr. | 1 extent, but the New Deal fetched it to fresh fiow- Hall-Mark of Federal Prose FroivusePhogiiins Samia inf : : Rock’s-'Lawyer’-Wins Love Tife "ana. Mall. St soulition - in { ering. . Vie flexibility of functibaiop A COMELETE scorn or puntugtion, with the but the over-all job is counted “In Legion Or ye The law schold from Evans i uch was the ilexibility of function of so many exception of over-frequent employment o e| failure so far. | I i base . bureaus, so temporary were So many measures colon subject to consideration of the demands of Unification has saved no money. | | High School Sweetheart, Ex-Convict o ville 8 his view on the Lodge y and men, that communication adapted itself to the occasion, is a ha.l-mark of federal prose. It has not stopped the bitter ,o dlana reported an advance To Wed Despite Her Mother's Objections provision: for proportional repre. obscurity. The solid man in the structure never That, and hard work. A man must polish and wrangling among top men of the Loi) American Legion member- CHICAGO, Nov. 23 (UP)—Cecil Wright, who won his freedom| vies (hat oh morament Pro- : hung himself on his own bulletins. He wrote so he polish until he has eliminated all traces of co- Navy and Air Forces. Ship of 86,050 in its quota of 105, : 'k lo h i b 8 d in Al | Vides that each state keep its [- could wiggle backward, forward and out from herence from his missive. If one vestige of clear-| Air Secretary Stuart W. Sym. °°7 Members today, at the clos- With the legal knowledge he gained by studying in Alcatraz, willl electoral votes, but that they be 4 3 Sy : f, y “VM ling session of the three-day an-| marry his high school sweetheart Thanksgiving Day even though| aivided according to the number under. . ness remains, he is a bum and will shortly be ington is on record with a charge her ther doesn’t want him for a son-in-law According to the experts, federal prose must replaced. {hat Navy officers have disobeyed Ua} conference of state com- mothe La I } . of votes cast for each candidate always be written in a stvle : x : | ) ¢ manders and adjutants here. The 41-year-old ex-convict became known as the “Lawyer of the| within that state. It is the proy! tyle that can be interpret It seems to me that this pamphlet, complete Mr. Forrestal’'s orders in their T H Rock” by his studies of habeas corpus proceedings during 18 years ed flexibly—or, “it is a form of non-metrical com- with glossary and simple translation, is a great!official statements on national de- o, L0¢ Hoosier department, with in priso y J ” JUINg 2 Years| portional Dlan-which would Cause Position, apparently English which can invariably hoon to the fresh young typist. In the absence of fense. (81.87 per cent of next years) h prison. { ags the splintering in Mr. Rudd's 3 be interpreted as meaning and/or not meaning indoctrination courses for business men Who try) That is a serious accusation: {membership quota reported, | ‘He announced yesterday e= Raciime Recruitin opinion. ; more and/or less, rather than what, it seems to to make sense out of Washington, it could win or Bucks Forrestal vans Segond among the 58 de-'he pad persuaded Beulah Brim- | "Under the present system the i mean.” lose a war. | Mr. Symington, himself, bucked|" x1 tra". berry, 36, of Charleston, Ill, to . candidate polling the most votes A ‘ ’ For you see, the English language as you Mr. F | At the same time the Legion-| iin any state (whether direct or \ Do Hens Lay Eggs? ' a X ” oy e iE ol grag 38 r. Forrestal and the whole ad-|ngjres pledged a total advance|become his wife. But he admitted ona lar | thro ugh electors) gets all of the 3 earn —the short sentence, the crisp ma, ministration last winter in a vig- 1949 membership nationally of that the bride's mother was so electoral’ vote: of that state id 3
FOR INSTANCE, the statement “Hens lay the punchy verb—no longer exists in Washing-|orous appeal that Congress au-|1 354 217 by Dec. 11 to Com-
eggs” would come out: “Egg-laying characterizes ton, the city of directives, channels, and admin-|thorize a greater Air Force than'mander S Perry Brown. Pledges what is termed the “electoral col- : .
Istrongly opposed to the marriage| The:ranks of the Indiana Na/that she threatened to disown her tional Guard were open to un-/ lege.” Each state has one elector
hens. Hens are typically oviparous. Hens ovulate, istrative democracy {the White House contemplated l y 3} un i - i | but not continuously and not without exception. The English language is a corpse, and you will] The in-fighting among top men nual Se hu OE ar for] daughter. federal court ro paleg rou ny Tor, ie) so every Rleiber 9 1s SoneresGallinaceous ovulation is effected only by hens.” do well to forget it and master the new jabber. of the two embattled services is call. x i Tight won a ‘federal for| Brig. Gen. H d M 1 sional delegation. k the. doses tom Soom off the hook, It Thats why 1'say the authors pertormed & public bitter and angry. It stymies reall” Commander Brown expressed Lage, Nov, T.0f Ws sentence tor| Brig. Gen Toward Marwell Under the Lodge proposal the ’ oy displ RL Po Discussion ma) aes. Srey OL Jt aI ito 25 Dugas, With ple- unification of the armed services confidence that the final 1949 en- time Miss Brimberry sald she was sier guard officials would resume; a straight national plurality vote { splay of vast learning is always neces- tures, for only a buck and two bits. and prevents the taxpayer from rollment would exceed the three- engaged to another man [recruiting des to put the pl a, would piu be ap-
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ve py the gmaller states, it . argueC. -Joportional represen--. , . tation makes each vote count in : the final percentage of electors.
of defense for his tax money. for the fourth consecutive year a7 has | * rry h id - | . The ban was lifted by the] Inau I Bl B F r eder ick C Othman — Forrestal Bually d suc (The 1949 national quota 18.3554, Mins Brimbe 7 had sail athe National Guard Bureau at Wash.| g U ra b ves y . n Keeping the top admirals 540. |everyone-started calling her after | ington, ‘Gen. Maxwell said.
and Air Force officers on active| North Dakota was the Only de-|
getting an ‘Honest dollar's worth million ‘mark by many thousands| Today, Wright told’ reporters| State's ground forces at 16 00Q.
I got out, she thought she could] There now are 6241 Indiana Fi service from sniping at each other partment today reporting an ad-| | Breakdown of Figures WASHINGTON, Nov. 23—The more plans our vided-icy seats, which melted when contacted by|in public. But n6 holds or wea- vance 1949 enrollment oF 100 per shat Miem 1p by Zaying she Yes Suan ne ground forces, Thus in the election just over scurrying officialdom makes for the inauguration the posteriors of the big-wigs. pons are barred when either hascent. . di ht na the: id belt s 38th Diviison da Lav. J. Strom Thurmond, Dixieof President Truman in January, the more I Ice crystals formed on the whiskers of thea chance at the other before a| —_— es os os WO at I: Maj Gen. Ben H. Watt |crat candidate who polled a dread it. So, I bet me, does Mr. T. = Chie? Justice. Ice ehilled the Eibie upon whichiprvate commitiee or'in privateiGlrl of His Dreams « [Fe a ER aS a on a all, © (he|poDular Yots Of 1,006,363 snd wen The $80,000 pineboard stand in front of the Mr. Roosevelt and John Garner swore. Then they|conversation. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov Bi Shiny town, becaus = the Sat Guard were stopped last 39 electoral votes by carrying Capitol, upon which he and dear Alben Barkley proceeded to the White House in an open car and TLrrurrie (UP)—A worried reader wrote a publicity given the Salze 9 | Fa 94 ‘when oT ar rumen Alabama, South Carolina, MissisWill stand, is finished. Auto traffic has been di- the sleet turned again to rain. Writers Club local lovelorn columnist today| Miss Brimberry’s mother said signed the peacetime draft law. SiPPi and Louisiana, would get verted and all it needs now is some bunting In the reviewing stand they had an electric Y that her husband “never ay] al Charleston that she was op-|Since then only officers, short- 36.8 electoral votes under the wound around the splintery posts. And some ice heater, but 2 million other feet got wet, and then Awards Prizes {me at night and he gives me all|posed to the marriage. {time war veterans and the young. lan. for the high dignitaries to sit upon. cold and soon lost all feeling. The Messrs. Roose- |his money.” But, the reader com-| “As far as I'm concerned, she'll est class of men eligible for the, Henry .A. Wallace, the self-
The inauguration committee now is trying to velt and Garner had to smile hour after hour| The Indianapolis Writers Club, styled “Progressive,” polled 1,
round up $150,000 for expenses. It is talking about as the prancing horses, drum majorettes, and|organized two years ago in thePailed, ‘he talks in his sleep never return here” Mrs. Brim-|draft have been permitted to en JVIOC, A EroBtesEVe, FOURC Cl a parade that will take six hours to pass the marching clubs skidded down Pennsylvania Ave. | Central Library and composed of| 2 saul fu) ong. TTY sa a. : list. {because he fajled to carry a President; longer if the streets are slick. Inside the White House was coffee in paper cups/amateur short story and fiction| h f {single state. Under the Lodge . . for hordes of well wishers with cards. Cup after Writers, today announced awards The Truman Re-Deal—No. 10 . |plan he would get 9.9 electoral Roosevelt Inauguration Described cup of that coffee I tried, it all was cold. for prize-winning stories in their e si en o us » | votes. THE BOYS are figuring on bringing down . (meeting last night in the YWCA. P od { t D ¥ Off S Pi a RB i | “It is this breakdown which Philadelphia’s rhuramers | all the bene bands Ever ybody Got the Sniffles Mrs. Dorothy L. Hunt won the cra : © l Ra {causes me to believe that the
for-500 miles around. They're dickering with the WHEN FINALLY the parade ended at dusk,|first prize of $10 for her wn UJ Pp : Lodge plan may encourage develrailroads to fill all the sidings with pullmans so a weary President went inside with the ends of|story, “A New Home for Gram” in| r ge assage in ew ongr ess essage |opment of splinter parties,” Mr. : {Rudd asserted.
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they visitors will have a place to sleep. They're his mouth still curved up in his reviewing smile. |the annual contest. She also won| Sa idering an inaugural ball, or maybe a dozen That left the city full of crowds. Milling crowds, $5 ppize for her short short! (Last of Series) power of such well known and ee ———— balls simultaneously. you might say. All cold And all wet. Traffic be-/story, ““Tomorrow We Rest.” fe rr er es tt et dette elderly men as Senators Walter They're wondering if it wouldn't be a good Idea came snarled immediately; the restaurants ran| Mrs. Marian L. Coonse, presi-| By EARL RICHERT, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer George of Georgia, Tom Connally \/ gndals Attack to let the government clerks off for four days out of food. |dent of the club, took the second WASHINGTON, Nov. 23—There is no mad dashing around of Texas and Kenneth McKellar ots . fe running and instead of having an Inaugural Day, Everybody began to sniffle; there was not an Prize award of $5 in the short searching for new ideas as Presidential Counsel Clark Clifford and (Of Tennessee and Rep. Robert Building Project . o". declaring an Inaugural Week. umbrella or a ‘handkerchief left for sale in all/short category with her entry, other Truman aids work on the state-of-the-union message which Doughton of North Carolina, ? This I don’t think I can take. Washington. Nor a pair of rubbers. I took to my|“The Browns Stick Together.” the President will deliver to the new Congress. {Adolph J. Sabath of Illinois, Carl] Widespread vandalism at the t I don't know how President Truman feels bed, as did most of my neighbors, with incipient] The club meets bi-weekly in Most of it is down in black and white already, in the various| Vinson of Georgia and Clarence site of 80 new homes on 16th St. , about it, he never having gone through an in- pneumonia, while Mr. Roosevelt, himself, didn’t!tlie YWCA at 8 p. m. {messages Mr. Truman sent to the Republican Congress and which Cannon of Missouri. |and Arlington Ave. was being inst augural before or tried to crack a police line on feel so well for several days thereafter. ————— {that Congress, for the most part, | y asked Tor Fi I FET The White House hopes though vestigated today. the great day, but I can tell him about one of It would be nice if Mr. Truman could be inaugu- Local Students Attend [dumped in the waste basket. loccons arofits thx positon of the|that the public will be treated to, H. L. Yarnell, 6060 Riverview 18 President Roosevelt's inaugurations: rated by proxy. Or maybe somebody could. write Risk A gents’ Parley | Reporters, searching for clues [curving inflation. as a:means Seat leas; one ney Soars 8 bet, Ave. contractor, Jsked poliss: to "A cold rain turned the red, white and blue into him a letter. And if not that and we've got to, las to what type & . od vorking relations veen patrol the district as . smeary lavender. By the time the crowds began have all the whoopla, fellows, can’t we postpone] Donald Smiley and Raymond labor law the ad- wl “7 | It is obvious that no decision the President and Congress. From nightly wrecking sprees in the : 1g to gather, the rain had become sleet. That pro- it until cherry blossom time? Van Camp of Indianapolis, Butler ministration will : has yet been reached in regard to|the White House standpoint, thatinew homes. ; University seniors, are attending|want to supplant © (the new taxes—also that the ad- means Congress doing what the He said a number of windows 3 5, the Indiana Association of Insur- the Taft-Hartley . iministration would be most happy|President wants. |were broken and that construction § ’r * 299 . 299 ance Agents’ Golden Anniversary law, are told to - {if it could avoid asking for them.| There is no doubt that the new was being held up by the vandal- : o UlZ aster res Test Your Skill ?% Convention today and tomorrowiread previods But this seems unlikely in the Democratic Congress will at least ism. le in the Claypool Hotel as student presidential mes- face of the expected heavy mili- start off more friendly- to. Mr.| Meanwhile, Frank Schubert, ™ representatives. v jsages in which gry an foreign sid spending and/Trumcan than aid he me Son) 1054 arnold Drive, head Borist sly ’ « » Other Butler students attending Mr. - e blow, when it comes, is ex-| Democratic can! Gar , . ost is the world’s longest suspension i [Goats was the term “rump session” first |, JER CINE Students ation 08 Sih Jryman fe pected to be directed at corpora. Congresses. . valued at S100 was smashed by : : : 1 : 2 = |vandals. ° vase w. . A—The Golden Gate Bridge at San Fran- A—In 1648, when the Rump Parliament of |paocy \ ooor’ a ers Vy {ling Jurisdiction: Hous. AND MR. TRUMAN should be! rom its site on the lookout at cisco with a center span of 4200 feet. some 60 members continued in session after - (Schilling. Edward Walsh as strikes an 2 Along with the same well- 3510 to got some of his program! the park. ¢ @ the purge of 96 members by Cromwell's arm 8. [some typesof sec- wr, Richert (known issues in the new era willl hrough—such as housing, aid to ee 2 pur, y Y. |Allen Eugene Stewart, all of In-iondary boycotts. go the same well-known faces,|agucstion broadening of social a 3% Q—How many man-hours are required to ¢ & & dianapolis; Carr W. Dornsife, | They are told to do the same|both in the administration and in security an d's rise of the mini-| 9cOUt Council to M J ! age radi J A cae: in Q—What does Army Day commemorate? aston, = and W. A. Lyon, on other issues such as housing, Congress. mum wage from 40 to 75 cents| Frank W. Braden, national co- ; Sweden, 262. g : ’ A—The entrance of the United States inte | aid to education, health insur-| After all the shouting is over,iap nour, lordinator of volunteer training, : i : saa World War I on Apr. 6, 1917. Wi R | ti Post ance, etc. . the President's top command will] pt, honeymoons between Pres-Boy Scouts of America, and for- A > ins Relations ros ."" {be found little changed. There igents and Congress are usually/mer Scoutmaster and \ Q—Why was, Louis Philippe, the King of Charles Posner, director of the) THE THING the Truman aids Will be changes but they will be short. {sioner from Odon, Ind., will ad- g France, called the “King of the French”? -_ Q—Where and when did the most destructive Jewish Community Relations keep most mum on is the subject gradual and much fewer than) Thus, it likely will not be long dress the 34th annual meeting of 3 _A—After the revolution of 1830, Louis ®arthquake in history occur? [Council of Indianapolis. has been of possible new taxes. They don’t some people have forecast. until the public again is treated the Central Indiana Scout Council 4 Philippe was recalled to the throne, as “King A—In Tokyo, in 1923. Over 150,000 lives [elected a director of the National refer reporters to the President's ¥ a = {to the now customary spectacle/at 6:30 p, m. Dec. 2 in the North : of the French,” to show that he reigned, not were lost and property damage was estimated | Association of Intergroup Rela- message to the special session off THE SENIORITY system im of a fight between the President/Methodist Church, 38th and Me- ——— 8 by his own right, but by the will of the people. at $4,500,000,000. . tions Officials. . |Congress last summer in which'Congress guarantees the return to'and Congress. ridian Sts. : a
