Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1948 — Page 1

, » no " 3 ah,

ovr er

ERIDIAN

PPL

1

-

50th YEAR—NUMBER 245 4 .

&

fi oy

Irving Leibowitz, Times reporter, gives Army lowdown to John Gambold, Coatesville; James DeMo#t, Lebanon; Joel Malicote; Clayton; William Blessing, Sheridan; Noah Camp, Lebanon; Kenneth Wallace, Sheridan; Charles Hunter, Atlanta, and William Ellison, Jamestown. *

The Indiana)

FORECAST: Cloudy and mild today with temperatures in mid-50’s. Occ asional light rains and colder

Armies May Change, But Old Yak-Yak Never Does a

tomorrow.

Entered as Becond-Class Matter. at Postoffice Indianapolis, Ind, Issued. Daily

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12,1948

Ex. S. Aid

|

Denies Charge

| Never Knew Chambers;

| Star Witness Says NEW YORK, Dec. 11 (UP)— {William /‘Ward Pigman, 38, for mer U. 8. Bureau of Standar

jemployee, today denied “categorically” chgrges by ex-Communist

Same old KP. . . . James DeMott, Lebanon; finds peeling Whittaker Chambers that he gave

i+ was to [secret government information to Chambers or any other person. Pigman's statement was re-

potatoes the same drudgery in the peacetime Army as rookies during wartime,

I's the Same Old Army (Gird for War

-With-Hurry-Up and Waitin Pocta Ricg

Sergeant in World War Il Goes go A To Camp With 8 Hoosier Recruits | Real’ Conflict Seen |

= mei With Nicaragua Donors on Page 3 lever knew the man,” the state- : . “When the “first “group of - Central Indiana draftees left Indl- |. SAN JOSE, Costa Due Dec. 11,” : mrt - ment said. “I further unqualifiedly| (oe wm Aecided that. ‘Wea ee A mittee, anapolis last week to start army training at Camp Breckinridge, (UP)—Provisional President Jose : ~_ By ART WRIGHT ‘deny that 1. have ever given to! “H."JoRSOR supervisor {200-- similar - documents 4he comKy., Times Reporier Irving Leibowitz went with them, It was an [Figueres tonight mobilized every The Times Clothe-A-Child joins hands tomorrow with generous Chambers or to arf other person oF the Valley ‘Cow Testing - Lonittee ebtalhed from. Ne Cham old story to ex-Sergeant Leibowitz, World War II veteran, but it able-bodied man to repel an in- Indianapolis residents to step up one of -the biggest jobs in its 19-'any unauthorized governmental Association discovered the bers last week hus. had some new twists. This. is the first-in a series of excluslve 'vasion from Nicaragua. : year history of clothing needy children. information, I am now appearing trouble. : 1 * : Ha articles in which Mr. Leibowitz describes how Hoosier inductees | He threatened ‘real war”, With only 11 shopping days remaining until’ Christmas eve, it before the grand jury and have “They were pié-eyed,” he <ast ‘Touchy a” discovered the New Army. lagainst Nicaragua, claiming will be necessary to clothe more than 100 under-privileged stionsput-to-me. | coig- ~ifrom eating A E+ Apparently the 21 were the er ee AE wt troops of that country were be- a day to match last year's achievement. . Quits £30,000 Job apples which had fer- ~|l€ast “touchy” of all the papers By IRVING LEIBOWITZ; Times Staff Writer hind the invasion. e I __By- the time the stores closed x x . Mr. Chambers, who resigned’. mented.” {in the - committee's . possession, CAMP BRECKINRIDGE, Ky. Dec. 11—The new streamlined Strict censorship was clamped last evening, 258 youngsters had The Times 1948 . |from_ a $30,000-a-year job as a| = {Te ly Sleatea 1d) publication

Army is the same-old Army with trimmings. fon all communications.

‘been taken to the stores by Times

Only 11 Days Left to Give leased by his attorney. Leslie H. Lift to Clothe-A-Child

a

100 Must Be Outfitted Every 24 Hours ~~~ "Jig the war. «= =o moos . I categorically deny that TI To Match the Achievements

{pleton, Wis., chemist had appeared [vestigating alleged Communist

Ee

[have ever had any dealings with {Whittaker Chambers. or

Isenior editor of Time magazine

olis Times

Secret Papers Given to Reds

Of Spying |

Arps, a short time after the Ap-| {before a federal grand jury in-..

{spy activities in Washington dur:

that Ii

VA Expert Finds Script On Pilfered Note Like Handwriting of Hiss

One Message Revealed Britain Plans

. For Navy and Purchase of Flying Forts WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 (UP)—A secret State Depart« ment message revealing British naval plans on the eve of World War II was among the papers stolen by a Red spy

-. . -4s.ring in 1938, it was disclosed today.

_ A government expert said the message was copied in the handwriting of Alger Hiss. Pree —— 1 Whittaker Chambers, confessed

Cow Jumps Over excourr ior tne wy ring. nas The Moon (Shine) tat copy an

|that copy and other official [ VANCOUVER, B. C. secrets for transmission to the Dee. 11

(UP)—A Fraser {Kremlin. valley farmer near herés “Mr. Hiss, who has denied the didn’t mind when his cows . 1 pa

went out om the occasional | Saturday night binge. But" “rmuiiofices. silt 1BB esc spear The handwritten memorandum was ong 6f.21 secret papers pube lished. today ™hy the House Une

son $15 i when they became so plas[tered they had to be i milked lying down, George

1 'eharge, was a high State Depart-

It moves more slowly perhaps, and it is cushioned with polite] My Figueres’ chief political an- {shoppers and by donors who ex-

MILE-O-DIMES

| {decided they could—-be released { M - . yesterday, had charged Mr. Pig ommentator Says without endangering the national

i along with other former|

~~ + saw them off.

“started playing craps and soon

——the-entire-contingent- took turns. In. Line With Truman

remembers quite: vividly,

~ barracks .

hurry up and wait. i

That's how eight Hoosier dratt- (gy fo Success;

ees and this pudgy reporter, an Fi old Army sarge, found the preinduction set-up at nd the wre Grocer inds

and Army life here at camp. | CHICAGO. Dec. 11. (UP) |

provisional government there.

have reached Liberia after a suc-| cessful landing on the Pacific,

A Nicaraguan Denial | The vanguard of Indiana's first| gtorekeeper Thomas Meder said | gonied Nicaraguan troops had enpeacetime selectees—all in the 24- today he's making money bY sered Costa Rica or helped th year-old .age bracket—wondered cutting butter prices almost in; a H o empt of Costs. Rican only about what the Army Was naif and meat nvasion a P ar going to do with them that brisk, pyousewives. flocked to his store

Dec. T morning at the Army Re gpare ¢ 1 ; : yr criiting Station.. 342 Massachu-| Tore iree-Policemen kept order. tat when Mr. Figueres abolished]

{than $40,000 was spent in 1947 to Invasion troops. Were said to buy this needed clothing. .

| coast. {Christmas morning will depend on

{ In Managua, the government YOU and other kind-hearted resi-

prices 25 per cent. |yeyolytionists. ~ ‘placed on the Mile-O-Dimes. on A government spokesman sald yw Washington 8t. will .be spent.

= This estimate ‘was made at 5:30 p. m, yesterday. Another estimate will be made at 8:30 a. m. tomorrow. . Uniformed® members of Firemen's Post 42 of the

ment employes, were among those Whether the same number of so charged by Mr. Chambers. needy children will be happy on grand Sey Wadleigh : denied the charge. Mr. e American Legion will be on refused to Fi igs confirm theni. duty all day today to receive Mr. Pigman’s. denial came as your dimes in front of L. 8. lsongressional spy busters ease Ayres & Co. and the 8. 8. |thejr feud wich Department of Kresge Co on W. Washing- [Justice investigators by agreeing _ton St. The firemen Will ts Jet a Federal Grand Jury sfudy “man the ‘Mile-O-Dimes 24 {secret documents taken from =a

the contributions received from

ents this week and next.

For every dollar sent to the lothe-A-Child fund or dime

for this needed clothing. - Yeur

Mr. Meder said business had |; Ni , - rt setts Ave., when they were sworn ) : s army 11 days ago, Nicaragua ;. . 8 / hours every day “until |pympkin on Mr. Chambers’ farm. oy when they € SWOT heen slow in his combined butcher raquced its border guardg, Which Son iLIUIGOnS, are lhe omy o way Christmas Eve. PF P Rusien¥ IY “Don't Like Shots’ shop and dairy store. He decided possibly helped the movement oo =" s Seventeen of vour dimes | ushes ny 3 po ae? to decrease his: fnargin of profit nr Costa Rican rebels. ° y h will make a foot of the mile | US Attorney John F. X.-Mec-Understand we get those shots and increase the number of cus-' In Washington, the Costa Ihe time schedule is running \. . 88 feet make @ line . . . |Gohey demanded that the House

William. tomers. He

~in the arms tomorrow,” Ellison, a fireman for the

Riean -ambassador invoked

Ohio bought 40,000 pounds of recently-enacted Rio de

Oil Co. in Jamestown, remarked, butter last week and on Monday mutual defense—treaty to protect NN

“I don’t Ike those shots.” started selling it for 39 cents a his country against the onset. After being assured by Maj. pound. Prices elsewhere . are He described the invasion as a ~N._H. Shortridge. commanding of- around. 89 cents. ficer 6f the Indianapolis recruit- | #5 Rica, ing station, that the Army today HE DROPPED his meat prices is a hep Army—democratic and 0% ~~ iN on TT kindlv—the men boarded a bus I'm content with a profit of 1 for camp. No anxious. relatives Of 2 per cent,” Mr. Meder said.

of its army a few days ago,

our confidence in the Rio treaty.”

is £ uo tbusine why SA SpE reerntte thelr few mitt gn fp) ae iat wen: tary titles—they conducted them-/aoaq 150 persons lo o selves like old soldiers on. the’ mented: -

Ang constantly towards-the north~

Sh E. Camp, a. red-headed “Welt Ws Shout Gime” [Nucleus of An Army | be é ' =Ne — pT —— w—— 2 » farmer boy Vv fT Leb | i They bristled with weapons of or 3 om Lebanon Town of Truman Gets every description, including heavy

and - automatic arms, in large, rolling dice on the rear seaf. TRUMAN, Minn, Dec. 11 (Up) Toantities. eran dice They sang the same old Songs: =8ix “darn good: RH 8 : hid Re SR ee rato) ved | : and told the same old stale jokes. |and two good Democrats left Tru- well trained and armed police! Fore old sarge it was slightl¥iman today on. a. mission to Tru:!force; which was. being used: as. ROSEAIIG. mah, wa the nucleus of th / ‘Hogrever; ft was a far; -far - The bipartisan group, bound —— e reactivated different. reception thése eight for the nation’s capital, hoped to yr —————— 5] rather reluctant draftees received,see President Truman 10. tell him pts than the one this reporter still’that although their nel him Pali Truman voted for Thomas E. ? ‘Mild’ | The darkened, nearly «deserted Dewey in the recent presidential By si Mild Quake buildings. depicted a election, the president has their PALM SPRINGS, Cal, Dee. 11. to the eight new unqualified support. rien Another in a week-long se-

irene

grim picture

Indiana recruits as the bus rolled =~ —————— ———— ries of earthquakes hit Palm into camp. ‘Sins of Fathers’ : | Springs today. Residents reported’ This was sogn dispelled when a, . no damage from the “mild they entered the receiving sta- Cited in GOP Defeat shock.

tion where their new command-| WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 (UP) The quake was recorded at the ing officer, Capt. Jack Conrad, —Former Gov. Alf M. Landon of California Institute of Technology| of Rossville, Tf "was waiting to.Kansas said today “the sins of in Pasadena, where seismologists| greet - them with a rather sur- the fathers being visited op the said their instruments showed it prising—even to thé selectees— children” caused the Republican Was the strongest since last Sat-) word of welcome. ‘lelection defeat in November. urday,. when seven persons were = nity “The people. didn't trust the) injured. : | And Then the Chow Republican party to deal with the, Minor earthquakes have hit “Then came hot chow. now called orice situation,” the 1936 Repub-: Palm Springs and Indio almost] dinner, consisting of pork chops.[ji.an presidential nominee said. ‘daily since then.

carrots, combination salad, bread,

the out for the 1948 Clothe-A-Child. Janeiro That's why YOUR help is fiesdéd’

“Pear! Harbor” attack on Costa tribution to -Clothe-A-Child, Inon the occasion of the abo- dlanapolls Times, 214 W. Mary=

which was done to “demonstrate listed in The Times:

San Jose tonight was a hive TWO-—By laying your coins wd | - 1 ole. A . ) {The Times Mile-0-D : i re gre {“1ts-enough. to. bring :me.2:800d of intense - military activity: Washington St. "O-Dimes on W.9 HIJUIOQ 1UIG

Truckloads - of troops were Jeax. J

THREE—BY. telephoning RI g__ o Knnteln em long, ‘com: orn frontier from concentration 0001 4nd asking for an amin. 1 Auto Ace {House rules, however. . . The Grand Jury sat in an- ex-|

{Committee on Un-American ac-

( i 5 . as.a 60. lines. make & mile... & 4100 submit to the Grand Jury,

mile is worth $8976. More

OW. A - CE rr than a mile will be needed

OW... in any of these three ways: ae - -

# again this year to clothe ” : & ONE—By sending a cash con- the increased number of witch, od alleged 10 have pees needy Clothe=A=Child —chit-— 0 ver to yr. { y

government employees.

Wadleigh, former State Depart-|

They also appeared before the ay. Mr. Hiss has

‘pending a final decision on whether there would be any such danger in making them publie, even at this late date, Acting Chairman Karl 3 (R. 8. D.) said he will call Mr, Hiss to the witness stand next week, as soon .as the accuséd man has finished his testimony before a federal grand jury in New York. x

Radio's Elmer Davis

Gives Address Here The nation is in for 20 years of international ‘fender - bumping” Hin-a- War on our nervous systems [rather than our-economic system,

{

{Elmer Davis, silver-haired radio ‘commentator, told an informal Igathering at the Indianapolis {Press Club last night. The commit bpensed L.Mr. Davis, here to address the Mp Hiss, nities has subpsnaed Indiana Society of Pioneers -atipDonald, another ex-State o De= {the Claypool’ Hotel, said that the partment employes, and William lonly” thing that hasn't changed Ward Pigman, a one-time ehems |was the public appetite for bridge jst at the National Bureau of paymg. : {Standards. Mr. Chambers ae- | g-Lived Philosophy [cused all three of stealing secret tHe said the millions Who in.reé- government documents for - him

a

= rh be! + Ee bridge columnist) all put their| T° hE fase. the war |téachings into practice, or try to.| Avowed Red That, he said; was about the only] Mr. Mundt told reporters the

Sp and solicitous officers to make the recruit feel he’s almost ¢ao0nist, Dr. Rafael Angel Cal- perienced the thrill of taking the man uman. J |deron Guardia, was reported at Clothe-A-Child children to the : : : security or the conduct of fore ‘But basically. it's the same military operation for a-bewildered ine porder-awaiting werd to pro- Stores themselves. —.Nine-Day Estimate er a] : : © eign relations. : __youngster making the transitin ——— —————————==—"—=/,00q to Liberia, some 50° miles| Last year 1341 children were 23 Full Lines ~.$3440.80 Communist spies. > 0 But about half the Chambers from civilian to soldier. Always, Butchering Prices Iinside Costa Rica, to set up a outfitted at Christmas time. More, 0 rh Suri dd stad SX Alger Hiss and Henry Julian, a —. papers still are being withheld,

Isitting in New York,-Microfilms cent years have studied the teach- dried Soviet 2 8 die Leatnl” when - WW a - ‘of —State-Department documents jnog of Kasley Blackwood (Times BRA SE S00 yas : a

+i

dren hoping Tor your" hetp; [" A short. time later, House ¢om-

land St. Your contribution rs mittee Member. Rep. zRichard M.

will be

let the Grand Jury inspect the microfilms Monday. He sald he

ment as a donor. Donors are those persons or organizations who . f : i " |traordinary Saturday session: 1 take Clothe-A-Child children-to| Three - persons were wind up its rr by the the stores and spend their own two seriously, in separate traffiC (;.. its 18-month term is over eid to outfit them with warm jceidents Jast might == CiWednestaY np FE Oscar Williams, 70, of $03 N.. Any indictments probably will pors yesterday were . e v e returned at that time, it was hast to a total of 19 -children. California Bt. was Strack by a indicated, but it appeared likely Times shoppers took other -chil- DIt-Fun taxi cab at the intersét~1ys probe would be turned-over-to dren to the stores to bring -this-tton—ef-Bt.Clair.and. West Sis. a new. Grand Jury...

injured,

~|Nixon, (R. Cal), sald he Would'h, resided here.

could not give thé jury actual cus= ;tody: of them: because: of “the,

thing he finds approximately ree-|committee knows the Identity of ognizable as’ it used to be when one of the photographers who “Mr. Davis said he saw a long made microfilms of the stolen llite for the New Deal. © |State Department papers for the Mr. Davis called ‘the New Deal] Comnitnist network. + [not. die.” |Communist who appeared recentHe said the Nov. 2 elections! 3 \proved that trends of government jury 7 Tne uy Yor X hand [since 1933 were not the work of a!” But Mr. Mundt said he doesn't :single man nor a reaction to a plan to subpena him, because “he‘eatastrophe:— === probly §— =the -ssme— Hoover the Pioneer {ine as the other Communists and Herbert Hoover pioneered the! refuse to answer questions on the New Deal theory with the Fed- grounds of self-incrimination.” feral” Reconstruction Finance Cor-| Few diplomatic bombshe TPGEALOn,- MT... Davis said... The! wepe: contained -in the 21 secret

rer wr —

»

year's. total to’ I58 children ijic left leg was broken. General clothed. : ~ Hospital officials . reported’ his —20 in—One. Loto 4ftion—as serious.

Love Oblivious,

n [ i Springs fo Jarred fod 5 ~The. Jargest. @roup six eh Lia fawoncar. accident at E.. New, J u st H of 4 5 H an ds y

dren—taken to the stores by york and Rural Sts. seriously indonors. was’ the guest of em- jyred Helen Gorman, 45. of 3001 ployees of the George I. Maver g. Washington St. She was a As Bar Is Held U Stamp Co. Among . the other passenger in an automobile diiven r= donors were ‘he tall girls of the hy George A. Fredrick, 25, of 2179 Ski-Hi Club. N, Temple Ave, who escaped in- young couple sat close together Slated to take the biggest group jury. in a tavern booth, holding hands out tomorrow is Local 145 of Police said the car ‘driven by and listening to the radio play the Amalgamated Clothing Mr. Frederick collided with one|“A Slow Boat to China.” | Workers of America and other driven hy Charles G. Ross, 65, A holdup man entered, pointed employees of the Kahn Tailoring of 5501 University Ave., who also a revolver at bartender Arturo Co. They -will take 20 children escaped injury. Soldero and scooped $100 from the to the stores and spend funids{ Mrs. Nell Ross, 51, riding with cash register. Then he herded raised in a collection at the firm. her husband, is in” “fair” condi-|Mr. Soldero and two men sitting Other employee groups and in- tion at Methodist Hospital with | dividuals are slated to make their leg injuries. annual trip ‘to the stores with Police arrested Mr. Clothe-A-Child children this week. charges of reckless driving.

NEW YORK, Dec. 11 «(UP)—A

= |locked the door. Ross ont a nw» A FEW fninutes later, Mr. Soldero dashed up from the cellar. “Which way did the holdup man go?” he asked the couple.

at the bar into the basement and, _

{New__Deal “adopted government diplomatic . papers released for {intervention to help the poor, he! publication. rexplained, along -the-same-lines The papers were part of a cache jused to. help the rich in times of turned over last week to the comfinancial “crises a sabecdhaitted by Mr Chambers, avowed Although . the - congressional! courier for a Soviet spy ring bee elections of 1946 indicated that fore- World War II. He had ree the -New--Deal-had-run-is-course moved —them a—p with the death of President shell on the Maryland farm and Roosevelt, the November elec- surrendered them to’ buttress his tions proved that what has been defense against a $75,000 slander going on since 1933 has not been suit’ filed -by Mr. Hiss, whom he the work of a single man, ‘Mr. i Davis sald. . (Continued on Page 2 —Col. 1)

£3 rom

On the Inside

..Page 2.

Back Home Again in Indiana. ..:....covvununns (General news and features, Pages 2 to 16) “A Christmas Card” . , . a picture story......... Page 17, (Women's news, society, clubs, fashions, teen talk, Pages 18 to 32)

“political: philosophy: "that willl 57 kif the man 1s an avowed

Safe To Eat... Unless Spud Explodes

butter, coffee and coffee cake. It's Weary and still slightly sus-|

“What holdup man?” said the Hoosier atom smashers.........

picious, the eight Hoosier recruits| bedded down to the soothing notes| of Taps, played by a mechanical bugle. : | When _the..first_Insistent notes]

of reveille broke out in the morn-|

ing, the recruits began an intensive period of processing with time-outs for close order drill. Our group of eight Hoosier) reeruits-—Bill Blessing of Sheri-| dan, Jim MeMott of Lebanon, Charles Hunter of Atlanta, Joel Malicote of. Clayten, Kenneth Wallace of Sheridan, Bill Ellison] of Jamestown, Noah Camp of Lebanon and John Gambold of Coatesville—anxiously went forth to learn a new occupation. They were greeted by a gruff, . pre-war version of the old sarge. “Now_look you guys, he be-| gan, “when I say left...” | This is where I came in. NATIONALLY FAMOUS FOR FINE FOOD FAMOUS FOR STEAK FOR ARS Charley's Restanrant, 144 E. Ohio—Adr,

A

Accidents Will Happen—Even Experts Slip, And=Well, Read On at Your Own Risk

CHICAGO, Dec. ‘11 (UP)—Strange accidents in which a potato exploded in a housewife’s face and a cigaret shot a man

were described today by a safety expert who slipped on the ice and broke his arm while en route to work. The accidents were listed in the National Safety Council's

report on the year's odd happenings. .

The report was prepared by Paul Jones, director of public information for the council, who listed himself among the accident victims, He completed a paper last winter on how to be careful, slipped on the ice on his driveway as he headed for

I the office, and broke him arm.

“I even sprinkle salt on ice cubes now,” Mr, Jones said. Mrs. Alfred S8wauger, Ravenna, O., was the ‘victim of the

[ yam - that - went - wham. She

baked a sweet potato in the oven, The potato, apparently

was watery because steam built up within the skin. When she opened the oven door the potato exploded in her face. She wasn’t bruised but suffered a bit from the. shock. ’

4 Ld = ~ THE VICTIM of the cigaret shooting was James ' Drager, Beloit, Wis. He placed a lighted cigaret on an ash tray and settled back to read his newspaper. The cigaret get off a bullgt that ‘had been left in the ash tray and Mr. Drager was shot in the arm. '

7

“No other cigaret can make that statement,” the council's report aid. Then there was the case of the bathtub that slipped and fell ona man. Andrew Anderson, Oakland, Cal., was driving past a truck on a highway near Gilroy, Cal., wheh the truck hit a chuckhole. Three bathtubs slipped off the truck and crashed through Mr. Anderson's car. One hit Mr. Anderson and he was treated for bruises. Ed Taylor, Matewan, W. Va, was a victim of a head-hunting steam shovel. He spent 30 minutes with his head locked 'n the shovels bucket.

” ” ” WHEN MR. TAYLOR parked his ear in Matewan, the boom of a nearby clam shell power shovel swung around, and knocked down a utility polé. A network of telephone wires fell on top of Mw Taylor's car .

Ld

As he stuck his head out to see what was. going on, the clam shell slipped down, snappgd its jaws and locked up Mr. Taylor's head and shoulders in the bucket. When rescuers got him out they found that he was scratched and shocked but not injured seriously. One of the odd accidents was caused by curiosity, the council reported. ; “In Pasadena, Cal, Mrs. Elizabeth Knudsen arrived at a railroad crossing to find the wig - wags wig - wagging full tilt,” the council said. | “Intrigued, she drove-on the | tracks to see what was coming. It was a train, of all things. She backed up hastily, but the locomotive , caught the front bumper of her car, Mrs. Knud-

girl. (Editorials, World Report, politics, radio, movies, Pages 34 to 48) {Butler, Purdue, IU, ND Netters Win ......s..ss Page. 49 (Sports, Pages 48 to 54; business news, Page 55) . (Classified advertising, Pages 56 to 64)

Looking for

Outstanding Other Features on Inside Pages VALU Eb 5 ? | AMUSeMeNnts vovevessesess 46, 47 Mrs. Manners ...seesssevess 31 Ns, BeAULY ++csnessesessssacscss 26 Movies ‘esrsassenssanne 7 Bridge ..... vesesinesarasass 28 Needlework .evsesssssivenes 31 ® On the Want Ad pages Business ...... vevsnsressess D5/ODItUATIEs .iiligiriiienness 13 of todav’'s Sunday Times Capital Capers "cevessssennas 28 0thman vovvev rs yvarsvrases 37 you will find a wide va- (Childs ...coocevves terevns. 34 Parliamentary Law ..ooeeess 28 riety of really ‘good val- (Classifiied ....oooveidiaes 56-63 Pattern .....eeeiieisennsnes 31 ues. There are outstand- Clubs Ceeeees epee in resnnnei 29 Radio: 1esserslfutivsvirets 44 ing buys in homes, furni- Bdiorials Crees aressereatuee 3 Fo State coiiiennnsnniane u nv ABNIONS seven sessdIsasnsnss O + FANE ANS ANNAN ERNRRA Ey boats. Food ...u.eud Bvenenssssasens 24 SCHEITEr .ivvisirinnnsvaqnes M4 i : . i Foreign Affairs’ v.eesessssess 35/8CR00I8 .overiviraavansnnnes 38 ng materials, musical in- ‘Forum ' y ¥ 34 Sports i 49-54 stiuisents, Deis. atolmos GATAEDING -vasxssranensssens 20ITOON PAGE | .vsssnssnavan 20:28 miscellaneous articles Meta GIVEN svevesvenovsnans 24 Teen Problems ..cseessensns 20 Re . {Hollywood sesanssdesivesses 471581 Wilson cernsnnsbneesnss 48

® Turn now to the Want [Home Page .....cceissssiss 27 WOMEN'S .iiicsavavnoness IT:3L

Ad pages in the Sport

sen, her curiosity satisfied, was unhurt.” : dis

{Tnside Indianapolis sansa SH Waid Affairs weesssssrsvans Junior, Page ././.coseencesas 43 WOr REPORL"S cussaenudibon

# \

Section,

i.