Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1949 — Page 17

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‘SELLING ON commission was a great disappointment to me at the Butler Fieldhouse. Something Is wrong, friends. be You undoubtedly have heard stories about expense accounts, fabulous commissions, big deals, blowout conventions and the like, haven't you? Well, from now on, be careful. Take half of what yop hear with a grain of salt. This may be unfair to salesmen as a group, but I don’t care, Cracker Jack sold at the sectional tourney about ‘as fast as you'd expect ice Shes to sell at a kayak regatta at the North ole, Speaking of ice cubes, I think business would have been better with them. And if 1 could have had them flavored alittle with grape or cherry, look out. They would have gone hand over fist. But Cracker Jack, ! . Wally Middlesworth, Butler line coach and head man of the Walter Middlesworth Concessions Co., loaded my little red cardboard box‘ with Cracker Jatk as if it was the hottest item in the place.

Wanted Something Else

MY FELLOW hawkers, attired in red baseball caps and yellow sport shirts, gaily loaded up with ice cream bars, cokes, orange and grape drinks, peanuts and pop corn. My plan for high sales was to cover as much territory as possible as fast and loudly as possible in the Fieldhouse. With a full house of exuberant basketball-crazy fans, a man ought to bé able to sell anything. Certainly the youngsters want something other than their fingernails to chew on, I told myself, ’ You know, they did. The rub, however, was

"Hot item” . +. A Cracker Jack salesman finds the going tough ‘at the sectional in the Butler Fieldhouse.

Inside Indianapolis -

_ Cracker Jack,” said Wally,

By Ed Sovola

©

# Tr > : ; ore Fong »

Ton 1h oe

3 i s

they wanted something other than Cracker Jack as a rule,

. SECOND SECTION When I yelled “Cracker Jack,” the echo would

come back, sometimes twice as loud, “Ice Cream” : or “Coke.” There was a simple explanation which al Ver dSe came to me after about an hour. The temperature in the Fieldhouse stood pretty close to the boiling Non point. (My estimate.) : . However, do the best with what you have has often been my motto. Cracker Jack was my mer- | chandise and I had agreed to sell it for the E Walter Middlesworth Concession Co., commissio

n oo. and mostly to see what a candy butdher's life | was at a rip-roaring sectional, | . The first thing I found out was that watching the game was difficult if you wanted to do business. I guess that's where the old saying Parolee Admits Bank “Mind your own business” came from. Robbery in Kentucky, Another thing, watching the expressions of "Links Ma the rooters as they were seized with convulsions in Missing n about every 15 seconds during playing time, was Times State Service difficult, too. CORYDON, Feb, 25-Southern Between games and during the half, move-'Indiana authorities today continment with a big cardboard box was practically ued their hunt for Thomas Van. impossible in the aisles, passageways and tunnels. diver and his missing family, unThe noise in the place made hawking rather use-| certain of whether they sought a less. A megaphone would have helped but a por-|fugitive or a murder victim. table public address. system would have been| Willlam D. Messamore, paroled better, Kentucky ex-convict who has A young fellow, ¥ took him for a first half|been questioned several weeks in freshman, gave me some anxious moments, He connection with the vanished

raised his arm and announced he wanted one|family, last night broke down and

box. T handed him a BOX and waltéd Tor the cash.|confessed the $19,000 robbery of Waited and waited. ’ a Kevil, Ky. bank last August, He fumbled in his overall pants pockets while |Paming the missing Vandiver as 1 was jostled in the aisle by the crowd. If the|OM¢ of his accomplices. maRings for malted milks were in my cardboard] It Was not the confession box I'm sure the buffeting T received would have|2Uthorities had expected. They

have been questioning Messamore been sufficle t mil Ce ht to go Into the malted Ik with the theory that Vandiver,

i ‘ {his wife and 16-year-old step‘Another Nickel, Mac’ | daughter have been slain po FINALLY, my customer handed me a coin. It that Messamore has some knowlwas a nickel. Before he had a chance to rip the edge of the crime. top off 1 had him by his skinny arm. “Another| May Be ‘Hiding Out’ nickel, Mac.” For a long time I had my doubts Eugene Feller, prosecuting atwhether he had another nickel. 1 would have 'orney of Harrison County, said felt like a heel if it had come to the point where that Vandiver, whom Messamore I would have had to get my merchandise back. claims “short-changed” him in diEven at that, after I pocketed the second nickel, Vision of the loot, might be “hidsorheone hit me in the head with a hot dog n8 out. wrapper. This, he said, would explain why Fathers with small children, and there weren't the family had failed to come formany, bought a couple boxes off me. Students who [Ward after nation-wide publicity couldnt get anything else or who had already °P their disappearance, eaten everything else, bought my product noncha- | lantly. I'm not even going to tell you how many| Lig 3 how wun oie. I'll let the COM said Messamore's statement that ~ When I got back to the concession office, I De Heated him ou o the told Wally, James C. Courtney, Wally’s partner. | motive for murder.” perfec and Martin Gebhardt, one of the supervisors, what| Messamore startled questionI thought of the Cracker Jack business at theiery yesterday with the statement: sectional. - “1 want to get something off my All three agreed in part that on hot nights chest.” His story of the bank the cold items were the hot sellers. Double talk, robbery followed. I got, while losing money. .

James Wall, another of the few who got stuck | a ; with Cracker Jack, stood squarely behind me. arl- utue S. f

“Some nights guys do terrific business with | » Nose in to Win

samore still is being questioned on the “foul play” theory. H

It'll be a cold night when I try it again.

Mr. Bloom Clicks

By Frederick C. Othman Long Shot Canters i Home on 2d Trip

+ WASHINGTON, Feb. 25—Poor old (he looked much older than when he was mowing down little pigs) Henry Wallace had no friends on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. Democrats snarled at him. So did Republicans. And nobody agreed that we ought to junk the European recovery program and sit down for a heart-to-heart talk with Joe-Stalin. When the argument got hot, as it did every couple of minutes, there came an annoying clickety-click-click to interrupt the train of thought of the man who also ran for president. I mean my favorite inventor was on the job. Fellow by the name of Sol Bloom. Long-time Congressman from New York. Statesman. Diplomat. Chairman of the committee and the man who would replace in Congress the lusty whang with gentle fap. He doesn't like gavels. Consjders them a waste of lumber, effort and eardrums.

Gadget Looks Like Thimble AND THERE in front of him on the blue baize table was an especially magnificent gavel carved from a dead tree that had been planted by George Washington, personally. The Hon. Sol Ignored it. He seated witness Wallace under an outsized crystal chandelier and reached in his pocket for the Sol Bloom patent plastic gavel eliminator. This was a device which looked like a black thimble. He fitted it on his right index finger and the committee was ready for businness, The gray-haired Mr, Wallace (in one of those blue doublebreasted suits that fit him only in occasional places) read a 10-page statement. There seemed to be not a thing in it with which any committeeman agreed. And there was a Rep. Abraham A. Ribicoff, a new man from Connecticut, wondering out loud whether Mr. Wallace used Communistic methods

in his efforts to make friends and infuence people. Pari-mutuel betting’ won by a Mr. Wallace's face turned white. {nose in the second heat. - “Are you intimating that I am a Communist?”| when it cantered to the Genhe demanded. {er } “I'm asking the questions,” snapped the gentle-| U Assun Y Dost Testerday Sos man from Connecticut. Clack-clack-clackety-|, o.,,, bettin th ou clack went Mr, Bloom's thimble on the mahogany, °° 8 3 arse, dog and rim of the table. He shushed Mr. Ribieoff; then .'WO°F "acs in Indiana, was he shushed Mr. Wallace. The clacks turned to|. long shot winner” in a 51 to clicks. . - . Mr. Wallace went on to say under questioning! On Wednesday, House memby most of the members that he didn’t like com- bers turned thumbs down on the munism; said he preferred capitalism, but pre- Measure when they voted 46 to ferred his own brand. 44 vote. The measure failed to

Smiles for First Time pass because of lack of the 51.

vote consti . “YOU MEAN,” inquired the courtly legislator | Rep. Wisienal majority ‘New from New Jersey, Charles A. Eaton, “that YOU Harmony) author of the bill find only one fault with our capitalism, namely: who refused to accept first defeat there aren't enough capitalists?” las final. - said wh he “Exactly,” said Mr. Wallace, smiling for the ;° “ eo : brougnt first time. He said, midst numerous clicks and| =." “0 oe ine for a interruptions, that the ECA was spending billions| W% ave no particto no good end and that at the very least the rest in horse racing or spending thereof should be under the auspices of >¢'ting. I'm only using this bill the United Nations. tas a vehicle to help pay the bonus “But it is,” cried Mr. Bloom. “It says right !0 Hoosier veterans.” here in the preamble . ..” Leads Opposition “Those are just words,” said Mr. Wallace, Leader of the opposition atsheathing his horn-rimed eyeglasses. “The ECA tempting to kill the bill was Rep. has nothing to do with the UN. Words, just Benjamin .E. Buente Jr. (D Danwords.” ville), who charged the measure Mr. Bloom went clack. He went click. He was inspired and fostered by the took a deep puff of smoke from his cheroot and “professional gambler who fills he exploded: “Just words, hey? Well, then, that's his pockets at the expense of all we've had here today. Just words.” {those who do not care or do Mr, Wallace started to reply, but the clickety- | not have the intelligence to know clack of Mr. Bloom's successor to the gavel made they can't profit by gambling.” him think better of it. He gulped, instead. He said he had a great deal of contempt for the professional

Ritzy St. Moritz

gambler, and added, “If you pass

By William McGaffin! ths bill, petty gamblers and

|acketeers will, In the next two years infiltrate every office In

ST. MORITZ, Switzerland, Feb. 25—This is the only town I'vé even been in where they pay people to scoop snow onto the streets instead of off. There is good Swiss business sense behind this apparently zany practice. Ong of the romantic attractions of this picturesque- winter resort are the horse and sleigh taxis. : The good Lord has been stingy with the snow @ver these parts this winter—so stingy that unless man took a hand, there would not be enough snow in the streets for the sleighs to slide over. Hence, the curious sight of gangs of workmen

riding about with trucks full of snow that they

soberly shovel off into the streets.

Good for Shoe Shops .. *.... THE SLICK streets make business for the shoe shops as well as the sleigh taxis. If you try to walk on the streets in the leather soled shoes you arrive in, you're apt to find yourself paying more out for a doctor bill than the price of rubber-soled shoes to keep you from falling. So you hie yourself to a shoe shop and buy a pair of the prescribed shoes—telling yourself fiercely that at 20 bucks they're cheaper than a broken leg. Of course, once you're in the shoe shop you find that you must buy not one but two pairs of shoes. One pair are ski boots, made expressly to fit your skis. And rubber-soled so that you can stand on the slick streets when not skiing. Ideal all around shoes, you tell yourself. But, no. The clerk carefully explains they are too heavy to wear éxcept when skiing. For after skiing, you must have a pair of “apres ski boots” (after ski boots) —lighter weight so that you can also dance in them at the daily tea dances at your hotel. |

* ing lessons it would cost $2.50 a time!

‘very convenient

It's not only the lighter weight, monsieur, it is! the state house.” also the fashion. Nobody would be seen dead . De bill now moves to the

Senate where it is not likely to wearing heavy ski boots at a tea dance. 80 shall receive a warm reception. I wrap up both pairs? Thank you very much. | [EE — } One hundred and twenty-five dollars later vou 8 } } -C finally are outfitted for skiing—not counting the World Flier Hopes rent of skis at $2.50 a week, and lessons at $1.15 Hitchhike Helps a time. Sti, though, you tell yourself, think of!

the money I'm saving. If I were taking ice skat-| ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Feb.

|Tait, the English housewife who

. attempted to fly around the world, Orange Juice 70 Cents {sald today she would hitch-hike

THE WONDER¥UL thing (from the Swiss by plane to Seattle next week to point of view) about taking a vacation in this/raise money to continue her flight. place is the chain reaction effect it has op your| Mrs. Morrow-Tait was stranded pocketbook. You think vou've finally got all the here last November when her incidentals out of the way and you start to ski. plape crash-landed near Tok Then vou find this makes you thirsty—and|Junction after she had circled there's nothing in the world that will quench your three-quarters of the globe. She

thirst but orange juice. So you hurry over to the did not have money to repair the ski lodge and order a double shot of pure orange |°Taft. ) juice (to make sure they don't water it), It's The plane. a surplus English air

force craft, is stored in Edmon-

ton, Al ta. Don berta

delicious—at 70 cents a throw!

Even royalty is not immune to crackups. L = Juan; pretender to the throne of Spain, broke his . leg onthe run a few days ago—and was whisked Swaps a Typewriter

back to his room at the palace by the efficient For $12,800 Rubens

ski patrol. } LONDON, Feb. 25 (UP) — Of course, here again you get the chain re- pfonry Eric Wells, a sales man-

action. Your bad luck. if you break your leg. ser whose art appreciation runs means business for the doctors. The doctors are second to his luck. saw a paintOne knocked on my door within ing he liked in a Reading anan hour after I arrived in the hotel® He said, tique shop. “Did you call me?” 1 said, “Not yet.” . Three. He told the antique dealer he days later I summoned him—not for a broken leg would trade. him an old typebut to cure me of tfe flu. writer for the “nude stabbing herself” in the window,

The Quiz Master

The painting turned out.to be

22? Test Your Skill 2272s Coinage ing naceers ron

/the love of Aeneas.

Who introduced the custom of the 5ld and new - Presidents riding together to the capital for the Inauguration? ; Ce This custom was first introduced by Martin Van Buren. On the way up, Jackson sat on the right side, And on the way down, Van Buren sat - on the right. This seating arrangement has heen followed since. rhe ¢ & .

“If a person states he has not been to Delphi, what is the reference? 1 He means that he does not know all the an-

* "swers. Delphi was a place in ancient Greece

famous for its temple and oracle of - Apollo. Seekers of igformation made journeys to the + temple i ;

a

Si A Bond Street art gallery has How long does it take to make a cloud? offered Wells $12,800 for it. It may take anywhere from a few minutes to'y , #3 several hours. With fair weather cumulus clowds, 17108 10 End Life , the first faint traces may be visible a few seconds But Changes Mind after condensation starts, though four-five min: NEW YORK, Feb. 25 (UP) utes ‘may be required before it grows to a good James Lawrence, 63. tottered into size’. Several. bours may be taken for the growth a police station clutching a bloody of a big thunderstorm cloud. rag to his throat, e ¢ ¢ “I tried to commit suicide two days ago,” he whispered, “but I Are there any animals that hibernate in sum- just wouldn't die.” nl, mer? ; Police found a gash’ in his The word hibernate carries the idea of winter. There are some creatures, as certain that was slashed. He was sent to a pass the summer in a torpor. This Is known as hospital-for treatment and obestivation, " « 8 .

.

|

He added, however, that Mes-|

(25 (UP)—Mrs. Richard Morrow-

throat and each of his wrists!

| award at Butler.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1949 i VER pe Camera Catches Crowd of 9000 at Ice-O-Rama

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Here's how the crowd packed the Coliseum last night for Times Phelagrapher John Spicklemire perched to take this pice The Times 1949 Ice-O-Rama. Except for behind the stage, where ~ ture, seats were sold out,

Senators Try Out 600 Amateur Skaters Star Four Languages In Annual Polio Fund Show

Little Kids, Ensembles Steal Night Used in Debate In Times Extravaganza at Coliseum On Conservation

By HENRY BUTLER | The United Nations has not The third annual Times Ice-O-Rama last night drew more moved from Lake Success to In-

than 9000 persons to the Coliseum. diana's State House.

That's not including the cast of 600 to appear in the amateur ice show penefiting n But visitors to the state Senate Paralysis Fund. way” narrowly missed Indiana chambers yesterday thought it’ Don't let anybody think it's a cinch to build up a spectacular; arly today when four mem

might have. - —— show like that with so many kids Of & Marshall, Ill, family were hotly debated i i vated Admits Slaying

Aut, Tuck Cras Kill 4 in Family

Girl, 14, Survives inois Accident

the largest group vei, tragic “murder on the high

the Infantile

Four senators doing elaborate routines. Solo-| Killed in an Ale INCH Areal, the merits of a conservatio ists, who incidentally are getting, S*VI"& age in four different languages while

‘better each year, besides adding|PRARS. sedate colleagues and visitors /new recruits, can be counted on. | roared approval. It was just al | But the little kids and the en-| 0 gag. | |sembles—they're the unsung | Sen. Leo J. Stemie (D. Jasper) ‘heres and heroines. Last night pio S671Y WAS CINE Served tn {argued against any change in! again they stole the show, The dead are: {the department in fluent German. | k Delight Spectators : [Cries of “Seig Hell, Seig Heil” | You'll never see anything more, Commodor Myles, 43. |arose from the floor. | appealing than the beginners,| Dorothy Myles, 34. | He was supported by Sen. Ed-| pint-sized and beautifully cos-| pagal Myles, 9. {mund Makowski (D, East Chi- (tumed. Even their occasional Sandra Myles, 6. cago) who spoke in Polish. He awkwardness was graceful in a, w nat SAR yielded to Sen. Louis Baldoni; (Way that older youngsters and| 0h SSTOUS SORAIUEM AT St Ar (D. South Bend), Who opposed (trained skaters no longer can be.| faony Honpita) Terre Haute is the measure in Italian. |And every time a kid made a Donua Myles 14, enly survivor of |good come-back from a mistake the crash, family was en lor tumble, the audience practi- Toute to Marshall from Terre ‘cally roared its delight. Haute, where they had been visit | This year's team of soloists, IDE relatives. The fatal tragedy

| happened at 2 a. m. and Indiana {including some veterans of pre- ¢ vious Ice-O-Ramas, did the most State Police assisted Tilinois aus

‘brilliant work yet. Caroline Ann thorities in investigating the ac-

| ident. . , . { Watters, Evelyn Everett, Shirley|® cpa Roberts, Stuart and Jacque La-| Another member of the family,

: ‘Otto, 18, had ‘remained in Mar. e, Virginia Meyers, John po Ei icbrenner. Miry Maloy (a "hall to attend & high school basw z skater for. one Who has Same, PE

>

Sen. Samuel E. Johnson (R.! Anderson) spoke in favor of the proposal in English. | The measure, which would es-! tablish a merit system in the conservation department, passed by a vote of 27 to 19. despite the fact the senators had ‘no interpreters,

Birthday Party

| fessed to the bludgeonMonths Ahead | sirimied to Wr Cini May Be Her Last | wife 17. Mrs. Lillian Sells’ bat- ! tered Jody was found in a corn-

: - - - Kornafel, Jack Barker, Paul van, dispute in the imeSPRINGV ILLE, Utah; Feb. 25 field w onesdey. __. __ Vorhees (virtuoso skater), Nancy! stone dapute Lhe Minna. Mme OE) Sect Aya Martin had =» Ga sina Project Woods, Mary McClean, Wesley ¢joq here before labor and manay party yesterday. Hou dy, Eleanor Ann Bond, birthday party Yesterd ry 9 | Reedy ean |agement representatives complete

Charles Boring, Cynthia Hanson,' Cecelia won't be five years old Gets FHA Approval {rharies ng, Cy ‘negotiations for a

"She slapped mi | Sells, 39.year-eld

factory worker, late yesterday learned in a year), Rhonda Rep-

chett, Wiliam Garwood, Billy Single Wage Dispute Woods, Betsey Todd, Herbert Brokaw, Betty Luethge, Patty Left in Stone Area

Beott, Constance Evans. Karl! gg ally Hand ingle Z

two-year

til May 14. but she is d Approval Of & Thunit rental J0AR Meyers ang Janet: Burks un ay 14. but she is dying of “unit r head—all these young people 1 leukemia and her parents decided housing project in Gary for jo amazing talent. M. J. Morgan, president of the

to let her have the party now, World War II veterans and their ~ , 2 {r 1. mav have omitted Indiana Limestone Institute, said She had spaghetti. meatballs families was announced foday bY yone names of skaters who did 121. .cent hourl increases, ha and bapanas for her birthday R. Earl Peters. state director of brief specialties, there are still " y ' ve dinner. But she didn't get the the Indianapolis office of the , =. by ith talent who been signed with six of the seven : “hundreds w a J radio and record player she Federal Housing Administration. ooo. ably mention here 008 crafts. in the Lawrencewanted The project is the 68th for vet- POSAIbA TE. Monroe-Owen County belt. ie fried . ) ’ That's the wonderful thing about! The blacksmiths’ union is the Her father, Robert Martin, had ¢rans’ rental housing approved by =. © 1 106 0-Rama—it's a only organization which has not - been unemployed for months, but the Indianapolis insuring office )

he got a job recently as a machin. Under the FHA Veterans Emer- school for talent, Next yeard yet reached” an agreement with . ist at the Kaiser-Frazer blast gency Housing program, accord- sho 4 x {the industrial relations commit. furnace. ists out of the chorus ranks. tee. The union has been offered

ing to Mr. Peters. | i * x = “Enterprise Grows {an 18%; -cent Increase above the

BUT TUESDAY night her Truman to Place Stone . A great deal of credit goes to 1948 scale of $1.40 an hour, ace

: Mrs. Norma Koster, director; cording to Mr, Morgan. father was one of 200 men laid 8 ead istant off. He said it “almost broke ma Of UN H quarters Mra, Davey Sinien, aa

: LAKE SUCCESS. N. Y., Feb, 25 director (both of the Park and Crippled Sus Lams Te amt oe oan 0rd he () ruin Truman wil ny Recreation deparmen. and Mrs 3 PCE SEE SE The guests at aye a arty the cornerstone of the new United Sherman McClean. choreo- u cape-Pre were her seTents any heir ivy Nations permanent headquarters grapher, for areaming up this| NASHVILLE, Tenn., Feb. 25 other children.’ There was a cake °° the East River in Manhattan biggest and best Ice-O-Rama yet. (UP)-—Three months ago James with five candles : Apr: 10, it was announced today. Routines, costumes, lighting. Floyd Philpott broke both’ his iii eign oo UN Sepretary-General Trygve staging—the entire production legs when he jumped from a sec= u . Lie told a press cofnéfrence that was a knock-out. ~~ =v “ond-s “hotel window in North = . S. Bars Fritz Kuhn both Mr. Truman and Dr. Herbert| My colleague Art Wright, asLittle Rock, Ark. in an attempt WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (Up) Evatt of Australia. president of master of ceremonies, shared, so to elude police who wanted himy Justice Department officials the General Assembly, will speak to speak, the podium with Ed on burglary charges. i said today Fritz Kuhn, former A! the ceremony. Resener, the Jge-O-Ramus Sevie| Otmoers suught nis and trang: German-American Bund leader, “an. zky. Both the announcing and 0 ‘‘escapewill not be allowed to come on So Solly. [the orchestra were excellent. And| Davidson County jail here with = o this country. Kuhn, 53-year- TOKYO, Feb. 25 (UP)--The 1 want to commend Jane Feezle, Wik his legs in casts. A a x old pre-war “feuhrer” of the census burewu apologized .ioday soprano, who sang an admirable| Yesterday Philpott shed his bund, was {reed from a German for listing Sentaro Suematsu, 119, version of Victor Herbert's basta and Sachped from the seve prison earlier thik week: ‘wfter as the oldest person th Japan. de Italian Street Song in_the DI in oor pt owering Simae if on w serving two years of a 10-year turned out to be a “young man’ number. “A Merry Life, which! ml ked 3 floor, sentence for Nazi activities of 16. | ® opened Act. IL an unlocked. portion of the ql,

We | The Ice-O-Rama was produced His brother-in-law, Joe Maness, Sigma Nus Get Scholarship Trophy

through the co-operation of the escaped with him. Park and Hecreation Department

and Dick Miller, manager of the Furniture Factory.

Colisevm Corp. — Recalls Employees Excavation Finished | (OLEAN; N. Y., Feb, 25—(UP) F UN Buildin s | —More than half of 151 workers So YORK, Feb. 9 (UPd v8 bY te nations argent J ; Excavation for the United Na- furniture returned to work today. ers tions capital In mid-Manhattan| The Daystrom Corp. announced ' °° lwas completed today, a month| that 75 per cent of the workers = ‘ahead of schedule and constryc-/laid off in December had been y tion engineers set Oct. 1 as €| recalled, bringing the plant's tos iv. date of. completion for the steel ta) payroll to 739. The work week superstructures of the secretariat] aise was lengthened from 36 to building. | ours. ¥ The skyscraper Secretariat - Paul M. Dollard, the firm's = building will be compléted first| president, said “sales and producand is scheduled for occupancy tion volumes built up at national in the fall of 1950. The General furniture shows have perm | Assembly and - Coudlil buildings us to recall nearly all Deimitied, : {will be completed latér. laid off by seasonal slumps.”

Film ‘Veteran Dies British Labor Wins Vote While Doing a Show | LONDON. Feb. 25 (UF)=A vie:

|. HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 25 (UP)—|intact today gr psn Yi Veteran stage and screen chAr-record of having successfully deacter actor Roman Bolhneh, 47. tended every Labor seal in Par. died of a heart attack last night jjgment at stake in. a by-election " NE while appearing ‘in a local stage since the 1945 general election. ; production. - + | Sx Center of attention in this picture is the Maxwell E. Hosea = Mr. Bohnen's best known roles MURDER LEADS er scholarship trophy, awarded yest orday during a Butler University were those of the old-timer Candy NEW ORLEANS. Feb. 28 (UP) I alemnity Coumeil.di : ic Club to Jn “Of Mice and Men" and Jen- — said today that lea | nterfr ty dinner in the Indianapolis Athletic iter ‘Jones’ t father in'on the murder of Hibonal | Sigma Nu fraternity. John Ellis (left) Sigma Nu commander at rt of Bettman iH |James A. Mahoney, 55-year Butler, receives the trophy from Mr. Hoses (center), Butler ‘25, as | ! bachelor from . ’ ler, ! > 5 | He was born in St. Paul, Minn., : ; | M.°C. Sewell, Sigma Nu national secretary, looks on approvingly. and educated’ in Munich, Ger fizzling out. Mr, ba ing | : | Given for the first.fime yesterday, the trophy will be a rotating i Sha" £1 ug Ymvarsiy, of dead’ in Bll : ; “0 ! I Minneso Yb : y

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