Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1949 — Page 14

PAGE 14 World Report—

Giant Radio Transmitters Used by Reds

Broadcasts Made Difficult for Far

- East, However : : By United Prem : ' Russia is using “a minimum of 38 giant radio transmitters” in an

the State Department's Voice of merica broadcasts behind the ron Curtain, it was disclosed to-

day. = Charles W. Thayer, head of the, epartment's broadcasting divi-| , said the Russians-had been! frying to jam the programs of American news and music “for a jong, long time.” i “But they haven't been at all puccessful in preventing our programs from reaching Russia and eastern Europe,” Mr. Thayer sald; “although their jamming has made some difficulties for listeners in the Far East.”

At first, State Department of-| ficials had believed that atmospheric conditions were responsi for static and noise heard on its eastern E broadcasts. | But by the use of radio direc-| tion finders, Mr. Thayer said, it|

8 Soviet

unsuccessful effort to drown out|

| Ybarbo billet

18 Stations Used vel

rere

Stations ~ To Jam U.S. ‘Voice’

.

-

n

§

>i ATES ea

Try

Clay Directs Woman Be Returned to U. S.

FRANKFURT, Apr. 15 (UP) Gen. Lucius D. Clay today ordered the release of Mrs. Wilma Ybar. bo, who is serving a five-year sen« tence for slaying her husband, an Army sergeant. : The U. §. military governor directed that the Malden, Mass., housewife be returned to the United States “on the earliest convenient transportation” released. ho Mrs. Ybarbo's son, Jimmy, 6, was flown back to the United States to live with relatives after the conviction of his mother late last year. Sentenced to 20 Years - Originally she was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for fatally shooting Sgt. John Ybarbo of Goliad, Tex, after a night of drinking and revelry In the here. i A board of review later reduced the sentence to five years. The defense attorney, Stanley, H. Gaines, appealed to Gen. Clay for clemency. |

power” in ordering the release

bie, Of Mrs, Ybarbo, who has been)

detained at an Army hospital at) Fritzlar. She was expected to leave im-| mediately for Massachusetts for a

reunion with her son who, so far

Mrs. Ybarbo Ordered Freed In Slaying of Husband |

and-

For Jerusalem

Internationalizing Of Holy City Urged in

{He clergy of the world.

{of holy places in Palestine.

armistice in Palestine.

peace,” the Pope said.

Still Receiving Pleas | {

“dictatorial.” on leave and unavailable today.|olic institutions.”

Note to Jimmy, 6— | ‘Mom's Coming Home’

that his mama's coming home from the hospital.” That's where thy 86-year-old boy believes his mother has been-— never having been told she was serving a five-year sentence in oc-

Lilly Thespians

_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ‘Red Faces Get Redder—

Pope's Letter eNeil Hai

Good Friday Message a blond, stock; 38-year-old son of

VATICAN CITY, Apr. 15 (UP) {—His Holiness Pope Pius renewed {his demand for the internation-

lalization of Jerusalem today in Andrei Gromyko apart plece by [ encyclical letter to the Catho-|piece before the General Assembly

| The Good Friday . encyclical Dever once dipped into yenom or {alsd expressed the Pontiff’s hope malice, yet dismembered Russia's for a “true peace” in Palestine. chief delegate with artistry and’ {It complemented® another of Oct.|finality. ) (24, 1948, In which the Pope firstivance one inch in the direction of |asked for the internationalization

| “However, this is not a true classic in international debate.

He said he still was receiving ipleas for ald from innumerable e | refugees and "many protests fori ASainst the Atlantic Pact. He ithe grave damage suffered by re- 1 athered with Mrs. Wilma Ybarba ..{lglous institutions, by churches i Tis New York shotel: > : |and other places of cult, with very| 14 have to be answered, of He was reported saddening devastations of Cath-/ :

He appealed to all able to do 80/ with ning business— to extend charity to the refugees» amps Ts LINE Sus De the and expressed his hope for es-|yiajjan foreign minister, and an-

. NEW BEDFORD, Mass. Apr; | tablishment of a “true peace in Today's announcement saldiqy (UP)—Jimmy Ybarbo will that region so dear to the heart|

|Gen. Clay “exercised his clemency jeain this Good Friday evening|®f every Christian,”

has now been established that al

stations are- being used by the told that his mother sh Russians for jamming the Ameri-| Ybarbo, can shows,

London |

{with his mother in the

Leaves for U, 8.

Bulgarian Premier Georgl Dimitrov’s departure for Russia on *home leave” touched off specujation today that he may have Yallen out with the Cominform. © Western diplomatic sources on the watch for every possible Ng that Russia's European empire is

United States. Mr. Gaines charged {the trial and appeal proc

minimum of 18 powerful radiojas was known here, never was

Jimmy spent Christmas Eve United Press that Gen. Lucius D.

hospital room which was her cell, her 24-year-old daughter, Mrs, He left a little later for the Wilma Ybarbo.

that the military government leave her detention quarters imcourt system which ordered Mrs. mediately for a reunion here with Ybarbo to serve 20 years was Jimmy.

cupled Germany for the slaying

»f his soldier father. . fp y

| “That's wonderful” said Jim- Comedy Showing

mys grandmother, Mrs. Charles 'Bailey, when informed by the Set Tomorrow “Ring Around: Elzabeth”

ot Sgt.

barred! Clay had ordered the release of

morrow by the El Lilly & Co.

{| “Maybe she'll be home for during | Easter,” Mrs. Bailey sald when eedings told her daughter was expected to

crumbling recalled that Mr. Dimitrov had not joined in the general Cominform denunciation of his old comrade, Yugoslavia's “= Marshal Tito, : ow . ‘The Bulgarian government at Sofia announced last night merely that Mr. Dimitrov had gone to the| Boviet Union for medical treat. ment after having been granted “home leave” from his posts as

MORGANTOWN, W.

1

the Bulgarian Communist Party, of two police officers.

Moscow Moscow boasted today that its

Dew skyscrapers will how . ew York's Empire State bulld-

ing and other tall American ‘buildings as “ugly stalagmites.” The newspaper Evening Moscow said Boviet designs are superfor in every respéct—engineering, esthetics and comforts. They already have won Stalin prises.

Flushing : The United Nations today preJaret new efforts to solve the ‘Balkan dispute after arranging an Easter week-end truce in the ‘heated East-West clashes over the North Atlantic Treaty. « The UN announced that As‘sembly President Herbert V. Evatt would meet next week at Lake Success with representatives of Greece, Albania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia to seek a “peace-| ful solution” of the satellite-Greek

was taken into custody request of Pennsylvania ities,

Pennsylvania Btate who held up the bank of

definite Information other two bandits were

Sgt. Adams said Mann without a struggle. No

handful of shells was In a pocket o Jacket. we

‘down last fall at Paris. : UN business ended last night|25 Latrobe, Pa. ’ for a three:day holiday in’ the! He said Mann, Klosz ‘wake of a fierce debate on the nett were also linked Atlantic Pact, $100 holdup of a store at

‘Berlin Pa. last Tuesday.

More than $200,000 worth of ‘black market goods have been jasiosd during the past two months * ritish military police raids, it| Us Swas announced today. | tion with the holdups. { A British’ control commission announcement ‘said the goods in-! Jcluded chocolate, coffee, cocoa, | cigarets and other goods. In ad-

n.

i

Troopers Join in Search For Two Bank Desperadoes

Companion Arrested in West Virginia Home; Officers Shackled to Trees in Getaway

premier and secretary-general. of young desperadoes wanted for the holdup of a bank and kidnaping|Vera 1. Hershber

Capt. Andrew Hudock of the Police Greensburg, Pa. said Mann def-| initely was one of the three men

bee Wednesday and escaped with] moré than $5000. He said he had| that | " . “heading forced the officers into a car and Robbed in Chicago

CHICAGO, Apr. 15 (UP)-—Ar-

south,” probably Florida. orte,|$18.75 to $19.25 and $19.50, the

Shells tn’ Pocket

were found in the house, 32-caliber

| Pittsburgh, and James Bernett, free the officers.

Capt. Hudock said that Leroy west of where the officers were| {Howell, 17, an AWOL soldier ar-{found, when he spotted a man . {rested yesterday in a stolen auto-istanding in the middle of-the road State Legion, VFW imobile, probably had no connec- waving a gun. Another man sat

He sald Howell had been under {suspicion because the automobile the two men and let them out on|ficer for the Indiana Military Dishad been stolen in Ohio near the|the southern outskirts ‘of Denni- trict. today commended Indiana's Weights sold |place where Lt. Al Rossell and son,

played by Jean M. Wonning, as Elizabeth, and

as her husband. Other mem bers of the cast, under - direction

Joan Smith of P. Earl Davis, include: Jaan| Mr Gromyko, he said, spoke

Va., Apr. 15 (UP)—Indiana state polic

James Herman were

at the! a trees include Dolores J. ‘Schwartz, ie ound Tidaputten to chafry “ stage manager; Edell Gosman, lyes'arcay, assistant stage manager, and

lv ati touched off in Weirton yesterday. Three men pickéd up as suspects| {In“the Follansbee robbery over TT ok oles, powered Lt. Rossell and patrol) Porte Man Wife i ’

the man Herman at the city jail,|

Follans- .

{raced into Ohio.

Shackled to Trees nold Menke, owner of a La P

gave firea t but: a! pistol f Mann's

later were found shackled to two trees on a farm near Hanoverton,

roy, cut down the two trees to his wife.

| A motorist, Steve Ornauskl! of and Bor Duncan Woon, O. told officers|info the front meat. Ligonier, [that he was coming out of Min-|

{eral City, O., some 28 miles south{for masks.

|

nearby on a guard rail, he sata, Win Commendation.

Mr. Ornausk! said he picked up

dition, large sums of foreign cur-! f ‘rency, including $10,000, were Local Issues confiscated, : a

| -- ‘Cat Burglar’ Active burying dead of World War II.

Apr. 14

a comedy by Charles Armstrong, will be repeated at 8:15 p. m. to-

A ; A Smith, Merrill 8. Zaring, Louis! | joined with officers of this and other states in thé search for twol|A, Battista, Agnes J. Scollard ger, Doreen I.

| Helphinstine, Norma Jean Sutton, A companion of the two wanted men was arrested early today Marjorie M. Clementz, William P.

as he slept in his home at nearby S8abraton, W. Va. bes Bgt. D. E. Adams of the state iupipolice here said Roy Mann, 26, patrolman

Brown and Henry B. Schreiber.| Others active in the production!

The manhunt in Ohio, West Robert F. Cook, make-up. Comirginia, .ndiana and Illinois was mittee chairmen .are M. Edna | Goodwin, properties; Anna Louise] | Roth, costumes, and Margaret E./

Officer Herman and Lt. Rossel] Ind. furniture firm, told police to-| day that he and his wife were held] up last night by four masked men. | Menke sald the bandits, armed 04 about 35 miles north of here./with a sawed-off shotgun and {George Betz, owner of the farm, pistols, took:$35 in cash from him Capt. Hudock safd that he was and his two sons, Allen and Le-/and a $1000 diamond ring from . ; |almost certain that the other two sm conflict. Mediation efforts broke bandits are Carl Klosz, 30, of] He said he had been visiting friends here, and that he stopped {his car so that his wife could get The bandits drew up in a car, he said, and alighted wearing handkerchiefs

Col. P. C. Bullard, executive of-

Britain's M

pa g Sears Soviet Sachem By CHARLES T. LUCEY Beripps-Roward Staff Writer

FLUSHING MEADOW, N.Y. {Apr. 15—The hero of the piece at ithe United Nations show today is

a Clydeside shipyards worker, the

{No. 2 man in the British Foreign {Office. :

Hector McNeil "took Moscow's in a brilliant performance which

He probably didn’t ad-

jshangiug Mr. Gromyko’s mind or Mogcow’s propaganda position on

The encyclical opened with an ithe North Atlantic Pact — prob . expression of pleasure over the ably nothing could-—but he gave

!him a polite pasting that was a

Mr. McNeil hadn't even been lon the floor Wednesday. night when the grim Mr, Gromyko brought out the Volga artillery

{first knew of it later that evening It

course—and Mr. McNeil would

answer it. But already he was

i

{other with Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, chief Canadian delegate to United Nations. But he got these out of the way and then around -a lates supper began weighing his reply. Telling Satire and Wit

He and his colleagues moved to the apartment of Sir Alexander Cadogan, No. 2 British delegate. Here, dictating to a stenographer, and counseling with fellow Brit. ons, he put together the speech which lighted a fire as has no {other package of oratory in these first two weeks of the new United Nations session. It was sprinkled with gentle but telling satire, barbed wit, down-to-earth metaphor, phrases that sparkled and a measure ‘of democratic political ‘i philosophy. - Mr. Gromyko, the delegate from the ‘People’s Democracy,” had undertaken to represent the views of the common people around the world as he attacked the Atlantic Treaty — people: who live in| |palaces, he said, think differently |from those in huts. But Mr. Me- { Neil, whose youth knew hardship,

|threw it back at him.

|

with “monumental unction and, {no evidence.” He observed tha ‘ithe Russian delegation lives on |a luxurious, walled estate on Long {Island or in a “well-appointed, well-guarded Park Ave, resi-

ce

Mister Minister” |

dence.” Let Mr, Gromyko go into

.

British Delegate Hector McNeil's defense of the

gets intent interest of the Russian

Yakov Malik is shown at the right; be

the busses, drugstores and sub-| He's a bit too stocky to get a ways, said Mr: McNeil, and he'll Hollywood-handsome rating,

find out about the thinking of ordinary men. ‘Ludicrous and Dishonest’

He saw the situation “as

strenghtened Hitlerite demanded

The Soviets, he said appear as the “lily white, the pure, the un-

sullied—all others outside their)

out for the home of friends in neat little fold are black, wicked,

vicious, aggressive, fascist war-|

mongers.” There was a great deal more of it and at the end Mr, McNeil got a very tidy response. Peoplesaround the UN happily give this still-young man, the salutation he rates, but Hector is really just {Hector in conversation. He's an |altogether informal human being.

Hog prices dropped as much as| 25, cents a hundred pounds in|

Hog Prices Drop 25 Cents During Later Trade Here

Medium and good sausage bulls held steady at $20 to $22. Good

later trade in the Indianapolis beef bulls moved at $18 to $21.

Btockyards today, after opening]

at figures steady with those of "Good

pound barrows and gilts sold

early top price. Weights from 240

were paid for 270-to-350-pounders, {0dd big weights dropped to $16.50. Bring $16.50 to $18.50

pounds sold at $16.50 to $18.50 as sow prices dropped as much as 25 cents. Bulk sales ranged from $14.75 to $16, a few head reaching $16.25 or higher, Stags moved at $12 to $13. ? Cattle prices remained steady in a clean-up type trade. A partload of good grade 750-pound steers reached $25.25. Small lots of

Sausage Bulls Steady Common and medium mixed at $19.50 to $23.50.

{beef cows reached as high as $20./| Approximately 6750 GI dead Buik of common and medium

won he: American Legion and Veterans of A few cuttery heifers moved at) ues il . Foreign Wars for their role in|$18 to $18.50. Odd head of good meet | ; | im |" "A burglar who crawled through/have beer returned and reinterred grades brought $16.75 to $18.50, (w=

700-t0-1050-pound average hi

|steers brought mostly $24 to|FR + homes. toma ond Tom Semis Sav: z fl OU SA A TARY $24.50. Thi ERRRLETRY TADIPA EHTINSTON

(to $1.

{down to $12.

to 270.pounds moved at $18 to| An inadequate supply of slaugh$18.75 as prices from $17 to $18) ter sheep and lambs failed to pro-| {duce any test of the market. | Prices were quoted “steady.” Good {and choice fed wooled lambs sold —Tightweights from 100 to 160 at $27.50 to $29. Slaughter ewe

{prices dropped to $11 and less.

| Estimates of receipts were hogs, 110,250; cattle, 325; calves, 225, and

| sheep, 25, ‘

Ren I Hailed as UN Hero @& Renews Plea After Brilliant Assault on Gromyko - :

Vealer prices dropped 50 cents Good and choice sold at {$29 to $30.50, the early top price. Good and choice 170-t0-240- commons and mediums brought 8ti $19 to $28.50. Culls sold at prices

»

‘FRIDAY. APR. 15, 1060

106 Air Fields! New In

j {dianapolis,

ER

$

In State to Federal Aid

$17,813,000 Budgeted: For Indiana :

a]

- me

Seaplane Base Here

WASHINGTON, Apr. 15 (UP) — _

One hundred six Indiana airports,

| {including a sea plane base in Ine were listed by the

Civil Aeronautics Administration

t (today to be constructed or ime - ¢ proved under the 1049 National

Airport Plan, = ~The CAA said the Indiana pros gram would cost $17,813,000, with the federal government contribe uting $8,445,000 for the projects, The remainder will come from the state and local funds. The CAA does not assign the funds, Officials pointed out this is done after Congress votes

~ imoney each fiscal year. The 1949

i |program was to run thro

1953, CAA Administrator D. W,

| Rentzel said.

Acme Telephoto, Atlantic Pact delegation to the United Nations. ind him is Andrei Gromyko. | his| {tle “hangs loosely outside his| jacket and he's not fussy about) appearance. | Likes Circus and Softball |

ludicrous as it is impertinent, asi { comical as- it is dishonest.” Mr. Gromyko had sald the U. 8. and Britain tGermany—but who, Mr. McNeil, signed the Stalin-Hit-{ler pact? ;

He retains the rugged constitu-|

{tion of the former Glasgow Uni-|

{versity footballer, and his capa-| leity for staying up half the night {with congenial friends and setilly {being on the job at 8 a. m, aston-| iishes even ‘those who know him:

{well. He's as busy as any dele-| {gate here but he's had time to get {to Madison Square Garden for the; | circus. At week's end he heads ithe counfry to play softball and iget the sun. ! Hector McNeil was brought up on Scotland's west coast, made a mark as a debater and toured the U. 8. 15 years ago with his university debating team. : He was Interested in labor politics from youth, got into journal-| ism and worked for Lord Beaver: {brook's Scottish paper, was elect-| led to Parliament from the Green-, ock constituency ‘in 1841. brilliance there was noticed and when the Labor Party climbed to] victory in 1945 Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin grabbed him as an! assistant. Pr tw i | He moved upward from one rung to another and earned at-| tention in Paris, when, as stand-|

spectacularly well in maching wit)

and Vishinsky.

more impressed by the high-wire {performers in the circus than with |Mr. Gromyko. !

The Hoosier airport program called for the construction of 26 |Class I landing strips with 1500 Lto—2500-foot- | still to be selected. These included strips at Bicke inell, Brazil, Brookville, Chester ton, Columbia City, English, Evansville, Greensburg, Hartford

- City, Jasonville, Jasper, Knights

town, Lagrange, Lincoln City, Nappanee, Princeton, Salem, Shoals, Spencer, Sullivan, Syra|cuse, Tipton, Versailles, Wabash, {Winchester and Winamac. | Six Improvements Listed { - Improvement" to landing facil« ities at Danville, Decatur, Mare {shall and Mishawaka in Class I, {and at Frankfort and Martinsville |in .Class II, with landing fields {with 2500 to 3500 foot runways

WEG

Pe ———— ea]

His }

in for the ill Mr. Bevin, he did] |hietion and tongue with Russia's Molotov! Here in New York he has been]

also were listed. : Eight seaplane bases were scheduled for Angola, - Indian< apolis, Monticelld, Syracuse, Tell City, Térre Haute and Vincennes, with sites also still to be determined. New Class II fields also were earmarked for New Albany and Shelbyville, and Class III ports, with runways’ from 3500 to 4500 feet, ~for Anderson, Marion and Vincennes. . Construction selected were for Class I fields at Delphi, Mitchell, Marshall and Veedershurg; Class II at Vale paraiso, and Class II] at Michigan City and Gary. 3

Y

Accepts Position

‘sophomore in engineering at {Purdue Indianapolis Center, Care roll 8 3255 Winthrop Ave,

has accepted a position in the engineering department of the National Farm Machinery Co.,

IT'S A GOOD BUSIN

901 Irving Ave. Dayton, Ohle A. MELIN, Sales Agent on Premises. |

INDI A

SET

I 4 |

0 on 1474

On Furs Cloth Coats

SAVE and Suits

BISHOP FURS

2nd Floor—1 N. Meridian

The Oldest Name in Metal Tile POR BATHROOM snd KITCHEN WALLS 3 «BABY TERMS—

CLARKE Mat. & Supply Co., Inc.

530 &. Wash. St. MA. 1449 Spun Meuoii, TH. 8, Sui. TH 4 PR.

VIKON TILE}

Hardware — Appliances 344 E. Wash. St. '

COLOR MOVIE FILMS!

S-mm. ROLL TYPE COLOR 16-mm. MAGAZINE COLOB

CAPITOL CAMERA CO.

207 W. Wash. St RL 9

Nanking STOCKS #14 .Asked|® ODe-foOt square opening above/in the state under supervision of Canners and cutters sold at $14 — ; SMS A reliable source sald today American States ptd... ...... 33% 38 the grill obtained $42 in cash, a the two veteran groups. .. [to $16.50. : : : You Save Because We Save J py {that the Communists have With. ATrsey Sater of A... 8. 5 purse and assorted groceries from; The . commendation made by, CROSSWORD PUZZLE MEN'S SUITS & OVERCOATS A Be ‘drawn their demand for punish- LS Avies 43% ole tor a. 03. 104% the Heath Restaurant, 2968 N.|Col. Bullard was on behalf of the, - i $22 95 $29 95 GRAY _[GRIBE 1 INE GC ‘sment of Generalissimo Chiang Belt R & &tk Yds com HE Joe ih Sherman Dr, last night. Ceciljcommanding general of the Fifth Answer to Previoas Pussie ¥ to . Tr i rreormrn Kai-shek and - other -Red-desig- bobbe-Merill ofa dws oi 1. (Heath, 2956 N. Sherman Dr, is Army. ROBERT HALL Clothes | “ry cu asuRiRIl a, inated “war criminals” as a price; Sire Sova oo Coounee. 23% (30% the owner. gn Con. Senate Ave. 4 Mergiand so I~ 1ndlana's Oldest Credit Meueines or peace. om Joan 15, WE AE gp SC. - Announce Dividend = : homens io : — Semand had headed the Cont cat No Var’ ” RL 4 REA Grant Made |. “A quarterly dividend of 30 cents| \HORIZONTAL VERTICAL fe — ny | wees LARGEST SELECTION 4 conditions for summings. Eng com... . 18 . oi . | 3 < | . J | : " down. by thie Hig 1501 Deace ln Qammings Eng nid, #5, L WASHINGTON, Apr. 15 (UP) per share of common stock has! | Depicted . 1Sally WHILE THE REST OF of Linoleum, in Indiana Commmaaist » Nationalist meso|Gonsondated tha Sr ...11111: J¥ 1% — The Rural Electrification Ad-|been declared by the board of di-| | jWweasel-like 20il. HOUND |" THE TOWN SLEEPS RUGS from $2.39 tions to end the Chinese civil ara br Waisetrle Com AR Bd’. sos $i ministration ioday granted ajrectors of the Indiana Gas & s< Mammal 3 Nip || toon tor the stors with the wig ves Sagan In Pelping AF Hays Corp pts ww 7... 0 $180,000 -0an io the Southern In-| Water Co. Inc., payable June I'to| 6 Hate ~ 4 Behold} + HAAG'S trom, ; * {Home Ter & Te £5 vtd ve) ... (diana Rural Electric Co-Opera-| all stockholdersef record at the] 13 Vegetable, 5 Seth's san) ALL NIGHT DRUG STORE * HOOSIER * Tokyo : Hook Drug Co caneniees 18% 0 oo itive, Tell City, Ind, for expan-| close of business May 17 | 14 Lured. (Bib.) 22nd and Meridian Sta PAINT & LINOLEUM CO. / | Ind Asso “rei 2" old « 3 . Pp | 8 Ww : 1 ~~. Prime Minister Shigeru .Yoshi- {aq Gag & Wat com ire ithe ATM sion of electric service in rural ps A . $ Beloved OPEN {| #1 -E. Washington, nd da today told the Ja Niet] radiate Dh I com. uo Gay areas 2 : | 16 Decl — | ————— | en——————————— . Ahat Say told 1b Nations: offers! [Mele & 1 ot do oe Fd Present Passion Play 18 High priest (comb. form) 25 Elliptical 42 Principal - —_— ———— he “best possible” securit to! Indpis Warsr oA am en YR Pl E H A A Passion Play, entitled “That (Bib.) 8 Pace - 28 Ointment 43 Sea eagle ALSIDE : Based The Home of Japan 10 mmavs Water Co 3% pid ...... 108 108.1 an Egg Hunt {Man Jesus,” will be presented at, 19Cravat 9 Mixed type 27 Spoken -44 Falsifies . Enamel * © Mr. Yoshida's statement was {hdpls Railways com i 8 "Sponsored by Wayne Post 64,18:30 p. m. today in the Phyllis| 20 Sharpen, as a 10 Chills 28 Urn 45 Bone § ALUMINUM SIDING BEAUTIFUL FURS nade in reply to a ‘Guestion by|Kiews a Go ord * ©" 8 4 American Legion, an egg hunt for| Wheatley Branch YWCA by the razor 11 Goddess of the 33 Core 46 Cape - immediate Apphiestion . Diet member Yel Hoashi, who ~ Kinean & Co com Laeiasis IM % West Side children will be held|Squires Dramatic Players under 21 Place moon 34 Chemical salt 47Gambling INDIAN ROOFING & LASTLY sailed Mr. Yoshida last week for! Lincoln a hs of : 910i Sunday at 1:30 p. m. at post head-|the sponsorship of the Women's 221t is found" 12 Newspaper 36 Dull . game J SIDING UO. | TE saying he did not believe Japan| Mas aeghaht i "iit oli diiquarters, 6566 W. Washington St. Council. i pr Bh Europe, executive 37 Calm 52 Note of scale || 605 8. Oapito) RL 1350 | ; : : should. adopt a permanent neu- Nai Homes pid 0110 ‘ 98 10 Lost & Found 10 Lost & Found 24 Negative repiy17 Right {ab.) $1 Cover S401 (prefix) — “trality plan such as Switzerland's. | fod £ub dory 8% ofd" 1 Tgln ogi] » ss ost & Found po ercrpercpeniney - i ss bcterghopbedblemiebminduid | | pis Rev oom: he inal TOR English school §I 12 4 1s | F T° P Pe 1 It }i| SHERWIN-WILLIAMS Local Produce P R Mallory com ...... 16% 181 : : _ | 27 Above : H ~~ Bas a aint ; |B gery Eh com. 23% Sis 3 ; 29 Virginia (ab.) 9 +] I-. Ph 1 e Poultry—Fowls. 4 , and over, 38, ub Bry of Ip 3m ore. Se Hh : 30 Egyptian sun } I fo Costs ss! breed springers, : "colored, 38¢, snd "50 Ind GARE 48 pid ... A081 ; | is foebgrn. sprinsers, ase, cocks, ic. and 80,700 YEE Cony it fs a 31 Measure of. . - E. . | fla Va : - s c pece 65 Ibs. to case, |Stokely-Van Camp vig, : : . area ~ : i Grade 4 dona podium | Torre Haute ataficatie 10% : . 3 While. no i ph 5 eanid . =] ? - A ; : |Ba8 Machine com. oieree M3 This is to advise that 132 of our pay roll 331t lives in sug. TAStve “prices apply whas dslivered as|Onion Title Co iil 8 " checks, No. 38501 to No. 38632 inelusive, were Lo AR joca! plant.) - pr 2 . —— St : Allen & Stew se 87 0 h ne stolen from our office and are being presented ~+ 38 Hebrew deity ns u. S$. tatement : Bastian "torre SY nee, % “ee to Indianapolis merchants. Tellurium ; ; WASHINGTON, 18 (UP) - | Da Fertilizer bs ee 0 ae : 3 , i very. pt ind secu RE Ghtens tng Te] due 11100) The checks that have been cashed bear a 30 Recent SST ‘ 5 3 bg =08 . van wars 4 - - - > = 1 X a year Seo hie Year la th Hamilton MT¢ Corp As #7...0 88 L.. forged signature and are made payable to 471t has Call MA. © Erenser MRT Sekdse '3393.83397 Luo Robert 8. Edwards and are all in the amount valuable wan RG x 7 noe 19.043. 00 a \ : Shs a8 ee i : 48 Paving gad © 5¢ on 2) 13,344, " a | go of $59.78. su : i, ite a a a Signed : 3 Ga wp jij 4H : Racking de 9 0 % qo 2 imitate : : k Gra ea ; : : Bunting = Le Mn. MEIER ELECTRIC & MACHINE (O., Inc. - . |53Small finch OLE SUSSVIAN ® 8 ALUMINUM AWNINGS woo fi oR LE aesas | [sootouens ye. I GALL LL 3371 28g : = LL Sa oN FENN. BR iF a ) : : be . : w 7 % BC

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FRIDAY

i Resigna J Membe . ' Appointmer trial Board ° peared likel; - resignation c¢ board membe Gov. Schricke

commented I John J. Far “At the same of very few men’s compe! Appellate Co ee tiPhere WO appointing a wild just for ing liberal. working peo! that decision but not reas; law would be anyway.” App @ The Indust plications f workmen's. ¢ dustrial dise: employee see employer Ww through his ance may ap cision to the later to the Other mer are Raymor ansville anc Indianapolis, Rob R. McN Democrat.

Treasury 1600 Ton

WASHING «~The Treas open bids on of paper on currency du year. Departmen will need 133 secretly-man Twelye bi each sheet, 2 year the gi manufacture sheet. That whether its $1000, is wor a cent in m: