Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1949 — Page 13
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MONDAY, APR. 18, 1049 _ ig
u. S.Frowns At Moves To Let Franco i in UN _
Latin Nations 2 ee Fioiols for Jimmy. Press Drive | To Lower Bars
Russ Step Up Cries of Fascism As Boring Within
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Franco Spain’. entry into the Marshall plan or the North AtJantic Pact at this time despite any move the current United Na-i jg tions Assembly may make in! Franco's favor, it was learned at’ Lake Success, N. Y., today. This official American attitude toward Spain was disclosed as the! United Nations ended a three-day, holiday to take up work in Italy’s| former African colonies, and Scandinavian plan .to streamline Assembly sessions. The Balkan church trials are to be considered’ early this week by a special United Nations committee. Reliable informants said the. U. 8. would prefer that the United Nations take no actioh on Spain during the spring meeting. But) the Soviet bloc, led by Poland. wants-to-tighten United Nations: objections toward the Franco! regime. Led by Brazil, Latin | American nations are lining up Mrs. Wilma Ybarbo, returning home to New Bedford, Mass., | -strength to have the objections yesterday after bein ‘released from the German prison to which |
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" modified. she was sent after the shooting of her husband, is welcomed by |
If the East-West issue cannot be sidetracked, the United States, her 6-year-old son, Jimmy. She is shown here holding the Easter
reluctantly will support return of | present she broug] him. ambassadors to Madrid, and pos-
bly rticipati f Spai i A or i nl MIT'S. Ybarbo Joins Her Son,
formants said.
homer it wa wceroos Bud Grieves for His Father
overall objections to the present |
mM i Ba Hog Prices Barely | Hold [Transit fim Tm Sete to
‘L. DUBLIN, Apr. 18 (UP)—Boom- less. - to $1.50 below Friday's" prices. | Indianapolis Railways 10 81 having, been quiescent. Sines early 3
ito join in festivities so long aS crgges about 160 pounds reached ewes sold. at $9. Common and
The. wige bill for 1948 was ithe Irish Republic's 26 counties $18 mediums brought $5 to $6.50. $5:423.339, up $390,557 from 1947, {still were divided from the SIX - Saw prices remained steady at Estimates of receipts were hogs,
[thes weights reached $16.50. Stags sold|And sheep. 100. {857 in _revenue for the year. : [Read “Page 1 People” Page 11 at $11.50 to $13. Conference Sponsored
} Mr. De Valera, last surviving Steers, Heifers Steady Selective Service = paying passengers last year, {commandant of the 1916 Easter! Opening trade nh al gosh and compared ith 90,992,308 for 1047, | /Rebellion, said in a statement heifers showed s a loss of 4,571,108: ic man, will be keynote ithat “rejoicings are out of place” three loads of igh: a od 1300. ongresas yno
of between 150,000 and 200,000/of strictly good yearlings and a awarded a nine per cent increase OPeNing at § a. m. Saturday in the massed at midnight in O'Connell load of good lightweight steers Draft Being Put pe crease)
{St., Dublin's main thoroughfare, also sold at $25. Quietly to Sleep operating cost an estimated $500,- -/cochairman of the conference,
‘midnight the first gun of a 21- heifers and mixed yearlings
orange, green and white of Irish Cow ‘prices rose slightly as
fice 33 at $16.75 to $18.75, while canners| ; gs tn tis or of the and cutters brought $14 to $16.75. year draft law. {loss followed the national pattern. tation hep Re {Easter rebellion battled the Brit-| = Some Bulls Unsold ~~ | qu lt Truman: administration for—transit-sompanies-and was; 8 :
_THE INDIANAPOLIS Tres
os PAGE 13
bare Post-OPA Low isnt es Co With EXCEPHON. crores vr sor ce cai san, Ndr
Jinie of $19.25 a hundred pounds choice, but mostiy $28 and higher. violence by “the
..| (top price) established last week, Commons and mediums moved at Fo ‘Sons of Freedom” en 4 {as they sold at figures steady to $18.50 to $27 as cull prices ranged SS in The tomb of Peter (the Lordiy)ig 2 cents below those of Friday from $12 to $18. Yeroum. first leader of the sect, n the Indianapolis Stockyards to-' Early estimates of receipts amited near here early
“Mi ny hogs, 9000; cattle, 2600; calves, sb pose police blamed Ex-Prime ‘Minister id ehaler Erbien weigh Hor ar: atte _ Causes Traced 10 Sona” for the blast. -Constables: Refuses to Celebrate ing from 170 to 235 pounds sold A test of the lamb market was Fewer Riders and said it was possible the Prsedams VE, irth : 3 lat $18.75 to $19.25, paid for choice malted by an inadequate supply! tes were embark another Bi of Republic ‘grades weighing . Pig pounds and of livestock. Undertone was $1 Wage Increases lof their campaigns of terrorism,
a ha FIR LT
s and blazing bonfires wel-/ A few common extreme heavy $211,903 in 1948, fhe annual re-/last spring. . Mr. cond Birth of the free Irish: “Re-o tte fom $18 (0 $1878 were 40 sol at $20 to $23. OAd port revealed to stockholders to- the dynamiting of & rind | {public today after mearly eight [= = roo 970.t0-300-pounders head of medium and good grade day. {conch in 1927. joenturies of British rule. ‘moved at $17.50 to $18.25. I ight- {brought $24 to $27. There were! Causes for the deficit, the re. * Countrywide celebrations were weights from 100 to 160 pounds D® 800d and choice. port sald, were substantial wage Is however, by former Pre- qronped 50 cents to prices from 000d and choice slaughter ewes) increases coupled with a heavy, using P imier Eamon De Valera's refusal 'g15 50 to $17.50. Choice uniform, sold steady at $7 to $11. Shorn loss th riders.
Seal,
ny won
i which, plus other increased costs, British-controlled northern coun- $14.50 to $16 as choice light- 10800; cattle. 2850; calves, 100,50 than offset a gain of $310,
The “system transported 86.421 -
By Veterans Group Andrew Jacobs, 11th District
Cite Wage Boost speaker in the day-long Indianap's0 long as Ireland i§ divided. | pound-average steers with a few Nipped i n Budget | The report pointed out that last! |. Despite this, a cheering crowd choice reached $25. Several loads August a state arbitration board! olia public housing conference
in wages which lifted the annual| World War Memorial, Irwin Katz, 2
|to witness ceremonies proclaiming! A few weighty steers remained) 1000 a year {birth of the republic. unsold in ‘early trade as sellers] By EARL RICHERT said today.
The retroactive factor (to May) | » b At exactly five minutes past asked $26. Several lots of good | Revinps-Howard Sta The conference, sponsored by WASHINGTON: Apr. er — Al lin the wage contract caused an the American Veterans Commits
outlay in back pay al 58. though it legally has more than a y ck p one. of $1 ¢. tee, of which Mr. Katz ia a mems« +
ber, will seek Indianapolis’ hous ing needs and a solution to them, he said. ; “Despite opinions of some real esiate groups that there is no
n salute roared out across the brought $24 to $24.50. Good light Led waters of the River Liffey. steers sold largely at’ $22.50 to [Sear to Hye, . draft setup is [008 Tne higher rates were in e ‘Floodlights streaked the sky with $23.50. Common and medium na- ’*"& PU quietly to sleep now ‘brilliance and shone upon the tives were scarce. with successive doses of budg-| The company report said its veTr 9 etary chloroform. hicles traveled farther in 1948
All this comes less than a year than 1947 by. 438802 miles and > ped post office good beef cows sold at $19 to ' Hb ara - The post om 2 Common and medium moved After Congress passed and the operated 21477 more hours. a President signed the new two-| The report said the revenue MOUSINE shortage.
started the chloroform treatment!gue t re privat bites A & price the average individual {ish and proclaimed the republic | Bull prices’ remained steady. as soon as the military made|o, ary Bp fe 3utoms eat can afford to pay,” he said in a {of Ireland which reaches maturity Medium and good heavy sausage known last winter that it didn’t!centralization and postwar em. "latement announcing the conf
today. ‘bulls sold at $20 to $22. Some! need Selective Service to get the| ployment adjustments. rence. Messages “of congratulations Nmained Bisel, Saeliers ing, men it needed and probably; enna Gary Man to Speak ured into President Sean T. higher prices. G e 118 iwouldn't for the remainder of the . ; 4 O'Kelly from state leaders Draught prices from $18.50 to life of the draft law which ex- ‘Today Marks alban A. Patmaled ‘oay . [throughout the world. Among $21.50. i cnn erin, {Pires June 24, 1850. Anniver ar f retary and president of the Indis, . them was one from King George Cut to 34 Million sary o ana Council for Public Housing’ VI of Great Britain. Other mes-| White Funeral The administration slashed by Authorities, will explain how a sages came from Pope Pius XIL| more than $11 million its Sedfuest Ernie Pyle D Death PHA was to benefit Gary. .
{President Truman, British Prime WwW for funds for operating the draf Minister Clement Attlee and, At 1 ednesday system during the next on] “TOKYO, Apr. TH (UPj—Ernie Other speakers Include Irving
others. Mrs. Lillian White, 1421 N. year starting July 1, asking for Pyle, the beloved “GI Reporter” libowitz, Times reporter, Lionel ’ : Jebrateq Arsendl Ave. who died Sunday in only. $16 million as against the|of World War II, died four years Artis, manager of Lockefield Gars The Irish in England celebrated, ‘Hospital, will be buried $27 million which Selective Serv-| ago today, but there are no/9®ns, FHA project where 1250
Spanish regime, and state that it] Boy Still Unaware Parent Was Slain; ol event amid speculation COn-|, coum Hill following services|ice had this yéar. The Housel Americans on Te Shima to com families are on the waiting list, has no chagce at present of get-| Mother Bu $s Him Some Easter Eqas cerning their status as British. p. -m. Wednesday in the|itself voted only $41 million memorate’ his passing. A smali|And Peter Terzick, editor of “The ting U. 8. dollars under the Mar- y 99 |citizens now that Ireland has be- pa nyel Baptist Church. She was| With the Senate still to act. marker on Ie indicates the spot| Carpenter.” national A, F. of Ly | shall Plan, or of. the At-! NEW BEDFORD, Mass, Apr. 18 (UP)—Mrs, Wilma Ybarbo, om a republic. 59. Selective Service officials hope it| where Mr. Pyle fell with the labor publication. : o lantie Paet. 24, played with her 6-year-old son, Jimmy, today and said shel {Inder a new British act, a citi A nave of Hopkinsville, Ky. will be more generous. “ {troops of the 77th’ Division. His @ hk This policy is aimed at taking, “wished to God” she could bring back his soldier-father whom she yen of Ireland may be registered Mrs. White had lived in Indian-| Nesmes—————————— body was removed recently and ARMSTRONG'S some of the steam out of Soviet Was convicted of slaying in Germany. jas a citizen of the United King- apolis 14 years and was a mem- B d $ R taken to Hawaii, where he will propaganda if the United Nations “I'm broken-hearted that my husband died,” Mrs. Ybarbo said.'gom merely by writing to thelper of the Emanuel Baptist | on or auvner rst permanently. ASPH ALT TILE votes a more moderate attitude! She arrived at Westover Field yesterday aboard an Army Plane British Home Office. However, Church and its choir. Hik d t $20 000 As M 1 . t h toward Franco. from Frankfurt, Germany, after nly 3000 of more than 1 million, Surviving are her husband, IKe Oo y 8 Mr. Pyle might have liked
German ‘ | Gen. Lucius D. Clay freed her Fri-| y day. She originally was sen-| efaving egun Seventy thousand American) te,ceq to five years in prison. troops moved toward the Czech) re Yobarbo bit her lip when |
frontier in the largest war games| (no poy asked if she had brought| unl Im in Europe since the war. TWO pis gaddy home with her. She brigades of tanks raced for the € shook her head. Project to
border. “Fell in Water’ ed in 1950
Behind them, in trucks and| : “ afoot, the 1st Infantry Division] “Daddy fell in the water,” the Be Fini moved up to dig in for an “inva-| boy said, and seemed to forget it. sion” from the east tomorrow. | She told reporters at the airport] The city will Meanwhile, German sources re- that she had been tricked into}000 widening an repaving proj-,
New York ported that Russia is seeking a Making a statement regarding ect of Morris St. some time next| England will have some kind of Minnie Coward, Indianapolis, and jail where he is being held for Hiei Webern from Ciotter JORDAN BROS.
face-saving formula for lifting her husband's death, which she! year, City Engineer M. G. (Ole) | the Berlin blockade and has — later rescinded. {Johnson estimated today. Viadimir Dekanosov, former She made only one stop on the| Work on the 14-block improve-| Soviet ambassador to Germany|100-mile trip from the airport to! ment project, * extending from
to Berlin for negotiations. {the home her mother. Sidr! Madison Ave. to Kentucky Ave. . was to buy a basket ot ster has already started on Capitol! Colombia fis for her son. |Ave. and West St. | Government troops reportedly «yymmyi* she cried as she en- Ends Bottleneck
restored order in Colombia atter| (oon her mother's cottage and The improvements will send bloody political rioting yesterday! gathered her son into her arms. early neo and Bit pny
took uncdounted lives. The fight-| kissed him again and in,! ing flared shortly after the ond) he Kissed pre A a bottlenecks along the heavily,
of a truce marking the first anni-| po 0 Gog jfaveled iin city trafic engi-| rsary of last year's lent riots. - , phi the Bogota 38 visi! piges) CID ‘Rough | The only snag in the project. Conference. “Mommy, mommy!” shouted Mr. Johnson said, remained the . \ ithe youngster, who never had’ larea between West St. and KenChina {been toid his mother was convict-/tucky Ave. The city will have
Renewed fighting within 48 ed by a miilitary court for fatally({to wait until work is completed hours became a possibility. the shooting Sgt. Joh# ¥Ybarbo of Go-lona railroad construction in the Communists set Wednesday as a liad, Tex. last September during area. deadline for a peace settlement; a party in their occupation zone Within the next%80 days work the Nationalists indicated they home. The boy thought she was Will begin on paying the area could not accept all of the eight! “ill” in a “hospital” when he wasibetween Union st. and Capitol terms and 24 points, - especially taken from her last Christmas. |Ave. = that permitting the Reds to Syoes Mrs. Ybarbo told newsmen the $225,000 Cost Set the Yangtze. Army “treated me perfectly but I Cost of paving Morris St. has|
{also want to say the Criminal In- Deen estimated at $225,000, while Ta Ww a g the city expects to spend an addi-|
. & vestigation Watts Hearin overs rough and lied from the tional $75,000 to acquire land tor, | beginning.” {widening purposes. Engineers estimate it would!
x ” She said she was rather bitter {cost the city approximately $400,-! ek {about her life in Germany and {000 to construct a new underpass! {advised the wives of servicemen| |
| there “to get out of there as ust By 0, TaliroAd Srossing bear; =} i Ind. Marian College will the glasses you" need. " Times Washington Bureau as they can and come back to the! e River Farkway. of % ptd _. 82% #8'5 Surviving in addition to her WASHINGTON, Apr. 18—The| United States.” sorta S08 1% (¥via... ‘ag 1 (husband, L. H. Hague are a Open Kindergarten Supreme Court appeal of Robert! Named to Post 180, fnd G Gai avin. 2% nw { daughter, Mrs. Minnie Waskom, A kindergarten will be opened E J Austin Watts today was placed il _ |8iokely-van Camp ota 3 fi | Vallonia, Ind.; two sons, Clarence Sept’ 14 in Marian College for yes Examined 137 W.'W, on the U. 8. court calendar for Local Man Stops Wi ih Gli dd C FE ote Veaild ox oA. Hague, Newton, Kas. and| {a limited number of children, the - Wash, St. Béaring this week. | | iaaen (0. 8M age, old 3 |Willjam Stanley Hague Sr. In-|gisters of St. Francis, who con. || GLASSES ON CREDIT Court attaches said that under| Music, but Stops Hugh J. McCullough, assistant|Union Title dianapolis; four brothers, George duct the college, announced today. : normal procedure the case would, |credit manager of Glidden’s Dur-| H. McPike, Salem, Ind.; Edward Registrations have. already be-! I —— probably be heard Friday. Short of $17, 500 jkee. Famous Foods Division, Alen & stew ss ot ...|McPike, Seymour; John McPike,| gun, and will close when the clhss! " CROSSWORD PUZZLE Watts, condemned to the elec-| | Berkeley, Cal., the last two years, American Loan ios. 80 10101": ;;;;{Vallonia, and Oscar McPike.|guots is reached. Classes will bel — a _" a tric chair in’the sex slaying of AN INDIANAPOLIS man who has been named Ep pnaian Moris .;..| Bedford, Ind.; eight grandchildren heiq in the Alverna Hall from 9| : : ror ry BU Indianapolis housewife Mary Lois; might have spent today figuring lcredit . manager Ch. of wjand one great-grandchild. ja. m. to. noon every Monday] Musteline Animal » 2.00 K Burney, was given a stay of exe-/how to spend $17,500 instead won-|of the Glidden | Columpla Club 3-8s Ears reel 1 Sana through Friday. : Alle te 3 cution by. the nation’s highest dered where to install an auto- Co.'s Feed . Mill {Samiiton Mtg Corp ce Wa, Accountants fo Hear i rey et ~| C ; . EmIATl court when it granted a hearing matic clothes dryer. — . { Division, 1160 EO tcsont. 4 1a" ha " Ge I M 1 | HORIZONTAL 3 Consideration i on his appeal for a new trial. John Heidt Jr. 3837 N. .Dela-|W, 18th St.° (nabls Bras # Ng 5s 56... " ob ! nera ofdrs Official ! 1 Depicted 4 Court (ab.) IM re Arguments ware St, won the clothes dryer| Mr. McCul-| (ind NO 3 1 a Vincent P. Blair, ~ divisional | animal 5 Dress edges oy Attorney General J. Emmett but lost his chance at the $17,500 /lough was as-J0%. investors a, ¢ “ ww +9 ® lcontroller in Inland Manufactur-| Lo 6 Its scientific 6 Man McManamon and. his chief coun-| mystery melody jackpot when he sociated 19 years: Suhner Packing 4s 4 9 ing Division, General Motors, | name 1§ «=. 7 Employer sel, Earl Cox, were in Washing- Was telephoned during the “Stop with the U. 8.88 eatmane b B tas LE «0é*|Dayton, O. will address the In-| [52 putorius 8 Hurried ton today preparing arguments [the Music” broadeas last night. {Tobacco Co. be-2 {on Art - .»|dianapolis Chapter of the Na-| { 13 Declaim 9 Palm lily ; “for the state. = {fore joining {Pub Ber os # 5 4 [tional Association of Cost Ac? | 14 Reaches fo. 10 Therefore i J Watts will be represented by! MR. HEIDT sorlictly jdentified |Glidden Co. H TN “oaena . .. 88% Wl countants at thelr annual dinner 15 Fabulous bird- 1] Conductor : Thurman Marshall, general coun-|“You Was” as the tune being served as assist- a———————— at 6:15 p. m. Wednesday in the 16 Fracas 12 Property items 33 Purify 46 Domestic sel for the National Association played at the time tHe call was|ant manager of "'' ullough Drive es Flomin Car Marott Hotel, 18Aeriform fuel 17 Interjection 34 Hardens slave : for the Advancement of Colored put through from New York: But/the tobacco company’s New 9 . Mr. Blair, a member and past 19 Social insect 25 Above 36 Comfort 47 Imitated People, and Franklin H. Williams, (he was unable to tell emcee Bert York office 10 years. He was To Death in ‘Denver president of the Dayton Chapter |", '% | 20Fragmem of 2§Prescribed 37 Cooked 52 Tellurium assistant special counsel. [Parks the correct title of the credit manager of the San Fran- DENVER, Apr. 18 (UP) —|Qf the NACA, will speak on “Cost jee = pottery amount 41 Knocks (symbol) The NAACP attorneys will jackpot mystery tune. . |eisco branch two years. While horrified Easter paraders| Estimates” at a dinner honoring { 21Poem of medicine 42 Stupefy 54 It is found argue that Negroes were auto-| The call was his first experi-| Born in New York City, he watched, Roy V. Platz, 57, drove all directors and officers of the | Government - 37 Caudal 43 Prong chiefly we matically excluded from the Mar- ence with “giveaways.” Mr. Heidt served four years in thé Navy. (his flaming car through down- Year. A business meetirig will be| — i sue (ab.) appendage 44 Units Europedn fon County Grand Jury which in- sald today. He said he was able —— — i [town streets until he was burned held at 7:30 p. m. Ww ” | 23 Suffix 28 Poker stake 45 Right (ab.) countries dicted Watts and will charge ir-|to identify the one tuné because Local Produce | fatally. Rg $s ‘Store 24 Habitat plant - ail ties in procedure by the his four children and the family | —— ——— { ‘He died four and a half hours! Ober Daly. 3:3 AM.-8 P.M orm oR BR rod Ble BX Ralf BJ ater passersby dragged him \ rs wit springers, 28c; colored 36a « i ; Te “og Indiana State Police of obtainingipicked from the nation's tele- Toehgra. & y de rine Rs. 1 Ite, a machine 9m ne Hong MATCHED UNIFORMS 29 Preposition confessions from Watts by force phone directories by Richard wid-| Begs—Curren: opel. > OVERALLS AND JACKETS 20Any 2 timida mark, scréen star. 40c: Grad Taree. & oe. orade A medium. i ] Bone da thamd. both the Bur-| : i ore, ide grease Uemdll | SHOE REPAIRING | LA AA 32 That thing sla and that of Mrs. = “Buttertat_No. I S3c: No 3. de. ‘ ture Mabel Merriteid, Bosch Grove 2 Report Thefts roca) RX nd wooly” wien” ferns ae SPECIAL with the purchase of en eis 35 Not as much housewife, but was tried only in| (From Parked Cars I T RA ; ALEXANDER SMITH COVERALLS : “38 Halt an em the Burney. slaying. Theft of $500 worth -of dresses, LOCO ruck Grain Prices MEN’S Composition : COWBOY PANTS 2 On te (ah)
bed clothes and kitchenware from, "No. 4 red wheat, 12.15, Broad Ripple PTA ne car parked in front of his| 8 St eotn. Bal . iresidence, 717 Congress Ave. was 3° To Hear Tech Teacher |Teeldence 717 Congress Ars. wael ns ‘sovbeans, Reuben D. Behimer, family. by Chester Wilson. U. S. Statement living instructor in Technical Another motorist, Bruce Snod-| ¥ High School, will can before grass, 58, of 62 LeGrande Ave. men
evening. Amatiag common he Sts, fining on. White’ Riven [BEZEL by the nominating committee; he sat fishing on White River, Receits
| ” {Dorothy Whitted, Indianapolis; trom $1000 to $20,000. 3 wh ana. Me told a reporter in Eng-\y.er ‘mother, Mrs. Martha Sallee, The Judge had voiced his inten-|ousands of soldiers
mplete its $700, jin England, but I'm a citizen of| {Sallee, Hopkinsville; three sisters, ling Saturday. Attorneys for Ship Movements
it, the most prominent ifice Trish in Britain have done so. Richard White Sr.; two sons, Municipal Court 4 Judge Alex AT ee his i" od is
George Bernard Shaw, a Brit-{ Robert White, Indianapolis, and Clark today raised the bond of (Tokyo's largest use ish subject for nearly 93 years, [Richard White Jr, Pittsburgh, Shirley (Whitey) Rauner, charged | Both Pyle. gest mavle Rouse the was one of those puzzled by citi- Pa.; three daughters, Mrs. Nan-|with assault and battery with {n+ brary, music rooms, snack bar zenship status. {nie Crenshew, Louisville, Ky., anditent to kill in the shooting of his ard roof garden have provided “I don’t know whether I'll be an Mrs. Laura Gilbert and Mrs. wife, Kathlyn (Kay) Rauner, entertainment for hundreds of { serving with the occupation armies.
A
| Hopkinsville; two brothers, Eiber{ tion of raising the bond when he “I've spent 70 years of my life {Sallee, Indianapolis, and John testified in a habeas corpus hear- |
weer LINOLE oul 2e..|I8e..| Te.,
Ireland. I. think the Irish in Mrs. Rosa Towsend and Mrs. Rauner sought to free him from! ® } Dalles Press
Sitizensiup, but ‘I'm not Mrs. Nannie Johnson, Hopkins- pre-mental examination. rom Puerto Barrios; Sante Tom Fa a, . ville; five grandchildren, nine! Rauner needed his freedom, his Vyas baiiibai Cond _— 333 W. Wash, Local Issues nephews and five nieces. attorneys said. to raise money for bane: ay oH pipet son oo Nusa. Mrs Thelma S. Dilts his wife's doctor bills. Physicians —_r— * have estimated plastic gery | #TOCK» Bia Askes| Services for Mrs. Thelma B8./for her face, mutilated ho the | States vid He» Diits, 1407 W. Ohio 8t., who died|close range shotgun blast, would |
13 | Thursday in General Hospital fol- cost at least $10,000. 104% lowing a long illness, were to be| Judge Clark said he did: “mot | 4 1i4/1eld at 2 p. m, today in the Far- think Ratner, who was reported | 14 ley Funeral Home. Burial was to/to have attempted to take his | $2% 3% be in Glen Haven Cemetery. She'own life after the shooting, |
1% | was 49. { should go free. | Surviving are her mother, Mrs.| ee - pe: Rella Doolittel, Indianapolis; four w| daughters, Mrs. Vivian aero Truman at Church | HAVE YOUR EYES %/ Osgood, Ind, and Mrs. Mary| Twice on Easter
TESTED BY OUR SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM OF VISUAL ANALYSIS
Mount, Mrs. Connie Johnson and! WASHINGTON, Apr 18 (UP) | Miss Mary Anne Dilts, all of In-|_pregident and Mrs. Truman| dianapolis; two sons, William and (ang daughter Margaret attended $7 | Maurice Rowe, Kansas City, Mo. [two Easter Sunday church Serv-| 3 | and 13 grandchildren. ices.
4 The first family went to an 8| | | Mrs. Amelia Hague a, m. communion service at Bt. |
a 09 Services for Mrs. Amelia E. [John's Episcopal Church, Then| .-104. 103% Hague, who died today in her|at 9:30 a. m., the three drove to Baw home, 2104 E. Michigan St. will the First Baptist Church where 0 {be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday in | {Dr. Edward Hughes Pruden de-! to oore Mortuaries Peace Chapel, [livered a sermon on “The Resur- || Eyestrain.-con couse diz“a | Additiorial services at 1:30 p. m., | rected Life.” The President fre- ll ziness, nervousness a nd 3. Thursday in the Hague & Son quently attends services ‘at the mental: di fort, Let D 0,, Funeral Home, Medora, Ind., will Baptist Church. Mrs. Truman and | Fo scomfoft. Let Dr, Serv com II 8 fi {be - followed by burial in the Margaret an are Episcopalians, { orris carefully exomine ome coo 10 185 Riverside Cemetery, Seymour, fll your eyes and prescribe
“omg er caplet. 0 ) BF Ere for its — HALF SOLES HOME-DECORATING PLAN ELT Sea
Mrs, -Safford is commit- later forced open the door of raning ~Sames W. J. Guenther, Vyrrell tackle. box ‘and a pol of eens
__ |the shoes at $12. res anne we |
: worked out just for you by 48 War god son $1: 95 "wu | AR oDLEY nim ton - your color-scheme ? way | 3 Relative 18 S. Ninois St.| w= = ro cowene wi, ."OWi0 SHOE REPAI R0. 3 RAMER FURNITURE. €0. ns tot
