Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1949 — Page 11
is
| Radio FUND
1 ~ xa REVERS
‘Inside Indianapolis
4 _other to “Pull in your horns.”
“your breeches straight from the horse's moyth—
"er than greased lightning—behind the eight bail ~lick and a promise—two shakes of a .lamb’s
get at them.
“hit such a peak of speed maneuverability and fire- | when its gas runs low.
| Fairfax Connty acres including the eggs.
bi Indiana, was the son of William, Henry Harrison,
sport in America. . 4 i Lok
By Ed Sovola| ©
YOU'VE ALL BEEN TOLD at one time or an-
Fad Te The Inc ianapolis
ood and early manhood (grade school day). I've situations where the words might have applied, ‘almost. : {
What do you do in SECOND SECTION
a case like that?
_TUESDAY, APRIL. 19, 1949 PAGE 1
‘However, as I remember my examinations. of the end of my nose, not once did I find tar there. Always, réd corpuscles, whether it took five direct “hits or 10. I don’t hold with the words at all. Did you ever see any skin on teeth? I haven't. How close¢ is “by the skin of your teeth”? Kind _of silly, isn’t it? As an illustration let me tell you of an ineident that happened to a young fellow in college. Chemistry examination papers were coming back. ‘The situation: for_this collegian was erftical. One more bad grade there would be: some . ques-| ‘tion about’ his passing the course which brought; up a few more questions. All in all, a most ear, tionable predicament. The paper finally arrived and was MRE] tal in producing ‘an exuberant hiss which formed itself into: “Got through hy the skin of my teeth — yippee ”w
Then take the expression, “Go lay an egg." You'd like to have a nickel for every time you heard that. right? Did you ever lay an egg? The list of double-talk phrases isa mile long. No, I don’t mean: that at all. You see how this habit of carelessness of expregsion . sneaks up on you? For the records here are a few to refrésh your memory before the work begins: “Beat the tar out of —cock and bull story—on your high horse— keep the ball roiling— slept like a top—~too big for
{ 3 i i i
Rotted. Hoses Hang Limply in Hallways
By PHILIP ¥. CLIFFORD JR. The Marion County Courthouse will net-become another St. Anthjony's Hospital if county commis-
- “By the skin of your cuff, you mean,” snapped ‘sioners have their way. a neighbor who wasn't quite as bright as the first| Galvanized into action by reyoung man. His grade, 74, put him in the dunce ports of the holocaust that two class. A flunkard. weeks ago reduced the Effingham, The play of words in the auditorium made TL., ‘institution to-a charred ruin, quite an impression on me. Truthfully, the guy and claimed nearly 80 lives, Wilnext to me was, in effect, more accurate. I had a liam Bosson Jr. president of the few refresher notes on my cuff —BUT I NEVER commissioner's court, has ordered USED THEM. No sir. That wouldn't’ be right, ‘an immediate survey of fire fightyou know. {ing - equipment in the gloomy Since that day, I've never used “by the skin courthouse. of my Yoetns J switched to “skin of my cuff.” AC-| He said any salesman of fire curacy we want. Ever been behind an eight ball? How much 66a day tn’ the dlapiaated bu A worse is it than being behind the six ball . tg ball? It's just as easy to lose a dime behin e 11 ball We is the eight ball. Let's strike it out, A quick trip through the musty of the records: old corridors. he said. would give What would you really do if you grabbed the the salesman all the sales ammu“bull by the horns”? No one ever says “Grab the Nition necessary. : DC-6 by the propeller” which is comparable if Mute evidence of the need for
get down to brass tacks—skin of your teeth-—fast-
tail” ‘ Between Horns of a Dilemmg
JUST IMAGINE how much consternation the above (and there are many, many more) could give a man who wants to “take the bull by the horns” because it's time to quit going “from pillar to post” since he's no longer “wet behind the ears.” Now, calling-a spade a spade, “beat the tar out of” comes up. Several times during my child-
you have the right kind of a bull. say, new fire hose, hangs limply : . and gathering dust at “strategicCan a lamb Tell Time? ally” appointed corners on all
HOW _ FAST is “two shakes of a lamb's tail"? four floors of the ancient citadel, Certainly it's faster than most women think. “I'll Inspected 8 Years Ago be down in two shakes of a lamb's tail” means| A survey of the equipment anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour and stil showed:
Hore itis... The fomons’ ‘eight ball” that no one ever gets behind. Another cock and bull story.
“Paddle your own canoe, Jack.” {most part they were found wedged “He's a chip off the old block.” i» behind steam or water pipes. “Oh, we shot the bull for a couple of hours.” pe. would be required to dis“My husband acted like a bull in a China shop.” |l0d&e them in case of fire. We're going to pot, really. We're barking up| Ok Fire hoses were rotted the wrong tree when we use that stuff. {through. Few were found hang. {ing according to regulations. They = . {just hung as though they ‘woul be needed no more. Pin Point Argument By Robert C. Ruark "need romore. | ot serious [proportiofis broke out in any part - . of the old building. there is no NEW YORK; Apr..19—One of the outstanding The delicate attunement of radar and rocket gorviceable equipment to fight it angles in this rassle for funds by the armed forces makes a truly fearsome thing of the needlenosed with, is that any number of experts can play. You don’t fighter. The Russians are supposed to have what! Even if the hoses could be unhave to know much. All you need is a point of we've got, and in superior quantity. [tangled, the water coming from view, depending on whether you are four-square There has been the ambitious, not to say in-ithe nozzie would be little more for Army, Navy or Air Force. accurate, statement that our big bombers can! {than a trickle... And the person! 1 gather, from the record, that a goodly number Maintain altitudes which exempt them from using the hose would be a sure of the Air Forcers, abetted by Rep. Clarence Can- fighter persecution. non, the sachem of-the House Appropriations Com- trip over the arctic wastes say—but the bombs from multiple holes in the walls mittee, are 100 per cent for the four-week war. will not be dropped on the arctic wastes, lof the hoses. , 3 5 A They are to be dropped on targets, deep in| Personal Tour Made Ty Ee rl 27 JIE dis. enemy territory, where the fighters mass to keep Meanwhile, Clifford Kean. su-| home to peace. The idea here is that the big apple the big hen from. reaching the nest with her | perintendent of county bulldings, will win it in a walk, but the details of delivery are deadly eggs. said he had made a personal tour, a little sketchy. I have a military expert's word that his fight-| of all county-run institutions to, as . ers can fly just as high and four times as fast check fire-fighting equipment and a Be Be mone wth tvs. Sankinde of Son on ee Pe prs big planes will fly too high for the little planes to S&S in her tummy. LE he pat wack. Ms, Kean Maybe the big pianes will carry “parasite” Big Stride in Aerial Gunnery iChildren’'s Guardian Home, re-! fighters, buttoned to the belly of the mama planes “ANY PILOT of mine who failed to shootienily branded as a fire trap. for use ‘as cover when needed. Now that we have down an airborne scow whose tail assembly alone Under his supervision, Mr. Kean, the atom and the enemy supposedly ain't got none,
the eventual pulverization of Soviet war might is presented as more or less routine. Jap Airpower Ravished I DUNNO. The argufiers against sole dependency on atomic bombs and big bombers to lug them make considerable sense. Delivery of the present to Russian targets could be less simple than bombing Japan. By the time the B-29's really got going on the Nips, Jap airpower had been ravished and ruined by Marine and Navy fighter pilots. What I do know is that no. bomber ever built was a match for a swarm of good fighters, During the first days of the war, a group of Navy fighters—unfledged in battle—took on 20 of the cream of the Jap air force and banged off 19 without losing, as I recall, a man. And the fact is that today our fighters have
martial,” he said.
% dittle depends on the man.
°
He sees his target, radar sets the sights, and he touches the button.| the week’s end. The whole wad goes at once—blooey! You don’t! He said he also visited the shoot but Once, and you don't come home with| building housing the any’ ammunition in your guns.” motor vehicle equipment As for retaliation, using rockets, the big bomb-!found it to be in. perfect condition. | ers haven't been able to employ them successfully (In the county’ jail, however, Mr.
when jaunched in the same general direction as the plane is traveling. This leaves the big ships wide open to bias attack, and modern fighters are taught to go in at an angle, anyhow. There is more target to see and more time to spend with it. : As for - the parasite fighter, which clings limpetlike to the mother ship—it is still an unproved dream. If the mothership gets knocked down, its lonesome chick has no place to Toost It dies. If the big carrier \gets jumped and destroyed before launching, it|
be given the stamp of approval. Advised of the existing condi-| tions at the courthouse, Fire Chief Henry Murray today said he would order an immediate investigation. He said he has a staff of inspectors charged with!
fire fighting equipment in all pub-| lie buildings. But the chief was at a loss to!
power that they can hit just about anything the pilot can see, and shoot down anything they can hit, —
Fat and Sassy 2 By Frederick C. Othman 9 Youths Sought
ynon’s théory of a four-week war. {the courthouse had not been’
|checked since ed since June 1046. : |
{
WASHINGTON, Apr. 19--Mother nature is a farmers be forced under law to turn some of perverse old girl this springtime, confounding their wheat fields into pastures makes them see bureaucrats and farmer Othman alike. red, and you can’t blame them for that. As for Nn going 0 up Everything is growing double-thick on my shipping the grain to Europe, the folks over there, These don't much need it. They're growing their own | C more often than not have two -yolks. Never was this year, thank you. city Snlice..syaats . $54.8.) the grass so tall, the ‘lover so lush, nor the Early indications are that corn, cotton; beef in a* “battered” blue car, wanted animal life so fat and sassy. and garden truck also will be in booming supply. for the brutal slugging-hoidup of First came the peach trees with blossoms so
And not only here, but in numerous other places. a South Side man. thick as to indicate peaches denser than jingle Mexico, for instance, has announc that | “All @ w alerted to : Took bells on a department store Christmas tree. expects to have the first food surplus in years, r th an ee rib 0 90 Now the apple trees, which had hardly a for &kport. or the Paly Aller they Were seen
{throwing a wallet down a sewer {at Maryland and West Sts. The {wallet was retrieved and found! be the property of George! !Gooth, 47, of 533 Woodlawn Ave,
blossom-last year, have more flowers than 1 knew trees could hold. If all these turn into apples this fall, I'll be sunk; I won't be able to claw my way out from under. 2 "And so apparently are things growing all over America, including the Agriculture Department's farm subsidy bill. There are so many potatoes still that we continue to pay. $1 million per day to hold up their prices. The government's buying butter by the carload; eggs by the millions of dozen. Soon, says the worried Secretary of Agriculture Charlie Brannan, he’s ‘got fo get out his checkbook in an attempt to hold up the price of pork.
First Survey on Wheat
THE OFFICIAL crop forecasters have completed their first survey on wheat, the crop of which they now expect will be the second greatest
All these things indicate that ouf “crop-support | system will reach a crisis in a few more months. ! The question simply is this: Does the government have enough dollars this year to support farmers’ prices in the fashion to which they have become i ,accustomed? Many a speculator doubts it. Hap victim, Even now some grain futures are selling at Mr.- Gooch. was round dazed less than the government's official support Ay {and incoherent shortly after 1 If Washington pays off according to present & He at Madison and peCany schedule, the fellows who have bet it-won't will Sts. He told police he was walk lose a pretty penny. ore on East St. when two men in
{a car stopped. forced him into “Too All-Fired Efficient’
{the car and struck him with a ) ¢ they too is THE FUNDAMENTAL trouble seems to [riaskuck, He aad and 2 ia that we farmers are too all-fired efficient. Making him out of the car. two blades of grass grow where one grew before. | ‘We're chopping out weeds with chemicals; fist sprinkle - the stuff from a shaker can. We're, kifting "bugs with an assortment of new-fangied
He could give only a sketchy description of his assailants, olice were put on the youths’
in history. The bins already are bulging with last goos, thus making the tomatoes fatter, the cream Aral) al 7A. m; today. w BBE year's grain and here—according to the gents richer, and the corn kernels thicker. hy Jr oye a iT : with the slide rules and the moisture measures— You may have noticed I said we farmers. That holesale Grocery
| West 8t., saw a “battered up” old ‘imodel car stop near the company office. * Ohe man left the car and walked to a sewer at the south-
we're about to produce about twice as much wheat as we can eat. What fo do? Build more elevators to hold more wheat? Make the farmers quit planting 850 much? Ship it abroad? Brannan & Co, can point out what's wrong with each of these ideas, The more wheat in storage, the more taxpayers’ dollars will be tied up in crop loans. The mere suggestion that
is not strictly accurate. Doesn't include Othman. I'm co-operating with Secretary Brannan. I'm trying to hinder Mrs. Nature as much ‘as possible. I'm refusing to plant Hank Wallace's double-rich hybrid corn. I'm allowing the vegetables to h their own battles with Ee rs ® 10 Uh west corner of the street. He Lime, nitrates and stuff like that I'm not dropped what appeared to be a using. Mostly I'm sitting .on my front porch, on| Wallet into the sewer and jumpe the theory that this is my patriotic duty. hack into the car, which spad
The Quiz Master 2? Test Your skill 722
Mr. Meditch and other employeés- of the firm lifted the sewer lid and found a wallet Is the same prayer offered each day at 4 the Must a Congressman be a resident of his showed it to be the property of | opening of the sessions of Congress? district? — | Mr. h. The prayers are extemporanceous and differ No. The Constitution does not ‘oy ule Shak n ecru from day to aay. representative be a resident of his own district. ] Juvenile Center Aid It says that whén elected, he must be an inhabi- Rifli tant of that state in which he shall be chosen. Reports Purse Rifling Not even. a law officer is 8 these: days.
° * - What man was both father and son of a PresiSB ne Sent Harriaon, who was bo in 1804 in ey oe w n Sohn of W a. Who said “All men are liars?”
In the Book of Psalms, King’ David says: “TI! t t. 84, reported tosaid in my haste, all men are Hars.” a autas *-0 @ {children—entered the front door .. How. does the Bb t of Niagara Falls com-'of hér home and pilfered her origin, wat adopted by white settlers Canada PATE WIth that of tne. tall oy ik Yosemite, purse, which contained $85. The and has come to be regarded as the Canadian S217 ! ‘door was not forced. 2 national game. It is probably the oldest organized ‘Niagara Falls is 167 feet high; the Upper. Mrs. Dennison is. assistant #uYosemite Falls in California is 1430 feet high. |pervisor of the Juvenile Center,
ninth President of the United States, aid father
Is lacrosse a recently developed game?
Courthouse Is Gloomy. Mesoun : of Antique Fire Fighting Devices
they use it. ONE: Fire extinguishers. had. “I got cold feet.” not been inspected or refilled. “Boy, is this a one-horse town.” {since June 10,. 1046. For the
This might be true on the pet to get a thorough soaking!
is three stories high would qualify for court-| added, all extinguishers were re-ig filled, hose and hose couplings “Aerial gunnery has hit the point where Very were inspected. and those consid-| 000 Ww ered obsolete will be replaced by,
sherify’s d8y dead from a neck stab wound. 'during the next, two years, C ity! and!
from their waist guns. They are effective only Kean said, certain replacements| Western Ave. and continued when would be needed -before it could Baker followed him to the ga- city
Telephone G Group
making periodic examinations" of|
never. flies. There are lots of holes in Rep. Can- explain why the extinguishers at/ Will be held Friday night in the
gay. Waiter E. Frye, Mildred! full
caught on top of a pile of leaves. {is being given for the entire com-|
Smoke Victim
Mrs. Sally Dennison, 49, of 817 Apt
- -
Tw
: Photos by Bob Wallace, Times Stall Photographer. Heavy lead pencil was inserted in one of “hundreds” of holes in one of outdated, illkept and rarely inspected fire hoses that might be called inte play, in the event a blaze should be discovered in the dilapidated, old firetrap known as the Marion County Court. house. Firemen would get shower using these hoses. :
SH i
But in event a blaze is discovered in the musty old courthouse, problem would be how to extinguish fire. Antiquated hose resembles Swiss cheese. Fire extinguisher is securely wedged behind water pipe. Tag shows _last inspection was made June 10, 1946.
hanic Charged Neighbor Cli i Mechanic Charged City Urged to Add Neighbor Climbs Two Engineers
An Indianapolis mechanic was Elderly Couple Council Studies Plan
Fire prevention poster poses a good question,
imma ——
Hoosier Tax Bil Set at $195 Million
Reports $53 Million
charged with murder today in r NEIGHBOR crawled over | al
‘connection with the fatal stabbing of his juke joint companion! porch roof today to rescue al
after an argument Thursday| helpless elderly couple unable tol night over the price of a pint off 10 Enlarge Dept. get off the floor of their upstairs| Rise in Two Years . beer. City Council today studied a bedroom where they had fallen, Hoosier property owners face a
Herman Freeman, 37, of’ 5009 proposal to enlarge and re. i Jiunois. we was to Fave pre-| rEuiie_« purtion of hs city's Mu oS hor Re Bt oa imillion, the president of the Ine minary hear on e char, 0 ashin {before Judge Dn M. Clark Re An ordinance introduced last came perturbed when he did not! {diana Taxpayers Association said Municipal Cougt 4 at 2 p. m. to- night proposed to add two posi: hear any noise today from the today, : y. tions in ie Sky Engineers Stick residence of Mr. and Me Alhent 3 Cole said property ’ at an a onal expenditure o liam Richter. of 2435 E. Wash- taxes in Indiana wou - Hy Ih Tyee Bauer, 30 ” $2740 a year. ington 8t., the adjoining part of 561,206 this year, an increase of the floor of Freeman's garage, 560! The positions were created 10 the duplex. Mr. Richter is 78. $53,370,686 dyring the past two ’s facilitate the construction of the jis wife, 14a Mae, i 73. {years. Mr. Cole sald the increase 'W. 25th St. about 1 a. m. Fri- city’s $5 million sewer program {was as much asithe total prope WHEN ug saw them sprawled erty tax bill for the atate in 1915, Johnson helpless on the floor, Mr.. Fisher in Marion County, the tax bill {said he hroke the window, went pase from $27.5W.389 in 1948 to 0.K.'s Sewer Project lin and put the couple to bed 31, 405,487 in 1949. First in the series of proposed ‘before calling police. | The association president said sewer projects was approved| Police summoned an ambu-|, 01 budget authorities sought to [rage. Freeman had been held on|last night by council. A $140,000 !ance. The ambulance phy siclan | end more than $210 million, but /a_vagrancy charge while police bond issue for the relief sewer to examined the couple and left , (oop city on the local and state (investigated. |be. built under York St, from them in care of a sister-in- Jax: levels trimmed $14,443,301 from | Kentucky Ave. to White River, 2s. Ed Richie, 18, of *[the proposed levies.
(was authorized. Bn he St. Property taxes rose in 89 coun The proposed reorganization ties .and fell in only three. The
ordinance would lop $1000 off the largest decrease was in Blackford Schedules Dinner Sewer Engineer's $4500 annual Continue Probe [County where taxes fell $29.450. The annual spring dinner party|Salary to make room for a new) {Union
County decreased its pro {of the Hoosier State Chapter of {$2800-a-year Beweér Structural ty prope Committee Studies
out of bed, 11949 tax bill of more than 5105
Freeman told police that the Engineer M. G, jargument began in a juke and!said. {beer joint at 25th St. and North-|
(Ole)
lerty levy $11,372, and Martin {Telephone Pioneers of America Engineer. [County $826. The proposal would also lower | Marion Up $3.8 Mi {Columbia “Club with Carl Whit- the. present §2820 annual salary arion Up on more national president, as prin: lof the Survey Party Chief by An increase of $3,866,008 was {cipal ‘speaker. $600 and add a $1626-a-vear inoted in Marfon County, and the
Life members o assitsant Public Workg inspector. 2 1 {other 88 increases tapered down Wp ember nip certificates 1 Vote te Amend By-Laws Officials’ Replies to $4780 in Adams County. Other ring this spring by R, E. Mec. Councilmen, demonstyating that] A civic Citizens Committee increases over $1 million were Laugh hlin, chapter president. H. their fast time recommendation. probed deeper into “How the city! by Lake County, $3.173,781; St, nna, president to Indiana '2%t month wasn't an Smpty picks its workers”. today at A joseph, $2.348.225; Allen, $2,203. 3-H Telephone Co.. will es gesture, voted unanimously to special session in the City Council g28 and Madison, $1.194.236. the speaker. amend Council hy-laws to observe chamber, ; Mr. Cole said $4 million of the
A voluntary form of Daylight] The committee, backed by the Baving Time quging the summer League of Women Volers, began months. tabulating results of secret guesCounetl will convene at 6:30 tionnaires sumbitted by top city (p. m, Central Standard Time of administration officials “17:30 p. m. DBT from Apr. 24 to Department = heads Sept. 25. three major queries. Before Council adjournment,! “Do you require certain party wa Yo itmore; Bretiqent OF he! an ordinance was introduced pro- affiliation for job seekers?” [that have hitherto ese of axa: 'his telephone career as a fieldman PO*INE a daytime hour and a half. “Do you have certain educa- that have hitherto es ped Axes at 8an Francisco in .1911. Long Parking limit on both sides of tional requirements for appli- tion. identified with philanthropic! King Ave, from Walnut 8t. ta canta?” 2 | "Other factors that £0 to make {movements, he served-as national 10th 8t.. and also on the west . “Do you set job specifications?” up the enormous increase,” the \campaign chairman for United ® side of N, Pine Bt. from Market Answers Still Secret {Taxation Association president Service Organizations in 1948. St. to Ohio 8t. Mrs. Alffed Noling, chairmap |®8id. “are more money for sale
i ise in the {of the seven-member committee, / aries and a general r jong Managers to Io. Hold declined to divulge how these east, of government sil a the “Clinic on Apr. 28
questions were answered. She .|sald, however, that answers have, by some cit The co-operative gelationships been received by som y omof community, employees and company will be the theme of a
Scherer Resigns. clals but not all. luncheon clinic presented jointly
One member of the investigat- Gas Co. Post ing committee. disclosed that the A Citizens Gas & Coke Utility a ‘iby General Electric Corp. and the Miss Geraldine Simmons will Indianapolis Chamber of Com-
group might recommend a .merit system .for city employees. One official had resigned today as a direct . the presentation which merce in t C } Hot r. Justin. Wroe. Nixon called “The m ce in the Claypool Hotel Ap
Entertainment will be provided by Audrey Marshall, pianist; Minnie Lee Belden, accordionist, and the Bell Telephone Chorus under the direction of Charles Hedley. D. Btroud is chairman of the entertainment committee,
increase was set aside ‘for the | reassessment of réal estate.” “This revaluation of real prope ‘erty is fot expected to increases materially the taxes to be paid iin future years,” Mr. Cole said. “It proposes ‘0 put on the assess
pondered
Church Speech Choir , To Give Production
A Speech Choir of young adults’ will give Herman Hagedorn's The Bomb That Fell on America” Thursday at 7 p. m. in the First Presbyterian Church Chapel
of the women members said the climax to an [nter-department committee was considering a city row.over public relations policies,
noblest utterance the bomb has The presentation of employee civil service plan B. Morgan Bcherer, advertising released on America -tremen- community and union relations However, Mayor Feeney landed and public relations director for dous.” will be open (0 top management the first blow for better city'gov- the utility, handed in his resigna.
The choir includes A. Roderick! , I6cal businesses ernment last week when he ad- tion effective immediately. It. wal
Embry, who will give the solo) with sourid film. slides and vocated a “city career plan” for accepted by Thomas 'L. Kemp, parts! Darlene Blum, Caroline gprs talks, the factors of job se- technical personnel. general manager. : Davis. Edward DeHoff, George, curity, working conditions, re- He emphasized, though. that Mr. Scherer's successor to the § {Fathauer, Mr. and Mrs. Hal Fo-|g spectful treatment by superiors, political patronage should - ex- $6000-a-year position has not been :
named. : Neither Mr. Kemp nor Mr, Scherer would disclose what the. policy disagreement was J gi former public relations al 4 rector said he and the |
information on company ac- tend to the non- “technical help. sitions and pelitics, good pay, com-
{petent understanding? Supervisioh Treat Babies ‘Who |
and fair promotion will i "Drank Kerosene
|onstrated. Invitations are being mailed tof manages Two children, each 14 months ment did riot agree on how publia old, today drank kerosene, but|yeiations should be handled and
| chamber Inembers, ; Civil Service Lists |General Hospital reported both in ryt wes useless to pull againet. Therapist P ost Open as condition. Covington, daugh-| each pcos Sma LL 0 fe shen ho Sopa s Richest” Man
being accepted by the Civil Berv-, '\ iaetermined amount, the hos- Listed as Tax Dodger |
{ice Commission, C. P. Bernhart, Firemen rescued a “i sarw: tary pital ssid. { TOKYO, Apr. 19 (UP)—Japan R Teas A yer 1sarvice secre anid today: But the hospital was able to wealthiest Am, was listed :
come by smoke in a fire at 224 E., ission has also listed’ today 10th 8t. last night. or Sommis don has require. find that Donald Craft, son of as the nation’s leading delinquent George Beatty, 22, resident of ments specialist at the Crane Mrs. Iris Craft, 24, of 1042 Church taxpayer. 3. was overcome by smoke Ammunition Depot. and main- 8t., drank about a pint of the fuel. Masamitu Moriwaki, hikari from a fire in the next apart- tenance superintendent at the| Both accidents occurred at the old Tokyo moneylender, owes the ment. Battalion Chief Albert Jeffersonville: Quartermaster De- children's homes. government 99,771,000 yen (3332,
Stammer and Lt. Ed McGovern pot. - a 000). carried him from the house and ~ Mr. Bernhart said applications WOMEN'S UNIT TO MEET I~ Moriwakl, who says ‘he is pene : 1 %he Irvington Women's Lions niless because all his nomex is Md to
Gallatin, Emily W. Greenland {Dolores Julian. William C. Kons ing. Eloise Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Shipman, George Wal-| 'lace, Alice and Mary Winslow and | Barbara Yoeman. The Speech Choir performance
| munity and there are no tickets. |
Firemen Revive
revived him, ‘must: he filed hy May 10 for t ine In ara eo ats beca — Police said an ofl stove explo- therapist and inspector positions. Club will mee n loans, $ ] sion was believed to be the cause The local office is located in home of Mrs. O. H. Boas, 915 N. have an income last year of of the blaze. | | iroom 525, Federal Bullding. taney Ave. eld 100 million yen.
| rl
