Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1949 — Page 15
Tavel RIST=
MINED FITTED 'E: Your Eyes ined and |
ES ED Ordered ARRANGED our ed Now!
RIST—
LORE Xe FITTED
: By Edwin A. Lahey
thrusts bebr hon ad a case made rich listening inf the first few weeks of
this production. Thé exchanges sometimes reached britiiant heights of legal colloquy, and frequently bordered on contempt citations. The attorneys excell in well mannered and lofty vituperation of. the judge,
and the judge outdid them in the literary magnifi-
cence of his rebukes. : Now the wits of these characters have been dulled. Like the members of a stock company who have done the same script too long, much of the gusto has gone out of their verbal duels. When Judge Medina makes an observation to
_ the jury, or tries to straighten out a witness, one
‘of the five defense lawyers still will pop up with the now-hackneyed line: “I must object to the court's remark, and ask that it be stricken.” Judge Medina just nods his head wearil) shrugs his shoulders, and keeps rocking in h & swivel chair. Sometimes he strikes out his remark, other times just overrules the objection.
He's Boss in the Court
“SOME DAY I might have control of this courtroom,” he said the other afternoon, with despair, ¢ The despair is a pure act, and the judge has plenty of the actor in him. Actually, he is boss in the court.” Sometimes the defense lawyers wil! start arguing the reasons for their objections to a question put fo a witness by U. 8. Attorney John F. X. McGohey. They are under a standing order to state their objections without argument. When they step over the line, Judge Medina stops rock--ing, looks at them sideways and reminds them that they are out of bounds. The attorneys invariably sit down. ‘the seven weeks that a pretrial challenge to the system of jury selection was being argued, Judge Medina gave the defense attornéys great leeway, but tightened up the ground rules
considerably once the trial actually got under way. -“His Indulgence of the defense lawyers apparently
was the subject of criticism by members of the bar throughout the country. Informed persons say much of this criticism eventually was heard by Judge Medina. He now seems to regret his extreme leniency with the defense lawyers in the early stages of the
case. “Every time I think of that jury challenge, it just makes me sick,” he said one day when bringing a discussion of the attorneys up short. = The judge can still be quick on the draw in an ad libbing session.
All in Fun
Recently a started over a question put Epler hdd ff eed
5 el 2 di Cor Cee PEE Sa di a Sntont Ms. Aovemmon sid TUBSDAY, APRIL 26, 1049. a = PAGE 13 | impatiently. ~ : dg ; “I'l ‘withdraw my objection,” countered “Prose il Sutor McGohey : " “And I'll withdraw my ruling.” the judge said. y while the jury smi Judge Medina is: hed, most industrious person in| the court. He takes voluminous notes, and each day's proceedings after each session ef hel EXE trial. When there is a conflict of opinion over Labor Cost Cited as Ecomple; ** Thin is the rst big case in which Judge Meaina Other Problems Peculiar to Industry has presided. Me was appointed to the federal bench in the summer of 1947. He has told friends By ROBERT BLOEM : that he has never figured out why President Tru-| " " man picked him. He has never been active (Third of of 2 Series) year law praétice he dropped in a hurry when he These are coupled with problems peculiar to the transit industry Yas appointed. Once during this trial he referred! which in some respects make efficiency in the normal business Senge to “the great day” that he became a federal judge: dificult if not impossible. a recent years, compan PRET Has Elegance of Expression spokesmen point out. one of the «/drazice to heal efficiency | J the AS HAS BEEN reported before, Judge Medina major costs of operation has been P hange the fact that a lot of with the philosophy of law. Twice in as many years wage " Judge Medina was born in Broekiyn 61 years, 'demands of union employees of People go to. work in the morn. ago. His father came to New York as a boy from Indianapolis Railways have been|ing and come home again in the Yucatan. Mexico. His mother is descended from subjected to arbitration. Raises) {evening. the early Dutch settlers of New. York. He at-/granted by a state board under | .'n , tended the public schools in New York. took a/the Utilities Compulsory Arbitra- CHARTS prepared by. Indian + He was a lawyer's lawyer for most of his pro- - (gers. Half an hour later the fessional life, arguing appeals for other attorneys. IN 1932, when the present com- number "fs up to 11,000 and be: The last big case he handled as a private attorney Pany took over the Operation Of tween 7:30 and 8 a. m. nearly was the U.S. Supreme Court appeal of Joe Fayithe utility, there were 1428 em-i;9090 persons are going some and James Bove, the convicted labor racketeers, Ployees on the payroll receiving place hy bus. trolley or streetcar. He attacked their conviction on the ground that# total of $1,780,574 in salaries; oy on hour after hundreds Judge Medina for years was famous for his payroll was $5,423.339. “cram course” which he conducted privately a| Only control over ‘these pay-|a, Plunged away down below couple of times a year for candidates for the bar rolls today, spokesmen say, is to; examinations in New York. Between 1914, when cut the number of _employees.! Then for four hours the fighe began this sideline, to 1942, when he dropped it, That has been done—171 em- ure hovers below that mark, 30.788 students paid $35 each for his six-week ployees were lopped off the pay- mounting gradually and finally
. SECON y SECTION
what some witness said a few hours earlier, the, judge can clear it up instantly. Recourse to the; transcript will then show that the judge’s account| politically. { REGARDLESS of the outcome e of the projected ‘efficiency” study # But his seat on the $15.000-a- vear-federal bench. of Indianapolis Railways, the company's records show a number ot means more to Judge Medina than the $100.000-a- major expenses over which management has virtually no control, matter what is done to improve is a deadringer for Adolph Menjou. He is suave/taken out of the hands of thejmalier » in other Tespacts prow and has the elegance of expression that comes'transit executives to a great ex- ty ‘men insist. no: utility aah with ja’ fine classical education and a saturation tent. That is the cost of labor. : degree in Romance languages ‘and h Phi Beta/tion Act have added to the cost/apolis Railways show. that froin Kappa key) at Princeton in 1909, and then.at-'of operation of the transit’ a. m. to 6:30 a. m. their vetended the law school at Columbia. system. hicles haul nearly 8500 passenNew York's “blue ribbon” jury system was uncon- and wages. Last December the coo. 1.0 ove heen sent out io stitutional. and he came close to outlawing that company had only about 250 more, ‘carry this huge load. the number system. He lost his case in a five-to-four verdict. employees than that but the 1948 passengers going somewhere course of lectures. roll last year, more since Jan, 1. {soaring to near the 19.000 mark Copyright, 1043. The Jpdianavolis (Times and Other uncontrollable operating again between 5 and 5:30 p. ‘m icosts are represented by a couple By 6 p. my the bulk of riders |
Wr {of recent developments known tolhave gotten where they are
the construction of the new White| company must leave only enough
many riders. One example was s i d the By Robert C. Ruar Ble wasigoing, the peak is ovirosa : ; \River~ bridge -at Michigan St. vehicles on the street to handle
NEW YORK, Apr. 26—A kind of Kinsey report {nqt the sex Kinsey, but the booze Kinsey) will be uploming from Yale one of these months. Tt is a survey designed to explain, in tabulated detail, why college boys drink. I can save Yale's section on alcohol studies of the university laboratory of applied physiology at New Haven a lot of time and trouble. And Heaven knows how much wear and tear on the tabulating machines. I can tell you now why college boys drink. They drink because it is fun. Or else they think it’s fun. Or else they drink because the Hther guys do. Or else they do it because the prexy says they shouldn't. But in any case it is my scientific observation that nobody ever got hurt much hy college drinking—unless he was the sort of guy who would have been a drunk in wollege or out, before or after, g ®
Fido in the Chicken Bones
A COLLEGE STUDENT is a puppy. He will chew any shoe, hat or soap-bar that is placed before him. If he is a smart puppy he will stop chewing the articles which make him sick. If he is a dumb puppy he will keep on munching, and nobody can ride sufficient herd on him to stop him. The.second the guardian's back is turned, there is Fido in the chicken bones again. x Yale, for some odd reason (maybe they baven' t got enough work to do in New Haven), would like
© to amass a flock of statistics. The snoopers would
like to know’if rich kids drink more than poor kids, or if the sons of teetotalers lush it up more than the scions of soaks. The end aim is to “aid in the therapy and prevention of alcoholism by identifying factors associated by excessive drinking in youth.” Every so often I despair of the work that Satan finds for idle professorial hands fo do. I notice that this particular milestone in. futility is the pet project of a couple of sociologists. Sociologists are people with a smattering of ignorance ‘of all sciences. They have been enraged, from time untold, be-
Patter on Pates
Fas solid grounding in higher math or Engli
cause the established scientists would never admit. Which HO hau alles to te-llens than, shin the peas them into the clubhouse. They have been trying {blocks across fhe New York St load to earn their letter with surveys ever since—partly | | bridge. T TRU E E ; ra C ' ENCY, of to keep the professors out of the pool halls, and] . ww - i 1d i 1 at partly to gain dignity by association with the sta-| SIMILARLY, when a hole was{y arse, Woi nvoive Spreading
tistics. I know just a little about the sociology|pounded through the Indiana Ave.(the=¢ PET dnd valley loads more field; T once took a degree in it. bridge over Fall Creek, the track- evenly. That, say transit experts, like to see protected from too much second guess/doned temporarily. That meant] Because of these and other and explanation. College is a fine, prime, giddy|the service had to be made up|Problems. Indianapolis Railways according to their nature. Their youthful troubles ularly during rush hours, Were ut hai a Billion tollars more. 4 : and their method of handling same swiftly serve needed elsewhere. n operating costs alone than Circle shows load conditions nder which ndianapals as groundwork for the tough chores of adulthood, Weather conditions, especially Will take in as fares unless the This il: hour pictwre taken in. Monument . peek ! College is little more than a trial run for man- transportation industry. A heavy grants their request for higher ld hood, a wind-tunnel experiment in which the poten- SNOW, a mere inconvenienge to rates. The estimated loss, com-| nare ~ [Schricker ‘Makes tial adults test themselves for flaws. The first/individuals, can represent costs pany officials say, does not in ] by more than a natural curiosity. As such, they|transit company. |{increases which already hae may provide healthy experiments in self-control] Probably the greatest hin-/been demanded. Gov. Bechrieker today = Schools Fails ° — nounced the appointment of & unsupervised temptation. | | former sports editor to serve on Needed: Course in Guzzling Job Insurance Plainclothesman Fortville, McCordsville Gets the ‘Goods’ {made a former school principal a id Consolidation Set approve of a college course In it, inthe interests of | Nine affidavits against a Fed-| “Police raids ona cigar store, moderation. It seems to me easily as tornts ot | Truck Burns |eral prisoner charging unemploy- smoker and taveih last night re- {Board and made one reappoint. MocoRBRVILE SH rir ish| ment insurance fraud, were filed sulted in arrest of 15 men who ment to a third board. j2ian io seek consolidation a poetry, and is apt to turn out a consideranle sight today in Criminal Court, Di- | will be arraigned. in Municipal| ya.k ‘H, Mankin, former sports! more useful to the student. Hi F Fl | vision 2, [Court on pool ticket charges 10" a editor of the Terre Haute Star, the Fortville School was defeated im From Flames A t Toh one of the half-dozen hardest-drinking schools in| |chie said Glenn B. Yaple, 350 E.| At a smoker at 1412 E. 16th St.) by nC. replacing Marjorie Gunder- remonstrance group wh the country, I neve knew a full- ng sot. My] A Maywood truck driver es- washington St; now serving alofficers armed with search war-| P ® Jor learned of a plan to circulate pes Hugh E. Vandivier, Frankln./two schools got out counter-pro-reason than a desire to feel gay and sing loud. when a passerby pulled him from [Correctional Institution, Ashland, of 638 W. 20th St, and Willlam| Most of them learned to hold the stuff and to treat| his flaming truck after a South- eh y. fraudulently obtained $342|Miller, 28, of 1427 Cornell Ave, {who formerly was principal of|posals and won signatures from
The college boy or girl is one animal I should|less trolley line had tobe aban-||® éasier sald than done. period of coltishness, where the hobblehoys cavort/with motor busses which, partjc-/today sees a picture of putting ‘and as swiftly split the men from the boys. iin winter, are a hazard in any|/Public Service Commission Railway busses 1 must operate. ri Move to 2 . dabblings ih boozing or sex are rarely motivated,of thousands of dollars to a clude the amount of new wag 4 Appointments because the—“world outside the ivy wall is full of h Gaming Trap Driver Rescued ‘the Indiana Athletic Commission, Fraud Charged IF THERE is to be drinking in the world, 1! i g member of the State Probation | |McCordsville High School with Passerby Pulls What I started out to say, though, was that in| Deputy Prosecutor Louis Mur- day. named as attorney for the Derore It got off to a good start, bunch got loaded on occasion, but for no deeper! caped Serious injury early today 90-day sentence at the Federal rants arrested Waiter Perkins, 30, | titions for consolidation of the it as an everyday commodity instead of a sin. If! from the Indiana Unemployment|and filed charges of keeping a the Hopewell, Franklin and Mar-some 90 per cent of the parents
| west Side crash. | Division. ‘Mr. Murchie said Yaple room for pool sellin tingville High Schools, succeeded nefore the original petition forms Shere a Peyehiic compulsion, 1 sont recall it. The driver, Leonard Ward, 25, applied . for jobless rao Eleven Pi . the estab-|Veffa Smith, as a member of the were Avabirg n ta rer y Ve a sugges fai during the period from Sept. 4,[lishmeht were also arrested and|Probation Board, and Dr, Willlam| The remonstrance group ion or. the Sutvevors: ey might spend a few; waa a ) al EL Sondition In he face 1948 to Jan. 1, 1940. charged with visiting a gaming! N. Wishard, Indianapolis, was re- scoured rural areas Sunday with iE DA raul and_Sorrelating he a rim on the facel Records indicate: Yaple was house. Police said they confiscated appointed as a member of theipetitions protesting the consolidas babies invariably put ry they YT The westbound truck struck ’ the |actually working during that time 10 partly filled baseball books, State Board of Medical Registra- tion plan. Workers returned to Pe tyatably roo of an underpass near, Hard: {and had earned $481.63. three bank clearing sheets and tion and Examination. a ‘mass meeting at Methodist
He was sentenced to the Fed- five baseball schedule books. Church here in the afternoon wit {ing and Morris Sts, turned over| \ - " h | several. times, according 10 wit-| Ta prison Feb, 11 for forging Caught “Red-Handed «Two 0 Youths 1s Held A Jom 300 pare nts, Leaders in the original petition
WASHINGTON, Apr. 26-1 don't know whether President Truman has in mind free wigs for bald-headed men, Or girdles (with the compliments of the government) for rat ladies. He probably doesn't. I hope. But so far I%e been unable to gat any of the experts on his new national health program to say 80. Everybody's mulling over the leal to give free medical attention to Americans, ind about all a fellow can do is take a look at England, where the same general idea has been put in practice. Some say the British scheme is working out fine; others claim it is'a mess, with go many people discovering pains that the overworked doctor’s can't keep up with the pill pusiness, There's probably some truth on both sides, but what worries me are those funny little stories about wigs, gold fillings, walking sticks and fe-" male corsets -that keep trickling across the Atlantic.
Baldness Called’ a ‘Disease’
THE BRITISH, for reasons best known to themselves, have decided that baldness is a disease, that a man suffering from same is likely to sneeze in a draft, and that the government owes him something to keep his noggin covered. Instead of prescribing nats for people with bare pates, the English have ordered wigs by the thousands and the hundreds of thousands. This has beautified the tight little island, comforted a lot of bare-topped people, and produged a number of new jokes. And also has had ith effect omighe hat market. Because why should A man, snug in a free wig, waste his money on & fedora? The British dentists are having their troubles,
The Quiz Master
. A narcotic otic prescription. . | Floyd Morris, 50, of 2214 By Frederick C. Othman cesses. and burned. Mr. ward io oe as lager with 5 Sail e believed he had gone to Feenev N Named ND keeping a room for pool selling] movement said they thotight they 100. The average free customer, faced with the; Jack Romine, 29, of 133% 8. y [he polich sid he sid & jo After Mail Thefts | would “forget the whole thing.” decision as to whether to get gold fillings or sil] Hiatt 8t., pulled the truck driver (ball aol tickets 1a the i | “The people who wanted the ver, wastes little time making up his mind. » I a gals ‘ope|ChANge never had a chance to
EV dy aT i uD. TA nC Li J he Jushing venice sid at ‘Man of the Year jat 2178 N. Illinois 8t. : | Two Indianapolis residents were present their ideas.” one of the it Mr. Truman's health program does go into ef- The truck, owned by G. A. Wea- | When he filled the officer's first, yng custody of the U. 8. Mar- pro-consolidation leaders said,
fect, gold is going to be barely good enough for ver of 473¢ W. Washin : {30-cent order, Morris: replaced hi nable to meet a $2000 ‘The other side had an overs me. I don’t want any of .hat cheap old silver, was demolished. ashington Bt. Mayor Given Scroll jHickets n the sale before the po- has ioday. uo SOTIIASIONSE Ads J. whelming majority and it's alike I've got now, in my mouth. Hit in Trafic {ceman. cou entify himaelf y question now If we will even try Latest report from England concerns feminine) 2 Hi a were At Alumni Banquet jand mie an arrest. loth i" Smith op ail theft charges yes: (no present our petitions." unmentionables. The ladies suddenly have is-}, ured slightly in Other traffic, More than 250 former Notre (ask for 9 Fie ” wi onl terday. | The proconsolidation group covered that if they can get a doctor to prescribe |aceidents. i. Dame alumni applauded last night | qperator Hed An w : bi Ernest L. Poore, 20, of 1010 B icontended that McCordsvilie High a SaEget, the government must buy them one. "po Kimmel, 64, of 1706 N, in ‘the Marott Hotel as Mayor] Spéra arrest. y a8 placed Mount St. and Harvey E. Reese, School, with anly 58 students, reused I er To ap, ie Jadies who , 1abama St., suffered a hip in- Feeney was named the University! phe bartender at the Pioneer| 17, of 437 N. Alabama Bt., waived quired sit nets while She ment has appealed to the nationalized physicians| 127 When she was struck by a|Of Notre Danfe “Man of the|Ciub, 322 8. New Jersey St. was| Preliminary ‘hearing and were "123 had © ly three teachers. io gb easy on the girdle busin alized physiclansicar at 16th and Alabama Sts. Year.” {also caught in the snare of the|Dound over to federal court. At ies rr 8 eas, The driver, Richard TenEick, 32,| The Mayor. a member of the [police gambling net last night. | Both were arrested when Gus-| Be An ey I tl) a Sh A dF D of 5532 W. 16th St. ‘was arrested |Irish class of '15, was presented | ctu a 0 ean ops Around From Doctor to Doctor
ion tav Steinberger, - operator of a! [Fortville high school in th and charged with failur croll honoring him for his| gh schopls are in the THE DOCTORS retort, what can they do? Ala ra the L aiiure way" Rchievement by G. Don Sullivan, | Local Student Wins JE ty > Alabama_st.,| same township, they proposed lady bent on owning a free corset shops around| The injured woman was treated President of the Notre Dame Club [Engineering Honor {when the pair asked him to cashicoP20lidation to allow more tenche from physician to physician intil she finds one|in Methodist Hospital, {of Indianapolis, sponsors of the! 1d Keyt, f M dla $20 veteran's allowance check. lers for the lower grades at Me. who Prescibe i. On account of her weak back.| Frances Koble, 37, of 3436 N./ Universal Notre Dame Night din-fyy2? "Herbert Keyt, Noid Langley| Mr. a a told police pe Sordaville and addition Sun ula ay ruman's system can escape these Euclid Ave. was treated in Gen-|ner: jor | hanical en- had cashed a $40-check for them| 2 ludicrous problems, but my own doctor doubts it. eral Hospital for injur Harry <G. Hogan, Ft. Wayne/AVe: 8 Junior in mechanical en: McCordsville High School. - He, being a member of the American Medical As- when oy was OF by Jeceived| Ham whe ny ie |Bineering at Purdue Oni » month ago and later discovered The remonstrance group__cone sociation, is prejudiced. The association vows to Massachusetts Ave. and Noble[two years as president of the [has been elected to Tau Th he admitted stealing a|londed. ‘however, that Fortvilla fight the plan to its last scalpel. {St. The driver, Milton Robinson, Notre Dame Alumni Association, | honorary engineering -fraternity.| > You 8 adm a to an {school Is already . overcrowded It claims the program would cost the taxpayers|19, R. R. 3, Greenwood, was not|was honored at the dinner with 12u Beta Pi is the engineering $25 savings bon and 3 401 {and sald it could not offer Me~ up to $18 billion a year and force the government held. "a testimonial certificate presented counterpart of Phi Beta Kappa. refund check in addition e | Cordsville young pééple the ade to hire about 350,000 more clerks *o keep the rec- lon behalf of the association board t is open to juniors and seniors allowance payments, Maurice
ords, buy the wigs, hire the ductors, build the hospitals arid see that the patients didn't cheat. This also I don’t know about for sure. But somehow I am beginning to feel’ a small! pain that somehow I fear natioflalized medicine
couldn't cure. —
22? Test Your Skill 27?
What were the principles laid down in the Monroe Doctrine? In his message to Congress in 1828. President Monroe announced that the United States would remain neutral in the political affairs of Europe and that there was to be no colonization and no; intervention by Etfopean countries | Hm the’ Americas. * & o
Do elephants lie down to sleep™ The Asiatic elephant often lies down when resting and sleeping. This is in marked contrast ‘to. the African species, which does so rarely, ex-
eo
cept to roll in mud or rub itself agunst an
antheap. ® & o When was John Masefield appointed poet lau-
Bridges as post
“Where did the ballet dance originate?
pertiriics in mimic action -
of Ae: originated in Italy
tury. a na
* also one of
Which i# strongef~s hollow évlinder or a solid one, the material and weight being the same? The same weight of material in the form of a hollow cylinder is stronger against bending than a solid one, becausé the material is at a greater radial distance from. the axis. Therefore, in bend-| ing, the outér material is stretched more and the _ material inside is compressed more with the hollow |
cylinder, and more force is Fequireq for the same i
amount of bending. ¢ & Where is the world’s highest scientific laboratory located? ! The laboratory on the summit of Mt. Evans, “Colorado, is generally referred to as the highest laboratory in the World. But this honor i$ also claimed by the Institute of Andean Biology at Morococha, Peru. The altitude ‘of the laboratory is 14,900 feet, compared with 14,156 feet for Mt. Evans. ‘ee * @ % How much does the human heart weigh? The av rage human heart iveighs 10 ounces. * & 2 Which metal has the highest melting point? Tungsten, used in) Meht bulb filaments, has the highest ene point of the hardest-ma
any known metal; it is Louis Stump, Mrs. William Heck Miller,
‘ivantages of the Present arrange«’
‘Laboratory, Grocery lof ‘directors and the Board of in engineering who are in the Graston, assistant U, 8. attorney, ont {Governors of Notre Dame Foun-
upper fifth of their classes, Isald today. . : Re ported Robbed dation. P. C. Reilly, member of Shortridge ° Senior Wins
¥ » Burglars who broke their way the university board of lay trus- Hoosier Red Loses Head, Scholarship fo Wabash
into a ‘laboratory and grocery ‘ees, made the presentation.
store and escaped’ with $80 last Indifference Scored ¥ . { Pl D d A Shartridge High School pupil night were the subjects of a police Mr. Hogan, principal speaker But Re uses 0 ay oa was one of five Indiana high search today. at the dinner meeting, said a i . “ slatd to school seniors, who were awarded Entering the Chemico Labo. fecularistic’ indifference to God RUSHVILLE. Apr. 28 (UP)—-"Red.” a Rhode 1s and ross e+ ‘honor scholarships to bash ratory 1050 Broad Ripple Ave.. is every ‘bite as “dangerous to without a head, was kept alive today ‘on a diet of milk, liver an {College after a series of examina\thieves had knocked the combi. ‘deals and welfare as outright LVilaming, 3 ’t Ket {tions in which 96 candidates from {nation from the office safe-and atheism itself, Red” loxt his head yesterday morning at a poultry marke ‘seven states participated. |fled with $35 and change from a _ Other speakers included Gov. lowned by Mayor Russell Coons, | The Indianapolis youth, Fred. Isoft-drink machine | Bchricker, Edward. (Moose) or But the Bir «veterinarian and the Mayor turned it over to erie nt nara. A 41 E. 37th : se, Notre Dame athletic di- ames Alan ‘Lord, t a grocery store at 532 N. {irause, nd I Da Ne 3 in Nich. Mr. Coons said he hoped “Red” ama wr given the ax treatment Knightstown, were awarded $600 Miley Ave, $45 was taken from olas-3. Connor was elected presi-| would outlive “Lazarus,” a Lag Yesterday b orn COONS. {per year scholarships to remain I™ Eat x, police were told. dent of the local chapter, Other Angeles, Cal, rooster who lived|Y The youth said he dropped the, in + effect the full four-year course, ntry had been mafle through officers are William Holland, about three weeks after his head| o scholarships valued at $300 'orie of the windows in the build- {new birds into a° barrel. : \vice president; Joseph Gillespie, Was chopped off “But when I looked in, there Igor year were awarded to Galen | secretary, and LeRoy Keach Jr., But Dr. Mull said’ there WaSiwas old Red on his feet at the Weaver, Wabash and treasurer. {“no way of telling” whether Red/pottom of the barrel” young Gevise SE ETLR oN “The auxiliary to Hayward-Bar,| Charles E. Mason, Francis L./would break Lazarus’ record. Coons said: $ 2 Hay, Pp bert cus Post 85, American Legion COTE UC UL Don SUVAR WEIS) him dot nd iver) Tn i ified his father rs. - ii | an em n of Hw JI hold a benefit Sard puny at Letter Carriers Plan”
7 p. m. today in Chambers Pro- I RE Ea and milk with a vitamin complex ducts Ine “showroom. 2468 Police Fraternal Group [through a glass tube” Dr. Mull Pircheln: Dinner “Auxiliary No. 140, National xe
Post Sets Card Varty
eridian said last night, “and he Me EI | Arranges . Card Party to be as strong as six hours ago) ARRANGE BEN T EVENT | The es Auxiliary of the although he had loat a lot ot A- penefit ¢ard party for St. Fr Order of Police will blood”. Paul's Catholic Indian Mission hold a card party at 8 p. m. Fri-| Dr. Mull said be believed thein oe ‘Marty, 8. D., will be held May day in the Foodcraft, K. of P. Hiver would help the bird regain [Bank New York St. branch. ~ 5 at 1:30 p. m. in the Food Craft Bldg. Istrength. Mrs. Eimer Schmalfeldt’ ia Shop. Miss Minnie Murt will be Mrs. James Fletcher “is chair-| “I'm.going to: keep ‘Red’ in a'five years and this is the first chairman. Assisting are Mrs, the. chairman, assisted by Mrs. \man in charge of arrangements. lchge in my dog kennel for a few time we've ever, had a freak,” te Harry Ro Root. Mrs. Richard Phillips W. E. Stumpf, Mrs. Louis Koern-| Others "are Mrs, James: Martin, days and see how he gets ajong.”| " mayor, said. Casper Phillips. Mrs, hi Mrs. Julius Armoruster, Mrs. Mrs. Edward Heyob, Mrs. Salley the veterinarian said.’ The rooat- He explained "he Saat, Inman is in . Bien Barger. 0 heartbeat is normal; he said. “Red's” pedis ‘may have, been ] " and
a ne a ara 'y
»
