Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1949 — Page 11

PAUL LL

DRSEY Funerals - in the hi edit If Needed 5 £. New York vingten 1173

any ine

le i$

yo

nd

ARIE

Re

I

Ee as

RR

Te

= SAREE a i

AT AR WE EINE OS

Inside. Indianapolis

By Ed Sovola

MY FIRST WORDS after a terrific vacation must be this: Butler University has the greatest musical organization in the world. ~ How come? If you ask that then you weren't

“In the vicinity of the Union Station yesterday aft-

ernoon along about 3. Have you ever been met by a brass band going full blast? There's nothing quite like it for making you feel as if any second. you were going to fall over backwards. : Getting back home from a vacation a little broke, tired, hungry, thirsty, with no prospect of anyone being at the station makes for a rather dull conclusion. That was me as my train pulled in. I hit the bottom step of the stairway with a sigh. No one was even looking at my coat of tan. Fellow passengers reacted to my bronzed coloring

_ with an exasperating amount of so-what.

And All for Mr. Inside

ONE STEP was all I took toward the front door when Charles (Frenzy) Henzie's outfit struck with all its musical might. If it hadn't been for the quick-thinking gateman Oscar (Doc) Poland, I would have gone up the stairs at a run. Someone shouted “Welcome home.” And that, mind you, over the spirited notes that were crashing back and forth on the brick walls of the station. “It's for you,” said Mr. Poland. Disbelief like a wet towel hit me in the face. For Me? Must be a gag. Couldn’t be true. That last beer in the club car was what did it. A few more steps forward and I spotted the

ol’ maestro himself, Frenzy Henzie, grinning like

the proverbial cat. “You've always wanted to be met by a brass band,” he shouted, “here it is. ‘Butler War- Song,’ boys—hit it.” Drum Major Hal Wilkins gave his baton a twirl, blew his whistle and the station’'was shaking again. So were some of the dumfounded people. There was nothing left to do but walk past in review, A lump in my throat the size of a tennis ball made walking difficult. My lifelong ambition

Back home . . . "Mr. Inside Indianapolis” reels from surprise as the Butler University band greets |

~The Indianapolis Times

TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1949

realized at last. This was my finest moment, the! greatest moment. Probably no one in the whole! world was being welcomed home by a brass’ d that particular time. Wow!

semmsezrzn:Mlichigan Road Shy Of Signals Pupils Of Crooked Cree

PAGE 11.

“That isn’t Buckshot O'Brien. is it?” asked a| curious taxi driver. A gentleman (I'll call him that), said some- O r thing I didn’t catch and the cabbie flipped his hand and went out. Hummph. The band swung into “Washington Post| ., ¥ March” as if the kickoff were only a few minutes of i away. More people began to ask what was going on.

Look of Disappointment

WILLIAM McKITRICK, superintendent of the Indianapolis Union Railroad, appeared on the balcony. I tried waving to him. He recognized me all right, and he waved all right, but I thought I noticed a look of disappointment on his face. 1's hard telling who he thought it was coming in with/ a brass band. Mr. Henzie had the boys play “Director's Choice” and take a swing.around the station. I followed along trying to recognize familiar faces. With the buttons on my shirt just aching to! pop off, I recognized Farrell Speake, Paul John-| son, Art Schatz, John Pregoras, Charles Covy.! Harry Gillespie, Leon DeKyne, Marion Laswell, | Bob Logue, Bob Curtiss, Harry Henderson, Pauli Sims, Joe Marsh (that poor bass drum), Merle Featherstone, Barney Walls and Terry Thomas. Some of those gals that turned up their noses at me in Ft. Lauderdale, Miami and Daytona should see me now, I thought. Heck, brother, be-| ing met at thé station by a brass band was smooth, | Man, it's wonderful to get back to wark., Especially after being met by a brass band. Not a three-piece outfit, not some guy with a glocken-| spiel, but a real, shiny, loud brass band. What mare, besides a few more days to rest

i

A passing truck driver is oblivious to the school zone, parents charge, since there are no adequate safety markers. Crooked Creek Grade School children must that larger

Guarded by a school traffic boy, children of Crooked Creek Grade School

up after a vacation, does a guy want? I've had it.| wait to cross heavily traveled Michigan Rd.

A ins el

'n it school-zone markers may help gm 3 & S | cross heavily traveled Michigan Road each day conditions. 1 In ured Here my Lrgeon under the most hazardous conditions without Under present conditions nearly 30 children, | | benefit of adequate safety signals, aided by the school's traffic patrol, must walt for ! . u Raising a storm of protest over the traffic a break in the continuous stream of cars and . Isit IU conditions, parents of the children today called trucks, then dash across, parents say, n 0 CCl e S on the State Highway Commission to erect Principal Carder paid Shecial tribute to the { more conspicuous precaution eigns along the “alertness” of the school patrol. Gen. Armstrong Will road : “We teach the children they are responsible 2 Pedestrians Struck * 'g “I don't think any motorist wants to kill for their own safety, but the traffic boys are a a Hit # D i Attend Alumni Day | a child,” said Principal Delver Carder, “but great help,” he said. y «RUN rivers Brig jen. George E Arm-| Something must be done to slow down vehicles The Jehool never has had an accident in- Four pedestrians were injured, ebay p | in the school zone.” volving pupils, ! i SLYODE, deputy surgeon ge nerel| Some of the parents have urged that no- “I'm not trying to be finicky,” the principal two of them by hit-run drivers, will he Sah He indiana Hui passing signs be erected in the vicinity of the sald. “Other schools throughout the state have and six others were hurt, none ux ie ar alumni day | 5700 block of Michigan Road. Others suggest the same problems.” seriously, in 18 automobile accle activities tomorrow on the In-| ] * ° { o © Seite om 6 p. m. yesterday to Sn Armour Awards |P to Visit Pop $2 ay A. native of Lawrence County, rincess » IS Mrs. Emma Nelson, 41, of 729 Gen, Armstrong received his A. B.| ® C Union St., was struck in front of Sogies b RAN a MDB Despite Protestant Censure: fiona Sern 1925 from IU after serving in| A p ag : | 202 3 eridisn Bly LLM . * * Nd to Amy services| Private Audience With Pius XII Set Today; Mitchell, 30, after trailing him to after graduation and organized) Local Employees Said to Have Tacit Approval of King George Me: Nelson waa rested at the ihe yes, biog ia field | Have Best Record ROME, May 10 (UP) --Princess Margaret Rose of Great Britain igcene of the accident and remedical school for Chinese Army! Iwill have a private audience with Pope Pius late today despite & jepsed. Mitchell was arrested on officers in the China-Burma-India |. 1 0¢ Safety flag of Armour and murmur of disapproval among English Protestants, charges of drunk, resisting arrest theater, He was named deputy CO: WAS Presented to employees! mpe vigit of the young princess to the head of the Roman|anq leaving the scene of an acci\surgeon general in 1946, {here in a ceremony at noon today| Catholic Church was disclosed ih London to have the tacit approvaligent, Alumni activities will start at for having the best safety TeC- of her father, King George. |

Another hit-run victim was

Fashions in Men

i i ion. tion | . {9 a. m. with registrations fol-| him at the Union Station. The vaca ion is over al - {ton McCall, Jefferson Medical . {College. . By Robert Cc. Ruark! The afternoon program will in-

{clude discussions by Dean John

ord for the year ending Feb, '9,|

R. H. Borchers, Indianapolis plant manager, announced today. Indianapolis Armour employees worked 877,673 man-hours during

Reliable church sources in Vatican City sald the visit would | assume an official character be-| cause of her royal position. She | lis in Italy for a month's holiday tour.

Name Top Cities In Traffic Safety

Robert Warfield, 17, of 825 Ogden 8t., who was struck in front of the Antlers Hotel last night as he crossed from the west side to the east of Meridian St, He was treated at General Hospital for a

A a Ar Ln

NEW YORK, May 10—For the past 20 years or so I have kept a chart on what kind of male frontispiece makes the female heart go si-boom-beh—-very possibly hoping that some. day there would be a vogue in mildly fat boys with fleeing hairlines.’

At the moment a 50-year plus opera singer named Ezio Pinza is the hottest thing since the Kinsey Report. Mr. Pinza is teetering on the

_ edge of grand-parenthood, and the.part he plays

in the musical, “Seuth Pacific.” is that of an upper<middle-aged man. But they faint for Mr. Pinza now as they used to swoon for Valentino. Mr. Pinza, aided by grandfather Carl Brisson, has made youth impractical and unfashionable to the practicing Don Juan: The old joints may creak on the balcony lattice-work, but as soon as Gramps gets his breath—Oh, Boy! We have come a long way since the immortal Valentino, who let us in for a decade of slickhaired Latin lovers as the beau ideal of the palpitating matrons. Rudy's bear-greased, sideburned magnetism lasted so long that George Raft fashioned a fair career of walking in the master's fading footsteps.

The Vagabond Interim Lover

THERE WAS an interim period between the devilish Latin and the ugly brute, as later typified by the flange-eared Mr. Gable, and the damebeating Cagney. This was filledo more or less neutrally and certainly hygienically by Mr. Rudy Vallee. Nobody has ever quite figured out what Rudy had that made the dames go voom-voom. In the old days he presented the personality of a dehydrated carp. He had the volce, if voice it was, of a saddened sheep come down with adenoids. He wasn't much to look at. But he stacked ’em in the aisles, and babes from Cincinnati to Siberia hated their husbands every time “Vagabond Lover” was played. Mr. Gable, ears and all, then swaggered onto the scene, and for a while anybody who wasn't six foot two, unshaven, gruff and rough stood no chance for public feminine adoration. Mr.

Hocus-Pocus Foods By Frederick C. Othman! i; ame ne mis tha'tis Thins, ™ 0 4 Sirs, Bosse O18 orl

the year without a lost-time accivisit was scheduled for|

The W. F. McClellan, Chicago,|,q. T director of general plant safety nD Le Dress

. D. VanNuys, of the IU School Cagney na the exception which held the rule up- . Medicine; Dr. Jowell Cosgeright. - ‘He was an ex-chorus boy and pretty small, |shall, University o cago; DI.\for Armour and Co. will present . Mrs, Abe Drai : but he looked so mean and talked so tough and|Frank C. Mann, University of|ine fiag Robert W. E > Plant The Since wil —a the For Pedestrians “IN. Delaware Bt, was struck pushed girls’ faces so.desp into grapefruit that|Minnesota Postgraduate 8chool of gyperintendent, Earl B. Hall, per-| in by the Pope—a high-| Evansville, Terre Haute, Lafay- she cut diagonally across the in

you forgave him his size and his past. The ladies Medicine, and Lewis B. Hershey, sonnel and safety director and a| d long-sleeved dress, a ette, Peru, Madison, Huntingburg |tersection of 24th and Delaware yearned to be mussed up by Mr. Cagney almost|director of - selective service committee of employees Will re-| brie vo nud black shoes, the|and Clarksville won first place in sts, She was at General as much as they craved a tousling by Mr. Gable. records. 3 {ceive the flag. | tion legation said. " 7 their population brackets in the Hospital and re . The drive We had a queer recession, then, doubtless in-| A ed or wives of lun will) Joseph C. Cunningham, safety| She will be accompaned by John|198 Indiana Traffic Safety Con-/er, Edmund We Martin, 21, of duced by war and the fact that most of the able. Pe held n Ball: Residence forigdirector for the Indianapolis| yo Perowne, British minister test, Gov. Schricker announced 2077 N, Delaware St, was hot bodied he-men went off to fight the battles of] . {Power & Light Co. will deliver al," ." vatican, and by Maj. today. held,

Piccadilly and King’s Cross. This bred the Sinatra, | brief address, representing the ny ;mas and Lady Mary Harvey,| Peru is also the winner of the un. fourth pedestrian was a

- or fragile trend in popular lovers. To qualify in ; Indianapolis Safety Council. 'her companions on her Italian|American Automobile Association 8-year-old girl, Dorothy Swalils, of this league you had to appear to be wistful, ore 1 Mar on County The flag will be flown over the P award as the safest pedestrian 536 N. Traub Ave, who was and maybe even a touch tubercular, in order to!

r plant here for the next year, and "my, British royal family broke town in the U. 8, under 50000. [0 "00 0 lle ieiion of Tree {small replicas will bua presented! y/ religious relations with the The contest 8 scored OR the Aes mont and Walnut Bts, yesterday. |to each department. Employees| i, ic Church in the 16th cen-| complishments of cities in % | Her right side was skinned. The {will receive mechanical pencils asl ury when the much-married down fatalities and injuries an

{a token of company appreciation. in operating effective traffic en- driver, James Johnson, 43, of 1119 {Henry VIII wanted religious pe Ba on, Tied a . * . | sanction of his matrimonial ven- gi Bee EAH x aw Efron: Toni; ” hr, a on. h Rome would not give. school safety an . i Anneunced by Purdue TiPPling Irishman a t on 1922 ? tion programs. ; 9, of 1708 N. Emerson Ave. reTie Stas Suv ¥irs he Rankings of the cities in the ceived bruises and a broken finger STTE, May 1 Margaret's visit will be the various population brackets are:|when he was struck as he rode his

: y Finds Howard's LAFAYETTE, May 10-- State, first by a member of British 500 Evansville, - first: - South Bend,

| . ale 100 bicycle at the - intersection -ofscholarship awards have been Leniency Limited | royaity, the traditional “defend- second and Boon Rerre "Naute, Arsti|Gladstone and Nowland Aves. {made to 19 Indianapolis 4 cine ene | €F8 Of the (Protestant) -aith, Anderton, te00nd And, Mr eite, nd. third: Police did not arrest the driver, Wolf Calls for Gran’paw | Marion County high school pupils| AN IRISHMAN'S good nature|since 1927. At that time the Duke mips, second. eng Lovensport, third, | Mrs Gladys Ostermeyer, 33, of ABANDONING the 4-H Club. hero. the |for the fall semester in Septem- can only be stretched so far, even! of Windsor, then Prince of Wales,| 10,000 to 25.000—Peruy, first in the sth 4212 E. 15th 8t. The child was latched onto ‘the man who intimated a subtle evil, Per: Dr. Jean Harvey, executive by another Irishman. i treated at St. Francis Hospital, Th tyr-faced R t Mitch be th ir | Secretary of the Purdue Scholar-| Judge Joseph Howard sus- on Pope Pius XI. 5 te 10,000-- / a ® 2 do ace Rape! chum came ir ship Committee said today. - pended a 180-day sentence to the] The last “official visit” by second, and “Huntington. first; Garrett, . oe Mi , 2nd s popularity was heightened 1s Bleak include Benjamin Vieandiews. state farm last Friday for Tim British royalty to the Pontiff was second. ‘and ures, third | Corydon. DePauw Junior > en ye in gy on a marijuana rap. They J} Grchnoes Ave, Short Cteon "or. Duffy, despite Tim's record of{in 1923, when the late King as i Es cas they loved him because he looked ss on! vr Sricrat; Ricard Bile amgbell;(70 arrests, mostly for drunken- George V and Queen Mary had ihe contest, lsiconduiion spun 2 Wine Honor was they loved him because he looked $0 un-|z3ig'E” 1th St. Tech: David. G. Cobpate. ness, after the defendant .said|an audience with Pope Pius XI. |and the Indians Traffic Safety Council. savory. {88 W. Wilkins St; Manual; Prank C.| | Vatl d th ee Miss Catherine Clark, Indian|Ernhart, 4215 _ Bowman. ' Southporf; his latest arrest for tippling came| Both the atican an e : vs apolls junior at DePauw Univers And now it seems we are trading in grand- frances Marion Forbes 1148 Reid Flace as he was on his way to get a|British legation to the Holy See Jewish Federation po

cut on his left leg. Police still are’ Peru Best in U. S. searching for the driver.

co A i

fetch out the mother-féeling in the damsel. Actu-|

. ally it was only a wartime substitute, a throwback Pu ils Get Award to the weedy Wallace Reid. |

From the Sinatra stage, we progressed to a| healthy post-war appreciation for the beautiful humble puppy, which included Van Johhson and| Sonny Tufts. The boys had to be big, but they| had to be handsome, too, and above all they had| to. be pasteurized in appearance. But the jmters) |

Scholarship Winners

national bobby-soxer sickened quickly of this diet. It was much too bland.

BI | cicmmsiimstemsitm——

d nation; Bloomington, secon |paid an unofficial courtesy call|giate and third in AHe nation,

Huntington, thitd. 0. Brst; Jasper. mn. thir

a3

-

{known use of the word ‘“Hoosler’ |

WASHINGTON, May 10—There is a U. 8. Senator who owns a nylon shirt. Every night he washes it out personally in his bathroom and hangs it up on a coat hangar to dry. He doesn’t have to iron it the next morning and consequently never knocks off any buttons. “It is supposed to last forever,” added Sen. George D. Aiken of Vt, who told about his thrifty colleague, but’ carefully neglected to mention his name. “And what I want to know is -when this. gets popular, what is that going to do to the shirt industry?” Rep. Frank B. Keere of Wis., who still wears a cotton shirt, said he didn't much care. Nylon in large part is made of coal, but so, said he, is the synthetic lard and milk that some bakers are putting into bread. That's what's worrying him. Maybe these chemicals are nourishing. He doesn't know. But the way things are going now he said it may not be long before a citizen, exactly as in the science comic strips, eats his beefsteak dinner in the form of one pill.

‘What About U. S. Economics?’

“MAYBE SCIENCE will prove these pills will be better for us,” he said. “Maybe that's progress. But what it's going to do to the economics of this country I can't even imagine.” ; What it’s aiready done to the fats and oils business since.the war, he continued, is a caution. Two chemical firms that he knows about last year sold more than 10 million pounds of synthetic emulsifiers and softeners to the manufac turers of food. Sen. Guy M. Gillette of Iowa wondered what foods? Rep. Keefe mentioned bread, cake, peanut butter, candy, and ice cream. He said there undoubtedly were others, “And what are these chemicals made of?” demanded Sen. Aiken.

“Mostly from coal, petroleum and natural gas” Rep. Keefe replied. “I have tried to look into

{to describe residents of Indiana

the methods, but I felt my head swimming every|was in 1826. ‘CARNIVAL

time I looked into the chemical processes. It is! The Bulletin said that Dr. Richvery complicated.” lard L. Power, a research worker In Europe, he continued, the chemists have at the Indiana State Library, had turned gas into oleomargarine of excellent flavor. found the word in a letter written, They haven't done that here yet, but he said by James Curtis at Oregon, Holt they might. Fact is, he said they're doing about/County, Mo., to an uncle here. the same thing now with their synthetic ingredi-! “The Indana hoesiers that ents of bread, [came out last fall is settled The géntleman from Wisconsin added that the 2 to 4 miles from us” Mr. food and drug administration even now was try- Curtis wrote. ; ing to look “into the effect on human beings of! YE ; these chemicals, but that little had been seen avout Caught mn Gaming Net the proceedings in the newspapers. _ | Police raided a room operated He said this was because the evidence was so by Fletcher Tyman at 845 Ft. technical, and much of it so new even to science, Wayne Ave. yesterday, arresting that no ordinary chemist could understand the/the proprietor on a charge of evidence. “S80 you can't expect any newspaperman, keeping a room for pool selling no matter how conscientiously he tries, to write/and four other men on charges about it,” he added. of visiting a gaming house. They

. : {confiscated 50 books on baseball Plans to Ask Investigation tickets.

* REP. KEEFE sald he intended to introduce’ > a bill calling for an investigation of coal and OES Marks Birthday The auxiliary to Brookside

gas in food, to be conducted by Congressmen. | They should be able to keep things on a level Chapter, OES, will hold its 25th a reporter can decipher, and I, therefore, intend Susivesary dinner at 6:30 p. m. to be on hand when the lawgivers pry open their Yon the chapter hall, E, 10th first peanut-butter jar. ‘ and Gray Sts. Wilber La Roe Jr., the Washington represen- YEE A tative of the independent meat packers, said it LYNHURS? SEs To MEE? will wasn’t only the hocus-pocus foods that were ruin-| ot a¢ 8 p. m. today in the ing the fats and oils industry, but also the syn-mepynie Emilie Crouch is worthy || thetic soaps that many housewives row use t0/ma¢ron and Howard Klinger is Cleanse their dishes, clothes, teeth and hair. pon Thése detergents have replaced about one-| . third of the fats and oils that used to go into OES TO MEET soap. Thix has resulted in huge surpluses, sagging! A joint business-luncheon meetprices and a situation he called demoralizing. , !ing for past presidents of Queen What Congress can do about this is problemati- Esther Chapter OES auxiliary cal. And I don’t suppose I ever will discover what will. be held tomorrow in the that unnamed Senator uses to rinse out his nylon home of Mrs. Maud Young, 121' shirt. 4 {8. Gladstone Ave. |

. hich J By Dick Turner ted aration, 2% ltural and fndus-

fathers, mellowed men who still use their own ton Bt. Tech: Wilms Jeannette Morgan. job and “straighten up.” maintained secrecy on the de- sity, has been elected to the hair and teeth, but who have passed the boyish | Berries 1903 Meats sioriridge: Wabace J sven joa of the audience and on the x Lio ey Author campus chapter of Mortar Board, 40's and who don’t mind admitting it. I think Anne Rutledse. Beech Grove, Edward 1. “I'LL SUSPEND the sentence protocol. 0 ea highest women’s honorary on this is a very hopeful sign for the aging non- Euclid Ave. Tech: James Gordon Wood: (and give you a chance,” the Irish| Margaret was to lunch with the Miss Eleanore Levenson, lec-/campus. Members are selected descripts. The day yet may come when the girl-| Wright. $145 EF 10ih 8. Warten Gen. judge of ;municipal Court 3 sald.| president of Italy, Luigi Einaudl,|, 4 and author who recentlylon basis of scholarship, leaders ish wolf-calls are roused by fat fellows with bald |{jsl, Orace O Blankenship R. R 7 “But I'll give it to you the next pefore her Papal audience. visited Israel, will. speak at aiship and participation in campus skulls, store teeth, and legal wives. Matter of F. Grubsugh. 1703 Central Ave. Short- time you come back.” —————————————— meeting sponsored by the Jewish activities. tact, that golden age may be just over the horizon. school. Greenwood: was aiso amons (he Tim's freedom was shortlived.| WBA PLANS LUNCHEON Welfare Federation's 1940 fund| Miss Clark, daughter of Mr T seem to recall that Roberto Rossellini has less|i65 Dupils in the state who received He was back in court yesterday, A covered dish luncheon spon- ‘ algn today at 8 p. m. in the and Mrs George L. Clark, 510 hair and more paunch than I, and if he's good| a , ——-. on a drunkenness charge. Before|sored by Siicery ang Meribers of Gold. ah of Forest Bivd., is in the school of erough for Bergman, theres sil hope tor me, ‘Hoosier’ Orfgin Traced he nk was dry on he wuspended| Fide Review No. 10, woman'aGld Son, nara rt pecan 1. ho - ot tn | ‘ [Hotel economics. e is a member o ‘To 1826 Document the suspension and sent Tim to|tomorrow in the home of Mrs Rel. Levenson a One a 2 member bf is rush chairman, secretary of Alpha Lambda Delta, national {scholastic honorary for women, and a member of Theta Bigma Phi, journalistic honorary for |women, the student Radio Guild |and the Home Economics Club,

po

ion ied a |State Sets Deadline

jawnile in Jer: Mts Loris For Exam Applications {salem after ihe sie yas «| 2 | Applications for positions in the The meeting will be sponsored, , "gi. te Service as stores

{by the General Bolicitation 8ec-| "oq in rormational writers tion, Women's Divison, ~Mrs.[ 5 gyeq py May 26, the Ine [Lewis Levy ia “section chairman, ,. ogi. te Personnel Bureau ane - *{| The drive is for Indianapolis i A nounced today, ,||share of the United Jewish Ap-|™"p 0 ool will establish {peal for $250 million to i Jens’ lets of eligible applicants for Ine ing displaced persons fo 1Arael, .. ...¢ional Writer I and III and’ and the United “States fromig, =. "wo. D, B and I classifis camps in Europe. |cations. Applicants will be notis (fied by mall of the date and lo {cation of examinations.

Miss Levenson

Schricker Names Five

To Aeronautics Board Te Gov. Henry F. Schricker today Accident Victim Dies ‘announced appointments to the Times State Service \ |Btate Aeronautic Commission... HUNTINGBURG, May 10{George N. Beamer, South Bend|Glenn Kemp, 40, of Hunti x |Democrat, was named chairman. died last night in Stork Hospital | Other appointments included here from injuries suffered two {William E. Renshaw, Indianapolis days earlier when he fell from Democrat, two years; William KE.|[the fender of an aotomobile Molenhour Jr., Warsaw Democrat, driven by his wife. Mr. Kemp three years; Jerome DD. Beeler,|was adjusting the carburetor Evansville Republican, one year; When he toppled from the moving and George W, Starr, Blooming-| vehicle.

ton Republican, four years. RTH SR > TY OES Plans Initiation

CARD PARTY THURSDAY | New Augusta Chapter, O | The Barbara Fritchie Council, will have an initiation in Daughters of America. No. 76. Mother's Day program, tomorrow will hold a card party at 1:30 night in New Augusta Masonid p. m. Thursday in the Meridian Temple, Mrs. Faye Huffine § "Room of Colonial Furniture Co. worthy matron and Allen Bowden Mrs, Mae Smith will officiate. 4 is worthy patron. 4

"We weren't getting the crowds we used to!” >