Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1949 — Page 3
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a3 #7
pp
So
Bb
wn OEE is" no- good.” +
bios pe Ah a adit sana
wvaii Cries for Help |’ but U. 5 Ignores 1 gs
sions hors (Continued From Page One) ? and that ha and they ve. infiltrated into political “We have merely scratched the surface in combating their influence. Action should be taken to--bring into the open the names and activities of Communist groups. | The 99 per cent of the members of Communist-controlled labor organizations are good, loyal Americans and should . welcome the disclosure of the character of their leaders.” Information and: évidence constantly are added to the government's etaned filing cases—but athing mare seems. to ‘be done..
“Governor Under Fire-of Communists : Gov. Stainback naturally is under fire of the Com- _ munists. They ‘accuse him of Red-baiting, of bungling the strike settlement and of appointing Republicans to Democratic offices. The Communists, as previously has been pointed out, have captured control of the Democratic Party machinery. The governor's appeal for help is eshoed by Sen. Hugh Butler (R. Neb.) Who headed a committee which - recently studied-conditions in the islands. High ranking
‘To Be
party won
party unity,
to help Hawaii in its present crisis, but their reports ai are “not publicized. In its summary, the Butler report recommended: “That the executive branch of the federal govern‘ment through the Department of Justice, take immediate steps to prosecute lawless communism in the territory, and to protect from force and violence those who honestly seek to support and strengthen orderly constitutional government, 5 “That Congress take cognizance of the very serious economic problems which confront Hawaii as a result of the activities. of the Communist-dominated ILWU and immediately enact remedial legislation.” Also, among other recommendations, “that statehood for Hawaii be deferred indefinitely, until communism in the territory may be brought under éffective control.
Tension Noted Beneath Surface But the Butler report, like others, has been filed away. On the surface, harmony still exists among the racial minorities in this sun-drenched land where people of .many nationalities live and work and play. But for the first time authorities here are aware of a tension seething beneath the surface. Once Hawaii
4as_ national
Omaha.
Gates,
polities.” "At ohe |Halleck (R.
But he laid
in 1918-21, licans some vice.
nda,” he
Supports Gabrielson | With Winner’ |
WASHINGTON, bel 5—Republican national committeemen and women were en route home’ today with_the parting advice =e i from a Hoosier GOP veteran to! J
principal speaker last night at the’ huge Republican dinner at the Mayflower Hotel which was “labeled “Kick-off for ‘50:" -
The dinner was set up to stress
Among the 52 votes for the, winner were the two from In-| diana cast by former Gov. Ralph national and Rep. Cecil Harden, national committeewoman. Up until 3:30] (p. m. yesterday Mrs: Harden had (been listed in the anti-Gabrielson {camp. The switch was summed! {up by Mr. Gates in these words: “Indiana wants to be with the & winner. That is a good rule in,
sought to get Rep. Charles A. BE Ind.) to take the iff chairmanship as a compromise. 3 down requirements ® which were not met, including a unanimous vote and withdrawal of all others. refused to withdraw. = Mr. Hays, {czar who was national chairman
DAN N KIDNEY
elections, was the
after the day was
gpent in another “Omaha breach”! which resulted in Guy G. Gabriel-| Army and Navy officials also think Washington has got [son of New Jersey succeeding Rep. Hugh D. Scott Jr. (R. Pa.) chairman. with two “{votes-iess-than-Mr -Scott- at
“got
committeeman,
Halleck ‘Mentioned er]
point. the meeting!
Mr.
the retired movie
offered all - Repubelder statesman ad-
“In this time of raucous propa:
said, “it is the Re- |
was immensely proud of its remarkable progress in the publican Party that can best mo-
field of racial understanding, and it still is. the Communists decided to use the islands as a test tube the ‘seeds of grave unrest have been planted here and some of the islanders reluctantly admit -friction-may develop. They see President Jack Kawano of the striking longshoremen’s union standing before an audience shouting: “Why-don't-they give -us-the same wages they pay on the coast?” He pauses dramatically, points to his bare arm, and roars: “Because the color of our skin is brown!” And strike osganizer Henry Schmit, Harry Bridges’ aid, will tell his hearers: “If people on the coast, black and white, receive the same amount of wages per hour, then you people who have brown skins should also receive the same wages per hour.”
progress, no tion.”
the year."
~The Things You Hear a Alien Filipinos, who comprise a large “part of the striking longshoremen, and one of the main forces in the ‘pineapple and sugar Belds, -are sold that “g- Hacle (wis
Homes-
These are things y you Bear. on the dona aiid in the fields; “The employers are our enemy . . . we must stick together and fight , . . the pineapple industry arrogantly brushes us a few miserable crumbs . . . a stab in the |
|dered change,
He advised adoption of t gan “every man a politician” and explained that he meant each| |party member should participate door intelligently in politics not only Sensing
But since |bilize Americans Who want or-| not pros
t wholesale destruc-
{of Miss Duncan who often ran he slo- errands. for the elderly recluse
The latter were absent from the!
tooted
Jewels, Cash Yoke $300 Loss in One
Jewels and cash of a value esti-
dark at'our union... the wailing and gnashing of a few mated at several hundred dollars
|were missin millionaires fail to disturb us’ ’ and so on. fashionable
Loyal Americans here among the workers of all races sacked and wonder how much of that can be fed to Chinese, Japanese, ported hig Filipinos, Koreans and native Hawaiians before the calculated reaction is produced in the test tube. Hopefully they look toward the United States government. to end a situation that threatens to become not only intolerable but a grave menace_to the once undisputed paradise of the Pacific.
| h | Heel From Shoe
Solves Robbery with the purchase of an
ALEXANDER SMITH
"MUNCIE, A Tug or carpet . . . 0
ington Blvd.
{by a burgl land broke a
estimate the
|and reported * 75 — A rubber’ Heweiry and
heel, of a suspett, picked up in conwwith* &. robbery. . here, to be the clue. that solved... [$300 80
terda HOMEDECORATING un, hing i ey rei SR grabbe rom the cash. regis- [been ripped from a back door and ter of the Victor Clendenin Groc- a glass broken by the burglar. {Two bedrooms were‘ looted. Missing were a platinum proosh| Police picked valued at $200; -a $50 string of who pearls; earrings worth $12;a numfinally confessed. Today his part- ber of old coins and a $10 bill Hixson Thomas, 44, of 1069 w.|
worked out just for you
CLARA DUDLEY
your color-sc ot — “ar YOUR LEISURE
IER FURNITURE (0.
“an COLLEGE AVE.
Lf —— ISTAR STOR
ee
ery here Wednesday. The orily clue left on the scene | was a rubber heel, up a 16-year-old
consultant
Smith suspect ‘ner, 18, confirmed the statement! of the juvenile. Michigan 8t., The 16-year-old youth said he sers, contain
Ho. 1376 § had not missed the his shoe until an hour later.
missing.
!&Lawrence
| motorcyclist
4
[lacerations
NGTYON ST Ted | atftick by a
1: Ww
2500 FINE QUALITY
{as the car
Sidney Shane, 42,
g today after homes were rananother citizen retrousers and. wallet
5402 Wash‘tol
who cut a screen
glass door in enter-| burglary, -he-said, 100K gay. Had - visitors sometime between 9 a. m. heen expected, Mrs. Pearce said,
; pm Mr. Shane said he could noti;
loss until he got in
touch with his wife, Mrs. Ruth | Shane, who-is out of the city. He: knew, however, that a jewel case |in her bedroom had
been rifled ‘quite an .amourit of money missing.”
"$300._Burglary Bernard Stroyman, 50, of 5501] IN. Delaware, reported his home | wal robbed of jewelry and cash ally left the Duncan ‘mail at 9:15 Ans approximate value of a. m, etime after 2 p. m. yes-, [there since Tuesday when he left
reported his trou-| ing his wallet, $25 in|
heel from cash and a $50 check; were lifted Side from a bedroom winffow during| Hiped nearly to her waist: by her — the night while he slept. T, Both pants and wallet are stil]
| Motorcyclist weed ‘When Hit by Car
Smith, 21-year-old of Pendleton, . suf-
|feréd an injured back and facial
early today Bid
car operated by
F. Radford, 30, of 4923 Rookeiife, besides a large pan ‘of birdseed| Road, at 16th and Tibbs Sts. i Police "said Smith wa¥ struck \floo
was. making a left
turn into Tibbs from 16th St. He 8nd newspapers,
|in-an ambuldnce. |
TURKISH TOWELS
Actual 59¢ Value _ 20x40- «Inch Size ;
Colorful Block ‘Plaids
Colorful block plaid turkish bath Towels. “Heavy i, closely ‘napped. Choice of colors. First
Over 12 Years of Perfect Safety "Phone FRanklin 1554 Ticket Office: 6 E. Market St.
Hy os tis |
Gabrielson
| was. cluttered throughout with versation with a friend or two. Sen. William E. Jenner's (R. ancient. and up-to-date popular She had no enemies that were | Ind.) plan to have the national] magazines, many newspapers and known. committee lay down a set of {old furnishings. A heavy coating prineiples for the 1950 candidates of dust had long ago settled over bery as motive for the ldlling,| was adopted. “A special commit-| the interior. tee to do so will be appointed by | Chairman Gabrielson.
Two North Side
two |
olice his resi-| dence was ransacked yesterday |
‘ | a i - 5, a We etn. Elsie
{
|
Mrs. B. M. Pearce.
last eonversation mith victim.
Mrs. Aaron Wright . . . heard victim's screams,
Police Step Up Probe
Of 'Rocking Chair' Murder
(Continued From Page One) chiefs over théir faces to block. Kuhlman, a school teacher friend the odor. : | Mrs. Duncan who started i
and paid her monthly, utility 5 pal yu bin tired on $50 monthly pension in Mrs. Kuhlman noticed the front 919. W ab f ajar when she arrived. 191 ell love y her former
that - something was Pupils,
She was always alert mentally, !
bound it to the rocking chair. - |jonely person. she resented “pry-| The rundown, six-room house ing" but sometimes sought con-|
Although police suspect rob-
{the next pension check was not! Shocked friends. expressed as- due Miss Duncan until Wednes-| |tonishment at the condition of day. [the home. Although they visited Terre Haute citizens, aroused | the elderly lady at times, she over the killing, swamped police always kept doors to all rooms with calls volunteering informa[closed, and visitors were never tion concerning the neighborhood permitted beyond the: front room. and- workers employed by Miss Inthe Kitchen &n uncracked DUHCan. +g was placed onthe table as! “Despite eager. clies existing lg Se Duncan ‘were preparing ID the case’ Chief Evelo said, | to have breakfast. Nearby, a bot-.. Have utmost Confidence in De
tle of milk, which had been left tectives Porter and Seward, who'ns 130 N. Miley St. was recover-| junior national and open cham- at work. ing from lacerations, shock and burns, quested to enter the case early suffered because of Sis curiosity.
lat the door ®t 8:20 a. m. had Are assigned to the case. If it can |been placed in a pasteboard box.| Pe cracked, they can do it.’ It was still cold when investi State police had not been regators arrived. At 840 a. m., Mrs. Duncan's voice_was heard for the last time She had tele- DOg Veteran Buried
today.
work is still in preliminary stages and far from the point of human application.
. held [worked out,” he says.
teaching when 18 years old, re-|spinal column.
roots Aj simple feat,” plains, {been carried out on several dozen o¢ this attitude. prishates.t
Experiments Have Cured Animals
(Continued From Page One)
medical school. Doctors have long contended. it was not possible; “If our finding is repeatedly ob- Written by Lt. Gen. A. C. Wede-| tained, the importance of it hardly can be overemphasized,” | Freeman asserted.
Dr. He cautioned, however, that the “Many problems still must pe
Vv The pr
Grart Aids Project
ntact nerve above
i
ite,
surgically a relatively |’ Dr. “Such procedures have
is
Along ‘watting- period -eristies, | | sometimes a year, before it can,
be determined if the nerve @sliS| consent and the report—other- | grow back down through the new. wise favorable to Gen. Chiang’s
connection. Today in Dr. Freeman's labora: tories animals “Walk and jump without impairment on onceparalyzed hind Jee:
Curiosity Causes. : Explosion, dnjury =
Beven-year-old Robert Rumple,
in General Hospital today |
Police said Robert was Injured
inthe explosion of an abandoned:
in convérsation. ‘gasoline storage tank yesterday phoned a friend, as she did once aftérnoon after a lighted match a week, to pass the time of day. With Military Honors was dropped into .a three-inch Mrs. B. M. Pearce, who received, SI. PAUL, Minn, Aug. 5 (UP) opening.
the call, sald Miss Duncan said, Cascade, a 10-year-old “sheep-| -
Fumes in the oid tank, located.
nothing unusual, other thar the oe and eombat veteran of World in the rear of Gaseteria No. 2,
weakness she felt early yester-
_or—workers-2daY. the “victim_of poison.
The dog,
. the Pacific, was buried with full military honors yesterday. .He Across the street from the Dun- gs 5 member of the Carleton
;an home, W. O. Wherrett, ‘had ' £° the. Vet orei eaten his breakfast at 8:30 a. m., Hes. e..Velerans. of. Foreign
then sat on his front porch to fascade helped his master, exread his paper. His back was. to Sgt. Albert Tschida, flush scores |the. street. He saw. and. heard of Japanese soldiers and civilians
| nothing. | out of caves on Okinawa. No Forced Entry
War II, lay in a military grave 1702 W. Washington St., exploded rand the boy, witnesses said. was | who went out on 92/knocked 50 féet in a deluge of | ~Hmr-wontd- hrave-mentioned: patrols into enemy territory in!dirt and debris.
"Two companions, Charles Lip-| parer, 10; of 1535 W. Ohio St. and ‘James Brockett; 8; of 123 N. Richland St., were not so curious as Robert and escaped with a severe case of fright Robert's ‘mother said an older boy dropped the match and then ran. :
Postman Harold Wetright usu-
but had made no stops
IN INDIANAPOLIS
INDIANA WEATHER fi DigH.. pressure area centered. ovér Indiana should -makex.the! ‘temperature cool again to ght. = The pressure area will begin moving eastward tomorrow Permitting warmer air to move into the are
a New: York newspaper... ...... Police later said there had been] ino forced entry to the home, al{though friends of Miss Duncan isaid_ the former school - tedcher would admit ‘ho one unless they
lealled by telephone to arrange a. Ine humidity . should not reach| | meeting. i high proportions, See weather! Friends said it was _believed Map on Page 20... Temperatures (that Miss Duncan carried a large in Indianapolis one year ago tolsim- of money pinned to the ifi- day: high, 75; low, 56 of her dress, which was EVENTS TODAY Times and City Park Recreation Depar
ment Hotseshoe Tournament—Qualifleman Pa erica Sais Con-
1B Bund Severin otel
Pearson's Band and Pearson's Accordion Band Concert—-8 p Finch Park Startight Myleain The Cat-and the Rid gte airs uns or andstand, -
Detective James W. Porter d Clint R. Seward said it was aon impossible to tell whether rthe house was-ransacked. There iwas “too much junk scattered |eround,”. they said.
ns a Seabee. Veterans. ol. Am entio Throush
fay Beliaire Mefhoint Eh reh Women's So-
clety Christian Service Fish { The two dogs and 16 canaries| Begining 81-3 Peli, 11,300 church, n an rittenden ve jin six cages were turned over to Kiwanis Club b Noon Lunchean Meeting | ®Y Poo
the Humane Society by detectives
trom the sidewalk, held handker- | Aiffasd club Monthy “Heeling Noon, Hotel
MARRIAGE LICENSES } Harold Geel. 22, 22 as Morgan; Betty Bibbs a1, 4d 8 ne ‘ 2 Lincoln: Dons Win-|
Phyllts |
of Troy; yivian|
29, 129, 18th |r . es y Tose Tr Warman: Bonny ‘Grif- { | > : |e 15" T4a4 oookiat : NE wl Lin 30 B vil
206 hy 1s New Jersey:
ra feld
Hie y
260
| Dav a" Ald
Ww 29th; Bessie [sam
olmes: Flornell[Johm
iar PRs Edith Zippo
Ropert Crevigtan, 21. Belleville HL: Helen t
hs Godwiy. - As lilinols; Thelma |. Robert 8m oat 23, .263
0 Holt; Nancy “Tays t .. 134 Perry; Shirley Carolyn
ors x.
a on Re at Leland Brow wn, 20. Greencastle: “Hofim an. 18, _Greencastle
DIVORCE SUITS FILED Grover Hurry Marion vs
Helen vs, Robert Forrest; Mitchell, Caroline
Bamell dw ard Hen n nett Rav id Flora ry Bl ngs Ban Betty vs Mie Freeman ard vs Julia Thompson Lilian 3 I mmers E William Artis: Viole! vs. Win-
3 fed We al den
Donpa vs. Righard Hunt: BIRTHS BOYS . At St Frandis- Charles: Marths OGsrien;
Pields. Ray, Grace Steven- |
Ross, |
Da id. Mary Ronald. Lots Sandiin
© Phyllis ms.
AL SE enurali gsa Fri k: Coleman—Roderick Smith: 1 Martin Helen Willia .Char Syivia Pettidrey AL Methodist—1iyn Alsa Stephens; Law-| ence, Thelma - Kessler; Leonard, May | Behiey; Lawrence Ruth Thurman! | Clyde, Dollie Crawford; Charles Ryelyn
Herron Art Institute Students’ Exhibl- Kane Kenneth, Donna Qamitys twho--found them —in-—the—house | tlonmWeek days. § a.m. 10 4 0. .M.| Wilma Fox eorge Th through - Sept, A At St. Vine AT neh ee: Jets ere were no signe of struggle Butier University's Summer School Com~| “trips, Ashley, Kathryn Wright; Warren, penrement Exercises—4 p Butler Mary Carrico CARLA f nin was scattered over the|lnfiana Stamp Club Monthly Meeting ALSL Francis Pua. Claudine Ruppert: arol Virginia Rup a ‘| indiana oils” Optimists ap J Noon Lunch- | o "0 oman—Harry harioste Stoeppel- | When [detectives ‘shifted boxes gn 11D | a Tin iohn. Ohiley Need], & Balbi| 4 ” odin mice skittered EVENTS TOMORROW [. phil up . Bet 2 i Hurley. Edna Vv “os | appe AONAr nes uinton |was taken to Methodist Eaital into darkened corners of ‘the Sepben Leura of ay. Beverin Hotel At St. Vincent s—James. Vera Huffman {house.. The musty odor of mould! Stariie he Minieals—" The Cat and thet Robert, Mildred Hicks: William, Phyllis ~ is 5 " . was heavy-in the air. Curiosity | grounds Gringriand vs p= Fair |seekers, ‘crowding into the house North Unitariah fee Cream Sociai—1:30 DEATHS
Al ma Small, mn, At General, arterioscleroms ® at 2060 Boulevard Place, Addie 441 N. Walcott. are teriosclerosis Clara A. Nielsofi, 72. at 722 N, Tremont,
carcinoma mes x Peak. 67. at Veterans, carcinom Eliz abeth D. Pursel, 80, at 440 N. Alton.4 pneumonia - | Anna Minnie Wiedenhaupt, 74, at 1713 In. am, myocarditis Robert W. Baliinger, 60, at 8t. Vincent's,
myocardial infarction uel Paul" Graves, 5, at 2013 - Parker; hypertensy on Einora Dalfin Meko. 26, at 1938 N. Dear-
born: mitral sten a oo» av Veterans, ofton ry thro boy :
‘| people.”
from secret documents without of -| ficial eonsultation with the Chi-| nese. It is intended, Mr. Acheson said, to ‘provide a. “frank Record) of an extremely compHcated a mest unhappy period in the life
United States has long been attached by ties of closest friend-| ship.” - 4-2 To-the- Chinese. people, he. Held. Tout one 1ast—hope==that they) ‘might some day, SOMenow their “democratic individualism” and “throw off the foreign yoke. "i
would ments in China which now and in the future work toward this ond” “THe did not siy how
son wagged a ‘warning finger.
“for what you are, not what you, profess to be. a minute.”
!intentions * vast crusading movement”
= oct Attack: Leg Paralysis
{paper revealed the text of the | Wedemeyer for two years—and offers its ex: ‘planation why.
Red. i of Russia, who has always coveted ‘pital.
meyer, man's secial envoy to China in 1947. In it, Gen. Wedemeyer, it is now revealed, recommended that this country, with congressional was that of 24-year-old Edgar Ele approval, economic support to China for at jn Ft, Wayne.
finance land currency - ‘stabilization; that we provide military supervisors bject of Df. Freeman, 33, and advisers, is supported in part by a grant and, particularly, {Fromm the Veterans Administra- cies: that China inform the Unit_...ed Nations she had turned to UsSitheir incidence ranging from. one. 48 the experiments, “the animal for ‘help, and that China agree tot, the high of 54. anesthetized and a hind leg is/a United Nations trusteeship for | paralyzed by-the-cutting-in two of IManchuria. a nerve along the spinal €olumn. i" The surgeon then “selects an/meyer™ report it in the similar” to its own, with one im-| Chicago hospital. It. is usually a portant merve serving=a- relatively unimportant muscle. i The nerve is- pulled down to retary of State felt that recom- vania St. He was reported in fair neighbors said she had| join the far stump of the cut! mendation, on election day but every day in wrong, she summoned police be- received as many as 100 greeting nerve, by-passing the damaged be highly offensive to Chinese day. THe Indianapolis polip total ° ~- - {fore- -entering. The badly muti-'cards during Christmas season, [8 Mr. Hays said: the party should | {lated body was discovered by poappeal particularly to women and lice, sagging in the ropes which they agreed, and read widely. young persons. conspicuously dinner, which cost $5 a plate.
rtrusteeship: ~potio-
susceptibilities “Transplantation of spinal nerve ment of Chinese sovereignty ”
Freeman eXx- George C.
I i 5 ®
wd
The white paper; was assembled,
hich th
He promised that we the U. 8 “encourage all develop-|
At the Communists, Mr. Ache-
“We..recognize you,” he satd,
We aren't fooled
The Chinese Reds, he said, sue | ded because Russia m dh ‘behind a facade of a which mistook for “their he said, Chinese!
Donald George Henderson esis. Be year-old victim of tetanus
wil Olina ully died today in Methodist Hos-
are dupes and tools!
State Polio Toll Increases to 0
“2 Cases Suspected who was President Tru- i Beech Grove
(Continued From Page One) Latest death reported today
he Far East. For the first time, the white
report — suppressed;
Written by General |
The Wedemeyer report * _
provide’ military and’jepherger in St. Joseph Hospital
that. we help| reconstruction!
east five years; Chinese
The five new cases reported ine cluded -gne from Jay County, bringing its total to 54, highest in the state, and one each from centers A gams, Allen, Howard and Putlogistics agen-\ nam Counties. As of today 54 counties reported polio cases, with
training
Two new fatalities os en ‘terday were Hue. fa Bal ~The White paper says he Wede- Memorial Hospital in ES and for “in general Carole Evanson, 16, in an East
exception — Manchuria] Indianapolis reported one new.
case—yesterday,——Charles It-says the President and Sec¢- Sujlivan, 9, of 2150 8. Pennsyl-
if, published, “would condition in General Hospital toinfringe- for the. year stood at 22 with no deaths reported. of State The death of the 9-year-old * Marshall ‘“confiden- Muncie boy, fourth Muncie polio tially advised” Chiang Kai-shek victim of the year, ended an The generxlis- eight-day battle: for life which | simo, the white paper says, had attracted national attention. “vouchs#aféd ‘no comment.” \ Added by Firemen His silence was intarpreted as|- on’ July 27 the youth was
placed in. an emergency iron lung FeSTATAIOF constructed by Jack
el aq {i fi 4 held despite frequent and violent, Releh by i te mers
protests from Congress. It was n. Chiang. ‘___. bearers at. his funeral, his family sald today. ~~ The victim was tie. son. of Mr... and Mrs. Rufus Steele. ."During = Shakamak Meet the. period. of. the boys. ness... —— Twerity - ‘four swimmers will fellow Indiana Railroad: bus’ compete for- the YMCA in the drivers covered. the father’s shift
as an
ormer Secretary
hard-pressed regime—was with-
Sends 24 na
pionships ‘at Shakamak State Experts, from throughout the Park tomorrow and Sunday. state disofissed polio on a radio They are: John ‘Stephenson, Proadcast in Indianapolis last | Jack Frazier, David Gunyon, Joe Bight, 3 Slasoutuge “xs Duggan, Bob. Cris i Wr ie EE tanto In a roundtable discussion the Hedges, .Chafles Downe Stan doctors sald normal precautions. y...8 against polio would be taken but Brossman, Leon Perkinson Ror: that extreme measures such as ald Salisbury, Jack - Patterson, yucinecs boycotts were not cof Bert Fentress, Jim Kelly, Jack templated. * Morgan, Jim Shea, Billy Shea, pr. Leroy Burney, head of the | Pick Wertz, Billy Willever, BilliState Board of Health, said only Frederick, Dick Denson, DIicK!Jay, Randolph and Union Pang and Larry Frazier, ~ |Counties were epidemic areas
STRAUSS SAYS:
SUMMER ~~ STORE HOURS
SATIRDAYS COTULT
( Other Dogs, ? 9: 230 till ke
Pr STRAUSS & 00, THE MAN'S S
1
cent 8, garbral emorr nage.
at St. Vine}
