Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1949 — Page 1
OPEN LL DAY TURDAY AM.
Wage
SMe 0th YEAR—NUMBER 161 _ °
Lobaugh Bets Prays in Adoption Case
FIVE AN
Hawaii Asks U. S. -
Conciliator
In Dock Negotiations
Acting Governor Appeals for Aid After Bargaining Collapses Again in 112-Day Strike
~ HONOLULU, Aug. 20 Long today appealed to the
Service to intervene in Hawaii's 112-day-old longshore strike after negotiations again collapsed. : Gov. Long's action followed a joint. appeal for intervention, sent to U. 8. Conciliation Chief Cyrus Ching by
-
-_reqiresentatives of the dock
companies and negotiators for the CIO International Longshoremen and Warehousemen’s Union. " Bargainers, brought together by Gov. Ingram Stainback three days ago, met twice yesterday but were unable to make any sub.stantial progress despite a 6cent decrease in the union’s wage demands. There was no immediate indication from Mr. Ching’s office in Washington whether or not the chief conciliator planned to heed the appeal. : ' Bridges Plans to Return
ILWU Chieftain Harry Bridges left by air for the mainland last night but announced that he plans to return “next week.” Meanwhile Gov. Stainback delivered a Harbor Day San Francisco in which he charged the ILWU has been “anything but co-operative” in the territory's efforts. to reopen the ports by seizing the docks. Speaking inside a cordon of 300 ILWU pickets, Gov. Stainback said the empioyers “have placed no obstacles in the way of territorial operation.” On the other hand, the ILWU has “been vituperative and hysterical . .-. instituted silly lawsuits, and . . . made threats that government-loaded ships will not be permitted to sail, or if they sail, will not be unloaded on the coast.” ’ “I have been advised that such action . . . would be a violation
of the National Labor-Manage-|
ment Relations Act,” he said. Legislature in Recess The Hawaiian Legislature re- _ cessed for three weeks after passing nine strike bills during a fourweek special session. Chief meas-
ures were the dock seizure bill and “an amendment outlawing
The Isthmian freighter Thomas Cresap sailed last night for an unannounced Eastern port, but carried no cargo. It was unloaded by government stevedores, but was not offered for loading by 0, RR RR ; we “fatest negotiations down on the question Of wages, as have previous efforts to reach a settlement. ly . demanded a 32-cent-an-hour inerease...This has been lowered to-26 cents... The companies have offered 14 cents. The strike has tied up shipping {n Hawaiian ports since May 1, A special session of the legislature recently approved a law permitting the territorial government to go into the stevedoring business while .the strike lasted.
Terms of Invitation
“As you know, representatives of ihe Stevedoring companies of Hawaii and. the ILWU resumed
negotiations Aug. 16 in an attempt cases, Reporting one case each|2qg (U
to reach a settlement of the current strike,” the invitation to Mr. Ching said. ' “At the suggestion of the ILWU it was agreed that a joint invitation would be sent you as director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service to come to Hawaii. “We've been unable to work out a settlement and therefore now invite you to make a trip here as quickly as convenient. May we hear from you as soon as possible?” There was no fndication from Mr. Ching’s office in Washington ag to how he will view the invitation. Ship Unloading Sugar Despite Picketing NEW YORK, Aug. 20 (UP)— AFL longshoremen unloaded more sugar from the first sugar freighter out of strike-bound Honolulu today, while only three CIO representatives made a token picketing of the ship. The .. freighter, Steel Flyer, docked at the American Sugar Refining Company's Brooklyn pier yesterday. AFL International Longshoremen’s Association members have ignored the picket line of the International Longshoremen’s Union (CIO) to unload the 6500 tons of raw sugar. They expect to complete the job Monday. A special detail of police was on hand to. see that there were no clashes between the rival labor unions. - The ship also is being picketed by the Marine Engineers Benevolent’ Association (CIO) for run- - ning the labor blockade put up by Harry Bridges’ striking longshoremen in Hawall. *
- Times Index
Amusem’ts 5, 9; Your Job seca 7 BOOKS ++vess+« 8 Mrs, Manners : Bridge sasnen 8 Movil cose By Churches .... 4 National Aft, 10 Comfts .....14 Needlework .. 3 Crossword Editorials ...10/Radio «ivveee 8 Foreign Afr, 10! Boclety cenes’ Hollywood ae 9 Bports aves T Ingide Indpls, 5 Try It cease
"lafter Oct. 1.
speech in
Say | ported. today. An Indianapolis. - ee state i caiasnpols {day “there “certainly is
The union original-|
“eld ; Eh NJ
Bi SE = rh .d FORECAST: Fair and cool through tomorrow.
SATURDAY, AUGUST
to Help Seventh Stay
| Execution
(UP)—Acting Gov. Oren E.; chief of Federal Conciliation Ralph W. Lobaugh, Kokomo grave digger f the electric chair in the sex
Judy Ann Rouff, 4, kneels i Probate Court in Boston, while Chinese laundryman and his wife to keep the girl. They reared
esi —————————— murder of three Ft. Wayne Netw k W n't women, today was granted or S 0 his seventh stay of execution. . : | Gov. Schricker granted the 33-| year-old Lobaugh a 90-day stay, Give Up Giveaways postponing his execution date from Aug. 26 to Nov. 26. Describing the 1944 and 1945 Broadcasters to Act Ft. Wayne murders as “one of the strangest cases we've ever Against FCC Ban had,” the Governor said: WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (UP)| ‘The investigation still is In- — Radio . giveaway programs complete. I'm not going to let which distribute millions of dol-|a man die when there is a grave lars a year in money and prizes doubt about his guilt.” probably will stay on the air in- Stay Issued in April definitely, despite a government] Last April Gov. Schricker is-| ruling that would outlaw themisued a stay of execution from | May 25 to Aug. 26, explaining that | This was the word in the|the case was confusing and that broadcasting industry today. The Lobaugh's frequent admissions prediction was based on a -de-|and repudiations of his .confes-| cision by broadcasters to act at|sions left doubt as to guilt. _ | once to take the issue to court. The Governor said today ‘hel The Federal Communications also acted because another man | Commission ruled yesterday in a had been sentenced to life im-| |3 to 1 decision that the big jack-|prisonment in one of the slayings. | {pot programs are lotteries and/A third man also was indicted |therefore cannot = be legally |for one of the murders. broadcast. | Lobaugh walked into the Ko-!| Since the FCC has no immedi- komo police station in 1947 and] |ate control over program con- volunteered information that he tent, it" did not name specific had killed three women at Ft. {shows. But it laid down anti-lot- Wayne in late 1944 and early tery regulations that would dn-|1945—Miss Billle Haaga, Miss| clude just about All the give- Anna Kuzeff and Mrs. Dorothea! aways. | Howard. i Would Welcome Test The commission itself indicat-|
Repudiates Confession | In the murder of Mrs, Howard, |
Island couple also wants the girl.
her, but her mother is opposing their adoption of Judy. A Rhode
Low tonight, 53; high tomorrow, 78.
Indianapolis. Ind." lssued
—— " 20, 1040 Lo Entered as Second-Class Matter BS Donato
Auto Crashes Accused of
Man, Woman Die | When Hit by Freights Tenn., “police early today on At Rail Crossings ‘mother by poison and for qu illed two Hoosiers yes- her father and the illness of h
[the result of h The dead: Arthur Mills, 86, New Castle. I=
Mrs. Vers Pittman, 68, Frank-| | fort. 5 NEW e 0 0
Ethel Booth, 60, Montclair, N. J.|
Raymond A. Wolfe, 60, Paoli. : Justin Cyr, 18, Fowler. | an - ounce - Laddie Shults, 26, New Castle. | Some Decontrol, Local
Glenn A. Harville, 38, Michigan| City. { b | Boards to Aid,
Mr. Mills died last night in New Castle of injuries suffered p . earlier in the ia aries he was WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (UP) struck by a Pennsylvania freight|—Rent Director Tighe E. Woods train locomotive at a street cross- outlined plans today to balance, ing. {his cut-back budget by decon-| Police said he suffered a frac-| trolling “some” rent areas and | tured sku when he attempted to turning over to local rent boards!
accidents.
titer women i |
n prayer in a corridor of Suffolk a judge hears the petition of a
ed it would welcome a court test Lobaugh was quickly convicted g o pointed out that broadcasters {would have ample time to pre- confession. He first was sched-| |pare an appeal. luled to die on Feb. 9, 1948, No action will be taken against, But he later repudiated the |a station broadcasting the pro-/confession from death row in hibited giveaways until its license State Prison and his lawyers de{comes up for renewal, any time manded a trial. Lobaugh then| aster oes L Liceties must be re-received two stays of execution] | 8. {from th | The American Broadcasting judge and re Cou day, the Afr Force decided today {Co., with four evening shows the Indiana Supreme Court. {paying listeners from $5000 to| Robert V. Christen, former Ft. $20,000, was the first to take up. Wayne druggist, went on trial in the challenge. It announced it Columbia City in the would act immediately. 1948 in the death of Mrs, Howard. He was convicted and sen-
| phenomena of flying saucers.” Several official spokesmen fo
son of Memphis, Tenn. was -in- g -~§ ou al {dicted in the death of Mrs. How- In Fall Preview’ ard, but the-.charges were subsequently dismissed. Week-End to Be Cool
Sees ‘Great Deal of Doubt’ In view of the conviction of , With 78-Degree High a great! ci ao o ”
Reported Here.
Two new .polio cases were re-
i
Christen, Gov. Schricker said to-
rn a ena Ser tied Mo Tink Between Mystery 0 e controversial issue An Cleat bourt Broa oe No in e ween ys ery 4 " * : - Plane and ‘Flying Saucers
Air Force Seeks Inventor of Strange Disc Craft Found in Maryland
{ WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (UP)—After thinking it over for a|
|in a Maryland barn “have absolutely no connection with the reported |
spring of | hawed about the discovery since the experimental craft were found.
were a “definite prototype” of the|
m————————————— . : picketing or interference...with f) : ™ ‘Ap enced to life imprisonment. Mercury Dips to 0 _ government operations. 0 SES A third man, Charles D. Dod-|
cross the tracks in front of the most of the work in others. train. : He said he had sharply modiMrs. Pittman was killed when! fled his earlier plan to absorb the she was struck by a Nickel Plate budget cut by removing the rent
freight train. She was crossing lid entirely in. one-third of the re on her way to a i. 1000 counties still under federal!
rent control.
} + iy In Prankion. led Mr. Woods said the new pro-| | School Nurse Ki _ |gram may call for 150 to 200 de-| 1 { A school nurse at Montclair|coritrol orders, some covering one
State Teachers College, Ethel Booth was killed when the car in {which she was riding left U. 8. 30 These orders will be issued only
that two strange old craft found|
r the Air Force had hemmed and |
embankment into a/has been “reasonably” met, as required by the rent control law. In many other communities Mr,
an i cornfield. Two sisters, Miss Sarah Sperie,| | flying saucer. other |87, Deerfield, Wis., and Miss HenNoes that prog ssn gd FT Sperle;, 61, Montclair, employees and depend on local {. Then shortly after noon today, Were injured. They received mul-/rent advisory Boarlse-coinpasied [the Alr Force released this state:{ ble fractures and were a unpaid. volunteet workess.-to ’ {in a Columbia City hospital. | ment: > | Mr. Wolfe was injured fatally|ceive complaints and. petitions | “The Air Foree states that the when his pickup truck overturned from tenants and landlords. two experimental aircraft found on U. 8. 50 near Washington and] The boards won't ‘actually
, inned him beneath it, process these papers, Mr. Woods Nar Balunope, M4. -yestaiday]P said. They will send them to the
One spokesman had said they!
deal
spectacled Lobaugh's guilt. —— eC am eat | Gov. Schricker also pointed to| LOCAL TEMPERATURES
In addition, nine other new polio cases were reported in the
state. ‘ | Tr i arr Se Wat | the fact there was much criticism| 6a m..5 10a m..65 stood at 49. . {of the Ff. Wayne city adminis-| 78 Mov 3411 a m... 61 Stanley -Barbarich, 1643. Med. '200D for its inability to solve| 8 a.m... 57 12 (Noon). 69 i ~/the three murders. Lobaugh's| 9 & m... 61 1pm... 71,
confession came shortly before| the 1947 municipal elections. When the Governor granted the {stay of execution last Apr. 14, he| |also ordered a full-scale investi{gation of the Lobaugh case by
| ford Ave., and Dianne Truex, 3547 Robson St, were admitted tol {Riley Hospital yesterday. They were confirmed as polio cases. A Beech Grove boy also was { admitted to the hospital as a sus- | pected polio case. |
{of mid-fall weather today following the coolest night since early
Coal dealers reported a rush of orders to fill empty bins and
of doubt” as To the “be- Pollen COUNT. :157 per cable yan with
| Indianapolis enjoyed a preview|cal attitude as to whether there NiShway intersection near Fow-
have... abso ly o Two passengérs, Fred Cook, 47, the- te SORRECOn una his: son; William. 10, both of Dearest
FR pr 35 anges IEE, : 'oods™ pa the fiying saucers.” [Cool Wie re 5 oi [workers will make the decisions. i Skeptical Attitude | Washington. ) a In This will.put a great respon- . “ ’ sibility on the boards” r. | By referring to the reported | Young Cyr died in a Lafayette of {phenomena of flying saucers” the hospital of injuries suffered three
| | vince them to take it.” {Air Force again stated its skepti-/days earlier in a collision at a|
i Mr. Woods will fire 2462 of his 5462 workers, as he originally; | |ler. really ever have been any such| uy Shults was killed six milesgaiq. can he absorb the cut in| things. {west of New Castle on ‘Ind. 38 pis budget. ” | The eccentric inventor of the|Yesterday afternoon when his au-| Ppregident Truman asked Con|dbandoned experimental aircrart, tomobile, moving west, ran off the gress to give Mr. Woods $26,000,-|
{near Columbia City and rolled where demand for rental housing| sic eq In, confection Woods will withdraw his own paid|
police the rent. ceilings. and re-|
|Woods said. “I hope we can con-|
s Arsenic Death Suspect
Trains Kill 2: Evansville Housewife
¥
Killing
Demise of Father, lliness of Husband Also Probed; Arrest Made in Memphis A ‘buxom Indiana housewife was arrested by Memphis,
Fatal to 5 Mother by Poison
a charge of murdering her estioning about the death of er husband.
Mrs. Clarence Francetti Spurlock, 30, of Evansville, was |arrested by Memphis police as she drove her car into the
city shortly after midnight, She was accompanied by her husband, Arleigh, 39, who
was released after it was de« termined he was not wanted. Police Inspector Pete Wiebenga said the arrest was made on a warrant from Indiana. He said Mrs. Spurlock will be held for the Evansville authorities without questioning by Memphis police. Bheriff Frank McDonald of Vanderburg County (Evansville) said the warrant was issued for Mrs. "SBpurlock’s arrest in connection wi he death of her mother, Mrs. Eunice Irene Dears ing, 56, of HuntingbuPg, Ind.
Deaths Held ‘Mysterious’ Mrs. Dearing died last Nov.
in Evansville Hospital after a ™
short illness at her daughter's heme, Her husband, Winter Dear ing, 59, died five months later under circumstances which
community and others a whole Sheriff McDonald described as |county or an even bigger area.|“mysterious.” i
Not satisfied with the circume« with the death, the authorities exhumed her body on Aug. 3 and Dr. R. E. Faruey, of Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis, said re found “definite signs” that she had died of arsenic | Sheriff McDonald swore out the warrant with the findings of the medical examiner . and today planned to have the body of Mrs, Spurlock’s father exhumed for an examination.
! |, After Mrs. Dearing’s death, the remaining rent control|., a Where Mr. Woods Pade Tom ARAB ou
her,
reside with Mrs. Spurlock. He died five months later,
Husband Il
Sheriff McDonald said the
woman's. husband had been
|planned. Only in this way, he Suffering” from a “mysterious fii-
ness” and that he would be asked to undergo a complete medical observation. : Memphis authorities said they
Po AWabash - County: “reported: its)
[first 1949 case today, making it
the 65th county added to ine. EGYPtian to Attempt
state list Adams‘ and Elkhart [Counties each reported two new
were Vanderburgh, Howard, Allen and Huntington Counties.
| Gary Walker, [New York 8t., and [York St., today sent $3.50 to the] {Riley Polio Fund. They raised [the money yesterday at a carnival] {in Gary's back yard.
} Schools to Open Sept. 6 B. L. Curry, Warren Township trustee, announced today that al Warren Township -schools will
state police.
Swim Tomorrow
: ;sales of fall suits and costumes
|boomed in downtown department {stores Chilling air from the Canadian
FOLKESTONE, England, Aug. Northeast swept into the city late
Mr. Attala, who is secretary the Egyptian Minister of Co merce, attempted
to give up after 24 hours.
Gl Electrocuted YOKOHAMA; Japan, -Aug.
P)—Fahmy Attala, 40-year-|old Egyptian swimmer, said today — that he will try to swim across P- ™- _ . — “the English Channel tomorrow. Kids Send Polio Money Mr. Attala said he hoped to get 11, of 3522 E. away from Cap Gris-Nez on the, Jimmy French coast about 3:30 a. m.| |Engleking, 12, of 3546 E. New| (9:30 p. m. Indianapolis Time). |
m-| to swim +t channel last year, but was forced
yesterday and lowered the merlcury from a peak of 76 at 2:30 to a nippy 53 degrees by 6 a. m, today. The coldest . temperature on record for the date was in 1897 when Indianapolis shivered at 50 degrees. - No Rise in Sight What's more, he|said, a bright summer sun this |afternoon and tomorrow will do |little to raise the mercury. Warming to near normal is expected by {late- Monday afternoon. | A high of 75 this afternoon and
to]
20i%78 tomorrow. is. predicted. The! (UP)—Pfc. Melvin McKinney, 18, méréury will tumble to a low
the weatherman;
which were rediscovered yesterday, was Jonathan E. Caldwell. He disappeared from Maryland -nine years ago. No one has been able to discover where he went or {whether he is still alive. | {| - The only remote possibility of |a connection between Inventor Caldwell and reports of flying) (saucers “had been based on the! theory that he might have gone] to some other part of the country! and built bigger and successful {flying planes. —. !
$4000 Worth of Iron Stolen at Warehouse | Theft of $4000 in iron parts| from a warehouse of Bodner] tConstruction -Co.,. 966. N. Merid-!
|
road and turned over. State police/po0 to run his agency this year. eXpected Indiana officers to come
said he apparently died of suf-|A compromise version of House after Mrs. Spurlock “today or
focation = after” they fotind” theland Senate Bills —on which final tomorrow... They. said her ats body in a creek. He had been action has not been taken—pro- torney in Evansville had advised thrown from the car, they said. vides .only $17.500,000. {her to waive extradition proceed He was alone. | (ings. Mr. Harville was killed instant- Meanwhile, Mrs. Spurlock was ly last night and his wife, Faye, being ‘held in the women’s divi31, critically injured in a head-on
4 Japanese Hanged auto collision near Shirley, II, For War Crimes on U.S. 66.
3 web TOKYO, Aug: 20 (UP)—Four TWO of ‘the Harville. children. sa panese or inged early this| Hareld, 12, and Susan, 5, were, ....o at Sugamo Prison for seriously injured, while a third) the deaths of Australian prisoners 8) of war by beatings and torture. An official announcement said | [the four executed men had been!
West Pointer, Fiancee civilian prisoner of war guards) {and were convicted in January, |learned that Mrs. Dearing had a
Win $4610 Jackpot |1948. |$1500 life insurance policy name
NEW YORK, Aug. 20 (UP)-—A| The dead wefe: Masji Seki-|ing her husband and Mrs. Spur. West Point cadet and his fiancee hara, Akira Yanagizawa, Hiroshi{lock as beneficiaries. He said he jokingly..invited the radio audi-Obinata and Yonesaku Akiyama.| understood the father had sold
in Memphis. Sheriff McDonald said he would not go after Mrs. Spurlock until definitely assured she would not {fight extradition. He was to cone {fer with her attorney this afters
(Continued on Page 2—Col. noon.
- Named in Will Sheriff McDonald said he had
open Sept. 6. The Warren Cen-
V of the 304th Signal Operations of pear 53 tonight, the Weather tral school office is open daily
Battalion, was accidentally elec-|Byreau said.
from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m. for regis-|trocuted Aug. 10, the Army an-| If Indianapolis thermometers tration of new pupils. nounced today. . plunge to the predicted level ; 1 [tonight, the ‘weathérman sald,
» “ : ® © Exorcism Ritual by Priest [moe mc iene - | Last night was the coolest in
Frees "Devil From Boy, 14 | downtown Indianapolis since June
¢ |9, when a low of 49 was recorded. Unusual Phenomena Reported After
{The maximum daytime tefnperaTwo Months’ Effort of Catholic Cleric
ture yesterday was the lowest {since June 16, when, the mercury ha | TOS ly 72. WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (UP)—A Jesuit priest, using the|T0S¢ to on Roman Catholic Church's ci)nturles-old ritual of exorcism, has| But the coldest spot in dediana freed a devil from a 14-year-old boy, the National Catholic Welfare ™2* Wheatfield. An early mornConference News Service reported today. {ing low of 43 was reported there. The “haunted boy,” a Maryland resident whose name was not| In other parts of the state, disclosed, reportedly was possessed of an evil spirit which caused |South Bend reported a minimum unusual manifestations, le : 1 Iota ro {of 46; Ft. Wayne, 48; Terre Haute, 7 ress , a Iv . The boy's case was disclosed Jrusn ons 4 language he d Hot, 35, and Evansville, 61
recently at a meeting of the 80-| The boy's affliction first was 50 : w ciety of Parapsychology. The un-|studied at Georgetown University Hurt in reck
usual phenomena, as reported by Hospital and St. Louis University,
the boy's parents and other wit- both Jesuit institutions, veran Caused by Blunder esses, included such manifesta- | the priest was called “in when! CANAAN, N. H,, Aug. 20 (UP)
{boy was sleeping moving across|cess in curing the boy.. for a head-on collision of two the room, a picture suddenly jut-] The priest stayed with the boy Boston & Maine express trains in ting out from a wall in a room for two months, sleeping in the which 50 persons were injured in which the boy was standing,/same house and sometimes in the and scores shaken. and a heavy chair in which the same room,-the- NCWC' reported.| Fourteen of those hurt, inboy was sitting suddenly tilting! The exorcism ritual included cluding two .rallroadmen, were After these manifestations, (prayers, psalm singing and sprin-| doctors sald all would recover. some'attested to by a Protestant kling of holy Water on the boy. Another train wreck in which minister, the boy was received
the consent of his parents. time there was a violent reaction Sept. 15, 1907.
{tions as the pallet on which the the institutions reported no suc-/—A blunder was blamed today!
over. |daily masses, a period of fasting, still hospitalized at Hanover but
Then the priest would command | 25 persons were killed and 40 in-| x into the Catholic Church with the evil spirit out of the boy. Each jured occurred at the same place] ‘§
Then began about 20 to 30 per-/from the. boy, the NCWC re-i After Investigating yesterday's| -
lan 8t., at 27th and Yandes 8ts, ance to attend their wedding at|They mounted the scaffold afl was reported today by 8. C. Bod-|the U. 8. Military Academy on|12:30 a. m. and were pronounced ner, company president. {June 6, 1950, when they won the dead approximately 14 minutes] | - Mr. Bodner said he found 600 ad- $4610 jackpot on the “Break the later, the official announcement | justable shores and 3200 hammer Bank” program last night. stated. | {clamps ‘missing today when he| The American Broadcasting.Co.| Two other Japanese, convicted |checked his supply at the wars-|gaid it received 545 telegrams ac-|along with fhe four hanged to{houseé. +The shores, which weigh cepting the invitation of First day, are scheduled to. die later {a total of 18 tons, and the clamps, | Classman Ralph Stephenson of for participation in the offenses (totaling 40 tons, might have been|Jena, La. and Miss June McFar- which contributed to the deaths {taken any time within the last land of Yonkers, -N. Y. withinjof 11 Australian POWs at the several months, he told police. {an hour after the program. |Naoetsu Prison camp at Niigata.
Benefit Show Given by Shelby St. Children Raises $305
the Huntingburg house and signed a will leaving his estate to Mrs, Spurlock before he died. Sheriff McDonald instituted a six-state search for Mrs.. Spurlock after he learned yesterday that she and her husband had left in their car. He said she told neigh« bors they were going to- Memphis and apparently was making no
(Continued on Page 2-Cal. 8)
for Polio Fund
by the untamed Jesuit, the
3|NCWC sald, At some of these priest reported
the bop broke into harsh proand
«se Bi Pattern ..... 3{formances of the ancient ritual ported.
Finally, the
the devil
A
St
NCWC said the Robert A. Jones said that an inwas correctly turned switch shiinted driven from the boy and he was the Boston-to-Montreal “Ambas- , meveamed Latin ext quiet, : ~
|collision, Grafton County Solicitor
“Children of the 2300 block of Shelby St. raised $305 in a recent benefit show for the polio fund. Participants
in Aug. 12 and 13, at 2329 Shelby St., were (first row, left to right) Susie Devore, Bob Botzum, Judy Stephenson, ne
drix, Peter Speth, Ronnie Devore, Herbie Devore, Karen Duke, Elizabeth Hdffmann; Jerry Fox and Jannie Stephenson; (back row)
{sador” onto a siding,
'
ri ~
*
nie Tutpin, Darleen Ferris, Edith Mesalam, John Hoffmann, Mrs. Rosemary Ross, Bill Hendrix, Alice Clark and Ronnie Coy. " > !
> oc dim 7 2 . ‘ wi " »
0
sion of the Shelby County jail
