Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1949 — Page 9
pautiful
je Wine | Azure
ed RRA RE
sa
. we tia
hd -
Susugh 3nd Juli gut poisd,” Words to. that with h The : Zi: x MONDAY, AUGUST 22,1949 = fh - Well, that’s what happened to me at Western assistant superintendent 2! i a. ; FL A Electric in Speedway City. It had better be said and training, and 1 ; a. al A) Lr that the jolt didn't come from a wad of knuckles, to simple names = : . ; - i ait @#t came from a wad of paper, . No initials. / ¥ i The whole thing started when I asked Inter- Jack : , : . viewer J. M. Ochs if there was anything new, like ' just before I fain - in ry this: “Anything new around this joint, J. M.?" was one who » : Bids " J. M. thought hard for a minute, real hard for = Tony is in charge / five, presently got a couple of Cokes before he section and looks n -B be un sald, “Can't think of afything offhand.” Nice iry, knows a good tool 3 : = y ; While we smoked J. M.'s cigarets, C. 8. Sol- In a nutshell, say a ] TT : berg, employment manager, walked is. re-. last June and stopped A id i Aa
peated my question, “Anything asw, C. 8,7" just for effects, : : How New Is New? .. “HOW _NEW do you want it?” was his reply. My foet fell off J. M.'s desk and I had the feeling that complications were going to set in. The employment bods then asked'if a comparatively new method of selecting tool and die makers would be of interest. A shrug of my shoulders seemed to be enough for C. 8. to start in on Ris comparatively new baby, Had he asked if & new method in selecting winners of races involving large, solid-hoofed, herbivorous three-year-old mammals were of interest, the shiv might have been a thousandfold more violent, “We've been using the technique for about two months now, We hope to really make it work for us when the new Shadeland Ave. plant is ready,” sald Mr. Solberg. : A few phone calls were made and shortly the
. Feel clever? . . . These three gentlemen (left to right), Tony Vail, J. M. Ochs and Jack O'Neill, “can put you to work.
, & rough picture of how a tool and die maker is
oi ' . 4 @ among an average of 12,000 cases of cancer of all types in labora-
i
fidence would be sent to Vail. The latter would try to determine whether really interested in tool- The kid
|
and our hero goes to work,
Tests Too Tough
ROUGHLY, the above is supposed to give you
chosen. The gentlemen pulled their ace out of a hole, I examined carefully a mental test, mechanical - comprehension test, geometrical perspective test, industrial mathematics test and the Western, Electric mechanical ability test. “Elastein would flunk these,” I screamed, get-| ting no solace at all from the fact that Indiana os = University awarded me an A.B. degree in liberal) Dr. Meredith N. Runnder, Indiana University scientist, studies They ganged up on me. I had the pleasure of problems in growth with Researcher Joy Palm. meeting Bob Jones, who was graduated from Ben
~ Careline Taylor, Oberlin, searcher, Dr. Clarence Cook-Little-examines—a—mouse——— working with inbred black and in the laboratory.
Davis High Henool last June. Bob was making a Hoosiers on Research Staff Help Hew in ‘for a die. Simple task, to be sure, Vail said, +s ’ ia by the end pe training period Bob would New Paths Into Medicine's Dark Frontier
be 3 Saskeryack journeyman. & | By HAROLD HARTLEY, Times Business Editor e way I have it figured out is that some BAR HARBOR, Me., Aug. 22—Up here in this postcard oN . hy . picturepeople are good at some things while others aren't; ng at the edge of the fire-charred Acadian Forest, 90,000 mercy good at anything. That's the way it goes and I'm| joa gre fighting cancer, tooth and tail, gla ihe world isn’t full of loafers trained in Here cancer is a common word, spoken without fear among the ral arts. top scientists and graduate students who work year after year
The Young Democrats Club of the Indianaitory mice, - ~ i bi University School of Law sent me a document that] This week efid at the Roscoel We Can start it and we can pre< is replete with words such as “pending . . . sald|B, Jackson Memorial Laboratory, Vent it in certain cases. It is a performance . . . sald publication . . . intent, a3 mite south of the swank summer Multiple disease, and to date no etc.” There are 25 signatures at the end. There-|p,meq which look out on the crys-| “2 hds been found of unifying fore, 25 requests for “You, Too” gives me a totalii.) pine water of Frenchman's| the different types.” of 1186. Thanks, gentlemen. Bay, a new aluminum laboratory| DF: Little's laboratory mice rei : yp ; s
Changeable Chap By Andrew Tully, rad T, Ickes, former Inferior ah at hayes. Such 22 Xun
! {nation’s biggest rese } | 88 arch men 0 three main classes:
Secretary and U. 8. Surgeon Gen-| start the disease, 100.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 22—Let's get this business straight about Tito. First we were against him. Then we were for him. Then we were against him again. Now, maybe, we're for him—kind of. Atleast, we're going to sell Yugoslavia a $3 million steel plant which we hope it's going to use to make railroad tracks. The reason we're being so generous is that Tito hasn't been getting along well lately with his Uncle Joe ‘Stalin, who gave him his start in the dictating business. He's even been kicked out of the Cominform, and Moscow has refused to recognize any capitalists he shoots until he starts taking orders again. :
Can Tito Be Kidding? EVEN SO, the State Department isn't quite sure Tito and Joe aren't kidding, Communists being such cute rascals. But it's worth the gamble if we can help toss a fly or two in the Kremlin ointment, the experts figure. " Just the same, though, it's pretty confusing, even for the guys who look good in cutaway coats and talk knowingly about white papers and -tri+ partite pacts. Because ever since he started killing Germans in World War II, Tito is one guy we've
never been “able to" dope out. Every ‘time ‘we
thought we had him labeled, he turned out to be
culo GMEOTenS. ChAT ACRE wom
" vitch in a cave and had him executed, although a who runs the show. He is tall,
Nobody except some guys with whiskers and
bombs in candle-lit cellars ever heard of Tito until
1943 when the Allies suddenly discovered there were two resistance forces fighting the Nazis ‘in Yugoslavia. One outfit was led by Gen. Draja
“Mikhailovitch andthe other-by a fellow famed
Jokip-Broz, bette] sickle set as Tit We and the British had been send Mikhailovitch guns and dough for some time and calling him a hero and paying no attention to Tito, although we were glad he was killing Germans, too. Tito thought he should be the boss, however, and he started fighting Mikhailovitch, charging that Draja’s boys were just a bunch of neo-good collaborationists, and lousy fighters as well. This went on for some time until the Allies finally decided .Tito really was doing most of the work and started sénding the guns to him. Tito
own among the hammer-and-
unless Mostow gave the go-ahead sign. It got 8Oitheir cancer cases quickly, They're selves at the rate of five gener- or ten mice to a side. The food does not permit the shipment of strain, laboratory -men tell yo “his-own- were muttering in thelr bOrschooking for H—every—aay— OnE EVERY RE id Eb ; el pe 3 30D tory you Co”
’ eral Leonard A. Scheele were in- . did a good job, all right; he only had about 200,000] vited to take part in the dy] TWO: Biologicals such as hormen but at one time he pinned down 18 German tribute to the scientists who are| Tones or the changing of the medivisions. 'hewing new paths /in medicine's| (a oro of the body, such as After the war, however, Tito started getting darkest frontier. {transplanting an ovary into a cantankerous. He ordered a lot of fancy Sore 4 pris [SPleen, 2 oaluelon 5 Marna from Moscow and set himself up as dictator of. mpo-pety trifle measure “of the! system. . h r old Gen. Mikhailo-| / a | THREE: Chemicals, There are Yugoslavia. He caught poo 1 |work you haye to mieet the man| po 0 ens’ pro oon ma in
lot of American fliers testified he'd saved their erect quief-mannered Dr. Clar-|3UCers, many in the coal tar field. lives when: they were shot down in Yugoslavia.lance Cook Little, former president| Indiana plays an important Then he sent Catholic Archbishop Stepinac to jail|of the University of Michigan and | art in carrying on the work. on a charge of collaboration. Some of his aviators|the University of Maine. He is|Dr: George H. A. Clowes, of the also.shot down two unarmed American transport chairman of the laboratory and Ell Lilly & Co., resident of Golden planes, and although he paid us $150,000 for that,|leads the American Cancel So- Hill in Indianapolis, is a trustee. it didn’t oring back the five flyers who were killed.|ciety on the research side. On the staff is Dr. Meredith |
Meanwhile the Communists were going great| ‘He is the genetics man. He has | Reiner Who Sot ha Sostonue » i : ; i wi # Ta ’ 3 guns in Yugoslavia. Tito was real pally with Sta-/standardized the laboratory|indiana University r eight : . L ne Mil : lin, hanging pictures of him all over the countrymouse, not much different from |vears work in 200l0gY. : Dr. John Fuller, behavior scienfist, holds a mouse which died when the researchers rang an and yelling about American imperialism and how the mouse the midwest house- on 8 ordinary doorbell in a washtub, Researcher Clarice Easler watches.
nice it was to live in Yugoslavia where nobody got wife finds nibbling at the crack-| A.J. LADMAN here a year as shot as long as hé kept his mouth shut. He asked er box in her kitchen cupboard. graduate assistant will go to IU| Graduate students move com- large quantities. From 15.000 to They also produce mice with one
UNRRA for help and when he got it he said we He has bred mice for years. | Medical School this fall, and, fortably about in tennis shoes, 20,000- are shipped monthly to|/eye or no eyes at all. And they were trying to blackmail him. He also said it was| His assistant is Dr. George w, | Reba Mirsky, IU graduate is a 0ld blue jeans, topped with long|leading research laboratories. sell most of ‘their mice with awful the way we were helping these -people in|Wooley, a friendly, easy-talking, |Tésearch assistant’ here. Whiteconts," ; + {These bring from 22 cents for an specific diseases for labordtory Greece, and you might think we won the war, or/middle aged man in mild Mies Gene Gillum, Earlham grad- .n 8 fordinafy lowbrow mouse to $3] study. All of the mice are guaranjomething. > oo pe 'who by his manner can make uate is also a research assistant.| THE mice are fed Puring Fox/for a mouse with a mammary|teed and haye pedigrees. Th Th bin Joe's Borsch Vi feuneer sound ‘as tamé as a con. | He 18" going to TU Medical School Chow Pellets which cost $7:a bag: tumor not: more: than one-fourth’: They produce one strain of e ump in mon cold. | next month. | They consume $6200 worth of f0X of an inch in diameter at the time mouse which has hereditary can-w-AS, TIME went SB. hough. the pesigrment, Bot Here. thex-can. start. cancer atl. .But back to the mice, They f00d a week. . _ _ . lof shipment. ~~ . _ __ |cer. Atleast the mice develop 100 pretty tough for Tito. He had to keep Joe Stalli{wy) “They can stop it, too, in are what you remember. The You rarely see a Nive. mouse. ‘The milce ars Shipped fi wood per cent cancer by the time they happy by sending him all the flour and stuff hen, ot cages. But they know miore| little squirming, gray-brown fel-iThey are stacked to the ceilingjand wire boxes with a quarter] are eight or nine months old. But wanted and letting Joe's fifth column help him run igpou¢ their mice than science|lows who live and die for the|in boxes one foot square with a/potato as water supply. They are they also produce another strain: the country and ‘never hanging even a banker |ynows about people. They find cancer fight and reproduce them-| partition in the middie, and eight bedded in shredded paper as law| which resists cancer. In the weak
the cages in little wood shavings over the state bor- they believe the disease is trans-
about who's Boss around here, anyway. | No “gverage Htters of six;iwire baskets-so the mice-with-not-der—This—is—-a—-check-aganst the mitted In The MIK of The Mothers So0-one-day-Tito-got-independent. He started. ONE of the most recent and will be responsible for 216 descen-|trample their food. diseases, " | The whole layout has a book small,*but after a while he was paving roads-and encouraging discoveries here is/dants.in a year. . And they get water from the. r 8 = {value of about $13 million with even buying new uniforms without asking Stalin. the “virus-like agent” present in| The laboratory which rests in/end of a goosenecked glass tube THE laboratory can produce an annual payroll of $275,000, It Joe got sore, naturally, and passed the word along cancer. It has been isolated and the- shadow of fog-haloed Mt. which runs from a quart bottle/ any kind. of mouse you want, if was first financed by Roscoe B. and before Tito knew what had happened all his photographed electronically at the Pickett has a musky hospital/down into the cage. A drop of you should want one. { Jackson of the Hudson motor car Communistrpals were snubbing him. Rockefeller Institute. {smell, a cross between the animal water forms on the tip of the, You can get them long or short,| family in 1929. The three-day Since then, Tito’s had hard sledding. The Iron “Cancer is not the unknown peo- house. at the zoo and the disin-|tube. That is a mouse's drink. |with fur or without, with long or|festivities this week and cele-: a oe In oe wh Bm Asause ple belive it is,” Dr. Woolley said. | fected corridors of a hospital. The laboratory sells mice in short ears and the same for tails. brated its 20th year.
rig ho se Boi hea som cs Arrested on Local Man Hunted Evansville Youth Preacher Dies J New Cars Crash;
wheat? Or some fat pigs? In Prison Escape As Choir Sings
Color-Blind
YT MART MH I 7 og
By Frederick C. Othman DEVErage Charges... cxvz =v. » 5th Polio Victim ‘lest Be the Tie' 7 Killed, 6 Hurt
gd Perrin, 41, son of Mrs Bui SEATTLE. Aw 2 (UP The y=
WASHINGTON, Aug. 22—If color television
* “18 good enough for doctors to rate high in their
training programs, then I claim it js suitable for me when I gaze into the big brown eyes of Milton Berle. rs And if the Federal Communications Commisston—kindly will get up off its sofa and allow the color-picture boys to go into business, I'll appreciate it. Their widgit is wonderful. I want one. There 1 was at the local armory, looking into a bleached oak television set carrying the first color pictures ever to be sent over the air. These came by commercial channel from Baltimore; in the past tinted —television—always-has traveled by ‘wire. 80 this was a historic moment and Dr. Peter Goldmark, who invented the system; was nervous,
Rainbows, Skyrockets, and—Ah!
HE FIDDLED -the dials and rainbows flashed across the screen. Then came skyrockets. And pretty soon there was 4 female-Who looked like a sunburned Indian with green teeth. Dr. G. twisted the knobs spme more, the colors fell into their proper placey and there on the streen was Miss Patty Pamter, a beauteous redhead with white teeth and skin which would have been a pleasure to touch. She stood In front of a sky-blue wall 40 miles away. Her finger-nails were dark red. Highlights glistened in her auburn hair. Her eyes were biue, while her blouse was of Roman stripes--red, blue, green and gold. All this was as clear and sharp and bright as any technicolor movie I ever ‘saw. So Miss Painter held up a series of multicolored scarves, scotch plaids, pink ostrich feathers, cigaret packages, and paintings of headless females by a modernist named Matisse. In the midst ef this Dr. G., like any proud proprietor of a plain
“old black-and-white set, couldn’t “resist tin]
. ) wooo 4 = y _—— os = pe ge on a ee Es T= me 5 Police Seizé rin of 1521 leGrande Ave, wre} : Indiana Epidemic ~~. {Mr. Rev, Clive Taylor, 63, pastor] Lagro . ‘Man, Kansas ring’ Quantities of Liquor |tscaped from the state prison at Reaches 500 Cases |of the Findlay Christian Church, Baby, Are Victims
wit dials. He got the usual result. Chaos. | i {Michigan City Sunday night. | iy Lda put es machinery back in adjust- ore wi djanapolis a ronal Prison - officials told State Po-| The State Board of Health to- finished his Sunday sermon. | HUNTINGTON, Aug. 22 (UP) ment and there was Miss B. in full color, saying with violation of the a arged ice the Indianapolis convict day said its health records| The choir and congregation be-| Two persons were killed today goodby. The temptation was strong to reach.out erage Act last night and early na oa Way while working on(FOOWed ‘antie Dastlysls Mad gan to sing a hymn: land six other injured when and shake hands with her. {today by police and state excise] m :30 p. m. He was B Adland coun-| “uy oun hear my Savior Calling. three new 1949 A A number of important personages were pres- officers. sentended for second - degree|ties since the first of the year,| automotiles col ent. Mi "5 i burglary in Criminal Court 2 in| claiming 500 victims, 50 of them| Take thy cross and follow, fol-{jided at the intersection of U., 8. nt. Mostly they were amazed. As Rep. Harms Sis Bical ap swas arrested ont Sar 1947. by Wir fatalities how me | . “ nara > . . Judge 0 re - re Sf Me aa = § =a 7 = - a; Ellsworth of Oregon put it, “This is too good to| on the Pele Stub; liam D, Bain. Three new cases were reported] ‘The Rev. Mr. Taylor aka] na Sour -Tont-west:-of :
mri
EE EE
t » wi i .11219% N. Senate Awe. when " . aa ; be true The- erd thing was that this particu \police_and excise men went to| Records show he was investi-|t0 the state board yesterday, two that the last verse be sung The dead wi lar test wasn’t being made in the interest of | BXC 88 gated for. a parol 3 lin. Marion Count d i i e dead were Edward T. television tans “generally, but §o that doctors ue, A0dgess go his - residence; 1949. but > ole on Oe ry y and one nl “Where He leads ne, I williCleaver, 48, Lagro, Ind., and Ida lat 2: . m. today. ’ ne 0 od . [follow,” they sang. Ti go-with| May — Bits; seven—months—oid;—
could watch other sawbones performing opera-| ; . ) | Police said several persons ran |Prisonin Michigan City-on June-10./.—The 50th person to die was Him, with Him all the way.” {Wie tions. The physicians soon will do their slicing, a rear door as they entered. Robert A. Foltz, 16, of Evans-] . - eWay -130ishila, Ras, ve Siem EL
in color under the auspices- of Smith, Kline & { » ille. wh | - . x = ! French Laboratories of Philadelphia, which | unisicy were seized. quantity of Robber Hurt in Getaway; Mary's Hospital there. wo 1. THE MINISTER sat down, ff & 8ide road into the highway bought the equipment from the Columbia Broad-| In a raid on the Eustside Social Police Seize Suspect nois children also died in Evans- placed his arms on an easy chair '" the path of a car in which casting Systém. } [Club, 1313'; E. 19th St. Robert! ville hospital but their deaths behind the pulpit, and closed his 1X members ofd the Howar Too Good for the Public? | Williams, 33, of 1925 Bellefontaine | Police today were holding a were not added to Indiana totals. eyes. : {Ellis family of Wichita were rid[8t., the proprietor was arrested 36-year-old suspect in. the early, Towa Girl Di 1 1 i : ) | ir es Here The congregation continued
ng. THE COMMUNICATION commissioners issued | jar {morning robb i ge amount of gin and g robbery of the Woodrow, A Keokuk, Iowa, girl, 7-year- “ | A third auto driven by Benny 3 spesial Hoenss Jor the Qo; ut it turned Sowh whisky were seized. |Arnold - residence, 835 Johnson old Maverne Rainey, Kea yoster- Binge Blast 3¢-1he Fe That! Govan, Detroit, sideswiped one of and a half years ago Tt til) hasn't Com Hts) Charge Sunday Sale jars. \day. in Methodist Hospital. The, The hymn finally finished, the the cars as tliey Saruehed. after a R a8 \ ) g Tom Malad, 55, of 2233 Avon-| Mr. Arnold told police a man little girl was visiting relatives in congregation remained stan. the collision, It also was wrecked nnd Jit Jaa scheduled further public hearings) dale St. was charged with viola- ®ntered his house and was going Shelbyville with her parents; Mr, Ws Os poy YN Mr. Govan was unhurt, + nth, . nets "i | tion of the bevarage act after po-| through the clothes closet when and Mrs, George Rainey. |peared to hive, vaio aslee i. The Miured: Were taken to ta ark, a youngish citizen in heavy eye- | lice investigated the sale of two "8 Wife woke up. In attempting] Jay County remained the hard-/ member of th choir sh ro Huntington County Hospital here glasses arid speaking with an almost imperceptible half-pints of liquor to -Carl/!0 Tun out the front door, thelest hit area with a total of 64 gently, but he did vt ove, | T|fro mthe. scene of the accident accent, said if the commissioners decided in his| Schatz, RFD 2, Sunday morning Man fell and cut his head but cases. However, polio in that sec-| ro s ni move. Just across the county line ‘In favor, color television sets would go on the market at a poolroom at 2235 Avondale | Managed to make a getaway, Mr. tion appeared to.be on the wane He had died of a heart attack. Wabash County. uhmost immediately. | Place. Police sald they saw|ATnold told police. °- |since no new cases have been re-| .- ~ a They were identified as Howard , Several radio factories even now, he sald, are| Schatz come out of the place with| Mr. Arnold reported that $138 ported in Jay-County since Aug. Newton County Wins Elis; nia wite. Riby May; his ooling up, just in-case. He figured that a set'two half-pints. He identified|2® Missing. A coat left by the(10, when two were recorded by| Sister, Miss Florence Ellis; His
producing colored pictures would cost about 25 Malad as the man who sold hiny|PUrSlar contained $43. thre Stite Health Board. Conservation Awards [two children, James and George, per cent more than present models. He also talked|the liquor. Schatz ‘also was| An hour later police found a| Delaware County was second Times State Service and Charles Reese, 15, who was about green phosphors, electronic color, color|charged with violation of the|™an answering the description of|in number of cases with 56, five] KENTLAND Aug 22 Three! ding with Mr, Cleaver. discs, and something that sounded like sink. I| beverage act. the burglar lying in the neighbor-|of them In the last week. Marion, | Newtbn © t fai | Florence Ellis and Mrs. Ruby have no Idea what he meant. ; | Police visited the Udell Pleas- hoad, bleeding from head wounds. Vanderburgh and Randolph Coun- ounty farmers have gilis were .described in critical All I”know is that I want a color television ure Club, 2856% Clifton St. and| ¢ Was arrested and chargedities all had 35 cases. been awarded $100 each and the condition and James Ellis was set. You hear that, FCC? And the sooner. tlie confiscated a quantity of whisky, “''h Vagrancy. : |county conservation district has|serious. . {
better. ‘ {gin-and beer, afd arrested Rus-
The ‘Quiz Master
Is 17 {fue that more male bables than girls are boyn duringsa swar? Statistician of a large life insurance company that contrary to popular belief, it is not true that more male babies than girls are born during » major. war, . .® % 9
Who presided atthe Impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson? According to the provisions of the ConstituSom, Jdatatls Wea, SHed. bY. he Seushe Tus, pee
| . . , received top honors from the! : \ ei 260 Banks, 49, of 549 Uden st, East Side Carnival Men 3 Tg Houle Hooter store at the U.S. Du|County Council Opens 7? T Y Skill 297 ———— [Nets $#2 for Polio Fight, "," = lv $ |partment of Agriculture's conser-/Its 1950 Budget Study ? Test Your Ski 22 $3 Million Financial Loss| Children from the nelghbor-|and two teen-age youths turned| “1 C® Program in Akron, O.| Tne Marion County Council
Set in 3 + hoodof Ewing and E. New York|over to Juvenile Ald authorities Judes there said today. | Was to begin its study of the proToon Muncie Folio Ban Sts, today contributed $12.09 to|early today when they were] The program; sponsored by the posed 1950 budget at 2 p. m. to. siding judge at this trial was Chief Justice of the AI, Aug. P)—Busi-|the polio ward of Riley:.Hospital. caught stealing gasoline from an! Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co,, was/day in Room 103 of the Court.
United States Salmon P. Chase. : [008 lenders sutimared today that| The sum represented proceeds automobile parked at the Asso- held for 24 districts from eight house. ia 0 i public gather-/from a carnival staged by some ciated Gas - Station, 1430 W. states and included 72 individual The study meeting was open to : ge ] Sg @ because of an but-20 neighborhood . youngsters at Washington St. | farmers. taxpayers to express any opinions When will the last encampment of the Grand lion i Of 10 iD oa: the city $3 mil-/the corner of Ewing and New| Police said they saw Ray Nor-| Steve Weinert, Lake Village;/on the proposed budget. J id Army?of the Republic be held? " York Saturday night. Children in man, 21, Cincinnati, beneath the Robert Carlson, ‘Morocco, a
! They said there was a $3 mil. chirge of arranging and present- car at-2:30 ¥ v J . 30 a. m. They said he Donald Clark, Brook, were New- RETIRED EDITOR DIES ded Dilution sdopied. the 148 imbsting im tion difference between commer- ing the carnival were Mary Alex- was siphoning ling tr the ton County winners, Fountain| DES MOINES, Towa, Aug. 23. the Tat. pia Mich- I Wo thes | cla dceoums deposits in banks ander, Elaine ' Kerr, Frederick tank while the teen-agers waited | County soil conservation district (UP) Harvey ) ‘ Ay ment In 1866; wil , oped By a oo here. in Pan and a wim pe Aur Spaulding, Naney Moshenrose, pearby, The boys, 15 and 17, also and the Montgomery County dis-|tor emeritus of the Des Moines | ! rly Myers and . en | were from Ohio. was trict were \ ‘ joe es an 8 Eleni orman was second and‘ third, re-| Register and Tribune, died yes : a
last time Aug. 28, 1049, 'Y {before the ban. % arged with ¥ | spectively. g lterday.
-y ¥ - 4 a, \ - . 7 . = % a » - { : , . apr : . ’ - 4 r » TH 0% x HS 7 He So m4 : $ ww A 0 : {Fa ; : ; fide - 7 ¢ + . i \ » jo . Bs 3 v v i 4 ; ‘ ] ! ¥ ‘ "
