Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1949 — Page 11
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HOW WOULD YOU like to help me write a letter to Joe Stalin in ‘Moscow? . I've been planning to. write him for quite a while now, A letter to him takes a heap of thinking. = Today, it being Labor Day and a holiday, could be a fine time to get the ball rolling. Why write Uncle Joe in the Kremlin? Well, I don’ t see where it can do any harm and there's a remote possibility it might do some ‘good. *
Did it ever occur to you that the politicians,
« statesmen, global thinkers and the like might get
so clever, so cagey that the things we little guys think mighty important are Torgotten or not even discussed?
Worth a Try -
DO YOU ever remember reading a few words after the Big Four got together that the ‘reason all powers ought to stop glaring and sniping at each other is because John Doakes on Prospect St.,.who, incidentally, fought in the ETO, now has enough money to buy a house and has two nice kids and a good wife and a few million dreams packed away in his noggin? Isn't it possible that if enough ‘small people sounded off and brought their views out in the open and let a powerful man like Stalin know about them that a better understanding could be weached? Certainly it's worth a try. Most books on Soviet-U. 8. relations will bring out the fact that peace of the world is contingent on the two nations seeing eye to eye. If the two big boys agreed, the little boys would follow suit. If you're like me all this talk about outlets to the sea, trade barriers, blockades, ideologies, nationalism, boundaries before 1939, 1914, before 1905, before 1887, 1492, 1000 B. C., goes a few feet above your head.
A letter to Stalin". . lis" is writing and wants other Hoosiers fo join in and make it-a combined effort for peace,
"Mt. Inside Indianapo-
Cautious Aide
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5—Everybody’s always talking about the President being surrounded by a bunch of clowns who talk too much-—who are forever shoving not “only both feet but also a couple of pairs of galoshes in their mouths. Well, people had better stop generalizing— especially after meeting Col. C. J, Mara, Mr. Truman’s assistant military aide. If there ever was a careful man—a man who thinks not-enly twice but four or five times before he speaks—Col. Mara is it. Col. Mara has just been answering some questions for the Senate committee investigating how much, if any, Maj. Gen. Harry Vaughan throws his weight around. That is, he was supposed to be answering them. When you think back on fit, you're not quite sure what was going on.
Questions Aren't Simple RIGHT OFF, it developed that Col. Mara had trotted over to the Justice Department to see if the G-Men had anything on Gen. Vaughan— which he knew ‘they hadn’t—in an alleged bribetaking for fixing an income tax case. From there on, it was anybody's guess what went on. What Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R. Wis.), wanted to know was did Col. Mara happen to run into the fact: that the FBI had investigated Gen Vaughan's alleged pressure on the Agriculture Department in. behalf of some hooch-makers? Col. Mara didn’t quite follow Mr. McCarthy. OKay. So Mr:-McCarthy repeated the question: Did Col. Mara now know that Gen. Vaughan had been investigated in this booze business? That, added Mr. McCarthy confidently, was a simple question. Col. Mara said Oh no, simple question. So Mr. McCarthy repeated the question again, giving each vowel and consonant the works. Oh, ‘said Colonel Mara. No, he didn't now know it, } " ‘Senator Karl Mundt (R. 8. D.), took over. How's about "it, asked Sen. Mundt, did Col. Mara tell Gen. Vaughan he was going over to check up on that income-tax thing?
that wasn't either a
What Congress, Sir? By Frederick C. Othman
. Stationery you have in the i and tell Premier
: = 5
working for a living to the best of my ability, paying my bills, saving some money each week
By Ed Sovola)
I understand very important items such asl
HIN Jr Se TE
The Indianapolis Times
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1949
¥ PAGE 11
and hoping the factories keep producing. people keep ‘buying ‘and selling and -one-of these days;
having a ranch-type house with a big refrigerator,
always stocked full of beer for my friends. Prem'er Stalin surely can't find anything wrong with what I mentioned. If it were told to him in black and white, who knows, mu ybe he'd say to the men of the Politburo that’ this fellow in Indianapolis, this Ed Sovola has a
good ideaski about the ranch houseki and fbi .
80 aheadski because there would be no more wars.
Of course, if Stalin did do that the Politburo| | might not go Into an immediate Cossack dance | An idea like that is sure tof,
and yell “Hey.” take 10 or 15 minutes to sink in. Pelitburo members are human.. They should know what a ranch houseski is. J So, friends, In line with that," rather than making this a solo effort, I'd like to’sejad- along with my letter several thousand, If ssible, of your expressions of why we must cut oat all the nonsense and start going forward instead of in circles. Heck, I'm not bashful about writing to Stalin. I wrote Princess Margaret Rose for a ‘date, didn’t I? The second secretary in the Britis h Embassy answered my request and it's unlikely that the Princess will come to Indianapolis, but the point
is, friendly relations have been estalilished. The) secretary wrote and said Princess Niargaret “ap-
preciated my invitation.”
Crux of Peace WE HOOSIERS, right here in "Marion County
That's so) nething.
and vicinity, have an opportunity qf getting to the -.
crux of peace and with the man who has a lot of say-so whether we'll have peace or not.
a, big spark in the old boy's heart and make him | think about the dreams the milllions of Ivans and
Mischas must have and suddenly realize that it's high time he was calling President Truman for a talk with all cards on the table. No funny ,business, no doublt talk or gohbledegook. If you are interested, write a letter on the best
Stalin why you think it's important to you that we clear the clouds from the international horizon. Send it to me. i - When all the letters coms: in they'll be bundled neatly and the next stop will be Moscow. Let's
"keep them.clean. We don’t yeant any more trouble. {
Not us Hoosiers. * ® & Wonder if T should sem] Mr. Stalin a copy of “You, Too” when it's written and published? For a couple of rubles, of course. . Mr. and Mrs.| Charles E. Freeland, 3502 Caroline Ave. hope they're not the last backers of “You, Too.” So! am I hoping. Four more add up to 1570. Goal 30,000 requests.
By Andrew Tully
Col. Mara didn’t know that he did. That is Col. Mara didn’t believe that he did. Col. Mara, you understand, was helping out all he could but he was very busy and half the time he didn’t know whom he talked to. Well, Col. Mara wouldn't do anything like that without tellimg Gen. Vaughan, would he? Col. Mara said No, of course not, he wouldn't think of such a thing.
And now Senator Margaret Chase Smith (R. Me.) had a few questions.
Would the Justice Department give Col. Mara
Information about General Vaughan’s file unless :
the General told ‘em it was okay? . Col. Mara really didn't know. Well, then, did Col. Mara go to the Justice Department without any credentials? Col. Mara said he phoned somebody over there and told him he was coming. When Call. Mara got there and talked to this Mr. Ford, did Mr. Ford ask him for apy credentials? Col. Magra said- Mr. Ford didn’t have to, this first man ‘he saw at the Justice Department,’who had referred him to Mr. Ford, had phoned Mr. Ford thal he was coming. Yes, hut how did Mr. Ford know Col. was Gen. Vaughan’s assistant?
Couldn't Answer Yes or No
WHY, COL. MARA was wearing his uniform 80 Mr. Ford could see who he was; besides, Col. Mara ‘told Mr. Ford he was Col. Mara. Mrs. Smith sighed, but gave it another try. This, she told Col. Mara, was a question he could ask yes or no. Mr. Ford didn't ask him for credentials, then? Col. Mara said No, it didn’t seem to him like a question he could answer yes or no. The fact is, said Col. Mara, he probably told Mr. Ford who he was or sométhing. And that is Col..C. J. Mara; assistant military alde to the President—a man who fears to tread where fools rush in,
Mara
Of Too Many $S
too many unsolved murders.
problem. There police have number of crimes, too many
nal history, Ft. Wayne now has one man facing death in the electric chair on his confession to the same murder for which another man is serying a life sentence. Still another suspect is facing grand jury indictment for his confession of three slayings, two of them the same crimes which helped send the first man to the deathhouse. Puzzled police, trying to keep score on who says they killed whom, have a further problem in a series of new ‘‘crackpot” confessions. The latest one, which came- {ast week-end- just as they were checking out another “credible” confession, turned out to be from a man who was in Germany when he “killed” his Ft. Wayne victim. The rash of confessions has become a joke in the northern Indiana city. .One Ft. Wayner
meeting another is likely to crack: “Well, have you confessed
Yet this morning?” It’s no joke, however, to a man in the deathhouse ‘who now claims the confession that put him there was a lie or to conscientious police who alternately wonder if they've sent an innocent man to die;or if they're working to free a vicious killer. - ” ~ NOR IS it funny to the families of four pitifully mutilated, brutally slain women, for whom each new probe reopens old wounds. . The whole strange case had its beginning in a terror-packed 13-month period in 1944-45 in which one after another Billie Haaga, Anna Kuzeff, PhyllisConine and Dorothea Howard
WASHINGTON, Sept. 5—1I have to argue with the clergy, but there was the acting chaplain of the House of Representatives praying for the good’ health and wisdom of the members of Congress as they shape the destiny of this great nation. What Congress, reverend. sir? The performance was one of the weirdest I ever saw. At 11:45 a. m., the bells clanged through the office buildings to warn the ‘Congressmen they only had 15 minutes to get to work, Eleven gentlemen straggled in. A small man in a sports jacket rushed in the mace with the silver eagle on top, Another dignitary poured ink from a large bottle into the well on the desk of the Speaker. ’
The Speaker’ Pops Out
AT 12 NOON Speaker Pro-Tem Gene Cox of Georgia popped out from behind the golden drapes and bounced his gavel on the mahogany. The fillin chaplain, a dominie from a local church, glanced briefly over the 11 heads and the nearly 400 empty seats, and made his plea for the health and good
‘Sense of the missing gentlemen.
Rep, Cox approved, bang, the journal of the last meeting. Then Rep. Harry R. Sheppard, the leading Democrat of Yucaipa, Cal, rose in his chocolate-colored suit and said, “Mr, Speaker, 1 move the House be now adjourned.” Bang! It was. Speaker Cox and his 11 colleagues filed out. Somebody dimmed the lights. Elapsed time: Two minutes, exactly. This mumbo-jumbo was part of Congress’ elaborate farce to get a vacation without taking one and thereby breaking the law. And if this dispatch sounds ludicrious, I can point ont only that it isn’t my fault,
The law says that the House can't adjourn without consent of the Senate and, of course, vice versa. You may remember how the House applied a week ago for a month's vacation and the .Senators said, no, you lazy ones, stay on the job. This made the House sore, Some of the gentlémen made
were found . either “dead or dying, their desecrated -bodies mute testimony to the savagery of their attacker, Detectives followed few slim Clues. The cases were marked “unsolved” ved” on June 9, 1947
bitter speeches. Others muttered insults that did! not get in the record. The House got around its own law by deciding to take up no legislation for the month and. meet only twice a week, as per the rules. I at described above in complete detail one of these sessions.
Senate Decides to Rest
THEN THE Senate concluded a few days back that despite all the work still to do, it needs a week's vacation over Labor Day. So it had to ask the House for permission to take time off. The House was in session, according to law, but actually it wasn't even visible. And how are you going to ask the little man who wasn't there? Even if, -theoretically, he was? The Senators took a leaf from the Representatives’ book. They, too, decided to consider no bills, to meet twice a week with a corporal’s guard on deck, and thereby keep the law intact. So the gentlemen of both houses are getting their vacations, which won't appear in the record. On Wednesday the Senate will return to take up a whole cartload of urgent legislation. The House, which is in somewhat better shape, won't get back until the end of the month. - And if I were the chaplain I think I'd pray that the lawgivers caught large fish and small sunburns. At this. writing they're not interested in anything else and no amount of prayer, I'm afraid, will change their attitude.
The Quiz Master
??? Test Your Skill ???
How did the dandelion get its name? The edges of dandelion leaves are cut Into large teeth which are sald to resemble the teeth of a Hon. This is how the Plam got its name. * &
Where 1s the Beriahire Museum? : > It 1s located in Pitts In the Hall | of Man is one of thie five sledges with which reached the Nortle Pole, while
Ww
in the historical collection is the original “One Hoss Shay,” immortalized in. the poem by Oliver Wendell Holmes. * 4 @
How many calories are figured in field rations for U. 8. soldiers?
Field rations are figured: 5000 calories
Engineer Group
Ses Meeting
“Atomic Power and Aircraft | Propulsion” will be discussed by Andrew Kalitinsky at the 8 p.m. meeting Thursday of the Indiana} Section of the Society of Auto-| motive Engineers. The organiza-| tion will meet in the Antlers Ho- - tel. Mr. Kalitinsky, who is chief power plant’ engineer with the nuclear energy for propulsion of aircraft division of the Fairchild Alrcraft and Engine Corp., will also show films of the Bikini Mr Kalitinsky atom bomb tests. He was born and abroad and became a naturalized citizen in March, 1945. He served with the Navy from 1945 until|¥ 1946, and has held his present] position since June, 1946. A dinner meeting and soclal hour at 6:30 p. m. will precede the speaking program. Newly elected officers will be in charge re {of the meeting. They are Dimitrius Gerdan, Al-| lison Division, General
Motors
Metallurgical Service Co., chairman; W. P. Woods, ‘Chev-|sr rolet Indianapolis Division, GMC,
day ash wan,
Ko
treasurer; and C. K. lor, 58 |8pring Clutch Co., sec
Ralph Lobaugh . i He woh the death cell to die. Police There Also Face Problem
By DONNA MIKELS IN AN ERA of brutal crimes, too many cities have
But Ft. Wayne, Ind., is plagued by another kind of a
In a web of violence unprecedented in Indiana crimi-
educated |}
Corp., chairman; 8. A. Silberman,
layers for Slain
too many solutions for the slayers for the slain.
a
Robert tenced to life.
when a moody-lookinfz, bespectacled stranger walked into the police station im Kokomo, Ind., and caimly told the desk sergeant: “lI want to confess a murder.” ’ With those words 32-year-old Ralph Lobaugh set off the chain of events ‘which he later was powerless tor halt and which sent him to the Michigan City deathhouse. One day Lobauglh was in Ft, Wayne confessing that he killed Miss Haaga, Miss Kuzeff and Mrs. Howard. The next, Lobsaugh changed his mind and denied the crime. The” day after, he was reconfessing, and denying his denial. . The “now-I-d¥d-it, - now-I-didn’t” confessicms and repudiations -occurred many times in the subsequen}. investigation. But Lobaugh surprised even his attorney ona day in October, 1947 when fin ‘a period of insisting on his innocence he
Hollows:
Christen . . . Sen.
the
-" Franklin Click , , . Another confession. suddenly asked for am-<mmedi-
ate hearing, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to die in Febru-
ary of 1948. . s = = TWO DAYS later the off-
again, on-again “slayer” awoke and again announced that he was innocent. In the long months that followed new de- , velopments . brought him reprieves. Lobaugh added another “first” in Indiana criminal history when he took a “truth drug” test which substantiated his denials of the killings. Under the influence of ®odium pentothal he said he was a homosexual, that marriage failed to solve his emotional problem and that he.had con-
~ fessed hoping to commit “legal
suicide.” There were more legal moves and Lobaugh was still reprieved with appeals pending in November, 1948, when a new complication appeared. On new evidence the Allen County jury indicted and a trial court -later convicted Robert C. Christen, former Ft. Wayne druggist and then a Denver, Colo., grocer, for the slaying of Mrs, Howard. He was Sentenced d to | life imprison-
State Fair Lists Week-End Prize Winners Rudy Vallee Weds
/
Anna Kusoff . , . Two men
Phyllis Conine . . . Justice at
last?
, vestigation. to
ment as the man who assaulted and left the woman dying. in an alley in downtown Ft. Wayne, and sent to the same prison where Lobaugh was awaiting to die for the same crime. The newest twist produced more stays, a governor's investigation. - Even Ft. Wayne police officials began to say Lobaugh was “railroaded” and the outspoken.new police chief, Lester Eisenhut, started an insupport . this opinion. - Had his execution gone as scheduled, Ralph Lobaugh would have been in his grave some 16 months ago. Last month Franklin Click, a 30-year-old farm worker under arrest for rape, startlingly like the slayings, suddenly confessed that he, not Lobaugh, killed pretty 22-year-old. Anna Kuzeff and ex-dancer Billie Haaga.
» » ” TO THIS he added thbfeonfession that he attacked and killed teen- -ager P Phyllis C Conine,
Indiana Stabe Fair prize winners over the week-end were as Rasl Sharowille: pen three barrows, 170-
Merion Littlejohn, "Christiansburg sing
Enis e ba ATTow. £10. Jon Holsappl, { pen three barrows, 210-270. John Holsapple L Reto ont Ira SEU Baad A = Ea +R champion barrow y Serve | winner, iddie I aldwell, Darlington; | Teens: Donna’ _ Lee Waas, Jeflerson: champion barrow. HHA champion eliman Hoppa, Roy Cook Darfing: Joann: Guynn, Scott; Joan Yinegal,| en, Littieiohn: reserve champ ton: a L Gre Jamestown; J Howard: Jane Potter. Warren: Mary E. Hoisapple. ames miller 4Woton Wayne © Van |Rissby sh. Marilyn Reed, Elchart| Sooiied Poland China—S8ingle. barrow, ve, Crawfords vii Harol Hoftner, | Pauline Sesenguth, A 0-210, Ralph R. Bittner; Evansville pen Gleave, - 7a Carl '8hields i aD nd Food eparation— Ty Frances Allen, | a ALT OwS, 170-210, Bittner sin sweepstakes winner, alter Weber and Sullivan - Marjorie Whitm Putnam: barrow, 210-370 James, ‘Moore Evansiile, son. Indianapolis Byron Hiner, Lewis. | Shires Conroy, Clark; Esth or McCarty, | i. se barrows, 0-270. Hubert V Stemart, wton: Marilyn Mitchell, Clinton. Mary
Greensburg, an | preemies winner, Hazelwood Pain. |
Ann, Menely, Lagrange; Carol Sittler, Kos. |
en are Kol
t. Wayne Has Too Many Murder olutions For Number Of Crimes
Mrs. Franklin Click and children . . . Her husband and their father is the latest to confess slayings of three Ft. Wayne women.
Haaga . . . Who killed her?
the only one of the unsolved murders which had not been previously confessed. Authorities withheld his confession but revealed that the one on the Co case was “apparently authentic.” A lie detector test substantiated all three of Click’'s confessions, it was reported. Ft. Wayne police, now too wary to cross off the “unsolved” label until they've sure, are checking out every detail in Click’s confession. In the Conine case Click described the crime, led them to the. spot, and solved for the first time the mystery of a trench coat.found near the body. He told them he had stolen a car and found the topcoat in it on Aug. 4, 1944, the day he said he drove 17-year-old Phyllis to the country, to rape and kill her. The businessman, from whom the car was stolen, last week viewed the
coat and identified it as the one
either way.
which was taken with his car. Chief Eisenhut and Sheriff Harold Zeis, conducting a joint investigation on the case, said they were sufficiently convinced of the authenticity of Click’s confession to turn it over to the prosecutor immediately and to make an extensive re-investiga-tion of his confessions of the Kuzeff and Haaga slaying. Meanwhile, another turn was added in the “tangled cases as Robert Buhler, attorney for Lobaugh, assumed Click’s defense. Still fighting to save 'Lobaugh from the chair, Mr. Buhler said he would defend Click on a plea of innocent by reason of insanit
ty. Meanwhile, Lobaugh — killer or psychopathic liar--waits in death cell he locked on himself, unaware of the strange turn of events in the world outside. If you.asked him today if he was the killer Lobaugh, might say he was or’ he might re-af-firm his innocence. Prison officials wouldn't give you odds
Fourth Time and. Hopes This Is It
MONTEREY, Cal, Sept. 5 (UP) Crooner Rudy Vallee said toe day he will “work very hard” at
Champ fon barrow, Moore; .reserve cham. making- a success of his fourth
row, Bittner: shamplon pen thre
. here with
}
oth broth erty In the receiving line.
ples | lames, ren” Hoon: Vallee beat out the fire with his
mpion Hee |marriage.
Mr, Vallee—was honeymooning the former Eleanor
y: pen hice |Kathleen Norris, 21-year-old Uni.
versity of California ‘graduate hom he married in a ceremony at Corpus Christi Catholic Church
Eh in Piedmont, Cal., Saturday night,
“I pray this is it, " he said. “It is my most sincere wish and I |intend to work very hard."
“I'm awfully excited . and
70. happy,” the new Mrs. Vallee said,
. " ~- wedding reception, {the new Mrs, Vallee backed into one of the candles while standing Her floor
AT THE
Astle. {length bridal veil went up in
singeing her hair. Mr, hands. Mrs. Vallee was treated for shock. Mr. Vallee's previous wives were Leonia Gauchore, Jane Greer and Fay Webb,
—————————— —Actor's agent Vic Orsatti, 46, FOUR CONVICTS ESCAPE
MILLEDGEVILLE, Ga., Sept. 5
with Patricia Vaniver, “Miss Phil-|(UP)—Four convicts assigned to : adelphia of 1944,” said they would a work detail of the state mental
hospital here escaped late last
tonight, and state trooper blocked
actress June Lang in 1937 tm 0 i highways eating out of low
arain and Graswy + First Place Winners Preservation — Jo Ann Bennet A Bittner; reserve cha . [~Wa ne Van Clean: Crawfordsville, Carl| Orange: Alice Ann Osborne, Knox: pels: three barrows, Noel Callahan. Rushville Sle, ifonio Bor Cnt Dilagioy Seri, WS MET Wo XG 0) 17g sine warror, rosin pi : | ; a enke Poultry Farm enter Poin pen frenoand Jom, Sha, ange, or Byars hus Evelyn "Funer,” Bry. ae 330. Dietx, Po Itry; single ord, . athryn Cook, :Putna ety Poultry vel, Bar lingot ig piedaig Cold-| ely Class, Tamworih—Bingle barrow, |parrows. 10-270, ety reser, y: ch mp pion y . ' 0 bs rothers Arrow, e oultr, re a ’ Orth Joe, Bumpin, Lafayette: Villiam Monery: 210-270, William Waits, Hagers- {barrow Katherine Oude he uber: H Arnold and town: pen t ree barrows, Walte; champion | chester; champi on ig Diets” th ata ¥ {barrow, Waltz; reserve champion barrow, [owes Shiltapseas pen, O ns. Coaresville, Elarence Bowers, Salem; Sips Brosnaia; champion pen Eat mn rows x nnen ere au . . G ampsh| ingle barrow, 170-210, Rob. | champion} lk olar ina, ach Class Col jnary. Kirst Place Win. ig *A ersburger, _Sharpsville; Seal serves champion barrow, Bowen, Rossville, - also triple sweepstake [(hree | rows, S310, Dovershurger: si Gee “Si ty, Keller brothers. , Sars winner; Minnie A. Stone. Clayton. also|§l® barrow -270, Giibe . i, ; serve grand. epampion pen. Sweepstake winner’; Mrs. Ethel Brock, |Connersville; pen. of three barrows 210-| al ed Yon ye tilesville, Mrs. < yde Paddock. Lafayette; (370. Bi arms, Pennville: shamplon |. "4 argow Specia : Sinele rs. James L ford Plainfield: Mrs (barrow, Doversburger: reserve champion | arr esier IY Bre fogeial. Sihgle; ymo ow alestine; Mrs, barrow, Gardner, champion pen, Dovers-| v pepbrt; roe a Blank 0- 20.1 rman Oacadafe Pitshoro; Rachel Reit- burger; reserve champion pen, Emery L and barrow, 210se), | Clayton. | Mis \lliam J. Records, |Parks, Crawfordsville. lyfe rothers’ pen on barrows Prankiln; Nanc icharagon, Sargersville: o™ Sani ingle parte. 120-310. 19 0. Pa r gr Newsom, Colum: us; champion rs one ough ANADPO 3 Son, ; ATTOW ey brothers amplon pei arlene Mays, Bifiker Hill; Marie Spencer, [three barrows, 170-210, Blank and Son; 8 ¢ i Macin; MiOvsy Cur, Meglis™ Hgts, Wpeiout, WEA, Koll, Bigogrh | aofiand Rates perrey. spiel Chane oe. Owns! J Bwensan, ghdianafolis, Mary, And Ann Ab- Parker Newsom, Columbus; champion bar- is ord chy Teserve oh mplon poAow; Ww, CHI CE LR TT RR (Derg: Dotti, Gratt, Feru Also sweep- jon * pen, Blank, Logansport: re- LT jerve cham on Duroc o Vior Ta p-4 %e Childress, serve champion pen, Newsom, Columbus. |PAETows: noes shearing Contest _ ' a tics, OC A and China—8ingle barrow, 20.310, gional el sganiey . rew. M Mrs. ‘william Yo nite rH Iphur Springs; Faith Botton W a W a le bar-13 jini i tf ps Norr! Sta taniey, Danville; Carolyn | TOW hy OR. Sh aon. 8 ¢ champion Ol ar. sons, Sharpar} ie; r ge. Ploe In. (row, 210-270. pear, Waldron: pen three burg artford eh ADA ation © Clore. Fioenges Ms barrows, 210-370. Beth Meal. Waldron: aes Sn Khanh, Livenaogs Med, fs camp Jarrgw Bf Megl Esse cheny | © lo ndia napofis! 3 i's. Bert al 5. Baldwin, eal: reserve eh ampion B. Meal: - Miss Philadelphia field” EE wf ei St heeham Brothers Bouth th “Srow: lyr id f Vi 0 1 stophel, Goshen; rs. |Bro , u - FX > h rechabure; Mrs: Bethice fows, 2-310. be 4 ig "a gogders ride o ic rsathi City: Mrs a Trout, War- burg: single barrow, - Curtiss, Indianapolis; Mrs. and Son. Prankfo oft © avy pen three bar-| LAS VEGAS, Nev., Sept. 5 (UP) | a IR /e Frank tig Mr rows, Brown Brothers, Lyons: Ehampion ’. n- . ; reserve - | [Bal peas . Cecil Clore, Bargersville: ig ig § D. Pooner ‘aad Sons, Al- spending a brief honeymoon here ixuells, Pein 4 Paul; Mrs. Claude Harsh- [bion: champion pen, Brown Brothers; reTR ager. First rise. Nieger: Serve Shamplon pen. Frasier and Ankrom, 3 sman, Hamilton - lip Waggoner. Clinton Percheron— Robert ert Sele Latavette non thive harrews, | Teturn to Hollywood tomorrow. htsman, Har arllyn Sue South 170.210, Lester pick, Wan town: single! Mr Orsatti was married i’ Clinton. 4 barrow, 310-210, Max’ Bemilier, Elkhart: . \ Jf omomics Contest, BI Blue Rib-Ipen th rows, 310-210." Bemiller hep TEN Ann Reber tor. ih: Jans ; mpion pen. Be- |actress Marie MacDonald 10. years|early today t, SBad nace tie hin , a later. the udging: Bey .
