Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1949 — Page 7
7 1040 -6 afin eS 00
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SATURDAY, SEPT, wow
Americans Fight Back In Ryder Cup Journey
Overcome 3-1"'British Pp With Brilliant
Subpar Play; Lead in GANTON, England, Sept. 17 fessionals, battling to overcome
foursomes competition, fought back into position to retamn the Tent 30 pay by forging leads at the half-way mark of five or
the eight 36-hole tches.
Shooting brillant te golf under dull, threatening skies,
E. J. (Dutch) Harrison, Sammy Snead, Chick Harbert, Jimmy Demaret and Lloyd Mangrum assumed midway leads over their British opponents on the Ganton course, Johnny Palmer and Clayton Heafner were one down at the 18-hole mark and Bob Hamilton was four down in the singles matches that will wind up the tournament. America needed victories in six of the eight matches to retain the cup and five singles triumphs to tie. Harrison, the veteran “Arkansas Traveler” from Little Rock, led Max Faulkner of Britain seven up after 18 holes. |
5 Matches at Half
(UP)—America's crack golf proa 3-to-1 deficit from yesterday's
Smmy| Taylor Thumps «Huntington, 12-0
MARION, Ind., Sept. 17 (UP)— Taylor University today held its first football victory in two. sea-| sons of play, a 12-0 win over, Huntington here last night. ‘ Rocky Jones, Taylor back, spearheaded a - Taylor offe which netted 11 first downs tol Huntington's 5. Taylor lost all| its games last year. In the third period, Jones took & pass from fullback Granitz and stepped 35 yards for the fi first| and winning touchdown. In the final period Jones raced 26 yards for another score.
ie
No Such Thing as Key Games, DiMaggio Believes
Whole Season Played to Get to Crucial "
Contest, Yankee Outfielder Insists By JOE DIMAGGIO
(Special to
NEW YORK, Sept. 17—I am not a believer in key games. To! me the whole season is played to get to the crucial game. know whether you have or have We have not played that game yet. {
tite works. When it comes, you not won the pennant.
The Times)
That's
There are any number of games which give a club a lift. But these are not key games, because they can't get you in.
We. won the opener with the Red Sox, last time they played in the stadium, That was called a key game. But we lost two in a row after that, Weren't those key games, too? The big thing in baseball is to, pick it up again after a bad day. We had a bad one against the
“Indians ‘Thursday, - x 3
»
- Bom
- from* Em-Roe Sporting
Can't Be Good Every Day ‘There's nothing wrong with a bad day. It does not bother players as much as a 2-1 defeat when all their stuff is on the line and they are not good enough.
Dot Kielty in Final ~
‘With Dorothy Porter
ARDMORE, Pa., Sept. 17 (UP) —DPot Kielty, Long Beach, Cal. ‘and Dorothy Germain Porter, of Manoa, Pa. two always stead sometimes brilliant golfers, f each other today in the 36-hole final round of the U: 8. Women's Amateur Golf Championship.
old Marlene Bauer, Los Angeles, 1 up, in a stirring semifinal match yesterday which wasn’t settled until the last stroke. Mrs. Porter was a more comfortable 3 and 1 victor over Dorothy Kir-
I pr Po who. gained a repuiation:
| number of unauthorized —
|Lee- on” another charge. Miss Kielty eliminated 15-year-|
Nobody can have good days py Atlanta, Ga., twice’ runner-up
*
Murder Count
Ralph Lee Says He Hopes He Can Be Left Alone Now
FRANKLIN, gr 17 hope they leave me alone now.” Alling’ artist Ralph Emerson Lee uttered those words as he, was released yesterday from the' Johnson County jail after Circuit Court Judge Oral 8. Barnett freed him of a 25-year-old murder charge. ~ Judge Barnett's ruling was on a petition to free the Brown, County landscape artist on grounds that 76 court terms had elapsed without trial on the charge. A corps of deputy prosscutons, representing Prosecutor Dalley's| office in Indianapolis opposed the release, charging that he was, |“dangerous.” Cleared, Judge Says ui Barnett, in freeing the Brown County artist, said: t
- pe Rritely clears Lee as this court is concerned.”
jas a jail escape artist after a
tures, was charged with the mur-| der of Abner Peek, an Indian-| {apolis. grocer. | He was last arrested Aug. 9 when an armed posse of In-| dianapolis detectives and newsmen, -led by Detective Orville K. Gleich, took him into custody | at his home.
County jail until yesterday when Judge Barnett's court order treed im. Dally Plans New Action Prosecutor Dailey said he would | either appeal the judge's decision | or seek a new jury indictment of |~
En route to his modest Brown | County homestead outside Ninevah on R. R. 1, Lee observed that the seasons had changed since he was jailed. | “Autumn has come to Brown] County since I left.” Lee left the ‘courtroom with his| wife, an ordained Methodist min-}
Fireman Retires After 42 Years
every day. It anyone did, I don’t know what this game would be But you have to back up the bad day with the pickup. That's what the Yankees did yesterday | against the Tigers. That was i portant, It was a game in which one man had to do it. That's what! you get down to when you have good. pitching on both sides. One! man. Both pitchers met the early test. Hutchinson got Berra and me in the first, when we had the big opportunity. Byrne got Mullin| and: Wertz, their, 1:2 punch; in the J
third; when they had the chance. | |e
But we had the winning man. | Brown's double off a curve on the sep 2-2 count in the fifth scored two ig and gave us the two-run edge.! That meant they had to play for, three. On the road, they couldn’ t| go for the tie. To me, Byrne did his best job! on Wakefield (pinch-hitter in the seventh). Tommy got the first strike by, then broke off two beauty curves which just nipped] the outside corner. ‘Wakefield did 3 not even swing the bat. Brown hit the winning blow, but Frank Crosetti, our coach at, third, had a part in the second) Tun. He kept Mapes traveling from first to home on the double,
If the throw had been made tog;
home, it had to be close. I think Crosetti surprised Wertz in right by sending Mapes home. One man had to win yesterday. Brown did it. Today we may have! somebody else,
Becker and O'Brien Jo Wrestle Tuesday
* Izzy Becker and Jack O'Brien’ have been signed to meet in the Bemiwindup spot on next Tues-| Bay night's wrestling card in Armory. * The headline battle Rf = 4iit, all-heavyweight program will send the “Zebra Kid,” 326-pounder be against Buddy Rogers,
|
Complete List of Prizes | For Times Fishing Rodeo
Here is the list of prizes for The Times Fishing Rodeo: " CHAMPIONSHIP AWARD For the largest bass caught, a $200 Mercury Outboard motor Goods Store and the L. Strauss & Co.| Champion's Trophy. The winner |® of “the championship award will not participate in other division prizes and that division prize will gp .to the next in line. LARGEST TAGGED BASS Men—Season’'s pass for two srsons to Indianapolis 16th Bt, idget Bpesdway for 1950, worth more than $100 Women—Year’ $ supply of Maxwel House Coffee from Koehler Brothers, Sirioviors of Standard Food Products. 3 Javd Product tly fishing outBR from Smith-Ortel Sportsmen
ge. « Girls — South Bend Casting Rod from South Bend Bait Co, Penn Fishing Reel and 100-yard Nybeau Nylon Cast Line. LARGEST TAGGED CRAP Men--Bristol Electromatic Casttng Reel. Women—One year's supply of Bonnet ~ Margerine from
Bother Bre Bros. . lon thermos ug ye one-galion Inc, InMeal
«= Girls—One-gallon thermos jug From Metal Industries, Inc., Indi-
anapolis. ° LARGEST AGED VE-G
he he
PIES | pishing Kits, feur Rex 8
(in this tourney, Star
He said he would go back to atl - {landscape painting today. “There is so much I have missed.”
‘Races at Glance
By United Press AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ww. L. pet. GB ™ —————————————— New York 88 51 ton . .. 80 fi i eland 81 8 HH roit . nn Remaining Schaguie New ¥ rit Home: Clevela 18, Pi
{8ept. 17: Chichen Sept. oH phi. 7,
37. 38, 29: ER Bet’ 1. * otal ~11 Aver AL ashing | mm), 23 At
To Be Honored
All Risked Lives
—4 Boston—At Hom lcnteato: Sept. \. New At New York. Sept. 2 ot) ington, Sept. 27 (Nn),
poiegiand aL Hong” pei a | " For Highway Safety ington, Sept. 17: At New York, Sept. A I. 20: Ak Six. Hoosier truck. drivers. will
“ini, 28 A Detroit, Seog! ypoo! Dettori —at” Home. Cleveland, Sept. re Somos. 26¢ Siud ool Ho. Set 2 A Washingion. Se hg] nook, of the 18th annual Indiana Motor Philadelphia. ‘ge Bane, 50 oii a "si Cleveland. |;rryck Association convention, for risking their lives in contributing to highway safety.
[Set
NATIONAL al WwW. L . TP
Pet ! 18 Performances | piRemainne Schedu du uesl) ugh oe at of duty” will rate certificates and Sent 18.98 rm). 30 Brookiyn. ‘Seo. 3i|Prizes to be presented by Gov. 2%. 22 a): Chicago. Sent. 2 24 LY Schricker to: | 30, aro: 3.3 Toul 8 3 Phige iit ...| - Leon Brown, Terre Haute; GerBio tha el 5% lov. Boomington: Haro Mil, 3 ca % pt. :llor, joomin n; aro. 8, 1a Boston: Rept "30: 30: ae Piniaas | Indianapolis; Eagar Grant, 1. 2 Total: 11 |ward, and Harry A. Smith, An|derson.
8 duis
"mi: iadelphin.
‘Major League Leaders Saved 4 Soldiers “
By United Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE Mr. Brown saved four soldiers Indianapolis, he plans to ride! They found -the peeper, G AB R H pc. from possible death by wrecking through Nashville, Tenn. en Hughes, 41, with his stare glued obvious. Siauehte: Broofivn 143 os "32 190 343 his truck to keep from hitting poute to Atlanta, Ga. to the window, Musial. 8t Louis 143 884 118 184 | their car when they cut in front; a a er, Pittsburgh 154 ¥ Marshall. New York ih 444 78 138 'of him. !
— |
- Mr. Davis risked his life to resAMERICAN LEAGUE
{cue a child from a car which was
al ra stony. 143 i 14 i : 3/200 after overturning. Mitehell” Cleveland 134 $71 '8 136 313) Mr. Smith wrecked his truck by| (Dillinger. St. Louis . 125 497 61 184 313 aetiverately running off the road gra agi [to avoid -collision with a car car-| { rying a woman and two small, Wliame™R “Bex gE ig Eo [» # children when the car pulled onto phens “nove ITED ~ | the highway without stopping. | |gtephen Sox 149 Robinson Dodgrs 118, Mr. Taylor rescued an infant A HK iner, Pirates ...117 from a wrecked car and tended it
Aantil aid arrived. ‘ | Mr. Grant helped recapture a Golf Notes tiger which had-escaped from a’ The an nual Dr. Paul Schmidt handiesp circus farm near Peru.
tourney. will held at the Pleasant Run golf course tomorrow. Players will meke| Mr. Mills helped set up a road
their own ‘foursome and nT eR So {block and directed traffic around rs e at a Dr midt tourney. there will'la blazing apartment house at Vaughn nolecin- one tour- Mari 11th hole. There no Marion. |
the be the Tommy on fee “Yor either event.
ey entry
is
|reonard Wild Rites | To Be Held Monday
Services for Leonard L. Wiid, son of Maj. and Mrs. Robert 8.
MOST TAGGED FISH Wild, Washington, D. C., former
The we NONE or gir1'held at 2 p. m. Monday In Flana|catching the most tagged fish for ner & Buchanan mortuary. Burthe day will get a Bait Canteen ia! will be in Crown Hill. He was from the Canteen Co. Oberlin, 0.21. ° {The person with the second larg-| Mr. Wild was killed Mrsiay est’ tagged catch will receive a when an automobile in which he
Bait Canteen. {was riding left the highway and MOST TAGGED FISH {crashed into an embankment near BY DIVISION | Lexington, Va.
Men—Weber Futurist Fly Reel. mcem— Women—Weber Futurist Fly Motorcycle Rider Hurt
Boy and Girl—Indus Bait can In Collision With Car
of from Indus Corp, , Indi A motorcycle rider was in fair The person winning the prize condition in St. Vincent's Hospital for the Most Tagged Fish by any-|after his vehicle collided with a one will be eliminated from a|/car on Morris St. at Richland prize in this division. Ave, this morning. THE TAGGED FISH James McIntire, 30, of 5141 N. Other persons catching tagged Beecher St. suffered cuts and fish, and unsuccessful Singles, bruises on his face and left leg will shate prizes including a / when his cycle, going east on dozen U. 8. Rubber Co.'s U. 8. Morris St, collided with a car Royal’ Golf Balls, six Johnson|griven inthe same direction by
Spoons, dinner for two at the Danube Restaurant, 12 Asha ay Ave. police sald. of 1134 Ritnlatd
from the Weezel Bait Co. Cincinnati; three Ilatfish Lures from | the Helin Tackle Co., Detroit; 12 Ofr-Bottom Rigs from Ripich Co., Cleveland, O.; six Arbogast Lures from the Fred Arbogast . Co. Akron; six Fly Lures from E. M. Packinpaugh Co. Chattan i 12 Tuttle's Devilbugs, six J
Ready for Immediate Wear Slacks or Pants
Our will make Immediate ‘Wlterations. them home with you
LEON TAILORING CO. 235 Mass. Ave. i Fi {idl
‘TRUMPETS TJ om nse 6.
uncles, nephews and nieces,
tered from South Bena to Eb Gyn Toms Holds
bike trek from his home in San Diego, Cal. on April 1. He moved | to San Diego from Indiana in 1946. He has already visited 23 of the proposed states in his! © DETROIT, Sept. 17 (UP)i- An ‘ried by that age. Eleven per cent itinerary and has visited iWo attractive housewife told today With high school education are Canadian provinces.
icold,” said the roving cyclist-who| sleeps under the stars at alent and carries only a change of: clothes in a light sleeping baginto the adjoining bedroom and). cent of high school graduates and mothers. Some with college! on his handlebars. “It's time to/told Ser husband to.call police. .. oo med ‘by this ‘age. But #nly diplomas fai} miserably... | Then for 10 minutes she walked in 74° per cent of college women have! Several states in the southern|the nude in and out of the réom|pyshands before they're 50! clime are next on his route. From| until officers arrived.
{hit the road again.”
| Indianapolis residents, will ‘be .
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Capt. Edward H. Trimpe, of the Indianapolis Fire Department, relaxes in front of fire house 29 in uniform for the last time. Lee was held in the Johnson (Capt Trimpe retired at 8 a. m. today after 42 years of service
with the fire department. A party was held at his home yesterday | fo celebrate his retirement and also his 70th birthday, which oc- | | curred ‘yesterday.
Hoosier Taking 7500-Mile ‘Sightseeing Tour By Bike
Left Present Home in California On April 1, Has Visited 23 States
. A native Hoosier will leave Indianapolis early
. about them. q Ly | earning a living. I want to
Canada, Aug. 1. The past six!
Nv
| Ask Mrs, Manners—
PAGE. 1
Your Job—
No Rospection ‘Chasers’ Insurance -r ‘Who Also Pose as Nice Demands Hustlers
DEAK MRS, MANNERS: I have more respect for women who admit what they are than| I do for the “other women” who chase after married men -but try! to fool everyone that they are nice girls. The latter offer a greater threat to society and marriage than the others because they're accepted 90 per cent of the time due to the fact people aren't “sure”|
The women admitting their 3 stand take advantage of a man. only financially, while the “other women” take advantage socially, catching men at the peak of their confusion and working on them. I believe the woman who wrote you saying she and her husband would have gotten together sooner if the “other woman” hadn't worked on her husband, and that part of the tension was due to the girl's insinuations, The “other woman” seeks to grab from another woman what she herself will not honestly work for. She is plagued by her inability to ft into normal life. Lacking a moral code, she seeks to destroy the happiness of others, hoping thereby to obtain a little (happiness for herself. She's seldom “picked up.” The man is picked up, after she tosses the idea his way. I blame women a lot for their husbands’ wandering feet. It takes ‘so little to keep a man happy-— Just mutual physical interest and | companionship. Too many {women offer the first half--but you have to have both. for hap'piness and contentment. Many women think a man is an animal. Far from it. He's anxious for companionship and ready to build and create. -He needs a wife to give him spiritual support. “Other woman” trouble never happened to me and I hope it doesn’t. I dam doing everything 1 can to prevent it by giving’ generously of love, understanding and companionship — by continually keeping interested in life and people “By strengthening. the "| bonds of the family by sharing {and doing things together. f V. L. J.
at winning “husbands “when the wives are falling and the men think they are. The “other woman” will knock herself out to understand, maybe becayse she's failed herself and knows | how an unhappy man feels. | Most of us “understand” on the surface only—if we're in the mood to understand. A wife would do well to remember the ambitions her husband told her about in college—when he took his first job. She aimed to be a housewife and a mother—she's enjoying her career—=she's sure she hasn't failed. But her husband thinks he has failed if he's lukewarm about his job . and short of his goals, To keep him _appy she needs to figure out why he isn't happy.
Tell Your Doctor
To.V. A. (writing privately ‘about the drinking husband she isn’t sure she loves asking her for a divorce)—Before you decide anything tell your doctor what you have told me. There would be little point to going back to your husband, H he wants you hack, without straightening out your dificulties—both yours and his. I doubt very much if you causéd Pis drinking. He drinks still, with this girl he wants to marry-—and admits he mistreats her, as he did you. He hasn't changed— nd I'd want to see some changes before I'd expect a happier life with him. You're
ably not as bad, with those regular checks, as you could be. MRS, MANNERS.
Let Mrs. Manners and read- {: TIt's a good idea to remem ers of the column share your “there “wre” all’ Kinds’ of “ot lenis. ‘Write in care of The women, around d willing to work | Times, 214 Ww. Maryland St.
Your Marriage: By Samuel and Esther Kling
rosie ne Uneducated Girls Given
on the last leg of a 7500-mile sightseeing tour of the United States, Canada, and Mexico by bicycle. Earl Hattery, wiry, sun and wind-burned native of Akron, Ind. arrived in Indiana from Montreal, weeks have been spent visiting 48 relatives, brothers, sisters, aunts, marriage?
Greater Chance to Marry
Q—Does a girl with little education have a poor chance for
“scat-|
Mr.” Hattery began his long
Peeping Tom Till Police Nab Him
A~—On the contrary. The girl with meager schooling is al/most sure to get a husband. What's more, ‘she usually marries at a much earlier age that her better-educated sister. One survey, for example, shows that 22 per ‘cent of girls with {less than five years of education ORS marry before they're 20. Sixteen per cent of those with seven to
business world earlier. There she meets men who are working and able to earn a living. She ns
{new she transfixed a Second Tour
police. Margaret Joffa, 34, _Iférmer cigaret girl, said she was attributes - 4 8 st
Mr. Battery
He the window.’
{off the slip,” she said.
“Too Cold Here” “These Indiana evening are {00 the window. sill.” * ‘w MRS JOFFA
».,
Peeping! | Tom with an impromptu strip then!
A former machinist in Kokomo| {tease while her husband called] By the time they're 29,.83 per, ‘also easy to explain.. The girl and Elwood, he worked during! the war years in the Kingsbury Mrs.
Ordnance plant in LaPorte: = a Eighty: “three pez-oent-of girle- with: Jpg A. Jusband... Shes,
wearing only “a slip early yester-travel-by-bike-bug to a desire “tol4,y morning when see the nation without gas. said he made a tour of the 48 states by automobile before the| “beyond the call war.
“1 “felt that! someone was wate hing me through
“Just to make sure, I pulled! the time they're 29. “Then I,
'heard someone's fingers slip, “off |ally all wemen With less than five educated girl?
said she walked,
Carl educated girl marries sooner is makes in marriage.
ight - eight Years of schooling are mar. t to date such men and this, in turn,
{leads to marriage.
wed at 20. But only 5 percent of | The fact tht the girl with less,
bad off financially, but prob- |
Many Opepings for ‘Men Who Can Deliver
I am a young man who quit college two years short of graduation because I flunked out. I am . now faced with
get into some occupation In which I can grow. I've been thinking about life insurance salesmanship as a career. Does it offer good possibilities?
By JAMES GRAYSON If you flunked in college bee cause you were lazy and you are still lazy you'd better not try selling insurance, People just don't come up and ask you for it, You've got to get ot and hustle gnd then you don't always make a sale,
Life insurance is being sold
every day. No one salesman is
getting all the business in one community unless all the other salesmen are lying down on the job. The business is there-—but the salesman have to go after it, Most life insurance agents spe-
iclalize in one of three kinds of {life insurance, namely, ordinary {insurance,
industrial insurance,
If you have a personal job problem, write James Grayson
| in care a. The Times,
and ‘group insurance. You most likely would have to begin in the
ordinary life field, in which you
sell policies with face values of at least $1000 and premium payments are made directly to the general agent or company home office, You might sell industrial ine (surance, in which low-premium policies with small face values are issued and premiums are collected by the agent in. person. In a city the size of Indianapolis {there are lots of openings for in« {surance salesmen who can really (sell, Some companies are more. {eager to get salésmen than others. ‘Some are very particular and choose ‘new sgjesmen only after ‘they. are - convinced that salesmen have a reasonable chance of SuSetequng: Your earnings to begin with may be very meager. They likely
|will depénd on how much fn-
surance, you sell. Some companies
|which write ordinary insurance
have, in the past, given . new agents financial assistance during the apprenticeship period. Industrial agents who meet certain qualifications generally receive a salary from the start. One of the biggest problems which confronts you is to know which company or general agent |offers the best possibilities for you. You need to give consider {able thought to this. If you do not have a good friend who knows about the
{various life insurance com icollege women are married by education is more apt to marry, panies ‘than her better-educated sister’ is|and general agencies here in In-
dianapolis, contact the Insurance
|cent of those with less than five! with less formal schooling usual- Department, Room 240, State
|vears of education are married. ly has lower seven “to. eight years are wed. with someone Wh
school education are married by education. then. But only 53 per cent of} > 98 college women have husbands by] Q—Is the girl with little edu[cation as likely to be successful And .by the age of 49, practic-| in her marriage as the better-
|years of schooling are married—| A—Not as a rule. Of course, 96 per cent! Of those with seven much depénds on the individual to eight years of education, 92) case. Many girls with {per cent are wed. Eighty-eight schooling make excellent wives|
But in general, studies reveal {that the more education a woman
The reason why the less- has, the better adjustment -she
Leaving school at an a college background are the
stanqards m conten: the insurance companies licensed cS may ane fine [Seventy-three per cent with high, undesirable to a girl with more
little!
Women with
House, to find out the names of .
Ine AA
usiness friends or-acquaintances deciding which life insurance companies to contaét relative to {employment.
Auxiliary Luncheons Three auxiliary committees of the Sahara Grotto have scheduled noon luncheon meetings for next week. The visiting committee will meet Tuesday in the home of Mrs. |Eva Bohnenkamp, 1027 Newman St.; the decorating group Wednesday in the home of Mrs. Coral Bryson, 955 Hawthorne Lane, and the general house committee will meet Friday in the home of Mrs,
early age, she gets out into the most successful of all!
{Donna Cook, 2330 Stuart St.
Tha number will represent’ the office of Fletcher Trust Company where you and open your savings or checking account. + ‘Whatever office you choose, you can en-, joy the facilities of the other 13 strategi-
cally located Fletcher Trust offices as well.
Suppose you open your. account at our newest office on Arlington Avenue at East Tenth Street. You can make deposits in all 14 offices. Automatically you become a customer of our Downtown Office where “you can cash checks, make withdrawals. . You can also arrange to cash checks at
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
ake a Number from One to Fourteen
other offices. Checking account statements
you, if desired.
No matter at what office you open your account, you can bank at all fourteén. This unusual banking convenience is the reason why more than 90,000 depositors —just about one out of every five in the
Jurnished.
Fletcher Trust Company
erie INDIANAPOLIS
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
9
canceled checks will be mailed to
Indianapolis area—bank at Fletcher Trust SOE, Vastingten Welk Company. You, too, are invited to open 1 your account with us. Zi BAS) WAS Siraek * Bank-by-Mail_ envelopes Jo deposits are yA Win, Saag
~
«
DOWNTOWN OFFICE Northwest Corner Pennsylvanie
BROAD RIPPLE OFFICE 706 E. Sixty-third Street THIRTIETH STREET OFFICE George E. Hulsman, Manager SIXTEENTH: STREET OFFICE
Ralph E. Dodson, Manager 1125 S. Meridian Street
ROOSEVELT AVENUE OFFICE 1533 Roosevelt Avenue W. Ellison Gatewood, Manoger EAST TENTH OFFICE Donald E. Williams, Manager ARLINGTON AVENUE OFFICE Ted M. Campbell, Manager
5501 E. Washington Street Ralph C. Wright, Manager
WEST STREET OFFICE ATA WW. Washington Street Stoilko Yovanovich, Monager
WEST INDIANAPOLIS OFFICE Theodore R. Beck, Manager WEST MICHIGAN OFFICE
2600 W. Michigan Street ™ dus Ls Malas Mumm
ond Market Streets
Lee-Welker, Manager -
3001 N. lllinois Street
20 W, Sixteenth. Street
SOUTH SIDE OFFICE
Emil L. Kuhn, Manager
2122 E. Tenth Street
6000 E. Tenth Street
IRVINGTON. OFFICE
EAST SIDE OFFICE
1233 Oliver Avenue
You may have to get the help of -
wa,
