Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1949 — Page 1

2, 1949

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premaowarey 60th YEAR—NUMBER 202 = °°

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FORECAST: Fair, warmer through tomorrow. Scattered light frost tonight. Outlook for Sunday: Mild, partly cloudy. Low tonight, 40. ro

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1948

[FNAL | "HOME

PRICE FIVE CENTS

Botered as. Second-Class Matter at Postoffios seen

Indianapolis, Ind. Issued Dally

hs ae

a

bre view of Pece Kk 100,000 Miners Ordered | 0 Back Into Pits Monday

| ‘aL ® y .. #3 N . : —— . ~ ‘Obit Burglars’ fyéizee i» tie Indiana Mine. UMW Announcement

Rob Homes of 2doerte=¢__ Owner Reports Brings First Break in

» i y lath d } ball Bereaved Here Penman pcre ota Picket CI 12-Day Pension Strike merican Association: The In- IC p dS > 2 |dianapolis Indians last Might de | Bituminous Workers West of Mississippi Check Funeral Hours 5 vung the Association pad Linton Man Asks And All Anthracite Groups Affected travels to Montreal today where| Trooper Protection PITISBUBGH, Son 30 (UP) iT Tuite. Jie Places During: Rites {2°73 vey the bist grim W080: After. Wife: iy. Hurt [Workers toda ordered Bitwigiuens mie Vest pr By BOB BOURNE (Details of Games on Page 27) Violence broke out in the Stepp an anthracite miners turn their Obituary-reading burglars best four-in-seven series for the Indiana coal strike today and : Aud who work hand in hand with Little World Series title. The In-| a small mine owner who. said It was the first break in the 12-day coal strike.

di ill play th 1 : : : death itself are preying upon Montreal, ot arting tomorrow his wife was injured by, pick- The order applied to the 78,000 hard coal miners in

In Papers and Loot

|

Fie 3 an) ia ‘bereaved families in Indian-|ni8ht. and then return home for| ... ..r.q4 for state police ort northeastern Penns ylvan spol aan ae me testi S100] PACE {Read stwminnte mac) With planned cunning, york ue ALU! ost Rea | Thomas Richardson, who oper- i

these burglars use the obituary Sox, tied for “first place, were ates the small Richardson mine

| rikcolumns of Indianapolis news. rained out yesterday. The Yank- near Linton, Ind, said 500 st ms pulls 28 lees meet Thiladelphia in New ing UMW coal miners: swarmed

The announcement was made by UMW Vice President Thomas

Outlook Gloomy

papers $0 pian systematic Joot-lygyy and the Red Box meet Wash- onto his property this morning. Kennedy As wien negotiators foings. {ington in ashington today. He said they demands e See tract order his 20 non-union workers Strike n Likely at white Sulphur Springs, W. Va.

with northern and western soft coal operators representing the largest segment of miners still on strike. 3

Determining from obituaries National 1 : The Brookwhen death has visited homes, yn Dodgers went into the league the burglars await the departure|lead by half a game by defeating of the hearse from a home and Boston twice, 9 to 2 and 8 to 0,

|yesterday while St. Louis lost to watch families follow a loved one piitahyrgh, 7 to 2. St. Louis plays to the cemetery before ransack<Chicago today while: Brooklyn is idle,

ET Te Mavor Stands Pat In Meter ‘Gyp’ Row

The home of Frank E. Gates, widely known Indianapolis Claims They're Among Best Obtainable

11.01 P. M. Tonight

BULLETINS CHICAGO, Sept. 30 (UP)— A CIO United Steelworkers representative sald today that negotiations on a pensiox plan | between Inland Steel Co. and the union had been indefinitely, and that a strike at Inland at midnight was assured.

CLEVELAND, Sept. 30 (UP) —District Director William Donovan of the United Steelworkers today sald negotiations with Republic Steel Corp. “Have

out of the mine or “take the consequences,” He said that during the two hours that he was getting his miners out the pickets “got! ugly” and ordered his trucks to leave the property. : The owner said his wife, Marthena, 38, began taking license numbers of the automobiles crowded in the road outside his mine, after the pickets crossed a rope barricade. . Throw Book Inte Ditch She had taken about 19 numbers, he sald, when several of the men wrenched the telephone directory on which she was writing out of her hand and threw it

payments in both coal fields, already has cost approximately 6.5 million tons bituminous and more than million tons of anthracite. Mr. Kennedy

realtor, in 4525 N. Meridian St. was ransacked yesterday during the funeral of Mrs. Bertha M. Gates, his wife. =w/The burglary took place between 2 and 3:45 p. m. while the ; ’ family and friends were attend$7 ; ing services at a Tuneral home

: been broken off in a deadlock ~ yi . 3 into a water-filled ditch. His " Both western 3 ; SAT aad burial in Crown Hill Ceme- _Mayor Al Feeney stood pat io- wites Hm was bruised in the| Without any agreement. * loutput and anthracite are used t . . - Xs , 3: 2 - y A an a of } Times Sports Writer Jimmie Angelopolous has a nose for news. When he heard that Gene | Mr. Gates said the upstairs of day On his contention that park- |“, ™'p,pyrason said he told] PITTSBURGH, Sept. 30 (UP) mostly tof domestic Resting pu ; . the home had been ransacked by|!N§ meters installed for trial on William (Poses. Neither had hes Turnipseed, ‘ate Tech High School placement kicker, had booted nine in a row in the Tech-Anderson |= " Yihe curbs of downtown Indian-|.D® heads of the delegation that| —Government Mediator under the work’ ame, he decided to test Turnipseed's kicking ability by using his proboscis as a tee. This is the result prowies, Who swis al rolls the [is mine was non-union and per-| Margolis, seeking settlement of |, se ; 3 , . ] ing ability s proboscis as a fee. * |platinum dinner ring valued at|3POlis streets were among mitted to work the steel ; reported toa Gerlach, Turnipseed's holder, kneels by to shout the good “nose.” Jimmie tells all on Page 27. $500 which had belonged to Mrs. best obtainable for the parking “We don't kmow anything| day that the CIO snd U. S. Pressure on Kennedy | Gates, several watches, a quan-|*XJErmele Ye about that” he quoted them as| Steel Corp, were sticking stub- wl Kennedy, whe dalla sem ; | Need a Doctor— tity of silverware and other extey von saying. We want your men| bornly to their position and Pennsylvania anthracite 1 ° ° jewelry of an undetermined vale, Jesmed publication o ariicies 'n out.” “there is cause for gloom” had been under griguny, 20M Get Acquainted With Him |v: om the house eras he Tm "00h S05 "el. The owner wie be nad put up| EE He torn up,” Mr. Gates sajd. ~Some|the ming devices could ber, |... at his y line PITTSBURGH, Sept. 30 (UP) Where dwin stocks \ For Football Good Before Sickness Strik on, E350 ES tr nae un sh 00, os 09, Sonn rural metre wit C10 (S035 EY 1 ! Before Sickness SIrikes jascovest be seaman: in fio "Some sf the sms tnt and came onto he mine DIU ana 0. 8. Bae Cop. negotiators ir ¥ . | . : lk - | nee in th try,” 1ses. e ho 1 “ 1 - . : Mercury Dips Wise to Contact General Practitioner [from beds ana mattresses. turned | LES L 10° JUN EL found no SSCHIYS COveriig Ser ne Jetnie sitions" for heading off & ‘strike wich was. sent O- telegrams 10 3 . i . | t p a " > To Low of 35° When Mcving Into New Community | strewn about the rooms and f8Wit With them. They are, stil The pickets tore these off and|DY 500.000 steel workers at 11:01/5); jocals in the affected areas, % iy Hl ___|clothing had been jerked down|°" trial took the numbers. p. m. (Indianapolis Time) t0- yuq gigned by UMW Chief John £2 6 WA NERA gave 18 bless-| (This is the last In a series of articles on the doctor and |from closets. : Still Against Publicity “They'll be visiting them at M&ht: dle at/L- Lewis, = Secretary - Treasurer o ing e secon 8 week-end | Natural Health Insurance.) “We have a houseman, an em- “Just because a mechanism home tonight,” Mr. Richardson! With 9000 men already idle a John Owen and Mr. Kennedy. of the Hoosier football parade to-| ployee of 25 years, who had left/can be jammed is no reason to| prophesied {four plants in premature walk- The pine. western states in day, a few hours after the mer- By ROBERT BLOEM prop . |outs, Peter Beitz, general counsel

the house on errands during the

run a course on how to do it,”

Leave Blackjack Behind

ileft the pit. He said that some of his truckers refused to leave and ' The Mayor said the models In- that two union officials almost

oa cury dipped to 35 at Weir Cook Many doctors freely admit their profession has been lax In its afternoon. Wheh' he returned he “ ©% Airport for the lowest reading of public relations. The profession is taking steps and plans more saw nothing wrong downstairs in Bg T I g g, bg the season in Marion County. steps for the future to improve these relations. |and went about his work. It was/on how to pick pockets as ex2 Fair and warmer weather to-| The public is less frank in its own self-appraisal, but investiga- not until we returned from the plain“how to gyp parking me5 night will be followed by sunny| tion of the whole medical picture indicates that the public is going services that the ransacking was ters.” 2 Pollen Oo nT 14 per cu. yd to have to do something about its “doctor relations,” too. {discovered.” ’ : o — YZ | One recommendation doctors Mr. Gates sald it would take stalled here have had the bene- “came to blows” with one trucker bu skies and considerably warmer make to the public is this: several days before a complete fit of nine years improvement on in the mine office.

temperature. over the state to-| Don’t wait until illness strikes morrow, forecasters said. |to become acquainted with a genBright sunlight should push eral practitioner. Chances of rethe mercury to 68 this afternoon ceiving quick attention on some in Indianapolis. A low of 40 was night of crisis will be vastly imforecast for tonight, Winds proved if the doctor is not exi shifting to the south tomorrow pected to climb out of his bed promise a high of near 74 jand dash into an unfamiliar Frost in the Indianapolis area |N€i8hborhood to the home of a was moderate last night, but the total stranger, Pa first hard freeze and killing frost of autumn in at least three Indi-| yp OY AN EFFORT to strengthen| pgoogier doctors were preparing their own public relations, the In-|4, dig into their pockets for an forced an inner door into the

|Park Ave. during the funeral {burial of her father.

Enter Through Basement

Boost Dues to Fight Socialized Medicine

By JOHN WILSON

{of Mrs. Martha Gardner of 3921)

Mrs. Gardner told police the |

cities, where the practice

. r . . Hoosier Doctors {check of the house could be made early designs located in Ohio | to determine all property missing. of work but 20 men against 500 isn’t ‘ y! The “obituary burglars” earlierigiopping timing mechanisms has very much,” Mr. Richardson said.| f in the week ransacked the home |p.op widespread. He said that he put in a call to 0 ar “Perhaps a meter could be the Governor's office immediately and jammed,” the Mayor stated, “but when the trouble started but did

“My men didn’t want to leave

so can any other mechanism, in- not reach the executive until after

attempt.

og Sopuntties Rea the eta. | dlanapolis Medical Society BOW 3 4ditional $20 a year in dues to|home hetween 11 a. m. the fu-| |1ists numbers in the telephone di-| pinance an extensive public rela. | neral

§ tion in the flelds. [rectory which can be called to| Paoli, the coldest spot in thellearn "the identity of a handy|UONS CAmPaign against socialized 1uU5ch: he continued.

} In the Gardner home, rugs had Eig A 29; Comb, 30, doctor. These numbers are listed MSCS. Tent WaB authorized| © € 1 pulled up, pillgws rr nd PALE OF ull Of City, 31. ee (and Cambridgeiunder "De for doctor in the tele-| yesterday at the final meeting OPen and mattresses pulled from U. 8. POLIO CASES DROP Evansville reported a low of 33, fled section under both “doctor” [°F the State Medical Association's the beds. while Marion and South Bend and “physician.” centennial convention here. both had 35 degrees for an early, A call to any of these numbers | It will bring morning low. should bring help in an: emer-| Louisville, Ky., had a minimum gency. It should produce the treasury from its 3711 members| of 33, an all-time low reading :for name of g convenient doctor with (in the state. ilies t x the date. “~. whom a strange family may be-| -Dues were hiked from $15 to|llies to exercise caution. Scattered light frost was fore- come -acquainted“ before some $35 a year in a voice vote after cast for the Indianapolis area emergency arises: ' {prolonged debate by opponents. | again tonight. ? | At least one Instance where the|An amendment to delay the vote Careful study of obituary col- previous highest year. Sunday weather will be mild|doctor’s suggestion was tried oc- until December was rejected. . | WMNS, picking addresses where and only partly cloudy, the curred during the investigation; Plan Wide Campaign _"|they expect to find the most valWeather Bureau sald. A high of for this series of articles. The| Funds from the increased dues|uable loot. A Indianapolis Medical Society pro-| will be channeled into a “war

bank were reported missing.

They consecutive week.

“Our meter contract with the hour, and shortly after manufacturer is good and clean,” ceived other reports of .strikers “Anyone can see

| NEW YORK, Sept. 30 (UP)— A gold watch valued. at $50,| The National Foundation for In-| at least $74,000 20 undetermined amount of sil-|fantile Paralysis said today that —John Witmer, 26, Mishawaka,| Imore a year into-the Association's | Verware and even a penny piggy the number of new cases in the died in a hospital here last night |nation’s infantile paralysis epi- of injuries suffered Wednesday Police warned bereaved fam-| demic had declined for the fifthjwhen he was caught between a The epidemic tractor gnd a gasoline “pump |advanced the theory that the has reached a high of 31,289 cases, while working as a repairman in burglars plan robberies after a|compared with 30,000 in 1916, the the transportation department of) _ Ithe Studebaker Corp. plant.

[cluding the presses of a news- the pickets had departed. paper. Anyone who tried to stop] { burglars apparently had entered|a meter would spend more than warned mine officials the state

through a basement door and|a penny’s worth of. time in the Would “protect the men who want . roug! penny B rth of make. sense. to Work,” said he would “look into|8Tant the “10-cents-an-hour com-|long deadlock. The southern op=

Gov. Schricker, who yesterday

the matter.” He said he had re-

| “visiting” men who had remained on the job to urge them to join the walkout, |Dies of Injuries SOUTH BEND, Sept. 30 (UP)

‘Veep’ Gets West of St. Lovis—

The burglars, police say, appar-| Truman Hails Barkley

| The owner said the pickets left might just as well run a course a blackjack behind when they de-| {pai ted, after all of his miners had|,, key U. 8. steel talks.

which mining will be resumed are Washington, Towa, Kansas, Colo« rado, New Mexico, Oklahomay Montana, Wyoming and Utah, The order does not affect the

lof the Government Mediation Service, said he still “trusts” that a settlement can be reached in

* The 53 basic steel firms directly affected by the negotiations miners in the soft coal fields of

cut back operations rapidly in|/Pennsylvania, West Virginia, preparation for a shutdown. Kentucky and other states east | Thousands of workers were laid'of the Mississippi where the off because of the dwindling/UMW men walked out “spon|operations. | taneously” Sept. 19, two days aft. Mr. Seitz sald the Mediation er welfare fund payments were Service proposals were based on suspended. preliminafy and exploratory talks Comment Withheld with officials of “big steel” and| There was no comment from the union last night. the operators’ representatives as Companies Hold Firm they resumed the soft-coal negoWith one exception, the compa-|tiations, which they threatened to nies stood firm in their refusal to|leave yesterday because of the

|pany-financed pension and insur-| erators will meet again with the ance packdge recommended by UMW at Bluefield, W. Va. next President Truman's fact-finding| Tuesday. board. The new developments came as Most large companies agreed to picketing and violence decreased the money terms, but the negoti- in the strike-bound soft. coal ations deadlocked on their de-|flelds. Additional non-union mines mand that employees make addi- started operations in some west[tional contributions, ern Pennsylvania sections, but Portsmouth Steel Co., an inde- Several owners closed quickly pendent company employing 4000| When pickets appeared. workers, capitulated to the un-| Although picket bands cone jon’s demands yesterday. Several|tinued to rove through the areas, companies broke off talks with there was no violence reported to. the union. |day in contrast to the past seve A United Steelworkers strike of eral days when two coal tipples the basic companies would slash Were blasted in Pennsylvania and {the nation’s steel production by|Kentucky, ‘a miner was shot in 200,000 ingot tons a day. The|Alabama and two non-union men |tew companies which do not deal Were beaten in Ohio. : ,

80 was prédicted for Indian- | with the CIO union produce less) {vided the name of a doctor whose cHest” to conduct tat |enly watch for the hour of funeral , ; apolis. |home and office were conveniently | campaign against ti ronosed and burial and possibly wait out-| » » hun 5 per cent of the country * Harvester Makes | LocAL TEMPERATURES 204 ioe home of new resident CmDA Wl nur pn. ie te homes uni ney ores AS. @ Future Missourian oa ~— Pension Proposal 0 ' ’ amilies departing. | 6am... 42 10a m... 5 [name and occupation of the new-| It was predicted that ss mueh| In times of bereavement fam-! i | : am... 44 11 a.m... 63 {comer without having to ask, and iy NNW 4 Tear will be spent ilies are apt to be careless about! President Follows Up Banquet Speech ’ Romance Draws one International Harvester a.m... 48. 12 (Noon). 84 |he said he would be glad to serve"; i" + “ot the annual din- Such matters as locking doors With Brisk Walk That Winds Newsmen B kl Int Ranks orp. today informéd all unions a m...55 1 p.m... 65 |as the new family doctor. ’ and windows, police said. Officials | Ol ey nro : representing the company's éifis

—————————— ner, u ploneer Hoosier doctors WRined them to Ds alert a IF he wishes—and probably he ere onored by the association " } aolasi Fred Petty Dies; |wont—tne doctor may make a for having practiced medicine 50| I oi check on his new patient, his job, , . ’ Specia Gifts Up | to become a citizen of Missour!.”

Ball Bros. Official |status, his reputation. If some|'a]s 217 members. For Community Fund |

Times Stats Service {night the father or mother calls Doctors onoied ule: ioward

MUNCIE, Sept. 30 — Fred J. him, he will not be going to an, "5, L Wayne: Contributions inh tne Specfal| |, ei La Petty, vice president and secre. Unfamiliar address, to an un.| 3, Blosser, Fi. rut Francs % Gifts division of the Indianapolis! ¥ Widow. the | OP® intersection, he pointed out, ‘him a St. Louis Cardinal rooter. be adequate to meet the “reasons Ball Broth C known set of circumstances. Thus Ys Sfanspor: ; r Cc ity Fund i Mr. Barkley, seated at © | the site of a theater where he lable needs of emp) who tary ut rothers Co. and |i, doctor is given an even break,| Brown. Muncie; Herbert Lemon, | ommunity Fund campaign Ar® other end of the Speaker's | once was employed as an usher, | The Vice President disclosed his| wo mp ayes a president 2nd Ar Tol. the sameé kind of courteous treat- | Goshen; Horace N. MeKee, tk. [30 au pu at you | table at a Democratic rally, A cab driver yelled: “Hi, |baseball sentiment to the gradu: via y ORY added. habia ) , - ; Glenn Henley and Joseph , { ly. " 1 National » a ment the patient will expect if| y Pp grinned broadly Judge.” Mr. Truman smiled wg class of the FBI doesn't | Study of pension, insurance and

heart attack In his of-| |P. Seale, both of Fairmount, | workers of the division revealed |

and when illness strikes.

» “We are glad—we are very That's a case of public rela-

glad that we have managed to get our distinguished Vice President to visit a place in Missouri outside of 8t. Louis,” Mr. Truman said. “The Vice President is a grand man, and I am proud

fice. Frank A. Van Sandt, Bloom-|at thé first report meeting today |fleld; George G. Wimmer, Mount in the Lincoln Hotel, |Etna; Guy W. Hamilton, Madison;| The Special Gifts division, Joseph F. Michaels, Edinburg; | which begins its work ahead of Lewis J. Gilmore, Vincennes; Le-| the campaign proper. kicked off Yoy A. Wildos, Michigan Cltyi] last Monday. Contributions to 2 | .|James B, Griffith, Crawfordsville; date total $9392.68, Co-Chairmen| Wii ine? Including the Ro- Football Results [Faved M. Sweet. Martinsville; | Wilson Mothershead and Evan L.| tary Club and Delaware County Ae Re pk ck; Jo n| Noyes reported. 2

Country Club. He was a gradu- ® Your must reading every | “Nios Lindquist, South “it Times Index

Mr. Petty was a past president Re of the Muncie Chamber of Com (Continued on Page 6—Col. 6) merce and was a director of the Merchants Trust Co. He was awe . ‘member of the Presbyterian | imMes Gives You

counselor. And I am also exceedingly glad that he is about

to become a citizen of Mis-

ate of the University of Michi- Saturday is The Times |g.y P. Levering, Lafayette; Her-

” » . # . : ootball Final . . . for . — answer was “No, thanks.” | MR. BARKLEY grinned and take a final position as to type of Ban Or include his wifé, Mar-| _ Scores and results of col- [San 1. Burnhsimer, Liberty: Wir. | Amusetnents 22 Marriage ....12| sourl. ‘ Kansas City still was happily [said: *T have no way of know- plan until the subject ‘has been 52 garet, who was the daughter of | lege games, local, state and (jam R. Davidsbn, Charles F. Bridge ......21 Needlework ..22| Today Mr. Truman bounded | gazed by last night's role as (Ing whether I'll make the grade thoroughly explored” through

Comics evss++35/0thman ..... 9 out of the Hotel Muehlebach

the late Frank C. Ball, one of]

national, the founders of the Ball Brothers, ;

® It's like sitting on the 50-

Deifendorf, Charles L. Seitz, H

G. Weiss, al] of Evansville, and Editorials ...10 Pattern .....21| early for a brisk, 16-block walk,

> ! » 3 i weit - y > 3 gt & ¢ ol

rf . { 02 »

Truman to Keep Congress on Job . .. Page 15 KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 30 (UP)—President Truman sald last night he is happy that Vice President Alben Barkley is “about

that he is my friend and my |

His remark was an obvious reference to the 73-year-old Vice President's romance with Mrs. Carleton 8. Hadley, attractive St.

and waved. Another cab driver, oh the fringe of Skid Row, asked Mr. Truman if he would shake hands “with an old taxi driver.” |. “Yes, sir,” the President re- | plied.

. r . * BACK at the Muehlebach, Mr. Truman asked the newsmen if they would like to walk about nine more blocks. The

the nation's “capitol.”

which he accomplished in 20 |EX-OHIO EDITOR DIES

| . |ployees that it is willing to pay Of Cardinal Fans |an amount equal to 10 cents an i | hour toward the total cost of pen TY A Er ETYN FTI Ranh p) 8lon, insurance and welfare plans, | WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 up) The announcement qualified the | —Romance, Vice President "| offer with “the provision that W. Barkley said today, has made plans finally agreed upon must

He sald he know whether he will “make the Welfare plans had convinced its

"w {officers that 10 cents an hour will grade” with Mrs. Carleton Had-|° ley, attractive St. Louis widow, NOt meet the need, and that furs FBI Director J, Edgar Hoover ther contributions will. be neces brought up the Veep's romance. nary from the Workets, “And now,” Mr. Hoover said 1 Sompany said } oud ae in introducing Mr. Barkley, “ac-|*Pend the 10 cents an hour

| It is to be an in lcording to latest reports he's ONLY resu _/plan which will create Shout 10 Achjeve pusnomena) sue |dissatisfaction,

cess in the field of romance.’ The company said it cannot

Academy.

{but 1t ‘1s a wonderful thing to collective bargaining. have the head of the FBI pulling

Co., and Mrs, Ball. Koa : 1 lowing Indianapolis doc- v04+20 RAAIO seuss for me.” . 6 SLAIN IN JAIL BREAK Other survivors Include a eh ard Ate When Jou Read he william G. Culloden, Alfred | Food .....cc.21|Ruark ...... 9 minytes with panting newsmen | CAMBRIDGE, O., Sept. 30 (UP)| Mr. Barkley said he was some-| ‘BATAVIA, Java, daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Harper, Football es BJ : K. Forum ......10|Boclety ......20| and: decret service in tow. ~Harry W. Amos, 73, former ed- what nervous over the tight base-|—Dutch sources that Muncie; a son, Edmund, student| Final. Daniel oe , C. W. - “es +++427-20| The President appeared ex-| itor of the Cambridge Jefferson- ball race in the National Leagile. prisoners were killed and. . im Indiana University; moth-| ©® Get copy tomérrow |erford, Urbana Spin De od .. +21] ceptionally fit as he paced off- ian, the city’s only dally news-|- “ under the circumstances,” wounded when 112 prison er, Mrs, H. L. Green, afd a broth-| ...and Y Saturday. |Wolfe Wales Crock- Indpls. 9 24| block after block of Kansas |paper, died last night in a local|the Vice President sald, “I'm pull-| broke out of Malang Jail in gr, Wilbur Petty, both of Muncie. : 4 Mrs, Manners 16 Women's ....16| City’s steep, downtown hills, At |hospital of a kidney ailment, |ing for St. Louis.” 3 Java. > : 3 x - . > AE : 48 & . 4 ¥ i: ; y A 5 . 5 i ; ¥ ~ w - - > , ‘ 1 nip : 3 ? « 2 A iy ie 5

A 3 - ¥