Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1949 — Page 13

ATS

slender:

in yoke ack, wine

SUITS

vet collar own and

ism

the now. . Significant, too, was the absence of bellowing d bawling. If you shut your eyes and held your nostrils you'd never know that 2700 cows were in the place. That's contentment, brother.

Psychology of Cattle

THE NEXT THING was to talk with someone who knew about the psychological makeup. of dairy cattle. Why should cows be contented and human beings not? How do they get that way, the big, ol’ fat cows? In a stall, deep with clean, sweet-smelling hay, lay two huge Holstein cows. That's what the sign above them said they were. Also, the two were Green Meadow Farm cows from Elsie, Mich. A gentleman approached me chewing on a piece of straw. His cattle? Yes. Is Elsie, Mich., the hometown of Elsie the Borden cow? He didn't know, Do cows ever worry?

i gnc

Contented cows . . . There's a lot of them at the International Dairy Exposition.

: . =

The Indianapolis Times

: . ~ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1949

PAGE 13

“Yes.

a -déal,” was my comment. For emphasis I gave a

Indiana Artists Club Announces

Edmund Brucker Awarded Top Prize for His Oil Landscape

WINNERS of 12 prizes totaling $800 were announced yester-

his premise that cows were smarter than humans. day with the opening of the Indiana Artists Club's 17th annual

Humans make more money than cows so that makes humans

exhibition in L. 8S. Ayres’ auditorium.

An additional $415 in purchase guarantees also was awarded

smarter. . ‘Up and down aisles you could walk and every- by a two-man jury of out-of-state experts, with a final $200 in where there was bliss. At a group of stalls which ptirchase prizes still to be announced.

were havens for Guernseys from Mt. Ararat

Judges of the exhibit, which in-

Farms, Port Deposit, Md., I stopped. A sign above cludes 132 paintings in oil and the Mt. Ararat cattle read: “In this barn every lic er fg ops water colors, were: Carl Gaertner,

cow is a lady—treat her with'kindness.”

Within a matter of minutes, Frank Brown, Sia. owner, and Vere Culver, manager, were telling y | me about cows. Good stuff. Mr. Culver said the

cow was the foster mother of the human race. Cow's milk is nearly a perfect food. Happy as Can Be

HE POINTED TO Camelia, a 3-year-old beauty who hasn't been beaten in six fairs. “She's as

her. Look how heavy her eyes are now that it's time for her nap.”

Mr. Brown mentioned that the human animal supporting slot machines? Internal revenue figures for the|

is the only animal that won't or doesn’t have

Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 — How happy as she can be. She doesn't want or need come they call Illinois the Suckerjand Mrs. another single thing,” said Mr. Culver. “Look at|state?

instructor in the Cleveland Institute of Art, and Kenneth Hudson, dean of Washington -University’s School of Fine Arts, St. Louis. Top prize in the show—the T. C. Steele Memorial $200 prize— was awarded to Edmund Brucker for his oil landscape, “Hoosier Capitol.”

Wlinois has 10% Of 1-Armed Bandits

=» ” - HARRY A. DAVIS won the Mr. Nicholas Noyes $100

|Krannert $100 prize.

Clifton Wheeler, with “Moun-

sense enough to rest when it's fatigued, ex- fiscal year ended June 30, 1949, (tain Highway,” and Harry Simp-

hausted.

“We have more to live for, we accomplish/had slot machines.

show that 6961 places in Illinois|son, with “Back Water,” jointly

The actual/were awarded the Indiana Univer-

more,” added Mr. Culver, “and don’t have sense number of machines is not indi- sity Book Store purchase guaranenough to take time out to really enjoy ourselves. [cated. The tax records show only tee of $265.

Look at Cowslip. She's having the time of her|the number of locations.

life relaxing although today she will produce 40

that much.”

Yes, sir, you can learn a lot in the cattlejper year. Illinois, the Sucker state, acbut what’s wrong with learning how to relax, be|counted for 10 per cent of all the

barn. Maybe not how to make 40 pounds of milk

Lawrence E. Trissel, with “Win-

Although the machines are il-|ter Wonderland,” won the DePauw pounds of milk. Takes a lot of work to. produge(legal, they are taxed by the gov- University purchase prize of $150.

ernment at the rate of $100 each The L. S. Ayres and Severin Ho-

tel purchase prizes of $100 each wére still to be awarded. Other winners and prizes in-

happy with what you have and that it takes work premises having slot machines in|c/ude: Louis F. Mueller, the Mr.

to be contented. Cows are fine.

Air It Out

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Oct. 12—Uncle Tom Connally has stepped into the Air Force-Navy squabble with a plea for early peace, on the grounds that public airing of the feud weakens the nation’s position in world affairs at a “critical moment in history.” This is the stock comment when any sort of uppercase excitement stirs the military, whether it is the trial of a Gen. Benny Meyers or an inter-serv-ice scrap that finally breaks into the open. ‘And I find it generally a meaningless assertion, albeit a comfortable shield to duck behind when the going gets a little gooey fof one side or the the other. No, no, the quote always runs. We mustn't talk about it or discuss it or prove anything one way or the other. We mustn’t scare the taxpayers with too much revelation for their silly little skulls to handle. We mustn't tip our mitt to the Russians and we mustn't let the little nations suspect that big old tough us is confused like everybody else. Cover it up. Smother it. Let's keep all our secrets

between the Congress and its wives and the gen-

erals and their ‘wives and the admirals and their wives and let it come out piecemeal in the gossip columns. )

Tap Secret Stuff

I'VE BEEN hearing this one ever since I can remember, but can never recall it being right or provable. Washington being, as ever, a seething snakepit of spies and gossips and undercover operation, nothing is ever truly secret but is only labeled secret. The stuff we keep from press and public is common cocktail talk among the foreign powers, any of which is at liberty to use it for propaganda. Just how an honest and open appraisal of the Navy-Air Force fuss, which has been running furiously for four years, to the functional detriment of both services, can “weaken” the United States is not readily clear. What can weaken the U. 8. is the adoption of a bomber that may be no good. What can weaken the U. 8S. is the placing of all military eggs in a basket with a straw bottom. ay What can damage the U. 8. is an undercover

Gold Dust

WASHINGTON, Oct. 12— If the Republican Representative from Michigan, Clare Hoffman, has his way, there's going to be the biggest pile of the most expensive sawdust this world ever saw, What the suspicious gentleman wants to do is drop down to Ft. Knox with a hacksaw, haul out all the gold bricks buried there, and cut ’em in two. to see whether they have hard centers. He is fearful that some of the golden chunks may be brass, plated like 10-cent-store diamond rings. Perhaps they've got chocolate centers. Rep. Hoffman, the only Congressman who has no pockets in his coats, doesn’t trust anybody much and in particular he does hot rely on the officials in charge of American finance. After observing some of the hocus-pocus that has taken place in connection with our money, he said it was all the more necessary that each golden rectangle

be opened up to make sure that it is gold clear

through. Without cracking a smile, he announced it. His demand, he said, will be offered as an amendment to the resolution of Rép. Carroll D. Kearns of Pennsylvania, who went even further in his mistrust of the money keepers. His idea was that a special committee of Congressmen be appointed to take the elevator down the Kentucky hole for the express purpose of seeing whether the place was empty. All those billions in bullion we're supposed to be saving there, he said, may be some place else. Durn funny, he muttered, that nobody's been allowed dewnstairs to see.

Trust a Lady ALL I KNOW is that Mrs. Nellie Tayloe Ross, the director of the mint, is in charge of this hoard. At this writing, according to her calculations, she has in stock 702,990,981.1 ounces of gold. This is worth $24,604,999,618.36. I put my trust in Mrs. Ross, She is a lady. She would not tell a lie. And if those gentlemen succeed in opening up

the United States and its territories in the fiscal year of 1949. The Internal Revenue Bureau re-\yy marvey, the W. B. Stokley Jr. ported a total of 69,786 premises. g5q Ee aaoly G. Bradley, In-

and Mrs. Thomas Chandler Werbe 350 prize; ' George Jo Mess, the Louis Schwitzer $50 prize; Winnie

The state of Washington was diana Artists Club $50 prize; Don-

a close second to Illinois, with|ald M. Mattison, Indiana Artists 6939 premises found by the tax|Club $50 prize; V. J. Cariani, the

continuation of this service dogfight, with top collectors in search of slot ma-|Isabel Urban Ball Memorial $25

emphasis placed on brother battling brother, to the chines.

neglect of the over-all defense effort. What can

understressed Navy or Army, sulking in a corner,|relative purity, and an overstressed Air Force, crowing in an-| premises harboring slot machines. North Dakota had only four

other.

|prize; Evelynne Mess, the Dr. and

New York, the most populous Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes $50 prize, damage the security of the United States is an|state in the nation, had a high|and D. Omer Seamon, the Friends

with only 624 of Club $25 prize. | “WINTER WONDERLAND,” a

Many a congressional hearing swats at gnats|Places in the entire state with slot landscape by Lawrence E. Trissel,

while the buzzards fly by, and a muckle end in/machines.

noisy confusion, with nothing proved and nothing

decided. But every so often a hardboiled, double- 2 barrelled probe does clear some air and does turn Brains ervice

up some dead dogs.

Now Is the Time

THE PRESENT probe of the B-36 and the animosities between the two warring services could be one of the latter kinds, and should be. If the B-36 is not the all-purpose weapon of tomorrow's war, I want to know it now, not later. If it isn’t, the Russians know it already; if it is, no harm has been done by scrutinizing it in the open. If the Navy has been deliberately sabotaged in the Pentagon, in a calloused grab for power, now would be the time to know it—not tomorrow. If the Navy is truly of worth only as a carrier of troops and supplies, and not as an offensive arm, now-is the time to take away the guns and planes and force the sailors to concentrate on boats and ships and landing craft. It it takes six months to sweat this one into a clear picture, it’s worth it, and it should have been done at the outset of this feudin’ and fightin’ that has sapped vitality from the American military muscle. No matter who it embarrasses, and no matter what private ambitions are scrapped, I would like this to be the big blowoff the final settlement of what's worth what, and what ain't. Old Sen. Connally has picturesque hair and a charming manner at Georgetown tea fights, but he’s all wrong about the airing of this bitter controversy being of damage to American prestige. To my mind it’s the healthiest thing that’s happened since the war, and might conceivably win the next one for us.

By Frederick C. Othman

| her mighty underground vault, tracking up her| shiny floors, unsealing the doors, and getting gold sawdust under foot, she’s going to be mighty unhappy, because this country never had a better housekeeper than Mrs. R. As I say, I'll take her word for it, but I did call on her for a little assurance. Unfortunately, she wasn’t in, but her able assistant, Leland Howard, was on the job. He said.the gold was there, or at least it was a few days ago. He got down on his knees and saw it through the official péepholes. That's part of his job, to inspect the gold and see that nobody sneaks off with any. About half the $24 billion is in the marblelined hole. New York and San Francisco, where the guarding arrangements are equally as good and visitors are not allowed.

Vaults, Vaults

THE FT. KNOX vault is two stories high. There are two combination locks and a time lock on its 26-ton door. Inside are 17 separate inner vaults, or compartments. Each one contains about $400 million worth of gold. These compartments used to have electric lamps in the ceilings, but the gold has been piled so high in most of them that there’s no room for the light bulbs. Each vault is sealed and the only way you can see what's inside is to get down on your knees and look through the peepholes. Even then you can’t see much. If anybody breaks a seal, then Mrs. Ross’ boys have got to haul out all the gold bricks (weight 36 pounds per each), count ‘em, and put ’em on the scales to see that no corners have been nicked off. If Mrs. Ross allowed visitors, she'd have to hire more guards, And if anybody saws all the bricks in half to make sure they're what she says they are, she’s going to be insulted. As well as put to an incredible amount of bother. All right, fellows? You still think Mrs. Ross is a, er, plater?

The Quiz Master

29? Test Your Skill 27?

A six-day session of the Fifth| Annual Indiana Department of

was awarded the $150 DePauw University purchase prize, while the Severin Hotel's $100 purchase prize was divided evenly between |Clarence E. Lavenworth for his “A Bit of Taxco,” and Gene Lacy for “Shrimper-Gulf of Mexico.” At a later date, the Ayres’ pur-

nounced. The exhibit will continue

Six-Day Session Starts Monday

{at Ayres’ through Oct. 22.

{ Your Job—

Could it be because it|prize for his “Family Group,” and

leads the nati Robert Gardner, with “City Holi- § ad Ration in ivlerating and jay,” won the Mrs. Herman C. §

"White Sails" is the title of this painting Club $50 prize for watercolor landscape in the

=E=2E=\Winners In 17th Exhibition

by Carolyn G. Bradley, awarded the Indiana Artists ub's 17th annual exhibition, which opened yesterday

in L. S. Ayres' auditorium, to continue through Oct. 22.

Cafe Owners Ask Action on Gaming

Charge Clubs With

Community Cripples Help Themselves

Fund Helps

Good Will Industries Provides Employment; Red Feather Aids in Meeting Its Budget

‘Unfair Competition’

Here is another story in a series The Times is publishing to

Gov. Schricker today took un- heip you with the Community Fund Contest sponsored and financed

by General Motors dealers of Marion County.

der consideration a petition from Hoosier restaurant owners calling for a crackdown on private clubs stocked with gambling equipment. |

By HAROLD HARTLEY For the man who limps a little, or carries a white cane, it's

sometimes hard to get a job.

And take those polio cases, people who have fought a life-long

“All we want the Governor to| battle against crippling disease, they, too, have trouble getting jobs,

do is enforce the law,” said Phil-|

Then there are those over - the - hill people, old, dim-sighted,

lip Clauss, Ft. Wayne, president palsied or hard of hearing, who wants them? What can they do?

of the Indiana Restaurant Asso-|

chase prize winners will be an-| ciation. { can get it. names on relief lists, or they can|at jobs to which they are best beg, but a lot of them don't want fitted.

The restaurant men yesterday told Gov. Schricker the private clubs used gambling income to improve their restaurants and serve food at a cheaper cost. Gov. Schricker said he had no

They can take charity, if theylang give curative advice. Then They can get their|they help place Goodwill workers

! to. They want! Those who cannot get to work . work with week-lon public transportation are ly wages and brought in station wagons donated

Veterans Affairs Service Officer school will open here Monday with the welcoming address by Gov. Henry F. Schricker. Meetings will be held in the House of Representatives chambers in the State] House. State and national officials of the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans and Veterans of Foreign Wars will staff the annual school term. Top administrative personnel representing the local regional office of the Veterans Administration will also serve. Gen. Robinson Hitchcock, state adjutant general and director of selective service, and Dr. E. W. Dill, director of the state depart-

The Boss Takes

comment on the subject.

How-| & the dignity of|by the steelworkers, chiefly from

All the Credit

Lack of Praise Irks Worker

It burns me up to see my boss taking all the credit for the work that those of us under him do. Why can’t the higher-ups give us shop mechanics some credit instead of taking it all themselves? When he takes visitors ‘through the shop he never mentions us at all.

By JAME GRAYSON Not all higher-ups try to take

ment of public welfare, will actithe credit which rightly belongs as instructors. Course certificates|to those who work for them. Their

will be awarded by Lt. Gov. John good

A. Watkins. Other organizations to be represented include the Indiana Employment Security Di-

vision, Red Cross, U. S. Civiljmuch, do you think he is fooling|ington Hotel.

Service Commission and Indiana Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

Other state officials who will serve on the school staff are Col. Everett L. Gardner and Fred Jenkins,

veterans employment representatives;

. . 1liams, state vocationals education’ department; Clinton Gree! Richard ernon

sense tells them they couldn't get away with it if they wanted to. . If your boss is assuming too

many people? They have his number. Of course, those higher up have a right to be proud of the achievements of the organization which they head up. That's natural

ever, IRA officials quoted him as| - saying he would “get on the mat-| ter at once.” | % Seek ‘Protection’ § Charging ‘‘unfair competition,” the restaurant owners said they wanted ‘protection” from non-

Two Indianapolis fied were among the delegation day at the Statehouse.

|dianapolis were “hurting their business.”

‘Real Estate Board

To Meet Tomorrow

address the Indianapolis Real Estate Board at its weekly noon luncheon tomorrow in the Wash-

Dr. Turner, who spent several] years in the executive offices of! Presidents Roosevelt and Truman,

tions of the White House.”

earning their|the Link-Belt Co. bread. The merchandise is collected in + So at the Good-| Goodwill trucks, taken to the : will Industries, plant, put inte condition put with time run-jon sale at retail word ning out, they{1307-9 N. Sehate Ave. 1 begin all over,| Massachusetts Ave.; 1134 S.Me-

profit restaurants in private clubs.|learning new trades to hold their ridian St.; 1243 Oliver Ave. and restaura-|places in a highly competitive 625 Fletcher Ave. 2 teurs who asked not to be identi-/economy. Goodwill that visited the Governor yester- munity Fund agency,

most of its own bread, They said numerous clubs in In-|speak.

Each morning the day's work a Com-|Starts in a memorial chapel where butters|/a® red-lamp burns over the altar so to/day and night. There leading pastors give brief

Industries,

It has income power,

and Marion County earning about $150,000 from its| Sermons, lead in prayer, restoring {own efforts.

hope to the hearts of the discouraged.

Has a Less Margin In the chapel there has never

But in its work, because it i8|peen a funer a rehabilitation agency, there is Soon a oe ul but thefe is & Huy Robert C. Turner of the Indiana |® 10S margin. This is the invest-|gaycer from which children are

ment in physical and spiritual reUniversity School of Business will habilitation. So with the $150,000 Dap there have been

a year gleaned from repairing old clothes, there's an extra $20,000 needed to span the year’s budget. $11,000 is asked from the Community Fund. . Howard Lytle, director, an orwill discuss “The Inside OPera-|gained Methodist minister, takes

no larger than a

What Goodwill teaches is selfshoes, yy fciency. Many of its “graduates” now run their own businesses (eight have shoe repair shops), and many more take regular employment. Goodwill with humility which bespeaks true Christianity, makes

furniture and

Of this,

them in—the polio cripples, thei. afrort in one of the fields most

ay, Harvey Grossma

n, McMillan, Richard Miller, Edgar Gusler, J. H.

loyment service. Former Director

instructor

Stout, You wouldn't want it any other

n, R. FP, Robinson, C. B. Ftazier, Irvin J. Craig, Field way. Dailey and Walter Lange, all of the 1lRom Stalnaker, Brazil, will also act as|{boners.

The other half is in mints in Denver,|]

Legion staf! officials will include Homer McDaniel, Joseph Lute: love, Ralph s O'Neal and Dr. Charles D. Bird. Ward Anderson, Willlam Pierceall, John Weiss,

Howard and Nathan e DAV; 0

Benning, the VFW; Virgil Sheppard, Hasselbring, Jacob Lien and Mrs. Martha Brieden Baugh, the Red Cross; M. D. Cummins, Dr. Karl Dickens, E. E. Wilkinson, Richard Stuckey Dr. G. M. Powell, A. F. Il, Francis Brosnan . n, Dr. Earl Hare and Dr. Haughton Baxley, the VA; and Glenn Carbett, U. 8. Civil Bervice Commission.

New Meeting Set Dock Strike

In Hawaii HONOLULU, Oct. 12 (UP)—

Suppose you fellows pull some Suppose you turn out some lemons. Does the boss blame you? Or does he take it on the chin and assume the blame? If he does, he is entitled to some of the glory when you have done a

s \good job.

I'll admit that giving credit

Civic Group

Proposed Filling Station

Sponsored by

cerebral palsied, the arrested TB cases, the blind and near-blind, the deaf and the cardiac invalids, and a few who are struggling against the grip of chronic alco-

to Protest

the Northeast

forgotten, with the aged and the handicapped, still determined to earn and pay their own way.

Wayne Township Civic Association, a meeting will be held tonight in the Olive Branch Methodist Church, U. 8. 52 and 30th St., aimed at preventing construction of commercial enterprises on Kessler Blvd., N. Drive.

. ue holism. There also is ‘a waiting aw 1] list of parolees who want to start | over, and go straight. There are from 90 to 95 under training daily at the Goodwill Industries plant at 215 S. Senate

Governor Dies

where credit is due pays big people who fail to do this.

hearts are right, just neglect to

Topic of discussion will center dividends and that there are some around the proposed construction 225 complete their courses in self-

Some aren’t, big enough. Some, whose Sf 3 Aning station at 30th St. and

Ave. And each year from 200 to| ST. LOUIS, Oct. 12 (UP)—Mrs, Cecile, Stainback, 55, wife of Hawalian Territorial Gov. Ine gram M. Stainback, died suddenly

maintenance. At the plant there is a doctor and a psychologist who classify

do it. : As long as your pay is in line| | with the others in your organiza-| tion who are doing the same kind | of work, and your job-relations,! | generally speaking, are satisfac-

| Union and company bargainers scheduled another meeting today in an attempt to settle a fringe issue holding up the end of. the Hawaiian dock strike. The dispute now centers around wage increases for 400 nonstevedoring workers in outer island ports. The CIO Longshoremen Union first demanded a progressive 21-cent hourly wage increase, the same as it won for 1600 regular stevedores. However, the employers refused to go higher than 4 to 6 cents. The union now is holding out for a progressive 16 cent raise—9 cents now and 7 cents next March.

Radio Storm Due

In what year did Norway become an independent nation? : Norway, which had been united with Denmark and Sweden, declared its independence in 1814, but the union of Norway and Sweden was not finally dissolved until 1905. :

® & & How many atom bombs could the U. 8. put out in two years? : In an emergency, all-out production could provide as many as 1000 bombs in two years. a a

" Is the earth the most powerful magnet that is known to exist? ; ’ — The sun is a magnet that is many times more powerful than the earth. : ro aed was the first waltz to be composed? is said that “Ach du lieber Augustin,” composed in 1770, was the first : >

‘Who issknown as the “Kipling of the Artic?” Robert W. Service, the English-born Canadian poet. : 3

4& ' Is it true that lightning never strikes twice in the same place? Scientists state this is an erroneous idea. There is nothing in nature to prevent lightning from striking 100 or 1000 times in the same place. <

® Can the president veto separate items in bills passed by Congress? The president can veto only the entire bill. He is not authorized to veto separate provisions.

Oe ‘Where are the highest and«lowest points in the United States? : . Mt: Whitney, California, is t! Death Valley, California, the lowest. The highest and lowest points in the U. S. are 86 miles apart.

By Science Service WASHINGTON, Oct. 12—A quite severe radio storm is predicted for tomorrow and Friday by forecasters at the National Bureau of Standards here this morning, although reception today should be fair to good. An-

20 degrees latitude, is the cause of the second radio storm this week.

GROUND-BREAKING SET Richard T. James, vice president of Butler University, today announced that ground-breaking ceremonies for the new College

highest point;|of Pharmacy building will be held

at 11 a. m. Tuesday on the Butler campus, v

other active sun spot, at north|{Ewing “He will be responsible for in-| ith. 1 5 tegrating all technical and re- phonograph combinatio search aspects of the water con- |i! i Sth,

tory, I don’t think I'd worry about | | {not getting word-of-mouth credit. | | Your work record is open for| {inspection to those who own and] | operate the plant. It should] speak for itself.

If you have a personal job | problem, write James Grayson, | in care of The Times. |

Hoosier Heads Research On Pollution Control

| I : l | WASHINGTON. Oct. 12 Louis | | | I |

|

F. Warrick, a native of Anderson, Ind, was named today to head the water pollution control research program of the Public Health Service. Ys Announcement of his appointment was made by FSA Administrator Oscar R. Ewing. “Mr. Warrick will be associated with the nationwide program being conducted by the. Public Health Service to alleviate water pollution conditions which are threatening the ‘quality and use of this country’s resources,” Mr.

trol program.”

the University of West Virginia and Cornell. For the last 24 years

ne. Bureau of Santiary Engineer-

Community Fund Contest

MARION COUNTY GENERAL MOTORS DEALERS’ CONTEST

FREE ENTRY BLANK—Mail It Now to COMMUNITY FUND CONTEST

P. 0. Box No. 1681, Indianapolis, Ind.

(Complete the following statement in 25 additional words or less)

“| give to the Community Fund because

ho)

after a brain operation, doctors at Missouri Baptist Hospital said today. Dr. Roland M. Klemme, brain surgeon, said Mrs. Stainback underwent an operation to remove a tumor yesterday afternoon. She failed to respond to | post-operative treatment and died of “cardiac failure” shortly before midnight. Gov. Stainback left Honolulu an hour later for St. Louis aboard a Pan-American airplane. She and Gov. Stainback have two children, a son, Charles, and a daughter, Laura.

abeyance pending Gov. Stainback’s arrival.

r

n

Veteran Parachutist

Nam

oe Nume

Address

Tests ‘Bat Man’ Wings SAN DIEGO, Oct. 12 (UP)—A veteran parachutist gave his nylon “wings” a thorough test today in preparation for a 18,000

($5000 Worth of Prizes Paid for by General Motors Dealers of Marion County.)

— — —— ———— ——— —— —— —— — —— — —

On a thronals 13(h Dorcable radio: test, P. 3 Toul i » P. Mr. Warrick is a graduate of T3;" ough Soh, table model radio. en The Rules > The contest is open only to residents he has been with the Wisconsin of Ma:jon L Souncy i Rcent paid State Health Department. His 1a8t munity Fund and its agencies position there was as director of |bers of ‘their families. Ky munity Fund because.

36 statement:

{ | | ! | | | | 1 | | | Funeral plans were held in | | | : I | |

foot “bat man” jump sometime this week. A Forest Service smoke jumper by profession, Paul A. Block, 25, has bailed out 20 times into for est fires. i Vk . may use the official entry blank| Mr. Block said he plans te door Chere arate sheet of baper.. Enter as many|JUmP at 12,000 feet, glide to console; ‘4th, re-|iimes as you wish but each entry must be|1000 feet in about 15 minutes, Suto. (on 4 ‘sep ”.. ind then float to earth on one entries to Sommunity ¥und Con-of the two. parachutes trapped not later|to his body. ;

celved no later than Nov. 1. Entries will pe judged on ihe basis of STUDENT DIES OF POLIO

a ous originality. apiness and sincerity by the SOUTH BEND, Oct. 12 , HE 150 REE 0 Bodh att 5 Genta Notre Dam, from Ona, © oF een on a Toes Ta A aT a Ve diosa [Er County Community Fund ” Joseph Hospital. Fan

oo ik NEAT