Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 December 1949 — Page 23
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£3 Ler 0 DN dE an TN oR ad Sule rae AR ny —— i " - Ap a———— - " — TR hy eR 1 ; di : 3 : hi . Na .e 50 i PN . AA | “Inside Inc ianapolis | . EVER USE a hog bristle needlé? Excellent for ssi is "The whole business of hog bristles, Irish flax and’ hand-turned shoes and welts, began whef a little man in a little shoe shop stopped his work long enough to answer ‘a stranger's lone (at the moment) query. That was a mistake. Might not have been, though, because Harry Martinelli, proprietor of the Alps’ Service. Shop, 10 N. Delaware 8{., said, after an entire afternoon - Had been talked away, that he was happy to chat despite the fact that he would mpfss his supper, have to work to midnight and séveral other reasons hardly worth mentioning. - . Anyhow, my nose began to twitch when 1 glanced through the shop window and saw a man sewing a shoé by hand. To me, who has all kinds of time for investigating such important matters, the sight was startling, . - : What has happened to-the machine age I read about in fifth grade? Are we losing ground in the race for progress? I8 the man inside a reactionary?
Born in Italy : AT By LUDWELL DENNY, Seripps-Howard Staft Writer SILLY, SILLY BOY. Everything was all right hi, ‘ WASHINGTON, Dec. 1—Headlines announcing that and it wasn't the fifth grade where the introduc- Hog bristles . . . Harry Martinelli stitches a New Zealand after 14 years has voted down the welfare
e Indianapolis
= THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1949
PY Amp . _ ih gone
ew Zealand To Keep Welfare Sta
Chiet_ lJ. S. Seeks to Free
moar] | . fe a a ER Pair Held in Korea | _. New Diplomatic Moves Planned in Behalf 2 11. Of Amerigans Imprisoned in Communist Area g | WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (UP)-=The 3 iitates widened its ‘diplomatic offensive in the Pacific thday by ae new mi to | free two Americans imprisoned in Communist North Korea. RN
| Tories Boast of Share |Munitions iin Social Services | High Cost of Living Top Issue In Campaign That Labor Lost
.. : 4 : | © rhe North Korea regime admits holding the Ng, 3 rie epee . Yon 2 She machine age, had taken place, it was shoe by hand and remembers the .old days. state are exaggerated. - | Willis of Brooklyn and Alfred T. Meschter of HWinderpook,” N. . Mr. Martinelli, a native of Italy and a ‘resident MI: Martinglil. “Best thread and seedle fOr Jowing Tory predictions in London that, United Kingdom vot- ii r hag tea Jat he United Stats " oe. . . of jhe city for the past 35 years, most emphatically a ote meat be sewed by hand for best. results. eS next spring will do likewise are premature. i | BF Ve {condition for renin. them. not 0 beleives in machinery. But he also gets a thrill out Nailing, the ‘prevalent method of today, said the| In. New Zealand “the victorious Nationalist Party 4 e to arc {This the United States h of a handmade pair of shoes which, he believes, little man, only ruins a pair of shoes. Besides that, | : — smiorgpbp—] do, : : » can't be duplicated by any machine, any place. a nalled welt won't hold well. It's the easy way out. | Promised not to harm the ex- ‘ y The State Department, wi
“Eh, John?" Mr, Martinelli turned towards an- Both men admit frankly that machinery has tensive . social benefits, It France nae: committee of th | other frocked man. been a boon to the repair industry. They remember competed with the defeated!) + f\eiense o ‘ .
fe
tlantic Pact met at Paris today
. {moral backing of American Into Chun mn lic opinfon and at least 12 | fern nations, arranged new diplo« + | matic man
» 3 John S8pinnato didn't hear the question. He the sore arms and shoulders 10 to 12 hours of Labor Party in claiming credit 't ve a plan to bri br euvers to help the two switched the machinery off. Mr. Martinelli, sens- sewing by hand can produce. But the fix-it-while-'o the welfare state, BE Di pre | srength of ng Ys rh ing, no doubt, that the afternoon was going to be U-wait attitude of the public prohibits the use of " :
out that New Zealand has had me nations "into on if ™ shot, explained what had transpired. I told what the slower methods. . A Wembet Nations ito. AcHon
Underground fo Turn man. an has been
i little I knew They will average 10 hand-sewn repair jobs a old age Jansions, Jre. .o hoapitan ed A pt Gf them should be. at { Over : City to Troops jit believes the Kremlin is res - “Handmade shoes" whispered Mr. Spinnato @ month. Mostly from oldtimers who have the money pais a century. “4” The. plan was a sober warning Hubert E. Howard HONG KONG, Dec. 1 (UP)=- sponsible. # his eyes rolled and the room seemed to fill with to pay, And who remember the old days. | Im England, the Tories under to Russia or, any other possible. Mr. Howard gets telephone Thousands of Communist eons Both ECA the sound of gondolas and troubadours and the D es Awl |Winston Churchill also boast of aggressor that Western Europe, COngratulations in his Chicago Were scheduled 10 uate Bi Mr. Willis and Mr, sweet scent of. ripe olives. For all practical pur- _ emonstrafes Aw {their joint pgrentage of the wel- hacked By the United States, apartment after being appoint- (Chungking today: od x wil br op plates 98 he poses Mr. Spinnato was back in Italy. His ims WITH AN AWL, Mr. Martinelli demonstrated fare state. Far from wanting stands ready to defend itself. | ed by President Trnuman to be [OVer a 3 Bo Gra a vr pes were passioned words: soon transported the boss (an how the bristle and flax thread is used. During|to abolish it, they propose to in-|- It was a strategic plan to in- chairman of the Munitions |capital co ommu easy job since Mr. Martinelli is only 5 feet, 2 inches “the years when he was in top form, he could resole crease some of the social bene- give that none of the 12 nations Board. The 60-year-old eval {groun artes. the new Na- crew 4all) back. to the ol' homeland. a pair of ‘shoes in an hour. Today his time is fits—but more ‘efficiently and wy ne picked off ‘by one while company executive has been "— Hepor on tal” of Chengty ship, ~ 8hortly, must have been a second .short of an slower. The bristle is threaded through the welt cheaply, of ‘course, they say: [the others stand by. The 12 states, serving as chairman of the Per- | ay ns SA “authorities as hour, both men returned and we got back to and sole, one end going in from the top and the| It All Depends. {are the United States, Canada, sonnel Policy Board of the De-. {Su hp changed hands work under Mr. Martinelli's nose. I was convinced other through the bottom. All old. thread is re-, What the Conservative parties [fceland, Britain, France, Belgium, partment of Defense since cefully yesterday when ad-l" of the superiority of handmade shoes. 1 moved. The new is put in the holes already present of both New Zealand and the Holland, Luxembourg, Norway,! Sept. 1. Ee {Taman Communist units crossed “Let's start. from the beginning,” said Mr. jn thé’ welt. ’ {United Kigdom promise is to stop Denmark, Italy and Portugal. Be gr [the Yangtze river to help main-! Spinnato. ole “Every time I stitch a pair of fine shoes by the spread of nationalization of] So ——————— Alois Wantz : tain order. a v And from the beginning it was, too. Both men hand it gives me memories,” sighed Mr. Martinelli. Industry and to lift government All Nationalist troops, including * cut off four lengths of Irish flax. Over their “Me, tc,” added Mr. Spinnato. “You should controis“on business “wnerever, Slaye Russ Re viem Set = the garrison commander, Gen. thumbs they wound and wound it. have seen my father in Sicily. He taught me to Possible.” q {Yang San, evacuated The ends were rubbed with the thumb until appreciate a good shoe.” But they hotly deny Labor A :
hte—
Requiem high mass for Aloise day. they tapered fo nothing. A hog bristle was split in It might have been my Imagination bit it Drty charges that in freeing fy ogo Ds Wantz, former Indianapolis real-orIY _ Wednesga). iat 4 eral half and several deft twists, saliva wettings and seemed to me two pairs of dewy eyes cleared up| isiness ind requcing taxes t rid g ny g |dent who died yesterday In South, iine ‘was halted by under incantations followed. All this produced a built-in when the machinery was turned on and cold steel| y1ich a he “coun | y . Bend, will be held at 9 a. m. Sat- ground forces : Goat hog bristle needle. Beeswax was applied. bit into leather. So impersonal. Not at all like a|ypieq are committeod overwhelm-| . urday in St. Roch’s Catholic] “Greet Red Forces “Just like we did it in the old country,” beamed tickling hog bristle. : ‘ ingly. Suicide of One Church, following a DrAYSE Aervice Four municipal — representa . : : : | Whether British voters will fol- Defendant Reported at 8:30 a. m. in G. H. Herrmann tives, including the chairman of 1 : 3 Bh lors ter MCh mo ono go! SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia, Dec. 1] crown on. urial will be nithe Chambér ~ of en IS i Ings . By Robert C. Ruar ernment depends on developments (UP)—The government charged] Mr, Wantz, who was 82, was : this winter. If the election were Russia today with directing a born in France and had lived in * me today Labor would win by a re- widespread . spy. ring - through Indianapolis 44 years. He resided ~ SAN FRANCISEO, Dec. 1—-The recent waye Yet the San Francisco police chief refused to duced majority inthe opinion of Soviet embassy officials. ist 2814 8. Meridian St hefore of horrid slayings of children by perverts finally charge him with rape, saying. “How can you prove Most non - partisan observers. It aiso announced that oné of moving to South Bend “years: has touched off a demand long overdue for more Tape on 4 6-year-old girl?” It gas the bitter as- (here. But they won't bet a bob'13 accused Russians had hanged ago. He was a maintenance man| drastic punishment of habitual sex offenders. ‘sumption of the local press that the fact the child t/ther Way on what will happen himself rather than stand tHial.| at Vonnegut Moulder Corp. before Chengtu «It has been pretty well proved that this kind had contracted a venereal disease was proof NX. SPring. pably , Only 10 of 12 scheduled de-| retiring 15 years ago. Mr. Wantz meanwhile, that was of leathesome abnormality makes a potential “enough. The British election probably eengants appeared in Sarajevo! was a member of St. Roch’s paring to resume an
killer. ‘will be decided on the same issue as head of the Nationalist gov- # ? was
, In this state a previously convicted sex of- : : t {district court when the spy triaF Church. ; a California parents, since this last rash of gender'is guilty Sg of a misdemeanor if Ra on ealand: | Th chiefly (opened today. The public prose-| He is survived by his wife. ernment. : fiendish killing was culminated by the rape-murder found loitering near a school, vet his presence near even government control of busi- Cutor said that one defendant Louise, South Bend; two daugh- However, sources close to A¢ of an 18-months-old. girl, are almost afraid to tnat school is as clear a specification of felonious ness. It is: the cost of living. hanged himself and that another _ Mrs, ing President | allow their children out of sight, and justly 80. intent as if he were found parked In. front of a The New Zealand Nationalists!s ill in a hospital. _.|Bend, and Mrs. Blanche Gans, Hong Kong said that
The newspapers have joined in a frank cam- "pani with a machine gun in his hand. made high prices the crux of the Name Contact Men berg, Indianapolis; two grandchil- : 8 paign to make perverted approach to children ~~ Tyere gre gr em penalties for re- campaign and licked the Labor-| Enver Krzic, deputy public pros-| dren and a nephew. , |quish his post. something more than a misdemeanor by 4 malad- po. tere in other categories of crime — possibly ites on that basis. But the Brit- ecutor of the Bosnia-Herzegoving| : 38
justed creep. They want to rewrite the extremely \ ish Labor government, unlike its republic of Yugoslavia, opened the gn "LE... _ . lenient laws to put 2ffective restraints on habitual Smits io are i antially dangerous 10 watlmgtan counterpart, has been state's case by naming five Rus. GUSTAV F. Hansen 4 Be Zs
offenders. ~ 3 ‘conspicuously successful in hold-|sian embassy officials as the ‘con- : ¢ Almost invariably a look at the record of per- Soo" Of With & reprimand. ling down prices. tact men who directed Soviet spy BUTI iN Illinois ” verted killers shows & long list of “minor” offenses. Séx Crimes Increasing ’ : ‘Great Britain operations against Marshal Tite's. Gustav ¥. Hansen, retired Chi- + —Ppeeping, SXpoa: molesting of children, ACCORDING TO ‘the FBI, the nation's Worst pAvIp McDONALD, treasurer go rament, adjourned ott: to 35° & Eastern Gets Only Four Years 2 Wave Of sex crimes is under way, with a grim of the CTO United Steel Workers, morrow as scon as the charges Te.
p a prospect of gaining. momentum, unless some ts] dthe free world labor confers! ws z i Inna LIke prt Sharper teeth are grafted onto existing statutes. lence at London today that his| Kraie identified the defendant y ... 4. Edgar Hoover is on record as adv L union's new - contracts. With the whe. ar he» da an 11-year-old girl, this gay fellow received a sen: i 4i0) ang psychiatric treatment for early of- hl oe hatcts ioe whe Eommitied sultide nie is an ex-convict with tenancies in both Sa Quentts - {*24€FS, With permanent isolation for repeaters. —|gesaliest blow" struck at com-|Nekludos. efor: hanging himself and Folsom. : . Mr. Hoover places a heavy share of blame on/munism “during our lifetime.” {confessed he-had-worked for
S i and le boards for the current wu n He gets out again, possibly with timé off for 0% le boa i een the! Mr. McDonald, a member of the|Russian intelligence, for the Rus-
~ : swing CI Odelegation, said the con | ‘ “for bs , ! 80 : egation, tracts sian embassy his homeeX good beuavies to remain the Same menace 801008 oourty set ridiculously low ball on apprehended sex proved that “through trade union/land and Sovi w oa % - as he 1s loose. criminals, .and parole requirements are so slack practice, free action and a free
In one of the recent Los Angeles slayings of a as 10 be almost non-existent. = 86-year-old child, the murderer had been at large : choice, man can face the future o six months after being arrested for molesting The business of prosecuting such degenerates heads up and unafraid. Mrs. Alice Owens another child. He had jumped bail and no arm of has been doubly difficult because of the admis-| pg, 414 the Communists tried Rites Tomorrow 4 the law seemingly cared enough to gather him in -Sibility of a child's testimony as sworn evidence. i; got the steel workers to overasin and. trum some parent taturl Tevunion agninat Coby thee eaoer. | Rea ai We had here in San Francisco some time back n “| The conference is discussing a Alice N. Owens, who died yesterirs a3 the case of a man—a 49-year-old carpenter—who In past the law has expediently sought to con- constitution for & new day in_her homie, 955 N. Tuxedo MIS. Florence Dunham * attacked a 6-year-old girl and was identified by a vict known perverts on lesser charges, with the pmunist world labor federation. St. will be offered at 10 a. m. to- Se es or i Fiureute Dun1 woman who saw him entice the child Into his car. result that they are soon free to prowl again, their; Last hight Walter Reuther, morrow in the Bt. Philip Neri ham; Ruvin y : ndianapolis, — 1 This man had a record of three previous imprison- abnormal appetites whetted by a short jolt In the vice president of the CIO and Catholic Church. She was 79. io Jesterday n Montpelier; 5 : ments for sex offenses. 7 pen. : ipresident of the United Automo- The St. Philip's Altar Society 9 welt Ltiag arranged a Wisre 10. oto {bile Workers’ Union, said the new Will meet for prayer at 8 p. m. to-/daY. n St. He had been 3is. Belden
’ : * organization should make a “posi- 3&y In Tolin Funeral Home, Cemetery here. She was 80. {ll from heart Bi \ / _ 8. : . k h | tive” pron against ake 3 posi LY will be i» Holy Cross. Mrs. Dunham died in the home disease and hardening (World Federation of Trade Indianapolis 35 ears. She was/With whom she had been living in the past two years. +t er — ren a - { Unions. pc the. widow of Leslie Owens, a the last 10 years." Born in Ogden,| Mr. Bélden's dre n! WASHINGTON, Deec."1—Rep, Emanuel Celler pleasant thing to pass an 80th birthday and still: bricklayer foreman for Kingan & Ind. she came to Indianapolis serious three months : - nded his insurance compan Italy < #Co., who died 71; years ago. She in 1884. She and her husband, his retirement from of Brooklyn, N. Y., ha& an idea that the life in- feel chipper.” He fou . pany : . a En : surance companies are growing too big for their 56 years ago. He was its first, and for a while, A nationwide 24-hour general WES a member of St. Philip of on a ha and general repair bu corporate britches. Why, said he, one of these its only employee. strike called by Communist labor Church. ; a Sngins , moved 3024 Ww, Mig ph IRL mastodons in the business of gambling with its Today he has a billion dollars of life insur-'ynions fizzled out before it ever Survivors include a daughter. ph 1 n 1902. ar the operating at ‘address he customers on how long they'll live takes in $3 ance in force and millions in first mortgages lent got started today. Officials esti- MTs. B. J. Craney; two sons, Alon-| She was a Jnasgbas 0 {a paint and wall’ paper shop at million cash every day in the year. on homes actoss the land. He doesn’t want his mated that it was only 10 per 20 and Hilmon Owens; a sister, Bryan Presbyte an Church. Bell 2430 W. Michigan St. $ To And how could anybody every morning at 10, big competitors chopped down to size. They're cent effective in Rome and 30 per Mrs. Margaret Christian, all of Burdivors ineiide wis. CineL * Native of Kentucky Dr pg Sundays and holidays included, prudently invest doing a good job, too. Fact is, he said. these!cent throughout Italy. UnanApaily; two brothers, Mack another gh ay an. He was born in Lincoln County, $3 million? whoppers in the insurance game have done 80 In contrast with previous labor nes, Louisville, ro oe wix{E. a nN ' AfSnce Kentucky, but came to Indianapo- : : 80 Rep. Cellar, an intense little man who be- much advertising that they've softened up the demonstrations, no trouble was Huffines, Johnstown, N. ¥.. « ham, Indianapolis, ’ LS leves that bigness in business may lead to-some- prospects. : ] reported anywhére. Routine pub- Srandchildren and eight great- grandsons, a granddaughter, and lis in 1919 and remained here. 1 thing worse, called in -the presidents of some His language wasn't quite so slangy, But the jic life was barely affected. |grandchildren, four great-grandsons, Soon after the death of his wife, Shalimah im £ small-fry insurance firms to see whether they truth is, he said, that it's far easier to sell. a! The Communist-led General . g / a? : Sally, seven years ago, he moved in Suiits eo] agreed with him. Opps! y fellow a life insurance policy today than it wasiConfederation of Labor called me Discuss Results of Election ip iE into the Reichwein home. He be: NE Butter 1 ‘ They, all said lay off “the insurance blsiness. when he opened shop. Yes, but did he think—Rep. one-day st-ike to protest a clash { to’ a: 0b mien panel re They're doing fine. They may be little now, ‘but Celler asked—that it would be as easy for him petween - police and peasants owt v : longed ristian church P twill . some day they're going to be big, too, and they to start an insurance company today as it was Tuesday In which two men were! A Sn Kentucky | meeting ofthe want no federals messing up their business. James back in the Nineties? |killed. The strike call also sig-| Survivors include five daugh-|Branch A. Fulton, the white-haired president of the Home -E ier # St § No { nalized the start of the Com-| ters, Mrs. Relchweln, Mrs. Kathe] Life Insurance Co. of New York, looked thé Con- "&OSI€r JO Jfar wo 5 munist. winter campaign against| rant, Refehvain: he St. - gressman in the eye and said if he wanted to in- “EASIER,” said Montgomery in a voR¥ that'{a gdvernment. Mrs. Sally Higgins and Ay Mary Holdup-Kidnap Suspect . vestigate something. big, why not take on the boomed through the sanctum of the Judiciary, Anti-Communist trade unions Williams, Phoent and Mrs. 1 government; itself? Committee. The insurance agents jamming every hoycotted the strike, and rela Josephine Henry, Lexington, Ky, Faces Federa , : : . seat smiled apprecidtively. The Congressman tively small parts of the populace two sons, Raymond G. Belden Sr., T—— ~1".. Raps Power Concentration wasn't getting any place with the grand old man paid any attention to It. 933 N. Oxford St, and Hubert W. ‘ * «+ HERE IN WASHINGTON, he said, is where of life insurance. . |. Govefnment officials said 75 Belden, 60 Cossel Drive; a sister, vo z there's a steadily growing concentration of power, He called C. G, Coley, who runs the Durham per cent of the state employees) Mrs. 14a Mundy, 74, Loutsville. |®
Rep. Celler glared back at him and changed the Life Insurance Co. of Durham, N. C., which, com- were on the job in ‘Rome. | subject. Amnd.that brings us to William Mont. pared‘ to Metropolitan Life, is flea-sized. r.. In Milan and Turin, in thei gomery, my favorite insurance tycoon. He's his Coley said leave Metropolitan alone, it's-not both- heart of the so-called “Red Belt” own worst advertisement. ering him. Down in the Carolinas he sells more o¢ industrial northern Italy,! ‘ Trouble with Presidemt Montgomery of the policies than the big outfits as it is. Rep. Cellier snout 65 per cent of the factory -; Acacia Life Insurance Co. of Washington, D. C., asked him if he believed his company was as sife i
Ky.; a brother, Cleveland Belden, aotutsd of Riana Hou Louisville; 12 grandchildren: one|y... "wi bo "brouont before U. great-grandson, Johh Wiliam. commissioner Asa J. Smith again Higgins, Columbus, O., and sev-/io4ay after ; denying
eral nieces and nephews. {the holdup-kidnaping of John &
: workers were reported out, Ericson, Sharon, Pa, nut shop | 1a that he's too blamed healthy. Troubis. of course, - asthe bigeness CCT CL hers ere Teportel uh | Mrs.. Nellie Anderson proprietor, on’ Nov. 17. yeh 08 ’ is the wrong word. Everybody's dell “That question,” drawle r. Coley, “is sort | Services for Mrs. Nellie G. An-| Houser y he's in pink-cheeked fettle, but if all citizens lived, of like asking a vain girl if she thinks she's, Governor Drops Probe derson, retired Indianapolis school | Jail under $10,000 bond After to be 80, like the boss of Abacia, there wouldn't pretty.” . : : s . ; | ; teacher. will be held St.10 8. m./arrest ° y “be any life insurance. Nobody'd need it. You see-how it is. No easy thing for a con. Of Ind. 3 Pumping’ bi —- ‘a. ! & [Saturday in Patton Funeral Home, police ox ueda FBI 4 agent’ ; 80 octogenarian, Montgomery popped a small gressman to help small-businessmen fight the wig, gov: Schale os eee Ve Bao. : : Crystal Chapel. Burial will be in He 1s Attuned forcing: white pill in his mouth, tok a swig of congres- ones, Not when the little fellows all expect soon Telary | ay - investigation or fh ? p Ti yp Riverside Cemetery, Carthage. Erich Js oll anpoint, sional. ice water and announced that it was a to be giants, too: \ - n > pp Toa ors The new | Fa i) RLY : Mrs. Anderson, who. was 76, (0 a4 100. ig ! ams and - : |Feparts of Ind. 37 bétween Bloom- | SHY. i eR Tesla died Tuesday in the home of Mrs, federal complain mposition '® : ~ Y k . I ? ? 2 ra and Mattinavilie: sme | uy ro RIA Byes ) Ropes 2 Jgnland >is burgh, Pa. hig} th closi | p t ' | Arthur Cam 1 sa gov. & i hs § schoo - ; th closing The Quiz Mas er. 7? Test our S I ernor was convinced by State : here 32 years and retired about|y go Five i . : : Highway Commission Chatrman BN 2 years ago. She was a butive ntant, b an ) De Samuel C. Hadden that there was| . | but lived here Crib Rat & | . What causes fehcé and telegraph wires to - What is the most prolific mammal? no deterioration of the new con- x years. 4 ; Biften in dib By an has cordu- vibrate and hum on a clear, still winter day? The family of rils and mice is the largest of crete highway. : w "Mes. Anderson: held members A Hitmen HA y ralls and As air moves over the wire, a series of eddies. all families among the mammals. In North Amer-| “Mr, Hadden will continue to ship in Second Christian Chugh, DitieR by a it aly y beret, . develops, first on one side, then on the other, These ica nearly one-fourth of all our four-footed ani- watch the road closely,” said Mr, a vy |She is survived by a niece, Mre.{*"3 slept In a EE is ng "Hi PURSE Whe ie} Sh Ch mt, nna A SD then transmitted with greatest force to the poles, n what age - did Grandma Moses begin of the inspections.” . : | 5 ; i 0 Warren Central Fair ' , t nding -boards. painting? * ‘ EE i 3. RT : has matche [1 >WWeh set aa sounding-hoardy : Mrs. Amma Mary Robértson Moses, better ENVOY TO CHINA STRICKEN! > La sarten Ouptral High wilt hold, aby's | juroy skirt | How does the accident rate among farmers in known as Grandma Moses, ‘was 76 years of age WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (UP)—| By Cn Re A SOuiitey fais tiom 3 oon piv Jagd |. ||| gn vee Compl wae a ie a Yt ear tae A a a" uaa] | Na / ? il : : A Ne By. Wa ] Ce Broad Ripple Hi : . : “ 2). TAS ni wna IRI- Hive igor ace. ~—What-—was~ the original - rship. of the, aboard -a train here early today a ir elected offinsholdurs. ~Loft to-right-are. is 36 vp in oh “dent rate than those in the East. The western United States” House of Representatives. = 'and.taken to (he U. 8. Naval Hos- o¢ Wet er Novy Wille. swratary: Jane Melmus,’ d . 0 farm accident rate is 40 a year for every 1000 farm . The original House membership was fixed at 65 pital ‘at Bethesda, Md. He is 73. ics Art § T Ey Neth, we The. president abe} i people. Falls cause the greatest number of noel by the Constitution, At the present time, there The State Department said the president; urmail, president. i dents on farms, py g : ; “oa
; are 435 Representatives,
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