Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 December 1949 — Page 15
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“WHAT YOU seed is another job to kee occupied in your spare time if Py Bob Newton, assistant professor of accounting,
director of Butler University's new Union building, manager of the-school bookstore and score- |
keeper of all basketball games played in the Fieldhouse, thought for a minute before saying a Job would have to be-pretty good before he'd take it. Of course. ‘vo “Is it necessary to be an accounting professor to handle the scoreboard?” Wanted to clear that up right away. Sometimes you ryn into silly rules 4nd. regulations. Mr, Newton said a professorship wasn't a re“All a man has to do is to be able to punch’ buttons.”
Shows How It Is Done
“THAT COMPLICATED, EH? Would you mind
showing me how you punch these buttons?” “The game is about to start,” was his surprising answer, “and there isn't room for you on the bench and I don’t think the officials will lét:
A dt
_you sit out there. Besides, during play I can’t
talk very well.” . Since Mr. Newton's arguments were rather flimsy, I assumed he just wanted to be coaxed a little. A firm wristlock proved I assumed correctly, We took our places in front of the timer and scoring device on the edge of the playing floor, , Let's see, if these notes are correct, the Bulldogs were going to play the Cavemen of Wabash College. A minor Butler official raced up and down the aisle in back of us repeating, “We gotta win. this one.” It so happened I wasn't ready to ask questions until the starting horn went off. Found out there are 15 buttons to be pushed. Two scoring buttons operate each scoreboard. Mr. Newton expressed hope that Buckshot O'Brien and the rest would keep him busy. | “Stick to the facts, Mr. Newton.”
“=~Ofié Tittle button is used to correct an error.
Bometimes there are slips made. No, seldom are
. mistakes brought on by excitement, the scorer
snapped, keeping his eyes on the thundering herd in front of us. “Buckshot is cold topight,” was another irrelevant remark. For a man who said there wasn’t much time for talk, Mr. Newton was doing all right. I soon learned, though, he’s capable of performing 10 or 15 things at the same time. He demonstrated how a free throw was recorded. One punch. Mr, Newton wouldn't let me punch. He said you can’t until a basket is made. Field goals take two punches. Officials at professional games are the hardest td interpret in his estimation. He watches the officials for signals. Maybe a player makes a
basket and it-doesn't count.-- The -referes is sup~
napoiis
ad 5
Two points . . . Bob Newton's the man who operates the Butler Fieldhouse scoreboards.
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World's Greatest Single Power, He
Traveled Road of Violence, Prison
By BAKER MARSH, Times Special Writer
TOMORROW. more than.200 million people wildly will celebrate the 70th birthday of a man they know only by official pictures and
by his official reputation.
The rest of the world will know little more. greatest single power in the world today.
But the man is the
He was born Dec. 21, 1879, in the township of Gori, province of
Georgia, in Russia, His mother was a serf named Catherine, his withdrew him because of tubercu-
posed to let the scorer know. Then he watches father a wine-swigging cobbler losis.
both boards. They have to be alike.
The clock operates on 60 cycle AC current. |DeW baby, pe y Sec- | Damed Joseph Vissarionovich, the
“vich” part meaning “son other children died young. Later Joseph called himself a one-minute clock. Resembles a stop watch. ~At|S0sso, then Ivanovich, then Koba. | party. the end of the.time a horn blows automatically. You know him variously as “Good | For substitutions Mr. Newton merely taps one of| Old Joe” or “That Blankety-/pmyeh,
You have to be quick to stop and start it. onds can be very precious in basketball and can't be wasted, Mr. Newton explained. : When a time out is called, he flips into motion
his many buttons.
Hinkle Always Nabs Errors |
WHO USUALLY catches a mistake on the [toes of his left foot joined and of prisons, board first? Coach Tony Hinkle has always been [with a crippled left arm, he later been a leader of the Communist first in the several during the three years Mr:iadded-the pitted sears of small- Party. . {pox to his disfigurements. ey But these don’t show in the offi- 2ccounts say.
Newton has been working the board. High school basketball games, especially at
their fourth,
named Vissarion Dzugashvill, The they
~ . ” IT IS KNOWN that he joined {the left wing of the Social Demo-
of.” The crats some time between 1896 and
| 1898 and that he was thrown out of his-first revolutionary job in {1902 for intrigues within the
8o far, you see, he hadn't done Even the police didn't
blank-blank” or perhaps by his|start a file on him until 1901.
{last allas—Stalin.
| And from 1902 until 1917 he
Born with the second and third was so busy getting into and out
he could not have
To This-is--hot_. what. the official There he is built
tournament time, are the hardest work. “I don’t|cial pictures and how he got|UP a8 one of the founding fathers mind noise and cheering,” Mr. Newton said, “but| where he is today is given the Of the present Communist Party. what those high school kids do makes you feel once over lightly or not at all in| Those 200 million Russians who
like blowing your lid.” When the game began, Mr. Newton said, and| I believed him, that he never got overly-excited or nervous. Maybe a little when Butler was playing.- Well, I must have seen him wipe bis
forehead and hands 50 times during the first | pretty sketchy, as befits a former ’ {small-time revolutionary, robber
half.
[the official biographies.
{will celebrate his birthday won't {know any better, | Between 1902 and 1917 he was
OUTSIDE OF THOSE approved sent to jail once and to Siberia
But, you must realize that Mr: Newton has a'and prison inmate.
lot of buttons to- push to stop the clock, change| the score, blow the horn and every time a Butler. player shoots, guide the ball toward the basket.| ‘Heck, that's hatd work. . -
‘On the Lam’
t i
But legend, fable
By Robert C. Ruark es taller than Napoleon:
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec.!20—1I will not pretend that I am not excited, for Daddy's off to the seven seas again and may very likely have candied kangaroo for his. New Year's dinner, ° ) Last year it was sheep's eyes and cous-cous with the Arabs in Tangier, and any man who fan cope with a Ifthpid; boiled sheep's eye certainly can
“handle a hunk of Australian marsupial. It can't
be any harder to swallow. ’ I always get excited when I leave San Francisco—probably a throwback to the war, when you never knew where you'd wind up. This time I've got a better -idéa, since PanAmerican, not NATS, is handling my trade and no naval orders inhabit my coat pocket. It looks very much like the Hawaiian Islands need a short inspection from your correspondent, who has heard of snow in New York and who never, never encountered that heavenly fluff in Honolulu. . I am also a little bit curious to see whether Harry Bridges left anything in his wake, in the way of fun. The final report I had from the islands told of starvation and strife as a result of Harry's longshore strike. The islands were full of starvation and strife last time I was out that way, too, but for a different reason,
Gals Scarce on Isles THIS REASON was called war, and was embodied by the GI. The heavenly isles were as crowded as a subway, and twice as jampacked with frustration. You could look but you couldn't touch. Everybody was mad at everybody else. You couldn’t ‘buy a drink or rent a hotel room or find a seat or get your clothes back from the laundry within a normal life expectancy. Gals were as scarce as courtesy, and almost every military man I knew hated the joint. After I have given Hawaii another chance, it seems foolish to come home to more snow, so I
rustle over to Australia and New Zealand, to see
what gives since they bounced the Socialists out
of the government. At least that is what I am telling the office.
Actually I am going back to see if the horses still |i run counter-clockwise at Randwick racetrack ini
His physical size -is-a. measur-
lable fact, but hi 1 stature able fast, But his ments edly he holdups and robberies.
s something élse. 8 s well educated,
Sydney, and to determine whether Melbourne beer many difficult subjects.
has lost its flavor.
My strong right arm, otherwise referred to as schooling. Mama, isin tow for thig safari because I am not'in school at 8, his father put him! allowed to return to the scene of past crimes with-/'to work at 10. But a year later, Named Stalingrad. His tréops did
out firm supervision. : t
In fact, he had little time for, His mother put him;
Mama, like a few hundred thousand other him in a seminary in Tiflis,
mamas, has heard violently colored anecdotes|
mit me to mention the word in the parlor.
or Perth. 1
From there faci and fancy get| about Australia, and for some years would not per- mixed up again. Mr. Stalin said|Stalin consolidated his hold on the| ) [he quit the seminary because the party; making himcelf finally seI intend to perform a service for a great many|place was full of espionage and|cure with the exile of Leon Trot-ex-GI's who are still having trouble as the result of |chicanery.” - a short stay at Sydney or Brisbane or Melbourne that he was thrown out for lack friends in 1927-28, . : {of discipline. His mother said she] On one thing there is general
and fancy freed when {built up around such a man and|thrown and a general amnesty perhaps from these we can get anigranted political prisoners. -.—idea of the kind of man he is. , In the first place, he's wu litiierin, then in his Sosso-Koba phase, guy—>5.feet 5, which at that is two worked for the party, at least; — . ——1oneéit...1s. reported, helping” to
informed on
ithe father died and mother put
Other reports are/sky and the purges of his old
|accounts Stalin's biography is/seven times.
| He escaped from Siberia six {thues, but he was safely tucked away in the far north when the 1917 revolution began. He was the czar was over.
Between prison terms Mr. Stal.
{keep. the treasury in- funds by' iplanning and, some say, staging
After 191% he worked with Leénin, gaining responsibility. He defended a town called Tsaritsin against the White Russians and did so well the place was Xe.
[pretty well there again in World|
}
{War II ; F rr * =» BETWEEN 1017 and 1928 Mr.
i. :
_ The Indianapolis Times illions To Acclaim Stalin At 70 ut Few Of Them Ever Saw Him E
agreement. He's a tough customer. Just before Lenin died in 1924 he wrote that Mr. Stalin should be removed as secretary-general of the party because of his “rude” and “rough” methods. : President Roosevelt called him & “realist.” Sir Stafford Cripps: described -hini as “the greatest realist ever born” a] Yakoviev, who designed thé Yak fighter, called his boss “extremely gentle, polite.” - But -history shows otherwise. When the small independent farmers balked at the Five-Year Plan and planted only enough grain for themselves Mr. Stalin seized the grain. The number of dead small] farmers has been put at more than a million as a result of that starvation order. During the great purge of 1938 Mr. Stalin said, “It is quite clear, that these gentlemen should exterminated merciless! That is)
PAGE 15
Siberia 6 Times
TR is testified to by many a toast, ER But there has been no confirmas REE *, tion of stories of orgies in the , #4 Kremlin, whether with wine or : women. Wat ‘At state functions Stalin drinks Sr sparingly if at all. . He has been married twice, His first wife was a peasant by whom he had a son, Jacob, who kept the family name of Dzu~ . gashvill and who disappeared ‘in a German prisoner-of-war camp.
monia. In 1919 Stalin married brunet Nadejda “Nadia” Alllluieva. She was 17, he was 40. They had two ‘children, Vassily, now an Air force general, and Svetlana, reported to be married to a pro= fessor. Nadia died in 1932. Craig Thompson, former New York Times correspondent in Moscow, ‘sald she died of a bullet hole in the head. He admits he doesn’t know who fired the shot,
WHAT THE RUSSIANS kno is probably even less, They see about as much of Mr, Stalin as some guy in Topeka does.
When the boss appears in pube lic, a few times a year, he's so
This wife died in 1917 of pneu- :
‘Good Old Joe'—Stalin (his last alias)
clear and does not demand furthe interpretation.” : Trotsky said of the slaughter: “Stalin-can't stop.” 7 During the first German ad; vances of the war Mr, Stain phoned Marshal -Budyenny and calmly ordered the destruction of the Dnieper Dam, the greatest! . engineering feat in Russia at Even-the one bit of English-he is credited with learning has ui. ough ring. It is. led that when he met Churehill andi is" Roosevelt at Yalta Stalin care- |. fully learned one English sen- he dies.
Then one day he walked into Fi Ris publicity bulldup Bath
the room where the other WOli;;rned him into & sort of god.
were waiting and sald in a deep, ; _ ri (oT Ho ng beef S9INg On hety, Anyhow": He has said his health is none too
THAT STALIN smokes, all|§004, but Georgians are “be|Who #ee pictures know. His ly long lived.
n'a trademark. That he drinis|OoPIriehk 188. by Tae Infianasots Ties
I am going to turn Mama loose on that terrain, and convince her that all military men were noth-
* ing but bored and saintly during their ur [Jail Declares down under.
Visit New Caledonia
THIS WOULD seem to me to be a public service, for I know of no American spouse who does not compress her lips into a thin, stern line when the subject of Australia slidés into a. conversation. By some horrid miscarriage of public relations, alk wives are convinced that life in Australia was an interminable orgy, with dancing girls, wine and carousal running a 24-hour shift.
and aigs, the benevolent climate and the kooka-| burra, or laughing-jackass bird. After inspecting the Maori culture—I thought
it might be a nice idea to tarry for a moment in|Made yesterday by - The GI left a mighty| George 8S. Dalley, to a group of mess of cultural footprintsin those parts, includ-| judges and welfare workers at al ey ing red-headed ones, and I think it my bounden|SPecial meeting in the grand jury J
Noumea, New Caledonia.
War on Deserters Christmas Gifts
‘Plans to Bring
Back All Fugitives
Husbands and fathers who de- early last night. sert their wives and children will I intend to convince Mama that our love of the|find “the going rough” in Marion|loot included two shirts, two suits place was founded entirely on a fondness for styke|County—after the first of the Of nylon underwear, five pairs of
| year.
This was
duty to give the old town at least a routine check. room at the courthouse.
There is only one possible hitch in my plans. In case Mama is not convinced that our interest in Australia was purely academic, you may send |
the mail to Tahiti. The guy in sarong and tun Ing and prosecuting me
beard who meets the boat will be me.
Handle With Care By Frederick C. Othman
1
WASHINGTON, Dec. 20—When I asked my bride what she wanted for Christmas I never thought I'd get tangled in a losing fight with postwar technology. She said she had been thinking about this for some time and had I noticed that the only member of our family who ate in style was Emma, the pup? She meant that there were no nicks in Emma’s dish. Otherwise, said she, our crockery was in, a sorry state. The plates didn’t match, most of the cups had lost their handles, and all but four of the saucers were cracked. What she wanted more than anything else for a gift was a new set of chinaware. And since I had to eat off it, too, she thought I'd better help her select it. Dishes come in 14,000 different designs, mostly involving buttercups: The Japs make ‘em and so do the French. They come from England apd Germany and Austria and we're no slouches at making them, ourselves. Choosing a set of china is tougher, even, than making up your mind about
wallpaper. Picks Home-Grown Product
80 WE tramped from store to store. We looked at plates with squiggles, squashes, and glazed strawberries. We gaw ‘em with castles, canna lilies, and, I believe, cantaloupes. Mrs. O. decided that the garlands, the wreaths, She said she believed the set she liked best was of American make, creamy in color, translucent, thin and simple in design. The only decoration conpisted of some genuine imitation gold around the rini and a stalk of golden wheat in the middle. This cost like sin, but the lady said it was the best china made today and good for a lifetime of
“.»use unless, of course, dropped. The Christmas
spirit had me. Shoot the works. I said wrap 'em ‘yp. First hint of trouble came after the lady had
. the dishes.
He said wash plates like these electrically ‘and husbands in mean business.”
tised for baby’s skin. What, ¥ demanded, about my fine, new, superduper electric dishwasher with irfum? She said anybody who put dishes like these into a machine was a spendthrift and also a fool. ~ My idea was that she was an old-fashioned female, who didn’t know about the velvet-gloved gentleness of 1949-model dishwashers.
Mr. Dailey said he planned to|len from the Merklin Market, 19 assign a deputy after Jan. 1 to|8. West St, during the night. Pothe “full-time job” of investigat-{lice found a rear door open and n who de-|notified the manager, causing a|Ported the pre-cooked hams miss- | sharp upswing in the county's re-|Ing. | Lief 1pad. Under the new plan, Mr. Dalley [yp (said, extradition proceedings will .
their families
the anonuncement Prosecutor
'‘Meanest Thief Takes Family's
ALL OF THE FAMILY Christmas presents and $23 in cash was
reported stolen from the home of Carl Williams, 27 8. Euclid Ave.,
Mr. Williams told police the
nylon hose and several unopened packages from out of town, . ® =» . | HE SAID the thieves apparent-
{ly entered the house with a pass)
Three hams were reported sto-
who re-
D. F. Chimento)
be filed against men who flee Opens Office
Efforts Hampered
“In the past,” Mr. Dailey said, | “this type of action against run-| |away husbands has been hampered because of the shortage of Wh funds with which to finance ex-| en Ours; dition proceedings. But this
dishes arrived and my bride unpacked ‘em, she will change in 1950,” he said
got worried. She phoned the electric outfit, which rushed over a service man. He was aghast. He didn’t exactly say that anybody who bought dishes like these was a spendthrift and a fool, but the implication was there. Nothing wrong with the dishwasher, you understand. The trouble’s in
pretty soon all the gold rubs off. There ought to be a law against gold rims on|
plates, he said. The hot water whooshes in under | Superior Court judges, and wel-
“We'll have about $21,000 tol spend for this work next year, as compared to $4200 for extraditions of all types this year. And under the new set-up,” he added, | “we expect to find wandering We |
short order.
other states to avoid criminal my money. She said these dishes were precious Prosecution for falling to make and wash 'em in the kind of soap that's adver- support payments for the children announced the opening of his : and wives and for former wives. [office at 910 Hume-Mansur build-
Dr. Dominic F. Chimento today
ling for the practice of general surgery. Dr. Chimento was graduated from the St Louis University School of Medi cine in 1942. He has completed five years postgraduate training as intern and surgical resident of St. Vincent's Hospital here. An overseas
Dr. Chimento
The three of the county's five Veteran of World War II, Dr.
Chimento resides with his wife
and son at 1827 N. Talbott St,
pressure, he explained, with detergent added, and|fare workers who attended the
it scrubs that gold as efficiently as it does gravy. Meeting. pledged their support to v ) . It may last for a few months, he said, but eventu-| Mr. Dailey’s plan. They said any Thieves Loot Office, {case involving failure to support . or desertion coming before them, Fail to Open Safe {would be referred quickly to the MRS. 0. wondered whether she ought to try to DeW bureau for action.
ally it goes down the drain.
Mr. O. Sounds Ominous
send back the dishes, or the dishwasher”? Old
Santa Claus Othman, caught in the middle with Off to Switzerland
a substantial investment in both, said let's keep ‘em and put our faith in the genius of American industry. She agreed. i
We intend to wash our widely advertised dishes Administrat in our widely advertised dishwasher, with two|is touring Europe for a closeup safe, police said.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Dec. 20 (U
Safbcrackers failed last night In an attempt to open the wall safe
Co., 2215 Valley Ave., police re- | ported. ] The burglars broke an outside
Capehart, Jacobs | _ [End Debate Series
Still Far Apart on Socialism in U. S.
EVANSVILLE, Dec. 20 (UP)~ The eight-day debate series between Republican U. 8. Sen. Homer E. Capehart and Democratic Rep. Andrew Jacobs was over today, with the principals just as far apart as ever on the question of socialism in America. The seventh debate was held here last hight, before some 2000 persons, one of the largest crowds on. the tour which began at Indianapolis, Dec. 12.
Sen. Capehart's final argument|} last night was a summary of four;
programs in British-type socialism, which he said the New Deal party was trying to “force upon the people of this country.” Four Key Points The points were: ONE: Socialized medicine. TWO: Bocialized farming “under the name of the Brannan Plan.” i THREE: Deficit spending. FOUR: Socialized housing. Sen. Capehart said both he and
Found Dead on Elkhart Tracks
Knute's Teammate Robbers,
ELKHART, Dec. 20 (UP)~— There once was a time when
!
Rep. Jacobs had agreed, during
the debates, that these four|
things were not good for this ie
country. “Yet, each of these programs 1s| being forced upon the people of this. country by the New Deal at this moment, or is being proposed! for the immediate future by the party's leader, President Truman,” sald Sen. Capehart.
Cites Voting Records “Was the New Deal forced upon| the people, Senator?” asked Rep.| Jacobs, ‘or did the people force it on you?” ~- [ Rep. Jacobs delved into the question of voting records in Congress again. He said Sen. Cape-
hart admitted that his voting rec-grderly conduct and another was
ord “is 99 per cent with the Republican Party.” “When the Senator admits his! voting record is 99 per cent pure,” |
too high.” Rep. Jacobs sald he was surprised when the Senator told him
3 = Ee ° ® =
Detective Capt.- Tom Danforth) amount of cash from as
said there's no doubt Duffy was| after hit by a train during the night. Mr County Coroner Dr. Burton Kint-| whisky ner said death apparently was|store aqcidental. Police looked into the bility of suicide. didn’t have a penny to his name.
possi- & gun. - They fled on They said he! the whisky on the counter.
. Robert. Fisk, 335 8. State St., Fighters ‘Wreck’ Cafe; reported he was
1. Held, Another Sought »d robbed of $5 in cash, a $43
One man was arrested for dis-|
sought by police today as the re-| sult of a fight in a College Avenue! restaurant.
(gold watch and valuable papers by two men who accosted him {in an alley near his home. | Miss Alice. McEifresh, 16, of 206 Hiawatha St., reported a man
Harry Mundy, 23, of 1654 Col.|!n a long overcoat grabbed her at the Stickley 'Steam Specialty! said Rep. Jacobs, “that's entirely lege Ave. was slated for dis- Purse containing $4 last night as
Loy's her home.
hollen, proprietor of Ave.,|
restaurant, 1602 College
\orderly conduct after D. H. Mon- he Walked on Hiawatha St. near
Another purse grabbing victim
P) —U. 8. Federal Security window to get in and then bat- that his (Jacobs’') voting record complained Mundy and the other| Was Miss Marietta Henson, 23, man had “wrecked the place” in|0f 911 W. 26th St., who reported t
Several desk
or Oscar Ewing, who tered the combination off the big was 90 per cent.
“I am surprised to learn that
tablespoons of widely advertised detergent added, |0f socialized medicine, leaves for drawers were looted in the office my record is that consistent,”
as per directions.
with gold, I'm warning three mighty corporations |assistants.
now: Their past troubles, if any, will seem like
If our sewer pipes get clogged Switzerland today with his four but N. G. Wilson, office manager, Rep. Jacobs said.
sald nothing was missing.-
little ones.
Local Student at Yale 11950 Plymouth
Elected to Literary Club . John B. Rawlings, Yale univer. FTE ViEWS
Elizabethan Club, oldest college] literary club in America.
Mr. Rawlings, son of Mrs, L. W. Rawlings, 3351 N. New Jersey | 8t., is a graduate of Shortridge High School. {
TO ATTEND FRI ACADEMY | . Lt. George A. Everett of the Ligonier Post, Indiana State Police, will attend fhe 43d session
of the Federal Bureau™of Investi-| gation National Academy, H. G.|
, H. B. Heberling, assistant gensity class of 1950, has been|,.a) sales a Rt of the Piym. Military Order of Purple Heart,
.elected to membership in the|puth Motor Corp. will come to Unit 212, will hold its annual
be one of 45 he-
| Purple Heart Auxiliary
Yule Party Tomorrow | The, Ladies Auxiliary of the
Slated
Indianapolis for Christmas party at Billings Hose C. pre- - View of the 1950 pital at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow. Men and women of the Order!
Plymouth automobile line. will distribute gifts and serve]
The preview veterans of Ward 11186, will be held in| The children's Christmas party the Muratwil be held at the hall Thurs-
Temple and will day night.
ing held by PLAN
Plymouth execu- YULE PROGRAM
Mr. Heberling tives in key cities,| Southport Lodge No. 442, Order | R. C. Ragla, Plymouth district of Eastern Star, will observe the|
Foster, FBI agent In charge at ‘manager, will be host to the se- annual Christrfas program at 8
(lected guests,
¥
"wv : «|p m. tomorrow'at the lodge hall,
hd - || When and Mory found
=
THE STORY OF THE SAVIOUR
\
Joseph Jesus in the Temple, || Said, “Son, why hast thou: thus dealt with ws?” le, ory swered, “How is it thot ye sought me? Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's business?” Jesus knew whot his mission 2:43.50)
Ruka
a fight, hat three
‘teen aged boys
Police sald a cash register had|grabbed her purse after twisting “I thought 1'been knocked from a counter and her arms behind heér at Senate {had disagreed oftener.”
broken, along with other damage. Ave. and 11th St.
regularly “As his custom wos, he went into the Smagogue oa the Sobbath Duy. (Luke
"Now there come word to Jesus of the pri . @ mon nomed John in the country Thig wos John the Baptist, cousin of
about
Escaped From = |
. Fe a nn steno]
Jack Dufty shared the glory off In Taxi Spared = Notre Dame with Knuté Rockne. Gunmen held up & taxi driver to AY a Ta arid b UGE Mom. & Tah names and saw the headlines * ¢ : announce their feats. bers last night and early today. Rockne stayed in the national] In the taxi holdup, a woman limelight as one of the country's/passenger was not robbed or othsports heroes. erwise molested as two armed Duffy, who also was a track/men took $15 from the driver and star, left school, married, had|forced him to drive them around two sons, and started to practice town. ° Ga SS aw. Worsar Bell, 9 2000 Villa But Duffy failed to make a/AVe. police he was taking living as a lawyer. Some a passenger, Mrs. Clara Bess years ago now, his wife died. |Bollen of RR 3 to her home Duffy took to drinking. Police [Thun be Was fegued two men. records carried his name numer- Thinking that were having ous times during the past 10/CAT trouble he stopped. ‘years. Only last week, two bonds Spare Woman's Money were forfeited when Duffy failed] One of the two drew a gun and to appear in court on a drunken-|forced the passenger into the front seat. They then made the . driver take them to the 2300 THE-SONS grew up, one went block of N. Rural St. where he to Texas, the other to California.|was robbed. Mrs. Bollen sald Duffy made his way picking up|they did not ask for her money odd jobs. Recently, he worked as/or hardly noticed her during the robbery and ride, Yesterday there was a body on| Gale Imber, 27, of 803 B. 224 New York Central railroad St, a clerk in a liquor store at /tracks here. It was Duffy, He 2151 College Ave. told police two died at the age of 56. . an undetermined
