Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1950 — Page 11
ir
, Linnie chenille . Wash.
Hunter's ush Pink,
d colors: ,
OSE LUE /INE REEN
‘many friends on the hill.”
“Still, I can't say the law of averages has
helped me recover my losses on the horses, I've had
. \
shocking bad luck, my dear.”
E £ 3 : g :
‘designing one of these shows?’ I could have spent a couple of weeks answering that one. But I kept it short. They have a knack of letting you know en the conversation is ended—without ever saying so. You do your little bow and they move on.
always been done in. Relatives, instead -of buying
iE £2 fd
: g
§ i ik
23% 1! 1k2 t : §
¢ i
2 3 : 3 8
be as well off or better than she. But 40 years ago 1 can remember seeing children barefoot in the streets in the winter time, Times have changed.” And so the conversation flows on—with not a word spoken about Russia. They're aware of the problems the Russian Bear is throwing at the British Lion, all right. They just don’t talk about them. They were like that, too, when you dropped into pubs back in the days when Hitler was throwing his weight around, - But when the time came to defend their beloved islands they rose to a man and fought alone fora year rather than knuckle under to a dictator who threatened the way of life they love—the freedom to drop into a pub and grouse about the governments, and laugh at kings.
Ed Sovola is on his way to .Panama., His dispatches appear on Page 1.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 9 (UP)—Congress is eardeep in such weighty matters as Formosa, the President's budget recommendations—and whether Andrew H. Brown is legally married. ' Mr. Brown is the Andy of “Amos and Andy” in the radio comic skit. On Dec. 11, he was duped into a trip down the middle aisle with one Abigail Simpson by his friend, the * h.” The Kingfish who got a fee from Abigail was
"supposed to have provided a stooge fo “object” at
the last minute. The stooge didn’t, and when it came time for Andy to say “I do,” he was so flustered he said the words with a question in his voice. . Therefore the great legal minds on Capitol Hill are pondering the legality of the union. An alert CBS representative paged some of them for transcriptions on the subject, with these results: Sen. Warren G. Magnuson (D.), Washington State—the most eligible bachelor in Congress: “As a bachelor and lawyer, I must come to the conclusion that Andy is not married. I'll stick to the bachelor side; no marriage is successful unless the intention is there.” > :
Demands Congress Probe SEN. MILTON R. YOUNG (R.), of North Dakota, was pretty worked up, too. “I demand a congressional investigation,” he said. “Andy has
Rep. Harold H. Velde (R.), of Illinois whose wife comes from Andy's home town of Peoria, said that much as he regretted to say it he thought Andy has gotten himself in a mess. “The words ‘I do’,” he said, “constaute an acceptance of the marriage contract.” Another bachelor, Rep. Hardie Scott (R.), of
Nichols
«By, Hageman W
BAPE or ao AY
+Pennsylvania, came to the defense of the comedian. | “I am sympathetic,” he said. “But I am afraid it| is going to require the best legal talent in America, to relieve Andy from the lost freedom.” { Rep. Chester A. Chesney (D.), of Illinois said!
Ks . Yor TA
; somelike. We knew what was coming. |e.asiest on your pocketbook NO—|you wait until the last minute, it
of the few taxpayers with compli-
Higuve.,
fo Res PGI So? ito 4
‘
4
THERE ARE only a few m
return this year. But that doesn't mean you should wait until the last minute to fill it out. g Here are hree reasons why you should go to work on your Se Your presente: Wis wat fo 18 Jeary say:
ONE: You will have time 3 el It
may cost you money. TWO: If you turn out to be one
not be available as Mar. 15 ap-
proaches. THREE: Taxpayers who have refunds coming and who file now can expect to get their refunds befor Mar. 15. If you wait until the deadline, it may be summer before the auditors get to your return and you get a check back. ~ - » EVERYONE who had $600 or more taxable income in 1949 must file a return. The third article of the Primer will tell you all you need to know about the! $600 figure. Once you have determined that you must file, the next question is —which return should you use?) The vast majority of taxpayers
are eligible to file on the simplest experts and shows the wage- ple Form 1040A.
return, called Form 1040A, printéd on yellow paper. If you ‘use
answers to the questions, the Bureau will figure your tax and send, you a bill or refund. The fifth article of this series will give al detailed explanation of who may
Ye SEARLE 1 AE Bed vi Ad
¥
Income Tax Primer +++ No. 1="
In Filing Retur
Early Bird Has Time to Unravel “Unexpected Snags, Save Money
By RICHARD A. MULLINS
inor changes in the income tax
figure out the method which is
Expert Prepares
Times Tax Series
This is the first of 14 authoritative, easy-to-follow articles in The; Times’ annual LEP i Income Tax wt NF Bd Primer, made RY NY famous by the, hy Sng late S. Burton] A ® Heath. This, Ns. year's Primer | ; 3% has been revised | by Richard A. me. Malling Mullins, a ranking Washington tax expert, creator of a widely-supported average! tax plan, and graduate of the, same training course that's given the federal agents who scan] your return. As in all other years, |
it’s been prepared in consultation
with Bureau of Internal Revenue
earning taxpayer how to handle] every jtem of his return with the
i.
TWO. Your income included | anything, however littie, that was
{not interest, dividends, or pay- é
i _—- So id Pio Tre urn. This is the only
Used together, the 14 articles starting today tell everything the ordinary taxpayer, in the lower or middle income class,
needs to know about how to file the return on his 1949 income.
+ Everything that would unnec-
essarily confuse the small taxpayer——everything that will not help millions who live principally on wages and salary, has been left out. No one article, by itself, is
enough. Several of them tie to-
gether to help with each type. of return. So you will find it easiest if you save the articles dealing
- FORM 1040 .. Demat
EERE
ow
cts Prom n With Uncle
Save All These Tax Primer Articles
with your particular type of return, and use them all together. For the Optional Form 1040A, now filed instead of the Withholding Statement — Save the first four articles, and use them with Article 5. For Form 1040, using the tax table-—the first 10 articles. For Form 1040, taking the Standard Deduction-—Save the first 10, and use them with Articles 13 and 14. For Form 1040, using your own ‘itemized deductions, you will need all except article No. 5 - You should have very little trouble if you will follow these
‘Sam |
BE HOY Mont SR
instructions, step by step, with= out trying to understand why you do some of the things. Some of them may seem silly or illog= ical. They aren't. They show the way to prepare this blank most easily, in compliance with the law. If you do what these articles say, your return will be correct, even if you don't know why. . The Bureau of Internal Revenue provides this year, with Form 1040, a well-prepared 16page booklet that tells, in sume mary, a great deal about these returns. It will be worth your while to look that over, too.
U. S. INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX RETURN 1949
For calendar yoor 1049 or focal your bagionieg .................. JIN, nd onting -
_—_
Instead of this form, wn Form 1040A If your total income was less than wholly of wages shown a Forms W-3 or of sch wages sod hot mer thm 30 oer wag, Sundin sod
eesenacs
TW
Name ~S500 0d Jae Punic
THIS IS the first thing you see eyes of the Bureau of Internal)
on the 1949 Form 1040 and is the Revenue:
same as the first part of the sim-|
In all but rare instances, which will be explained.-in the second y décor Ben
can save money by “splitting their income. cl * If you are one of these, on the rst line of the tax returh you
he thought the marriage was in the “shotgun cata- Use the simple Form 1040A and ments for personal services; or if . gnoulq type or print the names
gory, but Andy’ll get out some way.” Rep. Vaughn Gray (D:), of Virginia said he remembered many another time when the gullible Andy was in trouble, “When Madame Queen, in the radio script, was suing Andy for breach of promise, I was trying a damage suit in Richmond,” the congressman said. “The jury in Andy’s case was to announce its verdict to an aroused radio audience at 7 p. m. At 6:45 our jury came in with its verdict and in a matter of seconds the courtroom was empty. Next day I saw a member of the jury and he told me that the verdict was rende in jig-time so that everybody could hear the Amos 'n Andy show. Andy’s friend, Amos, is a native of Richmond and we're pulling for the team in this one.”
Symbol of Bachelorhood
REP. CLARKE W. THOMPSON (D.), of Texas, observed that Andy is “the outstanding symbol of bacheélorhood in the whole United States and he's just got to get out of this one.” Rep. John H. Marsalis (D.), of Washington, said “I think I see a way out if Andy will go along. Marriage is a contract and there must be a meeting of minds, but will Andy be willing to ad-
when it is wise to do so. printed on white paper. ; . =.»
Form 1040 if:
as much as $5000; or if
- THREE. Your income included
ceived it.
YOU ARE required to use the|if you wish to itemize your own
deductions (when they are great-
ONE. Your income, includingier than the standard deduction)
Beautiful WAC Helped Them Nab Hitler Agent After He Baffled Them 2 Years
its territories and Latin-Americ special Times reporter with the one of a series.
Now it ean be told—how the FBI uncovered spies and saboteurs of World War II in » battle of wits, wiles and science. The dramatic, inside stories of the “secret war” in the United States,
an countries are revealed by a co-operation of the FBI. This is
mit that at the time of the marriage his mind was|
in such a confused state, he did not realize what he was doing?” Said Vice President Alben W. Barkley: “I don’t know if Andy is married or not. All I know is I am certain I am.”
Color Scheme
By Frederick C. Othman
WASHINGTON, Jan, 9—The man who knows his maple syrup is Sen. George D. Aiken (R. of Putney, Vt.). He makes his own and when he eats pancakes, he drowns ‘em in it. On the sap of the
“maple tree. as it has to do with breakfast food he
is an expert. -. , And I want Washington's hotelkeepers to direct their complaints about this dispatch, if any, not to me, but to Sen. Aiken. I'm quoting him. I don’t much care what I pour on my griddle cakes, so long as it's sweet. : Sen. Alken said that the capital is full of cops, G-men, T-men, intelligence officers, and sleuths of many varieties, but they haven't been able to do one dang thing about the hotels advertising maple juice on their menus and serving corn syrup. The leading hotels, he said.
Leads Up to Oleo
AND IF ALL the bluecoats can't do anything about this sorry situation, he cried, what chance
- have they to force the local hosts to serve butter in’ squares and oleomargarine in triangles? Oleo,.
he continued, ig likely to come in square pats, too,
. and people all over the land will be defrauded.
Do not, he urged upon the seven senators who were. garine. By all means, he urged, do not expect the lunchroom keepers to distinguish oleo from butter by carving it in pyramids as per the bill now before the Senate. He sat down. In came Sen. Joseph R, McCarthy (R.- Wis.), with a wad of newspaper ads and mafgarine
” wrappers under his arm. Hardly anybody, except
me, seemed interested. While he surveyed the rows of empty seats, Sen. Robert C. Hendrickson (R.
to him, relax the Jaws against mar-
N. J.), tried to be helpful. He suggested a_quorum call
The clerk read the list of 96 senators and 14 gentlemen came in. The clerk read again, but more
slowly. And while he droned off the list of names;
By EDAN WRIGHT,
|a cab in Manhattan.
Gay laughter—from the back seat—followed him as he strode | over to the mailbox on the corner. He slipped a small envelope out for $900 from the same bank and Fort Des Moines, Iowa. ~
Times Special Writer
|of both husband and wife (using
The othet return is called Form more than $100 on which taxithe wife's own given name). Give 1040. It has four pages and is/was not withheld before you re- the addresses of both, if you live
bo
A couple legally separated any
time before midnight of Dec. 31
Nobody who received “less | Was not married, for tax purposes,
| than $600 is required to file an at
income tax return. ' | But anybody who
y ng : hii Am BLED RS AL file
a return in order other way for you to get them back. (NI i Technically what you file is a claim for refund, But you use the same form — preferably 1040A—as for a regular return. A couple remains
.inot _remarr to get back 17 there [% an admiristrator o get | those withholdirigs. There is no |ecutor he files for the dead spouse, Y {If not, the survivor files for both,
any time during the year. If a wife or husband died dure
earned |ing the year, and the survivor has
" a t return can te ow -
Let's take an imaginary tax-
(payer, John Public and his wife |Jane. They are eligible to file a {joint return and do so by typing |both names as shown above. married, the articles that follow, we will
In
{apart, and give the occupations whether or not living fogether, fill out John and Jane Public's You must use this form, also, and social security numbers of until one dies or until a court/return with many more tax prob-
| both if each of you has these. |separates them formally.
x = = i |
SINCE MARRIED couples ¢an fore midnight of Dec. 31 was maryour wife's if you file jointly, was|or if you want to deduct the ex- file joint returns, it is important ried, for tax purposes, throughout ‘ | penses of earning your income. = [to know who is married in the the year.
lems than the average person, just
A couple married any time be-|S0 you can see how it's done.
Tomorrow: Dependents ‘and
| extra exceptions.
How G-Men Trapped Clever Spies By Wits and Science
| To the G-men who tagged the quaintance had reported it to the|the truth about the accomplices,
{playboy suspect on his sprees, ithe cost of cocktail, night club] {and “at home” parties seemed a|
|great deal more than the income| game ‘was in Washington, Weary
fof a teacher—even a boastful |one. : ~ | Digging into foreign transfers [of money, G-mén came up with] {something interesting. On Dec. 27, 11940, Vallecilla had received $500, by cable from Lisbon. On Nov, 18
A’ good-looking man with a spoiled babyish face hopped out of there was a check for $1000 from fairs,
a Lisbon bank. On Jan. 22, 1941, another check
of the pocket of his topcoat and popped it into the box. Then he on Mar. 17 a cable transfer of
|dashed back to the cab, ducked into the open door and squeezed into
a space already occupied by another man and two girls. “Where's the party tonight?”
leaving your job in the afternoon like that?”
{ship collection on the spies and] |suspects. Nothing had checked. | Ithe girl next to him asked. “We're |sure getting an early start. Won't work and there were few. clues. they complain at the school —|
A new, unknown spy was at
Needle in a Haystack It wasn’t likely that the spy had uséd his right name and address,
{$500 from Lisbon—by order of |Gonzalves Azevedo.
Trail Grows Hot | It was a lot of pay-—more gen|erous than the usual provisions|
idoled out to spies by the German high command.
| There was another discovery
was getting embarrassing. Sen. Hendrickson said gides, I'm lining up pupils to teach|“needle in the haystack” problem that read: my own. I'm picking them by canvassing everyone at the ad-| “Aunt Maria died suddenly: I tine. Her G-man “date” suddenly| |dress and by investigating tele-/eg you to write Uncle Pablo who remembered another appointment
he withdrew his point of no quorum. "The chairman said he couldn't. droned on. Sen. Hendrickson said then he asked for unanimous consent to stop the roll call. The chair said he couldn’t do that, either, because there
and ruled finally that a quorum was present. I| counted 17 senators on the job. Sen. McCarthy told them that too many margariné people were” trying to make people think their product was butter. He read from the oleo ads such phrases as “country fresh” and “freshly churned daily” and said this languafe wasn't! cricket: They Make Paint, Too THEN HE brandished a margarine carton, colored yellow, which he said copied a butter
prise. And we can d
} jon . The "clerk right out of my classes.
“It's easy. All T have to do is/Phone listings of “Gabriel Reyes” ig inconsolable."
{praise their Spanish and tell them
ate lessons from me outside the chool. “I thought we'd made the rounds in Greenwich Village for
a couple of amusing spots and we can find more. I discovered a new
(place for dinner—that's a sur-
.in on the night clubs later for a show and dancing.” “Trust you, Roberto,” the girl giggled as he fitted her arm around his. “You always know
package almost exactly. He. said the producer of how to plan a good. time.”
this was the Durkee Products Co.
“Dancing, romancing, a little
“Who are they?” asked Sen. Aiken. [rum—and Roberto, he is a happy
“A subsidiary of the Glidden Co.,” replied Sen. McCarthy. “Paint manufacturers?” asked Sen. Aiken.
hombre, eh?” his companion kidded. “Let's go!” Roberto answered
“Yes, sir,” said Sen. McCarthy. {with an order to the driver. And And I got out of there and ate a hearty lunch|the cab snorted up the street,/things about Hitler, his military in the senatorial restaurant, where the butter was leaving a trail of laughter.
genuine and the maple syrup, too, or so I trust.
Two Girls Who Lost
Visit as They Confer Over Dolls
MEMPHIS, Tenn. Jan. 9 (UP)—Betty Lou Marbury and Phyl- | Ys Detweiller found in a brief meeting that they have more in| Wayne). common than the loss of their right hands. They aren't afraid.
Hands Accidental Shot Kills FT. WAYNE, Jan. 9 (UP)— accidental death in the shooting) Rep. W. O. Hughes , (R. .Ft.| |
John was shot Saturday night
Phillis flew here from her home in Willoughby, O., delayed for hy Douglas Lee Miller, 15, who several days -by bad weather, to cheer the Brownsville, Tenn., girl was ITE one of the victim's "0% sorry he was that he could do
whose hand was amputated during the holidays. own two years ago when she|.;. also was 10.
tying the red
already, and demonstrated by un- Miller boy and another friend,
Phyllis lost her (rifles,
er He died instantly. The
ribbon from a James Shearer, also 15, were with
They met yesterday in Browns-|pupnbie hath gift Phyllis had/the Hughes boy in his room at the
~ ville, with quick smiles and a brought her.
. lis gifts, looked at dolls, and agreed|«ts show. Bette 1am he
hot |
835 handicap does
dependence, and will fly back to- Shh ieetetse Sees . Phyllis told how she made a/in sight-seeing and g| HONG KONG, Jan. 9 (UP) — softball team as pitcher, skates, trips. Six Chinese staged a daylight paints and hopes to make the — : robbery of the Chase Bank toschool basketball team “because Ephraim Lowe Dies
time of the accident, W. O, Hughes was Republican t a minority leader in the 86th Gen-in-/eral Assembly last year.
day and escaped with an estimated $60,000 (U. 8.).
r——————————— E. HUNGARIAN ASKS ASYLUM LONPON, Jan. 9 (UP) — Pal of the Sebestyen, a secretary in the Hun-
{
jof John Hughes, 16, son of State A norlel Reyes, 140 W.
Letter Intercepted |
| In an FBI office a short while |later, G-men pondered over a let-
° . State Rep. Hughes’ Son [ter that British censors had interFind They're Not Afraid
Ohio Child Cheers Up Betty Lou During
cepted. The envelope was addres'sed to “M. Gonzdlves de Azevedo,
[Allen County Coroner Paul H.|Calcado de Desterro 5 R/C, Lis- | Miller today returned a verdict of Pon. Portugal.”
bore the return address of 10th St. New York, N. Y.” } The letter itself was written by hand in Spanish. On one side “Gabriel” told a “dear friend”
nothing to help him obtain a visa
{for the United States, winding up
with “yours unto death.” On the other side of this loving message was a report on aircraft production in the United States and shipment to England—meant for the eyes of the German high command to be relayed-through their spy hatch in Lisbon. - Laboratory treatment of invisible ink had revealed such tips as “value of aeronautical production 000,000 millions of
ment.” Th The FBI laboratory had-al-ready run a check on the names
£8 ; |
wasn't a quorum present. The clerk resumed his | they could do better aking priv.
reading of names. The chair gave a quick count]
{or similar names in the New York |area. | They quizzed confidential {formants who were closely in {touch with German Bund activi[ties and they alerted allied na-
cocktails,” he went on. “I know tions to be on the lookout for
“Reyes to Azevedo” letters.” Months passed and no more letters turned up through the cen-
were uncovered, either, The case of Gabriel Reyes looked as if it was destined for an. unsolved file. Meanwhile—through a grapevine in Europe—word had come that a young South. American named Roberto Lanas Vallecilla might be operating as a spy in New York. There also came a report—from a private citizen in New York—that a man named Vallecilla was saying a lot of nice
|organization and his persecution of .the Jews. Thus, another investigation was (launched. G-men followed Valle-
discovered he ran around with a crowd of South Americans, somg of them natives like himself and /others, born here, of S8outh Amer |lcan parents. From the companions who gration records G-men assembled Vallecila's history. He Was born in Colombia, South
Vallecilla wasn't keen about any|thing as a serious career and he |spent three years knocking about Europe, draining the parental bank account. . He picked up an assortment of languages, enough to land a job in 1938 as translator with the International Labor Organization, affiliated with the League of Nations in Geneva, Switzerland. . He also picked up a taste for partying. He spent money with reckless abandon and a conviction that the world owed him a living. He lost his job in 1939 because of firresponsibylity, went on to Italy and ugal and finally arrived in New York in September, 1940. In New York he got a position in a school and
sorship watch, No decisive clues]
cilla to get a line on him. They,
could be trusted and from immi>|short time a person leaves unnum-
branched out as a private
There was no Aunt Maria or {Uncle Pablo in the famly histcry ‘miliar with the German habit of] sending condolences to tell a spy that his “go-between’” had been] put out of business. In this case “Aunt Maria” had obviously been| replaced by “Uncle Pablo.” | One other report went into the; {record. An acquaintance of Vatles! !cilla—a man working with the G-| |men—noticed a “Lisbon” letter that Vallecilla was - carrying: laround. It was addressed to Gon-|
zalves de Azevedo. {
All of the findings on Vallecilia' were co-ordinated in the FBI
headquarters in- Washington. In out—as the G-men hoped—in Val- he
the process the name Azevedo stood out. Vallecilla had received mongy from Azevedo and he had a letter to Azevedo in his possession. G-men cross-checked the name through the files and found the unsolved case of Gabriel Reyes. Reyes could be Vallecilla! "Only—prove it.
Handwriting’ Traced
Now the G-men went to work [collecting specimen’s of the play-! {boy's handwriting. Even in a {erable samples<in rental leases, | lin grocery and clothing accounts, {in notes to laundry and milkmen,
laboratory that Vallecilla had! written the Reyes letter, there was still another problem, Was| Vallecilla still operating, and if] so—with whom? , | One of his girl friends was a| model, a beautiful brunet of South | American extraction. G-men re-| called a report they had in con-| nection with her. Vallecilla hadi asked her to assist him in “‘working for the cause’ by delivering some letters to a German agent in a midwestern city. i He had boasted of his activities! and he had even done some invisible writing for her to show off his talents. ; - The model thought Vallecilla was as usual and she mentioned the incidents lightly—
Amt
.
¥
{bed
“Since his arfival he had worked,
FBI. Vallecilla at this stage of the
Néw York agents who “put him to
24-hour sul quished him gir -00-workers in Washington.in 1942:Vallecilla had a new job—as translator for the Office of Inter-American Af-
The beautiful model had;joined| the WAC and was statjoned at
Hoping she would be useful in
they figured he would be in the proper state of anxiety to get in touch with them. But Vallecilla made no attempt and, on the third day, they ar. rested har eich The play . to “beat the the rap” by malfitaining he was merely defrauding Hitler and his gang by obtaining money for ine formation of no value. His jury thought differently. He was convicted and sentenced to 10 years. His term was reduced in
1945 to four years’ and five months.
helping to wind up the case, the FBI arranged to have her trans-| ferred to Washington. Then they, set up an accidental meeting in a restaurant frequented by Valle-| cilla. -
Walks Into Trap
Vallecilla walked right into the!
“Who cares? I always know but Hitler's recruits were known that was a giveaway to hook up|trap when the model, seated with |where I can lay my hands on|to be caréléss how and ther about Vallecillal-as uw spy. On Oct. 15, a G-man “date” gave him the a second time, three of the 14 walked out. This|some money,” he boasted. “Be- addresses. So G-men tackled their/1941, he received a radiogram “my goodness, it's so nice to
“re vou and it's been so long” rou=
and left the model to pump the, spy. There were other G-men it
In Vallecilla. And’ G-men were fa- ting at the next table when Valle-|
cilla told the model he had been | a spy but had quit some time ago. He had a narrow escape from| the FBI-—he ‘said—and that set-| tled it. Then he became his usual
boasting self, remarking that the FBI would ngyer catch him.
The ‘escape Vailectlla mentioned: sirode into ~ the
was -a mistaken notion he got when he was given a routine check by. another . government agency in connection with other) matters. He thought the investi-| gators were G-men.
The restaurant meeting worked!
| |
lecilla asking the model for dates. |
The model kept them, pumping|
Vallecilla for information on pos-| sible contacts. When it appeared that he didn’t] have any or wasn't talking, G-| men called him into the FBI of-| fice.
The spy. who claimed to have
|been scared off by a fancied meet-|
ing with G-men, didn’t appear to! be afraid when he was faced by| them. In fact, he seemed to have] no inkling that he was suspected|
|
—until_the G-men began to quiz| him, . Loc
He met their questions with de-!
onfesses All
which could be explained away — he confessed.
A German friend in Geneva had felt him out,” he told the agents. Through this friend he met other Germans in Italy who sent him to a spy in Lisbon. This spy dur nished him with capsules of powder for writing Invisible messages, gave him the Azevedo address and sent him to the United States with $1000 as.a starter,
alone—-entirely alone, he assured the G-men.
Vallesilia was questioned for wo days and allowed to home each night. ; » :
Next: The Case of the Singing Canaries. Copyright, 1950, by e Indianapolis Times
and Chicago ily News, Inc ———————————————————————
Loses $60 in Third Holdup in5 Weeks
“Gimme your money.”
With this command, a bearded robber snatched $60 from Everett Shircliff, 50, night attendant, at 7 a, m. today in Kocolene service station, 3215 Mad ison Ave, shoved him back over a -chafr; and ran to a nearby automobile, Mr. Shircff, who lives: at 705 S. Whitcomb Ave, said the man filling station with his right hand in his pocket. He looked like he was holding a gun. Tr
The bandit grabbed the money Mr. Shircliff produced from his pockets, then demanded he open a locked desk. Mr. Shirclifr said didn’t have the key. } The hold-up man shoved him ver a chair, told him to stay there, turned and fled. “Mr. Shircliff believes the robber was the same one who held him up about a month ago. He has been robbed three times in the last five weeks,
Old Time Printers
Elect New Officers
The Old Time Printers’ 2.ssocle ation elected officers yes‘arday. Members of the associa which was organized in 1922, have held membership in the olis local of the International Typographical Union for 20 years -
America, and his family had once and for Vallecilla there were also|nials and tall stories. But when|OF more. ; been wealthy. They had sent him immigration. papers, application he was confronted with the, let-| to Rome and Paris to study. But blanks for school and other jobs.|ter, his matching handwriting and kins Sr., president; William J, When proof emerged from the evidence of monies — none of|Spires, vice president; Edgar A.
New officers are Edgar A. Per
Perkins Jr. secretary-treasurer; Albert Small, Henry Pohlkotte and Rome Smith, directors.
WBA Unit -to Hold Business Meeting
Fidelity Review No. 140, Women's Benefit Association, will hold a business meeting at 2:15 p. m. tomorrow in the Antlers Hotel Newly elected officers of association are Mrs. Ethel singer, president; Mrs. ;
G-men let him mull over his|
predicament while they kept an eye on him. If he wasn
TM AAT A HA)
