Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 February 1950 — Page 11

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ver You Are Nearest You

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_ Stella still have the mud turtle I gave her tied with "a red ribbon. She said she would keep it _

Inside Indianapolis

VALENTINE DAY, 1950, isn’t going to inspire me muh. Ain't, got a girl this year. That is, at

First February in about 25 years that there's no one making me spend dough on cards or candy or other foolishness. .Absolutely no one. Sent a remembrance home to my mother, but that's different, Scares me. Is 1t_possible_that the parade is past? Am I obsolete like the TNT bomb? Can a man at 31 actually be through?

Quarter-century ago I bought a penny’s worth -

of cinnamon “hearts for Loretta. Threw them at her and made her cry, Of course, with the years, 1 acquired more polish and finesse. You can't expect a first-grader to be smooth, you know.

Has Known Wonderful Ones

LOOKING BACK (and where else car an old bachelor look?), I've known some pretty wonderful girls. It would be nice to know where they are and what they're doing. Would they remember? Does

forever, § Today, however, most of my thoughts concern the future. Surely there's a girl somewhere who would be my Valentine. “When I see her, I'll know whether she’s across “a crowded room” or buying a Cadillac convertible. This gal is going to make sparks fly when I come within 10 feet of her, Just like Barbara used to do. Maybe you remember what a sad character I was last spring when Barbara gave me the It was awful. You might be wondering about this spark angle. Well, it was one of those relationships that make everything exciting. A chocolate sundae with Barbara was food for the gods. A beer, no matter what the brand. was nectar, A walk around the block or through the campus with her was always good for making you lose a night's sleep. Sparks, yes, sir, sparks is what my Valentine is going to have, : Along with the sparks, this ideal of mine will be able to cook. Like Joan, a girl in Chicago I used- to know. She loved to cook. Cooked almost as good as her mother and her mother was tops. That deal broke up when I got tired of washing dishes. First few times was fun but it got tiresome. Furthermore, and looking at the subject from a practical point of view, my Valentine will be slightly loaded with dough. That was Rosemary. Gad, what a girl. What a bankroll. What a shrewd old man she had. About the time I was investing in blank checks, Rosemary married a friend, an old friend of the family. His outfit was loaded, too. Why is it that dem’s that got it won’t part with it? Let's see, so far my Valentine gives off sparks, cooks superbly (on the chef's day off) and is in possession of a lettuce patch that would choke a herd of horses. What next? Ah, a figure like Betty's. My first’ year at Indiana University was endangered be-

air. the last I heard of her she still didn’t have a

Where are you? . . . "Mr. Inside Indianapolis has a Valentine an Just a dream, Buster.

cause of Betty's figure. It was almost criminal what she could do to a skirt and an old sweater. Fortunately, Betty flunked out after one year and

degree. Poor thing. Went to Hollywood and is now living in Texas someplace. Husband either owns a few oil wells or runs a gasoline station. Not sure which. (Liar.)

Eileen—She Was Heaven

WITH ALL the above, a man ought to hope for heaven, too. That was Eileen. Her face made you turn’ handsprings. And the closer you came to her the better she looked. Complexion—ummm-—eyes

say »

he 1

ndianapolis

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1950

PAGE 1

Dental Offices Yield Precious Metal From dniay Filings Dropped on Floor

"(Last of a Series)

By VICTOR PETERSON THERE'S GOLD in them thar rooms of the Hume Mansur building.

it systematically. That was in the days when scrap gold commanded a price making it worth while to salvage. Gold mining in the Hume Mansur is but one of many sidelights tucked away in the 11 stories of the commercial

medical center of Indianapolis, ; Just a few years ago the sweep-|

faataral, most of the persons entering are seeking advice of do¢tors. The impact of all this is greatest upon elevator operators and the starter. They see at close _{range the fear and hope written ings from all the rr Eng the faces, engraved in the large drums. When filled, they| eyes were shipped to 2 processing plant! committed suicide by plunging

In Texas which shifted and {from top floors. Elevator men alsearched the waste for any mi. from are on the alert for those

nute particles of gold. who exhibit the slightest sign of After taking their share of the, 4a) tendencies. Suspected per-

Since 1912, three persons have

—ummm-—teeth—uummm-—-smile—ummmm grrrrr—hair—excuse me while I do a couple of| handsprings. Hands? Marilyn. Disposition? Sandy. Good ol’ Sandy. Jeepers. Hospitality, faith, hope and charity? Evelyn. Patience and understanding? Regina, The name never appealed to me much but Regina was a swell kid. At this point my heart is about to burst with memories. Surely there's a girl somewhere to take the place of Barbara, Joan, Rosemary, Betty, Eileen, Marilyn, Sandy, Evelyn and Regina. Is she at the Telephone Company? Lilly's? One of the department stores? Model agency? Dance studio? Butler University? Indiana Central? IU?

Purdue? Ball State? Wabash? Diamond Chain? Kingan’s? “Some enchanted evening ...” Gosh, no Valentine.

Playboy's Passing

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Feb. 14—The cliches of murder, as they are invariably presented in. the courtrooms of the land, could almost qualify as amusing if tragedies were not forever involved. By that I mean the corpus delectable doesn’t laugh, and even the killer is apt to feel uncomfortable for a spell. Occasionally I have yearned to be a lawyer, if only to develop a flock of new defenses for my clients who get caught with the body on the floor and the gun in the fist. 3 Take a hinge at the new one from Minnesota. © “A 23-year-old brunet insisted today that playboy so-and-so, 36-year-old married lawyer, who was shot fatally yesterday as they struggled for possession of the gun, was the father of her expected child.”

Sees Red, Then All Goes Black MISS BLANK, it went on, had not yet been given a pregnancy test, her lawyer said. “We are waiting until her mind clears up, to question her further,” he said. It‘also says that Miss Blank fled from the defunct duck’s office shortly after the shooting, crying in anguished tones. “My - Honey! My Honey!” It says only two shots were fired (while they struggled for the gun) one of which went wild, the other bullseying the dead dude’s heart. All my life in this business I have been sitting

‘in on stories in which the stiff got it as they

struggled wildly for the gun, where everything went black and the attorneys had to wait for the

“mind to clear up, where the first shot went wild

and the second one hit, where the dame did it because she was caught with a woods’ colt, where she. wept over the corpse and said, quote, “My Honey, My Darling, what have I done?” In these cases the bloke on the floor is always described.as a playboy. It is an odd thing how total amnesia smothers

the client as soon as the smoke curls from the. barrel of the Smith & Wesson; it is peculiar how

they always struggle for the gun; it is mandatory that they are always sorry for the deceased and aloha him to heaven with My Darling, My Darling, and it is funny how the lawyers always wait *

‘Explosive Issue’

for the mind to clear, thereby establishing temporary insanity. Heaven endow that temporary insanity with permanence. You never know when you'll need it. As soon as you call a chilled lover a “playboy,” you have already cinched the defense, and if you can locate him on a yacht or tie him to a series of flamboyant affairs the defendant is as good as out and hired by a burlesque wheel. In the annals of crime a playboy inspires no sympathy, possibly because the jury, afflicted with economic problems and nagging wives, is jealous of any gent who can qualify for the title. Somehow, too, in the curious heads of citizens who are forced to sit in judgment on murder trials, the fact that the babe love the boys, and maybe even bad-a baby minimizes the sin of speeding him to the harp-country. This is especially true of juries with women aboard, legal eagles all know it and trade on it. I have watched a few score defendants in the dock, with the dress demurely off the knee and a plungingly neckline for the prosecutor to inspect, and they always give you that .everything-went-black-as-we-struggled-for-the-gun routine. The truth is the people who go around with loaded guns generally intend to employ same for a definite purpose, such as shooting people they don’t like, but it rarely comes out that way in court. Total amnesia is the rule. -

No Struggle for Strychnine POISONERS and club-murders have a harder row to hoe, since it is difficult fo struggle over a vial of strychnine, and a club is such a blunt instrument. You can’t stand up and tell the court that you slipped him a jolt of cyanide because you loved him, nor can you holler “My Honey!” when you just knocked off the top of his head with a poker. There is no doubt that the contested pistol _is the ideal weapon in these. cases, but Sallyaed,) you get tired of the same old, old song. If I am a juror I might very well be inclined to vote *aye” in favor of a dame who said quietly that she didn’t like him, and hit him square with the first volley. It would be a switch, anyhow.

By Frederick C. Othman

McCLEAN, Va., Feb. 14—Now I can relax in

the knowledge that when I go to work tomorrow. -my house still will’ be there when I get home. The

lady dynamiter in my family has changed her ‘plans.

st.

t Main St. encer Ave. \” Avenue ast 4th St. ington. St. -

ve

1 strode briskly to our back pasture with dynamite in her resticule and her fuses in her pocket for one last look at the big rock she was going to blast. You may remember that she has been’ going . to blow the rock up for thé past two weeks, only to have the operation postponed from day to day by rain, sleet, two luncHéons, and a tea party. This kept me biting my fingernails. My bride is a brave woman, but as she con-

~~ templated—that-Tock she aimost- fost her-nerve:

It was a whopper. Maybe her six sticks of dynamite wouldn't budgé it. She called in a dynamite xpert from Vienna, the next town down the Fairax Pike. “Lady,” he said, “that is an awful big rock” “You ‘think I need more dynamite?” she inquired. © ° “A whole lot more,” he said. To get that rock out of the pasture, he added,

. would take a jolt which probably would flatten

7

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“ry

the barn, take the roof from the house and break every window in our end of the county, -

Clamps Jaws Tight “YOU DON’T recommend it?” she asked. “Just let me know the day you do it,” he said. “So I can be out of town.” “Oh,” she replied. And if you ask me, fellow husbands, I think I handled this one about exactly right. Not one word of protest did I utter during the past two harrowing weeks. No advice did I offer. I merely clamped my jaws together when my teeth began to chatter. : Mrs. O., now worrying about how to dispose of a few surplus sticks of dynamite, has decided to

The Quiz Master

Tie

plow around Te rock, which will remain as a monument to. a. good. idea... And all is well once. again at the beaten- -up old house we bought in the country. Except for a few small matters. Ten of my neighbors aren't speaking to me. Our big brown poodle, Emma, produced one night a few months back 10 of the prettiest pups you ever saw. Their father was unknown except, of course, to her. To each of the fortunate friends we presented a pup. These now have turned into ogs. Mostly they are black with brown speckles; their noses are of variegated shades; their front legs don’t seem to match their back ones, and they are the saddest looking animals it has ever heen My MISFortune” to view. "What their owners’ think of me (and Emma) cannot be printed here.

Gets Couple of Ducks .. AN ELEVENTH neighbor who did not get a dog, dropped by the other day to give me two muscovy ducks. They are black with red tips on their wings and when they open their mouths not a word comes out. They are quackless. They also are non-affectionate and I wouldn't be surprised if they were Communist. The buds on the apple trees are out far ahead of time. One good freeze and there'll be no apple-

Jack next year. Come to think of it, there’s'hasn’t

been any this year. I made the cider last fall and nature in her wisdom made it hard. Since then I've been waiting for a cold snap to freeze the water in it so I could drain off the nectar. All winter we haven't even had a heavy frost. : A few more weeks of this and I'm going to find myself with a keg of vinegar. At least it won’t be sprayed across the landscape in a major explosion, And if you need a few sticks of dynamite in your work I think I know a lady who has some to give away.

22? Test Your Skill 27?

How popular is company housing in the coal mining industry? There is a trend away from company-owned housing In the coal industry. Four out of every five bituminous coal miners’ families now. live in houses which they either own or rent from private Jdandlords.

> © What is a gazetteer? © It is a dictionary of geography with statistics. Prior to the 18th Century the word meant journalist. Sh What major Teague record f held by Wes Fered Ferséil it nine Rome rane. 46 games in IL mar eng ced for rut in by pitchers, ts : ; i

For whom is the Gideons International named? This laymen’s group, founded by three traveling: ‘men in Janesville, Wis., is named for the Gideon whose stery is recounted in Judges, who overcame the Midianites with a company of but 300 men. Early in its existence the socle Jet a 18 $001 Tne Plating wt 3 Bible \n every hotel guestroom in the ited States and Canada.

Do deer c—— ‘with domestic livestock for forage on the forest range?.

If the numbers of deer and livestock are

adjusted to the available food supply, there will be no conflict. speaking, deer feed on browse; cattle and grasses and

weeds. Ei Ook eres tect, oF bythy whe, premsat 1a in excessive

. findings, the Hume Mansur man-

{Hill They were ——

sons are watched carefully while

agement received from the pro- in the building.

jecasor $50.t0.5100 a drum. Most of Of all employees Harold Toole, Jo 5 " now superintendent, has had the where filings from gold inlays udy th dropped to the floor in flakes. ~~ |Sreatest opportunity to study the . an og flow of life “through the Hume

Mansur, Following a short peGOLD STILL isn’t passed up as riod as fireman in 1922, he spent worthless, for dentists constant-|25 years in the lobby as elevator ly are calling the office asking operator and starter. a plumber be sent to find some of | “You have to take into considthe precious metal dropped in aeration that many of the people bowl and caught in a water trap. who come here are sick or they There are other problems, some have worries about members of serious, some humorous, which the family who are not well,” he must be faced. Each fall, at the said. opening of the sneak thief season, “But you sure get a lot of petenants are warned to be oniculiar reactions. That's especially guard against light-fingered artists who might try to prowl the corridors and reception rooms. Summer brings awnings and awnings bring fires. Another caution goes out requesting tenants and patrons not to throw burning cigarets, cigars, pipe ashes or matches out windows. The same goes for using window ledges as shelves. This constitutes a real dangér to the pedestrian below, Once a passerby walked up to an elevator starter and handed him an optical instrument which bounced off the pavement when it tumbled from an upper-story window. And Monday morning is a bad day for the office girls. They forget their keys most often on Mondays. After sleuthing, the reason is obvious. On Sundays the girls transfer contents of one pocketbook to another. Then they forget to switch them back in the rush to get to work on time,

# ” BUT PATHOS and humor dwell side by side in the building. It Is

‘I'll Be With You, Poppa’—

Keeps Pledge at Husband's | Casket, Dies Within Week

Mrs. Frainey Stuart Collapses as Family

Leaves House, Succumbs in Grandson’s Arms

By BOB BOURNE “Til be with you in a littie whiie, Poppa.” The little old lady leaned over the casket as she said goodby to her husband of 54 years. Four grown children and a grandchild, they had reared, were watching. That was last Tuesday. Yesterday the little old lady, Mrs. Frainey -Ann— Stuart; -eollapsed--on—the- front porch of her home.

She died a few minutes later, Mayme | Formes: a son, Hibbard They would be together. Formes; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Jonas Stuart, an interior decor noiiie VonStaden; a sister, Mrs. ator in Indian- Rose McLaughlin, and a bréther,

apolis for 50 J Indi - years, died Feb. Art Formes, all of Indianap-|

7. He was 77. . Mrs. Ola Ervin

Mrs. Stuart died yesterday of a Services for Mrs. Ola Ervin, heart attack. 724 Blake St. will be held at 1 She. was 80. p. m. tomorrow in Corinthian Mr. and Mrs: Baptist “Church. ‘Burial will be in’ Stuart were na- Crown. Hill Cemetery. { tives of Bunker Mrs.- Ervin, who was 74, died Sunday inthe home of a Sigs; {Miss Mamie Johnson, 1065

vators. Normally intelligent people often seem to have fear of vertical transportation. We have to watch them like hawks so they don't go haywire and do something foolish.

» - » “AND THEY can ask the craziest questions, People who have come in week after week for years to see the same doctor will ask

name is, “We hear some of the best stories in the world as we take

get the whole story, We get snatches of beginnings, the mid-

ing how they came out,” Mr. Toole said.

stumbles into the building and nervously asks for help. The op-| erators see the individual is]

married there

54 years ago. Traub Ave. A member of oi The family Mr, Stuart Corinthian Church, she was a gathered in Indianapolis last|lifelong resident of<Indianapolis.

week to attend the funeral of Mr, Stuart.’ One son, Clarence Stuart, Cordele, Ga., was to have Jeft yesterday, but stayed over nieces and nephews. pecause of the bad weather. . ~The. family was preparing to Mrs. Hebert. Whaling. leave the Stuart home in 1819 Milburn St. They Rites Tomorrow were going to visit a daughter, Mrs. Mildred Arbuckle, Clermont, Mrs, Stuart walked onto the front porch and collapsed. She * died in the arms! of a grandson, Donald Stuart, whom she had raised. Mrs. Stuart is also survived by another son, Samuel R, Stuart; two daughters, Mrs. Ileen Todd,

Mrs. Ervin is survived by her sister, Miss Johnson; a brother, George ‘Johnson, and several

“oh

relda Whaling, 312 E. North St., who died yesterday in her home, will be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in| Moore & Kirk Colonial Chapel.! Burial will be in Crown Hill. She] was 65. A native of Filks Creek, Ky.,| she lived in Indianapolis 28 years. | {She is survived by: her husband,! Herbert J. Whaling; ‘a step-| daughter, Mrs, Joseph: Miller, and | ‘a stepson, Robert Whaling, all| of Indianapolis, and 13 grandchildren,

Mrs. Frank Atherton

* Services for Mrs. Flora A.

Mrs. Stuart

ce naman: sist held at 11 a.m. Thursday’ in M B polls; . the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. rs. Emma DeLong, Indianap- Burial will be in Crown Hill Céme- |

olis; seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Mrs. Stuart: will ‘be buried beside her husband in Memorial ‘Park Cemetery. Services, will be

tery. Mrs. Atherton, daughter of) Robert, P. and Martha Brown, {pioneer Hancock County family, died yesterday in her home. She

Once it was of ‘such value that the management mined |

true when it comes to riding ele-

what floor he is on or what his -

people up and down, But we never

Private services for Mrs. Ze-!|

.| Atherton, 4230 Glenwood Dr., will 131

at 1:30 p. m. Thursday in Shirley Brothers West Side Chapel.’

was a native of Greenfield and a member of Fourth Church. of Christ, Scientist.

Otto Formes

Services for Otto Formes, Indianapolis hardware dealer for more than 40 years, will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers Irving Hill Chapel. Burial ‘will be in ‘Memorial Park Cerhetery. Mr. Formes, who was 69, died Sunday in General Hospital. He was injured In an elevator accident last Thursday and had been A ill for a’ short time. « |Central High School pupils. The A native of . Ger- auxiliary’s welfare committee will many, he rated a hardware| meet at noon tomorrow in the

‘Surviving are her husband, Frank W. Atherton; a daughter, Mrs. Martha G. Brown; a sister, Mrs. Pearl Drake, and two grandchildren.

Auxiliary to Meet The Ladies auxiliary to Sahara Grotto will meet in the Grotto Home, 4107 E. Washington St.

at 8 p. m. tomorrow for an entertainment program by Warren

Did You Know They Mine Gold In The Hume Mansur Building?

through the building for 28 years,

dle or the end. Then we spend| pushed to the nearest doctor imdays riding up and down wonder-| mediately,

With these tragic happenings come evidences of the lighter side

Emergencies come the way of of Jife. The most humorous and elevator operators, too. Often a the most embarrassing event in|the dainty undergarment. person becomes sick on the street,| the life of Mr. Toole as elevator, woman was on the sidewalk when purse.

starter goes like this; One afternoon he q

Bishop Hughes Rites Tomorrow

Times State Service GREENCASTLE, Feb. 14—Memorial services for Bishop Edwin H. Hughes, Methodist Bishop who died Sunday in a Washington, | D, C., hospital, will be held at 10

‘a. m. tomorrow in Gobin Memo-

rial Church here. Prof. Jerome Hixon, of DePauw University, will deliver the memorial address, with the Rev. Buell

Horn, Newcastle, assisting with!

memorial rités. Bishop Hughes’ son, Dr. Edwin H. Hughes Jr.. will officiate at 3 p. m. graveside services in Forest Hill Cemetery in Greencastle, assisted by Bishop Richard C. Raines. During memorial services the DePauw University Choir will sing, and Delta Tau Delta Fraternity, which Bishop Hughes

once headed as president, will at-|

tend in. a. body. Bishop. Hughes, {was also president of the univer-| sity from 1903 until 1908.

Otto V. Gale

Services for Otto V.:Gale, Cumberland, will be held at 3 p. m. | tomorrow _ in Shirley _Brothers Irving Hill Chapel, Burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery. Mr. Gale, who was 56, died Sunday in Veterans Hospital after a long illness. He was a native of Cumberland, ....

Surviving are. his wife, Mrs.|

Edna Gale; a son, Arthur; his

mother, Mrs. Mary Gale, all of 3

Cumberland; a brother, Hugo, and sister, Mrs. Roy Denny, all of Indianapolis,

'Mrs. Elizabeth Mann

Services for mrs. Elizabeth T. { Mann, 1811 Carrollton Ave., will|

{be held at 3 p. m. Thursday in ~

{Shirley Brothers Central Chapel. | Burial will be in Crown Hill] (Cemetery. Mrs. Mann, who was 80, died] | vesterday in her home after an illness of three years. Active in!

lodge work, she was: past Poca-|dianapolis, will. introduce . the He discusses the

{hontas of Minneola Council No, and .was a me.nber of Unity! {School of Christianity. She was a native of Cincinnati] {and a resident of Indianapolis for, 70 years. Ss. Indianapolis; and Bernard J., ‘Danville, Ind, and a brother, Bernard Otto,’ ‘Indianapolis.

Mrs. Samuel Brown

Services for Mrs. Mary" E. Brown, 260 8. Sherman Dr., will be held at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the J. C, Wilson Chapel of the Chimes, Burial will be in Floral Park Cemetery. Mrs. Brown, who was 80, died

{Sunday in her home. A resident of Indianapolis 40 years, she was

a native of Indiana and a member of Jehovah's Witnesses. Surviving are her husband, Samuel James Brown; two soni, Charles Laub, O'Fallon, Ill, Lyle T. Laub, Van Nuys, Cal: a

derson; a half sister! a half-broth-

store at 522 ¥. Washington St. |home of Mrs. Margaret Brumner, - Surviving are wife, Mre.| 1426. Terrace Ave. ;

gE

as

er; four grandchildren and two '|great-grandchildrer pre rh

returned

She had stepped out of a pair of pink: Jantles, lace trimmed.

He "stood nonplused, clutching| “Why, I believe I did.

Mr, Toole decided to catch her.

About People—

“Authorization for payments

Schenck, Indiana Farm Bureau N.C. He addressed the North Car{olina Farm Bureau's annual convention. “Price supports ‘should not be regarded as a price fixing factor, but as a stop-loss {factor to be resorted to only when absolutely inecessary,” he sald.

He warned of the ‘‘hidden danger in the regimen tation

Mr. Schenek. that would be required of every handler, processor and distributor

Harold Toole, Hume Mansur superintendent, has seen tragedy and humor in the flow of life

something as she rushed from the; “Lady, I believé you dropped bullding. He hurried to pick ‘it up.| these.”

With great composure turned and said: Thank

With a face as pink as the

Hesitatingly he plucked at her|panties, Mr. Toole stole back to uickly as he saw ‘a lady drop/arm and volunteered:

his post in the lobby.

Warns Farmers Against Price Support Danger

Indiana Farm Bureau President Addresses North Carolina Farm Bureau Convention

to farmers under the Brannan

plan constitutes no guarantee that the money will be available as each succeeding Congress must make the appropriation,” Hassill E,

president, sald today a at Raleigh,

writing now and then in regard to these two servicemen impris« oned 16 months?” . » » Nine DePauw students have been pledged to Tusitala, creative writing honorary: John Russell, Brookville; Thomas Weaver, La Porte; Dean Mitchell, Marion; Julia Petry, Hoopeston, Ill.;

Lascher, Park Ridge, { IIL; John Wyandt, Chicago; Miri. am Ely, Webster Groves, Mo., and Gordon Layne, Louisville, Ky, SOC Lady Margaret Cavendish

Charles Brownmon "ot Indianap-| olis, commander-of the 11th Dis-| > trict American Leglon, willl speak to South port Lions Club tomorrow at dinner meeting| in the University] Heights School, 1350 Hanna Ave. His subject will be ism.” Mr: Brownson recently moderated the! state - wide deSen. Homer E.! Rep. Andrew

A Mr. Prownoon

{bates ‘between | Capehart and Jacobs. Attorney Harry Harman, In-|

i peaKer, | A polio vietim, unaware that ‘she has inherited $13,000, was sougnt today by her relatives.! ra. Wanda McGuire Long, 46, no

{Okla., where she asked that her| mail be forwarded in 1944.

Dr. Gordon C. McNeilly, 30, said

of food if the consumer is to be guaranteed. cheap foo."

“American-

{the Duke and Duchess of Porte (land, will- marry Italian Prince | Geatano Parente, the duchess ane I nounced in Lenaon today.

Prof on Walker Cal: of Education, is attending {the national convention of the | American Camping Association’ in St. Louis, Mo.

{ Pr. J. Hartt, Walsh, dean of Butler College lof Education, has an article entitled “Wall of Separation” appearing in the = {Februray issue = |of the National {Education Association Journal.

{theme that our "historic and logical commitment to a separation lof church and state means only {public schools should be supported

Dr. Walsh

Surviving are two sons, Alfred| longer fives on Route 4, Lawton, 8 PUblIC expense:

Ray Baney, 29, Elizabeth, N. J, | was snowbound before an inch. of snow was on the ground. Firemen

today he resigned his post at a) had to rescue him. from the Santa Rosa, Cal, hospital to “do stiow-glazed slate roof where he what I can” for a leper colony on Was installing a sleyision aerial,

sister, Mrs. Margaret Gales, An-

Tinian Island in the Pacific. His| wife, a former Navy nurse, is with! him, he said. » ~ » Mrs. Ruby Smith today asked President Truman to blockade | Chinese Communist ports until © her husband, Navy electrician]

Elmer Bender are released by the Communists. Her attorney; 4| Rolland third cousin of 4} the President, telegraphed: “How | much fe “Harry, are you going to permit our CommunJst,infl sated State Department to do o: othisig more than note-

William Smith, and Marine Sgt.!

she

®

The you,” and she tucked them in her

Thomas Moore, Taylorville, "Tit; ~ | Edward L.

Bentinck, younger daughter of ~

Grant A. Kersten today was

named the “cleanest man at ‘Michigan State College, East |Lansing.” He takes a shower 18 times a week after each of his 18 classes, as required by the physi cal education department in which he is enrolled. Next fall he'll take 30 showers a week,

Marshall “Grabiil, superintens [dent of purification, Indianapolis

Water Co., will discuss the chemi cal nature of city water at meets ing of the Aquarium Hobby Club

ad TO

is

*

Buthep oo