Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1950 — Page 19

SEA

Inside Indianapolis

rr

WHAT 8 ‘antihistamine doing to the old and established way of knocking a cold for a loop? Before we jump into the subject with both feet, for the benefit of those who might have some question about prehistamine cold concoctions, the old way involved things like rock and rye, rock candy, glycerin and bourbon, lemon juice, honey, hot wine, feather beds and maybe a couple of aspirins. One of my favorite uncles treated himself for a cold the year around. It's been years since I've seen him but my last report had him still taking treatments, With the advent of Anahist, Irhiston, Clay-Histin, Kriptin, Neohtramine and the rest, he may have shaken the cold loose. I certainly hope 80, Several men operating establishments featuring bottled goods assured me antihistamine products have not cut into their sales. Furthermore, they have no fears that the more complicated method of treating a cold will'ever disappear.

Grandfather's Method

“THERE ARE pill swallowers and then there are swallowers,” one retailer said. “Nothing will ever replace the mellowing qualities of grandfather's way of treating a cold.” We got to talking about favorite recipes for clearing up the sniffles. He had tried many things, including antihistamine products, but he finds hot wine, lemon juice (to taste) and two aspirins as effective as anything. “Rest and warmth is what a person needs to rid is system of a cold. My medicine gives a man th” Another gentleman reminded me that the new cold pills are most effective when a ¢old is shaping up. “What you going t to do ‘When it settles in your chest?” I knew he didn’t want me to answer the question. because he raised a long finger and took a

Te Srp a mp

By Ed Sorat

Antihistamine products are selling like hotcakes but the old treatments are still with us.

Aaachooo . .

cerin and a good jolt of this with equal amounts iS the way in which the organiza- a wood stove and of hot water and you've got nature on your side tion's facilities operate to solve kitchen, a table,

if you take it easy for a day or so. An old guy used to come in, . .

hin nga fll Ati

. R—

NOE,

RR

well aw colored light,

“signals

ftask off a shelf. I've seen the medicine before. "Now, say you have a terriffic congestion right

here.” he said, thumping his chest. “You take half

-of this Tr

“Half?” . . half of this with an equal amount of boiling water. Drink ’er down. Wrap yourself in a warm blanket, soak your feet in water as hot as you can stand for a half hour. When you feel warm _inside and out, pop into bed for 12 hours, You'll live to be 100.” “Don’t you think 100 is a slight ex: aggeration?” “Isn't that long enough for you? Well, another man catering to the ills of humanity said the quick knockout pills for colds are part of the system that brings on the common cold. Hurry, hurry, don't get enough rest and work yourself up to the point where a cold germ can

_walk in and set up housekeeping. Then hurry to a. “drug “store and buy a bottle of pills.

Swallow quick]y and keep right on going. Not good. Gotta rest. Nature does things slowly and she knows best.

“Two ounces of rock candy, one ounce of gly-

Druggists Aren't Worried WHAT ABOUT drug stores where pills and liquids are handled? Druggists aren't worried. “They admit thé new antihistamine cold tablets have knocked the props out from under the old cold tablets, Almost everyone buys the newest sensation. But, sales of grandfather's remedies haven't been curtailed. :

“I've been .asked many times for both”. a

druggist said. “Sort of a companion article oo do?

new pills.” How so, pray tell? Simply because ingenious man has figured out he can get antihistamine action from the pills and tried and true benefits from proof-positive liquids. “Remember,” ‘can’t beat plenty of rest and relaxation. The body! needs to built up when it's exhausted.” True words; friend. Progress is wonderful and every advance is welcomed, to be sure, but the knowledge that we still haven't .forsaken the old for the new entirely sends a glow through my system. Wonder if my uncle will live to be 100.

Just Plain” Scared

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Feb. 17—The people are scared, now, scared spitless. That includes coarse fellows like me, as well as the high-frequency scientists like Prof, Einstein, the pappy of the A-bomb and the granddaddy of this new playboy, the hydrogen bomb

This fright really isn't so tough to analyze. You can hear it hashed up any old evening in the Corner Bar & Grill, in the living room, in the pool parlor. The fear is founded on a stark realization that the whole thing's got out of hand—that You can’t bet very soundly any more on your own individual luck to duck the hard ball into the bleachers.

His Security Is Slipping MOST OF US have sat in those bleachers, on occasion, and have seen people sniitten on the head with a batted ball. In all my life no such ball ever dropped near me. I never caught one or ducked one. I carried this idea to London, during the biltz, and to other places whére hard balls dropped from the skies. I found it comforting all the way. Bombs splattered on the heads of people I knew, but it never occurred to me that I would field one with my scalp: Felt the same way about

the potential employment of the atom bomb. If it hit New York, I would be in New Jersey. Or some other far place. Aflock of other people felt the same way. One

of the best arguments in real-estate hawking around the Jersey-Connecticut-Pennsylvania area

" was placed on the pitch that the property. was

“out of the New York City atom area,” a mythical subdivision embracing about 30 miles. They never said what would happen if the vaguely expected bomb dropped short or carried high, but they sold real estate, all the same, on a fright quotient. With the imminence of manufacture of the hydrogen bomb, this head-in-hole security has been whisked away. It is very much, now, as if one explosive ball were to be batted into the bleachers for every occupant of every seat, including the standees, and all balls were tg be batted simultaneously and constantly, The physicists who have created

this panic

now peep,over their bifocals like a bunch of scared

kids, affrighted at a fire they have lit and cannot quench. They whine about its danger to the ¢ommunity,

poison the atmosphere and murder the entire world. Iam a bum chemist, but I know from high school that if water -is composed .of H20, then there is twice as much hydrogen as oxygen around, and there is a passel of oxygen around. This fearful fellow, Fuchs, the German psychopath, confesses calmly that he and his split personality have been trading off atom secrets to the Russians with the aplomb of a child swapping comic books behind the garage. The government has just issued a handy little report on the building of a semi-atom-proof love bower for every man. A neutron-proof breakfast nook. Oh, boy!!

We have become hardened -to the daily gabbie

and garble of the warriors and the politicians, | each serving his own fuzzy end.

tions rise and wring their hands, to a Wagnerian chorus of “what have we done?” I begin to Switen When the government starts telling Jou ho atom-proof your bedroom, and old fuzzy- ar crawls out of his sweater long enough to talk about Killing off the world, then us nonscientific bystanders begin to buck and shy, like a spooked horse before a tumbleweed. The sorcerers of wholesale death have admitted publiciy. that their monster has stricken off. his shackles, and is loose in the fields. The common fear today is not so much- that somebody will throw one of these super firecrackers at us as that some domestic schizophrenic will mislay his glasses and blow us all to Tophet in the interests of pure science,

A 20th Century Frankenstein THE SCIENTISTS have reached the point of not trusting their own wisdom or even the mathematical symbols of their craft, if Dr. Einstéin’s

“In the Soup’

© WASHINGTON, Feb. 17-—The man with 1950's toughest problem so far seems to be James B.

Bender, the Somerset, Pa. shoe manufacturer,

ea HORE BOVE En t THEIRS CHAT He FIFE HIE HW " salary—and which says also that if he does he's

going to be in serious trouble. This sorry tale comes from Mr. Bender, himself. His facts I have checked with appropriate governmental sources, which agree, red-eared, that he is in trouble. ~Pemding passage of “stilt another law by "Con= gress to get him out of the soup, they agree (off | the record, of course) that his best bet simply is to drown himself. In the hope that he does not find such a drastic solution necessary and -that maybe somewhere there is a federal lawyer who can find him a way out alive, I'm reporting his predicament here in full: Mr. Bender, his father, brother, four uncles and 57 stockholders organized the Bender Shoe Co. in July, 1948, to manufacture good, solid shoes for small boys. The elder Bender became president and treasurer; his son, James, became secretary

+ and superintendent.

Seek $40,000 Loan

THEY DECIDED that until such time as the

corporation got into the black they, as the only

apiece. But they needed more working capital. So they applied to the Reconstruction Finance Corp. for a $40,000 five-year loan. This was granted. It tied up the company’s funds, the, personal -assets of father and son, and froze their salaries until either the firm shows a profit or pays off the entire loan. This, young Bender reported regretfully, is unlikely in the near future. But eyerybody was happy making shoes, Until day before yesterday, that is,

The Quiz Master

Does white Hight" penetrate fog as well as colored light?, Although white light penetrates fog just as

clear lens fog lamps 10 to one. This probably because amber Nght is the more unusual visual’

dchild > testimony is any good. They never were a prac- DePauw chapter of Alpha Tau Dr. Frank T. Gueker Jr., chair- ton had been an Indianapolis Bratch] Inglitute bate, ated for Oshkosh tical set, at best, when it came to remembering to Omega social fraternity has man of the IU C hemfstry Depart. resident 40 years. She Jase life- Mrs. Albert Marshall Normal College and Pratt Insti wear their rubbers and pay the butcher bill. So named the following officers: ment, has ..an OE ey re lends Mrs, Susan Lottie Marshall, tute, Brooklyn. She retired in I, like a mess of other folk, am scared. I never Richard Collier, Park Ridge, IIL, outstanding new urch and Professional former Indianapolis resident, died 1940 after more than 35 years as licked calculus, and when the folks who did don’t president; Charles Ellinwood, Illi- pq. assist the Business and Professional ; : rOrtvi Inistrs S . 8) ; j . research assist- Women's Club. . today in her home in Fortville. a teacher and administrator. She know what to do with it—well, unease can creep opolis, Ill, vice president; Ernest , «+ pn. p F vo . ar g 30 has made her home since 1940 into the mind of anyone who likes to stay alive. Jones Jr., Evansville, secretary. wv... wv ot doo Surviving are her husband, C. She was 69. p it eo M Werner Bro- * “p John Davies. Jr., Gary, treas. Van V§ elde n, E. Compton; two sons, Joseph J.. A native of Hendricks ( ounty, with a niece. ; I Dt sejrbeioesestessoeesssim om ereeesee ar Dutch scientist Coffin and William H. Coffin; a Mrs. Marshall lived in Indianap- oY = Toor or I B F deri k C. Ot h . and author. has stepson: oi Lewis « Pompton; its 31 years “before moving tore - ORY SUrFIVOR y re ric man Samuel Ben nett To2 of Miles Joinec 1e J all of ne ianapolis; two Sis ers, Fortville three: years ago. She Mrs Andrew Klaisler tv. Mont. ontana's last sur- staff. Mrs. Olive Thornburg Sebring. was a member of the North Park . | cree etme se sete eet amie smi cn 0 the GAR, is Dr. Van Vel- Greenville, O., and Mrs. Mabel (‘hristian Church. Services for Mrs. Rose Klalsler At 10 o'clock that fateful morning a brisk hospitalized in New York. He den holds the Pirkey, Chicago, and six. grand- ~ Surviving are her husband, Al- of R. R. 5, Noblesville, who died young, man dropped into the Bender Shoe Co o., collapsed following a bus ride. Ph. D. degree children bert W. Marshall, and two Tuesday In n Pesersbuls.. uae identified himself as. a representative of the Labor. ogo Boars sms AT bB 10 Bo LEOL, TN SESE op oh Rr. ens rgte Te Mae Rv Me Bride arid wih poohoded a B00 A MOR seni “Department and a nk ar the laa Gold" isa Tot of "trouble When the University pr. Gueker Mrs. Elva E Rutrer- E TE —, Combs. all of Fort- day in Harry W. Moore Peace to see whether it adhered to the wages and hours there isn't “enough of it. That's oA oardam. yserviees - fof Mr Elva Eo two grandchildren’ . and Chapel. Entombment will be in bill. He noticed that the superintendent earned What Preston Sturges, movie pro- ,.. (.. .warded a Fulbright Rutter, 2149 _E. Garfleld Drive, o_o ndchid, Washington—P-a-r k—Mausoleum, only $60 a week. ducer, decided when jhe shovelled grant from the U. S.-government Who died Wednesday in ‘her home, Burial” will be in Crown Hin $he was 61 ‘ % “You've got to "pay him $75.” he said. uw a nugget while digging a cellar to come here from Holland. will be at 2 p. m. following services which were Born and reared a Irginsaps. “He's me." replied young Bender, sounding a ora theater In Hollywood. ” ” ” tomorrow an tse being - arranged. .in Flannér & lis, “he Se ore ation in . little flustered. Mae West: wan us weg Prete Tronrines—for-an-B-A-Li0 Place CTRACHARAR Worry. pith isla Lge a an A ‘Well, “he's responsible Tor purchasing and ve “r FReoeie] to go Academy . award for the best Methodist ite d was a member of the St. Matthew “Me.” interrupted Mr. Bender. on with the show performancé by a supporting « ‘hurch.. Burial William A. McCor Evangelical Lutheran Chureh. “And that makes him an administrative em- tonight as “Dia- actor in “All thé King's ‘Men Wil be in New Services for William A. McCord, survivors include the husband, ployee,” the man said. mond Lil” al- today received his release from Crown. . She was 2224 N. New Jersey St., who died Andrew J. Klaisler. Noblesville; a Mr. Bender. learned that as a company officer though she ‘was Columbia Pictures. He asked for 80 vesterdav in his home, will be at brother Thomas Johnson. Indi» he was required to pay all administrative em- unable to com- release from. his contract to free A native of 10 a. m. tomorrow in Royster & anapolis, and two sisters, Mra, ployees. namely himself, a minimum of $75 a week. plete her per- lance. He. has agreed to pay Cynthiana, she Askin Funeral Home. Burial will Agnees Matthews. Indianapolis, Ah, well, if he had to, he had to. formance - last Columbia 25 per cent ofg his ved ne Indian- be in Crown Hill. He was 90 and Mrs Carrie’ Goldsboro, Denight in Roches- ross earnings during the five apolis 37 years. Mr. McCord was a retired em- (r4it Mich. Maps List of Questions tes N.Y. are still remaining on his con- She was a mem- ployee of the old Van Camp Pack- ol “OH, NO, you don't,” said the Reconstruction Miss West be- tract. ber of the Barth Mrs. Rutter ing Co. He had been ill several Fred D. Roper Finance Corp., “You raise your own salary and came ill during k nwqmma—sco. Place Church. ST years. Born in Parke County, he Services for Fred D. Roper. you violate the loan agreement; under the law we her touring stage AD She is survived by a daughter, jived in Indianapolis 50 years. He o¢;- fende St. who feds - will be forced to foreclose.’ show. 8 Nines Mist West Thurston to > Speak : Mrs. Eunice P. Koch; five sons, was a member df the Christian I el) an ne a) en H-m-m-m-m, Mr._Bender said to himself, He was brought on by exhaustion, Af Chicago Meeting William D., S8amuel. H., Oral M:, Church and the Modern Woodmen route to General Hospital, will be drew up a list” of questions which he wanted her physician ‘said. State Police Supt. Arthur M. James R. and Arthur E. Rutter, of America. at 10 a. m. tomorrow in Jacob answered: # = =» oo ’ on mn. all of Indiana olis; a sister, Mrs.. Survivors Include two 8S0NS. Brothers’ West -Side Chapel. Bur“ONE: Are the consequences of defying the! Singer Kay St. Germaine and THULIN YAUO Quisribe Je 1a. A S: Sharp. Evansville, 14 Fred MeCord of Marion. and ja) will be in .Crown Hill. He salaried officers, would pay themselves $60 a week RFC more serious than disregarding orders from Actor Jack Carson have signed a ana 2 ty area eee in| grandchildren and five great- Ralph McCord of New Mexico. was 69 the Labor Department? property settlement paving the tional security a grandchildren. and two grandchildren. Mr. Roper was a building con“TWO: How do I go about suing myself for way for a divorce action. ( ieags oii of - Wi. plete M D Clark ? io tractor 35 years. Ile specialized back wages? : bl 2 = a } ’ oir > rs. onnie ar i ’ inn” remodeling .and building fam“THREE: What is the proper method of run-| William Kapell, pianist, nro: €reate) diana Swi Diente Services for Mrs. Donnie Clark. Mrs. Cunningham ily dwellings.» He had been {ll a ning a factory ‘without making purchases? jSive 2 eal hy benefit three Douncy , ‘set up °T a § 964 Cornell Ave. Who died Tues. Burial Tomorrow year. . . . . 4 Co " POUR} Ave the Marines giving ob) bile}s:10 funds at Ball | He was to speak at a Chicago day, were to be at 1.p. m. today = gervices for Mrs, ‘Anna Dodd plore in Hamilion UY reserve officers for immediate active duty in Pago . in. King & King Funeral Home. ¢ inh 6415 Ferguson St I ye Pago?” State College, |program sponsored. by the Ameri |. ne ug Una Some. ‘unn ng al, foe 5H 4 8 io Fer Four nephews, four grandnieces * There you are, lawgivers. You answer shoe- Muncie, Wednes- can .- Legion National Defense pagan ry who died; We pes i a. m. to--And.two grandnephews survive, maker Bender. And kipdly don’t tell him to go day night. Mr. Commission and, to take part ini She was home, will. be at 10:30 a. m. to- . ? Kapell has ap- a “panel discussion on national Mrs. Clark was born.in Casky, morrow in Moore & Kirk Colo joy . peared with security , problems. Ky., and - me in Indianapolis Ria) Chaps! Burial ou be hi Capehart to ‘Debate EH —— es ~~" the Indiahapolis Supt. Thurston - was ~ accom- six years. She was a member of Ebenezer Cemetery. She was | a rr Ard by Det. Sgt. Frank Jessup the Seventeenth Street Baptist A lifelong Indianapolis resident Budget Director Aas. will 239- Test Your ski ?2?2? in Butler Bowl of Pendleton, who is southern Church. = she was a member of the Broad Sen. “Homer F..( ape hare Ww : summer series. vice commander of the state de- Survivors include two - sons, Ripple chapter, Order of Eastern meet President Truman 8 direc Se The Olga fpartment=of ‘the Legion.’ Leslie Clark, Midland, Pa. -and Star, and the Broad Ripple Meth tor of the budget Frank Pace Jr, What is the northernmost settiement of the Samaroff Foun- obtrmeien a Arthur Clark, Hopkinsville, Ky. ora, include ‘two = sons 8 ig ow oe mae ~ United States? dation and Sige 0 : and. two daughters, Mrs. Ella .*& ivors 2 hae. + SOUS. of the Budget” on the - The villagé of Barrow on Alaska's Point Bar- ma Alpha Jota : My, Rapell Truck Accident Fatal Daniels, 8{. Charles, 111, and Mrs. Morris E. and ( laude - M. Dodd, work's American Forum ‘of the row is the northernmost settlement of the United music honorary are. sponsoring WASHINGTON, Ind. Feb. 17) Helen Wills, Indianapolis. Indianapolis; a stepdaughter, ) a Air Sunday. States. the Tecital. Mr. Kapefl and other (UP)—Harold H." Johnson, 36, Beatrice. Mclean, -Andianajoliss The debate will take” olate In : * 3 2 ‘former students of Mr. Samaroff Bicknell, -a State Highway De-' CLUB DANCE TONIGHT two stepsons, Dewey and Clifford before a sty-

Sen

> 4

Who "eomposed the song, “My Wild Irish ?

motorists favor amber over

Which of the .cities named In his hondr did

Abrahdm Lincoln help to lay out? Lincoln, III, founded in 1832. It is the only one of 24 similarly named cities of the United |

before he became famous... *

1 BY —

the apothecary cautioned, ‘you |anapolis.

and Dr. Einstein creeps out of his ivory] tower long enough to-mutter that the H-bomb may

But when the! high-domed folk who built these lethal contrap-|

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1950

No Bad Boys, Only Negl Ones, Is Credo of ‘Y’ In

+ Executives Cite Many Cases Of Youths Put on Right Road

“THERE are no bad boys, neglected or misdirected.” Executives of the Indianapolis YMCA; which next:Monday will open a drive for 1800 members, can relate an endless number of stories proving the right kind of help at the right time can put a “bad” boy “back on the road to good citizenship There's the boy who ran away from home under a father's taunt the swimming instructor could that "he couldn't make his own get him in shallow water, and anliving, the lad who became ill at other month before he would venthe thought of swimming, because ture waist-deep into the pool. But of a deadly fear of water, the in 12 weeks Johnny was swimyoung man who sought a room ming. His unnatural fear of water because he was separating from was gone. his wife. Xam Everybody Knows of the YMCA TOM recently was elected presisports, recreational. and religious dent of a Gra-Y club in his school. activities. Less widely publicized. Tom's home is primitive. There's : table in the stove and three problems of unpainted chairs in the livingdining room: The beds are pallets een ——on-the floor ina third room. When TIM, 16 vears old, came to In- there's a visitor, the four children dianapolis from a small Indiana sit on the uncarpeted floor.

only good ones who have been

the vital, personal boys and young men.

town some months ago. His! But Tom has talent. Selected father, after receiving for the by the YMCA to demonstrate bethird time an alarming school fore a group of leaders how a

report card, had said: Gra-Y club chould be conducted, “You don't amount to a tinker’s he gave a near-perfect performdam, and you never will. unless ance.-On a -gift-membership- Tom you start studying. What can you goes to the “Y” where he swims, I'll bet you couldn't live 30 plays in the gymnasium, sees days on your. own if I didn’t sup- movies, earns the skills that will - port you.’ help fit him to be a Christian So ‘Tim tiptoed out of the house citizen. [that night, to sleep in a hay stack. 2 # x Next day he hitchhiked to Indi- THE YMCA even helps voung men in marriage probiems: He had only a dollar ‘when he = A young man sought a room arrived here, and before he found at the “Y,” listing his wife on the a job he was reduced to eating application blank as his nearest on 5 cents a day. A month later relative. His was an Indianapolis he went to the YMCA. The secre- address.

tary who interviewed him gained, “Why do you “want to. live [his confidence, learned his story. here?” he was asked. “What is “I ran away from' home to your wife going to do.” : {prove to my old man I could make, “Well , , .” he said. “My wife

my own living,” he said. But he and I are going ta separate.” was still a runaway boy. Throligh His story of disagreements, misthe efforts of the YMCA he is now understandings and in-law trouback home and in school. He's hle was soon told. The sec retary making better grades, and he and asked him to come back later, his father have learned better to and in the meantime talked to know and respect one another. the youth's wife. The result wes A that the misunderstandings were JOHNNY, when 7 Years old, fell resolved: The ‘young man didn’t : : baat out of a boat and almost drowned. heed a room at the “Y.” He and . 9 £ Sor 1 oR Thereafter he had a deadly fear his wife are still living pappily ' of water, became sick if the sub- together.’ ject” was mentioned. On advice FE » of .physicians, he was taken to, BUT IT takes money the YMCA for swimming lessons. members

: The YMCA .

- takes, Open house tomorrow at the demonstrat -to keep a broad agericy| Central YMCA, 310 N. Illinois St. craft work.

Little Johnny got sick with fear like the YMCA operating. So, in! will precede the campaign. Boys Judo, in the office, and developed a rash the drive from Feb. 20 to Mar. 6, work, from 8:30 a. m. to 3:30 golf, wrest and insomnia before his lessons the Indianapolis YMCA seeks 1800 p. m. y.- will include started. It was four weeks before members. | riflery, swimming,

~ Mrs. Compton

About People—

Pledges Not to Play Mibs With Glass re

English Boy Makes Promise After’Losing

Two of Them in Game of Marbles

An 1l-year-old London, England, boy named Bill today promised C he wouldn’t play marbles with his new glass eye. Marble-shooting lost him his old glass eye and a spare given him bythe government, he told the Society for the Prevention" of Cruelty o Chidren investigating his case.

Servic

| Charles Mayer & Co. Employee Dies

Services for Mrs. Nona Coffin 8:15 ompton, assistant buyer in the at 8:15 a. China department of Charles-Mortuary. Mayer & Co., will be held at 2 [joven € en p.m. fomorrow in the Hisey. & Mr. Jenn Titus Mortuary. 14 years at

day in the

weight

Edward Jennings

| A requiem mass for oy i es OMmorrow [Allen Jennings, who died Yeoters | : : in his 21( Foy will be sung 2 9a m Mon-|

t Church, Beech Grove. He was 52. at 64 Additional services will be held

Imes

PAGE 19

ected Good Here |

. "There are no bad boys."

ions, movies, and shop will be held from 9 to 12 p. m. Judge Lloyd D. Claycombe and lifting, fencing, John R. Jones will be co-chair-ling and tumbling ex- men of the membership drive,

tumbling, hibitions will be given by young Francis Hughes heads the coms gymnasium men from 4 to 4:30 p. m.

A dance mittee.

er Wisconsin Burial

For Miss Hayden

Was Art Official In Local Schools

Services and burial of Miss Estelle Hayden, former assistant supervisor of art in Indianapolis city--schools, whe -died yesterday

home, 3 8. Emers

Holy Name Catholic!

m. Monday in Voigt Burial will be in St. 1etery. ings was a machinist Bemis Bag Co. A na-

tive of Hamilton, O., he lived in !n Oberlin, O., will be held tomore-

The Rev, Herbert Huffman, h. Wis. She was 73. C. E. Eash, Principal of Warren Central High Sel hool, 1001 N. pastor. of the First Friends member of year Be be poked Ontos Os hike sh, she was Post Road, will attend the Na-] ———————— ——— Church, will officiate. Burial will [= J.A eo > ar from tional Association of Secondary at Purdue Wednesday night. The be in Crown Hill. Co Survivors include his wite. Mrs. Agsie an rg apervis Te, Som {Schools’ conference to be held to- speaker, leader of the Ronne Ant- Mrs. C ompton died yesterday in Mary C. Jennings: three daugh- nore to Dox Moines. Towa oo !morrow through Tuesday in Kan- arctic Research in St. Vincent's Hospital shortly

Expedition 1947-48, will be assisted by his after suffering a stroke in her wife, Edith, first American wom- home, 40 W. 56th St. She was

an to venture into the Antarctic. ” u ” “ ” o x

sas City, Mo. He is vice president of the Indiana division of the association.

Jennings, Reese; a

Born in Winchester, Mrs. Comp-

partment employee, died in a hos- ‘A ‘dance sponsored by pital yesterday after the truck Marion County Young Democrat sisters, Mrs he: was driving overturned on a Club will be held tonight in the anapolff, a Comm. Firin Ronne (USNR, in- downgrade in I. S. 50 four miles Indiana Roof. Gov.

foupded the scholarship fund as 1a memorial io their late teacher.

been invited to attends dren.

{ ~ - : 4 >

plover, ¥ will given an openylecturs| tured skull, : :

the Cunningham,

Schricker, San Bernardino, Cal; 16. grandChauncey Olcott wrote both - the. words and. States which was named for Abraham Lincoln active), | outstanding polar —ex-' west of here. He suffered a en city and couny officials have children and nine great- -grandchil-

music of this fophlar love song.

ters, Miss Helen and Miss Blanche pecome director of art education

Mrs. Mrs.

and

Thomas |p their public schools. She also sister,

Gilbert was associated with the publie

Leeds, all of Indianapolis, and a art classes at John Herron Art

Washington, D. C. ‘dio “audience of several hundred people, who will be asked to submit questions to the debaters. The program will not be broad[cast on the local NBC station,

5"

Indianapolis; twi s. Carrie Moore, Indind Mrs. Maggie Lewis,

"