Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1950 — Page 13

TOE

Gi mp :

ndicapped ‘by your eyes are | be you'll en-

efficiency on ler enjoyment | ne to us fora

examination

ie , TT YY

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1

ew

© Doc, let's have it.

make you feel like a

age group. ought to have a physical once a year.

My s ‘opening question roy ocirs, opening question mrorieet me. he was asking me how I

. “Just going to ask Soci dime thing - ~ this conference. day?”

~The man in white nodded his head and smiled Dot re vr uiowsd 4 thefmometer. Came of,

HEART ._..... OK LUNGS...... Ok J KIDNEYS...... ok

In_Fi 0

ae Aa should - a Jou dant. have to have another routine physi- - cal for Wo years if-you don't change your habits,” - “sald the doctor. - 3 He went on to say that women in the same

Bini tos via lo a tutor, wice a year would be desirable. i “Records show female are heavy sites of cancer® .continued the doctor. “But for Pete's sake, don’t generate a panic when you write this. Remember, I told you fear of a disease and a phobia are a medical man’s greatest enemies.” : The lecture was on. He stressed the value of exercise and relaxation, The trouble with exercise, he said, was that many people didn’t indulge in it regularly, They sit in offices all year, ride to and from Wark: io and from the market three blocks away .and then alo Omer 4 vaation and the poe Spin ong ¥ _Hoora +. A clean bill of health goes fo “Mr. “Many a vacation has killed a man,” he added. nai e Indianapolis. It didn't hurt, either - I got the lowdown on how to get the most out “You can. The urinalysis of the physical examination I had taken. He rec-— sugar or albumin. Outside of eXes being ommended to continue exercising three times a -glightly sharper than normal, youre. a healthy week. He liked the idea of big and wholesome Joe breakfasts, light lunches and regular evening He meals. Violent excesses were to be avoided. Plenty noth ol restful sleep was 3 must. If any unusual pain in

said it was little more than normal’ but ing to worry about. Just something to note the medical history.

ribed only it A]

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pértension. That's the only place in your body where a doctor

- out ruffling {ts theory..and.so.yow have the silly

—and-the-shipping lines; too; and: the farmers get “writing pieces. .ghipported and they start to throw these pension no good and won't sell. .I want guaranteed. prices;

~ set and his” WItE's old hat,

and ends that cost him $4.10. My man “said he colorvision was too expensive, or not perfected. -bet-he could-do-it, too.

— Then he bought himself three sheets of cellophane or would be, as soon as perfected. A third outfit,| “~in red, green and blue. “These he cut ple-segment- Color Television, Inc, 6f San Francisco, had an-

- a pulley: To the mo

“““had a technicolor movie in his living room.

phane triangles, and he thinks he’s got it licked. make up its mind soon. I want one of those tele-

tree.” The historic Texas shrine at San Antonio This Army transport was

es

_disorder came up, his : come in and have it checked. My new family doctor wasn't inclined. to face-

“Don’t worry about a condition ‘needlessly. tiousness at that moment. He mentioned again that Come to me and let me woiry about it as soon as Dr. Charles Myers’ idea of bringing out the merits possible. If you allow me to téll you when you of periodical physical examinations was a great ¢ ould worry, nine times cut of 10 you'll mever step in the direction of good health. have to lose sleep. That applies to the majority of Steamed Up

people.” + : “THOUSAN k of people are frightened sill ot I asked about the time he looked into my eye- 4 perculosis and yet om the i i unit ny ot balls with the funny contraption that locked like them an opportunity to make sure they don't have a miniature railroad signal. the disease, they walk past. We can cure it if given “That was an opthalmascope,” he said. “I the chance. Cancer in early stages can be. eradilooked into the retina. Any defects there would tell cated.” He was really steamed up. me if you had congenital diseases or hy: “Thanks for coming in.” can look at a blood vessel in action.” He was thanking me. My thanks The reading off the electrocardiograph showed Dr, Meyers. The superintendent of my heart to bea strong organ. His stethoscope ex- pital got me to inves amination told him that but the electrocardiograph amination. It’ test confirmed it. part of their budget set aside for preventive Blood pressure was normal, lymph glands and medicine. ~thyroid were normal, ear and nasal passages were Sure reels’ good fo feel Food and know it. “How good. The red blood count showed I didn’t have . long has it been since you've had a good physical, anemia. The white blood count was normal. -- friend? Wouldn't you like to have a. clean bill of oan I be proud of my hemoglobin?” ! . health?

1 Want a Subsidy

should go to General Host in a thorough physical exs also his idea that all citizens have

By Robert C. Ruark a Ea Fr week-

_subsidy, and ty, for just madhouse. of eo

k

farmers get and all the other. people get. You been hearing about this Department of Agriculture operation, which involves a dank mystery called parity, and which is translatable into

What's with a farmer, he’s so noble I got ‘to pay hard money to support his crops? I got a vote, too, and to date I have stuck no government with a supply of unsaleable. columns or a soap opera in which I got eggs, you got eggs, magazine pieces. A book I“-wrote don't sell, it all God's chillun got eggs, at roughly a half buck “Just don't sell, Fineesh book. Who. pays me for “apiece for three billion of same." Likewise spuds.” unsold copies ‘of books? Not even the publishers, Under this magnificent economic plot, which goes they should buy a better lobby. .on and on, it is possible for a farmer to be paid I need a bargaining agent, no 10 per cent, who three grand for a.consignment of potatoes and will shove something through Congress which says then buy ‘em back for 20 bucks. Subsidized spuds, - that if Ruark writes a hunk of copy, this copy will yet. sell at such-and-such a price. If it won't peddle at those prices, a little man in Washington will Politicians’ F labby Thinking cipher up the difference and send me that pretty, AS I understand this parity routine, which is pretty check. /Bill goes to the farmers. Let a long and devious process of flabby thinking by pay Tor my spinach for a spell.

Indianapolis

- {contents would have filled a box-five inches By five inches.

of to ng Wo

Jjearth. Scheduled for early dedi- ‘ders of the World and such strue‘jcation is the nearly completed tures bear the King’s sname as

My session ended —with—my doctér- _saying.|

. y F the simp -pouring-iquid subsidy, like the potato growers get and the egg- trom a boot, with the well-known hole 1n the toe:

them| Elected President

In nfaapolly

_ WEDNESDAY, MARCH. 1, 1950

— But This Does Not Mean Cemeter 1s Running Out of Burial Soucy

_ (Last I in na n a Series) . ICTOR PETERSON =

IN MY RIGHT hand lay a small, white silk bag. The

I hefted it and estimated the ‘weight three pounds or less. Inside the bag were what speared to be flaky ashes, particles of chalk ang charcoal.

In that bag la Ja that remand of an average.-sized man after cremat Ion. ibupfai service

bupiai service to persons of all “More and 0, _people

{races and creeds. Erection of the over the natioh are turhi ation _. Said

lof the dead fe ?

Howfrd' pr D manager. of | Crown Hill, ‘Cemetery. -“Indian~ nota new idea: REI apolis, however, hasn't’ yet ac-| Above-earth entomb ent is a cepted it as fully as it has above- traditional method of burial. In ground entombment,: Cremations 350 BC, Mausolus, King of Caria stay. ‘Steady “aboat the” year in Asia Ditnon, “died. His wife, , some Crown Hill ig prepared for the| magnificent tomb ‘in. which to day when the swing will be to place his remains. cremation and further use of In time the. tomb became entombment over burial in the known as one of the Seven: Won-

"a

spacious temple +~with its three = ghgpele,

$1.5 millon Community Mauso- mausoleum. Even today, in other leum located in the more unde-| types, the Pharaohs of Egypt are veloped section of the cemetery sleeping their 50th Century withnorth of 38th St. in the pyramids: A symphony of various éolored There also are the huge Roman imarbles, the huge mausoleum tombs of Augustus and Hadrian, combines the beauty of modern |Christ's simple

architecture with ancient simplic-/ Taj Mahal, this country’s Washity. In it will be space for 3600 |Ington -at Mount Vernon. and entombments and niches for some [Lincoln at Springfield, Ili 4500 inurnments. As time dictates,| Soon the local mausoleum will the building can be expanded with become part of that institution in two wings and closed in the rear/Indianapolis known as Crown like the Federal building in down-| Hill. From the original 40-acres. {town - Indianapolis; it has grown to Its present mam- & “This will more than double the mothness, keeping in step with available space, but in no way|the needs of a Sxpanding city. does the mausoleum itself hold| the only burial spots still waiting AS WAS the aim of the origiin Crown Hill. Contrary to most "2! 30 corporators, the cemetery thinking that the cemetery nearly Stl operates as a. non-profit oris filled, Mr. Wood said the acre-| |Sunisation, all moneys age still is great enough to P/aced in a perpetuity fund and pramise use for the next 100| {iInvested. Eventually the proceeds

yea ~~ are ‘expected to care for- opera: : yisabout- half: ofthe: com tonuof “the cemetery. into fy etery is fited” he “sald:" “There H are more than 200 acres still undeveloped, much of it in timber.”

)rporators is Readed, by Bowman Elder. [A self-perpetuating body, posi[tions on the board traditionally

are handed down from father. to - Some 1500 times eldest son.

Sts, Northwestern Ave. and| In only one instance, however, of ty the site of burials, -

‘Boulevard Pl. except north of 38th. has-a family: remained: absolutely FN Otay MeCarty, Joh Vv: Kitch= Thomas A. Morris. Cran “Daniel” eases “and St. where the east boundary is intact. Since-1863 the name Lie- John H. Vajen Elijah B.! John a, John Love, ‘James Blake. Clarendon Rd. ber never has left the role of fartindale, William S. Hubbard, William Otis Rockwood, Calvinp/ From their vision there Bas —In creating: the mausoleum to corporators. Beginning with Her<|John C. New, Robert Browning, Fletcher,” Thomas- A. Sharpe,grown Crown Hill, the City of provide space for both entomb- man, there has followed in order| Addison IL. Roache, William H. Charles N. Todd, George Tousey, the Dead with a present popula« ment and inurnment, Crown Hill Otto, 1908; Herman Pa 1934 ‘and | {Morrison, Theodore .P. Haughey,| {Ovid Butter, James M, Ray, Al-ition of 117,000. It is a city witha becomes the largest cemetery. inlKurt, 1940. +8 “A Flstener— J Wil mus E> Vinton, Jesse “D. Cif tuture, a future built on the past the ‘nation offering complete! Other original corporat, rs were liam Wallace, John M. Lord and michael, William Sheets, Jacob A.lof man. :

About People—

3 2.88 THE sprawling cemetery, second largest in acreage in the na-| tion, is bounded by 32d and 424

a_year Crown Hill Comets, gravediggers shoulder their shovels and arch

|Democ

politicians, we- once made up our national mind

city folks, so we guaranteed ’em a minimum price votes just as often as a farmer's family... Now

for what they raised, with the good gray gov I have to take on the financial obligation of feed-| underwriting the guarantee. This is“ called sup- Ing farmers, in a style to which they're unaccus-|

port, and is easily as intelligent as the speeches of tomed?

H Wall . . A iy Overproduction of Rejects

‘The whole thing is kind of fine for the farmers, who vote, but has paid off lately in a vast supply KICKING AROUND in the desk is a flock of crops which we call “dogs” in my bucolic trade.

of SOgRgY potatoes and acrid. eggs. . The governThese are columns the editors said “nunh-huh” to,

Let them plow under their own pigs.

ment can’t seem to sell 'em or give ‘em away with-

operation of imported spuds from Canada selling gereen plays, and malnourished novels. I own for jess than the spuds we can't give away. If more overproduction than the potato joes ever this is confusing to you, you ain't lonesome. dreamed of, but nobody pays me a bloody dime for What she comes down to finally is sheer this excess of enterprise?

jealousy. If the airlines can get government dough This cannot be right. I want money for not

plans around and the oil guys get depletion allow- for, ail piéces. Money." Gimme money. Gimme ances and even race horse owners can charge off lots of money. Gimme ‘other people's money. their had judgment at the track, then I want me Subsidy for one, subsidy for all, And that, Washa special’ subsidy. ; ington, means lovely little me,

_ Colorful Crisis By Frederick C. Othman

WASHINGTON Mar, he ‘Federal Com- set of structural steel, and who couldn't make it munications. Commission, which’ still is listening work without his motor, He wanted i Buel: He -10_the experts explain why color television sets still. does... .- “won't be practical -for another decade, will be Color television ;m McLean, otherwite is a interested to know that a neighbor of mine ™m smash hit and that's why I was. a little surMcLean, Va., has built one with his son’ s Meccano prised to drop in onthe FCC's proceedings on the}

subject, which began last September, and which|

Works fine.

my friend, about the citizen in New Jersey who testimony, still were at it. built a color adaptor for his TV set from odds Most of the radio manufacturers claimed that |

or unworkable on regular TV sets. ‘Then there From his missus’ hat (she’d thrown it away was the -Radio .Corporation. of Anderica, which and didn’t care) he took the.round wire frame, said its system of color inside the tube was better,

A farmer's a man. So's a writer. My hound éats TREE that farmer folks didn't make as much money.as - just as much as a farmer's hound. My family|

and seedy magazine. pieces, and underprivileged

T want money for pieces that are|

have just been resumed. The same gents, who had | You may-have read a tew ‘weeks ago, as did uséd up better than 3000 pages of stenographic|

Va

12 Pla OP—Two Bits

While Indiana Democrats feast

Anna ‘Myers Hohored for Service Of 30 Years in Telephone Work

at $25 a plate Saturday night, Mrs, Anna Virgil Stinebaugh, superintendent Dermod, - Indianapolis Power & a of pa niin Ropubean Myers, 2315 Cen- of Indianapolis public schools; Light Co.; Mrs. Ruth Rhode, L. will stage a two-bit counter affair, tral /Ave., cele- {Deane E. Walker, state superin- 8. Ayres & Co.; Miss Mary Eliza-

The Democrat banquet will” be

brated her 30th ’[the annual Jefferson-Jackson Dav

'tendent of public instruction and anniversary in §

beth Hendricks, Eli Lilly & (Co.; Harry T. Ice, indianapolis attor-

Miss Jean Johnson, Blue Cross,

y elephone work ney. land Robert Smith, Indiana Bell inner in the Egyptian Room of the Murat Temple. The party will today and won a 2 ‘Telephone oo; be “strictly —swank, featurin~ jeweled service Richard Llewelyn: author of} ¥

Dr. C. Gilbert Wrenn, professor among other things the music of lof education of the University of Tommy Dorsey and his band. Minnesota, will be resource leader 8 8 for the third and final mid-winter THE GUEST list will be even = “conference ses. ° swankier, headed by Vice Presi{sion of . Butler dent Alben Barkley and his ree University Col- cent bride, Steaks will top the [lege of Educa- menu. ne {tion Mar. 13 and The young Republican 25-cents l14 Df. Wrenn, a-plate dinner at the Antlers author of several | Hotel will have as the main: [books, is a. mem- § [course milk and crackers. The {affair -as-the—“poor man’s deflersanslackson. day baie quet.” x

‘John Randolph

Services Set Services for John W. Randolph;

emblem to com-

: | “How Green Is My Valley;” will ~[memorate y

{speak at 10 a. m. {Friday in Gobin 8 Memorial Church at~DePauw University,

fce--assistant for Indiana Bell Telephone Co., Mrs. » +Myers entered telephone work as an operator in Clinton in 1920] member of * the and came here in 1927. {poard- of elders jof Centenary Walter Moore of Greencastle, Christian Mo., is-only an amateur auc- Church, has been SiS -tioneer -but-he's- convinced he's a| lelected president wide. : good “one. “Mounting an auction’of the Marlon. block yesterday to -raise money County Laymen's. Mr. Combs {for new fire ‘equipment, Mr.|League of the Disciple Chrches. ‘Mgore-pedated “an ancient coffee Other officers Tntitide: grinder, an antique iron pot, a| A. OC. Tharp, Olive Branch platform rocker, a ‘windcharger Christian. Church, ‘vice president; a Mis $135... Farmer, Seventh. Christian:

Mrs. Myers

Dr. Oe K. Befirers Dr. Otto Behrens

- Heads Baptist Men

‘National tional . Association and president of the “leven sold himself a dollar bill, for Church, treasurer, and William Counseling division of the Amer.

Voca-

Guidance Pr. Wrenn

-

~ Worley, Harmon

can Psyshologicat Assoctation. Indianapolis resident for the past y ¥ . $1.50. [H.” Plymate, University Park Ji Christian Church, ¢ ; four months, will be held at 1 Are. Vice: Presidents - ® » Across Janet] an rch, secre Ary. c..4- Bernard Kelgore; ® publisher of|p. m. tomorrow in Jacobs Brothers Dr. Otto K. Behrens, Eli Lilly] “ Blair goes to] Lewis Doug- the Wall Street Journal, will ad-| East Side Chapel. Burial will & Co. biochemist _.has been elec-. Sourt today to las, USB ams oa oo rdress—a—banquet- of n=) In New Crown Cemetery. : ted president of Baptist Men, Inc.| try to get the di- bassador to Eng- flustrial eftors of Indiaga, ls

Mr. Randolph, who was 77, died

He succeeds the late Df. Herbert § ing Mar. 24 at

vorce-- she tried land who is vis-

shaped and fitted on the frame. He installed an’ other system, but it kept breaking down and axle in the center of this and put the apparatus the commissioners couldn't tell for sure. how on the table in front of his télevision screen. good it was. i: What he needed now was something to make his color wheel spin at a steady and regulated CBS Was Smug raté. From his son's building tay set he took the BS. fellows, with their spinning disés electric motor and attached it to the wheel with nicely enclosed in mahogany cabinets, were the e hitched a rheostat from . Sug Slies. ery time they. Surned on hep sets ley got colored’ movies eirs. may no e an electric train so that he could control 18 speed. - ont system (I am no engineer) but it does work. Son Threatens to Spoil It - : The poor old commissioners, faced with a WHEN. THE Columbia Broadcasting System's multimillion-dollar three-way . tug-of-war among’ color test’ program, which looks like hash on the the color battlers, have got to decide some time regular black and white receiver, came on he this summer which method is to be manufactured. pulled the switch and after a little fiddling he Either that, or order the inventors to perfect their machinery and come back later.’ There were only two drawbacks. All the things + Whatever the FCC does decide, it is going to in his pictures that were supposed to look ‘blue be in a mess with the losers. Not being good with came out orange, but he has been working on’ scissors and my bride ewning no hats she’s willing this with a pair of scissors, adjusting those cello- to donate to science, I wish the commission would

His other problem was his son, who was in vision sets where ye" are blue and skin is fleshthe midst of building a toy ditch digger win his colored. : 2

The Quiz Master ??? Tes You skill 27?

{tional vice president, and -Lester

- |yesterday in the home of a son 2 3 Thurston - who held. the post, 3 to keep a secret. iting Hs ranch - Baler The yer. William - Randolph, 1615 Massa- { years. uecson, . usetts Ave. He w iS a nat] Eo “Dr. Behrens, who is a- me ~EEAINSt TE COTA ATI today Te ara, Springfield, “Tenn. and was a of the First Baptist Church,” re-| company -execu- called. .for con. .- PONS member of the Baptist Church

" |by the Indianap(ols - Association jof Industrial |Bditors and the school’s journallism department. Members of

ceived his Ph. D. degree from the | | University | of Illinois, At the out-|7 break of World War II he was | studying in Cambridge, England. Others elected at the Baptist Men’s 12th annual dinner in Lynhurst Baptist- Church last week included Newton Worley, promo-!

tive Lou Busch tinued U. 8-860 ; under her legal nomic ald to name of Martha England.-He said Janet Busch, but/U. 8. aid is “esthe secret “leaked fsential” to re- | Ns nome Cbs Mr. Divglas | : c ~bal- ! 4 Nine Indiana ‘students were ance and avoid war, |the committee in among the 14 pledges initiated) Pe charge _ of conHarm Rote + " /into Lambda Chi Alpha, national| Lt. Col. Jerome. arter, USAF, ference tele: a on, evangelistic vice presi-| rnity, at DePauw Uni-| dent. 8 pr sonal Traternt y hm [professor of air science and! Deaconess omstance Erickso#employee of Citizens Gas & Coke {versity Y. y [tactics at Butler University to-| !missionar: f ' the. Methodist Ré-e Frederick . D, Ratcliffe, Green-| nary -o e st Utility Co., where he was ems lected Boys’ Work Head | red nick .D. "> ar voll Ft. 08 announced promotion of 19!Chirch in Africa, will speak at!ployed 15 years. id Mr. Worley, of. the ‘Garfield 3%ves ; |7:30 p. m. tomorrow in Roberts Survivors include a son, Walter

Wayne; Jack A. Malik, East Chi-| une" Alr ROTG cadets. Park Baptist Church, succeeds '' ;| -Promoted were: [Park Methodist Church, 401 N..Buchanan, Detroit. and -a—sister: Paul Vogt and Mr. Harmon suc- “Greenfield, Delaware i 3 { Mrs.” Pinky Fitzgerald, Franklin,

cago; Floyd M. Wahl, Hebron; “Hugh 4. Loss William G. Phillips, Crown Point; _'u8h J. eaming, ceeds M. Wallace Maile, who is | Vincent M. Myer, Indianapolis, |Tenn., apd two grandchildren. critically ill" in Methodist Hos: New initiates into gr Delta! ; |Pi, national education honor so- Charles F. Kiefer

Steve H. Feagler, Auburn; Rob-| Peru, to pital, J clet Butler Uni ty, i d £1. at Butler University, include: Services for Charles F. (Frank)

there.

d Seaf Buchandn -

{ Services for Seaf Buchanan, 416 Blake St, who died Sunday In General Hospital, were to be held at 2 p. m. today in Patton | Funeral’ Home. Burial will be in [Floral Park. He was 63. Mr. Buchan was a retired

Miss Blair .

Mr, Kelgore

when the uss

heading for England south of Greenland When | "8 Seman Submarine made a direct Wi onthe,

What is the meaning of the word Alamp?. How many men lost thelr Ives “ Alamo is Spanish for “poplar or cottonwood Dorchester was torpedded?

was originally called “Alamo Mission” from the and was about 600 miles grove of cottonwoods in which it stood. . Srausport, Iu tht satasteinbie 330 men gave their

® oo : including the four who sacrificed: Whats s Tandy Sacer) Rfor's track a Ehele ive so tha four okner mem cold be saved laborer. The name may have originated from the A z + 6 @. os gander-ike motions of & man tamping ties. g Jnat i the biggest living tree in the woria? ® The General Sherman Bigtree in the Sequoia Where was the American Legion organiaad? ‘Natiopal Park 1 Calinin. Tt 1s weary Segucla, iY Sganted in Fath, Svcs, in March, in sirstifotence and 73 foot

3

ee)

8 Net; fo volume DveaCola. refrigeration. ma- Dean, associate professor of

si

jort E. Myers,” Muncie; Kendrick 8nd Robert L. Wenge r, M. A. Shircliff, of Crooked = Snodd, Cathy, and Ronald Fe Sager) 5 a She re 0 roo e pir Hi wand, a a., an ames | Creek Baptist Church, was re-| g R. Sprague, Anderson, -to cadet oa: S afely n Shan quy Edward! Kiefer, who died Monday in his elected boys’ work vice president., James Colvin, 4415 Winthrop, captain; Jacek D.. Albertson, tion hi oe on 804), 'me, 1255 Congress ‘Ave. will Dr. Shields Hardin, ent), Ave, and Thurman DeMoss.| joseph M.. Gillaspy, -Albert-.G.|Darbara Elliott, all of. Indlan-l,, 4 330 om: tomorrow in Orange, N. J. chairman of Ane| Prandin, Wirfepraent wie in] Harding, -Richard L. Jarrett, "To > : Flanner & E Fis Stewards ance of ‘the dianapo {Guy H. Large, William D. Moore, : , {Burial will be in Crown e Srevanisiiy (Lleol was dianapolis division of TU in IU's gar LIVES, Wiliam . Moore, Byraters Take Packet |maryg the principal speaker at the din-|a0ntial Law Day moot court May, | Roberts, Carl E. Rogers and Rob- Of License Receipts ner. {10 in Bloomington. - The Bloom-| "y "yuo © Indianapolis, | 1 Tech Sho Buildin «ington campus will be represented’ land. Thom B. Miller, 8 po: A packet of license receipts was P g 'by ‘Wesley Bowers, 1718 Carroll-| a r, Susque- stolenearly today from an auto To Be Re laced 2 “Bai dits T Tk $11 15 hanna, Pa. Patrick C. Rund, license branch at 2640 W. 10th p Sh | nairs jake {ton Ave. and John Bunner, |Evansville. The moot court com-| Jackson, Heights, N. Y., Frank St. by burglars attempting to cash| A portable .Tech High School in, Ga s Station. Holdup petition ipvolved the briefing and M- Shultz, Camby, and H. Dale, /in on heavy, last minute fee a building declared ‘obsolete lice today sought two men groument of an actual case be- Sommers, Terre Haute, to cadet/ ments on the license deadline yes- by the ‘building and grounds com{who took $115 in a hold-up at a: fore the Indians Supreme Court. second Yeutenants, |terday. mittee of the oud) Board: will. : filling station at Ind. 34 and High . » : Police’ said no monéy was left be. replaced wi $40,000 : School Rd. yesterday. : D. J Hartt Walsh, dean of Col-| don’ Kleinhenz, publicity “di-|overnight ‘in ‘the branch safe! structure. Max Downey, 17, “Station at- lege of Education, Butler Univer: rector of the Indianapolis Water which was forced open. “rec-|. Emil V. Sciidad, State tendant, who lives nearby, told sity, will act as moderator at the ‘Co. and association president; ords were later recovered near the Somubittee ast lice the pair took the money, final Educational Town Meeting David K. Banker Jr.; Allison Di- King Ave-and Michigan St. 0 then forced him into a basément next Wednesday at Butler. Panel vision of Genera] Motors, vice th ficers warned branch operators plans ays and blocked the cellar door with participants include Dr. C. Ross president: Newtom Goudy, Indian-|th that Jurther attempts may japolis Chamber. of Rr 30 ‘buiglatize license sta- classes in auto. 'secretary treasurer; Cc. w.. and a oy

5 > od fecteol lon.

eT; 8e