Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1950 — Page 11
veh
be
, "kicked LPO
- re
polis
. wondering what on earih has precipitated all this, It's no secret now. With the outbreak of -hostilities, I'm going to tell all First, Indianapolis is where I live, work, play;
; study, have more friends than anywhere else and .
therefore it’s the best city in the world. Above
all, it is not an overgrown hick town. My heavy artillery (this typewriter) will be shooting to
change a few opinions. - Let's Make the City Even Greater
YOU HAVE an idea now what all the shouting
is about. I'm going to defend the fair name of “Indianapolis out in the open and as of now I'm asking for volunteers. This is a great place and We can make it greater. Lie In‘ this column-writing business, I flirt hither and yon in. h.of SAE RG Ni TFN 3 Kr
d. ro 4 PE CE criticism never hurt “any city, Evaluation and comparison + with - other cities, smaller or larger, often bring out points on both sides of the ledger that can be helpful to a booster who realizes nails are better for loose slats than kicks. Why expend eriergy to go backward? I burn at a conversation with a capable and brilliant young man who complained how dirty Indianapolis was. There was no use of my sweeping the dirt under the carpet and saying there wasn't any. The city as a whole could stand more brooms. The citizens themselves could help a great deal. : yt \ Just about the time the conversation got pretty heated, my friend pulled the last cigaret out of a pack, crumpled the paper and ellophane and flung It into the gutter. A trash can was not more than 20 feet away but he had to throw his bit of dirt into the street. I mentioned his action. Aw, what harm would an empty cigaret pack do? Yes, and what harm would an empty paper bag do? An apple core” Cigar butt? When you're speaking of that, how about the familf-that uses the front and back yards. for catchalls? Then grumble, without turn: ing a finger, that there is no grass. Complain the front porch is falling apart, His argument was that some residential areas’ look so bad because the tenants don't have the money to buy paint, lumber, etc, My argument was that-it-didn’t cost much-to-pick up debris, do some honest” scrubbing if nothing else. What this town needed was an optimistic point of view. This place, the city I live in, has everything. If enough persons want a certain thing, it can be had. It takes work, it takes pride, it takes initia-
Hounded Leopard
Si WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1950 _ —
Civil War Underground Railroad Blazed A New Life or S
| Society Organized in 1833 | - Core of Abolitionist Movement
{3 at «
FRY IRS aa {This ra road owned no chub carsyand hired no engineers. It never laid a rail or a crosstie, - It never bought a locomotive. But it handled passengers by the thousands. - ‘ It was called the Underground,
Railroad. = [road cars. When in the “open, - Ne | “This mysterious method . of they carried false papers which
‘transportation trafficked exclu- Proved them to be freemen. : so [sively in the passage of slaves At night, the escaping slaves Say what you will, it's the best (escaping from their bondage into traveled. During the day they lay in-the: world: freedom. : “hidden on the farms in the cellars : Locating its freight anywhere ©! abolitionists. five, but Nothing Is [pousivie. Not if the right} th of the Mason-Dixon tine, TheY 1 were Srughy hunted, Probably the most infuriating label that can the -Undergr ound Railroad ars a = Rn Ee reach my ears is ‘the overgrown hick town tag ranged the route, prepared the Law of 1850 Thi Fugiive Slave Where that originated, I don’t know. It just seems ">" 3nd sent €anada-bound Ne- holders h te a. to me that the people who like to throw the “hick 5'0¢S horth to liberation. sk po Doe eu Stuff” around aren't too sure of themselves to| The railroad did not run itself gan ud i De any point in be in with, Often it takes a world traveler to say Fatomaticaly. Ht Was Operated by : ae ho os" Jo canture 3 a a nice town Indianapolis is a group of people called aboli- TUNAWSY.- = : . ig tionists. : PENALTY FOR hiding or asWho Said This Is a Hick Town? ——At the core of the group was sisting runaway slaves ne $1000 HICK TOWN? Think a moment about some of the Anti-Slavery” Society, or-'g =" six months imprisonment the world’s largest industries such as an inner tube 82nized in Indiana in 1833. Yet brave, humane men and factory, manufacturer of one-piece bifocal lenses, Behind ‘its existence was the = gave vears of their lives saws, silent transmission chains, power chains, Society of ‘Friends, the most con- and much of their money to the world’s largest truck engine plant, television plant, Sistent abolitionists in the United |..." © abolition : shoe polish plant, truck body plant and many States. Quakers from the begin- One of the best known was Levi others. y : ning insisted slavery was morally! qm, of Fountain City. A native How many towns this size can boast of a|"ron8 and worked right up t0/5¢ North Carolina Tore an helpmajor symphony orchestra, baseball team, hockey the Civil War to abolith it. ling slaves to escape oo he wh team, basketball team, Speedway and a ‘long list! "8... 15, an ; of cultural, educational ay Eo a up a= _THE INDIANA. CHAPTER sro. an Dn je oh after = T wish you would drop me a note with some the American Anti-Slavery . So-| His house in Fountain City was views on the city you live in. Do this while I'm|Ciety was begun Sept. 12, 1833, in!a main stopping point in Indiana. preparing my campaign to give my town a boost. Milton, Wayne County, a Quaker|1t could. almost be called the «There's no limit to what can be accomplished. A|stronghold. \ Grand Central Station of the Untown is only as good as its citizens. The fight is| “Resolved,” read the minutes derground Railroad. on. Give me a hand. . {of the organization ‘convention,| At one time it was estimated . : {“that slavery is the vilest crime 10,000 slaves passed through ; Benes the Sun; Hs Jendencies Fountain City during the years are not only to crus e ies, preceding the Civil War. By Robert C. Ruark 3 to destroy the souls of its| Other well-known abolitionists |vietims; it is a heinous sin against and stalwart members of Under-
Our town . , &
» a hoe. 8 PY —~.
This log cabin was typical of the days of Indiana's underground railroad.
NEW YORK, Mar. 8A leopard ain't much more than a big old pussycat; with spots, and if you know anything about wild beasts you know that timidity is the No. 1 trait, like with a stranger in a New York night club. You get a rogue elephant, from time to time, when the young bulls and the old cows and the debutante heifers in the heard weary of a creaky bore who trumpets too strong and wheezes and belches out loud, so they run him off and this turns
- him mean. He is unwanted, as the psychiatrists
say, and lonesome, and hurt in the soul, so he is apt to kneel on a native or trunk-whip.a field of kaffir corn out. of nothing but pique. But the cat family, from back-fence troubador to Bengal tiger, is a sneaky breed at best, and the old India and Africa hands will tell you that a cat seldom turns man-eater until he has worn himself
-.-0ut.on.nobler quarry...Man-is-a-pretty-foultasting-
fellow, but awful easy to catch, =
Reparations for Family Se I AM ASKING reparations for the family of this displaced leopard who was seeking sanctuary in Oklahoma last week, and I trust the United Nations will “intervene: ; I this ‘orie world of everything for everybody, I hate to see a leopard hounded and persecuted and deprived of his civil liberties, finally to be evilly executed without benefit of counsel. “Te = “i It is possible that a loose leopard constitutes a threat to the yeomanry, if he is an old and achy mouser, too stiff in the j'ints to pull down a bullock. You can generally find mange in the fur of a’'confirmed man-muncher, and his fangs rattle in his jaws, because he has conceded professional
“defeat by admitting that man is his main hors
d’oeuvre. But this cat was no old gaffer reduced, to panhandling for human hamburger, / This was a leopard in the prime of life, illegally pent ina D. L. (displaced leopard) camp, for the idle amusement of his conquerors. He was dis-
.. played for pay, and had been fetched here in viola-
tion of an international Mann act. He wearied of being ogled by yokels, and evinced a fine capitalistic enterprise by playing a three.cushion shot off the walls of his dungeon, utilizing the scientific
~the. mighty. Missouri, ~a-displaced-battieship-~was'
laws of inertia, and went walkabout in the best/G0d and man, and ought to im-|ground Railroad personnel were political sense. mediately be repented of and Col. James W. Cockrum, Oakland : While he was’at large, this leopard menaced 2bandoned.” |City, and a crew in that vicinity nobody, for the record. For all I know, he may| The smuggling of ' slavés to| consisting of his son, Col. William have been seeking a polling-place to cast his vote, freedom had begun early in this Cockrum; Dr, John W. Posey, Dr. or searching out an immigration office to file his/country. Negroes were known to Andrew Lewis, Ira Caswell and first papers. But from all the pother that this jail. have been assisted in escapes be-| George W. Hill, VE break raised—during a human crisis of cessation fore g | ; RR of Hungarian relations and appraisal of the hydro-| But the coming of the Anti- HUREE ROUTES a through gen bomb—you would have thought that this tired Slavery Society put this actior on © River
_|northward to Michigan. Other _ . ‘ gh tabby was the last worst threat to civilization. |& Mass basis, especially in Indi routes were established in. Ohio a ) oo R LS Ned “ws Everybody Joined Chase : "This state was part of the/aPd Illinois, and the bulk of ha
PROFESSIONAL and amateur hunters chased Northwest Territory in which by|SScaping Slaves passed through Streams like this had to be forded in the heyday of the underground. him. Former Marines coursed him, armed with! 7 "ex. one of the three states. oy 4 i the latest inventions of the armament Fits Att of i 03, Slavery eclama.| Slaves entered Indiana at Ev-night to Westfield, Hamilton for them they were doomed to be 1800 until the Civil War. No one Walkie-talkies were employed in lieu of radar, and! tion of = whic 1d : Ty AMA“ ansville and went up through County. a Quaker community and sent back to the South in chains./has estimated the cost to slave there was positively no truth to the rumor that! ugitives could legs | Vincennes, Terre Haute, Lafa-| hotbed of abolitionism. ~~ The Anti-Slavery Society, led owpers in.the. South. where. a... | rg at rir yet tena RersseTaer 1 MIChIgah. | The Fugitive Slave Law of 185 in” Tndiana by "J.T. "Hanover strong Negro was worth as much to be sent to Oklahoma to track down this fagged-| THE 'ANTLI-SLAVERY Society They came in at New Albany, was so sweeping in its provisions (known to co-workers as John as $1500. out feline. Cops quit chasing gangsters to bay in| frustrated those who came to In. Lawrenceburg or Rockport and that every Negro found in a free Hansen), went into ooust ana From the record of the Anti. the wake of this global menace, while the scientists diana to effect any such reclama. | aveled through - Richmond to state was likely to -be kidnaped proved many times the right o 2 | Slavery Society's success, it is evie in the atom camps shoved aside their cyclotrons|tjon Pend an Jonth or jout of his tieighborhood, taken | (reedman to remain in this free that ie Underground Raile 3 to reach for 22-caliber rifles, formerly reserved f ’ OR | e cen route fromibefore a U 8. Commissioner state. Vora slp SE. LDGerground ia ey the i of ew. i or| Men were placed-along the Ohloi Madison to Columbus and into In- friendly to slavery; put-on trial as. The “mysterious ‘body which road was to form a combined de- Ss
On the frodt pages of the nation's Prose, the| pacer oro act as fishermen and gianapolis, where = slaves were a fugitive and sold back into formed the Underground Railroad flance to national laws, on the
eo ; 'sometimes greased its wheels with grounds that the. laws were une a a a wae Pa money, especially in the South ust and opprestve. mild Ee ‘of justice eer Acheson's: river, a constant danger point.| His home was situated on what] THE NEGROES themselves Bribery often bought assistance] In that sense, the slavery laws DECATath. Or alors io en ry ro Once across, Negroes wereiis now Keystone Ave. "probably could do nothing if kidnaped. where appeals to humanity failed. probably failed” Tor the same leopard was at large in the land, at Lord knows Po 4 from point to point in In-|in the 5790 or 5800 block. He hid Their testimony was not allowed] No matter what the means, reason that the United States rewhat risk Ao ill-advised chickens, astray in the diana, by wagon, by horseback, runaways in his barn or cider| as evidence in court. If no white probably 75,000 slaves escaped pealed the Eighteenth Amend. night. g on foot, and sometithes in rail-/ house hefore moving them by/person spoke for them or fought from bondage into freedom from ment—neither could be enforced, Undbubtedly dismayed by the vast array of Et Ny ; =
mate-
\
Flood of Grain.
: . ! . 3 rr man’s massed, indignation against a threatener About Peopl . . oi B . | of the public peace, the leopard wearied of veter- m : CL ) ¢ o_o 9 ANS" groups, public. relations counsel, and diplo- N : U S L k G ot T ( i } WwW [ed | matic threats. He came home. ow ® ® 00 S 00 (0 i iZzeén oO or , { : He gobbled a portion of it, unaware that it was | Dr. Tracy C. Owens, psychia- Hall, Dr. Carl E. Nichols, council! refares ppe isoned. More in sorrow than in anger, he flopped - . . trist at 2823 N. Meridian St., joins members; Dr. I. E. Reibel, mem-| Po!50 and died. . - 8 ppe: That I Let Him Return fo Native Land Henry M. Graham, executive sec- ber of the board of censors. a “ > { had been delivered from a threat to the peace and discarded his citizenship to become a “citizen of the world.” Nathan Perman, executive di- Notre Dame this year will op-| . Has a Toothache _prosperity of the greatest nation on the face of Garry Davis, 22, son of Meyer Davis, New York bandleader, rector of Jewish Social Services, erate two summer schools 1700! NEW YORK, Mar. 8 (UP)— the greatest planet in the greatest little planetary waited anxiously in P. r a visa to re-enter the United States. in family counseling to counter- : : _ { “World Citizen No. 1” was pinned on Mr. Davis when he gave maturity. ; Sponsor ca. School in latin: oy. first convicted Russian spy . ] ) up his citizens yee mtn ERE > r.. Owens, a psychiatrist for American culture a exico y — p a hip and picked up re oi I Break. B 207 Win assists hh t — . p A ye hoy Wein ou {—gloomily nursed a toothache in 3 * a wide European following of per- bride o arry Bresky, Boston. > Ss DS SL une -Aug. recte the ; By Frederick C. Othman sons who also desired to. become They were married last night in Service counselers. He also is: $ y jail today while -his- attorney
He was hungry, and there was a chunk of meat. ‘ “ . 3 . Garry Davis Waits Patiently for Visa : ; The country sighed with relief. Once again we The U. 8." looked good today to the ex-AAF bombardier who [¢tary of Family Service, and y Convicted Spy system in the universe. He hopes to sail from e Mar. 17. act the effects of emotional im- "M1°¢ apart. The university will'yyjenyin Gubitchev—this coune Rev. Alfred Mendez, C.8.C., of
WASHINGTON, Mar. 8—0Our government is storing grain in condemned gymnasiums, busteddown airplane ‘hangars, abandoned ships, and— for all I. knoWw—old shoe boxes, wrecked sedans,
and laundry bags. : We have so much wheat on hand now that if not one -more sprig were grown all year, there
_ still ‘would be plenty of bread to go around. But ..
a new avalanche of grain is coming up. And finding mysélf among some of America’s leading grain
‘specialists, I asked one of them what they were
--going to do... -
“Durned if I know,” he said.
conor The solution--is obvious Lazier farmers: Let
‘em emulate Squire Othman, who directs his rural enterprise from a hammock, who has come to admire weeds in his corn patch, and who never has seen the dawn in his life except when coming in
“a little late fromthe night before.
Desperate Problem THIS SOUNDS like heavy-handed spoofing, I know, but there's a small vein of seriousness in it, too. The problem of farm surpluses is desperate and rapidly growing desperater. Now we've got the Agriculture Department asking for another $2 billion so its Commodity and then worry about where to put 'em on account of all the bins being full. . It’s easy enough, though costly, to dye patatoes blue and bury ‘em; to dry eggs and let 'em grow stale in a Kansas cave, but grain is something else, It is practically everlasting. Corn taken from Inca tombs centuries old still is nearly as good as new. ¢ : That is worrying Congress. What to do with the stuff? The House Banking and Currency Com-
- Storage capacity. for. 475 million bushels, or more “Beaten But Not
stateless. His campaign fre- Miami. The bride's father gave consultant psychiatrist for the. oo otre Pame.“The usual session Pianned an-appeal. a ; mittee at the moment Is trying {o decide whether JUeNtly ‘landed "him in French her in marriage. Indiana Girls School. will be held on the campus June Gubitchev, 33. who entered this THittee 2 € momen ying © et ails Td country in- 1946 to serve the to give the CCC the extra billions it wants and ‘2.5: £2 = = Dr. Ralph H. Campbell, Detroit 19-Aug. 11. |
it is asking leaders in the grain trade fof advice. These gents, all old-timers in the business, say the government's corporation suddenly ‘hag become by far the largest grain trader in the world. :
“The myth of ‘World Citizen "A niece of the late Showman dentist. will s “ . au {United Nations and who con- ,. : Ce o . eak” on “Practice - I Is finished. The time for Earl Carroll has accepted a $63.- P Management and _ Dr. Theodore M. Greene of Yale tinued to draw his - tax-free Symbolism is over,” he said. 000 settlement of her .claim to Office Proced- University will speak at the| United Tations Say — Jo ; a 8 $600,000 of his estate. Mrs. Pa- ures” at the Powell lecture Year un s conviction as'a ; The Bev. og Kirkpatrick, pas- ofa Carroll Peck, 21, Baltimore, | monthly. dinner _series at IU next SPY, was in the Federal House of - : ; ry On 01 Mt. Olive Methodist Church, ‘showman’s tlosest living re- } 7 F | Monda Tues. | Detention. By. spring,-they say; it will-have temporary will speak on _ Hative, was willed § g meeting’ of the Y, ues-| | ’ 5000. |
day and Wednes-' His co-defendant, former Govday. His subject ernment Girl Judith Coplon, was wiH—be “The held—te nthe City Acids of Modern- House of Detention. sid ty eCiteria’ oF They “Will be Sentenced tomor: Responsible row morning by Federal Judge Evaluation” and! Sylvester Ryan on the guilty ver“The Role of/dict returned by a jury of six "Language ‘and men and six housewives yester{Ft. Knox, Ky., with the ‘3d Ar-| as follows: Dr.’ C om mu nity in|day. =, je Division. Prin E Simans, President; uD: al Exsiuaton. Maximum Terms ! uture ‘events of the club in- Harry ipstein, president elect; e Powe ec-1 A : : i FT . Paul.” “Other, clude: Apr. 2, district. board ne Dr. Maynard K. Hine, vice pres- tureships were ‘created under the Cubitchev ‘aces ‘a maximum “YOU JUST CAN'T turn an elephant around topics’ will pe: Rev: Kirkpatrick directors’ meeting, here; Apr. 22, ident; Dr. Denzil .C. Barnhill, terms of Mahlon Powell “to assist S¢ntence of 15 years in prison— in a bird cage” explained Edmund Marshall, vice par 15 “Invasion of Europe”; inaugural. ball; May 19-20, fifth secretary; Dr. William W. Peet, in the cause of a higher. education the Same sentence given Robert president of the Shannon Grain- Co. of Kansas Mar. 22. “Dangers of the Deep’; district convention: at "Terre treasurer; Dr. G. T. Gregory, Dr. for the young men and women of ogeler, American business man, City, in telling why this behemoth among corpora- Mar. 29, “I Have. Kept the Haute with William Brown in Harry J. Healey, Dr. J. Frank our station and nation.” In Hungary on a spy charge— tions couldn't speed up its bookkeeping. | aith.” charge ‘of room reservations: ~ - - ——— and $20,000 fine, Miss Coplen
F = - . - Nobody among the wheat and gorn dealers # x June 21-24, international conven. 2 Baby Elephants to. Fly Editor Whe Took Lae 8 Daxian. of 25 years in would put it in so many words; neither would the john F, Thompson, Who Oper- tion in Atlantic City. T Ww. hi Z : Vv d bh ira’s J b Di Abraham L 1 tz Congressmen, but I got the ideéa:-that some of gies Thompson's Market and rT . 0 ashington Zoo andenbergs Jo es ney Tor bat Pommeray , attors hem were wishing fervently for a crop failure. ives at 3844 N. Illinois St., likes BOMBAY India, Mar. 8 (UP)— GRAND RAPIDS. Mich. Mar 8 Neuburger, Misr: Gomng., Samuel That sounds cockeyed, but another bumper har- the Florida flowers, butterflies Trans World Airlines prepared a (UP)—Frank Sparks, who Suc- gefense counsel tale oo Shue [special plane today to fiy two ceeded Sen, Arthur H. Vanden-| > ¥ Wo {half-ton baby elephants to the berg (R. Mich.) as editor of the
Indianapolis District Dental ciety-M-ondavy;-6:30 p. m., in sWeashington Hotel Officers ) to be voted on = Apr. 10 have: Dr. Campbell - been nominated
than all the privately owned elevators in America. W h i pped”’ to- § They charge further that the CCC is turning night ‘at the 6 into “another mighty governmental bureaucracy, o'clock dinner E which unreels red tape faster than it builds sto eting of They cite’specific examples to show that a man vestigation Club § selling a carload of grain to the CCC is fortunatein Central if “he gets all his money 8iX months later: They YMCA. His talk doubt, as the surpluses get larger, that the gov-is one of the ernment’s grain buyers will get any more efficient. March series on
‘Wish’ for Crop: Failure pine Journeys of
» t J » | Maj. Charles Sanders, who has, st completed a 15-month tour AWY. on. Okinawa. will. address. _{Indianapolis = Optimists Friday, {12:15 Pp. m., in Hotel Severin. He _{will speak on “Occupation -Prob-| {lems.” The major soon will go to|
|
ju
- Dr. Greene
vest this year could wreck the price-support Pro- and salt water, he writes friends! set the ball rolling immediately
gram. back home.. He is visiting his f The or \Washingtan, D. C., 200 tomorrow. Grand Rapids Herald, died ‘last win hePbeal Of the verdict. They
So I recommend my own farming methods in son Herbert formerly of Indi-| leg ’ 3 i will . Fairfax County, Va. Sleep late every morning, play anapolis, now 4n- Jacksonville. | The elephants, a gift of Indian night. He was 73. bid Seek the release of their cli " {Premier Jawaharlal Nehru, were :
golf when the weather is good for plowing, spend ” the rest of the time just sitting, and thereby do The whole Nogales, Ariz, po-| poor, old, overburdened Uncle Samuel a favor. lice department was out for pistol!
Mr. Sparks became editor of The jury convicted both Gu{turned down as air passengers by|the newspaper when Mr. Vanden- bitchev and Miss Coplon en a
The Quiz Master
{a - British ~alirline because they berg was appointed to the U. 8. conspiracy count. It ‘further cone (were more than six months old Senate in. 1928. He had been as-|victed her on a count charging (and thus “dangerous cargo.” ;sociate editor and political writer/that she actually attempted to | But TWA said it would provide for the Herald since 1904. He re- pass documents to Gubitchev, and |a specially reinforced plane fortired in 1947. : {convicted him on another count
practice today. Bonnie McDoniald, the chief’s daughter, won the
29? Test Your Skill ?2?? department’s annual pistol shoot.
| “Actress Nan
When did World War I officially end? : President Warren Harding declared World War I officlally ended July 2, 1921. :
Are there ‘any. remains to substantiate the story of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? ~All inf ion we have derives from the works of ancient writers, dealing largely with tradition and legend. 7 * Sd & : nis What i» the fastest speed of a helicopter? The maximum speed of a helicopter is 120.6 miles per hour. This record was established on Apr. 37, 1949, by Harold Thompson, a Sikorsky pilot, at Cleveland, 0: . 4
Where did Alaska get its name? The origin of the name Alaska has not been definitely determinéd. Some authorities maintain that it Is defived from a native Eskimo word, Alakshak, meaning “Great Country.” :
+
2 today. |
Why does a fountain Pen sometimes leak in|preYs no has 3D irbiane? ; |mantically with here is always some air inside the pen; above er Frankie {he ink, at the same pressure as the air outside. , n
As you ascend, the surrounding air pressure be- Lane, Joiay Dos
Mr. Graham
Mr. Berman |ASoka, the male, and Shanti, the, Mr. Sparks was born in Bangor, of actually attempting to receive
: ta [COW {Me., and was graduated from y. 8. secrets. | Failure to grow up emotionally ‘Asoka weighs 1032 pounds and Bowdoin College in Maine. | . {is a No. 1 factor in America’s his girl friend 842 pounds. |
| personal problems. at | | ‘That's the view of the Indian- . Relies Te Wife a Jake | oye 3 lapolis Family Service Association BOY Equips Self Fully {died during World War IL Pilot in Plane Crash = ‘ g re State police were investigating
|and Jewish ‘Social Services. Those! Foy i | HR {groups joined 250 U. 8. family or Chosen Profession { hil d Ini ed b . ‘a-crash landing of a plane last [agencies in contributing to the SEATTLE WASH, Mar. 8 (UP) Child Injur y Eating nignt in a field off U. 8. 31, south | ,000_ family problems! —Folice today were holding a, ini Of Indianapolis, {that formed the background for T-YEar-o1d boy who said he was Ice Containing Lye —— eGatamastic ln {Lawrenee Galton's article, “Lig 1y equipped as the ideal burglar. A 3-year-old child was recov- gated reports of a crash they “\Boys Make Lousy Husbands" in He carried a map of the United ering today from the effects of found-the wreckage but no trace 2 March Better Homes and Gardens. States, tax tokens; white canvas eating ice with lye in it yesterday of a pilot or passenger. : The Tiller Girls, precision dancers, whe have The ‘actress was given custody NL a aT gloves, field glasses, midget flash- at her home. 4 The plane was e istered to the ~~ * been_entertaning British audiences ‘at London's of ‘their two daughters. _The Stockholm, Sweden, Busi- light, and a brace and bit. Mrs. Louise Wood. mother of Kentucky-Indiana han Sales. Palladium since 1868. In that year theaterman: a " [ness and Professional Women's, Detectives said that despite all! Geneva. Maries Lucas, of 548 .N. Service, Inc., Louisville. ContactJohn Tiller trained some neighborhood girls to! The former Helen Sue Arvey, Club annotinced today that Mrs. his equipment, the only thing he Concord . St. teld - police heired by state police, company Jock arms and dance. Many of the routines they daughter of Jake Arvey, Chicago Eleanor Roosevelt has accepted managed to make away with be- daughter - found some frozen spokesmen said they did not im. originated still are performed by chorus lines Democratic boss, planned a Baha- an invitation to visit Sweden this fore being caught was a live water in a pan. It had contained mediately know who was flying Fon tii : ‘ .___ .. |mas hemeymoon today as the summer: Seay irabbit. la lye tolution for cleaning. - (the firm's plane. =
| He is survived by his daughter, Cassa : Mrs. Bruce C. Swain of Grand State Police Seek
comes less and the air in the pen expands to equal! it. If the pen is in a handbag with the point down-| ward, or even if the point is upward and a drop. Mise Grey yesof ink has been entrapped in the nib, the expand- 2y was
: granted a divorce ing aie inside may push the ink gut... [Eranieda drone
3 rope, jockey. She What London dancers correspond to the Rock- De Ny
ettes in New York City? “cruelty. .
niet
A
Miss Grey
