Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1950 — Page 11
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Sill Ci Jou Hie to push and shove and. y+ pull things around for a living? I spent some “tire with five guys who do just that. They're + erate around the Union Station under the New York Central banner, ; Ne ‘When Yardmaster Si Dodd said it would be all right if I went along with the crew to get inside dope on the business of switching railroad cars, I thought it would be outside work, You "know, hanging on the side of a car, swinging a lantern and giving signals to the engineer. In . my day, I could flip a ride on a boxcar with the best of them.
Rail Walking Forbidden CONDUCTOR Bert Minnick's crew was checked . out of Mr. Dodd's office at 3:30 and headed for the yard and the Diesel switch engine. An inkling of things to come popped when I walked & rail. About 15 feet before the yardmaster noticed me, Gee, I was going good. “You are violating one of the first safety rules of a railroad,” he said. “Never step or walk on a track. Mr. Minnick, will you see that he gets into the cab of the engine and stays there?” No support was T. M. Lynch or Fireman R. A. Suhre, Switchmen L. E. Campbell and H. A. Powell shrugged their shoulders and smiled. I wasn’t sure whose side, they were on.
“I have to stay in the engine?” . “If you want to stay in the yards,” answered Mr. Dodd. Well, that certainly settled that. Mr. Suhre assured me I could see plenty from the cab. He sat on one side where there were no controls of any kind. Mr. Lynch ‘had several levers and a mass of buttons in front of his seat. He also had a jar of coffee. I. The first thing we did was pick. up an. empty coach. When the switcher hooked on to the coach the couplings looked like two huge hands going into a handshake. Mr. Powell crawled between the switcher and coach and tied—connected—the air hoses. Then he hopped clear and signaled with his hand. “Where we going?” “We're not.” “Oh.” : Pian Both men kept a sharp lookout along the maze of tracks. Finally we were in motion again. Up a short distance then back and up and back. All of a sudden we had an express car hooked on. The switcher had a coach on one end and the express car on the other. “Who knows what's going on?” I asked. “How ean we cut across so many tracks, switches and things without fouling up?” Mr. Lynch was busy handling the controls, mainly, I think, to scare the daylights out of me every few minutes with a. big blast of air. Mr. Suhre gave me a short history of railroading that
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| Inside ‘Indianapolis te . 5 By Ed Sovola
one of the switching crews that op-’
~The Indianapolis Times
' ™
» "> Lh a No
Woman AA, ‘Free’ For First Time, Declares Sobriety Is A Miracle
Credits Big Part To Spiritual Aid
"MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1950 : § PAGE 11_
Dry Six Months And Is Thankful
of Her Happiness
Second of a Series
She Received EN “I had to go to a hospital to be
"By CAR
“TO ME, sobriety is a miracle.” That's Miss Nobody speaking, an attractive woman in her mid-
!dle 30's and an active member of
“I've been on the wagon now for-six-months,” she says, "and
Swish and o itch On 2 raiircad, “aviary the man I date commented last week on the way I'm thankful
dried out, and the doctor warned me I'd die if I didn’t stop. I was desperate, I came back to Indian i apolis and actually got drunk so Wl I'd have the courage to call AA Hi and ask for help. I did—but I 8
I HENN
Alcoholics Anonymous.
move has a meaning." covered thé period from 1850 to 1950. I gathered
the switching tower and the conductor and his in my body crying for alcohol is the program gratefully, while a crew knew what was to go where. We didn’t a wonderful experience. For the Woman walks around the edges.
jump any tracks or go through switches.
day that I'm sober. . “Why, just walking down the street without having every nerve
first time in my adult life I'm
Like a sheepdog, we'd pick up a string of free.”
sleepers here, a couple coaches there, deposit the
sleepers 'way over and drop the coaches some of her present sobriety to the| “Often, too, she makes three
Miss Nobody credits a big part
other place. |spiritual help she asked for and,
When the Cleveland to St. Louis Special pulled in, we hurried in our own inimitable and rumbling way to splice a diner on’ the train. Some of the
passengers were Jooking out the windows, as a bered up for good without His the last binge.”
matter. of fact, and I may be mistaken, but I
thought they were holding placards with big block some members of AA who dried 20 years illustrates all these
letters ‘we're hungry” on them. Of course, 1 could be on the wrong track.
Some Redson Sighted I COULD SEE some reason for moving the diner and the four .sleepers (empty) consigned for Cleveland where, 1 understand, people do quite
she believes, received when she attempted td stop drinking. “I don’t think I could have so-
help,” she says. . There may be
up without requesting spiritual aid, as we are asked to do in the 12 steps. But I think they soon have to admit the other side of it if they don’t want to start drinking again.”
” » » a bit of sleeping, but some of that other stuff we, BEING ONE who lacks many
shoved and pushed, not on your life. lof life's “advantages,” Miss No- | should even then.
Mr. Suhre stoutly maintained that “every move has a meaning.” Maybe so. I must admit the
railroads have never lost a car while I was ajown who is or becomes an alco- here and there; usually had a
passenger. That's not saying that I haven't lost a .car. One time in Kansas City . . ., well, never mind.
When it got dark, that's when the switching
crew and I parted company. Ifthey couldn’t make to make a free admission of their 23 I realized there was somethin ae te " : . : Fores of conduct.” 3 } me see the light during the day, they certainly addiction to alcohol and to join wrong with me, but 1 didn MY Sister called AA for me six came worse in my drinking. I ~“That was last July. Now I'm 3
couldn't in the dark. Gentlemen of the railrqads, I trust you.
English Clothes—Ugh! sy Robert c. ruark
NEW. YORK, Apr. 17—I feel that my honor is at stake today. It having been most. foully impugned by Great Britain. Short of cutting off all dollar credit or challenging the ancient, fusty English weekly of “Tailor and Cutter” to a duel, we must treat again with masculine fashion. Since I cocked a snook (attention copyreaders,. this ain't a dirty expression) at the Englishman as a slovenly dresser, and openly admired the average American male as a mold of fashion, neat, God-Tearing and dean of dogs, I have been bombarded with abuse by our cousins from the foggy isle. *
“Tailor and Cutter’ Sounds Off
“TAILOR AND CUTTER,” the he-“Harper's Bazaar” of Britain, really dealt me a resounding cuff on the kisser. “Open your national wardrobe, Mr. Ruark,” said “Tailor and Cutter.” “Take a good look inside. Look at those Picassian ties, like a rush of blood to the throats, Look at those wide, wide shoulders, extended out and beyond; like a great cloth milkmaid. Look at those long, tight-at-the-bottom hobble jackets, And wake from your little dollar day-dream.” ow I hate to kick a cripple, but this is too easy. Let us start with the journalistic integrity of “Tailor «and Cutfer.” Not long ago they condemned tartan plaid dinner jackets, to be worn by hosts at semiformal dinners, as whipped up by an American firm. “Deplorable,” said T. and C.” Then His Majesty, the good George, laid in a supply of them. “Oops,” said “Tailor and Cutter,” rapidly applying vote backtrack. “His Majesty will bring dignity to "these garments.” So much for both Mr. Tailor and Mr. Cutter. ’ We come now to neckties. Only in England can a man be assaulted on the streets for wearing a striped necktie. It seems that the Guards and ‘the Harrovians and the Etonians and all the other select clubs have certain colored, striped patterns on neckties, and nobody else is supposed to wear them without being publicly horsewhipped and denounced as an imposter. Is this becoming to a Socialist state? The most repulsive sight to be seen on Broadway or Hollywood today is a great, round blob of necktie knot, resembling a- hangman's choker, which occupies most of the visible portion of the
upper shirt-front. It is called the Windsor knot. Guess where we got it? Look at those great, broad shoulders, the boys say. Chances are if you pinch them, you'll find some man-meat underneath. Those great, broad
shoulders constitute a drape—English drape, I be-/
lieve it's called. When exaggerated by zoot-suiters
I have no defense except to say that our zoot-|
suiters comprise roughly as much of the American population as coster-mongers comprise of the English population. “A coster-monger is a fellow who wears’ baggy clothes covered all over with pearl buttons, up to and including the cap. Let us inspect our ‘“hobble-skirted” jackets. Mostly they fit smoothly over the caboose. They rarely have to apologize for bad tailoring with a series of vents, slits, plackets, or attenuated tails
that start out at regular coat-length and swoop as she slept on a couch in her Es William Pagan, 19, who tried 8hetti,” he said. |group will be spelled down to sharply downward to the knee-hollows behind. This apartment. Her assailant demand- clawed at his face and he let her g
is the rough tweed that the British squire wears on his county seat.
own torture to adjust with a hangover. Fat or slim, all wearers of tab collars look like toothpaste tubes that have been squeezed too hard.
What Man Wears a Dress? ASSUMING that Scotland is a part of Eng-
men. A kilt is a dress. Dresses are worn by girls. ing does not discount the fact that a kilt is a
skirt, and a man looks very peculiar in a frock. 1 have known and liked a great many Eng-
their jackets pull at the buttons, and ride up over
the seat. There aré exceptions, naturally, but they Miss Jasper said. She did scream, Carlo.
come few to a hill. And I wish our cousins would quit hollering about “dollar dreams” every time somebody slaps their wrist. They were just as sloppy before the war. Case rests.
Panama Robbery
WASHINGTON, Apr. 17—Last time I patronized the Tivoli Hotel in Panama it was a mustysmelling place with anemic palms in the lobby, clammy sheets on the bed and ceiling fans that made more noise than the winged bugs they were supposed to blow.away. The proprietor, a fellow by the name of Uncle Sam, didn’t much care if I couldn't sleep. He didn’t even seem to bother whether he had any patrons. His hotel lost money every year, anyhow, and Congress back in Washington always had to appropriate cash to keep his hostelry in business.
du. Things Can Be Worse... «ccna
THAT WAS a good many Vvears ago, but it turns out that affairs at the Tivoli have gone from worse to worst. This ancient flea bag of the © governmernt-still loses money, of course, but it is 80 jammed with Army and Navy brass that the ‘deep-sea sailors who foot the deficit never can get a room there when passing through the Panama Canal. Or so they reported to me.
They're sore about this, while every time one of their ships chugs through the canal they get shivers in the pocketbook. This situation, as are most in Washington, is complicated. The shipping men, including that mariner from Minnesota, ex- . Sen. Yoe Ball, came to the U. S. Senate to complain about the way Uncle treats ‘em in the ditch between the Atlantic and the Pacific. Ball, now vice president of the Association of “* American- Ship Owners, and his fellow sailormen said they were sick of flattening their pocketbooks
every time they sent a ship through the canal.’
The government bills ’em $6600 every time they send an ordinary C-3 freighter through the watery short cut. The trip takes eight hours and this works out, according to President Frazier A.
By Frederick C. Othman
Bailey of the National Federation of Shipping, to better than $800 an hour. : All "his ships going through the canal have
body knows how difficult life can be for a single woman on her
holic. | She embodies, too, the attitude of many women desperate to stop drinking but afraid or unwilling
openly in a group dedicated to |drying up alcoholics. I Women don't comes into AA ES easily as men,” say veteran members.
Housebreaker, Slugger Sought
1 Struck, Injured Sleeping Woman | Police today were seeking’ a housebreaker who slugged one woman in a robbery attempt yesterday and was believed to have entered the bedroom of another woman a short time later. | Miss Ruth Lee, 701 E. 21st St. |was struck on the head by a man
ed money.
Scratched and bruised. an ar- : Let us now consider tab-collars, a direct im-itery severed in the top of her| NE Der same ald trick. She go
port from the misty isles. They are an ‘instrument head, Miss Lee broke loose from into another car,” Mr. Heston it i i of torture, squeezing the Adam's .apple, rising her assailant and ran to the bed- said. the emergency room.” He was 15 J Calling her about returning M chimney-like above the coat collar, and are hell's room where her father, William i They plumb wore out. You n
O. Lee, was sleeping.
o ~ ” The intruder ran out the back .2undries. When Lee and Grant met at door, Miss Lee later told police. A. chain lock on the door was
found to have been broken.
Miss Lee was treated in land, let us regard the wearing of dresses by Methodist Hospital and released. The second break-in yesterday Even. a dangling sporran.and.a.dirk. in the.stock-. morning, . occurred... five... blocks ramet “Jace pan="" from the first, at 1704 College
Ave,
Miss Alba G. Jasper, sister of wimbledon lishmen, but few wore their clothes—even naval State Supreme Court Chief Judge year. Besides, uniforms—as if the clothes had been made ex- Paul G. Jasper, told police she she's engaged to pressly for them. The majority seemed callous to/awakened to see a man standing pat De Cicco, Miss Moran Mather, Marshall, Mich. They Said. egg-and-ashes on lapels, to clean collars, cuffs over her. His description tallied Hollywood theater executive. Mr. observed their 24th wedding an- Her mother / and fingernails. Their ties slip, their collars curl, with that of Miss Lee's assailant. DeCicco said they'd be married niversary, Mr. Mather's 48th Said they “like
He warned her not to scream,
however, and the man fled down |a back stairway, + Police yesterday arrested a 32-|year-old man when Mrs. Ella |Long, 457 W. 16th St. identified {him as the purse-snatcher who grabbed her “coin purse, containing $11, in the 500 block W. 16th St. Bruce Harris, 919'; N. Senate {Ave., was charged with larceny |after the woman told police a {man drove alongside her as she | walked, asked directions, grabbed
got to come back at the same price, he said, and her purse and roared away. the round-trip fare is more than enough to pay| Harris was located through the wages of the crew for a month. The cost is|the woman's description of the excessive, he said. One reason, he thinks, is the automobile, police said. Tivoli ‘Hotel. : | T——— —
A few others are the dress shoppes, mone PONCE Net 0 In
plant, movie palaces, laundries, cemeteries, phone company, dairy, water - works, and restaurants
places a subsidiary ofthe canal and the Panama
that a benevolent uncle operates for his hired . ‘e a hands in the Canal Zone. Every business in =: Bootlegging Raids
railroad; some break. even, some make a little:
money, and some lose scads.. The sailormen testified the records were so complex that they had trouble discovering just .where- their canal toll dollars went.
Maybe Navy Should Pay WORSE STILL, they said, is the fact that Army and Navy boats of all descriptions haul cargoes through the canal for free. The shipping men claimed this wasn’t fair. If the Navy had to put up $10,000 every time it sent a small cruiser through, maybe the privately owned ships wouldn't be nicked so deep. The Senators promised to worry about this. One of the mariners, a white-haired one with a foghorn voice which indicated he couldn't be called ancient, told me about his last trip through Pan-/ ama, when the Tivoli turned him away because of too many official patrons. He was lucky, said his partner. The latter actually got. a room Bice at the Tivoli. The flying things and the heat caused him to dream that he was a buzz bomb
‘in a Finnish bath. When he woke he was a
shaken man.
~~ The Quiz Master
rz
2??? Test Your Skill 2???
What is a constitutional majority? A constitutional majority is a majority of the total membership—49 of the 96 Senators and 218 of the 435 representatives. An ordinary
on majority Is a majority of members present and
voting,
-— 4 o
3
Who were the first’ motion picture stars to ‘receive the Academy award? The first movie actors to receive Oscars were Emil Jannings and Janet Gaynor for the best acting in pictures released between Aug. 1, 1927, and July 31, 1928.
Why are motion picture awards called Oscars? The name Oscar came about by accident. Margaret Herrick, secretary of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts, viewing the statuet for the 8. Illinois St. after police found
first time, exclaimed: “Why, it reminds me of my Uncle Oscar.” The name appealed and since then the awards have been known as Oscars, 2 > ! Does the government issue patents to employees of the Patent Office? )
for a patent immediately after leaving office.
Fence Arrested in Noble ‘St. Tavern
Nine persons, arrested yesterday in bootlegging raids by police, were to. be tried in Municipal Court today on chargers of violating the 1935 Alcoholic Beverages Act. “ Five were arrested in the Lucullus Tavern, 743 N. Noble St., after police knocked, were admitted and found all drinking beer, officers said. Violators included Henry Zerr,
tavern owner; Herb Goodin, 725 E.| St. Clair St., John Gomboz, 506 E.|
10th St., and Demus Watson and
James Roach, both of 822 College”
Ave, Admitted Buying Beer George Williams, 842 W. Vermont St., and Clifton Leesenberry,
Shr ER on co TEATO 0 NC hr ho ih police found Leesenberry drinking White House lawn. He led a sec- aay. fora private visit to Field “It is not ¢nough that ehureh- mage him so determined to gain Deer in. the kitchen there. ond march in 1914. prin Bl nant Jlexhnder Sov. 2eintes Sollenes teach - resident nis freedom. The Bavarian hills | Leesenberry admitted buying “a. housewives lined leave tomorrow for Montreal. = “The colleges must po to" Ld: are reputed to be the hiding place : {the beer from Williams, police Cherokee,’ 1a. hou: ) onireal. e. coleges must go to the of fabulous fortunes in Nazi loot,
= o » said. They confiscated quantities, .. hope that feuding grocers Two Butler University faculty communities where these churc
of beer, wine and liquor.
Leslie M. Watson, Oxford Hotel, ice School will leave Indianapolis « pounds, made his escape by ripi a . hase of their month-long price Pp If colleges of a and Fart C. Harris, 319 E. South vy Bread prices fell from 17 to Shortly to attend conventions. reach fe Tye al ping apart the iroh bars of 16s
St., were arrested in the 200 block
Harris leaving Watson's roonf (. oral thousand loaves of bread. Association of College Registrars religion in church-related colleges wire fence and fled in stocking i
with a bottle of wine in his shirt.
” nr = Harris said he bought the wine John Mayer, 19, Kingston. N. Y., convention Apr. 17-21 in San “Departments of religion must
frem Watson.
Police, in two Sunday raids, pal to shoot him so he could keep chairman of the Resolutions Com- reaching churches with extension BOSTON (UP) -- Man's best confiscated 13 books of baseball an emergency ward date with a mittee during the meeting. courses, lectures, forums, insti- friend? State health department Employees-of-the Patent Office are prohibited tickets at 1412 E. 16th St. and 19| Hospital today— without the care] Robert F. Newton, director of tutes, teaching centers confe- statistics show that approximateby law from taking out patents, but may apply books of baseball tickets at 867 nurse, was recovering in Kingston John Whisler Atherton Center, rences and others with or with- ly 10,000 Massachusetts residents
Indiana Ave.
“COUIAR'T stay on the program. i “For five months I tried to stop B drinking. I'd go for two or three: weeks. Then something would ig come up and bother me. I didn't 4 § know how to cope with a situa tion except to drink.
~ - - “I TOOK another trip out of town and became worse again, This time when I came back I knew it wasabout my last chance, “] went to my sister's house and did some meditating and praying. I said, ‘f don't know how I'm go« ing to do it, but I'm not going to take a drink today.’ ¥ “1 would take a sip of milk, lie down and die. After awhile I'd get up, take a sip of coffee or bouillon; lie down and die. “Some people came to my sister's house that night and started drinking. They offered me one, but I said, ‘I never needed it worse but it was never before so important to refuse it.’ “The next day, I had one sober boy friend. When my drinkin day behind me. The day after became a regular thing 1 is that, it was two sober days. 1 ried my own whisky. Photo by Lloyd B. Walton. Times Staff Photographer. went to AA meetings regularly “From about. the time I was Road to sobriety . .. a woman alcoholic asks His help. and tried to follow the 12 rules
“A male drunk often jumps into
She may go to a meeting, but ofteri she says she's there for a brother, or a sister or father.
jor four false starts before she 'evén gets as far as the first meeting. She calls for help, then refuses it when she recovers from
Miss Nobody's experience over
points. I drank home-made wine on my father's farm when | was 11. or 12." she says “I got drunk for the first time, unintentionally, at 14, When I was 16 I started running around, and began drinking more than
“I HAD a lot of fun, worked
know what. I didn't want to Years ago, and I talked to cne of wasn’t any good to anybody, in- happy and free for the first time stop drinking. I didn't know you the men. I know now why he cluding myself. 1 called AA here since I was 16. I found out life 7 Foould do EI y ETE WITHOUT © Courant Help me. T. didn't want in Indianapolis long distance and ®3% be fun Without & arin: > reer on drink==work; pray; tike “a “trip {o Stop drinking at that time. got a name in the town where I Tomorrow: Husbands of Alco. lor anything. “While 1 was out of town I be- was staying. but I never used it, 'holics.
\ady Godive Rides Again... Sa oo But This Time She’s a Hitchhiker "a
: |Mr. Newton at Butler, will attend . Apparently Distressed Woman Bums the convention of the National Prelims Tomorrow Ride, Then Claws Unsuspecting Driver | Association of College Stores in By ART WRIGHT Chicago, Apr. 19-22. | ‘Twenty-one grammar school
Southern California's Lady Godiva is riding again, police of 5 8 - Manhattan Beach, Cal, reported today. But this time she's a hitch- There's not a single “Rover” or pupils who Survived tne ast Dre hiker. A rough one at that. “Fido” among the licensed dogs liminary is hp es pe ng Tex Heston, Albuquerque, N. M., told officers he spotted a °f Minot, N. D. R. E. Barcus, Hee at Garadld par Dinu y woman on a highway. She flicked open her coat, had nothing on City auditor, found to his sur. Center last week will return there
underneath it. He sai stressed W prise. Minot dog owners go in tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock. a ride. She ad 2a offered the apparently distressed woman for unusual names like “Spa-' In the second preliminary, the
two who will represent the Garfield district in the semifinals at asked an Atlanta court is" manele indi Wola War Memoria) er mother-in-law, Mrs. p a «Erie erin-law, Mee. Rate Ley, They are: David Kenter, Beck alott, Margaret Ann McCarthy, Margaret Kester, Bobby Thomp- * = & son, Carolyn Wending, Paul Zo. ’ Shirley Temple today denied the dorer, Rita Brady, Mary Frances ADpomattoy, Ya. ihey suiled 5 report of a Hollywood gossip col- Ronebaum, Tom Stinger, Ann {talked about the weather. At Rist that she Pringie, Rosemary Clayton, Mary least Robert E. Lee IV, San Fran- "25 engaged to 7 ge {Ann Feitman, Catherine Wurz, cisco, and Maj Gen. Ulvsses §. Charles Black; Paul Sauer, Phyllis Fox, Carroll rant 111, Washington, did. The SO Of 8 utilities Boss, Grace Mace, Joan McElroy, ’ Shington, cid, executive. “We Jane Schaeff ; 0'Do 0 descendants of the CIVILWAL wp emn.topgappre Jane Schaeffer and James Q'Dons. . . .. <n erals met at the scene of the Bachelors Ball in mel nitiie wiit be’ sdwilied
ties which historical surrender to dedicate it shocked staid Ras a national shrine’ San Francisco. free to see the spellers in action, ’ Others Completed
last REI Now fell meyhow Sunday's celebration ended dis- that makes me 4 Other centers in Indianapolis completed their preliminaries
astrously for Mr. and Mis. Leslie €N8age d” she . ~F last week.
County schools are holding Miss Temple their eliminations now to select the two best spellers from each of the nine townships for the War Memorial semifinals. The finals will be held Apr. 29 ne at 1 p. m. in the War Memorial, Prof. Robert Turner of West of The champion will go to Wash. F wo» {Scotland Agricultural College in|ington late in May for a week of Gabriel Gonzalez Videla, Chi- Glasgow has arrived at Purdue to|Si8htseeing and entertainment lean president, receives New Study farm work simplification, 2nd to compete in the National York's traditional welcome today He'll also visit Indiana farms. Spelling Bee. Expenses for the a ticker tape procession up a = = , trip will be’ paid by The Times. Lower Broadway to City Hall. Nine-year-old Carole Ann Wen- m= “That little girl seemed like such pavor ~ William zel's first faltering steps in New
out, lo play Spl WLS 22 5ifle Was) Mn Charles Doris Lee, in “ _ in jail. An hour before the shoot- se As I drove off I saw her pull poles. sald, yor a the |LA08 Marion Lee for divorce, nurse —on—her—way-to—work and!
said “I'll see you at 6 o'clock in
her wedding and engagement minutes early. rings. 5
w how it is with pants and
They're no longa question,” said Gertrude “Gorgeous Gussie” Moran, California tennis - {star of her
when she returns from Monte birthday and Mrs. Mather's ‘43d each other a lot” birthday by going to the motor- and Mr. Black's socialite mother = x = cycle races. ‘When they returned Said her son asked Shirley to the Mrs. Mary Bondurk, South Ha- their 10-room home had been ball and “There's nothing more ven, Mich. said today that her destroyed by fire. The only item than that to it.” | husband and a 14-year-old baby saved was their anniversary sitter “must still be out having a cake. Lr good time.” She told police that her husband, Henry, a - truck driver, ran away with the girl Friday. A three-state police alarm failed to locate the cauple.
O'Dwyer will ’ a sweet young thing,” she said. yreet th utiv d giv York Orthopedic - Hospital paid Arm : Deserter s » = greet e executive and g Ve 2 her debt to a 13-year-old hoy who “A stable civilization will be a =o» . ’ built only upon the foundations Jerome Courtland, 23, who - “I promised I would walk for of the farm and kitchen,” Dr.'gave Shirley . you,” Carole told Joseph Lipani. l es olice : on Ann, who hadn't walked since °. |geographer, said today on the Kiss before the S . Patten lecture program at IU. | cameras, wore a she was two, had a five-inch strip Returned to Reich fo : , ,i. lipstick today in 3 A enc, with Sel. Las Vegas, Nev. - Was amputated so” he could be MUNICH, Germany, Apr. 17 : itted. witt Ee. bot at a countries. He neymooned « n an artificial one. (UP) — Homer Cook, 27, Okiae Studied, Dr. Stamp. said. CEE vn vi J wear adi drial gin 4 i fl a aa Roh * RNR BAG gl WHER pons wn Tn : ec anan | c 00 serter, -who retlirned illegally to’ } while taking vo- / Germany to be with his swent. dancing instructor of Portland, 3 jessons. § heart, eluded a police trap today, Ore., today offered $100 to anyy in Flamingo Hotel chapel. ) |picketed the manufacturing plant i 2 om , days. It set off a three-nation where she worked to support their ~Hildegarde Neff, German act- Church Board Hears manhunt in the heart of Kurop.. General” “acon 5. Coxev. of TEATS ABO asthe hottest siren Dr. Henry Sherwood tary police armed with machine ienera acob 8. Coxey, of since Garbo, packed her bags to- opurch-related colleges will ex- Suns and tear gas surrounded a birt S -'g ! ; A ane, phe hasn't done a Hck of Work tne walls of their institutions if @ tip that Cook had refreshed 3 S pve . Dr. Henry Noble Sherwood's sug- himself with a sandwich and cofeffort of “trying The second trial ot George Dag- o to put across the git, 36, former music instructor Dr. Sherwood, president of the Cigse Svaseh “Fails cost.” sary to murder, was to begin to-|/Ucation, Indianapolis, outlined Io Bush Cok hose. Boyhood The “general” day in Bowling Green, Ky. Harry these plans in his annual report y in 1894 when he Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Martin in 1948, Hotel Lincoln Saturday afternoon | 1eSPerado. unemployed on ended in a hung jury last January. mately 100 presidents and deans a5 3, mernber 91 the posse Washington and |of colleges supported by the :Dis-| :
luncheon in his honor. made them possible. Dudley .Stamp, noted British Temple her first “You see, I'm walking.” Carole Y . . ... new brand of of Joseph's leg grafted to her * The U. S. is ninth on the list spine after his deformed right leg Be With Sweetheart He honeymooned .homa bad man’. and ATI. Ae. Johnny Antons, 29, unemployed Singer he me V- “They were zo . He fled from the Army. stoc... one bringing back together his married Satur- MI- Courtland [0d enn I i ade at nearby Dachau early to(wife and himself. He previously 4, day in his second escape in five son, Jimmy, and himself. ress imported to Hollywood two German police and U. 'S. miliMassillon, O., spent a quiet 96th day to go back to Europe because tend their influence far beyond Square mile section of Munich on his half century's "a a =» gestions are put into practice. fee at a lunch stand. - idea of money at at IU charged with being acces- Disciples of Christ Board of Ed-| A hotise bY-house search failed became k now n Kilgore, 28, who confessed killing to the board. It convened in the| 20%) Floyd, notorious Oklahoma led an army of implicated Daggit whose first trial and will adjourn today. Approxi-| It Jooks. like he got, away = " n P 1 was arrested for The Duke and Duchess of Wind- ciples in places all over the coun- Oljce Delieved Cook; & formed
at two rival groceries today membership of churches and of
h The Oklahoman, who stands 6 would continue the “free bread” Members and an employee of the are Jocated. . 1S feet 1 inch and weighs 195
15 cents a loaf before A. L. Swan- Dr. C. R. Maxam, Butler regis- adult and youth, in an off-campus L2chau. cell with his bare hand:. son and Bill Beckwith gave away trar, will attend the American program, surely i He then scaled a 12-foot barbed
and Admission Officers. annual can too. feet into the surrounding woods.
who told police he persuaded his Francisco. Dr. Maxam will act as become service departments NOt ToO Friendly
|of the nurse he wanted. |and- William Miller, assistant to out credit.” A ‘are bitten by dogs each, year.
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