Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1950 — Page 13

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® Inside Indianapolis BE

“IT'S “A CRIME the way a husband sweating day after day over a hot stove.” What's this? “Wouldn't it be better if the husband took the little woman and the kids out to eat? Then the mother would have more time to take the young- " sters to museums, concerts, lectures. We owe that to the youth of America. Gentlemen, the housewife is our real competitor.” : For a man who eats his three meals in three different joints every day, a man who dreams of : spreading out with both elbows on the kitchen table; a man who believes a woman's place is in the kitchen, the opening remarks by the speaker almost made me flip my lid. : “Is that Mr. George L. Wenzel?” - “Yeh, quiet.”

Competitor Gag Scores

THE MEETING was part of the two-day program of the Indiana Restaurant Association conference. Mr, Wenzel, a national restaurant consultant, in his opening remarks brought chuckles to members who we se packed in the Severin Roof ballroom. The competitor gag struck a majority My real purpose for attending was merely to hear what an expert food man had to say to chefs, catering managers, restaurant owners, all sort of on the expert side themselves. What were they cooking up for me, the patron? There wasn't a soul in the place dressed in a chef’s hat or apron except me. My main thought was not to be conspicuous. The only thing lacking was a flaming crepes suzette in my hands, - Mr. Wenzel was an extremely fast talker. The speed of his delivery and the slight hoarseness of his throat, brought about no doubt from years and years of talking, made me feel like the. dancing girls would be coming out of the tent any minute. Hyaaa—Hyaa. ' Just as I suspected. Mr. Wenzel’s primary concern was to show how the restaurant or club owner could save money on his food by cutting down , waste. He also had a lot of stories about slipshod

Berlin Made a Radical Out of Whittaker Chambers

z - a condensation of the book, SEEDS OF TREASON, just published by Funk & Wagnalls, New York. It is the first orderly, factual account of the events that brought Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss face to face in one of the most sensational trials of our time. Re Digging deep into the records and interviewing many principals, the authors have tracked down much hitherto unpublished material. Their story is also a remarkable case history of bril. liant young men “going Communist.”

~ CHAPTER TWO _ GR By RALPH DE TOLEDANO AND VICTOR LASKY

As he was saying . . . George L. Wenzel tells restaurant men where to slice the bologna.

life. He decided to get away from a hampering environment.

The cook was nervous. And still closer inspecman’s ‘back. It was tied to his neck with a stout pushed young Whittaker into the Communist Party. cord. | The employee couldn't explain what the fish|Summer of Yous. was doing on his back. The owner paid him off| People walked but not before he made with a word of advice. “Either you get a shorter string or a longer their faces. | coat.” was the. advice. {common on the main thorough-| Te : fares. | , For two hours Mr. Wenzel talked a blue streak. Be little pleasure could be By that time I was completely lost in figures. How|oytracted from life was frenzied | would he be on advising the housewife? I stopped | gang orgiastic. If .a bushel of) him at the end of the meeting. Naw, he wasn’t] tired talking.

| else, | {

Purse-snatching was | before forces it could not control

Whittaker

campus.

(marks would not buy. a loaf of (bread, a cigaret could buy a woman, At night,

library; he attended no classes

‘Housewife Is in Business’ while demoralized

Some of the stuff dealing with careful buying and percentages wasn't quite clear. To me. You have this loin, see, and this loin should be cut into so many slices costing so much with side dishes costing so much and when it’s all over and the dishes are- washed—voila—there’s money in the - till. All the people were taking it in both ears, Jotting down notes, shaking their heads, clucking approval. . The one story he told when. he came to. the

fat of tyrants . . . Blood, blood, blood must flow.”

thrown rice on it. Mmmmmmmm. HE SOUGHT OUT his

“Watermelons should have a Cary Grant dim- a a = | ple on the blossom end. Cantaloupes will taste! FOR A YOUNG MAN seeking, -like they smell. Women should use their noses.'a sense of direction and a scale For roasts, housewives should use aluminum skew- of values, this was hardly the nicht find a solution to the ers. Cuts down on: roasting time, you'll never burn place for sound orientation. NOT woriq's besetting problems. the meat, cuts shrinking 25 percent. ~~ ordid -Whittaker's- subsequent -WanR-\ Were ¢an I learn about so“In buying canned foods the housewife should Rating help, Mibny. bo state ti cialism?” he asked his friends. read the bottom ‘of the labels for the grade and aying Germany, he m M3 The - fundamental’ point kind; like-fancy, choice and standard: Buy a sam-/W & ¥ through _war - devastated i pe

advice. He had: heard about Marxism. Perhaps in the writings of the socialist theoreticians he

{tionary mov

ement seize and hold er?” ¢

lin what had been: Cities and vil-| IEEE J" THINS: SVerywhere the PoE thought for a while that he { : i] y 1dgged remnants of prewar Ji had found the answer in Reflections on Violence, Georges Sorel's incendiary treatise. But though the French syndicalist called with religious fervor for direct action as a means of overthrowing capitalism, Chambers felt .that the book barely arrived at the crucial question. When Whittaker got a copy of the “Communist Manifesto”

aisle. It must have struck close to home. Anyway, a restaurant owner spots one of his cooks walking out the door at the end of the day with a peculiar bulge on his back. Closer inspection reveals part of halibut tail protruding from under the man's suit. coat. :

“Don’t buy water in the can. It's cheaper out of the faucet. Americans buy $5 million worth of water and air in cans a year. Young man, it's 4 pleasure talking with you.” Didn't even have a chance to tell him that I'd like a homecooked meal for a change.

been jo and pre-war security; once-| {fertile land pitted with shell holes and scarred by trenches; and the cemeteries with their horribly ‘Ineat rows of crosses dipping into : the horizon. offe These were pictures of doom By William McGuffin for young Whittaker; this was : [the twilight of man. Perhaps he did not think of it such articulate terms. It was

LONDON, Apr. 24—For the first time in my life I've had to hire a lawyer—or solicitor, as he’s called here. He's my defense in a battle with a laundry. Britain is a lawyer's paradise. In France people duel; in Britain they go to court. No people sue each other with the passionate persistency of Britons. An American diplomat friend of mine once recalled how he accepted an invitation to watch a parade from a balcony on the ‘Mall. He was about to walk onto the rickety structure when the butler warned him: “This balcony is not actionable, sir!” “How’s that again?” he asked, bewildered. Then the butler explained that if the balcony collapsed with my friend on it he couldn’t sue his host. I had never thought, however, that the sum of $19.60 involved in an argument with a laundry would cause me to hire a lawyer. But it did. My laundry is certainly no better and no worse than others here. But it had lost a sheet and brand new tablecloth, and refused to make them good. I had deducted $19.60 from my bill.

‘Other Hands’

The laundry softened a bit and said, well, even in though I hadp’t abided by the terms plainly printed on the back of the laundry book, I would be reimbursed 20 times what it cost to launder the missing articles. I was offered $1.86 and if I Re ninny I'd know this was the limit, We were playing by the laundry rules and 20 times

laundering cost was one. If you don't like that, do the wash yourself, old chap.

Ridiculous Offer

MY solicitor replied that the laundry’s offer was ridiculous and of course his client wouldn't accept it. At the same time he wrote me and said, “If you pay: the $17.74 difference between $19.60 and $1.86, you undoubtedly will have to man Sue to get satisfaction. On the other hand, if you don’t pay there is the possibility vou will be sued.” for

This has been going on since December. When for awhile. or how it’s going to end is beyond me. My solicitor according to hasn't sent me a bill yet and I don't have-the courage to ask him how much I owe him.

‘About People—

Rita, Aly May Meet Ghost in Irish Manor

Prince Buys Estate Where Spirit Is Reported to Walk in Kitchen Nightly

Parsonstown Mann In Batterstown, Ireland, had ‘folks talking today. Prince Aly Khan bought the 350-acre estate with its sumptuous or house, ghost and all.

And when they do, i " Batterstown folk,/Green’s daughter, Joyce, 1 they “will make the acquaintance eloped Apr. 14. of the ghost who

8,

. . ported having to live off friends. in sight When we began this whole thing my friends strolls almost a 2 lyl Act NEXT THING I knew the laundry told me I blithely asured me, get a solicitor to write a letter nightly through. Kirsten Flagstad, Wagnerian wasn’t entitled to anything because I hadn't given fOr you. It will only cost about 75 cents and will the fireplace in:

Jsopreno, denied today that she i fod go home to Norway be- { [the hall during recital , | Angeles last night.

written notice within two weeks after the loss. If I didn’t pay up within seven days the matter would -.be_ turned over. to. ‘other.hands.’ ra At this point I went out and hired myself a . solicitor who wrote the customary nasty letter

clear the whole thing up.” {the kitchen. The It's a terribly corny old cliche but I can't resist townsfolk aren ‘using it when T'meet my friends now. I tell them Sure just’ whos “sue you later.” Or, instead of saying, “see you in 8Dost it is but

in Los

church” I use the much more apt, ‘“‘se inthey say it is “ y supporting me and giving the laundry the devil. court.” : P see you trendy as are {Jang “Battle Hytp of the Repub. NS is 2 =ll of eland's {questioning Mme..Flagstad’s loy-| ff fi . ¥ [Sone To “Eng- lalty to democracy during the . war. The operatic singer de- : lishmen. foot Coftee Profits By Frederick C. Othman we

Miss Hayworth [clined to. repeat her denials of ae Shost and r. steeplechase Alleged pro-Nazi activities during jockey, got along fine until Mec- ne war when her late husband t.) wondered what the Keever was killed in an auto aS accused of Quisling sympant of the New York crash. Later, Lord Birkett, Eng- thies. Her audience heartily apws lish nobleman, bought the manor, Plauded each number. Mr. Suplicy was in New York a few weeks ago But he never moved in. The word E = = and he wanted a’ car,” testified Broker Boedtker. is that the ghost didn’t want an Carmelite Jere Cross, 34, orSo we bought it for him.” Englishman, even a titled one. ganist of San Pedro, Cal., claimed “And what is this other item to the same | = = =n |a new deep-sea record for women Cadillac company. for. $8115?" demanded Sen. Anna Flaus, Latvian. a do- following her stroll along the Aiken. mestic, en route to Indianapolis, ocean bed 152 feet below the sur“Oh,” said Mr. Boedtker, “Mr. Suplicy wanted is among the 1303 displaced per-| face. Accompanying her during several cars for his family. We bought them sons aboard the USNS Heintzel- her hour and 10 minutes underfor him.” 'man to dock in Boston tomorrow. water trip yesterday. was her It turned out that the millions in profits never She is one of 29 persons coming husband, E. R. Cross, 36. diver were turned over directly to Mr. Suplicy in Brazil.to Indiana. The arrival of the who recorded the feat ' Mr. Boedtker said he had cabled orders to deposit Heintzelman will bring to 145,694 'n } them in an account marked Seavo in the Chemical the total number of former dis-| 0 e Tturbi ianis National Bank. Who was Seavo? Or, maybe, what placed persons brought to the jury vesterda plans WAS SERVO? |. oui pion nev wid UseSi on International “Refugee iN SL ELOAY "Mr. Boedtker said he had no idea. Sen. Holland Organization chartered ships and turned to the room full of coffee brokers=-and planes under. the Displaced Perasked if any of them knew. They didn't. .isons Act of 1948. = = Seavo Gets the Meney . Ruth Warrick, actress, and Carl IT WAS HERE that Mr. Boedtker read Mr, Neubert, interior decorator, honey-Suplicy’s-cabled protest against making public the mooned “secretly” today. They traditionally - secret nature of his coffee spec- left Hollywood yesterday followulations. ! - ing their marriage. It was Miss “There is no reason why his dealings should not Warrick's second marriage -and be disclosed to the public,”* said Sen. Holland. “If Mr. Neubert's first. the traders regard their exchange as of more importance than the public interest of the nation, we might as well find out now.” Sen. Austin said American coffee drinkers might _ » not feel so badly if their money was going to Bie said today she'll Brazilian farmers. adopt a 5-year-“But it isn’t,” said Mr. Hadlick. “It is going to ©/d girl within accounts like Seavo.” a few months in I guess I'll start drinking milk. That's one way the Fast. She I can be sure I'm not buying gasoline for Senor Said she will go

WASHINGTON, Apr. 24—You'd think that Paul Suplicy would be happy riding around in Brazil in his three new 1950 Cadillacs, which you and I helped pay for every time we drank a cup of 80-cents-a-pound coffee. But not Paul. He is a bitter Brazilian. He cabled to his broker in New York a protest against having his name mentioned in public as a man whose firm took better than $3 million speculating here in coffee during the last nine months, while the price. of this brew soared to record-breaking heights. . ’

Dealer's Broker Subpenaed

PAUL'S COMPLAINT. from Sao Paulo had little effect on the senators, who have been seeking for months to learn why the cost of a cup of coffee ..was_ heading. toward. champagne. levels... They slapped a subpena on his broker, Alfred Boedtker, and ordered the tale of the Cadillacs and the quick millions spread on the record for all coffee drinkers’ to read. . ~Paul, with a couple of other relatives, is head of the firm of Escriptorio Suplicy of Sao Paulo, “coffee brokers. There in the center of the greatest coffee-producing area of the world, he's been keeping the. cables hot to New York, directing his trade on the American exchange. . The records indicate, according to committee counsel Paul Hadlick, that while coffee was doubling and tripling in price last fall and winter, the Suplicys had 2960 coffee futures contracts in force in New York. With the price on the way up, they ~bought cheap and sold high. Hadlick's figures showed that for the nine months they made a net profit of $3,363,334.71. : “Without ever actually delivering a single bag of actual coffee,” commented Sen. Spessard Holland (D. Fla.), "> ’

The Quiz Master

When was Washington, D. C., incorporated as a city? : In 1802. Its municipal affairs were run by - mayors and boards of aldermen regularly elected by the citizenry; in 1871, -however, Congress decided to turn the District of Columbia into a territory and govern it as though it were Alaska or an Indian reservation. : * * 9 : “Does the United States government have the right to seize the property of an enemy alien? The right of the United States government to seize the property of an enemy alien, regardless of where he lives or whether he had in any way symyathized with the enemy, has been upheld.

Sen. George Aiken (R. V $4324 entry to the accou Cadillac agency meant.

» t, escaped inyhen..the. private.

“plane in which he was riding made a forced landing in a pas- % ture near Wye Mills, Md., while he was en route : to Baltimore to play at a concert engagement. Mr, Iturbi, his sister and a secretary were flying to Baltimore from Rochester, N. Y., {when their pilot lost his bearings land ended up across the Chesa|peake Bay in Maryland, forced to [land when the gas supply ran low. | un - = Marie Wilson, actress, has re{ported missing a $1000 white fox

= 5 o Joan Crawford, movie star, already the adoptive mother of four children,

Mr. Iturbi

Suplicy’s Cadillacs. after the child fur. She said she first ‘really when she fin- missed” the fur 10 days after she ishes her current

left it at a photographer's studio.

movie. 2

She decided on §¥ the adoption be- =

» n By all means take the dog along | isis ion your travels this. year, says cause the gap Miss Crawford Harry Miller, director of . the between ages of Gaines Dog Research Center, New |her twin children, Cathy and York. Finding lodgings for you Cindy, 3, and Christopher, 7, Was ;,4 your pet is not nearly as diftoo great, she said. Miss Craw-/sio)t a5 it once was, Mr. Miller) (ford also has a 10-year-old gniq in announcing the 1950 edi-| daughter, Christina. |tion of the service. booklet, “Tour-| "40. ling With Towser,” unique direc-| Green, chain store mag-|y ry which lists hotels and motor Newton, Conn., apparent-/.,; ts which accept dogs. {ly relenting over the elopement| ———————— lof his daughter and a Latin 50-YEAR AUTO MARK Lothario, said today the couple] U, 8. auto plants have turned What is the present membership of the 4-H only needs to “pick up a Pine out: More >> 105 million veClubs” if they need help. Juan Gonzales hicles during the past half century The 82,000 4-H Clubs in the United States re- Cuevas, 22, son of a public utility with an estimated value of more

port appgoximately 2,000,000 members. executive in Miami, andy Mr.thap $80 billion. : iy :

?

27? Test Your Skill 2?

From what type of tree are cashew nuts obtained?

. The cashew is a spreading tree, from 20 to 40 feet high, native of the tropics and common in the West Indies. The nut which grows on the end of a fleshy, pear-shaped stalk is small, kidney-shaped, ash-gray, varying in size. The kernel, oily and H L. Autritious, is used for food and is removed from p,¢e of the three-layer shell by roasting.

oD

hp

Indiana;

MOND

~ EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of 14 installments of

WHITTAKER CHAMBERS was once more soured on collegiate

With. Meyer Schapiro, he booked passage on a German steamer tion produced a hefty halibut hanging down the | and sailed for Europe. It was this trip which, more than anything

To the impressionable student, Berlin was a paranoid city that

through the/more a spectacle of humanity " streets with tears running down| Crucified and bleeding, helpless fa

Returning home, looking for an Chambers made his peace with Dean Hawks and returned to the Columbia

But it was only to live at John Jay Hall and to use the university

So as not to be dependent on his

] “THE HOUSEWIFE is basically running a busi- householders sat listlessly in the family, he took a nighttime job in #] Dayine, Jreparing Ad Loniral Of what way on so ey he said. “She wants tender. juicy homes, Communist students the New York Public Library, hand. Ory he old sounded as if he had Jy... “dhe ‘should 100k for brittle, white fat surged through the streets shout- handing out papers in the news. 3 Personiiy been OR the spot When it Happefied. And puri the steak, Not yellow, soft or oily. The|Ing that tender Marxist anthem: paper room. % Ja4-9 milen. lean part of the meat should be like you had Grease the guillotine with the 3

old friends at Columbia to ask their

of |

The question of whether Rita Hayworth will see the ghost of face charges today after being

No doubt the Prince and his Hollywood bride want the place their racing string, but they are expected to stay in the manor reported their homes were entered

They were re-

cause 50 pickets paraded -outside western Ave: The pickets handle were confiscated. Bron-|

[lic” and passed out literature gain entrance, police. said.

to]

ARUN NES

Left College . For Europe

In Marxism-Leninism, he felt he found a simple explanation and a program for action—or in terms more suited to his temperament, a moral solution for a ‘world of moral confusion. “The very vigor of the project particularly appeals to the more or less sheltered intellectuals who feel that the whole context of | their lives ‘kept them away from the world of reality,” he ‘said.

cern, a Christian concern one might say, for underprivileged people. They feel a great intellectual © concern for recurring crises, the problem of war which in our time has assumed an, atrocious proportion and which always weighs on them. They say, ‘What shall I do? At the crossroads the evil thing, communism, lies in wait with a simeple answer. Once he had reached that crosse roads, the new convert moved des terminedly to implement his conclusions. But this was not as easy as it might seem. ; =» ” THE WORKERS’ (Communist) Party was an elusive thing in

| 1920: Oly a year before, a secret convention of the party at Bridgman, Michigan, had been raided and the Party leaders arrested, on the tipoff of a government agent who had infiltrated the highest echelons of the organization. Now the Party was wary of all new recruits and doubly wary of those with middle-class backgrounds who came in out of the blue. It was even difficult to find out where Party-branches-met: Then © Chambers = remembered Sender Garlin, the “campus radi- : who had: passed briefly

a

*

This picture, taken in 1934, which shows Whittaker Chambers with his baby, was presented to Alger Hiss in a House un-American Activities Committee hearing for - identification purposes. ~ Hiss, who admitted knowing Chambers in 1934 as George Crosley, couldn't be sure this picture was Crosley. ;

w CHL"

; ed — ay mrp al en | ; " : ry ts afr imbers. as sehen toss I Rw - : SAREE ARE SIRI = “subject of" employees taking homie & “few Scraps” ple can and check the net drained weight. That's France and Belgium: ~Here wie Ci on does a revolu| MATE oe “ ¥ in.” ¥% bered, tqo, that Garlin was associ-(2-pound steaks) for the dog laid one man in the the secret in buying canned foods. |shock was not in what was, but] : : the first sentences: “A: specter is Lenin.

| i ; “ated with an outfit called Russian{haunting ‘Europe, the specter of. .JIts description of a functioning y po aionn Relfef.

Communism... . All the powers of soviet moved Chambers almost count Garlin out and asked him jold Europe have entered into alas much as it enlightened him. ..co. = ‘where's the Communist holy alliance to exorcise this “This is the answer,” he thought:ip, 5 specter ..." “This man Ienin knows the me- Garlin questioned him closely | “What horrible Fhetoric,” iehutics of i oi to determine his sincerity. Chambers: thought, and he tossed 2nd hold it. Ig. Rn “Go see Clarence Miller,” he

been looking for.” Like Paul on _, ne 1 VOU-10.§ jaway the pamphlet. ./the road to Damascus, he had Said at last Hell take y 3

“One evil hour, walking along 'seen the light. He was converted. | [Fourth Ave. and browsing in the x a. 's) and {bookshops, I came across a book- “NO ONE recruited me,” Whitlet in a fire sale,” Chambers re- taker Chambers was to testify calls. “It was called ‘A Soviet many years later.

TOMORROW: Chambers goes to work for “The Party.”

(Copyright, 1950. by Funk & Wagnalls Co, Distributed by united Feature Syndicate)

h Face Burglary School 25 Custodian Quits Post Charges Here on

Two Teeners Among Suspects Seized

Three men and two teen-agers

|

| | apprehended in alleged burglary

(attempts over the week-end. Meanwhile, two residents

{and ransacked during their ab- § sence. 3 Shortly after midnight today !police answered a burglar alarm at the “Club 11,” at 230 W. 11th 3 St. There they arrested a man, whom they” identified as Albert |Lee Bronaugh, 25, of 1720 North-|g on présburglary! A dagger and a jack

charges.

{laugh jimmied a rear window to Late yesterday Leonard Short, 52, Bridgeport, an employee of the /Acme-Evans Flour Mill, called police to investigate a ‘man he said was stacking four 25-1b. bags jof grain near the mill. Police arrested John L. Sheet, 29, of 429 Blackford St. on a burglary charge. He said he gained entrance through an open window of the feed mill. Two teen-agers were arrested, on pre-second degree burglary ‘charges and taken to Juvenile Aid|

Edward Gruner pauses on his last day at School 25, to pa

Y an official farewell to the black oak tree he planted on the school

after police caught them in a ware-| lawn in 1924,

house in the rear of 1943 W. New |York St. yesterday. They told officers they entered the building after removing a tin sheet from the west side of the ware- | house, which is leased by. the Amazon Rubber Co., Chicago.

Edward ‘Gruner to Retire After 33 Years' Work

Willi Q. Booth, 44 f 2013 By LEON W. RUSSELL School on Pennsylvania St., near . . , C «U1. x . 7 2. ’ ang Re Ae &t 2 told boTice © het Edward Gruner gave a tug on the present World War Memorial o . A ‘ I CAD /inced a li : e Plaza. a is wi res- his cap and winced a little at the ©} 5 fo rage returned home Jeu. tug on his heartstrings. In 1918 he went to the New lday- absence - to find the house: ~~ He gave a few parting instruc-'York Central Railroad's Beech

ransacked. Watches, guns and tions to the new custodian of Grove shops, to work as a guard. jewelry worth $635 were reported School 25. ) There he stayed until Jan. 22, imissing. Mr. Booth said entrance/ Lhen he said goodbye to the 1922 when he returned to work {had p , : i building where, man and boy, he for the school bo rd. He was as|had been gained by forcing a 8 or the sch a

had spent 33 of ms £4 years s signed to Technical High School ; 2 y = A few hours before, School 25 534 4 janitor. | paymond alive SS elie had said goodby to Mr. Gruner. On Aug. 31, 1922, he returned tered his home sometime over Ihe teachers and pupils gathered to his alma mater, School 25, also [the week-end and took a $650 in the gymnasium, sang SONgS known as the Catherine Merrill |diamond ring, another ring and presented him with a plant. School after the woman who had valued at $145, two watches ou brojs down, Mr. Gruner gonated the land for the school y ! olv a 50' con esses shyly. grounds. i ro! er and a 8 In 1886, when Mr. Gruner Was The work has not been easy, Jewell Owens, 27, of 621 Blake 6 and the building was 7 years old, Foreign Language Taught St., was under arrest today on a they began an enduring associa-| There was a time when there : was a pupil for every seat in the

pre-burglary charge after police tion. said he broke a window yesterday Returns as Custodian school's nine rooms. In Mr, morning at Rose Tire Co., 939 N. He attended for five years, then Gruner's boyhood there even was Meridian St. left to take a job. Young people ® class in German. for it was a L. B. Freeman. service man, were likely to get their careers German neighborhood. said he called officers when he off to an ‘early start in those But the population of the neigh heard a glass break in the south gaye In 1922 he returned as cuis- | Porhood has dwindled as it has side of the building and saw a todian. In. the interim his sob gradually become a factory disman reach into the window. and daughter . were pupils in trict. And today, there are but School 25. three rooms in use—two grades

Sgt. Joe Klein and Patrolmen t d th th Alexander Sabo and James Burke A pan re ale Tee His first job was with Metz- taschers including the principal,

said they caught the suspect in , i on phe y + Qt ortap B€I's Bottling Works, where he His two children, Kenneth and the 1100 block of N. West St. after washed bottles and ran the ele-

'kitchen window.

0

Catherine—now Mrs. Eld 11 a chase through neighborhood fF CC 0 years of this and he 3 ne o Wells alleys. They said they fired sev- ider's| 250 went "to School 38. A eral shiots. began to learn the mou * granddaughter; Beverly Wells, at-

/trade with the oid Brown-Ketch-

on : (am Iron Works in Haughville. |icaqv for junior hi h 1 TRAIN KILLS 5 WORKMEN | He also worked with the Heth- pow goes li lig school, and

KIMBALL, W. Va., Apr. 24 (UP) lerington & Berner, Inc. iron Kenneth's son, Eddie, and -——A small speeder car carrying works, and the Central States daughter, Pat, missed out on the six men to a railroad bridge re- Bridge Works. For 2 hme he family tradition. They go to Z ; drove a horse for the Foley Bros. school 13 ir job smashed head-on with a g " pair jobs smashed head-on Plumbing Co. : Mr. Gruner will not reach the Then in 1914 he began work for sehool board's retirement age— the school board. He was a jani- 70 years—until next Oct. 9. But tor in the old Shortridge High he Qecideg to quit a little anh

tended the school until she was’

Norfolk + & Western passenger train in a tunnel here today, killing five ahd injuring gre.

“They feel a very-natuyral eon~ .-

Chambers .