Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1950 — Page 37

[F THAT bottle could talk ft would tell a wonderful story" > if we broke the seal and tapped the

of that bottle we could both tell a wonderstory,” Was my answer, I'm the kind of a

guy who has faith in animate objects.

_ Jack Cann, secretary of the American Legion Press Association, grasped the jug Haig & Haig filled and held it with both hands. “I'm not kidding.” “Neither am 1.” Jack stared out the window for a minute. The

bottle had me puzzled. He lad never shown it before and anyone around Legion aeadquarters

knows he's had plenty of opportunity. Jack is an excellent yarn swapper. “Just brought this bottle down the other day." Jack. “You remember I told you about it once—what party or banquet was it that I saw you last?” ;

Must Have Been a Good Party

I'RACKED my brain a few times and came up with nothing. Sometimes parties will produce a temporary amnesia. Good parties will. “See this writing across the label?” asked Jack, thrusting the bottle at me but not letting go. I read: “Drink to the health of the English army which saved me from the Germans.” “What's the gag?”

CTT IVs no gag. Quiet; And TI tell you a story”

&

they knocked off one of your own airplanes which

“You won't consider , , , ?” The ends of Jack's waxed mustache began to twirl like a puppy dog's tail so I knew it was time to stop. The story of the bottle of scotch, which unfortunately can’t talk, as told by Jack, follows.

i

hi

Toast? . . . Jack Cann holds a bottle that .came a long way for a momentous occasion and missed.

Indianapolis

By Ed Sovola

Barry Arthur Bulek. a mining engineer and a.

e Indianap

/

.

“ a

>

lHeutenant in World War I and .ateetotaler, gave| the bottle of scotch to his friend, Jack Cann, Jack ihe gift in December of 1943, when the Germans were still and mighty. | Jack promised to drink a toast when the Ger-| mans were driven out of France, not before. This took place in Detroit at a little farewell party for| the Buicks who were returning to Klamath Falls, | Wash., Mr. Buick's boyhood home. ! The story flashes back now to young Lt. Buick in 1918. He was an interpreter. In connection with/ his duties, Lt. Buick met the widow of a French

officer killed in combat. She had an infant son.| How a Communist Editor

They fell. in love and married. | I . y f d I S ; After the war ended, the couple came to the, : ’ United States. The labor strikes of 1922 hit Mr.| y rans orme nto a P y ) Bick bald. Mrs, Flick, homesick he Seg hes Dotpie EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth of 14 installments of a aud J Ta: peta ng Yee el and oS a ud condensation of the book, “Seeds of Treason,” just publish still in France when World War II broke out. by wun sw a he New Yorke t of the events th ¢ Mr. Buick had built airfields for the French Mo Secomnl. of the aven » government, installed the first underground pipe| brought Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss face to face in one line for an American company. He became a dealer of the most seiautivia) iia Is ot ole Kime terviewl in American agricultural equipment. He also was Digging deep records and interviewing many princigiven a subcontract on a new Ford assembly | pals, the authors have tracked down much hitherto unpublished plant in Poissy, a suburb of Paris y material. Their story is also a remarkable case history of brilliant . . -“, v, » Mrs. Buick’s son had grown, served his required YOUng men “going Communist. time in the French army, married and had g child ThE RSH of his own. World War II began, turned into Al By RALPH de TOLEDANOG and VICTOR LASKY war of nerves and then the German fury was, rr CHAPTER FIVE oe unleashed. France collapsed. | WHEN WHITTAKER CHAMBERS walked out of the Dail ; y 2 Mr. nd Mrs. Buick aed heir a to begin thelt Worker office in 1929, he still believed firmly in the bolshevik git pend an . ar . On eran oul. | seizure of power and the dictatorship of the proletariat. peLsy whenever ible, they nade thelr way Sains | The right instruments to bring about the revolution would Near eve x the couple was picked up by al come in time. They would be schooled and dedicated young men. British soldier who drove them to a motor pool | and he would be one of them. In the meantimé, he would write. where equipment was being destroyed | Chambers knew that he sould, a La rn A British major supplied the Buicks with a °asily earn more than his Daily he {irst time when he was Sever: truck and enough fuel to reach the Spanish fron- Worker salary by doing literary ing the 1% 8 Passaic textile strike tier. They were instructed to destroy the truck granslations, Since dhe midge SE ot Visca, a sur ded av hv R § ‘roundae a if captured. He also gave them the bottie of Haig the best-selling “Bambi” by Felix hall in which strikers were ath

& Haig scotch as a stimulant. . ) After much hardship, the Buicks were in Salten, his reputation in that field ered. Suddenly the doors burst

Detroit. A report was given of the condition of the Ford property. Normal living conditions eventually were established. Mr. and Mrs, Jack

were completely un-Marxist in by a slender, dark-haired girl.

THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1950 _

introduced to a Russian known to him merely as Herbert, . Herbert questioned Chambers closely on his past disagreements with the party then bluntly told him that he had: been selected for underground work. Chambers had no desire to leave the New Masses. That night, when he discussed it with his wife, she strongly objected to the move. In fcct, she cried. For Esther was not, in the party jargon, “thoroughly developed.”

» » id BUT AS A Leninist, Chambers knew that he must. accept the assignment. The father of bol-

the revolution could succeed oniy if the party developed a core of - professional revolutionists. These men, undemoralized by personal problems, had to be ready to leave their families for months or years, to go where they

Mr. and Mrs. Whittaker Chambers are shown at the’ Federal "ere sent and do what they wera

told. This is what Chambers ha

Court in New York, Dec. 6, 1949, after Mrs. Chambers told the court in detail how she and her husband visited three of the Hiss Relieves at Ne Deaster, aM

homes. Chambers first saw her tempting to arrest her.

on a picket line with police at- Two days later, John introduce1 him to a short, wiry, monke/faced veteran of the Russian civil

had been high. And he could open and the strikers marched out posed on himself the more rigid him back. The lure they held out/war. His name was Ulrich and. continue to write the poems which to meet the police. They were led discipline of his political stories. to him was the editorship of the not being a party member or a He wrote five stories for the

New Masses. strict Marxist, he was an anomaly

Cann were among the list of Buick friends. ney Refsiion of an older and «Get that b—— in the brown New Masses in this period, work- For three months Chambers/in the underground. sadder philosophy. beret,” the police shouted as they Ing at them in the cold-water flat, edited the New Masses, handling! But he was an experienced revoLoses Hope for Scotch What he wanted most of all moved in on the strikers. on New York's East Side, which the copy of important left-orient- Iutionary, and the Kremfin ‘rusted

was to crystallize his political! The girl, a labor organizer, was he and Esther had rented.

THEN CAME that night in 1943 of the gift thinking, to arrive at some con-

of scotch. Events moved rapidly. The Buicks left. clusions, and to put these conclu- arrested in the struggle that fol-

(lowed. Chambers learned then

establish residence. He never felt right with the was preoccupied with the more itz, but it was not until years later

scotch in a hotel. squalid aspects of American in-

VE Day and VJ Day came and went. The friend self-pitying and dishonest — putp-¥2% | . was in a hospital, critically ill for months. Jack fiction in reverse. pathizers who work in party or-

world-wide repercussions in leftns wing literary circles, that he met her. What Moscow thought of “Can

A friend was given the scotch for safe ‘keeping. dustrial life! "It" was mawkish, Never a.-‘party member, Esther yo, Make Out Their Voices” ‘was one of the multitude of sym- important to Cha

gave up ever seeing the scotch. You see the friend Chambers had no desire to de- ganizations and accept party Moscow went all out.

wasn't a teetotaler, scribe the insides of garbage doctrine without formal member-

” ship. But the friend and the unopened scotch came pails. His aim was at once

A critique published in InternaWhen they re married at City Honda) Literatute juifiessly eric. Be cel Ie __ : andiose and practical; he want-! y we Y cized the New Masses but praised © ed organize a subback. In fact, the trust Jack placed in his friend to create hw bolshevik as a Hall in 1931, Grace Hutchins, a whittaker Chambers as A find Way strike in the Twenties, was

helped preserve the remnants of will power, ‘igure in American literature. It Bryn Mawr-Back Bay Communist, ,,¢ 1931.

“When Russia-sends-up a real Jove of peace was this character who dominated 8nd Anna Rochester, author of]

Let's Get Rough

This remote laying on of hands Name aliases Mike, Arthur, and

At ed writers. least two of the stories, “Death Jack had der the Le in Indi i of the Communists” and “Can ack had an offer from the Legion in Indianapolis. gions down in the form of stories. - You Make Out Their Voices,” had “Tlie “War was ending. He came here alone > Proletarian writing in those days hot her name-was Esther 8hem- i" ige™ enercussions in left.

(him. . Ulrich gave Chambers his » ® 8 first cover name—Bob—and his

FOR THREE MONTHS he was first assignment.

in the midst of tha fourth issue Writer disappeared as completely under his editorship, the phone a8. if he had dissolved into thin call came from Max Beaacht. The fir. None of his party friends

WAS instructions from Bedacht were knew what had become of him,

mbers’ future in i i nor was it their business to ask. the Communist movement. A typically mysterious,

He became a man of many names and of no name. He moved ianonymously about the country, a “faceless man,” his old identity lost in the musty files of the New

now operating under various firsts Masses office...

Chambers was to meet John, a! man he knew in the open party

or we all agree to live as good neighbors, I'm 4° op ne of “tn “Rulers of America,” a slashing n. |ground assignment, he and hig " ories he began to hy Moscow convinced party leadopening the jug.” said Jack. : write. 8 treatise on United States capital- rq that Whittaker PA Without any explanation, John family assumed a new false iden“I'm with you.” 3 wo. ism, were their witnesses. must be brought back into the took Chambers uptown where the Hiy as routine protection, Wagnalls SE DURING THIS relatively calm . 0 party as soon as possible. Early two men strolled casually along Co BieirTbuted By United Feature Syndis

and productive period in his life, MARRIED TO ESTHER and in 1932, two of the cultural com- Riverside Drive near Grant's By Robert C. Ruark

Whittaker Chambers married Es- with the security which a good missars, Joseph Freeman and Tomb. A cruising limousine picked]! Tomorrow: A spy serves his ther Shemitz. He had seen her for marriage brings, Chambers im- Mike Gold, were assigned to win them up, and there Chambers was apprenticeship.

WASHINGTON, Apr. 27—According to the way the Reds are playing this deal about the shot-down American aviators, and in the light of their spy trials of our people and our handling of their spys, about the only logical way you can cool them off is to start shooting a few hostages. I do not imagine we will adopt this old-fashioned mode of retaliation to thugs, but as a non-global thinker I don’t see any other solution. You get a little sore when they admit thot

they say flew over a frontier, but the brazen arrogance of the admission and the threat to do it again 1s what really pours the coal-oil In the flame. We send the laddies a meek diplomatic note asking them to please, for Neaven's sake, say they are sorry for the benefit of the American taxpayer, and they come back with an invitation for the United States to go whistle up a rope.

Common Man

I AM WHAT is patronizingly referred to by the lace-pants diplomacy set as a common man, and so I cannot understand a nation this big just pouting when they shut up our man, Angus Ward, and-send Robert Vogler to jail for 15 years without benefit of his own counsel, and when the Jugs shoot down our aviators and the Russians shoot down our aviators and then spit in our eye. ? But I do recall how the American gangsters used to do business with each other, and it was messy but effective. If the ooys in one mech knocked off the boys in another mob, then the knockee's chums went out and blew down two or three of the first offender's friends. If one set put_the snatch on a member of a rival concern, then the rival concern borrowed a hostage and tickled his little toesies until the fair light of reason dawned. The cops have a tight houserule which has always operated effectively—namely, that copkillers are not nice and if you let one mug get away with killing a copper, other people will

Dream Cars

-

maybe be tempted to draw down on a blue uni- ou. Peo le form and before long you will be running out of Ab t Pp

law enforcement. Sp cop-killers nearly always . get caught, and- generally in a terribly rumpled! f° ancy inatra ants condition. Gradually the word gets out that cop-| 2 shooting is unprofitable. |

. | anna nme: Separate Maintenance

tap on the wrist, when maybe if we'd shot him . . publicly some hint of our ill-temper might penetrate Crooner's Wife Takes First Legal the Iron Curtain. If our-guys, merely by approach- Action Since Announcing Separation

ing Russian-held land, are automatically guilty of | espionage and subject to shooting, then possibly! Frank Sinatra's wife has filed suit for separate maintenance in a little harsh patty-cake with the first Red Santa Monica, Cal. merchant seaman we catch with a camera mightn't It's her first legal step since she announced her separation from be bad medicine. y | the crooner on Valentine's Day. | I heard we had a Russian submarine marked Mrs. Nancy Sinatra accused the singer of extreme cruelty and down off the port of Boston the other day, with mental suffering. 1a Eh ae

a bevy of our destroyers watching him. A check » She asked custody of their ——— ~~ = Tm this story got a denial from a, en on three children, temporary and screeching ina man’s car really

i rmanent support, and a divi- came from a cat. fearh Id lo qu verlfving JUNIE aN SALW pr of a nk | The “body” in the trunk re-

fire blind in the interests of sensation) but I was! rted by Robert Stensland bethinking at the time that n . nity property. po c tunity : flex a Ia on $33 9000 Orbe | Erskine John- jonged 0.2 Poslianic: Se Tote scie, son, Times {with Ernest W. Wunderlich, Joli-

Hollywood cor- et mortician, to check engine An Act of War RP: re- inoises, Mr. Wunderlich told ChiIF SHOOTING down an aircraft is not an act

rts “the 8i- {cago police who investigated. of war, then sinking a nearby Russian submarine Por. reconcilia- | Ivan Booth, Winnipeg garage

is not an act of war. What is not an act of War yon is in the mechanic, found the cat that for one is not an act of war for another. Hence, bag with Frank- bothered the motorist. The cat sat we drop a depth charge right down the visiting jo accepting the on the battery and screeched fireman's schnorkel pipe, and maybe some of the stiffest terms every time the motor made things itch leaves the trigger-fingers of our friends. ever imposed on too hot for it. I do not wish to go to war again, having had him by Nancy. Nancy Sinatra a 8» all I need to satisfy me on its discomforts, but in, A series of trans-Atlanti¢ phone Ralph" L. Reeder, former Nemy innocence it seems we are raising up a-beaut cgiis will soon be-climaxed-by the Praska farm magazine editor, has,

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Times to Show Contest Clothes

® Garments made by entrants in The Times Sewing Contest will be on display starting Sunday at the Central Library, Pennsylvania and St. Clair Sts. ® The winners and pictures of the outstanding garments will be shown in The Sunday Times . . . in the Woman's Section. ® Hours for the public display—which is free—will be: Sunday, 2 p. m. to 6 p. m.; Monday, 9 a. m. to 9 p. m.; Tuesday, 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. Contestants, except first place winners, will pick ‘up their garments from 5 to 9 p. m. Tuesday at the Library.

Four Teen-Agers Fined as Vandals

Juvenile Court has swung its est opportunity since 1928 to elect weight behind the city’s “get a Republican to Congress. tough policy against juvenile de-

linquency.

Four teen-agers who went on. gressional aspirant, attacked the, by letting these babies strut around and push us marriage of a 28-year-old model been named, associate director of a ‘tree-cutting spree in Washing- record in Congress of Democrat ‘off the sidewalk. I personally do not buy the|os Gleichenberg, Austria, and her agricultural information at Pur- ton Park have been ordered to Congressman Andrew Jacobs. He

Tr EAA Heart Di Tilson Attacks * any, Disgase |

B | @ The REAL STORY about rainan an : heart disease. . . Amer- ; fca’s No. 1 killer. . . will be toid in The Times

Declares Farm Idea starting Sunday. Is Unworkable @ In a series of articles that -A. Jack ‘Tilson, Republican can: will appear daily and didate for Congress nomination, Sunday, The Times bares |attacked the Brannan farm plan| the truth about heart dis{last night at a 10th Ward GOP ease ... a story that's meeting in the Woodruff Place instructive . . . authori. {Community House. tative . . . optimistic.

| “The Brannan Plan is unwork-| able” Mr. Tilson said. “It pur-|

® A Times writer spent two months investigating this

{ports to give the consumer some-| REAL story about heart | thing for nothing and takes away. disease. from the farmer his right to live @ You owe it to yourself, ,, jas a free American, all at the to your entire family. , , expense of the taxpayers.” { to read about heart dis- | He told Republicans at the ease in The Times. {meeting the nation’s tax structure; ‘AMERICA’S NO. 1 KILLER’ is “all wrong” and said taxes Starts Sunday in |could be cut by the “simple meth-| THE SUNDAY TIMES lod of reducing federal expendi[tures ‘Car Hits Parked Auto,

{- Mr. Tilson told the group the . Republican Party had its great- Both Destroyed by Fire

, Two cars were destroyed by fire early today following an acs cident in the 900 block Virginia Ave. Driver of one of the cars

At the same meeting, Charles Brownson, another GOP con-|

drunkeness.

brotherhood of man if it involves absorbing abuse |gweetheart by mail and telephone, due. pay $88 for the damage within charged Mr. Jacobs “sold both| Police ssid. the fire staried

from a bunch of fugitives from fullbeards who | - -old grandfather of Chi- *r x = { still keep their hard coal in the bathtub. Ah come | San Baith tn) Rauch, it Miss Ruth | from way down South, suh, where the menfolks village queen of Gleichenberg, has|Ann Thomas, still got pride. received word that Sam Hedge, daughter of Mr. : chef of a Chicago restaurant and and Mrs. Charles By Frederick h part-time inventor, will arrives Thome 5155 | Austria. Object — matri-| i : y Frederick C. Othman zon io : has been elected

“Sam is the perfect husband for recording secre-

WASHINGTON, Apr. 27—My campaign of many years for automobiles with running boards, cranks, choke buttons and other modern conveniences is over. I am a beaten motorist. The

~.opposition did -me.in... :

I have bought—and this is a confession—a

© 1950 model without any of the items I long have

.. considered. necessities. About the only resem-. . blance between my new sedan with the tin pants

($35 extra) around the rear wheels and the car of my dreams is the smell. Remember that salubrious and almost-aromatic. odor of fresh varnish, new steel, clean oil and rubber? My new car has that, at least, and so reminds me of my youth, when-automobiles were

built the way I thought they ought to be.

““Kverything else is different.” You “may récall”

that President Truman wanted on his new limousine running boards so that the secret service agents would have a place to leap. He got 'em, too, special made to order, but they made his car 80 wide he couldn't get it into the garage.

“Nearly Hit Him-

MINE IS the same way. It is longer than it is wide, but not much. The front seat has room

: for four grown men, three boys and a pup. It is

stuffed with foam rubber and upholstered in nylon and I must report that the salesmen tried to sell me seat covers ($65). Made of nylon, he said. I nearly hit him. The instrument panel is littered with one of the, fanciest assortment of silvery buttons this side of a bellhop’s chest. My experiments with these indicate, fortunately, that they have little to do with getting a ride. Mostly they change the ra-

_dio’s tone from basso to high fidelity. shoot up the

aerial hydraulically, set the clock, light cigarets,

-1f-1-had 152 horses hitched in tandem,.I'd like to

wash the windshield on the outside, spray it with me. He is kind and he's a cook. tary of the In--warm air on the inside, and turn on lights in un- Cooking has always been my fa- diana organizaexpected places. |vorite occupation,” Getta told/tion of Future } Under the hood is an engine and more mys- friends. * Teachers of terious-black boxes with -ganglia -leading there scoliosis America: She's from than in a Chinese magician’s trunk. The| King Phumiphon, the boy mon- a junior at But-

book says this engine delivers 152 horsepower. |, of Thailand, will marry his|ler.

Miss Thomas

lo} . " . : os test this. I doubt it, as of now, but I must admit|childhood sweetheart, Princess . this power plant is as silky smooth as a piece of Sirikit Kittiyakon, tomorrow in 2 Fined $100 Each

60 days. Judge Joseph O. Hoff- business and labor down the riv-| mann, who found the four East|er” by supporting additional fed-| Side youths guilty of delinquency, | eral regulations on the national {ordered the penalty as a “lesson.” | economy. {Al four are to report weekly to|

the probation ofticer.

when the auto driven by Howard Edwards, 26, of 1602 Faust St, struck a parked car owned by Warren Bronson, 9491; Vire os |ginia Ave. Flames spread from WOMAN HURT IN CRASH [the Edwards car and ignited the

The judge also ordered that any Mrs. Kara Lucy Current, 56, second vehicle before brought

{money advanced the boys by their {parents to meet the penalty must

Danville, Ill. suffered a serious under control, Both cars were Iback injury in a two-car collision declared a total loss. Edwards

be repaid by the defendants today on Ind. 34 near Browns. Was arrested.

“nickel by nickel.”

burg. She is in Methodist Hos-

Meanwhile, Mayor Feeney Pital.” Dr. Esch’s Condition asked Pclice Chief Rouls to in- ALTAR GUILD TO MEET 3 . The Altar Guild of St. George Still Reported Serious

crease park patrols to curb deIinquency. However, thé Mayor Episcopal Church will hold a pil-| "Dr.'L. Lynd Esch, president of

said he expects vandalism to drop low-case card party at 8 p. m. Indiana Central College, was ree

when playgrounds and swimming today in the church, Morris and ported still in serious condition

TR opened for the summer. Church Sts. y) di [today from injuries sustained in

lan auto accident Tuesday.

el ° Dr. Esch is in the Wabash machinery can get. It doesn’t even purr, but sighs|thé private palace of the King's Th C a do t S vemmn Y 2 as gently when whooshing up hills. Otherwise, it grandmother, Queen Sawang Vad- IN Embezzlement Case e an I a es a [Sqimy Hospital in Wabash.

seems to make no noise at all. (hana. Thailanders were dis-| Robert Ray Waggoner, 39, of| } {appointed that there will be no 2019 Southeastern Ave. and John This Is Spooky ‘royal . procession on gilded ele- P, Hartlage, 31, of 9211; College

wor DHERE 48 -no-way to shift-the-gears-in-this

car, I don’t even know .if there are any gears. The 17-year-old Princess and charges in Municipal Court 4.

-Hidden uMerto 15 a something called a super-,,, 22-year-old King will be mar- Sentences of 60 days on the ‘state sonic radar drive. I must say that it works. Step on the gas and she goes; tramp on the brake and ried when the Queen dabs three prison farm were suspended and | : |dots of sandalwood paste on their both were placed on six months’

she stops. This .is spooky business and I don't | even believe it. I still use the clutch every time foreheads and sprinkles them with probation.

-Tstop-and ‘there is mo-clutch. - This could give a; fellow a psychosis, but I am assured I soon will learn to keep my left foot dormant. * . It hurts to be honest about this, but I never knew a car could be such a pleasure to drive or so easy to handle. It is just barely possible that the auto makers know more about designing motorcars than I do. I'd still like to have running boards, but I'll give up on the crank. My engine at sea level, according to the instruction book, is under 110 pounds of compression and Joe Louis, himself, couldn't crank it. Even if he had a crank. | in Beverly Hills land costs today before Judge As for the geritlemen in Detroit, I suppose I It will be the Alex Clark in Municipal Court 4, ought to apologize for past diatribes. But they A : § first marriage after he was found guilty of opdid get my money, after all, and money talks. for the 26-year- erating a lottery and gift enterMiss Caulfield 4 , tress and price.

* x = embezzling: $125 and Hartlage pe © Joan Caulfield, $250 from the Railway Express lL Frank Ross, film ployed as delivery men. producer, will be tet

[oyeied Satur- Pays $50 Fine, Costs

The couple For Operating Lottery

home of Benay

2 Venuta, singer, | Temple Ave., paid a fine of ‘$50

The Quiz Master

the second for Mr. Ross, 45. He’'s| Morris, employee of a cigar

??2? Test Your Skill : PP? the ex-husband of Jean Arthur, store at 653 Massachusetts Ave. candidate for State Representa-

actress. was arrested Apr. 22 after a

-— What were the first steam locomotives to run in this country? The first steam engine to run on rails in Amerfea was bullt by John Stevens in 1825 and was operated on a circular experimental track on his

_ estate at Hoboken, N, J. Stevens’ engine was

never to put to practical use, The first Americanbuilt locomotive actually to be operated on a com-mon-carrier railroad in the United States was the “Tom Thumb,” built in 1829. s > > o - Must the President of the United States take the oath of office in Washington, D. C.? It is the custom for the President to take the oath of office in Washington, but there is no provision of law to that effect.

What is the largest single United States import

in dollar value? jowe anything jo anyboay, The tickets. : "In 1949, coffee ranked first; the second largest Word comes from William J. Che-| isipebeityesedismaremiesibamstmetns { impobt item was paper and paper materials. Mey, executive director of the Re- Aybyrn Student Heads : gs. Washington. He said naif the DePauw Fraternity a : ._ ‘Washington. e sa p | Which instrument of an orchestra Is lowest in population is out of debt and only Tires State Servier pitch’ 22 per cent have any instalment GREENCASTLE, Apr. 27-Nor-

The tuba, a musical wind instrument of the debt.

4 S

How long have men cultivated wheat! /today. Prehistoric races, such as the Swiss lake dwell-! In Chicago, a body “stuffed” Powell, 4927 Winthrop Ave., vice ers, are known to have cultivated it, while the in the trunk of a flashy automo-! president; J. Kent Guild, Fairland, Chinese claim the use of it as food 2700 years bile turned out to be alive. In|secretary, and John G. Atkins, before the Christian era. Winnipeg, Canada, the cat-like Brooklyn, N.Y, treasurer,

Vv ¥

strange revelations in two cities national social fraternity.

| He suffered several broken riba

Frank R. Owen, Republican tween wise custodial care and and a slight concussion in a headcandidate for Sheriff: “I invite spending of taxpayers money and on collision 15 miles north of Wae

phants: due to the King's recent Ave., were fined $100 and costs all my friends to attend an old penny pinching to the obvious det- bash, . : ‘auto gccident. TT each “today on embezzlement TASHIOHEd POTILICAT rATIY At “TNE rINTENT ANA HERIELT Or Iii tes College GMEIAT 41d He” proba

Athenaéum Friday night. There and personnel in many of theably will remain in the hospital will be a band, vaudeville and no county's institutions.” {for another two weeks.

speeches.”

Carl D. Hill, Republican can-

John J. Farley, Democrat can- didate for State Senator: “I am Mayo Clinic Official

didate for State Representative

holy. water _from 16 temples. | Waggoner was. charged with “I want more economy. in. _gov-

ernment.”

William Phil Miller, Republican | screen star, and Agency where the two were em- candidate for Sheriff: “There will be a careful screening of applicants for deputy sheriff regarding their past records, their intel-

ligence and ability.”

. for the American Way. of life un-

der a Republican form of govern-| To Speak Here Saturday Te

it.” 1 believe the Indiana Gross] ment. T'belleve the Indiana Gross), ‘poy ur, Wilder, chief of ealed. I'm for a sales tax on|the medical staff of Mayo Clinic, everything except groceries.” {will address diabetics of IndianFern E. Norris, Republican can- 2Polis at 1:30 p. m. Saturday in didate for State Representative: the White Cross Guild building, “I would welcome the opportunity Methodist Hospital. to work for a legislative rogram _ Flans for establishing a lay or-

Saul I. Rabb, Republican can- which would give to the citizens Sanization of diabetic patients

will wed at the John Morris, 28, of 3155 N. didate for judge of Criminal of this county better police and locally will be discussed at the

Court 2: “There is nothing wrong fire protection, better schools and Meeting, sponsored by the Indie with a degree of mercy or with health service, better streats and anapolis Clinical Diabetes Socies

special consideration for first offenders who may be saved. But duction in taxes.” sex offenders, dangerous crim|inals and drunken drivers must candidate for County Commis-

not be coddled.”

and a substantial saving and re- ty. Dr. Wilder wil} speak before the Indiana Diabetic Association William A. Brown, Democratic tomorrow in the Marott Hotel,

sioner: “I am positively opposed ‘Coffee Hour’ at Purdue

James F. Durnil, Republican to trick bidding by vendors sell- Times State Servic

ing to the county. I'm in favor, LAFAYETTE, Apr. 27—“Coffes

tive: “I will support legislation in|of a county hospital on a pay-as- Hour” will be a new feature in

8 a policeman charged Morris sold Indiana which will enable the re-| you-go plan.” Good news. Half of us don’t his $1 worth of baseball pool | buflding and construction of well-| Charles A. Bell, Republican Purdue University . for alumnae

equipped school plants.”

{the 1950 Gala Week festivities at candidate for Decatur Township of the home economics school. It

Robert M. Murnan, Republican Trustee: “Fight sepending with will be in the Hom candidate for State Representa- votes. The hand of public spend- building from 9 to " eSuomics 6

tive: “I want to work for legislation that will improve the relationship of policeman and citizen.”

ing is digging deeper into your pocketbooks.’ Tony Malo, Democratic candi-

H. Dale Brown, Republican date for Sheriff: “I propose to Fire Razes Warehouse

{in the County Clerk's office to didate fof Prosecutor: “For a which injured Other officers are Richard C. provide prompt service at lower prosecutor to be the scourge of Chief Charles Condon. The the

: man N. Rohm, Auburn, has been candidate for County Clerk: “I separate juvenile offenders from ANDE i saxhorn family, has the lowest pitch in the or-| Vy elected president of the DePauw have planned a more modernized sacl ofenders.” RSON, Apr. 27 (UP)

chestra. | Strange car noises brought chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon, system of handling public records

A two-story warehouse was deEdwin Haerle, Republican can- stroyed in a $100,000 fire today Assistant

+

cost.” - the criminal element so urgently house was operated by 0. L, Harold H. Stolkin, Democratic needed in every large city, he D. Forwarding Co., and owned by candidate for County Council: must have knowledge born of the Truck Realty Co. Indian“There is a vast difference be- skill,” ~ |apolis. aR . » - r > »

) =

~shevisnr had made it clear that —-

-absorbad-in-his- new job: —Then;+ 50 . Whittaker. Chambers the.

i

And, with each new under.

was “arrested and charged with