Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1950 — Page 30
; Are Still Nearly as Cold
HENECTADY, N. Y. June seem fiuch higher than Hiey 40 i SCHENECT, winters are nota cmon 1 milder than they used to)
the average temperature seems SPring.
Winters recent:y ~Fias-been-rather-light;- there have $orm. .. see becn ers when it wa ite : Bice, oh * TW Lov SHELTON BURIED There is no proof that dur wiri-| FAIRFIELD, Ii, ters are not what they were “in'More than 1000 °
————————————— brs
_banks to a small child certainly death from.a
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The Pen of
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Pas 0 Dore to, | Also, it used to be the practice) General Electric research sci- "ito pack down the snow on the!
~ iroads with a mg snow roller, ind! Over the past 20 years or #0] it might remain “well into the
to have risen only about 2 or 3 Now. with modern plows ana degrees. While we have had a few other equipment roads are bare when snowfail Almost immediately Aer 4 a Lnow|
persons today ‘the old days.’ Memories of deep attended funeral services for Roy snow years ago often go back to|Shelion, third member of the childhood recollections, and snow notorious Shelton gang to meet
Mrs, ‘MorrowsTait Set to Marry Again
id. Morrow-Tait,.
-rel-haired Cambridge housewife who took a year and a day to fly Around June 10 (Up) the world while her husband
cared for their baby, sald today that he has filed suit for divorce. Mrs, Morrow-Tait, artists model, sald ‘she welll att contest the divol RRR REET he whom-~-as soon as it is final | Mr. Morrow-Tait could not be | Immediately located, and Mrs, | Morrow-Tait refused to say on! | what ground her husband was secking divorce, “Thursday's Child’ Mrs. Cambridge in a plane named "Thursday's Child” on Aug. 18, 1048. She landed at Croydon Airport, near London, 39,1940, after 8 26000 Tn ight “around the world, | Dinghies by half ‘a -dozen| crashes and difficulties with the! [Canadian and American authorIm ties,
- During the first part of the
{trip she was accompanied by | Michael Edward Townsend, 26-year-old student from Cambridge | who acted as her navigator. He
+-went-home-alone-after-the plane’
Terashed in Alaska in Nov. 1048, | but rejoined her tn Buffalo, N. Y. {in July, 1949, after he had won {a degree in: geology. “My husband and Michael Townsend are great. friends” | Mrs. Morrow-Tait toid Canadian | reporters last year.
LONDON, June 10 (UP)—Mrs. | Richa
a former |
Morrow-Tait, now 26, left singje- engine’
|
”
— Wast, youn [They are going te: Scouts seated oft to right) are | tiss. Behind, them are: back row are Chatles
are: itt poo ll John Emmons, SIT ar: Earl Herndon, Jronp
Spencer, Gilbert Meece and Paul Lee; B. N. Peterson, Variety Club troop commitisemen, and Scout Robert D Bey. nr
Group ‘Will Leave Sunday
Early in July Resurfacing of E. Washington TRL PIOBABIY WIT be started this, fall, several months earlier than owned | the State Highway Commission, burial had anticipated, ; : Bids for the project are ex-in, changeover may be made by pected to be taken early in July, ine end of July. | [Highway Commission Chairmag| ne street, also U. 8. 40, will : Samuel C. Hadden sald yesterday. ; reads to ie the ids an got her in Irvington. work started as soon as the In-| The pavin, dianapolis Railways removes its\with a minimum of interruptions streetcars from the thoroughfare. to trolley service, Mr. The traction company will soon gsid. The surface will be a “hot replace the streetcars with track- mix” material over which traffic less trolleys. This can be done can move ‘soon after it is rolled. as soon as a second trolley wire "Had is strung along the right of way. estimate when the project will The traction company indicated'be completed.
“at [Twenty-Nine
Kruse Sulphur Baths
Colonic Irrigation ?
e Gorrel, Ronald Malicoat, Robert Smith and Wilbur Dunn. In the | committeeman; Scouts Glenn | ‘momber; Alber H. Gide,
Plan Forestry Camp SPECIALISTS IN REDUCING
Times State Service
On Week:Long Excursion
High achievement in stone National Park for Variety Club Heart Fund. Nine boys in the Beaver patrol start next Bunday, going by train - After two and one-half days to Omaha, Neb,, for a tour of
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|0f Cattle Baron
Finds New Mexican Murdered 2d Wife
SAN JOSE, Cal, Thomas P. Talle, wealthy New | Mexico cattle baron, was convict-
led of murdering hiz second wife|
todiéy but a jury of six men and!
six women recommended leniency. land Robert Smith.
| The first degree murder verdict, saved Talle from the lethal gas| [chamber but [matic sentence of life in prison.| [He will be eligible for parole con-| sefderEtion fn 15 vénre” The 39- year-old cattieman, the! jury agreed, fired two slugs from| {a 44 caliber Western-type re-| {volver, into his wife, Marge, last i Dec, 23 In the patio of their new! | The prosecution claimed Talle's| motive was the ‘hope of “getting | rid” of the one-time, Denver] waitress so he could return bol his first wife, Mary Talle,
{Banta Fe, N. Mex.
Sticks to Story Throughout the “two-month | { trial, the defense stuck Bo its |
“blacked out” ta {atropine — containing ° ine on| the night his wife was slain. | Talle ‘himself said on the wit-| | ness stand he remembered. noth-|,
op
+ing -about—-his-wife's—death; “His
first wife took the stand and!
| blamed the dead woman for
breaking up her marriage } Although she had stood by her
and testified in his behalf, Mary | Talle denied she had plans to re-| marry him and said “I never) would take him back.”
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Assorted sanding discs, net, grinding wheel, wire brush, cloth buffing wheel, sandpaper pattern.
Talle showed no emotion as the iverdict was read. His mother,|
© ROGERS CORNER. -5-N.- ILLINOIS ST. Mrs Eiste Tulle Heyhoni, and his Heense “applicants —in--Indianap
| ex-wife both ‘wept as the court] clerk. said * ‘guilty of murder.”
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| June 10 (UP)|
carried an auto-irom. Mills of the Silver Fox pa“trol;
{mansion n the Saratoga Hills, [for Valley Forge, Pa., and Wash-
a {wide field of vision n
ex-husband’ since the trial began river's
{ probably the notation should be istamped on-théir licenses.”
| state Bureau of Motor Vehicles
| perception and
'in®10 ears were dispatched from
| nance [force entdred the plant in
and order was’ restored.
| suits
iby and tri ap WLU E TOW {will reach Indianapolis early the {following Sunday morning.
The Beaver patrol was awarded;
[the trip for winning the troops 12th annual: patrol contest. The {Flaming Arrow patrol -was sec-| ond. Silver Fox patrol third, Flyling Eagle patrol fourth, Lions patrol. fifth, Pine Tree patrol sixth and Indian patrol seventh. Beaver patrol members making the trip will be Patrol Leader {Charles Curtiss, Glenn Spencer, Everitt Workman, Paul Lee, {Harold Barnes, Steve Gorrell, John Biggers, Ronald Malicoat
‘Wilbur Dunn and Robert Day {of the Flaming Arrow patrol;
Scoutmaster . Charles Em-
v Scout work has won a trip to Yellow will attend the forestry summer boys in Troop No. 83, sponsored by the samp in the Clark State Forest 25 |
Departments for Men & Women 9 to 9
| LARAYRTTE. June 10—Forty-. | five Purdue University juniors § | majoring in forestry production 2
oN
jm {les north of New Albany June} 2040 College Ave. . TA. 0789 and three from other patrols will! 19 to Aug. 28. Prof. C. I, Miller] to Livingston, Mont. of the Purdue forestry staff is hey
in, the park, the boys will return | camp dire director.
HOOSIER PAINT and LINOLEUM CO.
TEIN
AMAR. And ATIBUE Fyre GRIME} comes
chairman of the troop committee, {also will. make the Yellowstone {tour Scouts Curtiss and Barnes will board another train, eight hours lafter returning from the West,
|ington. They will attend the National _ Boy Scout Jamboree.
: Eyesight of Many
Drivers Held Faulty
ng New" T= from a
Times St. FRENCH LICK “ies 10- The
{safe driving apparently is lackIng in nearly a thitd of the state’s motorists. That was told
Optometric meeting here tonight. No test for “corner of the eye” vision is given by the state to license - applicants. The findings were. reported by r. M. N. Scamahorn, Kokomo, {on the eve of the association's Jiwo- day midsummer convention. Dr. Scamahorn's figures were obtained in tests given to driver's
Association
{olis and in Elkhart. He cautioned that definite con{clusions cannot’be made, as only 484 persons haye- been tested. “We would fot advocate denying licenses to such persons,” he said. “But for their own #- . and. that of others, they should be aware of their limitations w.u
The optometrists aided the tests for visual perception, depth field of vision. Plans are being made to establish similar examination in Gary, Richmond, Ft, Wayne, Evansville { and Terre Haute, Ji
in setting up acuity, color
Violence Flares In Plant Strike
MORRISTOWN, Tenn: June 10 (UP) and lead pipe turned the road to the strikebound American Enka Corp. into a4 small battleground today only seven hours after national guardsmen quit the s¢ene,
Ado 0ASt. One. MAR. WAS. Injured
“severely, one automobile was burned and a dozen were battered. But Gov. Gordtn Browning rejected an appeal that the troops be sent back immediately. . Instead, 21 highway patrolmen
Ringsport to reinforce the few hard-pressed troopers who had remained at the rayon plant seven miles putside 1 Morristown. -. + The, 70-man week-end mainte-
safety with the patrolmen’'s help How‘ever, Sheriff Robert Medlin feared that new outbreaks would occur
Monday -when- the regular shifts —
report again. Union officials had filed damage totaling $500,000 charging that guardsmen violated the civil rights of the strikers by mistreating arrested I leaders.
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MONDAY UNTIL or.M |
iE ow Yr A BO San tahe nl EN AER
For C
TI lovers and th at the 7 Riders v by a you One old. Sh ship cla those sh the 5-ga an outde
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ERNE
farm in houasegu Hines Mart House, ington, Jack Qu enbush, cinnati;’] bara Kr and Ge Van Ha Chicago. and M Aust Brown Tryon,
‘were t
as were
. steepleck
Friday
fet supp ticipants Woodsto morning given at out-of-to owners for this Mrs. Wi Mrs. Lot and Mrs Mrs. Wil the last sors an
"cluded |
hunt el
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freshme: hash of
Tennis INDIA
sports a tention t Tournan 16 at W sored by Tennis A. Atklr man ar chairma The c« first tim
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is under of Marn mary H housing. The p homes ti tion of | chart fo be on wanting me a ri fast.
Annive
JUNE month turns u saries. James [ prise 1 for Car Ten g dinner ¢ ‘then we It turne evening
