Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1950 — Page 11
95 | |
y 2 hand:
Inside |
at the flag-draped casket, hears the sobs of
Gilbert off to jail. They said his language had been
The Quiz Master
to appeal to his better nature, if any.
- FUNERAL services for Pfe. Harry B. Brown county center when he were held yesterday. Pfc. Brown was killed in a for Washington High plang en route to France on D-Day, World War II. You have to mention the number of the war, I| You sit and listen and watch the ‘guess, or people might get confused and think | Harry was a casualty in the Korean War. Awful Agommentary on human relations bu way it is in our time. =A man sure has a ot of thoughts as he looks _
member hearing that phr
‘different ways. The nations were being united by the common bond of death, destruction and love
Ltd 7p
J A i] {became a soldier forever. un §
4 World War I should have been t that's the everyone for a thousand—for all time,
World War IT with its vast
to last
~ for control so he can 'be 6f some comfort to his ‘wife, watches tears fall, feels the wounds of sorrow open once again. es ? : I didn’t know Pfc. Brown. I didn't know ‘his by the dictators. Yes, united. } parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown. 25 N, Rich-, They said the eries of the dying in the gas land St. After seeing his picture and obituary in Chambers of Europe would forever remind us. of the paper, it seemed going to his funeral was the horrors of war. Never again would man sink to
ver | a great feeling of indighation sweeps over =< enough 4
destruction of life and property was surely the end of conflict. I re-! t phrase expressed
olorful P
of won freedom that almost had been wiped out ¥
B 10 do. And didn't the priest rem us (he depths and inflict {orture on his fellow man. 1 country? y _|ducive to thinking as the priest prayed at the : : jaltar and the choir answered him in Latin, A Dead Six Years ; /man could pray or think. Rl A CURIOUS feeling came over me as I entered Here it was, five years after the biggest free. St. Anthony's Catholic Church. The ushers at for-all, when the country's dead were still being + the door treated me as if T had been a dear returned to their native soll, men are dying again friend or relative. My eyes stopped on the casket 2nd mothers and fathers are crying again. Doesn't before the altar. The church was far from full. 84d up. ’ It was hard to reconcile the fact that the body Stories and pictures of American soldiers, in the casket had drawn breath for the last time hands tied behind their backs and shot, make’ over six years ago. That's more than a quarter you feel sick. You wonde 186 . of , 1 ESHEETS ec you kn de witir fis “hands behing Tis back in Kore TE EHE THT RH 177 A IPRRNBOEL ER FoULE 18 FFE You even entertain the notion. that generals, the diplomats, the soldiers could under{stand each mother's love for a boy, her care for [the slightest ailment, her vigilance to bring her flesh and blood to the threshold of manhood only {to have her work destroyed in a mud-filled diteh, {maybe there wouldn't be any wars.
{ Pfe. Harry Brown left his church, ‘St. An-|
ithony’s, yesterday for the last time. That was also the last time he was in church with His thi sisters, grandfather, father, mother.’ pu 2
Legion Fires Salute
# | THE FUNERAL proceeded to Calvary Cemfi 'etery. An American Legion honor guard fired ‘|three volleys and a bugler blew taps. The priest {prayed again and so did those who stood on the {sunlit rise. { Just as the priest was concluding his praver, an {Air Force transport flew directly above and turned. {It was a C-47. Probably the same kind Pfc. Brown [vas in June 6, 1944, ; { There were many tears that fell to the grass around the, final the paratrooper. The priest said “A nation is not an indi= {vidual but it is made up of individuals.” He meant {the dead’ like Pfc. Harry B., Brown. He meant {those words to be a challenge so the man and men {who died “will not have died in vain.” But death is loose again in Korea. Sometimes things just don’t make sense at all. :
By Robert C. Ruar
resting place of
June 6, 1944, Pfc. Harry B. Brown became a soldier forever. :
Stanky Squashed
NEW YORK, Aug. 22 —— 1 feel keenly for Master Edward Stanky, an inspired second baseman for the New York Giants, a lofty-spirited lad sometimes khown as the brat, and other times ° as that $!§"'!!! according to the speaker's appraisal of him, Mr. Stanky has heen highly frustrated by baseball’s supreme court, which in Mr. Stanky’s case is a fellow named Ford Frick, National League president. Mr, Frick has just turned down a Stanky application for a patent on a procedure which might easily have revolutionized baseball,
Inspires a Brawl
tion the first time Mr. Seminick came up. However, after the Giants’ third baseman, Hank Thompson, had been knocked cold by Mr. Seminick as he slid into third, Eddie began to wave his arms again and was shortly given the heave. Then everybody began to swing, The litigation was eventually taken to Mr, Frick: Mr. Frick said that from now on confusing the batter by arm waving was illegal. He disallowed Mr. Durocher’'s protest. He crushed
of a historic niche in the Hall of Fame, as the man who introduced a secret weapon for pitchers who are not too sharp on the plate.
Mr. Stanky’s spirit. Mr, Stanky already has visions Just planted a
-Some_parts. of the Catholic ritual were con
it the
+9
a
A STSCI
Sante Claus may. be slightly out of season, but he made a big hit during last night's Amer.
ican Legion parade. The reindeer and St, Nick represented Post
About People— :
Councilman Stole Kiss
| r -
Seeks Damages
Says Elevator Operaior
Just Planted a ‘Fatherly One’ on Pretty Girl's Forehead, Explains Houston Official
A little kiss in the elevator. was reverberating all over Houston, Tex., City Hall today. Pretty 18-year-old elevator operator Nancy Patterson come plained City Councilman Jim Griffith stole a kisz as she transported
bility, and Mr. Stanky refrained Irom arm agita- him from the eighth to the first floor last Saturday, She told: her,
"poss, City Civil Bervice Director Roy Flood: “He got on the elevator on the ——— “ eighth floor. There wasn't any- ers prepared to leave from Hong one else in the elevator. He Kong for Korea. And every true kissed me and said I felt like I Scot believes that Margaret has had a fever. Then he put his already chosen her mate, the arms around me,” she said. handsome Earl of Dalkeith, a Councilman Griffith, a stout, Scot. gray-haired, slightly beyond mid- : dle-age politician, protested he , 10 familiar Hollywood names “fatherly kiss” on turned up in court suits today. —Child stars Jackie Coogan and
” » LJ
Miss Patterson's forehead. Se “Why I didn't think I did_any- OekeY Rooney thing to make the girl angry or "°C RTOWn-up
~ IT HAPPENED that there was a fine, ripe “ruckus in Philadelphia, “the other day, when the Giants were visiting. Mr. Stanky, playing the role of La Pagdianaria, inspired such an unusual brawl that a couple of people even managed to hit each other, This is very rare for ballplayers, who mostly mouth curses and wave wildly at safe distances. : The box score on the fracas was that Messrs. Stanky, Rigney and Andy Seminick all got bounced from the ball game, and the intervening cops were all for dragging First Baseman Tookie
It was argued to no avail that if it is all right for a base runner to fluster a’ pitcher by darting —off the base; it must be legal for a second baseman to agitate a batter. If it is good tactics for the whole left side of the infield to shift, in order to frustrate Ted Williams, then Mr. Stanky ¢ould not see himself in the wrong by merely fluttering a wing. If, further, it is fine for the moguls to needle up- the ball with go-juice, to increase the homerun quotient, or to tamper with their fences in -order to cater to individual hitters. then Mr. Stanky’s arm waving seemed legitimate in spades. Mr. Frick said no to all counts, and jerked hiz thumb at the door.
coarse in the extreme. Mr. Leo Durocher protested the game, which the Phils won, 5-4, and threw himself and Mr, Stanky on: the mercy of the court, Mr. Frick, All the trouble stemmed from Mr. Stanky's decision ta remodel the playing rules of the game.
Invention Dismissed
AR A CREATIVE artist, I resent this sum-| mary dismissal of inventive genious. Mr. Stanky The night before, every time the Phil's Andy paq barely nibbled at a dream, which may have Seminick came to bat, Mr. 8tanky would stand regyjted jn all infielders being armed with sawed-| directly in his line of vision and frantically wave .¢¢ shotguns and banderillas, the more to annoy his arms. This appeared to be confusing to Mr. ine opposition. If Ty Cobb sharpened ms spikes, Seminick, and the advice of the umpires Was for a slide into second, there is nothing in the sought, SE ; After consultation, it developed that there is nothing inthe rule book to prevent a second baye-— man from flailing his arma about to annoy a. and Mr. Stanky continued to take his calisges ETI
RSS TOR LY oy
himself with a spear.
a- little encouragement and he would have hai TE FH CBR RY NE ZTE ERY PANY RTE]
I TE A 5 I RR I CR res traipsed to. MY. Stanky’s dressing room” ‘bear traps set at his own station to discourage hase stealing. Mr. Stanky, as’ I said, is a man of! spirit, and his ilk iz all too seldom.
By Frederick C. Othman
they're
|garet's presence in Scotland as
| ! | ig ; they toasted the
book to argue against the guardian's defending: ;
~~ Batlplayers are , dull Tot; in the" Mass. staves to convention, and it is a shame to dampen al
unuzppy. I just leaned over and . Ra Kissed -her-on-the forehead: Sanganis. third + | “It war certainly only a father- * o singer Ann ly kiss. I imagine I have kissed McCormack Ooo{all the elevator operators. I cer- Jan sued him tainly didn't mean anything by it OF divorce, and I am sorry it caused such a CNarging” “The ‘ Kid" with eruel-
furor.” : ty. She said the | Then he blushed. 35.vear-old Coo-
" Ld » Highlanders today gave Prin. 820 had agreed cess Margaret less than a year '0 Bive her cusof single bliss. “She'll be wed be- 104 of their fore she's 21,” was the prediction daughter, Jean. 2. : of tradition - oogan, whose $6 million forminded Scots as tune earned during six years as a child star was gone when he was 21, is now a gadget
own
Coogan
young Princess, ‘on her 20th birthday yester-! day. { King George, Queen Elizabeth and Margaret celebrated at a small ‘candle-lit! dinner party in options JRRROTRL, BGOLa: Princess land castle'S Margaret ike Philip flew
after the birth of a daughter,
Rooney's problem was a Mfinancial one. His second missus, Bet ty Jane Rase ‘Rooney, sald the star
rears in alimony
y.
"TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1050
| In Amended Action |
ay ¥ - iss Birmingham of 1044,
Mic [LE JN |
PAGE 1
Hoosierdom’s
Of
ry
Frisky veterans take aim at a pretty miss as she walks on lllinais St. near Washington St. The gun was loaded, but only with water, Is Iran Next?— : |
Russia Could Make Iron Another Korea
Soviets Working to Create Puppet State Inside Country; Have Fifth Column Established acy to fix milk prices. 124 plain. BY CLYDE FARNSWORTH, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer tiffs yesterday filed an. amended TEHRAN, Aug. 22—The outcome of the battle for
affidavit in Marion Circuit Court Korea is likely to determine the character and timing of asking $15 million damages. Russia's moves in or against Iran.
; omplaint, filed by at- : : : e Te MW SOIMPIAINE Md DY 2 Russia has two choices. She can manipulate puppet
242 of Santa Claus, Ind.
Milk Price Suit
$15 Million Sought
Charging consumers and farmers were skimmed in a conspir-.
torney Silaz C. Kivett Br, adds : the Kroger Co. to the list of de- forces in the name of “the people,” a la Korea. Or she can fendants and deletes the, names step in directly and claim legality for her aggression under of the Capitol Dairies and the the 1921 treaty with Iran. -— aver a ———————— Furnas Ice Cream Co. Some observers here believe They believe that Russia then Capitol and Furnas are subsid- that if Iran is to be Iron-Cur- attempted to create a “North iaries of the Bordon Co. which iained the Russians will have to Korea" in Northern lran-—-which is named as a defendant. 0 ft themselves, This Moscow a Charges Big Companies may be reluctant to do because an is probably true, But they may
The suit, originally filed in Au- OUtright military méve here al. ®'T In assuming that the Boviets gust, 1949, charges the “big milk MO&L certainly would be regarded Will not try it again, with or {and ice-cream companies -are in/DY the United States and Britain Without the presence of Russian na state 88 a challenge to World War 117 troops on lranian soll as in 1945
violation of the India rust law, and have raised, Optimistic Americans here and 1946, :
prices “of milk products to contend that the collipse of the 10 was American and British
ithe consumer and not relayed the Azerbaijan and Kurdish “people's pressure for withdrawal of Ruslincrease to the farmer.” republics,” which Russia briefly sian troops from Northern Iran . Mr. Kivett sald the suit not Promoted in the Iranian border which liquidated the post-war lonly asks damages for the 124 region at the end of World War Soviet adventure among the [plaintiffs, but also for some 3000 II. Argues agains! any successful Kurdish tribesmen snd the Azer[farmers and milk producers in/Russian puppeteering in Iran. baijani of Iran.
Marion and surrounding counties. o urreunding counties Kurds Hard for Aanyone to Manage
Defendants Named Other than Borden and Kroger . Red propaganda for union between the adjacent Azerbaijan
Co. defendants are: Polk Bani- govfat Socialist Republic and the 2.5 million or more Iranian
tary Milk Co., William H. Roberts and Sons, The Indianapolis Sales Azerbaijani still goes on, although Iranian sovereignty has been
Association, Indianapolis Dairy- established In Iranian Azerbaijan —as well as ostensibly among the men's Co-operative, Indianapolis: Kurtis who have never taken any sovereignty very seriously.
Daity & oduses Counell, Inde- The Kurds are a tribe of several hundred thousand physically pendent ucers Assocla- ong but culturally retaraed
tion and the Indiana Guernsey nomads, who live mostly in the Northern Iran,
Bree sociation. be i a ts is a‘mountains of Northeastern Tur- Since 1944 Russia has econ2 intensive propaganda
key but who straddle the borders ducted MES! of ne of the markeung | ¢ Iran and Iraq with little at- among the Kurds, Azerbaijani. “The sales association and mar- tention to boundaries, Turkmen and other minorities of keting associations provide the Their language (Iranian) and Northern Iran, It's the old Czermethod by which the dairies con- THi8on (Mohammedanism) are ist game with-a top dressing of trol prices to the consumer and|/tDeir principal ties to Iran. Cre- Marxism and world revolution. eliminate competition.” Mr, Kivers 2tion-of a Soviet-sponsored Kurd~— Former Iranian regimes resald. - rob * istan in'Iran would threaten Tur- settled some of the Kurds .in . key and Iraq. The Kurds are be- other parts of Iran and tee CSRS
EET ee ye
Conspiracy Charged
za =
nn = y k # ‘ are undoubtedly part of the same,
oe AEB Ca ay Te ~[aPms when the Russians con- Azerbaijan. This lessened Rustrolled the Iranian arsenal during sia's opportunities to big-brother
jcould not attend, buf a piece of
sald she could not understand his Program,” Mr. Kivett said. “The| -three_months-failure-to pay: since: falsts an -not-findingtheir-way; ; ' his income for the last year was Pack to the farmer or producer.” Com ist -Azerbaljani-Sent Back to Iran Throughout .the.-highlands, ne fo . ; ommunist -Azerbaljani 8 Scots po to ot the Prin- $200.00. Rooney was ordered into: The sult charges the distribu- 1 cess with heavy brown Scotch ale. COUrt Sept. 15 to determine if he tOrs entered .into a conspiracy Russia still entices the Azerbaijani with pamphlets, lectures, They saw a good omen in Mar. Should be cited for contempt, shortly after the Indiana. Milk schools, clinics, clubs and free sight-seeing trips to the neighbor- : - Control Board expired June 30, ing Soviet Socialist Republic of Azerzaijan.
their 1042-1946 occupation “of the Northern Iran minorities. .- birthday cake was sent to her. —
the Argyll and Sutherland troop-
And the garden hose. They cost $T40- per copy. rec tail, for the knee-length model and that's net. No! 20 per cent fur-coat tax. 5 + § Your chance of buying one this vear is prob-. lematical. Nylon is scarce. But if peace ever re-| turns for sure, the rabbits and the mink will get A break. Fresh frozen lemonade, with the sugar already stirred in, i on some markets. I had some frozen! French-fried onions the other day; not bad. There is a phonograph now on sale that will play records at any old. speed, including those! which yet are to be invented. THe city of Chicago! has bought 500 busses that travel on propane gas, This is the same stuff that farmers buy in tanks to run their kitchen stoves. : | An advertising man who knows the. ways of, brats has developed the paper bgg with comic! strips printed around it. Heaven help the mothér of the future who lugs her groceries home in a plain brown sack. :
button world and F hagten to report that -T-am the proprietor, for 79 cents, of an automatic latherer, Durndeat thing man ever applied to his, whiskers. This apparatus consists of a small can full of soap and. .gad under pressure. Touch the button on top and lather flows out in an endlegs stream until you let up the pressure.
Joy for a Small Boy
WHAT A SMALL BOY could do to the bathroom with one of thease I hesitate to contemplate, but I keep mine on the top shelf. 80 now comes another manufacturer catering to the feminine trade with a similar can of pressurized shampoo. Push the button and whish! A lady's crowning glory is full of lather; ready. to be rinsed out. These wonders, of course, stem from the bug bomh of World War II and in their development have resulted in the can of paint which sprays itself, the wax that goes on to a motor car in the form of a mist, and the cigar lighter that carries its own pressurized gas tank. I know a fellow who has one of the latter, which is guaranteed to light 3000 smokes on one tank. Not his. He spends so much time demonstrating it to his incredulous friends that he usually has to ignite his cigar with a mére match. : The Russians, who still are selling us furs by the multi-million dollars worth, will be horrified to learn that in Milwaukee. Wis., today are being manufactured fur coats which never saw a mink, or a rabbit either. They're made of riylon. They look like the fin-
60 MPH—In Reverse
i
AND THAT brings. us finally to the British army which has developed its own variety of jeep. This is a vehicle a little heavier than ours, built
transmission. In high it will travel 60 miles an hour. : { The trick is that all five speeds are as avaliable in reverse as they are in forward. Why. I have no idea, but I predict this is bystanders.
27? Test Your Skill ???
Q—Are whales classed as fish or mammals?
A~—The whale is a mammal. A whale breathes tional Open Golf ¢
holes and
6 brown.
AY
gq
alr and is without any gills; it has fins, but these are very different frombthose of fish. * > 4 - Q-—Is China the only country hordering Korea? A~-The Soviet Union also horders Korea for ‘about 20 miles hetween. China and the Sea of Japan. ’ :
Q-~Are the magnetic poles stationary? . A—It is believed that the magnetic peles are
A—Johnny Goodman of Omaha. ¢* 4+
the direction of the magnetic needle from year to! year. Their motion, however, is very slow. Jue * & 9» a Q-—What Presidents at one time worked for the railroads, A—James Buchanan was ident of a railroad in Pennsylvania in the 1830’s. Abraham Lincoin was an attorney for an Illinois railroad during the 1850's, and Harry 8. Truman was a time:
Q-—~Why is a sombrero so called, A—The word is derived from the Spanish sombra, meaning shade. = 4 *
L/A menace to airplanes? nee in the air, a thun-
“for Another survey 6% the delights of this push- WAPMer—When soiled; you can wash ‘em with soap —
when thawed,
upon the same lines and equipped with a five-speed|
going tp be rough on the| th ald to destitute children pro- ago to process service records, 1 |gency appropriations brings the
| John Mueller, lirector of the WAr mobilization today were: .
{appropriation will net meet our tion in the new draft were in the ineeds.” :
Q-—-Who was the last amateur to win the Na!
not stationary because of the observed changes in|the program is costing an aver- the city, Sept. 6.
Held on Drunk Charge smo ioieg reiana aN As long-age—as-1538 the Russians repatriated thousands of —— pAccused of creating a. disturb-lboard. ou some slarges Agerbainiant- to dran,-afisr-thorough. indoctrination inthe Ance and smashing articles in the! John H. Morris. Henry Circuit psvolutionary aims of the Kremlin, {Claypool ~ Drug Store, Li LE A tribesmen of Chinese Sinkiang. It merely’ happened. that the Chinese Communist revolution .came along and more convenient. fy “delivered all of Binkiang to ‘Russian-domination. Tomorrow: Iran Shies Fro Specifying U. 8. Ald.
gram received $25.000. The emer- Other Trends Noted
total fo $35.000 for 1950. Other developments in Indiana
Welfare Department, said “this mail to 60 Hoosiers, -including 27 “We will have to come hack from Southwest Indianapolis’ for more later in the year, or Board 52. Mrs. Helen Mitchum, ‘make some drastic culs,” he Clerk of the four County boards, ‘added. Pa Z sald 66 more Indianapolis men ‘Figures released today by the would be called up from Board 49, Welfare Department
derstorm does not
kee on the construction of the Santa Fe Rail- 4 pel. 58 ; petently-pjjoted mo:
ent grave danger to a commay about 1901. plane, or
ounty.Co cil Gerald Judge, has he selec t e i C un York, 24, New Harmony, was held ge. No et Slesieg 18 hear For such reasons, the Azernai- : a by police on a. drunk charge to- - Defendant companies withhelq ani are believed to. make up a . day. He wags arrested last night. comment today. large part of the fifth column in S un I S 500 ’ : Iran. This is estimated by for. . |eign intelligence at perahps 40, An ax-swinging Marion County "= )0 Local Mar ine Reserves persons throughout Iran. 4 Couneil today cut appropriation “ M } C | ‘Russia's program of “ethnic exroquent $250,000 ace Muster Call Thursday smi some inner "sec : El n re —— ——— Councilmen voted approval of . wy, soy men of the local 16th whereby Reserve officers in jobs tending her political frontier be- 3 $202,438 in department budgets. Infantry Marine Reserve Bat- they or. their employers consider fore altering national boundaries. State ih hwa Departments had asked $444,000 talion will become full-time Ma- essential will soon be able to ap-| The 1946 attemp to “liberate in emergency appropriations for rines- Thursday morning. peal for deférment directly tothe Iranian ‘Azerbaijani paral- A the remainder of the vear. Maj. Nick E. Presecan, com- Washington. leled Russia's strategy among the | A Welfare Department request Mander of the 16th, sajd final Lt. Col. Norman C. Finney, ad- Th = [aS es | for $30,000 as ald to destitute Muster call” would be at 8 a, m. jutant of Indiana Military Dis: Beer or Near— ? children was pared to $10,000. at the White River Armory, Ex- trict, sald no such orders had yet ° A Garv youth and a Hopkins Waiter Horn, representative of ‘ended active duty will be the been received locally and that his Does ABC Rule ville. Ky.. woman died in traffic the “Indiana Taxpayers Associa- NeW Status of the men, The group headquarters will continue to 3 : accidents on Indiana highways tion, reminded the Council that éNtrains for Camp Oceanside STANt deferments only on a three- Sale of Beverage? yesterday, state police reported the entire program gost only Cal dug 2 id a of federal mitts : today. : $30,000 during 1949. The depart- mately a oot personnel, officers oy: Paeney}: THE INDIANA Alcoholic Bev-| Charles McArdle Jr. 22, Gary, ment requested that amount forl vi had been } : ferred by 5th Army head erage Commission today Was wage killed when the car he was its operations during the last five Strengt en lost by 9th’ y y quarters h the problem of wheth-' : months this year Marine Corps Commandant or. indefinitely under present regula. faced with the pro W driving east on U. 8. 12 west of year, ders weeding out all 18-year-olds tions. Col. Finney said only °F it had any control over “‘near- apichigan City failed to negotiate $35,000 Total from combat service. Recruiting About 100° Hoosier officers would Deer. a curve last night. The car sideIn the original grant this year, was shut off more than a week fall in the direct-appeaj group. , Robert K. Kyle of Culver asked ywipeq a westbound truck driven These will be mainly scientific in- fOF A ruling from the ABC on the py pohert Hand, 38, of Benton structors and researchers in high. 1e8ality of the distribution and papper, Mich. : er institutions of learning. sale of a ‘cereal beverage” in In- “Injured in the crash were three fh Seti : flan. iy ia passengers in the McArdle car, ONE: First call for final induc- Cites Tax Effect |. THE LETTER sad, in part: Rovert Erickson 323. Richard of . “ 5 ized Boncik, 21. and Mike Karas, all On Utility Bills Inasmuch as this de-aicohol Gary beverage contains leas than one- oe v Why Is your gas, water and half of one per cent of alcohol Mrs. Lucy Harpur; 60, of Hop. electric bill so high? there seems to be some question Kinsville, Ky., died in a crash on "Indiana Public. Service Com. Whether the Commission can pro- Ind. 41, two miles south of Steam TE ra eh hibit or regulate its sale in the Corner. She was a passenger in missioner Lawrence Cannonigtate, the same as any other soft'a car driven by Frank Willis, 28, indicated serving the northeast section of thinks he has one answer. Be-'drink.” ; {Chitag. hit bridge butm at icause, says Mr. . ! Mr, Kyle said the ‘“near-beer,”| he car hit a a en jage of $6100 a month. . ~~ ~TWO: Brig. - Gen. Robinson, .... jays Ie 2 avert product manufactured from and overturned. Mrs. Harper was Township assessors’ requests Hitchcock, state adjufant general!” " v y AID grain, has the flavor of real beer thrown out of the car, then pinned - for $107,000 to complete the re-'and Indiana draft director, said $1: |but is nonintoxicating. under the overturned vehicle, Assessment program was pared henceforth all conflict in status| Statistics show state and féd-| Walter A. Rice, vice chairman ie re EC fon only slightly to $04,750. [between the draft and Guardsmen éral taxes cost consumers an ad- of the ABC, sald he did not know FIRST FROST REPORTED Townships received as follows: and Reservists would be handled ditional 85 cents for every dollar whether the beverage came under, HARTFORD, Conn. Aug. 2% Center, $70,000; Decatur, $1500;/locally by Selective Service head- charged by the company. |provisions of the Alcoholic Bev- (UP)-The Weather Bureau reFranklin, $500; Lewrenve, $1800: quarters. Previously, such affairs Thus, if your monthly water erage Act. © ported the first frost of the sumPerry, ' $1500: Warren. $1450; were ironed out in Washington. bill is $1.65, he explained, 85 cents “It certainly raises some inter- mer "at Norfolk, Conn. tod Washington, $4000; Wayne, $14,-. THREE: The Pentagon today goes for taxes and §1 to the esting points.” sald another com- wherg the température 000 * announced setting up of a system utility, : © !missiorer, Glenn A. Markland. 34 Harees Ice crystals
* Co
