Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1950 — Page 5
of the counGreat Lakes
line 1y Term.
her of nine )-day term at Farm yesterchild neglect. Mary Miller rt pronounced mum for the
434 E. 11th of leaving n, who range 1 years; with» and funds. Pace tried to y saying that us, and used tables. Judge nine children 1d reasons to
eet 2 UP)—More wins from 25 . opened the
ional ‘twins’ jay. se SSAA
“ter, and Max is
SUNDAY, SEPT, 3, 1950° -
By AN ANDREW TU LLY, Se
Potomac" Patter
Something's ‘Been “Added To Washington Parties
Capital Hostesses Nowadays Expect Their Guests «To Be Cute as Well as Hungry and Thirsty F
ripps-Howard Staft Writer
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 Any time now you, can expect Wash: ington hostesses to introduce that daring new game of postoffice.
As it is, you don't just-go to
a dinner party these days, have a
few drinks, chomp on a few exotic vittles and trudge home again.
No, you've got to be cute. Take that hig whoop-te-do gave at the Carlton Hotel the other night for Jack Peurifoy, new ambassador to Greece, and Jack Erhardt, the new envoy go to South Africa. § Mrs. Truitt, of course, is Veep Barkley's daugh-
a big corporation lawyer who works for such bottled - in - bond outfits as Standard of New Jersey. ‘Anyway, when Truitt the guests showed up at the Carl-
Mrs.
Mr.--and Mrs.
matic world just because you've. got Perle Mesta in Luxembourg and Mrs. Eugenie Anderson in Denmark. There are hundreds of diplomats in the | Official . Blue Book and only | eight of them are women. Mine. Pandit, the Indian Ambassador, is the only ambassador in the lot, too. The others are second and third secretaries and attaches. So there. = » »
Grecian Grub
"AL OT of stomachs in this town fels. pretty exotic the other night- after their owners had
‘Max D'Rell Truitt
ow
turkeys, “creamed chicken; about six kinds of salads and some little sandwiches for those who wanted: to look dainty, Lt. Col. de Moreno is in this country as a special guest of Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, Air Force Chief of Staff, and should be pretty tired *cut by now. So far he's seen militar, sights in Florida, Texas and California, with more to come. ; “|
One of the most tragic fig- |
ures that drop in and out of
town these days is Hjalmar Procope, former minister from Finland. Mr. used to be on every big-shot dimner list in town, but nowa-
days he's strictly anonymous. {
Still one of his true pals, how-
ever, is the “Princess” —Alice Roosevelt Longworth. : a & = °° } Rep. Carl Vinsom iD. Ga),
ton they were met by their host’'sanipled some of the eats at a chairman of the House Armed
and hostess and each male was
parfy given by John J. Jago, exec
Services Committee, ‘is a . swell
|. Abbett said. Procope’s name |
Control Sought
PSC Wants Bill Giving Jurisdiction
A law to give the Indiana Public Service Commission wider authority over small telephone.
companies will be sought in the 1951 legislature. Hugh W. Abbett, PSC chairman, said last night a preliminary draft of the proposed. legislation is being ‘compiled. It will be:submitted to smaller companies - and other interested parties for criticism. so that the final draft will be ‘acceptable to: [as many interests as possible, he said. - The PSC how has control only over rates and finances of the small telephone companies, Mr.
Development Hampered There is no jurisdiction over {their territories, and the lack of this ‘authority has hathpered de-| velopment: and modernization of the companies, he explained Lacking ' assurance that their, territories would not be ‘raided”! by competitors, the smaller firms have had difficulty in. obtaining finances for expansion and im-
given a boutonniere and a card ytjye, director for Near Eastern, | barometer these days as to how provements, he said.
telling the name of the doll he| had to escort in to dinner. Then when he finally reached the room| where-the-food-was-being served;
he had to go find a table with
flowers: the same color as his
boutonniere so everything would Greece, and Mr. and Mrs. Jago) J
match. Despite all these complications) there was great merriment and
1 The party was
| South Asian and d_African. Affairs in_the State Department. in honor of Raymond A. Hare, new Ambas-| Peurifoy, new Ambassador tol decided to give em a taste of | ithe vittles they'll be eating soon
sador to Saudi Arabia, and Jack | N
The grub was served up nie] :
a o the war in ‘Korea 2 2 is going. When- eliminate these uncertainties and Brethren Church. aver the news is provided better service for’ rural -———.
good Carl shows | up. to work in white flamnels and “grins -all over the place. Everthing
sure
is up-to- |
‘than one legal questior. came up,
gome people even had a good time. | date im De-
(the general heading of “Meze-| tre, oF oauite, ing upto ma (BAS WHI x” Greek for Tor: Sa gay blade reputation, Er . was domuvrer, which is. French for| Mr. Vinson ice in the Pene stuff you get to eat at cock . , : Mrs. Vinson. Just in case more tail parties. “Mezethas,” {cock tagon. On the wall above the
desk of Warrant Officer Steve
also Justices Tom 2r® guaranteed to let you know| Moreland in the reception room
you've eaten something. They're Civk and Mig Clark, Robert either red hot or full of little-| Hugo Black and Mrs. Black. | known spices that take you by! Then there were General and Surprise. : . . Mrs. Omar Bradley, Treasury Sec-| ~ Ihese particular “Mezethas retary and Mrs. John Snyder, and were hot pastries filled with| an assortment of good Democrats cheese, little meatballs chock-full from Capitol Hill—guys like of ‘herbs and mercy knows what
there were
white. When the white light is’ on it means Louie’s in his office; when the red: light is on, too, it means s0fMepodys in there | - with him. Steve also has an automobile rear mirror stuck up on the wall
are two lights, one red and one |
--Jast year im college.
& of the H Sam Ray-| born Senators Bil Fulbright, stuffed with still another Eastern,
burn, Tom Connally and Brien MecMahon. Booze was served but! everybody was very genteel about it.
MRS. ALBEN BARKLEY holding her own in other places’ besides Capital drawing rooms. As a member of the Senate Ladies’ Club's Red Cross unit, for instance,
she's being hailed as championship timber. {
lelse, and, naturally, grape leaves
concoction. Among those who managed “tol ‘nibble’ daintily without looking (too startled were Assistant Sec-|
facing him so he can see people | leaving the boss’ office even | before they pass his own desk. ! "= »
VEEP BARKLEY'S auto li-
iretaries of State George McGhee CENSe number is 111." Cab drivers
was ‘chaser, »
THERE WAS’ positively
is and Jack McFall. Of course, there call it the Three Aces . .. Rep. plenty of whisky for a'Helen .Gahagan Douglas (D.,
Cal.), figures there's no use lying {about her age any more. Not
n n Medal Party |with that big, broad-shouldered,
{16-year-old son of hers around. no His name's Peter and he says he's
‘tn five months. from the first swinging from the chandeliers-or not going to study acting.
of the year to the end of May, Mrs, Veep put in 341; ing surgical -dressings, knitting, and 12';
drinking champagne out of girls’
hours mak- Shoes at the party given by Vene- gon got a thrill 22 hours zZuelan” Ambassador de Pocaterra when hours sewing. the other night for the Chief of showed up to check on his mili- ‘Sept. 16 at the Masonic Temple.|
The dames over at the Pentathe other day Raymond.
Actor Gene
These totals are well below -some the General Staff of the Vene-/{ary status. He was an Air Force! of the veterans, ‘but the ladies, zuelan Army and Senora Felix officer in World War IL
figure it's a swell record consider- |
ing all those parties Mrs. Bark-|
ley has to go to. = ° The 1950 champs of the club are: Mrs, the Iowa Senator, who put In 400 hours knitting; Mrs. Ernest W. McFarland, wife of = the Arizona Senator, 9314 hours making surgical dressings; and Mrs. Edward R. -Burke, wife of the foxmer Nebraska Senator, sewih 95 hours.
” Now you ladies,” "Please don’t get excited .and think * you're about to take over the diplo-
Q and A—
And the Se
By GALVY GORDON Times Military Editor
(EDITOR'S NOTE:
—
Here’ s
answer series that tells how the Korean war affects: reservists, ow yeterans; draft-age men, and anyone likely to be called to: service | The author will answer questions only in this space, not by mail.)
{Roman de Moreno.
time comparing medals {Vaughan, the President's aide, not {being there made it a wide-open contest and at quitting time no{body could agree on the winner. In between furtive looks chestward to make sure nothing had fallen off, the brass and braid |stowed away large quantities of eatables from a board which not only groaned but yelled out loud. You would, too, if you were loaded {with that stock of;roast hams,
rvice
the fourth of a question-and-
Q—My son is under 25. Yet he served for a short time in the Army during World War II. Can he be drafted? A-—If a man served honorably a year or more between Sept. 16, 1940, and June 24, 1948, he is not liable for service, nor is he liable] if he served honorably for Hore than. 90 days during the war—that is, between Dec. 7, 1941, and Sept. 2, 1945. If he served honorably between Sept. 16, 1940, and June 24, 1948, for more than 90 days, but less than a year, he is conditidnally deferred-if-he is in one of the organized reserve! units, -
Q—I failed several subjects in|
gh school last year” because 1 was out sick a lot. I will be a’ junior this fall.. Can they draft
. me because my grades Weren't,
very good? A~~Technically, yes. is a borderline case to be decided ® by your draft board. Q—I've received my draft no} tice. But I planned to finish my "And I. was taking ROTC, . Can they draft me anyway? A—-1f-you have shown your intention in ‘any way of returning to college for your final year this
fall ‘you are deferrable, regard-
less of your ROTC.
Q—I support my aged ‘mother. Can I be drafted? A—Not if you can prove to your board that you contribute the
ARMSTRONG'S ASPHALT TILE
2 Be... 1c.
99 TRE | 99 THE | 99 THE
Jono BROS.
But yaeurs! |G
major part of your mother's Sup[port. .~ a Q—Is there any appeal to a re-.
port for active duty to the Marine Corps?
self. : Q—Fma CoE objector:
|draft? A-—Yes. But you can ask for de-
questionnaire. .Q—I am a veteran of overseas | service with a 10 per -cent serv-| ice-connected disability. I am sin-| ‘gle and have no dependents. Will legislation being considered by] Congress to include certain vet[ora in the draft include me? --No. President Truman and! Sie Service Director Maj. n. Lewis B. “Hershey have stated” - service-injured [rola not be called at any time. Q—I have already been classi-| fied 1-A. Now my employer tells; ‘me -I' am essential to his plant (operation. Can I be deferred for occupational “reaSons? : A —No. Brig, . Gen. Robinson Hitehcock, state draft director, has said employers must file with
quest for occupational deferment!
sified 1-A. 4 Q—I am a member of an organized reserve Army unit and am required to drill once a week. My school burden for the coming semester is heavy and I want
I do this? A—No. Q—Will my being. in the vo Jitter reserve category keep. me m being called in the draft? ‘A-—Effective Aug. 10, Gen./| Hitchcock said such men in” In-
sidered for the draft.
F T | Filipinos ‘Get Flag i
. MANILA, Philippine Islands, Sept. 2 (UP)--A battalion of 1200 Filipino troops today received the. United Nations flag under which [it will fight in Korea." Foreign (Secretary Carlos P. Romulo made
\before 10 persons,
Youngest ambassador in Wash- (ner, scribe; C. Edward Gaumer, | Everybody was strictly military ington {and guests spent most of their: Jimenez of Costa Rica,
Guy Gillette, wife of quantity and size. Maj. Gen. Harry press corps. He's only: 35. ‘
Hold Parenaopet In Brutal Beating
= Times State Service BEDFORD, Sept. 2—A Bedford paratrooper was held in jail here today as police investigated the brutal beating and attempted criminal assault of a pretty young woman cab driver. Pvt. John Perry, 23, stationed at Ft. Bragg, N. C., was accused of attacking the 28-year-old
“Louisville feminine “cabbie “last
night in Spring Mill State Park.
Police said Perry and another
{soldier rented the cab in down-|
town Louisville and started to Bedford, but detoured into the
{park at Perry's request.
|
ferment on that ground in yodur| PY’ [ettective..
}
{
veterans
the “appropriate local board re-|
“before” the registrant is clas-|
to return to inactive status, Can i?
PE
1 \
{
‘the presentation in. a ceremony ¥ (”
Pvt. Artie told police he
Perry's companion, Morris, Marion, O.,
— attempted to intervene but stop- body of Bonnie Merril,
ped when Perry threatened him.
Crafts Get Pay Hike
The new legislation will seek to
patrons, he added.
‘More Rain Seen For Week-End
Hoosiers could look forward tojday to a Labor Day. week -end! ¥ [dampers «d by rain. Local showers ware predicted lin central and southern India [with widely scattered thunder, showers in the extreme south to- | day and tomorrow, The Weather Bureau predicted little change in temperature, howlever. Today's highs were expected to irange from 76 to 82 in the north land from 80 to 85 in the south. | Tonight's lows were forecast at 163. to 65 in the north and 65 to 68 in the south. Forecasters said ths two hurricanes roaring ovar the Gulf of Mexico had “stagnated” the rainy area ‘over Indiana. EL Nearby states were mostly dry, weather men said, although rains
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES =
t it."" That is,
Nn ; "3
ER
“Small Phone Firm: Sermon of the Week— . 2
Laborers Wi
— pT
th God
. By A. Glen o Dell
Serpe: “For 1 we are laborers together with God.” I Cor. 3:9. et
HIS REVEALING text says that my- job. is not strictly my own. God shares it with me. By the same token there is much we term “God's work” for which we are to assume responsibility. What an inspiring thought and fact this is. “colaborers with God.” We are enjoying a progressive revelation about labor. Those who feel that work is § part: of the curse that the Adamic sin brought into the world are in the minority. at = least among Christian people. But this is a mistaken impression which a careful reading of the story of Eden will quickly remove, We learn here that after the creation the Lord took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to “dress it and to keep work was within yod’s plan to be a part of the unfallen, life. of paradise. Idle-
This “Sermon of the Week” was written by the. Rev. A. Glen O'Dell,” pastor of the Brookside Evangelical United
ness was not. to bethe “secret of t-Edenie-~happeiness ~any more [than it is today:
As Theodore F. MacManus so -
{ pungentiy puts it in his humor-
ous poem: “Beware! the deadly sitting habit, [Or if you sit be like a rabbit
* Declares Defense Needs Target Data.
Civil Group Asks | A-Bomb Objectives |
WASHINGTON, Sept 2 (UP)—| A civil defense group said tonight that U. S. cities cannot plan ef-!
A-bomb targets.
had spr2ad into Ohio yesterday afternoon.
Royal . Arch Masons Chapter 5 Elects
Leslie C. Young Jr. hax ween’ ielected high priest of Indianapolis Chapter 5, Royal Arch Masons. | New officers will be installed
Other officers are: . Leinhos, king; Harry W. Beck-
is Don Maria Echandi| treasurer; William A. Waller, nick- |secretary: Glenn IL. Moreillon, for| named “Jiminy Cricket” by thecaptain of thes host; Harold B.
{Baker, principal sojourner; R. |Gerald Wiker, royal arch captain; Walter F. Fuller, master third veil; Melvin L. Kettelhut, master second veil; Luther A. Higbie, master first veil; William W. Bow- , guard; George L, Johnson, chaplain; Frank W.* Nutting, chaplain emeritus; Walter F. Fuller, Masonic Relief Board director; and Emil V. Schaad, Masonic Temple director. :
Father of 2 Admits Killing School Girl
COLUMBUS, Neb., Sept. 2 (UP) —=A-yournig Tather confessed today that he killed a 16-year-old high school girl who resisted his lovemaking, and led police to her body in a weed-covered grave beside a lake. Roland Sundahl, 20, Norfolk, Neb., father of two children, led authorities -to the shore of lake Babcock, where they
of Silver i Creek, Neb. | Police said Sundahl confessed “that he choked ‘the girl when she| epulsed his advances in his ge car last Sunday about 4
SOUTH BEND, Sept. 2 (UP)—| 2 Mm. ‘Then he said he beat her
Some 1500 workers in nine crafts unions affiliated with the St. Jo-
| seph County Building Trades {Council were granted hourly pay A Yes, to the Marine Corps it- {Increases of 1214 cents today 2 Lucas Assails Critics the result of an agreement with the Building-Contractors Associa: shooting Do I have to register for theltion of South Bend and Mishas
(waka. The increase. -must-be ratified
Tax Hike Hearing" Set | In Fountain County
Times Stale Service COVINGTON, Sept. 2—A hear|ing on a proposed 10 per cent tax | iincrease on real estate in Foun{tain County will be held by the! {State Board. of Tax -Commissioners at 8:30 a.’'m. Wednesday. The hearing will be in the office of County Auditor Mont Boatman.
{with a hatchet, police disclosed. {Police said she apparently had {not been Taped.
Of U.S. Foreign. Policy. WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (UP) enate Democratic ‘Leader Scott W. Lucas says: Republican candi-
each union before. becoming dates who charge the administra-
| tion “bungled” the United States into the Korean War, are aiding the-Communists: : In a radio broadcast prepared here for Illinois stations, he hit back at critics‘of the administration's foreign policy. “While some politicians in Illinlois and America concentrate their vemom upon the President and ‘his cabinet, you must remember that the real culprits gain strength and * satisfaction from tmuch reckless attempts to divide’!
found the!
That conclusion was based on a
All-American Defense. Associa[tion, a private group working to (spur defense activities.
Rev. A. Glen O'Dell :
Who keepeth ever on the jump By springs coricealed within his
hump. Man was n6L-made ta sit a’-trance To press and press and press his pants, : i But rather-—with an open mind
To circulate among his Kind And sp, my son, avoid the snare Which lurks within the cushioned chair.” ~ » ~ JESUS qanctifiad Tahar hn working with his own hands as a carpenter. The great Apostle Paul wrought at the then com-
mon trade of tent-making. He
Savork! Be sure ‘tis better than
+
Labor has its siorsl values - not merely in the material advancement of the world, but more so for what it does for the moral well-being of the laborer. Wrote Elizabeth Barrett Browning: “Get, work! get
what you work to get.” This is true only for those who work within the framework of the will of God for them, and whose labor rebounds to the glory of God and the good of their fellow-men. » » - I BELIEVE it was the great composer, Bach, who kept the placard above his organ at the church bearing the inscription,
“To the glory of God.” He who |
is a true co-laborer with God could well have that before him | at his daily task, Unfortunately, much of our industry has no such moral or spiritual basis because its products cannot be -rated as vital to the enrichment of human lives. The Kind of work we should do depends on what we are divinely fitted to do. It. may ‘be on a farm, or in a shop, or in a store, or in common household tasks. It ‘may be some intellectual pursuit, or in direct Christian services. Every such calling Thus becomes a divine calling and. the called should - devote -
i. himself to it with enthusiasm.
So then, be the‘task great or |
small you will work with a song “in your heart, conscious of the fact that your labors are put-
Lz PAGE 5
~~ Nashville Flier Killed in Korea
Lt. Billie Crabtree Navy Veteran
Times State NASHVILLE, Sept. 2—2d Lt, [Bittle R. Crabtree, -23-year-old F-51 fighter pilot, was killed in
. action over Korea: July 26, mem«
bers of his-family here’ “were ine formed. ; . Lt. Crabtree, son of the late Dr, and Mrs. L. R. Crabtree. Colum-
# bus, was a graduate of Columbus
High School. He was a Navy veteran of World War II and had been in the Air Force since 1947, He was stationed in the Philip. pines after being sent overseas last November. Survivors include three sisters, Mrs. Roy E. Jones, Brownsburg, Mrs. Charles Miller, Ligonier, and Mrs. James Richards, Riverton, IKy.: four brothers, Harold Crabtree, a state policeman; Sherift Preston Crabtree and Joe Crab. [tree, all of Nashville, and Capt, {Lee Crabtree of the Air Force; a {half brother Rudy Crabtree and a half sister Miss Mary Elizabeth Crabtree, both of Nashville,
Month's Weather
ToBehverage
Bureau Issues - September Forecast
Ry Sciences Services
| Pearl, 39,
wrote strongly in commendation of honest work, and stingingly of the reproach of idleness.
ting wings on the prayer, “Thy | ; kingdom come, thy will be done, 1 WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 — Ex« {pect a warmer-than-pormal Sepe
in ATLA 82 It 18.in heaven.” {tember west of the Continental In 2 Bloomington Deaths
{Divide and east of the AppalwHanley Releases | chians, This is the Weather BuBLOOMINGTON, Sept, 2 (UP) Efethel Reynolds, acting Mon-| roe vounty coroner, said today, fil
Coroner Sets Verdict
New England can expect the greatest departures from normal,
{reaw's forecast for the next 30 he would: fild a murder-sulc The central regions of the
days. The extended forecast section says that the Southwest and verdict in the deaths of has { Johnson, 47, and his wife, Lillie
Governor Seen
. . imonth so far as temperature is Running Again
i concerned.
Mr. Reynolds said Mr. Johnson |
apparently shot his wife and him-| self with a shotgun in a potato, patch near their small rural home |avowed candidate for the New fectively unless the military tells| vast of here. He had not deter- | York Republican gubernatorial them which are the most likely, mined Mr. Johnson's motive for|nomination, tonight released Gov. ithe slaying, and suicide.
ALBANY, N. Y,, Sept. 2 (UP) Lt. Gov. Joe R. Hanley, only
{Thomas E. Dewey from his pledge The only witness was a 3-year- Not to seek re-election.
oung to tell { Dewey, urged the governor
{survey of all American cities of| 0d daughter and Mr. Reynolds| Mr. Hanley, in a letter to Gov.
[300,000 sald “she was too y population or more by the 0 at happened.”
to {run again in view of the interna-
The Johnson's had eight chil-| [tional situation, which he said in-
Three-fourths.of the cities aur-; years.
veyed, the association said, “are! proceeding with full-scale organ. lization of civil defense agencies.” {But only two cjties—8t. Paul and
Edwin V. Pittsburgh—actually have made
a start. What the cities need most now, | [the association indicated, is some | !straight talk from the military. Worst Known Danger “Obviously,” the association said, “the extent to which local agencies should be organized can be determined only if they know how great is the danger. “Some of the larger cities are known to be relatively less important as targets for atomic explosions than some smaller ones. “The officials of municipalities are reluctant to embark on extensive programs of relocation of facilities or shelter construction unless they have reason to believe
a potential enemy’s list.” mayors believe civil defense plan-
ning is their responsibility, not that of some higher authority.
Elbert R. Printess
Services Tuesday
Services will be at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the C. M. C, Willis & Son
[dren ranging in age from 2 to 21 volves *
‘great danger to the na{tion and our state.”
The country is divided against itself so far as the prediction for rain is concerned. We can expect subnormal rainfall in the West, the East. Cool, wet weather in the East during August did not jibe with the Weather Bureau's Aug. 1 30day prediction. At the time it was made, extended forecast section Chief. Jerome Namias said that it was a difficult one to make, Events bore him out. -
they would enjoy high priority on The association found that most of
~ - | Gov. Dewey, who ‘has said he. Mr. Namias expected JEFFERS' WIFE DIES would retire at the end of his| west winds from the Pacific in CARMEL, Cal, Sept. 2 (UP) current term, told Mr. Hanley he the upper atmosphere to bring | Funeral services were held here Would give him a definite answer the warm, dry weather he had today for Una Call Jeffers, wife Monday or Tuesday. | predicted to the East. At the time, of the poet Robinson Jeffers, who, The Hanley statement was however, he thought there was a died last night following a long handed out by Gov. Dewey's press | possibility that tropical air from illness. She was 85, Survivors in-|secretary, James C. Haggerty, in-| the Atlantic would upset his fore. clude two sons, Garth, and Don- |atcating the governor had decid-| cast. It did, meeting the winds nan; two sisters and five grand-'ed to remain in politics, It also|from the Pacific and causing all children. ‘was indicated Mr. Hanley would |that rain.
19°X EL} MN ik gia
- Bar
Another Marott Exclusive
“7 FREEMANS GO BACK TO THE CAMPUS ALL OVER AMERICA, A MERE LOOK WILL SHOW
Mortuary Chapel for Elbert Rice]
Printess who died Friday night at| iE Hote, “922° ‘Edgemont Ave.
Mr, Printess, who was 67, was a native of Marion County. "He was an employee of the Socttish Rite, Cathedral and a member, of the!
- {Barnes Chapel M. E. Church. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. |
|Leota Printess, and a sister, Mrs. |
¥ \dianapoiis...
FOUND ¥ BEATEN TO 1 DEATH MONROE, Mich., Sept. 2 (UP)A 22-year-old Toledo, O., govern-! ment employee was found beaten to death beside his car 4 mile, from the Michigan-Ohio. border ‘today. Sheriff's officers identified him as William J. Soshea through the license of his car.
TRAMPLES GIRL TO DEATH NEW YORK, Sept 2 (UP)—A 4-year-old child was trampled to] death today by a run away horse.
its rider, Sophie Adler, bowled over Yolanda Martino, at] {a drinking fountain. The girl died
‘A petition of protest was circu- and confuse the American people.” |of a fractured, skuil
lated after state officials notified |}
Auditor Boatman two weeks ago that. the increase was in ! prospect. DIES OF 4 ATTACK NOBLESVILLE, ~Charles Scearcy, 55, Dallas, Tex., inspection engineer, died of a heart attack today while playing golf on a Noblesville course, Mr. Scearcy, was. employed on a power project at Center Hill, enn.
ro
AND
FRAMES
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Sept. 2 OP)
BROTHERS
fh fie]
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Burial will be in Crown Hill;
| Nellie P. SHIEH, _both_ of In-|
in Central Park. The horse threw and
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