Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1950 — Page 13

FRIDAY, SEPT. 8, 1950

‘Fan Draws Bea On 4 Yankees

BOSTON, Sept. 8 (UP)— Postal inspectors were looking today for

| Rites Tomorrow

Local Railroad

May Be Postponed

» = Representative the author of a letter who | 0 i r ved B p ices f ) | threatened to shoot four New n Case ¢ Big Wa , urial services for Paul D. 8al- york haseball stars from the Fen- WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 (UP) mon, former local railroad repre- ~The Veterans Administration

way Park stands if they anpeared here for a game with the Red Sox Sept. 30. 7 The vpencil-written note was postmarked Hartford, Conn., and was addressed to New York Shortstop Phil Rizzuto, who received it on arrival here yesterday. Outfield Hank Bauer; Catcher Yogi

! : Berra and First Baseman Johnn tive of the Canadian Pacific Rail- zie also were mentioned ny

3 road. He was later. transferred {aropts SA “8 to Memphis. Tenn. For the past = «Jr tne Yankees st several years Mr. Salmoft was district freight agent for the railroad at St. Louis. Mr. Salmon was a member of the American Legion and the In+8 dianapolis Traffic Club. served in the Army during World War 1. Survivors” are his wife, Marie; “98 a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Bonsey, “= St. Petersburg, Fla.; a son, Jack. St. Louis, and two sisters, Mrs. Mary C. Dorsey and Mrs. Michael J. McGinty, both of Indianapolis. : A telegram front President Tru-

Herman W. Schrader man indorsing Alex Campbell for Services for Herman William Senator was read last night to a Schrader, a carpenter for Kingan fathering of northern Indiana and .Co.. will be at the Conkle Democrats who attended a banWest Michigan Street Funeral quet at Winona Lake. Home at 10 a. m: tomorrow. Bur- The occasion was a meeting of : “ial will be at Floral Park Ceme- the “Campbell for Senator” club, = NE tery. first organized here about a week os Born in LaPorte, Mr. Schrader before the state nominating conlived heré 50 years. He was a vention. member of the Lutheran Church “Hearty felicitations and warm- ¥ and the Loyal Order of Moose. est personal greetings to all who| 8 He was employed at Kingan for attend the opening of the” Alex 33 years until he retired in 1946. Campbell for Senator Club to-! Mr. Schrader died yesterday in| night,” Mr. Truman said in his General Hospital. He resided at telegram 55712 W. Washington St. There “The country needs your wise are no immediate survivors, counsels in the Senate and I trust

DIES OF CRASH INJURIES that the will of the voters of the

‘and old state of Indiana will NOBLESVILLE, Sept. 8 (UP) 5.20 lov ~— Mrs. Alice Plerse, 66, Anderson, \\ LY mY judgment in Novem

sentative will be in Holy Cross Cemetery tomorrow after serv5 ices at 10 _a. m. at St. John's . 8 Church. The body is at the Black- # “8 well Funeral Home. 3 Mr. Salmon died Wednesday in Bt. Louis, Mo. He was 55. He was born in Indianapolis and served here as a representa-

are in the pennant race on the last two days of the season, and you dare to show up at Fenway Par . to the Red Sox, I have contrived to shoot you, Rizzuto, Sauer, Berra 1b. He ang Mize from thes stands,” the Air Corps jetter read in part.

25 Standard . and waiting, a change of York Central steel diners, [. (D. 8. T). 10 Standard

Truman Indorses Alex Campbell

WARSAW, Ind...Sept. RB (UP)

ceived in a-head-on auto collision

near Lapel Wednesday. Retired President

MACHINE PERMANTIT Of Hershey orp. Je

Anz. trie. Insltacy $2% (UP) William F. R. Murrie, who!

Haireut, Soft Water Shampoo and Set. rose from candy salesman to president and general manager Beauty College, Inc.. 2 L

Absolutely Guaranteed of the Hershey Corp. died at

CENTRAL Muhlenberg Hospital here last 4 : Uniforms

night. He was 77. L Overalls 1947.

| Credited with originating the chocolate confection known to millions as the “Hershey bar,” Mr.! Murrie had been retired sincg THE WORKINGMAN'S STORE JI. A requiem mass will _be said! SIMON BARUCH Monday in Saint Joan of Arc 49% W. WASHINGTON ST. Church at Hershey, Pa. He will |be buried in the Hershey cemetery.

plans another big GI insurance dividend for 1951, officials said today. ” But they said the VA must first find the money to pay the clerical ‘cost of the job. And they warned that the dividend might be postponed if the nation should be plunged into all-out war since that would increase VA's workload and cut down its manpower. VA asked Congress for. $4.8 million this year to pay iwothirds of the cost of handling the 1951 dividend. Congress turned it down and told VA to finance the job out of its regular appropriation. . Faces Several Decisions Spokesmen said Veterans Administrator Carl R. Gray Jr, must decide if VA can afford the administrative cost of the new dividend which will cover three years, Annual dividends are planned after 1951. If he decides to go ahead Mr. Gray also must figure out: ONE. What part of the present $5.4 billion trust fund can he paid out and what must be held in reserve to meet death payments. "TWO. Who is eligible. The first dividend went to all who had GI insurance in force three months or more before 1948. The 1951 requirement fis expected to be stiffer.

THREE. What the rate of pay-! ment will be. It will be lower than last time but the exact fig-! ures will depend on the total] amount and the number eligible. | Last year policyholders under 40 got 55 cents per $1000 of insurance for each month it was in|

: ber.” The message was signed effect. Top individual payment] died 1 \ { ty H ast night in Hamilton ( oun- garry S. Truman.” was $528. The rate was lower | y Hospital here from Injuries re- tn for those past 40, since their}

shorter life expectancy requires! -

a higher reserve. FOUR: How the new dividend would be handled. Present plans) are to require no applications, but,

| |

to mail the dividend to each vet-| -

eran on the anniversary of the day he took out a policy. Gets 8000 A Day | The VA said yesterday that it is receiving about 8000 aplications a day for new GI insurance, mostly from men now in service.) Many applications, it said, are from peacetime servicemen who did not want National Service Life Insurance until a shooting war started. ; Servicemen. are permitted to!

V_g9R

8 Paul B. Salmon * Basabal Fever: — [A Planing or 3 Bi Dividend in 1951

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_ THE IND

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—— a

IANAPOLIS TIMES

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ADAPTATIONS OF FASHIONS USUALLY FOUND FOR 24.95 TO 29.95

take out as much as $10,000 in GI| life insurance. Veterans who q served between Oct. 8, 1940, and pi Sept. 2, 1945, may buy new GI| insurance if they have let their pld policies lapse.

‘Mrs. CW. Frasher

Rites Tomorrow

Services for Mrs. Zula E. Frasher, will be at 8:30 a. m.| at- Kirby Mortuary and at 9 a. m.| tomorrow at SS Peter and Paul] | Cathedral. Burial will be at EI- | wood. | Mrs. Frasher, who was 57, died 8 yesterday in her home at 1521 N.| {New Jersey St. She was a mem-| | {

ber of SS Peter and Paul Cathe-| dral and the Moose Auxiliary. 7 Born at Elwood, she was form- | erly employed for 13 years as a bookkeeper at the William H. Block Co. and at National Biscuit Co. 21 years. Surviving are her husband C.| W., and a brother, Jack Hupp.

‘William De Sanno a Services for Willian De Sanno, who died yesterday after a long "illness, will be at 3 p. m. tomor{row at the Harry W. Moore Peace

« 2 fi you CANT A/SS L | Chapel. Burial will be in Crown

4 WITH 4 Hill Cemetery.

; 1 ‘ Mr. De Sanno was 55. He was

ELAR AA

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| dianapolis 65 years. He was employed as a tile setter most of his life, retiring in 1935. He re-| sided at 445'; N. Davidson St. | Survivors are a sister, Mrs. | Elizabeth Burnett, Chicago; a | niece, Mrs, William F. Lienr, Indianapolis, and a nephew,

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