Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1950 — Page 15

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By Ed Sovola

Inside Indianapolis

WEDGEPORT, Nova Scotia, Sept. 20—Gene Tunney, former heavyweight boxihig champion of the world, showed the luckless 1950 United States Tuna Team how it's done. He boated a 680-pound

For three days, seven members of the team sat on the edges of their fishing seats ready to spring into action at the slightest movement of 39-thread lines. And they sat that way from 7 in the morn40 4 in the afternoon on the pitching seas in Soldier's Rip. Exasperating.

Essence of Nonchalance Ty

. MR. TUNNEY, just visiting up here, didn’t get up at 5 a. m. and feel his way to the dock at 6. He was the essence of nonchalance. The day after the match was over, while the victorious Chileans were rubbing: the Alton B. S8harp Trophy and the Americans, low in spirits, were staring unbelievingly at the big zero they had earned, Mr. Tunney for the Rip &t the comfortable hour of 9a m, ! By that time, Tony Hulman and his old friend, Earl All, Terre Haute, and I were out on the Rip for two hours. Hulman, owner of the Speedway and member of the U. 8. team, thought the luck would change after the competition was over. He was determined to get a bluefin before starting for home. After an hour's running time from Wedgeport in a tuna boat, Mr. Tunney appeared on the famous Rip which, as the Nova Scotian booklet says, “swarms with tuna from early July to late October in numbers beyond anything seen elsewhere.” I laughed under my breath. What luck would Tunney have if the best game fishermen from all over the world couldn't take more than eight fish in three hard days?

United States got only a whiff . . . Guides boat the 610-pound bluefin tuna which Eduardo--Reyes of Chile caught on the second day of the Ih International Tuna Cup Match in Nova cotia.

We didn’t have long to wait, The former boxer was on A tuna in no time. It looked like a big one.| Fishermen on 17 boats shook their heads in dis-| belief. Why couldn't have Tony Hulman snagged | one during the tournament? Why couldn't one of! the other six Americans been so lucky? | As unconcerned as if he were in his living, room, Mr. Tunney proceeded to fight the bluefin closer to the boat. No doubt about it, he had a| big one. And he landed it. t Our guides, Capt. Jerry Boudreau, First Mate] Frank Pothier and Bait Man Alex Boudreau, were ready to trade the boat for a motor scooter, I wouldn't have driven such a hard bargain. Well, it was the same old story. When -we hauled in the lines for the last time, our ‘boat

was empty and the flag with the little black tuna .

was still in the bag, where it had been for several’ days. ; \ A word about the guides is in order. These hardy fishermen spend their lives on the water.

It seems like everyone in Wedgeport is Telate In Township, who are factary work-

one way or another,

Of course, the families are large. In the Boud- ers, doctors, farmers, postmen reau family there are seven boys, Jerry, Alex, and just good guys, are gatherClarence, Delbert, Dennis, Gerald and George. ing these days (and evenings) at Jerry and Alex work together, Clarence is captain Hunter Rd. and Raymond St.

of his own boat. George is a fish inspector, Gerald is a seaman for the Canadian National Steam-|

ship Co. Dennis is a photographer in the Nova'a community center and fire staScotia Department of Defense. Delbert is a doc- tion for the southeast section of

Warren Township.

tor in the upper province. At an early age, boys go out with their fathers or older brothers to earn a living fishing the ocean. At 20 they know the coastal waters as well as they know their names. To appreciate their knowledge, one has to operate with them! in a thick fog. They know to the minute when the tides will

begin their treacherous flow in the Rip. And they township trustee.

are masters with a small pot-bellied stove and a

few essential pots. All meals are hot arid the »Strikers regularly employed at &§ International Harvester, Inc., are, A dinner usually consists of fish or meat, po-lending the great hand at the tatoes, vegetable, tea or coffee, homemade bread Moment. And many other factory) and pies." For someone who has seen chaos in Workers who work swing shifts/the southeast part of the town-| modern kitchens, Boudreau cooking is short of a are working during their off time. ship when it was realized the Post Rd. and 10th St. it takes with crossing -U. 8. 52'and many |

chowders they can whip up are out of this world.

miracle.

I think T ate the best apple pie in my life in dawn until dark,” Mr. Curry said. was not in easy reach of that a fire in the outer reaches of the| The proposed building will be comodate about 200 persons at &

Wedgeport. The artist who did the cooking for our cottage was Mrs. William E. Murphy Jr., wife

of the local canteen owner, cottage operator and A r r e st A m i S h Pp Qa r © n t S

Here's How She Does It ! IN HER OWN WORDS, here is the way she does it: “I just take bread flour, cup of Crisco, little salt, enough ice water to moisten the dough . and knead it tenderly. “Then I put one piece of pie dough on the bottom -of-the-pan. I peél my Gravenstine apples, slice them, sprinkle a little sugar and dot the top

}

?, ” | with butter. That's. all. lone Amish mother have been arrested in the first action against a

So much for the world's best apple pie. Now to the packing, saying goodbyes and, handed, we head for Boston. Americans, better

luck next year.

‘Papa’ Slipped

By Robert C. Ruark

. NEW YORK, Sept. 20—I cut my literary eyeteeth on Mr. Ernest Hemingway, a colorful burly gentleman who speaks in shorthand and who probably has done more to influence the production of prose than any other man of modern time. My boyish admiration for Papa, as he is called, was so great that once I spent two weeks looking at him in the Cafe Floridita in Havana, and never did screw up enough courage to step over to say Hiya. Like all talented people who play a typewriter by ear, or who pioneer a field with a pencil, Papa has committed some great and some mediocre and: some goshawful. A race horse cannot run any faster than he can run, 2nd a writer cannot write any better than he can write.

Hemingway Cut the Pattern

MR. HEMINGWAY cut the pattern for socalled realistic writing. He told you how it was and how it felt and how it tasted and he was never afraid of “and” and a long sentence never

scared him. He was never fearful of the first person singular, either, and for that I bless him,

" because I am an “I” boy from way back, and

love to reflect that there is an established and talented precedent. Mr. Hemingway learned a lot about dialogue from an early association with Gertrude (a rose is a rose is a rose) Stein, and he at least picked up the rhythm and the necessary repetition while discarding the cheap theatrics. He is possibly the best adjective man alive, as regards acute deseription without laziness or floridness. Papa has written two deathless books (“The Sun Also Rises” and “A Farewell to Arms”), one competent hunk of trade fiction (“For Whom the Bell Tolls”), and a slew of great short stories, of which one, (“Big Two-Hearted River”) may be the finest mood picture of a man going fishing ‘that was ever constructed. The movies have expanded some of his fragments into top-class fare (‘The Killers” and “The Short Happy Life of Francis

Maccomber”). He hit a clinker with “To Have and Have Not,” but he wrote a hunting documentary called “The Green Hills of Africa” that was as exciting as the best fiction. So, having praised, I will now chew the ears off “Over the River and Into the Trees,” which is Papa’s latest and which he regards as his big work. I am afraid Papa iS getting old, in this one, and mighty wordy, and peddling some dis "courses in fiction form and sacrificing the necessary meat and potatoes of narrative for wellbeloved secrets shared mainly by the writer. This was his trouble a long time ago in “The Fifth Column,” a play about the Spanish revolution which flopped hard. My idea at the time was that Papa was writing for an audience of two, one of which ‘was Papa. > Mr. Hemingway's new one is garrulous as an old man is garrulous, and irritable as an old man is irritable, and kind of patchy, in the over-all hide, as a saddle, long borne, will wear the hair away. It isn’t plump all over, like the old Hemingway, with devotion to the collar buttons and bobby pins and zippers—all of which can be important in prose. Oddly enough it resembles greatly a lot of the very early, boyish stuff, where the great talent was stumbling, briefly, over its clumsy feet.

Technical Skill Remains

THE TECHNICAL SKILL has not suffered, because Papa never wrote a cheap word in the 20-odd years I have worshiped him, while never knowing him. But his mood is petulant, his plot an incident, and the purpose of his narrative a lecture. This ain't fiction, not if you have read “Farewell to Arms.” ~ ~The funny thing about the flop, to an aficionado, (Spanish word I learned from reading “Death in the Afternoon”) is that Papa had in . his story line for the new one as pregnant a possibility as he will ever own, and for my money he blew his opportunity. It takes flour to build a fruit cake, and in Papa's latest he dealt mainly in cherries, citron and pecans, /

Supplies for Reds By Frederick C. Othman |

WASHINGTON, Sept. 20—Congress still is trying to learn (without any particular success) why we keep sending stuff to Western Europe, which continues to forward the same kind of material to

" Russia. I don’t mean baby food, or vitamin-en-

riched candy bars. The lawgivers are worried about warlike things such as steel, copper, locomotives, machine tools, and trucks. We're sending them to our Allies. And said Allies are forwarding the same sort of items through the Iron Curtain. Of this there is no doubt. The question is, why? " The Economic . Co-operation Administration promised to tell all. It sent to the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee a bulky citizen in a peeled-onion haircut, name of Robert N. Golding, in charge of looking into this sub rosa trade with Russia.

Too Much Secrecy HE SAID there'd been too much secrecy about ft and then he began to talk in sonorous phrases. The Congressmen stared at him; the reporters gave up trying to take notes and Rep. Charles A. Wolverton (R. N. J.) finally exploded: ] “In all my experience in this Congress I've never heard so much talk and got so little information as I have from you today.” The Congressmen kept pounding away, however, and they did manage to extract a few nuggets of disconcerting information. Take trucks” said Rep. John B. Bennett (R. Mich.). “We are shipping heavy trucks to France and England. Your own figures show it. And both of these countries have been sending trucks to Russia.” : “I cannot comment on that,” said Mr. Golding. “I can,” snapped Rep. Bennett. “If they can manufacture trucks to ship to Russia, they don’t need to be getting trucks from us.”

Mr. Golding said there were trucks and trucks. | 59%

The onés going from here to England and France are all muilti-ton monsters. The ones going from . there to the Communists are small, 60-horsepower| bs . |

“Just the kind that Russia wants,” interjected ‘Rep. Wolverton. oo Furthermore, he demanded, is Russia sending

; ‘ : ® ever, that if they are deluged with] The ventilating process not only ing: “Ig it possible thé R | | 2 . ussia us anything much except furs for coats and { (o) U. S.: Br other Was Killed requests for liquor permits, they supplies clean air, but creates suf-/can be so dumb?” asians

canned crab meat?

Mr. Golding said that was about all. He added’

that he was trying to persuade the Europeans to| cut out exports to Russia, all right, but that he | hadn’t succeeded completely. He said they ‘were’ sovereign nations. And you can’t issue them | orders. Rep. Bennett said, well, you could stop) sending them stuff. Maybe then they'd mend their ways. The ECA. man said he doubted it. Probably just make ’em mad. He said further that many European nations consider the current fracas as a private rhubarb between Russia and the United States. They want to keep out of it, if they can.

Some Are Isolationists

FACT IS, said he, some of them are isolationists, exactly as most of us were in 1914. This is going to take some educating. -Rep. Bennett demanded to know how much war machinery has gone to Russia from Western Europe since the fighting began in Korea. Mr. Golding said he had no idea; it would be months before the figures are assembled. And let us be strictly fair about this one. You will note that I have quoted not one Democrat as an asker of embarrassing questions. The, Democrats in general seem to think our exporters have done the best they can. The Republicans don’t. This is an election year and politics may enter into it, but I'd still like to know—strictly as an American taxpayer—a little more about those trucks.

The Quiz Master

22? Test Your Skill - 27?

* Was an American task force ever sent to Korea r to the present war? a D371 the United States sent a punitive expedition to Korea as reprisal for the massacre of the crew of the U. S. S. General Sherman in Korean waters bound on a trading 3 © © Who furnishes the baseballs used in the major league? ; The home team. Se : “ & ¢ .' Has a member of Congress a a duel? LE ar ih 4 Yes. Jonathan Cilley was killed in a duel by William J, Graves on Feb, 24, 1836, ei

* Q_Did John Howard Payne words and music for “Home Sweet Home"? A—The words were written by John Howar Payne in Paris and set to music by Sir Henry Bishop, the tune being derived from a Sicilian alr. ® © ¢ § How many vertebrae are in a giraffe’s neck?

will be about $1000 we have spent

empty-| aren away from school. It

{cock Township. All entered bail, ———- of $300 pending a hearing Friday The arrests were the first mass)

» oy » | ° * ) {economic welfare and the peace sides by Cincinnati's downtown tured here by Marshall : Will Give Her Second Son and morals of the people.” {basin area and highly industrial- ficials, y Plan of. | The commissioners’ noted, how- ized Mill Creek Valley. i

pany clerk with occupation forces i a struck the earth, 1""A look will sometimes pulverize Telephone Co, in Japan for more than two years, Cpl. Charles P. Shields Bu d C what a hammer can’t dent. ~ : ? auditorium to. was killed while acting as a mes-| meray foe eb taniey get Cut to Save |" Bill Fineum, 31.-of 1018 Collfer § BS morro =. gsenger—under —eTemy —fire— ET A = —M ifli To “8t, 8to . spped hig truck at tHe COT eh oes = © days after he landed in Korea. | . oo payers $25 : inion [ner of Troy Ave. and Harding St. 3 tions ‘for Civil" Attended Tech High Is Injured in Fall _ | Indiana Taxpayers’ Association iast night. A car with Tennessee of Defense” will be {figures showed today that county plates pulled alongside and a man § ¥ the subject of the

Carlen De ll, he’s been| Police are escorting city gar-the state tax board considers the lane. /is currently ald 1 wild to go,” Shields declared. bage and trash * trucks since county budget, Harry Miesse, The would-be robber got Secretary of the Army ne “I don’t like it, but I can’t stop regular employees walked out chairman of the association scared, jumped off and drove ana and sputy director for eh him, He waatsito go so bad.” Fae te {board said, away with his partner, ian defense in Marion t

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The Indianapolis Times

Warren Township Volunteers Building Fire Station And Community Center

Work is Saving Area Large Sum

"By BOB BOURNE Volunteer fireman of Warren

PAGE 15" |

They are “pitching in” to build

About 15 men are erecting the building and saving the township money on labor costs. “The total cost of the building

for material,” said B.- L. Curry,

Strikers Helping

4

Money-saving workers . . . This is one of the crews giving free time and labor to build a Warren Township fire station and community center, “From the present station at|“Sometimes it takes longer, what it will be used as a fire station, e ¢ | The other half will be used as That gives us a fire equipment from 10 to 13 minutes to reach railroad tracks.” 'a community center. It will ace

crew from present fighting

__The community spirit grew in|part of the area. township,” Mr. Curry explained. 40 by 80 feet, and only half of meeting.

We : ‘New Dream Comes True— Wiley Wins GOP House Requires No Hea

Nod in Wisconsin Or Air Cooling Systems

Six-Months Test at Cincinnati Proves New

Nomination Foe Project an ‘Unqualified Success’

. By United Fress | CINCINNATI, O., Sept. 20 (UP)—A revolutionary seven-room Sen. Alexander Wiley won Re-|home that requires no heat in the winter or air cooling in the sume [Pilican denomination Jo a tira {mer was opened for public inspection today after a six-month resis : ; {term in Wisconsin’s primary. But|gential test proved it an “unqualified success.” on rane betore Alderman Wiliam Hull lipo night between four Democrats The ore floor and basement house, the brain-child of Dr. Clars Foam, officer of nearby 1€4-/who want to oppose him in No-'ence A. Miles, professor of experimental medicine at the University | {vember was still undecided today. o¢ Cincinnati, uses “reflective ra-|

In Work Permits Row

Sect Members Keep 14-Year-Old Children | Out of School in Protest Against 1939 Law |

J LANCASTER, Pa., Sept. 20 (UP)—Twelve Amish fathers and

Swamps Senate

state-wide movement of sect members to keep their 14-year-old chil.

{ | Mr. Wiley is the second ranking giant ditioning” t rovide night. . laction against the absenteeism jdiant conditioning” to prov Jv Amish spokesman said|which affects every Amish com-| GOP heuer the Semitte For- warmth in the winter and cool- ere ase lirse leaders of the sect decided during/munity in the state. A 38-year-|° Be 2 ons a a more™™™ Inthe summer. the summer to keep their 14-year-old Amish father in Mifflin Coun-|,, tt FeSVERS COPE C0 FRE Tang Interior Comfortable » old children away from classes atlty was sentenced to five days in| oon tWo-Lhirds © oid jection | Dr. Mills and his wife, who the start of the fall term, pro-Lebanon County Prison recently Precincts An Jester ayy tke oR, have lived in the home for six) es Wi p testing the state administration for failure to send his 14-year-old Youthful Btate AL orney Ceading months, reported the interior to of the school law enacted in 1939./daughter to school. |Thomas E. Fairchild was leading pe completely comfortable in tem-| The spokesman said that’ since| Two Lancaster County nl mE iocratie senatorial race bY perature extremes ranging from the State Department of Public/were fined $2 and costs each| Ye OS ran Second |20 10 98 degrees, . : Instruction will not grant per- early this year for failure to send| ie f| The sitractive Lothe-¥uown a2 mits for the 14-year-olds to re-their 14-year-old children to] Wiliam 8. Sshderson, ead o |-veflection. point"—has_no insu-| HOOKSETL, N. BH. Sept 2 main away from school for Tarmischool the sulisgury ro aghi the Wisconsin Association of Co-|iation, no weather stripping or|(UP)—Dr, Herman N. Sander’s work and domestic service in ac-| Their appeal was turned down i Dperat ves, Waa SO, ah catllking and has no conventional office nurse apparently tied | ol : {Danie oan, | heating or air conditioning de-|Suicide in despondency when she cordance with the law, they would the Lancaster County Court In!mavor, a close third. Former Oar bur !| mayor, 0 . ’T| vices. No attempt is made to|discovered her boy friend was n oad Jidreh eligible for the July but a further appeal is pend |Congressman La Vern Dilweg warm or: cool the air inside aolgoing with another girl, authoripermits to school. ing in the State Superior Court. |tpajled | - pe ne ne alled. : | house regardless of the outside|ties said today. ; | Mr. Wiley's little-known OPPO-| tamperature. The body of 25-year-old Helen inent, Edward J. Finan, a farmer, Around the top of the walls, at A. Maciolek was found yesterday and boilermaker, conceded defeat |, . ceiling line, is an aluminum |1YIng near a brook about a mile when he was 100,000 votes behind |. vo containing freon cooling cofls|from her home, A small glass the Senator. . |for summer use. Also within the Was clutched in her hand and a Arthur W. Coolidge, a fourth ., . 10 a piace for electric heat-|Yellow pill envelope lay nearby. cousin of the late President Cal-| jo elements. The girl had worked for seven

vin Coolidge, won the Republican “3, "C0 cllings’ are covereaj Lease, for Dr. Sunder and. stush

gubernatorial nomination today in Massachusetts. {a colored figured aluminum March in which he was acoil. Foll also covers the concrete pol Mr. Coolidge, 69, a former lieu- lab fi topped by a foam rub- quitted of the “mercy murder” tenant governor, will oppose Dem-| 31ab floors, topped by of a woman cancer patient. ocratic Gov. Paul A. Dever in the| Per mat which, in turn, is cov- ; : . ered by wall-to-wall nylon car- Autopsy Performed ; Raymond K. Perkins, Merri

November elections. Gov. Dever was renom - > = ominated without opposi In winter, Dr. Mills explained, mack County solicitor, sald Miss the heating elements in the cove |Maciolek learned Monday that a

Despondency Over ‘Jilting’ Blamed

Mother Presents All to Army

body, reducing the skin's heat loss Saturday night. This apparently For Liquor Store body 1s reflected from walls and “erin isoft, even, directionless glow in| Material for Goods

{and making the occupant com-/caused her to take her own life, Like Winter Sunshine ack County medical referee, inABC Will Consider | | Te has no bearing on the occupant’s {most two years the ABC will even all parts of the room, like winter self-imposed ban on liquor per- sald. Times ‘Spee s = = effect May, 1948, to protect “the the fact it is surrounded on three arm Western Europe has been pice

=

tion. ng® gf " |radiate warmth that is reflected man she had been dating for Door Slides A jar from ceiling: .and. walls to the months took out another girl on [fortable regardless of the room's he said. [temperature. 5 Dr. Clarence Butterfield, Merrie | | The process’ is reversed in the|dicated his autopsy showed the 'summer. Heat radiated from the 8irl took poison. Applications Oct. 21 ceilings to the hidden cooling] The Indiana Alcoholic Beverage P'Pe8 and absorbed or rnvre, e S e f earm 7 Commission will consider Again, e Joom's jemperdiu en quests for new retail liquor store sensation of comfort, Dr. Mills permits next month, |sald. i f ern ro ‘| Tt will be the first time in al-| In winter heat comes as a Trade Strategic } consider such requests. Yesterday, sunshine at Sun Valley, Idaho, or the commissioners voted to lift a in the high Swiss Alps,” Dr. Mills| ; ial . Mrs. Helen A. Shields and son, Thomas, view Cpi. Charles—P." mits Oct. 1. I “In “addition, the home's inte WASHINGTON, Sept. 20-~The Shields’ posthumous Purple Heart. wl. The ABC put the moratorium In rior is completely dirt-free despite spectacle of Russia helping to re.

| Several Congressmen are ask-

may reimpose the moratorium. |ficlent indoor pressure to give afi, An 'ECA official testified Ruse Cases Can Be Reviewed outward draft through cracks and|gia is shipping manganese, iron County liquor boards will bel openings through which dus tigteel ingots, crude oll and asphalt |allowed to determine for them- could normally enter. {and getting manufactured goods.

By CARL HENN selves whether they have suffl-| | Robert N. Golding, chief of

~clent If 1 : i | " An Indianapolis mother whose last memento of her eldest son oy dy ew applications "= Sherman's Tune | fiast Weat trade activities, says was a posthumous Purple Heart today was preparing to give up .ages are subject to review by the ¢ Cy ussians think they need the ‘Attacks’ Yanks

Thomas L. Shields ‘Wild to Enlist’ Since Hearing of Death of Charles in Korea

h {articles more than the West ds her younger son, and only remaining child, to the Armed Forces, Ira a “Thomas” Lee wants to enlist’ said Mrs. Helen A. Stifelas, |” ™M° board. "He In supported br BOA

# ! 'imes Fore p : | He is supported by ECA Ad435 E. 9th St., “and I just cant hold h d ’ Times Foreign Service pp v going to let him go.” J : - back any longer. Im BERLIN, Sept. 20—William Te- ministrator Paul G. Hoffman, who

Thomas Lee Shields, 17, is the Meteor Crashes lcumseh Sherman would have SevV- says that the net balance of the tn | eral fits If he could learn the use §3 billion trade between East and only brother of Cpl. Chaifes P. an Tennessee peing made in the Soviet zone of West “is in our favor.” Shields, who died July 30 in the Germany of the American mel- Mr, Golding testified before a mountains surrounding Inchon,

A meteor, apparently of huge | he. : “ ching Through Geor- Ho b-cc size, blazed across a four-state |°14Y: Marc | House sub-committee hearing obKorea. He was 19. { jections to an amendment to a

area early today and crashed in|

One Killed by Auto 'w |” Hanns Eisler, the musical supplem ntal »n which ; i : estern Tennessee. Its impact » ra SUPpleme appropriation which William Joseph Shields, “baby twas felt over a wide area. Pact, other of eastern Germany's would bar Marshall Plan aid to

of the family, was killed F¢b. 12, 1943, when he and his mother were struck by a cap’as they crossed the street. He was not quite 7. Mrs, Shields suffered two brokjen legs In the accident. It took her nine months to recuperate. Now her third son is leaving. Thomas expects his call to the U. 8. Army “sometime this week,” according to Mrs. Shields. He has served three years in the Indiana National Guard. Cpl. Shields, who was a com-

i ister, and Ernst countri hippi - The exact spot where the propaganda min e untries shipping arms or stra \meteor hit had PO been deter- Busch, self-styled “singer of the tegic materials to Iron Curtain mined, but state police said it fell Fevolution.” have gi fr tr kote. i g e 'a parody with the central eme ht. 1950. {somewhere between Memphis and of “Go Home, Ami! Ami, Go OD ohioats Dany Nunartih Tmes -

{Nashville, Tenn. A small plece pr he." which is Intended to drive! RE

{“about the size of an ink bottle” * : |was found near Murray, Ky. js Auiericans va} of Duron pil Engineers to Hear Witnesses sald the meteor 0ne SURE. | : x effect will be to reduce the num- Col : F i St | {lighted the sky as it swept south- ber of Communists in Georgia.” . . . an ey | westward across Southern I1Hnois, | copyright, 1950, by The Indianapolis Times (ol, F. L. Stan] ice: id Southrn Indiana, Western | and the Chicago Dally News, Ine ol. F. L. Stanley, vice president IB a, and rn| serps imesh of the Indiana Bell Telephone Co., {Kentucky into Tennessee. It ap- will address the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at a meeting in the

{peared probable that much of the Driver's Dirty Look {meteor was dissipated before It Foils Holdup Attempt

‘He attended Technical High| A policeman riding guard with!

d : , - Indiana School for two years before en-|. “oii trash truck was injured 'XPavers will save $2.6 million jumped onto the truck's running, polis ex«

listing in June, 1948. After three, been udget cuts 208Td. : : months training at Ft. Knox, Ky., yesterday evening when he lcst next _ » ‘ We of budget euls) The highwayman waved a ham- eran of three he was sent to the West Coast control of his motorcycle on loose PY the Marion County Tax Ad-mer in Fincum's face and de- A Rl Wars. oz Te |gravel, {Justment Board and the County manded his money. But Mr. Fin- A colonel

and embarked for Japan. i Thomas can’t wait to get into, Victor Osborne, 25, of 1218 Nor- Council. - ~~. |cum thrust back a dirty 100k| (ol Stanley ‘he Signal Ce the service, his mother said. ldyke Ave., was in fair condition] A battle -for further reduction usually reserved fro drivers mak-| ., during" Wo rd about at General Hospital today. = will be made next month when ing a left turn from a right hand War II, the career

Aug. 30. Yap