Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1950 — Page 21
28, 1950
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[IRS coat hroughout $39.95! 18, RED or GRAY,
Ne Se aE
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~~ WASHINGTON, Sept. 28—1It gives me a good
A —
Te
Inside Indianapolis
IF YOU happen to be carrying a few excess pounds, friend, get a®air hammer, v p og dig our worries The air hammer, in case you are scratchi ) n your head, is the noisy tool with which men wi gouging - through asphalt ang concrete along Washington St. in downtown Indianapolis and leveling the safety zones. Take a look at the type of man who. is surrounded by flying chunks of concrete and bracing himself against the bucking gun. Put some cotton in your ears and step up close. You'll Jud are air-hammer operator to be hard of muscle, slim of waist and possessing a of steel. He eats like a horse and sleeps like mn Pe Mention ulcers and an upset stom#®H and he doesn’t know what you're talking about.
Washington St. Manhole Filled I GOT to messing around with an Indianapolis Power & Light street crew at Washington St. and Capitol Ave. The three-man crew was cutting
~out an old manhole cover preparatory to filling
in a 11-foot deep, 35-year-old steam hole Murlin Palmer, 1404 N. New Jersey St., was just starting to cut the asphalt. Henry Koch 1127 River Ave. for the moment, handled a shovel. Foreman Edward Codling, 415 Orange St, was figuring out how much fill dirt he would need to. pour and tamp in the hole. A new and larger steam line had been placed into operation making the series of holes in Washington St. useless. The new line runs under the sidewalk in front. of the Statehouse. It would be bad business to leave the old hole unfilled when Washington St. is resurfaced. One fine day the pavement might collapse and a chuckhole would be born. And don’t we have enough chuckholes? Mr. Codling must have sensed that I was itching to get my hands on the air hammer and give it a whirl because he pointed to the hammer and then to me with a nod of his head. I nodded back.Mr. Codling shouted to Murlin Palmer and the hammer stopped its deafening chatter. “Give him your safety glasses and let him work it for awhile.” The switch was all right with the aperator-who was grinning. He explained how to hold the 100pound air hammer and what lever to press for the air. “Keep it away from vour feet and drop it if vou feel it's getting away from vou,” cautioned Mr. Palmer, OK. Throwing the air into the hammer full blast i= a shock. The reflexes get scrambled and releasing the air becomes difficult. You hang on to the hammer and wonder when the bones in your body will start rattling. Cutting the asphalt is comparatively easy. When the blade reaches the reinforced concrete the jolts
- become harder. In a few minutes the hands begin
to feel as if electricity is running through them. Soon the forearms feel the same way. Every time the air is released you're struck with the quiet, The policeman’s whistle on the corner, automoblle horns and traffic noises are mere whispers. Under the watchful eyes of experienced men, you don’t want to throw in the towel too soon. But the grip is gone. the fingers feel like bananas.
’
= in
“By Ed Sovola
“The India
Bormnpr =
0 gay —— Toa
napolis Times
| State Group Raps Military
Medical Convention Seeks Assurance Against Treatment
Times State Service
FRENCH LICK, Sept. 28 —~Hoo-
'ance this time that doctors called ‘into service will be cast in medical roles and not wasted in military jobs for which they have had no training: This alleged treatment came in for some caustic comment yesterday at concluding sessions of the 9 (three-day 101st annual convention
One way fo reduce . Henry Koch (left) “of the Indiana State Medical Asso-
ciation. and Murlin Palmer have the air hammer to keep | At a meeting of military man: their waistlines down.
power committee members, Dr. A.| : A. Rang, Washington, Ind., deCompared to the vibrators I have used several times to tone up the system, the air hammer has ™anded that the American Medithem all beat. |cal Association and the state
1 u ery influence to see A city engineering crew was getting ready to ED ey EY eto jobs air-hammer "the safety island to smithereens. I : ,
| He pointed to conditions handed the air hammer to Mr. Palmer. World War II when.
“When you first start work like this,” he ex- many medical officers had little
in
Doctor Waste’
he said, |
“THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1950 PAGE 21
er ‘Miss Stenographer’ Race = fou /=rr Enter gi P A hl » Nation's Clock
s Fixers Plan 3 Get-Together
A. S. Rowe of Here To Preside ot
Convention
You should have nn trouble stopping a stranger on downtown streets of Dearborn, Mich., next week and.getting the correct time, The town will * :
be chockful of clock makers, oteeming with
timepiece as the Canadian Jewelers’ Institute and t he Horological Institute of America convene there Sunday, Monday and | Tuesday. A. 8S. Rowe of Indian£8 apolis, president a Fu of the Horological Institute, will preside at the joint session,
Mr. Rowe .°
-
plained, “your wrists, hands and shoulder®Jget pretty sore. The best remedy is to use the hammer for a few hours the next day. In no time at all you don't notice it.”
Slight of Build—But Muscles
~-NOW MURLIN PALMER and Henry Koch aren't large men. They're slight of build, in fact, but one look at the muscles of their arms, the way they guide the hammer and pull it up ‘after cutting through eight inches of concrete and you know they're tough. : It must be a good feeling to make steel and! concrete give way to your skill, muscle and sweat. |
Most of the work is dirty. Just as the work Was their members on preparation for
of the men who put in the original steam hole 35 years ago. . i Improvements and progress for many requires the toil of men such as Palmer, Koch and Codling. | I'd like to take my hat off to such men, who
| Back IU Boa rd
to do while patients they left iback home were hard put. AMA Pledges Help Dr. George Lull, secrefarymanager of the American Medical Association, said that the national organization would do everything possible to help solve the problem. ’
Mrs. Audrey Howard, of the Retail, Whole- vu om sale and Department Store Unien (CIO), is a top Moon and Son vote getter in The Times' search for "Miss Ste- = In Elberton. Ga. Mrs. Gordon nographer of Indianapolis.” . “Moon gave birth to a son during vm erste —- the eclipse Monday night, ”
‘Why Did He Do It?'— 88 Days "til Xmas Stephenson's Sponsor Lost LT want 24 ma
Miss Rita Hegarty . . . a stenographer at the Indiana Gross Income Tax Division offices is a . candidate for the title of "Miss Stenographer of Indianapolis.” '
Vote Tabulation
The medics heard Brig. Gen Pr Cl ° Di i Night Chib Opins itchcock, d - | erator Harry novmeon incon ae are Sat Tomorrow ~~ For Clues in Disappearance cro Marry
Recalls Last Visit With Ex-Klan Boss, |
Now Sought as Murder Parole Violator
the local medical societies gather information on military status of|
wed yesterday in Philadelphia but
Times Contest their honeymoon
jimplewieni ation of the doctor Closes Sunday | By BOB BOURNE, Times Staff Writer | 8 wil Nyaa. jdraft law, By ART WRIGHT CARBONDALE, Ill, Sept. 28—Lloyd O. Hill struck a dramatic aor Tha
curvaceous singis booked solid
: urt, He gazed out of his window, hesitated a Competition for votes in The pose and looked hur 8 |
At the final meeting of the as- moment, and mused aloud:
scratch the earth by the ton and who don't com- sociation’s house of delegates a plain there is sand in their sandwiches. ‘resolution was approved backing You know, I don't think that rugged, building, /up efforts of the Indiana Univerpioneer spirit is gone. Some of us with calluses/sity Board of Trustees to obtain in the wrong places just think it's gone. more funds from the General As-
Come Back, Bill
— |sembly for enlargement of the IU
{School of Medicine. By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Sept. 28—1It arrives as no great
" shock that some of the cops in the greatest city
in the world have been playing footie with the horse books. Anybody over the age of eight knows that a bookie can’t operate without fix, and fix means ice, and ice means bought-up-coppers and slyly winking higher-ups. : : Just how high you buy, though, is always a matter of conjecture. In the case of the two Jims —-Walker- and Hines—it was pretty high, or roughly as high as you can get in local government. How high it reaches here today is a-fair cinch to be unproved. Momentarily, we have a cage full of canaries, who are singing their little hearts out about a million annual dollars of graft to police and other officials. We have reshuffled a few cops, to date, and thrown up our hands in horror at the spectacle ‘of graft aprowl in our town. This is news?
O'Dwyer Should Know
I THINK that the shame of the gambling expose in New York City is the absence of its long-term mayor, Bill O'Dwyer, who has flown the coop to play Ambassador in Mexico just as the stench begins to burgeon. Bill can be as honest as Calvin Coolidge, but it still looks lousy. Mr. O'Dwyer’s reaction-to the gambling purge has been perverse in the extreme. He scorned it, sneered at it, he called it a witch-hunt. Mr. O'Dwyer is a former cop. He came up through practical politics. If Bill O'Dwyer doesn’t know the score, nobody knows the score about cops and temptations. I accuse Mr. O'Dwyer of nothing save expediency. It seems awfully peculiar that a mayor of New York—-a job Franklin D. Roosevelt once described as more exacting than any other diplomatic post —suddenly collects an assignment to Mexico just before they blow the lid off his city. It is remindful of the way the old Latin politicos used to take off for Miami under stress. On the evidence we have a man who says he; spread a million a year to police and other offi-
"cials. If we have caught one, scores go unhindered.
They're Human
At the wind-up banquet last — | Louisville,
night, Dr. Elmer Henderson,| AMA president, deAll during the reign of Mr. O'Dwyer the books|clared that medicine's bitter battle have operated disdainfully. lagainst the Truman health plan) Books mean crooks. Crooks mean corrupt has played a major‘role in alertpoliticians, and angled government. It was no|ing the people to the “dangerous great accident that the “little man.” Frank Cos-|trend toward state socialism in|
tello, once entertained a covey of legislators and this country.” {will be counted.
|
judges at a lush party at the Copacabana. He!
said his psychiatrist had told him to mingle with : a higher class of people. . . . GOP Senators Ra It is nice to see a man better himself, as I i suppose Mayor O'Dwyer has bettered himself, socially. To swap a hizzoner for an ambassador- | ¢ y | ship is a stride upward in protocol, and the awies [TUMAN Trends of an excellency ain't near as grueling as those of a mayor of a city as complex as New York. * But to me it looks more like a runout on a nasty crisis than a merited award of honor. And the crisis-—proved now—is one the charming Irishman proclaimed as nonexistent.
Some Questions 4for Bill
k; . ’ : . ved their w in f the IF THE MEXICAN®¥ can spare him, i'd like cneved ! er arhmngs. of. to see Bill O'Dwyer come home to the city that, dangerous trends”. in govern-
Capehart, Jenner " Renew Warnings
Republican Sens. Homer E. Capehart and William E. Jenner
made him and testify a chunk in the upcoming ment under the Truman admin-
hearirigs on the corruption of cops and the cur- istration in two speeches last! rency. of wickedness in our midst. New York is night. still _his town, and has been so since LaGuardia At Anderson, Sen. Jenner
passed to his reward. There must be some light warned voters that for the last on the subject that Will would find himself able 18 years “every act of the Demoto shed. cratic administration has been Questions such as: Did you know that your more and more to the left and if police force was rotten with graft, Your Honor it had not been for the GOP opand/or Excellency? i . position in Congress the country If so, what steps did you take to correct these Would have followed the pattern faults? If not. why not? If you didn't know, why °f Britain which has gone so-
|pa
Times “Miss Stenographer” con- “Why did he do it? Why did he leave?" | test was reaching a peak today. | He was talking about his friend—despite prison bars -of 25 Fran Warren Several candidates from many|.,,., pC. Stephenson, one-time Indiana Ku Klux Klan leader! offices in Indianapolis were iin er oo now sought as a murder parole ome
the top of the vote count. | y violator. juntil Christmas, : organizations were getting behind | t S est 00 |" "he scene was in Mr. Hill's] their own candidate 100 per cent. Money Well Spent
home in this southern Tlinots | A tabulation of votes will appear ‘town. His audience consisted of Screen and radio comics tradi-
for the next 2%, months and won't be able to take a break
in The Times tomorrow., Carbondale Police Chief Lee tionally complain about income Times readers have until mid- eav S or ome |Davis, Parole Officer Robert Ald-taxes. But Al pa night Sunday to get votes to The ‘ {rich and this reporter. {Jolson, back In:
Personally Concerned [Hollywood afte
Mr. Hill wanted it known that 16 days of enter-
Restaurant Owner : a GI's in r |he alone is personally concerned ‘aining Ends Voluntee Duty Prog Rally + /the Korean wa
By MARION CRAN EY | Mr. Hill acted like he will never 200¢ ha 58 mew ing) Ping the most] CAMP ATTERBURY, Sept, [ise his "good friend Sieve” sgl. Fur’ going ito] or single — recelv I . . |He spoke as though the man who! votes will get a week-end trip to! The 28th Division was WIhOUt re said. "1 am the iawn Indi- ook uw my » New York City, with all expenses |its best cook today, as far as the gna” has vanished from the'\sy oi. ° id, plus a gold-plated Under- 109th Infantry Regiment is con- earth. !the Mammywood portable typewriter. |cerned. $ | The dark -complexioned mansinger com1 i DE oan. De) Chris Colovos, retired Scranton, with 4 graying mustache Sestured mented. “Thope ; hasan Lb Pa: Nv (wildly as he declared he knew s (U. 8. } are wonder. hold a style show for stenogra- Pa. - restaurateur who served) hing of where Stephenson hag urs ( troops phers at its new Underwood sales |three weeks as chief cook for the cone or why he bad left. agency headquarters, 23-27 E.|109th Regiment, returned to) Fo r Attorney : .m, OrTOW. | "la ! rme Maryland St. at 8 p. m. tom (Pennsylvania yesterday, but mot| 0. inn formerly an Indianap-| Datroit. ox-
0 le Pri { . | | ardy, The le Prin votes Without the honors due him. olis attorney and now manager plained why his wife went“to a also will receive a going-away . Maj. Gen. Daniel B, Strickler. of the Western Adjustment and hospital to give birth to their ensemble consisting of a suit, hat division commander, yesterday Inspections Corp. here, sald 19th child when the first 18 were Shs es wn | son |PTesented Mr. Colovos a letter of Davis Curtis Stephenson. 58, “is porn at home.
& Co PB Wasson smmendation “for his contribu-one of the greatest minds of our| “We were out for a drive SunIt doesn’t cost anything to vote /day and she began to have labor
tion to the welfare of the di-/ century.”
Coupon, Page 27. Times offices. Letters with votes | postmarked by midnight Sunday!
| | { |
“Miss Stenographer” - married |
Al Jolson
PRON
ow of Suggesti
Power on Francis H
vision.” The insurance adjuster told pains as we passed this hospital. . It is neces- | - 4 | Jo 2 Sania A The | Advance Guard how “Steve” had always seen to We just didn't have time to get Times or obtain one at the In-! Mr.. Colovos,. whose children !t that young Lloyd Hill had a her home.”
dianapolis Typewriter Co. and took over his restaurant when he job while he was working his way
y ” ” ! send it to: Miss Stenographer, retired, has been cooking for the through She Ben asi Harrison Racit g Rossellinis Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Mary- regiment since the arrival of the or n ae nn a anapo i ‘mr. 11 Indianapolis Speedway ever - land St. An individual may vote advance guard three weeks ago. | tfe€Paenson nad sponsored Mr. .... ates husband-wife racinz any number of times for any He voluntarily accompanied the an through scion) and retained teams, Italy has an up-and-com-ndfdate, but each coupon will federalized Pennsylvania National m as defense aliorney for * ing pair of candidates. gand are, u . {sensational murder “trial good for one vote.
laa \ in In-| {Guard unit to Camp Atterbury: diana 25 years ago. Now Mr. Hill! The newspaper Gazzetta Delln
3 ting officially .as a ' {Sport reported today that A , "ty ” falistic.” Friends are invited to send a ac Ie ' {was Stephenson's sponsor -- in SPOrt repo ay that Actres: Tr poy y yr call th i ti ‘ Sen. Capehart, speaking at nominating letter pointing out the consultant ‘he meal preparation parole. p bo {Ingrid Bergman and her husban | tion of gambling a witch hunt, when jt shein oy Aurora, lambasted his opponent, stenographer’s good qualities. The (Unofficially he pitched into Mr. Hill smoothed back his Roberto Rossellini will race their
is not? Why did you stage the big turnout funeral Alex Campbell, Democratic senfor the suicide captain? Why did you desert the atorial. Rominee, for his inconbiggest job of work in the world, save the presi- stent campaigning. ! dency and Mr, Stalin's chores, for a striped-pants “M aps Campbell Stand sinecure—and so sudden? ! y Opponent has been quoted Unless Bill comes back to speak his piece— as being both for and against the which he won’'t—all you can do is give him title to a big sector of cloud. Innocents like me bound to say he quit his office under it.
Sen. Capehart said. was against President Truman's, veto of the bill and later he was quoted as saying he would have voted for the bill if “he had been a member of the Senate.” !
By Frederick C. Othman
deal of satisfaction to learn that diplomats sometimes unbutton their fawn-colored vests and worry about such matters as no-left-turn signs on the roads of the world: tuna fish, whether it's likely to rain tomorrow, and how much to charge for a telegram.
They even take time out from high-class oratory on affairs of state to ponder the international traffic in feelthy pictures. This, I can report officially, they frown upon. These indications that ambassadors ‘extraordinary and plenipotentiary are human beings with problems like the rest of us came from Sen. Tom Connally (D. mes) the chairman of the allpowerful Forei Relations Committee. He and cohorts boss the diplomats.
Ris Good Humor Glows
SEN. TAWM, the only Senator who looks like -
a Senator, called in his. friends of the press to make his annual report on work accomplished. The committee having labored long and fruitfully, the good humor of the Senator glowed like the six golden studs down his white shirt front. His ‘shaggy white hair curled over the back of his collar: his black bow tie looked like it was new for the occasion; and the only thing that seemed to be bothering him was his cigar. This dad-blasted cheroot Rept going out, while
—the-Senator-uttered-words of wisdom on the inter-
national situation. These I'll leave to the pundits; what Interested me was his treatise on the littleknown doings of the diplomats. 2 The boys got together in Geneva, for instance, to figure out road signs that motorists of whatever language could understand. Sen. Tawm and Co. approved; said it would make driving in Europe a lot easier for American tourists. The dirty pictures came up in United Nations
. meetings, which also concerned white slaves,
The Quiz Master
- temo Both Sens. Capéhs - opium, and the elimination thereof. The Senators ner .warned the felare aud Jen
promptly agreed tothe protocols. . on w The fish mainly are funa, which skim the only ay. ep LArphiee am queans mostly off the coasts of Central and South tained in the U i ; merica. — We catch more of these fish than sendin Fou [ anybody else. They are growing scarce and Mexico hong 4 Repuplican Congress to| and Costa Rica are getting worried. ‘So the diplo-| Sen. Capehart who has heen mats of those countries and ours signed two con- making two speeches a day in "a ventions to divvy up the fish equitably. As Sen.
Teions ho, diy up-the fab Ys oh swing from one ‘end of the state ; » the tuna is a mysterious fish to the. other, will be the ne and we can't do much abot it GOP nel
until the scientists speaker tonight at a GOP | learn more about its habits. : oy al
Illy at the Perry Townshi High The interest of the statesmen in the _weather School in Southport. P 8
has to do with the World Meteorologicaf ‘Organi- | All Republican organizations of zation, which has been in business since 1872, pre- southern - Marion County and| dicting what it'll be like upstairs. Now, with the |Johnson County will take ‘part in Senate’s blessings, it is an official part of the/the mas meeting. - United Nations. — .o Th | <
Talk About Payments
. - | Rites Saturday THE GENTLEMEN went to work on a scheme to standardize telegraph service everywhere In the
For Mrs. Cottey world. They made a deal to pay the Swiss!
Funeral services for Mrs. Nanc $14,600,000 for damage done ‘by bombs dro i 4 y by mistake during the war on their 0 aoppee| E Hen Cottey vy be held at 1:30 They talked about slipping neutral Portugal |p. Naauay gow Moore & $202,55052 for similar damage by similar bombs 1, "eriheast Chapel. Burial on her iSland of Macao off the China coast, but! I own the Senate quit in too much of a hurry to do! anything about fit. { : « After prolonged negotiations the diplomats de- Tho lived at 2519 ry cided to_send_and_actually did send, back tog (eq Cestrits Mexico the flags which we captured there during in M a °o ora the Mexican War. Our ‘neighbors to the south Hospital, 8 ; ‘were glad to get 'em. re leap : 2 The suave gentlemen of Canada and the US.A.| gy vorn A also divvied up the water from Niagara Falls. N ” om They ‘sent an exhibit to the fair at Port-au-Prince, | Wes: Haiti. All this was in addition to a good ~ 4 of international yakety-yak; I am pleased to re-[134 lived here §3 . port it largely because even I can understand Jott ® Wana Mrs. Cottey what they were 1alking about. Brightwood Methodist Church and
‘
Mrs.Cottey,
«| |
{ { { | | |
in
A
the Women's League Northeast]
??? Test Your Skill P27 commmbyemie =~ |
Mrs. Hazel Haught, Mrs. Dorothy |
; How was. the ‘site of our national capital finally determined?
The location was the result of a political deal tween Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilto support the
Is the music of “Hail, Hail, the . : {Wells, Ralph and Carl Cottey, all| Here,” American® 2 * Sang's Al of Indianapolis; seven grandchil-
: ‘dre nd nine at-grandchil-| No. This song is sung to the tune of the Pi- grep A rates’ Chorus frum “The Pirates of Penzance,” by the British writers, Gilbert and Sullivan,
anti-Communist bill in Congress,” ond and third in the vote count “He was each will receive an Underwood ere are quoted once as saying that he portable typewriter,
{Ninth Symphony and Mozart's connection with the slaying of a
_ {DRIVERS LOSE LICENSES ~~}
best letter for the girl who wins|thick of the work Nit the regi- } , nderwood port- mental cooks and KPs. ry Uide the Peter He had cooked for the regiment, writer Letters © must be kept | Which is from Scranton, annually | within 50 wards - (when it went with the 28th Divi-
to go The stenographer finishing sec. anton Gan Pare 3 linois U.) to visit a professor.
“I told him I would take him, his self-imposed hours but he said the cab was already ranged from 5 a.m. to 5 p. m. Dur- ©" 0 way. The cab came, he got| English film Miss Hegarty Leads Ing that time he prepared three in. and that was the last time 1)astrens. Greer Leading by 41 votes, Miss Rita Meals, helped in the JMter.mes) saw him.” wk may Hegarty, of the Gross Income Tax Cleanups, and gave instruction on Wrote a Lot [ion come “a Division, was ahead of 40 other future meals. Stephenson had been writing V8. citizen. The stenographers in the first tabu- Tne commendation presented by , great geal, Mr. Hill said, and red-haired “Mrs, lation of votes. Second was Miss Sen, Stnckier read. in part {he Nad been very successful in sell- Miniver,” who is Bea Clemons, of the Congress of ’
ing his articles. the wife of Industrial Organisitions. arg division and its enlisted personnel wi yy the time he was here, and Dallas oll man,
“"eonstitute a valuahle contribution KE. E. Fogelson ey Howard, all the times we were together, he Rg M thirg Mas Miss Audrey How; to our common cause. The fact never had less than $400 or. $500 in real life, filed Mrs. Joyce Kelsey. of the Ayr. Dat your ‘assistance has Deen ,, nim and he certainly didnit a petition for Folli Tl ose Contributed voluntarily and at no ge ey from me." naturalization in shire Follieries, is running a clgse get any money from fourth. = "small personal sacrifice to your-|" yy Hill blamed all of “Steve's” Ft. Worth, Tex. 0 : self, reflects great credit on your {rouble on his political enemies. . 3
patriotism.” —. Strategic Retreat
| Nine of 16 dogs who came fron [S. ma 0 Tennessee to Lake City, Mich. * . | = Brings Life Term |. Two of the world's most treasured = , Dies at A p Tl music manuscripts— Beethoven's, G0rg¢ Dennis, sentenced to life
graying hair and stared out the OWn Ferrari roadster in the forthwindow. He told how he last saw coming “Mille Miglia,” a 1000the parolee Aug. 30. {mile grind. Mr. Rossellini, a long“He sald he had called a cab, time racing fan, said his wife wz 1 to the university (Southern ‘enthusiastic and has started practicing.” :
Citizen Greer
Greer Garson
Two Tredsured Music
Manuscripts. Found ROME, Italy, Sept. 28 (UP)
2d Slaying Trial
{licked their wounds today and refused to go out after any mora |bears. - It wasn't bears that sent them in retreat, however. They ran into a group of porcupines.
for the fifth annual bear hunt, imprisonment two years ago In
“Magic Flute” opera-—have been |ocal laundry official, today was A located in Communist Poland ynder life sentence for the second A » after a 10-year search, the direc- time on the charge. ttention, tor of the American National The 43-year-old defendant was Mrs. Emma L Holtz, who spent Al » Arts Foundation said today. 4 found guilty: yesterday of being 4); but seven -years.of her life in | Prospective Carlton Smith sald the famed an accessory before and after the ’ , n ». } musical works were located ard fact fn the hold-up shooting of Indianapolis, dled today at her Home Buyers will remain in the Benedictine Thomas Bridewell at Star Laun--home, 103 N. Edgehill Rd. —ii irae ¢ Abbey in Hgrussau, Silesia, now dry, 1251 Roosevelt Ave, » Mrs. Holtz, a native of Indian FIRST OFFERING a part of Poland. Dennis, who pleaded guilty two had been bedfast the past _Two-bedroom expansion type an He said the manuscripts were years ago, won a new jury trial apolts petaonry home. combiets with car-
Services to Take Place Saturday
ths. She ° vets. rane refrigerat t taken from the. Berlin State Li- on grounds he was coerced iirto; ude ng a half months yasher and deer! auto air heat brary in 1944 but that no infor- making a confession. The case Wa8 11. fe of Louis F for at least one additional hed. mation on their whereabouts had was heard by Special Judge gi Nya the Wile ilps Soll 3 3 b i sain at - only been received until now, despite Frank A. Symmes in Criminal Hoth a farmer, : ; RE. R CO. REALTORS
various appeals and searches be- | Court 1. hind the Iron Curtain. - | . Dennis’ brother; 8am, : [charged two years ago with being
° Above is just oné of the HUNDREDS of home bargains you will find in >
_8he was an honorary member of the Ladies’ Aid Society of the Grace Lutheran Church and main-
ad the trigger-man in the holdup bership in that the classified columns of Man Who Lived which netted $124. He was_com- tained her memberslriv : The Times Today and - oy : : {mitted to the Indiana State Survivors include a daughter, Every Day! If you want Up-Side-Down | Prison Colony for: the Criminally yo Clara R. Holtz, Indianapofis:— to better your housing —— Insane. : , {two sons; Otto, Indianapolis, and conditions, move into a
® For 30 days Fit Snydes | Walter. C= Onslow, Iowa; a grandwore special glasses thal : daughter, Barbara Jean, Indian-| turned everything he Polio Totals Sangh and several nieces and
viewed up-side-down. - : pI : Today's polio totals in Indiana NePhREWS. : - | GHOW a Wal ean Temain |... pny y compared with the Services will he at 2:30 p. m.| normal under such an Saturday in the Conkle Funeral
hetter neighborhood, increase the size of your . home, you are sure to ¥ find just the right place among ‘the hundreds advertised every day in the
existence . . . how he nees Same date last year: = |gome W. Michigan St. Chapel. slassified pages ‘of The the world again after | 7 Cases Deaths Counties, Burial will be in the Concordia’ a en Hebe acs ; living ‘up-side-down . . . 1050 323 23 68 Cemetery. ry day there are new a | zt . i —— . :
is told in PARADE offerings. Turn now to
v El v ES the real estate Want Ad PROVED OIL RESER es ee Section, select several Proved oil reserves in Mexico, - homes that meet . Deaths reported today: Mabel are now 1.270.000,000 barrels; the needs and ar a pr a Harding. 27, Ft. Wayne and Diane daily crude ofl production rate -, spect them. right away.
AZI Su . (1949 828 88 74 ; A os Sunda) | New cases reported today: One oy i in Allen and Jay Counties. COMES WITH ah n y THE SUNDAY TIMES
.
Yo 98 iy | More than 9000 drivers in De- . For what do the initials MATS stand? . |troit had their operator's licenses! Military Alr Transport Service. : - revoked in I
I.
|K. Trumbo, 6, Red Key. 196,500 barrels a day. |
a . 8 : ro
maaan
tos
