Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1950 — Page 15
NTH~— NTH
An
A
to me that people would be so rous. I should ve started table-hopping early in the after-
portation problem. : The two young people were discussing the merits of renting a car to drive to Bloomington next Saturday. They're planning see the In-diana-Notre Dame game. My . was to
hitchhike. I've been doing it for ye®xg. Unless it °
rains or snows Saturday, my thumb “will be in mction on State Rd. 37. I hope Mr. Mulhall will pick me up. At another table, two young couples had a lively conversation concerning free dental work and cigaret lighters that wouldn't work. 2 Edward Lawton, Indiana University dental student from South Bend, was trying to convince Dee Allen, 1026 Windsor St., that she should come over to the school and get her teeth cleaned free. Miss Allen, who has a beautiful set of choppers, thought she'd wait another year. - Dental Student Stan Hyslop of Francisco, Ind,
“was giving a speech to his companion, Mary King,
Bloomington, on expensive lighters that don’t light. I listened for awhile and decided to try it on my cigaret. Worked perfectly. . Vicky Rovol, Johnny Robinson and Marian Smith, Sheffield residents, were talking about a sample of new water-proofing solution Miss Rovol brought home. The claims for the solution, which is applied with a handy sprayer, were fabulous. The three-
~ some was drinking coffee. I'm going to get some
of the solution when it hits the market. Either
ry
is
© TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1950
9%
manager from Hershey, Pa. was explaining all about the candy factory, the indus-
wholesale grocery company. i Mrs. Forte, a secretary for the American Legion, used a few minutes to wonder about the new Legion national commander, Earl Coche. Three Army officers from Camp Atterbury were engaged in a serious conversation. Capt. Charles Zolmer, Pittsburgh, had a few beefs about not being able to find a place to live. He would like very much to bring his wife to Indiana.
Seeks to Find Home
LT. ELMER DILLS, Cranford, N. J. wants | to find ‘a place to live so he can get married. He's] been to get married for four years. Lt.| Dills was about to marry his fiancee when he had to go into the Army again. Lt. Bob Matesic, Pittsburgh, was telling his buddies about his troubles. He just got a good start with a tavern back home only to be called back into service. “I want to get back to my tavern,” said Lt. Matesic. Problems, worries, hopes and fears and good | cheer, You can find them all in a pub. There
‘were several subjects being discussed which must
be passed over. Enough has been printed about the girls who stole quarters from their employer. Interesting evening and my cup floweth over.
Red Fugitive
By H. D. Quigg
SEOUL, Korea, Oct. 17—With the Communists hot on his trail, George Suh, a young Korean reporter for the United Press who had remained in Seoul when the North Koreans ‘nvaded, began hiding out. The “people’s army” was searching for him, and the “people's committee” had ordered his arrest. He gave about half his money .to his sister and half to his sister-in-law, both of whom lived in Seoul. He kept enough money to buy rite '0 feed himself for a month and gave the rice to = boardfng house to cook for him. When that ran out, he moved in for a month with a woman friend of his sister who had rented half of a house.
Hid Above Ceiling
THE HOUSE owner, a lawyer who lived in the
other half, was arrested by the Communists.
Whenever searchers came seeking young men for the Red army, George would hide on the boards above the ceiling or under the Japanese mats in the living room. “I wouldn't have opened the door if that kid Badn’t made a noise,” George said. . came in and said the lawyer was in
A woman can jail and that her husband, who also a lawyer,
would defend him. The lawyer's niece a mal arrived then, and George left the woman to them. During the conversation the two girls innocently remarked that George had worked for the Ameériean press. > _- The woman turned out to be a Communist spy. The house owner's wife asked George to leave. She said that if the Communists came and found George there, it would be bad for her. George left on Sept. 5. Next day the people's army -earched the house for him. They arrested the niece and his sister's friend because they had concealed him, but released them next day after questioning. “I was penniless,” George said. “Many of my friends had gone south. Of my friends and acquaintances who stayed in Seoul, all but one sur-
rendered, confessed they had co-operated with the ‘reactionary government’ and said they would cooperate with the Reds. The .Communists arrested those they considered ‘wicked reactionaries’ and turned the others loose. { “Nobody would feed or conceal me. I stayed| in Seoul another week. My sister sold her clothes, | five suits, and made about $20 for me. I spent one-third of that for food.” : George decided to leave Seoul and try to walk to the American lines far to the south. The Communists were picking up young men on the street| and forcing them to go into the army. George, thought of a way to avoid that. If he was wounded he would be no good to the Reds as a soldier. He went to a doctor friend. The doctor cut al gash two inches long and an inch deep in the muscle of George's right forearm. He wrapped an inch-thick bandage around the arm, poured on plenty of mercurochrome and put the arm in al neck sling, The doctor refused pay because—as he said: “This is a very special operation.” George left Seoul at neon Sept. 12—three days before the American invasion at Inchon which resulted in the recapture of Seoul. Later in August folks who were impatient for an American landing asked George when the Americans would come. He said he believed by Sept. 15.
Afraid of Prediction
“WHEN I LEFT Seoul,” Géorge said, “my sister asked why I-—who had prophesied the Americans would retake Seoul Sept. 15—was leaving. I og her I was afraid to believe my own predicon.” :
3 Hoosier Paradox—
Ten Oil Wells Pumped On Infirmary Acres By MACE BROIDE
Times Special Writer ’ ‘EVANSVILLE, Oct. 17—
A farm for the poor, but certainly nc poor farm. That's the story of the Vanderburgh County home for the indigent where the county’s ‘most destitute residents mix with wealth, and even greater potential wealth. As you drive up to the brick and stone home tucked among the trees you see nothing different about the Vanderburgh County home. Go around. the drive that circles the home proper and divides it from the infirmary and you see fields where grain has been growing, fruit trees, chickens, hogs and cattle. It's no different from dozens of other poor farms in Indiana where the crops and the livestock plus government surplus foods help keep the indigent from being too much of a burden to taxpayers. And the inmates are the same as anywhere else. Yet less than half a mile from the main building of the Vanderburgh County poor farm lie 10 producing oil wells. os » = EVEN UNDER the very house -in which these destitute ‘people eat and sleep may lie part of the vast wealth that is oil. How vast this wealth is may be known within a year as more wells are added to
those now producing royalties .
for the county. Pp It was during the 30's that Vanderburgh County began getting monthly checks for the sale of oil pumped by a lone well at the northeast end of the farm acreage. That well produced only a few barrels a day, just enough to pay for the operation and a little, more. That meant the county's share of the oil sales was small, for seven-eighths of the price the crude oil brought went to the firm that drilled the well and took the chance there'd be no oil. “But within the last year, nine more producing wells have been brought in on the 274-acre tract. Royalties from all 10 wells make more than $550 a month for Vanderburgh County at the latest accounting. ” - » TWO THINGS make things look even brighter for the future, too. So far 14 wells have been drilled and only four produced” no oil from under the land two miles north of Evansville. And another dozen wells probably will go down during the coming. year: Present conservation laws
LT Ta mnie ier et Black Gold Under
allow 27 wells on a tract the size of the Vanderburgh County
farm. Officials say some day that many steel arms may be pumping oil from under the ground into the large silverpainted tanks on the grounds. Chances are especially good not only because such a large number of ‘wells drilled actually produce, but because drilling is comparatively inexpensive. Poor farm oil Wells in Vanderburgh County are drilled with the same equipment as used to sink water wells on farms all over the state since the petroleum pool lies just 1000-1200 feet below the ground. Oil pumped from these shallow wells is brought up into pipes that carry the liquid to storage tanks on the northeast section of the farm land. s - ” - ONCE A MONTH oil firm bookkeepers calculate the county’s share and the check goes ‘off to the auditor. The money is dropped into the general fund. One-eighth of the money earned by the production of some wells belongs to the county. From others only one six-
Over the hill to the Vanderburgh County poor house . . . and oil wells.
teenth finds its way into the public coffers. Co It works this way: The standard lease between a landowner and an oil driller provides that the owner will get an eighth of the price paid for the oil at the well, But, in oil country, a person often reserves certain mineral rights when. he sells a farm. That's what happened with tracts of the Vanderburgh County poor farm land and that's why the full owner's royalty isn't always paid to the county. o » ” EVEN S80, oil from the poor farm is expected to bring in $7000 to the county next year with the price at the well $2.77 a barrel. That's a small part of the $1 million county operating budget. But it's a fair-sized slice of the $57,570 allotted to keep the poor farm going. "Of the budgeted amount, only $12,000 is on the county tax rate now. The rest comes from farm income, Besides the $7000 expected to come In from existing wells
He walked south. Police stopped him frequently but he had borrowed a Red Cross arm band and he posed as a surgeon's assistant who! had been hit by shrapnel in an air, raid. He said he lost his identification card and traveling pass-| port when He dived into the Han River during a raid. They let him pass and he kept walking. It was a dream about Josef Stalin and Harry, Truman that finally turned George back toward Seoul, and we'll come to that tomorrow.
¥ 1 1 |
Parisian Can-Can
By Frederick C. Othman
PARIS, Oct. 17—I escaped the picture postcard , of the lady who, when you pull a tab of paper, undresses before your very eyes. : I even evaded the purchase of a rubbery replica of Mlle. Claudine Cereda in the altogether, “See her weegle at home like she weegles on the stage, only four hundred francs,” urged the motherly-looking saleswoman in the red-plushed and crystal-chandeliered lobby of the Casino de Paris. I told her the genuine weegle of the Mile. was enough for me and I hurried inside to e like a tired businessman in the bald-headed row. Gad! : : ?
Lacy Black Garters.Near oak
THERE NEVER was another theater like this. In a deep velvet easy chair I was taking my ease and in position, should the mood come over me, to snap any one of a hundred lacy black garters as
" they pranced by. The ladies were doing the can-
can. They, their mothers and their grandmothers before them have been performing this same
. dance on the same stage nightly since the theater
was opened in 1881. : - This can-can business to the music of Offen- - pach involves a lot of fluffy ruffles and fleeting glimpses of long black silk stockings pulled up tight. It is a prety thing to watch, but I guess - times have changed since grandfather's day. I just leaned back in my lounge chair and didn’t even make a gesture in the direction of a garter. Things soon grew livelier and I must report that these old eyes goggled when the 50 lovelies appeared in elaborate skirts and nothing whatever above their waists except talcum powder, goose imples and smiles. They looked cold to me and if ‘I'd had a shawl I'd have handed it up. All these bare bosoms a la South Sea islands, . seemed not to startle the Frenchmen. So along came Mille. Claudine in a brassiere that could not have been attached to her with anything but glue. She was a luscious blonde and she sang a song | of which T could understand not one word, but . the longer she warbled, I have to confess, the | Jess weary I felt.
Just Ask Us ils the capital of the United States always’
change and Compre met in Baltimore, (Pa.), York (Pa.), Prince-
¢ Lancaster ton (N. J.), Aunapolis (Md.), Trenton (N. J.) and New York City. Philadelphia was the seat of ernment for the longest period of time. The titution drafted in 1787 authorized Congress to exercise exclusive legislation over some district
‘16, 1790, that Congress voted to accept of land on the Potomac mow known as District of Columbia. ;
er, |
Chest Fund Drive
S
At Halfway Mark
Advanced Gifts Leads Sections
Each succeeding act became more elaborate in! goal of $1,472,760. * To ‘date $724,490, or 49.5 per apolis Church Federation.
still bare in front, hanging by their heels from invisible wires, popping up on white satin sofas from holes in the floor, and cascading down vast
the machinery department. Now there were onl
Iresidents to some 400 voluntee
cent, has been pled, by local] Pleaged by r Organization of the seuvice com-
campaign today hovered just short |
lot the halfway mark toward its | executive secretary-of the Indian-|
|About People—
lies Poor Farm
ETE 2
3
|
om
next year, some money from the sale of hides and other poor farm items goes to the county. n " =” WHILE NONE of this “black gold” money goes directly to the farm, this income is bound to influence the tax board members when .they ponder ways to cut ccrners on budgets. That may account for part of the prompt action given in Evansville to recommendations
made by the state Department | inspectors |
of Welfare. When say the farm home needs a coat of paint, it generally gets it. Meanwhile, officials are hoping that twice as many wells pumping on the farm lands will mean twice the present $7000 royalties by the end of 1951. That, in turn, could mean a reduction of a cent in the county tax rate or it might mean a poor farm that is the finest in the state
Not bad for afd that cost’
Vanderburgh County $14,000 and was written off in 1882 as the county's contribution
era.
Interdenominational Group (if 12 Among 3
To Sponsor Gl Facilities
Rev. John P. Craine to Head Unit :
Planning Recreation, Religious Work The Rev. John P. Craine, rector of Christ Episcopal Church jon the circle, will head an interdenominational committee to sponsor The current Comunity Chest recreation and religious facilities for service men in the city.
The new committee has been formed in response to spiritual a 12-year-old girl
Molesting Cases
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And Identified by 2
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Hurries Trip To Get Ahead 0f Hopalong
Stockyards’ Wise Man - Off Sor Florida ‘Soon for Vacation. I. M: (Ike) Hoagland, wise man of the marketing counsel and public relations office of Indianapolis Stockyards, is introducing his vacation substitute around, preparatory to a long Florida trip. “Ike,” who says his nickname stands for “I Know Everything,” will be replaced by Pur-due-trained Richard Kreusser while he basks in St. Petersburg from December to April. He's staying in Indianapolis part of his vacation, he says, so he'll be here to cast his ballot. But he wants to get to Florida before his two grande sons, Bobby, 8 and Johnny, 5, arrive from Providence, L. I, to join the Hoaglands for Christmas, Ike wants to get all the sun he can before the grandsons como because “I'll be spending all my time in Hopalong Cassiday pic
tures after they get there.” os n on
Portable Pre-Fab
In South Haven, Mich., someora stole William Hadesman's brancnew $1700 prefabricated house.
Stowaways
Roosters can get up early bro. cause they sleep so soundly ail day, Robert McEwan of Portse mouth, N. H., reported today. Mr. McEwan said he drove mora than a mile from a farm dwellin~ relative’s home yesterday befo a {he noticed an object on his aut~{mobile bumper. It was a roostc» —sound asleep, In California, Larry Rusyne, 122, Pasadena, heard a cracklir~ {noise in his motor but blamed 't lon 100-degree temperatures. Ar riving home from. a 217-mil» trip he investigated and found a {Rhode Island Red chicken bie |tween the radiator and grill. " “ n
He Wanted Wings
{ {
Ike Hoagland
{Force in Terre Haute yesterday,
wk ptt Bi Bad co ith Resigns’ From Draft
i An Earlham College student. tou to day had ‘severed relations” wit support the destiute of that the Selective Service System be|cause he said American forces
have “invaded” North Korea. Storrs F. Olds,
jvasion of North Korea was t'3 straw ' that broke the camel ;
Three molestings, one involving back.”
whose dress -
- ” and social needs of military personnel in the Indianapolis commu- Was torn by her assailant as her Qualified Advice nity, Dr. Howard J. Baumgartel explained. Dr. Baumgartel is the mother looked on, were reported
Conferences which preceded the
mittee included ministers and
flights of steps. Two men dressed like one bull Workers who met yesterday at the jaymen of i1 denominations with
ambled down the aisles and made love to the fourth report 1 prettiest women in the audience. A couple of Claypool Hotel.
o.hér gents costumed like monkeys bestowed similar attention on the females in the boxes. |
uncheon in the churches in the mile square as
well as representatives of the
Associated Distributors played lyMC A, YWCA and the Council of
Everybody rushed at intermission to the lobby eon. which was televised. | | The Advanced Gifts division gey Mr. Craine in the commit-
‘where a series of bars sold cold champagne at reasonable fees and the weegle salesladies hawked | their wares. One of these vendeuses suggested
thet might like to buy for my own girl a bras-|total $592,417 toward a goal of
siere like Mlle. Cereda’s. She thrust it into my hands for closer examination and somehow it| seemed like 20 million Frenchmen were standing around me, smiling, For the first time .in 20 years, I blushed. But in my confusion I did manage to ask some | leading questions. The mademoiselle has tried] glue, but it does not work, because in moments] of stress it does not have what you call the elas-| ticity. She has experimented with numerous other adhesives and has standardized on- bicycle tira} cement as the only -substarce which will stand up safely nie Casino de Paris: |
Blase About Bare Fronts
THE SECOND ACT was more of the same, | better to look at probably than to write about.! I thought it was fine; I even became blase like, those Frenchmen about all the bare fronts. Some,
long-awaited conference wit State Excise Police Chief C. B.
$945,759.
led the sections by reporting 62.2 {.a work. per cent of its quota. Its pledges
host to the workers at the lunch-| chyrchwomen.
Two other officers will assist the
They are G. Vance Smith, vice chairman, who led
{service men’s activities at the
Second Presbyterian Church and
Other divisions and their per- 5; pBytler during the war; and Dr. Grover L. Hartman, secretary,/ing financier. It was her second hands claw-like in front of her
centages: .
Schricker Meets Excise Chief
Commission of the Washington, iren, was divorced in 1941 from man slapped“her on the hip with
or 45.5 per cent; residential, $45 1p C., Federation of Churches. 078.70, or 47.2 per cent; utilities, | $2524.25, or 6.7 per cent.
secretary of the Wartime Service
The Rev. Mr. Craine’s former
'parish in Portland, Ore. threw
open its doors as a center for
{service men during the war.
The current needs of = men
Downey Weds Mining Heiress In Surprise Rites
HOT SPRINGS, Va. Oct. 17 (UP)—Morton Downey, radio and television singing star, married Peggy Boyce Hollenlohe, of New York, today in a surprise wedding ceremony. The bride is a granddaughter of ‘William Boyce Thompson, min-
| . Commercial, $5112.64, or 15.3 Per |p 45 director of the Church marriage. (cent; downtown, $37,761.25, or 46.6 pogeration’s Social service de-| {per cent; industrial, $7039.50, OF na tment. Dr. Hartman served as married to Alexander Hohenlohe. | 4.5 per cent; mercantile, $3990.81, {or 7.1 per cent; public, $32,566.44,
Mrs. Downey was formerly
Mr. Downey, father of five chilActress Barbara Bennett. His bride has two children, ” 5 » a THE COUPLE obtained their marriage license this morning. The wedding ceremony followed
‘stationed at Camp Atterbury were immediately at the home of a outlined for the organizing con-
friend. )
Gov. Schricker today held his ference of the new committee by They were attended by Robert
town Indianapolis church arranging programs for military men re-
evil companions suggested that I join them after France, who recently attacked the ported progress so far. The
the show for a foray into precincts where female State Alcoholic Beverge Commis- churches are: Christ Episcopal. cb ra ting | » with Roberts Park Methodist, Second
anatomies are barer still. I had to forego this delight because I had another date with a TWA flying machine for a fast ride across the Atlaftic. She was a Constel-| lation and as she stood there poised in the mid-
night flood lamps of Orly Airfield I got to thinking meeting.
—'without any reflection upon the chassis of Mile.
Claudine — that she had the most beautifully streamlined body of any I'd seen all night.
to The Times.
the blue field with the stars should always the upper left hand corner, whether the ‘are hung vertically or horizontally. When the middle of a street, the flag suspended’ vertically with the stars
J
:
£ :
ision for “playing politics
{to
liquor interests. Neither Chief France nor Gov.
Presbyterian and Broadway Baptist.
{Schricker would comment on the Pedestrian Beaten
Recently the Statehouse was And Robbed by Five
ed with rumors that Gov.
{Schricker was going to shake up [the liquor commission immediate{ly after the election.
Questions from readers on ANY subject will be, answered here. Mail questions
Chief France, who said he wouldn't be surprised to see himself the first one ousted, declined comment on that possibility today.
Clay Conner to Speak On Red Infiltration
{ |
|
i
I
3 th § £ E
speaker; in the position of hon 3 It should never be ture nor draped over a platform but the Bible can upon it.
ceremonies and rules, but these are the most
if the street runs east and west, (jay Conner Jr. Indianapolis on
BOHIRATO SOW ate % insurance executive, will speak
s be above and behind the before Indianapolis Chapter memit is flown from a staff, it should be bers of the 82d Airborne Division ‘at the speaker's right. Association at 8:30 p. m. tomorcover a plece of furni- row on his experiences in the
or stage. Nothing Bataan Death March and guerWhen the flag Is rilla fighting with the Huks in
rest carried with other flags in parade, it should always the Philippines Islands.
There are, Mr. Connor was retired as a major from the U. 8. Army after
common ones. Yh ; : World War II. He will stress the peeks gL * eo infiltration of communism in the ' ‘What is the total populatifn of the United Philippines during and after the | States? Lid oy a2 | wat in hissstdechos 10 be made at, as of J8iy 1, 1049. Memorial Post, ¥FW. |
John Weisbuch, 38, was beaten and robbed of $40 early this morning by five young men who
assaulted him on Pierson St. just 11th District Congressional nom-
north of Ohio St. | Mr. Weisbuch, who lives in a
h' Atterbury chaplains. Also, dOWN- yw wooaruff of Atlanta, chairman of the executive committee
of the Coca Cola Co. and Mrs. oodruff. The Woodruffs were their 38th wedding anniversary at the Hot Springs resort.
Labor Group Backs ‘Republican Candidate
A newly-formed Republican labor group today pledged support to Charles Brownson, Indiana's
inee. Members of the Railroad Broth-
otel at 207 N. Illinois St. said -erhood of America, AFL and CIO ‘he was approached by the group formed the “Labor for Brownson after he walked out the rear of a for Congress” committee at a la-
216 N.
garage at
Meridian St.
‘bor meeting last night in Hotel
{to police last night. | Police are holding a 21-year-old man identified by two women who {reported molestings in another section of the city. The child's mother said a man {followed her and her daughter to the front porch of their home and asked to get in the house. He grabbed the girl and tore her dress before fleeing south on Delaware St. A 59-year-old woman told police a man jumped in front of her in the 1000 block N. Temple Ave. The man made a deep sound with his voice, drew his
face, and fled through an alley without touching her. Slapped on Hip . A 52-year-old woman said a
his open hand as she was walk{ing near her home. She turned, faced the man and backed from him ‘as he. mumbled to himself, she said. . — Police later picked up Robert Stewart, 2189 Kildare St. at 13th and Oxford Sts. The two women identified Stewart as the man {who approached them.
Four Boys Lectured
For Pre-Halloween Prank A pre-Halloween prank involv{ing the use of gasoline and
Imatches brought: excitement to Hi
{the East Side last night—oplus a fre to three 14-year-old boys. Police said the boys were reported to have poured gasoline on the front steps of three houses; knocked on the doors, and then set the fuel blazing with lighted {matches. : ! The trio, picked up at about {10:15 p, m. last night, was lectured on the danger involved In the prank. - The taken to their homes.
After taking the money from his Washington, Wililam G. Shannon.q_. Hurt When Car
billfold, he said, they drove away. 108 S. Emerson Ave. was elected
Big Chill
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 17 - (UP)—President Truman received four unwanted jugs of ice water from room service at the Fairmont Hotel last night. A reporter ordered water “for the press room,” but room service thought he said “president's room.” Moments later a bell boy blundered into a staff conference in the President's suite. He got stony glares.
"of his mother in
group chairman.
FBI Arrests Man After 4-Year Search
| Four years is a long time to be “over the hill” — put the FBI's
memory book is always open.
| Warren Dallas Gifford was accused of absenting himself without leave Sept. 5, 1946, from the U. 8. Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Knox. Ky. He was arrested by {FBI agents yesterday at the home brother, Glenn, 40, of 236 N. Sum- The number of St, who suffered a back ployed by the
Central Ave.
been working as a houge painter. described as fair,
the 2200 block mit
Crashes Utility Pole i Two men were injured, neither {seriously, late last night when
Newest member of Alabamn Gov. James E. Folsom’s staff i: ex-convict Roy Dickerson, ape pointed an honorary colonel because he reformed and “help: others to go straight.” “Yon can't beat the law,” the parole | bank robber said. “Take your punishment Tike a man and resolve to make good when yo. get out.”
. ® =» ‘Open Wide’ Doctors registering for tha jdraft in Memphis, Tenn. included Dr. Cary Middlecoff, who quit his dental practice several years ago for a successful cae reer as a professional golfer. = ” s
What's in a Name? .
First woman to enlist in Detroit’s Civilian Defense Auxiliar~ police force yesterday was rush: 1 to police headquaiters for a Spe« [eial induction: ceremony yesterday after officials learned her name was-Miss Catherine Polic>, -— 2 o
Errol’s Perils
Errol Flynn, who never has any trouble finding women to marry him, is now. having trouble find-
ing a minister to do same. Th=-
dashing screen star and flamehaired Actress Patrice Wymor> still are set for a civil ceremony next Monday at Monaco’'s tow hall in Francs, But so far their desires for a religious after the civil
= Patrice ore Ceremony have Pa Wm been met by ree
boys then Were ¢,qa1 from the Lutherans and si
{lence from Scottish Presbyteriars {because of Mr. Flynn's two dii vorces. 2 :
Carries Her Own
| Donald Duck enlisted in the A'»
{ 20-year-old | Pittsfield, Mass, student at (I~ (Richmond, Ind., college, wro {his draft board he was returnin’ (his draft card and would refu:: {to pay the part of his income tr; {that went to the military becar . |“war is wrong and should not 72 Young Man Seized supported” and because “the i--
weddin~ .
porch of a Bath,
From her rocking chair on th»
Me.. cam"
{the car in which they were riding ‘alter Morse shot a duck ‘crashed into a utility pole in front Wis, wal AE over Merry.
of 2004 English Ave. The driver, Ralph A. Thomp-
was treated at General Hospital. He was booked by police on‘a charge of drunkenness. With Thompson was his
meeting Bay. Having no retriever,
she plunged into the cold water son, 42, of 231 E. St. Joseph St. ,,4 swam 100 feet to get the bird.
U.S. Employees Up WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 (UP)
civilians ‘emstive branch of
injury. He was taken to Veterans the government totalled 2,080,301 Gifford, 41, is married. He had Hospital where his condition was at the end of August. This was
Vv
~ jan increase of 76,894 over July.
«9
