Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1950 — Page 17
Nations, Two. ‘were sponsored by .
ce was made by the stuJ of the United States. Then Pete Be made the dedication talk and Gordon Smith, president of the Student Council, accepted Nations flag on behalf of the Counci It was ting o accepted - the cil ie was | r that Gordon the United Nations flag since he was Broad Ripple’ represeiitative at a United Nations Assembly meeting in New York last week. oa Ae Ta IT WAS QUITE an honor to be asked to speak
speech
| before the students of Broad Ripple on United
. A firm called Ruthrauff and Ry-
quired with his sincere suits. op
Nations Day. 1 told that to Principal J, Fred
Murphy. And I also mentioned the fact that during my high school days, the principal of Hammond High School was seldom as congenial to me as Mr. Murphy. Of course, he had every reason not to be. I wish Mr. A. L. Spohn could have
‘ been present yesterday.
Before the first session, Willard - Gambold, héad of the history department, said 1517 students of Broad Ripy e signed the Freedom Scroll. That is almost 100 per cent representation on the scrolls which will be plaeed at the base of the Freedom Bell in Berlin. Mr. Gambold paid high tribute to the efforts of Pete Scudder and Janet Sage who worked hard to make the signing of the scroll a suc-
United Nations flag. . . (left to right) Spencer Trudgen, Pete Scudder. and Gordon Smith check the companion to the Stars and Stripes.
Xt Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW. YORK, Oct. 25—Tallulah Bankhead's crushing crack to me: “You look better on television than you do in person.” : > 2 COMEDIAN JOE E. LEWIS, to an audience at the Copacabana: “I'm sorry to be late, but I was out with dad . . . Old Grandad.” LT CAFE SOCIETY'S abuzz with bustup rumors about tobacco heir Dick Reynolds and beautiful ex actress Marianne O'Brien, but taint so as of now. They had a spat (who didn’t?), but afterward his B. W. (and she is!) was wearing hi orchids and around with him looking happy. They got a problem I wish I had: How to be
happy though rich. wy . > > o
SHOT-—that which if some people have more than one they are half. 3 ; oa Acting N. Y. Mayor Impellitter] told brother Lambs at the Lambs Club that after Nov. 7 he'll delete the “acting” from his title, Bert Lytell declared that the three wise monkeys whe said, “Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil” should add a fourth monkey who says, “Write no letters.” — ¢ * 9 { A FLORIDA ex-governor was out strolling at the home of a friend who said, “Let's walk up to the house and have a drink.” “Walk!* said the ex-gov., “Let's run.” * <>
HOT NEWS: Sensational story is about a playboy who “managed” another one into a rich marriage, now hopes to collect 10 per cent of
his settiement. . . . Tip: Start ordering “Guys and Dolls” tickets. Bogart and Bacall raving
* about Bob Alda, Vivian Blaine, Frank Loesger’s
hit tunes and Abe Burrows’ writing after seeing it in Philly. +. Ole Olsen, already on crutches, faces an operation due to those auto
crash injuries. :
- > > &
At an army camp, a male bus driver shouted, “Hurry up, Sarge, we can't wait all day.” A WAOQC sergeant replied, “Wait'll 1 get my clothes oni!” All the GIs stared out the window—at a WAC sergeant boarding the bus with a bag of laundry.
Opportunity :
By Robert C. Ruark
. NEW YORK, Oct. 25—We have a tiny sermon oday in the person of a big ex-GI named Dave Mahoney, who has just passed his 27th birthday. Mr. Mahoney is & pretty striking example of the fact that opporfunity is not dead in these parts, and we need not substitute, as yet, socialism for hustle. - : tw Mr. Mahoney, one of the youngest Pacific infantry captains in the war at the age of 22, just became one 6f the youngest vice presidents in the history of his racket, which is advertising.
an, one of the largest agencies in the business, decided that a youngster who was spending several miljion dollars ‘a year for them might just as well have a title to go with his ulcers, which ~~
Dave also seems to have: ac-
2» 3 - HERE IS a guy whose education was knock: in the head by the war. He was 18 when Pearl Harbor came to pass, a student at the University of Pennsylvania. He was a junior when he went
“into the Army.
After his discharge he wasted no time with
‘the 52-20 club. He went back to school on his Gi
bill, but he needed some extra dough and took a $25 job in New York. Since he wanted to finish at Penn, he worked all day in New York, commuted to Philadelphia, and studied at night. He got a job cold with R. & R. by kicking on the door with an idea for an advertising
The idea broke down, but he landed in the mail-room. While he worked there he went to Cojust to pick up a master's degree, which figured come in handy some day. He busted out of the mail room to work on
§
‘some soap clients, and a couple of years ago was
account executive for a beverage, Virginia This meant that a 25-year-old was sudspending more than a million a year of wh still considerable
is >
Yih Schoo students at a
accom-
ton and Lincoln Memorial. In the short space of time allotted, it was impossible to tell the students. some-of the impressions that came to me as I recalled the vituperation that was encountered in the Russian Embassy. On the stage with me were leaders of the school. In the audience were students who were on the threshold of unlimited opportunity if world peace can he aehieved. g > > %* 9 I TOUCHED on the subject. It's doubtful whether high school students can realize that a successful future is theirs if they prepare for it. From my own class of scalawags, I know a fellow who has an important post with the State Department overseas. Another is patent examiner
in Washington. He was a close friend and if someone had told me in 1934 that he would be examining patents, I would have fallen over backwards from laughter: Sq would he. Our class produced a professor of business law in a Marge university. A boy who refused to climb girders on a bridge because he didn’t like high is a full commander in the United States Navy Air Force. He was an ace in World War II and was on the carrier Enter-
When you look into the faces of 1500 students, you're looking into a terrific, amount of future, Among those students you have doctors, scientists, educators, businessmen, lawmakers, <
IN A VERY short time a boy with a burr haircut changes into a man of responsibility and force. The change is gradual but relentless. There is no escape. The biggest cutup. at Broad Ripple could easily grow up to be the greatest man Indiana ever produced. A glance at the printed histories of the big men of our time proves that the road to the top is still up te the individual. That’s why on United Nations Day, in the gymnasium of Broad Ripple High School, I wished there was some way we could bring the futures of the entire student body before the men responsible whether our road will be peaceful or dangerous. _ 7 > > & @ 1 WISHED that I could look into the future of young men like Gordon Smith, Spencer Trudgen and Peter Scudder -and Janet Sage and say, “Look, with peace among all the nations, with just an even chance for their talents to mature, you will have this and this and this. The world will be this much better off becausé we have used every ounce of strength, spared no expense, called upon wisdom and justice to guide us to real peace, a lasting peace.” The United Nations can’t and must not fail. We must not fail the United Nations. It scares me to think that we'll be lucky enough to gct another chance should we fail now.
Run, Do Not Walk
To Nearest Drink
GOOD RUMOR MAN: Paulette Goddard was dismissed from Doctor's Hospital. . . . Margaret Phelan and Howard Lee, the wealthy Texas oilman. (Glenn McCarthy's brother-in-law), are melting the long distance wires. . . . Joan Fontaine and Olivia DeHavilland, both in town, remain widely separated. . . . Todays Daily Double: George (Sad Sack) Baker and Starlet Nancy O’Brien. . . . “Oklahoma” closed in London after a 3'%- % year run, . . . Charles Boyer makes his video debut on the %% next Bob Hope Show. . . . Hope finally arrived in Korea and will stop in the Aleutian Islands on his way home. . . . Dinah Shore will be the only guest on Jack Benny's TV show Saturday. . .. Connle Cezon ponnis McMahon, the Irish In‘ternal Revenue collector, is popular, At a Vets of Foreign Wars testimonial, Owen McGivern said he's so popular with all groups that Chaim Weizman sent word that anyone that didn’t like him would be considered anti-Semitic. . . . Edward G. Robinson, reporting no film jobs in sight, is coming here to arrange a TV show. . . The Flying Lobster Restaurant flew. . . Ginger Rogers returns to Hollywood for talks with Wald-Krasna which may team her with Fred Astaire again, . .. Connie Cezon will appear in “Broadway” which opens the ‘Equity Library Theater's season.. * > &
Who's news: Bette Davis sees her new husband, Gary Merrill, off to Germany where he'll do “Legion of the Damned” for the 20th. . . . Humphrey Bogart leaves to start filming “Siroceo” for his own producing outfit, Santa Ana Productions. . . . Farley Granger and Geraldine Brooke were a Roos-Grill twosome. * > 2 : EARL’S PEARLS , .. Kate Murtah found out that the slogan of the Broadway and Hollywood wolves seems to be “Another day, another doll.” * P @
TYPOGRAPHICAL TRUTH: | A Minnesota paper said: “Mr. and Mrs. Jones have been en-
tertaining several housépests.” . .. That's Earl,’
brother,
This Is Cinderella, Horatio Alger Stuff
—orie of which, Motorola Television, spends astronomical sums on a weekly TV show. This makes Mr, Mahoney the technical employer of such an-
cient maestros as Jimmy Durante, and between his three accounts, I imagine he will supervise the
_ Spending of three or four million a year.
It's enough to buy him a title as VP, anyhow, and an approximate salary of $25,000, which is plenty potatoes for anybody, not to mention a youngster. This Mr. Mahoney is a perfectly ordinary guy ~no genius, no superman, no wild-eyed zealot, no
spreachful abstainer from anything. He drinks
whisky in moderate amounts, goes to night clubs
moderately, runs around with pretty young
women, and seems to have a lot of fun. He does not steep himself in his job—just in his spare time he recently whipped up a sidebar mail-order busiBess which seems slated for some large, keeépable coin, ; > > THE FACT that the youngster is a friend of mine has no bearing on this piece, anymore than my friendship with a highly successful restaurant owner, a Chinese ex-coolie named Sou .Chan, had any bearing on the piece I once did on Sou. It's just that both men are similarly important in that they represent something really wonderful, which is that you can still mingle with opportunity in this fine land. ! It took Sou 17 years to go from untutored immigrant to tycoon, but both he and Dave did on personal effort, with no pull, no strings, a great many lads were whining that had robbed them of youth and divested: m of opportunity, Mahoney was working on construction of that corny old American ideal, 8 better mousetrap. That it paid off while he is from a professional standpoint, a beardless , is a reflection only on his ability, a mirrof directed effort. ; :
EEE == i
252
1 am a passionate addict of the Cinderella-and-Alger-hero storjes myself, and I suspect most folks ave, which is why I tell you about Dave.
-lvorce granted her husband in
PAGE 17 -
Hoppy
{tions could name the County {Council candidates on their respective party tickets. Election Drawing Near Thus, with the election only 13 days away, most of the 279,000
4 r Tr Tr Smet gs T— eo - WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1950 ‘ a 2 hy = ly a + . About People— ‘We Can't Help Him'— 'Old Bob,’ Sealed in His C T oi] nation Back Waces ob,’ Sealed in His Cave Tomb |nformation on i | 4 dC ages | Week-Long Rescue . ar | "| Atempls Thwarled'* County Council i | Due 3 < gars | Times Staff Writer i : : > { BEDFORD, Oct. 25—0Ild Bob, i ? best coon dog in Lawrence Couns 3. - Receives 25 Cents " Names of Candidates {limestone hills he loved to hunt. | Fy k Pl { He will never know how the To Spend Tax Money At Akron Plant people of Bedford loved him. By NOBLE REED Bill Boyd, who runs close competition to Ft. Knox with his in- Lawrence County will never-for- {elected at the Nov. 7 balloting come from “Hopalong Cassidy” get the week-long, long losing {will have direct control over the movies, television shows and mer- battle to save the life of a stout- {spending of more than $9 million chandise indorse- (hearted, toothless old dog that {Marion County next year. a check for '25 Old Bob chased a coon into a Yet, the great majority of votcents back pay {tiny-mouthed, deep cave a week _lers don't even know the names owed him since |ago as other dogs stopped outside ! lon the. County Council which | When Hoppy Men risked their lives in frantic {holds the purse strings of the {judged the Soap {but futile efforts to lberate the County government. {Box Derby in trapped dog. | {workers themselves disclosed that year, he men- As a last resort they ripped off only a few in party organizationed he once {the top of a high, wooded ridge. Editorial m worked as a | At 1 a. m. today a giant bull- § ora’ on Page |F. Goodrich Co. ‘of a 60-foot hole. Red-e | X . -eyed men jthere. A check of the records gi- leaned on picks and shovels. |closed the pay deficiency. Presi-/ women some carrying infants in
J mes | x analano: Bete Lawrence C 's Best Coon Doa, Voters Lack op ng Lawrence ounty S bes oon Vog, | Bq CLIFFORD THURMAN i .. Majority Don’t Know ty, is sealed forever beneath the i For Shortage But the people of Bedford and ! Seven officials who “will be { of the taxpayers’ money here in ments; today got {refused to quit. "lof the candidates seeking seats 11901. {and barked. He never came out. . , Further, a check of political Akron, O. last Ridge Ripped Off stock boy at B. \dozer was shut off at the bottom | dent John L. Collyer corrected the ya nyets wept as Lawrence
{short - changing by sending the Clark.-Old Bob's master, climbed {quarter to Hoppy, pronto. " »
School Marm
atop a huge rock the bulldozer
o fad uprooted. registered voters here probably “Friends,” he said in a tired a will go to the polls with little or Honored a {no knowledge about the candi-
ivoice, “it is time to quit. We can- = Japan will con-'not help Old Bob. I'm satisfied fer the Order of it ig jmpossible to get to him. I the Sacredygant this thing to stop before Crown, thirdisomebody gets hurt. I want these class, on ‘Mrs. holes sealed up. Thank you all'ceived an answering yelp fromiscene. Elizabeth Vin-for your help.” |far down inside the cavern. the ridge he crawled | ings, tutor to “Where Else?”
dates they are electing to spend {$9 million in 1951 and possibly {more in 1952. The County Council, controlled the last eight
—Phote by Lloyd B. Walfen, Times Staff Pholographer Defeated rescue workers block off the entrance of Old Bob's grave. |
After it was snaked -up by Republicans into the years, is the legislative body with Then Old. Bob started howling, hole to cut away the obstructing sole authority to appropriate any
" >» i Le grown. Frise Several hundred people were yelping and crying. rock. funds spent in County governFo pas deadly quiet as a chilling autumn/ “I k + h | The passage at some places ment. two years. Mrs. new e was trapped or ! in p. Vinings plans to|¥ind rustied the deeply colored nyrt” Mr. Clark said. “We nos 105% than 14 inches hIgH. Before $1 can be spent by any ‘dl Es RE > leaves on the hillside. Then, one kept calling. After four hours [he Jnen Loated fhermaelves ith County official, it has to be ap- * her home. in 2Y 00& In pairs and in family we went home.” ansmission grease 10 ald ihem proved by a majority of the seven
in slipping through, a ' At one time Mr. Gratzer had A Y S ’ {Fars a mile below, | First, just a aa: fo be piled out wil safety or. |'AS Te J0W., . . | “Where else but America,” al... : attached to his ankle. He finally ’ Is : {sportsmen who knew and loved reported the task impossible. for the Council are: oe EE re in Le won: specie Jsked focel Old Bob went out with spades and, Then the bulldozer came. | Otto H. Worley, 22 N. Campday as it was in the horse and |lives and work day and. nf ht shovels. They worked all day] Last night, with blazing gaso- bell Ave, assistant sales manabuggy era. Seventy-six friends/to save the life of an old oa | without getting more than 15/line torches lighting the woods, ger for the Indianapolis Engravand neighbors turned Good Sa- hound?” {feet inside the small cave. a 15-ton “cat” operated by Harold ing Co. (First District). { the Bolding piowed through - the; Robert E. Morris, 2230 Ring-
The next day and night maritan yesterday to pick 24-acre Past ‘Middle Age’ i ) : 10 yes el y ’ Pp ¥ tl : fiddle Age crowd returned and kept on dig- gulch to reach the scene. Trees gold St, a printer. (Second Dis-
The immediate story began a gj y dow it h } Taylor, hen| > ging. Old Bob could still be heard went down in its path. trict.) EE i hs Sas x wd, then week ago last niglit when Mr. hut his barks were growing weak- “Cat” Stopped | ‘Victor L. Rigot, 5414 Rockville 32-year-old Washington Cour t/C2Tk and two other Lawrenceler, Each day and night. the Cutting deep into the almost Rd., an attorney. { Third District.’ County coon hunters took Old Bob!crowds grew larger and more and Solid limestone the ‘“cat” went| Joseph Walker Barr, R. R. 17.
members of the Council, List of Candidates Democratic candidates running
|groups, they picked their way
\down the rocky slope to waiting The battle: to save Old Bob
started. in earnest
Philadelphia.
Mrs. Vinings H@
sf e ing! : ame = ovine and two other dogs out for a more men left their work in the 60 feet into the hillside in about Indianapolis, operator of severs! 0., hospital practice un, famous limestone pits of Law- four hours. inéighborhood theaters. (Fourth 4 ’ The real The giant. “cat” was whipped. District.)
Bom | story started seven rence County to aid in the dig- ‘ : years ago when Mr. Clark got| ging. It was estimated that the hoie| Joseph F. Dezelan, 1924 N. KessA long Wait |0ld Bob and started training him. | “By Sunday night there were W285 Within six feet of the Lop of/jer Blvd. operator of several West It will be foir or five weeks Old Bob was really old, pasti1000 cars here and twice as many Ln cave. but the bulldozer couldn't gide howling alleys. (At large.) before doctors can say if an oper- middle age when compared with people” said Lawrence McAfee, Sc enough traction to. cut! wijjam L. Holman, 2325 E. lation to restore her sight was human life but he was widely owner of the land where the dog J ough Beecher 8t., South Side grocer. {successful for three-year-old known. His reputation as the best wags ‘trapped. “The crowds kept Strong men, accustomed to the (a¢ jorge.) Sharon Sue Clubb, South Bend.'coon hound in Lawrence County getting bigger every day.” limestone pits, jumped in With yawrence C. Miller, 2525 Broad|Dr. Otto Barkan, San Francisco, had been earned. 1 Yesterda: wheh old Bob's picks and shovels. In exactly 70 way retired farmer. (At large.) I Speration yester-| On the hunt a week ago 01d cries had died down to an oc- Tae u psi aged Weugn GOP Candidates Gay after 5 he gn He Pre ET I he ack. he casional cough, his would-be lib- Men clawed out a hole, about! Republican candidates for the
erators were desperate. two feet in diameter, and Frank Council are: developed an operation which was far ahead of the other dogs. Then| : | | successtul in 66 of 76 cases. Old Bob's baying stopped. The . Dynamite was used to blast Anderson, Bedford letter carrier,| Scott Ging, 3608 Lesley Ave.
way - the mouth. of the cave. went down with a rope under his attorney, former legal advisor for 8 JoMIere Levt barking. They found \3” pick So World War arms. ' P the County Commissioners. (First cave—Old Bob had ON ad € II veteran and operator of a serv- A silent crowd on the cold out- District.) * lice station in Bedford, crawled side waited while his voice echoed| Irwin W. Cotton, 1035 N. PennYeips, Howls into the hole 50 feet through from below. sylvania St. president of the I. The hunters waited for Old Bob|freezing water. He was stopped “Here Bob, here Bob, come on W. Cotton Co. (Second District.)
Living Monument | They didn't put up a hunk of |stone to honor service heroes in|
iMannington, W. Va, Instead, the|
government, an insurance firm to chase the coon out. He didn’t./by a heavy rock. Bob,” he called. | Rondal M. Mannon, Country land friends supplied funds and Becoming alarmed, Mr. Clark| In the afternoon, John Gratzer, - Old Bob did not answer and the Club Road, Wayne Township. {1abor to build a home for Norville crawled into the mouth of the Bedford monument manufacturer, passage wasn't large enough to West Side coal dealer. (Third
District.) J. Clifton Hirschman, 4141 E. 62d Sti, president of the J. C. Hirschman Manufacturing Co. (Fourth District.) Herbert O. Jose, 4309 Park Ave., former owner of the Indiana {Wallpaper & Paint Co. (At large.) Howard Scott Morse, 3649 N. {Pennsylvania St., retired general manager of the Indianapolis Water Co. (At large.)
|{Shock, 2 paraplegic veteran. The cave and called his dog and re- moved his air compressor to the explore farther. {$20,000 specially - equipped home| ” — rere rere em e——— |will be turned over with cere- A Good American—
| fes t Ww. . : : ac Dinner Bell, Flag on Homemade Pole Sov momen x: ever, ust Attest Woman's Love of Her Country {last night over a televised cam-| Mrs. Raymond Walker . 3 /
jpaign show that after 20 years) |of. public life he | Observes UN Day
has no savings nr Harriett Cracraft Stout. 4473 jand “not a dol- i : By DONNA MIKELS {Washington Blvd., veteran of lar - of stock.” There was a vigorous pealing 23 Women's Army Corps and a He said-his sole of bells in the 1400 block E. Ver- housewife. (At large.) material assets § mont St, and the American flag insomnia meses are a 300-acre junfurled on a homemade flagfarm and “life |pole. 1000 Expected
| The woman whom neighbors jcall ““the best American in the {block” was at-it again, reminding {her neighbors on UN day yester{day that they live “in the most |through school {wonderful ¢ountry in the world.” 'by having a war | Mrs. Raymond Walker, 1406 E. bond deducted weekly. His eldest Vermont St. read in the paper son, a student At Princeton, that bells would be sounded to {sends “his laundry home in a observe UN Day. She put down
'pox.” Gov. Dewey has earned the paper, marched to the garage 195.000
linsurance which {isn’t enough, I'm |sorry to say.” | He said he put his two sons
a . i At Homecoming ! | Times State Service | NORTH MANCHESTER, Oct. {25-—A near record Homecoming {Day crowd is expected here Satur|day when an expected 1000 alumni {will return to the campus. { Highlights of the day’s program {will be the Alumni Program at 10 a. m,, the Manchester-Earlham {football game at 2 p. m. and the [presentation of “All My Sons” at {8:15 p. m. Friday and Saturday | Among other activities. which will be included in the Homecom{ing festivities are a snake dance, {bonfire and pep rally, judging of {15 exhibits sponsored by various _ jcampus organizations. class re‘unions for students of 1925 and 11940, an Aunt Jemima Breakfast for former Home Economics stu- ¢ dents, a Letter Men's luncheén. and a post-game coffee hour for all alumni.
Gov. Dewey
{where her husband had an old y a year since 1943 as New| nner bell. Soon the bell and the ork governor, plus use of the| lexecutive mansion and.other ex-|01a8 Were side by side in her yard lpenses with a sign that said: : penses. “To. My Adopted Country— : America. This is for the people Not Just What He Meant in my square and for freedom Louis Garfinkle authored a and peace everywhere.” {recently released movie: y You Born In England 3 [Can Beat the A-Bomb.” Yester- Mrs. Walker, known to her’ 'day in Seattle, Wash. he com- friends as Hilda, was born in |{mented: “This isn’t exactly what England. She married Indianap{I had in mind,” as he drilled with olis “doughboy” Raymond Walker
{other Army recruits at Ft: there during the first World War, | Woman came to her door asking the flag isn’t hauled to the top o Lawton. y and they came to America in her to sign the Stockholm Peace the pole Mr. Walker built for his
iam 1922. : { Petition, .a Communist-sponsored 100 per cént American wife. EER Ee : That was before citizenshi imovement, Mrs, Walker chased “I'm a native Hoosier and a . Cleopatra, Maybe? \aws. Were" amended. and Mrs | the woman out of the yard. No native born American, but darned 3 Youths Arrested In San Ffancisco Mrs. Helen Walker: became an American more Reds knocked on her door. if she doesn't outshine me on both F ‘P . ’ Fiske, wife of Col. Norman Fiske, | tomatically by her marriage to Never a holiday goes by that points,” he says. or ursuing Women : Three youths were arrested by
military attache of the American = iio0n But. thou 3 y . : gh citizenship, Embassy in Cairo, asked a su-| oo oo ony she has never NO Pay, No Play Three Freed on Bond deputy sheriffs early today after two young women complained
perior court to set aside a di-| arded it as anvthing but “the . 8! ything _GLENOLDEN, Pa, Oct. In Notary Misuse Case ,.., had been pursued from a 25 (UP)—A mathematics Three men indicted yesterday bus stop to their home in the 4000 teacher planned today to [for alleged misuse of notary block E. Terrace Ave,
Mrs. Hilda Walker . . . her own freedom bell for “my adopted country—the best country in the world."
most priceless possession in the world.” : A day doesn’t go by that Mrs.
Cairo last June 27 without her kndwledge or consent, She said
pe stand sno LT Goede do he PACA | tn malo otk sours wre Tn inde 1000 ich er 2 aad Low ll-known in international cir-|\CARS "a talking to” when they, cparges of “wilful negli- [bonds today following their sur- : we! own in gripe about America “going to the ! 3 {Ave., and a 16-year-old boy were
gence” —and possible dis-missal-—for refusing to col- ~ lect tickets at high school football games without pay. A, Todd Coronway, father of three and a teacher at the nearby Lansdowne High School for 21 . years, said the school board threatened to fire him after . he asked for $2.50 an hour
render to Criminal Court officials. apprehended by New York Cen- . A fourth man, also indicted by tral Railroad police. Their de- . the Marion County Grand Jury In OE ed aaa cast af ter iconnection with Progressive Party cice of being log Ane any of . {attempts to place candidates on| Deputies said the women, 20 next month’s election ballot, has and 26 years old, identified the
{not made his appearance. | ne | Those released following their oUt and signed affidavits of
Isurrender include Oscar Banks, |966 Hosbrook St.; Arnold Grubin, |
ta take tickets for a game |1819% College Ave. and witlard Kirshbaum Program next Saturday. * |B. Ransom, Attorney, 824 N. Cali-\\ppny) : a Wry em ——————— [fornia St. All are notaries public. ill Feature Comedian an SOUTH BEND, Oct. 25. (UP)— grade DISMISSES CIO PETITION ' | The indictments charging “false, A comedian and special ms ;
being taken She helped start the Mid-East CHARLESTOWN, Ind., Oct. 25 acknowledgment by notary’’ will be featured on the junior among some 21,000 CIO United|Community Center and was pres- (UP) — A petition by the CIO stemmed from an investigation of tertainment series program
cles” whom she would name only as “Jane Doe.” 2 » : » |
dogs.” a ‘Aren’t American Enough’ “Americans aren't American Last Laugh {enough,” she often points out. “If Basketball fans who called they'd been in any foreign coun-] L. H. Shillinglaw “blind” when he |try they'd soon learn to appreciofficiated at sports contests in|ate this wonderful land.”
ce today. He got four She does things to make ‘the best ne-day bag limit| country in the world even better. —~with one shot on a hunting trip. She's twice a past president of the - © |PTA at School 15, where her TAKE STRIKE VOTE ‘|daughter, Barbara, attended
Auto Workers employees of Stude-|ident for two years. On their own, Utility Workers of Am-rica in signatures on the Progressive 'p. m. Sunday at Kirshbaum biker Corp. today, no date she and her husband converted which the union sought the right petition submitted to county elec- ter, : A their garage into an unofficial to represent employees at thetion commissioners. | Wally Burns, ju decision by the firm to reduce the recreation center for neighbor- Public Service Co. of Indiana Prelimihary examination of the median, will be : ‘was hood y; : 'plant here was dismissed today document indicated some signa- tainer on the: the reason for the: strike ‘Mrs. Walker is her own ‘“anti- by the National Labor Relations tures may have been’ forged, in pen to all bo; e Alms TT, + |Communist committee.” When a Board, |vestigators said. ithe of
Pol
oe vy A ty 5 < ®
