Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1950 — Page 11

... Acorns.

“first day of spring.

By Ed Sovola

BIG OAKIE, my white oak in University Park, has been given the task of keeping the memory of a friend alive for longer than a great many of us will be around. : er The history of the oak began last Mar. 21, the At that time I was red hot on the subject of bodsting Indianapolis. In keeping with the season, I called on State Forester Joe DeYoung to help me plant several Big oaks, you know, are supposed to “grow from little acorns. Permission to dig a few small holes in the

5 park came from the late Mayor Al Feeney. He

y BACK — THE TOPS oN CTOR!”

" TUBE ) ROOM

was all for having a sturdy tree in the open area that faces the parking lot between the Athletic

Meridian St. . Well, as a great many friends know, Joe and I didn’t have much luck with the acorns. Squir-

Two acorns popped up. We were pleased. Then one died. By the middle of summer, one Little Oakie stood eight inches high and had 14 leaves. When I. returned from my vacation, Little Oakie was gone. Someone had snipped him in two. Joe was furious, Our labors were in vain. Sympathy cards from friends helped a lot but they didn’t bring Little Oakie¢ back.

Victor MaGee, superintendent of the MorganMonroe Staté Forest, promised to give Joe one of his finest seedlings when the trees became dormant. Joe followed up the offer recently, went down and picked up a 4':-foot white oak (Quer-

cus Alba). . Sn

HE BROUGHT- BACK a sack of rich woods soil, IT bought a sack of treated fertilizers. An hour of digging and stomping and watering the soil followed. Big Oakie was in place to stay and grow. > My job for several weeks was to keep the ground moist. I hauled water from the gasoline station on the corner of New York and Meridian Bts. With the heavy rains and colder weather we've been having, my water bucket duties are over, 4 _ Several days ago. 1 got thinking about Big Oakie's future. Into my thoughts. came the untimely death of Mayor Feeney. Why wouldn't it be a good idea to have something, in the heart of the city the Mayor loved, to keep his

memory alive? A telephone call to Mayor Phil Bavt, Mr. Feeney’'s old friend, followed. I didn't know

whether my idea was proper or not. You know how it is when you start mulling something over An your mind. : Mayor Bayt was pleased. He said to go ahead But another problem of a suitable marker came up. The Hodsier Monument Co. provided in gcribed granite for the Mar. 21 acorn planting Richard C. Brooks. president of the monument company, listened to my plan to change markers Then he said, “Anything you want is yours Just’ like that. The problem was solved. One of these days, I'm going to find out how to put in

It Happened Last Night

By Earl Wilson

NEW YORK, Nov. 22-Only a couple of vears ago. Fred Allen told me that N, Y.'8 famous Radio .City was becoming a deserted village: True—everything had gone west. Now swung back. . : The other night I saw Bob Hope, Eddie Cantor, Jimmy Durante, Perry Coma and Jose Ferrer sit on one stage for most of an hour-and-a-half at the Centre Theater, waiting to speak their speeches to Tallulah Bankhead, in an NBC effort to prove that radio isn't dead. : Said Bob to Bankhead: “Before 1 left Hollywood, Bette Davis told _me to call you.” “Rilly, dolling?” said Miss Bankhead. “Yes,” said Bob, “but I can’t tell you what.” I rushed over to the International Theater where Fred Allen, doing his third television show, saw his time run out right in the middle of a sketch. Facing his studio audience apologetically. he =aid: : “I'm right back where I was in radio--getting

it's

my end cut off every week.”

v > ood ob . MONSIGNOR SHEEN--who'll have no time for banquet speeches now that he's with the So

ciety for the Propagation of the Faith—was asked

* whether he hadn't made a niche for himself as a

public speaker. : “That's like the little boy who was asked the meaning of ‘a niche in the church” replied the Monsignor. “He. said a niche in the church was just like any other kind of a niche, except in church vou can't scratch it,” i - le a ae fe Leonid > BILLIE BURKE'S ‘appearance at the Ziegfeld Club dinner. reminded Harry Hershfield of the time when’ a publisher barred all use of nicknames. Soon afterward his paper had this item: “Ethel Barrymore and William Burke are now rooming together.” 2 At the same: dinner, Gypsy Rose Leé asked, “When are we Ziegfeld Girls going to quit calling ourselves GIRLS?” Fasties: “An outlaw is always wanted, an inlaw always wants’ ’— Sheriff Bob Dixon. . ... Ken Murray says some TV sets have televitus. . . . YA

well. who's battling with her husband, restaurateur Andy McIntyre of Hollywood, isn’t suffering

TH. id

vious Puzzle OL ISO IN] CG]

AGOIONE - SE PAP] N| 8 ESACIA

[S ¢ EISISPAAIS| AINEZAAIL]Y | (RIAIT | 1 JOIN] PIAIT IES]

44 Pontift 45 Image 46 Grant 49 New Zealand , parrot : ! 51 Biblfcal name 53 Delivery (ab.) 55 Giant king of Bashan

BREE rre— Sister Kenna ile wold

avier and Nicky Hilton. hound heje whens that

plane crashed,. postponed their trip temporarily. But they're doing fines together now singer Rosemary. Clooney underwent an operation at

Americana 3 By Robert C. Ruark -

MIAMI, Fla., Nov. 22—] was talking to my old chum Bull Connor; the police boss of Birmingham, t'other day, and Bull said something about the recent elections that reflects the attitude of most folks I've seen from Ohio to Florida: Bull, the beamish bov who once arrested Sen. Glen Taylor, Henry Wallace's . presidential running” mate. said an unusual thing for a deep-dyed South'n Democrat. “I-swear to John,” he said, “1 do believe the people are startin’ to think again.” This mirrors most of comment. from Yankees - and Southerners, Republicans and Democrats and Dixiecrats 1 have met nobody who. seemed .urthappy about . the defeat of Scott Lucas in Illinois. or Bob Taft's avalanche ‘over Joe Ferguson in Ohio 1 have talked to no soul who seemed sad over Jimmy Roosevelt's pasting in California. .nor to anvone who seems wistful about Helen Gahagan Douglas’ defeat in the same state. : Jubilance attends the ousting of Sen. Tydings trom Maryland. They figure he had it coming. Mike Monroney’s victory. in Oklahoma wins applause, even though his opponent had signed up the Almighty in his corner. / Za > : CONCERNING THE election of New York's mayor, Vincent Impelliteri, on an independent ticket, there i§ great huzzahing, even from people who have never been to New York ‘and who scarcely figure to get there. They just think it's prefty nice that a lone man can buck ah old, astablished system of political bossism and still squeeze in. x This same elation attends the kickout of that

So

the

3

Chub and the Chamber of Commerce building on

rels dup up a coupge. one or two failed to appear..

Bg

Mayor Al's Memory Lives With Oak Tree

ven the job of keeping alive the memory of Mayor Al Feeney.

To a friend .. . Big Oakie is gi

a concrete base for the new everything will be set. <> x COME--NEXT SPRING, I hope Big Oakie grabs deeply with his roots and becomes firmly rooted in University Park. Joe says the white oak should grow easily. for a 100 years. And barring further bad luck, the forecaster says he

granite marker and

’ *. oe oe

sees no reason why Big Oakie shouldn't grow “This Spring. No matter how we feel about someone, time dulls the pain. In my own small wav, thinking into the futuré, I'd like to see Rig Oakie grow large. Some day, when he's big enough to give

shade. maybe a park bench could be moved under his branches In the cool of a summer evening, or the heat of the day, citizens gould sit and talk and maybe remember a man whose passing was felt keenly by a great many people. Mayor Feeney had thousands of voung friends By the time Big Oakie really becomes of age they will have taken their places in the community. The tree will help them remember a man who never compromided his principles Some: day I'd like to sit in Big Oakie's shade and refresh my memory of a friend while the leaves whispered: the squirrels plaved and birds chattered noisily.

Gags. Gossip. Humor From Broadway Beat

the Madison Hospital . At Gori's big formaldress LaRue opening. Honevchile Wilder wouldn't pose with her escort Prince Hohenloe, and Milton Berle and: Joyce Mathews wouldn't pose, either. Somebody explained, “Honeychile isn't divorced from her hiisband and Milton isn't divorced from his writers.” . . . Jimmy Durante, scheduled to do nine TV shows, wants to cut it to six . .. Mayor Impellitteri's got the goods on some “charity” ticket-selling outfits that demand 50 per cent of all they sell. : DJ <-> ow CHICO MARX remembers that one of the worst reviews the Marx Brothers ever got was

by Percy Hammond who. said: “The Marx Brothers in a show called ‘Home Again,’ should be.” x -

> GOOD RUMOR MAN: President Truman is fond of Margaret's escort, Marvin Invites him on yacht trips frequently. . . . Copacabana clown #59 Phil Silvers . is around with | chorus gal Judy Tyler (the -former “Miss Doughnut’). Is Nicky Blair really going to call: his new joint “The Blair House"? «+. The 21 Club's 25th anniversary -opén house was a moh’ > scene: almost 4000 crammed in. * . . . Enrico Caruso Jr. gave up singing for importing. . . . John O'Hara now goes regularly to Hear the Philadelphia--Orehest FB. Ti . . John Reber, the J, Walter Thompson TV boss ill. Lucius Beebe's back from Virginia City, Nev. first time in nine months. * . . Crooner ¥ddie Fisher, new hot guy. on M. Berle's show Tuesday. . . . Evdie Gorme, Gary Wagner discovery, the Bronx actress who'll’ make a Spanish language b’cast for the Voice of América.

°, e! +!

.

is

Eydie Gorme

18

EARL’'S PEARLS . ..

hd Taffy Tuttle told Kitty Kalthat

word to the wise often gets a terrible long answer” ‘ol olen, the Waldorf's star, Dublin Opinion . . . Faye Emerson, . the. tor=a | “Americans now ‘recognize five that's moreso’-—Dennis James. . “A modern 5 : ‘treedoms. Free Speech, mother's one who can hold a ¢igaret and a safety o 3 Free. Press, ete, and Free . pin in her mouth at the same "time" -— Australian Kitty Kallen Laading. Humour, Se Me cde : ! Gib . TOPAY'S BEST LAUGH: George M. Cohan FROM THE HORSE'S MOUTH: Marilyn Max- 1. i514 on a CBS show how his fz afte

watching an. imitator. said that one of us_is lousy winster MB R25 told the exijusive crowd in Selizer Room at fhe KEE horse player bragging how well ‘he did Ft THE $raek LL" he .a ride home.” That's Earl, brothér.

All 1 «

nas:

said got AL

To Think Again ‘machine voters, even though few Puerto Ricans can be accuséd performing - as anything but infocent dupes of a politically vicious man who used poverty and misery as anyimplement, of the party line, : Time and again folks have mentioned the defeat of Mr. Ferguson in Ohio as a striking example of the fact that we are not yet become a completely “gimme” nation. : Mr: Taft has never been much of a practical spellbinder; and has ever been embarrasingly honest to his own detriment. Yet, obviously the farm vote was for him in Ohio, and thé CIO indorsement of its rubber-stamp candidate, Jumping Jee. wasn't strong énough to keep him anywhere’ in— the campetition with the politically non-sexy Taft. :

Of

IN MY VERY short career as an intimate of politics 1 have never seen people so concerned with issueg and the people behind them. .It was a jong and dirty campaign. with much muck on all sides. and I guess it got through to the voters. But it shocks you a mite to have the barkeep or the waiter or the cab driver remark. casually

that he's ‘glad the Democrats maintained a slim

majority, so Mr. Truman can’t blame the next two vears on a hostile Congress.” Previously, they were more concerned with the state of Joe DiMaggio’s ailing heel. i In the places I've been since Ohio the first question they heaved at me was: “What about Taft?- Do you think he can whip the LaborFarmer bloc? Golly, he’s got to.” This about a man who has been about as appealing to the common man as Mr. Roosevelt was to big business. And the Ohio result. illustrated the voters’ concern. It is kind .of wonderful, at that, to see machines flouted, and established political names

apoplectic little screamer, Vito Marcantonio, from spurned. and ras josvag out, and “blocs ¥ his empire in the Bronx and Harlem. » heaten. Maybe, 1i®% Bull Connor said, the peoThe murder attempt by a Puerto Rican on’ ple are beginning th think once more before \ * President ‘Truman has not, finally, endeared the .they ballot. We've been pretty apathetic for an * nation to Marc's callously & ried hordes of awful long sia ia Sh ay i shi Fy

Right in the heart of his city.

Braverman.’

an say is

per Pehratessenr od 4 wn

‘People Are Starting :

1 suppose, amply, |

wv

:

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1950

PAGE

About People—

Indian Chief's

Kin to Return

Pilgrim's Favor Tribal Descendant

Plans Turkey Dinner For Needy Children

{| On the first Thanksgiving Day the Pilgrims invited Indian Chief Massasoit and hig tribe to dinner.’ [* Tomorrow! Metasoya; a descendlant of Massasoit, will return the ifavor. She'll play host to 100 Salem. Mass, underprivileged enone in an “lhdian ThanksIgiviiig Dinner.” Helping out the Indian lecturer will be her husband, Karl Holt, of Beverly, Mass, who's a descendant of Peregrine White, first Pilgrim child born in New England. ”

" = Hoosier Who's Who {Hoosier Jayne Shover has been appointed associate executive director of the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults, Chicago Miss. Shover, thority en rehabilitation of handicapped children served;

as director of speech and hearing

outstanding au-

formerly

and assistant in guidance for East Chicago public schools. 8he also did graduate work at Indiana University. = n = ” Anchors Aweig

The Navy Recruiting Station in Knoxville. Tenn., has accepted enlistment of Admiral Dewey Maloy Jr., 19, of White Pine, Tenn. =

2 n

Emily vs. Customs Agent

It just isn't cricket to ask vour groom-to-be what he paid for your

Jerry to Sonja—Hi

Jerry Dunaway and Sonja Henie

A

he steri her req Dr neither reinstat

all, 1 Stephen

there

/

the

lized by eased o Whe

tor sai

= | her—~hu done.

charge . dressing-room chat. walked

Jerry, B-year-old leukemia victim, visited Sonja's ice show at the

engagement ring. Faip Grounds Coliseum last night with his. mother, Mrs. Earl Dun- I But Emily Post : ; : sation rules cut no ice away. 835 Eastern Ave. (Henry Butler's review, Page 9). CTW with British cus- tubes

toms authorities who took away Actress Jean

Simmons’ big diamond engagement ring on her

arrival in London. Miss Simmons didn’t

know what Brit- MARYSVILLE.

| Jean Simmons

the customs took temporary cus- to flee.

‘tody to have it evaluated. News-

Hoa near Ripon. : I ; The floods were the Charity Begins at Home series that were blamed

| The family of author William deaths in California

a“ Swedish report that

2 More Rivers Add to Flood

Hazard in California

Torrents of Muddy Waters Force 7000

Persons to Flee Central Valley Area Cal.

The Yuba River spilled over six towns near Marysville Farther men guessed it at about $11,000. south, the Stanislaus River broke through its levees at three places, petter than before,

and Nevada Faulkner today said they doubted and sent property losses soaring he would toward the $20 million mark. Au-

Nov, 22 (UP)—Two more rivers broke

He is a

Monday

lized

1est

Stephens

hope ement

s said

said desire

h nor

at

this

ir. 1

Patient a Catholic

indirect’ and

Di regan

nl

In my opinion,

sband

of in

sterilized off her fallopian tubes.” i ‘She

her.

asked that

surgery

Reopens Tubes

took

ant

the sister began.

his

“We're all closed up.” “Well, will you admit that you tied off the tubes’ *Yes" ! “You will have to untie them.” Pr. Stephens complied. That was Friday afternoon. B privileges: =~ "% i, ‘had been suspended indefinitely. PAY 12 Stickers. They were makSince then, the doctor said, his|/!N8 out sticker No. 13 for {llegal ; ish Actor Stew- their banks today, sending torrents of muddy water pouring over telephone has been “ringing off Parking. ; art Granger paid for the ring, so California's flat Central Valley and forcing at least T000 persons the wall” and most of his callers ¢

10

hospital

were sympathetic.

latest in a levees might not held. They spent

for 10 yesterday afternoon moving their Cox cattle to higher ground. OX:

Waters Subsiding

“If anything, my practice

Second Violation

donate his $30,000 Nobel prize thorities generally regarded the - The Ripon police mward to an unspecified cause. figure as conservative, “aid the "waters appeared to be : His teen - age daughter and his Let-Up Forecast subsiding early today and that violation. wife in Oxford, Miss. said Mr. Moanwhile. the Weather Bureau the floods

Faulkner, absent on a hunting {forse trip. hadn't decided how to.—use the prize. = = and melted. the

» »

What's in. a Name?

Park Avenue HilQilly Dorothy The Yuba

legal. The 29-year-old nightclub peared, singer filed, suit in Superior Court to rescue a to change her name from Dorothy

party of

Two's company but threes a

going on dates with her and her Farmers in the boy friend. The judge gave her‘warned ahead of father, William, a suspended sentence and said: “We have enough

time

Stalins in. the world without encouraging them in our. family lives.” 2

n ”

Bedrid

Realism actor Paul Douglas “two broken ribs yesterday as’ immacge cenes of him i + ~~ Timed Tor a = gridiron picture. Mr. Doug-+# jas a former professional football plaver. : ” St

True. or: False? Chicago Municipal Judge Matthew J. Hartigan today consid-. ered the. request of Chicago Police Censor Harry Fulmer that the Windy City ban sale of “A Diary of Love!’ written by Maude Phelps Hutchins, divorced wife of University of Chicago Chancel- } lor. Robert M. Hutchins, In a fore-

Grid, Skid,

Cost

ser

‘arrving- the ba SN

1s

Mr. Douglas

‘.

word, Mrs. Hutchins: said: “My diary is false; in the sense that it is ex-post facto. At an age

|

when I should: be president of the Garden Club or ‘running for Con1 dream of the diary 1 did not Keep.”

A Christmas Carol

Kress

ast a let=up in-the rains that paq." drenched—the-=state~for-nite-days

Sierra

generally fair weather flood came Shay. rose to fame with that name y that rescue parties found them- temporarily abandoned land said she wants to make it ¢plves stranded as roads Power boats were called the 35 rescue from the towns of

workers marooned oh a pile of

The Stanislaus break came in Truckee crowd, 22-year-old Audrey Wilson 3 sparsely séttled farming region banks, swirled through the lobtold a New York® judge as she of perhaps 100 inhabitants. Most bies of two luxury hotels and sought to prevent her father from of them were taken to Ripon area that

Cute and Agile, Eh What?

Jean .and Janice Casteel, gypsy dancers

“MoKeTinine Tver overflowed And.

flood forced 6000 persons Hammonton, Marigold. Linda, Oliverhurst, Ar-

The Yuba River evacuation. of

disap-

~Nell- Sims.» .gravel. - a boca, Ostrom ang parts of WheatSRR " = « Sheriff John Dower waded 16471and. 7%. =. ; oo L ; vards to safety/through water In Nevada. Reno residents 2 Plus ! Is 2 Many that at times réached his chest. cleaned up debris left when the

overflowed its 30 - foot

caused more than $1 million damwere age to downtown stores and office County the buildings. Lee "B. today. weiler, second Phillips ard tary-

Elects

ville),

(UP)

the. Casteel sisters will dance in a floor show during the second annual Autumn Cotillion given by parishioners of Holy Cross Catholic Church. The ‘dance will be held in the church hall; 123 N.: Oriental St.

following a dinner at 8 p. m. tomarrow.

Pp. Mr

m

When Scrooge's nephew, Fred, dropped by to wish his uncle a merry Christmas, and to invite him to Christmas dinner ‘the old curmudgeon turned Sh bi with “Christmos ! Bahl Be um ad : R

BY \ \

\ Ma Ni 4 \

treasurer;

ZURICH,

Harold S. Zeis, (Ft. Wayne), Clayton,

(Crown Point) the Indiana Sheriffs’ Association

Vigo

Walter

Mercy Hi

thing.” “1 doubt if it would’ be very pleasant ever to practice again-—even which IT also doubt.” Protestant Mercy Hospital operates under for Little David, took the stand the code of the Catholic Hospital today to defend his position in Sew” | Association. and the Sisters of the ‘newest episode in the case Mercy have explained that alr of the boy evangelist. doctors practicing there agree tol abide by it.

Doctor Barred by Catholics Thinks of Leaving Town

Sterilized Patient at Her Request,

Refused Future Use of Hospital BROWNSVILLE, Tex. Nov. 22 (UP)—Dr. J. M. Stephens, barred from practice in this city's only medical institution because he violated the Catholic hospital code, said today he was seriously considering leaving Brownsville. 1944 graduate of the University of Southern California Medical’School. he was barred from Mercy Hospital Monday because a woman patient at

e had to win ospital,

operated by the Sisters of Mercy “It's their hospital, and

started

after Dr.

could,

On sterilization, the code says! such operations are unethical and!pe boy's f may not be performed in a Catho-| : lic hospital except where they are undesirable result of removing a diseased organ, The unidentified patient ‘Stephens-had -no dis’

steri-

1 tied

the dochad had (babies, and a hard time with each. , ass sterilization was ~ necessary. Both the woman and|

four

“it be

Both the patient and her husband are Catholics { The tie-off was completed. Dr. Stephens said. when the sister in the

rooms

Stephens said this converplace: to. see «vour patient's

Through their attorney, Bascom | a, Protestant, said Dr. Stephens did not advise hospital authorities of his intent said. department to perform the sterilization. Mr. Cox said that was a second

the Sisters move his car.

“The by-laws of the hospital stickers and a release for his ear. “don’t appear to be t00 promulgated by the doctors them- The patrolmen still were waiting selves, require this,” Mr. Cox said. patiently for the wrecker. t -has-nothing-to -do-with-—Where—js—the—wreecker=

Nevada the Lodi area. isolating the town the matter of sterilization. It is asked. snowpack. The prediction was: far of Woodbridge across the river. merely a simple. rule on pro- “We don't know.” they replied. Thirty-two Woodbridge families Cfdure.” 5 . Mr. Schneider showed the offi so swift- were evacuated. The town was He added, “the Sisters at the cers the release. They left.

hospital are very lenient and I'm/ sure that any request by the doc-| still is not known. tor to have hospital privileges re-| stored will receive consideration, . g' but IT couid not say what the re. Albert D. Stanle sult. might be in such case. He . : . has made no such application.”

as

County

Sauley,

Allen County Sheriff To Head Association

FRENCH LICK, Nov. 22 (UP) -Sheriff

Allen

succeeded whan he was 19. He founded the

Lake County greenhouse about 35 president of

Other officers were John Trier-

(Terre

Haute), first vice president; Walter Baxley. Harrison vice president;

(Corydon), Harvey:

Marshall (Plymouth), Clifton 1.. Small, How(Kokomo), executive secre'd to airectorships were

James Plagektt, Clark (JeffersonJefferson Paul H. Tran EER MD enh. Hmm tered nd Norma vanderburg Evansville); Harry Indianapolis florist; a Jackson, Tippecanoe (Lafayette); Mrs. L. R. Fitzgerald, Memphis, Dontic Costello, Vermillion (New- Tenn.) two brothers, Seymour and port); Frank :Carpenter,. DeKalb €. B, and a sister, Mrs. Carrie (‘Auburn), and Jack West, (Crown Point). W. Pete Anthony. Delaware (Muncie), was named trustee.

Lake

CRIPPS NOW BEDFAST Switzerland, Nov.

no

de

Sir Stafford Cripps, 61,

exchequer, is

spinal

former British chancellor of the

suffering from a

infection. which will him bedfast six months, his physfcian said today.

will

speak

keep

CLUB TO HEAR LECKRONE Walter Leckrone, editor of. The Indianapolis Times. will address the Woman's Rotary Ciub at 6:15 Tuesday in the Propylaeum l.eckrone Where Do We Go from Here

on

y| teria court” as one to’ be towed

{s removing his personal property * he answered, from the auto for removal to po-

- By Charles

Dawson Defends Role as: Guardian

Little David's Father Seeks Tally of Funds

James M. Dawson, guardian

Jack L. Walker, the boy evangelist's father, brought the present suit in Probate Court to have Mr. Dawson removed as guardian and for a complete accounting of unds. ' Little David, clad in a Floridastyle sports shirt, left the stand early. today after two hours of questions and answers. David Changes Mind He told how. two -vears ago. he had asked to be taken from his father's custody. He now has changed his mind, he “told the court, and wants his father again ume the management of his personal and financial affairs. Cross-examination of Mr. Dawson late today was expected to end the trial. Little David and his father ex|pressed a desire for a quick decision since David is due to confer with a group of evangelists in St. Louis today. .

Ticket No. 13 Is Anything but Bad Luck to Him

THIS IS the story of a wrecker that wasn't there.

Police cruising on Monument Circle saw a car listed in, “cafe-

in for the operator's failure to

Paul Schneider, 4042 N. Adams t., owner, observed the officers

lice property room. Dashing. up to the scene he was informed a wrecker had been called to re“I'l "be back.”

Mr. Schneider

PE BE fat SOME 50 minutes later he

dashed up with receipts for the

Whereabouts of the wrecker

.- - J Services Friday { Albert D. Stanley, former ownler of the 46th Street Greenhouse. died yesterday at St. Vincent's ‘Hospital. He was 73. A native of Greensboro, N. C., Mr. Stanley came to Indianapolis

years ago. After selling the greenhouse three years ago, Mr. Stanley has spent his winters in Florida and the sumniers visiting his children. He was the oldest member of the Indiana State Florist's Asso- * ciation and was a member of the Calvin Prather Masonic Lodge. Services will be at 3 p. m. Fri-

day at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill. 2

Surviving are his three sons, Glenside, Pa.; Orrin B.;”

‘M¢Farland, Greensboro, N. Car.

Father Slays, Then Tells

Son, 15, to Turn Him In ST. THOMAS, Ont, Nov. 22 (UP) — Lawrence Jones Jr., 15. trudged inso police station “and asked, “How do you report a murder?” : Police followed him to his trailer camp home yesterday where they arrested his father, Lawrence Jones Sr., 35, for killing his common-law wife Ann Evans, 52, with a shotgun blast. Young Lawrence told police his father had ordered him to walk four miles to the police station to report the slaying,

wen