Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1950 — Page 11
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. IT'S ALL in the viewpoint, of course, but Carter, who delivers over 300 dozen diapers ly, is one of the most important men in town. If there's any doubt in your mind, you shoujd see the reception he gets along his route. Mr. Carter, known also as the “Smilin’ Irishman.” is driver for Dy-per Service, Inc..4814. Dorman St. Dy-per men have followed the stork around
Jami
* town since 1932. Mr. Carter has been in the bird's
wake for only five years. Even so, he has seen a lot in that time. oe I rode around with Mr, Carter in the blue and
~ white delivery truck, and outside of the milkman,
Mr. Carter rates No. 1 on the wélcome-sight list. Sob AS HE SAID, "A baby waits for no man.” You can tell the household situation is desperate when you see a mother standing at the front door wringing her hands until Mr. Carter comes bouncing up the stairs. He figures. most of his customers are between the ages of 19 and 35. And he says he can tell a mother with her first baby from one who has had three or four. : ; “The experienced mothers are a lot calmer about the whole thing,” Mr. Carter explained. “They seem to have more poise and aren't worried as much.” Mr. Carter, who will be a grandfather any day now, sometimes lends a hand to a distraught mother, No, he doesn’t and hasn't been asked to make any changes, but he does on occasion hold a child while mother gathers up a batch of tri-corners.
Stork's little helper. :
. . James Carter has delivered, dry goods for five years.
It Happened Last Night By Earl Wilson an
We've got a new menace in this country today —~—the guy who just knows he's a Great. Lover. Wherever you go, one of these bachelor dan-
dies who fancies himself a Charles staring at the prettiest girls. He can't do much else, but oh. can I've never liked v : these louts—being maybe a little jealous- of them but now. comes a girl who says they're stupid, too. “Why do YOU consider them obnoxious?” 1 asked her. “They're such awful bores.’ said my pretty informant, the ‘Frenchborn movie actress, Suzanne D albert, and I trust 1 vio- - late no confidence when I say she’s in a thing called “Breakthrough.” Together we drew up guidebook called “The Six Sex.”
Boyer, is
he stare!
SO
Suzanne Dalbert Wilson's handy little Mistakes of the Other
v . ’ NT
CAREFUL STUDY of this will get you fewer slaps in the face. fellas. ONE: They think ;and a woman 4 man looks instead of hers. - : “TWO; They boast of their conquests-—usually - being business failures with nothing else to boast
handsome of his
all thev're so
hates who thinks
‘about. “THREE: They compliment clumsily: They'd. little ‘mouth.
tell Martha Raye she had a cute They're phony. ‘FOUR, They. s t.you with half-closed
eyes and to look sultry. They orily look
sleepy. “FIVE: They want to show you off so other people’ll stare. The sincere man idoesn't want
try
,other men to stare. : “SIX: They're so egotistical. when you're not fascinated by them, they blame vou, and say, ‘You're just a cold woman.” I'M GLAD that Miss Dalbert, ‘who has care: fully studied the subject for a few years in Hollywood, ‘has tabbed these fellows. With the ‘increase in bacheloring nowadays, us husbands have got to beware. ; “They're usually without men friends,” Miss Dalbert says. “They just can’t get over how fascinating they are. ; “They make you feel like a million women in-
stead of one in a million.”
“ The Great Lovers. she says out
lose
Americana By Robert C. Ruarlk MIAMI, Nov. 27,~The incubation of Miami's vigilante action against Jocal corruption by national hoodlum combines was provided by a handsome lady named Ucdla Katzentine, wife of a prominent Miami "lawyer, radio station. owner, and former mayor. . Col. A. Katzentine has just come b three years in the wars. His wife, sitting on-their remarked querulously that if
ack from
spacious veranda, a bunch of grown men could drop their businesses
and families to go play soldier for four years
or =o, they could certainly get together and clean up their crook-infested community. ?
0 *. 0 " oe oo ~
CROOK INFESTED was right. You couldn't throw a rock without hitting a-$100,000 mansion owned by some polished hoodlum with: broad interests in national rackets and local industries, including organized gambling and the corruption of local officialdom. ’ ; The town was wide open, and was also the gathering. place for the big racket bosses of New York, Chicago, Cleveland, St Louis "#nd other hot-shot centers. Out in Broward County the Frank Frank: Erickson syndicate openly operated the Colonial Inn, Club Green Acres-and (lub Boheme. Income tax records have since .shown.that county's ‘sheriff. Walter Clark, to have a heavy interest in the Bolita gambling effort and the slot-machine ‘take. THrough his interests in the Broward Novelty Co. this empire was cut up by such charmers
as the brothers Lansky, Jake and Meyer; Joe
Adonis and Vincent Ala, otherwise known as Jimmy Blue Eyes. ] ‘ <>
Re ’ "’ Le ¥
IN DADE County, around the Miami area,
., Club B58, the Island Club, the Brook Club and
Summer Isles Casino were operated by. the local J 8. and G. syndicate. plus some individual operatore. (The S. and G. syndicate heads. Sam Cohen, Charley Friedman. Jules Levitt, Eddie 4 \ ‘ p #4 i ” % -
to ‘the: ,
Costeto-
Is the Diaper Man
MOST OF THE TIME, however, the Dy-Per sack is full and waiting at the front door. Every minute counts on some days. It's not much of a gripe with Mr. Carter, he's a pretty tolerant and patient man, but when he's a victim of a practical joke, his temperature goes up a notch. ' i 3 For example, someone calls the company and orders the service. Mr. Carter trots up to the front door with a bundle and a sack to do business. Instead he gets the business. A young
married gal stammers and stutters and says it’s
news to her. Someday, perhaps, but not right now, thank you. Precious minutes are wasted.
o> 4 4
HE MAKES TWO trips a-week to Bloomington. home .of Indiana University. Whenever a new customer shows up on his list, - Mr. Carter wonders if it's on the level. Several times he has been turned away from a private home where 10 ‘or more coeds reside. When he pulls up in front of a sorority house, he runs a gauntlet of remarks. I was curious to know if he did much business with fathers. After all, women have become so entrenched in the business world that I wondered if the fathers have ever taken over after mothers returned from the hospital. Well, I'm happy to report that Mr. Carter has never dealt with the proud papa while mama worked on the assembly line at Allison. Oh, on occasion the man of the house may hand him: the sack, but it isn’t anything to get alarmed about. He has several customers who have looked for his truck for five years. With the stork coming every year, Mr. Carter simply hauls bigger sacks.
‘We pulled up behind a Crown Laundry driver
who proceeded to give us the crylng-child routine. I went along with the gag and started after him with an old windshield rag Mr. Carter had in the glove department. The guy wouldn't wait, the SISSV.
. . &
GRADE SCHOOL children heckle Mr. Carter the most. His most frequent call is, “Hey, mister, you want to diaper me?” I'm sure if the change were necessary. Mr. Carter would be capable and willing to oblige. i Another favorite remark pertains te the sign on his truck which reads: “We've followed the stork since 1932." People will ask if Mr. Carter is tired after following the stork for 18 years. Ha, ha.
Those Great Lovers Are Real Menaces
non-experts, who have no technique but are sincere. : She brushed the Great Lovers of Hollywood to become engaged to a young actor and producer named Mike Conrad, originally from Columbus, 0. They'll be married soon. The Moral is that the Great Lovers are just guys with inferiority complexes. who finish up life having their adoration returned only by themselves. £ oo &
THE MIDNIGHT EARL .. . Pretty TV chorus gals already are being fired under new contracts
upping them to $125 a week. Chorines, “most expendable,” will get ax” first. “Star Time" dropped 30 people...GIGwhiz! The Army’ll
replace the Colt .45 with a ‘much~Tighter aluminum model , . . ‘Handsome Hal Tunis now has seven shows a week . . . What famous writer, defending his work against criticism, says, .t] was drunk?” .... Polly Adler's going to college fused to be the reversel .. . Alfredo de Marigny expects to work for. a cigaret firm in Europe Smith & Dale who “came back’ via TV, will do an RKO movie, + @
B'WAY BULLETINS: Jimmy Donahue escorted the Duchess of Windsor to El! Morocco's Champagne Room ; . . Winnie Gardner, aviation enthusiast.. bought a Johnson Bullet (250 m.p.h.) -4) . The Havana-Madrid offered Harvey Stone three g's-a-wk . . . The Shelburne Lounge, home of transparent-skirted waitresses, has clothed half of them in transparent bodices . . . Mario Lanza has a January schedule of 28 concerts in 30 days. i ; EARL'S PEARLS. .. Liked Kenny Delmar’s line on Fred Allen's TV: “In Russia there are no celebrities . . . everybody's a nobody . . . millions of people making a mass of themselves.” : “FODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Joe Frisco accused Jackie Gleason, the “Cavalcade of Stars” clown, of . stealing his stuff. Gleason roared, “Don’t accuse me of penny Delmar petty larceny!” ’
! " """
WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Joe DiMaggio loves to fly—he's ‘got thousands of miles under his seat belt” —Gentleman Georgie Solotaire. . ALL OVER: Answering criticism for firing Lou Boudreau, Hank Greenberg writes from Cleveland, “By bringing Al Lopez to ‘manage the Indians we feel we will improve our chances to win the pennant. Since the responsibility is om my shoulders. naturally I am willing to chance the outcome” . .. Eddie Davis engaged Myron
Cohen, Alan King and Adeline Neice for his ~ big Sunday night at leon & Eddie's. £2 “A satirist,” writes Arthur R. Kassin, “is a
fellow who laughs til it hurts—the other fellow”
.'» That's Earl, brother.
Veranda Thinking Sparks Cleanup
Rosenbaum, Harry Russell- and Harold -Salvey, all are under indictment.) But it was not the presence of the local gambling strongholds, and the hotel habits of leasing their bookmaking concessions for as much as $50.000 per season that disturbed © long-time Miamians. 4 It was the gradual stranglehold that the mobs were taking on the city’s economic -life, and their bold emergence as shameless citizens. Frank Katzentine later put' it rather well: “The cleanup was not aimed so much at mobsters per se. but was designed to break up infiltration
into legitimate business enterprise—in. competi-
tion to little businessmen who can only fight back with their tax-ridden dollars against hoodlum dollars that Uncle Sam never saw a piece of.” dor, de MR. KATZENTINE had been a tough mayor back in 1932. Kis was the’ famous “foreign legion.” He merely imported two cops: from every well-known hoodlum city—New York, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleveland, L. A. Chicago, St. Louis. They oscillated around the hotels, race tracks. and night clubs. When they spotted 4 vfreshlv arrived hood they hauled him up before the mavor., ° -
; : ! i © Mr. Katzentine gave them 24 hours to gl.
out of town, or the alternative of having his brains knocked out and a ride, after, on the. “hobo express,” which was a succession of police vehicles. that eventually dumped the battered mobster in darkest Georgia. It worked exceedingly. - He had also jugged a Capone brother for vagrancy. , i } So. Mr. Katzentine was a logical man to head
the informal crime commission. He rounded up a posse of local large-wigs, hired ex-FBI Op Dan
‘Sullivan, dnd proceeded to take practical steps
toward the eradication of a menace. Dan Sullivan’s research played a huge part—tough public relations did the rest. It was “gangbusters” in actual practice.’ Ga oY i
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1950
About People—
Janis Carter Gets Deluge 0f Letters
Waiting Period Before Marriage Idea Meets Disapproval
Janis Carter, Hollywood film star, survived a barrage of angry letters to admit today. that her idea of a legal “cooling-off” period before marriage did not meet with universal approval. “You should see some of these letters,” she said weakly, “They accuse me of sverything from a nasty mind to
being against ¥ “marriage.” Miss Carter Miss Carter
announced awhile back that it was too easy to get married and too tough to get divorced. She made headlines by proposing an enforced sixmonth waiting period to weed out obvious mis-matings. : Most of the 863 who disagreed with her by mail were men. she said. But the total included many women who foresaw difficulties in snaring husbands if the halfyear ban were enforced.
Xmas Entry Playing .Santa Claus in a downtown . Detroit store earned Julius Garner, 23, a berth in jail. Police nabbed Garner after he plunged 15 feet down a chimney in an attempted burglary. - The fall dazed him and alerted a night watchman.
Unhandy Candy
x
Stubborn Louis Fagot, Philadelphia truck driver, faced more summonses in Lancaster, Pa., today, after being caught the second time with an overload of Christmas sweets. First arrested on Harrisburg Pike with a 90,000-pound cargo, Fagot was fined $50 and costs and ordered to reduce the load to 45.000 pounds. -But when state police inspected the candy shipment at Gap, Pa. his load was intact. Four summonses were issued—one for each township he drove through. ,
Goodby, Vi . |" British film stars Vivien Leigh {and Laurence Olivier are en route to London aboard a French . finer after a. 4 three - month ‘stay in Hollywood. During their first visit here in 10 years, ™® Miss Leighg starred in a movie version of “A Streetcar
Named Desire,” and Mr. Olivier played in “Sister Miss Leigh Carrie.”
“What Next, Bray Tell . A Hollywood nightspot has changed the name of “Moscow
Mule’ —a ginger beer-vodka. drink
~to “U. 8. Mule.”
“Fleet Reserve Unit Holds Dedicaiion
Color dedication ceremonies
were held in the World War Me-
morial yesterday by Indianapolis Branch No. 30 of the Fleet Reserve Association and its ladies auxiliary. : - Capt. Miles H. Hubbard, commanding officer of the Naval Ordnance Plant, spoke on the Navy's part in the Korean war. Mrs. Estelle Hodges, past presi‘*dent of - the national auxiliary, was another speaker. ¢ Dedicating. officers were Mrs. Ellen McTaggart, regional vice president, and Elmer Welsch, past president of . the Indianapolis branch. President F. E. Dwver of the Indianapolis branch presided. ’ : ©
Mr. Marguerite Young presented a
the American Flag to the Auxiliary on. behalf of the RobisonRagsdale American ‘Legion Auxiliary. . Juvenile Aid Quarters Enlargement Plan OKd The Works Board today adopted Mayor Bayt's recommendation that the Street Commissioner's office change quarters with the Juvenile Aid Division to provide more room for JAD functions. ~The Mayor's recommendation followed reports submitted by citizens’ child welfare survey committee which cited the need for better juvenile aid headquarters. Heads of the two departments {will be instructed to work out de[tails for the transfer ‘as soon as!
mw
time after high
12 Years of
Ollie Purvis, 6 (left) and Russell
Youth Here Will Attend White House Conference
Jimmy East, 19, to Be One of Three Representing All Boys’ Clubs in U. S.
When he was 14, Jimmy East lish Ave. Boys’ Club.
On Dec. 3,
House Conference on Children and Youth. Clubs in the U. 8.
to represent all the Boys the few times personnel Boys’ Club headquarters béen chosen for the honor. Behind that feat lies the story of more than 12 years’ member-
outside have
ship in the English Ave. club— vears .of work. perseverance and learning.
Harry G. Gorman, executive director of Boys’ Clubs in Indianapolis, a Red Feather agency, was generous in his praise of Jimmy. “Fine leadership,” ‘exceptional interest,” and “fine example of fair play and teamwork,” he said of his part time assistant and games room director. Started at Age 1. Jimmy, now 19, started going to the Boys‘ Club when he was 7. His interest continued to grow, and in October, 1948. he became a part-time employee of the Club. Before that he had worked partschool and on Saturdays at the paint. company. There he had started as a stock
‘Miss Teen-Ager' Count to Begin
First Vote Tabulation To Start Tomorrow
Vote clerks will start their first tabulation of ballots tomorrow in The Times sgarch for “Miss TeenAger of 1950.” : The initial roster of candidates will appear in The Times within
few days. "Miss Teen-Ager of 1950" will be the girl high school student in Indianapolis ‘or Marion County receiving the most votes on official ballots clipped from The Times. She will receive a Philco television set with 16-inch screen and will head a glamorous entourage that will go to Camp Atterbury to prgsent three more Philco television sets to the soldiers. . a The girl in each high school receiving ‘the most votes, outside of “Miss Teen-Ager’'s” school. also will take part in the trip to Camp Atterbury and will be honored at gala reception. Each girl will receive a Philco radio. Don't Have to Work
The girl candidates won't have anything to.do to win their.laurels, except to get their -friends to vote for them if they wish, The search is free. The winners will be. the girls for whom the public casts the. most votes. Ter vote for any high school girl studént, clip the official ballot from The Times any day and drop it in a ballot box .at any Philco dealer's showroom in Indianapolis or Marion County. Any number for votes may be cast by any individual. Each coupon is food for ene vote. - g The “Miss Teen-Ager of 1950" search is conducted by The Times with the co-operation of the Radio Equipment Co. and the
possible,” Board members said. !dealers of Mariop county.
A Christmas Carol
NS
On’
Christmas hoht-fisted Ebenezer Scrooge sat huddled before his hearth, when he heard a strange sound---the rattle of chains!
LG an do not
.
Jimmy East is shown at work in the English Avenue Boys' Club. Jimmy (standing at right) shows
And he worked at the Perfection Paint & Color Co. to help support his invalid mother. James R. East will attend the Mid-Century White
there: vag —
Philco
There stood the ghost of his dead partner, the chains of his worldly selfishness. He told Scrooge that those who
Stock Issue
_. SEC Has Approved. Move, Ex-Governor Says of His Company
Public issue of stock in the | American-Canadian Uranium Co., | being investigated in New York, {was defended here today by the {firm's president, Paul V, McNutt, former governor of Ingliana. The former War Manpower Commissioner, who was the Hoosier “favorite son” for President in 1940, said his company was offering sale of stock on a come plete “statement of facts.” Investigation of the firm's stock issue was announced yesterday by Nathan Goldstein, attorney
general of New York State, He said the situation behind the company’s offering of shares
| worth $1,750,000 was “unusual.” Mr. Goldstein said the stock was offered by the company only as a ‘speculation and that the uranium prospecting firm made no claim that its land in Saskatchewan, Canada, had yielded any ore. .
an
A Charge Hurled He charged that if an impor- — tant strike were made, “insiders holding stock would take 83 per cent of the profits while the publie would be getting 17 per cent-.to-ward repayments of its invests nents.” ; Mr. Goldstein referred to the stock issue as “purely speculation on the public's part only.” The New York attorney general said one of the stock promoters, Maurice Young, had a record of today conviction and jail sentence in Dl ta tr that 75.000 Indiana war veterans Canada for Land in connection Eva ne oe their - state soldiers’| Ap oho apipu 5 on. Hak 5 bonus if they fail to apply before Hirshhorn. has a record of two. boy. When he left to take his job the Dec. 31 deadline. convictions for violating foreign with the Boys’ Club he was a fab- ville P. Bray, bonus admin- exchange laws. he said. Sralory Li inéreasing “trator. said his department was Advances Public Study / y as creas . j " his tes at . the - club a required by jaw 2 FR 1 have vigorously opposed the working. he found enough time BDfliestions Fostiarkes 22 Tae me 7. Taouative for studies to make a straight than Jar. 1. : ng. sues Mr. Goldstein “A" average at Technical High Nearly 290,000 Hoosier veterans said. “1 am bound to check a have applied for the bonus, state thoroughly an issue such as this At Tech he was a member of veterans Affairs records. show. which is being pushed so hastily, the Tech Legion, an honorary The Veterans Administration es- The public would be well advised group chosen for leadership and timated the number of former to study it just as thoroughly. scholarship. servicemen - from Indiana as Mr. McNutt, who is stopping at Jimmy now is a sophomore at 365,000 : to the Indianapolis Athletic Club, 3 Mr. Bray said applications were said that insiders in the company
Thompson, 5, how to play "football." Watching is Russell's brother,
‘Bonus Deadline Near for Veteran
Officials Warn 75,000 Lag in Applying
State officials warned
was a regular fixture at the Eng-
will. lose
Indiana Central College, where 3 L he lives. He is taking courses pouring into bonus headquarters ready ru put up “about $200, which will prepare him for a at the rate of 600 a day. JU In the company’ and pointed
career in Boys Club work, and’ No bonus payments have been 1 : > approved by the Securities and
later he'll attend a special one- made : Exch ' aca ange Co S 3 year Boys’ Club course at New ynder existing law. the bonus yj Se Semmission. i. there
York University, He is feature editor of the. 'Reflector,” monthly newspaper of Indiana Central. Has Role in Play And he has a role in of God,” Christmas play produced by the college. Jimmy says dramatics is his “second love.” It was in pageants and plays given by the Boys’ Club that he displayed most interest before he became a worker
payments will be made when the on the company’s land, and I state collects sufficient income think Saskatchewan is the only from the special bonus gross in- place where uranicn will be found come tax to pay the entire bonus. on this continent,” the former ov However, both Democratic and ernor of Indiana said. Republican state legislators have pledged to enact new legislation to make bonus payments available next vear. The average bonus paymen will be $300, depending upon veteran's length of service and disability. “| One plan, sponsored by State Currently he is developing the 1vep. Joseph Klein (D. Gary), second of twa. original Boys’ Club would pay all disabled veterans “clubs Within a club.” and the next-of-kin of deceased ALL % : - =yeterans sometime after the GenAlready formed is a Service eral Assembly convenes. : io Clup, dedicated to work for the Rep. Klein, co-author of. the he had a good record.” He said Boys' Club &it#€1f and wherever ciate bonus law, said the "state he did not "know else. its “members tan Tend Af has enough money to pay the dis Hirsehhorn's record: ———- = sistance. Last spring the Service gpled veterans and next-of-kin in The company's vice president Club produced a carnival which January. The remaining veterans listed. as Josiah Marvel Jr, netted $75. would be-paid in order of service, former US. ambassador to DenForms New Club under Rep. Klein's proposal. mark.” His newest venture is a Boost: FOr veterans who haven't -ap‘ry Thi ica td >." pligd-for the bonus, state Veterans ere--Olih, This prganiZetion: will Affairs offictals ‘listed the follow= be made up of Boys’ Club mem- ing proceduresfor them to follow: bers who do not already belong to “Optain an application at neara “club within the club.” It is de- o5t Red Cross chapter or veterans signed to promote” group activity organization: Fill out form and and to keep any boy from feeling mail it immediately to the Bonus
‘I'nquestioned Character’ “The prospectus by which an (offering of stock is made to the t public statics the - facts. Tha unquestioned character of the offie cers and directors of. the com(pany who have given both time
“Silence to be
tthe guarantee that the company's funds will be spent properly.” Mr. McNutt said Mr. Young's conviction occurred “about 20 years ago” and that since then
navi
36th, Air Guard Pick Training Site
“left out” of club work. Divisiof, Departmént of Veterans Indiana's military forces are In addition to his regular work Affairs, 431 N. Meridian St.” scheduled to stage the largest
peacetime maneuvers in the state's history during summer ex-
at the club, Jimmy is a counselor Ee at the Boys’ Club summer camp. GAS BLAST KILLS WORKER ‘About Boys’ -Club work Jimmy SELMA. Ala. Nov. 47 (UP) ercises at Camp Grayling, Mich, is most serious when he. says, W. W. Steward. Corsicana: Tex. For the first time, the all-Hoo-“What. we need is more parent a pipeline worker was killed and sier 38th National’ Guard Division participation. We need more co- eight others were injured yester- has been ordered to train along. operation between the Boys’ Club day when a tank ex- Side the State's, National “Air and adult groups from churches, ploded, throwing off a 250-foot Guard, the 122d Fighter Wing.
the Parent-Teachers Association flame, and. hurling the blasted Fifth Army Beadquarters has : -ordered the 38th Division to re-
gasoline
and others.” tank-into the workers. . : G . port to Camp Grayling for. two — i — oo — o_o" — So yo —— — weeks, from July 22 to-Aug. 8. *||The Fighter Wing will train at
| nearby Grayling Air Base. Atterbury Is Alternate Brig. Gen. Robinson Hitchcock, | the state adjutafic general, today said Camp! Atterbury will be an alternate {raining site for th | Division. 4 We will train at” Attérbury
MISS TEEN-AGER OF 1950
The Times Search for the Most Popular~High School. Girl I Sponsored by the Radio Equipment Co. and : Philco Dealers of Marion County
This is my vote the following girl student in an Indianapolis City Parochial or Marion Ceunty High School
for
[only if it is not being used by HER NAME... iii casi vunnpuis innit +++: o | Other troops,’ -the general said. : Cn : os At. present, Pennsylvania's fedHER: SCHOOL. . i covrinsvn dies eee LASS ....ivv aries | eralized 28th National Guard DiMy Name... ui..." ey Cama A re a ead ee Eadie ! i Ysion js I training St Atterbury. For the last three years, In-
AdAress. i. isin sae uieweussaes.eoite- | diana’s 38th Division has trained “at Atterbury ; The Air Guard has undergone | summer. training at the Grayling Air Base since the end of World War 11.
| By Charles Dickens
DO NOT MAIL. DROP COUPON IN BALLOT BOX AT | ANY PHILCO. DEALER IN MARION COUNTY.
| | | | [ | |
5
TS
! 1h 2 : Jacob Marley, wrapped in share their happiness on earth must, after death, wonder the eh a d in chains. © -
Hard Work Pays Off McNutt Backs Uranium Firm ~~
Joseph H,
out that the stock issue has been
and money to the enterprise is ..
about Mr. .
