Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 February 1951 — Page 13

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hy? No strike lic: know wha v there can be and who are agement, they

d if the union

the switchmens } Ching and his the blame? hat long. What That's what I ould a lot of about three 1en the strike happen again, ss it will connson, City.

| deserve comd in holding rea. Do you Korea? If he stop to think rt. . . You men ves of the men gence you may

sw Alexandria

your statement 39. I have kept shows that on hit 24 degrees i below as you uary yet. ly, New Castle juggests readthermometer. ord of 18 de-

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irk is through t comes across d views , , , . with this n hear the big ifurled , . . I the commentahat touch the swell . . . and . the man behis voice that ++. and that d doff my ha sloquence . . 4

n Burroughs

ng? sharply. His th communism rn of Chinese litical history, greatest name

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TBSDAY, FEB. 13,

And when I hear Dr. tilt forward.

He, in my opinion, is one of the best farmer-business

men in the country. He tal And he called the pricewage freeze a “political cool spell ‘which was not

even a hard frost.” . n n ” THAT'S LAYING it on the button, fur would continue to fly in the running war between food producers ‘and the distributors, who put it in packages. And the co-ops, he said, will oe the “whipping boys” of the ray. There was another guy up there who gave the red warning flag a vigorous shake. He was Dr. John Davis of the National Councikof Farmer Co-operatives, who warned that it is necessary to keep controls for ten years, by that time the people will regard

them as normal. - = = ”

THE OLD HARNESS will be

on tight by then. And as time passes fewer and fewer will remember that there ever was any-| thing like free enterprise. It is good to see the farmers stand up and slug it out with controls. To them the government listens. » H ” AND THATS why Dr. Earl Butz knows the price-wage freeze can be nothing more than a “cool spell.” The farm voters, as well

as wage earners, won't take the

hard crackdown. And they elect the Presidents.

Glass-O-Rama HOMER BISCH'S Fibreglas show opens tonight at the Ant-| lers. And I'll be there. I used to play in the sand after school, and kick it around, and never knew I was wiggling my toes through a whole new world) of wonders. Owens-Corning has applied its laboratory wizardry to sand, which is the basis of glass, and| come up with curtains and evening gowns and insulation in’ doz- |

ens of forms to. Keep the coldsint Jor out.

" u =

AND ROBIE L. CONE JR. who/

trucked the $50,000 wonderland | exhibit into town tells me they’ re |

making a fluffy glass fiber to put in life jackets for the Navy. And I want to try my hand at that glass fishing rod. I always!

“wught the stuff would break, but Four Hurt as Blast

i one outlasts steel, is whippy| and sensitive. It's the world of tomorrow, all made from that stuff I kicked around as a kid—sand. I had bad news today. We're going to lose one of our most useful citizens, a new fellow, too, who came along. dug his toes in and carried more than his share of the! load. Rodgers N. Brown, Indianapolis manager of Krogers, is getting a sweet promotion to general manager of Wesco Foods Co., which buys fruit and produce for| Kroger in Chicago. He's a little guy who gets to you fast. And the first thing you}

know, you want him on your L

team.

x A » HE'S PRESIDENT of the In-|g¢

diana Chain Store Council, treas-

urer of the Associated Retailens o of Indiana, on the board of the|g

State Chamber of Commerce and the Better Business Bureau, and he was co-chairman of the Mercantile Division with Sears’ Russel Savage, in the last Community Chest campaign. And the guy's only been in town four years. That’s stepping. Now, see what we're losing?

U. Slwank). ‘A.

I'VE BEEN FED UP for years with all the la-de-da talk about Paris styles.

We make better automobiles, |}

better radios, airplanes, railroad trains, and fancier bathtubs, so why do we go a-twitter over anything with a Paris label? The truth is that Paris hasn't come even close to Hollywood and New York designers for years.

» - = THE PARIS STYLES show a little more of the gal, but still

they can’t beat those cobweb /S2

bathing bandannas they wear at Laguna Beach. Take it from me if you want to wear what's right, look sharp as a tack, buy the stuff with American labels, And you'll have Paris backed off the map, a mile.

All right, Frenchie, — a kilo-|8

meter.

On Trial

THERE'LL BE A BIG show up in the Murat Theater tonight. And you can’t buy a ticket. strictly private. But it'll be a wow—in salesmanship. The big fast-footed companies

7 IN

oy HAROLD H. HARTLEY Times Business 36 Editor

WHEN SOMEONE mentions co-ops my ears fli “like the levers of a voting machine, ps my ears ip up

Earl Butz of Purdue talk, they

And he predicted that the all else which goes into the home,

{blast occurred when molten metal,

It’s|Ind Limestone 4s 7

1951

USINESS

ked to 325 co-op leaders.

dramatize their lines. And Hayes Hollibaugh, president of Radio Equipment Co., 1010 Central Ave. (Philco), is one of the best. He handles many lively lines, Youngstown Kitchens, Bendix and

w ” » SO THE SHOW TONIGHT will put Bendix on trial. He will have five tons of equipment on the stage, a judge, a prosecutor and a jury. Bendix will stand trial against its competitors. And the jury will decide which is the best and why. Of course, I can give you the verdict now—or maybe, if you're 4 Bendix dealer, you'd better go and see, just to make sure. There could be a slip.

\Cutback in Cash SO FAR THE THREAT of cutbacks has been a brow-wrinkler, nothing more. It's been talk of the awful con-| !ditions coming. But they are long loverdue. And retailers and dealers are beginning to wonder if, in the end,

cutbacks still will be nothing more than talk. The government has issued

tough orders, always well into the future. But somehow, there dre delays. And there isn’t much you can’t find on a store's shelves.

» » n | BUT THERE IS the sinister shadow of something quite real! |creeping into fhe picture. It is the {well-paid wage earner who be- | comes a poor man through taxes.

He will sit in a world of plenty|to attend, but doubted if he'd

with his tongue hanging out, but] he just won't be able to raise the

About People—

Now Hear This!

Bing Croshy Undergoes Operation

Crooner Reported Resting Comfortably In Santa Monica

ing fairly comfortably” today at St. John's Hospital, Santa Monica, Cal, after an operation for a kidney ailment.

“The Groaner” is in “good condition,” His physician, Dr. Fred Schulumberger, said the crooner will be hospitalized about a week.

Quiet Stroll ¢ Little Julia Moody, 6, who is deaf and ean speak only slightly, began walking the six traffic-filled miles from school to her home in Washington, D. C. yesterday when the usual-taxi failed to come for her, When Julia hadn’t arrived home a half-hour later, her mother became alarmed and called police, The cab company, teachers, students and neighbors joined in a search which didn’t end until Julia

walked into the house four hours later. It was a long walk.

SEN. ROBERT A. TAFT (R. 0.) will have a tough job convincing one member of his audience when he addresses a Republican rally in Des Moines, Iowa, tonight : STATE. REP. J. E. HANSEN, Democratic leader of the Iowa House, will be the unsympathetic listener. Rep. Hansen bought a $25 ticket and promised

Sen. Taft

Singer ‘Bing Crosby was “rest-|

Lueth enty of g mour to The Times Ice-O-Rama Feb. 22 in the

| Betty add

Fair

In 10 Days, 1000 Skates Will Flash

Final Rehearsal One Week Away

Only one week remains until the final rehearsal for 500 skaters who will perform in The Times Ice-O-Rama to raise money for the Infantile Paralysis Fund. The last rehearsal—this one for the entire show—will be staged ‘next Tuesday afternoon in the Fair Grounds Coliseum. Only those in the show will be ad-

sunds Coliseum.

agree with much of what the] GOP leader has to say.

down payment money. And he won't have much left [after the government sinks its tax! teeth in his ay 4 Shack. RIGHT NOW it * 1o0ks as if {spending controls are going to, beat the pants off materials con- | trols. [| “There's a cue to the unions. It | won't make much difference how {high wages go, if the government {taxes it away faster than they |get it. That makes it plain. It isn’t the high cost of living, it’s the high | cost of government which will {break our backs.

Rocks Steel Plant EAST CHICAGO, Ind. Feb. 13 (UP)—Four men were injured today, none seriously, when an explosion rocked the Indiana Harbor plant of Inland Steel Co. A company spokesman said the

being hauled through a tunnel in slagpots on railway cars, spilled and came in contact with water in the tunnel.

Local Stocks and Bonds

~Feb.

13—

STOCKS Asked American States com American States ofe re iAyshire Collieries com 20 an . 8. Ayres pf

Eng c Consolidated Finance 8 ptd is {Contin-Car-Na-Var Delta Elec com Eastern Ina [ele b pid Equitable Securtiles com

i — = >

. 14 15%

Family ance com oo] Family hanes 5% ofd 97 100 fan Soro, of Ad . 9 Sal n Mts Co Som . a W Herfl-Jones ¢ . Home os Xe 8% ola. . 8. 05] 0 co . . | Joo Or Drug. C Zoid... . 385 4i *Ind Gas & Wat com. . 19%; ! Ind Mich EI 4% pi ves 104 196 tna J Hepnane ART ofd oR jindpls Fd LL COM ..covsasnenn 28% 2 4% pid ........ 100%2 103 Indp is Ath” Club Realty Co... 84Y “Indiana Water com 18% 19 Indpls Water Co 5% pid 08 Hs pfd de com

Kingan & Co com ........... Kingan & Co pid es Lincoln Nat ite ......... Lynch Cor; Marmon- Herington com Mastic Asphalt

N N Ind Pub Serv com . N Ind Pub Serv 4% pfd N Ind Pub Sery A pid . Progress Laundry com P R Mallory Co com ..... *Pub Serv of Ind 3'% pfd.. *Pub Serv of Ind com .... Ross G

tear Tool com 80 Ja GA® com pid om

FE eh nd GEE pid =. iota 1iats - am! . Storey Van Damp. pia 18'a 18% ERE a eable y g. 8” Machine Co . + 0% 0% ele Pa Oojed. iienhone 6% otd .... 83

Allen &

nd Asso ndpls Rail 8 Langsenkamp 5s 58

long have used the theater to

§ Ind Pub Serv i 73. blie ce I%r 104 Sprague Devices 5s 60........ 95

Today's Weather Fotocast

PARTLY CLOUDY AND Be LOUSY ARiAs ¥°

J. Cm 961 (Ow LA. wane. AL as

TONGH] AND TOMORROW—Ti winter again,

2 og [Eras swow |@== UI >»

{It was Terry who identified him-|

{Pauw University, Greencastle.

‘Lost Week-End

ii: Emotion Helps

:+ |marble—only lots warmer. «++.(all woman . .

WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (UP)-—Govern-ment expe and receipts for the current fiscal year through Feb. 9, compared wit A Year ago: t Ven | Expenses id 3890.953, 93 ro 3 a8 192, 424, % Receipts . . ’R Bil. 5 ,196,6086,77 u Def it 2,995,817,320 Cash Lane 3.084. 2,973 ‘| Public i, 2658, lial o 256,604,081,768 Gold reserve 23, 310,208,6 24,344, 34 541

Popularity

TERRY DOYLE, 19, was fined, {$10 in Melrose Park, Pa. last| ‘night, but to 500 fellow high' Ischool students he was a hero.'

self over the telephone as the township school superintendent and asked a radio station to an-

Thursday because of cold weather.

Me Tarzan, Who You?

Film star Arlene Dahl and movie muscleman Lex Barker will be married Apr. 17 at New York's Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church. Miss Dahl, 24, and Mr. Barker, 32, will leave the day after the wedding for a European honeymoon.

Scholars

Earl Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren A. Lewis, 4718 Stratford Ave., Indianapolis, and Edward Slagle, Pittsburgh, have been granted full tuition scholarships worth $1600 from the Rector Scholarship Foundation at De-

Miss Dahl

nounce classes were canceled last!

.Iseat is reserved and the show is

mitted to the Coliseum for the rehearsal. | The skaters will get one day’s {rest before the big night when |{they perform under brilliant spotlights to the tempo of a 15-piece professional orchestra at 8 o'clock jon Washington's Birthday, Feb. 22. Choice Seats On Sale

Although the show is about 10 days away, there -still-are choice seats available in all sections of the Coliseum. Tickets are on sale only at the Marott Shoe Store, 18 E. Washington St. They may be obtained from 9:30 a.m. until 5 p. m. daily. Every seat is reserved. Prices are: Box ' and parquet chairs, $1.20; north and south side mezzanine, 85 cents; east end mezzanine, 60 cents. Prices include tax. Theré will be no admission charge for small children, unless they occupy a seat. Since every

usually a sellout, a ticket must be obtained for everyone occupying a seat. Weeks of intense rehearsals have produced one of the fastestmoving and most colorful Ice-O-Ramas ever presented. For two hours skaters of all ages—all amateurs—will present difficult skating numbers to rival even professional shows. Many of the skaters are veterans in the Ice-O-Rama. Still there will be the “cute” tiny tots, some of them beginners who each year win a warm spot in the

Edward Condon, 38, awoke i San Francisco city jail yesterday |

{morning and wondered what had -+ transpired

% couple of bottles to take to his|

since he bought aj

room Saturday night. Police told him he was arrested | while strolling downtown clad] only in a wrist watch and a right| shoe on his left foot.

Ava Gardner's emotional tri-| angle with bullfighter Mario Cabre and crooner Frank Sinatra! in Spain last summer helped her turn in the greatest screen |

her career, a movie maker! said today. | “She’ll take] your breath away in ‘Pandora and the| Flying Dutch-| man,’ ” said producer Joseph Kaufman. “I honestly think it's the first time a real woman has

Miss Gardner

...|ever been portrayed on film, Her|

beauty comes out like sculptured | She's | . all sex.”

i Girl Scout Complex

Mrs. Sophie Wienckus, 60, has|

he [tangled with Newark, N. J., , police, *:lagain over her uncontrollable

urge to sleep outdoors these chilly nights. Patrolmen found her a week]

./ago sleeping in a doorway. She

was wearing enough clothes to| ‘|start a rummage sale, between the layers of which were tucked bankbooks crediting her with nearly $20,000. Placed at the home of friends on probation, she slipped out in near-freezing tem-

perature yesterday and was found | (snoozing in the driveway.

Local Produce

urrent receipts. 54 Ibs, to case, ser rade Al ree. io; Grade A small, medium. 3 h fT, and Grade A oy irl hh, ve 30 156 ahd Nor*3 poultry dc Jess

than’ No. 1. Butteriat--No. 1. 68c: No. 3. S36.

U. S. Statement

-

hearts of the Coliseum crowd.

, Patty Scott and Mary Maloy (left to right) will

Steady to Strong

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Glamour in lce-O-Rama

Hogs Become

School News—

{Paden represented Broad Ripple {in the piano solo festival at

Spelling Bee Will Be Held At Attucks

Girls’ Glee Club At Broad Ripple To Make Debut

An old fashioned spelling bee will be conducted at Crispus Attucks High School under the sponsorship of the English Department Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Winners will get medals from the Webster Merriam Dictionary Co.

Director of exchange students from India, Nilkanth Chavre, will speak before the Broad Ripple student body Wednesday.

Marianne Hall and Douglas

Shortridge High School today.

The newly organized girls glee club at Broad Ripple will give

their first performance Monday |-

Bonzo Is Just Another Monkey in Plush Setting

before a mothers chorus association in the Wm. H. Block & Co.

auditorium,

Members of th To Adkins, Barbar A £ Carter Mug 5] Ange Raugh, Sjsle Corti, No orma a Con Rorothy arle, i

Hog trade opened rather slow| at the Indianapolis Stockyards to-| day. Prices on barrows and gilts were barely steady with Monday’s average but were fully steady to

instances strong as the market] later became active. | Hogs 8000; bulk choice 170 to| 250 pounds $23.50 to $24; latter price freely for choice up to 240 pounds; 250 to 200 pounds $22.75 to $23.75; 290 to 350 pounds $21.75 to $23; 120 to 160 pounds $16.50 to $18.50 or more; sows fully steady; bulk choice 300 to 550 pounds $19.25 to $20.50; choice lights $20.75 to $21. Cattle 1200, calves 400; all slaughter classes in good demand; steers and yearlings active, fully steady to spots 50c higher; heifers scarce, firm; cows strong to 50 cents higher; numerous loads low good to average choice 900 to 1150 pound steers $31.50 to $35; choice to prime $37; few prime mediums held around $39; utility

$31; part load. choice to prime heifers held at $36; commercial and good $29.50 to $32.50; utility and commercial cows $24 to $27; bulls steady; utility and commercial $27 to $30; good and choice quoted- $28 to $29.50. Vealers less active, some weakness but bulk sales steady; good and choice $41 to $43; common and medium $29 to $39; lightweights near 75 to 100 pounds hard to move account of high percentage condemnation. Sheep 500; market active, fat

| Peterson, |Slorp, Cargle Smith, | Van Briggle,

and commercial yearlings $27 to{7iman,

Carolyn Nawih orne, BA Taean Hihaoon, Carleene Jefry, argaret Johnson, Betty Kiefer, Marilyn McComas, ut eyer Johana Moser. Carol Ottinger Shirley

Schortemefer, Kay Sally Stiles, Diane Janet Wachstetter, Leah | arilyn Woerner and Carolyn |

Jacquelin

Watson, | Woodfill. The Colonial 1 Chorus at Washington High School will provide the music for the annual party of Catholic, Jewish and Protestant women to be held Wednesday in the Third Christian Church,

Members of the newly organized Madrigal singers at Wash-

ington High School are:

Betty Carr, Vernon Griner. Bye Hartley, Bil Linville, Anna Marsh, Jean Stanley, sandra kton, Russell White and Colleen Keltner.

Fifty girls from ‘the home economics clothing class at Washington High School will exhibit their completed garments before the PTA meeting Wednesday at School 30.

New student history assistants

at Shortridge High School are: Nancy Berry, Paul Hargitt, Paula Boyer, Sally Savage, Don Steffy, Phyllis Magenheimer, Nancy Waymire, ‘Catherine Christoff and Deborah Collins. Library assistants are Mary Ann Hostetter, Phyllis Ru Rust and Marilyn Slaughter, Jane Hanns, Doris Lytle, Nancy Sweetman, Delora Venablé, Flo Ann BerKeehn, ..

Gretehen ilyn Gots lieb and Beverly Lewis, Dolores Holland, Judy Hanna, Bob ks, Jane. Goble, Jerry Jordan, Caton Jets, Suzanne Hardy, Doris Lytle, Roberts, Margaret Wilson, ADS Aharine Barbara

Clark and Jerry Jordan.

Candidates for class day officers at Shortridge High School have been announced. . The candidates for historian are Lynn Boatman, Ann Robinson, Marillyn Shaw and Janet Wabhle. For giftorian, the officer who presents senior gifts, are Jerry Granowsky, Lynn: Harshbarger,

Tarum Court No.

a dance

By R. K.

under like circumstances.

in his supporting cast in “Bedtime for Bonzo"). You see, Bonzo just spent a couple of months making a film in which he starred as a humanlike chimpanzee who behaved with the best social decorum only because everyone respected his civil rights and liberties. After making the movie, Bonzo thought he'd struck the first blow for chimpanzee sufferage. According to the chimpanzee philosophy, if a chimp is permitted to star in a film, then he should be accorded the rights and privileges of a full-fledged star. Rude Awakening Bonzo thought he had succeeded when everyone in the cast of the movie treated him as another filmster, but now comes the rude awakening. Bonzo learned that the railroads have no &nsideration for

his status as a film star, He has)

to ride the rails in the baggage car just like the monkeys and other lower forms of animal life. And at the Columbia Club here, the management has arranged for him to stay in the basement, as though he were someone's pet. The greatest indignity of all comes when he goes abroad in the city. His trainer (actually his press agent, according to Bonzo) leads him on a leash, and screams at him like a fishwife.

w

. PAGE. 1

Presented Wheel Chair

SHULL

Mrs. Ralph McAninch, Mrs. Ernest Hughes and Mrs, Rudolph Roehl (left to right) present a wheelchair to a young patient in a Lexington, Ky., hospital for crippled children, The 14 of the Ladies of the Oriental here. To 3 more money for charity, the urganization is'sponsoring turday night at Longacre Pavilion.

Bonzo wasn’t a bit happy when he arrived in Indianapolis this morning. And any self-respecting chimpanzee would feel the same

“Hey! What gives?” That's what he seemed to be thinking, after his trainer pulled him out of the baggage car of the train. With him were Diana Lynn and Jesse White (a couple of humans who are

represent hrine Patrol

And another thing Bonzo wants

Dave Queisser and. Frank Unyer-

lambs 50 cents higher; good and choice $38 to $39; top $39. New

good $36.50 to $37.50; slaughter ewes steady; medium to choice $16 to $23.

Series of Holdups Nets Bandits $344

Holdups staged last night in Indianapolis netted bandits $344. The Petroleum Sales Corp., 5231 E. Washington 8t., lost $212. William Merriweather, 1408 E. Minnésota St., a United Cab driver, was held up in the 400 block on S. Rural St. and robbed of $22.

y/Services Thursday For Charles F. Janke

Charles F. Janke, employed in {the Indianapolis Street Commis-! sioner’s office the past year, died lyesterday in his home at 840 E. {Berwyn St. He was 66. |

Mr, Janke was a lifetime resi-

|dent of Indianapolis and was for-!

merly employed in the shipping |department of the Allison Divi|sion, General Motors Corp. He lwas a member of the Moose lolige 17. Surviving are his wife, Mary E.; two sons, Mavity and Irvin; two sisters, Mrs. Minnie Whitaker |

performance of and Mrs. Elsie Gonder, and four|

grandchildren, all of Indianapolis. Services will be at 2- p. m. Thursday in the Charles R. Mec{Carty Mortuary. Burial will be in [Concordia Cemetery.

‘Miss Thuemler Named

To Scientific. Group

Miss Gertrude Thuemler, 3043 College Ave., has been named associate in the Human Engin-| {eering-Scientific Placement Divi-| sion of Management Research) Associates. The organization, operating locally, is a personal evaluation organization. It plans careers, screens applicants for business firms and conducts personality tests.

‘Warns Bomb Shelters ‘May Be Death Traps

BOSTON, Feb. 13 (UP) —Com-munal-type underground bomb shelters being proposed in many | cities may turn out to be “death traps,” the National Fire Protection Association warned today. Persons in such shelters might survive a bomb blast, but would perish in “fire storms” following the explosion, the NFPA said, advising that no such shelters be built until the danger of “fire| storms” in a city has been, assessed.

2 Elected Members

Of Accountants Group James M. Gibbons and J. H. Rushton, Indianapolis, have been elected members of the American Instituté of Accountants, national professional society of CPA's. Mr. Gibbons is controller of the Econ-0-Seal Co., a division of Basca Mfg. Co., Inc. Mr. Rushton is manager of the financial study

etnias 40H 8 CLEARING iam py eR

x

division, Elf Lilly & Co.

Mrs. Louise Coplea, 25, of 312]

E. St. Clair St, reported that a

local all-time high; medium and

saw. Those running for willmaker include Richard Brown, David Epstein, Thomas Evans and Dudley Farmer. Candidates for prophet are Jo Anne Adair, Sue DeTurk, Marigold Leete and Loretta Smock.

Official Weather

TED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ™ he’ 13, (1

Sunrise . 6:40 | Sunset . 5:19 tion 24 hrs, ending 7:30 a. m. _.02 Bt cipitation Mince Jan. 1... 3.69 Deficiency since Jan. 1 ..........c0000 A

The following table shows the temperatute in | other cities:

Bn or AR" 32 40 Chicago 46 27

Cincinnati . g jevatang

'man entered the Crum Market, p Evansville a. “8% 50 {809 N. Alabama St., where she is Ft. Vayne bd ows .r : 4 3 night clerk, and robbed her of Kansas City : Hn 15 $70. {fas A ig hlienasinns ‘ a 38 The Hoosier Pete Service Sta- Minneape lis-8t. Paul i - Ition, 2201 N. Capitol Ave. was New Yo aig C49 40 robbed of $40. JOklalioma £ city’ . xn 19 | Pittsburgh ois . 81 7 {San Antonio 81 3

Penney Still Confined

To Room by Influenza C. Penney, head of the de-| rn store chain bearing his name, was convalescing from in-!| fluenza in the Columbia Club]

IE. Louis

fan Francisco ....

| Washington, D.C Cc. ie oh 3 |

Local Truck Grain Prices

No. 3 truck wheat, $2.35. No. 2 soybeans, 12. No. 2 oats, 93c. Xo 2 white corn, $1.77 . 2 yellow corn, $1.63.

| today.

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

On Television

3 HORIZONTAL 512 months

7 times his size, and in that dress.

6 ‘his public appearance on stage at

was’ is Abe Dueling, shia ne Francis’ hand on television the other night. According to the video viewers, Arlene extended her hand in friendship and Bonzo attempted to sample it for flavor. That Dress Now, here's the true story straight from the chimpanzee’s mouth. Seems that he’d néver met Arlene before, and then suddenly she swooped down on him dressed in-a frilly gown. Well, it's like. Bonzo said, she was at least four

He just forgot his manners and snapped at her as any level-head-ed chimp would do when accosted by a predatory female. There was nothing personal in the bite according to Bonzo, it's just that they were never formally introduced. But Bonzo will be giving out more interviews and more inside dope of Hollywood during his three-day stay here. He'll make

the Circle Theater with Miss Lynn and Mr. White during the opening day ceremonies Thursday.

Answer to Previous Puzzie

MII ISISIOIVIRITE IMIAIRIK] AMIOIUINITIEIDL JEIR| | |E [JIAIBIATIEIPIE IE PAAIVIE ied SIAL SPR INI

i

department, economics research|

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