Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1951 — Page 22

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Inside Indianapolis >

By Ed Sovola

A MOTHER-IN-LAW shouldn't poke her nose in the affairs of her children and their families. Thirty-one mothers-in-law were unanimous on that well-known rule for peace and harmony on the home front. It made you wonder about all the uncomplimentary in-law stories you hear. The attraction for getting 31 ; mothers-in-law together in one CEE room was a special showing of IE the new Paramount picture, “The S:iH Mating Season.” The comedy J could be called “All About Mother-in-law.” : Walter Wolverton, manager of the Circle Theater and a mother-in-law lover, was host for the: evening. I showed up to see a free movie and 31 mothers:in- 2 law in action,

& o . TO MAKE the ladies feel more welcome, Mr. Wolverton had popcorn and candy bars. He also announced smoking was allowed in the screening room, Several smoked. I handled the free popcorn. It went fast. “Is it fresh?” asked one mother-in-law, “The boxes are warm, ma'm,” was my answer. The story was about A young couple, newly married. Gene Tierney and John Lund played the leads. The two mothers-in-law were Miriam Hopkins and Thelma Ritter. o> > H THE BRIDE was the daughter of a United States ambassador. She was accustomed to high places and high noses, and was sick of them. Miriam Hopkins was her mother. The groom, son of an owner of a hamburger joint, worked hard all his lifer His widowed mother had to give up her business about the time love struck the young pair. Thelma Ritter, lovable, down-to-earth person, arrived the day of the wedding. Eventually all four lived under the same roof, Miss Ritter as a maid and cook of her own volition and Miss Hopkins as a critical and disappointed snob. i» 4 & THROUGHOUT THE MOVIE, the 31 mothers-in-law expressed their sentiments. Since it was their party, the ladies didn't hesitate to make themselves heard. The efforts of the mother of the hard-working and ambitious son were applauded. On the other

It Happened Last Night

By Earl Wilson

NEW YORK, Apr. 12—Fred Allen gave a4 new description of Tallulah Bankhead's voice at the Bob Hope Paramount show for the Damon Runyan Cancer Fund. Sald Fred: “Her voice sounds like a fellow pulling his foot out of a bucket of yogurt.” So bb ob EUGENE O'NEILL, Amerfca's greatest playwright, is down to 84 pounds at a hospital here, and due to Parkinson's disease and a knee in-

jury, can neither write nor dictate. Thus for the present his

writing genius is dammed up. > He eats little, and is confined . bs. mostly to bed. i However, the author of Mr. O'Neill such tragedies as “Strange Interlude,” whose own life lately has followed a tragic pattern, is not in critical condition nor is he especially sad. In fact, he requested “pretty nurses.” He announced: "I don't want to be taken care of by any old witches!” FRANK SINATRA has grown a mustache. You can almost see it. TELEVISION —defined by Billy Reed: “Summer stock in an iron lung.” Se > SENATOR KEFAUVER won't risk any more blasts for cashing in on the Crime Probe material such as he got after the magazine article. He's just rushed word here that he's decided not to undertake any projected radio or TV appearances or shows .., . “except as a public service.” LE oo *»

BOB HOPE kept saying on his TV show that Aly Khan, who permitted beautiful Rita Hayworth to come here alone, must be “a blind Aly.” Rita stirred the rumors by dining at the Little Club with Producer Jimmy Gardiner and another male. She all but caused a riot when she went to see “Kiss Me, Kate.” Then she offed to the Copa to hear Jimmy Durante— using a side door. Newest Paris report is that Aga Khan tells friends he’s “glad it's over” (despite his public denials.) He favors a Moslem as his son's Princess. The Aly himself reportedly wants her to hurry home—but she is NOT hurrying. SL A WALLIS SIMPSON'S bad head cold changed history. The Duke of Windsor's book, “A King's Story,” wil explain that when they met in '31 in England, she had a cold and he remarked she must miss American central heating, whereupon she said, amid sniffles: “I am sorry, Sir, but you have disappointed

"

me. Asked why, she replied: “Every American woman who comes to your country is asked

~ \ Horse Rodeos . By Harman Nichols FARMER CITY, Til, Apr. 12—Hang on to the top rail of the old corral, and I'll tell you eity slickers a trick or two they use in them horse

rodeos. Some of them broncs that curve their backs

. and buck are gentle, like lambs. You could hitch

‘em to a buckboard and haul the young'uns to school. But to make 'em wild-like, all you have to do is tighten a flank strap along toward the hindquarters where it tickles, nervous 'em up a mite in the take-off chutes and you've got some ornery crittters on your hands. They'd rather pitch a cow poke than jaw oats. Me, I've never yelled . “hi-yippee” aboard a bronec, and I'm not about to. But Bob McKinley has. He owns what is known as the McKinley Wild West and Rodeo Show and, brother, he knows his livestock. bb

BOB ADMITS that he wasn't born in a saddle, but claims that at a reasonable age he traded a diaper for chaps, got a fat little leg up on a pony, let out a lusty “da-da” and was off, bareback and barefoot toward the back forty. He's been a horseman ever since,

‘One wonders what she'd have started if she'd

‘that Have a delightful dislike for cowboys, cow-

hentia Nabna \

T 31 Mothers-In-Law See Free Movie

hand, every remonstrance of the snooty mama was met with hisses and catcalls. “Isn't she a stinker?” could be heard several times from different locations. | > © © OBVIOUSLY Miss Hopkins’ meddling did not set well with real mothers-in-law. It ended with complete victory for the mother-in-law who wanted to help .rather than hinder. The villianess paid for her obstruction. Not only did the daughter side in with her husband's mother, but Miss Ritter walked off with her son's wealthy employer to the utter disgust of Miss Hopkins who had designs to out in his nest. > & AT THE CONCLUSION, every lady present had something to say. Mrs. Dee Keith, 2128 Ww. McCarthy St., referring to Miss Hopkins’ portrayal, said, ‘She stinks. We're not as bad as we're painted even though people who don’t know think we are.” " Mrs. Mabel Crail, 1610 Lexington Ave: said she has three sons-in-law and loves to cook for them all. She enjoys having them around With their families. Mrs. Lucille May, 2053 Houston St., thought Thelma Ritter played the part of the ideal mother-in-law. She didn't meddle or become a burden, she tried to be understanding and helpful. oD “SHE SHOULD HAVE had one new outfit in the movie though,” Mrs. May added. Mrs. E. C. Wakelam, 3158 E. Fall Creek Pkwy., commented, “People think most mothers-in-law are like the type Miriam Hopkins played. When you come right down to it, few are like that.” Mrs. Laura Ray, 3608 N. Meridian St., thought Thelma Ritter was a perfect mother and mother-in-law, Praise was high for the movie and not because it was a private showing and free, either. It was

15 minutes before they all cleared out. “hb

|

AS ONE who has yet to experience the acquisition of a mother-in-law, I felt that the meeting eased the apprehensions considerably. . If you can get 31 mothers-in-law to agree that meddling in the affairs of a young couple is loathsome, by golly that's big news in any bachelor’s life. Mom, you sweet thing, can we come over for dinner and leave the kids for awhile? Ah.

Ailing Eugene O'Neill Eyes Preity Nurses

that same question. I had hoped for something more original from the Prince of Wales.” That's the way she started it, with a head cold.

been feeling good! oo ohh

THE MIDNIGHT EARL: Barry Gray's about to start an early evening CBS show besides all his other chores. . . . Comedian Sid Caesar withdrew his suit against Eddie Hanley charging he stole a “girdle routine” that Hanley'd actually done long before Caesar started. . .. But Hanley’s out several hundred $ in lawyer's fees. Ingrid Bergman's friends say her ex-husband in Hollywood still declines to let her have the clothes she left behind two years ago. (Is he mad about sumpin’?) . .. Mary Martin and her husband Dick Halliday plan to board a freighter for South America when she finishes “S. Pacific” and take a rest before going to London. . .. In Oleg Cassini’'s bloody battle at the Enchanted Lilac Ball, he felt somebody was pushing him around and trying to dance with his wife, Gene Tierney. He went down from an unexpected punch, then rallied and slugged and chased the guy out, an easy winner. He has a cut lip. & ob TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: They claim a Texan pointed to a customer lying heipless on the floor at Fay Ross’ har and said to the bartender, “Give me some of that.” de deus ALL OVER: The George (Commentator) Putnams' baby died suddenly. . .. On the Edge of the Ledge: Handsome Johnny. Miles and Betty Sullivan, Ed's pretty dtr. . Jean (Size 40) Williams, the beauty, has been discovered by Bil Cahn. . . . Tony, the Fearless Farrell is angeling | the Bert Lahr show, “Two on the Aisle.” , .. The TV producer Bob Monroes had a dtr. od ah B'WAY BULLETINS: May West and troupe open at the Cafe Theater May 7. Monte Proser must pay transportation from S. Frisco, alter his stage and get rid of his current cuties. . . . An American syndicate’'s bidding for the lease of Monaco's Monte Carlo casino. . . . Chio Farmer left Jack Elgen’'s Guest Room. . . . Audy Vallee and wife adorned El Morocco. . . . Richard Quine, Susan Peters’ ex-husband, calls her thrice weekly from the coast. . .. Jose Ferrer now wants to ask Milton Berle to replace him in “20th Century.” ... Today's Daily Double: Insurance man Ronnie Hudson and Gretchen North. . WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Too bad about Joe Stalin.” , . . “Why? What happened to him?” . .. “Nothing”—Anthony J. Pettito. Just as Coleman Jacoby the Pittsburgh Gag Whiz was writing his doctor a check for long unpaid-for services, he added a note, “Doc, I just felt an awful pain in my checkbook.” , .. That's Earl, brother.

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THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1951

Manpower Waste in Armed Services—

¥

Washington Holds C

2 Regiments That Greeted Auriol Might Have Changed Lost Battles

By JIM G. LUCAS Seripps-Howard Staff Writer AN WASHINGTON, Apr. 12-—When President Vincent Auriol of France arrived in Washington recently, 5000

soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines were turned out to

greet him.

That's almost two regiments.

In Korea, one regi-

ment of men—and those who put on the show for Presi-

dent Auriol were the best we have—could have held

off the foe in a couple of

battles that went against us. A whole headquarters staff of colonels, lieutenant colonels, majors, captains and lieutenants took more than a month's time to plan the reception. They went about it as they would a military operation. Staff officers are badly needed in Korea. } 8. ACROSS THE Potomac from Washington, at Ft. Meyer, and at Ft. McNair, down on the water front, the 3d Infantry Regiment is stationed. It has 1100 men. A proud outfit, it has a distinguished combat record, Its 31 well-earned battle streamers are proof of that. Sometimes newspapers refer to it as ‘“The President's Opn.” But its men never do. They prefer its more official name, “The Old Guard.” Theoretically, the Old Guard has three missions — to take part in public cererhonies, to be available for the defense of Washington and to train soldiers for combat. Actually, its

ceremonial duties are so demanding it hasn't much time | for anything else, although it

tries hard to carry out its other

| missions. “The ceremonial work is a headache,” Lt. Col. C. A.

Weaver, the regiment's executive officer, says. “It hasn't kept us from training troops for combat, but as it is that training certainly takes longer.” Ceremonial stuff, of course, fail to render proper military courtesies might cause hard feelings and make the work of our diplomats much tougher. For many distinguished foreign visitors, the-O1d Guard is the only part of our Armed Forces they get to see. And every sailor. soldier, or airman buried at Arlington—and this includes veterans-——is en-

Spit 'n polish parades are no small part of routine assignments for the brawny armedforce units stationed in Washington. Jim Lucas, ‘who well knows how the other side lives in a war, reviews this nicer but boring aspect of military life in the fourth of a series on manpower wastage.

titled by law to a military funeral. Nevertheless, as Col. Weaver says, it's a headache. In wartime, it might be a job for others than our best men. As a minimum requirement, men on ceremonial detail must be at least 5 feet 9 and present a “good physical appearance.” The Old Guard is composed of three rifle companies and a heavy weapons company at Ft. Meyer and three rifle companies at Ft. McNair. In addition, it has a special detail of 10 -men to guard the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier,

” ” ” HERE are some of the ceremonial assignments it has drawn recently: Security and honor guard for President Truman's State of the Union Message. A wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, An honor guard for the chief of the Argentine navy. Ditto for the head of the Dutch air force, the head of Bolivia's armed forces and the chief of staff of the Cuban army. A ceremony Memorial. A Washington Birthday pa-rade-in Alexandria, Va. It averages seven Arlington funerals a day. A formal military reception at Washington's MATS (Military Air Transport. Service) terminal takes a minimum of

at t he Lincoln

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PAGE 28 |

rack Troops

we ;

\ : ’ y WDA. i SEVEN A DAY—A typical funeral procession at Arlington demands turnout of a 3d Infanty detail. The regiment, one of the best in the Army, is stationed in Washington largely for just s ceremonies.

300 men. It also takes at least half a day away from training. It requires two companies of 70 men each — the best the United States Army can produce, In addition, a saluting battery of 20 men. Then at least 50 men are detailed to rope off the area--keep the outsiders out and let the insiders in. Finally, at least 20 men are required for traffic guards and bus drivers.

The calls which the Old Guard must answer range from the sublime to the ridiculous. It provided an honor guard for the funeral of the late Lt. Gen. Walton Walker, killed in Korea. But while 1 was talking te Col. Weaver, at the next desk a major was arranging for a detail to attend a ceremony at which the head of a motor pool presented safe-driving awards. With a war going on. the Old Guard has one creditable

How We Jailed the Badman . . . No. 3—

« reached.

| Lucky, however.

assignment -- to train troops for combat. Col. Weaver and his chief, Col. William W. Jenna, take {it seriously. They've already sent 500 men to Korea and are currently trying to train 500 recruits. But as Col. Weaver says, it takes longer. He says 25 per cent of the regiment's time is taken up by public ceremonies.

If it weren't for ceremonial work, the Old Guard probably wouldn't be stationed at Ft. Meyer and Ft. McNair, It has few training facilities in the crowded Washington area. It must train some of its men at Ft. Belvoir, Va., and others at Ft. Meade, Md, It requires each man to spend a week at the A. P. Hill Military Reservation — where he is supposed to learn to rough it — but that's 70 miles away in Virginia. It uses up a lot of man hours ing to and from the field by bus,

THE ARMY isn't alone in these cermonial activities. At the Marine Barracks, there are 250 men on such detail. They average three funerals a week. Like the members of the Old Guard they are the Corps’ best physical specimens. Re~ cently 150 were sent to Korea, but they were replaced by men of the same caliber. . The Marines hold a publie parade twice a week on the barracks parade grounds. Its: a stirring sight and Washingtonians who drop in enjoy it. But it hardly helps the war effort.

In addition, the Marines have a drill team and ‘a drum and bugle corps. The drum and bugle corps recently was sent to New York to appear on a television show. : The Air Force at Bolling Field and the Navy at Anacostia also maintain ceremonial units, Each has approximately 100 men so assigned.

Luciano May Still Be Boss Of Rackets

Deported Gangster Could Still

Have Finger in Crime Circles

Now that the Kefauver Committee has torn the masks oft

America's top criminals, what do we do now?

How can we

imprison the vicious racketeers who prey on moral society? In this timely series, Times Special Writer Richard Kleiner shows how the government used three different techniques to jail the three worst gangsters of the past—Al Capone, Lepke Buchalter

and Lucky Luciano.

This is the last of three articles.

By RICHARD KLEINER

Times Special Writer

LUCKY LUCIANO, now living in transplanted luxury in

Italy, may still be a potent figure in U. S. crime. Nobody seems to know. there always was a lot about Lucky that nobody

he may not. entire career Knew.

And then again That's in keeping with his

Nobody ever knew how far his control of crime and politics

Nobody knew how many peopie he killed or ordered killed. And nobody really knows —or will tell —how he got a.pardon and got out of jail. There are some facts about It is a fact

| that he parlayed brutality and

Some Timely Tips For City Slickers

boys who love to work and don't mind being killed once in awhile and a few other things. | “Rodeos also have to have good trick riders, home-grown calf-ropers which can be picked up in every town on the tour, including the big ones, a few hands who can handle a guitar as well as a horse—and a good master of ceremonies.” Bob McKinley does the M. C. job in his show. He still rides, and if it pleases the crowd, he'll hit the dust. During a show last year, he was. leading the .grand-entry when a “wild bull” either took things in hoof or, let’s face it, maybe was poked, came out and charged his horse. Off went Bob,

| |

> dD “THE CROWD liked it,” Bob said. “I took quite a few falls before we closed the season. Sometimes I hurt. But just physically, not financially.” Bob said. that bronc busting and steer riding are dangerous. A lot of the boys really get bruised. but the cow pokes learn how to take a fall. Next time you are dumped from the saddle, just relax and you'll have a better chance. No matter how well-planned a show is, though, there can be embarrassments. Bob tells this one:

|

| tenement.

Np

| During the | period, he fought his way up to

| about 1000 girls with names like “Jennie the Factory” into a $12

million a year prostitution and white slavery business. And it was that aspect of his varied career that finally jailed him. Luciano, born Salvatore Lu-

{ ecania, came to the U. 8. in 1910,

when he was 9 years old. He once described his birthplace, Lercara Friddi, in Sicily, as the

{ “deadest dump in the world.”

Lucky grew up in a New York When he was 14, he was still in the fifth grade and

| that's as far as he went. He

quit with a record of poor work and ‘“‘chroni¢ truancy.” J ~ n = HIS FIRST PRISON TERM came when he was 15, a sentence for a narcotics .violation.

)

| Altogether, he has had 25 ar-

lifetime, so far. wild prohibition

rests in his

the top in the gangster trade. His nickname came from his ability to keep breathing, when

| others desired him to stop. No-

body knows (there it is again) how many attempts were made

| to get him. One, in 1929, came

LUCIANO IN EXILE— "Italy's dead—nice, but dead.”

Lucky bullied his way into

-the brothel business, took over

and made it his own private baby. He is estimated to have controlled 200 houses with 1000 prostitutes. One of his career

LUCIANO IN TROUBLE—When the racket-busters arrested Luciano in 1936, the man nobody really knows hid from cameras.

BUT THAT WASN'T his only source of revenue; he was the biggest dope distributor in ‘the nation, ran the numbers racket and had other investments. He was also a power in New York's lower East Side politics and the American branch of the Italian terrorist group, Mafia, Some say that today he is the boss of Mafia. Lucky and Lepke Buchalter, the head of Murder, Inc. had a crazy arrangement. They traded killers, like other fellows trade stamps. When Lucky decided that Dutch Schultz was getting too ambitious, his good friend Lepke loaned Lucky a few gunmen to de-ambition him, An idea of Lucky's engaging personality can be had from the report of a probation officer, late in the gangster's career, It reads, in part:

“HIS SOCIAL OUTLOOK is essentially childish, in that it is dominated by recklessness and a craving for action. His only asset as a leader consists of his apparent calmness at times of stress ... as a consequence, he is accorded a degree of underworld respect. “His freedom from conscience springs from his admitted philosophy: ‘I never was a crumb, and if IT have to be a crumb I'd rather be dead.”

A crumb, in Lucky's definition, was “a guy who works and saves and lays his money aside.”

Racket-busting "Foam Dewey, appointed by Gov. Lehman in 1935, put an end to Lucky's career in the U. §, Some of the disgruntled girls on his staff gave Dewey enough evidence to convict Lucky of compulsory

Others were caught on some minor matter—like Al Capone for income tax violation and Lepke Buchalter for anti-trust violations. . > »

DESPITE his stiff sentence, Lucky only stayed behind bars for nine and a half years. In

1946, Dewey, then governor of New York, released him for deportation to Italy. Dewey said that Lucky, while in jail, had been a big help to U. 8. intelligence services during the war. The governor said he didn't know exactly what those serve ices had been. Lucky's pals boasted that their ex-boss had made the invasion of Sicily possible. Nobody knows for sure, or will say, Whatever the reason. the jail cell was unlocked and Lucky left on a permanent foreign vacation. A year later, although he'd been supposed to be in Italy, he and a retinue of 14 were spotted in Havana. They were living in a fancy suburb and frequenting race tracks and swank gambling casinos. Cuba was too close to the U. 8. for comfort, so the U, 8. had Cuba deport him back to Italy again, » LJ s BACK IN HIS native land, he told a reporter “Italy's dead— nice, but dead. I like movement. Business opportunities here are no good. All small-time stuff.” Which may be true, but Lucky livened things up in Italy. The Italian police estimate he spends $50,000 a yéar. For a while he lived in Rome's handsomest penthouse. His only visible means of support was a small bakery he owned. The police were sure it couldn't keep him in the style to which he was accustomed, Something was keeping him in style, however, The Kefauver Committee thinks he's the arbitrator when U, 8S, gangs have a difference of opinion. They wouldn't be surprised if he runs Mafia. Others think he's the

this Mr. McKinley turned to rodeo when horse =ell- s * a close. They found Lucky on girls said she took in an avering quit showing a profit and has appeared with A : y Von Staten Island, his throat, chest age of $260 a week. Out of that, “His ideals of life resolved prostitution. He was sentenced overlord of international crime. his show all over the country, giving this, our o RODEO advertised a particularly mean | ynq shoulders slashed, his Lucky let her keep $13. themselves into money to spend, to 30 to 50 years in prison. They think those things—but “se home town, a plug the while. ranma Steer which no ranch hand ever had mouth taped and his body Of course, there was quite an beautiful women to-enjoy, silk Lucky was the first big-time nobody really knows, SS SS Tidden: vo mali did 9). season. Just as 4he yept | bound with wire, He never said overhead rent, light, heat, underclothes and places to go racketeer to be jailed on a big- pi ’ / e LOO rudely | : End of fos. Al “RAIN, days running. can ruin you when you discarded all commers, hopped a fence and gave who: did. it, byities and bullies, in style. § ima racketeering. charge (Fad of 4 setion;) ry- work out doors,” Mr. McKinley said, “although birth to a calf. > > . you must have good promotion, horses that will “Thank goodness that didn't happen to my | S § | i A $ To | T rink buck, or can be tricked into it, Brahma steers show,” the man said. ome- rown atura u er oun uccess u n u omo i e ires bd) ds f guayule are centered at Selinas, jable to produce it only on a small will enable use to get by if we are olor- % ® ® ¥ But House Group Has Doubts Cal, under the department's Bu- Scale.” in a bitter emergency,” he said. Operation Housing Despite Reports on Guayule Progress reau of Agriculture and Industrial Mr. Speh added that the Prosi He cited testimony showing that By THOMAS S. HANEY ; compares ‘very favorably w pular ; WASHINGTON, Apr. 12 (CDN)—Guayule has been tested re- Chemistry, ; hevea rubber (a top grade of tree- Sespise the Vnpravements guayula ! “Operation Housing” has been Operation Housing, Army Finance Center cently in automobile tires. Results were good. Government scientists. C: ¥- Speh, its assistant chief, grown natural from the the Far 1s not yet technically to a point started by the officers of the Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind. lare ready now to try the home-grown variety of natural rubber in told the subcommittee the bureau East).” that synthetic rubber is, “W& want “0 Army Finance Center at Ft. Har- There is a (permanent) (temporary) home for (family) {large-size truck tires. took ‘a long forward stride re-! Another subcommittee witness some showing here that guayule rison. Yves ve...persons (group-women) (group-men) at This was disclosed in testimony given a House appropriations cently when its technical men hit strongly in favor of the program will do something that synthetic Public co-operation in listing a subcommittee. But despite the optimistic reports, members of the on a process for turning out gua- was J. D, 8mall of the Munitions won't do,” he said. Rep. Clarené# all available temporary and hous- Address BreBssInts nnn nsnnnrrennanesne sane iornup indicated that they still, —— a re ~~ yule with very little resin in it. Board. Cannon (D. Mo.) took an ing facilities is being recruited for This is (apartment) (house) (room) (share home). I prefer have some doubts about the worth research on the ground the rubber! The result has been “a uni-! “I have talked to five big rub- mer view. Some a ved... the rapidly growing military (Military) (Permanent Civilian). of the guayule program. bearing ‘shrubs will be important formly high grade” of rubber ber companies, and I am going on government money and 10° years® t colony. + Nam | <The Department of Agriculture strategically should World War which, he said, “has been tested their advice that thia is.a good {i have gone into guayule up te Local residents. are urged to fill B. Ltrtissamensavereannanssenensiornisinnennroees trrtreteeect lagked Congress for $50,000,000 for IIT break out. : on’ automobile tires on a ‘very chance that we can develop here . charged. a > ————h out and mall in the above SOP. AGAIESS «..y«ohesnivitivssraeenvsiabvares Phone.......evvvy use on guayule development and | Today's small-scale efforts with small scale because we have been at home a source of crude which copyright, 1951, for The Indianepolis Times ® / > : : id ‘ . ' : ¢ oF 4 . ~ « ! A Lh i 2 = 2 ’ 0 hia SL