Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1951 — Page 17
3h. x
3, 1051 |
derness and of adminis homes made i wooden
' say : project
!
RE
Outside Indianapolis
. By Ed Sovola
acter.
LONDON, Eng., June 13—You probably never
heard of Wood St. 1t doesn't atter, reall Nothing stands in the way of buildings on either
From a sightseer's point of view, there isn’ much to see on Wood St. All the visitor a is am open area. Better to see Buckingham Palace, St. James Palace, House of Commons, West. minster Abbey, the Scotland Yard building; Downing 8t., House or Lords, Big Ben, Take them, visitor, I'll spend an hour on Wood St. It's in the heart of the textile district, business district of the City of London. Jerry did a thorough job here. He flattened the area. He exposed the earth to the sun and the wind and the rain. Little yellow flowers grow wherever they can take When you close your eyes halfway, the bleak Basemauty sna Shattered stone ar and you ar pattern of y ne Pp yellow. It could be a * +
CERTAIN SECTIONS are passable. Men and women walk through as they go about their business, Off in the distance on what could have been a courtyard sit two young women, sunning themselves. They occupy a huge stone that was torn RE an : vers and motorists and cyclists look straight ahead on Wood St. Pedestrians turn slightly aside as they pass you on the narrow sidewalk t a second glance. They don’t know the name of the little yellow flower that grows so profusely. And they look surprised that you should ask. One man had to look across the emptiness to make sure there were flowers, You could tell he was accustomed to seeing buildings and then, when they were gone, he became accustomed to that. It strikes you as strange that any living thing would grow where death, violence and fire took place. How could a dainty yellow flower dare raise. its head and bloom? Where did the seed come from? How did they become as thick as the grass in fields? ’ ® * %
A MAN STANDS and gazes and thinks of more familiar areas back home where people work and live. They're not unlike what lie beyond Wood St. Every big town has its commercial section. Would yellow flowers grow if they were destroyed? Then you think of the wags who speak lightly of war. On the low wall with your fingernail you try to make a mark for each time vou heard someone say that we might have been 2 bit more productive and patriotic in World War II if a few bombe had fallen on New York, Chicago, fan Prancisco. It's too disgusting to keep counting.
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
PARIS, June 13—1I flew to Paris for a weekend to cover the Rita Hayworth-Aly Khan divorce negotiations—and found that the Aga Khan and his handsome son were hoping Rita would agree to a reconciliation. The fantastically wealthy Aga is pulling the strings to save the marriage—and a $3 million settlement—and as for the Aly, he was out dancing again with blond and radiant Fontaine. “They can link me with 500 women, but I still love only my wife,” Aly told me, bending across a table between sips of champagne at the Club Florence on Montmartre. . “Then the marraige isn’t over?” IT asked. “You know it isn’t as far as I'm eoncerned,” the prince said gravely, then returned to Joan's table. *. 2 * JOAN, with whom I had a little dance, the better to interview her, my dear, insisted there is no romance between them. The fact that she was dancing a samba and I don’t know the samba handicapped us, but she said, “There is nothing to these stories. It just happens that we go to the same parties.” But she was his date, having flown back from London Friday. “As far as breaking them up, everybody knows I was -in South America when that happened,” Joan said. “Is he a mice guy?” I asked. “Everybody thinks so,” she sald evasively. * © FOR YEARS T've felt that editors eventually would assign reporters to hop over to Paris to cover a story. So I was in a willing mood when my editor said, “Can you go {6 Paris?” “We had the first story on Rita's bustup and you ought to follow it through to the finish,” he said. I phoned Pan American and in 15 minutes they had booked me on a Boeing Stratocruiser. “How long will it take you to get ready?” I asked the beautiful wife. “An hour,” she said, throw dresses into a bag.
instantly starting to
Americana Bi Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, June 13—Robert Vogeler is sprung from the hospital, is reasonably hale, considering his experiences, and most of all he is here instead of Hungary. This summary I believe may be credited more to his spouse than to the State Department, the press, or anything else that pried him’ loose from the Communist jail. Lucille Vogeler is what Mr. Hemingway calls much woman. She is not what is known as a progréssive woman. She is European, a Belgian, to be exact, and she does not wish to wear pants, runsfor Congress, or seek surcease from trouble on a psychiatrist's couch. Lucille, whom I believe to he a" friend of mine, could be called an old-fashioned woman. Her busines revolves around the menfolks. She can weigh flattery to the last gram, and is awful good at inflating the male ego. She has a brain as hard and sharp as a knife-edge, but she does not inflict it on the male animal as a piece of general competition. In so. far as springing her husband was concerned, I am sure that Lucille Vogeler would have murdered anyone who got in her way, and I am also sure that she would not have lost any sleep over it. Hers is a type of family loyalty that is deeply ingrained in the European—a loyalty to the head of the house, a symbol of security. ob ob
LUCILLE IS pretty enough to make the movies, and she has a sense of humor to go with the beauty and the brains, and she likes to laugh and play and take a little drink and eat and dance. ~ But I am certain she would have employed the ancient art of blackmail to put In action the forces that got her old man out of the jailhouse. She is a real determined gal, even, as her kids say, if she is only a Belgian. This lady's approach to the respect of her two is a good index to her general charThe lads had been accustomed to patronize Lucille as a “foreigner” who wasn't apt to know about things like baseball. : Just to prove that she knew about the important things of America, she waited for the
Sp
w= Jerry Pulled d Fast One on Wood St.
On whom would you have those bombs fall? Certainly not your property or on your skull, How useful is a burned building or warehouse? Aren't the dead in a war nothing more than a nuisance? Only the living are counted in the potential, . For a moment I had to laugh at my own seriousness. ‘The day was warm and it occurred to me that something cold would be desirable. An item in a morning newspaper came to mind. It had to do with a new idea that was being introduced in England. America was given due crdit for the invention of the snowball, a novelty in the sweets line. It was explained that “a machifie shaves the ice to a fluffy texture, which is then saturafled with syrup. In effect, the customer has a colouted snowball,” > *
THE THOUGHT was ridiculous, to be sure, It was as ridiculous as war among civilized nations. It was as ridiculous as the puny little flowers of Wood St. You could say, if it hadn't been for the war the flowers wouldn't be growing there. Owners of the property take small comfort from those flowers, An idealist might. In the flowers he sees growth and beauty. Man had nothing to do with the planting or cultivation. He only had a hand in exposing the earth and had to destroy what other men built to do it. Without man’s aid the flowers grew in every precarious crevice and opening. At a distance or from & great height, an observer might think he was looking at a garden. They grow on the walls
of the buildings at ground level. On the, floors of |
the debris-covered basements, grass and weeds have taken root.
Still you don’t move. You're fascinated by this |
power tHat's called nature. What sort of a world would this be if man, with his capacity for reasoning, decided to only grow and build and never destroy wantonly? Is it within his scope to hold the forces of hatred in check? ¢ > * THE IMAGINATION runs rampant even in
the bright sunlight on Wood St. The force that | was required to level stone, steel is beyond com-<|
prehension. Your bare fingers dig into the stone wall and nothing comes loose except the dust. How then was all this destroved, you ask yourself. and become angry at your sudden stupidity, But that's the way it is when you try to figure war and peaceful ruins. You have to see it to believe it. There isn't a Britisher living who can tell you the real horror of being bombed. I asked several. They all failed. All they know is they dou't want to go through it again. A housewife attempted to explain how it faels to hear a V-1 bomb overhead. She compared ‘he sound to a motorcycle. She couldn't give you the terror, the fear, the uncertainty that accompanied the sound. I don’t care to find out, either.
Aly Pines for Rita While Dating Blond
IT TOOK a tortuous hour to get our passports renewed before we climbed aboard at Idlewild. The one stop at Boston was so smooth I didn't even spill my Martini. Bartley Crum, Rita's attorney, had left on the same airline the night before and had left some papers behind. Pan American asked whether I would carry them to him. Would I? Why here might be the entire Aly Khan-Rita story right in my lap. I was momentarily tempted to peek inside, but the wife wouldn't let me, that it was only some neckties anyway. After a good sleep over the Atlantic we came down at Orley Airport to be greeted by Lenore Lemmon, the New York playgal and actress who had come over from London for a few days® At the Hotel George V, which is an American hangout, I ran into Paul Douglas and Abel Green in the bar. Where else? “> od de
EVENTUALLY I was reminded I had come here to get a story and made dates with a friend of the Aga who revealed the reconciliation hopes. Attorney Crum, however, would only say that the preliminary conference went along favorably. “Both Aly and Rita are desirous of giving adequate security and protection to the daughter, but beyond that I can’t comment,” he said. Columbia Pictures, Rita’s employer, looks with favor on a reconciliation, it was learned. A princess might be a bigger boxoffice attraction than just plain Rita. > + »
A DIVORCE, if it comes, will be very involved. Because of international law, Aly might have to obtain a French decree. The $3,000,000 trust is not simple, ‘either, because the Aga is merely custodian of his wealth, at least theoretically, and isn’t entitled to give it to somebody else. However, something akin to this was done in the case of Aly's other two children. Regardless, Rita must soon make a decision. Whatever happens, the headlines should make her the biggest boxoffice attraction in the world.
Lucille Vogeler Has Keen Business Eye
Fourth of July and had a massive array of fireworks constructed for her personally. Comes the Fourth and she hauls the kids up on a hill outside Vienna and gave vent to what even the cynical tots admitted was a glorious Fourth. As of now they have just about decided that Ma ain't so much a foreigner as she used to be, oP IT IS QUITE a family, the Vogeler gang. The old man met Lucille on a skiing expedition in Switzerland. He didn’t ski, himself, but he knew a good thing when he saw it, and he proposed about an hour after he met her. She wasn't interested. She already had a feller, and she was spending most of her time on the slopes with the staves on her feet. As a non-skier Mr. Vogeler was at a disadvantage. So he hired an instructor, kept him up all night, and by morning was a pretty fair Schuss man. Lucille found herself engaged along about lunchtime, because Bob Vogeler is a real firm fellow. He has a nice sense of phrase, too. When they let him loose he carried his own bags across the line, and when he was greeted he looked up at the sunny skies and remarked simply: “My, what a nice day to get out of jail.” oa THE BIGGEST KICK I have had in many a year occurred the other night when we had the pleasure of squiring Lucille around the town. It could have been the first real evening of uncomplicated fun she had enjoyed since they shut up her husband in. Hungary. We wound up somewhere around 4 o'clock with three Hawaiians, and even that late she was like a kid with a new red sled. Yet this is the same dame who coldly and eannilly withstood all offers and demands for her
husband's memoirs in order to wait for com-
petent management so as to exact the maximum in money. Her basic thrift has decided that so long as Pa had to suffer, he will be compensated financially, at least, for the time he put in. I do not suppose that Mrs, Ruark and Mr. Vogeler will agree to the deal, but if they with I would propose to Mrs. V, tomorrow. And even in that case’ I would expect no success, because there must be a few thousand ardent swains ahead of me.
/ /
Legion Commander
Recovers From Ailment ' LOS ANGELES, June 13 (UP) «National Commander Erle
other missing
in action,
'2 More Gls Win Medals of Honor
WASHINGTON, June 13 (UP)
yellow |
It turned out later |
Hort When Truck ‘Nudges Car
A truck nudged a car into a Anna Stanich, 702 Haugh St. locomotive yesterday and slightlv|$25,000; Mike Matich, 702 Ket-|
Pfc. Luther H. Story, 20, Amer~—Two more young heroes of the icus, Ga., now listed as missing Korean War, one dead and the|in action, has been selected for were the award for single-handedly
Cocke Jr., of the American Legioninamed by the Army today to bel|killing or wounding more than
recuperated today from a gastro: intestinal attack suffered while
awarded the Medal of Honor. They were the 13th and 14th
100 enemy.
addressing an American Legion Army men in Korea selected for|Bail Out in Jet Crash
luncheon club. Mr. Cocke was stricken yester-
- A Medal of
coming - day.’ ’
ia . y
“more
the nation’s highest decoration.
Honor will be (Up) —
immediately,
4
= °
; near here. The fliers, who were inevitable each hand grenade with Ik body to|injured and hospitalized, were not save the lives of his comrades. identified
| costs,
oo.
he Indianapo
Hoosier on a Safari—
Shoots Lion Bet
{ | |
| ON THE tour lion baits We found
AFRICAN SAFARI (Part Four)
MORNING of Sept. 26 we got up to check
again that nothing had been at the baits and
‘were about to return to camp for breakfast when we saw
4 '
a boy on top
{they started
{They went about 500 or 600 yards
{and holed up in {grass
Mr. Williams
was.
ourselves into a position on foo {10 yards from the lion, face to {face but not able to see it.
i ” - » | AFTER STANDING there for {five minutes, the lion moved his/the
vultures in the treetops beside a little open plain. ‘of the truck and he said there were thre /male lions around a kill. : When the lions sighted us
surrounding an ant- hiil.
We put
The Times today publishes the fourth excerpt from “Afri. can Safari,” the story of a biggame hunting trip through East Africa. It was made las’ fall by Gene L. Williams, 29 year-old vice president of Gas eteria, Inc.).
to move out.
a clump of high
There was only one shootable male, and after they reached the elephant.
grass we could jo uu and I looked him over not see him With gy th, the glasses and I asked Bill the naked eye. whether he thought it was a By using field trophy elephant. He estimated glasses and ciT- the tusk weight to he 70 pounds cling the clumpeach and said he ‘elt we could of gras for 45 probably do a little better. minutes we man- "ae aged to figure GETTING AN elephant with : out “where the 70-pound tusk is always a gamble
good specimen of course. I knew that Jenvy was: Jenvy and I then worked CAITYIng an elephant license for.
t/ Tanganyika, so I told him to {shoot the elephant and I would take pictures as we made the Istalk As we came within 50 vards of elephant, {it sighted us,
{head slightly and I managed to stopped behind a tree for a sec-
{make out two eyes looking square- ond, then came out on a full lly at me. I shot the lion between charge. Jenvy dropped him about the eves with the .470 rifle.
One shot in
course, completely poleaxed the collapsed in his tracks. |lion. The other two ions ran off]
{at the sound of
[10st sight of them. This bad been the finest scenes of the entire a rather touchy proposition be-|trip. I will say it is a magnificent lcause of the high grass. If I had Sight to see an elephant start a missed or only crippled the lion charge
we would have laps in one fast
large animal with an average It takes excellent marksmanship| mane for a trophy lion. About 4 p. m. we went out such circumstances. again in the shooting car to look] {for some buffalo that might be out early and cut across the coming to water at sundown. Weitracks of a herd of buffalo that
30 yards away with a beautiful
the brain, of frontal brain shot. The elephant
i
The movies I got of this stalk | the shot and we and the shooting are undoubtedly
from close range. The had him in our brain of an elephant on a front jump. He was a shot is about 5 inches in diameter.| {and a cool head to drop one in
The following morning we went
large anthill we saw a large bul’ -
y EN
WE SOON sighted them and, double-barrel at a portion of his after stalking them four miles, head that was sticking out of the we got to within 100 yards dead bush. This shot missed, and at astern of the herd. 1 was using the sound of the shot he started |a .375 Magnum loaded with solid!to charge. He came out 25 yards bullets and my first shot struck! straight at us, then veered off the largest bull about 10 inches again to the left, He was trying
behind the hecit. That didn't to make a clump of bush 100
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1051
SR
ween
\ 3 i
a
seem to faze him; as the herd yards away.
bolted off he started after the other buffalo.
into a clump
of grass. We ap-
proached that clump and saw
had gone only a half-mile from'had left the river and was going
camp when, as we rounded a back into heavy timber.
A record sum
A
Bailey. The ‘proposed than $2 million
period
of the school
Mr. Bailey said in new ex
levy of last year. Another
tion.
Record $8 Milion Asked to Operate cums me seme Schools for "51
million will be needed to operate] Indianapolis Public Schools for
School Board adopt an emefgency | budget of $8,930,083 was 'sub-
mitted to the board last night by the business director, Maxwell 4 Fin Mrs. Conner did not know.
|year, becbmes a part of the regu-| lar budget adopted in August. |
Less Than 10 Per Cent
Although the new budget shows a dollar increase of $2.255862, fly-ash emittéd by National Mal-
nditures is less than/N. Holmes Ave,
$400,000 will roniiine satetéria fd, Joumer said his office had received comy an independent s -iplaint = About $47.000 of the in- Plaints about the plant for several lcrease was accounted for through the elementary school expansion land lunch room programs. Earlier yesterday the met in special session to receive {bids on the construction {Manual High School.
Fortune Teller Palms $290, Too
The fortune-teller who warned
{in trouble” was right.
| After the stranger left, Mrs. Margaret Conner missed $200 from a drawer in her home at {2002 8S. New Jersey St. She of more than $8 aid the money was the family's entire savings, and part of it was
{to have been used for a tonsil the remaining dining 1991 loperation for her son. recommna on ha | The stranger, a well-dressed
young woman, had come to Mrs. Conner’s home inquiring about a
ipalm and palm the $290. budget is more, higher than the!
$6,647,221 adopted for the same last year. was attributed to rising admin- | istration expenses, construction » . salaries and new ems Quite A a ot added to the budget expenditures. | J iN Added were the special building | fund and cafeteria operation.
» The emergency budget, aortea aot S Firm annually for the last six months]
The
system's fiscal
area.
|
that he was a
control.
New Albany.
Rep. William G. Bray, Martins- stein II, who hit the roof, claim- but he
. Bot seem West Siders File {ville Republican, 7th District Con- ing they had Johnny tied to a'and only lived to be 93.” . f But’ i
Denton,
Evansville { 8th, took the-floor to argue for gotiations began which resulted the. Vincennes
very sick animal.
nite in Vincennes Flood Control Plea
By DAN KIDNEY Times Staff Writer
|gressman, and Rep. Winfield K. run-of-the-play Spli Democrat. they didn’t, and cross-country ne- SPH
amendment.
They pointed out that the pres-
ent system of
A big"West Side steel firm vas floods, is “poor economy.” sued today for $80,000 damages|devastasing 1950 flood was cited {by seven property owners in the as a case in point. The fact that Gov. Henry F. her Five ‘suits charged smoke and Schricker and the Indiana Water trip. Resources Commission dropped
spending $50,000 a
{year for sandbagging and about| {half a million every few years to
{save the city from Wabash River/® Sharp™con-, The trast to the wel
the actual rise leable and Steel Castings Co., 546 ll projects to support the Vin-
is injurious to|
cennes
appropriation also was
{health and causes property logs. (cited. The $300,000 is half what
{10 per cent of last year’s figure. | The building fund alone totals $1,228,137. This money will come to force the plant to abate the from the special
The suits also seek court orders)
20 cents tax “nuisance.”
John G. Mingle, superintendent COme of the City Air Polution Board
Cites Co-operation
“We've had several violations board on them But they have never been taken into court because of a new they have been very co-operative The pro-in trying to work out the prob-
|posals were referred to a building lem.” he said. |
committee for analysis. liminary study indicated the low-/intendent, said company officials
jest combination [$3.5 million.
{for the project.
A public hearing on the emer- the issue,” Mr. Flagle said. “But |gency budget proposal {held by the board June 26.
injured George Church St. Mr. Sapp had
home,
Local Delegates Named For Hi-Y Congress
Eight delegates will represent Indianapolis at the sixth annual] National Hi-Y Congress at Cleve‘land, June 21-24,
Donald Haymaker and Richard Speaking for the GOP will be SUMBERLAND. R. I, June 13|Allen, east district branch; Cor- Sen. John W. Van Ness, Valpapilots parachuted nelius White, Senate Ave. branch; raisd, and Rep. Glenn Slenker BE er Nitkin Talis aches arn Cow tia [Zalely today when thely Jet Pane Neu] Puhr south dant bran tc that war with Russia wes be- Ky., who smothered an enemy | od and Samed oo unesBarbara Bunewils, Luann Myeh
The board has earmarked a $3 million bond issue cinder collection system.
at the _Pennsiyvania Railroad Nick Dimitroff, 708 Ketcham St. | crossing at Kentucky Ave. and |and Cilia Dimitroff, 712 Ketcham
Reisner St. Police said a trailer St. $15,000, truck driven by Melvin Westfield of Albion, Ill, pushed the car into the side of the freight locomotive which was backing up: A General Hospital ambulance {doctor treated Mr. Sapp for head and back injuries and took him Political fur should fly at the an-in m, t
A pre-; William Flagle, plant super-
bid was about will meet tomorrow to decide on the instailation of a fly-ash and
“We're not trying to sidestep
will. be when we have to spend $100,000, (we want to get something that {meets requirements.” Plaintiffs and the amounts, |sought in the suits are Fane Vase-!
Into Train |iofr, 701 Ketcham St. $15,000;
1129/cham St., $15,000; Nick Vaseloff, 1702 Ketcham St, $10,000, and] stopped his car George Deloff, 705 Ketcham 8t.;
E. Sapp,
1 tow Sehool Alum Set Banquet Saturday.
Times State Service | BLOOMINGTON, June 13
(nual reunion banquet of the Indi-| ana University Law School alumni at 6 p. m, Saturday here. | | Principal speakers include the {four men who led their respective parties in the two houses of the 1951 Indiana legislature. Upholding the minority Democratic delegation will be Sen. Leo
} |
Other speakers will include Gov. |
the Army enginzers recommended With
the Congressmen stressed. Vin-
cennes has been on the approved musicians list since 1946, but ruled out by Strummed tropian economy cut '|failed of budget approval
\year because it was listed as a divorce, wants t {the breakup of her marriage,
“new project.”
last year and this
Job's Daughters To Install June 23
Marilyn Burton will be installed they do not understand the source issued him in January are too
as honored queen of. Bethel
International
Ww Miss Burton
lain,
Joan Eberhart is the retiring
queen.
4, Order of D a u ghters, at 7:30 p. m. June 23, in Prospect . Masonic Temple, |
ficers are Naney | Johnson, senior) princess; Bar-| vara Lockhart, | princess;
see, guide; Sara Johnson, marshall; Phyllis Copeland, chap-
Former City Woman To Be Buried in Illinois
Times Special
ORLANDO,
Services for Mrs. Lola Cunning-| ham, formerly of 3202 Baltimore! “=| Ave, Indianapolis, will omorrow in Irving, Ill
Fla, June 13
be at 2
Young
|14-year-old actor, the youth has more than 75,000 ia top role in “Boots Malone" with | WASHINGTON, June 13—Both a salary $750 a week during film{Republican and Democrat Con- ing, and a possible icng-term congressmen from Indiana united in tract starting at $500 a week. the House today in an effort to get $300,000 for Vincennes flood ing the role of the King's No. 1 son in the Broadway hit, “The The only flood control item for King and 1” when he caught the She stayed to read Mrs. Conner’'s the state in the Army civil func-/eye of a Columbia talent scout. tions bill, now up for passage, is 1$575,000 to complete the levee at weeks’ notice to producers Rich-|I wanted to very much. lard Rodgers and Oscar Hammer- father was a very heavy drink
{in Johnny “going West.”
Different Now Mrs.
lcome she re. |ceived there on honeymoon
Then, 10,000 Hawallans {greeted the Ga{bles at the pier
a huge band. Now, four
{cal melodies for '50 people.
Skirting the Issue Clarence B. Randall,
{dent of Inland Steel Co.
contract.
no % = ah sd A Eh
During the procession I put | the other .470 bullet through his I couldn't shoot again for fear lungs. Jenvy hit him with two of crippling another animal. But) 465 slugs and I brought him after running 200 yards he veered! down for keeps with the .375 just | off to the side. We saw him go|as he entered the brush. I never saw an animal take the {punishment that this one did be[tore he gave up Buffalo seem When I was about 75 yardsito be completely immune to the laway I took a shot with my .470!shock of heavy bullets.
State Lawmakers 22> Peer a 5 Broadway Star
Hits’ Movie Jackpot |
Because Hollywood won over York, was honored at a tes ‘Broadway in a tug-of-war for a /monial buffet dinner for treatir
Johnny Stewart was play-
Johnny immediately gave two
Clark Gable found her arrival at Honolulu yesterday
Mrs. Gable | Mrs. Gable, seeking a MAtthew Lasseter after he ob
o rest and forget
will invariably attempt to 1 the hunter. He will run for a distance, then start to circle. 1 ue hunter {s foolish enough to mova ahead and not cover his flanks, he will soon be animal from the rear. ;
g
Since they weigh abou pounds and have a horn of 35 to 50 inches, they are
53 years of service. Tos ny Dr. Edmund Brewer Mon! mery, 93, Quincy, IIL, attr his long life to the fact he a delicate child and was not
2 ad Hgaelf, Dr. Montgomery “I was careful of 6 didn’t drink or aLISlene
a tobacco heart at
British film Medina charged Green with cruelty today in divorce suit filed in -Hol Superior Court. The two married in 1941.
three days with her husband, a British Army officer, in the ruins of Seoul, only 30 miles bel the Korean front. : Because it “might cause troubls for others,” pretty Mrs. Benita Lasseter wouldn’t tell how she got to Korea from Japan. But she freely admitted meeting Capt,
tained a three-day leave,
‘Pan's Pinch | Mrs. Madeline Huns r, presi- Philadelphia, asked President said [Truman by letter to see that
!in Chicago today that women “are Russell, her airman-son, gets a
of their income.” He
nesses."
Works Overtime
voting us into socialism because new pair of pants because those
claimed tight in June. ' Job's women own the “majority of busi-
Breakup Broadway - actress Irene Wine iston, 29, sought a divorce in
Harry Vance, Columbus, O. Hollywood today from actor-
/|milkman, suffered a broken nose producer John Shelton, chargi ng Other new of and body cuts and bruises when | desertion and no
nsupport. She
he fell down a stairway in his wants $300 monthly temporary
home early yesterday while sleep-
walking.
alimony.
Mr. Vance, 32, said he usually g M Williams to S
averages three sleepwalking ex-
peditions a week, but claimed' Ag ECA Information Aid
most times, “my wife finds me in,
the hallway asking what corner I should put the bottles in.”
Snap Action
[—Edwin Moss Williams, former |vicg president of United Press, was appointed special assistant
One-time musical comedy star today to the Economic Co-opera-
Blanche Ring, 74, divorced roly- tion Administration's Director of {poly character action Charles Information. 3
| Winninger, 66, yesterday because |
'he walked out on her 23 years With its information program. He
ago.
The 39-year marriage ended on Paris.
Mrs. Cunningham, who was 82, Lucky died here Monday. An Indianapo-
Church.
Surviving are five sons, Ben C.,
Jacksonville, Earl,
Fla.; Chester and! Indianapolis; Claude, Hull,
Canada, and Cl The delegates and the YMCA!J. Stemle of Jasper and Rep. 8.ipy, . 5 oy hg Miniriion branches they represent will be: |Hugh Dillin, Petersburg. ! :
mond, Irving,
Mrs. Logan Ham-,
Ill; 16 grandchil-
Truck driver Henry Burkholder,
|
overturned.
dren and 19 great-grandchildren. amounting to $20,000.
‘Piano Recital Tonight
branch, and David Marksbury, kins and Arthur Campbell the at Downey
4 west district branch,
|Governor’s secretary.
{Church at 7:30 p. m. today,
Avenue
¢
|
‘Age Plus Duty
ith Gaze a | Elderly physicians are stealing arrison will present a the spotlight at: American jana Patricia White, north district Schricker, Lt. Gov. John A. Wat- group of pupils ‘n a plan Tecital Medical im he n Christian Atlantic City, N. J. ~ | Dr. Sidney V. Haas, 81,
Mrs. Winninger’s testimony that) her husband -lefther—on New Year's morning, 1928, saying, ' no longer want to live with you. I'm in love with another woman.” |
trol on “dead man's curve” near Darlington, Pa., tore out 18 guard (SION, Korea, June rails, knocked over a utility pole, (Charles M. Mount Jr, disrupted a power system and|lege Park, Ga.
Mr. Burkholder crawled out,|an American regh junhurt, and surveyed damages
vention in)
will make his headquarters in
Mr. Williams served with {United Press to 23 years. He «was instrumental in setting 1 ihe news agency's pris J 4
jretired from UP in 1948.
WITH 7th INF!
The 32d
New
WASHINGTON, June 13 (UP)
Mr. Williams will help the ECA
world radio service in 1935. He
lis resident 27 years, she was a 47, cheated death yesterday older, Regi tal CI ig {member of the Second Moravian his tractor-trailer ran out of con- Is Full Colonel at 35
&
