Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1951 — Page 12

s Doing re for Staffs

. By Harold H. Hartley

IS DOING more and more for its workers. have become whole orks of social

subsidized oate-|

way. Ee

akes them available before they =n M

remember when 1 visited the

list of employee activities on the. 44,0 weight barrows and gilts

camera groups—and there was a . } juke box for dancing at moon. |, gs so ioe a oa t last winter ? : And 1 recall tha load choice No. 1 around 195

A

{lies (allowing four) to a Bomid yn, 4 150 pounds around $18 to again with the Indianapolis BYM-|g2050 to $2250; sows weak to

phony. i to 550 pounds, $17.50 to $19.50; AND THE THINGS Mallory’s| lightweights, $19.50 and sparingly, | does quietly for its people are $19.75; over 600 pounds down to never knéwn, such .as helping $17. .

them fn sickness, and even t0| (attle, 1650; calves, 675; steers ® supplying attorneys when estates ,.4 neifars opening rather slow, consumer's dollar spent for meats tion of their 1800have to be settled after a death ost bids and scattered sales than for any other food. He gets ,,, in the family. hn about steady; couple loads choice 75 cents out of every dollar spent Then there's profit sharing. The 040 weight steers $35; prime |for beef and an average of 67) girls even turn out their office voarlings held upward to $38; cents of every dollar spent on all} lights voluntarily when they B%i0.5) share of steer supply meats. He does almost as well . ; Jat load Shotge ® prime Reifers) Poultry and _ 15 335.25; bulk good and choice cents of every consumer dollar.ijast week. AND EL LILLY & Co ng neifers bid $32 to $34.50; cows|On dairy products, the farmer) probably |opening steady; utility and com-|averages 54 cents.

to the cafeteria, for lunch. Great, ine to sell at $32 to $34.50; mpany 8 . company spirit.

mTe reir away mercial $22.75 to $29; short load]

back in 1934 when Ell Lilly, chair-| man of the board, was dedicating

“This building after all Is

ut an em shell. ‘The allth Bl neon is the spring lambs steady to 50 cents! human material in the staff.” higher; bulk choice and prime;

ple who make up this company good to choice, $30 to $32; slaugh-

At Lilly's they try to make work and choice, $9 to $13; culls down

a pleasant experience, giving itto §7. ‘ment’s parity f dignity and the mployes a sense; Bulls steady; commercial and, on To a acnent sai of belongivgn = ; SU0d Sate $31; cutter and utility, \sarm prices still were .averaging| ih o $27. {104 per cent of parity—4 per cent IT STARTS AT the top. Lilly wn TTT {above the so-callad fair price.

supervision wants to merit em-

{by farmers are still 11.8 per cent

formance. Lilly's adds it up—"“We may Soon ilo oy fall short In many ways but ~ [alled Racketeer |

“try to create a situation in which

right to life, and progress daily

. wer in Soi Ig Tax Action happiness.” i 1 {153 per cent of parity, tops the

a vn |

THE ALLISON PLANT pays. The first action against an a which stood at 152 per Local Stocks and fana man under the Internal .ant of parity when Price Boss) Revenue Bureau's drive against nrichael up employee misunderstandings'Tacketeers” evading tax pay-tempest in announcing his three{ments was pending today against stage beef price rollback progra ‘Allison promotes from within. & Muncie resident. in April, has dropped to 146 per °L 8 When Clark A. Riddell was re- Indiana revenue officers said cent of parity, Belt And cotton, which stood at 122 Open Auto Works in Germany, have been filed against Charles per cent of parity when Mr. Di- Central Sova six promotions followed in his W, Kehrwald, whom they describe Salle slapped on price ceilings last wake. as ‘‘a racketeer because of the spring, And Allison buys uniforms for business he is in.” cent. Farmers are getting 147 per athletic teams, provides a lighted when the campaign against tax cent of parity for veal calves and athletic field. evaders opened recently, the Rev- 139 per cent of parity for lambs.

up to $2000 for suggestions, and has its own system of clearing

on the spot.

cently put in charge of the Adam-'liens totaling more ‘than $30,000

. a nu = enue Bureau organized racket THEN IT STABILIZES em- squads whose objectives were to ployment. When one department ferret out underworld tax evaders. lags, the men are shifted; their Agents said Kehrwald is curincomes stay steady. rently under indictment by the Other companies do pretty much pajaware County grand jury on the same, in a lesser way. Bul, oharge of operating a house of the big point is that the Worker jj) fame. Trial on that count has is being recognized as an Indl- peen scheduled for October. Kehr-

vidual. wald also has heen named deHe's important and they are fondant in a nuisance abatement tetting him know it." suit.

The federal len filed under di-

Scrape for Scrap

They were a nuisance in World wald War II. Their value was mostly one of morale. They made people

A lot of the pots and pans piled

To, Improvement in

WHAT STEEL WANTS now is the heavy stuff, old machinery . which management put aside in a corner thinking maybe it could mings be used sometime. It's this “maybe” scrap that Br United Press steel's after, the big tonnage, ahd PHILADELPHIA, July 30—~The the better grades. And the NPA Pennsylvania Railroad Co. reis pleading with industry to 100k vealed today that: its earnings around, scrape the bottom of the ymproved in Juwe™ but that it

barrel, and turn in old steel to’ “ » A operated “in tHe red” for the first make new steel. - half of this year. ;

Built to Order | Net .loss amounted to $961,068

"CUSTOM BUILT HOMES are o.. i...i04 with net a trend today, the statistics indi-| $5 000 ras . hid het income cate. Federal figures show an Cr 30005097 in the correspond. increasing demand for bullt-to-order homes averaging $16,500 or better. - But that's because the small home builder has been eliminated by the large downjayments required by Regulation

gross revenues improved to $304 million from $411 million in the same interval. For June only, net income was $2.3 milion, contrasted with a net loss of $5.2 million in June, 1950,

a ———— ee... Gross revenues increased to $59.6 m= millon last month from $80.8 mil-

Indianapolis Water Co." a year earlier. gos un Official Weather

DIVIDEND NOTICE UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU

July 80.

Preferred ‘Stock, Series “A” | aT i — 1am

Sunrise

But Not Consumer

By EARL RICHERT WASHINGTON, July 30—The “farmer's take” of i con-! nc sumer’s food dollar started Pensions, insurance, playgrounds, company clubs and|to decline, along with the " drop in farm prices, the ture Department reported

Hogs Off 30-15 z=

Sih

T

average of only 49 cents of spent for food at

|dollar ately eo

cent—below the 51 cents of the

Sr NEVER SAY QUIT—With the entire “cabin” a Stes Jook around Active Trade tood dollar which the farmer was Trading

of the raft "Lethargia” start repairs at new mooring south of Moundsville, the raft and continue their rp to New Orleans, leaving

determined to re cCrady, Don Brown and Geraldine Garcia.

(left to right) are; Milt Bordon, Skipper Mary Ellin i

Raft Cruise Halts | Till Three of Crew

(et New Glasses

MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va., July vVagrancy. :

getting in April. LAB a The department found in a ; a e Indianapolis study of the marketing situation Ave. plant Luly ester? Stockyards opened moderately that middlemen’'s costs in Chicago active this morning. Light and charges had been going up at the same time farm ces were board as long as my Ss were 50 to 75 cents lower than|geclining—with the prices that —flylng clubs, horseback clubs, pyiqay's average. eS ner. did. sot gain. Retail Prices Stay Up it Retail food prices, the departJoe Cain, president of B RY ih pounds. $23.65 to city butchers; ment said, rose between April lory & Co, Inc, took Wl UF 240 to 285 pounds, $22 to $23; 285 and May and have remained relaMallory employees and r to 325 pounds, $21.50 to $22.25; tively steady since.

show. Then he did it : x sl Farm prices, on the other hand, Henle ice $20; choice 150 to 170 pounds,|, =. declined almost five per cent 30 Skipper Mary Ellin McCrady|

| Act, possessing slot mac other gambling equipme

{25 cents lower; bulk choice aoo(®ince April. They have gone ,s tne New Orleans-hound raft, Five arrests were made by Sgt. crew Richard Van Noy and a squad at] 732% 8. Illinois St. They sald jo the 1935 Beverage Act y they caught Nehemiah Farrell, 47, 4oy was Creamurs Thurston, 46, of 930 FE, 17th St. pointing a pistol "ssa Ww. 13th St. from whom| police said they confiscated 39 “ half-pints of whisky, 15 fifths of Farrell was held on charges opp da pins 24 ot beer. i Donald Bypwn, 23-yeaz-old Unt | disorderly conduct and violation FR, veyed, “lof the 10935 Beverage Act an bl of Jehigan senior, Was joss pire Arms YSTage caused by loss of his glasses .... lx ges of disorderly On \when the raft flipped over ile were others found in the room: owaos {Minnie Lunde man, 31, of 2344 Shriver Ave.; Delman Lacey. 3L netted ‘police numerous items of jof 732% 8S. Illinois St., and Willie policy and numbers racket equipPhillips, 29, of 351 W. 11th St. ment. They believe the outft to They were to appear in Court 3/helong to persons reported as today. operating Confiscated were 23 quarts, 16 11jinois St. other street liquor sale. yes-| rday afternoon resulted in the

{down slightly more than 6 per cent since reaching a record high in February.

The farmer,

iLethargia was the only ber able to see clearly what| the department she was doing today as the four|

aid, gets a larger share of the adventurers prepared for resump- at Gladystine Tarrants, 31, mile river jour-/7321 8S. Illinois St.

getting 66 njtching a ride from a t

Miss Geraldine Garcia, 23, a {Boston artist, and Milton Bordon, But on fresh fruits and vege-|30, Medford, Mass., engineer, lost| commercial and good $30; vealers tables, the farmer received only their glasses in the Ohio River active, fully 50 cents higher; bulk 33 cents of the consumer's dollar at the same time. a building. He said: (choice and prime $36 to $37; com-'and on grain products, such as ‘mercial and good $30 to $36. bread and cereals, he gets only 27 year-old

Sheep, 500; market active; cents.

shapely 24sociologist from Ann {Arbor, Mich. was determined to continue the cruise. She planned the unique trip to study the reactions of a small group confined for months in the close quarters of the 20-by-12-foot homemade

Still Above Parity e Although farm And J. K. Lilly said, “The peo- native spring lambs $32 to $33; a yrs bon | * » : th are its most important assets.” ter ewes weak to $1 lower; good eral, A Town

basis of the Agricul E 9 griculiyre Depart “We'll be here for at least three

4 |more days, though,” Mr. Brown) '|sajd. “The raft’s cabin was mangled and we have to put up a new Quincey Ayles, 30, of 3429 Gracelone. Besides that, we three will jand Ave. and the buyers, Coral paris T.. who said he twas cut

\Johnson, 19, of 956 Massachusetts hy a man named Henry Wooten, Ave., and Harold Gaugh. 48, of 3g. ” }

And, despite the past five con- Nave to get new glasses.”

. . rk loyee confidence and approval a | wih intent, its attitude and per- | Nn secutive months of general de

leline, the average prices received

INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC

Five products — cotton, wool, [beef, lambs—are repeople may achieve an economic sponsible for pulling the average of the farm list to above parity.

Waqol, which brings the grower |

Vice Squads Have Field Day, ab 13on Assorted Charges

Police had a field day yesterday. ,half-pints Vice squads arrested 13 persons whisky.

for violation of 1935 Beverage,

Pistol-Pointing Charge

bottles and 24 cans of beer, 24

pints of wine, a 38-caliber Smith 1, & Wesson Special with six lve|grrest of Zeke Morman, 40, of! | » ’ |executive vice president of P. R. cartridges, and one pair of dice./707 S. Illinois St. on charges of IIYeE Go. and dbigriy Report Whisky Sale violating the 1835 Beverage Act, Buell promoted to vice president,

Three arrests were made about BI Salon of two half-pints the firm announced today.

noon yesterday after police said today’ they witnessed a whisky sale transacted in a sedan.

(the 1935 sBeverage Act were

1304 E. 10th St, both admitted

buying whisky. ' General A search of Ayles turned up the gash in’ the left side of his back, key to a storeroom at 406'% In- said the argument arose during al diana Ave. where police confis- poker game in the home of Lu-| cated two nickel slot machines, ther Hughes, 39, of 825 Ogden ft.! 15 half-pints of gin, 68 books of Two witnesses also were ques baseball tickets, two policy tioned. v | wheels, policy-ticket printing =

Bonds equipment, 36 bottles of beer, 43!

16 Asked

# “" Prohibitionists Back Beer Tax, Brewers Warm

16% Br United Press

DiSalle touched off a Smériean Loss. 8% pli

| American States com m American States pid Ayrshire Colleries com

Belt RR & Stk Yds com Bobbs-Merrill pfd 4% .......

5 =

Circle Theater com is now down to 116 per Com Loan 4 pfd Cont CarsNa-Var Cummings Eng com .... Cummings Eng pfd. ....... | Consolidated a 8 ofd .. Delta Elec com | Eastern ind Tele § ota Equitable Securities com Equitable Securities ofd

7 Quit Red Cross

In Pennsylvania

PHILADELPHIA, July 30 (UP) ~The resigned chairman of Southeastern Pennsylvania Red Cross chapter wanted Congress today to investigate the national organization's land bigoted attitudes.” Arthur C. Kaufman and six

rection of Assistant Indiana Col-} & 7 > 3 other chapter officials resigned THE STEEL COMPANIES are lector Wilbur O. Plummer covered yesterday because the national or-

ushing until thei 8 r pus in a Mind TR gelinquent taxes In ine pag fou ganization opposed its co-opera-They want no pots and pans. against pro a oe : Keh tion with other charitable groups : gainst property owned by Rehr- ;, separate fund-raising drives.

amily Finance 5% of 1

| Hamilton Mfg Co COM ..ses

Hook Drug Co com ind Asso Tel 2 pld the Ind Asso Tel 3% pfd 8 Ya

[nd Telephone 4.8 Indpls Ath Club Realty Co ... Ihdianapolis Water com Indianapolis Water 4% ptd Indianapolis Water 5% pid

Indpls Pow & Lt p Indianapolis Railways com Jefferson National Life com Kingan & Co com "

1d *Lincoln Nation Lynch Corporation Marmon-Herringt

Nat Homes com ...

N Ind Pub Serv 4'a pf N Ind Pub Serv 4! Progress Laundry Mallory Co com Pub Serv of Ind 3a co

Cross would lose $1 million a year

think they were turning in stuff PRR {in the Philadelphia area {if the to make guns to shoot Nazis, Re orts which was pretty much nonsense. raise part of its money through the United Fund. He sald he would remain as chairman until a suc-

cessor is named.

Local Produce

“Eggs—Current receipt

local chapter is not permitted to

Jear Tool com *Schwitper-Cummins_ pfd 80 Ind G&E com vane *So Ind G&E 48% Stokely-Cin Camp com Stokely-Van Camp pid | Tanner & Co 5% Terre Haute Malleable U 8 Machine Co

84 3. and ower ree. 50c: Orade

United Utilities

. *Extra dividend Poultry—Fowls. ,

American Loan 4'as 85 American Security 5s 80 American Loan 4'4s 60 .. Bastian Morley Ss 81 Batesville Tele Co 4's .. uhner Fertilizer 3s 58 .. h of Com Bids 4'as 8 Columbia Club 3-8 &2 n

Equitabla Securities Sa 80 .... 96

Butterfat—Premium. 60c: regular Te

U. S. Statement

WASHINGTON, July 30 (UP)—CQovernment expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through July 28, compared

Indpls Paint & Color 5s 84 1 Indpls Pubité Loan Ind Limestane 4s 78 3 Ind Asso Tel 3s 75 Indpls Ratlways 5s 67 Kuhner Packing 4s

N Ind Pub Serv 3!

in the six months ended June 30,

8. 626 257.438.472.728

ing six 1950 months, eve i EB even though a 21,738.247.999 24.156.853.281

INDIANAPOLIS as

Trae Ten 3s 87

quarterly dividend of o

{ture in other cities

GARD <i asnanesscnnsunas

Ay

abids o Bare

»

The r ne wg | > i scipitation 34 -hrs. ending 7:30 a. m 0 char has S dsciared See Board o Tonsl precipitation since Jan. 1 23.20 s "the. atic erred fictency,. since Jan. 1 ‘hon I to

‘ b t . — of Teor Beamer 10. Lodi | The following table shows the tempera.

Preferred Stock, Series “B* | Siac © Hg Low

PARTLY COVEY AND

WASHINGTON, July 30—The

:..!c10 Brewery and Distillery 100 (Workers urged Senate tax writ-

ers today not drink in the heady)

10% draughts of the “fanatical forces 3 |of prohibition.” |

| Union President Karl F. Feller,| Cincinnati, said in testimony pre-| pared for the Senate Finance Committee that beer taxes have!

17: « » Ji reached the “saturation point.

Mr. Feller, testifying on Lhe;

33% $7.2 billion House-passed tax in-|

crease, asked the committee to

4% “disregard completely any ‘con- , trol’ or ‘prohibition’ arguments or 18Y4 considerations.’ 8s “Fanatical forces of prohibition 3T% which are ceaselessly active in 233, our national and state capitals,’ 23% he said, “view any increase in

»

alcoholic beverage taxes as a step

1312 towards prohibition. 30

Assumes They're Aware | { “This committee and this Con-| 'greks, have no mandate to re-in-ltroduée national prohibition. I assume that (they) are too well

He aware of the social catastrophe 12% | Which is called the ‘noble experi-

ment’ to even contemplate its restoration. “Those who would destroy the

‘../alcoholic beverage industry will i..lenthusiastically support any pro- +++ posal which will place a crippling] i. 'burden upon the already over-| **' [taxed beer and liquor industries. | a “The size of the beer glass has .... been shrinking,” Mr. Feller said, '*1“and its price has been rising.” | He blamed much of the price '"*’ rise on incgeased beer taxes. «+| The federal tax — $5 a barrel ‘..|right after prohibition—now is $8. *+ The House bill would increase it

, to $9.

Uj S. Payroll Up To' 2,489,500

WASHINGTON, July 30 (UP)

—Uncle Sam had 2,489,500 persons on his payroll this month, | an increase of 45100 over June. |

| Military departments accounted [tor 80 per cent of the increase ithe Civil Service Commission re'in the Interior and. Agriculture Departments .accounted for an'other 20 per cent. < | In the continental United | States, federal agencies reported {2,316,000 employees as of July 1,

|foreign countries jumped 1500 to | 8100. . oh

| Local Truck Grain Prices

WASHINGTON, J oth recruiting job today. Industry must find 45 million defense workers in the 18 months and still meet civilian production needs.

A Reports Net Df 26% for First Half of 1391

By United Press NEW YORK, July 30—Radio tracts. Corp. of America today reported . Headache that net income for the first half

of this year declined 25 per cent

from the same period of 1 , even though sales soafed 21 per| To illustrate the size of the

seme Telephoto. crew members W. Va. The members are Wednesday. Shown

washed off by the force of waves,

1so confiscated two half-| Johnson and Gaugh.

t and for Another charge of violation of the Slot Machine Act was filed against share, in the first half of 1950.

Ayles. All three were to appear today in Court 3. More Liquor Arrested on charges of violat- corresponding period last year.

lion or $1.02 a common share,

hines and pints from from $20.9 million or $1.40 a

or|

Federal taxes on income f |. [power controls at this time.

'the six months increased $2.5 mi 'lion from $14.1 million paid in the Mr. Flemming called for

Two Move Up At Mallory Co.

No arrest was made by the vice a squad at 1208'; N. Senaté Ave.,|

‘wh 1i found on a back-/ severe headaches, iis opponent was held on boii 31 half-pints of whisky,

conduct 88 15 fifths of wine and six half-

pints of gin. A raid at 936 Hosbroo

last week at 933 8S.

Mr. Sparrow Ray F. Sparrow has been elected them for defense work.

| An argument over “a couple of! Arrested on charges of violating p,¢t1es oY beer” resulted ap hos-!

of v

Hospital with a

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By United Press

uly 30—American business faced a

The government says about 2 million defense workers must be found by the end of 1951, The other 2.5 million must be added to mobilization production, during 1952, Defense Manpower Chief Are thur 8. Flemming estimated 1 million or 15 million workers in civilian industries will shift automatically to defense production

The remaining new workers are

950 causing the headache.

problem, Mr, Flemming said the normal increase in the civilian

Sales of goods and services ’ climbed to $302.3 million for the|labor force in 18 months would

six months ended June 30 from $248.7 million in the similar six months of 1950. Net income . reflected an increase .@f 17 per cent in the provision required for Federal in-| come taxes and fell to $15.7 mil-|

be about 1.5 million workers. The growth in the next 18 months must be. more than twice as large, Mr. Flemming has a plan to get these workers, but said that !the government cannot do it alone merely by: announcing a |suggested program. It is up to employers to carry it out, he said,

|

intention of imposing rigid man-

|strengthening the state-federal

{employment services and said the Defense Department must insist lon a thorough study of local {manpower problems before de-

joing on contract awards.

new plant sites, he said. Training Program

{technical workers,

He said hiring and training Mr. Buell, Mallory sales mana- practices must be accompanied by ger since 1945, will succeed Mr. industry's willingness to hire Sparrow in the sales department. women and handicapped workers James IL. Wellinger has been to replace workers who enter deelected company comptroller.

{fense employment.

HOME PLATING (0.

SILVER 2 ",, RHODIUM BRASS GOLD BRONZE CADMIUM | COPPER-NICKEL | CHROME

~ To SifVerware Replated ® Antiques Refinished ® Commercial Plating and Polishing

917 MASS. AVE CApitol 9088

hy

\o

A

as companies get defense con~

| because the government has no

| Private business must make the {same studies before deciding on

Industry also must develop an “effective” training program, Mr. Flemming said. He noted the greatest shortage of manpower was in skilled trades and among

| Such a training program, Mr, ! Flemming said, may mean taking workers with special aptitudes out of civilian industry and training

The government, on the other hand, should provide wiser coun.seling of high school graduates to {persuade them to enter engineer- | Mr. Sparrow served for many ing and science courses in ear {years as vice president in charge ne said. ’ of sales. He joined the firm in| Mr Flemming conceded “that 1931 when fhe Yar Manufac- the drain on workers in civilian turing Co., of whic e was an pusinesses and industrie 1d pitalization and arrest on charges .yecutive, consolidated with Mal- Sou Ey iags gre y be great, with little relief in sight.

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Phone CH-6T11

SHELBY

Carburetor & Brake (o. | UPHOLSTERY CO.

323 N. DELAWARE LI-4348 ||| 443 MASSACHUSETTS AVE

HARRY LEVINSON | 87 N. Penn. Comer Ifinois & Market

PEERLESS ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO.

WHOLESALE ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES

Distributors

EMERSON RADIOS — APPLIANCES RI LEY 2361

DB iid I I EB =

3 iE NUP ERIOR VIILLWORK

Public spirited local merchants, as an expression of goodwill, want you to receive this lovely basket of gifts, if you have just moved to the city, are 0 New Mother or have just moved to a new oddress within the city

BURNET-BINFORD LUMBER

{ported today. Seasonal increases:

“Fixture Store Complete” Designers and Builders io } on RESTAURANTS, BARS,

F

COMPLETE

and increase of 43,000 over June. | Federal civilan employment in|

Welooms

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INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 2960 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis 7

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Jus eanees, CHIld'S Age sux.

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|

A t

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TAVERNS, HOTELS,

— coop siimiii — Se ———

WASHID Czechoslov faces a cl! tion at ti State Dep: rives in ab . Administ Viadimir Czech env uncertain { nation stir over the ar ing in Prag Correspond on spy cha

Diplomat lowed to t an appoint chazka an Acheson pr White Hou

But offi pected to ©

‘references

One infc

| ambassado

quickly of dignation v feels tows plunged An to a new I

Neverthe ing was | presence i give the St: level conta negotiation Oatis from

It also w bassador w hand the action to ti

Czechoslc ment so fz mands tha It has turn requests t Voice of A no avail—t mitted to t radio.

Mr. Proc formerly w list, lawyer national official an Prague. He play drafting t put into ef lowing the

He succe rata, who last Febru: up in the ice.

Logansp Face Sle ¢ Ti LOGA! Charges o gambling against Re of trustees Club, {oll raid here, Excise p tine invest] and local | slot machi This was t Gov, Schr slot machi!

Boy Hu

A boy c¢ the street terday. Jo of 6226 R in the 150 St. by a Shearer, 4 Drive.

ANNI

t Death

Jra———— BURNS side Dri Mrs. Hers unday, ( a.m, ¢all FLAN] TUARY. - COOK—Wi Ohio “St. father of father of L may eall a HOME, 39: 8 p. m, I 10 a. m. W Burial, Gi ford, Ind, DELOACHof 2829 Robert Da! Deloach, «¢ Lydle, twir der, Mrs, / Fletcher, Wesner an Sunday. F at the | Nazarene, Burial Flor at the PF 1604 W, M one hour FREED--C Carroltor ne Scott ealing ar of city, br of New O children; riends m UNERAL Jer ? nesday invited.

DECKER of Virgil & Clayton rs. Bern) y, &

WILSON ¢ Friends 1

lends in

oT

Pi

may oi 8

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