Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1951 — Page 1

e Indianapolis

FORECAST: Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Colder tonight with hard, freeze. Low tonight 25; high tomorrow 40.

62d YEAR—NUMBER 244

©

"THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1951

mil

FINAL HOME

§

. PRICE FIVE CENTS Entered 2s Second-Claszs Matter atPostoffics v : Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily.

“Thank-You, Dear'—

A Down-to-Eart

‘9

Harry Puts Princess at

By ANDREW TULLY . Scripps-Howard Staff. Weiter WASHINGTON, Nov, 1 — A. guy ‘from Kansas City has taken charge of that royal tour and brought it down to earth. His name is Harry Truman

and the newspapers say that as . President of a : the United States he is host to their FF royal high-k: nesses, Brit- § ain’s Princess Elizabeth and 3 the Duke of -§ Edinburgh. ; But to Mr. Truman the princess and the duke are : just a couple of Mr. Tully nice young people away from home. : Things may be stuffy with formality everywhere else the royal couple goes. Protocol may be observed to the: ultimate. But at Blair House where they're boarding, it Is clear that life is relaxing and folksy. In fact, it would not be surprising to discover that before

h Guy Called

Ease

‘LONDON, Nov. 1 (UP)— The British press was over-

whelmed today by the “home- :

ly” informality of Washington’s reception for Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh. : Four words from President Truman became a bannerline in the London Daily Mail and took up a five-column spread on the front page of the London Daily Express: “I thank you, dear.”

Princess Elizabeth left on her ceremonial rounds today, Harry Truman gave her a fatherly. kiss and admonished. her to “be

. 4 good girl.”

For that is the way Harry Truman is taking this visit of the heiress presumptive to the British throné—naturally, and in stride. And both Elizabeth

and her obviously weary hus-

band, the handsome Philip, seem to like it that way. Other presidents have spoken words of more international significance. Many have spoken solemnly of things that stirred the entire world. But a fathér-

ly phrasé of the President of |

the United States went down

Most-Wanted Fugitive Nabbed

r bi snr Aver

oo

into’ history alongside them to- |

day — merely becalise. it was |

from Kansas City.

It was just after Princess |

Elizabeth had valiantly struggled through a formal, stilted

reply to the President for his

words of welcome at National Airport. The little girl with the

little-girl “voice had waded |

through the last few ponderous

words of her message to Ameri- | the |

ca and had turned to President with a wan and wist-

ful look that showed her re- |

lief at having endured the ordeal.

And then President Harry ! - 8. Truman, who has a litile !

girl of his own, became just

- plain Harry Truman of Mis-

soygi. He looked at Princess

Elizabeth with the fond look |

which ‘ fathers everywhere bestow on everybody's daughters and the thing that he said will never be found in a book of protocol, “Thank - vou, Harry Truman. And suddenly ‘Princess Elizabeth was at home.

dear” said

Times Sow Vole— ; Shrines of Sacred Honor—

Clark Margin Lilibet Lays Wreaths Drops Slightly On 2 Famous Tombs

Another’ Story. Photos, The lead Judge Alex Clark

Br United Press . holds over Mayor Phillip Bayt in WASHINGTON. Nov. 1-—Prin-The Times

Vote for Mayor, “5% Elizabeth placed a wreath dropped s oday in the 15th today on the tomb of George

tabulation i Wntes received. Washington, at Mount Vernon. Judge Clark's percentage of all Then they motored to Arling- They were» greeted -at Mount votes, counted slipped slightly: to'ton National Cemetery to lay an- vernon by several hundred aight56.9 per cent from his yesterday's Other wreath on the tomb of! seers and tourists who, for this count of 57.0 per cent. .Mayor America’s . Unknown Soldier, of special occasion, were not required Bayt's percentage went up to 43.1 World War I. to pay the usual 50-cent admission per cent, from his previous tally Elizabeth and her husband fee to the grounds of Washingof 43.0 per cent. {ton’s home,

_ Here is the comparison of the. The procession drove directly to percentages: | a Total to - Previous Data Tab. |

Washington tomb. There, the For Judge Clark, 57.0%

Republican ..... 56.97% For Mayor Bayt, Democrat ...... 43.1% Straight Repub- A ~~ y 7: ~ Beas votes fox +a 289% 289% An attempt to ke: Oscar Fon votes .... 18.8% {and she laid the wreath at Re for i Democratic Bayt 11.49% Democrats for Republican Clark . No party prefe- . rence indicated . 32.4%

Page 3 Philip, accompanied by Margaret {Truman, drove to Mount Vernon in a-black, closed limousine. An all-night rain had ceased about an hour ‘before, but the weather still was cold, gray and blustery.

o | 43.0%, : .

11.5%. re twisting,” Mayor Bayt declared ington’s family are buried rather

8.5% ‘today. . ithan on the sarcophagus which Mr. Ewing had been scheduled contains Washington's body. 32.37% io Epeak before the Business and, ; e tally of Professional Women's Club .here has been ages oe follow: tomorrow, but his afpearance was tomb for many years, corrected For Judge Clark, 50.0 per cent! canceled suddenly yesterday. His the Princess’ error .as soon as For Mayor Bayt, 50.0 per cent; 3ssistant, Wiliam Mitchell is be- the royal couple left the tomb, Straight Republican Votes. 25.0 ing sent from Washington. moving the wreath to the white per cent; Straight Democratic ‘Vicious Fact-Twisting’ Votes, 25.0 per cent; Democrats’ Mayor Bayt said a story in the for Republican Clark, 12.5 per Indianapolis Star describing Mr. cent, and no party preference in- Ewing's scheduled appearance as; dicated, 37.5 per cent. 4 campaign issue is'the most The Times Straw Vote for “vicious piece of fact-twisting I! Mayor is not a prediction or fore- have ever seen.” : cast of the election Nov. 6. It is’ “I had nothing whatever to do a public service to Times readers with Mr. Ewing's being invited * to enable them to draw their own here, and anything he might have conclusions as to trends in local sald if he had appeared here would politics. have nothing whatever ‘to do with If you: receive a Straw Vote the mayoralty compaign.” the Page 30 Card, mark it -as if you were mayor said. . : Hunters who stayed away from voting today, and mail it back’ He asserted he had no informa- Poker and beer last night raked to The Times Immediately, Every tion about the reasons Mr. Ew-.i0 the deer-est pots this morning. section of the city and every ing's appearance was canceled at| Conservation officials said early wage-earning bracket are repre-ithe last minute.

8.6%

Continued on Page 4—Col. 1

Early Hunters Get the Deer

Another story, Feingold sketch,

d Mr. Ewing was de-|In8 of Indiana's first deer, hunt-

sented In the percentages pre-iit was sai in -a pattern from the City Df Mr. Ewing was invited for the there Was a lag in the bag. rectory to insure the representa- date long before the welfare situ-! Vern Collins, 8129 Caven Bt tion of every group. ation became an issue. {Was the first Indianapolis ma# 8-point buck. Mr. Collins was one of 16 men who shot a deer ®. by 10 a. m. inthe Morgan-Monroe Ba te Be t t {ing the first three hours in the Y . a o OSssSes | State forest in Harrison County, Se . y {Conservation Lt. Paul Wiese reBy IRVING LEIBOWITZ By NOBLE REED {ported from the scene. The first Frequent references to the late; Evils in government are growvole, at sunrise, dramatize the ‘off - the - cufy” Judge Alex Clark, Republican An unidentified hunter in the speeches being made by Democrat Mayoralty candidate, declared at "Harrison preserve drilled a 12Phillip Bayt in his vigorous cam“If the people of Indianapolis, could stand u . ; s ; A | 8 .up as the season rec- » Sans o r i Mayor Bavt sesis that. at last and everywhere else -in’ the U. S./ ord. Another “big'un” was a 170he will get the entire Democratic Noblesvill vote because the appointment of country th ’ y oh] arr Ye mal, Touniry than we have now. cube! eTiye sounded Nike a litte In Japan, where they had their Korea between 6:30 and 7:30 this Chairman healed old wounds in the party, of the 17 ty hunti tone ba ./voted, he pointed out. Younly TUNLng area in Now, he Is out to get the inde “In the last United States pres. Outhern Indiana, but skies were {dential election only 55 per cent ¢leAring at dawn. Except for wet Feeney. He has been waging, on tele-| he said, {rods had it good. vision and off, a “teach the polit The GOP candidate for Mayor, Conservation officials esti-

sented, Names of persons receiv- layed by business. | ing Straw Vote cards are selected) Club officials earlier had said FePOrts. After the first few hours, ; officially reported taking a deer The Candidates Say— . today. He bagged a 205-pound. Clark: Wake Up, Vote ar -e Qa P; J | State Forest. {| About 40 deer were killed durkill was at 6:30 a, 'm., 17 minutes Mayor Al Feeney and the type of, Ing because ‘a . BLA mass of garter the three-day season opened government he gave Indianapolis| Citizens don’t bother to j2 genes of. campaign meetings point buck weighing 250 pounds, " paign to be elected Mayor next '25t night. : which eonservation officials said Tuesday. don't wake up and go to the polls! u 8. a we'll have a worse mess in this| ro Pointer bagged . by a Indianapolis Banker Frank Meo-! Kinney as Democratic National ing." : first election in many years re-{ Tr ug: Lt. Wiese said. cently, 90 per cent of the citizens| , 8!l-night rain soaked most pendent vote in the manner of| his _ colorful . predecessor, rt | m edecessor, Albert of our citizens cared enough about | feet, and perhaps too few deer |their government to cast ballots,” | {OF the 10,000 hunters, the nimical bosses a lesson” which he recalfs the “sinis

. a {target, _ Continued _on_ Page 5—Col. * | Continued on Page 5—Col. 1 | 8

On the Insid " |Car Strikes Down

. 3 . . ~ e Girl on Circle United Nations and Communist negotiators agree. on about 50 per cent of a proposed cease-fire line, but spokesman says armistice still a long way off Sekesyvneien ' : Lusils Ball, popular mavie.gomedisnns, says TV is wonderful . . . or one thing it gives her a chance to sleep i rn Ying. Ts gist a © sleep late. in the _ Other Features:

Amusements «.....0000

{Circle today. Barbara Anderson, 4!

frre .

St., was crossing Market {had taken §bout two ste the. curb newe J. C. Penney. Co. Beaten ssasssnnnsnse 20 when a yellow car whiszed around’ {the corner, She jumped back, but! th€ car sideswiped her and Dac shi RAE 88 Fel ES HOT 21 + Ageab driver told police the hit33 . run ‘motorist continued west on BOURY a vreen sr 8 Market St. and turned north EQ BOVOIR .ioouviianee. 23 gaint ihe oneway trafie ;

BOOKS vaiicsiveyaiien 30-92 |COHIOLAYe, JEarl Wilson yovveivinai. 23 ] ‘Women's Ate natant 10 What Goes on Here .... 11

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“Radio, Television ....... Robert Ruark ..i.......

Crossword’ Editorials. ....vviniansas Food Forum In Hollywood ......cv00. MOVIES ovivvviivivivanns Othman fans

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SANA E RATNER raha

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tors sald ‘she did not appear be seriously hurt, ids if Pe

RE

MORLEY VERNON KING— Nabbed while shucking oysters.

The FBI last night arrested Morley Vernon King, one of the crime busters’ 10 most wanted fugitives, as he was working in a Philadelphia, Pa., cafe. Morley, accused of killing his wife in California in 1947, was shucking ‘oysters in the restaurant when he was nabbed. His arrest ended a four-year, na-

| tion-wide hunt.

Princess, flanked by her husband, and C. C. Wall, Mount Vernon:

: v : {superintendent, walked through wing ory A {the gates of the tomb and stepped’ - "briskly inside. : boon : : he yn ol TE ! But the Princess 48 tipi Upward with a sickening jolt ini ; had not been briefed correctly

Truman Gives OK To M’Kinney Reform

In Tax Collections: Bs Underso © vo pmmmmgmm Wants Staffs pial Tes & Placed Under In Atom Blast Givil Service

Another story, Page 18 By United Press i

{ By United Press LAS VEGAS, Nev., Nov: 1 | - WASHINGTON, Nov. 1— —The Army held its first

: President Truman will recomatomic maneuvers today in mend to Congress in January conjunction with an aerial

that all collectors of internal

drop of a compact A-bomb and promptly .announced that .

- The atomic cloud itself first resembled a head of .caulifiower, Pw moving steadily upward for two minutes before it assumed the per|fect mushroom - shaped atomic {cloud.

Its head, wrinkled like the exposed surface of a’ human brain, .continued to boil violently and to expand steadily. : Five minutes after the blast, it still was’ boiling furiously. | ‘The nuclear explosion that touched off the maneuver came at ,19:30 a. m. (Indianapolis Time). Seven and a half minutes later a wave of rushing air hit has WV like an earthquake. b downtown stores. =

H eavens— oO

d in

S991.

‘They Went

Another Story, Page 36 Hoosiers got socked a governmental one-two to, the pocket book today, : The cost of high living lurched

A-bomb proving ground. Hits Harder

the cigaret-liquor division 2s newlEner

{excise . taxes were imposed. Inman's Fiat

proving jaddition, a federal order appeared! An hour after the

i

Guard William Holland. who pe stationed outside the ta

|other one-half cent tax on a gal- dication of producing effective! A big gambling pool dried up Women can’ meet the 6000-pint

In Washington, | risers did “very well” at the open- | isuch “passing-the-buck” action. {Ing season, according to initial!

fight Initold a crowd at the Women’s De. mated” 16,000 bucks and does Sovola's first book “Monday Fol-| ter” Re- partment Club last night that the roamed the hunting areas as fair 1 {fes. As a silver star veteran of

——————————— |

| this

A 15-year-old girl was hurt in at I. U.. a hit-run ‘accident on Monument, Indiana

3 St. Paul being aged in the wood as a re-| St, and porter and all-round newspaperPs from man, He found a short cut and| Indianapolis. He appreciates na-|

n To. in Indianapolis.

~The girl was treated for shock ected by himself. Thete is a at: General Hospital, where doc- foreword made from a column! to about Ed written by Robert 'C:/came back for | Ruark 40d a prefage by Bag, |

vault in which members of Wash. PErIItting Indiana grocers and Maj. Gen. William B. K

butchers to pass their state-grossimander of “Operation ~ Desert income tax charges on to the Rock,” released a terse statement customer. on the troop phase of the maAnd the coming paychecks will neuver. shaved sadly, Hl or 12 per cent; He said there were no injuries X-wise, by higher withholding of any kind to military personnel. due to upped income taxes. “An appreciable step forward Consumers Protest has been taken toward relating Plus ‘more cost. when today's military tactics to the employhigher taxes appear on new auto- ment of atomic weapons,” Gen. mobiles, appliances and other Kean said. factory-produced items, and an-| The operation “has every inlon of gas. {results which when evaluated In Indianapolis, angry con-/ Will be greater than anticipated,” sumers and puzzied - meat and De added. ; grocery handlers swamped the The Army disclosed no details State Gross Income Tax division of the troop participation, howwith calls protesting the federal ® co’ : ruling ° on I Tan : Army combat troops and servtaxes to the consumer, or reguest- 108 700ps with a large- number : Natl Ax 1 of military observers representing clarification. ing the Army, Navy and Marine Conn J. Sterlipg. commissioner eka taat

; Corps participated. today in a of state revenue, said Indiana fawig obs P RC » said the

is “silent” on whether the order is eneral's statement legal here, but 4 1934 opinion by(® 3000 Extra on Hand the Attorney General prohibits. He said the troops’ part in the

“That would mean the is coHecting the pay said.

: grocer detonation, observation of the eftax in order ta!fects on test items and equiphis own tax,” Mr. Sterling ment and observation of psycho- . {logical and physiological reacNo Cheer for Imbibers tions.” . He "conferred with the State It was indicated this stateRevenue Board yesterday on Ment would be all that the Army whether Indiana will honor the intends to say at present regard-

-government order, and said ar- INE the test.

other conference was due” today, Gen. Kean said reporters will in which Gov. Schricker would|Pe permitted to interview some take part, if possible. |troops here tomorrow. but that Teetotalers probably are chuck- the soldiers will not be allowed

Continued on Page 4—Col. 4 [scientific phases of the test.

Kind Wo

‘Dear Boss—'

Kidney Has

Mr. Sovola’s Column, Page 23; | y Editorial, Page 24,

By DAN KIDNEY WASHINGTON, Nov. 1-—-When the patient Job sighed, “0, that

my enemy had ‘written a book.” he was only stating half of the case ahd the better half at that. It is when a friend writes a book and you are assigned to re-| view it that things, really .are tough. Your essay is’ bound to sound like something entitled “Birth of a Salesman.” Frankly I should like to see Ed|

Ed Sovola is our boy. None of the local gang wanted to Review Ed's tome so’ Kidney. who is slightly . out of book-throwing range, drew the job. To Times readers, however, we point out MONDAY FOLLOWS TUESDAY came into form through Ed's columns

page. His next publication, which might be called Wednesday Follows Saturday Afternoon, could take shape during the next year from that same spot. We ‘suggest you keep a ; 9 .| sharp eye on MONDAY FOLows Tuesday” sell a million cop LOWS TUESDAY, The Times dally section page and Ed So-vola-that anything can happen is not a possibility, but a | foregone conclusion.

The Indianapolis Times, I‘ lke man whose eoldyn has clicked from the time He came out of Indiana Uniyersity. As the first Ernie Pyle scholar

F : son. Both are highly skilled proEd was editor of . the fessional jobs and Ed shows he Daily Student. Unlike appreciates it. Ernie he didn’t spend much time, In fact, it iz this appreciation of almost anything that has rhade Ed such a popular columnist in

became a columnist almost over- ture enough to count all the night. ‘lleaves on a tree, women enough This book. printed in green to ¥yemain a bachelor, booze and published by Allen Smith an. expense account, : He made it to Europe this vear The contents consists of Sov- and the wonder af it all is approola’s best Times columns -— se- priately set out in the ‘green print. He had been here in Washington for a' week before he . that ‘passport to Europe. He does the local scene

SL SL RTeen COXRFT 4 Orie) / oes SCG ETO] 8 lllustratéd by Keith Brat- travel enough to go anywhere on

Wil \

or -

» C5 anf day

the, operation was “most successful.”

It, roke plate glass windows on four)

Las Vegas ‘is 90 miles north-| east of Frenchman's Flat, the!

| ‘Residents said the blast hit A harder thap that from any of the, Aes held at the Atomic! gy Commissign's French-

g

{test “involved observation of the,

to discuss military, technical or:

rd for Sovola

Dan |

which you liked on the section |

revenue be brought under Civil Service and subjected to the standards of that service, the \ FEW | White House ahnounced today. Cais up ; rd | The move to end the political eine bag patronage method by which inHUMAN , ternal revenue collectors tradi bi ol 8 ru 8 tionally have been appointed was p10 $ niu proposed to the President by GLASS Fe Frank E. McKinney, new chair FRAC 4 !man of the Democratic National i : “r | Committee, at a -nieeting with LIFE IN A COOLER—Life's blood for Gls in Korea was vir. Truman this morning. packed for shipment in an ice box last night at the Red Cross = “It is the intention of the Pres-. Blood Center here. Shown being packed is the last of nearly 5000 ident to recommend to Congress pints of food given during October in the central Indiana area. | mary Eo. MoBiuhe id {White House Press Secretary Joseph Short told newsmen.

Blood Donations Here Hit Record in October

By. AGNES OSTROM

total Of S115 pints -of ite

giving blood in Oe“Blood

Modern Minute Women— :

Only :] in September. 11a . : October's record collection re- accomplishment {Had every person’ who offered to $ give been physically able to do so, the dedicated drive of possible,

Times’ Modern Minute Women to! “Toward that end I recommend =~ | : ‘recruit blood donors—to wipe out that collectors of internal revenue Wilts Lotter y

public apathy of the crucial need be brought under civil service and

for lifegiving blood for American subjected to the selection stanservicemen in Korea. ‘dards of that service. Organized ¢lubwomen are doing Courtesy Call a job—are proving leadership to “It § y . a nation watching them. $ your objective, I know, With the drive deadline’ ex-! a} SH: have and tended to Thanksgiving, Minute of our fed tes | ability : for No {I believe the adoption of this today under the heat of the new|S°p¢ for NoveInber. ped them win TéCOMmendation: will further that federal tax law and threats of this hometront battle do so today OPjective” easier shutdowns by local police.'by making your appointment as a f Mr. McKinney said’ that apart. The pool was the first lottery gift donor at the Center. Tele- [JOM handing in his internal revto fold since gamblers began get- phone LI ncoln 1441. enue recommendation, his meeting ting the shakes last week. Hoosiers are well on their way ".t0 the President was merely a A bet taker for the Triangle to victory. Make it complete by Courtesy tall. He said -he and Benefit Club said the last drawing Pledging yourself, Mr. Truman discussed generalities was held last night and today is A serviceman will live to say Sad did not go into any specifi the final payoff—"unless we find thank you." political problems.

a He said he expected he would a loophole.” “ . {need four to six weeks to reor wi “A ! yester- : . He wrote men” on yester Tangled Antlers. Fasten Young Bull

y 'ganize the national committee day's numbers. card. Operators of another major lot- office staff and headquarters, and To Dead Moose FAIRBANKS, Alaska. Nov. 1

: [that until then he would have no tery called an executive session | for tonight to-decide if they hi fular Snedule of meetings with continue their drawings. If they! § . : do, they already have announced, |i Frum Dreseiited Mrs. Mor $1 chances will now cost $1.10 to, ME MR lasts set. meet the federal government's (UP)—A young bull moose. which OnE deEee _ ey o er expressed new 10 per cent tax, which went apparently survived for three! 1052 elects S party can win the into effect today. (week by eating. snow-after jis. ection with President Try. antlers became entangled with, Continued on Page 4-—Col. 8 those of a large dead moose, was sawed loose Yesterday by wildlife agents. But no oné knew for sure ho

Earlier this week, three football gambling enterprises severed, w . the two masse became tangled. | 1OMOrrow Night Some officials believed the! WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (UP) —

lke to Fly Home

Continued on Page 4-—Col.

2

relations with. the public. And one major horse bookie stopped! moose locked horns -when they Ge . : YiGen. Dwight D. Eisenhower will engaged in mortal combat for ght 8

taking bets over the week-énd. Some diehards in the gaming " fly home from his European headule of a herd of cows. : quarters tomorrow night for a owever, the three wildlife two-day conference next week agents who cut the live moosé with President Truman and others from his dead adversary said on. military problems — and perthe animals’ horns were not haps politics. locked together, but instead were! The trip may clarify Gen, Eisenwired together by abandoned hower's 1952 presidential intenmilitary aircraft target tow- tions. cable. The 600-pound moose ap-! A Whit parently had become when he “sniffed dead moose out of said.

in the Sovola manner, including counting the pickets on the White House fence. But .he alsd does better than that. For there is a serious side to Ed Sovola that

creeps through his funmaking. At times he leaves the inipression that he is [like the Irish who “laugh to keep from weeping.” Ed Sovola is a first generation Hoosier-American of Polish par{entage. He is as sensitive as the g A. mm... 36 12 (Noon) #4 {late Madam Modjeska and as pa-| g¢ a m.. 39 triotic as Generals Kosclusko and| Latest humidity ...... 50 {Pulaski combined. He is a star-| —- ik

=: Bale of Steel Serves Clevelander as Tomb

[U, 8. A. means speaks out in this! book in some of the serious pas-| sages. It is moving at times to the point of becoming poetical. CLEVELAND, 0., Nov. 1 (UP)—A 58-year-old" man, crushed to death last night when he accidentally fell into a scrap metal baling machine, will be buried tomorrow entombed in the 800-pound block of scrap.

Hjs. essay entitléd “I Talked with Lincoln,” describing - that The victim was Amzie Cannon, whose ‘job it was oad : ' v PETA

e House announcement ‘tangled today said only that Gen. Elsenaround” the hower was. called home at Mr. Curiosity, they Truman's suggestion for military talks and that thé flying trip was ‘not dictated by any “emergency” 'in the Western European defense organization which the General commands. There was no reference to any possible discussion of Gen. Elsenhower’s political plans.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES 6a m.. 34 10 a. m... 11 Tam. 34 11am. 42

oe o

hushed moment of awe that comes over anyone but a clod when making the pilgrimage to’ .’ the Lincoln Memorial in Washington for the first time, is priceless. : Priceless even if it appears in

. aa 1 ont or RR aE RELA Dah i he) rs

Police said that Mr. Cannon evidently fell in‘as three walls of the box «closed in under 5000 pounds * pressure. When ‘the bale was completed, a fiveton® weight capped the 4x5x10 foot package. Attempts to open the bale with blow torches failed. Coroner Samuel Gerber ordered the burial of the entire mass gl obmetal oy oa io

Tim

[Sapling Sees Washington.” Just [think what a spiteful copy reader could have done to that second’ word, ; p | The first edition "of this bit] of ‘Americana is priced at $3.50. {That is far less inflationary than Ed Sovola often makes himself sound. . 3 {

he,