Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 December 1951 — Page 21
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TUL3DAY, DEC. 11, 1951
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Big Boy From A Little Town
By Harold Hartley
I HAD NEVER HEARD have.
of the place. But maybe you
It is Horse Cave, Ky., (pop. 1541). And it might have passed me by if D. W. (Red, for reason) Gadberry, hadn't
dropped in, He grew up in Horse
Cave.
He's 35 and broad shouldered,
| which he says camie from swing-
ing on grapevines when he was
“a kia. And he says-when he was
there he could “throw a rock
“from one end of Horse Cave to 3 the other.”
» » ” HE'S SALES MANGER for GE Supply Co. And he had with him who talks
twice as fast as he talks. Third in the threesome was Earle Fortmann, who is going to bring back the old time horse-and-wagon peddler. That's what Red Gadberry came in to tell me. ” » ” GE SUPPLY has a “Task Force trailer” which hooks to the bumper of a car. And in it there's electric restaurant equipment.
‘ And that's where the old peddler
gets off, From there on it’s not pots and pans, but calrod-heated grills, French kettles, waffle bakers, food warmers, Dutch ovens, hot plates, | all compact, glistening and
‘matched.
» » » |
GE SUPPLY will take its mer-|
sary, right out of the trailer. It's taking the big goods to the consumer, instead of expecting him to come around and see it. It's Hotpoint, a name with gumption. It has risen from 9th to 3d in appliances since the war under the sure-footed guidance of President James J. Nance who has just bought a big chunk of land to add a million square feet of factory. " |
» HOTPOINT, I was told, has the dishwasher business by the tail. Clothes dryers, too. It’s the sealed dryer which eats its own steam, lets no vapor or lint out into the basement. My admiration for Hotpoint runs deep. You see it is a child of big General Electric. And, fed on human energy and gray matter, the kid’s grown up fast, and already outsells General Electric in several lines. » » ” AND IT'S DOING all right here with Red Gadberry drummajoring the sales parade. He's 200 pounds of get-up-and-go, with red hair to match. I'm mighty glad I talked with I wouldn't have known about Hotpoint. Or Horse Case, either.
" chandise right to clubs, hotels|you get a chance, see it.
* and restaurants, and sell, if neces-|
}
Right now savings at Fletcher Trust are up about 4 per cent. And that means to me that people have found out that the buck isn’t such a shabby rag after all.
The Biggest Hit
WHAT MOVIE was seen by the most people? . The film industry would say it was “Gone With the Wind.” It was seen by 30 milli. But I'll tell you of a picture which has topped “Gone With the Wind.” It is an industrial technicolor made for the Aluminum Co. of America. It was titled “Unfinished Rainbow.” And it was seen by 34 million, : » » » THE DIFFERENCE, of course, lies’ in the price of admission. “Gone With the Wind” had a stiif ticket charge. “Unfinished Rainbow” was free, by invitation, and plenty have been invited. My point, if any, is that when industry stakes its bankroll on a film to tell “its story, it never dares turn out an inferior job. Recent best example was the bituminous coal “Powering America's Progress, done by the March of Time. If
Wells of Capital
Where can business look for fresh capital? One source being eyed closely are the pension funds, But first they must be built.
In the search for security, both 150k of identification on them companies and employees are PI: makes them difficult ot trace.
ing up a backlog of earnings to help the times.
The pension fund is the work- national er's equivalent of the company’s
surplus fund. Ld » ”
I TALKED WITH A. Mansur
Tebbetts, of Morss, Seal and Teb-/trols on livestock or meat.”
betts, of St. Louis, with offices in New York. His firm is one accredited for pension planning by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane with a hundred security offices from coast to coast. He's on a pension plan tour,
{Nashville, Memphis, Little Rock, Ito preach the gospel of shared 6.6 per cent in 1913,
security between company and employee. Where Merrill Lynch comes in, I think, is that these pension funds become the well from which business can draw fresh capital funds,
30 Minutes
I USED TO KNOW a lady who
| Junk Jolts |dipped her hair in tea.
HERE'S A JOLT for the junk dealer. The NPA conked him with an order today, a tough one. i Bill Rightor, manager of the|
. NPA district office, said the order
will mae the boys let go of their| scrap. If they don’t they'll be out
It was to make it darker, and xeep the color even, no streaks. But there's a faster way. It is called Lightning Change. Tintair makes it and promises up to eight shades lighter, all in 30 minutes. » tJ Nl I GUFSS a woman has a right to any shade of hair, nails, lips,
of business, which no junk dealer or cheeks, she wants.
wants to be.
2 ” » THE NPA THINKS the junk boys are holding up scrap metal, | The dealer says he’s got spare parts, not scrap, and the government should not get confused about it. . Here's how the NPA lowered fhe boom. After Mar. 1, any junk dealer who gtill has a 1946 modél
lowed to buy another car. i We IF HE DOES, I am told, the NPA will draw the shades and lock up the junk yard. “All of which is bad news to the boys who take those no-good cars of yesteryear and turn them into tidy bank accounts. |
Savings Up ‘WHEN BEARDSLEY RUML wag in town, he said what the country needs is a “thirst for liquidity.” He meant we ought to give the buck back its self-respect. More savings. Then up in Ann Arbor, a University of Michigan professor dittoed Mr. Ruml’s remarks. » » »
| o|
PAUL W. McCRACKEN, pro-|g
fessor of business conditions, said there'd be no fear of inflation next year if people just kept on saving. , That made me dial Bert Buenabel, secretary of the savingest savings bank in the state, the Fletcher Trust Co. There I found out that Mr. Ruml's wish was coming true, and that Professor MoCracken had his figure finge right on the button. . AE ATE. i. LAST YEAR when people were fighting for everything else but money, savings went down about 1%; per cent. But by the end of ber, the savers reverted to
| few hundred
But somehow I think they were made beautiful in their own right, just as they are.
Sale of Hogs Reported Active
Sales of hogs at the Indianapolis ' Stockyards remained - moderately ‘active today. Little was being done on steers and heifers. Native lambs ‘were active and strong. Slaughter ewes were
scarce.
Hogs 11.000; moderately active; and medium barrows and gilts mostly , Instances weak: heavier weights shales 118 [2°40 Bounds 14° To pee: choice 0 pounds 0 .50; e and two 180 to 225 3 250 jo 283
light
Nos. on ounds $18.60 to $18.7 17.25 to $18; 120 to $17.50; sows about § : choice 3 400 pounds $15.25 to $16.25; few $16.50; 400 to 550 pounds $14 to ,50. ttle done on steers pounds bid 50 cents to $1 weights bid weak to 50 cents lower; cholce steers bid downward from $34.50; sprinkling high choice to pi Yr around $36: high choice heifers held at $35; cows uneven; largely steady to weak early; bidding 50 cents or more lower on commercial; bulk utility, $21.50 to $24.50; commers] hel, 0H Ste steady; choice and prime, 3 prune, to $38; commercial and good, gd
Sheep 1200; native lambs active, strong; bulk choice and prime $32: small lot hi choice and e $32.25; good and choice $31 to a 5; jostly 3 1.30; oll and tility $23 to $30: ty * hig $ud to 33-baund western yearlings $23.50 to $25; 1 good and choice summer shorn western lambs $30.50: slaythter ewes scarce, quoted steady at $9 to $14.
above lower: light.
Rites Today for
Grindstone Victim
Services and burial for Ellis Clay, 4, killed here by a chip from his father’s grindstone, were planned in Chavies, Ky., today. The boy had been watching his father, McKinley, 28, sharpen a knife in their apartment, No. 3, 911 E. Washington St., yesterday afternoon. The grindstone flew apart and a fragment cut Ellis’ jugular vein, The parents have three other
small children,
4 TY ERR Fr aay
industry's |
- lon -somebody’s desk in Washing-
worker through hard] | James Hooper, president of the to be discussed——especially con[trol of the atomic bomb,
;I'This objective, Mr. Hall said, is! ds being achieved “despite mounting
THE INDIADTAY Lad
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Convention Speakers Rap U.S. Program
CHICAGO, Dec. 11 (UP) — Farm leaders lashed out yesterday at government
marketing quotas, crop estimates, acreage control and other agriculture regulations. Some speakers at opening sessions of the 33d annual American Farm Bureau Federation convention said that farmers are starting to withdraw from government programs. Lorenzo Lambson, president of the Massachusetts Farm Bureau, said that participation in government programs in New England is declining. Mr. Lambson said that in a recent nine-state referendum a majority of New England tobacco growers rejected marketing quotas and acreage controls. Ralph Gillespie, president of the: Washington State Farm Bureau, said that in his area there was a “definite” moye to get away from government controls. Say Estimate Too High
estimates made by the govern-
Some leaders charged that crop)
ment are ‘invariably too high, {tending to force prices down. Carl Marshall, head of the Ne|braska Farm Bureau Federation, Ideclared that when government experts overshoot the mark on crop estimates they contend that there was a “disappearance” that was greater than expected. { “The disappearance developed
{ton because it wasn’t there in the| [first place,” Mr. Marshall said. { Mr. Marshall revealed that Nebraska farmers have been con-| fronted with a new kind of thief] |—the tractor rustler. He said 26 tractors have been stolen in the {state in the last six months and
‘No Rhyme or Reason’
Livestock Producers
{Association, told a convention!
livestock session that “there is no rhyme or reason for price con-
Mr. Hooper said there is an adequate inventory of meat ani-| {mals and that prices generally] are within the price levels of! other commodities. He said that| last year consumers spent 5.5 per cent of their “disposable” in-
come for meat, compared with
Mr. Hooper declared that “men with limited or no business experience whatsoever” are running the economics of the country. Earlier Allan B. Kline, president of the AFBF, warned delegates that “we are in danger of losing our liberties in the midst of progress.” Addressing 5000 farmers from 46 states, Mr. Kline said progress in the last 50 years has meant greater centralization of government.
Must Strike a Balance
But, he said, if freedom Is to survive, Americans must strike a! balance between the amount of centralization they want and the amount of liberty they want, “There are some,” he said, “who seem to think that the principles laid down by our founding fathers are no longer applicable.” Joseph B. Hall, president of the Kroger Grocery and Baking Co., told farmers they are getting half of the consumer’s food dollar today, compared with 39 cents in 1939. Mr. Hall said that at the consumer level more food can be Bought today with industrial wages than at any time in the nation’s history. He said the goal of modern food distribution is to lower the
tiyicost to the consumer while paying 9 Die in Flash Fire
the farmer more for his output.
cost pressures under which the retailer is operating.” Dr. Herrell Degraff, University economist, advised delegates that ‘their long-term best interests lie in a flexible federal farm program which will come as close ad possible to a free market.
Boy Singer Sought For Role in IU Opera
Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, Dec. 11—Auditions for a 10 to 12-year-old boy to sing a juvenile role in the new Gian-Carlo Menotti opera, “Amahl and the Night Visitors,” will be held at 1 p. m. Saturday in East Hall on the Indiana University campus. : : Ernst Hoffman and Hans Busch of the IU music faculty, whe are directing the production of the IU stage premiere of the new opera scheduled for next Feb. 21-24, are seeking a boy eligible for the role.
Cornell
{step forward along the road to
of the ship when in port, received
Talks to Be Resumed
By United Press PARIS, Dec. 11—The Big Four announced today they have agreed to resume talks on outlawing the atomic bomb and on general disarmament in a new United Nations commission. Debate on the Big Four report to the United Nations was opened today by British Delegate Selwyn Lloyd. Mr. Lloyd said that although there was agreement in principle on the machinery for discussing disarmament, the Big Four totally disagreed on the major issues
“It would be deceiving public opinion to herald this memorandum (the Big Four report) as revealing a great and spectacular
peace,” he said. “Yet I believe that it would be equally wrong unduly to belittle it.” Mr. Lloyd said mutual EastWest distrust was the crux of the problem. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Y. Vishinsky told newsmen he probably would reply to the West
(SILIGHT(LY) FANTASTIC—Dorothy Shay,
shown initiating some of the ladies from the
}
Disarming
{
"the Park Avenue hillbilly" (second from right), is asonic Old Ladies Home in Hollywood into the in- | fricacies of night club dancing. The ladies are planning to use the dance in their Christmas show.
Monkey-Faced ' Owl Bored by Curious Humans
tomorrow.
Three Injured
In Tanker Blast
SARNIA, Ontario, Dec. 11 (UP) —A loud explosion in the hold of a Great Lakes oil tanker startled this port city yesterday, sending black smoke billowing hundreds| of feet into the air and injuring | three persons. |
the Imperial Oil Ltd. fleet, was| being readied for winter berthing here when the blast occurred. Port officers said the explosion, in a tank compartment about midships, apparently was caused by a spark from an electric cleaning machine. The ship, capable of carrying 150,000 barrels of crude oil, wassempty and flames from the blast were quickly ex-| tinguished. Capt. Fred Smith, company marine superintendent in charge
face burns, as did Michael Aknes, a laboratory technician. Reported in fair condition with burns in Sarnia General Hospital was crewman Stanley Pleasanc,
DIDN'T GIVE A HOOT—For
i mere humans.
EVER been ogled by a mon-key-faced owl? Employees of an insurance firm in the downtown Mer-
} {
chants Bank Building were this |
morning. The hooter, a rare bird in these parts, perched nonchalantly in the window of Room 1505 and dozed contentedly de-
| spite the crowd of curious huThe Imperial Leduc, flagship of
mans who immediately congregated. But when cameras started clicking, the big old owl casually took off, soaring high over the city like a big bomber followed by a flock of curious pigeons. » n ” ROBERT HOOVER of the State Conservation’ Department said the rare bird is officially known as a barn owl. It is popularly known, however, as the monkey-faced owl. Full-grown, the barn owl stands 21 inches tall and has a wingspread of 47 inches. It lives normally in a hollow tree or a cave and is supposed to be allergic to daylight—and downtown offices.
Heart Attack Fatal to Mrs. Van San
Mrs. Marie Van Sant, 623 E. Michigan St., suffered a fatal
“heart attack last night at the
home of a neighbor, Mrs. James
(Long, 627 E. Michigan St. *
The police emergency squad,
led by Sgt. Claude Kindeér, and
Dr. F. R. Brown, General Hospital ambulance physician, admin-
istered oxygen and adrenalin for
an hour in an unsuccessful effort 0 revive her. Mrs. Van Sant, who was 50, was the wife of Walter Van Sant. She had been ill with asthma for the past year. Services will be held at 2 p. m. Thursday at the Robert W. Stirling Funeral Home. Burial will be in Washington Park, Survivors, besides the husband, are two daughters, Mrs. Eileen Halverson of El Reno, Okla., and Mrs. Ruby Bailey, Urbana, Ill; two sons, George Spaulding, Indianapolis, and Paul Spaulding, Plainfield; her father, George Murphy, Iuka, Ill; two sisters, Mrs. Ruth Mullenhour of Champaign, Ill, and Mrs. Alice Gardner of Tulsa, Okla.; three broth-
ers, Kenneth and Leo Murphy of|band later at the hospital. “Peo{InIdianapolis and Clancy Murphy ple stopped what they were doing
of Eldorado, Ill.
Jats ae (Europe Assemby Favors ‘Army Control Plan STRASBOURG, France,
{their farm had braced his back
Jeep Part ju (UP)~The European consul~
tative assembly voted today FO Ce
Cheers Rescuers—
HERMISTON, Ore, Dec. 11 (UP)—A 51-year-old farmerlaborer yesterday gave thanks for tHe strong back of his son who saved him from suffocating until he could be rescued from a caved-in well. Norma Vina Ford was pulled from a well he had been digging after he had spent more than 18 harrowing hours buried at times up to his neck in crumbling, sandy soil. Mr. Ford's first words as rescuers reached him 20 feet down in the well were for his son, Leon, 18. \ } “How's that boy?” he shouted as the last soil was shoveled from around his legs. The boy, with whom Mr. Ford had been digging the well on
for nearly seven hours against a board support that threatened to collapse and suffocate the father. X Shouts For Help
Leon slowly scooped dirt with
{dirt to relieve the pressure.
| “I was a little scared when I|&
{saw more dirt faling down on {dad, a little bit at a time,” the
{son sald as he was put to bed 3
{suffering from shock. | The father,
{to give assistance, | ‘I'm thankful that the Lord {saw fit to stop the earth from caving in before it covered me,” Mr, Ford said. “And I'm thank{ful that He (God) gave me such {a son as Leon, who stood like a concrete wall for hours.” Construction workers from the dam brought in power shovels to gouge a pit around Mr. Ford, protecting him from being wholly buried with a corrugated iron tube around his head. Mr. Ford remained conscious throughout the ordeal, taking oxygen from a physician. He cheered rescuers as they dug toward him, aided during the night by floodlights. As he was brought to the surface his wife, who maintained a night-long vigil at a nearby ranch home, hugged hinmv and his four-year-old daughter cried “I want to see Daddy.” “There's never been anything like it,” Mrs. Ford told her hus-
his hands into a bucket lowered}? to him by neighbors who heard |S his shouts for help. He kept at|8 {it-until he had removed enough |&
resting comfort-|& {ably at a Pendleton Hospital, |: {thanked the rescue workers from |& nearby McNary Dam on the Co-| | lumbia River and the more than {300 persons who stood by ready]:
Farmer Saved From Well Thanks Son's
Strong Back
and thought of only one thing— ‘get that man out.” Mr. Ford, who works at MecNary Dam, sald danger was his business ‘but I don’t like the kind of danger I faced when that earth started coming in around me.” ’ He said the dirt came won him so fast he didn’t have time to think. “When I knew I was trapped I think I must have s , to pray.”
Bag 1 of 10 Most Wanted Fugitives
NEW YORK, Dec. 11 (UP)— Giachino Anthony Baccola, one of the nation’s 10 most wanted fugitives was arrested on Broadway yesterday on a Detroit murder charge. : He meekly cried “I surrender” to the FBI men who found him. Ironically, Baccola was on his way to see his lawyer when four FBI men caught up with him in lower Manhattan. He had tried to change his appearance by wearing horn-rimmed glasses ahd ‘ a mustache. Tone Once a professional boxer, Baccola used the names of James Reanna and Jack Fiore in the ring, but didn't take even one
swing at his captors. He will be arraigned today. :
“He is wanted in Detroft for
‘Army Stocks
{favor of a supreme palitical body|
[to control the proposed European
arias. The assembly voted 60 to 10, with 12 abstentions, to recommend the creation of the powerful political body to the council of Europe's upper house—the committee of foreign ministers. British and Scandinavian dele-
while German socialists voted against the recommendation.
Local Truck Grain Prices
uck wheat. $3.50 New No. 2 white corn, $1.86 New No. 2 yellow corn, $1.80.
ats, 9c. Boybeans, $2.88.
U.S. Statement
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11 (UP)—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Dee, 7, compared with
A year ago: This Year
In Mill Town Home
SUMMERVILLE, 8. C., Dec. 11| (UP)—Fire flashed through a country heuse near here today,
two other persons. al Two additional occupants of} the dwelling of Louis Cook, a! lumber mill worker, were injured. |
the predawn fire swept through
bers of Mr. Cook's’ family, his sister-in-law and three nieces! were burned to death. His!
Hinson said there were no witnesses. |
Rites Tomorrow For Miss Leonard
Miss Helen Leonard, 242 Blue olerriaia .
1 Expenses .... $26,928.810.438 {Receipts ...,. 18,005,788.152 {DeBey y 7.833,022,285 Cash balance 3.465,895,029 Public debt 250,432.485,178 Gold reserve. 22,381,316,767 |
$15,949,561.872 14,798.402,457 1,151,069,214 3,645,351,768 256.017.596.413 22,026,386,057
CLEARING HOUSE v : $1.48]
INDIANAPOLIS
Ridge Rd., chief clerk in the office] Debits i 31,201,000
Kill TE : (of the Internal Revenue Depart-| ng seven small children and... cor 20 years will be puriea Local Stocks
tomorrow in St. Joseph's Ceme-| = tery. Services will be held at 9:30 STOUKS
a.m. in Kirby Mortuary and at
Magistrate T. E. Hinson said|10 a.m. in St. Thomas Acquinas|Jferican States ota =.
Catholic Church.
Mr. Cook’s house with such speed | - Miss'Leonard was born at Lima, that the sleeping occupants had|O. and lived most of her life in no chance to escape. Five mem- | Indianapolis. She was a member Central of Daughters of Isabella and St. Circle
Thomas Church.
She is survived by two brothers, mother-in-law and father-in-law Charles C., Ft. Wayne, and Dr. Cummins Eng ptd were seriously injured, Magistrate, Thomas M., Indianapolis, and two! gis Elec com
sisters, both of Indianapolis.
Katherine and Lenore,|Equitable 8
The youngster selected will live with his guardian on the campus during the rehearsal and performance period. The new Menottl opera will have its world premiere on the TV network of: NBC at 9:30 p. m. (EST) on Christmas Eve.
Man Critically Hurt In.Wrecker Crash
A wrecker was involved in a
he fe
Le a id § *
SOLVES
vr
PROBLEM-—Mrs, s_governor, Herman Talmad
Butly Tolmadge: wite of , wife o ge, figures the safest way to
and Bonds
—Dee, 11
{American Loan 5% Bis Askeq {American States L 8 Ayres Shak fel 3 Belt RR & Stk $a oid Belt RR & Stk Yds com .... | Bobbs-Merrill com { Bobbs-Merrill pfd 4% .
Soya mber of Commerce Theater com om Loan 4 Bis ge Consolidated Fin 5 pfd | Cont Car-Na-Var AW *Cummins Eng com
‘ig 38 srn ng Tele § oid. 2% urities com Securities pfd
10%
phd =u A Water com "na 4% pid Sanam
*Ind Gas & 38 293 HV, 103 1
Sanus RatR A =
= a
$ wS
Fe
- >
=
Ss8% 8% u¥s
ts oe
1 sels LEE
“is Yo ' ’ Talmadge in raising the mink on the
-
*
Rasen To veves
gates abstained in the voting,’
Last Year . |
nd {Peace Chapel. 4%!
04!
* |World War I.
1east of Medora and Ind. 258 west
[Official Weather
} By United Press | DETROIT, Dec. 11—A watch-
{dog committee on government |spending charged today that the Army still was buying certain jeep parts when in some cases it had enough to last more than 100 years. ; {'" The Army 104.1 year's supply {of front axle gaskets came out as
the subcommit on executive expenditures pressed Detroit Arsenal officers for an explanation of
~~ its spare parts buying program.
Committee Counsel Edward | Schaffer read off a list of 96 jeep parts which he said showed the {Army had enough of for normal replacement to last from one to 104.1 years. | He said the Army also had a 75{year supply of steering column covers, *an ‘clutch washers, a 75-year supply of engine tappets, and a relatively “low” amount of valve spring Jocks—37 years.
‘we Former Local Man
To Be Buried Thursday
| Austin L. Harding of Baldwin { Park, Cal, formerly of Indian-
|apolis, will be buried here in
Washington Park Thursday. In-
terment will follow 10:30 a. m. in Harry W. Moore
|
|services He died Friday in Baldwin Park. Mr. Harding was employed (here 10 years at Billings Hosipital. - He was a veteran of His stepdaughter,
{Mrs. Gertrude Drinkwine, lives
lin Indianapolis. | Other survivors are his wife,
|Cora; a stepson, Stephen W. | Woodbury of Baldwin Park, and ia sister, Mrs. Ruth Marx of | Providence, R. I.
3 Siate Highways
A » Flood conditions” have closed stretches of three Indiana highways, the State Highway Department reported today. Ind. 39 south of Tampico will be closed a week or longer, the department estimated. Ind. 235
{ i
of Seymour probably won't be open to traffic for two days,
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ol 1
Sunrise. ..... 6:06 | Sunset. ...... 421
tation, . on 3 s.m, i
Ames baNNn an ana Asana h aon avendnsaninens ae
84-year supply of]
i.
the murder of Albert Swartz, Detroit jeweler, who was ambushed outside his home
ful flight across state | avoid prosecution for the murder and on the obstruction of justice charge. Swartz and a Ferndale, Mich. friend, who also was shot from ambush on another occasion had turned state's evidence in connection with the theft of photographic film, valued at $27,000, from interstate. commerce. It ' was believed that the two shootings were attempts to prevent their testimony. Kenneth C. Gorden and Kenneth McCloud were convicted in Chicago federal court June 8 on charges of interstate transportation of stolen goods and related charges and sentenced to 10 years iniprisonment. Swartz had pleaded guilty to a charge of being involved. -
If You Like Scotch, Get a Load of This LONDON, Dec. 11 (UP)— There {will be 20 times as much Scotch {next year—for everyone except the residents of the whisky's native land. 7 Bxport Scotch will be increased
from 500,000 gallons to 10,350,000
gallons. But for the home market the government allocation will be 2.6 million gallons, the same as in 1951.
ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 Death Notices
HARDING—Hattie KINNICK—Stella MOUNTJIOY Arthur E. PAUL—Karl SHIRLEY—Alva R.
Ber aiher ot Mire. me
en fh of J Be! man and bret r_of ! Read ; xa in ey) may at
. of Saturdsy o J Hen rod Ps Sis ll Vited. nds may call & more
