Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1952 — Page 5
WEDNESDAY, Lk Wyoming All Set for Elk’ Invasion
By Unlted“*Press * « JACKSON ‘HOLE, -Wyo,, Jan, ' 25-~The first of an estimated 17,- . 000 head of elk are coming down _ from the Teton Mbuntains ~ their annual free lunch, courtesy of the state and federal governmen & The elk have nn promises to make; nothing to dn but collect their meals and stav. alive until’ next year. Next vear, the elk—some 5000 of them at least=—will pay with. their lives “as the prey in the giant Jackson Hole hunting season. : Without the feeding, would be no season, Each year Wyoming's game and fish commission jgins hands with the federal fish and®wildlife service in feeding the huge bands of roving elk in this scenic resort
for
there
Winters Rugged 4 The winters high in the rugged Tetons ‘are considerably more than" just bitter. They are real, freezing snow-bound winters. Unless the two services maintained their free lunch program, up to 0 per cent of the 17,000 would probably die of the cold and starva tion. Several years age..the federal government, at the ~urging of sportsmen’s groups and the state, erztablished the Jackson Hole na tional elk refuge, 30.000 acres of a winter haven for the huge gama animals. The refuge is under the supervision of Almer Nelson, veteran game management officer, for the federal service. On the refuge, federally employed “farmers” raise vagt fields i of hay, meant only for ‘the elk J ' _ The hay, 3000 tons of it, is left standing in fields for the elk to graze through during the winter
—Mag- : In "addition, the federal govern efacts. ment and the state share the casts of buying another 1700 tons fidwest, of hay to supplement that grown. n these Come by Instinct y- beau- Retween about Christmas time : and the last of March, the elk, a femi- led bye’ natural instinct apparent he way ly, flojy «off the mountain peaks ashions na dy x the n down 10 the n of the . refuge bordering the Snake River. vearing. -
There they make themselves quite at home, grazing leisurely through
(yolden standing hay fields with no fear
ly about of hunters, put, be When heavy snow falls up to and full eight feet deep in the refuge and eloveds” covers the standing forage, state r their and federal workers break out the purchased stores and. scatter it e colors around the refuge. Added to the ar pro- hay diet, the elk also are given t to the cakes of oil feed supplement to ombina- give them a varied meal and also collec~ to stretch out the expensive—$32 too, can a ton-——hay supplies. moothly “We can carry over for the next nd fun-- vear's hunting season just as many el as we can feed.” the secrets ite game warden, - Charles vourself Hanscum, said. ‘Altogether we wntown eed between 10,000 and 12.000 ear de- elk and the others can manage ng with wr themselves,” m both w—— ay the
suitcase Used Car Ceiling . Prices Dip 8 Per Cent
WASHINGTON Jan: 2 (UP) ‘lost used car ceiling prices autoically dropped about eight per nt yesterday, but officials said "he reduction will not necessarily
nothing to buy,|
playground of western Wyoming.
noon.
°
MIXTURE OF TRAFFIC— Motorists in Dallas, Tex., are apparently
an approach to Loye Field. AH through the Winter months, when the north-south ri planes skim over car tops as they come in to land at the busy Southwestern Terminal,
v
Possibility Liquor Ban
JOSEPH MAZANDI
By RUSSELL DALEY United Press Staff Correspondent MEMPHIS, Tenn., Jan.. 2 — An
By educator of a small Arkansas col-
United. Press Staft Correspondent lege is out to make Americans TEH ; . 2. A 8n: . k TEHRAN, Iran, lan. h An vote-conscious and get a big turnine wht hes hi vo 5 bering thought has hit "" out at the polis every election day; sian Garden immortalized hy
local or national.
Omar Khayvam. Alcohol may be : : banned legally in Iran Dr. George S. Benson, president Theré is a parliame ntary move of Harding College at Searcy, to clamp prohibition gn this an- Ark. wants to ‘tag’ everyone
cient land where drinking has Who votes and in that way make been considered a pleasant pas- those who don't vote feel selftime since man began brewing at conscious. history's dawn, Dr, Benson said the idea is to Iranian Romeos may have to have each voter distinguished by court in the wilderness without a red tag which says: the traditional help of a jug of “1 have voted: have you?” wine or arrack. Harding College, which has conThe parliament has instructed ducted freedom forums against the. -government of Premier Mo- what it calls the drift to -socialhamed Mossadeg to present with- ism, is promoting the vdting idea in a month a bill prohibiting any- all over the country. The school thing that could lead to intoxi- hopes a civic club, the local gov-
cation. ernment itself or even civics Court Bans Liquor classes at schools. will “sponsor “tag day” each election dav: in Most persons predict the bill their communities.” will, never be passed, ‘however, v Parlament's ‘move followed a Calls It Duty growing tendency -in public—t0 «aAimost everyone will agree
avoid aleahnd. The shah recently ‘that it is a patriotic duty to vote, decreed, fos example, that noth- genqon said. “Most people who ing intoxicating should he served gq, vote feel a little sheepish on at.court... Embassies and €on- gaction” day =whether it's a local sulates abroad were told to fol- ¢opo) district election or a presilow suit. ki " : dential @ne. Despite = public opposition 0 “ te ar Arp : drinking, Iranians still congre- 1f his co Workers or neighbors : i were proudly wearing a little ‘I
gate for the local version of the , B cocktail hour almost every after- have voted-have you? tag after|
It's held in the back yard, going to the polls, the non-voter’s which for every Iranian home feeling of guilty would increase.| worth the name is equipped with The theory is, then, that a great a miniature pool like the fabled/ Many of them ultimately would pleasure gardens of romance. (form the habit of voting and be-
In the southern-city:of Shiraz, 'come, we hope, intelligent voters.”
for example, it.is customary for! Dr. Benson sald Harding's nathe local men about town and the tional education program staff local women noted for their found that only about 50 per cent charm to congregate with jugs of of the 95000000 Americans of wine in the city’s parks. voting age vote in presidential Arrack 1s Potent elections and only about 20 per
cent vote in all elections. Lutes and Wyres also are carted Workers: Mobilized along.
Harding College has mobilized The mos potent 16cal drink is white lightning concoction nearly 2000 persons in all 48 called ~arrack: It powerful states to present its plan. They enough to make Russian vodka have some good talking points on about as sirong in comparison as (N® values of just one vote. ; a coup of tea.. They point out that in the presiOpponents of the Bill in parlia- dential election of 1948, Ohio's 25 ment say there is no need for °lectoral votes went to President : Truman by such a small margin
a
is
vy. dinner ean an actual change in selling passing the bill. : sert and prices. P Drinking is banned by the Ko- that a single additional vote in . The sole exception was 1951 ran, they said. each of the state's voting pre- + it, One models which dropped only two —_— ee !cincts could have reversed the reneapple- per cent. jautt. ™ ion. "The Office of Price Stabiliza- Deer Evade Him - Dr. Benson said the discounting! Tharshe fion ordered the reductions to re- . WARE, Mass..(UP) — David of the value of a single vote has on of flect normal depreciation. Used Carroll has bagged a lot of small) won and lost ‘many an election. Poa automobiles generally are selling 83Me in his day. However, he’s He said a few thousand votes in! 1g until below ceiling, however, and the ‘been deer hunting every year for particular precincts in some of! one and 2ut TY Most cases will not close ll-YeAl® without getting a deer. the key states have, more than . the gap between the going price te! p= once, provided the deciding factor ses, top and the legal’ Hmit, Conds Pick Up Tabs in electing a president, Additional two per cent cuts on BOSTON (UP) — The Boston In 1876, he said, President Rutll ‘models are scheduled for the University News said a poll of therford B. Hayes was elected by irst day of each new quarter of students dis losed that most of & single electoral vote and in 1844 he vear—April 1, July 1 and Oct. the go-eds are footing the bills on Grover Cleveland was elected by se idea 1. : ri off-campus “dates.” so small a margin that 600 votes budget y. Serve : 8 (with. r maoa~ — . 2
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SAVINGS
Persia Scans Suggest Tagging to Shame of Voters Into Balloting
J . 6000E. Tenth Street gr ne :
“b ot Bowl Fart s Put - In Production
By United Press ELKHART, Kan. Fifteen vears ago, farmers in what was then a wasteland of Morton County sold their land for $4 an acre and moved from ‘the dust-blown area >on Today 110,000 acres along the Cimarron River in _.that county 1s pasture land and this year it will produce about a million extra pounds of beef.
The pasture is: owned by the desolate plateau in high Mesopn-léd him tir the intriguing discov<=80il conservation servige of the tamia was anything but useless ery of chains of “mud volcanoes, government. The servica started pee . emall mounds. of *volcanic stones work to reclaim the land in 1936, stone .and sand: Oil prospectors , 4: earth hetween 150 and 900 buying. the land from farmers used to detour around ft on their coo ji circumference and 20 to whoa went broke in the drought way to the rich ‘oil country of 545g fast high. The earth and and dustbowl years. Saudi Arabia and Iran, farther 0 qiones when ground, gave out a : . . the south and east. strong oll odor. Seeds Poured In "Today it seems they were by “Tress: volea hide Fe ‘aR NY oblivious to an aitliner making The service poured. pasture PRSSINE ithe WHICH TEAL Sel on mistakable sign of important oil mway is used, grass seeds: into the’ depleted, Paul Schuh carries The Times dle Easter tries and ow esources, since they can "he TS ———=sandy soil. By 1943, a small part ‘route in Maywood. He is a senior n counries and lows ol ‘roumd in - all tropical and sybof the area was ready for graz- at Ben Davis High School and oolag inte. thelr. government. HO TOT ATER MT. Mereter ing and farmers and ranchers in lives at 2630 Kentucky Ave. His 0 v. reported the region formed the Morton hobbies are photography ahd Close to Sea ; : In the Urfa district alone, Mr County: grazing association. music. The money he earns from. The oil resources, locked in tha Mercier sald, he has mapped 14) Any farmer-in the eounty can carrying The Times has heen Harran desert, may run to. mil ich volcanoes. over. an area 2. belong to the organization. It’s a used’ to pay for flying lessons. lions of barrels, informed sources mil wide and 70 miles long’ co-operative system, with every- Paul is a veteran of 6!; vears here said hey are anxbufward sign of o body interested benefiting from on his Times route, and has a A great advantage for any fu- resources, formed by pressure of fof his ‘Opponent in. New yori gS overnment grass. : Sister Whe also carries the pape: ture exploitation is their geo- nil gases. Pushing against the is last vear 60.000 acres were graphical location. The future earth crust, he wrote, would have reversed the decision grazed. ‘Another 20.000 acres will Wh °, G wells would be only a few dozen Oil circles here are talking ex Dr. Benson gave a classic eX- he ready next year. Cattlemen fig ere to [o] ath miles off the nearést Mediterra- citedlv of the oll hoom to eoms ample of the value nf one vote. re that more than 6000 head of “Autumn © Garden,” starring nean port, eliminating the ‘heed The French press has hailed the pointing to a man who decided to stack grazed on the 60000 acres ¥redric March . and Florence (or extensite pipelines discovery. as. something likely t vote in Indiana in ‘the 1840s -atithis vear and gained a million Eldridge. $1.20 to §3.60. 8:30 The discovery was rhade hV hange political and military the last minute. pounds of heef. «nm. : fean: Mercier a noted French thinking abaut the Middle East The candidate he supported fOr Tn 1043 there were 475 head Of Ne em————— - ——— v > . _ ee LL
Here's Your Times Carrier
RE Seed nT PAG rs
8 SE
Found i in Middle .E
By GEORGE SIBERA just hack United Press Staff Correspondent
PARIS, Jan.. 2 Vast oil
ge ologi it an exten de
posits have been discovered hid- it "in a reporf to deh beneath the barren, voleanic Academ of Stience ; ; Me who has , ateay between Svria Harrap. Pl 3 : Jing. the Middle
and Turkey. If. exploited, influence the strategic and economic position of the Middle East For years, no ona suspected -the
traced Urfa and
for mohths,through the
the Syrian
they might greatly
-
Mr, Mere
"be en
district Turkish borders.
ast
the
Soil Yields Secret
Vast New Oil Bonotlis:
in Paris from sive geological survey of the Middle Kast. He announced ;Frenen
trampKastern deserts ‘the deposits ACrORs
er said his soil survey
the state legislature > LN one cattle on the pasture that was vote. ‘ opened for the first time. That candidate ‘cast the déciding vote that sent Edward A. Cost Is Small Hannegan to the U. 8. Senate, Stockmen pay $1.75 a month per Mr. Hannegan was acting as head for use of the government
president pro-tem of the Senate when the question of statehood for Texas came up. The vote was tied and Mr. Hannegan cast the deciding vote in favor of admitting Texas,
grass. The government's fee is $1. The other 75 cents goes to the association to defray its expenses. One fourth of each dollar paid the government returns to the county in lieu of taxes. That means about $10,000 for the county treasury this year. When it's roundup time on the {pasture each fall, about 100 cowhoys join forces to rope the different brands and se pa rate the calves. The land worth $4 an acre 15 vears ago now is figured from $30 to $100.
Wana Azidontlly Killed by Celebrant
WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (UP) Police said Mrs. Ollie Estep. a 41 - year - old grandmother, was killed yesterday by a .22-cawm er ballet apparently fired at random
by: a 13-year-old New Year's celebrant. : ; . They held the vouth withgut $100,000 Fire Hits A
charge after he admitted he fired the rifle ‘he “got for Christmas from the second floor hack porch of his home a block away from Mrs. Estep’s home. The bullet coursed through a window: and lodged near Mrs. | Estep's heart as she fingered the (dial of a radio in her living room.
It's Unlucky Street
FALL RIVER, Mass. (UP) — Patrolman James T. Taylor
S. Dakota Town
ABERDEEN, 8. D., Jan. 2 (UP) Fire yesterday destroyed: two Main St. business establishments and severely damaged an ice plant on the outskirts of the city. Destroyed was a Main St. build{ing housing the Parsch Hardware! | Store, Sportsman’s Bar, and sev-' eral second floor apartments. Badly damaged was the Culbert Ice Plant on the southeast
‘parked his automobile on the edge of town. south side of Pleasant St. and/ The ice plant fire broke out found his left front - fender while firemen were fighting the
crumpled when he returned. Two days ‘later he parked on north side of the same street. When he returned he found the front of his auto pushed in. These days he's parking his car in the repair shop.
Main St. blaze. The Main St. started in ths basement building. : Damage was expected to exceed £100,000, No one was reported injured.
-
fire apparently of the
eserves mee oe. i etter rc nie
,
CHRISTMAS CLUB
IS STILL OPEN
At Fletcher Trust there are different plans to fit every budget:
$ 2 every two weeks gives you $ 50
4 every two weeks gives you 100 «."~ 6 every two weeks gives you 150 10 every two weeks gives you 250
Open your club account at any of our 14 citywide offices listed below. You only have to make deposits at fwo-week intervals—and you can deposit at any Fletcher Trust office in.town. A check will be moiled to you December 1.
* More than 12,000 persons last year received Christmas Club checks from
N. W. Corner Pennsylvania and Market Sts. : 706:E. Sixty-third Street 8501 E. Washington Strast’
3001 N. lilingls Street 2506 E. Washington Street 20 W, Sixteenth Street’ 500 E. Washington Street | ©, 11258. Meridian Street © 474 W. Washington Strest
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