Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 February 1952 — Page 2
PAGE 2
Report 'Black Saturday' May Have Set Egypt Back 50 Years The following account of the destruction caused in last Satturday's Cairo riot was received via British-Army headquarters in the Suez Canal Zone. It did not pass through Egyptian censorship.
Occurred Saturday afternoon, a time when most British residents are in their suburban
gering destruction caused in last week's riots are still hidden behind rigid Egyptian censorship. But enough information has leaked through to British sources to form a fairly complete picture of the worst disorders in Egyptian history. British observers said a general massacre of Britons was averted only by chance when well-organized bands of hatefilled youths turned parts of Cairo into a nightmare of fire, looting and death. One informed British observ-
An observer said that a general massacre of Britons was avoided only because the riots
er who studied the reports from Cairo said: “This may have put Egypt back 50 years. The police and youth of the country have been demoralized by the government of El Nahas Pasha and forces of disorder let loose, “The situation cannot be put “right in a day.” The reports described the heaps of rubble marking the wrecked Anglo-British build ings set afire in the riots. Observers compared the destruction to a "well-blitzed London or Berlin."
homes. Ten Britons died in the riots. The British reports said they were "butchered" by the shrieking youths who hurled their bodies into bonfires. The British reports said the riots were the result of "a campaign of organized arson." Gangs of as many as 70
By PETER WEBB United Press Staff Correspondent BRITISH ARMY HEADARTERS, Suez Canal Zone, Feb. 2—Cairo’s "black Saturday” may have set Egypt back
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
youths, each led by welldressed middle class youths, blazed a trail of fire and murder through a quarter-mile area of luxury hotels, fashionahle shops and buildings owned by people of eight nations.
“It seemed to be a set plan,” one British report said. “Young men with notebooks were con-
troling the gangs. They were not ordinary riff-raff. They were armed with crowbars to pry open windows and armed with sticks tipped with lead and steel.
"Some members of the gangs
were only about 12 years old.”
The British report added: “The Egyptian police did
nothing at all to stop the gangs. They did not even raise a finger when a little firm action might have stopped it.”
The British reports said Cairo
is still not back to normal.
No automotive traffic is per-
mitted in the still heavilyguarded center of the city where the destruction occurred,
they said. Pedestrians are kept moving at all times. The reports said that about
SATURDAY, FEB. 2, 1952.
400 persons have been arrested for participating in the riots.
They listed at least 200 individual cases of “deliberate arson.”
The fashionable and worldfamous Shepheard’s Hotel
which was fired by the mob
now looks like “Ypres after a bombardment,” one British report sald. Nearby booking officés of several world airlines were described as "just a heap of rubble.” The gigantic department store of Circurels— the Macy's of Cairo—is "a skeleton," an-
other British report said, and an estimated 20,000 people are believed jobless because of its destruction. One British observer reported: ‘I saw London after the blitz and part of the center of Cairo looks like a well-blitzed London or Berlin.”
Egyptians were shocked and .
stunned by the devastating outbreak, another British report said, and regard the riot as "the first sign of a social revolution."
Reds A
Minor Truce |
7
ssues,
50 years, British reports said today. The full details of the stag-
pprove
“UN Says It'll Hold Out for Gl Rotation
By United Press
~~ PANMUNJOM, Korea, Feb. 2—Truce negotiators. settled
three more minor disputes today, but the United Nations command served notice it will hold out for the rotation-of at least 40,000 troops a month. _ } The United Nations also re-|: jected Red demands to trim the number. of ports of entry to be inspected = during “an armistice!
as Little Chum Liquor Store Looted Again
Little Chum was robbed last night. : One of the two men who did it had a thin face and hook- nose. Roscoe Ray, 55, who managed the at 1422°N, Capitol Ave, sald early today he didn’t know how much the two robbers took.
again
more. than $100 in cash. ‘ Police records show that. Little
from 12 to three on each side. . {Chum was robbed last Mar. 5, The - Allies “contended that the burglarized last Oct.'19. And smaller number would be ‘‘en-! .|last Mar. 10 a burglar alarm
.tiréely inadequate.” \ | , Unjted Nations and Commu-| nist staff officers reached agree-| ment on the following three] points during a ‘second trip” | through a B4-paragraph. United Nation proposal for supervision | of A IrNee: on gseomew TIE > % ONE-=-The number of joint ohei~ server teams roaming the de-| militarized zone bétween the op- | ¥ ~ POSITig armies shall be 10 instead ¥+ of 15, as first sought by the United Nations. The joint milltary armistice commission will have the right to reduce this number still further after the peak load of the early days of! the truce. Ls - Each to Decide Rank . TWO-—Each side shall decide the rank of the members it wishes to assign to the military armistice commission. THREE-—Armisticé headquarters at first shall be jn the ceasefire conference village of Pan- . munjom, but the armistice coms-/-mission shall. havé the right to shift later to another site. The Communists delayed again their nomination of three nations to serve on the neutral supervisory commission, They also postponed their reply to a United Nations proposal that staff officers begin at once discussing the fifth and final item on the armistice agenda — recommendations to the bheHigerent governments,
5th Air Force Seeks He ruled that the government
; : | : | . {prosecutors had presented “vague To Avenge Heaw Los Ground Hog Sees Red mci hima: EIGHTH Arty HEADGUAR. : | could impress a jury as fact withTERS, Korea, Feb. 2 ( ~The 3 P .. jout actually informing the acPifth Air Force, out to avenge the —Flan nels Th at Is * cused of the accusations on which loss of 14 planes in its second | py : : ‘they were being tried. most disastrous week of the war, | By United Press demic. But the vigil kept ‘by for-| The dismissal freed three of “damaged three Communist MIG- PUNXSUTAWNEY, Pa. Feb. g|dem enn aE Ay othe 10 defendants outright. They ~ 15 jet fighters in a running 40- _The Punxsutawney ground hog aral Charles J. Margiotti and John are Clarence Hood, former namile air battle today. : (blinked. at his shadow at 8:52 pawarqs, general manager of the tional committeeman for MissisEighteen American Saberjets g,.m, (Indianapolis Time) today |g & o Railroad tas in earnest. ®iPpl; ¥rank Mize, former state fought 55 MIG-15s all the way as a sure sign that red flannela| they had an elght-man Marine 6XtCutive committee chairman,
honor guard to show they meant 8nd Miss Laverne Yelvington, sec-
soundéd—but there was no burglary. Grocery Robbed
Earlier last night 2 fruit stand {and grocery at. 1520. Roosevelt . |Ave. was ‘held up by two. teen(agers who stote $135 from Angilo Amore’s cash register, One of the young men’threat: nickel-plated revolver. ‘The other * |threatened to beat him with a Coke bottle. ‘They demanded his billfold, got it, found it empty. : . Then the man with the gun scooped up the money from the cash register. Mr. Amore told police they walked east on Roosevelt Ave. after the robbery.
Will Weigh Other Job-Sale. Charges
~ JACKSON, Miss, Feb. 2 (UP) —Federal Judge Allen Cox who yesterday dismissed job-selling conspiracy charges against 10 pro-Truman Democrats will hear arguments Monday that he also .|dismiss perjury indictments pend{ing against five of the 10. In a decision based on two tech-
AS YOU CAN SEE—Things are different down Florida way on Ground Hog Day. The G-Hog above with pretty Jo Anne’ Mashburn at Spa Beach, St. Petersburg, saw his shadow without fear. For one thing, there's plenty of sun... and for another, he's a stuffed specimen from a museum.
flamed public opinion” might prevent a fair trial for the 10, Judge Cox threw ouf the conspiracy in[dictments.
to the Yalu River Manchurian and mink coats will be needed for border at altitudes of .30,000 to the next six weeks. business iretary for the state committee, 40.000 Jeet The three enemy jets! The famed one-day prognosti- | Residents in Sun Prairie sald! Still to be heard on charges damaged rought oth Air i S i i ( - Forces claims to 183 MIGH de. works atop Gobbler's Knob. ful. [16 Punxsutawney ground - nog cf FTENCY DOA the Senate sub Io Aaa Et oe Ie emis ciokend has|aust. But observers said “Crick” [0b sales’ chargts sre Forrest Saberjets also exchanged firing more weeks of winter. |was cleareved and resolute when go. 0 * Jimmy [Wilkinson ans passes with other MIGs .over| The prediction was official—not he made his JEOphaLY. ts chal. Henry, DeBrow, all party -worknorthwest Korea during the day, withstanding the claims of Sun, Funxsutawney ap Foet ne a ers. 1 f, but no additional claims were Prairie, Wis, which local folks lenge -nebly. It's still the Feb. 2 po 00 under |indictment for
made. Altogether 135 of the disdain as a “two-cow” town that Weather capital of the country. | 4 0, job sales. sweptback -wing fighters were sought to usurp Punxsutawney's. Ee tt meted Light, Water Strike -#
spotted. Feb. 2 fame. or Purdue Cager's Trial “Chuck” ' (he's: also a" wood-! : . chuck, you know) bounded trom Recessed Until Monday Looms in Anderson his burrow with his nose tilted in| [ AFAYETTE, Ind, Feb, 2| ANDERSON, Ind. Feb. 2 (UP) radar-fashion. He spotted Nis! \yp)__The assault and battery —State labor officials met tody ishadow quicker than an income twa) of former Purdue Univer- with city and union leaders in an tax collector spies a false deduc-|gity pasketball star Ernie Hall attempt to avert a strike which Io PRT [was In’ recess ‘today “until Mon threatens fo cut off this city's _munist line, have scored a tri-| Diai't- Waste Time day. : {electricity and water supplies. umph-in the Indian general elec-' Chuck” wasn't long for the Hall, 21, charged with injur-| Workers at the Municipal Light tions returning one of their top outside world. He glanced at his ing Coy 8. Monroe last Jan. 13, men to parliament. shadow, and shrugged his shoul- went on trial yesterday. in city leave their jobs becaule of a disA. XK. Gopalan, a- lawyer from 46'S With a “there-it-is-boys-8iX- court. The state rested afteripute over dismissal of three men. South Malbar and India’s No, 2 MOre-weeks-of-winter” attitudeipriet testimony. Special Judge! The union, a CIO 62h], accused Communist, defeated C. K. Gov. 30d scurried back into his den. |Mark Thompson set defense testi- the new Republican city adminisindan Nair, one of the Indian Na-|, There were some who charged mony for Monday and adjourned tration, headed by Mayor Noland tional Congress Party by more/!Pat ‘chuck’ was enticed fromthe trial for the two-day week-'Wright, of improperly dischargthan 87,000 votes. : his hole by a “Mati Hari” ground end. , : ing three men, ene of whom had " * ' Report Gerhard Eisler.
Hog: D Sauk LOPeRED, resi BE EE hh—H lth served 25 years as a meter repair0 unxsutawney Groun el ’ i man. Wright said they were dis. Hog. Club, held another ground Fire, Water Don’t Mix is y Stripped of Powers hog in his arms as he and a group For Traffic Officer BERLIN, ‘Feb. 2‘ (UP)~—Gér-|
missed for inefficiency. Wright “lawaited “chuck’s’ succeeded a Democrat mayor. |awaited “chuck's" appearanse. | Water started a fire that ; | J Dr. Lorenzo's ground hog... eq = * Indianapolis police hard Eisler, who jumped bail and was female—as hinted—t certain-| escaped a perjury trial in thelly proved that “chuck” wouldn't
In “TVJEEBIES” youll man's eyesflast night. | lean the slory of on; of -tele- \ | vision’s most uproarious . United States, has been stripped fall for the wiles of a lovely opy.l,, SISIISH Rasmord Brose an in ins Ip vay 0a ow - of his powers as chief of the,Com- Others charged “commercial-| o he used to direct traffic at 8 Pa yal Ye munist information office in the {sm.” Wasn't D Kalo Are 18 uss | knows what a studio Peul:up asnt Dr. Lorenzo talk-ipaymonq and West Sts. Sparks, | ; Russian occupation zone, in-/ing to the retired president of &| are set.off by water from thet CAR do to a show. The first informed sources said today. coal compdny? And wouldn't a! z Za Elsler, informants said, has coal executive want six more
rain-wet . street splashed by an Stallment of this Sunday's only been blamed for the failure of weeks of winter? More coal, more, ise]
unidentified motorist. ! Red propaganda campaign aimed!dividends.
| The motorist took the officer | against Western Germany and| The questions were purely ache 22 General Hospital, where he es. ; ;
Indian Communists
Score Big Triumph
BOMBAY, India, Feb, 2 (UP)— Indian Communists, who follow the orthodox international Com-
tomorrow’s Times.
|was treated and réleased.
Blame Hot Boiler Pipes
In Minneapolis Fire . - | MINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 2 (UP) —Arthur Thompson, chief arson
{ |
o
4 TE Restaurant Operator ; She Ly ay ' Nabbed on Slots Charge
| A customer's good luck with gor Rxomps Toa on) SaSPTELE BT = ra 11, eCrea St. : Ford Motor Co. says material] No isurant at 247 McCrea 8% squad” investigator, said: today
brought bad luck to ‘the estab: Shor have forced the com. | rouEht bad luck to ‘the e that hot boiler pipes that touched
any Io lay off 27000 workers, | Ishment's owner, Eddie Marr. |y wooden support started a tene- | 24,000 of them in Detroit alone. |
Police arrested Marr yester-| sw } / ? day. Charge-—violation of the front Ese that, ited 37 Persons Mr. Ford. told a-news tonfer- 1035 giot . Machine Act. The| Authorities: Investigating the | ence that restrictions of vital brightly lighted pinball machine yiaze said the cause was estab-| “materials will curb his 1952 pro- | paid Police Officer Ernest Leeper jisnea definitely after firemen | duction. to 1 million vehicles of 40. cents when he won four! all types compared with almost. games.
managed to open-a way.to the - twice that many in 1951. Marr appeared tn - Munic hasement of - the . burned out] ‘ 8 Court 4, where his case was
IP&l building. L, con: | ——=
- beautiful “tribute yet. no burden to
> a
F tt i ARE samy : v LITTLE LIZ a ey DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT HISEY & = . on B-36 Forced Down Does your {iroat feel raw and : L
{irritated because you have a-cold? Father John's Medicine sou thes and relieves irritated throats and. coughs due to colds.
® COUGHS DUE TO A L DS
|As Engines Conk Out TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Cal, Feb. 2 (UP)—A huge 10engined B-36' bomber lost the . (push of three power plants on -{a lengthy training. flight last night and made an emergency! {landing at Travis Air Force Base. The B-36, a Strategic Air Command plane, was reported on a round-trip flight from|-
5,
951 NORTH
FOR
larceny-plagued liquor store!
Russ Charge U. S. AEC Gold
| An employee said ‘the loot was
pie AAPA Se HRCI £0 |r Yet HE CRIA MERLE edt tute la Ae a sl EO
nicalities and a fear that “in-|
land Water Plant threatened to!
series of six articles appears in |
* Our service embodies all thet goes - to give that after-feeling of satis- _ faction; the sati
DELAWARE ST.
But Balk On Big One
‘Anarchists’ Throw Eggs at UN
By United Press PARIB, Feb. 2-—Demonstra-tors calling themselves “The ¢t Association of Anarchists” | showered the United Nations | General Assembly with raw eggs .and tomatoes just as it adjourned this afternoon. Half a dozen “anarchists” stationed in thé broad gallery
| {
Uses Toxic Bullets
{| - PARIS, Feb, 2 " demanding immediate United ll tions intervention to end the Korean War, charged today that American airmen were “toxic bullets.” =~ =
place, phlets, eggs and to the delegates as they ad}
gs was the first incident ot the sort at a United Nations As \
sembly meeting.
oo Disrupts Life
overlooking “th e underground theater in the Palais de Chaillot,
he United Nations“ meeting started thr
The bombardment of
{
n Las Vegas
By United Press
% people want peace. “nies must be freed. And we
The pamphlets, printed on
small slips of cheap white paper,
sald:
“Politicians talk
who men are dying . in Korea, Burma, Indo-China and Tunisia. Enough of speeches. The The colo-
N\
‘Cur Owner Gets Free
Storage. in. Capital
It'll cost a Ne
battery—to get his eat storage here next spring
Soviet Delegate Jacob A. Malik, ‘working man’s paradise” was 1941 Pontiac in downtown Was
made the charge after the United recessed. today ~affer States "said it is ~“disturbed by showed lifg in the Kogpean disrupted when $ a their “regular. jobs. to become’ Boon XE i, veek.
‘the slow course armistice negotiations. _. ... United Nations intervene to erid “ the Korean War quickly and) thus pave the way ‘for settle-| ment of all problems that divide the world.”
| “New United States atrocities
/strafed the Korean pulation | {with explosive and toXic ‘at 4 p. m, Jan. 9,” Malik said /in backing up ‘his demand. “U. 8. planes strafed with toxic |and- explosive bullets the peaceful
{populated point of Ulnim-in the ,.
{district of Munchaon and the province of Kanvon, despite the fact that no military objectives were in the area.”
[te {81
jon Allied maps.) | Malik sald five persons were ¢
attack. Next “vietims" |bed,
day, he said, the could not get out of lost their appetites, had|
‘headaches and insomnia And residents got up in arms ahout ‘many spat blood and had nose | nes Tatior op disruption {bleeds. : caused by the fabulous overtime " |wages paid on the - sprawling
Separated Since
Birth, Twins Are Reunited
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Feb. 2 (UP)—Ronald MacMillan, 19-| {year-old Korean War veteran, (Was reunited with his twin brothjer today for the first time since {they were separated shortly after pirth. “I'm Ronald,” the veteran said. “I'm Richard,” came the reply. | - Their reunion had been -delayed on advice of a physician. Richard, whose last name now is {Von Sprecken, had been seriously | ill and it was feared-the excitement would be too much for him.
I
| However, his héalth improved
Dewey McLeod and B. C.|and-his doctor finally allowed him Chances and ran from a hitchto come here from his home at hiking gunman last night.
Ludington, Mich, to meet his! brother yesterday. 4 - ® "8
RICHARD - recently had been told- by his foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter von Sprecken,
orphanage and - separated soon |after birth, vi
abouts of Ronald who was raised| he was fighting in Korea. Let-
ters were . exchanged and the meeting was arranged.
‘Mexico. Charges U. s. Hogging Water Supply
| MATAMOROS, Mexico,” Feb, 2 (UP) — Mexican ambassador to! {the United States, Rafael de la {Colina filed formal protest with | {the U. 8. Department of State {yesterday seeking ~ relief for |water-short Matamoros and oth-| jer border towns. . | Matamoros city officials had |asked the Mexican government [to protest that American irriga[tors were taking more water from |
|
{the Rio Grande than internation|al agreements allowed.
a
isfaction .of a to a loved one those left.
TITUS
bullets ;...ause ‘he found it more profit‘able to work on the cost-plus-fee 'contract jobs.
{salaries paid by Haddock En-
lections to come (The points are not identified | gro nastill.”
Li . Flipin t . seriously wounded in the alleged |g 10 Gays Jr. Fuoin testing that the men who had the: jobs w
atomic project.
he said, “but I just don’t think any man can earn with“his hands the wages that were being paid.”
{to $700 a week. .
by charges of the MeNeil Contracting Co. which said that its workers were pirated away by the Haddock firm.
pany charged, it was unable to complete” a $617,000 contract at /the atomic site and the government subsequently - canceled “its contract, -
Hitchhiker Draws Gun, Driver Takes It on Run
{dricks Place, jumped from his car shouting, “Call the police,” at the Gaseteria Station at 1017 E. Washington St. -
called lice. that he had a twin brother and Thomas Batt Jr, 21, of 731
that they were born in a Detroit park Ave. a block-from the. sta(tion. Stewart was arrested for
Richard checked on the where-| jor on Of the 1935 Firearms) -
in the orphanage and found that j,mpeq
{stopped . for -a traffic light at ‘Washington and Meridian Sts.
bakery. Take me there, “Stewart told him. Later he drew a gun land said “I know how to use it.| Be careful.” .
<
A,
iv
Oi Ei
Milk and bread deliveries in the
Flat proving grounds, one witness occurred when American planes g,iq P 8 gr
A store owner closed up shop
Garbage Collectors Lured Roy B. Flipin, managing dictor of the Builders Exchange, stified last. night that the huge
neers, Ltd., caused garbage col“almost to a
“My garbage wasn't pfcked up understand the reason was
ent to work for Haddock.” Mr. Flipin said that Las Vegas
“I don’t object to high wages,”
He sajd laborers got from $500
The hearing was brought on
As 4a result, the McNeil com-
Edward Woodfin took his Mr, Woodfin, 28, of 225 N. Hen-
Clifford Thompson, attendant, ey , captured
Mr. Woodfin said Stewart into his car when. he
“I'm: late for work at the
owas § Ser PE I TO
city were hampered when local hours in one place in the capital, lcitizens were lured onto the con- so the owner will have to pay a his family committed suicide bestruction projects at the Atomic fine. Energy Commission’s Frenchman |
The storage is free.
too - much: While you make speeches,
Jersey motorist
say with them that we do not want to die, either for Stalin or for Truman. . “The peoples won't go along.
The oppressed of all countries,
united in a real third front, ery out: “With your hyprocrisy, your weakness, your cynicism, you are all war crirainals.”
It's About Time
| GENEVA, N. Y., Feb. 2 (UP) {—Clarence J. Estey, 82, has cut WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (UP)— his first wisdom tooth. It emerged without distress beside his false | : teeth, Dentists told him ‘he es< jonly a fine—and probably & NeW ,.,i4ned a record since the oldest out of person previously known to have . © grown a tooth was only 65. USINE LAS VEGAS, Nev. Feb. 2—A The owner of New Jerley Mhearing into the atomic project.cense plate EC2621 parked “his
Family Leqps to Death
testimony ington’ and left a note promising IN Front of Train raps was to.pick it up when the cherry trees : are in bloom. sh, gh of 7s INE. es 37-year-old farmer, his Police towed the car away ani 27-Vear-0)d Wie 8a... wee
cause of WOrry oxer their
‘poverty.
"YAMAGATA; Japan, Feb, 2
RIOrRSE SLX re. cxdents- ‘children; “aged 1 to 7, leaped th fled owner. It's against the law front of a ‘speeding train today to park a car for more than 18 and were killed. Pélice said Gentaro Ozaki and
@*
ot insured
\ N
rr Cw - * Ti SAFETY OFsYOUR| SAVINGS 1 Insureo Up 10!
ay ™L
reo saan
$10000 |
N INSURA INGTON, RANGE
This bronze plaque assures you thf
the insurance of your savings account es Beswagaroved by the Pedorsi Saving and Loan Insurance Corporation, en : instrumentality of the government, : Why not call for 0 copy of oup. “bulletin covering Insyred
Savings accounts?
“
SIRVICE HOURS dhondoy through Friday 900 a.m. 16 4:30 p.m: Soturday shor Loge! Hold rol
et Pa
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i» of
TIIYT
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Satur Repu Rip €
Of N
By WASHING Republican cized appoir . Morris to h c¢le#hup cam involved in a of surplus ta Sen. Karl would be mu were selecte -his full time ruption and part of it b another .case “1. is. a | South Dako “that the P head his corr A man wh linked with t der investiga
Plan P
The Senate gating comm reports that : mer Rep. Jc Mass.) made profit hy buy from the gov ing them ui conditions. Theres hav that Mr. Mo! tanker deals man Clyde FT gaid Mr. Mor quiry by .the i The commi public’ ‘hearin deals soon. N not know w would be call Mr. Morris, lican attorney trustee of the Foundation, common Sto Tanker Corp.
TE TT
eRe wa
fw
5 Se i Fe TRAN ‘surplus tanke company and the nonprofit _ organization : . Attorney ( McGrath, hin lican fire, ani appointment ris sald his fi Investigate ti mént, and M his “complete unlimited co-c However, Se (R. Cal.), like _ ber of the Hq “the appointm was “too little “He's ton lif too late,” Mr. see how the can investigat
Bell Rate Set for Mc
Indiana Be rate case will the state Pub sion Mar, 17. The comm facts and bri date since the a permanent "$7,000,000 a vy cuit Court oy; PSC ‘earlier $730,000 “a ye court perman commission fr Bell's new I: such fime as ¥ “proper, reaso fiscatory rates
»
Organiza
‘Wel
Will
s.
«
For |
UNCHE ule of |
the hostess Monday. schedulad for Assisting t Mesdames F James E. Fo C. Allen.
Broad Rip
All but th 16 included i of the family groups at B School have - further enrol Additional be accepted bookkeeping dramatics, . may call M muth, chairr committee in coe Smith or "Tuesday ev “line for enro is offered ar fee charged.
Catholic C New office at the 8:15 p. St. Philip Ne .. olic Women. gion will be Mrs. Loren F
© Westfield Schedules
* The Westt
Til © have an ope
.. from 4.to0 9 the Westfield -.-~ There will be
"', shown and wl The group ‘the Indiana
' silalhe 1
