Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1952 — Page 14

~ » «

. legislation to curb Communists in

PACE 14 =

»

NLRB

Says New Laws May ‘Be Needed

WASHINGTON, Feh, 18 (UP) The National Labor Relations

Board said yesterday that Com-|§ munists still are. a problem In the labor movement and that “it is possible that new legislation will be required to deal specifi:} cally” with them But:the AFL and the CIO told! Congress. thdt new legislation is unwise and unnecessary and that ° the labor unions themselves can

(eal and have heen deating- effeetively with the Communists in their midst These opinions as well as

of other experts a Senate

those of a score —were made public by Labor Subcommittee, headed by Sen. Hubert M. Humphrey (D+ Minn.) which, has been investi-/ gating the matter. It plans to! hold public hearings next month. ’ Seeks Expert Opinion Sen. Humphrey recently wrote experts in the field of labor, management, ‘Fovernment, and’ the publie, asking their opinion about

labor unions There was little - if any —agreemént among the experts, although % AFL. President William Green, C10 President Philip Murray and the other big™“umion leaders re-| jected the idea of any further) anti-Communist legislation. They also called for repeal of} the Taft-Hartley Law, on the grounds that the law's anti-Com-munist requirement has helped not hindered the Reds.

But the National Labor Relatlohs Board, in a ‘statement by Chairman Paul M. Herzog and George J. Bott, took issue with duction of "Cheaper by the Doze

this view. ‘Contributing Factors’

seine highly probable” gaid “that the tanti-Commu-

ha | fhey nist affidavit) proviso was a contributing factor to the post-war

Hog Prices Dip |

n,'' to be presented at 8 p

ocal Stocks and Bonds

p———————

ELEVEN FOR A DOZEN—Featured in the Broad Ripple Chapter of National Thespians pro- . m. Wednesday in the Broad Ripple High School auditorium, will be (back row, left to right) Jone Hester, Jeani Sage, John Hummel, Rhoda Kittleson and Sally Marness. Seated in front are Marilyn Woerner, Art Pittenger, Sue Ann Miles, Neil Greenbaum, George Asquith, Sunny Kaiser, Belgen Richardson and Carolyn Hawthorne. the Blair House,

!vivors of

® PORE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES — I

Pushes Probe Of Communists In Ranks Of Labor

2s sn ————————————————— i

7 Fishermen Feared Lost In Storm

BOSTON, Feb, 18 (UP)— Seven crewmen of the missing fishing schooner Paolina were, wi 4 {feared lost today when a Coast $ {Glard cutter found an overturned , % seven-foot 1

life raft southeast of (Nantucket Lightships in a fierce northeast storm.

The cutter Unimak picked up the life raft and a cork lifepre-| server marked ‘“Paolina”- late)

yesterday afternoon, some 26 hours after wreckage of the ship's 8

dory was found, Winds with gusts of near hur- [EEE ricane force , grounded search

planes but the Unimak and three| |other Coast Guard cutters continued to ‘séarch™or possible surthe Paolina in "a blinding rain and snowstorm. ‘Another long overdue fishing vessel, the Julia K. docked at| its ‘home port of New - Bedford late Saturday night and reported its crew -of four all were “safe % and sound.” . The Julia K. apparently became lost in the same area where the Paolina, also out of New; * Bedford, was feared to have

et MONDAY, FER. 18; 1052

—— —————————— et — —————————

{gone down. ’ Photo for The Times by Clarence Awhrey, The Coast Guard cutter Le- « . lgare picked up two sections of| FIRE LEVELS CHURCH LODGE—Concrete steps mark the site of the 50-room summer lodge

the Paolina’s dory Saturday afternoon after the wreckage was

of 4he Indiana Disciples of Christ Church, destroyed by fire at Bethany Park.

|

|spotted by a PBM amphibian]

[plane. One of the sections had agers were blamed for the $70. {the name of the Paolina printed] M B by V dos 000 blaze which - destroyed two on ft. arines 00 00 00 large buildings of the Bethany pn ii . Christian Assembly near Brooke ’ yn in Morgan County. Margaret's Now 28 A B = T WwW ' lames razed the: 50-room WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (UP) S eing ar 00 e summer lodge and nearby sande Margaret Truman . celebrated wich shop and dormitory Saturher 28th birthday yesterday with By United Press es, from the Marine air group 12 day morning, fire companies from

President and Mrs, Truman at A FORWARD MARINE AVIATION BASE, Korea, Feb, 18—Marine Air Group 12 said today it

has a new secret weapon—Afri-

3 ® forces which led to the revolt A Y d H ie . ,. can voodoo magic—which works against Communist domination of t aras ere AST OCRS 3 BI Asked IH 20 well that its indiscriminate use a few labor unions, especially in : Ae AN States’ 5 f has been banned by the comthe first years after its ‘enact- Light and medium weights bar- American States pd 3 J manding -officer. ment.” rows and gilts sold mostly 25 1's Ayres 45% pfd 100" 2 A couple of South African %via- : , er ¢ ri pd Belt RR A Stk ¥ds co a3 . i a ia The board said that because all Senile owe ran Friday At the Bot RR Stk Yds pid oF * (tors dropped “in at this Marine the big labor unions have, com-| ndianapolis Stockyard today. Botibs-Metrill Cont ot - Bs ; ‘ | base last autumn on an overnight plied with the Taft-Hartley Act's] Bulk choice hogs at 170-240 Central Sova =~ - Ba | visit and entertained the boys anti-Communist réquirement and pounds sold for $17.50-18. Choice ¢ NT hoater com « an with a voodoo rain dance. hecause left-wing unions have! SOWS weighing 300-400 pounds eu . 3 SELITR £2 utd 30 o One of the South Africans heen expelled from the CIO, some sold for $15-15.75 gc i Rn 5 pfd 9613 Inge S ver moaned and grunted, a chant he - i s ms i wn : ine? assume that the Communist prob-| High and: good choice cattle C Eig com aD said he had learned in Africa's lem no longer exists. 'sold at $32.50-34.50. Cows were | Br pid 2 exe 300 jungles. The other jumped and ———————— moderately active to steady. 5 nid ... 91 By Harold Hartley gyrated in a weird dance which ies com . . a) at $20-24. Bulk good and choice Ec Securities pd . 94 he said he picked vp from pigmy vealers sold at $35-38 with a Tamils Tihance com 4 witch doctors. R 3 nance § pid 25 ~ i . . . . In top of $39. mvs Corp pid wi ane NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 18—Americans are hitting their| It was in the middle of the amilton fg 1€Co com : 30 “ . . , | Floss 13.000: only moderately active; Herfi-Jones Class A pid ~.... 8% 9 coffee cups harder than ever, but the price binge is over. |dry season, but the next morning ght and medium weights barrows and io me o & T 5%. pid canes 99 i it rained. gilts mostly 25 sents lower: "bulk choice Hook rug Co com rea 18 19 1 1 y i 1 . : n ianapo is 110-140 pounds 417.8018. top $18.35; 240-| Ind Asso Tel 2 ptd 16 I got this straight today from one of the biggest im-| The Marines figured this brand 50-17.50: 275-325 is! Inc sso Tel 2'u p or A : Tm . 3 : : : 8 50. 16. nds eae pounds 11450-1530. ;Ind Gas & Water com" 24% 8 porters,-deep in the coffee-aired dock district. of Tagle nig come in handy v few $18; sows ‘about stead ice 300-400 Ind Mich El 4's p { ; ——— ———————— 80 7. 3 . KE. - BIRTHS pounds 415- 13.75, few 318. 400-000 pounds 1nd Telephone 4.8 pd 96 He was easy-talking. 47-year- re me day. So Capt’ E., J. Bruch BOYS $14-15,25. Indpls Ath Club Realty Co . 80 y | Englisbee. vice! man of Chicago, Ill, noted the o AT SE Franets==Witltam, Betty Showalter, | Catite 2500: ' calves 300: steers and! Indpis Pow & Lt com 26% mumiold. W. ( ‘onnel Lng a vacuum {is impossible. And music and choreography d adDou, Martha Tomlinson: Don, Irene heifers only moderately active; high wood Indpls Pow & Lt pf 22! 93a * president of Ruffner, McDowaell'there i= some air in a coffee can. eograpLy ant a - Swenson; Harold, Dorothy Callahan; load ‘high “choice ‘vearlinzs $35.50; scat: Indianapolis Raliways com ... 4 o ded at few jumps, jives and twitch- » pi : ere ots -commercia ans ROOC( mixec naianapoiis ater com T's r C sl William, Mildred Gainey; Cecil. Stella | re ote steady a A oT d Ixed [aqiananoiia war 4'q pf - 3 PL & Bur h 3 - d A pound of coffee, left open 24 Crews; John, Maztivn Oraly; bet | color native Steers and mixed yearlings i napolls Sater, 5 pf 10849 108 ) He's been in coffee, Fan Ane nours, will lose 50 per cent of its n yron, Ary 0! i 27.5 : 3 cholic neat T75-pound Jeli 101) Nationa Life com n y nn ars 8 i as i | Ro Bi pa Mildred Horne; Virgil] Pr $33.50 cows moderately. active. Kingan & Co rom 13, iss boy, for ad years. He startec flavor. And in a can the flavor| Juanita Cox 4 at eady; Foi tid and Lommencial 320. 24 K an & Co pid 9% 62 an office boy, setting up cups for seeps out into the little air that is| J . 26, ¥ x ifery kinds $27 5( incoln 1 tional fe 8 23 2 “we seman iames, Alden Brandon: Jon | O45, 2 nd rere 16-20 80; bulls Lo Co ion Taka 14's 143, the tasters. : there. oro strong to $1 higher: vealers steady: bulk P R Mallory vas 38 38 ack i old swive Malan; George. Catherine Helmer. Paul. igonq and choice 335-38: top $39 for Marmon-Herrington com ..... 4'4 ia He leaned back in an So the hoarders lost dough in| Almada Hooley: Stanford, Betty Lewis; prime utility and commercial 126-34 | Mastic Asphalt gn 4's chair, coat loose, and told me coffee strength and flavor while Ss e 8 r an AlrIY! Natl ot 8 o« . 1 18" ry Ly Jao. Salon: a, anive acthe” stendy to i gh higher: other Natl Homes a .“ 1 Ba what good coffee is, and how you the stuff sat on their pantry! udor; wh bog Fr! Harriet White; Classes scarce, abou steady 3 decks N Ind Pub Serv com ai 43s 2% an tell ' shelves. & | At Methodist — Melvin, ¥ D choice to prime 98-pound fed woolen west- N Ind Pub Serv 4's pfd a2 3 . . : . 2 | George, Marjorie Ingram: Robert, Dovie (era lambs £28.50: couple loads lighter N Ind Pub Serv 4'u pfd 25 Wy In the front of the oftice was a; My tip from a guy who knows py Leonard: John, Jane arle weights $28.25: choice to, prime Hative N Ind Pub Serv 4.56". pld 25 165, table filled with samples of green is to buy it nd use it quickly. Nancy Coppi wonoled lambs held above $28: e¢ 13. Progress Laundry com 292 : | At St. Vineent's— George, Mildred Hender- few 514 ‘Pub Serv ‘of Ind com eal 0% ffee beans, and a 4-foot lazy| And dowh hére I run into some! ; d: N *Pub Serv of Ind 3'a pt #3 £0 ere Hk ian Nt Che: Ross Gear & Tool com 8 8 san, a round turntable on which which is not so good. It is loaded| vieve Talley: Carl, Catherine Roesinger. Community Surveys Inc. Schwitzer-Cummins pid coffee Samples are Placed besidy, i ri Yih Be tt ihe John, atricia ewhouse; Law : . ‘0 Ind G & E 4.8% pid tos? the cups filled w 0 é ank an er is c u Tap 5 ha vol Mary LeMasters, 1041 Set Up at Meeting Here Stokely-Van ld ‘ota : He roasts samples, then grinds it doesn’t taste like coffee to me. | N. Alton. A corporation to tell other cor- Tan er 3 Ce Xi o pid the heans, and weighs it. out in. Another trick, to make the cof-| GIRLS erre alte alleable 13% aw : i At St. Francis—Charles, Mary Nunn: porations how to spend their U. 8 Machi ne Co an 2a 11g even balance with two hi Lonbion seem blagy Sng sions. is to| A ae Beers Fowler, money was formed today at a Union Tite oo" Be pennies. This Foi Jou Jno SYRETORASY or “burn” the beans of Hm, Eileen. Swiggétt; Ken, Veldadean jyuneheon in the Indianapolis “Extra dividend each cup. Some grains s K, 8 : e. > i ley. BONDS x - - SE nerut=Nathanielk Plora Green: John. Athletic Club. St bs 95 float. So hy under Ie mach : Ada Williams : . 7 ” # ” names, and you won't miss muc a MS iesan—teaan Mildred hein Community Surveys, Inc. an 28 THE TASTER breaks the unless those guys with the mil-| ; se: v vis ’ 3 + , } 4 : - Benneit: Thomas. Mary Carney: Batel. independent, non-profit organiza- i; 98 “float” with a spoon. As he stirs. Jion-dollar taste buds blow a fuse.! Shirley Pennington, i bee y re- 97 x : i At Methodiat Edward An, Harries Hm, Ho. ha Seen Tommed 20 hg 37 he lowers his nose. This is fest And if they do, they’ 1 blow} uth Hankins: Henry. Helen Wester: search and advis > d 87 IN * aroma. The smell of cof- their jobs }iiliam, Catherine Keers: Harry, Lois thropic organizations on how best 98 No. 1 a na. ood want It Jobs. i» At St Vincent's—Charles, Maraaret Peltz: to spend funds in Indianapolis ; I, a8 fee Mus makx . Sil | Sidney, Dorothy Kemper: Rov. Bobhie|'O SF . BI Pa Cn EY oh 100 Next he tastes, but never swal- Twitc in the Night | Glover, William, Jula Hansford: Rich-|' Attorney Harry T. Ice, WhO Iudpls Public Loan 5s 64 96 lows. He takes a sip away back Adrian: Pred, Dorothy Woltman: Herb- served as chairman of the Sur- indnis Rallways 5s 97 »oo 82 8 into his mouth, and right there SLIDING DOWN the magnolia ert, Sharon Gibson. vey Exploratory Committee to Ind Asso Tel3s75 his tastebuds, if they fouled him trail on “The Hummingbird” from r > ord i Kuh Packing 4s 59 3 i 2 3. aes i i DEATHS : plan the new organization, was MU" Re ek pi ‘up, could make a million-dollar Louisville. A sudden twitch in Cen T Ketter 88, at 520 Campbell. chairman of today’s meeting Ba Arts Co 5s 58 error. To guard against this, they the night. a sense of awareness.

coronary occlusion

Sprague Device Sx 80

Fvart J. Carter. 68 at St Vincent's, coro- Initial expenses of starting the Traction Terminal 5% 57 .... 90 04 pT ogeiuslon. ot 2961 N. Harding, STOUP Was met by Lilly Endow- m——— carcinoma i pa ment, Inc., with $2500 and Indi- Produce Tn on 3 A= General. anapolis Foundation with-$1000. : a Walter H. Zoller, 62, at General, arterio- im re Eeggs— POP Cincinnati

sclerosis cardiovascular Harry Caplin, 66. at 1930 Sugar Gi myocarditis

ove

Marriage Conferences

cases An luded on 3m srade A brown mix 35. 7! white 33-35

rdward w. Heche 87, at Methodist nix, wholesale grade arterioscleratic heart: mercial 6. b ° 2 OXLT Martin M. Kastelhun, 88 at 520-F—Ver Scheduled at 1U mere) Jo ver cent, gextra latse mont, cerebral hemorrhace . . h cases exchanged, 29-3lc ? Lillian Shalansky, 54, at 3039 Broadway Times State Service . with = steadier undertone coronary occlusion J a » in Y < Purchas light du Henry A. Wachter. 83. at 520 E. Vermont, BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 18 i Sices. Fuschases Ligh due cerebral hemorrhage Happy marriages will. be the ulti- Commercially grown fryers, Mildred Easter, 51, at¢ Long, Iymphosar- : 20-31¢. hens heavy, 26-28c; hens light, 20wome. : Slik 5 i mate goal of a marviage. eonfer-2ic: old roosters. 17-19¢ Ary hristina Spilker, 62, at ong . vs > ¢ In x hi » ry ‘ ? RH topanh . Bhi) ence slated for five weekly ses. list welsh fries weak with demand CLUBS Se——————————. sions starting Wednesday at In- hu and unchanged prices Y i x ter Creamery, 950 score, 88¢c; medium aL EAS diana University: arta ; ; : Lions Chib—Meeting 12:10 p.m’ Wednes " bi Pi ! Tic: Tegular, = 13 af, Clayhoel Hote! Speaker. Ross Rrown l'o be held in the Lounge of ing department manage Ind - > ine =a ¥ Power & Light Co Re fianap the Student Union Building at U. S. Statement ————e — 7:30. p. m,, lectures on the con WASHINGTON, Feb 18 (UP)—Gavern- » " wr . . a Ment expenses and réceipts for the cur. Gr . Fi Id vy d ference series each Will give A ait fiscal vear through Feb. 14 cOmacie elias eas different approach to the matter pared with a he veo Last Year x 18 Pal RS a ISLE OF CAPRI. Italy, Feh Of matrimony. Expenses 3 319.053.018,372 § 24.288.797.925 1 . S y Receipts 11.483,688.220 25 086 058.957 A cl ae Dritish. Stage Star) geq] Tryck Grain Prices Dich - L354 458 3 ~~ & De 7.569.310,152 — grane Fielas and © Romanian- Cc Ra! 4.716,987:168 i 4.943.062 Is worn Boris erovic y ol “Truck wheat—$31.36 R ablic Debt 260.141.125.380 56,015,303,27 ried at th Joh vic} Wire nar Sack PS 3 G Re 23.030.026,493 22.260,108.498 a e church of ' 8anto! New No. 2 white corn, “$133 INDIAN APOLIS CLEARING HOUSE: Stefano today. | New No..2 yellow corn, $1.68 Clearings SR A84,000 —— Soy beans, $2.80 t Debits £33,982, 000

Jackson fo Take New Post Mar. 1

+ Clarence Jackion : 3 * Leslie E. Crouch

DeWitt Carter, chairman of the sition as exeéutive secretary of ‘board Ame n the Indiana .State Chamber of hl She Co loan Unked Commerce to take the post. He ? | will succeed LesHe E. Crouch, offielally confirmed Clarence A. who will retire as president but fll become _president Sf temain ; on the béard of the infar. 1. surance firm. on will leave his orf Also on Mar, 1 J, Howard, All:

‘secretary and personnel

J. Howard Alltop

have several tasters. He squirts it out into a brass super-cuspidor

3 feet high n ” ” HE TOLD ME that coffee prices went . loco because importers never quite believed the

coffee countries on their scarcity figures. Some thought the coffee countries fibbed a Jittle on their dwindling supply, to make Amerjcans buy more and hold prices up: A. year or so back it was true, but importers discounted the story. Then when they found cof-’ fee was short, they bought ahead. The story seeped down to the consumer, and she did the same. But be glad coffee is not raised in this country. If we produced it at. American labor prices, it would cost about $4.50 a pound.

» n a WHEN you buy coffee, . Mr. A Elishee told me, taste it for smoothness. It should never be sharp to the tongue. Then for the delicate flavors, the rich,

tones, do ag the cof0, take it away back

winey, tast fee tasters

into your mouth for a few sec-

6nds, then listen to buds. If they're happy you'll be, too. Green coffee prices go up with

our taste with it,

altitude. The highér they are grown, the rarer the flavors. But there's. a limit. It's about 5000

feet to the frost line. Coffee hates frost. - n ” ¥ THE PORT of New Orleans is the second biggest coffee port, next to New York. Here each year between 4.5 and 5.5 million 60-kilogram (132 pounds) bags are unloaded every year. It's from Santos, Rio, and the newly developed state of Parana, south of Santos, Colombia, Africa, Juatemala (for richness), I saw the. incoming’ ships, cargoed with coffee beans, listed 6n a black-

board,

. “cl tn n FRANKLY, the coffee importers expected the upward price romp to cut coffee consumpfion

top will become secretary of the about 25 per -cent.. But it didn’t

firm,

succeeding William A: Jen- touch it, except for a few rebelli-

kins who will be retiring after 50 ous days.

years in the insurance business.

Mr. Alltop, who joined American hoardsrs to remember.

Here's a for coffee

‘Vacuum-

secret

TInited in- 1931. has heen assistant nacked coffee is not in a com-

ager,

man-

plete vacuum.y FExgept' under the up-fug of inflation and is now, and communication tines and Ihighly technjcal cénditions, such a half-a-buck. | stalled air and railroad traf, - 4 a “ ~ - 4. > ’ 5 2 : 3 = oi 3 ‘4 S 3 . s, No Jig 5 ou wily

I-looked at my watch, then at the timetable to see where I was. And sure enough it was Horse j Cave, Ky., the boyhood home of “Red” Gadberry, sales manager of General Electric Supply Co. A couple of lights flashed by, and the train slid on into-the night. And I kept .thinking, “Well, I can say I've been there.”

Dixie's Pittsburgh

TOWARD MORNNG, after a cradled sleep, a peek through the window at the first fading of the night.

1 saw a burst of tea-rose flame " in the sky with a blast furnace. In Slaying | a

I didn’t have to look at the time-!

table. 1 knew it was Birmingham, the “Pittsburgh of the ‘ : South." Times State Service \

Then I remembered it gave us HAGERSTOWN, Feb. 18—The Alfred Norris who ruhs the In- theft of $150 from the pocketbook

dianapolis Water Co., and who of a maid found shot to death in | » sits on the Boys Club Board. a 20-room mansion here appeared Quickies {today the best explanation of her

{killer's motive. AT LUNCH at the Interna-| Folice held one man as a mational House (to spur gulf ship-! {terial witness in last night's slay-

Ping) with George Sawicki, as- Is of Bye Anny Webster = sistant director with whom I had! ang song) ane her bo 0 xy lunched at the Columbia Club. |* a e n a stolen late mode

uto. Mrs. Webster was shot through the head during a party attendied by two couples in the George Keagy home in the Hartley Hills Country Club area.

With him was George Roper, head of World Trade. of International House. who had a letter on his desk to Mrs. Lillian Kreps, world! trade manager of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. I asked him" to put my “Hello” in a P. 8.| Then in to see Charles Nutter, | > ex-newsman. who directs Inter- or Oe on ree ot per Jitiond) House, He spun his mind are vacationing in Florida. Mrs. 0 8 Panama-Peru air Webster, whose body was found jaunt. with Times Editor Walter!in an upstairs parlor, had been

Leckrone, what times they .had, living alone in the home during and how they pre-dated an earth-|their ab ence.

Living Alone

quake in an ancient fown in the Williafh Blair, 32, Muncie, was Andes. held as a material witness. 3 . Police identified th ¢ | Boat's In ce identified the man sought

as Mrs. Webster's half-brother, ouT ALONG the docks today, Melvin Welch, 32, Muncie. They! you could tell the banana boats Said both men were guests at the were ‘in by the big ‘trap game of party. : muscle men who do thé unload- r il

ing. Perish in Storms

Azaleas are abloom everyw here, a rose now and then, and here, BOSTON, Mass. Feb. 18 (UP)

April's come, truck gardens are —Winter's worst storm dumped | ‘up and green, and strip-carpeted up to 17 inches of snow on New with lettuce, {England today, caused at least As I write this T am deep in the seven deaths, marodned ’ ‘hun: | French Quarter. which has felt dreds of motorists, cracked power

| threatened to spread. Here they take it back after the fire.

| 37 Inundation

| 47 Out of order

Tramps or marauding teens

war dance. Martinsville, Mooresville and Six times in the next: few Brooklyn battled to save six months when rain was needed homes in the path of the roaring for some operation, the dance flames was: performed. . Ephraim D. Lowe, executive Five times out of the six, the gecretary of the Christian Marine aifmen boasted, the Voo- Churches of Indiana. said the fire

doo magic brought deluges which set aerological records. The sixth day by H. J. Buchanan, grounds time it didn’t rain.quite so hard. superintendent at Bethany Park, A couple of nights ago Lt. L. J. sn a

was discovered at 7 a. m. Satur-

Lynch of Kansas City, Mo., told HE SAID the lodge had been a visitor about the dance and __ _, °° . e a . 3 molested ‘about ‘ayn month ago demonstrated just a few steps. when someone*broke in through An hour later dark clouds and 3 window and sét,-a mattress on fog rolled in from the mountains. fire. The lodge was closed for Witnesses swore that blobs of the winter. he said. and elecsnow the size of ice cream cones tricity to the building had been began tumbling from the sky. shut off. ! The storm is still continuing; Although value of the two and almost every Marine on the buildings is set at $20.000 and base has been shoveling to keep $8000, respectively, he estimates the runway clear. the replacement: cost at near Col. “Sam” Moore, group com- $70,000. mander, warned Capt. Bruchman The church currently is stage

and Lt. Lynch that from now on they must check with the flight improvements -at Bethany Park operations officer before demon- and two other church camps. Mr, strating the rain dance—even a Lowe said $103,000 has been res fey steps of it. ceived to date

ing a drive to raise $200.000 for

————— ————————— —

SALVAGE CREW Stacking the furnishings along High School Road, parishioners and neighe bors cleared out the parsonage of the Mt. Olive Methodist Church when yesterday's church fire

et

Answer to Previous Puzzle

Ins and Outs

HORIZONTAL 4 In printing, type measures 5 Inadequacy 6 Arm bones 7 Inlaw, lost

1 Income 8 Outlets 13 Lacquers 14 In full force

” animal 15 Dyagive 8 Container 17 Inane person pou w » Ye dant In farming, 21 Outfitted cultivation 33 Indented 41 Pilot taking 23 Seaso 12 Kachooed 34 In German, a off 25 Point in 19 Inflate siren 42 Reparation France 22 Worker in 35 Inwriting,. 45 Mammal in water expungers the ocean oi Poltainie » 24 Grayish 38 In 48 In The 28 gon y mineral bookbinding, Levant. 5 boat distance 21 Inlets adecorator 50 Units 20 Promise 29 Antics $0 In Italy, 53 In French, : ) 31 Female - Grand Canal from

32 Labored - 33 Outer covering for arm 36 Outcome

servand bridge

$35 Month (ab.)

39. Great artery 43 In astronomy, [is The Altar 44 Flat-bottomed boat 46 Thailand

:dndition 49 Exclamation 51 Incisive tool 52 Implcee #4 Sheep wool * oil 56 Weira | 57 Chose ‘58 Circular pla 59 Rebuild

VERTICAL 1 Edit 2 Isolate . 3 In feudal

times, a tenant

32. of

MONDA F. P. Servi Wed:

Services f Huston w Wednesday chanan Mort in Crown Hi Mr. Husto his home, 41] a lingering | Mr. Husto Cincinnati, w the Insuranc view Service from 1917 to Active He "was a helonging to sonic Lodge, dianapolis 1] Court of Hor mémber of Club. He was for ships in the try Club an [etic Club be: Survivors Sylvia Mi; t and Phillips apolis; a bro sister, Miss A ter Park, F children.

Local

FRANK 0 967 Lexing! member of /t social depart p. m.. Wedne Buchanan M

morial Park. J

TIL] 1315 of First Baj ington. Serv urday at Fir Irvington. | 4 MRS. LUC 60, of 1951 at 9 a. m. to Moore Peac Crown Hill

MRS.

PEARLY landon. Ser morrow at M Burial, Odd

i

ESTLE U.

‘Tacoma Ave

tomorrow a Peace Chaps ton Park.

MRS. MA 917 N. LaS Third Christ at 1:30 p. m, W. Moore F Washington

MRS. LUC 60, of ,1951 at 9 a. m. to Moore Pea Crown Hill.

CONRAD 2212 8. Ranc penter. Servi morrow at ( neral Home.

MRS. MII of 2217 W. ( club woman. tomorrow af Mortuary. I Cemetery.

NEAL F, Minerva St. tomorrow at east’ Chapel Park.

MRS. LU1 250 E. Sout! 3 p. m. Wed! mann Fund

“Crown Hilk

WILLIAM 1427 - Colum! 1 p. m. at Church. Bur

CARL A. Arrow Ave. tomorrow a Peace Chape

JOHN-E: 32d. Service: at Flannér ary. Burial,

Police

Safe Bi Suspec:

Three saf were in the The spotl cruising poli

_ trio trying

from a chil 600 block S. The men the still un $1900 it cor later anothe Missouri ant ‘Albert De loss St., a known to pe Deckers”; FE of 923 Hal Wright, 27, All were charges of for Municip: noon. This mort reported a the Cardina St., of whic Detectives ant surprise

Local Ba To Advi

E. Kirk M the Jeffersc surance Co. Federal Hor

- dianapolis

a member o and Loan / Home Load nounced. The Count ton twice a ditions affe loan associ tute the mn member Ins eral Home 1

Educator VALPAR Dr. Carl F. the educatic partment a

- sity, died y