Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 March 1952 — Page 1
»
. 2, 1952
ent) : : & =e 8 {PAINS .
ER-X Tabléts rog : discomfort
100 The cal Chemists. Ln
yrtant apolis vision ays a The
LE
ns
f your rs and
single own in ulation, taken ight,
nes
”
rices are ling one-
[sourrs “wowsrol]. 62d YEAR--NUMBER 357
MONDAY, MARCH 3,
napo
FORECAST—Cloudy, windy with rain or drizzle tonight, followed by Snow flurries. Low tonight
25. Slowl
1952
Entered as Second-Class. Matter at Postofce
.
v falling temperatures tomorrow,
po ied — | PRICE FIVE CENTS
Indianapolis, Indians, Issued Dally
—A beautiful American ballerina and 36 other persons!
and crashed in flames. person aboard, a woman, desperately injured. Harriett Toby, 22, a native of
life was Harriett Katzi mann, had danced her way into be European fame in her brief career, - Last night she had danced in
private
the Spanish ballet “Of Love and | §
Death.” The four-engineed Air France
liner, carrying 34 passengers and! a crew of four, had just taken off | j
from Nice airport when it. ran into a flock of migratory birds.| Two of the plane's motors cut off. :
Brushes Ground
Its pilot tried to ‘make it back to the airport. A wingtip brushed the ground. The plane crashed in La Valentine Valley, only half a
‘mile f the airport, and Dual |
The passengers included, be-| sides Miss Katzmann, 11 Britons, two Belgians and an Italian. The! rest were French. Most were re-:
As Plane
. NICE, France Mar. 3 (UP) }
“aboard a French air liner! |
were killed today when the plane|§ hit ‘d flock of birds on its take-off The 38th]: was]:
New York City, whose name in|
turning to Paris from a 6 winter holiday on the Riviera. , . Miss Katzmann barely caught
37 Killed in France Hits Birds
Geraldine Harris
Butte Holds
By United Press RENO, Mar. 3—Authorities today sought to link a heel print, a palm print,. a button and a miniature soap wrapper with a frightened . blonde and her four com-| panions held in Butte, Mont., for questioning in a $2.5 million bur-
foe —]
City Council
Public Housing Faces Vote in |
New Ordinance Would End Power
Editorial, Page 10
One of the hottest sessions in City Council history is set for this evening when public| housing will face a life-or-death vote. In a move to definitely put an, end to housing authority activity | in Indianapolis, the council is expected to approve an ordiance stripping the authority of nearly all its power. At issue will be whether or not Indianapolis will have federallycontrolled low rent housing de-
Rodney C. Unger
5 Suspects
‘minority battle for survival is the
In $2.5 Million Robbery
them without raising suspicion? And the securities had. my name on them.”
Leave Four Clues
The millionaire financier, wearing his usual down-at-heel oxfords, bright tartan “shirt and
the plane. She missed the regular ‘bus from Nice to the airport. So she raced to the field in her own! car, and arrived just in time fori the takeoff. . After scoring a triumph in the
worn Levis, was pleased that the burglars passed up another $1 million in negotiable securities] jammed into a suitcase. The burglars left only four slim
glary here. The clues were all that police| had to work with in solving the
Friday night looting of the home of millionaire La Vere V. Redfield.
Marquis De Cievas Ballet at Cannes, Miss Katzmann was to have opened an engagement at the Fine Arts Theater in Brussels, Belgium, tomorrow night. - Other members of the ballet company left by train, but Miss Katzman was in a hurry to get to Paris. \ “Miss Katzmann's mother, who lives: on the Riviera, was on the way to the airport to pick up her daughter's car when- the plane crashed. She joined the smokeblackened rescue crews who searched for the dead. |
One Woman Survives
Miss Katzmann’s father, who owns a chain of shoe repair shops in Paris, left for Nice by train. Records showed that Miss Katzmann was born in New York Dec. 12, 1929, She studied dancing there. , Claude Giraud, impresario of the Marquis De. Cuevas ballet, said that the Marquis himself dis-
was in Paris seeking an engagement. The one person who came out alive from the plane wreckage was Mme. Marguerite Delpy, a Fréenchwoman. With both legs mangled and suffering from burns, she managed to drag herself out of the plane. So desperately was she injured that French
Pr “
covered Miss Katzmann while she
The theft, in which cash, securities and jewelry were taken while a “vicious” watchdog gnawed on a hambone thrown im by the thieves, was one of the biggest hauls in modern times, police said.
The five persons in custody, were stopped at a roadblock near Butte last night in a two-tone Cadillac in which they were carrying ‘16 pieces of luggage, most of it crammed with dirty clothes.
Lists Suspects { Police said their names were the same as those issued in a Ne-| vada police bulletin. Nevada authorities said the suspects were: Geraldine Harris (alias Geral-
dine’ Unger), 27, Tulsa, Okla; Floyd Dwight Dugger, . 26, Missoula, Mont.; Rodney C. Unger (alias Robert Clinton or Armstrong), 31, of Tulsa; Walter E. Moore, 23, Las Vegas, Nev., and Bendel Lee Moore, 30, Monroe, La.
Four of the suspects have “records as long as your arm,” said Emmett Sullivan, Butte assistant police chief,
The loot was taken in a safe which the thieves carted away. Mr. Redfield said the safe contained $3000000 in cash, $100,000 in jewelry and more than $2 million in negotiable bonds.
officials announced’ her death. But she was taken to a hospital] where surgeons said her condition |
mangled legs were in a “pitiful” state.
Today's News “In The Times
Local
Tn Page Police nab- three youths in two theftS .ovcevsrsessies .. 68 Man picks wrong spot to have
mo -caceldent oo asinine diese 18
$ -
5 Page Reds runner-up in India NOLS Tr eT, National « |
Page Terrorism slows probe of massacre Morris to . ask aid’ of local lawyers in cleanup drive... EXx-convict with flare for cats soughit by FBI .........:., 2! Editorial Page : : Page It is no longer a sin to back a Republican in the deep | South . Mountain . ... and Mouse , . , an editorial’ ....co000i00e. Hell Afloat . . . an editorial cartoon by Talburt Senator tosses in towel to Army on book “sale” , , , by Frederick C. Othman... Sports Page New Albany sets pace with 71.7 average in sectional ... 11! Training Camp Briefs ...... 11 Records of sectional winners. 11] All NCC teams win sectional title8 ...oveeeriei Fanwren 12 Tllinois, Towa put Big 10 ‘title chances on the block .....
Women’s Lo ’ Page May 3-4 are dates for 14th a nual Park School Garden TOUr Leceeese Barbara Sloan, Lovely Lady of Tomorrow ...... seenen Other Features: ** Bridge .. ) . Comics > Crossword ....cisese00se0 Harold Hartley ....se00% Radio, Television ....... Robert Ruark .....sisee 9 2 . Ed Sovola srs rrr NERNNR 2 fel Women's essssssesscncitdy 5
9 tresses ss ssn ~
10
10,
errs sc nen
4 ceantersgiesvrine 17
7
<T
4 x 18
sees s asst
n- i
“But they'll have a hard time getting rid of it,” Mr. Redfield said, “There were two $10,000 bills
a brown button and a soap wrapper
“well-defined” heel print, ‘a from a mid-western hotel. Reno police asked Butte authorities to get fingerprints, shoe prints and palm prints. Butte,
police also were checking the
jnents continue their fight against [the Authority, :
velopments. On the one hand, . fighting a Housing Authority of Indianapolis, which has immediate plans for more than 300 housing units on the South and Southeast Side and Jong plans for 1500 units,
Opposing Factions Opposed are the various real estate and building organizations and a majority of the Republi-can-dominated city council. The - ham-stringing action, if {taken by the council, would be lin the form of an ordinance re|voking authority housing officials| have to plan, design or build new’ rental units. yg | The authority would retin control over three existing housing units now occupied mostly by.
cene—a palm print, | veterans. | clues at the s P P Council chambers are expected
{to be chock-full as hundreds of
South Side public housing oppo-|
Six-Month Battle The Highland Park League,
suspects’ clothing to find if a but-\with Attorney Walter Myers Jr.,
ton was missing.
“All we can find is scads of |
dirty clothes, boxes of costume
jewelry and enough cloth to make
at least four suits,” Chief Sullivan
|said.
“We found no money in the bags.” ‘Somewhat Obscene’ When the expensive auto in
‘which the five were driving was halted about 10 miles from Butte,
any resistance. “Nothing was said, except the
machine gun at the group,” he said. . “I forget exactly what she said, but it was somewhat obscene.” Earlier, Sheriff J. C. Harris of Elka, Nev. said five persons were picked up in his city Friday night for questioning about irregularities while playing slot machines there. He said the five were driving a Cadillac. They were released the next day. Later, a tip came from Las Vegas that two of the five, with long burglary records, had been in Las Vegas last Thursday and
safe. How are they going to break|
was most grave and that heriand about 122 $1000 bills in that had headed north-to Reno “to
make a contact.”
High Tribun Juvenile Court Setup
Juvenile Court here has lost a fight for its life. The entire system children are declared delinquent] has been set aside by two high
court decisions. Charles Boswell, |
chief probation officer of the] court said today: “We will become just’ another! criminal court as the result of| these decisions. We will no longer
bea court for the benefit of juve-/are based on an appeal seeking
niles.” : : ; Higher court decisions reached last year and this one posed two big problems for the court, Boswell said. ONE: Findings of probation of-|
ficers, key to the .juvenile court ruled . : ; could not act as prosecuting at-
set-up, will be thrown out 'of|
court until children hae been: de-| clared delinquent. :
quired by the decisions, and Mar.| jon County prosecutor Frank Fairchild said today he was un-
o able to provide extra help for the|
juvenile court. Mr. Boswell said the studies made by probation workers in the past have played a key part! in evidence submitted about juvenile cases. + , “We are able to go deeper into
[the reason for a child’s behavior
and into his-background through
the probation system than is pos-| for sex offenses |sible through a regular criminal |
trial procedure, Reports-have been a major part of information submitted to judges who must determine quents. “Under the decisions of the Ap-
12 pellate and Supreme Courts, these cision.
probations reports can not be used by the court until the child |is found~to be a delinquent.” Will -Reduce Number. | This will have the effect, Mr.
the number of children found to
4 be: delinquent.
Manpower also will become a {major factor for the court under these decisions, Mr, Boswell asiserted.
| At the present time two deputy! {prosecutors are assigned to
‘juvenile court.
their time in the court prosecuting|
|cases which involve adults. : |
Adul cases involve charges of
-
if children are delin-|
al Dooms
contributing to the delinquency of
minors, child neglect and cases in| in which! which men refuse to pay support!
payments to wives and ex-wives. Prosecutor Fairchild said he is unable to furnish additional deputies as he is limited by law as
ito the number of assistants he,
may employ. Based on Arson Appeal The two _court decisions involved
the release of a 15-year-old boy for arson. » The appellate court. last year
Mr. ordered the boy released .because|
'a deputy prosecutor did not ap- Foreman Here
pear in the hearing. The court
the juvenile court judge
torney, defense counsel and judge.
| . The juvenile court filed an ap-
TWO: Presence of a prosecutor Peal this year in which Prosecutor | .,.,e at each juvenile héaring is re-[Fairchild supported it asking.the yi on the head.
supreme court set aside the ruling. The supreme court Thursday re-
effect upholding the lower court’s decision. Plan Further Appeal
Juvenile court plans a new ap-;gash in his scalp and injuries to closed effective tomorrow. pend-!forms filled out,” he said.
In this hearing a girl committed to the Girl’s School last year was ordered freed on a deéision based on the appelate court ruling. : Mr. Boswell said attorneys had informed him the Juvenile court could expect a wave of appeals for the release .of juveniles all based on this appelate court de-
‘State Traffic Deaths. Dip in February
| Indiana traffic killed
fewer
- "4 Boswell said, of greatly reducing than three persons a’ day in Feb-
ruary and established the month as one of the year’s safest. State police provisional figures showed only 71 fatalities in the 29 days last ‘month, 52 of them rural and 19surban. In February, 1951, the final figure was 75. The Seymour district went
They devote allthrough the month without a
single rural fatality, “a record achieved only oogasionally Hoosier pelice , area,
Ed
Chief Sullivan said none offered
girl made some remark about how scdred she was when we pointed a
y a; =v]
jas spokesman, has carried on a six-months long battle against a | publie housing project at Dawson St. and LeGrande Ave. | | ~ Also expected to appear will be {spokesmen from the real estate jand building industry and some | city officials. | City councilmen last month (blasted the housing authority for “deflance” of a city council resolution which called on the authority to submit final plans before going ahead with construction. ; Less than 10 days after the council passed its resolution the jauthority advertised for bids on| two housing projects without further approval from council. Key point in stripping the au-
orm
Jack O'Neal Dies After Heart Attack
M
o>
Big Town Is
By Unijed Press *-
NEW YORK,
but. it failed to arouse the city slickers and out-of-town visitors. “Why she’s not much different from the cooch dancers we used
thority of its powers is “who is going to pay the $275,000,” al-| ready spent. | The $275,000 was spent by the | Housing Authority in buying property and designing buildings. The Authority obtained its money in loans from the U. 8. and if allowed to continue would rethe Federal government
pay
{from the project it proposed to! build. Might Have to Be Repay If council now stops | Authority, attorneys here say the
lcity might have to pay back to
the Of the gaudy Latin Quarter to
to have at stag parties,” was the dismal reaction of Irving Fischell, New York. His view was echoed by Charles Everett, Seattle,
“She shakes it okay,’ Mr. Everett admitted, “but she doesn’t take anything off, She left me flat.” The of the
sultry siren
blue satin, heavily embroided with| gold,-and a siit skirt of filmy pur-| ple satin. She glided over the floor
the reedy wail of several flutes, However, not all the spectators,
the U. S. the $275,000. |were disappointed. !
In an unofficial opinion, City| Corporation Counsel P., K. Ward; {said the city would be subject to! {suit for the money. “But,” Mr.| ‘Ward said, “I have some defenses {and we may not have to pay ny all.” : Councilman. Glenn W. Radel has| {said he favors a public vote on
|
jhousing and Mayor Clark today!
|
'said_he too is in favor of taking ithe issue to the voters. How such a vote could be taken
Mr.
‘has not been worked out, *Radel said.
Portable Crane
. . | Strikes, Injures
>
Photo Page
A 35-year-old construction forewas injured- early today the boom on a portable broke loose and. struck
man when
Bahre (Bud) |
Superintendent . for the Construction Co., Marvin
;building at 918 E. 63d St. when! injured. ‘ Although he suffered a 6-inch
{peal of the decistons-based on an his head and shoulder he was re(action Saturday in Superior! ported in “not serious” condition] Court 1.
at Methodist Hospital. {
Fog and Snow |
Slow Traffic |
Fog and snow slowed traffic in Indiana today, cutting highiway speed to a crawl and virtually knocking out air transportation. Most airline flights inh and out of Indianapolis were canceled (from midafternoon yesterday by
|{fog which blanketed most of the,
istate, Other flights set for today, after visibility being crossed off because of the prospect of freezing rain. Driving in the Rensselaer, Valparaiso, Plymouth, Monticello and Ft. Wayne areas was hazardous due to packed snow.and ice. LOCAL TEMPERATURES . mm... 38 10 a. m..: 39 «mM... 37 11 a. m.,. 40 Mm... 37 12 (noon). 41 . m.. 38 1 p.m... 41
|
6 7 8 9
a.
»
improved, were ——
test Humidity oo. 0% 2 ;
“I had her pin-up picture on! my wall for two years,” sald Ko-| rean ‘War veteran, Sgt. Robert!
r.|L.. Weaver, Hudson, 0. “and she's| “They're less likely to grab at the flesh as I.me,” she said, “usually they just
as delightful in thought she'd be.” |
DEBUT IN NEW YORK—Samia gets bouquet but few plaudits.
By Egyptian ‘Bellyrina’
) ar. 3—Bgyptian| Gama paced her dressing room |cop” who would give everyone an dancer Samia Gamal brought the nervously, Her Houston play break. undulations that thrilled kings of husband, Sheppard W. Egypt to Broadway last night, ian) King, had been banished to pointed inspector of detectives by
Nile] {through revenue bonds and rents'wore a brassiere and hip sash of |
{stomach at gray-haired gents,
er Police Chief
5.73 , Esteemed Officer Who Worked Way to Top * Collapses at His Home
John (Jack) O'Neal, former chief and veteran of 38 _|years service with the Indianapolis Police Department, died at his home early today. pi He collapsed before daylight after firing the furnace
but was not found by his family for more than three hours. Another Story, Photo, Page 3
After fixing the furnace, Chief j | O'Neal had returned to béd, but ! suffered a coughing spell which | brought on the fatal heart at tack. 4 The 67-year-old veteran officer resided with ‘his wife at 24 N.¢ Holmes Ave, Chief O'Neal had worked at headquarters during the day Saturday., He had missed only a half-day in his 35 years with the early in January when he was off with a strained back. And, when he returned to work he found himself the focal point of an alleged police scandal for which the beloved chief was suspended for seven days. This action, which citizens protested to the press, was the only blemish on his: life-time of service to the city.
Set Up Records System
~
pM . ve
JACK O'NEAL . in | 91 7
In his years with the force, : dopled as the model system by po. Bored {| Working his way up from thé : reer as a detective, he became
Chief O'Neal set up the present lice departments all over the |bottom, he -joined the force in | kfiown to both the law abid criminals food
records system, It has” been country, 1917 as » patrolman, In his caBefore she went” on, Missiand .alike as a “ even : (Abdul-| In January, 1948, he was ap4 table out front. the late Mayor Al Feeney. | “He walks around too much] The climax of his career came land stamps “his big feet,” Samia)" July, 1951, when then Mayor i ' [Phillip L. Bayt appointed - him |explained. ichief. He served, as always, with ! She confided before beginning/the honesty and integrity for her New York engagement that/which he was -known, until he [she was concerned over weight/was relieved of the office by ishe had picked up in Miami, Fla./Mayor Clark on Jan:.1,-1952. {The dark-eyed Egyptian beauty Reduced to Lieutenant 'had a noticeable “spare-tire” . {when she swung into her “ab-| At the first meeting of the new nominal ballet.” {Republican Safety Board in 1952, J r lieuThe dance itself was a swirling|Chief O'Neal was reduced to circle of the nightclub floor, in/tenant, Earlier, he had refused an = which’ Samia undulated her hips appointment to the permanent Kejley had testified he had deand snapped her fingers at the Tank of captain, stating: |liberately - “held- up” the chief's customers, pausing at several] ‘1 want 30 sake ‘my chances inquiry in fear the investigation ringside tables to wriggle her With the new board. might be used by someone as a De pd He had been offered the cap-ipolitical weapon in the Novemtaincy by the Democratic Safety per, 1951, election. Board in 1951 under the police Defended by Sons merit law. | } When Chief O'Neal turned over; Chief O'Neal was prosecuted, _ his office to his successor, John E, judged and convicted by the mem Ambuhl, on Jan. 1, he rushed who had served under him at the away to attend a relative’s fu-time of the incidents. f neral. At the funeral he sustained| At the time, the aging chief
JACK O'NEAL , , . 34 years later chief.
Backstage, after her performance, she explained she usually picked out elderly men for the personal touches in her dance.
turn red.”
Auto Tag Branch Shut
In Probe of
By DAVID WATSON A West Side auto license:
!branch was ordered closed today lucrative sideline,
investioffs
while state authorities gated reports of pay hurry-up=license service. The branch at 1230 W. Washington St. was ordered closed effective. tomorrow ‘by Clyde R. Black, director of the State Motor Vehicle Bureau. His order followed an investigation by The Times which dis-
for
closed that anyone with $2 or $3 Pany which donated space) knew Ito spare could get their ‘license nOthing about it. plates in ‘a .few minutes while | fused to grant a transfer of the Wiseman, 1126 N. Bancroft st. (those who did not make thé pay- Haerle said, jt would be nothing case from appellate court, thus in wgd working on_a new business/0ff waited .in line several hours. more than a private transaction
“There is no, question in my mind that it happened,” Mr. Black said. “I am ordering the branch
ing our complete investigation.” Expresses Doubt
Mr. Black said a preliminary investigatio indicated gemeone employed by the license branch
-Home Ownership
More Economical
Owning a really suitable home of your own'is the most economical way to live in the long run. Home owners usually install more labor, time and money saving accessories, Your equity amounts to saving toward your future.
$750 DOWN—IMMED. POSS. S Lge. rooms, water inside, oll heat, fehiced-lot. Total Fs $3750. __HI-6179, MERIDIAN REALTY, HI-2198
Many hundreds of interest~ ing home values are advertised today in the real estate pages of The TIMES, including the home shown here. In fact The TIMES is Indiana's largest real estate newspaper, Among this wide selection may be the “just right” home you need. Inspect several today!
PAN.
. thinking
such leads are followed up.”
a back injury which kept him/was staunchly defended by his from headquarters seven days. |three sons, James, Jack Jr. and He returned to find himself a Maj. Robert O'Neal. Maj. O'Neal lleutenant and the center of at- is executive officer of the Indiana tention in the police investigation State Police, : ¢ y {concerning Robert Liese, charged| Other survivors “include his Payo {with a burglary. wife, Elizabeth; two daughters, = : . Mrs. Mdry Elizabeth Smith and | Became Desk Officer | : | Mrs, Margaret Ann Cohan, and 11 Je reg all) Mmecne outs) Following a departmental In-|grandchildren. ; acai he ventigation which” rained he "1, wag taken to the Usher Fs {wra 8 frienus b neral Home. Services will be held { Edwin Haerle, manager of was suspended. He returned to atethe mortuary Thursday at 9:30 Marion County license branches, | work as a desk officer in the de- | go and at St. Anthony Church today expressed ‘doubt the pay-'tective division. at 10 : a e in Hol offs took place. ! ‘He was charged with taking ala m. Burial will be in Holy “ ' 2m “too long" to investigate the ac- HD Xr ont naw Dat they gid, tivities of Liese, a patrolman who! He was a member of St. An< reed. it iw Stale. AP= gti]. 1s pending trial on charges thony Catholic Church, Knights jpened, it was without our knowl-( ic ood Jarceny and burglary, of Columbus, and the Fraternal sige desire 200 1 Rnow the Another patrolman, Howard Order of Police. ma men re 0 e com- ——— - —
is Be od ra f Was Adam Weak Chin In His Birthday Suit?
By ERNIE HILL the Tree of Knowledge. BEIRUT, Lebanon, Mar. 3 wanted to find out things. . Mr. Haerle Indicated it was his \aHN): The women of the Mid-| “Then, when the Lord called to if * those conditions qo past complain that for more them, Adam was hiding. * He said existed, part of the blame rests ian 2000 -years the Christian, he couldn't come out because he with ihe public.” Moslem. and Hebrew religions'had no clothes on. It was then We had branches open untilip,ve peen misinterpreting the that He put the blame on Eve. |9 p.m. tFYINE to give the Publicigiory of the: Creation. “Had he been gallant, he would ja better hreak, e sald; Eve, ~they contend, is given have shared the blame. After To Call a Meeting most of the blame and Adarh is all, if Adam had been a force“But for 60 days many of them held guiltless for getting them ful character, he would have made” did nothing,” he said. 'kicked out of the Garden of Eve realize she should not taste | Mr. Haerle said he will discuss Eden. . the fruit, But he was weak. the case with Mr. Black but in-| mpg appraisal of the Original! “EVE has been maligned long dicated he " has no immediate gin jt jg stated, is strictly a enough, It's time we have a ‘plans’ until: 5 man’s version putting all the woman's interpretation of these | “I see what the” company is plame on-Eve. events.” : |going to do.” : i « . ; .. Miss Kaddoura, a Mosler s {" Mr. Black sald he will call aj Jt 1s time we revise our esti. USS pC Te 32
{mate of this event,” says Miss meeting with everyone concerned i al . Hebrew religions are as much to Ibtihaj Kaddoura, president of | lame ae ‘the Christians for
Jin an attempt to hurry up the in ithe Arab Women's Federation, Jou dam “Somebody will have to’ pe 2nd make Adam_ shoulder his .- ek punished,” Mr. -Black said ye Share of the Name. : | pias Faaouras Weary ou tie ‘the situation cannot he. corrected Svomen have heen gD wih Ie Snake ad Te bys the branch will. be moved.” quietly ‘accepting Eve's guilt for oof CEE a “a a The U. 8. Internal Revenue '00 Many centuries.” e omens ederation A a . Bureau today expressed interest “The truth is, claims Miss Kad- om pausl . = ang ; Ane in the amount of money made in 90Ura. that. Adam lacked initia- OR BR BNC The from Aha : tive, curiosity and gallantry. Garden of Eden than that gen |erally accepted by most religions
the side deals!” "* . : A tax official declined to say “All of our present day learn-|ioqay » :
exactly what action would being.” says Miss Kaddoura, “is a : - mir Qs, Boar 4% GU ” 2 3 ; 3 oo : ;
Even if the payoff existed, Mr.
{with an individual. “Anyone could get your license
for you, if you have the proper She
wf
taken, but did declare t “all direct result of Eve's curiosity in
(tasting the Forbidden Fruit from
+ Tw wir
a6
