Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1952 — Page 21
blican Party would didate for Governor, ple, they like Sambusinessman; State raiso merchant and ittorney. ‘ GOP top command Leland Smith, Los his own personal
uld cut deep scars, he party first, don't when the only big liana ‘was Thomas
Forum a word that you > the death your
de
&
icy in this land if . When the 50 or so paraded as nearagainst the Mayor's many proponents of have been there— 1 eggs. There is a. ven for.rotten eggs. and. no doubt some would have considtreated if they had some male intruder
H. Seaford, City.
ssn Ha "IMR o-
ng? We are friendly with with Russia. and Chinese strewn se must be minions ly as “Murder, Inc.”
ysperity, but I, who es at 15 cents, will
Jersey St., City. . rt and very poorly rery large THANKS
ay.” Camp Atterbury.
ay-— purselves about the our PAC (CIO Powomen are pretty . Dwight EisenhowAC. o point . . .. as to have universal milirow whether we can al bankruptcy with chard B. Russell (D.
® ever said, “We can- } the world.” It has laid, “We cannot cgnt.” — Gen. Dwig
»
he prisoner of war seem unable to sepe from the word bays, at truce talks. *»
ionalism is usually ant can also find exenzy, which is nons | with because it is tic failure. , . . This the Middle East.— ign secretary. .
spirit of neutralism her word for defeat termed “ohne mich” K. Javits (R.N.Y.). ° : Parliament and the ernment. If a great the King.—Winston
* z - § United States an eas there does not
y.—Rep. Hugh Scott
mes Daniel
at Pact
ld have to buy a quantity of wheat, bsidies on their end.
ar since the agreesigned, wheat has } the pact’s ceiling
ery bushel of wheat
e U. 8. to a foreign er the agreement is -
American taxpayer
. » . KS this way: Ria op 8 buy U. 8. wheat g market price, ship
more aid
_, at work. ” :
Be
Sn
SUNDAY, JUNE 1; 1952
dy 5%
i
Washington Calling— =~
‘Red All-Out War
Threats in Korea Taken Seriously
By SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPERS - WASHINGTON, May 31—-Red threats of new all-out war in Korea are taken seriously here. Top military men think they're more than bluff. Gen, James Van Fleet says he can handle Reds. But he’s told Pentagon it would cost us two full divisions to
crack Communist lines.
’
Reds now have defense in depth—as well as build-up
of a million men. They've built three defense lines across Korea, with pill boxes, bunkers, emplaced artillery, mines, booby trap areas. Eighth Army reports each line is “another Heartbreak Ridge.” We've dug in too—even have built underground
communication centers.
There's no Allied agreement yet on how to win if Reds start all-out fighting. When Field Marshal Viscount
Alexander, British defense minister, reaches Tokyo, he:
and Gen. Mark Clark will talk strategy. Some top American strategists favor naval and air
counter - offensive against China. British are afraid they'd lose Hong Kong if this is done. If military chiefs can get together, there'll be better chance of Truman-Churchill ent "at political level. Also Churchill hopes Alexander, after look at Korea, can remove growing suspicion in England about American oper-
ations, which prisoner-of-war’,
- meses has brought to a head. French Dilemma
ACHESON brings back grim report on France. 7 ‘France has warned him she'll have to default her promised
1952 military program in Europe unless she gets more aid. She wants another $300 million in American orders for military equipment, placed with French industries. The sixyear war in Indo-China takes one-third of Her defense budg-
“Marsha. : ceived. It's pinned down 150,-
000 of France's best troops. But if France fails on meetthg military. targets, entire
plan for German rearmament.. may collapse—and with it, -
American foreign policy in Europe. 3
much. Here's dilemma:
FRANCE: Pinay government will fall if it tries to lengthen term of conscription, from 18 to 24 months, send conscripts to Indo-China, raise taxes or lower standard of lving. Also, such moves would ruin chances for getting French Parliament to ratify either German or European Army treaties.
UNITED STATES: Truman administration can't seek for France when Congress is cutting appropriations. Tt can't plan more direct help in Indo-China when (1) Korea may blow sky-high any minute (2) Berlin blockade may be reimposed and (3) American presidential campaign is getting really hot.
Reform Unwanted?
DON'T COUNT on passage"
of legislation to end abuses disclosed during Xing Committee study of Internal Revenue Bureau. ° Mild reforms proposed by King group are meeting resistance, open hostility, in Ways and Means Committee. Short public hearings have been held. Closed sesizons take place next week. : . "Hearings showed up opposition to reform from both Democrats and Republicans. Rep. Cecil King was absent (he's in California for Tuesday's primary) and other Democrats on subcommittee. did nothing to support their bill. Republican members did better on it. But Treasury officials urged “caution,” or “further study’ of even such small changes as . penalties for persons who represent clients before Revenue Bureau without permits from Treasury. call’ for such permits. But King Committee found abuses, such as Henry Grunewald's operations, and there's: no penalty.
Politics
INSIDERS say Tafters have picked Sen, Styles Bridges of New Hampshire to be temporary chairman of GOP con- . vention. Temporary chairman can do much to gavel in—or
out — testing delegations. Sen, Everett Dirksen (R. IIL) is slated to nominate JFaft. ign managers will. make sure candidates don’t become shopwarn television
faces before election time. TV professionals find it's easy to wear out their welcome in American living rooms. So ‘GOP radio-TV director, Edward T. Ingle, plans carefully timed-—but not too frequent—appearances for Sis candidate, He predicts campaign trains this year will follow coaxial
cable and microwave relay.
# routes so candidates can be picked up on TV when strategy dictates. - At conventions, Philco, Westinghouse and - Admiral will spend $7,250,000 sponsoring radio and TV coverage— with ‘total of 1946 technicians
Peak Past? : QONSUMER'S DAY is
price cuts on appli-
ite
OS * Regulations oh will be eased, probably in two
: Acheson couldn't promise
Regulations now
cheaper . clothing, shoes next fall. ; Cost of living. index is still up, but wholesale price index is falling. There's a three to eight months lag before this shows up in cost-of-lving figures, There’s reason to hope upward trend of food prices has been checked.
furniture,
Economists don’t see eyé to :
eye, but it looks as if gradual slowdown from galloping inflation has started (provided full-scale fighting doesn’t start again). <
- Housing Test
HOUSING experts say June will tell story on construction: for balance of year. Many units go on market then. If they move slowly, there'll be fewer new starts. Soft spots are. showing up
payments
weeks. But -it's not certain this will spur sales.
For the Marines 3
LEGISLATION making Marine commandant a member of Joint Chiefs of Staff will be watered down, and President Truman will sign compromise . version, according to present indications. He's eager to avoid ‘offending Marines again. Likely compromise would make commandant an associate member, voting at all sessions where corps’ “intéerests are involved.
How They Grow
. WE'RE MAKING veterans —eligible for various benefits
~—at rate of 780,000 a year.
That's at current discharge rate of 65,000 a month from armed services.
About Face HOUSE Republicans are trying to get in good graces again with workers retired under social security. They killed administration bill’ allowing $5 a month more and raising monithly earning limit from $50 to $70. Now they've offered new bill with a $5 a month increase and monthly earning limit of $100. It leaves out benefits protested by American Medical Association in Administration If House Ways and Means and Rules Committees don't act goon, GOP may take lead in bringing it to floor.
No Teamwork
THERE'S LITTLE chance Ff and 2x1 will work toer in year's cam h There's bad feeling Shipalge: to organize textile workers . . . Commerce Secretary Sawyer says he'd like to quit but has promised President Truman to stay as long as he does . . . Mrs. Taft will attend GOP convention, though: she’s in wheel‘chafr because of fliness . . . Nearly $500 million of foreign
‘ald has gone up in smoke.
(Shipments of free tobacco to foreign countries under mutual security program.) *. . . Sen. Bridges keeps special office file for letters from “the butters.” ‘Most of them demand economy but. The but covers project, pension or person for which writers asks appropriations.
+ Treaty which will
~has no action
in ‘market. Biidd bass vo
~
®
Senate to Put Fast OK on Pact
TE
With Bonn to Keep Allies From Dragging Feet
Delays Play In Reds’ Hands
Compiled From the Wire Services
There is a rare promise of
reasonably quick Senate action on the Allied peace contract with West Ge , Peter Lisagor, Times corre= spondent, reports from Wash- |
ington. ; Except for the vast job of getting the documents printed, the administrations plans lit.
tle delay in sending the agree-
ments to Capitol Hill, How fast it moves through hearings and on to the legislative calendar will depend upon administration adroitness. : The reason for haste is selfevident in Washington, Mr. Lisagor writes. If the pact is, not ratified this session, it is likely .to lay over until next year unless President Truman calls for a special session after the July nominating conventions. Delay will play into the hands of the Communists in Europe, whose chief aim, in the judgment of officials, will be
. to block ratification of the
agreements in both France and West Germany. Prompt American ratification, it is felt, may speed up the process abroad. No Action to Take The Senate will be called upon to approve the contractual relationship with West Germany, which removes the occupation authority and" gives to Bonn control over all its affairs except special ones affecting Berlin, German frontiers and a peace treaty. It also must approve a protocol to the North Atlantic ificlude West Germany’in the same guarantees in case of armed ’ attack as applies to NATO countries; Not being a party to the European Defense Community Pact, the United States take ‘on that
members. of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee have been kept in close touch with negotiations at Bonn. No unfamiliar commitments will confront them when the agreements, are sent up, they add. , In general, the agreements conform with policies approved by the Senate in the past, according to these informapts. Few Dissents The United States, Britain and France have stated before that they would oppose any aggression in Western Berlin. Implicit in the presence of American troops in West Germany has been an assurance that aggression would be met there. p : Few, if any, voices have been raised on the Senate floor against bringing Germany into European defense throughout the long negptiations, and administration leaders anticipate no major resistance now. Another factor accounts for the desire to speed the pacts through here. 5 . That is a general uneasiness among both the Frencly and Germans about the whole project, and dragging feet could be readily encouraged if the United -States delayed on its part. Fears Need Quieting Secretary of State Acheson is reported considering whether he should make a public report on details of the pacts and the problems still facing final acceptance when he returns from Europe.
When the documents are
sent to the Senate, they will be -
accompanied by a statement by President Truman designed to quiet the fears of the French that West Germany might oné day secede from the arrangements. , i This statement wil match one issued by the Big Three foreign ministers in Paris, in which this key statement was made: “If any action from whatever quarter threatens the integrity or unity of the community (NATO and EDC) the two governments (the U. S. and Britain) will regard this as a threat to their own security.” .
France
THE Council of Europe assembly wound up its spring session by voting to draft a plan. for an international authority to supervise both the new six-nation European army and the Schuman Plan
SOVIET RETALIATION—
Timesmap retaliatory moves initiated by Russia against West
Germany for signing a sep-
arate peace treaty with the Allies. Shaded area shows fhreemile strip from Lubeck to Hof where Reds have orders to shoot all unauthorized persons. Allied military patrols were stopped at Helmstedt (1). Solid black lines indicate Allied air routes used
during the 1948-49 Berlin airlift,
In Berlin (2), Communists start-
ed barricading streets dividing the east and west sectors of
the city.
for a coal-steel pool. The vote was 84 to 8 with 17 abstentions. The assembly also endorsed by a vote of 75 to 8 with abstentions the European army treaty signed last es~ day by France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. The assembly meets Sept. 15. .
BRISBANE, Australla,
© May 81° (CDN) -— Eugene
Ebzery—probably Australia’s - thirstipst man — has just . been convicted for the 60th time for drunkenness. He's 47..
et
handed down a death’ sentence tor “threatening the peace of the .world.” Judgment was delivered by. Dr. Hilde Benjamin, the woman jurist who presides at all major “sabotage” and “treason trials. Seven alleged
“terrorists” were before, the court. 2 Dr.” Benjamin's reasoning
forecasts many such Draconic proceedings. -
An attack on Eastern Ger- \
many's Communist-controlied government, she said, is more than a political diversion. “It is an attack against the
German people, against - the unity of the country; and against = the peace of the
world,” she conculded.
Great Britain COURT MOURNING for the
late King George VI ended at
Therefore
midnight. Britain
. began its traditional gayety
for June. British officers stripped off black armbands they have worn since Feb. 6 in memory of their former sovereign. Government and court officials stopped wearing black ties. Queen Elizabeth II is expected to’ make her first appearance -out of mourning next Thursday when she will ride at the trooping of the colors in honor of her offici&l birthday. x ; Meanwhile, Elizabeth caught her first salmon while fishing in the River Dee near the royal family's Scottish estate,
Dressed in hip boots and an old
jacket, she landed the salmon while fishing with the Duke of Edinburg.
SYDNEY, Australia, May 31 (CDN)—Nelson M. Gordon, whose wife ran away with another man, has recelved a five-page letter of complaints about her. The letter, disclosed in Mr. Gordon's divorce case against wife, came from the “other man,” Kevin Davison, who grumbled: “Dear Nelson . .. She has done the same thing with me that she did with you .. .”
Yugoslavia RUSSIA'S Balkan satellites soon will hold the biggest military maneuvers along Yugoslavia's borders since Marshal Tito's break with the Cominform, the agency Tanjug reported. “Hungary, Romania, Bugaria
Yugoslav news
-
and Albania this year have 52 to 55 infantry divisions and 10 to 11 air force divisions with 872,000 officers and men, while in 1948 they had 24 infantry divisions and four air force divisions with 362,000 men,” the agency said.
Italy . KING BAUDOUIN I of Belglum was in Italy _ for what many believed to be a formal introduction to Italian Princess Margherita with the ultimate objective of marriage. * The bespectacled 21-year-old monarch traveled by tain from
resort town, with his stepmoths, er, Princess De Rethy, wife of former King Leopold.
AMMAN, Jordan, May 31 (CDN)—For centuries, Arab women wore long, colored cotton pants, tight at the ankles but the short khakis worn by British Tommies gave them ideas. Foray So in 1842, the Arab women discarded the longies and adopted khaki shorts. The British later discarded .khakl shorts as standard gear afid started selling them at 10 cents each. THe Arab
.
’
French, Germans Both Uneasy
nationalization of the tin mines, It was given 120 days to submit a report.
South Africa
. A CONTROVERSIAL BILL to enable parliament to overrule the supreme court needed only the signature of GovernorGeneral Ernest G. Jansen to make it law. : Both houses of parliament zave final approval to the legislation Thursday. Premier Daniel Malan's Nationalist Party majority rode roughshod over the combined United and Labor Party opposition. The government introduced the bill after the Supreme Court outlawed Nationalist legislation removing persons of mixed blood from the voting
register.
Soviet Union
The Soviet press reported that a canal has been completed linking the Volga and Don Rivers and forming an immense north-south waterway acrosd Russia from the aspian to the Baltic seas. ~~ (Moscow radio, heard in Yfondon, said” thousands of persons lined the canal to watch the opening of the last sluice gates and the meeting of . Russia’s two great rivers
—4n-the vicinity -of Krasno Ar-
*
em re ce—
meisk, just south of Stalingrad.) The 63-mile long canal permits. seagoing vessels to ply between the Baltic and White Seas in the north and the Black, Caspian and Azov Seas on the South. x=
SYDNEY, Australis, May 81° (ODN)~—That “protective - deafness” some . husbands " develop against wifely yvacket-yak has heen no problem for Hedley V. Bayle, His wife, he told a court in his successful divorce sult here, hasn't spoken to him in three years: — although
aan a a Thy mn abi ls to Fl Sis _ they have Hved together. Sl SO RNS MST AP EE ha alae 0! 2 . Dts Ao Mp Ea v ny THE highest court of Soviet~ : tena Rare Tha ts "occupied: Eastern Germany has
long as ¥ eare fa talk . . . but never says a word in reply." oe
Guatemala . LANDOWNERS complained Communists’ who are
not members of congress are °
sitting in ‘the congressional committee examining a government bill to expropriate un-
"cultivated land for distribution
women are buying them up -
by" the dozen. ’
The government appointed a -
commission to study plans for
to peasants. . Thousands of landless peas-
ants converged on Guatemala
. City to stage public demonstrations for quick adoption, Representatives of landowners who face expropriation issued a statement calling attention to the presence in the committee of Communist Party Secretary General Jose Solorazo. .
On the Inside Of World Affairs
IN THE PAST YEAR, the United Nations has eased 12 Communists out of their jobs. Trygve Lie will not admit it for fear of incurring the wrath of Russia. All of the Communists fired are citizens of the + United States, Britain, France or other Western countries. Delegates from those countries objected to having them on the payroll. . = » ” THE Japanese are negotiating with Brazilian authorities to emigrate 5000 families—25,000 persons—to that Latin American country in the next five years. . ® o .
ISRAEL'S exploration for oil
is worrying the Arab states. Should Israel discover oil in the Jordan Valley, many of its problems would be solved. The big Arab producers have been trying to wreck the Israel economy by refusing to permit any petroleum to reach the new Jewish state. All pipeline con‘nections have been cut. ” » . -
EFFORTS of the “Arab-
* Asian bloc in the United Na-
tions to promote a special ses-sion-of the General Assembly to. consider the Tunisian case this summer appear doomed. Western countries want no spécial session. ” ”
- WORKERS who are Accused of malingering in Hungary
‘WHEN IN ROME EAT ROMAN CANDLES’ Co Ring Lardner Every Traveler Becomes Own Filing Case
By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN PARIS, ‘May 31 (CDN) — With a breast pocket bulging as thought we were carrying a tame rabbit in it. we are now prepared to face existence in the Europe of 1952. i The bulging is not caused by cash, . ’ To, live, work and play in present-day Europe ' involves an array of dentials and documents that no ncrmal pocket was ever built to hold. ” » ” A RECENT housecleaning of our pocketbook in preparation for a trip abroad produced the following assortment of cardboard. - ONE: A Department of ’Defense “certificate of identity,”
issued to us by the Pentagon after six a agen aim to the fact that we
fused one—without any explanation by the anonymous colonel who was responsible— was fired by the magazine for which he worked. ; TWO: A permanent accreditation of credential for SHAPE. This entitles us- to. -get into the
special form and to engage in the pastime of trying to get information out of SHAPE's subordinates :
Vv useful. «= TOUR; A police card to prevent us arrested
headquarters building without filling out a .
conferences at the migjstry at which nothing interesting is ever sald. a! SIX: A ‘carte grise” iden--tifying us as the qwners of our Saitomobile. This has to be produced whenever you are ‘stopped by a traffic policeman. In Paris this is likely to happen, for any of 50 different" reasons, once or twice a week. A very important document. SEVEN: A card showing that we are’a member of the L'Ile De France Automobile club. oh _ EIGHT: A driving license. Very important. « — . NINE: Our French identity ‘card, which is also a permit to
reside in France, Very impor: -
tant.
: TEN: A card permitting us - to send messages at press rates
; over French domestic lines.
aren't just docked. They're away, fast. a THIRTEEN: A fishing li-
cense, on which is noted the fact that casting is prohibited on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays from the first of April to Oct. 1 and that no fish-
"ing is allowed between Apr. 17
and June 15. We may throw this one away, too. vy = » x THIS COLLECTION of cards is notable for one thing.
sent to jail for from three to eight months under Communist law, . » . A FAMOUS American arms ‘merchant of southeast Asia, who sold weapons to both sides in the Palestine war, is now buying surplus wartime trucks
in Ceylon, ” - »
TIME is running out on the
British-Egyptian efforts to settle their differences over the Suez Canal and the Sudan. King Farouk is holding Egypt's intense Nationalists in check with martial law troops but his restraining force cannot last forever, “an ” ” + THE Japanese are mapping extensive plans for publicizing their country .again through export of films and junkets by Japanese actors and actresses. » ¥ "” . EXPERTS returning from Argentina say that President Juan Domingo Peron’s hold en the country is becoming precarious. Having wrecked the agricultural economy of the country, Peron has lost popularity over meat rationing and other shortages. » o - USIS, Washington's propaganda bureau overseas, is having difficulty with the consciences of its lady librarians. The ladies don't want to give shelf room fo the I-escaped-from-the-Kremlin:terror litera-
' ture, fearing that foreign read-
ers may believe libraries are a propaganda effort. ’ . 8 GERMAN youths of military age who are without a job have been called to enlist in Eastern Germany's new Red Army. The Eastern German government intends to raise 12 divisions as an answer to the European. Army's West German contingents, » » ” THE BUDAPEST Interior ministry has sent a warning to Hungarians who during recent weeks have sent more than three letters .to friends outside the Soviet bloc, that they must reduce their correspondence with the West. Short notes only will be tolerated. Transgressors will be liable to terms of imprison-, ment of from 6 to 15 years, ” » »
INDIAN COMMUNISTS,
~~ Gusts of wind carried it past with
Our Fair Giy— | mln ool Judges’ Remarks On Own Decision Will Haunt Him
By THE TIMES CITY STAFF CIRCUIT COURT JUDGE LLOYD CLAYCOM who boosted telephone rates all over the state, will be “on the spot” by Indiana state officials. J 0 They have a couple of red hot arguments up sleeve when they file an objection to Judge Clayco! ruling. Case goes before Indiana Supreme Court in
two weeks. :
Attorney General J. Emmett McManamon'’s office ; charge Judge Claycombe ruled against himself, reve:
his own decision,
State intends to point out Claycombe gave Bell $6 million boost last June. Six months later, withe hearing further evidence, Judge allowed further raise; making total tel- phone boost a whopping $10 million, "In granting company a second rate increase, Judge * Claycombe declared rates were “confiscatory” and unfaimi
to telephone company. State regards this with glee—alls
.because “confiscatory” ‘rates were those set by Judg
Claycombe himself.
Potatoes Are Cheaper
OFFICE of Price Stabilization, the federal agenqy that has tried with little success to keep prices down, can break the “hot” potato black market in a week. But this Democratic - controlled outfit is politically hesitant. . OPS has power to act against grocers as well as wholesalers for violating price ceilings, They wouldn't be hard to find. In dianapolis alone, one in tor could find in one day ‘at least a dozen stores charging above ceiling. ; Although Washington OPS bigshots keep threatening crackdown against all potato
violators, state OPS proceeds
gingerly. They realize, for example, if “they hit grocery stores they'd
“become as popular as a skunk
in a perfume factory. Not
3 ¥
from her already meager supply. And when the gals are aroused, look out. ~~ Democrats wouldn't like to. chance a “potato protest vote” in the fall. =
Smoke Screen : JOHN G. MINGLE, who
bossed the city’s smoke control
program under Mayors Feeney, Bayt and now Clark, came up with two new rulings this week :
ONE: Can't burn old auto
bodies. Too much smoke. TWO: Can burn scrap paper. This smoke okay. _.. Here's the catch, National Production Authority appealed for scrap steel for defense. Auto bodies would be ideal. But, burning scrap paper is okay with Mingle even though it is against city law. Mingle's explanation: Paper users ave no other way to
dispose of their waste inexpen-
sively.
Here to Stay? LAVISH brothel on 8. Illinois St, sporting several floozies, played to huge crowds during Speedway week. This joint, not too far from union station, has all trimmings of a comfortable house of prostitution—paintings, carpets, furniture and supposedly “protection,” plus air conditioning. This isn’t news to the downtown sharpies. Perhaps not even for the gendarmes on the beat. Painted “pleasure girls” began Alling up this Americanstyle Geisha House shortly after Speedway trials opened. Purpose, of course, was to hook out of town menfolk. So lavish — and expensive — are the “fixtures,” however, it looks like joint is here to stay. Unless someone gets indignant and “makes” police close it up.
Who Said That?
LOOK FOR’ Mayor Clark's administration to do what _football experts call “a sweeping reverse.” | After election, Hizzoner blasted Mayor Bayt’'s policy of issuing bonds to finance street construction and repairs. : Now, however, Mayor’ Clark already has recommended Park Board issue bonds for construction of an extension
Over-Age Scouts Beware
IF IT'S a bright sunny day and you feel in a Boy Scout mood to do some one a gocd turn. Don't. Go kick sc - body's dog, instead. . Learn from the lesson of Times Reporter Ted Knap, who was strolling through downtown Indianapolis last week when a balloon on a stick, obviously separated accidentally from its owner, came blowing down the street.
: nh howl, ih, 9
of Fall Creek Blvd., from 16H’ to 11th Sts. This is an a ! now owned by the Redevelopws ment" (slum clearance) Cone mission. oT New rdpairs should speed] home building there. “al Reason for Mayor's poll ] switch: “This project is so ured gent a bond {ssue is needed.” . °
* Get Lost? - IF YOU GO looking for the intersection of LaSalle St. wity 9th 8t. you may get lost. 4h That corner is marked : Salle St. all right. That parg is easy. , ag But the 9th St. may throw. you. It's marked 9th St. Pratt"
er
—'
St. and 8t. Joseph Bt. You cag take your choice. i Omclally it is oth 8t. put tel changed to 9th. ad
1896 it was Pratt 8 City Hall is at a loss to exw plain how ‘St. Joseph St. gob’ into the act although 9th Bt. igy Salles St. Joserht on Ue v e. ie
Stay Out
HOW LATE can prize fig ers stay out the night befe big bout and still win? Kid Gavilan and F Pruden were seen at Field at 10 p. m., the before the rhumba-bolo-punching Cuban clobbered the Canadian ster. a Pruden went home imme ately and went to bed. . But Gavilan didn’t get und the, covers until after mids night. Yet, Gavilan punished. Pruden the next night. Commented the Cuban K “The Indianapolis night a it's invigorating.” Pen Letter AND TALKING about petitive bidding in go ment... i A national magazine ly received an “invitation, and award form”-—or thers, + five of them—from the United States © Penitentiary,. Terr # Haute, Stapled to the fa . were 15 pages of mimeograp material. Everything was ig’ be done in quadruplicate. BA Thé magazine wanted ; ‘tional subscribers but de 5 to accept the invitation to bigs —it was a shade more paper’ work than the Sirculation at ager felt like taking on for &. single one-year subscription. 8
lantly to the Happy nga Instead, the ‘on toward the lone bal Two mothers halted their
