Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1952 — Page 11

ha

?lot

gainst his will’

risoner of war brother, Jean, )ecame violent 7, and helped Lrty.

ver been the y, ‘he has for rench commuent to Moscow eld the title of

r, was just a

the Kremlin, an ‘emotional fotism—saving warlike plans” idoubtedly will ot Duclos—the

rum

rd that you death your

e seizure of

1, or bus fare ion for public e the general statutory law, * the: law, the Arges can be ‘ommissioners, s the right to board, resort law, and eall le the rate of the essential y according to

this principle id unjust. To ) provision for izure contrary conflict with Constitution, ‘onstitution, it each citizen, 1 more than , the greatest n. the whalgs aten to rob us win,

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cherish freemust. ‘decide

ssentials, It's

m St., City

ny not have a have to do is have a wellhat he thinks

ndidates. All vision, and if iominated and

ip like a man he screen. In les and people

of men on the , from one to id if a robot 1ager had two his name pre-

. robot. They eed not be for » say nothing candidate. So emocrats that | some places icans can run

nd cry, “Vote 2 any views.” structions for Ww to have a put them out voters. Vote {, you should te. Let's have need a direct vernor, U. 8. 1 all. And let ve did at one that we will Lt a campaign

» Sr., City,

aise from me iblication of arent.” erage parent h wonderful losophy, psy1d it all very kable. Je for many,

it to us, Reelsville,

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could be ire ringes of the

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erty was one "dams in the

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reclamation d in the last old, limitedbig enough urpose projwer Co, will location . of rom the new ody is left

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gother swimmers Saturday.

ston, was killed when the auto in

“over an embankment on" Ind. 67

‘Hog Prices Steady

#5

MONDAY, JUNE 9, 1952

Auto Fatalities,

At least 13 Are Killed; Several Hurt

Hoosiers today looked at the results of one of the deadliest week ends of the year as violent death claimed at least 13 lives. «An Indianapolis ‘couple was killed last night and four hurt in a car-truck collision at Southport Rd. and U. 8. 31 south of Indianapolis. The dead are Robert Franklin,

55, and his wife Blanche, 50, of 826 Harrison St.

The victims’ daughters, Virginia, 12 and Alice, 10, also were injured in the accident. Both girls are in General Hospital. Alice is critical and Virginia is in fair condition,

Willlam E. Dixon, 38, of 313 Cincinnati St., driver of the car| the Franklins were riding in, is in- critical condition at General. Driver of the truck, Lowell Haverstick, was injured slightly.

Accident Fatal

Paul Thomas O'Connor, 21, Madison, was injured fatally to-| day when his auto collided withi| another car during a rainstorm! on Ind. 56 west of Hanover. Katherine Coleman, 29, Louisville, and William Coleman, 41, were injured. She was held in| Kings Daughters Hospital for in-| vestigation. Police said her car skidded on wet pavement and swerved out of control into O’Connor’s path.

Stephen Foreman, 2, died today| in Reid Hospital of injuries suf-| fered Saturday when he was run

at Liberty by a truck backed by his father, Homer. Pfc. Clarence Payne, 21, Terre| Haute, died in Clay County Hos-| pital of injuries suffered when he| was thrown from a motorcycle) on U, 8. 40 near Brazil Oliver Rawley, 72, Worthing-

which he. was a passenger cdllided with another car and rolled

near Martinsville. .

Floyd Markley, 41, Ft. Wayne, P

was Killed in a car-truck crash near New Haven on U. 8. 30. And Everett Stalcup, 30, Bloomington, was killed when struck by

PI

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

rownings SoarIn S

tate Over Week End 1

By United Press

iMsgr. Cioffi said. “Last Sunday

|

{ {

|

i | { { |

I i

i

United Press Telephotos.

PRAYERS ANSWERED—Rt. Rev. Msgr. Angelo R. Cioffi displays returned crowns.

Thieves Return Crowns to Church

ously by another priest that de-

NEW YORK, June 9--Detec-there were tears. Now there isjtectives believed the crowns would

|tives examined today an envelope

joy. Your prayers today have

repentant thieves used to return|peen heard.”

altar of a Catholic Shrine Brooklyn. The crowns

only five minutes before Mass.

arrived at the Cioffi's memory, over in the driveway of his home|Regina Pacis’ (Queen of Peace) plause [Votive Shrine yesterday in the church. |unregistered, uninsured envelope!

i {two crowns valued at $100,000 Mrs. Rosina Morales, who had| |which they had torn from the been kneeling in a front pew, inifainted. Some of the men shout-

{ed and, for the first time in Msgr. he heard apin a Roman Catholic

land said their Rosaries since

Msgr. Angelo R. Cioffi, pastor Msgr. Cioffi told them tearfully of the shrine, was so overjoyed at thieves had pried loose the crowns seeing the crowns, which were(from a. mural of the Virgin stolen nine days ago, that he Mother holding the Infant Jesus. cried. out their return was: the) He had called the theft a “greatest miracle I have ever “greadfiil, sacreligious action com-

seen.” : %. + :

{mitted by sacreligious hands,” but

He hurried to tell the news to jater begged the thieves to repent

his congregation, for it was théfand return the arishioners who had °contrib-| Mailman Willlam Rorke delivuted their diamonds and other|ered the envelope to the shrine.

owns,

precious gems so that the crowns Msgr. Cioffi’s: fingers. trembled as

might be fashioned. _ “God has heard your prayers,’

{he opened the envelope. He had ''been told only two hours previ-

The parishioners had prayed)of

ibe returned. | Some Jewels Gone

On the inside, the two coronets| |were fastened to two strips of |corrugated paper with Scotch tape. The crowns were dented and about $2000 worth of small dia-| monds were missing. ! | But Msgr. Cioffi said members the congregation already had donated enough diamonds to restore’ the crowns, which will be locked in a safe until the grilljwork" erected to- protect them is {reinforced. Detectives took the envelope, a commercial container used for the, mailing of photographs, to police laboratories “for examination. The refurn address; printed in neat lower case letters, was ‘‘Police Headquarters,” but the street number was that of an annex used “by narcotics and burglar’ squads. :

a Monon Railroad freight train at a crossing yesterday. The week-end heat wave saw thousands of persons flock to cooling waters, Drownings claimed at least seven lives, equaling highway deaths for the first time this year. . Willard L. Dodson, 18, Tipton, drowned in a Clinton County gravel pit when a log on which he was floating rolled over and spilled him into the water. He couldn't swim. Thomas Wiebke, 18, Bluffton, drowned while swimming in a gravel pit near Bluffton. John McCammon, 32, Sullivan, drowned while swimming in a washout west of Oaktown.

Drown in Lakes

Victims of Indiana lakes were Donald Zappone, 27, a Tri-State College student from Wooster, O., who drowned in Lake James near Angola, and John Hammes, 17, Plymouth, who drowned while swimming from a rowboat in

Dixon Lake near Plymouth. Warren Smith, 33, Tipton, drowned- in a Howard County gravel pit. Fourteen-year-old Robert Wiseman, 5157 Clarendon Rd., Indianapolis, drowned in Broad Ripple pool among hundreds of|

A drowning Friday brought the 3-day total to seven.

At Yards Here

Hog prices were steady with) Friday's average today in trace at the Indianapolis: Stockyards. Bulk choice 170-250-pounders were selling for between $20.75 and $21.25. Choice Nos. 1 and 2 in the 180-225-pound class sold for $21.5Q. Hogs 7500; barrows and gilts, 240 pounds down, active, steady; heavier weights slow; | not fully established; few sales barely] steady; bulk choice 170-250 pounds, $20.75- | 21.25; choice No. 1 and ‘2 180-225 pounds, | $21.50, top, $21.50; few highly mixed near 255 pounds, $30.50; scattered sales 250-300 pounds, $18.75-20; few heavier weights sold; choice 120-180 pounds, $17.50-18.50;

choice sows 300-435 pounds, $17.50-18.25;

5; ie . to scattered choice near 300 pounds, $18.50; 53 Methodist Hospital School of | commonwealth ‘Loan 4% vf .. weights above 425 pounds, $16.25-17.50; Nursing students received their ont Car-Na-Var ...........

few boars, $13.50-14,

Cattle 1700, calves 300: good choice steers and mixed yearlings under 950 ; load choice

pounds steady at $31-34.50; near 900 pounds mixed yearlings $34.50: cows slow, not enough sold to establish price trend; vealers moderately active, mostly steady: bulk good to prime $32.36: odd head sorted prime $36.50: utility and commercial $25-32; bulls about steady: few commercial and food 26-2750. i eep 500; spring lambs steady: about 3 decks good to prime near 85 pounds $30; | utility and

10; choice lights scarce.

»

shorn slaughter ewes $8-' Church.

Model Plane Milk of Hungry Mother

Contest Is Set

50 Prizes Offered

At June 29th Flights

Model plane builders will com- his 33-year-old mother had eaten/the baby to the hospital where Ipete in 16 events to bid for 50/0nly a handful of stolen fruit inthe child was examined and pro-

lprizes worth $2000 in the All-| American Mbdel Plane Cham- |. ¢ ronounced dead at Roseland hospital took the parents to a

Can’t Keep

CHICAGO, June 9--A 21;5-month-old nursing baby died of

{day he starved to death because

ithe past week.

| The Infant, Charles Gaffner,

pionships, June 29, at Sky Harbor | Community Hospital last night.

Airport.

His mother, Mrs. Ethel Gaffner,

The “contest 4 committee from told police she had eaten only two

The Times, Exchange Clubs an

Plymouth dealers today put their final approval on the classifica-

tions.

In Free Flight, there will be! separate events for contestants fainted under 21 years old and for those 21 years and over as follows: Class A Gas,

Class 15-A Gas, Class B and C Gas, and Rubber.

In Control Line Flight, there|fed him last night about 7 p. m.|

4/bananas and some tomatoes since

la week ago. Her husband, Charles, 32, admitted to police he stole the fruit at a market where {he tried to get a job. The husband said his wife had from hunger several times recently. Despite her weakened condition, {Mr, Gaffner said, his wife con{tinued to nurse the infant. She

will be separate events for both then lay down until about 10 p. m.

as follows: Class

groups and D Speed, and Stunt.

Official entry blaftks will be, Ef available this week. When and 39-42%c; where to obtain them will be published in The Times . . . so keep

reading your Times for important model plane championships news. The public will be admitted free

to Sky Harbor to see some 250] builders fly their home-built cre- of ns Very ordinary am ations. The flights will be from| Be rr. at T8¢;

10 a. m. to 5 p. m.

Four Marion County winners! will win free trips to Detroit to cqmpete in the Sixth Interna-| tional Model Plane Contest set

for August.

Indianapolis Nurse Wins ze kz &

"Top Honors in Class

An Indianapolis nurse today sows opened about steady, closing easier; held top honors in her class after

diplomas. Miss Mary Margaret Schroder

228 E. 13th 8t., received first prize| fauitabie Securities com for general skill, an award given|®amily

by the hospital’s medical staff,

She received the honor at comlast| Broadway Methodist

¢" Ind Gas & Water com .. T | wnd Mich El ¢%a% bid ..

mencement exercises night in

held

A Speed, Class B Speed, Class C

Produce

Eggs: FOB Cincinnati—Consumer grade S. A large white 40-44':c,- brown mix U.S. medium white 36-40%ac: brown mix 36-39'2c. Wholesale grade: (commercial graded 40 per cent), Extra (large white 34-36c. Current receipts cases |exchange 39-32c. | Good quality steady to firm. At un{changed prices quality declining fast, |due to hot weather, | . Chickens—Commercially grown fryers {26-27c;. hens heavy 20-23c; hens light 15- | 16¢; old roosters 15-16c. Fryers steady offering fully ample for a fair demand. Balance steady quality of hens very ordinary and demand for

prem- | jum butterfat 59c, regular Sdc,

local Stocks and Bonds

| June 9; 1952

STOCKS Bid Asked Americans Losp 0% i American States Class A ..... 70 . American States 4.8% pfd... 24% {Ayrshire Collieries com ...... 15% 16% Belt Rik 4 Stk vds otd . 63 id Stk Yds com 34% 36% {L 8 Ayres 42% pid ... 101 oe | Bobbs-Merill com .. ....... J . Bobbs-Merrill 4%% pid ..... . SUnne: rertilize: 8% of .. ¥ Central Boys... oven 33

hamper ot Commerce com (hat Theater com .......... ' 1

85 1%

[Summing phn com td {Cummins Eng 4% Delta Elec com : LQ Lele

40 “ * 14% | ssaleru via

Zquitable Securities ofd

am Hays Coro pf viens *Hamilton Mfg Co com .. Herfl-Jones Class A ofd ..., Home + % | +4 nto vas |Hook Drug Co com ..... ‘Ind Asso Tel $2 ofd .. IL Asso le! $260 ord

a 18 48

i'n 25%

nd. leiepnone 4.5 pid

nriple Ath “lun Qealty Co ... 18 Ind Pow & Lt com ........ oo 35% 36% *iIndpls Pow & Lt pf .......... 95 99 | ‘Indianapolis Water com .... 17% 18% Indianapolis Watér 4% ptf. ,..100 mn {Indianapolis Water 5% pf ....106 ny

| [atferson National ite com |Kingan & Co com

1

13% 3

“ese eee

‘malnutrition and doctors said to-|

wo) Harvell is a South Bend con-

. | LAFAYETTE, June 9 (UP)—

'R Ma EY. aaa Marmon-Herrington com Viastic Asohalt 3 er Natl Homes com ... 24 Natl Homes pfd . 100 103 | *N Ind Pub Serv a 25% Ind Pub Serv 4Y4 100 *N Ind Pub Serv 44 26% *N Ind Pub Serv 4. 267s ‘Progress Laundry com 2 rv of Ind com Ya Pub Serv of Ind 3% pf ..... 88 of the news staff more than 30 rae oa © bead oom Sehwitser-Cummins "315 ptd 181, | years, will remain as editor, the So In REE com 4 voanersmane 23% management announced. Stokely-Van Camp com I$ a > ely-Van sa d 1 iannet & Jo § A . 13% U. S. Statement ay (nited Te 5% ofa ae TID s.uesnenr an sess | WASHINGTON, June 9 (UP)—Govern- . vidend ment expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through June 5, compared Allen & Steen os coarser . wees [With ‘a year ago: ) ase

vss. |Burplus

Baby Alive

| The infant did not respond when she attempted to wake him, ishe told police. The father summoned the landlord who rushed the couple and

nounced dead of malnutrition. | Police who were called to the

restaurant where they each devoured several hamburgers. Mr. Gaffner said he married his wife about 20 months ago. He said he had been unemployed for some time. Police said they could find no evidence of criminal negligence. No charges were placed against the couple and they were not held.

Husband Admits ‘He Shot His Wife

SOUTH BEND, June 9 (UP)— Grady R. Harvell, 31, South Bend, was held on a murder charge to(day after he walked into a police {station and said he shot his wife! ion a dark street. | Police found the body of Mrs. | [Nannie Mae Harvell, 37, lying in {a west side street last night, dead of five bullet wounds. | Harvell told police his wife left {him a week ago to live with rela[tives Tolbert Chism, Mrs. Harvell’s brother, said Harvell entered his home Sunday night with a drawn gun -and ordered®Mrs. Harvell to {80 with him: Shortly afterward, she was shot {while police, called by Mr, Chism, (drove toward the Chism home.

{struction worker. Police said Har-, (vell was married before and {fathered four children by his first {wife. Mrs. Harvell was married [three times and only three days {ago attended the high school |graduation of a daughter by one previous marriage.

Calvert Is Publisher Of Lafayette Paper

|

{D. Preston ‘Calvert, a Lafayette |attorney, has been made pub-

By DON TEVERBAUGH

time and these gas pump jockeys,

the $12 billion vacation handicap, purse. The boys with their minds in

‘your wallet say that America’s and sausage supper, free. vacation budget this year is up|

15 per cent to $12 billion and pre-|

dict 1952 will be a vacation bo-| {nanza—the biggest yet.

And the automotive industry's share should be about 30 per cent of that. It’s much more than just a load

lof gas. It's tires, spark plugs, | batteries, motor tune-ups, acces-

sories of all kinds.

Auto Agony

Last year was a tough one on

the family chariot. { There were almost 49 million] frantic SOS calls from balkyout this way soon.

buggy owners stranded on the roadside. That's about 11 per cent over 19351.

motorist was tire trouble. They

|grabbed about 21 per cent of the

emergency calls. Battery difficulty was a close second. Others on top of the grief list include ignition trouble and carburetor difficulty. Nearly 4 million motorists just

million drivers ran out of gas last

{year,

Don’t feel bad if you locked

three quarters of a

year. story . .

motorists avoided.

have can be easily!

service station and let ’em look your car over. It may save you precious hours, or a long walk «vy ayhe even your life,

Letterheads Say It CA LETTERHEAD -doesn’t mean much to me. Or I thought 80. Then I had a note from a man who sdid I am barking up a wrong alley, that letterheads get in their word even before the letter itself. . It is the door-opener. And if you sell perfume it ought to be pastel job with dreamy, willowy letters. But if you are a lawyer, it must say something else, such as integrity, in firm, forceful lettering. , But if you own a brewery, and you send letters to tavern owners, the “Hiya Joe” atmosphere does it better. » » I GET THOUSANDS of letters, but I remember very few letterheads, which means they aren't saying it very well. From the Parsons Paper Co. up in Holyoke, Mass., which outlets through the Indiana Paper Co., 151 8. Neal Ave.; I found letterheads can have plenty of comehither, they can scream or whisper.

» » ” THEY MAKE an Impression. They deserve more close study. A bad one costs as much as a good: one. The only difference is how much thought goes into it. ~ » “ SO DON'T call the printer and say, “Send me a couple thousand sheets and envelopes.” 8it down swith him or an artist, and think it out. It can tell your business story in many subtle ways.

‘Nail Polish Glow

THE ITOPS GIRLS have their pins. They are the Indianapolis Tele-

Service, the voice of the town's business, all private switchboard operators. I talked with Mary Lou Pace

their gold ping, miniature telephones, had arrived, complete with little gold switchboard plugs for guards.

Burglars Eat Sandwiches at Local Market

Hungry burglars sliced two pounds of meat off a boiled ham in the Hale Market, 4555 Marcey Lane, over the week end. They used the slicing machine in the market, : Then they got a loaf of bread, already sliced, and made "themselves ham sandwiches. They ate them in the store. Their snack finished, the

{lisher of the Journal & Courier {Publishing Co. in a reorganiza-

{the death of Henry W. Mar-|

[shall Jr. | Mr. Calvert continues as vice, {president of the corporation

|

Courier daily newspaper. Mrs. Helen B. Marshall, Mr.|

5% | Marshall's widow and ‘chief bene-|them W/ficlary in his will, became presi-

dent and treasurer. Mr. Marshall | [Was president, publisher and edi-{tor-in-chief when he died. | Herbert H. Heimlich, a member |

Expenses

This Year Last Year $60.240,500,467 $39,474.653, Receipts 3 $3.805.330.418 a

1841480110

«++. | Deficit 7,435,175 Lg = er RE a CRACKUF—n Sei Debrin, Th sen Toe + 3 = face ruck Grain Prices : . any 18, ve, : . I= Bop \ vision of her right eye restored after car crash in Brownwood, iz iE. | Futieeus | He Sree Sores Fea | ued oi Eman fe 2 i i “ Nw a . » : ismipy ; . mn) ;

thieves returned the rest of the ham to the refrigerator case from

‘02 ltion of the corporation following which they took it.

They got no cash. There was none in the market to take, the owner, Alfred Hale, 49, of 3560 N. Chester 8t., told The Times.

‘3% Which publishes the Journal &| But the burglars did take an,

estimated $100 worth of cigarets. Presumably intending to smoke somewhijfe else. v

WATCHES

FOR GRADUATION

Every watch completely reconditioned and cannot be told from new. Men's and ladies’ styles and brand new, latest “style, latest bracelets, Every watch carries a 1-Yeor Guarantee.

$Q95

SACKS BROS. "2.4"

whispered that some of these

plain “got stuck.” And about 15 a

yourself out of your car—almost |

million One Little Knob

'S GOT IT, the first a ets é Months

people did the same thing last/ ARVIN

But there's a moral to the] . Most of the troubles with the whole control on one

phone Operators, Personality and relief, which dropped $1.4 million,

at the A. and P. She told mei;

New York @ Memphis @ Los Angeles

MARY LOU touched up her

{slicker polishing and attendants’ it 100k like the real thing. Others side today. § [smiles are broader, It's vacation Saw it, begged for a “paint job.”| Widening and paving of Sher-/Ports that. her daughter com

Iman Drive from 16th St. to 21st|Mitted suicide with sleeping pills land said she

iwas an accident.

Three or four got it,

| are riding after a lush share of| Stark, Wetzel's Mary Swaim is g¢

ITOPS president. And it's been|

days the girls will have a waffle

mates the charm of a woman

jputs a smile in her voice, { She makes friends. friends make customers.

Dri-Charged

And

an eye on it. But there's a new one which|

{has a little longer life. The rea- Works

the minute you buy it. Firestone makes it. It will be The acid Somes separately (to the dealer)

in a plastic bottle, When you buy bi {it, he puts in the water and the

Biggest headache for last year’s acid. And life begins for the p =

(battery.

you get them. That means the

acid is working on the plates in Co. submitted a low bid of $7

neer William R. Hunt, board told him to prepare plans,

fmete a" {man Drive had been a traffic haz- ' ARNE i BUSINESSS never underesti ard, for there have been many

when she sits at a switchboard {incidents of cars hitting the old| '|bridge across Pogue's Run.

{would cost about $240,000.

Works Board Mother Insists Backs Street Re

pair Plan

By JOE ALLISON

{ | 9

250 4 Works Board had good newsRObinson, id WIN are getting a Plug-guard with nail polish, made for residents of the Northeast! Wife © 0 Director Edward DSHIELDS are getting \Dmytryk, today denied police re-

was suggested by City Engiand the!

or the project.

Mr. Hunt said sections of Sher- R

|

His plan calls for widening

Sherman Drive to make a four-| {lane roadway and a complete new Chief C. H. Anderson's report bridge to be combined with al'that the WHEN A car battery goes into railroad bridge over the creek. “probably suicide” and said Miss its second year, you'd better keep He estimated the whole project Robinson had packed her luggage for a vacation trip to Klamath Before work can be started, the River. ; find the! Mrs. Bagley said she was sure son is that it is not charged until money, and present outlook indi- her “daughter “accidentally” cates the job will be delayed until took an over - dose of sleeping next year.

Board must

Take Bridge Bids

Smith & Johnson Construction

the space between the factory/on the Oriental St. bridge.

land you.

{charger, for people, it'll have

|something.

I've seen. It’s the built-in double tuner

knob. Bill Julian, sales manager for

Before you start that vacation the Gibson Co. Arvin distributor, | trip, pull into that neighborhood has one of the first sets out.

And that’s my tip to you as to] what's coming.’

2 5 n 8: . THE NEW all-channel TV sets will 1dok about as they do now, and with ‘a-flick of the fingers you can get ahy of the 12 regular channels, or any of. the, 80 channels on the upcoming ultra high frequency. But don’t get set-shy. There won't be any UHF in this neck of of the woods for at least a year and a half. : Any medium-priced set will pay for itself in pleasure between now and election day.

Urges Fight

In Tax Rates

Taxes will rise again next year |unless people fight for cuts at the local and state level, the Indiana Taxpayers Association warned! today. Harry Miesse, chairman of the, Association's board of directors, said Hoosiers have been nicked | for $233,051,854 in property and poll taxes for home government this year. He said this was a boost of $27,465,248 over 1951. “While the people of Indiana were objecting to high federal taxes,” he said, “they were remaining relatively indifferent to the continued increase in cost of government at home.”

Cut in One County Of Indiana’s 92 counties, only Newton will levy less in property taxes this year. Mr. Miesse said increases for 1952 range from 2.92 per cent in Boone County to 31.35 per cent in Crawford. Biggest decrease was in connection with county = welfare] funds, where the 1952 total of’

Now if Firestone ‘can work outcome from a bond dri-charger, instead of a wet should be available month. Work on the bridge is ex{pected to be completed late this| |year or early next. It

For Hit-Run

accused of the hit-run traffic death of an Indianapolis woman in ‘1950, was sentenced today to six months on the State Farm.

Ave, pleaded guilty to failure to Stop after an accident. : Ie Sle iad been indicted by ganized Reserve? There's a col= , the Grand Jury on charges of| a : . . manslaughter, reckless homicide, ‘00 for you in"Thé Sunday Times, operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor, and drunkenness.

1950, | struck Mrs. Margaret Pierce at North and New Jersey Sts.

St., died 21 days later in General! ° ® Hospital. Against Rise | zo moms oe sae

Farm sentence recommended by!

driver’s license,

Money for the project is issue and| within: a

Fatality Here

A 30-year-old East Side man,

Clyde Taulman, 471 N._ State,

Taulman was arrested May 25, two hours after his car|

{ Mrs. Pierce, 55, of 615 Ogden|

the prosecutor’s office, Judge Saul I. Rabb, Criminal Court 2, fined! Taulman $10 and recommended 4 one-year suspension of his

ed

[TERMITES |

Stop Damage by | This Money-Saving Way

‘Daughter's Death ‘Was ‘Accidental’

ere

funeral arrangements. for Miss {Robinson, who was found dead in her apartment last Friday.

itoday at Woodlawn Cemetery in nearby Santa Monica.

{pills.

In other action, the Board took continue taking sieeping pills” ds on the rebuilding of the she riental St. bridge over Pogue's cheerful, and she had arranged to leave Saturday with her son . pia That bridge is next to Techni- to spend the summer with me MOST BATTERIES, Firestone cal High School and has been a said, are charged at the factory, blockaded since last year, creand must be kept charged until ating a traffic bottleneck.

Methodist Church 8.405 Appointments Made

to St. Paul and the Speedway Methodist Churches as a result of appointments made within the {Northwest Indiana Conference.

|appointments at the closing ses~ sion of the conference yesterday in West Lafayette.

director of public relations for the Indiana Methodist area and minister of the Speedway church, was appointed minister of the Methodist Church, Griffith, Ind. The Rev. Paul Hedden, who: has been serving at Staunton, Ind., Was named associate pastor of

Ralph Moore Jones, minister.

| HOME PLATING C0.

BEVERLY HILLS, Cal. June (UP)—The mother of Madeleine 39 - year -old former

was “certain” it

Mrs. LeRoy Bagley arrived

yesterday from Klamath iver, Cal, to ‘take charge of

Private services will be held

She tearfully denied Police

woman's death was

“I had urged Madeleine to dise

said. “Her letters were

nd my husband.”

Changes will take place'in the

Bishop Richard C. Raines of he Indianapolis area made the

The Rev. Wesley Brashares,

&aul's to serve with the Rev,

Are you a member of the Ore

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Termite-proof your property yourself with ARAB U-DO-IT (Chlordane base). Sure death to subterranean termites—and gives long-lasting protection. A liquid concentrate, one gallon makes 100 gallons ready to use and will treat average size house. Non-inflammable, odorless, harmless to flowers, | shrubs, trees. Directions on | label. Pint $5.95, quart $9.95, | 1; gal. $17.95 . gal. $29.95. Housekeeping Dept.,, Fifth} Floor, The Wm. H. Block Company.

$10,851,191 is $1.8 million less;

than last year. Only other major, cut was in township trustee poor

to $5,458,791. Mr, Miesse urged taxpayers to) attend budget meetings in the next few months.

Selling | {an ILLOGICAL MARKET

|is an ECONOMIC WASTE|

Write ..« | Georce S.May Company || Bune A : ng

Engineering Bldg. Chicago 4, IIL.

_.—e—.. |

—KING'S

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Regardless at what you pay you can’t buy better

If it’s quality werk you want our craftsmen can deo it.

bla,

If it's price. our low prices still give you quality. > :

a Phone CH-6717

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Designers and

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A lovely basket of gifts awaits you as an expression of goodwill from public-spirited local merch- | ants if you have just moved to. fhe city, are a new Mother, or have moved within the city. There's nothing to buy. No cost or obli-

1401 W. 30th. St

gation. Arrange te receive these gifts. Call your Welcome Wagon Hostess whose phone is listed below.

‘Welcome Wagon

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EE Fhe PT CW Te Nie TLE I

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