Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1952 — Page 15
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[, 1952 SUNDAY, JULY 21, 1052 : 2 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 15 ins ® ° a 0 ° S i U Th * S ® I A Pp C % stability that prevailed” during Py I the Trees Die Out usinesses Srep Up er savings ny er «en that period. JURSE ; : . By United Press thelr holdings of currency, U, S.jtheir so-called “liquid assets” by of currency holdin PI Wr ohio tbe 3 re : 4 RK x UU, 8 Ss was ater moved or r - nanship, : 3 WASHINGTON, July 26--The|government securities and shares|$6.3 billion, while business added than the increase = AY of [sumer aed sonirels od vor J a ure on t et em © qa S Federal Reserve Board reportediin savings and loan associations,jonly $4 billion. Unincorporated|government securities, the report] business borrowing in general, the y } J joday aiissses 2 unsed Shiels plus bank deposits, was unusually business added to their liquid as-|said. iboard said the increase in bank | St, : ths ma ; i" saving and piling up cashjlarge, but organized businessisets for the first time in five] In its July “Bulletin,” the board —] ARE SOME of our favorite a ; 9 more than individuals did lasttopped them: with an increase of|years. said ory and credit rival [orotate yas shade trees facing extine- | : 3 Css year. {almost 6 per cent. - Because the individual and the ments during the first half of 1951, and the privately-held tion? : is : Sr 0) hi! — Jate at which individuals; In dollar Bgures, however, thejcorporation alike had a greater 1952 were both the cause and ro: money supply declined, although —— Will the Dutch elm disease : Hd So (including {rust funds) inereased “individuals” won. They increased need for ready cash, the build-up sult of “the over-all economicl|less than last year. . " : . AVE Norway muble wilt and oak wilt ’ , PY —_ fll an increasing number of WwW i (@) WwW ae a : A Si 1) a. oS 1! - 15¢ trees. each year until they finally [5 ve o1Y Cl Qf 5 ouse. rices re as ( to e ast! Come to hi . fale out of existence? Frank N. Wallace, state ento- : A mo is anxious to allay the ROLL fears of persons who think this is , . happening. PAK! “These trees will never com: —— “pletely die out,” Mr. Wallace sald re-Tak- “Nature always sets up a reameria sistance to diseases, and I'm sure See Lie it will happen in this case, too.” 1 In cams Mr. Wallace has made an exipmeént, tensive study of diseases which d » affect trees. And in this study he has found many things which can
alleviate or forestall most of the
Cg “ y& begged people not to plant same kind of trees
in & 19 all down the street” ne said. “It’s nice to say they have a boulevard of elms or oaks. But that is what causes so many trees to become infected. ! - £ » “WHEN NATURE puts trees in ghe puts a mass of different kinds in the sam# place,” Mr. Wallace continued. “That's why when one tree is stricken by a. disease it very rarely affects another one becatise not many diseases will work on more than one kind of : : : ¥
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- ‘Mr. Wallace said we “brought the Dutch elm disease on ourselves.” The dreaded disease was brought to this country by importers of veneer logs. “The disease is carried by a little beetle which’ bores its way
DOOMED ?—Will the rest of these stately elms contract the dreaded elm disease that has withered and killed this once-proud specimen on White River Parkway?
el “Ture found famous
0.P.S, 113.60
35
'Y OF PARK PACE
into the leaves and bark,” the entomologist said. “The disease fruits inside the wood and forms a fungus growth. The spores grow so thick they shut off the sap and literally strangle the tree.” According to Mr. Wallace the government has spent many years in research attempting to find something which would kill the fungus and not harm the tree. “There have been several men
_ in the past few years who claimed
to have discovered a ‘vaccination’ for killing the elm disease,” he said. “Some of them have even been willing to ‘guaranetee’ the
immunization for five years. But none of them have been willing to wait even as much as three years before accepting their pay to see if the vaccination was really effective.”
o n ” THE ELM disease has been killing trees in Marion. County for. the past 18 years, Mr. Wallace said. During that time it has killed nearly 50% of all the elm trees here. » Mr. Wallace pointed out the seriousness of the chestnut blight a few years ago. It killed nearly all of the chestnut trees in the
‘Week-End
Prisoners’
Aren’t Showing Up
On July 9, Mrs. Long's attor-!
Question of the week: If a husband owing support money for his children is sentenced to spend week ends in
jail until he pays up, does he havejvacation, = -
to go? Not in Marion County Jail, apparently, unless his former wife
ney hailed Harlan Long before {Superior Judge Norman E. Brennan, while Judge Clafk
Judge Brennan dods not follow the week-end plan, ‘Noting that Long’s back payments by then
finds out he isn’t showing up ati, ; 4 743 que, the judge tossed
the calaboose. This peculiar state of affairs
when Mrs. Mardella Long
him behind bars indefinitely. Long
can get out only by paying up, . came to light some Hille aa or convincing Judge
Brennan
The Times with a complaint, She that he can and will make up the said Harlan B. Long, 41, sup-[Payments. posedly in jail each Saturday and| Trouble is, this completely spoils
Sunday, was coming to her house/the week end for Long. .on week ends to annoy her.
In the
{Summer time that’s really pen Jail records showed Long was -
sentenced late in January, when 2) Paul B. Clark, judge.of superior Here Is Your
Court 5, found him in contempt of court due to a failure to pay support money of $30 a week for six children. Long owed a total of $270, plus Mrs. Long's attorney fee of $160, following the divorce Nov. 30.
Then He Stopped
Long appeared regularly for his Saturday-Sunday stint from Jan. 26-27 ‘through Mar. 22-23. Then he stopped coming. Then he
began appearing at Mrs. Long's home, 210 N. Davidson St., boast-
ing of his political connections, she said.
Investigation by The Times revealed the sheriff's office does not go out looking for a man who
fails to .come to jail on time.
“We're only supposed to notify the judge in case he doesn’t come in,” said Sheriff's Capt. Morris
Settles.
Judge Clark, in turn, leaves en- i forcement of his week end jail] |
order up to the aggrieved party— in these cases the divorced wife. “If the man disobeys the sentence, the attorney representing the wife is supposed to put the court on notice by filing a supplementary petition,” Judge Clark said. “I then issue a body attachment with a fixed bond, and the man is brought before me for a hearing.” Nothing was said about who enforces the sentence if the wife's attorney doesn’t know the man is absent and fails, therefore, to file a supplementary petition. Judge Clark began sending de-| linquent husbands to jail on week’
a
Times Carrier
bicycle,
Times carrier
_ Indianapolis Richard Hadcliff has used his
profits wisely. Besides a savings account, he has bought a watch and his own
clothes. Richard delivers to customers
in the 1900 and 2000 blocks of N. Keystone and Tacoma Aves. | He has been a carrier for two |
years.
An eighth grader at School | the Hillside | Christian Church. He and his two brothers live at 2406 N. |
38, he attends
Tacoma Ave,
|
|
jand be rid of all the leaves.”
country. However, there are some new trees springing up in Pennsylvania .which show a resistance to the disease. And tests are being made to determine if they] are immune. | “And that's just what will happen in the case of the elm,” he; said. ‘“Most of them might be killed, but eventually a hardier, strain will come along and we will have elm trees again.” | “Oak wilt will never be a city! problem,” Mr. Wallace added. “People shouldn't worry about it because it’s a disease that spreads through the root system. All that’s necessary to control it is to plant the trees far enough) apart so the roots can't come into contact with one another. | * 8-8 MR: WALLACE'S favorite tree, is the red, or scarlet, maple. It| is a native of Indiana and has no known disedses. “The wood is tough and won’t| break in windstorms or when the| sleet is heavy,” he said. The| leaves are beautiful in the fall and all of them come off the tree’ within four or five days. | “The women don’t seem to like| that so well,” he laughed. “But if they had to go out and rake the leaves they'd know how nice| it is to rake the ground only once,
REST EASY
UNDER LLL EEN
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His intention was to leave them|jy)y 26-—-A bus whose brakes
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using the two-day jail term as 3in
“persuader” to be good in the future. In many cases, it has, convinced the delinquent man that his best course is prompt payment. “The average fellow is honest,” said Judge Clark. “And these men are not criminals, Most of them just want to eat, sleép,|
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