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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 6

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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6
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1947 State Welfare Fear Methodist Bishop Is Dead in China Crash By the Associated Pre 2 Teacher Pay Bills Introduced Doubling of Minimum Salaries Is Proposed By EDWARD H. ZIEGN'ER Governor Ralph F. Gates and Roscoe P. Freeman, state budget director, today continued work on the state budget and financial House Passes Reckless Flyer Penalty Bill The Indiana house of representatives hit hard Tuesday at highway and flying menaces, unanimously passing a strict bill against reckless flying and starting consideration of a bill to set highway! speed limits and stiffen drunken driving penalties. H.

B. 45, authorizing a maximum penalty of $250 and six it ii' kow. Radio contact was lost shortly after the plane took off from Hankow. Airline officials aboard a search plane reported, the transport was bady burned. One wing was seen a half mile from the wreckage, which led to the fear an explosion had occurred in flight and none had survived.

tv Xf Xfv rfi tsf a -'ill fi 4t' A-; 1 J- forecast for 1847-49, as a special subcommittee of the G. O. P. leg-jor SHANGHAI, Jan. 29A Chinese commercial airliner carrying Methodist Bishop and Mrs.

Schuyler Edward Garth, Madison, among it twenty-six occupants exploded aloft 100 miles west of Hankow and the official Central Nws Agency said today twenty-five persons were killed. The agency said the sole survivor was a 'very seriously Injured foreigner who was being rushed tot a hospital. The survivor's identity was not reported. The agency said its report came from Chinese civil air authorities. The plane, second lost In the interior of China in four days, was piloted by John Papajik, of New York, and carried several foreign missionaries and their children.

Other foreigners listed by the company, the Chinese National Aviation Included Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Vick, of the American Baptists (North), of Cheshire, 'and their two children; Mrs.

F. Miller and her three children, of Canada, and Mrs. B. Kitchen, of the United Church of Canada. Mn.

Miller was en route to Join her husband who is attached to the China inland mission at Chengtu, Szecbwan province. Her three children are Paul, Peter, 7, and Philip, believed to be an infant Mrs. Miller was a native of Auckland, New Zealand, and her husband was from Vancouver, B. C. They came to China in 1932.

Bishop Garth and his wife, both of whom came to China December 31, had boarded the plane at Han 1 -I I I 't PUPILS TEST NEW ADDRESS SYSTEM Pupils of Public School 20 ore shown testing their new modern public address system, which also lets them listen to instructive1 radio programs. Miss LaVon Cox teacher, is shown with two pupils, Erma Blaine and Ronald Joyce. Current Direct 3 Freedoms Promised by Polish Regime By the Associated Prest WARSAW, Jan. 29 The government bloc parties controlling Poland's first postwar parliament issued a manifesto today promising Around the World With The News 'Oscar7 Battle So Vicious It Frightens Film Academy By ROBERT W. NEWELL rrpired from Prett Aorltin Dispatches Benefits Rising $2,000,000 Larger 2-Year Budget Forecast Increases in the number of per-' sons receiving welfare benefits and increases in their grants were listed today by Otto F.

Wflls, state welfare administrator, as. the rea sons for an expected $2,000,000 annual boost in the Indiana welfare budgets for the next two years. The increased amount of state welfare aid was disclosed Tuesday by Governor Ralph F. Gates in a discussion of the budget for the next fiscal biennium. More persons now are receiving welfare benefits, Mr.

Walls said, because of loss of employment by elderly persons. Aid to dependent children has increased because mothers who worked during labor shortages have now lost their jobs. As examples of how costs have increased, Mr. Walls pointed to a total of 54,201 Indiana recipients of old age assistance in November, 1945, who received an average monthly grant of $23.95, for a total of $1,406,368 in aid. By November, 1946, those totals had risen to recipients, receiving an average grant of $27.17, for total payments of $1,517,151.

This- represents an increased cost of almost $100,000 monthly. More than 3,000 more dependent children received aid in November. 1946, than did in November, 1945, at an increased cost of over $50,000 monthly, he said. Piled on top of these increased costs, he added, has been an increase of about $1,000,000 over 1945 figures in direct medical payments. The state pays 60 and the coun ties 40 of welfare grants.

An in crease in $5 in the maximum monthly grant for old age assistance was made available by the Seventy-ninth congress but could not be accepted by the state because of lack of legislation au thorizing acceptance. Increased fed eral funds for aid to dependent children and the blind also were in this category. House Bill 17, an administration-sponsored bill now on second read- ing in the (Indiana house of repre sentatives, is designed in part to enable tht state to accept these federal funds and any future ones that may be offered. CD? Chest tight? Bronchial mucous znetpbranes raw, tender, inflamed? Finding it bard to raise adj expel sticky, germ-laden phlegm? Then, it's time you sought welcome relief with dependable M-K, a Doctor's formula. Ash far at Veur Orwvgtst'a Fertnuia WlVl Th ONE-UNIT iiEAnino aid Thousands Have Waited for 4i Thf3ft! ALL You Wmmr He Separate lattery Pack He Battery Cards Tha tiny new Beltona Mono-Pae ia about aisa and weight of old-tyle hearing aids, ytt ao powerful you hear area wkispirt! Get helpful facta about this new "miracle" aid in valaabla FREE book abowt deafness.

BaltoDi Indlaaapoiis Co. Paul Bmwmnrr. Dlv. Mer. 830 State Ufa Eldf.

MA. P1m mm) ma FBEE booklet abort eearoan aad arbat eaa be doaa teerarcome it. mm TO I Th3 crash area is the same general sector being searched for the C. N. A.

transport plane with nineteen aboard, including the American pilot, Jack M. Black-more, of West Los Angeles, CaL, which disappeared Saturday about fifteen miles away from Chungking on a flight from Hongkong via Canton. War Brides, Children, G.l.'s Due From Europe Br the Associated Ptcm The John Ericsson was scheduled to arrive Wednesday at New York from Southampton with 174 war brides ind children. Also due at New York Wednesday from Bremerhaven, were the Mary C. Kimbro, with fifteen troops and ninety war dogs, and the Wabash Victory, with fourteen troops and eighty-seven war dogs.

Three transports arrived Tuesday at New York from Bremerhaven. They were the General Howze, with 1,305 troops; the Lew-iston Victory, with 803 troops, and the General M. B. Stewart, with 1,278 troops and twenty-eight wives and children. day women, partly because they didn't read books which portray child-bearing as the "dreadful agony of a heroine." The alleged decline of the female would be debated by Washington police.

Five of them approached a home to investigate a commotion. They saw the door swing open violently and a man sprawl outside. "She just picked her husband up and threw him out," one policeman said of Mrs. Mildred Wood. It took all five cops to break in the door while Mrs.

Wood held the other side. The reason: She is six feet three inches tall and weighs more than 200 pounds. BATTLE OF SEXES In Hollywood, Mrs. Helen Patricia Hall accused her actor husband, Eddie Hall, of taking too seriously the slogan, "Love me, love my dog." She told divorce court she drew the line when Hall insisted that their Boxer dog. Dynamite, sleep with them.

She won $50 a month alimony, custody of their daughter and the apartment In Detroit, Mrs. Gloria Lee Deane broke any legal hold her husband had on her by telling divorce court her husband turned their married life into a wrestling bout. She said, "He'd clamp a headlock on me and then slip into a hip lock and then try the flying mare and he'd toss; me right across the room. I always lost" Novelist Lawrence Lipton charges cruelty in seeking the Polish people freedom ofjpublic SChool office. speech, freedom of the press and Members and guests will assem- months imprisonment for reckless intoxicated went to the A new bill appeared to set up a mandatory five-day jail sentence on first conviction of drunken driving, six months for the sec ond and indeterminate sentence of one to five years in the State Prison for the third and subsequent offenses.

It would set the (following highway speed limits: For passenger cars, sixty miles an hour; buses, fifty miles an hour; trucks, forty-five miles an hour, Progressive loss of license terms are specif ic. vwith three months in Sail added for a third offense. Senate to Probe Burch 'Pressure Employe Tells of Direct Primary Boost The Indiana senate today unanimously vsted to probe reports that an employe of A. V. Burch, state auditoui has been bringing "undue pressure on farmers to support passage of a direct primary bill, i A committee of four, headed by State Senator Samuel E.

Johnson Anderson), who introduced the resolution, was appointed to report to the senate within five days on the charge. Other committee members include Senators Roger G. Wolcott (R-, Indianapolis), A. W. Mitchell La-porte) and Jack O'Grady Terre Haute).

The resolution followed reports that Mr. Claire Henricy, 4528 Fa'r-view Terrace, had charged that the state auditor required her to have applicants for gasoline tax refunds sign post cards to their senators or representatives urging them to support the direct primary measure. She said most farmers had no interest in the primary question and that she even had to look up the names of their legislators for some of them. Mr. Burch, called out of a special staff meeting in his office which included air division heads in his department, said he would "welcome an Investigation by the senate or any one else." He said he has contemplated no punitive action against Mrs.

Henricy and that questions on her future status would have to be answered by her. Mrs. Henricy, a veteran of seven years in the auditor's office, insisted she was under instructions by the auditor to approach the applicants. Further, she said today, Mr. Burch would not permit her to make the contacts with state 6fficials necessary after her, appointment by the Marion county Republican centrol committee to head the infantile paralysis drive in the Statehouse.

Consequently, she asserted she could not head that campaign. Truman Plans to Visit Mexico's President WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 (API-President Truman early in March will make the first flight to Mexico City by a White House occupant for a three-day "good will" visit with President Miguel Aleman, He will entertain Mr. Aleman a little later in a return visit to Washington by the head of the Latin-American republic. Presidential Press Secretary Charles G.

Ross said details of the trips are yet to be worked out. But diplomatic officials were quick to suggest that the two presidents will discuss among other things a United States loan to speed Mexican industrialization and the right of public assembly. All three privileges were cardinal issues in the recent national election campaign, during which Vice Premier Stanislaw Miko-lajczyk's Polish Peasant party bitterly accused the government of using repressive and terroristic measures to influence the voters. The first task of the new parliament will be to elect a president who will appoint a cabinet. The parliament will then proceed to draft a constitution to replace that of 1921.

"The new constitution," the government bloc manifesto said, "will guarantee freedom of speech and the press, public assembly and equal rights of all citizens. It will guarantee liberty of conscience and religious tenets, particularly the rights of the Catholic church. 'The constitution also will create wide possibilities for the development of co-operatives and will safeguard private property as the basis of sound, private initiative" In addition the manifesto promised increased employment, higher salaries, the development of social services, improved housing, school reforms and financial aid to farmers. Of Vice-Premier Mikolajczyk's Polish Peasant party, the manifesto said: "By becoming the legal superstructure of the reactionary under ground, the movement has put itself outside sound social forces and has eliminated itself from the list of forces which may contend There was no announcement i concerning the government's in-1 tentions toward the underground movement, but political observers expected that the bloc parties would attempt to strengthen their nnsition hv a npw amntv nffpr to resistance groups which lay down their arms in a specified 1 time. Tomlinson Hall Bill Passes Senate With only two dissenting votes, the Indiana senate today passed! and sent to the house of representatives a bill by which the state relinquishes all claim of title to the Tomlinson hall property, clearing islative policy committee studied a proposal to double the minimum salaries of Indiana school teachers at an added annual cost to the state of between $14,000,000 and $26,000,000, depending on what percentage of the minimum the state elected to pay.

The minimum salary bill and a companion bill, designed to end the yearly action of the state board of finance in setting the percentage of minimum that the state pays, were introduced in the senate today, although the policy committee has not as yet taken action on the minimum pay bill. Budf et Requests Pruned The budget committee is reported working to scale down budget requests as, much as possible in an attempt to come up with a balanced budget of probably around $77,000,000 in general fund appropriations, about $11,000,000 more than general fund appropriations in the 1945-47 biennium. The request of Ben H. Watt, state superintendent of public instruction-elect, and Robert H. Wyatt, executive secretary of the Indiana State Teachers Association, would mandate, as under present law, the state to meet 80 of teachers' minimum salaries, at a cost of 000,000 annually from state funds.

If 100 were paid by the state, the cost would be $55,000,000. The proposed schedule of minimum salaries, based on a nine- month school, term, follows: Teacher with four years' college training, $2,400. Teachers with three years col lege training, $2,200. Teachers with two years train ing, $2,000. Teachers who meet the educa tional qualifications, but are era ployed in eight-month schools would receive eight-ninths of the new minimum proposals.

Additional Increases Mandatory The teachers would receive the following additional mandatory in creases, in addition to fixed sal aries. Teachers with a master of arts agree, $60 a year for each year up to twenty years, making a possible minimum of $3,600. Teachers with four years training, $50 a year up to ten years, with a possible minimum of $2,900. Teachers with two an dthree years' training, $50 a year up to five years, with possible minimums of $2,500 and $2,550. Substitute! teach ers to receive $8 daily minimum? pay.

The pass increase bill has an emergency clause which would make it effective immediately and would thus affect signing of contracts for the 1947-48 year. It provides that the first installment of the state's contribution should be paid August 1, 1947. The senate now pays 100 of minimum salaries which are fixed at $1,200 at a cost of $29,000,000 yearly from cross income tax funds. The companion bill introduced along with the increased pay bill is framed to remove the necessity of the state board of finance taking annual action in fixing the amount of the minimum of the teachers' wages that the state will pay. The bill is designed to maintain the present payment of 100 of the minimum by the state, unless the finances of the state indicate that 100 can not be paid.

Revolt Crushed in Paraguay By Um VnlUd Trtts ASUNCION. Paraguay, Jan. 28 The government announced of ficially Tuesday afternoon that an attempted revolt of officers of; minor rank had been smashed. House Continued from Page 1 fusing to handle specified brands of alcoholic beverages." Two new sections include a $5 license fee for bartenders, instead of the present $1 charge, and extends this to include waitresses. It was explained that this is aimed a eliminating "floater" personnel who drift from one tavern to another.

The second additional suggestion is the elimination of bonding re quirements, in which a permit holder is required to post a bond for cases of fines. The alcoholic I commission aaoptea tne policy of closing taverns for a ivt enu JW f7 unnecessary. In addition, technical changes ir. the present laws are included to repeal obsolete "saloon-day restrictions. Meanwhile, the annual pastors' conference in Indilnapolis adopted a resolution calling on the assembly to take immediate steps to remove the influence of the liquor traffic from the county and state and urged passage of House Bill 54, the local option bill.

fliEonMnEiiMaaim Slllli r.rais Ricf. mvstervtover Poland's fate." Hollywood is beginning to ask, "What is an Oscar?" Is it an award for acting or horse trading? According to Ralph Dighton, of the Associated Press, the undercover political shenanigans over the annual awards have grown so vicious that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science considers it is fighting for its life. Only members of the academy will be allowed to vote this year, but this fact merely places hurdles in the way of an unscrupulous producer who might suggest to another: "You swing the votes of the workers in your studio to my picture, and I'll guarantee my people will vote for your star." Other Hollywood notes: Actress Joan Bennett has undergone a minor operation as part of a physical checkup Doris Kenyon, widow of Milton Sills, was married Tuesday to Bronislaw Mlynar-ski, Polish composer and conductor The portrait of Lilli Palmer used in "Body and Soul" was painted by Lilli Palmer. IS MAN scientists have cast some doubt on the belief that modern man is any great shakes in comparison with his ancestors. In Berkeley, CaL, an anthropologist says that members of a tribe of stone-age men who roamed the hills of Palestine about 8,000 years ago could not be distinguished from modern man if they were dressed in modern clothes.

He said the Natufians may represent a transitional culture between the savage hunters of the Ice age and the adoption of agriculture by man. In Detroit, an eminent obstetrician says cave women bore children with less difficulty than present- Iodine Ration in tMf farm, taken frm pUnt DAI a avrnir $1.00 4(H DAYS' SfPFLT, S3.0 Mali rdri seat pntild receipt remittor. Beeler's Natural Foods 117 NV Delaware Indpls. 4 Adrrr tttrmtnt I FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Mx.ny wearers of teeth hT uffered real embrrfcmeDt bc.ue thir put dropped. lirpd or wabbied at Jttt the wrong time.

Do not live tn far ot this happntrt to you. Just aprtnk! Uttl FASTtlETH. th alka-lina (non-acid) powder, on j-our plates. Holds falsa tth mora firmly, so thy fnl mora comfortable. Dews not sour.

Checks "plate odor" (dentura breath). Get FASTEETH at any drug etore. Double CheckThis- arCOUGHS to 9 Why from that cough to a cold waea om teMpooafol el Mvttbo-Malaica attrts voa so saaea betta? MaBtbe- Mmlatea aelpa million ei cjlaada ia yeat threat to t-cxaee meiarux. thus leeeeBlag tae phlam with- tae-Molsiea ia ae qaiek, ao yea be Ak your dreqr- lt for Meetao-MaU atoa today. FoUew directions oa labeL wao-7S an4 fr sala Haac'a, Haefc'a anal other ce4 drat Starrs.

MM 1 Demonstration of Education by Radio Set for Thursday A meeting of the Indiana Association for Education by Radio will be held Thursday with four scheduled attractions on Ithe agenda beginning at 3:15 p. according to Miss Blanche Young, IhpaH nf rarfin fnr fh TnHiananhlis ble first at School 20, 1849 Pleasant Run boulevard, south drve, where the principal C. E. Sun-thimer, will conduct a tour of the building and demonstrate the use of a modern public address system. A demonstration utilizing a transcribed radio program will begin at 3:45 p.

m. in the auditorium. Miss Mary Conner, chairman of utilization, will lead a discussion and Miss Marjorie Mc-Bride ivill demonstrate the use of the program in a third grade class studying jungle life. Mrs. Beulah Stevens will show how the same program clan be used in a fifth grade science class.

Exhibits of art work by a junior high school class will be shown by Miss La Von Cox. Music and English pupils in junior high school will discuss the follow-up1 activities with their teacher, Miss Erna Santarossa. Principals, tjeachers and school patrons, are invited to the demonstration. A dinner will, follow at 6 p. m.

for members and guests at the Canary Cottage. Special guests will include radio chairmen of civic groups, radio editors and columnists of newspapers. The final attraction of the meeting will be held at WIBC, The Indianapolis News station, at 8 p. where Brad DeMarcus, production manager at the radio station, and Mrs. Bess Wright, chairman of the program committee of the association, will present a radio program, "Libby's Problem," by a cast from members in the audience Dr.

Harry Skornia director of radio for Indiana university ana president of the Indiana Associa tion for Education by Radio, will preside at all the meetings. Other nffirers include Miss Mary Jo Woods, vice-president; Mrs. Ressie Fix, secretary, and Mrs. Lucile Heizer, treasurer. Kidnapped Judge Freed in Palestine; Banker Is Sought JERUSALEM.

Jan. 29 (AP) Palestine police and British troops intensified their search today for a Kamat uan in pursuit oi me men who abducted Judge Ralph Wind- nam Monaay dui rpxeasea mm ua- Reports circulated that the bank er, H. A. I. Collins, a former British army officer, also had been te-leased, but after a full day of checking, police were unaDie to confirm these rumors.

They spec- ulated that underground might hold him longer to treat injuries he reportedly suffered when he was abducted Sunday night. Reliable informants here said the Britisn naa Iixea p. m. loqay as the deadline for invoking mar- tial law in certain sections of Pkl- nhrmri Judge Windham, seized Monday frnm thA henrh ff his Tel Aviv courtroom, was taken by his cap tors to a textile factory on the out skirts of Ramat Can and there fe leased Rumpled and unshaven ne was sua wearing ine -1 i I I wig and robe ot ms onice. Palestine police expressed ln creasing fear that Collins mignt have been fatally injured i a home.

Gilbert 5uCCeCQS DIShop Manning NEW YORK, Jan. 23 CAP) Suf-j fragan Bishop Charles Kendall Gil-! bert Tuesday was elected to suc-j ceed Bishop William T. Manning' as bishop of the Episcopal diocesej of New York. ine eiecuon was announced Dj Bisnop Manning, neaa ot the dio- jcese since May 11, 1921, who re- signed last December because of; this age. i From Atomic Ovens Visioned By HOWARD W.

BLAKESLES Associated Tress Science Reporter NEW YORK, Jan. 29 An answer to the unsolved riddle of how to extract electric current directly from atomic ovens was proposed to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers today by Professor John G. Trump, of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This, he said, might be done by combining a vacuum with use of the sort of electrostatic! generators now employed to make million and ten-million volt flashes of artificial lightning. These generators produce electricity only bit by bit, and some of them do it by picking up static.

They store this electricity rapidly until there is a million or more volts available. Such generators are, however, very bulky. Professor Trump said that if they can be house in a vacuum, the size can be reduced. It might be reduced enough so that they could be used to pick up the tiny electrical charges emitted by splitting atoms. Present atomic power plants are planned to produce heat, that jn turn will make steam, which, will run a generator of electrieity.

The electricity from the' splitting is diffused. Professor Trump's proposal would concentrate the electricity enough for the apparatus to pick it up and then channel it into a power line. Taking electricity directly from splitting atoms is a problem that atomic scientists have predicted might be solved. Separate Examining Board Is Proposed for Chiropractors Chiropractors fight for self-rule was reopened Tuesday In the Indiana house of representatives in a bill to set up a chiropractic examining board independent of the state medical examiners board. The bill, introduced by Representative Herbert M.

Copeland Madison) calls for a board of three chiropractors. The board would be authorized to license, without further examination, chiropractors now holding license under the state board of medical examination and registration on surrender of license and payment of $10. It sets up as standard for recognition of chiropractic colleges a course of four years of nine months each, covering 3,600 hours with a minimum of 90 attendance. The board would be authorized to increase the educational requirements after 1950. The board would be required to conduct two written examine tions, one in basic sciences and the other in physical diagnosis, dietetics, gynecology, neurology, jurisprudence, principles, theory and practice.

i Court Ruling Paves Way for Incorporation Vote Special to The IndianapoUs News LEBANON, Jan. 29 An election to decMe the issue of ir. corporation in Whitestown is ex- pected to be called soon by Boone nnntv mmmiwinnprt fnllnwinff a hv Fr.nir Hntrh. msnn that Dersons ODDO.ced to the iproposal we not e'ntitled to an The injunction suit was filed last October by Bruce Neal and fnrTV nthp. living in anH WWt Laughner, Whitestown druggist and others who initiated a petition for the election, as defendants.

County commissioners and James R. Stewart, county auditor, were also named defendants. The court also dissolved a temporary restraining order granted to delay the election until evidence could be heard, prtrmfl CftffA Hlac rormer 3enaie WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 (AP) jChesley W. Jurney, 69, former sergeant at arms of the United States senate and a member of an old Waco Tuesday, (Tex.) family, died ti aciroH ih Anpplps! anrrnv.

nmnprtv set-! tlement with Miss Rice. Although Socialite Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney frequently leaped to his feet and shouted his bids, a man quietly nodding his head at an auction in New York Tuesday night acquired a (copy of the first book printed in paid for the "Bay Psalm Book" was jthe highest ever paid for a book fin this country. Mr. Whitney gave at $150,000. Dr.

A. S. W. Rosen-jbach, rare books dealer whose agent outbid Whitney, said he considered it "a very reasonable price" The high chair which President Franklin D. Roosevelt used as a baby will be auctioned off in Brooklyn to benefit the infantile paralysis fund.

PERSONALITIES After thirty-nine years in Joliet Prison. Charles Hanson, 74, is enjoying his first month of freedom and his iob TOWM ii i 1 i 1 1 STATS 1 1 SOLARIUM ROOMS the wav for the city and county to kidnapped aruisn oanicer ana cor-erect thereon a government build-' doned off the Tel Aviv suburb of fli ij ttt" rr mi si mg jng Senator Robert L. Brokenburr Indianapolis, author of the i V. It. .1 (said that while Indianapolis had'narmea iuesaay mgm.

baby sitting. The man who killed! held title to the property 120 years, a policeman in 1907 said, "Boy, (a possibility of title dispute, be-do I get a kick out of watching: cause of prior state ownership, fl II muuuuH CD that little baby Mrs. Eleanor Webster was arrested in Chicago for flattening another woman, a total stranger who wore a pink hat. "I just don't like pink hats," she told police Stanley McCormick, of Chicago, has left his entire estate, worth about $25,000,000, to his widow Toots Shor attended! a banquet at the White House and! reported. "The Trumans throw a swell party.

Best darned meal I ever had in my whole life." In New York. Dr. John R. Dun- ining has turned atom splitting into! a parior irics. xne annual raeet mg of gas manufacturers he used samples of radium and beryllium as a neutron source, acting upon a one-inch square of uranium, to pro needed to be cleared Under the bill, the Governor erants to Indianapolis a emit claim deed.

Strong South American Earthquake Recorded WESTON, Jan. 29 (AP A "strong" earthquake somewhere near Bolivia in South America was recorded today at the Boston nnllpee seismograph station at wftnn The quake, the station reported. uf.rf at started at 2:27.59 (C. S. and lasted about two hours.

It was "about 200 miles under the jface of the earth." the report said. I I WASHINGTON. Jan. 29 fAP President Truman sent to the sen-; ate today the nomination of Fran-) cis Biddle, former attorney gen-1 eral, to represent the United States? UU lilt? aliUIJS rcuiiuimi and social council. He would succeed John G.

Winant. resigned. i i duce uranium fission. Energy leased was viewed on the screen of! Diddle Nominated lOT rmn is mn TES, THAT'S JUST ANOTHER NAME FOB AN INCLOSED PORCH, but the word Solarium "Sun" -tells the story. The sun produces enough, heat through the glass to make the room comfortable most of "the time.

Building inclosed porches is not a new thing with us, we have always specialized in this work. Now that good materials are available we are able to contract for more work than in the past. The windows we use are designed especially for this purpose. There is nothing to store, both glass and screen Is immediately available at all times. WE PAINT OUS WINDOWS AND DOORS TO MATCH.

TOUR HOUSE. OUR MR. McDANIELS will gladly estimate the cost of inclosing your porch. He is not a salesman, but a skilled craftsman who will supervise the work if you decide you would like to have it done. THERE IS NO OBLIGATION for this estimate and we can give you TERMS With NO DOWN PAYMENT If Tei Uka EUBANK Roofing and Insulation Co.

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