Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1944 — Page 2

Drive for Memberships rsh in 8% Hospitals, Leo Heiny Jr. R. Behymar 88. |... Murat temple “ladder of smiles” PVT. LEO HEINY JR, grandson|this week as they intensify their J

of Mrs, Lillie South, R. R. 15; Box|cAmpaign to sell permanent ‘con-* 711-B, is with the army in Italy. in the

U. S. Bids for Entire Output! Of Ballbearing Plant Supplying Nazis.

WASHINGTOIN, May 15 (U.P). ~The foreign economic administration, intensifying the reported crack-down against Swedish sales of ball bearings to Germany, was reliably reported today to be bidding for the entire output of the} massive SKF ball bearings plant in} Sweden. 2 Stanton Griffis, 'FEA's special representative in Sweden, has been granted blank check authority to spend as much as $30,000,000 to channel SKF's output to the United States and thus deprive the Nazi war machine of one of its most vital materials, authoritative sources disclosed.

(SKF stands for Svenska Kullager Fabriken—Swedish ball-bearing

Training’ Leaders Register For Classes June 6 At Y. Ww. C.A.

: OF the moment in local Republican circles is how many of Marion county's 311 votes in the coming state convention will

James M. Tucker get. (Mr. Capehart is almost certain to get a substantial majority since

fhe has the hacking of the Bradford-Ostrom-Daniels-led regular or3 > District Chairman Bradford : claims 185 votes, giving Tucker gr . RS ‘| only 26. The Tucker forces on F WAR MOTHE | the other hand claim 78 votes, HONORED HERE Po oelegates | POR WHATEVER IT'S worth, | this writer made a cross-check of More Than 100 Greeted by| the convention delegates, asking

= ® ¥ : : 14 people (1-15 of the entire dele. Davison at Memorial gation) who they favored. Ceremony.

Ten were for Mr. Capehart, two were for Mr. Tucker and two said Mother's day in Indianapolis took | on 3 new significance this year as|

they were undecided. The results of this cross-check, the No. 1 war mothers of the state and the nation were honored at the |

| camps will register June 6 at the | ¥. W. C. A. as the Council of So- ~ | opening of 15 camps throughout the | city June 19. 3 Approximately 300 to 400 girls | between the ages of 8 and 14 are | expected to attend the Afth annual . |1. D. D. C. for a two-week program | of summer activities. | The project will be b! Camp Pire Girls, Girl Scouts and Girl Reserves of the Y. W. C. A, and leaders will be drawn from troop leaders of these organizations and from women trained in youth work. : : Leaders’ classes will be conducted by executives of the co-operating groups June 6 at the Y, W. C. A, following the registration for girls

tributing -~ memberships a : Shrines’ hospitals for crippled chil- = PFC. RAYMOND S. BEHYMER|dren, SR., son of Mrs. Lillie South, R. R. i Beilin 15, Box 711-B, is with the military|desiEnated ke Riley, ous police in England. postntate, at “Murat ‘Ladder of

pe Smiles” week, activities of the temple will center around the chil‘HIGH COURT UPHOLDS INDIANA TAX LAW

dren's hospitals and their work in = © restoring the health of crippled boys and girls whose parents are not able financially to provide them with WASHINGTON, May 15 (U. P.). adequate medical treatment and —The supreme court today upheld, in a 7-to-1 ruling, constitutionality of an Indiana tax law imposing a gross receipts tax on sales made by

care, out-of-state corporations to Indiana

cn ——

«

Shortridge high school students, who are men one of the newly formed junior achievement groups, will do some manufacturing for the Packard Manufacturing Co. In the junior company are (seated, left to right) Frank Sanders, adviser; Richard Rouse, Lee Belt and Esther Caluza and (standing) Jack Strickler, Betty Bertrand

WEST SIDE T0 OPEN

The special membership campaign is being conducted as a part of Murat's 60th anniversary celebration and O. William Maibucher is general chairman for the drive. &

if projected, would indicate that Mr, Capehart has 150 votes; Mr. Tucker has 30 and that 30 dele-

censes to the Scandinavian neutral and its industries, FEA officials, |

American War Mothers ceremony | gates are undecided. factory.) STS interested in attend th customers. Special Program Tonight " -| . lin t. ALAR ALIALLS nS ing the camps 5 yesterday at the world war memo | AU but one of the delegates | peanyhile the attempt of this howsver, destined Somument, 0 from 9:30 a. m. to 12 noon June 3|' The International Harvester Co,| Depicting the work of the hosrial. | favoring Capehart said they were |, ein +0 persuade Sweden to cut While government officials invest- ai the neighborhood camp site. A Chicago, chall the Ia pitals for crippled children, a special As speakers voiced their hODeS| sor nym because he was the Or- log the shipments turned to a|iBated the Philadelphia concern,| uo eo d : 50-cent. registration fee will be ’ Shiged W In 8|program will be given at a meeting, for a lasting peace, Mrs. Willlam| oo, ip0ti0n choice. One said he v i : park department's only suit to recover taxes paid under of Murat temple shriners id checkup on Swedish SKF's Ameri- another report hinted at possible’ neighborhood self h charged, partially covering the cost p tonight. Ward, 1222 N. Colorado ave, Indi-| wou for him personally. Several |.on a dE ee \ V'¢ | nelg se elp project, al umches which the girls assist in protest on three classes of sales to] Another special event has been ana's No. 1 war mother with seven| of (ne pro-Capehart delegates |r p in Pe seizure of the property by the alien newly remodeled community house preparing Indiana customers during 1935 and scheduled for the reg weekly sons in service, and Mrs. Esther| (iq they liked Mr. Tucker Very |trace —. connection with the |PrOPerty custodian and the tregsury 1% Coleman Parks SAL son It ior Sot Will Be in Charge 14%. : luncheon meeting of tha Carvan » McCabe of Lilly, Pa, the nation's| 1 but that they were against 4 department. A high official re-| - > club, inner Shrine organiza : after bomb first war mother with 10 fighting| 1m now because it was an organ- poses on on ct by minded. however, that oily definite Pel V. Brown Sala Joay, a Mrs. Bert C. McCammon and Miss |y w. ¢. A. 329 N. Pennsylvania st. | Murat temple Thursday ae . around it more -1 ies involv es chigan | Oranda Bansburg, executive -| Hull - po sons, were awarded certificates em-| y;5¢ion matter. federal agents in a move traced un-|PrOf that the properties involved| Bo ou Caron association | tary of the Camp Fire ners munity Rouse. 1608 Connie wel} ¢om-| Climaxing the “Ladder of Smiles” ! in the middle o blematic of their patriotism. on officially to U. 8. Army Chief of '® aXis-controlled could bring ion Pp will | “Hawthorne hood st Hawthorne| week will be a theater party in the The medium | Lt. Gov. Charles M. Dawson wel- |. ' ey oo . 8 y about such a move. and other residents of the Coleman | have charge of leadership training. social service house, 2400 W, Ohio st. Murat theater Saturda ht when: German fi comed more than 100 war mothers. Capehart Ahead Griffs PR: Cloorge Sa William L. Batt, Philadelphia pig district Sted funds and 4 pe will open at the following chapel Tr abeiited 8 Mayer short motion pictures ot — she safely nies, held here f. , . ' | labor in recon an old NYA sites June 19 with a varied program | Watson rd. “neighborhood angeli- : : Ge qine 0 2 FOLLOWING ARE THE names facturers in Sweden, purportedly |SKF's president and dollar-a-year | center into an airy, freshly painted {carried on from 9 a. m. to 3:30 Fairtald fan chureh, Watson 3 and | Shriners’ crippled children's hospi- t 19 years ago. | of the 14 persons questioned and (has set out to dissolve Sweden's vice chairman of the war produc- | five-room structure for use this|p. m. daily Monday through Priday: | Broad Rippl ° at Bread tals in Portland, Ore., will be shown. the 9th air for : ., | what they sald: contracts to supply Germany and tion board, eypressed agreement summer by the recreation division. | Coleman park neighborood st schosi 83, Rope Toa, ot the can Legion, 84th] A dance for nobles and their ladies “New Faith and Hope | ™ Arthas nd ward [her safellites with $6,960,000 worth|with the move to halt Swedish) Mr. Brown sald the Business am bburhaod o Trvingtes ne neighborhood at Keystone| "1 fOLOW.’ : objectives in n “you offer the truest feeling of| « Teshaim, second Wa of ball bearings in 1944. If his|shipments to the Nazis, but as- Men's association had dopated ap-|Presbyterian Conimunity center. 128 8. Keystone ave. | So far Murat members and local Swift, twin-e Organization all the way. p Riley ni at Riley Park fortitude for the mothers of world, Thomas A. Daily, third ward— |OVertures are disregarded, ii was serted that the seizure reports proximately $500 for the develop- | center, a ay. "4 Smmunity mmunity center, 800 Oliver ave. organizations interested in the work quitoes droppe war 11” he said. “From them | “I am absolutely independent. said,” FEA Chief Leo T. Crowley would harm morale of his firm's, ment with the park department Py oe neighborhood at School ¢4, 6s. at 2107 RE aon0od A athael Of the hospitals have purchased 825 Eb busters sud hw they can have new faith and hope.’ Haven't made up my mind yet might clamp sanctions on Sweden 8000 employees and throttle war furnishing 6200 and recreation Spades Park neighborhood at Spades! Municipal roens and Gold Bar Mot. permanent contributing member- }, = Cologne, © Adjutant Prank Luchowski, TeD-| as to whom is the better.” by suspending export or import li- production. | equipment. Park. 1800 Brookuide ave. red at|CIF PATE, Borin of 18h wi. on Lafayette ships, Msciey Teceived 1s Invested 3 Rutland sna resenting Ft. Harrison, told the au-| il — A . . W. C. A. neighbor ‘ , in war bonds, dience eh salute the mothers of ord ups y A % _ serving occupie h | #rd, ward | © Other Mosq war with the hope that I shall sa-| Capehart while Tucker was still | 3 tect in P lute them again soon as mothers jn the service.” | jectives " | y i ] Holland. All p of peace. Henry R. Wilson 8r., fifth ward | “ Though incle: Speaking on “Mother and the| _«wijth the organisation.” ed American h Home,” Dom T. Dignon of the Cur-| Anna Daniels, seventh ward— | day, Canadian tis Publishing Co, said, “To much| proxy held by Ward Chairman H. | : the daily sche cannot be said in praise of the part| ngle Brown who is for Capehart. | . £E A w] sweep over eas being played by American mothers| anci] Morton, eighth ward—"For : fore dusk to & in our country’s war effort. Their! the organization.” ¢ enforced lull. effort will have its effect on the Arthur J. Walters, 10th ward— as i next geperation—its happiness, its| “Don't know how I will go.” (Mr. | : progress, its character, all rest upon | walters is chief clerk in the Bar- | : BRITISH the love, protection and counsel of | rett law department at city hall) | ; . ; 1 | the mothers of today.’ J. Lee Miller, 14th ward—"For | i Represents Tyndall Capehart. Think he put the party | BR UNDERS : back on its feet.” — . | Sidney Miller, city corporation] poger w. Overstreet, 18th ward Srred ne { ; (Continues eounsel, represented Mayor Tyndall —“Personally for Tucker.” | i { i a ) Et v ot the Series, am . Irving W. Faure, 20th ward— | B- / / vo ; rh : J he one bunk Ts. = 3 ree, past na- c » ’ \ Po oar { : 0 H only a yard tional president of the American a, pis Emsley W. John- | Moy NL \ : this Summer eo 0 : s The men ! War Mothers, presented Mrs. Ward| co “915 ward—“For Capehart | ” : ; J hinder aright with the certificate which was de-| gince he is backed by the organ- | Hl entirely on a Signed by Mrs. E. May Hahn, 1a-| ization” vs i Bclent for sev al president. : . The torpedc Amelia Wilking, 24th ward— ¥ Mrs. Margaret N. McCluer Sr. “With the ai { i side of a ship of Hollywood, Cal, also. a past na- Oonell Sutton, Perry township | ——— . 3 a forward and goal president, presented a sim-| _g. ©. Sutton, Delegate Sutton's the butter I award to Mrs. McCabe. father, said his son was for Tuck- | Ny erat The presentation was broadeast| op Delegate Sutton is an em- | in He AERZONE ® . “stick.” over a nation-wide hookup to army | pioves of the city health depart- . ; BB Approaching camps over the nation. A band| ment. ; : pedo submery concert and program of choral| George W. Eggleston, Washing- TR tw is sigh music and community singing pre-| ton township—"For Capehart.” % J Aeers by co eeded the ceremony. Sr x» BR under the shi 3 £! f man attaches . Pressure on Gates § Lg: - Jets: the 30 U. S. Addicts Get FRIENDS OF Gubernatorial | 3: i ng de ioe 0 Y . Candidate Ralph Gates, who now | i He midget German Narcotic has the field to himself, say that | a | *aicide” erat WASHINGTON, May 15 (U. p), | Mr. Oates will stay away from | { 8 The six me ~A synthetic substitute for mor- | Lndianapolis as much as posible | ! fi}: Palermo reas hine, devei during these two weeks precedPhine. developed by Germany, is | [ek Cot ention to. avoid. the | f It's just about the time of year, sir, when you begin States, and narcotics agents fear a on of ihe Tucker-Capshary | : | | ? sharp incsease in drug addiction eo is being subjected to all : as a result. ; The narcotics bureau, it was re- mortars to get Jom Thvke : ried, i h | { 3 . . . . . . Pn ihatin_secking to remove the | py. strength on their side. | i } thinking about making an investment in cool summer comfort = —called dolantine by the Mr. Gates reportedly told pro- | % . Ti ne . nl ar erol IS | Cepehart Marion county leaders | : . drug trade channels EY a Saturday that he would stay out | : was released by the food and nq let Jim and Homer fight it | . “ir drug administration over the | ° Here's the way neutral observ- | | « «+ 8 suit that's light and easy on the torso, yet holds its Sau Shjecticns, ers size up the districts in the | : 4 drug administration | senatorial fight: t regulations specify that the drug, " . ' which has a coal-tar base, ” sorta” or Oapeliart: second, or | be sold y i : ' ’ | : . . nae Lripion. Bt. Tucker; fourth. spit, with Allen | shape nicely and wears well. That, sir, is the Aerzone red DO) nty (Ft. Wayne) for Tucker; of narcotics agents, it is reaching fifth, majority “for Tucker with | . Morphine addicts, it was said. Madison county" (Anderson) prob- | ably for Capehart; sixth, majort ’ ’ ’ ity for Capehart; : BLAST FIRES HOME by Jor Cape a reverts, to Tropical, an all-wool worsted summer suit A fire caused by an oil stove ex- strongest; ninth, for Tucker: 10th } plosion in the kitchen destroyed | Tucker strongest: 11th (Indian. | furnishings in four rooms today at| apelis), for Capehart | - the home of Mrs. Elard Bransford, ' now 1828 N. Capitol ave. Two washing * exclusive with ) i Bachies and a refrigerator were, See Malan Support $ Ayres Man's: Stora.” Neo} Btipe effects’ and dam . : Aly damaged Regular” G. O. P. delegates to : n 1e state convention are expect- | GIRL BORN TO HAYMESES | pee g to get word to go down ‘the | HOLLYWOOD, May 15 (U, P.)—| line for Dr. Clement T. Malan, good-looking plain shades of tan, brown and blue.

Mrs. Dick Haymes, wife of the

state

superintendent of public |

erooner and movie actor, today gave, instruction, in his fight for rebirth to a 6-pound 8-ounce daughter at Cedars of Lebanon hosiptal. | The child, named Helen Lane, was| the second for Haymes and his wife, Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom, wife of the. former Joan Laycock, New, the Republican county chairman, York dancer. | works-for Dr, Malan.

Kinnaird, state teachers’ associ-

Indianapolis Gaining Favor As Convention Center

° The popularity of Indianapolis as!

nomination against Miss Virginia | | ation president. |

iris