Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1946 — Page 23

IW Admission to Park Pools fo - "Hope § Cost Nickel More This Year| In support of whic! L The park board announced that swimming in city pools next summer

y 3 vill cost a nickel more, , a As s Jeart " Paul V. Brown, city parks and recreation director, explained that| cky combinations 4 e increased prices were made necessary by recent reductions-in the Rich Tiave the sour, k_ department budget. However, he said, there will be a’ half hour ven the subject ari nore free time each day. : 3 | Prices from 1 p. m, to 5 p. m.

Lill be 20.cents, while from 6 p. m. ; lo 10 p. m. the cost will be 30 cents. REGISTRATION : hdmission in 1945 was 15 cents and 5 cents for the respective times : x A half hour more after noon will i Increase the free period for -chil-| :

{ren to two hours, The gratis period | ast year was from 10° a. m, to]

x, Mr. Jones pointe f sounds, some ry. Consider for | lo, dove, moon ar igh with which o cited the curio >, ough, eau, os, « e sound of O, or i is the most mooc 2 noon. id Mr. Jones. : Broad Ripple Scale Admission at Broad Ripple park )ool, operated for the first time by he city, will be 25 cents all day for| | [hildren under 12 years and 50 cents tion of voters will open Monday or adults. The opening of the park jin the outlying districts and con- Miss Fournier, candidate of 18s been tentatively set for May 30.1410 yy various lpcations in the Delta Della Delia sorority, deJack Ensley, operator of the Little : pe feated Miss Gloria Nichols, Mecounty and city until April 6, rom, candidate. of the Indepen-

America recreation center, was warded 8 contract to operate the| The following offices will be open| dent Students. association. The lance pavilion and refreshments Monday and Tuesday from 10 a.m.| Prom queen, a major in journal\oncessions at the park. to 8 p. m. with staffs authorized ism, is also a member of Theta

The city will receive a 20 per |to take registrations: Sigma Phi. :

‘ent return on the pavilion's re- Monday

beipts and 10 per “cent on the re-| pike Township school, Tist st. and SOUTHPORT CLUB reshments income. Zionsville road. Scientists’ Area Wayne township, Ben Davis WILL HOLD D AN CE

| The park board yesterday also |school. : announced plans to hold the deed| Decatur township, school on Road ho a 50-acre tract south of 59th st.|67 near Thompsonville road. The Southport high school Franklin township, school on Post | Booster club will sponsor a dance road north of road 29. at 8:30 p. m. March 15 in the school

tween the Monon railroad and eystone ave. for scientists who vill purchase the geologically-valu- Lawrence township, Castleton gym. ible land, {school. Committees are Joan Losche, Known as Bacon's swamp, the] Warren township, E. Washington |chairman, and Joseph Tipton, Shirland is used by scientists of Butler |and Franklin road. |ley Ketcham and Robert MacBeth, lind Indiana university and many | . Perry township, school west of entertainment; Jane Maas, chairventral Indiana high schools as a Madison ave on Epley ave, man, and LaDonna Dailey, William botanical and research area. It is| Tuesday Ackermann and Robert Burchfield, decorations; Lois Line, chairman, and Evelyn Sutherlin, Donald

‘he southernmost formation of its| wayne township, ‘Speedway city Smith and. Durene Dudgeon, re-

hype in this part of the country. |pall. Perry township, Bash Grove ey freshments, and. Thelma Phillips,

Commercial sale of the top layer f peat by its present owner will Dr P Hay chairman, and Robert Bretz “and Dorothea Reagan, invitations.

Janet Fournier

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind, March

Offices to Be Open in Some 8.—Janet Fournier, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Wallace Fournier,

Distri . stricts Monday Fronkiom, will reign ae queen of

Branch offices for the registra-| the Junior Prom March 22 at

nis straightened ou Indiana university,

acters, every one « ts own, If anythir 1s, With the Jon: a lot of words wit: irkable was the fa. ese” with only tw r, three letters we: eze.” But to mak icky word “occasi letters were all the cated 10-letter wort

consumption of 1H -say-nothing of ti’ As for the saving « he English-speakir nouse in order. : nes’ invention, prot eople knew about i m a typical old fo his time worryin aking people in 19¢ ain, if further proc pody who is right ¢

aot harm its’ scientific value, of-| Center township, Walsman school ficials said. Under the proposed iat 1700 Sloan ave, arrangement, the park board willl Lawrence township, Lawrence guard the land from future com- grade school mercial exploitation. | Washington township, Nora school and Crooked Creek school.

~ 4 5, Voice 2ing pursued in th re the Communist: upational forces, w to bring about ts to form a ne ocial-Democrats ar in Germany. But j 8 perfected in th

Booster club,

LOCAL MEN LAND IN Twenir-fist wars, SAN FRANCISCO PORT “0 ouiordere

lL The following are Indianapolis | been opened to pus soldiers, listed by the San Fran- | | OCAL British and Frenc cisco port of debarkation as arriv-| ent, ing ih San Francisco recently to be B R E Le »mocratic leaders ic processed at Camp Atterbury: | posed to the "yy Aboard the Missoula—T. 5th Gr. ists are working t Benjamin Mumford, T. 5th Gr. Har-| - el W, Harris, 8. Sgt. Clarence W. Carter, T. 4th Gr. Donald E. Roepke ope and T. 5th Gr. James W. Henry. Aboard the Marine Eagle—Sgt.

|

McCormick, agriculture instructor sponsors the group.

{2 p. m. in Machinist hall, 48! S.|subscriptions; Alice Bader, $201.90 : Delaware st. and Wendell ‘Leedy, $122.25. 8 are playing hard {

|Six Salesmen Parade Ware

Thomas Wilson is president of the statement to the groggy witnesses.

Members of the Southport high |Dauss’ query concerning traffic, school grain judging team who will each salesman agreed that the traf-Twenty-first ward, fire station at|represent Marion county in the dis- [fic situation is alleviated with the trict contest are Fred Mounts, Wil- |installation of meters by eliminatliam Hurt, Willlam Smithey, John |ing double parking, cruising for McGuire and Oscar Stone. Earl [parking space and employing fewer

High point salesmen in the recent Sepp " Other meters “stripped” were ag drive conducted at Soutb= | rom the Duncan Meter Co. of Chii i ‘ ) . k Time pro- | Indians Od-Age Pension Program ew band uniforms were Joyee| GT 1030 4 Ridges, Toe, of | Group No. 22 will meet Sunday at|Leichty, who sold $210 worth of |... ..0 + conn : ’ '

Sales in tHe drive totaled $4347.30.

BN - i aT

For Councilmen, ~

City councilmen were still sleepy today after a three-hour -“yawnfest” last night watching salesmen from six parking meter firms parade their devices for the works

board. i Board representatives from all city departments except health, weights and measures, controllers and street commissioners Wit nessed the demonstration at the invitation of Mayor Tyndall. It was the third time in six months that meters were before the city officials, During the showing the city “fathers” chortled as the salesmen issued contradictory statements extolling the performances of their products. Salesmen from the Dual Parking |- Meter Co. of Canton, O., and the Magee-Hale Park-O-Meter Co. of Oklahoma City, Okla, each denied that his product had major service difficulties in Mattoon, Ill Salesmanship Profits Alfred Miller, sales manager of the Mi-Co manually operated meter from the Michaels Art Bronze Co. of Covington, Ky., frankly admitted that “there's only $18.50 worth of material and labor required to construct any meter in the country.” “The rest is salesmanship,” ‘he said. His product sells for $48 per meter for the nickle type and $50.50 for the penny progressive product. : “My meter is worth more in junk value than any other meter,” the representative from the Kar Park Corp. of Cincinnati, O,, stated. He did some fast talking to explain his

In response to R. C. (Bud)

patrolmen to check for parking violations.

Back to Engineer

: Although neither Mayor Tyndall nor James 8. Watson, newly appointed works board president, were

Edgar Fitzpatrick. | A young people’s sports club will The air transport command at organized by the Oak Hill Civic Hamilton field, Cal. has announced j..01e Monday at 7:30 p. m.-in

the arrival of 1st Lt. Robert M. school 38. Children’s parents, living

\.gainst the day whe en so weakened tha

Organizations

present, - they indicated through representatives that they, still intended to purchase meters for the

ly or necessary th

\d economic Suppo assuba and M. Sgt. Glenn FOr: i; the community, are invited.

The Indianapolis Traffic club aux- | (be Food Craft shop

Naomi auxiliary, O E 8. will sponsor a ester. card party at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in| The bids were again referred to

downtown area.

| City Engineer Thomas R. Jacobi,

“TIRE OFFICIALS

ain’s Labor govern antagonistic attitud ws out of a feelin

JAP WOMEN IN POLITICS

liliary will meet at 8 p. m. Tuesday| Englewood chapter No. 483, O E s.! Purchasing Agent Edward G.

TOKYO, March 8 (U, P.), — At in the Columbia club. Mrs. Paul

least 75 women will be candidates

Van Treese will preside. The group

will elect officers Monday at 8 p. m. in| the Englewooc Masonic temple |Hereth and the legal department

r will compete wit] or of the workin Japanese diet, it was disclosed to- March 30 in the auditorium of thea card party at 8:30 p_m. tomorrow a dav. Wm. H. Block Co. J en

king and a cheerfu the British Socialist

ian attack has bee: If Britain can be n of a secondliminated, and ad of a Big p ier her heel and ¢ and info Africa.

artmeni

could best be lost. 1g-place would, © i highways, tunnels h tourists could rid 5, the guides poin aks and valleys p found strange wild abetical order. dents for having y, Early in the wa as boss of war pro tions for priorities 1 a never-to-be-for-n some good Searsand cleaned up the

[, chief of the con. yrces, once invented thing, As a youn department district lace all cluttered up ight he broke inte 1e drawers and piled op. When the civil pnday morning, they Robinson, who told ; away the worthless t those that needed

maybe this “lost 1 way to handle som loan request, Whe ver, don't try. Jus be lost. It won't b flerence?

»n Limb

regime which

at that particula ghout the America mestic affairs. Tha 108t everywhere hos ly anyone doubts hi ee exceptions, probe down to the rive yerwhelming defea at-though they a blue book--they r tbject. |. ... 4

mn are stilil suspicious north. True, the ades conscientiously policy, Neverthe! e remain “from Mise new president may get tough. So they ir “intervention” in e Peron. They are . They figure. thag t' like Perdh, maybe m for a similar reas nervous. leve, may have heen ntion.” Some who him out of resent.

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5 “4 hy

: : 3 ’ | Burns-West Striebeck post auxiliary 2998, in the coming elections for the will sponsor a card party at u Pp. m. Veterans of Foreign Wars, will EY 2909.

eh in 4 ARNESS WILL SEEK

tor analysis and recommendation.

t

RETURN TO CONGRESS

Times Special WASHINGTON, March 8. — Rep. Forest A. Harness (R. Kokomo) announced here today that he will seek renomination as congressman from the fith Indiana district for his fifth terms in the house. Rep. Harness has béen a member of the military affairs committee of the house since his first term in congress seven. years. ago. : In announcing his candidacy, Rep. Harness said: “Serving the people in this office during a periou which has been as critical as any in our history is the highest privilege. I hope the people of our district will endorse the manner in which I have met the responsibility of the office and that they will consider the unique experience this service has offered as worthy of enlistment in the critical job ahead

| years.” i

VA HANDLING 1000 |G. I. CASES DAILY

A backlog of Hoosier veterans’ education and training cases which were pending is being reduced at {the rate of 1000 daily, the veterans’ administration announced today. Seventy-five additional workers were assigned to processing pending cases Tuesday after the backlog had mounted to some 17,778 cases. The V. A. also announced that of "|the total 3306 individuals already in an educational br training status, 9814 regular payments for subsistence allowance were made during the month, This indicated that there were only 492 cases in which the allowance for students was in arrears.

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DIES IN PLANE CRASH

CONNERSVILLE, Ind., March 8 (U. P.).—Garfield H. Rogers, 40, former prosecuting attorney of Fayette county, was killed late yesterday in a plane crash near Harrisburg, Ind. Rogers was. found in the wreckage of a small trainer plane which crashed into a field. The plane was owned by the Connersville airport. Rogers had been flying solo only: a shart time when the accident happened. He was prosecutor during 1942 and 1943.. Since then, Rogers had

‘ormerly lived at Madison. The widow and a son survive.

GERMAN MERCHANT FLEET IS DIVIDED

WASHINGTON, March 8 (U. P.). —The Big Three last night announced division among the allies of all of Germany's remaining merchant marine except few more than 100 very small ships. The estimated 500 vessels divided range all the way from the former | Atlantic luxury liner Europa “to | tankers. The Big Three did not re-

FORMER PROSECUTOR

practiced law in Connersville. He]

veal which nation will fall heir to

the Europa, although it now is in American custody.

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