Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1946 — Page 3

pp rain | ‘Match

Selmier, Anne Ranse lther, all of School

To church, Monday 7

her Milner, Marillyn arolyn Myers, Helen Medcalf, Jim Hays, 1d Julia “Ann Laol 43; Jim Wardlaw both ‘of 8chool - 86, Bob Jacks, both of

y center, Monday— Theda Pittard, Lois Powell, Helen Cazee , all of Bchool 13; Monroe and Patly 1 34; Dixie - Seifres, ckelsen, Beverly Cox all of -Bchool 20; 35 and Mary Ann holic school. ter, Thursday—Mary lliams, Barbara Wile Il and Lora J, Bride “atholic school, y center, Wednesday n Freeland, both of

ity center, Thursday bert, Fisher, both of h Eichel, School 36, ly center, Monday ool 4, and Rose Fose

ity center, Thursday 1 Thursa Swafford,

ly center, Tuesday {Sheatham and Busie 19.

community center, Fisher and Wilhels School 23, and Done 42

y center, Tuesdays toberts, Pat Commise y, Bill DeHoff, Tome O'Donnell, Eddie (ines, Mary Wathen, McAndrews, William Connell, Gloria Byre ell, Rita Windisch ry Ann Kempe, Mar~ iomas Noone, Ellen My, Donald Murray of Assumption Cathe

center, Wednesday—1 16,

odist church, Tuesday harles O'Hearn and St. Joseph's Catholis v, School 2; Shirley nd Fayne Byers and 1 of School 10. st church, Tuesday ol 41, and Rosemarie Medlin, both of Holy

ol.

nity center, Friday ara Bredell, Carolyn nn Sutton, Lou Ann

a West, all of School nd Jackie Chambers, nd Bobby Moran, St, hool. lerian church, Tuesi, Barbara Summers of School 60; Charles Glanzman, both of ndra McComas and th of School 66. school, to compete at Shirley Smith.

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THOT RACES SEEN | IN GOP PRIVARY

Anti-Organization Candidacies Develop as Campaign

|

TEX PROMISES For Legislature STREET WORK, croc x save, ss: on

!didacy for state representative on

ig

Republican

the ticket. Mr, Layton has bgen a “Republican precinct committeeman Yor |

Commissioner Says Protests Will Be Heeded.

By LARRY STILLERMAN J Unimproved city streets and alleys

the last 15 years i v i . make Luther Tex's street depart- and’ formerly was 4 Shows Signs of Going Wide Qpen.. ment the target of citizens’ wrath | i y in complaints voiced today to The 16th ward Repub- | ; 3 By NOBLE REED vy = Imes, ? lican club. Li Although anti-machine G. O. P. candidates have no organized lead-| George Adams, 1149 Vanderman

Hl ership as yet, several hot contests began taking shape this week in at

st, protests on the inefficiency of | least three Republican races for May 7 primary nominations,

the street department to grade and| Mr: Layton 650 metcher ave.

¥ Anti-organization candidates up to now are arrayed against the |oj) the unimproved streets in the for the last 30 years. He is a || regular party machine in contests for county clerk, sheriff and prose- |goutheastern section of the city cutor. EE along Prospect ave, and Orange st. Dr. Walter Hemphill, former 22 He charges that the city has done and has been a delegate to the

member of the city board of works,

i iticg— nothing in the past three years to has filed his declaration of candi- Hoosier Politics

“keep the kids from bringing mud He attends the Second Church of into the house.” “And that picture of the school

supplies and hospital furniture, ‘much of it fabricated from wood. Owner of the 40-year-old company, M. P. Schwartz, is vacationing in Florida.

dacy for the G.O.P. county lerk| nomination against incumbent LE AVE LIQUOR L Jack Tilson. bus bogged down in the mud which The word has gone around that (your paper had on Wednesday FIREMEN FIGHT the regular organization, which tee everytime it rains out here,” didn't back Mr. Tilson four years Mr. Adams reported. | ago, is going to support him for : Tex Explains Felomination Jus tie. will go to Street Commissioner Tex smoothed | the polls as anti-machine candi- Democrats Adopt Policy Gls whie hal sown aM suid} vt date unless he wins over to his side] Dicpreet Silence. [we can't get to alr the streets ar SChWartz Building on some of the organjzation men. once. | 5 | 11th St. Is Damaged. Russell Is Slated By ROBERT BLOEM “Only yesterday we graded that The Republican race for le First political blasts on the Re- Stresk e bus Was stick on and in Firemen battled three and onesheriff nomination grew hotter this) . ed a sewer, ,’ he expained.| o morning to week when Capt. Al Magenheimer, {publican liquor muddle in Indiana Hie thin frame. shook ius La Bibi Jay is ars I police department safety: director, appeared likely today to come, not|ggpeq Schwartz Sectional System, 421 W. opened his campaign as an “anti- from the Democrats, but from| “We're short of equipment, too. 11th st. machine” candidate. within the Republican party itself. Only got three graders, when we, Damage to the one-story brick He is expected to get solid back-| 40 cupject of liquor Demo-|Should have six, but we'll get to|pyjiding and machinery was estiing of anti-organization Republi- cratic leaders appear to have all the unimproved streets and mated by a plant superintendent cans in addition to several civic adopted a policy of discreet silence. alleys as soon as the ground hard-| who said the loss was covered by and business groups with whom he | me party members noted ° that ens,” he promised. insurance. has been working on safety meas- | , rs . ures the last ro y last Baty Suchen pay Sinner The Glass Danger [, The fre Vas Slioveled & 2% Although organization leaders| /85 0 of liquor patronage, “shake- Unswept glass on city streets) was suffused with a pink glow have not said so publicly, Sgt. | jowns » ‘and kindred troubles cur- prompted Lyle M. Ward, 346 N.|. aomes shooting from windows Charles Russell, special investiga-| ’ plaguing the G. O. P. Holmes ave, to appeal to Todd/ 4 parts of the roof. Smoke was tor in the prosecutor's office, is ex- | os tisfled to let the hews- Stoops, secretary of the Hoosier extremely dense. pected to be slated by the party ere Sa that fight” one | Motor club. | machine for the sheriff nomination, PAPers cary on de g © opn| Mr. Ward writes: “It is time this| "op Te Cveral hours. Prosecutor Contest (Democrat explained this week. pag (question was brought before the The prosecutor contest is more the newspapers 3 shows up as the AYP and city councilmen. complicated. It may become a four- {SOVernment. 1t we Spe Yur Ou | “In December I took two tires to way tussle with the party machine |1* will just be Plain polities ne © have retreaded and one was turned divided between Alex M. Clark and Bepdujlenns will have plenty of an- back as worthless on account of s0 T. Brown, both deputy prose- | : . glass cuts. In January I ran over Leo? puly Pp | It is from newspapers, Republican | whisky bottle and eut the side-

The first G.O.P. anti-organization | PAPErs to be specific, that the first | walls of a tire. It was torn so badly candidate to announce for prosecu- °Pen Use of liquor as political am-|4}.¢ i couldn't be repaired.

THE INDIANAPOLIS

LaytoninRace RITES MONDAY |

member of the Glass Blowers’ asso-| Jones had lived here 42 years. He

| Christ, Scientist. |

The firefighters played four hoses |

The firm manufactures surgical

bg od "

TIMES

FOR C. 0. JONES

Former Machinist to Be

. Buried in Floral Park.

; | Rites for Carlos O. Jones will be! held Monday at 2 p. m, in’ Belmont United Brethren church, Burial

président of the Will be in Floral Park.

Mr. Jones, machinist for Link

{Belt Co. and a member of Amer- | He has lived on ican Guild of Variety Artists, died the south side at Thursday in Long hospital. He

was 45. |

A native of Morgantown, Mr.

ciation, Local No. 64 (A. F, of L), Was & member of the Methodist

church and the Loyal Order of!

Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Beryl, Jones; two sons, Donald Carlos] Jones and Jack Dale Jones; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Ellen Thomas, | and sister, Mrs, Estella Davis, all of | Indianapolis,

Central Labor Union for 10 years, Moose, Lodge 17.

MRS. MINNIE FIVEL

| Rabbis Nandor Fruchter and

$ 1 0.0 00 BLALL ‘David Shapiro will conduct services

tomorrow at 2 p. m, for Mrs, Minnie |

W. !Fivel in Aaron-Ruben funeral home. |

Burial will be in Knesses Israel cemetery. \ Mrs. Fivel died yesterday in her home, 3257 Ruckle st. She was 77. Born in Lithuania, Mrs, Fivel had | lived in Richmond 25 years and | came to Indianapolis 22 years ago. She was a member of Central He-| brew Congregation, Beth-El Sister- | hood, Borinstein Home for the,

sociation. ¢ | Survivors are her husband, Morris | PFivel; a son, Abraham Fivel; two! daughters, Mrs, Goldie Adelman and Mrs, Lena Frankowits, of Indi-| anapolis; a brother, Nisson Saffer,| and sister, Mrs. Jacob Goodman, both of South Africa, and 11 grand- | children, | ——— MRS. LOUELLA A. SELVAGE Services for Mrs. Louella A. Selvage, a native of Indiana, will be conducted at 1:30 p. m. Monday in the G. H. Herrmann funeral home, Burial will be in Greenlawn cemetery at Franklin. Mrs. Selvage died yesterday in the home of her daughter, Mrs.

BURNED BOY ABED ON 10TH BIRTHDAY

A 10-year-old boy is spending his birthday City hospital today,

tor is Charles M. Clark, also of Hutition i5 expected > Je sae; “There is also an ordinance in Indeputy prosecutor, who says he will] pape RE Val a be. | dianapolis that prohibits a motorist campaign against “political rack- |’ na BE ap pay hE from parking his car on the streets ets” in the liquor industry here. . | TE ya , or lor [for more than six hours at any one Also mentioned prominently in Prenension by Sippe Res 3 eat the lime. However I have had to leave the G.O.P. prosecutor tangle is Su- E. Jenner, candidate to unsea my car parked in the street before perior Court Judge Judson L. Senator. ke: my house for several weeks now suffering received when he Stark who is regarded as a possi- | Willis Looks On {rather than have my tires cut in|lighted a can of lighter fluid in the ble, last-minute compromise candi-| Willis-for-senator editors, it is be. ilriving through the alley to my oars yard - his Hohe, Ew date. Judge Stark has; not yet an- jleved will use the tack that Mr, 8arage.” e boy, Ray Green, son of Mr. nounced his candidacy formally. |; nec was state chairman while! Usually the rain washes the glass and Mrs. Charles Green, 1726 Olive Thus, "thé whole complexion of the "present Batlle was gaining [2V8Y: Mr. Ward stated. “But we st. was reported in fair condition. the Republican party leadership Pp : {don’t want to wait for it to rain all, He and his brother John, 13, steam, and is just as responsible for Tay ! found. th tf Lighter Auld i may hinge on the outcome of the the recent outbreak as if he re- the time. i foun e can of lighter flu n race for prosecutor. }aat . in that 5 | Carl L. Rost, 4544 N. Meridian st. | the kitchen, They poured some of Petit's Plans Pe i has been de- ASO casts a weary glance at glass it on the ground and lighted a A fourth major Republican con-!scrined by his friends as “too much | °% the streets. { match. Ray, who was holding the | Mr. Rost, who travels north and can, dropped it when the blaze

test may develop next week if of 5 gentleman for polities,” also i i | y t i {caught his trousers. The Sheriff Otto Petit decides to run is jooking over the liquor mess with | 5% h through the city on his way Caug

for the Republican nomination for j.terest. He hasn't said he won't! county treasurer. make use of it in his fight for re-|

be hurt with all the broken glass he them also.

Nellie I. Zimmer, 2114 Madison ave, | with whom she had lived the last 10 years. Mrs. Selvage was 79, | She was a member of Pocahontas |lodge 5; Alfretta council 6; Mothers’ club of the English Avenue | Boys’ club; Indianapolis: chapter {388, O. E. S., the Wednesday birthday club and the Friday birthday She-is survived by her daughter, {two grandchildren and three great-

|grandchildren.

OLIVER N. LAND Services for Oliver N. Land, re{uted Prest-O-Lite stationary engineer, will be held at 3 p. m. tomor-

fluid | row in the Brownsburg Methodist | to work, warns that some child will| splashed on his hands, burning church. Burial will be in Green-,

| lawn cemetery there,

Aged and Jewish Educational as- |.

STRAUSS —SA YS}

9

Dear Folks—

Youth will -be served aplenty next week with 55,000 city public school pupils romping on spring vacations. . . . Spring recess for county public school students began Wednesday and ends Monday, , ., . But the city kids were freed yesterday afternoon wr until April 8. Parochial schools, however, will observe their spring holiday April 17 10 28. . . .

Also romping this week (in spirit at least) are Hoosier

teachers whose salary appropriation was boosted by the state. . . Choruses from 10 high schools harmonized in the seventh annual Marion county choral festival at Pike township school in New Augusta. . . . Broad Ripple high staged a vaudeville show, “Ripples of '46" in the gymnasium. ., . . Boys and girls all over town were primed for the season's first circus, sponsored by the Shrine for a week beginning Monday night in the Murat theater. . . And with bubblegum back behind candy counters, there was but one dark cloud on the juvenile horizon: The Indiana Dairy Products association predicted there wouldn't be nearly enough ice cream to go around this summer. . On the college level, Butler university junior men voted to decide the momentous question of which coed would reign as queen of the junior prom tonight at the Murat, . , , Six former members of the Norwegian underground, now Purdue students, were to be honor guests of the American-Scandinavian

center today. ’ > % & 9 STRAUSS SAYS: ; Well—we're practically moved ~4o the building en the corner—the barricades are still

up—a vast portion of the first floor is boarded up—the third (women's) is temporarily lacking in physical splendor—as are the other floors—but we're willing and eager to serve you. L.. STRAUSS & CO. INC.

fo bi

Standing -Room Onliyy—

Local hotels and those in other cities within a hundred-mile radius are already booked to capacity for the Speedway race May 30 and the Indianapolis convention bureau appealed to private citizens to open their homes to Memorial day visitors, .

“ .

Th lar GOP. hine lead-1 6 us ~|sees on the streets. : | John helped put out the blaze| Mr Land, a native of Hendricks Arthur W. Herrington, ers wh Talking of or Lou- Qoaiination us Sous of hs SUP" | «It'll soon be barefoot time and bY tearing off his brother's trousers. county, had lived most of his life | Indianapolis automotive - J i Pletcher, young’ attorney” and porters are fearful he may shy away |(),;; giaec should be swept up,” he He then helped his mother who in! in Brownsburg and retired 13 years and” aviation hd { eT, young y from the subject of liquor on is | turn called the police He died Thursday in his home. ne $Yiaion Mdustrislist, : refently discharged war veteran, as “ethical” grounds. PRs | ' Jago: 3s al ursday . succeeded Capt. Eddie their candidate for treasurer. They also have the uneasy feeling UDELL EMPLOYEE | { Survivors are four daughters Rickenbacker as chairman = , Sheriff Petit is said to be con- (ha¢ fajlure on the senator's part . J J - of the Ameri A - ’ sidering the treasurer race. He, canitalize on eve esible angle, DE i Mrs, Effie Dalzell and Mrs. Lillian ® American Automo wy) beat the machine in the primary - apidl go yy ~- : oh AD HERE AT .67 ; | Ailes, both of Indianapolis and Mrs. bile association contest four years ago and is regarded as ls a | James R. Martin, employee for | ROUT FOUR BANDITS Neom: Hodge and Mrs. Ellen Ry- board and drew supervia strong vote-getter, him the homination. the Udell Manufacturing Co. died | | nard, both of Brownsburg; four sion of the 500 mile race fo Sia nie moral Med Yams poe ty gt ror ho 0, Ft Lao SPH. | i ae mk A ' | . He was 67. : Democra IC ate Democrats Find A native of Campbellsburg, Mr. | S6gusiay Io Women last DEVE |p, of Indianapolis, and Paul Land raat een Hs I | 4 \ . 54, . amber o . Still Held Back ‘Fight Stimulating [Martin had lived here 41 years. He! caroline st, reported that while °f Chicago; 22 grafidchidren and Commerce's first “Staff of HERRINGTON

Democratic organization leaders! Although the Democrats are de- | RO a Siembes o ni Fellows Me- | wq)king with her 8-month-old baby, are still working on a slate of can- liberately passing up the liquor rowan ge and the Third Chris- | 5 man approached from the rear,

didates but indicated they wouldn't matter, they find the three-way Re- [lian church and resided at 1736 struck her, knocked her to the side-

be ready with a complete lineup publican senatorial fight very simu- | BO ave, {walk and fled. The baby was unbefore the end of next week. lating. ore ae : his wife, Mrs. |p They are expected (fo agree on| Several weeks ago Oscar Ewing, a | . artin; three daughters,! wimg Phillips, 21, of 843 W. New

izai} i |Mrs, Edwa i Mr { organization support for Lewis vice chairman of the Democratic! q i Tillman, 5 Rees /y (Cap) Johnson, retired police offi- national committee, came to nai. cle abd Mys, Catherine Elerkman, |y, { » and a stepson, L. F. Sweeney, all of

ork st., said she was entering her

cer, for the sheriff ; nomination. ‘ana to throw some extra weight into 1n dianapolis |man with a gun, who released her Beyond Mr, Johnson's candidacy, congressional races in Indiana's! Services will ve held Monday at and ran when she screamed. organization leaders haven't yet «marginal” districts. In the third, y | Eddie Tobbin, of 737 Center st.

3 p. % in the Robert W. Stirling (lq officers she was robbed by a uneral home. Burial will be In|, .n who twisted small change from Crown Hill. hand and

compiled their choices. eighth and ninth districts, the raThey are having trouble getting tional committee saw hope of unthe men they want on ‘the ticket seating Republican incumbents. we to agree to make, the race. Party This week Mr. Ewing came all the leaders are seeking candidates way back from New York to check | Screams by Inez Smith, 19, of prominent in civic affairs of the reports that he was missing a bet 1600 SERVICE MEN 1008 N, West st., also routed a man

community rather than professional in not hitting still other districts who grabbed her,

politicians to head the ticket. this and possibly the whole stat DUE IN U S PORTS eI | fall. senatorial ting igo * iw 5-FOOT FALL FROM

They are predicting that the Crying need of the Democrats at | By UNITED PRESS { party will present a high grade the moment is a senatorial candi-| Nine ships were due to arrive at| SCAFFOLD IS FATAL ticket in the fall election. date with whom to capitalize on|U- S. ports today with more than Clarence Whiteley, 63, of 1802 N. isis G. O. P. factionalism. At least eight | 7600 servicemen. | Tibbs ave., died last night in City Rave been mentioned, but the one |PUE AT NEW YORK: 2 xu wr} Hospital from injuries received who appeared most acceptable to! trorry Mvtles. S3OL tank hi 7A | March 68 when he fell five feet. from the most Democrats was M. Clifford | Pattation and 103d port company. |

Norway Victory, from Southampton—| ‘At the time of the fall, Mr.

? | Townsend, former governor. "11025 troops, including 258th military po- : 10 MANILA FLIGHT If Mr. Townsend will he is|lice company, 480tn engineers mainte. | Whiteley, an employee of an -in- | : run, he IS nance company and 463d engineers base | sulating company, suffered a bro-

regarded as having tt | depot : | : ) HONOLULU, March 30 (U. P).— tor nomination Mr perry 20Ce | General Squier, from Le Have—3dss| Ken loft hip and head injuries. A husky air force colonel winged : : € €X-'undesignated troops. 1g across a vast stretch of the Pacific|j, {he Democratic picture. but | U! B.S. Guilford—Seven officers. GREECE TO VOTE today in the heavily-laden B-29 P €, Ul CON=| pUE AT SAN FRANCISCO: | ATHENS, March 30 (U. PY wo” rh F mpanied by hits | S0ded Mr. Townsend would be al Arthur ‘Middleton—414 naval personnel. | ' arc (U, ) “Fluffy Fuz" acco WAC secretary 8 2 Grew of eight | A MC Hespera, from Pearl Harbor—Four un.| Military precautions today for its in the first attempt to make a non- designated sailors. first general election in 10 ; stop flight from Honolulu to Manila. | Democrats Concerned 15M 42), 1 | B i years

| her |screamed.

ae ltr thm

pressed a desire for a “new face” |DUE AT NORFOLK: strong candidate. Reamer, from Guam-—21 naval person-| Greece prepared with elaborate

sailors. rom Pearl Harbor — TWO ri will be held tomorrow if necesCol. C. 8. Irvine, St. Paul, Minn, About Strategy DUE AT SEATTLE:

sary emergency legislation is passed

Marine Falcon, from Yokohama 32645 lin time.

deputy chief of staff of the Pacific/ won pay also have been an- undesignated troops.

ome when she was grabbed by a|

a scaffold at 2130 N. Capitol ave, |

| four great-grandchildren.

MRS. VISA ROSS VALLIER | Services are scheduled at 1 p. m. | tomorrow in the Robert W. Stirling | funeral home for Mrs, Visa Ross | Vallier, 943 Prospect st. Burial will be in West Newton cemetery. | Mrs, “Vallier died Thursday in | City hospital. She was 63. She was | a native of Olive Hill, Ky., and had | lived: here 33 years. | Survivors are a daughter, Mrs, Ellen Tierney, and a son, Willis

ran when she woods both of Indianapolis; two

sisters, Mrs. Anna Bennett and Mrs. | Vine Garner, both of Kentucky, and two brothers, Samuel Salyers of | Greenwood and Hugh Salyers of | Monrovia. {STEPHEN J. ELLIS | Word was received here of the |death of Stephen J. Ellis Monday | lat Santa Monica, Cal. A former resident of Indianapolis, he was He attended Shortridge © high | school here and was associated with {the R. V. Taw and James Apple{gate automobile agencies, A veteran of world war I, for the last two years he had been employed as an airplane mechanic at Hickam Field, Hawaii. Survivors are his wife, Mabel; a ison, James Ellis, and a daughter, | Betty Lou Ellis, all of Santa Monica; | |a sister, Mrs. Marshal Montani and | (his father, L. W. Ellis, both of InIdianapolis.

air command and. holder of four multi-engined flight records, piloted the Superfort on the 20-hour flight that he said would end at the Manila army airport at 9:30 a. m, Sunday (Manila time). Aboard was Capt. Ruth Salzman tof Washington, D. C., Irvine's_sec-

other reason for Mr. Ewing's visit, | observers believed. State Demo- | crats have not all taken kindly to the business of concentrating on | certain districts. There is a strong feeling that from the standpoint of the senatorial race and other state- |

EVENTS TODAY | Laura Robertson Duncan. 83, at 1336 N. Republican Editorial association, meeting, | Delaware, arteriosclerosis. 11 day, Clay i, 2 ny ayposh. —— mw. al hemorrhage, vs 50. Sileuh | William D. Brown, , at 95 enberger BIRTHS '

wide campaigns it i ici | kwy., chronic myocarditis. retary. i Paigns it is bad medicine Girls | mattis Erb, 79, at 1027 N., Wallace, cere- : 4 : to discourage party workers else-! bral hemorrh All army airforce air-sea rescue ore . s At St. Francis—Gordon, Grace Knuckles, | a ASHOFFhage. Lewis: 12. at 3008 N units along the route were alerted ve and Robert, Esther Bottsburg Surge Ie as npton davis. 3, . Some party workers night let At City—Walter, Myrtle Jones, and Har- pie, y J

in case ‘the plane should have to old, Pauline Coghill. | Margaret Duval Foor, 77, at Antlers hotel,

down, certai i broncho-pneumonia. 1nd at sea. ‘The typhoon off Guam certain Democrats feel, if a|At Coleman—Cary, Harriet Gantz. lo I ve. By TAURSNS Patterson, mIocars il Republican congressman is con-|At Methodist—William, Bernice Hazteth; | ditis had grounded Guam and Mani a eded Victop A . ' planes the last few days. Among|. = Y too early in the game.

crew members was Lt. PW. Rob- letdown would hurt the

es Fo 3 JT oot oe man LE Cl Ll a ha rn EBL or tice et

Dorene Teagardin, and Donald, Betty | teriose erosis.

Such a Cunningham, MARRIAGE LICENSES .

4 | 3 { { campaigns for senate and state of-|At St. Vincent's — John, Margaret Ed-| is, navigator, state o , | ens, Indiunapel g |fices for which the vote MUSt be| Prrasss mucknen™’ Von And James Donald Arthar Beam, 5453 EK. 10th; Clara _——— ) : . , Bt, r. YY {gotten-out-in-every district, = | At Home Harry, Otte Keys, 400. W.| Ren pummc Porn KK. 5 Box 81; Cam- ‘ . | Mr. Ewing brought with Ohio; George, Bertha Wilde, 1240 Eng-| by: Gisdys Elis Halden,” Mooresville. Or anizations : ght with him #n| jish; Russel, Dorcas Kinser, 652 E. 15th; | Jerome Louis Dorman, Long Beach, Cal; A g | idea for setting up “disfrarichised| Ned, Artena Taylor, 1443 E. 17th, and Bleanor_ Louise Cohn, 1504 8. Meridian. ht {voters” clubs He 1 . Cleveland, Lena Muse, 539 8. West, Preston Irwin Fergason, Shelbyville; Ts fon the tir would capitalize Boys Averial Alleen Bn grass sheibyuilie. WY ves. vies mindnoim was instaiied ust e feeling of “Hoosters whose | ai si. Fraueis—donn, Mary Weaver; Steve, | Anes Baar Hors, A Market, .

hight as worthy matron of Golden Rule votes were disqualified in 1944, ali chapter 413, O. E. 8. Fred Uhl became | . ; worhy atron, Others installed mre Mrs. legedly heewuze of an attorney gen- ) verson, associate matron; win eral's interpretati Berry, ~associate patron: Mrs... Minnie, H Pp on of the election Boemier, secretary; Mrs, Alice Goodnight, 18W. He said such clubs would gross

Wilda Kanuck; John, Dorothy Williams; Norman, Josephine Botts, and Frances, Louise Bodwell, ° . At City=David, Katie Mag Finch. At Methodist—Willlam, Lula Johnson, and John, Ruth Tilson.

Thomas Lee Baugh, 319 W. 28th; Verda Mae Watson, 349 W. 24th, , Caldwell O.; Ruby Ady College. Everett Franklin ane, 715 Gerrard dr.; Mary E. Murphy, Monrovia,

-

w

Kil t

. r, rs. Christine ‘Steele, Martha; Mrs. Jean- . ette Gentry, Flecta; Mrs, Florence Chil- | Arsenal ave, was slightly injured reel 00 and Mrs. Ethel Shields: this morning when he fell 20 feet 2 Sea from a scaffold in the Monon A pitch dinner and card party

vill | he held tomorrow evening in "he home Foundhouse, 1103 E. 28th st. At

Rosemary | BG eannette Justine Ballard, 2133 N. Tal:

treasurer: Mrs. Lucille Hall, conductress; |g membership of 65,000 At St. Vincent's~Frank, Mary Hluchan:|Zery V. Gwynn, 713 N. Delaware,: Apt, { Mrs. Esther BSchiefelbein, associate con | P- : y h-- : Ti RE Tank. ML Shan; BY aN taut Alt. | uctress, Mis Porothy Durrell, ehaplain. | FALLS 20 FEET OFF Mt Rich; Herman, Mary Schneider; Howard, | ton, Apt. 2. a S300 % Neth: i Virginia Schafer, Adah; Mrs. Aultie F | ‘ET OFF SCAFFOLD| Grace Kelly, and Philip, Douglas Morris os, - ;

» | Bauerle Joseph Snider, 55, of 3301 N. at Emhardi—Robert, Vicginia Boyd. . | boll. At Home—William, Elizabeth Dawn, 535 James Claren W. 11th; Norman, Margaret McMurray, 1010 Calvin, and William, Crystal Proper, 44 N. Colorado.

DEATHS vn

o# Hunt, 1517 Montana; Frances Thornell, 1517 Montana. Ernest Owen McCoy, 660. N. Rrvbolt

ein. Edward LaVerne linois: Betty Lou Donaldson,

Knoffin, 3331. N. 1I-

3360 N

of Mrs. Mayme Eichel, 351 Congress ave, | Methodist hospital his condition ! Meridian, Apt. F-8, . Popahontas council 350, gree of was rted as fair Cordelia Sayles, 90, at 1028 8. Kenwood, | Walton M. dicanon. 8318 'N. Pennaylacahontas, | 8 reported as fair, = lobar pneumonia, \ ; vanis; Barbara L. Wolf, 4350 N. Ospitol. . . :

or Led ak ! fo ~~

Amos T. Shotts, 63, at 1418 Reisner, cere- |

+ James, Martha Price; Ralph (deceased), | Omer Sharp, 73, at 1173 W. 20th, ar-|

Dorothy Mae Owensby, 118 8, Rich-| in

IN INDIANAPOL |S—~EVENTS—VITALS

| Conrad Frederick Klingenstein Jr. Gran- | ite Springs, N. ; Betty June McConnell, 1214 Hoefgen. | Norman Albert Richwine, R, R. 18, Box | 604; Dorothy June Marshall, Clermont | Joseph Benton Knight, Hartsville; Lil- | lian Beatrice White, Hartsville, | Ansel Lloyd Ross, Oklahoma City, Okla | Thelma May Bennett, 1922 N. Harding

| OFFICIAL WEATHER

ity, 8. Weather Bureaw

All Data in Central Standard Time March 30, 1046

Sunrise 5:38 | Sunset

Precipitation for 24 hrs, end. 7:30. «Trace | Total precipitation since Jan. 1 7.3 Deficiency since Jan, 1

The following table shows the tempera- |

ture in other cities: |

Atlanta ein Boston Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Denver ..... Evansville .. Ft. Wayne .. Ft. Worth ./ Indianapolis (eity Kansas City raat en Los Angeles , Miami

+Mpis~8t— Paul 69 39 | | New Orleans .... «8 6 New YOrk ......covveneviinsionsn 7 58 Oklahoma Cit served 81-88 Omaha . “ 2 3 Pittsburg! . Vas 8. Louis . 0 se | Ban Antonio ..l....ieieeiennnen. 97 6 |

San Francisco, ....qpeverigereece 8 Washinglen, D. 0, TET TEER EN 6 60

A

Honor” since 1940 were Arthur R. Baxter, Robert 8. Foster, Edward W. Harris, Charles J. Lynn, Edgar A. Perkins, Clyde E. Whitehill, Almus G. Ruddell and the late George J. Marott. . . , Chairman and co-chairman of the Marion county 1946 cancer control drive will be former Governor Schricker and Mrs, Julia Ray Iles. Indianapolis Railways issued pasteboard tickets in place of tokens, it claimed, are being horded by transit-riders in anticipation of a fare increase. , . . A debate raged over a petition for the county zoning board for permission to expand the Hoosier Parks airport at Kessler blvd. and State Road 52. . . Chicago: and Southern airlines inaugurated a flight ‘to Paducah,

Henry

> 4 o SAYS:

We like it here—in this block, on the corner—we'd rather be right here than any other spot on this Earth, We like it here because we have room to serve the rapidly growing clientele— that is honoring us and we have fuspiting evidence that you like to have us around. ank yom so much.

L. STRAUSS & CO. INC. * > )

STRAUSS

AR

Animal Lore— .

The animal kingdom cut news capers this week as some 300 toy green snakes were draped over cornices and ledges of the Roberts Park Methodist church to frighten away pigeons and starlings. . . . An expert “dog walker” is wanted by the $4-dog sales room operated by the city pound at city market. Ten Hoosier lambs are in training at Brown county for stardom “ in Walt Disney’s next movie, “Midnight and Jeremiah,” tp be filmed in the hills down there. . . . Some N. Pennsylvania st. residents thought the chances of seeing pink elephants along that thoroughfare were too great already, so they’ protested establish

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The county liquor board held up the license after one remonstrant suggested, that the name of N, Pennsylvania st, be changed to “Tavern st” and another pointed to the proximity of Jordan conservatory dormitories. . . Irvington residents obtained a temporary injunction against construction of a tavern at Michigan and Emerson,

ment of a new tavern in the 1300 block. , #

©. INDIANA—THE HEART OE THE U.S, A.

The “Goon’s” a Goner— - Indianapolis boasted a low crime record in comparison with 13 other cities in its population class, an FBI report stated. , . + But at the same time, Marion county judges + requested - establishment of another criminal oourt to handle the overcrowded -crime docket. . . . A man calling himself “the Goon” was arrested by G-Men in a phone booth as he was calling to extort $5000 from a local judge on threat of harming his two sons. . . . A policeman who entered a house to nab a man accused of the theft of a $700 truckload of whiskey, was bitten by the suse pect's dog. . . . Cases of 46 persons arrested in gambling raids were dismissed in mue nicipal court for lack of evidence. ¢ >

STRAUSS SAYS:

are preity much torn w he Boys (second) is od condition—and e serve ho well. L. STRAUSS & CO. INC,

! ¢ 9 |

Sporting Life— Five state swimming records were shate tered at a week-end water carnival in which the Riviera club won the women's state A. A. U, championship over the Indianapolis Athletic club, 83 to 43. . . The 1. A. O, stroked to a 42 to 42 deadlock in a swim meet at Bloomington. ’ « » The ¥. M. C. A, “learn * to swim” campaign, participated in by 1500 lads, begins Monday. = . +». Our Caps dived off the deep end of the & American hockey league this week by losing two more play-off games to Buffalo, thereby losing the series and ending the season. . . , Scores were 4 to 1 and 4 to 2. . . . The Caps won one out of five by a 7 to 1 count, . In the Purdue relays, Michigan captured the -universify division title for the third consecutive time and Miami _university of Ohio made it four straight wins in the college division. Bill Burwell, manager of the Indianapolis baseball club, pared 10 candidates off the Tribe. With the grapefruit league well under way in Florida, the Indians dropped their first exhibition to the Washington “B" club, 9 to 6, then walloped St. Paul 9 to 0. : * oo Quiet, Please! "Two civic crusades were mapped in Mayor Tyndall's office, one a cleanup drive, the other an anti-noise campaign, . . . Spone sored by the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the cleanup drive, beginning April 15, will send city trucks and crews on sanitation missions, in all neighborhoods. . +». The "Quiet please” campaign, perhaps in jest, is part of a nation-wide contest promoted by - the National Noise Abatement council » Which sends unknown “spies” into participating towns to score their racket ratings. . . . Police were instructed to arrest truck drivers who overload their vehicles and spill the contests over the streets. . . . After far north side property owners complained of drainage conditions, county commissioners announced the U. S. geodetic department will draw a detailed map of fhe ‘county's contours to initiate a large-scale drainage survey, . . . Town hoosters begged the city to fill the chuckholes in 16th st. to -avoid giving Speedway visitors bad impressions and jolts. . . The federal works agency granted the city $36,600 with which to blueprint a new sewer system to cost eventually $1,325,032, . . Plans of the Pennsylvania R. R. to run 20 freight sidings between Are lington ave. and Brookville rd. were opposed by the Lowell District Civic club. , , . Pire Chief Harry Fulmer wants cameras to enable his men to photograph future blazes as a routine investigation measure. > 4 9

STRAUSS SAYS:

The Man's Store has not only

a the understanding service that covers the clothing needs from head to foot—~but alse helpful J) . suggestions and authentie Zz re

ance in everything pertain. to travel on land, sea on nir—-THE STRAUSS GLOBAL TRAVEL SERVICE — on the SIXTH foer, .

L. STRAUSS & CO. INC. _, $ ¢

Veterans’ Affairs— Mayor Tyndall offered the Weterans ade ministration a 20-acre city-owned tract in the Indiana university medical center as 8 location for a proposed 1000-bed Veterans hospital. . .-. Plans also were under way for establishment of a 350-bed *intermediary veterans’ hospital at Pt. Harrison, . . . The American Legion classified several buildings at the U, 8. Veterans hospital in Marion as “firetraps.”. . . . Engineers began’conversion

of Stout fleld into a $550,000 emergency housing project for veterans. ., . . The Civilian Production administration will re. _ establish an office here to direct the new ban on’ non-essential building and expedite vet. rans housing, , . , Mayor Tyndall u some 100 trailer-dwelling students of th

Lincoln chiropractic college to park theie i

mobile homes at Stout fleld, ,