Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1946 — Page 5
PRI 22, 1948
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BANDITS PILLAGE
continent. Air fields and coastal ports throughout the United Kingdom |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Music Director Explains Passage
HEVER, England, April 22 (U, P.).—Scotland Yard today directed 1500 priceless gems, art treasures and historic relics, Details of the robbery were a. |= : of the criminals trying -to escape; luable clues. They hinted, : : gr value y Steel Hard Hit, Rails at tor's, might lead to capture of the | The country-wide soft coal strike |scopic examination of the tire {with the government facing growing, Bandits Well Informed | The noose of a shrinking coal sup-| specialize in art work. {week of the strike to cause more of antiques, but knew the castle|¢pieat of unemployment in the wheel of the waiting car—covered naif dozen major railroads were ap- | Authorities said the disposal of Secretary of Labor Lewis B. they can be identified easily andj, Wor yo” Striking United Mine
Bring Gangsterism to Ancient Home Where Henry Vili . Courted Anne Boleyn; Get Priceless Gems, Treasures. a far-flung search for five bandits who—bringing modern gangsterism to the castle where Henry VIII paid court to Anne Boleyn-——escaped with The moated castle where the robbery occurred early Sunday now is the home of Col. J. J. Astor, chairman of the Times Publishing Co. dioed to the United States and el { were alerted against the possibility GRIPS INDUSTRY abroad. ! Investigators said they had sev-| - that the use of a Rolls Royce, a| dark sedan similar to one of As-| ‘Danger Point.’ robbers. | By UNITED PRESS Threé technicians made a micro- | | entered a critical, fourth week today {tracks left on the grounds of the] 14th century castle. ; | pressure to find a basis for settleThe criminal record offices of ment. Scotland Yard compared the brief description of the robbers—given| ply gradually was tightening around | by George Scholls, a night watch-| American industry. Steel produc-| man at the castle—with the records; was tumbling fastest but gov-| of international criminals known | ernment officials expected the next! One police official said the bandits! wiqecsnread repercussions. not only had a specialized knowledge, A4ditional thousands faced the plan and location of the treasures. | steel-hungry auto industry. OffiFour men—the fifth stayed atthe! ia) said coal stocks of at least a several rooms on the first and 8ec-|proaching the “danger point.” ond floors. New Contact Planned the treasures probably had been| _, 1 : . ince | ellenbach planned to ask mine planned carefully in advance, SNC oto ang John L. Lewis, presall pawnshops and art salons DAVE! workers (A. F. of L), to resume nebeen notified. | gotiations this week.
The intruders wore dark masks, conference was scheduled at Pittslong overcoats and dark soft hats burgh in an attempt to settle a pulled low over their facts. | strike ‘at Upper Michigan iron They left the car in a back drive mines. near the river Eden about 200 yards Shipping Tied Up from the castle's back entrance. Al a; Seattle the $5.000,000 canned drawbridge has three steps at either saimon industry and Alaska shipend, making a. closer motor ap- ping were tied up by pickets who proach from-that direction impossi-| surrounded Alaska Steamship Co.| ble. CR docks. The men broke a small window in| Tne magazine Steel said that the the billiard room, then broke Open qa) strike would force large pro-| a door to the morning room. Thereiq,cers who have not yet materially they waited behind a door foriyeqyced production to make curtail Scholls, who came to investigate | ents soon. Producers which althe noise. They seized him, tied eaqy have been affected may have | and gagged and blindfolded him,|i; make still further reductions an left him in the butler's pantry. |yithin a week or two, the magazine | Scholls broke loose soon after the|g.iq robbers had completed their hour} of pillaging, beginning about 3
|
Steel Production Cut {
The U. 8. Steel Corp. announced its largest steel producing sub-|
m Priceless Articles Taken : | An officer said the stolen articles|Sidiary Was cutting production to i per cent of capacity in the
were beyond evaluation in terms of | money. They included a signet Pittsburgh district this week and
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ring of Henry VIII, taken from a '° 40 per cent in the Chicago cabinet in a corridor outside a 2¢as: | already has released about one-| [the castle to pay court to Anne, .".: tne 1,600,000-ton reserve | Boleyn. | Bole |strike for emergency allocations. | yn, Queen Elizabeth and | | Charles V were taken from a room| Officials thought the reserve would | Viscount Roghford { The only loot not in the art and { DEAD IN STATE coat belonging to Lady Astor. EASTER TRAFFIC | CLINTON, Ind. April 22 (U. P.). Indiana despite excessive traffic on | —Authorities today sought clues in|Indiana highways during the Easter Store. ; 4 Mrs. Margaret Schaeffer, 80, was e Gillis Pharmacy was entered |, 4 instantly in Aurora Saturday |checks and cash removed from a|When she safe, police said. |an automobile driven by Robert [the store was closed Sunday but he| Three women were injured slight- | worked in the establishment until|ly in two minor accidents in Indian{later in the evening and discovered| Mrs. Jean Brenneisen, 31, Lontita, \the robbery. > | Cal, was hit by a trackless, trolley |lock on a coal chute in the base-| ran from a safety zone to retrieve ment. The thieves forced open an-|a newspaper. She was treated at [fore they entered the retail depart-| Mrs. C. E. Asbury and Mrs. ment, George Dalrymple, both of 1824 sledgehammer and chisels which|a taxicab in which they were ridwere left behind, Chief of Police|/ing Was hit by another automobile
| room where he slept when visiting The solid fuels administration Prayer books belonging to Anne | accumulated on the eve of the! ‘once occupied by Anne's brother, De exhausted within two weeks. | treasure class was a $5000 mink AT CLINTON STORE A single fatality was reported for {a $1000 robbery of a local drug weekend. {sometime yesterday and $1000 in| y y and 3 n walked into the path of | President George Walthall said|Rosenburrough, of that city. | shortly hefore 1 p. m. He returned | apolis yesterday. Entrance was gained by forcing a|at Illinois and Market sts, when she | other door bearing three locks be-]City hospital. They broke open the safe with a|Carroliton ave, were bruised when Harley Youmans said. at 17th and New Jersey sts.
‘Organizations
Rebekah lodge 227 will meet in their hall at State ave. and Prospect st. at 7:45 p m. today. Mrs. Hazel Delameter, noble grand, will preside.
Mrs. Willard D. Armatage, Mrs. Bessie L. Kinert and Mrs. Guy O. Byrd assisted with the inauguration of Amaranth court 12 and installation of its first worthy
Fidelit
! matron recently in Thorntown, Ind. e worthy hatron for the new lodge is Dr. (Mis) J. Vidya Lindsay of orn-
town, well known in Indianapolis lodge | circles. : ‘ The newly organized Indiankpolis | Housewives League, Inc, will meet at 0 ia. m. tomorrow in the Claypool hotel ‘ Advertisement) New Discovery In a Hearing Aid
A big improvement has been made in a hearing aid now we.:omed by thousands. Accepted by the Council of Physical Medicine of the {| American Medical Assc~lation It /is a new hearing aid that does not [require separate battery pack, bat{tery wire, battery case or garment to bulge or weigh you down. B8o |small it fits in the hand. The tone is “ clear and powerful. 80 made that you can adjust it yourselt to {suit your. hearing as your hearing changes. The makers of Beltone, Dept. 5397, 1450 W. 19th Street, Chicago 8, Ill, are so proud of their, achievement that they will gladly, |send free descriptive booklet and lexplain how you may get a full | demonstratjon of this remarkable hearing device in your own home
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Miss Alberta Denk (left), director of the Washington high school orchestra. explains a difficult passage to James Meadows, cellist. Miss Betty Corbin (right) is concert mistress of the orchestra, which will participate in the annual festival for Indianapolis high school orchestras Sunday at Caleb Mills hall.
Russian Magazi
MOSCOW, April 22 (U. P)— Smena, monthly illustrated magazine published by Pravda, ridiculed the capitalist system today in a double page spread on unemiployment in the United States which said that victory and peace had brought “sorrow and privation %o millions of people in America.” S8mena appears in the same format as Life, and the story was accompanied by two large pictures, each showing a man sitting in despar. a Speaking of the employment problem in the United States, the magazine sald “the situation of thousands and: thousands of soldiers of yesterday has become tragic. After the misfortunes and experiments of war they could not even be certain they would have jobs on heir own soil. Unemployment Increasing “War invalids,” according to the magazine, “are in particularly difficult condition. Eighty-eight per cent of the war invalids cannot find work, Employers are trying nat to employ men who partially lost their working capacities. “The army of unemployed is increasing all the time. In January,
11946, Minister of Commerce Wal-
lace said the number of employed was 5,000,000. “The number of people who can't find jobs: and who are doomed to inactivity and pitiful existence is
SCHOOL ACTORS CLUB. PLANS ANNUAL PARTY
SCHOOLS PLANNING MUSIC. FESTIVAL, sore momtirs uns wows wa
. Seven Indianapolis high school | the Mask and Wig club, dramatic orchestras will participate in the | organization at Manual Training third annual orchestra festival at | high school, with a banquet and 3 p.m. Sunday in Caleb Mills hall. | theater party Friday evening, E.
The program, divided into seven parts, follows:
“Symph
tion of John “Nutcracker Suite’ (Minature Over-| "The Three Trumpeteers’' by Agostini.
is as
Washington high
The Howe orchestra, epard
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Beltone today.
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under the direc “Russian Chorale
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orchestra, directed by Miss Roberta Trent: | ony 15” (1st movement) by Haydn rected by John “Gopak’” by Moussorgsky.
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| Edward Green, sponsor, has an- { nounced. { Following the banquet at the | school, members will attend English theater to see a performance
LOCAL BRIEFS
J. Russell Townsend, former naval officer with the executive office of the Secretary of the Navy, will address members of the Wayne Township War Mothers at 12:30 p. m. Wednesday at 1503 8. Lawndale ave,
Mrs. Chris Donegan, 2035 Broad-
by| hool hestra, diLady Violet Astor, indistirbee Yi Later Mr. Schwellenbach and MT.| jected by Miss’ Al- {of “Dear Ruth." the noise of the robbery anC UM" ypeywis conferred with President Tru-| Berta Denk. “3inuet aware until later that it ad hos man at the White House Saturday,| Wilson and “Cava: | ture and Waltz of the Flowers), both by curred, called on her husband 18st; 1a45r secretary announced he|ii&r Overture” MY Tschaikowsky. night at Middlesex hospital to give, would contact the operators over Shortri e Orches- ne OTIS hare otebtsine, Pious him the details. He has been Un-|y,. week eng A labor department] indie by Fried s- Dame Overture’ by Yon Suppe and The . f ; : a icato Polka" by TRUSS. der observation at the hospital Since ¢hokesman said, however, arrange- mann. ul Ye ae 1 poThe Broad Ripple orchestra, with Owen April 15. {ments still were incomplete. chestra, and Willard PRAY at a nan ae. on Car Parked in Right Place | In other labor developments, a rd Willard Shull | ‘Malaguena’ by Lecuona-Grofe
school orchestra, . White
Technichal high 3 “March of the | Meistersingers’ by Wagner and “Gypsy | Dance’ by Czecho-Marcelll. Delbert Dale, Donald Corum and Wilbur Millar, memw
bers of the Tech orchestra, resent
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| plants, she said, were destroyed.
Herman A. Fischer, Chicago atfrom | torney and trustee of Wheaton col{lege, will speak at the Christian Business Men's committee dinner tomorrow at 7 p. m. in Buckley's restaurant, Cumberland, Ind. Wives
and women friends will be guests.
'Sorrow, Privation' in U. S.
— and superintendent of music for
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——— PAGE 8 ne Reports
growing in- the United States. The army of unemployed is increasing by tens and hundreds of thou= sands,” the magazine continued. The article was sigried by M. Les kov. Referring to barrons, “the organ of American bankers,” Les« kov said the publication “cynically” termed the concept of man’s right to work as “one of the most absurd ideas of our time.” “The same bankers and indus trialists who are throwing thous sands of men and women into the street . , . declare that real equal~ ity and personal freedom exists in a capitalist society,” Smena said. “Ten years ago when talking with American Journalist Roy Howard,” the article said, “Comrade Stalin said ‘it's difficult for me to imagine what personal freedom and unemsployed man may ‘have when he walks hungry and doesn't find a job, Real freedom . . . exists only where there is no unemployment or poverty.”
ATTENDS EASTER SERVICE, GAR ROBBED
A music teacher reported $300 in clothing and jewels were taken from her automobile hére yesterday as she attended Easter church services, Adeline Faucett, Fortville resident
Kokomo schools said the clothing and jewels were taken from her parked car at 223 E. Ohio st. : In week-end holdups Earl Gare riott; 2736 Guilford ave., said he was robbed of $20 Saturday night when three young men forced him®into an automobile at Gale st. and Roosevelt ave, Beaten by 3 Men
way, reported to police today that during last night, vandals had cut and carried away 25 of her 28 giant tulip plants. The three remaining
willie Pennley, 22, of 431 8. Ala~ bama st., was beaten by three men in an alley near South and Illinois sts. He sald they took $25 and wrist watch, : Bandits broke into a safe at 574 W. 52d st. and smashed a cigarette machine, taking $20. A lone bandit fled Martin Clean= ers, Inc., 1831 N. Arsenal ave. Sate urday after he had held up Wayne Martin, the manager, and searched two billfolds that were empty. Albert Kendig, Lexington, Ky, an employee at Camp Atterbury, said he was beaten and robbed of $60 at a local night spot Saturday, He did .not know the name or location of the place.
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