Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1946 — Page 23

THURSDAY, MAY 2% 1946.

0PA TRIES AGAIN 3 Organizations, 140 Students! ON MEN'S SUITS Cited on Butler- Honor Da

f Three campus organizations and . 40° students. were. singled out for Hopes’ Latest Order Wil Hy. = in’ Honor day ceremonies : at Butler university today. . : ~ Speed Clothing Flow. | The awards included scholarships, WASHINGTON, May 2 (U.-P).— | prizes, plagues and listings of memThe government moved ahead today 'Derships in honorary groups. with emergency steps to keep men's! Speaker for the annual affair in clothing moving into retail stores. |Sweeney chapel of the school of reThe OPA led the way. It decreed | ligion was Dr, John W. Ashton, 8 30-day period of grace—from | |dean of ‘the Indiana university May 1 to May 30—in which manu- | college of ‘arts and sciences, who facturers can continue shipments of | |spoke on “The Uses of Learning.” higher priced suits without risking| The speaker was introduced by penalties under OPA's maxim Dr, M. o Ross, Butler president, average price (MAP) regulation; e ng of awards follows: Many manufacturers Sa a reper *Caiatehips, went to Barbara | holding . shipments yesterday be- | niihins to Barbara’ Lucas and. Reba Mar. cause of fear of penalties. MAP re- | "Brizes tn the John Chapman Miler quires them to turn out the same | university competition in public speaking ratio ‘of low, medium and high |S pr arie b Sal sonn’ Kisknom “4a ah ’ - rkho priced garments as they did during | 48a Hill, os; Martha Jean Bmith a specified period in the past, gen-

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‘William Osborne Betty Jo Fark

The aniversl ers, Yu h was re. erally 1944. sented to t YM Cc. ie ay, W re y chapters Jointly for uigtanding service ; - Seek Production Boost io he 80! Awards to the outstand-

Ea an d tL t t OPA" said the 30-day “grace” | Whim Ee ng

: of the Y. M. 0. A, period would allow the manufac- | Keough. who received ‘the Phi Chi Nu

turers to bring their shipments in| sophomore bracelet. compliance wtih the order and at Scarlet Quill Scholarship

Mary Pritsche was awarded the $100 the same time assure an uninter- | scarlet quill scholarship for the highest

rupted flow of suits. grade average during her first three se-

Barbara Fark Virginia Ester

Houston, $40; Robert E. Bluck, $20; and Robert L. Bond, 815; The Christian Board of Publication. holarship of $180 to {Arthur B. Edwards) the Irwin Essay Con {Arthur B., Edwards: the Irwin Essay Con-|

mesters at Butlér, A half tuition schol | ton Clarke, '$50; William J. Richard- | The civillan' production adminig-|#rship was Sraited to Mary Alice Kessler | [A er EE E. Dunn, $20, as editor of Manuscripts, English quar. | Membership in Theta Phi, international

tration scheduled with clothing industry men to dis-|{

two meetings terly. Miss Kessler also received the award from the Indiana branch of the | reli {League of American Penwomen for best| XR:

fous honor society, was won by Harry aird, A. Berl Clarke, Arihur B.

| Edwards, Robert E. Gonyea, Willlam Suss ways of boosting production. |creative writing piece by a, Butler woman | JUICE, ‘Huvold L. Phillips, William J. CPA officials met today with| Literary cash awards went to Miss Richarqson, and Earle R. Starkey. a. the woolen and wotsted manufac.| Kessler, short story = prize, $25, with In the Colle . ol Education, rea y

top honors went to]

honorable mention A

Dean P turers industry advisory commit-|essay prize, 1 Ave Pra |Win

$25, with honorable mention | Wilma Todd, the Eliza og tee. On May 6 they wil meet with 18,1355 Kb, ys wood, post" ike Rusa" 1 blkaue 107 rsars the men’s and boy's clothing in| 335 With heierabie, mention ts Edna | Success i) a Wacker and scholarship. | Phyllis entice - qusy advisory committee, Pa ey Conn Sisived te a istrative Women Award ” $25 Jor mar holarsh professional capacity an At the same time, Morris Verner, a freshman appearing in Manuscripts, ar Eo De

TALK AT SCHOOL

pa

Blaker award |

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THE INDIANA

SCHRICKER WILL!

Franklin College Graduation

Times Special FRANKLIN, Ind., May 3.—Thie 26 graduating students of Franklin college will hear former Governor Schricker at commencement. exercises at 5 p. m. Sunday. y "«Honorary degrees will be given to Wayne Coy, assistant to the publisher of The Washington Post; R. Fred Chambers, Central Philippine university president, and the Rev. Cletis Brown, First Baptist church, Kokomo. Graduation - ceremonies will climax a week-end of activities including the annual Saturday luncheon of Alpha, scholastic honorary society. Dr, Charles Rice, 1940 graduate of the college and a scientist in the field of atomic energy, will speak. He is a professor of chemistry at Purdue university. Those graduating are:

Ruth Bariows Taylorsville; Jack Birdcell, Waynetown; Mary Elizabeth Bland, | Indianapolis; Barbara Browne, rek a,! | Kas.; James Cheney, Acton; nneth | | Dodgson, Terre Haute; Howard Ehlert, Whiting; Faye Golden, Columbus; Walter | Gorham, Indianapolis; Carolyn Griffin, | Franklin; Wiliam Hartman, Detroit; James Havens, Butlerville;, Verna Holt: | man, Seymour; Robert Jones, Mt. Wayne; Robert itz, Kenosha, Wis; Doris Mc- | Cullough Loomis, Indianapolis; Margaret Moses, Decatur; Mary Jane Nelson, Battle Oreek, Mich.; Betty Nugent, Columbus; | | Donald Rutan, Columblis; Howard Rogers, | Franklin; Prank Spencer, Franklin: - | liam P. Spencer, Huntington; Richard | Btainbrook. Franklin; Shirley VorHoof, Jrankun, and Gene Wyatt, Rutherford. |

*. Set for Sunday, . |

| ing. or housebreaking, he is re-

Pa ie

POLIS TIMES __ Escape King'

¥

LAUNDRY THEFTS, J

$5000 bond each today as police in-| vestigated a month-long series of thefts at the Progress laundry.

2415 N. Olney st.; ‘Byron Woolridge, | 41, of Apt. 6, 014 N, Pennsylvania st.; Robert Terhune, 46, of 2415 N.. Olney st., and Paul Scalf, 31, of 1 Draper st. They are held on grancy charges. Their case was continued to May 8 today. . Polive said the plant manager re-| ported . several. hundred po worth of laundry has disappeared in| | ‘a series of thefts that started March | 5. He sald the painters came to work there March 5 but they were not suspected untll a guard dis-| covered a box of laundry hidden on, their truck April 28, All four of the men denied the

thefts and sdid they knew nothing of the laundry allegedly found on the truck,

Identified by Paris, France, | police as George Reme, “the King of Escapes,” this man tried to duck the camera and landed hard, failing to escape being photographed. Arrested innumerable times on charges of pick-pocket-

ported to have escaped jail 11 times. Once he got out of a police wagon by sawing his way through the floor boards. This photo was made after his arrest in a Paris subway station as he was about te steal n passenger's wallet.

chief of the CPA. compliance | Eisie Stefans and John Joyce won honor- = pledges to Kappa Delta Pi, professional

Marjorie Bellmeyer,

LOCAL BRIEFS

The Wayne. Club, Inc., will meet] lat 8 p. m. today in the home of Mr.|

Jov Mudd received the Theta Sigma phi And "Mrs. Lee Carpenter, 246° N. Corena Hornbeck, chairman, will be {in charge.

Mount st,

| Dr. W. ,C. Worthington chapter 3, {Disabled American veterans, will]

hold a card party at 8:30 po m {Saturday at the Post hall. Mrs.

Plans for a.new V, F. W. post in Brightwood will be considered at

Four painters were held nde

The men are Frank Scalf, 34, of

| Williams and Joan Yarian,

and Phi Eta scholarship, activities and attainment in | Sigma, men’s honorary, Henry Hill, Marion | the field of journalism. The Indianapolis

elect officers’ at its meeting in the a meeting in the community center hall, 20 8. Delaware st, at 8 p. m.|at:7:30 p. m. Monday. The center

able mention. ed t societ were announced as branch, warned he would take steps | The Association of Women Students’ | ray. Dotty Lou Davis, Heragainst manufacturers who with- scholarship cup awarded to sophomores berta Fry, June Ann Gongrich, piSaRatie| hold shi ts with the highest freshman grades went Hawk, Barbara Jardine, old shipments of suits for any to Mary Fritsche, Jeanfie Malott, Rebecca | Rosaline Martin, Patricia Ro ZYeason beyond the 30-day limit per- | T*sgart, and Glenda Rose Vaughn, beth Nelson, Virginia Pearl Rice, or { Freshman Honoraries Roberts, Marylou. Stefy, _Alice niitted by OPA. The clothing, he | | Wilms Todd, and Jeanne Winters. said, must be kept. moving to meet! at bubers 91 Leshan sshojastie haber. Women Journalists growing demands. of veterans in gram were: Phi Chi Nu, women's group, particular | Audrey Helen Hancock, Constance Harvey, pendant for the outstanding sophomore | y » i : Joanna Jennings, Marjorie Little, Barbara woman in journalism. The Sigma Delta To Lift Exemptions Javelis Imogene McClellan, Jeanne McCoy, | Chi veriifioate presented to the citstand. ; arilyn Mitchell, Barbara Myers, Charlene ng journalism senior Was awar In ordering the 30-day period of, | Myers, Virginia Rodman, Rosemary | Mrs. Carolyn Coxen Duvall. grace, OPA said it was planning to|Ronsheim, Edythe| Beity Jo Fark received a trophy for announce a new method for grant-| ing price adjustments to individual | Hopkins, Timothy Jones, William Osborn Theta Sigma Phi Alumnae chapter premanufacturers, to investigate pricé rises of companies which were not! entitled to MAP adjustments, and “generally survey the ability of the, men’s: clothing industry to operate under MAP, The agency said it would lift MAP exemption levels for manufac- | turers up to $21 for overcoats, $21 for worsted suits, and $17.50 for other suits to give them .a little more lee-way. MOUNTAIN ERUPTS KUMAMOTO, Japan, May" 2-(U, P.).—Mount Aso Kumamoto in the prefecture of Kyushu started erupting today after it had lain dormant! for nearly two years.

| Janet-RURE and. Robert E, Black,

i

and Donald Payne, Awards in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences announced by Dean Gino A, Ratti included the Alliance Francaise | stiver “medal for—excelience—in— French to: Mrs. Mary Margaret Crumpacker; W, K. Kellogg Foundation Scholarship and {loan fund to Joann Baker, $150; Carrie P, Clark; $150; Barbara Harding, $200; Drusilla Toohey, $300; and Dorothy Wilson, $150; and the National Foundation for Iinfantile Paralysis, Inc., scholarships; with a minimum value of $1200 to Frances Dingley, Northwestern University Medical School; Dorothy Masters, Columbia university, and Elizabeth Mumm, Harvard Medical School.

School of Religion Awards

Dean O. L. Shelton, School of Religion, presented the following: Indiana Hebrew

Congregation prizes to Robert E. Black, |

$15; James H. Ellerbrook, $10; the Davies | Sermon Contest prizes to Harry R. Baird $50; John W. Lambert and Gerald B. Kreuger, $40; honorable mention, $5, to E.| Speech | Improvement Awards Russell

to James

(sented a $5 award to Bernice Butler as the outstanding woman graduste in journalism, Other honors awarded in um College of Business—Administration Merv included

Monday. Commander Walter R.| Pence will preside and resolutions on the location of the new Veterans’ a hospital will be discussed.

1G. Bridenstine, acting a membership in the Alfred Marshall Honor Burns-West “Streibeck auxiliary (society for scholarship In. business to Warren Cross, William Davey, Patricia | 2999; Veterans of Foreign wars; will

Eckhart, Rosalie Elkin, John Fargo, Ann Gill, Robert Ogg, Paul Bmith and Avie Wheeler, and membership in Kappa Tau Alpha for scholarship in journalism te Alice Brassie, Bernice Butler, Joan Hayden, Joy Mudd, Marjorie Phillips, Betly Lee Snyder and Marjorie Yelvington.

289,000 MORE G. L'S OUT WASHINGTON, May 2 (U, P.).~— {The army discharged 289,000 men {and women during April, bringing [to 7,074,000 the number returned to civilian life since the end of the European war.

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:| SAUNDERS SPEAKS AT PHONE MEETING

Members of the Indiana Telephone association meeting in. convention at the Severin hotel this morning heard Burton W. Saunders, general manager of the Indiana As- | sociation Telephone Corp., Lafayette. | Mr. Saunders said that re(building and re-outfitting of the

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{experience are invited to |Ray Gardner, state deputy orgéni-|

school essay contest sponsored by the Ralph Barker Post 1587,-V. F.

{checker champion, Lee Munger will

is located at 30th and LaSalle sts. Former servicemen with overseas attend.

izer for the V. F, W, will preside.

Margaret Kidd today was awarded | first prize in a Technical high

W. auxiliary. Second prize went to Paul Jordan while Max Kortepeter {won third prize, All three are seniors, Their essays will be entered in national competition. Prizes {were to be awarded in ceremonies at 1 p. m, today at the school.

Five times state Y. M. C. A.

Edward F."'McGrady, above, vice president in charge of labor relations for RCA, has been called to

Washington by Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach to join in

coal strike mediation Popular with both labor and management, McGrady is a former assistant secpetary of labor and war department labor relations consultant.

|GERMAN CREW HELPS

efforts.

BRING SHIP FOR TEST

SAN DIEGO, Cal, May 2 (U. *), ~A detachment of 134 German officers and men, last of the crew of the 20,000-ton Nazi battleship Prinz Bugen, boarded s transport today for return to Bremerhaven, Germany. The men were part of the Nasi crew which assisted an American crew in bringing the sleek vessel from - Germany to participate in

the Bikini atoll atomic bomb tests.

Gay ...Washable

small exchanges is a must if they play all challengers simultaneously are to stay in business. Frank E.|in an exhibition match at 7:30 p.m. Bohn, Ft. Wayne, &poke on “Things | tomorrow in the central Y, M. C. A., to Be Done” within the industry and | 370 N. Illinois sf, A prize will be pointed out the road of new develop- awarded to the first peffon defeatments. a {ing the Indianapolis title-holder, William C. Henry, president of |

the United States Independent |- {Telephone on, spoke yes- “Organizations terday and that long distance calls will increase 40 -to 50 per cent in the next five years. Naomi chapler 131, ‘0. E 8. will Four new directors were elected | prioay = yA ne No. Pir

today and six others were re-elected, [Nellie Shipman, worthy matron and Hugh Newly elected to two-year terms ’0Pnston. worthy patron, will preside. were Willlam A. Hughes of Indian-| ,., gu. imere & Obie Railroad vetapolis, Francis Simpson of Win- erans auxiliary will sponsor a card party chester, and E. M. Blakeslee of | & P. m. today at 220 Virginia ave.

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New...

Party-Pretty Or Perfectly Practical

MOTHER AND DAUGHTER APRONS

bl ’ i 4

A mother's day gift that carries with it the solution of more than one prob. lem. Little daughters will be extra good if their work and party aprons look just like mommie's. PARTY-PRETTY: white ‘ofgandie, laceembellished. Mommie's, 3.50 "Daughter's (mall, medium or large), 1.00 PERFECTLY PRACTICAL glazed, waters

proof checks, red or blue. Mommie’, 1.69. Daughter's (3 sizes), 1:59,

BLOCK'S, Aprons, Fourth Floor

“lence Marie Fenter;

Lafayette. Members re-elected for three-year terms were Frank E. 8ohn of Ft. Wayne, R. F. Lucier of Warsaw, R. D. Pontius of)

Princeton. Re-elected for two- -year terms are John A. Harbaugh of Sullivan, and Max PF. Hosea of Hope. C..E Mc{Cormick of Terre Haute was named to a three-year term. | Officers were to be chosen this Po

GODFREY L. FENTER RITES ON SATURDAY

Godfrey L. Fenter, former technician with ‘the Indiana state police identification bureau, died last night in his father's home, 1928 Valley ave. He was 28.

olis, Mr. Fenter was a member of the Brightwood Methodist church and Veritas lodge 608, I. and A M. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Flortwo sons, Eric Lee Feriter and Terrell] Dee Fenter; his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Earl L. Fenter, and three brothers, Howard,

Indianapolis. The Rev. A. J. Coble, pastor of. Brightwood - Methodist church, will officiate during the services Satur- | day at 2 p. m. in the Veritas Masonic temple. Burial will be Washington park.

ANNOUNCE RATION CUT

FRANKFURT, May 2 (U, P).~ American army headquarters announced yesterday rations in the European theater will- be reduced 800 calories a day starting May 5

of foodstuffs.”

HOME LOANS

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Celtic offers you quick, friendly Home Loan Servfoe. You deal with local men, eliminating “out of town payments.” Monthly reduction of principal and interest means low _cost heme financing. It's “easy to obtain and repay a “budget tailored”. home a at Celtic,

Ne Commissions » Marion Co. Homes

Rochester and G. T. Welborn of |

A lifelong resident of Indianap- |

Maleolm and Richard Fenter, all of |

in

“in view of the worldwide shortage

| Ko-Keuiters club will hold a hayride iat 10 p. m. tomorrow at Silver Hills Saddle club. William Hicks, president, will be in charge.

Mrs. Marie Kafader, chairman ‘of the Mooseheart alumni ,committes of the Women of the Moose, will be In charge of a public benefit card party in Mae's restaurant, #45 Massachusetts ave, at § p. m. tomorrow.

{

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THIRD OUTDOOR DINING EXHIBITION

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