Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1946 — Page 2

eo

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

nsville Banker To Plead Guilty In $143,000 Theft

_ SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1046

of $143,000. He it to dabble in oll stock and

the bank vice presisuccumbed to the wiles of “three well-known big time” oil promoters, whose promises of great

~ Perry was also pictured acquaintances as a man who slipped away on week-ends to indulge in (heavy horse betting. © Kept Bets Secret Friends sald Perry declined to place horse bets at nearby Dade park, across the Ohio river from Evansville, for fear of being recogthey indicated, he elsewhere, probably at bookie stands or at other more dis-

Generally known as a staid citiEvansville, Perry neverthea lot of horses " it was rewas described as a perconservative out the temptagamble. . alcohol, had y that there

“feminine angle” involved. to have waited until

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by close

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2 :

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books at the bank were in that his alleged y would have been end of this month, One source said affairs were ex-

are experiencing in tracing allegedly ille-

$10,000 bond against his will and provided him with legal assistance. Two Not Arrested =. Of 27 other persons indicted grand jury, two have not yet been arrested. Dewey C. Wilson (alias Jack Frost 2 Ghoul), 317 E. St. Clair st, ‘was indicted on a charge of using the mails to extort. He had ad-

of Gerald W. Ohrn, hearing judge of the Indiana alcoholic beverages commission, and demanded $5000. ~ Charged with conspiracy to transport fraudulent checks in interstate commerce were two Evansville men, Francis E. Smith, 32, and Raymond PF. Powell, 25, and two Mt. Vernon

Roberts, 31. Austin Emery Sylvester, 40, Co lumbus, was charged with purchas- : from Bernard M. Chicago. The latter was inon a theft charge of an inmeat shipment, Tatum was n transporting the Chicago to Louisville. . Two other persons indicted for purchasing stolen meat have not been arrested.

Car Theft Charges ~~ Other indictments included Robert Ray Goodman, 18, of 1741 8. West st, faflure to advise his selec tive service board of an address ‘change: Thomas Doyle Duncan, 19,

orgery of a government tk; Houston Louis Powell, Evansville, mail theft; Charles J. Buchanan, 50, Westfield, Ill, mail from W. Terre Haute boxes; Ingersoll, 27, Indianapolis, theft from Interstate express ship.

Henry Louis, Louisville, ition of Mann act, and the fol. lowing alleged violators of the na‘tional motor vehicle theft act:

:

§

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iueg FBI agents that he e! the lives of two children|

* Man. Killed in Aut

TRAGEDY HITS

Two Members of Family Die in Accidents.

Tragedy struck’ for the second time within a week at the Prim| home, 40 8. Rural st, when Dorsey G. Prim, 55 years old, died last night in St. Vincent's hospital after he was fatally injured in an auto-mobile-street car crash. En route to meet his wife, Agnes, who was completing funeral ar-| rangements for his veteran stepson, victim of a swimming pool] accident, Mr. Prim received fatal injuries yesterday when his car smashed into a streetcar in the 5000 block on E. Washington st. Passengers Uninjured The accident occurred as Mr. Prim by-passed another vehicle and crashed into the westbound streetcar, Grant Long, 61, of § N. Traub ave, operator of the streetcar, reported. Although the automobile was demolished, none of the 18 streetcar passengers was injured. Mr. Prim had been employed by the Indianapolis Rallways for 15 years as a bus driver. A Mason, he was born in Wheeling, W. Va. Masonie services will be completed for Mr. Prim after services are conducted for his stepson, James] Franks, at 10 a. m. today. Lived Here 18 Years

t

Thursday in U. 8. Veterans’ hos-

with burial following in St. Joseph's cemetery at Shelbyville. Born in Pittsburg, Kas, Mr. Franks had lived in Indianapolis for 18 years. He was 19. After at-

Franks enlisted into the navy in January, 1043. Besides his mother, he is survived by four brothers, William, John, Joseph and Michael Franks; a sister, Mary Franks, and a half-sister, Loretta Prim.

HELPLESS NEIGHBORS WATCH 6 DIE IN FIRE

{Continued From Page One)

lines. But they arrived too lage for any makeshift bucket bridge to offer hope. A neighbor discovered the fire.

Mrs. Stewart said she everybody on the country lines| then everybody in Centropolis.” Most of them gathered in the broad lawns surrounding the blazing eight-room house. They stood for hours before the fire had leveled |

here from Ottawa.”

‘CHAPLAIN OF BATAAN’ INDIANAPOLIS VISITOR

Col. Alfred C. Oliver Jr, famed “Chaplain of Bataan now retired! arrived here today from’ Washing-| ton for the Indiana encampment of |

service Thursday in Muncie. | Senlor chaplain on Gen, MacArthur's staff in the Philippines, Col. | Oliver later was captured along with Gen, Wainwright in the fall of Ba-| taan.

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE The Day

Clearings Debits" ........ ' 20,101,000 “The Week Olearings ........ : A Ra bae 42,5090 TRAE co snttnansin tun nen ihnn 105,002,000

New Harmony Festival of Golden Rain Tree.

(Continued From Page One)

formal presentation of the area to! Hoosiers,

». ” » NEW HAR.40... \ as the worldfamed experiment of the Owen family to establish a communal living. Originally an Indian camping ground, it was later settled by the Rappites who practiced celibac§. No children were born during their 10year tenure. The Rappite community was the most prosperous in the state and contributed f of {Indiana's taxes, : : | Robert Owen purchased the settlement for his experiment. Here was established the first co-educa-aal school in America, the first

fatally when his automobile (shown above) smashed head-on into a streetcar on E. Washington st. yesterday. :

TWICE IN WEEK

midnight, eastern daylight time in New York, Boston and Philadelphia.

local time.

“some time before ratification voting is completed, but that doesn't mean the men will remain off the job.”

personnel wage -increases—retroac-

timated would boost seamen’s in-

y come about $51 a month, or 30 per Rites for Mr, Franks, who died cent,

pital from injuries received when | monthly increase in basic wages and he dived into shallow. water at cut the basic work week from 56 to Westlake beach, were to be held in|4g hours. They will work Sundays Bt. Philip Neri Catholic churchiat overtime rates of $1 an hour which will raise their monthly pay

(48-hour basic week and a $17.50 {monthly raise, plus an additional tending Tech high school, Mr. amount to be fixed by arbitration to preserve historic differentials.

association, whose contract does not expire until Sept. 30, was granted overtime pay for Sunday work. General wage adjustments must await expiration of the present contract.

For th Longshoremen, Mr. Bridges reluctantly accepted the 22cent hourly increase recently

recommended by fact-finding board,

within five miles of the Florys, and [served with the company 10 years

o-Streetcar Crash

river, Dorsey G. Prim, was injured

RR ey

Dorsey G. Prim, shown above ‘with his daughter, Loretta.

PORTS RETURNING BACK TO NORMALCY,

(Continued From Page One)

The strike deadline was midnight,

Mr. Bridges said it might be

The settlement gave sea-going

ive to April 1—which employers es-

It granted seamen a $17.50

another $32 to $40. Radio operators also were given a

The Marine Engineers Beneficial

a government

——————

HONOR EMPLOYEES . OF AUTO COMPANIES

Out of 350 employees, 150 have

Charles E. Bolton, president of

the Gibson Twenty-Year club, presided at the dinner. the building to the ground. Finally|J. M. Bloch, Gibson Co. president; | honor treaties with weaker nations. they were able to reach the bodies, [E. M. Gass, secretary tréasurer;| In this respect the Soviet Union has but they left them where they lay, |Rex E. Poe, personnel manager, and [the worst record in history.

Speakers were

Mr. Bloch cutlined the history of the automotive industry in which the Gibson Co. has been active 48 years,

TRUMAN SIGNS BILL WASHINGTON, June 15 (U. P).| —President Truman today signed into law a bill giving the court

case involving a sult against the United States shipping board emer- | gency fleet corp. COMMUNISTS SENTENCED | MUNICH, June 15 (U, P ) ~Five | ranking officials of the Bavarian |

for illegally entering the Russian!

4 zone in Germany.

Will Present

whose president was Frances Wright, a Scottish ward of the Marquis of Lafayette, American in|dependence hero. . ~ ” ” AMONG THE interesting conventions of the Owen community was the requirement that every inhabitant attend a ball weekly and a lyceum meeting,

- New Harmony, during the Owen regime, was the center of U., 8. scientific activity. And it was here that David Dale Owen, son of the founder set up his staff as U. 8. geologist and founder of: the Smithsonian ihstitute. Robert Dale Owen, another brother, was a founder and first president of Purdue university. Two pageants will be held tomor-

e school, and the first: woman's

row commemggating these events,

a :

Stalin

CHARGES. STALIN LOOKS TO WAR

Eastman Says U. S.-British Clash Is Russ Aim. (Continued From Page One)

man who seems fully to realize this is Winston Churchill, but I believe it will gradually sink home. to others who are aware of the peril to democratic civilization. ” - " EVERY CHECK we place on England's power is a gain for the totalitarian world order. Not only in the lines I have quoted, but in many others, Stalin has described both England and America, together with other democratic nations, as “our enemies.” He probably will try to knock off the weaker and more troubled of these enemies first, He will favor the United States as against’ the British empire, but only because that is the expedient order in which to take over the “decaying” capitalist world. And his great longing is for as much trouble in all democracies as can be brought about by his borers from within, his Communist fifth column in other countries. Chaos is his aim. That is why he sabotages all efforts to agree on treaties of peace. ® im ” STALIN'S position then, far from being the “supreme conundrum,” as Senator Vandenburg called it, is clear. It is not what Mr. Churchill so picturesquely described as “a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” It is precisely stated in his own book, “Problems of Leninism,” which is the Russian counterpart of Mein Kampf. Stalin regards the present situation, which we call peace, as an armed truce between the Soviet dictatorship and its enemies, the “western democracies.” = = » IN THAT truce he will jockey for every position both within our country and out, which may enable him and his disciples, when the hour strikes, to overthrow our government and establish a Communist dictatorship here. In this jockeying he will say anything, sign anything, and “collaborate” on anything that may seem expedient at the moment, That is the way any tough fighter behaves against an enemy with whom he considers himself at war. It is no particular comment on the character of Stalin, That character is worth studying, but a mor important study is the doctrine of revolution in which he believes. ” » » STALIN often has avowed himself an “obedient pupil” of Lenin. It is no accident that the bible of his party is a book about Lenin. Lenin taught Stalin to speak of capitalistic or imperialistic nations as enemies, and Lenin advocated dishonesty in dealing with an enemy as explicitly as Hitler ever did, or Machiavelll. “We must be ready,” he said, “for trickery, deceit, law-breaking, withholding and coloring truths.” Or again, “we can and must write ... in a language which sows among the masses hate, revulsion, scorn and the like toward those of different thought.” »

THIS thorough-going belief in!

war, and the “morals” of war, as the method of progress was instilled in Stalin from early youth. From the days when he robbed banks for the Bolshevik party to this day when he steals chunks from the capitalist world on the

While he attempted to reach his | Forty-two employees of the Gib- | plea of “security” or “distrust of the friends, his wife cranked her tele- |son Co. and of its subsidiary, Capi | war-mongers,” he has been guided phone in an alarm ring to the tol Motors, were honored at & din-|py [enin's subordination of moral village operator, Mrs. Ava Stewart, | ner at the Indianapolis Athletic | nrinciples to the principles of ex“rang | club last night.

pediency in the grab for power, It has been expedient so far for Russia to honor business contracts

in addition to the 42 with between |gith capitalist nations, and her con20 and 30 years service.

duct in this regard has been exemplary. » “

as BUT IT has been inexpedient to

As

‘until the fire marshal can get Paul E. Mason, sales manager of Julius Epstein demonstrates in the Capitol Motors. :

“New Leader,” for Dec. 20, 1045, Stalin's government has violated treaties at the rate of one every three months for the last six years. We can afford, I suppose, to ignore any particular one, or perraps all of these violations. But we cannot afford to ignore the principles on which they rest:

Veterans of Foreign Wars memorial|of claims jurisdiction over a Florida | "MeL, that the Soviet Union is in

A state of war, overt or latent, with the whole capitalistic world and that it enters into treaty relations with the capitalistic nations only

for the purpose of their destruction, »

” . THE URGENT thing at this mo-

| Communist party werd® sentenced | ment for -our statesmen and our 4 B086000 today to four months imprisonment | PEOPI€ 1s to get over the notion that

there is some mystery about Russia’'s foreign policy, It is all plainly written down by himself in the Russian equivalent of Mein Kampf—“Problems of Leninism * Our policy toward Russia shouid | be based on that book,

2 TROOP SHIPS DUE "IN U.S. PORTS TODAY

| . By UNITED PRESS Two ships were scheduled to are

rive at American coast ports today with more than 1300 service men. DUE AT SAN FRANCIS00: Ada Reham, from Japan--21 undesignated troops. - DUE AT SEATTLE: Lagrande Victory, from Yoko hama--1306 army and naval personnel,

SKIN" OUCHES”

F + Almost ii laf ar ae

y- at your d

sion of everything else.

NAME AND "PLACE OF ARREST

Steve Armandoff, 551 W. Washington st.

36 W. Michigan st.

782 Indiana ave.

Samuel Kirkpatrick, 511 W. 14th st. Thomas Carruthers, 511 W. 14th st. Prank Howard, 511 W. 14th st. A. J. Merritt, 795 Indiana ave,

Sam Scott, 795 Indiana ave, Andrew Perkins, 795 Indiana ave,

oe Green, 795 Indiana ave,

William Pickett, 75 Indiana ave, George Oldham, 795 Indiana ave.

Jesse Canaday, 795 Indiana ave, John Keys, 798 Indiana ave John Wilson, 795 Indiana ave. Ulysys Sanders, 795 Indiana ave. Ennis Smith, 795 Indiana ave. William Bell, 795 Indiana ave,

John Bishop, 1013 N. Illinois st, David DeLatch Jr, 1013 N. Illinois st.

George Edward Hoosier, 948 N. Belmont ave.

Leroy Heinrich, 1102 Fletcher ave. Walter Daily, "1087 Virginia ave. Otis Billington, 1559 Blaine ave.

»

Edward Cunningham, 1417 Prospect st.

William Stovall,. 2866 Northwestern ave,

Frances Jarvis Jr, 2856 Northwestern ave,

Joe Maul, 2866 Northwestern ave, George Whitaker, 2866 Northwestern ave, James E. Doolin, 1211 Oliver ave, Dan C. Young, 2858 Northwestern ave. Robert W. Banks, 28568 Northwestern ave. Robert Jennings, 2856 Northwestern ave. Omer Lee Hughes, 1211 Oliver ave. David H. Branhan, 1211 Oliver ave. David Rodgers, 1211 Oliver ave. Loewell E, Bennett, 1211 Oliver ave. James Orit Dulwarth, 1211 Oliver ave. George N. Washington, 2866 Northwestern ave. Thomas A. Montgomery, 2856 Northwestern ave. William Lew Gregory, 2866 Northwestern ave.

to follow the law,"

- “I don’t like to discharge all] Here's the record:

ment of a single prosecutor to alljthese gambling defendants gither”, cases, handled to the exclu-|the judge complains, “but I've.got

DISPOSITION

CHARGE MAY 1 Operating lottery and gift Discharged

enterprise; keeping room for

operatnig a lottery.

MAY 12 Keeping gaming house.

Gaming. Gaming.

Operating lottery and gift enterprise; keeping room for pool selling. Visiting gambling house,

Operating lottery and gift enterprise; keeping room for pool selling. Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

Visiting gambling house.

MAY 18

Advertising lottery antl gift enterprise. Advertising lottery and gift enterprise,

MAY 21

Operating lottery and gift enterprise.

Keeping room for pool selling. Operating lottery and gift enterprise, Possession of slot machines; operating lottery and gift enterprise.

MAY 22

Operating lottery and gift enterprise; keeping room for pool selling.

MAY 24

Gaming; keeping gaming house; violating beverage act. Violating beverage act; gaming; operating lottery; keeping gaming house, Gaming; visiting gambling house. Gaming and visiting,

Gaming and visiting, Gaming and visiting. Gaming and visiting. Gaming and visiting Visiting gambling house. Visiting and gaming. Visiting and gaming. Visiting and gaming. Keeping a gaming louse;

gaming. Visiting and gaming.

a

Visiting and gaming.

Visiting and gaming.

pool selling. Thomas Sims, Keeping room for pool sell- Discharged 851 W, Washington st. ing; advertising a lottery; operating lottery and gift enterprise, f % MAY 2 Russell Wolf, 468 Massachusetts ave, Advertising a lottery Discharged MAY 10 Edward Ryan, Keeping room for pool selling. Discharged 36. W. Michigan st. : Irvin Stepp, Keeping room for pool selling, $5 and costs on

room «- keeping

charge; discharged on lottery charge. Leander Lewis, Gaming. $10 and costs; 38 W. Michigan st. fine and costs suspended. MAY 11 Albert Dorsey, Visiting gambling house; Discharged 782 Indiana ave. gambling. Wilbert Busby, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 783 Indiana ave. Robert Tandy, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave, Benny Ford, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave. Robert O. Anderson, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave. Issic Jones, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave. William J. Gammon, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave. 2 Foyd Goodrich, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave. : Robert Hayes, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 782 Indiana ave, George White, Visiting gambling house. Discharged

$10 and costs; fine suspended. Judgment withheld Judgment withheld Discharged Discharged Discharged by Judge Pro Tem Charles Stiger Discharged by Judge Pro Tem Tom BStiger Discharged Discharged by Judge Pro Tem Stiger Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged

Discharged

Discharged

Discharged

Discharged by Judge Pro Tem Leo FP. O'Conner Continued Continued Discharged by

Special Judge Wilson Bean

Discharged

Discharged

Discharged

Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged Discharged

Discharged

81 Gambling Cases Are Tossed Out, Only 11 Convictions As Police, Courts Blame Each Other for Failure of Drive

(Continued 'From Page One)

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«

902 N, Meridian

Chemistry 1 & 2 Engr. Drawing 1 & 2

Registration Now Open

Purdue-Marott Agricultural Center

Purdue Extension Center

SUMMER TERM

College Credit Program . . . July 1-Aug. 24

Day Classes in

mathematics 1 & 2 Physics 1 & 2

LI-3548

Jacob R. Freije, 1205 S. Meridian st.

Keeping ing; ope

Roy Edward Dann, 808 N. Zllinois st.

Keeping ing;

300 Blake st.

ROXAS PLEASED BY M'NUTT SELECTION

MANILA, June 15 (U, P.) —President Manuel Roxas today, praised the appointment of Paul V, McNutt as first American ambassador to the Philippines republic. “McNutt, an eminent statesman and friend, has a secure place in

gift enterprise.

operating lottery and

George Chapman, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 2856 Northwestern ave, : n Charles E, Glover, Visiting gambling house, Discharged 511 W, 14th st. } : William Charles Woods Visiting gambling house, Discharged Mildred M. Curl, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 3127 W. Washington st. Katherine Hurley, Gaming and. visiting, Discharged 3127 W. Washington. . Wilbur Garner, Gaming and visiting, Discharged 3127 W. Washington, Doris Cooksey, Visiting and gaming, Discharged 511 W. 14th st. Warren Williams, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 511 W. 14th st. Jesse Kemmebrew, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 511 W. 14th st. Mark Collier, Visiting and gaming, Discharged 511 W. 14th st. Edgar Johnson Jr., Visiting gambling house. Discharged 511 W. 14th st. Henry Clark, + Visiting gambling house, Discharged 511 W, 14th st. Robert Quisenberry, Visiting gambling house, Discharged 511 W. 14th st. Vika Tich, Operating lottery and gift Discharged 339 W. Washington, enterprise; keeping room for Ralph Shumate, Operating lottery and gift Discharged 2633 W. Michigan st. enterprise; keeping room for pool selling. Charles Hartlamb, Operating lottery and gift Discharged 1026 E. Washington st.’ enterprise; keeping room for pool - selling. Charles Billhimer, - Visiting and gaming, Discharged 3127 W, Washington st. : ; James E. Hurley, Keeping gambling house; Discharged 3127 W, Washington st. gaming; violating beverage act. - Walter G, Allee, Visiting and gaming, Discharged 3127 W, Washington st. Victor H. Holtgrave, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 3127 W, Washington st. Charles Beard, Keeping gambling house. Discharged 511 N. West st. MAY 25 Lewis Eley, Gaming. $1 and - costey 700 N. West st. (rear) (fine and cose suspended), Daniel Furman, Gaming. $1 and 00 N. West st. (rear) costs Wo Clint Shobe, Gaming. Judgment with “150 Colton st, held Wilton Allison, Keeping gaming house; Discharged 303 W. Vermont st. gaming. William Graves, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 303 W. Vermont st. Lonnie Wilson, Visiting and gaming, Discharged 303 W. Vermont At. John E. McKay, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 750 Colton st. Hosea Engram, Gaming. $1 and costsf 700 N. West st. costs suspended Harry McDonald, Gaming. Judgment with750 Colton st. i 3 Miley Green, Gaming. $7 and oostsf 700 N. West st. (rear) sts suspended Horace Tyndall, Visiting gambling house. Discharged 308 W. Vermont st. MAY 26 Carrie Surface, Gaming Discharged 1104 Oliver ave. Theodore Haryison, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 303 W. Vermont st. Williams Wells, Keeping gaming house, Discharged 1104 Oliver ave. Melvin Staff, Visiting and gaming. Discharged 1104 Oliver ave. Wallace Poirier, Keeping room for pool sell- Discharged 2222 E. Washington st. ing; operating lottery and gift enterprise. Nick John, Keeping room for pool sell- Discharged 525 W. Washington st. ing; operating lottery and gift enterprise. JUNE 1 William. Hanna, Keeping room for pool sell- Continued on 113 Massachusetts ave. ing; -operating lottery and plea for change gift enterprise. of judge

$10 and costs on keeping charge; discharged on lottery charge by Judge Pro Tem Thurl Rhodes

room for pool sellrating lottery and

room for pool sell- Operating lot-

tery and gift

gift enterprise. enterprise, $10 and cost; keeping room for pool selling, dis~ charged by Judge Pro Tem. Thur] Rhodes, Lena Morris, Keeping room for pool sell- Discharged 2133 Prospect st. ing. JUNE 10 Charles G. Wilkins, Gaming and congregating $1 and costs 300 Blake st. for congregating (costs suse pended), dise charge on gams= ing charge. Willie Swain, Gaming and congregating Discharged 300 Blake st. Floyd W. Goodrich, Gaming and congregating Discharged 1002 N. Missouri st, Manzy Northington, Gaming and congregating $5 and oosts

for gaming; $1 and costs for congregating; court confis= cated $10.48

{already performed in our behalf” | President, Roxas sald. | "Mr. McNutt said he had advised | President Truman he would accept [the ambassadorship “for a short { period” until all programs planned {during’ the past six months were under way. | WASHINGTON, June 15 (U. P.), ~The White House has announced that Paul V. McNutt will be Mr, | Truman's personal representative |at the independence ceremony in

our history and our hearts for work the Philippines next month,

“MAKE IT A

MILLION!"

HERE'S TRAVE

Going abroad — seeing sights you may never see otherwise — is just one advantage of enlisting in the new Regular Army, Over three-quarters of a million

416 FEDERAL BLDG.

INDIANAPOLIS :

ADVENTURE FOR

L

YOU!

have joined up already. MAKE IT A MILLION! . Full facts are at your near. est Army Camp or Post, or U. S. Army Recruiting Station,

A GOOD

iOR FOR YOU

U.S. Army

CHOOSE THIS

(LR PROFESSION NOW

SATURDA

Ret SAFETY

ASKS OFS

Bid for $20,( Made for Of Par

By RICH A record 1947 was in the maki officials guarded city hall pendin mates with depa In a bid fo Parks Director F nounced his req to operate the ps system next yea $20,000 over la Other departn ever, filed their Controller Roy hoped for the be Seek Mor An increase requested for ai force and fire d safety board. The would increase both department provide for a 15 Mr, Brown pri to a group of tions representat explained it was quired to maint and recreation se A 16-cent rate to finance the p proposed expend the 10-cent rate rector asked las rate he was all With its finan away by city co park departmen operations curta its rate is cut : Points to

Mr. Brown sa cent raise for would result in on labor costs crease of $720 services will be playgrounds are competent perso The director tional represent: impossible to hir personnel for | $110 a month nc asking $200 a mo ation jobs, he sa not sure these at that salary. Because of ci for this year, nc ment could be pervised games | or be confined t ting around as Says Budget Musical prog: sible, he said, t insufficient to sheets. Arts an dropped becaus monéy for tools “This budget

current budget, department wa this deficit to rigid economies.

COLUMBUS PURDUE

Time COLUMBUS, university has ar locate its extens college freshmer Plans call for sion school in Columbus high Luther A. Lock? intendent. Other Purdue have been estal apolis, Ft. Wayn East Chicago, L gan City.

WABASH | LAND TC

COLUMBUS, —Hoosier farme area have been acres of farm 1 River army ord leased for crop C. Dunn, divisi U. 8S. corps of e today, Col. Dunn st could be used f without interfer of the plant.

CONTRACT MAYOR 0

MITCHELL, I —John W. Wal publican, today mayor, He was elects cil last night t pired term of | Mr. Taylor re citing ill healt] The new ma here most of h immediately by Walker is a cc

JOHNSON DEMO

Tim FRANKLIN, son county Ww club held its f coming campal noon to honor ficers. Approx attended. Honored gue cluded Mrs. E

Mrs. eounty chairma