Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1946 — Page 3
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Maurice Winkler, 48, at Veteran's, hypers
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| State Bar Meeting Hears
MASS OF NEW _ STATUTES HIT
BY ATT TORNEY ktant . prospects as schoolmarms teaching Shakespeare in skin-tight|
President =o Notre Dame: Warns of Challenge. by Materialism.
Times State Service : NOTRE DAME, Ind., Sept. 6.—An appeal for more simplified laws was made by Chase Harding, president of the Indiana Bar association, at the opening of the association's 80th anniversary session here today. “Within-the ast. few..years our
“federal, "has mushfoomed Trto the: tangle of an unending jungle,” he said, “In the last decade our federal statutory .factory has mass-pro-duced some 5000 new laws—more than has been enacted in the 150 years of our prior history—in addition to 10,000 presidential directives, all have the force of law.” He urged a return to more simple, brief and more understandable laws. In a luncheon meeting address, |
Governor Gates charged that some - ‘Indiana traffic courts were doing |
more harm than good. The governor did not name any specific court and dealt in generalfties in qualifying his opinion that state traffic courts “were bad.” He said uniform enforcement of traffic laws throughout the state was necessary to combat an inereasing auto death rate. He also asked the bar association + delegates to “make an impression on reckless motorists by seeing to ft that they have meted oit to them sufficient punishment for trafic violations.” . Challenge Is Seen In an address of welcome, the Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, president of Notre Dame university, warned the fundamental relationship existing between God and all real law is ‘being challenged by materialism which denies God and morality. “1 think the challenge is presented dramatically in the hectic meetings of the United Nations where God is arbitrarily shut out and another base is sought, for some reason or other, as a foundation of government and law,” he said. “A new and strange philosophy challenges fundamental Americanism. This philosophy contends there.is no God; that the so-called rights are based on the natural law and this so-called natural law.is a myth, that men are mere. servants and instruments of government, rather than the other way around.”
POGUE TO SPEAK AT
SHERIDAN PROGRAM
Times State Service SHERIDAN, Ind. Sept. 6.—Bar- | ton Rees Pogue, widely noted poet and humorist, of Upland, Ind., and Indianapolis Times columnist, will be the speaker at a community party in honor of war veterans of this eommunity, to be held Sept. 11 at the high school gymnasium.
Mr. Pogue will speak following a |
banquet at 7:30. A musical program also is being planned, and gifts will be presented .the .honor guests, Rev. ‘C. W. Kocher is general chairman. The - American Legion Post here is in charge of invitations.
-—e
IN INDIANAPOLIS
MARRIAGE LICENSES .
Raymond J. Farrell, Pt. Harrison: Bonnie | B. Harrington. WAC, Selfridge Field,
— ecm:
Rollie Johnson, 545 8. New Jersey; ~ Vivian Bell Glick, 531 8. New Jerse Gene = Pisher, 929 N. Campbell " Florence E. wiin, 102 N. Sheftield Wiliam James Kuntz, Carmel; Mary Jo Harold, Carmel, Justin Melvin Druck, Logansport: anys Lee Summerfield, 3062 law Harold Morris Kep ‘ Delaware;
Thelma Anita Hu a. 505 N. Delaware Oharlie R. Meadows, 23 S. Alabama; Susie Cadwallader, 23 8. Alabama. loscoe Lee Fordyce, Los Angeles, Cal Beale Diessa Allen, 2501 Brookside
ve. Russell Lowell Elkin, Anderson: Mary Saiherine Lang, 4317 E. Washington,
With William Skiles, 1126 8 Shefold} Charlotte Dillingham, 839 8.
Ho! wilitam® Lynn Loffer, DeGraff, Kathering . Elizabeth Payton, Martinsvile, Frederick Schilling, . i 133; Muriel Hilda Newton, 32 Se Willlam J. McLan 4122 N. Meridian; Joan Frances Welch, S239 N. Capitol Earl Edward Solday. Chanuie Field, 111; Jacqueline May Hu! N. New Jersey Robert Paul Bridges, "514 Leonard; Dorothy Maxine Owen, 1347 N. Kealing. Heppner, 1814 Orleans, MilThomas, Oldenbur & Georps Marshall Kreiger, 2 ain 5
Ra Ayinon d,. Ww.
on a Mae Prosser, 610 E John Richard Jernagan, FH * Hieh. mond; Viela .Reseda Christensen, Koomo, 7
* BIRTHS Girls At St. Francls—Maurice, Regina Stringer, and James, Elizabeth Beasley , Lorine Stephens; Hugh, Robinson; Floyd, . Lena ay Teague; Lewis, Emma Jeannette Baker; Albert, Beatrice Cleo Owsley, and Otis, Ida Mae Ammons. At Methodist—Joseph, Esther Peak; William, Frances Launsbery; Derrill, Mary | Henley: William, Alicia Dudley, Mary McElhany; Forrest, Rilkene, and William, Betty Lee BSich-
ng. a "5 Vinecent's—Charles, Barbara Lesh Eugene, Beatrice Pretzinger; Edgar, othy Price; William, Reba Franks: Carl, Lenora Annee: William, Veva Dunkin Lee, Jean Caiman, and William, Elaine
ockwi At Home-—-John, Norma Ledbetter, 1027 N. Tibbs, and Carl, Nancy Homal, 330 Shelby. Boys At St. Francis—George, Glenna Kalser At City-—Joseph, Ruth, Smerdel, and Fred, Juanita Shelton At Methodist—Lester, Florence Karentzer: Donald, Margaret "Miller: Walter, Caula: Fritsche; Gordon, Alice Dunn; Marley, Genevieve Settles; Frani, Doris Ann MeGuyre; Jobert; Betty June 2 McDermid: on
John, Ad ler; Raym , ~~ Dort Barick, and Nicodemus. Hilda Hendrickson. AL St. Vincent’s—Norman, Audrey Wil-
; ‘James, Anita Wood; Robert, Ann Bonge; Richard, Eva Jackson; Claude, Margaret White; Jack, Burhet ‘Williams Doris | Conrad, Rachel
Frederic, ' and Louis, i Schu-
Krichberg, bert,
At Rome--William, Pay Burris, 457 Udell;
Jesse, Irene Minton, 1045 Walnut; Samson. Sarah Wilburn, 1966 Sheldon and John, Beulah Groves, 2349 Guilford.
DEATHS Anna Pounds, 81, at 901 W. 11th, chronie ep: Charles Dunn, 73, at 1445 Broadway, arteriosclerosis, John cker, 70, at 512 N. West, carcino
Rosa McAdams, 4. ab Methodist, cergbral Demoriage.
tensive heart.
FRIDAY, SEPT, 6, 1946. aay
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~ Othman Sees Miss Indiana nd Gets Some Important Educational Facts
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN, United Press Staff Correspondent jeurling pins,
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Sept. 6.—1 think I know who's going to win|Wilted orchids.
the Atlantic City beauty contest, but who cares, except possibly her| On the only easy chair was| mother? draped a black lace evening gown. |
Let's skip the future Miss America and consider such impor-
fingernail , goo,
straps,” Mrs. Langlais apologized. “We tried and we tried, but how | can you hang up a dress, when there is nothing to hang it from?" | » » » +
THIS WAS my opening. 1 said if this frock would not hang on. a clothes hanger, how could it be expected to hang on Miss Vermont? They showed me some of the engineering details, With no further introduction 1 present for the first time in any newspaper the “facts about the .topless evening dress: | The lady planning to startle the male sex and keep it worried for the . rest of the evening puts on first an sir) sABhreintef. undershirt a in
bathing suits (the teachers, not Ww. 8.) and how a’ beauty Queen holds up a topless dress. The prospect that I call dazzling is- a green-gyed beauty with yellow curls, wearing high-heeled shoes and her Miss America bathing suit and carrying a book of Shakespeare.
THE BEAUTY who brought culture to us beauty lovers was Miss Low es. Id, Who! AGAIN WE point out Miss IndiWeight 118 pounds, bust 36, nat ana was wearing a dress when this 24, thigh 29, ankle eg, phone | classroom dialog took place. If number private. ot '{she’d been. in her bathing suit, he’ Miss Indiana te ea English it- | wouldn't. hav erature at Helmsburg high school, wh ave . sail; what. He, when she- isn't... winning beauty wouldn't have said anything. Phe DOE Ii Ets (1. onl) And. now: to Otter AUCH \ ‘em doits) refuse to Show an riterest tacts. such.as hoy a dréss’ that Huy fermalejarges: Ei in Chaucer or Beowulf, either. They|NOthing to hang it on a hanger, “ITS 1" Fo ordinary armen just sit there and look blank. All hangs on a beaéity queen. Sir Isaac !8, reinforced with loops, of steel this is, of course, when Miss Indi- Newlon would be amazed spring wire. ana Wears standard school’ marm * n= When oné of these wires breaks MRS. GERTRUDE LANGLAIS out of its’ holster, as sometimes
attire, a 18 society editor of the Buriinglon i hey 3nd pues ze be g te nly
home in Indiana to maintain their| of mine. She came here as chap- | face interest in English literature,” she |erone for Lola Sundberg, Miss Ver- | : "ua earnestly told judges, “I could, and|mont of 1946. 1 dropped. in to see; S80 NOW she's anchored inside | maybe I should, meet my classes in |them. her undershirt. She steps into her my Atlantic City bathing suit.” Their hotel room was a shambles |dress, which has - invisible hooks | Obviously, ‘she should. of fluffy ruffles, "ironing boards, 'around<the top.
Miss Indiana suid education as now practiced is in a sorry state. Only last term she asked one of her students, what is a wharf? “He did not say it was a place to moor & boat,” Miss Indiana said. “He said a wharf was a little man, ! about three feet tall.”
® 8 ~
“We have, got, to keep it spread mentarily;"” out on the chair because it has no tually it is as solid as Gibraltar.” Gosh, Mrs. Langlais! > We ‘went on to convention hall Miss Vermont | without -incident in her masterfully | | engineered black lace. The lovely, finally, who has the best chance of being crowned Miss | America tomorrow night,
where
| Miller,
| Atlanta,
THE INDIANAPOLIS: TIMES
ppeal For S
green-eyed Ga whom
blond
of all they'd seen so far.
* Then
Tosca.
At she survives tonlghy, hie’ s in, ~ :
LEGION, “oF TORY “i “CONVENTION 18" SET
A record- “breaking 3676 delegates: attend the Anierican “victory”
will
she returned evening gown to sing an aria from The judges agreed again that nobody yet had performed so|.
in a
inp pl tind d
performed |
is Janey | from | the judges | agreed filled a bathing suit best |
blue | §
Legion convention in San Francisco Sept. 30 to Oct. 4, the national
headquarters announced today.
Previous record was 2031 delegates to the national convention at ChiLegion membership | Aug. 31 was 3,301 889, the headqua.She bolts these to'ters said. ¥
cago in 1945.
1 ¥ El
and [brackets built into the" uidershirt, . land there she is. “When I.first saw such’ & dress, | I, too, expected an accident mo-| Mrs. Langlais said. “Ac-
| 3
STRAUSS SAYS: -
Inc. THE MAN'S STORE
Miss Lois Chitwood . . schoolmarm with every book of Shakespeare.
JUST. CANT BE— 2)
Police. See Speed) Speedy Solution To. Decapitation Slaying. {-| BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Sept. 6 (U. . P).—State police questioning Elmer Lewis, 30-year-old carnival worker, sald today they expected a “mo- | mentary break” in the decapitation murder of Henry Scott, 85. Ray Hinkle, state police detective, predicted a s solution of the case. He refused to elaborate on that statement. : Lewis continues to deny any knowledge of the murder, Hinkle said. He surrendered voluntarily . Wadnasdas. atten, h [Ties
re
Toning, nl : Scott's Ss body was found Sunday in a woods near his cabin. The head was lying at the feet. Hinkle said Lewis was taken to the cabin and identified by a neighbor of Scott as the man who had shared it with Scott. Lewis told
investigators that ‘his- fingerprints would be found in the cabin “be- | cause, after all, I lived there.” ’
. Othman proposes a bathing suit attired
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