Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1946 — Page 3

re the roo - Riley hospitds. / | an punched a than 50 ya.ds perhaps only e slaying, the e attack. hospital slept es below shed it.

MISSING (GS FIRE

Ark, Sept. 14 §

} through the l early today es leveled the health resort oo hot to perims among its

on, tentatively s Adams of . died in the ' Ir. Adams’ ingless Spanishn, identity not sorted missing. were taken to the Army-Navy ne’ with critical

1g to find the ge ruins of t} d check wife: d determine if . Fire officials ge tomorrow be1d ashes cooled it a thorough

edly died in a ment from the * of the hotel. a low building; en able to run ust to safety, firemen's nets. ipples—here to healing baths— be carried or

\'T ALGIERS 4 (U. P).—The er Franklin D. in Algiers harring a 21l-gun

-

{0 INS.

» for piano inxt week. Those to take piano

ke the neces; "

5 NOW. | 1

f a qualified

r home phone

is.”

IS PIANO - ASS'N.

J

a love: for 35—we can s interesting,’ /e now have . Because of siastic young vancement is nd managers. ough Friday. Lloyd, 2 to 4 for interview.

foe of this ke us your ters forall, dit needs.

| Roosevelt during the

SE m——————

BE ,

—_—

I 1 1 | | | 1 i !

-

SATURDAY, SEPT. 14, 1048

| CAN. §. HAVE | 2 POLICIES AT Jind ONUSSR?

‘Go Easy’ Talk Aimed at]

Votes, but Truman May Have to Back Up.

A ay Read a an editorial, , “Henry s Two Worlds,” Page 8, also World Affairs, Page 8.

nla

By SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS Times Telegraph Editor

The world was asking today

whether the United States has one foreign policy for home consumption and another for use abroad: Secretary of Commerce Henry A.

Wallace's New York "speech was!’ an administration bid:for left wing |i

votes. But it made Secretary of State James F, Byrnes and his senatorial advisers in Paris so boiling mad that President Truman may be forced to repudiate any ease-up-on-Russia sentiments.

‘Imagine the Glee’

- Ome responsible official suggested at Mr, Byrnes scarcely could have Pn more embarrassed if sémeone ked his pants off right in the middle of the Paris peace conference. Another source close to Mr. Byrnes at Paris said, “Imagine the glee at the Soviet embassy this morning.” Secretary Byrnes, Senator Tom Connally (D. Tex.), and Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) all were represented as feeling that the incident had cut the “ground from under their seven-week battle with Russia at the peace conference. The three men conferred all morning today on the Wallace speech and President Truman's press conference statement that he approved it. May Ask Accounting

The speech Mr. Byrnes delivered at Stuttgart last week was a be-firm-with-Russia speech. Mr. Tru- | man indicated” he approved of Hi speech too. : The policy Mr. Wallace recommended was fellowed by President war, Mr. Roosevelt himself decided, just be-| fore his death that the policy had’ failed. He began to change over to a tougher approach to the Russian] problem. Mr, Truman has continued this! tougher policy—up to now. Future Up to Byrnes

, The future probably

able position, he may demand an| accounting from Mr. Truman. ‘If he] decides he is not irreparably em-

depends | Jpon Mr. Byrnes. If he finds that Wallace's get-along-with- Rus- | speech placed him in an intoler- |

NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORECAST SUMMARY: The Atlantic hurricane continues to move northnortheastward 250 miles off

the east coast, ‘It was eastsoutheast of Cape Hatteras at map time. Extreme caution is advised all interested in its path by weather bureau forecasters who expect it to curve slowly northward Saturday. ‘The storm is a severe one and moving at 15 to 20 miles per hour, Gales are extending 100 miles out from the “eye” of the hurricane. The winds are at full hurricane force. Northeast storm warnings have been issued from south of Block island to Cape Hatteras due to steepening pressure gradients over the northeastern states. The immediate forecast is for winds from the northeast increasing to 40 miles per hour. (See NE storm and wind warnings on the FOTOCAST.) * Temperatures will be rising in western Great Lakes region, but

a. ars ine com hpi 4 wacate aL uTs este

ree

.

* Ry Sy

otherwise no important tempera ture changes are indicated for the country. Fair weather is promised the northeasternmost part of the nation and a section of the west extending like a belt from southern California to the Western Dakotas. Overcast skies are shown for the far northwest and it will be part-. ly cloudy elsewhere than already mentioned. (See clear and cloudy areas on insert chart.) High pressure dominating a large part of the United States from the extreme northeast to central Texas is bounded by the standing or stationary fronts pictured on the map. These fronts are currenfly inactive: ' The eastern half of the country is almost free of shower or thunderstorm areas. Those in Florida will occur during the "afternoon and evening Saturday. There will be scattered showers east of the standing front line in the plains states, in northern Missouri, east-

a ouch AiR fLOow

RAIN

NR ; § : uv

ern and southern Kansas, most of Texas, New Mexico, southern Utah and eastern Arizona. Those predicted for the northwest states are due to frontal activity,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

United States Weather Bureau-———— All Data in Central Daylight Time Sept. 14, 1944

Sunrise. .... 6:25 | Sunget..... 6:56 Precipitation for 24 hrs. end. 7:30.. “Trace Total precipitation since Jan. 1 ......24.71 Deficiency since Jan. 1 ..........c..00 nH

The following % table ; Shove the tem-

perature. in other cities

Ft. Worth Indianapolis (city) Kansas Cit

82 Los Angeles canemn Miami . . 88 T7 Mpis.-St. ‘Paul 91 56 New Orleans 86 66 New York ........ 67 = 51 Skiahoma City 77 61 sararssnann 0 59 Bitispures Sannin 70 - 49 sarsuren 72 48 San tonto Areas 9 171 San Francisco ....... .screasses 62 53 Washington, D. C. ......ivsvi.... 68 50

MISS TILLIE'S NOTEBOOK . . . By Hilda Wesson

Parents Should Visit Classrooms

(Parents, teachers, and children, { too, send your school worries to! | Miss Tillie in care of The Times)

»

DEAR MISS TILLIE:

My girl is.in the third grade and |

she begs me to come to school and | visit her room, Now my boy in the sixth grade tells me teachers don't want parents to come. I'd like to go but I don’t want to do anything teachers wouldn't like. Do you think I'd better stay home where I belong or visit. FRIENDLY PARENT,

|

| DEAR FRIENDLY PARENT: Visit by all means, You should

‘standing of him. Teachers can do more for children that they understand well. Let the ‘teacher know that you are working with her. Ask if there's anything that you can do at home to help your children with their school work. Criticise if you need to, but do it tactfully. Teachers are touchy but they can take criticism if it’s given in the right way. Of course no teacher wants to be told how to run her school. She's been trained to do that. But there may be some things you didn’t understand and. you should get a satisfactory explana-

barrassed, the administration may be welcomed heartily. But let me | tion of them.

be able to carry water on both

shoulders until the November elec- |

tion is past. There may have been glee in the | Soviet embassy in Paris Over Mr. Byrnes’ apparent discomfiture. There was, however, strong: opposition to Mr. Wallace's remarks among American Communists. Moscow's only comment ‘so far

give you a tip. Stay long enough so that you can see how your chil- | |dren take part in class work. Tell the teacher when you leave [that you weuld like to talk to her! | soon about your children, and ask her when she can see you. She won't have time then while she has a room full of children, or between classes;

but she will tell you what |

I FEEL, TOO, that I ought to tell {you that some teachers don’t like | visitors. I hope you won’t run into that kind on your first visit. But if you do make the best of it and remember most of them aren't like | that. We think the school is yours |as well as ours. We're for more visiting - and better acquaintance |

was a statement that Mr. Wallace day to come after school, (Teachers | ity, parents.

had “demanted a return to Roose- | never have a minute before school |

velt's foreign policy.” U. 8. Communists Angry Mr. Wallace was heckled and booed throughout the delivery of

his speech at Madison Square Gar- | den. The Communist Daily Worker |

blasted Mr, Wallace in an editorial which ended this wey: “The bi-partisan foreign policy now generally indorsed by Mr. tervention, which is leading us (the United States, tinct departure from the carved out by F. D. R.” At his press conference on Thurs- | day, Mr. Truman stated fa) oy nsidered the prepared text

‘path

” the Byrnes policies. Vandenberg Asks Unity The bi-partisan foreign policy to which the Daily Worker referred has been carefully cultivated by Mr. Byrnes and his predecessor, Cordell Hull, who believe that “party politics should end at the water's edge.” Despite the fact that Mr. Wallace has now sought to make foreign policy an issue in this year's congressional election, Senator Vandenberg declared in Paris that most Republicans would be glad to continue to seek unity with the administration on a foreign policy. This would be possible only if there is “unity within the administration itself,” he pointed out, adding, “We can only co-operate with one secretary of state at a time.” U. 8. Press Critical American newspapers were generally very critical of the speech. That of the New York Herald

| Tribune this morning was charac-

teristic. “The United States . ,. is used to seeing policies interpreted in various ways for the votes of various constituencies, But it has also become aware within recent years of the need for creating a national foreign policy, rather than a conglomeration of sectional policies— and it has never been affronted by such a bundle of contradictions.” London sources ‘were reported as ‘very surprised” .at the anti-British tone taken by Secretary: Wallace. British newspapers interpreted it as domestic politics,

AGREE ON FILM EXPORT EW YORK, Sept.*14 (U.-P.)=

Irgine Maas, vice. president and] general manager of the Motion Picture Export ' association, last |!

night announced an agreement with

. the Czechoslovakia government for

the unrestricted . distribution of United States films in that country.

followed by the administration and!

to war and is a dis-|

allace's speech to _be in ih £3

(to see parents. They often have meetings in the office at 7:45, and they always have a million things to-do-before-the children-come-in. = » » EVEN IF YOU haven't anything in particular to say, come back at ithe time arranged and get ac|quainted with the teacher. Friend- | ship between teachers and parents [ is helpful to the child because it

Wallace is one of imperialistic in-| gives the teac teacher a peter under<| xe under- [fixed it up?

TWO PARTIES BUSY WITH REGISTRATION

Major campaign activities of both Republican and Democratic parties {in Marion county will he held up {for another two weeks in order to concentrate on registration of many | thousands of voters who are not on [the balloting lists. Headquarters of both parties are devoting full-time to registration now - being conducted in branch |offices in residential neighborhoods. Branch registration offices will be open, from 1 p. m. to 9 p. m, today, Sunday and Monday at the following places:

TODAY 10TH WARD James E. Rober's’ 8chool, 1401 E. 10th st, ,School 14, 1229 E. Ohio

st.; Fire Station 11, 1030 E. Washington st.; School 15, 2302 E. Michigan st.; Fire Station 27, 2918 E. 10th st.. School 3, 23 N. Rural st.; Woodruff Club House, East dr. and Cross dr.

TOMORROW 9TH WARD Dearborn Hotel, “3208 E Michigan st.; Fire Station 12, 339 N Sherman dr: School 13 321 Linwood; School 62, 4715 E. 10th st.; Rice's Pharmacy, 4837 E, New York st; Gladstone

Apts.,, 4317 E. Washington st.; Christian Park Community House, 4200 English ave.

MONDAY 16TH WARD English Avenue Boys Club, 1400 English ave; State Street Auto“Electric Co., 250 8, State st.; Fire Station 15, 2101 ¥nelish ave ; School 21, 2815 English ave; Fire Station 3, 1136 Prospect st.: School 139, 801 8. State st., residence, 2133

And don't forget that parents and

plain, painted walls, seats in stiff rows (now, why in rows?), teacher's awkward oaktopped desk, square cases full of books, no pictures anywhere, no color; a room drab, forbidding, uninspiring. This is the home where teacher and your children come to live for 10 month of the year. But give teacher just a day, a day before school opens in the fall There'll be pictures on the walls, a rug up front for little folks to play on when chairs get hard and sitting still is boresome, cretonne covers on the chair backs, bright blotters on the tables, gay pillows on a bench, flowered curtains at the bookcase doors, ferns in the window boxes, a vase of flowers on teacher's desk, a gold-fish in a bowl, a table filled with clean white sand, a radio and victrola. You've seen it so. Who paid for all these extras that changed a barren room into a place you'd really

like to live in? Teacher, of course, helped by the P.-T. A. when spending got too heavy—teacher, who'll do without some personal things

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

allace ‘Speech Embarrasse Byrnes,

1 RITES ARE SET

STRAUSS

C. J. MILLER

Retired Water Co. Employee Died at 72.

Saturday, “Sept. 14, 1946

Services for Charles J. Miller, re- | tired employee of the Indianapolis | Water Co, will be held in Boe W. Stirling funeral home at 2 p. m, Monday. Burial will be in Crown

Hill, A resident of the South side

for 39 years, Mr. Miller died yesterday in his home, 1417 Olive st. He was 72 Born in Warrensburg, Mo., he i | worked for the utility for 36 C. J. Miller | years until his retirement in 1944.| - Mr, MiHer was an elder.of the Seventh Presbyterian church. He belonged to Prospect lodge, F. & A. M, and the Modern Woodmen | of America, Marion camp, Survivors are his wife, Marie, and | a son, Jack 8, Miller, Indianapolis.

MRS. CARMEN KINNAMON

Services for Mrs. Carmen Kinnamon, wife of Clarence M. Kinnamon, were to be held in ‘Dorsey funeral - home at 2 p. m. today. Burial was to be in Crown Hill Mrs. Kinnamon, who was 36, dled | Wednesday, She lived at 1104 W. | Oliver ave. Born in Shelbyville, she | had lived here most of her life. | Survivors besides her husband are) a son, Carney Leon Kinnamon, H, and a half-brother, Paul Porter, | Indianapolis. ¥

LILLIAN FERN STAUFFER

Services for. Mrs. - Lillian Fern Stauffer, former comptometer oper- | ator for John Deere Plow Co. will be held in Moore Mortuaries Peace | chapel at 1:30 p. m. Monday. @Burial | will be in Crown Hill | A lifelong resident here, Mrs. | Stauffer died Thursday in her home, | 1138 N. Oxford st. She was 47. A past matron of Union City ghapter, | O. E. 8, she belonged to Centenary Christian church and Brookside | chapter, O. E. 8S. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs Martha Jean Krause; a sister, Mrs. ! L. Marie Thomas, and a brother, Clifton Lavon Fear, and two grandchildren, all of Indianapolis.

| MRS. MARY MATZ |

Matz will be sung in Holy Cross Catholic church at 9 a. m. Tuesday. Burial will be in St. Jouepa | cemetery.

Mrs. Matz, who was 76, died |

Thursday. She went there two! years ago to live with her daugh- | ter, Mrs. Charles "Rawlings.

was a resident here for 54 years.

who died in 1914. Besides her daughter, a son, Martin Matz Jr, Evansville, survives.

MACK BRIER HUFFMAN Services for Ma~< Brier Huffman, | conductor for the New York Central | railroad for 27 years, will be held | in the home, 145 8. McKim st., at! 2 p. m. Tuesday. Burial will be in Crown Hill, Mr. Huffman died yesterday in the 12th st. station, Chicago, Iii,

teachers have a club that meets ghe's wanting to make a homelike while on his second trip following once a month at the school where place for your boys and girls toa 10 months’ illness. He was 60

you may extend your acquaintance to parents of other children and take part in the work of the association. That will make you feel that the school is really important in your life. - ~ |DID YOU EVER See a schoolroom before teacher It's a bare place—

p(ISY | LIBERALIZATION. PLAN

‘REJECTED BY CHURCH

PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 14 (U. P.). —The house of bishops of the Protestant Episcopal church yesterday rejected by a 66 to 44 vote liberalization ~~ of marriage and divorce canons as proposed by a commission on matrimony. The bishops then appointed a committee of five to study the remarriage rules and repart its findingss The commission had recommended that remarriage be allowed in the church where the diocesan bishop determined that the broken marriage had not been a true union of body, mind and spirit. The present canon permits remarriage of a divorced communicant only when he is the innocent party in an

adultery case,

EVENTS TODAY

Federation of State Teachers, convention, Claypool Western professional tennis champion. ships, 8 p. m., Manufacturers’ building, fairgrounds.

EVENTS TOMORROW

Western professional tennis ™ championships, 8 p. m, ~Manufacturers’ building, fairgrounds.

Prospect st,

PHILIPPINES WORRIED BY UNEMPLOYMENT

Times Foreign Service MANILA, P. I, Sept. 14.—The Philippines are facing a serious unemployment problem which deserves “immediate attention,” according to government labor officlals. A preliminary survey by the department of labor shows that thoucands are jobless in the provinces, particularly in the north. From 100 to' 150 workers arrive daily in ‘Manila seeking jobs.

the country has been started.

Copyright, 1046, by The Indianapolis Times nd The Chicago Daily News, Ine,

A census of unemployed all over|Ro

100-mile A. A. A, qualifications, 1 p. fairgrounds.

MARRIAGE LICENSES Harry [Everett Jacobs, 1411 Nordyke; Mona Lou Penstermaker, Francisville Gerald W. Miller, Muncie: Franhcies Mae PittengsF, 2102 N. Alabama, James Oliver Swan, 1119 N. West; Ellis Marie Jackson, 3015 N. Meridian Delbert Leon Brinson, 801 8. Richland; Josephine L. Yelp: 1519 Gimber.

Edward Watkin 2726 E. Washington; Phyllis Jean Williams, 334 N. Noble: Alberto de uza Cotrim,. 8t. Vincent's Hospital; Margaret Ann Winks, 2538 N. Talbott Thomas r Riley, 820 N.. DeQuiney; Norma C. Ward, 1821- W.. Morris: Joseph P. Jean Rector, Pao Roberk, Ellison Crooks, 1101 Athér ine Elizabeth Ed Why 1741 8

championship race; m., race, J p, m,

Ray, hor Benjamin Harrison;

18 8. Walcot land Marion Hever: 8050 Carrollton; lv Palticia Ann South, 962 N, Pennsylvania

Thomas Charles YY Milwaukee, Wis. Elizabeth Joan , 858 Patter,

+ -

N. Kealing’: {

ain Philip Beton 1861 Orleans; Mary, Frances a gq.

learn in. » ” 5

TODAY JANE SAID My teacher just talked and talked all afternoon till I got tired of lis-

| tening. I had a lot of things to tell

about an airplane ride I had this summer but I didn’t get to say a hing. I'm I'm for n more talk by 1 the k kids.

ALIMONY PAYMENTS REDUCED FOR SHAW

HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 14 (U.P) — Bandless band-leader Artie Shaw, who is trying to be a movie producer, yesterday won himself a reduction of $1000 monthly in alimony payments. Superior Judge Kurtz Kauffman accepted Mr, Shaw's explanation that he could not pay $2000 monthly alimony to Mrs. Elizabeth Kern Shaw. because his income

year, And not only did Judge Kauffman cut the payments in half, but

was born at Kewanee, Ill la member of the Brotherhood of

A resident here for 32 years, he He was

Railroad trainmen. Survivors are his wife, Maude; a sister, Mrs. Nell Hamilton, Los Angeles, Cal, and a brother, Carl Huffman, Indianapolis, i

MRS. FRANCES GOLDMAN

Services for Mrs. Frances Goldman, 42, native of Poland and resi-

|dent of New Castle for 20 years, {who died yesterday in a New Castle

hospital, will be held in AaronRuben funeral home at 10:30 a. m tomorrow, Burial will be in SharaTefilla cemetery, She was the wife of Louis Goldman.

BRONC RIDER DIES AFTER HER DEBUT

PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 14 (U. P.) —Jane Ann Greeley, 27-year-old Ardmore, Okla., rider, collapsed and

had | died here last night a few minutes dropped from $280,000 to $37,000 a

after making her debut on.a bucking bronco. Miss Greeley stayed on the bucking horse during the opening of the

he ruled the new rate was retroactive to’ Aug. 1, 1945, when Mr. Shaw said his income nosedive.

Belbets Eugene Allender, Mary Elizabeth Schafer, 19 8 Hawthorne Lane, X J Harvey Logan Parker, 2510 Foltz; Dorothy Marie Houston, 2510 Foltz, Francis Eugene Roberts, Brownsburg Tillie Mae Ricnter, Clermont. Michael Herman Ryan, 528 Eastern: Loretta Margaret Dillard, 1354 N. Parker. Louis Prancis Fleischmann, 348 N. State; Marye Cecilia Levis, 17 N. Arsenal Keith Herald Herbert, 310 W. New York;

Marguerite Bernice Wickes, 1419 N. ey. | Thomas Bernard Dawson, 40% W. MecCarty; Betiy Jeanne Sauer, 2039 Boyd. Warren E, Burns, Gem Hotel, Ruby J. Mitchell, 720 N. New Jersey. Fred Martin Guebe, R. R. 2, Box 405 Wilma Delore darcy 62 E. Regent Claud Martin be 1435 W.. Market

Janet June Newsom, 1731 Fletcher William Phillip Campbell» Toledo, O.; Joan Pauline Moore, 307 Congress. Robert H. Ludington, 520 Sutherland, No. AL Jean Elizabeth Robbins, 542 Suther-

land. Oliver Neal, 135 W. ‘Vermont; Margaret Duggins, 538 N. Illinois. John Jar} Hirt, 1260 W, 31st; Naomi Mabry, 16 8. Illinois. John 3! Atchison, 1114 N. Tecumseh; Katherine Tuttle, 674 Middle . Drive, Woodruft Place. BIRTHS Twins At St. Vincent's--Leroy, MRkry Virginia Graw, twin boys, Girls

Francis-—Irvin, Mary clam sel

| At" Olty~-Willle, Janie Rus:

At Coleman Frank, Ay 8mith: John, Sue Lynch, and John, Frederica Scudder, At Method! orge, Lo ; Norval,

Mary Louise. Mercer, n, KEisie | Isa)

\

{returned the animal to its pen. took a| ting down on a bench beside the

Roy Rogers rodeo at the arena and Sit -

pen, she colla psed,

cn ————

IN INDIANAPOLIS--EVENTS—VITALS

5723 Beechwood; 8

Fendley, and Esthel, Millicent Fick At St, Vincent's—8am, Stella Bishop: Emer sori, Phyllis Cahen; Fred, Mary Krabbe

James, Margaret Powers, William, Beulah McCullen, and Donald, Helen Black Boys | At St. Francis Walter, Irene Rode, | At City—~Dwight, Nora Hazelwood

At Coleman--Walter, Nancy Snyder; Nor

man, Violet Bartlett, and Matthew Dorothy Doyle, At Methodist Raymond, Mary Lambert Robert, Delores R. Stewart; Carl, Margie!

Glowver; Phil, Bernadine Baker. Rollo Rita J, Sisson Leon, Virginia Lee Roquet; Harry, Edythe H., Clark, &nd Thomas, Irene Harmon At St. Vincent's Marvin, Marie Ruster Robert Lodise Clemons, and Robert | Jeanelte Garey = dl Sh SL MA | DEATHS 2 +Thomas Hook, 52, at 824 N, Bancroft coronary occlusion, | Margaret Trapp Gilbreath, 67,

at 1213 8. | Richland, chronic myocarditis, | Clara Johnston, 49, at City, sarcoma, Infant Pottorff, 4 days, at Coleman bronchopneumonia. |

Estella Thomas, 41, at City, hypertensive |

VASCHIAY, ” Warner A. Williams, 52, ‘at Veterans bronchopneumonia, . . Hollis Walls, B54, at Long, hypostatic | pneumonia, *'

Lillie P. Siiith, 72, at Meihodist, cerebral | hemorrhage, James Liddell, 24, Long, Teukemia, John Benedick, 74, at 1245 Union, chronic myocarditis,

xX -

m Hill, 68, at City, carcinoma, '

Requiem high mass for Mrs, Mary | Fr

Thursday in San Bernardino, Cal,

Born in Terre Haute, Mrs, Matz |

She was the wife of Martin® Matz, |

—_—

SAYS:

Dear Folks— :

The entire city was rocked on its heels this week when one Riley hospital nurse was wantonly murdered and anpether brutally slugged by a masked assailant who entered through a window of the convalescent ward, . « « Galvanized into action, Police launched the greatest -.manhunt in Indianapolis history, syste matically searching near West side neighborhoods. After the slaying, crime literally took a holiday with thieves, prowlers and other furtive characters flinching from the dragnet. . .. Police quickly solved a second murder by arresting a suspect who admitted slaying a stablehand at the state fairgrounds in a fight over a pail of hot water. , . . In a chase through the north side, police pumped a dozen bullets into a “mystery sedan” believed to have been driven by kidnapers. . . . Four prisoners escaped from the Ft. Harrison disciplinary. barracks by ramming a four-ton truck through a compound fence. . . . A “shakeup” in the police department over the chief's no gambling edict shifted 15 sergeants on vice and district squads. . . . A N. Pennsylvania st. restaurant patron was arrested because he tossed hot coffee at a waitress, giving her adequate grounds for complaint. . , . Police Chief McMurtry requested installation of an elevator in police headquarters to haul “paralyzed drunks” to the lockup. . The chief also banned street sales of chances on new automobiles after several “new car raffles” failed to raffle. , , , Even the waste paper drive landed in the police news. , . . In some cases, “unauthorized” trucks picked up waste paper ahead of salvage crews, never turning it in to the campaign to collect paper with which to fabricate wallboards for veterans housing.

* % STRAUSS SAYS DEAR SIR: If you like to SMOKE-— Katine has abgut the finest cigars and pipes and p - badeos that a man can get ek of. (Also seme oaiea choice cigareites—Bensén and Hedges). The SMOKER'S CORNER is just inside the doors—' is your right. L. STRAUSS & INC. THE MAN'S STORE. ¢. 2°

Plenty Baloney, No Meat—

Indianapolis appeared headed for a vege« tarian diet with most meat counters again empty following restoration of OPA price controls. . . . A task force of 68 OPA sleuths ventured forth to uncover illegal livestock sales barns which they charged are “located at every crossroads in Indiana.” . + The weather's cooling off, but politicians are warming to their subjects as Republicans and ‘Democrats alike loosed their - campdign oratory. . . . I... Some 700 Marion countians Lge} are daily signing up to vote, assisted by establishment of branch registration offices in neighborhood stores, schools and fire stations. Side civic clubwomen are protesting plans to construct an underpass at the W. Michigan st. and Holmes ave. rail crossing, demanding a track elevation instead, The Marion county zoning board has approved erection of $275,000 worth of hangars at the Hoosier-Parke airport, Kessler blvd. and Lafayette rd. . . , The public service commis« sion asked the state supreme court to review Marion county circuit court decision permitting Indianapolis Railways, Inc, to hike token fares. Mayor Tyndall vetoed a city ordinance prohibiting overcrowding on streetcars and trolleys on grounds it would duplicate a 1939 state law. . . The State Federation of Labor convenes here for four days next week.

> eo» STRAUSS SAYS: DEAR SIR:

If you have a TOPCOAT in mind-—we can 4 it on: your back—and you'll live comfortably ever after. Prices are about what you have in mind— whether it's something in the neighborhood of $80—or flirt ing with $100 L. STRAUSS & CO., INC, THE MAN'S STORE,

5, of . o Dd

School Daze—

Fairview campus was swamped with 2000 perplexed freshmen" as Butler university's fall registration began, , . Another 2000 students are due next week to almost double any previous enrollment. Although cramnied to over-capacity, Butler promised to ‘enroll all qualified Indianapolis and Marion county veteraris and high school students, . Purdue and other schools likewise observed frosh week, with the exception of Indiana university, which postponed its fall opening until Oct. 11, pending completion of campus housing facilities. The veterans administration got its signals crossed by. announcing that Indianapolis public schools would be leased to I. U, and Purdue for local classes, an announcement quickly denied by the two schools after Butler U., objected, + Dr. Clement T. Malam, retiring state stperintendent ‘of public instruce tion, will teach political science at Butler, .'Dr. John S. Harrison stepped down as dean of the Butler U. English department, a post he had held since 1916,

DR. HARRISON

4. STRAUSS & CO. me.

- INDIANATHE HEART OR THE u. 3. A.

ev West

won the Tyndall golf tourney cup.

Volume 1

Everybody's Business— Business and financial sources here volun« teered their aid to Bridgeport Brass Co. in its struggle to retain peacetime ownership of its local plant, now on sale by the War Assets Corp. + +. . A Chicago metal firm outbid Bridgeport Brass, but the WAC then ordered a. reappraisal of all property involved. , , , The Union Trust Co, and the Security Trust Co. will merge in a new building to be erected on the Union Trust site on Market st. . , . Allison's will get a new General Motors jete propulsion engine plant to be transferred dere from Buffalo, , . , After neighbors ree monstrated: vigorously against “Tacoma Vile lage,” 75-unit veterans’ subdivision on the Northeast side, city officials hastened to assure them it wouldn't degenerate into a “shacktown.” «++ The 40 West Business and Professional Men's club demanded extension of water mains to Ben Davis and Weir Cook airport, . * :

> * 0 Trav el Notes—

If and when an atomic World War III arrives, everybody in Indianapolis could take

_ refuge in Wyandotte cave down in Crawford

county, say government officials who are studying such gloomy features of “modern® civilization. . . . Prematurely cool weather slashed Hoosierdom's corn crop by more than 4% million bushels. , . . But the state's tomato output —600,000 this year— is second only to California's, , . , In anticipation of the annual tourist influx from Indianapolis, ‘Brown county trees are breaking out in & rash of color with “unprecedented” rapidity, . + « Mayor Tyndall flew to San Juan, Puerto Rico, and back as the guest of Eddie Rickenbacker, Eastern Airlines president, e and an old pal of hizzoner. . , . Jeff Davis, “king of the hoboes,” was in town to file the annual organization report of Hoboes of America, JInc, with Secretary of State Rue Alexander. , , . Joe" Stalin will receive a pipe carved here by Hetzer Hartsock, local sculptor, to be presented to the Russian chief by the National Chess Team of the U. 8, . Colors flown by the battleship Indiana will be mounted in the statehouse. , . . A Jeep leaped a curb, crashed through a restaurant at Shelby and Orange sts. > STRAUSS SAYS: DEAR SIR: wr I you shave reelf—the

finest razor on the face of the Xarth (or on the Jhoo of v. Bye

wind the handle like you do a watch. You shave in the mecustomed way—but you get » shave Sntirely new lo your ex-

rg inside the doors.

L. STRAUSS & CO. INO, THE MAN'S STORE.

* 0 @ Exit Baseball, Enter Football— Battling to keep the baseball season alive, the Tribe moved ahead 2 to 1 in its playoff series with Milwaukee. . . . Although they blew the pennant to Louisville, the Indians led the league in team batting and Sibby Bisti was the A. A. swat champ with an aver= age of 343. ,., But a recapitulation indicated our pitching was of second division caliber only, , . , Football is stealing the sports show these days, with Butler ‘registering a record grid turnout of 178 Z aspirants. , ., . City and ¥ f county high schools popped the lid off the season with the following scores: Beech Grove 18, Sacred Heart 0; New Castle 18, Crispus Attucks 6; Southport 12, Warren Central 0; Decatur 7, Ben Davis 6... Eighteen-entries, many of them big name veterans of the “500,” will vie in the 100 mile, A. A. A. auto race at the fairgrounds tomorrow. . . . A batch of old-timers (including Bill Tilden) and some newcomers competed here all week in the Western Professional ‘Tennis Championships. . . . The. 11th district American Legion has organized the largest bowling league in the nation, . . . Ward (Piggy) Lambert, former Purdue cage coach, is commissioner of the new National Professional Basketball League. . , , Coffin «+ « Milwaukee pedalers captured top honors in a pre-Olympic bike race here,

LS STRAUSS SAYS: DEAR SIR:

Here's your HAT. It's a DOBBS. It's a light weight felt—that has a lot of stamina and char-_ acter-—and gives a world comfort to the head—and te . what is within it, Some swell ° Dobbs Hats are 7.50 and $10. L. STRAUSS & CO., INC, THE MAN'S STORE.

* oo

Home on the Range—

The Indianapolis Community fund goal this fall will be $1,328,000. ., . . The Marion

County .Cancer Control society collected $40,

000 from a dozen sources and re-elected J, Perry Meek as its chairman. , , , For the first time, Indianapolis hospitals received allote ments of the new “wonder drug,” streptomye cin. ... A complaint against an upstate “diae betic clinic” that promises a quick cure withe out the use of insulin. was filed by the In=dianapolis Better Business Bureau, . .. Loos} hospitals urgeritly need 150 nurses, a survey disclosed. , . , Marion county tops the state

-inr the poliomeyelitis outbreak with 33 cases

reported as of Aug. 31... .. Designed to ac-. commodate 84 children, the Marion County Children’s Guardian home now houses 175,

THE MAN'S STORE