Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1946 — Page 13

Maks and I'm glad ever had any, ys had it, and man’s way, of

2 girl. without hard to come

el 50 comfo im earnestly, ightened me. e, and I hadn't grandeuf—but it unimporat him. “You ny more than

. y why, my dear, portant to me. find that out, d.” He looked oorway behind , young man.” said Bart. “Hi, have been up * bent to kiss s father. “Isn't

question,” his it's fortunate you honestly. ave one of my I must send

» . Wallace will, unny and I am u sit with me arden-—-not you,

His request almost a plea. id, “and noth-

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sure of hernd kissed his her hand and you, my dear. > going to he

tinued) ES STUDENTS + all, pastor, First of the Wesley na university, in the Warren The Indianation sponsored

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- W loside Indianapolis By Donna Mikeis

THE 4200 BLOCK OF Carrollton ave. is divided y

Into two classes of residents.. Everybody we talked to had either just moved there from some other town or had lived there so long they couldn't remember living anywhere else. They seem to be paired oft— the new residents on the north end of the block and

+ «+ The year 1921

- the “old-timers” on the south.

&- have been;a good “plantnig” year for Carrollton

\

ause that's the year most of the “old-timers” moved |

there and took root.

year, And, as they remember, that was the year the Perrys and some other neighbors moved in. We couldn't find any of the others at home to make sure, though. , . . Mr, and Mrs. Schreiner paid us a great compliment. ' They turned off the world series: game to talk to us. Frankly though, Mus, Schreiner was tired of listening and, it being the ‘seventh inning, Mr. Schreiner : was pretty sure that the ' Red Sox

wouldn't lose. The Schreiners have heard that their #

house and two others, 11 of which were built in 1918, were the first between 42d and 46th on Carrollton. « + » Mrs, Tavel says her hobbies are her two sons, David and Milton, and “staying home and working hard.” Even though she stays home a lot, Mrs. Tavel has heard plenty about a great downtown topic of ‘conversation, the Claypool sandblasting, Her son David, who recently opened an optometry shep in the Claypool, conies home every night with stories about people with sand in their eyes. “They must be using a lot of it,” Mrs. Tavel guessed and we assured her that she'd guessed right. , , .

Explores Territory

ONE OF the block's newest residents, young Paul - chocked full of china knick-knacks in the Lowe living |

Roger Bauer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Bauer, has lost no time exploring the new territory. Mrs. Bauer was doing her washing the other day, calm in the belief that 22-month-old Paul was penned in on the front porch. The next thing she knew a strange woman walked up with Paul in hand, asking if Mrs. Bauer knew where he belonged. It seems the woman

found him wandering down 42d street and had egun a house to house canvas of homes where she saw toys and gates. The Bauers had a gate high enough that he couldn't climb over and a lock that he couldn't unsnap but they failed to guess that he might go under. ,,. A few days later Paul pulled the same stunt, this time going out. to explore the yard. It seems that the Bauers will have to install an electric eye if. they want to keep their South Bendborn son from exploring northern Indianapolis.., . .s. We played peek-a-boo with young, Dana Denny, of 4214 waiting for his mother, Mrs. George Denny, to answer the door. Like the rest of her near neighbors, Mrs. Denny moved to Carrollton from another town. She's a former Madison, Ind. resident. . , , Another

Soft Soap

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—The pollyannas in pants on the federal payroll-are getting me down. They're finding silver linings in every empty meat box, lard can, and sugar jar. The less candy we eat, they claim, the fewer holes we'll get in our teeth. They say that without fat to fry our potatoes, our stomachs will last longer. Now we've got a doc in the marble sanctum of the public health service who says not to worry about the soap shortage. Bathing isn’t really necessary, he adds, because washing our ears is only a habit. Soaping ourselves may be fun, but it won't make us feel any better, . This anonymous sawbones savs he's sure of this. One of his pals is an Indian who hasn't had a bath in 60 years and he’s 60 years old. The doc says Chief Dirty Neck is one of the healthiest men on the reseration.

Both Mrs. Edwin Schreiner; of 4226, and Mrs. Abe Tavel, of 4232 moved there that

Paul Roger Bauer ... he wanted to see the town.

near neighbor is Mrs. R. D. Lowe, of 4218, who moved to Indiangpolis from Kansas City. Two cabinets

room are the result of mother-daughter hobbyists. Daughter Cora Jane collects tiny vases which are displayed in a cabinet on one side of the room. Mrs. Lowe's collection of some 68 sets of salt and pepper shakers occupy a nearby cabinet. When we called Mrs. Lowe was concerned with neither vases or shakers. She was right in the middle of her first batch of green tomato pickles.

Has Fowr Daughters WE'D SEEN only boys in the block's younger population until we dropped in on Mrs. Joseph Murray, of 4224. She has daughters, daughters and more daughters; four all: together. Two of them, Patty and Nancy we think, were still yelling “goodbye” to us when we were a block down the street. . , . Last but, not least on the visit was Mrs. Mead Knight, of 4202 Mrs. Knight declares she's a woman who has no hobbies; no nothing but we learned differently. She has a coffee pot capable of turning out very good coffee—we forget whether it was three or four cups that we had just to make sure it was as good as we thought it was . . . it was,

By Frederick C. Othman

would grab him by the ear and plunge him into a tub of slipso-dipso, the modern-miracle phoney soap. This looks like soap, but she believes it is made of muriatic acid and ashes from an atomic bomb factory. Doc, she washes the dishes in this. It makes no suds. But it gets the grease off the gravy bowl. It also takes the skin off my favorite dish washer’s hands. These are sore. So is she.

I kept your secret, Doc; I didn't reveal your name;

but she said she wondered how the Washington facilities were at the public health service? I am presuming that these are not off-the-record, too. There seems to be no shortage of soap in the health service's washrooms; over each washbowl is a centaimer of olive oil soap, free for the pushing of a button: ‘My bride said she was glad to hear this, Doc.

Abou? the Indian Chie f

SECOND SECTION

This is the first of a series of articles on natural gas and its relation to Indianapolis and American fuel markets.

By RICHARD LEWIS

THE UNITED STATES is on the threshold of a great expansion of natural gas as a primary source of heat and power. Frozen during the war, the gas industry has gathered its energies for an invasion of the biggest of American fuel markets— the East. coast. Texas gas is thrusting against the Alleghenies for the rich seaboard industries. It has been advancing (eastward for a generation. Before the war, nfural gas had already engulfed the Middle West. Now it is ready to move into Philadelphia, Camden, New York and New England at. a cost potentially low enough to threaten the |anthracite coal industry and to displace manufactured gas which is a product of coal. By mid-century, the natural gas men estimate, Texas gas could infiltrate deeply into the {seaboard markets now powered by coal.

» » » { IN THE SANDS under Texas. Oklahoma and southern Kansas, {men have found more gas in the last five years than they ever dreamed of. | The trillions of cubic feet of gas in these great reservoirs have been stcppered for the time being by the federal government. Natural gas is the nation’s genii in the bottle. No

‘lone is quite sure of what will hap-

pen if the cork 1s pulled .all the way out. : : Government regulation now takes the view that the unregulated discharge of this enormous energy po- [ tential, whose limit is unkown, may cause serious econpmic dislocations. A two-year natura] gas investigation which barely attracted atten- | tion of a public immersed in war {and reconversion has been in progress since 1944. It came to an end last month.

~ ” » ! IT WAS STAGED by the federal power commission which regulates 'the. interstate exploitation of nat'ural gas to establish a long-range | economic basis for regulation. | The investigation has had something of the portent of the Lewis and Clark expedition. It discovered a new horizon in America and

a new perspective which dwindles

off into- the future for more than 2000 years. Whether natural gas is to expand or remain compressed in existing ‘service and to what extent, it must {be conserved are some of the ques-

ie Indianapolis Times

Coke oven batteries at the Prospect st. gas man ufacturing plant of the Citizens Gas & Coke utility, {

,

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LoS

MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1946

WILL COAL BE REPLACED AS A BASIC FUEL?

Natural Gas—And Indianapolis

Indianapolis. The expansion of gatural gas threatens this process of making synthetic gas not only here but throughout the Middle Atlantic and Eastern seaboard states.

NATURAL GAS PIPELINES: PART OF THE NATION'S NETWORK / 8 NEY {

I —,, f -——. » y J I QE MTL CU na / > > SORT MRS 4 TS AEAS I Wn ATTEND Mtv | \ $ 8 £ - Am Eo. " ! \, / { NONTAN, #RORTH DAKOTA |MINNESQTA sanas WATVAML CAS PLUMS , " ’ ne Damark “ Wa . X | ~— ” Sing " ; \ ws " Pmt hd —— AH \ / SOUTH Dakory | Memmine | ] oan | ; Whapd Coy Yeon { “rowing ang / cant ~~ % Bef 152 ” \ : % 18%A Nf - } ee NEBRASKA § # ts Sela — : " 7 by = i Rees nt ty Da —— is \ re” Ulan 7 pt Colony, wr t po » Le- ’ ln \ corn ff et ape Vo ——— » s— : s J - —— {rs ¥ gl ws «37% Ny ! Re AR ll v ot LINA f Ne Sr . we: Po, F hie A CARY Mung r.* / ’ nEsses p— | RI SIGMA i NL SOUTANG ME® Mex | > apt a rr |: Nanorint FL ad \ Ra in yo \

bride read this in the newspapers, she Blew up. She didn't exactly froth (soap being scarce in the Othman household), but she said I should look

well and good. He was an honest man. But if he was fresh-scrubbed pink in color and his shirt was clean, then she said I should expose him.

0 f-the-Record H ypocrite

I REGRET to announce that the government's exponent of the bathless life looks as clean as the next fellow. He also smells faintly of lavender. He is a hypocrite. In addition he’s off-the-record.. Won't allow his name to appear in print.

This probably is just as well. Mrs. O. otherwise

Aviation ~~...

OKLAHOMA CITY, Oct. 14.-—Amerfca’s aviation baby, afflicted with growing pains, is fo be psychosnalyzed, diagnosed for current physical disabilities and all but operated upon by opposing “industrial surgeons” during its 1946 National Aviation clinic, which opened here today. Surprising as it may seem, one of the foremost “surgeons” is going to be aviation's most strident opponent, the American railréads. And even the automobile industry will be represented, if it will send & speaker. In its fourth year, the clinic has opened the way or outside competing industries to pick the aviation aby apart, suggest a new diet and mode of living, ith no punches pulled. For aviation leaders believe that constructive eriticism will prove of tremendous value during the present climactic period in this particular phase of its growth,

Some Ears Likely to Burn

COL. ROBERT 8. HENRY of the Association of American Railroads, Washington, D. C., is to wield the railroad-scalpel during the clinical operation. What Col. Henry is going to say has not been revealed but, if he remains tuned to the recent rail« road advertising on railroads versus airlines, the ears of airline representatives are likely to burn until they have: their chance to kick back.

My Day

HYDE PARK, Sunday.—Not far from the houses" of parliament, in the little square near where the United Nations met in London, I used to watch people stop and bare their heads before the statue of Abraham Lincoln, A few days ago I saw in the newspapers that a bill was introduced in parliament to erect a statue in London in memory of my husband. It will be in Grosvenor Square, I believe, around which were the buildings where most of the United States officials and officers were housed during the, war. There the work was carried on-which helped the British to withstand the onslaught of the German forces. I hope the people of this country will always remember that without the strength and cour-

age of the British people, led by their prime minister, /

Winston Churchill, we might easily have seen fighting in our own land.

Indorsed by Churchill .

THE COSTS of this statue dre to be defrayed by’ small popular subscriptions throughout the United ingdom. But the bill to permit its erection was rought in by the labor government and warmly ndorsed by the leader of the conservative opposition

party, Mr. Churchill. The speech. he made was beau-

tifuil and expressed his genuine affection and feeling. Between my husband and Mr, Churchill, T am sure, there grew up, during the years of the war, a very deep personal affection.. In. spite of any differences in tactics.or objectives which might have developed between their general staffs or themselves, a loyalty and respect existed which made their difigrences easier to reconcile, ~~ .

“families out of the; tents in which they had lived ‘for ‘years, and to make relief a very different thing’ from |

heartfelt gratitude.

SHE SAID that when she'd given you a slipso-

dipso treatment se you would appreciate her suffer- | up this medico, If he was tattle-tale gray, she said, N&: she would let you take her dirty dishes down to|into America's

«fonstitution ave. and wash same in your soothing soap. ’ Her only Worry, Doc, is your bathless Indian. Keep him away from her dishes. She's not concerned about his dropping the plates. You know what she's worrying about, Doe. She says federal officials may enjoy associating with Chief Dirty Neck. ‘She says you can have him as a house guest. She doesn’t want him. ‘She wan soap. Not soft soap from government spokesmen, Doc, but stuff that makes lather. on the dish rag.

« 4»

By Max B. Cook

THe clinic sessions are being held in the chamber of the house of representatives in the state capitol, with Movies Robert Kerr giving the. opening

address. L, Welch Pogue, president of the National Aeronautical association, will preside. :

It is aviation's most important annual ‘meeting, | 1

as it comprises the “grass roots” of the industry, with every phage represented from private filers, big and small airports, airlines, light and heavy plane and instrument industries, official Washington, state aviation representatives and others. Colleges, aircraft training schools and flying farmers also aré among the delegates. yor } In the past, aviation has performed its operations ‘pon itself. Most of them were minor. This year,

with’ criticism pouring in from persons in alt walks of life, olinic heads decided that outside “surgeons” should be called in: for consultation. expected to be a “major éperation.” The case of the civil aeronautics board and its

The result is

handiffig of airline ro ported by James Lait , The airlines’ def present-day airline

and airports will be supCAB chairman,

dnditions—will ‘be delivered tok, executive vice president, Air

© The aviation bh With 168" adrline-appendix kick ing yp, 18 really in {OF a proper “going-over” this week in* Oklahoma CRY" 5 : .

By. Eleanpr Roosevelt ’ RY > ; SR ‘ ey R : * ‘Both of thn Knew,’ 1 think, that ‘fundamentally their. phifesople$ of | ment if peacetime were very different. I.can remember Mr. Churchill onde, in

the migsy of "§ ‘discuss, tyrning to me and. saying:

“Your family and mine: ould be the first to be shot if there shotild. ever bé&"& revolution.”

Helged thé Miners: 3 TANSWERER. {hal I hoped that would neyer’ be : “Ly rerfember returning in-1938 from Bei, Virginia, where I feiti-condi-tions were at such™& point that it needed’tily a feader for revolufion to break out. : , 1 told my husband and, before the cold, winter came, something was done to get miners and their

what it had been. It may be that these years of responsibility during a depression had helped to strengthen in my husband a different kind of peacetime phjlosophy from that which could be expected of a man who was at orice a little older and who lived in a land of tradition far more firmly established and more difficult to changé than ours. | All British people love their country dearly. We may not like some of their policies: in fact, we may differ profoundly. But we must admire their admirable qualities. When, therefore, they do homage fo one of our citizens, we accept it dwith deep and

tions the FPC's investigation sought to answer. It was the first big-scale probe power . resources |made for the immediate purpose of | supervising an industry and guiding 2 trend. The industry is the gas industry and the trend is the replacement of coal as basic fuel by natura] gas. » » » UP TO THE beginning of the investigation in 1944, Texas gas had |

{shot up through and beyond the! [Midwest into the fringes of the] East, It cut a wide swath through Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, and Michigan. How much farther it fs to go is

in the hands of the federal power

commissioners, who are now assess- 200 vears

ing the results of their investigation, i Involved in their decision ate approximately 100,000.000 Americans |who are now served, or can {served, by natural gas for myri

ee to making steel. futures of industrial cities: Indian-

phia, New York, Boston. The commission's decision

is authorized. It will directly affect |

the future of the. eastern coke industry’s merchant gas and coke |

tons of coke production capacity, 8 » =

AT STAKE on one hand is the

the conservation of resources. directly, the commission's decision | will affect. the speed with which

\ 1 - a 1m os § id SE TRIAN

Per Ne Fo Neen ALABAMA} GLORGIA '

FLORID

The nation’s network of natural gas pipelines. In the last 20 years, these have pushed steadily eastward from the vast natural gas reservoirs of midcontinental United States. The natural gas industry is now poised for an invasion of the Eastern coal market.

illuminate American cities and run lel

industrial miachinery.

And in the long run, the decision | cago. may have the effect of tightening wrought irdn pipe hooked together 3, the grip of government over the|with screwed couplings.

THE EARLIEST authentic record Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky. be of natural gas-in commercial use Ohio cities still get their gas from An enterpriser in the Appalachian reserves, purposes ranging from making cof- Fredonia, N. Y., dug a 27-foot well| But these reserves form only a land transmitted gas through log|fraction of the newer pools discovInvolved also are the economic pipes to the Fredonia general store.| ered in the last 40 years in mid-

ad|is June 4, 1825.

ination's sources of power, . support ‘the huge population of the/der an Indiana, | ypjted States, and make possible a|pounds per square inch. This was|the wells. | potential standard of living higher | the than anywhere else,

which

»

8-inch lines

Gas was forced through them un- hic feet of gas and was transmitting 5.25 some of it as far as 300 miles from

initial

beginning of

In 1840, the farmers around Cen- | continental America. apolis,” St. Paul, Chicago, Philadel- | terville, Pa., harnessed gas, set 'it|

._» IN 1891, THE

|alight and produced enough heat Iola, Kas. will (to evaporate brine in the manufac- | squarely. affect Indianapolis which | ture -of salt. is now ‘seeking natural gas, but Civil war, the Fredonia Gas Light [serving which cannot get it until expansion |& Water Works was organized and | Missouri. the nafurdl gas industry was under | way.

” Indiana

Gas |

Natural flourished, In 1913, California gas was piped

In 1873, a gas well came in at! that discovery | arose the $104.000.000 Cities Service| At the end of the | Co.,

Out. of

Oklahoma,

: BY 1907, THE market for natural] Piping was started in 1872 on a|g&as was developing faster than the plant” and their 12,000,000 annual |fairly large scale at Titusville, Pa.|industry's ability to supply it. | By 1884, gas started to flow into the !tween 1910 and 1925, the big, mid-| |steel mills of Western Pennsylvania |continental gas systems of the and Eastern Ohio and 300 miles of | Oklahoma Natural, Gas Co, big . eastern market; on the other, | cast iron

Gas and Cities

pressure of

long-distance, | high-pressure transmission in duced

and its vast network -of lines| Kansas

120 miles from, Los Angeles, the beginning of gas (northern Indiana gas fields to Chi- on the West Coast. The lines were built of |

| |counter.

PAGE 13

We, the Wome : There's Lure And Lesson . In Clerk's Job :

By RUTH MILLETT IN AN EFFORT to lure het sewives out of the kitchen ano jsut them bghind counters, the U. 8. employment office in labor-short Salt Lake City reminded women that clerking ‘is the best way to get first-hand information on what merchandise is available in the stores. That ought to get them. Women love to be on the inside, and mo#t of them are weary of the daily chore of chasing from store to store trying to scare up scarce articles, » » » FURTHERMORE, a woman with the inside dope might be able now and then to tip off her friends on such vital information as that her store’ is going to put out sheets or . lard at such and such an hour. Being able to dd that certainly would give her social prestige. For the true friend today is the person who remeinbers .to call and say, “If you hurry and get down to so-and-so's, I think you can get some meat.” » » » ANOTHER advantage, of course, would be that after trying clerking for a while the housewife would soon see that shortages are as hard lon the man who owns a store and lon the clerks who have to keep saying “No” all day long as on the customer. That is something we housewives, trying to keep our families clothed and fed and finding it hard going

‘ ‘same days, dre likely to forget.

It is so easy to see only one side iof the shortage problem—if you look at it from just one side of the

How to Grow Your Own Criminals

A 16-year-old boy ho confessed a sex offense against an 83-year-old {woman and was told by Juvenile | Judge Mark W. Rhoads to “leave {the state” reappeared one week {later in Indianapolis. The youth, whose sentence to the Indiana Boys’: school: was Sus{pended on condition he would stay {with an uncle in Tlinois, told po=

t [that the uncle haa been informed

the boy was guilty of robbery.

When the uncle ldarned differently, he ordered the boy to leave. | Records in juvenile court show the youth was sentenced to I. B. S., with [no indication the sentence was {changed in private,

Gagged Elderly Woman

The boy's record: Jan. 23, 1946—State police brought

By 1935, the industry was serving|y,, youth to the county jail after 500,000 customers in 23 states, Was| i, yegtigation into the report of

selling nearly 2 billion thousand cu- |; elderly woman that she had

Then technological advances pro-long-distance

Natural gas began to flow nearly America. lines. Pipelines began to ago, but only in the last] Up until the 20th century, prac- across America. 40 years has the nation begun to tically all natural gas was taken au =» explpit it. lout of the Appalachian fields In. GAS WAS PIPED from the mid-

and Michigan. | By 1944 116 companies had an investment of $1,970,499,175 in nattural ghs and in transmission lines (which radiated 60,912 miles. Yet, this appears to be only a strong beginning. Demand for gas began backlogs {ging during the war and millions of dollars worth of new expansion

and plans were filed with the FPC by

Be- |

the pipeline had been laid in | Lone Star Gas Co., the Arkansas

In- the city of Pittsburgh. Service |

the industry anxious to cash in on |its widening market. In attempting -to/dssess the effect |of gas expansion on the nation, the FPC has directed a significant part of its investigation under the ground, How much natural gas is there and how long will it last if we Keep using more of it every year?

|

TOMORROW: The more gas we

atomic power plaits are built to'& Oil Company laid two paral-|150 niiles from Kern county ilo ue. the more we find.

By Palumbo ANDERSON POLICE

COMMITTEE CALLED [SILLY NOTIONS

ON AIR MAIL WEEK

Following a proclamation for suppart of Afr Mail week by Mayor | Tyndall, Postmaster Adolph Seiden- | sticker today scheduled a meeting! of his arrangements committee for | tomorow afternoon. The observance will be held Oct. 27 through Nov. 2 to popularize the |

{new Feduced airmail rate of five!

cents, “During the period, air mail | headquarters will be established at | 41 W. Washingtofr st, the former quartérs of L. Strauss and Co, Activities there will feature a talking | mail box, mail handling exhibits, | window displays, sidewalk inter-| views and information booth. The conimittees_ appointed by Mr. Seidemsticker include: Post office—Marion FP. Clarke, chair. Ra enon” he ttf? J

. amsfiton, Max Darmstandler, Russell Schultz, | lenn Moreillon, Luther Highie, Merle | 0.

QQ

Airlines—Don Campbell, American Airlines: Cafoll P. Burks and J, R, Chicago and Southern; R. V. ' World Airlines: D, H. Rudd, Jack Robertson and Glenn Forest, Eastern Airlines Chamber of Commerce—Newton Goudy Boy Scouts—Dongld Barnett Newspapers—Art Wright, Indianapolis Times: aul Janes, Indianapolis tar; Gene Dawson, Indianapolis News. Radio stations—Reid Chapmay,, WISH: | Frank Sharp, WFBM: WIRE, Sidney Mason, WIBC,

a

fr =

filam’ Dean, | iy.” - .

10-14

- SHOOT LOCAL MAN

Local detectives today were en route to Anderson to question an Indianapolis man shot by Anderson | police Saturday night when they | attempted to arrest him and three companions. OfMcers at Anderson said the | man, Stanley Kirkpatrick, 2229 N. | capitol ave, pulled a gun from [ his pocket and ran after they told him to get out of his car with his hands up. A bullet hit “Kirkpatrick, breaking

both ‘legs, police said. He was taken’ to St. John's hospital at Anderson, Arrested with Kirkpat-

rick were Robert Harris Jr, 2231 N. Capitol ave, and Preston Gernett, 120 W: 23d st. . A woman oc-

officers said. The arrests followed a tip from state police that four armed men had been seen in a car going toward Anderson.

HULL OUT OF DANGER

WASHINGTON, Oct.-14.—(U. P.). | =~Former Secretary of State Cordell

cupant of the auto escaped, the|Oize

been raped while walking along a county road. “I met an old lady,” the youth confessed later, “I had seen ner

transmission | pefore, but 1 did not know her crawl name. :

“I made up my mind I would hide in the bushes. I grabbed her from the back, put my hand over her

Western New York, Pennsylvania,)oontinent reserves into Minnesota, / mouth, and dragged her into the Illinois, Colorado, - Illinois, Indiana | bushes.

1 tied her scarf over ner mouth,” the statement continued. The boy was held under $2500 bond and sent to the City hospital psychiatric ward. « Feb. 19, 1946—Released from City hospital; taken to juvenile detention home. g March 5, 1946 — Sentenced to {I.B.S.,, released on condition he, would go to Illinois. :

Ordered to Leave ®

May 3, 1946—Sent to county jail by police, who found the, youth in a park here. Interviewed by police again, the boy said: “I went to my uncle's farm and stayed about one week, when I ran away and hitch-hiked back to Indianapolis. I spent one day and night at my home here and then returned to the farm.” He stayed about two weeks, he told police, when his uncle learned the boy was sentenced fer rape, not robbery. - The uncle said he had been told the boy was “in trouble for robbery when I permitted him to be brought to my home.” When the uncle learned the facts, he ordered the youth to leave. May 22, 19046 — Committed I1.B.S. May 23, 1946—Tranferred to the Plainfield institution.

to

BENNETT IS NAMED SPEAKERS CLUB HEAD

Ernest Bennett has béen elected president of the Indianapolis Speakers Club, Inc, and has announced that several changes in the club were pending. Other officers elected at the recent banquet meeting are Miss Magdalena Fred, vice president; Yvonne DeVeny, sergeant at arms; Jess Arnold, Mrs. Edna Burns, Miss | Kaiser and Richard MecWilliams, directors. Mrs. Carrie Rafferty is retiring president. Thomas Bemis, executive secretarytreasurer, was in charge of the program,

LIONS TO SEE GAME MOVIES

Members of 4he Lions club of In dianapelis” will. see colored movies -

Hull, who suffered a stroke two

| said today. He is at the Bethesda

| Md.z:naval hosiptal.

“ Tn

of the Illinois-Notre Dame football

weeks ago and was in critical condi-|game at their meeting Wednesday tion for several days, now is con- noon in the Claypool hotel. The | sidered out of danger, his physicians movies will be presented by B. B..

Holmes, president of the local Iltini Chul opr Rl

RL