Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 October 1946 — Page 15

lisite?.

for one, would ate of the two the other, "in 1 it, » citizen but, for some ond, Ind, dete. after having icken Wouldn't

2.20) |l@ Robbery; 2 Schools Entered

Indianapolis on d and departed to ‘believe.

treatise doesn't tion of Indianjation in other funny feeling nry Butler will thstanding his

way. For one very that the ing in 4d, 1, g, on the letters matter of fact, appear in the - | the disturbing it there is the tes of Indiana, or WAS ane. \apolis, too. To le and filter it of course, that: lisite. Well, he

napolitan after be elgvated to 00, Mr. Menoken

holdup.

MONDAY, OCT. 28, 1946

Crime ncronses Sharply |

THE INDIANAPOLIS 1 TIMES

ere As ( unmen Stage 8 Hol

eo

Bandit Critically Wounds Patron in Attempted Club:

Representatives of Times Speak at Meeting.

Crime increasedesharply here during the week-end as police sought bandits who ‘staged eight holdups and burglars who ransacked four business places and two public school buildings. One of the holdup victims, Daniel Mason, 28, 709 N. Senate ave. was in critical condition in ony hospital with a bullet wound in his abdomen. A bandit attempted to hold up the Manhatten club, 451 Indiana Ohio st., and No. 35 at 209 E. Rayave, early yesterday and when mond st. some patrons showed resistence, the | Lockers and desks were smashed gunman opened fire, the bullet open, doors were torn off their atriking Mr. Mason. Robert Cross, hinges and ink splattered over the 428 W. 31st st, was robbed of al/walls,. It was not determined if watch and $65, and Vanwert Mullin, any money was missing. 303 W. Vermont st, lost $20 in the, The Edison Body Shop, 1112 N. | Meridian st.,, was entered by burglars who drove away with a new automobile,

color printing in the nation's daily newspapers occupied today's sessions of the Great Lakes Newspaper Mechanical conference in the Claypool hotel. The 200 newspaper rep-

resentatives from Indiana, Ohio and Mighigan will end their three-day conference tomorrow afternoon. J. L. Donaldson, superintendent of The Indianapolis Times engraving department, was in charge of the session on photo-engraving. Another Times representatives, Louis D. Young, advertising director, told how The Times attained its reputation as the national leader in run-of-the-paper color. The three Indianapolis newspa-

Badly Cut “James Burrell, 430 N. West st, was badly cut about the face and| The" Charles McCahil Co.’ ’123 N. abdomen by a bandit who robbed |Pine st. was the scene of the burhim of $40 at West and Michigan | glary last night. The combination sts. early yesterday. was knocked off the safe ‘but it Fred Nichols, 526 N. Illinois st, wasn’t opened. | reported he was slugged by a ban-| Burglars took fountain pens, | pers were hosts at today’s luncheon. | dit who took $33 from him as he| cigarets, several cases of whisky | Walter Leckrone, editor of The was walking on Kentucky ave. near and automatic razors at the Haag| Times, was one of the speakers. Harding st. drug store, 2706 N. Meridian st,| The composing room session at 2 Another knife-wielding bandit |1ast night. p. m. had as its speaker, Victor robbed Joseph Brown, 2324's Win-| Yeggs took $50 from a safe in|Free, managing editor of The throp ave. of $9 as he was walking |the office of the Pennsylvania Coal| Times. A discussion of editorial deat Senate ave. and St. Clair st. last (co, 741 E. Washington st., last! partment and composing room op-

night. Mr. Brown was slightly cut | night. |eration was Mr. Frée's subject. A on the arms. Toy Pistol Bandit !clinic on mailing room operations at Took No Money | A slender, 'four-foot 10-inch ¢ P- m. had Harry M. Gibson, mail

bandit stepped out of a hedge in the superintendent of the Indianapolis

Claude Parker, 1731 Fletcher ave., ssue 0” id a bandit cut him on the arm 400 block on Division st, last night |Star a5 leader, The day's program

fied ensily, due ident Roosevelt n enlisting Rewon only after pposition, This final votes, as ple one or other se who covered

or the eongreser those up for vepublicans, but onal cogoperaar and related and s dicated in his bly. We would hat already has ears if there is o-operation in

st in the camrans are keenly us. One could it had lived he nt issue, raising

vy a sort of gents and" Repubissue. This was ed, for example, ator Arthur H. ames F. Byrnes

is co-operation, he Byrnes-Van-then go a step of wanting to the Wallace ininto their spiel | is riddled with

Peace

ar II is not only at-dog spirit in s intensified by ation. It stimuitionalism, more rid co-operative yr nations, while orm of wanting xt war.” 1g international course has been yf the past year erything else in ple—Communists pressed by the force and threat

method may be real, the Euroced by what he

-

» conference and for obstruction to break agreecharter pledges i cynicism. Her sto has occurred ler of course, cy and methods, { those methods » United Nations me's guess.

Dead

little worse than , of Harry Kemp. est that the law under false labels hin. lore than whisky casual confusion, faverly place is a entertainers still th social signifijerves as a front:

e law for a resiShirts are made is still the right to wear next to 11 ordinance bannim pants for the ers of unfettered > the pash

other way of life, \lity, once bizayre ¢ in the face of &

pparent to every-

bankers and the

'phys—are just as d as devoid of { the 30's. Move

30 million people,

ge now, and that gs in vaudeville.

a ——————————————

“ stitches.

ut took no money in a scuffle at and poked a gun in the back of Mrs. | Will end with a dinner in the Claythe B. and O. railroad crossing on Lulu Daniels, 402 Division st. { pool at 6:30 p. m. Ohig st. last night. | He demanded: “Give me your| Officers will be elected and the Mrs, Katie Moss, 1230 N. Senate purge!” 2 convention city selected at toave, reported that two bandits) - Mrs. Daniels said she thought the MOITOW'S afternoon meeting. The dragged her into an alley and|voice of the robber was that of a {morning session will deal with robbed her of a fur coat and $4|boy. She would not yield to the|Pressroom operation and a clinic on as she was walking in the 300 block, (order. | stereotype work will be held in the W. 14th st, last night. The bandit stepped in front of afternoon. Schools Ransacked hér. His face was masked with a Dale Maxwell, 1721 N. Delaware white handkerchief. He repeated st., reported that a bandit robbed his demand. BELLEFONTE, Pa., Oct. 28 (U. his filling station at 320 W. Mich-| Mrs. Daniels grabbed what she|P.).—Prederick Morris, chunky 24igan st., of $30 at the point of a gun | thought was a gun from the youth's year-old ex-stevedore of Chester, Jast night. (hand. He turned and fled up the Pa. was electrocuted early today in Burglars ransacked two public nearby railrodd tracks. | Rockview state prison for the brutal schools, No. 50 at Belle Vieu and’ The gun proved to be a toy pistol. | x slaying of Mrs. Rose Reynolds.

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COLOR PRINTING METHODS TOLD

Discussion of modern processes of |:

Wives of Ex-G. I's Fill Vital Jobs at Crowded I. U.

® 4

Mrs. William LeSuer, former

By VICTOR

Instead of becoming a problem,

administrative functions to a halt. The record-breaking enrollment flooded the switchboards with telephone calls, swamped the student health ‘service and jammed eating establishments. This is but a limited glimpse of the consternation which developed. Then the G. I, wives stepped in. Many, even some with children, wanted to work to supplement the family income or to help pass the time while the husbands hit the books.

“Saved Our Skin” They descended upon the university employment office and Paul Hartley, personnel division director. “Without these G. I. wives we never could have filled our vacancies,” he said. “We would have been swamped. I don't know how we could have seen our way clear to handle the tremendous additional work stemming from the huge registration. “Frankly, they saved our skin. There just isn't a large enough labor market in this area upon which we could have drawn. “Today we employ 175 of these women full time and some 60 on a part-time basis. About 75 per cent of an estimated 1000 wives have indicated a willingness to work. | Some 40 per cent actually are em- | ployed,” Mr. Hartley said. Snap Up Positions

“Naturally we couldn't hire every

Women Supplement Family Income as Husbands Study

Wives of former G. L's are everywhere on the Indiana university campus filling in on vital jobs created by the record enrollment. Here Mrs. Dorothy L. Raber, assistant in the production of food for the Union building (right, rear) supervises kitchen work. Also shown are (left to right) Mrs. Agnes Godsey, Mrs. Faye Baxter and Mrs, Margaret Query (foreground). \

medical technician instructor at | Northwestern university, assists Dr. T. M. Sonneborn, zoology department, as a laboratory research technician,

PETERSON

Times Staff Writer BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Oct. 28.—It is fortunate that many student

veterans on the Indiana university campus are married. tunate that most of them brought their wives along when they enrolled.

It is more for-

these wives today are credited with

saving the university from a bogdown which might have ground many

created mountains of clerical work,

no more positions, We referred the others to the U. 8. employment service in town, and it has placed about 200 of them.

“For the first time since 1941, I {don’t believe there is a single secretarial opening in Bloomington,” he said. Among the applicants the university found women to fit nearly any type of job that was open. Clerical, secretarial and general office positions were snapped up. But there also were highly-trained specialists perfectly capable of accepting some of the other openings. Today, for example, the assistant in the production of food in the Union building is Mrs, Dorothy L. Raber whose husband is a graduate student. Manage Book Store It is Mrs. Raber's duty to estimate the number of daily customers, plan the meals and order the correct amount prepared. This is no play-time job for an average of 8000 customers are served daily. Mrs. Raber is a graduate of Purdue university and at one time was | personnel dietitian at the Indiana university medical center. Some of the other positions are | Altea by equally well trained perisons. Among the posts held are those of the student personnel secretary in charge of hiring enrollees

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CRANE DYNAMITING | Amputee’s New BLAMED ON UNION Carls Suen

ORK, Oct. 28 (U. P).~A ., Oct. 28 (U. P.), —| * a Er Ie DR last | SPecially equipped “Amputee: aia ai np rr of a i000 OWohile long: awaited hy'.a vets g | : : eran who lost his r steam shovel blamed “labor trouble” ight leg in ac-

| tion” in Europe, was delivered {Tor its intentional dynamiting. | the ET Ion mn. ©

{ Sheriff Mansfield quoted William day. | Clays, Bloomfield, Ind, as saying Yesterday, the veteran, Walter representatives of the A. F, of L.| Floch, reported that. the car was | Union of Operating Engineers had! stolen while parked for an hour in ‘contacted him “frequently” about | front of a Washington Heights having his operator join the union. | apartment building. Mr. Clays identified O. B. Sousa of Terre Haute, Ind, as president heard for 15 miles and broke seve of the local which contacted him. A eral windows in nearby homes. The shovel, of the dragline type, Mr, Clays told Sheriff Mansfield was dynamited Friday night. It|there was no possibility that the was being used in the dredging of explosion bad been left in the a marsh ditch. The explosion was| shovel by its crew,

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business experience lost while they were in service. So until the husbands once again are the breadwinners, the wives are “bringing home the bacon.” |

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