Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1946 — Page 8

_published daily (except Sunday) by J 4 [Publishing Co., 214 W.- Maryland United Press, Scripps-Howard NewsNEA Service, and Audit Bureau of

Price In Marion County, § cents a copy; deliv‘ered by catrier, 20 cents a week. G2

iy rates in Indjana, $5 a year; all other states, 8. Canada and Mexico, 87 cénts a month. " mm wT PAE b! w Vala RI-5651. nm Gio IAGME and the People Wil Pind Their Own Way (CLEAN-UP of Marion county and.co-operation with other

of

s

e pledged by Lewis John-

a |

|

¥ -

IT'S OUR BUSINESS . . . by Doneld D. Hoover ~~ per Selects Candidates

-

How a Newspa

_IT IS INTERESTING . . . and significant . . . to

ted . ? “ _| watch the inner workings of an independent news-

| People Will

publican

| paper as. it, prepares to make recommendations. to | its readers on candidates in an. election. és readers would - like to look behind the scenes nd léarn how this newspaper arrived at the inddrsements which will be

As a case in point, I believe

e Monday, the day be-

HAVING. NO OBLIGATIONS to either the Resf Democratic party, mor to any factions or al candidates . . . and no ambition to “run” part of the community . o . The Times places phasis on the candidate If and his qualifica-

| tions. That is consideration Number One.

No consideration is given to political affiliation in

the discussions, on the theory that party responsibil-

! Jaw enforcement agencies ;

gon, Democratic candidate for sheriff,

The Times has indorSed-Mr. Johnson, on his record

the basis of

during 29°years as a police officer, over his Re- | - publican opponent, Albert C. Magenheimer.

\:

heimer was tamed sheriff by the board of county commissionerssfollowing the death of Sheriff Otto L. Petit, whose administration we opposed and whose force of deputies - Mr, Magenheimer retained. t Va Mr. Johnson charges that gambling and lawlessness are thriving in Marion county through a system of “colJectors and front men” and promises this will be stopped if he is elected. He asserts that. this system exists under the political “permission” of Henry E. Ostrom, G. O. P. county chairman. Mr. Ostrom has not commented on this charge. “There will be no ‘boss’ with his thumb on me,” Mr. Johnson said in one of his speeches. ; : ~ + We believe him,

pe 4 » ” ANOTHER criticism which he malkes—and a well-founded our opinion—is of the lack of - co-operation |

one in among law enforcement agencies. Mr. Johnson says on that point: 1 “Good law enforcement is contingent upon fullest co-,

operation: of the sheriff, prosecuting attorney, criminal court judge, chief of police and judge of juvenile court.” That co-operation does not riow exist. We have recommended election of Judge Judson L.

a

Hoosier Forum

say, but |

"| do not agree with a word that you

your right to say it." — Voltaire.

& A. > he

ry rt

will defend to the death

Stark, Republican candidate for prosecuting attorney, on the basis of his record of performance. And we have recommended defeat of the Republican candidates for sheriff, criminal court judge and judge of juvenile court on the same basis. : : With Judge Stark and Mr. Johnson in office, along with Jacob L. Steinmetz as criminal court judge and Joseph O. l Hoffmann as juvenile court judge, we believe the law enforcement picture in this county would be considerably

ighter. : beigter. reasons we indorse Mr. Johnson are to be easily found in his record. He has walked a beat as a patrolman, been a sergeant, lieutenant, captain, major, deputy inspector and assistant chief of police. When on the police emergency squad, he handled a large number of murder cases, and never lost a one which he investigated. * While he was captain of traffic, Indianapolis won the national contest for greatest reduction in traffic fatalities in the five-year period 1985-39. During the latter year, the lowest city fatality record since records first were kept was established, and it has not been beaten or equalled since. While “Cap” Johnson was ‘major of police, he person- _ ally raised the money from local businessmen to install the police radio, which he operated for its first 18 months. In other words, Mr. Johnson knows law enforcement from all its angles, and knows how politics can reduce its efficiency. : ; - 8 » y » » » HERE is no chance of his election unless hundreds of Republican voters cross party lines.and independent voters in large numbers come to his support. : We believe a vote for Stark and Johnson, Steinmetz and Hoffmann, is a vote for non-political law enforcement in Marion county. 2

THE NOBEL PRIZE : JNDIANA UNIVERSITY is awaiting the return of Prof.

Heérman J. Muller, distinguished member of its faculty, to honor him for winning the Nobel prize.

award for his discovery of the production of mutations by X-rays. . ~ Working on the faculties of universities and colleges in thé state are a number of “starred” scientists of éminence. However, Prof. Muller is Hoosierdom’s first winner of ‘a Nobel award. 3 Prof. Muller joined the Indiana faculty a year ago as a member of what has become known as the outstanding group of geneticists in the United States.

HAPPY HOOLIGAN HENRY : ECAUSE he ran a tremendous international issue into domestic politics, Woodrow Wilson shattered the ideal of the United States’ participation in the League of Nations he himself had conceived. ir President Truman wisely has benefited from Wilson's ‘mistake. To his everlasting credit he has held the bipartisan line, the Byrnes-Connally-Vandenberg line. But Henry Wallace, in a speech at Minneapolis, tried : to toss the international issue into the present political campaign, He accused Senator Vanderberg of “needling”

he doesn’t require proof.

among our international triumvirate.

id ‘not mentioned by Wallace, is very dry behind the ears. I. 8. WON'T BANK UN

Ld 4A

%;

if the total cost of operating the UN.

hould adopt our economic system.

"

abundant manpower, and with tr ca now finds the shelves and cupboards bare. And why Government statistics showed great

Dr. Muller was named Thursday as recipient of the!

By Norman Gle

* America, the land of abundance in natural wealth, with great dustrial enterprises, unequaled farm lands, productive genius, ansportation supreme, this great Amerishould this be so?

Quite a puzzling paradox.

"Revert to Law of Supply and Demand; Abolish Subsidy, Ceiling"

nit, Gem City

industrial production—but no goods on the market. bumper crops of mest things, of work available, but many not working, on strike or

but foods were scarce.

inand

Farms showed

A great amourit |

otherwise.

So the workers wouldn't work, the manufacturers wouldn't put out,

This was the basic cause of “the

portunists. In this triple squeeze] play by manufacturers, farmers and|

In spite of the

and the farmers wouldn't sell—unless there was that dollar “incentive.” it was the great American squeeze play—but after all truly American, for in this land, born and raised on lelssez faire, who was to tell anyone anywhere they could not do anything? >

failure of OPA, a fact now taken| guard, the concentration camp advantage of by political party op-|guards, the notorious S.8., and the Gestapo.

impossibility of

union labor, John Q. Public has had | executing ‘everyone who was directly responsible for the deaths of

to come through and pay the bill. |

limit. the bill. Now, let's be fair. If in a few, years when prices take that inevitable tumble, will this same farmer be yelling for John Q. to pay him a farm subsidy? “If we do go to the! law of supply and demand as he] insists, why not go all the way and abolish both price ceilings and price subsidies. If our government must not act to keep prices down for benefit of consumer, why should government tax consumer to hold

up prices? » " »

“PUT MR. TAFT IN GERMAN DP CAMP”

By Edgar E. Hamer, Indiamapolis One hour and 16 minutes, That's

all it took to wipe out of existéhice| the 10 disciples of Hitler. One hour and 16 minutes of time to justify

the eternal suffering wrought by those ‘whose ultimate aim was to enslave the world. How ironic it is to execute 10 inhuman beasts and

Secretary Byrnes into risking war with Russia, He presents no proof. But being a well-known crystal-gazer he thinks

His objective obviously is to start a political fight | Should he succeed | fully he would bring ‘about a repetition of what happened | in Wilson's time. But he will not, for neither Byrnes nor | Vandenberg will fall for the trick, and Connally, though

! give a hand to Senator Vandenberg for standing up in the financial committee of the United Nations assemdeclining the flattering proposal that this country

the senator says, if it be true that the 5 per cent orld’s population residing in this country possess ‘gent of the world’s earning capacity, then other |

how little other countries think of our free-

society uritil they get around to_the up the check. Another tenet of

Lo

‘then ¢laim that justice has been done. Yet, roaming the streets of a desolate Germany today are many of the fanatics who actually did the plundering, raping, burnihg and

Let us survey food prices. Why untold millions who fell beneath should butter sell at $1 per pound,the victor's ax, our dear Senator lard at 65c, oleo at 45c and meat Taft raises his voice above the inat fantastic prices? Was there a describable joy of the hundreds of shortage? Yes, but it was artificial. | thousands of Europe's oppressed Not many years ago this farmer who heard of the executions and was pleading for farm subsidies pours forth a “legalistic” concept against low prices and John Q. Was of , American jurisprudence. His taxed to pay that bill, .Now in un- theory of the ex post facto prinprecedented farm prosperity and ciple brands the Nuernberg prosDSH Drices SE ne ta as illegal. Put Mr. Taft “n > ’¢!a D.P. camp and let him expound controls so that prices may go the ys a descantations re And so John Q. again Pays who have suffered and will continue

to suffer eternally and I will as-

to shreds.

would care to mak » n

By Reader,

You have

as possible.

murdering — Hitler's famed elite

“NUT IN INSANE COULD DO BETTER” Crawfordsville Just read your article about private enterprise being on trial and will say a nut in an ingane asylum could do better. It sounded like old hen Roosevelt saying our way of life is on trial, which is a damn big lie as big as yours, Of course, “Jumped around sou

sure you that they would tear him You see, Mr. Taft, the proceedings actually were contrary to our Constitution. However, only those whose minds are warped

e an issue of it.

» ASYLUM

ch you are di¥zy and don't know the score anyway. You never did and never will, for it's not in you.. The only thing you ever had in The Times that amounted to anything was Pegler and since he had brains enough to know what he was talking about you ditched him, Your policy seems to be as little brains My Day and Stokes, eto, show what you want, and then your editorials are rotten as yourself, ry

“EXPELLING UNION MEMBER IS WRONG” By John Alvah Dilworth, 816% Broadway After reading the con and pro arguments about the C, I. O. in The

Times I believe that. expelling members from a union or jailing members or union leaders for contempt cannot be guarariteed to bring peace within a union or bring about resumption of gn economic or vital {public service. It is more likely to convince them that they are the victims of arbitrary action, court and union made laws. The servicemen, newspapers and citizens who uphold the full thirtythree freedoms guaranteed in the Bill of Rights and Constitution— not select those which they will uphold and. throw the rest out of the window—are tough. It is not ignorance that makes the latter mentioned smisquote and misconstrue the Bible, Bill of Rights, Constitution, Shakespeare, etc. They think their way of doing or saying it is better. Mein Kempf. Voltaire said: “I do not agree with a word that you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” Thomas Jefferson, the man with many talents and the first President to be inaugurated in the city of Washington, said: “When the press is free and every man able to read, all is safe.” When there is no freedom of expression there is no certainty of any .other freedom. Christ, our Redeemer, who drove the money changers out of the temple with a whip, was tough. Was he not tough because he was right? If people.are right in their policy of defending the freedom of thought, whether by tongue or the right to express facts and the truth in the newspapers, speech and free press—voice of freedom, guardian of liberty—the question of expelling a union member for so doing is wrong. » n ” “SOMEONE MIGHT WANT TO PULL MY WHISKERS” By Grandpappy, Indianapolis No one hollers so loud when his toes are tramped on as the fellow who-has-corns. .No.one likes to retaliate so quickly as the fellow who is wrong. I'd rather read the writings of a “Voice in the Crowd” or “A Citizen” who say something, than to read .the. babblings of “will U. 'Rattel-Brains.” When someone starts. talking like the socalled greatest President did awhile back—*“Ill show you who is your master”—it is just a matter of self-protection to hide behind something. It's a shame that it is not as safe at present to speak the

Carnival —By Dick T

urner

1

COPR. 1946 0) [RYIC

you're -entitied to your

i pl

truth as speak falsely. Union labor is wielding a sharp instrument these days, and since they don't seem to care who they hurt, it's just the part of wisdom to keep out of ‘the way if possible. They seem to_be anxious to bring forth a condition in this country, something similar to what gur boys had to go over to Germany to stop; but who will be kind enough to shed their bléod to finish our Hitler, if we produce one. Unions are always » right. Anyone opposing them is bound to be wrong. I

union father-in-law, and had to support his family while he danced to union fiddling. This has happened before. Everytime prunejuiced consumers are losing-the day in the battle of wits in the Hoosier Forum, they start calling for names,

taking the ‘paper,

might want to pull my whiskers,

DAILY THOUGHT Six days shall work be done;

bath of rest,"an holy convocation; ve shall do no work therein; it is the sabbath of the Lord in all

ia A

Gr ; on oEbTaan err J ’ on t- 4 € J am a feet how

your dwellings. —Leviticus, 23:3. TAKE rest; a field that has

o

IN WASHINGTON . . . By Daniel M. Kidney Hoosier Got Wallace Peace Formula

ought to know for I married a}

When the editor refuses to comply, then they threaten to stop Kiddish, but they can't help it. Sugar is no less sweet to the fellow who happens to not know its, name. Just to show that I am old enough to know how -to spout off, I'll sign my name. Thanks, Mr, Editor, for allowing me to clothe in anonymity; someone

but the seventh day is the sab- .

rest-

{ity really is rarely involved, except in the U, 8. gen~

ate race. In that instance, the newspaper's opposition to basic Democratic national policies was the primary consideration. It may be argued that the same position should be taken on the congressional | candidates, but those involved in the decision to | support the incumbent were unanimous in believing

that even this factor was overweighed by the weakness of his opponent.

When indorsements are made in this manner, it is

obvious that The Times is indorsing some losers. However, thé philosophy behind indorsements may be found in the Scripps-Howard motto: “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way.” “At times, it seems that the word “eventually” ‘should be added when’ it comes" to politics. would rather indorse a competent loser than an incompetent winner.

However, this newspaper

Eventually, enough voters may cast their ballots as independents to improve the caliber of men in

DEAR BOSS: DID YOU KNOW that Henry A. Wallace went on

Jecord for the Molotov disarmament program more

than a week before the Russian foreign minister made his UN speech? : Well, he did so and in writing to a humble Hoosier pacifist who paid his own way to attend UN and come hefé "and talk to Wallace. Here is the story that never before has been told.

Views Similar to Molotov's CHARLES C. ROHRER, North Manchester, Ind, one of the leaders of the Church of the Brethren there, went to New York to try and interest the Russian UN delegation in disarmament. He was well received at the palatial former J. P. Morgan estate where the U. S. S. R. top brass is ensconced, but he didn't get to see Molotov. So he left a copy of the Brethren service committee’s plea for world disarmament and perpetual peace, attended one session of UN and came here to talk to Wallace. It was just before the ousted secretary of commerce took off for the West Coast in his whirlwind campaign tour which winds up in New York. ‘He got to see Wallace in the family apartment at the Wardman-Park hotel. They talked peace and all at once Wallace reached for a paper. It was the kind of plue-ruled paper on which school children write exams. On it the one-time vice president wrote the following: “The time has come to work definitely and specially on carrying out article eight of the Atlantic charter providing for disarmament of all ‘the nations and the abandonment of farce in the making of international policy.” ,

THE -NATIONAL ROAD came into being as poised to shift, in a big way, across the seacoast on

America was Appalachian mountains from & nNAITOW the rim of the nation to the wide-sweeping plain in the heart of one of the world’s five great continents. Just now and then in the history of mankind

has there come a moment like that. So thisvroad, America’s first great national road,

became a rolling melting pot of the nation.

Westward Parade } ON’ IT MINGLED the rich, the well-to-do, and the poor. They were rolling west to roam, to squat, or to stick. Some of them were

rob, or murder, as some did. They moved over this

big road wagons piled high with implements. Trailing along were horses,

poor—they all, by turns, help the procession move along ‘on its way.

the variegated stream of humanity

example, with paneled beds, high front and rear

Dewey Majority

paign nears its end.

next Tuesday

nomination,

Outcome Affects President Race HIS RE-ELECTION 18 accepted conclusion. of itself, by only

nomination.” But much more making. ‘They are talking of & into ‘a majority of 500,000 be quite a feat for a Republican here. Any such victory in this convention and electoral vote behalf of the still young governor vention despite precedent that the. renominated a candidate defeated foy

break tradition, given a landslide.’ He broke

natorial candidate after being once , right on to victory in his second attempt. He seems to have a

President Roosevelt in 1944, he out for 1948. But seemingly

sidered none. too pright. to be riding high. th

‘That was: the reaction that the Truman administration, here as everywhere gse. .

led gives a bountiful crop —Ov

on TEN « it) .

AA

-

EA

| -At the same. time, he was

w hg

educated, wise and ambitious. Some, too, if chance favored, would steal,

highway in equipment as varied as talents and -ambitions. Families came in household goods and cattle, sheep, and hogs. Men and women, boys and girls, fich ‘and grabbed the opportunity to

With a knowing eye, you could spot the sources of as it rolled by on

this road. There were the Pennsylvania wagons, for

NEW YORK, Nov. 1.—Thomas E. Dewey is run-

But his‘ race against Demooratic Senator James Mead has gathered far more significance as the cam~

To many people outside this state, including highplaced party leaders, as well as many in this state, election “will be interpreted in terms of the contest for the 1948 Republican presidential

as a foregone Democrats concede it privately. That a comfortable majority, would ‘put him in the forefront of contenders for the 1048 than that seems in the triumph that may roll to a million—which would

key state, with its big will speak loudly on at the 1948 conparty never hai the presidency.

He will be in the best pessible position to try to a long~

standing tradition by winning renomination as guberdefeated, and went

lucky star. After defeat by generally was counted undismayed, he went back quietly to his governor's job. A year or more

ago his chances for re-election as governor were conThe Democrats still seemed

But here he is again. He got a fortunate break. began to ‘set in against end now is at high tide,

public office . . , and The Times will keep plugging away, fighting for losers miany times, in its attempt to Hasten that Utopian day. 2 Enough of this philosophizing. What are the mechanics? Well, here's the way it works. :

department editors. ; : i reporters are in the office early in the morn-.

* “Hey,” calls the city editor, “meeting on candidates in the boss's office at three this afternoon. Politics, city hall, statehouse, courthouse men be ere” ° : : And at 3 p: m. the long meeting begins. Bach candidate is discussed in detail , . . his record, in and out of office, his independence of political domination

or lack of that.independence, his personal habits . . .

all those things a reporter learns in his day-by-day. contact with these men. When discussign is complete, the editor asks each ‘man: “Well, what do yoi say?”

Final Decision 3 WHEN EACH HAS EXPRESSED his opinion . . . and argued about it if there is a difference in. the group , .°‘. The Times indorsement for that office is made. - ~ There are relatively few visitors to the office to try to “pressure” indorsement of candidates , . . because politicians know The Times doesn't react to that approach. Indorsements are made in the editor's office, after full discussion and on merit alone . ., The Times accepts no one’s slaté blindly. “And it has no candidates of its own, . . feeling public office is the gift of the people, not the press. Perhaps, eventually, the people will awaken to the responsibility of the ballot . . . give careful scrutiny to qualifications before they give their indopsements at the polls. Perhaps.

oe

Then he signed his name—H. A. Wallace—in his ‘ customary back-slant style. . Needless to say Mr. Rohrer was highly pleased. He brought the copy in to show me. But I would have taken his word for it. Because Mr. Raohrer. is one of those “literal Christians.” He doesn’t tell les. And he went overseas for UNRRA and brought whole herds pf cattle to the bombed out Belgian and Polish farmers. The herds were donated by his church. They don’t believe in fighting, but they do believe in binding up the wounds, he said. But getting back to Wallace and the coincident of his anticipating the Molotov speech. Points of the UN speech were almost what Wallace had written for Mr. Rohrer, except that Molotov recommended disarmament based on article eleven of the UN charter, rather than on the Atlantic charter as proposed by Wallace. Mr. Rohrer was pleased to have farmer Senator Warren Austin, the U.- S.-UN representative, also advance disarmament ideas. He doesn't care whether its on the Atlantic or UN charters, but he believes the choice now lies between ending wars or ending mankind. : The non-shooting war now is between the “peace people who oppose the political people who expect to try again to play power politics,” Mr. Rohrer sald.

Republican Congressional Control AND SPEAKING of non-shooting wars, maybe you would like to know how I cast my final vote in the Newsweek poll in Tuesday's election. Here is what I predicted: : Republicans will win both the house and the senate and the 80th congress lineup will be—house Republicans; 232: Democrats, 202 plus Marcantonio; senate Republicans, 50, ané Democrats, 46. Of course I could be wrong. In fact I often have been. DAN KIDNEY?

SAGA OF INDIANA . . . By William A. Marlow State Grew With the National Road

drawn oftentimes by four or even six horses, matched in size and color. But from the south, especially from the Carolinas, the horses were small and bony. The w s, too, were small, many of them only carts. ey were made entirely of wood—no nails, no tires, not a touch of metal of any kind. Some families; grim and poor, moved along with this throng, earrying everything in the world they owned on their backs, or in a small hand-wagon which. they were pushing from a humble southern home, For the folks who lived along-this road, this daily moving throng that throbbed by on this highway was a never-ending sight and thrill. To them it was the moving picture of their day. As you could look behind the curtain, it had "all the tragedy and comedy; all the hope and heartbreak: all the vile and low that only a Shakespeare could well portray.

State on Receiving End INDIANA was at the receiving end of this long procession. Much of it disbanded in Indiana. As it fanned out over the state, -it-gave. color and punch to the Indiana scene. It undeniably added mueh to the biting flavor and tangy touch of Hoosier folks. However much or little the National road helped to make Indiana and Indianapolis the crossroads of the nation, it brought a lot of good Hoosiers and some. of the great ones to the state. - ;

‘POLITICAL REPORT . . . By Thomas L. Stokes

500,000 to Million?

He has behind him his excellent record as governor. He is an able administrator, shrewd politically. He kept at his job. His foresight suddenly was revealed

suspension of OPA.

for a time with temporary its own rent control law

state was prepared with

emergency came.

the books here. This law, lature by Irving M. Ives, the senate against Herbert this state and city with its minorities whom it is designed fo

discriniination in jobs. It was natural, when

and the state rent control law.

comparison of his administration with

Washington.” ; He has been running

more bearing on national politics.

In Strategic Position r WHAT POSITION GOVERNOR DEWEY takes be

‘tween now

might well become, along Governor Earl Warren of California, fluence on behalf’ of sive element of the guard group.

old He much on his party's course.

: The éditor sets a time for a meeting to discuss | “qualifications of candidate . . . informs the various

: shoud be in a fine strategic position bo: emert

oh

i SRS

glia

ETT en A

ib

SSR

== 4

ic

oi

—-

I

to the country when national rent control went out |

which he had put through the legislature months before, the only state statute in the nation when the

While Republicahs and Democrats-fiiddled around | in Washington. over a federal fair employment prac tices act, without action, Governor Dewey put one on. . co-sponsored in the legis- | Republican candidate for | Lehman, is important 4n | large racial and religious | protect against

Governor Dewey came into this city this” week-end to wind up-his campaign. that . he should emphasize this anti-discrimination measure If you wanted to read significance as to his national aspirations into | his speeches here, you could find them in his repeated “the confusion

and incompetence of the present administration in

largely against President Truman in his campaign. But his comparison of his administration with that of President Truman has

8

and 1048 among the conflicting’ elements within his own party will be closely watched. He x with Harold "Stassen and | a potent inthe younger and more progresparty against the Taft-Bricker &

MANY Emma Gen Carlton Hall and Mrs. Ge for Miss Tuc by Mrs. Wil Mrs. Ward tained recently of Mrs. Wohlg her cousin at a eon will be gi Hamerstadt an Miss Tuck: party to be giv Albright and 1 the Albright h party to be gi Barksdale Bro Brown will be » Mrs. Milto: Miss Tucker } Patten, Walter the following Earl W. Kiger the Indianapol luncheon to 5245 Broadway Mrs. Jame the Propylaeu daughter, Mrs. Nov. 18. A bu Evans and Mr: Or. Nov. 2 on Millersville

Peterson-Da THE ENG. ald C. Daniels and Mrs. J. D Mrs. B. R. Da early spring. Miss Peter of Delta Gen Columbia univ Mr. Daniel Sigma Chi fraf now is alumni

= Mr. and their daughter will be Dec. 7 is ‘a graduate Gamma sorori the University Chi fraternity. (retired), and | » Announcen and Ernest S. | Mr. and ‘Mrs. J Leiser of Indi: reporters for “ is a civilian rej the couple wi Falkner Schoo graduate of the the Chicago Hi Guild Plans INVITATI the anniversar: Nov. 30 at the be discussed w Joseph Breeze assisted by Me Burchard Carr Mrs, Kenn the guild part 10:30 a. m., N« day will be Mr guild president vice chairman the guild's ‘nev

J Col. and NM Indianapolis 8 Murat theater, and Mrs. Dav Arthur Herrin subscribers fro concert include Harold Rozell Olivia Dunbec] Rozelle,

D. A, R, an MRS. RO! hostesses whe: at 2:30 p. m. I Robert A. Ada Colored slides

# Beta Beta a guest tea an university cha committee, anc ceeds from the ian home.

n The Indiar its monthly me huth. Assista Thomas F. O'F Musicale Pr THE IND active member: rium. The pr Mary Gottma Helkems,