Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1947 — Page 25

rom

you say, but | ?

——— d

liwaukee, Wis. the American our editorial of p,” with the re- ]

the American i he Constitution ny . the defense ose accused of government by

k the following olution lays for

1 it has beconie tional law that’ to shield those troy the same ely; and 0 be suppressed | ead, instead .of Ar and present

n best he safe1g them a part tates.” for judges and constitutional ~ defense’.” tion, they must es: of constituprosecutors ars les. Too often ret off because lled “clear and Supreme Court

-

is to crystallize h, where they or misapplied, he Constitution

&

Mm. ould hear was, thout a lot of ithout two pair dresses without re pretty short st as we were d, “Bang,” on the Gay 90's. younger days

d girl, 8 feet 7, ng nice and. in ut 5 feet and >, If you can, ion. nooks good in a b put some of les and see i

e these drastic . st a couple of st of the girls to have more y are married ore saving and

change to such I bought new ies, I wouldn't ) go over them. tyle dress and low the knees igton,” because ) know though, ‘ be dead than Me, I'd rather

but I do have

own on “Just Circle or you vhen you were

n answer but deeply if you 's and murders

mms

?

* 3 ster Cleorges | ning point of || Plan and all, i dent Truman his eountry’s aid. He will the German

ed disinclina« e on the part —which, like the Germans

—————————

re than ever was not even

insisted that v

United States # |

no air force. hat the miliYet France i today as she If she falls, ; \ Greece and

itable, demo- , France, the

1 War 1, that When Prance + he Treaty of i Arist.” g about Hit.

iperate. She | now, under- i ut these, no j the ming, ard. Il understood sduction. She lly as a pro-. 00,000 tons a 0al annually he 19,000,000 uble. To perhe Ruhr's, it Non sense.

ey od ) Death Case Today,

| weeks of testimony and argument.

wEdda even before her father had

f ‘Gollum Confident of Acquittal; Plans Tour BANTA ANA, Cal, Oct. 3 (U.P). ~The murder trial of heiress Betlah Louise Overell, 18, and her} flance, George (Bud) Gollum, 21, goes to the jury today after 19

Superior Judge Kenneth Morrison yesterday revealed he would hand the case to the jury of six men and six women today, even if he had to keep court in session into the night. He also promised to keep the ry] in deliberation Saturday and Sun-! day unless a ' verdict is reached earlier. He expected to use two hours in| fnstructing jurors. Gollum Plans Tour

Gollum, in a jail interview, revealed he is so confident of acquittal that he already has!

packed his bags and has a car waiting in which he plans to leave | on ah extended automobile tour of the nation, The car is one in which the state

contends it found evidence linking him with the yacht murders of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Overell, Gollum said his mother had obtained release of the auto, impounded by investigators, and readied it for his trip. There have been reports of a

STIMULATING IDEA—Hilda Mobre, of Homoluly, models the very latest in beauty aids—heated booties and mittens—at the National Hair¥ressers and Cosmetologists association's convention in Chicago. Gadgets are supposed to stimulate-the circulation and improve the texture of the skin. Cap is used for hair conditioning.

rift in the romance of Gollum and Firemen to Show skill, Equipment

Miss Overell since their arrest, but the youth said that so far as he was concerned, Miss Overell would be with him when he goes on the trip.

To Wed Jeweler

ROME, Oct. 3 Communist-sponsored newspaper La Republica reported today that Edda Ciano, the late Duce’s shapely daughter, was about to marry a

Naples jeweler and settle down in a8 three-room apartment. La Republica said Edda had told her friends: “We Mussolinis are becoming cursedly bourgeois. © My mother has become a cook, brother Romano is a bookkeeper and I am getting married.” The jeweler Pietro Capuano was described as “very jealous of her; he never lets her out of his sight.” Mr. Capuano had been seen with

er husband, former Italian Foreign Minister Count Galeazzo Ciano, executed. Since the end of the] war, he was reported to have be-| come her constant companion. |

|

Need For Communing With God Stressed

“We can develop our capacity to] talk or commune with God as we|

would talk with a kindly, wise| friend.” This is one of the thoughts on| prayer expressed by Archibald! Carey, of Detroit, C. 8. B., in his| Christian Science lecture last night, | in the Murat theater. He was! sponsored by the First Church of! Christ, Scientist. “As we not only talk to God in| prayer, but also listen in prayer) for the right ideas which He will} give us, we find that His loving| wisdom guides us and leads us to recognize and accept the opportunifies which He always provides to bring His children the fullest degree of happiness,” Mr. Carey continued. “Our Father-Mother~God loves! you individually, and it is His pur- | pose that you should be well and bappy and successful. ”

Lady Iris Mountbatten Wins Way Into U. S.

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 3 (U. P.) —| Lady Iris Mountbatten, who was re- | cently denied an extension of her! visitor's visa, has been admitted | to the United States as a permanent | resident, U. 8. immigration bureau officials revealed today. Lady Iris, cousin of King George | of England, went to Canada after | her plea for an extended stay was | refused last summer, bureau spokes- | men said, and applied to the American consulate-general at Montreal for a visa to enter as a permanent | resident under immigration quota. The visa was granted and Lady | Iris was admitted last Tuesday at New York, the bureau said.

Order Half-Staff Flags | For World War Dead |

WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (U. P).| --President Truman has ordered! the U. 8. flag flown at half staff on days when world war dead ‘are! brought home from overseas. He specified Oct. 10 and Oct. 26 when memorial services will be held | in San Francisco and New York for | the thousands. of soldier dead who! are being brought back, to final | resting places in this COUNT,

Drys Will Dedicate

Winona Lake Quarters |

WINONA LAKE, Oct, 3 (U, P.).— A formal dedication of the new headquarters here of -the Prohibition Party will be held Sunday afternoon. | The national dry political party moved its headquarters here from | Chicago recently. The dedication will’ precede a! housewarming and inspection of the | building remodeled for the party’ | use,

| |

| | |

GUARANTEES

WATCH REPAIRS

PROMPT SERVICE ACCURATE WORK MODERATE PRICES © NORTH MEZZANINE

Fire Prevention Week will be apolis Safety Council of the Indiopened in Indianapolis with a show of fire fighting skill and equipment by the Indianapolis Fire De- oyard force, Link-Belt Co, partment, on the Monument Circle

Report Edda Ciano a vurday. been

anapolis Chamber of Commerce. Frank S. O'Neil,

nounced by Charles T. Coats, chair- plant grounds Wednesday. man of the (U. P.).—The committee, Chief H. H. Fulmer. paign is sponsored by the Indian- own homes.

fire prevention week! During the campaign,

City Silhouettes i

vice president, abd Frank R. Owen, captain of the

65,000!

‘by

¥*

Beer Contracts

Case Involves Appeal

Of Gary Wholesaler |

Five superior court judges began

the State Alcoholic Beverage Commission to revoke a beer wholesaler's license o ncharges that he en{tered ito a discriminatory

agree-

| beer, | The case involved an appeal to ithe court by Leroy Jacobs, {beer wholesaler, revocation of his license under a! new liquor law which prohibits ex3 clusive beer sales, 1 During {Samuel !wholesaler, charged that the anti- | discrimination

Gary

from the ABC's

arguments Moise, attorney for

yesterday, the

amendment passed the legislature “was sponsored

by cowiity Republican chairmen to keep the hands.” The superior court judges indicated they would rule on the case within the next we weeks.

beer monopoly in thei:

Play Centers

Are Reopened

The reopening of community cen-

ters for the fall season, has been

announced by K. Mark Cowen, city recreation superintendent,

will be hosts to several hundred business and industrial representatives at an an- industrial fire demomstration on the

shows,

which will thlis month, Football leagues are being organized by Wilbur Schumacher, athletic supervisor, and will cover

Full programs of dancing, flower lectures and athletics have been outlined for many of the clubs, their activities

begin

city

various age groups.

A city-wide boxing tournament and Fire Department school children will receive forms is also being scheduled for the midThe cam- for voluntary inspection of their dle of November with novice, suo-

novice and open classifications.

or

in B. G. Casuals

Business-Girls

»

v

The Sportleigh Coat, only....u......... $35

Thoroughbred classic coats are thoughtfully planned and executed to give the maximum in good looks, tailoring and serviceability. Sand-tan or black and white tweed; 100%, virgin wool. One of five styles. Sizes 8 to 16.

BLOCK'S Coat Shop, Second Floor

The Henry Rosenfeld Dress, only.......$16.95

Pleated coat dress of novelty sheer wool made with the care given all Rosenfeld styles. The choir boy collar is becoming and young. Finished with covered buttons. Gray, green, blue, burnt sugar. Sizes 10 to 18.

BLOCK'S Sport Shop, Second Floor

be

fi, AW a.

"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

Study Exclusive’ Button Owners “Buttonhole Fair Tomato Yield

Judges for Rich Prizes

2 Million on Display at National Society Meeting; Value Ranges From $1 to Hundreds

That odd-shaped button knocking around in the family button box 'may be worth a lot of money, the National Button Society said today. Some of the most valuable buttons’ that ever slipped through a | deliberation today on the right of buttonhole are lying unnoticed, the bhtton fanciers said. But a couple of million or so others are being gaped at and pawed over. by visitors to the national exhibition of the button society here

{|

Nearly 2000 persons who collec

buttons as a hobby are meeting to lo boiled horses’ hooves.” of Among the displays here are camIment for handling one brand u buy and sell for prices ranging paign buttons of early U. 8, presi- ager for from less than a dollar to several dential elections.

look over each other's collection |

hundred dollars, and vie for blue ribbons. | 2 Million on Display Harold W. Carlson of Springfield, | | Mass., president of the society, esti- | ‘mated thatymore than two million buttons were on display or for sale here, Many of them have small value, he sald. But others “could bring as much as $500 if sold on the but-ton-collectors market, It's their ‘Size, age, beauty and history at 'hikes the price, he said. It doesn't make much difference who wore the button, so long as it tells a story, 1s unusually constructed, or represents a historical period, said Mrs. Lillian Smith Al- | bert, editor of the society's publica? Lions. Found in Odd Places In fact, she said, collectors usuallv have little idea whether their buttons held together George Washington's colonial waistcoat or adorned the roval robes of an Egyptian queen

Collectors find buttons in the strangest places, said Mrs. Albert, but the “first place to look is in

your own button box.” Mr. Carlson said buttons were made from “evervthing from glam

Ship Movements |

New. York Magallanes from

Arriving Havana Arriving at San Francisco Yaney from

uam

» -

The canning

canneries the nation's tomatoes.

one of the

largest

Expected in State -

Crop Will Be Below That of 1946

industry reported today: that the next week will tell how the 1947 Indiana tomato pack compares with 1946, when Hoosier

packed 20 per cent of

B. R, Wood, Indiana sales man-

can

making companies, said that there

PAGE 4

was no doubt that this year's crop A 7

Iwas considerably below 1046 in both quantity and ‘quality, He said it was impossible to tell now Just how badly frosts had dam# tomatoes still in the fields, pe 2 another week or more of

sunny weather might mean fair

crop for Hoosiers after all. A. F. Dreyer, secretary of ‘the na diana Canners’ assoctation, de~ clined to predict what the 1947 to-

mato crop would be. But he said -

that sweet corn, Indiana's second largest canning crop, was practically all canned now. Mr. Dreyer said the corn pack was about 90 per cent of last. year’s.

BLOCK'S ALWAYS HAS YOUR STYLE AND SIZE IN VASSARETTES

FRO bs

FIGURE-ATIVELY SPEAKING

atl

HERE'S WHAT FASHION CALLS FOR!

5.00 to 15.00

/ f

Whisper-soft, porous-knit “girdles and panties that accentuate curves fashionably, control them comfortably. Sketched, Vassarette's newest—a figure-hugging girdle with Matelasse front and back panels, knit elastic sides, elastic waist

band across back. Tearose or white.

Small, medium, large. 10.00

Also matching pantie-girdle, 10.00

«-BLOGK'S. Gorsats, Fourth Floor

»

© 0 0 000 000 PPOPOPOIONOESONOIIONIOSIOIOSEBONORNOSERSPSTDSNDS

IN LINE FOR SECOND LOOKS! OUR SUIT-ABLE

n Stijn welome

8.98

Smart little two-piecer that doubles deftly as suit or dress. New longer jacket with front tie set-in belt, push-up sleeves, nd adjustable neckline; side slit skirt. Both of soft spun rayon unusually striped

in white on grey or brown. Sizes |2 to 20,

BLOCK'S Paragon Dresses, Fourth Floor

Ask about the New Cap Coif in Block's 6th. \ Flr. Beauty Salon. It’s so easy to manage. \ For appt. telephone RI-9441 or RI-4042.