Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 October 1947 — Page 3
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A Program Eyes R Premiership For General
Communist-led Group Can Dissolve Self |
By JAMES F. McGLINCY United Press Staff Corres t PARIS, Oct. 21—-Gen. rles De
Gaulle was expected to announce today his plan for putting his vic- | ‘torious, anti-Communist Rally of tne | French People into the National Assembly. The plans may include | the premiership for Gen. De Gaulle. The elections in which Gen. De Gaulle rose Sunday to the top of French politics were municipal. And while they showed his Rally ) to be the strongest political group i b in the nation, they cannot under] 5 the present constitution affect the composition of the assembly, where the Communists now have the most deputies. : Assembly Can Dissolve When the present assembly was elected last November 10, Gen. De Gaulle had not organized his Rally. Hence, it has no deputies, A new election is not scheduled under the constitution until next May. But Rally officials said Gen. De Gaulle was considering two plans for getting immediate representa‘tion. They were: ONE: The assembly could, by majority vote, adopt an election] amendment to the constitution, and order its own dissolution. The| amendment would ‘then be put to a
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Boy Next Door
Verdict Withheld Eoy Ne Girl, 17,
2 In Purdue Death Then Shoots Self Find Professor Shot | CHICAGO, oct. 31 (UP) —A
icollege girl told today how the boy | In Basement of Home next door wounded her, then shot | A Times State Serviss Id to death. LAFAYETTE, . ~Co | The girl, Emery Tito, 17, Is a Wayne T. Cox withheld a verdict | grechman at Mundelein College, She temporarily today in the deaih of} was wounded only slightly in the Chester A. Hughes S3-yeureple Pu ishoulder. due engineering PoE ound} ghe told police Edward McNulty, Send. jn a june nel ; Jeb rr 16, telephoned her last night shortly . after 9 o'clock. He asked her to with «Thome Tie Which | yme over to. his house to help lay Deside hi to Purdue from MM With his chemistry problems. the University of Minnesota this cup SAID she had known Ed: fall Je . Jeaching, Mtrdesaral ward, & junior tn high school, nearengineerin "Uy all her life, (engineering at Purdue and pre-| uy welt into the hallway and Yiously 3a ue 3: Sie Nive was about to knock on the door,” y 0 ni 8 ' {she sald. Professor Hughes was a Canadian army veteran of two wars. He and; ooyidn't see a thing, All of a had HE i 2h sudden some one grabbed me. It , was Eddie.” freshman and another son in high| «cmon, 1 want to ‘show you some-
home here. drag the girl down the stairs leadThe body will be returned to To- ing to the basement. ronto, Canada, the home of Pro- yn fessor Hughes' father, Chester M.'” Hughes, for burial
Dr. Wells to Leave IU shot at her as she ran
| ‘Nov. 1 for New Job “Eddie ran past me,” she sald BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 21 (UP)— “and went through the passageway Dr. Herman B Wells, president of to the back of the house, Indiana University, will leave about minutes later, I heard a shot.” Nov. 1 for Germany to serve for six ' months as educational and cultural affairs adviser to the American in'i- followed the boy's path, itary governor there.
He was granted a leave of ab- drenched and four- youth, a bullet in his head.
youth's pushed open
door and fled toward the street
grasp,
|sence from the university. A
Acme Telephoto. |man board will handle administra-|
ontrol Of Asset 5 )
school, had recently purchased thelr lining” he muttered and tried to
» SHE SAID she twisted out of the the
» » ” MISS TITO called neighbors who reasonably congenial and
In the alley, they found the oil- number of nude body of the ground and opinion.
national referendum and if it] passed would be followed by a new| assembly election. TWO: The assembly could, by
A REAL $64 QUESTION—Mrs. Julie Strnad, is shown embracing her daughter, Antoinette, 4, in her New York home yesterday.” They are involved in a custody suit which promises to write new legal history. Claiming that Antoinette is a test tube baby, Mrs. Strnad asserts her estranged husband has no claim to full paternal
and fell into a 55-gallon oll drum
(two-thirds majority vote, adopt an amendment ordering new elections. In that case a referendum would not be necessary and assembly elec-| — . | . 5.8 = tions could be held immediately. | { { — In either case, it was said, if Mr. ec ns pea | Paging Mr. Solomon
De Gaulle’s rally won an assembly |
New York court.
election by the percentage it-rolled
held by Socialist Paul Ramadier,| whose party is third strongest. | ST. LOUIS, Oct. 21 (UP)—The| Got 433 Per Cent of Votes |U S. Circuit Court of Appeals mainThe official count of 4,400,393 pal- tained today that members of the lots in Sunday's elections showed Jehovah's Witnesses sect have a] the rally got 43.3 per cent of them.|legal right to meet in public paris The Communists received 30.4 per without molestation and without ob-| cent, the Socialists 155 and -the/!aining the permission of Popular Republican movement 10 8|councils. per cent. | The case followed action by War-| Although the Communists called tent County, Iowa, officials who i off the eight-day subway and bus|1946 blockaded public roads leading visiting her 4-year-old daughter. strike in Paris last night after Mr.|into Lacona, Iowa, to prevent al Already the child has been the) Ramadier and promised to give|group of the sect from holding a|pawn in a kidnaping and counter33,000 workers 15 to 20 per cent|religious meeting: kidnaping that led to Prague, wage increases, the General Con- {Czechoslovakia and back again, federation of Labor, which the|Railroaders Voting Strike = Mrs. Strnad said his only respon-
Communists run, still talked about sibility for the child's birth was ara general strike. | NEW HAVEN, Conn, Oct. 21 ranging and paying for the artificial
Some change in the cabinet was (UP)—J: J. Hamill, general chair- insemination. regarded as almost a certainty and man of the Brotherhood of Railroad it was believed that a general strike Trainmen, said today that early re-
By LEO TURNER, United
Mr. Ramadier’s resignation now|19 to 1 majority in favor of a childs father would not solve the political di- strike by 5000 employees of the New| Mr. Wolfson argued that the lemma. Indeed, it would only add York, New Haven & Hartford Rail-|child was named Antoinette after to the confusion. 'road. the husband. He said Mr. Strnad loved the child with a genuine fatherly affection. It's Up to the Judge The lawyer said that “biologically and physically, it is impossible for a child to have only one parent.”
Justice Hofstadter ruled himself |
STRAUSS SAYS:
lack o out of the case yesterday. His Blac sued grounds were that Justice Green- | pump—wingead berg issued a separation agreement trim piped in which Mrs. Strnad was given . 4 custody, of the child on Oct. 8. At) in paten that time Mr. Strnad received per-| 16.95 mission to visit the child from ‘11
a. ms to 4 p. m. on Sundays.
would be asked tomorrow to act as
tube baby.
rights and says that she is the child's sole legal parent. The case is being heard in a
: Has a Test-Tube Baby | | =z woes ent On Right to Meet only One Legal Parent? | i Judge Must Rule on Whether Husband iar | Has Any Rights tp 4-Year-Old Girl
NEW YORK, Oct. 21—Justice Henry Clay Greenberg will be asked city in Manhattan Supreme Court tomorrow to decide whether a test-tube [baby legally can have only one parent. Mrs. Julie Strnad, 31, pretty and blond, asked Justice Samuel H. - n|Hofstadter to forbid her estranged husband, Antoine, a chauffeur, from
The husband, through his attor- d from. th y ney, Philip Wolfson, challenged the Ne rm ie ay oa would bring it about immediately. turns of a strike vote indicated a mother to prove he was not the circumstances of the child's birth.
Attorneys said Justice Greenberg Optometrists Outing
a modern-day Solomon and decide, society and their wives will be enwho is the legal ‘father of a test-|tertained by golf and dinner to-
The identity of the bioldgicali club in Pendleton. Dr. Frank C.
STRAUSS
SAYS: WITH A
TRADITION
Press Staff Correspondent
Mr. Strnad replied that his wife and brother-in-law had drugged his drink and made off with the little girl. Yesterday, Mrs. Strnad’s attorney, ‘ Jerome Horowitz, appeared before Justice Hofstadter and said that fear of the baby’s being kidnaped
Mrs. Lillian Johnson Services Are Held ' :
Funeral services for Mrs. Lillian Amos Johnson, 125 N. Noble St, were conducted last night in the Grinsteiner funeral home, Burial will be held today in Kokomo. Mrs. Johnson, who died Saturday, was a native of Kokomo, and had lived in Indianapolis 50 years. She
Survivors include her husband, Richard Johnson, and two brothers, Joseph Amos, Kokomo, and Bert Johnson, Indianapolis.
THE ONLY MEN'S SUITS IN THE WORLD
to be advantaged by the practically limitless resources of The Botany Woolen Mills— (and these are masterpieces
The Central Indiana Optometric
morrow at the Idlewood County
father in such cases 1s usually kept Otte of Indianapolis, president, will secret even from the mother, and|pe in charge. Dr. C. F. Brindel of he never knows the identity of his anderson and Pendleton will be
of Botany looming — the
child, . In* the original hearing before Justice Greenberg early this month, Mrs, Strnad said her husband took the baby for an airing on Feb. 6, and fled to Czechoslovakia. She followed with her brother and after a two-weeks' search, “managed to take the child from him while He was drunk and flew back with her” she testified.
EVENTS TODAY
Meatless Day, Technical High School Music Cornivaj— In the school gymnasium. Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies— Noon luncheon, CA. Indiana Section, American Chemica) Soelety =~ 12:15 p. m. luncheon, arren
Hotel, Indianapolis Rotary Club Luncheon--12:18 p. m., Claypool tel.
EVENTS TOMORROW Teachers’ Association
Ci le. Sehaimen’s Club — 6:30 p. m,, Claypool Indians Minicipal Electric Assoclation—
Bev: . Opening of the Art Students’ League Exibis (Oct, 33 to Nov. 8)—Block’s Audium.
‘MARRIAGE LICENSES
Martinique
Shoes are the product Clarence Me Ewan, 2311 Montcalm; Mary kson )6 Rader. of a fine maker—who Kenneth L. McDonel, 1427 Hoyt; Martha
has the fundamental ideal sop wesk GF waking: Betty . Ernest M. Malone, 954 W. 28th; Lucy of FIT. Me has a fine win” Bogen” Horrin, ‘BSdioRe, Tad Po highly imaginative designing i M talent expressed in high fashion. *Martinque' enjoys working in
un Son Fors, 10m J. Moran, 550 N. fine suedes—They are priced conservatively— nel
Lawrence . Tacoms; ” Alta E vid, Pt Wayne, ‘ Joseph er, 1701 'olumbis; 16.95 Preije, 1701 Columbia.
L. STRAUSS & CO., INC. aan re THE SPECIALTY SHOP § OM JHE THIRD FLOOR
1 1807 Sout O'Bryan Fry
A oo
aco . . Starks, 537 BE. Court.
Jean Coffey, 2127
Pennsylvania. # i “ ? : "an 4
Craver Oller,
- In Indianapolis
Offers “Cutis, 1006 E Vermont: Posey! “'umarola Rosella Blewart, ’ ib Ave; Mary| a¢ Mathodist— William, Lesh Davis; Earl, $5 D Jo, non ; Mary Kitch a Rowe,’ Muscle, ind.; Dorothy Law, DEATHS ._ Richardson 4902 2 versity; carditi Mary b H. Stokes, 535 E. Court; Blizabeth Carl'M. Fisher 1323 B Minnesota; Fthiyn| William wo phure Jois E Oeorgta;| MATOS C. Smith, 80, at 1400 Sturm, Charles L. Scott, 2014 N. Oraen! Phyllis| Sylvester A. Tillson., 44. at 300 E. Mc
|dopn Pp. Semi th |B Em; Mary B. Joseph Ge
, myocard W. 20th; Alma A.|James C. Gruwell, 50, at 828 N. Alsbama,} cerebral hemorrhage.
| host.
i
"500" range)
19 Years, 19 Stories THE ONLY SUITS | NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 21 (UP)— IN THE WORLD
| Police today investigated the' death to be tailored by
of an 19-year-old merchant seaman who plunged 19 stories to the street DAROFF — with Daroff's sincere handwork — with
here yesterday, The youth was identified by his papers as Clarence his laboratory pre-planning and follow-through — which
'Pisher, Hickory, N. C. insures fullest satisfactions in advance.
THE ONLY SUITS IN THE WORLD
backed by such a duo— concentrated in a fixed price!
Harold R. Stanley, 2302's N. Talbott; Betty Jo Yates, 1863 Taliman bert J. White, 228 N. Addison; Doris | Mue Roberts, 25 N. Addison ! 1] H. Wissel, 1433 BE. Market, Bertha . Marlow, 1433 E. Market,
BIRTHS
i Boys {At Si. Vincent’s—George, Ruth Bwitzer; | Louis, Pearl Balzman: Francis, Annie
The end-product is — logically '
THE ONLY SUITS IN THE WORLD
Kinnaman; Melvin, Diana Cunningham; N. B., Lucille Sandman: Charles, Doris | ; Kenneth, Lola 3 | Mitehell: i n, {| 'Leons Raia, and Emmett, Lois Steffey. | At Coleman—Robert, Mary Craig; ; lois Graham, and Maurice, Joan
Drummond. At St. Prancis—Edward, Betty Hoyt, and Leona . Stiegelmeyer.
At General_Bernard, Jews Hawkins, and " ward, es X — i At Methodist—Tom, Oelia Rush; Fils, that return in such Margar ; Leslie, Wands a fullness of VALUE! Hampton; Hills, Mabel Stiver; Thomas, Lian JAdamt Sa, a aret $ " A As, ne » . ald, dean Bowles: , Esther Broyles, You SHOULD drop in—and see
what this means to yow personally ~to your purse and person!
he
And what is said about suits applies also to TOPCOATS Same price $55.
and Alfred, or ry Taen.
| At St. Vineent's—Ivan, Mildred Frakes, and Peter, Maxx Chermansky. Coleman—Walter, Windlon Johnson; william, Myls Taylor; John, Elizabeth Wooldridge; Robert, Dorothy Crowley, and Donald Betty George Francis—Kennard, Mary Jo Pritz! and Bthus, Margaret Johnso
1 Hart; James,
Ed H 5 Otls, na Jeu snd John, Margaret
Annice Goodman, Poland,
tHelen Downey, 88, at 2444 ‘Talbot, myo8. ! Celis M. Keers, 51, at 1911 Dexter, carci noms, Grace Conner, 83, at General, pneu.
monia. Maud R. Pirtle, 62, at 916%; E North, carcinoma.
cancer.
ry occlusion
Carty, col , Wehrel, 64, at 1400 N.
1
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a
L STRAUSS & CO, wm. THE
Companionship—Not Love
Called Happy Marriage Key
Sociologist Finds Discussion of Bach More
Important at Meal Than to Bill and Coo
By CLAIRE COX, United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Oct. 21~Love is not the sweetest thing about marriage, Sociologist Ernest W. Burgess explained, He said a man and woman who get married because they are madly in love don’t stand as good a chance for happiness as the couple who wed so they will have someone to talk to at the break. fast table every morning. Mr. Burgess, professor of soci-| ology at“the Universify of Chicago, | sald’ love had been overrated as °¢ the determining factor in predicting a happy marriage.
concluded a marriage could suce ed if: * ONE:“ Both husband and ‘wife were raised in a happy home. | TWO: vi He believes marriages of ComMpan- 1 ne pots hae Ne of mas, jonship are happier than unions gone to college, have had religious based solely on romantic love or in- training, and live in a house rather fatuation. It is more important, he, an. apartment or a room said, that a couple be able to dis-| "pypEp: The husband is self-con-cuss Bach over bacon and eggs than fident has a regular, secure job, and
“It was quite dark in there and bill and coo over their corn flakes.) doesn't make too much or too little
Second of Lecture Series 'money, and if the wife has worked Mr. Burgess, a bachelor himself, hefore marriage, particularly as a expounded his views on marriage teacher or office worker. in the second of a series of aca-| FOUR: They have a wholesome demic lectures on how to predict a attitude toward sex. happy home life, | “The presence or absence of chil« | He sald he'd peeked in on 526 dren is not as important as the atti« couples in Illinois by means of a tude of the couple toward them,™ scientifically prepared questionnaire Mr, Burgess said. . and had discovered that 10 of them -
Edward followed her and fired one were about as well adjusted as it is Boy, 6, Runs in Front
possible to be, while eight may “ave
good reasons to pitch the family Of Auto, Injured
crockery at each other every night. aise About 135 have fewer grounds for| A 10-year-old"boy was injured to-
A few serenity in the home than might day when he dashed from In front
be desirable. More than 200 were of a parked truck into the path of the re- an automobile. mainder had just about an average| Allison Bank Jr., 2447 Wheeler differences of back-|8t, is in fair condition in General |Hospital. He was taken there after From his survey, which ranged he ran into the street in the 3100
Police said he. apparently leaped from questions about the home life block of E. 25th 8t., into the path tive duties during his absence at over a fence in his efforts to escape of the parents to whether the hus- of a car driven by Charles Schlos-
the university.
bands were Rotarians, Mr. Burgess ser Jr, 5020 Julian Ave.
OF TOMORROW!
TOUCH
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