Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1947 — Page 2
Ask rs. ‘Manners— + is Wear Lipstick for ‘Hubby—With a Smile
Dear Mrs. Manners:
A SAT
TO “IMPRESSED BUT NOT PERILED," who gave his, -
versions of why men leave home. I am hot impressed.
or hasn't any children, Did he ever have to sit up nights with sick children? Who feels glamorous at 5 a. m. after being up all night? Yes, 1 get up and put lipstick on and a house dress and get a good breakfast for my
husband-—-but many mornings I'd rather stay in bed. | 1 have three children and get three hot meals a day and wash twice a week and clean and wash dishes, I fry to look nice when “hubby” comes ‘home. But who fecls glamorous when you cook a meal for 6 p. m, and he comes in two hours late? How can anyone keep prety and not get disgusted while dinner gets colder and colder? When he is ‘heme. he either is on the davenport asleep or with his nose in the paper all evening. About. this afternoon nap the poor office girl doesn’t get. Who does he think takes care of the: children while mother sleeps? You can't knotk them all in-the head at once, They don't all sleep at onge, These poor working girls nave their pay checks to look glamorous with while the mother has to do without while Junior has new shoes ar pays doctor bills and food, rent, ete, There isn't enough to go around but “hubby” makes fairly good wages. I haven't had a good dress in eight months My version of why womeh leave home~These poor men are 50 mistreated because they don't have Betty Grable and a home manager, house maid nurse maid, cook, laundress, etc, all in one Try and hire one maid to do all these things, ONLY ONE WOMAN, Too bad that “hubby” doesn't tell you the nice things he's probably thinking, isn't it? That lipstick may be doing you wear it with a smile.
Help Father But Don't Cancel Plans
1 AM A BOY 21 years old, 1 have Leen a Christian ever since 1 was 12 years oid, God has called me Lo preach the gospel. My problem | 18 that my father 1s too disabled to work and 1 have to support him, | 1 feel condemned not to go to school and take training to be a minister and would also feel condemned to let my father down, | H. H.W, Qity. Of course you should help your father, but don't cancel your plans. Work during the day and enroll in evening classes, You could work toward an A. B, degree al Butler University, Indians University Extension Division and Indiana Central College. Follow your graduation with theological training, Some chiirchéf permit student ministers to fill pulpits,
She Might Get Bored With You, Too
SOMETIME AGO at a dance I met a woman who is all wanted or dreamed of in a woman, Though she is married to another man we find that we are very much in love, She tells me that she never has really loved him and 1 feel that she is sincere, This being a small town we cannot show our love, of which we are not ashamed. Do you think it would be wise for us to go away? I ean get a job in another state and then she can apply for a divorce, Or “should we wait for one here? He has said that he will give her a divorce provided she takes the child. CICERO GENTLEMAN, Stay away from this woman who meets men at dances, Don't influence her about a divorce, You'd hear about it In your first argument. Of course you're ashamed of making love to another man’s wife or you'd be willing to face the scandal, She may just have been bored and liked the excitement and your dancing. She might get bored with you, too. You can't be sure of | your love with such an improper and unnatural courtship.
Why Not Help Troubled Couples?
HOW CAN 1 get in touch with an attorney In New York-—Seaman | Miller? 1 have written to New York Supreme Court but they don't | have a record of him, : { I have been buying your paper since 1018 and see where you do’ good things in your answers, I'm a married woman and work when-my husband is so T can, 1 am happy with my husband. M0 M., City, The New York City telephone directory and legal directories don’t | list Mr. Miller, He was listed in the 1934 New York City directory as residing at 17 E. 97th St, Apt. 3-C, with office at 20 Vesey St, Room 804. You also might write that address and ask -that the letter be | forwarded. To .what do yuo attribute your happy marriage? troubled couples with your advice.
Don't You Want to Help Your Community? DURING THE RECENT Community Fund drive a collector came to our office. r My question is, can an employee be forced to pay and would he | lose his job if, for personal reasons, he did not desire to make a donation? | A DAILY READER, City, Legally, you don't have to contribute, Few employers would be | arbitrary about such a matter. But don’t you want to help your { community by giving a small donation—even a very, very small one? available from the coroner's inquest
. held yesterday, no charges have been” placed. | eries 0 e S Mis. Edna Curtis, the dead boy's A
more good than you think—-provided
1 have ever}
You could help |
an iron lung at General Hospital, | Although no official verdict Is
grandmother, sald the family was teen-age holiday crime spree certain the boy had not been tmpliposed a problem for Juvenile Court cated in any crime or planned crime authorities today. | She said, “Jack has always been a Two brothers, who admitted 23 sweet boy, keeping out of trouble burglaries and three auto thefts, and He was well liked in the neighbor-| a 13-year-old suspect, were detained hood, and by. his teachers. He was by JAD until proper disposilion preparing to graduate from school could be made. this year, I don't know what to The brothers, who gave an E. St.'{hink." Clair St. address, said they com- The 13-year-old was wounded in mitted all their burglaries and thefts he right shoulder, by one of the since the oldest of the two 2scaped|ywo shots fired by Mr. White, He from the Indiana State Farm Nov. 3. was turned over to his parents , Have Long Records { — The two brothers have been committed to several correctional nstitutions In the past and have yet to be rehabilitated Joth have long Juvenila Court records They were captured. Thursday night after a stolen car they were driving overturned on While River typesetters against seven dailles Pkwy. near Raymond. St went into its fifth day with neither Deputy Sheriff Virgil Quinn said gide moving to break the deadlock. the 13-year-old admitted to nim The Hammond (Ind) Times bethat he and a l4-year-old com: came the seventh paper to put out panion were attempting lo bur! photo-engraved editions. The typeglarize the H. A. Waterman Co. at setters struck against the Times on Five Points when they ‘were shot Wednesday. The paper did not ig hon isi is publish Thanksgiving Day but beack Richey was fatally wounded gan putting out the improvised ediwhen the pair was fired on by Don tions yesterday, It will only pubW. White, an employee of the com- lish one edition a day, however, inpany. He died a few hours latér in stead of the usual lwo. ;
Hoosier Paper Puts Out, Photo-Engraved Edition
CHICAGO, Nov. 20 (UP)-—Resi-| dents of the Chicago area were be-| coming accustomed to “typewritten” | newspapers today as a strike of 1500
———————
The impression stamped upon the
mind by services for a departed
loved one Is always a lasting one, We try to make it as reverently 1
beautiful as posisble, regardioss
of cost, | C
HISEY & TITUS
|
951 NORTH DELAWARE ST.
A A
[ euts,
In
EVENTS TODAY Children's 1am
| At Methodist—Harold,
| At Coleman—R, Case,
I'll bet 10 to 1 he isn't married;
ve
NT
&
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Railways 10-Cent Far
GUEST CONDUCTOR — Composer Howard Manson, fists clenched, beats time for some difficult rhythms in his Third Symphony during an Indianapolis Sym. phony rehearsal at the Murat. Dr.-Hanson, dean of the University .of Rochester's Eastman School of Music, will-conduct his symphony at the orchestra's Murat concerts at 8:30 p. m. today and 3p. m. Sunday.
Washington Calling—
Marshall Plan May Face Drastic Cut;
Some Fear Total Defeat of Program
(Continued From Page One)
0 for larger sum, strongly. But 20 Republicans lin
Democrats:
Chairman Vandenberg had urged it
ed up against him and so did 10
This vote came, too, despite fact Mr. Taff himself was opposed to making issue of Interim aid. He wanted to save big guns for long-
range Marshall Plan,
But when a GOP Senate bloc insisted fight be
made now, he went along, voted for smaller amount, and spoke against
whole basis of plan. ”
~ ~ Toughest Test TOUGHEST TEST of Vanden
~ . ”
Is Still Ahead
berg's three-year bipartisan foreign
policy leadership seems just ahead. Some look for Taft-Vandenberg break, but Mr, Taft's friends say Mr, Vandenberg himself is likely to be critical of some Marshall Plan angles. When President Truman linked foreign ald and need for inflation
controls in his message, he gave to oppose aid or whittle it down seas help when President himself concedes these exports increase
| inflation pressure—which he says |
must be controlled—at home? Continued price rises between now and time Marshall Plan comes up for vote—probably March — would make passage even more difficult.
So will GOP pressure for tax | Mr. Taft points out for- |
eign ald means additional tax burdens, claims such policies cbuld wreck U. S. domestic economy, One sure thing: Republicans will insist on flow of strategic materials into this country for
{ stockpiling, if any aid is given.
Not Much Interested
SAMPLING of opinion in Wisconsin and Minnesota discloses that people in these areas are not much interested In Marshall
| Plan, often know little of what
it's about. One . informed People out there
reporter Says:
less and less with what goes on in |
Washington, . more with day-to-day problems of their own lives, care little about strategy of world
politics as planned by State De-
pattment. » Hn ” ARMY'S ‘LATEST estimate of strength and disposition of military forces in Europe now is In hands of - House Foreign Affairs Committee, will be made public next week. Most important
item: Russia
has 82 divisions, 6000 planes, in |
sbuthern area, generally pointed toward Middle East, Iran, Turkey, In Germany, Poland ahd -Russia (European frontiery Russia has 93 divisions, 7200 planes, In Korea, 13 divisions, 700, planes. In Siberia, 20 divisions, several hundred planes Total for Russia, men under arms, 15000 combat planes. Army estimates Russia can expand to 10.5 million men in 30 days. In contrast,’ we men under arms in Air Force In Germany we have 161,000 men (one division, {wo regimental combat teams, 10 constabulary regiments, 11 air groups), Our totals for Japan, Korea and Pacific islands are seven divisions, 18 air groups. England has army of air force of’ 250,000, forces ‘are negligible except
have 950,000 Army and
French for
small garrisons in Germany and |
Austria,
China has approximately © 4.5
Museum Guild Ball-9% p. m. tp Woodstock Club ndians Association of Teachers of RelHgion Indiana Central. College.
EVENTS TOMORROW { Protestant and Catholic Church Services ~Pirst Sunday of Advent, 0 p. m, Scottish Rite;
‘athedral Hour Cathedral,
| BIRTHS
Boys [as St. Franels-Willlam, Mary Bryant;
Dewey, Voltis Jones \ Howard Edward, Veva Price: James, Clarice Hightower: Lee, Marjorie Miller: Raymopd, Thelma Bryant; Carl, LaVaughn Sloan: Robert, Opal Peace Ruth Hammond Jackson, Margaret Richert; Ralph, Stel.
Isabell
~ la Shireman . At St. Vinecent's—~Albert, Betty Crubeaux
McDonald: Robert, Helen McCool; Dr Melvin, Geneva Kingery; Glen, Alice K. Audrey Westfall; Ross, Mary Jarrett; LeRoy, Winnie Thompson, George, Doris Redford ft GeneralClem, Pannie Smith f° Rome-—Alfred, Beatrica Owsley, 111 Bright | John, May Murley, 71) & Belle. vii, Thomas, Oe Tin, 1318 Roach,
~ : ‘
are concerned
four million |
700,000, |
Indianapolis
opponents what they see as alibi |
They ask: How can we vote over=
| million men, but worth little, te | us in military sense. Foreign Affairs Committee has decided to include tabulation
bill as another argument for strengthening economies of Europe's free nations. ~ » »
Fear Retaliation
REAL REASON for adminis~ tration’s reluctance to stop shipments of industrial machinery to Russia, as urged by Harold Stas«sen and Rep. Taber (R. N. Y)! Fear that Russia would get even by cutting off trade between her satellites and western Europe. U. 8. could get along without Russian furs, manganese. But western European recovery sumption of normal eastern Europe, U,
| is given. For example, Poland is now | shipping vitally needed coal into western Europe. (She got $40 milliordoan from us to buy railroad. equipment to move coal) Our government still hopes to get wheat out of Russia far western Europe this winter. ~ ~ ". PLENTY of made-work power company | wrapped
for lawyers is up in Panhandle-East-
ern pipeline decision handed down | this week by Federal Power Com- | In it, commission as- |
mission. | serts right under natural gas act | to break existing contracts, make | new allocations of pipeline gas | based on what it considers public good, Basil Manly, former FPC mem- | ber and now vice president of Southern Natural Gas Co, thinks | commission fxceeded its powers. Ruling will "be challenged up through all courts. w ~ # Mr, Stassen soon may palsy-walsy relation with Mr, Taft by going after GOP conven-
| tion delegates in Mr. Taft's Ohio, | Some Ohio newspapers are invit- |
ing Mr. Stassen to enter primary
next May. Earl Hart, one of Mr, |
Stassen’s campaign managers, recently visited several Ohio cities, thinks Mr. Stassen could pick up dozen or more delegates in urban districts, ~
n » Reece Will Stay CRITICISM of National” GOP Chairman Carroll Reece by some | Sennte Republicans may have | mild effect on way Mr. Reece discusses party policy, but won't dis- | lodge him. Mr. Reece was put in | .office largely by Taft wing of
| At GEReral=John, Ann Rogers; Jess, Mary Pound At St. Vineent's—Leslie, Dorothy Danford At Coleman — Bernard, Lucille Brown; heodore, Ellen Bowers At Methodist—~Horace, Jean Whitaker Charles Sr, Margaret Plake, Eugene Ethel Goss; Charles, Kathleen McMurty, St. Franecls—Paul, , Mary Tiepen tn Ruby
Mary MecMannis;
Mayberry, 1096
o—Cleorge, ! N. Traube; Willlam, Ruth Griffith, 938 |
Indiana,
DEATHS Ben Rader, 41, occlusion Roy D. Taylor, 50, at 438 W, 40th, myocarditis Frank Gillespie, " nAry occlusion 73, at 820 8. Randolph, car-
At 918 BE. 48th, coronary
71, at T'a N. West, coro-
John Riedl, cinoma James M. Atkinson, carcinoma, Wendell P, Coles, 56, coronary ocolusion , Andrew \Hatchett, 63, at General, hyper. nephroma ? John H. Holtman, 68, at Veterans, carci. nomatosis, | John Hehry Patterson, 63, at 214 N. Ad dison, cerebral hsmorrhage Leo Weissenberg, 51, at 1128 EB. Illinois, coronary occlusion. :
58, at 1850 Central, at 137 Eth
with its report on Interim aid |
chrome, ,
depends on re- | trade with | 8. planners | | think, even if Marshall Plan aid
end |
party and odds are he'll stay, at least until some other candidate
| is named at Philadelphia. It
Gov, Dewey's nominated he'll go; probably ‘be replaced by ex-Sen. Danaher of Connecticut, Meanwhile, men like Alken of Vermont insist GOP is inviting |into Judge Hinchman's court after 1948 défeat by holding onto Mr, Reece and his policies; say party has lost much of farm and housewife vote and can't win without
getting them back.
Printers Walkout
industrial |
MAIN CLOUDS in labor picture are International ‘he moved that if the state's injunc- | the rate order the utility would Typographical Union's walkouts tion was granted, the utility would compelled to follow. in Chicago, and threatened Western. Union strike next month, Meantime, number of new strikes and men involved is about as low (“as it ever gets, and man-days being lost are only two-tenths of one per cent of estimated workIng time in all industries. leaders refuse to give Taft-Hart-ley act credit; so do its support ers, say it's too early to tell.
comes next manufacturers’ expire,
labor
hd
Test
spring when big
contracts
i i {
’ r {
1 { i {
|
i
| |
'would prevent the PSC from inter-| Service Commission. fering with the company ‘n the
| |
Union |
NDIA ME IN a1 WO
5
-
e Ruli ng Due Maze. of Legal =
Angles Studied
By Hinchman
State Puts Up Stiff Fight Against -Boost By RICHARD LEWIS ©" Times Staff Writer GREENFIELD, Nov, 20—The quest of Indianapolis Railways, Inc, for a 10-cent fare rested somewhere between two injunctions and an appeal today. Circuit Judge John B. Hinchman began a week-end study of the legal entanglements. He said he would have it untangled by Monday or Tuesday. Hearings on the utility's appeal from the July 1 rate order of the Indiana Public Service Commission were concluded yesterday. The state presented evidence purporting to show the utility does not need to charge a dime in order to make a profit, Seeks Injunctions
Deputy Attorney General Frank E. Coughlin Shen asked Judge Hinchman to grant an injunction which would force .. Indianapolis Railways to obey the July 1 rate order. The order éstablishes the 85-cent fare now being charged. It also requires the utility to issue free transfers and 5-cent tokens to school children which the utility has declined to do pending disposition of its appeal . The state's Injunction would compel the company to cease charging 2 cents for transfers and start selling tokens to school chil-
“dren” Tor “a nickel Immediately.
Proposes Counter Mojion The state's Injunction was taken
it was thrown out of the Marion County Superior Court by a State Supreme Court writ of prohibition last July. No sooner did Mr. Coughlin ask the judge to grant the injunction than Elbert Gilliom, utility counsel, proposed a counter motion.
Dictating the motiqn off the cuff,
ask for its own restrainer against the Public Service Commission.
This injunction, said Mr, Gilliom,
matter of charging fares, Attorneys were not quite sur where that left the case. ‘ Utility Appeal Pending If the state's Injunction were granted, the utility would have to follow the rate order. If the utility's injunction were
Yr on SE
~~
tr “+
___ SATURDAY, NOV. 29, io41
onday
—
Farm Woman Pens Jingle o the Tune of $21,000
‘Nearly Fainted,’ She Says, at Results‘in Soap
‘Contest; Plans to Purchase New Outfit ULLIN, 111, Nov. 20 (UP)~Mrs, John B. Dunivant, 63-year-old farm woman, today had $21,000 for writing the winning jingle in a national. soap contest, and she knéw just how she was going to spend it, “What would any woman do?” she said. “I'm going to buy myself a new hat, and a new dréss, and a whole new outfit.” “My husband and I are going to have a wonderful time, and spend meney Sri Sh We ew how.| Sith the money, too, Some of it t. {will go into savings. They'll pay The white-haired woman, Whoioff some debts, and get some badlyhas spent all her life on a farmipneeded new machinery for thelr and learned on Thanksgiving Day 220.acre farm, four miles east of that she had won the grand prize pjnin. in a contest sponsored by the Proc-| Then, after Uncle Sam gets his tor & Gamble Soap Company, sald|share—which will be about one she nearly fainted when she frst|ihird—they will give one-tenth te found out. the church. The Dunivants attend “I had to hang onto the daven- Cache ‘Chapel, a rural Methodist port,” she said. “I was that weak. Church here, They have no chile Now I'm so thrilled I don't know dren. : what to do, and my husband is run-| “We're going to have a wonderful ning around like a turkey gobbler Christmas this year,” she said. “Bug trying to escape the ax.” we're going to help as many other Mrs. Dunivant said, there are a people as we can to have a wonder lot of practical things they will doiful Ch#stmas on it, $00.” .
PARIS, Nov. 29 (UP)—France to- , day mourned the death of o Feared Do m Jacques LeClere, World War II. (hero, who was killed yesterday when, ; his plane crashed in flames near| (Continued From Page One) Oran in North Africa. si, of course, would take the 10 Seven other persons died In the per cent, which probably would crash which was believed to have| amount to around $2000 for the been caused by a sandstorm. ree-day meet. Gen. LeClerc, commander of the| “We don't know whether Butler French forces in North Africa, took could do better than that with a part in the liberation of Paris in|88me of its own, or a professional 1944. He was second only to Gen. 88me, but tht $2000 looks like a Charles De Gaulle in wartime popu | very fair return to us,” the official larity with the French people. jsald. The concessions do not go Ov LeClere signed the Jspsness 1 this Soniract Hither oe surrender aboard the Battleship|* The commitiee doesn’t feel too | Missouri. After the war hé was friendly apout the whole matter, named inspector general of French|the man who risked the opinion forces in North Africa. said that it was being given a ———————————— “brush-off.” + Girl, 16, Dies in Crash! One ahletis iostar J that His MARTINSVILLE, Nov. 20 (UP)—| ven e Doris Ruth Payne, 16 homies use of Purdue's fleldhouse without Mrs, Clara Payrie "Martins ville, was charge for an indoor meet with Ft, killed yesterday when a car driven Wajne North Side next spring. \by Cecil Rapp, 21, sideswiped a e tournament was held at Tech [Eeus five miles north of here. Me V0 Pick 0 he Ya Loars, Ca~ was injured critically, y eart, Crispus Ate p J Sruically tucks and the Silent Hoosier have enforce een added to the tourney field pe Now the East Side gym, which ad |pommodates around 5000 fans, is ine | Meanwhile, there is pending. the “dcquate for the city meet. |appeal of the utility from the order| The county tourney also is held | which is to be studied by the Publie 2+ Butler, Sut Some in January : of December, ~ Also, there is the petition of the! te Butler will extend the utility before the PSC for a straight "01- Saturday rental policy to that | 10-cent rate. [month was not known. today. Attorneys for both sides admitted] yNpIANAPOLIE ors amien they were dazzled by their fe : sy ra 8 Tove tactics, but neither side could en Clearings vision where it all would lead, if/P*tis anywhere, It seemed to be Judge Hinchman's problem for the weeksend. |p SutH
granted, the state couldn't
a
t ARS
France we eo 0iy Net Tourney
JAN. RIT mony in St. | Church will mary Berni and James ( Ritter Ave. ter of Mr. | Walsh, 604 He is the $¢ and Mrs, Ec H. Ho phot
Trip t
Will] Cerem
A wedding follow the ce Jacqueline Di and Marvin p. m. tomo Arnold Clegs in the Grac Parents of and Mrs. D N. Shannon Mrs. Ora Ke The bride’ is accented roses and ¢ wear a finge wreath of ol Miss Nan the maid of an iris taffe taffeta dres the bridesm Maxine an Helen Wyth Richard K to be the b be Robert P Walter Saln wig of Ft. \ A recepti Club will The couple * Mooresville. tended Ind
Msgr. Offic]
St. Cathe was the sc Miss Ma: marriage Msgr. Jami vows at 10
The brid satin gowr and a full wore a fi carried whi Miss Ru maid of } maids wer and Miss } Judy Jeni bridesmaid eonral, gree vet. Charles man, and Wendling er. A break Country ( and 4 re night in { a trip to ( be at hom The bri College, is and Mrs. Allen Ave. ents are ) Jennings,
Salon Holidze
The Ma 8 and 40, ainner ar Tuesday | Plans | culosis Mra, Jack the seal ¢
