Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1948 — Page 13

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houses. —————— (Bobo) Barnett, tramp clown in with the limited budget of the Poor Man Dies Wealthy the Shrine-Polack Bros.® Circus, family for which it is ‘NEW YORK, Apr. 2 (UP)— whose opening at the Murat while the garden for the largeriyMax Wedell, a church sexton| | heater Sunday will be heralded house will be more pretentious. (everyone thought was poor when| by a downtown parade starting < Mr. Lowry is 3 Srifinais uf the be died last Feb. 11, was still] at 2 p. m. tomorrow.

plot for the “House of Ideas” Church disclosed that Mr. i which formed the centerpiece for|Wedell’s will cancelled a $13,000 mers the 1946 Home Show. mortgage

pr —————sey DIOS Parade

© Grand March Begins . = At 2 p. m. Tomorrow

a0 FLOOR, 7 N. merioian st. Offer Your oral Suintis J Hage a

5 ‘ . - djanapoiis tomorrow to herald

onc SUITS] 000 EO

Bishop-Kaye Furs . . .

.» tomorrow's parade will march down Massachusetts Ave. to Pennsylvania St.,, down Penn to Market, west on Market to the Circle, from tithe Circle north on dian to Michigan and east on Michigan t'back to the Temple.

HOBO CLOWN — Chester |

- THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Rush. Siberian Military Pla

ds Straits.

From Alaska

royal

By JIM G. LUCAS Scripps-Howard Stall Writer ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Apr. 2 —Russian Siberia—26 miles from

American Alaska at its nearest point—is a beehive of military

activity. Just what the Soviets have across the Straits, our

bqlizes the curtain between the East and West these facts have seeped: Petropaviovsk, the Russian airnaval base on Kamchatka peninsula, daily assumes more military significance. Russian fighter bases have been reopened on the ChukotskiPoluostrov Peninsula, just 50 miles - from Alaska’s Seward Peninsula and 26 miles from American-owned Little Diomede Island. New Bases Built

built in Siberia, within = easy range of Alaska. There is considerable military activity along the Sea of Okhotsk, just back of Kamchatka Peninsula and also within striking distance of Alaska. ‘The Island of Sakhalin, com-

Parade Mile Long *

Vernon - (Pop) . Sheller, the Muraps parade marshal, predicts

oc COATS}

pletely under RusSian control since the fall of Japan, has become Russia's Arctic staging

| Some. snow flurries will occur in North Dakota while showers will extend from Montana and WyomNew fighter bases have been' ing to Washington and Oregon.

= NEW ORLEANS

FOTOCAST"

J EGEND

ay seaTTtato Si ECTED Ye a, I ey SNOW SNOW SHOWERS : i. RAIN 0 towns 777

T M REG PAT'S PEND. COPR 194R EDW, ans RIGHTS RESERVED. 4 TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—The cool air flow arrow pointing down toward Arkansas shows the general air flow which will cause colder weather from the Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic tonight and early tomorrow, By morning, weathermen say the mercury will be in the 30s from upstate New York through the Ohio Valley to Missouri, lowa, Nebraska and Kansas. ' The dark affected areas on the forecast show by symbols where latest government forecasts are calling for rain and snow.

BROWNSVILLE

The cold air flow from central Canada will send thermometers down into the 20s all through the Dakqtas, Minnesota and eastern Montana near daybreak. Tonight, skies will be clear along the east coast from Maine to Florida, in the Gulf States and the central plains.

preparing for trduble up here, but ing throwgh Congress, carries $47 hundreds of Russian fishing ships Lt. Gen. Nathan Twining, vet-|million. will appear in our waters this eran airman who heads the| If war came to Alaska we un.(Speing, Russia has: i} uw. iy Alaska Command, says they doubtedly would try to hold atitne Russians show ‘up here it's have the mititary power for a0Y cost the key points. To sur-ig bet they're fishing—but tarting it. render them would expose te In not for fish.

Hoosier Barkers

Monday Tuesday st the MeCupdy Ental iy Evans- ;

The Evansville Asso- 2: ciation will be host for a series . { of meetings. Melburn G. Berges,

of the arrangements committee.

trust officer of the Old National Bank in Evansville, is chairman

John Zuber, vice president and : trust officer of the American National Bank of Indianapolis and chairman of the trust committee of the Indiana Bankers Association, will call the first session to order. Speakers will include Mr. Berges, R. D. Mathias, president of the Indiana Bankers Associa« tion and president of the Old National Bank; Mr. Zuber and George F. Dickman, administrator of the Indiana inheritance tax division.

Speakers Other speakers include John T. Royse, vice president of Merchants National Bank of Terre Haute; Robert 8, Davis, vice president and trust officer of First National Bank and Trust Co. of Lexington, Ky. and Verne G. Cawley, president of the Indiana Bar Association. Speaker at the dinner Monday {night will be Louis Ruthenberg, president of Servel, Inc. Mr, {Mathias will preside. : R. W. Goheen, vice president and trust officer of the National Bank and Trust Co. of South Bend, will preside at the Tuesday morning session. Speakers include Earl G. Schwalm, trust officer of the Lincoln National Bank and Trust Co., Ft. Wayne, and Ro 8. Swaim, assistant trust offi of _the First National Bank of

«eo Were

wonderful "buys." «oo BOW 1 9 |

SORTS A

95 >" «ss Were 59 «so NOW 29 CRRA

TOPPER 215

(Right Over Florsheim Shoes)

a procession of a mile or more base. in length. In the line of march will be all the Murat's bodies, including the 1

Something is going on at Ulan Ude, far inland near Lake Baikal, and the chances are that some{Shrine Band, Patrol, Gun Club, (thing is military in nature.

dustrial heart of the Need $2.5 Billion States to alr attack. Maj. Gen. Joseph H. Atkinson

If Alaska should fall, the mili-

CAMERA CLUB TO MEET The Indianapolis Camera Club|luncheon. Evans .Woollen Jr. Air Force commander In Alaska,|tary men here say, it would take will meet for business and print|vice president of American Bank. says we need $2.5 billion worth of [200,000 men at: least a year to|analysis, directed by Jack Hutch-|ers Association and chairman of

Chicago. Mr. Zuber will preside at the

+c TOPPERS

AT... ig

+ $98 Saturday and two matinees Bun-| tia day, Apr. 11. |

Mostly one-of-a-kind samples, show pieces and window pieces. Also pastels, slightly soiled. All

19

we5 ore 99

7 N. MERIDIAN ST., 2nd Floor

|Oriental Band and Horse Patrol.| - Alaska’s defenders. say there is|construction to defend the ter-irecapture it.

Representatives from Shrine/no outward sign that Russia is'ritory. Our new budget, now goand

organizations in Hendricks

There are reports here that'clubrooms at 113 E. Ohio 8t.

inson_ tonight at 8 o'clock in the the board of Fletcher Trust Co,’ if will speak. : 3

Henry Counties, Whitewater and Logansport also are expected to participate. A special feature! will be Greencastle's championship high school band.

Features Clowns

Clowns from the circus and Murat’s ceremonial clowns will be scattered through the procession, with the MGM Hollywood elephants bringing up the rear. The circus, produced for the {| third year by Polack Bros., will give 23 performances during the 10-day run. Sunday shows wilt be at 2:15 and 8:15 p. m., and all school-day matinees will start at 3:45 p. m. The schedule “calls for two night performances Friday and|

A ————————————————————— Mystery. ‘Mist’ ils Traced to Hospital Boilers mem ————

& THE boilers of Methodist Hosi pital were today considered to ilbe the source of the “mist” ¢{ which descended in the .area i {Wednesday threatening the paint i lon many parked cars. Robert L. Wolf, City com3 vustion engineer, said the mist ‘lwas “undoubtedly” steam from the boilers. He based his con- % clusion on information obtained i from hospital officials ‘and from a survey made by Roy Gillum,: : City smoke inspector. El Mr. Wolf said his study indicated the steam cohtained some [alkaline chemicals but not enough f to cause any serious damage to § automobile paint. The safety valve on the hosE|pital boilers popped off shortly | before the mist descended, accord- £ ing to Wilbur C. McLin, ‘assistant hospital superintendent.

The following members have been elected to the board of directors of the Indianapolis Legal Aid Society: Herbert J. Backer, William E. Steckler, Frederic D. Anderson, George W. Eggleston, Roy Falvey, Charles E. Boswell and

The directors at their annual meeting elected officers of the society for 1948, They are Mr, Eggleston, president; Julian A. Kiser, vice prasident; Joseph N. Myers, secretary, #|and Mr. Falvey, treasurer.

[Franco Hears Taylor;

Refuses Two Others

MADRLD, Apr. 2 (UP)—Myron | Taylor, President Truman's per-

3 {| sonal envoy to the Vatican, con- | ferred. for 75 minutes last night with Generalissimo Francisco

Franco. tl Franco refused to permit Paul Culbertson, American Charge | d’ Affairs in Madrid, to attend the meeting. He also excluded Mr. Taylor's diplomatic adviser, Robert Pell.

Official Weather

UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ~Apr. 2, 1948

Seb Precipitation 34 lis, ed, 130 4 m.. 00 ; Tot. {tation since Jan. 1..... 10.13 #| Deficiency since Jan. 1.. a8 ° The followin e shows the “tempera- | MEE | ture yesterday in other cities:

4

2

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