Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1948 — Page 3
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WEDNESDAY, AUG. 25, 1948 .
350 Tenth Air Force
Influx of 61 | Personnel Due Next Month
Quarters at Fort Not Adequate
Jampacked Indianapolis faces the problem of housing 350 G. IL families moving here with 10th Air Force headquarters at Ft. Harrison. Most of these families require rental quarters. About 100 are unable to pay more than $40 or $50 a month. The Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce today set up an emergency housing agency for the 10th Air Force in their offices on N. Meridian St. Chamber officials and air force officers joined in an urgent appeal for homes or apartments. Moving in Next Month
Advance officers and enlisted men of the 10th Air Force will start moving in at Ft. Harrison Sept. 15, with completion of the transfer scheduled by Oct. 1. Chamber of Commerce spokesmen said they had contacted, Hoosier congressmen about the Fort housing problem but were stalled by lack of Federal funds. Tenth Air Force military personnel will total ‘1000, including 750 enlisted men and 250 officers. ! Half of these have families, many with children.
Limited Facilities About 150 families will be quartered in houses and converted barracks at Ft. Harrison. The rest will be forced to find homes in the critically overcrowded Indianapolis metropolitan area. Some air force maintenance troops will be stationed at Stout Field where the headquarisss unit will base 20 planes.The Tenth comes to Indian-| apolis from Offutt Field near Omaha, Neb. Its headquarters employs 700 civilian workers but only a few of these are migratIng here ‘rom Omaha. Majority of the civilian personnel will be hired in Indianapolis. The Tenth supervises the Midwest aerial defense area including Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Wyoming and Colorado.
IU Increases Economic Study
Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, Aug. 25 The department of economics of InIndiana University has included in its curriculum an expanded graduate program of teaching and research in economics, including public finance, At the same time, Dr. Louis Shere, director of the U. S. Treasury’s division of tax search, was assigned to the faculty of the economics staff. Dr. Shere resigned his post early this week with the Treasury to join the faculty. He will begin teaching in* September. He was with the Treasury 14 years.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Families
il
THE GENTLE TOUCH—Two members of the Indiana Air National Guard ground-crew probe the gizzards of a P-51 Mustang fighter plane during the guard summer training Reried, now in its second week at Baer Field, Ft. Wayne. They
are S. Sgt. John W Ave. (right).
tactics at the field.
$350,000 Swindle Believed a Plot |
Slain Financier Seen | As Having Had Aids
EMPORIA, Kas. Aug. 25 (UP) —Stdte officials said today that “three or four other men” helped’ Herbert J. Kindred swindle his City Finance Co. of $550,000 before he apparently hired someone to kill him. Chairman Jeff Robertson of the Kansas Corporation Commis-| sion said “it took more than one man to juggle the company's books-~three or four men were! implicated by our prefiminary|
{audit.”
But Mr. Robertson refused to, say who the “three or four men" were. The corporation commission! {was scheduled to hold a meeting, at Topeka today to decide whether the firm should be al-
hearing will be held in district court here tomorrow on a peti-|
ceivership. Kindred's body was found on farm road near Florence, Kas. last Wednesday. He had been shot several times. Investigation has led officers to believe that he/ hired professional gunmen to murder him so his family could collect his insurance. A subsequent audit of his firm's books revealed the large-scale fund manipulations.
"You Can Win Year's Free Rent
ION WITH A
FOUC
Green, 2607 Broadway (left), and Sgt. John Stout, 352° Good Brig. Gen. Howdrd Maxwell, state adjutant general, looks én. Several hundred airmen, the majority from Indianapolis, are brushing up on combat flying
® Better hurry up and visit The Times Home of Ideas between now and { Sunday if you want to try { to win a place to live RENT FREE FOR A YEAR in the brand new Contest Home in Windsor Village.
® To participate in this absolutely free contest go to the Home of Ideas, 6030 | 15. 22d St, and get an entry blank, then visit the Con- ' test Home and pick out five errors in interior decorating. The “homes will be open each day from 12 noon to 8 p. m. Sunday, however, deadline for the contest, * though you have until Sept. 6 to mail your entries to The Times. ® There are other prizes, too-—a total of $1500 worth.
{
|
Admits Attack to ‘Fix’ lowed to remain in business. A Bal] Game
‘A Dream’ NEW BRITAIN, Conn. Aug.
tion by company officers for re-i95 (UP)-—Police said today that E. Vincent Eldréd, 27, a first/in the apartment.
rbaseman in the Hartford Twilight
League, had admitted his story anyone except his wife and him. 2itempted to swindle » waitress
Differ in Stories
i | ‘ (Continued From Page One) { —the important charges—-are not
your suggestions as to how to {“But if you don’t mind, we have villainous accusations” of Soviet
will be the final {ask
i Of World-Wide Espionage Ring
Russ Follow New Propaganda Line
By JAMES DANIEL
, Communist spying in this country. } The United States is accused ‘of directing-qn “international spy ring” com of former spies for Germany and Japan. Sowiet Sxpatriates and. displaced per-
| OIE Americans named as {leaders are former Rep. Clare Luce, Rep. Karl E. Mundt and, [John Foster Dulles: | The wild charges were made on | the Moscow radio in the form of | lengthy quotations from an ar-| ticle in the official press. i International news embarrassing to Russia is ignored for days or weeks, Then suddenly a vebuttal appears in some publica{tion and is broadcast by the Moscow radio. | The account of U. 8. spying begins with a reference to Mrs. Kosenkina's “kidnaping™ by U. 8. intelligence officers who. the radio said, used torture to extract anti- | Soviet statements from her. Then’ {it takes up Mrs. Luce. { “The political specialty of this. — {lady is concern for displaced persons, or rather for those international spies who are imported into the United States under this! STRAUSS {brand.” said the Moscow radio. SAVS: {Tt names fise committees aiding DP’s; adding, “these notorious organizations used to be employed . by the Hitlerite and Japanese Chairman Warns agents” asi . r. Du comes into the netOf Perjury Charge {work as a former contributor {to a non-interventionist organiza‘tion which was secretly aided by itlerite spies who now, says the questions of leases but whether I . was a Communist. Tt seats to me Jlascoy report, work “or the U. 8. to be topsy-turvy to talk about {leases in such a question as this.” - Mr, unt ats into the picture, Mr. Thomas intervened. ccording to Moscow, because he “The committee appreciates is prominent in the House UnAmerican Activities Committee which publicly indulges in
~ Spy Witnesses
conduct these hearings,” he said.
certain questions we want to Ying in De L.8 a nd, behind {Soviet nationals such as Mrs. | osenkina, The spy network has its man the State Department, Moscow says, naming him as Charles Bohlen, the expert on Russtan affairs. Mr, Bohlen is identified : as “an Americanized member of jhe Krupp-von Bohlen dynasty.”
The questioning about was resumed. { Mr. Hiss then described the in apartment transaction as “an ioral sublease arrangement.” He said he turned the apartment lover to Chambers when he andi {his wife moved into a house in! |Georgetown. { For a while before the swith!
|was completed, Mr, Hiss said, Mr. Old Skin Game their
and Mrs. Chambers and baby stayed with tne Hiss amily Doesn't Work
Hiss! Police today held two men on
leases:
Mr. Stripling asked Mr.
BORROWED FROM WEST—Some Japanese brides are de- | serting their traditional many-colored bridal costumes {right) in | favor of the Western wedding gown. Japanese models display the | Eastern and Western costumes at a fashion show for wives af men of the | Ith Airborne Division at Hokkaido.
|if- he had yet been able to find
of a razor attack by three meniself who knew “George Crosley”, who wanted him to “fix” a game in 1934 or 1935.
was “all a dream.”
| Mr. Hiss said he had failed to
Lt. Michael J. Flynn said Eld-ido so, so far, but was continuing red told him he made up. the his effort.
story to ‘get some publicity” and
“make a little more money from| Mr.
the ball club.”
H OF
TOMORROW! !
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Mr. Stripling said that after Hiss last week identified|®
“Crosley” as a free lance
zine writer, the committee
.jchecked the Library of Congress
for any record of a writer by that name, but found none since 1905. Mr, Stripling read a letter from | American Magazine which said! that publication had never pub-
Fes any articles by, “George Crosley.” Mr. Hiss had testified ich 3 {that Mr. Crosley told him he Traffic Victim, Dies
{hoped to sell an article on the!
{a charge of vagrancy after they
jout of §6 with an old = .n game. Mrs. Doris Goode, Tyndall 'howne. sald two smartly dressed men came into the Dipper Parlor, (1818 Madison Ave. last night and jtond her they wanted to get rid a lot of dollar bills they had a in a poker game. One of the men counted out five ones, When Mrs. Goode placed a five on ghe counter, he laid the ones on top of it, then asked her to give them a 10 for the pile. She caught on and police caught the men.
Howard T. Harper,
Howard T. Harper, 6345 River-
{view Dr, died in the Greensburg Magazine, inquiry to American] | Hospital yesterday after an auto SHOPS geeigent on Road 46 south of FOR there. He was 26. 2 Injured Slightly A resident of Indianapolis two YOUNG months, Mr. Harper was a civil As Cars Overturn engineer on the New York Cen- FOURTH | Two ‘moto-'sts escaped seriousitral Railroad. He came here from FLOOR {injury early today when the cars Bellefountain, O. :
{they were driving sideswiped {each other and overturned in Fall {Creek Pkwy. one and a half miles west of Shadeland Ave.
| Deputy sheriffs said one car!
{was traveling alongside the other {when both attempted a turn. The, {drivers vere William Hoffman, Jr. 22, of 2638 N. Emerson Ave. {and Robert Fentz, 22, of 2450 N
He was » member of the North Methodist Church. He served in World War II. He had been {graduated from Ohio State University. Services are being arranged in Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nancy Sue Harper; his mother, .{Mrs. Grace Harper, and a sister,
{Delaware St. They were treated {at 8t. Vincent's Hospital,
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Mina Ann Harper, both of Media,
MARRIAGE LICENSES | BIRTHS { | Morris F. Duncan, 51, of 436 Berwick Ave. : Boys ! | Mable Craft, 48, of 436 Berwick Ave : At St. Franek ge. Patricia Owens;
joanna Joseph Nolan, 23, of 1415 Hoefge i Anna Rita Gavaghan, 23, of 120 £ New York St
Charles A Beal Jr. 26, of 3085 N. Temple
1 Ave.: Marjorie Jean Hyatt, 25, of 2216 At Methodist Thomas, Norvell Nelson: 5 : A Joseph Victoria Goldstein: Gi *: Meridian a [i Jeanett Bailey: Harold, Jean their store—The Man’ $ Store. os Jobn L. Sullivan, 32 ol 24 N Peninsyl-! Paul, Jeannette Wease; Harold, Masha J vania St; Joanne A Ptrauss, 21 Hefner, Roy, Phyllis Brow v + SCAT | Billings Veterans Hospital. Nurses Quar- ag Ar Vieosatn mover” Borothy Gate | The Kindergarten crowd is : pb eu of Pi Lauderdale, AECL Bertha McDaniel L. A. I INSIST toddling i x * gy alter r ¥ anderdale enell Johnson. Jose athleen Hos- | _——— x pas Kathryn E. Simpson, 34, of 220 totter: James, Irn Sent: Joseph, Kath-| THEY PUT ME 0 ng " : % th St erine Baire { — y s % William B, Wratten, 27, of 2827 B. 18th Girls ! HERE The Grade Schoolers (from Six § & Mary Theresa Anderson, 24, of 6188 A¢ 5. Francis—Nolan, Marie Haver: Leon, | | want to be seen roadway
Otto Keeler, 22 of 5660 Guilford Ave
Janel Cummniings. 27, of Columbus, ind | Al General—Alfred. Ruth Lynn boy i eq shape— Harold FP. Past, : 46, of Rollywiee, = L:1AL Co lenian ay Sonat. Halen Jennings, | BECAUSE o taken care of in gr t ohn izabeth Fatley: Carl. Josephine | i Emma Marie Gay. 56. of Hawthorne, | Watkins: Richard, Ann Glasser; Glen, ” 2 to 10 years And SENIO HALL i 1s hosti the {Clarence R. Gentry, 38, of Hammond, Ind. ; g¢ ALE Staiahart be Martha Mazelg old he's a man, : the H School } st—Robert, Martha Hazelgrove: : ! oe. Zelma Meadows, , Hof Hammond, Ta Olen. Ruch Goff George, Senisia ck i isn’t he— young men of ages eman 0 n ames, Jane Bugioka vere uth plays { Place, Mattie Baile” 33. of 350 Worn O'Conner. aes Caan pad He's old enough (there is a juke box { v neent’s- niter, ® ursley: Gh a Colbert. 32 of 930 N._ California, ~Berirum. Beitle Beck Richard, go, et his clothes for free—and a coke machine that % t.. Margaret Gaines, of 91 itchard; Jasper, ALel Woo 3 "e Cleo, Mary Cassidy; Russell, Juanita ot . trouss, disgorges for a CE sore vy Zunan a 25 of 1a N 5h ghey perd, James, Ruth Carson; Charles, i isn't he? : ‘ ve: Avonelie Jean Evans, of 14 iriey Pe bool i Prospect [2 ‘Willie, Bmms Rogers, 923 E.! nd ryw here onsidération we 8 {Chester Newland Jr i M4, 2061 3 hot Bt - . . i A eve where t e is c A Chester 8t :. Marthalou Re 17 of 920 f id Division St. ’ t Ww {Yrs Ames. 24, ol 2714 N. Pennsylvania: DEATHS 1 for the parental walle hether . a | Marjorie R. Epple. 28, of 1851 N Charles Edward Henthorn, 70, at 1820
§(Geor | Carl, Martha Powell. Herbert, Chris-i tine Reel: Hobert, Rosemond Smith; | Cilenin, Marcila Kr
Kropp, {at Coleman—Lessel, Hazel Louks: 1
orothy Jarvis; Howard, Ruth Fattier;
Drath Helen Outeslt
{ Bas St 0th., Ateriosclerosis {Andrew M. McHaffle, 22, o Panvills, Ind; Jessie Bornstein, . at 881 Bradshaw, Joyce Ann Wilhams, of 5214 COTOTAry ctaaion
1 t {Richard P. Miller, 21 Place; Glenna M. Prost. 20,
Ral {Charles Hathors: 76, of B30 Reisner Bi; | Jennie Condon, bs. ot Franklin, Ind {Hubert Leon Beavers, 28, of Medora, Ind. | Ruth Jackson, 23, of Anderson, Ind.
[DIVORCE SUITS FILED
vi, James Gilbert Venable; May vs Le ne Baiterson: Bdna M. vs. Nobie Clarence
(H. Bims; vs. Clarence Reffity;! ‘Geneva vs. Russell Whisenbunt; David R. |vs. Evelyn Twenette Horton, Edward L. ivs. Damenica Anne Boyd; Grace FP. vs, (Ervin W. Wicklund; Betty J. vs. Luther J
lund, Maurice Robert vs. Mildred Ber! {nice Nicely: Delorice vs. Richard W. Mus-
grave: Harold D. vs. Beulah D. | Beity Jean vs. John Zike. ;
of 2s Belle View; Creek, N. Dr * 4637 Ha!
Rhine; | Hi
{Julia Eliner Robinson, 86, at 676 E. Pall] ., arteriosclerosis i rry Ryle, 71, at 2310 Columbia, cere bral hemorrhage. { {John P. Scheide er, 9, at 942 N. Parker. SRIOPARY thrombosis { Richard HH. Smith, -63. at i mitral insufficiency {Ha tite L. Winkehote: n at 29% Barth, | di
CRT 8. Ralph Butier. 61; at Veieran's, on
Broadway, carcinoma
George Charles Reinhart, 66, al Methodist, aortic CmbuTicency 508 N. Beville, cari cinom:
| William J Gill, 70, illiam Arve Hancock, 71. at 2250 Central, cardio vascular renal enry Harrison Scaggs; #1, at 220. N. Traub, arteriosclerosis.
i
Methodist, |
nyper-| Clifford Hadley, 45, at 5923!
AND heard! JUST
that of the Juvenile Court.
TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
I'S A NATURAL MASCULINE ~~
A Young Man—who is about to be exposed to something like 9 months of edjication— is apt to consider the whole thing pointless—and without compensation—unless his clothes come from The Man's Store! It's a natural masculine feeling!
He wants his clothes presented in masculine surroundings—from o masculine type store—that understands a boy's heart—and his head—and his framework.
And in they come—to the FOURTH FLOOR—boys of all ages—in record - numbers—following instinct and ef : : custom and good sense—right to , le
Je
to in their ‘teens) are being
wallet be limitless-medium or flot—"the BEST at YOUR price—no matter what the price” —that's it!
L. STRAUSS & C0, 1
