Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1948 — Page 3

SUNDAY, NOV. 7, 1948 . THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES : PAGE 3

State’s Stepchild Goes Modern, Makes Homemakers Of Girls Who ‘Got Off On Wrong Foot’

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Hx SE 4 ss 5 RE Ri eR es k 3 3 & BUDGET CASUALTY — The . NEW TYPE SHOWER—Here is the -equipment the Girls BEHIND THE TIMES—As late as 1946 gitls in training in Clermont had to sweat over three old- LEARNING TO LIVE—Giris who never had a chance to learn esident of money didn't spread far enough School hopes to install in all cottages next year—tiled sanitary fashioned coalburners, and in similarly antiquated laundries. Placed out on the job they couldn't homemaking in their own homes acquire cooking skills and tidiness jorized a to replace all old-fashioned showers which save water, speed up bathing and cut down the adapt coal-stove cooking to electric ranges. Vacuum sweepers, electric refrigerators, ‘automatic in .these shining tiled kitchens. Besides basic homemaking the right out bathrooms at Clermont. waiting lines. There's also less danger of spreading infection. washers and irons were similar mysteries. girls learn "nica-ities" from instructors. business. a wis 2 an pf ca pr

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FA Clorment Gil: Schoo Graduly Acauiing | World News: Clay Reports German Economy In Red Zone Stagnant

Long-Needed Up-to-Date Equipment

| crew of (he steamer Dun | tip today, because Raymon |Melvin Collins, 38, mad man of MEDIA, Pa., Nov. TP) ee . \ By DONNA MIKELS Lacks Coal, Steel and Spare Parts, Aengus. | Bauzon had a good time in [the tenderloin here, to kill eight! Daniel P. hy aT ' The Indiana Girls School at Clermont—for too many years the Due in Part to ‘Counter-Blockade Neutrals’ Still Hope Europe. |persons and wound three others York, a bridegroom of less than stepchild of state institutions—is emerging from the coal stove BERLIN, Nov. 8 (UP)—Gen. Lucius D. Clay, American military P Bauzon, a musician, headed today from behind a second-floor. a day, left for ‘Bellefonte, Pa.,

LONDON, Nov. 6 (UP)—"Neu-| , | barricade. Before he took his today . 1 fo 1s. overnor, said today that the econo loa straight for Mammy’s Restaur- | 4 Y 00 5) Jody where he willbe ‘ex period into a progressive training school for girls.y g 0 y momy of the Soviet zone Of Ger ira)" members of the United Na-| ant one of his fasorite havuis, |OWN life he terrorized the tender-| ‘cuted Monday for the hith-hike

As late as 1948 the 10 cottages in which some 200 girls live, many is at a complete “standstill,” partly because of the Western yj ns security Council believe that

. “ 2 » : | when he got off the boat. He [loin for an hour. slaying of a motorist. 5 4/| ‘counter-blockade” of Berlin. ; | : shiafs| Ww i : work and learn were equipped with old fashioned coal stoves an Gen. Clay told a press conference that the Soviet zone economy | 2, "Ee 08 1 Jat Big Your Shiefs had 3 goo quate meal aM ‘Balance of Power His marriage to Stella Noto, ls. af | 0 Ss 0 riendas, e waill-

obsolete flat irons with heaters which turned the laundries into|p.. pottom during the summer and “has shown. no improvement ey Ba et cusaly Xo WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 (UP).

who bore his child last Fébru- : rm oe y {thoritatively reported today. —Southern Democrats, whose 18) rls ee trained fo cides, In contrast, he said, in West- DUBLIN, Eire; Nov. 6 (UP) There was a growing belief Bauzon handed the waitress- |pellion wasn’t strong enough to ary, fool place. yesterdyy - in wash, iron an

is , > rela’ : . Broadmeadow Prison farm near las a “leaning tower of Pisa” in a ETmany Ba? ben increased Father Thomas Varley, par- among then that only a meeting, ®* traveler's checks and left. |stop President Truman's election,| pare. work manually were at a 1088! prs. Lehman's 1949-50 budget y per cent in e past five| jgh priest of 'stricken “Aran |of President Truman, Premier Jo- Today he sent them a post- still will hold a sufficient con-

auburn-haired Brooklyn girl

for months,” resses, all about his trip.

sweat cabinets. : tendent. The chimney of the cenGirls who were trained to clean, tra? heating system was described

when they were placed in outside months. -} i . card with his address, saying: |gressional “balance of power” to Senator Under Fire homes. They couldn’t adapt their REaRet 4 The Soviet zone is “suffering” | Island, bined Ip Wiles of yug jut Sam Prime Br in “If anything is wrong with |whip him on apatanly parts off] DETROIT, Nov. 6 (UP)— experience to electric irons, mod-|te Need Is Great from lack of steel, coal and spare| Ing seas in a fishing smack |Queuille could finally break the the traveler's checks, contact 'his legislative program if they Claiming evidence of ‘‘gross irern washers and vacuum sweep-| The improvements must come,|parts, Gen. Clay reported. | last night and today received deadiock ” | me.” |care to. : regularities” in Tuesday's voting ers. {says Mrs. Lehman, if the school| He noted that the Russians had | a promise of aid for his people. A Ti . f Ti Killer Uses Dum-Dums | A combination of Dixie Demo- for U. S. Senator, the Democratic Many Sent Back is to fulfill its work in educating stepped up their “peace ection| Food for the 1000 inhabitants A=11ZZY OT a [Ip jcrats and Northern Republicans party today served nétice that :

and training teen-age girls who ganda here- since the re-election| of the island is - desperately | NEW YORK, Nov. 6 (UP)— | CHESTER, ge. Nov. 8 (UP) woud be big enough to put the the re-election of Sen. Homer

5 Maly of the Bils ere The| “80t off on the wrong foot.” |of President Truman. He sald he| Joy because of a strike by the Three waitresses shared a $250 |— Dum-dum bullets were used by skids under any bill. Ferguson may be contested. ack as unsatisfactory. { “Our institution isn’t a place to|did not believe western Germans - en — : school could not give 20th cen- put girls behind bars because they | would fall for it. % tury training with 19th century|w..e’ aq» Mrs. Lehman said. v : ’ + equipment. [“It is what the name implies—a Getting the Book

When Mrs. Adeline Lehman re- school to teach girls homemaking! TOKYO, Sunday, Nov. § (UP) STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW turned as superintendent in 1945, ang domestic arts, to prepare| ‘1... ... miltarists and sat- : a $70,000 emergency appropria-them for both earning a living| "hb : tion was granted by Gov. Ralphignd for marriage.” raps of the 17-year era of agGates to modernize the school. Recenfly a man who lives near|gression took no cheer from the Work started in 1946. In two the school called her. first portion of the 350,000-word years all laundries have been re-| “Pe told me he'd heard about judgmént of the International : modeled and equipped with late all the things we taught our girls| Military Tribunal for the Far modern washing machines and about housekeeping and what East. temperature controled irons. Each|good housekeepers they were,”| After the first nine hours of kitchen has new electric stoves Mrs. Lehman relates. “He wanted reading, the general feeling in

and refrigerators. to know how to go about get-/the courtroom. was that the triThere is much more io be done. ting his own daughter enrolled bunal was getting ready to , A survey made‘'by Mrs. Leh- here.” ‘throw the book” at them.

man in 1941 showed that in 10 years only $80 improvement had been made per cottage per year—| 3 : 4 less than would be necessary for] STRAUSS | ; 4 1 . b - i Lr the average small home. . : [ ' : 5 54 ald do a elo util] Gavel SAYS: FOR SPORTS IT'S STRAUSS g * old-fashioned bath tubs instead » of showers needed to afford the best sanitary protection to the; ’ ¢ large number of girls who use them. x - The schoolhouse hasn't passed] + a health or fire inspector's test in ‘the memory of the superin-

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STRAUSS SAYS:

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