Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1949 — Page 16
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In Venezuela
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To New Junta
i+: "Recognition Zi Also Expected ‘For El Salvadore
‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 (UP) The United States today granted . Tull diplomatic recognition to the +. new revolutionary military gov5 , ernment of Venezuela, i '% The action was announced by the State Department which made lic an exchange of notes with| Venezuela, { Diplomatic quarters speculated that the United States also would recognize a similar new military regime in El Salvador, } American. recognition of the % new state of reslal and of Trans-| * jordan also was reported under!
study. +91 Delivers Note to Caracas The State Department said|
Walter J. Donnelly, U, 8. ambassador to Venezuela, delivered
- a note of recognition to the Ca-|"
J Tacas government today. A #«.» The document sald thé United States had noted statements by the new regime that it would “strictly fulfill its international obligations,” and would prepare elections. ¢ _ Venezuela in a note dated Nov. + 25 notified this government that! the new military junta had taken -v. over in Venezuela because of the “grave circumstances threaten * * ing the social peace and economic -Jife of the republic.” Other Discussions Held The State Department said its recognition did not “imply any
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a
Shmoo party . .
. Miss Betty Nahmias, Miss Nikki Levy an
Norm Weisman make plans for a Shmoo party and dance Sunday night in Kirshbaum Center sponsored by Junior Hadassah. Norm | will be emcee of the floor show and the girls are dance co-chair-
men, .
Heavier Hogs Dip in But Lightweights Go Up
mn
Price
I~ The Most Rev, Paul C. Schulte, {archbishop of Indianapolis, spoke jon “Our Opportunity to Bring|,.. {Ourselves a Little Closer to the ov 1i¢tord
d of archdiocesan charities, on the
~~ |Child Theft Charge
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.
A
A a . ¥ Mrs. Thomas O'Brien To Head Group Mrs. Tlingoais O’Brien will serve as the new president of the In-| dianapolis Deanery Council of, the National Council of Catho-| lic Women. CL ! Mrs. O'Brien was elected last!
night with other officers at = Three Attorneys
Mr. Ryan
Mr. Robb
quarterly meeting of fhe organi
zation in the . Catholic Com- 3 Eton. Ble. 8 un Form New Firm (%5s en { Mrs. Larry Zapp was named |
first vice president; Mrs. John A. Murphy, second vice president;|
|lcan Sunbathers
Boucher, | general practice
retary: Mrs. George f law under
treasurer, and Mrs. A. E. Cod-|of
building, 130 E. Washington St. The son of and Mrs, T N.
moved up from
Ideals Which Christ Has Given | Us”; and the Very Rev. Msgr. August R. Fussenegger, director
Reese, 5659 Illinois St., Mr, Reese is a veteran of oversea duty in World
Mr. Reese
minors. -
“Work, Purpose and Scope of the NCCW.” degree from Indiana University raided last ‘fall. {in 1942 and his J.D. degree from the Indiana University School of. Law in June, 1948, : Mr. Robb is the son of Mr. and Mrs, James Robb, 17 N. Dear-| born St. ‘During the war he]
Trial Postponed on
The trial of George Wilmoth,
49, Logansport, on charges he Miss Helen H,
|stole his son, George Wilmoth ®erved overseas with the 'Air|/ing machine operator |r. 4, from his ex-wife was post- {Corps as a bombardier. A grad- Set-Up division of the box plant, Volunteer Aids poned yesterday by Judge Wil-|uate of the Indiana University | pg nor Package Co, was to be)
national president of the Amer-|
Keith C. Reese, Robert G. Robb defending Thomas and Vernon | Mrs. Joseph Dugan of Browns- and John M. Ryang all of Indian-| Smith, Bloomington father and| burg, third vice president; Mrs. apolis, have announced the’ Yor- son who were indicted by a grand George Hoffman, recording sec- mation of a partnership for the jury for their alleged activities |in connection with the operation |of- the club's camp near here.
The defense-has requested that a’ jury be called for the trial,
} to give Mr. Bray opportunity to {acquaint himself with the facts. {| The Smiths are charged with {contributing to the delinquency of
. Officers said children were presWar II. He received his A. B. ont when the club's camp was
Package Firm Honors 25-Year Employee
non-nudist, and| Chicago, former |
ciation, in|
a Py
FRIDAY, JAN. 24, 1040
E.U.B. Church Laymen In Sessions Here By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor Laymen from four ‘states are meeting today with Bishop Fred L. Dennis and his cabinet on the campus of Indiana Central Cole lege to plan for increased enrolls ment. and improvement of the college. Laymen from Indiana, Minne. sota, Wisconsin and Illinois, with the college president, Dr. I. Lynd Esch, and Bishop Dennis of the Northwest Area of the Evane gelical United Brethren Church, are discussing ways to interest numbers of young people in en-
rolling at Indiana Central. Bishop Dennis said the laymen
b. 4 to Feb. 25
state merit
|said.
Hoffman, cover- | in the
‘Seek Red Cross
{ J . ssive program dington, auditor, 'The nominat-| the firm name Mr. Bray said that Robert Ran- . nis will start an aggre ao included Mrs, of Reese, Robb faa Indianapolis, president of the| Bishop Fred L. Den for the growth und improvement {James. Welch, chairman; Mrs. and Ryan, with Fern Hill Club, and Vernon Smith ¢ A to Giv of the co ge. They Will veturd {James McCaslin and Mrs, Fran-| Offices in the Se- " |called on him seeking his aid. tate Agency t e to ster Jocat ches and | ces Sherwood. jcurity Trust % ? Trial Date Changed Merit Examinations through n an
contact strive to promote the idea
Everett L. Gardner, director of or 5 college 'education among the Indiana Employment Security| young men and women. Division, today announced that examinations {soon be given to fill present and ‘anticipated openings in audit examiner ‘obs in the agency, i. . ’ Persons desiring to register for jective in this movement for the the tests, which will be given by college, it is expected that finan« the Indiana State Personnel Divi-i ia] growth will come out of it,” sion, will have until Jan. 28 to : {make application, He added that the entrance isalary for audit examiner posi-/met yesterday on the campus ins itions is $200 a month,
Sees Financial Growth
“While the effort to raise money is not the laymen’s primary ob
will}
{the bishop added. Mr: Sandner The bishop's cabinet which also cludes: Dr, Virgil Hunt, Indianapolis; Dr. L. L. Baughman of Decatur, Ill; Dr, E. Craig Brandenberg; Bedford, Ind.; Dr. C. O, {Main, Minneapolis; Dr. George H. {McAhren, Fennimore, Wis.; and
An appeal for daytime volun-ip,. Bp Smith, Warsaw, Ind. teers to serve as Red Cross staff] Reports were given at the aids was made today by Mrs. council meeting yesterday by: Dr, to Wallace C. Tomy, chairman of W. M. Roberts,
president of {Bonebrake Theological Seminary;
Volunteers are needed as recep-/W. O. Clark ‘of Dayton, O., treas-
anapolis Veterans Hospitals, at Gregory, executive secretary of the Red Cross blood donor center|the general council of the denomi«
chapter|nation, who interpreted the
{church’s 1949 program.
; Judgment whatsoever” regarding weights rose and $16.50, as canners and cutters/llam D. Bain in Criminal Court) School of Business and School of |) noreq by her co-workers today | i Venezuelan domestic policies. It sir prices on Sigliptreights. helo pir to $15. Bulk of cutters|Division 1. - Nasgew trial date|Law, he is presently sefvirig as al¢or having completed 25 years of | + Baid the question had been dis-|[,4ianapolis Stockyards today, as/sold at $14 to $14.50. 04d shells has been set. Deputy Prosecutor. |service with .the company. % ‘cussed with other American re-|).,ior weights showed a 25 to/were noted as low as $8. Wilmoth asked the contin-) Married and residing at 519 E.| Among those assembled ~ publics, and that they were In| so cent drop Bulls dropped 50 cents, as good uance because he wanted a new 48th St, Mr. Ryan bo the so of mark the - occasion for Miss/ Red Cross volunteer services. "+ formed of this government's deci-| ’ pi 29 avy sausage bulls sold at $21.50. lawyer. Wilmoth’s bond was in-| Mrs. M. J. Ryan, Mahanoy ity, Hoffman, 637 S. New Jersey St. . + Bion several days ago. | RS And Shales of oT usage mediums a Chuan, however, from $750 to Pa. He was a Navy pilot during/were her brother, Carl Hoffman, tionists, librarians, filing clerks|urere of the E.U.B. missions ne . A. fonal subcommittee, gx 50 as prices from $21.25 to!$17 to $20.50. . -1$2000. He is now in jail. the war and received his A.B. de-land his wife, Elizabeth, and two and typists in Billings and Indi-/benevolences board; and Dr. D. T, © After a tour of Latin America, §21 50 were paid for classes-that Sheep Trade Steady Thé ex-wife, Mrs. Mildred/gree from the _ University ofisisters, Josephine: and - Betty .7 expressed the opinion that quick|iere strictly lightweights. The, In sheep trade, prices remained Wilmoth, charged that her former| Notre Dame and his J.D. degree Eckhart, all of whom work or “recognition of military BOVErn-| nractical top price was $21.50. generally steady. A lot of choice mate toolg the child Feb. 29. She from the Indiana University | have worked at the Paper Pack-/and at the Red Cross 3 ments gave the “green light” to| Weights from 220 to 250 pounds to prime grade 110-pound fed na- lives at 2005 Mansfield Ave. School of Law. ‘age Co. house. + Similar actions elsewhere in the oo1d at $19 to $20.75. as a few tive lambs established a $27 price sg % Western Hemisphere. reachedl $21. Prices from $18 to(top. Common to just good na-| ~The State Department also an- $19.50 were paid for 250 to 290-|tives sold mostly at $17 to $24, as| . nounced that the United States ponud weights. Choice uniform |a few sales reached $25. + and Saudi Arabia had agreed to offerings reached prices from $20! Three decks of good and choice + Taise the status of their respec-|to $20.25, : 91-pound fed Western wooled| tive Jegations to the rank of em-| Weights from: 200 to 350 re-|lambs sold at $25. Three decks of {ceived bids of $17 to $18. Heavier 800d and choice nearly wooled fed .. Full-U. 8. recognition of Israel weights near 400 pounds dropped| Western 90-pound average year-| > was expected in a few days. as low as $16. lings brought $22, : | - : | Sows were sold at prices steady| Slaughter ewes scarce, Jemained)
Charge Butcher
Small lots of . common and
$23.50 per hun-
to 50 vents lower than yesterday.|Steady at $9 and less. Estimates Sales ranged from $14.50 to $16, of receipts were hogs, 7850; cattle,
although stags sold at $13.50 and
. Cows Sell Down All slaughter classes of cattle showed a week-end drop, as cows sold at prices 50 cents a hundred
taste|and heifers sold at $17 to $22. Even|
- Late sales of common and me-| um beef cows dropped to $15
600; calves, 275, and sheep, 1100.
Halt Fire on DC-§ With 28 Aboard
Airliner Pilot Makes
Emergency Landing KANSAS CITY, Mo, Jan. 21 (UP) —~ An American Airlines| DC-6 commercial plane, carrying| 23 passengers and a crew of five, |
Blast in Movie “Drowns Sound
made an emergency landing at the Municipal Airport here early| today after there had been an indication of fire in the ship's tail!
i 1
pa 2 Surf ’
|
heater. oF Capt. William A. Coln brought | the ship down safely after crew
v work, the detectives said. z el, the detectives said, and took | a taxi te the packing plant where he was given a quantity of |
meat which he sold to. a friend for $76.81.
Yanks, Czech Guards Exchange Gunfire : FRANKFURT, Jan. 21 (UP)— The U. 8. Army announced to-
- > > 4 *
day that American soldiers ex-/'n changed gunfire with Czechosto- rious!
& Vvak border guards in a brief in-! = cident last night. | » The constabulary troopers on! +¥ guard duty along the Bavarian frontier with Czechoslovakia suf-| fered no casualties. The trouble began when a truck crossing into Czechoslo-
CANTON, Il. Jan. 21 (UP)— members had emptied fire bottles
theater, and
- less, id - “za : Police. Say C paunds lower, : Admits $158 Deal wi DORK A0.year-old meat cutter ac-/Mmedium native yearling steers " }. cused of an extra-curricular : 5: for smoked ham and bacon was|Good grades were scarce. © # to uppear in Municipal Court 3|these were not believed salable 2 Joday to answer charges of em-at prices above : bezzlement of some $158 worth! dredweight. > of meat. -_ | &s Detective Sgts. Jack Alkire and di E Drvlis Gleich said Clancy Buror alter, 1501 N. New Jersey : $< Bt. admitted he signed rasincs Shoots Rival as + meat orders to Stark & Wetzel, > Inc, for the DeBurger Food Mar-| . Ket, 20868 N. Illinois St. ‘+. be was employed. x Borrows Car - rs detac bichon hi or | John Tovrea, 20, sat behind his > on Jen. 10 and picked up some |8ir] friend and his rival in a movie +» 136 pounds of smoked ham and
and shot the rival as a dynamite, sliced bacon from the packing ®*Plosion on the screen drowned company ir ag in ng out the sound of the pistol, Sherorder from the DeBurger Market. | ff A. J. Linveen said today. * He then sold the meat to two Then Tovrea ran from the thea- » men for $81.40 and retu {ter to a coal mine three miles returned 10! away, throwing the pistol away in|theTe had been a fire alarm. Tuesday Walter placed the snow. He was arrested there
another order with Stark & Wets. PY & deputy Sho alse was in the [Nurse Will Speak
in spraying the heater while in flight. There was no actual blaze, Capt. Coln said. Airport officials said it was a perfect landing and there was no fire and no hysteria among the passengers, although they were informed before the landing that
admitted!
shooting Robert Pugh, 19. = " THE SHERIFF said that Tov-|
On Disaster Roles
Miss Jessie W. Herr, assistant
rea told him he was “still madly director of nursing service for in love” with blond, blue-eyed Ro- the eastern area of the National
Agents Fin Corp som American States
Ayrshire Col ~om
*L'S Ayres 4% % pfd ser “45 Rk Yds ole
Belt R & 8
Local Issues
pld {American States pf A
|gine Willlams, 23. Tovrea s {had been dating Miss {for two months, and planned the {shooting when Mr. Pugh started to take her out two days ago. The bullet grazed Mr. Pugh's eck, but he was not injured sey, Mr. Linveen said.
vakia failed to halt for German Belt R & Stk vds com
#. border police, according to the
% Army account,
* answer to a call from a’ German |Consoiidates Finance pfd .... ¢ {Cont Car-No Var .
border station, the Army said, Czech guards opened fire and the U. 8, soldiers, returned it,
. de ————— — ita Electric com hoes ’ Pt Wayne-Jackson RR pid ... : Scout Troop 42 (ers. Somes” "a "pte = To Evaluate Work Hosk: Drug. Go. com +s. Boy Boout Troop 42, of the ind aa wat 0 *" Capitol Avenue Methodist Church, “ihe » & © com today completed a two-year plan todon pA ta Bie
’ . Indpls Water ¢l A com of action which will culminate In| indie Water 8% ofa the 40th Anniversary of Scout-:indpls Water 4 ise pta Ing in 1950. tndpla Railways com fersnan Ngtinp Troop, Pack and Senior Units Kingan & Co "otd y Kingen & Com fom 4 Were asked to evaluate their units Linen Nat I Tg 2..on the basis of Leadership, Pro- Lincoln Loan st uid jeskram and Members, and to de: | Marmon Werringion com —xide what they feel can be ac-| Navona: Homes com
Fi vomplished in 1949 and 1950, ceremony was planned,
A
place during Scout Week, Feb.! 8-13,
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING ROUSE PY EE $1
*N Ind Pub Bery fe IN Ind Pub Serv som to take!N Ind Pub Serv 4%%
Union
Central Soya com
Bobba- Merrill pfa
Com Loan 4% pfd
Cummins Ens com
Cummings Bog pfd Consolidated Ind com {Consolidated Ind nfd
R Mallory com
» Progress Laundry . Pub Serv of Ind com
|U 8 Machine com ‘ | United JFhlephone 8% oid ...
Title
merioan Los lastian Morley Oy ubner Pertilizer 6»
0 Ll) dttsens Ing [el dv Club 3-8
When the Amer- Central Soya com thoeyirs iret %" fcan guards reached the scene in|gam Lone oo SOM core
ifs com
* pid oe
BONDS Allen & Stewn 8s oi “we American Loati™ 4's 60 ...... 4% 88, ” ie Le
aid he/Red Cross, will be guest speaker Williams |
‘at the second session on Disaster Nursing, sponsored by the local Red Cross, in the World
Bldg.
speak on “The Role. of the
ter” at 1 p. m, 18 and at 7 pm 103% Miss Herr Jan: 26. Before joining the Red Cross
“9% Miss Herr served 18 1 visiting nurse. ew! She had Red Cross disaster | nursing experience in three floods Hh two in the Ohio Valley In 1945 7% and 1947 and one in Willlams“port, Pa., in 1946. | Miss Herr received her degree in public nursing from Duquesne 10% | University. Graduate nurses and|
years as a
: {Red Cross disaster relef volu3 Nn [teers are invited to attend the seis 10%" session. BW an - ——————————— al ”" * . wee... Hoosier Drops Line 108 1081 2 iw _ iu To His State Senator 2 Ta Lawmakers to Indiana's 86th 60 “ General Assembly today were re- @ ¢ Celving instructions on how to ly _|Vote—by mall, ir ™ Sen, William Butcher (R. South 24% Bend) received a postcard from 100% 103 15 18% One of his constituents, Lawrence +11, I McNamara, South Bend, which . » 0'a « 10% 20%, | sald: + Mk Fd “Dear Senator: Are you going . 34 to do something about our state bt 10 Mental institutions or make an 10 18 (ass out of yourself over what
| ime we should be on?"
i ~ Poultry—Powls, 4 and over, Jo; Tol under 45 Ibs. and Leghorns, 28¢; spring: ,| ors and rossiers, 30¢; Sahar springers,
% Ibs
+] 3e; cooks, 170: stags
Sas No. 7 poultry eess] $0 loss than No' 1)
been rent receipts, 54 Iba” to case wesi| 20 rade A large, dlc; Grade A medium, soe | Bei O B latge, Mec Orade A small
» fio gra Butterfat-No |, Sig Ne 3 Sse - BOB, | crenata -~
| Local
War Memorial
Miss Herr will
|
Nurse in Disas-|
i! ; ‘Surf is ANOTHER FINE PRODUCT OF
New Heavy Wash Sensation_;
° do
MH NO MORE QUICKDYING SUDS
NO MORE - § SKIMPY SUDS
RA Zo. DIRTY WORK. ¢ JE IR CLOTHES hd NE ES REALLY CLEAN i od
- econ —p—
oUDS LIKE SIXT RDEST WATE
Salis
{
Licks for Good the problems of Had HWatow Secure /
CUM spots and stains white clothes —~dims pretty colors — makés washday slow and tiring. Surf licks hard water scum. Suds come instantlp« and Surf * suds last'and last. Nothing
equal to Surf in hard water has ever been known before. That is why Surf is the greatest heavy laundry aid ever offered to women who live in hard water towns. Try Surf next washday,
NO MORE GRAYING "AND YELLOWING
NO MORE DULL COLORS
Surf GIVES YOU
LONG LASTING ~ SUDs!
Surf Gives You
HEAPS OF SUS!
| Surf Gives You a
~ WHITER ~ WASH!
LEVER BROTHERS COMPANY-ESPECIALLY MADE FOR HARD WATER fan : eT oh A wi Sy gin . i sik of
' - x 0
Surf Gives YOU
BRIGHTER COLORS!
hy
56
Reg. Dun bor
