Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1949 — Page 3
El
. day by ardering all its employees
“who demanded a clean-up of pros-/than it used to be. [re-elected treasurer, and Toner! pSircinoma.
Bag Train B 1 Aer un Bate |B
One Shot by Police in D. C. Pawn Shop
(Continued From Page Bo when paraded before reporters in the police station, admitted that! he and Ramsdell had pulled off the train robbery. But he refused to say immediately what had, happened to the rest of their loot, They were linked directly to the crime by a wallet, which Ramsdell accidentally dropped ‘during the tavern holdup. It contained! ¥ his picture and his Youngstown, address, Police said Ramsdell had a long criminal record, including an automobile theft staged while he was serving in the Marines in 1045.
{ Dead in Wake 0f Heavy Sow
~ Drifts Create : Highway Hozards | (Continupd From Page One) a deep head cut when wind broke a schoolroom window: while he was calling the roll at the start of classes. | At Evansville, electrical pow-! er was off in east side homes be-| cause of transformer joules. “Traffic mishaps due to slippery pavements were reported through-, out thé snow belt, A Greyhound bus slipped off the icy pavement of U, 8. 31 north of Franklin and stranded a dozen passengers more than an hour. Higher prices today at the Indianapolis Stockyards were credited to a “storm market” because farmers were unable to truck in their livestock. Cattle gained 50 cents to $1 per hundred, while hogs advanced 25 to mostly 50 cents, Traffic moved at a snail's pace [Hvar downtown this morning, blocked by stalled automobiles {and streetcars. Streetcars on the |E. Washington St. line followed jan Indianapolis Railways, Inc. snowsweeper. 1 Winds accompanying the ‘snow
4
We'll Settle Later Rallroad officials said the pair boarded the train at Washington. After passing through Baltimore, they went to the dining car and had dinner. When the porter presented them with. a check, they sald “we'll settle up later” and went back to their seats in a! coach. | Sometime later a soldier com-| Plaines 15 Pullman onducter Wi “|weraged 27 to 28 miles an hour robbed, Mr. Purcell- remembered ’ {early today, rising at times to 40the thief described by the soldier) Roland [Ronnie] Alcorn . . . he was in town today to make 'mile-an-hour gusts. as a man that had a ticket t0| 5 movie of the Indiana Boys School with profits he is said to have Automobiles slipped and
4 skidded in slushy streets. Trolleys Younghioun, 0. Se Siu 2 Wes./ made in the sale of Kansas wheat to the Brazilian government. | oes went off edu, os
patrolman meet the train at Cum-| A I a il De e clare of Naying Che wring arrival of But a : the train arrived at. merican y The snow was caused by warm, .a-level.stretch-about-15-miles-out! moisture-laden air from the
of Martinsburg, the man Qéscribed ‘Soeunder Than Ever Befor e | Southwest meeting cold air mov-
_.By the soldier accosted him an 'ing in from Canada.
‘ordered him to pull the 3 his and Margaret Mead Also Finds Papa ; bore storm began as rain at cord to stop the train. nd Fi With Ch ild : Pp. m. yesteraay. At midnight! sw Mp) PrreelF retased and started 1+ Spends For-More-Fime- itdren | wet snow was falling, changing to into one of the combines that| An overflow audience anticipating a warning that something 4r¥ snow as winds rose.
It was the second heaviest made up the 9-car train. One of has to be done about the U. 8. family before it disappears was the bandits pulled out his gun and asaired at Kirshbaum Center last night that the American family snowfall of the winter, Weather struck Mr, Purcell over the head ig jn pretty good shape. - Bureau records revealed. Indian-
and ordered Purcell to stop. the, - It is not only bigger and better than ever, there is more of it 2Polis had six inches of snow on|.
"train, lthan, ever before. Papa takes more ‘time with the children and Dec. 18 and 19. On Mar. 10 last Mr. Purcell then ased on the| ama is growing old before her| Hove Shwe” with ‘the eile: oi ho, Cour 5% inches fell on Marion air and the train stopped. About|; keeping house and raising ot the. extra female vember who County. -this time Pvt. George G. Fank- ine ourigsters. ed to be aroufid.’ furth, of Detroit, Who had rel Adithority for this report on the | Mother and tather Baw Hive by Optimist Speaker e 0 1 y Showed up with the dining car state of he ato eo 'o¢ dren, she said. Often, they have Donald Madison, director, John steward. the best ra ethnologists and| N° relatives in the same city. . “Th A Shatiyue, wil apes The bandits relieved the‘ . ws logists in the United The Urge to get out and away on e Training of the Artist steward of $300 and took about jan’ = po {from relatives has become a fea- At 2 meeting of the Indianapolis $40 from the conductor. They |S ates. [ture of American family life, |Optimist Club at 12:15 tomorrow She is assistant curator of ¢ |in the Severin Hotel. The club pushed the soldier and conductor 3 New Phenomenon ill hold a bri ahead of them into the first/ ethnology — the science which “This is a new phenomenon.” od ol Ap dee arty at atsr. m, coach and started robbing the tells people where they cameic.iq4 Dr. Mead. “The American [ay in a passengers, | from and where they are going —!woman now. has her home ail to When Engiheer Roy C. Purdue of the American Museum of N&%-| herself, People who like to live] i came back to see why the trainiyral History: Her = nante and| with relatives today are suspect.” n was stopped, one of the bandits pooks are bywords Wherever As a result, mama has no help
used nis pistol to beat him un- social sciences are taught. in the household, ‘unless pa | di li mercifully about the head. Dr. Mead was the final speak-|pitches in to take care of the n ianapo IS - . er on the Indianapolis Open children—as more and more paForum. which ended its season! pas are doing. Dr. Mead/ said. IMARRIAGE LICENSES SIMISSe last night. Her lecture attracted Overwork is the price mama pays {George Stahl, 22, Wothington; Ruby Jones,
a large audience of social work-/for running the house without | 20. 2524 Guilford. ers, welfare workers, students| Aunt Hester or mother-in-law! Doris Mens Beane ions moicham;
Marie and teachers. telling her how .to do it. a Laon, 30, 3 3 E Washingion: y press im She kept her listeners in a on) Reasons for getting married Robert N. Bailey, 25, 2232 Marthe Thelma |
tinuous ripple of merriment with|have changed, she said. Prime pAdeline Maries, a 13% 8 Belmont. NEW YORK, Mar. 10 (UP)— such observations as: | reasons, she said, are to have phauricia Metter.” 18 eed 8 I Union spokesmen for 9000 Rail-| “The Kinsey report is a report children to play with and to ac- ester,
|quire a permanent date, ey Al T. 19, 3448 N. Denn way Express workers fired from|,s wnat" men of different ages uis Pieper, nn
THURSDAY. MAR, 10, 1049 2 = L bes Tema a THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
a family, clajm to have seen the | from the zoo came to vi that{turtle from the South could ra.
{Hoosier Seeks Diver’ 's: “Aid In Caphuring Huge | T
Dozens Try to Trap Reptile in Farmer's lake; : [ad drag eo Itai, ptarrls : 800 for Monst And yr Cincinnati Zoo Offers $ 180 for Monster Harris|0f the lake, tar a we know.” t. £5 ag
“| sought the aid of an expert diver today to help him capture Oscar, oghe hunters trying to capture Sito | the monster turtle of Fulks Lake. Dacar are Spurred by Ave Tepiiles a fun Mr, Harris had a theory. He thought the diver could find the that the Cincinna Natura) : istory, said monster, pump it full of air, and float it to the surface. gitered $1800 for him—alive. Mr. weight oF - snapper Pe Many people hereabouts, including Mr. Harris and members of | arris’ wife said two investigators |poun e only an aliga
w
Helpers stood ready on shore the turtle was in the 1 as high as 200 pounds. ;glant reptile. . They said it looks| with ropes to haul Oscar onto “Seemed Satisfied Mr, Pope doibted that Ogear
like an gvergrown snapper weigh-| ing prod slg pounds and with a /and if the hunters in the boats| “I don't know whether they had come that far
‘head the size of a year-old baby’s. o|ever trap him. saw it” she said, “But they|
Slithered Away {seemed satisfied.” Dozens of people flocked to the| “We had him trapped in a net| She,said her brother, Charley FEOF 21 Dead in \ Crash |seven acre lake on Mr. Harris’ g.turday but he slithered away | Wilson, first saw the turtle swim-| SYDNEY, Mar. 10 (UP) «= [farm for a try at capturing to one side and dove down into ming in the lake last summer. | Eighteen passengers and three: Oscar, (the water,” Mr. Harris said. “I|It disappeared from view until re- crew members were ‘ ‘Some used chicken wire/think a diver would be able tolcently when, Mr. Harry. ¢ hisikilled today when an airliner “hy stretched between fence posts as get him.” |son, Vaughn, 1% potted it/crashed and burned shortly after extra-strength seines while they, He denied a report that the again, She said Mr, P Wilson's. (taking off from Coolangatta criss-crossed the lake in boats.'turtle had come out of the lake son-in-law also had seen it. * | port for Brisbane.
. % »
STRAUSS SAYS: STORE HOURS DAILY 9:30 TILL 5S.
ARERR A
yi a Shir) their jobs for conducting a& SlowW- guy they did. It has done much|, 5° that nobody will think you ,.soiriek EE RhDis 24, 15a Koehne:
down warned today some 30,000 ¢," preak down the clumsy Vic- haven't got somebody,” she add-| Patricia Ann Barrett, 18, 720
others across the nation may bel; ian notion that sex is not to| “That's an important thing| Place, forced off their jobs in the die be mentioned.” lin our society —to have some-'prvoRCE SUITS FILED pute. } “We never have been as mar-| |_ Robert vs. Beity Chadwick; Ernest The members of the Brother-| . ii the whole of DeoPite alarms over the divorce Richard vs. A I hood of Railway and Steamship|'ied as a nation in the whole Of rate, the American family is as|samuel F. Tapp; Imogene vi. Geo Clerks (AFL) began a slowdown °%F history as we are today. Weg nstantial an institution as ever, Aloert Neal: Virginia C. vs. Myron Knigh Thensay Dig iu the metropoyiay couple getting married than any | “The family,” she added, “is Cloud: * Ja Tsudriette Es Th ay Bp
Roscoe Will H been “stalling” for 11 months in| other society.” |the toughest institution we have. Corinne we George’ EB. brown: Margarei negotiations in Chicago for a new| The American attitude toward Whatever else happens, it sur- RRR TRI Z ** Rudolf. labor contract. love leads to divorce, said Dr. vives.” } '
Alice Josephine vs. Robert Cheek (Mead. It is. a mystical, unrea-| Dr. Mead told the audience she ——————— | soned.. method -of- picking. mates, lis.a graduate of DePauw Univers! ‘BIRTHS... Twi : irrespective of common sense. As sity. yo
At Methodist—Clifford Mildred Kelly, a result, couples marry without] “I was there as a freshman,” boys: Reily, Mary Adams. girls
Orders Embargo The company countered yester-
in New York and New
fired effective” Saturday andi, tpejr backgrounds which lead|(U. S. Atomic Energy Commis-
Boys clamping an embargo- on all air.g, incompatibility. |sion chairman) was a senior.” (Moti. "Fenty Kenneth, Wava Meiring: and rail shipments of less than a The a on attitude toward. Deibert, Ruth Duncan: Rn tuyariens|
an
load { d out of th et Barris: Fred. Renclie ruck; Kayn carload into and out o e metro- Jove and romance, she said, makes | ary Pittinger: Ralpn arjorie Smith. | At Methodist—Oftts, Lucille Ingram: H. pojiias Broa m ” " t mandatory for the wife to be H. W. Manz Heads adtcad, louise Perry. . . a - aniel J. Sullivan, the rallway A and before breakfast an [Man Ifans Rosh. Louise Snyder: clerks’ regional director, said the ,iq dishpan hands in order to Business Bureau ae Coteman—Jonn, Mary Hobson; Bm-
I Martha Grammer
embargo would hit the union competé with the business girls Henry W. Manz, business man- ar Cetra eto Helen Warrenburg;
throughout the nation. ees during the da nford, Myra Cherry TT a ATE te day! ager of The Indianapolis Times, Ah HomeCaster, Hons, . Wooten, IY Ga Cleanu Hits divorce the last resort only of the|was elected 1949 president ofl st v Girly } cl x and Churches {dissolute and neurofic no longer| che Indianapolis Better Business, Charies. Dare Gardner Mary — e t ; won Mar. 10 (UP) — Slot I nstoad of I IE ca, (Bureau yesterday by the board of A a BS, Addie ae ” ar. — i . Franc er ucy e machines, punch boards; bingo the American wife who is required directors. AL Coteman-—8amuel, Maxine - Sherwood and keno were added to the lists to Tear two children and keep| Mr. Manz Bureau vice presi pats ot gambling games and devices house single-handed is becoming dent for the last two years, suc- john J. Carer. 64, at. 4436. %... 10th, - panned. here-today, wm oo sodal-0l@- Woman before «her: time casds GOH “Wailerich, w |" ebr6naFy occlusion Police Chief Millard T. Mato- from overwork, the .anthropolo- [oer el auueker, 81, 4 Vettrany, vina said the order was aimed at gist said. { Other new officers are Walter jens E. Lewis: 51, at Methodist, cerebral lodges, private clubs ahd churches) Mothers are working harder to- L. Shirley of Shirley Brothers, hemorrhage
lice D B 33, at General, as well ‘as “sneak joints.” /day than they used to, she said, Mortuary, vice president; William myocarditis yers, * ners
The order. .resulted - from a because. the family has become/C: Grauel,. executive. vice presi. Gesrse D. Dirks, Ti; st.8. Vincent's; ears) .
drive staged by 2000 housewives much more of am isolated unit/dent of Merchants National Bank, alte” Paden, 76, at 424 E. Pall Creek, H. Cherry, 23, at. Veteran's, titution -and- ‘gambling to* drive| “Grandma and Aunt Susie have M. Overley,; Bureau manager, Ye] Savon 0. ot OF NP undesirable elements out of town. {gone from the family scene,” she elected sec retary. f a, rheumatic heart. -. The demand was made after Miss said. “In the last 15 years, the rr —
Mary Cheever, a school teacher, word ‘sitter’ has come into. the Hurt | in ‘Motor Car’ Mishap killed :
was resisting a purse \vocabulary. The arrival of the sitsnatcher last Friday. ter has marked the disappearance
The Inquiririg Telephone Reporter
iiodn which Indians Bell asks a timely question of telephone users picked at random. TODAY'S QUESTION: Does having a telephone make everyday living any easier for you?
Gerald E. Perry, x] Mrs. H. M. Pld Businessman, ler, Houtewifs, 11304 Pearl St., id N. IER. Jor Se Columbus, “With eb, i
meit's a necessity.~ | v Ka a, in my
I'm on call two grocery orderw, do nights out of § A my shopping, and three. If it wasn’t = i call m a: - for the And whenever |
couldnt Phone 1 she house, This way have to make appointments ahead I just leave a number and I can of time, 1 save a tip to town simply ahvuys be called. by phoning in advance.”
y Mrs.J. M. Bates, ¥ Housewife, 478 ¢ Andalusia Ave,, ville, “For
238 £8 & ° & z
the druggist, the grocer or most te e and Ean! one else I. - order, I'm alone want, heim Sb De quite often, too, aud the fe lephions from ves me a secure feeling. When hinge § need | . on fro: to, I can always call.” The Is fo many people. ft runs errands, Em Becouse the telephone is all these things—and more~it goes | , slang way towards moking ving sosier for Yom i : J _ INDIANA BELL’ “TELEPHONE COMPANY
| marry younger and ask less of a she said. arian; Ernest Richmond vs. Maudie Lou!
gl Jersey yeing aware of the differences she said, “when Davie Lilienthal AL Sriman—Robert, - Betty Jedtin, boy)
| LSMASS EO, “w
Is Woven by "BOTANY" —
and it's a masterpiece from that world famed mill — (I is earmarked 500") A 2-ply weave — rich, “staunch, pliant.’
, The Taloring Is Done by. DAROFF
Who treats the Gabardine. to London Mellowing — who tailors it a with a wealth of hand-skills into about the best fitting, best looking, best value-Suits that man ever put body into! (SINGLE AND DOUBLE BREASTED).
: ‘Regulars 9 Shorts Lon » Po Up of,
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2 and 8 Button Crd eta i 2 Shades of | Single breasted—. A Cit BROWN : Double breasted ds TAN. pictured—also the BLUE : 1 button double GRAY breaster in favor Ss : i J f - BLUE GRAY. among younger LL i Ne a A J A y a Gr
