Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 April 1949 — Page 14

Re

Most Popular

‘Consumer Subsidy’ By Sen. Thye

; By United Press WASHINGTON, Apr. 8 (UP)— Sharply divided ional re1 ne Lr atiom new farm program i a tough fight for the plan on Cap- . tol Hill : 3 Under the program outlined ‘Yesterday by Agriculture Secretary Charles F. Brannan, the government would guarantee farmers a high income but would, let the cost of food items drop for consumers, : Opponents of the immediately charged that it would Jead the way to a “controlled economy” and would require “a terrific

“Lewis A. Plourd

for Crippled Children and Adults had $287.17 more toward its annual goal today as the result of a campus popularity contest at Butler University. Lewis A. Plourd, Frenchville, Me., was named B, M, 0. C. (Big Man On Campus) yester- ‘| day. ‘Each contestant received one vote for every penny con: mov iributed (o- the ; Backers of the Butler senior, i Lamb, Ch. Alhe.. of $82.51.

- i

’ : a AL PRI BP Thembeva Gt thE * Senate Agriculture Committes to new

4 More Spellers Enter Semi-Finals

‘Winners Named

in Two Centers By ART WRIGHT : Four more grammar school pu-

rR 0.) semi-finals in The Times = Spelling Sind Winners at two centers which

Stages preliminary contests last

Rhodius Community Cente Senate GOP us m y nter-—— 8. Wherry, Morre, 13, School 49;

Georgia James Hawkins, 11, Assumption.

‘and foreign spend- Center — William administration, Johnson, 13, School 22; Anna , Democratic leaders) Marie Bpicusza, 14,

Holy Rosary. ! will spell again in the the first week in May Indiana World War Me-

£

: i

I

]

ty i

£5

:

spell will be the winners from centers in I and representatives of each of nine townships in the county

|

in the two semi-finals and finals will got to Washington, D. C, the last week in May

ing Bee. All expenses for the trip and the week's stay in the national capital will be paid by the Times. The Spelling Bee is staged each year with the co-operation of the City Park and Recreation Department.

: Will-o-the-wisp ear looters ‘broke into eight cars parked near Belmont and W. Washington Sts.

wehicles ven as city police were will be held the week of Apr. 18

at those centers which did not eliminate their contestants to the two semi-finalists,

Allison Foreman Dies in Home

as late as 11 p. m. All “were ‘parked -within a block of

»

reporting theft insrgia Hadley, 520 Laclede Bt, $13 worth of Slothing;) Harvey Carchen, 302 N, Lyn- home, 46 N. Gladstone Ave. hurst Dr, egg cartons and boxes: | Services will be held at 2 p. m Mary Warner, R. R. 7, $20 in merchandise and clothing: William Froschauer, New Ross, beverage truck driver, four cases of | beer; Ralph Egan, 1561 Carroliton i. Ave, clothing valued .at $25; James BE.

be SSE A

ntown,

had lived in Indianapolis 30 years + Louisville, Ky ‘

"

Te Ivan Kernodle tool chest valued at §15. {ber of ; Parolee Caught { Church. - dn other break-ins last night Surviving are his wife, Louise & 16-yeap-old parolee from Indi-itwo sons, Jack and Jerry Can ana Boys Behool was captured rifling Moore and Owens Consult: | { Miss Vivian Canatsey; his moth

“ing Engineers office, 1456 N. Delaware St. And $60 worth of er, Mrs. Martha Canatsey, all o Jewelry was taken from: A Indianapolis, and a brother, El Stokes’ bert Canatsey, Terre Haute.

Sra are mi we Jewelry 28, AN. Th VOY "% Miss Wilma Eaton

St. W. T. Russell, operator of a|

$45 and some rare coins, _faken by thieves who broke a ‘window. Theft of $40 and 13] partons of cigarettes and Sum | preCord & was reported by Marcus DeBer- ip. cue, oo * Jon Speraior of Candy Market, |} are. 7 ve.

Massachusetts Fined, Loses License L Indianapolis chauffeur lost for a year, $75 ang sours oy Judie 4 00S x Clark in Municipal Court 4 on & charge of operating } while under the influence

‘charges of reck- N

Burial will

years ago.

The Marion County Society

|appeared imminent today followlof aviation. commissioners

.ipresident, and Prosecutor Robert

The Indianapolis champion de-

to compete in the National Spell

last night, apparently rifling some| gecond preliminary contests!

Lawrence Canatsey, . night {maintenance foreman in Allison { Division, General Motors Plant|? No. 5, Maywood.-died today in his!

Sunday in the Dorsey Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Mor-|

Mr. Canatsey, who was 48, was’ a native of Morgantown: but he|Cu

An employee of Allison's for the Deita Electrie com are wheel; Marion Reed, 3758|past nine years, he previously had n n Bt. box camera; been au salesman for the Perine , T08 Rochester 8.011 Co. 10 years. He was a mem- ; the Grace Methodist

atsey; three sisters, Mrs, William | (hdbls w Kennedy, Mrs. Homer Fisher and [24

: Services for Miss Wilma Eaton, |¥ In - oafe at 1545 Roosevelt Ave. re- 534 m, 12th St, manicurist in the pro : Columbia Club for the past three Publis Se years, who died today, will be Ross Gea held at 2 p. m. Monday In the. Boone Memory Chapel, i8t follow tanner & Co

Miss Eaton, who was 45, was Vanes born in Evansville and had been Union Title C a hotel manicurist there before!,i.. . coming to Indianapolis three Am

Surviving are her father and - WAS: giep-mother, Mr, and Mrs. Wil-|Gitisens ine liam Eaton, Evansville, and four sisters, Mrs. Ruth Pfender and Mrs. Celia Irch, Evansville; Mrs. [nd Limeston Genieve Allen, St. Louis, and Mrs. || Juanita Elliott, Governor's Island, || : = .

Tough Battle

Sunrise Service Rehearsal Called

children and older persons who

8 (will sing during the 27th Monu- { iment Circle Easter Sunrise Carol |

The practice tomorrow morning will be the first united work of this year's sunrise service vocalists. Mrs. Mary F. Barton, direc tor of the Ogden Junior Chorale and of the entire sunrise service, will conduct the rehearsal. Mrs Rosalee Spong, teacher of music for School 32, will serve as ac{companist both tomorrow and.on Easter;

announcing the sunrisé service will receive them at the meeting tomorrow. All groups will be assigned numbers indicating where they will be placed during the service. Miss Mildred Blackledge is chairman of the posters and programs committee. Those assisting Miss: Blackfede inciaae Mids Zeinhd™ Cu mings, Mrs. Marshall C. Harvey, |

| } |

Mrs, Mare. Anns Parriah and Mus. sre -oomooiono snr aniicab «$80. $38.50: Heavy Thomas E. Purky, Mra Homer Good and choice 170-to-235- weights dropped to $14.50, Stags

Cook is chairman of placement! and numbers, The service was founded by Mrs. James M. Ogden who directed it each Easter until last year.

New Castle Airport May Be Reactivated

NEW "CABTEE, "Apr. 8_Re-

activation of New Castle's municipal airport northeast of here

ing appointment of a new board by Mayor Harold IL. Meadows, headed by Joseph P. Bono, chairman. Mr. Bono last. September was critically injured in an airplane crash which killed his flying companion, Harold Meader. ; Other member of the commis sion will be Stanley W. Harding, secretary; Arthur J, Lines, vice M. Brown. Kirshbaum Center [Plans ‘Vacation Fun’ | A program of “Spring Vacation {Fun” ‘will open in Kirshbaum Center At 2 p. m. Monday as

1

arm Program

| The many choral groups of’

a

¥

| 3 §

} |

|

| ;

NN

¥

Pennies for polio . . , Ho

|

pi

mer Henley (left | stand beside a bottle filled with $150 worth

Perons who have agreed to customers at South Town Tavern, 1232 S, Meridian St., contributed distribute posters and programs’ to the Infantile Paralysis Foundation.

FEAT, 2

115,000 Pennies for

=

Polio

and George Sutton pennies which their

Hogs Hold Firmly As Prices Show Weakness

Lightweight hog re-,

{mained barely steady in fairly a dunia sold at $16 to $18.50, snap, Sox, ures Sousa 4 mach pe the pu

Hye. trade, In. the Aad Stockyards as quotations

heavier weights were 25 cents,

pound barrows and giits moved were scarce and sold at $12" to lat $19.50 to $20 and $20.25, the $13.50.

extreme top. Weights from 235 to]

{270 pounds brought $1850 to! Cattle prices remained steady

$10.50. Prices from $1750 to $18.50 were paid for 270 to 300-pounders.

Charts Dynamic : Course of Church

The Rev. William A. Simms, 8. 'T. M., of Battle Creek, Mich., today charted a dynamic course for the church in his noonday sermon in Christ Episcopal Church. He said in part: “All this talk about the failure of Christianity carries one too far, The Church has not fafled but she has not entirely succeeded. She has laid the cornerstone of the highest civilization and culture that the world has ever en-

the power that abolished slavery in the world. “She has given to people new fdeals of home and family life. She has ushered in a new consciousness of the dignity of man. She has made it possible for

grade school boys and girls see & motion picture, “The March of the Wooden Soldiers” Vari after the movie, An outing will be held Tuesday, busses leaving for Camp Ki-Wa-Ca's George Washington Park at 1:30 p. m. A program featuring [“Harvey the Magician” will be

{shown at 2 p. m. Tuesday.

Ex-Representative Dies RUSHVILLE Apt & = Charles M. Trowbridge, former joint state representative from Henry and Rush Counties for four terms, who died yesterday in his home, one mile west of Mays, will be buried In Wyatt Cemetery fol lowing services hers Sunday. He was 71

Local Issues

ADE, Bea | STOUKS American Rata ofa. merican States Agrshire Col com

oA elt k Yd d

padiei } ds . Sa "a it 8 s com

| ae ol

ba

b entral . Girele ‘ Pheater fom a & n 4% ptd Vane CoRsonidates Pn pid 5% .... 98 Oopt Car<No Var .... Jummings Eng Spm Ass mmings Eng pid .. Consolidateo Ina eo Consolidated Ind

od ae -e Wayne-Jackson RR pid... pid ww

os ol A je

| Hays Corp | Hert. Jon {Home T

n itn . *Indpis_P fades 3 ndpls & Water cl A “om ....

4 en pid ndpls: Kailways com : «| Infforaon National Life com .. ¢ Kingan & Co ptd Kingan & Co com "Line armon- | | Mastic A {Nat Homes Ine : {*N ind Pub Serv 3% ofd

N In Serv com ... X b Serv 44% ... Axllory com aw

ndry f [hd com

ater §

r ndpls Water 44%

5% nid {ferrington com asphalt .

ress Lau A ASEYe of Ind 3%% ofd .... BI t & Tool com .....i; Ind O&R 48 pid . &E oom ely-Van Stokely.

80

Camp a Van Camp ofd SW % pd { Terre Maule Malleable

Machine co! Tejephon °

BONDS Stew fs 8 Loan 4% 00...... merican Loan

8... Bastian Morley 5s 61 Buhne: Fertiliser os 58 ...... Cl Bldg + lel 44g 8 {Columbia Clup 2

thenns

& erica

sean

® 48 a) napis P&L ad» Indpls Rail

; and disorderly ||) § Sygtement

14 on Milton

: piblanaroits ngs i

| CLEA ai 19:

wma povsr If SAN |

8!

{countless people to rise above itheir sins and stand erect amid

IOUS the forces of evil. Her limitations, recreation: rooms will be open have been those of the human be- |

{ings who make up her member{ship, .*The Church is the machinery {to bring in the Kingdom of God. {The Church will not be complete{ly successful until the Kingdom {of God has fully come, The whole world can't be in revolution and

[the Church escape. The Church division of the H. and A. Selmer, {cannot remain static; it must be- Ine. plant, in a National Labor Re-| —————~

{

come dynamic.

inspire and dedicate them through contact with God at the altar.”

Sizes tt?

*

SRC ea XIU

} UHY 1 18 Veoh WR | {ATIC TUT TTR TO

140 E. Washington St. I Near Delaware Bt.

v

joyed. She has put into thotion |

SCHIFF'S WEDGIES with a

Mail, C. O. D. and Phone Orders Filled Promptly

| WE Wahi s

: To ® » Active Lightweights from 100 to 160

weighing less than 550 pounds

Cattle Steady

on a clearing market. Small loads

of medium and good steers and! less than 1000 pounds ~ |brought $22.50 to $24.

heifers Some remained unsold. A few common natives dropped to $19. Odd head of good beef cows sold at $1850 to $19.50. Common and mediums brought $16.50 to $18 as canners and cutters moved at §13 to $16.25. Bull prices remained steady in a scarce supply. Medium and good sausage bulls were salable at $19 to $21, common and mediums {from $18 to $19, Vealer prices rose 50 cents.

fe TAR Fy St

| On Dismissal Plea

: {the two Smiths to withdraw their

iquash on that date.

, the will not plead guilty to the

¥

Quash Motion Judge Sets Apr. 14 To Hear Arguments

Times State Servies BLOOMINGTON, Apr. 8—Nu-

Club, who had promised to bare all-in the Monroe County court room as they resisted prosecution of criminal charges against two members, gave out rain checks

today. . Motions to quash the indictments filed st Thomas. and

Vernon Smith, were filed by defense attorneys William of Martinsville and George H Bloomington. Special Judge Edwin B. Long, Greene County, who allowed the motions to be filed, first permitted

not guilty pleas, then vacated the trial date, Apr. 14. Judge Long ordered the defense attorneys and Prosecutor Robert ¥. McCrea to be ready to argue the motions to

Prosecutor McCrea, who directed the grand jury investigation into the club's activities on the order of Judge Q. Austin East, protested the withdrawal of the pleas only a week before the trial. However, Judge Long declared that the case would be reset for

er which the defense hopes tn secure quashing of at least one of.the two counts, cites the possibility of a faulty title in the statute on which the charge of abuse of children is based. The other count is contributing to the delingquency of minors. Vernon Smith, 37, who with his father, Thomas Smith, 65, were charged with maintaining a public nuisance following the October raid on the ciub’s camp nine miles southwest of here, declared that

RRS,

charges. Mr. Smith, pointing to his no-arrest record, declined to be labeled a “criminal” by enter-

ER ON Ww TM Station

rama, Are. 8 i568

. the new 11 : three Jroductiss Br . cumpaie was announced by. RC. ile, general sales manager of the Plymouth eta ne i on : ace: re Suburban and a two-door sedan, will be added. Regular Plymouth wheelbase is 118 :

Use of Television Sets for School Instruction Seen First Experiments Likely This Fall, School Board Head Tells Optimist Club

By DAVID WATSON Television sets as a means of instruction in Indianapolis publis schools likely will be used for the first time next fall, Clarence La Farrington, School Board president, said today. Speaking at a luncheon meeting of Indianapolis Optimist Club in Hotel Severin, he outlined future plans of the School City and gave the club members an inside view of operations of the $35 mil

tion system. i : that television 25 years old. He said bullding He Aunenced tha problems were further complicated

and FM radio as & means of instruction in the schools will be- by the increasing birth rate and

come commonplace within the the shifting population to new next few housing projects.

“I think some schools will be! ; ‘ Arthur O. Wanger

equipped with television sets dur-| Rites. Tomorrow

ing the soming yess. Mr. Far. on said. “Direct telecasts of Sag es SAT Be sii in the study of current events." Arthur Otto: Wanger, owner of the General Welding Products Mr. Farrington also predicted [Co.. 901 Massachusetts Ave, who that “within a short time” the died of a heart attack yesterday system will have its own FM ‘while visiting an Allison Division, broadcasting station “to 8erve genera] Motors plant on business, the cause of education for all res-| will be buried in C Hill fole

Calvert Distillers ———————— 1

a ‘was most Hiely [lowing services at 2 p. m. tomor- 40 YEARS OF some school events would be tele- TON in his home, 6042 Primrose SQUARE cast this fall. { . Mr. Farrington told the club /A Dative of Utica. N. Y. Mr, DEALING

t Wanger had lived in Indianap~ folis 27 years and was a member |of the Capital City Masonie {Lodge and Scottish Rite. He s 59

| ‘Surviving is his wife; Mathil Kathryn Wanger.

members that the annual budge provided for the school system fell short of actual needs, For the school year 1948-49, the ‘allocation for: school operation was $13,862,39599. As a nation, ‘Mr, Farrington said, America

ing a guilty plea to the charges, which could result in p sentence and fines. His fathér, Mr.

{Good and choice sold at $30.50 to | $32.50, the top price. Commons ‘and mediums were $21 to $30, culls down to $13. Lambs Steady |- Native lambs remained steady, |although the supply was light. {Odd head of good grades reached 1829. A deck of mixed breed meidium to good 82-pound feeding {lambs sold at $26.25, good

{" Seventy head of

{ full-

mouthed stock ewes with 60 lambs American Sunbathing - Associaby their side sold at $24.50 per tion, with which the Fern Hill . {Club is affiliated, had contributed Slaughter ewe prices wereito the defense fund for him and

pound on a country account. quoted steady, salable at $13 and (less. Early estimates of receipts |were: Hogs; 8500; cattle, 400; { calves, 300, and sheep, 300,

Vote for CIO Union

Times State Sprvice

NEW CASTLE, Apr. §-Employees of the local Jesse French

| lations bodrd election, chose the { “It 1s the task of the Church!International Union, United Auto[to gather up those mighty forces mobile, Aircraft and Agricultural that are surging in the world to-| Implement Workers of America, day and direct them by prayer CIO, as the barganing unit by a and stimulate them by grace and | vote of 76 to 43. The on was orth

{opposed by Union of { America, AFL.

Smith said, should pever have been charged, since Ne, Vernon, had made a verbal deal to buy the 164-acre tract from him to be used as a camp site.

Father Was Caretaker The elder Smith, says Vernon,

|

{who admits being a member of {the nudist organization, was only a caretaker and guard. Mr. Smith reported that the

{his father, : | “Robert Randall, Indianapolis, {president of the Fern Hill Club, has indicated that nationally fknown nudists from all over the {United States will be brought to {Monroe County to aid the defense iin its contention that nudism {could not be construed to contribute to the delinquency of min-

| {

od

pe or "tobacco, _ liquor and Butler to Send Three te To History Meeting

{luxuries as on education. Outlining school pians, board president sald commission-| Butler University’s department ers will act on the strong publicof history and political science demand for kindergarten training will send three faculty members for pre-school age children. ° -ito the annual meeting of the Mis’ Kindergarten Plans Sapp Valley Hisorieal Amociae The School City will eventually ton, : versi

take over the 24 free kindergar-{” 7 isconsin, Mad tens now operated here, he asserted, and will probably open new centers in public school buildings Septem : .

(1

}

S

ON

of writing paper annually, 1000 gallons of paste, 28,800 pen holders, 43,200 pen points and 57,600 pencils. However, the text book rental plan practiced in the schools saves parents of pupils about $196,000 a year, he said. Building needs were emphasized by Mr. Farrington when he stated that 25 per cent of all elementary

PATCHOGUE, N. Y, Apr. 8 (UP)—Muriel Daniels reported to police today that a single-seat, one-horse buggy was stolen from the lawn in front of her home during the night. She said the buggy was 75 years old, but was in good running condition. It was used to advertise her ane

ors who attend the camps.

[) A Great

“gr Selection at only

$198

Bright Pastels Multi-colors or Black.

"4 BIG STORES . IN INDIANAPOLIS

1063 VIRGINIA AVE. Expert Shoe Repairing 346 W. Washington St.

West of Senate RE i

lL

{school buildings were more thanitique shop.

MEN! U for. THES

v

FPR

TH

R111