Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1949 — Page 9

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the sun. Shaky political foundations of the new republic draw less attention than the skillful balancing of government officials building the super-structure. “The change from deep pessimism - to extreme optimism among leaders of the anti-Red majority is due, of course. to more than mercurial Latin temperament. Conditions have improved. oy ® Compared with even a year ago, : hd fhe progress is beyond expecta- . ons. 2. Mr Denny American aid has been a big factor. But not the only one, Astute political leadership backed by the Vatican, plus the recuperative capacity of the hard-working and long-suffer-ing people. have been equally or more important. And the Red wreckers have overplayed their hand. ; Among Italy's rapid achievements are: “ONE: Relative stabilization of the lira and

TWO: Repair of most of the war’s physical damages, except to housing. ‘2 THREE: Defeat of the Reds in a national election. and creation of a representative middle-of-the-road coalition of Democratic parties. + FOUR: Partial disarmament of Communist po t military forces, and restoration of public order. ‘FIVE: Rescue of at least some trade unions from Red control. Aid Pays Off PERHAPS no other country as exposed as Italy. and certainly no other as weak, has equalled that record of performance. Judged by the short term test, American aid before and since the Marshall Plan already has paid off. Without that timely help Italy doubtless would be under alin dictatorship today. ‘ ’ But temporary gains, however dramatic, cannot save Italy. : “For all the basic economic and social problems

Anti-Climate

WASHINGTON, May 9—I know a literary lady, who wrote a piece for a big-time magazine a while back about what an elegant summer resort is Washington, D. C. I might as well be blunt about ft.” The lady lied. Either that, or she wears refrigerated underwear. Summer hasn't even arrived officially and already my fingers are sticking together. My feet are hot, my hat band's wet and my eyelids feel like they were lubricated with glue. Worse is to come. Much worse. What I'm leading up to in this humid. fashion

“is the Othman theory of American rulership: If

Washington had a better climate, we’d have a better government. It is as simple as that. The first streaks of this season’s mildew now are giving a greenish tinge to the shoes stored in eapital closets and as the humidity climbs upward, so do the snarlings of our statesmen. So bitter are they and so loud do they shout that you can see the droplets of moisture from their mouths shining in the klieg lights.

Henry, John Sound Off

HENRY WALLACE is denouncing the Atlantic pact and assorted Senators are denouncing him, John L. Lewis is sitting under the golden picks and showels on his chandelier and making insulting noises in the direction of the coal mine owners. Numerous lawgivers are denouncing President Truman for wanting to remodel the White House instead of tearing it down, for reappointing J. Russell Young district commissioner, and for trying to get the Taft-Hartley Act repealed. Mr. Truman isn’t doing so well in Congress. Almost every time he asks the boys to pass a law, seems like, they talk it to death. When he threatens not to let.’em appoint their pals as postmasters, they yelp and chop another plank in his platform. ¥

Sam’s Snappy Nephew By Nat Barrows

By Ludwell Denny

remain. The same poverty,

misery and illiteracy, which led a desperate people to follow Mussolini antil military defeat, can invite another dictator-| ship, unless this new democracy, by lifting living’ standards and equalizing opportunity, can hold the loyalty and hope tentatively given it by this anciently cynical hs .

sages st] afayette’s Temple Israel To Mar

or asy solution, | . The worst is over-population. The country can-

cannot drain off such a flow fast enough. The Catholic Church opposes birth control. i . There {is little natural wealth, few raw materials, and only vncertain hydroelectric sources of power. Half the population is dependent on the land, much of which is mountain. desert or swamp. Its limi‘ed productivity has been lowered by feudal landowners and backward peasants. :

Time Runs Short

THE SKILL of artisans and factory workers is offset by inefficient industrial management, waste-| ful monopoly and obsolete nachines. The result, is high prices, keeping goods away from the home consumer and off the foreign markets. The government which must cope with these conditions is hardly organized as yet. Its leaders are amateurs in administration.

:ETEEEREEE 100th Anniversary With Banquet

The state is saddled with ineffic ent nationalized |i

and semi-socialized industries. Frong sad experience the people distrust government as such. Tax evasion is ‘raditional and almost universal. * Italy's largest markets in Central and Eastern Europe are virtually closed. Private foreign capital is not forthcoming. And American government gifts in dollars, goods and machines will cease in! three years. | Time is short and the task big. Over all is the shadow of Soviet aggression and war. And inside Ttaly a mass Communist Party is organized on every front and in every district to sabotage economic progress and to pre-| vent political stability. ; If you look back Italy has come a long way. If you look ahead she has a much longer way to go. Prosperity ‘divorced from foreign subsidy is! not in sight. ’

By Frederick C. Othman

. The President is camping out across the street! from the White House and getting his sleep interrupted by the Pennsylvania Avenue trolley cars. The fireplaces in his temporary abode are wired for canned music and that's good. Lately he's heard little else that’s soothing.

i 1

A

Even so he's bearing up better than most Wash-| brate its 100th anniversary with services and a banquet this week.|

ingtonians. In lightweight suit and chipper tie he

still manages to smile, He hasn't called anybody the Purdue University campus. Rabbi Meyer H. Simon fis spiritual any names (in public, that is) for some little time. director of the congregation and Morris Friedman, president,

Air Conditioning On

Constitution Avenue have turned on the air con-

ditioning. The Federal ~afeterias are specializing 2's:

salads for stenographers. And day after day after]

day come citizens to complain before CongressiLafayette formed an association the banking house of Kuhn-Loeb to arrange for the regular wor- & Co., New York City, ! the surplus of fats, subsidies for farmers, the po-°iP Of God and a place for the xo tato glut, the Malmady massacre, the wages of|burial of their dead. The associa-| soldiers and other strangely assorted subjects. The tion was food and drug administration is investigating thes chim” (Brotherly Love).

about the things that mre them miserable.” These include at the noinent the price of gold,

chemicals that bakers put in bread; the Federal Communications Commission is trying to make up

it mind whether to make television start over on Martin Hollstei, Moses Amberg, new frequencies, or leave it the way it is. The heat Solomon Fisher surrounding these two subjects, alone, rivals that Henry 3 As many a bigwig as can gets out of town as| Brush. A. Danziger, Joseph “an-

provided by the weatherman. often as he’s able. Junkets are going out in all gations. The House »f Representatives knocked off

for two days so its members could investigate/8nd E. S8choenfield. ratein, H AtAbraham, Samuel and Marx American Hebrew Congregations|Levy, M. Maye ) 2a d| until 1034, Dr. Julius Morgenstern,

the Kentucky Derby.

And the man I'd intended to interview today Kuhn were established in Lafay-/ which was organized under Rabbi las,

{interior has been modernized, the, a 'buflding has furnished the setting 'tt!®¢ b¥ 1849. Marx who died at THE ENGINEERS in the marble halls along = worship, continuously, for 82/28 in 1851 was among the first

The 82.year-old Temple Israel of Lafayette.

Co-Founder of Kuhn-Loeb Among First r

To Be Buried in Synagog's Cemetery By SARA MESSING STERN TEMPLE ISRAEL Congregation of Lafayette, Ind, will cele-

The services will be held in the synagog and the banquet on

The synagog is sald to be the oldest in the state, While the

{to be buried in the new Jewish

cemetery. Abraham,

In 1849, 26 Jewish families of tavette ater leaving La-

was co-founder of

THE earliest record of a place “Ahavas Of worship was in 1858 in a hall, {Main and Sécond Sts. The wor.

{ship was according to Orthodox Among the early members were pita)

known as

a

| d . Simon. Philip Solomon.| The Present synagog was com- Rabbi Meyer H. Simon Isaac Faust, Pleted

Mei >

Leo Pottlitzer,

- The Indianapolis Times

MONDAY, MAY 9, 1949 Coke!

Amberg, A. Danziger, L. Brush, | N The Temple Israel Congrega-|Gustave and Solomon Loeb, Sam- the late. Dr. Joshua Loth Lieb- The Wheel of Life.” {tion in 1874 joined the Union of uel Hene, Moses Schultz, Maurice; man, author of “Peace of Mind.

Stately furnishings adorn the interior for the 100th Anniversary observance.

Dryfus, J. Louis Loeb, H. Good- for many years president emeritus

Spiritual leaders of the con-|other, gregation have brought honor te) : ... the American rabbinate far be-! RABBI SIMON has directed the yond the confines of Lafayette.|congregation for 15 years. Under The synagog seemed to be aihis guidance, a B'nai B'rith Hillel “proving ground” for the young Foundation ministering to 500 clergymen, many of whom occus| Purdue students has . developed pied promient places in American | from a small Jewish student club. Jewish life, { The rabbi teaches part-time in the « = =» university sociology department, ONE of these, Rabbi Joseph has been president of the Com~ ‘| Leiser, father of Monroe Leiser munity Jund of Greater Lafayette of Indianapolis,’ presided at the and active in many civic affairs, ‘wervices marking the golden an-| The anniversary program niversary of the congregation,'schedules an Institute for the pr. 28, 1899, : {elergy ‘and religious workers at Dr. Morris M. Feuerlicht, rabbl Temple Israel all day Thursday emeritus of the Indianapolis He- beginning at 10 a. m, brew Congregation, accepted &| Rabbi Feurlicht will give the call to the Lafayette synagog In forenoon address for the institute 1901. He was the first graduate and preach the permon for the of the Hebrew Union College to anniversary service Friday. The serve the temple. After a ministry banquet Saturday at 8:30. p. m. in of three years, he came to theithe north ballroom; Purdue Union

in the fall of 1867 and wise's leadership the year before. Indianapolis congregation where Bldg, will climax the festive M. Bloom. Levi dedicated by the late ‘Rabbi Isaac] Some of those who served as/he was rabbi for more than 45 events of the centennial. g h |M. Wise. Rabbi Wise foundedipresidents of the congregation inziger, Harris Frank, David Hurt, {the Reform, or Liberal, branch of cude the late Jacob Mayer, Moses , .|David Klein, Jacob Mayer, Lewis . directions daily, but mostly they're called investi Pre M. Rosen Wins. wis

years, | Dr. Bernard J. Bamberger, Other distinguished rabbis who rabbi of the West End Bynagog, served the congregation include New York, N. Y. will speak on Rabbi Simon will be in charge of the inftitute and the services and act as toastmaster for the banquet,

He held the position from 1931

wasn’t in town. Turned .out he was busy investi-

spins samen or sous ox cot ment [)aafing Near louse Spy Probe Given Tip State Pit Strike In Mibs Contest

take a Shower. Before I blow a gasket.

LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.,, May 9—Lucid, quick in repartee, able to think on his feet—those are the characterizations of Dr. Philip C. Jessup, the American who negotiated with Russia's Jacob Malik about the Berlin blockade and the future of the German state. = -

Dr. Jessup, on leave as a professor of interna- ;

tional law at Columbia University, represents something entirely new in American diplomacy. He is a roving United States negotiator with the title of Ambassador-at-Large. He made such a yeputation as a member of the Ametican delegation at the United Nations, and particularly as U. 8. spokesman at the Security Council hearings on Berlin last year, that the State Department broadened its policies to keep him in public life. The new post, said a White House announcement in February, “will make his services available to the Secretary of State for special assignment in connection with negotiations with other governments as well ag with international meetings where an experienced representative of high rank is rquired.” That was exactly the mission that Dr. Jessup performed when he sat across from the Russian deputy foreign minister, Malik, in the exchange of ideas that led to the agreement to lift the Berlin blockade. '

Both Cross-Fire Veterans ‘

BOTH men were veterans of United Nations cross-fire debates and it was, in fact, inside the United Nations that the two men were able to put out informal feelers for talks about ending the Berlin blockades and finding a way to reconvene the Council of Foreign Ministers May 23. The 52-year-old Dr. Jessup has the scholar's command of language and the lawyer's skill at ironic humor. : . His rebuttals at the Soviet Union's Andrei

The Quiz Master

Does England still have restrictions on the use of electricity for outdoor advertising? No. On Apr. 2, the lights of Britain went on again for the first time in 10 years. In London's West End and in most of the great cities of the kingdom outdoor signs and advertisements began blinking and blazing with as nearly forgotten splendor. * © ¢

How did the expression, “show the white feather,” originate?

To show the white feather means to prove cowardly or back down and is supposed to have been a product of the cockpit. It was by the old belief that a white feather in the tall of a gamecock was a sign that the fowl was crossbred and a mongrel, and consequently wanting in courage and pluck. ’ ’ * ¢ o When was the title Duke of Windsor created for King Edward VIII? : Edward VIII abdicated under date of Dec. 11, 1836. The following day he left England as His Highness, Duke of Windsor. The title was selected by the dulie. .

Do coyotes ever band together? Yes. The coyote shows great cunning in hunting its prey. When after jack-rabbits, a pair of eoyotes will work together; antelope and deer they often hunt in packs, spreading themselves into a wide circle and endeavoring » exhaust the quarry. : ®

. Why is the secretary-bird so called? This bird derives its name from the crest of

Vishinsky at the Berlin blockade debate in Paris were so brilliant and so forceful that Mr. Vishinsky abandoned his usual preoccupation with note-tak-ing and newspaper-reading and gave Dr. Jessup his attention. :

November, Mr. Malik chanced across Dr. Jessup bles Tournament winners on. the|

asked, lightly, what had happened to the polltakers who failed to predict the Truman victory. _ Dr. Jessup gave it right back:

Witness Insists Woman Who Vanished In 1937 Was Slain as Backslider

By TONY SMITH, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

Entries to Close | Midnight Thursday |

By ART WRIGHT

n Body Dumped Into River pac in 3d Week

WASHINGTON, May 9—Paul Crouch, an ex-Communist of| Miami, Fla. has told House spy hunters that Juliet Stuart Poyntz. mppri HAUTE, May 9- From Sram, 25, of 762 Ketcham 8t., told

Accuses, Ex-Mate (Of Kidnaping. Her

Police today searched for John {Mason Ingram, 25, of 1655 Col{lege Ave. whose former wife |charged that he kidnaped her this {morning as she walted for a {street car on her way to work. | “Police sald Mrs. Virginia In-

6000, fo 7000 Out | In Pay-Hour Dispute

{ Times Special

Schools have until Thorsday was killed and thrown in the East River in New York’ City, It was|yix to seven thousand Indiana them her former husband forced After the American presidential elections ast aright to get their Times Mar- jearned today.

Mies Poyntz at one time had been national secretary of the {hree.week-old dispute over hours

in the Palais de Chaillot corridors in Paris and Oficial roster for the sectional rnternational Labor Defense, a Communist-front organization. Her and pay rates in deep mines.

Iminers were still out today in the her ai he halos ot 4 gun | to enter , n-by a | youth at St. Clair and Ketcham

{disappearance was reported in)

Playoff being held t 1937. : : ol yuAt fie being Seld ow ati Slippery Burglars

Two years ago a grand jury

» i ” . “Perhaps we had better send them to the Soviet 2nd Private schools and at Mar- nyestigation into the alleged wo Make Slick Exit

) fon County schools. i | 2 Union where it's a lot easier to predict elections the four winners at each school ({ § was demanded by. group must have been received or post-|o¢ prominent New Yorkers on the, mATkee by midnignt Thyraday 10 basis of disclosure made by Louis s. Norma Koster, supervisor of | : m i diactivities for the Ciry| EE, Le pu A said today he was investigating task at the United Nations suggested the pace of (Park and. Recreation Depart-|s a nailer; he began at 8 a. m. and he thought noth- ment.

in advance.”

Hours Mean Nothing to Him DR. JESSUP is a tremendous worker.

ing of carrying through until midnight. : He learned his job rapidly here at the United Nations, first as American representative on the Interim Committee, the so-called Little Assembly,

and later as Warren Ausfin’s alternate on the|eXpense-paid trips out of the city testified in secret session of a to compete in divisional and na- House Un-American Activities Other. delegates, not excluding the Russians, [tional playoffs.

Security Council.

soon saw that he was clever in negotiating ability

His | special

number is WA. 4576.

Names of [tivities of Soviet agents in the!

| Sts.

| One company which had a dis: |pute with the deep miners pub-| Mrs. Ingram told police that he

|lished a full page advertisement took her out on Cold Spring Road near the Veterans Hospital. {in the Terre Haute 8tar to which hn id. he att {the miners took exception, They, :nere. she said, he attempted to

i . i {ansault her and threatened her On Greased Cable issued a statement of their own SHEN H€F ARG

{which was published also in the |

POLICE SGT. Charles Vile

the: “slipperiest” {the unsolved cases urged for in|vestigation was that of Miss since he has been on the force.

{Peyntz's disappearance. Close Friend Crouch, it was

The park board telephone

Win Free Trips ’

The two top shooters will win Mr,

and that he knew the tricks of parliamentary tac-/who could be a boy or girl from When he and Mrs. Crouch were first floor.

tics and maneuvers. a

Dr. Jessup is a product’of Hamilton College, |National Marbles Tournament in Communist party in America. It was only the most per-| Wildwood, N. J. June 20 to 25.|

Yale and Columbia. suasive arguments that induced him to remain

The runnerup will go to Pota-that she was murdered—except

P= working as organizers for the Sounty OiokSwil §O 15 he : ¥ rill, 46, of 4350 Graceland Ave

in public life early this year after he returned from watomi Inn, Angola, Ind., to take/to say that she had threatened|h® arrived Tor work today.

Paris; he wanted to return to the academic re-

ee vinted ae {part in the Western Sectional to reveal Communist underground | . ; 0 st at Columbia. iplayoff. If the runnerup wins secrets—and he did not identify] Almost overnight, Dr. Jessup has become a there, he or she also will £0 to her clleged slayers. ranged over the floors. world figure. From what he has demonstrated the national at Wildwood.

thus far, he is going to justify the faith Dean Acheson has placed in him.

Copyright, 1949. by The Indianapolis Tim and Chicage Bats News. Inc. i

Is meant by the word Rye?

__ In the song, Scotland.

| this word refers to a river in A

* oo

What {s the suggested date for the adoption | of the proposed world calendar” {

Calendar revision continues to progress toward the approval of 14 governments. a change could be put into operation. ®* © ¢

When was the word “restaurant” first used? The word “restaurant” was first used for a Paris eating place, established in 1765. 0» dao

What is the sun made of? The sun is a tremendous globe ~ontaining al-

most all the chemical elements that have been WIBC Live Music found on earth, and so hot that all of them are Dispute Settled

gaseous. There is no solid standing room on the

sun. “’'s > ial

ve, grocery-meat market and an {Ohio and East Sts. filling station with the sub-committee last week, were reported to police today.

|store, told police that burglars atom-spy network, "which is rewho entered through a coal chute ported to have covered 11 states. actual adoption Jan. 1, 1950. It has already wongand left by the back door, lugged

International off $40 worth of ham, pork and|revealed—was said to have estabagreement would have to be secured before such beef and $26 worth of cigarets.

smashed a cigaret machine. En-|with the Communist underground try was made through a rear win-|late in 1942 after more than 17 dow, police said.

The local sectional piayoffs for inent Virginia family, Mr. Crouch (ne place.

Theitee, Her name was nuentioned in

job,” Bgt. Viles observed.

—————

| Mr, Crouch also testified, it was {learned, that he had been trained Reservoir Victim's in Moscow as a Soviet agent

along with such European leaders| Condition Improves as Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia

ported improving

sald a woman agent Arthur Volpp, proprietor of ‘the “Jackie” helped him establish an toda

“Jackie”-—last name not yet

but was Improved today. lished a Communist cell in at least! o a riuY for

several 1 id. Joe Powell, 26, manager of the|one major atomic-research unit.|p....s after he fell down a bank day, Army officials sa service station, said that burglars|He said he knew her onl 1 took $70 worth of tires, batteries underground cover name.

nd other accessories and| Mr. Crouch and his wife broke

years. Committee sources said he was “the best-informed witness” ever to testify on Soviet espionage | activities in this country. They on the spot gave first aid. sald he presented more proof of " Communist sypfng activities than ®¢!f a8 “2 good swimmer” sal

St. ville.

Live music went back on the)

Who changed the name of the Oregon River today, marking the beginning of Bentley, an. Louis Budenz com: | youth's .cap floating eight fee

to, Columbia? a

Robert Gray, a Boston trader. One of the sicians union and the station.

claims of the United States to the territory out of |

which Oregon and Washington were afterward the old wage scale. $5.20 an hour ————————————— formed, was based on the fact that in 1792, Gray for a 10-hour week. It brought ADMITS KILLING ATH WIVE had visited the mouth of the Oregon River, which back to the air such live music : he called the Columbia, after one of his vessels. programs as Ceuntry Carnival, (UP)—Willlam C. Mahurin, 52, . * & @ ithe Dixie Four, P. M. Party, and has confessed that he killed his Cafe, 239 Virginia Ave. SHRINE GUILD TO MEET eighth wife, whom he met through night and arrested Roy Killian, WFBM still is negotiating. The a lonely hearts club, suring Anjos, ties Sey A and gear Se Roi cole d Rodeo Cowboys Aspocia Gerald other stations were not involved argument at their farm home and mar orse " . ae n DT ned here, highway police sald forms. Killian was charged with p. m. in Parlor E at the Hotel fampas, May 15 from 1:00 to¥:00 today. Ikeeping a room for pool selling. Lincoln, m

Who was named the leading rodeo cowboy for E 1948? :

Roberts of Phoenix, Ariz, cowboy of the year.

mmy Lou and Chickie.

the ‘best all-round|in contract expirations at, this near

new contract between the mu- v .4

i

The contract was renewed on .i an open hearing here May 24. Out, she said.

Find Pool Tickets

FARMINGTON, Mo. May 9

burglary case|closed by walkouts, the trouble

Sometime during the night, he|to strip operations. I sald, a pair of diminutive bur-

. There was no indication of set- Car Thief Su ect glars scaled the two-story build-|tlement today. ‘

learned, ing occupied by the Solitaire Bev- Hons erage Co. 1825 Shelby St, cut ag ¥ . foot square hole in a cubicle hous- Bootleg Cabbie Sub-Committee here that Miss/ing the elevator shaft and slid The. Indianapolis champion— Poyntz was a close friend of his|down the greased cable to the Faces 4 Charges

The plant owner, William Mer-

Hospital attaches sald Joseph Districts Merged {Andrews, 17, of 1551 Carrollton |Ave. had been on the serious 1st cryjting districts of Indiana and sajd the car was stolen from He Michigan was made effective to- Hagen Auto Sales, Inc., 1432 E.

by her » i Y y > jute thé 10dianapoils W ser Coot (stations in Indiana after the con-|6 Butler Journalism

and Ann Johnston, Nobles-| Three Lincoln Chiropractic College students also fishing

away. She and Miss Johnston) He is under subpena to testity WAded to the spot and pulled him 4... “The Indiana Legislature Cox. Hans Stellberger, Howard

Police raided the Three Pigs Hotel last

He later let her out of the coupe at Massachusetts Ave. and Alabama Sts, Mrs, Ingram told police. } -

| Star, |

One mine after another was

spreading from the deep mines

Nabbed in Chase

A suspected car thief who fled

A suspected “bootleg” cabble ,, roo after a 75-mile-per-hour

made the mistake of committing

“la trafic error in front of a po- Police chase was captured when

He did not amplify his charge 14 police } . Jo uid he olfIe! ue car yesterday and ended up|officers found him hiding in a ga-

with four charges against him i | Capt. Ralph Chambers and

rage last night. The chase started when Patrol.

» GREASY FOOTPRINTS squad stopped Creamurs Thurs- men Cecil Maddelana and Maurice File cab- ton, 43, of 458 W. 13th 8t., in the Figher tried to stop a speeding |inets were opened, and grease- 1200 block N. Senate Ave. after car at’ Massachusetts and Park Miss Poyntz came from a prom- soyered papers were strewn about they said they saw Thurston turn Aves, The car sped on and two

Nothing was stolen, into traffic without giving a hand other’ patrol cars joined in the |the four winners from each school i§” said to have told the commit- Hr. Merrill told police. {will be held next Saturday.

jos] Sule wil staged at Wil- a memorandum here. . ar ark, a 3. P27 Test Your Skill 292, 2 oh ‘Market, Oil Station In the song “Coming Through the Rye” what Are Burglarized

signal. On investigation the offi- chase, with Patrolmen Rogar

“It sure was a well-greased cers added charges of driving a Harrison and Alfred Finnell fir-

taxi without license and of driv- ing several shots. ing h cab without cab driver's! The speeding car stopped at license, 13th and West 8ts., and the driver | Checking the car they found- disappeared into the darkness. 10a ang | and two pints of Police searched the neighborhood

An Indianapolis boy who fell Whisky and four half pints under and found 3p guspent: when they Burglaries .at a 3132 Carson and Palmiro Togliatt! of Italy. {down a bank into the reservoir the hood, adding a charge of vio- mw § pals of oaTiding Mr. Crouch, who spent 80 hours + Oakiandon yesterday was re- lation of the 1935 beverage act. 8

feet protruding

7 - — rage wall in Hamilton : The suspect at first refused to named county Hospital in Noblesville 2 Army Recruiting give his name. but later was

identified as Robert Roy Jordan, 18, of 1328 College Ave. He was Consolidation of the Army re- charged with vagrancy. Police

Washington St.

There will be seven recruiting

{solidation, according to Maj.

He was rescued oy ge women (Marcus Braatz, Frankfort, com- Students Initiated Bg ot Warhington manding officer of the Indiana

Six Butler University journalThey were Evansville, ;;m majors have been Initiated |Ft. Wayne, Gary. Indianapolis. y, membership in Sigma Delta New Albany, Richmond andcy, ,ational professional jour{Terre Haute. Inalism fraternity. George Mel-

|district.

. .! Headquarters for the new dis- 10 nior, president of the orMiss Collins, who described her trict will be in Detroit. loan, junior, p

r over WIBC at 11:30 a. M. whittaker Chambers, Elizabeth ®he heard a splash and saw the :

ganization, presided during ini. [tiation ceremonies. | New members include Sates Ar

t Watkins to Speak

Lt. Gov. John A. Watkins will Vawter, Robert Churney,

land its Work” at the 12:15 p. m. Jackson and Frederick Petry. meeting of Indianapolis Rotary Pte Club 58 Tuesday in the Claypool PLAN OUTDOOR EXHIBIT An outdoor exhibition of work by students of the John Herron Art 8chool, as part of the 424 A meeting of the Shrine Guild Annual Indiana Artists Exhibi7:45 tion, will be held on the school

man and Henry Rosenthal. lor Hebrew Union College was an-

x