Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1949 — Page 3
cago, as new chapeau, or national
. off from business for their annual
» &
While the monkeyshining “40 and 8” delegations arrived in in. creasing numbers with their “locomotives” and bells and whistles, the convention commit-|;
proposals ] to the. delegates for action. p Most important of the programs were the national defense recommendations, which will be given ihe finishing touches by a special Legion commission tomorrow. 4 Meetings in One The convention actually is four meetings in one with thé Legion, the Women's Auxiliary, the funmaking “40 and- 8” and the women's “8 and 40” holding separate business sessions. The “8 and 40” honor group of the auxiliary, met today in the ballroom of Convention Hall and elected Mrs. Jesse G. Hyish, Chi-|
head. k The delegates, all former officers in the auxiliary, aiso heard a report by Mrs. Hyish, chairman of the Child Welfare Committee, that the organization had spent $159,000 in the past year on a program of tuberculosis prevention in children. The money was used to care for a total of 21,633 children, she reported. The Department of Ohio presented a $1000 check at the meeting for a bed at the Jewish hospital in Denver. The “40 and 8” will wind up their meeting at the annual “marche,” or banquet, tonight. High spot of the national convention will come Monday, when President Truman addresses the delegates at Convention’ Hall Tuesday the Legionnaires knock
elaborate 15-hour parade. Election of a new commander will be held Thursday, On the serious side, the con-
George N. Craig foward from
ing candidate for the American Legion's national commandership, discusses strategy in Philadelphia with Hoosier Legion leaders. They are (left to right] E. ‘W. Sherwood, national Americanism director; Joseph F. Lutes, past department commander, and ' William E. Sayer, Indiana Department adjutant.
A delegation of 300 Hoosier L convention yesterday aboard the
farewell in Union Station are (left to right) Harry Fitch, T.
Haute, ex Terre Haute; Jack Charles B. B. Brownton, | Indianapolis, Eleventh
tive committeeman; Miss Marjorie Tille ig, Seventh District sitet cenvbander, and (rear)
let), Brasil gHorney and lead |
ionnaires left for the national
aig: Special” train. Waving arte
Y:
commander.
vention was expected again to demand universal training and assail the Army. for not putting up a fight for UMT in Con-
CALL RI 4375
year-old Scottish comedian whos
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has been seriously 11 since Aug.|
STRATHAVEN, Scotland, Aug./20, was “just the same — no 27 (UP)—S8ir Harry Lauder, 79-/change,” his attending physicians tonight.
| meeting is held we could tell the J employers our position in a very short time.”
Federal Conciliation Commissioner George Hillenbrand has asked for a joint bargaining sesnou next. week. . Bridges told a press conoy that the restraining order now sought by union attorneys in
|ing a 27-year-old man who admitted holding up a North Side store at rifie-point and escaping his home shortly after a gunman’ grabbed a handful of bills from the : ; \ a cash register in the Senate De-' wallan : Damage estimated at $10.000 rested yesterday when lighting siruck & modorn on partment Store, 2108 Boulevard nn tee" Satie! farm of W. O. DeLong, Nosl Road, near U, 52. Fire destroyed the barn along with several fons of Ph a dors WT discards its dock hay, a tractor, a farm wagon and other equipment. Abave picture was made just after the big struc- | [Loe CoB UOT, ‘ G Sure, didnt come to Honolulu to] 1'® collapsed. © ~~ : : rying a rifie, and asked to Ses, Taio the President of he tnier Named Dealer aman Cab Driver Ralph Parnell opened the cash ¢ frawer 10 make, ! |housemen’s Union. isan Ware Studebaker ; lugged and Robbe Rites Tomorrow ride and demanded: 4 last night from a week's trip| a Aver ies Ralph Parnell, a grave digger| “Leave the cash drawer open..I the Ee 4 Appointment of Charles Stuart, siugged and her purse containing at C Hill Cemetery for 54 Want some money.” i th his li Sue. Tudianapolia Beth Sur desler about 330 was stolen bY 9. pas. Nefore his netireaent last] ‘At that moment, Wiliam as town "he 30 Sook. Hara Bra ili ried there fon | Sch s5. AD y overhead.
Mr. Stuart
where the permanent dealership will be located after extensive re-
Ruth Campbell, 58, of 2627 N. Illinois St. the driver, told police. the man she picked up as a fare Siugged her after ordering her to stop in MN. Rural St. She was \struck above the right ear. The purse contained about $18 of company money and $12 in personal funds she said. Ba Ve The empty purse and identifi {cation papers were later found been established yy 5 neighborhood resident. No at 1011 N. Penn- |; ney was recovered.
sylvania St, . lis from Danville, Ind., more than five years ago and will continue
Side Chapel. .
Mr. Parnell, who, in his many years of service at the’ cemetery, helped to prepare graves § for the bodies of C Paul Bradley, 33, of 1926 N, such notables as Mr. Parnell Capitol Ave., and Miss Edna Skin« James Whitcomb Riley and Ben- ner, 26, of 2034 Highland Pl, who jamin Harrison, died Thursday in|were in the car, refused to drive the home of his brother, Albert!it. The fugitive was still in the
dered the occupants to “drive me away.”
federal court to cancel the seizure law “would séttle the strike.” He said employers would be forced
j | “to settle in a hurry.” i
No Unequal Contest | With the law favoring the employers through allowing them to get nearly normal profits, he said, “we would be in an unequal position across the bargaining table and negotiating now in Honolulu would be a waste of time. “We are not going into an unequal contest. There'll only be real bargaining when the ting is evened up.” Mr, Bridges charged that employers are “afraid” of negotiations in Washington with Federal Conciliation Chief Cyrus Ching. But, he said, “I'll try to get them to okay Ching’s invitation. Mr. Ching agreed to hear the dispute in Washington, D. C., but refused] to make a trip to the islands, Pleading the press of other bus-
Report 3 in Tree Saw Spy Parley
Link ‘Scientist X’' To Steve Nelson
WASHINGTON, Aug. 27— (UP) — The House Un-American Activities Committee has three
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lll atomic spy, it was learned today.
|| under the direction of Rep.. Harold H. Valde (R. IIL).
lll as a West Coast FBI agent dur-|
|| witnessed wartime meetings bel| tween
| room and watch the two while the || meetings took place,” the source
ll! this scientist went to Mr. Nelson's ll home and gave him a {lof importance” in atomic bomb
ll her husband in Bonnieville, Ky. ll recently. She just packed cloth- || ing into large cartons and piled lon a bus with the children, who
ili go back to Kentucky.”
110,000 qualified, unmarried aliens
alleged wartime
The three witnesses — former federal agents—have been questioned by committee investigators
Mr. Velde worked on the “Scientist X” case
| ing the war, An autheriative source said the three former agents personally
“Scientist X" and Steve] Nelson, a Communist party offi-! | cial. They were perched in a tree! | outside Mr. Nelson's home while - the conferences took place, the
i} source said.
| “They could look right into the|
explained. “I do not know
il whether they could hear what was| || being said.” I>
“Scientist X” has been ques-|
| tioned ‘repeatedly in closed com-
| mittee sessions. Each time he has
{| Mr. Nelson, who now is Com-| ill munist party organizer for. west-| ern Pennsylvania. |
The case first was brought to] l public attention in a committee] {report issued last September. In March, 1943, the report said,
“formula
development. The committee said| it had reason to believe Mr. Nel-| {son later handed the formula to an official of the Soviet consulate| In San Francisco.
Family of Eight Leaves Police | Station ‘Home’ |
FRANKLIN, Ind., Aug. 27 (UP) | |«~Mrs. Ruby McCorkle and her,
|| seven children moved into a three-| if room house today. i
CEMENT Ji
The 37-year-old mother and her {family lived in the city police station because she was unable to {find- an “apartment. ' They were [not destitute—they just needed a place to stay. Mrs. McCorkle said she left
range in age from three to 18, “I brought my family here be{cause I simply refused to live | with my husband any longer,” {she said. “I'd rather starve than
Senate OK's Bill
To Enlist Aliens
‘WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (UP) ~The Benate today passed and’ sent to the House legislation to allow the Army to enlist up to
for terms of not less than five years. The authority would ex-|, pire in two years. in peace-time
those legal déclaration of intention to become citizens,
-“
raodeling, Mr. Stuart said. nis used car business at its pres-| Parnell, 502 W. 26th St, He | vehicle when police arrived. In Mr. Stuart came to Indianapo-/ent site, 1129 N, Meridian St. was T1. = ‘a watch pocket officers found $20, STRAUSS SAYS:— TRADITION WITH A. TOUCH TOMORROW?
OF
%y) YY iu
as > “Everything Grows Up in Summer!
~ FROM ALL OVER THE CITY AND STATE AND ~~ NEIGHBORING STATES—BOYS, FOLLOWING A FINE CUSTOM AND NATURAL INSTINCT, COME TO THE MAN'S STORE FOR SCHOOL OUTFITTING
_*DURING THE SUMMER ‘while the student body was being drilled "by mosquitoes and bedeviled by chiggers, bronzed, by the sun, exposed to poison ivy— L diving into the cool waters— or fishing therein or boating thereon the Boys' Shop was busy MOVING —getting up-in the world— moving from its nice home on the fourth floor <= to an even nicer home on the SIXTH FLOOR— the famous Sixth — (thereby acquiring a very fine neighbor— the SPORTSIAAN'S ROOM— is on the same floor— the famous Sixth)
AND HOW PERFECTLY natural! - After all this IS the MAN'S STORE— and the fellow who wouldn't prefer something from his own shop, | . in the Man's Store — isn't!
The acceptance of Strauss clothes for the younger generation has reached such proportions— that unless a boy has on something or other from the Man's Store— he just doesn't feel-so good— a and his school mates are apt to look at him wondering i he is “stubborn” or something!
And arents are glad to know ToT Tee The aT aero much to the comfort and the
Rappiness and the spirit the boy—cost no more—often
Teer HothTRG To Bs Tie | Except 3% mare bedy severing a
“The BEST at YOUR price—no matter what the price” even more so this fall,
1 STRAUSS & COMPANY, me ING. THE MAN'S STORE | | * BOYS’ SHOP—ON THE FAMOLS SIXTH FLOOR.
AND IT'S DOING very much of all right in its new home!— jy greeting the bestest, brightest and largest body of students that it was ever host to!
