Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1949 — Page 3
OWNS 5.95
++ « there pretty in fine
ire
rl n drawstring
| waist inset.
ace trim and
k. Pink, blue,
d collar. Lace Pink, blue or
ond Floor
as Gift Judget!
ond” and” 1 Set 1.00
set in junior or hristmas gift] , semi-hooded 5-year guaran. blue, grey, or m. Order sew
street Floor
klin 44H
9, Ind. doint Pen and
seth tantan SEstsstantan
serdar annan
.0.0
Traff Ic Deaths
CA i he oii al a Vac Ay Seg A NO 2
MONDAY, DEC. 5, 1949
In State Hit 10
! "STUDENT INDIANA WEATHER . BODY IK A A low pressure area centered today over the northwestern por-|A v i . tion of the nation was expected to move southeastward to the Mis- ! sissippi and Ohio valleys, causing increasing cloudiness and warmer SPECIAL temperatures tomorrow in Indiana. Showers were expected to develop throughout the state tomorSELLIN' Al row night and be followed by mild temperatures again Wednesday. Temperatures tonight will range Gea. —e———— — from 8 mintmuin of 20 to 25 tention’ and Sonne . on gon: north to 25 in southern Indiana i of dh en and: tomorrow from a maximum ™ Christmas Seal Compaten — Through | - (Regularly 7.50) of 47 north to 50 south. | Ghristmas Symphony Ore Concert re See weather map on Page 15. Jrepin 30", Whine TaerIAcle. i Temperatures in Judinng pole one ine=1 m., av fogs Layman Are High, 57; low, 36." dis napoli” Ri nThese are the one-and-only year ago today: High, i fs ne DAVID.COPPERFIELD Slacks— EVENTS TODAY In Park ‘Chanter 8, “Cable Cord" —which Indians: Farm Bureau Co-Operative Ase |B gare, Tok ad ref) tailored from, ock e sociation Shvention—Throush tomorrow, cis i ve OU ncheon mh is as 1a emeyer Indiana Meeting. ‘Fandamental Baptist Fel stn Be COLORS ~~ CORDUBOY—in a Wide Wale . ee Tania, 00 ONT SOB ond | I w Setdin Gray (wide bumps)—very smart! Indiana Shoe Travelers Aegpetation Con: fils 35 ny op “me community . vention and Spring Thr orty-Hi Shee Show Bl party. “Luncheon MoetCream "i finish" Cord ( ~ Or ee dates Claypge!. HoOpel o a & incion , is a "pure finis orduroy (no sizing Maron 6 Srubercatosis Rasgctat Mereator Club Neon heon Meeting— Wine which means they are not stiff— Chrlumas Seal asi He i plas” Rivapis © FE SION Rie Meeting Green they hold their shape—they hang nicely. hs Daashin, Jemecratie Club RSS Brin METI, Co Hens Ee tH ae generation . And they are cut with , pehorial Anan bn eneral rist, Helen Brewer, oy | DAVID.COPPERFIELD'S special tailoring Fried Nient Programe 4b b. wing andl Nome = PredfiE Phils Mika, 1403! B skills—pleated, zippered and dra Content Sinus Branch, Notional Voes-| Ba Balgimorl, Jam i Burrig: H41=t with continuous (California) droped You 55%. See Srl Jie vers. } WX ’ Feb a w Robisen- ost 1 i! § They were a top value at their fel Christian C ey 20 wilt 81 | He ed dl in." a | ular price of 7.50 Hotel Antlers. IAL 8s. Franels J Werner: The of the best buys th Service Club Noon Luncheon Mostine—|at, General=tisor Vn Sickles; They o ot body e to of o Junto Gab Neen Luncheon Meeting—Clay- A¢ Cole 8 a lle Melart body ever got into a Teaffie K: Neon Luncheon _Moeting—| fice + Fink i rat Rostmatis. Comm: tog A 5 98 od North 8 side | Fin, Club Noon Luncheon Si ner pe Ls pre ! i Sizes 25 to 32 Indianapolis M ortease Association Dinner é m- | . thenae | fick: Wea a a W . ME 2 at ote Roles. gh REE giby, OR a } | And el Soni 5 flour Bi afer. ' Mildred d Juatehini L. STRAUSS & (CO., INC. vr roo RE Vip pn, y : ‘ ' : F VEN FOMURA oY 3 John: Ratn ard peer: 5 A SENIOR HALL—SIXTH FLOOR |[g7s-m=sirarase Ei li £7 ; rc EEE Ld ar Gua Nhl Seiji gw ae :
‘erstown, killed when their car
On Week-end
Evansville Woman Killed as Auto Roms Bridge Abutment
Indiana's week-end traffic death toll stood at 10 today, with nine deaths Saturday and one ®. yesterday. The Sunday traffic victim was Mrs. Martha Saucier, 24, Evansville. She was killed when the car in which she was a passenger) struck a bridge abutment -eight| miles north of Evansville. Serjously injured in the same ac. cident were her husband, Albert Baucier, national advertising| § salesman for Evansville Printing! Corp.; Peter. and Mary Mazza! and Catherine Johnson, all of Evansville, : f Two persons were killed Satur-| day on U. 8. 52, north of Lebanon, when their car was rammed from behind by another car. They were Theodore Edwards, 20, and Conn | 5 Collins, 23. both of Hinsdale, | L An Elkhart woman, Mrs. ortha’ Upsan, 71, died Saturday of inJuries received when she was struck by a taxi Friday night. Other traffic victims Saturday were Cecil Chapman, 55, and| Ralph Grissum, 50, both of Hag-|
struck a bridge northwest of # Richmond; Ronald Bryant, 32, Muncie, fatally injured in an acci-| dent south of Alexandria. Mrs. Georgia Allison, 37, East Chicago, was killed in a head-on
collision with a car driven by | waited for ladders to reach the
| pital in Anderson.
Accident Throws Motorist Into Wires
A "oe g |
Ronald Bryant, 32.year-old Muncie motorist, was catapulted high info the air and caught in a'| The institutions objécted to the web of telephone wires when Ris car overturned three miles south of Alexandria on State Rd. urday. State Police Technician Charles Epperson of Pendleton Post snapped this picture as rescuers |
accident victim. Mr. Bryant died two hours later in St. John's Hos- |
THE. INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
Predict New Fee To Spur GI Loans
Estate Reporter - Volians in have an easier approach in obtaining loans on their houses now,
two Indianapolis mortgage officlals . for erasing reluctance of ‘|U. 8. lending institutions to accept 4 per cent notes on homes.
encourage interest bearing notes was urged
cent service charge on the original amount of the loan by lend-
9 Sat- [low interest rates, saying process-
William L. Betz, mayor of Vin-| cennes. Two pedestrians,” Ed-| ward Reed, 73, Shelburn, and James Short, 77, Rolling Prairie, died when struck by cars as they walked near their homes.
{car collision at Capitol Ave, and {McLean Place yesterday afternoon. | Miss Waldon was a passenger
© juries.
There were no fatal accidents 1 a car driven by David Adams, in Indianapolis over the week-| 19, of 3207 Hawthorne Lane. A end but three persons were in-| |car driven by Alvea Hindman, 38, jured in traffic. of 3310 N. Capitol Ave. northT togenarians es ca p e d| bound on Capitol Ave; struck re with minor injuries when the car|naamer the sab dUives bY. Mr.
Washington St. yesterday. |43, of 2143 N, Capitol Ave., mak-
Robert Locke, 82, and his wife, |ing a left turn into McLean Place. |der »
Laura, 80, were riding in a car |The Adams car in turn struck the, driven by their son, Lloyd L.| Davidson car. Locke, 56, Bridgeport postmaster. Two persons received minor in-!| Mr. Locke lost control of the car juries when a car driven by] on a curve. Mrs. Locke was|Neville Hagar, 26, of 1321 Man-| treated at Methodist Hospital for jove Ave., struck the safety zone two broken ribs. Mr. Locke re-\at Delaware and Market Sts. | fused treatment for head in- early yesterday. Mr. Hagar was treated at Gen- |m Marjorie Waldon, 20, of 3101j/eral Hospital and a passenger, Boulevard Place, was in fair con-| |Amy Lynn, 38, of Knoxville,| dition in General Hospital today, Tenn. was given first aid at the! with injuries received in a three-|scene.
STRAUSS CHRISTMAS STORE HOURS 9:30 TILL 5 AS USUAL! SAYS: * (Excepting Saturdays, 9 till 6)
"CABLE CORD" SLACKS FOR THE ose
also northbound. The out in which they were riding OVer-| Adams’ car had halted behind a cracked and 1 couldn't do it. I turned on Tibbs Ave. north oflcar driven by Seawell Davidson, got back in the car and realized
{marry anyone,”
Youth Confesses Hammer Slaying of His Sweetheart.
Asks No Mercy
In Kentucky Crime (Continued From Page One) to jump. My last nerve
‘my lite was forfeit for the mur-
At the end of his confession, | Slay incorporated a paragraph admitting full guilt to “unpremeditated murder of Mary and I ask no leniency whateyer.”
Car Rams Truck Slay told detectives that after Leaving the bridge when ‘he “lost my nerve” he just drove away ''to escape. He was arrested in Athens, Ga., ithe following day after his automobile struck a truck and a sub|sequent investigation revealed he
|
-|pense, the need to build reserves
v man, personally,
Charge Expected To Attract ‘Lenders
BY 1A LARRY STILLERMAN
The GI's can applaud efforts of |
attractive method to Joans on the low
A mo
by G. E. Ohmart, vice
president-treasurer of the Federal women in the same capacity, Miss Home Loan Bank of Indianapolis, and BE. G. Wilkinson, loan guarantee officer of the Indiana regional office of the
Veterans Administration. The method calls for a 1 per
Ing houses. The fee, paid by the veteran to offset processing expense, can be included in the original loan and paid as part of the loan in terms of the mortgage, VA spokesmen | said here. VA headquarters in Washing-|? ton, D. C. ‘approved the fee| Dec. 1. It is effective in all VA districts.
Loan Groups Balk
Flooded with 4 per cent mortgage notes on GI homes, banks and loan groups balked more {than a year ago and slowed efforts of veterans to obtain |housing. ¢
ling costs excéeded any profitable return on the notes. Four per cent loans aren't safe, [the institutions said. They cited cost of obtaining money to loan, operational ex-
against any contingencies and taxes as totaling more than the rate of return on the GI loan.
Ignored Bonds
‘““The lenders eyed higher interest loans on the market and ‘ignored’ government-backed = 4 per cent notes,” said Mr. Ohmart. “They feared government subsidy to offset any losses incurred by further handling of veteran Py " he explained. The new 1 per cent fee should speed acceptance of 4 per cent notes now, he said. “This should have been done a year ago,” Mr. Ohmart stated. “We hope it's not a belated move now.’
Hopkins Cleared
In Atomic Leak (C .tinued From Page One)
just don’t ring true,” Mr. Lubin
was wanted on the kidnaping warrant, Police said Slay first told them, the young woman left his car! near Madisonville, Ky. “apparently to go home.” He broke down later, however, and told of the
suicide pact. Pay Plea Voided
“I wanted to get married at| Indiana miners lost their bid once,” he sald, “rather than for jobless pay for a two-week mewit uitl, Mary Ellen finished | morial holiday last spring in the schoo {Hooster coal fields in a ruling toHe said he had proposed tol |day by the State Appellate Court. the girl on the night before they| one court affirmed ruling by the left on their fateful trip. Fler | review board of the Indiana Emmother, he said, had advised the noyment Security Division which girl to wait until she fin denied unemployment compensaschool before marrying. {tion to 2000 miners who applied. Map. Helps Police The decision was written by “Why mother, I'm not going to Chief Justice Floyd 8. Draper,
ho said: Mrs. Harmo n|%o { lunauoted her daughter as saying. The (miners) laid onovO ut She suid, Mary hag known SiaY available but they would not per-| Since y a {form it. They agreed to this tem: ponded with him since he entered | ary unemployment period in school in Florida. Detectives said the girl's body advance. They were idle through
” was easily found by Slay’s map. choice and not necessity.
panties, potice said. Slay was to Shirley May To Visit Here
be questioned regarding the rest Shirley May - France, 17-year-|,
of her clothing. The Evansville detectives, assisted by Kentucky officers, found the body in a old Somerset, Mass., school girl ravine about -60 feet from the who attempted to swim the English Channel last summer, will visit Indianapolis next February.
country road. “The body apparently had been Having signed a contract to appear in boat and sportsman’s
dragged through the underbrush,” shows throughout the country,
the detective chief said. “It was Shirley May will open a nine- to
partly covered by leaves but we do not know that Slay covered 11-week tour here, her father, J. Walter France, said.
ary Ellon Harmon . . . beateath.
ent Na
‘Miners’ “Jobless
it. It ig ble that the wind piled up the leaves.”
in New York. He is now associated with a movie Qistrib-
German wom candlelight In the darkness" lead-
{Sara Southall of Chicago, recent
German Women “Advancing
Slowly, Speaker Declares
Tells of Survey In Tour of Nation
n- now see “a ing towards taking their rightful place in the new Germany, Miss
ly returned from the U. 8. zone, said in Indianapolis today. Miss Southall, former assistant {personnel director for International Harvester Co., Is here to attend the 51st anniversary cele bration at Flanner House and to . ald in dedicating a new $65,000. cannery and shop on the grounds. The status of German women in trade and industry is far behini the position of American
Southall said. She added, however, that a new guidance program offered a solution to ageold German problems and the socalled inferiority of women.
Studied Conditions Miss Southall studied conditions in Germany with Miss Pauline| Newman, of New York, head of the health center of the Internation.1 Ladies’ Garment Workers Union. g . “The German population Is heavily overloaded with women,” ‘Miss Southall declared, “and the problem of German economy Is
Miss Sara Southall praise of a number of German | women leaders, citing particularily
a Frau. Leber. “This remarkable woman.” she
“is destined to become a great leader. Her strength was sufficient to draw a crowd of 150,000 to a public square near, the Russian zone border. “She was loud in her praise of the American airlif nd scorn
said,
Center Town
He has a job now canvassing door-to-door. His wife told The Times interviewer: . “If the mister doesn't seil any~ thing by noon today, we don't eat tomorrow.
Some Disabled
Another segment of the relief load is made up of persons who have been permanently ijured in automobile or industrial accldents, In one case in" N. East St, a | woman 51 years old suffered a fractured hip when she was
hard to get moving. German; women are still considered Inferior to men but there is a small| “Europe is having its last gasp! candlelight in the darkness.” ** |4¢- private enterprise,” Miss! She explained that women In |gouthall ded. It 15. success) Germany had been restricted inin,w or continued failure in the education and training and Were | future.” not educationally equipped to equal American girls in trade and . . industry. She said the maint Mechanic Cred
of German women had quit]
school at 14 and had been given To Death by Car
ful of the Russians” who stood across the zone border.
{any lenpth of time singe them,
struck by an automobile in front of hé home last March, says she has not been able to walk any distance or stand for
She was unable to return to her job in a downtown department store. She was an orphan, and had never married. 14 Years to Go She must sur/ive 14 years more before she is eligible for old age |assistance.
no chance to learn trades on an equal basis with men. An Indianapolis mechanic was {crushed to death yesterday when
Cites-an Example “There is a subtle transition & car under which he was work-
from the old apprentice system to|ing slipped off of a jack. the new job-training program in
Alex Blakemore, 31, of 910 E. light zone between destitution and
She receives a $6 a week food order, Most relief cases surveyed by The Times were those in the twi-
Germany,” Miss Southall said. She cited a case in which girls were kept in apprenticeships for three years on inferior jobs rather than being trained to do better things by German industrialists.
22d 8t., was pronounced dead at{some form of welfare assistance. the scene after his body was dis-| They are an ever-changing load. cove under the car in the rear The records show that as fast of 1618 Cornell Ave. = a$ these persons are absorbed into Police said he had been. trans-| welfare. new cases APPSRE 10 take \terring parts from the rear sys-itheir
tem of one automobile to another.
&:' &
Miss Southall was high In her
STRAUSS
STORE HOURS AS USUAL, 9:30 TILL § SAYS: (Except or Saturdays—? fill 6)
uting firm. He sald he never knew of Mr,
or letters, Mr. Hopkins’ son, David, sald Mr. Jordan's story was “complete-
who wrote the book, and Hopkins,” after studying the late presidential adviser's private papers. The FBI has refused to comment on the case, but it was learned that its agents have
amined the diary which he contends bears out his charges. Young Hopkins said his father, while aware of Russfi’s tremendous contributiofis to the Allied cause during the war, also “was well-aware of the thrert of future world communism . . J (and) was very outspoken against it.” Mr. Hopkins’ son said there never has been, to his knowledge, a plece of White House stationery with the name of his father or anyone else printed on it. “White House letterheads just uy “The: White House, WashingD. C.'" he added. “I'm sure reve D ait (deputy defense secetary and former White House will confirm
Furthermore, he said, “my father never signed anything ‘H. H.
and I defy anyone to produce 8
Jettor or memo from him signed in that way.”
In Indianapolis—Vital Statistics
Tremont; Horace, Florida How.
if i ets.
“pt i Fr “i Ames. At kh i — >Effnord Jo J » he: i he To dE James, etty Spot So Nancy Enos. “Engiles.” AD oi: po Pi feott: Payl Frogn n akg: Arc elon ancy Jean ans pitore A One: on fi arias Sk Allert otty na wrence, Ne ane C nna Caer.
ie.| DEATHS
Beater, ateisctasis. enter, atelecta Minnie Doup Clawson, 72, st 3837 N. Penn-
ivan: arteriosclerosis o ec. Su wai 56, at 336 N. Glad-
Anna f Belts Hamill o. at General, hyperve cardiova « Dalle Cl rence i) 0, at 400 8. abetes me Jénnie e. Broe k. 76. at 2928 W. Michigan,
athertn ". Methodist,
Catherine Edgeworth, | pneumonia ust F Jansen. 79, st 1338 N, Dela~ ware, arterioscleros {Willies 8 Foarose, 11. at 2300 E. Michiwan, arteriosclerosis |Bmma 8. Sager, 87. at 615 N. Oakland, ploronary occlusion ussel Trump. 48, at General esrcinoms. Ora Whetatine. 66. at 3719 N. Colorado,
at
The “Indianapolis Times, dally and Sunday, the mewspaper that
{carries the REAL ESTATE ADS!|
7 oom tom
i OF TROIT
Toke iy 4 Sane for Ya rvs __. Phone: FRanklin 1554 Or Your Travel Agent Ticket Office, 6 E. Market St. & SOUTNERN g
Hopkins signing “H. H.” to notes
questioned Mr. Jordan and ex-|
A
ens, 1 day, at JU Medical
DEAR MADAM: SO DEEP | ROOTED IS HIS PREFERENCE—THAT THE OBJECT OF YOR AFFECTIONS IS
APT TO THINK IT
IF HIS GIFT DOESN'T COME FROM THE MAN'S STORE— TS THEOL INPULSE—“4HE WILL OPEN Bo STRAUSS GIFT Sd
“FUNNY” (MIRTHLESS)
places. TOMORROW: Cut Off Relief.
