Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 December 1949 — Page 23

9, 194)

Sing yness

)S

Advice Clerks

, MARTIN Correspondent . 9—~The man pearance of a for his bus, lamp post he st. It was the

unter of a de« .

suddenly set , he strode in idle salesgirl. for my wife,”

eason had now Hubby was for the little rift. They seem wonths of the nber the men ales personnel pot them and ase their buye-

nice slip?” The sh. “Nightie?” assiere?’ Red, ?” Beet red. ake the black th the wives nd hoped he immediate gethese frilly and sgirl then rele warited them h.” He couldn’t size but helpie weighed 100 married her 13

ual

as one of the life interesting nd the lingerie the Christmas

lel these days their shyness,” girl. “But the \barrassed are try to act very they were buyle tire or a

res have just composite case \gerie shoppers, ered: ore at ease In »cialty shops or nt stores where devoted to line like lingerie among other

& of his 16age ata nearby

\d spot him. yy dmit the sugxpensive than show the gents

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——— sailors in wartime, - :

ATTACKS LINDA'S FILM

-- Linda Darnell as Fatima, daugh-

e < ni Ne 4 VE yr SP ode 2 of ASB nem Te

FRIDAY, DEC. 9, 1049 __

: Big 3 Protest Seizure. ~ Of Tito’s Military Chief

“. . ae ZR By Soviets in Berlin Charge Violation of 4-Power Accords; Slavs Freed After 16-Hour House Arrest

BERLIN, Dec. 9 (UP)—The United’ States, Britain and France protested to Russia today against thé Communist East German state's 16-hour house arrest of members of Marshal Tito’'s Yugoslav military and consular staff. Fg

‘The house arrests marked the first time that a segment

@a:0f defeated Germany has detained for a considerable period of Servatory of Music before coming

“time representatives

" of one of: ” the allied powers.

. . 4 The Big Three western powers! Y[] oslav Court charged that the east German ac- : {ehotr of the Christ Episcopal

[Church and gave private music §

~to which Russia was a party— | » {lessons for a number of years assuring members of all military Convicts 10 Russ { rE Chicago, in Your he missions In Berlin free entry and |established a "there as a

tion violated four-power accords

exit and freedom from arbitrary acts by German officials, Search Officer's Home East German police put the 10man Yugoslav military and con-| _ sular mission under house arrest| in the Soviet sector of Berlin last night. dion TEI | SARAJEVO, Yugoslavia, Dec. 9 ) 80 searche e home| (yp)_The Sarajevo County of Col. Momcilo Sibimovic, act-! unty ing head of the mission. Court returned guilty verdicts toCol. Sibimovic said a police gen- day against all 10 Soviet citizens eral called at his home today and on trial for espionage and sen-| told him that he was free to leave at any time. The House arrests|tenced them to prison at hard were “a mistake,” he said. |abor for terms ranging from ««. However, the general added oe to 20 Fars. fendants im hat Col. Sibimov -! - that Bo his ERGY jo 2lu Shemem mediately appealed. All are white, the Soviet sector of Berlin by Dec. a ommynist) Russians who 17. Police guards remained on : . oi duty outside the homes of the Tar 1 and became Soviet citizens, fugoslavs. ; se” Yugo Ae te. SGV Out The state charged they worked The East German government for a spy ring operated by the ordered the Yugoslav mission last Soviet embassy in Belgrade. They) night to keep out of Soviet-occu- ola or with ne Muni jme. pled Germany In the future, but ™ was the first time since the placed the members under house/, .. +... pucdan citizens have! arrest before they could leave thir , tried, convicted and senhomes in the Soviet sector of the tance 1n any of the eastern Eucity. It accused them of trying to ropean countries. “interfere with lawful order.” |

Receives 20 Years The Yugoslav mission has head-| Arsen Boremovic, former pros-

quarters in the British sector of ecutor for the war-time puppet Berlin, although by four-power Yugoslav government, and the agreement its members have been only defendant to plead innocent, | living in the Soviet sector. The was sentenced to 20 years at military mission also has acted as hard labor.

Another story, I'age 10 rd

a consulate staff. Fr. "Alexei Krisko was sen- — ream |tencedgyto 11%, years. A Russian SIGN MERCY PACTS Orthodox priest, he admitted!

i GENEVA, Switzerland, Dec. 9 espionage for the Russians but] (UP)—Forty-five nations, in- nad charges he had been a cluding the United States, have - .o 2P0 agent. A signed four Red Cross conven- ,. i cnia-Komad; only woman de

3 ifendant, a middle-aged school toins providing for humanitarian: : of Hans. teacher who said she had lived

with Fr. Krisko during ‘he war, wounded or captured soldiers and received the minimum sentence

of three years... She was charged only with collaboration. with the Gestapo. «9. Accorded Lentency -}

Lhe se }—Lentency was recommended ror per Dawn today editorially at-| i tacked a Hollywood film starring iy ey endAtS) . 51 Tito's wartime partisans; ! ter of Mohammed, as “profane and predicted it would be banned They were Vidam Gesler, found throughout the Moslem world.

es

KARACHL, - Pakistan, = Dec,

/guilty of distributing Russian! toes eestor propaganda, five years; Peter SoAUSTRALIAN JUBILEE NEAR kolov, same charge, 4% years, The golden jubilee of the found- and George Oljsevsky, four years.| Ing of the Australian Common-| Two defendants, former Czarist| wealth will be celebrated in 1951. Army Capt. Vladimir Ognjev_ and atec ™m "%.. Army Capt. Viadimir ( ane

Spy Terms Range ba a radio organist, and at From 3 to 20 Years |

Walter Flandorf in Chicago.

other downtown movie houses, died Wednesday in New Methodist Hospital, €hicago. He was 56. Composer, organist and choir - director, Mr, Flandorf emigrated to America from his native Berlin, Germany, in 1914, He studied music at the Ithaca (N. Y.) Con<

to Indianapolis in 1919.

In addition to his theatrical work, Mr. Flandorf directed the

concert organist, Later, hé be-

one time, served as. director of the Zion City Radio Singers. He also composed numerous Christmas choral selections, Indianapolis friends met Mr. Flandorf again in 1939 when he served as director of music for the ampitheater of the Golden Gate Exposition at San Francisco.

mer Miss Vera Sangernabo, daughter of the well known In-| dianapolis sculptor, and a sister, Miss Charlotte Flandorf, Oakland,

7 RAH,

Walter Flandorf Dies = In Chicago Hospital at 56

,_A page of history dealing wit the era of silent movies in Indianapolis. was reopened yesterday with news of the death of :

Mr. Flandorf, who provided the spine-tingling background music for ‘melodramatic films of the early 20's in the Circle Theater and

~ Walter Flandorf

Burl Ives Recital Surviving are his wife, the for- At Purdue Postponed

Times State Service

LAFAYETTE, Dec. 9—-Cancel-

6

i J LL Li : "

said.

ations.

Fund Cut Possible

~ Wants Original Plan.

Times Staff Writer

““WASHINGTON, Dec. 9—Cuts| in Marshall Plan aid can be made, | but the program should ¢ontinue| through 1952 as originally agreed, Rep. James E. Noland, Blooming-! {ton Democrat, declared upon returning from a month-long study tour of Europe today.” He was accompanied on the trip by Mrs. Noland. They trav“leled at théir own expense, Mr.

of the

“The cut shouldn't be so great as to handicap economy, nor the /new appropriations so large that

|it would retard economic integra{lation of the recital by ballad tjon of Western Eurdpe,” Mr.

|singer Burl Ives scheduled for Noland said.

Burial will be in Chicago fol- this evening in Purdue's Hall of lowing services there tomorrow Music was announced this meorn+ formation

afternoon.

|

Lays Down Policy

Expresses Faith In American Way

Claude Adams Putnam, a small business man who is the 1950, president of the National Associa-| tion of Manufacturers, said today that his regime would be based on faith in “the imperishable na-| ture of the American way of life.” = Mr. Putnam, 59, is president of 2 the Markem Machine Company, of Keene, N. H., makers of power-| driven devices for marking industrial goods. He was elected last night. - = Mr. Putnam, who employs fewer than 200 production workers, said he believes small businesses. face “less probability of. extinc~. tion than big business.” He ex-!

plained he was “thinking -about'# -

further government control of. big:

Hya Zerepkov, 30-year-old former employee of the Soviet Information Bureau, were sentenced to, six years. i Anatoli Polyakov, a civil engi-| neer, was sentenced to 10 years.| Vaisl Kostrjukov, whose defense was that he was feebleminded,! received a five-year-term.

———————————————— {of convocations. { Mr. Ives is ill in St. Paul, Minn., lion ew td |Prof. Gunn said, and has’ been ning July 1. This year's outlay {obliged to postpone his |appearance until mid-January.

BULKHEADS REQUIRED OTTAWA, Dec. 9 (UP)—Trans- — port Minister Lionel Chevrier or-| dered all ships sailing Canadian your broker and tell him to ad-fire-resistant vertise it in the big NEW REAL bulkheads to avert a recurrence ESTATE SECTION of The SunNEW YORK, Dec. 9 (UP)- of the Noronic disaster,

TN dl

waters to

for

Purdue is

install

iti

£3,778.,000,000. sald they would ask cuts of all [the way from one to more than one and one-quarter billions,

Neil Dalton, retiring ECA inestimated ing by ProfXJ. T. Gunn, director that ECA Director Paul Hoff man will ask for around $3 bilyear begin-

director,

the fiscal

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Noland didn't make the trip as part of a committee assignment, as 50 many Senators and-Congressmen have done during the congressional recess, Mr, Noland's views regarding the Economic Recovery Administration are close to those ex {pressed by Rep. Ralph Harvey ‘|New Castle Republican, who re-, turned from a European tour as 'a member handling Marshall Plan appropri-

committee

The Senators

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British Laborite Wins ‘Over Conservative

(UP)—The British Labor Party scored“a victory over Winston Churchill's Conservatives today. . Hin a parliamentary by-election Retained Through '52 that had-been billed as a bar-|winde. By DAN KIDNEY | — ——— ——

‘lometer of next year's general election. “Final returns from yesterday's contest for the vacant parliamentary seat in the South Bradford. district gave the Labor candidate, George Craddock, 23,335 votes compared to 19,313 for his Conservative opponent, John L,

BRADFORD, England, Dec. 9

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