Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1950 — Page 15

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Inside Indianapolis

. WHEN BIGGER and better nuts are planted, Joe DeYoung, district forester, and I will plant

them. Remember, from acorns mighty oaks grow.

This Is a good time to say that each and every

one of us ought to plant something this spring 3}

to help beautify our yards and neighborhoods. There is no better way to get a boost out of life and indirectly “boost Indianapolis.” Ask anyone with a green thumb. : Joe DeYoung, a man so interested in botany and forestry that he’d rather watch a tree shimmy

than a pair of shapely hips (no kidding), thinks .

planting, whether they're acorns, shrubbery, trees, cucumbers, flowers, - is the greatest pastime a person can have. ; a

Planting Plans : SO IT was that Joe and I got together on the acorn-planting detail. What better way to celebrate the first day of spring, we said, than popping a few acorns into the ground?

“~~ Don't get the imprésgion all this was done on

to have a good location, something to plant and it's no easy matter to- go gathering nuts in

" March. Gathering nuts in May is a different

-matter. » Jok thought the bur oak would be the ideal tree to plant. I thought University Park would be the ideal location. Mayor Al Feeney gave us his blessing. Anyone with something constructive

for Indianapolis has the Mayor's blessing.

When we visited. Dr. Roy Freasner, head of the botany department of Butler University, and told him about planting a quercus macrocarpa, the botanist was delighted. He was still delighted when he was asked for the acorns. It was necessary to dash over hill and dale on the campus before we had five beautiful specimens. Dr. Freasner showed us an excellent stand of bur oak in front of the Union building. It was hard to believe that 21 years ago the 20-foot-high trees were little acorns, in spite of the stories you hear. : He said he gathered nuts in 1929, planted them

_ in a hothouse and when they were kneehigh to a

picket fence he transplanted them along.the walk where they are still flourishing today. Bur oaks will grow about a foot a year, Dr. Freasner explained. It isn’t any trick at all to plant acorns so they'll grow, either. Boy, I was glad we visited with the professor. Joe knew all the stuff but this civic-minded guy didn’t. Speak on, sir. : . “Most of the people lack the patience that is required when Mother Nature does most of the work," sighed Dr. Freasner. “You can’t expect an acorn to grow into a mighty oak over night.” He was certainly giving me something to look forward to over the years. By the time I get bent over double and have a beard hanging down to my knees, the bur oak acorn Joe and I planted yesterday, the first actual day of spring, will be 40-feet high and have, if everything goes well, a nest of robins.in its hair, Pigeons we're sure of.

-—

i

Makes Machine to Clean Venetian

Blinds on Production Line Basis : By PHILIP F. CLIFFORD

trap but the world is beating a path to his door. : fuss aiFe-Robiusowinvented a machine for cleaning Venetian blinds on a production-line is. | From such far-off places as Hong Kong, Alaska, South Africa, { Mexico and the Hawaiian Islands, comes a steady stream of mail Acorns . . . "Mr. Inside" (left) and Joe DeYoung and cablegrams to Mr. Robinson's yr ~Robinson soid his Arst maget a mighty oak started in University Park. [Eoie at irs en dents Chine about eight months ago to Then if everything goes first class, no hydrogen eagerly asks for “more and debombs exploding and the rest, in a couple tailed information” about “Jet- Shat Hime, he. hag. aeliverea ane hundred years University Park might be blessed matic,” the trade name of the mp. “gadget” as ‘Mr. Robinson with a tree the size that used to stand in adopted Hoosier’s invention. {calls his. cleaner, is %. OnG-IIan the Berkey Woods, Kosciusko County, about four| “Jetmatic,”” Mr. Robinson 8ays| oberation and sells for $1205 miles northwest of Warsaw. In.1926 it measured by way of explanation, “is a adg-| 1p addition to a ing : i pervising the 7 feet, 1 inch in diameter, 41; feet above theet I dreamed up during the war. sales of the Jetmatic, Mr. Robinground. Quite a tree. At one time it was the largestiIt cuts down on labor in cleaning! gon also operates the All-Brite tree in Indiana and some experts believe the Venetian blinds. X . largest of its kind in the United States. {with the woe and worry for g Yesterday Joe and I popped the acorns in the housewives during spring Y rea ered barn. 3% the rear of: Nis rich soil of University Park. Hardly any work ating.” : all. You plant acorns about a half-inch below the! s = -surface. Just enough so the squirrels can't see! BEFORE the war, Mr. Robinthem, son, who served wtih the 70th InA spry little fellow came over where we were, fantry Division and the Adjutant He better not dig them up. If he does-he'll be one General's Department, was steam- in sorry. squirrel. I tried to give him a lecture onifitter and mechanic in his native brot civic pride but he wouldn't stand still. Allendale, Il, Navy veteran

3 After being discharged from Installation and operation of Send Your Letter 3 z : |service, Mr. Robinson said, he be- {na Jetmatic. Mr. Robinson said. THE HOOSIER MONUMENT CO. sent over a gan “fiddling around” with an| js economic and relatively simple. hunk of granite with which to mark the spot. It's|idea that came to him one night! «A 1most any location. will do very gratifying to find so many people interested in a West Coast Army barracks. for the installation of the Jetin beautifying and promoting Indianapolis. { Numerous experiments ended | matic.” Mr. Robinson said. “All Now the vigil will begin. The acorns need a lot| with an apparatus that “was filled | you need is a ceiling about 12 feet of warm weather and rain. Joe thinks in about’ with kinks and bugs,” Mr. Robin- high and a wall area three feet a month the quercus macrocarpa ought to bel son said. deep and from 15 to 23 feet long. sticking its little head out of the ground. By the, Finally he devised a special type Many operators are using gaend of summer. if the pigeons and the squirrels pump and spray gun that worked rages and home basements,” he and the kids lay off, our oak should be a foot “just the way I wanted it-to,” he said high. Gad, isn’t it exciting? | said. { . wall, he said . Are you planning to plant anything this year? At the outset, Mr. Robinson defy Ba bath up a kas Do you have any ideas we. could further the driveiclared, he used the machine for made of corrugated tin. From an to beautify our city? I'll welcome all letters oni cleaning frame houses that would | gverhead ‘rafter. or beam hang ‘the subject. Must keep boosting Indianapolis. |later be painted. 'a series of looped cords from

Pressure of sales work, however, forced Mr. Robinson to hire a helper to take care of the laundry. He believes in - keeping things the family, and hired his

By Robert C. R : {trying to improve on the machine housed in a tin box ‘located on

2 | ; year-old inventor said, was t00 The spray gun does the rest. vark seasonal. There just wasn't . ge

__ NEW YORK, Mar. 22—1I will put up with a lot of nonsense from Vogue Magazine, the bible of feminine silliness and masculine desperation in the dough it costs to dress our dames according to Vogue's precepts. Just so long at the book makes a fashionable fool of the females. Somebody's going to, anyhow, and it might as well be Edna

- Chase's approximation of Godey's Lady's Book.

But Mrs. Chase and staff can keep their respective hot hands off the gentlemen's wear department, or else I will make trouble and cause ques-

tions. to. be raised in the. House... .Of-Parliament;--

"that is. Vogue has just started a campaign to

|

dress us men after the latest English mode, and I will have none of it. : Vogue says the derby, or bowler, is back, and 80 is the Edwardian manner of dress—the pipestem pants, the velvet-collared and cuffed overcoat, the tightly wrapped umbrella, and the short great coat for sports, which hits its owner at the knees, The own#ir looks more or less as if he had been scourged from a cold-water flat by the untimely arrival of an angry husband, and left precipitously in his nightie. Three of the silliest looking men I ever saw pose for Vogue's latest outrage—all wearing inadequate English haircuts, derbies, carrying umbrellas, and looking just a touch seedier than a Bowery bum before he finds thé first gill of canned

“heat.

~ Across the page is a young scion of the Empah, also sporting an fron hat and carrying a cane. If he was my boy I would know exactly what to do with the cane. . :

‘A Lack of.Imagination’ I HAVE SPENT considerable years in the sceptered isle, and will say offhand that British men dress worse than any other men alive except Frenchmen and Spaniards. The tailors of Germyn St. and Savile Row are famed n song and story, but the average beefeater appears to be garbed in borrowed raiment. The collars gape and the pants bag and there is a total lack of imagination in clothes. Whether the clothes fit or not has never been a prime consideration.” :

The laddy-bucks affect the bowler hat, which is. and adapt it for.other uses... nothing more than a felt approximation of the pot, By experimenting with several that British barbers use to square off the haircuts

“The Jetmatit,” Mr. Robinson they administer to British men. |solid soaps, he came up with a rial, “cleans all blinds without All British hair is cut with a knife and fork. secret” formula which- he guar-| exception, removing all dirt, They choose to leave it grow wild like a bramble, 2ntees will “completely and effec- [stains oil and grease film . . . lichen-like on the neck, or they mow it off in| tively clean any metal or wooden and restores original brilliance sheaves, leaving vast arid areas over the ears painted surfaces without damage without damage to slats or tapes.” and down the nape. Stick a derby on either version | © the coat of paint.” > | Prior to marketing of .his maand all you can do is laugh . vn : |chine, Mr. Robinson said, houseOnly an Englishman would wear _pepper-and-| * ACTUAL construction ef the wives faced the chore of remov-_salt--trousers. witha semi-tormal “black - morning LUMPINE equipment is farmed.out/ing blinds - from ndows and coat. Only.an Englishma would wear th {to local and out-of-state tool and doors, taking them apart and Solfs or collars Ba rr me, ate makers, but Mr. Robinson |reassembling. then. after clean- : Bi {handles the sales work with the|ing. Whisks and neckband seem to be celebrating a SeP-| aid of his wife, Jean, whom he] “With the gadget,” arate mourning for an unknown relative. {married in September, 1940.

he said,

The Indianapolis Tim Hoosier Inventor Lessens Load Of Woe and Worry for Housewife

__LEO C. ROBINSON, a former GI, hasn't built a better mouse- -

a. man in Pittsburgh, Pa. Since - It does away yepetian Blind Laundry in & con-

her-in-law, Robert Dixson, a

But this work, the husky, 35- which thé blinds are suspended.

‘enough money in it so he began] THE pumping machine {& ‘the. floor to the operator's left... .

kinds of liquid, powdered and declares in his advertising mate-"

“Mrs. Housewife has only to take! On rare occasions, Mr. Robin-|Bob. couldn't get finished during|of the “Mounties.”

PAGE 15

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Leo C. Robinson operates the Jetmatic in cleaning Venetian blinds. |down the blinds and ship 'em to|son said, when he finds time hang-|the day.” : {the laundry. No muss. No fuss.” ing heavy on his’ hands in the At the moment, a Canadian t Many of Indianapolis’ larger evening, “I go out to the garage firm is dickeéring with Mr. Robin. {offices and industrial plants are and make myself $25 or $30 by|son for exclusive manufacturing clients of Mr. Robinson. {cleaning up a flock of blinds that!and stributing rights in the land

This mourning is generally shared by the fin-|

gernails of the mold of fashion. And I have seen| . at least one prime minister's son clean said nails ICI with a salad fork while at table. ! A

The Englishman is less heedful of soup spots on i the lapel or vestigial remains of stew on the weskit | than any other national I ever met. 0 pea ere He does not wear the purple serge of the Span-|

fard or the loose-cut hand-me-downs of the Frenchman; but manages to look ill-kempt in the uniform |

TA bout People—

‘Rainmaker

New Jersey Governor

of his land, whether it be a swallow-tailed sports! To Address Dinner Dr. Irving Krick Eyes Cloud Seeding Plan Big Budget |week in the annual state oratori j 1 a sack-s gton. | ; : ‘al contest “ jacket or what they call a sack-suit in Kensington. By ROBERT BLOEM . | As Way to Cover Burning Sun By MMA RIVERS MILNER cal contest sponsored by the In

Materials Termed Good | Two national Republican fig-| “THE "MATERIALS one buys in England are yres will speak in Indianapolis generally wonderful, and they make the best shoes * in the world, but the menfolks of the tight little | TIS week as the campaign of whether it is isle are constitutionally unfit to model. « the .state GOP gathers Somehow the adam’s-apples wreck the effect of| mentum. the collars, and the bunions distort the footwear. The only Englishman I ever saw who looked at home in a hat was Anthony Eden in a homburg. I would say boastfully that the American male, even if he is buying his plumage off the nail, is

A wheat farmer at Horse He , maker to figure out a way to-keep New Jersey's Gov. Alfred E: tne sun from burning up his crop. Driscoll will speak tomorrow eve- “r= os ning at the 61st annual beefsteak| - You can’t teach a child to swim dinner—nf—the-—Columbia—Ciub-by keeping him away from the

. « » water, and you can’t strengthen the cleanest, neatest and most tastefully dressed Gov. Driscoll beat the- “Boss eople. by sheltering them from

: va P he-creature in the world today. Hague machine in last year's: ———— > > _ " y : what is happening in the world, We will thank Vogue, which has heavily con- New Jersey election, PP :

tributed to the caricature of the American Providing pr, Louis P. Hoyer, superinre of the American woman, | ew bright spots on t of Philadelphia . schools, to stay out of our fashionable lives, especially as| °"® of -the-1 g po tendent o Pp 1s

regards the derby. It hasn't looked right since which ‘Republicans are “building said today. “School teachers must the death of Jimmy Walker and Al Smith,, and is morale for 1950. stop RYO LOM OV Eran jn somewhat less comfortable than an iron lung. = | More than 500 persons were to :

Unhappy Morning 5

} in attend the traditional dinner in classes. The igest thing to do ST the state's citadel of Republican- 18 to aw, Sw | ism. Honor guests at the dinner | -| Frederick C. Othman wil be 347 who have been con- anda,” he argued. { tinuous members of the Columbia! a & =x

ee

WASHINGTON, Mar. 22—Diplomats are supposed to be able to take care of themselves, but I still couldn’t help feeling sorry for Prof. Philip

+ C. Jessup, our ambassador-at-large.

-Minity for Communist causes. Prof, Jessup almost

The professor, you may remember, was in Europe a couple of weeks back attending to his ambassadoring when Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy ‘TR. Wis.) . charged that he had an ‘unusual af--

blew his top (in a scholarly way, that is) .and grabbed the first flying machine home. So the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee sat ‘him down in a large red leather chair, while the movie men, functioning lke so many OGPU secret agents in a Soviet torture chamber, focused

“their spotlights in his éyes.

Blinks in Brilliance of Klieg Lights

rimmed eyeglasses; the lights were so brillidnt he couldn't even see Sen. McCarthy glaring at him from a seat in the midst of a row of senatorial wives. The professor had his own troubles reading the print of his typed statement. He was an elderly citizen with tousled gray hair, which apparently at some previous date had been parted in the middle; his nose was pink and pointed, his suit of blue serge fitted him none too well, and his cravat (a black one with nonescript spots) looked like the kind head waiters in toney restaurants lend to tieless patrons. To glance at him you'd never guess that he was a full-fledged ambassador. a ; He said at some length that he was not a Communist, or even a pinko, and that his record proved it. Nobody ever attacked him before, he continued, except Izvestia, the Moscow magazine. And by using the kind of logic favored by Sen. McCarthy, he said, he almost could presume that the ‘latter's charges were Communist-inspired.

Sen. McCarthy smiled at that not-so-diplomatie| Club for 25 years or longer. Dr. Edith Davis, Dr. Robert K.| witticism. But the professor was just getting a Principal Speaker |Srorge. Dx. Li. Haskei good start. He said the Senator was irr ible | an Fr. Gera . ey, indian-| nd Who be sir she Jeniator ¥ esponsible | Sen. Owen Brewster (R. Me.) lapslis, and Dr. Charles A. Priest, “Sen. McCarthy's charges and insinuations are Will be the principal speaker atiy,pion gave table clinics at Cin-|

not only false, but utterly irresponsible and the| the windup banquet Saturday |e, ng 4g Dental. Society's annual!

_ circumstances reveal a shocking disregard for the| night of the annual ‘business| i... closing last night in Cin-,

interests of our country,” he roared. Moisture Meeting of the Indiana Republi- cinnati.

~&listened. bluish. in: the kifeg light -shining on ‘hig can-Bditorial. Association... policing Sag gsi

upper lip. : { Another highlight of the Sat-| The Senator, who had accused him of being ajurday meeting was expected tojof Mr. andtMrs. Ralph Walrod, pal of the paler Reds, by now was poker-faced; be a session of Republican Con-|6002 N. Michigan Road, has been he busily jotted down notes. When finally Prof.|gressmen and congressional can- named assistant feature editor of Jessup had finished his defense, applause—mostly|didates. The group was expected Stephens . Life, weekly student

from ladies in the rear—ec marble chamber, Sen. Millard F. Tydings (D. principles on which the GOP will|Columbia, Mo. She belongs to Md.), banged his gavel and suggested that the base its campaign to win back Beta Sigma Beta social sorority. audience sit on its hands. some _ of the six seats in Con~The professor, still batting his eyelashes into/gress the Democrats took from, those infernal lights, lit a cigaret and took a deep them in 1948. ’ drag. His hands trembled when he put his match, In their business sessions the in the ash tray, And now I don't know what to! GOP editors will elect officers] think, | for the coming campaign year. 3 | If tradition is. followed, tto/ Good Witness for Self | Harris, Loogootee, will be. adHE MADE an excellent witness in his own|vanced from the office of vice » behalf. The Republicans charged that they couldn’t|president to that of president. "18 UGe when. 3. use Prop question him properly because they still hadn't! He will succeed James Benham, | 4 him, he said 7 seen the State Department's secret files on his editor of the Terre Haute Star.| 4 ’ activities. The Democrats congratulated him on| Other officers expected to adwhat they called the way he Hr himself vance were Ed Schergens, Tell] Recently honored & his comand Sen. Brien McMahon (D, Conn.) said: |City, to first vice president and|Pany for five years bf safe driv“Dr. Jessup, I am proud to have you as a|Paul Riddick, LaGrange, to sec- Ing. Ronald B. Dela, 44, Davenconstituent of mine; you are entitled to the thanks ond vice president. The associa- Port. Iowa, salesman, had an acciof all the people for the magnificent work you tion will elect a new. treasurer dent yesterday. His automobile, have done.” : ; [to succeed Mr. Riddick. {collided with another car. The professor said thanks, put on his ambassa-| = ——= —— = $48 dor hat, & beaten-up old gray fedora, shook hands ‘Witchcraft’ Case Bad | False teeth are no handicap to with a number of ladies who gushed, and ambled ; |firemen, the St. Louis Court of out of perhaps the unhappiest morning of his ite. FOr State, Judge Says {Appeals says. Robert W. Mahon

S. K. Bennett, Los Angeles, swears hé was knocked down by a flying saucer and showed a gash on one leg to prove it. He was setting the stage -at the late Aimee Semple McPherson's” An|gelus Temple for a sermon on fly-

The Quiz Master

-

WILMINGTON, Del, Mar. 22 filed suit against -R. Elliott (UP)—The “art of witchcraft” Searce, personnel director of the

— T | 27? Test Your Skill x ??? case against Mrs. Helen Evans, !St. Louis fire department after

fharacter reader and adviser, has the official ruled Mr. Mahon was| cast a bad reflection on the state inéligible to be a fireman because

If a sponge were submerged in water ‘would it raise br lower the water line? ‘It would raise the water line. The sponge would displace water equal in volume to that portion of the sponge which is solid material. 3 Line ee : © What ts the United States per capita consump-

_ tion of erude oll? ny : : consumption Is 4 good measure of a

country's standard of living; in the United States

: {of Delaware, M ourt ; » How many deer, elk and black bear are there? juqce hi na Le Sout jié wdie. fais legth, The court] Of the estimated 6,300,000 deer in the| Judge Herlihy cornmented that

United States, a.third are on national forests. jt - “ ” y There are nearly 200,000 elk, of which about three: Na le ohh man have 20 natural teeth. fourths spend all or part of their time on the na- enlightened state of. Delaware as tional forests. About ene-half of the estimated he granted a 30-day continuance! 150,000 black bear ” os thie national forests. - | of her trial becausé of her illness. What are joint freight rates? - Fou doint freight rates apply to shipments mov-

COAST FEELS LIGHT QUAKE RIVERSIDE, Cal, Mar. (UP) — A light earth tremor

a ‘colonial statute against witch- day at approximately 11:10 p. m.| craft on charges of telling a (Indianapolis time) Tuesday. It

Visi)

Cif

To Cut Summer Heat |

A Los Angeles meteorologist with experience in making rain now Is trying to cool off the summer heat. : Dr. Irving Krick sdid today“he's starting surveys to determine !¢ges will get more funds for op- |. possible to cool off scorching summer days by seeding erating expenses and mo- clouds with dry ice to create a thin overcast.

Miss Jo Ann Walrod, daughter Indianapolis, and Miss ‘Helen F:|developed new communities in lo-

hoed. through the white to. discuss..national ‘issues .and/newspaper at Stephens College, Miss. Martha E. Warstler, Gary,.growing areas but asked-aise-for 0 isposing of the local's funds.

—— a x s 000000

held that Searce went “beyond gay from their gold coffins -at Marjorie the law” in requiring that a fire- Chusonji

scholars.

» tury. ; | Mrs. Evans was arrested under jarred the Riverside area yester- REPORTS $9 ROBBERY :

. ander, 37, told ice hi Robinson, City; / CEL rom wh aa ea ra ot haa cated as tr 2 pom Col obi of 3b anrned badd Huot Frinton Naomi Gif: an s- Ir ogg am irtici- was under a cur niles to the west. No damage, in the men’s rest room at the “Y"|Crawfordsville railroads on an agr | basis, | ner a charm to | le =. |was reported... " ike early today. ~ 0 c 5 -.| Mahoney,

Curlew. Officials Discuss Howe High Pupil Seeks Wa bine cis i . 'Named.Finalist--Y Church College As ners

Presbyterians Also

diana American. Legion and the Indiana - State -Bar -Asociation: Other pupils: who will compets r the state championship on the afternoon of Thursday, Mar. 30, in Anderson High School will be David Gates, La Porte; Richard H Ss, . hy o Church officials of 10 states are Fa Syyae, am Earl S meeting here to discuss ways to! total of $300 will be divided : Vv raise a $12 million budget for the among the four contestants with s » above causes and for missions the state winner receiving $150 Nur ; nn a and Christian education in the cash and the privilege of repreUnited States and abroad. The [senting Indiana in the national sessions were to adjourn at 2|contest. Mrs. Helen R. Johnson, Indiana P: ™M. today. Representatives of Judge Frank “B. Russell said

{church boards of the Presbyterian tp ; University Training School » e 13th anoual state contest at- ’ g |Church—in-the-U—8. A. held their tracted more than 1300 contest.

graduate. will be a candidate foriplanning sessions in the First ants from 189 high schools. the presidency of the Indiana Presbyterian Church. | Winners from Michigan, TenState Nurses Association at elec-| ‘Dr. John Thompson Peters, nessee and Indiana will particie tions “tomorrow and Friday In New York; of the defiomination’s pate in a regional contest on Apr, Evansville. Central Council, called the meet- 11. in Central Catholic High She will be opposed by Miss Ing. - School of Ft. Wayne. Marie E. Hickey, East Chicago. | Miss Edith Brookmiller, Chi-! Other candidates. are Mrs. Cag80, pleaded the cause of churchMildred W. Ellis, Brazil, and Miss related colleges needing additional Bernice Rieckman, La Porte, first financial support to meet presentvice president; Miss Madelin c,|day needs. ~ She outlined the new Coleman, Mishawaka, and Miss Study materials for adult SunLucille Tamlin, La Porte, second day School students which will be vice president; Miss Thelma released by the Presbyterian Koontz, Ft. Wayne, and Mrs. Church this fall. so Helen J. Schreiner, Elkhart, sec-| Population Shift retary; Mrs. Virginia R. Gehring, | war population

Times Church Editor “Btruggling “church-=related ~¢ol-

“un|churched” areas will get houses of | if Presbyterians have

IU Graduate to B

aven, Wash., appealed to the rain- worship d eter] . —— their way.

ee timpmtn.

Federal Judge Holds

Union in Contempt

HAMMOND, Mar. 22 (UP)—A ruling by Federal District Judre Luther M. Swygert today held 1G officers of, the United RElectricel Workers Union at Ft. Wayne 4 guilty of contempt of court: - ° Judge Swygert-said *he men,

Layton, Indianapolis, treasurer; calities without churches, Dr. Si oa Juembete ik eliefel

Mrs. Alma M.. Ash, Vevay; Mfs. Howard V. Yergin, Board of NaSilpha Burnett, Vincennes; Miss/tional Missions, New York, said. Nano, violated a Testraining or Mabel C. McCracken, Evansville; He urged church extension te ch prohibited them from

Postwar population shifts have

Judge Swygert issued the in.

and Sister Miriam Dolores, South help for downtown churches. 4 ng Bend, director candidates. Dr. Yergin sketched the needs = ast November . when mee eee nf churches in Alaska and r— t-wingers in the local formed : ’ rN ithe Indians of the United States, ® COTPOration to seek control of. Tibbett's Son Takes Dr. John Weir. who served as a 20 estimated $114,000 in union Castoria Heiress as Wife Presbyterian missionary te India assets. The. Five followed the HOLLYWOOD. Mar, 22 (UP). MOTe than 32 years, said pegple Ousting of the UB from the C10, Lawrence Tibbett Jr. son of the °D the foreign mission field look Seuss opera star, ind Nopma, Fletoher JO AmeNeA Yo ey Muncie Woman. Dies eredith, an heiress to the Fletch- : on, er castoria rhein ote married of he x Polen: Doug Show b in- Apartment Fire e increased cost of living in a Secretly Monday. his mother re- foreign countries and the propor- anmoIe. Mar. 22 (UP)—PFu: ven, sc. today. tionate need to increase gifts to yo iA 2 Ag were arranged Mts. Grace Tibbett said the ,iccione ; oday for Eva L. Jenkins, 73, marriage at Las Cruces. N. M., | who died in a fire in her apart. was supposed to have been kept { ment. : secret from even their closest Firemen sald the Womal's body friends. They hdd been going to- jwas. found on a davenport ia BY Me ul going Io ship Winn | which a fire apparently smoldered ‘ ta vi © |for several hours. ° said. BLOOMINGTON, Mar. 22 —| — ; The bride is the granddaughter - ! of the late Charles Fletcher, who Scholarship award winners for Boy 7. Hit owned a medicine business It the, current semester at Indiana ye was her fourth marriage. Mr. University include nine students SUffers Broken Leg Tibbett was divorced -by Mrs. from Indianapolis. A. total of 13] Samuel Rowlett, 7-y ar-old Edith Ermestine Witte in 1042. scholarships have been awhrded.'or Mrs. Elizabeth RY Son

2 Er RR Pai dah * Indianapolis winners were How-| College Ave, suffered a fractured TOKYO MOVES | 4 TOKYO, Mar, HuMmLES The ard C. Phillips, 1260 W. 33d St.; leg yesterday when he ran into mummies of three generations of © cter Cahn, 3038 Park-Ave.; Isa-|the side of an automobile in the Fujiwara rulers were removed to- 40T¢ Talesnick, 3051 Park Ave.; 1500 block ( . He 1s in at General Hos-

tei ep sre er

IU Lists Student Scholarship Winners

by Car,

Stryker, 1232 W. Michi-|fair condition i Temple in northern 520 St.; Rebecca Lane, 1405 E. pital. % Tamm 5 Japan for inspection by Japanese L6Grande Ave.; Mrs. Joan Bryant. ‘ota Ee The mummies are the QUETY. 2318 Villa Ave. Lillian PAYS $4,682210 BONUSES = remains of rulers in the 12th cen- Hacker, 2252 W. Pierson St. WASHINGTON, James R. Walker, 739 Graham .. The Chrysler Corp. Ave, and Gilbert Inman, 3750 bonuses totaling ‘ > | Totem Lane. fe of its office; A YM rosi“ent. Malvin Alex-| Other awards went to Rosalind on v. isory