Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 April 1950 — Page 21

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IRAE

2041 E. 46th ST. At Evonston *

6:00 P. M,

—tomer -can-enter-at-a-time. The

* in the phenagling

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inside Indianapolis

fn a wall on 8. Illinois St. and sald, “I'm going

into business for myself.” Cloyce Anderson, probably one of the most independent en in town, is located at 143 8. Illinois known as the Anderson An unusual feature, one of the many about Mr. Anderson's place of business, is that only one cus-

sions of his establishment are 49 inches by 50 feet. One step off the street and a customer is as far as he can go. He's right up to the counter.

‘Fast Turnover’ ; THEN on the right side is a small window display of Mr. Anderson's work. On the left wall is a display of postcards and souvenir items. “I believe in a fast turnover,” explained Mr. Anderson, when questioned about the size of his retail end of the store. “A customer comes in Qere, places his order and is on his way. I'm not wasting his time and he's not wasting mine.” There used to be a peanut stand at 143 8. Illi-

pois -Bt.- Mr Anderson-admits -he had his .eye .on..

n

—and- waited for the peanut to fold. : “I'm centrally located,” the printer said. “I'm right downtown, close to paper supply houses and I'm between the Warren and Severin Hotels. Then you can't overlook the traffic to and from the Union Station. It's a good spot.” : He went on to say that it used to be a better location. He thinks people are beginning to hold on to their money. In fact, he has made several economy moves already. . Last month Mr. Anderson cut his electric bill $13. This month he'll do better than that because of the two Aladdin lamps he has added. Eventually he hopes to be completely independent of the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. “I don’t like to be hooked up with anybody,” he said flatly. 4 pe This love of independence and simplicity is the reason he has never brought the machine into his shop. All his presses are operated by hand. “Machines are all right in big shops but they're & pain in the neck in a small one,” was one of the reasons he gave. Another reason for the lack of mechanization at the Anderson Press is maintenance. The bigger the machine the more adjustment and supervision it needs. “By the time I adjust an automatic press, mon-key-doodle here, and there and somewhere else, I can put my work on the hand press and I'm gone. I know exactly where I am every minute.” Mr. Anderson stressed the point that he can rint 1000 business cards in four hours and once e ran off 8000 envelopes between 11 a. m. and 7 ..m. ? Seven years ago he opened the doors of the dérson Press with-one-hamd:-press. Today. he.

e operates a print shop and it's 4

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~The Indianapolis Times Associations

oast Membership of 125,0

Credit Groups Have Grown oC Slowly, Have $25 Million Assets

By CARL HENN AN UNUSUAL savings and loan plan, basically a financial co-

Co-operative Loan

..Independent... . . Cloyce (Andy) Anderson grown slowly. Today, however, they hive $25 million. in assets in — turned a hole in a wall into a business. ‘the state, all stemming from the savings accounts of 125,000 members. ren ret —

has four, Raised lettering jobs on cards and announcements he prints with the aid of a hot plate and a bellows. One of these days he is going to get

a kerosene heater and do away with the hot plate. dest at 3. P. Wasson & Co.

Out in front of his shop he parks his bicycle,

another possession which makes him independent

of the transit company. Two wire baskets over the rear wheel are used for delivering printing orders,

and the basket on the handlebars is used to take Indianapolis tomorrow when the creditors were dunning one of his

groceries home. { “I can come and go at any hour of the day or| night,” Mr. Anderson said. A phonograph under the counter attracts business off the street. To {llustrate he turned it on and a lively march thundered in the shop. Mr. Anderson also has a radio and an electric clock. | He doesn't object to the electric clock because he| says it doesn’t use much electricity. His heat comes from one kerosene heater. On the coldest days he says the heater keeps the shop at a comfortable temperature,

‘That's Psychology’ *

I WAS shown how he uses psychology in advertising. The card that goes to men has a picture of a beautiful girl on it. The card that goes to women has a picture of a handsome and welldressed man orn it. “That's psychology.” About that time a customer tapped me on the shoulder. He wanted to place an order. Was it the music? Could be. T had to leave and make room for a customer who was giving his business to a rugged and independent American. + “4 I wonder what the lawmakers in Washington |

would. think. of this.small.businessman? y

{

Peanut Vendor

By Robert C. Ruark

WASHINGTON, Apr. 20 — Johnny Maragon'’s lawyer called him a ‘peanut vendor among princes” and he was at least half-accurate. There is no doubt that the little fixer's legal beagle had Johnny tabbed, but whether or not he can describe Mr. Maragon’s coritemporaries as “princes” is open to argument. Mr. Maragon is a sort of symbol of our time. It is a time of errand boys, of operators, of small people doing small things to keep big people happy. Hollywood invented it, I guess, and Washington copyrighted the routine. - Fixing is a sort of tag end of the prohibition period, where you had somebody else perform the chore you didn't want to do for yourself in the first place.

Just Natural Innocence : MR. MARAGON is up against the District Court

__here on four charges of perjury, The defense has

it that he was a small man who worked and slaved the whole day through to expedite small favors for important folks—and, if he lied to a Senate subcommittee investigating the five-per-cent deals in Washington, he ‘just fibbed out of natural innocence. This little Greek shoe-furbisher got famous last year when he crept into the slight scandal of deepfreezes, bequeathed for free to the White House fraternity. . He was supposed to be a boon buddy of that doughty warrior, Harry Vaughan, who has been a

“very silent man strce “deep-freezes became a sym=

bol of a national joke. Through his alleged friendship with Mr. Vaughan, Mr. Maragon was supposed to enjoy an. intimacy with the presidential coterie that is denied lesser mortals. It is of some interest that Mr. Maragon, the arranger of perquisites, comes now to trial when the names of his associates are nearly forgotten. ‘He has gotten the freeze from the Congressmen who used to let John do it. He is strictly non-persona with the White House gang. If there was a scandal of government favors, it seems Lage oo)

more time in the jug than that atom thief, Klaus Fuchs, drew for giving the big information to the Soviets, or that Alger Hiss got for his sins against the state, or that little Judy Coplon rates for her involvement with Gubitchev, the Russian spy we recently bon-voyaged. The prosecution. says Johnny told some lies about how much money he made, and the way he -made-it, and-that is-a-very serious thing today. t I suppose that being a fixer is a sinful thing indeed, and that running errands for the mighty is fraught with risk, if it involves such desperate measures as perfume smuggling when you go to Greece for the State Department. Borrowing $5000 from your mother-in-law also proves something snide. The procurement of gratis freeze-boxes will lead us all to doom, I guess. . { ‘Princes’ Go Free BUT WE SEEM to have caught the errand boy, | in Maragon, while the “princes” go free. I have not. noticed tht. Mr. Maragon’s princely contacts have been charged with anything. And if he sin-gle-handedly corrupted the government, whom did he corrupt and how did he corrupt them? By getting them space on the train when sleepers were hard to come by? |

If Mr. Maragon was a “peanut vendor,” as his lawyer claims, who bought his ‘peanuts? What made his peanuts important, to whom? | I wouldn't know. It is the fashion nowadays for -big-shots-to-surround-themselves-with-little shots" ‘Who run down to the drugstore for the aspirin and over to the Hamburg Hall for the midnight lunch. They take care of irksome necessities, and generally minister to Olympian wants, whether it be bourbon or babes. We recall that Johnny Meyer, a fixer, became the big point of interest in the Howard Hughes hearings, and gradually all important factors paled beside Mr. Meyer's partythrowing. ’ So I guess ‘we are tryingiMr. Maragon now for selling peanuts. to princes,-as_we belabored Mr.’ Ls ro oS TID, i

5,

one inqfilsition seems” rate just’ on deeply as the other.

Tin Ears =

WASHINGTON, Apr. 20—The. president .of .the . all’ liked -the-old kind of -radio- best: “The ‘experts that only a change-in federat-ad- | ministration ¢an save America,

Columbia Broadcasting System claims that where listening to good music is concerned the average American has a tin ear. This. (she will be interested to learn) includes his own wife as well as the fiddlers and the tootlers who make the music. They don't like to hear the notes the way they play 'em. As an old avoider of symphony concerts I've long held this

“same suspicion, but I'am glad to have Dr. Frank

Stanton, boss man of CBS, confirm:it. It wasn't hfg-fault that the big. blond broadcasting chief got on the subject of human ears.

television which for 10 long years he has been trying to get the government to approve. : Commissioner Robert F. Jones, a music lover no matter what the state of his ears, mentioned FM radio, the kind which plays the music in all the tonal glory of the original. -How-come-most of the big-time broadcasters soft-pedaled it?

It Grates on Their Ears

THAT WAS EASY for Doc Stanton. Grown people don’t like it. He proved this with psychophysical research. Tested hundreds of people. Had em listen to old-fashioned AM radios, which brought in part of the musical tones, and FM, which reproduced them all, The people all voted against the good music. It seemed to grate on

their ears. This was a grave disappointment to Works so perfectly that he can hear the hiss of| the CBS engineers, who had banked heavily on & worn-out phonograph record on the air. So he|

FM's popularity. They said the experiments weren't fair. And why not make similar tests on musicians?

} : + ” DeiStanton did. He didn't try out his musical I must confess that my own ears are zinc-lined. | burg, Ind. he Shell Oil made a discovery on a Elections. ROE SL mies Who Iought under the ring ame blindfold on jazz bandsmen, whose ears can be too. I bought an FM set, myself, a couple of years Mr. Lanahah started in 20 {arm ING Bilies NOP of the town a ° the 1945 vp Tr callous, but on symphony orchestra members, who ago, and went to great lengths to get a coaxial phone work in Indianapolis in last Saturday. [ - : the 1949 sedan f| his manager, should be able {0 appreciate the tiniest trill of a aerial installed. I haven't listened to in in months, | 118 Mr. Lanahan lives in 5521; wilson said drillers told him) e anaiaa es ay ou Lo ti Do iccalo. The musicians flunked out, too. ey No boom. : >i. the well would be = ak, 17, da Diute, 18, Joseph p 1 a good com Pudiak, 17, Ida Diute, 18, Joseph

By Frederick C. Othman

still weren't convinced. They went to Milwaukee, a music-loving community, -and started knocking on doors in the rich suburbs, where the natives could afford radios with FM attachments, Every one of them had the treble dial turned down and the bass knob turned up, so that their super-duper radios went

boom-boom-boom like juke boxes in beer parlors. SPring.

Why, inquired Commissioner Jones, was this 80? Simple, said Dr. Stanton. “You know yourself, sir, that the ability to hear full range falls off rapidly with age,” he said. “You and I can’t hear

? V posed: to -be. telling the. Federal COM. anything like the overtones es a ; ah - mufications Commission about his system of color can, J es that the youngsters

can.

“And that's why those who can afford highfidelity radio can’t hear it.” ’

Wife Doesn't Appreciate It |

“BUT YOU HAVE a high-fidelity set in your own home, don't you?” insisted music fancier Jones. ] That he did, Doc Stanton replied. It set him | back $250 and he might as well have bought a|

table model for $24.50, for all his wife appreciated |:

it. She always turns up the bass and shuts off ‘the high notes. . | “But don’t you listen to the high-fidelity “system?” queried Mr. Jones,

For one reason only, Dr. Stanton replied. It

tunes in regularly to check up on his own disc Jockeys. If there's no hiss on FM, he knows it sounds fine on AM.

The Quiz Master

??? Test Your Skill 2???

Who was the first President of the United States to ride on a railroad train? > Andrew Jackson, on June 6, 1833, on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad between Ellicott’s Mills and Baltimore, Md., a distance of 13 miles. > SS Where is the home of the Gullah Negroes? St. Helena Island, near Beaufort, 8S. C,, is popJated almost entirely by Gullah Negroes.

other Negro group in America and may be of entirely different stock. 4

The *

What was the Mecklenburg Declaration? In May, 1775, the North Carolina colonists declared their independence of Great Britain and at Charlotte in Mecklenburg County signed a paper to this effect. - LS

Did .the federal government give money or Warren C. Koelling, seaman ap-|

bonds to the pioneer western railroads?

bearing interest. 2

+said-he will-seek

No. The federal government made loans of Charles A. Wright, seaman, R. R./ Hoosier political employe of the urer: “I am for elimination of the cratic candidate for sheriff: “We|/House Museum, Gullah Negro is of purer African stock than any bonds to hasten the construction of six pioneer 3; LaVay T. Williams, radarman U. 8. Agriculture Department, confusion that is currently takingican not longer tolerate political Sailors’ Monument and Art Galrailroads. These were not gifts but were loans, 3-C, 628 N. Temple Axe.; Harold whose headquarters is with the!place in the Mreasuige's office in interference or favoritism ingthe lery. Odus Haltom was in charge - y t

operative association, is becoming increasingly popular in Indiana. It is called credit union. Although existing in Indiana since 1923, credit unions have

In the Indianapolis area alone Credit if he is a member. When there are 75 credit unions, the the first child is born he can bor largest at Ell Lilly & Co. the TOW to pay doctor and hospital bills, If there is a death, funeral The extent to which credit ®XPenses can be met. unions have been established -In one Indianapolis establish and grown will be apparent in Ment, the employer learned that

26th annual convention of the Men Who was badly in debt Indiana Credit Union League be- through "a series of misfortunes gins in the Lincoln Hotel. "8°" om HE TOOK the man to th WHAT is credit union? credit union in his plant. ans It is an organization formed by said: any group of persons with a com-| “I know he isn’t a member, bu mon bond who unite to buy shares could you help him?” as # means of saving money and! Upon investigation, the credit of procuring small loans at low union loan committee discovered interest rates, the man’s $1400 debt included Loans may be made for any sums borrowed from eight agenpurpose which is,to,the member's cies. They loaned him the entire benefit—any “provident or pro- sum and arranged payments so ductive purpose.” all creditors would be satisfied. A credit union lends money to! In a lighter vein, an Indianmembers at only 1 per cent in- apolis credit union member, on. Jerest Shargsd mambiy on unpaid vacation in the Southwest, had! The shares, selling for $5, al- THE convention tomorrow and the annual banquet at 6:15 p. m. alinces, Dnastare oans up to some unexpected expenses and ways have par value. All profit Saturday will feature discussion Saturday. $300 : on. © , discovered himself out of cash.|is paid out in the form of divi- groups and lecturers touching on| The subject expected to be of 8 primarily a co-operative He wired to his credit union, got dends at the end of each fiscalthe important phases of credit the most interest during the conassociation of people who want a loan by return wire and was period except. for 20 per cent of union business. vention the: future. of credit to help each other out. It can able to finish out the vacation. learnings, which is put aside into, Treasurers and officers in the unions —is not listed on the assist its members through al-. A credit union may be started a reserve against bad loans. credit committees and supervisory agenda for discussion. most any --emergency-=sickness; anywhere there is a common em- —Credit-union-losses-on non -col- committees will attend -spectal— But -credit-unton -members-and-unemployment, crop failure or ployer, church,.union,. fraternal lectable loans average only +i" of meetings-~to-learn--ther-newestiofficers are enthusiastic about the disasters. order or even small community. 1 per cent yearly. Dividends on wrinkles in their part of credit growth of their financial coA young man who is getting|It needs 20 or more interested ‘deposits, on the other hand, aver- union work, operatives. - So far, they have married and wants-extra cash-for persons, of which §éven must sign age 4 per cent yearly, a high-re-i——Dr.M. O. Ross, president of hardly scratehed.the surface, they. the honeymoon finds economical the state or federal charter. turn on safe investment. Butler University, will speak atisay.

Co-operative savings and loan group . . . credit union window at P. R. Mallory Co., Inc.

Israel UN lid Dr. Kinsey Gives Opinion On Teen-Age Sex Parties

‘Reasonable’ to Assume Many Young

About People— — Maybe Louis Gave Em To Speak Here The ‘Double Wham my’ P Girls Engage in Group Promiscuity, He Says

: Will Address Welfare Brown Bomber Put on List of __ Drive Opening May 4 _ BLOOMINGTON, Apr. 20 (UP)—Dr. Alfred C. Kinsey said toNation's ‘Mosi Hypnotic’ Eyes day that It's reasonable to assume that many teen-age girls engage

> =, in group sexual activities with men since his studies showed that Joe Louis didn’t become heavyweight champion just or the Vy 84 per cent of American men have illicit relations before marriage. strength of his fists. His eyes helped him, according to the Hypno- ¥

Dr. Kinsey, the author of “Sexual Behavior In the Human tists of America. At meeting in Hollywood the hypnotists placed Male,” was asked by the United Press for a statement on his re the Brown Bomber on a list of soi mes —————

{action to recent reports of sex| =~ notables with the nation's “most 3-C, 842 Tremont St.: William E. |parties involving groups of young| Dr. Kinsey's first book did not hypnotic” eyes. His eyes contain Yott, fireman, 1105 Newman St.

| girls. : report on group activity. Hows= “smoldering “ { | . ‘ever, he recalled “a fair number” physical pas- ly harles E. Albright, seaman, | The .atest were In Monticello ("yp 0 views” in which he was sions,” said Pier- 2627 E. North St.

land Decatur, Ind. At Monticello, | re Devereaux nine men were indicted on charges 101d o sr Jchivity: ithe £ vere » f - AS ° oi ° ; Institute presi- growing out-of parties with a ed ug! re-

group of 15 girls. {quency of teen-age sex rings in

a... i Roy R. Smith, R. R. 13, has §

Sent. i been pledged to Ceres, Purdue - nrg, Levy Mrs. Goldberg At Decatur, three were arrested the news arognd the countey was With him on, | | i x vi : the list wr honorary for students in .agron- L Eb I 1 t Tuesday on the statements of anything to be alarmed a Dr. pL Were my. He's a junior Aubrey Eban, Israel represent- wo, orig that they and two others Kinsey sad: ? John L. Lewis, "0 al : ative to the United Nations, will jag Bor JHop boil ith 15 or 16] “It depend WT . labor leader, "2 speak at the opening of the 1950 - epends on what Lhe people

men. A grand jury was investi- gre alarmed about. gating .he case today. |that 84 per cent of the male popuQuotes Stastics {lation has relations before mar“My first reaction is that the|riage indicates some degree of capacity to make news of thejaceptance. thing depends on the public being! “If the matter is discussed .+ignorant..of the total. situation,” from. a. social. or. moral stand-. Lr. Kinsey said. {point, many persons will have He quoted statistics from his| totally different reactions to the book showing that the average situation. weekly pre-marital relations for| «gy apn not belittling the fact men was 14. {that the record of what happens _ “In Indiana alone, there are; ... thing and the social and ,700,000 males of mature age, Dr. oral implication is something Kinsey said. “Roughly 50 per else to be considered.” cent are unmarried, so there are ~~ 4 4 about 350,000 unmarried males of] uy biologically ‘mature age in In-

Joon Caulfield, 70%Pph J. Lauber, 5230 Grand- campaign of the Indianapolis Jew- The - fact

actress, Vic Da- view Drive, has been named to ish Welfare Fed3 mone, crooner, the dean's list of honor students eration May 4 in Mr. Louis Feruccio Taglia- in the College of Science at Notre Broadmoor Counvini, opera star, Dame. try Club. and the wife of Earl Warren, an & Plans for the FF governor..of- California... wt Pr-Monroe-MeGown;-extension-Women's—D ivi fle horticulturist at Purdue from sion campaign in 1927-1944, has joined the U. S. the drive were to embassy staff in Paris as assis- be made today in tant agricultural attache. He the home of Mrs. formerly served in the U. 8. De- Victor Goldberg, ! partment of Agriculture and the 3201 Washington Office’ of Foreign Agriculture Re- Blvd. She is colations, chairman of the . 2 a = ~divistfon with John'W. Clark, 3068 Washing- Mrs. Lewis Levy and Mrs. Davi nd k. Rich, -l.urye) p AE ET

» ” n Brig. Gen. James P. S. Devereux, hero of Wake Island; announced today in Washington he will run for Congress to try to make come true the dreams he had of a peace- * ful’ future while in a Jap prison

Mrs. Lurvey

pL

Hee A MI OE Freeman; etfare HULILY I Ras NC ras Federation president. Edward M. 000 experiences a week in Indigha, Dayan and Philip Adler are vice That's why I don’t get gt © chairmen. Nathan “Regenstreir When-the-newspapers FEPOFL LIIDR rity a and Maurel Rothbaum will serve 8 100s) on present population Tar Racing 65 MPH as co-chairmen of the men’s individual gifts divisidn estimates of 150 million in the Rams Into Truck ‘ 1 linsey s e U. 8., Kinsey said that woul VESTAL, N. Y., Apr. 20 (UP) _ —S8ix of a party of eight gay,

been farming in man by, Julian Stevenson, Md,

» = = +--Mik -Biggs,-a seventh-grader-of the Republican Atlanta, is glad he ran into poison nomination from the segond dis- jvy. Kept in bed by the rash, Mike trict, now represented by William entered a chain store scholarship P. Bolton (D. Md.). contest and won a $1500 prize. “I have come to-the-conciusion- ww

Gen. Devereux

The May 4 special gifts dinner TR Vone Wik & svi riohic eS Hng i launch the campaign, 30,000,000 males having 42 million arrahigement of’ “Save Your Con- Davie - Jrvey ad Charles 5 Premarital Frequency Joy-riding teen-agers were killed and that vehicle must be the Re- aun, co-¢ special : ’ _ last night when their borrowed publican Party,” he said federate Money, gifts group. are in charge of the, His book on male behavior Ie* oy. 0" oyiqded on wet pavement or ' Boys, the South'dinner. Mr. Eban’s visit will co- ported that S4 per cent of all U. 8.

Justice of “the Peace Theodore iL Will Rise Again” |incide with Israel's celebration of men have premarital relations. shy eras head-on into a Fadrow Milwaukee, proved today G might get anits second anniversary as an in- Since about half of the current . he didn’t vote for himself this| audition with dependent country. 150 million population are men— State Police Lt. Joseph. A. He wasn’t old enough. Conductor Ar- -— - 75 million—that would mean that Murphy said the car “must have

excep or . about 63 million American males heen traveling at least 65 miles tur Toscanini Red Cross Issues Plea had illicit relations before marri- an hour.” ? Ry li nae. For Handicrafts Class age. Co . “The. impact tore the motor stro said he'q The Red Cross today issued a Dr. Kinsey said he carefully loose and tossed it 250 feet down second appeal for volunteers to avoids any opinion except scien the highway,” ‘he: said. “The,

Elected to office Apr. 4. he won't] be 21 until May 3. But E. J. Berg, town clerk, said there's no law to prevent a minor from holdIng. tHe. Post, memes

miscers # play OTe: I J oral “handicrafts tite and declined to: state opi pos oth . Re 2 = enroll in a general handicrafts : bodies were throw Jim Casper, ostrich farmer of tive American course. - ions on mora! or social aspects of ar and we found oe ot 18 St. Augustine, Fla., has an- music on the The class, which will meet twice the subject. He also declined to from 45 to 100>feet away from

Mr. Toscanini

nounced plans to build a quarter- current tour of a week for six weeks, will train reveal ‘any information 23 fremile straightaway. for ostrich the NBC Sym- women as Red Cross arts and quencies among females from re- - racing hear New Orleans. He said phony Orchestra after the efr- skills volunteers for Billings and search in preparation for another a sai the kids were singing he had ‘trained his ostriches for splitting ovation given him in Indianapolis Veterans hospitals. book, “Sexual Behavior in the a joking” when the car sulky racing and claimed they Richmond, Va., last night for Women will be trained to teach Human Female.” Kinsey “hopes crashed while en route back to can outrun thoroughbred horses. rendition of “Dixie.” handicraft in jewelry, felt, yarn the text of the second book will be nearby Binghamton. . a 2 i and leather to patients as part of ready for publication in 1951. They had met earlier in a Today “marks _, . hospital occupational therapy pro-. He said, however, that it could Binghamton teen-age canteen and the 30th an oil Well Discovery |grams. be assumed there were a lot of | decided to go for a ride. He said versary in tele: C teen-age girls who had had sex four climbed into the f , reates {Lot e front seat phone work for tes Boom Town xperioncen oy forued into The Jront seat

the scene of the crash.”

no

~~ SR ; Gallup to Be Topic

| i J. K. Lanahan, JETMORE, Kas., Apr. 20 (UP) ’ . : : ’ . ‘Females Involved | seat. Mi Ps lant chief for Jetmore, with a normal popula- _W- Norwood Brigance, head of Serie: ae # the Tndiana Bell tion of 1000, became a. boom the Wabash College Speech De-| ‘If there are 420,000 $xperiensos) Only Two Survive | " ¥ Telephone C0. town today as ofl lease makers PATtment, author and lecturer, among unmarried men a week In| gy, yu survivors were in the pak" He's been pre- swarmed into the community.

will address the Indianapolis Ki- Indiana alone and many “in: "5k seat, he said. All

sented with wanis Club at noon luncheon that number mationally,” Dr. Kin- the victims, t jeweled service Editor Howard Wilson of the meeting tomorrow in Claypool sey said, “there have to be a 800d | griver. Raymond. Scudder. 10 he emblem. A na- Jetmore Republican said the in- Hotel. His topic will be: “Aris- many females involved. Some of Owego, were high school students. tive of Browns- flux of outsiders started after totle, Dr. Gallup and American them undoubtedly are young Scudder, a professional boxer

except

William Phil Miller, Republican| Ted Weighous, Democratic can-| candidate for sheriff: “Why such|didate for Center Township Con-|Combs, 14, Patricia Riegel, 18,

“Efficient law enforce- and James, Winfield, 16, all of _ | Binghampton,

x = 8 - Lt. Philip L. Blumenthal Jr., son Toreial producer. {of Philip L. Blumenthal Sr., 2227 etmore was so jam-packed! N. Meridian St., is among the 10 today that visitors had to drive 2 terrific political ibtesost In the stable: Indianapolis trainees on the five 40 miles to Dodge City for their Sheriff's race Ty Seek | ment. Navy destroyers to dock Saturday meals and to use telephones. ing ofice? Coul cause 38 H. Dale Brown, Republican) °, . : in New Orleans. Other Indian- ns wii i |sherite 8 Sikice Ils Phin candidate for County Clerk: “The Bainbridge High Class apolis men among the 500 Naval . appoin | taxpayers have a right to expect | . : . Reservists are: Paul E. Williams, Joys Hoosier Farmers responsiblity oo Sty ide daw] more for their money than they PaYS Visi to Times or chiéf boatswain’s mate, 1245 Ring- Li e enforcemen at politic ® have been getting in the past.” e senior government class gold Ave., Russell P. Willlamson, é Brannan A Plan and factions want jobs to dis. ag Jean C. Kimmel, Repub- Baimbridge High School visited fireman apprentice, 2501 8. Holt | + Apr. 20—There tribute and that various under- jc,n candidate for state repre- The Times yesterday while on a Ave; Paul A. Welch, fireman ap- Sa man here today who thinks world Sroups want to establish gentative: ‘I want to fight the tour of points of interest to the prentice, 130 N. Euclid Ave.; that “65 per cent of the Indiana monopolies? ever increasing tax load and the|class in the capital city. ; farmers favor the Brannan Plan.”| wjjjam F. Donahue, Demo- high cost of living.” j Other stops were made at the He is Ott Roberts, long-time cratic candidate for county treas-| Charles (Buck) Sumner, Demo-| Kingan Packing Company, State Soldiers and

(prentice, 2520 Brookside Ave.;

8." | sheriff's office.” of the group. .

L. Shadday electronics ®echnician | Finance Division in Indianapolis. mailing tax statem

i

a