Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 April 1950 — Page 15
¢ 9st Yoor
TA. 2468
down
ES, INC.
l. DELAWARE FR. 4578
at
nstairs tment us seoice of colors!
————
- {Inside Indianapolis -
ay
CORNER TRASH cans are kept pretty clean. After spending streets and sidewalks. Certainly you know we're pushing the annual Clean Up, Paint Up, Fix Up Drive which began last Saturday and will end May 6. Thinking along the lines of a spanking clean Indianapolis, paper and trash flying about struck my eyes harder than ever. Hurt, Don’t citizens throw things into receptacles
“more’ debris onthe
- provided expressly for their old newspapers, torn
shopping bags, banana Is and apple cores? Check, boy. - pee he. Core
Quick Turn Around
A QUICK turn around several downtown corners revealed the trash cans did have small quantities of rubbish. How many days would it take to fill one? Check, boy. Frank Henzie, mafiager of Indianapolis Advertising, Inc, who has charge of the trash cans in this area, said he would place at my disposal one of his samples if a survey was what I wanted. “I'm going to get a bird’s-eye view of this trash problem. Thank you, Mr. Henzie.” ; “You's liable to get an eyeful,” was his comment.
I wasn't really afraid although I brought along
eo @i-umbrella-just-in-case- Also wore my coveralls:
You can’t be too careful on some jobs. As usual, when my survey deals with a great
‘many of my fellow citizens, I set up my head-
quarters on the Circle. Right in front of .he
Really inside . . . for a bird's-eye view of the
. frash habits of the local citizenry, "Mr. Inside
Indianapolis” had to go all the way.
an entire morning in one on ‘he
|
It wasn’t any trick at all to crawl into the can. You see, the whole top on the model I had lifts up. It's a little trickier once you get in and pull the lid down. The weights on the two swinging slots .hang in the center and if one wasn't careful in keeping his head to one side, one would | get conked. There isn't too much room in those trash cans. , Sitting cross-legged, like an Indian, holding my small Japanese umbrella over my head like a Japanese, trying to adjust my eyes to the gloom of the trash can like a cat, I had a busy and turbulent five or 10 minutes. Remember, I'm an average, hard-working American young man. Nothing happened for 20 minutes. Then a comedian rapped the side of the tin can with a board or newspaper. It might have been the cop on the corner. For a second or two I thought’ a car had run up on the sidewalk and hit me. A half hour went by before a crumpled paper match cover was swiftly poked in. Shortly after that a section of ¥help wanted” came in. By that time I was on my guard. “Thank you for keeping your city clean,” I! said.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
Funk & Wagnalls, New York. It is the first orderly, fac
pals, the authors have tracked material. Their story is also a
Story of Chambers and Party Is One of Ins and Outs
the fourth of 14 installments of a
condensation of the book “Seeds of Treason,” just published by
tual account of the events that
brought Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss face to face in one of the most sensational trials of our time. Digging deep into the records and interviewing many princi-
down much hitherto unpublished remarkable case history of brilnist.”
| liant young men “going Commu A young face, belonging perhaps to a youth — - ‘of 18 or 20, disappeared from my view. “Shortly 4 the face, startled to say the least, came back in my line of vision. “Oh, excuse me,” the youth said and hurried away You know, I hope that boy gets a job. He'll go places. Anyone without a job (I checked the ads he had underlined) still gentlemanly encugh to put trash where it belongs and say “excuse me,” is a good kid. In spite of my cramped quarters, the muilled | sounds of a busy city almost. put me to sleep. Suddenly I heard the cover swing slowly open. I opened my: eyes to see a hand coming in. Someone was in search of treasure. OK, old papers, junk and stuff,
CN THE Communist Daily his first
and Tom O'Flaherty, brother of ! None of them was cut to the | its leaders. Chambers himself was something out of the ordinary in that | office. Small and unkempt, he was hardly the collegiate type. But he was markedly an intellectual and therefore suspect.
“May I help you, sir?” I asked One day Bill Dunne looked The arm jerked out as if 1 had seared it with pointedy Bt: Whittaker ang said
a hot poker. The gasp of fright prompted me to lift the entire top and get to my feet. An elderly man, who looked as if he had reached into trash cans before, stood quaking six feet away. He wanted to know what I was doing in there and he wanted me to know that he had experienced a great fright. i
Neat As a Pin
I EXPLAINED. He was touched. Civic pride is what Indianapolis needed. He handed me a political card and urged me to.vote-in the primary for his friend. We parted friends! I hope. At high noon yesterday when my joints apd stomach began complaining, I called it quits. Com- vince his older brother to. go pared to the sidewalks and gutters, the trash along with him. can was neat as a pin. It wasn't all there earlier.! His brother's death left Cham“My” bird's-eye view reveals conclusively that we bers in what he later described as could do better with the trash.cans. Boy, wher I'“a state of complete immobility.” think of some of the stuff 1 could have watched,! He was able to move about, to I close my bird's-eye. (use his arms and legs. bift all deLet's keep our city clean. |sire of motion left him. He was Struck by paralysis of the will.
“lI always look at these new comrades and I wonder which one will point a finger at me in a courtroom.” Dunne was a good prophet, » n » ” » IN OCTOBER, 1926, Chambers’ sense of social responsibility was blunted by a personal tragedy when his younger brother Richard committed suicide. Whittaker — had twice before {thwarted suicide attempts, and Richard had tried hard to con-
Now, Look, Senator
Living within himself during this period of mourning, Chambers dropped out of the Party completely. Finally Sender Garlin
By Robert C. Ruark
WASHINGTON, Apr. 26—This Congress of ours is really having a year for itself. Already it has come out flatly against sin, is momentarily on the record against crime, and is beating the brains out of gambling. Yessiree, Buster, our boys are strictly out there with the lance, and no windmill is safe on its hill, Let us consider gambling today. Gambling is something that Sen. Homer Capehart is going to stamp out if it takes until Christmas. By Christmas, I mean Christmas of the year 2050. The Senator is going to stamp out gambling by stamping out the communications facilities which make it possible to transmit gambling information over state boundaries, He also proposes to have bookie
. Frank Erickson and Joe Adonis down to bare
their souls for the benefit of Congress. I can just see Joey A. giving a flock of rapt Congressmen the deep lowdown on gambling in the U. 8. of A, Mob guys are all lineal descendants of the clam. That is how they stay alive.
Close All Horse Tracks?
I CAN TELL Sen. Capehart one way of stopping horse gambling. You close all the horse tracks—shrieks of, “Oh, no! Not that! Anything
"but that!” —from all the politicians who get the
cuts from the bookies and the taxes from the track. Close Laurel, Hayre de Grace and Charles Town, as an object lesson to Congressmen who patronize them. -- . Then shoot all the horses in the country who cannot prove that they were never affiliated with a racing saddle or were never ridden by an undersized grown man With Strong wrists: Then make all the cops give back all the money they have taken from bookmakers, For the Senator's benefit, the shake in New York right now is $200 a day, six days a week, for a bookie to stay in business. That is $1200 a week the cops get and free whisky for the beat private, to boot. Then return all the political contributions that the big gamblers have made to campaigns of the Democratic Party. Did I hear anybody say “Ouch! Especially from my second home, Louisiana”? Then make it a federal crime to be a horse,
sought him out. By returning to his Party work, Garlin remonstrated convincingly, he would shake off his paralysis.
to associate with a horse, or with people who associate with horses. ‘And we are merely started. Having purged the horses, we begin with baseball. Wipe out baseball, More money is bet on it annually, through bookies and personalities, than on horses. Then wipe out basketball, and college football, which embraces a greater betting racket than horses. Make professional football illegal, and remove temptation from the tramp athletes who go to military schools when a war is on and then quit the service to play ball. Now let us inspect the ancient game of stud poker, and the gentle art of craps. Craps, Senator, is played with little cubes of ivory, with little ers Correspondence—letters from specks on them, In the absence of frory, 1 Rave the raw proletariat, many of them J sugar with burnt-ma ; . Tecan the BR Fol, You bit a 7 or an 11, you win.|About People— Snake eyes and a trey beat you, and so do boxcars. Boxcars are two sets of six, or 12. ; To ban craps from the land you will have to shoot nearly all newspaper executives. I was in a spirited game with some of the top talent of the land, just the other night, Senator, and right] under your own nose. You will never be able to stop crap-shooting so long as newspaper editors
=n n » IT WAS IN the ferment of the Sacco-Vanzetti agitation that ‘Whittaker Chambers returned to the Daily Worker. But he was not assigned to write the exciting and living stories. Instead he was given the dull job of editing a page called Work-
The same applies to stud poker, although I will indorse a mercy killing of the practitioners of Boy Scout poker, which has déuces, treys, red queens and one-eyed jacks wild and a wild card in the middle for everybody to share. feature an airlift. Paratroopers
Humans will Gamble will invade the abandoned airfield
IF YOU BAN poker as evil you will have to at Camp Mackall Friday after shoot Harry Truman, too, and for your private in- which 200 transports and troop
“The Big Lift,”
The general is now in charg
of me, but I think it's a rigged wheel. The house divisions. It will be the ‘first always wins. [tactical application of the prinAfter we have wiped out most of the nation in!cjples of mass airlift,” Gen. Tunan attempt to control gambling, I-still got news ner said. for you. So long as two humans remain on the . x. 8 = globe, they will find something to gamble at, and| Things are so bad for a man things to gamble with. You might check on this who wants to wet his tongue in when Joey A. comes down to tell you that he dry Knoxville, Tenn., that “some hasn't got the faintest idea of what you're talking of the best people” are drinking about. |paint thinner.
Tough Problem
——————— | councilman, said today the council
. - iwould consider drafting an ordiBy Frederick C. Othman
WASHINGTON, Apr. 26—The embattled landJords and ladies crowded the Senate Banking Com-
_mittee’s room. Every spring now for eight long
years. they've been crowding it, demanding the end of rent control. They're beginning to get what you might call unhappy. And there was Housing Expediter Tighe Woods, the one-time real estate agent in Chicago with the Kewpie doll knot of hair in the center of his otherwise bald brow, testifying as usual that the hour
has _not yet come to end rent controls, -
One of the landlords, or perhaps ladies, in the back of the room scribbled an unsigned note and passed it up to Mr. Tighe. He flushed. “I've just received an anonymous letter,” he said. “It says ‘rent control is communism in action’ and that ‘rent controllers are thieves’'” "““That’s all right,” said Sen. Burnet-R. Maybank (D: 8. C.). “I get-a lot of anonymous letters, myself. I throw 'em in the wastebasket.”
Face a Tough Problem
WHILE THE landlords fidget and Mr. Tighe and other officials testify along the lines you'd expect, let us consider rent control in this year of eongressional elections. The lawgivers never had a tougher one to-decide. Nor have they ever received a more ingenious solution than the one offered by Rep. Brent Spence (D. Ky.). Rent controls, as you know, are destined to die 8 natural death when the law expires June 30, two months hence. The average Congressman, Demoerat and Republican alike, figures that now is the time for the obsequeles. And please omit flowers. We might as well be frank about it. Many a Congressman is running for re-election this year. And there are more tenants casting ballots than
nance prohibiting the sale of the thinner which he said makes peo- . ple “go almost crazy.” vo i y : "na oan ER to do? "The lawgivers were eg Neil D. Skinner, 5730 CarrollThe cheerful gentleman from Ft. Thomas, Ky,|00 Ave. has been Speinten 1pRep. Spence, came up with an“idea so neat-it ale rn Carmo nad OF. i orthmost seemed gaudy. He suggested a law giving] aign dest yep ye umn samMr. Tighe the right to administer rents for one| Po BT 2h y 2 Ia se million more year, but chopping off controls all over the| Henhia a a New ¢.a3s5the country Jan. 1, except where officials specifi oom bullding. I. Skinner is cally ‘ask for them to be continued. president of the Hoffman Spe-
This would carry the Congressmen through the cialty Co. 2 a.-n elections without having to worry about explaining] | tothe voters why they had-let-the controls die.. Gay Smith, Manual High
School,” “Indianapolis, and Carol It would cheer up the landlords because Phey'd Schlamp of Bosse High Schdol of presume that authorities in many areas wouldn't Evansville won the state high ask for more federal regulations. And it would gehool journalism contest consilence those who contend that rent control is a qucted by the IU departments of violation of states’ rights. : journalism and radio: They've a } been invited to IU for the weekApproval of Plan Seen end to participate in a broadcast REP. SPENCE'S fellow statesmen breathed a recording for “The School of the collective sigh of relief. His scheme is almost cer- Sky,” educational radio program tain to become law The current hearings thus broadcast by Hoosier stations. don’t mean much. 2 x =» It's not fair to call them window dressing, but, Four Indiana high school neither is there any use for me to report what the seniors were among nine scholargentlemen had to say. Mr. Tighe's oratory won't ship winners named by the Rev. change many minds Walter Pax, dean of St.: Joseph's One odd thing did come up, though. Mr. Woods College. Harry Ferson, Greensaid he'd fired 2000 people since last summer, but field. and Philip Kauchak, Whitthat he still had 3000 controllers on the job and, D8. were awarded $1000 scholarany way he figured it, he'd have no money left to ShiPs. John Dennis, Kentland, pay them after May 26. |and Eugene Mellady, East Chi“That means unless we give you more money, 280. Won $400 grants. we will have a law for a month and nobody to enforce i§2” demanded Sen. Maybank. be Mr. Woods said that’s the way it was. Whether pro he gets the money is something else again, but I 4, rather imagine he will, even though he promised! last year to try to make do with what he had.
= = n Even college professors can't
vision for their old age if left their own devices, according to a pamphlet study of retire{ment plans distributed by the | Teachers Insurance & Annuity
The Quiz Master
| Association of America. This report entitled “Planning a Retirement System,” is a condensation of more than 30 years’ experi-
??? Test Your Skill 2???
Who is called the founder of the kindergarten? Friederich Wilhelm August Froebel, a German educator. His theories regarding child education and training, which he tried and tested in his own school, founded in 1837, have heen adopted as the basis of the modern kindergarten. *¢ & 9 What is the largest organ of the body? The body's largest organ is the skin, weighing Just about twice as much as either the liver or the brain. o
ence with retirement plans. R. MeAllister Lloyd. president of the sponsoring association, said.
Was the inscription on the Liberty Bell taken from the Bible? The famous inscription was borrowed from Leviticus 25:10. It reads: “Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof.”
* Sb
» = . It Amétican males insist on a “Miss America of 1950," Minnesota intends to be right out in Can a dog get rabies If he does no come In front ‘in’ the beauty parade. contact with other dogs? Senators Edward J. Thye (R) - Yes, because rabies is transmitted from any and Hubert H.. Humphrey (D) kind of animal that is rabid. But the dog wounld| joined today in nominating Bettie only get rabiés if he were bitten by a rabid a] Lou Goodlad as a candidate
the party bureaucracy. | Louis Engdahl, Vern Smith, Harry M. Wicks, tough William Dunne
! Armed Forces maneuver that will—
Cas Walker, city @
CHK R FOUR By RALFH DE TOLEDANO and VICTOR LASK
Worker, Whittaker Chambers got There ‘was obtuse
Liam. heroic bolshevik pattern; all were
given to an easy-going, disconcerting cynicism about the party and
!semi-literate, reporting on Party work in the shops and factories. Though he did not relish the job, Chambers realized that this correspondence was “important. This spadework among the comrades, more than irate polemics, was what built up the sort of organization which could create a soviet America. So he labored late and long in the vineyard. And his reward came, not from the American party which considered the page a waste of space but from Moscow itself. A letter fom the Comintern, analyzing the Daily Worker, excoriated the paper. But it praised Workers Correspondence as the only good thing there. ..Chambers’ reward, of course, was to have the page taken away from him; it had become a plum. u 9g ”
Robert Minor (right), editor of the Daily Worker who asked Chambers to write his editorials for him, is shown singing the “Internationale” at the opening of the Communist rally in New York's Madison Square Garden, January, 1940, held in observance of the 16th anniversary of Lenin's death. He is shown with Earl Browder (center), sentenced, earlier in the day, to four years in prison
on passport fraud charges, and United States.
to destroy his reputation as weil.
So the cable reported that Trot sky, traveling with “60 pieces o
luggage and ‘his -hunting--dogs,”
William Z. Foster, national chairman of the Communist Party in the
National. Headquarters on 125th - 8t., rushing down to the Worker f office at about 9 p. m. when most of tHe copy was in.
hook-nosed Jew, with a star of David on his paunch and whip in his hand, guarding the money bags, . in the
EE SRN were appearing Cal SEX] assignment for had caused wondering peasants, “Chambers, I've got to catch a Yiddish Communist press.) bi 8 a as a promotion 10 +, oxclaim. “Who is this great train,” he would say-<he-lived in-~With typical Communist gratign editor. It —was—whilerjszq passing through our vil- Croton-on-Hudson. “Will you tude, Minor rushed to Charles
handling foreign news copy that
Chambers got his first real jolt in|
the Party. Curiously enough, what shook him was a trifling piece of copy from Moscow. Leon Trotsky had just been expelled from the Party. He did not try to_understand the arguments for or against it, but he could not'forget that Trotsky had —with Lenin--fathered the revolution. Trotsky had organized the triumphant Red Army. Yet Chambers could have swallowed the sordid story of Trotsky's political destruction without too much trouble had there not been a hair in it. That hair was a brief cable from Moscow describing Trotsky's journey into exile, to Alma Ata. The Communist technique
Air Force Set to Stage
Gen. William H. Tunner Tells of U. S.
Preparation at Premiere of Movie
The U. 8. Air Force is prepared to stage another major airlift foregather to figure out how to run the world. 3nywhere in the world at any time, : :
said last night at Camp Mackall, N.
Maj. Gen. Willlam H. Tunner C. He spoke at the premiere of
a motion picture story of how the U. S. Air Force Medicine (Columbus). beat the Berlin blockade. He directed the Berlin Airlift
e of “Exercise Swarmer,” a joint
from St. Paul. for the title that sponsors of Atlanta city's annual national beauty contest decided to skip.
parents,” the Senators said.
” » = Margaret Truman's chances of singing with
the Metropolitan were
out today by Rudolph the Met's new general manager. “She's a concert singer, an opera There is
of
Met” said. There was"
Miss Truman } -ing-on- thelist -of -official -guests Peters of Notre Dame College of ashbrook had. lived in Ames
to her name be-
invited to view an oil painting by Rembrandt which the Met is offering for sale to build up its! finances, he said.
Is = LJ " Prof. 0. G. Lloyd of the Purdue agricultural economics department has returned from, the 13-
Mrs. Effie McGrew Rites Tomorrow
Services for Mrs. Effie McGrew, who died yesterday in her home. ‘89 Whittier Place, will be at 10
a. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers Irving Hill Chapel. Burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery.
lage?” Chambers dutifully printed the he never forgot his
item but sense of outrage. =» » »
AT ABOUT the time the Daily Worker moved to Union Square, Chambers salary was upped from $10 to $25 a week, and he became |editor in fact though not in title. His routine consisted of run-
ning the copy desk and-persuad
ing the linotypers, old-line trade unionists bitterly antagonistic to the Communists, to get the paper By winning over the Chambers was able to meet a deadline now and then, and the Workers began making
out on time printers,
the mail train.
The normal editor of the Daily anti-Zionist, anti-Semitic line. But is not only to destroy a man but. he spent most of his time at the
Worker was Robert Minor.
* -
Lift An
search Committee in Chicago.
® Ld » Four Indiana students are on
the winter quarter honor roll | Ohio State's College of Veterina
Power, New Augusta;
ere in World
state meeting of the North Cen-, tral Regional Land Tenure Re- fessor of sociology at Butler, and |
in ing at Ohio State University (Co-! ry lumbus) They are Mr. Cameron, who lives in 5340 Grove High School honor roll Richard Pliske, Westville; Harold Byram Ave., will give a paper on Roy- De- “Insecurity.” Mr. Lasley will pre-|
Durba, head of the all-powerful Control : Commission, and informed him of Chambers’ heresies. The results were immediate, Durba phoned Chambers and-in-a sepulchral voice said, “Cham bers, I'd like to see you.” : Before Chambers had a chance to respond to the summons, an-
write today's editorial for me?" And Chambers would, as Minor went galloping off for Grand Central Station. “ Ld ".-.u WHITTAKER CHAMBERS’ first rift with the Party grew out of his loyalty to Minor. One day, Harrison George, a staff member and: brother-in-law of
Earl Browder, told Whittaker, other man was assigned to “If we could only get Bob Minor “assist” him. - off this paper—" Leaving the! This was mene; mene, tekel, sentence unfinished, he added, upharsin for Whittaker Cham-
bers. He picked up his hat and walked out without bothering ‘to
“And I think it will be arranged.” “They've got the knife out for
you, Bob,” Chambers warned resign. Minor. But drastic as this break And then he indiscreetly ex- Seemed then, it was with the
Communist Party, not with its Leninist doctrine. The evil thing, communism, still held his faith, Tomorrow: From Writer to Spy. (Copyright, 1950, b k & Wagnalls C
pressed his disaproval of Party .factionalism and of the current
(The year was 1929 and William Gropper's cartoons of the
Perfect R
Beech Grove School Lists Honor Roll
Seven pupils headed the Beech -
Bruce Cameron, assistant proPhilip Lasley, 23 S. Chester St., Butler senior, will attend the Ohio | Valley Sociological Society meet-|
Friday and Saturday.
{with perfect report cards durinz
Motte, Petersburg; James Don- sent a paper on “Who Teaches 'P€ Second grading period.
ham, Lafayette. = ” s Carl M. Gray, Petersburg, Ind.
“She has every- past president of the Indiana formation; -Bernard--M:-Baruech -has -a- roulette carriers-will -bring-in-26;,000 tons -tRing..an. American. girl. should. State Bar -Association,-will-open Lug ~Jlq i wheel in his house in South Carolina. This is ratty of equipment and two airborne Nave, including loyalty to her second annual 5
Legal Institute | to be sponsored May 5-6 at Notre Dame by the university and t he State Bar Associat ion. speak on “Defense of a Negligence Action.” Speakers also will include Dr. Turner L. Smith, assistant
+ Mr. S. attorney general; Richard ¢),rk Hospital, Paoli.
Gray
P.
sociation, and Prof.
Law. ~
= » Miss Mary Jane
University of Jllinois
City Wide Raids Bag Pool Tickets
Police Tally Shows Total of 804 Books
A tally today showed 804 books of baseball pool tickets confis-
Tinkham, Hammond, presi-
no significance dent-elect of the Indiana Bar As- g3 o week from today. Roger P.
Fouts, 4242 weeks ago, he taught Sunday College Ave. has been elected to gchool in Ames Chapel Methodist membership in -Torch, an hon- Church of which he was a mem-| orary for junior women at the per. He had also been active in (Cham- ‘supporting Republican candidates _..in the primary until a month ago.
“Dies in Her Home
Social Psychology?” { - They were Ralph Cingo, Barba~ siete ditn |
{ra Harding and Laura Hull, |seniors; Mary Gillespie and Mary Kleine, juniors, and Gerry Charn« ley and. Priscilla Winklepleck, freshmen. Other honor roll’ members were: { Seniors, Ba.'bara Kendall, ‘Shirley King, Marilyn Marine, Pat Stewart and Betty Wright; Sophojmores, Dorothy Dietz, Julia Mc. {Masters and Norman Seay; |Freshmen, Charlotte Brady, Bare Tres State Service {bara Clark, Marlene Cunning FRENCH LICK, Apr. 26 _'ham; Lee Little, Barbara Meyers, Enoch Richard Lashbrook, resi- 0¥le Ogden, Lee Porter, Nancy dent of the nearby Ames Chapel Ba, Laverne Switzer and neighborhood, and active figure Alice Terhune. in Orange County Republican Eighth grade, Kathleen Brown, politics, died yesterday in the Gladys Catron, Margaret Denson, Edward Lougmiller, Patricia Pace, Sylvia Prather and Sharon Wellons; Seventh grade, Rita Conway, Patricia Davidson, Bile |ly Geshwiler, Georgianna Gray, Chapel neighborhood for the past Barbara Gregory, Thélma Hunt. 55 years. Until his illness three ©» Mary McMasters, Carol Morgan, Pearl Pelko and Sharon
Dies at Age of 9
Was Active Figure In GOP Politics
Mr. Lashbrook would have been
Born near French Lick, Mr.
Weiger.
—————
Mrs. T. M. Hughes
Was Former Sheriff A Tumberman and farmer for’ many years, he worked on. his farm this spring. He served as
Mrs. Helen Hughes, wife of Thomas M. Hughes, district superOrange - County sheriff for two Sor © e Indianapolis grain terms from 1900 to 1904. pranch: Department of Agricul. Mr. Lashbrook was a ‘member Lure: died today in their home, of a family of 10 children, all of S502 Carrollton Ave. She was a3, whom lived to be more than 70 Mr. and Mrs., Hughes moved vears of age. . here three years -ago from Chis A daughter, Mrs” Paul Lindley, ago. A'native of Covington, Ky., is the wife of the Orange County Mrs. Hughes was graduated from Republican chairman. the Notre Dame Academy there; Other survivors include his She lived in Cincinnati’20 years.
A former concert pianist and cated by police who roamed the wife; two daughters, Miss Blanche She was a member of St. Joan of
teacher, Mrs. McGrew had been organist for many years at the Irvington Presbyterian Church. She was a charter member of the church. She was employed in the State Auto License Department and Chain Store Division 26 years, retiring in 1946. She was an
Fortnightly Club.
Born in New Palestine, she lived here 54 years. She was 80. i Surviving is a brother, Otto G. Buchel, Indianapolis.
Hubert Robertson
Services for Hubert Robertson, 2178 N. Illinois St. 2461 North-|
1530 Kelly St., will be at 1:30 p. m, tomorrow in G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home. Burial will be in Washington Park. A retired drayman, Mr. Robertson, who was 82, died yesterday in his home. Surviving are two sons, Earl and Ralph. and a brother, Willam, all of Indianapolis. i
city for 14 hours over night. Twenty-six establishments were visited. No arrests were made. Downtown spots raided were at 33 W. Ohio 'StJ 539 W. Washington St., 525 W. Washington St., 601 N. West St., 248 Indiana Ave, 224 Indiana Ave. 216 Indiana
counted on to make adequate nonorary member of the Irvington Ave. 46 8. Illinois St., 30 8. Illi-
nois St., 606 N. Illinois St. and 468 Massachusetts Ave. South Side Raids On the South Side the police visited 912 8. Meridian St., 1205 8S. Meridian St. and 110 W. Carty St. . North Side raids were made at
western Ave. and 2648 Northwestérn Ave. Raids on the West Side were made at 465 N. Belmont Ave. 1238 Oliver Ave. 214 Blake St. 23091; Clifton St. and 2708 W. St. Clair St. > On the East Side the police raided 1437 Columbia Ave. 1113 E. 10th St, 2125 E. 10th St., and 968 Massachusetts Ave.
Mc-|
Lashbrook and Mrs. Nelle Arm- Arc Catholic Church and strong, both of Paoli; a son, Ted, Woman's Club. Indianapolis; a brother, James C.,/ Other survivors include three French Lick, and two sisters, Mrs. daughters, Misses - Eileen, Mary Susan Breeden, West Baden, and Rita and Kathryn, and a son, Mrs. Hester Wininger, French Thomas, all of Indianapolis; two ck. brothers, Richard Byrne, Dayton, Services at 2 p. m. tomorrow in/O.,, and Edward Byrne, Cincinthe Ames Chapel Methodist nati, and her parents, Mr. and Church will be followed by burial Mrs. R. W. Byrne, Cincinnati.
in the church cemetery. S——————————— Irvington Chapter, ‘Announce Butler . . . OES, Sets Meeting Registrations | Thomas Hasbrook, blind vet-| Streamlined registration proce{eran and member of the Eli Lilly dures for Butler University’s three |& Co. public relations staff, will summer sessions were announced address Irvington Chapter, OES, today by Prof. Harold VanCleave, at 8 p. m. Monday in Irvington director of the summer school. Masonic Temple. His subjects will, The sessions are pre-summer, {be “An Inheritance for Your May 15-June 2: regular session Son.” {June 13-Aug. 4, and post-summer Past matrons and patrons of session, Aug. 7-25. the chapter will be guests at a' Students planning to attend any dinner at 6:15 p. m. May 8 in the of the summer sessions may fill temple. Mrs. Carrie Switzer and out requested class schedules Clarence Fenske, worthy matron which are enclosed with each But-
and patron, will preside at both ler University summer sessions | meetings. bulletin, :
its
»
