Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1950 — Page 15
Netmm— )CKETS —————
is fo fill
sewear,
| values. ncluded nd 14/2
-
ie te Fone Tost hone ust
Honey, Seinen i
call the. police.
To the operator: “Thanks, Honey.” “Look in the phone book for the number? ‘8shay, lady, I can't even sshee the phone book.” Place: LI-ncoln office of the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. Time: Few minutes after midnight. The LI-ncoln office handles the night emergency and information calls. Seldom is there a dull moment up there. The city is far from being asleep.
So Messed Up
Youn BE surprised how many persons call the ‘police. Especially if you're the type that never called the police for any reason. How can people get themselves so messed up, you ask yourself. A woman called in a foreign accent and asked the operator to get the police. She s “Quiet, everybody,” in the room from which she was calling. In the background you could hear singing, music and the tinkle of glasses. What's the trouble? Mrs. Opal Chastain, who was acting as my teacher on the switchboard, shrugged her shoulders. I got the impression that she meant not to be so nosey. Also, that I should feel lucky to be able to listen to Indianapolis at night. In no way do I want to give the impression that the girls are feisty. Not in the slightest. All are good-natured, patient and wide awake. But you must realize that the youngest git? in the office, from the standpoint of service, has over four years of nocturnal duty behind her. Miss Margaret Reichwein, supervisor, said there is a waiting list for the 11 p. m. to 7 a. m. shift. I must say that the experience of listening in on the incoming calls was eye-opening. Ear-opening, too. Indianapolis is an all-dial town now. Miss Reichwein explained when my brow was raised at so many requests for the operator to dial a number, “We can't make a customer dial” she said. There are many requests for the time. At 12:37 a. m. a hoarse- -sounding man growled, “What time is it?” Mrs. Chastain told him pleasantly that it was 12:37. He repeated the hour with a great deal of surprise in his voice. Probably wanted to catch 40 winks along about 8 p. m. The night shift will average 8000 calls as compared to 27,000 during the day tour of duty. Of course, the staff isn’t as large after the moon comes up. I was sitting between Mrs. Chastain and Mrs. Marian Cruise. My set of earphones, however, took in only Mrs. Chastain's calls. Telephone users often are snappy on the answers. A man asked Mrs, Chastian to dial a number. She asked that the patron look it up in the book, please. He said quickly that the page was missing. Maybe so. Mrs. Chastain dialed. Another patron with a thick tongue produced, no doubt, from hanging around the establishment from which he was calling, asked the number of a cab company. Sorry, he couldn't find it in the book.
Aside: “Shut your big. fat mouth, I told you Ta.
Night calls, » » when fhe moan cores ‘up there's still plenty of ‘business on ¥ fhe switchboards. “I was lucky to find a phone,” he said. Ah, he
was happy. A complaint came in that someone was calling
|Hoosier Heros— a
Indianapolis Tin
WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 1950
Local Tar On Way To Fleet In
Proposed New Income Tax Ens. C A Fi Compared With Past Years Watts Appeal Ens aan Among | irst
a particular number and then hanging up. What to do? Not much. No way of checking a malicious| person. | The long winded, descriptive persons have their say. They give their names, addresses, ages, what] they're doing and why they want a particular, number, It must be the hour. “My eyes are a little bad, will you dial such-!| and-such a number? Blind persons get dial - service. How many! sighted persons use the service because they don't want to look up a tavern or a club will never be known. One woman sounded a little put out because Mrs, Chastain didn’t look up the number) of a night club and didn’t know how to get «in| touch with one of the employees.
What! No Nickel Back? MRS. REGINA SUTT, Mrs. Catherine Butler! and Mrs, Marguerite Tritarelli were on the infor-| mation board. Telephone users want to know who has been calling their number; why they didn't get their nickel back when they called the police department direct; how can so-and-so on the party line talk for two hours and how come Mr. Joe Blow's name isn’t listed in the directory. When a conversation gets too involved, Miss| Reichwein steps in and handles the customer. If she can't cope with the situation, she gets in touch with the unit manager and right up the line. It has happened. People are funny. There's never a dull moment at the LI-ncoln| office. |
pieces WAth She 1atier date struck 1. proofs only.
Jelly and Jazz
By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, July. 26—Been riffling through a book called “Mister Jelly Roll” lately, and finding it just about the most entrancing history of the growth of jazz in this country that I ever read. I suppose that this is explainable by the fact that I will.read anything whatsoever that deals with New Orleans, and also because I happened to know the subject of the book rather well. Jelly Roll Morton was a proud and bitter man, with a diamond in his tooth even when he did not have eating money in his pocket, and he was as close to being the father of what we now know as jazz as any man could be. Jazz was born and partially reared in the fleshpots of old New Orleans, in the tenderloin district of Storyville, in the cafes and in the parades. It was cultured and tended by Negroes, mainly, who had the music of the French and Spanish, the weird strains of the Congo and Haiti and Martinique bubbling in their blood. They dumped all their inheritance into a gumbo-pot and it finally came out as what we have called jazz, swing, even bop, you should pardon the expression. Jelly Roll, a Creole of fairly misty antecedents, was the head guru of the composition-and-piano cult,
Made a Lot—Spent a Lot JELLY made a lot of money and he spent a lot of money. I think he was a bit wrong in the head toward the end, because he was intemperate and illogical and overvain, prone to boast too loud and to contradict himself too frequently. But he was always a friend of mine, and what he used to tell me about the birth and growth of Dixieland music, in a smoky loft in Washington, has now been embroidered and amplified wonderfully well by a man named Alan Lomax, in his biography of. Mister Morton. : Jelly - Roll—broke, mean, sad, discouraged, haughty and jealous of everybody—spun out the last years of his life in a little Negro night club on Washington's U St., the Lenox Ave. of that
city's Harlem. This was a man who started his
playing as a “professor” in a fancy house, >and who had come to contribute as much to medern
Brannan’s Butter
music as any contemporary, more than most. This] was a man who had worn diamond garter clasps, | who sported a diamond in his front fang, who had spent money as freely as he drank wine, which]
was pretty free, I used to drop by this little bistro at 2, 3, 4 o'clock in the morning, and sit by the corner of| Jelly’s piano. He would play the piano and tell me about the early days in New Orleans, when it] was a truly high-rolling town, full of hot blood; and wickedness, danger and excitement.
Fringe of Violence JELLY knew it all. He was a man who packed a gun for a long time, and his life had literally # been spent on the fringe of violence. At one time, or another he had violated all the commandments, | with some extras of his own devising, but in his| soft Southern voice, with that rippling piano ac-| companiment, it never seemed any worse than a rendition of the Arabian nights. So it happened that I got to know quite a lot| about the famed old New Orleans before I had! even seen it, and before it became a favored locale
{ for high-busted historical novels. But it never
occurred to me that it would be possible to cap-| ture it, entire, from Mister Jelly's lips, bécause he| was a cautious man with quite a lot to hide. | Then, while Mister Morton was recording his life’s work for the Library of Congress, not long before his death, Alan Lomax sat down by his side, switched on a recorder, and asked him how! it all started. “Well,” said Mister Jelly, as he had said to me a long time ago, “as I understand it, all my folks came across from the shores of France that is across the world to another world, and they landed in the New World years ago . . The slim fingers flashed across the ‘keyboard, and the gray head nodded in approbation of his own story. “Whatever those guys play today,” he Said, “Whatever they call it, they're playing Jelly, oll” It's a sort of wonderful book, wonderfully done, about a wonderful, wicked, free-and-easy era! which shall be no more seen.
By Frederick C. Othman
WASHINGTON, July 26—Official concensus seems to be that in Vermont there are more dairy cows than people. The people are in charge of the cows, however, and from their milk they make butter. This they sell to their Uncle Samuel, who holds ft in 64-pound pats and stores it hopefully in caves, And what do you think the people éf the Granite State spread on their bread? Oleomargarine. Or so said Rep. Walter K. Granger (D. Utah). He wondered if Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan, the proprietor of the biggest pile of butter the world has ever known, agreed about the habits of Vermont's cows and/or people.
Greatest Hoarder of All Time
“THERE IS some evidence they are doing just shat,” reported the greatest hoarder of all time. The big, bald Secretary was quick to point out that his hoarding of hundreds of millions of pounds of food was strictly involuntary, He'd bought butter, eggs, cheese and milk by the trainloads to hold up the prices, as per Congressional order, Now he was appearing before the House Agricultural Committee to ask the gentlemen kindly to tell him, before it spoiled, what to do with the stuff. I regret to report that he got no very good advice. Take butter, from Vermont, and practically everywhere else: Brannan now has 192 million pounds of it and every week he buys 9 million pounds more at 60 cents a pound. He's about to run ‘out of codl places in which to put it. 2 Rep. Clifford Hope (R. Kas.) has ar idea. He figured that if every week each man, woman and
" child would spread an extra ounce of butter on
his bread, Mr. Brannan wouldn't have to buy any more, ‘Why, asked the gentleman from Kansas, doesn’t the Agriculture Department put on an advertising campaign to get people to eat more butter?
The Quiz Master
“Minn.),
It wouldn't work, said Mr. Brannan. The butter people make the best butter they know how. They] put it in packages that are works of art. extol its virtues in every possible way, except possibly skywriting. But how are you going to| get more people to eat more butter when it costs| 70 cents a pound?
What this country needs; said he, is the Bran-| nan Plan to. get rid of its surpluses. This is the | scheme, in case you've forgotten, whereby the! price of butter at the store would drop to world levels of around 32 cents per pound, but you'd, pay for it again via the tax collector, who'd for-| ward the extra take to the farmer. The Congress- | men mostly took a dim view of that. Only other thing then, Mr, Brannan added, is| to pass another law allowing him to. pay the freight on the butter he wants to give away to charity and school lunchrooms. This would include a further charge for cutting the butter into pieces small enough for the average fellow to handle. A 64- -pound cube, he said, is too big to be of much use, even in a big kitchen. The trouble is, he said, that when he wants | togive butter away today, the recipients have to! pay the freight and mostly they can't afford it.!
Butter Even Stored in Capital
“YOU HAVE any butter stored here in Washington?” demanded Rep. August H, Andresen (R.
“Oh, yes, sir,” replied Mr. Brannan. .
. “Well, I am reliably informed they are using oleo here in the schools instead of butter,” snapped Rep. Andresen.
Mr. Brannan turned that over to his local man,
a Mr. Trainer, who looked in his book and re. 2)
ported that during the last six months the district schools used 42,000 pounds of free butter. How much of this came from Vermont he did not say.
2??? Test Your skill | 22?
WASHINGTON, July 26 (UP)—The following tables prepared Delay Granted by the Treasury Department show the individual income taxes ! 3 that Americans would pay under President Truman's new pro- i posals, compared with present rates and the highest wartime rates B y h 0 Under Pu rd ue Program, Ne paid in 1944. | oll a The tax Sigure for 1950 Ja smaller than fhat for 1951 because| y g y | Another in Japan or Battle Area is i only a quarter of a person's 1950 income would come under the | new higher rates while his entire 1951 income would be affected. | Convicted Slayer | Pvt. D. E. Henderson, Overseas 3 Years The new rates would become effective Oct, 1, 1950. B Ensign Allen Eugene Crum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claud A. Crum, The tables: Seeks New Trial; 11416 Sturm Ave. is on his way to join the crew of the USS Valley SINGLE PERSON 3 | Forge. Net Income Due to Die Nov. 14 He left San Francisco a few days ago en route to Pear] Harbor, Before 1944 Attorneys for Robert Austin! Although the exact location of the Valley Forge is undisclosed it is Personal ‘Wartime Present 1950 1951 |Watts today asked for and were PP hieved to be in Rorean ates: Exemption High Tax Tax Tax ns. Crum was gradua rom| p=. : I 0. 5 53 og x 4 "4 To% |granted an extension of time to|p gu University with a B. S.| Cpl Roy Lee Bragg, a former 800 69 33 a5 40 prepare their briefs appealing the! {Degree in Phar- employee of The Indianapolis 1.000 115 66 70 80 conviction and death sentence of | macy and in Times, is sta1,500 230 149 157 180 the Indianapolis’ slayer. (Naval Science {tioned at Wash2,000 345 232 244 280 The Indiana Supreme Court! and Tactics. On § ington, D. C. 3,000 585 409 429 488 |gave the three attorneys until|the same day he § Cpl. Bragg 5,000 1,105 811 844 944. (Sept. 15 to file briefs. It previous-| Vas commission- took his basic 8,000 2,035 1,546 1,605 1780 |ly had set this Saturday as the 3 Ensign in the § training at 10,000 2,755 2,124 2,202 | 2,436 [final date on ‘which the lawyers’ | avy" Lackland Air 15,000 4,930 3,804 4,033_ | 4448 appeal papers could be filed. He was among {| Force Base, Aft20,000 7,580 6,089 . 6,302 6942 | watts, twice convicted and sen- the st Zou {er basic he was 25,000 10,590 8,600 8,899 9.796 lienced to die for the November, '° De Eraduated {sent to Bolling 50,000 27,945 23,201 23,998 26.388 11047 shotgun slaying of Indian- and receive com- |Air Base in 00,000 69,870 58,762 60,771 66.798 |anolis housewife Mary Louis missionsunder Washington. 500,000 444,350 385.000b 396,181 429274 |Byrney, is asking the state’s high fais. Plan at gpy Crum Recently he > 1,000,000 900,000a 770.000h 810,000c 884,274 | court to reverse the decision of a i took a course in 3 MARRIED PERSON—NO DEPENDENTS Bartholomew County court and), ie at Purdue he was a mem-| ogy ot “printing . Pl Bragg. ber of the Quarter Deck Society,! $ 600 3 3 grant him another new trial. in St. Louis, 800 9 : a Navy Honorary; Scabbard and] Cpl. Bra who is 20. is th 1.000 15 | New Trial Denied Blade; an Army-Navy Honorary, 5 NE BrasE Ne 1,500 130 $50 $ 52 $ 60 | On May 11 Bartholomew Coun-/20d the Kappi Psi Pharmaceutl-' Augusta. 4 2,000 ~ 245 133 © 140 160 ty Circuit Court Judge George 2 Fraternity. 2 4 3,000 475 299 314 360 |W, Long refused to grant Watts al. Ens. Crum attended Technical | Stationed in England with the 5.000 a75 631 663 760 new trial. Watts’ court- appointed 18h School, here, | Air Force is Cpl. David F. Sherron 8,000 1,885 1.206 1,259 1416 pauper attorneys, Lew Sharpnack,! of New Bethel, 10,000 2 585 1,621 1,688 1.888 Will H. Dobbins .and Frank| hi serving 19 months in the Son of Mr, and 15,000 4,695 2,529 2,987 3.260 |Hamilton, appealed to the Indi- areas, Cpl. Raymond A. Davis | Mrs. David F. 20,000 7.315 4,247 1400 4872" lana Supreme Court June 29. is nearing the Sherron, Cpl 25,000 10,295 5,877 6.089 6,724 The high court granted oo SEE ay } end of his first!) Cherron, who is 50,000 27,585 17,201 17,799 19,592 |a stay of execution while it con- enlistment RX 20, took his basic 100,000 69,435 46,403 47,996 52778 | dered his case. He Was ton a “hitch” in thell training at 500,000 443,895 359,662 370,634 403.548 |yled to die July 12, but the date 8 U. S. Marines. | Lackland Air 1,000,000 900,000a 770,000b 792.137 858,548 Iwas moved up to Nov. 14, A’ ‘native a] Base at San MARRIED -PERSON—TWO DEPENDENTS Be 1 Indianapolis. the - Antonio, Texas. $ 600 $ $.ins $...:0s $...... | Watts’ attorneys are seeking . Po 18, His parents la new trial on the grounds that 21 - year - old 800 9 sensns arava . .e leatherneck t- are expecting 1.000 15 Ee Can ve... [the trial judge was in error when NEE ala him. home on 1.500 30 ca a cre v..v.. |he allowed the prosecution to in- tended Tech ' : High School be-| Cpl Sherron furlough in 2,000 45 “reine Severs einen | troduce testimony from women t listing| October. He has 3,000 275 100 - 105 120 [Watts was alleged to have raped. ore enlisting been stationed in 8 Englang for 21 5,000 755 432 454 520 [They contend this. testimony had : three and a half : ae ; : ty | CPL. Raymond years ago an q/months. -8,000 1,585 974 1,018 1152 [no bearing on the crime with A. Davis taki b | 10,000 2,245 1,361 1,419 1,592 which he was charged. They also|, . at Che a * ng Jasiel William F. se fire controle 15,000 4,265 2.512... 2,609 2.900 contend the court erred when it| Sot Se ry oint, C man, is serving aboard the air20,000 6.785 3,888 4.032 4464 [refused tov instruct the jury asi : 8 son of Mr. Lorena M.!craft carrier U. : 25,000 9,705 5476 5,674 6,268 the defendant requested. avis an rother of Josephine 8S. 8. Leyte in 50,000 26,865 16,578 17,154 18,884 ir etait | H. Tolbert, 615 E. oth St., Apt. 1. ‘European wa100,000 68.565 45,843 47,210 51,912 Cpl. Davis was last heard from org, | 500,000 442,985 358,677 369,621 402,456 Laundry Driver on July 11, while in Barstow, Twenty years 1,000,000 900,000a 769,314 791,350 857.456 1 old, he will com-
A survive* “anything but frantic war fatal accidents in rural Indiana PUDICHY Committee of the loose and” ran to Illinois and of the physics department, pre-
(a) Taking into account maximum effective rate limitation of! Injured in Crash | 2 = [plete athree90 per cent. Land Somewhere in Japan—or Korea, | |year Navy hitch (b) Taking into account maximum effective rate limitation of A laundry truck overturned and is Pvt. Delbert E. Henderson, in January, 1951, 77 per cent. its driver was slightly injured friend of Bonnie lat which time he | (e) Taking into account maximum effective rate limitation of early today in a crash at the un- Bruce, of 1547 §, Isays he will re81 per cent. {guarded intersection of 20th and] po Benoni i {turn to Indian|Ruckle Sts. is i o - apolis if his disyr. J. charge is avail- william Krouse
fhoui People— The Kxcalsior Laundry Co.jof the 5th:Cav- § able at that was struck ‘by an, Japan. He Has
truck, driven north on Ruckle St. alry, a part of | irl, itc 5 ki e (by Louis Chapman, 52, of 1335! he occupation : ne ie he CERI Seen Fi ’ automobile dri 2 by Richard 1 8; On Dad's ar UMDer Win 26 Nobleavile, estbound 2 7 Overseas jon 29th St.
if foned {Finley Ave., orces 8 Beryl Gene Hy is on his 2
I hock & 3 a oF two of hs: second cruise in the MediterThe truck spun and overturned.ithree years ranean. Shocked Motorist Finds Out What Shouting's |The driver, who crawled throughithe Army. He I Pvt. Henderson Son of Me
* About; ‘Drives Too Fast,’ Says Unhurt Child [the truck and out the rear doors |schequled to return home next |had minor injuries and pyar Be
By OPAL CROCKETT . ’ Neighbors yelled at Mike Brasic, 38, of Chicago, as he drove Sid he went to a private physi He is 22 years old and halls away from his home, He shouted greetings and drove on. Pedes-| a. ither warning BE Covington. RY: last heard trians waved at him. He waved back. Peopl ere are neither 5 . eople verlainly ref nor stoplights to control traffic at! from him he was in Japan but did
friendly; he thought. he intersection and residents said/not know how long he would st A mile from home a motorist st " , < the intersection ana resiac not kn ow long he would stay Orsi Stopped him. Do You know the corner frequently is the scene, there
what's on the back of your car?” the motorist asked. Mr. Brasic looked, then gasped. His 3-year. ————-teu {of collisions,
and Mrs, Walter Gay of St. Paul, the 21-year-old airman has been in the Navy for two years. : Aboard the USS Leyte, Mr, Gay handles outer communi
old daughter, Cheryl, was perched Mich. stowed away on a Navy on the bumper. ship ready to depart to the Far 12 Seized in in Gambling ah i F 2s es cations which Returned unhurt to her mother, East. They told Adm. Arthur W. fF | includes using a Cheryl said: “Daddy drives too Radford, who discovered them, Raid at Je ersonvil le OR G. Gay flag hoist, semfast.” ithat they wanted “to see some, JEFFERSONVILLE, July 26 aphore code, and 8.x. action.” Instead of punishing! yp) Twelve persons were ar- \ Sashing light. George Bernard Shaw revealed them. the admiral assigned them! posted and race-betting equip- | T ystem of communications on his 94th birthday today that !0_2 Marine unit en route 10 ment confiscated last night when Demands He Settle ios Ships of the task force he just finished Korea. state police staged a raid here on in constant communication with writing a play in *: at the Idle Hour Cate. Up After Collision each ther ra 4 seven days and is may be the age of atomic ted and charged with op- | 0 r. ay's ship is working on warfare, but the Army still needs eres and rE 2 op 2 out-cf-town visitor was is Quonset Point, Rhode Island, another. The|muleskinners. Maj. Real Desroch-/io nouse were Harry L. CIOgE. poe poionuh & Weapon early to- —— —————— completed pla y|ers, recruiting officer in Chicago, sg Clarksville; Thomas M. Ed- A ng 3h Capitol Ave. | Butler Adviso is a light com- sought recruits for Army mule wards, 27, and Robert Ward, 26, ap ve ry edy entitled/pack outfits. Wanted them “bigpoth of Jeffersonville. The three Ernest 8. Brodericl, 35, New Staff A ointed “The Lady Sheand strong because they push, were released under $250 bond, York City, was cut by a cab pas-| PP e Would Not,” he/not pull.” Ralph Brown Jr.2l,i Nine others, arrested nd Senger at 1 2. pi ir Broderiens Appointment of pre « profes > told friends. {enlisted or a three-year hitch. charged with frequenting a oan lear collided 13 = Daring 1 iv el sional and major advisers to the Mr, Shaw will |Handling mules should be a snap, ing house, were released under P g 'B 7 have only one he said. He used to be an ele-/§100 bond each. {1521 N. Capitol Ave. utler University academic advisMr. Shaw §Uest today—|phant trainer. State. police, who said betting , Mr: Broderick, a guest at the ory board for the fall semester * Gabriel Pascal, | was in progress when they en- Er i ne kee he was announced today by Press producer of some movie versions | E P h {tered the cafe, confiscated books driven by A. D. Francie a ident M. O. Ross. {of his plays. xpect us lot racing tickets, a set of ear-| Fh Of Hilaire Berlock, poet-author | |phones, a public address system| | Yandes » and demanded an|” Members of the board will who will be 80 tomorrow, Mr. For Speed Limit land miscellaneous e quip m ent. | inunediate honey settlement. | assist returning students in plan. Shaw said: “He wants to live to| They said it will be destroyed nen Mr. Broderick sald his in-| ning courses of study, completing be 100. He won't want to when | Pressure is reported rising to-| Aug. 2 surance company would tuke care) he’s 94.” day among advocates of traffic 2 iia iter of the matter, the assailant /d€8Tee requirements, and in iw» safety for the 1951 Hoosler legis- BJ BI Shi Id |whom the cab driver denied know- checking work to be taken preOnly “grestings from Und ve Cross-Blue ie ling, hit Mr. Broderick and cut] [paratory to entering professional 8r gs ncle ature to place a speed limit on his shoulder with a knife or razor.! Sam” will bring him to the sur- ali 1hadiana roads. Publicity Chief Named | ‘Mr. Broderick was treated at| schools, jrace o Lake Shafer, near Monti-| A 60-mile-an-hour daytime and! ‘Richard Miller, 2922 McPherson, Methodist Hospital. | Dr. Nathan E. Pearson, head jcello, Ind., deciared Paul Abbott,] 8t., has been appointed director of, In other crimes throughout the [of the zoology department, will anti-tax crusader who has quar-50-mile-an-hour nighttime speed ©..." ciations for the Indianalcity, Kenneth West, 26, of 1419! advi antined himself in a tank at the|limit was urged at a recent meet-/ 5 Uy ot ield plans | E. Yn St, Loeuapor of an advise students concernihg pre. lake's bottom. “I'll gladly serve!ing of the Indiana Safety Com- These plans are sponsor 1 by the ice cream parlor at 1420 E. Wash- medical, pre-dental, pre-nursing, my Sountry again if I'm. called, mittee. hospital and medical associations ington St., was robbed of $56 in| Pre-medical technology, and pres ut this time T'd like tg be a lit-| The committee is reported ready with offices in Indianapolis. lchange he had stored in a coffee Optometry work. Dr. Ray C.
le 8 - ’ i Be easier tor Fork 8 fi limi#program Bont 11 215 Sree re moana Ws whet mor bbe of on iyooum, He was| Priester, had gt the bataB¥. des 18, Ee “hidden” taxes he Indiana State police will ask In 1946 he joined the public re Taft St. said a man grabbed and | advise pre-forest claimed prevented him from buy. that the general assembly make lations department of the Indi-|tried to rob him as he walked p TY majors. ing a home for his family. ‘speed limits law. The police ana Farm Bureau Co-operative past an alley on Senate Ave.| Other ‘members of the pre. PE pointed out excessive speeds were Association. For the last year he north of Washington St, at 8 Professional advisers group Girdles, bras Ay corsets will involved in 34 per cent of alll served as state chairman of the p. m, yesterday. Mr. Nelson broke clude Dr. Seth E. Elliott, herd
rican Legion, Department of washington Sts., where he called engineering; Dr. A. Dale Beeler of | Indiana, police. the history department faculty, . pre-law; Dr. E. Robert Andry, » = » :
Alfred Merkd, 23 of Chicago to- have lined up behind the speed Blocks and Walks Away Danger Seat
accused pretty 1s at Lege girls at a limit proposal, PHILADELPRIA. Juisif AUIO Crash [tion faculty, education;
dance studio of enticing him into taking 500 hours extra in dancing|creased 24 (UP)-Carl A. Bennard, 24, per cent in rural areas @ It's not the driver who | Ft. Worth, Tex,, will be arraigned gets hurt . . . more often
lessons at a cost of $3782. In filing suit to cancel his debt to the a jot Cent In urban *eaid |on hit-run, reckiess and drunken ’ studio, he charged teachers were They predict 84,000 traffic acci- driving charges. ei on ailing be selected for their “physical beauty dents this year as compared with| Police said Bennard's automo- i mmes., When a symme , ymmetry, Cleopatrian wiles, 73.000 last year. bile struck Jive parked sars @ How to protect YOURSELF in the ‘danger
buying, reported the Formfit Co. |last year. Chicago, manufacturers of foun- | Various state officials, includ-|
dationwear. ing Samuel C. Hadden, chairman! of the state highway commission, Hits 5 Cars in Two
The number of accidents in-|
On what coin did the motto “In God We Trust”
first appear? On the. two-cent pleces issued from 1864 fo 1878. Two-cent of 1872 and 1873 are scarce,
‘What is another name for the. collapsible . ara hat? wi
and Loreleian characteristics,” within two blocks in the downseat”... if an auto crash
town area and a movi autosons when he meant to stop after Kosciuszko Too Long n should happen is told
mobile in another section of the 4 city last night. He was arrested 3 For Two-Block Street [city last night a in PARADE MAGAZINE DETROIT, July 26 (UP)—Resi- badly damaged auto. - next Sunday, § dents of Kosciuszko Ave. said to- - 4 TE ;
ordersiday they would like the name LODGE CARD PARTY SET Cym nr unites fort the SUI dis. ot, ee of Pocahontas, hold a Card party 4t 7:80 p. m.|
