Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1950 — Page 21
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Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola] “ \ The Indianapolis Times : :
HOW DO you feel about the new J. C. Penney Co. building on the Circle? Does the memory of the English Hotel bring a lump of nostalgia in your throat? Believe it or not,.but an “Inside Survey” shows the Penney structure tickles the artistic eyeballs 2a an overwhelming majority of citizens. People like it. And they say they'll like it even more as time goes by. This is most interesting. I happened to be in on the opening sledge-hammer party when the
" wreckers began tearing the English down. Senti-
mental citizens frowned. There were tears and talk of a movement to erect a similar building. When I hauled an Army cot into the lobby (the only part of thé English that had a covering) and thus became the last guest, envious voices beat upon my ear drums. By feeling the pulse of the population, one would think we'd never get over the loss of the landmark. Ha. Get a load of these comments:
Much Nicer Than English
GEORGE HOUSE, 222 Blueridge Rd.—"“I like the Penney building fine. It's much nicer than the English Hotel.” Leona Messenger, 3301 E. 39th St.—“Adds a lot to the Circle. We need more modern buildings in Indianapolis. If they'd only have a bar on the first floor, I'd say the Penney building would be perfect.” (FH go along with that, t00.) Mrs. Richard E. Ringer, Carmel—*"The Penney building is very_attractive. I always liked the English Hotel and Theater but this modern building is such an improvement.”
f
Appealing to the eye . . . Leona Messenger goes along with the majority and says the Penney building is an improvement over the English
Hotel.
_is appealing, I like it. “It’s a great improvement
.mind first, said: “I like the building but I don’t
out of place at this time.”
Mrs. Roscoe Martin, Logansport—‘“Beautiful.| . —— The English Hotel was sort of nice but it belongs] ne : : ; in the past. The Circle will be more attractive ’ ? FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1950 : an _PAGE an
Halowesr, Spirits Start Early Boost i in Gas
V. H. Petry, 9140 College Ave. "Beautiful e- . structure. When it was first started I was unset- About Peopl Supply Here | | Is Assured i
tled about it ‘but now it suits me fine, I don’t even think about the English Hotel anymore.” tw 10 enies Eugene McCormick. 1306 N. Pennsylvania Ave. | Utility Signs for
“I like the Penney building very much. Design is 10 Million Extra
rather advanced for the Trest-of the Circle: t but Cubic Feet Daily
maybe we'll catch up with it soon. It should make a fine impression on visitors.” Citizens Gas & Coke Utility's
Charles Stimming, 5342 Broadway — “I r don’t know why, I like the Penney pulling 5 [long fight to increase its gas sup= {ply has ended with the signing of
I do. It's an improvement over the English Hotel.’ The modern design should catch people's eyes ja natural gas contract with Pan-
without being an eyesore.” E. C. Horn, Bloomington—*“The modern design ‘handle Eastern Pipeline Co. : | Since July, 1948; the local utility
{has been involved in a series of {hearings before the Federal Power {Commission in its attempts to . (have natural gas brought here. | “Before the new supply will start . (flowing into Indianapolis, about {mid- -January, a 26-mile pipeline [will be installed from the Pros= pect St. station to the Panhandle compressor station near Zions{ville. i The connecting line will be con= structed by the local utility at a (cost of approximately $1 million. {A mixing station to combine the natural gas with the local supply {will be needed at the Prospect {plant. It will cost about $500,000. 10 Million Cubic Feet a Day
. The contract signed yesterday i [calls for supply of 10 million cube [feet of natural gas dally. This fig= | ure, however, is subject to revision (to Include additional volume up to two and a half times that
! i
Agent Starts Story
over the English Hotel. I don't miss the English, Star and Aly Khan at all.” . Hugh Waldron, Chicago—"This is my second Will Come to U. S. visit to Indianapolis. I'm a salesman. The first time I saw the building three weeks ago I thought it was going to be a gagage. I can see now it isn’t. Very nice.” _ Heélen Glende, 2124 N. Hawthorne. Lane and Jim A. Beasley, 1411 Shannon Ave, who will be married today (congratilatiohs and a-long and happy life to you both) disagreed on the Penney, Tan building. V With wedding bells sounding in her ears, Miss Glende said: “1 don’t like the modern building very much. I like traditional things. I like the Christ Church on the Circle. The Penney building is too low, too modernistic for the Circle.” Mr. Beasley, who heard his fiancee speak her
Rita Hayworth's agent, John Hyde, set off a dispute when he ‘announced the movie queen and her Moslem Prince husband, Aly Khan, will return __to Hollywood next year so Rita can re-| sume her screen career. “Un founded." | was the immedi- : ate retort from si Columbia Stu- te dios, > Rita's :
i. Ln " i bosses, ™who - like the site it occu ."" (Nicel t, Mr. B . > ike site it occupies cely pu r. Beasely.) added any ane
Mrs. Maxine Harper, 5014 University Ave—"1 2. } - think it’s a beautiful structure but it doesn't seem Rita Hayworth I ounceme nt
right for the Circle.” about. Rita’ tm es screen future would come from, Robert Starr, 5755 Primrose Ave.—"If all the yy. qrudio, not Mr. Hyde .
other buildings were the same, I would like the Penney building more. Even though it is an im- Special Delivery ! provement over the English Hotel, it is a little The Woelker household of De-|
: troit, Mich., set some sort of a record in obstetric synchroniza-| Wants lo Buy It, Tear It Down tion as three sons became fathers| KEITH BRATTON, 3802 N. Pennsylvania St. on the same day. -“I would be glaa to nead a movement to get Mrs. Frederick, Woelker Jr. enough money to buy the Penney building, tear it gave birth to a boy and Mrs. down and, restore the English Hotel te .the last Robert Woelker had a girl at one
creak and cobweb.” ‘ hospital yesterday while a third amount whan approved by FPG, A great many people merely sald they like the brother's wife, Mrs. John Woel- + If might have heen an early call the wit : i i > Start of construction on the new addition to the Circle and hurried off. One ker, gave birth to a girl at an- 9 " y by the witches-. . . but Mrs. Audrey Christensen, 206 N. |
Envy . : Cle oe connecting line is anticipated 1 man wanted to know how people are going to Other hospital. Gray St., found three pumpkins {which she didn't plant) growing in her back yard. She shows her "| November utility A pm, il
breathe inside since there aren't any windows. Hany Rebels nephew, Pat McKinzie, 5, of 23 N. Gray, what a Jack O'Lantern should look like. {when a shipment of the 16-inch - Objections were far and few between. y pipe is expected.
In this citizen's opinion, we're going to appre- | The Confederate soldiers, who 14 VY t S { & ed | At the Prospect St. plant, 18 ciate its beauty with each passing day and some-|are making good a boast they, 0 es e ara e ea ers di ers pp million cubic feet of local gas will day tears will be shed when it makes way for would “outlive” their Union con-
a new design. querors, closed the 60th annual in Stenographer Cont test be ined with the Panhandle sup=
Now, if you have any views on the subject, reunion of Confederate veterans In Home Loans | Although the utility originally ) {planned to increase its natural
Cheering Note
Storie is veterans able to attend. leaders in The Times search for By LARRY STILLERMAN
NEW YORK, Sept. 29—Through some mys- * terious circumstance, involving a man named Joe Copps, I found myself in Toledo the other day, to midwife some celebrations involving a new railroad station the New York Central had erected, involving a cost of $5 million. A southern lady, the wife of one of the Se brators, was heard to say: “I never saw so much carryin’-on over a new dee-poe In all my born days.” The lady was right. One whole week of huzzahs was devoted: to the station. Fleet Adm. Nimitz was on hand to lend the global military touch. At one count there were 18 foreign newspapermen and 19 press agents, until one extra newshound, sniffing the $7.50 lunch, strayed from a.murder and stumbled in to even the tally at 19 all. The Hollywood hams came later, .
Bets Stockholders’ Money
FOR ONE whole week they shook the state of Ohio upside down to herald the birth of a building in which trains and passengers dwell, and I thought it was kind of fine. Anything is fine, in this day and age, that does not package itself with the threat of sudden extinction. Here is a nasty old capitalistic outfit like the Central, which all of a sudden bets a wad of its stockholders’ money that nobody is going to blow up the world, and in the meantime the customers have a cleaner toilet and more comfortable place to set. There isn’t even a bomb shelter under the station. A flock of us were up in the dispatchers’ new offices, and the boys were doing great with radio telephones, routing trains -all around. If you slid back a drawer ‘a mite, you saw that every one still had a Morse code bug, or sending instrument, tucked away under the stationery. The phone is fine, but these lads still based their deepest faith on dah-dit-dah, tapped out with one finger. We talked for a considerable spell with the Qispatchers, and I asked one what would happen if the Russians suddenly parachuted a mess of
Times Staff Writer a {schedule. : DETROIT, Sept. 20 America's! 15 Year Contract This move would not be made until completion of a Panhandle today, sure their home loan port-|sunsidiary pipeline which will put (folios will be reduced in propor- more gas into the system in No= tion to the amount of new housing | vember, 1951.
saboteurs on the rail centers of our world, and But at the end of a round of con-| “Miss Stenographer of Indiandecided to foul up communications. vention activities he said another polis.” y “Not much,” said one, named Steve. “All the reunion will be held, declaring: | Leading the stenographers in boys who are talking to me on the other end “We outfought the Union Arnsy! the second vote tabulation “is know my voice. They wouldn't pay any mind and we'll outlive them.” " [Miss Rita Hegarty, of the State to a stranger. ‘Wouldn't get away with it for a There are only nine surviving Gross Income Tax Division. Sec-
I open mail every morning and read every word. in Biloxi, Miss, today with the How do you feel about it? y announcement, Another session Winner to Receive as Intake t i ft 28 ‘will be held in Norfolk, V t | : 8 0 8 Malmo | e n Norfolk, Va., nex Gold-Plafed Typewriter | Amount Depends on million cubic feet a day during a . i. three year period, national de- ( { . By Robert C. Ruark “Gent. Jags, Movre,, 39, or Sei By ABT WRIGHT New 1951 Housing fense plans may call for attempts . Ark. was the only one of 22 Only 14 votes separate the two to reach the maximum ahead of |
mortgage bankers started home
minute.” |GAR veterans since the death of ond is Mrs. Audry Howard, of the next vear. | Elliott G. Peabody, assistant to ~The method of following the progress of trains its national commander, Theo- headquarters of. the Retail, | ‘And that'll be by 40 per cent, the general manager of the local hasn't changed, basically, since about 1900, which 'dore Penland, recently. The Wholesale and Department Store !maybe more. : utility, said it was unlikely that
sort of comforts me in an age of jet plane and Grand Army held its final muster Union (CIO). Third is Miss guided missile. People at the watch-stations where in Indianapolis two years ago. |Bea Clemons of the Congress of the trains pass call in the necessary dope to the! ‘Industrial Organizations.
Today ‘Sen, John Sparkman natural gas would be available [(D. Ala.) urged greater building for heating private homes this
p TL bani i a ¥ yi rials, winter, central board, and the man writes it down in| IM Hopalong | Other entrants are: er ios _— The new connecting line will ink on a sheet. If the freight's gét hogs that have, The name was familiar, but of- urs. Joyce Kelsey, of the Ayrshire Lolo Istruction sails. |extend from the Prospect 8t, to be walked every so often, the man knows it. ficials of the Mid-South fair in ries dee? Wilkerson, RCA | Sen. Sparkman also expressed {plant to 10th St. and Ind. 100 and
He is even conversant with the quality of tomatoes ‘Memphis, Tenn., couldn't place the ®t Rer Kingan & Co. Miss Lucille Millen °
. ; fears "the Indus has come to|along the Zionaviile Rd, north to that some rail-borne tugboat™i{§ chuffing over a face when a lost 3-year-old boy Miller, Broad Ripple High School office; a e try
{depend too heavily upon the gov-|the compressing plant.
steep hill. [Drought to the Fair office insisted Motor Vehicies Miss mma Ruth. Colina. Miss Lois Du f Indi. eroment.” Yesterday's contraet ni e was a cowboy named Hopa.!Jefferson National Lite Insurance Co.; Mrs 15s Lois ncan, ‘0 n vu signed to , cover 15 years ; "Dorcas Clark, Wash- : ! | rges Decentralization Rugged Individualists long. A broadcast of * “Hopalong’s” (Lich Buns ite Co Mie kipine anapolis Morris Plan, is a can- | pe Sy further de- service. r™M NoT MUCH on trains, as a hobby, but| [escription yes he Jap ¢ bublic govce KE Poll of CG. A. Bass & Co; MIs. didate for the title of "Miss centralization of decisions and you can’t help but admire the rugged, even stuffy | N Syslam br ie "l and ifs Ducal, indianapoils Morris Flin: Stenographer.” administration for ‘ ‘we should, individualism of the men who run them. They! tified “H n 0 en-irian Btarkey, New York Lite Insurance; o : guard against building up 2 cenall Jook ke Toserve maj. generals ang a young Oppy™ as their son, Leslie. t inistration: ils Caroline *N~ Tym ne | ear postmarked by midnight tralinty administrative bureaucpresident of a line 1s in his 00's ey're all sore Beef a la Potatoes Columbia investment "Cos Miss Carol A style show will be held at the "ey: as hell at the competition of airline and steam Oscar of the | Moorhead, Ger-Bar Inc Theater Supply Indi yolis T it 0. hen He said, however, that the govboat, all of which seem to get fat government Waldorf, oo it go: Mim guia Brown, Indiana Trust ndianapolis Typewr er Co. ead- lor nment must fill the housing subsidies. Maybe they're just jealous. DF Lite Insurance Co.; Mrs Margaret Reckley jquarters tonight. , The typewriter
famous connois-| New York Central System; Miss Mildred | |Rmpany is co- operating with The gap in lower price Seids." vacated”,
; i b, rivate bullders, seur of food|pkeiey, Lele Colvin Contracting Co.; {| Times in staging the “Miss Ste- y, n operative ventures in houses. Returned to Cell Who's dished out Miss Kay Harvey. Indiaha Trust ne nographer” contest. |coming from “the career men in foi : gourmets tare thes Batiy Dovers. Indiana Gus al collectivism” - were blasted ~ by In Re rmatory or rinces and $5 e Simpson, mpsona ewelry | clals : Presidents more feat © a w gi Sentral 5 Appoint Three Troopers Rodney M. Lockwood, past preal-| Indiana RetoPmstory of ' than 50 years, ply Co. Miss Phyllis Jones. Blue Cro To State Polic F dent of the National Association today returned to his cell a fuglcelebrated his fprurance Co I ae. Laie Wiats, e Force of Home Builders. He followed tive who was captured by city po-
Lis 84th birthday Anyone may vote any number, Appointment of three new state the Senator on the speakers’ lice Mast night after a six-mile,
Trains do run slow, compared to the iron birds, | and they bump on the tracks—and the ticket §& system seems unduly ponderous, but today they| are comforting. They argue a permanence, an a old-fashioned way of doing business, a disregard’ A of hysteria, that seems pretty wonderful. ? A flock of ancients from an old people’s home #8 were in the new Central Union.Terminal for to j=
= a - 5 a
see and to‘admire, and they just couldn't get over ex TOI ALY 4 police troopers was announced to- rostrum, . the fancy fixin's and the glass and the do-jiggers. & a rer of trues ror any “the list by fling pou by Fo Arthur M. Thurston. Agsociation committee apnoint. bullet-punctuated chase. They oched and ahed and allowed as how they cooking” boiled out a coupon clipped from The Edgar A. Liking, Connersville ments for next year were an- Trueman Cail Lock, 26, surnever figured to live to see the like. Oscar beef with boiled Times or one obtained at Indian- 2nd Edgar B. Harger, Noblesville, nounced, rendered in the 6800 block of That was pretty comforting, too. Old fashiofiéd potatoes on the side. apolis Typewriter .Ca 23- 27 E.|Will be assigned to the Lafayette Paul F. Pfister, Terre Haute, Jackson St. last night after two progress has finally come to rail centers in Ohio, Maryland St. post and Walter F. Lamar, Hag- was named to the farm loan com- police bullets punctured the car
and it is nice to reflect that some are still alive Fraulein Portia | Th lerston, to Indianapolis head- mittee and H. Duff Vilm,.Indian- he was driving. who never reckoned to see it bloom. These eld Miss Sadie Belle Arbuthnot, Or-| 1 D¢ stenographer getting thelquarters. All appointments are apolis, new MBA governor, was Louls Barnes, 23, the man with
‘Dry’ States
codgers never once asked about the presence of Jando, Fla. who studied nights| M05t votes will be awarded effective next Monday. named to the research committee, 'whom Lock escaped Wednesday a radio-activity decontamination room. for her law degree while working | Tee end ip to New York with Pr , In a stolen prison truck, is still. {as a secretary in the Justice De-|® 1 expenses paid, plus a gold- The ‘Pigeon Woman’ Is Dead— at large. Police sald Lock told {plated Underwood typewriter.
.® {partment daily, will become the| ° @ : * u | them Barnes was in Indianapolis By Frederick C. Othman first woman judge of the U. S. Second pod turd piace entrants Police Find Body of Birds as late as yesterday evening.
‘court system in German. ‘She'll
WASHINGTON, Sept. 29—As you well know, I prefer a. cranberry juice .cocktail myself. But others have differing tastes and I must report, ‘without fear of the ladies of the WCTU, that my spies in the dry hinterlands have turned up some peculiarly damp news. "Take Oklahoma, which though dry, has 943 citizens paying federal taxes of $27.50 each as retail liquor dealers. They're legal as far as the federals are concerned, but bootleggers in the view of state enforcement agents. Most of these gentlemen handle standard brands of liquor smuggled into Oklahoma, but one of them—according to my man in the ex-Indian territory—bottles his own under his private label. This is a handsomely printed sticker in black and yellow and bears his name and address In case his customefs care to order refills.
"Moonshiner Near.White House
ABOUT 10 BLOCKS frond the White House here the other day the cops smelled an old familiar odor in a garage. Boiling mash. They raided the place and found a’ moonshiner going full blast. Some of the legitimate distillers claim—and I
- could quote 'em if I had room—that there is more
. bootleg liquor béing sold in America today-than the genuine article. Taxes have made the latter $0 expensive that only the prosperous can afford
be sworn in next Tuesday and 2Ple typewriters. The two fugitives abandoned you-don't schemes in the history of booze. A little gsgigned to 11th judicial district , 1 De Person writing the best let- Faith "Friend i in Home the truck near Fortville Wédnesthing Ed Jey a vote. Ir Bad Kissingen. . a ne h fied {day when they saw a state police e sawyers will vote. | oe ) | | diy whet they they approve, and there seems to be an excellent Off Her Chest ~~ stenographer , whe finally . wins, Ms. Dortha Hunter Delle City Law je Feed P City police discovered Lock's chance of it (this saddens me), Arkansas will be| A shoplifter whose sagging up-|als0 Will feceive an Underwood Them and They Had the Wing of Her House presence’ here after an acquaint-
dry except that every man, woman and child in lift was her downfall faced three Portable typewriter. Vote may bel 10 oo 0 orieve, those of Inthe state can own legally one quart of schnapps-—/months in jail ‘In“ Keene, N. H., isent in with or without a nomi- ianapolls are doing so today. if he can buy it illegally. today. Police said Mrs. Eleanor Dating letter. No longer will a figuré long ‘The drys, who got 53,000 signatures on their Stinson, ‘33, outstripped Florida All votes must be in The Times| familiar walk among them in Unipetition to put this one on the ballot, claim it i3{telephone girls when she unloaded \versity Park scattering feed from for the benefit of tourists visiting the many her prassiere for police who ar- a crumpled paper sack, beauties of the state. The idea is that a fellow ested her on suspicion of shop: Mrs. Dortha I. Hunter, cham going to Arkansas on a slow train may bring lifting. "In it she had concealed pion of thé city's embattled along a jug to while away the time.” And since {y, toy guns, a necklace, a brace- pigeons, is dead he’s going to spend his money there, it would be jot fy toy automobiles, a small The “Pigeon Woman,” as she a shame to jail him. ack o lantern, two pairs of was known to hundreds of down-
i The wets, and I do believe my operative jeans ; TN y panties and a pen and pencil set. , town office workers, was found in their direction, retort that the law doesn’t s 1) dead last night in her home, 2945
tourists. It says, everybody. So they claim that! ‘Short Rations ! Park Ave. an army of hootleggers now is poised at Arkansas’'| Army Reservist Pat Giglio, 36, With her in death were many borders, waiting to see whether it will be profitable {jtjca. N. Y., has been ordered to, of her favorite pigeons and a to Hivage. i” I bi lactive duty Oct. 9. His wife is large tame crow ever there was a hocus-pocus pro on wondering how ,she’ll support| > law, I guess this one is it. But-I befter not over- ‘their family on His $132 monthly| Neighbor Calis Pulice look Mississippi, which is a bone dry state, it says pay ‘and $85 family allowance | That was the scene that greeted
ance with whom he and Barnes stayed Wednesday night called police to report Lock had tried to retrieve a gun Barnes left there - Lt. Ray Porter spotted Lock driving in the 3800 block W. 10th 8t., where Lock’s mother lives. He gabe chase and called for assistance, Another squad car joined the pursuit. ; Lock was originally sentenced to the Reformitory from here in April, 1945, on a charge of assault ‘arid battery with intent to rape. He was paroled in 1947, but parole was revoked last August after he was convicted of disorderly conduct
here. | potice last night after they were ! : they have nine children. [called by a neighbor of Mrs. Local Soldier Pay U.S. Tax, Spurn State “Yea, Rah Team’ - ‘Hunter who had become ~larmed
Missing in Action
| Pfc. -Larry Loveless, 20, som
lat not seeing activity in the home. |8he may have been dead since (Wednesday.
THIS MAKES the Bureau of Internal Revenue| A’ young Negro with a third 4 laugh. Exactly 2064 whisky dealers have paid 8rade education made the highest
to imbibe. hieved intelli oir ronment tax i ii ¢ (score ever achie on an in And that brings us to Arkansas, where I was I ar 3 hy with 8 Musi They pay so (gence test at Atlanta, Ga., induc- In falling health ror some time, jot Mrs. . Mona Loveless, 1124 able to purchase once a jar of white mule 80 jiiije attention to the state agents, apparently,|tion center, Army officials an- Mrs. Hunter nevertheless did not | Beecher St. hase been reported salubrious that I almost gave up my addiction t0 ip a¢ it is easier to buy a drink in dry Mississippi |™ juounced, Lowest ever made there Mice Ann Wurster is a Kingan fail her feathered friends at feed- missing in action in Korea. cranberry juice. About 40 counties of the 75 in (pa. in. 24 other states that are wet. as by a college justior with a & Ce tront Th Tio ing time downtown. Her ap- Mrs. Loveless, Arkansas still are dry by local option. I only wish that I could sit down over a bowl | a football record. The a.entrant in e 1imes |pearances, however, had become {a widow, has My’ private eye in Little Rock reports that of fruit juice and discuss this sorry situation with test 18 designed for those with search for the city's outstanding much shorter in duration. ~~ _ : [heard no further excellent white mule still can be bought there. He my old and good friend, the president of the Sh BTade education or less. stenographer. And recently she had seemed to rs. Dortha L. Hunter Iword since a Decharges further that the drys have foisted upon WCTU. 1 believe even she would agree that some-|. - . ; : Jae the: fre. which had burned the Birds. Went Tutt fuodue word) nae : Departs - = o! . . v ’ e that state one of the wierdest now-you-drink-now-. how something’s mighty damp. ; “#)ISS STENOGRAPHER OF INDIANAPOLIS” sy % on gin ony . | te ty 0 TE re Ren I Rt CONTEST _Over the years hers had been they liked. [her that her son frag ere {4 one Y 0 ier an 0 Sponsored by The Times and the Indianapolis Typewriter | |, cam campaign In defiance of Over the years, the Hunter had disappeared. _Co., 23-27 E. Maryland St. : any effort to slaughter the coo- Nome had become a pigeon mec- Her last letter Here's What Our * i Special’ hospitality services as well as to plays, movies and 1 vote for the following person as “Miss Stenographer of ing birds. Twice she was arrest-| C8: Only a few were permitted from Pfc. Love{begin in in, the following churches other athleticevents. . Indianapolists —— ee es “Ted and released without penalty | Hriside; but on thé telephone and less was WritCity Has to-Offer sunday: ist, Second) The F in its upcom- : A it hen: de- ght wires about the house they ten Aug. 3 in : | fan By GALVY GORDON Pres! Roberts Park Meth ing Dairy Bx osition will provide Her Name ERE PATER CFIA I PN) signed DE at to. curd ner | > balanced gs wing. Several Caljfomia,_ prior Pic. Loveless ; : ; odist and Christ Episcopal. {special services for soldiers. = pbs undr: oun refuge in the to: his shipping What to do and where to go. Emphasis has been on every, Some Indianapolis theaters are -Where She WORKS Lovaas suatsstonsaiTiviieessssassyensls et the ny. ast Toco ladon! garage. J out for Korea. It's the age-old problem of the oo mily adopting a serviceman for permitting servicemen in uniform Her Home Address :. 4 salt Intver ity Park to elim.| Mrs. Hunter, who was 66, lived] He had enlisted Apr. 12, 1048, military man on pass or week-end; the day to enter free. The YMCA can pro- . sesssrercancarnbosaimisasreesenssees | traps in University Park to.elim-.., . Her hysband, a retired and received one leave that sum- - entertainment ant, Siroughout y : inate the birds, the pigeons alleave: following church * lvide &n up-to-date list. YOUR NAME casssnsrernreisisnssrsisisbsssssnnsaresnnssnrs ' raliroader, dled more than a year mer, during which he had celeThe 35,000 soldiers training at Excellent library y Tactitios here! Downtown university cénters, ways fespouded Yo ey call and ago. A daughter, Mrs. Viola Hun- brated his 18th birthday; at home Samp Atterbury 31% ho excepting, await servicemen with a literary such as Purdue and Indiana Uni- Home Address “eesanbarsssassnresaserrineaihecitertsininaty Minced tor artoririgs danger O ter, lives. in CHicagy. Ch “Aug. 12. n second week: 4%: . She was born ifn Richmond and! Mrs. Loveless has WO 18 the second wei sud Sines 1AM — AM NOT — (circle one) enciostng a nominat- | | 4100 a newspaper vendor. she had-lived in Indianapolis 46 years. ters, Mrs. Vonetia Howell Inia le at Camp Atterbury from } that many will in: ing letter. is would. set down a bundle of pa-| - Funeral services will be held at | Mrs. Verna Adams, both of Indi‘wade the city. Mall this coupon to: ‘Miss Stenographet 0 of Indianapolis,” pers at any moment in favor of|{10 a. m. Monday in Flanner and anapolis, and two other sons, ~ Here is. what is available in Tndithapole THOSE W. Maryand Ss ot] [ner flying friends. ome, Now oi era PE Fh mn 4 Ha-- ) in Le isl Ste wing of her Homie, Nous. ot be in Gro _. _y ci fc 3 wr m— i 67 ———— yee RO RON \ \ : : a 2 > te : 5 + : LA + eT A fant peso 2 { ; ~ a * Ey ; ; : A A > \ Z 23 % aie = Ei ET i
