Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 March 1951 — Page 3
oy
sultant Joard
for John L, 2 p. m, MonEvangelical burial will be ery. . He was .
sday in Long at 835 Park-
years he had tant for the alth, division
p resident of 8 a member ch, secretary men’s League ,ocal Branch sociation for
1e State post ims gdjuster ire Insurance
wife, Pauline, Donald and father, John lis.
yesterday in M. Skinner, igh School onal baseball wursday. no was 56, rom 1926 to 1 years was 0 University He taught college and ounting servyears. f World War from Butler, ago Univerprofessiongl innati Reds, nd Minneaping are his rs,
Savings account ylanned o your eds will and your ity dollars. younded gs, avails and insure to $10,000 und retire-
Social ) NOW ;
TLE JUTE TI
"to be the vehicle which struckd
‘ re
oy
| SATURDAY, MAR. 3, 1051
pat and Race
- “Sprint Ends as
Elevator Fails
Never try to hoodwink a copper. A 24-year-old man tried to . with an overcoat this morning and got a punch .in the nose. Robert Crooks—whose trade is anti-crooks—and a fellow poiice ‘officer, Joe Chestnuts, had arrested Jack W. Smith, 3025 Central Ave, on a disorderly. conduct charge, -
While being slated, Smith sud denly pulled his overcoat over the head of Turnkey Robert L. Meyer. Officer Meyer countered with a . blind smashing right to Smith's jaw and a push. Sprained Hand Smith landed. in a cell and Officer . Meyer headed for General Hospital and treatment for a sprained hand. Another officer, Arthur Myers, noticed that someone Had broken the window on his car parked | next to the Police Station and| two boxes of bullets were taken. 3 Next to his car war the auto of | Patrolman Eugene Krackenfels,| Is It had a broken front window 3 and a shirt had been taken. : At this point Officer Arthur = Myers checked to be sure his|: badge and gun were still in place : and was pleased to think that the: Chief was home fast asleep. The |: Chief’s car would have been] parked across from the two which were robbed had he been at head- | quarters,
Spirited Pursuit Meanwhile two of Officer Art’ fellow members of the finest had |S = # gpotted two men fleeing from the = cars and took off in a cruiser in = spirited pursuit. A record for the course from)
stayed with them. dashed into. the hotel, an automatic elevator. :
p. With both hands, both of them |= . slapped at the buttons—any floor |Z » . would Hie
get Buu {t didn’ ty The door| a ; quite closed. A safety de 0 0 Vi ence . yice had trapped‘ them. Arrested on a. pre- er charge were George H. Johnson, 22, of 1224 W. New York St. and| gar omp p ion James A. Montgomery, -17, of '1478| U. S: May Wind Up
W. Market St. os | Its Case Monday : By United Press
Man Critically. Injured | In Hit, Run Accident . |
if the thing. would Just, Sn
Debbie Reynolds is winding up for her plunge to stardom. She's been named as one of the fastest rising movie youngsters of“the past year, and already her studio has plans to boost her up to the top. Don’t you think she has the proper. form to dive into a big-time career?
> ann
Gls’
DATELINE: Hollywood :
: flakes into 10-foot drifts
3
-
HUN an nae
Bodies Found Wihere
a
Red Ambush Caug ht Them
Communists Steal ou From Dead;
Among Victims Was
x
‘Their Daddy’ :
By WILLIAM CHAPMAN
ited Press Sta
f! Correspondent
i WITH THE U. 8. MARINES IN HOENGSONG, Korea, Mar. 3+
WASHINGTON, Mar. 3 (UP)— The bodies of an undisclosed numbér of American soldiers were
Police today searched for al government ‘may complete found today sprawled in mud and water where they had been shot
smashed right headlight, believed |
1937 Chevrolet’ coupe with al its ‘case Monday against Oscar down thres weeks ago by ‘ambushing Chinese ‘Communists two |Collazo, charged: with slaying a Iles ar A Hoengsong. -
yester Ww “William “Led rwood, : N. Villa St., ers 004. 65 o tote Monday, the federal, cour
t fl {jury will hear FBI ballistics exeral Hospital With Jraciures © pert George A. Berley resume his|
{testimony on who fired the fatal shots in the abortive assault on
both legs. Witnesses said the car sped ~west on Michigan St= without stopping. Kenneth Graham, 37, of 1506 S. Emerson Ave, was taken to Veterans Hospital, Rd., after being knocked from his motorcycle by a car at Prospect St. and Churchman Ave. Police said he suffered a broken! left leg.
Crash Kills One Driver,
Heart Attack Another
A Bloomington man and a Sil-| ver Lake housewife died in sep- ever, that Collazo admitted short-| arate traffic accidents.
Blair House last Nov. 1 Collazo’s defense
|
demands for the Island's inde-| pendence.
sassinate the President.
urt |W!
apparently | will be that he and his cocon-|53id Sgt. Virgil Street,
Cold Spring spirator, Griselio Torresola, mere-|. ly intended to stage a demonstra-| tion to draw attention to the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party |And don’t think we'v
Collazo has denied in court that| he ever intended to try to shoot his way into Blair House to as-
|ly after the shooting that he and!
“Back, - a, ho found them.
&¥ings-
|
ever seen,” said Marine Lt. Col. {Harry T. Milne, of Dallas, Ore.| “It was horrible.” “We have counted something) like (censored) bodies already,”
i
|
|Tex., a Marine tank commander.| Most were around the convoy) land some were up in the hills {where the men ran to get away.
lof them yet.” |
Four Survivors Four survivors of the massacre, ~-two Americans and two South| |Koreans—were found' by U.
|pitals. Cne GI was wounded and {one was suffering from frostbite. | The ambushed men were in a
Dallas,
§. more, Md.
Prose- chance.” M rines. All were taken to hos-| cution witnesses testified, how-| RIines. e
‘ehattored -vehieles and
run or fight. Today, three weeks
“It’s. as bad as anything I've|later, their bodies lay where they! ‘Mrs. Mamie Johnson
had fallen. “I've seen a lot of dead people, but I've never seen "anything as bad as this,” said Marine Cpl. {Phil Larue, Los Angeles, Cal. Legs Tied Together The bodies of two soldiers lay together about 30 yards from the! road. Both were face down. The legs of one GI were tied together.
e found all goty had been shot in the back Frankfort, Ky. and had lived here
{of the head with burp guns.
“They were slaughtered,” said [Marine Cpl. John O. Wedel, Balti-
Fifty yards away, a Korean!
/baby lay dead on. a rice field! levee. Four hundred yards up the!
Wililam Brewer, 66, suffered a Torresola came to Washington oq Division convoy Pulling back road, the body of a Korean wom-
heart attack and died yesterday to, kill Mr. Truman
as he was driving one mile south phe jaw provides that it makes
of Bloomington. Mrs. Lottie Daub, 54, reeceived fatal injuries when the car in which she was riding was struck! by another on Ind. 15, nine miles north of Wabash,
White House
the automobile, injuries.
the murder.
Feb. 12 under pressure of an overwhelming Chinese attack on
no difference whether Collazo or|the central front, Torreslo fired the gun that killed
In the convoy were 25 trucks,
Policeman Leslie three tanks, two armored half- got. Coffelt. The law provides that if tracks and several jeeps. The Chi- letter said: a killing occurs during an armed nese attacked from ambush in Her husband, Otto, driver of house-breaking any person taking/the valley north of Hoengsong./to come home. I suffered minor|part in the crime shares guilt for|
‘flashes of fire,
an lay half in the ditch. And fluttering forlornly in a. muddy ‘rice field was the last let-| ter a young American soldier ever| Its blue ink blurred, the!
“Gee, I'll be glad when you get love you so
In the darkness, split by lethal much, Honey, and I wish you were | going aground on a reef off the American and here with us. We need our daddy.” Mesican coast yesterday.
Blackwood on Bridge—
“or
We, the Women—
Things Better Left Unsaid
By RUTH MILLETT EVEN if it's true, never remind your husband: That you warned him against taking a step that
turns out badly.
That he isn't as young as he was and is beginning to show it. That he doesn’t seem to love you as much as he used to. That he made a fool of himself, at last night's party. That he wouldn't be where he is today, except for your help. That one of his former rivals is doing better financially than he is. That you are the hard-headed, practical member of the family. Of the quarrel that has been settled and supposedly forgotten. “© oS PH
“OF THE times he has let you down in the past. Of any occasion when he made a serious : mistake in judgment. Ruth Millett Of any incident of a friend's disloyalty he has chosen to overlook or forget. That his parents don't ‘seem to like you or have faults he seems unaware-of. That he hasn't given you as much materially as you excted. Pe That he has ‘“changed’—in a tone of voice that implies, “and not for the better.” That you wish he wouldn't do this and wouldn't do that. That you are perfectly eapable of looking out for yourself ° in any kind of situation.
sntered.. the. -bank- and- rey
| She i Methodist Church.
“They didn’t have 2| Edna
- - i 4 y " " y rr ET I TTT — Toit, Lp % a } wa
Hoosier Profile By Tom Hicks i “x
“WE TRY to help the girls here, not punish them.” That's the philosophy of the Indiana Women’s Prison as voided By Mrs, Loretta Neff, superintendent. ’ “We feel that the loss of their freedom and separation from their friends and loved ones are punishment enough,” she said as she looked proudly out her office: window onto the prison’s grounds, which resemble a college campus, But for the barred windows, a.casual observer would think-he was looking at any American college: Mrs, Neff likes her work. She lives it, eats it and breathes it. And it shows up in the prison’'s smooth operation. After 10 minutes with her, a person Teulizes that this is her “life.” *
FORMERLY from Anderson, Mrs. Neff is the widow of Harry G. Neff, prominent Anderson . lawyer who died several years ago. She is a former schoolteacher and has worked all her life and Ontario. in social organizations and social service work. The Weather ‘Bureau said it|- “After I lost my husband,” Mrs. Neff said, ““T was ‘far more intense” than a|Was feeling so sorry for myself that I thought similar storm earlier this week|there just wasn't anything left for me.” which had been the worst of the] ‘When I was offered this job I took it in hope winter to that time, that it would take up my time and give me some- : Snow fell 18 inches deep at|thing to do. It has.” : Aberdeen, 8. D. and depths of Mrs. Neff likes to talk dbout the prison. When 15 Inches were common. Fifty- she does, a sparkle comes into her eyes. The mile-an-hour ‘winds piled the sparkle is that of a person doing a good job. that Her eyes contain another light. That comes blocked roads, stopped trains and when she speaks of her two granddaughters in halted air travel. Anderson. They are the children of her son,
Freezing rains, south as far as ow 8 rage mechanic. : ; Nlinois. Indiana = and Missouri ost of these girls aren't really bad,” she
: sald. “They just got a bad break somewhere. stopped fssses and foreed otor- - When ‘a person sees their family background, you wonder how they are as good as they are. Pg ow propped here Rarly “We: are interested in them. I have to be a - warned ctherori tot ne 2 au lawyer, doctor and confessor. They come to me Way, With high Wonder ne B oe with their problems. Each girl has her own sumed shortly after dawn. individual ones-and«they -ajl need solving.
oe oo oo
At Spring Valley, Wis., 700 per- y = sons spent most of the night at “ONE of our "biggest problems,” Mrs. Neff the Spring Valley. High School|Said, “is-the fact that girls leaving the prison gymnasium, singing, dancing and |after serving their sentences are not given playing games after wind and| ‘8atage.” This is the money given most prisoners snow piled 10-foot drifts around as they leave penal institutions. the town and blocked their routes “Somewhere along tne line,” shé sald, “we lost home from a high school basket- out on that and we have to take that money out ball tournament. All but about Of our welfare fund.” 75, whose road home to Grants-| The prison’s welfare fond is produced by (burg, Wis, remained blocked,| half the money the women make at outside | were removed by 4 a. m. work such as the lnundry at the Indiana School Smr——————— | for the Blind. Half the nioney goes. to the | women and the other half to the welfare fund.
Two Men Swindle | Mrs. Neff lives in a pleasant apartment in the ‘Woman of $1 300 prison’s administrationtbuilding. She answers all
incoming phone calls at night and says she gets A 57-year-old Indianapolis wom-
an today mourned the loss of)
SHEET IN INDIANAPOLIS
ccount to the pockets of two - = \swindlers who worked * the old EVENTS TODAY.
inet Storm Blow to Transport
Worst Blizzard of Season Traps Hundreds
By United Press MINNEAPOLIS, Mar. 3—The season's worst blizzard, the second big storm in two days, trapped hundreds of persons amidst giant snowdrifts today and almost paralyzed transportation over much of the Midwest, The storm struck along the “blizzard path” through the Dakotas and swept almost due east through Minnesota and northern Wisconsin before veering northeastward toward Upper Michigan
' Of Prison ‘Campus’
many calls from lonely relatives hoping’ to talk to one of the inmates. - ° “I don’t mind it,” she says, “I'm glad there is someone that is interested in them.” Besides her work, Mrs. Neff's favorite pase. times are reading and watching television. She is a 1922 graduate of Indiana University and is a member of Delta Gamma social sorority, Tri Kappa and Altrusa, She is still active in social work in Anderson but can't find as much time for it as she'd like. > 0b “WE'RE PROUD of the appearance of the grounds,” she says. “One thing that gives us a great deal of pleasure is to remember the time three carloads of children drove in and sald they wanted to register. They had -mistaken “the prison for Technical High School.” . “We're here to see that our girls are taught to lead better lives when they leave,” sald Mrs. * Neff. Coming from some persons, that statement might sound old and overworked, but coming from Mrs. Neff it was as fresh and meaningful as the flowers that soon will be blooming on the prison’s grounds.
Mrs. Loretta Neff . . . "These girls aren't
ag ut Hears we 90 Much Lying’
Billy, Anna Wallace; Carl, Pauline Cal-
Thets Chi Frate nity —Annual, _ Bate At’ Go Colem Robe, Xabi 1 C atesnll - “pigeon. drop game on her. Alpha Tai” Omers—Siate 1 Day, Claypool ss ior Hs wir i Rerimer-
Mrs. Lily Richards told police - GIRLS
she had just left the Fletcher, tndistaptt, symphony. Oreheir—Con- 1 mami: Pane ne, Joes Fulbright Refers . Savings’ & Trust Co. yesterday ™ferianss Basho: Bociasmentoor:| W, loth: Charles, Mary’ coleman, Hi when a man “about 35” struck up|_ler Fieldhouse. TW gh ES ee * fh enolis *How- To RFC Testimony a conversation with her. Almoct| Nei conteriing Tournament YMCA. Defane. 1a N 5 Cali Francis, Elsie ‘By United Press : “ Through Hotel. .... |At Methodist— . vmediately, Spothe: mai aboot rough tomorrow Lincoln Hotel A V er il ly Sars WASHINGTON, Mar. 3—8en, | + e vin, Sylvia ik; H said today the street that he sald was “full EVENTS TOMORROW NV Sisn_Cam a J, Wiriam Fulbright
Indianapolis. Symphony Zhen St. Franels_-Paul Jesephine Barker:
of money.” hestral, All Request Program, 3 p. m.,|_ , Nancy Horton:* Robert, Virginia urat Theater. Ashman,
The second‘man offered to split| State Conference of Printing Pressiner— At
that “I've never heard so much lying In my life” as during heare
silence. Mrs. Richards agreed, ro- Cecll, Anna Spears.
Indiana Association of 1 hrough Wednesd TL Li nee Ingutgies--
SMAAK TS
__ PAGE--8 Mrs. Nef’s Proud
the billfold" Last day, Lincoln Hotel, Ten Mario hen rivia | Brant; SOR] on 0! rie : - i : i 9 Did's.contents three ways | Low omas, Jr.—All-Color Motion] Pauline. Phelps. amey Wayne, ings on the Reconstruction Fi(if Mrs. Richards would put up al Picture and Lecture—''Inside Forbidden | At St. a nent s—Eugene, Joan Humbles; sum sufficient to guarantee hes ree Hockey Cups vo Pittsmreh, | Colle Ab Corman. Soonel nanee Corp, rgon, = ’ Seum: Fair Grounds. Br CO) Anna Spears. orn Puller: The Arkansas Democrat told
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RETA #X wtih aati WEY EC OhiG, ml WN “ TEES om sonr a “ ; Tpitige” IA ADck, Basgrmenly Hkh WW 2183873 ri 4
if Davis, 61, man—a.— King—$§3- at “1018 = ae SR des —— ing TL Prieto on “ 904 W. a " Toe Femiive car es “E108, [mony ‘about dealings With “the usse 9 968 eeney, t 2025 din agen | Martha E. Branham. 20. 2418 N° Penn. |, rteriosclerosis. 225 Washington, government leriding ey.
Thomas Hodgens, 1, at py A At 2320 Columbia,
Linda M. Penick, 4 months, at General,
pneumonia. Ernest F. Steffen, 77, Methodist,
B) yam
He did not name any witnesses ‘he thought were lying under oath, and said it was not the commite
Jack elden, 24, R.R. No. B: Blackwell 18, RR. No. William Taylor, 1084 College Catherine Ward, in, 12 College.
Ruth Ave.;
at
Rites Will Be Monday
|Pozt, JL Cassel, 31, 3423 Salem: Lula| arteriosclerotic heart, tee’s job to prosecute, But he Black : Services for Mrs. Mamie John- Harold Fry var da. 2 W" OMT Janet| clhoma, © ovenson. 82. at General. ear-|noted that ‘the Departs
son, .whq died Thursday in herls Beatles. 57, 1337 Spann: Mas iy at 2344 Yandes St., will be! | Alvin Myrrayc dU. 8. Navy: eld at 10 a. m. Monday in King) Dart. 16. 6 R '& King Chapel. Burial will be in/Ray. 32. 18625. Nortolk «= Jean
cor, rein Welch, 82, at 1840 Boulevard.|ment has been Ee tran
thur B. Cooke, 170, at 4256 Sunset, Scripts. of the hearings for any
cerebral hemorrh alter Joseph Hockersmith, 69, at 1451. 8Ction it might want to take, N. Chester, hypertension.
orence R. Watson, 67, at St. Vincent's,
Kelly, i Ar Myrtle
Flo |New Crown. She was 81. |Reeinaid Phillips, 34. 367 W. 15th: Louise] fbrilistich. Action ‘Just in Case’ | Hampton, 34. 1503 mg Pine ce. | Fulbright devel Mr. Johnson, was born {n Robert E. Nickleson, 37, 2838 N. Olney: Sen, g sald develop-
Bertha Young, 38, 531 8t. Paul ments indicatd some sort of “gene
eral investigation of the moral New. York By Luise Prete {level of government might be H. vs. Georgia | Bremerhaven; Media, Liverpool Tasvlor, | warranted, but that’s not the
Johnson; Charles W, vs. Helen Marie Self ew re Aun ove. | Exronk, “Valeria Sheet urckel, Matadt:| function of our committee.”
Ship Movements
50 years. She was a member of DIVORCE SUITS FILED
| Mary E. 3 Leo B. walsdale; Saraphene She is survived by three daugh- Johnson: Charies fe
Mrs. Paul Goff:
ters, Pauline Vance, Mrs, Mary Evelyn vs.
James Gatlin; Eva vs. Ivan Grider: Tho-|Esso Aruba, Aruba: Marine Fi | Willia G. vs. Mable Connell: Jean A. vs. bal; e rer, Cristo-| Sen, Fulbright said he had no ms and Mrs. Mamie mAs OC. Ys. Mable Connell: Jon A nes: Et Santos; Queen of Ber-| 8g
particular incidents in mind in the times he has pointed out dur-
| White and a son, William Chatman, all of Indianapolis.
{Alice G vs Bige Roberts.
a — BIRTHS a {Couch Frank Leahy Is jar the hearings that a quorum of the committee was present. He Fishing Boat Crew Safe My Moone Winifred. Vireinia Hoskin: | ‘Proud Papa’ Again {said he has done this “just in NEW ORLEANS, Mar. 3 (UP) | may Enki." somes” Mary Clark, i154) MICHIGAN'CITY, Mar. 3 (UP), |case something comes up.” —Four survivors of a sunken fish-| Bright. Reymond, Christine Daniels. . Mrs. Frank Leahy, wife of the| Presence of a quorum would be
ing boat were being ‘taken today {to Port Isabel, Tex., aboard a craft which rescued them, the Coast Guard reported. The men |
{Notre Dame University football | an important factor in any pere 8 lla Ot~ ter, 112 Ne Ringel: Zivde, Riby ig, Ot coach, gave birth to a girl at St.|jury action.
At Methodist Malcolm, Wilma Scamahorn:| ANthony Hospital today. Sen. Fulbright ‘said he hopes to Arthur, Helen Campbell: John, Norma| The baby, which weighed 5|finish the hearings next week be=
M w 11: Ed swam from wreckage of the “M.| Kath’ momingan or ar pounds and 5 ounces, is the|cause he feels the group has ’ Rober [P.” to the trawler Ora Baca after At St Vincents=Robert, Margaret Lons:|couple’s seventh child. T he|done its job and “I'm not going
worth: Thomas, Nancy Kuhn; Irene Sellmeye
as Edgar, Leahys have two other daugh-{to spend the rest of my life on At St. _Francis—Arthur, Daisy
Darringer: ters and four sons, this cockeyed thing.”
= Yes, He Should Have — Discarded a Trump
IN TYPICAL FASHION Miss Brash overbid this hand to a grand slam in spite of her partner's efforts to head her off. Mr. Heinsite’s opening lead was the queen of clubs which was
won with the ace. Miss Brash promptly cashed the king of clubs, led a small club and ruffed with dummy’s 10 of trumps. At this point Mr. Muzzy had to make a discard and he put
|on quite a show. As you see he
{held exactly the same cards in| {both red suits and so did dummy. Mr. Muzzy examined his hand |and the cards on the board at |least a dozen times. He looked at the ceiling, scratched his head and suffered in general. Nothing {helped him. Finally he took a coin | [from his pocket, flipped it, exam{ined the result and discarded’ a small diamond.
Set Up Diamond Jack
| THIS GAVE Miss Brash the |chance she needed. She pulled three rounds of trumps, discarding a heart from dummy on the] third one. Then she cashed the ace and king of diamonds and] ruffed a third diamond in her ~hand. Dummy’s jack thus became | |good and on’ it Migs Brash was| |able to get rid of her losing club. ! | Figuring the best defense is a {good offense, Mr. Muzzy spoke] first. {T'll bet,” he said, “that my partner is going to tell me I| |should have known which suit to| | discard from at that third trick.”| “I certainly am,” said Mr. Heinsite, stolidly.
Heinsite Was Right “LISTEN TO the man,” taunted
Denison Students Enter Sororities
Four Indianapolis women. stu-vania St, were ‘initiated dents were among those initiated |Alpha Phi. into national sororities at Deni-| Margaret Owen, son University, Granville, O.,
recent ceremonies. IN. Illinois St.,
Nancy Aabye, daughter of Mr. member of Delta Delta Delta,/from one of the red suits in daughter | dummy before you. You just disBroadway, and Barbara Babcock, (of Mr, and Mrs. James L. Schell,/card from the same suit as SC and Mrs. Charles|5510 Washington Blvd., became a dummy.” D,
and Mrs. Edwin-G. Aabye, 4720/ and Katharine Schell,
N, Pennsyl-|member of Kappa Alpha Theta. v
-
into played.”
daughter of Heinsite. “Discard a trump! Then, in| Dr. and Mrs. John E. Owen, 4429 | when Miss Brash plays out the became an active trumps, she will have to discard
Mr. Muzzy. “I had identical holdings in thé red suits and yet he knows which one I should have
| “Neither one,” barked Mr.
Mr, Heinsite was Fight. But Mr.
Nerth dealer. Both sides vulnerable.
NORTH Mrs. Keen S—10 4 2 H—A KJ 6 D—A KJ 6 —T 2 : WEST EAST Mr. Heinsite Mr. Muzzy S—8 7 S—6 53 I H=75 4 H—Q 10 9 8 D—4 3 2 D—Q 10 9 8 C—Q J 9614 C—8 3 SOUTH Miss Brash S—-AKQJ9 H—3 2 D=7"5 C—A K10 5 | The bidding: NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST 1H Pass 2S Pass 2 NT Pass 3S Pass 4 8S Pass 4 NT Pass 5 H Pass 5 NT Pass 6 H Pass 78 All Pass
Muzzy pointed out that NOBODY |'
|could ever tell him it was right|
to discard trumps.
George L. Clark To Speak Monday
George L. Clark, 3. insurance executive, will speak at the March meeting of the Butler Uni{versity Alpha Chi Omega Mothers Club Monday. It will be at 1 p. in the chapter house.
man, will introduce him. Mesdames J. . Besterman, J. M. Pearson and Clare Isaacs will have charge of luncheon arrangements.
.
“Tudor Hall Parents Will Meet on Monday
Mrs. R. J. Pile, program chair-|
DAR Council
Sets Session
| State Regent To Preside
The Indiana Society, Daughters lof the American Revolution, will hold a council meeting Thursday {in the Hotel Lincoln.
| Presiding at the 10:30 a. m, |business session will be Mrs, |Wayne M. Cory, (state regent, | Winner of the Good Citizenship | Pilgrimage contest for Indiana land winners for the Girl Home|maker contest will be announced. Chapter awards in the state meme {bership contest also will be made {in addition to the reports of state officers and chairmen, The 1951 winner of the Good Citizenship contest will receive a {$100 U. 8. savings bond, series G, (from the National DAR Society, The contest is open only to senior class girls in accredited public [high schools. Selection is based ‘on dependability, service, leader|ship and patriotism.
8% 6000 Participated & | Last year more than 6000 high. E schools throughout the nation par|ticipated. The winners represented {many races, including Chinese, |Japanese, Jewish and Negro. | State chairman is Mrs. Elmer 4 | T. Russell, Muncie. | Indiana ranks fifth in the DAR #4 national membership with a total # of 6525 as of Feb. 1. During the pi | past year the national organiza{tion has had almost a 3000 mems | ber increase. Officers serving with Mrs, Cory ¢ | include Mrs. Herbert R, Hill; Mrs, |C. R. Gilman, Ft. Wayne; Mrs, |T. G. Biel, Terre Haute; Mrs. H, |W. Miller, Attica; Mrs. A. H. Moel|ler, Columbia City; Mrs. G. W, _|Hays, Bedford; Mrs. P. 8. Nicholls, |South Bend, and Mrs. R: be “The|Shrader, New Albany. District directors are Mrs, H. B. Thomas, Marion; Mrs. H. H. Wolf,
The Women's Society of Christian Service of the Capitol Avenue Methodist Church will hold a spring-fashion tea from 2 to 4 p. m. Wednesday. Model Miss Suzie Hara (right) gives a preview of the fashions to be shown to (left to right) Mrs Ernest Koskey, social activities chairman; Mrs. Lester Ratcliff, president
'WSCS Plans Fashion Tea
of the organization, and Mrs. Vincent Langsfon, chairman of publicity. Tickets for the organization's one yearly money raising
| project may be purchased from Mrs, Koskey.
The Tudor Hall School Parenigiwil have charge of the business|speaker. He will talk on, Association will hold its annual session. . True Aristocracy.” meeting and election of officers| Dr. William R. Hodgson, Kenil-| A social hour will follow the| at 7:30 p. m. Monday in the school.|worth, Ill, pastor of the Kenil-program. Tudor class chairmen Muncie, and Mrs. 8. L. McKinney, Mrs. Robert Becherer, president, worth Union Church, will be guestiwill act as hostesses. Huntingburg.
: vi . Rn “is 4 8 *
Veedersburg,
)
