Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1951 — Page 3
i a $1000 or this oil d opening
ded
orial schol New Castle, e Vonnegut larship for e sculpture yur Eastern er.
oad
ith, Indian= n the sculps awarded d this sum- » Vonnegut y Milliken special gift rt. ka, won a he Milliken 2] in recog-
ears’ work B. Clary, Marozsan, if. NormanMr. Reno, r, PoquonDonald C, , Il.; Rus- ; Mr. Snodnon, Camirlene Call
and Lois M,
ars’ work . B. Allen, en Joanne N. Y.; Mr, 1a, 0.; Ted puis Raiso-
immer , , ¢ uty on the 8 you syle ts and sune nd. Grace. ) of every 5, 4 bread
.2.65 sot
ees d0e «e0s.88¢ eee be
.. 1.95
jlasses,
fth Floor
00: 9.98 ...12.95 .59¢ each
o
For Watch, S114
A break-in which netted thieves $1800, and the misfortunes of a man who slept too long topped te week-end’s crime activities re. Burglars pried open the front door of the Choice Brands Liquor Store, 205 W, 21st 8t., and walked away with the safe containing $1800, a wrist watch and a revolver. Elmer E. Broadhuhn, 29, 947 Kealey Ave., felt tired as he drove his car through the city streets late Saturday. He pulled over and parked on Michigan St. near lndiana Ave. to catch a few winks. ‘When police aroused him Sunday morning, Mr. Broadhuhn discovered that thieves had taken a watch valued at $162 from his wrist, removed his leather jacket, and slit his pants pocket to gemove a bilifold containing $114, Witnesses said several men had gone up to Mr. Broadhuhn’s car during his big sleep.
CYO Joins Chest; Now Set to Reach More People
The Catholic Youth Organization joined the Community Chest today. G. R. Redding, president of the Indianapolis Community Chest said that approval by the Chest board of directors will allow the
Wayne Coy Slated For New Term As FCC Chairman
Times Specia) WASHINGTON, June 11 — Wayne Coy, Indiana's top-flight federal bureaucrat, is scheduled to be confirmed for a new sixyear term as Federal Communications Commission chairman Wednesday.
The confirmation vote will be taken by the Senate Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee of which Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R. Ind.), is a member. He said he knows of no opposition in the committee, nor any that may be taken up on the Senate floor. Hoosiers on the House side
CYO to reach more young people. He added that including the| CYO in the Chest will mean one|
less community-wide campaign gown on him, They derived this
for money this year. f
“This action,” he continued, “is|Chairman Coy sent Rep. E. Ross in accordance with the Com-| Adair, Ft. Wayne Republican. In —8qualls which caused considermunity Chest’s traditional openlit the phrase ‘tropospheric propa-| |gation” appears. groups may sound, Mr. Adair learned are ih the chest here and through-/that it is just something that in-|Wnids today and were expected to
door policy.” Other denominational
out the nation. = ” s |
were jokingly suggesting that unless “Wayne watched his language” the Senators might crack
deduction from a letter FCC
‘day, when he closes at F't. Worth.
{in a four-day tour of the state |
this week. 9 He has five speeches scheduled, all - outdoors, from Wednesday when he opens at Austin on the steps of the statehouse, to Satur-
In between, he'll Houston, San” Antonio and Dallas. Parades, 17-gun salutes and lavish gifts, including a sleek new Cadillac, await him. Crowds of 76.000 at Houston and perhaps even bigger at Dallas are expécted to hear num speak. = ” a . HOUSTON’S oilman-hotei magnate, Glenn McCarthy, has engineered for the eneral’'s public address there Thursday ‘night a spectacle worthy of a movie pro-~ ducer, which Mr. McCarthy has been. | Hollywood actor singer John, Carroll will lead what the Hous-| ton MacArthur committee hopes, will be a full house- 76,000 in the Rice Institute Stadium --in a mass serenade. | Song for the occasion is a new
and Adman-Rancher Steve wil-|
grams to be distributed at the stadium gates.
Gen. MacArthur a new Cadillac,
rage owner. will he at the wheel to drive the old ioldier around the
city, Squalls Rip Up Louisiana City
Sinister as that
iterferes with TV channels.
The Ft. Wayner had asked GEORGE A. BISCHOFF, presi- when hearings would start on
dent of the Catholic Youth Or-|getting the three TV stations as-
ganization, said his agency was signed there. established in January, 1939, “tojest was
Mr, Adair’s inter-
aroused because Ft.
provide a balanced program of Wayne is a great manufacturing
cultural, physical, social vocational activities for Indianapolis youth. Although the CYO program is governed by Catholic
philosophy and ideals, participa-|
not restricted to Catholics.” 3 Raids Net Phones During the past year, CYO has|
tion
organized 930 boys into 62 basketball teams. About 600 boys
have played on 37 softball teams. | squad over the week-end netted
CYO has also sponsored football, kickball, bowling and table tennis events. End Brewery Strike Times State Service TERRE HAUTE, June 11—
and center for TV sets, he said. Chair-
man Coy informed him hearings on all the TV channel assigniments will get under way July 9.
‘And Lottery Tickets
| Three raids by the police vice
la small number of baseball lotitery tickets and three telephones. | Glen Manlove,
{playing baseball pool tickets. | At 26081
| 61,7 Kirkwood { Hotel, was arrested at 7 8S. New {Jersey St. Police said he was dis-
NEW ORLEANS, June 11 (UP)
{blow out in Mississippi.
ore. 1 shan mean e work From: Sergeant to Company nam. it wii ve ined on ee. C OMMander Inside a Year
| From sergeant to company|geant were killed in their first Houston's Elks Clubs wil give commander in less than a year. It sounds like an Army enlist-icharge which captured a vital and his World War I chauffeur, iment ad, but it happened to Wil-|hill south of Taegu. A few days Virgil Brady, now a Houston ga-|liam D. Raley, 24, of Cannelton, Ind. :
A ‘sergeant first-class when he
went to Korea last August, the \ |Army career man has fought his way out of five traps in bloody g Korean fighting. { Less than a month after he ar he has been awarded two Purple Hearts and two Bronze Stars.
In the process
Thoughts of Home But the quiet, couragecus offi-
{able damage in central Louisiana er Soesnit hi Theol his ac- { ‘complishments. 5 lost ‘most of their high-powered mostly of his loneliness and how homesick he is for his wife, Dorothy Jean, their children, Diane, The storm formed with tornadic/ William Terril and Julienne, and {intensity north of Alexandria, La. (his mother, Mrs. Muriel R. Raley,
letters tell
|yesterday and bowled over trees,|all of Cannelton.
power lines and signboards in
Lt. Raley entered the Army
{that city. Some destruction was|Jan, 10, 1945, and was sent to {reported at Marksville, St. Fran-{Hawaii in June of that year. In
i
jcisville and Baton Rouge as the|June, 1946, he returned to the {squall line moved southeastward, States as a staff sergeant.
but there were no injuries.
A year ago, Lt. Raley was a
The New Orleans Weather Bu-|basic training instructor at Ft {reau said the diminishing squalls|Knox,
Ky. He went to Korea
[probably would stop and reverse when fighting started there.
(direction, heading toward Missis'sippi.
Church Pays Rent | Of One Red Rose
MANHEIM, Pa. June 11 (UP), —The Zion Evangelical Lutheran
W. Michigan St. Church paid its annual ground
Normal production was expected police confiscated 162 books Of rent of one red rose yesterday.
to be resumed at the Terre Haute pool tickets. At 3737 Winthrop police nabbed three telesome ~ 550 CIO phones apd a racing work sheet.
Brewing Co. agreement by
today following
iAve.
The rose, plucked from a bush! in the churchyard, was presented to Mrs. Gilbert L. Dannehower,!
brewery workers to end their| No arrests were made at either Westfield, N. J., a descendant of
four-day strike.
| spot.
~
Breath of Summer!
As light as a breath of air, also as fresh and cool—our sheer, sheer cotton dress TEBILIZED for tested
crease-resistanc
e. The sleeveless top
» breaks into full and floating skirt.
A smart print brown against accented with Junior Sizes 9
8.95
in black, green or. - a white background, a black faille belt. to 15
DRESSES—FOURTH FLOOR
-
RaW
FULL
2
Baron Willlam Henry Stiegel,| famed glassmaker on whose land the church was built. A deed signed by Baron Stiegel 179 years ago calls for “in the month of June, yearly forever hereafter, the rent of one red rose . . .”
Five Believed Killed In Oklahoma Air Crash
STRINGTOWN, Okla., June 11 (UP) — Five men were believed today to have died in a twinengine plane, found burned and crumpled against a hillside in rugged southeast Oklahoma. Four bodies were recovered and
inside the fire-twisted aircraft. Patrol Trooper Vernon Rogers, who accompanied a rescue party on its 4-mile trek across heavily wooded and water-logged countryside, said all bodies were too badly burned to be identified. Four of the victims were believed to be Army enlisted men from Fort Hood, Tex.
Missing Cruiser Found NIANTIC, Conn. June 11 (UP) — A Coast Guard patrol boat found the missing 30-foot cruiser “Jack” capsiged about two miles northeast of Gardiner’s Island today. Anthony Lombardo, suffering from exposure, was found clinging to the boat. He was taken to a| hospital.
In Indianapolis
BIRTHS Boys
At Home -- Henry, Mary Mosley, 127 W.
At Si, Francis —— Robert, Phyllis Webb; wi Laura Davis; Walter, Elizabeth McCoy; Oscar, Dalores Mitchell; Dal Maxwell
ale, — William, Roberta lores Parks: Alfred, Anna Julia Spehoer. ames, Velma Hollars; Ben, Aron, Berina Katz Nedra Rees; William, Imogene Alberta Harlan; James,
Ruth Herald, At St. Vincent’ ack, Norma Jean Holucy Warrenburg; Wilbur,
land; Jam Bd erine tter; Alexander, Elizabeth 0!
Young:
Wards; William, Mary Louise Mullen. ' Girls
At_St, Ninsent's Robert, Dorothy Nelson; Donald, Janet uyer; Ralph, Mary Brafford; Nilllam. ; Ber3 r 3
Fr
3 om ary Strough; Marvin, Imogene Nicho-
obert, Mary ald omas, Josephine McNary: Noral. lores Parham; Lamar, Bertha
a fifth was believed destroyed | P
iifor a sixth term yesterday de-
Then began the quick spurt
{from sergeant to first lieutenant.
Platoon Leaders Killed
As a squad leader in an in-
fantry company of the 23d Infantry Regiment of the 2d Infantry Division, Sgt. Raley took command of his platoon when both his platoon officer and ser-
Convicted Bandit Called at Hearing To ‘Identify Pal
“Fingerman” Wilbur W. Daugherty, convicted post office bandit, today was to testify in the U. 8S. commissioner's hearing to identify Daugherty’'s accomplice in the robbery of a postal substation here last fall.
The hearing was requested by William Banks, 45, of 2115 N. Arsenal Ave., suspected of being the masked man who accompanied Daugherty during the hold-
The U. 8. Marshal's Office prepared to bring the men separately to the hearing room in the federal building.
Aids Murder Solution
Daugherty has not been permitted to fraternize with other prisoners in Marion County jail since his conviction. He has acquired a reputation as an “underworld fingerman” since he helped police in the solution of two murder cases and at least 11 robberies. Daugherty was surrendered to federal custody on the post office robbery charge in an effort to save him from a possible state sentence to Michigan City prison. Before his trial, he told police he feared for his safety in statef institutions as a result of his aid to law enforcement agencies. Daugherty, sentenced to 25 years in federal penitentiary, has spent 17 of his 38 years behind prison bars.
Union Re-elects Indicted Irving
KANSAS CITY, Mo., June 11 (UP)—Rep. Leonard T. Irving (D. Mo.) was elected president of the local hod carriers’ union
spite ‘a federal indictment charging he used the union’s fund to help finance his campaign for Congress, A full slate of Irving-backed candidates was re-elected in one of the largest votes in the union's history. “I am very happy and grateful for this vote of confidénce,” said Rep. Irving, representative from
gen | Waltman; Hes. Sarah es; w ar on; Sam, 18 on; Shoat Patty Ann Fite, | argaret Allen; Robert, Re-| ecoa Barrett: Paul, Lois Moon; Cieorge, ond. At St, neis—John, Amelia Kennedy;
ames, Sarah Montgomery; David, Dorohy Johann; Carl, Martha Daughtery,
DEATHS . Blanche Sars Butcher, 58, at Methodist, arierfoscle X Risin . Helms Jr, 56, at 30890 Highand, sarcoma. . Joseph ald Clinton, 44, at General, alien onia. - B. Kendall 49, at 1153 8. RanBertha McGlivrey. 71, st 410 N. Lynn,
coronary occlusion. Raymond, . Summers, 61, at 1238 W. 33d. cere Remorrha,
Robert R. Wimbley, 60. at 2000 Highland, rterd rosis., whit Sruntos. 83, at General, pneuaatfand L. Gardner, 3». at 1814 Woodwn, on. oDslay He allie, 75, at 331 N. ie, at 742 N. California, at General, arterio-
e Shepard, 19, at 815 N.
Irby. At Methodist—Jamas, Josephine Myers; | bert, Elle Chas
President Truman's home district,
Landlords Reach D. C.,
Press Rent Control Fight
Washington is full of landlords who are there to protest the pending legislation on rent control, Henry A. Werking, president of the American Home Owners, Inc. of Indianapolis, said today mpon his return from the canital, Mr. Werking spoke to Hoosier Rep. Charles Brownson and Sens. Homer E. Capehart and William
Jenner while in Washington tol»
present petitions against rent control. “I think we'll get necessary changes - in the bill—changes which will treat the landlords a little more fairly,” Mr. Working
|___ CAN YOU READ IT?—This bent sign is not much help.
engagement. He led a bloody later he was wounded in the hand and arm while leading another
ed a Bronze Star and the Puri ple Heart.
irived in Korea, Lt. Raley was {awarded a battlefield commission jas a second lieutenant and given
‘command of a platoon.
Wounded 12 Times
Wounded 12 times in an engagement near Kuni-ri in November, he was sent to a hospital in Japan. After two months, he was returned to his organization jin Korea. He was promoted to {figst lieutenant in February and recently was given command of headquarters company, second battalion. During the time he has been in Korea, he has been trapped five times behind enemy lines. The last time, he lost all his equipment.® Now, he is waiting to be sent
background. - be baked enamel to keep th from being emudged by smog and
weather,
charge. For this he was award- Standard Oil Co. refinery. here.
The surface of the signs will em
The new signs will be a marked
William ¥. Jenner (R. Ind.) shouted Rep. Emanuel Celler (I N. Y.) on the American Forum of| M
by Staff Writer ¥ WASHINGTON, June 11—Sen.
rive in about two weeks.
ment of President Truman?”
Worker Missing In Whiting Blost
WHITING, June 11 (UP)—One
man was missing today after an explosion and fire in which two men were burned seriously at the
Workmen were searching through the wreckage for the body of John Sinal, 58, Whiting, who was working on the unit when the explosion occurred yesterday. It was not discovered he was missing until hours afterward when his wife notified the company. he had not returned home. A spokesman for the com sald the blast occurred apn A pipeline carrying oil to a erude processing unit broke. Firemen brought the blaze under control in about 20 minutes.
Ee,
Truman Ends Cruise WASHINGTON, June 11 (UP) —President Truman returned to Blair House last night after an overnight cruise on the Potomac
Excuse It
WITH U. 8. 7TH DIV1 SION, KO June 1 (UP)—A silent figure ben
.
>.
over the GI. g ina foxhole and shook 7 The GI leaped to his feet. . The figure was a Chinese soldier. The unarmed Red politely extended a surre leaflet. .
withheld.
14 on 2 Boats Missing in Squall
Times State Service NIANTIC, Conn., June 11 (UP) —Coast Guard planes and ships searched today for two fishing, boats with. 14 persons aboard missing in Long Island Sound since” yesterday morning.
home on rotation. He's also {waiting for his captaincy.
STRAUSS SAYS:
River aboard the Yacht Williamsburg. He left Saturday night.
yesterday and officials feared the
Squalls with winds up to 35/E° miles an hour swept the sound|Ab
boats may have capsized.
commented.
\\
The AwCooled Clothing
is the SECOND
®
' v7 A
.
(JACKETS OR SUITS) give Casual
Coolness-yet are strictly smart
enough fo go
info business!
: Haspel
THE GENUINE FABRIC
} WASPIL TALEND Miw SRE Aw }
NOT SO LONG AGO—cords (seersuckers)
were typical of the South!
They were (are) the pride and joy of Gentlemen of Dixie—the product of Haspel of New Orleans—{who is still a "big wheel"
in the cord business.)
THE CELEBRATED cotton
seersucker (which is still very good)—
has been joined by brothers
who come from the test tubes.
A FEW YEARS AGO, cords invaded the north— they're taking over. In the business and college scene they are big!
THE JACKETS worn separately are seen in "best places" — on well-turned-out men—
(They go well with flannel or other wool slacks)—
These, herewith, are Haspel suifsThe cotton seersucker SUIT-20.75
The separate JACKET is $15
The cord SUIT Acefafe and Nylon—21.50
The separate JACKET is $2!
The cord SUIT Acefate and Nylon (
lined sleeves) is 32.50
The separate JACKET is $25
| L. STRAUSS & COMPANY—THE | A
with
3
