Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1951 — Page 11
ow! r pay check y part that's
'g the easy, TKINS. Gen- } your money sured up to Agency. b Street
TIONAL VALUE!
omplete Eight
FILLED—For Truck Routes, dling.
)ownstairs
d
m—— JULY 4, 1951 Cites ‘Danger’ of Today—
| Hails Free Speech Right | In July 4th Program
By yay RIDREY
WASHINGTON, Yr 4— This being: the 175th Bumversary. ot the of the De of Independence, something pin cial is planned for the Washing-| ton monument grounds tonight. In addition to the customary fireworks, there will be pagaentry to commemorate the founding fathers, and President Truman! ‘will speak over a nationwide network ‘from the Monument Am-! phitheater. Whatever the President says,
In Indianapolis
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Harold Tuner, 44, Frankfort; Opal Turner, Joseph Rinaldo, 23, U. 8 A CE i 1S ds, a mue. , + {vision: tii Jean Sup. 2 a, oon Ala no Netuie » 33, 2 Army; Betty Pavey,
Herbert bi 11, ope 8 Plainf 1d; a tinteld. e Lois Buford, Carl An 43, (Batesville; 38, 1648 Talbo
|
Teresa Riegel,
. U. 8B. Army; Mary | . 13th. {
ena : A c william, J: Johnigan, 34, RV | Lewis, 21. Day
ohn A iran 75, 2702 Ye aarapolis Ave ; rE atiotte Heywood, 81, 28th. 25, ; Pauling 8: Shirley |
J v d PL Jack R. Pollock. 30, 14 E. New .York; Olive L. Garrett, 33, 822 N. LaSalle.
Rayion.
Albert Montgomery, 52, U. 8. Army; Sophia Sargent, 48, 1409 W. Jefferson. Donald Holloway, 19. 1 en usias: Mary
E. Irvin, 16,
1105 N. » Lorene MacMillan, 23, 2054 N New Jersey; |
Joyce L. Reeves, 24.- Bloomington Nag Poole, 33, 1623 -N. Alabama; Mary R.| Poole. 28, 913 Union. Garfield Overton, 64, 2725 N. Oxford; Elizabeth Floyde, 42. 2921 N. Oxford. Prancis Pritchett, 66, 3001 Washington Blvd,; Olive L. Price, 54, 1202 Finley Ave.
DIVORCE SUITS FILED
Edwin J. vs. Grace H. Yetter; Audra vs. Ralph Sieveking: Kenneth L. vs Sorisals L. Scott; Satherine M. vs. Willi M. Brenton: William E. vs. Elms Ji. § Sreene: Myrtle B. vs. Nels C. Jensen: Mary V. Dencil W. Branham: Edna vs he Wil loughby: Frank vs. Hazel C. Vidmar; Willie vs, Martha Cole: Maxine vs. Morris Warren: Walter L. Jr, ‘vs. Coleen al Fanple E. vs. Willie Clemmons; Mildred M. ve Schwert: Louwana vs. Elwin J Smith: Leo W. vs. Margaret J. . vs. Edward 8._Butcher; i ry V. vs. Mary R. Lindsay; Ella M. vs, John| Earlene vs. George C. White: vs. William Ray; Floyd PF. vs.
Phyllis 1. Jackson; Ruby -B. vs. Jewell Waller: HLH vs. James Skeel. Merre Jo vs. Henry H. Pirtle; Ruth vs. Elster A, Meador son BIRTHS
At PRIMAL ‘Mary Short, 510 Bughanan; Chester, Daisy Lewis, 910 W.
At St. Franels—Kenneth, Mary Walker M
At Methodist—Harry, Margaret Sells: Ernest, Roslyn Besch; Charles, Dorothea Knight: Edmund, Ruth Tyner; Martin, Mary Christman; Dr. Charles, Eloise Cure: John, Joanne Curry: James Betty Ringenber; er: Gerald, lores Bro Frank. rtha Wolfila; Kirk, Pans Kelley. At Coleman—James, Patricia Stewart. At_General—Fred, Thelma 8impson; Larry, Barbara Harris,
At Coleman—Otis, Ralph, Wanda Blackburn : At General—Charles. Wanda Martin; Wayman, Motice Coffer. At St. Franeis—Ernest, Rieta Hubbell. At Methodist—Donald, Lola Cripe; Arthur, Jessamine Welsh: Willie, Betty Sout , Joa
Girls Jonell Warren;
vin, Thelm aaWilliam, Elsie Clarkson: Robert, Hack: . Rev, “Thomas, Ethel Gray; » .nard, Betty CunnhEhai: Harry. Léah Traugott: 8 Jesriean Stan: | bridge; Glenn, Ruth Strafford; Ben, Eu. nice Weiss. At Home—James. Anna West. 31 3 Ww. 32d: Robert, Mary Hatzell, 1454 Bau ey; John,
Merle Nichols, 2025 College.
DEATHS Cora Alice Hauser. 80, at 702 N Alabama, hypertension George Lewis, 70. at 2034 Highland, coronary thrombosis Bridget Cook, 01, at 421 N. Beville, cardin-vascular-renal. William Guinan. 87, at 1514 N. Alabama cerebral hemorrhage Julia Ann Kendall, %5 at 2037 N. Illinois, cerebral thrombosis Maltilda Dorothy O'Donal, 54, at 431 8. Harris, coronary occlusion Otto F. Rupholdt, 58, at Veterans, carcinoma
Sarah Ber-
Terre Haute Laundry Is Destroyed by Fire
TERRE HAUTE, July 4 (UP)— A $100,000 fire destroyed the Unfon Laundry on the ys northside today. Assistant Fire Chief Francs Fischer said the blaze apparently started in the laundry's receiving room. It spread rapidly to other parts of the brick building and only the office was saved, he said.
The loss included a large quar?
tity of laundry. Mr. Fischer said he cause of the blaze was unknown,
Question Woman In Cab Driver's Death
CRESTVIEW, Fla, July 4 (UP)-— Police questioned a. 25-year-old New York woman today in connection with the slaying of cab driver Doyle F. Heard, 22. Sheriff Alton MacArthur said Miss Jane Sessions admitted hav-
ing been with Mr. Heard about 5 A medical report
a. m. Monday. indicated he died about that time with six bullet wounds. Mr. Heard’s body was found near his cab in a wooded grove near Ft. Walton.
scattered nearby.
Romanians Learning Russian—By Order
PARIS, July 4 (CDN)-—Schools for the teaching of Russian are springing up all over Romania. 4324 new inaugurated. At-
During April alone
classes were
[tion of the Virginia Declaration
(he can pay no greater tribute to! the freedom spelled ofit in the! declaration than was done by a! librarian in what might be called’ a pre-fourth of July speech at Richmond, Va. That address was published in| the congressional record this! weekend and has attracted much! favorable comment here. The librarian was Julian P. Boyd of; i Princeton University.
Speaks at Library
He spoke at the Virginia State | Library in commemoration of the {175th anniversary of the adop-
| |
lof Rights. The thesis of Dr. Boyd's ad-| dress was that “freedom is the right -to argue against freedom”; and he applied it to the “present danger” of today. - Paying high tribute to the part| - {played by the great Virginians: in the American revolution, Dr. Boyd declared: “Their glory was not so much! in what they achieved as in what they sought. For revolution, in| | itself, i& not a glorious thing, it may #hdeed serve an ignoble! cause, It becomes glorious when it is governed by a transcendant ideal. The American revolution possessed such an ideal and its . leaders were possessed by it. “That ideal was in essence a total repudiation of the fear of {ideas. It rejected with the pas!sion and indignation of youth the concept that some ideas were so {reprehensible that the civil au- GI and five other Hoosiers killed |thorities could legitimately sup- ‘in. Korea are expected to arrive press them . . .
Cites Sedition Act
Return Hoosier
in San Francisco tomorrow. Among 394 American dead be-
“Freedoni to think, freedom 10 yng returned aboard the Santa :
|examine and discuss any proposition, freedom in the exchange of ideas, freedom of utterance —! this is the heart of the declara-| tion of rights, as it is the basis
Clara Victory, according to the Defense Department, are: Pfc. Robert Groves Jr, Robert B. Groves, 2838 Paris Ave. Pfc. Leo D. Beck, brother of
Dead From Korea |
The bodies of one Indianapolis
son of
Cell-ebrants
BANG—went the ’'crackers. “Why?” asked the two young men. “Agin the law,” replied police who arrested them for: tossing firecrackers around Monument Circle last night. Charged with disorderly conduct are Jack E. Davis, 25, of 100 E. Eppler Ave, and Robert Lee Eabernall, 21, of 1524 LeGrande Ave.
CLANG—went the jail door. |
N. |
He was clutching a 25cent piece and other coins were
of government in a republic.” This freedom from fear “of ideas” was the “great risk” that the founding fathers of the republic took and at times we have
steered away from that course City.
only to return "to it later Dr. Boyd declared. He cited the alien and sedition acts, of which the proponents later became ashamed, and then brought the business down to our day. “We have been :eized by a mounting wave of hysteria,” Dr. Boyd said. “Test oaths of increasing severity are being required of public servants, teachers, librarians, and others, and are being proposed even as‘ a condition precedent for those abouf to enter professions or trades. Books are
James L.
of Robert A. Kirkley,
Mrs.
Test New Landing Lights Thursday
noninstrument developed at the CAA center at Weir Cook Field.
the lighting section, and Marcus
Beck, Evansville. Pvt. Fount V. Burnett, brother
U. S. Asks Police Check
of Mrs. Josie M. Smith, Clinton. On Viraini HK : Pfc. Vern R. Clark, husband of n gia Hill 3 Trip Mrs. Anna B. Clark, Columbia NEW' YORK, July 4 (UP)—
Virginia Hill, the belligerent bru-
net of the televised Senate Crime Committee hearings here last March,, was the object today of a 13-state police alarm. Miss Hill was believed nearing New York on a transcontinental automobile trip with her husband, Hans Hauser, and her baby. The U. 8. Treasury Department asked police to watch for her 1950 Cadillac coupe, with a one-wheel trailer attached. The department, which has been questioning her in Seattle about her income tax returns, requested authorities to “kindly check” but
Pvt. Lawrence E. Kirkley, Linton. Cpl. Andrew Shields, son of Mary E. Shields; Lafayette.
son
A new set*of landing lights for fields has been
H. J. Cory Pearson, chief of
being banned or suppressed not Gilbert, electrical engineer, de- , +t to “molest” the one-time girl because they contravene laws but signed the lights with the helpi¢rjand of the nation's leading because of the ideas they con- of General Electric. {gangsters, including the late Ben-
“American citizens may be, deiprived of “livelihood or even “of W their liberties by ex parte proceedings based - on. accusations made by anonymous persons. Ariraigned at the bar of public! opinion, innocent persons may now be required to prove themselves not guilty. In many other réspects, we are in danger of do-'w ing violence to the letter and the spirit of the bill of rights.”
DON
“WH
1000 feet from the end of the run-|’
pilot coming in can tell by il light he sees first whether he’s city-owned transit system, wobbly on the course, vhich
at 8 p.m. Thursday.
It's really simple to find out
IT FIXED"
The "lights are installed abouts min (Bugsy) Siegel.
ay along the approach path, \instructor, recently was ordered
and are synchronized fo ‘turn inf, jaa ountry by Sept. 1. opposite directions so the beams De re the country by Sep
meet.
a Transit 7 Layoffs Set DETROIT, July 4 (UP)=-The
Mr. Maxwell explained that
and if not, side he is off.
The CAA will
on from a 59-day strike, said today
test the lights! car operators because of a- sharp decline in patronage,
an
ERE TO GET
Mr, Hauser, an alien and Ashi y {1 = Th
it will lay off 1300 bus and street-|
MAYBE THIS IS WHAT IT NEEDS—Irate motorists, who have been delayed for hours on New York's West Side Highway because .of a’ repaving program, were happy ta,see Walter Talun, sevenfoot giant who plays Goliath in the new film, “David and Bathsheba,” on'the job. If the Biblical costume Talun wore couldn't unsnarl the traffic. it might take drivers’ minds off their troubles.
OVER-SINK METAL CABINET
Originally $19.95
$Q.95
slightly. Perfect in respect. Gives space for every kitchen need.
‘Marred
q every other
No
‘Meter Reader And Pedestrian .. Bitten by Dogs
A meter reader for Indianapolis Power and Light Co. and a woman pedestrian were bitten by dogs in two seperate incidents |yesterday. Robert C. Hinds, 23, of 1941 N.- Delaware St. was en{tering the yard at "2864 N. Sher|man Dr. to read the meter when ‘the owner's German shepherd bit {him on both arms. Owner is Mrs. (Etta Wright of that address,
* a» { MR. HINDS was treated and
{released from General Hospital. Police charged Mrs. Ruth { Finke, 3823 Central Ave, with
lviolation of a city dog ordinance, {after her cocker spaniel bit Rose | Terhune, 25, of 217 Sanders St. fon the left hand. Police ordered the dog penned juntt it can be checked for rabies.
There's Gold In Them Ducks
AUCKLAND, N. Z, July 4 {(CDN)—Life has suddenly becom& grimmer for farmyard ducks around Marlborough, New Zealand. | It all began when farmer Ernest Mason killed a duck and found a gold nugget in its crop.
ha Bhi Tew Wea We.
Ea GP RE A RR
205 W. Wash. St.
Reaching for another duck, Mr. Mason killed it and discovered two more nuggets.
$78,000 worth
Closed at | P. M: Serdar —durng wy and a |
a a
BLACK KID $14.95 OTHER STYLES FROM $12.9
Walking invigorates you, improves muscle tone and stimulates circulation, helps keep your weight down and make you feel gooo all over! Take brisk walks dailyin Dr.Scholl's foot-comforting, foot-cod-dling Shoes! They're scientifically designed of finest leathers to give you vigorous, well-balanced foot-ease that makes walking a rsal pleasure. Sizes available: 24 to 13, AAAA to EEE. Expertly fitted. FEET HURT? Get quick, Inexpensive relief here! Dr. Scholl's worldfamous Remedies, ‘Arch Supports and Appliances. Private fitting rooms.
Or Scholl root comrorr® SHOP
pon — PAGE 1;
Values so Red-Hot that the prices can't be touched anywhere else!
burst of bargains. + prices are so unbelievably low that you can furnish a whole house for what it usually costs to furnish one room.
, "AUTOMATIC : 3.Pc. BEDROOM | Goes the Price! id CORN POPPER SUITE METAL 3 : WARDROBE Open Originally $14.95 Originally $199.95 Thursday Originally $39.95 $9.95 $159.95 ond $710.95 . Just like the ones in theaters, Handsome. walnii. vemwers. 1 9 Friday hcent Ne ES ry Smart Waterfall styling. Bed, Heavy duty wardrobes with Nights sides. Chest and Vanity. lots of space. Slightly marred. Till 9 PM
"ALL THIS WEEK ONLY
of furniture, appliances and carpeting going in 4 huge Tell your friends . . . bring your neighbors while
EASY
fee tables.
Goes the Price!
ODD TABLES
50% O orr
End tables, lamp tables, cofWalnut, any and blond finish, etc.
mahog- 3 unit,
3-Pc. METAL CABINET UNIT
Originally $49.95
$34.95
" Marvelous Bichen cabinet
Slightly domaged. You save $15. Limited quantity,
METAL FOLDING BRIDGE CHAIRS
Originally $4.95
$295
LAMPS
50% Off
Floor table Many styles, many Some just one of a kind.
lamps, lamps Sturdy all-steel chairs that are useful for many purposes
as well as card playing.
sizes.
STUDENT DESK
Originally $29.95
$ 1 Q.95
Lots of shelf space down one
BOLTAFLEX COVERED | | BOLTAFLEX COVERED Ty bis FE SOFA BED GOSSIP BENCH of A 6 Originally $69.95 7% 0% Originally $89.95 Originally $24.95 Im ; 1 ; io
$59.95
side, Convenient drawer. Colorful plastic in choice of Handsomely styled. Colorful Handsome Warerral styling Large writing surface. Wal- five colors. Smart chrome Gives space for phone book, in beautiful matched walnut TERMS nut finish, arms. Large bedding spoce comfortable seat. veneers. Mothproof.
$19.95 549-95
c
Goes The Price!
LIVING ROOM SUITE
3-Pe. MAPLE LIVING ROOM
OCCASIONAL CHAIRS
BREAKFAST SET
Originally $109.95
inand a aired for, ire guar. Heating matic héot, viler, — or
tendance is obligatory. In future no Romanian can obtain a job unless he presents the diploma delivered by these
up and throw it away class shape .
“0.
When there is something to be fixed about the house . . . don’t give . there's a fixer that can put it back in first . firms that guarantee service satisfaction. Look in the
2 Pieces.
Originally $119.95 Originally $29.95 Originally $199.95 ginally ; 9.95 $19.95 $79.95 $1695 Y ! ’ Smart modern design, At: 1 EAS Upholstered in lovely damask. Attractive Colonial styling, tractive colors. Will blend Modern styling in handsome TERMS Choice of Decorator colors. A wonderful buy for budget- well with any furniture. Save limed oak. Colorful Duran wise homemakers. upholstered seats. 5 Pieces.
$10.
"RED - HOT!
schopls.
3013S HEADACHE NEURALGIA NEURITIS PAIN
|
Read This New DIRECTORY?
Every Sunday
| “Where to Get It Fixed” Directory . . . clip it . place about the house.
The Indianapolis Times
. tack it up in a handy
AN io NNW A [
Al a
~~
7-Pc. DINETTE
Originally $229.95
$1 59-95
Beautiful limed oak. Modern design. Table, 4 chairs, buffet and china.
DOOR Esra FLOOR SAMPLE Goes the Price! >) Originally $8.95 REFRIGERATORS WW FLOOR «, 4 49 ro 30% OFF 0 33 /o OFF EASY Size 16x54 in. Framed in Many models of nationally N ly § x walnut or mahogany finish, famous makes. All sizes. Notiog 'y ote, HH TERMS. Save one-half. While they last. MOR | Haw Got “om quick!
a SH
Open Monday, Thursday and Friday Nights
Till 9 0'Clock
THSIDE
LAURIE
