Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 September 1951 — Page 3
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__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _-
ar-Old Icecap Gives 3 St
: We og . Causes Mostly Talk of Car § Others | ia " | 3 : : a _ © By United, Press a " { . - i NEW YORK, Sept. 4—An earthquake that shook parts Hurt T ffi | vv of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut and caused more m Id C conversatilon than i : Sonversghion us damage, was blamed today on an icecap, Other trafic stories, ET years age. . : | Two persons were injurdd seriColumbia University's seismo-|~—-——————— qusly and five others received graph recorded the 140-mile long Vast. Picatinny Arsenal, near n.nop injuries in trafic accidents temblor at 6:26 p. m. (Indian-. Pompton Lakes, had exploded. here yesterday. . apolis Time) yesterday. One min-| State Police Sgt. Roy Gardner p, “op oongition today are "ute later the Weston, Mass. ob- Of Bear Mountain, N. Y., said he Steven Mark Davis, 3. Muncie servatory recorded a “compara- felt a “terrific vibration for about oo Mrs Delofes . Murray 50 of tively strong” earthquake. four or five seconds. 454 E. 11th St. ty The Rev. Fr, -Joseph Lynch,| | Steven was ‘thrown from an
head of Fordham, University's Stock Car Injures autd driven by his father, Earl N. Relempgrap B aboratory in New : , ‘Davis, 38, after the child unlocked ork, sa, e subterranean dis- Mechanic Seriously a rear door and opened it. He
- turbance originated in Connecti-| suffered head and possible internal injuries. The accident hap-
cut. He called it a “resettlement! 2 young Mecham pa by a quake.” he stock car at the Indianapolis #4 " \Speedrome, U. 8. 52 and Kitley Pened on Ind. 67. Steven, was » y taken to Methodist Hospital
Mrs. Murray, a clerk in tlie record. bureau at Police Headquar-
Ice Cap Settles | Father Lynch said a massive ice- Ave.. yesterday was in serious cap which had settled on an area condition in St. Francis Hospital| from New England southward to/today. | Long «Island Es down the Henry Willis Davis, 22, of 1359 ters, was being fifiven to work by. earth's surface. It melted 5000 Oliver AVE, received a broken | Dorothy Kubler, 26, of 545 E. 11th years ago but the depressed crust|left leg and left shoulder and a St. when the Kubler vehicle only recently .has begun to re- brain concussion. He was struck collided]with one driven by Lowell cover, latter cars driven by Leland Potts E. John, 18, of 314 8. Holmes Ave. “It is like the créaking of and Bill Copeland collided. Potts’ Mrs. Murray is in General stairs,” Father Lynch said. “Long|car crashed into the pits and hit Hospital with bruises and shock. after someone walks on them, the Mr. Davis. ; (Mr. John received minor inboards are snapping in place.” | Both drivers escaped injury. juries and was treated at the The Fordham priest said such re eet tre eee scene.
’ . ? Four children were .njupéd, ar i uakes could be expected Three Men Lose $91 ae I
. cident at St. Clair and Fayette Rattles Windows In Separate Robberies si. You The quake rattled windows, Treated and released at Genknocked over glassware and dis-| Three men lost a total of $91, ,, Hospital were Catherine lodged pictures from. walls. It in three separate robberies last gn i¢y 1 month; Patricia Smith; 1 shook buildings along its narrow, night. In each case two men took yo... Barbara Deal, 11, and Cora snake-like: course which extended the money. Dale 14, all of 1123 Missouri St. from the foothills of the Berk- Fred Gibson 38, of 411 W. 10th * phe children were passengers shire Mountains im Connecticut St. ‘was "robbed - of $17 while jn a car driven by John Stivey, through the -Ramapos and Skag entering his house. Eladas Sndols- 19 of 350 Miller .8t. His vehicle munk ranges th New Jersey. kas, 21, Camp Atterbury soldier, collided with“a truck driven by It bypassed New York City but was robbed of $70 and his iden- Virgil Alexander, 17, of 249 S. ' shook Hollis, Long Island, and tification paper@ while in the 400 Oakland Ave, in the 2200 block several other towns upstate. _ block of Indiana Ave. Clarence Fayette” St. : > : New Jersey state police had Clay Denhen, 61, Crawfordsville, Following the collision, the more calls than they could han- lost $4 in the 4800 block of Win- Stivey vehicle struck a parked dle. Some callers thought the throp Ave. " lcar and truck.
“What's Going ~~ -Onat ingan!”
That's a question lots of folks seem to be asking us these days.
RY S
S
It's a mighty fair question, we believe, for most citizens of Indiana, and every food store and meat dealer, are affected one way or the other by what is going on at Kingan!
Briefly, here's what:
First of all, Kingan deeply feels its responsibility to the people of Indianapolis, as one of the largest employers in the city (our pay- . roll is around $ 1,000,000 per month) and to the State of Indiana, as widtiis the largest buyer of Indiana livestock (last year, over $70,000,000 worth!). So these days when others might be uncertain, we're putting on
ISCious new full steam ahead! : ,
pecial rubrmits invise ks loops in ps are slow
We're going ahead with a program of constantly striving tgp make the good things we make to eat, taste even better.
Every single day we're running kitchen tests, and consumer taste tests. Se
\ We're creating and trying our delicious new recipes. At the same time, we are checking and cross-checking every single product we ~Kingan folks produce-to insure you uniform high quality.’ We're devising new-types of things you haven't even dreamed of, which will be ready for the market one day soon,
But that’s not all!
In order to back up the good things we produce and market from the farms of the Hoosier State, we have inaugurated the most aggressive promotion plans in all of Kingan’s history. i You've already seen some evidence of this, and later we're going to tell you further news about what we are doing to expand the sales of our Indiana-made products throughout the country.
But then—as well as now—we will continue, of course, to give
. Indiana folks first call on everything we make. Sy .
. 86.40 .+ 97.00 11500 143.00
And then—as well as now and for years past—all Kingan products will continue to be 100% U. S. Government Inspected. ,
! It all adds up to the fact that we take those four Kingan words, “King of Fine Foods,” pretty seriously!
«
.|beth took matters—and a tele-
.of the possibility of Communist
By DONNA MIKELS | Times Stafy Writer : . MILWAUKEE, Sept. 4 - Neither : lone of John Reihman’'s wives is ‘mad at him. > : |“ This is one of the most unusual [twists to the true life_tale o |“John’s Other Wife,” the story of la’ traveling salesman who kept : two wives and two families less {than 60 miles apart for four lyears, each unaware of the other's existence. = “He was a good husband and (fagher,” say both wife No. 1, Dorothy Rennes Relhman, She'boygan Falls, Wis., and wife No. |2, pretty blond Elizabeth Nordman Reihman, Milwaukee. | The fact, that neither of the {spouse he deceived is mad at lhim—or at each .other—is a ‘pretty good indication of what a llikeable chap the handsome 33-\year-old electrical appliance sales{man is. Even his two mothers-
JOHN-—Commufer.
[in-law are still “standing by” DOROTHY—No animosity. ‘traffic t6 Berlin. equipment. : ’ ; John. : : . i ) ha ines trp i had A Sia Nyy Headed downstream again, the | ’ r John's: monthly “business trips” “prince of a fellow, said she Meanwhile, the Communist East : gain, ‘I'm Being Crucified had allowed him. to divide his was not sure “I could trust him German “state security service=-Faft-made-no-progress for nearly
John himself thinks the public time between his wife and child any more.” + Meanwhile, John said he hoped Berlin scientista Wolfgang Water- and the Cincinnati Yacht Club e” from a “bad press’ ever and their 5-year-old ‘daughter in the courts would allow him to gtraat. known Tor _his research gave the adventurers an outboard ‘continue. to support his families ith streptomycin. light last month. Cracks, ga. from being dismayed at and that the public would “try in priit about the proverbial po exposure, John said he is te understand.” Eh RE : ; b Despite his wrongs, John points FOUR men convicted of plot- being repaired. ; : lines like “Two Homes, Two Jobs, Flanked by his two wives he went out that he ‘tried to meet my ting the assassination of Ring Indiana and : Michigan
Two Wives—One Headache” have. voluntarily to the Milwaukee responsibilities.” He worked both as a salesman were executed. "
ppliances and took
as a liquor salesman yg aq price ceilings have been (UP) i i his “families. Since his| MEaT P g UP) __Indiana and Michigan au-
has ‘‘gotten the wrong impression in Milwaukee and wife Dorothy]
is .narital double-troubles Sheboygan Falls. “traveling salesman” and head- g154 to “get a load off my mind.”
tended to make a circus out of prosecuting attorney to put the /this thing. he said. |
[Because I faced it and am trying... he marriage occurs out
crucified. The thing I’knew would
{ to the charge of adultery. He is happeq if I tried to-come clean—
now free on bond, pending a
a lot of publicity that hurts the , oo... =o Sept. 14. lies were taken care of: Ww 1 a > | The patrons were taken to St. girls and the kids—is happen- J g p : “I've got three of the finest JAPANESE police raided Com Joseph, Mich., in a chartered: bus ing.” mo ‘A Terrible Load’ jchiaren granted a munist party offices and arrested where a Michigan prosecutor said A
“good husband” to Elizabeth happen.
wwife and daughter to meet his family living at Plymouth, Wis. near Milwaukee. Phone Call Spills Beans Last July, as she was awaiting the birth of a second child, Eliza-
“This hasn't been easy for him,” continued the pretty blond whose second child, a son now ‘3 months - old, was born prema-
disclosure. ‘‘He’s been carrying a terrible load, supporting two families and carrying that on his conscience. Now I can understand why he hasn't been well
phone—into her own hands. It was when she called her in-laws to introduce herself that she got the startled reply: “But John's °. ; : wife’s name is Dorothy and she S'N¢® Weve been married. lives in Sheboygan Falls.” Wife No. 1, Dorothy, no longer It was then the story unfolded. consents to see reporters. But in court she expressed no animosity ‘toward her husband or toward
take care of his families and
- . ’ atone for his mistake. Kick Off Bi New ~ Neither wife has indicated she | : would take him back. Dorothy
said she wanted time to consider. | {
Savin B d D sy. Elizabeth, still terming him a! : | g Bond Drive | - By United Press Local Sailor Loses WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 — The
government's biggest saving bond _-
- ! - { {drive since World War II started Life mn Freak {rolling today on the twin themes!
[of “beat inflation” and “help
America rearm against a new 1 aggressor.” { U 0 CCI ei From both President Truman
and Treasury Secretary John Ww.
Snyder came appeals for Ameri-| A happy holiday hunting trip)
ended in sorrow for an Indianap-| 'olis man. He has been notified | that his sailor son was killed -in| a freak accident on a Navy tug-| "'boat in Florida. Mr.. Truman, opening the drive, William Nolan Metcalf, 21, was {in a speech broadcast nation-wide the son of Mr. and Mrs. Felix, {last night from San Frantisco, Metcalf, 1722 N. Parker Ave. | jurged Americans to buy govern-igiate police searched Brown jment saving bonds as their “per-| County yesterday to notify the sonal” answer to Communist a%-| father. They found him hunting | gressors who threaten a new! n Ed Hart's farm. He returned! world war. > ih 1 i : Mr. Snyder told a nation-wide | ome al once. ! Iradio audience that “defense is| The youth was killed late Sunleverybody’s job” in which Ameri-|/day. He had mounted a ladder to] {cans can play “an important role hang up his washing, slipped and {by helping mobilfze the power of|fell into the water. His head ap-| {individual thrift behind the pro- parently hit the side of the ship {ductive power of our nation.” and he was knocked unconscious, | { The President painted an oml-| pie pody was recovered from {nous picture of a Red war ma-(he gt Johns River near Green chine poised for attack around the Cove Springs, Fla. and will be |world./ For this reason. he said, sent to the Jordan Funeral Home
{it is imperative that “we build : ervi : : . our defenses -— and build them i 5 Tyices are being ar i
fast.” 1 ‘ han { Mr. Truman warned that the The youth was born in Edin-| |Communists “may try to resume PUrg, but had lived here since. \the offensive in Korea at any infancy. He graduated . from 'time” . . . and “aré capable of Technical High School. in Jan-
llaunching new attacks in Europe, uary, 1948, and joined the Navy
cans to chip in with their own {personal savings to help the government pay for a new defense buildup. - i ‘Personal’ Answer
, lin the Middle East, or elsewhere last Dec. 28. au]
|
lin Asia, whenever it suits them.”
| i Parade of Arms Whatever the outcome 6f the {Korean truce talks, the President warned that the nation must not {lag in its defense plans because
ali BITE SIZE _
0 SA LENSES
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aggression elsewhere. | Mr. Snyder spoke in Grand {Rapids, Mich., selected as a “typical American city” for the formal launching of the bond drive. As Ipart of the ceremonies, a milelong parade of new arms and equipment passed in review, each: bearing a price tag showing what
V— READY-CUT SPAGHETTI defense bond dollars can buy. . |
a i - - |
INDIANA CENTRAL COLLEGE
An Indianapolis Institution offer- ||
ing courses leading to’ the follow- |! ing degrees: = .
Bachelor of Arts
Bachelor of Science
oi ¥ > AENT PLAN - | me : : Kingan & Co. | our home | coc sti i sneer ete 3 ran 3 ; memes z - soe fel . on - = red rrugsor] ~ “King of Fine Foods”. 06. Flic me - suing . EAT |
| PACKERS OF QUALITY MEAT PRODUCTS
ES
Bachelor of Science in ‘Education
Bachelor of Science in Business Administration « anime oll
nat 2 A
i i Pre-professional and Teacher Training Courses 5
4 Reset] . : rn ’ : c | I leven John's Moiors-nlaw ‘Stand B farihiii 2 e tlement Quake Boy, 3, Falls Out Traveling Salesman's 2 Wives Not Mad; {Inion in Berlin Agree He's ‘Good Husband and Father’ pc 40 oti
Milwaukee Journal photo.
3 'mdtter before the courts. of slectrie | “I could have taken a powder! “,. 0. cic now. Sinee ® IBN J 'and run out on this at any time at s where it rests n Sm ‘to keep ; " yohplYyisconsin has no bigamy law le life Has hit the headlines : lin the past four years,” says John. =... oo ioh it can prosecute double e has Joe ne pe en mentn d crackdown on spec-/a raid on an alleged. gambling * he's lost ode job 2nd may Iose the ulators. The controls dropped two house straddling the state line.
to do the right thing I'm being other. of the state, John pleaded guilty "Phere were no “beers with the Y
boys,” John says, but both fami-
|. For the four Years since they ic punishment might be a/Mman’” says John. “And no one gy, of the 17 members of the par- bond was set at $1000 each on \were wed in an elopement to Du-.,,..,, sentence. But both wives ¢aN aay a word Bpoue eines Of v's provisional central commit- charges of frequenting a gam~{buque, Iowa, John has been a have said they hope this won't the girls—or ey better not to
Nordman Reihman and a “good g,vs Elizabeth, who has since] “How I got into it and a lot of fore the raid. father” to- their daughter, now 3./r104" for an annulment: “That other things are personal. The 4 a 2 | PARIS, Sept. 4 (UP)—Medical {If there was one drawback, it yu. i14 be the worst thing they best thing that could happen now REPORTS from India's north- authorities said today that more : people would leave us ern frontiers said that the Rus- than 200 children have been 'alone and let; us work this thing sians have installed a radar sys- stricken by polio in an epidemie out, There's a lot of meaning in tem along the Western Tibet and that spread from the Saar terrisomething a guy said recently: China's Sinkiang Province bor- tory and eastern France toward ‘To err is human, to forgive is ders with India, Kashmir and the central part of the country,
turely due to the shock of the divine’.
iwas John's failure to take his could 26 -to- Taek, is that
STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW.
(wife No. 2. She too has said|’ I Ral, ny er |she hepes John remains free to)
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Sn Ci. PAGE, 3
anda r—————
‘World Repori— Lethargia Heads
For Bethlehem at 25 Miles a Day
_. MADISON, Sept. 4 (UP)~—The New Orleans-bound raft Lethar-
gia was drifting toward Bethle« hem, Ind. and Louisville, Ky., to=
: 4 ’ ’ day: | At Russian Tax | Mary Ellin McCrady, iskipper of
the raft crew of two women and By United Press two men, said she hoped to reach West Berlin's anti-Communist New Orleans—1200 miles away-— trade union planned today to cut by Oct, 10. With the aid of an . [traffic on the Soviet operated ele- outboard motor, the raft makes
rited valiw heré in retaliatio about 25 miles a day and averyated railway here i ages three to four miles an hour.
against a Communist “blockade The raft will have to cover tax” on truck traffic to the city. about 425 miles more on the Ohio - Informed sources said the Ger- River before getting to the Missisman trade union was considering SiPPI at Cairo, IIL. blocking entrances to the elevated “py j5By.20 foot raft already {in West, Berlin. Stopping West p,4' covered half the distance § Berliners from using the railway from New Kensington, Pa., dewould deprive the Soviet zone 8yS-‘gpite mishaps. It flipped over tem of an estimated $1.million naar Moundsville, Pa., while being monthly. ? towed by a fast riverboat, and This is four times the amount the crew narrowly escaped death, the East Germans will receive They spent two weeks rebuilding from the tax imposed on truck the cabin and .obtaining mor
has confirmed the arrest of West 8 week. Two Ohio newspapers
motor but it broke down soon afterward and several more days UE were lost while the motor was
: Abdullah of Jordan on July 2
- Officers Nab 78 in Raid
MICHIGAN CITY, Sept. 4
reinstituted by the French gov- thorities teaméd up yesterday in
years ago, become effective Sept.. ‘They arrested 70 persons they : ? tagged as “customers,” and eight a alleged operators. .
ing house.
tee, Eleven others fled homes be- = : es Polio Strikes French
Pakistan. . Four deaths were reported.
The DIXIE
Crease resistant water repellent Rayon a no Gabardine—Mouton : Wo ecollar—quilted satin : lining—intercel interlining— COLORS: -Taupe, Gray,
Navy, Green—
The ELLSWORTH
Rayon gabardine Surcoat with detachable belt and duo-length sleeves— Quilted satin lining and .___ intercel interlining— Sizes 12 to 20. - Sizes 12 to 20.
His =r 11.50
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MONARCH-=has a very basic creed—to use‘the best and the most enduring textures and leathers than can be had—cut them with a liberal hand (there is no such word as "skimp" in the Monarch dictionary)—to make them comfortable in action—make them stand out as the "foremost : value in the outdoors world."
BUT—even that isn't enough for Monarch. They likewise show a talent in design that gives them FIRST PLACE IN AMERICA STYLE! (Tradition—with a Touch of Tomorrow)—
There is a great and complete showing of Monarch outdoor ‘wear in the Boys' Shop—as fine and full as you'll ever hope to see— :
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