Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 October 1951 — Page 3

[. 21, 1951 les

ter, Home

here's no place

r-two of them vy that they had {the big town

t appearance, a er charged with a McCauley, 15r from Nahant, 1 and cried. He ing to do with which is misse judge to keep ing him “any

, crying unconhis shirt and ‘heavy bruises on his back.

Bail

year-old friend, and two school sconding baby gned in felony bail. .

me here Thursms after stealm the home of r, will be ar-

she stole only ne $3000 on a th her friends ning $15,000 in d Central Stahas dis-

ney

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SUNDAY, OCT. 21, 1951 _=

Egyptian Slai

ension High § British ire on Camp

By United Press CAIRO, Egypt, Oct. Egyptian soldier was

anchor of Canal zone.

the

Fragmentary reports said the Egyptian was killed when British troops fised on an Egyptian camp. was avyail-

No British comment

able immediately. %

Egvptian ambush.

terrorists firing

No large-scale violence was re-

ported in the zone today, but

there were reports that squads of

Egypttan fanatics were being organized for renewed sahotage attacks on British installations. THe reported clagh at Port Said heightened tension in the mideasfern trouble zone, where 11 persons have been killed and 110 injured in the few brief days since Egypt announced its inten-

der which Britain had maintained

LATOODS Ap he COUNTY cmc cons Britain, calmly ignoring

Ane

"Egyptian declaration, moved war-

4

ships and thousands of troops. in‘to the area today. Police precautions were tightened in Egyptian cities to prevent further outbreak of the rioting which had caused most of -the casualties. : Foreign Minister Salah El Din

its claims to the Suez Canal and the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan claims which touched off the riots supporting expulsion of British troops. :

Dr. Teter Opens Pediatric Office

Dr. George V. Teter has announced the opening of.his office at 401 FE. 34th St. for the practice

nf pediatrics (dizeazes of chil dren). Dr, Teter, a

1848 graduate of the Indiana University School of Medicine, served his internship at General Hospital and for the last

two years has been in postgraduate train-

ing at Children’s Medical Center in Boston. He served three years in the Navy. Dr. and Mrs. Teter live with their two children at 6126 Compton St.

Dr.

Teter

Court Ruling May Curb TV Use of Old Movies

LOS ANGELES. Cal, Oct. 20 (UP)—A legal victory for cowboy movie star Roy Rogers over the use of his old movies today offered a possible check to the multi-million dollar business of selling old movie films to television. Rogers won a permanent injunction in the court of Federal Judge Pierson M. Hall which forbids Republic Studios from selling 81 of his old pictures to television stations, Judge Hall ruled that Western film ido! had the to control association of his name HEA EY tommereial product or advertising.

the right

Bandits Wound Grocer After $425 Robbery

Three bandits with sawed-off shotguns robbed a grocer of $425 last night and fired at him as he attempted to flee back into the store, George D. Haboush, owner of a super-market at 3032 W. 16th 8t., was treated for a slight leg wound at General Hospital, .

Woman Trampled | By Herd of Cows Dies

ROCHESTER. Ind, Oct. 20 (UP)—Mrs. Jack Curry, 62, died in a hospital here today of injuries suffered when she was trampled by a herd of cows at her farm home near Akron Oct. 8.

3 Weeks at 5000 Bucks Pe

Lili Gets the

20— An reported killed today in a clash with Brit-

ish troops at Port Said, northern embattled Suez

Earlier, the Egyptian driver of a British truck was wounded by from

hinted todaysthat: Egypt may aps

et the the UTE Nations ons W

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Be Anh kw Po »”

n Along Sue

Times Phofo ybBill Oates

PRINTS: PREVENT MIXUP—Within minutes after birth, babies are f8otprinted in Indianapolis tion of cancelling the treaty un- hospitals to assure identification, as shown above. A similar system was being ‘inaugurated at St.

liht Chucks Her Mink Coat

By United Press VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct. 20— Thousands of Americans streamed across the border. today to get a glimpse of Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh, who have

reached the half-way mark on their 10,000-mile roval tour of Canada.

The princess and her husband who traveled through the snowcovered Canadian Rockies in their special train, were greeted by the cheers an "estimated 400.000 persons when they arrived. Thousands the spectators were Americans, many from as away as Seattle, Wash. 125 to the south

nf

of far miles

Three Faint in Crond The sun was shining and temperature in middle The clad in a maroon coat trimmed with black a maroon hat, black accessories and a three-strand pearl necklace and pear! earrings She tossed her full-length mink coat-—Canada’s wedding present — in the back of the roval car as she left the depot There was such a crowd at the train station that three persons fainted in the crush. For three days Elizabeth and Philip will have a back-breaking schedule of public appearances. Then they will get a three-day vacation away from the crowds and public officials at a secluded resort lodge on the eastern shore of Vancouver Island.

West Siders to Get Free Chest X-Rays Residents three West Side neighborhoods will have a chance to get free X-ravs when the Marion County Tuberculosis Association takes the = State Board of Health mobile unit “on the road”

the the 30's princess was

velvet

of

this week. Tomorrow the .unit will he at School 15. Belleview .at 14th from 10 a. m. to noon and 1 to 6 p. m. Tuesday X-rays will he taken at School 63. Traub and Belmont Park. from 2 to 6 and 7 to 9 p. m. Wednesday and Thursday the Christamore House at W. Michigan and Tremont will be the X-ray site. Hours of operation on Wednesday will be at 10 a. m. to noon and 1 to 6 p. m. and ‘oi Thursday from 2to6and 7Tto 9p. m.

Qt

Expels McCarthy ‘Spy’ GENEVA, Switzerland, Oc*. 20 (UP)—Charles E. Davis, 23, was expelled from Switzerland tonight by order of a Swiss federal court

which found him guilty of gathering political information on American diplomats for Sen.

Joseph R. McCarthy (R. Wis.) He boarded a plane for Paris and home,

[rene

Old Heave-O

Because of Peekaboo Pants

By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON United Press Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 20—Ciro’s one of the most glittering of movie-colony night spots, canceled strip-teaser Lili St. Cyr's engagement tonight after four sheriff's officers raided her act and ordered her to ‘clean it up” -—Or else. The raid took place during last night's performance with a host of movie luminaries in the audience. After a day of thinking it over Owner Herman Hover announced that Miss St. Cyr will not appear tonight. “T just decided, ‘what's the use’ ” Mr. Hover said. “We have a show, anyway, even without her. “No, I haven't talked it over with her, yet. But I told her husband she would not appear to-

night.”y : Miss St. Cyr ccald not be reached Immediately for com-

ment. Mr. Hover said he came to his decision “15 minutes before” he conferred with sheriff's officers this afternoon. Asked whether he took the position that the raid voided Miss 8t. Cyr's $5000-a-wéek contract, Mr. Hover said: “I haven't given that a thought. It f8 my present position that her engagement ended last night. I

just decided there wasn't any need to carry this on any more." Four officers raided the SunsetStrip club and decided the way the voluptuous blond skittered around in her net bra and transparent panties was ‘lewd, lascivious and indecent.” Lili said it wasn’t, either, but they cited her and Mr. Hover for putting on an indecent show. The beautiful stripper was almost in tears over the whole thing. “Was I surprised?” she gulped. “I sure was. I'm mad, too. My act is far less revealing this time than it was when I was at Ciro's last spring. I wear more than they weal any place else around here.”

Anthony Hospital in Michigan City just before the Lyons baby disappeared.

i RE GR

i

Lack of Footprints Dims

Hope for Kidnaped Baby

: Servi : Tigpes Sate frvice

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had been-porn-days later, the future might hold more: In six months his mother some hope for the eventual iden- could pass him on the street and tification of kidnaped infant not recognize him. Lawrence Lyons. The footprints wouldn't have But by a strange twist of fate, helped police find the missing the four-day-old infant as snatchédd from his crib just’ as. St. Anthony's Hospital here was switching to a new footprinting system which would have been a permanent clue to his identity. The new method would have given at least a fragmentary hope that police would have some chance or identifying the child, if a lead to his abductor should ically different prints. And fingercome in the distant future. print experts say it is even pos-! As it is. the time {is running sible that they would definitely out in which the fast-changing identify the child. provided the features of the newly born baby newborn prints were clear and would identify him properly made,

them if in the future they should find a child believed to be the missing boy. Although prints of such a tiny child might not be positive identification, there are sufficient patterns to help in the task. For instance, they would serve to eliminate any child with rad-

The kidnaped child missed by As it stands now, science offers days coming under the new sys- no long-term means of identifyYarn

ing the baby. Blood tests could In the past St. Anthony's has provide some help in eliminating footprinted newborn infants at suspects, hut are not accepted as the time the child and mother definite proof of paternity. were released, stamping the baby's

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

o Weary Congress

““and politicking

re page

“anon S13

‘looks like the 12-dav-old infant

PN AT fo Lhe ¥ Bre tHe AEE Tast-a-few-Next week He wil Save changed wo.

child. But it would have helped’

pre

-.

—_—

How would you'like to own the nard top iconvertible shown on Page One?

Downs Its Tools: Until Jan. f — ig a radio and heater,

| By United Press There are turn lights "so vou WASHINGTON: oot % ~Con- don't have to grind the window gress vote resident ruman yp and down all the time :-on {another $13 billion for nationallfrosty nights. J security today and then went pDark:blue and grey custom uphome with a record of peacetime nolstery is smoothly tailored over spending, taxing, investigating cafe foam rubber seats. just about ‘un- pg 3 1951 Nash Rambler equalled in the nation’s history. yas could win it. The 82d Congress adjourned ‘its ° gow? By entering The Times | first session sine die after setting $3000 “Movietime, U.S. A.” connext Jan. 8, instead of the cus- {act tomary Jan. 3, for the start of rpg gleaming Nash heads the 3 Second aad 1951 lem. Tha is 245 prizes being offered in this jiesause Jar. 3 i a UTS" unique and interesting conteset. {day inste of 1} y. | Wearied by the longest: unbroken session of any peacetime To enter. all vou have to do is 88 since. 3-14, the law- FD Fv rvt Ee il a lot. of Paste up movie titles Slipped tion Cit Aad +, the Amusement pages of the controversial legislation that will Times. plus your own words into keep the political fires burning SORLOTCe ara tabh or shoftthroughout the 1952 presidential 3 S€D » paragrap : vear story. The record was one of billions YOU San nse up to threg ot your for defense and nothing for the WN Worns lo cone eal r no reforms. demanded hy Mr. Tru- title, but you can’t use more : an man. And jt bristled with front- 20 titles in"each of the entries, investigations «into crime. © “When you've ‘finiched “vour- en= communism and political ¢orrup- tries, take them right down to tion that may shape the outcome your favorite theater, deposit them of the presidential election. in the contest box, and start rnakThe Senate and House nailed jpg up more entries. 3 down their - big-spending cham Fat. . : pionship in the. closing hours of Make sure that an Official En th ens on he SE nassed trv Blank is included with each e § f y r 8 y i : three oe or bills totaling: entry and that each of the entries : A i eid) 23th the so. Its Maier milion” ail aified at weds Tn a : % 8Ma FERRERS THE TEENY 61 HE SRE Le edhe pci i United . States - at home and If one of. your entries takes first abroad. place at any one of the 60 thea-

and

How to Enter

That was more than any pre- ters participating in the contest:

vious Congress ever voted for all you will receive ah RCA Victor government expenses, except in-‘‘'45” Record Player plus $6 worth time of war. It swelled to $95 bhil- of records of your. own choice.

was | for direct and indirect fense purposes. :

Cadou to- Conduct

Twelve more judges have been announced in the contest. They are:

ro te > ; : the Prige “list: : : lion. the aparobriations.p: Ms: Your SRLLY. W en a ie Mawnan dhertshortma Rs 2} abs ee > Ll - ies ES ROR Ta ese TD es g

Here's Your Chance 15. Rambles

'Movietime U.S.A.’ Winner Gets Nash

Zaring Theater —Dr. Robert B.

Movie titles MUST be st Pierce, pastor of Broadway Meth- sheet bf 2 Pag @m odist Church, 2820 Broadway St.:!., Fach m MUST close with: Orville ID. Denbo, cashier at Cen tral State Bank, 2998 Central'T Ave. and Saul Klien of Klien's ih Pharmacy, 2802 Central Ave Garfield Theater — Herman J . Kasper of Queen's Department entr Store, 2207 Shelby St Cecil'R. . It 15 not Secesiary to Buy a ticket to Tiirt f ot t11aryv D803 theater {n order to deposit your entries, Hur : of the Hurt Mortuary, 2226 * deposit any number of entries Shelby St, and Harold F. Schultz ans r of days, in any number of f t} 1 y “the the nontest . of the Mayrose, Market No. 2 e in the contest boxes by 2916 Shelbv St he eaters close the night of ‘ s 1 be 1 n Theatair-Twin Drive-In—L. W os anaes for Leatness Rinehart of the Founts ; thougnl : ! 0 Foun 1in, Square ries become the property of The Branch of Merchants National In¢ apolis Times and participating Bank, 1059 Virginia Ave Gus s siiztble, Iegardioss of age, casper of Kasper Furnitur AleX vees o a Indianapolis Ka ) Ka p JI urniture and Times ana the participating theatezs and Appliance Co., 1082 Virginia Ave, nbers of their familtes, and S. A lilliams ~ 1g . ere will be two winners selected from 3 1 : I. Willi 1m . of Gulf i Re- antries deposited at each of tho particifining Co., 114 W. St. Clair St. g theaters First place winners at ; heater will receive an RCA Victor Arlington Theater--Joseph Gui- Record Player and a $8 album of - . ds of the winner's choice. Second done, owner of Arlington Shop- at each rheater will receive Season's ping Centér; Ted Campbell of the «i ed Fe wo a ater. Judeing Arlington Branch of the Fletcher [hid {98 n6ighoborhood in -which each 1K . on + 24 5 : si 4 Trust Co,. 6000 E. 10th 8 nd place entry at each theater Cec rvnes, manager of the 13.1 ¥ ed ne Grand Finals and e il B Ager of 1e Mu Dl sequent. judging for the rat Theate: judges for the Grand ounced by The Times The Prize List rizes will he: First. a . Custom Country Club Here is the of the five 2! $2010.26, from Indian- - M ir Downjown Sesh . \a trys Brizes wt \ ot | Dea Market St sécond. an valuable grand prizes which you ite Gas ge worth $359.95; third, an y Fh % ace Laas Ranga worth $269.9 both from si mign win’ he Estate Range Dea ers of Indianapolis FIRST. GRANP PRIZE-—Nash Vicien : Iain. an RCA Vicior Custom Country Club automo-,!? Dealers of SATA t fifth, an bile worth $2010.26 A ph worth

SECOND GRAND tate Gas Range worth $359.95 THIRD . GRAND ,' PRIZE—Es-

tate Gas. .Range. worth $269.95.

FOC TIC RAND PRIZES Ro RA pan as Victor PHonograph-Radis Con="" Gis

sole worth $199.95. . FIFTH GRAND PRIZE—RCA Victor Radio-Phonograph Combination worth $59.95

Here are the rulgs and valuable

ment pages of the daily or Sunday Indianapolis Times ' Do not use more than 20 titles. but you may use fewer than 20 titles Between each title you may add from one to three of vour own words if they

. orum Series Jep Cadou S8r., chief of the Indianapolis bureau of the International News Service, will conduct eight forum meetings on current affairs for the Indianapolis Chapter of the American Institute of Banking. The first of the 35 pb. m Wednesday forums at the Hotel gi Lincoln will be held this week. Mr. Cadou has been a reporter in Washington, Detroit, New Orleans and Indianapolis.

MORRI

Mr, Cadou

print on its birth certificate. Decided to Change System A few weeks ago before officials had any foreboding of the iragedy that was to strike their hospital, they decided to institute the system used at most of the nation’s hospitals, that of taking prints * immediately after birth. But on Oct. 9 the day. that 37-year-old Mrs. Lyons gave birth by Caesarian section to the child she had wanted so long, the new system was not yet in use. He was one of those scheduled to be printed the day he went home with- his mother, the day that never came. Hence little Larry was marked only with the bracelet sealed to his wrist. The minute his abductor tore off the blue beaded band spelling out his name, little Larrv became just another newly born infant.

MOVIETIME, U

titles clipped from The and I have used not more any titles.

DROP ENTRY IN THEATERS... DO NOT

OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK ul ?

Herewith is an entry for The Times’ “Movietime, | U.S A” Contest, | have used ~.........

ADDRESS ..............

take any entries to The Times: :

S.A. CONTEST

movie (number) Times Amusement Pages

than three words between

tessa ene

B «+... PHONE ........

CONTEST BOXES AT Mail entries and DO NOT | - 2

Today, {f he is still alive, he

S02 0 0 0 0 0.0 AGATA =

State Physicians OFFERED AS A P

Schedule Annual Meeting at Murat

Nearly 2000 doctors are expected to take part in the threeday annual meeting of the Indiana State Medical Association. It opens one week from tomorrow in the Murat Temple. TWeliyope scientific papers will be read. | On the entertainment side, golt, trap and skeet-shoot tournaments will be held. Buffet dinner for men, women physicians’ dinner and the Auviliary dinner will be given Monday evening, Oct. 29. The foliowing evening the doctors and their wives "will hear the Purdue University Glee Club.

this valuable

is yours fo

mi ———— |

Report Jessup to Get |

Recess Appointment WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (UP)— President Truman will give Am-! bassador-at-Large Philip C. Jes-

sup a recess appointment as a United Nations delegate, informed administration sources said today The Senate Foreign Relations Committee failed to act on the controversial Jessup nomination and no attempt was made to bring it to a showdown Senate vote. A subcommittee, however, voted 3 to 2 against the diplomat after Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R. Wis.) and Harold E. Stassen, president of the University of Pennsylvania, attacked his quali-| fications.

Is Crown Hill really the largest and most beautiful cemetery with mausoleum in the United States? «

Then how can its prices be so low?

Is'it really non-profit?

you want to help out in an essential industgy—help build je sascsalt engines and tank transmissions— there's a place for you ot ALLISON If you can qualify for one of the several openings listed in our space in the classified section of this

Why do its directors give their time free? ’ 3 What is Crown Hill's famous “Endowment Care Fund”?

- . Non Profit Since 1563 rs - ~~ 2/83 ROMLEVARD PLACE THE NATION'S LARGEST

Crown Fie

BEAUTIFUL CEMETERY WITH MAUSOLEUM

Ig UBLIC SERVICE folder r the asking just ‘phone TAvrsor 4561 or write us tor vour FREE copy | | ¥ Re / | / ff | LZ .. “Fade OR TERR | A

titilament ray

Don't other cemeteries have such funds?

Are these some of the reasons why Crown Hill has beén chosen by families of modest and humble means as well as by families of a President, three Vice-Presidents, Governors, Senators, writers, etc. ?

Values up to

5398

Will your guide take my club or my family on a tour of Crown Mill's scenic and historic high. lights— free of charge ?

+ Plots from Fifty Dollar, + PHONE TALBOT 4561 AND MOST

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PRIZE —Es- In

A iw v FL aE SN,

Ciel PAGE 3

are necessary to complete the thought.

Dealers of v, .

e m all decisions. Grand Prize ounced one weak ‘ater

Annual State Meeting On Social Work Set * ‘Community Services — Whose

Responsibility?” will be the theme of the annual meeting of the

a. State Conference on.Sgs Mrs. C. T. "Boynton of Elkhart, president, said preliminary registration indicated an attendance of about 1000. . ©

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