Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1951 — Page 66
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i — ‘I Was a Very Foolish Girl'— »
War Bride Think + By United Press » COLUMBUS, O., Nov, 10 — A = it Norwegian war bride opposed leniency today for a man and a 3 §oy sentenced to the electric chair °° or the “love triangle” slaying of her husband. Jerry Killinger, 18, and Max Amerman, 28, are scheduled to be executed for the shotgun slaying of Harold Mast last year. Amerman's electrocution was ordered for Thursday night, and Xillinger's, Friday night. “I loved my husband and I can see no reason to extend mercy to either of the men who deliberately killed him,” Mrs. Mast said in a letter to Gov. Frank J. Lausche from her new home in Nutley, N. J. Attorneys have appealed to Gov. Lausche for leniency for the pair, and the governor said he is giving the case ‘serious consideration.” Killinger, whose 19th birthday will come four hours after he is scheduled to die, admitted being the trigger man, Gives Her Property Amerman, the alleged mastermind, has made no effort to escape execution. After his conviction, he arranged for Mrs. Mast to receive-all his property. He expressed bewilderment over the widow's wish for him to die. Attorneys for Killinger, however, obtained a stay of execution bv appealing to the state supreme court. The court turned him down on the ground he had had a fair trial. The governor gave Amer- (jermany. man a stay until the court decided ‘Very Foolish Girl’ the Killinger case. a
gin
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band whom she had married while
muted. . Randi Mast told the governor misquoted. Suffice it to say that how she felt in a letter read to! know now, as I had known at the pardon and parole commis- the time, that I was a very foolish sion. Its report to the governor girl.” yz has not been revealed. Her account of the “one” in-| Her story was that of “a very timacy with Amerman was that foolish girl” who had had a “sor- of a war bride and her husband | did affair” with Amerman but settling on the Amerman farm! later confessed to a forgiving hus- near Medina in northern Ohio.
Blames New York— . | Chicago Being Edged | Off Television Screens
By JACK MABLEY Ollie two nights a week. The CHICAGO, Nov. 10 (CDN) soap company then dropped the Kukla, Fran and Ollie, the pro- Chicago show in favor of a new gram which has won more honors show in which they are assured’ than any other children’s show of a larger network of stations.| in television, is being cut by the Mr. Garroway and Mr. TillNational Broadcasting Co. strom were primarily responsible A telegram has gone out to for the “Chicago style” of tele-! NBC stations saying it is planned vision, which won nation-wide! to cut the show to 15 minutes a recognition last year for its day. It now is on for half an hour simplicity and imagination. a-day. On Small Budgets It is believed that the first 13 Inasmuch us both operated on minutes of the time period has pudgets that were small combeen sold to a cigaret company. pared with the money spent on The negotiations to slash the New York shows, the success of show have been carried out In the Chicago style was a reflecNew York, supposedly without the {jon on the abilities of New York, knowledge of Burr Tillstrom, producers. creator of the program. Mr. Tillstrom had received no Deliberate Plan Seen inkling that NBC wanted to It is felt in television circles in change the show. The reviews in Chicago that the move is part of the trade magazines this year, a deliberate campaign fo elimi- have been the most enthusiastic nate source of television programs. the ratings have been on a par The campaign started last with last year. summer when the time period of It is felt in Mr. Tillstrom's of-Garroway-at-Large was sold to fice that the attempt to cut the another sponsor. show to 15 minutes a day may be The same technique is being the forerunner of an effort to followed with Kukla, Fran anditake it out of the time period Ollie. NBC cleared other network altogether, or take it off the air. time for Proctor and Gamble, tess es——
which sponsors Kukla, Fran and Taft Raps Triman In Kansas City Talk
KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Nov. 10 (UP) — Republican presidential {hopeful Robert A. Taft was on his way to Oklahoma today after a fiery attack on what he called the “low state of public morality” under the present administration. The Ohio Senator, speaking at a GOP banquet here last night! ‘said only the Republican Party could restore the principles of {common honesty {fo the federal government. | Sen, Taft, left here for Perry, Okla., last night. He spent three {days in President Truman's home territory fighting for the GOP bid for the presidency.
Glidden Co. Opens
Color Center Here Glidden’'s new color and paint center at 609 N. Delaware was formally opened to hundreds of visitors vesterday. Glen Wickham. manager of the picture-windowed outlet, said hundreds filed through the building especially designed for paint distribution.
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FOR CULTURE'S SAKE— Opera star Blanche Thebom thinks the U. S. should have a Department of Culture, to aid opera singers, The glamour queen g fhe Metropolitan sugesls ai given artists fo de- The store will cater to public Foy travel and education ®X- and professional painters Pike penses, and that some “consid- |; 5 trimmed with scored ply-|
eration” should be given on wood, and one-coated with Glidtheir taxes. den products, Mr. Wickham said.
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i AAPM A Tee © SKI SEASON OPENING—Nancy Wilson, Gaylord, Mich., is | “waxing her skis for the first time this year. A quarter of a million
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Lover Should Die
MRS. RANDI MAST—"| can see no reason to extend mercy."
she developed a friendship with Standards Mrs. Mast said that because Amerman, was intimate with him morning. The parents of the victim, Mr. she couldn't use the English lan- once, but then told him that sheiception probably: will he fair to and Mrs. Lyle Mast, have urged guage well “the manner in which Would not go away with him and'good until December as there are that Killinger's sentence for Kill- J related certain details (at the that outside of friendship he could no present indications of storms ing their 24-year-old son be com- trial) leading to this intimacy Never mean anything to me.” were horribly misunderstood and A ,.R] .. i aa>—
Chicago as an important the show has ever received, and!
‘people went skiing in Michigan's 34 ski centers last year.
Chiropractors Blast ‘Medical Monopoly’ Here_ |
| Indiana chiropractors passed a { resolution condemning a ‘‘med-| ical monopoly” in Indiana and] promised a newspaper advertis-| > | ing campaign to give the “facts” to the public at the opening ses{sion of a joint state convention {at the Hotel Washington yester- | | day. | The Indiana Bureau of Chiro- | practic and the Federation of In{diana Chiropractors declared: | “ .. We feel that a medical ‘monopoly has been established in {Indiana for many years, seeking! {by devious means to deprive the| | citizens of Indiana from ‘the doc[tor of their choice,” this same { medical monopoly having lobbied) | against passage of chiropractic {legislation (in the Indiana Gen- new Hillel {eral Assembly) since 1927. . at Purdue
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{other advertising media that may Sts.
! means.” of
rneete " tural Shortwave Outlook
WASHINGT ON, Nov. 10 Weak signals and fading are expected to hamper reception of
The was Simon of fayette,
morrow through Friday, radio ex- campus.
here predicted this After next week, re-
brewing in the ionosphere. story
THE INIWRAPOLIS TIMES _
Purdue Dedicates Student Center Legion Chiefs
NEW STUDENT CENTER—Interior of th Purdue University today.
LAFAYETTE, Nov.
“Be it hereby resolved that we dedicated at 1 p. m. tomorrow, library, {. . . do hereby back a state-wide followed by a reception
| educational campaign that willl3 to 5 p. m. {place facts before the public {through newspapers and
in West ibe at our disposal and within our realization of a an adequate and recreation Jewish students on the campus. idea of such a conceived by Temple Israel in . who founded the B'nai Shortly after their only child, Shortwave radio broadcasts to-ig.iip Hillel Foundation on the
he was on duty with the Army inigjgje Kay, was born. She said that The
pers at the National Bureau of|;, 04 by Rabbi Alexander Fein- tional treasurer~of silver, who became the first full- Hillel Foundations, Inc., will time director of the Hillel Foundation here in 1950.
_
Foundation building limestone with a
University will belchapel-lounge, classroom, Kitchen
any building at State and Waldron dents within the last few months, Glee Club the the others being the St. Thomas Stewart.
Lafayette is
cul- University Assembly Chapel. Dedication ceremonies, Isidore Feibleman,
religious, center for
building Rabbi Meyer
La- : : master of ceremonies, will®
with the national anthem.
project was fur-
B'nai
structure of due.
The biggest ALARM of all.
w= FIRE STRIKES, you may hear one alarm... maybe a second alarm... perhaps even a third. But the biggest alarm of all is the alarm in your heart. |
“Was anybody caught inside. ..anybody 1 know... hurt’... burned’. .. overcome? How'd it start? How much loss? What's the whole story?” Even if you have a police pass or a good ' view from a roof, you still burn up with unsatisfied suspense and curiosity... Until you see your newspaper.
You grab your paper and all the answers are there. First, in complete detail, full of local color —as it never conld be anywhere else.
You knew it would al] be there. Together with all the other news to be found anvwhere
The newspaper is always “first with the most”
This message prepared by BUREAU OF ADVERTISING, American Newspaper Publishers Association
e new Hillel Foundation building to be dedicated at
10 — The | California redwood and Indiana! THE INVOCATION wil combination given by Rabbi Theodore Stamp-| recreation room, fer, Congregation Sons of Abra-|
15-year dream Aquinas Chapel and the Lutheran
Indianapolis,
past president of District Grand tion program and a financial re- police—and his red shirt. Lodge No. 2 of B'nai B'rith, as view on the building program will
SUNDAY, NOV. 11, 1951
Due Thursday For Big Welcome
Indianapolis sets out the welcome mat Thursday for the new national commander of the American Legion and the national president of the Auxiliary,
Neither Donald R. Wilson, Clarksburg, W. Va. nor Mrs, A. E. Campbell, Homer, La, fis a stranger in this home of the Legion’s national headquarters.
But the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce luncheon in the Columbia Club Thursday, an annual event the last 18 years, will make the greeting official. Gov, Schricker, Mayor Bayt and Mayot-elect Alex Clark plan to be on hand-—as does a large conpe tingent of local Legionnaires—-to make it more so. Commander Wilson is scheduled and ham, Lafayette, and the benedic-|to give an address expected to be
from Offices. It is the third new build-|tion by Rabbi Rav Soloff, Temple/a major Legion policy pronounceing to be dedicated to the re- Israel, Lafayette, Dedication of the modernistic|ligious interests of Purdue stu- will be provided by the Purdue
Special music ment, :
directed by Albert P. yo ciar’s Red Shirt “Hillel Observations” will be Tags Him After Robbery
the topic of Maier Levin, formerly with Of Terre Haute, who is president, A 25-year-old Indianapolis man of the Indiana B'nai B'rith Hillel who went to Cincinnati “itching
Foundations, Inc., on this dedica- for a stickup” was caught by
Richard B. Hamon, 350 Epler open pe presented by Jack N. Gole, Ave, was arrested in Cincinnati treasurer of the Indiana Founda- on a charge of armed robbery a
Joseph Paradise, New York, na- tions and chairman of the local few hours after a $31 grocerVy B'rith planning and building committee. holdup. He
had changed his
give Greetings from the Purdueiclothes, but had not discarded a
the address and the welcome tq Hillel Foundations will be brought! bright red shirt which a witness the visitors will be extended by by Rabbi Feinsilver and from the said the holdup man had worn. = u # Dr. Frank C. Hockema, vice presi- Hillel Council by Morris Richman, THE NEW building is a one- dent and executive dean of modernistic
Hamon also is wanted in president of Frankfort on a charge of assault and battery. a
Pur- Dorchester, Mass, the student organization.
that matters to you. Plus a hundred things vou don’t find anywhere else.
It doesn't take a fire. You can be just as wrought up tomorrow about a plan in the town council to widen vour street. You never know what's coming paper every day.
.50 vou read your news
Everybody else is just like you. Everybody reads the newspaper every day. If one thing doesn’t stir them — it's another. To a thrifty Bousewife, the fire sale can be just as important as the fire.
That's why when you have something to sell, the newspaper is the one place to reach all the people all the time.
&* * »
In advertising, why deal in fractions’...
» and published In the interest of fuller understanding of newspapers hy
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES A Scripps-Howard Newspaper
Magazines reach only fractions of vour market. For each one appeals to some people —not to others. No magazine is read by everyone in town who can possibly buy. :
Radio and TV programs reach only fractions of your market. Each one appeals to only a special audience — sports fans, homemakers, kids, etc. And how many of these can listen at the time vou broadcast?
The newspaper talks to everybody in town. It's created fresh every day to appeal to everybody. Just as you read the paper now, all your customers and prospects read the paper too — at the times they choose, for as long as they choose!
Only the newspaper is first with the most news... first with the most people... . first with the most advertisers!
WIDER WORLD
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