Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 December 1951 — Page 3
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THURSDAY, DEC. 20,
Hancock and Haupt Named To City Jobs |
Frank X. Haupt, Marion Coun-! |
th
ty deputy prosecutor, will be the; new city attorney, and Battalion Chief John F. Hancock has been appointed fire chief by Mayor-/| elect Alex Clark, effective Jan. 1.| The new Mayor completed appointments of the City Hall legal staff; naming Rufus C.' Kuykendal} as assistant city attorney and Jacob. 8. Miller and Arthur H. Northrup as attorneys for municipal boards. Chief Hancock, who is 60, has been a member of the Fire De-
1951
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES =
oa
Fg
by
partment for 30 years. He will replace Chief Roscoe
McKinney, father of National Democratic Chairman Frank Me-| Kinney.
Chief Hancock has headed the| fire fighters in the downtown area as battalion chief for more than four years. He entered ‘service in the a partment in 1921 at old No. 6] station house on W. Washington| St. during the administration of former Mayor Charles Jewett. Captain in 1942 In 1936 he was promoted to!
lieutenant in the downtown dis-| trict, and in 1942 was made a|
captain. He was promoted to; battalion chief in 1947. His appointment settled a month-old feud among some Re-| publican leaders. One faction had been supporting Capt. Harlan] Reno, of the Broad Ripple dis-! trict, for the post. Chief Hancock is listed as a| “Republican,” but said he has not|
worked actively in politics while
on the department.
He is a member of several Ma-|
sohic orders and the West Park, Church. Hé lives with his wife at 44 S. Mount St. on the West! Side. Mr. Haupt has been a Republi-| can leader here more than 10]
cutor under former Prosecutor] Sherwood Blue several years and was public defender in Criminal Court 1 for two years. For the last year he has been one of Prosecutor Fairchild's! deputies,
Mr. Kuykendall also has been a
deputy prosecutor and once was a Republican candidate for the Legislature. Deputy Attorney General Mr. Miller, a former deputy state attorney general; served four years overseas in the Army during World War II, in Africa and Europe. He has been active in memorial projects for the late Ernie Pyle, Times and Scripps-| Howard columnist. Mr. Miller was a candidate for| the GOP nomination for Criminal | Court Judge in May, 1950, but was defeated by Judge Saul I. Rabb. / Mr. Northrup,
with the Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Republican organization. Mayor-elect. Clark also named Ralph N, May, a disabled, war veteran, as assistant to City Prosecutor John Ryan. Palmer K. Ward was appointed to Head the city legal staff as corporation co counsel last week.
Aid in in Search
Zenith, Mo., police today sought | the aid of Indianapolis officers’ in their search for William Howard, whose father-in-law has died there. Police said his address is unknown, but Mr. Howard has been employed for 20:yeafs in a “box factory.”
attorney here! several years, has been active
|
~ EAGER BEAVER—Warming
Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, Dec. 20— President Herman B Wells today backed the stand of an In- | diana University official who banned campus distribution ‘of a coed “pinup” calendar. “I haven't seen the calendar,”
Wells Backs Ban of Coed ‘Pinup’ Calendar From L'} Campus « 8
a coed is nice winter work.
said President Wells, “and nobody has approached me about rescinding the ban. But if they did, I wouldn't.” His statement left undecided the disposal of more than 2500 calendars; now under lock and key, originally printéd for dis-
TOWEL TALK—Can we expect TV telephones some day?
DRAPE SHAPE-—This could get the men all wound up.
PAGE 3 4
ltocal Deaths
. MRS. SARAH BARBARA JOR-~ |DAN, 81, of 3553 College “Ave. - |Services at 8 p. m. tomorrow at * |Kirby Funeral Home. Burial in Etna Green, Ind.
» ” ~ | | CHARLES C. STREET, 65, of |464 Minerva St. Former employee of E, C. Atkins Co, Services at 10 a. m. tomorrow at Jacobs
© |Brothers West Side Chapel, Burial
in New Crown.
» » ” RALPH L. BURNETTE, 55, of Miami, Fla. Former insurance agent in indianapolis, Services and burial tomorrow in Miami.
" LJ ” 3 MRS. EDWARD (MARY BELLE) CRANE, 61, of 922 E. 17th St. Services at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at Jacobs Brothers West Side Chapel. Burial I New {Crown,
MRS, FLORA "CUNNINGHAM, 170, of 933 N. Temple Ave, Serve [ices at 11 a. m. Saturday in Walut Corner Church near Danville, 1 Burial in Walnut Corner
tribution with this month's issue scantily-clad coeds, one for Editor Wilcox, a senior grad- connection with the contro- Cemetery. of “The Crimson Bull"—IU each month. ; uating in February, announced Versy. GEORG G. ROWLAND, 7, ot humor magazine. Assigtant 0eaf of stuns his resignation ‘Tuesday, the Although Mr. Wilcox issued Chicago. Former Patricksburg, Editor Robert Wilcox obeyed Leo By Roving, hy spi te same day the ban was ordered. Be pa, studens Dean Te ane an order‘ to yank the insert February, April and August But he later explained he had powling’s action. ‘Operators’ Association. rvices from each copy before IU stu- pictures, another school official resigned a month ago because “Maybe we're still back in the at 3 p. m. tomorrow in Flinner &
dents could view photos of 12 said. of impending graduation, and
Services Set Monday for
6.0. Jackson’
| George 0. Jackson of hear Carmel will be buried in Crown Hill Monday after 10 a.m. Ma-| 'sonic services at Flanner & Bu-| chanan Mortuary. {of the Jackson Engineering Co.|
died yesterday at the Indianapolis
years, He served as deputy prose- in -Marion County, coming here |
Athletic Club. He was 67 and lived 60 years]
from his birthplace, Galion; O.
Along with - being president of|
{the Jackson. Co. since it was {founded in 1922, he was secretary of Capitol Indemnity Insurlance Co.
City Masonic Lodge and a founds {er of the Gatling Gun Club, He was a member of the Ath-| | letic Club, Murat Shrine, Scottish! | Rite, American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers, Scien{tecn Club and Downtown Kiwanis Club. ¢ Survivors are his two daugh ters, Mrs. Lois Ward of Indian {apolis and Mrs. Alice Fenster-| | maker of Carmel; two sons, Cmdr. |
{Robert O. Jackson, stationed in |
{ Newport, R. I, and James W. Jackson, Indianapolis. His wife, | Mrs. Edna Jackson, died last] June,
C. A. TenEyck, Retired Plumber, Dies at Home
Charles A. TenEyck, plumber,
followed a long illness, He was, 72. Services will: be held at 1: 30, . m. Saturday at the J. C. Wilson Chapel of the Chimes. Burial will be in Washington Park. Survivors are his daughter, Mrs. Audry Roe of Indianapolis; three sisters, Mrs. Goldie Roetter of Indianapolis, Mrs. Daisy, Becker of Poplar Bluff, Mo., and, Mrs. Pearl Bullard of South] |Bend; a brother, Daniel TenEyck! |of Milwaukee.
s STRAUSS , SAYS:
STORE HOURS
9 fil
The
heart organ
® It SHOULD, of course, be a Dobbs— which HE naturally prefers— because he knows—and the whole wide world knows—that there's nothing
smarter
The Certificate and a miniature Homburg—come in a miniature Dobbs
hat box—
He keeps the miniature hat and box—
among
in the certificate—exchanges it for a Dobbs—and lives hattily ever after!
fssued for 8.50 (Cross Country) $10—12.50—$|5-—and $20
A convenient booth on the FIRST FLOOR!
|. L SIRAUSS & CO.
we THE
| 6
DOBBS GIFT HAT CERTIFICATE
feos to his head—and to his
(a pear-shaped muscular that propels blood)
under the dome of heaven!
is souvenirs—he brings
MAN'S STORE
The president|
He was past master of Capitol |}
retired died yesterday at his home at 2449 Shelby St. Death]
|Salle, at the urging of the Defense
jairplane parts. {combat aircraft had been exempt.
‘Dies at His Home Here
7
HELPING HAND — Tallulah
Bankhead is helped over a mound of snow by her lawyer, Donald Seawell, on their arrival at the district attorney's | office in New York, shortly before Tallulah took the stand as a state witness in the check forgery trial of her former maid, { Mrs. Evyleen Cronin.
Lift Price. Controls From Planes
WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 (UP) | —Price Stabilizer Michael V. Di-
Department, yesterday removed price controls from airplanes and Previously only
The aircraft industry said the action would encourage production, particularly of vital parts] that have been under controls because they are used in civil as well as combat planes.
Military men and industr yi sources have contended that aircraft prices already are controlled in two ways by the Defense Department and the Office of: Price Stabilization. They said prices are “redetermined” when a contract is approximately %half way to completion and they are ‘‘renegotiated” at completion. |
Mr. DiSalle said he will reimpose controls; however, if prices rise unseasonably. He. also announced that he had reached an “understanding” with the munitions board under which he will have more to say about all defense contract pricing policies.
Howard E. Legg, 79,
Howard E. Legg died today at his home at 1454 S. Talbot St. after an 18-month illness. He was a life long resident of Indian- | apolis. He was 79. Mr. Legg for 22 years was yard master at the old/ Lake Erie Railroad Co. Later he was Yocelving} clerk with the former Van Camp! Hardware Co., here, retiring nine years ago. He belonged to Friedens Evangelical and Reformed Church. Services will be held at 1:30 p. m. Saturday at the G. H. Herrmann Funeral Home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Survivors are his wife, Minnie, a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Lowel of Indianapolis, and a sister, Mrs, Effie Harry of Portland, Ore.
Airline Orders Planes With 400 MPH Plus Spee
A new airliner able to cruise at six miles a minute today was announced by American Airlines, Inc., and Douglas Aircraft Co. The new plane, known as the, DC-7, has a top speed of more] than 400 miles ap hour—about| 50 mph faster than the DC-6s now in use. American Airlines has ordered 25 of the 60-passenger planes at| a cost of $1,590,000 each. They| are to be in service by Jan. 1, 1954.
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Iran Official Resigns
—The governor general of Tehran [resigned yesterday in | against ities” in ine conduct ‘of elections. |
August's girl was “sort of re- Said the resignation had no clining,” with “just a little | wrapped around her at certain spots,” according to the spokesSpots STRAUSS SAYS: February's coed, reflected in a mirror, wore a fur coat and & “apparently nothing else.” | April's cutie was ‘clothed in a Jath towel.’ n
pointed male.
TEHRAN, Iran, Dec: 20 (UP)
protest |
government “irregular-
STRAUSS SAYS:
°
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I'S A GIFT
It's a gift that can't help but please a man!
A STRAUSS GIFT BOND
He converts it into an article of his
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COT MBPDO-®W
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SATURDAY electrical impuls
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{It we hod the time— * we'd explain the marvelous scientific mechanics of it— just how it works—if we knew how it works!)
TILL
You pick up the receiver—and by the process of manipulating the dial —using preferably the forefinger
It's a GIFT—and it's right there at your phone—
Call LI ncoln 1561 Ask for Extension 38 and the service is direct!
There's a Special Bond Booth onthe First Floor (and the usual Bond Booth on the 7th Floor).
— ON UN
L. STRAUSS & (O., THE MAN'S STORE
Dark Ages,” griped one disap- |
Buchanan Mortuary, Buri ~in [Crown Hill,
TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW
THE TELEPHONE IS A SLICK INVENTION—FOR SLICK WEATHER
There comes a pleasant voice—
"L. STRAUSS & (0."
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You then ask for
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LI. 1561
L. STRAUSS & COMPANY, INC.
Your telephone ~how difficult to measure its true worth! A convenience, yes. But more than that... a friend ...a bearee of good tidings . . . a link with loved ones far and near . . . a faithful guardian. Even in the night's long hours, its very presence brings assurance. Indeed, the value of this service mounts still higher every year. For as thousands and thousands of new telephones are added, you can run more errands . .. reach more friends and neighbors than ever before.
bridge game foday®"
“Con | stay for lunch of Bill's, Mom#"
*I'll send some
right over!” ° . "You'll love her, MomI™
Sil Y ; “Merry Christmas from us alll”
COMPANY
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nit pn comienmai
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