Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1952 — Page 5

4, 1952 i 1 | wis

‘kers expect e nominated

dA be Harry ssistant to one of the proposed by P. \

ned y the Bayt«

dM. Lewis

rei rovernor 1840 when elétifed the | didacy, aw by the ov. 8chrickne gphparent. is was ney in res i but he he McHale-

TE

*

PREETI SEDATE ERR ESRI REIT EE EERE I EET DERE URA00RARR 000A ERR RE EERIE RIERA HEE ETTORE Ee

Pitcher ‘Murdered,’ Says Brother

Bithorre brother charged today A. top official, of the Internal|———— ——— ro] tors to the freedom of America Orphaned as a child, Martin a rest camp. He lived with the Was tivin Salean government {Revenue Bureau said the . drive the list includes suc Tig ee is now fighting in Korea. spent his first 10 years in an unit until a Hoosier GI, Elmer - Fd 8 to cover up the kill- against racketeering tax-dodgers, gamblers and underwor 8 ‘Martin David Zenk Orrid, a orphanage in Germany. Then Turner, Anderson, arranged his ng of the" former - ~big league ‘coupled with enforcement of- the Pins as Frank Costello, Frank| gisplaced person who fouhd his'the orphanage fell under the heel passage to the United States

baseball pitcher hy a Mexican policeman. Fernando .Bithorn* said the - FBI had agreed to ask U. 8.

o

authorities’ in Mexico ta look. Smianeousy withthe hignly- Senate Crime ‘Committee last ooo =o 50 S08 re re he camp's him. into the case and also had itself. Interna Revenue Corimis:]” 2 yl democracy. [prisoners. The Russian soldiers) .“I am sire a great many peo-

‘promised to make an “informal” investigation of its own, : The widow of the” Puerto Rican-born ball scribed as a ‘terrible lie” the policeman’s claim that Bithorn had _admitted just before he died that he was a Communist party member “on an important mission,”

The policeman said he shot “Bithorn Saturday in self-de-fense at El Mante while escorting the. former Chicago Cubs

Mr. -Guthrie said the bureau to the high court. itctier I> egies ony aner his has a file of 30,000 unfinished| The Supreme Court's opinion, | without pro yn 0 58 = car racketeering cases, of . which written by Judge Arch N, “H per documents, 11,816 are under active investi-!pjtt, yesterday’ upheld the lower as murdered and A gation. court's decision.

robbed,” Fernando Bithorn said, ‘and the Mexican authorities are trying to cover it up:”

\

OSL

is

ERAN Ni

- FRIDAY, JAN. 4, 1952

“VLE. To Aeris Ais

THE IN DIAN APOLIS T MES

Closing In |

ein

.

>

SAN JUAN, Jan. 4 — Hiram

»3

grr sted Se

By United Press

By United ‘Press

new- stamp tax on gamblers, may well break the back of organized gambling.

(Checkers) Smaldone,

sioner John 'B.” Dunlap has assigned 2300 agents.to the racket Paiking gquad under James J. Guthrie to dig into the tax records of every known or suspected rac¥eteer in the country.

Mr, Guthrie indicated the back taxes and penalties already collected may turn out to be: chicken feed compared with the sums his! agents hope to recover from the underworld big shots now coming under investigation.

player de-

“ The Indiana

claimed his

narce, Mr.

. The bureau doesn’t talk about cases under investigation. But Mr, Guthrie left no doubt ‘that in the state.

; ‘Hiram Bithorn shown. with his wife, Virginia. HOLE a sw oaian aa tAOETREROERERRRRRRRERRRERERRR RRR ER ERRNO RHA NE HO TE AT Ene r

AYRES © DOWNSTAIRS © STORE

Here's A Headline Story if There Ever Was One . .

it's the | Jallay | A Modern Chair . . . Comfort Itself . Long Life .. .. Very Light Weight

With Beautiful Slip Covers . . . Soft, Deep Spring Cushions for Seat and Back .

This is the Chair of the Year, reds te Indianapolis and the World by L. S. Ayres & Co.

IT'S NEW as 1952!4t's the chair of this or any other year, it's the chair, to last for many years! Designed for you who enjoy the comforts of good living! Priced for everyone! IT'S PRACTICALLY indestructible, strong and sturdy from the floor up! IT WEIGHS ONLY 16 lbs. complete, makes housekeeping easy! THE FUNCTIONAL DESIGN fit? with versatility into every room! THE SMART SLIPCOVERS are in one piece washable cotton twill! CHOOSE YOUR PATTERN from large florals, small provincials, or solids!

SUPREME COMFORT with long lasting coil spring and Texlite cushions! SHIP IT ANYWERE! It comes in flat carton, easily assembled!

ALL THE BEAUTY AND COMFORT of costly upholstered chairs at 19.98

Light, Easy to Move

Use it in the Den

Use it for.TV a “rs Te a, , en The Dallas Smith Armchair at only

The same

29.98

The: modern chair with arms. ’ wonderful features as the Modern. The on ; same. comfort! The same functional - we design.

7

| Sigh - gt 4 A dele 3 > a fe . “ ‘ \ Y

ET Hn

Te

Bob-

-19.98

#

SU

WASHINGTON, Jan. 4—Treasury agents have tapped 5000 small-time racketeers for almost $50 million in uppaid] taxes since last August and now are closing in on so |the nation’s most notorious hoodlums, it was disclosed today. | Re fled ‘from his Russian

Erickson, Joe Adonis and Ernest the Cdlo- ine rado gambling bosses, and scores. lof others who paraded before the under ‘conimuds

Mater Violator Loses: High Court Fight

Supreme ‘has ruled against a motorist who “right of conscience” was, violated by parking meters. W. Mack Greenwood, Washington, was fined $1 by Daviess Circuit Judge Philip D. Waller for _ violating a parking meter ordiGreenwood appealed

Court he

The opinion followed a 1943 ruling which de-| cided the issue of parking meters]

PEE ET TOOT

°

—_

Sea

Imm PAGE 5

Notorious Hoodlums |

Farmar Russ Captive Is i in Korea

A 19-year-old youth Udell Sf: a circus acrobat and was adopted cap= in Korea. by a ‘group of American GIs at

-

Ferman is: on the front lines

first real home lof the Nazis and the youth was through the Lutheran Couneil. Indianapolis, § | sent to a concentration camp. On arriving in Indianapolis he lived both He was near death by starva- was placed in the home of Mr.

|tion three years later when the and Mrs. Orrid, who later adopted

ple ‘wonder if these young people brought overs from European - countries will contribute to, as

He‘ decisively he Showed which ay of life ‘he

took the teen-ager with them to {Berlin and placed him on guard duty. :

ard “The Russians were good td wejl-as receive benefits from, this left Short-#. Martin and fed him well,” says country,” said the youth's foster ridge High'g % his foster mother. “But he saw mother, a teachér at School 36. School 1 a st their terrible cruelties to others “Martin is doing his part in the March to enlist wEartin Orit {and finally one night he slipped service of his adopted country. in the ‘Army, ° arta Gree over tha border into the Allied We're happy that he volunteered

Currently the adopted son of Mr. sector to Berlin.” ¢to help promote the cause of the and Mrs. Ulysses G. Orrid, 535 ° There the youth did a stint as United Nitions.”

NATI on A A L'S WAREHOUSE MOG

Whew =THE THINGS You FiND WHEN YOU HAVE 70 MOVE

WERE MOVING OUR WAREHOUSE

STOCKS MUST GO ANDIN

ny « NATIONAL TYE

BANK

WEEKS

HEH

Your Pocket Change Pays

Aa

These are only a few of The Hundreds of

Bargains. Shop Every Department!

ll

Large Double Door

WARDROBE

Here is truly a wonderful buy in a large 2-door wardrobe. Roomy and convenient. Choice of walnut or mahogany finish. :

3 Regular $34.95

$2488

$1 DOWN DELIVERS

Reqular $69.95

x12 Axminster

RUGS

See these tremendous values' Good quality, heavy axminsters in a wide assortment of colors.

481

$1 DOWN ’ DELIVERS

Hirschman Special! Innerspring

MATTRESS

Built for comfort and long wear. Floral ticking, roll edge. A- terrific national value.

Choice of full or Twin size.

+

$1. DOWN DELIVERS.

°

STORE HOU RS: Open Monday Nicht Uni 9?

1899

HITT HOOSIERLAND SINCE