Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1952 — Page 19
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THURSDAY, JAN. 10, i957 ©. — ty. = . _THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . ee ee pa mt lemon PAGE. TY : : i We tag wns Warren Twp. GOP Club When You iy Asuivin Here's Jan. Fur Clearance Saié®
+ 10,1051 November Tax
A Special | To Hear Judge Bowen ONE NAME 10 REMEMBER | / lndempeliy Clips Hodsier + Judge Donald Se of the In- ND) oJ MOUTON LAWS COAT 88 ig Gamblers $74,409 sana Sopetie court wi seni RY = 1) 1]
HOOSIER gamblers lost $74.409.55 to Uncle Sam in November.
Warren Township Republican Club ASPI RIN
Saturday.
Fashions Today
Ralph W. Cripe, Indiana in- Prosecutor F airthild will serve ® 9 \ ternal revenue collector, said that ag master of ceremonies of the > > at 2 HORE much federal excige tax had been meeting at 8:30, p m. in Old ; pail in November. He explained Bethel Church. Mayor Clark wills hig office had not yet determined be a special guest New officers to he installed in-- ©
how many individuals made tax payments nor who" the biggest gambling-taxpayer was. n ” ” THE EXCISE tax pavments, which amount to 10 per cent -of the gambler’'s “take,” indieates their gross income for the month was $744,095.50. If this volume continues, the annual gross should total $8,929,146.
clude ‘W, Spencer Askren as president, succeeding Robert Hamilton: William kB Gossin, first - vice president; Michael Zorman.. second vice president; Mrs. Klements Zabel, secretary, and Fred Hendrickson, treasurer
SES
t Tenth Y ‘TH. 8
Senator to Talk Here Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R
The Collector said, however, Il.) was announced today as® the tax probably does not re- speaker for the Columbia Club's flect the: true total volume of 63d anhual beefsteax dinner gambling since some gamblers Mar. 29 :
may have transferred their oper- Ng SOLER Se ations to tax-exempt organiza- ik : tions, . GIBSON THE GARRY MOORE SHOW ie a delightful hour of fun and The November tax collection READS AND HOPES In P ~ Sn le. i In A rRON. $1 the sic— Garr —In Portland, Ore., Mrs. George Plover, GUITARS music. lene Woods and Ken Carson supply the music- y
Mr. Cripe said. does not include a . . . : rio 0 oT : the SE rou charged for , wie of the master of the sinking freighte, Pennsylvania, received and Durward Kirby the fun! Drop in
federal gambling tax stamp. It word of encouragement from a frien a« she reads of news of the INDIANA MUSIC CO. Monday. thru Friday, 12:30 P= M. includes only the 10 per rent -stricken ship. Looking on are her sons, Pat, 14, (lots and Timothy, 1s £. oHiO IM. 4486 y Za CHES ¥, levision Program W FBM-TV tax on gross income I
Times photo hy John R._ Spicklemirrs
DRIFT QUEENS—Butler University's Drift, annual yearbook, -- othe : : , ; — — - : ; . teeny
®
can't miss being a beauty this year. Four of the queens chosen last night to adorn Drift are (left to right): Sara Von Behrent, R.R. 16; Virginia Ann Johnson, 5010 E. Fall Creek Blvd.; Barbara Bugg, 4802 N. Kessler Blvd., and Bea Douglass, 7040 Broadway. Fifth queen, rot pictured, is s Elizabeth Young, Noblesville.
In His Earnlone.
"Twas a Bear, Declares Hoosier Who Shot at It
By United Press State Game Ww arden Pierson LENTON. Ind, Jan. 10 Wade of Jasonville, who had Farmer Harold Orman fired his heen browsing through the area shotgun today at an animal he near Linton for two days on resaid wag a 250-pound black bear, ports of other farmers that a intensifying a search that started strange animal was prowling. ortwo or three weeks ago. ‘ganized a new search. Mr. Orman said he saw the ani- He started looking when one mal lying by a hog feeder in Ris farmer reported a newborn calf barnlot when he went out to feed disappeared and another said he calves this morning. He ran to saw bear tracks. the house and got his gun, and State conservation department 1 told his wife to look out the win- spokesmen in Indianapolis said je! 2 . dow. if it was a bear it was ‘badly misplaced.”
* Then Mr. Orman said he ran Ther a. Boar outside and fired as the hear al RS ne ors n ne scurried ‘off toward a coal mine ural habitat in. Indiana and this
stripper bank nearhy. He thought ©N® must have escaped from a : circus, or something.” said the
he missed. spokesman. Mrs. Orman said it was a bear, A - all right.
ie mien Security to Be Topic
Communism and Internal Se.
Charges treatment curity” wilk be discussed at the noon luncheon tomorrow of the Turned Hair Pink Kiwanis Clud in the Claypool
: ~.i Hotel. Speaker will be Lt. Col. Mrs. Martha Fae Bitter, 2625 yo uc BR. King of the U. 8. Air
rl N. Meridian -8t., likes her hair po. internal -security division. natural color, even though it's’ — rin Semon i r these gray. - 3 il from Better than pink, she said to-
day in filing a $5000 damage suit | against Adolphe Stella's Studio ut! of Hair Design, 3335 Central Ave.
Mrs, Bitter said she entered the studio July 25 for a haircut, shampoo, ‘rinse and permanent with gray hair. She left with tresses “deep pink,” she charged.! This caused “great humiliation, ebarrassment and considerable expense,” she charged in a Superior Court suit. Mrs. Adolphe Stella today said Mrs. Bitter's hair had a ‘red-
rdinary
Don’t miss
RANGE RIDER
a
or de- | please |
rns i me ren : in
, a frontier hero
| Talked Out ] Of Ending Life
A horrified crowd looked
| = dish cast” after the treatment, h | but added that the tint was re- a 1 3 : | moved the same day. : PoE La \arge | i |
as ready with his ' wits as his nstairs sis blazing six-guns,
on. .. The man on the ledge threatened to jump . . | A heavy-set policeman managed to get near the man and * started to talk. Pretty soon the man relaxed and Pegan
4
talking. 3 of ud Patrolman. Harold C tristen ATRL s gen was preventing another
suicide. PARADE magazine brings the suspense-filled story of"how this New York City poi Heeman has managed to save e many persons from suicide. PARADE comes with The Sunday Times.
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