Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1952 — Page 7

TIRE PI, os ag?

starlet Joan gles into one stonishment— to right) La. ay McCreary

1se long

rchild said the aive jury. asked if it all parties to ‘ht charges in

with us, but T ” said Tuffy's

Fairchild for

bout when we 1,” said Judge

cted: “Maybe I'm going to ress evidence.” nless

ctly like some-~ n done before, n Judge Rabb 3ut it could be

eyes rolled tudied the calannounced his templated moled, must be in state’s answer Apr. 16. And that answer pr. 21. on the motion ill be held

ight cases will d Judge Scanstart May 13% possibly, if

| quickly tive and 5 require ne-third re of by es after

SATURDAY, MAR. 22,

‘Arkansas Bandit Uses 1 "Local Man’s Name .

Clarence Trennepohl Jr. .30, worked in his used car lot at 3401 N. Sherman Dr. today while a man who used his name sat in jail fh Texarkana, Ark. Police there nabbed two bandits in the act of holding up a filling}

Here's Your Times Carrier

3

Paul English has used so |

much business sense in operating his Times route that he has been able to sub-divide it. In the four years he has car--ried The Times, 12-year-old Paul has doubled his circulation and turned over half the route to his brother Bill. They carry on Denny St, and Sherman Dr. between 28th and 30th Sts. The boys have bought a bicycle and most of their own clothes with their paper route proceeds. Paul is an 8th grader at School 73, a member of the Brightwood Christian Church

and Boy Scout Troop 83. He |

plays basketball on, the “C” team at the Brightwood Community © Center and has attended John Herron Art Insfi-’ tute on a school art scholarship.

In Indianapolis

MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED

Norman Jameson, 24, Crawfordsville; Eliz- J

abeth Boone, 25, 3210 N. Capitol. Thomas Miller, 36. 4251 W. Michigan; Mable Hazzard, 34, Columbus william Allee, 19, 1635 bak Peyton, 16, 3607 Fletcher. Thomas Coleman Jr., 22, U. S. Army; Lola Harris, 21, 2504 E. 25tWilbur Miller, 21, 853 Collees Ave.; tin Tewell, 26, 219 E. 10th.

‘Margaret

Jus-

Harry Love, 28, 2204 E. New York: Kath-|

New York. 29th;

Patty Reem-

leen Love, 24, 2204 E. James Booker, ‘39, 436 W. Hall, 33, 102A Artis Dr. Eston Jones, 20, 519 E. 22d; snyder, 18, 519 E. 22d. Louis Wuellner, 23, Beech Grove; Maxam, 22, 3623 N. Illinois

Mable

Patricia

Morris Duckworth, 33. ®ranklin; Madeline }

Hedrick, 35, Spencer. Raymond Orebaugh. 19, 22] Bethel; lvn Belcher, 17, 2018 k, 25, 5302 N Pierson: Olive

Dorothy

Caro-

N. Tibbs ve.

son, 5, 615 Dicker Army: Mona Stein-

Royal Arend. 21, U. 8.

way. . 533 N. Tibbs Ave. Thomas Warner, 22. 880 W. 29th; June Peck, 21, 802 W.

th. Gerald Ragsdale, 29, 1529 N. Park Ave; Juanita Townlay, 30, 834 N. Tacoma. Robert McGill, 20. 2441 N. Dearborn; Betty Colluga, 20, 4052 Cornelius.

DIVORCE SUITS FILED

Lou vs. Philip Mayo; Mary vs. Watson: Ruth vs. Durley Blevins: Mary v8. MeKiniey Preston: Evelyn vs. Paul Goff; Betty vs. Richard Friel: Mary vs Everett. Hicks; Ruby vs. William Anderson: Katie ve, James Fox: Catherine vs | James Brown: Dewey vs. Thelma Terrell,

James

Waneta vs. Arnold McDaniel; Mary ve Robert Padgett: Edna vs Bartonnee Weaver; Mary vs. Harry Clark. BIRTHS ROYS At General—Wayne, Dorothy Clark. At Coleman — Rov. Glanda Jones, Paul Margaret Westbrock At Methodist — Joseph. Myra Taylor; Charlez. Betty Tafflinger. Lester. Be erly Rhoades: Vernal. Mary Leather Leonard. Phyllis Hannapel: Cecil. Ae cille Fritz: Alfred, Katherine Groethe Chester. Elizabeth White; Allen, Mildred Sours At St. Francis—John. Wilma Hoss: Eugene, Rachael McClain At St. Vineent's—George, Befty Bohannon: Jimmie, Madonna Eaton; George, Frances Harper; Wayne, Margaret Knotts. At Home—Floyd, Ernestine Whitlock, 819 Locke, GIRLS At Methodist—Raymond, Helen Morris Arno Jr., Ruby Sienker: Burtis, Gwen-

dolyn Endsley; Lester, Ruth Futrell: Lee. Elizabeth ennedy: Ayde, Frances Hochstedler: Richard, Marl n Hengor: son: Clarence, Phyllis Casselman; Norman, Dorothy Keith: Herman, Irene Bernard; Robert, Norene Martin; James Elizabeth Lynch; Kelse, Barbara McClure At General--James, Ruth McC At Coleman—Russell, Betty Stier; John Gloria Kitley, Clayton, Delores Sayles At St. Francis—Robert. Rosemary Gos nell; John, Lola Bauch; Charles, Katherine Ferguson; Delbert, Patricia Clark. At St. Vincent’ s—RoY, Florence Pratt Leonard, Constance Suesz; Robert Catherine Flood

At home—Dan, Florence Taylor, 4077 Ce ors

nelius: Robert, Georgia Ras Ashury: Robert, Sallie Brook terson;.William, Deloi sé Rice, land. —— DEATHS

Carl Bowers, 0. at St, Vincent's Hospital cerebral thrombosis Robert Coopez 81, at 1445 Broadway, coronary occlusion, Margaret Dailey, 85. at 702 N. Alabama arteriosclerosis Elizabeth Marsc! hke, 75. cardiovascular Ben Murrell, 49. at 626 Torbett. carcinoma Ernest Newhouse, 78. at Met A Hospital, coronary occlusion. Robert Pico, 80, at 52 WwW. Washington carcinoma Fdward Rapier, 65 enronary occlusion Teannette Shinn, 62. at Methodist arteriosclerotic heart Josephine Waller, 74 cerehral hemorrhage

at 931 E. Raymond

at 5140 N Meridian Hospita at 2606 Winthrop

Official Weather UNITED STATES nr ATHER RURFAU

“sunrise... 5:46 “Sunset TA Precipitation n 24 hrs, ending 730 a. m. 35 Total precipitation since Jan. 1 9 R&

Excess since Jan.

The following tahle shows the ture in other cities. Station Atlanta Boston ..i.evcivne Chicago. .. Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Evansville Ft. Wayne Ft. Worth Indianapolis Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Oklahoma City Omaha Pittsburgh San Antonio ‘es San Francisco .... St. Louis . Washington, | D. C Coors er

SAVE MONEY |

AT THE

TV SALES Corner

401 W. Washington St LI ncoln 1741 Open Bvenings and Sundays

The Russell Co. Home. Appliances

; Dies Here at 83 |

| fering was taken for support of

156} tempera-|

oy gs

station late yesterday. One said! his pame was Clarence Trenne-| pohl an dgave his address as 3380 N. Sherman Dr., Indianapolis. ! At that address, the real Clar-} ence Trennepohl offered a solu-| tion ‘to the mystery. He said| {that on"Feb. 28, while he was on {a honeymoon trip, someone broke| {into his car near Tampa, Fla.,| {and stole several hundred dol-| lars worth of clothing. | The thief also took’ his billfold| {from the auto. There was no {cash in it, but it did contain Mr. | Trennepohl's identification papers. | “Apparently the same one who, [stole my things is involved in| § this other robbery,” Mr. Trennepohl said. { The bogus,”“Trennepohl” and his companion, who said he was Al-| bert L. McClees of Indianapolis, were charged with armed rob-|

{bery, The City Directory and [telephone book list no Albert L. |McClees as living here.

Blind Salesman

{ Times State Service | ZIONSVILLE, Mar. 22—A 2';31) ving sling an 0 ade ie, year-old boy drowned in a swollen| died last night. Lewis C. Jones died at his home, 2225 Harlan St. her life trying to resciie him. He was 83. Known as “Uncle” Lewis in his pebbles neighborhood, Mr. Jones sold| home southwest of here. |brooms, door-to-door, in Indian-| apolis in early years. Later, and| [looked forward to daily trips to luntil retfrement in 1941, he made brooms at the Industrial Aid for! the Blind. He lost his sight |when 105. | Services. will be held at 9 a. m. {Monday at Beanblossom Mortulary here. Burial will pe in Paris, It was the same on Thursday, JI. " |the day Jackie drowned. His | also blind, mother held his hand while he]

| His wife, Naomi, 72, survives nim elgng With a broth {threw pebbles into the water, He {wanted to stay longer, but left]

er, Mrs. Vern C. Reger. The creek ‘was nearby, and Jackie and his mother would frequently stop on the bridge.

er, Dave Jones of Shoals and al

Sisten ‘Mrs. Harry Taylor of with a promise from his mother, Bedford, that “We'll stop tomorrow.’ Back® home, Jackie settled]

“ldown in front of the television | set. | At end of the TV show, {kissed his mother, told her and went outside “to play.” Ten minutes later, Mrs. Reger went to find her son. A gate in| the yard stood open. It was a gate hard to unlatch, and Jackie had never been able to open it.! This time, he did.

Methodists Hear Wife of Bishop

Jackié “bye, "i

Mrs. Reger ran toward the) Fe creek, calling for help. | i From the bridge, about five ' feet over the stream, she saw her,

only child. Mrs. Reger. jumped into the] creek. Undercurrents pulled her

away from Jackie. Neighbors appearing on the scene said she went down twice before she finally got hold of her son. |

Zionsville and Carmel Fire De-| |

3- Women Lose Purses to Thieves

Three women told police their purses were snatched last night. |

| “Some mothers in India must Mrs, Dorothy Pfieffer, 30, of| steal food to feed their starving 973 N. Bellevieu Pl, said thrée! babies.” rT That information was part of teenage boys took her purse as Mrs. Richard C. Raines’ talk yes- she walked near her home. Their terday to 610 members of the take was $8. Indianapolis District Women's So-! A tall, thin man stole the bag ciety of Christian Service of the : : . Methodist Church. ose Apna Hew 56, of 612 Mrs. Raines, in native Philip-| nly a purse full of paid re pine Coste, 320k a No ceipts was the haul of a thief who | Methodist Church, Special of-| tthe strap of a purse belonging |

t t C : foreign missions. Mrs. Raines and Ll Ns ertia Soden, 3 2

her hushand, Bishop Raines, vis- ni. ac ited several misisons including — a ! those in India, on a recent world tour. Others on

Fru

Mrs. Richard Raines

the progranr were Mrs. Oscar Tharp, Rloomington, conference president; Mrs. C. A. Stillwell, Indianapolis district president; Dr. Hiram Weld, host | pastor, and Dr. Sumner L. Mar-| tin, district superintendent.

Rule Out Time Off To Get Married

PHILADELPHIA, Mar. 22 (U P) | Municipal employeés will have to get married on their own time| from now on. The city announced the ending of the custom of granting two extra days vacation with pay to employees who get married with this comment: “A careful study of ordinances of council. indicates there is no authority in. law which would warrant the granting of leaves with pay for such purposes.” |

merchants, expression of goodwill, want you to receive this lovely basket of gifts, if you have just moved to the city, are a New Mother or have just moved to ao new address within the city.

Public spirited local

There's nothing to buy. No obligation. Phone your Welcome Wagon Hostess whose phone is listed below ond arrange to receive these gifts.

Hoosier Financier Dies Times State Service

CONNERSVILLE, Mar. 22 Carl T.. Brinkman, financier, died vesterday in. Fayette Memorial Hospital. He was president of the Remedial Loan Co. and ConnersWwille Community Concerts Inc. He also was a director of the Favette Bank & Trust Co., Chamber of Commerce and YMCA. Mr, Brink- | man was 48,

Welcome Wagon

New York ® Memphis ® Los Angeles Toronto

PHONE TA. 2796

|

|

Our service embodies all that goes

to give that after-teeling of satis

faction; the satistaction of a beautiful tribute to a loved one

yet no burden to those left.-

HISEY & TITUS

{ 951 NORTH DELAWARE ST.

[the rural mail box with his moth- three grandparents,

Zionsville Boy, 2, Drowns; Mother Nearly Loses Life

partments were called. But Jackie Burial

failed to respond to first aid. A large bruise on his head led to|

lcreek and his mother nearly lost the Deiter he toppled from the|72, of 2331 Winthrop Ave. Serv- area, either wielding pistol butts

Services will be held at 2 p. m,

Jackie Reger liked to throw tomorrow at Phillippi Funeral Cross. in the creek near his|Home in Zionsville. He be in Zionsville Cemetery. |

Burial will |

Surviving besides his parents, (Mr. and Mrs. Vern C. Reger, are Bert Reger land Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Albert Rhoades, all of Zionsville,

..South Bend Auto Doles Feted by Association

L. O. Gates, South Bend, one of Indiana's major automobile dealers, tonight was given the Herman R. Goodin award for outstanding civic service. * The Automobile Dealers’ Association of Indiana also chose Arthur M. Vivian, Richmond; as its new president. and George R. |Ranes of Terre Haute as one of {its vice presidents. Haywood M. Davis, Ft. Wayne, retiring president, presented the

award to Mr, Gates on behalf of {the association.

THE 5 INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

—4

a ower ‘ L

. PAGE ;

“Young “Thugs ©

By United Press

a “dead or alive” tab on four

in a wild pistol-whipping and| stabbing, spree while robbing four gas stations. Striking within 45 minutes at! the stations in Detroit and sub-| urban Ferndale last night, the {thugs used pistols or knives on| {their victims while nétting $620. { Killed was Alfred Jones, 27, {attendant at’ the second station, {Who died at a hospital of stab wounds. He left a wife and 4-{year-old daughter, Police said the gang used a stolen car. All of the victims said]

SLOW DOWN-—New lights at School 89 flash caution signals to motorists. The school PTA in- they were robbed and beaten by| stalled them yesterday at 5950 E. 23d St. The PTA safety committee, headed by R. E. Wheeler and five youths appearing in a Lincoln Harold Hoffman, went to work on the project after a child was injured in traffic near the school.

car, reported stolen in Detroit. Pistol Butts or Knives

They struck first in Ferndale, {robbing a station there of $250)

Local Deaths | and beating up ‘two attendants.|

ALEX F. MARTIN, 43, of 1264 They moved on to another station,|

N. Sheffield Ave. Services 1.p. m.ltaking $150 from -the till, and| Monday in Stuart Mortuary. pistol-whipping George Huckla,! in Crown Hill, i121, | 3 un » un

In quick succession they raided)

MRS. EDWARDS} 00 “other stations in the same

JENNIE

{ices 9 a, m. Monday at St, Rita | |Catholic Church. Burial in Holy Ty RvR, condition from two stab wounds in the chest was {John Serocki, 44. ‘The other victims were less seriously in-

| MRS. BERTHA E. SMITH, 79,

1925 Central Ave, Services 11 red. id otay at residence, Bur- | The cars believed used by the {raiders was found abandoned

n n ~ MRS. EDITH GRENARD, of 141% N. New Jersey St. Services: 2 p. ‘m, tomorrow at Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Cremation. s

63, several hours later in front of a home in northwest Detroit. There was no trace of the bandits, A city-wide alarm was put out by Detroit and Ferndale police with a warning to proceed cau|tiously against the thugs.

MISS MARGARET M. HENDRICKS, 51, of 726% Virginia] , The band.was led by a well-

4 dressed, slender youth in his re. y 0 : AVS aves a ndianarolisl curly 20's sporting a thin musMonday at Speaks & Finn Fu- tache, neral Home, Burial in New| One blonde member of the gang Crown. (seemed to take fiendish delight in ds \pistol-whipping the victims, In MRS. LUELLA SPROULL, 90, two of the holdups, even members of 2823 N. Meridian St. Services|0f his gang remonstrated with 10:30 a. m. Monday in Day & him and made him stop. | Carter Mortuary, Bedford, Burial in Cresthaven, Bedford.

Played ‘Possum’

Henry Holser, owner of one of the stations, said the bandits ap-

Indiana's largest real estate

Run Wild |fun,” Mr. Holser said. | : 3 after th In Detro it ns re Analy left with the warn-|

{ing “if you want to see your fam-|

[lies again you'd bett DETROIT, Mar, 22—Police put you fo i RW us.” ii |

{of another gang member, (hadn't been falling away from|*

section serves huyers and sellers [parently had been drinking. Aft-

in The Sunday Times.

{er robbing his till they turned on vessel, (n

him and his assistant, Alex Morrison, with guns and Ai or Tension © High

“They séemed to think jt was,

Mr. Morrison said he played!

In African Race Issue .

By United Press ,

CAPETOWN, South Africa, Serocki maid one of the Mar. 22 (UP)-—Anti-government

‘possum;” ‘feigning critical injury | first ' blows. ~ He sald

forget| Mr.

youthful gunmen today who killed ‘handits plunged rallies in. South A¥rica's biggest one man and.injured-four others chest a pa B92 2 nite ito Mis 5%

fell from the beating| Cities. spread fears of civil dis“1g p/orders today in reaction to Prime {Minister Daniel F. Malan’s state{ment that he will seek to prevent civil courts from tampering {with his “white supremacy” laws. The prime minister said last night that he will introduce leg-

the knife 1 guess they would have | killed me too.” All of the ‘assaults were coms-| mitted within a four-square mile|

[areas There Here ao witnesses jq1ation providing that the courts ¥ aying. He was/ can not test the rights of parliaound by another attendant who | mentary acts. This followed the had gone to take the day's re-'ynanimous decision of. the suceipts to a bank night depository. preme court which ruled. invalid - a government bill cutting off votling rights of colored inhabitants {of Cape Province,

Foreign Students

’ Of South Africa's 11418349 n Show 'Em How [Popuiation. only 2372600 are

Thousands of persons were re(ported flocking to anti-govern-‘ment rallies today in Port Elizabeth, Capetown and other large cities, Parliamentary observers said the government was under “sevtere strain”. in its disagreement {with more moderate sections of Prime Minister Malan's National Dame campus were led by: I LY iho. objet 10 the nr Rerick Regus, a German |" The 78.year-old premier's declve who came here as a dis- |4i6n ro]lows recent race riots in placed person. He took first Johannesburg and comes at a plate in the men's division, time when coloted and Indian. ina Sughens, 3 native of habitants of South Africa are Co, Seeol ° attend preparing for a monster demonollege. stration Apr. 6 to protest the law eee | RF RINSBL COlOTEd voOters. : —— | The prime minister said his % Rescue Eight Seamen planned legislation would “pro

«Ls |tect” the courts from becoming From Sinking Vessel linvolved in constitutional tests of MIAMI, Fla, Mar. 22 (UP)-

parliamentary acts. The legislaA crew of right men were trans Lon gid, would be rtronstus ferred from a sinking motor ves- lof Westminster governing Brit. sel to a Coast Guard rescue craft, ain's relations with the domin30 miles northwest of Havana 'ons, Dec. 11, 1931. today. The 83-foot rescue boat advised

the Coast Guard rescue center!

here that the motor vessel 543, a converted wartime landing craft loaded with deck machinery, {was “half sunk.” The

Times State Services SOUTH BEND, Mar, 22 —

Two college students today proved that it often takes a foreigner to master the Amer-ican-English language. Winners in the 46th annual

Intercollegiate Speech Association contest held on Notre

Rites Set at Culver Times State Service CULVER, Mar. 22 — Services will be held at 2 p. m, tomorrow in Culver Military Academy (Chapel for Mrs. L. R. Gignilliat, Coast Her husband, Gen. Gignilliat,

(Guard said the men apparently formerly served as superintendent all were in good condition.

of the academy; retiring in 1938, He is affiliated with the Veterans Administration Hospital at Hines,

Five boats and a patrol plane had searched for the crippled

[ Yrs of §

WITH THE INDIANAPOLIS

~ Public

Ernest Summers (right) and Dudley Jordan drove

this Cadillac in performance of

.

Water Supply

N'Sunday,{March®23,YErnest }

their duties in 1906.

bIVIGE

Summers begins his second half-cen-tury of service helping to supply the citizens of Indianapolis and vicinity with a safe, adequate, and ‘dependable water supply. In those 50 years he has witnessed the

Ernest G. G. Summers, 1242 West 34th Street, began werk with the Indianapolis Water ‘Company on March 23, 1902.

GG. of construction work; later Canal Superin. tendent. ;'Ernie’, helped his father by | feed. ing and raterin the horses used on" con. struction jobs, serving as water boy, count. ing brick, and doing other jobs that kept

boys out of mischief in the Sy Nineties.

tremendous growth both of the city and Ernest Stmmers typifies Y the ' spirit "of THEN NOW the water company. His first 35 years were service of water utility employees. , Today Hina : spent in customer service work, first as a there are five other active employees who 100. . v.r. Population ..... c=. 000 . district man and later as an industrial and have worked for more than 40 years. There 14000... Customs 109.576 commercial meter man. In 1937," he was. also are seven’ pensioned employees’ who placed in charge of the Stores Yard at the passed that period of service before retiring. 1,000 - Meters in Service. . . .. 108,919 Distribution Department. Of our entire personnel, almost one-third 20.......... Water Mains cor invenh 921.5 “Ernie” Summers has been a part of the have been employed for 25 or more years. 2.000 Fire Hydrants 8.628 water company family since boyhood. His To Ernest and to all his associates, the ' Si fi father, Gilbert G. Summers, began work in water company and the hundreds of thou. 15,000,000 wer SWAB 100. .$7,500,000 1876," five years after; the public water sands of persons who use water, truthfully supply went into service. He was in charge can say, Congratulations!”

THEN um Work began in 1902 on these slow sand filter units, first in service of the White River Purification Plant.

NO

wm This new filter building of the White River Purification Plant went into the service of the city erly in 1951.

IN THE SERVICE OF THE CITY SINCE 1871