Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1952 — Page 3
21, 1952
os
WEDNE®DAY, MAY 21, 1952
~ | Rhode Island Come Out and a) Woman Named Head of PTA
oP New officers today prepared to talée the helm of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, closing the
Your Living Costs Could Be Worse
If you've been beefing about
Jame ji ’ the high cost of groceries and the - upkeep of a family of four here y of late, cut it out. F W Id ‘and your brood had to scratch
You're getting off lucky. Red Menace Can't #10r a living in Washington, Mil-
Be Forgotten, He Says waukee, Richmond, Va. or any By" United Pr of the 28 other cities which have ya ‘higher costs of living than here. PARIS, May 21—Gen. Dwight "1y,, googter capitol ranks only
{tics based on figures of last Oc{tober ; You'd be a lot worse off if you
me
{ { | |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
|says the Bureau of Labor Statis-!
By United Press
‘Police State’ 2 Killed in Chicago Fog
Law Tested
CHICAGO, May: 21-Two men Mattoon, Ill.
were ‘trafler trucks piled up in a series Mr, Tull's vehicle of rear-end -collisions during a yp ripped the steel loose and it We€k. A storm bréwing in the
killed today when five
steel and driven by Edward Tull;
_ PAGE 3 : : 'Short-Wave News .
By Science Service . : WASHINGTON, May 21-—-Re-ception of short-wave radio broad
The far : . hen Casts may be expected to become 8 tarpe.of le struck the pila. Progressively worse for the next
[next Sunday and reach its height
heavy fog. ee ‘dens ch \battered through Mr. Tull's cab, l0nosphere will probably begin 8 ’ One o e ead, arence crushing him instantly. Citizens Group Wade, Louisville, was killed by, 8 y
Fights Ordinance
hearing this afternoon.
Judge Lloyd Claycombe will hear arguments on the ordinance!
56th annual convention at Murat Theater. v Mrs. Newton P. Leonard, Providence, R. I, is the new president. Other officers include Mrs. Rollin Brown, Los Angeles, first vice president; Dr. John W. Headley,
!D. Eisenhower dppealed to the sixt from the top of a 34-city which emerged from the recent: |world’s free people today to come list of where Jou Set tie, HIoSt cod ication of Sy Inve. The { “ " for do v eapest citylordinance requires citizens 0] jout of their “corners” and Heke wo Tn ore What an eo of themselves" | the menace of Communist aggres- family of four can get along to police officers. | sion. a “modest but adequate” way on “ This was the law invoked by “When you're fighting some- an annual income of §3812. That's Police Court Judge Scott McDon- |
Ys M.
Brookings, S. D, treasurer, and Mrs. Russell C. Bickel, Columbus, 0O., secretary.
thing evil you're not going to beat
Gen. Eisenhower said.
All new officers ‘will serve 9 “I talk about it every time I'm ’ rs » three-year terms. 4 i on my feet—you’re not going to| Mrs. Leonard has been first #% lick it by sitting in the corner.” | vice president of the national or- | Gen. Eisenhower told reporters | ganization’ for the past three '® at an informal ceremony at the’ years, coming up from the ranks = | French village of Louveciennes| - in Cranston, R. I. She first joined i {that “I keep talking about peace] When her daughter entered school g (and freedom and repeating the | in 1926. al , “same things” because the Com-| i Aided in Europe |munist menace cannot be forMrs. Leonard. represented the MRS. NEWTON P. LEON- gotten. national PTA in Europe last ARD—President elect, PTA. | Honorary Fire Chief
meet-| | | eae, A *or. either,a liability or an asset, and| The General was proclaimed an |
; . suggested that parents study the nonorar citizen of the village | £2 ization in the American “On€ programs their children watch. | y
|v and received a chromium-plated| As delegates prepared to wind| We must recognize the fact
| chief fireman's hat which made] up convention business, they that listening is a skill which
heard school curriculums and in- Peds to be cultivated and di- him honorary fire chief as well. telligence tests assailed by Dr. w.jrected, he said. Later, in “Paris, Gen. Eisen-| Allison Davis, University of Chi-/ A Double Approach thower said his formal goodby to cago professor of education. {the North Atlnatic Treaty Coun- | They also heard an appeal for! leil at a closed session of dele-
girls
An Indianapolis high school
iaht more use of radio and TV as tools girl told delegates the biggest gates from the 14 pact nations. gh Summer of education by Dr. Paul Witty, problem facing the modern girl Reporters who had Socompanied rofessor of education with im to Louveciennes were ejecte eee. 1.59 SOL xt nivereits. [1s how best to Prepare for Both Be NAD Derr ees “Pupils are in school to learn|a career and marriage. [building when the meeting began. 2 for 3.00 how to think,” Dr. Davis sald. Barbara Walker, Shortridge] Gen. Eisenhower also was decBut he added: {High School, said most girls are orated today with France's cov“Neither the teachers nor the taking a double approach to theeted Medaille Militaire by PreEight cole parents can teach the child 0 matter — “studiously” preparing|mier Antoine Pinay. 1.49 Phish, using the present curricu-ie .". .areer while keeping an| Mrs. Bisenhqwes aesompatied sess ly ; ums. ‘ l n mind to marital persuasions./the genéral on the trip to ub h Hits Present Courses - rig as a Ra of a|veciennes, which vied with nearoxer short, > He referred to present school teen-age panel, Miss Walker said by Rocquencourt for the symbolic 2 for 3.89 courses and intelligence tests as|,ne of the most important aims|ceremony in which Gen. Eisen- ; . “one of the most. arbitrary, unin-i,¢ oqucation should be to teach hower made his farewell to the Jeresting and ritualized aspects of |... sibilities of parenthood. [Frendh Jeople, Tue Ivo villages e.” jo s 2. ua. surth Floor They have given the class-| Donnie Dean, Lubbock, Tex., adjoin q
: attacked the “bigoted and vocif- outside Paris, room » bootlss. foslard chr, roll hors Re sian Suh: aes Marvelous YecoEnite 3 Spe Observes it for wi JU stated “the new| “There is nothing better than an hows” Dv Davis 2a. a is America is represented by mil-|these little village ceremonies in yaa? | Feoul Eo eons which lions of young people who are France,” Gen. Eisenhower sald. mis-educates them for the high- learning to live together. The way the. families all get toly competitive, economic society Emphasis on Home Life |Setber, it’ 3 Jakvelons. Baby is in which they live.” tori Und- | e paul 0 800 a y Dr. Witty told delegates that, Clare Van Sickle, Stanfor /the crowd when the child started children’s interest in TV could be versity, discussed the necessity of crying at the end of the cere3 home, church and school in mold-| ony as Mayor Farnand Guil-
{ing youth’s faith in the future. |, ume handed him a scroll’ con- | Stephen Porter, Yale Univer-|o. ...o the freedom of the city.
|sity freshman, said the basic so-| + lution to narcotics is greater em-| Ine party then visited the city
)0YS
without dinner three nights a
it by keeping quiet about it,”|Week at Antoine's, to be sure.
In Washington, D. C., the same living will cost the family ft $4454 a year and in Indianapolis we can make it with only $4044. Hope this makes you feel bet-
199Racketeers Get Tax Ax
374 Others Are Awaiting Trial
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, May 21--The Internal Revenue Bureau has ob-
tained convictions of 199 rack-|
etegrs for fraud since it began its racket drive 10 months ago, it was announced today. Indicted
and awaiting trial are 374 others. |
Additional taxes and penalties collected from racketeers in that period now total $112,300,000, James J, Guthrie, assistant director of the special tax fraud tax drive, said.
But the special racket squads throughout the country still have a mass of work before them. About 23,000 racket cases remain to be investigated, Mr. Guthrie said. Since the squads went into active service last July 1, they have closed more than 15,000 cases. .
Commissioner John B. Dunlap was appointed to head the cleanup drive on Apr. 27, 1951, and kept that post ofter he was named head of the Revenue Bureau on Aug. 1. He set up special squads of revenue, intelligence and collector’'s agents in each revenue district to cull tax returns for racket cases. In defining a ‘acketeer, Mr. Dunlap included anyone who earned his living from gambling, horse-room operations, numbers, narcotics, slot machines, punch-
: ‘hall to drink the traditional “vin! board, abortionists, lotteries and i phasis on a stable home life. ia’ ” { similar illegal occupations. plain colors, Other speakers were William dhonneur” (wine of honor). | larly 79¢ pr. Goode, Florence, Ala., and Wayne i REAL ESTATES BIG PROWisbaum, Niagara Falls, N. Y. | u Got $45 : 3 for 2.00 I | V The PTA will install new om. RePOS Th gs MOTOR is Times Classified ads! bh [cers tonight at a 6:45 p. m.| Louis Flower, 30, of 2314 Guil- Whether you're the seller, the | banquet in Scottish Rite Cathe-/ford Ave. told police ‘he Was|p.oker or the buyer, The Times er dral. Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, mauled and robbed of $45 by five EASY-TO-READ Want Ads are 13. Special pastor of Marble Collegiatejor six men who attacked him in Ph P 5551 to : Church, New York City, will [the 300 block, W. Michigan St./for YOU. Phone PL aza. Sch 3 prs. 1.00 speak. : a early today, place your LOW-COST ad. vee. 2.29 surth Floor SERN
pick-up in the middle of a long, hard day. Milk
feel fit—the easy, economical way.
keep in fightin’ form. ...AND LOW IN COST! ‘Milk really costs less than most other foods—much, much less than others with similar food value. To stretch food money, simply serve more milk. ppliances at refrigerators, Aric. ranges, hg :
Milk helps you over the hurdles—gives you that needed
food value, high in energy. It helps you keep fit. look fit,
Drink a glass for breakfast, for lunch, for dinner and just before you go to bed. Drink four glasses every day to
is high in
Batchelor, Bloomington. unior Town. arard reas: ie hi own, gran reasurer, n lh, Sa Ere | rin Tan: aster Wi . Tislow, in E. 37th Bt. od
{from the Stewart firm's office.
II board” in the race between | price and quality takes
Il you take your first bite of | . any food we serve.
II Hawthorn "can't be beat",
| Paved parking area.
|
ald in April when he sentenced {19-yedr-old Mareiyn Hopper to In-| dlana Women's Prison. The girl, (who had been named the “other (woman” in a domestic triangle, [was arrested in her hotel room by [police who said she did not answer {their questions. Judge McDonald said he imposed sentence to try to reunite a husband with his wife! ,and children. | | However, Attorney Thurl. C.| {Rhodes appealed the; woman's | |conviction. Although he did not | [represent the girl, Mr. Rhodes said private citizens retained him | to, take her case to test the “con-| stitutionality” of the law, ' He branded the ordinance a “police state” measure The ordi- | {nance provides that persons accosted by any police officer must (state their name and “give an ac-| |count” of their present where- |
(abouts, If their account does not | appear “truthful and accurate” officer to search the citizen, officer to search the citizen . Mr. Rhodes, in addition to appealing the youthful “other woman’s” conviction, filed an aecompanying demurrer which attacks the law as invalid under the In- | diana and U. 8. Constitutions, i The eight-point demurrer says the law abridges constitutional] guarantees of search warrant and | the provision that no person may be required to testify against himself, | | Jacob Miller, city attorney and | {Ralph May, deputy city prose-| {cutor, were to represent the city | {in the hearing this afternoon.
| ——
3 Local Students On Collegian Staff
Three Indianapolis students! will’ hold the top positions on | the staff of Butler University's {student newspaper, the Butler {Collegian, next year. | Donald Herring, 337 W. 324 8t., ‘has been appointed editor-in-| chief, and David Walker, 6125 Riverview Dr. will take over as, managing editor. Assistant man- | aging editor wil be Richard King, | 5757 Coburn St. Other students appointed to the staff are: William Andree, Renselaer, associate editor; Fdward Smith, 220 E. 19th St. makeup
editor; Robert Jackson, 310 N. Illinois 8t., assistant makeup editor; Jane Cooksey, 3906 Kenwood |Ave., editorial director; Max umacher, 4363 Winthrop Ave., sports editor; Patricia Elig, 520 N. Central St, feature editor; Ray Sanders, New Augusta, business manager, and Beverly Siegel, 4615 N., Michigan Rd., society editor. : Appointed city editors were: June Wolfe, 6 S. Bradley Ave.: Rita Black, 5867 Broadway; John Viases, 2045 Central Ave. and Katherine Simmons, 518 E. Dr. Woodruff Place.
Evansville Architect Heads Indiana Masons
Ralph E. Legeman, Evansville architect, today was installed as grand master of Indiana Masons
one of the trucks involved in the! pile-up when he climbed from the in handiest form . . A city ordinance under attack cab of his truck and sought. to Radio column as a “police state measure’ was warn away approaching vehicles lights . . to be tested in a Circuit Court with a flare. He was
*3
struck” by a truck pictures.
STRAUSS SAYS: STORE HOURS Tomorrow (Thursday) +
——
————— pot T—— i 3 OI : is
our v JACKET AND./OR SLACKS
Will Be Better—
wee [ON Monday and Tuésday. At that The week's television programs time not only weak signals and . TV and fading, but occasional blackouts «+ « ‘program high- may be expected to interfere with letters from readers broadcasts crossing the Atlantic «+ TV and radio features and and Pacific Oceans, forecasters of All these are on two the National Bureau of Standards loaded with sheets of stainless pages of your Sunday Times.
‘predicted this morning.
12
Till
8:30
2h \ i of of ] “aR
Wy i
—if they- come from clothing hands and are made with clothing sense—from The Man's Store to be sure!
—The "bettar" refers to the fit and feel and the looks—and the Value!
: of the Grand Lodge governing body at the Ma-
sonic Temple. Three Indianapolis men were lo high dodse a on. They are" Rurust Fa espa i EOP ve., junior walle Ave, grand
res lecturer, Charis . Lucas, grand steward and
Other officers appointed . were: Steven L. ller, Connersvi ie: senior grand deai Owen W. Schneider, Evansville, grand marshal, and Alvah D, Alexander, vansville, grand chaplain. Newell A. Lamb, Kentland, deputy and master; Elmer C. Forks, Ft. ayne, senior grand warden: Joseph A.
: resided ov the two-day meeting. » ’ -
tone, 5140]
‘Grade B’ Yeggs Fail To Crack 3 Safes
Clumsy yeggs tried but failed to open. three safes here last] night. However, they looted a cash drawer of $125 at C. H. Ellis Co, 118 8. Pensylvania St. | where they knocked combinations off two safes. ] One burglar left blood on the handle of a safe at Stewart Manufacturing Co., 320 E. St. Joseph St. Police believe he hurt himself knocking off that safe's combination. Nothing was taken
AR
"EVEN STEVEN"
Staying "even with the
some doing these days. But the Hawthorn is doing it—as your tastebuds will tell you the minute
For top quality food, at popular prices, the *
Open every day, I1 a. m. | to 9 o m.
RESTAURANT
N. Mo AT SIXTEENTH [
SRfls no
These are a few highlights from one of the most appealing selections of Jackets and Slacks in
America (North or South America)
They will rejoice a man through the days—and seasons to come
SPORTS JACKETS
HICKEY FREEMAN Beginning at $80 ye “and goingupte $105 for superlative
cashmeres
FASHION ‘PARK 2 A feature group— > with emphasis on the PARKEASEJacket—$65
HOLLYWOOD— imported textures—
$65 r
RUMSON TWEEDS— wonderful!
42.50
KINGSRIDGE Sports Jackets are $35 and $45
BOTANY by DAROFF featured at—
$45
DON RICHARDS— very high style— 33.50
IMPORTED LINENS
PALM BEACH JAVA WEAVE—
luxury lined—28.95 ™
FEATURE! All-wool Jackets—hand-picked
edges—28.95
FADED BLUE DENIM=9.78§ and"
CL STRAUSS & C0
i
__from ; Hickey Freeman—
SLACKS
' PEDIGREED SLACKS
Fashion Park and Gilbert of California
—29.50 and up
DAKS English Slacks —begin at $285 for the Gray Flannels
Ee
|SIER RA of California—with Holdapleat construction—22 50
SLEEX—those celebrated slacks with the side zipper adjustment—$20 and 22.50 (The 55% DACRON-— 5 45% wool ones
are $20) :
GABARDINES— all wool—un with SIZES UP TO
EE
a
TEA SRE AES EER ETE ARSENE Er Esa n
56—18.50 ool
CHICO SLACKS— : those marvels of : the Slack World—a ar of textures— inning at 10.95 for rayon flannels and Aristo rayons— and going up to 22.50
A feature group of ; CHICOS—in a marvelous DACRON and WOOL ~~ texture~ hold their even in the rain! 18.50
PALM BEACH
SERB BATA SAMIR FR EE rv SEO 6 8
- * « a i *
