Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1952 — Page 3

in,

"FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952 _

|

|

Junior Deputies,

By United Press

SKI'S THE LIMIT—This lissome foursome can be 1 seeri ‘at 2 p.m. today, fomorrow and Sunday t when Bill Martin presents his Ski-Capades at Blue Lake on W. Morris St. Left to right are Phyllis Bret. Burlington. tell, ChuChi Coker, Margaret Mangum and Nancie Cooper. Marion County Junior Deputies will be admitted free if they’ re with their parents. Part of the proceeds of the water show will go to the |

‘We the Children of the U. S. Do Hereby Pledge Faith in Future’

Did the 48 children understand]. .

PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July tli they were signing?

A little girl with a heart full of} to a disillusioned!

. faith spoke

this Fourth of July.

pledge our faith in the future,”

“Ob, yes,” said Gail.

lis here and will watch over us if names to this Declaration, know“We, the children of the United we try to do right, and whatever {ing that it is as real as our reStates of America do hereby] \happens then is for the best. jsotve to be free.” | There's nothing to be afraid of,

declared pretty 11-year-old Gail| you know.”

Reckless. other youngsters with Gail,

Declaration” where. John

“We have this faith, because we are the future.” Listening to her words were 47|

all the 48 states and ers,

Hancock scrawled his famous signature toiture,

iechoed her words:

storekeepers,

the Declaration of Tepe are the future.

176 years ago.

of things to come.”

Speaks in Clear Voice 8peaking in a clear, firm voice,

‘We Are Children’

races.

“They|in our homes the actual sounds

ot 3 od 1 Halll know what the declaration means. and visions of history at the moWorl. atom Incependence: Xa It means we are not afraid. God ment it is made.

The words of the Declaration|/be placed in a glass case for dis-

“We, the children of the United] representing, (States of America, born of farm-| Of reading the Declaration and iron| signing it first because she is a gathered to sign the ‘Children’ s| workers, artists—on the plains, in| native of Delaware—the first state at the same table the villages and jn the cities—do|in the Union, boldly hereby pledge our faith in the fu-| Philadelphia. We have this faith because

clerks,

“We are of all colors, creeds and| “when we're not all so nervous, We have studied our coun-|so we won't spel) - it,” Gail exGail read slowly the simple words| try 8 historic documents and we plained. of “children who “are not afraid know that these are more than ipaper and parchment and words.

Because of Legal Holiday

This Week, Banks Will Be

Open Saturday

(July 5,1952)

9 a.m.-12 noon

® Regular five-day banking hours are: Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.— Friday, 9 a.m. to " 3:30 p.m: No Saturday banking hours:

AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK THE INDIANA NATIONAL BANK BANKERS TRUST COMPANY THE INDIANA TRUST COMPANY FIDELITY TRUST COMPANY Te Live Stock EXCHANGE BANK Fuercuer Trust CoMPANY THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK ' PEOPLES STATE BANK A

“[Senator from Illinois.

|

|

. We are children, but unlike {those of 1776, we can see and hear

. We sign our

After. the children sign the | parchment with. quill pens, it will

{play at Independence Hall. Gail was chosen for the honor

She now lives in

Actually, the youngsters signed ia paper placed over the original ldeclaration. The real signing of

‘the parchment will take place,

Ex-Publisher Dies at 89

Z By United Press EDWARDSVILLE, II, —Charles Boeschenstein,

July 4 retired

one-time Democratic National Committeeman from Illinois, died in .gn Alton, Til, hospital near here yesterday. He was 89. - a=.

Intelligencer from 1883 to 1917, and in 1917 organized the Edwardsville National Bank and

‘State Highway Commission. |resurfacing and widening Ind. 421

newspaper publisher, banker and which have the same uses as butin recent :

He published the Edwardsvillefthe year €nding June -30, 1953,

Roa A liom

Nearly $4 million in highway | repair and resurfacing Projects! were approved yesterday by the

Biggest job is about $800,000 for

and Ind. 9 between Shelbyville and Greensburg. The two-lane {highway will be widened from 18 [feet to 24 feet. Another estimated $800,000 will| ‘be for repairing several main | ‘highways, including U.S. 52 between Lebanon and Lafayette, | U.S: 40 between Terre Haute and, | Brazil, and parts of Ind. 67 in! Marion and Madison Counties. ‘Other Projects Listed Other main projects

{

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMFS — es

:

About $300,000 for resurfacing 4

{Ind. 39 between Lebanon and {Crawfordsville, About $250,000 to resurtace |Ind. 421 between Logansport and

| About $350,000 to widen and re-

{surface Ind. 15 south of Warsaw. Bids on the repair jobs will be

opened July 22, the others July 29.

Lifts Import Controls on Cheeses

By United Press WASHINGTON, July 4—S8ec‘retary of Agriculture Charles F. Brannan yesterday removed import controls on roquefort and several other foreign cheeses but slapped new bans on imports of malted milk compounds or substitutes for milk or cream. Mr. Brannan "acted under relaxed provisions of the new De-|

law Monday by“ President Truman, The new act permitted Mr. Brannan to lift controls on certain noncompetitive products and to increase quotas up to 15 per cent for products. i Other Controls Dropped All import controls were re-| moved from swiss, gruyere proc-| ess, roquefort and several other cheeses. Controls. were also dropped on rice meal, rice flour, rice polish, rice bran and star and flaxseed screenings, scalpings, chaff, and scourings. The ban on malted milk compounds and milk substitutes was said to be necessary to make butter import controls effective. The department said imports of these high butterfat products,

ter, have increased months. - Imports of cheeses remaining ‘under controls will be limited in

to the quantity imported in the calendar year 1950.

Trust Co., of which he was president until 1950 when he became chairman ‘of the board. He was a lifelong factor in developing the Edwardsville community and he served in numerous civic and business capacities. He was a member of the Democratic National Committee from 1912 to 1924, and in 1913 was Democratic nominee for U.S.

Survivors are sons Harold, president of Owens-Corning Fi-

berglas Corp., Toledo, and C. Krome Boeschenstein, St. Louis| newspaperman; daughter Mrs.

Frank Godfrey, Edwardsville.

Prolific Inventor Gets 22 Patents

Beaten Patient

editors, publishers, reporters and {farm columnists will attend alr, §. Robertson, of the Division one-day school at Purdue Univer-|o¢ Agriculture Economics, who

PC" sity here July 12 to acquaint]; individual competitive|tphemselves with new processes in point out the economic Bo-

United Press Telephoto.

ON HONEYMOON-—Peggy and Paul Neukom paused with | . their guide dogs, Lady Rikki and Tex, in St. Paul, Minn., yesterday | en route to their honeymoon in Minnesota lake country near Brain- |

erd, Minn. The Neukoms, both blind, met when they were training |

their dogs and were married.

=

i Two Indianapolis men he re-! "fused to be drafted into the Army, ltoday began serving two-year | [prison sentéhces imposed by Federal Judge William E, Steckler, | Both defendants, Roy Eugene | Matlock, 21, of 3844 Rockville Rd., and Dossie Sansing Jr. 20, of 2447 Manlove St. had refused) induction for religious reasons. Sansing had applied for classification as’ a concientious objector, District Attorney Marshall Hanley told Judge Steckler. The draft board ruled him eligible for servite with the provision he| wag not to be assigned to combat. But he refused to enter the

PAGE 3

2 Here Begin 2-Year Terms in Draft Cases

his orders to report for induction. In other federal court action | yesterday:

Brookside Ave. a former tempeo-

rary postal employee, was sef-

tenced to serve one year in a federal penitentiary. The government charged he stole a letter containing $5.25. Robert C. Stephens, 27, Noblesville, was sentenced to serve two years for mail fraud. A former guard at the Pendleton Reformatdry, he was accused of taking money from the parents of an inmate in return for favors to be granted the man in his charge.

service at all, Mr. Hanley said. The court was téld Matlock

Ear} Moore Jr, 27, Louisville, was sentenced to three years for

‘failed to apply for an objector’s

driving a stolen car across state

| classification until he had received lines. !

‘Nagged Me,’ Says Boy In Slaying of Mother

By United Press MILWAUKEE, July 4 — Al

freckle-faced, 13-year-old boy who

How to Beat the HCL—

SYDNEY, Australia, July 4 (CDN) —Qantas Empire |

Airways is chuckling over its screwiest request in years. It has come from a Chinese girl in Hong Kong who

has asked the airline to book her fiance on a flight to |

Australia, fix up accommodation here for him, and take special care of him. Explains the girl's letter: “Because of the high cost of everything we cannot afford to have our honeymoon together in Australia, sd he is going to have it there by himself before we get married.”

‘ {Kubiak and Dist. Atty.

{shot and killed his mother Wednesday night will be taken to Children's Court July 10 for a hearing on a delinquency petition. | Herbert Habersetzer, of the town of Franklin, shook with sobs yesterday as he-told authoriities how he shot his mother, {Sylvia, 36, in the back and head.

took the family’s small truck and picked up a friend, Richard Phillips, 15, who lives near the Habersetzer home. He told Richard what he had done and the older boy tried to get him to go to the police. The boys drove around aimlessly in the truck until it ran out of gasoline about midnight: They

i

took them to the Cudahy Police Station when he heard the story. |Cudahy officers called the sheriff's

|The boy told Sheriff Herman office and deputies were sent out

{McCauley the only *

{that “she hollered at me all the time. 3

him his mother

fense Production Act, sighed into Writers and Editors To Meet at Purdue

Times State Service LAFAYETTE, July 4—Indiana|.ion workers from Europe.

agriculture.

ministry of agriculture informa-

sition of agriculture in this state.

Shot With Rifle

Also attending the school willlwhat's new In their respective/had always wanted a gun.” After the

be 25 agricultural editors and fields.

Loses Sight In Right Eye

LA PORTE, July 4 (UP)—Raymond Malchow, 40, Mishawaka, was in serious condition today as the result of a beating by two fellow Beatty Memorial Hospital patients which cost him sight of his right eye. His wife charged Mr. Malchow was left unattended several hours Sunday after the beating in the Westville Hospital. Dr. W. R. Van Den Bosch, hospital superintendent, said Mr. Malchow was attacked by two patients when he became restless,

By Science Service WASHINGTON, July 4—One man received 22 patents from the government this. week. A patent| office spokesman said this was an| unusually high number, but no one knows whether it is a record. The prolific inventor is Melvin de Groote, University “City, Mo., a chemist with the Petrolite Corporation, Ltd, Wilmington, Del. Nineteen of his patents were variations on a process for breaking petroleum emulsions. The other three were also.chemical in nature. Mr. De Groote has received many other patents before, the patent office said. Believed to have held the most patents during his lifetime was Thomas A. Edison, with 1093.

I ———————l

ais

gr Womnapous Powers Light COMPANY OFFICES

IN THE ELECTRIC BUILDING ri 17 N. Meridion Street

WILL BE CLOSED

TOMORROW—Saturday, July 5th

Payment of service bills due July 4, 5 or 6 will be accepted Monday, July 7, at the net amount . . . thus giving customers the same saving they receive ordinarily for prompt payment. For the convenience of customers unable to pay service bills during regular office hours, a safe receptacle for payments is provided in the Electric Balding lobby, open 24 hours a day,

OPERATING AND SERVICE DEPARTMENTS will Maintain the Usual. Holiday and Sunday Service

The assailants then fled, but were recaptured yesterday. They were identified as George | R. Brown, Hobart, and a 16-year-old whose name has not disclosed. Hospital attendants believed Mr, Malchow lbst his eye when he was kicked and beaten into unconsciousness, after the two ipmates took him to another room on a ruse to check his clothing. Mr. Malchow was transferred to the Holy Family Hospital here because Beatty has no surgical facilities.

4 Boys Reprimanded After Patriotic Sail

NEW YORK, July 4 (UP)— Four Brooklyn boys swimming in a creek that empties into the East River found a rowboat adrift. They thought they could show their patriotism by rowing to the Statue of Liberty. The six-mile journey to the statue was interrupted last night when a Marine launch picked up the boys, and the rowboat, and took them to a police station for guiding an unlighted craft into the harbor. | Police reprimanded the youths and sent them home.

Sharing Bedroom Not Always Adultery—Judge

NEW YORK, July 4 (UP)—A judge named Solomon ruled yesterday that evidence showing a married man had shared his bed-

room with a woman who is not his wife is not proof of adultery. In dismissing an adultery charge against garment manufacturer Robert Sloan, accused by his estranged wife of having lived with another ” woman for five years, Magistrate Charles Solomon said “Suspicion is not proof. n “The accused could be impotent,” the judge said. “The relationship could be platonic, though such a conclusion puts a serious strain on credulity.” .

For Information Phone Plaza 7622

Power R20 is

|farm of

Boy Seriously Hurt HUMBOLDT, Neb., July 4 (UP) —Lynn Frey, eight-year-old son of Mrs. Robert Frey was in serious condition in a hospital here today after he fell from a horse into the path of a hay baler. Lynn suffered several fractured ribs and internal injuries in the ccidenit, which occurred on the his unclé, Ralph Frey, in ‘the Nims City area.

BUT MON

—including the Pedigreed the Finest in the Suit world.

Thousands of SLACKS in Two Groups 8.95 and 16.95

. It sweeps through the MEN'S FURNISHINGS SHOPS.

It includes

2

Thousands of Men's and Young Men's SUITS year around—and Summer Suits

Nearly a Thousand SPORTS JACKETS

hundreds of pairs of Men's Oxfords—

A THS IS IT

Mr. McCauley said Herbert told scolded him{took place, Wednesday night when he cameihis father at the sheriff’s office home late from fishing in a near-\where he was taken for questionby creek, The district attorney said Herbert said his mother had been “nagging” him for the past into his father’s arms. Speaker of the day will be Dr.itwo weeks,

William|on the case. ‘reason” he

|could think of for ‘the killing was

a Breaks Into Tears Herbert's father, Lucian, 38, was at work when the shooting When the boy saw

ing, he broke into tears and ran

The boy probably will be placed in custody of the State Department of Public Welfare until he

The boy, shot his mother withjis 21, Chester Mayer, probation a small deer rifle she had givenjofficer of the Children’s Court, will Other staff members will discusshim for Christmas “because he/make a prehearing investigation

and report at Herbert's hearing

shooting, Herbert|in Children’s Court.

We're Closed

~ NOT SATURDAY (==

DAY

opportunities

omorrow,

As the doors open-the famous mid-summer sweeping spectacular

SALE and CLEARANCE

Starts wide open! By far the grealest in a dozen years!

It brings marvelous

in The

WOMEN'S SPECIALTY SHOPS

on the THIR

Sale FLOORS

°

D AND FOURTH

And it is a boon to

parents of BOYS of all

ages — Sixth Floor!

It everi comes into the Girls'

Shops ~ Sixt

h Floor!

Pence 8. Aughe,. 37, of 2544

called Richard’s father, John, who