Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1945 — Page 5
é a
Boyd Gurley, Ex-Editor of
~ Times, Is Dead in Mexico
(Continued From Page One)
“the most disinterested public service” during 1927. The Times was cited for “its work in exposing political corruption in Indiana, prosecuting the guilty and bringing about
4 more wholesome state of affairs in §
civil government.”
The Times, under Mr. Gurley's
editorship, exposed operations of
the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana gov-| §
ernment. : On ‘Hopor Rolt’ Mr. Gurley was nominated on the “Honor Roll for 1927" by the magazine “The Nation,” which annually paid tribute to the outstand- \ ing men in various fields of public service, as selected by its readers. Mr. Gurley left The Times in February, 1933, when he was suc-
~ ceeded by Talcott Powell. He is survived by his wife, Elea- |
nor, who is with her parents in| Monticello, Miss,
——
. CAPEHART GETS SON'S CITATION
WASHINGTON, July 25.—Senator "Homer E. Capehart (R. Ind) yesterday received a Certificate of
Merit which was awarded to his son, T. Sgt. Thomas C. Capehart,
Boyd Gurley
for exceptional service as a translator and interpreter overseas. The citation accompanying the certificate was from his commanding officer, Col. Henry B. Curtis. Landing with the U. 8, forces on the Normandy. beachhead, Sgt. Capehart now is with the occupation army in_Germdny,
Easiest Terms Possible!
ee
tion to C
From, \ AS LOW AS
GRAND PIANOS
Choose From
® BALDWIN 1 © MASON & ; HAMLIN | © STEINWAY ® KIMBALL * CONOVER ® CHICKERING . VOSE, Weber, Hamilton and many others Every one desirable
and in excellent condition—like new.
ROEBUCK AND CO
ATTORNEY RAPS DISTRICT OPA
Shouts Opinion. as Client Is Penalized. (Continued From Page One)
guilty of an, inadvertent technical violation in accepting loose stamps. But, he charged, Hoss’ violation was willful, Counterfeit Stamps Also suspended for the duration from dealing in meats and fats ‘was Jack Hutton, 150 city market. The order was stayed after 90 days. He was charged with depositing 2455 counterfeit stamps in his ration bank account. Samuel J. Hochman, operator of Sam's Subway, 3 E. 28th st., drew a month's suspension. He was charged
“|with submitting false information
on application for allotments. Mr, Hochman is prohibited from dealing in meats, fats, processed foods and sugar for that period. PF. A. Jones, operator of Bob's Triangle Grille, 205 N. Pennsylvania st., was suspended from dealing in meats and fats for a month,
Two Cases Continued Cases of the Jaggers Wholesale Grocery, Inc, 114 8S. Alabama 'st., charged with a shortage of sugar certificates, and Lipot Frankovitz, charged with posting wrong point values and failing to keep records, were held until today. Mr. Prank.
ovitz is operator-of the Stop and
Shop super-market, 56th and Iilinois sts, and the Frankovitz Market, 28th st. and Capitol ave. Continued were the cases of R. M. Skaggs, 536 Indiana ave, and Thomas A. Theard Packing Co., 710 E. 16th st. Both are charged with possessing counterfeit points.
SEAMAN FREED ON CHARGE OF MURDER
MIAMI, Fla, July 25 (U; P.).~ Seaman William Parker, 19, was free to return to the navy today after being acquitted of manslaughter in the death of Mrs. Ella Mae Eames, a former Boston minister's wife, Judge Ben Willard acquitted the Toledo, O., youth yesterday only a few minutes after the state prose-
beaten the 42-year-old woman with a beer bottle and thrown her nude body out the hotel window. Courtroom spectators cheered the decision.
M’NUTT PRESENTS MEDALS AT LUZON
WITH U. 8. 38TH DIVISION ON LUZON, July 25 (U. P.).—Indiana’s Paul V. McNutt, chairman of the war manpower commission, personally presented Bronze Star medals today to 21 officers and enlisted men of the 38th division, formerly the Hoosier National Guard. McNutt inspected the divisién with its commander, Maj. Gen,
"5 | William ©. Chase, El Paso, Tex.,
and discussed army chow with one of its mess sergeants, James Mindrup, Indianapolis.
AUXILIARY TO MEET The ladies’ auxiliary of the Indianapolis police department will meet Monday at 2 p~m. in the L. 8. Ayres & Co. auditorium. Mrs
Donald Bushong will preside.
Open Every Monday and Saturday Night
Until 9
0'Clock
Custom-Made Slip Covers
Made - fo - Measure of Smart New Fabrics!
~ 1-Cushion CHAR
1-98
3-Cushion SOFA
43%
These Prices Include Both Labor and Material
Large or small floral patterns and colors are beautifully harmonized to give. you stunning, professional-type ensembles. ' The richly blended colors are vat-dyed, insuring their permanent loveliness. Extra heavy fabrics in dur-
able, smooth finish that will wear long
your home by experts . . I beautifully :
asteners.
and shed dust. Cut and measured in ailored, with pleats, piped seams and
cutor - charged. that Parker had
4 filth and degradation.”
General Loses Redhead During ‘Jeep Roundup’
(Continued From Page One)
general's staff car. The general was accompanied by a titianhaired French. girl. : After much heated discussion he stalked off in one direction while the girl left in the other, calling, “I'll see you later, daddy.”
. . Hn » THE provost marshal's office explained that the impounded | cars could only be released by | the “next highest authority.” This means if a major lost a car, his colonel would have to get it back. In at least two other cases the intervening officer must be a general. Twice within 41 minutes two colonels, accompanied by comely civilians, were halted and | escorted to the marshal's office. | Sgt. Guy Richard of Thibodaux, La. said, “one of those colonels was madder than hell.”
n o » THE provost marshal's office said the hunt was prompted by 8 letter to the ‘army daily, Stars | and Btripes, in which the writer | said he had counted 104 army | vehicles occupied by “officers and mademoiselles.” The writer asked, “Don't they | need any gasoline in the Pacific?”
Socialite Dead: Miner Suicide
(Continued From Page One)
| vened. Dated July 15, the missive read: | “You will find Annette in the dining room. She died April 25.) She was sick one night when I! came would not let me. The next night! was gead and cold. I did not know| what to do. woke up in a couple of days. don't want to live, so I will find a way out.”
Authorities theorized that Johnson was afraid to reveal his clandes- | tine romance with the woman ‘and! chose to keep ber pody in the house, eating his meals within a few feet of the bed on which it lay. Marshal Youngstrom said Mrs. Peterson had evidently been living with Johnson since late December. Last fall the childless woman left the home of her husband, a novelty store operator .to live with her mother. The couple had been active in Leadville social circles. Mrs. Peterson was described as of sparkling personality and musically talented. She was a piane player in a Leadville movie theater until talking pictures came to this once booming mining town.
| Peterson died of natural causes. | i
days later her husband discovered
and began searching for her. His quest met with no success and was abandoned a few weeks later. Neighbors = noticed neWwspapers collecting on Johnson's front porch and the locked doors and shadedrawn windows led to calling authorities.
GIRL IS CHAINED T0 BED IN HOME
(Continued From Page One)
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
home from work, and I! wanted to call the doctor, but she|
In December she left her moth- | 5 er’s home, presumably to visit rela- |§ tives in a nearby town. Several |:
that she was not with ‘her relatives |=
STORM BREAKS “HOTTEST WAVE
Relief to Continue if Clouds.
Stick Around. (Continued From: Page One)
day afternoon as the mercury hov- | ered around 96 : | The July heat, which sent Indian-| apolis to bed sweltering, broke at
{3:20 .a. m, today with a thunder-
storm which damaged power lines in the city.
City police said “hot” lines were|
| reported ‘down at 16th and Cornell]
sts. and 34th st. and Sherman dr.|
{ Lightning also was reported to have morrow. : A ent |struck light transformers at 1716] The highest official temperature 07° 208) Says on the ground isn't| Blaine ave. and near Burgess and|recorded in Indiana yesterday was | ery : | {at Seymour where the thermometer |
Emerson aves.
Two police radiomen, Leo A.
|Brand and Julian Fryback, were|Was unofficially reported at Craw-|
manning the police radio station at Willard park at 4:10 a. m. when
{lighteiing struck nearby but failed | Marion trailed other Hoosier to put the radio out of commission. | with a reading of 93 degrees.
Stewart- Warner Hit :
| “The radiomen said lights in the Haute
station went out for a second but came back on immediately on the station's automatic radio supply. Street lights and lights in establishments around the park were put out of commission. The flash of lightning which presumably hit a nearby transformer carried into the radio station: sending a blue flash through the room several times. The only other lightning damage of consequence occurred at the Stewart-Warner plant, where a transformer which supplies the welding department was knocked out. Electrical repairmen were still working on the line this morning. John Longsdorf, assistant to the President of the Indianapolis Power & Light Co., said the storm dam-
when 1 came home from work shel}
I took poison, but IS 1
An autopsy disclosed that Mys.
said she had to stay there until the stepparents returned in the evening. In the kitchen the deputy sheriff found Mrs. Lewark's aged mother, 74-year-old Charlotte Simmermon, in what he termed a “state of utter She unable to shed any light on Georgia's chaining, he said. ° As police left for Anderson to arrest Mr. and Mrs. Lewark they took Georgia with them as far as the Hamilton county welfare agency, where she was given a bath and the welts on her legs given medical attention. “I just like to play with the horses,” she said. “But Momma and Daddy lock me up. Momma says I'm a bad girl, but I want to stay with you.”
MERE 7 ft 0
Z
Good vision means good health. Work better and . feel better with properly fitted glasses. They will
add to your joy of living. Don't delay, see—
No Charge for Credit
EYES EXAMINED OFFICES AT
i 1 |
|
i
was ii
{
| scattered -areas of the city. : | nad a doubly heavy load, since they
[pected to be serious. *
{ bY
i
ages still were not all repaired this morning; since they ‘occurred 'in
my ese sou, eee es ANY PLAGE'--KENNEY| were still working on damages (Continued From Page One) | caused by Sunday's electrical storm. | ~ ,
revealed little or no damage to| “biggest the world has crops by the rain. Hay bailing may of.” be held up several days until the| “Already we have gained control hay dries, but the delay is npt ex- of the air, so there can be no de-| - | cisive enemy action,” he said. “The {Japanese is ‘up against something he can't do anything about, and | The weather bureau predicted peg going to be taken apart. L general relief today all over the, “The troops will be bomb-happy | state, which shared the general heat and the whole anny jminokilizes { : r 3 {when we finish. The troops will be wave yesterday. Cooler tempera-| ¥ : tures. were predicted for northern = ) Sune hy ei 1s hlows that Ye Indiana, with scattered thunder- ™". : : : showers in the south and central Ihe Nip is not even contesting)
: : : control of the air, and when the’ portions today and in the north and’ : * | central state late tonight and to. SNeMY doesn't contest control of the,
air the jig is about up. The air,
eyer heard § & % i
Relief Expected
Asked if there was any policy re-
WELL GO ASHORE [=i
As far as | Tokyo 1s & target.”
Acid
Preliminary surveys of farm areas air. power now ufider way is the!
Millions of sufferers in the last 40 years have found a way to get guick | relief from the itching and smarting of piles. They use a delightful cooling, soothing and astringent formula ~—Peterson’s Ointment. No wonder one sufferer writes, “The itching | and smarting were relieved, and I slept all night, Peterson's Ointment is marvelous,” 35¢ a box, all druggists. 60c in lube with applicator. Money back if net delighted. A
read 101. The sanie temperature
{londsvllle. VACATION SPECI | State Temperatures
cities Other | temperatures 'were Terre; e and Vincennes, 100; Lafa-! | vette, 99. Rochester, 98; Indian-| {apolis, 97; Angola, Cambridge City, {Evansville and South Bend, 96: Columbus, 95, and Ft. Wayne, 94. Mr. Johantges, the only reported | heat fatality, had been a public! parks employee seven years. He| resided at 1431 S. Alabama st. Rites will be held at 8:30 a m.! Friday at the G. H. Herrmann. fu- | neral home, with burial” in St. Joseph's cemetery,
Why let sizzling days and nights torment you with ing and of hea
t { oy prickly heat, .chafe? | Check misery with Mex- | sana, soothing, medicated | wder. Family favorite | r itch of minor skin trou- | bles. Send some overseas. | Costs kittle. Get Mexsana. |
Beautiful, Soft Curis Easy to M Long or Short Style Complete With Haircut Shampoo and Set
high
2 Machineless PERMANENT Reg. $6
$2.95
Complete
Machine
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
JY
1 EERE TRY J
TRA
ERA 180 L
Another Fairway value that, as usual, speaks for itself. complete room outfit for the regular price of the massive, spring-filled
suite alone. included at
REG. $199 SPRING-FILLED MOHALI R uviNG Room sure
spring
3-PC. WALNUT DI
Beautifully matched walnut veneers, modern styling. Extension table, § matching chairs leatherette upholstered seats.
Walnut Venser Cedar Chests . . . . . $39.95
3-Drawer Odd Dressers,
Steal Coll Box Springs, Special . . . . $16.95 4-Shelt Wainut Bookcases sr amu $15.95
OIL PERMANENT
Nationally. Advertised HELENE CURTIS
or Machineless PERMANENT
Reg. $8.50
5.95
COLD WAYES "routax siise
L BEAUTY
COLLEGE
95
Reg. $8
Shampoo, Sef, 75¢ ALL WAVES GUARANTEED! NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY:
$T-28 Cisne”
Lincoln 9721
Here's a
And just look what's $139!
. Exactly as Pictured With Mahogany Trim
Famous . : . nationally known make . . , with luxurious dav. enport and matching chair. Both have complete innercome in variety of colors and
covers to harmonize with rest of room.
NETTE SET streamlined $3950
with blue
Walnut . . . $19.95
