Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1945 — Page 23

[. 18, 1945 -

ADE ILL

RINE GAS ° e i from the hlorine gas yes« er persons were jcaping from a

ine gas which hn Wiley Jones S. Btate ave, f the family of 7 8. State ave, not poisonous, Joris Lowe and 1, all of 1714 given first aid ercome by gas rater heater in ir home,

HLER

ROOM SUITE.

8 -

construction, he g-filled cushions, back, with carve

bolstering in a reen or blue.

LHURSDAY, OUL. 18, 1948

“DEPUTY CLERKS QUIT OVER ROW

!

Chief Probate Man and Two Assistants Resign. = |

“Just a few harsh words, no fists,”

. was County Clerk Jack Tilson's de-

scription of a flareup in his probate department resulting in the resignation of three employees. “Furthermore, I wish. phone would quit ringing,” Mr. Tilson wished. “I've been plagued with job-hunters all morning. Well, they're all filled by now.” The county clerk conceded his account of the inner-office debate yesterday was “all hearsay.” He said he wasn't present at the time because he was recovering from the after-effects of a fish luncheon, Joe Was ‘Touchy’ “I've been very fortunate with my personnel, but this thing's been brewing for a long time,” said Mr.

Tilson. “Joe's been a little touchy

lately.” He alluded to Chief Probate Clerk Joe Newburg, who quit with-

ogt notice in the midst of a spat

with Chief Deputy Clerk Myron Cosler. Mr, Tilson said Mrs. New-

burg had once been a candidate

for the post that went, instead, to Mr. ‘Cosler. Resigning out of sympathy with Mr, Newburg were Mrs, Viola Sturm, his assistant, and Miss Patricia | Adams, a clerk.

Routine Matter

Clerk Tilson said he understood |

it was all over “lack of identifi-|

cation on a pay-out slip, a routine

office matter.”

Mrs. Strum said today the tiff began over Mr. Newburg's contention Mr. Cosler lost a power-of-at-torney certificate. But she also cited a number of long-range grievance, including low pay, no vacations in two years and “gruelling war started

work.”

“It wasn't simply a clash of tem-

peraments,” she declared.

FACTORY WORKER

HURT IN ACCIDENT Vacuum Co. prior to receiving his

at darni

Al

Hares} Dance i is

ed by C.Y.O.

THE YOUNG PEOPLE of St. | Phillips C. Y. O. will hold harvest dance ‘Friday at 558 Eastern ave. The a Rhythmaires will furnish music from 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. The ' committee in charge is Francis Greeley, Carolyn Louise Neff, Marvin: Sweeney, Bud Donahue, Joseph Scanlon, Margaret Frances Neff, Rosmary Dorn, Rosemary Keen, Marieanne Goger, Betty Davis, Pat Gatchell, George De Kalb, Ed Sheridan, Ed Stich, Catherine Sullivan, Jo! Casler, Mary Lou Kriner, Patrick, Francis Stich, Eleanora Naughton, Gertrude Dorn, Alice Rae baba, Norman Ault, Bud Turner, John Nohl, Joan Sweeney, Mary Ellen Ramsey, Gertrude Walpole, Yavonne Rababa, Pat Carson and Mary Carson.

LOCAL MAN GUIDED

Francis Green

An Indianapolis man was charge of the rescue party - | freed Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, the office of strategic serv{ices has announced,

Maj. Robert H. Helm, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Helm, 4229 Rockjd ave. directed the complex operations of a group of B-24 planes which landed in various parts of occupied China in order to evacuate American prisoners. The B-24 on which Maj. Helm flew to Mukden on Aug. 20 was the first American plane to land on a Japanese-held air field since the

A 1937 graduate .of Purdue university’s school of sciences, Maj. Helm - was employed three years in the Hawaiian and Philippine islands by the Manila Standard

“Iture. © Recipients,

POST-WAR PROJECT LOANS ARE GRANTED

Post-war planning loans totalling $113,000 have been granted Hoosier governmental uits by the state finance board. The loans, to be used to blueprint public works projects, were approved by the Indiana Economic council, under a $500,000 revolving fund created by the 1945 legislaprojects and amounts are: School city of Seymour, $25,000 grade school, $1000; Knightstown, .1$217,500 water softener plant, $1600; Sheridan, $100,000 sewage disposal plant with sewers, $5000; Elkhart, $2,700,000 sewer and sewage treatment system, $60,000; South Bend, $4,000,000 worth of interceptor sewers and sewage treatment plant, $40,000; Bristol, $67,000 sewage

PITTSBURGH, Oct. 18 (U. Bay An Indianapolis baby boy ‘“purs

vertisement, as a “son” figured in

officer and his wife, Chief Petty Officer Earl Edward

of obtaining children. He has) charged his wife with “buying” two | children through advertisements. Klein testified in county court | here yesterday that when he mars | ried a widow in November, 1941, | she told him she had one child. | Instead, he charged, she. appeared | with four after the ceremony. Then, when he was at sea, he said he received a cable saying he was the father of a new girl, But when he docked at San Diego, he

treatment plant with sewers, $2800 was greeted with a baby boy.

$2600.

and $59,000 municipal waterworks,

z.

WAINWRIGHT RESCUE

first lieutenant’s commission in

Charles Hayes, employee of the 1940,

U. S. Rubber Co. was in a serious

|

condition at Methodist hospital to- NAMED PRESIDENT OF

day after he was injured in an in-

dustrial accident last night,

Mr. Hayes’ right arm was caught and drawn into a machine on which

drawn his arm up to the shoulder senior, has been elected president and had injured his neck before a ©f the International Relations club.

helper threw on the safety. The

injured man resides at 1046 Chad-

wick st.

ARMY TO TAKE OVER

{Purpose of fthe club is to further interest among students in inter- | national relations. { Other officers are: Miss Dorotha Beck, vice president; Miss Ruth Hoppe, secretary, and Miss Nancy

KINGSBURY PLANT Ostrander, + Indianapolis, treasurer. ‘WALKERTON, Oct. 18 (U, P.).— 12. YEAR- OLD. BOTANY

The Kingsbury ordnance plant

which employed 20000 men and STUDENT HIT BY CAR

women during the war, now has

dwindled to a personnel of 1450, of- | + ficials announced.

A 12-year-old botany student was {injured by an automobile yester-

The 5th service command will|day afternoon as she was gathertake over the plant in a few months | Ing specimens to take to school. from Todd X Brown, Inc. privat races Brunner, of 449 N. Haugh s

operators on war contracts,

received bruises when she

skeleton force will be maintained stepped in front of a car driven and the 13500-acre plant will be {by Virgil Eskew of R. R. 7, Box kept in readiness for possible use 1416, at Tibbs ave. and Cossell rd.

in the future. *

She. was taken to City hospital.

INTERNATIONAL CLUB

| Miss Martha Ann Holloway, 553 : he was working. The machine had | University ave, Butler University! ==

|

i

Klein said he became suspicious when he received a letter from an

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| woman,

Lady LIND dis dindas Vid Lidia

Sailor Says Wife ‘Bought Babies Here

lof 1943 saying his “son” was ob-|ment. Decision on the divorce suit will

chased” through a newspaper ad-|tained from another Indianapolis be handed down in a few days.

So Klein asked his sister, a divorce suit between a navy petty | Mrs. Margaret Whittington, of Basil, 0., to check, She checked, and so did the Red Klein, 31, Pittsburgh, said he did | Cross. The latter group said that | not approve of his wife's methods | Mrs, Klein's statements about the |

AGL

birth were “false and fraudulent.” ,¢ the fracas.

Klein's sister

through a newspaper advertisement,

died in 18 days.

Indianapolis,

testified that she When a man stepped out of a {found that the first child, obtained | vacant lot at 11th st. and Sharon | ave. and told Daniel M. Root of The second was| 3020 Wren st. to “put 'em up,” Mr. {obtained mm a similar fashion in| Root hit him oh-the jaw ahd left! | him stretched out to go summon

Klein said that his wife admitted police.

attempting to recelve more allot-

CITIZEN REPORTS HE fered his 28-acre Brown county), .. wsiona is the typical state

'KNOCKED OUT ROBBER

A would-be stickup was turned into ‘a knock-out last night with the hold-up man getting the worst

"The man had disappeared headquarters in this country. He | highway and rail in Indiana are

the hoax, and confessed she was | when police arrived.

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URGES INDIANA FARM {races tsa AS WORLD: CAPITAL oem se tte sets

Bert Dingley, president of el oh, Toasters Jon me . rein Marmon-Herrington Co, today of- 9

tions capital in Indiana. Statistics

farm as a possible site for a United | Nations capital. His action followed: Governor Gates’ dispatch of a cablegram to|

|in the United States. Containin : 'the center of population, it is lo= cated strategically within the heart of th ation. Nam deeds the United Nations Preparatory | oo the nal plums Commission, in London suggesting are now familiar to {he entire the world .peace city be built in! world. Indiana was one of the | Indiana, | leaders in the production of war The governor said he had been | material that contributed so greats \informed ‘the U. N. P. C. had de-|ly to final victory over the Axi jcided to establish United Nations | Transportation facilities by air,

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HANDSOME OFF-WHITE MANTEL

32.00

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