Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1945 — Page 5
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r 81, 1945 |] WEDNESDAY, OCT. 31, 1045 : : E (Advertisement)
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hat Wayne Bear and Casper Kleifgen,
the victim herself pointed the finger
Taken to the room by Detectives
the team credited with tracking him down, Edwards stood before Miss Brosnan as she studied him intently. S Identifies Suspect “Yes, that's the man,” the prominent Indianapolis churchwoman said. She later asked that Edwards be turned sideways and again repeated that he was the man who shot her as she collected rents near Bright and Hadley sts. on the morning of Oct. 20. Edwards, who told police he was on a marijuana and drinking spree and remembered nothing during the three-day period, including Oct. 20, previously was identified by four eyewitnesses to the shooting. A gun which he is alleged to have taken in the strong-arm purse snatching the night before the shooting was Identified as the weapon used in the shooting. The purse taken from Miss Brosnan and the gun were found in his possession at his rooming house at 717 N. Capitol ave. He has been charged with robbery and with inflicting physical injury in commission of a robbery. Police also are investigating other crimes with which Edwards is said to be linked and recoris showing that he is a parole violator.
6100 FROM EUROPE DUE IN N. Y. TODAY
NEW YORK, Oct, 31 (U. P).— More than 6100 service men were scheduled to arrive today aboard eight ships from Europe, They were the U. 8S. army hospital ship Francis Y. Slanger with 1599 patients for Mason and Halloran general hospitals; the Lewiston Victory with 1857 troops; the Williams Victory, 1951; Joseph Hollister, 579; Hart Crane, 32; James Kimball, 30; Lorenz De Zavala, 20, and the Cargao, nine.
DIES IN AUTO CRASH WASHINGTON, Ind, Oct. 31 (U.P.) —Harry Wade, 35, was killed late yesterday when his automobile
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
hit a concrete bridge. State policeman Donald. K. Smiley said ex-
{cessive speed caused the accident.
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Police Verify Identification Of Suspect in Brosnan Case
Detectives today had" verified the identification of Cleo Edwards as the man who shot and critically injured Miss Helen Brosnan Oct. 20 as
The 25-year-old alleged marijuana smoker was silent yesterday as . {he faced the shooting victim in the room at St. Vincent's hospital, where she lingered between life and death several days after the shooting.
of guilt at the suspect.
‘compromise” on political appoint-
RESIGNATION STIRS ROW WITH GOVERNOR
(Continued From Page One)
pital’s board of trustees. He said it presumably indicated “loose and inefficient” management. “There has never been one effort made by this office or the patronage secretary to replace a single employee in that institution,” said the governor, Dr, Williams asserted that among jobs subjected to political tampering there were those of the ohief clerk and the butcher, who is in charge of food preservation also. “1 don't want responsibility for the hospital's operation under those’ circumstances,” Dr, Williams declared. He said attempts to “reach a
ments at the institution for the insane had failed. Governor Gates pointed out that he personally had no jurisdiction over institutional appointments. They are vested in the trustees. Dr. Williams, a Democratic appointee of former Governor Schricker, tendered his resignation last week. He will be succeeded by Dr. R. O. Lynch, a Republican, with previous experience at the Logansport state hospital and the Muscatatuck state school.
‘Oomph Girl’ Here for V-Bond Show
{Continued From Page One)
them to be cleared up soon. Her last film was “The Doughgirls.” “The first thing I have to do is fix my hair,” the star declared
as she left for the Claypool hotel where she will stay. After the rally, Miss Sheridan will return to New York tomorrow,
DRAG FALL CREEK IN SEARCH FOR WOMAN
Police were dragging Fall Creek today in search of the body of Mrs.
| Florence Savage, 59, of 2442 N. | Illinois st., Apt. 3, who left her | apartment between 1 and 6 a. m. ! today. Police were notified by her two | daughters, Miss Mary Savage, 29, land Miss Kathleen Savage, 22, of [the same address, and it was believed she may have been drowned.
Organizations
The first auction of the season will be
{held at 8 p.m. Priday in thé Antlers | hotel at the meeting of the Indiana Stamp club. ;
! The Lynhurst auxiliary, 0.E. §., will meet at a& noon luncheon Thursday at 1239 8. Lyndhurst ave.
Lawrence chapter 384, 0. E. 8, will
$25 Million to Come From
houses, office building to house school of
. {To do this there must be constant
SET UP FOR. 0
Gifts, Bonds, Grants.
(Continued From Page One)
ate students .apartments and general «glassroom and
education, general library, completion and minor additions to certain existing buildings such as physics, chemistry and administration: men’s physical fitness building, women’s physical education building, fine arts center, jour nalism building, armory, student health center and infirmary, union building addition for adult continuation study and augmented facilities, and power plant development. $7 Million Construction
The building program which has been under study for more than two years includes $7,500,000 for construction which the trustees have designated as “critical” with $5,500,000 classified as of emergency character, An additional $7,500,000 is listed as “urgent” on the building charts. The total of $15,000,000 would be devoted to classroom, laboratory and library building purposes. Housing and other self-liquidating projects included in the program total $10,000,000. It was emphasized that totals given are tentative and necessarily will be revised in accordance with changes in building costs during the 10-year period. Less Student Space The university has substantially less space per student than it had prior to world war I. Its physical plant was inadequate for its prewar enrollment and only by additions can an increased enrollment be accommodated. The trustees’ resolution stated that such additions not only should take into consideration ® adequate buildings for undergraduates but also should be plarmed with reference to those graduate and professional studies which are the responsibility of the university. . “The larger student body will require a larger faculty. The pre-war staff has been depleted by the war
return, This situation is true of all other educational institutions, thereby creating a difficult competi tive problem not only in obtaining men but particularly in recruiting a teaching staff of men of promise and attainment,” the resolution continued. Need New Courses A third major problem for the university lies in the field of educational method. Returning veterans have many new professional and vocational interests born out of their experiences and the social consequences of the war. “The end of the war has made imperative certain definite steps to enable the university to meet its
the people of Indiana,” the trustees’ resolution declared. “The university cannot stand still, It must go forward, taking the lead and marking the path in the state's general advancement.
strengthening of its staff, its physi-
meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Lawrence Masonic temple.
cal plant and its course of study.”
Truman Spee
(Continued From Page One)
and steer clear of both these dangers to our security.” . ” s . “Labor has a stern responsibility to see that demands for wage increases are reasonable, , . . We must not kill-the goose which lays the golden egg.” . » . » “We must get away as quickly as possible from government controls and get back to the free operation of our competitive system. Where wages are oconcerned, this means that we must get back to free and fair collective bargaining.”
di in eng tar rit
an,
ch Highlights
“Labor must constantly find ways within its own ranks of cutting down on absenteeism, reducing turn over, avoiding jurisdictional disputes and ‘wildcat’ strikes.”
” » . “Several months ago I urged
congress to amend the unemploy-~
ment compensation law, . , . I hope that the house ways and means committee . . , will give the members of the house an early chance to vote on this important legislation.” . rn r “I am sure that workers , , . feel a deep concern about full employment legislation. . , . The responsibility for the damaging delay in enacting it is definitely at the door of the house committee on executive expenditures.” ” ” ~ “I am also sure that the work~ ers feel the same way about what is happening to the U. 8. Employ~ ment Bervice in the senate and house , , , USES , , , can do so much during the months ahead + «+ that I hope the congress for the time being will keep (it) under federal management.” ” n n “The country is entitled to expect that industry and labor will bargain in good faith, with labor recognizing the right of industry to a fair profit, and industry recognizing labor's need to a decent and sustained standard of living—and with both realizing that we cannot have either deflation or inflation.” *
” » » “The country . . . should be patient and realize that many of the parties are out of practice in collective bargaining.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ..
HUGE EXPANSION
activity as there was had been di-
and some of its members will not
responsibilities and obligations to}.
Ra to
(Continued From Page One)
vided among sevéral budding parties. Eisenhower sald his program of de-Nazification was leveling off—
an indication that it was nearing
completion.
Germans Growing #W*
Surlier, Defiant
By EDWARD P. MORGAN "Times Foreign Correspondent BERLIN, Oct. 31—Oivilians are beginning to make more trouble in the American-occupied zone. of Germany. ? Several soldiers have been killed in clashes with Germans in recent weeks, according to army intelllgence reports. The precise number of soldier fatalities has not been revealed. One G-2 officer estimated that it was “six or eight,” in unrelated incidents, including brawls and possibly Involving some armed displaced persons as well as Germans, Some soldiers have been fallen upon at night and beaten. Their attackers’ weapons have ranged from sticks and stones to hand grenades. Reports from scattered parts of the American zone show a noticeable change from the docility among the clvillan population, which prevailed. during the summer, to a surlier, bolder attitude. Crude, {illegal posters have appeared in some places. These mock the occupation and denounce the military government.
Sabotage Mounts More sabotage has been reported ~such as the cutting of power and
telephone lines and the stringing of wires across roads and paths at night, “We're in for more of this sort of thing,” one officer sald. “There will be trouble in Germany this winter of local but possibly serious nature.” These incidents should not be given exaggerated importance, however, There is no evidence that they are part of any widespread underground activity. Americans Alert The American authorities are watching this rebelliousness as carefully as they cam and trying to analyze its causes, They think it may be due partly to the return of German war pris-
oners, who are angered to find their women fraternizing with GQ. 1s.
Many incidents also are blamed on idle, smart-alecky youth and Germans who have been kicked out of their jobs because of their Nazi connections. These are potentially dangerous groups. Some of them have been
meetings.
‘lke’ Fears Discontent May Lead to German Uprising
caught holding clandestine Vi
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hs
in the attitude of Berliners, although lack of fuel may cause disorders here, when winter hits the capital with full force. The Germans showed anything but meekness in $leidelburg recently, When the burgomeister planned to evacuate 30,000 to relieve overcrowding, the citizens protested so bitterly that the figure was cut to 10,000 and aimed mainly at Nasis or their fellow
American Steel Dredge Co,
‘the General Dredging Co.,.Inc., died
STEEL FIRM HEAD DIES AT FT. WAYNE
FT. WAYNE, Oct. 31 (U, P)— Clyde A. Walb, 67, president of the the American® Steel Supply Corp, and
last night after a lengthy illness. -Walb was a native of Lagrange county, where he served as county surveyor. He was past president of the State Society of Professional Engineers and also served as Re-
1927. He is survived by his widow,
publican state chairman from 1923- 3
Vida; three sons and a daughter,
travelers.
Denounce Fraternizing
It was there that posters first appeared, denouncing fraternizing frauleins, in barnyard doggerel. Then the posters became more sinister. They were signed “AntiFascists” or “Edelweiss Piraten.” The latter was a curious underground youth movement, which the allies encountered before the German surrender. Then some of its members were found to be antiNazis, Communists, Hitler Jugend boys and delinquents, The commonest- attacks on soldiers seem to be in waylaying them at night after they have had dates with German girls. . “This is not necessarily sinister Nazis at work,” one officer said. ‘A gang of soreheads might do the same thing in Indiana.”
Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily on Inc.
MRS. BERTHA LEWIS DIES AT HOME HERE
Mrs. Bertha E. Lewis, 1415 N. Hamilton ave., an Indianapolis resident .35 years, died last night in
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her home. Mrs, Lewis, who was 63, was a native of Mackville, Ky., and was a member of the River Avenue Baptist church here. Survivors are her husband, Harry Lewis; two daughters, Mrs. Marie Backmeyer and Mrs, Henrietta King, both of Indianapolis; three grandchildren, Mrs. Marjorie Andrews, Richard Collins and Harry E. VanSickle; a sister, Mrs. Etta Reynolds, and a brother, Ben Phillips, all of Indianapolis.
LT. LENTZ MEMORIAL SERVICES PLANNED
Memorial services for Lt. Richard Thompson Lentz, son of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Lentz, 1240 N. Tibbs ave, who was killed Oct. 17, 1944, over Vienna, will be held at 3 p. m. Sunday in the Washington Street Presbyterian church. The 21-year-old bomber pilot lost his life when his plane exploded. Surviving besides the parents, are a sister, Miss Jean Irene Lentz, Jackson, Mich., and a brother, Capt. James Lents, Maywood, Ind.
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