Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1946 — Page 6

THURSDAY, JAN. 146 Three Sisters BASEMENT |

[Starts Move Here for Dry [L] 1. Vote in Indiana Counties

mitlee” It held its first meeting, i Ou A ™ | was killed instantly \ at HAS THE

with some 330 members présent, on

| Dec. 14 in the K. of P. auditorium. | Firm to Add Retail Division he was fiving crashed one and ong-{] iN Bt oe a | & lr svn kk far be- | Mr. Brown asserted. i une ; "- {half miles north of here. J Tips, Stark Testifies. © |yona anything anticipitted” ~~ | The group has no sonnaction with In Expansion Here, | ie was the son of Mr-and Mrs: St Er et ttl

p 5 thousand” ree | the Prohibition party,” said the (Continued From Page One) | nonses bn 2nd 4 Showman Tor! tate chaimhan. It advocates~not| (Continued From Page One) |Harvey Inskeep, horthwest of neve

; Robert McComb, of thell ; ; ; NG i! : : oe . wleal headquarters in the K.|state-wide prohibition—but prohi- low catalog. prices. ‘In a basement,| McComb airport at t ‘ SPRI ¢ . Pedr] Harbor. ’ ’ atur, who \ fr a me wer RE CE i Ge i, men em SE NG x "1, He assumed Adm. Husband E.

on sale at still lower clearance he had flown with Inskeep recently i ‘ \ BLE El) x ‘ 17S A mmanding. the’ Pacific]. Work Through Ministers Mi, Siown commas he n> and considered him a capable pilot. Wh i SU |

ices. .|“Indiana Old Age Pension pro- : i , only one was un | Goods to be carried include a|He said he rented the plane to fleet at Howail, fully understood | “Of Sli thest Mr. | Brown. gram,” for which he's been lobby- p pis war warning messages of No- Javor) is an in Elk-|ing since 1042 when he bolted the representative stock to outfit milady | tnskeep with the provision that the

| : | vember and December, 1941, and hart.” ~ : Townsendites, numbers 138,000 prom handle foot and putaide, i. fight remain within a 10-mile ra was taking defensive action mocord-| “go (ai the orfhnization had members.’ . ' Bn SHAD ther 1.1068) real dius of Decatur. ingly. : asked Indiana ministers (none in wh eT Sanders & Malsin of Rujiiond © 50 Whine 2. He did not stress the possibility | y lai 1a 001s) to provide them with DEFENSE RESUMES “in y oe A Hi the plane crashed, said it hit a tree of an air attack in communications |... names of 10 or more church | SW Jorg aie pri the iaxt and struck the ground, burying the late in 1941 because he assileg the members they would expect to be in IN DURHAM TRIAL 60 days for asked , . nose. : Hawaiian defenders were ¥ | tavar of local prohibition. Eventual-| FT. WAYNE, Ind. Jan. 3 (U. PJ. natryction. Sitemeter aces en aware fo the danger and had taken +" © i" in aianapolis ministers Additional defense witnesses were a fem how operates a smal r{MRS. STEVENS TO BE precautions. 1 receive similar requests... called, y in’ the government's i ‘ : 3. He did not send Adm. Kimmel NE of the group's activities conspi¥acy suit against the Durham of ihe, sah oles Jagnines, 102 5. BURIED SATURDAY]. i 1 \ = COLLECTION AT the 10-point mote which former |, ~rnqianapolis were to the effect Manufacturing Corp. and nine em- Mark aspired th um wnt of| Services for Mrs. Martha Mary WIE Ve bd Secretary of State Cordell Hull| oe the poll-takers were apparent-|ployees charged with concealing de- op inspir oa Jove opines A | Stevens, 1848 N. Emerson ave. who (| a5 iY handed Japan Nov. 26, 1041, and |) ymiting their “contacts” to|fects in war materials. the proposed a coll siore|dled Wednesday, will be. held ati} a which the Japanese considered an |. io who obviously were sym-| Two defendants, sax C. Hitt, anager, lor : etall store! 0.30 a. m. Saturday in the Moore|] ; 9 40 ultimatum, because It would RAVE |p, hetic. compapy inspector, and Arthur J.|N88 NC Neel ARBOR | . "| mortuary Northeast chapel. Burial ’ “weakened” the war warnings sent|” wp. official name of the present|Hentzler, night foreman, testified or hcl prinlly oN nas | Will be in Oaklandon cemetery. to Pacific commanders. “steering” organization is the “Local | yesterday when the trial was re-| years Aa S| * Mrs. Stevens, who was 55, was 4 In the Nght of hindsight hel SECC Syn, Tegislative com- (sumed after a two-week recess. (Shown us that Lane BRYAN 1S FOES harm in Evansville, but had lived wpegretted” that he failed to notify Under cross-examination, Hits|to stay,” Mr. Wadsworth said. ®lin Marion county since early chiid- : Kimmel the morning of Dec. 7, 1041, ' sald he was working for advance- city has been good to us. We hope) ~~ oo oC ember of the si} £241 B { Bid Yes — we love suits, too. Ste i BE ran WORKERS [or re mr ms 6% Ete mes mm | ANE foc 1 off diplomatic talks at 1 p. m. that moved rejection marks from faulty |Indianapolis. Legion auxiliary, y ‘ many of them . . . clever, 1 day. But, he said, he did not know materials when ordered to do so. He| The firm operates a chain.of retail Burvivors: include: a sister. mS: Litoedal lL unforgettable suits like the Fe io : : oY whether Adm. Kimmel would have BEGIN TIEUP IN EAST added, howéver, that it was a com-|stores in 23 cities including seven Elsora 'L. Bocks: two nicest and vob : ong Shown, an Hr. ahd rd réad into it more significance than mon salvage operation. large stores in seven of Ine Rayos three nephews 15 ER Roundstooth he - “Three Take My Wor he did in Washington. (Continued From Page One) ed larger cities. The company’s largest . h The ya checks. ree

for I+ 5. He had to ‘struggle” with Mr. avon: walkout of. U8 bee} RECONVERSION AID single unit, however, is the mail 109% RAISE. URC URGED i 11 Lg iveried pegs. front. ae

Roofev men for the order division here. [Rome Ee toch, bu he aul | Corp. workers, seeking » $3-a-day| AGENCY OPENS HERE| ‘The business was founded tn New| ~ EQR GHIPBUILDERS It pays fo have the best |liy got, what he wanted. wage hike and prepared to back| A gommercial agency to assist{York some 45 years ago hy Mrs. °° : of ed Fwhon i 3 to hh Crowdiia Ripbrted up. the - demand. with ‘a strike |p, ness and industry has been |Lane Bryant Malsin who still is ac-| WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (U. P).| : an ~~ USE YOUR CHARGE + + + and when it comes to : Ship Cro g Repo Jan. 14. established by ' former WPB men tive in the concérn: A recent visit here Government. procurement agen ii . BUDGET or LAYAWAY

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photographs, - the best means Adm. Stark explained that Mr, Company officials and C. I O.|pare wae partially aimed to inspect the|cies today Proposed a 10 per cent Personality Portraits from Rooseveli had reports Oy United Steelworkers representatives) rye expediting office has been |site of the new building. Raphael increase in wages for the nation’s ic ‘Studio... Whether JIS 2nd unsanitary oon whe were to be asked to resume DEGO- |egtabiished by Albert O. Evans, for- Malsin is president and Theodore shipbuilding, workers. Voorhis Studio, oe ship complements were increased. |iigtions Saturday at a meeting of | or district manager of the WPB, |Malsin, secretary. They are her| A government member of the you want a photograph for He said he had no reason to be-|pregident Truman's fact-finding and Clayton E. Tanke, former chief [sons as is one of the architects, | shipbuilding stabilization commits - business purposes or fo give {lieve that 10,000 more men 1 the | committee. If the OPA agreed to a of production service and facilities | Arthur Malsin. tee disclosed that the offer was E R d friends Pacific fleet when Japan attacked gee] price boost, a counter-proposal | givision of the Civilian Production| Other local executives are Harry made in an effort to break a joe your amily and friends ligonld have reduced the damage.|,ont end the walkout threat, 1abor |gaministration and WPB. The office, |J. Bagal, operating manager and month-long deadlock in negotia- « +. tlways go fo’ the [In fact, he added, it might have | observers said. 5 known as Evans and Tanke agency, assistant general manager, and tions on the demands dy A. F. of 17 N. ILLINOIS

Voorhis Studie. © resulted in greater casualties. Another threat to communications|is in the Circle Tower. Peter MacIntyre, finance manager./L. and C. I. O. unions. Adm. Stark reminded the com-| . .. jac night when Western -

mittee that the matter of defend-|,, 0 omolovees in the New York

SPECIAL flo har San mets ctovslian ir oi, 0

One 8x10 Lustertone 2 ia D ih a a ua Ihe ‘more than 7000 workers in 238 of-

Portrait joint army-navy defense arrenge- fices. ; ments had been made. Western Union service was cur

Correspond tailed in the New York area when 1.98 Cited 3000 employees quit work to atlend : A Adm. Stark called the commit- |, 1 oss meeting. They voiced unan- rant Proofs shown, Head and |ltee's attention to: {mously to reject & national War A beautiful, sparkling shoulders of individual only || 1. Correspondence between him- | jgpor bosrd wage ruling to strike. center diamond 2 His reac Sha Others a ne ‘pe pode So ds. Talks Shift to Washington : : Nang sige jy ands ig trict. at Hawaii in December, 1940, | - Negotiations toward ending the in_a lov the inadequacy of air de- 44-day General Motors Corp. strike $265 Hours 9 to 8 fenses at Pearl Harbor. shifted to Washington from Detroit ppointm 2. Correspondence between for- again as C. I O. United Automobile No 4 ent mer Secretary of the Navy Frank Workers leaders met for a strategy Necessary Knox and former Secretary of War conference. : Henry L. Stimson, in January, 1941, G. M. and U. A. ™ spokesmen in which Knox listed a surprise air agreed to resume tentatively attack as one of Japan's most likely at 2:30 p. m. V over the | moves in the event of ‘war with the union's demand . ) per cent’ United States higher wages. G. .. President C.| Bt ot E. Wilson denied rumors that the] 2.5 loft coagal Irguijef Setenss strike of 175,000 auto workers had elovely mew style iets in May, 1041, which been settled by a compromise. | mounting with a raincluded provisions for: joint air| In Seattle publishers and a sub-! diant solitaire dia operations ‘Joint anti-atreraft meas- committee, representing’ striking| ; mond. ‘ Op hy aircraft warning serv | Union printers planned to meet to- - J : $75 day in a new attempt to settle the 8 wage dispute. Publication of the]

Star, Times: and Post-Intelligencer | y has been stopped since Nov. 19. | Says Indiana Phone . Workers May Vote | S— President Ray Waldkoetter of the

Indiana Telephone Workers Union ® An engagement soli|said today that the union. wil take! taire in a beautifully la strike ballot on whether to walk| lout in sympathy with Western { Electric Co. employees in New York| : $49.50 land New Jersey, if such supporting | action is requested. | | Mr. Waldkoetter's union - repre- | gents some 1000 plant, maintenance ® Oxfords! and construction employees of Indiana Bel, plus 50 traffic workers o Straps! of the Richmond home company. Mr. Waldkoetter's statement con- ® Pumps! {tinued : “It - is* assumed that the other. {affiliates of the NFPW, the In- " : = diana Trafic Unofi, the Iridiana| * Two betilian de gia. [Bell Accounting Employees asso- | splendor of the large jetation, the Long Line Federation] center diamond in this of Telephone Workers, the Indiana | dainty ring. | Union of Telephone Workers, the | ‘ $100 {National Association of Telephone | {Equipment Workers and the: Asso{ciation of Communication Workers {will take similar action. 7000 May Be Involved

“In all, some 7000 telephone work- | ers of the Indiana Bell, the Indi-| ana Associated Telephone corpora- | Wk og [tion, the Western Electric company, | a the American Telephone and Tele- © Engagement in {graph company, and the Richmond ’ — nt Sie oD {Home Telephone company may be] ing with 7 individual- | involved. ly set diamonds of “The present dispute fis over | glowing beauty. iwages. The ITWU, local 1, is cur{rently negotiating with Indiana Bell {for the following: A general in-| |crease of $2 per day and an Im-| mediate return to the 40-hour week | lin order to provide jobs for return- | {ing service men.” |

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'CENTENARIAN OF KENDALLVILLE DIES

KENDALLVILLE, Ind. Jan. 3| ® Two . sparkling side

(U. P).—~Mrs. Clarinda Febles who | diamonds add to the celebrated her 102d birthday last] beauty of the large other daughters: Mrs, Pearl Shar-| rard, Palo Alto, Cal, and Mrs.| WW Cone son, Lee Febles, South Milford, and | | : TU 8 No. Elgg “rg. two sisters including Mrs. Mary | . / ; ; ; RTH S 9 ’ 8 years old ® ‘Lovers’ Knot” ene (Advertisement) gagement ring set Ny p ® liant diamond. Very yh beautiful. For years .

Dec. 17, died yesterday at the home| center diamond in 5 : Bs 27 of her daughter, Mrs. Frank Wein- | this smartly tailored SR grt. design. ; % ? Mrs. Febles was born in Seneca | $150 7 i Wr county, Ohio, but had lived in No- | : Adi 4 ble county since 1896. Besides Mrs, | : : BE Weingart, she was survived by two| i Charles. Weingart, Kendallville; a| Dicken, near Kendallville, who is! Hg i lings : ST. with one large brilPatients bothered b

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CREDIT TERMS .. CLAYAWAYS .o, AT NO EXRRA COSTS... ®

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