Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1946 — Page 3
lo
Legal ; City council members at a specelal meeting last night indicated they would reject the parking me-
ter contract at the meeting Feb. 4. |
tioned and the city was back where it started five years ago when the parking meter idea was introduced.
Authority to Use ~ Devices Questioned.
next council:
Legal technicalities were ques-
Councilman Herman E. Bowers, chairman of the ‘finance committee, questioned* the city’s authority under state law to install meters and suggested that specifications be eliminated and bids accepted again, It was Assistant City Attorney © B. Hanger's opinion taaé the council would have to pass an ordi- | nance authorizing a city board to accept bids if the state law doesn’t apply to Indianapolis. Objected to Contract
Councilmen objected to the extremely flexible clauses in the contract between the works board and the Magee - Hale. Park - O - Meter Corp., whosé product Mayor Robert H. Tyndall had selected. With approval, the board was ready to sign the contract calling for “1440, more! or less, meters,” at $59.50 per mete! | During the heated discussion, John A. Schumacher, council president, received a two-page telegram from S. P. Haines, Washington rep- | resentative of the Kar-Park firm! of Cincinnati, O., stating that the! Park-O-Meter “does not qualify un- | der specifications since they have | not at present time, nor have they had in the past, 300 parking meters installed and operating prior to the bid date.
New Model “The meter being submitted is not an improved model of any type meter now on the market, but is actually an improvised new -modél that has never been tried _under weather and traffic conditions anywhere in the United States.” Edward R. Kealing, scouncil vice president, charged that an injunction was liable to be placed against the city if the contract is approved. R. C, Dauss suggested that the editors of the three city newspapers “select an‘ engineering-sales-man to inspect and select the meter.” Both Mr. Dauss and A. Ross Man1y emphasized the need of “the revenue from meters .to ‘balance’ the 1946 city budget.” The storm subsided with discussion of meters offered by other
Dailey McCoy, Julietta superintendent, stops to talk with several o
wing after the much-delayed opening finally got under way today.
238,887 miles away holds a
Fund for Executive Mansion - Cut ‘by Congress,
WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (U. P). —President Truman, like a lot of other Amegicans, was knee deep in post-war housing problems today. His difficulty, however, wasn't the painter or the plumber or even government regulations about priorities for materials. 1 It was the house of representa- | tives, The chamber voted 110 to 41 yesterday to withdraw a $1,650,000 White House fund which Mr. Trunan had already started to spend for a new addition to the executive offices of the presidential mansion. "Taint. necessary, said the lawmakers. What's more, said many, protest-
added. ) Lm. | “IT SHOULD tell us that the way we're handling the affairs of the world, we may find some day that the only way to continue «life will be by fleeing to another planet,” Welles said, He insisted that he had not been + prophet in his Martian broadcast “I was just being a dramatist, and I was trying an experiment to prove that people were too
cerned, he explained. “The experiment certainly proved my point.” | - . » SAID that thousands of
HE people remembering his broad. |
down through the shining halls of Julietta
Moving day . . . infirmary go several of the residents to their new quarters.
companies, But opening bids again, it was learned, may not. conform with the “closet” practices of factions within the dusty archives of the hall.
ATTY. GEN. GLARK HERE FOR SPEECH
(Continued From Page One)
watching closely all property disposition involving more than $1 million. About $17 billion of a total of $33 billion of surplus materials is in war plants, the official explained. “If these plants are permitted to get into the hands of a few persons, monopolistic practices are probable. Even if we were to divide all the dollars in the country equally among the population, I suppose all of it eventually would return to the original owners. But, at least the public would have had a run for its money,” the Texan philosophized. Promises Trials i Mr. Clark will not permit as many “consent decrees” as his| predecessors, he stated. There will be more cases brought to trial, he plans, Governor Gates will introduce Mr. Clark at the banquet tonight. Preceding the dinner will be section meetings at which the following will participate: Frank C. Olive, Dean Bernard C. Gavit of the 1. U. law, school; Verne G. Cawley, Elkhart; Leo M. Gardner, Indianapolis attorney and James F. Thornburg South Bend. Clarence F. Merrell will preside tomorrow over a section méeting on insurance problems. President Claris . Adams of the American Life convention will speak at a.luncheon-meeting. The mid-winter session will close with annual banquet of the Indiana Roses association. '
| county commissioners requesting additional appropriations.
THOSE ACTIVE O'TOOLES
failing to discourage propaganda hostile to the Soviets. The Soviet letter was signed by Mr. Vishinsky. It was a bitter de-|
PETIT CASE FIGURE
“ASKS FOR MANDATE
| —President Truman today accepted | booked on a drunkenness charge at
The delinquency case against 17-year-old Susan Thompson, stepdaughter of Enoch Shriner, has been postponed pending an Indiana supreme court ruling on a petition to mandate change of venue from the Marion county juvenile court. The case is one of the links in the now tangled chain of criminal and civil litigation involving Shriner and Sheriff Otto Petit, It began to unwind through the courts last fall when Shriner moved to impeach the sheriff. The sheriff’s office then pressed a series of immorality charges against Shriner, his stepdaughter and a young man friend of hers, Harvey Algire. The latest link to be forged in the lengthening chain of legal attack and counter-attack is the petition of mandate filed yesterday in the state supreme court by James Dawson and Louis Rosenberg, attorneys for the Shriner family. Until the court rules on this latest move, the delinquency case will be stalled in juvenile court.
CARRIER HEADS FOR RIO WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (U. PJ), ~President ‘Truman today announced that the new 45,000-ton carrier USS Franklin D. Roosevelt will go to'Rio de Janeiro for the inauguration of President Eurico “Gaspar Dutra of Brasil next month,
ment hostile to Russia.
ton recently.
| yesterday to
| and wolf-calls.
| CLINTON, Mass. (U. P.).—It was| From the P. P. club, police folnunciation of the Iranian govern-| ge a day fopthe O'Tooles in Clin-|jowed little narrow tracks, discov-
Mark O'Toole was arrested by|st, near the Big Four tracks.
| ve permitted to keep the emergency | .qich.all district 50, at least for the!
ahead with the work. differences through A. F. of L. ma-
chinery, with the council making final settlements when necessary. |
The assault on the White House Like came during final considera {tion of the independent offices appropriations bill for fiscal year 1947. © it was. spearheaded’ py th: { house Republican leadership, which |advertised the occasion as the stan ‘of a big economy drive.. The net result was a cut of only $883,660 from the committee-approved $5.{504,146,286 appropriation measure itself. And in the end, the bill was epproved by a vote of 209 to 6.
boost the clothing drive for overseas refugees. But her auctioning was almost drowned | amid whistles *
Miss Russell Most of the remarks from John B. Clark, Northrop personnel activities director and impromptu master of ceremonies, made the audience laugh. But they kept Miss Russell's pretty face redder than her bright red skirt. The. star stuck to her gavel
years ago and
formed the C. IL. O. in 1936. .
pelled n 1937. Lewis resigned as
suesceeded oy Philip Murray.
Indiana ave, announced the theft of $500 from his safe, apparently by thugs who also forced his rear door.
stocks are not
ered a little red wagon on Vermont
{
“grimly humorously warming; be Eormer Conviot
| Police in
picture
New York
NEW YORK, Jan. 28 (0, PJ |F 11 states joined an in- | tensive search for a former convict {today while small merchants won=| | | dered where a glassy-eyed, mani« |acal noon-hour. slayer would strike | next. x Jack Goldner, 45, who was shot in the face by a thin-nosed men who entered his fur shop while : gullible where the radio was con- he was alone during thé noon hour yesterday, looked at a rogue-gallery LYMAN of Clifton Packman, 43, |twice imprisoned for robbery, last night and said, “That's the man." Police sent out an ll-state alarm
“He operates alone and takes re-
REACH AGREEMENT IN |Suen VALPARAISO STRIKE
Mr. Lewis becomes the 13th vice© VALPARAISO, Ind. Jan. 235 (U. president of the A. F. of L. His P.).—Some 400 members of local miners had been in the federation| 2280, United Steel Workers (C. 1.0.) for 50 years before he revolted 10|agreed today to return to work {accepting an offer of the Indiana |Steel Products Co. involving a 14-|former The U. M. W. was suspended from cent hourly wage increase plus a the A. FP. of L in 1936 and ex-|three-cent hourly production bonus. Company officials said the firm|plans C. 1. O. president in 1942 and was| would return to three 48-hour shifts| Mo
in effect in recent weeks.
, as yet, here
in great force—attire and
accessories are daily coming in
rr]
| = » s Racial Speaker | ANNEX IS Ho . ! » . ” peaker JULIETTA ANNEX IS |“ vesscttuios pegs STEAUSS THE INDIANAPOLIS OPEN | | pep things up,” she said. “I don't : FORUM will present Dr. Robert | OPEN AT LONG LAST sing or dance and I'm not very C. Weaver, field | clever when I get up in front of director of the «| Julietta infirmary's. new annex people.’ American was finally opened to patients today,| It all started when Mr. Clark . Council on Race eight years after ground was first! introduced the curvaceously beauRelations, at 8 broken on the oft-delayed project.| tiful Miss Russell with an aside p.m. Sunday in Although completed a year ago,| of too forthright admiration, Kirshbaum cen- the huge wing was brightened by| Miss Russell turned pink and ter. His topic human habitation for the first time| the 1000 workers who came to the A. will be “This {as 80 Julietta bed-patients ‘took | suetion ‘with’ their lunchbuckets ‘ Problem of their places in the spotless tile-| under their arms almost forgot Race.” : walled wards. | to eat. a. er Dr. Weaver ; | “Spirits of the aged patients were] . . has been active Dr. Robert C. | noticeably buoyed by the hustle and| o FLAKY aouiked Lint Mise in race relations Weaver | bustle of “moving day.” | ussell would donate her jacket ] work since receiving his Ph.D. The wing's mosaic floors were, 40 1he drive if & Worker would bid wt fr degree from Harvard in 1933. swept and washed shiny Wednes-| 19) ysed Sarena for a war-tat- | day, preparatory to the occupation, | “It's one worn by Maj. Carroll UNO YOTES 10 ACT ‘Happy as a Lark’ C. Smith, Black Widow ace, when ! “I'm happy as a lark that we're he shot down four Zeroes,” Miss finally able to move in,” beamed| Russell said. The airplane buildON IRAN-RUSS RO Julietta Superintendent Dailey Mc-| ers laughed. . 4 : | Coy. “Well, anway,” she stammered, (Continued From Page One) He said patients would be trans-| nervously clutching the blouse to : ferred from old to new quarters as| her bosom, “a reasonable fachas a right to have its complaint rapidly as furnishings become avail-| simile.” : heard.” able for the annex. A hundred 5 = = : Mr. Vishinsky's statement paral mattresses arrived Monday, but| SOMEBODY bid 105 assorted OR OTHER : . : bedclothing, tables and chairs are| items of old clothes for the blouse leled his note to Mr. Makin earlier| still. need od and Miss Russell obligingly tossed today in which he “categorically| op. EBHEX stood idle in 1945 be- the jacket off her back onto the opposed” the Iran inquiry. cause of the county's inability to| Pile. She Was Wearing a snug Mr. Vishinsky reviewed the Iranian | obtain enough equipment. Even- sweater underneath. you need for cold weather— : i “Woo, wool” chortled Mr. Clark. situation, contended that it was| tually it will house 400 Patients, The - aizbraft worker sald. he strictly internal, and concluded: Mr. McCoy said. . At present, 51 . . Hind Soviet delegation regards| are quartered at the institution. would ke whe Talor blouse’ et drop in! It may be that your the appeal of the leanian delgn |. esusverian Victims ee tion, i He roe ya is cate.| Half of those committed recently, LITTLE RED WAGON requirements can be met! gorically opposed to consideration | 531d Mr. McCoy, are victims of re- CLUE T0 BURGLARY of the mentioried appeal of the | conversion, and labor strife, with , ; Iranian delegation by the security| SOme family, incomes dropping too| A “little Ted wagon was the lone council.” ¥ ¥ low to support elderly relatives: He Site ad $500 burglary on Indiana ¢ IF IT'S SOMETHING YOU NEED The Russians, in a formal letter | Said Julietta was prepared to ac-|&V% y. : to Council President Makin, de-|commodate 700 or 800 in the event| First, Ruben B. Shelton, owner of j nounced Iran's charge of Soviet| Of & major unemployment crisis. the 440 club, 440 Indiana ave, re. FOR SPRING—we'll do our . . | The annex began in 1937 as al ported thieves had forced his rear interference in Iranian internal] ' door last night, taking only a “little fairs a oundless. They ac-| $263,000 project, but gradually the ight, . Be | cost soared to half a million with|red wagon.” Then, Palmer Richard- bestest! . And while Spring cused the ‘Tehran government of} | son, proprietor of the P. P. club, 438
jue_astingion Sivis Siups and). cast might be additionally fright- | for Packmans arrest, killed ‘Tuesday It Dad : hol to ened by the vast importance of | Police said & bullet removed from | Mile accident, , Songs ek a A inter-planetary contact. | Goldner’s head was fired from the|® ™M. tomorrow. Fante House. “That shows a terrible lack of |same gun that killed Irvin Weis, 0,( Ba Pel Mr. Truman sald at his new fun os, 10, Mr. Truman sald at his news faith in ourselves,” he added. “If |and Lorrilard 8. Tillotson, 86, while Chimes. B y conference iat the ‘whole hig] man is made In the image of |they were also in their stores) J, POUR Je 3. wapist ih Seupot. God, he should be capable of |during the lunch hour. Mr. Weis i He was ’ Was! any power handed him ran a liquor store and Mr, Tillot-| Mr. Wir planning an tectural eyesore “We ' : ‘was { the persons moved into the new [at the nation's No. 1 resid Ai such Yara play |son, brother of Queena Mario, the ' ence. ngs an we've come ar | former Metropolitan Opera soprano, | =" Lake Holl Ang te Tellcrmed Jt new office] on1y to discover our mistake, it's | was a perfume dealer, brook summ The house dominated WY an a e we ever crawled down | Fires Without Warning resort near Go Jan Russell's sconoiny bloc of almost all Repub-| "7 the Wee. | Mr. Goldner told police as he was a P e licans and many Democrats, didn't rushed to a hospital that his as-'was a leader Pie stop at voting to withdraw tn! MINE UNION VOTED |sailant entered his shop while.he| among the young” Curves Assist $1,650,000 construction appropria {was alone. He turned from his dis- | people at Salem tion. It also voted to reclaim the {play to find a man with “strange | park church and i . $17,000,000 balance in ‘he President's » BACK INTO A 1 OF L staring eyes and a thin, sallow |pands there. ot eS LIVE emergency fund. th ¥|face.” The man answered his greet-| He was a fire warden for Owen The Democratic majority man- (Continued From Page One) ing with a soft voice, and fired un- | county and had led Gosport y: By VIRGINIA MACPHERSON |aged. however, to rally ‘ts forces to : expectedly. in fire-fighting and ning. eager : United Press Staft Cérrespondent down a Republican maneuver that|occupied by President Harvey, Police believed the slayer, work-|4itions. Mr. Winkley was the son % HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 25. — Ac- [vould have had the ultimate effeci|Brown of the machinists, It was ing according to a set pattern and |,¢ the late Rev. Martin Winkley tress Jane Russell said today she |of cutting salaries of Mr. Trumao|geclared vacant early in the ses- with no apparent motive, was de- a.nd a native of Indianapolis. - Po guessed the victory clothing drive and thousands of government em. |. because Brown has refused to ranged. They feared he would strike! gr vivars include his wife, on master of ceremonies paid more ployees. pay per capita dues. again. Irma Winkley, Gosport; attention to her curves than his | It is up to the senate now iw de-| yr: Green said that the U. M. W “This man is dangerous,” the po-| qa, chters, Betty Delores, ceremonies just “to keep the show cide whether Mr. Truman shoull| yy remain intact, complete With its| opr ee: Marie and Virginia Mae
oing.” . { armel: Lymon Winkley 8 Miss Russell 3 | tund and the money tn build the ime being. (tail liquor stores, fur stores and Ou Er Nadia auctioned off White House addition. Until the| sp of I unions which com. cOSmetic stores. He operates be-|inqianapolis; two brothers, war souvenirs senate decides otherwise, Mr. Tru |,ain (hai district 50 transgresses “con 114. m and 1p m” |B. Winkley Los Angeles, and | at Northrop man. nas the money and van g0|gn their fields will work out their E Winkley, Indianapolis, and
U. 8S. ECONOMIST QUITS | Patrolman Martin. A. O'Toole on|
WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (U. P..| complaint of John O'Toole. He was| GEN. BRERETON MARRIED
MITCHELL FIELD, L. I, Jan
the resignation ‘of Isador. Lubin,| police headquarters by Desk Officer|25 (U. P.).—Lt. Gen, Lewis H.
commissioner of labor statistics | Edward® O'Toole. since 1933. One of the govern-| guilty to the charge and was fin ment's top economists, Lubin leaves $10 by District Judge George the government Jan. 31. | O'Toole.
BIRTHS TWINS
EVENTS TODAY
Indianapolis Federation of Community| Clvie clubs, meeting, 7:30 p. m., Wash- At St. ington, girls.) Indiana Hardwood association, 9 a. m, Severin Indianapolis Produce Commission, meeting, 9:30 a, m,, Claypool Texas Oil Co, luncheon, 12:15 p. m., Ant«| ; I.
GIRLS
At Methodist—Willlam, Etta Berry. Rich ard, Helen Ginn;, Harold,
meeting.
Ruth Todd; Jerome, Genevieve Weis. St. Vincent's—Wilmer, Anna Gibbs
lers, | At Indiana Farm Bureau, meeting, § a. m.,| Merle, Viola McCloud; James,
Severin
Indiana Bar association, meeting, § a. m,| Evelyn Wellborn; David” Margare
aypool. . | Bland; Daniel, Dorothy Holsinger American Optical Co., meeting, 10 a. m, George Rosanna Speafing; Melvin, Wil verin. | Jetta Gorby. Indiana Auto Insurance Ce. dinner, 6 BOYS
8. Francis—Maurice, Catherine Ne
p. m,, Antlers, At Indiana Flood Control Board, meeting, 9 yj)e a. m, At City-—Patrick, Helen Corrigan. At Methodist—Eugene,
EVENTS TOMORROW Agnes Stevens;
Severin, Indians State Guard and Reserve officers,| ate cerebral hemorrh
p.-m,, Claypool. ! Indiana State Building & Construction arteriosclerosis
» | id ’
. CW
Later he pleaded Brereton, commanding general of ed|the 3d air force, was married yesE |terday to Mrs. Zena A. Groves of
IN INDIANAPOL IS--EVENTS—VITALS
Francis—Samuel, Laura Dre]
Lotraine| Hamm; Clifford, Nora Thompson: James, | yo oT yoyerion, 75, at 1828 N. Dlinois,
Luetlle| Bo Leland, 35, at | . . Baugh; William, Wilma Brown. Lari |, "yore Craft, 46, at 2246 W. Washing:
Lois Ford; Paul, ther, Dorothy BStude-
age. . | Margaret Lyons, 60, at 931 8. West, cere-
dinner, 6:30 p. m., Claypopl. Indiana Judges ‘association, dinner, 6:30) bral thrombosis ) m | Emelia Welmer, 85, at 1546 8. New Jersey. |
Trade council, megting, 1 p.m, Ciay-| Joseph Miceli, 81, at 433 8, East, cerebral; Walter A. Marley, 72, at Veterans, chronie “pool. phen oh hemorrhage, isin ii Raphaitdte. a...
| London.
Elizabeth Wherry, 86, at 2519 N, Gale, chronic myocarditis, Jesse McKinney, 59, at Methodist, coronary occlusion, Minnie Of Harmon, 62, at” St. Vincent's, | eirrhosis of liver, | Dora Katherine Roach, 74, at 53 N. Dear~ | born, cerebral hemorrhage. Efe Rozella Freed, 73, at Long, carcinoma.
cerebral hemorrhage | Methodist, mitral
insufficiency.
ton, uremia, Josephine Thompson, 65, at St. Vincent's, carcinoma. Chalmer B. Webb, 64, at 2201 E. Riverside Drive, cardio vascular. James. H.- Webb, 89, at 769 N. Bancroft, chronic myocarditis. James Putnam McKissick, 77, at 435 Hamflton, myocarditis, Luticia Hunt, 83, at 3245 N. Illinois, ar-
yl
Marietta McCampbell, ison, cerebral heitarrhage LaRue D. Carter, 65, at 4280 N. Meridian, coronary occlusion. Ruth Goins, 32, at Long. carcinoma.
81, at 2446 Mad-.
v
baker; George, Frances Yotter. teriosclerosis. Indianapolis Stereotypérs union, meeting, | At St. Vincent's—Robert, Juanita Moore; | allie Fear, 78, at 514 N. Temple, coronary 9 4. m, Washington. | John, Dorothy Tucker; Charles, Mary occ usion. Indianapolis Bar association, meeting, 10, Greener; Rufus, Lovell Juliette; Thomas, | Nora Johnston, 79, at City, cerebral hema. m,, Claypool. | Mary Jackson; Julius, Betty Maurer, orrhage. Crescent Paper Co, meeting, 8:30 a. m., | S———————— George W. Carothers, 86, at Methodist, | Severin. ! . "DEATHS arteriosclerosis. Beach Products, luncheon, 12:30 p. m, Orla A Marsh, 51, at St. Vincent's} | Katie McNary Phillips, 61, at 1506 N. Sen-| uremia. .
scl
7
» 3 coma
from manufacturers—and daily going into our stocks « « «
and leaving instanterl
We are hopeful that one of these days—before long— we shall be able to have enough to meet the record demands.
Sincerely,
THE MAN'S STORE
a — noe ok LE
- L STRAUSS & €O., lnc.
* .
