Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1946 — Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1946 or

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TENANTS OBJECT 0 LUDLOW: ON VA SITE

Times Washington Bureau

crat, who announced last Saturday

WASHINGTON, March 6~Rep.|: 'THuis- Ludlow, Indianapolis Demo- |

that the Veterans Administration was about to buy the Century building; has been deluged with protests from tenants, : S80 have the .offices of Senators Raymond E. Willis (R. Ind.) and Homer Capehart (R. Ind.). Mr. Ludlow reported that he received 50 telegrams in a single delivery. In addition there were two lonelisianse phone calls of pro-

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He bundled up the letters and forwarded them to Gen. Omar Bradley, VA administrator. Indianapolis: congressman- sent an laccompanying letter urging their careful consideration. One of the protestants maintained he had moved out of the Murphy buildings because he understood the VA was to purchase it, only to find them following him around instead. But it 1s reported here that the

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Missing Lads

of him lying down ther sobs.

Vernor A. Glover . . . His brothers and sisters want him to come back to play with them.

SEARCH CONTINUES FOR 2 LOCAL BOYS) Seis ns sc np co

(Continued From Page One) | canal.

drowned in the canal Jan. 30.

is still going on.

check out.

Greer said today.

lying in there.” Last Seen Near Canal

Etta (his little sister) understand,” to know. why he doesn’t come back

tell her where he is.

the canal early‘in the afternoon, the last time the boys were seen by anyone in the neighborhood. . The search narrowed down to the canal after the frantic mothers checked neighborhood shows and the home of playmates and failed to find anyone who had seen them leave the vicinity of the canal.

SEND PLANE TO GET 5 CORRESPONDENTS

TIENTSIN, March 6 (U, P.).— Marine headquarters announced. tonight that a U. 8. plane had left for Chinchow, Manchuria, fo pick up. fivé correspondents. The correspondents were not identified, and no explanation was given, Nine correspondents, including Reynolds Packard of the United Press, who left Mukden 11 days ago for Changchun, capital of Manchuria, had not been heard from save for a cryptic radio message saying “We're sick.” Chinchow fis near Darien, on a railroad from

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CUB SCOUT LEADERS MEET

Cub leaders and den mothers of the South district, Central Indiana

meet at 7:30 p. m. today at Olive Branch Christian church, PF. W, VanFossen will speak on the Air Month theme. John Callender, field commissioner for Cubbing, will preside.

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{of a month-long dragging of the

Repeated draggings of the canal have failed to produce any trace of | o 1: pe no more “messes” in the boys. The search started Jan.

31, the day after the boys Wwere| recalling “some trouble” two years seen playing near the canal, and gg,

Tr P; LEADERS

City Improvements. (Continued From Page One)

their resolution, offered the serve ices of the county committee's treasurer, Edwin Steers Sr, to handle the city hall's current “slush fund” being raised to finance the election of a successor to Mayor Tyndall in 1947. To Collect Donations Two. weeks ago Mayor Tyndall announced a campaign to collect donations from city hall employees but didn't specify whether the money would be handled by the old city hall faction of the party or by the regular organization. Many of the regular organization leaders were frankly doubtful if the city hall campaign fund would be

# |adniinistered by the regular organ-

ization. Other open gestures of attempted “unity” in the party was the attendance at the pow-wow last {night of William H. Remy, safety board president, and Charles Jewett, both leaders in the old city hall faction’s fight to unseat regular organization leaders. Remy Praises Chairmen Mr. Remy praised the ward chairmen for their support in the police department's campaign against drunken drivers. Mr. Jewett called for a high degree of organized party machinery as the only way “to win an election.” - Jack Tilson, county clerk, who has never been listed as a party “regular” joined the harmony spirit last night, telling the ward chairmen that the county election ma- | chinery (under the- jurisdiction of his office) “is all yours as long as I'm in office.” Mr. Tilson has been hoping for

party leaders the importance of his power over election mackinery. Promises No Messes’

“That is my bargaining point in

The boys are believed to have|geting the regular organization to

slate me for renomination,” he said. “1 think they will.” Mr. Tilson promised that there

handling elections in the future,

“We now how to handle it now,”

As the days go by, police have he added. broadened their search, dragging as far as 17th st. to the rubbish gate.

The ward chairmen’s resolution also pledged co-operation -to the

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Seek Chair for Woolridge i in "Double Murder

(for his. client. Following an inter- marks in Indianapolis legal circles, | sald Woolridge was “attacked” by |

(Continued From: Page One)

WARN TYNDALL co ve ert oe

V, Eller and Paul Naylor.

day Saturday, and will be “giv

was guilty of "The. grand jury will meet tomar,

Say Next Election Hinges on row and Friday, possibly a half a

view with Woolridge, he said he didn't think the 29-year-old man

anything. Mr, Shaw said Woolridge’s statement to him in his Pendleton reformatory cell yesterday was “alto-

a day of rest” Monday, Judge East| gether different” from the one he said. provided state police and BloomMeanwhile, Woolridge's attorney, |ington authorities Monday. Lawrence Shaw of Indianapolis, in-| The attorney, whose dapper musdicated he would plead self-defense|tache and homberg hats are land-

Chance Seen to Avoid Phone | Strike; U. A. W. Lashes NLRB!

By UNITED PRESS : A glimmer of hope that a nation-wide telephone strike sight be averted appeared today as a top official of the American Telephone & | Telegraph Co. traveled to Washington to join conciliation conferences. When the marathon conferences recessed for lunch, a department spokesman said that A. T. & T. Vice President C. F. Craig would join the afternoon session. Mr. Craig J the company official in charge of

industrial relations. ’ w—————— Informed sources said that nls, y trip from New York to Washington | [ 0. P, S APPOINT could mean a new company offer to avert a walkout, now set for 6 PLATFORM GROUP a. m. tomorrow. | Meanwhile in Detroit, - the C. I United Auto Workers today accused | Willlam FE. Jenner, Republican the national labor relations board [state chairman, today announced of aligning itself with ‘General Mo- | the appointment of the platform tors Corp. in the Smpany's ais- | advisory committee to consider platute with the U., A p At the same time, Federal Labor i" Proposals for consideration by Mediator James F. Dewey, govern- |“ © coming state convention. ment concillator: in the union's | A veterans, advisory committee 106-day strike against G. M., said also was named to assist the main

he would leave for Washington Im=| o¢rorm group in drafting party |

mediately in response to a call from Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwel-

lenbach for a “personal report.’ members named were Nick Stepano-

, Rall Strike Set vich, East Chicago Howard R. HieFurther complicating the labor oo. 4" we tiand: Isadore Levine,

picture, a strike Bf 30.00 Te er | Ta Porte. © Walter E. Helmke, Ft. of the Brotherhoods o ailroa | Wayne; Edmund M. Wasmuth,

Trainmen ° and Engineers which Huntington; Harve y Cartwright, would idle all main lines in then... gayte: Kenneth Miller, Bra-

fagion has been set for March IL, ..4 Otto Wulfman, HuntingR. T. President A. F. Whitney burg. g

3. = announced the strike plans. | Also on e President — Alvaniey Johnston —of |g, ——— § Cand wn ve the Brotherhood of Railroad En-|njiichoro: Jean R. Kiplinger, Rushgineers, said © however, the unions would “take under advise- apolis. ment” any action President Tru-| phe ve ’ i man may take in application of the or world Seas SOUP, Sli Netesuns national railway labor act. | Col. 3 . - Under the act, the President cal, Tomes W. phen uy le could declare that an emergency ny michler, South Bend; Wyman exists and appoint a fact-finding mnley Kendallville; Chalmer Den- | board to mediate the dispute. Thelny Kokomo: Warren Buchanan, board would have 30 days to study Rockville. Richard * LaGrange, the issues and make recommenda | pranklin: Hulett W: Kinman, Gletions for settlement. zen; Robert H. Loring, Rising Sun; In New York, Henry Mayer, 1e0 Kinman, Shelbyville, and Eucounsel for the National Federation gene Behmer, Indianapolis.

of Telephone Workers, said the raph p—————————— phone strike was “inevitable” re- SEEK STAFF FOR '350-BED VA UNIT

gardless of what happens here. He The assistance of local medical

stands for the 1946 campaign. Platform advisory committee

tWO ville, and George L. Denny, Indian-

“I'm sure Jimmie's in there,” Mrs.

“tt ya mma nim 1 cou mare| GREED 1S PERILLIN

she choked. “She all the time wants | to play with her. I can’t stand to

The boys disappeared after attending school 42 on Jan.- 30. Two school boys saw them in an alley between 25th afid Rader sts., near

Gradually, the mothers have ac-|state highway commission in main-|lacking a contract by 6 a. m. tocepted® the theory that their sons|tgining streets here under the com-|MmOITow. are dead, after all other leads t0|mijssion’s jurisdiction; their whergabouts have failed t0\sage of an ordinance to provide

In other labor developments: * ONE¥ An estimated 842,000 U. 8. sufficient taxicabs for the Negro workers were away from their jobs population, and urged more speed as a result of strikes and shutdowns

urged pas-

“I wish they'd |in the proposed grade separation at resulting from strikes. drain it to get the boys out. . . . Tithe Kentucky ave. can’t stand the thought of them just | ave, railroad crossings.

and Madison| TWO: The threat of a renewed strike against Swift & Co. was averted after the meat company promised to correct a misungi arising from a 16 cents y boost recommended by

agreed to reopen wage contract negotiations with United Mine Workmade since entering the White/ers (A. F. of L.) chieftain John L. House, the President said: (Lewis, who already has paved the “A truly religious fervor among|way for a strike of his 400,000 our people would go a long way to-| miners April 2, if necessary. ward obtaining a national health program, a national housing pro-| PARIS FLIGHTS SCHEDULED gram, a national education pro-| WASHINGTON, March 6 (U. P.). gram, an extended and improved| Transcontinental and Western

(Continued From Page One)

|, S SAYS TRUMAN ho hy By avinmation board. ny THREE: Soft coal operators

said the federation was resolved to associations in securing a staff for

strike if any one of its members is a 350-bed temporary Veterans Ad-

Indiana department of American

ministration unit at Billings Gen- | eral hospital will be sought by the

both Koontz and Mrs. Coleman. He also pointed out police had failed

is supposed to have carried. ‘Woolridge said he was hunting groundhogs at the time he found the Supls embraced in an ga stone mi

Mr. Shev charged that the

was “far above the vocabulary of a man with a seventh-grade education.” Woolridge admitted clubbing Koontz, stone company executive and strangling Mrs. Coleman, chestnuthaired wife of a Monroe county farmer, atter surprising them Friday afternoon. He sald Koontz

to account for the gun Woolridge |

wording of Woolridge's confession | gog

lunged” - at h him.

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Legion at a dinner tonight.

Entertaining members of the In-| diana and Indianapolis medical societies, staff members of the Indiana university medical center and Cmdr, Henry Siebenmark will outline the problem which has been endorsed

the Nurses association,

by the VA if a staff can be secured.

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social security program.” Not since his annual message in

such a full-fledged bid for suppert of his legislative program. The President came here from Fulton, Mo., where yesterday he introduced former British Prime! Minister Winston Churchill for an] address at ‘Westminister college. The President and Mr. Churchill traveled here by train. Mr. Churchill continued on to Washington by train, and the President was to fly back immediately after his speech here.

‘Forces of Selfishness’

“In our relations abroad and in our economy at home,” he said at the outset, “forces of selfishness and creed and intolerance are again at work.” He said this threat to the wellbeing of the nation and the world called for awakening in the life of the individual and in the councils of the world.” “If the world is long to survive, the gigantic power which man has acquired through atomic energy,

Airlines announced today that it will begin ‘daily service to Paris on

You can take

January has the President made!March 10.

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