Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 April 1946 — Page 3
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rive and let.* .
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ly 8 o'clock jard’s home. wanted to nto his car ly 10 miles | returned. foward told wn. He told Kentucky se * to his fa. s wife and I took my ll and then ell my wife
most imme e at Shelbye to drive for could sleep, \ster er, Ky. and with a rela- . The next father and same rela with them ers. After er, he sugne bus and , S80 as “not le, as I had he death of d I been a g of Leland
to Indiane [ arrived in oximately $ | 13. 1 was state police leased withaced against . & vagrancy puties Virgil ings in the s office.”
[RIKERS = WORK
April 20 (U. nternational y some 1300 ack to work
juction will of a strike. be the first At present, ees aré ene
ED 20 (U. P), Russell was y in a suit ents, Myron cover $2500, Miss Russell become one ned a cone and revoked turned only ency claimed,
ERVICE 1#!
EANING
pt * Lb
- government reported that the bi-
u
. Oliver Iron Mining Co., producer
“early resumption of coal mining can
LEWIS CONFERS AT WHITE HOUSE
Schwellenbach and. UMW Chief in Surprise Visit. WASHINGTON, April 20 (U. P.). —Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach and John L. Lewis, president of the 400,000 striking United Mine Workers (A. F. of L.), paid a surprise unannounced visit to-the Whité House today. -»
This unexpected development in the strike deadlock -occurred as the
tuminous stoppage already has cost the nation more coal than all of last year's coal strikes. Solid Fuels Administrator J. A Krug placed the loss in the present 20-day strike at 21,652,000 tons. Earlier, Mr. Schwellenbach indi cated the first step of a campaign of more vigorous government intervention in the coal tieup—an invitation for mine operators and union representatives to meet with him in separate conferences Monday or Tuesday. Iriformed sources said progress at these talks will determine whether it is practical to try to resume joint conferences over the walk-out.
402,000 Tons Lost
SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1946 ;
Memorial plaza.
; TT THE INDIAN Devout Observe Way of the Cross Tradition
The Rev. Fr. Cornelius Sweeney, 8S. Peter and Paul Cathedral, knelt in prayer as thousands of devout followers bowed their heads along the path of the traditional Way of the Cross yesterday on the War
U. 8. Steel Corp. said it would sut operations in its largest Pittsburgh subsidiary to 26 per cent of capacity and in Chicago district plants to 40 per cent of “capacity next week because of the coal shortage. It said 28,000 employees already are on a part-time basis begause of the strike. The corporation reported losing 402,000 tons of steel since the strike began April 1. Corporation President ‘Benjamin F. Fairless said in a statement in New York “only an
prevent a disastrous effect upon employment and production for a large part of America’s industrial machines.” Meanwhile the threat of a serious food shortage in Alaska was removed with settlement of an 18-day strike by C. I. O. longshoremen which had choked off ocean-route food shipments.
Tomate Cost $1.10 An agreement was reached between the union and Alaskan shipping firms after a night-long session called by Territorial Governor Ernest Gruening. Unloading of ships was scheduled to resume today. The strike had sent food prices soaring, Tomatoes sold for $1.10 apiece. Elsewhere, the steel industry, already forced to cut %roduction because of a coal shortage, faced reduced iron ore shipments on the Great Lakes as the result of a strike by iron miners. Copper Workers Back Attempts to settle the iron mine strike, called Reb. 8, continued as the Great Lakes were cleared of ice and the spring shipping season began, Three companies had reached an agreement with the C. I. O. United Steel Workers. They were the
of about half the Lake Superior area’s annual output, the Interstate Mining Co., and the Wheeling Steel Corp. About 8000 employees of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co. of upper Michigan, however, remained on strike, along with 5000 miners employed by other companies in northern Wisconsin, upper Michijgan and on Minnesota's rich Mesabi range. Copper production at Butte, Mont., neared normal as miners employed by the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. returned to their jobs with signing of a new wage contract.
U. A. W, CRITICIZES REUTHER'S POLICY
CHICAGO, April 20 (U. P.).~— Walter P. Reuther, newly elected president of the C. I. O. United Automobile Workers, said today he would “accept the will of the majority” which overrode his wage policy and criticized his conduct of the General Motors strike. Mr. Reuther suffered his first setback as president of the world’s largest labor union yesterday when the U. A. W.s 22-man executive board voted almost 3 to 1 for a resolution he had opposed. The resolution held that industry’s “ability to pay” should not be made & major factor in wage disputes. Mr, Reuther_ contended . during the prolonged General Motors negotiations’ wage increases were justifled by company profits, and demanded unsuccessfully to see the company’s books. The resolution approved yesterday said “ability to pay is a factor but not the most important factor.” It also disapproved of long-term wage pontracts, such as ‘the twoyear agreement negotiated by Mr. Reuther with General Motors. The resolution was submitted by the “anti-Reuther” faction led by former U. A. W. President H. J. Thomas, defeated for re-election by Mr. Reuther at the recent Atlantic City:convention.
BOY, 4, BADLY HURT WHEN HIT BY AUTO:
william C. Haley, 4, of 4903 W. Washington st., is in serious Qe tion at City hospital today was struck by an automobile he front of ‘his home. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Haley, the youth started to cross the s turned back and then dartéed’into the path of a car driven by Wesley M. Capp, 1455 Brookside Pkwy., North Drive. Witnesses sald Mr. Capp was driving at a slow rate ol speed He was not held. a broken
Young Haley ong left leg, a possible skull fracture
official declared today that “order buyers,” representing eastern slaughterers, are paying over-ceiling prices for cattle, divertiiig supplies from local channels,
being outbid by “order buyers.” . He described these buyers as agents of eastern packers. Hoagland admitted, however, that some of the local persons and that they apparently are acquiring part of their purchases for slaughter here.
that sufficient supplies of cattle are reaching the Indianapolis market, but above-ceiling prices are beingipupils helped him prepare the
CATTLE BIDDING CHARGE MADE
Local Official Says Buyers Pay Above Ceiling.
An Indianapolis packing house
I. M. Hoagland, general manager of the Indianapolis plant of Armour & Co, disclosed that his firm is unable to buy more than & trickle of the local cattle supply because of
Mr.
“order buyers” are
Blames Regulations The packing plant official added
asked. This makes it impossible for law-abiding firms to compele, he charged. Mr. Hoagland charged OPA regulations are making it “practically impossible” for these firms to acquire cattle. “Nothing in the OPA regulations, he said, penalizes sellers who dispose of lower-grade beef at topgrade prices. This is a common practice, he added. He asserted that large packers like Armour & Co. are buying as many cattle and other livestock for slaughter as possible. ‘But, abiding by the law means only meager supplies, Mr. Hoagland concluded.
PLANE TO BE USED
BY STATE POLICE
LINTON, Ind. April 20 (U. P.) — manager of the Linton airport, said today that he had arranged with Indiana state police to equip a plane for use in
James Harman,
solving crimes,
Harman said arrangements were made with Col. Austin R. Killian, superintendent of the state police, to equip a BT-13 plane with twoway radio facilities of the same frequency used by state police transmitters at the Jasper and
Putnamville posts.
to help chase criminals or perform other crime-combatting tasks.
TELLS PURDUE GROUP OF VETERANS’ COURSE
Times Special LAFAYETTE Ind, April 20.—A spokesman for the government's vocational rehabilitation and education department, yesterday urged colleges and universities to develop extension programs for an expected enrollment of 600,000 veterans next fall, A. G. Murphy, consultant for the department, told the National Association of Deans and Advisers of Men meeting at Purdue, that the seven courses veterans prefer are general college course, dentistry, medicine, education, law, engineering and agriculture.
JAP GENERAL A SUICIDE SHANGHAI, April 20 (U. P.).~— Gen. Rikichi Ando, Japanese governor of Formosa who was arrested at Tal Ho-Ku, committed suicide by swallowing poison which he had concealed in his clothing, it was
door at 520 E. Ohio st. early last night.
pecting to see her “pet Angora cat, Honey, begging to come in,
weeks-old baby boy. His blue eyes sparkled as Mrs. White picked him up. His blond head was nestled in two clean blankets. | tion,
A faint ery sounded outside the
Mrs. Edna White looked out ex-
But there lay an abandoned, 8-
Infant's Faint Cry Bring s Help To Abandoned Baby Hore
No note was left with the child,
who was taken to the Childrens Guardian home. Police immediately began a search for the mother after the child's finger and footprints were taken for possible identifica-
'A-BOMB CALLED AN OPEN SECRET|
Beside the baby was a paper bag with clean diapers and bottles for two feedings. A third bottle, still warm, lay beside the infant.
POLIS IMES pik
Industrial Nation Gan Make Weapon in 5-15 Years.
WASHINGTON, April 20 (U.P). ~The senate was informed today any ‘modern industrial nation will be able to produce atomic bombs within the next five to 15 years. A ‘voluminous report from the
“the book of nature . . . open to careful, painstaking readers the world over.” Industrial potential, not a magic hocus-pocus process, will determine just how soon other countries are producing the bomb in quantity, the report said. Any relatively industrialized nation probably can produce the weapon in quantity within five to 15 years, members learned during a five-month study of atomic problems. Ask Domestic Control The report, asking prompt senate approval of domestic control legislation establishing federal ownership of atomic materials and production plants, also made these points: ONE: Any future atomic war will not be measurable in cities and nations destroyed, but will mean the end of civilization. TWO: There is no military defense against the bomb, nor is any defense in sight. THREE: The dangers of atomic weapons make mandatory an effective system of world safeguards. The committee report included a study of Dr, E, U, Condon, director | of the bureau of standards and al pioneer on the bomb project. Con- | don’s report said before detonation | of an atomic bomb, the active materials—uranium 235 or plutonium
First Lady Takes
—MTrs. shooed the White House kitchen, put on an apron and took orders from Prof. Ramon Ramos.
of a luncheon for 70 of his women Spanish students, who include -the first lady.
permitted no English to be spoken —there is a nickel fine for anyone who breaks the rule—while Mrs. Truman
“piccadillo” and other tasty Spanish dishes,
CHARGE TEXTILE
CPA
violating OPA style restrictions.
Cooking Lesson
WASHINGTON, April 20 (U. P.). Harry S. Truman today servants out of the
The professor bossed the cooking The handsome Cuban
“senor”
and other prominent
RULES EVADED
Accuses 108 Firms Use Too Much Cloth.
WASHINGTON, April 20 (U. P).} —The Civilian Production Administration charged today 108 cloth-
ing manufacturers have been
The CPA also reported 27 out of
MADRID FEARS
—are kept in two or more “lumps.’ | The act of firing consists of np bling the smaller lumps rapidly into| a mass that is above a “critical” size |
|atomic energy committee declared | atomic secrets are mbstly written in
SHIPS BOYCOTT
—Dbig enough to explode. Technique Explained
Well-informed said today they feared that oppo-
sition to the Franco regime may lead to an international labor boycott against Spanish ships in world
Labor Groups Ports Seen Ready to Act.
MADRID, April Spanish
ports.
in World
20 (U. P)— sources
“The necd for rapidity (in bringing the lumps together) arises from the fact that if the parts come together slowly an explosive reaction begins before the parts are completely together,” he reported. “This would blow them apart again and stop the fission chain reaction with only an insignificant release of atomic energy.” Condon suggested development of power-producing piles—or atomic “poilers”—will make possible, perhaps within a decade, the powering of ships. However, size of the piles
A boycott against loading and unloading Spanish ships would be a serious blow to Spain, informants said, because of the country’s strained economic situgtion and food shortage. Such action would cut sharply Spanish imports and exports. The same well informed quarters expressed fear that opposition to Gen, Francisco Franco inside Spain —and outside, too—may be inten~ sified greatly if the Polish proposal for diplomatic action against Spain is defeated by the UN security council. Spanish government officials, however, expressed considerable satisfaction over the speech by Sir Alexander Cadogan of Britain at the
probably will prevent application of the power for automobiles and locomotives, he said. .
SLUGGED MAN FOUND IN ALLEY
Taken to City Hospital; Purse Snatchers Busy.
A man whom city police identified as Orien McConnell, 48, of 2225 N. Delaware st., unconscious and badly beaten this
was found
|
posal.
council, opposing the Polish pro-
morning in an alley in the rear of 2233 Central ave.
The airport manager added that three pilots from the Linton airport would be available upon call
28 stores investigated were selling garments made in violation of CPA orders intended to conserve textiles. . A nation-wide survey made early this month disclosed 82 manufacturers were making “shortie coats”"—shortér than 33 inches—in violation of a CPA order. CPA subsequently lifted the ban on these coats so thousands of women would not be prevented from buying a new coat for the Easter parade. Other widespread violations included suit jackets longer than 25 inches, coats and suit jackets with more than two pockets, coats with excessive sweep, and two or more garments sold at one unit price,
‘and diplomatic circles, Foreign ob-
See Cause for Alarm
Officials claimed that Spain holds a stronger position now before the UN than it did at earlier meetings, where only a few South American countries spoke up in Franco's behalf, The, Spanish note to Britain and the United States alleging military preparations against Spain on the French side of the closed frontier was the dominant topic in political
servers believed that the Franco government was anxious to appear calm and serene. Authoritative sources reported that the note included a charge that a Russian freighter landed 15,000 tons of ammunition at Marseille
McConnell was taken to City hospital where his condition was described as serious. Meanwhile, reported on the loose again last night.
Mrs. Dewey Smotherman, 726 N. King ave. told police two teenage youths grabbed her purse containing $7 in the 500 block on N. King ave. A man walked from an alley on 20th st. between Delaware and Alabama sts. and grabbed a purse containing $5 from Maude Maxwell, 27, of 2065 N. Alabama st. Harry Wolfe, 56, of 1314 Bates st. was slugged by a young man in
purse snatchers were
$7 Stolen
manufacturers were on the list of violators. .
some CPA compliance division officlals to question whether it was worthwhile to try to enforce the rules.
tion is on record as favoring continuance of the order, however, as a method of controlling prices.
roll deductions were made with the
announced today.
WASHINGTON, April 20 (U, P.). e |—Here is the six-point world food program laid down by former President Herbert Hoover to meet the threat .of mass starvation in Europe and Asia: ONE: A U.B. grain-buying program to guarantee export of 1,100,000 tons of cereals a month through July, backed up -by rigid public conservation of bread and fats. TWO: A limit of 300 grams daily on Europe's per capita bread consumption. This would be about 50 per cent more than Americans
‘and severe lacerations of the left arm, 2
would get, but bread: is Europe's link > With (to,
their taxes for the year.
Hoover Has Six-Point Plan
To Meet Starvation Problem
Some of the nation’s best-known
The widespread violations caused
The Office of Price Administra
MILLION HOOSIERS TO GET TAX REFUNDS Nearly 1,000,000 of the estimated 1,350,000 federal income taxpayers in Indiana will receive refunds on their 1945 tax payments, a revenue official said today. Collector of Internal Revenue F. Shirley Wilcox sald the refunds would result largély from the fact that week-by-week income tax pay-
expectation that each worker would work for the entire year, Another reason for the number of refunds, Mr. Wilcox said, was that many people overestimated
THREE: Release by Britain of half of her 1,000,000-ton * wheat reserve for immediate relief feeding. FOUR: A 40 per cent cut in Latin American wheat and flour from the U, 8, Canada end Argentina during the next four months, FIVE: An Pe to 300,000 tons & month in Russia’s grain contribution to the world relief pool by Aug. 1, SIX: Relief priorities for smaller liberated nations whose resources are most limited and whose people comprise abou! 15 per cent of Eu
the 1100 block on English ave. after
for use by Communist forces planning an attack against Spain from France. The Spanish note claimed that activity on the French side of .the mountainous border constitutes cause for real alam, informants said.
the man had attempted to steal Mrs. Wolfe's purse, Window Smashed Thieves hurled two stones through a plate glass window of a liquor yo at 1006 W. Michigan st. last night to gain entrance and escaped
TEXAS U. FACULTY
house.
against a candle.
legs and body.
BURGLARS BREAK IN
PROBES COED DEATH
AUSTIN, Tex. April 20 (U. PJ. —University of Texas faculty members studied reports today on the death of Miss Georgia Stevens, whose dress caught on fire during a secret initiation ceremony held by candle light in a dark sorority
Witnesses said Miss Stevens, 18, finalist in a university beauty contest, was standing blindfolded at a stairway as the ritual began. Suddenly her long, flowing lace dress burst into flames when it brushed She screamed and ran down a darkened corridor. Before sorority sisters could beat out the flames she had suffered third degree burns on the arms,
with $370 and an unestimated amount of whiskey. Thomas Hallett, 4s, of 405 N. Wolcott st. was slugged by two men on 16th st. near Illinois st. as a third man attempted to rob Mrs. Hallett who was sitting in an automobile nearby. Mr, Hallett was re-
heard his wife scream. The three men drove away in a tan sedan. —————p——
CZECH AUTHOR SAYS RUSSIA WANTS PEACE
CHICAGO, April 20 (U. P).— Stefan Osusky, author and lecturer and former Czechoslovakian ambassador to France and England, said last night the world has nothing to fear from Russia. In a public lecture at the University of Chicago, Osusky said every time there has been a question about peace, Russia always has backed it. He predicted they would continue to do so in the future, be-
STORE, STEAL SAFE
Safecrackers last night broke into the Merit Shoe store, 930 8. Meridian st, and stole a small safe containing $156.60. Police early today recovered the safe back of the community house in Riley park. It had been opened | A by chiseling out the bottom, Entrance to the store was gained by cutting a glass from the tront door.
INFLICTS STIFF PENALTY
Municipal Court Judge John Niblack today levied fines totaling $300 and costs and imposed a TpampL sentence upon Robert Flick, 43, of 115.N. Belmont ave., on charges of
cause “they do not want war.”
’
INDIANAPOLIS
At
At St.
ropes Reedy. tion. ' I
drunkenness, public indecency and disorderly conduct.
bins; Midge
man—George, Dorothy Jones, girls. A Ce dle—Kennath, Lola Fisher, boys.
At St. Franels—Cornelius, Marion Abbott, At Oity=John, Maxine Kelly; Alice Parsley, t Selaman Halt ‘Mabel Hukle, Tonend Chaties, Margaret At 5¢, Jincent_ William, Estherlee Webb,
Boys At % Franels—Pa Baty goss At Coleman Vincent's!
Ray,
BIRTHS Twins
Girls
Grace Chad
Jack, Betty Lg and Jac Prank, I Edith Madritsch. Oma Seely; Dan-
eee
turning from a drug store when he [|
ER
‘STRAUSS ATS:
ner Delores A
\
Saturday, + April 20, 1946
Dear Folks—
Holy week boomed Indianapolis church attendance with climax of the local Easter observance due tomorrow at 6:30 a. m. when some 50,000 worshippers are expected to
"converge on Monument Circle for the 24th
annual sunrise service. . . . Carols and other program attractions will be presented by more than 70 organizations numbering a thousand persons, . + ~All day Good Friday the city’s usually bustling pace slowed and at 2:50 p. m., the high-geared metropolitan tempo ground to a standstill during a minute of universal silence. . . . Transit vehicles, department store and shows suspended operations during that period. In the morning a squadron of planes in cross formation cruised overhead, school children were dismissed at 11:30 a. m, and special downtown services were held at churches, theaters and on the War Memorial plaza, . . . On Thursday, Archbishop Joseph Ritter officiated at the blessed sacrament and holy Eucharist mass at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral and Maundy Thursday services were conducted at Protestant churches throughout the city. . . . Governor Gates proclaimed the week “crippled children's week” in connection with the sale of Easter seals in behalf of handicappéd youngsters. . . . Easter lilles were to be sold in downtown stores and buildings today by the Marion county Society of the Crippled.
¢ ¢ ¢ STRAUSS SAYS: Mave you & HORSE interest? Strauss As quit _ a Sadde a Shop—resl for sn saddles— and shout an the Saddlery Aefi Tomer won he STH
L. STRAUSS & CO., INC., THE MAN'S STORE. * * ¢
Names in the News—
Ronald M. Hazen, chief engineer at Allison's, was appointed by President Truman to the national advisory committee for aeronautics, supervising three important research laboratories. . . . For developing an anti-ice system for airplanes, Lewis A. Rodert, research engineer for Stewart-Warner here, was one of 11 international scientists receiving
gineer, was employed by the city redevelopment commission to survey blighted areas. . . . Professor Robert Wolf, on the chemical engineering faculty at Washington university, St. Louis, was offered a job as city smoke engineer here. . . . Guggenheim foundation fellowship awards went to- Indiana University English Professor Richard Gordon Lillard, Purdue Mathematics Professor John W. T. Youngs and Capt. Holman Hamilton, former editor of the Ft. Wayne Journal-Gagzette. . . . Federal Judge Robert Baltzell fell ill in New Albany. . . . Maurice W. Graston of DuPont was named assistant U. 8. district attorney in this district. Eight civic leaders were appointed to the Chamber of Commerce's staff of honor. . « « Emile Pyle's old portable typewriter was presented by The Times to I. U's Pyle Memorial room and the state announced plans for a roadside park on U. S. 36 near Dana as & living monument to the Hoosier journalist.
Ronald M. Hazen
® ¢ ¢ STRAUSS SAYS: orts it's
7 “aan, *—u great showing Ber aby VE NW Py a on a SIX
L. STRAUSS & CO., INC,, THE MAN'S STORE.
+ 9
Welcome Homes— Mayor Tyndall asked the federal housing authority for 350 additional veterans housing units here. . . . Priorities on 109 new*homes were issued 1st week to 29 local builders. . Construction of several small structures
Strauss”.
described by hoc sponsors-—-as - “Quonset--
“huts for veterans” near Fenton and ¥ washington sts. was halted by the Marion County zoning board. . . . City eouncil granted a 20-acre plot near the Ine diana university medical ‘center as a site for a new veterans’ hospital. . . . A cash bonus for Hoosier World War II veterans will be requested of the next Indiana legislature by the state American Legion. . . . Organization of a “Housewives League”, to fight inflation was launched here. OPA investigators circulated among cattle and buyers at the stockyards in an effort to catch black marketeers. . . . Ten per cent of Marion county’s 1355 restaurants are violating ceiling prices, the OPA charged. . . . Indianapolis men who are ex-prisoners of war will form # “Barbed Wire club” . . . Twenty-nine Ft. Harrison employees received. meritorious civilian service awards. . . . Selective service medals were given to 140 Marion county physicians and dentists.
#
L. STRAUSS & CO. me. THE MAN'S §
Crime Climbs— Indianapolis was the center of a grisly murder case in which dhe local youth was. = accused of killing another, severing his-hands and a foot, and burning the torso and dismembered parts in various sections of central Indiana, , . . A nation-wide crime survey sald Indianapolis reported four homicides, 89 burglaries and 2500 other offenses in March, but police officals blamed the dark picture on trafic violations, . . . A confidence man accepted several down payments on a non-existent apartment. , . . A Camp Atterbury soldier walked away with | blankets, sheets and pillowcases from the | USO center on W, Georgia st. . . . From an uncoupled trailer parked on Kentucky | ave., thieves stole 25 cases of whisky. . . . The safety board rescinded a traffic sticker handed a motorist who had hurriedly parked in a restricted zone when his car caught fire, . . . Fires sent students home from St. John's academy for girls at Maryland and Capitol, and disrupted Palm Sunday services at the Crooked Creek Baptist church. . . A fire truck and an auto collided at Michigan and East sts. :
te STRAUSS SAYS:
2: GOOD HUNTING! If you ge
in for MSH. are guns —and necessories
rsinler & CO, INC, THE NAYS STORE,
¢ ee “Play Ball"—
While 11,000 opening night fans either held their breath or gnawed peanuts, the umpire bawled “play ball” and the Indians popped the lid off the 1946 season by spanking Toledo 10 to 4 with Paul Derringer on the slab, . . . Next night, the Mud Hens again pecked the dust and it appeared the Tribe was well on its way to the pennant most of the league's scribes predicted for the team. . . . By scores that betokened a track meet % rather than a ball game, Pur~ : due’'s powerhouse nine steamrollered Butler 20 to 8 and Tilinois Normal 25 to 0. . . . Indiana and Notre Dame split a double= header, 6 to 2and 5 to 1. , . Butler won . a three-way track meet over Wabash and Earlham. . . . Race cars are scheduled fo roll in prastios Rate Gly a in five years this week-end at the Speedway. , Ai +. + A Bakersfield, Cal, fan who will spend $900 to fly to the race was able to buy. only. a $250 bleacher seat. , . . Melvin H. (Mel Taube became head basketball coach at Pure due. . . . Crescent Paper Co. captured the annual Fox-Hunt 1050 team classic bowling tourney.
Vat
¢ + ¢ STRAUSS SAYS:
LIKE FISHING? We've gol Jotsa {hings te aid you in eatehing the firiny fellars. Come on up to the Sportsman's Leunge on the SIXTH FLOOR. 1. STRAUSS & CO., INC, THE / MAN'S STORE.
*® ¢ ¢ ! The Civic Whirlpool— . Indianapolis’ annual cleanup week began . three days late following settlement of &
it was to start. .e .. idle in a walkout that chiefly affected com mercial and industrial
o-oo.
“Amazed and perturbed” MR — by Mayor Tyndall's 60 "oeMsy - charges 1t failed to 00= ’S operate in cracking down
commission promised ifs eight Marion county exe cise officers would assist the city’s 600 police. . - The A. B.C. also ruled liquor laws will ‘Dew to standard time, thus shifting local hours from 7 a. m. tq midnight to § a to 1 a. m. when In anipolis seine 18 light savings A AEE sparring continued preliminary to Do primary battle, one candidate urged that high school pupils be hired to tabulate the votes. . . + A delegation of South Siders _.opposed proposed construction of an amphie theater in Garfield park. ,.. Lt. Gov. Richard T oy Hooters should tie to thule. feet whenever “Back Home Again in Indie ana” or “The Banks of the Wabash” are played (what about the “Wabash Blues?"),
¢ & 0
Peach Blossoms Nipped— . |
City council authorized Engineering Metal Products Corp. to build a $250,000 plant at the southwest corner of Oliver and Belmont aves. . . . The Indianapolis Athletic club will ‘buy the property it now stands on af Meridian and Vermont for $250,000, , . . For the first time it was revealed Electronics laboratory manufactured “sniperscopes” which enabled Yanks to pick off the enemy
hat
fort demanded $3000 with which to collect feed canine inmates. . . . The 19046 ) county fair will be held July 3° Aug. 3. . . . The weatherman's last a ne ein Easter Parade, with rising Vemperature,
