Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1946 — Page 13
RS i
» . : . r £3 election was held. | uks were “levying” rines. They fre- | { government, So | e their arms, and ome provinces , , , Osmena candidacy. ipport of the party \d ‘backer, Manuel he backing of this erwise close race. 7 who do not like eglect of the prostime making such es, has been used vho were our de-
day’s election, the wealth . . . which 4 of this year...
, president will be he islands during acArthur’s request, 1e harm the Japs
se Chinese backgive up on little and out of touch days he spent in 4 e 1s the heir ape party machinery
8. ttributes of a good t of the monied } many ties among does Osmena. 8 tough job bate
‘
Views visas for American
nction, but that if with a twinkling
10t be allowed to
e American newser it would be for
n. Mikhail Galak« resplendent in his ° nov, of Red Star, el about the siege ated. ditors to get the spapers. The Ruse rs present a dis~ ssians, and think ditors should take burg assured the malice in Russian tes, though there ay the same thing | not include the m. Some, he said, Ss made mistakes
-
zed that they like s, with the plain ave to accept the ernment. , and an acceptaps the beginning to the other—difthe people, newsus to do our part porters move and
Clini Any doctor could se, or could boynts completely, ren exclusively. at under national i deteriorate. By doctors, it would lity, because doc= ore patients, od doctors now is an’t give as much ld. Doctors with ood enough living | ofession. Spread. lity of the serve
nal health insure the physician, by he physician and | servants,
under the plan is ork out that the re incentive. If nce, every doctor his services. The § o collect bills and ity cases would be
t national health wtment of patients inics the patients t the practice of § lized that no one & of better medical nics, not through = est hope of elimie s of private prace
£m ca
*3
Ssh
wirisn
Russia
lito,
, mission to
aw their support on the following
st twice the popuikhaitlovitch. movements would r civil war, once
hemselves capable d fashion against in fact, holding 8, ‘ ce that Mikhail- i ted with the Ger. |i dence that nearly, - J commanders had
te out of love of 0's Partisans, + n line, in general, | Minister Churchill { would “fight the §1 rom the point of 14 y as possible and |! 'ision was correct. | | ce the war ended.
ig’ ingratitude to t, as - Sir. Robert a lively sense of st Tito has owed he has to Soviet utyre, He expects
&
LIONEL TWILL, eS fo Direct TY CLEAN-UP FILM STAR, DIES NID SUGGESTED
The Rev. Virgil A. Sly will serve British-Born Actor Featured Works: Board Considers | building.
as the new director of Disciples of | ‘ ’ . i ; ’ In ‘Heavy™ Roles. Si Educational Program.
Christ missions in Africa. His} headquarters will continue to be at 222 Downey ave. in .the Missions HOLLYWOOD, April 23 (U.P). | Hopkin, presi A proposal to augment Mayor British-born Lionel Atwill, por- dent of “the ; ip ttee n trayer of many movie "heavy" roles. United Christian Tyndall's cleanup committee pro
is , "ny 31 as held up yesterday for died last night at his PacificsMissionary so Tam was. : : Palisades REE His long iliness | ciety. today an- jurther consideration by the city had followed an attack of pneu- Rounced that the works board.
"Submitted on the first day of the city's annual cleanup week an “educational” program costing $2450 for the remainder of the year was offered by W. H.+Frazier, city sanita-
monia. |Rev. Mr. Sly will § . With him when death came was 0° trausior : his fourth wife, Mrs. Paula Atwill, |{"0m the position gy
mother of his 6-month-old son. Mr. | o Slevin Seer Atwill was 61. "; (relaty ol inant
| Rev. Sly ; . Sib | resources in the tion district superintendent, wham povile third Wife, TOM |cociety to the department of for-| The plan suggested paid newspa: 1943, was Gen. Douglas MacArthur's S18n Inissions with -Alries as his; per and Falio sdvepuspiment io “edu. fret wife a. | special charge. He will assume his cate” the public on proper methods! " , {new duties July 1. (of trash collections, tagging garbage It was while married to the , vein he made an extended|cans by collection men to correct! former Mrs. MacArthur that thei, “Africa visiting the mission Mistakes of display, and letters to| fatherly-appearing movie star was| gos ang ascertaining needs and community organizations enlisting! accused of wild revels at his home. possibilities of the church of 60,000, Lhelr aid in the year-round camHe was placed on five years pro- nempers Its work is carried on by| paign. bation after pleading guilty to'a staff of 55 missionaries and 1590| Edective’ May 1, the program perjury charges arising from ques- | native workers. The entire project would be handled by Arthur P. Tiertioning by a county grand jury In will come under his jurisdiction ininan, former newspaper writer, and 1941. Witnesses. said guests dis- | July. {present director ot the Indianapolis ported themselves in the nude on| Rev. Mr. Sly “has come back community fund. a tiger skin rug. {from Africa with a new awarenmess/ Meanwhile a seven-point citizen In April, 1943, the probation of the basic necessity for interde- | beautification program 1s . being] against Mr. Atwill was removed to nominational co-operation in for- mailed today to civic and youth orenable him to find employment. eign missions,” Dr, Hopkins stated,| ganizations in the €ity, George Deck, Two months later he was divorced | “and has announced his conviction publicity director for the mayor's in Washington by Mrs. Louise that only through united effort can cleanup committee, revealed. Cromwell MacArthur Atwill, sister we hope to carry forward success-| The bulletin appeals to all or-' of former U, 8. Minister to Can- fully the missionary enterprise in ganizations to back the present ada James Cromwell, | these postwar days.” |cleanup drive being spearheaded by Mr. Atwill was born in Croydon, For the past 11 years, Rev. Mr. the junior chamber of commerce
England, and educated at Mercer's Sly has been responsible for raising as the nucleus of the mayor's school, London. He made his first millions of dollars necessary to con- cleanup committee. theatrical appéarance in London 41 duct the program of the society in| The = bulletin explains that all years ago. {the United States and in 10 foreign trash should be placed on city
Coming to the United States in| fields. Last year, $2,643,636 in new streets and alleys before the col1916, he appeared in various stage |receipts were included in the more|lection department arrives. productions with Lily Langtry, than $4.000000 received by the so-| The collection crews were scours Grace George, Nazimova and Kath- | ciety from the churches. : ‘ling the city by districts with Me-| arine’ Cornell. Movie executives wren ridian and 16th sts. as the dividing then signed him for what ultimately SERVICES ARE HELD lines. Yesterday and today the became a long series of film suc- crews were collecting trash in the
cesses. FOR REV DAWSO northwest - section of the city; . Wednesday and Thursday the REPORT NATIONALIST | ! northeast; the southeast April 6
ARMY AT CHANGCHUN Services and burial for the Rev./and 29, and the southwest. April 30 James M. Dawson, retired Christian and May 1. CHUNGKING. April 23 (U. P.).— minister and father of James Daw-! Trush and garbage will be colVanguards of the Chinese Nation-| gon, Indianapolis attorney, were lected on regular collection runs alist 1st army—American trained held Sunday in Decatur, as well as during the special pickand equipped—were reported today| The Rev. Mr. Dawson was a for- up schedule, 8. J. Ludzack, assistant! to have reached the mountainous mer resident of Indianapolis and a sanitation district superintendent, | gateway to Changchun. minister of several Christian announced. : They were at Kungchuling, 35 churches and maintained his home Ha tein miles southwest of the Manchurian here while he did evangelistic work capital. There they ran up agains! for a number of years. 2 FIREMAN KILLED IN
80.000 Communist defenders, it was| He died last Thursday in the OHIO TRAIN CRASH reported. {Adams county memorial hospital . : The National Peoples Gazette, He was 76 MARION. O. April 23 (U. P).—A reporting the new Nationalist| Survivors in addition to his son fireman on a switch engine was
northward thrust, said that heavy are his wife, Mrs. Sarah Dawson; killed instantly yesterday when a fighting was expected. three daughters, Mrs. Russell Acker Nationalist troops have been ad- and Mrs. Charles Maglev, both of : : vancing from Mukden toward Decatur, and Mrs. Harry F. Tribble, engine and overturned nt Changchun along the trunk rail-| Brooklyn, .N. Y, and five grand- Manon, O road between the two cities. i children ' Thé dead man was identified as SRB CO SG RR H. R. Hoag of Huntington. Ind. | Three other locomotive emplovees— {all from Huntington—escaped with
prisoner-of-war train ran into the near
TAME THAT WILD INJUN!
{minor injuries. They were C. A. Casper, H. H. Miller and F. E Schocholm.
CHAPTER 26 REALIZING that the issue could not be evaded, Mona went to the | kichen where her mother was arranging fragile, flowered cups upon {a silver tray. Mrs, Shane glanced {up brightly, “Tea’s almost ready.” “We shan’t need it, Mother. Rus{sel has gone.”
“Gone?” Mrs. Shane repeated, | sinking upon a kitchen stool. | “Why? - Mona, vou certainly didn't refuse.” { “Why not? I've told you before I (don’t love Russel. What's more,
| he doesn't love me. He's the most | cold-blooded man I ever knew.” | “Love? Cold-blooded® What do | such things matter at a time like this. A fine gentleman offers to {marry you In spite of an indiscre[tion which has been published in | the newspapers and you refuse.” | “I FAIL to see where a trip to | Mexico City as Mrs. Russel Breth-| erton could improve the situation. Even if it did, I wouldn't marry | him. I'll never marry Russel ne matter how fine you think he’ is, ‘and that's final. Mother, I wish He won't fall out of this vou'd try to understand.” California Babyline bed. “I uhderstand nothing whatWhite, painted with circus ever about you,” Mrs. Shane said figures, 25.00. truthfully. “Even now - when you | should be hanging your head with! Mattress with | shame yau aré as ihsolent as vour covering, 1.98. {father has encouraged you to be.”| | Mona's heart hardened as it al-| (ways did when. her father was ' blamed for her sins. She poured Keép him out of mischief in herself a cup of hot tea and took it a Fisher plav pen that stands with her into the library. . ” 5 ” 8 inches off the floor. Cas. : NO MATTER how angry her tors make it easy to move. mother might be she could not force In natural wood, 10.98. ‘Mona (0 marry Russel. and she No.draft pad with water- lioped this last refusal would preroof covering in pink or ent his asking her again blue, 5.00. She heard her mother going upA stairs, so presently Mona returned to the kitchen and started the dinner, She wanted to have it on time so she would be ready to leave when Mike called. | She had plenty of time as he did not arrive until after eight. Her | father greeted him affectionately His admiration for the young district attorney was strong and seemed to be mutual -since Mike spent hours talking things over in Pat's office. But tonight he was in 1 hurry.
waterproof
”n n ~ “I.MAY have to send you home in 1 taxi, Mona. ‘I have several other ppointments tonight.” “Anything new?" Pat inquired “Nothing "I can talk about yet Vona and 1 are checking the perume on the handkerchief found heide the body. It was: your daugh-
ars 1cea S “It would he Moha's perfume{ronseinus , I'l) het shes got a dozen yottles she hasn't even opened. 1 never saw such a collection.’
| ” » o | “1 COVE IT and I'm something lof an authority on .the subject,”
2, ee eK - : ‘Baby Shap, - ’ Mona adniitted modestly si} Third - Floor ’ - ” . | Mrs. Shane said. nothing = Her) ; 4 ia No aT ; » face was like a wnask as she con-
“a : on a »
A THRILLING TIMES SERIAL—
MAYBE IT'S LOVE...
“What she wanted to know
?
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Issue on Halibut . PATRICK HUNT
- Will Be Decided
CHICAGO, April 23 (U, P.).~ Some diy soon now housewives may buy halibut with their heads on
Curly-headed, 5-year-old Ches-
ter Duane Corbin lies critically injured in a City. hospital bed today
Native of Ireland Had Lived
The National Fisheries institute | ‘ {all because he ‘was tired of candy,” said today that, according to | N Here 44 Years. | The boy 1s the son of Mr. and superstition,” women and halibut ' Patrick BE. Hunt, Indianapolis; Mrs. Chester Corbin, He was toy-
look alike from ‘the neck up. resident for 44 years and head of a 8 With the candy friends of his That's why halibut with their family of 10 children and 24 grand- Parents had given him in Valley heads on rarely reach the house- children. died vesterday in his Mills. The incident occurred in the wife. ’ home, 2142 N. Olney st: family car on the way home, 5142 The institute plans to settle the ~ Mr. Hunt was born in Ireland ‘Wayne ave, late last night. | issue at its annual convention ‘in 1873. He was a retired stationary Little Chester looked toward his|
Thursday by comparing photographs of a giant halibut and a
woman. | back seat,
|and the Holy Name society of the Chester stood up be-
church. He had been ill a vear.
7 : 3-year-old Hovey close to her, Services Thursday at 8:30 a. m, | -u rt : ™ REQUEST $600 [in toe orien” chuper” of hey, dg: tm tired of my canes Moore mortuaries will be followed | =
and try to
f ! sleep,” his mother replied. WAGE INCREASE : rae: church. Burial will be| “gy qdenly his father felt a gush {in Holy Cross of cold night air on ‘his head. The|
car screeched to a stop on dark
“Lie down, darling,
Lby the funeral mass at 9 a. m. in!
Ten Children Survive Mr. Hunt's wife, Mae, survives Road 67. him as do his seven sons and three pocked back and forth.
daughters. The sons are: Theodore| “I knew what had happened im-
Police and Firemen Seek i i E., Walter R., Norbert L. and Rob-| mediately.” hi: Aid of Local Businessmen. bert E., all of Indianapolis, ro is yrvon i Pll on =
Letters to Indianapolis business- Drexel M. of Oxnard, Cal; men enlisting their backing in aE Detroit, and Arthur J. of Nash-| he pitched forward onto the roadrequest for a $600 annual wage|Yile, Tenn. His three daughters bed. his father told City hospital atincrease for police and firemen 3° Mrs. Ray Latham of Indian-|tendants last night. were mailed today by the salary | APolis; Mrs. J. A. V. Norman, Day-| Chester is reported suffering from committee of the Fraternal Order |" o., and Mrs. John A. Whitney, a severe cerebral concussion. of Police and the Indianapolis Fire Detrell, Thomas Ho of kogaseFighters association. ’ « 1s his brother, and his Bite R. Kinley. recording sec- SISters are Mrs. Lenore Waterman MAN SHOT, 3 YOUTHS yetary of the I. F. F. A, said that 30d Mrs. Nanette Dickerson, both higher wage scales for police and of Cincinnati, | firemen would be requested: of city ALBERT PHILLIPS council this fall, during budget
hearings, - employed for 30 vears as a saw filer ties today following a police chase Since 1926, salaries of police and at the E. C. Atkins Co.. died today On the banks of White river near firemen have been increased only in Emhardt Memorial hospital. " [Oliver ave. $6.25 per month, and the basic.min-| Mr, Phillips had been ill a month| The man, Charles (Pug) Smith, imum salary is $2400 annually, the and was 61. He was born at Bloom- | former prizefighter of letter states. |ington, Ind. lived at 910 8. Illi-
3 {nois st. and was a member of the ’ . 1 Only One Increase Atkins Pioneers.
“Except in 1937 when a decrease in salaries during ‘the depression was restored and in 1943 when a|fugeral home followed by burial at Vvenile aid officers. $6.25 monthly increase was granted, Gosport, Ind the mayor has defeated every at-! Survivors
Feontributing to delinquency.
include
tempt to obtain an increase,” the "rs, Mre. Telpha Mae Polen and! home on N. Emerson ave: since letter points out. Mus. Floy Fae Brooks, both of In- Sunday night Long working hours and tax de- dianapolis, ad so Ete! City hospital for inspection. ductions place city police and Phillips also has two brothers. | Smith was shot in the hip by a
firemen in lower wage brackets, the letter asserts. Mr, Kinley states that Ft. Wayne, Gary, South Bend, Hammond, East Chicago, Anderson, La Porte and Whiting, all cities in a lower population cateory, pay their police and firemen higher salaries than Indianapolis officers receive. Favors Increase Councilman R., C. (Bud) Dauss, chairman of the safety committee, said he was in favor of an increase for police and firemen “if there's a way.” Both Fire Chief Harry Fulmer and Police Chief Jesse P. McMurtry indicated that they favored higher wages for their men. Safety Board President William H. Remy was unavailable for comment, but he has intimated in the vast that he highly favors increases for the fire and police departments.
children. ' four of the suspects fled.
By Vida Hurst |
|
tinued her knitting, but Pat cried, | “Ge! along with vou now, Can't you| see Mike's in a hurry?” | As they left the house, Mike said. “I brought the glove Mrs. | Cameron dropped. Also the hand-| kerchief: You're right about one| thing. The perfume on them seems | to be the same.”
=» s . “I KNEW it just as I'm posi. tive we won't find any pikaki in| Jean Roberts’. room. If she had| been wearing {it that afternoon | when she called on me, I would | f have noticed it, but I didn't. Yet { otherwise her clothes were the | same.” { { As they drove to the apartment]
house where the dead girl had | lived, Mona asked, “How are you going to get in?” | é He almost smiled at her. At] £ least the cleft in his chin was less | £ a scar, more like a dimple. “I happen to be a district at-| £ torney, or didn't you know?” | . - “So vou can go busting in any- |
where?”
” » » | “I CAN go anywhere that might | offer a solution to this murder,” | he replied; pressing the manager's bell. The woman who answered. hard-faced but affable, said, “Good | evening, Mr. O'Brien. Shall 1 give | you the key or do you want me to! go with you?” “We'll go alone. Mrs. Allen. This is Miss Shane with me.” | “Miss MONA SHANE?" the woman's cynical eyes shouted, but | the thin lips- smiled, “Good evening. Miss Shane! It's nice to meet you.” » Mona resented the appraising stare and patronizing tone, but it was part of the price she had to pay for the lie she had told. She would have done it again to save
Jay, but as yet it had had little result—since Mike did not believe er,
on on n ‘MAYBE HE would now when he realized that the perfumed hand-| kerchief- found beside Jean Roberts belonged to Edith Cameron They took an elevator to the top! floor, and Mona waited impatient-| ly for Mike to unlock the door. The. living room was small. Little of the owner's expensive taste was re-| vealed in the rather ordinary fur-| nishings. The curtains were drab The rug old, stained. A small rec bar gave the place its only color. A desk with leaded glass doors wa filled with fashion magazines ” » » THE BEDROOM, however, wa more feminine. The bedspread wags ‘ose colored silk. ‘There were sev. eral lack covered pillows and a pair of frivolous pink satin mules, The dressing table was crowded with cosmetics, among them several bottle of scent. One glance told Mona There wat no carved wooden container. There was no sign of any pikaki perfume. : le 2 Lay
; (To. Be Contirined) yt?
)
-
‘ tit A (ii ie SLs 3 Co oii a Ios ! i 4 . hi } si : \ x : . best on wo a Ye Cw . ‘ 2 ii ap it fod ua 2 a " iss i ; \
K HUNT Child Crifically Hurt Trying TROLLEY FA DIES AT HOME To Discard Cand
engineer and a member of the gi; Jeu -oiy Shore David, . sleeping] | Frances De Sales Catholic church! dghtly In the other corner of the,
hind his mother who was nestling)
The right rear car door!
COMMITTEE TO OPE
had opened the Harold [door to toss the candy out. Instead
HELD IN POLICE CHASE
A man was shot, a 14-year-old | girl sent to City hospital and three | Albert Phillips, who had been' 20¥8 held by juvenile aid authori-| end of this week,
| ward, members of the committee's | | steering group, were appointed to| [head precinct organizations. Bridgeport| Since Mr. Hoffmann is unopposed was to be slated on a charge of for the Democratic nomination for Two | Juvenile court judge, the committee Services will be held Thursday at YOUthful companions, one 16, the will concentrate its activities in be10 a. m. in the G. H. Herrmann °ther 17, were questioned by ju-|half of Mr. Fields who has three The girl, with opponents, Judge Mark W. Rhoads, | them at the time police were sum- | incumbent, three daugh- moned, has been missing from her! Richard Smith.
She was taken to posts were Mrs George Home, Mrs.
\
y From Auto HEARINGS END
‘Decision on Increased Rates Expected Next Week.
The Indiana public service come ‘| mission is expected to decide early next. week on. the plea of Indiane |apolis Railways, Inc. to raise trole ley and bus token fares two cents. | Hearings on the company’s emers gency petition wete concluded by the commission yesterday. | The petition sought a token fare | increase from. 6% to 8% cents. It asserted that the company faced | financial emergency as a result of a 15-cent hourly wage increase it gave employees in March to avert a strike. | Last witness to testify yesterday | was Raymond Harp, business agent |of division 1070, amalgamated asso= | ciation of street electric railway | and motor coach employees of | America, He said that employees [actually were cut from about $50 to $42 in take-home pay despite | the hourly wage increase, primarily PRECINCT OFFICES as a result of overtime pay loss. Employees, he testified, lost overe time when the hourly wage ine |crease became effective. In addie N. Fields, Republican, and Joseph tion, he asserted, they have last O. Hoffmann, Democrat, for fudge | oi pay amounting to $2.74 per of Juvenile court, has announced it! employee in Pebruary to $3.31 in will form precinct organizations for ae..." ot the current rate. the primary campaign. | Mr, Harp's testimony was counter Ward. and township leaders to, (ho company's estimate that the conduct the campaign for the tWO. 16 cent wage increase would ine candidates will be named by the crease labor costs by $500,000 a year. The company disclosed yesterday it had spent $47.251 during January, February and March in the conduct of the rate case. Of this amount, $2160588 was spent in advertising to tell the company’s side of the story during those three months. The remainder, according to the {testimony of L. T. Hixson, the advisor, was incurred in legal and commission fees.
FRED H. MOORE RITES SET
Chester Duane Corbin
The citizens Juvenile court committee which is sponsoring Harold
Henry J. Peirce and Harold Wood-
Edwin ©. Boswell and} SOmpany’s nancial
Appointed to various campaign
| Earl Moomaw, Mrs. Frank Fairchild, | ROCHESTER, Ind. April 23 (U, | Alex L. Taggart, Mrs. Maxwell Cop-P.) —Rites will be held here toe Walter of Hillesburg, Ind. and Bert “Guad under Sgt. John Foran when|pock, Miss Frances Kearby, Mrs. morrow for Fred H. Moore, 71, real of Bloomington, and three grand-| Ne ignored a command to halt after| John Mason Moore and Mrs. Silas estate dealer and a founder of the
Reagan. [Chester White Journal,
MILANS
MIDSUMMER MAGIC
Milans cast spring shadoys that lengthen into a romantie summer and linger on and on. In the broad-brimmed styles you've loved since you were a little girl. These frame your face and paint you "portrait-pretty.” Im
black. brown, navy, red, toast and while, «eee ad 8.50
“a | locke win v . oh » " Foor : sr Sy. i i . » “
- : : tw nr
