Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1946 — Page 3
4, 1046
OLOUP
IN 0
h rear doors, from two ads at 1113-1118 t. nchroom, 1113 § missing from $20 from the dith Drago of , 1115 College ad been stolen »s there. up the GaseKentucky and 5 a. m. today, tendant, E. B, ive, Woodruft old “police the » station and e went out to
IS BY TRAIN nd., April 24 ld mother was she stepped in n at Fillmore, sband returned
n, 36, died ine estbound New struck her this d, Robert, and arvived, e——————
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_ Harrisburg as district traffic—chfef:|
BYRNES ARRIVES
No. 81; Mary A Kibler. 3638 Hemlock George * 1. Newhall, Fortville, Laura R » Stuart, 1122 'N. Olney
‘Raymond Thomas
WEDN. AY PR]
* HUGHES NAMED BELL PRESIDENT
| | a ! |
Succeeds James F. Carrol As Telephone Head.
(Continued From Page One)
of personnel matters with the A.|
T. & T. He became affiliated with the Indiana Bell system in January, 1944. Mr. Carroll began his career with the Central New York Telephone & Telegraph Co. as a student in the traffic department at Oswego, N. Y. In 1909, he transferred to the American Telephone & *Telegraph| Co. at Pittsburgh, later moving to
Held Various Jobs He later held various telephone Jobs at Auburn and Utica, N. Y., and joined the Bell Telephone Co. of Pennsylvania, with assignments at Scranton and: Pittsburgh. He then became division traffic superintendent of the central Manhattan division of the New York Telephone Co. Four years later, he was appointed general frafic manager of the Ohio Bell Telephone Co., becoming vice president in charge of | public relations in 1929. | Active in civic and state affairs, Mr. Carroll has headed the In-| dianapolis Community fund and was general chairman of the Red Cross war fund campaign in 1943. He Js president of the state cham- | ber of commerce. He plans to continue living here following his retirement. Directors Re-elected
Mr, Hanna has been a vice president of the Indiana Bell Telephone | Co. since November, 1933. Previous- | ly, he*hAd worked in telephone firm Jobs in Cleveland, Columbus, O and New York city. At the stockholders’ meeting held today, all Indiana Bell directors | were re-elected. The board is com-|
posed of the following members: {will propose returning Tripolitania |
Mr. Carroll, Mr. Hanna, Mr. Hughes, | W. I. Longsworth, N. H. Noyes, T.D.| 8Sheerin, W. R. Sinclair, T. D. Stevenson, E. W. Stout and A. L. Tag- | gart. The directors re-elected the fol-| lowing officers: Mr. Hanna, vice! president and general manager; F. Marston, vice president (public | relations); F. L. Stanley, vice presi- | dent (personnel) : B: G. Halstead, secretary and treasurer, and R. L.! Kessing, eompirofier. . ..
GETS TWO DAYS T0 ‘STUDY’ LOCAL JAIL
Stanley Murphey, 32, New York City, told Municipal Court Judge John L. Niblack he was on a na-|
tion-wide tour investigating condi- | | besieged with as many offers for|
tions in prisons and jails. “You can devote all your time looking into conditions at the Ma- |
rion county jail for the next two!|ing of the Indianapolis champion, | Richard said he was anxiously look- | Murphey began a two-day sen-|ing forward to visiting the capital! His home
days,” the judge replied.
tence on an intoxication charge today.
INSANITY PLEA HIT AT EDWARDS TRIAL
(Continued From Page One)
filed an insanity plea for their client. Deputy Prosecutor James Stewart called to the stand five witnesses to testify that Edwards was| drunk at the time of the alleged attack and not insane. Takes Gun From Defendant Two residents at 717 N. Capitol ave, where Edwards lived, testified that the night before the robbery of Miss Brosnan, Edwards “pulled a gun and threatened to shoot everybody up.” The witnesses, Thelma Lee, and Lillian Caldwell, declared the defendant had been drinking. They said they took a gun away from him at the time. James Johnson, 619 W. North st. and Robert Buck, 622 W. North st. testified they were employees of a grocery where Edwards was a frequent customer. They said he was “drunk” just before he walked a half block and allegedly” Shot and
| ship.
DAF 6
Nach King Dies
FEAR FASCIST
‘Police Block Roads ‘After
’
MARCH ON MILAN
. Theft of Duce’s Body.
(Continued From Page One)
Neph King, co-owner of King's Indiana Billiard Co., died today in Methodist hospital. He was 65 and had lived here 50 years.
toss — eb ———— a rer apps pcb
FOR BIG 4 MEET
Russ Sending Strong Team For Paris Talks.
(Continued From Page One)
for the people of Europe. Preparations to handle its secret sessions in the Luxembourg palace were on|
a scale consistent with the gravity of the issues,
The Italian issue probably is the |
most difficult of those to be faced. Russian claims for heavy reparations from Italy—which are opposed | by Britain and the United States— probably will top . the agenda. Russia also is pressing for an exclusive Soviet trusteeship over Tripolitania against strenuous British | objections. The United- States pro-| poses a 10-year Big Four trustee-| Britain apparently wants to!
| postpone the entire issue.
France, feeling that it is hopeless to reconcile the opposing viewpoints,
|to Italy and letting the Italians run the African colony themselves. Observers believe-that the conference, like the foreign ministers
| meeting in London last fall and the| no he vanished from a Jesuit
{ United Nations security council ses- | sion in New York, will be dominated |
F.| by the basic clash-of power between | | knowledge of any underground or-
Russia and the Anglo-American in-" terests. France will try to play a role of mediator.
EX-QUIZ KID n OFFICIATE AT FINALS
(Continued From Page One)
dio. No other quiz kid was ever
| free scholarships ‘to colleges and] | universities as Richfrd received. Invited to officiate in the crown-
city of his native state. is at East Chicago, Ind. A round of entertainment and sight-seeing tour are being planned for the outstanding guest invited to be here for the Grand Finals. He will be kept busy from the moment he arrives in the city until he returns home.
Will Not.Cempete Although he will not compete in|
the spelling match, Richard will] take an active part in the program
public will have an opportunity to meet the famous sonally. Richard graduated from Kids? cember 23 because four days later he became 16 years old, the retirement age for the youngsters.
- “Quiz
Mills hall will be the last opportunity for the 40 grade school pupils still in the contest to win a place among the 20 who will appear with Richard. Twenty will be spelled down in this week's match which starts at 7 o'clock with organ music. The spellers will opén their match at 7:30 o'clock. Those competing Priday survived the first semi-finals last Monday.
robbed Miss Brosnan. Another witness, Larry Collins, | 127 E. 9th st, said he was held up by Edwards the same day of the | Brosnan robbery. He said at that | time he smelled liquor on Edwards.
hearing the case.
PLASTIC LUNG MAY LET PATIENTS WALK
WASFINGTON — Plastics * “lung”
60 pounds,
haps walk or drive.
and small 1 hospitals. \
PLASTIC FURNITURE SEEN FOR U. S. HOMES
NEW YORK, April 24 (U,P.). —| Plastic piano tops, davenports and
Special Judge Willlam Miller is |Overstuffed chairs, so “light that are
they can be moved with ease, in store for the American housewife, R. A. Hoffer, of E. I: Du Pont
{De Nemours & Co.'s technical serv-
ice department, said today. Mr. Hoffer disclosed that
| lished, he said.
v guards reported everything calm be-
Italian |
so far
and each of the 20 finalists and |
“Quiz Kid” per-|them away,”
in a special broadcast De- |
This Friday's spelldown at Caleb |
the plastics industry has been explor-| for artificial respiration weighs only ing the possibilities of adapting | ler said the plane struck a tree in about one-eighth the these materials to peacetime uses.| | the Brychta yard, damaged a servweight of standard iron lungs, per-| It expects sizable fields for appli- | ice porch and knocked a door off’ mitting a patient to sit up, or per-|cations when techniques of fabrica- the Brychta garage. The unit is tion have been fully worked out|some damage to the house from convenient for life-saving stations {ahd production-line ‘methods estab-| fire, but Brychta, his wife and three
vent any Fascist demonstrations in. !spired by the theft of the body. The
| neath the dictator's old balcony. | | Around Milan police intensified [their search for thieves and the stolen corpse. They patrolled the roads in jeeps purchased from the American army. © Seek Mystery Car Police sought an automobile de{scribed by a witness, who saw it parked bejung the cemetery at 6 terday, about the time that the | ob was believed to have been snatched from its potter's grave. | They said this was their only clue. The manifesto said: “The Fascist Democratic party, ‘having received no reply to the democratic and human request sent on April 9, 1946, to competent authorities—a request which if sat- | isfied would have clarified if only slightly the Italian political horizon now steeped in a coalition of |hatred and blood—is constrained {to begin the struggle against those henchmen of Red violence, seeking lat any cost to compel the free expression of the popular majority, which only through peace can find (the proper course.’ Deny Request Authorfties denied knowledge of the existence of any such formal i request. The manifesto contained .mes- | sages venerating Mussolini similar |to those in the note found at the ave. Police investigating Fascist or- | ganizations known to exist gave’ | particular attention to the S.A. M., the Mussolini action squadrons. The S. A. M. is the best known of several Fascist organizations operating throughout Italy, particularly in the north. Carlo Scorza, {the last Fascist party secretary, has | been mentioned as its secret leader
monastery last November. Police officials said they had no | ganization calling itself *“Democratic Fascists.” Tomorrow will be a national holiday commemorating the first anniversary of the partisan uprising that freed Milan and led to Musso{lini’s execution and the subsequent public display of his bullet-scarred | body in the Loreto square. Extra Holiday Guards Because of the political aspect lof the grave-snatching, police took | extra precautions against Fascist | demonstrations, possibly involving 'n Duce’s body, over the holiday. Police said the thieves had exact knowledge of the grave and worked | skillfully. They left shovels and | hammers near the open grave. Bits of the plain wooden coffin in which Mussolini was buried on May 2, 1945, already beginning to decay, were found in the freshly dug dirt The thieves apparently carried | the remains in a blanket or some | similar wrapping to a nearby foun{tain in the cemetery, police said There were boot marks around the | fountain. | “Several persons probably washed the remains taken from the grave at the fountain before carrying a police official said. (An Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Milan said that watchdogs posted near the grave had been chloroformed or poisoned.)
‘AIRLINER ‘CRASHES DURING TEST FLIGHT LOS ANGELES, April 24 (U, P.). —Three crew members were killed today when a Western Airlines DC-3 airliner being test-flown after an engine change crashed and burned in the San Fernando valley between North Hollywood and Roscoe, The three—Pilot Wayne Fieder- { hoff, Burbank, co-Pilot Marvin Swartzbach, Roscoe, and Mechanic
| Leon A. Turgeon, Los Angeles—were the only persons aboard the twinengined craft. They had been testing the plane an hour and 40 minutes when Fiederhoff radioed that one engine had failed, WAL officials said.
yard of Matthew Brychta's home. Van Nuys Police Sgt. Roy O. Mil-
There was
children were unharmed.
IN INDIANAPOLIS--EVENTS—VITALS
EVENTS TODAY
Lions Club, luncheon, 12:18 p. m, Clay-| pool Junior Chamber of Commerce, 12:15 p. m., Washington Apartment Owners, luncheon, Washington.
EVENTS TOMORROW
Indianapolis Real Estate Board, luncheon 5 m. Washington. » Jewish Welfare ‘Fund, dinner, 8:30 p. m,, Washington,
luncheon,
12:16 p. m,
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Thomas Edward Wetter, 1433 Williams, Maralyn McClain, 3707 E. New York John L. Murphy, 4049 Ruckle; Rosemary Elizabeth O'Hara, 4150 Ruckle James Washington Leslie, 1323 Montcalm; Connie Marie Wallace, 1323 Montcalm Fred Johnson, 946 E, Georgia; Kathryn Wilson, 420 8. Pine, James Wilson, 1558 Park; Bessie Lucille Smith, 1119 N. Kealing, Robert Lawrence Browning, 745 8. Sher- : Geneva 1sabel Lynette, 1306 E. St. Charles Glen’ Mitchell, 801 N. Chester; Martha Darine Lee, 802 8. Sherman dr. John Ray O'PFallen, Salem, Ill; Wilma Mills Hopkins, Salem, Ill
Earl J. Strother, 15562 English; Dorothy Louise Minor, 26090 E. 56th. . Joseph Francis Meier, 1422 E. Vermont;
Jean H. Egan, 357 Parkway,
Earl Willlam Rich Jr. 5947 Ingianola Dorothy Elizabeth Kellman, 3157 Delaware
Donald Edward Griffin, 315 N. Pine: Doris Elona Reynolds, 728 N. East, No. 2. John Edward Leahy, 4500 Marcy Lane,
Kimbley, 1434
James R. Johnson, 1174~Kentucky, Mary Home-—Prince, Helen Hamler, 8. Jane Cox, 223-N. Belmont A Raymond, Eleanora etn Ellsworth Staver Jr, Newark, N. J, Mary 337 8. State, and Paris, Addie Gilbert, L. Daniel, Tangier 1308 Yandes. J Stephen R. Fertal, Cleveland, O.; Mabel Boys Vera Hesse, 1015 Division. At St. Francis — Boston, Florefice Me- '| Wilbert Eggemeyer, 248 8. Rural, Mary Queen: James, Moon Viby, + Moog Reaiisde, 238 N. Lagelle. ,| Lillian Jones, and Robert, Alice Mitchell, obert Lee Campbell, 268 N Alcott] | oy Coleman—Donald, Adele Shoemaker. Marie Elizabeth Mills, 3242 College At Methodist—Emory, Ruth Gurley; Jos-
Carl Frederick, 248 -E, Iowa
rope, 5147 Pleasant Run pkwy, 8. drive.
Isaac Richard LeMasters, 1213 Linden; Mary Zelma Lynch; 763 Fletcher,
Mae Wright, 727 Congress
James, Virginia Ellis.
Kerinington; Mary Ross Kelly, “ Fletcher,
At Ewha William Alice Jenkins, and| William F. Hansman, 60, st St, Vincent's,
James, Melba Adams.
Agnes Ward-
Thomas Edward H3sson, Evansville, Cora ail} Sums, Ir ras. Donald, M. Pate, Evansville : (% s James Neiswinger, 320 E. North; Bonnie PO Wht Bl Irene Hamilton Mae Terry, 1736 Berwick and John, Opal Clark. , Jumte Teflon La Ne¥ SB Anna | Home—Richard, Mattie Blaine, 1301 N Johu_Bdward' Miller, 1036 N. Alavama;| JTremotl. ang William, Xia Pidids, 2000 Hannah H. Emmons, 836 N. Delaware, Wevard. po. No. 14, — Rudolph Melvin Stern, Columbus, O.; DEATHS Shirley Jean Solomon, 4068 Central. Emma Menze, 83, at 1715 Central, ar-
Paul Francis Kimberlin, 3017 Clifton; Anna
Ray V. Belmont, Danville, Ill; Ella Mar- Yoilliaz Henry Keys, 67, at 3100 Shriver, garet Durre, 3155 College. John Dexter Stetson, U. 8, army; Rita Mary D6 sDarden 0, at 1973 Hovey, Mary Hillman, Cumberland. Moe a Shonkle Hy ab City. broniboFrederick. H. Johnson, R. R. 2, Lynn; ET yi: So Y, Betty Lucille Btarkle, 1713 N. Penn-{y, "0, Miller, 8, at #440 CorneMus, ylvanin. uremia Lee Tinsley, 83, at 1731 Broadway, myoBIRTHS carditis. ' i Grant Lennington, 81, at 838 College, Girls chronic myocarditis | At St. Francis—Albert, Elizabeth Liston, Howard Averitt, 38 at 3723 N. Kenwood, At City=-Roy, Imogene Howard. , coronary occlusion. » At Methodist — Edwin, Mary Braddock;|John William Parkhurst, 84, at 1670 Park, Seldon, Irene Johnson; Lloyd, Joan| arteriosclerosis Hobbs; Charles, Elizabeth. Luke, ahd, Alice Hubbell 82, at 1436 W., Court, Kent, Mary Martin chronic: mynsearditis,
At Bt. Vinecent's—Wilbur, Mary Miller, and Ernest
eph, Maggie Larr; William, Mildred Cad-~
teriosclerosis, Lida Belle Leslie, 87, terfosclerosis,
at 1302 Lindley, sr-
Kirkpatrick, 2, at Rilay, trachao-
bronghitis
separately today with Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and Commu-
.|newed effort to end the civil strife
{fighting” was raging near that im-
The plane crashed in the back-|
TL
NDIA.
MARSHALL T0 RENEW CHINA PEACE TALKS
CHUNGKING, April 24 (U. P). —Gen, George Metshall will confer
nist Gen. Chou En-lai in a re-
in Manchuria’ : Four , Nationalist divisions wére reportedly attacking Communistheld Szep Ingkai, according to the China Times, which said “fierce
POLLS
quadruplets;
portant railway center.
%
carcinoma.
HIVORGE NEAR FOR "FATHER ‘OF QUADS ors 2 Zi
(Continued From Page One) ;
learned her husband was thé father of quadruplets in a telephone call fused to grant her husband a difrom an English newspaper corre- YOrce because of religious scruples, government stepped up its efforts automobiles carrying nonesttiking
spondent March 1, 1944. {but last February changed her mind to mediate labor disputes keeping workers, but no cars were damaged.
‘Wife in Pittsburgh’ “He told me my celebrating the birth of the babies pided and was drinking, my husband was saying, but wife in-Pittsburgh," “My husband had written me and vealed his plans.
husband was
I've also got a! she sald.
so
| Tat vee in i " DISPERSE 400 C10 Her husband was not present at of pic who kaded . PICKETS AT DETROIT uciee soe
By UNITED PRESS Violence flared briefly in a De-. fr
itroit strike today as elsewhere the
discharged fr atom. - July 1. . 9 Mrs. Thompson previously had re
3nd, brought the “indignities” ac- | 660,000 U. 8. workers in idleness,
Her attorney said she had de- County and state police dis- | “she'd. give Thompson a Ipersed morg than 400 C. I. O. autg |
DIES OF INJURIES
He said that chance to'live up ‘to his claim he workers pickets who demonstrated | —Rites were arranged at the Stinson plant of the Con-!Silas Wesley Stout, 63, who died last night of injuries received Saturday Sheriff's deputies sald no fighting | when he was struck by an aytomo~ (had occurred and there were no'bilé as he fan tp catch a& bus,
‘I've got’ wanted to marry Nora.’ The quadruplets’ mother : England... Thompson has
still is in solidated Vultee Aircraft Corp. not re-
STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
-
The Sportsman's Lounge— has E-X-P-A-N-D-E-D. Now—that the Men's Furnishings have moved from their
temporary home on the Sixth Floor—to the
First-Floor—the Sportsman's Lounge has
had a chance to spread out (as also has our Luggage Shop)— SPALDING is represented in a big way—
Also gther big names in sports
«
equipment. Golfers and tennis players— hunters and fishermen—archers
and ball players—this is the place.
WARNING — Lest this picture mislead you — please note that right at this moment we do NOT have rods and reels — but plenty (we said plenty) of other fishing tackle. Of course—
we have the other items pictured — and then some.
—_— er © overtum
TERRE HAUTE, April 24\ (U. Py,
el
y for
