Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1946 — Page 7
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‘ganizations,
. the international set-up. With the]
‘WORLD COLLEGE
: a May Become, World Peace Hub.
. (Continued From Page One) :
at the feet of the most learned fac~ tis in history. Enrollment probably would be limited to 400 to 500 students, each carefully selected and approved by the faculty. - _ It is hoped that the institution "can be endowed by individuals, orstates. and nations. Students would be chosen by those making the endowments subjeét to faculty approval, “Our prime -physical needs are for a classroom building, one of the world’s finest libraries and housing,” Mr. Kendall said. Seek World Support “However, before we can. move with surety we must have national and international suppert. By the end of this year we of the memorial committee hope to have an international advisory committee in.existence. “The first step is to enlist the support of Indiana's leading educators. With them as a nucleus, we believe the movement can gain national recognition,” he said. “Then it is but a logical step to
United Nations meeting in this] country it might be possible to speed | our world-wide organization.”
' THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1046 iy
TOWN PLANS A
'Gummings,
Traffic Wiaries
To Mrs. Luella. Cummings, 81
(Continued From Page One).
driver of the car that struck Mrs. He is slated to appear in municipal court 3 today on
- éharges of operating a vehicle with
inadequate “brakes and reckless
driving, * Mr. Maitland told ‘police - Mrs. Cummings stepped ‘from between
two cars and that he did not see her|
in time to stop. He said he tried to swerve but that an oncoming car blocked his path, .. , Mr. Ketring, a 33-year-old veteran discharged in January, was left lying in~a heavy rain storm on Shelby st. by a hit-skip driver. He was found by police about 11:30 last night, after an anonymous phone call sent a squad to that area. The victim suffered a. compound fracture of the right leg and other injuries, He told police he tried to get out of the path ofthe car that struck him but’ failed. Police believe the driver. of the car fled the scene and then made the call that sents police to aid his victim. Car Cruises Near Scene While police: investigated a car was seen crusing on Hanna ave, with the driver apparermtly” watching the accident scene. The ear fled. when police started toward it. Slippery streets caused six other accidents last night and today. Mrs. Janet O'Conner,
near Hanna ave.
Prove Fatal
Mrs. Luella Cummings Walnut and East sts. Mr. Hill also was slightly Tnfured, - Hanley cker, 38, 2263 S. Meridian st. and Paul Poynton, 20, 2829 S. Meridian st. were slightly in ‘jured: when their cars ‘collided at Meridian st. and Southern ave. Fred Johnson, 70, 6532 Rockville’ rd, was arrested on charges of reckless driving after a collision between a milk truck he was driving and a car driven by Eugene Alberty, 46, 20 Bankers lane. Mr. Alberty received slight injuries. The accident occurred at New York st.-and Capitol ave. Mrs. Cummings, the widow of Gorden Cummings, was a riative of
ie Utiity Asks Right
Chicago and about 600 communities
Jcentral Illinois. The order, effective |
Ne egro Is Honored. _As Mother of '46
POWER CRISIS
(Continued From Page One)
To Reduce Service. (Continued From Page. One)
nols commerce commission. affects and 55,000 farms in northern and
immediately, limits manufacturers and industrial users to electric service for only 20 hours per week. Close Sundays : » Commercial users, ineluding of-| fices, department stores, theaters, nightclubs and taverns, were lim-| ited to electric service from 8 to 6 p. m, Monday through Saturday. They will be forced to close on Sundays. fi The order prohibits the use of i. electricity. for show- windows and | display signs, for air conditioning
3 3
Emma Clarissa Clement and for interior lighting above min- lish at Tuskegee institute, Tuske-
imum needs, gee, Ala, and Mrs, Abbie Clemerit Hospitals, restaurants, newspapers, | Jackson, Louisville, executive secchurches and other institutions and retary of the A. M. E. Zion Misfacilities considered essential for!sionary society. 7h public health, safety and welfare] Mrs. Clement, a native of Proviwere. exempted. | dence, R. I, shaies the honor of Home owners, apartment dwellers | American mother conferred an such and hotel residents were asked to women as Mrs. Elias Compton limit voluntarily their consumption | (1939), mother of A. H. Compton, |
She|
dianapolis most of her life.
30, Hotel was a member of Grace Methodist| East and Midwest, | Washington, was injured early to-| church. Those agitating for the world col- | day when she ran her‘car into the|
Surviving’ her are a daughter, |
lege have not moved forward blindly | back of a truck driven by Richard Mrs. Stella Abbett; two grandchil- | following pet likes and dislikes. For | W. Vandenberg, Dearborn, Mich, as| dren, Mrs. Berthelda Hinesley and |
a year, up until his death a Tew, months ago, Perley Oakland .Place, head of the Latin department of |% Syracuse university, was consulted | constantly, . | ~~ Ability and Character -In one letter to Mr, Kendall he erystalized his thoughts on the in-| stitution. He wrote in part:
the truck stopped for a traffic sig-| Jal « at Park and Massachusetts] aves. Mrs, O'Conner was treated at. Methodist hospital and released. She is Democratic candidate - for the nomination of Center township]
'trustee, and was on a sick call at)
the time of the accident A 6-year-old child, Jane Wright,
{Charles Abbett, grandchildren,
PAYS $446,464 FOR FAIRGROUNDS DAMAGE
The state fair board today announced final settlement with the
and two great-
“The college should be an under-| daughter of Mrs. Nina Wright. 2620 federal government of $446,464 to
graduate college, and the students!
N. Harding st., was struck by a car
| reimburse the state for “damages”
should be selected on the basis of driven by Bruce Frazier, 21, of 1056 to the fairgrounds by the air forces ability and character, not only in! W, 18th st., as she ran across Hard- |during the war,
the United States, but also in other countries. As undergraduates . , .| the students would be more susceptible to ideals, and their fundamental training would be in liberal studies , . . at the same time the special aptitudes would be measured, so that even at the beginning of the second year the field of spe-
entered. A wide range of ‘liberal studies through the four years would
© prevent narrow and premature spe-
-gialimation, “Each division of the curriculum
should be planned as a part of the
larger .unity, and the students should gain, with the help of their advisers, a perspective of the entire
| the windshield and cial interest and aptitude could be
ing st. at 26th st. Her injuries were |
not serious, police said. . David R. Johnson, 42, R. R. 19, Box 142, suffered crushed fingers when his car slid into the rear of a truck loaded with steel at Washington st. and Sherman dr. Material in the truck crashed through struck Mr. Johnson's hands on. the steering wheel. st., was the driver of the truck. One Reckless Driving Arrest Lorina Nolan, 41, of 2610 Schofleld ave. suffered bruised Knees
ing, driven by William Wimbly, 2t, of the same address collided with one driven by Lloyd Hill, 27, 101
experience in liberal studies.
Denny st. at the intersection -of
Arthur Campbell, 1214 Bates
when a car in which she was rid-.
The grounds was the home of a | huge supply depot operated by the air forces technical command and at its peak housed one of the most gigantic supply operations of the air war. The board originally sought a cash settlement of $600,000 to put the grounds back in shape for the 1946 fair, but in today’s announcement expressed opinion that other concessions” made up for the difference.
RECESS LICHFIELD HEARING BAD NAUHEIM, May 2 (U. P.). —A military court hearing the Lichfield brutality trial of Lt. Granville Cubage recessed today until May 7 to give the defense time to prepare special pleas and motions
LS Ape & Co. ng
“| would be laid up within two weeks
by Fatf-fare’
Gay flowered cotton, accented by snowy
pique, with a pair of perky bows nipping the waist of the bilowing skirt=\3. 40.
Sizes 7 to 14
“Rog. V8. Pot. OM.
|
Indianapolis ‘and had lived in In-|
“Isaid it had been forced. to lay off
| decreasing
|| ported dim-out and other emergency | | regulations
| lic transportation fast J proaching a crisis,
|city’'s vast subway
| called ont President Truman to in-! tervene in the coal shortage, which, |
| Portland and San Francisco all re-
| if necessary,
"INEW VINCENNES WEATHERMAN |
of power, | president of Massachusetts InstiSimilar regulations were antici-|tute of Technology and Nobel prise
pated in major cities throughout the winner, and Mrs. Edith Mayo, where officials| whose husband founded the Mayo {reported coal stockpiles approach-| clinic.
{ing the danger point. Meanwhile, John L. Lewis kept the coal industry and the government in the dark over his objectives and strategy in the prolonged strike, New Move. Expected He aroused much speculation over the possibility of new moves by calling the 200-member policy committee of the United Mine Workers (A. F. of L.) into session next Tuesday. Such calls often have foreshadowed major union decisions. There was no sign of an immediate break, however. raigned publicly tomorrow on Some mine operators expected 8! charges that they conspired with move by Mr. Lewis Within a feW| gy opean axis powers in a plot to days because they thought mount- dominate the world. ing pressure on both sides would ) : force him to show his hand. Indus- To's aftalguicent Will mag his try representatives have long insisted that Mr. Lewis was waiting for an industrial crisis before telling them what he wanted.
She was invited to go to New York on May 10 for a mother’s day | ceremony, including a radio ap-| pearance. “It is a great honor,” sald Mrs: Jackson, who received the news for her mother, “We are proud.”
'TOJO ARRAIGNMENT SET FOR TOMORROW
TOKYO, May 2 (U, P.) —Former | Premier Hideki Tojo and 25 other
September when he interrupted a conversation with correspondents to attempt suicide in another room.
A total of 23,000 employees of the Carnegie-Illinois Corp. were sent home in the Pittsburgh area alone, and company spokesmen said production was down to 20 per cent of capacity. Road Lays Off 7000 The Baltimore & Ohio railroad
native quarter today after
fields in Egypt.
were killed.
7000 employees, and other roads (reported the cancellation of pas-! | senger runs as a result of rapidly supplies. © Thirty-four! | engines of the Chesapeake & Ohio’ [railroad stood idle in the Columbus, lO. freight yards. t * At Cleveland, the Pittsburgh { Steamship Co., largest of the Great [Lakes operators, said its boats,
if the strike continues. An an'nouncement from the Canada| | Steamship lines said three of its | boats were unable to obtain fuel | to leave the piers. New York City aiithorities re-
would be reinstated unless the strike ended soon. Pubwas apand some officials predicted a shutdown of the system if the mines still were out May 15. Steel Production Cut A similar situation existed in New Jersey, where orders curtailing the use of street lights and electrical advertising were expected momen- | tarily. Birmingham, Ala, . steel produc-| tion. was cut back 43 per cent. Min- | nesota’s Gov. Edward J. Thye|
| he said, threatened the closing of | creameries - and. food Possming | plants.
Coal stocks in Washington, D. C,, were down to a two weeks’ Ap and the Potomac Electric Power Co. | appealed for emergency relief to the! | solid fuels administration. The com- | pany supplies electricity to users in| the District of Columbia and Maryland, as well as for government buildings. Small plants in Michigan began to take emergency conservation measures, but representatives of the big Detroit area industries reported sufficient supplies for another month at least, Only .the West coast appeared immune from the shortage. Seattle,
ported good supplies and were able to fall back on hydro-electric power
JAP GUARD SENTENCED | YOKOHAMA, May 2 (U. P)—|
{Ryoichi Shimode, a civilian prisoner of war camp guard, today was sentenced to 20 years in prison for committing brutalities against American internees. He" was the | 44th war criminal sentenced by the 8th army commission,
VINCENNES, May 2 (U. P)~— incennes had a new weatherman y. A. B. Broulllette, former rmap who held the post for 26 , resigned yesterday. He was succeeded by Leo Moon, city “sewers superintendent.
———————— DISCUSS BUSINESS CAREERS BLOOMINGTON, May 2.(U, P). ~The annual business careers conference of the collegiate chamber of the Indiana university school |of business willbe held tomorrow. | Prominent businessmen will speak |during the day-long meeting.
APPLE BLOSSOM QUEEN | WINCHESTER, Va, May 2 (UU. P.).—Virginia Anderson, daughter | of Becretary of Agriculture Olin- | ton P, Anderson, will be crowned Queen Shenandoah today as she begins her reign over the tradition-
Ja Winchester apple blossom -fes-
tival. : wa Lo
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES =
TO NEARS
| Conferences Reveal Differ: on the mda. He 1s mow 18 years
of a
™ CONTESTS
fer (Continued From Page One) |
oan Deselan, Catholic school. { Catholic school. Charles Drullinger, n osied Heart Catholic school. Solomon Edwards, 13, School 87.
jor TY and his mother, Mrs, David Williams, will, remain. in the city . overnight as ‘guests of. ‘The
“ences Over Slate. (Continued From Page one Times,
his “candidacy for superior court 1| The prenouncer for the important nomination “on my record a3 judge Grand Finals’ will be Charles R. in police court.” {Parks, speech and English teacher He cited as. accomplishments his at Arsenal Technical high school. “abolition of thé bail bond racket|The judges will be Miss Helen among professional bondsmen and Thornton, Miss Jennie Strain and his backing of the ‘law passed by Miss Irene Rhodes, all of Arsenal] | the last legislature providing for Tech's English department, hospital treatment for persons ar-| Tomorrow night's winner will go rested on charges of = “mental to Washington, D. C., with all exvagrancy.’ A penses paid by The Indianapolis * [Times to cdmpete 4n the national spelling bee May 23 to 27, The contestants Top the grand| finals are:
school,” Washington township. John Hall, 13, Pike township school, Pike township. Jeverly Hendrickson, 1, School
B eley Ann Hessler, 1,. Lite Flower Catholic school... Delores Kramer, 1, “Holy - ors Catholie school, Nathanial Jones, 1m, School 34,
rc n—
Judge Stark Stresses Experience : Mary @atherine Bean, 13, Uni-
The Ned Toy experiente. and | Heights school, Perry fowncomplete’ background in criminal ship,
law inthe prosecutor's office was | stressed by Judge Judson Li Stark | in a speech at a Republican rally LA FOLLETTE SAYS at the Marott hotel last night. 6A iS 3
He is a candidate for the Repub(Continued From Page One)
Creek school, Washington township. Joan Litzelman, 13, St. Francis a Sidles Catholic school, Jackie Bill Maze, 12, Acton school,
| Franklin township. 13, St. Patrick's
Patty Prestel, Catholic school. Jenny Rice, 12, West Newton. school, Decatur township. Hulda Lou Thompson, 13, Pike Township school, Pike township. Barbara Timmons, 13, Plackville school, Wayne township. Dorothy Wuensch, 13, St. Cathet|ine's Catholic school.
lican. nomination for Pa Citing his record as depu 8ecutor 20 years ago and wo elected prosecutor, Judge Stark told the governor to “quit being the cap{voters that the next prosecuting | tive of that crowd and let the dele|attorney reeds all the experience | gates nominate Someone who can
“Bill Frager, 13, John Strange
Japanese war leaders will be ar=]
Government - officials made it rem clear such situation ' was rapidly 1 KILLED IN RIOTS developing. CAIRO, May 2 (U. P).—British
STORE MOURS. DAILY
possible,
candidate against regular G, O. P. leaders, Judge Clark asked for support of precinct men and women,
‘Beveridge Raps ‘Medicine Bill
Albert J. Beveridge Jr. candidate for the G. O, P. congressional nomination, criticized the national administration for “furthering bureaucracy by supporting a bill in jcongress that would socialize medicine.” “Such a bill, if passed, would ade ‘further taxation and further regimentation on every American individual, rick-or poor,” he said. “The answer lies in voluntary health. insurance.”
|
first public appearance since last| Pledge Support for /
Veterans’ Bonus
In a joint campaign statement, Virgil H. Fox, candidate for the
senator, and Leslie ¥. Fox, can-
troops and armed Egyptian police didate for the Democratic nominapatrolled the streets of Alexandria's tion riots | pledged support for a bill to provide caused by published reports that! for a state bonus’ for war veterans. Britain intends to maintain air-
for state representative,
They also said they will back
program of. better facilities.
recreational
Democratic nomination for state)
n, The national convention of!
{wi Running as an “anti-machine” 1948 won't pay much attention to a
{Republican governor who loses his senator in 1946.” Turning the heat on the G. O. P. attitude toward OPA, the Evansville candidate sounded a warning that “no Republi congressman who voted for crippling OPA amendments .which recently passed the house can be re-elected this fall” As it passed the lower house, Mr, La Follette said, the OPA bill is national. socialism. It guarantees a profit on every item manufactured or sold, he charged, a guarantee which never existed under free capitalism at any time. Mr. Jenner, he charged, is among {the Republicans on record against the OPA. Ih laying about him with numerous charges against tha Republican state organisation, Mr. La Follette took particular pains to give the Marion county organization a clean bill of health. He said he had found ino evidence that the liquor indus{try in this county had been shaken down ta support any candidate nor that the “Regular Marion county organization is so stupid as to play the palace guard's game.” Reference to Governor Gates’ “impartiality” in the senatorial racé referred to a recent statement by
Two policemen | legislation for more liberal pay-|Senator Raymond E. Willis, third were killed yesterday. Unofficial re- | ments of old age assistance and a| candidate for nomination, that the ports said that five students also
governor had assured him he would [keep “hands off.”
DETROIT GROCERS DEFY UNION DRIVE
DETROIT, May 2 (U. P).—Detroit's 6000 retail grocers and meat dealers today ew down the gauntlet and refused to “pay tribwhich
union, seeks to organize
them,
called upon ldéw enforcement officials for speedier action on. their charges that they are being coerced into joining the union. The teamsters assert that hun dreds of their members have lost jobs because dealers now pick up their own supplies at wholesale warehouses and have warned them
ness,
the Detroit Retail Grocers’ associa tion—attended a stormy mass meet ing last night and roared deflance at the union. They approved a resolution that - “after a reasonable walt" for official action they would turn to the courts for help in their fight against organization. Mayor Edward J. Jeffries Jr., already has ordered a police investigation. of the organizational drive for evidence of, extortion.
ERB maammem mR
9:45 TO 5:18
With bright printed cotton! Here are preity cloths for your
tables in kitchen, dinette, breakfast nook . . . printed cotton
by the yard fo sew your own curtains, tea towels, place mats.
Linen Department, Street Floor
Printed Cotton Tablecloths, 54 x 53 in. — 2.00 3
Printed Cotton Towelingy 17 in. vider 3% Jor
At the same time the dealers
Patricia Kauffman, 13, Crooked i
ute” to the A. P. of L. teamsters -
to sign up or be forced out of busi-
Some 1000 retailers—members of ’
