Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1946 — Page 1
¥ 4
*
AY 18, 1848 ind Ralz Lare
TUAL FRIEND, ERE. I HAVE | TWO BIRDS TO
46 BY NEA SERVICE 'INC.|
srockett Johnson
, Mr O'Malley, broke the window.
He proposed that a United Na-| Business closed shop as the hour ji ioq to near 60 degrees as the WASHINGTON, May 20 (U. P). : i : : ) : tions food administration be cre-| approached for’ the visit of the|yo. "tor tne ceremony neared. | Csiravan Arthur J. Altmever, of tor of First Presbyterian church, will officiate. ; ated to take over the food and ag-: President, the first time in the| wpe college had installed loud-| ine social - security board, today The body of one of Indiana's greatest authors will be
agencies TM REG US PAT OFF tribution, ieburn Van Buren P. Anderson idea of better
EET WAS yea CK IN ZE FACE -- A chinery to
orderly hunger areas,
\ CUFF IN ZE TEETH. EF WE COULD AN ABSINTHE ZE
—By Bushmiller
a —————— MY FAULT IF HE DOESN'T
ANSWER ATE
|
EL
SURE TO ET WRK \T WAS
Jae LM AEC UB PAT OFF)
-By V. T..Hamlin
THINK THS 16 THE IO OF ATLANTIS. } I E'D BETTER GET ET TO YANK OUR. | IME= TRAVELERS ouT!
—-
¥
Mr, ,the surplus food producing nations.
present
HORI Hine is ec srs Private Funeral Planned
Administrator Would Direct to give him a neighborly welcome as he drove here from Kansas City
3 . y : By MERRIMAN SMITH i { United Press Staft Correspondent : : 8 Ln LIBERTY, Mo, May 20.—This historic old college town, as much : 3 : : : - ;
Distribution-of Supplies The President's party left the — ——— Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas Cily|old friends. With a pair of Secret To Hungry. at 9 a. m. (Indianapolis time) for|gervice men, he strolled through -
WASHINGTON, May 20 (U, P.). 4500. Here, in the crowded chapel|pefore 7 a. m., then returned to his —Former President Herbert Hoover Of the college, he received his hon- pote] suite to shake more hands beproposed today that the United OTary degree shortly before noon as fore the party climbed into cars « Us
Nations set up a food A8MINistra=| ment, of the school. It was his third| yiperty about two miles north] tor to direct the world distribution such degree from a Missouri school g¢ the Missouri river and 13 miles of food to hungry nations. |since he entered the White House’ from Independenece, Mr. Truman's |
Mr. Hoover made his suggestion] Liberty had readied a friendly ,me town, dates its organized his- |
fo an emergency session of thelygng variety, for Mr. Truman has| United Nations- food and agric l-|visited here many times in years ture organization, which deals with | past and this town of old-line Dem- | : the square and flags fluttered from 2 Cents long-range planning. He has re- ocrats knows him well. It was here oct of To Bi Bl Slash From 3to2C
cently returned from a world sur-'he wound up his campaign for the| 1 an's party arrived. The sky was | At House Hearing. vey of food conditions. vice presidency. ' :
ricultural activities of the United | town's history. that a president has|c aarers about the campus for the | Nations Relief and Rehabilitation come here. ; JSpeR of crowds camp to enter | Urged congress to reduce the 3 per Administration ‘on next Sept. 1 Mr. Truman was up early today . “when this immediate world crisis after visiting last evening -with (Continued on Page 5—Column 8) rate to 2 per cent. should have passed.” oz —
UNRRA's operations are sched- : ; & uled to end in Europe Jan. 1 and U S MAY SEIZE DAR Moves to jon deposit with the Jedrst tread in the Far East in March, 1947, i k | ury nearly $7,000,000,000 of unem= ; E t » ployment funds. This is the equivSpeaks at Meeting Delete Wh | te {alent of more than four years em-= Mr. Hoover spoke after the 18-| | nation food and agriculture meeting |
. | i rere A ( | “BEven if we should have as many I ir len rt | st lause .. three and one-half million unTruman that the world shortage of \
grain and livestock will continue Action by Midweek Is - beyond the coming harvest. Hinted in Strike. (U. P.)—A move to admit Negro|contribution rate of less than 2 “Everyone realizes now that the artists to Constitution hall will be pgr cent without being obliged to worldwide scarcity of cereals cannot, WASHINGTON, May 20 (U. P.. made at the 55th continental con-|draw upon accumulated reserves,” be completely overcome with the|__a government official close to the|gress of the Daughters of the Ameri- | he said.
1946 harvests,” Mr. Truman wrote.|coal dispute predicted today thal can Revolution which opened here! , Asks Unified Setup “Deficits in livestock products will President Truman would seize the today. Sot the 7B evs and \years old. A bronchial obstruction which had confined him continue a long time.” {nation’s 300 bituminous mines bY| A 17-woman committee has pre-’ He loi € House ; Way: ‘to his bed two months was the cause of his death
The President, indirectly" rebuk-| midweek. : ing critics of this country's famine! The two-week work truce ends tion of a clause reading “white
lief efforts, said the Americal Saturday. % rob hazed. + artists only” from the lease of the|gecyrity act, that employers now|™ Soir me emt | Then death came. She and the three nephews are his only «people haye shown “an admirable] His view was not shared, hoW=|p A. R.-owned hall in Washington, y : of. 2 i : 3 Lp } { ad : {are allowed a credit of up to 2.7 id . . . immediate survivors. willingness to do their share in the! ever by some administration offi- pc, “} t r : : great humanitarian task of pre-|cials. They still hoped for a re-| yo. oi gtiempt to present it| Po cent of their tax, if their state onvicCT, ITe Rewea In rison Mr. Tarkington, who won the Pulitzer prize twice, never
venting famine in other lands.” | sumption of negotiations between =... 4400 delegates for a vote has enacted an unemployment com- To Clear Way for Pardon Pleans: away from Indianapolis because “it is a part of me.”
Raise Export Program | United Mine Workers (A. F. of L.). that this credit be made 18 per “We have progressively raised our| With Mr. Truman in Missouri export program as worl needs be- and White House attention still] The Negro ban issue came into e repeated his al for a - : “ "i. 1 : . Ce " I hon trae {national Promirience When el Tie. reps ated le eo 2 Bria tig ay Correspondent last week when: his first wife's di-|and Seawood” in Kennebunkport, Maine, occasionally trav gressively at the same time our] bles, no developments were expected D. A.-R. prevented Marian Ander- pensation system. He said there 300) withered SE oar gwn Sonsamplion of wheat,” Mr. in the coal case for a day or two. son, distinguished contralto, from. perent defects” in a state by : y ruman said.
Mr. Hoover suggesied that. aj
single international focd admini : de SA ig » | : i trator be appointed with a small! til midnight Saturday. | unconstitutional, illegal ‘ErOUD” BY|emolovment insurance system. that} Bit he is looking forward to peti-| Nad been his. wife for nearly 20) At the time of his death he had completed about three-
advisory committee.
He proposed that the new inter-. Tnere have been unofficial in-| the committee of dropping “an iron national
. ] : . I ® 5 . ¥ : : : l * T PY . ; | : : ; & ] : FORECAST: Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Cooler tonight. ; 1 : - — ii Ey 3 Yr : ———— — a — rppps——— meme ——————————— —— m——————————————— - ri —— h——— rah ha. . tga PRICE FIVE CENTS: : Pscrirps —sowarnY VOLUME 57—NUMBER 60 . ' MONDAY, MAY 20, 1946 , a A ajulloy wt) or de . : !
| A majority of this committee, ! . > : . : for release. . : otk : Hoover said, should represent Was believed that Mr. Lewis would | who added, “we are not anticipating|y ve one national system of un- | She had married him when he urday Evening Post. Although his eyesight was failing he
agency take over the gications that the miners would curtain between the D. A. R. and present duties of the combined | ot work for the government ex- tion against wage loss due to un Anglo - American - Canadian f00d| cept under a contract such as was board and other international| negotiated after the mines
2 | ne . were . a | be : . . j ! : > lia GE SEE 7 0 PRISONER GOES A Capital Ides IRAN CIVIL WAR “Missouri Waltz’ ~NEW JAP CABINET in Silos Secretary of Agriculture Clinton on pressure today for settlement of
also supported the ihe railroad dispute before the ON HUNGER STRIKE For Libraries, IS ‘WELL IN HAND Composer Kills FORMED BY YOSHID fate George, Ade, Humutist,
assure ' efficient and{ Thomas J. Harkins, assistant distribution of food to|grand chief of the Brotherhood of 3
As Truman Receives Degree
|
llike the President's home town as two peas in a pod, shut up shop today |
wy » a ——
(to receive an honorary degree from William Jewell college. { Zremtm—— —— —or a. 8 9 . A. |
Relatives; Friends fo Attend Simple Rites; Body to Rest Near James Whitcomb Riley
(Photos, Pages 3 and 13; Editorial, Page 14)
the 13-mile drive to this town of Kansas City's downtown district
a highlight of the 97th commence-|¢,: the short drive here.
Only relatives and near friends will attend last rites for Booth Tarkington, world famous Hoosier novelist who died last night at his home, 4270 N. Meridian st. The rites, to be conducted at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow at the Tarkington residence, will be “brief and simple,” relatives said today. The Rev. Russell Galloway, assistant pas-
| welcome, though hardly of the brass yoy to 1824, the same <y off dg | : : pendence became a town. ‘Social Security Chief Urges
There were bunting and flags on |partly cloudy and -the mercury,
laid to rest in Crown Hill cemetery, not far from the grave or his close friend of earlier literary years, James Whitcomb Riley. He will be interred in a family plot where his parents : land his daughter are buried. Sixteen honorary pallbearers were named today. They are John T. Jameson, Donald B. Jameson and Booth T. Jameson, all nephews; Dr. Joseph Tarkington and Arthur Tarkington, cousins; Francis T. Mayberry, Cornell W. Acheson, Harry Kylie, LeRoy Miller, Warrack Wallace, Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch, John Peter Frenzel, Thomas Sheerin, John C. Appel, Allen C. Appel, and Reilly G. Adams, all of Indianapolis. . ‘
| cent federal unemployment tax
He disclosed that states now have
ployers’ contributions.
: | employed, the average state would ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, May 20| be able to finance benefits with a
Spent Summers in Maine : The mild-mannered “Gentleman from Indiana” was 76
pared a resolution calling for digo] means committee, now holding Booth Tarkington . . . world renowned “Gentleman from Indiana” |
general hearings on the social] who died last night. His wife, Mrs. Susannah Tarkington, was at his bedside
pA wh : { mine operators and John L. Tewis at tomorrow's session. {pensation law. Altmeyer proposed
|He died just four miles from the scenes of his boyhood. He
Committee Called ‘Illegal’
| cent. had divided his residences between his Indianapolis home
By LOUISE McAVOY record. That charge was elinfinated|
May 20.—A yorce became final. leling abroad.
rm | = . ] PO a barber under life sentence Fis ner wr yesterday, in Ye Hi} Nu: He returned here from his summer home last December. | Under the truce ordered by Mr. singing in the an ter barr ¢ : {ding ceremony ever perform or | : : ; ack k , | Lewis after a six-week strike, the concert pianist Hazel Scott. ite because OF Alieee iniacrent murder of a taxi driver in 1914 to-| 2. "i nate of the Raiford prison, | Ordinarily he would have gone back to Kennebunkport May
| mines will remain in operation un-| The committee Was termed “an'g.ccic in 5 state-by-state un- day’ is honeymooning alone in his|p. was re-united to the woman who 1, but his illness prevented the trip.
May Not Work - Mrs. Julius Y. Talmatge, Athens. . ccoia] security board has be- years before she learned he was a, : . E sae Spee } 3 joning the Florida pardon board| < f a novel that was to.run in serial form in the SatIf the mines should be seized, it Ga., president-general of the DAR. | convinced that we should t he parven hunted man—and a marfied man. | fourths of a novel
’ 5 : ; ” ; C. A. Boyett, who escaped and ” [call the'U. M. W. policy commit~ any trouble. employment insurance in order t0|started a new life in a eatown | known as S. H. Powers.
| also was writing all the script and was to be in charge of | tee to Washington. Mrs. Talmadge was accused BY gq nich the workers of this country
: Yesterday she stood with him be-| .. 3. i. , p . y Pa, during 30 years of freedom.| oop the roof of an outdoor vis-| directing a 200th anniversary pageant for his alma mater,
f tec- i ; fw : . the maximum amount of protec-|hadq heen informed by the board it! itors porch on the lawn of the Princeton university.
a would not consider his release while | | : : dim . (Continued on Page 5—Column 1)! employment.” he said. | there was a bigamy charge on his| (Continued on Page 5—Column 6) He entered Princeton in his junior year, after attending EE ER}SEYY— rr —— er etre ———— Pydye university. At the
!
international ma-|Thursday strike deadline. : cous . . 3 | WT am tol Self Under Train , ; {famed illustrator, who were his a ier. a ay wilwardens Calls Inmate’s| Public librarians harassed By ihe) gpgkesman Says Fighting PONTIAC, Mich, May 20 uP). 5 Liberals, 4 Progressives fraternity brothers in the Sigma
New York there wes a possibility number of books long overdue: | —James Royce, 65, who as James |Chl chapter house.
Could Expand Board that the railroad ‘strike dispute Dizziness ‘Natural.’ | Declare a week's embargo on. Limited to Skirmishes. | Royce Shannon wrote almost 600 Are Included. | Mr. Tarkingon, who just last
He suggested that either the would be settled by tonight. i S. ) 2a 3 United Nation food and| Mr, Harkins said he definitely ex- ST. LOUIS, May 20 (U. P).—The| The public library here did it. | LONDON, May 20 (U. P.). — An/an4 “When Day Is Done,” was re- TOKYO, May 20 (U. P.).—Japa-| Lp 00 of Josephine,” made his last
agricujture » organization could be pected a settlement before the self-proclaimed seven-day fast of} Sos were returned at the Tate| rranian embassy spokesman said | vealed today to have taken his own nese Premier - Designate Shigeru, pic appearance May 7. The poe0
given authority over world food truce period expires on Thursday.) james E. Bundren to get out of supplies, or the present combined, With two paralyzing walkouts! ’ on
problem.
Sir J Boyd Orr, direct f : a record of several convictions, was ir John Bovd Orr irector o YA Starts Condemnation
fines | songs including’ “Missouri Waltz” | | year produced a best selling novel,
1000 a day. These were books
hich penalties had ac today that the situation in Iran life by stepping into the path of & Yoshida today succeeded in forming] casion was the world premiere of w .
seemed to be well in hand with ‘no freight train. la new cabinet with appointment of & dramatized version of “Alice | “An inquest was ordered but wit- |
city jail and rejoin his wife and|cumulated, some of the fines equal-
food board could be expanded to in- threatened this week, tt tion | : " Adams,” at Civic theater. The novel clude major food exporting or im- was suffering EE ot a a two children at Hammond, Ind. re-|ling the prices of the books. | more than local Skimishes De" nesses said it appeared certain the | Hiroshi Nasu to the ministry off ad won him one of his Puliider porting nations now excluded. strike-nerves in its history. ceived little sympathy from au-| [ilony eur SUNS and composer deliberately hurled him | agriculture and forestry. ; | prizes 25 years ago. Mr. Hoover told the delegates me ritalin thorities today. ‘DETECTIVE RESIGNS, | The spokesman said Premier elf, onie Be, Backs. He had been | avast of fhe few abivet 03. | He was born in Indianapolis July hat ec eal. i) y "iy id : | | . cials e as [ 29, 2 $a, SUNRRA Dirsstor Serer ¥ Walden 85. Hensiey Sil el 25 YEARS ON FORCE Ahmad Ghavam was determined, ive of Detroit, Mr, Royce first for tomorrow Blom, Whe Son Liss Joss H. LaGuardia favors his suggestion | ical examination showed the con- | Inot to yield any ‘demands by the » LX, RO) “110 . 2 Stevenson Tarkington, Civil War that some other organizations ab-| } dition of the prisoner, who wants| Detective Sergeant Edward H. | V |began writing in collaboration with| The government will be headed | soldier, and Elizabeth Booth Tarksorb UNRRA's duties Sept. 1 f five-year sentence! | Azerbaijan leaders which violated |..." 1 other, Mrs. Eliza Shannon,|by Mr. Yoshida and a cabinet of|ington. The novelist, who served fory 3 BRAS Sn oe on) Sept FOR CENTURY BLDG 8 patole fom 8.0% Jear % | Brown, a veteran of 25 years In| the Iranian constitution. | Detroit poetress, and achieved his|five liberals, four progressives and| one term in the Indiana general asy 8 now c s only or theft, . So- : ’ 20 per cent of the world’s food 8 mr Hensley said he thought the Indianapolis police department, The Tehran radio said the 50- gq. rea] success in writing the |four members of the house of peers. sembly, was named for an uncle.
today announced his resignation. | viet embassy yess qerjed that tne | music for Chauncey Olcott's “Sha-| Earlier, Joji Rayashi, secretary| Newton Booth, who was a governor Sgt. Brown began as a patrolman, Russian evacuation of Azerbd io |meen Dhu” in 1912. Among songs|to Mr. Yoshida, said allied head-|0f California and a United States’ working his way up to dispatcher, | Was conditional upon Iran gIVINR|,. yw ote for that hit musical was|quarters had called Mr. Nasu to a| senator in the early "70s.
Bundren, 33-year-old burglar with
the United Nations food and agri- “chiseling, a little. We take the Russia 51 per cent of the shares in|... . hat! He had been married twice, first g oanizati | i to him and don't wait to see/and was appointed to the detective J ' (“Irish Lullaby. conference, but did not say for what| 2 ’ culture organization, warned that! Proceedings for Structure. ood, " B s with it.” | bureau 18 months ago. His plans a joint oil company. | "Mr. Royce's daughter, Dael Royce, |purpose. He gave the impression, | to Laurel Louisa Fletcher, member the- world food shortage will con-.| { what he doe . | FoF Bs iinmediate future, he said, Meanwhile, Radio Tabriz called? Da |
tinue three or four years. The government today filed a con-| Bundren said the fast had, left
or fons Sn — : U. S. OFFICER HELD | court for acquisition of the Century commented: “That's a NYE cree near Thorntown. > | pulse attacking Iranian revere HORN 1TH QUALIFIER; ————— ——————— i # 2» IN WOMAN'S DEATH | Administration. Bundren formerly lived at West MAY SUSPEND TRAININ [frontier offensive toward Tabriz, Tarkington's Characters
is a New York patent attorney, |however, that headquarters would of an Indianapolis banking family.
30d, TORIE Lobe silonayle in Mr. (Continued on Page 5—Columnu 3)
: im {vay Sugay |upon the men, women and children | demnation Suit in federal district|him “a little dizzy. The warden|are to go to his cabin on Sug Flot Azerbaijan province today to r
| building in behalf of the Veterans condition with him.” troops. The troops, it said, began a|
’
FRANKFURT May 20 (0 py] Located on the northwest corner Frankfort, Til STOCKHOLM, May 20 (U. P.).—|yran's “second city,” at 5 p. m. AVERAGES 123 980 ye © °|of Pennsylvania and Maryland sts. ” GLC _ | A three-week suspension of army gunday. ! . ° “® * U. 8. army authorities today €on-| the building: would house all VA LOCAL TEMPERATURES | training to provide additional har-| «Bloodshed has started,” the hin Still Live In U S Literature fined .to quarters an American offi-| state offices in Indianapolis, now, 6 a.m. ... 60 10 a m. ... 60 | vest labor this fall is being con-| Azerbaijan broadcast said. J oy . . . cer, whose name was withheld, | scattered at three points through- 7 a. m. 59 11 a.m. ... 61 |sidered by military authorities, De-| «azerbaijan troops and armed ci- Pilots Shaw's 39, '40 Race SHERLEY — : nis Iamidly moved tn. thE pending investigation into the! out the city. 8 a.m. ... 58 12 (noon) .. 64 |fense Minister Allan Voougot Bis- | . . Siluh Wadi By § ‘ when his family ov! | Filed by U. S. District Attorney| 9 a. m. 50 1p. m. .. 66 Lclosed today. | (Continued on Page 5—Column 2) Winner at Speedway. Newton Booth Tarkington is dead, homestead that he loved so fondly death of a New York woman whose Howard Caughrar and Ewing ko. - —- ee trp . - but the characters he created are|in later life, at 11th and Pennsylnude body was found outside the wright special assistant to the at- | Ted Horn became the seventh | still among the living. vania sts. He attended Shortridge
| . { i “ " p U. S. headquarters compound. torney general, the suit lists a con- | Medical Science to Tell of 4 Conquests, driver to qualify for the “500” to- |& penrod and Sam, Alice Adams, | high school, then called Indianapo-
The dead woman was Gertrude | demnation deposit of $625,000. Mr, Knapp, 38,; Port Richmond, Staten Island, a war department civilian clerk. She arrived in the European
day when he completed his 10-mile | the Gentleman from Indiana, Mon-|lis high school, when it was downrun at an average speed of 123980 |ciour Beaucaire, the Magnificant| town.
Caughran emphasized tl i s . . * » WwW are a ry a od Preventives Against Disease Made in QF jue per hour. Ambersons are eternally alive in| Hundreds of his fictional episodes
still are negotiating with owners of Horn’s run, the first official test | American literature. are patterned after Indianapolis.
| : ! i i *" /, Wi he eight-cylinder| - thei d to the H foremost in ter of theater only six days before her | the building. He said the suit was | dv { lv us war years they worked under “top of the day, was t They owe their endurance e Was a ’ : : By JANE STAFFORD proved and ready for early use. | 3 terpre denth, “subject to the rights of the ten- yd Service Medical Writer | Here is the list: | secrecy.” Maserati of the Boyle team. This | fact that Mr. Tarkington was a dyed- | Midwest city life. This is es ech ly Provost Marshal Lt. Col. Red-| ants.” DETROIT, May 20.—Four more | : At the meeting this week they is the car in which Wilbur Shaw, in the.wool professional author 24|true in his trilogy, “Growth.”
mond J. Connolly of New ‘York said| The building, now occupied by medical conquests are being pre-| Miss Knapp fell from a second|60 tenants, has eight stories and a sented in their preliminary stages
| “1, Vaccine against influenza. | will reveal some of the advances DOW general manager of the Speed- | nurs a day, 365 days a year from! As he regretfully saw the city
2 Vaccine against rinderpest, jeu made which promise peacetime Way, won the race in 1939 and 1940. | 1499 to the end of his life. He was| transform from a cozy, neighborly Sh
floor window of the officer’s billet| basement, It was constructed in| to the world this week: dread cattle disease. benefits, aw was at the wheel in the 1941} 0 of the world's most industrious) community into a grimy, tense
onto a concrete back ‘porch, where| 1900, whence it got its name. It| yaacine to protect against parrot’ 3. Vaccine against dengue fever,| Food, most pressing problem 1
n race when he wrecked at 375 miles. | o iors wei Horn's time placed his starting | with him writing was a business, (Continued on Page 3—Column 1)
she was found in a shock state. {was evaluated by government ap-|g sittacosis. mosquito-borne malady. this hungry world today, may. be- : —————————— —e pion — | praisers. oi yn 15 irotect azatnst rab.| 4. Globulin from human blood to come more plentiful or more nour- | Position aa inside - ae Mure Yow as well as an art. Unlike many wi TIMES INDEX ; | At present, state VA offices here bit EF 8 | protect children against measles. ishing through studies by the| |iere are the detalls of Xo | American literary men he achieved| Quick Possession Available oj 3% Joctied al the Neisrans SWEpHitl A new antibiotic (Penicillin-like) | 5. Globulin for protection against scievtists hore is Veoh Jee: Lap Time MPH | ey 8 dianas| On Superb South Side Home on j on Cold Spring rd., the rails | — " . «| infectious hepatitis, popularly organizms in the so ; . Amusements. 6 Inside Indpls. 13! puilding, 307 W. Washington st. Jrug serve in We Tesh babe MESH known as jaundice from one of its|plants grow. Others reduce the food 1. J3A 20% was published. in 1899, climaxing a Because new business takes the Eddie Ash ... 11] Jane Jordan, 23 and on the state fairgrounds. { fungi, tuber > P symptoms. supply of the world by the spoilage 3 1:12.46 124.206 gruelling trial and error period in owner to another city, he is wit. Neg Erouks.. 13| Ruth Milieu, : 13) —tw-rermi os Sens Hieria EE atment for"&nthrax| 8 Vaccine against typhus fever, they cause. Still others, some of J 123.762 | Which Mr. Tarkington did little but| ing Wo make & quigk Sea} Bb ia Business «.... 8 Movies ...... 6 SEEK ROOMS | af poss e we | 7. Two new remedies for malaria those that live in the intestional " ake SOS 123.980 develop his literary muscles. This post This 0 n of the city. Classified 20-22{ Obituaries . .. uy a eW weapons against dis- | better than guanine. - tract of man and animals, produce | Tolal—=4:05¢ ®" and “Monsieur Beaucaire.” which | sectio ; Comics . . 23 J. E. O'Brien. 10) FOR RACE CROWD— | ih v Yeap vi 8. Streptomycin for one kind of some of ‘the vitamins needed for i HINING. STRIKE had been published in McClure's| 3 oilrrvey, near Garfield park Crossword ves 20, OC. Othman 13) e With hotels filled to capacity ose by nim are to be dis- meningitis, urinary tract infections|good nutrition, 10TH LIG & . established his reputation. It was a basement, Peerless aimee, Beibowms 1 4) Radio Aa # for race time, the Indianapolis cussed at the first post-war meet- | and possibly tularemia, undulant| New useful knowledge may be KENTON, O, May 20 dh By reputation that never flagged, never alr het; tol! ower, 1A Be Ee eo Jus : y - § he | Charles Brown was recovering to-| dimmed. Ta ay mpieielt" | p _|fever and other unconquered dis expected on these problems and the | Cha n Cohveurior.. Butea Sgain ‘Ss; [ung OF the Society of Smerieat Bae day after being struck by lightning need ty
Europe Today 14 Mrs. Roosevelt 13] Fashions. . 18-19] Science .....13| Seeking the aid of residents to | teriologists here beginning today. | Ase
Forum
G. 1. Rights , Meta Given, , Ernie Hill ... In Indpls. ...
PINE STRAKS ALWAYS OUR SECIATTY | ip “unis edition of The Times. disease weapons actually in use or bers of this society. wth “the | penicillin and streptomyein. brary, J
related one of what foods germs Aga He was a 100 pes san Howser. \hrubs. Per Arrang to ddition to these advances;|themselves need for best growth so Saturday for the tenth time in his| more importantly ‘an ianapolis | i ; In addition to these promises for| In a lo ! Wow Judie itd rm ves or Rerm warfare, publicly scoffed at scientists can study them outside |life. Brown, already known as the| Hoosier. He was born July 29, 1869 classifica 17 Sports ... 10-11} “e Register with the bureau and | edies of major disease plaguesjby a number of high-ranking|the body to devise new ways of | “human lightning rod,” was knocked [in a small house in the 500 block 10} Waspingion ‘ 4 become a member of the have - been miade available in the scientists in the early days of the| killing them, new vaccines to pro- unconscious by the lightning as he|of N. Meridian st. The site is mw | " 4 Geo. Weller. . 1 “hospitality committee. war years since 1 when the bac-| WAT, has been the full-time and|tect against their attack, and reap | was receiving a book from the li-|occupied by the Stratford apar 4 sprit n bs
7 Women's”, 18-19} § 12 often dangerous job of many mem- | bigger ‘harvests of antibjotics like braridn in the Kenton public 1i-! ments. ® Clipgghe coupon on Page teriologists last t. ‘These are B Jo ! i - £ He was still in swaddling
14| Serial ....... 12] house the overflow of visitors,
: " ‘ ~
A 4 ro \ . . 3 a ie : : i “. iy Wi Li ’ PE poe # : i iy : ‘ . - 4 i x Side 5 ’ A i ps Sa —~T Eh i od a . a
