Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 May 1946 — Page 5
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1946
OAL MINERS * LEAVING JOBS
Output Is Cut Despite U.S,
Seizure Order. (Continued From Page One)
stand by for a White House contime this afternoon. A union spokesman said no time had been set for the conference. He said he believed President TruJointly with
ference some
man would confer
union and carrier representatives.
Across the nation,
this time, scheduled for last Saturday,
request. y
Observers acknowledged that any wage settlement for the trainmen and engineers could not help affecting pending disputes involving more | than 1,000,000 other railroad union Attended DePauw university and members. Strike votes already have S¢rved in the air transport rkers, who also are demanding more than the 16-cent hourly raife rec-
been taken among the other
ommended for the industry. °* Plan City-Wide Strike
In other disputes, the Canadian CHITWOOD ou ALIFIES government intervened in a nine-day-old strike of 37,000 lumbermen, and a joint A. F. of L-C. IL O. strategy council planned a citywide strike of 60,000 Rochester, N.
Y. union members.
At Vancouver, B. C., Chief Justice Gordon Sloan was named to intervene in negotiations between striking loggers and sawmill opera-~ tors. A wage dispute of woodsmen in five Pacific Northwest states further threatened dwindling news-
print stocks,
miles an hour at the start, his fastPICK BLIND WOMAN {est lap was the second at 120224 AS ‘00D NEIGHBOR’ dirt track drivers and king of the
(Continued From Page One)
{s new and best in news and books. | troupe. His Hell Drivers and ChitShe does most of her own house-|wood will appear at the Indiana work, and cooking seems a specialty. | State Fair Sept. 1. To the neighbor who is ill comes
her delicious - vegetable soup.
keeps a current list of shut-ins of |Lap Time MPH our community and each day calls|1 1:14.91 120.144 two of them to exchange pleasant-|2 1:14.86 120.224 ries and spread her bit of cheer.|3 1:15.27 119.570 She is a wise counselor to those|4 1:15.42 119.332 who seek her advice.” Total—5:00.46 119.816
meanwhile, local rail union officials emphasized that only a final and satisfactory settlement would prevent a walkout The original strike call, was postponed five days at Mr, Truman's
She qualification:
R.O.T.C. Winners Will Get Plaque
The annual inspection of the R. O. T. C. unit at Washington high school tomorrow will be highlighted by the presentation of a plaque to the best drilled company. Cecil H. Whaley, captain, O. R. C., inactive, will make the presentation on behalf of Lavelle Gossett post 908, VF. WW: Featuring a cene terpiece of , three stacked rifles, the plaque will bear. an inscription of C.’ Whaley the presentation on one side and the name of the winning company commander on the other. A flowing bronze ribbon bearing the name of the award will be superimpoged. A graduate of Washington high school, Mr. Whaley was a company commander in R, O. T. C. He
mand flying the China - Burma
“hump” during the war, He is junior vice commander of the V. F. W. post.
WITH 119 AVERAGE
(Continued From Page One)
because his trip to Williams Grove, Pa. kept him from the week-end qualifications, Chitwood was at the starting line eight minutes ahead of the 12-noon starting time. Although a wind came in from the south, Chitwood signaled for his start after three practice laps. Hitting a gait of better than 120
miles per hour. Chitwood, one of the nation's top
Eastern circuit, also heads an automobile and motorcycle stunting
Here are the details of Chitwood’s
For .$641,0Q0.
BOARD PLANNED FOR AUDITORIUM
Old- School Site Offered
Indianapolis appeared a step nearer some concrete action on plans for a city memorial auditorium today following agreement by city and county officials to set up an auditorium authority, At a special meeting In Mayor Tyndall's office yesterday about 30 civic and goevinment leaders agreed that demands for an auditorium made creation of a committee nec-
Undey provision of a 1937 law, President John A. Schumacher of the city council and President Addison J. Parry of the county couneil will ask the two councils to appoint two members each to the auditorium authority. Fifth member of the board will be Mayor Tyndall. ; Officidls to Co-ordinate Public officials who attended the meeting warned, however, plans to set up the board did not necessarily mean building of an auditorium was in immediate prospect, The new authority simply will be an official headquarters in which to lodge proposals and suggestions and to co-ordinate and study the need
~ Flees From
BURLINGTON, Iowa, May 23 (U. P)~James Ashe, 27, and his wife, Margje, 20, planned today to hi back.to the “homely” baby she in the hospital because she fcouldn’t bear to think of taking him home and showing him to everyone.”
afternoon.
Mr. Ashe, arriving at the hospital
to take home his wife and 10-day night-stand in her room, have been cute, like you.” wife's action, adding that the bab: was “perfect” in every way. From the Union Station.she tele phoned*® her frantic husband, beg
me, honey.”
safe-keeping, then into the police station. Mrs. Ashe was there, waiting. “Oh, darling,” she sobbed. s0 mixed up. I don't know why did it. Take me home.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ____
Couple Reunited After Wife
'Homely" Baby
God had blessed me with a sweet ag! pretty little boy. “But, darling, I guess I just didn’t deserve to be made happy. 1 failed you so terribly, my darling. I'm not even worthy of you,
The couple .was reunited in a Burlington police station almost eight hours after she disappeared from a Chicago hospital yesterday
old son, had found a note on the asking plaintively why the baby “couldn’t|®*teR my He expressed amazement at his The young mother got as far as Burlington and changed her mind. ging him to “please come and get Ashe called Burlington police, asked them to hold his wife for
chartered a plane. A few hours later he burst
“I'm
She said she had planned to visit
“I don’t even deserve to be alive
Y! The note was signed, “I love you,
that baby,” he said. think he's the most beautiful baby in the world.”
HITS GAPITOL AVE. | RESURFACING JOB
(Continued From Page One)
for an auditorium, Offer to sell Site
“citizens” committee”
when the property was
ago.
Times § 1 GREENCASTLE, at DePauw university. Her attend
waka, and Merilyn Smythe of High land Park, Ill
were discontinued during the war.
It was regarded as probable the new auditorium authority, once appointed, would in turn set up a to go into every angle of the auditorium idea. At yesterday's meeting, State Life Insurance co. representatives said the company was prepared to sell the city the old Shortridge high school site on which to build an auditorium. Company spokesmen said the company would sell the site for $641,000, exactly what it paid
purchased from the school city nearly 20 years
May 22.—Jane Hickam, senior from Spencer, will reign as May Day queen Saturday
ants will be Martha Lang of Misha-
In honor of mothers of DePauw students, the traditional ceremonies
her sister, Mary Ann Dyke, a nurse at Mare Island, Cal, “but I couldn't run away from you." Mr. Ashe took his young bride in his arm. “She's all .right now,” he murmured. “It is amnesia or something. She didn’t know what she was doing.” Mr. Ashe, a navy veteran, first learned of his wife's disappearance when he drove up to the Illinois Central hospital to take .his wife and their new baby back home. Wife Had Disappeared Hospital attendants met him at the door, and fear struck his heart
{when he saw their faces. His wife
SPENCER GIRL NAMED nad disappeared, they told him. DEPAUW MAY QUEEN
She left behind a six-page note (addressed to “the most adorable and precious husband in the world and to the sweetest and Kindest and most understanding mother in the world.” “My heart is ‘just aching and throbbing with pain and tears and unhappiness,” the note read. “I could have been so terrifically happy and T would have been if
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SCIENCE SOON MAY CONQUER LOCKJAW
(Continued From Page One)
ger and Dr. Thomas C. Grubb of the research laboratories of the Vick Chemical Co. at the meeting here today of the Society of American Bacteriologists. The chemical they used is named clavacin. It is produced by an organism isolated from a manure. Use of an antibiotic drug to neutralize a germ poison is a new way to use these substances. Heretofore they have been used -as remedies that checked the growth of germs in the body or killed them. From the soil around potted plants in a greenhouse, University of Pennsylvania scientists have obtained two new antibiotics which show promise of developing into remedies against typhoid and paratyphoid fever, dysentery, cholera, anthrax and tuberculosis. As remedies these antiblodics
test tube good results in laboratory animals as treatment for the pneumonia caused by Friedlander’s bacillus. Especially encouraging is the fact that as chemists have purified these antibiotics more and more, their action against germs has increased, but their toxic effect has
ducted
tol ave. is being repaved between 16th and Michigan sts. “It's been my experience that it's better to pay the added cost of concrete In view of its lower maintenance expense and longer life,” Mr, Murray said. He also expressed belief concrete results in fewer repairs and this “less public inconvenience.” Concrete Superior He sald the city has recognized the superior durability of concrete in planning to insert concrete strips at bus stop intersections on asphalt streets. Such strips already have been installed on Central ave. City Engineer Thomas Jacobi said the new rock asphalt surface on Capitol ave. (not yet completed) would remain smooth “for years to come.” The fina! asphalt coating probably won't be applied to the strip until after Memorial day. Capitol will be opened, however, to Speedway traffic, even if it rolls over the course underlayer, poured before the glossy finish is added. The bid on the current rock asphalt job was, $44,413. Concrete would have cost $55,269.
UNION CHURCH WILL FETE EX-GI'S TONIGHT
Neighborhood veterans will be
honored at a banquet given tonight by the Union Congregational church in the recreation hall, 17th and Rembrangt sts,
Memorial services will be confor four neighborhood youths killed in world war II. Two ex-army chaplains, the Rev. Clarence Baldwin, former pastor of the Union Congregational church, and the Rev. Marcus Johnson, pastor of
the First Congregational church,
will speak. (Advertisement)
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dividuals whose only desire was to spend county money. . “This group decided a new county council would have to come in which could be dictated to, and for
pockets to set up a system of into determine the accuracy of requests.
the county auditor refused to aid this project in any way and, in fact, they tried to block such action,” Mr, charges. ‘Tried to Kill Power’ “Later the county auditor (Ralph Moore) and the
Reforms Are Cited statement cited reforms achieved by the pouncil in the) financing of Sunnyside sanatarium by setting up a separate purchasing department for the institution ana taking its operation “out of politics.” Mr. Hollingsworth said the coun-| cil last year was asked to appro-| priate $1,189.407 for the county's 19456 budget. ! “Actually the council ounly appropriated $736.964." he said, com-| menting that “we did step on sothe- | body's toes” and these jndividuals |
ENEMIES’ ACCUSED |= BY HOLLINGSWORTH
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took steps to “defeat us at the 3 ll. and Company Jewelers |: ANDERSON MAN KILLED X ANDERSON, Ind., May 22 (U. P.). : apd i —Ray Fisher, 49, Anderson, was Lower Floor + 4 * * 5 N. Illinois St. © | = struck and killed by a hit-run mo- £ torist as he walked along state . ! 1: highway 9, south of here early to- | HHI HTN nc 3
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