Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1946 — Page 7
A | NE 11, 1946
11; y ° ht r \ v it if last night's 0 expect of them {ter two down in
, and the Derby-
went down swing- ’ w =
- VILLE B-BMH O.A 3 E TT 0 4 0% Yo 1 23:00 4 1 1 1.00 4°'1 §1 3% 1'%¢ 3 1-1 0 32.0 3 0°) 4:00 4:0 11 01 1 0:06:33 1 0 8 370"2" 0 3 ¢ Ts 7 3.1 APoLIs B RH O A&R 3 0 1 4 0.0 4 0 06 3 no 4 1 O03 1 1 4:00 1:0. 0 4° 0 1 9 0-0 3 0 } 4 0-0 3 1 3 1.3.9 ov 0 ¢ -3 3 0 0-0 4 9 1 0 0.0 00 oO 0 0 00 0 i. 32 3m 9.1 ‘ecil in eighth, wise 000 003 001—4 yy 000 000 110-3 -Flair, LaForest 3,
elaj. Two-base hits ner. Three-base hitse—Shofner. Sacrifice s—Louisville 9, Indiballs—Off Wilson 1, 3y Wilson 11, Cecil 5, 8 innings, Barrett. 0 '—By Cecil (Walters, ld « pitches—Cecil 3, ll. Umpires—Hurley, Time—2:09,
Batting
H HR RBI Pel 64 2 25
4 33 343 3} 1.60.1 393 2 21 5 3 307 5 11 33 1 3» 4 9 26 26 0 5 .292 1 20 41 1 11 9 5 13 2¢ 0 7 282 8 31 51 7 48 24 2 33 55 4 30 213 4 151 1 3M 8 14 20 3 15 .204 1-2 20 .0 152 83 5-0 3 1% Sisti 3, Turchin 3,
k, Brady, Drews. Sisti 8, Wentzel 8, Brady 4, Turchin 3, Blackburn, lzel 7, Sisti 7, Tur- . English 2, Shupe, iddle. .
registered another ghth on Ed Turi Wayne Blackiple ‘to deep right Colonels added a ninth against Red $s (wo-base wild ng fly and Welaj's ) fly to Drews in Colonels gambled got away with it. astimers collected ad nine runners y three by the
er game played in day Kansas City aukee Brewers in aukee, 6 to 4. The Paul Saints were ineapolis and To8 were not sched-
unter tics
nut-brown brow, in his train of
if he didn't need ldn't have fought e would have re- » service. Well,
ing it rained up umon got up at 5 at 5:30. It was eamon went back ased at the prosep. At 6:30 he by Louis, {fully pad. “Come on,” opped. Let's get
vould have pren’ for a change,
le Indianapolis Times Daily News, Inc.
ESULTS ernard Docusen, 141, d out Johnny Wil. ry, Als. (1), 155, Detroit,
Graw, Gee, 163, Milwau-
OVERS 5 $9.95 INT oorecy in and Ray Sts.
BALL—
FIELD
E AT 6:30 vs. Louisville
or Information oy 4458
|
TIRE C0.
dealer In Indian es used tires. Our joctional repairs. ily and Sundays TA-0738 d on N. Miinols
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5:30 600 East)
smh
J TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1946
ol
ribe |
A A SA
Suspend Policemen in Lottery Probe
3.
LT 1 t | | | \
i ; ; ’ { : day. Will the mornyig, say about BOST <a J 0:30, be convenient?" : | WN #8 8 SmE% He was punctual and waited a few
ELUDES POLICE
‘Myriad of Clues Surrounds | Whitcomb Killing.
(Continued From Page One)
randy
©
minutes in. an antechamber before being admitted to Mr. Whitcomb's
office which overlooks Boston's financial district. $ The two conversed for about,
seven minutes and then, suddenly, (four shots were heard. The vanel {door opened and. the visitor emerged. He carried a leather briefease in one hand and a pistol in
| THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
. . ’ »
¢ a
’ y
; : | tall, Our ‘job is to continue } | torfous in Indiana.”
NOMINATION IN {i ; | Appeal to G. 0. P. Group JENNER DECLARE | Despite the optimism of ; ! ‘Jenner camp and the fact it
(Continued From Page One)
and his not being renominated is no| Senator Press elub, affront to him. The party just! editors committed to his support, wanted a younger man.” -.* lintensified the preconvention cam- : _.-|paign with a half-page advertiseMr. Jenner tfaced his selection pep in state newspapers. way back to the time when it was The advertisement. appealed to
Delatore #: &
Discover 100,000 Tickets Were Printed Here
(Continued From Page One)
Frank
ticipated in the lottery sales, was on si¢k leave and is due to retire June
Philip J. Debarr
Lottery
| Foreign
tion. DeBarr, a police license inspector
16 on disability The man’s name in the office of City Controller Roy was not revealed. Chief Fulmer said E. Hickman, said “there's nothing
he believed a second member of the | to it.”
He said he sold six’ of the
department was involved but did tickets to a personal friend and
not know who he is.
fraudulent.
Police and the prosecutor's office are probing charges the lottery was
| bought four himself. “Then,” he replied, “I read. in I'he Times where the tickets were sucker bait . , . so I turned back
Both DeBarr and D#atore said ‘he rest.”
the lottery books were brought to| ° : the - Hoosier post, Veterans of aid he placed 100 books of tickets
Delatore, assigned to city market,
“lin his desk drawer after learhing {they were “no good.” He said he explained this fact to
ihe later discovered 15 books had been distributed ‘without sanction.’
{ ment board, said today he was con{ducting his own investigation in the lease of Johm Burcham, city smoke observer, who also is alleged to have {sold the tickets. Action on Burcham is being post- | poned, Mr. Frost said, pending the {arrival from St. Louis of Prof. Robert Wolf, board chief.
ee eps tan
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Wars, hy a city fireman able |working in the Broad Ripple sta-| FOUR: He ejected four bullet five state solo scholarships offered | accept. That is all there is to it.
{the V.F.W. post. However, he said |
Charles Frost, administrative as-|-
ployeés. Yet none of them was able : to identify as the killer any crimi{nals pietured in rogue’s gallery, THREE™ He apparently was] familiar with Great Northern op-| erations, possibly because he was|
an employee. In telephoning Mr.
called an unlisted number, sald to be known only to employees.
SCHOLARSHIP AT I. U.
Whitcomb for an appointment he| ° j 19739 Jnlian ave. 1s the only In-| governor, but was given the choice | dered that requires he be purged?
In| dianapolis high school graduating to carry the senatorial banner this addition the job he sought was student to receive an Indiana uni- year of step out of the political! «gurely Franklin D. Roosevelt's
he other. decided by the
WON BY HOWE GIRL
Miss Shirley Dott Scholle, daugh:
er of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Scholle, | a party matter,
jone which few persons in the or-| versity school of music scholarship | Picture.
|ganization knew was to be avall- t |
Contract on Desk
|
comb’s office, carpet. .32 caliber
were distinctive for ballastic identi-| one{graduated from Howe high school.
fication. FIVE: He left a three-copy contract on Mr. Whitcomb’'s desk that called for $25000-a-year life job. A name, perhaps his, was typed in. SIX: He left a fountain pen on {the desk that Mr. Whitcomb was ito have used to sign the agreement, SEVEN: He apparently left fin|gerprints on the contract, on the | desk, on the arm of a chair and on the office door. Police found many {clear ones that were not Mr. Whit|comb's. ;
EIGHT: He may have used a si-
lencer on the pistol since the reports were indistinct to persons in’ adjacent offices despite the fact Whitcomb's office door was ajar, NINE: Polige Sgt. Raymond A. L Monahan announced at noon that one possible suspect had been | eliminated. This was a man whom taxicab driver Bernard Robichau| of Brighton drove from a back bay |
- EI TT | building housing Mr. REMAN orc! to °° ee. "Stonahan said
|investigation showed the man rep-| resented a Lebanon, Ore. paper) company and was on legitimate | business which was transacted with officials: other than Whitcomb. { TEN: He may have been the man who wrote two “crank” letters to Whitcomb las Feb. 28 that were post-marked Millinocket, Me. ELEVEN: He apparently was demented, not only because of the crime he committed, but because of the casual way he walked] through the office and down seven flights of stairs after the shooting. | In addition he had visited the office once prior to the shooting and unconcernedly identified himself as a “U. S. treasury agent.” The crime was planned carefully. | Asserting that he was a “Mr. Horman of the United States treasurv office,” the Killer telephoned June 1 for an interview with Mr. Whitcomb on June 3 He kept this appointment but was told that Mr. Whitcomb was away and would not return until yesterday.
of FISK TIRES
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“That's all right,” he told a sec-
4 | retary, “I will call again on Mon-
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‘have him step down from the G7 O. P. state chairmanship and Clark | {St attempt to purge Senator WilSpringer carry on as his successor. Wanted Governorship
“I don't even have a personal or- yled “purge.” ganization,” he concluded. “This is]
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tothe G. O. P. state organization once lagain to "withdraw from the mani-
“organization”
lis” It took up preme Court Judge Frank N. Richman of Coluthbuf, another sched-
“What I preferred to be asked,
decision,” the Willls ad “has ‘Judge Richman ren-
Question Before Delegates
© infamous attempt to ‘purge’ the U,
“I have invested 14 of the best|s supreme court h { 19, v as not bee - years of my life fighting for Repub- | gotten. 0 for
Will Hoosier Republicans
I decided I had better allow a small group to toy with such
The question before the delegates
the “casé of 8u-!
vie- or not they sell their party's soul} [to¥ a mess of patronage.” . CON | «*If the delegates deny Hoosier the! Republicans the duty and privilege was of voting for Raymond Willis and {shared.by a substantial majority of Judge Richman and’ dll such freely «| political observers, the Willis-for-| nominated candidates, we will know a group of our party has
<0f an invisible empire."
Count 700 for Willis On the question of votes, in the) convention, the Willis camp counts, more than 700 delegates” who will vote for Senator Willis, or who say
they will,
This, added to the 16756 claimed by Mr. Jenner and around 100 con~ ceded privately by both groups to the third candidate, Rep, Charles | LaFollette (R. 8th Dist.), total 2475 The convention will cast
| votes,
jonly 2129 votes.
aid unit to stand by.
been stolen—Ilock,
VICTED | convicted of murder. stock and barrel—by a smal] group|year, prepared for a
which operate like the gestapo in| day after the ‘Indiana | Germany, directed as by a potent. "
-~
f o
0. 10 new trial
5 §
rw to-
ate| court upheld his contention there
had been discrimination in naming
There are {now 30 cases of infantile paralysis
FIGHT POLIO EPIDEMIC | NEW YORK, June 11 (U, P) — |The National Foundation for In/a fundamental ‘ institution. of our|fantile Paralysis today sent two shells from his pistol on Mr, Whit-| by the university for her perform-| “I think if we do give some votes government as our supreme eourt more nurses to the Florence, Ala. These ‘were 80ce on the piano. She has been to Senator Will is it will help elim- {simply for some private advantage?’ area and alerted a polio epidemic and firing-pin marks | Studying the piano for seven and inate what might be sore spots. I ! half years. She recently was want Republicans to be completely at Thursday's convention, the ad | united behind the entire ticket next ‘continued, will be to decide “whether |in the Florence area.
(a jury. j i In an opinion written by Justice Frank E. Gilkison, the high court held that because the panel from which the Dixon jury was selected contained no Negro members, Dixon's constitutional rights had been violated. : The decision reversed a ruling of the lower court in which Dixon was denied a new trial on the constitutional grounds. Testimony in the initial retrial plea indicated no. Negro had been called for fury duty for more than 12 years in the court where Dixon was convicted, ' =. The plaintiff in the supreme court action was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder. of Raymond McSwain on Jan. 31, 1044,
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