Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1946 — Page 6
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Defective Wiring
Victim, Father of 20-Month-Old Daughter Had Lived Here a Month.
Four men and two women were being questioned by police today in connection with the death of Ralph S. Wilson, whose body was found in the canal near Wabash st. on
June 17. Arrested this morning by Lt. Leo Trautman and Capt. John Ambuhl, three of the suspects were placed under $10,000 bond and the others under a $2000 bond. All were slated on vagrancy charges. The arrests were made after Dr. Roy B. Storms filed his report that death was due to a blow.on the head by a blunt instrument as well
for a body after Maurice Grunell, | 30, of 210% W. New York st. re-| ported that he saw two men slug & third person and push him into the canal early on June 1. Only 50c Found on Body a Only 50 cents was found on the | a body. Wilson's father, Frank Wil-| son, 456 8, Emerson ave, sald = Whiting Blaze son was carrying $50 when he left home on May 31. The body was identified by the victim's stepmother, Mrs. Helen Wilson. The victim had been employed at Indiana Tempered Air, Inc. and had been in Indianapolis only a month, His wife, Mrs. Elnor Wilson, and a 20-month-old daughter are in Clay City, Ill
An air view of the Standard Oil largest refinery, shows smoke comin at the plant that was brought under
defective wiring was responsible for a fire that raged through the
tire refinery area. The fire destroyed the barrel house at the plant, one of the
RUMA . world’s largest refineries. It was VETO OWN BILL se completely under control | after four hours, with heavy rain helping firemen extinguish the
| flames.
Nine persons were injured by
| Action Seen if Case Measure ying debris sent out by, explosions.
WHITING, Ind., June 13 (U. P.). smoke. None of the injured was Authorities believed today that hurt seriously.
huge | after the fire broke out in the twoStandard Oil refinery plant here story barrel house in which 500 to yesterday, exploding barrels of oil|700 drums of lubricating oil and and gas and threatening the en- | grease were reported stored.
[STASSEN LOOKS T0 HOME STATE
‘Minnesota or’ Bust’ Slogan After Nebraska Loss.
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, June 13, — It's
Minnesota or bust for Harold E. Stassen. : He took a pasting in Senator Hugh Butler's Nebraska primary
Blamed for Fire
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
2 Women Are Quizzed By Poli
| if he and Mr. Thye are beaten by! They say that even in Minnethe veteran Senator Shipstead. |sota, a series of speeches by Mr. With nearly a month to go, nu- Stassen in behalf of Governor Thye merous Minnesotans here give the —a popular man in his own right— edge to Governor Thye. {might also draw some backfire. =" "Believe Stassen Erred “Isolationism’ Main Issue The politicians are saying now The old issue of “isolationism” was that Governor Stassen erred in go- a dominant one in the campaign. ing into Nebraska to make a series Senator Butler had voted for the of speeches favoring Governor | United Nations San Francisco charGriswold. “ter, but hé was generally regarded He should have taken into ac-'as much less “world-minded” tha count that it is always politically | Governor’ Griswold, heralded as an hagardous for any outsider to go adherent of Willkie-Stassen interinto a state to attempt to tell peo-| nationalism. ple how to vote, they say. This is| At a time when there is virtually especially true in a primary election no end of perplexing domestic queswhich is strictly an intra-party af-|tions, it was a paradox that the
oy . : . 3
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1946
ce In Canal Slaying
Senate Votes Today on OPA
WASHINGTON, June 13 (U. P.. —The senate votes today on a con-
troversial price control extension bill which would strip OPA of most of its powers. An administration source’ flatly predicted President Truman will veto the measure if it is passed by congress in its present form. Final action on the price bill was delayed yesterday when the senate adjourned because of the. death of Senator John H. Bankhead (D. Ala). ’ The price bill is loaded with pro-
30 on farm products together with timber, petroleum and fish. Another would remove controls on leaf tobaceo and tobacco products.
PIANIST TO JOIN DENVER U. STAFF
Joseph Bloch, Indianapolis pianist who has appeared here with the - Indianapolis symphony orchestra as soloist, will head the piano depart ment at the University of Denver this fall, The youthful pianist recently was
fair. |$3.750,000,000 loan to Great Britain
| victory over Governor Dwight Gris- | wold. Still he can make a fair re|covery if Governor Ed Thye beats ‘the isolationist Senator Henrik | Shipstead in the July 8 primary in Minnesota. | Most politicians think that at | best it’s uphill for Mr. Stassen In | his quest for the 1948 Republican | Presidential nomination. They con-
Co. plant at Whiting, the world's g from a fire in the barrel house control after a four-hour fight.
s Controlled After Four-Hour Battle
Fifty employees fled to safety
Huge clouds of black smoke billowed over the area as firemen from five cities battled the flames. Explosive jets of flame from oil drums shot into the air. Firemen feared at first that the entire 1000-acre plant would be destroyed. But a favorable shift in wind kept the flames from spreading to structures housing highly inflammable products.
Is Used as Rider | Three firemen were overcome by
WASHINGTON, June 13 (U. P). Finds Artificial
—President Truman will veto his
own emergency strike control bill if congress attaches the once-rejected Case labor bill as a rider, it was reported authoritatively today. A close congressional the President said Mr. Truman vould Tob: dnlys. veto the whole| ®t ot worth 3 ball of wax but would do it with far
used in sending the unsigned Case bill back to congress two days ago. Case bill advocates, apparently aware of the President's attitude, still were undecided what to do|“lamb-zee-divey”
NOT ONLY have
of strategy conferences.
Decision Next Week There was some sentiment for|they ate the Missus’ rose bushes to making the Case bill a rider on the|the ground, I had to begin finding emergency strike control measure a new home—for the lambs.” and using two vetoes to argue that| 80 Mr. Truman is so biased in labor's| WILLIAM KUHN, north side favor that he twice blocked con-| let deal to th gressional efforts to reform union = Co Bt Gea er. Sammie Yet abuses. . The sentiment was based on athe lambs at Folly farm near Carfeeling among Case bill supporters mel. Mr.
3 t a 8 hat unless union powers are curbed |)... slaughtered and there are a
lot of G. I's who are hoping the! be guest of honor. Cold mutton chops| A class of candidates will be iniribbons in a tiated following the program with
there will be a wave of strikes andd disturbances which would result In| unfavorable public reaction against same thing. the Truman administration. never did win blue The decision ‘whether to merge, mess hall. the emergency and Case bills will] The lambs, whom Mr. be made next week. Meanwhile, the had named “Robert.”
Cantwel
President's emergency bill awaits a “Tuts” and “Home Show,” were pur- | 80%
decision on procedure by the house|chased last month from Hansel rules committee. | Meade of Brown county and placed lin the Home Show exhibition. Prior
LAFAYETTE MAN KILLED | to that they were destined for Hol-
Grass—and Rose Bushes, Too
J. FRANK CANTWELL, the Home Show manager, has thrown friend of |. {he towel on his four lambs, assuring himself that the little rams lawnmower they should act like. For the past three weeks Mr. Cantwell has been CRpesimenune with live mutton, testing whether the lambs could keep his lawns nore forceful language than he neatly trimmed at 6035 N. Olney st. | m—e— —————" - -
» they trimmed his lawns, they have added to their diet Mrs. Cantabout it after two successive days well's best growth of rose bushes. “They could have had a home { here.” Mr. Cantwell said, “but when
cue with an offer of a home for
Cantwell doesn't want
“Midnite,” | present 18 bedspreads to the Indi-
Mowers Like
KLEM TO ADDRESS WOMEN OF MOOSE
Robert Klem, governor of the Loyal Order of Moose lodge 17, will be guest speaker at & meeting of the Women of the Moose at 8 p. m. tonight in the lodge hall, 135 N. Delaware st. Mrs. Jessie Ramey, chairman of the Mooseheart committee, will sponsor the program. Frances and her Boy Friends, a musical group, | win entertain. Sgt. Harold Hodges of Jackson, Tenn, a Mooseheart adute in the class of 1925, will
$115
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ritual staff of Shelbyville chapter
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home at Mooseheart.
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sider his prospects are dim indeed nationalist thinking.
GIFTS FRO
| Some here who have been close to became the only major point of de{Mr. Stassen say he would be wise bate in the campaign, Senator But[to take a second look at his hand ler voted against the loan. Goverfor the Minnesota campaign. Al- nor Grisworld had said he favored | ready the case is being made against it. {him in his home state that he him|self should have run against Sena- West agree isolationism still is tor Shipstead for a clear-cut de- strong there. Some of them quarcision on isolationism versus inter- rel with definitions of isolationism, ’ however.
Many senators from the far mid-
visions to lift major controls and {give producers their prewar prices |and profits plus increased costs. | © Paint administration hopes of removing the so-called inflationary {features of the bill rest in the sen-|ate-house conference to which it {will be sent immediately after | passage. : A major amendment still to be voted on would end controls June
discharged from the U. S. army air forces, in which he served nearly five years. He is a graduate of both Chicago and Harvard univers sity music schools.
FINDS BITUMINOUS COAL WASHINGTON — George Washe ington, in 1770, discovered bitumi« nous coal in Virginia.
®
/ M ROST
| 7-Jewe Waterresisting,
'SAMUEL C. SCOTT
LAFAYETTE, Ind.” June 13 (U.|lywood fame in a Walt Disney pic-| gamuel C. Scott, 427 N. Hamilton P.) —Rites were planned today for|ture and later rejected because of ave died yesterday at the home of John BE. Needham, 22-year-old vet-| postponed production schedules.
eran, who was killed yesterday when
a handsaw he was using struck a} {have gotten as much publicity as
high voltage electric power line,
GUIDES MILLIONS
qualit, hy
St. Jose
ots “AT WHITE'S MARKET
401 S. Warman Ave.
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERY DAY UDING SUNDAY
3. Speed 12 tablets costs only 10¢,, | have lost their wooly friends.
” » de MR. CANTWELL says the lambs]
Elsie,” the cow, but their days of| Memorial Park. i popularity are shortening now and the neighborhood children who in-| Scott had lived here as a retired variably leave the pen gate open farmer for 25 years. He was a mem- | | ber of the Church of Christ at Mr. Kuhn assured Mr. Cantwell | Unionville. | | that the lambs could eat their way Survivors besides the son, inelude | ‘to a ripe old age at their new home three other sons, - Lawrence Scott, { itubeenhasa—— s—— Fishers, Harold Scott, Los Angeles, SNYDER TO TAKE OATH Cal. arid Richard Scott, Unionville: two daughters, Mrs, Pearl Dollens,
WASHINGTON. June 13 (U. P). Bloomington and Mrs Mary John W. Snyder will be sworn|gchlanger, Indianapolis; a half(in as secretary of treasury at a brother Clarence Franklin, Crown] | eeremony on the treasury portico point; 10 grandchildren and 1!
sometime next week
Bishop Oxnam Again Seeks i Recall of Envoy to Vatican
{ | { | NEW YORK, June 13 (U. P)~—
great-grandchildren,
inal Spellman knows the Roman |
ment at the Vatican, contending | that it violates the American prin-
for every Roman Cathplic, every Jew, every Protestant. The respectciple of separation of church and ful request for the termination of state, ’ Mr. Taylor's appointment . . . was Bishop Oxnam, a former presi- made hecause Protestants believe it dent of DePauw university, issued | violates the American principle of |
a hew statement after Francis geparation of church and state. Cardinal Spellman suggested yes-| “The Roman Catholic chureh ‘in- = | terday at Fordham university com-'sists upon being a church and a mencement exercises that the “Anti-| state. How can an American citiCatholicism of unhooded klansmen zen be at one loyal to his own sowing seeds of dissension and dis-| country and his President and also union” was more probably behind loyal to another political state and the action of these “religious lead-| its political ruler, if the two states ers pretending to represent 40,000,- differ in international policy? Is 000 Americans.” |it not better for a church to be a The Roman Catholic prelate re- church and not try to be a church pd to the visit to Washington and state?
‘a Protestant group, headed by “I, of course, do not question the op Oxnam, who asked Presi- personal patriotism of
ylor, his personal represenfative Thousands died to preserve our the Vatican, as soon as the freedom, but I.do want the fundatreafies are signed.. : shop Oxnam said that "Card-. state brought out.” ¢ £ ¥ TE x i :
!
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