Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1946 — Page 1

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Scawrs“nowase] VOLUME 57—NUMBER 87

MAN NAMED AS. PARTNER FREED ON $1000 BOND

Metcalf Gives Up, Refuses To Talk; Faces Later Trial.

Raymond T, Metcalf, retired city fireman who was named as the "boss" operator of a big lottery scheme based on the 1946 Speedway race, surrendered himself to Prosecutor Sherwood Blue today. Arrested by Charles J. Russell, special investigator in the proseeutor’s office, Metcalf was released under $1000_bond at the county jail. He will face trial] later on an affidavit charging him with operating a lottery and pool enterprise, pool selling and gaming. His arrest followed a confession Tuesday by George H. Purcell, another city fireman, who said he acted as a partner of Metcalf in the lottery, for which 100,000 tickets at $1 apiece were issued. Remy Checks Reports

Safety Board President Will H. Remy, meanwhile, studied reports bearing the names of additional firemen and police alleged to be implicated in the lottery. He ordered Police Chief Jesse McMurtry and Fire Chief Harry F. Fulmer to draw up charges against those accused of selling lottery tickets while on the city’s protective forces. Mayor Tyndall was reported to be incensed over allegations the scheme had been engineered by firemen. He is said to have ordered the dismissal of any city employee found to have been involved. Two police have already been suspended for distributing tickets. Refuses Statement Purcell, in his statement, said

Metcalf ran all the business details].

of the lottery, handled ail the money and distributed the prizes. Purcell said Meteslf told him that, of the 100,000 tickets, only 24,200 were sold. “Metcalf said my share of the net profit was $587.50, which he paid to me,” Purcell asserted. Metcalf, who appeared at the prosecutor’s office with his attorney, Thomas McNulty, refused to make a statement to Prosecutor Blue and declined to comment on the case when questioned by newsmen,

CRASH-LANDING HERO IS GRADUATE OF I. U.

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, June 20.—Indiana university faculty and alumni today remembered Capt. Samuel H. Miller, hero of a crash-landing yesterday of an European bound Pan-American Constellation, as a quiet student and top-flight track| man, . A 1938 graduate of I. U., the 28-year-old pilot saved the lives of 42 passengers including Laurence Olivier, British actor, and his wife, Vivien Leigh, when he crash-landed the ‘giant plane in a small field after one motor burned out. He was trained in the army air corps and then entered Pan-Ameri-can service shortly after graduation. He was a middle distance runner from 1936 to 1938 under the late Coach Billy Hayes. His home town is Decker, Ind. !

FIVE FACE BANANA BLACK MARKET SUIT!

MIAMI, Fla., June 20 (U. P.).—A $1,000,000 black market in bananas that extended from Miami to New York and Chicago was reported broken here today with the issue of warrants against five Miami men charged with selling bananas at prices ranging to 50 per cent above | ceiling. The black market ring, which is estimated to “have drained millions of dollars from the public in the last year or so,” was broken by office of price administration agents after more than two mdnths of undercover operations. The OPA said the investigations would continue and probably involve other banana dealers.

LOCAL TEMPERATURES

Sam. ....00 am... 12 7am 6 11a.m...48 8a Mm... 71 12 (Noon). 66 Sam... 72 1p. m..... 65

TIMES INDEX

| Arrest Ex-Fireman As Lottery Boss’

§ u

Raymond T. Metcalf . : . under arrest for 500-mile lottery fraud.

BOWLES URGES LABOR PEACE

Says Harmony Would End

Controls in Year.

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U., P). re omic. Stabilizer Chester Bowles said today that price and wage controls’ would be almdst unnecessary a year from now if the nation has labor-management peace duririg the next year. But such peace is contingent upon continuing effective price controls at the present time, he told a news conference, Mr. Bowles again served blunt notice he would recommend that President Truman veto any unsatisfactory price control extension bill. He said he considered the legislatoirr now pending in congress to be unsatisfactory. .-In case of a veto, he said he hoped thdt congress then would agree to a simple resolution extending price controls without crippling amendments. Bowles Remains Hopeful

Mr. Bowles remained hopeful that a satisfactory bill would be drafted by senate and house conferees now seeking to resolve differences between the bills approved by the two houses, He contended that some provisions of the pending bill contained “booby traps” that would ruin effective price control. Mr. Bowles made his statement as conferees met for the second time in efforts to compromise wide-ly-divergent, but equally drastic, legislation. He said he had discussed with labor leaders the possibility of a new one-year, no-strike pledge. The discussions are continuing. Mr. Bowles said he was not dis-

(Continued on Page 3—Column 6)

LEADER OF INDIAN NATIONALISTS HELD

‘Nehru Defies Ban on Entry

To Kashmir,

BOMBAY, June 20 (U, P.)~—= Local authorities of Kashmir today arrested Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, president designate of the Indian National Congress party, when he defied a ban on his entry into the state, Unconfirmed reports said Nehru was seized at the remote village of Domel, some 200 miles northwest nf Lahore near the Kashmir frontier, (In London, Indian experts said

touch off serious trouble in view of she delicate situation involving British attempts to have the offers of independence accepted by the Indian parties.) : Nehru had been-a likely selection for foreign minister in the interim government which the British hoped would be set up as part of the moves toward Indian inde-

Amusements, 20|Labor ...... a Eddie Ash ... 22| Ruth Millett, 15 Boots ....ia.0 26| Movies ...... 20 Business ..... 12| J. E. O'Brien, 23 Classified. 24-26] Obituaries ... 10 Comics: ...... 27| Politics ..... 16 Crossword ... 24| Radio ....... 27 Editorials ... 16| Reflections .. 16 Europe Today 16| Mrs. Roosevelt. 15 Forum ..... .. 16] Science ..... 15 Meta Given., 19|Serial ....... 13 Don Hoover. 16| Sports. 22-23-24 In Indpls. ... 3|H.J. Taylor. 8

Inside Indpls.’ 15 Women's . 18-19

* Aa »

the rule of the local authorities,

the action involving Nehru might

pendence. Nehru had attempted to enter Kashmir, a princely state, to ar-

range for the defense of Shiekh Mohamed Abdullah, president of the Kashmir national conference, in jail on a charge of agitating against

———————— toe mee

ASKS PROBE OF JUDGE STARK'S CAMPAIGN FUND

Sullivan Demands Listed $100 Contribution by Johnson Be Explained.

By NOBLE REED An investigation of the primary campaign expense account filed several weeks ago by Judge Judson L. Stark, Republican nominee for prosecutor, was demanded today by Arthur J. Sullivan, the Democratic nominee for prosecutor, Mr. Sullivan asked that the voters of Marion county be given the facts concerning one item in Judge Stark’s financial report which listed Judge Emsley W. Johnson Jr, of Superior court 3 as having donated $100 to the Stark campaign fund. “Immediately after this fact (Johnson's $100 donation) became

guardian instead of two of

THURSDAY, JUNE

Son Charges

Bill Hart Was Drugged, Tied

By PATRICIA CLARY United Press Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, June 20.—William 8. Hart, 75-year-old pioneer cowboy star, was strapped in his bed, drugged, and left in the care of a drunken male nurse, his son charged today in a bitter court battle over the actor's $1,000,000 estate. William 8. Hart Jr., 24, said he found his father “dangerously ill under shocking conditions” when he flew here from Washington last June 3 to care for him. He is seeking to be appointed | the original cowboy actor's old friends! who have been caring for him. "#8 | “HE WAS in a coma and under | the influence of drugs,” he said. He was strapped in bed with cloth guards at each side, The night nurse was drunk, “My father recognized me and | said, ‘Hello, Bill, I'm glad you're| here’ He couldn’t say much more.” | Young Hart said he dismissed the ou nurse and took his father to|

| (Continued on Page 3—Column 4)

MEAT SITUATION

public through newspapers, Judge Johnson denied having made any contribution to Judge Stark's campaign,” Mr. Sullivan said.

Amended Return Not Filed

“Although a sufficient time remained, Judge Stark did not file an amended return nor has he explained the $100 contribution. “This, it seems to me, is a question that involves the integrity of our judiciary and the basic principles of our election system. The public has a right to know from whom Judge Stark received contributions for his campaign. This right is recognized in the Indiana election law,” Mr. Sullivan declared. “I, therefore, call on the proper authorities to make an investigation and report the facts to the voters of Marion county,” he concluded.

Johnsen Surprised At the time Judge Stark's finan-

|

month agg, Judge Johnson ex-

on the list of contributors. “lI didn’t give a cent to Judge Stark's campaign,” Judge Johnson said at the time. Prosecutor Sherwood Blue said he had received no formal request from Mr. Sullivan te investigate Judge Stark’s financial report. “If it is true that Judge Johnson did not make any contribution to the Stark fund, then it is up to Judge Johnson to report that fact to me,” Prosecutor Blue said. Judge Stark has been out of the city on a vacation trip since a few days before his financial report was recorded he has made no public explanation of how the $100 Johnson contribution happened to be in the statement.

FT. WAYNE BOY GETS MURDER SENTENCE

WAUKESHA, Wis, June 20 (U. P.) ~Three teensage sailors were sentenced to 14-25-year terms in Waupun state prison yesterday after pleading guilty to second-de~ gree murder charges in eircuit court. ..The sailors are Jack L. Braddock, 19, Toledo, O.; Wayne R. Payton, 17, Ft. Wayne, Ind, and Charles L. Cooper, 17, Findlay, O. They admitted beating and strangling Kenneth Kirner, 21, West Allis, April 29, near Dousman, Wis., after he had given them a ride in his automobile, The sailors were absent without leave from Great Lakes naval training station at the time. They stole Kirner's automobile.

HOLD MAN, 51, AFTER RIFLE SHOT HITS BOY

| Deputy sheriffs today were hold|ing Ward Gray, 51, of 3016 S. Harlan st., while they investigated a report that he had cacidentally shot John (Jackie) Linson, T7-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Linson, 3031 S. Villa ave. Officers said today that the boy was hit in the back of his right shoulder with a .22 caliber bullet while playing in his back yard with several companions, He is in fair condition at St. Francis hospital. Gray told officers he was shooting at birds who had been eating the strawberries in his garden, He is held under $500 bond on a charge of vagrancy.

ASK REJECTION OF STREAMLINE PLAN

-—The house executive expendi tures committee today asked con-

the federal government.

all three,

~~.

cial statement was made public, a

pressed surprise that his name was

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U, P.).

gress to reject President Truman's initial proposals for streamlining

A majority vote by both houses of congress is required to block the three plans drafted by Mr. Truman for reorganizing various branches and agencies of the government. The committee voted to turn down

SEEN AS SERIOUS

‘Armour Official Slaughtering Drop.

By DONNA MIKELS

“The meat situation we now face| is more serious than at any time!

|

Tells of

since the start of the war,” I. M.| Hoagland, general manager of | Armour & Co., told members of the Caravan club at a luncheon at Murat temple today. “The meat supply is short and getting shorter,” the official of one of the nation’s largest packing houses declared. “Black markets are more widespread than ever before and there could be a crisis before the year is over.” Speaking on “Food Business in General,” Mr. Hoagland pointed out that the food industry is one of America’s largest industries and that meat is a larger part of the business. Meat produces 25 cents of a farm dollar in the nation and 43 cents of every dollar of an Indiana farmer's income, he said. Charges Bungling Right now, he said, general bungling of the food situation is clogging this vital industry. The Armour executive presented figures which showed that in December the plant was slaughtering 1000 cattle a week. Last week, he said, the plant slaughtered only 92 head and so far this wéek the total head has been 55. He also added that the “meat] shortage” is not a true shortage but | a scarcity brought about by controls and regulations on cattle and feed. In 1944, Mr. Hoagland said, the U. S. farmers produced more cattle than in any previous year, By-Products Feel Effect “All we heard in 1944 were com-| plaints about the ‘meat shortage.’| | Yet that year the average meat consumption was 148 per capita, the highest since 1908." Mr. Hoagland also outlineq economic standards which are being knocked askew by the meat situation. He aded that thousands of dollars worth of pharmaceutical materials and edible and inedible byproducts of cattle are being lost because small slaughtering plants not

[45

In

20, 1946

FANS AROUSED | OVER DULLNESS OF TITLE BOUT

Fight Is Failure to All With Exception of Mike Jacobs. (Fight Photos, Page 22)

By LEO H. PETERSEN United Press Sports Editor NEW YORK, June 20.—The sports

world had its first post-war hangover today—and it was a bitter one. For what was ballyhooed as one of the greatest sports events of our time turned out to be a dismal faiure to everyone except Promoter Mike Jacobs and Joe Louis. Leading the hangover parade were the financial héadaches of the 4 266 persons who paid all the way from $5 to $100—the Wighest price {ever charged for a boxing contest—

Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice

dianapolis, Ind, Issued daily except SBunday

Plan 'No P

arking' Experiment

7 in City, Coun Pay

ue er okay wins roms: Safety Board Orders Street

to. see Louis retain his world's heavyweight championship at Yankee stadium last night by knocking out Pittsburgh Billy Conn in the

eighth round. well division head, and Audry Jacobs, police traffic inspector . . . park-

. Reverberations starting coming ing will be banned on nqpth-south streets in mile square as experiin early today. | ment.

At Washington, Rep. Donald L.| O'Toole (D., N. Y.) announced that

Frank H. Yardy (left), city traffic engineer; W. B. Griffis, game-

General Robert E. Hannegan to bar | 3 . . use of the mails to Jacobs as a reEe Check in Traffic Campaign The congressman, who is from Brooklyn and who saw the fight City traffic authorities today were ordered by the safety board to devia television, termed it a “joke.” termine which downtown streets shall be designated as “no parking” He said that only 17 real punches areas in a sweeping traffic clearance campaign. were thrown by both fighters and | Traffic Inspector Audrey Jacobs, Traffic Engineer Frank Hardy and that “Jacobs knows no efforts were Gamewell Director W. B. Griffis were to present their “no parking recmade to get those guys in shape.” |ommendations to the safety board next Thursday.

Penalty Is $25-$500 Fine, 6 Months Maximum Jail Sentence.

By KENNETH HUFFORD Records in the office of the internal revenue collector here today disclosed that 47 establishments in the city and county paid federal tax on slot machines for the period ending June 30. § All but seven places paying the $100 annual tax on each machine are located outside the city limits, Indiana state law prohibits possession of slot machines & fixes the penalty at $25 to boi fine and six months maximum jail sentence. It is the only gaming device in which mere possession is a violation. Clubs Pay Tax Among the out-of-town paying the tax were most country clubs, including the g try Club of Indianapolis, R. R. % Box 540; Highland golf and coune try club, R. R. 17, Box 160; crest country club, R. R. 13, Box

fel

.

country club, R. R. 12, Box 245-A; Lake Shore country club, 4100 Carson ave.; Liberal View league, 2920 Bluff rd, and Willow Brook Golf Club, Inc. 4701 N. Keystone ave. Also on the list was John H, Wil-

And thousands of the vast audi-| During ‘a 90-day trial period, — ence which listened to the bout un{parking will be banned on north- | day were still

under consideration tor of

8500 Pendleton pike, operas = Oastle Barn night club, He

the radio wondered if there was any|south streets within the mile square. | as the trial areas for the prohibited | figured recently in several disputes

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U, P.)~Rep. Donald L. O'Toole (D, N. Y.), today asked the New York boxing commission to hold up the Louis Conn fight. purses pending an investigation of all circum- | stances surrounding last night's heavyweight title bout.

Railways would be asked for rec-|is forbidden | ommendations concerning new | downtown bus and trolley stops. Before the safety board today he pointed out that cars parked near bus stops add to downtown con- | gestion. “The movement of north-south |

' fush periods. a

significance in an announcer’s statement that Louis and Conn had |traffic is the principle trouble at touthed gloves at the beginning of | present, Inspector Jacobs said. the eighth round in which the| He indicated that the survey

tween 4 and 6 p. m. Meanwhile, Mr. Griffis was study-

Mr. Harding indicated that rep-| parking experiment. At present, | resentatives of the Indianapolis | parking on the east of Meridian st.| from Maryland to! Miami sts, and on the approaches |to Monument circle during the]

An ordinance to prohibit parking | along the southern arc of Monu-|paid the Belmo: ; | ment circle is expected to be | hash F. ot Reus proved by city council on July lipresident, 210 S. Belmont ave.: R. This ordinance would eliminate the D. Adair, operator of the Blue Rib tangled situation on the circle be- bon tavern, 820 W. 30th st. Elks

with the county liquor board and Indiana aléoholic beverages com= mission over granting of a liquor | license for his club. It was denied | after many charges: and counter { charges. ’ Indianapolis establishments which

{lodge 13, 750 N, Meridian st.: Gate {ling Gun club, 707-09 N. Illinois st.;

Brown Bomber from Detroit put his| would check the movement of cars| ing new equipment for the modern- Harry A. King, operator of the

opponent away. . According to boxing tradition, and Pennsylvania and Fall Creek|light system. He has,a $60,000 profighters touch gloves only when they | blvd. on Central ave. posal in his 1947 budget for the imcome out of their corners for the | rilinois and Pennsylvania sts. to-! provement of the system. final round. And louis and Conn — mem . - e—— were scheduled to go 15. Scoff at Reports The fighters, their handlers, Jacobs and almost every one else scoffed at the reports. The newspaper writers and .others at ring-| side did not see any touching of gloves. i But there wasn't any doubt but iri what Jacobs was in a hot seat. Note Pad Origin. His hangover may turn out to be CHICAGO. June 20 (U. P) Tre! 010d today that Synseription of worst of all for while his biggest) ,jrelenting hunt for G-year-old}| 18-Year-olis is a “dead duck. promotion laid an egg, it was only|guzanne Degnan's killer-kidnaper| The prediction was made by cona rotten one for the public. |has been aided by the discovery of | ferees from both the house and He had expected a crowd of be-|«pjdden” writing impressions on the| coats They included some who tween 75,000 and 80,000 and a gate |kjller's ransom note, police said to-| : of $3,000,000. He got instead a gate|day. | previously have been the strongest of $1925564—<which was a lot of| «Chief of Detectives Walter G | supporters of drafting 18-year-olds. money for what the customers saw.|Storms and Lt. Philip Breitzke said| They revealed their view shortly

HIDDEN’ WRITING IS ‘Says '| 8-Draft DEGNAN CASE CLUE Is a Dead Duck

Police Attempt to Trace

Several conferees on the dead-

locked draft extension bill pre-

equipped to save the by-products are killing more cattle than before. |

SENATE MAY REJECT | ATOM CONTROL PLAN WASHINGTON, June 20 (U. P.).| —Advocates of civilian atomic en-| ergy control today predicted senate rejection of the house military affairs committee's plan to give the | military a direct part in atomic control and development. | The seriate approved a bill to set up a five-man atomic control com- | mission composed entirely of civil- | ians and giving the military only an advisory role. The house military committee is now redrafting the senate bill to give the armed forces a voice on the commission.

DENTISTS OUT SOONER WASHINGTON, June 20 (U. P.).| —The war department has an- | nounced that the length of service required for release of army den-| tists will be reduced from 36 to 30 months, effective Sept. 1. |

By RICHARD LEWIS |

The battle between the Citizens |

Gas & Coke Utility and city coun-| cil has reopened the biggest con-|

flict, in the utility's operation: The introduction of natural gas. When the city acquired the utility in 1935, it was the announced policy of the board of directors and of Mayor John W. Kern to enter immediate negotiations for natural gas. l The board subsequently made an investigatiol

7 2

City Council-Gas Utility Dispute Brings Into Open Introduction of Natural Gas Question

preparatory to sign-|gas to sell. a . ling a natural gas contrack Thi, Agitation for natural gas died (Continued on Page 6—Column 4) of Postmasters >

For it was anything but a cham-|that the finding of the writing-im-| after efforts to get a compromise pionship boxing bout. pressions left on the ransom note on the issue collapsed. The comEnd of ‘Black Market’ by previous writings on other sheets | ro omise was blocked when Rep. It may well have been, as gne|of the pad from which it was orn|npawey Short (R. Mo.) challenged $100 ringsider put it, “the end of |—had aided the police search, inp. ca of the proxy of Rep. Walter the black market” in boxing, this fashion: : G. Andrews (R N. Y}, But Jacobs could be pardoned for! The writing impressions of nu- | They said that a compromise not - weeping. |meral sequences like those in tele-| i nt he reached that would make He went a long way—financially| phone numbers, individual names, | 3 years the minimum draft age, —while Louis and Conn, along with|and the names of horses indicated | Even such a 19-year-old draft 12,000,000 other fellow Americans, |that the pad was used a SOme | compromise appeared headed for Sp {business house, near a telephone. |¢.ouple when returned to the house (Continued on Page 3—Column 4) The fact that horses’ names were | aoor for final acceptance. on the pad indicated that a horse- | Mr. Short said he would wage a player might have used it at some |«f,rigys” floor fight against such a past time, although police dise| compromise. He said that calling counted a theory that it might have up any teen-agers is “ridiculous , . {been used in a gambling establish-|,,,necessary.” ment,

Because different manufacturers TRIPS IN BALL GAME (Continued on Page 3—Column 5) ORDERS OWN CRUTCH

STUDY JAP BOMBER HILL, N. H.,, June 20 (U, P.).— NEWARK, N. J. June 20 (U. P.). Playing in a softball game, Edward —“Rita,” the only four-motored D. Amsden got a hit into center | Japanese bomber in this country, | field but tripped over first base and will be flown to Wright Field, O. |sprained his ankle tomorrow for additional tests by the army air forces,

Fight Details— @® The Times today reports all the interesting sidelights of the Louis-Conn fight... the results . . . humor by Joe Williams . , . authoritative stories by other experts , . « . who was closest in the Indianapolis Times' prefight poll,

@ For complete coverage of title bout

Turn to Page 22

|W. Ladd Co, crutches,

P.80'S CARRY FIRST

away during the war, when thel of articles giving the background | of the dispute between the city hall and the Citizens Gas & Coke Utility. {

This is the second in a series fe industries. la jet-propelled plane will be disWhen the artificial gas SUPPLY | 1500 Saturday faltered last month because of the| Two P-80 Lockheed

the utility suddenly appeared to dusted off their arguments and pre-| Chicago, the other to Washington. abandon natural gas entirely. |pared to sound off again. con —————————— From time to time, various inter-| But before they get up stem.) MYERS T OSPEAK ests have attacked the utility for|the issue will be raised by city | Walter Myers of Indianapolis,

“failing to keep its commitment to council, because .the question of [fourth assistant postmaster general, the public.” Some of these attacks| selling natural instead of artificial|will be principal speaker tonight at

were motivated by persons who had 'gas here is inextricably {inked tothe convention banquet of the In-

3

5

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U. P).|

AIRMAIL. SATURDAY |

WASHINGTON, June 20 (U, P). utility's coke was snapped up by|—The first airmail to be carried in

| patched from Schenectady, N, Y, at

“Shooting results were not made public and coal strike, natural gas proponents!gtars' will be used, one flying to

\diana chapter, National Association

‘ 3

as far north as 16th st. on Meridian | ization of the city’s decrepit traffic| Corner bar, 2025 W. Michigan st.;

{Lloyd W. Tucker drug store, 1503 {Shelby st, and Earl J. Wheichel, ‘operator of White House lunch, 108 IN. East st. > Other Places Listed Other county places are Amerie can Legion 64, 6566 W. Washington ;8t.; A. M. Barr, operator of the {Chat and Chew, 5675 W. Washing |ton st.; Walter Baker, operator of {the Mars lunch, 3026 McClure st.¥ {Ralph Chadwick Gulf service, 3220 Madison ave.; James D. Cox, 3528 {Rockville rd.; Audrey Curry, oper= {ator of the Aero Motor Inn, 4720 W, 10th st, C. E. DeWitt, operator of the B and B chicken dinner place, 4404 N. Keystone ‘ave.; R. Donelson, Road 67," Oaklandon; Edward J. Gardner, operator of the Lawrence cab cafe, 8006 Pendleton pike; Joha H. Gerdt, 3002 S. Meridian st.; A, A. Gibson, 3730 W, 16th st.; David Horner, R. R. 9, Box 424; Officers Mess, Indiana fairgrounds; Indians apolis Truck Stop, 5102 Pendleton pike, Russell Middleton, operator of the Alpine billiard parlor, 4444 WwW. Washington st.; Non-Commissioned Officers’ club, I troop carrier com~ mand, Stout field; Earl Nail, Road 67 and Post rd.; Officers’ club, Ff, Harrison; Non-Commissioned Offi cers’ club, Pt. Harrison; E. C. Plume mer, 3006 Holt rd.; Harry Rader, operator of the Clipper club, 3444 Madison ave, ‘ G. Smitha auto supply and serve >

(Continued on Page 3—Column ”

STRIKERS PICKET

| CLEVELAND HALL

|. CLEVELAND, June 20 (U, P.).—

|A picket line was thrown across the | main entrance to city hall today as {700 white collar workers struck for

A teammate put in a call for a|wage increases. rush order from Amsden's factory. Mr. Amsden is president of the J.[50 employees, members of the state, manufacturers of county and municipal employees

The picket line was made up of

union, |

| One of the Better Brick Doubles on the North Side

Just a short distance from the busy shopping center at Fairfield and College, on a quiet resi~ dential street is offered for sale

. .

FIRST OFFERING-QU BRICK DOUBLE 3330

ails s © Times Classified Ads “Phone Rl ley x

¥

A