Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1946 — Page 11

. v Him 13” not -a matier

intimation that ‘héart. In supn as far back as e his purpose; to on of “The Life nything like the he time. ion, Jesse James ied ‘potatoes and 3, 1882, when he where he found rs of his gang) He tossed off an e effect that it his coat. What's the only mistake #8 Ford boys had :

. the quicker of igh the back of , then fell face ed floor, (Mrs. ' housecleaning). ttempted a quick this precise mohrough the open. that.” d looked around odes). Charley, boys opined that iccidentally, “Is

a. thing, he os, let alone her

neglect of Mrs. he fact that he of Jesse James” he laws governg. It's member-

vernor

*d the campaign dd what he stood ority of Alabamre tired of the

ountry boy"—and 7” in him, which 'e is shrewdness

58 sort of southy Long type, nor r the mean Bilbo \y of that in this lows with human

tive fellow. He the people of his kind from the 1.

pay much attencould carry this f he can get any the state consti- > city folks more ncreased old-age n of the poll tax. essive in instinct. experience and as ment. Much will men and motives and how well he are those ready / are clever and

Isiness

n it to Franklin

to do that night, House. Nothing during the meal. Mr. R., “Franklin, u'd be interested

| a divan. Oscar photo of the mill mill?” asked the est idea. r, my grandfather ! You can't get 's market, What a distillery beside e sugar into rum. s floored. uld cost to put a ed. Oscar hadn't a wild guess of

ie President. “Put , will go through.”

, phone rang on Harold L. Ickes. 2 House. as a meeting of rojects were there

poke up. He had , to the old sugar wanted to make 0. And it should

| said, brightly, “I

ot into the rum

roblem

n occupation zones an economic unit, Moscow's blocking many local induspermit opening of and international t the country and and currency by p of the oversized perate with U, N. or agreed alleviaarge, secret hoards r a later show of

tion y to the extreme own zone, which is lly supplying the . R. A. food from ationed Britain is ins in the agriculd whose food was

will improve after ay permit a 1200 next winter. But inimum health redical experts. political future of y into the hands of

| i

MONDAY, JULY 29, 1048

VOTE MACHINE CONTRACT LET

New York Bid Is Only One. For 180 Devices.

A contract for the purchase of |

: | 180 new voting machines to be used |

in primary elections here was] awarded by the county commis-|

sioners today on a lone bid of $239,374 40. | The award was made to the

Automatic Voting Machine Co. of | Jamestown, N. Y, the only bidder. | The contract provides for a| trade-in of 166 of the county's old | machines at $100 each, giving the county credit for $16,600 on the machines. Delivery by Nov. § Company representatives told the | commissioners that all 180 of the | new machines will be delivered and | ready for use in the Nov. 5 gen-| eral election here. The hew machines will be. euipped to handlea primary elections eliminating the present paper ballot system ‘which requires five to six days for tabulation at the Tomlinson hall central counting project. The county. has enough other older machines that can be converted to primary electiori use thus providing machines for all 380 precincts. Proteeds from a bond issue of $242 000, approved recently by the state tax board, will be used to pay. for the new machines,

MAJOR BOXER, WIFE SAILING TO ENGLAND

NEW YORK, July 20 (U. P.).~ Emily Hahn, the author, and Charles Boxer, British army major.

she married last November, some five years after the birth of then child in China, were en route to England today aboard, the Cunard liner Queen Mary, Their daughter, Carola, them The Queen Mary sailed yesterday amid all the pre-war glamour that accompanies a ship's sailing. The Queen was decked out in her peacetime colors’ of red and white. Most of her 1050 passengers were government offieials or persons returning home to Europe

ICKES SAYS TRUMAN TO BE RENOMINATED

NEW YORK, July 29 (U. P.).— Despite a “steady turning away from President Truman,” he will be nominated for another term in 1948 unless he refuses to run, former secretary of the interior Harold Ickes predicted. last night. Mr. Ickes, who spoke over a na-tion-wide radio network, said the present trend among voters was “not really a Republican trend although it may have that practical result.” He also predicted

was with

former Gov.

Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota would not be nominated by the G. 0. P

in 1948.

oN ORIGIN mam To

Parole Promise Brings Surrender

Louis Lockhart, 31, state prison today,

Rutledge, Tenn., seconds aftér he surrendered-to jail officials.

back in solitary confinement at Michigan City is shown seated on the floor of the county jail in

Chief

Deputy James N. Strican (right) smiles with relief as Deputy H. M.

Clifton holds the loaded gun,

Ld » ~

Pistol-Packin' Hoosier Convict Now in Solitary Confinement

MICHIGAN CITY, Ind, July 29 (U. P.).—Stubborn Louis Lockhart 31-year-old fugitive prisoner who

nearly killed himself to prevent his return to Indiana, was In solitary confinement today in the Indiana state prison Last Saturday, Lockhart sat with a gun in his hand in a jail cell at Rutledge, Tenn., and threatened to blow out his brains if an Indiana prison official came into his cell The? Hoosieer authorities wanted to take Lockhart back to the instituion from which he escaped as a trusty last May For nearly 24 hours, Lockhart foiled the police Then gave up, in tears, and agreed to return peacefully with two police officers. Warden Ralph Howard said this morning Lockhart would be kept in solitary detention for “a few davs

ne

“We'll leave him there a few days until he gets adjusted and gets over his nervousness.” Mr Howard said. “Then we'll take

him before the state parole board and they'll decide how much longer he has to stay in prison.” Lockhart had served four months of a one-to-10-vear sentence when

preliminary

He was sentenced in St. Joseph county last January after his conviction ~on a grand larceny charge. “He hardly back from Tennessee, said.: “But trouble.”

MOTORCOACH DROPS ITS GASOLINE TANK

A Speedway disposed this morning.

he escaped

spoke all the way ' Mr. Howard he didn't cause any

bus was slightly in-

It dropped its gasoline tank, .pillNew York st. at the White river bridge. - The motor coach, westhound, had crossed the bridge when the tank lurched off the rear end, splitting open. Firemen from: Station 1

ing the fuel over W.

* flushed the gasoline from the street tem- |

Bus passengers were stalled porarily.

RAPE CHARGE HEARING SET

Henrv Lester Okes, 23, of 1658 Madison ave. will appear in municipal court this afternoon for

Tape filed by a 17-year- -old girl.

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Pastor Plans Vacation With [250070 ATTEND Couple Makes 3000-Mile

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a JS Sd 14

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

'Martyr' Wife Who Ran Away

BONNER SPRINGS, Kas, July Oklahoma City late Friday, after 120 (U. P).—The Rev. Paul Lambert, | spending nearly a -week in seclu-|

Trip in a Covered Wagon

John

LEGION ME b DAYTON, Wash, July 20. (\J.).| nephew. Mr. Light's sister, Mrs. Lil~ : Jee | —Their fathers crossed the contf- | lin Gay, was also on hahd te ith. a ga bow | 8100 at a hotel, her husband rare] nent by mul wer and, besides, | Weloame the modern pioneers. | dapper little man with a gay bow) (5 CC (Cl 0 om Kansas City, Contests and and Parail to Be y mule: power .a tie and slicked-down. hair, prepared | Mrs. Lambert, still tired and Hi hii ht H |it was cheaper, to lay aside his religious duties to-| nervous from the tense week which ighiignts rere. So 66-year-old Johnnie Light and ANNUAL-COUNTY FAIR day and take a vacauon with™'his' followed pdblic reading of her ares Approximately 2500 delegates are his 58-year-old wife, Minnie, took | wite, well note at the service a week ag dt ‘ I : {a ride in a covered wagon pulled | Mrs. Emalie Ruth Lambert, 41, | sunday night was not present “for | cxpecte o attend the state Amer-| {by a& pair of old mules—a 3000- mile IS UNDER WAY TODAY {who ran away last week because her | her husband's discourse. | ican Legion convention here Aug.| ride that lasted six months, husband spent all of his time on] The Rev. Mr. Lambert said she 17 to 20. “Shucks, if that wasn't the astesth Visitors attending the 15th ane | church attairs, came home volun-|did not feel weil. They will be welcomed by Wp We Ne ii Dive Jelied| Huai souty fait Sheilg " Jv 0 ( S d | warily after a week in hiding. In her farewell note, Mrs. Lam- | Stelle, national Legion commander; / pe , y y ecelve a preview | The congregation of the “church bert said she had hindered the Rev.| home-made wagon yesterday. {of an exhibit of the Purdue univers 'in the country” got the full story Mr. Lambert's church work by| Mayor Robert H. Tyndall and Gov.| His mules, Mike and Kate, had |sity agricultural extension service | of last week's events last night from! jealousy and “a preacher cannot |Ralph F. Gates, {hauled the Lights all the way from! to be shown later at the state fair, \the pastor himself. {work with a jealous wife.” Highlights of the convention in-| Corpus Christi, Tex. | The educational exhibit includes Rev. Mr. Lambert preached: The Lamberts will leave, probably | clude drum and bugle corps, band,| Mr, Light and his dimpled, white- units dealing with farm and home 3 | but ori he| Within the week, for a Denver va- {ehorus and musical contests Sun- haired wife were tired and dusty| safety, fertilizing small grains and R regu jp Semon, oth ee, and cation. | day, Aug, 18, with more than $2000 from their travels, (legumes, piped-in water for the - Be Toul his Har Pp By the time they return, the Rev in prizes. But they stood up better than home and other similar topics. oh side. I py | Mr. Lambert announced, he willl A parade of 10,000 veterans will the old mules, “who are going on| Two general themes will be em | ter R , oe Serine = % Tou a" have decided what to do about cut- Pe held through the downtown busi~ 11 years themselves.” | phasized, “making farm products Te his wi : a "mar yr. ting down on his church activities Mess section Monday night. The ‘The animals wore out 14 pairs accomplish the most for human be- | "She was willing to give up her| ™ present he does. regular pas- | convention will close Tuesday, Aug. of shoes in the seven-state trek. It|ings and livestock, and attractive church, her family and her home | "0, work, regular church radio 20, with election of officers, [looked like they were ready to be! conditions in and about our Ine [because she thought she was’ in-| work and evangelistic dut S———— [turned out to pasture. | diana homes.” iterfering with my carrying on the| 8 ° iy.

: n ee —————— EVACUATION OF EGYPT SET | “we could. do it again if we — Jorg work,” said the Rev, MF. REVEAL WAR CRIMES CAIRO, July 20 (U. P.).—Britain wanted 10,” Johnnie said. “But we CHOLERA IN KOREA ambert, WASHINGTON; July 20 (U. P.).|will begin her promised evacuation don't want to right now—and may-! SEOUL, Korea, July 29 (U, P.).— Of course, she did the worst

thine —The war department said today | of Egypt before the end of Septem- be never will again, ning possible. But to me. she's a that axis war criminals killed 142- ‘her by moving British military “Minnie and I are willin’ martyr. I'm proud to be the hus-|076 American and Pilipino citizens | headquarters from Cairo to the awhile on Floyd's front (band of Emalie Ruth Lambert.” [in violation of the international Sues canal zone. according te an maybe for When Mrs. Lambert called from! rules of warfare v offeinl embassy communique “Floyd” 1s

tt ——

Soviet Col, I. M, Chistiakov today ‘gave a north Korean cholera epie demic as reason for his refusal of & request. by American correspondents to enter the Russian-occupied moma,

to set

porch— the rest of our days." Flovd Wilbur,

his

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