Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1946 — Page 8
Bring Top Money in ~ Turbulent Trading Here. _ (Continued From Page One) A » for producers (which would govern stockyard sales); Sept. 1 on
' slaughterers, and Sept. 5 on whole~ Ceilings will be effective
salers. Sept. 9 at the buyers’ levels. The rise in livestock prices was reflected throughout the country. At Chicago prices were up $1 to $3 and at St. Louis, where the bottom dropped out of the market at closing yesterday, prices were 50 cents to $1 higher. 4 Livestock specialists at Chicago predicted that “anything can hap-
be caught with an overstock when
Retail Ceilngs Take Effect on Sept. 9
Third Fugitive
The charges carry a possible 25-year prison term.
charge, then escaped affd was sent
year term for escape. When he was captured this morning he had no weapons and no money. Police Sergeant Haney who took the escaped contvict to City hospital for treatment quoted him as saying that for four days he ate nothing but green corn.
at me in the last 10 days,” Sgt.
“Plenty of times I had to lie on my
Arrested Here
{Continued From Page One) police said, to send it spinning off
Gilchrist's capture wound. up the break at Pendleton state reformatory Aug. 12 in which he and two companions slugged an aged guard to make their get-away. The other two members of the trip, Rollin Hurt, 25, of Indianapolis, and Fred-
erick Johns, 22, of Kokomo, were recaptured last Monday,
All three face auto banditry charges in Montgomery circuit court where Judge Howard Sommer has requested they be arraigned before being returned to the reformatory.
Gilchrist originally was sentenced to the state farm on a robbery
to the reformatory on a one to five-
and other state officials suggested strongly that it was part of the
DEATH OF YOUTH MAY BRING SUT
‘State School Officials Face
‘pay and insufficient equipment to ‘assure good help and proper equipment in the state's mental institu-
Fleet Missed by B-29’s Now
Dr. C. L, Williams, head of the
wf 7 3 -
~
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
inadequate
-
BRITISH REVIVE TIN IN MALAYA
had scuttled their tin dredges rather than let them be captured by the Japanese. But the Japanese were prepared for this Scapa Flow technique. The imperial army came equipped with pontoons and divers, i - The odd, scattered fleet with ‘its long decks and peculiar superstructures, which vanished jnto the tin-
Possible Court Action.
Possibility of court action against officials of the Ft. Wayne School for the Feeble Minded loomed today as lan outgrowth of the recent death of a 15-year-old patient from Mich-
Wallace H, Storey, father of the youngster, asked Governor Gates to investigate charges of {inefficiency and neglect yesterday, but his advisors indicated they were not satisfled with the governor's reply. vHe sald the boy, a patient at the state institution for 17 days, had
shortage of help, the attendant in Jackie's ward had been forced to remain on the job despite a sprain d ankle, Because of the chronic overcrowding—40 per cent in this case —the attendant took care of from
“1 figure I've had 300 shots fired at me in the last 10 days" Sgt. Haney quoted Gilchrist as saying.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U. P).
an inkling today on how much they will have to pay for meat begining
Sept. 9. | A “sample” of prices farmers, |
slaughtergrs, wholesalers and butch-| tye gqlvation Army . Industrial home today, James Howard, 522 Blackford st, stepped on a loose et Clet. Paul Porter told a Dionk ang fel 12 Jeet lo the con- | te rool n e news conference late yesterday that | puilding. EA his back and the new meat prices retail stores | poad, he was injured only slightly can charge will be placed into ef-| woo given first ald by City ambulance drivers.
three weeks was scheduled to be
ers can charge within the Best) issued by OPA.
fct on Sept. 9. He hoped price ceilings at the
consumer level could be rolled back Ap ro APNG to ig effect on June 30 when 83 ACCIDENTS COST
the old OPA law died. Sliding Scale Adopted Producers’ prices, however, will
become effective on Aug. 29, slaugh-| Russell Clapp, Greencastle police terers’ on Sept. 1 and wholesalers’ | chief, today reported that a total of on Sept. 5. The sliding scale will |83 accidents have occurred in be adopted, Porter explained, in or- | Greencastle during the first seven der to give producers and distribu- | months of this year, incurring a tors a chance to clean up invento- | total money loss of $5809.50.
ries they piled up while price cejlings were off.
F arnswortl | |samuel ‘A. Bowman, age 23, dis-
charged war veteran, was seriously injured in an automobile accident at Roanoke, Va. One person was
RADIO
Exemplar of America’s Electronic and Television Genius
belly in the mud¥as posses went ~The nation’s housewives may get by.”
i Denver's proposed $6,000,000
tients a time, he paid. ated, covered with sores and crying 38 10 35 pa " a
with pain, The boy, John' Richard (Jackie) Storey, died in his home, June 26, just five days after being removed from the institution. Death Already Investigated Governor Gates’ office replied to the appeal from the father with a
statement that the child's death al-|the hospital four months before the
state mental health council, said. investigation had revealed the Story youth to weigh only 37 pounds when he was admitted to the school and showed his condition was poor. The was suffering from malnutrition and anemia when admitted, he pointed out. ’ Points Out Help Shortage Dr. Williams . also pointed out bluntly that because of the chronic
The attendant was not a quali-
fied nurge, Dr. Williams pointed out, |’ because the school's budget, as set up by the legislature, did not allow sufficient funds to pay the salary needed to atrract nurses, She had not even had previous experience as an attendant before coming to
Times Foreign Correspondent IPOH, Perak, Malaya, Aug, 22.— There is one former Japanese fleet which America’s © far-flung B-29s
grateful that our heavies, raiding Malaya, bypassed the 1200- to 5000
tn the days when 1 was covering Malaya's disintegration and visited
been investigated. He!B8torey boy was admitted.
ONLY SLIGHTLY HURT
IN PLUNGE OF 12 FEET
While working on a scaffold at
TOTAL OF $5809.50
«»¥ Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind, Aug. 22.—
HOOSIER VETERAN INJURED Times Special GREENFIELD; Ind, Aug. 22. —
killed in the accident. Bowman, who was visiting in Roanoke, is a patient in the Veterans’ hospital there.
DENVER LOOKS FORWARD
DENVER (U, P).~A civic planner has beén commissioned to out
building program, which includes
ctign. of a new
KING-0-HEA
FILL ONCE A DAY
100-Lb. capacity maga §
zine feed . . . large feed door . . . heavy steel drum . . . heavy cast-iron grates , . , easy clean-out face.
ee | Payments,
“Reliable Furniture Merchandising Since 1899” 1
Buy Now for Winter
ee C——
1] if i
T HEATERS
49°
k 1 'y Balance Arranged on | Easy Payment Plan.
Tune In WIRE Sunday Evening, 10.15 P.M. “Sincerely <Kenny Baker"
nitu re
Is Sold” — | |
1
: DY stadium. Hel, E Part museum, *symiptidoy® del and other municipal buildings.
Ipoh under bombing, it was full*of | British “captains” proud that they
Back in Service. By GEORGE WELLER
ay, British tin companies are|right.
on Malaya’s lakes. | rations.
filled lakes, rose again, Like battered galleon$ the the waves with Japarese skippers But their machinery never fully recovered. The Japanese ingeniously soldered huge “top tumblers” which the British to sink. smashed, but they fever worked
and crews,
Japs Came Prepared i The tin galleons were divided beton ships floating | tween three Japanese master corpoSoon, however, the JapaFor these ships|nese were forced to rely for tin on , actually were|[the Chinese floating dredges| which, always have produced about and the fact they |one-third of Malaya's tin, were spared has| Then the Chinese started deliberenabled the Brit-|ate slowdown methods and the Jap-, ish tin industry |anese lost heart. to get on its feet.| Ipoh is once again moving toward | #nd Indian racial elements, has reThese ponder-|becoming the Far East's tin capital. | ous dredges can|About 200 of the 400 British and rightly be called foreign mining executives originally Mr. Weller a Japanese fleet. | here have returned. Rice is scarce and high, due to Siam’s failure to remit its share under the reparations plan. Skilled native labor is getting 50
Navy Day Group Head Is Named
.. Russell White has been appointed chairman of the 1946 Indianapolis Navy day observance, Walter L. Hess, Indianapolis Council Navy league president, announced today. Long, active in civic and patriotic affairs, Mr. White is a vice president of the Navy league. He is president of the Indiana National bank. Mr. White revealed that he = Mr. White would appoint other members of the league to co-operate in formulating plans for the program shortly.
to 80 per cent and unskilled 80 to 130 per cent more salary, though living standards are still urnsatisfactory, But the General Trades union, embodying Chinese, Malayan
frained from violent demonstrations while awaiting’ governmental solution of the rice shortage.
Since the galleons are still afloat,
attitudes are: hopeful that their cruises—rarely more than 10 miles in a lifetime—will be profitable,
Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times
> "Threesome" Shaver, $17.50
Evans—
and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
See Rogers fine selection Nationally advertised watches.
Ladies’ Bulovas from $24.75.
Man ¢ Rida z Vien buiovas
from $29.75.
Ed mbination Lighter and Case,
7 $150
Fan-Shaped Large Metal Compact
Powder Guard $10.00
A A
Use Your Credit at ROGERS—Pay Weekly. Semi-Monthly or Monthly ... NO EXTRA COST!
_. Modern Flower Metal Bracelet,
THURSDAY,
gr
A bartender at the Hotel Washe
the hotel lobby during a scuffle with a former cocktail lounge ems ployee, The victim, John R. Burton 47, of 3766 N. Oxford st, is i tair condition in City hospital . ire
he was treated for a wound in the
abdomen. Police said Burton and the fore mer employee, Benjamin H., Clif ford, 48, of the Plaza hotel, got into an argument after Clifford accused Burton of “beating him out of his job” “I called Burton a stool pigeon; he busted me in the nose and I cut him,” Clifford admitted to Detective | Fae Davis. - Police said Clifford fled across Washington st. after the incident but was captured by Dan Caplea, 24, of 56 N. Hamilton ave., a bellboy
at the hotel. Clifford was charged with assault and battery. He will be arraigned
{in municipal court this afternoon.
Design Y $10.00.
AUG.-22, 1946 “] STABS BARTENDER IN HOTEL LOBBY FIGHT -
ington was stabbed last night in °
_ THURSDA
Roomy, sjaciot choice of design ch, yellow . . ches high, 11! —If you are un phone or mafl « prompt and car
Call @ur B
L Write 23]
EASY TER
2
Furni
231 W, Telephe
mm OPPOSITE
Choice wine, bl are gen slip cov we've wi
“Ol O11
Exceller ment ol well bu nomical or take
Oil §
