Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1946 — Page 23

ction

since it will in judges’

hich will fix t legislature judges on a t to political bill to that the assembly orm did not

reform move 0 headed the .. Mr. Bom- * association, ly concerned ch, when he 1 as thinking concept that independent ~

not in party

a procedure 'n them, the from within

y stands falls aw it recomve action will tion of politi-

nists Tor Ta oon

onist, myself; caste system,’ politan jungle take it when a bum, and if room — well, 1is caste thing as Beebe, rs know me is llo’s, and this 0 go write a ragons spilling y.long, and a ) sit. And the guished guests lephone which and down on | of exercise.

room, has bediner, I men2 to eat soon, 1il walked over m, you've been o eat.” That's Ir. down 3d ave, ince Tim got at and earry- * his arm, was

rowled, surlily. rom Costello’s,

1788

2 great civilisawest Territory,

ointed by the resident of the the state, likeslature of the governor, they hen judge them sn did just that. he Continental tions from the cting in accord judges enacted { they had no k of the woods, initiative, horse , more than 150 944 invasion of e unit of Gen. had reached its with objectives.

ourt were final, adverse decision ted States. This And it worked. often did, make ars they emerge ed judgment of l of a frontier

es who set the days. Sheriff ried “Oyes Oyes \y in 1788,

Britain

miners is falling. pst pressure from Ary absenteeism”

on was that the mal service than tploiters, Failure le or output of nost, discouraging he new Commuur Horner. ration this week the largest railrners, hoping to . Similar savings r industries, But mic defeat for a for domestio fuel pecially when the

BING aspeet is ask what would sther war if her re dependent on , in competition s, tanks and air-

ports have slowed n countries nor- . Buropean need 1 ever before bef western Europe r cent of prewar.

-

THURSDAY, ATG. %,

Quaker Authoress to Tutor J

NEW LONDON, N. H, Aug. 20 {(U. P)~A soft-spokeg - Quaker woman, whose books have taken prizes as outstanding contributions to children’s literature, packed her luggage today and mused over how she could best democratize the Japanese crown prince, Because of her new job, Mrs. Elizabeth Gray Vining cut her twomonth New England vacation a few days short and left today for her Philadelphia home. There she will await instructions from the state department concern:

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idg her post as English tutor to throne. prince’s only American tutor imresponsibility.

“I've been packing my bags,” she said,

any case, I've decided all

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Mrs. Vining, who was graduated | . the 12-year-old heir to the Japanese | from Bryn Mawr college and has ’ taught at several schools and colHer ‘appointment as the crown |leges, said she was convinced that the books read by impressionable pressed Mrs. Vining as a great|children are highly instrumental in training them for good “citizenship. ‘I'm going to introduce the “and “wondering just how|crown prince to the best of Amerimuch English he knows and how|can literature and ideals,” she said. far along he is in his studies. In|“He’ll read the writings of Jeffermy son, Lincoln, Mark Twain, Thoreau teaching will be along the lines|and all the best American folk leading toward a world in which/ stories nations co-operate instead of fight.”| know.”

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+ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PRRTITTI————————

EP CEP

Melvin Carlson, 12, who fell three floors from the roof of his home in Chicago last May, greeted his mother for the first time in three

case to all his doctors—but not to his mother, Mrs. Esther Carlson.

Her faith was unshaken . , . she knew her son would recover—this week he did.

w=

o NURSING HOME Plan Lie Test | PATIENT DEAD !n Death Probe Times Special Stein — BLOOMINGTON; Ind.,, Aug. 29.— . Prosecutor Robert F. McCrea sald Old Age Blamed; Had Been that arrangements are being com- | ‘ ’ pleted to take Mrs. Florence Moran, In ‘House of Horror. 48, to Indianapolis today for lieDeath of a former “House of Hor- | detector examination in connection ror” nursing home patient was at- | With the death of 70-year-old Abe tributed today by city hospital phy- | Pelfree whose charred body was sicians to malnutrition, old-age and | found in his trailer home which | hardening of the arteries. was destroyed by fire here early The victim, Mrs. Mary Landers, Sunday. | 83, had been removed to City hos-| Mr. McCrea also indicated that pital following evacuation of thel|the Monroe county grand jury nursing home at 1828 N. Illinois st.| would be called into session to in- | She had been bedridden for 10/ quire into the death of the aged years. Prosecutor Sherwood Blue factory hand, believed to have been and the state welfare department slain Saturday night. {closed the home, alleging it was a| In the investigation following the “House of Horror” after some pa- |discovery of Pelfree’s body, Mrs. tients were found chained to their| Moran told officials that she and Pel- | beds. | free quarreled. She said he stabbed Deny Injuries Caused Death | her repeatedly with an ice pick and City hospital officials denied Mrs, She went into the trailer to look Landers’ death resulted from injur- | for some bed clothing. ies received when she fell out of bed | Officers sald she told them, “I at the hospital last Friday. A friend | !hféW a match into the trash box had reported Mrs. Landers com-|30d ran out.” plained of headaches after she tum. Also held in the death of Pelfree bled from her City hospital bed. is Wiliam Lewis, 26, who told poDr. Paul Evans, acting superin- [lice that he, Mrs. Moran, and peltendent, said Mrs. Landers had re- |free were participants in a drinking ceived a “slight” head cut, not party at the trailer Saturday night. severe enough to cause death. Four {In his statement, he charged Mrs. | days later she died, remaining con- Moran with having said she would scious almost to the end. Her sus- | 80 back and kill the old man after tained consciousness, he said, large- |N¢ had ordered .them out of the ly discounts the possibility she had | “eT: succumbed as an aftermath of the KAISER MUST VACATE fall. There was no autopsy ‘and no WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (U, P).! report submitted to the coroner. | ~The U. S. maritime commission | Fell Accidentally | today ruled unanimously that the He said the hospital places side- | Kaiser Co., Inc., must terminate use |

Landers, he explained, fell acci- 30. dentally. | ree Dr. Evans said while Mrs. Landers DYKES’ SISTER DIES displayed marked symptoms of mal-| BRYN MAWR, Pa. Aug. 29 (U. nutrition, this was not necessarily | P.).—Margaret T. Dykes, sister of | an indication: that she had been| Jimmy Dykes, former Chicago

|underfed. The patient had first| White Sox manager, died in Bryn |

been removed to Julietta sanitarium | Mawr hospital yesterday after a | two weeks ago, when the nursing brief illness. | home was closed, but complained of | conditions there and was transferred to City ‘hospital.

HERE'S FISH- STORY T0 END ALL STORIES

ST. PAUL, Minn., Aug. 29 (U. P.). —All kinds of fish stories have been told, but the latest one is a livewire yarn. F. L. Steinbright, superintendent of Northern Pacific telegraph lines here, said a trouble-shooter was sent out to clear a short-circuit on the line in western Montana. The trouble-shooter reported a nine-inch bullhead was lodged on the cross-arm of a 30-foot pole and connected a live wire with the ground, shorting the circuit. An osprey or a fish-hawk have deposited the fish on

FOR WINTER

may the

COMFORTE

U. S. Replacements . Sail for Germany

NEW YORK, Aug. 20 (U, P), — Ship movements scheduled today in New York harbor:

Departing—Pacific Vietory, from Casablanca; Mount Davis, Manila; Kathleen 8, Holmes, Persian gulf; Cape Canaveral, San Juan; Marques de Comillas, Havana; Titus, Venezuela; Glaucus. Shanghai; Mormacwave, Sweden; Norefjord, Oslo; Predrika, South America; Willard A. Holbrook (army dependents), Bremerhaven; Gen. 8 D. Sturgis (army replacements), Bremerhaven; Gen. C. C. Ballou (army replacements), Bremerhaven, and Westerly Vie |tory( army replacements), Bremerhaven. Arriving—Marine Angel, Mediterranean:

and rosedust,

15.00

John Ericsson, Southampton; George Washington, Bermuda; Maua, Rio de] Janeiro;

Cape Florida, San Juan; Bennett Moore, Liverpool, and M Victory (1213 troops), Bremerhaven.

mim Ey |

ROXAS ENCOURAGES | UNION DEVELOPMENT! Times Foreign Service MANILA, P. 1, Aug. 29.—Manuel Roxas has pledged his administration to give every encouragement to Philippine trade unionism. In a message to American trade union newspapers, the Philippine president declared that in the “master plan for Philippine economic development labor . unions should and must have every opportunity to develop and grow | alongside and as part of the industrial economy.

Steamship Co. and International Harvester-—have reached agreements with the National Maritime Union -

CLUB TO HEAR HOBBS Oliver A. Hobbs of the Bridgeport | nursery will speak on “Some Interesting Experiences with the Divining Rod” at the Exchange club lunch-

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'NON-HOME BUILDING SLASHED $1,290,000

CHICAGO, Aug. 20 (U. P)—A new civilian production administration directive will slash non-home construction $1,200,000 weekly in Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana, it was disclosed today. Elmer E. Canfield, OPA regional executive officer, sald.the order reduced from 25 to 30 per cent a com-

May for the tri-state area. Mr. Canfield said applications for | all type of non-housing construc-| tion would continue to be acted upon by the agency's district offices. The reduction, he said, would be achieved by tightening all criteria for approval, | Applications based on inadequacy, of space and facilities will be denied, he said.

B, & 0. ORDERS 1000 CARS BALTIMORE, Md, Aug. 290 (U. P.).—The Baltimore & Ohio rail-| |road company has ordered 1000 box! cars, it was announced today. |

months. In a coma since his fall, Melvin was considered a hopeless |

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