Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1946 — Page 1
apolis, Bobbge
FORECAST: Partly cloudy, warm and humid today, tonight and tomorrow,
| the Sensjons . Af. groups | Sxres aumanp) [us as a nover brings a sure |
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15 SERGEANTS TRANSFERRED
ovelist . ,
= [BY WHURTRY
Bachrach)
VOLUME o7T—-NUMBER 156 ©
Gambling War Stirs ‘Police Shakeup Here
Fear of a General Strike Causes New
.Loss More
(Strike details, Page 3)
son and Dixon
6 Week-End Raids Made As Lid Is Placed On Gaming.
sympathy and th races in the vorld. of their
«
|
A shakeup in the police depart- ———— Is ment today resulted from et tickers lagged 2 minutes be- = { Typical of the meat situation gambling” edict issued last week by hind the market and sales for down as much as 18°: points in in- nere was the plight of ‘one retail able Mavor Tvndsd "in iti ackd ~ |the first two hours totaled 1,320,000 ternational Business . ‘Machines. meat store: the manager said they fi 2 : B is crackdown |shares, a rate of more than 3,000,000 Schenley lost 8 and Standard Gas had a small supply of meat he 'ER'S . HANT pn vice in Indianapolis. {shares for a Yull day. $4 preferred was down 5. Dought at OPA-less prices. ad How ia Police Chief Jesse McMurtry has| The fears of g general strike were, Bethlehem, down 5', led the “It will last . tntil the end of : shifted 15 sergeants on vice and dis- | generated, Wall Street quarters said, | steels lower with U. S. Steel off 4% |the day.” “he said. “Then there our City." By trict squads, ostensibly because “it hy the growing seriousness of the/and Youngstown down 3. Chrysler | won't be any meat.” ul. New York, I good for them to see strange triple strike now under way in New lost 5 and General Motors was dow Control at Midnight 75 cents, gees ones 1n-w ‘whie.” | York, that of the tugboat men, 3 in their group. Santa Fe, off 5%, | Most Indianapolis grocers didn't!
The shakeup followed a story in . The Times last Wednesday that dis-| closed a “hush-hush” sessipn between the mavor and the safety board "at city hall.
Mayor Demanded Action
ss distribution der their own ok is available 1 the publigher, | state agencies » agencies that
Angered by reports that attempts were being made to sel up, a gambling syndicate and “loosen un the
the handbook Jown the mayor demanded police n forms and Scurrying fo comply with the arance, conduc mayor's edict, Chief McMurtry
: ; made the following changes. feature is the
Three ‘vice squad sergeants yesplanning of a terday were shifted to district duty. n, They are Sgts. Joseph Klein, Albert
Beck and Otto Burk. Replacing them are‘ Sgts. John] Haney, Melvin Wilkerson and Paul! Pearsey, formerly district sergeants. | Nine other district sergeanis are taking over duties in new areas-to-day. They are Janies Langsford, James Graham, Everett Steele, John For-
prints pt. 20
Inc, New York e the appears e first 20 titles
NEW YORK, Sept. 9- (U.P
attracted heavy selling in "stocks today and’ the market | {broke to more than 6 points to a new low since early Sep-| |tatlers The loss, jn market values topped $2,000, |
terior. 1945. 000,000.
Trading was heavy on the decline and at one time th
truckers and maritime workers. All sections of the list shared the losses “with some individual Stocks
RIVER VICTIM—
Probe Milroy |
Baby ‘Murder’
Times State Service
RUSHVILLE, Ind., Sept. 9.—State
police and Rush county author-|
ties today were investigating the possibility of the murder of a baby {whose body was found in a river vesterday near Milroy. The body was discovered by two
!young people fishing in Little Flat
Rock river near state road 3. They {summoned authorities.
Rushville county Coroner Dr. R.
O. Kennedy said the baby was less than a week old and was clothed. Dead When Abandoned Absence of water in the baby's Jungs indicated the baby was dead
Enfered as Second-Class Matter at Postofice badd
Indianapolis, Ind. lssued daily except Slnday
MONDAY, SuPfLMErR 9, 1946
: — | PRICE FIVE CENTS |
4
STORES HERE SEE NO MEAT ~ 10 CONTROL’
‘Today's Buying E Exnactel to Clean. Out Most Stock Four 6-Year-Old Cousins Enjoy (2) Their First Day of School Except Poultry, Fish, |
(Another Meat Story, Page 16) |
Stock Break, Than $2 Billion
| Indianapolis shoppers today were! faced: with the most serious meat! >) —Fears of a general strike | snortage ° in. history. r Meat packers, distributors, re-! all expressed the same | opinion: . . “When stores open tomorrow uns |der the second round of OPA meat” e price controls, they won't have any-! __|thing to control.”
Union Pacific off 4%, and Southern | | have a one-day supply. Meat
had the widest price controls will be reinstated at| _I'midnight. If you walk into a store | | tomorrow and are lucky enough to | | find any meat, here's what it should cost you per pound. as compared to the old ceilings:
Pacific, off 2%: losses in the rails.
MEAD T0 QUIT
T-bone steak, 61. .was 52: sirloin WAR Quiz POST steak, 51, was 43: round steak, 51, was 42; 7-inch rib roast, 43, was 34; pork chops, 44, were 36; loin ‘ lamb chops. 74. were 589: rib lamb Norinalion or Governor chops. 39. were 47; leg of lamb,|
¥ ry. 51, was 41; grade A sliced bacon,’ Behind Decision. 45, was 41; spare ribs, 26, were 22; | tenderloin, 57, was 48; lard; 23, was WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (U..P.).— 19, Senator James M. Mead (D. N. Y)| All kidneys heart, veal, sausage, announced today that he will resign tongues and brains remain uncer from the chairmanship of the the old ceilings. Beef kidneys, 20; | senate war investigating committee | | beef tongue, 37; beef liver, 40; calves as a result of his nomination as|jjver 81; pork liver. 23; frankfurDemocratic candidate for governor ters 34 to 47. according to grade; {ot New York. | pork sausage, 34 to 49, according to Mr. Mead told a press conference] grade. be didn't think he should remain] ’ . ’ as head of the committee while he Only I You Can ring 1b is actively campaigning for some- | But that’s only if you can find
“Gee whiz, teacher!” The four Cooper cousins, Frosty, Russell, Yarey and ‘Sandra (left 0 on are a little puzzled as their 1-B teacher, Miss Marie Schock familiarizes them with the blackboard which they will et | to know well in the days to come.
FIND DISMEMBERED Vacation Days Are Over for BODY AT MOVIEDOOR 72,000 Indianapolis Children
Find Kidnaped Baby.
Maid at Terre Haute NURSE SEIZED,
LEADS ne T0 HIDEAWAY
Says She ‘Stole. “Stole Child, 3 Because She Wanted One of Her Own.
TERRE HAUTE, Ind, Sept. 9 (U. P.) ~—Three-year-
{old Madeline (Toby) Tobias
of Kansas City, Mo, was found safe in a farmhouse today—five days after she was kidnaped from her home. Her maid, 22-year-old Mildred Everett, was arrested in another home here. She got a job there yesterday as a domestic. The little girl was found at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Omer Punkhouser. The latter told police that the maid brought her to them yes terday morning and promised them they could adopt her. First tip that the maid and child were in Terre Haute . came more
Saw Picture in Paper Mr. Funkhouser, a foundry works er who lives three miles from Terre Haute, saw a picture of the child in a newspaper this morning, recognized her and went to the police. He knew where the maid yas staying. Officers arrested the maid, then got the child]
thing besides re-election to the Meal. : senate. | One packer said his firm had no
He suggested that Senator Harley Meat in storage and could not buy
Four 6-year-old cousins got their first taste of school this morning) when they were registered at school 34 but * "cowboys and Indians” are still preferred to pencils and books.
Boys - Discover Packaged
livestock at the yards.
Chief of Detectives Robert Vance |said the alleged kidnaper and the Tobias girl had been in Terre Haute
than 60 hours. after their arrival. .
k
ham, Edward Higgins, Burt Ennis, ise Illustrated Charles Crouch, Alexander Dun-| woody and Oral McClain. +f ted, the series Sgts. William Reed, Glydon Macy t famous books. end Charles Schwinn of the police eniergency squad retained’ their re: Voltaire’ A ame jobs, i ed by Mahlog® -In an effort to close the
before it was abandoned in the river. Sheriff Virgil ‘Grinstead said he’ believed the baby ¢ould have been murdered. “We cannot understand
M. Kilgore (D.”W.-Va.), who is a | candidate for re-election, succeed him as.eommittee chairman. Appointment Up te McKellar Mr. Mead, who was nominated for-|
Another, asked how the new control laws affectedsRisefirm, said;
. |“Nothing could affect: us, We don't,
‘have any meat.’
Indianapolis chain grocers said
Parts in Can, Boxes.
~ BAN FRANCISCO, Sept. § (VU. P.).— Police - sought toda? the idéntity ‘of a man whose dismembered
Heaving great sighs of relief after the 1-B students were told to! since last Friday. He said the child go home for the fest of the day, Sandia and Larry Cooper, twins of [stayed in three different homes 11646 Bradbury st. Russell Cooper, 1715 E. LeGrande ave, and Frosty (furing, the three Hights, she ad Cooper, 1612 E. LeGrande, ave, im- ~ el Leen Hope mediately planned “Wild West",
a
of All Flesh” “gambling lid” police made six raids illustrated by over the week-end. " “ Six men were arrested at the ain’s “Ad > Swain ¢ Army and ‘Navy !'nion club, 122', wyer, Hoya 8. Illinois st.. vesterday when police ess, iy “Rue found a poker game In progress, hayyam,” - illuse Visitors Arrested J. Sullivan. Maurice Goss, 42, of 2734 Rowena gt., club manager, was charged with
keeping a gaming house and viola- | tion of the 1935 alcoholic, beverage ! act Arrested for gaming and visiting a gahing house were Lester Moss, | 32, of 1108 College ave.; Irving Bur- | ton, 32, of 315 E. South st.; Charles | Neel, Shelbyville; Lawrence | Huber, of 622 N. New Jersey st., and - John Fannon, 26, of 401 N. Illinois st. : In a raid late Saturday at 943 Udell st, police made five arrests Harry Brown, 36, of the above fddress, was- arrested lor gaming and keeping a gaming house. Charged with visiting a - gaming house and gaming were John Copeland, 75, of 977 W. 29th st,; John R. Brown, 55, of 1065 Eugene st.; Hubert Harold, 50, of 1072 W. 28th st., and Marion Clark, 58, of 1203 W. 34th st.
v
32,
27,
Act on Tip Arthur Treeter, “34, of 1607 S State st., was arrested for adver-| tising a lottery and gift enterprise, when police, apparently acting on
[since the P. A.C. {three of the five top G.
why it would have been abandoned otherwise,” he said. Authorities sought to establish identity of the infant by a hospital gown it wore when it was found. The gown and a diaper were to be sent to the state police laboratories at Indianapolis today.
MAINE VOTERS 60
TO POLLS TODAY
Outcome’ Test of PAC Power in GOP Stronghold.
PORTLAND, Me. Sept, 9.(U. P,). —Maine_voters ballot today in the first state election of 1946 and one that is regarded traditionally as a barometer of Republican. strength in November. The election also is regarded as a test of the power of the C. 1. O. Political Action committee in this traditionally Republican stronghold has deneunced 0. P, incumbents seeking re-election. The morning vote was light and {some “observers helieved rain and.
recommending a Successor.
lof the senate, Senator Kenneth controls.
SPEED RECORD SET, FLIERS TO TRY AGAIN
to
games for the rest of the a The four youngsters are the 72,000. Indianapolis Jugs who answered the call to books in public, parochial dnd high schools today. The four cousins who are part of Britons Will the 4000 who are reporting to school for the first time will carry on the name of Cooper in School 34. LITTLEHAMPTON, ‘England Russell Cooper's mother and fa- Sept. 9 (U. P.).—Royal- air force ther, ik ng oe. Jaren Sooper officers said today that another are graduates o 00 ndra | and Larry's sister are also gradu- SUempL to see a new air speed lates of the school. Frosty Cooper record probably will be made tohas been preceded in School 34 by morrow. a brother and sister Who ‘Were weather forecasts indicate better graduated. -. lconditions than those prevailing It fay be “cowboys and Indians” saturday when the record of 616 for the rest. of the day but tomor-' miles an -héur was set. row when school starts in earnest Experts. explained that coolness | for the young 1<B's it will be anoth- out down on speed in the ratio of er story—readin’, writin’, and ’rith- approximately one mile an hour for | metic, each degree of temperature.
body was found stuffed into two boxes and a milk can in the dark side enfrance of ‘2 motion picture
theater. Discovery of the killing was made by four boys, Terry Sweet; 15; Janes Pillow, 18, and Thomas and Jerry Stern, .both 16. The boys said they saw two large | cartons, of the type used to ship leggs, in which were a number of parcels of brown wrapping paper. Opening one, the boys found a | will- be’ ‘a dry spell on hogs,” he human foot. Then they called posaid. They have decided it is more lice. profitable to sell their corn than to! Inspectors opened several more of feed it to their hogs.” the parcels and found another foot, He also said the cattle supply one calf and a forearm. They were would remain short until the end sent to the coroner along with the of the grass season. rest of the parcels. “There is no incentive for farm- - Each portion. of the body was ers to sell now.” the packing firm carefully rapped in cotton padexecutive said. “when they can put ding, which’ police said was simliar on a few pounds and sell them for to that kept in a reserve supply is
governor by the Democratic state. they had no meat for after today. convention in Albany, N. Y. last mheir full stocks are in théir stores week, said he already has notified today, they declared. committee members of his “changed | ‘one packer of luncheon meats political status” and asked them to \and sausages said his firm had a meet as soon as convenient to Te-[jjitje- stock, but that it would go ceive his final report and consider, <choois and hospitals. One packer predicted the shortage The new committee chairman go; be much more noticeable will be appointed by the president (it was under the old price |
Attempt Beat 616 MPH Mark.
McKellar (D. Tenn.), However, Sen- | ator McKellar probably will. make | the appointment on the basis of committee Fecommendations.
————————————————
SLAYING-SUICIDE END FEUD AT TERRE HAUTE
TERRE HAUTE. Ind. Sept. § (U. P.).—Two men were dead today as-a=result-of-what—pelice-deseribed-| as a long-standing feud between their families. : The dead ~were James Howard
Dry Spell On Hogs “Farmers themselves say there
the same price at the end of the { the theaters storerooms. : Christenberry, - 74, and William one o Capt. E. M. Donaldson, who set Phillips, 38, TRS Season ! By piecing Joperne: the scattered ROCKETS REPORTED the new record, and A Squadron ; . ; st feeders already . had sold of the body, the coroner was t ho fA Dr. D. M. Ferguson, Vigo county fost 1 parts Leader W. A. Waterton, who flew coroner. returned a verdict . of their entire stock. he said. at the ahje to. determine only that the SEEN OVER GREECE miles an hour in his attempt murder-suicide. high prices paid when OPA was off. hody was that of a man, The head [ONDON, Sept. 8 (U. P.).—The Saturday, will take up two Star
He said Christen- | berry shot Phillips in the back as : : he walked in the street separating could sell ‘his entire supply to a the two homes. Then, Dr, Ferguson “good-sized” store and it would be said, Christenberry fired.a shotgun 80n® in a day.
Exchange Telegraph. news agency |
said today from Athens that two) more rocket projectiles had been reported flying over Greece.
A third packing firm head said he Meteors for the new assault on the
| record.
and neck were missing.
OUST REFORM MAYOR, FATHER-IN-LAW ASKS
PRESIDENT “CONFERS
Most retailers looked to poultry
Mr | “didn’t know what it was all about.”
charge into his own head.
cold which settled over most of the apd fish for the salvation of their
NEW ORLEANS, La. Sept. 9 (U.
The first was reported Sunday, over the towns of Drama and
AGAIN WITH BYRNES
| _ Called ‘White Girl’ | The maid, described in Kansas City as a light-colored Negro, but by Mr. Vance as a “white girl,” was held on a kidnaping charge while | detectives questioned her about her activities since she and the haby | disappear from the home of the | ehild’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Tobias, last Wednesday.
Vance said the little girl
“She apparently hadn't been mis. treated,” he said, “and when we started’ to take her away from Mrs, Funkhouser, she cried.” He quoted the maid as saying she stole the child because she wanted one of her own. / Toby Wasn't Frightened Police questioned the maid about -her-w. ts between the time {of the kidnaping and her arrival in Terre Haute, Mr. Vance said the little girl was playing about the Funkhouser homewhen he and Capt. Alec Irving of the Terre Haute detective force found her,
8he wore alittle blue sweater, striped play pants, bobby sox and black slippers. Toby wasn't frightened, Mr. Vance said, Mrs. Tobias, mother of the kidnaped child, was notified by tele-
Mr. Vance said she was
a tip, picked him up in the 1200 ‘state might materially reduce the block on E. Washington st. with |total vote. 13 baseball books in his possession. | The Republicans are favored to Five men were arrested for gam-|Wih easily—Maine has voted Reing and congregating and one pair | [publican consistently since the civil | of dice taken to the property room |war—but the size of the majorities yesterday when police broke up a G. O. P. candidates pile up will be
TWO CRASH AIRPLANE, FALL OFF CLIFF, LIVE
LONDON, Sept. 9 (U. P.).—Robert Krause, 29, an American soldier from Los Angeles, Cal, was alive
‘trade. Supply of these two items is phone,
(reported sufficient at least for a short time.
1700 THREATENED WITH QUARANTINE
P.).—Jack Waterman, father-in-law of New Orleans reform Mayor De|lesseps Morrison, said today that he | was launching a mov ement to recall | the youthful ex-army colonel from city office. | Mr. Waterman charged in a 13-
(Details of Paris Parley, Page 2)
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (U, P.. —President Truman conferred again today by transatlantic telephone | with Secretary of State James F.
nearly hysterical with joy. : “Are you sure it's my child?” Mr. Vance said she asked. x “Does she have a scar on her chin?” Mother to Fly to State
ato in Eastern Macedonia and dis | appeared over the isle of Thassos. Another rocket was reportéd later [in the day flying over Pharsala, Thessaly, ly, heading south.
session on Brook st. near 10th st. | Saturday police arrested an em- | ployee of the Tuffy Mitchell clean- | ing establishment, 246 Indiana ave,
for operating a lottery and gift enterprise, They said the employee,. Luena
Durante, .30, of 548 N. Senate ave, had 14 baseball Books in her pos2 session, Y An Sunset Terrace tavern, 869 In-' diana ave, police “found six men arrests were made but police said there was evidence that a- dice game had heen in session.
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
fam «Nn 10am ... 77 wa. om... 70 lam... 30 Ram....7 12 (noon). R2 Pam.... 74 1pm ... 84 TIMES INDEX Amusements ; 6 Ruth Millett... 13 Eddie Ash... 10|Movies ....... 6 Boots ........ 22 | Wm, ‘Newton.. 8 Business ..... 8 |New Drugs... 13 Classified ..20-22|Obituaries ... 17 Comics ...... 23!Dr. O'Brien... . Crossword . 30{Radio .>...... 23! - Editorials .... 14 Reflections .. 14 { Fashions ..18-19 Mrs. Roosevelt 13 Foreign:Affairs 14 Scherrer .. ...~ +1] Yorum ........ 14 Science ..... 13 | | G. 1. Rights... 23 Serial-........ 12] Meta Given .. 19 Side Glances . 14 Housings . '13{Sports -. ... 10-11] In_Indpls. 3 Washington 14! » i Inside Tops, 413 Weather Map 3 me eek k “Jim Lucas... 12] Women's 18-19) = : ! Pe FAMOUS for FINE FOOD. § 4 4 & Charley's Restaorant, 144 EK. Ohio Ady.
of primary importance to leaders of oth major parties. X Political observers fee] that | failure’ of the G. O. P. to poll 65 & per cent of the vote would be a
|serious blow to the party's hopes
{nationally in November. U. 8. Senator Owen Brewster, Dexter, running for re-election for a second term, is opposed by the {P. A. C.. which favors Peter M. r"c~ Donald, Rumfdrd, a former chair-
huddled in a small rear room. - No man of the Democratic state com- |
mittee. Mr. Brewster is favored .to win, Davis Clark. Milo, 30-year-old { veteran, is running for governor on the Democratic ticket, opposing incumbent Horace A. Hildreth,
Cumberiand
Senator Bridges Asks U. S. Halt All Goods to Yugoslavia The Big Thise—
| (Earlier Story, Page 7)
| WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (U. P.). | —Senator Stiles Bridges (R. N. H.) |
13 today asked the state department to]
halt shipments of American goods to Yugoslavia and all other nations
“standing dh" {he way of the peace of the world” Senator Bridges said in a ftelegram to acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson that such shipments | parallel sending of American scrap iron and oil to "Japan in pre-Pearl Harbor years.
He specifically objected to action | “certainly by UNRRA in. shipping to Yugo.) stout the Jncident.” : yo.
¢
w' is
| Byrnes on the Paris peace cconfer- | ence, :
RAINFALL HALTS
NEW YORK, Sept. 9 (U, P).—
Mr. Vance said he assured Mrs.
today to tell this story: point statement last nigft that the
He and a British pilot swam, \De threat of quarantine hung jgorrison administration, which de- BOMBAY RIOTING The call lasted only about five Tobias that the child was hers. He ashore and declined hospitalization myer the 1700 persons aboard the fegeq the long-incumbent Robert minutes. said the mother said she would French liner, Athos II, today after zraestri machine last January, was. BOMBAY, Sept. 9 (U. P.).—A| White House Press Secretary | fy here immediately to take the after their private cabin plane one of its passengers was re- favoring one racing news service rainfall of 8'z inches within 24 Charles G. Ross disclaimed any|pabhy home. crashed while attenipting a forced moved critically ill with what doc- over another here. hotirs flooded downtown streefs to- knowledge of reports that Mr.| pq VaDCE said the maid told landing. tors feared was spinal meningitis.” He said both services were raided day and the drenehing downpour | Byrnes might make a radio report | The plane—which had developed Mrs. Martha Steinweg, 76, a Na- |act week. but that the raid on the virtually halted Moslem-Hindu to this nation from Europe on the engine trouble—bounced . twice on | five of Germany, was removed «fayored” service came only at the clashes. diplomatic situation. the ground and then slid over an from the vessel last night and jhsistence of the attorneys of the Only two cases of stabbing had “But that ‘does not mean. he
80-foot cliff into the sea near Wal- taken to Ellis Island hospital where ney island. an ‘examination was ordered to de- - { termine if she was suffering from the highly communicable disease.
other group. beerf reported to mid- “day.
French Nobleman, Who Gave Up His Title
xT
REPORT BRITONS IN TRAQ
LONDON, Sept. 9 (U. P.).—Radio FLIER DIES IN CRASH Moscow said today that an Iranian | ’ y Le L + U S Gi Di Ob 1+ newspaper of Sept. 3 reported fivel COUDERSPORT, Pa. Sept. 9 or ove Oo * . Ir I es in SCuUrl Y British divisions had arrived in : P.)—Attempling an emergency wo Iraq “In the last few days.” landing, Carl Farnsworth, 35, of By ALFRED LEECH | American girl ‘on a visit to Prance.|late Frank Knox, secretary of the
Fryeburg, Me., was Killed yesterday United Press Staff Corresponden navy and publisher of the Chicago | when his plane struck a power line! CHICAGO, Sept. 9. Funeral Daily News j18 miles northeast of here. A broth- | services will be held tomorrow for After A. Terry died in the county ', Lincoln, 31, was seriously injured. a lonely old man who died in ob- C&g0., and after many letters be- | hospital Thursday, Public Adminscurity in County hospital. He left tween them, the marquis followed istrator Jack Rubin went around |only a love story behind. [her here in 1913. He left his estate to his attic apartment to examine The -hospital records listed his and gave up his title for the girl his effects. name as A. Terry, 67. His address | he loved. But his sacrifice was in| In the drawer of a scarred and was an attic room, He had worked | lvain, | battered desk he found a -.stack as a night clerk in a hotel, and he | Two years after he settled in Chi- of newspaper clippings about . the |died of a heart ailment. wey married someone else; The | Free French movement during the But behind this impersonal rec-|marfuis stayed in Chicago. He be- | war, ord was the story of a French cZme a‘riend of the girls family | war bonds the Marquis had bought nobleman who gave up-—his title | Through them, he got a job at the from his meager savings. {for the love of an American girl. A. | Livestock National bank. Later he! In a dog-eared envelope, the | Terry, hotel night clerk, really was worked for the Federal rve public administrator found. several {the Marquis" Pierre Marie Ayman hank.for 14 years. Three vei 0, receipts for money donated to Lebout de Chauteau-Thierry Beau- the shite-haired man with e France Forever to help the French
He fell in love with her. | She returned to her home in Chi-|
,slavia thousands of tons of steel { | rails originally .earmarked by Gen.| ® What brought them to- | George C. Marshall for tebullding| gether?... What were their | China's railroads. Senator Bridges said the, shooting, | down by Yugoslav fighters of two, American unarmed trapsports witht! loss of five lives warranted “imme- | diate action” ‘to halt further ship- | ments. He also protested to UNRRA
agreements? . Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam were milestones in their hazard- | . ous course from wartime unity to peacetime disunity.
® The origin of the Big Three combine and what it
Director General = Fiorello La- has led to is discussed in a | manoir, [manners went to work as a night underground. Guardia, : if series of articles which start The famous ChateausThierry was clerk, | Although-she did not love him, UNRRA , headquarters said the in your Indianapolis Times named for his family. In France| The guests never suspected that the girl for whom the marquis
tomorrow . , . an authoritative series written by Parker
rails werg shipped to Yugoslavia with the: “complete’ knowledge” of
he was noted as a mathematician, |
a man who could “add as fast as a mail and room keys once was -a/ It was she who planned the
{the state department and that. there| ~_'_ LaMoore, Scripps-Howard \complometer.” {rember of French neste. tuneral services. He will be buried was nothing sv . staff writer. The story begins 2 years ago,| In his spare tht Shr Taught in her family plots near the grave - . ivhen the Targdis met a Jorely, Frege One o pil Waa htot her father wk x
{ . Y wl -
”
In another drawer were 25|
the man who handed them their had given up his title admired him.
him she and the little girl arrived in Terre Haute Friday, two days | after they disappeared from Kansas City.
might not do it." Mr. Ross added. | The maid told detectives she and
| the’ baby hitchhiked to Terre Haute late Friday. She sald they stopped at the Good Will Indus~ tries, -a welfare agéncy, and the maid struck up a conversation with {'Mrs. Clova Moore. | “She told. Mrs. Moore she was looking tor a job as a domestic,” Mr. Vance said. Mrs. Moore took the maid and
(Continued on Page 5—Colun 3
Homes Near Schools Featured in Times Houses For Sale. This one Near Little Flower and 62.
Within easy walking distance of the diversified shopping center at 10th st and Bosart ave, Just one block from the East Tenth trackless trolley. line, Available 30 days; 1132 N° Riler, room modern brick bungalow. corner
but, in Tatts Gas rnace;
: social wonderful bondi! fine furniture.
al Turn to vinskifoation Mn ol today's
TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS
