Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1946 — Page 15
ublic
‘made an exn the merits asé the repuibtérfuge will iis Back upon
d think that a certain ex-
MOND DAY, OCT. 17, 1946
-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 15
‘World Political Division Perilous, Smuts Warns Parley
Pickets in Strike
ASKS MEETING OF BIG THREE
Strikingly Pretty
THE GIRL
more as a result of another halfcent boost granted by the OPA to manufacturers in April, and which has up to now been absorbed by the Feiallers. y
2 FIRMS BOOST ‘GIGARET PRICES
_ OPTION BATTLE
is defense of an estimated 50,000 Jobs now held by A. F. of L. membere in or closely connected with | the beer and liquor industry. Approximately 65 per cent of thé apron candidates over the state
BIRD FOR LOCAL
bition or even widespread application of local optiom, Mr, Wallace said: “We understand their feelings on the job question, but believe there would be an adjustment following
+ serain ex HEAD OF LUTHERANS ol ready have Jesoimon » the 12 local optic w sven prohibition u ons as @ unio rou whic IT se Tl Ss i hgiunt _WHO Is SUPPOSED T0 sn Others Me Expected to. RAPS CHURCH UNITY Labor, Drys Due to Lock in’ According to A. P. of L. Sectetary| We feel the "contitued eftcts of
nally steeped fate is fanged When Myron Presbyterian ly announced: rite that line
ire didn't emright on using matter of fact, ext he turned | again everyintil ‘1883, the s appeared, It ‘Leven More
+ | 70 HEAL RIFT
Conference To Told It Must End With ‘Message ofHope—Despair.’
By R. H. SHACKFORD United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Oct. 7.—Premier Jan Christian Smuts of South Africa, today called, in effect, for an early meeting of the Big Three. Its purpose would be to end what he told the peace conference was a dangerous “parting of ways” and
HE BOSSES LAP
RN
» FINALLY
UNDING ul
price £ PRoressiowaL wOREes, CIO Cio
| CLEVELAND, Oct. 7° (U, P.).— Accepting re-election as president of the United Lutheran synod of
Make Increases.
NEW YORR, Oct. 7 (U. P.).—Two tobacco manufacturers today nounced increases in the wholesale or Akron warned the church’s 15th prices of their cigarets. The-increase, in which all other| ficial union of churches.” conipariiés dare expected to . join,| probably will Increase the retail unity in basic belief and are “union price of all cigarets by one cent a| just for the sake of union.” He pack and from five to seven cents asserted that “unity of belief, not a carton. | Just human Organization is basic.” The increase was announced first) by the American Tobacco Co., THIEVES GET JEWELRY makers of Lucky Strike cigarets, and | by Philip Morris & Co., Ltd., Inc.| Burglars removed an iron: grill Other major producers are subject| from a rear window of Hamilton
an-|New York, Dr. Franklin Clark Fry
|John Acker, only “one or two have come out flatly in favor of local l option.” Gives Stand of Drys Warning against those who hedge
Legislative Clash.
Hoosier wets and drys today were winding up the first round of what
biennial convention against “arti-
He said such unions have no
they believe will be a history-mak-ing legislative fight over local option, Both sides have completed surveys of legislative candidates to obtain their views on the subject of prohibition and local option.
The dry fight is belng run from Indianapolis headquarters of the United Dry Forces here. The most active and open wet support comes so far from the state federation of labor.
or refuse to answer liquor questions, the Protective association is assuming those who will not answer local option questionnaires already have made commitments to the dry forces or wish to remain non-committal to pull dry votes. Dry leaders, described by their opponents as “busier than ever before,” also have conducted a poll of legislative candidates. They are less ‘anxious to discuss figures on the outcome of the poll than are federa-
liquor and attendant evils are more drastic than the adjustment these people would have to go through.” On the question of tax revenue which would be lost to the state by curtailment of liquor trafic Mr. Wallage said: “Savings In enforcement of safety laws and damage from drunken driving and other costs entailed by widespread use of liquor would more than offset the tax loss. We'd get less money, but we'd need less and it wouldn't be necessary to tax elsewhere to make up the difference.”
ONE KILLED, TWO HURT
le know for division of the world’ into eastern to the same conditions which Jewelry Co, 19 E. Market st, over| The federation drive to elect leg-|tion spokesmen, but U. D, F. head| HARRISBURG, Ill, Oct. 7 (U. P.), Riley's poems and western blocs. prompted the move by these two [the week-end and ‘stole two trays of islators who will vote against lo-|Clayton Wallace described the cam-| —Stanley Erris, 20, Harrisburg, was Mr. Smuts spoke as the 21 nations companies. cal option is in the hands of the|paign as “going forward satis-|injured fatally and two companions
Riley tried to is poems with ol them with he signed his
began final plenary session consideration of the peace treaty with Italy. The only man who was a delegate
Today's increase of the wholesale | | watches and a tray of rings, police price raised retailers’ costs only half |said today. The theft was discova cent, but retail buyers are almost| ered by Kenneth Whilchel, Carmel, certain to have to pay a full cent|a clerk who opened the store today.
Workers Protective association appointed by federation President Carl Mullen.
factorily.” Commenting on the A. F. of L. move $0 protect workers from job losses which would follow prohi-
were, hurt yesterday when their automobile left state highway 13 between here and Shawneetown and
crashed.
h Marizol Their motive, admitted candidly, i= ar gold, both te the 1919 Versailles and the — ma i dney, 1946 Paris conferences, Mr. Smuts v rE Mark, wai cheered when he began to le Se oe speak and again when he finished.
‘James Hoosier p as he was in ite the joke at
¢ west
k wall through mped up under 26 miles long. ition ditches at ow barren and
vou look down ling snow drift, n of beauty. neath the dam. he river create f old and new to pump water | of the future. ling as spacious les and miles of 1 and out to a Quiet men do a few to handle brought under
; is helping to st, among them wo large alumiare three other y. ywn, and cheap
to work.
fternoon. oe afer “tay devciore! wr. W. B. Alexander, a missionONE: . Film strikers continued ary from Inaia, will speak. A social yl and MOTIVE SOUGHT FOR | ONE: mim strikers continued U0 i0n (LCL DIVORCEE S SLAYING while a delegation of topflight stars{ oie : 4 rotective associ- DETROIT, Oct. 7 (U. P.).—De-|sought aid from A. F. of L. leaders| Fidelity Review 140, Women's
reatened to boynt around mutnmission backed e of the horses
5 us" horses. The 4 Mrs. Rose’s body was found in the | {union leaders and city officials in A household linen party will be e past the com- § laundry room of the apartment | transportation walkouts in Chicago 81V€n at St. Anthony's parish hall, ent that a nag building where she lived. A medi-|and Columbus, O. Oct. 17° Hostesses will be Mesisted in the re- | cal examination showed she had| THREE: The Pittsburgh dames Catherine Shay, John Hel-
oii
ome stall, under
LI
of horses with acute allergies red, however, to ous prostration. animals in their rian from easing
1 protecting the been attempted. , a horse, doped han he can run. oes not increase ¢ ss and bold. : something about re plugging - the ecloth. For real ckeys should be pach race.
casts could be keep them from the herses could yf drone aircraft. element of the
is foolishness, let yckeys haul hard lic could go on plicated, and it ce.
} War
awyers conducted
he fact that the | it necessary to dicts, particularly per justice with 1 agly fact undery of thé charges particular those could have been orce against the
ronspiracy clause, d, prepared, initi- - which were also
eaties.” Bul what Members of the Catholic clergy and laity waved an affectionate farewell to the Most Rev. Joseph | & 5 * Finland, latvia, E. Ritter when he left this morning to become archbishop of St. Louis. | ’ Biel. ! Were these not -
vere they merely
5
the German govrting “able-bodied to Germany and purpose of slave f Poles, Latvians nothing of thei deportations look, unknown - number, haps as high as ie Russian slave
edly put a blemish | and, to, a large whole transaction,
- nation.”
He said the split between the powers had only been emphasized by the Paris discussions and asked that the issue of great power unity “be openly discussed and ventilated before this conference closes.” Asks Message of Hope “Let this conference end with a| message of hope—of hope and not| despair,” he said. He couched his appeal for a Big | Three meeting in these words: “Our | leadership must take counsel to- | gether and set people's’ minds at rest.” “The fear of our splitting up into |
two camps transcends all other issues arising from this conference. PEACE HOPE DIM I myself do not think we are at! the parting of ways and consider the fear much exaggerated. But fear is spreading and must Pef halted. Fach of the nations is allotted o minutes, if it desires, to discuss the | Italian treaty. The United States used only 15 minutes of the time allotted.
office of Professional Brass Co. in Cleveland, O. | ‘the slogan ang,
Studio Dispute.”
Calls for Free Trieste By UNITED PRESS Senator Tom Connally (D. Tex.)| Prospects remained dim for a genattacked the conference's most con- | |eral settlement of the week-old troversial issue, calling for a free
| shipping tie-up today. Trieste—“free from outside domi-| Pp P
Little progress was reported in
The commission drafting political | 244 lo yeach sgreement
phases of the treaty had failed to| reach an A the form of | | LRESPOr tation. Industries, government - for Trieste. Mr. Con- | Negotiations were resumed at nally urged the territory be given| Washington, D. C. between ship a government founded on “demo-|OWners and striking maritime workcratic principles.” |ers, with government labor officials Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov | expected to by-pass holdout Pacific who has been in Moscow for con-|C0ast operators and drive for sepsultation with Generalissimo Stalin |2rate settlements with East and returned to Paris by plane this|GUlf coast companies.
troit police today sought to un-|in Chicago to end the jurisdictional cover a motive in the brutal laundry | dispute. room slaying of Mrs. Josephine] TWO: Additional negotiation sesTracy Rose, attractive 38-year- -old,| sions were planned today between
brunette divorcee. | transit company representatives,
power been struck at least 11 times with|sirike continued with no signs of & heavy instrument. Six blood-|settlement, but the Duquesne Light smeared footprints led to the laun-! { Co. assured housewives there would dry room door. [be enough power for household Investigators’. said they were chores and department stores checking the possibility that Mrs.! planned to reopen. Rose was killed by a suitor. There| Across the nation, upwards of was no evidence of robbery. | 683.000 workers were away from Detectives also thought the slay-| their jobs in strikes and shutdowns, ing might have been the work of a the majority of them as a result prowler. of Whe 1 maritime strike
Archbishop- Elect Ritter Leaves dor insts/iation
IN SHIP STRIKE BR
Film Stars Seek End to
in|
a workEes cit
Acme Telephoto. Most beautiful picket line in the world is the claim of the C. I. 0.
Workers union on strike today at the Chase Mrs. Elaine Hurtt, Cleveland, shows what |
LOCAL
The L ions club will meet Wednesday noon in the Claypool hotel,
Maj. Gen. William E. Hall, a member of the army chief of staff ad- | visory group, will speak at a lunch-eon-meeting of Rotary club tomorrow in the Claypool hotel. His subject will be “Armed Services Unification.” . The Indianapolis Writers club will {read and discuss original manu{scripts at a meeting at 7:30 p. m today in Cropsy auditorium at the central library.
Afternoon and evening groups of the Women's Guild of the Carrollton Avenue Evangelical and Reformed church will meet at 7:30 p. m. Thursday.
Benefit association, will have a covered dish luncheon Thursday- in its hall, 322 E. New York st., followed by a public card party at 1:30 p.m:
mer, Margaret Whittingham, George Usher, Thomas Boyle, M. J. Healy, Frank Kelley and George LaRue. Raymond Jenks, 2838 Collier ave a driver for the Interstate Motor Freight system, reported to police today that thieves last night stole four tires from three semi-trailers parked in the company. lot at 330 Kentucky ave
i
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor
The .Most Rev, Joseph E. Ritter, archbishop-élect of St. Louis, Teft Indianapolis todd#y to take up his new work. He will be installed archbishop of St. Louis in ceremonies there ,OMOITOW morning. i) A group -of local priests accomPanied the archbishop; some in his private car and others in coaches. The Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry F. Dugan and various members of the clergy and laity waved farewell to
the archbishop with mingled regret
and gladness. Many expressed their sorrow at seeing him go and their
| pride and pleasure in his promotion | Riedinger, Ambrose Sullivan, James to more responsible duties. | Moriarty, William Boland, Paul “We must carry on,” was Msgr. | Courtney, Carnelius Sweeney, Dugan's comment. He spoke with|James Moore, John Halloran, Edfeeling ‘as the archbishop’s personal ward Bockhold and Edward Bauer. friend and school mate, | The Rev. Fr. James Galvin and the For Archbishop Ritter, himself,| Rev. Fr. Charles. Ross, who are it was a momentous occasion, He studying at the Catholic university was born in Indiana and has spent | {in Washington, D, C.,-and the Rev. his entire career as a priest in this| Pr. Amos McLoughlin, New Castle, community. He sdcceeds John | Ind., also will be present. Oardinal Glennon” who died short-| A The Most “Rev. Paul C. Schulte, ly after his elevation to the rank afchbishop-elect of Indianapolis, of cardinal. {will arrive here tomorrow night by Local priests who - will attend | chartered plane, He will be “inArchbishop Ritter's installation in-|stalled archbishop of the archiocese clude the Rev. Frs. James H. Jen- | Thursday morning in SS. Peter and sén, Joseph C. Somes, John C.i Paul's cathedral
0
8
“lock %
Make your reservation now for Block's “Furs in Your / Future” fashion show, tomorrow, Oct. 8, at 2:30 in our
auditorium. Call the auditorium
“uffice, sixth floor.
