Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1946 — Page 2

. Of Prosecution by Attorney General.

| Subversive Element Warned

ed v ah : 4 r i i 2" ~

-

Another Case How Indianapolis Grows Its

April 11, 1944 — Was truant, [town store. Sent to juvenile home; stayed out all night. ew juve- (ordered into juvenile court. Case nile home; ordered “into juvenile

continued indefinitely. court. Case dismissed. Mar. 13, 1945—Violated curfew April 28, 1944—Made a ward of law. Sent to juvenile home; orthe public welfare department. |dered into juvenile court. Released Oct. 3, 1944—Stole several ar-|to his mother. “Tnsg continued inticles. Sent to juvenile home; or- definitely. 5 dered into juvenile court, Welfare| June 14, 1945—Snatched a purse department placed youth in foster | from & small boy. ‘Sent to the juvenile home; ordered into juvenile

An 11-year-old boy who was arrested 13 times and escaped from the juvenile detention home eight "(times finally has been committed to the Indiana Boys’ school. He was well on his way to learning how Indianapolis grows its own criminals, as a result of laxity in the courts, poor probation methods land other factors,

His record: home, May 3, 1943—Ordered into juve- Oct. 24, 1944—Sent to juvenile court. Sentenced to Indiana Boys’ nile court on a stealing charge. home as an incorrigible; ordered |school.

July 4, 1945—Escaped from the juvenile home, where he was awaitling tranfer to the I. B. 8. Caught

into juvenile court. Records show

Placed on probation, the boy still was in custody of his

Feb. 18, 1944—Ordeyed into juve-

re __ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Delegates

Fob earrrn—

©

fA x I Own Criminals juvenile home. Sent to juvenile home again; ordered into juvenile court. Aug. 14, 1945—Escaped from the juvenile home for the eighth time since June, 1946. Free 10 days. Caught and returned. Sent to juvenile home as an habitual truant (apparently had escaped again since Aug. 24, 1945), No disposition of this case. Sept. 8, 1945—Sentence to the I. B. 8S. suspended, youth placed on probation, Sept. 15, 1945—Sent to juvenile home as an habitual truant. No disposition of this case.

parents, Case continued indefinitely.

By FRED W. PERKINS Nov. 10, 1944—Ran away. Sent

Seripps-Howard Staff Writer CHICAGO, Oct. 12.—The Ameri- |

nile court on a truancy report. Sent to juvenile detention home. Case continued indefinitely. =~ |to juvenile home; ordered into juean Federation of Labor convention| w.. 29 1944—Ordered into juve- | venile court. Released on: Jwn today awaited reaction to its triple nile court as an incorrigible, Sent recognizance; continued as ward of barreled attack on Communist at-|to juvenile home. Case continued | welfare department,

tempts to capture control of the | indefinitely. Nov. 13, 1944—Stole

American labor movement, | The convention responded heart-| {ly to remarks of Attorney General Tom Clark against subversive elements operating in the United States, taking them as an indorsement of the A. F. of L.'s own strenuous endeavors against spread of Communistic doctrine. Preceding Mr, Clark's address the convention put on an impressive i tration of sympathy with non-Communist labor forces in the Latin-American countries.

Second - Attack The stage for this was an appearance by 18 delegates to an interna- | Li tional labor organization meeting in| Montreal. William Green, A. F. of L. presi=| occaped without trial - after dent, warned -them against “ideolog-1 ; ginal arrest Sept. 17. ical experimentation,” and advised The defendant, charged with them to look to the federation’s yee- | public indecency and disorderly ord for the proper means of better-| duct, asked for a continuance ing conditions of their working! : ic case when arraigned In people. municipal court 4 today. That was No. 2 in the er Continuance Granted ini ry oe dariric of| Judge Pro Tem Victor L. Rigot, the Jewish labor committee, com- | presiding for Judge John Niblack, of A. F. of L. leaders in op- granted the continuance and set position to the American-Jewish la- | the case for trial Qct. 23, fixing bor council, headed by leaders of| the bond at $5000. , certain New York C. I. O. unions, Investigation by The Times disand numbers avowed Communists closed that the defendant, sought in its membership. many months for indecent molesta- | The Jewish labor committee drew tions of school children, was arsharp distinction petween Jewish rested Sept. 17 after witnesses said “labor leaders who appear in Com- he appeared nude in the front yasd munist-front organizations and of a Kenwood ave. residence and atthose who place the interests of tempted to molest a woman walking the United States topmost. A lead- along the street. er in the Jewish labor committee is At that time, police said the David Dubinsky, president of the prisoner admitted he was the man A. F. of L. International Ladies who had appeared nude and he was Garment Workers union. | referred to the mental ward of City hospital for examination.

and returned,

until Aug. 9, 1945.

from down-

WASHINGTON

A. Weekly Sizeup by the Washington

000 BOND FOR SEX SUSPECT

ld

Continuance Granted, Tria Set for Oct. 23.

Bond was. fixed at $5000 in municipal court 4 today for the 30-year-old. alleged sex offender who | was rearrested by state police near ebanon yesterday. The rearrest climaxed a year's search here for -the suspect, who slipped through police fingers and his

Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

oa

' (Continued From Page One)

big city districts is much heavier than many dopesters predicted. That's Democrats’ one large hope. They're praying voting habits in industrial districts changed, and that large registratons in cities mean they'll be able to hold onto those congress seats.

Problem that faced Mr. Truman and his advisers was accepting inevitable. Décontrol board's decision to recontrol meat was mistake; order was unenforceable. So long as stockmen had dangling before them the hope they would get higher price and profit by waiting, they held their cattle | off the market. Only thing that | will start big flow of cattle to stockyards is fear that if they wait longer*they might get less. Which is why there was such flood of cattle into markets in that interim between death of old OPA and renewal of meat controls. Which is also why administration spokesmen have’ been hint. ing canned Argentine beef may be imported to compete with domestic product.

running far above 1942. PhiladelPittsburgh, San Francisco. Registration heavy in all Ohio city dis

set in Cleveland, Toledo, Youngstown.

Into Legal Markets THOUGH they've gambled on higher prices, and will win if they can get stock to market before it's glutted, cattlemen know con- | sumer buying power cannot sus- tial voters I sale Dior,

tain over long pull prices they'd i like, and breaks about to come. Pepper in Demand

vy Id vote on Case bill and other labor

legislation,

some states;

reiterated statements he made in court, the hospital report listed him a speech here in June before the as sane, and he was released on the American Bar association, for which mental examination ‘order. While he was severely criticized by some police were preparing a new affidaleftist elements, including the vit against him in the clerk's office, American Lawyers Guild, the defendant walked out of court Leaders of the lawyers’ guild after and disappeared.

Truman retreat, it'll mean movement will be into legal rather than black markets—with hides saved for shoe leather, tallow saved for soap, glands saved for drugs, in all of which we've been. | short and growing mare so. | oratory,

about were letters to him from guild members who said they were resigning. He said he urged them | to stay in the lawyers’ guild and fight to prevent its policies from going too far left. To the 600 A. F. of L. dele~r* Mr, Clark said, “American labor as a whole is not communistic. it is composed of the most patriotic

might lose much by longer hold- . . outs, Family Twice Erickson, Democratic Sudden death struck twice in a tamily circle at the Frederick F.| Kohlmeyer residence, 2052 Central ave. last night. A son, Sylvester C. Kohlmeyer,

” ” u Better After Election OTHER things also will get better on home front right after election. ? Country's been on dead center, with Democrats suffering political

there either.

complete Small Goes Alo

ng

EC ararlovt Iyescory of |! & Ehalr grieving over the Sudden speech and assembly under our | d€8th Of her son, Jropped dead of Constitution. I will examine their ® NEAT Sttack. activities closely and protect them |, ible % ng yi will be nly so long as th 5 wi {held at a. m. Monday at the only 50 long as they operate within | 5 0 dway oh a Br

And whatever outcome, all will be more inclined to get back to work, | once votes are counted. Administration will begin reforming lines for 1948, which will

should -be lifted.

Law requires administration re will

Mr. Small

July 12, 1945—Escaped again, free

haven't

New York City’s registration is

phia’s is biggest since 1940. Totals | are higher than 1944 in Detroit,

tricts with new all-time records

Returned veterans account for part of increase, but some P. A. Cc. registration campaigns have been effective. - Labor -is drumming on campaign theme that meat isn’t the big issue, that what counts is how prospective congressmen will

Rural registration’s also high in Pennsylvania has second highest number of poten=

much ih demand as speaker, especially in cities where Democrats feel need to pile up maximum labor votes. Denver, Kansas City, Butte, Mont., among latest where Democrats call for Pepper

the June speech protested to Presi- The new affidavit Jay in theclerk's| 1° upcoming broadcast, Mr. Some Democrat strategists, redent Truman asking in effect. that office several days before any War-| myyman will not do garding house already Jost, favor he muzzle the attorney general ‘rant was sent to slate police for his| apout-face, Will try to salvage | concentrating to save senate. Key Mr. Clark told reporters today rearrest in Lebanon. what's salvageable, but will make race is Wyoming, where popular no mugzle had been applied to him, | Sheds et ——— future policy clear so stockmen | O'Mahoney, though at this point and that the only results he knew tk will know they can gain nothing, | favored to win, is bucking a Death Strikes

trend. C. I. O.-P. A. C. is going all out in Montana to elect Judge primary nemesis of Burt Wheeler, but Re- | publicans aren't sitting on hands

CPA ADMINISTRATOR Small

port to congress in January and plug decontrol then, hopes Mr. Steelman and Mr.

Sept. 20, 1945—Stole a bicycle. Sent to juvenile home; ordered into [juvenile court, Sentenced to' the

Aug. 9, 1945—Stole a bicycle. Said I. B. S. he had been sleeping in alleys and parked cars since escaping from I. B. S,

Oct. 3, 1945—Tranferred to the

SUPPORTS ARMY TRAINING PLAN

Truman ‘to Go Limit" for Universal Program.

By HM G. LUCAS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 —President Truman has assured Secretary Patterson that he “Will “go the limit” in support of the war de|partment’s universal military training program, it was learned today. Mr. Patterson conferred with the President following the secretary's return from the American Legion

he pleaded unsuccessfully for Le-

{gion support: In effect, reaffirmation of White House support means that the President and war - department

intend to make no further concessions. The war department is asking for a six-months minimum basic training period. The Legion, in a 10-point program for national defense, set forth that *“adequate preparedness demands that a system of universal military training Ibe started without further delay.” Its resolutions committee would limit basic training to a fourmonths “summer vacation” period. It is believed that: the President will include a recommendation. for universal training in his message to the congress in January.

Address Is Noteworthy | Listed as Sane Pirst frosts would have started | DEMOCRAT headquarters here SLAV SENTENCING Mr. Clark's address was note: : : : seasonal movement off ranges and | getting desperat® pleas for help.’ | worthy, for one reason, because he, When he appeared in municipal| out of feed lots in any event. With | Rabble-rousing Senator Pepper

OF PRELATE STUDIED

WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 (U. P.). —The state department today awaited further details of the con- { viction of Yugoslav Archbishop | Aloysius Stepinac amid evidence half. The department expressed ‘“‘concern and deep worry” over the Catholic leader's fate and made it | clear "that the United States in- | tends to determine whether he received a fair trial.

paired under the Marshal regime. Archbishop Stepinac,

and God-fearing citizens of tis] 43. dropped Sead of 4 lean attack | paralysis, Republicans dragging | will go along with administration |2000000 Croatian Catholics, was land. Jy e Playing : b » ne A on €| feet in hope long-deferred, man- wrategy to delay decisl i | convicted as a collaborationist and Has Confidence in Workers jane hig 00P Ro t p- = agement and unions. sparring strategy to delay decision On In- | ,,;,,04 1016 years’ imprisonment “Those groups working against, ..... yh TS.| for favored position whatever out- | dustrial decontrol, though he |a¢ forced labor by the Croatian su- . yer, 68, sitting| ., oof November balloting. | thinks practically all controls | preme-court.

Permitting direct quotation of his| | remarks, Mr. Acheson revealed that {watched & poker game in progress this country is interested particu-|at 806 N. Illinois st. arrested Albert larly in possible violations of the | Beedy, 46, of 825 S. Illinois st., on United Nations charter, which seeks | a charge of keeping a gaming house

convention in San Francisco, where |*

that it may intercede in his be- |

Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson told a press conference yesterday that news accounts of the | trial aggravated U. S. fears that religious and civil freedom is imTito |

leader of

.

ON NEW REGIME

3 Parties for Constitution; De Gaulle Against It.

By SEXSON E. HUMPHREYS . Times Telegraph Editor French voters will go to the polls Sunday to accept or reject a constitution for a new “French Union.” All three of France's important political parties favor the consti= tution.” One man, without a party, leads the opposition. The man is Gen. Charles de Gaulle, former provisional president of France. The “French Union” is the newly coined name for the French empire, intended to indicate that Algeria and Senegal, for example, are as much a part of France as Paris. The new constitution was drafted by a constituent assembly elected after a previously drafted constitution had been rejected by the voters. . ‘Chamber of Reflection’ If this constitution is accepted, the ultimate power in the new government will lie in a parliamentary body called the assembiy. There will be a second chamber of parliament—a: ‘“council- of the republic”—with power to delay but not veto legislation. This “chamber of reflection” is a compromise between the, Com-munist-Socialist bloc, which desired a single-house legislature (like Nebraska’'s) and the Popular Republican (Catholic) party which desired two chambers with equal power (like Indiana's). _ There also are a great many compromises regarding the powers of the “president. President Gets Real Powers

In the. past, French presidents have performed only ceremonial functions. Under the new constitution the president will appoint the premier, will choose prefects (governors), high civilian and military officials and ambassadors. He also will appoint half of the judicial council (supreme court), but the assembly will elect the other members. The assembly has two important powers over the president, however. It will elect him or determine how he shall be elected. And when the president dissolves the parliament, the president of the assembly automatically becomes the premier until a new parliament is elected. Gen. de Gaulle had wanted a president with veto power and with a cabinet responsible to him, rather than to parliament, He wants an American-style government with a ron-party president—like himself. To Compromise or Not?

The Popular Republican party | wanted pretty much the same sort of constitution desired by Gen. de Gaulle. They defeated the pre{viously proposed Socialist-Commun-ist constitution because it placed no checks on the assembly power. But the Popular Republicans say no constitution is possible except one which all three parties could agree upon. The constitution be-

| |

that three-party agreement. Gen. de Gaulle calls it an “unworthy compromise.”

10 ARE GHARGED

ait Reaction To Triple Attack

FRENCH TQ VOTE.

8

fore the voters Sunday represents

@

SATURDAY, OCT. 12, 1946

HOPE SEEN-FOR SHIP STRIKE END

Film, Power, Transit Tieups Still Deadlocked.

By UNITED PRESS » Government officials were opti mistic today for at least a partial settlement of the 12-day-old ship= ping tie-up, but no progress was reported in strikes in the fllm, power and transit industries. C. I. O. marine engineers cleared the way for an agreement in the maritime dispute by yielding on their demand that any settlement reached with Gulf and Atlantie coast operators be extended to gove ernment-controlled ships in the Pacific... The other striking union previously had given 'in on the same issue, In view of the union's reversal, federal conciliators expected to ree sume negotiations quickly and ‘end

Changes Tresses FE 2 a

A brunette in every movie to date, Linda Darnell is now an “amber blond” in order to play the title role in “Forever Amber.” The picture goes before the 20th Century-Fox -technicolor cameras

this month with a $3,500,000 |the strike. budget. In the other major labor develop= ments:

ONE: A conference was set toe day for Monday between the Pube lis Service Co. of Indiana, Inc., and the A. F. of L. Electrical Workers union, in an effort to head off a threatened strike of 1500 utility workers. TWO: A strike of 5500 hotel em ployees curtailed service at 1 Washington hostelries, includin several boasting cabinet members, congressmen and top-ranking gove

U, S. HUNTS FOR A-B0MB PHOTOS

Nation-wide Search Follows Attempted Sale.

BALTIMORE, Oct. 12 (U., P.).—|ernment officials among their The Federal Bureau of Investigation | clienteles. THREE: Violence was renewed

pursued a nation-wide hunt today for photographs of atomic secrets. The hunt was begun following the arrest of three former servicemen who allegedly tried to sell such photographs to a Baltimore newspaper. The trio—George W. Comer and Miles F. Deubenheyer, both of Bel Air, Md., and James B. Rike, of Chattanooga, Tenn., a former army captain—were free on bail totalling $3000 pending a U. S. commissioner's hearing on Oct. 23. They were charged with trying to sell the photographs—taken from

in the stormy Hollywood film dise pute when police rigt squads, swinge ing night sticks, cleared a path through massed pickets outside the technicolor laboratories, arresting 40 strikers, FOUR: The strike-bound Chicago, Aurora and Elgin railroad, serving 24,000 daily commuters, informed employees ‘it would meet union de« mands if it was able to obtain a 10 per cent fare increase. FIVE: Negotiations were stalled in efforts to end transportation strikes in Chicago, Columbus, O., and Tacoma, Wash. g SIX: The Ford Motor Co. shut ‘down all assembly lines for the week-end because of steel shortages and warned of future layoffs if a weeklong strike of crane operators at the company’s River Rouge plang in Detroit is not settled. As a result of the C. I. O. union's decision to yield for a partial seitle« ment of ‘the maritime strike, the labor department sought to arrange a resumption of negotiations which were’ suspended Wednesday. - West coast ship owners left Washington yesterday, withdrawing their coms= promise proposals and saying that further negotiations appeared futile.

FOUR ARE HURT IN BLEACHER COLLAPSE

LINTON, Ind. Oct. 12 (TU, P).— Four persons were treated in a { Greene county hospital today for injuries suffered when a section of | bleachers collapsed at the Linton. | Vincennes high school football game At least 10 other spectators sustained minor cuts and bruises in the accident. - Upwards of 200 persons were. sit-

Tinian island, the army's wartime atomic bomb air base—to the Baltimore News-Post. They set a price tag of $7000. The newspaper's representatives turned them in to the FBI. The arrest set in motion a hot search for any similar photographs which might be in circulation and within 48 hours, copies were picked up in California, North Carolina and Texas. In its original announcement of the arrests, the FBI in Washington said the photographs were of the atomic bomb itself, and there were some uneasy hours for army guardians of the top-flight secret. Later, the FBI said the photos were not of the bomb but of material relating to it: Nevertheless, it added, this fact does not lessen the seriousness of the case.

15 STATE HIGHWAYS CLOSED FOR REPAIRS

The following detours are now in effect, the state highway depart-

ment announced today: . Ind. 11, bridge out 2 miles north of

IN GAMING RAIDS

Ten men were arrested in three gambling raids last night. Police officers who said

they

fore the courts.” He expressed

confidence

communications,”

fo gain influence American countries and said:

the orbit of the Constitution and | the laws. Any violation of the] statutes will bring prosecution be-

“loyal American workers” would not! be ‘deluded by groups trying to] capture control of certain unions in| fields such as transportation and

-In the reception of the Latin| American vistors, George Meaney, | secretary-treasurer of the A. F. of | L,. referred to attempts of Hitler] in the South|

“Today we find another totalitarian -regime is looking toward Latin- America. The agents of Mos-| -- cow are trying to promote antagonism to the United State, to what they call ‘Yankee imperialism.’ |

mean further retreats on controls, including wage controls, now practically dead anyway. Cabinet will be rejiggered, with new secretary of agriculture. (Gov. Kerr of Oklahoma is good bet.) Long=delayed appointments will be

Porter ‘will join him. Mr, Steelman makes no promises, insists next few months will make decision for them. Mr. Small wants te abolish CPA, keep controls on tin, lead, rubber, under established agency such as commerce department, He also may recommend keeping a few “insurance” controls without necessarily enforcing them. Between now and January, CPA

jal will be in St. Paul's Lutheran cemetery at Osgood, Ind. Surviving besides the husband and that | father are two other sons, Harold H. and Fred W., Kohimeyer and a daughter, Mrs. Robert W, Tonning, all of Indianapolis. i Sylvester Kohlmeyer formerly | made Ny Ns Taman, Joluding

was a funeral director in Shelby- | i i | > confusion over foreign policy will ville and once was coroner of Shelby disappear, - once “necessity” of

county. making pre-election statements |

to guarantee civil rights throughout |and held six others on charges of the world. gaming. sm——— oy Charles Walker, 23, of 2230 N.

PRELATES PAY FINAL {Talbot st, was charged with the TRIBUTE TO PRIEST sale of lottery tickets after a raid

lon a tavern at 2032 E. WashingFT. WAYNE, Ind., Oct. 12 (U, P.). ton st. | —Church dignitaries from all over | On complaints that employees of Indiana gathered today to pay final | International Harvester Co. were tribute to the Rt. Rev. Msgr. losing a “lot of money” gambling Thomas M. Conroy, late rector of lat 300 S. Ritter ave. police raided the Roman Catholic Cathedral of the rooms and arrested Russell

a; detour 1% miles over county

{* Ind. 17, from 1 mile north of Burr Oak to 1 mile south of Plymouth; trucks de- | tour 8 miles over county gravel. U. 8. 20, bridge construction 1% Foss of junction with 13; detour 2 over county pavement and 13. U. 8. 24, bridge ofit at east edge of | Monticello, detour 6 miles over 39 south] to Patton, then north on county road to

ting in the wooden bleachers when they collapsed in the third quarter of the game. , After a short delay, the game was resumed. Those listed as patients at the hospital were Elza Matthews, 50; C. R. Brown 40; Mrs. Herber§ Donnoa, 30: Don Richardsville, 14,

coni gravel.

miles pe

® -

Ind. 26, east of Portland, § miles over

county gravel Ind. 49, north of Wheatfield, 4 miles| A]] were from Vincennes. over county gravel > Ind. 39, north of La Porte, 10 miles over

MRS. GOODMAN GOING TO MEETING IN EAST,

Mrs. Jack A. Goodman of Indi-

35, 20, 212 and 12 (This detour extends to New Buffalo, Mich.) Ind. 45, south of Rockport, 8 miles. over

{ 66 and 75. ‘ . | Ind. 59, from Bellmore Jorn, Tia miles | over 36 and county avel, |, Ind. 100, from Wilkinson to U. 8.36 11% county oil mat, 234,

1 ad 36 } anapolis will attend a meeting of Ind. 124, closed west of Ind. 13; detour| the officers and executive committees Mind. 129, Dr a To. Pleasant, | of the national women's division of 4 miles over 62 and 20. 0 3 mies|the United Jewish Appeal, Monday viz jo and ig Tate line to Boswell and Tuesday in New York.

Mrs. Goodman, and others in ate tendance, will plan. for the reloca« tion of Jews made homeless by the war and for improvement of Pale

(Benton county), 12 miles over 26 and 41 Ind. 358, Tron Ind. 57 to Ind. 58; 5 miles

| over 87 and 5

|—=We Cater to Parties!

NDREWS

RESTAURANT 1506 N. Illinois St.

Open Daily 10:30 A. M, to 2 A. M.

On Reds

0

“It is up to the A. F. of L. to | see that these people who transmit | the mouthings from Moscow do fot obscure the real purpose of the| American people and the American | labor movement.” A

Times State Service | RUSHVILLE, Ind, Oct. 12.—To- | morrow is .the birthday of Knowles | Shaw, who went- from a Rush county country church to gain wide | fame as an evangelist and author of hymns, Pt i

Provided

B..0.P, WOMEN HEAR WIFE OF CANDIDATE

LOGANBPORT, Ind, Oct. 12 (U.| P.) ~Mrs. Harry Crumpacker, Mich- | igan City, told a women's Republican group today that “the New

through the free-will | offerings from people of many | states, as well as the local church community, is a Knowles Shaw memorial stone and tablet at the Big | Flatrock Christian church, 10 miles

Deal's planned economy, instead of | Outhwest of Rushville, near the J fla un {hamlet of Gowdy. leading us out of the morass orass of 13 The tablet recites that “Knowles

years of decay, is taking us further to ucratic ruin.” ’ Crumpacker spoke on behalf of her husband, Judge Harry Crumpacker, Republicari. candidate . for re-election to the Indiana appellate court. | “The way is being paved, through

Shaw , , . preached his first sermon | in this, the Big Flatrock Christian church; brought 20,000 souls into the church of Christ . .., wrote and put to music one hundred gospel songs . . Some of Mr. Shaw's ‘best known

Beside the Big Flatrock Chris-

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Edward J. Mungo- plaster formed atop her by the|

products before now: do so. van, Hammond;-Vicar general.

If steel prices should go up, for instance, many would substitute other materials. thus éasing | shortage. Another example: Controls make it more profitable to make chocolate cake than bread.

AUTHORIZE TYNDALL

75-year-old building.

| } |

GIVEN 2 TO 21 YEARS FOR KILLING HUSBAN

of the trapped when

two-story |

floor

was

the first building,

today was sentenced to two to 21 ture, years ‘at._the Indiana Women's| Five others were injured. Fire Prison, Indianapoli§, on a jury’s| Chief Charles B. Kuhl said he beconviction of voluntary manslaugh- | lieved that Mrs. Nelson was the 10 APPEAL TAX CUT ter in the shotgun death of her |only one killed. veteran husband last July 4. ee et — City council yesterday authorized| The middle-aged washerwoman SEEK CHILD'S FATHER Mayor Tyndall to appeal to the|received the sentence calmly and| ‘AUBURN, Ind, Oct. 12 (U. P).— state tax board for restoration of | will begin serving it next week, 'A 21-year-old mother reluctantly $200,000 cut’ from the 1047 city| During her trial Mrs. Walker re- | remained in a hospital today & few budget by the county tax adjust- pudiated a confession she ‘Made doors from the newborn child police ment bogrd. : | July 4 that she killed her husbana say she abandoned in a nail keg. lems which City TOrporation because he begged her to do that |Police, meanwhile, searched northCounsel Arch N. Bobbitt will file &| rather than send him back to|eastern Indiana for the child's fapetition for Monday are: $53,175 for ; 24 additional firemen; $75,000 for | health board and hospitals; $50,000

the | $250.

He shot at her with his 22-caliber | sudden collapse of the roof of 8 rifle, and wounded her left leg. She | died shortly afterwards from loss of | Mrs. Nelson, a tavern worker on. pind, When he was arrested he had [ He told police he took the COLUMBIA CITY, Ind, Oct. 12 wood and tarpaper roof suddenly money from his mother's purse (U. P).—Mrs. Flossie Walker, 52, smashed down through the struc- | after he shot her.

KITTLE’S @00D HOUSEKEEPING STORES (20 E. Ohio—MA, 437

Indiana's Largest Appliance Dealers

WESTINGHOUSE—GENERAL ELEUIRIC—CROSLEY

Mrs. Kohlmeyer, who was a mem- | for benefit of foreign blocs is : : | | per of the Eastern Star lodge, had| . : will reduce list of 49 control |the Immaculate Conception and a |Garrett, 22, of 716 Edgemont st, FARM YOUTH 18. lived in: Indianapolis 26 years, Her needed. orders now on its books, particu- |prominent Indiana churchman for|and Alonzo James, 27, of 355 W. ’ R estine. husband is affiliated with the Roosa | $ Aaa larly in: textiles where some |45 years. |35th st, on gaming charges. SLAYS HIS MOTHE & Ratliff Wholesale Chemical Co., Registration Heavy softening’ in markets already is | Officiating at a solemn requiem a KNOXVILLE, 1a, Oct, 12 (U. P.). Cincinnati. REGISTRATION of voters in | indicated. high mass was the Rev. Fr. James P. COLLAPSING ROOF | _Eighteen-year-old Maynard Grieb- | mpm eer em com me —=—.. Small, like many another in- Conroy, Huntington, nephew of the, bien was hunting birds-and saw his | ; . ’ | dustrialist, thinks. most price deceased. KILLS }; INJURES 5 mother picking corn for the hogs. | Memorial Honors Hoosier | mics io mote’ simage han | Attending the sives were the Most) - stoux CITY. Towa, Oct 13 UL| ‘she bumed trom the sano good; says because materials Rev. John G. Benfeo, bishop of{p.) —Workmen today recovered the ward home. Police said Maynard ” . ° prices are low, many manufac- Lafayette; the Most Rev. John F.| body of Mrs. Maxine Nelson, 35,/told them “Something just came Evangel ist and Hymn Writer! turers who never used scarce |Noll, bishop of Ft. Wayne, and the from a tomb of wood and erumbled | into his head.” - |

The impression stamped upon the mind by services for a departed

loved one is always a lasting one. We try to make it as reverently

) {hymns are list 3 “Bring- { ar . New Dealism's constant efforts to| = are ste, including “Bridg- yp church in rural Rush county | for Park board, and $27,500 weaken our government by bungling e Sheaves,” “The Hand-| {memorial stand and tablet, | Street repairs. | writin tie Wall," “I Love Jesus” ; and. abiel ilmi ; 8 on ak, su Councilman A. Ross Manly

and administrative incompetencies, for the kind of revolutionary crisis basis of communism,”

Da PT

, 88, when they ad-

|" honoring Knowles Shaw, Hoosier { evangelist and hymn writer.

|and “We Believe,” Born near Venice, O, Oct. 13, 1834, Mr. Shaw came to Rush in a train wreck in Texas in 1878. county with ‘his parents when less| Elmer E, Hungerford of Rushville | than a year old. It was in this is chairman of the Knowles Shaw! | community that he spent his early Memorial association, which, was, years and here he- confessed his organized to promote recognition of faith in the church which stood on the evangelist’s hymns and work. the site of the preserit building. |Each year a Homecoming and |

he opposed the park board req | and ‘Councilman William A. Br

additional firemen.

The today be placed under rent control ‘r

Indiana OPA that Clinton county Ww

NEW RENT CURB SCHEDULED

Marion veterans hospital. ther. The baby suffered only ex- beautiful as ‘possible, regardless \ rs posure and was reported in good of cost. for FRIENDS LEADER | condition, : v. os ; SPEAKS AT PURDUE om me ISE said Th st 8 fe : s # S Y T TUS on Lararom tsour. 12-oe |} FOR PROMPT RELIEF & own | p, Elton Trueblood, - professor of trom externally caved

| opposed all tems. except that for | philosophy at Earlham college and . Friends religious leader | || will open Religious | : Emphasis Week at Purdue univer-| announced | sity at 10 a. m. tomorrow with an

"+ | ‘well-known and author,

| address in the Hall: of Music

“The Recovery of America.”

ould egu-

Dr. Trueblood recently returned |

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Mildly medicatea uticura helps clear

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hetic preparatory] The Rev. Mr. Shaw ‘conducted Knowles Shaw day is held at the lations effective Nov. 1. OPA ‘Rent ! Dr Arie / t \ : vo yu » | lat fle vids uyatyourdruging i Spealion. | Sut i dg pene in 14 veo! Big Flatrock church. At the re- Control Director Robert -Deweese from Europe where he made al Bis : ao ap 2 number of | cent homecoming, Harry Adkins of said the . housing shortage in| study of the wartorn countries as i CUTICURA 30AEnY side "in Chi 8 the Boulevard Butler university was speaker and Frankfort and the surrounding a member of the American Friends } ! cago. He was killed | Mr, Shaw's. hymns were sung. . by ; enw No i ER

area was “critical.”

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i 951 NORTH DELAWARE ST.

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Querie In the case report found utility -has o to the city ! to the amou predecessor private owne It also four dated May 3 directors wel that it was t tiate immedi: The report council find « leged - statem never been utility. % It also re council prob comparative and of syntl by the utilit, much of net

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Billie D Carrier & at 231 Nov getting a business get in & work. Hi tual expe way to le ICE, SAL! and AC( important business 1} as a life Billie h sonality outstandi SALESM. SELL whi now may ciding fax life.

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