Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1946 — Page 1
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The Indianapolis
FORECAST: Fair today and tonight; tomorrow, increasing cloudiness wi th little change in temperatures.
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VOLUME 57—NUMBER 213 Te Times Mobile Telephone Installed
ata VO
SCRIPPS = HOWARD
OPA PONDERS | BID FOR 15 PCT. J IKE IN RENTS
Pledges Full Consideration Of Recommendation by Advisory Group.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (U. PJ). «For the first time in four and a half years, OPA expressed willing~ ness today to consider an across-the-board increase in rent ceilings. OPA promised full consideration of a request by its own rent industry advisory committee for a general 15 per cent boost in rents throughout the country. It refused, how= ever, to say whether or, when it might accept the proposal, OPA has withstood pressure for a general increase ever since rents were put under control in 1942, although it has granted more than 900,000 individual adjustments to landlords claiming hardship. Work on Details
Ready for faster reporting through the use of The Times mobile telephone unit, . . . Heze Clark, veteran police reporter, “reads up” on final instructions as he talks to The Times office.
» - “ President - Truman said last Saturday that further rent adjustments On-the-Spot Coverage may be necessary but whether they will be general or individual remains to be seen. OPA doubtless would favor the individual method but there was fresh evidence today the The Indianapolis Times mobile telephone unit—providing communidecision may be taken out of its cation from a moving car to the news room—will be placed in operation hands. Dec. 2
for
Readers Will Begin Dec. 2,
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1946 Ena nepOs Inde Torasd Sndy exeepy Bunahy
SOAP SCARCITY ANOTHER YEAR CALLED LIKELY
Unprecedented Demand for
Bare
, PRICE FIVE CENTS
Black Market
Meat Cuts Production Of Fats, Oils.
By JIM G. LUCAS Secripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Nov. 14.—The de- ’ partment of agriculture says soap| First of four jet planes to comwill be hard to get for at least an-ipete against The Times’ “Miss In-
other year. |dianapolis” in a five-city race will
With controls gone, no one will . predict how much it will cost from roar through Indianapolis skies to-
here on out. Already, some popu- Morrow, lar brands are up 50 to 60 per cent.! “Miss Cleveland” will zoom off Government economists say they the Cleveland airport about 11 a. m., may level off there, or go higher. [Indianapolis time, its’ bullet nose On the other hand, a determined headed for Indianapolis, Cutting buyers’ strike may force them down, through the local skies shortly afteras in the case of meat, the experts ward, Maj. W. L. Moore, of Lumber-
Public Invited t
| say.
Contribute to Shortage Wartime manufacture of explo-| it sives, destruction of foreign copra will be " Usplay Weir «pak sources, the meat shortage and labor | Mp roug va rs oe - troubles have contributed to the lowing ils recep rum ALUPIARY, shortage. . | Lt, Arthur Murray will fly the Before the war, the United States Ship bo Indingupolis, after se. annually put two billion pounds of | 'ueling In Cleveland, upon com fats and oils into soap. Of that! pletion of his race. The public will amount, 60 to 70 per cent was ani-| Mmitted jo an hig on She mal fats, 25 per cent coconut oil,| Porth end of the north ramp for and 5 to 15 per cent other ingre-| ® close-up view of the plane and dients, principally vegetable oils. a chat with the pilot. The Times The bureau of agricultural eco-| is offering the plane's display free
nomics says production of fats and| and there will be no admission
The Times’ “Miss Indianapolis”
Informed sources said the budget |
That day will mark a new, faster era in news gathering. By using | oils in this country for the year)
charges of any kind.
Entry, 'Miss Indianapolis,’ at Airport
bureau was now working out details the mobile unit, a reporter may telephone the facts directly from the beginning Oct. 1, 1946, will be the . scene of any news event while the event is happening.
of a plan to set up a new liquida- 3 tion’ agen¢y to take over the re-| The first equipment installed for maining functions of OPA, the a client here has been placed in’ civilian - productien administration! mo Times mobile car by the Indic |
ttle- | sug Ue office of contract settle ‘ana Bell Telephone Co.
The office of war mobilization] The telephone-radio service be-
lin” the day the service goes into
| smallest since 1939. Stocks on Oct. ' | 1 were 400 million pounds less than thus was the first to have its equip- 'a year earlier and 700 ‘million | ment installed. | pounds below the 1932-41 average With the unit ready for “plugging for that date. hii !
ton, W. Va, will head for Evansville, then Cincinnati, Columbus, O., and back to Cleveland. The race will-be against time and ithe pilot having turned in the fastFat Supply Small lest gait when “Miss Columbus” ends As of Sept. 1, stocks of animal the race next Tuesday will be de-
operation, The Times news stafl yesterddy finished receiving its instruc-
and reconversion, headed by John
tween the car and any telephone
_ whether he plans to keep them.
© Crossword
; 4 : : : tion. Bell Telephone representatives R. Steelman; will remain _inde- connection in Indianapolis — Or schooled The Times staff in the pendent of the new agency, it Was 5ughtout the U. S.—will be operation of the car-to-office service. said, so it will be free to Settle! i, ii teq Dec. 2. That's the day] One of those to complete the inter-agency rows which otherwise ty, federal communication com- course was Heze Clark, veteran might require the attention the mission license obtained by the Times police reporter, who yesterPresident. . {telephone company = becomes ef-| day received his final instruction. Won't Figure in Decisio | fective, Mr. Steelman, who recommended! The Indianapolis Times was the of the many post-war expansions
thought wise, will not figure in the for the service in Indianapolis and serve its readers.
fats totaled 215 million pounds. At the rate of withdrawal then per-|
clared the winner. The event, the first of its kind
The’ mobile telephone unit is one |
mitted, the stock was sufficient for yer staged, is in conjunction with only six weeks. Without controls, the National Aircraft show which experts say it ‘will disappear over- opens in Cleveland tomorrow and night. ends Nov, 24. The amount of animal fats going| “Miss Indianapolis,” with Lt, Are into soap right now is small. The thur Murray of Harrisburg, Pa. at {agriculture department says “an the controls, will race the distanté unprecedented demand for meat on Saturday. The takeoff from
every type of meat cut, fat andia, m., Indianapolis time. ‘The ship
much speedier decontrol than OPA |first newspaper to make application planned by The Times. to a Peat] Harbor has absorbed Cleveland is tentatively set for 11
rest decision except on an appeal;
a ts 2 2° LT 7 SNOW. LET IT SNOW coupe 1s request or + secerss' White Christmas’ Is Possible
rent increase with a proposal to eliminate rent ceilings on new con-/ 8 . : sirction and on property bens con- ON Made-to-Order Basis Now verted from non-residential to resi. dential use. These ceilings are fixed | SCHENECTADY, N. Y., Nov. 14 (U. P.).—Scientists. from the Genby housing expediter Wilson W.\o.0) plectric laboratories said today they had succeeded in producing a
Wyatt, who was expected to an-|g ,uctorm by sprinkling an ordinary cloud - with pellets of dry ice nounce within the next week | 4ropped from an airplane.
Meanwhile, Chairman Roy L.! director of the G. E. laboratory, that a single airplane, flying through Thompson was expected to an-
price decontrol board. The panel bas had nothing to do since August; when it decontrolled meat and then
Snow, would reach Dr. Langmuir said the experi- | ground, the scientist added. saw Mr. Truman reverse that de-| TCV 's Imporiant because: |. The method was developed by cision last month to put meat back) It probably can be applied in Vincent J. Schaefer, G. E. research under price control. {winter to produce snow in regions scientist who, made the outdoor test. —— | where there are clouds which fail to! Six pounds of dry ice pellets were produce precipitation. Thus, it would!scattered in the air above the cloud
A-BOMB PHOTO SALE store up a supply of moisture to feed land “within two minutes a radical CHARGES DISMISSED irrigation and water-power projects modification of the cloud took place
during the spring months. and streamers of snow began to BALTIMORE, Nov. 14 (U. P.).—| Snow might also be produced at pour out of the base of the cloud,” U. S. Commissioner James K. Cul- mountain resorts for the benefit of Dr. Langmuir reported. len today dismissed charges against Winter. sports enthusiasts. Dr. Langmuir explained that the three war veterans who attempted | Reduce Air Hazards 8:9 ice pellets, Whiclt are solid ears to sell pictures of atom bomb equip-| .ment to a Baltimore newspaper, !fall over urban areas could possibly the drops of water in the cloud to ‘Mr. Cullen based his dismissal on be made to drop snow in rural areas ice. fnsufficient evidence. He empha- instead, thus eliminating the probsized that the case can still be lem of snow removal. taken before a grand jury but that| It could be used to clear areas of the. government
Several Tons of Snow
it intends to maintain.” | to. aircraft, The FBI George Wallace Comer, 23, Miles made snowstorm was
Frederick Daubenheyer, 26, both of ‘Wednesday. A small
Rike, 26, of Chattanooga, Tenn. western Massachusetts, flew through | into the active region, Mr. Daubenheyer is a former a cloud three miles long and turned| With a completely overcast sky, Butlerville, Ind., resident. [it into snow. {he said, a single plane should be go ” From a 14,000-foot level, the snow able to produce hugé amounts of {fell an estimated .3000 feet, But be-|snow in comparison to the amount
Z HUNTERS KILLED of the dry condition: of the of bon dioxide used, H ti cause e dn on of carbon i sed, e estiAT GRADE CROSSING atmosphere beneath the cloud, the mated that a single pellet of dry ice,
SALEM, Ind, Nov. 14 (U. P.).— S0OW evaporated before it reached | about the size of a pea, dropping Two persons were killed today the ground, Dr. Langmi§f# sald. | 2000 feet through the air, might
when a Monon train struck an
automobile at a crossing near here. titudes, which commonly prgvail in|velop several tons of snow,
The process is so simple, explained Dr. Irving Langmuir, associate say now.
{an overcast sky, could blanket a {will cut down the total grease and | nounce the fate of the three-man|,.... area with several inches of winter, such a precipitation of snow | tallow intake.” and blanket the|
: enn, | DOD dioxide with a temperature of | pe vr Clouds destined to produce tnow- |, . degrees DUloW. Yolo. converted | MEAT PRODUCTION
lean, with the resultant lowering! warn of the amount of fat ordinarily) (Continued on Page $—Cojumn §)
o View The Times' P-80 Race Sunday
U. S.-DONATED UNITS SELLIN CHINA FOR $25
Shanghai Quacks Advertise ‘Quick Restorative For Systems.
SHANGHAI, Nov, 14 (U. P)., = The American Red Cross demanded today that the foreign liquidation commission withdraw tens of thousands of blood piasma units from the lush Shanghai black market. The plasma—donated in wartime by patriotic Americans—has been selling for two months at $25 a pint, U. 8, money. The commission sold the plasma to Shanghai merchants as “surplus” {at approximately 50 cents a pint. Donald B. Davis, newly appointed field director of, the Shanghai foreign liquidation* commission office, said he would do his best to buy back the plasma and turn it over to the Red Cross. Under military regulations all donated plasma and other Red Cross {supplies unused by the armed forces {is supposed to be returned to the {Red Cross for distribution wjthout [cost to hospitals. Advertised in Newspapers The sale of the plasma became {known when Chinese language ‘newspapers began printing a series {of advertising ballyhooing “America plasma” as a “quick restorative for {depleted systems.” : | These advertisements urged the {user to write a letter to the Amer« : : . rH. (ican donor whose name appears on Maj. W. L. Moore Maj. F. E. Everest Lt. D. A. Schulis Capt. J. Sullivan each box.
TIRANA by %
pa
trimmed bilge aa i: J the mark-!’ eting of fat cuts Yormerly tanked. Nor do authorities see any immediate improvement. They had hoped | that, with record supplies of corn and other feed crops and an anticipated heavy slaughter of feeders in | September, there would be more] fats available this fall, |
Rush Will Cut Intake Announcement Comes After “Decontrol changed all that,” they, Z : Inspection of Site.
“If anything, the tem-| By RICHARD BERRY
15 Die, 8 Hurt [INDI
“Miss Clevelafd” “Miss Evansville” “Miss Cincinnati” “Miss Columbus” When these adVertisements first
i {to the foreign liquidation commis : y& sion and was promised the plasma : ¢ Px would be withdrawn. In B lowup of : | The only result, however, was that 1) thereafter the plasma was advertised ’ : as “red and white corpuscles” ine ——— P + stead of “American plasma.”
Erroneously Declared Surplus
Banana Shed | After additional Red Cross pro-
COLUMBIA, 8. C, Nov. 14 (u. Safety Consultant Advises P.).—Five persons were killed today | a : i ing Traffic Study First, tess the FL agrees to “contac nese purchasers and attempt to
porary rush of livestock to market : | Montgomery Ward & Co., Chicago, | a soem. Dua nounced todsy that. it wll enter ing the war, we shared with the ® formal bid for the Fall Creek | British what they could obtain from Ordnance Plant, following an in-| Ceylon. Copra imports from the spection tour of the plant yesterday | Philippines pate been Jesuit but by top company officials. e shipments are small. . ia a] The a destroyed all copra If its bid is accepted, the company ciushing mills in the islands. In said, it wilt operate a giant ware-pre-war days, the Philippines house in Indianapolis to serve 14 Suh x per gent of sels COPIR grates, The warehouse would be the ore shipping it. Now, i neces} ae ail : - re pp 2 to Es ent major distributing point for Indiana, | crushing mills, |THinots, Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan, | | Wisconsin, Towa, Missouri and | Arkansas, a company spokesman Istated. Company Treasurer
Robert 8.
AGAIN DECLINES
and eight injured, seven of them | seriously, when a sharp explo-| : 1 sion demolished the W. N. Wes-, Indiana, whose highways long round up and buy back the plasma, sell Co. banana ripening shed in have been free of a general speed scattered in scores of drug stores downtown Columbia. {limit, today was advised to adopt and other markets in Shanghai.
The blast shattered windows in ODE as the first step in a long-| Director Davis said the situation="
surrounding buildings but there was rage program of accident reduc- was one which he inherited when no fire. | tion, en {he took over the office. He said an Coroner Ollie Mefford listed the »What limit to adopt should follow investigation revealed that the U.S. dead as W. Nolan Wessell, owner ® careful Study of traffic volume and navy erroneously classified the of the shed; George D. Watkins road conditions, is the opinion of plasma as “surplus” and the Shangand Robert Lee Black, both of Norman Key, Washington, D. C., hai liquidation commission sold it,* Roanoke Rapids, N; C.: 'G. C. Aber- | Safety consultant, American Auto- | without checking the contents, nathy, Columbia, and Arville Gantt, | mobile association, in. Indianapolis along with medical supplies from Pelion, 8. C. [eae . : | Okinawa. Z The injured were taken to Provi-| A committee appointed by Gov-/| Red Cross officials estimated that dence and Columbia hospitals, One ¢'NOr Gates is studying the possi- 290 measurement tons of plasma had later was dismissed after treatment DUity of recommending to the nextifound its way to the black market for cuts. and. bruises. {Jegisiature the establishment of a and that at current prices it would The company cashier; Miss Al. | speed limit in Indiana. {bring approximately $10 million in -
vena Dixon, escaped death or injury | Although fewer automobiles are in U. §. money. operation now, these are being)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (U. P.). Smith in Chicago today told The —The agricultural department said | Times The heat which is generated by|yesterday that production of feder-|would supply some items to stores “is undoubtedly | clouds that produce dangerous icing the freezing of the water produces | ally-inspected meat dropped last|as far east as Pennsylvania an handicapped because of the secrecy conditions, thus reducing hazards a turbulence in the cloud which re-|week for the second week in a row.|New York and as far south as Tensults in pillars of cumulus at the It reported that substantial supplies nessee, Mississippi and Alabama. identified them as| Dr. Langmuir said the first man-| top, Dr. Langmuir added. This tur- {of choice beef should be available | produced | bulénce, he said, enables the proc- next spring and summer. airplane, ess to spread as a type of shan} Meat production last week totaled Bel Air, Md, and “James Barnes flying over Greylock mountain in reaction and draws more moisture | nearly 412 million pounds, including -
|becaues she had left a few minutes before the blast to go to a bank. Fire Chief E. D. Marsh attributed d the blast to leaking ethylene gas, {which is piped trhough the shed to theat and ripen bananas, ?
that ‘the warehouse also
Officials Inspect Plant
| Mr. Smith accompanied Mont- 60 PCT REPORT SET gomery Ward President Wilbur H. 1 I
|
|
Iconditions predisposing to accidents.
driven a greater average number of miles than prior to world war II,
| Mr. Key declared, adding to high-
way traffic volume, = Besides volume, speed is the other most important factor in creating
However, has learned through surveys that human failure accounts for 70 per
the safety consultanty
STATE RULING ASKED "ON BLACKFORD VOTE
No decision had been reached to jday in Blackford county concerning the winners in a ‘Wi |township advisory board election. - The Republican party won the election, but by mistake the names
i a Norton, R. E. Harrison, operating jus million pounds of beef, 22,200,000... president, and Robert rove, AQ FUND GOAL TODAY pounds of veal, 196 million pounds on the inspection # |
chief engineer, tour of the plant. Mr. Smith told The Times that
lot pork and 17,700,000 pounds of
' {lamb and mutton. Lard production! | Was 42,300,000 pounds. the company does not plan to open This represented a drop of 6 per , ,o(qi] store in Indianapolis in cent from the previous week's total| iy. ear future, even if it acquires] of 400 million pounds but was still {10 plant. [17 per cent above the 351 million] ‘whic does not mean that we
In cloud formations of lower al-| produce enough ice nuclei to a= 7 pourids produced in the correspond-|,.ve no plans for a. retail: store in
ing week last year. [indianapolis,” e added. “It is
The dead were Russell Paul Southerland, 23, Salem, Ind, and Edwin L, Gray, 22, driver of the auto, State police: said the men were en route to nearby woodlands to hunt, The accident occurred at the Charlestown crossing, four miles east of here on state highway 160. George N. Muill of Lafayette was the engineer of the train,
Out of Proportion, State
By ROBERT BLOEM Labor probably would not “risk” a year's truce with management, even in the face of mounting belief that a new wave of industrial strife could ring economic disaster.
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
6am.....3 10am. ...;. 4 That today appeared to be the consensus among top-drawer lead7am.....3 11am... 53 |ersof the labor movement in Indiana. ‘8a. m..... 40 12 (noon) 54 These labor leaders were approached by The Times to obtain their 9am. 43 1p m: ., 585 [reaction toa truce plan for 1947.
The plan was proposed Tuesday in|augmented by Carl Mullen, presian article by Basil Manly, former dent of the State Federation of joint chief of the war labor board.| Labor, Although a number of labor rep-| Mr, Gilbert is legislative repre Amusements ,.28 Local Briefs ..36 resentatives were checked, the !gsentative for the Brotherhood which Eddie Ash ..,..34 Inside Indpls.. 21 [broad viewpoint was the work of ig one of the “big three” organiza-
TIMES INDEX
MANLY PLAN: WORKERS FEAR 'NO STRIKE' CLAUSE—
Labor's 'Sacrifice’ in Proposed Truce
| possible that we will open one there | | | at a later date.” |
Well Suited to Needs “The plant is well suited to our purposes and could be easily adapted to meet our specific needs,” |
U : M S {the company treasurer said. “While | non en AY there is some machinery we do-not {wish to buy, it will not interfere
to put—meore—restrictive legislation | with our plans to bid on the plant.” | on the books.” |
that labor-management stsife was its central location and fine transa major cause of the nation's Cuf«| Poriation facilities. rent economic straits. The country,! He declined to comment on how he said, “is producing at the high-|the Montgomery Ward bid on the|
pression that may be dificult and have been made on the property. Built in 1942 to make armor plate for tanks, the Fall Creek plant cost $8,750,000. It covers more than 18| acres and has 265,000 square feet
long, industrial strife hag virtually | nothing to do with it.” He said the Manly plan’ was “workable, but too late.” Too much; of floor space.
Boots .. .+++38 Ruth Millett . 21 | Walter Frisbie for the C.I.O, Hugh tions of the labor movement in Ned Brooks:,.. 4 Movies ..,",..28|J, Gormley for the A. F. of L, and | Indiana, Business ... 30 Obituaries ....16 [Ray Gilbert for the Brotherhood of| In general, their objection to the Classified 36-38 Dr, O'Brien. ...21 | Railway Trainmen, © truce plan centered around “no- |
Comics .. ..... 39 F.C, Othman .21| Mr, Frisbie, secretary of the In- strike” sections and on their views | .+. 39 Radio ......30 dustrial Union Council, spoke pri-|of its basis for wage settlement. | Editorials .... 22° Mrs. Roosevelt 21 marily for that branch of the All expressed strong suspicion that! Fashions 24, 25, 27 Serial Mrs. Ferguson 27 Silly Notions .21 Hapgood and leaders Forum. ....... 22 Sports .' ..34-35 powerful unions within the C. I. O. would be sought from industry; Meta Given ,..25 Teen Talk .....24 preferred to leave such broad policy | One spokesman, Mr. Don. Hoover ..22 Washington ...22 matters up to national chiefs. charged The Times and ScrippsIndiana Saga 22 Weather Map 3 In Indianapolis 2| Wom, News 24-27 | director of the A. F. of L. His dis-|plan for “circulation promotion” Labor ,..n....21 World Affairs 22 cussion of the truce, proposal was|and to “persuade politicians ee . 2 hated " & ¥ . 1 y
\
...%. 33/C. 1. O. Regional Director Powers the plan called upon labor fof far prove chances of labor participation
of the plan, he said, iS based on as- ~ : : sumption that present wages are a! The war assets administration re- | fair and equitable starting point for Fichul office al Oinemnei il re truce adjustments, By settling the open wn ing on e plant ov. 0. standard of living question first, he sald, Mr. Manly would vastly im-
RESCUE SHIP DISPATCHED | YOKOSUKA, Nov. 14 (U.P).
x, |inter-island- ship, the Edwin C.|
Only Mr. Gilbert was frank and Echels, disabled since. Saturday
Mr, Gormley spoke as regional | Howard newspapers with using the plunt about the strategic problem of when its rudder failed to function
/ ; . while the’ vessel ‘waz “bound for | (Continued on Page 9—Column 1) [Honolulu from Yokohama, a - - . . 3 4 vr
»
Meeting to Launch Drive Into Home Stretch.
| Community Fund campaign work- | ers hope to see 60 per cent of their | goal raised at today's meeting in the Claypool Hotel, Already ahead of last year in percentage, 7000 volunteer workers are driving down the home stretch to subscribe the total goal of $1,328,-| 000 by next Wednesday. At the last report meeting, a total of $635,274 in pledges represent- | ing 47.8 per cent of the goal was turned in. Today's meeting will be in charge
| He said the company considers of the downtown division headed by From there, Mr. Frisbie took sharp |Indianapolis -an ideal spot for a|Clifford Campbell, chairman, and exception to the Manly implication |major distribution point because of Albert Mendenhall,
co-chairman. |
[U's Nobel Prize Winner Finds
est peace-time rate in history, and plant will compare to the size ad * * . Income Property Grosses Sixteen while we are heading into a de- specifications of other bids that! JONOP Put Him Behind in Wor i Per Cent Plus Owner's Apartment
By eat HOFF | Times Staff Writer | BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Nov, 14 Dr. Herman J. Muller, Indiana university's Nobel prize winner, was back on the campus today catching up with back work before leaving for Stockholm to accept the prize. The winner of the highest academic honor ever bestowed on the school said he was nearly three
of certain heavier proportionate sacrifices than|in the truce, although then the The heavy cruiser Chicago was dis- | weeks behind in his research; a {need for such a truce would be re- patched today to the aid of an army | continuation of the studies of mu-| Frisbie, duced to a nonentity,
tation by X-ray which won him the high honor. Indiana university will delay al celebration for the scientist until alter he go from Sroeklm, |
ia
a
cent of all accidents, with about of three persons other than the ofi«
half the remaining number due to!
| ballot, road conditions and the other 15] per cent due to faulty vehicles. This frio—Chester Bird, Francis
: : | Yates and Ennis McConkey—was This is why safety work has emphasized the human response oj Srolared the winners. All are Retrafic volume and speed, Mr, Key publican precinct committeemen. ’ No one of them ever had sought th: explained. ug e He also urged wider adoption of high school courses in drivertraining. One course is in operation at Technical high school; incidentally, using an outline pre-
red by the Washington, D. C., i il . Republican candiates omitted in-
A dual-control automobile also|2dVertently from the ballots are is available at the East side school Ralph Spaulding, John Sharp and for in8truction, Carl Osborne, A The expert is scheduled to speak at a session this afternoon of a| HOLY LAND TRAINS HALTED two-day central Indiana safety con-| JERUSALEM, Nov, 14 (U. P.).— ference and exhibit, opening today |Train service between Jerusalem in the Claypool hotel. It is being|and Jaffa was suspended indefinitesponsored by the Indianapolisily today by the Palestine govern safety council, ment because of the increasing bold« ness of Jewish extremist attacks,
office, pe state election board was asked to decide the winner, but the only decision reached was that the question was beyond the board's jurise diction.
The energetic Dr. Muller, who was singled out for the award in medicine and psysiology on the basis of work done 15 years ago, returned to the I. U. campus last week-end ‘from Washington. He was attending “i scientific conference at the Carnegie institute there when he received word of the honor, worth more than $33,000. He found his desk here piled high |. with letters and wires from all over the world. ! : * He said he hoped to calch up ol his work before leaving for en to receive the Nobel mi. TS
Within easy walking distance of Washington High School, B. & O. Shops and other west side indus try. It's a good rental location.
128 N. Traub Ave. 10-room modern
s
rented per month. ing state. For exact price nt phone refer to‘ ‘Houses y's '
In Blood Plasma
t-—
cial candidates were included on the +
