Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1946 — Page 1
PAGE .; | =— a ER
= The Indianapolis Times
wiih Fair and continued cold tonight with lowest temperature 20 degrees, Tomorrow, increasing cloudiness and not quite so cold. - »
MONDAY, DECEMBER
ww Entered ax Second-Class Matter at Posioffice Indianapolis, Ind, Issued daily except Sunday
57th YEAR—NUMBER 228
| 2 State Officials Take Oath of Office
tain Urges an on Al per Weapons
. S., England Team | p on New Demands
BULLETIN AKE SUCCESS, N. Y. Dee. (U. P.).~The United States
2, 1946
Judge Hints Way Lew; May Dodge High Pena
ay to prevent “coercive United | | porarily shelv disarmament - State Auditor A. V. Burch (left) takes oath for his second term. | Listed by Police
.
State House Plaza. Planned for Hoosier Capitol + |
ons action” against Franco | Here Passes in after the be | gn ) te and took up the smolder- | issue of Generalissimo Fran- | KE SUCCESS, N. Y. Dec. 2 before Supreme Court Judge Frank E. Gilkison, p.).~While the United States |
Russia clashed over what to do I the atomic bomb, Great Britain yrmed the United Nations today | . : ” t there are “other more terrible| By JACK THOMPSON pons” which must be outlawed] 4 Early morning traffic moved with ‘ediately. : {comparative smoothness today. : %ere is no longer safe ground! ” Police, who made an inspection ying the atomic bomb re-| jour of the downtown district to; the most terrible of weap-| 4 study the effect of new parking re-| Bir - Hartley - Shawcross of | strictions, which started at 6 a. m.,| told the 50-nation political were satisfied with what they saw.} 1 urity committee. Motorists generally were co-oper- | ¢ abolish the atomic bomb,! | j ative in observance of the new city] we abolish . . . even more ordinance which prohibits parking methods of warfare which! fon the street in most parts of the et named but the existence | - : mile square between 6 and 9 a. m. ; ! is not entirely unknown,” | Governor Gates (left) welcomes Thomas Bath of South Bend and 3 and 6 p. m. ! pb eT | (center), newly elected secretary of state, to his official family. Look- | A thorough check by heads of the! L THE TEA 4 4 ing on is Supreme Court Judge Mart J. O'Malley who administered the | police traffic division showed only oath of office to Mr. Bath in the state house this morning. {about 40 offenders. Many of them
Burch, Bath Are First to Be e United States is a state Sworn In for 2-Year Terrs
Inspector Audry Jacobs, head of the traffic division; Capt. Harry holds with both hands this ” Mr. Vishinsky said. . Crowds of Well-Wishers Gather at State House Rotunda to Witness Ceremonies
Photos, Page 3
haweross spoke after Soviet! Minister Andrei Vishinled the atomic bomb “the Jof the horror” of devastating’ ons which the United Nationis d abolish for all time.
\Y WITH YOUR ND CHIEF CHUM! | THE OUTBOARD | HARDY’S AND MY CLOTHES. 48
- ¥3jere is an architect's model of a new state office building and other improvements of the proposed state house plaza. The plan was recommended to Governor Gates teday by the stale office building com- | mission. Figure 1 is the proposed new state museum and conservation building; (2) expanded state | library building; (3) existing library building: (4) new highway commission building; (5) the present | state house and - (6) _Vropuaey state office building.
Bates Is Given 2 Proposed Design
Supervisory Group
Lessens Congestion They agreed that the parking ban lessened congestion and speeded the | flow of traffic into town. | Inspector Jacobs said: “Traffic this morning is in a lot better shape’
: ; Eoin than we expected.” Indiana's official “swearing in” season opened today as Stale: py, gpticipated rush on centrally
Auditor A. V. Bureh and Secretary of State.Thomas Bath took oath ;,..teq parking lots a“ hat = of office for the coming two, years. terialize by 9 a. . The two officials are the first to receive the oath after the sweeping i. anneared 2 8 tam mens machinery must Ro Republican election victory of Nov. 5. Mr. Burch began his second| 1; 3pH thought that persons norrst on the atomic bom term while for Mr, Bath today's § cerem vere an introduction to the 1 ork had turned to 1so providing for the prohi- n.ally driving to wor Is Recommended 0 providute ay 72 ficial amily, busses and trolleys for transporta-|
all Other * ‘weapons of mass i 1 it f po § :€ of well-wishers milled 5, A check with Indianapolis! A program to expand the state as | I ain, abou. the rotunda of the stale pgjlways, however, gave No iM- house area and add several new house. A delegation from EVERS- , ediate indication of an increased government structures. including. a
I S$ Mi lita p t ville jammed the auditor's office 10! yglyme of business.” (patking ‘ares for 1003 cars, was
Soe tellowiownsman Burch tape. his Walking to Work {sent to Governor Gates today by the oath before Supreme Court Judge State Office Building commission. Fr ilki . E. H. Pflumm, superintendent of g : rank E. Gilkison, at 10:30 a. m. Praises Empl . transportation for the railways. ex-| The commission recommended Labor M. P. Sees raises Employees pressed the belief that perhaps that a planning authority” should be is In a brief talk after the cere- people were parking farther out created by the general assemily the Union Against Russ jwoaY, Mr. Buren Feld Shasial tribute if. om town and walking to work. jest of He year A Superviee purto the employees ‘of his department| pe said that the company could chase an developmen toward reduc- | LONDON, Dec. 2 (U. P.).—Konni for past performance and urged {c]] petter during the evening surrounding the ¢ Zilliacus—one of the leaders of the continued efforts so that “the voters gpether more persons were using ment seat. of armaments. revolting group of British 1abor | will have no regret for the honor |{},e transit system. Trafic in the] New structures needed s Back members of parlimngny ad oday they have bestowed on us.” nornipg is much more spread out ately, the report said, are: ped back that charged " TR have. AD bour later Mr. Bath raised ijan in the evening, he explained. | ONE: A large state office building ling “in tri- sh id BEY iy he defense his right hand and took oath before! gypervisors at both the Circle | to provide most of the space needed. fually Russia workin pu J a world war. Supreme Court Judge Mart J. pus station and the booth at Illi-| TWO. A conservation and state phibition of X "Mr. Zilliacus' charge came after O'Malley. The ceremony was wit- \nois and Washington sts. said busi- museum building. : ell. ta British ‘government spokesman nessed by more than 150 residents of (ness appeared to be that of a ty pi- THREE: An addition to the state ithe Soviet i that the United States and South Bend, Mr. Bath's home town, cal Monday morning. A heavy sale library and historical building d, “seem Bitain are conducting conversa- Who came to the capitol city in Of car tokens was reported, however. FOUR: A highway commission be to get tions “on a technical level” for two specal buses and a moor Halts Double Parking building. nd then standardization of * weapons and caravan | Police pointed out that a favor-' FIVE: Additions to the board of t prob- ‘peacetime military co-operation” | Party leaders honored Mr Bath able condition. brought about by health building on W. Michigan st. security but denied that hard and fast waits.” agreements or decisions had been would reached. - stand on its proposal that §Rhe as- Ne Written Agreement
Pump Firm's Fall Creek Bid Seen Favored by WAA
Corporation's Offer to Initially Employ 500 Persons Is Big Factor in Negotiations
By RICHARD BERRY Reliable Indianapolis sources today speculated that the Food Machinery Corp. of San Jose, Cal, is being favorably considered for pur | chase of the Fall Creek Ordnance plant. Recommendations on the bidding were forwarded today to the Chi! cago zone office of the war assets administration for approval and forwarding to the Washington office of WAA. Bidders for the plant on the Nov.|~
20 cut-off date were the California firm, with an $851,000 cash bid; Wm. Cold Snap to End: Mercury Hit od
H. Block Co. $651,000, and Stokely Warmer Weather Is
Foods, Inc., with a stipulated bid of Expected Today
$458,000 cash. Would Employ 500 LOCAL TEMPERATURES 21 am. . UU
The plant cost $2,200,056 when it] was built and now is appraised by | WAA. as being worth $1,144,000. It was understood the machinery 2 lam... 21 12 (Noen) . 23 ipm..
Bailey, and Lt. Otis Tyner. | 'Shaweross did not hint imtely at the weapons which pd his remarks, but presumthey included bacteriological
. edi inspir ably warf He ho disa cents while bition of destructiq The dis “furning p nally (D. traded blo LN duel over 7 AW, SOME sian: propos Tus SHOT UP | mament [1 NORTH NAMED Conn atomic bomb’ over all other tion and prohibit Vishinsky Mr. Vishinsky si Mr. Connally was angles” and that also was seeking the other mass weapons a8 “The two objectives proposal,” Mr. Connally to my untutored mind rid of the atomic bomb the rest of the disarma lem would be placed in t council . . . where the vetd He said the United Sta
pre, teamed with the United States, ver, in asserting that proposed
ament debate neared ol #8 Senator Tom Con Fa and Mr, om Gon} 's in a sharp oratorical he American and Rus-| pls for setting up disLIEry. i said Russia's plan of . land Hoosier govern-
immedi-
corporation's offer to locate a Peer- | less Pump manufacturing plant here, | which would initially employ 500] persons, was a large factor m the negotiations. A Chicago WAA spokesman told The Times that if the national office does not award a contract to. The week-end cold snap, which ated & Statement " one of the three bidders, the plant hastened the commercial and in-| negotiations she tugesiing thi id will revert to the control of the Cin- dustrial crisis by biting into dwin- | 1 ewig be ‘Tesumed. cinnati WAA office. |dling coal reserves, will end today. | Mr Burke left the n io sole Sought as Ware House The Indianapolis weather bureau g,n of the directors The spokesman said the army predicted fair weather today, and it convened but no orgy Ea wants the use of the plant and that|said it would be considerably |civen, He was unavailable 0 re {WA2 also would like to use it for|WArmer Jomoeron. But not as WAM porters, a warehouse. He added, however, |as Saturday's 65 degrees. Joseph Cunningham, president ot that the Cincinnati office can re Temperatures skidded overnight ihe orummies Creek Coal Co. w open bidding on the plant if the down to 20 degrees at 7 a. m. The presided in Mr. Burke's al
three present bids are rejected. The mercury rose one degree at 8 a. M.|jaclined comment. He is expected to make |As the sun dispelled the mist over told x
{@owntown Indianapolis, the mer(Continued on Page 4—Column 3) (Continued on Page 4—Colitn 4) \cury inched higher, Indianapolis industries, meanwhile, began a production week with . uncertainty that they would fin. ish it. Industrialists feared curtailment of manufactured gas by the end of the week. i
resume negotiations with Mr. : for a new contract. One-iii.u uf | their number already had spuds
nn . 28
6a 7a 8a 9a 29
(Continued on Page 4—C olumn 5)
| arguments over duration and operation of Mr, Lewis’ May 29 contract with Mr. Krug. Government lawyers argued that the terms conditions of the contract were ‘the period ‘of government y tion” of the bituminous mines. Judge Goldsborough dropped 4 hint about penalties us Mr. Le contempt: trial went into its a: week. The government sought ‘to blast the union contention that the
at
They are the persons
100
= Fuel Crisis Drags 2 Production Lower
[RGH, Dec. 2 (U. P).~
(Continued on Page 4
BODY RECOVES Ens SAULT STE. MARIE, 12 (U.P) -~Police
cer, at a banquet Friday evening!double parking by delivery trucks mobiles near the state house. would be the first step in a nited | received information indicating Brazil Man an Noived Economic Council. Do. xr ahi \i riti |to the west, northwest and north greement in writing. atomic energy commission. Grant Hughes, Connally -left no doubt that as a siened pact had been made. |of trustees of the Indiana State land now owned by he state, J this session of the assembly, was{ Britain already have agreed, at least! expired term of J. Frank McDer- Newton L. Halterman, a busy world atomie control machine. | apd other: items of joint defense. 19, 1950. grain and hay show at Chicago named jet planes, pacteriologies! | I buss Are Huai Beings [with the international livestock | They also expected a rail freight Shelby county as world corn prince. | Trainis Many New Donors Join Veteran Sponsors to Gl Training Major king. He was attending school to- {strangle what appears to be the hind Fog of Rigid Censorship coal mines under a sham BEDFORD, Ind, Dec. 2. — The : The new corn king was working | gjothe-A-Child to provide thie initial casif fund for the 1946 campaign.| As the soft coal strike went into lieves Mr, Lewis — Their contributions amount to $370. than a month's supply. vealed as a major point of dispute— | Russia ha obscured for outsiders the simple fact that Rus- 'dent 844-D variety corn was tops np Clothe-A-Child list to local stores Donors’ List | or Lewis’ lawyers argued the program has been “a sore spot” in| “The temptation is to think of them as characters Mr. Halterman was Indiana corn ao a Boy Named Charles” last Negotiations were scheduled to be neither. They are folks like ourselves, working, worrying, of Rush county, he lives paign which Opened only: la Indianapolis Bowling association SIT penalties for sinking a carvers and planermen, Ywho are (Continued on Page 2—Column 1) | Golden GI den of That needs to be understood at the outset in looking at Swe. 10: be. clouied 11s veal, in Momary of mw
and his predecessor, Rue J. Alexan- the new laws was the elimination of | SIX: Parking space for 1000 autoand again at a special party lunch- on the heavily traveled streets. The technical studies made prior eon this noon. | Nevertheless, some trouble Was (5 the report were undertaken with sembly adopt a resolution which| Mr. Zilliacus said that he had | rms the co-operation of the Indiana | Nations disarmament prografm ge-{aliet the United States and Brit- Th: commission recommended the volving unmistakably around jain have not entered into a written State Farm Trustee | acquisition of four full city blocks, 10-months-old United Nati¥ns! |agreement. He said there would be 0 sier S dame { Governor Gates today named lot the state house, inciuding the However, he said he was informed Brazil, Ind. indus-! y V.T Hamlin Outlaws Other Weapons {that commitments just as binding | trialist, as a member of the board W Id C : jstate- Library IGpEFty aid. ‘ul jacent x " orig Lorn ning : a oid Hr . - national office : THE ONLY ) the United States feared Russia, ifn! “Mr. Zilliacus seid that the gen- Farm near Putnamville. | The grounds for acquisition in- nation THIS oN pushing the disarmament issue i eral staffs of the United States and|- Mr. Hughes will finish the un- - trving to infringe on the atomic \n Principle, on the standardization mond, Attica newspaperman, who Rush county farmer, was named \ commission's negotiations: for a ff arms, mobilization of manpower died recently. The term expires July corn king the international Off fo a Good Start— — § ) as * Connally insisted that “other ny re ie | OclRY | } { Cl th A Ch Id y. -~ - weapons of mass destruction” he | The show which is being held ni es Q e | . " Expect Freight Embarge warfare and rocket bombs—he {show also. named 12-year-old | Contributions Reach $370 pe 5 ¥ jumped with the atomic bomb > Die S ite P {Thomas E. Fischer of neighboring be h 1 but tal outlawing and control. P ropaqgah a mbargo on all but essential com- . ! Tommy Fischer is the son of | |modity shipments, That would not hey Work Worry and Li Just We D Charles Fischer, 1940 world corn | h d '46 C {only hamstring local production, but ’ ive Just as We Do i | sh Fund in ampaign Stone. Trade Issue |day when his family was notified Provide Ear y Ca pels biggest Christmas buying spree of|government was operating the Times State Servige [of _the award. Many new contributors have joined veteran sponsors of The Times the decade. t By EUGENE LYONS on his 60-acre farm fo x 4 iy ur miles t \izations and individuals are among early contributors its third week, coal reserves in In- he judge's past remarks, G. 1. apprentice training program Beripps-Howard Stat Writer south of - Rushville. hen), Si Seyentien orgal ever, indicated stron he | in the stone trade has been re- The¥og of propaganda and’ censprship around Soviet notified that his a Pay Yoh tu te Yttyimmurk Times servige lo provide. eioiing 10x Bese. COQ le Ca i vi ; ir ps. Mayor Tyndall, meanwhile, ed grder to keep the contract in along with wages—in the Monroe- | lsians arg’human beings ith hl } in the international show. ; Many Sours Ris Have JIEIH woe gine two additional yw © his] 2 Lawrence county stone strike, One, gs, with roughly the same faults and Tommy Fischer had also exhibited who will take chidren on union official said the apprentice |virtuegas people in other countries. an 844-D variety ; {Continued on Page 4+~Calumn 4) /mines actually have been y. and purchase clothing from their Winkler r Olt Co. " 3 ; — » She private owners: ‘and | the industry for the last several | 4 ama. or gui 2 ' in a xioE In 1933, $e Won the’ Hoosier] [own funds. “For x Gir Named Joan’: oyees. i OannaRy antiatEine haw 4 " nea ’ i T U It’ ood start for a cammonths. Pigs in a great experinfent, They are {shelled-corn title in 1938. A re ES . wt Minne ©. rr tat ot apply. They protested that ¢ with his | Wednesday. But it will be necesa Ieeumed ee ios ke went [getting what satisfaction they can out of life despite ex- Wife and two children at the farm. sary to “keep the ball rolling” if all Be A 0 N. ers, . n d treme poverty and political oppression. the unfortunate children seeking Fad omer Knowisdse sivh asking a 25-cent per Bour pay In Memary of my wite, increase, have been away from their the everyday facts of life un-! nou Greater Demand Indicated “Lohman and Caryell A." jobs in 24 mills since Nov, 19. \ indication points to an
"Violet Franklin,
. Ind. ' Every Fred Haymond
Amuse, Eddie As Boots |
Business .....
Classified Comics
Crossword Editorials ....
Fashions
Mrs. Ferguson 161 Bide Glances .
Forum
G. I. Rights. . ° Meta Given In Indpls..
| Tnside In
B Paul Leach. 12. Women's
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10-11 Ruth Millett 13 h...., 8 Movies , 10-11 . 22 Obituaries «19 18 F. O. Othman 13 ..20-22 Radio + 18 . 23 | Reflections ... 14 © 20+ Scherrer 14] 14 | Science 13] . 13 14 . 14 Silly Notions. 13 18 Sports .. 8-9 | 17 Stranahan wai P 19 | Washington 14] 13 Weather Map 2 16-171 8 a. Affairs 14
AKE FINE FOOD. Restaurant, Ya KE. Ohio, ~Adv.|
. 17 | Serial
dpls.
(der the Soviets, as this series ppm eyes |of articles proposes to do. TIMES INDEX |
— ———————
| Because of their unhappy his:
tory, firs¢ under despoti: Crarism and them under more despotic Communism, Rus . \ sians have learned to “take fit” petter than’ most other populations. 3 Theirs is almost § a genius for bend- } ing before the
[storm. They submit
to fypes of terror against 'which peoples less meek afd more Eugene Lyons politically experienced would revolt It is fair to say that a handful of zealots could put over the Russian
(Contintled on Page 3—Column nit
| dictatorial power.
| facts ahout
» Eugene Lyons, for six years the | | United Press
corrgsponden Soviet Russia, is an Pa Naen on its history and system. He was
the first foreign reporter to inter-
view Joseph Stalin after his rise to |
Mr. Lyons is the author of several books on Russia. He has written and lectured extensively on world wffairs, Russia is prominent in today’s news. From letters reaching this newspaper, we’ believe Americans want to know the basic everyday ife and government aps economyvin a country that ms so large on the world’s horions. The first of a series of arti-
es Mr. Lyons has written exclu~ |
lively for The Indianapolis Times d Scripps-Howard newsna published
Byrd Expedition 0ff for Antarctic
|ABOARD BYRD EXPEDITION FLAGSHIP, Norfolk, Va, Dec. 7 [(u, P.) Several flights over the! | south Pole .are planned as part of the greatest polar expedition in history. The trek started. today when a | peacetime naval task force left this, country for the frozen Antarctic. Rear Adm. Richard H, Cruzen. commander of the 13-ship task force, announced plans for the flights _gver the poig at - mig
| Child. A families have applied for aid since 2
{even greater demand on Clothe-A-
large number of needy
the headquarters opened last Friday at 241 W, Maryland st. (across from The Times). Contributors are assed ‘that their funds go only to the mgediest families, Trained ves tors! make certain of the need of a plicants before clothing is p chased. Experienced shoppers the children to local stores
[fit them.
You - can he
2 (] [oneal
—
Ethel Caverston ' ussell Conger, Billings hospital. A Friend
Total
ping trip, just call Rlley 5651, ask! for Clothe-A-Child and an ap- | pointment will be made he day | you wish. Among the new ¢ (this year is the 5 ;
ikap- a Ch printers. Ja Le
a,
reported ting from el they’ had i the | W. Frank nd, 58,
