Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 December 1946 — Page 25

Jether

not only hadnt was less than ia

e joo taspayers tions gh

iscussion. rere loaded fides. should be jus determine advance Peatise

nile delinquency ' juvenile crime, ch ‘crimes, withe orkable probation

upon, to improve

assigned to mue r association ine there. pledge by Judge first of the year, he police 100 per 8 out of law ene

, one that may if crime is made me will decrease

y Plan

cularly when the mand for a come . during the war, “Wait a minute, oing to have more security, covering a return of social their employers? plicy on this, then

seen fit to decide grow. The Issue SS. lation controlling oncern social ine 2 clear, slation regulating nizations and- in rs would broadly curity plans now ctrical and other

y at may have to be urther advance is security plans. is mmerce. If more de, as in the coal now whether this federal or state

| of union-private only if there is a e various trustee aside for sickness, n labor contracts.

Failure

srnal improvement 00,000 to build the er they celebrated six months later, e canal. The first Brookville in 1839, i to. Brookville, canal was in the t of a 20th-story he passed the 10th

, president of the , owned the canal, f the Whitewater s was the end of diana’s own canal

itewater canal was ope was too small, ge of 77 inches per he 88 inches per nal for its first 25

he mouth of Little: |

Whitewater canal et in 1847, a flood cts and dams. A amage, with $30,000 make the grade— 1d do. was wink out,

canal was an ine ration to its valley

r Fight

s long. Since Tra« uring world war II itest question what n's bowerful fleet

nged. Russia is in ugoslavia, Hungary dy pressure to bear balance. If Russia that will, at one oss Britain's Medi

er V-E day. Communists came had done elsewhere ely because of the ns to help maintain liberation. Subseunder British and ed out after pledgre soundly detested

rable bloodshed. s in this country to council, As a sort

st neighbors claim

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% MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 19 (U. P.).

¥ Co. was completely burned out less

s

THURSDAY, DEC. 19, 1946

Lawyers Seek Bail For Grid 'Fixer’

B3 Milion Bushels | Of Grain Bum Up

Lawyers for Alvin Paris—skeptical | of police claims that the Broad way gambler may be killed if removed from police custody—said to- | day they would seek a supreme | court writ to free him on bail. Freedom on bail appeared more certain for Jerry Zarowitz, 36, anthan two hours. |other New York gambler, who was Officials said the elevator, which arrested yesterday as a material has a capacity of 3 million bushels | | witness in the case against Paris.

of grain, was nearly full of barley.| Paris is accused of tr i . ying to bribe Flames soared skywseS il ed football players Merle Hapes and | be Been In A enorted sighting FTank Filchock of the New York Airplane pilots repories sig %| Giants to make sure the Giants lost

the blaze as far away as Fargo, N. D., and La Crosse, Wis. {their professional football playoff

-Fire roared through the Union Terminal elevator here early today. Officials estimated damage to near-| ly 3 million bushels of grain at “several million dollars.” The 50-year-old building, owned by the Foredtart Grain & Malting

more than 10 points. Zarowitz was arraigned last night |

RELEASE JAP PRISONERS TOKYO, Dec. 19 (U. P.).—Russia|

# will release 50,000 Japanese prisoners and bail was set at $10,000, He of war for repatriation each month couldn't raise the money immedi- |

under an agreement signed today. ately and was locked up.

Just inTime for Late

Christmas Shoppers!

»

ATTRACTIVE SLIPPERS Now $2 to 2.95

Were *3 to $5

I's a big turprise to find such wonderful volo just before Christmas! Here's your chance to s-t-r-e-t-s-h your money and make it buy a better gift than you thought you could afford! Don't miss this opportunity to pick up an extra pair

for yourself, either.

Block's Slipper Bar, Fourth Floor 1}

i — eee

Tw

*PAVILION OF WOMEN is Pearl Buck at her best, the dedicated storyteller. Beneath the deceptive simplicity of the riarrative flows the clear, swift tide of human life.~Saturday Review,

Pearl S. Bucks PAVILION

THE DECEMBER SELECTION OF THE LITERARY GUILD. ¢ $3.00 Book Shop—South Menzanine

game with the Chicago Bears by |

James s Farley

NEW YORK, Dec..10 (U. ts Suggested

Running Mate

‘No Comment’ Reply Leads to Possibility

By LYLE C. WILSON

United Press Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Dec. 19.—Harry|

| 8. Truman and a big city Easterner are the team that practical politicians foresee right now as the 1948 Democratic Presidential ticket. The President was asked ~t his | news conference yesterday whether ‘he would accept the 1948 nomina-| | tion, He¢ replied: | %“No comment.” Such a reply kept the que ion open and was about as close as Mr. Truman could come at this time to acknowledging his availability. During this year's difficulties with congress, word seeped around Washington that the President was weary and looked forward to release from a job in which he was not achieving any spectacular immediate successes, Two-Term Tradition It is not unlikely that Mr. Truman did remark to some old friend that he was heavily burdened and would welcome relief in 1948. But Washington never took that very seriously, assuming the report was true, On the contrary, this capital has ing down the burden—barring only Washington who established the late two-term tradition, Herbert Hoover, who had scratchiest hair shirt of any recent

a second term. The late Franklin ‘D. Roosevelt took not only a second but a third and fourth—the last at a time when he certainly was a very tired man even though his health was certified as good for his age.

| Mr.-Truman to despair. 2 But at the moment he looks and acts like a man in good spirits and enjoying life and his ‘job. The nation's applause at his handling of the coal strike contributed more than somewhat to the President's good feelings.

bility which Republicans now share with him in their control of the! house and senate. Wise men report that Mr. Truman will not offer detailed proposals to this Republican congress. | Instead his annual message is expected to outline situations which | should be dealt with. There will not be specific propo-

ject. Rather, there will be citations] of things with which it is the responsibility of congress to deal.

vet to see a President willingly lay-,

the |

President, was a stubborn seeker of |

The next congress may well bring!

Another factor is the responsi- |

sitions which Republicans can re-|

Some of Mr. Truman's advisers'

THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES

Politicians Predict ° Truman will Be Renominated In 1

C.) Bachrach &

THE SPARK—Politicians believe James A. Farley, as Trus mans co would enliven Presidential campaign,

nominee,

believe such strategy will give him an opportunity to break- even or better with the congress next year, On that basis, the smile of the man from Missouri might brighten instead of fade. There is another factor.

| The long Democratic winning streak was broken last November. It is reasonable to believe 1948 is likely to be a Republican year. | In that event competition for the Democratic nomination will be less than it otherwise might be. It imight, in fact, be more a battle within the party for control of the party organization than a 100 per cent effort to win the White House again, s Opposition Expected That does not mean Mr. Truman hecessarily would be -renominated without opposition, James A. Far{ley, formér Democratic national committee chairman, told press con- | ference questioners in New York yesterday that Democrats who have lost the public's confidence must step aside to permit party Feorgan. | zation, Mr. Farley may, but probably did | not, have had Mr. Truman in mind. He undoubtedly was thinking, however, of the extreme left wing of the New Deal-Democratic coalition, A Truman-Farley ticket would put considerable spark into the 1948 [ain

9 DIE IN RAIL WRECK | | TAKADA, Japan, Dec. 18 (U. P.). —Nine persons were killed and 60 injured today when a passenger jirsta ran into a snowbank near a tunnel at Taguchi, 150 miles north- | west of Tokyo. x

| METHODIST BISHOP DIES | NEW YORK, Dec. 19 (U. P).—. The Rev. Lorenzo H. King of Atlanta, Ga., one of the five Negro | bishops of the Methodist church, | died Tuesday at Memorial hospital. He was 68.

1

BLOCK S=

Store Hours 9:15 to 5:15

yf

Clearance

TOY),

w Y

GAMES "fs Ys

OFF

A wide variety of new and | desirable playthings of which | we have few of a find,

slightly marred items included.

Toys, In the Annex

DOLLY

| Study From INYOKERN,

is operating

2

rege cy

OY

ER Bui 3 A en A oe

Some ‘

#

Cal.,

flying

Cosmic Ray Flying Labs

Dec. 19 (U.P)

as 40,000 feet

Technology «nd Dr.

give her a smart and

sassy pajama ensemble

slick little set that folds to Rothing in a suitcase,

; time in quarter-inch stripes of red or blue

‘h white, and the same prim little edging

white ric-rac.

She'll love the smooth cotton fabric

at's such a joy to launder, the slim, smart lines’

the double-breasted three-quarter-length

sat, the tailored pee-jays.

Sizes 32 Yo 40.

The Whole Ensemble 6.98

Mail and Phone (RI ley 8421) Orders Filled.

—Lingerie, Fourth Floor

desert, B-20's loaded with scientific equipment and delicate electronic! devices have been flying ‘as high to permit famed sci-! ~The’ navy last night disclosed it engists to study cosmic energy.

laboratories | Participating in the experiments!

40,000 feet above the earth to learn are Nobel Prize-winner Dr. Carl E. | paraiso; the secrets of nature's own atom- Anderson of California Institute: of | George smasher—the cosmic ray. Operating from a navy

Robert B. Edam, experi- Brode, University of California cos- |

mental ordnance base here on the mic ray authority.

22

4 Ships Arivitig ‘In New York Harbor

NEW YORK, Dec. 19 (U, PJ] Ship movements scheduled in New| { York harbor today: | ARRIVING—Sunta JIsabel; Marine * Flasher, Azores; Washington, Bermuda. Rotterdam, DEPARTING — Marine Shark, | | Mediterranean. |

val-|

what the well dressed woman will

wear when she stuffs

N1P-N-TuCK

ZIPPER FRON

3?

Because it's a clean, crisp, flower-printed

cotton that nips in to give her a neat little waistline, and its zipper is a qui when she's ready to dress for compa Yellow, blue or pink backgrounds. Sizes 14 Yo 44,

—Daytime Dresses, Fourth Floer

Wanted: Mine Detector :

JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Dec. 19 (U. P.).~—The war assets admine istration looked around a mine detector for use in a ure hunt along the Florida A group of men asked the leral agency for a surplus mine | tector saying that they wanted use modern methods in their for treasure.

~ —

the turkey

T DRESS

|

ckie ny.