Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1947 — Page 13
rotha 0)
thé platlirm OF ir. Mayor Book- , and a silk hat,
urse of which he
ook of Indisnaphs of ‘the statefers and Sailors’
he equivilent of
ure of the monu~
antable. ; ' the Wagner act f. It will require resent session, if i reform.
> Boss
piece about this er 82 was suspiite for?” I told of the road. He
[t's you, all right, once. But you I just push the
7. “Number 82?" * best people just
fleet of 27 cabs a rush Saturday nd that the FCO Directing cabs vogue for a year, ew other places, e being assigned \CC examination. 5, with emphasis windedness, per-
By Meio =:
ald Mr. Keating. cabby of tomorman, no carefree s. He is forever ely responsible to 3 it; I prefer the his marital ills istration.
» Pinch not more “bread in the end? r statesmen who
above easy politiwork and tighter
ust export .or die, .
the present sella's more modern ’'s. ‘They know jun of U. 8. and
ment, after driv. ith big results in rain a little and \bness of British in be lifted soon, pots and pans, if sn begin to show,
vill remain. Britaw materials apd » quarter of her r colonial empire. sects his country
fia 18 & far better .
nent upon whieh
A
p
lee Plant Here
“Fireman Injured In $20,000. Blaze
Fire which broke out in store gaused heavy g ii
! early today at the Polar Ice-and hie) “Cor plant. 4 at 16th and Mu.
souri sts. _ One fireman was injured.
Preliminary ‘éstimates placed damage at around $20,000, Loss in-
cluded 9000 bags of Georgia pine}
kindling sticks and a new ice cone veyor which buckled in the intense
‘heat.
Ray Shipley of 4641 Caroline ave, + member of pumper company 14, was injured slightly when he fell
.through a floor at the plant. He
was given first ald treatment and returned to work almost immediately. : Wires Burned
The kindling supply where the fire broke out was on the second floor near the back of th» plant. Three huge meat storage lockers on the floor below were damaged on the outside. Plant Manager Ray Williams expressed. belief $12,000 worth of meat inside the lockers had escaped damage. There was no way to determine condition of the meat early because the lockers were sealed. Principal damage to ice-making facilities, located in the central portion of the plant, consisted of burned out wirthg. » : Willlams said the manufacture of ice could be resumed quickly, adding that the bulk of the damage was tn the storage sections.
Second Recent Fire
The roof over the kindling warehouse was almost completely destroyed. Buckling of steel beams in the flames will handicap repair. Today's fire was the second at the plant in less than two weeks. A less serious blaze broke out several days ago in the section where sacked coal is stored. Damage in the earlier fire was light.
Morris Plan Officers”
Directors Re-Elected
All officers and directors of Indianapolis Morris Plan were reelected at the annual meeting of the stockholders, William L. Schloss, president, said today. Officers and directors re-elected fare: Mr, Schloss, president; P, C. Neidlinger, executive vice president: LeRoy Kahler, secretary-treasurer; Howard M. Coots, vice president; J. Richard Freije, vice president; Frederick M. Olney, assistant vice president; Joseph E. Hittle, assistant vice president; William E. Foley, assistant secretary; Edward O. brock, assistant treasurer: Jackie]
“'W. Joseph, Sirectar, and Ernest R. Lee director.
Organizations
Chapter 452, O. 8. will t a" 4 oniaht at Masonic Rl Deel
Monument Cha 549, O. BE 8B, vi hold ’s.* annual nual hspection Jan, 13. dane be inspection offiregular mest and initiation wii be eon by Ann worthy casted and Preeman A. Le worthy patron, an
Cumberland Chapler 515, O. 8, will eet at B: ednesday a: "Cumberland Mason ¢ temple.
© MONDAY, JAN. 6 1047
He Damages i
s, [into the muzzles of the troopers’
OPENS CAMPAIGN OFFICE—Former Minnesota Governor
Harold Stassen, Republican candidate for President in 1948, is pice tured (right) in his newly opened Washington, D, C., campaign
office. With Mr. Stassen is his Cleveland, 0.
Teen-Age Bedford Jail Escapees Recaptured
Times State Service BEDFORD, Ind, Jan. 8—Two! teen-age youths who escaped from jail here Saturday after overpower-
ing two women attendants were back in their cells here todsy after a-12-hour chase by state troopers and Bedford authorities. Philip Craig, 18, of this city and Richard Roach, 17, of Heltonville, stole a car, staged two holdups and stole three guns during their brief period of freedom, When Mrs. Lester Hayes, wife of the sheriff and Miss Nancie Cara-| way brought the youths their ‘meal! late Saturday the youths slugged both of them and dashed out of the Jail, : : They stole a car, drove to a residence near Craig's home where they held up an elderly man, took a rifle and a revolver and went to-a filling station at the edge of the city. There the youths staged a holdup and escaped with $20. The attendant called police, but the bandits’ trail was lost. » Several hours later, Sheriff and State Troopers Joseph O’Brien and Eugene Cox sighted the youths’ car on a back road leading to Heltonville, 4 At 5:30 a. m. yesterday, state troopers checking telephone calls through a Heltonville switchboard became suspicious of a call for a taxi from the Jones funeral parlor in Heltonville. Troopers Don Smiley and Wayne Stalcup answered the call. Driving up in front of the funeral parlor, the youths, apparently mistaking the police car for a taxi, walked
ns. The youths are cousins. The Craig youth has a four-year record of
juvenile delinquency in Bedford.
lk 's
ee
presenis..
suthor hor of NORTHWEST PASSAGE, OLIVER WISWELL, and RABBLE IN ARMS
‘ saory.of ov, the portrait of Lydi dia Bailey, and Lydia berself,
Ss IN DEMA ] SOQK® | Me face the - "Like h of som _ comprehensive / ST Kane — The Ce, who ued best ak ies sabject.” = Time. $ : 7 i JY Mu ever SSirnrighe. anusans, H. Ales Se pre per mer y's milion bucks 8 TRADER c's BOOK oe T gm roams: Jobe TRADCLU Trader Viele Jewsinst 240 Ber x to Val ing. dining, ParR , $230 the auth 0 $3.00 1 4 ; 1 Ear? ow 7308 Frank PIKES rx Of ion oy A DARK GARDEN. Wilson = The, TC Gazing Into. ws ideo of the auth A $2.00
personal secretary, Earl E. Hert.
Joseph T. Adams
IIs Dead at Home
Joseph T. Adams, retired ironworker and an Indianapolis resident for 41 years, died today in his home, 214 8. Detroit st. He was 79. Seryices will be held at 1:30 p. m. Wednesday in the G. H. Herrmann funeral home. The Revi N, H. Schultz will officiate and burial will be in New Crown. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. ‘Helen Schwab and Mrs. Ada Howe, Indianapolis; a son, Raymond Adams, Indianapolis; two brothers, John Adams, Indianapolis, and K. D. Adams, Lexington, Ky., and two grandchildren.
Orval. F. Hood
Requiem high mass will be sung at 10 a.' m. Wednesday in Little Flower Catholic church for Orval
Motor Co. Mr. Hood, an Indianapolis resldent 32 years, died yesterday in his home, 1102 N. Wallace st. He was 53. He was a member of Hillcrest Country club, Indianapolis Athletic club, Elks lodge and Little Flower
Hayes| church.
Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Helen Hood; a son, Robert Hood, Indian~ apolis; a sister, Miss. Edna Hood, Rush county, and three brothers, Clarence and Anthony Hood, Rush county, and Myron Hood, Cincinnati, O.
Charles Knotts
Services for Charles Knotts, who died Saturday night in his home, 3203 E. New York st, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Moore mortuaries Irvington chapel. Entombment will be in Washington Park mausoleum. Mr. Knotts, who was 73, was employed 30 years by the railway mail service. His wife, Mrs. Cora Fouts Knotts, survives.
Asjetica 10H Haiti flaring Nepsjoont *
to Tri
1-33 Follow’
Frank Broden
Frank Broden, an employeé of the Indianapolis Star, died yesterday in City hospital from injuries received when he was struck by an automobile Nov, 25. He was 81. Active in the labor movement, Mr. Broden was secretary of the Union, a.labor publication, and secretary of the old Pressmen’s union 17 and feeders’ and assistants’ local 39. Also active in Democratic politics, he was Democratic county secretary during the term of Reginald Sullivan as mayor. Survivors are two sisters, Mrs. Frances Fisher, Indianapolis, and Miss Lillian Broden, Denver, Colo., two nephews and a niece.
Mrs. Hazel Ann Payne
Mrs. Hazel Ann Payne, 547 8S. Harris st, died. yesterday. in St. Vincent's hospital. She was 50. Services will be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday in Robert W. Stirling Funeral Home. Burial will be in Forest Hill cemetery, Shelbyville. Survivors are her husband, C. Howard Payne; two daughters, Mrs, V. Elizabéth Freers and Mrs. Norma 1. Simpson, all of Indianapolis; two sons, Glenn H. Payne, Indianapolis,
PF. Hood, manager of the White]:
From Pharmacy
week-end for a sizable “haul in
Five holdups during the two-day period added to the police problem, Investigators believed dope addicts may have been responsible
“{for cracking a safe at Freund's ' | pharmacy, 602 N, Highland ave,
Saturday night. Considerable quantities of drugs and an unde- | termined amount of money were |
| taken. |
OC. A Crum, manager of the
to the safe lying on the floor when he opened the store. The safe, he said, had contained the entire receipts for the previous day. b Take Cabby’s Trousers A tear gas bomb in the safe of C. Off & Co. at 107 N. East st. failed to discourage burglars yesterday. Officials of the auto body repair firm estimated the loss at $500. The cracksmen apparently gained entrance’ to. the office through a! skylight, A safe in the “office” of the T."W. Woelfing Co. plumbing contractors, was forced, yielding an estimated $250 to yeggs. Theodore Woelfing, head of the firm, said $2500 in! checks had been passed over. Police were investigating the’ holdup-kidnapping of Fred Sher-| rill, 336 N. Pine st., cab driver, who) said he was robbed, bound and ‘taken for a ride” yesterday, by an unidentified soldier. picked the soldier up on a run to 10th st. and High School rd., where the passenger ordered him out of the driver's seat and “took over.” After a ride which he described *1a8 “long to have gone to Terre Haute and back,” he was ‘released. The soldier made off with the cabby’s trousers and $14. Foils Holdup Attempt
rear of his clothing store at 1614 Ooliecke ave. yesterday -and robbed A thug slugged William Anderson of 729 W. New York st. as he and his wife were entering their home ‘yésterday. The holdup man escaped with Mrs, Anderson’s purse containing $1.75. Another cab driver, Robert Gunnell of 81 N. New Jersey st. tussled with a would-be holdup man who. slugged him after engaging him for a run to the Silver Hills night club at Raymond st. and Southeastern ave.
the bandit broke loose and escaped through a field. William Irving of 2120 Highland Place reported loss of $4 to a holdup man who threatened him with 3 SUB in 760 Block on Indisns ave.
and Jesse G. Aldridge, El Paso, Tex., and a brother, Walter Sebastian, Indianapolis. . |
|
Charles M. Templeton |
Charles M. (Mike) Templeton, 2802 ' Winthrop ave, an automobile
night in Hulset sanatorium. He was 69.
row in Flanner & Buchanan mortuary with burial in Crown Hill Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Anne L. Templeton, and a.-sister, Mrs. Harry Tiedemann, Chicago.
Mrs. Eleanor P. Jelleff
Mrs. Eleanor Porter Jelleff, granddaughter of the late Albert Porter, former governor of Indiana and one-time ambassador to Italy, died Saturday in her home in Washington, D. C. She was 68. * Survivors are her husband, Frank, R. Jellefl; a niece, Miss Eleanor Pangborn, and a nephew, Mark Pangborn, both of Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Mary E. -Shake
Mrs. Mary E. Shake, an Indian-
yesterday in her home, 1313 Charles st. services wil-be-held-at-10-% m1] tomorrow in J. C. Wilson Chapel of the Chimes with burial in Shoemaker cemetery, Eminence, Survivors are a niece, Mrs. Effie Manning, and a nephéw, Oliver Shake, both of Indianapolis, and
several other nieces and nephews.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Screen Actor
Answer to Previous Pusale
" HORIZONTAL 6 Greek seaport 1,7 Pictured 7 Color movie attor 8 Area measure 11 Stately home 9 Spanish . dictator 12 Dread = 10 Stagger : 14 Constellation 1] He plays mes 15 Hummed ~ roles 17 Consumed’ 4 Golf term
18 Pokes Pipe 20 Essential being 13 Nope Scotia 21 Poker stake (ab.) 22 Leers t parts 24 Minced 39 13 Sonne Bay ‘ 25 hack (Scot.) 3 Put away 26 Scents las 27 Toward ’ 2 Gupala 28 Parent 4 20 Cut .
36 Stale 317 Cicatrices 38 Boat paddles 39 Journey 43 Work units - 44 Greek letter 45 Interstice ‘48 Moon goddess 50 Part of Italy 52 Impression 53:State
VERTICAL ‘1Car ro well TEM possible
AIM! ie g MIE ILITIOINL RIEIMIOT | OE HAIN IC OSA ARIES) | AEAE ILIA ETE ARTLTTIOD! : EM) NIN BEL | | ROO HE p RIAIDITIO! LAIVIOIW] 5% md = 41 2d HOS ia LS FARIS [ie] | el | 1 | A RCP | h TESTS |B PE 7x] IAILIT] EB [ALL] MIA] | INE [ks [1] RICE 1S] | INGE a PISIAILIM 29 Halts 40 Anent 30 Expunged 41 Jot 31 Manly 42 In addition 33 Cold wind 45 Insect 34 Pressing 46 Donkey 35 Attempt 49 Half an em 39 Town (Core 51 Cerium nish prefix) (symbol)
"Drugs, Receipts Stolen’
store, told police he found the door|
He sald hej
A. R. Aylor was held up in the|”
Failing in his holdup attempt, |
dealer here 30 years, died Saturday #-
Services will be at 3 p. m. tomor-
-apolis resident most - her life, died |
Mademoiselle spotlights this
‘in the Dece~'er issue. It's ie Hh :
a 2-piece Kaluki crepe sheer by Junior Guild. 2500
Helen of California dreamed
up this Navajo trail print, etched in blue-and-black, or lime-and-brown on white. \ ‘2500 [1
ak
