Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1947 — Page 3
y mM. C. ode
am today head Y. M O A Ector §f ths Indie he autoeeds Hows
elected Yesterday [ughes, Walter H, Carrier, vice pres. ps, secretary; Roy and John L. H, reasurer. = the 1947 organe gan recently with arles J. Lynn, vice Lilly’ & Co, as board of trustees.” J. Duane Dungan rere elected to fll board. Re-elected rms were Berkley le Sidéner, Archer Mr. Brigham, Mr, r, Mr, Hughes and
{ Champaign, nter's Mate BE,
irrier and a large h is to house the
will be moved up
are learning the heir job here as
mastered similar
pics in wartime, ded most of their , the present 20 res. tively has “naméa k of this expedis lled a small cove
written summary,"
at least a thou
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THe WEATHER Fo TOCAST VIA ACME E TEEPNOTO
Ry , TM REG PAT'S PEND. COPR 1947 OW. L. A. WAGNER. ALL MENTS RESERVED.
NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORECAST SUMMARY: Below zero temperatures are expected throughout the upper Lakes region tomorrow morning as cold air from Canada flows into the central lowland Plains, the Ohio valley, Tennessee and New York. These sections will have near Zero minimum temperatures by tomorrow morning, in the wake of the told wave produced by 40 mph northwesterly winds
Pr Syitw ve U.S. Weather Bureau Foran Reviod Ending 730AM EST 12247 %
BROWNSVILLE .
CE.
ere
NS
WL Hr TR) iu] AREA PMZILE [ax ni SNOW SNOW SHOWERS © AND FLURRIES RAIN
Despite the extensive cold front in the southern states, there will be no precipitation and little cloudiness . for the -air pushing -southward is extremely dry and a lack of frontal convergence indi-
cates nothing but a narrow band of scattered -clouds along this front, High winds have caused north. west storm warnings to be hoisted over the Great Lakes and along
cloudiness,
Official Weather
Jam, 21, 1047
UNITED STATES WEATHER, BUREAU
Plans Change
In Drivers’ Law Enforcement
By ROBERT BLOEM
Governor Gates told his press {conference today he would apply the theory of business-like unification to a total of three major state operations, At the same time he announced he was driving to complete bills which carry his policy recommendations to the legislature by the end of the week and may have the administration’s liquor-politics bill ready by tomorrow. With a bill already before the session to unify the operation of tax collecting under a single agency, the governor outlined similar plans for handling procurement and supply. He also will offer a proposal to place driver’swaesponsibility enforcement under the bureau of motor
mentioned, and there will be little |vehicles instead of in the state
police department. Proposes Perpetual Invéntory . The unified department of procurement and supply which the governor will propose will carry the following provisions:
7:01 | Sunset
saves 4:52
ONE: Abolition .of the present
Excess SINCE JAR. L.uuiivinrevinr rien
Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a.m. Total precipitation since Jan. 1....... 243 JA8
'§tate printing board, placing its
42 director under the new department.
TWO: Perpetual inventory of all {state property, including that in;
"The following table shows the tempera- |
the north Atlantic- coast. These |iure in other cities: sweeping across the Great Lakes, | winds will be diminishing tonight, High Low It will be 12 degrees below zero | but caution is still advised for 40 Atlanta .............. Aveeetyy 89 0 30 at Duluth; 7 degrees below at | to 45 m. p. h. gusts will occur. Boman J Seifirsatian 9 Milwaukee; zero at Chicago; 5 Snow squalls will accompany |Gncinnati .... +381 28 degrees at Detrojt and St. Louis; | the cold wave INt0 NeW YOK, {Denver .....o...: La 13 8 degrees at aha. Northern | Pennsylvania and West Virginia. |greigiine «-.:-:: «3 .n New York will have readings be- In the west there will be rain [Pt. Worth ..........oeeeseee. 55 31 tween 0 degrees and 10 degrees; | in the lower valleys of the Rock- jndianapolls (eity) 2 NR Boston 8 degrees; Atlanta 28 de- | ies, and intermittent rain in the (Los Angeles esi 11888 grees; Memphis 30 degrees; Den- | Pacific northwest. Snowfall will Mam) od 8h Pal rane 3% —9 ver 23 degrees; Kansas City 8 | occur east—of the Cascades into |New Orleans .......... .. 68 44 degrees, western Montana and Wyoming Oklanoma City 3 The freezing line on the Fotocast | ‘will have snow flurries. Omaha .......... 4 is drawn throught points where The nation will have generally Pittsburgh a. : Lthe minimum temperature will be | fair weather, except for the small [San Prancisco .. . 39 32 degrees tomorrow morning. - areas of rain and snow already ie L854 3
STRAUSS SAYS:
Every Motorist
should have one— Nice for a man to have in his office
or in his clothes
closet—(or both)
TRANSPARENT LIGHTWEIGHT
RAINGOATS
QUICK CLEARED AT ABOUT HALF PRICE
Comfortable — smartly ‘styled Zipper front — will not crack. or dry out — 100% waterresistant — while they last
2.
“»
»
OND FLOOR
ad STRAUSS & C0., THE MAN'S STORE
5
ING
hinterland institutions now virtually orphaned from a business standpoint. THREE: Uniform contract procedure, at least to the extent -of! permitting the one agency to pas on all state contracts. FOUR: ,K Use of the mass-buying principal to affect savings in purchases for institutions such as hospitals and prisons. Other Revisions By placing enforcement of the driver's responsibiilty law under the motor vehicle department, the governor hopes to eliminate certain ob-| | jections to present enforcement. It has béen pointed out that the ex-
ages resulting from accidents.
er's responsibility law and at the same time make it less cumbersome, The: bill to divorce liquor from politics, the governor said, will follow word for word the recommendation in his opening message to the legislature, This means primarily throwing open the wholesaler li-
qualify, ending political monopoly. The ‘governof said he had backed away Trom his original intention to demand an end to the. entire sys-
insisted it would be “impractical.” Study Federal Grants “Divorcement of all semblance of political control over the wholesalers. was my only objective,” the governor said in explaining his| changed attitude. ‘My bill will accomplish that and I can see the Logic of the argument which holds the wholesaler system an important factor in enfor¢ement.” He said the Republican policy committee, which meets this.afternoon, also may receive a general proposal to enable the state to avail | itself of various federal grants. In| the past two years it has frequently developed that new funds could not be accepted because the state lacked specific authorization from the legislature to use them. He was questioned about the possibility of legislative re-apportion-ment but pointed out that “the constitutional provision calling for such re-apportionment every six years applies to the legislature, not to the governor's office, so that matter is up to the members of the general assembly.”
Taft Favors’ Keeping Control on Rents
WASHINGTON, Jan, 21 (U. P)). ~—President Truman's request for continued rent control had the
Would Relieve Police Of Collecting Damages,
isting law makes state policemen | the agents for collecting minor dam--
Dancing Star.
Given Settlement
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. a U.. P). ~—Dahcing star Ann _Miller—who claimed ¢ ght months of marriage to millifhaire Reese” Llewellyn Milner left her practically penni-
. less—today pocketed. a property
settlement. which made up her loss. Details of the settlement were not sevealed. However,
Miss Miller said it
|would keep her in dancing shoes
until she got back on her feet. The star gave up a $2000 a week job when she married the westeyn steel heir, whom she charged treated her cruelly.
against him and will receive an uncontested divorce on a mental cruelty charge. Miss Miller originally asked that Mr. Milner either give her their home or $375,000 damages. She charged he obtained it by fraud. They were marriéd Feb, 16 .and separated Nov. 15,
Woman Is Hunted As ‘Dahlia’ Killer
Man Suspect Cleared
In Torture Mystery
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 21 (U. P.),— Police made a complete about-face 'today in their efforts to find the tourture-murderer of pretty Elizabeth Short. They began an intensive search for a woman, rather than a man, as the mutilator .of the “Black Dahlia. » = Former mmates ;of the 22-year-old girl were first on the list of those to be questioned. The decision to change all previous tactics came after a meeting of the city’s top-ranking polie ‘officials. Roommate Is Suspect Top suspect is a girl roommate {who disappeared Jan. 15, the day {Miss Short'’s tortured and mutilated | body, hacked in two, was found in a lover's lane.
Adding to their belief that the
|
{girl's slayer may have n Governor Gates also promised | 5 y y been a
other revisions to tighten the driv- |
woman were two factors. First was the fact that she was known to be in Los Angeles Jan. 9 without luggage. This would indicate she spent the week before she was killed with some woman who could provide extra clothing. Second, police officials said they believed the killing followed a pat-
(tern of other horror-murderers by censes to any businessman who can |
women, ? Let Her Out of Car Miss Short's presence in Los An-
tem because many of his advisers|
geles on Jan. 9 was sworn to by Robert (Red) Manley, 25, who was cleared of suspicion yesterday. Mr. Manley saw the girl, whose ‘coal-black hair. and fondness for sheer, black clothing gave her the “Black Dahlia” nickname on Jan. 9. He told police he let her out of his automobile that day at a Los Angeles hotel. An inquest was set for tomorrow after Mrs. Phoebe Short, mother of the girl, identified her butchered body. ly 6 Are Slightly Hurt In Two-Car Collision Times State Service FRANKLIN, Ind, Jan. 21—Six persons were injured, none seriously, 30 dozen eggs broken, and quantities of canned beets and pickles spilled over the highway yesterday when two cars crashed at state roads 252 and 135. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Hargis and their 6-year-old daughter, Ann, Indianapolis, were returning from visiting relatives in Johnson county. Their car was loaded with the eggs and canned goods, The Hargis car collided with one driven by Dennis F. Stierwilt, 17, Paragon. Three passengers in the Stierwalt car also were injured. Mr. Stierwalt was arrested and charged
with failure to give oncoming traffic the right-of-way.
qualified approval today of Senator Robert A. Taft (R. O.). ! Rent control is scheduled to expire June 30, but Mr. Truman has asked congress to extend it. Senator Taft, chairman of the senate Republican policy committee, said he thought rent control “should be extended in some form.” He added that he favored. some adjustments to remedy “injustices” to landlords.
SEEKS LOCAL OPTION Times State Service - MARTINSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 21.— The Morgan County Civic Association met here Sunday to complete organization plans. The new association advocates local option in
Bilbo Is Reported
Resting Comfortably
NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 21 (U. P.). —Senator-elect Theodore G. Bilbo, who underwent a serious operation for cancer of the mouth, was reported resting comfortably today. Dr, Alton Ochsner, cancer specialist of Tulane university performed the operation at Touro infirmary yesterday. He said Mr. Bilbo's condition was “very satisfactory.” He had removed a diseased fragment of lower jaw bone. ’ Physicians believe it will take almost eight weeks before Mr. Bilbo can expect to return to Washing-
regard to sale of alcoholic beverages.
ton to fight for his seat in the 80th congress. ?
IN INDIANAPOLIS
EVENTS TODAY
Central area, Volunteers of America, Golden Jubilee convention, Ilotel Lin-
rr ‘A. annual Nealth conference, auditorium, L: 8. Ayres & Co. Sthdents League Sn Nations, proa m, 7:30 p. m,, Crooked Creek Baptist
ure Indians ‘Association of gp OT Iometrists, converition, Hotel Seve National Executive rrammitiee American Legion auxiliar Notre Dame Club of Indianapolis, luncheon, Canary Cottage,
EVENTS TOMORROW
meeting,
National execulive rommittee meeting, American Legion auxiliary, BIRTHS
Girls At. St. Franeis—Don, Doris Grant Glenn, Anna Sones, Marlin, Alberta Strode; . Raymond, Elizabeth Plummer, and. Thomas, Lillian Ford. At . Coleman-—Lester, Thelma Garrett; Royce, - Florence, Doty, and. John, Mil-
dr At Methodst—cor. Mary Waggoner: xmer, Maxine Stailte; Raleigh, Eleanor Coates; Robert, Lorraine Caution; John,
Jane Sutton; Alvin, M; Marian Jor Jorgensen,
AR
aR
Ba
Verda Barnaby; Harry, Yvonne Keller house; Thomas, Crystal Reeves; RayPond Kathryn Monahan: Roy, Mary y: Orville, Marybell Duckett: Claronos, Mary Gorman: James, Goldie Chambers, and Howard, Norma Har-
AC ® Enhardt William, Eleanor Carter, and Harry, Elizabeth Kennedy, Boys
At SL Franels—Vincent, Janice Maude,
n, Koehl; Harold, Peter, Edna ‘McGuire;
Susan
Betty Browder; Norman, Mar Pickard, John, Armbruster; Eleanor Jones; Slarence, Violet abbitt: Good - in, 8 ian Danner, and James, Maxine ar
At St, Vincent's Walter, Mary ny nd Glenmore, Jean Warr AC Embhardt—Donald, Vir, At Home-Estell, Hilda Traub,
DEATHS Lillie s lnm,
inia ardin, hd
84, at 1556 Brookside, 85, at St. Vincent's,
" Nichols, 84, at 6024 BB \2th, arteriosclerosis.
BE “ !
is Rex Hulman, 5, at! ‘Mothodind
~nia
In‘return for the property settle- | ment, she dropped fraud charges|
Gen,
-
”
TOKYO, Jan. 21 (U ‘i. <4. uniform - who give us Robert: . Eichelberger, ‘mander of the U, 8. 8th: today that “certain nations drifting toward totalitdrianism, Gen, Eichelberger called on ocel- | pation troops to. help build a strong army to forestall attacks by “any future aggressor.”
“If ‘we bulld a post-war dPmy of (the Fraternal Order of Eagles is such men,” Gen. Eichelberger one geting under way in Attica.
com- ‘réputation,” He sa amp said, !the occupation
tion.
State Se
the organization of
STRAUSS SAYS:
id the ‘mission make | — Japan a peaceful democrat na
EAGLES J1AN NEW AERIS ay Times ATTICA, Ind, Jan, Ne Plans for
all
i
a new aerie of|
v -
~.
msm. i NORE THAN 2000 N.ECKT,LES
HALF
These are the days when men step lively through the :
doors—and choose from some rare bargains. : 5 on re
The selection is practically endless—there are bold ties— and quiet ties—and all the degrees in between, of course : they are all fine—in good taste— a part of our 4 regular stock. The saving is !/;—and it's real. The ties are spread out on top of the cases,
easy to get at—it's 285 shopping days fill Christmas! Many 1.00 ties at 506 Many 3.50 ties at 1.18 | Many 5.00 ties at 2.50 © | And so on—At Halft ~~
Many 1.50 ties at 76¢ Many 2.50 ties at 1.25
Here and there in the Men's Furnishing Shops— hh are groups of seasonable items at HALF PRICE : fe
(and some are less).
SPORTS SHIRTS—Prioed to clear at HALF PRICE MEN'S SWEATERS—Ware 4.9510 10.00—Now 2.48 and 5.00 MEN'S FINE ROBES—Small lots, various prioss—AT HALF ~~ :
LEATHER GLOVES—Capeskins and suedes, Cleared at HALF PRICE. Some are unlined. A choice gon. of fleece-lined and fur-lined gloves. i “
MEN'S FINE WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS cleared at HALF PRICE - HEAVY WOOLEN MUFFLERS, Were 6.75, WhiRk they Int, 338 oh A FEW GLOVE and MUFFLER SETS. Were 1.50. Now 38 PIPES, variess bowls and finishes. Famous makes, HALE LE PRICE
