Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1947 — Page 2

i pt oO = Truman Presents.

Greek Crisis

Fear Red Sweep

' WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. P.). | |—Congressional Republicans . and | Democrats alike started a move today to provide financial help needed

APPOINTED po Glenn W. Funk, prominent Republican party worker, today was named chie deputy prosecutor.

vent an upheaval that might have dire repercussions or, the western democracies. Administration Yeaders estimated it would cost at least $250 million this year #0 give Greece the urgent ly needed financial help which Britain — plagued '. by economic troubles of her own—can no longer

Act to Relieve

‘Thiough Middle East

to save Greece. They.sought to pre- |"

NEW. JUDGE — Saul Rabb. today was appointed Pd Govs ernor Gates to crimina tourt post. Joy

fitness of convicts eligible for SEVEN: Selection of employees

IGoes to Gates

Board Recommended’

of all ‘paroling authority now held by prison boards of trustees.

of supervisory authority held by: {the dbrrections division of the state welfare

{habilitation center through which all parolees would pass as the first step in their rehabilitation to- soclety. This might bé the Indiana state, farm. :

tFi8t, psychologist and physician to determine the physical and mental’

3-Man Independent (Continued From Page One)

FOUR: Transfer to this board

ent. FIVE: Establishment of a re-

s . Selection by Merit SIX: Employment of a psyéhia-

of why - don't - you-do-something

“Party “Control Shift

58 — Ee afford. eon sel WHER AWAITS [5 com one, S nts a y tment was a tem-| were too~large. measure designed to bolster "Assistance to Negro "Reply by Note

ras te pening» 7

of the entire execu-

PERS a as

Authoritative sources disclosed | Journalism Recognized Mir wrisni in Me

Acheson “Ha@& "British - Arsbassa-

virial hire

Fills Post Created

‘By New Court. Law

salaries and qualifications.

was appointed

‘have resigned and have a ey 12" union of Communist sympathies. . ] sub- ». = u BE es the | ceived special merit certificates for | Atomic - . Yuan president.” fe ey programs titled - pegpite an initial senate setback, : ; President Truman still - raised & tumult] Mr Syuman auded the ideal of ¢. mined to go down line for his departure. One |freedom press. a R, Chpp and David E|

f -~Newspapermen "met a Presi- | {country take over British: commit-

-{nalism in 1946." by the

‘the scapegoat for the country’siof objective newspaper :- lon the Haitiian revolution and the

- | have a press that is fréer than any |

| Post.

Guide, edited by P. Bernard Young! aid could be extended soon.

By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press. Staff i pane

{dor Inverchapel this country's repl WASHINGTON, March 1

P).'to Great Britain requesting this

dent Truman at the National Press: ‘ments in Greece. The reply was club last night to honor the men given at a conference this morning. who did the most for Negro Jour- | Nature of the U. 8. reply was not { disclosed. Unconfirmed, but reliable Outstanding Negro newspapermen reports said, however, that tnis and newspapers received the Wen- government asked the British to dell L. Willkie awards, pioneered by stay in Greece in order to avert Agnes M. Meyer, wife of Eugene! [civil war. Meyer, owner of the Washington Te reply also was said to contain ! assurances that this government The awards were conferred by lis, considering assuming much of Mr. Truman on: {the financial burden in Greece and “The Norfolk, Va, Journal and ‘to have expressed hope that such

. A

Jr., for the best example of public Other congressional develo ents | service by a Negro newspaper. } were: Gia Ralph Matthews of the Washing- | ton bureau of the Afro-American Labor Ce I. 0: tenders of the Allis- |

Newspapers, for the best example | Chalmers strike charged that the company had thrown up “the | smokescreen of communism” to new administration of the Virgin yi4e an “arrogant determination”

bargain. Robert Buse and William ©. Walker, editor aod Io

Harold Christoffel, president and columnist of the Cleveland, O., Call! .oirman respectively of Local 248, and Post for the best example of pitied Automobile Workers (C. IL writing other than news reporting.

: 0.), made the accusation before His aiticles dealt with inter-racial| 1.’ pouse labor committee, Which

; . the com accuse the The Chicago Defender and ra-' Is heard tlie SGMPARY |

reporting. The award was based on his stories

“While there are limitations on! including the

Lilienthal. Mr, Clapp’s appointment | all our freedoms, : as chairman of the Tennessee Val-! freedom of the press, we can-say | IC, Authority was rejected T-5 by | without fear-of challenge that we! senate committee. Foes of Mr. Lilienthal saw this as foreshadow- | ing defeat of his Bomintios 1)

head the atomic energy The Wendell L. Willkie awards| = put Mr. Print d skid a he

for Negro journalism were first| ® i 40 all in his power to win|

presented here last year. They, io ¢ approval of Mr. Clapp’s Reminat n el Bases santa 9 te.

Budget Tie Rep blican plans to cut income taxes \by 20 per cent were again threatened.

other in the world today,” said Mr. 1 Truman.

.|needed for a quorum. Two days

{Continued From Page One)

is a native of Indianapolis and prior to joining the prosecutor's staff had practiced law here since 1924. The new criminal court judge lives with his wife and two children at 3839 Ruckle st. He is a member of the Indianapolis Bar association, board of directors, BethEl temple; B'nai-B'rith, Zionist organization of America, and the Masonic order. The signing of _the new court law representing completion of one of the major parts of Marion county's legislative program. The bill was introduced by Rep. Edwin Haerle (R. Indianapolis) and was supported by the Indiana judicial council and local legal organizations. N ° a Legislators Have Quorum Trouble Everyone seems to have trouble these days—with the state house ‘of representatives, it's quorum trouble. Ap of the end of the ses-. sion finds some legislators content to let others do the voting. As a result, some bills are passing

only by the “skin of their teeth.” -In the house, 67 members are

ago, when a ‘bill failed to receive a quorum vote, the roll was retaken and showed some 80 votes. . ~One bill passed, 67 to nothing, yesterday ‘when the ‘speaker pro | tempore added his vote to make a rum. A couple of other bills received 8 votes each. Yet some 80 members were present for yesterto| 9278 session. "in

=4

capital | transfer of its duties to the parole] voard. On

mental “health screening hospital, planned for" the Indiana university medical center by 1949, for mental health checkups of parolees whose mental health is .in doubt.

load of each parole officer to 75 or less cases. When the cases exceeds 75 per officer, the board would be under mandate to

Committee Cuts

Striction on their co

of the parole board by merit through the state personnel board. The" parole board itself, however, would retain the power of fixing EIGHT: The abolition of the state clemency commission which!

now functions only in long-term or t cases andthe!

NINE: The use of the projected

TEN: The reduction of the case

number of

School Pay Hike

i Action Brings New Legislative Fight (Continued From Page One).

brought out of the public policy committee with one major change. The gommittee amended the measure to relieve précinct and ward party officials. from the re- | ection with the beer and liquor ess. As- passed by the house, the bill! would have precluded any party} worker from any connection with the business. County and district chairmen and chairwomen and officials of the state committee still will be prohibited from having any

emt ra

The house ways and means com-

shift of party control, new chairs

major problems indicates growing

#realizes labor regards this act as

—feared—it moved to provide sities and colleges with liability in-

Move to Insure |Sports Crowds

The Indiana legislature today | quested the bill be sent.them imme-| -all—staté-univer- giately so they wou would have time Ww

mittee was verbally spanked yesterday in a message from the senate which wanted to know why the budget was being held up. Senators protested the bill is. too ‘important for them to consider on

dence remodeled into apartments. ‘She pounded on the door of the * apartment where her father, Albert Bowman, and two other sisters, Mrs. _ Alice Walters and Ruth Ann Bow-

River Steamer

NEW ORLEANS, March 1 (U.P).

might not be possible

i crisis. *in-|

to cut Presi-|

Furthermore, a bipartisan

dent Truman's $37,500,000,000 budget surance as an aftermath of the as much as ‘originally hoped bea of ‘additional relief money! which may be needed in the Greek

Purdue university basketball’ bleacher - collapse.

A Yesolution which would require estate in Indiana in 1949 by a mere

the spur of the moment. They re-

study it. Buzsing through a buy calendar yesterday, the house passed the bill {for a re-assessment of all’ real

this was adopted by the house and |gne vote more than the constitu-|

—Shipping officials today

vestigated the cause of a |sroup of senators persisted in efforts

to earmark for debt reduction so

Diesel

was sent to the senate for tonal majority. The vote was 52 currence.

years. : - ~ Employed by City in 1944 Edison was employed by the park department as a plumbers ~ helper at te Brookside Park shops : He was hired by the: department i gad worked in various

plosion

river.

The explosion wrecked the engine room and buckled deck plates. But|

killed three persons and in-

1 oe apiosion shear He or much- funds that a 20 per cent tax!

| cut would not be possible. jured seven last night during a ‘OPA

trial run down the Mississippi oo uient career of OPA

Bet headed for an end on June 30. Despite some Democratic moves

5, 1944, until

Feb. 11, 1945.

1. “

» »

. Record of Bix Arrests

had a record of six arrests.

drunk, vagrancy and a charge o

was separated from

The victim was dea good worker, always " by Leo Miller, plumb.

Mr, Miller. said Eidson was born - in Louisiana and had lived in Ken-

"Detective Davis said the victim These were for Mann act viola- | with a Mr. tion in Jackson, Miss.; drunken Perez Colombia, third engineer. driving on which he was fined here;

grand larceny on which. there is no made by 322 Americans and 28

to keep the tottering agency alive, a “death sentence” bill was being |° prepared by the senate appropriations committee. And Chairman five tugs that were sent to the| Styles Bridges (R. N. H) said he scene 18 miles from New Orleans, [Would seek a senate’ vote on the The dead included two Ameri- | measure early next week. cans. Joel W. Moore, wha represented the Bush-Sulzer Engine Portal Pay Co., St. Louis, manufacturer of the] Democratic senators predicted that ship's ‘power plant, was the only| President Truman would veto legisperson who could have given expert|lation outlawing portal pay suits advice on ‘the cause "of the blast.|if it reaches him in the form passed

the main force of the blast went straight upward, preventing more 8 (oxtersive damage. The. ship was towed safely to a repair berth by

But he was fatally injured along|by the house. - The house passed a Chatfield and Luis|bill yesterday outlawing almost $6 billion in the portal pay suits. The house version: also would strike out many safeguards in the wage hour | law.’ The senate will consider a somewhat milder, xersion. next week.

The blast interrupted a leisurely of (cruise down the Mississippi being

ANS...

Fo rob

“No legal method exists whereby {state univerities and "colleges can provide compensation to students

(R. Garrett). Rep. Miser is a neighbor of the family of Roger Gelhause, 24, one | of the thrée Purdue university stu-

" Cigaret Tax Reported | The administration measure to was reported for passage by the| - [senate finance committee four hours |after it received the bill yesterday. In other action, the senate killed

to committee for study.

Gets CPA's Approval

The civilian production adminis{tration today approved 20 non-| | sonnel problems was given the house residential butiding and construc- | blessing and sent to the senate, tion. projects in _ Indiana for the!

dents who died as a result of the a bill to impose a $25 annual license | bleacher collapse during a basket- | ball game last Monday. Some: 250] fee oh parking lois. The measure other fans were injured. Rep. Walter Maehling (D. Terre lots to carry heavy insurance polHaute) introduced another resolu- {icies. tion which sought $250,000 in dam- | parking lot operators. ages for the injured and families] The house passed and sent to the of the three victims. It was sent | governor a measure to allow women

New Legion Building (approved a senate measure to man-

“Pelord veyora presentation ol: prt

week “ending Pon

case to the Marion county grand

Jury. : or Fidson's left forearm had been . amputated after an accident in

_| badge.

struck the Allis-Chalmers a Communist party #omi-|

FBI Agent Show Credentials OR

had found the jewels.

Junior G-Man, 8, Helps |Find $13,450 in Jewels -

‘Glad to Help, He Says After Making

renga

SPOKANE, Wash.,, March 1 (U. P) Tiodniey Peterson, Tr ate his cereal, sent the boxtops to the radio station and won his junior G-man’s ‘costing $1,252 4301.50.

Along came Special FBI Agent H. G. Maynor asking questions, Mr. Mrs. Maynor was searching for clues to the mysterious disappearance of

admitted today that he $13, 450 worth of jewels. “If you're an FBI man,

Es

| " Rodney | Dale Randant, 6. Dale admitted he day in St. Francis hospital. Sie had

mated cost of $679,677.73. Largest project approved Was nne for the foundation of a building! which will house American Legion national headquarters on the war memorial plaza. Légion officials . previously said

At an estid

| also would have required parking |’

It was bitterly contested by

.|in factories to work eight hours a |day, 48 hours a week. They also

date a 48-hour week for police. | A bill to create a 9-member commission to study Indianapolis per-

Phone Workers Here ‘File "Strike Notice

Three unions representing traffic, accounting and. plant employees have filled intention to strike against Indiana Bell Telephone Co.’ Strike intention notice was filed

construction on the site would be|in 30 states, affecting 150,000 teledelayed until the housing shortage {phone employees. was eased. Negotiations between ‘ representa <At-“the—same—time; CPA- denied-{tives of local employees andthe 16 other construction applications |telephone company here opened last Wednesday and are to continue next | week. The strike intention is a legality | required at least 30 days before any

Francis ‘Canaday |

Washington ealling—

Taft's Senate Rule Shaky After Several Defeats

Loses Vote on Budget, Bows on Debt: Reduction, Poor Second i in Poll of '48 Race "(Continued From Page One) :

Republican committeeinan, frequent Mr. Tatts offices. here. They control delegates to 0 Republican ‘eonvention.) Republican congressmen, are irritated by ever-inereasing dbo

letters from back home. They | ‘suspect organized campaign. But’ they don’t know whom to suspect. Many of writers are recognized Republicans. ‘One congressman tells - com" pliiners to be patient. “The New Deal structure was built up aver 14 years, and we can't fell it with just one blow,” he writes. “We must tear it down section -by section.”

v- TR MN

ACTUALLY, delays are due to

men learning ropes, new procedures required by reorgaiiizafion act and conflicts within party. Observers here think delay on

responsibility among Republicans, . s = = Labor Law Reform - “MODERATE” Republican approach to: labor law reform-—dif-fering from proposals of Mr. Taft and Senator Joseph H. Ball— will come soon from Senator Irving M. Ives (R. N. Y.). ~ Mr. Taft wants Taft-Ball- Smith bill, revision of vetoed Onze bill passed first. nA Mr. Ives, experienced n laborindustry relations in his state, thinks revision of Wagner act should be starting point. He

its Magha carta, doesn't believe in by-passing it or pushing it into background. “w-

: Mr. Ives opposes old Case bill | - principles,

opposes * outlawing closed shop. He argues this would lead to chaotic conditions in some industries which have had closed shop for years. . ® = THERE'LL be no more draft’ after March 31.. War department won't ask for renewal of law, high officials have told congressmen.

Formal announcement will be |

made soon, = » =

- May Refuse to Yield

HOUSE with its. disciplined G. O. P. majority, may refuse this , year to yield to sendte on appropriation cuts, Often in past house

yielded or compromised. = This week ‘only one Republican dissented on cutting $6 billion from budget, Dissenter was Rep. Magaret Chase Smith (Maine), who said campaign commitments pres vented her from voting for cut. House leadership also thinks it can pass any legislation over Truman veto. They base this on vote they mustered to limit presidency to two terms. - ® n SENATOR is usually regarded .as most lordly title this side of * President, but one newcomer disagrees. Copies of speech he de-

facturers association, were identi-

U. S. senator from Pennsylvania.” Mr. Martin tells friends he'd like to organize senate along military lines; says he ran Pennsylvania, as governor, with everything - coming up to him Ytheough channels.” - » = . HE WHO laughs last: At a meeting of the American Retail federation here, many merchants sang blues about losses they are taking on these loud, high-priced men’s sports shirts { with which they filled. their show

hid Red Gross, Truman Pleads

{tum tothe Red Cross—once a Year Jfrom the White House

has cut. funds, senate has re- | stored them, ‘house then has.

livered to Pennsylvania Manu--fied “Maj. Gen. Edwin Martin,’

President Opens Annual Fund Drive | |

WASHINGTON, March 1 (U, PJ ~The American Red Cross opened its 1947 fund drive today-and Presi« dent Truman urged that its workers be welcomed in every home and shop. = ; “Many times a year “the ‘people

the Red Cross turns to the people,” Mr. Truman said in .q broadcast night. “That time is now at hand”. “The Red Cross hopes 73 raise $60 million,

Mr, Truman described the Red lates dollars into - helpful deeds;

race, creed or color, which concerns itself only with human needs.”

| He said the Red Cross record for § “really great

1046 was one of the stories of our time.”

An “Inspiring Record” hope re-lit and comfort given,” he said, “It is a story from the hearts of the millions who helped and were

12-month period.” Close to 3 million volunteers have been enlisted: in the 1047 fund drive. The - President said “I (fervently hope that these unselfis workers will be welcomed in every home the land.” * “Every dollar contributed will be multiplied in usefulness. Let us keep the Red Cross at full strength.

call,”

: ployees.

‘Aid Claypool Strike

Several hundred members of labo {unions today put on a sympathy

| demonstration in front of Cla hotel now picketed by i em-

DOO

windows during war.

Hoover Figure Up HERBERT HOOVER'S propo-

relief fund is $248 million more than Truman budget provided.

,G. O. P. congressional lea ers sppove it, their budget-cut-ting lems will be increased.

But influence of men like Mr. | "Vand , Who see relation- | ship to ore policy, it over.

Proposed $350 niillion for relief | in liberated countries is some-_ thing else. If it's voted, some house members are talking about insisting that U. 8. distribute food, instead of handing —it over to SOvermmenta, In countries like e, governments. could use our food to strengthen | their own political hold. American relief administration ran into same problem in 1921 in Russia. ‘At that time, under Riga agreement, U. S. insisted on handling distribution; Russia

agreed to provide help, transpor-. |

tation, warehouses. But U. 8. relief officials had to fight con-

tinually to get promised co-0p-

and others who suffer injuries or impose a 3-cent a pack cigaret-tax, eration. death,” said Rep. Charles T. Miser |

ARMY IS responsible, ‘Inadvertently, for increasing number | of ex-soldiers’ names on sucker lists. Names and addresses of exG. 1's are net made public by | "war department. But smart compilers .of sucker lists have been aided by department's general release on award of decorations. ‘More than 1,725,000 soldiers earned awards. Publications of names and addresses has now been stopped.

string to make the government insist that coal operators deal with United Mine Workers on fiew: contract. He's planting congressionab speeches stressing ‘need of getting new contract before April 1, when his. strike uce expires. ’ Watch for filing of operator | suits a king government's collection of ‘welfare fund. Government now operates mines, urns profits “over to owners, but collects and keeps cash for welfare fund. ‘Miners would like — but won't :get—legislation withholding profits from owners until they bargain.

" GAEL SULLIVAN is

Mis. Frances Rose DeSano Cana-

day of Bridgeport, Ill, died yester- |strike can be called,

been visiting her sister, Mrs. Wil-

'ing for “missing minutes.”

Record-Breaking Pilots Look for "Missing Minutes’ Army Fliers Can't Locate Lost Time;

Mantz Says New York Was Hard to Find

_ NEW YORK, March 1 (U. P).—Two world flying records vere cracked wide-open yesterday, but today the pilots involved were search»

Lt. Col. Robert E. Thacker of E Centro, Cal, who commanded the "twin- fuselage P-82 Betty Jo in its 5000-mile non-stop flight from Honosal for a ‘475 million German lulu to La Guardia field, was clocked. officially as having made the his-

toric trip in 14 hours, 33 minutes. | “But both my

| minutes, i ia grin. “We've

ipened to that other 23 minutes”

searched and searched may put but we just can't figure what hap- Hawaiian blouses for their wives. “ Asked to kiss his wife over and .°

Hut. Gol. Jack te ; co-pilot (Lt. John poo ‘Jack Carter of the army alr

d- ‘M. Ard of Inglewood, Cal) and I | figured our time as 14 hours, 10 ‘met at the airport yesterday by | Col. Thacker sald, with their wives. The two men are expert | ‘husbands, as well as expert pilots. |

They brought along orchids and

Cross as an agency “which transwhich transcends all barriers of |

“This is an inspiring record of

helped by the Red Cross during one

and business establishment of 4

Let us | respond proudly to this |

Col. Thacker and Lt. Ard were

i

“A Country Boy” | ‘The other record-breaker, civilian gy grinned and sald: -

i jiier Paul Mantz, who breezed into flying without food, I get down to

‘La Guardia at 3:36:35 p.m. yesters ‘earth. And what do you want me |

|day, just 8 hours, 7 minutes, and to do? Kiss ‘my wife!” i5 seconds after he left Burbank, r— iCal’, In his trim P-51 Mustang, was | | bothered by 40 minutes that: would

a

‘over again for the photographers,

afterall those -hours of |

oh an : |- COOKS WITH T t “I think I lost it trying-to locate ] {New York,” he said. “After all, GAS TURNED {I'm just a country boy trying to SOLD EXCLUSIVELY get along.” < IN MARION CO. AT “Mr, ‘Mantz “got along” well ~208 N. Delaware

enough to establish a new record Tor. single- engined, propeller-driven - airéraft over "the. transcontinental | BURNERS route, west to east. The previous JMMEDIATE | record, 6 hours, 39 minutes, 30 sec- |

ronds, was established in 1944 by! IN TALLATION & TH res |

A

NEW ERS |

» JOHN L. LEWIS is pulling-every |

= Il NEW FURNACES \&

Local CH. 0849! Bri efs Plummer Furnace Repair

vane 3712 N. ‘Sherman IN DAVE ed

Capt. Golden Reynolds, juvenile | aid division head, will address ‘the |

Sales Executive i h club Mond i Sclenterit Su 31. Soon Mosse 3 Offers

| The Liederkranz Ladies society | Immediate Delivery of brand will sponsor a eard party next Sat- | new 1947 Ford Club Coupe at.

list price for rental of sixPawo their hall, 1421 E. Wash- } om unfurnished house. Will

, pay $85.00 per month, guarAlexander Campbell, U.S. district ||. antee care of property and attorney for northern Indiana, will [| offer-axsellent reference. speak on “Wartime Prosecution” Ct at the weekly meeting of the Indi- | Ask for Mr. Strettar ana university alumni club at noon M A. 2491 vi | Monday in the Warren hotel. | | "

— -

SAVE ON BEAUTY : SERVICE ‘e PERMANENTS

© MANICURES

" o FACIALS 1

being TL" briefed in his new job as Democratic national committee eXecutive to succeed Robert Hannegan in chairmanship unless Mr. Han- . negan’s health improves. He may | | take over before 1948 campaign. "

¢ SHAMPOOS

fpr

eo FINGER -WAVES Personal Supervision and Modern Equipment

International Beauty School

842 E. Wash, | —MA-T181. .

petition in 1946. But he de- piped, “show me your badge.”

that he was a Soman or | Rodney pointed to his own O-) agian hud ‘ven. the sapphire Lam, Bian, 820 N. Bancroft since r, | man badge. The agent grinned and| oo to’ “a 'red-headed kid for a! em

Robert Buse, President of local produced his credentials.

Rodney | o1entine.”

J

Mrs. Canaday, who was 61, for- police last night . that two men

Woman Reports Assault IT a A 21-year-old woman reported to|} Available NOW

forced her in a car near the bus

' United Automobile Workers examined them carefully. ©. — told the house labor “Okay,” said Rodney." the trouble?” = ° Mr. Maynor said a pearl necklace worth $12750 and a sapphire ring worth $700 were sent from " {Chicago to Mrs. George J. Jewett, Spokane. The gems disappeared from a delivery truck, lost or stolen. “I'll get to w on the case” sald Rodney, Proptly fingering his (Junior G-man’'s badge. Thirty - minutes later Rodney's mother telephoned the FBI to say

“What's

ig toe. tp which ont p, which ca e Rodney's friend,

_ijthat Rodney had a tip and believed |

to Harvey Dubois, 8. Harvey explained he had. ‘given. the. ring to Tom Palmer. . Tom dug into a pocket ~tul of. odds and ends and produced thet ring. : That left only the pearl necklace. Mrs, ‘Mark Pavelic walked out and handed it to the FBI man. She had found it where little Dale Randant dropped it. After trying it lon, she had decided it wasn't as nice as her own $5 string, and-had tossed it intq a drawer. : All the gems recoverd, Mr. Maynor’ and the éther federal agents thanked Jor his help. ;

ing i ve.

“Glad to * said Rodney, pol- | |

"Services will be held at 3 p.

‘Monday in Moore Mortuaries Bers chapel and at 2 p. m. Tuesday ‘in the Davis funeral home in New| Castle. Burial will be in New Castle.

That sent the agents arly lived here before moving" to Bridgeport several years ago. She was. a member of the Bridgeport ‘| Christian church. The sister is the ‘only survivor.

along White river, ¢

station, and assaulted her iajer|

_ Safety A

BOY mo

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CIRCLE TOWER FRM

59-29 V Proposal “By ROBE ‘The. house tox ministration bill - utilities. ~ Vote on the o ‘It was the sec

strike bill had lower house. It

+ votes short of a

Jority, after a s publican majori leaders rounded tional votes ove bill across.

Expect fn

It now.goes t it is Jot sailing.”!

At the same t! up an attempt t reconsider an ‘pletely upset a women's work h The comprc reached in a fig licans - who ..w working hours dustry and Dem * present limitatic war period, w barred in India dustrial work | of midnight ant Under the cc ‘midnight deadlix . extended, but ol By a slick ma old “round-thé-substituted for just before the the question. T mate under hou . to follow sever: were fooled and % One. senator, ( Hammons), ws house .at the ti move. He dash ate hoping to h currence in the sprint across tl rived too late. 21 B

A short time “of the G. O. bolted the party strike sbill fail Failure of th 30 unexpected bill's avowed op crat predicted colleagues the 60 votes on tl G. O. P. floor | ley (R. Bloom Speak for the © . The outlawin ties and severa ures have becon ters by a slow Mr. Henley, wl administration an author on t ~ cating that whe ¢ —it-was not api There ‘is no. observers - close situation that bill to prohibit ing doorways o have full adm Governor Gates stamp of app -- picket bill" in ference.

Nude Bc \ Spankin In Launc

PHILADELP] P.).—A "T-year nude from his | being threatene was found col day, huddled i - a neighbor's px “The youngste © was examined found to be un than 14 hour freezing weaths William was Mazurek, who in the rear of oD MR. MAZUR a laundry bag

‘not his propert was placed on chievous -boys. Several hour: to take his noticed tire bag “time, ‘he saw

ing for playing -ehiat- school.