Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 March 1947 — Page 2
To * agalnst an
it et i 18 a mC ati a ir CT alt
~ ana Bell Telephone Co
' People’s class of Centenary Chris-
: 33 Approximately 150 sleeping cat |
Acme Telephoto
ICY RIVER — A coast asard ice breaker finds the going di fficult as it struggles
° Trenten, N.
in the Murat Temple.
Candi ounced by John Hansgen, dance chairman, « ties ah Delta Delta, Crawfordsville; Patsy Thompson, Zeta ‘guilty by the safety board yester-
New Castle, and Carolyn Finn, Pi Buia Phi; Bawn Larson, |
i) Huber,
id Kappa Gamma; Marjorie,
Little, Butler Tadapeudons o assocta-| fo us uns a Faster Seals Omega, apd Joan Parkhurst, rt. Kappa
(Are. on the Way
Easter seals today ‘were in the mail to 875,000 Hoosiers. Accompanying Easter seals will be an explanation
Alpha Theta: The last five are al of Indianapolis.
Irvington Phos Qffice to Expand
for a one-story and base-
Local Briefs
Butler Sophomores Vote For Sweetheart Tomorrow
Butler university sophomore men tomorrow will go to’ the polis to * elect a Sweetheart to reign over their annual cotillion Saturday night
ice pack that has choked off navigation in the Delaware river near J. The river has been blocked for a week,
Reinstate Office Guilty in Bribery
Safety Board Then Suspends Patrolman
are:
the sheets of
Plans ment addition to the Irvington of the service rendered by the In-
office, 747 E. Washington st, have been Snoupoed by Indi-
building will provide for inof a additional dial office
A company also announced
plans to construct a $127,000 garage on the site. Both constructions have been approved by the “civilian production administration.
Lastep C. Bush, field director for
Members of the Young Married
ghurch will see movies and hear the radio returns on the bas-|;o ketball game at their pitch-in supper meeting Saturday at 6 p. m. Belding is class president and Al G. Oooley is teacher.
E. J. Fricke, lay leader of the North Methodist church, will talk at a laymen’s dinner meeting tomorrow at 6:30 p. m. in the Greenwood Presbyteriam ehurch in Greenwood.
T. Walter Boydston has been ap_Pqinted Indianapolis -distriet construction manager of the civilian administration, following the resignation of ‘John T, Cleveland. Mr. Boydston was formerly district priorities officer of the war production bobrd of South Bend,
'A three-day series of round-table eonferences for Pullman workers will be held here March 10, 11 and
Quincey st,
G. Harold
ductors and porters are expected
THIS WEEK ONLY
“our PHOTOREFL
wie
Oamphbell st.
2 PICTURES TOR THE PRICE OF :
EX’ way
’ 1s “Dank You"
i far helping make, vir studio such a wonderful . the tune of 202,848 portraits of you foo sq fal Thet's why, to say “thank yeu" hwice over, wi is cits You 2 pictures for the
diana Society for Crippled Children. Herman B. Wells, Indiana uni-iy versity president and state chairThe 36-foot addition to. the realiman for the drive, said funds raised |; through the sale of seals will be used to finance a flexible service program for crippled children and physically handicapped adults.
Richard F. Seehausen, 944 BE Dehas been pledged te membership in Scabbard and Blade, national henorary military fraternity, at the University of Hlinois,
The Hornet's Hut, formerly the Jive Hive and the Irvingteens, will sponsor a “Joe" party Friday night at the Downey Avenue red room of Downey Avenue Ohristian church. Howe high school basketball team members will be honored guests. Members of the charge are Marianna Fullen, Wil-. liam Locklear, Ted Worley, Allen Smith, George Harris, John Brick-
committee * in
A city policeman who resigned 18 {months age after he was charged
[with accepting a bribe was found
day, after first being reinstated upan recommendation of Police Chief [Howard Sanders. The policeman, Patrolman ¥rven ©.
.|Schwemeyer, was suspended 30 days.
He will repert for duty April 6. His ‘partner, Patrolman Joseph A. Bronner, who alse resigned in September, 1945, was reinstated last July and given a suspension. He later was returned to duty. Considered Money ' Gift The two officers were charged with having taken $50 from 17-year-old Robert Walker, 3210 E. Washington st. The youth had been arrested by Patrolman Schwomeyer. and Bronner-on charges of reckless driving and speeding, Bronnér said he was seated in the polige car, while his former partner talked to Walker, Schwomeyer said Walker tossed the money inte the police car, between him and his partner, He told safety hoard members he considered the money was & “gift.” He was markings Bi A dR ay Schwomeyer added. Walker, who is reported in California, was pot subpenaed for the hearing. Chief Sanders recommended Schwomeyer’'s reinstatement on the basis of “his good record.”
Ca -
Ld
; Gongress— '
Democrats Fight
Two-Term Rule :
Slap at Roosevelt, Lucas Declares
WASHINGTON, March 5 (U. P.). —A group of Demoeratic senators opened a _last-ditch fight today against a proposed - constitutional amendment to limit presidents to two terms. The house - approved measure came up for senate debate at noon, and indications were it would get the required two-thirds approval
or early next. The amendment would not become effective until Tatified by three-fourths of the states. Opening up the senate opposition, Democratic Whip Boott Lucas of Illinois denounced the amendment as a Republican attempt to “smear the good name of Franklin D, Roosevelt"——the only president to beat the two-term tradition. Sen. ator Lucas said the measure was “politics, pure and simple." ; Other congressional de velop:
ments:
Lilienthal
Senator Kenneth McKellar Tenn.) said he would invoke an old but controversial senate “prerogative™ in his fight to block confirmation of David EK. enthal as head of the atomic energy comHe said he would ask the senate to reject the appointment on grounds that Mr. Lilienthal is “personally obnoxious" to him. This device has been used suc-
‘|cessfully by some senators to block
appointments from their state, but Senator McKellar's chances »- peared slim. “The senate atomic energy committee scheduled a vote on Mr. Lilienthal's appointment tomorrow.
Rents N - Legislation te boost rents 10 per cent and transfer rent control from LOPA to the courts wis put in final form by & senate banking subcommittee, The full banking committee will consider the measure tomorrow. Chairman Robert A. Taft of the senate Republican pelicy committee said, however, that he sees no reason to “hurry” rent control legislation threugh eongress. The present law does not expire until June 30.
Labor
The C. I. O. asked congress committee to scrap all pending strikecontre! bills. But the National Association of Manufacturers indorsed them as vitally necessary to industrial pesce and said many should be made even
stronger. The O. I. O. view was placed be-
Van A. Bittner, vice president of the United Steelworkers (OC. I. O.) | and director of the C. I. O orgen-| izing committee. ES wid That lstiad of seicicle ing labor, congress would do better to combat the rising cost of living and the housing shortage. The N. A. M. proposals were sub-
man and Mary Jo Taylor.
i , 8 member of | the public relations .department of Eli Lilly & Co. will speak March | 21 at the fifth annual vocational guidance conference at Transyl-| vania college, Lexington, Ky,
The final organization meeting of the United Rabbit Breeders association of Indiana will be held at 2| Pp. m. Sunday at the west meeting | room of the War Memorial. Robert | Dodd, acting president, will be in| charge. The workings of the rabbit marketing co-op will be explained. By-laws will be read and stoek subscriptions apened. William Allison, 2207 N. Rural st. | was appointed today by Walter | : Boetcher, county Democratic ehairman, as chairman of the 23d ward. He succeeds Paul _€ave,
i _N.
inet mtiiie mtg
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THE WEATHER FOTOCAST:. ACME TELEPHOTO. vit Yoh 5. WEATHER BURIAL, OUP, COMMERCE FORICAST-- PLAID NDING ADO AM E573: 47
when a vote is taken late this week|
NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORE. CAST SUMMARY: Rain is ex+pected in the. south Atlantic states, the Virginias, Tennessee, Ken-/ tucky, Ohio and easterfi OKlaJhoma tomorrow, Rain showers are pictured for Arizona, eastern Tex-
as and the Gulf states.
Snow is forecast for Michigan and Jowa while flurries of snow will develop over portions of Montana, Idahe, Utah and Nerth Dakota. Rain and snow or sleet will add to traffic hazards Indiana, -Missouri: and eastern Kansas. (See affected areas on Fotocast). : Clear skies will be confined to New England, California and Wy. aming, Partly cloudy weather is pictured for Montana, South Dakota, the Rockies, southern Florida and along tha coast from Georgia to Massachusetts. (See inset cloudy sreas chart.) It will be warmer in the south Atlantic and Gulf states as warm, maist air flows inland from the Gulf of Mexico. Large, open alr
mitted to the serine labor dasimits tee by Raymond S. BSmethurst, counsel of the association. He
especially urged that the closed shop and. industry-wide bargaining be outlawed. . Mr. Smethurst alse asked a ban on jurisdictional strikes and secondary beyeotts, a requirement that unions bargain in good faith, exclusion of foremen ‘from the Wagner act and requirement -of fingneial reports fram unions.
fore the heuse labor committee by'
Foreign Workers
. Chairman Clifford R. Hope of the
Sizes 38.52
¥ WMG PATS PEND. COP 1947 EW. L.A. WASHER. ALL OATS AEREWVED.
37
‘mass Arrow on the Fotocast shows direction of this air flow around the. high... pressure cell. east of Florida. Temperatures will fall in the northern and central plains states as cold, Canadian air moves into this area. Morning temperatures will drop below sero in Montana, Wyoming and the Dakotas. Below, freesing tempera will ex» tend as far south as New Mexico, The fronts, shown on the Foto« cast, outline the frontiers of conflicting air masses. For example, the cold front from the central plains where warm Gulf air is meeting
Canadian air. Rain, snow, i
wers or. some form of precipitation usually occurs - near a front. The freezing line on the Fatocast is drawn through points where lowest temperatures will be
through Texas shows |C
ll alk
RRTLE
We ZZ
include Boston, 36; New York, 38; Philadelphia, 31; Washington, 32; Memphis and Ft. Worth, 38; 8t. - Louis and Kansas Oity, 20; Clevefand, 24; San Francisco, 30, and Seattle, 36 degrees.
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU
32 tomorrow. It will be still colder north of this line. Minimum temperature forecasts
house agriculture committee cei Subvardve
prompt senate approval of legisla~ tion ta continue the importation of foreign farm workers until the end of 1947. The legislation was approved by
the house. iate. yesterday by & roll) judiciary subcommittee on his bill call vote of 243 to 110. June 30 isto bar -subversives from federal
the present deadline. Under the program, this country has been importing between 80,000 and 85000 foreign workers a. year, mostly from Mexico and the West
classic lines. of this
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Maren h aw Sunrise... 6:1 ate ‘ 4 recipitation #4 h a Wm... trace Total Brecipiitiols i since ig bovivns 4.5 clency since hr ral 1.8 The fol following is shows the tempera: ture and precipitation in othe! cities: Statl h low Atlante I Pr RN 3H Boston a y] Chicago or 30 Cincianati’ ji 2% leveland : a ver Bvanaville 3 PL. Wayne 18 tnd ah t % Indi s (ol ) Kansas OY 3 Los A oo ‘ TE i Minnes bat. 1 New a ns M Oklahoma ely $ aha Pittsburgh . 3 jan Antonio é a (Jaheine teertsse MB 3
Rep. Sam Hobbs (D. Ala. today urged congress to make it mandatory that the government investigate the loyalty of all prospective
Hobbs testified before a house jobs. Tt would provide eriminal penalties for both officials hiring
plicant. He said the investigation
of prospective employees should be made “not as a punishment but to
‘WEDNESDAY, MAKCH 5, 1047
inal investigations,
i Asks 5 More Troopers
Would Bring Force Up to 300 Men
- State Police Superintendent Robe ert Rossow today asked the state senate finance committees for $1% million to expand the state Poltee
“| departments,
He would hire 50 more Revpem, bring the number of state polices men actually engaged In patrol work to 300. The force now has 380 patrolmen, exclusive of clerical per+ sonnel. In addition to hiring 80 more men, new cars -and other
{equipment would be bought,
At the same time Col. Rossow said the force does not-have enough men to police the state against gambling. Even the suggested 300 men force would be “far shom" of the number needed if the state group is adked to enforce local gambling problems he said.
Want Local Co-Operation
The superintendent also said state police would risk loss of valuable local co-operation needed In crim. if it were to #04. aer.the ends of - look ake thorities, . : “Our policy will he that we will not go inte any local situation with. out .the request amd the co-opera~ tion of local police authorities,” Cal. Rossow said. “If citizens can't get local aus thorities to act and if state police Jump in we will jeopardize our main job, which is ta handle the state's crime and traffic problems,” he con. tinued.
Doubts Convictions Possible
At best, gambling is a relatively | Minar offense, from the state's standpoint, he added. Col. Rossow also said that if state police go in “willy nilly" over the heads of local police, to make gambling raids, they probably will not get the authorities needed for a conviction. He also said that he would recommend changes in state police poli~ eles with regard to gambling at the next meeting of the state police board; hut he said his recommendations would not interfere with the general policy to leave local” probe lems to Jooal officials,
Joseph M. Huston Dies in Home Here
Joseph M. Huston, 805 N, Illinois st., Apt. 11, was found dead in his homte by police who were called there this morning by a physician who had been attending the 64. year-old man. The r said
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