Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1947 — Page 4
“§-E-N-D M-O-R-E H-O-T This arid many other messages
the corporation's 14 warehouses Richard Hubbard, director, turfied to a form of communications less . He enlisted the gervices of a dozen Boy ‘Scouts and on race day, positioned at strategic points, they will relay ‘messages by means of semaphore flag hand signals. Replenish Any Items . Thus the service will be able to! speedily replenish a stand which Has _ [run out of cold sandwiches, popcorn or any of the other items the Spostservice Will offer the pub.
tofu fhe wate ME. Hubcontacted Grant J. Hayes, tmaster of Troop 42, who was able to supply seven of the needed signalmen from his troop. The
¥
If a concession stand in the in-
of its field runs out of an item,<he manager will notify a nearby scout who will wig-wag the message fo a scout White Freed near the pagoda. The scout will
*May.i0 (U. P:). relay the word across the track to ' Georg White won|a scout betweeh the stands who will Forint ud after serv- send it down to another signalman ths and 16 ‘@Ags of {near the maim gate where is lo~ . He immediately cated the Sportservice’s headquar-
Paid for Work i Within a few minutes after the first scout sends the message -the}. supplies will be on the way to the stand. The Sportservise will pay the boys for their service and the scouts will put the money into their ‘troop summer: camping fund. Scouts taking part will be: Richard Clifton, 2870 N. Illinois st.; Robert Ikerd, 273¢ N. Illinois st.; Glen Clarkson, 3224 N. Kenwood ave.; Robert Gruman, 2733 N. Illinois st.; Vincent Thomson, 3214 N. Capitol ave.; Robert Vick, 3155 Boulevard place. and Eugene Harrison, 1301 Congress ave, all of Tfoop 42; Dafi Wakefield, 6129 Winthrop
State _|Deaths
" ANDERSON—Opcar %.. Jackson, 69, retired farmer.
BRAZIL—John A. Wells, 173,
farmer, BLUFFTON-~Mrs. Louisa Welbsum, I" COLUMBUS--Mrs. dia Hyutt. ~ DECATUR~-J. B. Hersch, 71. EVANSVILLE—Mrs. Si Craiger, 79. Charles C. Jaggers, 60. FT. WAXNE~Mrs. Lizzie R, Peigh, 83. ARY=-=John philkovic, 70. ana Lynn Bi 21, Pearl H. Bdw L GOSHEN-Mrs. Mary M, Cory, #1. 0); wi t , 19, reured pair IND--Edward P. Stelley re
Mrs. "ary BE. Lafollette, 68 TTE-~~Mrs. Elisabeth th Thayer. inn, 49, mail carrier, elson, 64, Tamer. : Mrs. Ida Newhouser, 74. LOGANSPORT—J. PF. Bueret, 73, retired e | manufacturer. ° MUNCIE~Mrs. Catherine Miller, 8. , 91 TERRE HAUTE--Mri. Sefih Ellen Royce,
401 S. Warman Ave. OPEN 24 HOURS ‘EVERY DAY INCLUDING SUNDAY .
retired
Catholic Women
1
Thieves Take $200
[Plan Retreats
{tucky ave., last night and took $200.
Police today were hunting burglars who drilled open a safe at the Co-Op service station, 601 Ken-
sends a hurry-up call for more soda pop to be sent to a concession stand at the Ingignapef is Speedway track.
\Wig-Wagging Boy Scouts To Keep Hot Dogs Rolling
Speedway Enlists Service to Flash Call When Concessions Run Out of Food
By LOUIS ARMSTRONG =
across the Speedway track numerous times on race day by the special communications system of Indianapolis Sportservice, Inc., concessioners. Faced with impracticability of installing telephone service between
» {Troop 72.
pane | sill on Strike
about to enter its sixth week. The Jabor department's weary top conciliators, who thought it was about ‘oyer when long-distance employees settled their strike Thurs. day, prepared. to step up negotia-
its two still-striking unions here. © Their target was a week-end agreement to get rid of the picket lines by Monday morning. But prospects appeared slim for achiev ing that objective. Could Prolong Strike Ernest Weaver, president of the Association of Communication Equipment Workers, and Frank J. Fitssighmons, president of the Western Electric Employees association,
WASHINGTON, May 10 (U.P
tions between Western Electric and,
said their picket lines could projong the nation-wide walkout in-/ definitely.
Meanwhile regional strike set~ tlements continued throughout the | nation, although there wére some
hitches. Southern Bell telephone workers, some 43,000 strong in nine southern states, ended their dispute with the company last night for wage increases ranging from $3 to #4 a
Settle in Cincinnati
The strike was called off in Cincinnati for a settlement of $2 to $3.50 a week. San Francisco telephone strikers offered to settle for a $4 across-the-board boost plus other features of their old contract. Negotiations between the New Jersey telephone union and striking workers, howeyer, were broken off in what was described by union
» Hamison. star scout of Troop 42,
Refuses Statement In Death of Woman
Harry Stice, held in the death of
signed statement of the affair. “lI don't remember much about
nude and unconscious early yesterday in Stice’s room at 1020 E. Wash ington st. She died later at City hospital. | John R. Bradley, held or a Vas grancy charge, told police Stice met the victim in an E. Washington st. tavern. ‘All three of them went to the room, where Bradley said he saw Stice slap the woman. Coroner Roy B. Storms said death Was caused by a blood clot on the woman's brain, prtny caused by a blow.
In San Francisco
His body "was found yesterday by police officers. It was stuffed into the trunk of his snappy 1947 town-and-country convertible.
recent underworld rumors thae members of the eastern rackets haq been seen in San Francisco and were attempting to “muscle in” on
The murder seemed to confirm!
- SAVE ON BEAUTY service » PERMANENTS : F/ - ® SHAMPOOS . FINGER WAVES “ Personal Supervision snd Modern Equipment
* International Beauty Scheel ho
5440 , . . 5440 . . . 5400
5440 . . . 5440 ,
7) ELECTRIC
RR
1 GIVEN NORGE 1947 }
REFRIGERATOR §
and |5 other valuable prizes given away .
5440
apo Watch for contest rules. cao 5440 , . .. 5440 . , , 5440 . , , 5440 . , , 5400 , . . BG
for admission. living and classroom facilities. wise to apply a year in advance.
(EEE DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
Nationally Recognized for
Education in
* LIBERAL ARTS and MUSIC
a DePauw University has enlarged its facilities and staff to meet, in so far as possible, the unprecedented demand Admission is limited, however, by available Qualified students will find it
Applications are being accepted for the summer session, which begins June 18, and for the 1948-49 school year.
For Information Address Office of Admissions |, DePauw University . . . Greencastle, Ind.
spokesmen as an “unfriendly” "| atmosphere. They were to be re-| > sumed today. - os Major areas of the strike still to| mr be settled consist of seven Moun- | tain ‘states, five Pacific coast states, and six Southwestern states. Ne-| gotiations are continuing in all | cases and picket lines are intact.
D-O-G-8." : will be wig-wagged ‘back and forth
spotted over the Speéedway area, h p | 0 ere ave: Pat Bvara, 59% Gotiegs ave. None Parley He:
y Keith Bundy, 6138 Haverford ave. Reports ‘No Progress Kenneth Moss, 6218 Indianola ave.; Ronald Rice, 5365 N. New Jersey Spokesmen for the Indiana Bell st, and Tom Heidenreich, 5768 N. | Telephone Co. and its three tele-| Delaware st., all of Troop 90, and | phone unions today expressed little Ben Andrews, 3403 Birchwood ace. nope of an agreement over wages |
- | before next week. | Ee ——— Doth sides reported “no progress”
f this morning's parley over holiByland Not Voter, |dy.
company’s first counter proposal. The company’s initial wage offer would have given increases ranging from $2 to $4 to some 6400 Indiana telephone workers. All three unions turned down the offer on thé grounds that it was too Jow.
day pay and other ge mates. unions ‘yesterday rejec e ‘Doubt Eligibility To Run for Mayor |i
‘Richard H. Byland, ‘who was ted for mayor of Beech
The unions, Indiana Telephone Traffic union, Indiana Telephone Workers union and Indiana Tele-| Mr. Byland was nominated by phone Clerical uhion, all members | more than a three-to-one margins tne National Federation of Tele-| over Omer J. Hamell in the town's | phone workers stayed on the job | Democratic primary. {because of Indiana's utility arbitra-| But a group of fellow townsmen |¢jon Jaw when workers throughout complained to the Marion. county | ihe country walked out more than al election commissioners that Mr. | month ago.
Byland wasn't registered as a voter | es GOOD JOBS
and therefore was not legally ‘a ARE CALLING ...
candidate. : The county; board shoved the The school will be in session continuous]y
problem into the laps of the state | election commissioners. Mr. Byland said he wasn't a poli} ticlan. He said he discovered before | throughout the spring afd the primary that he was not regis- | summer. Students may tered, so he didn't get to vote for | enter now and pursue himself. : their courses without inThe state board now must decide | terruption until. com- - whether ‘Mr. Byland can go ahead | pleted. High school graduand run next fall against Republi- || ates wishing to prepare can Mayor E. Allen Hunter, or Pa us Be whether Mr. Hamell, the man Mr. | ble will find this continuous program of interest to them, This is the
Byland defeated 396 to 124, will be Indiana Business College
Mr. Hunter's opponent. | of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion, Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, - Richmond and Vincennes — all approved
Grove last Tuesday, wondered today if he would get to run for the office next November.
‘Daughter Gone 8 Days, Father Breaks Down
PT. ATKINSON, Wis, May 10. (U.P.).~George C. Weckler, whose | eight-year-old daughter disappeared from home eight days ago, | has broken under the strain, it was for GI Training. See, réported today. | write, or phone the school Meanwhile, 8s the distraight fa-(| = Of Your choice or Pred ther and mother fought to keep | Ah nelpa hope alive, Wisconsin Governor || Gepiral Butiness College Oucar Rehnebohin rived in Pt. 833 N. Pennsylvania A tkinso s of | Sndianapolis the Madison police department.
Your entire satisfaction fis our thought in the service we render, Electric refrigeration in our air. conditioned system insures comfort regardless of outside temperature and humidity.
© HISEY & TITUS
951 NORTH ‘DELAWARE ST. = SINCE 1868
-
the West Coast.
i las se
Pv as
mmm
THE TESTIMONY OF OUR NATION
“1 know how long and ardently the Jewish people have worked and prayed for the establishment of Palestine as a free and democratic Jewish commonwealth. I am convinced that the American people , Sive their support te this aim and if re-elected I shall help to bring about -its realization.”
~=President Franklin D. Roosevelt
“I have before this expressed my personal approval of the declaration of the British Government regard.
ing the aspirations and” ‘histerie claims of the Jewish people in regard to Palestine. I am, moreover, persuaded that the Allied nations, with the fullest concurrence of our own Government and
people, are agreed that in Palestine’
shall be laid the foundation of a Jewish Commonwealth,”
A ~President Woodrow Wilson
“I . .. add my expression to the
sentiment ameng our people in favor of the realization of the ageold aspirations of the Jewish people for the restoration of their national homeland
—President Herbert Hoover
“I... express again my sympathy with the deep and intense longing which finds such fine expression in the Jewish National Homeland in Palestine. The proposed plan fur-
. nishes to the Jewish people an op-
portunity to devote ‘their great qualities to the upbuilding and preservation of their own homeland and in their own sphere, and I feel sure that the people of the United Stats will not fail to give that earnest and substantial aid which will be necessary if-it is to meet with a full measure qf success.”
—President Calvin Coolidge
“The. Government and people of the United States have given supe port to the concept of a Jewish national home in Palestine ever since the termination of the first World War, hich resulted in the freeing ofa large area of the Near East, incinding Palestine, and the establishment of a number of independent states which are now members of the United The United States, which contrib. uted its blood and resources to the winnipg of that war, could net divest itself of a certain responsi-
bility for the manner in which the
freed territories were disposed of, or for the fate of the peoples lib. erated at that time. It took the position, to: which it still adheres,
that these peoples should be pre-.
pared for self-go™~rnment and also that a national home for the Jewish people should be established in
Palestine. 1 am happy to note that
most of the liberated peoples are now citizens of independent eountries. The Jewish national home, however, has not as yet been fully developed.
“It is only natural, therefore, that this Government should faver at this time the: entry into Palestine of considerable numbers of displaced Jews in Europe, not only that they may find shelter there but also that they may contribute their talents and energies to the -upbuilding of the Jewish national home.”
—President Harry S. Truman
Zionist Emergency Council
of Indianapolis
mms Cr ——
eel a
Nations,
1
Cte Bein
IP
nx
Pte oR SEAR
compare weekly average Curtailed op tinue at some Motors Cor Pp. truck producer
‘vision of Nast
The G. M. Fi and the Fleetw will close down affecting some
Dogs Bi
Cap Gu
If Rover bi chance in thre was responsib! health departn Dr. Gerald F lis city healt that dog bites since cap guns two. months ag The state caps last winte become effecti until the asse: lished. Stores -sales, however, ing all over th
LEGAL NOTI(
NOTICE OF © Notice 18 hereb:
ber, City Hall, | changes in the 2 city, relating to f changes a nance No. 63, 19 XRetiona wili be
changes That" Senaral as afended),
pei two hundre south west con south west cor ing located in Avenue; thencs east line of place of begin Tt being the ir to include the Wocbers 2nd Ad ness District. Copies of thi details of such formation therec office of the City mission, City Hos Witness my ha City of Indianap 1947.
diana. will hold , May 19, 1 Lx City Hall, changes in the | city, relating to
(as amended), Ordinan apolis, Indiana, amended,
80 the following d Beginning a Lot No. 30 in Addition to th Jeconded in P
of ogni, India of said Lot Nec of the north | the -east line Bast Street; t the east line north line of
leans Street; the west line northeast corr 18 of said D, | east on a line of Orleans Bt ner of Lot N D. 8. Beaty's corner of said section of the 4 and the w east of Orlea: the west line of Orleans St ner of Lot 'N D. 8B. Beaty’s a line paralle Grande Ave of Lot No. Beaty's Addit of said Lot N of the north and the west * thence north of Applegate hundred ffty thence west t Also the fol to-wit: Beginning ¢ of New Stre southeast cor 13 of D. 8. south on and New Street s
Block 13 in s east line of
13 of said D. east to the yp Copies of ti details of such for Hon Sher
Cit
ess my 1 of Indians
