Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 May 1947 — Page 2
To Probe Relief Plans to Keep Eye
On Aid Abroad
WASHINGTON, May M4 (U. P), ~The house foreign affairs com-
action,
the sincerity ‘of their desire
4 witnessed the destruction done in the ‘in 1923, it is not easy to realize that sincere
particularly the various foreign re-
lief programs. A committee member, who asked that his name be withheld, said a special subcommittee will: be set up
France ‘Drafts’ Workers in Crisis
Seeks fo Prevent Gas, Electric Tieup
By UNITED PRESS
dg a8
|
two French power production.
BE
i
EF
peace
| hi
2s g :
Hi f
1
i aks:
? g
£ 5
{
per cent wage rise.
I 8 ih
1
21 : :
:
:
i!
|
Official reports said 50 guerrillas
Hl
BEE, i
sent to relieve government troops dispatches from milidis-
|
]
seven separate resolutions callcivil war and resumption of Kumintang-Com-munist peace negotiations. : Four American residents of Peitaho were believed to have been evacuated by marine landing craft. Little Hope for Peace Meanwhile, Great Britain was preparing to submit to India an-
i}
lead ce. But there was little hope either in Lon-
to India's troubles,
In the past six months 4014 per-
outbreaks of violence between Hindus and Moslems and between Moslems and Sikhs. - Another 3316 persons have been wounded.
‘Bowling Alley Owner Is Slain in Dayton
. wealt Regartiess of the nsture of its| DOWIE alisy owner -and hy
regime, an Internally stabilized Tel estate operator, was shot to Greece can. unquestionably count! death early today in front of his on the co-operation of its strong home as he stepped from his car. Turkish neighbor.
Dispute Shuts Down
2 St. Louis Papers [street just a few feet from the stay __!tion wagon he had just parked. ST, LOUIS, May # (U. P).~| Police discarded robbery as a moA F. of L pressmen walked off. after finding more than $1100 the job at St. Louis’ two afternoon|in his pockets. daily newspapers today after the ot
publishers refused to withdraw pub- pactaffice to Curtail.
of a telegram from George . . * L. Berry, international president of Memorial Day Service union. All departments of the postof-
Presses were halted in -the midst fice, with the exception of parcel the first edition runs at both the post windows and the special de--Times and the Post-Dispatch. | livery section, will be closed FriMr. Berry's telegram, addressed to local’ 38 ‘here, ordered members of the union to respect the terms of
1]
ER
Parcel post windows will be open from 8 a. m. to 8 p. m, and the
77
{on a rgeular week-day schedule.
tL GET ERE
® People who regularly ride the INDIANA RAIL ROAD buses tell us they like our drivers. They sey they'ze courteous . . . cheerful . , , careful, and don't take chances. In fact, they go out of their way to make
the passenger's trip more comfortable and more
Your INDIANA RAILROAD bus driver was se. lected for his job because he does have these, and other, that fit him for his responsibilities. is always uppermost in his mind, sacrificed to maintain time sched. perator especially proud of his + + » 30 honor not lightly earned. is well-schooled rules of the
to your
bus iravel information shout forse, Himes of rol ond deperture, soll your-locol agent. |
Premier Paul Ramadier today signed a drastic decree mobilizing
“ithe workers of France's gas and electric plants in an effort to avert a walkout which would cut off
Mr. Ramadier's decree was the equivalent of drafting the workers
§ i : E § B g
strike under peril of arrest. The workers have thfeatened to strike in support of their demand for a 23
other alternative plan designed to toward independen
don or New Delhi of an early end
There was & new curféw imposed has been tossed in the lap of
one person was dead and 13 injured.
sons have been killed in raging
day in observance of Memorial day.
contract with the three St. Louis | special delivery section will i.
The proposed subcommittee, he said, would see for itself how foreign relief funds were spent.
Senate Group Ends Compromise ‘on Labor |
Senate labor conferees appeared
He said four or five major
Anderson Is irked
|At Agriculture Cut Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P.
Vote Monday on Delay, Of Income Tax Bill
Republicans in the senate are said tc have given up plans for reporting a legislative budget. They were {understood to feel that agreement on a ‘legislative budget now would only cloud the issue of incomé tax Democrats want to delay senate action on the G. O. P. income tax !pill until a conference committee {agrees on the legislative budget. The {delaying motion comes up for a vote Monday, and Republicans are condent they can defeat it.
Greek Administrator
Is Up to Marshall | ‘The job of finding an” adminisltr for the Greek-aid program
Secretary of State George C.
| Fruster Jones
Col. Lee Heads
Reserve Here Col. Ernest R. Lee of Indianapolis,. wartime military aide to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, today was named commanding officer of y . the 329th Infantry reserve regi- . ment. Urits“of the regiment are located In central Indiana cities. Now an Indianupolis businessft man, Co. Lee SN served In Africa a and Europe with Cien. Eisenhower. fle has nine battle stars, the Legion
Cel. Lee of Merit and
Bronze Star medals as well as decorations from the governments of France, Belgium and Russia.
Senator McKellar Taken to Hospital
WASHINGTON, May #4 (U. P).
(D. Tenn.), dean of the senate, suffered a sudden illness in his office today and was taken to the
paval hospital at nearby Bethesda, Md. His condition was described as good
THE, INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Pret Vaccine
To Prevent Fou Director
Sees Success Near
A vaccine to prevent infantile paralysis was predicted for “the not too distant future” by Dr. Hart E. Van Riper, medical director .of the National Foundation for Ine fantile Paralysis lere yesterday. He spoke at a polio preparedness conference in Hotel Antlers at tended by more than 150 persons from the state.
It was brought out at the meeting that encouraging steps in the study of polio virus have becn made and that by the use of vaccines in ammals affected with the disease some control has been shown.
Search Continues “We are searching for some-
| Washington Galling—
Atomic Commissi
on in
| tion. and naturalization, calls
them “absurd; fantastic.” Mr. Griffith says we admit 154,~ 000 quota immigrants each year, "but that 1,540,000 illegal immi. grants—]0 to 1—creep in. He says his estimate is based on justice department report that 15,000 illegal immigrants are “apprehended and ejected” each month; that he has no way of knowing how many get away but that it “must be considerable” because immigration officials are short-handed. He counts, in his estimate, foreign students and visitors, both authorizéd by law. Immigration says we're admitting only 35,000 annually instead of the 154,000 whe could come in under quotas. It says 90 per cent
thing like penicillin that will be effective against the polio virus," Dr. Van Riper said. !
Dr. George M. Brother, director
—~Senator Kenneth D. McKellariof the bureau of preventable dis-
eases of the state board of health, said it was likely that most people had polio at one time or another but that it was the rare case which resulted in paralysis. He said parents could help guard their children by giving them pas-
Mr. McKellar's office said the 78-year-old senator became ill" at his desk. A Capitol physician was summoned. i Officials at the naval hospital declined to reveal the nature of Mr. McKellar's illness. They said only that he was “under medical! observatiorsr Mr. McKellar is serving his sixth
Loses a Case
—In Civil Court
Pendergraph and John Clark, who charged that Jones forced them into receivership when he failed to return $300 worth of restaurant’ equipment they had installed in his] Manhattan Victory club, 453 Indiana ave. » . . 2 JONES ALSO refused permission for them to operate a snack bar in the basement of his club, after he had agreed earlier, they added. ‘Instead, he planned to sell food) prepared with their equipment, the plaintiffs alleged. Jones decided to return the |
Marshall, authoritative sources disclosed today. Weeks of effort on the part of | the administration have failed to produce a chief for the mission for | which congress has set aside $300 million, High-ranking government offi-' cials, familiar with nearly s dozen | futile attempts to interest someone in taking the job, revealed that
the
has been carried on by | House aides, lower state depart- { ment officials and Democratic party | stalwarts. | Among those said to have
White
and Philip D. Reed of General Electric Co.
Second in Collision
DEAL, England, May #4 (U.P. .— Two American ships were reported | in trouble off the treacherous!’ Goodwin Sands today. Early reports | said at least one crewman was’ killed. The 10,000-ton tanker Newhall Hills was reported a flaming furnace, with two holds blown up| {and indicating that the crew had | abandoned her. A heavy fog was reported lifting but visibility still was bad. % The = 7176-ton freighter John LaFarge was reported to have collided with a fishing boat, believed to be French. The bat was reported sunk, and the freighter was standing by to pick up survivors, according to a radio message. Both ships. were said to° be in the same area.
Alleged Deserter Shot by Police Here
A 31-year-old alleged army de- | serter was shot by police this morn-| ing as he attempted to flee. “= * | He was identified as Freddie Aus|tin, 433 Ogden st. He was treated
nduct Christian As Jap Premier
TOKYO, May 2¢ (U. P.).—Tetsu
i |
Japanese | constitution at a precedent-setting
A short time later he called on Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who
RE TS SER Japanese politics “need a spiritual | ‘Report U. S. Ship Afire, revolution.” Japanese reporters con- |
{sidered this as an indication of
the nature of the discussion. Gen. MacArthur said the choice emphasized the “middle-of-the-road course” of Japan's internal politics.
Kaiser Denies Charge Of Senator Bridges
OAKLAND, Cal, May 24 (U. P.). Henry Kaiser today ' heatedly denied a U. 8. senator's charge that his automobile manufacturing enterprise was a “terrible bust” and that he wanted the government to pull him out of the “hole.” The charges were made by Senator Styles Bridges (R. N. H.) yesterday in criticizing Kaiser's effort to get the government to scale down the purchase price of the Fontana, Cal, steel plant which Kaiser ‘bought from the government. Kaiser said Bridges “distorted his, facts.”
Co. was successfully”
ace 8 {and had produced 45,936 cars in the and climbed out the window.
last eight months. “The west's in-| dependent steel mill at Fontana is entirely separate and apart from |
‘at City hospital for a leg wound. | He was shot by Detective Sgt. Edward Shubert, who with his part-
{ (ner, Detective Sgt. Anthony Zer-
(onick, had gone ta the Ogden st. ‘address to arrest the youth ag a deserter from Camp Polk, La. After a chase of three blocks, during which the detectives fired several shots, Austin was hit by a shot from Sgt. Zeronick's gun.
}
‘Union Loses Election Times State Service
Shelbyville Desk C6. employees have for the second time rejected union representation 48 to 32 in the formal election supervised by the national
SHELBYVILLE, Ind, May 24.—
the Kalser-Frasier Corp.” he said.
German Kills Self |
| DUBLIN, Eire, May 24 (U. P,).— | Dr, ts, a German who parachuted into Eire in 1941, allegedly in an effort to organize the Irish Republican army against | Britain, committed suicide yesterday by swallowing a dose of potas-| sium syanide. He preferred death to being deported back home. |
Free for Asthma
If you suffer with attacks of Asthma and choke and gasp for breath, if restful sleep is diffionlt because of the struggle
labor relations board.
\ AAAS A ALA A A A A Ean
SKIN IRRITATION
| " RELIEF ftche chatagyed havgng win Ec os: UTICURA 302%.22¢
live or
1§ breathe, don't fall to send at once to i the Frontier Asthma Company for a FREE trial of the FRONTIER ASTHMA MEDICINE, a preparation
whether you have faith in any medicine under the sun, send today for this free trial, It will cost you nmothing.' Caution! Use only as directed. Address 4 ; 215.A, Frontier Bidg., N¥o
: Deadly Virus Soon
| some day may
equipment before the case was, the (heard by Judge Emsley W. JOhn-| jcan Chemical society. | son. = !
teurized milk exclusively, postponing nose and throat operations during the hot summer months and by protecting them from chills and fatigue.
Shock, Anger, Stress Cut Lymphocytes
NEW YORK, May 24 (U. P).\ — Watch your lymphogytes. Because some day, sicence may be able to test your mental condition by counting these tiny cells in your blood.
Shock, anger or stress tends to cause the number of lymphocytes to decrease according to a group of psychiatrists from Massachusetts general hospital and the Harvard medical school. Liymphocytes are one cf the tvpes of white corpuscles in blood. They help to form the anti-bodies that go into action when infection. gets into the body.
May Be Man's Ally
of illegal entfants are calght along borders and sent home. Most are itinerant Mexicans.
In last year, 203,450 persons have entered on visitors’ permits. This Includes foreign dignitaries, transitory travelers, students (18.
w ¥ LJ STOUT LIMB department: It looks like cinch President Truman will veto wool subsidy bill, It has passed both houses, will go to cenference. Bill would raise price of all woolen products with consumer and government paying bill. Sup-
Immigration Laws IT'S ING to be ticklish proposition, but a senate subcommittee wants to look into immigration and naturalization laws of another republic—Panama. Our civil service commission recently held that Panama citizens had same job rights as U 8..citizens on Panama Canal. RooseveltArias treaty of 1939 makes it mandatory, commission says. But Senator O'Conor (D, Md.) of subcommittee says testimony indi-
CHICAGO, May 24 (U. P)—A Nobel! prize-winning chemist said last night that the deadly be changed by science into an ally of mankind. Dr. Wendell M. Stanley of the Rockefeller institute for medical research, Princeton, N. J. said that’ viruses already have been changed! in test tubes. Such experiments, he said, may result in one of medicine's greatest triumphs. Stanley, who shared the Nobel prize in chemistry last year for his work” in developing an influenza vaccine, spoke in acceptance of the, williard Gibbs medal awarded by |
!
section of the Amer-|
3-Foof Ledae Saves Boy in Fall Into Pit 450 Feet Deep
IIIS, GLEN CARBON, Pa., May 24 (U. |
{
P.).—A ledge one-yard wide saved
President Truman now has turned | Katayama, Christian leader of the the life of Andrew Cooper, 16, when | selection over to Marshall Social-Democratic party, today of-| he tumbled over the edge of a 450 DAYTON, O., May 24 (U. P.).— (himself. For the past month, the|ficially became the first prime, foot-deep abandoned mine shaft. | George K..Zavakos, 59, Dayton Search for a suitable administrator minister under the new
|
Andrew said he “spent most of the time praying” as he huddled
{ceremony performed hy his emperor | for five hours in the dark on the
narrow ledge 50 feet below the sur-, face before his father and a neigh-
turned hailed Mr. Katayama’s election as| bor heard his cries and hauled him Police said neighbors heard a down the assignment are Paul G.|a significant move toward the erec- to safety. scream for help and two shots, the Hoffman of the Studebaker Corp. tion of a spiritual barrier agamst sound of a car being driven away | William H. Harrison of the Ameri- ideologies that seek to rule by pital at Pottsville, he was treated fast. Mr. Zavakos was found in the can Telephone & Telegraph Co. | oppression. The new. premier spent an hour,
with Gen. MacArthur. He said)
Taken to Good Samaritan hos-
{for shock and bruises on the hands
and face. ” - ” | THE YOUTH was bicycling home
rode over the edge of the deep hole, | caused by a shaft collapse far be- { low ground in the mine. | He landed on a 36-inch ledge | 50 dropped the full distance to the bottom. He tried to climb up the side of the hole once, but slipped back to the ledge. | The father, Michael, began*look{ing for his son when he failed to {return from the errand. It was
hours before he and the neighbor, burr, all of Indianapolis, are the
, John Hozella, heard Andrew's cries | coming up from the hole, 10 feet, from the Cooper home.
Burglar Apologizes For Waking Victim
ST. LOUIS, May 24 (U. P.).—
Herman Goldman was awakened | early this morning in his West End apartment by a man climbing retary, i through the window,
“Sorry I woke you up,” said the
|burglar. “I thought I could do this! , Kaiser said the Kalser-Prazier job quietly.”
He took $50 from Mr. Goldman
from the store late at night and |
. » Believes Prisoner SCaped C., May 24 (U.P). —District Solicitor Ernest R. Tyler
that he had “strong evidence” that
{a young Negro seized from jail. by
a band of armed white men might have escaped the mob and hidden in the woods. Mr. Tyler told the governor in Raleigh by telephone that he was continuing the investigation. But he said he personally felt Godwin (Buddy) Bush, 24, might have gotten away with his life. The solicitor did not disclose the evidence on which he based his
A family living near the red brick jail from which the Negro sawmill worker was abducted by the mob yesterday reported seeing a man lunge from one of the mobsters’
cars as théy drove away, and dart
between two houses. The 4ailet who lost his prisoner also reported having heard one shot, or automobile backfire, as the armed band pulled away in" cars. Bush was being held for an alleged attempt to seize a white woman.
Chicago Pastor Closes A. M. E. Zion Conference
A sermon to be given tomorrow by the Rt. Rev. William J. Walls, | Chicago, will close the A. M. E.
| Zion conference being held at | Jones tabernacle, 440 Blackford st. | Three clergymen and three lay-
|
feet down, but his bicycle] men have been elected to the 1048 ~~ ~~~
! conference in Louisville. The | clergymen are the Rev. G. A.
| Brooks and the Rev. I. A. Moore,
both of Indianapolis, and the Rev. | Charles E. Tucker, Louisville. Cor- | delia Elliott, Ruth Macome | State Senator Robert H. Broken-
| lay members.
| CHAIRMAN SELECTED
&
NEW CASTLE, Ind, May 24.—
Gregg Appleby, city water works clerk, has been named Democratic
*|eity chairman for the fall municipal
election campaign. Other officers elected are Mrs. Pear] Reichart, vice chairman; Mrs. Leroy Decker, secand Walter PF. Wilkinson ) treasurer. N
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE For the Day 7,407,000 | hee
and
| cates Panamanian immigration and naturalization laws are lax, that citizenship can be acquired oveinight. : Army and navy ufficials are ignoring civil service ruling, picking employees on security basis. Meanwhile several hundred Panamanians, some haturalized, have Hed for civil service examinaons.
oo _ ASSISTANT SECRETARY of
mined to take more initiative on foreign policy. -
Universal Training * "AMERICAN LEGION'S 50 de-
Rep. W. G. Stigler (D.Okla.) recently polled his district on sub-
swered, T1 per cent favored universal military training. .
- . HOT FIGHTS underway for
» 2 o SENATOR WILLIAMS (R. Del.) still "worries about U. 8. atomic energy commission; has written each member : asking | where his parents, grandparents I Snr,
Germans Made Blood Plasma
From Stone
A ——————— | EDGEWOOD ARSENAL, Md. May 24 (U. P.) —German scientists
‘told Governor Gregg Cherry today made synthetic blood plasma out
of stone during world war IT and used it to save thousands of lives!
The Germans produced a drug] called periston from acetaline, which in turn was produced by them from limestone and coke. | ~ ” » - { THEY USED this drug as a sub{stitute for blood plasma in the. treatment of shock and wounds, and in transfusions. They told | American chemical officers it was | used 300,000 times on about 40,000 patients. | The chemical is a yellow solid which is dissolved in a solabion) and inserted into the veins of the | patient. | { Blood plasma was produced in, this country during the war from whole: blood gathered tediously through the sacrifices of millions of American donors. One scientist said it was all the more amazing because there is no ‘Similarity between the structure of 'a molecule of periston and one of human blood. i
SUED FOR DIVORCE LOS ANGELES, May 24 (U. P.) — Sugar heir John D. Spreckels III, '36, was charged today with extreme mental cruelty by his third wife, Mrs. Lou Dell Spreckels, former wife (of test pilot Vance Breese. Her divorce action was filed in superior
_ SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1047
§
Atomic on Is Keeping Mum ‘Pylig- On Uranium Find in Colorado Basin
| (Continued From Page One)
| J
and great-grandparents were born.
1948 Tax Bill
RESTORATION of earned-in-
3 :
g ¥ 2
hi
~ - IRON CURTAIN bituminoug”coal negotia Becrecy pact was insisted John L. Lewis, agreed erators to keep negotiations Anti-poll tax bill will reach floor this summer, Speaker Martin has assured its author, Rep. George Bender of Cleveland. Mr, Martin thinks it would look bad for G. O. P. if bill must be
{ i
o
g 2
i
| brought to floor by petition.
House leadership strategy is to have favorable subcommittee rePort on federal aid for schools, nothing more this year. Passing it next year would get more votes, they argue. ”
Our. Mr. Springer
ELOQUENCE of the week, from Beg. Raymond 8S. Springer (R. ) -
“Mr. Speaker, there are many problems confronting the AmerfJcan people today; the same will be true tomorrow. It appears that many of the utterances of the past, when compared with the more recent statements, cause much speculations, and in some respects much confusion.” . » ” McKellar story of the week: Senior senator from Tennessee, talking in senate about an action
commission, headed by David E. Lilienthal. . When Senator Knowland (R. Cal.) pointed out they were different bodies, r heard Mr. McKellar say: “If it's a different commission, it's the first I've heard of it.” When congressional record came out, it showed Mr. McKellar replying to Mr. Knowland’s explanation of the difference: “I understand that, but I was darwing a parallel.” Senators and house members may revise their
remarks before they reach print.
«Good Jobs Are Calling . ..
The school will be in session continuously
ble will find this continuous program of interest to them. This is the
Indiana Business College
of Indianapolis. The. others are at Marion, Muncie, Logansport,” Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes —all approved for G. I. Training. See, write, or phone the school of your choice, or Fred W. Case, Principal.
Central Business College
333 N. Pennsylvania Street Indianapolis
WOMEN LEARN TO BE A NURSE'S AID
“On-the-Job Training” with pay—8i4-day week—Free Pension Plan—Annual Vacation and Sick Leave Training to begin June 1, 1947.
Let Us Help You Improve
Apply Personnel Office
METHODIST HOSPITAL
Your
for temporary | L Symptomatic relief of paroxysms of Bronchial Asthma. No matter where you |.
Butler University
Announces the 1947
Summer Session
Keep educationally fit! Train for a better and fuller life by enrolling in summer courses. at Butler. A wide variety of courses offered in the Colleges of Liberal Arts, Eduction, Business Administration, Pharmacy, and School of Religion affords opportunity for study on undergraduate ahd graduate degrees. :
15 858.000 |
House This Spring
NO, we won't actually draw the plans, select the contractor or do the work—that's your job. we will provide the money for you to complete o the improvements you wish to make, : You can borrow for repairs or modernization up to $2500 by an FHA Title I Loan, repayable | monthly for as long as three years. i ’ fs Three Easy Steps to Get a Repair Loan: ? v hI Shand en Te which will be ac upon within 24 hours.
1. Decide the improvements you wish to make.
3. Get estimates from your contractor or material dealer to determine the amount you wish to borrow.
EF This Chart Gives Examples of Various Loans and Payments irition Amount of 36 Monthly Amount of 36 Monthly June 1 . Loan ) Payments of - Joan Termenis of A Post-Summer Session “ioe tin 2 na = Aug. 11-29 500 15.97 1,000 3.00,
For Further Information Write or*Call Director, Summer Session
Butler University
Indianapolis 7, Indiana
Veterans’ Semester June 16-Aug. 29
= School of Religion
June 10-July 18
July 22-Aug.
. 1301
Member 1
1 Deposit Insurance Corp. ;
The Peoples State Bank
Pelix T. - McWhirter, - Founder
130 E. Market St. :
. SATUE
Tr
Prof To B ; Plea
As Fi
WASHIN —President anti-inflatic near future key indus thinks are sources re) Administ) to be mak profit stud including automobiles completed, down to ot dustries wi keeping pri Informed dent's late one of “int Truman ha as yet whe public or " directed on cerned, the The Pre for lower p general ter! Ci Administ: Secretary o and Secrets Harriman, | leaders of t. industries. with Bost their negoti Steel is 1 entire price a compone products,
workers lal
£5. Ht
te
sg
:
ix
tes after 19 N. Tk
hes 85g
participate ups and | pected to He M » Back | HARRIS P.).—Thin I ' along smo b trade eith s Vincent, diet for tl cluded su and razor ports toda stuff still The 30 from Voh mitted to night, Physieia; sundries w gus and rays today complete whether | Bary.
| Indian ‘To Ins
Indiana stall new Monday are: “Claude Biddinger McCarty, Vault, Cl iy Herbert }
