Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1947 — Page 3
ce net, , Vari295 to
LOOR
Woman Struck By. Bus, Dies In Hospital
I” Ywo Drowned
_ ‘The Indianapolis traffic toll rose to 50 over the week-end as four persons were killed in Indiana high- | way accidents and two others were drowned. ¥
view .dr. s
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DeJulio, died Saturday night at City hospital shortly after being struck | % by a bus at 2000 W. Washington st. | :
company employee, Mr. Bender | died Sunday morning at Blooming- | g ton from injuries suffered Saturday | ] night’ when his car left Ind. 37 four miles south of Bloomington and/ : struck a'tree. : {
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» Police - charged the injured man
Bandman, Dies
Over Week-End
The traffic victims were: | Mrs. Julia DeJulio, 41, 6453 River-
Keith Bender, 23, Bedford. Floyd Furr, 37, Attica. Arthur R. Tracey, 65, Silver Lake. Drowning victims were: Frances Brown, 17, Lafayette. Dorothy Ellen Fettig, 13, Dayton, i
The 59th traffic victim here, Mrs.
Car Hits Tree .} A former Indianapolis furniture |§
He had been living in Bedford | for several months. Mr. Bender | had stopped in Bloomington to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs, E| L. Bender, before continuing .to Bedford. . | State police said Mr, ‘Furr was killed in an sito crash near Sterl-| ing in Fountain county yesterday | Police said his car went out of control on Ind. 41, Mr. Tracy, Silver Lake farmer, was struck by a hit-and-run driver, as he crossed a street in Peru Saturday night, authorities said. Jog ‘Miami - courity authorities today | held a piece of broken headlight
clue. They intended to bring the piece here today in an effort to trace ownership.
Girl's Body Recovered :
The body of - Frances Brown, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Francis H. Brown, Lafayette, was recovered from Tippecanoe river Sunday. several hours after she left home with six friends to go one swimming party. The. other drowning victim, Dorothy Ellen Fettig, lost her life at Warsaw while attempting to rescue her brother, Dennis, 14, from Yellow Creek lake, Artificial respiration applied by Warsaw fire department members failed. Her brother was rescued by another swimmer. Dorothy was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Fettig of Dayton, O.
Two Indianapolis persons were injured in the city over the weekend in other traffic accidents. John’ Hanna, 52, ©f 414 W. 14th st. is in a serious condition at City hospital after walking into the side of an automobile at McCarty and Meridian sts. Saturday night. The car was driven by Esther A. Renfrew, 49, 244 Blue Ride rd. Scooter and Car Collide ' Frank N. Dyer, 18, 518 N. Jefferson ave. suffered a fractured ankle when the motor scooter he was riding collided with a car at Temple ave and New York st. Saturday afternoon. He was taken to City hospital. The car was driven by Charles E. Baughn, 24, R. R. 3. One other person, injured through violence, was at City hospital today with a fractured skull. He was Jefferson Hamilton, 52, 2421 Prospect st, who was Yound by police at South and Alabama sts. last night in a semi-conscious condition. Witnesses told. police Hamilton had been struck on the head with a rock by John Ellis, 58. Witnesses also said Hamilton had threatened Ellis first with a knife.
with vagrancy and being drunk and Ellis with being drunk.
Rubinoff Home To Settle Suit
PITTSBURGH, July 14 (U. P).— Btage Star Dave Rubinoff decided today that music lovers could wait for the sweet strains of his Violin until he settled discord in his family affairs. Mr. Rubinoff flew here from California when his 85-year<old mother, Mrs. Libbie Rubinoff, filed sui to stop him from selling her home, “I'm going to stay here until fall and get this thing . settled,” the
famed violinist said. “My ~areer is|i.. was not his first love.
important, but it can wait.”
At least one note of harmony was apparent already between mother BE of ‘that awful and son. Mrs, Rubinoff rethrned to ! : her $32,000 home fqr the fist time
since Dave arrived.
“I said, ‘Welcome home, Mother’? | glad she's so homely.
Dave related.
% ? ory LT TTT a
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
.
4
3
i '
arrested after atom bomb plans were stolen from the Los Alamos,
Me was arraigned today. ” » » ?
$10.000 Bond for Ex-G. 1. In Theft of A-Bomb Data
alleged to have been stolen by two former army men, : | Xn FBI official also doubted that the two ex-sergeants were involved in any foreign espionage conspiracy.
Wie oh IRE, ond et oc home in suburban Mt. Lebanon, Pa.| until July 24. |FBI agents said he had hidden a| Alexander von der Luft, 23, was folder containing confidential data to be arraigned in Pittsburgh. Helon pomb construction in the family | was also placed under $10,000 bond. a fe The charge against the men-—re- Ts . moving and concealing documents—/ Wallis, who was discharged in; carries. maximum penalties of February of 1946, had in his pos-| $2000 fine and three: years ‘yyy {session more. than 200 photographs rison. - lof various phases of the bompo' and Arrested Saturday tes* explosions. | Both men were stationed at the|. Chairman Bourke B. Hickenlooper Los Alamos, N. M. atomic bomb (R. Iowa) of the joint congressional plant while they were in the army. atomic energy committee said ne was They were arrested Saturday. {satisfied the documents never goi Von Der Luft, who was dis- beyond the two men. He said the charged from phe army March 6, matter was .now entirely up to the 1946, was taken into custody at his justice department.
Resume Yach Murder Trial; 'Other Girl' Enters Case
SANTA ANA, Cal, July 14 (U.|Shortly after his return they de-
in the love life of defendant George April 30, 1947, her diary revealed. “patricia” expressed hope that
CBU). Callum. \oday.. as. thie mur Gollum could clear himself of tne der trial of the 21-year-old Mavy|,p,,ge that he slew Beulah Louise's veteran and his sweetheart, Beulah | parents and sent their bodies to the Louise Overell, .resumed after a|botfom of Newport bay March 15 three-day recess. : by dynamiting their yacht. The prosecution said it ‘would in-| “I hope you get out of his be-
troduce a pipe stanchion as evi- cause 1 have faith.in you. But I dence.” The state asserts it was|hope she doesn't. After all, she
used ‘to slug to death financier got you into this mess.” Walter Overell, father of Beulah] butt SR SRB - . “me . Charges Wife Tried Gaff, chief criminal investigator of | < g ’ : | Orange county, was expected to be . called as a witness along with ws Hire Sla er Mary Pritchett, housekeeper for
The finder of the pipe, Tom MecMr. Overell and his wife, Beulah.
bludgeoned to death with a ball P.)—A 67-year- old Washville peen hammer at the same time her |yoman today was charged with
husband was killed. i 1 ex Act to “kill Their bodies were found on their Ine jf hise an ex OLIV 0 eld blasted and sunken yacht. * |girl formerly employed by her hus-
Jail authorities intercepted a Band Jussionata Jeter rom a Mrs. Eunice Mallory, wife of C. uy \ Buford Mallory, 6, a building : | specialist, was free under $5000 bon It was revealed that Beulah Lou lon charges of conspiracy to com- “ . mit a felony, 8he was to appear We ‘were, 20 happy before. you today to answer the charges before the district stiameyegenieish Her accuser, James F, Jones, 30 Aimed to Wed in April 'is a convicted murderer whose case “You left me for a rich girl—I'm is now on appeal. He has served two térms in ghe state prison, “1 still remember those lovely| Jones claimed Mrs. Mallory paid
's
“Its good to be home” the days on the beach at Long-Beach him $300 with the promise of $300 violinist quoted his mother as say-|. . . But you left me for her. Iimore and a liberal bonus for
Dave said they stalked = andloverseas and even now I haven't| Therman Jennings, police said. laughed until after midnight.” They! forgotten the swell times we had | Jones sald he accepted the $300 on
did not discuss the request for an| together.”
injunction, according to Dave.
Jimmie Lunceford,
Jimmie Lunceford, 45, Negro or-
man
side music shop and died a few
Beulah Louise began writing to intended to harm the girl
{VA Announces Exams for Positions
fictim Here, [Europe's Small |e
PARIS, July 14.—The 16-nation European economic conference {headed into its first tiff today. ; Small nations are demanding full + equality with the big powers in di-| = * Irecting machinery to carrv:out the, = . Marshall plan, |
countries served notice that they: would not let big prwors do any dictating. |
small executive committee here to| £ steer the economic recovery pro-; , gram | *
seeking positions on “the »xecutive committee, joined all other members of the conference in approving |® five-point program. This was de- | «4 sigred to speed economic recovery, {but at the same time safeguard | smail nations’ sovereignty. { i f
tthe meeting may end tomorrow, Jatter lasting only four days—a rec-| ford for postwar international con-| | ferences. * | |
{ which boycotted the conference teconducted a counter-offensive by. tightening their own economic ties.
|vakia . and Poland, Bulgaria and] (Russia, Czechoslovakia and Russia, {and Switzerland and the Soviet] izone of Germany have been announced since the Paris conference
ons ~ Search Bogland for Cause
116 nations in plenary session left {the way open for Russia and her igatellites to join the effort to sured European recovery with American| i aid.
‘and-13-minute plenary session, last night agreed to: |
: —_— * committee of all ‘16 nations now : , + Acme Telephoto |attending the conference. This com- | “O" . : BARRED FROM HIS GELL—Mrs. Sylvia Wallis, wife of ex- mittee 2 take ence Shs ol dead still remained unidentified. |°. Sgt. Earnest Wallis, 34-year-old native: of ‘Indianapolis who was: [present conference leaves off. :
committees—food and agriculture; coal and power, iron and steel, and mjjeg short of a navy landing strip eight transport. lat Melbourne, on the coast 160 Crasn |22,500-pound maximum | with the United Nations and all of | WASHINGTON, July 14 (U. P.).—The FBI reported reason today |;ic specialized organizations to avoid to believe that no other outsiders had set hands on the sceret data | 4) ,nlication of effort. | i FIVE: Guarantee that informa-| Houston, Tex. and Roderick Pau!| {tion for a “balance sheet” of Eu-|mMacKennon, Delmar, N. Y, were | vestigation, A regional official of| Most landowners hesitates to buy It is designed to carry 10 the federal agency in Atlanta said |another farm and then lend a ten-isengers in addition to the pliok men it seemed to him that the plane ant $5000 for a start. co-pilot. In an emergency it ape Nicholas Smith, a retired farmer, |carry said a young man starting out on a litters, or a cargo of 2000 pounds.
: rope’'s resources will be obtained . . Earnest W. Wallis, 34, a native of Indianapolis, was arraigned opty with the consent of each gov- instantly killed.
Two men, one from Indianapolis,
— E | cided to wed on her 18th birthday, P.).—A- new chapter was.revealed | lay, into: the business place, where Ue 05. cents a week), attend movies, eat | in public restaurants and make love}
, (u. : The state claims Mrs. Overell was| NASHVILLE, Tenn. July 14 (V0 “yc hong of pianist Artur Ru-|
| binstein with Actress Maria Montez | QUEEN INVITES MRS. PERON
land her sister, Lucita, when they| ROME, July 14 (U. P.).—Mrs !struck a parked automobile.
waited for you to come back from |carrying out her plan against Miss
advice of a lawyer but he never
Gollum while, he was overseas. He sald Mrs. Mallory wrote him while he was on trial for murder- . : im ing a man with an fee-pick and} James, Lucy O'Gara and D. Earl, Betly | signed the letters with a typed a: Home—Ra Rulah Reed, 832 8 . signature, “B. Simpkins.” Recently| Rennsviuma, presser Dor SEASIDE, Ore., July 14 (U. P).—| Examinations for positions of he said they had met four times at 538 8. wick: Ray Harris, , card ular nst barber, laundry helper, |the steps of the state capifol and| Gilmer a a an, Pu Baier, 28. at 228 N chestrs leader collapsed in a sen-|lsudryman and laundry -superin-ihe learned details of Miss Jen- Saunders. 100 Belletoniaine: Clifton, | Bdwara H, Bruning, 13, at WE matcher, , working hours,| Susie Payne, 1511 Columbia, | Dusit Elis, 60, at Bt, Vincent's, adeno- ; Boys
ons Ask Voice Oppose ‘Dictation’ At Paris Parley
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG United Press Stall Correspondent
i Scandinavian. and other little’ The conference began selecting :
Great Britain and France. while,
| 1
Agreement came so. swiftly that|
i
Russians Announce Pacts Russian - influenced countries
NT I's
gers eboard. "
Full Session Is Short The conference, ini a one-hour-
ONE: - Establish a co-operation
dition. The hody of one of the
TWO: Establish a small execu- and 33 passengers aboard -— left]
N. M. tlant, was denied permission to see her husband at Chicago. juve commifdee, to guide the co- Newark, N. J. Saturday night. It| _.. |operation committee in its day-to- was fo have landed at Miami Yor} day work. | refueling before making the over-{Burke said federal THREE: Create four technical water hop to San Juan yesterday. allowed 25 passengers and a crew | f The crash occurred fust eight | of three. But--he said seven or $12
FOUR: Maintain close liaison! i.e north of Miami. Pilots Killed Instantly The pilots, Capts. Henry Heim,
ernment concerned, and guarantee Survivors said both engines failed |
will not be changed unless thei ip.,ueh pine trees and ploughed countries concerned agree. a 200-yard trail through the jungle-
i —— like bogland. Hold Local Man The ship had been in radio {contact over Jacksonville, 170 miles : {north of the crash scene, and re3 il ‘ A ult no mechanical failures. 0 b, SSd | Andrew Burke, Galveston, Tex, .
owner of ‘the plane, said he bought Times State Service {the surplus C-47 aircraft from the GREENFIELD, Ind, July Mim [army about a year ago. He had been operating between New York are being held in the Hanoock | ang San Juan for the past five county jail for investigation in cor-|,. oy months. nection with a series of SIX] yt wag his only plane. It i burglaries, a holdup and a criminal} . y p si b Toge Ved assault upon the wife of a Green: | . field business man last Friday night. German Prisoners
Local officers said two other men Geof Rights in Britain
are being sought in connection with] the series of crimes, ‘I LONDON, July 14 (U. P.).—Some : [275,000 German prisoners of war t Only two men participated In the! 50 Britain will be allowed this
, broke holdup and rape. The pair br | week to garry pocket money (about
owner and his wife were sleeping. After’ forcing the owner to open a! safe, from which they obtained | to British girls.
The new freedoms, to become} he _— Mn aiacked the. pro | effective Wednesday, also will ake
Loot in the six local burglaries | the prisoners eligible to marry Brit-
the same night was estimated at| ish girls. .
$150. | , - Boston Crowd's Boos Boyer, Wife ‘Stop Gerald L. K. Smith Hurt in Crash | SOETON, Jie MC
HOLLYWOOD, July 14 (U, P).~ “Christian Nationalist Crusade.” Film Star Charles Boyer and his canceled his scheduled speech in actress wife, Pat Patterson, were Boston's historic Old South church recovering today from minor in- yesterday. juries suffered in‘'a motor car ac-| He gave up when the capacity cident early yesterday. crowd of more than 600 hooted and The Boyers were leaving a party | jeered him from the platform.
| Eva Peron, wife of Argentine | Miss Patterson suffered head, cuts | President Juan Peron, has been inand was treated at St. John's hos- | vited to visit Britain's Queen Elizapital In Santa Monica. Mr. Boyer beth and tour Windsor castle, the suffered chest bruises. | Argentine embassy reported today.
In Indianapolis
BIRTHS Franklin; Arno, Anns Jellison: Robert, Martyne Jones; Lewis, Mildred Baker; Theoflore, Wanda Benizer; Prank, Elizabeth Callahan; Marion, Marian Dinniger; Henry, Rachel Well; William, Betty Landis: _Aified, nina Kuchler, . " an liam, rothy onr. aber, wi rd, Jean Bradshaw: Guy, ' A¢ Si, Vimeent's—Noble, Marea Below: Mary Boff: Maxwell, Gracie Wilson, and \ "gugene, Mary Gorham; Rollin, Lots ah Wands Vores. . Carey; Paul, Margaret Lynch, Charles, City—~8hepard, Susie Orton, and Harry, | Agnes’ Darke; Lewis, Alice Grabbe, and
Twins At City—Oscar, Acy France, girls, Girls
At St. Francis—~Richard, ary Barrett; © Paul, Barhara ‘Angreck: Charles, Jane
Willie Tay) George, Emmelene Brenner, Al af Rabert, Wands Keisel, and | o¢ Home Andrew, Annie Beeler, 947 N AL Methods oy bert Elaine Hunt: Al Elders: oN cHmond, Ada Hedricks, 2642 bert, Marjorie tin ; Fred, Margaret a ariisle; Vernon, is Okey; ar, Pa Allen, Mildred Clouse; | DEATHS
rks; iph, Mary Mattingly: Prank; Flora | charles George Thompson, 83, at 730 W, ehmrs, oe Rerer, tute | AE, Sint At si Vine en Charles. Elizabeth | ay Ann eds 11 Columb, i ossgh. n Hicks; ard, Bil ; h 4, - oe Fagier oy Baer ‘Bn. | Bilipe A Jaywood 74, at City, hyperten r Ellis; John fei jah Ed Johnson, 50, at 5822 E. Wash-
1 Joan Kr ington, coropary occlusion, | Delors Moss, 28, at Oity, peritonitis. | Dicke Ra Stephens, $3, at Method-
DasathX ; George, Vivian id ral - bi
carcinomas
dt; jam,
EB. Washing:
was that existing commercial treaties before the big skyliner crashed | cop cops
Busie Pletcher, 35, at City, erulooDephritis. ; oy : 1 Mont- | . iin
ree Killed In
' Beginning Farm
SWAMP CRASH-—A wing points skyward from the wreckage: of a war surplus DC-3 airliner which crathed in a swamp near Mel Agreements between Czechoslo-| bourne, Fla. It was on a chartered flight from New York to'Puerto |ers drill, disc. corn planter, harrow Rico. The crash killed 20 persons and injured the other 15 passen- |
The Soviet ' press continued to ° {snipe at the conference. But we OF Air Crash Fatal fo 20
15 Other Passengers Hurt When Plane
Falls in Swamp Near Melbourne, Fla.
MELBOURNE. Fla, July 14 (U. P.,.—Civil aeronautics authority | investigators searched the tangled undergrowth of a thick coastal swamp, here todsy in an effort to learn why a war surplus DC-3 airliner crashed. | The crash killed 20 persons and ‘injured the other 15 passengers | aboard: on a chartered flight from New York to Puerto Rico. Hospital satteridants said only two of the inhired were in—critica
a 100-hour checkup in San Jyan
Thursday,
§ Children Are Victims
were killed.
CAA officials ined to comment on their in-|
“carrying too ma
STRAUSS SAYS:
3
THE CLOTHING FLOOR IS THE SECOND!
¥ Seas J fo
Need at Least $5000 To Get Started Today
Gone’ Are Days When a Strong Back Would Be Sufficient to Begin, Old Timers Say
By EARL RICHERT, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer BURR OAK, Ia, July 14.—Gone are the days when a young man could start out on an Iowa farm with little more than a strong back, a team of horses and a corn planter.
‘their parents or {bankers just don’t [start. They can't.” This situation is {due chiefly to the {high cost of machinery and stock. | A man starting = jout as a tenant oo jon a 120 or 160- °, must (have at least Mr. Richert {$5000 worth of nfachinery according to most landowners. | This includes six to 10 cows cost-| {ing about $150 apiece, 14 or 15 sows | $18 or $17 for a horse. lat $60 each. a $1300 tracter, culti-| |vator, $100 team of horses, a plow, Boon wagon hayrack and mowing ma- ira | ehine, harness, grain and corn bind-| :
and some chickens, in addition to] { household equipment. Parents Financed Them Result of this situation is that topractically the :onl farmers on Iowa land are
spent several years as tenant farmers previously. | In some parts of Iowa the lack of | beginning fargers has had a de- | for - Community Service, who will...
$90-$125 an Acre
to operate a farm if they bought it.
After world war I. this same land sold from $200 to $240 an acre,
The Man's Store.
i Ae ey Bl ¥ B08 MO wR web SE Sd i a. §
-
. First to admit this are the grizzled, elderly farmers who themselves ollowed this path to a debt-free farm home and a large | . “No sir" said Jacob Risner, a wealthy, 74-year-old - farmer, “you § |ean't start out on a shoestring any-, Shmtre ie “would not have to have 8, You've got to have quite] 12M today woul a bit of capital. And young men “But a young fellow today would have ... oa
bank secount.
| a tractor—that he could use horses.
2 {no more think of starting. faring | without a {Factor than a city gil
of
‘without an electric refrigerator,” he © |sald. “In fact, most city boys won't leven come out to work during the. (summer months unless they are as‘sured their only job will be to run b tractor.” | Most good Towa farms today have
[stalls in the big red barns stand empty. A fox farm in Wisconsin
© d stock,
Start Swim Class
Times State Service
LEBANON, Ind. July 14.—Inaug-
{he sons Bram in Boone county in eanjunc-
|
mer, : ! Leonard Naab, recreation director
x
| pressing effect on land prices. ‘This [give part of his time to the program, b is particularly true in areas where | said that if ‘enough interest is . urke sald | qairying is profitable, an operatiou | 3 its two crewmen AUS 5 | dairying is pi ' {shown other activities will be added, The plane—with its ] ogy (ATCT arriving here from Miamiy | that requires hard, year-round labor. | including classes in handicraft work such as clay modeling, wood carving,
Questioned about the load, Mr.| Hesper township in Winnishiek | irplane modeling and others.
regulations county is an example. There good | . arm land is selling from $90 w Biggest Helicopter 5 an acre, not because it isn't, : * x of the passengers in the | worth more with the present nigh FOSS@s First Tests ed ship were children and the prices but because prospective ‘nload was | vestors cannot find’ tenants with not ex d. | ot exceeded, Three of the children | sufficient machinery and finances supter. the Kellet XR-10. Tag coos.
{pleted fis first test flight success{fully at the Kellett North Wales.
Pa, plant,
-
Dear Sir: + = :
tittle curl, right ”
— “Like the little girl with & Good* in ta dle it hei forehesd—=when \ she was good, she Was very, Vers good.
: but when she was bad, she Ww terrible.
Tropical Worsted
Suit—for the sake
S—————
of the body and the wallet!—the Suit needs tailoring to hold its lines « and your selfrespect— presenting
éxclusively the
Good, Better and
‘Best—Feature
Values at 39.75 and $45. L. Strauss & Co.,
would think of starting as a bride
{two tractors, even if they are as {small as 120 acres, and the horse
has been buying horses to feed for meat for as little as 1 cent a pound,
y young uration of a rural recreation pro-
land owners Whose parents| on i Commun ries here. financed, them. | Swimming and life saving classes The tenant success stories with |were to open at the Memorial Park which this state abounds involve pool here. ; men who started buying land before the war and who in most cases had|school age youth. They will continue for the remainder of the sum-
The classes will be for all county
WASHINGTON, July 14 (U.P) ~— = e army air forces announced today that the world's largest heli-
six wounded soldiers on
So
a to
