Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1947 — Page 9

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(Continued From Page One) | Joma Hoffert, Columbus, ©. The other car “was driven oy Carl Harper, 27, of 1260 W. New York st. : ~ 6 Die in State Six other violent deaths occurred in the state during the week-end, The body of William D. Campbell, 48, was found at the base of

Tydings Raps

leer Probe

WASHINGTON, ‘July 19 (U. P). —Senator Millard E. Tydings (D, Md.) angrily charged today that a fl Maryland election investigation i headed by Senator William E. Jen~ ll! ner (R. Ind.) “reeks with partiality and partisanship.” In 8 heated exchange with Mr. Jenng' on the senate floor, Myr. Tydings protested against recount ing ballots behina closed doors in the investigation of last year’s U. 8, senatorial election in Maryland. Mr, Tydings contended that the public and the press should be admitted to proceedings of the senate subcommittee investigating election in which the Democratic

{| John Markey, Republican.

not warranted. He said that ate torneys and checkers for both sides were present at all times. He said the daily results of the recount were not made public because they did not include many challenged bal. lots and would be misleading. When Mr: Tydings charged Re publicans were ignoring the rules of silence imposed by the investi~ gating committee, Mr, Jenner replied that he knew of “no way to keep an attorney from talking if he wants to.”

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the B: & O. railroad bridge at Connersville yesterday, Coroner Otto Tippin said he apparently fell from the structure.

killed when a car in which he was riding skidded and struck a bridge abutment one ‘mile north of Bedford. Melvin H. Farmer, 68, Hunting. ton, was killed when he was struck by a car on s Huntington street. Thrown From Truck Charles E. Lytle, 33, Muncie, suc cumbed tO injuries received when he was thrown from a truck which

Muncie. Charles Nugent, 70, Grand Rapids, Mich, died of injuries received when he was Bit by a, truck while hitch-hiking near Elkhart. Garland Chitwood, 22, Westfield, died yesterday of injuries received when a car in which he was a passenger hurtled over a 30-foot embankment on old State Road 13 late Saturday.

tenn wen ne pene (JbMEE. LOW Prices

| | (Continued From Page One) attain workable relations in” the wage and salary structure.” He coupled his warning against {broad wage demands with the ad- | vice to business that it fellow the | “wise strategy” of “charging less than the trafic will bear.” Mr. Truman recommended a change of attitude by some employers, as well as workers. He said “certain” ousiaessmen should discard the belief ‘hat periodic depressions are unavoidable and that limited production and “a considerable volume of unemployment” are helpful to efficient production. Asks End of ‘Featherbedding’ Then he turned to labor, demanding that unions “root out” the long-held belief “that the volume of work available is strictly limited, and that if they ao it rapidly, they will soon be out of a job because the work is finished.” or advocated an immediate end to “make-work operations, featherbedding and soldiering on the job,” calling these practices as econom{cally unsound as “limitations on

4 ¥ production, capacity and new tech-

niques on the part of management,” “Production and more production Is our great need,” he said. Higher Food Prices Seen Higher food prices are in prospect because of some crop set. backs, Mr. Truman ssid. But he said the U, 8. still may obtain » total agricultural output as large

1|as last year. He urged the public {ito refrain from speculation, hoard-

g and unneesssary spending, Construction of housing is lagging behind real needs, the President said, and substantially lower costs needed. He called on congress to adopt a comprehensive housing program similar -to the

Cletus Maxwell, 16, Bedford, was|.

had collided with 8 Parked car in J

Truman Asks High!

Settle. ‘Heads on Post 312

Settle, 5679 N, Delaware commander

Le es elected

Broad Ripple post 812, American

of

are Virgil 1 1 Vaughn, first vice commander; John A, Noon Jr. sec ond vice commander; Ernest H. Smith, third \ vice commander; Lawrence H. Mr. Settle

Landreth, chaplain; Robert T. Hesseldenz, sergeant-at-arms; Ed-

and Charles BH DPrewe, historian,

2 Local Fishermen Drowned on Picnic

(Continued From Page One)

7th ave. a relative of Mr, Norris, and his son, Leland Tripp, 8. Both victims were employed by the New York Central system. Mr]

J| Norris, 8 world war II veteran, was

employed as a yard clerk and Mr. Williams in the Beech Grove shops Survivors of Mr, Norris are his wife, Mrs. Evelyn Norris; two sons, Robert, 5, and Kenneth, 3, and his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Robert Norris, Surviving Mr. Williams are his wife, Mrs. Betty Williams, his par~ ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Williams; three sisters, Mrs. Henrietta Gootee, Mrs. Mary Yates and Mrs, Catherine Mathewson, and two brothers, George Williams, sll of Indianapolis, and John Williams, Clgveland, 0. At Richmond, Sheriff Carl Sperling said LeRoy Patterson, 24, of Connersville, was riding with a com« panion, Miss Catherine Rhinehart, also of Connersville, when he deliberately drove his car into a canal pear Milton. Miss Rhinehart, who swan ashore, said Patterson suddenly said, “O. K., baby, this is it.” .She said he then swerved the car over an eémbankment into the water. Dies on Turtle Hunt * At Huntington, Francis Tincher, 35, of Marion, drowned in the Salamonie river one mile east of Bina while attempting to catch turtles. In Lagrange county, Robert Rudd, 41, of Anderson, drowned while trying to assist friends after their boat had capsized on Lagrange county lake.

TOLEDO, O, July 31 (U. P).~ Paul N, Price, 36, and his brother. in-law, James A. Person, 26, Athens, 0O., were killed instantly yesterday when ther small plane : ypiabed earth s Mrs. Price Wat from onto of thstr home,

115000 IDLE AT G. M. ; DETROIT, July 21 (U. P.).—~Some

115,008-automobile production workers of General Motors Corp. plants

Taft-Ellender-Wagner bill.

began & week of idlencss today because of sheet steel shortages.

(Continged From Page One)

{ “Just drink this, and then lay back and relax.”

down the stuff. | Adolph left me to soak, and 1 lay there enjoying the soothing effect of the water, When he came back |15 minutes. later, he gave me the works, He lathered me all over. Then, using a rough. mitt made of a dishrag gourd, he gave me such a scrubbing as I had never had before. He started at my head and worked his way down, fore and aft. His mitt tickled the bottom of my foot, and I jerked and snickered. But Adolph just gripped my ankle tighter and kept right on without looking up. Adolph said the biggest man he ever gave the works to was the

wrestler who goes by the name of | the Blimp. ’ Sitz Bath Included “I had him. Man, man,” said Adolph. “Lots of ballplayers, too. Dizzy Dean. And you remember) Jimmy Londos, the wrestling champion? - Don’t reckon I did him any good. He got licked soon’s I got through with him.” The tubbing over, Adolph led me, to the sitz bath. No extra charge. I sat down in a tub with my legs| dangling over the side, my knees | under my chin. Adolph worked several valves to show me how he could shoot me from any angle. Oop | He left me sitting in the water, and sweat began to pop out. But it felt good to sweot. More ‘Free’ Service Prom there I was taken to thei vapor cabinet, which looks like a

that, either. In it I breathed the | Flymo fumes from running hot water, and squirmed.

phone booth. No extra charge for Leaving Aone Fe dd

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stand it another second, Adolph rushed up with a cold towel and wrapped it around my head. That enabled me to take a little more. The pack room was next, and there another attendant, Jackson,

Stabbing Vic

ward T. Pritchard, athletic officer; ™

uncle were Morton Tripp, 191 N |

Plane Crash Kills Two |

Near Death Here

(Continued From Page One) tomers, Theodore Steamburger, 727 Park ave, and Frank Mille, 1301

Shortly after midnight yesterday Clyde Cordell, 300 8. Warman ave, was robbed by two men answering a similar deseription. He told police the pair jumped out of s car as he alighted from a streetcar at W. Washington st, and Warman ave, threatened him with a revolver ‘and sawed-off shotgun. They took $52 and & 17-jewel pocket watch.! Sam Tompkins, 64, of 1212 BE Washington st, reported twq men

block Saturdey evening and asked for his money. He said they ob tained $45. Robbed of $50

1 (Girl, 14, Strangled' With Own Bandana =

P.).—Authorities were without clues today in the slaying of a 14-year-old girl who was found strangies] with her own bandana,

body of pretty, dark-complexioned Aurelia Vertanen in a stream near here yesterday, |

algopsy failed to establish whether the girl had been raped. He said there was no water in the lungs and it was definite she was slain before, being tossed into the stream. J

of Mr. and Mrs. Prank Vertanen, hard-working Houghton farmer couple, school and preferred the company of Boys, Sheriff Schumacher said.

i —

HOUGHTON, Mich, July 21 (U.| =

Three boys fishing found the|

Sheriff E. J. Schumacher said an

The girl, one of seven children

county seldom went to

Bubble Up Sevangy’ Co, Ine,” 2402 East Washington $t.

The sheriff said her parents “had

ol

Indianapolis, Indiana MA. 1406 '# hard time handling the girl.” s \ ¥ -

Se

rip

pon Whitney, 301 W. Vermont st., said® two strange drinking comniops -forced him 0 nand over, and a watch Sunday night, | "A substitute Yellow Cab driver, | Ernie Slinker, 41, of 5201 W. Washington st. was slugged by a bottle-| wielding passenger early yesterday! and robbed of $7. Mr. Slinker said | his assailant drove the cab back, downtown and got out in the 900 block on N, Capitol ave. | Two armed men held up a fitle| ing station at Virginia ave. ancl South st. shortly before midnight last night and escaped with an esti.

pocket. \ -At 1823 Broadway, Ples Smith, a roomer, reported loss of $14 from a bilifold in his room. The burglary occurred, sometime Saturday night. A bilglar broke into the iow of Lillie Montgomery, 3038 Win. throp ave. Sunday and took $22! in cash and a bankbook.

Pickpocket Gets $35 James Pelley, 35-year-old Bloom-

Veterans’ hospital here, reported a pickpocket took his wallet containing more than $85. He believed the wallet was taken in the bus station before he boarded a city bus for the hospital. A woman who hailéd a taxi about 3.a m. Sunday in the 5400 block on Keystone ave. ssid she found the cab siready occupied by a man who forged her from the cab a short: distance away and then attempled to assault her,

Diapers May Assure

Peace, It Says Here WASHINGTON, 2 0.p)~ Proper diapering, William R. Ogg said today with a st i may éstabiishe future. po vv: Po Unite@ Nations fail through and talks to accomplish same. Furthermore, he told National Institute of Diaper Services’ forum, there is a direct connection between juvenile delinquency and improperly folded baby pants. For that reason, he added, the eternal triangle has given way to kite folds, banjo seats and the prize Uipadding of them all—the Darrsh type fold which provides five thicknesses down the center of the baby. “United Nations delegates and diplomats can’t seem to establish

talks" the young father and N. I. D. 8, president said. “Perhaps proper diapering will for future

took over. The temperature of the room was 102. I lay down on a steel] couch and drank some more, hot water, Jackson asked if I had any joint trouble, and I said 1 nad a little bursitis'in my right should. er. He slapped & hot pack on it that made me jump. After I had sweated for about 10 minutes, Jackson gave ma 8 needle| the shower, rubbed me dry, put a fresh

sheet around me, and sent me on

to the cooling room. The temperature there was about 88. Serious for Some Since I was the last bather, the room was deserted except for the| stout man who had been just! ahead of me, | The stout man gianced at the, clock and arose. He had finished {his 15-minute cooling period. As {he walked to the door, I noticed his’ left leg. The veins were all buckled up into big knots. It was a pitiful sight. That sobered me. That reminded that many of the | people who come here are not seéking amusing experiences. They are | sick, weary, desperate people, fighting for relief from pain. «

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Army V.D. Rate Falls WASHINGTON, July 21 (U. BP). ~The war department reported today ‘that tie army's vengredl disease rate has dropped 30 per cent from the postwar high in the sumes of 1946, At the postwar peak, army had 24 new cases a week

ington veteran on his way to tha 4

enduring peace through treaties and

for each 10,000 men. The ratio now

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