Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1947 — Page 2

PAGE 2

Council Whets Aes for fat Park Budget

Rejects Dr. Kempf's Plea for Wage Hikes

City councilmen today were sharpening their axes for a whark at the park aepartment’'s p. proposed 1948 budget. Nearly all councilmen have ex- | pressed the opinion that the park! department's record high equ: for $1,126201 is too much. They will review the department's budget tonight. Last night the council took a pre-| liminary cut at the city’s health | and hospital fund. From the de-| partment of- public health alone It cut $18.040 from proposed salaries. After a look at city hospital salary proposals the councll postponed | further review of the department, pending more study. Kemp! Blasts Council Refusal to approve $3000-a-year, salaries for restaurant, meat, sani-| tary and dairy Inspectors brought charges from Dr. Gerald F. Kempf, city health director, that the coun: cil was making a “political foot- | ball” out -of public health He stated the $2400 salary approved by the council would “not get any better inspectors than we have now.” Councilman Edward R. Kealing declared spectors you want at $2400, - good ones, too.” : Cuneinan R Cc (Bud) Dauss About Bubble “They say they want to take the health “department out of polities, but they just want to give the jobs to thelr own friends." Defends Council

which is much smaller

Bubs 2 Bubble Gum

could do in The Times

ALL GUMMED UP—The Duke of P aduceb, national radio star who will be a headliner in the state on Radio Roundup, tries his wind at blowing bubble gum.

“you can hire all the in-| Duke ‘of Paducah Curious

Learns He Can't Enter The Times Event,

But Says He'll Be at State Fair Anyway

By ART WRIGHT... The Duke of Paducah, one of thg headliners for this year's radi

Cab Driver Beaten, Robbed of $14

2 Passengers Stage Holdup at Speedrome

A taxi driver was brutally beaten and fobbed by two dapper passen{gers early today. | George Knepp, 35, of 227 Spring st., driver of a United Cab, told po{lice two men he picked up at Penn|sylvania and Washington sts, at 1 la. m. today tacked him and ‘robbed him of $14. He said the two mien, one of slight build wearing an army field jacket and a dapper six-footer clad in a * !blue suit, tan shoes and a polka dot bow tie, jumped zn and told him [to drive to the Speedrome on Rd. 52. | Mr. Knepp said he noticed a car following him as‘ he neared ; the | Speedrome. . Struck on Head When he stopped, the six-footer suddenly leaned forward and struck the taxi driver on the Read. \ | Then, his agile khaki clad comA panion leaped up and pinned Mr. 4 Knepp down with an arm lock. He bY held the driver as the other man fained blows on his face and head. As Mr. Knepp sagged almost unconscious, one man rifled his pockets and took $14, “Stay here and be nice and quiet until we're gone,” one of the bandits told him. Then they leaped out of the cab and into the car which had been

following: and which had Iidled Gum Contest on arin ne venime: Mr. Knepp drove back to town and reported the .beating to po-

lice, who administered first aid. Tries to Steal Car Hilbert Copenhaver, 45, of 3419

This "pim was the best he than the youndyters will show him

contest at the

Council President John A. 8chu-' round-up at the Indiana state fair, found here yesterday that he couldn't Station st. captured a 17-year-old

macher defended the council “Paced with the policy of holding | the line on all salaries, I think it is | WBM's Grand Ole Opty, asked first

fair enough when we give members| contest The Times will stage each day of the fair,

of the health department salary in- | Told the contest for bicycles, roll-

creases over this year,” he sald. er skates, and $250 in cash was reMany other public officeholders | iricted to youngsters not over 15 have been given no salary Increase years old, “The Duke” wouldn't this year. Restaurant inspectors give up,

are receiving $1920, sanitary inspec-| tors $1620, meat inspectors $1920, Let me try 1, sayweye he Mked, and dairy inspectors $2160 All| *1 see kids blowin’ bubbigs bigger would receive $2400 next year under | a ness Read—Ht they ken go It wo p 18ae} SUH SPR) ied OUD. S80 “The Duke" was supplied with A group. representing the Pedera- |" Whole back of, jhe wll. He tion of Civic clubs asked the coun- |, { nd R= blew. hes t the biggest! cil last night to approve funds for | 8 u 1 the installation of chlorination |

| Rubbing the perspiration from his

|brow, “The Duke" gave up with Judge Paul C. Weiter, federation |, promise: “Bet I'll show. the

president, all the council could do | d thi t wi was approve the park department's! kids 3 nos oh rr Bey: 1. id budget but that it could not ski . Duke Can Watch uke Can Wa

how the money was spent. “We gave the department money While “The Duke" Sait ve 8 CON

Councilman A. Ross Manly told

to be spent on wading pools and |testant, he can watch several thou- |

{sand Indiana youngsters “blow 'em | ,|big” The Times contest will be Belg] 'S pg umi

they used it to improve Broad Rip-| ple park and Tarkington park" asserted Mr, Dquss The 20 wading pools in ‘the city have been closed this year on order of the health department.

each day, Aug..29 through Sept.

iyouth center. On the last day of the fair—S8ept.

Dutch communique today said that|ana champion. clashes were increasing along boundaries. between Dutch and In-|brand new bicycle. seven men killed and 17 wounded | bearing

roller skates

“steal the show" from the youngsters in blowing bubble gum. Here to make plans for his appearance Aug. 30, the comedy star of | qr parked at the New York Cen-

| gible.

bubble he could produce was nO\ part is attend the fair any day and

* . units at the city's 20 wading pools. | {bigger than an overgrown pimple.| go 4; the bubble gum contest area

at.a special arena in frant of Te

5—the two winners from each of the DUTCH FIGHTING "INCREASES [preliminary contests will take part BATAVIA, Aug. 19 (U. P.).— Ain the finals to determine the Indi-{1:30 p. m.

. . ro en Te men ve Harriman Indicts Each dally winner will receive a|humidity for that time of day in

Second place August is 53 per cent.

boy as the youth tried to steal his

of all about the “Bub” Bubble Ora roundhousé on Shelby st. last

re ——————— night. and runners-up in the finals wil will| Mr. Copenhaver had parked his split $150 in cash. car and walked away when he There are no fees for entry. The | noticed a man trying to enter the only restriction is that contestants) car. must be not over 15 years old. Creeping along in the shadows, The winner each day will be the {he slipped back’ to the car and boy or girl Bowing the biggest grabbed the man. After a furious bubble. *' wrestling match the intruder broke | Even the gum will be provided away and ran. free of charge by The Times. The youth was apprehended by Any boy or girl in Indianapolis or {14 Dulin Judd and squad as he

any town in Indiana will be eli-|,oa0hed the porch of his home on All you have to do to take pejgss st.

Probe Purse Snatchings

at the Youth center. | Police arrested him on charges You may compete as many days Of attempted vehicle taking and as you wish until you win a prize. burglary and turned him over to wmm— the Juvenile aid division. Police also are investigating a Ain't the Heat purse snatchng at "St. Vincent's hospital. Mrs. Rose Lomberger, 23 of 534 N. Alton ave, was walking on the ambulance drive last, night when a man stepped out of the 8 ws, grabbed her purse and (Continued From Page One) fled north on Illinois. ture in figures because it's never Several persons pursued the thief the same for. any two persons.” |but he escaped. The purse contained $4. TAKE yesterday, for example, At/| the relative humidity |

So you felt

donesian forces and that they lost |bubbler will get a pair of roller-|& lot hotter yesterday than you 1als ing’ . The state |ordinarily would on a usual August LISS mperia Im

in the past 24 hours.

champion will receive $100 in cash afternoon when

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*® - AY nom red INDIANA POR 7)

the - temperature {hit 89, which is what it did about | |that time. |P.).—The United States must be | Strangely enough, the weather the “standard-bearer of freedom” | bureau people use that stunt about | | against a rampant Russian imcovering a thermometer with a | perialism that has “submerged” damp cloth, They call that particu- | nearly all eastern Europe and now lar thermometer the “west bulb”|menaces western Europe, accordand usually it registers from one or ing to Secretary of Commerce W. two to five or six degrees cooler Averell Harriman. ‘than the weather. “But you can't

SEATTLE, Wash, Aug. 19 (U.

bulb,” Mr. Miller says. There you have it. Feel better cial, Mr. now? ’ of “the most aggressive tionists of all time” iin Russia and

Knights of Columbus Open 65th Convention

BOSTON, Aug. 19 (U. P)—|

mally opened thelr 65h annual! | commerce, convention today a message of greeting from Presi mare threatening

| tolic benediction from Pope Pius’ into the world.”

| XIL., | “This imperialism,” he said, I" The delegates, representing 700,- |

sphere, were told by the Most -Rev.! live in eastern Furope, and Matthew F. Brady, Bishop of Man- ,, .aatens to engulf chester; N. H, that Christianity Europe has established only a “beachhead” | on the earth in 2000 years. Bishop Brady preached at the first event on the. program, a, solemn pontifical mass Mm the Cathedral of the Holy Cross presided over by Archbishop Richard Ex-Swarllimore Dean

i Cushing of Boston. a ‘Found Dead by Niece Official Weather

UNITED STATES "WEATHER BUREAU : —Aug. 19, 1041—

orate: is “overwhelmingly strongest power to threat to our free Inston."

“Sunrise; 0.018. m. | Sunset 1:36 p.m. Ethel Brewster, 61,

-m Total recipitation since Jan, A 26 88 Excess "ince Jan, 1 43 home of a niece here.

The following table shows the tem. Pelbture yesterday In “Fu ities Statio

w 9 | sleeping pills.

Cincinnati Cleveland

1h e5

nver ae of a storage room. Evansville ...... .. n War I" . naianapati (City) gr

tam Minneapolis-St. mm New Orleans

{in 1932 and 1933,

| trea PATRIOTIC UNIT TO MEET

Bh IR. 4 the ¥. MM. C+ A Jon sls

wil. Drill ey Pa Br Ses Sow, 1 Bak ne Ww Mary Roberts: Rithard. Lorin ine q Toenjes, and. Maurice, Bernice Dux, Oaks: at eta Rodewald, and a Suleman Richard. Roan Sauer.

mr INDIANAPOLIS TIMES:

In one of the strongest indict- | ype two big powers teamed up to ever feel any cooler than the wet ments of present-day Russia yet | {push a | made by a top administration offi-| {he council. Harriman said a group revolu- | donesian republic had rejected the seized power| American offer of “good offices” in “split the world | “clear” terms when it appealed to into groups”—one believing in and | the security council to mediate the one opposed to a “bill of rights.”| dispute. In his address last night before Nearly 2000 officers and delegateé8/ {he Pacific Northwest Trade assoof the Knights of Columbus for-|cjation and Seattle chamber of| outset, coming as it did after India he declared that fol-|and Australia already had tossed | after receiving! jowing world war II a “new andthe Indonesian question into the 5 imperialism) security council. | F dent Truman and a special apos-| that of ‘the police state—has come

| “has submerged not colonial peo- Of Southern Official 000 Knights in the, Western hemi-| jas hut nearly all of those who

tic. L O. attorneys appealed to a western 'nigher court today in a test case

Mr, Harriman said the United |ganizing director for the C. I. O. the |i the South was convicted in po-| meet this jjce court on charges of organizing

GREAT NECK. N. Y. Aug 10/$1500 a year. His sentence of 10 (U. P.).—An autopsy was to be per-|days in the stockade and $25 fine | formed today on the body of Miss|Was stayed, pending a Superior former acting|oourt ruling.

Precinitation for 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m. .08 dean of Swarthmore college, who a Cm was found dead last night in the gursied to the U. 8. supreme court |

| Police tentatively attributed—ther cause of death to an overdose of ‘Delaware Forms Group Mrs Midred R. Osborne found| TO Combat Polio [the body of her aunt on the floor

Miss Brewster was dean of women infantile paralysis today began | ‘ {at Swarthmore from 1921 to 1928. [forming a state emergency comKan iby at eavisn | She was acting dean of the college mittee to combat Delaware's polio

The Federation of Patriotic soe : cleties will meet tomorrow at §|/ There we

a Ridge-

Al Thomas om ie on arteriosclerosis,

Ee Pk

‘Cooler’ Is Full of Pe Who Tried to

Police said it must be that Marsh is allergic to sultry August weather. It was just a year ago he was En found driving a s truck and Marsh was arrested on vagrancy|sentenced to 1-10 years for vehicle charges after the officers who|taking,

Cool Drink Evidently Wqs Too Much of a Shock

Then there was the woman who outside looking in a plate glass windropped in the American bar, 212 (dow. And one fraction of a second 8. Illinois st., to cool off. wap i. ok blow later there was The cold brew must have been t00| A right to the window had shatmuch of a shock to her system be- tered the $100 window, cause all of a sudden she went| Police followed a trail of blood to “crazy with the heat.” Grabbing handfuls of bottles and

Mr, Cornett was in Kéntucky on Aug. 7 Mr. Cornett was wanted by

glasses she let go with a few wild pitches and missiles whistled over the heads of other customers. Bartender William Neubauer |dall will get no mercy from using bragged her and was showing her the heat as an alibi, Records show the way out when she swung -lopse [she went wild and tore up a N. Illiand tore his shirt off, A second later she found herself {the cold of winter last year.

Billy Club on Foot Moves Sleepers

Five persons who sought relief |was deep enough to indicate more on the cool lawns of University than Morpheus had overtaken him. park had their hopes shattered, not Vagrancy charges were placed to thention their arches, when police came along and applied the oid |*68Inst Perry E. Walls, 22, and billy club to foot wake-em-up Wanda L. Walls, 20, who gave method. ; ; their address as “city.” The pair Clyde Morris, 32, of 122 8. State told police they have no place to ave, was arrested on a charge of |live and had been sleeping in the drunkenness. Officers said his sleep |park several nights.

Search for Cooling Breeze Ends in Beating Two out-of-towners, 17-year-old |ing .fate would produce s cool boys from Evansville and Owens- | breeze. boro, Ky. told police they were| Instead fate produced two men stopping at the park because there on a bike. They rode up, parked was more air conditioning there the bike, walked over and struck than at downtown hotels. They Mr. Burr several times, knocked were turned over to thé juvenile him down, got on their bike and ald division. rode away. Martin T. Burr, 38, of 2221 Sta-| “I didn’t know them,” Mr. Burr tion st., was standing on the bridge 'said. “They just looked mad. He at Indiana ave. and the canal hop- |was treated at City hospital,

Stab in Chest Winds Up ‘Heated’ Argument

Police found Harry Porter, em- [Fhe said they had been in a tavern

ployee of Hillcrest Couptry club,|and that they had ome “h " leaning against a light pole at 300 { y t ee a Ww W. 15th st. with a stab wound in|® 80 Argument. More heat was

his chest. too much so she stabbed him.

Later Marie Cantrell, 46, of 371] He is in a critical condition in W. 12th st., admitted stabbing him. [City hospital.

Russ Accuse U. ME Generals Face Air Corps Shakeup 0f U. N. Bypass —The army air forces will announce a shake-up in overseasand Ce Te 8 domestic assignments this week for

“good offices” on the Indonesian liable informant said today. republic in an effort to by-pass the] Names and commands are not United Nations security council and §isclosed, but the informant said it | + | protect American interests in the would be one of the largest mass East Indies. |reassignments of AAF generals in Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister recent years. Andrei Gromyko called on the se-| The new overseas assignments

curity council to disregard the! be. lear wi American offer to intervene in toe a o. 4" th the state

Dutch-Indonesian dispute and to ae i ——————— “take the task of arbitration and mediation of this question into ws Ex-OPA Chief to Speak its own hands.” Times State -Service Mr. Gromyko said the council] must act “without delay” to send|Henderson, Washington, D. C, foran on-the-spot observation team to mer director of the OPA, will speak

Indonesia to, enforce the security st the Eastern Indiana C. I O.council's cease-fire order. sponsored Labor Day celebration at

Strange Maneuver Shadyside park.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 19 (U. PJ.|

States today of trying to force its|more than 15 of its generals, a re-

ANDERSON, Ind, Aug. 19.~Leon|

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As a second step,’ he said, it must establish a security council commission to mediate and arbi-| trate the differences between the Netherlands and the Indonesian republic. | The Soviet blast wiped away a | tiny vestige of American-Russian i-harmony created in the security | council earlier this month when

“cease-fire” order through

Mr. Gromyko conténdéd the In-|

He said the American maneuver seemed a “strange one” from the

'C. I. O. Appeals Case CUTHBERT, Ga., Aug. 18 (U. P)./

| in which Charles H. Gillman, or-|

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Here are s in The Times . The best p There is a ted in previous How about dren. Get the: pose. Catch s kiddie photos. Good outdoor appeal—but ge photo some pla photos In yo you'll find tha raphers alway have a person i This gives th “life.” #ow about could have bet Then there pictures , . , ! the atmosphere

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STRAl SAYS: