Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1947 — Page 8
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PAGE 8
ite ANDERSON BREAKS FINGERS TANKER GOES AGROUND
€ HONOLULU, Aug. 21 (U. P)~| PEARL HARBOR, T. H. Aug. 21 No Relief-Just :
Secretary of Agriculture Clinton |(U, P.).—Pacific fleet headquarters
Anderson was treated at a navy sald today that the tanker 8, 8./ hospital today after he broke two|Cyrena, chartered by the Shell Of | wh :
fingers of his right hand while Co. of London, was aground off operating a lawnmower for exercise. Kitava island near New Guinea, |
CHOOSE
Heat Causes Electricity Shortage
(Continued From Page One)
a barn on the farm of Samuel 8. Schwartz, killing two horses and destroying the building. Loss was estimated at $15,000, as the flames destroyed 25 tons of alfalfa hay! 500 bushels of wheat, 700 bushels of oats and a hogbarn. The storms brought some rain to the Pt. Wayne-Huntington area. A state-wide ice shortage also! loomed nearer today. Anderson and Bloomington officials’ reported the reserve supply almost gone. In
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ice production, Elkhart's Chamber of Commerce tried to take the residents’ mind off the heat by calling a meeting| of the Main Street Christmas committee today. In Chicago a special plane was hired to produce artificial | no kind of o rainfall over the city. Sdme 150, {pounds of dry ice scattered in a! cloud caused a rainfall which lasted 40 minutes but the cloud was 40 Imiles west of the city. - The only bright spot on Indiana's weather scene was the effect of the hot sun on the tomato crop. At Brazil the Libby, McNefll & Libby food products plant went on double shift as the flow of tomatoes from Clay county increased.
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Mrs. Irene Souers' #i Rites on Saturday | Services for Mrs. Irene Montha Bouers, who died yesterday in the home of “her daughter, Mrs. Irene! Stencil, 1704 N, Pennsylvania ave. | will be held Saturday at 1:30 p.m in the G. H. Herrmann funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill Mrs. Souers, a native of Connersville, Ind, had been a resident here for 30 years. She was forelady at C. B. Cones Mfg. Co. before her illness. 8he had been employed there 20 years. She was 54. Burvivors are two daughters, Mrs Stencil and Mrs. Elizabeth Wolsis- | ser; one son, John William Souers, now in New Mexico, and one grand- | child. |
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Part Usually Minor In Municipal Court
(Continued From Page One) | Normally, Mr, Kistler is not a mem{ber of the municipal court prosefcuting staff. He is a deputy prose- | cutor assigned to the criminal court. On this occasion, he had come down to municipal court to try the case of a man charged with obtaining money by false pretense. The
MOVE INTO NEW HOME—The West Side Messenger, pub- ‘defendant's attorney was John Mclished by Toney Flack, will hold open house tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday in these new quarters at 5555 W, Washington st,
Dope on Weather
. (Continued From Page One) Virginia as wari, southerly winds clash with cool Canadian *air near the fronts,
Weather-wise readers and amateur forecasters will notice high and low centers, fronts, air flows
| and affected areas move east-
ward across the FOTOCAST from day to day. The scientists say this motion of weather is caused by rotation of the earth, The amateur forecaster will note weather from the Rockies to the Atlantic is in a large part determined by the southerly air flow and air mass arrows from the Gulf. Looking forward toward the week-end the amateur would expect warmer weather in the East,
The Weather Bureau reported a tropical storm 300 miles south of the Louisiana coast at 3 a. m. (Indianapolis time) today, moving west northwest about 10 me p. h, Small craft along the coast were advised not to venture in the open Gulf since the storm may increase in intensity.
Minimum temperature forecasts include Boston 64; New York 67; Philadelphia 68; Washington 69; Memphis 72; Oleveland 73; Detroit and Milwaukee 74; Chicago 75, 8t. Louis 78 and Kansas City 80.
Evansville a water shortage sowed Eo tocast: Advance Mrs, Elizabeth Clark |
‘Dies at Her Home |Box 655, McFarland rd, died at her home yesterday.
{Marion county all of her life, and | & member of the Southport Baptist | church,
{ter, EMe Ferguson also of Indianapolis. | Services will be held at 3 p. m.
Nelis, a former municipal court Judge, Argue Over Radio In the background of the case was an argument between the defendant and a woman over a radio
sooner had the defendant sold her his console model radio than the
| She had been a resident of Men came around and took it away
-
for back payments,
| Prosecutor Plays Role of Fixture’
i . { Mrs. Elizabeth 8. Clark, R. R. 1, The woman contended ~that no
| There were also involved in this, {case an item of $42 for back rent | Survivors are a daughter Mrs. and payment for seven tickets to| | Raymond Smith, who Mved with'an all-star basketball game, back | | her; a son, Rev. William E. Clark,/ when basketball was in season. | Bunker Hill, Ind.; a brother, Walter| Mr. McNelis called the court's at- | | Thompson, Indianapolis, and a sis-| tention to the presence of Mr. Kist- | (ler as the prosecutor. He charged |
the prosecutor was representing the complaining witness in a civil suit
| Saturday in J. C. Wilson Chapel yuainst the defendant.
of the Chimes. Burial will be in | Greenwood cemetery.
Charles E. Long, 73, Ex-Railworker, Dies
longtime resident “of Indianapolis, branch.
!died yesterday at City hospital.
Mr. Long came here from Bed- advisement until
|
Filed Suit Against Defendant Courthouse records show that Mr.
|
|Kistler filed suit against the de-| {fendant in the civil branch of mu-| {nicipal court on the same day he |
Charles E. Long, 703% Shelby st.,/¥88 trying him in the criminal |
|
Judge Clark took the case under
ford, Ind., in 1903. He was recently civil suit is returnable in civil court
retired from the Big Four railroad. Sept. 18. He was 73. » «
Saturday in J. C. Wilson Chapel of the Chimes. {Glenhaven cemetery.
3 + = 8upervising Prosecutor Carson exServices will be held at 1:30 p. m. plained after court: ;
“George was interested Mm that
Burial will be at case, so I let him try it.” This is another reason a defend- |
He is survived by his wife, Cecil ant can get lost in the municipal |
D.; a sister, Mrs. Minila Anderson, court maze without an attorney.
Bedford; a half sister, Mrs, William |
Work 6 Half-Days
(Colby, and three half brothers, Fred | Not often does a deputy prosecuand Earl Long, Bedford, and John tor get a chance to prosecute a de-
iLong of Shirley, Ind.
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[tendant he is also sueing in another court. But under the operating system in the municipal. courts, there is nothing to prevent him. All of the municipal court prosecutors are young and genial attorneys. They are trying to get a start in law practice. In the prosecutor’s office, they are sometimes able to get off to a flying start, either in law or politics or both. They work six half-days a week. As supervisor, Mr. Carson receives $250 a month. " He will be cut to $227.50 a month under a new salary arrangement made necessary by economy in county government, , The other six deputies who now receive $200 a month each for their half-day work are to be cut to $185 a month. “You can't blame them for trying to get work,” a court official said. “Did you ever hear of a prosecutor who made a name for, himself as a | prosecutor in municipal court?” *
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