Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1947 — Page 3
1
Gi A TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1947
oliday
9g
'eek-End ‘Acci
x : 5 x 2 ‘ | i KR ; £5 % Sov
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -
ents Kill 18 In
‘State, 4!
\ + 8 in & In Tn A
wae | Toll 5 272,
said to ha quarrel |which will * determine _ the ; { have ' : - a | , wp TT her that ause California Highest Beth Griswold, 11, sobbed her story to police shortly after th fatal] 3d Place Captured Deaty HR from 42’ states and | e her wedding With 40 Death shooting yesterday. aS | By \ndianapolis Ship cena an Buuctey. batten “Nov: 30° ' BOF ; 3 da Beth's version of the killing of} ore ND hep 2 0g P Can y, in line with Indiana's Labor Day holiday &c-| her mother, Agnes, 45, contradicted hoon Se i ot. exciting week which will be climaxed pp
highways, three dead by drowning
dents.
in all type accidents. Reports from .all states early today showed that 272 persons died in traffic accidents, 22 more than had been predicted
fore the holiday began. : | + In addition, 70 persons were drowned, 24 died in airplane acci-
ARS
mishaps directly attributable to the holiday. ord
Indiana was far down the list of
California led as
fatalities.
fatalities.
Mechanicsburg, Ind., when truck he was driving left the road and the load of steel pinned him in the truck’s cab. { Bloomington Girl Killed State police said only two persons were killed in traffic accidents yesterday, when the highway. toll was expected to be at its highest. | Juanita Witham, 21, of Bloomington, was killed last night when the truck in which she was riding side-
The total of 456 dead was just one|sobbed. under the" 457 fatalities counted away. Then he put the gun against last year. {my mother’s chest and shot her.” | Griswold told police his wife, 'a| states with high accident tolls.|26-game (dice) operator in a South 3 usual with 40|Side tavern, had been keeping late| : Two neighboring states hours for several months, and alwere second and third—Illinois with ways gefused to tell where she had 34 deaths and Michigan with 29 spent ‘the time. ; ! He said he was awakened about Ray Edward -Carry, 21, Alliance,|6 a. m. yesterday by the sound of | O., was killed early today near his 15-month-old son's crying. Mrs. | the| Griswold had just come in, he said.| ‘Didn't Mean To’ At first he told ‘police that he| confronted her’ in the bedroom after her return. He said he grabbed his| service pistol and fired one shot, only to frighten her, as she lay on |the bed. !
cident death toll stood at 18 today|the two conflicting tales told by ‘Policeman Frank
he surrendered after the shots were| and five killed in other type acci-|fired, A oe She said she was awakened by In the nation 456 lives were Jost sounds of a quarrel early yesterday. The she heard her mother scream,
. Runs to Bedroom The girl ran to her parents bedby the national safety council be-]room she said, in time to hear Griswold shout: “Well, IT am going to kill you.” She said she saw him reach todents, and 90 died in miscellaneous ward the dresser. “I ran to my mother and put my arm around her to proteet her,” she “But Daddy pulled me
Chicago Girl Sees Father | Slay Her Mother in Bedroom
“Policeman Gives Varied Versions of Shooting; Only Wanted to Scare Her, He Says :
CHICAGO, Sept. 2 (U, P.).—A grief-stricken little girl was to tell a coroner's jury today how she futilely tried to prevent her father; a; Chicago policeman, from shooting her mother to death during a bitter,
Acme Telephoto
i i
‘his buddy, Tony Janazzo, who was Americas since 1921 was the Ameri- _| plane, heavily overloaded with gaso- gowns were the prescribed dress.
{only one other pilot was injured
—
Death of Pal
Pageant Starts
Race Winner
today for wipning the Thompson Miss America. = trophy race. He said it was Today's outstanding ¥t of the small consolation for the death of pageant which has crowned 19 Miss |
killed in. one of the four crashes.can Beauty Boardwalk parade.
Mr. Janazzo was the only fatality rolling chair floats, were to move in the 300-mile race, climaxing the the length of the boardwalk as a national air races yesterday. His|late afternoon -attraction. Evening |
line, dived to earth, early in the contest, Mr, NAZZ0 WAS
burning wreckage. Three other planes crashed, but
For Divided Reich
Rejects Protest on
Industrial Level WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (U. P) -—1
seriously. 1 Wins 2 Prines Mr. Cleland;"who had thyee planes entered in the $40,000 race, won $16,000 first prize and an additional $2000 for setting a new closed
{ hour over the 15-mile run. Russia .for the two-year stalemate; { “I had to win,” he said, “I was over the economic unification of mortgaged up to my ears.” Germany. Mr. Janazzo, whd would have It did so in a note to Moscow re-| been 25 years old next week, was|jecting Soviet cliims that the Lon-|
MOTHER SLAIN-=F ran k Griswold, 15 months old, and
Chicago police. station after their father, Frank Griswold, a policeman, shot and killed his wife, Agnes, 45. .
“I iritended to put the bullet into off the dresser to make a threaten-
the mattress. I didn't know at first ing (gesture, as he had done once airport. that I'd hit her,” he said, swiped two other cars on road 46, mean to." . gsix miles east of Bloomington. The| Later Griswold revised his .state- the bed and reached for the gun. driver, Pablo Raymon, 40, and two ment. He said that he had decided They grappled and the weapon was other passengers, Marvin Thacker, | to scare his wife. He seized the gun discharged accidentally. ’
“I didn't’ before. He said his wife jumped up from
Seid siiitd - 24, and Pauline Chafin, 21, all"of| y, Plus . ensby Robert Hunter, Bloomington, | redient ay aX then grazed a car driven by the| pply of Rev. Paul Foleno, Chicago. Mr. ht d Hunter and Mrs. Foleno were taken | ght an to the Bloomington hospital.
A a ed . , 500%
F. McCrea said Mr. Raymon would be charged with reckless homicide. Mrs. Gretchen England, Spring-
the car in which she was a pas-| senger collided with another car near Paoli. Walter Rodestsky, also] of Springfield, driver of the. car, is:
e from
alk this” + +
i in critical condition in Paoli hos-| t floor pital. Morgan County Sheriff William | St. John last night recovered the| body of Marvin Hine, 28, from an| eight-foot hole in Indian creek near! Martinsville. Mr. Hine, who had
been fishing alone,
vd +
Roy A. Allen,
in a gravel pit near Bourbon. He| was an employee of the Pennsyl-|
|
nary, 27,
by a passing motorist.
and crashed into a culvert, .
P-51 Pilot Killed A plane crash six miles north of
tiansen, Sioux Falls, 8. D., yester-|
planes to Cleveland.
Two Chicago men escaped injury in a spectacularly highway crash landing in LaGrange county dur-!
two miles north of South Milford were the owner-pilot, E. J. George, ! 37, and his passenger,
the Cleveland air races. : Milt Vernon, 80, of Orangé coun-
drawn disc on ; lene. [ | State police glso. are fattenipting to identify the about 50 yéars gid whbse body ‘was; ound on a ya track, Muncie. " 5 i Funerdl arrangements are
Silas Gibbons, ‘New, Winches who drowned Sunday. it.) , Mrs. Florence Hopson, 56, of] Tulsa, Okla., died in Daviess county | hospital today of injuries suffered! in an auto accident Aug. 27. i Mrs. Hopson was a passenger in! a car driven by her husband, R. P. Hopson, who was also injured. He is still in the hospitgl.
. A Dollar's a Dollar, Taxpayer Contends
HAVERHILL, Mass. (U, P.).—It may cost Haverhill §1 because city hall was closed on a Saturday. That's the sum Herbert E. Emer-| son said he had to pay because the building was. locked. He has filed
{
if | court to get it back. Mr. Emerson said the 14-day time
out on a Saturday but wher he
When he returned on Monday, he
Monroe county prosecutor Robert! cials
on org
The body of Wilbur James Ca- Oi
suit against the city in small claims Tarn
: went to pay it, city hall was closed.|;
siennen, woe ms. 70,000 Due at Fair Tod The Dn Bis Si gy car driv-| s ue a air 0 ay:
Labor Day Total Drops
(Continued From Page One) | Game preserve. Conservation offi- oP honors in the Aberdeen-Angus pointed out that although competition. donations would ‘be gratefully ac- Cortland won in the heifer class. cepted they were depending mostly ~The .Curtiss: Candy . . anizations for support. They champion Brown Swiss field, Ill, was fatally injured when cig fair publicity —r get the!grand and: junior champion honors
campaign before the. public. in that open class. {craft Corp. to fly a P-39 Alrcobra/
| ‘Armstrong Bros. of St. H. A. Thompson of
company's bull took
A boys’ quartet from Hancock| Herbert Davis Forestry Farm, -ex-
Indiana Farm Bureau.
Wayne Harting.
{by Rollin H. Stewart of Indianapolis. ga , More than 40 small children were pion, Ill., won like honors with Jor tuer wiriiere In the wince « Prohed hy Gates apparently [returned to their parents through! Grand champion Hereford . boar) | 1 stepped into the hole and was the efforts of ‘state police and the was owned by Bill Miller, Cory, cal, operations. officer at 12th air! drowned. His fishing tackle was | public address system. { | . found nearby. {€
of Liberty township, qualified by the state fair board Shelby county, was found in YeelWlicn 1 was sales © Shelf 3Her the grand champion fa wreckage of his motorcycle in ation hai the steef Nad been SS competition. The reserve champlon| Tony 'Levier, Ohio trophy, $3000 Govermor Gates said. | .ditch east of Shelbyville Yesterday 8 wien On county! ¥35 shown by Phyllis Jean Gardner, 7119, of nersville. Officials said they believed the fair last week. 3, of contesvile cyclist, a world war II veteran, was, A new contest was held late.yes- g.ot in Tea Table Baskel Arrange- prize; speed, 349.026. killed about noon Sunday. He ap- terday with an Aberdeen Angus ant in Floriculture competition! parently lost. control of his vehicle owned by Dale Pentecost, 14, Cen- p,es poral Co. was first in the dis- group, March field, Cal, Allison vervilie drawing grand champion ay of asters in -assortment, rose trophy for jet planes; speed, 494.277 | ors, Dale wasn’t om hand to see his W. F. Cuffel, Eleahor’s Flower Mar- Halle trophy race for women, $2500
tack of bronchitis.
steer goes on the Friday.
Returns to Win | Jackie, however, returned to win een months ago police raided a, ing a rain storm yesterday. Unhurt the grand champion gold med2l Columbus business establishment when the small plane bounced to steer contest. Fair officials said they and confiscated 21 bottles of whisky earth and landed on state road 3, felt Jackie hadn't intended to and five cases of beer.
break the rules.
Champ Disqualified The grand champion steer in the ynjversity in vania railroad in Bourbon, {4-H Club Class, shown by 10-year- judging competition.
county won top honors yesterday hibited the grand champion milkiin a Rural Youth amateur enter- ing Shorthorn; and Jamies Collins, | tainment contest conducted by the Tipton, won Gold Medal honors,
The quar-|. 1p sheep ‘competition, Oren A.
[tet was composed of Charles Scalf. wrioht Greenwood, exhibited th David Barnett, Jack Fentz, gists ; bi -
and champion Rambouillet ram and te-
jservé while Kenneth Knox, Cham-
In many while Evan Kessler, also of Cory,
ases the children were in tearsi{ook the reserve championship. 18; Middlesboro, 2nd could hardly blurt out their
Ky. was drowned while swimming |D8mes.
Gets $340 Scholarship John H. Ruszler, Terre Haute, won a $340 scholarship to Purdue the 4-H vegetable
C. C. Dow & Sons, Paragon, won
barrow
The Arbogast Floral Co. placel
corsage, vases of asters and zinnias,
Atwood in Kosciusko county took steer win the prize. He was at ket, Dr. A. E. White, Raoul H. _the-life of 2d Lt. Allen E. Chris- home recovering from a severe at- Ayres, W. R. Johns and Dr. R. A His father, Moore, placed first in other flower Goodyear trophy race, $8500 prize day. His P-51 army fighter plane] Lewis Pentecost, said the youth competition; burst into flames and exploded. He! Probably would be able to return was in flight with several other to the fair by the time the prize auction block
Law's Delay for Once
Pleases Defendant _ COLUMBUS, Ind. (U.P. —Eight-
The owner
now has been found innocent of
Reserve grand champion of the charges of unlawful possession .of
William 4-H club steer show was the HereLuchitz, 30, en route home from! ford owned by Patricia Royer of
New Richmond. Yesterday,
in both bull
show,
Champion Hereford bull in open shown by
competition was
shorthorns exhibited ty, died in a fall from a hofse- by Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sims of farm nedr Val- Elkhart took grand championships and heifer classes. wood farms- of Carmel, swept body: ef 4 than the field in the polled shorthora'191 IN LOS ANGELES
intoxicating liquors. Police returned the whisky and beer "and. the owner was pleased that authorities had kept the merchandise off the market.. Some of today's prices are about double (what they were when the goods were confiscated, he said.
| LOS ANGELES, Sept. 2 (U. P). Southern California wilted today the under a record heat wave which
Shadeland Farm of Lafayette, Re-|sent Los Angeles temperatures to
completed today Yor , 1 -year-0ld serve winner was shown by Stuart'101 degrees, hottest in nearly two ter, Farms, also of Lafayette.
|years.
In Indianapolis
EVENTS TODAY State Fair,
Marion County Teachers’ institute—all | Robert; Mildred Armstron day at Manual- Training high school a Rotary Luncheon—Annual
Dorothy Raftery;
. sald the tax collector demanded an
Ha
. Draper: or ih Ta
pit. Ui Proadibr. Mae Gr SH SEE sn 5. on o wa ‘ R argie Har § a . Fisher, Vernon, Mabie" Shafer; Josenn,| arterioscleropif,, -
Porow Rossebo; John, Marth rr 940 Pau na Burch; Rob-|Ch i limit on his overdue poll tax bill ran Robert. | at Lori, al Passwater:| Ralph, suse Buanaber 3 . John; Norman, June h : po in Fuchs; Lawrence, Hagel Griswold; Eu $0e, | Hoos. Dorota Reed ht
a
John, May , James Williams: Clifford, Catherine Morphis agricultural At Coleman — Char
vin, Gloria Lattimore;
n, (Glover, Viola om, 8. Kenwo 22190 Pleasant Louise Stansherty, 234 W. Ray Michigan; Wil
715 8, Capitol, Rob Carty.
, Alma Button: | 711 B. NL Yi Ralph, Aina, alton: ert, Doris Biddle, 711 B. M¢
Cunningham; Robert, Jane Emrick; Rich- DEATHS © At neen Alice HMaker-| Allen Bert Pulkerson, 80, al-1045 W. 32d, smith; F , May Weatherhead, Charles,| coronary thrombosis, Edna ‘Perrin: ‘Kenneth, Rosamond Holmes: Mary Belle Armstrong, 8, at 1117 Roach ly nie: ‘1eRoy, Mon’ Lou st., osclerosis, " Aeetasin: brick Wilma Sullivan; Do ,| John R Munn, 86, at 604 N, Jefferson,
arteriosclerosis.
| May Willetts: Helen Hooper: Del- ; bert, Virginia eo Morris, Kathryn | William Riley Arbuckle, 72, at 1868 Gen
pt. carcinoma
LAL Wome-—Noble, Betty a 1803 W. Samuel A, Leffel, 79, at City, ‘arierioscleroA Mietigan; James, Dor: Ballard, 1233 AL
AAAI
. AR y a ¥R
dob obi ie gt
a Sl A i
sister, Beth, 11, are shown at |
Paul took! Richard Becker, Cleveland, an ex- '0 the economic rehabilitation of
| # : te} -1500.704 m.p.h: Id Jackie Berlet of Walton was dis< y, 41a open class swine show, Steve Beville, Hammond, Ind. who some formal demand is made to me by Smith or any other person hav-| matter,”
og He continued the case until 2 p. m./of 1409 N. Pennsylvania st.
killed flying one of Mr. Cleland’s|don three-power conference ri | {planes, ei. ain, France and the United States) | | 12 Start—6 Finish lon increasing Germany's indUstrial| | Twelve pilots, flying souped-up levels violated the Potsdam agree- | fighter * planes, started the daring ment, : (race, but only six finished, The note said, In part: Woody Edmonson, Lynchburg, Va,,; -“For over two years the United {crashed in his P-51 Mustang about States government has sought per10 miles southeast of the municipal sistently to reach agreements on He was taken to near-by matters affecting Germany as a |Berea hospital where physicians whole and to implement the prosaid his condition was fair. (visions of the Berlin agreement of Skip Zeigler, ‘Kenmore, N.-Y, 1945 (Potsdam) which state that bailed out of his P-40 Warhawk in Germany should be treated as a view of the crowd. |single economic unit and to this end The fourth casualty was Jack certain common policies should be Hardwick, Arcadia, Cal., who walked established.” away from his burning P-51 after ‘Heavy Financial Burden’ it crashed behind the grandstand. Asserting that the *Soviet govMr. Hardwick suffered a scratched ernment is certainly aware of the elbow and a burned hand. importance of German production
navy pilot flying a Corsair fighter, Europe,” the note added: was second in the race to win $8000! “The failure: of the .Soviet gov-| {prize money. His average speed was éfnment to implement the Berlin {390.133 m.ph. . Third place went fo A8reement has placed upon the | Jay Demming, a Niagara Falls test United States a heavy financial bur/pilot who resigned from Bell Air- den in the occupation of Germany.” The note was handed to the Soviet lin the race, with an average speed embassy yesterday for delivery to {of 389.837 mph. Moscow. It was signed by Acting | Mr. Demming flew the same ship Secretary of State Robert A. Lovett.
Insurance Charges
{in which' Alvin M. “Tex” Johnston, {Bell test pilot, won the race last ‘year with a speed of 373.908 mph. The ship was purchased recently
Lt. Col. Robert L. Petit, Ventura,| (Continued From Page One) {force - headquarters, March Field had made & confidential statement Cal, who won the Thompson jet on all matters concerning Mr. | {division. Col. Petit flew a P-80 shoot- Smith's charges. ling star around the seven-lap, 154-| Withholds Statement
territory.
rmed aggression,"
No Mention of Russia Mr, Truman did not refer directly seriousness with which we view our to the foreign policy of Russia in ghligations.” : { central and southern Europe, but E
He said, however,
| (U. P).—A five day whirl of glamor cept in the use of force is “revolu- ican land talent began today for 54 girls|tionary.” nk in the annual Miss America Pageant | py. American President described [the post-war era as a “bitter disapipointment and deep concérn' to his
, He said that thé United! ; y ada arrived here yesterday and grates was obligated to prepare for this natiof’s determination to avert achievements of this conference and.
P.) — brepared for the first. event of the |. prolonged military ‘eccupation of Armed conflict should not be
pocketed $18,000 in prize money Saturday night by th& selection of | “We find that. a number ‘of. nations are still subjected to a type ~ lof foreign ‘domination which we {fought to overcome,” he said. “Many
there was no doubt as to whom his|
Ja dead je : {when rescuers pulled him from the dames LISS zemess were directed. . . |
{resolved by armed conflict.” H |added that the “world may depen on it that we shall continue to go; far out of our way to avoid anything [assistance felt by war-torn coun-
__way-a—thrgat,
7 the sald.
that “we do Clear that the United States is de-|
Miss America |U. S. Keeps Armed Might to Save Peace, C % 3 ah | = t Starts Truman Tells 19 Nations of Americas - Saddens Plane» tlantic City (Continised From Page One) |are determined to remain strong,” agreement on a broadly-drawn pack | — — w——— \decision to:bind all the Americas’he told delegates who recently to check aggression against ay
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Sept. 2/to abide by a two-thirds «vote ex- completed. work: on an inter-Amer- American nation,
defense ‘pact. “This is in‘ nol Criticizes Peace Delay The record of the| “You have made it clear to any \past speaky for us. No great na- possible aggressor that the Amer{tion has bgen more reluctant than ican republic are determined. to ours to use armed force.” support, one another against attacks But the) President declared that... Yau can be justly proud of the . mis-|T commend the noble spirit which represenfed as weakness, has inspired your efforts.” “Our fiversion to ‘violenos) must The President, decried failure of not be misread as ‘a lack of deter- the major world powers to agree on ‘mination on Our PArt to live up to Peace for. Germany = and the obligations of the United Na- Austria: j
'tions €harter or as an invitation to, “No agreement has been reached
| h inin oples of Europe| picks iors NE Do shadow ot others to take liberties ‘with theamong the allies on the main outs that marred the speed contest. The contestants, in individual | 4
foundations of ihternational peace,” |!ines of & peace settlement,” he “Our military strength Suid. “In consequence, we are will’ be retained as evidence of the|oblized to contemplate a prolonged military occupation of enemy terrie tory. This is profoundly distaste [ful to our people.
Pledges to-Back UN
surope Gets Ald Priority Likewise Mr. Truman made it
|this nation to strengthen and make
‘not believe that present interna. termined to do its best to provide — =." oo tive the United Nations
{economic help “to those wh {tional differences will have to be| p who. are o Prepared to help themselves and ®® * world peace organization.
4 each other.”
But the President declared tha {the United Nations “has been sube jected to a strain which it was ! never designed to bear,”
He made clear ‘that the need. for
that would increase the tensions of tries of Europe and Asia will be
sire for adding that this nation is prepared looked o work for that aim both through nomic
t the United Nations and through use hemisphere as well. |
|international “life.” : OS DrIOTIY : i He described as the “fundamental for other American nations, course record of 396.131 miles per The United States today blamed |, ‘o." 5g" io the strong de-|here he told the Pan-American sald.
permanent
of its dwn resources.
/mile jet course in 18 minutes, 27.24! “I have the statement but cannot seconds for an average speed of make it public or comment on the| charges myself until such time as
iwon the Kendal trophy prize of
1$2000 with a speed of 384.062 m.p.h. ing information on the
first prize; speed, 360.866 m.p.h, Ken H. Knight, Walnut Ridge, Ark, Tinnerman trophy,” $2500
“If Smith does make a formal charge to me, I can sav now that the state insurance departnient will ibe perfectly clear of any wrong doing and that Smith will becom involved deeper than he already has found himself.” The governor sald his office will be prepared to meet any charge if and when any is presented, Mr, Smith could not be reached 5 for a statement today. In regard to Secretary of Stale Bath, Governor Gates said he has no jurisdiction, “Mr, Bath was elected to office, (he isn't my appointee,” Governor Gates said..“He will have to answer the charges himself.”
Bath Denies Charge Mr. Bath last week denied the (U. P. ~De- charges made by Mr, Smith, exvelopment of a new variety of plaining that he had been warned wheat, known as marfed, has been that the deposed safety responsiannounced by the Washington bility director would “play dirty” State college extension service. if he were ousted, Marfed, in the development stage - Mr, Bmith vigorously denied the since 1931, is a cross section be- state police officers’ statemertt (hat | tween a well-known Washington he tried to arrange a fix for the |vartety, federation, and a marquis- gambling operator florence hybrid. If the state police officers’ stateThe new wheat has a highér test ments involve an #ctual offer by
Capt, Richard Burnor, 1st. fighter
Ruth Johnson, Upland, Cal, prize; speed, 223.290.
William Brennand, Oshkosh, Wis,
speed, 165.857, Paul Mantz, Hollywood, Bendix {trophy, $10,000 prize, average speed | 460.423 m.p.h. Mr. Mantz won the | same race last year with a speed of 435.501. y
New Variety of Wheat ‘Developed in West
| PULLMAN, Wash.
weight than federation and a Thornton to pay protection money, |greater resistance to smut and he would face arrest on a charge | inf “offering & bribe.”
| mildew.
Judge's Edict: Gamblers
— Must Appear for Trial
(Continued From Page One) establishment at 601 N. West ‘st.
lgan, 33, said to be proprietor of the! yesterday. ’ 1849 club at 1849 Shelby st, was
discharged on a charge of aiding
| Arrested yesterday on a warrant arid abetting a lottery. . Leslie Wise, 28, of 2822 Clifton st.
les, Helen Tansey:| program, noon, Claypeol hotel, Oscar, Edith’ Word rk, Charlotte gigned by James Bostick, 520 Wood - v - a Tomes, Charl oe Jucille Marshall «lawn ave, who said he has lost Was charged with keeping a room { e 8 Lee OMmas Onya Urnanss ’ EVENTS TOMORROW | Leslie, Clue tat ian Asher: Gearge, Helen! more than $1000 in the club in the for pool selling and operating a i | Cornovich; red, arte rens. er-| > 4 tierv t t | ate Fal he fraternity—Annual state 810. Mildred Sfudiey. John, Ruby Mc-| past year, Morgan was ordered to ko wi ang gift Ri erprise o of fair dinner, woman's bldg cafeteria, Cormick; Blepln, Ry re Meru appear in court at 0 a m atrolman Oscar Pedigo purchase 6:45 p. m. Dial; ‘Cecil,’ Irene Bmith; Dallas, Eva| Morgan did not answer when his ® lottery ticket from him. in his ie , . re BIRTHS AL BL. Vincent's—Herbert, Jane Beck: case was called at 9 a. m, He was pool room last night, Thirty-eight Girls Merde, Janet A fham. James, Marguerite 4, court, however, wher it wes books of baseball tickets were acon, Richard, tt ppberger eroon, ’ v . ' g ‘i " mM 88. Francs—Roy, Edna Beal, Nor- Susan Miller; Donald, Arbara drwin; Ed- called the second time just befor: Girl, 17, Arrested A Clty—Jonp, Millie Dowdell, Juss Br 0 oman "Alnnit Everette, Betty] court closed A 3:30 a. m. raid on the Chief's gia Langford; am, arjorie jr ’ Ho / Turner; Earl, Mary Quaries.. |Justies ester, Lois Rogers. 1356 8 “Nine o'clock means: just that,’ club, 453% Indiana ave. resulted an-cloyd Gloria Adams. Licyd. Tremont; Artie, Zata Young, 1308 W. 18th; Judge Howard told the defendant. In the arrest of Daniel Copelea, 25,
and +1 Sept. 9. ; Leonard Martin, 22, of 427 N, Ban- | “And 2 p. m. means Just that croft ave, on charges of violation and not a minute later,” the judge of the 1935 beverage act, and Jean4 told Morgan as he turned to leave./ette Swangle, 1515 Central ave., and to Three Other Ralds Madeline McQuain, 28, Washington e" Three other vice raids yesterday hotel, on vagrancy charges. brought the total number of raids| Miss Swangle, Who told arresting over Labor day week-end to 10, - police she was 19, was found to be George Minter, 57. of 8421 N.|only 17 when the case came up in California st, was fined $26 and police court 3 today. Judge Howard
t
; Batley. Wva| Prank. McClanahan, 83, at Methodist, costs on a charge of keeping a room remanded her to the juvenile aid st; Klittord Tena | Dariesn Barrett, 10 months, at Riley, for pool selling, A decision was gevision. and continued. the case to TOIROY. ocean | gp DTONCHLIS, | withheld on an operating a lot- t. 11, ma BE. Bitzer, 84. at 3164 Station st Police tdok = three half pints of
"
“ltery and gift enterprise count. H~ was arsested when police phided his liquor from the quartet.
rtf ole 4 ian
|
| | | { {
|
|
John Hazel, 40, of 906 ‘Lafayette
Hel teliows, pr, Thelma Morris : ; f | a Ay ames, arian Nickson; Cai- reprimanded for failure to heed St. arrested at the same time, was Bertha court orders this morning,
Denies U, 8. Weakness “In carrying out our policy
Igiven a priority over economic help | “Its role is to maintain the peace But and not to make the peace,” he “It has been embroiled in ite
world peace, delegates that later this country|infancy in almost continuous cone
forward to increased eco-|flict.” \ a collaboration within this! Mr, Trumah said the United Nae [tions should not be prejudiced by | Mr, Truman hailed the work of “this unfair test,” and pledged {the inter-American conference, “fidelity” of this nation’s efforts to
we which in two weeks time reached make it a going concern.
»
. 3
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Mr. Truman once again pledged
