Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1947 — Page 5
9, four]
ille’ actor, Serra ries of alleged 3s last Decem~ said, he talked rs into “just 40,000 worth of wv taking” a8 Der $5900 by ime | businessman, another $5000 Okla., jeweler,
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: TUESDAY, SEPT. », wot : id : ; State Airline Need Improvements
At Four Airports in New Aerial Network
Turner Corp. Plans to
Indianapolis, Cleveland on T. W. A, Route
Turner Aeronautical Corp. officials announced today setvice on the new feeder lines granted them yesterday would begin within the next
few months.
Robert H. Turner, corporation treasurer, said the beginning of service depends on completion of airport facilities according to civil aeronautical board requirements and the training of necessary personnel.
Nearly $4 Million Voted for Roads
‘August Lettings Cover Highways, Bridges State highway commission signed state road and bridge contracts totaling nearly $4 million during August. The figure includes 11 highway and maintenance contracts totaling $2,930,544, and six (bridge construction contracts totaling $994,554. Awards Listed The contracts were for: Reinforced concrete pavement of 29068 miles in Lawrence county, $613,196.52, Calumet Paving Co., Indianapolis; grading and structures of 2.323 miles in Parke county, $122,860.21, Tri-State Construction Co., Indianapolis; compacted aggregate surface for 5.623 miles in Putnam and Hendricks counties, $257,031.22, McMahan - Construction ~Co; ~Ro~ chester; reinforced concrete paving,
and bridge on 1.118 miles in Pike county, $179,285.09, R. P. Olinger, Huntingburg; grading and structures on 3.209 miles in Monroe county, $485,504.51, Ralph Myers Contracting Corp., Salem. Grading and structures on 3.262 miles in Monroe and Morgan countries, $290,141.86. Ralph Myers Contracting Corp. Salem; plain concrete widening of 6.780 miles in Marion and Shelby counties, $108, 203.20, Middle West Roads Co. Noblesville; plain’ concrete widen-
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_ THE ‘INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Fly DC-3s Twice Daily;
Turner feeder lines will serve 14 cities and 10 of them have satisfactory airports, the company treasurer said. Yet to be brought up to re-| } quirements are runways at Connersville, Bedford, Bloomington and Kankakee, Ill.
Will Fly DC-3's
Mr. Turner said DC-3 equipment | carrying 21 or more passengers|: would be used and it was expected | | to schedule two flights each way| daily. £ The action of CAB yesterday under the Great Lakes area case decision has broad effects on the air transportation facilities of Indianapolis. ’ : A new ‘link between Cleveland | and Indianapolis by T. W. A. and | granting of additional intra-state| feeder line8®to Parks Air Transport! were included. Total effect of the decision in the state was outlined by C. A. B. Vice Chairman Oswald Ryan, formerly of Anderson, as follows.
Affects Six Cities
“The decision provides additional trunk-line air services to six Indiana ® : cities—Indianapolis, Richmond, Ft." : a . ao hortties] A LITTLE GIANT—Nurse Mildred Walls holds the 16-pound the establishment of important] son of Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Todd, of Knoxville, Tenn., who was born local-feeder airline services travers-| Sunday. The couple have seven other childrén, The baby is being Indiana in both east-west and| lieved to be the second largest ever born in Knoxville. north-south directions. p= emit “5 mi Se — ;
» * * ® “Indianapolis is linked win [P WwW P { lors 3 oy a SD established ize 3 inning ic ures
ene Teldphoto.
j anapolis society at the turn of the
I" |was banked and used to help work-
Service Starts In Few Months " «i |Mrs.Sadllie Coleman |
Remembered Working Women in Her Will
Local Philanthropist On N. Meridian St. to
The home, a showplace of Indi-
century and one of the last surviving near downtown family mansions of that period, is to be perpetuated as the Sallie E. Coleman memorial home, It is: to be used to benefit Mutual| Service as the board of trustees sces fit. Started as Small Home Mutual Service association is one | of the lesser known projects of | Mrs. Coleman, founder of the wil- | liam H. Coleman Hospital for Women, Suemma Coleman home for unwed mothers and countless other philanthroples. The association grew out of a small home which was operated as a shelter for working women at the time when they were not yet accepted by society. The home was sold when doors were _ finally opened to working women and the money from the sale started Mutual Service associa- | tion, Has Countless Members
The money and income from it
ing women in times of sickness and financial need. With the help of
who bought memberships to the group for working women, the fund {grew until the foundation was organized to handle disbursements. Mrs. Coleman, first life member of the group, instituted the plan of
Indianapolis’ working women who through the years had come to look on Mrs. Sallie E. Coleman as their matron saint, today were again remembered. by the Indianapolis philanthropist. In her will «Mrs, Coleman, who died Aug, 30, left home at 1006 N. Meridian st. to the Mutual Service foundation, a ‘Igroup which she helped to look aft
hostess.
Left $50,000 Home Mutual Service Group
her $50,000 er working women, ney for the estate. ; The will also included®individual bequests of pieces of imported fyr-|
niture which Mrs. Coleman pur-| chased at the St. Louis exposition at which she was a sponsor and Several pleces of the furniture were bequeathed to individuals and others items left with the home to Mutual Service foundation.
21 Crash Victims To Be Recovered
MANILA, Sept. 9 (UU. P).—Authorities said today that an air-| borne graves registration party | would leave late this month to. re- | cover the bodies of 21 persons | killed -in a crash of a U. 8. army plane in a remote “ShangrisLa"| valley of New Guinea in May, 1045. | Three persons survived the crash | —two soldiers and WAC Corp. Margaret Hastings of Owego, N. Y. In one of the most dramatic rescues of the war they were hoisted out] of the valley by glider tow after] 47 days there:
SMroeo Goleman and other patronst
businesswoman a life member, Since
direct trunkli te ted to . . spb is ww. x wien wi ee 2 10 BE Published Tomorrow
direct air service to connect these] two cities and will permit nonstop The best photos received in the | Entrants may submit any number
service.
are placed on the Miami-Chicago Photo contest will be published! in|'D black and white. On the back
ing of 8.120 miles in Shelby coun-
ty, $106,964.05, Middle "West Roads:given direct service to Chicago and
Co., Noblesville; reinforced concrete pavement of 5 miles in Jay county, $368,760.54, J. C. O'Connor & Son, Ft. Wayne; reinforced con-| crete pavement of 4.496 miles in Jay county; $353,442.62, Moellering! Construction Co., Ft. Wayne; bi-! tuminous resurfacing of 3.05 miles in Johnson county, $45,244.40,
~-...Grady Brothers, Inc. Indianapolis.
Substructure: for bridge over Wabash river at Montezuma, $421,823.55, Robert ‘H. King, Danville; | two bridges over St. Joseph river and Spy Run creek at Ft. Wayne, $316,238.87, Rieth-Riley Construc-
route of Delta air lines and will be py. Times tomorrow. |of each picture must be written the
to-Cincinnati, Atlanta, Miami and| The entrant who submitted the phone.number, type film and carfiera other cities in the southeastern part, ro thi 85 Deir of the United States. Richmond s|7®¢¢!V® 119 fo Prize.
: Photographers have "until also placed on the transcontinenta 4 : route of T. W. A., thus linking the night Friday to get their entries of The Times. The decision of the
; ‘ for the sixth week of the contest to| judges is final. w ty seat with the cities : i 5 aye Soun Sie inckeal cities of| The Times. Entries postmarked by| Mail or bring entries to: Amateur Europe Africa, the Middle East, that time also will be judged for Photo Contest, Indianapolis Times, India ond China. the prizes {214 W. Maryland st., Indianapolis 9.
|opening, type lighting, :
5 ten A
Ft. Wayne is placed on T. W.
| ~~ SEs | ——- by E - A’s Chicago-Pittsburgh route. ~ (rand Ju to Act Grou 10 S Wayne is also place on the coast-| , ;
to-coast route of United Air Lines, » . | thereby giving Ft. Wayne airect [13 School Strike single-company service to the east, dmpaign or ers tion Co. Goshen: bridge over Deeds| 08st: the West coast and to Ha- | ;
creek near Pierceton and retaining] Wal
GARY, Ind, Sept. 9 (U. P).—| : Prosecuting Attorney Ben Schwartz] Mrs. Clayton Ridge will supply
wall at Markle, $35,241.45, John R.| New Route to Chicago {said today he would ask the grand speakers to address parent-teacher
Gates, Ft. Wayne, Youngs creek near Pranklin, $48.808.58, DeBolt Construction Co, Richmond; superstructures for two new bridges over Muskatatuck river west of Austin, $154,447.33, Ben Hur Construction .Co., Indianapolis, and repairs to rolling lift bridge in'East Chicago, $17,994.68, George Kruzick Construction Co., Winamac, |
bridge over)
“The board also grants a new jury to take criminal action against/and civic organizations on behalf route to Chicago and Southern adults who have aided and abetted of the Citizens’ School committee
from Evansville through Terre a students’ strike against Negroes at| candidates for school commissioner $3000,
Haute to Chicago. This route will|Gary’'s Emerson school. {in the fall elections, i give those cities direct, single-| Mr. Schwartz asked officials off Mrs. Ridge is an executive vice company service to Chicago and the school yesterday to turn over to chairman of the committee and has connects Terre Haute for the first him the names of all adults known been a member of it since its time with the important cities of to have helped foment the strike. founding in 1928. She is a onetime the “Mississippi valley, the Gulf{ He said he would present evidence | school board member and a past coast; Havana and other islands/to the grand jury and charge the president of the
photographer's name, address, telesc eanermiined amount from bond photo judged best for the week will used, shutfer speed, diaphragm
mid-} All pictures become the property
parent-teacher
the idea was accepted, Mrs. Cole{man had given memberships to {countless numbers of girls.
. Other major bequests of the Cole-| Richmond and Kokomo fifth week of The Times’ Amateur Of pictures, but all prints must be| oo estate, estimated at $450,000,
lincluded 70 individual monetary gifts. Residue of the edtate and an| holdings is left to-distant relatives. | ‘Scholarships Provided | | Two college scholarships were pro- | vided in the will. One was to Cole- | man Oertel, New Palestine, the first | \baby born .in the William H. Cole- | /man hospital for women, The other! {was to James Coffey, 17, of 3508 N.| {Illinois st, son of Mrs. Coleman's! lawyer ‘and friend, Mrs, Doris
CofTey. !
Henry Lewis, family chauffeur for
more than 40 years, was given $10,-! 000 cash; his wife, $1000, and both| living quarters
{were given free above the garage for life, | “Jennie Secrest, Mrs, Coleman's nurse, was given $3000 cash and a $50 monthly income for life, Vera | Filler, cook, was left $2000 and Marie Heidenreich, family maid,
Dr. Gatch Named Other individual bequests were to Dr. W. D. Gatch, former dean of Indiana university medical center, $2000; Dr. James O. Ritchey, $2000; | Dr. Carl Huber, Coleman’ hospital, |
paying $100 to the fund to make a}
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lof the Caribbean and with the agitators with violating the Indiana | council, the Seventh District Ped-| $1000, and Dr. Charles Meyer, Gen- | northern coast of South America. state law prohibiting dissemination | eration of Clubs and the Woman's eral hospital, $1000. Dr. Dean Burns,
‘Most D | stv feeder sery-|0f racial or religious hatred. | Department club. of the Petoskey, Mich, hospital] 0 dngerots Hen. BW Joga foe Se AM More than 1300 of the 1750 stu-| John D. Hughes, executive secre- which Mrs. Coleman helped bulld, uy . |diana have also been authorized py dents at the combined grade and tary of the Citizens’ School com- received $1000. [this decision. The Roscoe Turner high school left their classes on the! mittee, announced the formation of ine Test of the estate is to be ; aZl Cau p x Aeronautical Corp. has been au. first “day of ‘the fall term™ 5 "week the ~ speakers’ ~ brea with Mrs, distributed in a 10-year trust fund, {thorized to operate between Grand|380: They struck in protest to the Ridge as its head. half to five cousins of Mrs. ColéMUNICH, Sept.. 9 (U. P).—Lt. Rapids and Cincinnati serving: the Gary school board's rezoning pro-| Candidates chosen by the non. Man and the other half to descend-
Gen. Otto Skorzeny was acquitted intermediate cities of South Bend, Sram which sent 38 Negro children’ partisan Citizens School committee 218 of brothers and sisters of her
by a Dachau war crimes court today of charges involving the use of U. 8. army uniforms for infiltration
.‘and espionage in the Battle of the cxtends from Chicago to Indian-| |apolis and Louisville and will serve Seven officers who served’ under|pafayette, Indianapolis, Blooming{ton ‘and Bedford.
Bulge.
Gen. Skorzeny when he commanded the Naszl 150th Panzer brigade, also were freed." Other charges in the indictment against Gen. Skorzeny and his officers lsd been dropped by the court. The prosecution had failed to prove that they had killed American prisoners of war. Gen. Skorzeny was called “the most dangerous Nazi alive” by the prosecution, He led the airplanerescue of Benito Mussolini from his prison-hotel on top of the Appennines. He took Austrian Chancellor Kurt Schusschnigg prisoner by a similar eoup. ? According to Gen. Skorzeny's own story, his purpose in slipping through the American lines at the time of the Battle of the Bulge was to kidnap Gen, Dwight D, Eisenhower. 7
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in the first three grades to Emerson. gre 4, Dwight Peterson, Mrs. Louis All Negroes in Gary formerly were w -Bruck, H. Nathan Swaim, Leén sent to one overcrowded school... | ©. Thompson, Raymond F. Brandes, | Only about 650 of the students.pmil v. gchaad and Carl J. Brandt. had returned today, but sub-district pour of these candidatés are Re: directors of * the C.LO. United! pyblicans and three are Democrats. ‘Another 1 ocal. Steelworkers of America advised alll pagar H. Evans serves as honora: |feeder carrier, Parks Air Transport, |, low Siiers 30 assist In urging chairman of the committee, while has been authorized to dperate a | e others to return. | the executive vice chairmen, in route between Crawfordsville to Galesburg, Ill, ST. LOUIS, Sept. 9 (U. P.).—Op- John L. Niblack, Thomas D. Sheerand also 10 operate a second route | position arose today to the action | IN and Mrs. Walter 8. Greenough. between Indianapolis and St. Louls.”| of the Most Rey. Joseph E. Ritter, D hs he “The establishment of these local archbishop of St. Louis, in ah rs. Brady, Thompson air services, which for the first|ing the enrollment of both Negroes, i i {time is authorized for Indiana, is| and whites in the same Catholic n Joint, Practice fargely experimental in character. high schools. ‘ * any announced
{ Logansport, Kokomo, Indianapolis| {and Connersville. A second route] |granted to the Turner corporation
and its inherent advantages have, estimated the attendance at 700, {Mans 1 ! | Ten North St. Louis parishes were Mansur bldg. been associated with the long haul. | P Dr. Brady is a graduate of Indi-
_| represented. The civil aeronautics board is au-| “yp © 0 ot unless Arch. ADA university school of medicine
ti th rvices for horizing these local services fo ®! bishop Ritter reverses his deciston, | had three years of training at
period of three years in order i of patents wil gain the experience on which the % board will be able to decifl ro) thelr Shijaren from the schouls,
such services can be economically
conducted so as to qualify for a! ile permanent place in the national air W , pi S ear transportation system.” | . Shortridge Talks By UNITED PRESS g |
- Scheduled ship movements today: | Over 350 Shortridge high school | ‘ Arriving at New York — Queen Mary freshmen and newcomers attended oon. tbampton; Batory from South-| he gami.annual convocation yester-| : | : Leaving New York—Jutlandia to Copen-| day in Caleb Mills hall. ; | en, Floneer Cove to Bremen; Saturnia) ' mgyup ‘students, one a senior and
OT Titi 3 dsr 11 ancisco es | Li ld Victory from Guam. away v Ige Sradustes, and Joa x. Hadley,
y ; Ted Steeg, member of the 1047 MAIN SPRING ARCH football team, discussed athletics;
Marilyn Wiegand, , outstanding! WALK-OVER scholar of the-'46 class, spoke on | > scholarship, and Helen McLane and R 28 N. PENN. ra ’ “Across from Loew's Theater”
Mark Rhoades spoke on service and activities, | Mother's Friend massaging prepaast ————— {ration helps bring ease and comfort OBSERVE HOME-COMING | to expectant mothers. Indianapolis chapter 393, O.E. 8, o == .
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Indianapolis and Protest in St. Louis addition to Mrs. Ridge, are Judge
parents. The cousins are Mrs. Myrtle Fulkerson, Mrs. Clara Oldham, Mrs. | Lillian Richardson, Earl Hodges and | Kenneth Coleman Hughes. | Furniture Bequeathed Mrs. Coffey and Willlam A. At- | kins were named co-executors and
{ Thompson Kurrie was named attor-
- FOR THE
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today his associati - Air transportation in the past has| William Rone, co-chairman of aj... y i: Soria lion dn the pias. been a long distance transportation | protest meeting held last night, |p, Charles F. Thompson, 320 Hume
withdraw | G€neral hospital prior to serving {for four years in army air forces |
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