Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1947 — Page 3
e times a week, rvey “exploded. ie myth that. | ive drinkers of’ | two-fifths of * jon report use 3 atgall” of those whe eported, drink
per. cent of are drinkers, nt of women, women werg © rinkers.
an New
cial J
' Indianapolie 1047-'48 state Daughters of
rs. Sears was ted at the ree - state session the organizain the Hotel oln. She is a onal repre« ative from ict 5, a fore, state councis and a one district depe Mrs. Mary Kinney ap as incilor. The is a patriotia arries insure hip,
+
T ‘ 399, 0. E. 8, ing Sept. 15, ic lodge. A be served a$ eral meeting
n _——_—_ Fr—————
ISienton ~~ -
Mr. Bevin's speech had been . ex-
iposal, and doubted he" had men[i tioned it to U. S. Ambassador Lewis Li Douglas.
Mast night, Mr. Bevin acknowledged
Officials Backing Plea
‘Thinks Out Loud’ As in Share-Gold Idea
LONDON, Sept. 11 (U, P).— British officialdom disavowed any responsibility today for Foreign Secretary.” Ernest Bevin's suggestion that the United States revive lend-
For the second time in a week, official quarters showed no inclina-
vin heaved their way. The first was his proposal that the United States old hoard at Ft, Knox be redisbuted. Admitting that his gold proposal had not turned out to be popular, Mr. Bevin told visiting American | Legionnaires last night that the re-| newal of lend-lease would suit him as well as share-the-gold. The foreign office said today that
teporaneous. He had not given the office any advance indication, it said, that he intended to address the Legionnaires. Along with the treasury, the foreign office declined any comment on the situation. ’ Thinking Out Loud Informed Whitehall sources said
thinking out loud. They said Mr. Bevin was desperate In his quest for some means by which" Britain can get more dollar aid, and ap-| parently was giving vent to every | idea that popped into his mind. The informants said Mr. Bevin] had not consulted his government | colleagues formally about the pro-
In a speech to 150 visiting L American Legionnaires at a dinner
unpopular reception given his tigold distribution proposal. He told ithe Legionnaires he did not care whether it was lend-lease or that, “so long as we get economic conditions right.” ‘We Will Not Fall’ Mr. Bevin called Britain the
RHR OAT SEPT i "- To
Britons
{| lease aid to save Britain from eco-| & 8% nomic ruin.
tion to catch & hof potato Mr."Be-|
FUR ECE
Sp ST TTT aver TETINM
zw —HETRDIAN CAPOLIS TIMES ro
Surprised’ By Bevin's Call For New Tondlease:
ts ARAN ARI A SAK RT Bg Sei
BRAVE QUEEN — A year ago, Norma Lee Arnold (above), |6-year-old Humboldt, Neb. high school senior, was stricken with polio. For a year she has fought off effects of the disease in her right leg. Earlier this week her leg was encased in a brace as she was crowned queen of the Richardson county fair at Humboldt. Doctors say she should regain complete _use of he of her leg soon.
jgreat -bastion of Europe, and said ‘western civilization could not fall unless Britain - falls—“and Britain ill not fall.” He observed that in the United States recently “they have decided we are a junior partner. They have ecided we are a third rate power,
{has cast this little island for a role which is unfinished yet.”
tarising daily, Britain was short on dollars but not short on will. “We * will win through,” he said. “We do
¢ is understanding.” Snyder in London
n Britain's economic crisis. John yder, U, S. secretary of the treasry, was
ayton the mergency aid for Britain.
vertibility of sterling last month,
ent Co., 2252 College ave.
ved. Charles Walker Jr, d st,
23, of 214 8.
Sigaming house,
Police said he had charge of the| report of the nomination commit-| tee and vote on candidates at the meeting at noon tomorrow at the Said at least 21 other persons were
Bhobar tavern,
bought seven pick and win tickets.
i “Somehow I feel that the tradi~ . ition we have developed in 400 years
¢ . Rot ask for patronage. All We ask me. Lunding eight or 10 stories
high was given by city and county|P2rtment will have to do some con-
he lend-lease suggestion came]
hancellor of the Exchequer Hugh! possible sources of |
Mr. Snyder and Mr. Dalton were |
nd of a loan from the U. 8. export- | i
Beech Grove, was charged -
Plast night with operating a lottery | itand gift enterprise and keeping a Vote © on Candidates .
3032 E., Washington i; where a patrolman said he
City-County Hall Contract Near
Recalling ~ [Congress Now|
4return next week.
Up to Truman
More Money Sought For Marshall Plan"
By R. H, SHACKFORD United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Presi-
prospect today of having to call a special session of congress this fall, He probably will beg for an advance payment on the projected multibillion dollar “Marshall plan”
program. Undenied are reports that Undersecretary of State William L. Clay-~ ton in Paris has urgently cabled that $2,500,000,000 will be needed “on the cuff” before the end of the year. It eventually would be fitted
terms of about $20,000,000,000 over four years.
continue his diplomatic war with Russia in person at the United Nations in New York, -apparently has been: convinced that there is no alternative to a special session. No| other source of stop-gap aid is| available except through new ap-! propriations. |
France Needs Help Some Republicans Pal charged that the European “crisis” is more| alleged than real Mr. Truman will find it difficult to deny Mr. Marshall's request if the secretary of state still thinks as he does now on the President's Marshall is going to the United Nations in an effort to consolidate western Europe and much of the rest of the world behind U, 8. leadership. A key nation in the consolidation ‘effort will be France - which is “urgently- appealing for quick.dollar help. Against that, however, he will face a large portion of congress which is not only hostile to a special session, -but especially to any {more blank - check “crisis” appropriations. It took congress many months to approve only $400,000,000 for Greece and Turkey. ‘Crisis’ Has Worsen Mr. Truman's job—if he issues a {special call on the eve of an elec{tion year—will be especially unpleasant because before congress quit this summer, the administration assured the Republican-dom-inated congress that there would be: St ; ONE: No more relief appropriations for Europe this year.
Building Agreement To Be Signed Soon
City and county officials are ex-
governmental office building. Tentative approval of preliminary plans for a combination city-county
officials three weeks ago.
|commisisoners. | Plans Started Year Ago
tee.
| Delaware, Alabama, Washington sts.
The building’ would house all city| (D. Mo),
{pected to sign a formal agreement
he beginning of He said that idst the js next week for the ginning . = crisis). ans for construction of a large| sion:
In another of a series of con- Senate - President Vandenberg ®.| the eve of major developments ferences yesterday the city works Mich), as good a friend of admin{board and county commissioners dis- istration foreign policy as there is cussed a joint agreement on the in congress, is adamantly opposed here examining with|project but it was not signed due|o further blank check Pe foams 12 million union workers vice-chairman of ‘the joint com-|
TWO: No more “piecemeal” ald for Europe. Henceforth, it was said, everything would be included in<a broad overall reconstruction rather than relief program. THREE: No need for a special
Since then the European “crisis” hae changed abruptly, and for the worse. a Whatever happens, the state de-
vincing talking to -get an advance.
dent Truman faced the unhappy|
LJ * Secretary of State George OC. Marshall, who leaves tomorrow to n IC )
plane crashed into a field nine miles northeast of
Five $100 Bills
{for affluent people flashing $100 Light Craft Fall july Ig t Craft Falls | They warned that someone who
Near Greenfield |was able to work the combination
8 Servi & GREENFIEL D, Ind, ‘Sept. 11,../Co. Office, 424 MassaChiysetis ave,
were investigating the crash of & gue $100 bills and one $50 bill,
WASHINGTON, Sept.
STE Es probe Plang CrashiSefe Yeas Toke [Polio Increases ee we os, eres SHAT 1 Ohio
By Science Service
[Democratic Leaders Rally For '48 Comeback Tonight
| State Democratic leaders will were drawn long before, either :
convene. at Muncie tonight, to sour | party picked. their candidates for
ne battle ogy for Indiana's preview |uhe 10th districs gtruggle 1 Hi} the {test~ of the 1948 presidential cam- death of Rep. pace 8. Springer,
|patgn. C. I. O. labor leaders came out ® Officially the session will be 8|gwinging last week in support of: {10th congressional district Demo-| (Mr. Hanley and the Democratie: |eratic convention to nominate - a] program in their avowed fight: |candidate for the special Nov. 4 against the Taft-Hartley labor election, _ but more significantly 1t|regulation law. ‘ {will be a “grass root" rally for al The labor leaders said they Iparty comeback in the state in 1948. | would make a Democratic victory \ Democratic leaders are united in {in the 10th district thelr “No. 1 {support of Frank A, Hanley, Muncie | political business.” lauto dealer, for the nomination to Argue C. I. 0, ‘Control {oppose the Republicans’ candidate,| H., Clark Springer, Republican {Ralph Harvey, Rush county farmer. |statq chairman, revived his party's Mr. Hanley is expected to be | 1946 battle cry; that the C. I. O. {nominated on the first ballot among was dominating the Democratie the 20 county chairmen and vice party. [chairmen in the district in the tip-| Pleas Greenlee, state Democratis
DEATH PLANE—A New Castle man and woman were killed when the 2bove oft of a campalgn involving na-{chairman, denied vigorously that reenfield _yesterday.
tional issues, any group “dominates the party.” Prices to Be Issue “We ean't blame the laboring Battle lines on the high cost of man for coming over to our side,” living and labor- management issues Mr. Greenlee said.
is oF. fied, Alison Employee
George Wickman, Chicago, rep- | Shot Accidental 11. — Sud- resentative of General Electric Co., y den outbreak of infanfile paralysis will speak at the first fall luncheon | fof a safe in the Home Furnishing|in Ohio with sharp increases in the meeting of Indiana chapter of the [fs In critical condition at General
number of cases in a few
made himself $1600 richer last night. tated b h high be vil aeronautics authorities toda § rought a new high number morrow at Hotel Lincoln. Civil ae Y| In the total of money taken were| cases for the year during the|
The | week ended Sept. 6, latest for which|
A 40-year-old Allison employee
other| Producers’ Council, Inc., at noon to- | ‘hospital today after a .22-caliber [pistol accidently discharged striking him in the temple as he was climbe
Mr. -Wickinan, |ing through a fence near Brownse
district manager |
[light plane nine miles northeast of burglars, who entered a side door, official figures have been reported | of the construction materials sec~ hyurg yesterday.
here yesterday. A New Castle man overlooked $10 in cash left on &|iy the U. 8. public health service tion of G. E. appliance and merhere. With all state figures in except cent electrical products. Which had no cases in H. Willlamson Stewart, president, | motorist who rushed him to Jones
and woman were killed in the, desk,
crash.
The victims were identified as John MecKechnie; 27, and Miss i 2 In way Myrtle Worley, 26. The plane crashed in a field 1 owned by Mrs. Minnie Piper, near On I S Housing Maxwell. Victor Reynolds, a farm- . . er, said he heard the plane circling | overhead several times. He said| he stepped to the door as the plane exploded and plummeted to earth.
Inquiry Seeks Of High Costs
Officials said both victims
ly Miss Worley had piloted the, committee . is” intent on ferreting : out basic causes of high costs and
|labor and material shortages.
Mr. McKechnie was employed. at| At the outset a committee inthe Chrysler Corp. plant in New| vestigator was asigned to gather Castle and Miss Worley worked at! information on *“‘sky-rocketing’ costs the World Bestos factory there, |Of lumber and any unnecessary pay-
|ofts. to middlemen in the distribuU if t 0 tion of housing materials. Nite at unce,
The committee called In top | housing officials from half a dozen | government agencies yesterday to | get latest facts on the housing situJaton, Committee members were told hat : : Green Asks Merger . Lab L | The nation needs 1500,000 new Against anor LAW. housing. units annually, CHICAGO, Sept. 11 (U. P.).—The| Because of high costs, home-buy-1A. F, of L. and C. I. O. must unite erg would buy only 820,000 units, immediately if they are to defeat even if more were available, congressmen who voted for. the| gonciryction is increasing, and:
Taft-Hartley act, A. F. of L. Presi- 450300 units will be completed in dent William Green said today. | 1047
Mr. Green said he did not think the two union groups could “make a success of one thing by co-operat-ing and working together, if we're
same plane on a round trip to Mexico.
Construction on Increase
Materials in the coming year will too scarce to allow the conIstruction of-even 1 million units, | out fighting somewhere else over More than two-thirds of avail-| something else.” able construction laborers are en-| He said the matter of setting up | gaged in building other than homes. !
to the absence of one of the county |™ons for piecemeal relief. His co-
leader of the senate, Senator Robert |
|of the powerful house appropria-
The structure would be erected on, tions committee declined to express {the north side of the present os ion 0] Tien y pee, court house square surrounded by! Sho e ca saying -he not, sq ed [have engigh Information, Seems % lave Shared elk minds." For Co- -0 eration 4 However, Rep. Clarence Cannon] e Vp est With: them
ranking minority mem-|
and county offices, the police sta-|{ber of Taber's committee, said he
tion, sheriff's office and county jail.
was certain there would have to be
The old court house has been con-|a special session.
nsafe and unsanitary A A A 14-year-old boy was held by for several years. The police station Sound Storm Warning police after a passerby had seen) is in a dilapidated condition. | im early today climbing out of a! NE BN
dow at the Banner Home Equip- Hospital Plan Talk Set Set
Plans to .support a drive for,
ST. THOMAS, Virgin Islands, (U. P.: — Government, agencies today took precautionary |
The passerby, Joseph Gammon, establishment of a hospital on the| measures in event that a storm now 25, of 2308 Guilford ave, captured past side will be ‘discussed at e youth. Although the boy tried] meeting at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow of this direction should hit the Virgin 0 beat Mr. Gammon with a bot-|the Mideast Civio Association, Inc. [*180ds. le, he held him until police ar- in gt. Matthews American Lutheran SS —‘—— ‘church, Oxford and E. New York 1 Killed in Bus Crash sts.
least of Martinique and moving in|
CHICAGO, Sept. 11 (U. P.).—Two! { fully- laden buses bound from Chijcago’s north side to the Loop col-!
The Exchange club will hear the jjded on Lake Shore drive today, |
Claypool hotel.
and one woman was killed. Police
injured,
Nobel Prize-Winner Prophesies—
i persons not killed directly by ining scientist said today.
Lexplosions
icinity.
harmful,” Dr. Muller said,
misuse of atomic energy, to resul
causes thousands ofi Th Emutations, or changes, in the genefc system of all persons in the
“A vast majority of mutations are; “and damage enough could probably be acts of
Many Descendants of Americans Who Made Bomb Already Doomed, Dr. Muller Says
CHICAGO, Sept. 11 (U. P.).—A series of atomic wars would wipe Of the explosion, fo cause at least) out mankind by planting tiny delayed action “bombs” in the bodies of the nuclear blasts, a Nobel price-win-
Atomic Wars Would Wipe Out Mankin ‘Delayed Action,’ I. U. Scientist W Moly Spiel pian By elayed Action,’ cientist Warns 3 i ues phism in 3 dviom boi sna vin bo
| kills "100,000 people, enough muta-
A. Taft (R. O), is far from con-| Preliminary plans for the project vinced that the proper information| believed to have discussed the pos- were started a year ago by the Will be available on the foreign ibility of thawing the last $400 Citizens City-County Building com- picture before the first of the year| million of the American loan, frozen mittee, a sub-group of the Indian- 2nd the regular session. “iwhen Britain suspended the con-!apolis Post-War Planning commit-| Chairman John ®aber (R. N. Y.)
one powerful organization for the| Senator Joseph R, McCarthy,
would be discussed” at today's ses- mittee, was hopeful that many of sion of the A. F. of L. executive the present bottlenecks in. housing! council’s_regular quarterly meeting can be worked out through, con= ere. ferences with representatives of la- | | ‘Work Out Details’ bor and housing and real estate A. F. of L. and C. I. O. officers interests, {have agreed already that the mer- Tree og {ger is “absolutely necessary” and |that it is only necessary to “work emmer S S lout the details.”
However, he said, C. I. O. officers
(again to find out whether they” ve| {repudiated the agreements we {reached in our meetings with them !ion between township, county and last May,” he said. city governments was stressed by | Mr., Green did not indicate Willlam H. Wemmer, Republican | whether he had contacted C. I. O. | mayoralty candidate, in a speech | \officers to arrange for new merger 8¢ Mars Hill last night. negotiations but sald he was anxious| Speaking before Decatur township | to hold such a meeting. | Republicans, Mr. Wemmer sald the {interests of residents outside In-
6 y dianapolis are interlocked with Shaw Not Broke, {those of municipal government. |
“I want to achieve a metropolitan | Tired of Donating | city that will be of benefit to LONDON, Sept. 11
(U. P.).— suburban residents,” he said. George Bernard Shaw assured his| 15 another noon luncheon s peech friends in New York today that he dav before the Marion © ount; {may be hard up but isn't broke, y y | “Fm not what some people would wemmer pledged, if elected, to apjcall a poor man,” he sald in reply point boards that will act to achieve
ito reports he'd given away all his |. rooressive and efficient adminis|money. “But the fact is I have no! tration.”
'spare cash. p———————— |
| “I wish everybody would under- Tavern ‘Friends’
(stand that, for I'm completely tired : lof receiving begging letters from ‘Roll Man of $110 Charles Magnar, 2014 N, Illinois
{people I have never met and have! never heard of. in my life. These gt told police today he was “rolled” {begging letters arrive with almost of ‘$110 by two men he had met in [every post. a tavern, “Why does everybody pick on me He said they later rented a roo
[the bottom of the business.” | bilifold were missng
Wyoming, the preceding week, polio cases reached 823, compared with 602 for | the week before, The epidemic ini Ohio, reported IN8 of the Producers’ council in New ito be centered in the Akron area, York from Oct. 1 to 3, for more than half of Cause the increase as Ohio jumped from|be Merritt Harrison, president of climbed between strands of the 139 to 105 cases officially reported.|Indiana Society. of _Architects; J.|fence. He said he borrowed the gun Other states with increased num- Lloyd Allen, Edward O. Hunter,|ITom a friend in Clerniont for tare
|accounted
The necessity for close co-opera- | '
[Council of Republican Women, Mr."
| tions may have beén implanted in'*
| the survivors, living on the fringes|
as many ‘genetic deaths as the original blast.
“In other words, there have been [EVENTS TODAY
November Municipal Flection—Open | from 2 to 9
in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists that radiation from atomic minute time-bombs inthe survi- wetre Dame: Reunion—9 jm. to1p m,
{human gene covery.”
t
. determines’ the ristics of the body.
, on the average, a
vors’ germ cells, resulting in in time Bycsesd In Sesroving he spattering of hundreds of thusands|
Dr. Muller won the Noble prize last lor hig res Shes JNO je delayed action “bombs” finally 80, oem §. Marion county Past Matrens and
ff, thé mutated genes will have : and on the gene system as a whole.| 2% { done if there were a world-wide He explained that the gene is the bescume spread’ portion of the cell structure which World.
the genetic dying-out of & NUM-/ germ ines whether children will re-| He said that many descendants of Branch Offices for Re ber of people equal to several times, in yember
t more than the population of the the, father or the mo her,
physical | scientists who developed the bomb | Crpok on
| ‘e may say that for every muta"that. occurs in the geretic blasts at Hiroshima and Nagasaki : a genetic ie Biv of vou Wit mt, eventunlly 08 bigger Ng ecier none Some 11, however, the exposure fo the result.” he said. 2 n i Hom wets ‘repuued ft this was} “When an «atomic bomb is su ene 1 your on imaginations, he At
al 1 Either Mansion. League of Women Voters—10 hn Mm, YY w.! | Fie i ‘ot a serfes of lectures by Dr, William of deaths from now on through the| "Robinson Birmingham, Brgland—Butler very distant future,” he said. | | miversity 1 a. m.
He added that by the time the | Minar Boke] Aoticr.
Patrons assoclation—6:30 Masonic temple,
p. m. dinner |
throughout the Ee——— 'EVENTS TOMORROW
tration of "Voters | musle I elections—Open My i) to 9
Creek Pardon club Flower Show Crooked Creek school audi-
Americans — including those of
—probably will die as a result of oi um. ree
“hereditary injuries” caused by. the.
C. five-day conference—Cloges in the Tndjanspoii “Athlelit club. ————
“The effect on the future, of the, BIRTHS he a a
Being contemplated, 1 must At St. Franc umes, » Marcella Bustace «= Chester, Spall;
] Donia, Fines : bo; Cin, "tn
4 } Branch Offices for Registration of Voters ai Dr. H. P. Muller, professor of zoology at Indiana’ tiniversity, wrote| plarited hundreds of thousands of in
ve — In Indianapolis
| Mary McKinney, Leonard, Betty McCay Vincent's—Ketineth, Polly Haehl: nard, Irma Gray, Curtis, Mary Baker At Home=Lewis, Alma Weigand, 911 E Pleasant Run; James, Charlene Gibson, 730 N. Senate; Willie, Ada Owens, 955 W. Pearl; Jefferson, Laura Holloway, 922 | B. Benate;, G. B., Betty Spears, 514 N.|
1 Bheflield.
of Automotive Engineers, Indiana At $(. Franeis- Prederick, Bettie Scott; | ayiation -meeting-—following 17
Fred, Rosa Sedan |At Coleman—Harold, Patricia Reid At atoll, Virginia Ardelean; John, Marie _Schurmann; Clarence, | Clara Portner;- George, Loretta Marks: | John, Mary Wolmer, Alvin, Anna Buck, Havold, Katherine Sledge; Charles, Ruth pton: John, Isabel Kroeger, Wes og heima Landon, a St, Vineent's—Thomas, Mat” Black-
|
well; Virgil, . na a ki Everett, Joan | Glufr; Allen; Harry, Alice Crawford; rt ia Betty Toble, X a wiin—— DEATHS
| Broughton Avert 7 Nietchor Bartlet, o at General, Julia A. Reynolds, vio a - "19% Lexington, |: * william ee 2 9, LL Mount, i Tt, Blt w.. Washing. a
from Weston airport in New Castle. —A joint house-senate committee compared with 53 cases for the pre-|Earl Russ, architects, and F,. H. were today blueprinted plans for a na-ceding week, and Indiana which. Stout experienced fliers and -only recent- tion-wide inquiry into housing. The increased from 7 to 28 cases. lengineers.
STRAUSS SAYS:
BOYS' FOOTWEAR (LIKE DAD'S) IS ON it THE FIRST FLOOR ; MEZZANINE
WHITE ELK Plain Toe Oxford 8/3 to 123.50
BROWN ELK Scuff Proof Tip Blucher Oxford
8!/3—12 and 12/3 t0 2
Tan and White SADDLE OXFORD Sizes | to 6.85
’
L STRAUSS & C0, w THE
« The will talk on _re- 810%
victim, Edward Gerrard,
|chandise division, N, Illinois st, was discovered
{funeral -home -in Brownsburg. He announce plans for sending | (was taken to General hospital by {delegates to the annual fall meet- ambulance.
Before Mr, Gerrard lapsed inte unconsciousness, he told state police officers the gun discharged as he
twill
Other guests at the luncheon will!
Earlier, the pair had taken off, WASHINGTON. Sept. 11 (U. P). bers included New York with 95, Robert Frost Daggett and Willlam|8et practice, Mr. Gerrard 1s employed a$ Plant 5 of the Allison Division or - * General Motors Corp. >
and Charles Ammerman,
Official SCOUT OXFORDS Cro-Cord Sole Sizes | to 6, 7.25 Sizes 6!/; to |0— 8.50
TROUPER MOCCASIN Cro-Cord Soles ] Sizes | to 65.50 Sizes 6/3 to 10—6.50
4.95
Gillie Tie BLUCHER: MOCCASIN Sizes | to 67.50
Bi
G00D FOOTING FOR BOYS OF ALL AGES
(First Floor Mezzanine)
GOOD in leathers—and lasts~—and in construction. Fitted by men who know the score —and how to-insure future foot health by putting growing feet into the correct shoes. The fullest value for your money—every time. The ‘pictures give you an idea of the variety. ~~ (We present C Offi cial Scout Oxfords.) 2
S STORE
DAE
\congressional seat\yacated by .the :
latory the roadside” by tunidentiffed
Fae 3 .
hd
SE i. £
Soo’
