Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1947 — Page 3
oem L FRIDAY, OCT. 24, 1047 ___ a _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _._ | PAGE'S
i Indiana Police South Side: ‘We're Sick and Tired of Dumps’
(Continued From Page One) vertising in the Commercial — or cording to the board. Residents, Board President Blaine H. Mill On Lookout for without asking the residents wheth. &0Y other Indianapolis newspaner feel otherwise. er said he thought the deal was i Shelton Killers
they cared, |for ‘that matter. Ta. : [squarely in the interest of the ity. er y ; | Legal details have not yct been comThe residents did care. They il-| The board contends it acted .e- WHAT the Works Board never pleted in the transaction except for | lustrated that by filing suit appeal- gally. The American Can Jo. pur- bothered to tell these householders f 2p
the street vacations. ling the city's ruling and asking|ciased the property abutting the Was that it made a private defi sq one gingleton St. housewife
| damages. block vacated, and therefore was With the American Can Co. | expresspd. it . | _A quiet residential street, Single. ihe only JeOperty owner directly uf. aL, bond Sw APpeY 90 rpans “Just what do they think we are { |ton is easy access to Garfleld Park '®C was the only owner tue Singleton an I eansew ree riown here? Could they do that mn i { Highways Watched | {between East St. and Pleasant Run|beard notified by postal card. alleys for a 57-foot strip of Can Co. ne North Side?” y $1 a | , , The consent of residents livi woperty in preparation lor the & | | Parkway, One day .at the end of] ng property) prep ¢ For Gang Slayers i September, residents awoke io And One and two blocks farther routn eventual underpassing of 8. East TOMORROW—West IndianapoIndiana state police todav watched | part of it being torn up immedi- On Singleton was not needed, ac- St. at the. Belt. lis and the West Side.
i
’, the highways for a gang of killers’ | who, yesterday machine-gunncd| ' Carl Shelton, 59-year-old southern’ | Iinois farmer. |
Shelton, slain as he drove a jeep, along a road near Fairfield, Ili, once |
lately south of the Beit Railroad mechanical devices,” he said. “The war about a week, so he said, “it | tracks. Sto A easing |technique was the same as that used was played up in Poland as a great i ..8. 8 by Hitler. Opposition was intimi- Russian victory, Scarcely any men= | WHEN they learned the ors |dated, its press was censored, radio tion was made of the years the Board had vacated the stree! Tr
| time was denied, many were threat- United States forces battled to inaxe [that the American Can Co. “cnld p S, d S die ened with arrest and exile, loss of it possible all over the Pacific.” 'pui' a new building across it, rey
jo
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: homes and jobs. SWith all her constant 1 battled gang rivals with tanks, ar . i | sonstant campaign mored cars and an airplane. 1 nou. They hes = a (Continued From Page One) “And those’ threats were carried of attacking capitalistic policies of Tllinois authorities warned Hoosier | tg ogi , resist communism,” he said, “we Out in many cases. At least 100 the U, 8." he said, “Russia still police that the desperados, one of : : help ourselves as well as the people persons were murdered for their 0p- does not hesitate to accept. our reatile © whom was believed wounded, might, em ne ar at of those countries to insure peace. pasion Jo the party.” elite cour money and then excoriate us bee ) no ay n Aa ussia’s sa coun- cause we insist upon credit condihave sought haven in Indiana. streets without consui.ing the peo- Appeasement has prqven a failure tries.” Mr. Lane said. “a police state tions.”
Illinois officials feared that the qlaying might touch off a war of i ) getaliation. -
. ” sal ¥ SOUTHERN COUNTIES of Illi-|
ple who live on them. It coniends in meeting the Russian problem, the exists. Such. a So should’ be the board sidestepped the law by former ambassador sald. And One|... 1 the American people BUS LINE APPEAL SET not giving residents proper notice. (Of the greatest mistakes this na-|o) lho it 5 under the swastika | Times State Service Board records show that a reso. tion has made he added, was failure under the hammer and sickle.”! LEBANON, Oct. 24—Hearing on lution to vacate Singleton for bout to tell the American public the |a petition of Victory Coach lines
crim min Police i nois have a long tion of vio-| a half block south of the Beit facts behind executive agreements Cites Press Policy for restoration ‘of “local service Dos Jee porn 13 Sen, el tracks—and thus sever the street/With foreign nations. | Once the police state takes hold,|iyeen Indianapolis and Lafayette, Wars and persana) (fds. ! THIS OWL WASN'T SO WISE — Leonard Brammer holds a big hoot owl [in two—was adopted by the'“oard] “Not only do the people have a he said, the nation comes to Know | iccontinued in July by order of the Authorities feared today that the ht fichi bait whil tina for bass. |Aus. 21. F right to know what their govern- nothing else. He cited the play pyplic Service Commisison, is senedtradition would be continued bys With 45-inch _wingspread which he caught on a fis ing bait while casting . a. ley ie deine he sad “but thelr given the victory over JAPAN In the| Lied for Nov. 24 before th commis. : - , rertis 1 . knowledge of “the facts can give Polish press sion in Indianapolis, # 5 4 echors of the slain. ganggters who tance and was the target of several It WAS advertised in the Indian g g \ p
might seek their own vengeance on Bass Fisherman Lands Owl apolis Commercial’! Aug. 30 and great support to the government it- ‘Although Russia had been in the | sommes the men who riddled him with 15 slugs himself. He told newsmen: |Sept. 6. When no one appearsc self in a crisis.” . , MANY FOREST FIRES or 20 slugs as he drove his jeep. “We know who did it.” for the final hearing Sept. 22, thc) Mr, Lane accused Soviet Russia In the first half of 1947, there along a dusty country road yester-| yi was reported that authorities ‘While Casting i in rave i noard confirmed the resolution. of conducting fraudulert elections Mrs. Manners were 4474 forest
fires in national
day. for Charlie Harris, | | Residents say they didn't &now|in Poland and in other nations en- forests or. on. ad dod prathy Police and sheriff's officers were were sparching Tor : ; Bird With 45-Inch Wing Spread Grabs about the action because ordinarily gulfed by the: iron curtain On Page 6 me > Jaceny Fv Investigating two possible causes for one of the neighbors involved in, eT y apis . . they don't pore over the legal ad-| “The Polish elections were mere, and shoulders, o the slaying. the squabble with Shelton over the | Jitterbug Bait in Mid-Air : oe ONE: It was known that Shelton (cattle. Leonard Brammer pf 326 S. Oakland Ave. went fishing for bass, ® kis warm, : has been actively interested in| Officials believed there might be Wednesday night and-got “all fowled up.” At Ne. Tr Brammer = 0, ff Peon County suming establish ome connection between Sheion's| A lathe oberon Sb SE ena o JM Beamer = i | 5 Ss < . able fo wear neHis SUPHS weed SS dein death and’the ig Jet Saan Shelby County. He had caught one 15-inch bass and then he lost his plug. day night of Virgil Vaughn, a I tter-bug” to his line and was casting again | . ' lawlessness and settled down as a 9° "6 TE le REC 8 a OR rere tee | STRAUSS SAYS: TRADJTION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW esty priced! prosperous farmer. {neighbor of Shelton. Vaughn was in the darkness e saw a flying > : . hado down over the water employee who was fishing with Mr. | i ’ wounded, but not seriously. His shadow swoop i Police thought he may have been . and felt & tug on his line. He for- Brammer, lit a match and the two killed by a rival ring of gamblers assailant escaped. got the shadow. {men saw the sloe-eyes of a hoot : intent on eliminating him {rom Police said that Vaughn was a lowl. partment, the business. {cousin of Harris, who formerly | THINKING HE HAD another, The owl's wing spread measured TWO: Shelton has been involvéd managed an east St.+Louis skating strike, Mr. Brammer jerked the 45 inches. Mr. Brammer believe; ied Floor. recently in a squabble with neigh- | rink that Shelton owned. {line and began reeling in. What- the owl heard the artificial bait Shh bors over cattle which had strayed| Earl Shelton said he believed at ever it was, it hit the gravel pit surface and spin in the water and | SAY Pe off his huge Wayne County farm least one of his uncle’s bullets had bank and “took oft” skyward. [that it made a dive for food. ok and grazed os Hoste pEoperty. struck home. He said he saw the, Mr. Brammer kept on reeling in| Mrs. Brammer and their 3-year- = murderers pick up one of their and landed his catch. Rex John- old son, Donald Lee, were on the A NEPHED, TY Shelton Jr. gang and lift him into their car be- son, another P. R. Mallory & Co. spot. to see the catch. 4 Witnessed the shooting from a dis- fore speeding away. S } 4 T bi F H } od = STRAUSS Battle Over Resolutions SAYS: (Continued From Page One) [tions. The proposed costs is exin banks drawing no ‘interest be Peered » draw fire from some of ns - ‘| distributed to school units to reduce | S Joachen. fetolution expected 10 - in local nm . property taxes in Jocal government meet opposition also hits the teach- a units. . ers pocketbooks. It is one which Although many teachers are said | seeks to increase the present $3.50 = to favor the proposal, many insiders 4. aq to $7 for the coming year. Baroness feel the resolution probably will be | ———— Sling Pump shuttled to the “under advisement” | Hickok to Speak : in black, pigeon hole. : _ Highlights of the afternoon ses- 3 1 brown or Two other controversial resolu- Slot wai be an Riresy if Guy y suede— tions may draw spirited debate, Hickok, a director of UNRRA, «na grey} a concert. by Margaret Daum, wi Urge Educational Survey NBC star. i trim. One is a proposal which will be = Tonight, former U. S. ambassa-| £ 10.98 introduced by Executive Secretary | dor to Poland, Arthur Bliss Lane, g a Robert Wyatt which seeks to set will speak on “Our Foreign Policy— ” LH v4 up a 25-man study commission to Right or Wrong,” at Cadle Taber- — ; B 3 survey the state's educational system nacle. | go to survey the state's educational! A choral program by 1000 public | system and make long range im- | school pupils will precede the talk.! provements. | Teachers heard former DePauw, Advocates will warn that the as- University president, Bishop G. sociation wants no “whitewash” sur- Bromley Oxnam, New York, last ' vey, but an extensive study made night as the bishop criticized -— by qualified personnel which will present tactics of combatting comin turn ) require adequate appropria- | neunism. | Sen. Taft Seeks German Veterans | ‘Seek Ghost Town | . . LAS VEGAS, Nev, Oct. 24 (UP) - GOP Nomination The ghost town .of Rhyolite, Nev., oe . . was sought today by 50 disabled, . Fashion Park has a distinctive outlook in the German war veterans who offered . (Continued From Page One) |Mayor E. W. Cragin $10,000 for the matter of clothes—Namely an eas is Former Gov, Harold E. Stassen | uninhabited Sommunity, oe . y y | e offer was ma ayor ' . of Minnesota. | Gragin by Erich Baerwin . relaxed manner—It doesn't strive for 8 y e dt, spokes But Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of mar for the disabled vete i New York is the man they all have ° s Than Yeverans ‘n : : tat i li a . Hamburg, Germany. It suggested . mechanical precision—not a stilted stylize to beat, a fact which is generally ; BARON ESS conceded—despite the . governors a sales price of $10,000 to be repaid - 4 . ATE whtawp dT within 1 10 ) years including interest. stuffed shirt look as though the Makes shoes of quality—of good presidential candidacy. 'here in and expanding suite of 1% t st d out of the band b leathers—shoes that fit—in Mr. Taft and Mr. Dewey knocked, offices. man just stepped out of the band box i Ce each other out in 1940. A bewil-| The biggest job confronting Mr. : . fact—we think they're one of the dered convention stampeded to the Taft and Mr. Brown is to convince (Our inquring reporter reports. that . best—in their field. In the : nomination of the late Wendell L. Republican leaders that the Sena- . esT—In / Hh s Willkie. | tor can get the votes and be elected. he failed to find anyone who Specialty Shop is a varied selection— Mr. Dewey won the 1044 nomina- RIEht ow, a year before the poll- . ' tion almost by default because PB: e publiean consensus " H —0 in fine suede and calf, They ii there was ne strong candidate to ems to be that President Truman | has ever seen a "band box lately ! notable both in fashion—and in oppose him. will run strong race next year
and that the GOP must have a has ever seen a man stepping out of one).
VALUE—at Mr. Taft hopes to make next strong and fast entry to lick him. year's conventien - contest a real horserace — and that is what it Mr Taits wii Industey and, 10 9h probably will be. The dark horse| pny aroiauded among Re howlédge i Fashion Park puts it in these now is Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower,| ,s. PR annou : m i who could come up fast in the the form of n Set men er yf words—quotel event of a convention stalemate. | Johnson of the Ohio Republican | Mr. Taft named Rep. Clarence J. Central Committee. It was in re-| . Brown (R. 0.) to magage his cam- | sponse to a communication of July - “We put into a suit what the best-dressed men demand, namely, paign, assisted by Mrs. Katherine 31 from the committee to Mr. Taft, . i , i Kennedy Brown, national commit- in which Ohio pledged its support life-like naturalness of cut and drape; free, fluid lines; teewoman for Ohio. Campaigni|if he desired to contest for the i i rier Ti Bech Conroe] Lorton a suppleness that fuses with the figure. All this expresses the
red-blooded American desire not to look as if a fellow owns
In Indianapolis the earth, but as if he doesn't give a Boulder Dam ———
black suede. Closed heel— open toe—and
medium heel. 10.98
who owns it. And how it sells clothes, brother! I”
EVENTS TODAY | BIRTHS Closing Day of the Indiana State Teach-| Boys
rs’ ' . nianapelaMatines Musicale, W-Manth- AL BE ViReenéa—Marvin, Susann Harm : The Man's Store has right now—one of AD ater. sation ~ 3 5. | SL aC. Ja, Yo the largest and finest collections of rv ers Mosiation PR m., oleman—Emerson tty Bailey. Max, + World War Memgrial. p. Mary Semenick; Carl, Alice Van Winkle e arges an ines ° a Kociely (through Sat-| Arthur, Betty McDermid, and Michael, ‘ . . y)—8everin Ho argaret Schick. National Renderers Association (through Ag MErgarst Schick. Easter Adams Fashion Park clothing it has ever had— Saturday) “Hotel Lincoln At Methodist — Robert, Elizabeth Smith " Prchanse ub Luncheon—Noon, Claypool mgrold, Dorothy Claunch: Robert, Ruth . Nigh. Argyle, Bonnie. MeClain JPAvid and we shall conclude our remarks ppd , Myra Powers; Garnett, Helen FrankEVENTS TOMORROW | lin: Prank, Phyllis Stucker. Roger,
si ma Alpha 8 Sorority (through Sunday)— Beaulsh Smith, and Hubert, Anna Nash with the same words that Fashion Park
Indiana State asaciakion of Baal Brith Gita (through Sunday)-~Hotel Linco AL St. Vineent's—L. D, Patty Moore, Wil.
Gorernment. AMajrs School = Claypool liam, Mary Agnes Branton, and Pari : uses—and how it sells clothes, brother
Allie Meredith mer | At St, Francls—Gus, Jane Mascari: George, MARRIAGE LICENSES James E. Jackson, 173 Bright; Willie B.|
Alberta Hartl; Nolan, Marjorie Boles, Smith, 326 N. California.
» Harvey O. Craig, RR. 15. Box 118. noe brougn; Donovan. Eiaine Noland. Mi- : The Suits begin at $68 and go easily upward
Mae Pratt, 3411 Broadwa chael, Prances Prelepa; Vernon, Helen John Sherron, 2084 Bellefontaine; Evelyn| alt aks. and Dr. Harry, Margaret Ellis.
Knox. 1244 Roache. ethodist—Ralph, Denita MeClellan; . $90 Th T b : $60 od : Linder: K eth, Pri ; sylvester RT Joop Eastern; Rose | OT nae an a Arne fo . e opcoats eqgin at an go Oswald D. Briony “1319 Si Chester; Edith ers {AL
| and aque ’ " Annabelle Breiinaupt, 1987 Gilbert Home—Willard, Ruth Cameron, 2433 N. | d 13 William O, ae Sh enim | Alabama, and Jay, Margaret Milliser, ‘ eas/ y upwar . 95 Sg Dorothy Nae, ailing, Sat Penal ak 4 Fowler A N. Park 30 N. Kealing. : h iol ’ — hy i aan’ | : sbi Norbert ay. 3038 N. Greensburg; sarah DEATHS ' own, 1093 \ nie Woodfil, Greensburg. : Bugene Baliscd, 4 at 1% E 10th, “ar-
z 1. STRAUSS & co. INC. ["s: a na: Dues 1 Re Bet a sw. Ti
i : Erskine Freeman, 1714 Pierson; Lorraine = ooionary occlusion, ce buttons, THE “SPEEIALTY SHOP pons, y Siena 2782. Parts: Mary Dolly M aresls, 78, at 410 N. Temple, lack, 16. : J Kenwood. Jaronardttia. : : : +1098 : a Join FH Hau ; 344 Beliefontaine; ‘Lola {Henny Five. TB. a0. X. New Jersey, i : A F | “ a is ON THE THIRD FLOOR Jo enn } 4826 Bra Bdith M. Preston, | BT emo Buzanne a rt at 604 N. 3 . Ly ia Sn ky floor | de L yvar sive hii \ : : ty Cie dson, 0x Orgs, Rove Elizabeth Hla Pell, 76, at Methodist, ean- ; ) HR » |
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ir swishing, of rustling as the tune
