Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 October 1947 — Page 6

PAGE 8

~ William H.

To ‘Our Fa

' (Continued From Page One)

are considerifig sn alternative plan. this nuisance. _ “As to Madison and Kentucky| “Brightwood also has complained Commentary Aves. these are state highways.

shall use all the influence

if I'm in office to get the State Highway Commission to place those intend as soon as possible to have| nc (nat 1s done at election high on their priority of improve- the question of adequate Nghting time 4; /

ments.

“Il needle ‘em just as much 88 Brightwood is the worst in the city, We are not scraping the botton of! I can. The trouble is that where i; will be first to be corrected. state higliway maintenance is con-| “you ask, can the city and county a great deal of trouble to get money,

cerned in Indianapolis, we are 1

competition with needed improve- gard to the Keystone Ave. bridges. eye on expenditures in these high-|

ments in the rest of the state,

“In regard to the 8S. East Bl early conference with county of- don’t extend ourselves too much, separation project, that raises the ficials to determine what the city question of Singleton St. Singleton can do to open up this obvious bot-

was one of the streets vacated,

“It was found the city had to| “The sewer improvement program

have some of the land owed by th

American Can Co, a 57-foot strip out, on 8. East St, to go ahead with

separation,

"Tam informed the can company unsatisfactory. was planning a large " expansion stay. They wash out, They are a

program and intended to use tha ground for building.

with the improvements on it,

“They were willing to change everything it can to find means of administration I'd probably be try- ; their building plans and deed the installing sidewslks in areas where ing to hoodwink the public, in Al's headquarters and the caller iden- Early in the summer, after Presitified himself as a Texas policeman dent Truman had intervened to as-

57 feet to the city if they could schoolchildren ought to have them = 0 was motoring through Balti- sure them of permission to

in exchange expansion

“The feeling was it must be done now to show good faith, so that a change of administration wouldn't

be given something to take care of their project,

leave them high and dry,

“When the separation is completed at S. East, there will be no need for Singleton as a through street. I think it is foresighted to protect an avenue of expansion for But I also believe that where you're going into residential districts on a thing like this,

the South Side.

: It would be, “I'm not sure of my improvement! foolish to allow them to build and law—it has been a long time since then condemn the ground later I've had to refer to it—but I can

i hod RA

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Wemmer Replies ir City’ Questions

wi a mayor's power to eliminate as a safety measufe and where resi: Shin ¥ dents don't petition for the walks,

Homer Dugger Honored by Navy

Plant | here,

“I think questions of the kind 9 cently.

asked in The Times Survéy ought to {be a regular feature, rather than

Tiit needs brightening up from the standpoint of street illumination, I

{looked into. If the lighting in| “Indianapolis is a well-to-do eity. |

five years,

the barrel. We don’t have to go to!

Nn get together on the problem in re- but we have got to keep an eagle

“The answer is yes. There will be an priced times. We have to see we Mr. Dugger pag

“One of our difficulties in render- of the main plant building.

[tleneck.

e for Forest Manor will be carried with industry to get good help. 'ee’s life from death by bleeding.” “We lose a lot of our good employees because of that fact, But in fairness, we have many excellent employees who have stayed with the city because they have an interest

in it,

“As to temporary sidewalks, we have tried it. I believe they are Cinders will not

Texan Tip Tops On Detour Tips

t constant irritation, BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. 27 (UP) the city, but we are going to have to live within our means. If I did (assure everyone the city will do any more than promise an efficient 8g¢ has arrived, His telephone rang last night

(Al Feeney) words.”

mtorr mers i a |

— w ‘Mrs. Harvey to Present more and was lost on a detour,

Pupils in Recital { “Mrs. Irene Bishop Harvey will yor present her pupils in a marimba re- |

Hasty Bandits Ge . $186, Miss 199 cital at 3 ‘p. m. next Sunday in ge eq where the Texan was calling | Third Christian Church, 17th 8t.|¢rom

t {and Broadway. | Flee After Tying | They will be assisted by Ruthgnswer.

Attendant With Belt | Ellen Fark, Mary Margaret Sutton,! pefore Sgt. Murphy could recover Two stickup men early today took Marjorie Ball and Janet Wray, pu-|trom that one, his caller reported $186 from an 18-year-old filling Pls of Ruth Gentry Edwards, andipe had just driven off the detour station attendant, but overlooked [bY Ann Freeman, a student of Jes-|,nd was back on the highway, another $99 in their haste. {sie Thiebaud Clapp. ‘ ners Sessa

all the people affected should be] The youth, Dale Hommel, em-| Others appearing on Sunday's| gin Movements

notified. Transportation

“Necessity and public pressure

will do this job. for us, as shown by, oo . = few minutes later and Wright, Suzanne McLaughlin, Carol trom Valparaiso the opening of the Merfdian-Gol- '

den Hill line for North Indianap-

olis. I think iu 1s up to the city

administration to use all of its in-

{ fluence with the transit company] Tavern Burglarised | . -. . to secure adequate. transportation Two taverns were burglarized! IS in By for all parts of the city. I think 4 ing the night, the Dells, 2120 E, W the city and aid in raaking surveys .., ‘St. and Cooper's tavern, 2001

as the necessity for new lines. But nv wo aio gy Dies in Home

we cannot force the company 10 “nine cases of whisky and $30 were

loss.”

and Trash

run lines ¥ ?

Garbage “1 hate the open much as anyone in the city. New, modern equipment has been or- . dered and it should be delivered 5001. » ’ “It will save wear and tear on garbage caus since it will enable the men to dump the cans into the

vehicle at a much lower level, I Man

think the new equipment itself will salve a great deal of battered garbage can complaints.

id him Expansion and Planning “In the aqrderly development of the city, there should be regulation been gained through a broken winof development. I see no way of dow. They found nothing missing. doing that in areas now lying out. : side of city limits. That is a matler N. Haugh St, last night held an Indianapolis, six grandchildren and

for the county planning board.

“I want to see that the city Is He is Howard Pendergast, 28, of Martin L. Taylor

able to give services to any new area before it comes into the city. “You ask the question of whether the city should require new additions to be fully improved before taking them in. “I would like to study that question. In some cases, I think it would be putting the city in a difficult position to make that requirement, although personally I would like to see it “1 intend to carry out the plans in existence for the betterment of our city. As to the question will these plans be speeded up or delayed in the next administration, I can say If I am elected I shall speed them to the fullest extent.

Irvington “Can time limit parking be enforced? I say yes. On the question of overtime parking in Irvington, I sympathize with the business people in thelr dilemma. “It would be difficult for me to choose, were I one of them, between enforcement of parking rules for overtime shoppers at the. risk of offending my own customers or continued lack of enforcement at the expense of depriving my customers of parking space for themselves “Bat as a candidate, I can take only one stand. Every city ‘ordinance should be enforced. If Irvington business men and residents desire the elimination of the 90minute parking limit in their section. 1 shall co-operate with them to have it removed. 1 believe the eventual solution to parking prob. lems of this kind is off-street parkIng facilities “You mention the problem of school children crossing the tracks on 8. Arlington Ave. I. would be very interested in getting adequate protection at crossings near schools. “The Arlington Ave, bridge over Pleasant Run should be widened. I nearly had an accident there my--self.

Brightwood and Forest Manor

“The crossing at Sherman Drive land Miller, Indianapolis, in April and Mamcaties ave no vero, 20 Jr, Milks boos ve one, n't know what can! I haven't studied "41 and one foot Severed.

be done there it, but it should and will be studied

“The widening of Massachusetts Paralyzed Woman, J 0, ‘Heads Conference Ave. is a reasonghle request, but = | Fro D t at present it is under state control |G WIS m Lea I also feel the request that something be done about Sherman Drive yesterday lay helpless for two hours) headed as president today the new-

is sound and reasonable. It should be included in the program now

under way.

pir carts as police sald. Two cigaret machines

ployed at the Jackson Oil Co. 2080 Program include: Christie and Val- alia Prem Kentucky Ave, was tied up with eria Phillips, Sandra Jane Stout, Ship movements scheduled today: his own belt to a towel rack in the David Roberts, Bobby Castor, Mary! Arriving New York — Gripsholm, from

O b ; Brni® Pyle, from Bremerhaven; filling station. He pulled loose, Beth Wright, Janice Miles, Ruth | dam. from Rotterdam; Santa Maria, De th New York--Marshal Govorov, (called police. and Lolita Washmuth, Lois Ann, a. Cape Isabel, to Cristobal;

Most of the loot, $111, was taken Goodnough, Carolyn Hartman and Santa Clara, to Cartagena.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

"| ‘The Commanding Officer's Meri- : torious Conduct Letter was awarded to Homer D. Dugger, 5665 E. Bt. puja BEACH, Fia., Oct. 27 (UP) Clair St, at ceremonies at the Twenty-four European refugees military mission and air force per

Naval Ordnance spent their 58th day aboard a lit-|sonnel at the Habbinieh re-!tle two-masted sloop today.

Mr, Dugger, an!privation and ahead at the

employee of the plant for the last None has American entry papers.

was/ given the award galing vessels in the past 1 for administering reached its haven in this country

first aid to anoth- py, was kept under immigration er employee Who control, P {nah told 3000 women of the Hadas- |

fallen ap-! proximately 40 feet from the roof .... the “Svea Malmon.” ing services is that salaries of city! The letter cited Mr. Dugger “for,

employees are too low compared meritorious conduct In effecting the with industry. We have to compete possible saving of a fellow employ- |} ey would bs ¥ 0 thelr |

“I want everything I can get for _p.iice sgt. Herbert Murphy is willing to admit today the modern authorities for several months al-|

at take jobs there.

How, he wanted to know, could turned to this country as immihe get back on the road to New grants under quota, :

Somewhat puzzled, Sgt. Murphy

“Prom my automobile,” was the

| |

u Ship Refugees | Forers From ha Be

~

Standard Oil Co.'%f New Jersey has Center Fund.

| & ey Om I i ! | "announced last night that it had'g : withdrawn its troops from Iraq, except for a small liquidation force, a

They looked back at fear and! {mansions of.American mil

The group, fifth of its kind to’ find a way across the A

nths,| of “trouble,” Abraham Feinberg, |

| president of Americans for Haga-

X {sah, women's Zionist organization| The refugees were not allowed fo convening here yesterday. i

Capt. Peteris Licls, 33, and’ who! POWDER PUFF

speaks eight languages, said they’ ” left Bweden because of fear that

:

- SERVICE /

tive Baltic countries, Estonia and | ° Latvia, now under Russian control.’ Three similar parties, totaling 49 persons, docked at Miami in a six{week period last year. A fourth ar-. rived in Savannah, Ga, several weeks ago. }

| The Miami group was held by

\ WET WASH | 18h $125

ROUGH DRY, FLAT IRON \ 5 Finish, Dry Cleaning

though the men were paroled to,

stay, | {they were taken to Nassau and re-

BEAUTIFULLY IRONED

|

from a safe. The $99 was hidden Carol Ottinger, in a box, police were told,

___ MONDAY, OCP: 27, 141 ES 1 D |contributed $250,000 to the New NEW YORK, Oct. 27 (UP)—The York University-Bellevue Médical

Jy BARGAIN Sesizze

s—

l { ; \ / VEOS Sanu | : PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE ~~ | on ram | Life of Building | UNGIN 3 tf +) ON STEEL | ~ Z TILE Hea | h KE ere [1 ] LAUNDRY 5 sali TH] | Srey PPTs AND DRY CLEANERS HAUPTSN San, HAS | "933 E. MARKET ST. FR-1414

{stolep~ after burglars entered the

Dells by breaking a door glass, Wife of Late Pastor

and a juke-box also were pilfered, | I Long Time Entering through a coal bin, bur-| . zg Henrietta Louise Clippinger, glars at thé other establishment soq) . washington Blvd. died yesobtained nothing but change from a terday in her home after an ex-Juke-box, Loren Cooper, the OWNer.+ionded illness. The wife of the [0 police, rv. 40 night wate [late Rev. Henry C. Clippinger, she | -Ambrose Lowry, 48, night watch- gg, gg, « : ‘at Washington High School, = A resident of Greenwood for a gh How BY 8 vell-difue sna number of years, she came here ‘ § i police were told. The prowler shoved Dicey | orvices i a -Held in ainst a wall and fled, he said. |" mortuary in a Seize § ‘ ’ with burial there, Mrs. Clippinger unpes tlle. Police said entry apparently had was bon in Evansville She is survived by two children, | Mrs. Stanley L. Scott, Washington,

Two residents of the 700 black,/D- C. and H. Foster Clippinger.

|alleged prowler until police arrived. 5X Sreat-grandchildren.

3152 Winfield St. charged with va|grancy and peeping. » { Funeral services for Martin L.

| ; Taylor, 2737 Station St, will be | Police dragged Fall Creek for sev- | . eral hours yesterday in the belief conducted by the Rev. Russell Ford, that a man may have drowned, Pastor of Cadle Tabernacle. Ar|Henry Vance, 36, of 1811 Martindale angements in charge of Moore 'Ave., told police he saw two men Mortuaries have not been tomsplashing in the water under the Pleted. Northwestern Ave. bridge early yes-| Mr. Martin, who was 64, died Sat-

terday. urday in his home, after an illness One of the men was Clarence of 10 months, Harrison, 43, of 522 Douglas St. A native of Maynardville, Tenn.,

- . : .

—IRON AND STEEL PRODUCTS COST RAILROADS 47% MORE

—FUEL (COAL AND OIL) COSTS RAILROADS 81.9% MORE

— WAGES & WAGE TAXES COST RAILROADS 75.5% MORE

(Only recently an Arbitration Board raised annual wage costs $50,000,000 on the Pennsylvania Roilreed alone.)

{

who was standing in the water and he had lived in Marion County 40 washing his face, police were told years, and for four years he was by Vance. Harrison was charged employed as a foreman with the with drunkenness and vagrancy. Indianapolis Street Commissioner's Robert Maun, 44 ok?818 N. Fast office. He was a member of Forest St, was in General Hospital with a Manor Methodist Church. broken jaw he received early yes-| gyurvivors include his wife, Clara {terday when two men held him up jp Taylor; two daughters, Mrs. Ress Bast and New York Sts. The Bertha Teter and Miss Beulsh Tayrobbers obtained nothing. lor; one son, Robert Taylor, all of

, [Indi lis; ister, Mrs. Doports $2500 Theft, ieee. Heer, rom "on $s Je in Jai

bfother, Lee Taylor, Andersonville, {| George Sigel, 36, Tremont Hotel, Tenn, and three grandchildren.

SrAIRIEL Gates Pledges Aid In Nurse Shortage

night and took his billfold contain‘Ing $3500 in travelers’ checks. He Gov. Gates offered Indiana's full co-operation to help relieve the

was charged with drunkenness. Nothing was taken. from a safe that was entered by burglars ea nation-wide shortage of nurses today in respanse to a telegraphed appeal from Katherine J. Densford,

rly yesterday at the Eastern Motor | Sales Co, 2605 E. Washington St. president of the American Nurses | Association.

police were told. Niss Densford wired governors of all states from her headquarters in Minneapolis, Minn., asking that

Times State Kervice statewide conferences be called “to GREENFIELD, Oct. 27 Judge consider concrete measures to re-

John B. Hinchman of Hancock solve the nursing crisis now facing Circuit Court today ordered a spe- the American public.” ‘

cial venire of 110 persons for pos- : I sible jury service in the “hands. Ihe governor, in a reply pointéd

foot” murder case of Howard Pole out that the State Board of Health lard. is now conducting a campagin with | the ald of hospital 8 The case, venued here from Mar- aid ol adnininraion

{ and other interested groups to speed |lon County and twice continued, is ¢raini and recrul scheduled to open Nov, 3. ng t wmoen for

| nursing. | Pollard, an Indianapolis man, is leh t _| Although he declined to call a charged with the murder of le conference, Gov. Gates said he had)

turned over the appeal to Dr. Le-| roy Burney, state health director, (along with authority to take such action If he thinks it will help.

Call Venire of 110 For Pollard Trial

FT, WAYNE, Oct. 27 (UP)—WilA 70-year-old paralyzed woman/ lard B. Ransom, Indianapolis,

while a fire developed in her home. ly..organized Indiana state confer-| « .» Finally, after a smoldering ences of branches of the National | mattress burst into flames, the|Association for the Advancement of

“Brightwood also objects to low victim, Mrs. Edith Stroup, 4256 Colored People. He was elected, \ flying planes. Regulation of the Rookwood Ave, crawled inch-by- here yesterday. ; ‘height at which a plane may fly is inch to the rear door and called for Advertisement

delegated by law to the state, I help. believe, but I shall do everything) On her way, she took a

telephone MIGNTY FAST RELIEF

ADDRESSES STUDENT FORUM | |" James Eldridge, Midwest director {of the Association for the United

Nations, will address a student fo! 3

=IT’S UNFAIR TO THE PUBLIC—

to deny railroads reasonable increases in freight rates so that service can be improved. While industry is obtaining higher prices to meet its increased costs, it should not overlook its own need for adequate and efficient railroad service — that the country may continue to grow and prosper. Industry is prosperous when the railroads are prosperous. Railroad operating costs have increased more than 65% since 1939. Freight rates have advanced but 28%. An unsound situation which cannot continue.

.

PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF 218,000 STOCRNOLDERS

\ PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ©

No RUB ON

| cum at Herron Art School at 7:30 |p. om. today, id

~FOREST PRODUCTS COST RAILROADS 171.3% MORE

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the National tors Associati ident in 1928,

Helped He helped { Indianapolis as president made honora He was elec the General | sociation last a trustee 40 y He served of the Salve a charter mi Club and the the Indianap« Head He was pr Building and also belonge Street Evang Church, Anc sonic Lodge, Rite and Mu Services Ww Wednesday ir ary. ‘Burial Burvivors Pearl Schum mond Gard Gardner, an Mrs. Eloise Gardner and Indianapolis.

Mrs. Em Services fo 1122 8. She held at 1:30 Wilson Chap burial in New was 65. Mrs. Cox, her home, wa She had lived a member Christian Ch Survivors Wihifred O. Ci

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ler, both of sister, Mrs. Ill, and four

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