Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1947 — Page 1
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58th YEAR—NUMBER 213
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FORECAST: Rain beginning this afternoon to continue through {OMOre OW, Slowly rising temperature. Low tonight, 36. =
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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1947
Siege of Newark—
Old Queen of the Navy Set for Z-Hour Clash With Fireboat Flotilla
Crisis Grows Off Brooklyn as Ship Anchors; Odds Turn Against Jersey Squirt Fleet
By LEO TURNER, United Press Staff Correspondent NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 14—The battleship New Mexico
and her tugboat invasion flotilla dropped anchor in Graves-| \ 5 end Bay off Brooklyn today, around the shoulder of Staten Island from Newark’s battle fleet of two fireboats ordered to “prevent her from entering Newark harbor. ; __Zero hour for the battle of Newark harbor was set for ; 5:30 a.
| |
m. (Indianapolis|ypright “was Staten Island Sound \S Time) tomorrow. The en- and Newark Bay. The crosspiece was the Kill Van Kull.
gineless and -rudderless ONe-| “rue path of the invader was up time queen of the Navy, nudgediine Narrows, through the Kill. ‘hen along by tugboats, arrived too late up Newark Bay, flanked by bayous today to clear the channel. She and duck blinds. ; pulled up to wait for high tide. | The ducks had ducked out early. From the air the watery bat, | Newark harbor is man-made. It tle scene glistened like a crooked juts off at an angle from Newark H. The right upright was the Bay, just above Morse Creek where Brooklyn Narrows that widened the invading force was alerted for into New York Harbor. The left/any surprise sortie.
Fireboats Keep Their Hoses Dry Newark’s fireboats, although out- and ordered his fireboats to keep numbered and rebuffed in their it out with streams of water from
x |fire hoses if necessary. 1 , -1 . ealls of help 1 Tepel the foe, con | The Newark fleet was definitely
tinued to patrol the entrance 10| the underdog. the channel under orders, “don’t| mne invasion fleet—three Coast squirt until you see the whites of yard ships and nine harbor tugs their eyes.” towing the 33,000-ton New Mexico, The Coast Guard assigned three was the favorite. ships to stay at the side of the old] Adm. Halsey, of Pacific war fame, battlewagon, en ‘route to a junk who grew up in Elizabeth,'N. J, reheap which city officials vow won’t!fused to be drawn into the fray. be Newark. Adm. William (Bull) [When asked by a Newark. friend Halsey declined an appeal for ad- how best to block the channel and vice. {prevent the old battleship from enThe lines were drawn at Newark tering the harbor, he replied: channel. There Mayor Vincent J.! “I can’t help on strategy. I don't Murphy has ordered that “they know a damn thing about patrolling shall not pass.” 5 channels. Let your own admirals| He called the ship an “eyesore” work out their blockade.”
British Ask: Is This Civil War?
Mayor Murphy's admiral of the wants to make a junkyard of our fleet, John B. Keenan, the city's seaport.” public safety director who was or- Coast Guard officers said they nad dered by the mayor to block thelassigned the 180-foot tug Tuckahoe, channel, said he would have police an 83-foot cutter, and a 64-foot tug aboard the fireboats to arrest tug-|to escorting the New Mexico up the men on the invasion fleet, if drastic route through New York harbor, measures were required. | past Bergen Point and into Newark | The London Daily Chronicle Channel. | cahled Newark to find out if New Jersey had declared a civil war. { Tuckahoe,” one Coast Guard officer “Let there be no dancing in ‘the said, “but if I was the officer in streets of London,” Mr. Keenan|command and those Newark fire cabled back. “This is no civil war boats began squirting water at me and no insurrection. This is a bat-|—1'd let go with our hoses and tle with a private eorporation whol!sink ‘em in 22 seconds.”
Santa’ Pe, N. M., offered to send; The Santa Fe Press Club wired
reserves to the aid of the battleship, if any were needed. To Mayor Murphy, John E. Baker, editor of the Santa Fe New Mexican, tele-Rio Grande fleet is mythical. graphed: At Atlantic City, New Jersey's “If you are unwilling to give this Gov. Alfred E. Driscoll presented honorable ship a decent burial, we Mayor Murphy with the title of ghall institute action that she be admiral of the fleet and presented floated up the Rio Grande at your [him with a bandleader’s hat. expanse to lie in state at the port| “This is a very unusual hat for of Espanola.” a man who follows the sea,” the The telegram failed to mention Governor said, “but then you have that Espanola is usually dry. |a very unusual navy.”
should call out the Rio Grande fleet if necessary to defend the insult against the state's fair name. The
oO - > F
Urges U.S. to Use Force In Europe Against Reds
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (UP)—Rep. John Davis Lodge (R. Conn.), 8 wartime Navy officer, told the House Foreign Affairs Committee today the United States should use force if necessary to protect the 16 Mar-shall-plan Buropean nations against internal Communist uprisings. Rep. Lodge testified before the House group as the Senate Foreign Relations Committee wound up its separate hearings on the%adminis-
tration’s proposed bill for $597 mil-| m lion to tide the European wa Reich Called Key To Europe Relief pe KE
over until the Marshall Plan can be put to work. bg The Senators heard from John Foster Dulles, a leading Republican foreign policy spokesman, that U. 8.| aid to Europe will only “breed an-|
Rep. Everett M. Dirksen (R. IIL) said teday the “betting abroad” is
that the United States and Rus- (pour money into Europe,” Earl O
Patients to Use
tutions will be provided
“I'm not going to be aboard the|
Gov. Thomas J. Mabry that he|
“Unless the groundwork is laid WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (UP)— |for European recovery through settlement of Germany's status, 1t wiil be futile for the United States to
State Mental Fort Hospital
Building to Take 400 Off Waiting List
Immediate hospitalization of hundreds of mentally ill persons waiting fér commitment to state instithrough use of a large hospital building at Ft. Harrison, it was learned today! Gov. Ralph Gates said he received an order from the U. 8. War Department, granting the state use of a new,” modern hospital building at the fort with accommodations for more than 400 patients. The governor said plans will be made at once to transfer to the, Army hospital scores of non-vio, lent mental patients from state institutions. This will permit commitment to
state institutions of hundreds of patients now being held in jails and other unsaticfactary places 8s
part of a long waiting list for mental treatment, the Governor said. Confer on Operation “Each of the five state mental institutions have long waiting lists which have he n aceolerated by an increase in insanity due to wartime conditions,” he said. Arrangements for -use of the Ft. Harrison = hospital were ‘made’ through ihe eforis-at the Governor and Dr. Norman Beatty, head of the newly created State Mental Health Couneil, The Governor and members of the Health Council were to confer with Dr. Max Bahr, head of the Central State Hospital this afternoon on details for operation of the! Ft. Harrison unit as adjunct to the: state hospital. . The Army granted the state a right to use the hospital for one; year, but Gov. Gates said he| felt sure the rights could be extended at the end of the year.
Hornstein Freed Of ‘Fence’ Charge
Harry Hornstein, Indianapolis| man who was arrested with a group! of New York men in a round-up of alleged “fences,” has been released, | The quintet which included Mr, | Hornstein, 3210. Winthrop Ave. was) {freed after Assistant District As-
|torney Paul F. Reilly moved for
| dence. The charge of receiving stolen
tempts. to dispose of watches stolen from a Manhattan distributor.
Santa Fe Offers to Send Reserves fos grew out of alleged at-
|they just “happened to be in the building” when a man carrying some of the stolen goods was” ar-| rested. {
Car Hits House, Man Killed, 4 Hut
Paul Armstrong, 48, of 225 8S. | Emerson Ave, died today in General Hospital from injuries received, in a spectacular crash in which] four others were injured last night. The | accident occurred at 60th {St. antl Winthrop Ave. when Mr.| | Armstrong's car collided with one| |driven by James R. Cain, 42, of 5233 | N. Capitol Ave., who bounced over a lsidewalk and crashed into the front| {of the Harry E. Ball home at 5950 {Winthrop Ave. | Mr. Cain and his wife, Margaret, |were injured. Mrs. Mildred Armstrong, wife of| the other driver, and their son, John| Armstrong, 17, also were badly hurt, Police arrested Mr. Cain and said | {they will ‘file a reckless driving charge against him. |
U. S. Wins Soviet Bout | Over Korea Commission
Second Hunted
2 Rail Unions | dismissal because of lack of = Reach Wage |
Members of the quintet protested | railroad brotherhoods representing|
about 200,000 operating employees rec i reached an agreement with the na- to recommend all appointments made for City Hall jobs to fill any La : vacancies during tion's major railroads today. agreement calls | hourly wage increase.
| hood of Railroad Trainmen and the | Order of Railway Conductors
active to Nov. 1.
A Damp Week-en
ity Employee urder
§ Another Driver Also Reported On Far N. Side
2 Slayings Likened; Denny, Feeney Meet
Editorial, Page 24; Photos, Page 5
_ A second city employee was sought today for questioning in the shotgun slaying of Mrs. Mary Lois Burney, 39. He drove his city truck into
the drive of a home in the same north suburban district where suspect No. 1, Robert Austin Watts, 95, was prowling ji search of wom- ~ en Wednesday migpning. : In an almost inaudible voice, he asked directions from a housewife, When she stepped up-to-bis truck to hear what he was saying, the > city employee became flustered, mumbled something in an under tone and sped out of the driveway, Terror in the Suburbs "This tenuous clue was the.latest development in the gruesome ikiliing of Mrs. Burney Wednesday afternoon in her home at 8558 N, / {Pennsylvania St. The crime has produced an atmosphere of terror in the Indianapolis suburbs. - Mrs. Burney was found dead at 6 p. m. Wednesday by her husband, Herschel A. Burney, a well-to-do food broker. She was lying across the bed in her bedroom. The left side of her fdce ‘had been shot away by a shotgun blast. Mr. Burney, who has offered a 181000 reward for formation leadling to the capture of the slayer, | was near collapse totiay. dons In Clk
$ Photo by John Bpleklemire, Times Staff Photographer.
George Denny met at City Hall today
INDIANAPOLIS THE TOPIC — Mayor-elect Al Feeney (left) and Mayor for a conference_on municipal problems which the two felt best could be handled jointly.
"Trained Workers to Stay hi
Urges Atack
n Jobs,' Feeney Promises fin Wich Pri oe —— Feeney Yomises On ices
Ki we IRAE
Agreement Calls for | Successors Proposed by MayorElett J 7 Senate Group Urges {City Hall, ving 25 " 15 Vac Hourly Hike | Ina conference at City Hall today, Mayor-elect Al Feeney assured ‘Voluntary Rationing as wag ne subject of & long cot~
workers that there will be no “wholesale firing of trained technical
CHICAGO, Nov. 14 (UP) — TWO po yore when he takes office Jan, 1. WASHINGTON, Nov, 14 (UP)--
Mayor George L. Denny said he had agreed to permit Mr. Posey A congtestiina) oO
of attack on high prices.
Mayor George L. Denny and Al Feeney, Mayor-elect, who met to talk over personnel plans. — 0 EA Coa ” Mayor Denny ordered an investi 0 tia pin ese included volun ration- \ pervisi Mayor Denny said several city «I don't want any city employees ing of meat, butter and By gp mio huphaterd supers - : building inspectors have served no- who are well-trained for their jobs a program of forced rationing if Watts’ admission of roaming around The two unions were the Brother- tice of their resignations and that to feel that they will be fired Jan. that fails to work “quickly and the north segment of Marion Counhe will appoint successors recom- Mr. Feeney said, effectively.” ty in a city truck when he was mended by Mr. Pedhey. | “Of course, in the case of Mriely The group also proposed higher supposed to be working in Uni political jobs, that's another story.” exemptions for dependents of in- versity Heights in the south sege Mayor Denny also agreed to per-, Mr. Feeney did If it does become come tax payers. I ment, 11 miles awa Three other brotherhoods, repre- mit any of Mr. Feeney's depart- necessary to make changes In’ The proposals were submitted to!” Not ‘one—but a trucks apsenting about 150,000 operating ment head appointees to confer with trained technical workers “they will Sen. Robert A. Taft's joint con- | yarently were seen b EY = workers, still are negotiating wages present officials for a “fill-in” on be given plenty of notice to make gressional economic > committee ie suburban area rs Mrs. Burs
and working rules with the rail- their jobs before Jan. 1. {other arrangements.” one of its three price” thvestigating ney was killed roads. " = x i
BE subcommiitees, The sub-group was, What were-th It was the first time that a na- General Requests ere-they doing there?
the next six weeks.
The for a. 15%-cent
The wage increase will be retro-
headed by Sen. Ralph E. Flanders! Both Promise Action
tional wage agreement had been . 4 Germans Hanged tR. Vt.) | “I intend to find : . : . . { out what kind reeled ns id ruirond industry Trial, Refused Groups Fail to Agree lof supervision we have,” Mayor rithout governmen e on. “gw : EE Von WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (UP)- | The Flanders report was handed Denny sald grimly, 8 Ys : to the full committee along with! Mr, Feeney said he would take me Retired Maj. Gen. Bennett E. ther { #4” sob | . : | Meyers requested but the Air another from-a subcommittee head- prompt. action in January when he
| MUNICH, Nov. 14 (UP)—Eight a by Rep George H. Bender (R.|takes office to have every city emal vestigation’ of his War- German. war criminals were hanged J, oth- . groups urged against ployee whose duties” take him near time aviation stock deals, it was: today at Landsberg prison for atro- Festoring price controls but theylor io private homes rigidly checked, disclosed today. cities committed at the Dachau Bgteed on Lie else: d A Sick Shock bY ae Tynes, = eentration © Mr. Flanders’ group urged con- meanwhile, disclose at none — doe rs Ta ar i a for Ae sideration at least of a return tothe City departments which have ment; 9 oer 2 ie ae States filers. consumer rationing of scarce foods, trucks out working have been able | : g | to account for all their employees.
{Force refused to grant a court-
Grid Fans’ Memo:
LOCAL TEMPERATURES A -. executed (Continued on Page 3—Column 2)
6am. ....2% 10a m..... 35 [subcommittee had produced what! Herman .8tolz, 34, was " Ta th. ...20 11am. .37 he called “one-sided” evidence that for leading a mob of German ay ENG vent §am....31 12 (Noon).. 3@ Gen Meyers made money in com- civilians who killed seven American ’ the trucks under ‘its supervision nm 33 1 p.m... . 40 |panies with which he had wartime airmen in Ruesselsheim in 1044. Mg S Denounces were the day of the murder. The . contract relations, | Karl Eggert, 50, was hanged for ; | street commissioner was vague about,
A damp week-end was promised] The court-martial developments shooting a surrendered American residents of Indianapolis and vi~ followed testimony by plane maker flier near Nentershausen.
cinity. Lawrence D. Bell that he let, Others hanged were Alois Hipp,
it. This department recalled *'sev(eral trucks” working in the rorth {end of town.
Foes of Co-ops
Hoosier football fans were also
sia will be at war in four months. UNITED NATIONS HALL,
Mr. Dirksen is chairman of a special joint afmed services-appro-priations committee which surveyed conditions in Europe. He returned to the capital today. Both Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Adm, Chester W. Nimitz, chief of naval operations, said Wednesday they saw no likelihood | of war in the near future. | cannot plan confidently on the basis!
Shreve, president of the United|
\States Chamber of Commerce raid F@USHING, N. Y., Nov. 14 (UP)today. The United Nations General Assem-
Speaking at the annual meeting bly today overrode Soviet objections
lof the Indiana State Chamber of 8nd established a special United Na|Commerce, Mr. Shreve said the link tions commission for Korea. |between the German problem and| The American proposal was ap-| 'the question of business prospects| proved by a vote of 43 to 0 with six lin the United States is a close one, nations abstaining and Russia and
“Certainly American businessmen |the Slav states not participating. Action was taken by the General
% x
-
Assembly after a last-minute attack i War” unless the try J ads °f a boom generated in substaatial ! | her 73 ay aa SE oe part by handouts to Europe,” helon the commission by Soviet rep-| i added. resentatives. - The commission is
Tope. ‘1 Mr. Dulles endorsed State Depart- | ment efforts in behalf of a 40-year German disarmament treaty. He) said if Russia refuses at the London Foreign Ministers’ Council to| (Continued on Page 3—Column 1) s. _ support such a step, the United) es —
States, France and Britain should| Missing Purdue Soph
go ahead without her. or Back From Vacation that Great Britain probably woud
Senate President Arthur Vanden« Times State Service begin to evacuate her 100,000 troops
berg (R., Mich.) said the Senate, Committee would meet in executive| LAFAYETTE, Nov. 14—Murray F.|from Palestine within a month.
in the long run would be better for|tive government in preparation for : |independence.
EVACUATE PALESTINE SOON
LONDON, Nov. 14 (UP)-—An informed Whitehall source said today
$1,053,0000 of wartime subcontracts 36; Franz Frohnapfel, 33; Joseph to a company recommended by Dreiner, Nikolaus Kahies, 32; Gen. Meyers. August Ruhnke, 56, and Kurt Otto,
Mr. Bell said Gen. Meyers told 40.
given the discouraging news they will probably be very uncomfortable tomorrow afternoon in rain-swept
The city asphalt plant had no
Watts Grilled Till 4 A. M.
Some 5000 farmers attending the... assigned in the northern sec= 29th annual convention of the In- (ion of the city
diana Farm. Bureau, Inc, today)
Ble cg i
Mr. Shreve said American loans|empowered to go to Korea, set. up| for the rebuilding of Euorpean|and conduct elections there, assist , economy, rather than stop-gap aid,|the Koreans to establish representa-| 3 hy She 40's today and drop|
football stadiums. him the firm—the Aviation Electric heard a strong defense of co-opera-| peputy sheriffs and state police
The Weather Bureau Predicted Corp. of Vandalia; O.—was owned $40 Million Overpayed tive associations. detectives were continuing their that cloudiness today would de- py “friends” of the Air Force pro- M. J. Briggs, Indiana Farm Bu- questioning of Watts tonight. ! velop into rain early OnigNt|.ement officer. ~~ To Veterans Charged reau Co-operative Association man- grilled him last night and Viol would Sonne ii wo a TT 8ST. LOUIS, Nov. 14 (UP)—gep ager; Sharsw) deraw injeresty on morning until 4 a. m. . Temperatures, however, are ex- Claude I. Bakewell (R. Mb.) said 4g y SW.r0y | He readily admitted his attemptpe Ek fips iki 1]! ampaign today that an investigation by the 0-0pS. ed assault on Mrs. William J. Stout
pected to rise slowly. The mercury reached a high of only 38 here yesterday and dropped to 28 in the early hours this mornling. Temperatures are expected to
“Any talk about special privileges at; 7910 College AV talked enjoyed by the Co=ops in federal in-| freely about 0 pre i $40 million by the. Veterans Admin{C°Me tax regulations is either out- on women in Indianapolis. ‘But istration to ex-GT's. Mr, Bakewel}{T18Nt misrepresentation or a subter-| when asked about the murder, he said very few cases of overpayments fuse for a more sinister motive fori fell silent and stared at his quesIndianapolis Community Pund resulted from fraud. Most, he said, destroying them, by those who would tioners, | workers were warned in a meeting were caused by clerical errors. profit by furnishing these services| Authorities studied a “pattern’— | yesterday that the drive was “bog- Ce reem—r———————— to farmers,” Mr. Briggs sald, |marked by two similarities—in the |ging down” with less than a week ‘ 2. ly ,| Speaking in the Murat theater on slayings of Mrs. Burney and Mrs. {to go. } U.S. Importing Wheat; the second day of the three-day Merrifield and in the Mrs. ander B. Cowan, 86, retired gen-| Repeating a previous declaration 108 Bushels, That Is session, he sald no amount of “vic-\Stout, a few hours before the Burney |eral manager of the Western Tele-| that the fund would not ‘be ex- ry ious name calling ‘and abuse” willlglaying, | graph Co. and veteran of more than | tended. Fermor 8. Cannon, general WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (UR)— turn farmers and co-op leaders In all three cases, buicher knives ‘graph Co. p hai ked th Foreign countries shipped to the] : ‘ |50 years fn the business, died early chairman, asked the workers to 4 rom their goal of strengthening were major clues today. : |redouble their efforts to meet the Dkiifed haan oly 108 bushels of the family-size farm. Mrs. Merrifleld’s throat was : |goal before the deadline Wednes- Wheat in the five months ended) wr Briggs recently returned from |siaghed Nov. 1, ‘Customs Bureau figures re- y {slashed wikh a butcher knife which
House Veterans’ Affairs Subcommit-| tee had disclosed overpayments of
465,000 Short
W. U. Executive Dies DENVER, Nov, 14 (UP)«-Alex-
session next week to begin ( {ting|p, matte, 21-year-old Purdue Unithe emergency relief legislation. | orgity sophomore who had been Rep. Lodge testified on his ob- sought since his disappearance last Pare Monday, returned to his room early (Continued, an’ Page 3—Column 2) (today, explaining that he had taken lan unscheduled “vacation” in Indi-| anapolis and Evansville, | WESTCOTT, England, Nov. 14 Amusements.. 31 Markets 15, ‘The young Navy veteran from|(UP—Dr. J. Schmidt, top German Eddie Ash ... 36 Ruth Millett.. 30 Memphis, Tenn., sophomore in civil rocket scientist brought to Britain Bridge 27 Movies ...... 31 engineering, told J. D. Grants, di-|lo aid in experimental work, was b Classified ;4 39-42 Obituaries 10 rector of men's residence halls, that killed today in an explosion at the Comics 43|F.°C. Othman 23 he felt he needed a rest from his| research station here. Crossword ,.. 43 Radio . 43 sehool work and had taken time oft | One other man was killed and Editorials .... 24 Ruark 23 for his trip, traveling by bus. He| Forum ....... 24 Scherrer .... 24 said he had seen none of the news- blast. A number of other German Gardening ... 28|Society Meta Given... 28|Sports ... 35-37|ance and didn’t:realize he was caus-| injured. . Hollywood ... 23|Teen Topics. . 30|ing worry on the part of university! Becret fuel for rocket propulsion Don, Hoover.. 24|Women.... 27-30 officials. He -plans to resume his e Inside Indpls.. 23) Weather Map 6 class work. ’
Times Index
Top German Rocket Expert“ cumpaen acks more han Killed in Fuel Explosion
eight were injured seriously in the
...... 26 paper reports about his disappear- | scientists were reported among the
The Supply Ministry experiment-tat
vealed today. (Continued on Page 3—Column 5 (Continued on Page 3—Column
000 of reaching the goal of|
namo eo wr wrens NJOPth Carolina Executes 3 | ourpoors— a 904. | Yesterday, “Downtown Division '@ No matter what outdoor
sport is your favorite, you'll read about it in Mare G. Waggener's OUTDO ORS column, : : "@ Up’ to - the - minute hap penings on field or stream —and predictions of things to come—make up this every-Friday column » , . ' another EXCLUSIVE fea-
al station was rocked by the blast. Day,” was the slowest day of the In Gas Chamber for Rape
No plane was involved, officials comnaign according to Mr. Cannon. i reported. The “Downtown Division” reported RALEIGH, N. C.,, Nov. 14 (UP)—| Vernon Litteral, 35, died together “Experiments were being made On $41,775 or 54.1 per cent of its goal. Two tough mountaineers were exe- in the tiny eyanide-filled chamber rockets to assist aircraft takeoffs| Other division reports were spe-| . ..4 in the state pri ol for raping’and slashing Peggy Ruth when the explosion occurred,” a'cial gifts, $170,772 or 88.3 per cent; onc Sle PT son gAs.CIAM* ghore of Elkin, N. C. and leaving spokesman’ said. residential, $43,837 or 54.8 per cent: Der today for raping a 15-year-old per bleeding and sobbing 100 miles The .blast occurred in a concrete township, $3552 or 46.1 per cent; girl in a wild night of terror. A from home. . 1 test’ cubicle isolated At the center! public, $35,762 or 58.1 per cent; in- third rapist died immediately aft-| Willie (Chicken) Little, 43, fol of the station's air field. | dustrial, $235,322 or 56.2 per cent; erward. ! ' | lowed ‘them into the ghs c er.
5
| The country's most secret rocket mercantile, $113,761 or 52.7 per cent; The three executions ran [he] Gov. Gregg Cherry declined tof ture of your experiments and tests with guided commercial, $67,044 or 58.3 per cent; state's execution toll for the vear intervene in the three death cases Times. . 3 | mishiles. were reported carried on railroads, $3609 or 55.2 per cent, and| to 23, tying a record set in 1936, |after a last-minute personal trip TURN TO PAGE 34 : Westcott, utilities, $96.37 or 94.2 per cent, y yesterday. : —
Marvin Claude Bell, 3, and Ralph. 0 the prison
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