Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1948 — Page 13
THURSDAY, MAR. 11, 1048
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Sun-kissed John L. Lewis is just back from a month in Florida, but won't say when he intends sending the coal operators that promised letter.
has had outstanding since Feb. 2 formal notice that a national controversy exists, plus a threat to “independent action” if the industry Mr. Perkins fails to come to terms with him on paying $100-a-month pensions te aged coal miners. . Ezra Van Horn of Cleveland, who is the operator member of the board of trustees for ttre union’s big welfare fundewhich is collected from a tax of 10 cents a ton on coal production— also is back in town. Other . leading operators are expected here in mid-week for a meeting of Interior Secretary. Krug’s Coal Advisory Committee. So there could be parieys. May Wait As time rolls by and one possible deadline after another {passes it becomes that much more likely that the miners’ chief may wait until late June heiore attempting> any decisive action. This theory originates in. re-
ONE WILL BE R
OSE QUEEN—Butler University freshmen men will choose one of these girls to be Freshman Rose. She will preside at the annual first-year dance
for Sale
As Balkanites PARIS, Mar. 11—How'd you like to own a house in Budapest, or a villa at Abbazia on the Dalmatian coast? . Your chances of getting one. at bargain prices—are excellent —if you'd care to live on that side of the Iron Curtain. " For some strange reason, |wealthy Balkanites seem 0 think capitalism has no future in their countries, Consequently, ever since Soviet control became obe vious, they heve been fleeing westward. Recently the real estate advere tising sections of. French newss papers have blossomed fourth with offers to exchange houses and lands in France. Rumor has it that Belgian, Dutch and Swiss papers have beet carrying such offers for
many months,
Copyright, 1048, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Dally News, Inc,
ABit of Good In Bad Weather
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Mar, 11— Weather over most of the country has been bad and good at the same time, during the past seven
tomorrow night in the Murat Temple. Left to right are the Misses Carolyne Black, |days. It has been cold—which
{was mostly bad. It has been wet
Alpha Chi Omega; Doris Mavity, Delta Gamma; Jean Ann<Bates, Delta Delta Delta: | —which was mostly good.
Marilyn Seiberling, Zeta Tau Alpha; Bette Casler, Independent Students Association: Joan Bryant, Trianon; Ellen Cox, Kappa Ka ppa Gamma; Marjorie Stuhldreher, Kappa
Alpha Theta, and Ruth Reed, Pi Beta Phi.
| The cold slowed farm work down and was unfavorable for livestock. The wet (largely in the form of snow) put more moisture in the ground. Incidentally, the
sponsible quarters but like .all
other Lewis rumors is not guar- . anteed. It is that the miners’ 26 Veterans Win ‘ paid vacation of 10 days, starting! Reclamation Drawing
June 25 under the contract, will be the kick-off for'a nation-wide shutdown.
YUMA, Ariz, Mar.
Twenty-six World War II vet-
82 acres. The men selected still must meet final bureau require11 (UP)—|ments to get them.
project, range in size from 25 to| phone Club to Hear Wabash Educator
Dr. W. Norwood Brigance, head | the south from opening in too of the Wabash College speech de-|big a hurry, and getting caught
First name drawn from the 340/partment, will.s ’ .speak at a noon-|by frost later on. When the vacation ends, July|érans learned today they won ain the bowl yesterday was that|luncheon meeting of the Bell Y
snow also blanketed winter-wheat fields against the cold. There was some in the bad: The chill kept fruit buds in
There was also some bad i
5, the miners would simply con- bureau of reclamation drawingiof John Snyder, Dalmatia, Pa. |Telephone Club of Indianapolis to| the good: The wet slowed down tinue their fishing and other rec- Sut homestond farms in the Yuma {who got a 70-acre farm near the/be held Monday in the Indian-|farm work in the south, where redtion until the operators signed | €Y
2 PAGE13
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Mexican border. Another winner|apolis Athletic Club. 4 new contract. Their finances| Ln farms, some on the reser-iwas Roy KE. Freeman, Wilder,
would be helped by the $100 pay- vation division of the Yumailda.
early spring plowing and planing He will discuss “The Crop Was | are already fully two weeks be« Not a Fallure.” hind schedule.
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ment for the vacation. Lawyers don't agree on | whether such an extension of the vacation would violate the TaftHartley law's requirement of notices for termination of a contract—particularly as the present document specifies that miners need be expected to show up only when they are “able and willing to work.”
Patent Granted On Square Wheels
WASHINGTON, Square wheels are usually taken as the very type and s'mbol of transportational snafu; yet an English inventor, Otto Singer lof London, has just taken out U. 8. Patent 2,437,407 on wheels--with-corners that look as though they would work. Actually, Mr. Singer's wheels aren’t square, but oblong with a slight bulge on their sides. Their rims consist of a series of six or eight plates, their spokes are a series of toggle joints op|erated by the gear-toothed hub | through a series of egg-shaped |gears, or alternately through a| series of sprocket-wheels and| chains. They are intended as groundengaging equipment for tractors or tanks, to replace the heavy, clanky treads now in use. The inventor says they are much less |noisy = than present-day tracktreads.
Brand Tavern ‘As Bookie Joint
| A tavern at 132 W. Maryland | St. was branded by police yester{day as a bookie joint, while a {notorious horse book establish|raent two doors away operated lat full speed. | Pat Collins, the tavern owner, | was charged with keeping a| gaming house after a policeman |said he placed a $2 bet with El |Seddon, an employee. was charged with ‘gaming. In other raids, police charged James 8S. Rice, co-owner of a pharmacy at 1702 E. Minnesota {St., with violating the 1935 slot| {machine act. Pplice said they| {found a pinball machine paying| | off. This - charge also was filed] |against John Burris, an employee {of Smith's Tavern, 1704 E. Min{nesota St., when police said they found the same situation there.
Variety Store Rifled; ‘Police Hold Suspect
| Police today held a suspect in| the burglary a few hours earlier jot the South West Variety Store,! {961 S. West St.,, where $85 was. |stolen. | | Mp%t of these funds were from la postal substation operated in| ithe establishment, according to, {AL J. orge, owner. | Police found a rear wall had] {been broken into to provide en-! |try. The combination had been {knocked off a safe in the store.
‘Woman_Hurt in Fall | lighting From Trolley |
{- A passenger on a trolley last {night fell in alighting and was
{injured slightly. The victim, Lillian Ware, 909 Marion Ave. was treated “at |General Hospital. She fell at {Marion and Oliver Aves, near her home, police said.
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