Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1948 — Page 13

* with $30,000. itries from Chicage I and three timber rses from the Ok and Polo Club, to the $2000 purse here the Royalton Association has ap. two silver trophies nated for the semi. sature events. lon m te June 12 racing

man's Run — ish course; 2 miles;

3, Stokely Memorial —Qualified hunters; f; 8 jumps; timbep

Plate—Ladies fiat f; 1 mile. ickelshaus Memorial } over turf; timber

mps. Steeplechase Chal. 2 y—212 miles over

ourse, 13 jumps. ridge ler

th Pirates today told Seals, Bob Chesnes, arm when the club

arm in an operation, t and announced the

ue pennant slipping

nsive heart of the ram re-injured ti riginally hurt yesterday during a armup session. And rithing on the field, is supporters writhed here is the chance 2 is lost to the team time, perhaps even

ls downed the Phils AY. ” = » ), Fla~—Catcher Jack headed back to the Senators today irted his major league 39.

ld to. Washington by is Browns yesterday iver price. The Sened Birmingham, 10-3,

» os ” ERNARDINO, Cal ed hit served as the today of Cleveland's y over the St. Louis Che hit by Thurmon ove in two runs to ame. \ owns insisted that. tt made a fair catch. ire ruled he had p ball. = - » A, Fla.— The New ees moved into a 31 the Boston Red Sox 1eir grapefruit series. got to Ellis Kinder ns and Your hits for ry yesterday. Ld = » TRUJILLO, D. R— Reese's sore shoulder Cdward’s infected arm o plague the Brooklyn \p today. Neither has rovement. #” s 2 , Fla.—The Cincinscored a 13-inning ory over Detroit yes-

Bucky Walters of the ped his own cause i a three-run homer, Galan’s double and ress’ subsequent sined the winning runs. I RSI

TONIGHT . 8 '0°CLOCK TAILORING CO.

| the Middle of s. Ave. Ln

the First Block pas ZEPHYR

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‘SATURDAY, MAR. 27,

Presid

Group Rules on 31 Issues

Covers Switchmen, Engineers, Firemen WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 (UP) —A presidential Emergency

Board today recommended a iY cents hourly increase for approxithrea

Three Classes : The increase would put the engineers, firemen and switchmen on the same level with all other railroad employees who have accepted a 153;-cents-an-hour in-

Nov. 1, 1947, Covers

crease. Previously, some informed sources had said that unless the board recommended at least an 18 cents an hour increase and certain. other benefits the engineers, firemen and switchmen would begin walking out in 30 days. The board also recommended pay adjustments to put earnings of yard service employees on a| par with other railroad employees with similar skill and Ye! sponsibilities, In all, the unions requested changes in 25 working rules and the railroad operators. proposed revisions of 15 rules. Act on 37 Rules Thirty-seven working rules were brought to the emergency board which made recommendations on each of the issues, The board refused to recommend extra pay for night shifts or Sunday and holiday work. There also was a recommended adjustment for roadmen on light locomotives weighing less than 140,000 pounds. Other technical recommendations dealt with delays at terminals, dead-heading, overtime work, and minimum guarantees. The three-member fact-find-ing board pointed out that the problems and issues involved were those that only the parties in question could solve. The report now will be given to railroads and the unions. They will have 30 days in which to attempt to reach an agreement.

Grants Injunction Against Printers

Orders ITU to Stop ‘No Contract’ Policy Federal Judge Luther M. Swygert today granted the government’s petition for a temporary injunction against the AFL International Typogtaphical Union. Swygert issued an order .restraining the printers’ union from using a “no contract” policy’ in its relations with newspapers. He ordered the injunction to apply until the issues were set-| tled in connection with a Nation-| al Labor Relations Board hearing on charges that the ITU was guilty of unfair labor practices. The judge also ordered the union to refrain from strikes or slow-downs which are caused by any acts banned by the restraining order. Strike Against 16 Papers Members of the ITU have been in strike against 16 newspapers In nine, cities. The biggest strike has been that against the six Chicago daily newspapers with a total circulation of more than 3 million copies. The Chicago papers have been published by a process which sidesteps the typesetting since the strike started Nov. 24. Chicago publishers have maintained that the basis for the strike was the union's refusal to sign a duct.” The decision said, in effect, that the printers must enter into written agreements with newspaper publishers until the NLRB hearing ends and the NLRB reaches.a decision on the unfair labor practices charges made by the American Newspaper Publishers’ Association. Unfair Practices Swygert said in a “conclusions of law” brief issued in connection with the ruling that “there 1s a probability” that the ITU “has engaged in unfair labor Practices within the meaning of ‘Several sections of the TaftHartley Law).”

WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 (UP) ~The International Typotshoingraphical Union (AFL) said today it plans to appeal immediately the injunction issued against the union in Indianapolis.

STEAK AND CHOPS

1606 N.lilinois st WE CATER TO PARTIES!

1048

AN HOUR with Ralph Norwood is an experi-

ence. He becomes part of you.

You find yourself repeating his sentences as you walk down the street, again at night as you lie in bed. It is the soundness of him, the impact of the truth, as he tells it. It is his unblinking frank eyes looking straight into the light while talks. It is the erect way in which he sits in chair, his little gestures with his hands, the clarity of his thought wrapped up neatly

understand.

‘One wall of his seventh-floor office in the L. Strauss & Co. store, of which he is president and general manager, is all window. Through big buildings at Washington and Illinois huddle about. In the distance he can see a piece of skyline, the far skyline which is the smaller outlying

businesses and the homes.

It is through this window that inspiration

flows.

Occasionally he walks to the big window and looks down into the street at his boss, the public.

The Real Economist

HE SAYS the man in the street knows more about business curves than most of the professionals. He knows more than buyers for the stores. The man in the street knows what he is going to do; the rest of them can only guess. To understand him you have to reach back some 35 years or more into a teller’s cage in an Indianapolis bank. You'll see him standing there serving the customers for his bank, and doing it graciously. As he counted money, if you could have seen inside his head, you would have discovered that he was pondering his own chances in

the world.

No Future There

FINALLY he put it up to the bank, and the officers told him the truth. They told him they had only so much for-pay roll and that he would probably be a teller for a long, long time. {didn’t appeal, so he quit, studied la school and joined L. Strauss &

manager.

He didn’t want a job ‘where he worked by the day and po matter how hard he worked, he was bound to stay where he was. He wanted a job he could take home at night. He wanted to use all of himself. * He learned early the wisdom of measuring eocrt against personal production. While. the government says it needs more production in the factories he believes it really means that it needs more individual production. That shoves the individual ahead, makes him feel he’s getting someplace. And that is our problem today, he points out convincingly, getting more production out of ourselves, more constructive thinking, more physical effort. The store of which he is president, is his work, hobby and consumes nearly all of his time. long ago realized we are an institution, and that . he have to be a part of the community, playing our role as good citizen,” he explains. taught our customers to expect to find what they want. in our store. Take the man who wanted a particular type of cigar cutter. “The cutter was a good one. It didn’t stuff the tobacco back into the cigar. clean and let the cigar draw. My friend said he had tried everywhere. I suggested that he try in The friend said, ‘All right, get me one,’ ” which Mr. Norwood did on his next trip to England

Indianapolis.

don and Paris.

It

He hag traveled. His Btore has offices in LonHe has been to Europe twice, South America, the Hawaiian Islands and many times to the Caribbean. stationed there with the Standard Oil Co. and he

His son, Walter, was

Hoosier Profile

he a in words you it the

THERE'S COURAGE these days in Midwest Americans, says Ralph Norwood, president of L. Strauss & So. Inhibitions have disappeared, in his opinion, and Hoosiers have their feet on

es 15%c Pay Hike For R.R. 15 Greeks Die ‘Send Ambulances, |

Hard Before Doctors Right Away, : Notify

5 7

La

Firing Squa

To Kill Guerrillas

By DAN L. THRAPP United Press bl SALONIEKA,

taff Correspondent Mar. 27—Fifteen

helped shell Salonika six weeks ago were executed by [fring squads today. They did not die easily. Many had to be finished off with tommy guns. To a man they stood erect, eyes unbandaged, to receive the bullets. The 15 were among 52 of 111 captured guerrillas who were sentenced to death a week ago by a special court martial after a 23day trial. The sentences were subject to review, and by today only 15 had been confirmed. ' Miserable Day It was a miserable day, to die or to livee Dawn brought low clouds and a chilling drizzle. And it was the bleakest of execution grounds, under the shadow of the citadel now used as a mili-

solid ground.

and Mrs. Norwood would go down to see their son by boat or air. ) His perspective on Indianapolis and Indiana

This js worth remembering. “Out here we're not isoat night lated but insulated. We can see problems which . as cr

South in their true perspective. It is as if we were blessed with living in the center of -the country far enough away to view the world objectively.”

How's Business?

IT IS DIFFICULT to talk with any business man without, in these uncertain days, asking how he feels about the future. Mr. Norwood has a ready reply. “We expect that 1948 results will closely approximate the very good year which has just passed.” ; “How about those war Suits? he was asked. “Are they getting better?” He was reminded that Sabrics got pretty bad and we paid a lot for em. “Prices will be still higher in the fall” he sald, “but quality already is back on the market. The reason is that so many spinners went to war. While in uniform they forgot some of their art. They've been back long enough to get back in the swing. Fabrics are sturdier and better. So are patterns.”

One Word—Confidence

WELL-TANNED and just back from three weeks in Florida, his first vacation in four years, he leaves you with the feeling that he is not pressed for time, a characteristic of busy men. The store functions smoothly on its seven floors, leaving you with the feeling that its president is a part of every sale from a collar button to an overcoat. These qualities are transformed in the alchemy of the customer mind into the one word—confidence. (By Harold Hartley)

“We

“We have

cut off the end

may be all out of proportion in the East, West or]

tary prison high on a hill over{looking Greece’s second city.

| Before daylight an ancient, bearded Orthodox priest called lon the condemned men, praying iwith each. It was their first sign [that this was their day to die. He fulfilled such final requests as he could—writing letters for some, giving others cigarets or drinks. By the time we jeeped to the citadel, some 75 soldiers making up the firing squads were clustered about the gates. They wore neat British-type khaki with overcoats and tin. hats, ‘A Good Lesson’

The soldiers were forming two (lines to receive the condemned men when I, together with security police and other officials, clambered over the ruins: and around behind the execution ground. On a stony slope facing away from the citadel were four mass graves. Four short-term prisoners were digging another. “It is a good lesson for them,” a security policeman remarked.

get if they don’t reform.” A raven flew overhead, its raucous cawing fading away in gusts of cold northeast wind. Then the condemned men came, hurried along by soldiers, a swift column stumbling over the broken ground. Tied by Ropes The prisoners were tied ‘with rope, two by two. The 15th

trict Commission i area.

Mr.

commissioner

hall.

and 1938.

W, Grayson, dissuperin tendent for the State Highway

the Indianapolis Kincaid

said he will run for First District

nl

in

Kincaid, Grayson in GOP County Commissioner Race

Two candidates today nounced their declarations to run for Republican county commissioner nominations against Commissioners William T. Ayres’ and Ray Mendenhall.

an-

Mr. Kincaid

opposition to

Commissioner- Ayres who is seeking renomination. Opposes Mendenhall Mr. Grayson will seek the Third District commissioner homination against Commissioner Menden-

Mr. Kincaid is serving his term on the County Council, having been elected to that board in 1934

“It is time for the taxpayers to get full value for the dollars that

Ross.- Dr. University,

Sept. 1.

faculty 1943, Dr.

course

Junior College.

active

A member of the Northwestern

of student advisement in the University College there.

Since beginning his career as] an educator in 1923 he has also been a member of the faculty at Ohio State University and Wright

Butler Gets New

English Professor

The appointment of Dr. C. B. Graham as an English professor at Butler University announced by President M. O. Graham, who is a member of the English faculty at Northwestern will assume his new duties at Butler

has been

Dr. Graham

{ Dr: Graham received his A.B.| degree from Muskingum College in 1923, his M.A. from the University of Michigan in 1928 and his Ph.D. from Ohio State in 1936.

SUPPORT FOR DOUG MILWAUKEE, Mar. 27 (UP)— Supporters of Gen. Douglas MacArthur from 20 states met at a national conference . today to make plans for setting up 1000 MacArthur-for-President Clubs across the nation.

:todist Church, Broad Ripple Ma-

‘|morrow with an open house in

or JEWELRY “its Tavel's . Watch Repairing

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ToVELS =.

« wreOd

man had his hands bound. All

are spent in county government,” Mr. Kincaid said. “I favor reduction of government costs, a cut in taxes and reduction of utility rates.’ My program will include improvement of public safety, elimination of public health hazards, improvement of county roads and home rule in government. ‘Use Common Sense’ “Let’s use some common sense and clean up this mess in Marion county,” he said. He is a member of the Meth-

aT

PROMOTED — A. E. Maha (left) and L. M. Watkins Jr. become assistant sales managers

Lik-Belt Names 2 to Sales Posts

A. E. Maha Appointed

Assistant Manager

The Ball & Roller Bearing ,Divisign of Link-Belt Co. today announced the appointment of two new assistant sales managers, one of them from Indianapolis. Arthur E. Maha of this city has been named to-the central division with headquarters at the Dodge, plant here. L. W. Watkin Jr. has been assigned to the eastern division with headquarters in Philadelphia. The announcement was made by George H. Woody, sales manager of the division here. Transferred Back Here Mr. Maha joined Link-Belt in 1938 as a member of the ball and roller bearing division engineering department. He was subsequently appointed district sales engineer in Chicago-branch territory. Later he was transferred back’ to Indianapolis. He is a graduate of Purdue University. Mr. Watkin joined Link-Belt in 1945 and after working in various departments of the Dodge plant was transferred to Philadelphia as district sales manager. His prior gxperience in ball and roller bearings extended over a period of 31 years.

Early or Not, It's April First

SOUTH BEND, Ind., Mar. 27 (UP)—Mr. and Mrs. Jack First today named their 5-day old daughter April First. They said she had been expected April 1 but fooled everybody by arriving Mar. 21. April has an aunt.named June First who was borm in January.

McConnell Heads Radio Association

C. Bruce McConnell, president of radio stations WHBU at Anderson and WHOT at South Bend, today headed the Indiana Association of Broadcasters. He was elected yesterday at a mee’ng here. Other officers were G. F. Albright of Richmond's WKBV, vice president; Warren G. Davis of . Bloomington's WBSUA, secretary; William F. Rippetoe of Terre Haute’'s WBOW, treasurer, and Dan Park of Indianapolis’ WIRE, executive sec-

sonic Lodge, the Washington Township Republican Club, He is a graduate of Ohio State University and has lived in Indianapolis 40 years. He lives with his family at 3918 N. Illinois St. He has been active in Republican politics for many years, serving as ward chairman in Wayne Township since 1941. He served in the Army during the war with Mexico and in World War I. For several years he has been attending the Purdue University road school. “I am a candidate for commissioner because I feel it is high time for the county government to start improving all roads in the county instead of just some areas,” he said. “My experience in road building qualifies me for the commissioner post. A highway improvement program is badly needed.”

Couple to Mark 50th Anniversary

Mr. and Mrs. George Thompson, 542 N. Jefferson Ave. will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary from 2 to 4 p. m. to-

the home of a daughter, Mrs. Van Dorn Adams, 3445 N. Temple Ave. The Thompsons have spent their entire married life here and have been members of the East Tenth - Street Methodist Church since 1908. Mr. Thompson is assistant secretary and office manager of the Marott Shoe Store, where he has been employed the last 31 years. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson have two granddaughters, Miss Marthanne and Miss Nancy Ellen Adams.

Mrs. Martha E. Costin |

Dies in Home Here Services for Mrs. Martha E. Costin, who died this morning, will be held at 2 p. m. at the Church of the Advent. Burial in Crown Hill Cemetery will follow. She was 84, Mrs. Costin, a tario, . Canada, years. Active in church and club work, she was a member of the Church of the Advent, the Monday Club, the Marion County War Mothers, the YWCA and the Riley Hospital Cheer Guild. Mrs. Costin was survived by a son, James W. Costin, and two grandchildren, Carolyn and James C. She passed away in her home, 2216 Broadway.

8 native of Onlived here 24

retary.

-

wore rag-tag clothing they had on when they were captured. Some had ragged overcoats. Some shivered without them. All were bareheaded. In good order they spread out along the side of the hill with the soldiers—five riflemen to each prisoner—facing them some 10 yards away. An officer said: “We don’t bother with bandages. They can shut their eyes if they want to.” While the soldiers stood at present arms, an officer rapidly read the names of the condemned. They didn’t pay,much attention. One was smoking. An armored force lieutenant with tommy gun slung over his shoulder walked along the line, asking each man if he had anything to say. Most professed innocence. One spat. Some shrugged, said nothing. Blown Over Backwards The lieutenant barked a terse command. The soldiers flanking the prisoners stepped aside. The rifles crackled: : The 15th man was blown over backwards, flat on his back. The lieutenant walked to him and pumped eight or 10 tommy-gun bullets into him. He lay still. Armored force sergeants walked up and down the line of the fallen, pouring bullets into this one or that one who still writhed of twitched. Three sergeants shot at one man before he was quiet. A priest stood at one end of the line, head bent, praying silently.

Begin Voluntary Coal Rationing

WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 (UP) —Voluntary coal rationing began today as President Truman’s

took legal steps to make sure

Monday meeting. Soft coal operators reported

shut down by the strike, and some retail dealers, have adopted a voluntary rationing system to keep supplies flowing to hospitals, public utilities, and food processing plants. The coal distributors are responding to an appeal from Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug, who yesterday urged “top priority” for coal ysers whose facilities are “essential to the health and welfare of the nation.” Coal industry sources said they were able to put the voluntary rationing suggestion into effect immediately in many communities because plans had been made in advance with municipal officials. Meanwhile, the fact-finding board authorized the drafting of a subpoena for Mr. Lewis for use if he fails to appear “voluntarily” at Monday's public hearing on the 13-day-old pension dispute. Federal Judge Sherman Minton, chairman of the three-man panel, said that if the mine boss should ignore the subpena, the. case would be turned over to the Justice Department for action. Judge Minton expressed the belief that Mr. Lewis will attend Monday.

Machine Guns Used |

“It shows them what they will M

coal strike fact-finding board John L. Lewis shows up at its

that many mines which were not

§ | i

Indianapolis Red Cross Gets Dramatic

Message From Coatesville Calling for Help |

This is the dramatic official report of the Red Cross following! {the tornado which killed 19 persons in central Indiana: | It was at 5:55 p. m., as a thunderstorm was moving in on| QREENFIELD. Mar. 27-—

{Indianapolis from the southwest, dricks .County tornado came to

§ | unkempt Greek guerrillas who American Red Cross.

A telephone call from the telephone exchange at Coatesville reached the home service staff, still on duty in the World War Memorial Building. First the telephone operator was on the line and then her place was taken by a member of the Coatesville town board. “Send us ambulances and doctors right away,” said the town board member. “A tornado has badly damaged our town.” A few minutes later a second call came from Coatesville. “My God, hurry; most of Coatesville has been destroyed. Send us ambulances and doctors. Notify the state police,” was the message. Red Cross disaster relief volunteers, who during the past month have been rehearsing for just {such calls, were quickly called |into service. { First Telephone Report First a telephone report was made to Dr. Charles W. Myers, superintendent of the Indianapolis General Hospital and chairman of medical serwice for the local chapter's disaster relief corps. He promptly dispatched seven ambulances, including several from his own hospital and others always held in readiness by private owners for Red Cross disaster service. The Red Cross motor corps and canteen corps were then mobilized. The motor corps volunteers, under Miss Marjorie Cowan and Mrs. Margaret Delaplane, co-chairmen, within a short while had Red Cross trucks and station wagons ready to transport emergency equipment into the area. Two hundred cots, blankets and casualty kits were loaded and started. By that time news had been received that Danville also had been hit, and part of the relief supplies were diverted to that community, The canteen crops, directed by rs. Lyman Thompson, chairman, loaded food supplies, including sandwiches, coffee and doughnuts, and headed for Coatesville. James T. Shaw and Randel Shake, for the Red Cross survey committee, were dispatched to Coatesville to ascertain the amount of damage and number of casualties and estimate the need for outside assistance. State Police On Way Contact had been established by that time with state police who were hurrying into Danville and Coatesville with motor equipment containing two-way radio. Through this means of communication, calls were received for 250 units of blgod plasma to be rushed to the hospital at Greencastle, for a quantity of antitetanus serum, for other medical and surgical supplies; for a supply of drinking water; for portable floodlights, flashlights, for trucks, for a bulldozer and other rescue equipment. Ray Fatout, rescue committee chairman, obtained this equipment and started it toward the stricken area. Profiting from the bleacher collapse at Purdue University a year ago, when telephone and telegraph lines were clogged with incoming calls for information about relatives, the local chapter set up an information bureau to provide news about persons killed or injured in the disaster. By midnight, emergency information offices had to be opened to take care of the rush of calls. Miss Bertha Leming, chairman of the registration and information comButtes, had charge of this activy. Chapter workers set up plans during the night for emergency feeding, shelter and clothing for disaster victims, if needed. By 11 o'clock, local Red Cross headquarters was in touch with its workers at Danville, through mobile telephone-radio facilities set up by the Indiana Bell Telephone Company, and was informed by the Hendricks County chairman, Mrs. Marie K. Parker, and its own representatives, that “Danville is taking care of its own,” but “will be glad to have the cots and blankets” that were

ing facilities.

DIAMONDS—WATC SPORTING GOODS - CAMERAS

{, VL BAYA IE {TTR

REPAIRING

at Our Usual LOW PRICES

on the way for emergency sleep-|| Member Feders) Deposit Insursnos Oo.

Lists of dead and injured were| = PEARSON I Ok oe TH OJUred Were

CUTICURA 37.40%

that the first word of the Hen-! the Indianapolis chapter of the

beginning to arrive at chapter headquarters “ and were made available to the information bureau to answer the flood of calls from anxious relatives and friends. Captain F. F. Knachel, commanding officer of the U. 8. Naval Reserve, had sent a mobile radio unit to Coatesville, to amplify the communications facilities. Because of blocked roads, it was hours before direct communications with Coatesville were established. The first direct word from this town came at about 1:30 a. m. through the navy radio unit. Sent by Ralph Werner, state liaison officer for the Red Cross, who went to the scene at once on receipt of word of the disaster, the radio message called {for food to provide for 500 people, | ‘relief workers and disaster | sufferers; requested additional! medical supplies, asked for relief workers for the canteen corps which had by then been on the job for several hours. Chapter officials reported the disaster to Indianapolis city officials, who promptly responded to the calls for aid. Police &nd firemen, including the rescue squads of these agencies, trucks of the street commissioner's depart ment, rescue equipment, as well as General Hospital ambulances, doctors and medical supplies were on the way within a matter of minutes after’ the first report. Offers of help came from as far away as Lima, O., where a generous individual called to offer to send a nurse. “Too close for comfort,” was the terse comment of one of the disaster relief workers who had given a lot of time to the re-

Jury to fet

a a Case

On Monday

‘Charmed Life’ Now Hangs in Balance

“charmed life” which saw $ vear-old Howard Pollard thro

{18 trips to court without so m

as a day's sentence hung in the balance today. The youthful former Indianapolis railroader has only two days to wait before a Hancock County jury of 11 men and a woman decides if he is guilty of murder in the “hands and foot” slaying of Leland Miller.

Prosecution and defense closed their arguments in the three-weeks-old trial yesterday. On Monday, Judge John B. Hinchman will read his instructions to the jury and the chips will be down for Pollard. The jury has four alternatives —the death penalty, life sentence, two to 21 years for manslaughter, or acquittal. Whatever the jury does, however, the long string of brushes Pollard has had with the law appear to be catching up with him. Even if he were acquitted here, he is still under a one to 10-year sentence for larceny and under indictment for attempted rape, Throughout the murder trial, Pollard's attorneys have hammered the story that Miller, 100pound arthritic cripple, menaced the defendant in Pollard’s own dining room during a drinking bout. They contend Pollard, retreating as Miller brandished a pocket knife at him, seized a .38caliber revolver in a buffet drawer and shot in self-defense.

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