Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 April 1948 — Page 3

’H COATS

oup, Originally 5.00.

p, Fourth Floor

) MISSES’ RESSES

and two-piece.

§ |

‘m : Ala., asked police today to help IS lenin Sow his bright blue : got around the neck of = 3 : fine red-naired woman on W. Mage i = He wanted to know because; FT. WAYNE, Apr. 15 UP)— tie strangled her. each convicted of seven violaSRE y a oe) toms_of ‘the: Fegstal Puts Food from Sxl Seria. and Drugs’ Act, today faced posin arians Suday. 7]: tink. Ive killed 2! 5je maximum sentences of! When officers arrived, he led SSVER years In prison and 371000(" : k them around the corner to an . : 2} alley where lay ‘the body of the] The same ‘penalty also faced| h four Fi Fl ae 8 at Be eh South Whitley, Ind., who General Charges was the name “Minny Gis" | was tried with the “wo Hoosler : gay necktie was knotted| docto Russ Plundering tightly around her neck. Court officials indicated that FRANKFURT, Apr. 15 (UP) “T've never seen her bafuge™ He sentencing of the Kaadts and we) said. “The first time I remem Benson, who were found guilty Fifteen members of two Hun- ing het was wi 1 YO! 1st 8 or garian missions were ordered t0-' ang found that I was trying to! man afters a a Feeney with the appointment 'day to leave the United States get my tie off her neck.” | layed 20 days to give them time t an EO mitten. sone of Germany within 48 hours? _ Police hoped to lear Who she! to file appeals for new trials. i 2 R en where came The Mayor named Jay Hundley, > 3 , to B |the expulsions were ordered by BLAST SHATTERS ARM [the jury seven hours after it PEs : > . kd aes with the in- % PRESIDENTIAL QANDIDATE Got, Lucius Bay because no * When Mrs. Sarah E. Stul, retired yesterday afternoon. Each BRIG OUTS Api ra Yer & the ngiatarois i tion to do everything pos- ohn R. Evans, Washington, been Cymberland, attempted to femove| of the found [lac on its side in the waters of Mu reek, Cincinnati, atter. a -toot bridge re Hon ard enlisting aid of the D, C., printer, has been tour- |i¥en, for the handling of anjy shotgun from a closet in her guilty on seven counts of he Y

public in the campaign. |, ing the nation as an aspirant to Other members of the com head the International Typo-

jttee representing’ . a mittee casizations © ill be named graphical Union.

ities permitted Soviet troops to! plunder the cars. }

American train in Hungary in ; them January when Hungarian author-| gentally discharged into her arm.|mislabeling medicine sent in inHer elbow was badly shattered. 'terstate commerce. :

soon by the Mayor. | 8. nN Those ordered expelled were Battle Two Million Rats members of the Hungarian reThis group is to be pitted) vais ~ |patriation and restitution misagainst the estimated 2 million; sions in the American zone. {4 rats which inhabit the City | The announcement said a full causing $8 million report on the Hungarian incident]

was brought to Gen. Clay's at-|

this morning, it was accl-

weakened by flood waters, collapsed. The driver, Mike Satterfield. 2018 W. Michigan | St. escaped unhurt. ; TE

STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!

=

mittee will be to cure the poor housekeeping habits of the public through an educational campaign. The committee will operate under the direction of the City Health Department of which Dr. Gerald Kempf is director. Mr. Hundley. declared that Jack of public interest in the destruction of rats is the greatest hinderance to his rodent control work. By keeping lids tightly on garbage containers and by cleaning up trash’ piles, Mr. Hundley explained, rats can be successfully controlled, Good Housekeeping Is Secret These will be the points on which the committee will work. Miss Frieda . Schicht of St. Louis, Mo., a member of the Department of Interior’s national committee on rat control, visited Mayor Feeney yesterday. . She was particularly outspoken against women who “harbor” rats by leaving the lids off garbage cans. Good housekeeping is the secret of rat contrél in the home,

== Campaigns Here annually. - ° i S fe Principal project of the com-

tention on Apr. 5. He demanded]

Seeks Top Post

In Printers’ Union John R. Evans was in Indianapolis today, campaigning for the, presidency of the International] hical Union.

nation. Mr. Evans, a graduate of] Georgetown University, Washing-| ton, D. C., has been a member of the Columbia local there for 18 years. . He is opposing Woodruff Ran-| dolph, who is seeking re-election. | Mr. Evans is representing the) Independent Party, while Mr. Randolph is a member of the insumbent Progressive Partly which has been in power the last four years. Mr. Evans has been on a tour that took him as far west as Kansas City. He will return to Washington and then undertake another campaign jaunt into the New England states.

Miss Schicht says. Because rats

can enter a house’ through any nis local 10 years and is secre-| opening over a half-inch in al- tary-treasurer of the Washington |

ameter, cracks-or small holes in the house foundation should be sealed up with concrete or metal.

nailed over a tiny opening ie an effective and . easy-to-make barrier.

adel aoe The lid of a tin can, for come |] S Gets Land " .

Other Precautions Paper or old clothes piled up in attic or basement or rubbish heaps outdoors — all of which make excellent shelters for rats —should be eliminated, advises the consultant. More precaytions to take, says Miss Schicht, include storing food in tightly-covered . containers, using garbage cans with tightfitting lids and rinsing all food particles out of tin cans before they are discarded. She suggested that women’s clubs place rat control projects high on their activity program.

He has been vice president of

Printing Trades Council.

{

For Hospital Here

VA Agrees to Build Within 2 Years

After more than six months of negotiations, an agreement under which the City will turn over to the Federal Government land in W. Michigan St. for a Veterans’ hospital, is scheduled to be signed tomorrow. The U. 8. Veterans Administration sought donated land for the hospital a year ago and finally asked the city to turn over 10

Election will be held May 19 by| ou produce a satthe various locals throughout the Se TE a. ah was

{extended another three days when they pleaded communications dif-

| 480

Third Floor

1 ~ om

JACKETS zs. Originally 5.98 ies, Third: Floor

RRR

acres of Park Department land {adjacent to the I. U. Medical Center. ‘+ # City laws prevented donation of iland. Then, the Merchants Association donated $5000 to buy the) {land from the City. i

re-|

Teacher Quits, Ends Troubles [sie=becr...

{fused WALKERTON, Ind, Apr. 15| 8(UP)—Paul Madden ended Bin Ee a or troubles today as teacher of the| ficials notified the Mayor today, fifth and sixth grades at the, + they will sign.such an agree-| township school here, He quit. ment. i Madden was fired a few weeks

ago for frequenting pool halls. He $0 Weekly Pay Hike

was reinstated after the school’s ! pupils struck to support him in his Agreed for Printers NEW YORK, Apr. 15 (UP)—

stand that he was a sports-lover and that pool was the only spor Agre t on a new contract he could participate in because of providing a $9 a week pay ina lame leg. rease was reached early today This week he quit. He told the Be 0 13 major city daily newsschool board that he got into a papers and their 2500 composing fist fight Sunday with the father|,.,,m employees. : ot 3 ul Whe Jesnied hat Be The new contract must be ap-| called on the pupil's mother * by the executive council of ask about the well-being of fhe rosa ly child.”

Bedford Murder Trial To Begin May 10

Union (AFL) and by a membership meeting of the New York local next Sunday. : The agreement was the first reached by the ITU since an in-

the International Typographical pe

immediate explanations, but those tendered by the Hungari-|

‘|ans in Germany and by the Hun-| igarian Foreign Office in Budapest were unsatisfactory.

Extended 8 Days Gen. Clay first gave the Hun-

ficulties between Frankfurt and Budapest. The Army announcement said the incidents involved an Americdn reparations train carrying Hungarian repatriates from the American zone to Komarom, 40 miles inside. the Hungarian border. The train was escorted by two American officers and 11 men. It was stopped by Hungarian bor-| . der police under Maj. Erno Razo at Hegyeshalo despite the fact it] had proper approval and clear-| ances from the Hungarian liaison mission in Munich.

Leave Weapons

Maj. Razo said the train could proceed if the Americans left their weapons at the border. The Americans agreed. Twenty minutes later Maj. Razo changed his mind and said the Americans could not pass beyond the border. Finally the train was allowed to go as far as Komaron, unload | and return. Then an. eastbound Soviet troop train carrying 1000 fully armed Russian soldiers pulled up beside the empty repatriation train and the Russians immediately proceeded to plunder the! cars, the statement said.

100 ‘Stalin Tanks’

Reported at Berlin

BERLIN, Apr. 15 (UP)—British official quarters reported today that approximately 100 “Stalin tanks,” Russia's heaviest, have entered Berlin’s southeast! suburbs, some three miles from the American sector. | The British were expected to! protest on the grounds that the| Four-Power agreements forbid | bringing heavy tanks into the Berlin sector. |

Charges Neglect On County Roads

Inefficiency in management of county road repairs was charged by Arthur W. Grayson, candidate for the GOP nomination for county commissioner, in two campaign speeches last night. Speaking before the Garfield Republican Club and at the Decatur Township High School, Mr. Grayson who is a subdistrict survisor for the State Highway)" Commissioner, declared that county roads always will be bad] if present methods are continued. |

are too large,” he said. “District

Times Stale Se BEDFORD, Apr. Vernon Quackenbush, 23, Bedford, charged with second degree murder in'a strangulation death, will face trial here May 10. He is being held in jail in default of $5000 bond. ; KILLED IN CRASH He is charged with the slaying] RENSSELAER. Ind. Apr. 15 of Mrs. Eva McMahan in her! (Up)—Kenneth F. Aiken, 22, of apartment Apr. 1. Although alHebron, was. killed last night confession was signed by Quack-'when a car in which he and enbush admitting the slaying, he| 11oyd Miller, 21 also of Hebron, entered a not guilty plea in Law-| were riding went out of control rence Circuit Court., = on Ind. 10.

Robert junction was issued by Federal

anapolis last month the union to strike to enforce the closed shop or to include a 60-day cancellation notice in its contract.

| Roy Hugh McDonald, 19, of 1709 Ludlow May Wright Sewell Indians Council of Ave. Peggy Lou Burkhart, 19, of 617 E. poyomen—Hotel Lincoln. | loth st. er University Night, Civic Theater. ward M. Club’ White ont

Naren man's ant Ave: Ruth E. Lantz, 34, of 2201 Roose- : . Mm. 8th Si. In- * diana National Bank. Stans, velt Ave

>» reen tle. 4 Oren: smi . EVENTS’ TOMORROW Witiars 8 hang 21, of 2002%2 English A a rte nald Pon: Home Show (through Apr. 23) — State] Ave. Shirley Lee Reddick, 13, R. R. 1| ine ; H , Helen Joan Arm-| Fair Grounds. : Washington. strong; George, Genevieve Nearpass. _ | Nationai Council of Catholic Women| Joseph J. Schmitt, 39, of 238 Parkview! oo ‘my rt, mi diss Cathedral High fiireuet Sunday) ne 5. Jasiyon, 30, 90 S06 kn Sever | : a ra ig! 26t . a p——— Seventh District, Indiana Federation of Lawrence Curr 27, of 7325 Kimbark THS C H I arie Reiley, 25, of 55 N..DEA Clubs—10 "a. in., Indianapolis Athletic) Ave; Rite, Marie RETEY Alzaliels Wright Godgrey, 45, at 1915 N. SL pe $5, at 520 B. Vermont omas . ho » MARRIAGE LICENSES DIVORCES cerebral hemorrhage. ) Jay Glenmore Ohwalt, 27, of 1918 N. Penn.| Grace G. Suigrove vs. Geor Sul-| May Lou Davis, § months, at General, 8t.; Violet 1 of 1618 N. va, P

M. Jamison, 24, of 2610 8. Penn. St. Vernon W. Bishop. 38, of 511 N_ Ti. St . yO . A Td Helen L. Jones, 35, of 106 W. North St.

Meridian Charles

Robert M. ‘Bone. 34 of $121 Boulevard |A. Northern vs. Glenn FP. Northern: Ge: PL; 1 ' sha! eva Kini . Curtis M. King; Mary V. Hoyt Tins A.’ Shanahan, 26, of 1M0incva hy Rlair; Stella Gertrude |

i Blair vs 1a Kennard William Davidson, 44, of 31% | Tallent vs. Jerome J. Tallent: Bale .; Lura Ruth Blackburn, 27, of Bradley vs. Odessa Bradley: ney “oly Llinots St, ad sprouse; Lens C. King vs. s Greathouse, 26. of 2112 Bloyd M: King: s , is Daggy, 28. of 3131 Nolte; idrey Highfield vs. George x Kenwood Aver da Red: Lois D. Snyder vs. Ivan Roland ‘A. Lo 21, Mitchell Air Force} en 3 Touay J. Duncan, 18, BIRTHS ont Ave. Yor 131 B®. Palmer r, 20, of 1308

Bowles, 23, of 1926 N. New — Mas Hooper, 2, of

Boys a neis—William, Marjorie A Sk aeeal Robert, Anita Du

nson; Jean Davis. ‘

i

aby (Mabel Haggerty; Robert, Betty

~

In Indianapolis—Vital Statistics

Purns, 38, of 1121 N. Beville

en: |Barle Moxley Pullenwider, 71, at 3421 B. 25th, coronary heart. ’ 5 Oscar OG. Linne, 49, at 550 N. Rural, corona na A Frances tichael L. Fox, 73, at 5060 Oak, car.

Freeman Larry C. Snyder.

Melvin, James,

At Oeleman—Creston, Elizabeth Rice, Jarl

crews cannot keep up the mileage

Judge Luther M. Swygert in Indi-|now assigned to them.” forbidding |

Transit Strike Looms

NEW YORK, Apr. 15 (UP)— A strike on the entire New York {transit system, a gigantic net- | work of Subway, bus, elevated] | and trolley lines which serves. | some 10 million persons daily, | was threatened today in a union ‘ultimatum for an increase in the 5-.cent fare and wage boosts for lits 42,000 members. |

ers a. aera

At Methodist—Henry, Jane Marshall; William, Marybelle Taylor; Robert, Eliza. beth Moore; James, Maxine Riggs; Alvin, Jene Goecker; Jesse, Lois Plummer. At Home—William, Marion Keenan, 5110 Indianola. pm ri

_ 23, of 225 N. Jefter-| on d Stewart Ihuth Sanford, 26, At St. Francis Hermes, Juanita Quinlin. le

cinoma. Prank J. Geiger, 94, at 217¢ N. Meridian; myoca ) ART : O. Lawn, 4 months, at St, Vincent’s, mastoiditis. Margaret L. Rinne, 732, ‘at 3245 N. Illinois, .{ cancer. t -| Elizabeth Sayers, 79, at 409 E. Orange! pneumonia. Safah Westrich, 65, at 520 E. Vermont, Herbert E. Richardsdn, 56, at 3080 N.

Daview eo Rudisell, 14 days, at Long,

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