Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 May 1948 — Page 3
" -
n moving to mar. hern Indiana fop all ~ekpected to uring
Coming
hipments are pres.
Vandemark, Pyr. marketing specia). the season to eng k in June. irk reports quan. Ltruek loads of kale, turnips tops and outdoor rad. vailable in the In. et. . y 10,000 baskets of atoes are expecteq on the local mar. ¢ amd favorable Ons dre expected supply to 15,000, ——— cm — >
of cotton, pe hat wil | a single or 3 breasted.
ERS easy!
nean mote comfort of clive shoe Got a pair
complete! -
able strap.
gn. Brown. Building
in: Se
oe
reen
vag, | pis Charge |
At Meeting
In New Castle §
- Attacks Campaign Tactics in 1944
““pieas E. Greenlee, ousted pa of the Indiana Demotic &
e committee, was on record ' with: an accusa-
tion that forme Gov. Henry F..
ker was a “party wrecker.” festa Greenlee, now ‘openly on the band-wagon of fellow townsan who seeks the party's nom{nation . for Governor, fired a plast at Mr. Schricker last night in a 10th district organization “meeting at New Castle. . Mr. Schritker is considered as an unannounced opponent of Mr. McClain and two other announced candidates for the gubernatorial pomination. Censures Schricker
Mr.
muel D: Jackson of Ft. Wayne po their campaign tactics in} 1944, when Mr. Schricker was running for a Senate seat and
.... Jackson. for, Governor,
“We had candidates who de-|
clined to run as Democrats,” Mr. Greenlee said, “but preferred to call themselves straight think-
ing Americans. They refused . . .|
the United States. They thought
they were bigger men than: Jef-, Lga a | IS Jackson, Woodrow WIson of his candidacy by the Marion tOTe acted as chief negotiators in Kim-if-be-<an-be found.
and Franklin D. Roosevelt.”
lee Calls Schr
Harry McClain of Shelby: }.
Greenlee censured Mr. | gchricker and former U. 8. Sen.
“CANDIDATE — H. Dale Brown, Indianapolis Republican, today announced he would seek the GOP nomination for Treasurer of Stats. =
|
Treasurer Office
Republican Is First Local Candidate
{publican |today entered the GOP ‘race for
[treasurer of state.
{
~ His formal nouncement followed -indorsement
|either party.
County and 11th district Re-
W
first: quarterly cost-of-living re-|
Brown to Seek
Boosts Pay 11 Cents an Hour
Precedent Set ‘By Sliding Scale {Cantinued From Page One) {sumer price index from 100.2 in {1940 to 169.3 for April, 1048, i | TWO: A 3-cent raise now and! another on May 29, 1949, as an|
| THREE: 'ments in the cost of living fdc-|
tor, up. or. down, with Lcent
{per hour added or substracted {for each rise or drop of 1.14 | points in the consumer price in-| dex. The drop is limited to 5 cents, | FOUR: Wages under the formula and contract provisions cannot be changed until May 29, 11950, a two-year period. There |is‘ no retroactive feature to the | contract. | Mr. Anderson said that the,
|adjustment will be made on the,
{first pay period after Sept. 1, | 1948, based on the July con[sumers price index. $1.62 Hourly Rate The other members of the automotive big three—the -Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler—offered! no comment on the agreement
_H. Dale Brown, director of. the but. said. they. were studying. it... | Bureau of Motor Vehicles and Re-|
Under the pact, GM's average
seventh ward chairman, hourly pay rate becomes $1.62,
compared with $1.52 at Ford and $1.44 at Chrysler. The variation
He was the first Indianapolis in the Chrysler rate is explained! to mention the name of Franklin man to announce candidacy for by the fact that this company D. Roosevelt, then president of nomination for state office in buys a large part of expensive: an- parts involving high labor costs. Mr, Livingston and Mr. Johns-!
the absence of UAW President
Mr. Greenlee said that, “as & publican organization a week 2/t¢f P. Reuther, head of the
result of their egotism,” he “in-
herited” a “loosely-knit organiza-| tion” when he became state chair-,
man in 1946. Charges “Low Blows” “That was a direct result of
he added. . Sincg then, he said, he had rebuilt the party. ;
ready to take ov Mr. Greenlee said he “could have remained as state chairman if he had resorted to underhand tactics.” “But the best interests ——of-the party are not served hy low blows,” he added. He charged that Mr. Schricker met with “anti-Greenlee” forces the night before he lost his fight for re-election, and that the former governor telephoned a district vice chairman -in- her hotel room at 13 a. m. “in an attempt to persuade her to vote against me.”
gain,” he
Israel Hopes U. $. Lifts Arms Ban
Truman Confers
theen-completety- 1
“I have become a candidate for Treasurer of State because 1 {am qualified for the job,” Mr. | Brown said. “My record as motor vehicle director
good ad-
Party.” Led Licensing Control
[year-old Tndignapolis Republican {the Bureau of Motor Vehicles has
{Brown was one of the leaders in the change of the drivers’ licensing control set up to tighten control over driving on streets and highways. er eaeignn The system, which eliminates haphazard methods of issuin licenses to motorists, is design
{have given the state one of the worst traffic records in the country. Hundreds of unfit Arivers already have been removed frori {the highways under the new
4 System. | Mr. Brown has been in county
politics for many years starting as a precinct. committeeman for the past eight years as ward chairman. He is a graduate of Shortridge. High School agd attended Butler University, Indiana University and Benjamin Harrison Law School. He is vice president of the
With Weizmann
WASHINGTON, May 25 (UP)| =Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the provisional council of the, new Jewish state of Israel, said| today = President Truman had given him “hope” that the United Btate would lift its embargo oni arms to the Middle East “in the not tog distant future.” Mr. Weizmann said he asked Mr. Truman for a loan of $90 million to $100 million for Israel and that the President gave him ft the impression “our pleading was, not in vain,” ! - Mr. Weizmann said the Presient did not indicate when the United States would lift the arms embargo, “Ttold him this was urgent. He' agreed.”
Arabs Draft Reply To ‘Cease-Fire’ Plea | CAIRO, May 25 (UP)—Repre-| sentatives of five Arab nations “Eel Aoday- for Aman, sent of
King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan,!involutionary mental disorders. | frame. the Arab.answer. to. the These “last are the patients suf-|
to BE United Nations plea for a cease-! 8f¢ in the Palestine war. ! High Arab sources insist the Arab answer will. demand. that ‘the Jews disarm and accept Arab Sovereignty over the Holy Land.| It 1s known the Jews will never Accept such terms while they hold all the rich coastal .plain and modern Jerusalem. ¢ Arabs have until 12 noon morrow, Indianapolis time, to Answer, The original ceasefire deadline of 11 4, m. yesterday | Was extended 48 hours * by the
United Nations at the Arabs’ reQuest.
The heav
an} hours in Jerusalem was | the on rooms and corridors of | ree-story convent of Notre he de France, across from the | gate in the northern wall of
American Motor Vehicle Administrators, Region 3.
SUES FARNSWORTH RADIO
FT. WAYNE, May 25 (UP)— Herber & Green, Inc., today had
{on file in Federal Court a breach
of contract suit against the Farnsworth Television & Radio Corp. for damages ranging from $148,000 to $465,000.
~Under ‘the direction of the 38-
union's GM department. They said Reuther has been kept advised and approved all of their actions. ’ Mr. Reuther is confined to his
experience and home! recovering from wounds in! the right arm and chest, inflicted - the ‘straight-thinking’ of a group SPeaks for itself. I will campaign a month ago by an unidentified! of Democratic Party wreckers,” °0 the premise that a ministration is good politics and shotgun blast through a window, (will mean- continued success for {the Republican . wei The. party wreekers of 1944, | well aware of -our success in re-| building Indiana democracy, were
gunman who felled him with a
of his home. © ‘Staggering Defeat’
Mr. Livingston and MF, Johns-' Adamson. 57, prominent Amer/tone hailed the pact as a victory jcan Legion member and dnvestis] «elm womb i gator..of Communist... activities,
for GM.workers. . ~~ “It is a staggering defeat for the ‘no wage increase’ p launched by U. 8. Steel and General Electric and copied by the Chrysler Corp.,” they said. is “a staggering defeat for the
+
John-8 tor Co.”
g Mr. Anderson revealed that the the
ed » . {to cut traffic -accidents which sompany reviewed the UAW de
posal for settlement last Friday.
/tle the dispute. : Bargain Tomorrow Chrysler officials and the union
before Norman
strike. | Chrysler offered and later withdrew a six-cent hourly increase.
the proposal. Gov. Kim Sigler of Michigan intervened in the Chrysler dispute during the week-end when violence was threatened on the picket lines because of the company's plan to take inventory during the stop--page. Gov. Sigler warned the Istate would brook no violence.
-
9,
10-Minute Operation Brings Back Sanity, Surgeon Says
Combined With Shock Treatment To Restore Faculties of Patients
. By Science Service . WASHINGTON, May 25—A safe, simple, 10-minute operation that is restoring mentally sick people to health: and sanity was
announced by Dr. Walter Freeman of this city at the meeting added by the airline next week ‘here of the American Psychiatric Association.
fering depressions and other abnormal mental states due severe. emotional disturbance at
jor just after mid-life, In the operation Dr. Freeman
drives a sharp, slender instrument, something like an ice pick, through the bony part of the eye socket into the. front of the brain. The instrument is then
degrées and withdrawn. .- The same operation is performed on both sides.
Patient Convulsed *The patient is first given two
or two-minute intervals. Then, while he is still unconscious, the operation is swiftly performed. | Within an hour after the operation’ some patients are able
{
¥
the war came and Dr.
11946. (formed . the patients.
|swung through an arc of 30 FVENTS TODAY B Scheel Awards Night — 3
Shortridge High 7:30 p. m., sch i Blossom Time Dance, sponsored by the Nativity Catholic Chureh—8:30-to 13:30 Pp. m, Indiana Roof.
EVENTS TOMORROW
lest fighting of the electroshock convulsions at one Stale Conference of the Needlework Guild
~ First Congregational Church Indiana Association of Parliamentarians— Hotel Lincoln | Irvington Mummers’ presentation of “Our Town"—8:30 p m.. auditorium of the Irvington Presbyterian Church earge Newton Pupils’ Reecital—8:1 Wilking Auditorium
the old city. The convent changed to get out of bed, talk, swallow Kiwanis Club—FHotel Antlers,
nds four times yesterday. Hoffman to Delve Into ERP ‘Diversion’
* Paul g, Hoffman, chief of the
liquids and perform simple activi
Liens’ ClubClaypool Hotel, |
were |
ties. In favorable cases, patients MARRIAGE LICENSES
have returned to their former jobs or occupations within two weeks. ) The operation does not succeed
Earl LL Vandergriff, 17, of 927 8. West St; Mary McLafferty, 19, of 829 8. West St {
Walter A. Howard, 31, of 5703 EB. 21st St; May Louise Pack, 25, of 708 E 63d Bt. |
|
improvement factor to ¥g increase the standard of living. o Quarterly adjust-|
Arme Telephoto WANTS HIS PUP — Donald Stover left the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children building in New York with his parents; Mro-and-Mrs: bro Stover today following his trip
to the city alone. He left his Harrisburg, Pa. home with his
labeled The pup is now lost but the Stovers will make a home for
Seek Slayer 0f Legionnaire
Found Dead in Hotel LONG BRANCH, {{UP)—The who - ‘fatally
unknown
beat Harold
} {was sought today by police.
_ policy| Mr, Adamson, who recently] with federal investigating Com“It munists in this New Jersey resort : ' in his +wage-cutting. policy... proposed by hotel room. yesterday, apparently... o.oo one —Bugas-for the Ford Mo- the victim of & severe beating.
{had been working authorities
area, was found dead
| His skull body was { bruises.
| Police“. believed Mr.
lost consciousness. An autopsy
beating. “
His body was discovered when The deadlock became complete 8 hotel housekeeper, unable to] when the union offered to accept 8et an answer to repeated knocks 17 cents and the company rejected at his door, climbed a stepladder {and looked thraugh the transom
Airlines Announce
New Fights
| Additional
sand nounced today.
Starting next Tuesday, the airline will put in service another| {non-stop flight, leaving Indian-| «:japolis at 5:10 p. m. (central day. light saving time) and arriving in
1 “Busses will eave downtown
the - pup expendable. |
. Al Prominent Investigator ra
was fractured and covered with The room was locked mands after 37 bargaining ses- on the inside and there was no sions and made a general pro-|sign of a struggle or a weapon. _Adamson |The union quickly agreed to set- had béén beaten elsewhere and {had come back to the room and
indicated Mr. ‘will return to the bargaining ta-/ Adamson’s skull was fractured ble tomorrow, resuming negotia-/by a blow on the left side of the and tions broken off May 11, the day head. Assistant County Physi-| _ Matthews, UAW cian Julius Toren said it would | regional director, called the com- have been possible for Mr. Adam-| panys 73,000 workers out on! son to have walked around for! {as long as four hours after the
plane service be[tween Indianapolis ‘and Detroit will be started June 1, Chicago Southern. -Air- Lines ani : v
oh
cker Democr a ‘00° Fans to Get
=
Speedy Travel
Busses and Trains | List Schedules
Indianapolis ‘every minute and [New York. Central shuttle trains {will run every 15 minutes to the |Speedway race next Monday. Indianapolis Rallways will double the fare for the ‘bus-a-minute” express service this year, charging 50 cents each way. The firm's Speedway fare last year Twas 25 cents. i) Busses will start leaving the {Traction Termnial building on {Market St. at 5 a. m. and unload race’ fans at the southwest cor{ner of the Speedway until 10:30 ‘a. m. The same service will be (given for the return trips after
the race. 1
New York Central trains wil]
start at 3:15 a. m. from Union Station and continue every {5 minutes until 6:15 a. m. when! they will start ruining svery 13 minutes until race time. The train fare will be 35 cents each way.
Colbert Rites Set In Bedford, Ky.
Services for Edgar Thomas Col-| bert, who died yesterday in the
bert, 842 Broadway. will be held tomorrow in the Bedford, -Ky., Baptist Church. Burial will be in
puppy-and.- $20. .atter-pacents. Bedlord where he was born,
ther of two sons, two foster sons
and two daughters all of whom
live here. He had made his home| WASHINGTON, May 25—Art whole end of Central Market are in-Indtanapolis-for the past-eight with a capital A 1s flourishing tn” hung stiles, Washington —by=*
|years. His body will lie in the |George W. Usher Funeral Home {from 2:30 p. m. today until 11 la. m. tomorrow.
| Survivors are the sons, Oscar ace housing the collection of the Merchants.
and Walter; the daughters, Mrs. (Marge) Sadahray Ray and Mrs. lie Morgan; the foster sons,
te
1
[Detroit at 7:43 p. m. (Eastern » daylight saving time). — Another new flight will be
Airlines announced it will put into| Freeman could get mo further: service: next week a “fest” or new? word about it. He decided to, 300-mile-an-hour twin-engine Con-| to investigate it himself early inivair liners that will reduce the Since then he has per- flying time on most flights from | operation. on 100. Chicago. and Indianapolis to east-|
ern points.
I —
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Buck: Helen E. vs, Charles E Lucille vs Ralph M. Moore; Henry Allen Voorhies; Mary L. vs L. Shute! “Olyne vs. William A Patricia M. vs. Bruce G. Hendrix; ritta vs, Ralph Brown vs Robert W. Rivers
Irene va. George
C. vs. Harry Shaner; son; Helen vs, Woody Hickman.
BIRTHS At Rt.
General—-Christopher, Mary Jones
A p.m, Al Coleman—Albert, Ethel, Beaman; Tay-
lor, Judith Wilson At Methodist Robert, Geneva Meyer; Jack, Druley; Albert, Twila Mantooth, At St, Vimecent's-~Michael, Mabel Sharp,
Thomas, Madelyn Carr
AM bara Jones; James Willa Childs; Jo Geraldine. Jenkins At Coleman -- Cortland, Elizabeth Shea
John, Kathleen Sweeney
ton, Tex.
Prancigeo; Emma vs. |
Boys Franeis— Thomas, Marian Strader
}
Mau-| Crystal Lorraine Charles Lewis Spiker Jr. Burnett vs.| 8 | Miller; Dorothy vs. Arthur Galinsky. Rose Marie Brittain vs, Otto Walton: Bertha vs. Robert E. Nickle-
|
Margaret
Gir General—-Otis, Cleo Long; Lewis, Bar-
mocratic 'P
TA CE HVAT Ar
‘residence "of his son,” Walter Col!
STRAUSS SAYS:.
7 a
European aid program.
Art Flourishes - Colbert, was 80 and the ~ir-Market-Place 5
Times Special
the nation’s capital, but in odd places. A fair 15-minute walk from the National Gallery, $50 million pal-
late Andrew Mellon, is the City Market.
There, within a 70-year-old,
lph Giddens and Jean Reap, huge rambling red brick builgyng, SPTing flowers and may W , Ho all of Indianapolis; his brother, are hundreds of shiny white store | don't understand this stuff.” He ‘Jerry M. Colbert, Bedford; seven booths showing Chesapeake Bay turned to the more mundane job N. J. May 25 gramachildren and four great- croakers, Iowa corn-fed beef, Wis- ©f trimming a rib roast. Wepasiat) grandchildren.
consin cheese, California aspar-
©
AN
AS
~~
AN
4 —
~JRADITION WIT H.
¥ ; ho J Ned
ECONOMIC AFFAIRS — First-graders at Colfax school in South Bend proudly |. hold letters they received from Paul G. Hoffman, ECA director, The letters were | in answer to letters the children sent Mr. Hoffman recently. the youngsters for their good. wishes and suggestions for his handling of the
tagus, and Golden Bantam corn: fyom Florida. Flowers, too. Also showing, right now, Good for Business
exhibit of their work. Across the
ways, a pair of confused nudes, an excellent portrait of a wideeyed Negro girl, and many more. It's good for business, say the’
“It's a swell idea,” said John Auth, looking up at a modernistic splash of color that looks like
Copyright 1948 hy The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine
-
- -
BREATHES. THERE A. NAN WITH © HEAD SO DEAD—WHO NEVER TO © HNSELF HAS SAD—GNVE ME
|from Indianapolis to Hot Springs, | Combined with electroshock treatment, it succeeds in one-third Ark; Louisiana, Hous of .the schizophrenia patients and one-half of those suffering and points southwest, ~~ | ~~ T Ear ants ders EEE TAT thE fame time, the American | ’
> E Z 2 z 7 _
A Zz ZZ Z bo Zz Z z 2 A
A DOBBS HAT has something on the hall (Printer—do not spell “Bald") It has the Dobbs initiative —which | sets the pace in the Fine Art of Hatting.
It has the uncopyable distinction that -
comes from Dobbs skills and experience
Ns 1s ¢ IST FLOOR
u | ) 1 0. 21 of 101 ' At Methodist Raymond, Mildred Pans Y prominecoyery Program, to-|in all cases 82d some Xho ere | C¥iaia Joanna Honan C20” of "se PW | ler; ayia. Betty Pogue: Hubert Ruth 0 investigate and apparently helped by : aln — | a , pL, Congress” on "charges relapeed. It was ‘originally de- "ier Longin 2 ot ap nm | ris Henaniciey i, "Sli ‘Brit, American aiq has enabled vised by an Italian surgeon, E. 2ist 8t < ALA Vinernt #.-Clarence, Minerva Risk An to arm the Arabs for|A. M. Fiamberti, in 1937. Early Charles 4 Boehm 2. Stal Baton: tT TN many. Joye ting in Palestine {reports were not reassuring and Warman Ave - John, Jane Lathrop ¢ 2180 assured . | em eee ———— | Hugh G._ Bauer, 31, of 2034 8. Delaware Pobriations Commute tS AR : : | "SL: Florence’ Chung. 2. of Tis E DEATHS | on woul be wee drecty ry Curtis SWIM. SIAr, |, Sit bua oot r 2 an gc R40 dP, wf vr, a. rchase of arms for Euro- 10 Wed Net Player |Charies Joseph Garvey, “20, of 330 N, Mids Galbraith, 44, at 8t. Vincent's, car Pean p Parker Ave; Mary Louisa Bweeney, 18 a ations Edgar Manson K 73 nts for or be channeled Into BERKELEY, Cal, May 25 woh, 321 Marion Ave he N. Tlinots Parker ra antmpet. 13, at--3333 N Alter inton, , 0 ‘ ol : i ~— Payment of troops. |(UP) —- Ann Curtis, Z1-year-old wikis Mildred Mills. 4%, ‘of Carmel Ind nr: ahr eer psi 0 N. Poy. ER —————— + P swimming star, announced her William Lee Chadwick, 31, of 3103
Yard Hunts Sex Fiend
LONDON, May 25 (UP)—Dis- Cuneo, 24, University of Cali- Richard
ny of A boy's arm and pelvis.
ve th la 3
in di:
Misy
engagement today to: Gordon
fornia basketball player. - |
Vater hazard on the seventh Miss Curtis; who swims on the PL.
Olympic es this summer, met nth at. UC where Curtis also is a student, . |
i The { od i ?
\ nl
Michigan St: Zionsville, - In Puhs, aret James L.
}, Delopes Mae Coble, 17, of | 18, of 1818 N. Tacomas Bt; Dunn, 18, of 2017 KE. 18th St McConnell, 26, of 154 W. 20th
Place
lian Frances vs. Jomo Morris Brown ;
th Th Conover; Nora val. Mark W. ; Margaret vs, Ciibert W. Anderson; atherine F, vs. Jessa J. at LA Fa v
Wiona Hembree, 28, of 196 Me- |
Margaret Pierce, 58, at St. Vincent's, core
OnAry ocelus
Kathryn Budens, 55, at 2158 Shelby, car. cinoma. A » Thomas Pisher, 86, at Long auricular
fibrillation, ora A. Ford, 83; at 508 Eastern, diabetes
¢ H Kish, #9. at 748 N, Concord, arY of Potter's Bar ‘Golf San Francisco Crystal Plunge William F. Briscoe. 23, of 148 N. Otney | MAYE Fir. . -— land Yard off ones Girls” swimming team. said they| Br. Waoirur Pisce. | * 0 24% ontries Soren raft, #0 at Methooint | Poy a sex maniac today. expected to be married after the IVORCE SUITS FILED - ° |[Royden Keth Zink. #1, at 318 Graceland;
3 ry oce on; i v Varine Sims, 47, at Methodist, mesenteric William PF. Vance, a ews, myocar.
im TG asi Ck
. : . * ‘
| { | - |
Py
A. pet ul eC a 2 hid
Nair hdl
—and the Dobbs head strong obsession for “ONLY THE BEST"!—The season is open! —and your head will get a wonderful ift—in getting itself Dobbstrawed!
nd OBES Body Hat range from $5 and 0. | _L. STRAISS & CONPANY, ic, THE MAN'S MATTER
rty Wrecker’
Mr. Hoffman thanked
— - —— n— — Gary Mother Selected | is art. For Gold Star Award Mrs. Marie McCarthy of Gary Students of the Corcoran Ar! tolry-FiE seidcted to receive the chool have opened a month's token award of the Gold Star button in Indiana during Gary's Memorial Day ceremonies May 3S — : Mrs. McCarthy was the mother of Rita McCarthy of the women's Army woman during World War II.
Carthy's selection as the typical ‘Hoosier gold star
made by Indiana military dist "ict ‘headquarters at Indianapolis.
A ITOUCH OF TOMORROW!
