Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 June 1948 — Page 3
cover, upholstery ‘ns and colors in Originally 1.75 4
5 Yd.
ps, Filth Floor
\RES |
STEEL EGG BEAT seseerancaana, Bb SPOONS, originally sessarsaieiina.l9g: SPOONS, eriginally ersetasrciine. lf, inally 49¢;
srssreesvianialfer
LAS, originally 1,00," |
este ateataanens 9%.
KE PANS, originally: |
sssavsesana,eidfer RS, originally 2.25, \NS, originally 1.00,: .39%° originally 10c pkg, eseeees Sc package
Sever eattage,
INS, originally 12 fon. §
cesaeass 100 for 29¢ nally 3.00, wensessiee: 119 sof riginally 1.50, asses srantase... 8%: PAD AND COVER cesaasanss. 89¢ sof [S, originally 64.75, ee0.+39.95 to 49.95
~ SETS, slightly ‘dam. 89.50
..39.95 to 69.95 seb |
S, slightly damaged,
ow. .4.98 to 7.75 ea. oor ‘samples of wall f# lly (995 to 11.95 [
++ «5.95 to 8.85 ea, S, originally 1395 tq 0d, , chrome, originally: 39¢ eas \ND TOWEL BARS,
v
ra cunsnyesssl
CR I
Catumeas ines SVE 0d,
ENTH FLOOR
LIANCES : ANGE, Model 618 sansivsonves 122900 \NGE, ERI97D, Floor , CNOWs vv «21998 WITH PUMP, 482P, 12995, now...10595 | 147, Floor. samples, creesennes 149.95 et RONERS, 640A, orige ceeenesnses39.95 one ft. capacity, slightly 75, now ...219.95 ea 25, Floor sample, orige 50
25, Testes tsetent
CELAIN LINED HOT lon size, slightly dame NOW +vnaan.. 49. - CABINETS, 30-inchg ciereaed. 44.50 ea
CABINETS, 18-inch ceeseeneas30.25 ea
SEVENTH FLOOR | : y )OLL HOUSES, orige
even
ginally 1.98,
sete atanre
vant neih obese 8 FABLE AND® CHAR now .. 98. GLIDERS, origins
IRS STORE, LDING
9g it da. : \UTOMATIC RADIO lly 69.95, now 39.95, . RADIO PHONO= NOW wussiess 4098 AODEL AUTOMATIC H, originally ak
testa’
Sestasrtearent
AUTOMATIC RADIO lly 99.95, now..79.9% AUTOMATIC RADIO: lly 129.95, now 99.9%’ JTOMATIC: RADIO! ly 159.95, now 129.95, TOMATIC RADIO: ly 199.95, now 139.95,
ii
UTOMATIC RADIO. |
ly 179.95, now 149.9% JTOMATIC RADIO" ly 179.95, now 14995 NSOLE AUTOMA 1, originally 3!
[H FLOOR
. Sea
“| 7oll Reaches 142 for Year
Marion County
Pedestrian Killed On S. Meridian St.
pight Hoosiers, two of them}
Henson Whitten, 48, of 3029}
Indianapolis residents, died in trafic accidents during the week-
end. Dexter Ave, was killed in-
stantly Saturday night when he was struck by _a car driven by
Henry Hagemeir. 48, of 30 W.'{
Troy Ave. in the 2900 block, S. Meridian St. The driver said’ Mr. Whitten) suddenly lurched sideways in|
front of his car as he was pass-|*
ing him. The death of prought the Marion County toll to 42 so far this year. Local Woman Killed
Mrs. Mae Breece, 24, of 1419 Montcalm St., was killed yester-|
day in a two-car collision near
springfield, O., on Highway 40.
She was riding in a car Seven by her husband, Charles Breece,| 27, who was not injured. Thomas
C. Gevedon, New Carlise, O., rid-| ing in the other. car, also was] killed in the accident.
2 Local Victims, 6 Others
Mr. Whitten:
| .
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Die In Week-End Accid
:
& a
lke Replies No'
Orlyn Seegrist, 26, of Michigan To Democrats’ Bid
City, was fatally injured yesterday when a car driven by his wife, Mildred, ran off the road and struck a tree on Highway 43 near Wanatah. wilford Ellis Young, 18, of Terre Haute, was killed yesterday when he was knocked off his bicycle in traffic near his home.| Anthony Garbeck, 50, of Hammond, was fatally injured ves-| terday when he was struck by a car while walking on street pear his home.
Dies in 2-Car Crash
Otis Dawson, 35, Boonville, died- in a two-car collision on Highway 41 south of Princeton. Olston B. Barrow, 31, of Evans-| ville, driver of the other car, was critically injured. | Mrs. Lorene Beggar, 20, o* Hymera, died yesterday when a truck driven by her husband, Joseph Beggar, 29, overturned and burst into flames on Highway 14 near their home, Lirey Whilhite, 2-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Whilhite of Evansville, was killed yester day when the family car was involved in a pile-up crash on Highway 62 west of Evansville.
Mrs. Cora Loftus Dies at Age 77
Mrs. Cora Alice Loftus, 1702 Rembrandt St., died yesterday at her home. She was 77. Mrs. Loftus was born in Madison County but had resided here many years. She is survived -by two sons, George and Geoffrey E. Loftus, both of Indianapolis; a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, Lafayette; a brother, Richard Johns, Anderson; 17 grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 3 p. m.|
four |
Refuses Again to Mount Bandwagon
By United Press With the Democratic national convention just two weeks off, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenshower was the man who had everybody wondering today. The Ike-for-President bandwagon was rolling merrily along, despite the general's insistence that he doesn’t want to be in the driver's seat. Two organizations—Americans for Democratic Action and Veterans for Eisenhower—are out to swing the District of Columbia's 12-man delegation to him in today's Democratic primary. Vote Blocked A draft-Eisenhower motion touched off a bedlam of cheers, whistles and shouts of approval from Wisconsin Democrats last night at their state convention in Madison. But the convention was hastily adjourned before the proposal could be put to a vote. In Minneapolis, Douglas B. Anderson, Midwestern representative of Americans for Democratic Action, told a state ADA gathering that Gen. Eisenhower “will accept a draft nomination President Truman withdraws.
Ike Says ‘No’
close to Gen. Eisenhower said that his latest reaction to reports of “draft Eisenhower movements” was that his decision not to run for President “applies to the Democrats as well as the Republicans.” Regardless of the general's statement his name is likely to go before the Democratic conven-
In California, James Roosevelt | Grundy forces but no wheelhorse.
son of the late President and a
Wednesd 3 staunch Eisenhower booster, was Central Chapel. Shirley aarothers| further entrenched as head of the
Crown Hill.
Jury Selection Begun In Manslaughter Case
Selection of a jury was started in Criminal Court 2 today for the trial of Claude Tolliver, 40, of 1715 E. 25th St., on a charge of manslaughter in a traffic death more than a year ago. Deputy prosecutors said withesses will testify that Tolliver was drunk and failed to observe a stop sign when his car struck and killed Aubrey Bridges, 45, of 221 E. 19th St., at 19th St. and Columbia Ave. in April, 1947. -
state Democratic Party at an or-| ganizational meeting yesterday. Marshall Plan appropriations. He
Dewey and Warren To Plan Strategy
Govs. Thomas E. Dewey and of the House Agriculture Com- peared Friday from her home.
Earl Warren, GOP standard bearers, will get together within the next few days -at the former's Pawling, N. Y., farm to map their campaign strategy.
PLAN SUNDAY TEA The Health and Welfare Committee of the Federation of Associated Clubs will hold its Fifth All-Federation tea from 4 p. m. to
7 p. m. Sunday in the Northwest- i
ern Community Center.
Democrats Urged to Name
Mrs. FDR for
(Continued From Page One) she is the only person in the
2d Spot
this issue alone, and many others would sincerely feel that a wom-
party qualified to tear the Roose-/an in government at so high a
velt mantle off Wallace and by sharing it with Truman, partial-
P ly restore it to him.
” ” . SHE WOULD keep a strong lien on the vast pro-Roosevelt vote that still remains in a nation Where: it became an article of faith that FDR, with all his faults, was for the poor man. No man can guess how many of these people would feel semtimentally obliged to vote for the Widow of their dead chieftain. Add that in her own right, Mrs. Roosevelt is popular. - Poll after Poll throughout 16 years have shown her to be the best loved and best known woman in the world. Above all, Mrs. Roosevelt's Place on the ticket would inject an element of controversy that
level would lessen the chances of war and increase all sorts of home and educational family benefits in legislation.
= = o I DARE to suggest this winning formula to the Democrats
{because it is almost certain that,
being men first and Democrats second, they will not have the courage, vision or intelligence to adopt it.
mise of one man instantly. ' Westbrook Pegler would turn into a scorpion, sting himself and pass on, emitting one last fierce column about the Lady Eleanor which, like all jibes against a lady, would boomerang. .
"MISS AMERICA" WEDS—Barbara Jo Walker, Miss America, of Memphis, Tenn., gives a bite of wedding cake to her husband, Dr. John. Vernon Hummel of Charleston, Me. after their wedding Saturday night at the First Methodist Church in Memphis | before a crowd of over 2000 invited guests.
i i { t
Dewey Selects Right’ Chairman
Scott Fevored Marshall Plan
By EARL RICHERT Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, June 29—The new Republican National Chair-
Philadelphia belongs to the socalled internationalist wing of the Republican Party. His selection points up further
man, Rep. Hugh D. Scott Jr. of essary measures
U.S. Discloses Marshall Plan Aid Terms’
Expect New Blast Of Red Propaganda
{| WASHINGTON, June 28 (UP) fortunate babies can be given. —The State Department today Tickets for the benefit disclosed the “terms” which game may be obtained | Marshall Plan countries are ac-| tomorrow from D. of I. members
| cepting to insure that U. 8. eco-|or at booths in L. S. Ayres &!
| group of Catholic women. ters of Isabella, have game. The proceeds will be used nursery at St. Elizabeth's Home,
‘nomic aid to Europe is not Co. L. Strauss & Co. the Clay-! wasted. {pool Hotel, Krieg Brothers, The ‘announcement of the Sportsman's Store and Room
| “terms” was—-expected by diplo-|1303, Merchants Bank Bldg. mats here to signal a fresh Founded in 1915 Communist propaganda blast as-| sailing the multibillion dollar European Recovery Program as |“U. 8. Imperialism’ and “Rule Bees the care of dependent chil{of the Dollar.” | : | Meanwhile, President Trumap signed the $6,030,710,228 foreign aid spending bill—largest in the | nation’s peace time history. Conditions Revealed ! For the 16 Marshall Plan nations, the bill carries $4 billion lin cash, which, at the President's ! discretion, can be spent in al |single year. ERP has an addi- | tional $1,055,000,000 in spending power through funds already ap- | propriated by Congress and the sale of notes to the Treasury Department. The conditions were disclosed | with the release here of the text |of bilateral agreements with Ire{land and Italy. Officials said all | agreements. are virtually the same. Ireland's signing is subject to final ratification by the | Dublin parliament. In exchange for U. 8. aid, Italy {and Ireland, as other countries | will, made: ONE: Guarantees of a favorable economic climate for Eurdpean recovery—by adopting necto establish | financial stability, increase trade ‘and establish a valid rate of cur- | rency exchange. { Special Concessions | TWO: Special concessions to
STRAUSS SAYS: CLOSED THE FIFTH OF JULY— MONDAY
Ww, and the D. of I. was called upon to raise the funds.
Game Receipts to Aid Catholic Nursery
Ticket Sale for Indians-Blues Contest Handled by Daughters of Isabella
When the Indians meet the Kansas City Blues tomorrow nigh in Victory Field it will mark the end of a lot of hard work for
For weeks now members of Mother Theodore Circle 58, Daughbeen scouring the city, selling tickets for the) to start construction of a new,
la day nursery in the old St. John Ra 2500 Chyrchman Ave., where the . i Proper care and treatment of un. C100! building. Under the di Dog Believed Rabid, Maurice O'Connor, baseball working mothers were cared for through during World War L
Rev. Msgr. children of
Bq 1919 more than $20,000 had
been accumulated. The Indianapolis Community Fund also con- : Since the D. of I. was founded tributed some money. And in in 1915 its main interet has 1921 the Home became a reality.
But, in 1925 tragedy struck and
the Home was destroyed by fire.| The organization first founded Again the D. of 1. came to the mission to destroy the dog.
t| nursery. The enthusiastic D. of 1. ® Very Rev. Msgr. August R. Fus-
the clean sweep made at Phila- the U. 8.—Agreed to submit to delphia by the branch of the party the international court at The
If they did, of course,| * they would bring about the \de-| °
Would cut across—and far deep-| er, perhaps, than any other issue BIRTHS
in this prosperous time save the . a rancis—whiem, Vivian Jones;
EW issue of war {tself—the woman| Donald. Addie Miller; Kenneth, Jewell sue, Ward; Lee, Freida Scalf.
- os : FIFTY-ONE per cent of the Votes cast in the last election Were cast by women, and there is a percentage of women who don't vote at all because they feel that politics is a man’s game and One in which women and their Opinions are ignored anyway. To put a woman on the ticket Would challenge the loyalty of Women everywhere to their sex, cause it would be made to seem
t the defeat of the ticket ®
Meant the defeat for a hundred of woman's chance to be equal with: men in politics. any women’s groups which very powerful politically 80 for the Democrats on
r
are
At General — Henry, Birdie McCray; Virgil, Mable Hyde; Frank, Millie Ham. ilton; Harry, Mabel Stock; Jessie, Betty Carter; Paul, Betty Moran. At Coleman—Norman, Awilda Bamford; Dr. Calvin, Gladys Settlage; Paul, Doroth Topmiller: John, Vivian Day;
bert, Barbara Coller: ; John, Joan Himman; ge. Charles, Viole
Daniel, Betty Eugene,
Dorothy Alexander; Isancs; al, Pauline Booher; Robert, Hazel Oraft; Leroy, Ethel Shelton; Riley, Anna
Baldwin. Vincent's — Robert, Bettie er, Frances. McGuire; Henry, Wolfe; Raymond, Alice Albert, t St. Francis—Michael, James, Helen Broaddus; i Joyce, Wilson, Buty Flannagan; Lindsey, Jane Louis. ; At General—Saul, Betty Officer; Arnold, ndler. At le veria Chance; Dr. Abe,
: , Mannie Conner Robert Tap Jones; Guy, Betsy Jones;
At St,
At Methodist—Troy,
va
7
Janet Rogers: Carl, Lou
Bernard, Betty Dailes.- ot; Hom |
which supports the foreign pol-
icy stand of Sen. Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan.
to the so-called nationalist wing of the party even when it came to selecting a “figurehead” chairman—and that's all Mr. Scott likely will be for some time at least because Herbert Brownell Jr., one of Gov. Dewey's three managers, will direct the campaign itself. ° War Veteran
state.
was “right” on foreign affairs.
| Mr. Scott served as a navy of- tion expenses abroad. ificer in the Atlantic in the early| Officials said the British agreepart of the war and then as an ment will he announced simul-
|
|was a naval intelligence officer in
[combat in the Central and West- cation.
ern Pacific. Mr. Scott represents a “silk-
tion which opens in Philadelphia stocking” district in Philadelphia. Germany, 26 on July 12.
He has been friendly with the
For Marshall Plan He has served three terms. | Mr. Scott voted for the Marshall Plan and against cutting
also voted for the new draft. He signed the petition to force the margarine-tax repeal bill out
mittee and he voted for the [repeal bill. He voted for the income tax
dent's veto. He voted for the Mundt-Nixon Communist control bill and for extending rent control for another year. He
voted for the reciprocal trade extension bill. He is a lawyer. » » os
w i Rl. FILLS THE BILL —Gov. Dewey picked Rep. Hugh D. Scott Jr. (above), 48, of. Pennsylvania, as new National Chairman of the GOP. He succeeds Carroll Reece of Tennassee.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
er, nine Turner; Kyle Bessie Wallen; Carl, Jo n Paul Jr., Virginia Blakeslee; Charles, ; Allen, Ruby Query; Rudy, Patricia Snider: Clarence, Boneze Simmons; Edwin, Mary Collins; ward, Jacqueline Resor; Henry, Birdie McCray, 's—Robert, Louise Reed.
ct
e. Mildred Fults; y
At St. Vincent DEATHS Anna L. Perry, 82, at 4238 Carroliton, coronary thrombosis. Lulu R. Bunchu, 72, at 115 8. Audabon, cerebral hemorrhage. Thomas J. McNutt, 73, at St. Vincent's, myocarditis. Joseph Bryant, 67, at General, nephrosclerosis. Ona M. Abbett, 54, at 226 Bicking, earcinomatosis.
Anna Cowan Buckner, 78, at General, ateriosclerotic heart. 84, at 4110 E. Wash- { ington, myocarditis. Dora Sacks, 80, at Gensel, Sarcingma. Della Stein, 71, at 732 tcher, hpyertensive heart. Mary Ann Steinaker, 72, at 732 Pletcher,
(August Hofman,
-
Hague any claims by U. 8. na-|.
No olive branch was extended °
Gov. Dewey turned to Penn-|and Trieste, {sylvania because of the strong {support given him at the conven-
{ordinary Seaman on a tanker car-|taneously in Washington and Lonrying fuel to England. Later he don tomorrow when it is sub-
bill and to override the Presi- he found a silvery blue parakeet
cerebral hemorrhage. i ClaTeao Frieinger, 66, at General, pneumonia. Waisye H. Ramsey, 71, at 5874 Cent: cerebral hemorr 3 a, Lucinda Elizabeth rt, 76, at 333 N. Doisware, sarebral NR TTARS. ia ussel . King, , 8 eteran’ - betes mellitus, 5
% S
|tionals arising from government(al measures in their countries; ‘to gmarantee the convertibility {into ican tries; arrangements {whereby the 1. 8. can obtain critical materials needed for stockpiling.
| THREE: An agreement, in an Se) A {exchange of separate notes, to grant most-favored-nation trade treatment to U. 8. occupied areas
{including Germany, Japan, Korea
FOUR: A pledge to set aside in local
aid which they receive. The U. 8S.
will be used to pay |economic co-operation administra-
mitted to Parliament for ratifiGovernment sources said [the British had granted most-{favored-nation trade treatment to but not to Japan or
| Korea. | THIRD ‘Sugar,’ Lost Pet FLOOR Bird Found Dead Police Sgt. John Kestler has {sad news Fi oki Jops Jaglop- ok sky, : abam - * A parakeet, “Sugar,” disap: THE BOYS The policeman’s 14-year-old 1008 son, Leo, was mowing thelr lawn (2 to 22) lat 1121 Reid Pl. Saturday when is the FOURTH
{lying on the lawn. It was gasping for breath. The boy gave it } (water and tried to revive it but \ the bird died.
| Sgt. Kestler said he read of dodr the bird's disappearance in The Times Saturday and has tried to THE ME-TOO locate Mrs. JablonskKy. Her de- . ‘scription of “Sugar” tallies with SHOP — is that of the bird found in his yard, on the
(he said. He added that ‘Sugar” was apparently exhausted from {the flight of several miles be{tween the N. Alabama residence {to his South Side home. TTT Tk Man Found Slain, ’ The Travel Suspect Seized | William Miller, 33, of 1935 N. | Capitol Ave., was found dead from knife wounds in the rear {yard of his home early yesterday.
ne
currency an amount of ; w: i ton by Sen. Edward Martin and money equal to the value of U. 8. the Joseph Grundy forces in that| y
It is reported Mr. Dewey must agree on the purposes for wanted a Pennsylvanian, a World| which this “special fund” is spent. Later at New York, a source War II veteran and a. man who Part of it
THE SPECIALTY SHOP FOR WOMEN —18 on the
FOURTH FLOOR
Bureau is on the SIXTH FLOOR
E58 PN
fore and soon the present Home was built. . This time the need is the new members are going to show the, Twenty-three internes and four members of the Methodist Hospi~ tal resident staff will receive certificates and keys at the institution's annual graduation dinner to be held at'6 p. m. tomorrow in the White Cross Service Center. Attending will be trustees, . medical staff executive council, Slain by Police ‘resident staff, graduates and their Policemen fired five shots be- wives. : fore they were able ‘o subdue a| Speakers will be Dr. Cleon A. !Great Dane dog believed to have Nafe, chairman of the resident {gone mad from rabies in the 1200/committee of the medical staff, iblock, N. Grant St. yesterday. {and Bishop Titus Lowe, president | The dog, owned by City Fire-|/of the board of trustees. |man Robert Princell, 1220 N.| Dr. Homer G. Hamer will pre{Grant St., threatened Martin Ken- sent the certificates, while Supt. {nedy, 1216 N. Grant St., when he/Robert E. Neff of the hospital {tried to get out of his car and|will present the keys. Pr. William {was preventing Mrs. Zella Heyer, M. Dugan will present awards to {62, of 1215 N. Grant St, from|five graduates who submitted the
leaving her porch. |best scientific articles. Dr. Charles Mr. Princell
archdiocesan director of Charities, who now {supervises the Home, that it can had.
sen s {Catholic
dent, will preside.
BEFORE YOU GO
FOURTH (OR FIFTH)
OR AFTER--COME HITHER!
THE MAN'S STORE has what it takes to put a man (and his wife* and their mutual replicas**) into a celebratious mood—and to convert what might otherwise be just one of those so-so trips or staysiiok
into something
THE SPORTSM THE FAMOUS
speciall AN'S FLOOR— ; SIXTH—is something to regale the
fisherman—to rejoice the golfer—the tennis and badminton players—the archers—the swimmers (by
the way we have water wings, and life preservers of a very efficient sort}—And we have boats, log cabins—and plenty for people who just want plain
down-to-earth solid relaxing—
OF COURSE—the various shops devoted to clothes
—have about everything to turn : m head to foot—for wherever he may
be headed—for whatever his diversion or activity.
Chester Jordan, 46, living at sedede 1 the same address, was held on t and accessories a vagrancy charge in connection LUGGAGE out a man—fro with the killing after: witnesses : said they saw Jordan and Miller is on the fighting. SIXTH FLOOR
Police quoted “Jordan as saying he stabbed Miller after the latter struck him with a club during an argument.
Estimates on Flood Damages Requested
Residents living near Big and Little Eagle Creeks who sus(tained damages in the April floods today were asked to give {an estimate of damages for Mrs. {Edna Donaldson, 628 Olin Ave. Mrs. Donaldson, one of the residents who petitioned for flood] * {control following the overflow, {said the request is now pending {with federal flood control authorities. They have asked that esti{mates of damages be furnished, 'she said. Mrs, Donaldson may be . [contacted at BE. 1334-W.
i me. tga
British Declare Emergency in. Strike
| LONDON, June 28 (UP)—The {British “government declared a {state of emergency today and |sent more than 1000 troops into
the strikebound London water. {front to save the nation’s already imeager food rations. ;
He will have comfort—his presence will indicate
a man of taste and with quality leanings—and
he will have the no matter what
satisfactions of the best at the price— the price! . :
Attention is directed to the STRAUSS CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICES.
(1) THE CUSTO
MARY 30-DAY CHARGE ACCOUNT.
in accord with general practice. :
»
(2) THE JUNIOR CHARGE ACCOUNT— 1 especially intended for the younger generation who are on their own—payments are made weekly—No extras—no carrying charges.
Applications for either Charge Account Service— :
are cordially invited—SEVENTH FLOOR.
L. STRAUSS & CO, se. THE MAN'S STOR
gave police per- |F. Thompson, medical staff presi-
rena
fr.
ame,
i } i
