Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1948 — Page 18
Dewey Aid Hints Policy Of Brush-Off
Governor Due To Stand Aloof
Scripps-Howard Stall Writer By CHARLES T. LUCEY WASHINGTON, July 21 — The Republican Party was getting its back up in a high hump today in resistance to the special session of Congress called for next Mon-
'day by President Truman.
The GOP strategy—for the mo-
brush « off of Mr. challenge to it to enact now the proposals to which it committed itself in the party platform
special session unless circumstances force him to do otherwise.
Brownell's Statement
These were the chief inferences drawn from a statement by Jierbert Brownell Jr., Dewey campaign er, which brushed off the special session in this manner: ‘““The Republican platform calls for enactment of a program by a Republican Congress under the leadership of a Republican President. this cannot be
done at a rump session called at
a political convention for political purposes in the heat of a political
but that it was not to be construed as a Dewey statement.
Look fo Albany |
Mr, |executive vice president of Willys-
differ greatly on such important matters. Nor would Mr, Brownell agree that his statement meant he was
renomi-
ation as party standard-bearer
Gets Back Up On C
divertible in brilliant yellow and
‘ |display at Willys of Indiana, 635
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ongress Call
JEEPSTER—1949 PLAY CAR—The rugged Jeep of the war years appears today in new peacetime dress, flashing yellow and fire wagon red with a continental atmosphere, newly sprung with a hammock-soft ride. It is being shown by P. Turner of Willys of Indiana at 635 Virginia Ave. Mr, Turner is shown at the wheel at a recent private
preview for press and radio. New Jeepster Makes Debut Here
Willys Introduces 1949 Model Car
The rugged Jeep, transportation pal of the GI, has put on sports clothes. It's a play pal now, chromed and gay, in the new models introduced today by P. Turner of Willys of Indiana under the new name of Jeepster. The New Jeepster, a natty con-
Woes Dog Barnyard Wizard Who "Sits on Secret of Life’
Farmer Blames Troubles on ‘Plotters’ Who
Hailed Him in Court for ‘Cancer Cure’
MIDDLEBORO, Mass. July 21 (UP)—S8keletons in his legal closet weren’t bothering Farmer John Brown today as he dug in for a finish fight to prove his “master cell’ was a barnyard bonanza. ’ “I'm the victim of a conspiracy,” said the embattled inventor. I can prove my invention can double crops and make animals
roe cou: PONCE 10 Get Data on Firms
He refused to explain why the Information Needed
“conspirators” were conspiring. Gosh, hadn’t they hauled him For Emergency Work The police and fire depart-
into court when he discovered that cancer cure and that remedy for 62 diseases and those “atomments today inaugurated a plan of cataloging information conconcerning Indianapolis business
fire wagon red, was announced today by Mr. Turner .and is on powered” nose drops for glandu-
lar disorders? “Too Strong for Me” “I admit I pleaded guilty,” he said. “The conspiracy was too
strong for me.” Yesterday when Dr. John W.
Virginia Ave. The “sun car built for fun,” according to Arthur J. Wieland,
Overland, was designed from the fan mail received from thousands
"as brought him into new promi. (drive for saving gas.
as GOP spokesman, have
ing
of GI's who wanted the tough little warrior converted into a romping, eager-to-go, but economical, peacetime vehfcle.
Soft as Feather
The seats have been made soft as feathers. The clutch has been ] ed, the ride smoothed, but the power, says Mr. Turner, asked, is greater than ever with over-
Sr
The wheelbase has been lengthfor clews from Al-lened 30 per cent, the center of as to what the stance would|gravity lowered, and the spring and weight distribution al-
had noone
per hour. The Jeepster follows in popu--{larity the mechanical and well-
Kusmeski, chief chemist of the Agricultural Experimental Station at Amherst, visited his farm Mr. Brown, resplendent in sports wear, ushered him into his cejlar where, he said, he had developed the “master cell.” Dr. Kuesmeski picked up a cement disc. Was this it? he
“The master cell is inside,” Mr. Brown explained airily. “You soak the disc in water and spray the water on crops or feed it to livestock. Great stuff.” Back to Amherst “Hummm,” said Dr. Kusmeski, who then conducted some tests fe es squinted through a miecro-
he : It wasn't known when the experimental station would reveal its findings—or when the Federal Pure Food and Drug Administraition would tell what it thought of Mr. Brown's brainchild. “Let them take their time,” Mr. Brown said. “I'm in no hurry. I'm sitting here with the secret of life in my cellar—why should I worry?”
land, Oct. 3, 1942, after entering accessoried workhorse known to . in May, 1 !
31% un
o0m oo 04 Comwith Loan 4 Lounens 88 poeple wg ote aS Ll Coat Oar-Nu-Var .. 1% Eng com
Pe F
it ‘i
45
107 16
sie amee|d Feared Drowned + (In French Air Crash
MARSEILLE, July 21 (UP)— Alr safety service officials reFm ported today that five persons were believed drowned when a !' French army bomber inbound 30%|from North Africa crashed in
Grandmothers Club Plans Picnic Friday
Members of the Indianapolis Grandmothers Club will hold a picnic at Holliday Park Friday. A bus for the park will leave the bus terminal at 11 a.m, Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, president, will conduct the business meeting after lunch. Mrs. T. R. Shideler, Mrs. Fred Sears, Mrs. Henry G.
« « + Collected some samples, “I'll return to Amherst now,” said.
Qh
Hn In
the Mediterranean 120 miles off the French coast. Reports from planes sent to the aid of the bomber said five were believed lost, and from 13 to 20 persons were understood to have been aboard. The bomber was bringing army men and their families from Reghaia, Algeria, to France for a vacation. Earlier reports said all aboard were saved.
Hog sales averaged fully steady in a moderately active trade in the Indianapolis Stockyards today. Good to choice, 180 to 240
19%, | Pounders, sold at pfices from $29 300-1000
to $290.50. Only extremely steady weights were exceptional in a steady to strong average, compared to yesterday, ranging 50
was $29.75.
The Minuet
Thake and Mrs. Willwerth are in charge of reservations. t
Group of the club
will hold a bake sale at F. W. Collier's Store, 3818 N. Illinois|loWed and they slugged him with
St., July 30.
PAY DOG PARKING FEE
HOOPESTON, IIL, July 21 (UP)
Common 700-1100 pounds Chotce— 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds
500- 900 pounds
Cutte
r and common ... Tr
—Teen-agers Judy Holmes and Mary Lou Bauer tied their pet dogs to downtown parking meters today, put nickels in the slots, and spent the next hour shopping.
Hogs Hold Steady Average In Moderate Trade Here
Shih arenene
saene, seenen cere teense
Cows (All Weights)
20 10% (cents or more lower. The top|goqd ++ 315002400
[email protected] 3 %0g1% 36.009 38.00 sestanaeanes [email protected] ds i.e versane 30.50836.00 vessarssseas [email protected] [email protected]
establishments to be used in cases of emergency. They will begin the plan in the neighborhood areas and later work through the downtown section of the city. Information such as name and type of business, hours the establishment is open, and names of persons to call in case of emergency will be placed on cards to be kept in police and fire department fiiles. ; Police Chief Edward D. Rouls said many times business establishments are broken into during the night and police are unable to notify anyone connected with the management because they do not know their names or ad-
dresses. Information to aid firemen in fighting fires which might break out in the establishments will also be recorded.
Oklahoma Sheriff Hunts Slayers of Son in Denver
Okla., tracked down flimsy clues and questioned suspects today in his hunt for the murderers of his son. . The lanky, sunburned sheriff sped here with his wife Thursday to begin a methodical investigation into the skid-row bludgeoning of William Carver, 24. » » blotter gave few } It said only hat two men accused young Carver of nearly hitting them with his truck. An argument fol-
t J THE POLICE clues to the killers,
a blunt instrument. Sheriff Carver has no official status in the manhunt. In Denver, the sheriff is just another citizen. However, Denver police permit him to accompany two detectives while they attempt to unravel the case.
George Kirkwood Dies in His Home
Buckingham Drive.
Center Masonic Lodge.
George A, Kirkwood, insurance 3368 Wilcox St.. manager for Kingan & Co. for 60 years, who retired Jan. 1, 1948,| “WHAT DO died yesterday in his home, 312/doorman asked.
Born in Indianapolis, Mr. Kirk- sergeant. wood lived here all 72 years of his life. He was a member of ' {barged in anyway. Services will be held at 1:30] Charles A. Scoggan, bartender-
11.30@21 50. p. m. Friday in Flanner & Bu- manager, was charged with vio-
NDS Cattle trade closed dull. Many CMBDer ..................... 14 [email protected] chanan mortuary. Burial will bejlating the 1935 slot machine act. The board would be inted! Advance Paint 8s 63.i.......97 ... |late bids of steers and heifers Bulls (All Weights) in Crown Hill. Surviving are his by the Go r ek Allen & Swen Ss 87 7 18 fae wife, Anna E, a Geo H : 2 y VErnor and wold spec os hy “he ¥ t, [closed 50 cents lower than yes-|Good (all weight) .i..c.cuuees [email protected] dab “ 8 50, ree H. Name Hoosier Acting fy that members be six-year res-| American Loan 4s 88 i |terday. Cows were weak to 25|Ssusage— HB ai other, Job, all of In. u d : idents of the state with 10 years’ Buhnet Portiliser : cents lower. Vealers were steady. Medium ... 0 I Il INN 00ga¢.00( 0 2napolls. . S. Education Chief real estate experience. It is modCh (3 Fy Slaughter lambs showed little[C¥"~7 and common... 18.00621.00 « WASHINGTON, July 21 (UP)|eled after a Nebraska law. Solis Ch » h change, although common offer- Dood ta don YE .: Satom Baruch Silent on. wi —Rall I. Grigsby, former Des Sie 88 ings were unevenly lower. Common la mediusy "111111... 11808750 Tour of Euro ~waw |Moines, Towa, educator has been/U. S. Statement Hoosier Crowns 8. duly Tle Culls (78 IBS. UP)... .eusees [email protected] pe named acting U. S. Commis- : dpe Boas 3 ¢ GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (4500) Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves NEW YORK, July 21 (UP)— sioner of Education. WASHINGTON, July 31. (P—-Covern. on 10 120- 140 pounds .........s.. 2000924 30 | Choloe Bernard Baruch, America’s elder| A native of Indiana, he rent fiscal year throngs July 10 come “i; . 2 pounds suvsvavsvess 37.00020.50 ’ ren socal year rough July 19, com=X 1961" 160- 180 pounds , Ty Good— statesman, arrived by plane from| succeeds Dr. John W. Studebaker, [pared with a year ago: Investors Telephone 3s 180- 300 pounds . + [email protected]| 500- 800 DOUNAS «uveesesees. [email protected]| Amsterdam today but refused to|commissioner for the t 14 This Year. = last Year Kuhner Packing 4s 69 220 pounds +. [email protected] Medtum— pas . N Ind Pub Serv 220- 240 pounds . [email protected]| 500-1000 POUNAS ...eeet eee. 23,[email protected]|COMmMent on his tour of Europe. years. Expeiites $2.436.504.308 1.973.304. 812 Bub Qery of 14. 3 34-710 pounds [email protected]| Common. He said he made the trip merely efie N40 Le Tub Tel thee 38 370- 30 pounds . 2830G38.00 $00- 900 pounds ............ .0@%.0|34 “a private citizen:®, . . I alADos Doe ana : JJ. 360 pounds Tareas taane | 230002450 Good to cnonce ewe) : Beating Takes Holiday 4 oi Pam gan FL Local Produce 100 200 POURE +. iuvavsrivs S0.00030.00} Be HERS, GSW eu sus +e +e ry #.00831.0 CHECK FOR FINE “BOUNCES”| PITTSBURGH, July 21 (UP)— : a Good to. oer" Sows 500 pounds dOWR .....i.ee.s [email protected], MINOT, N. D., July 21 (UP)-—|Mrs, Elizabeth A. Rausch told Poultry = Springers and brollers, 37c;| 370- 300 pounds . + [email protected] ao0d to cholo YT (Heifers) A Benedict, N. D., man was fined |Judge Samuel A. Weiss yesterloth fingers, do: socks S24 slaps of Pounds a. . nEghd B00 pounds AOWR ..e.s.eees . [email protected]{ here on a charge of intoxication./day that she endured an annual 435 ow ond A No. 3 poultry,| 360- 400 pounds ... "00€33.00 is Raw 210093850 A jail sentence was suspended.|Christmas beating from her husthan No. SHEEP (500) However, Nick Federenko, was|band, Joseph, for eight years but $4 Ibe. to case,| 400- 450 DOUNAS .....rese. v. 30.00922.00 X back in’ th . » » y 35¢; Orade A 1 : Grade A Me-| 450- 550 DOUNAS vsnesses os 18.509 20.50 Spring Lambs ac n the coop today. The decided to sue for a divorce when dium, 43e; Grade B large, 8c; Do grade, | M BE ile an Sudics SIOM1Y sorted... :-ss 3-30G20 50|check he gave Magistrate George he started beating her on other 1, 80¢; No. 2, Tie. Piga—Medium to good a nu Medium fo good .. ee 2 sais 00 Jessen “bounced.” ¥ holidays. Judge Weiss granted|] Watches®Clothing® Radios, ote. - pou ais 4 ba NS J L00 [COMMON wivciiiiiriiisiinnsan | 00] ——————————————— the divorce. ] Y Truck Grain Prices CATTLE. (0%) Good to eholcs «or +.80810.50 SOT PRODUCES SNOW GET CASH IMMEDIATELY
Arsanin
An 3 2801 000 5 EER ou 700 00
{Common and medium ........ T.50
24 50 32 50
1100-1300 pounds [email protected] Sept. 25.
the laboratory.
reset ianan
his
9.000 Dry ice was found successful
Chotee— 700+ 900 pounlE ........... 180636.25 /in creating an | oe 150 pounds sun BRENE DECLARES 25c DIVIDEND [storm when I Ld 1300 pounds r++ 318083650 Ayighire Collieries Corp. has|a super-cooled cloud a year ago. | No- s00 poun 8 36.28 declared a regular 25-cent divi- Now 15 different types of finely Lio.) : 3250@ 326.50 dend on new common stock pay-|divided soil have been found to
able Oct. 9 #40 shareholders of be capable of producing ‘snow in >
Guard, 16, Kills Grocery Prowler
2d Looter Flees During Shooting SOUTH BEND, July 21 (UP)— A Burtrand, Mich., man was shot and killed today during what a 16-year-old youth described as a burglary attempt. The victim was identified Carter Van Dusen, 21. Jackie Lee Brady, 16, of Roseland, told police he was employed as a night watchman at the Dixie Highway Food Market near here, owned by Marcel Van Raemel. The youth said he heard a noise at the front of the store and saw two menshurrying away with their arms full of groceries. He fired one pistol shot at the floor to scare the men, he said. Fires Second Shot Following the men into a nearby woods, Brady said, he found one of them crawling on the ground. He said he ordered the man to stand up, and then fired another shot, hitting the man in the spine. Van Dusen died a short time later in South Bend Memorial Hospital. Physicians said he also had a second bullet wound in the stomach, apparently inflicted by the first shot which Brady said he shot toward the floor. Police found groceries and other goods from the food mar ket stacked in the woods and an abandoned car nearby. No trace of ‘the second man was found.
Funeral Friday For C. A. Zeigler
Charles A. Zeigler, 3408 E. 20th St., died today in Methodist Hospital.
Mr. Zeigler, a native of Baltimore, Md., had lived in Indianapolis 42 years. Before his retirement he was a tool and die maker at Richardson Rubber Co. 15 years. . He was a member of Hillside Christian Church, Marion County Lodge 35, F&AM, and Sahara Grotto. . Surviving are his wife, Clara E.; two stepdaughters, Mrs. Frank Miller, Bellefontaine, O., and Mrs. Edgar Campbell, Indianapolis, and two stepsons, Robert McClure, Bellefontaine, and Kenneth McClure, Indianapolis. Services will be held at 3 p. m. Friday -at Moore Mortuaries’ Northeast Chapel. Burial will be in Memorial Park. y ;
Police Hit VFW Post Jackpot in Slot Machine Raid
TT ERR THE FAMILIAR click and jangle of slot machines is missing today from Speedway Post 2839, Veterans of Foreign Wars. Police seized six of the gadgets in a raid there at 6 p. m. yesterday. Sgt. Chester Timmerman politely rapped on the post door at
oy you want?” the “I'd like to come in,” said the
The doorman refused entry. Sgt. Timmerman and his squad
Find New Drug To Fight Germs 0f Infections
Scientists Say It May: Combat Some Fevers
en-yellow drug, cousin to strepto-| mycin but promising to conquer)’ diseases which streptomycin and|?} penicillin do not touch,®was announced at the New York Academy of Sciences here today. : The drug is call aureomycin,|3 the “aureo” part of its name com-|# ing from the latin for gold, and]: the comes
the same laboratories that pro-
By JANE STAFFORD Science Service!
( ight, 1948, ; v3 uly 21—A gold-
N YORK,
“mycin” showing that it
Aureomycin was discovered by Dr. B. M. Duggar of the Lederle laboratories division of the American Cyanamide Co. These are
duced the new sulfa drug now being tried in cases of infantile paralysis. This new anti-polio drug was reported by Science Service yesterday. : Effective on_ Viruses The golden-yellow fungus drug is effective against germs of the staphylococcus family, such as cause eye infections; against viruses and some germs called rickettsia. Rocky Mountain spotted fever and both typhus and scrub typhus are among the diseases caused by rickettsia. Trials of aureomycin on pa-| tients have been made in Boston, Minneapolis, at Columbia University here, at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore and Gallinger Municipal Hospital in Washington, D.C. Much of this work is still in the preliminary stage. But trials in mixed bacterial eye infections and a virus-caused venereal disease called lymphogranuloma venereum has reached the stage where the drug may soon be released generally for use in such ailments.
Marie Appointed French Premier
PARIS, July 21 (UP)—Andre Marie, Radical Sociaist and former Minister of Justice, was named premier-designate today by President Vicent Auriol to succeed Robert Schuman. Mr. Schuman’'s government tumbled Monday night when the assembly refused to give him the 12th vote of confidence he had demanded since he took office last November. No Moves Made Mr. Schuman opposed a cut of $40 million in the budget of the French armed forces and staked his coalition government's future on it. No drastic moves to enter the government have been made thus far by the Communists or Gen. Charles De Gaulle’s Rally of the French people. But both have demanded openly a share in it.
Cars Will Soon Be Made of Gold
Climbing auto prices have indicated that cars soon will be made of gold—and that's 100 per cent right. The F. L. Jacobs Co., which has a plant in Indianapolis, has achieved a two-tone plating process which will blend gold and chrome for the hood ornament of a 1949 automobile model. But Jacobs officials weren't saying which car would have the gold plated ornament, except that it is 20 inches long and will weigh 3% pounds.
Five Escape Injury In Highway Accident
from a kind of fungus, like streptomycin. 4
Reptile Clings to Mrs. During Photo-Posing
without warning. The Indian cobra—a new one| to her menagerie—clung to her finger for half a minute. Mrs. Wiley calmly pulled it loose, returned it to its cage and called an ambulance. She told her visitors how to give her first aid while she awaited its arrival. : - Autopsy Due She died at Long Beach Community Hospital, - after serums for North American reptiles were found ineffective. An autopsy was scheduled for today. Mrs. Wiley, who once said she would prefer death from a snake bite to “any other way,” died in an iron lung. Her cousin, C. M. Tanner, urged that the finger, hand or arm be amputated if necessary
Filipinos Seek Social Justice
. Times Foreign Service MANIEA, P. I, July 21—The Philippine Republic is out to promote gocial justice in a big way. President Quirino has just
WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1948
signed’ a bill to “undertake a thorough study of: . ONE: The social and economi problems ‘of Philippine working classes. TWO: Advance social security systems, THREE: Rates and characteristics of risks or hazards confronting working classes, The chief executive has declared: “The promotion of social justice in order to insure the wellbeing and economic security of all the people is a constitutional and moral responsibility of our government.” :
i Y A 4 Al 1 TNR CONT | ATS Largest Selection tn the State
INDIANA FUR CO.
112 East WASHINGTON st
%
DEADLY BITE—Mrs. Grace Olive Wiley, nafionally-known snake expert, died an hour-and-a-half after one of her household pets—an Indian cobra—bit her. Former zoo and museum curator, Mrs. Wiley was posing the reptile for a photo at her Long Beach, Cal., home, when it struck without warning.
Woman Snake Expert Dies After New Cobra Bites Her
Wiley’s Finger Attempt in Home
LONG BEACH, Cal, July 21 (UP)—Mrs. Grace Olive Wiley, 65, nationally-known snake expert who kept cobras as household pets, died yesterday an hour and a half after one of them bit her. Mrs. Wiley, former curator of Chicago's Brookfield Zoo and the Minneapolis Museum of Natural History, was posing the snake for a photo at her home in nearby Cypress, Cal, when it struck
bdo bmn Bit Bes leh babi |to save her life. But he said Mrs,
Wiley’ only shook her head and indicated she knew the bite was atal,
Mrs. Wiley, a widow, was try ing to persuade the five-and-a-half-foot snake to arch its back and. spread its hood when it struck. She had survived previ. ous bites by a cobra and rattle. snakes. Mrs. Wiley kept 125 reptiles at her home. She called them “honey” and “cutie pie.” She was proud of the fact that she never removed their poison sacs, saying: “A snake will loge its fear of people much faster than a person will lose his fear of snakes.”
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Five persons escaped serious injury in an auto-truck crash at midnight on Cold Spring Rd. and State Road 29. The accident occurred during the rainstorm when the car driven south on Highway 29 by Robert Amos, 21, of 2204 N. Bosart Ave. collided headon with the
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BEGGS—Edwart husband of M
Mary, brother ¢ Edith Reilly, ¢ ducted ¥ [ AARON-RUBEN Interment India etery. Friends | ar
Jersey b father EL by three gfande t his
:30, the | Meridian at 19 Peter snd Paul may call at me FLEMING — | Brookside Av Wednesday, service later, -1806. MOO GANT—Brodie passed away loved Dusband ¢ Jathet of an ene Ga Tr Woodard and 1 dlanapolis; Eu field, Tenn., ar McKinney, Te: R ursday, 2 p.
ence Da Box 308; husbe wald, father of Srinnewsia, p - Im. rv CONKLE FUNG Michigan. Floral Park, the _tuneral ho 00K—Mrs. ¥ Mrs,
& ART. Sime late: after 7 ng ¥l Dal papers ple I8KE—Louise 3 620 8. New hy 20. , from the BL HOME, 1503 N
8. m. Requien and Pay {ernment Catt ends ma, Home after % | KIEFER—Della James Ray Sister of Mrs. To, L ‘ed day. 10 a ae CH Burial Memoris Call at chapel 3 (Le
KIREWOOD— of Anna A, George H, “g John Kirkwood Xi Service HANAN MOR a Friends
TA — LONG ohn 2 and pe
