Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1948 — Page 2

own township.

Township and Jean Cooper of who entered more than Neon

BLUE-RIBBON EXHIBITORS — Helen Mills (left) of Decatur Township shows her ribbon-winning dress to two other exhibitors in the county 4-H Girls' Achievemént show at IPALCO Hall. With her are Maura Chillson [center] of Warren Decatur Township. Each of the many contestants exhibits in the county show was a winner in her

Allied Envoys Confer With Molotov _ MOSCOW, Aug. 6 (UP)—Diplo- ‘ mats representing the three west-

tonight 'nigh Russian officials on the {German crisis. | “U8. Ambassador W. Bedell Smith, French Ambassador Yves {Chataigneau and Roberts, secretary to British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin, visited the seat of the Soviet government. | They expected to see Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, who attended their meeting with Premier Josef Stalin last Monday night. ’ Several conferences of the diplomats of the western states here apparently had produced an ent on proposals to be presented on their next visit to the Kremlin, -fmpose Rigid Secrecy The most rigid secrecy has concealed the East-West negotiations, and officially there was nothing to report. But Western officials made it plain that they expected further consultations

7

to be demanding a voice in control of the Ruhr as the price for lifting the blockade of Berlin. There was every reason to assume fhat elimination of the Berlin blockade was the major con-

‘WASHINGTON, Aug. 8 (UP)~ The Federal Communications Commission

: ) ruling. But stimated that the edict— § final--will affect se “give-away”

ndreds of . by local

#

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WL bk 2 ob BIER wy § 5p ¢ %

=: Study Radio Quiz Show Ban

industry spokesmen said that new quis programs, planned for this fall, would boost the annual give away to about $2,500,000. nip The commissior said its new

someone can convince them that these programs do not violate the

date was set. It invited all interested parties ~networks, sponsors, local stations—to file statements or briefs with the commission by Sept. 1. The National Association of roadoasters, at its last conven-

its tentative rull

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ministers council meeting on At present, network shows give ton, Va. It held that that sta-| Germany. away about §150,000 monthly inition’s telephone quiz violated the Ee merchandise or money. Radioban on lotteries, {Aside From. All That,

The commission mentioned no liye a Good Car

¢ quiz shows in its

specifi ruling. It made it clear that even| if the new rule goes into effect vin Lee Jr. was minus his car each type of program rule will go into effect unless/judged on its own merits. Sudar the ruling a program wo considered illegal if, as Federal ‘Communications Ast, Nolg conditioning of winning, contestant chosen by lot must first: ONE: Furnish money or any other thing of value, or possess the sponsor's product. 4 TWO: Be listening to the program or seeing it on television. bumpers Jue that try to “buy the radio au: THREE: Give the correct andience.” ‘But networks and local{SWer to a question, the answer

stations have found give-aways a[or clue to which is given on the a @ station, even if on a previprogram.

will be

Answer the telephone The commission handed down|or write a letter where the con- ) in a case in-|versatioh or contents of the letter ‘volving station WARL, Arling-'is broadcast by the station.

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dition of the western powers before agreeing to another foreign

| SAN DIEGO, Cal. (UP)—Cal-

after police pinned the label of “unsafe” on the windshield. Patrolman Paul Tristle listed the 1935 car as without brakes, a headlights, stoplight, horn, front floorboards, front license, wind*

bearings. In addition, the rear license plate was wired to the gas cap cover; all four fenders were loose; the front and rear booth loose and “tacked” on.

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By Truman

y's Weather Fotocast

FOTOLAST" Rae, “ane EERO We AiR FLOW 1

’ 3 i

| TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—=Temperatures in the central portion of the U. S. are expected

| toward the Atlantic.

with ranking Soviet spokesmen. | to rise slightly tonight and early tomorrow. By dawn the mercury should be in the 60s. Unseasonably

Premier Stalin was understood, cool weather will continue in the east for the next 24 hours as the high cell over Indiana driffs

FSA Chief Defends Use

Of. U. S. Chef in His Office

WASHINGTON, Aug. 6. (UP) —Federal Security Administrator Oscar R. Ewing said today he considers it “entirely proper” for him to use a $3200-a-year government hospital chef in his private office dining room. “I propose to keep it up,” Mr. Ewing told a news canference, A' Senate Appropriations Subcommittee yesterday raised the question of the Ewing's private chef, neaser James Kelley, who is paid by a local government hos-

shield wiper and left front-wheel pital

Mr. Kelley told the Senators at a closed h y that for the past 10 months he has spot about five hours a day whipping up luncheons for Mr. Ewing and his office guests in a private dining room in the Federal Security Building. The subcommittee said this violated federal budgetary rules, Mr. Ewing said, however, that his budget experts have assured him there is “nothing improper or illegal” about ‘it.

keeping time of lard itself.

He said having a private chef

saved time and money because he and his aids could talk business while they ate instead of taking time to go out for lunch. Mr. Ewing also used hit news conference to answer charges of “censorship” by John W. Studebaker, former U, 8. Commissioner of Education.

Mr, Studebaker, who resigried

Mr. Ewing baker of “utter falsehood.”

“To 9 that Iam lukewarm in my qpposition to communism is puge unadulterated falsehood,” Mr. Ewing said. “The man who made that injende knows he deliberately made He said Mr. Studebaker’s “inference” that Mr. Ewing tried, to exert “political control over edu-

cation , ., is an utter falsehood.”

Engineer Rescues Woman From Train

Times State Servies CRAWFORDSVILLE, Aug. 8 —A rallroad engineer was credited today with saving the life of a woman who police termed as mentally ill. C. R. McMillan, operating a Pennsylvania switch the east edge of the city yesterday afternoon, said he saw the woman running down the tracks towards an oncoming train. He said he called to warn her but she paid no attention. ; The engineer pulled the woman from the track just in time to save her from being struck.

Retired Madison Mail

Carrier Dies at 72 Times State Service : MADISON, Aug. 6—Louis Lay= ton, retired rural letter carrier,

He was 72 Mr, Layton was the first rural letter carrier out of Madison post office after free delivery was inaugurated. He was also secretary of No. 3 fire company.

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