Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1948 — Page 5
1
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BYTERIAN
r was Minister sylvania Sta on, Minister _
11 a mm I Design”
Career Called
committee which investigated New York City gas and electric companies in 1905. Expose Brings Reforms i Mr. Hughes prepared laws which remedied the evils disclosed. In the same year another legislative committee employed him to conduct the famous insurance inquiry. He revealed that policyholders’ money was being diverted to private funds. This expose brought about insurance reforms throughout the country. Then the Republican Party chose him as its candidate for mayor of New York City, but he refused. Then the Federal government called on him to help in its coal trust investigation. A year later, in 1906, the State Republican convention at Saratoga nominated him for governor and he alone among all the Republicans on the ticket was elected. Mr. Hughes defeated William Randolph Hearst, the Dem-
He was re-elected for a second term but before it ended President Taft appointed him an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. He went to the high bench on Oct. 10, 1910.
Sides With Holmes Mr. Hughes wrote few dissenting opinions while on the bench, as an Associate Justice, a fact that has been explained with the theory that the court was more liberal than just before his return to it as Chief Justice. He did, the records disclose, side with Oliver Wendell Holmes, dean of the liberals, in denouncing “yellow dog” labor contracts, in holding Leo Frank entitled to federal intervention to insure a fair trial in Atlanta, Ga., and in condemning an Alabama law permitting the imprisonment of Negro farm hands for failing to keep wage contracts. Mr." Hughes returned to the political scene June 10, 1916, when nominated as the Republican presidential candidate. He resigned from the bench the same day. Stumped Country in 1916 During the campaign he stumped the country against Mr. Wilson. He was a solemn candidate, made more dignified by his famous reddish brown whiskers. His campaign failed to arouse the enthusiasm of the regular politicians. His misunderstanding with Sen. Hiram Johnson in California was believed by many to have cost him the White House. « Certain it is that Mr, Johnson, often considered as a presidential candidate, did not give Mr, Hughes his enthusiastic support. And it was the loss of the California electoral votes by a popular vote minority of 3777 which cost Mr. Hughes the victory. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes, according to accounts, received the elec~ tion returns in a Times Square hotel. So clearly in his favor were the early returns that she addressed him at dinner as “Mr. President” and saluted him with a kiss. Undaunted by Defeat Mr. Hughes went home leaving erders not to be disturbed. By morning the tide had turned and he was once more a private citizen. Undaunted he returned to his law practice. A highly successful lawyer, Mr. Hughes did not hesitate to return to the public service in 1921 when
important role as chairman of the United States delegation to the sixth Pan-American Conference -in Havana in settling the delicate situation then existing between the American continents.
prem Feb. 14, 1930. He frequently was
mous gold clause decision and the ocratic nominee, {decision upholding the first test of TVA operations.
Of Supreme Court
FORMER CHIEF JUSTICE have been planned for Charles Court jurist who died last night
Chief Justice in 1930
Mr. Hughes returned to the Sue Court as Chief Justice on
allied with the liberals on the bench and wrote some of his most important opinions in their behalf. He was the author’ of the fa-
Mr. Hughes wrote a bitter dissent against the decision ‘ outlawing railroad pensions, the Guffey Act and the New York minimum wage case. In other New Deal cases during the Roosevelt administration, Mr. Hughes voted to outlaw the NRA, AAA and the “hot ofl” law. In his writing, Mr. Hughes indicated his belief in the necessity of maintaining the court in pubHe esteem and in avoiding, as far as possble, 5-to-4 decisions. Despite that belief, however, he did not hesitate to vote with the minority »n many liberal-conserva-tive questions.
Retired in 1941 He retired as Chief Justice on July 1, 1941.
Mr. Hughes was born on Apr. 11, 1862, at Glens Falls, N.Y. the territory made famous in Cooper's Leather Stocking) tales. His father was a Baptist minister who schooled his son in the strict tenets of the faith. His mother, a brilliant woman of Scotch-Irish, Dutch and English ancestry, taught him to read when he was 3% years old. While attending kindergarten in Oswego, N.Y., where his family was then living, young Hughes complained of other children being “too slow.” , He laid on his father’s desk a “olan of study” written in his own childish scrawl. It included Herodotus, Homer and Virgil and resulted in his being taken out of school for tutoring by his mother. Translated Bible His family lived a short while in Newark, N.J.,, where Mr. Hughes read Shakespeare chiefly
translate the Bible: from the Greek. His family shortly afterward moved to Manhattan where he entered Public School 35. Before
“for the stories” and was able to/Mitchell, Anderson, 15 days for
get
insanitary conditions and for allowing minors to loiter. The waitress permit of Dorothy Jenkins, Michigan City, was revoked on evidence that she is not
leaving high school he had writ-
IN INDIANAPOLIS .
MARRIAGE LICENSES Lockman, 20, of 1031 Harlan Sherrill, 18, of 1031 Harlan St, . er, 48, of 5 - ty; Zora M. Hanger, 45, of 1748
town . Smith, 20, of 8538 Centennial St; Elizabeth J. Riley, 17, of 1533 Centen-
nial St. Simon Motlow, 40, of 308 Douglass St; Martha Davis, 20, Douglass St. ivan Gene Eacret, 19, of 817 laurel St.; Ruth MoQueen, 19, of 1633 E. Raymond
St. Max Candiotty, 25, of Los Angeles, Cal}
St.;
President Warren Harding named him Secretary of State. He immediately became again a front page figure. His handling of the Washington Arms Conference was said to have been largely responsible for its success. His fame became world-wide and his energy and foresight never ceased to arouse wonder. His opposition at this time to
recognition of the Soviet Union is |}
believed to have done much to arouse the opposition of Senate later when nominated Chief Justice. He held there should be no recognition unless the debts of the Czarist regime were met and the rights of private property conceded. z Resigned Cabinet Post He resigned the State Department post co-incidental with the
second Coolidge term after bring-|;.,
ing it to a high state of efficiency
Lillian Steinkeier, 33, of 363 B. Westfield
Henr { St. Verna Mae Rethard, 21, of 910 8. | Missourt St
t. Ae pr Charles I. Gray, 18, of 1923 Central Ave. | Col Sunrise ..... 6:00 | Sunset ..... 7:98 | Josephine LaRussa, 17, of 27 Sycamore| Ms Hieties 36 he coding 7304 = " { B08.m. 00 Orvil Pringle, 19, of 1914 Dexter Ave] » : al precipitation since Jan. 1..... 27.58 Mary Ann Jackson, 17, of 2146 Sugar . Ramona Meese; Orville Blanche Rbert t ciency since Jan 50
Grove Ave. Donald HE. Pavey, 33, of 1228 Central Ave; Phyllis Mann, 21, of 23 E. St. Joseph St, Wendell R. Curtis, 19. of 153 Bakemeyer St.; Marilyn Ann Bleistein, 18, of 967
_ Ray Jr. 25, of ive; Anna Kathryn Bebee, 28, of 31 iw. J fo 38, of Princeton Hotel; . Je es, » Be hyitts Worland, 19, of 916 Woodlawn
Ave. bert of 5306 Byram Gayle Bs 8, eof io Hallowal
Place; Bett Jean Reon at of 84% N. Beville Ave. RE Tor Baie wo hE ad ve. Borla. aki, 33, "of $13 N. Parker
Louise rden,
which was said to have extended! rnomas
down. to the charwomen. On resigning he expressed the wish to refurn to private life, but it was not long-lived. In 1928 he
for International Justice at The “ga He had advocated some form ™
1 . Pennsyl
of participation in the World of
Court and an “enlightened” form of ‘participation in world affairs. In the same year he played an
8100 E. Ridge
Greenwood, Ind;
yet 21 years of age.
J of
Minnesota 8
DIVORCE SUITS FILED Mary vs. Laurence Tait: Connely R. vs
An | Tatum.
{BIRTHS
e ms; or; Charlotte vs.
3 Boys y D. Konrad, 34, of 857 8. Pershing At Si. Francis—Ralph, Mary Forey; Wilse,
| Virginia Steed. | eral—Thomas, Lena Lak | At rsn-—Rober
Donsid, Betty Sparks; Newton, | Pierson; Fred, Madonna Eddy: GO. i Evelyn Hill; John. Iva Hos {A Be Vine Bticasa, Phyllis bast son, PH) | Paul, Estamse O'Neil; {
’
Wil N Max, ry Hittle,
At St. Fran Dorothy Hunt.
» Mors At At bara Carr; BEugens, Rowe;
Oo SE)
MnCow,
ames CG. Kjeldsen, 26, 233 N. Deven Ave; Betty i Haller, 21, of 101 EB. E. Rouse, 21, of Columbus, Ind: Virginia Ruth Joyce, 21, of Acton, Ind.
vs. Samuel T, nd Cory: Ruth Dewayne undetermined amount were miss-
an. Cun a : The following table shows the temperathiture in other cities:
tetler; Mil. : h Low Mi tan uli oy .I Boston . veranes 000 7 Katherine Chicago 73
Ham, VIE Oustiom | Cine
{Denver Iris Polley; Earl, At_Genersl—Louls, Ruby Marrow; Joseph,
Rn Bar. Mi ty
half of the state.” Democrats, he said, distributed their state ticket over all parts of the state, and’ if elected, the Democratic administration would be représentative of all Indiana.
Find $155 Missing From Stolen Safe
Police are looking for some energetic burglars after they found a safe today in the 1000 block of Speedway Ave. It was taken from Duncan Supply Co., 937 N. Illinois St. The door had been pried open land an employee of the firm said $155 in cash and checks for an
ing.
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU —Aug, 2, 1948—
Wrbasion
4 eam ay in ain EIS2ETTERSLRSRS 2
end
At_St. Vincent’s—Robert, Doris, Betty Robertson At Home— Warren, Nancy White, 1 Norman Ave. > DEA
, 48, a
Anns Margaret Hooser, 55, at , carcinoma.
jess, 89, at L U. Medical Cen
David W. vid - Harvey, 84, st 3138 N. Kenwooll,
ion. h Stark, 57, at 27 N. Arsenal,
“Chapel of ¢
kd
Stevers
She 3
he Flowers”
have to trade for it with the West.”
bang
‘Spadework’
“If he's elected.”
# ~ » . » Hit Price Support AGRICULTURE DEPARYMENT sees black clouds ahead! on farm: grain and cotton sur-| pluses. Within year, problem of whether to tell farmers how much to grow must be! faced. Alternative would be bulg-| ing warehouses, filled with grain| bought with tax hold up prices. Marshall Plan enables us to {dispose of bulk of surplus this year. But if
it
soon.
When deciding “Which Wey. to. Turn,” allow “Chapel of the Flowers” to offer its foeilities and: understanding stoff 8 for a truly heart-warming. service.
be
OF TRUMAN'S official family doesn’t share his election optimism. An essistant secretary, working nights on next year's budget; says he's “doing Mr. Dewey's Spadework He doesn’t bother to add:
says | payers’ money to
an produc-
tion, continues a] i YOU CAN
Law lets Agriculture Depart-. ment pay up to 50 per cent of
cost of exporting surplus foods. Thus,
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THIS IS WHAT YOU
YOU DON'T NAVE.TO:
worried about how “proper rewards” to aids If he’s elected. He can hardly put more than two New Yorkers in cabinet; por hc includes several of ae Sm t make everyone happy, however, yy =» . Ives Seeks Governship y : SEN. IRVING IVES wants to Indiana Demo- : : DEFENSE PLANNERS be New York governor in 1950, re-slection to Oon-| SOT OE “aght because thinks Albany is better spring here for the annual say staged by Democratic edi-'she has no A-bomb; won't have board to White House than SenHe_took up tHe federalluntil about 1052 sccording. tojats of Cabinet. If Dewsys next; This fisttiaton 1b, deeply : : fight where Henry Schrick-| President's Air Policy Tl-year-old Lt. Gov. The request has disappeared e. party's Governor candi- Sion. They say Reds might try Joe will serve out his un- operators working in the | sng reappeared In three differ date, left off earlier this week, jasassing our, Hugks, hut, won, Rg term, field and with the re- | ent Marion County budgets and He called the 1947 Republican ire on them. HARISY Jens Tv Sor Jo sutnor i ant Tn 0 eet Ta riots sat. Sppea ture’s Others argue we'll be inviting in ; 80 do t 2 EY Lot a L ppested ing federal aid hg Gem act of war; must be prepared for New York Republican leaders. sible to rum such responsible ih the county eleric’s } for 3 » ! it we take chance. Dewey's mum. ected Ives so-called builders $3500 for a photostat machine. the Jats = Congres “und a * Those favoring calling Reds' for Senate only after party lead-| business. We want to see every |Tater the request disappeared |which has done’ Indiana bluff say Stalin still runs Soviet lors refused to take his first] legitimate complalat of vet- from that budget and ashesred able we IrTepar-| how; discount Feperis he's | choles; 1. Gea. Hugh Drum, Tent Dow Mr. Gorteign minds I uy Cut Indiana Out DE . to go about this, he didnt say. | oT “Because of that resolution,’| 20 faith in Long-Range Forecast Two. days later, Pyul Srewr Madden sald, “Indians tarian, but figure he's too. much ong-R ge .-n county recorder, asked the county définitely didn't mich fod-| ® realist to risk war now. THER BUREAL'S expert. petail Meat to appropriate $8500 for & new y get asm "|. Until recently, we feared menting with month-in-advance | Drops photostat machine. A check of eral flood control aid as It might! gi, ins influence was forecasts. It's “average monthly] MEAT PRICES came down nis department's budget disclosed bave. The State hasn't begun 0, .: hotheads in politburo with resume and outlook” can be ob-iitle on a retail leve! this week, that a request was not ifr it. The feel the full effects of this thing|, ., military savvy might tained from t printing but what eaused it—the heat of proposed appropriation again ap Which amounts to telling Con-|,, war With Stalin in saddle, office at $4.80 a year the housewives? pears in the commissioners’ Sar ont Want any federalliney figure he realises we cant ————————— The housewives and thelr oudget. : 5 : be driven to our side o - ; ; The controversial resolution| 1%, driven back to our sige of AL Plead loader, Mrs. Velma Pork, Whe | Go—— put Indiana on record of prefer-\y, ow from outlying bases. bellion last Monday, are feeling . ring. to- manage its own affairs nr a - proud. They did It, they The condemnation of federal . 3 wd j & kickbacks to, wh sates suns ‘Hold Our Temper’ ||() Lilli} wow 1a in hot weener: won COMPLETE. : an i SHORT OF WAR, we won! the heat wave came they had to pg . y from ‘other. states more anxious abandon Berlin. Some generals Parvants of 5 Sa cut prices to move stocks. SL» as DIES—Private funeral services to receive federal funds an ex-|3&Y We shouldn't have stayed, but y : no. i Evans Hughes, former Supreme |. "it Indiana out of federal tDAt question is academic now. ; It Was ‘Accidental’ . A of a heart attack® He was 86. |apnropriations. restal dossmt want any The parents of five childfen Bows and Boos X ; i ten essays on “The Evils of Light| Mr. Schricker’s recent attacks igen a war. He fears aroused Who were found hungry and un-| CANDIDATES Henry Schriok- SERVICE : » - jtations [OR the resolution by the Gop start 1 attended at their Mars Hill home er and Hobart Creighton ap- Ln Literature” ahd "The Lim trolled legislature already had|American opinion wil at the Press- ” of the Human Mind.” Son eglslature already had... coction it Reds kill some of|Yesterday, pleaded Jullty to child) Radio benedrawn defensive argument from| = "= neglect charges in Court {fit baseball game as managers of or Mr. Hughes sought to enteriRepublican Governor Gates. The(*'f "en _ .. 1 cident we'll be|t0daY but both explained it was opposing teams Tussday. J for Corporations t Hamilton College when he was 13.| Governor Thursday called the at-| = *00, “Co. “lot ate untess|all a0 accident. ; took their bows. Amateur His youth barred him but he was |¢aei unfair and said even though |i. clearly an organized cam-| Mr, and Mrs. William R. cO8 are now quibbling about Business admitted to Brown University the GOP ves the princi We didn’t come out shoot- {2626 8. Lyons Ave., said they had | Which one drew the most apthree years later and was gradu-|pje, it still is the duty of state Fog when Tito downed our planes; made AFTAngemenis for Relgh PUN 1; OF the fewest boos. Stores 3 ated in 1887. ¢ time|OMCI8l8 to “get as much federal| ii "holq our tempers this time|{bor Who watch their children, a. : as oi Obeid His schoolmates at that th [money back into Indiana #8 Pos-|y. jong as we can. Ages § months to § years, bit Ragged Golf Courses Factories = Plants found him to be a “timid Jouth sible.” : -—n a , |that after they left home to go NE a Individuals vide who stood. high ii iis Classes, “That's a heck of a way to get : downtown the neighbor was un-| GOLFERS WHO PLAY the os was graduated third in his class. fmoney back in A ta Liquor Sales Drop able to continue, city's municipal ung 3 are won- ™ Serbian Taught School ngress you don’t want it,” MEN think their post- Oase Continued dering why some oourses nce Department of . on ed ‘two vears dur.| MT: Madden said here. Thi is has reached 31 os J Their was continued in|are in such bad shape, particu. Trust | i no = There follow Greek | Charles Fleming of Hammond, (roo: vear whisky sales dropped Juvenile pending an in-|larly Riverside. Fletcher Company makes hematics and French tn Del. [Party candidate for secretary of|30 per cent under top year, 1946, | vestigation of general con-| At Riverside, the are nalyses mathematics and French 1 Dea|state, also joined the attack: bY|gaioe are now running only 1.9)ditions no longer green but Durned-of aware Academy, be EDEL tay demanding to know why the per cent under last year; leveling “If the Investigation shows the| arid patches of sand and studied ‘law in his Pre. Unt legislature had not carried out its oy agin sufferers are bars. High are not getting proper| gravel. What has sur {Then he entered Colum te at | Princple here in the state, Nearly| 0 “of 1iving has forced Amer-{°8re, we will have to make them | vived in Mle ¢ be- | versity law school to gradua every Hoosier city and town is| "0 "ate home. We're WAIds of the court and tween the ball And the say | the head of his class. complaining, he said, because the| fi" oor than before|them in foster homes,” Charies| the golfers. On being admitted to the bar in (state takes millions in tax money|s Boswel, chief court probation! City employses seldom get 1884 he was ordinarily successful out and then doles it back to local > a officer, said. around io watering the greens.| in general practice. Four yearsiunits of government. . The children were left in a/The other day several spigots later he married Miss Antoinette “It looks to me as though they A Scotch Problem - two-room home for eight hours were geysers of water Carter, daughter of the senior put the shoe on the right foot and THERE'S SCOTCH problem, while the father a disabled war skyward. 0 hoses were ate member of the law firm to which |start’ practicing their so called too. Internal Revenue's alcohol/veteran went to take & phiysteal tached to the mains and the wahe had been admitted. ’ home rule principles right here in|..." . it has scheduled examination and the Was ter was forming ponds at the His health was threatened|Indiana,” Mr. Fleming said. on rules governing nr! Inge selling costume jewelry she had sides of the greens. three years later and he taught There appeared to be little bit- in Scotland and U. 8. made, . ’ law at Cornell University for a|terness left over from the recent People making “Scotch-type” D rest. party upheaval which cost former! gpisky want to call it plain An had Want run On his law practice State Chairman Pleas Greenlee “ teh.” Importers » = y y oy IN two. years later he soon ‘became is job and put Ira Haymaker of no whisky made outside Scotand| A (C 's. Hawk vill § one of -the city's ablest corpora-| Franklin, in his place. State com-| noid be called “Scoteh” or oope J $ a of tion lawyers. This reputation Mittee members who stuck with «migniand ” Norman, 12, and Myron Dahl, 8, {up caused him to be retained to in-|Mr. Greenlee in the factionall may unit has Russian prob- |were the proud owners today of|Willvestigate the city’s gas and elec-|f18ht sald today they were con-| jum, too, It's trying to set |what is possibly a Cooper's hawk, don tric company for a legislative Strned now only with winning the| yeandards for vodka, Russian (but they don’t know what to do/Soms commission. elechion, eissal national drink which—belleve it [with it. which : oy ral funds fight ap-| or pot—is a neutral spirit. The boys, sons of Mr. and Mrs. ABC R kes pea estined to become a “wow Bert Dahl, 1814. N, Parker Ave, KevVoKes major issue in the coming am Hi oil Bl ked ; took the bird home with them p : Even Democrats - were Hint Qil - Bloc yesterday, after it had fallen in Tavern Permits startled at the speed which Re-| TITO'S DIPLOMATIC biast|ihe yard of School 81, 18th and t of the White publicans came to the defense of against Romania may mean Ana|Parker Sts. The tavern permit of the their attitude and they believed Pauker is blocking oil shipments| Last night they released the Lantern, Inc. 2630 8. Holt St,|they had touched a ‘GOP sore/to Yugoslavia. That'd be bodyibird, which apparently suffered YOUR COMFORT! has been suspended for 30-days|SPot. Charges “Dosertiont blow to Yugoslav economy Which leg injuries, and found it hadll TOR 0d Alcoholic Beverage Com- must have oil imports. It'd be|returned to their today. NDA by fhe for alleged oysag Hquors In another move to carry the more damaging than Cominform Ornithologists. EDACk Yard 18 OPEN su Y mission for allege q fight to the GOP, John Watkins attack, which Tito's weathered-- scription classified the 17 3 to minors. of Bloomfield, lieutenant gover-|so far, long, 28-inch wingspread bird as 8 A M. to 8:18 P. MN. At Blwood, the tavern permit 0Or candidate, charged Repub-| Tite's protest ranted about a Cooper's hawk. An Saturday of Weldon and Dorothea Hahn Hodis With deserting southern| “Insults, slander, terrorism,” rithms Cetin Toe Bummer was suspended 15 days for allow- - ete, but also sald Romania was |HURT BY Pi ing minors to loiter in their place ou pointed out that the recent! unde: Yugoslavia's de- URE BY Jon oR 1461 Masand the waitress permit of Miss| OOF convention which feafured| fensive strength and Inde- |,ocnisetis Ave. drove an fcepick Malmothe Beeman, Elwood was|® bitter battle between Sen. with respect to “Im- |i per thumb today whil chi nding 15 days for permitting| William E. Jenner und State t 2» Stel g |B um y while chippin® suspending y pe & | House ¢ perialist powers pped of ioe tn her home. She was taken minors ‘to loiter, ship orces over the governor- Communist double-talk, that |i, General Hospital where the The commission suspended the| «ng ld mean: ick was removed. lquor permit of Jacob CHERter ar ciomnmngle state Candidate| “It you dow't sell us oll, we'll Be as semovel si
wn $135 oven
Writé s word—Listen to s tadio program Enow an answer to s question :
DOI Sonus neg msn
