Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1948 — Page 1
Unity in State
TA ARN es a hg Ae EE ete
The Indianapolis Times
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FINAL HOME
Defeat Shoves GOP Toward
Can't Quarrel Over ~ Absent Patronage
Democratic sweep of state: offices in Indiana today had disarmed the warring factions of the Hoosier GOP, first step toward the party unity state Republicans preached. but couldn’t quite achieve. The Republican faction led by Junior Senator William E. Jenner need no longer worry about how “Governor” Hobart Creighton would use state patronage powers—because Mr, isn't Governor. The so-called State House fac-
EIGHTY - EIGHT, KRy., Nov. 4 (UP)—Final vote tabulation today showed: Truman 88, Dewey 88, That's the story at EightyEight.
prospect of Mr. Jenner wielding federal patronage as a club to gain Hoosier party
age for the GOP ‘with President Truman back “in the national saddle. Need to Pull Together Without weapons, and with the common cause of picking up the pieces and returning to state power, natural forces were again
Creighton |
; - * control. There will be no federal patron-
FORECAST: Rain late tonight and tomorrow morning. Cooler tomorrow. Low tonight, 55. High tomorrow, 65. 59th YEAR—NUMBER 207
E
DISCOLORED
Oder Witness
Broglin Had Been
at work to induce Republicans to pull together. | Democrats, on the other hand, have at least a temporary safety | valve to ward off the chronic | disease of parties in power—fat complacency. Although the new Governor, Henry Schricker, has a completely Democratic official family in the State House and 61 to 39 control of the House of Representatives, his administration for at least two years will face a Republican State Senate. Republicans, saved by an overwhelming backlog of holdover Senators, still control the Senate 28 to 21. Those 28 GOP Senators will see to. it that Democratic power is held to a minimum, that party-fattening legislation doesn’t pass. Dewey Leads by 10,000 Final tallies on the state election showed Republicah Thomas E. Dewey carrying the state by only 10,000 votes, a mere shadow of his anticipated plurality. The final unofficial count by United Press was 816,203 to 805,939. Another profound effect of the election in Indiana was the humiliation of the Wallace Progressives, Weeks before election day, spokesman for the “third” party said they would be humiliated if they polled fewer than 75,000 votes. The voters did a thorough job, giving Mr. Wallace 7363 votes and Walter Frisble, governor! candidate, fewer than 2000. Not Even Third Party Final returns almost certainly will deprive the Progressives even of the right to call themselves the third party because they likely will be outpolled by the Prohibition Party nearly three to one, Gov. Schricker's victory over Mr. Creighton grew as the. total vote grew and his margin wound up nearly 140,000, The final United Press count was 878155 votes for Mr. Schricker to 738,607 for Mr. Creighton. Other Democratic state candidates fell far short of matching Mr. Schricker’s performance, but the final results are the payoff and even with a margin of a single vote, nothing but the victory matters at this point.
Weatherman Sees
Rain Tomorrow LOCAL TEMPERATURES
6a m., 58 10 a. m... 63 7. m. .~58 11 a. m... 65 8 a.m... 58 12 (noon).-66 9 a m.. 60 1p. m.. 68
The clouds drifting over In-|City Hall, said she was livingitions director of the utiiity, said 'denly I got a choked up feeling. dianapolis are expected to bring with the defendant in May, 1943,/this morning that ne poisonous't
rain tonight and tomorrow, ac-| cording to the Weather Bureau. | Temperatures, which have been! unusually high, will drop slight-' 1
¥, : Today's high of 70 degrees should fall to 55 degrees tonight but tomorrow's high is not expected to go above 65. There remains the question of snow. When will it appear? Don’t forget to send your prediction as to the exact time and date of Indianapolis’ first snowfall to The Times Weather Editor. This is a prizeless contest. Your reward will lie in receiving the title “Champion Weather Forecaster of the Year.” All entries in the snowfall contest will be judged by Paul Miller, chief meteorologist of the Indianapolis; Weather Bureau, on the basis, of official weather records.
Times Index
Amuse. ..32, 33/ Movies ..32, 33 Beauty ..... 29 Needlework . 27] Bridge ..... 28/Pattern .... 27 Classified .39-42 Radio .:.... 9 J. Crosby .. 10 Side Glances 24 Crossword . 37! Society ..... 27| Editorials .. 24 Sports -..36, 37 Food ....,.. 28 Teen Probs.. 29
Forum ..... 24 Washington. 24/but Air Force headquarters said Hollywood . 32{ Weather map 5ithe pilot, Capt. Vingent J. Bracha | Earl Wilson. 13lof O
Inside Indpls. 23 Mrs, Manpers 18 Women's 28, 29
Dr. R. N. Harger, Indiana University Medical School toxicolo-
gist, testified today that Harvey)
Samuel Broglin was under the influence of alcohol the night he was fatally shot by Jeannette Oder. The well-known scientist took! the stand for the defense as the 11-day trial neared its end. Earlier, the other end of the telephone call made the night Jeannette Oder’s ex-husband was shot to death was admitted into
evidence in Criminal Court 1 to- |
day. . Allowed to Tell Story Mrs. Oder, 46, is standing trial for her life on a charge of first degree murder in the fatal shoot-
Drinking, He Testifies
HOME —Close in the shadows of the Citizens Gas & Coke Prospect St. plant is this home at English Ave. and S. Gray St. Overnight, the : owner protested, it changed from "snow white" to a drab brownish purple. Resition can stop worrying about ae dents of the area contend chemical laden smoke from the plant causes discoloration.
ing of the ex-husband as he came up the steps to her home; 2538 Brookside Pkwy. the night of Feb. 3 to call on her. Clifford Aldridge, key witness] for the defense who was silenced last week by objections from the prosecution, was permitted to relate Mr. Broglin’s telephone conversation with Mrs. Oder shortly before he went to her house. Admits Testimony Judge William D. Bain ruled| that Mr. Aldridge!s testimony was admissible to corroborate
from the stand that Mr. Broglin had telephoned to tell her he was coming over.
Under direct examination vs DIF Kempt Says Gas Plant Fumes ‘Not Poisonous’
Frank Symmes, defense attorney, Mr. Aldridge quoted Mr, Broglin{ as saying: ; ! “What do you mean leaving me| standing here all night when I know you're there?” Here there was a pause while the party at the other end of the line said something, according to Mr. ‘Aldridge. He said Broglin replied: “I'm coming over. I'm coming over and I'll be there in 15 minutes.” Slammed Receiver
Mr. Aldridge said Mr. Broglin then slammed down the receiver and walked ‘out of the restaurant. : On cross-examination, Harry! Riddell and Robert Coates. at-| tacked the credibility of the wit-| ness. Under their questioning, the, witness admitted that he didn’t] remember how many employees
clothing Mr. Broglin was wear-| i
g. Earlier in the murder trial the
jury of seven women and five to protest emission of the fumes night.
men heard a former roomer at! Mrs. Oder’s home testify. The roomer, Mrs. Elva Power, | row a switchboard operator at|
when, she said, Mr. Broglin viciously beat his wife.q,
Oh, Sore, Huh?
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 4 (UP) —When another woman driver cut in front of her, 8s. Joan Zeroni lit out in hot pursuit, banged into the other car at two intersections, chased it into a service station and pursued it in a frantic ring-around-the-gasoline pumps until she crashed into a post. She was booked on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. : “I got mad,” said Mrs. Zeroni.
2 U. S. Planes Crash In Germany; 1 Dead
FRANKFURT, Nov. 4 (UP)— Two U. 8B. Air Force fighter
office.
Health Expert Replies
On Danger of a ‘Second Donora, Pa.’
IRATE CITIZEN—Mrs. Anna Miller, 438 S. Gray St., who says she'll lead a fight to prevent home discoloration in her neighborhood, points to screen door of her home, which she contends was discolored during the night by smoke from Prospect Mrs. Oder's earlier statement| St. gas plant. Mrs. Miller plans to take the fight to the Mayor's
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1948
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Ind. Issued daily and Sunday
ose
!
Most of the evidence indicated N aw { Oo n u r © = = diana’s 13 electoral votes in 5 conclusion that despite ardent u reached the people of Indiana . In Final Tall President Also Faces Party Battles Over Hoosier Democrats happily credit | sional candidates and many of) WASHINGTON, Nov. 4—President Truman today is By NOBLE REED the exception to all rules. Many day's election gave him a surprise mandate. eat
Truman's Loss lL eo in axes Of State Laid ! ! Mapy Split Tickets, Analysis Indicates By ROBERT BLOEM today that Democtats themselves deprived President Truman of InTuesday's general election. Analysis of the statistics in > » mas ne ne a Truman May Advise [emocratic | support of Mr. Truman by Gov-| | ernor-elect Henry Schricker and] * . the state Democratic organiza-| un in a S i ; tion, many individual Democrats] have voted for Republican Thom- ° { as E. Dewey. F St i C t On the other hand, Mr. Truman | or rag : U with his speeches as no candidate ever has reached them before. ly . . : Civil Rights and Taft-Hartley Act : County Gives Dewey hat put ’. WILSON, U Staff C nt vo a hls with Je Saal boost a By LYLE C. WILSON, United Press orresponden 6000 Mai ority the state offices. ‘hurrying home to the White House to undertake on his own Final tabulations from omcial a Selvickel the Excepiion oe an administration in the Roosevelt tradition for which Tues- [election returns in Marion Coun. TF, Schrlc i 0% d AY ty's 393 precincts today redu Republicans voted for pim to push It will be New Deal with a touch of higher taxes and ties as shown in the earlier unhis margin of victory far above : : . oficial returns. the margins of other Democratic iréer spending than the repudiated Republican Congress ER deatial ‘ballot
candidates. And in turn he, too, Would like. It will be aimed at” .] 9 here, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's Jet a valusple heli han hp that class of Americans Deweycide majority in Marion County went S personal popular n : up to 6000 instead of the 3800 other Democrats through. (which the Trumans them- GLASGOW, Nov. 4 (UP) |ien
lead shown originally. Henry F. Schricker’'s majority in Marion County was 20,669,
Here is some evidence to sup- selves resemble so much—the av-
—Glasgow Bulletin said toport the belief that Democratic erage man, his wife and kids.
day in comment on the
ballot scratching at the presi-| On taxes, Mr. Truman either U.8. presidential election slightly less than the 21,000 redential level was a major factor will just try to raise them or seek that the public opinion ported yesterday. in the odd twist which the elec-'to junk the tax cuts‘of the Re- prophets had committed 9400 Majority tion took in Indiana: {publican Congress and substitute “Deweycide.”
Final returns showed the next Hartley act was passed with more biggest Democratic majority was Democrats in Congress voting for|given to Walter F. Kelly, Demit than against it, And it was|ocrat, for State Senator. He re-
Mr. Truman lost by a small his flat $40-per-head tax reduction margin here in Marion County system proposed this year. in the face of a definite Demr| wr Truman and the Demo-
ocratic trend. feratic platform were mighty firm
Republicans obviously voted rammed into law over Mr. Tru-|ceived 105,047, a majority of 8400 for Nr. Dewey though many, tay oor Ee ep iplican man's veto- with Democratic/over Robert Brokenburr, Repubvoted for Mr. Schricker for Gov-IThe community property system 'oles: It is very doubtful that lican opponent.
the new Congress will vote repeal. majority was given Joseph O. The same Southern Democratic Hoffmann, for judge of Juvenile elements which helped that act{Court. He won by 7763 over his to become a law are almost vio-| Republican opponent, Scott Meclently opposed to Mr. Truman's Donald. First returns showed civil rights program, Judge Hoffmann winning by: The President carried ma-{about 9000. jorities of the Senate and the] In the race for prosecutor, House into office with him on|George 8. Dailey was shown win Tuesday. The administration{ning over Republican Frank H.
ernor, too. Independent votersioe tax computation will not be The third largest Democratic showed a strong inclination to|4isturbed. vote against all incumbents, Tne President will arrive towhich doubtless included Mr.| .orvow. It will be unlike’ any Truman to some extent. previous Washington arrival of Carried Out Threats Harry 8. Truman of Missouri. But in paper ballot areas where The crisply tailored clothes ‘and noidential scratch 18 MUCH dertly folded pocket kerchief, the simpler than on the machine used, yntteq with a haberdasher's owed gindependent = VOLerS|yyiii—they will be the same. But showed no such tendency to ain- 3 gle out Mr. Truman, under the natty hat will be & dif-|,, toned nine seats in the Sen-|Fairchild by a 4420 majority inOnly reasonable conclusion|férent man. ate and at least 71 in the House Stead of the 5200 lead listed seems to be that Democrats who|, Harry 8. Truman is coming. he Gop earlier. had indicated their dissatisfaction|Pack from the political wars ai™ yw "0e tyace newcomers were Jacobs Wins by 4100 with the President long before Winner. He has dons what Stalin ogisted into office by the strategy| Andrew Jacobs’ lead in his ton Of Scatening Mr Truman people freely io judas him on the EAniaea Jabot win séek To hold man wha. Fednred to sbout 4100 and then voting the rest of the 'SSu¢ © : the President and a Democratic|/in complete tabulations. Unofticket Democratic. Returns His Own Boss Congress to their Taft-Hartley ficial returns earlier showed him If this attitude applied to less| He has accomplished what the defeating his Republican oppon-
than one per cent of the Demo- majestic Churchill could not ther Election News ent, George L. Denny, by nearly { 6000
cratic voters in the state it would jachieve in a bid to remain. in| account for the difference between power. Four new faces expected in, the presidential results and the He comes home to the White s Truman Cabinet ou age way Democrats fared generally. [House tomorrow as the single- tate. bysatate Vole - . Another factor supporting the|/handed author of the most re- n ry jg Ey les In ag! belief is the obvious fact that/markable political upset of our “TEFER fn trip East Page many normally Republican farm-|times. County election Yeturns. . Page ers voted for Mr. Truman in rural| Mr. Truman has become a Democrats top GOP. in areas. Since it would be easy and (great and powerful political figure state legislature ......Page likely for many of these to swing|/in his own humble right.
George Kincaid, Republican, This | prohibition takes beatin back to the Republicah column at|capital will roll out the.red carpet| in pemocrat sweep. aps 81
state level, this factor would tend for the new boss.
Other Democratic majorities in Marion County ranged between 3000 and 4000 except for County Commissioner, first district, which William Allison won by 2000 over
to Charges of Citizens |
joes
Dr. Gerald Kempf today said fumes from the Prospect St.
plant of Citizens’ Gas and Coke
type,” in answer to charges of South Side résidents that fumes were making a “second Donora, Pa.” of their neighborhood. The city health officer said the fumes in.Pennsylvania which caused 19 deaths included sulphur dioxide, emitted by a foundry.
He added fumes from the gas company here are hydrogen sulphide. “A poisonous mixture of hydrogen sulphide would contain 100 parts of the chemical to a! million - parts of air,” Dr. Kerupf! said. “I'm certain the gas utility| does not achieve that strong a] mixture at the very source.” |
Plan Protest Meeting His reply, however,
to hold a meeting tomorrow |
night in the Methodist Church at! Temple “and Southeastern Aves.|
which they say turned their|
[homes purple and sickened adults Mrs. Townsend said, “I was sit-
and children alike. | B. Morgan Scherer, public rela-
fumes are being emitted by the Prospect St.’ plant. “The worst that can be said] about the fumes from our plant] is that they ‘smell bad,” Mr. Scherer declared. “We are watching the plant and attempting to eliminate any operation which creates an output of fumes.” All day yesterday South Side residents stood helplessly by as a mild breeze, coming from the south, carried a dense smoke containing discoloring agents which settled on their homes. Women, Children Ill | Some of the residents charged] this morning that the haze, which! came from ‘the direction of the plant in Prospect St., contained nauseating fumes. Many of the women and children became ill, they said. : Particularly irate was Mrs. Anna Miller, 438 8. Gray St. “We have fought a bitter battle
planes crashed in Bavaria today! in unrelated accidents. An F-80 jet fighter crashed in the street near the main railway station at Garmish., The pilot was killed. An F-47 crashed near Neubiberg air base outside Munich. The fighter was demolished.
Say It Isn’t So
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3° (UP)—An elderly woman « put down her newspaper, turned to her companion on the bus and said: “I can’t believe the polls any more. I don't even know whether to trust the
)kmulgee, Okls,, suffered only minor injuries. _
Utility are not of a, “poisonous
did notgg, were working for him the night satisfy the residents of 400 block| Mother of two small children, of the shooting or the kind of S. Gray St, who said they plan|gopita, 7, {months old, Mrs. Townsend said
|soon.”
Kinsey report.”
for almost two years now,” Mrs. Miller said, “and t6 date nothing has been done. We get absolutely no co-operation from City Hall.’ At 3 p. m. yesterday, Mrs. Miller told The Times, she became choked and nauseated by the fumes as she alighted from a bus. “Even inside our homes we were unprotected,” declared Mrs. Winifred Townsend, 436 S. Gray |
and Deborah, 10
she was affected by the fumes which seeped into her home last
“Around 10 o'clock last night,”
ting in the living room with my husband and two children. Sudbecame
terribly nauseated.
Something must .be done and
Mts. Miller charged the Mayor | with giving a delegation from her street the “brush off” last March. “Mayor Feeney told us he would investigate our complaint. He said he would have Mr, Wolf survey the situation, and if the gas company were guilty of causing these fumes, the Mayor said he would issue a warrant against the| head of the utility. We are still waiting for some action.”
Red Attacks Truman
Atom Control Stand PARIS, Nov. 4 (UP)—Soviet] Delegate Andrei Vishinsky at-| tacked President Truman's position on international control of atomic energy today and sai there was no basis for agreement between the East and the West. | President Truman's position, Mr. Vishinsky said in a full dress| gession of the United Nations,
“|General Assembly, was a “vicious
circle of contradiction.” i Wins Confidence Vote | TEHRAN, Nov. 4 (UP)—Pre-| mier Abdul Hajir Hossein won a. parliamentary vote of confidence on his domestic . and foreign
policy today. The vote was 67 to 8jand surface search began ‘at
with 4 abstentions. :
to have shown Mr, Truman rela- | Once home, however, Mr. Tru-|pledge. That is true also, but At School Pr obed tively stronger than other Demo- man’$ troubles soon. will begin with somewhat lesser force, with
crats instead of relatively weaker anew. Behind the returns of his respect to civil rights, v (Photo Page Six) State police today were investi-
as was the case. . {self-made election triumph stands| On thos explosive issues the a Democratic Party wounded by Democratic majorities in Con-
/internal feuds and divided on al-|gress will be like two parties. On gating theft of $2200 in school ome olin - {most all issues save foreign|the Taft-Hartley Act a Repub- funds from a safe in the prin« policy. lican-Democratic coalition may|cipal’s office in Decatur Central
Mr. Truman's Cabinet is com-iset the repealers right back on High School, ing apart at the top—in the State|iheir heels. Officers said indications pointed
Department. Secretary George| The southern effort to intimi- “ ” C. Marghall is expected to retire h toward - a. “professional’ safe
Crashes, Killing 18
MacDILL AJR FORCE BASE
land crashed in the Azores late yesterday, killing 18 of the 20 crewmen and passengers aboard;
'(retary James Forrestal has shown Fla, Nov. 4 (UP)—An Air Force symptoms of a desire for private B-29 homeward bound from Eng- life. Theirs are two top jobs..
soon after Jan. 1. Defense Sec-
Bold and foreboding across the Democratic Party lies the shadow of two outstanding issues and
date, defeat or control Mr. Tru-/opening job done by persons who
man was a dismal failure. State's Rights presidential candidate J. Strom Thurmond got four southern states and their 38 electoral votes. But Mr. Truman got alll the rest.
hid in the building last night after a benefit basketball game, Police said the safe in the of-
fice of Hollls Adams was bate tered open from the bottom. The money, which was in cash except
darkness from Lagenn Air Forge said.
|12 men aboard is missing off
It was proof enough that asof ror an estimated $175 in checks, now the comparatively conserva-\y,q the accumulation of various
Air Force officers disclosed here /two party-wracking disputes. tive Southerners cannot dominate!
today. They are the Taft-Hartley act] ! ; = One crewman was missing and and civil rights. Mr. Truman a Democratic Party which must 7100 Tyids, inciuling pron another was injured critically. {and the Democratic platform are have the Northern votes of 1ib-| Earl Goodall, custodian dise The big bomber faltered and pledged to repeal the Taft-Hart- erals, independents and left Wing-i ered the bur. : « | glary when he crashed into the sea a" few sec-iley act. fers, or else. opened the school thi i onds after taking off in earlyl “It has failed,’ the platform| Authority for price controls, XP ROD con 1 mOIlNg, {rationing - if - necessary * and 0 trace of a forced entrance of They are pledged to enact civil| broad . scale program for what|the building mwas found but a rights. FDR used to call the ill-clothed, chain removed from the inside of MacDill base issued the follow-|~ That is where the triumphant |ill-fed and fll-housed are tops inj® door led police to believe the ing partial list of casualties: | President and powerful elements Mr. Truman's program for his Safe crackers left the building at Dead: lof his party collide. The Taft-'own administration, that exit. M/Sgt. Robert C. Wise, S/Sgt./g EY. o e 0 2 Torey natkohall ie William D. ch, rt K | 38 Ec | b P 4 | re x. Bo, ¥riny J, SEL 2ben eveda . ° I er Is 0 than $100 in receipts from the
T/Sgt. William J. Stubblefield, © n from ere mn the amount taken S/Sgt. Raymond J. Chaplin, w WW A bh I D 1) Ww P rom the safe. Sgt. Franklin =. Albright, 1st Lt.| as m us ea “ @ William Jacobs and 1st Lt. Leon-| Photos, Page $1 iy Struck by Car Here, ard Post, pilot, all living at the A .38 caliber special revolver was the weapon used to kill James: . | Kelly Brooks, 27, from ambush last night as he walked to Mis work Pupil, 6, Breaks Leg
base here or in Tampa. 8/8gt. Henry B. Anderson, Mac-| at Kingan & Co. A first-grade school pupil sufe The murder weapon was established by the police crime labora-ifered a fractured leg today when
base in the Azores at 6 p. m. last| night. >
Dill, suffered “major injuries.” | Other names will be released tory at noon today after examination of the copper-nosed bullet'he was struck by a car while . when next of kin have been no-| which ranged from the victim’s heart to his right side. [crossing in the middle of the 1100 tified. With this clue, police intensified; ov old wife, Louise, or relatives lock in Sherman Dr, on his way {their search for a mysterious. 14 think of any reason for the to school. | stranger who reportedly had been|ghooting. Jack Raymond, 6, of 1139 8S. Na Plane Hunted following Mr. Brooks for two yr. Brooks’ body was found in!Sherman Dr., a pupil at School weeks prior to the slaying. 2 dare alley, shortly after neigh-|{21, was sent to General Hospital They were checking the story y,.. heard the crack of a heavy|Where his condition was described
. lot a fellow worker of the slain ..uoiver or rifle shot. as fair. 0 I |man to ang a motive for the mur yntouched were coins in his ig Jar. Jy. DuDokS was sno! {through pocket, a new wrist watch he had Awarded Nobel Prize SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 4 (UP)|g° <2" an ig Xe V€ received from his wife and his| STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Nov. 4 A four-engine Navy plane with, :
| - Police \ discounted. an lunch pail. Deputy Coroner Leon- (UP) — Thomas Stearns Eliot,
theory that a fight between their. COX considered the possi-jAmerican-born British poet, was
early Port Moller on the northern coast
bility the victim might have beeniawarded the Nobel Prize for of ‘the Alaska peninsula, the td a week might have mistaken for a prowler, but later|jjterature today. Seattle Qoast yard sa} today. * led to the Slaying | nticated he thought the shooting The Y4Y-2 vateer lef t : was murder. Kodiak yesterday on a navigatior.| Another faery - orker told) A 38-caliber copper-nosed bul- For Quick, Low Cost flight to St. Paul-Island in the Police that Mr. Brooks was wor-i;e; vypgeq from his heart to his] Want Ad Results Bering sea, The plane later gave ried and puzzled because an un-/.op gige its position as in the Bristol Bay{identified man had been following “a. Brooks lived at 1201] Use the area, approaching Port Moller. him as he left his home to_go t0| matcher Ave. No word has ‘been received Work several nights. Mr. Brooks rhe factory foreman, Clarence, SUNDAY TIMES since, the Navy commander of Was employed on the 10 p. m./pynn, 713 Chadwick St. con- RI-5551 the Alaska sea frontier said. shift and left home at 8:45 each|firmed that Mr. Brooks had been o- - The plane had 13 hours supply night. . 3 {in a fight with another worker Ads accepted 7:30 a. m. to of fuel when it took off for a 10-| Police believe his. killer was last week but said it was not 7:30 p. m. : |
hour flight from Kodiak. {familiar ‘with his habits and serious. Police also talked to An all-out Army-Navy aerial waited for him in some bushes on another man who admitted be|oiive St. ing in a scuffle with the dead Neither his grief-stricken 18-/man.
dawn.
Until noon for the SUNDAY. TIMES. :
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