Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 December 1948 — Page 24

PAGE 2

oe INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

: Around the World—

sponsible sources said today,

Lts. Peter Pirogov and Anatoly Barsov, fugitive Russian air force officers who fled to the American zone of Austria last October in a stolen bomber, said air commanders have been ordered in a

top secret Soviet directive to halt] ~~~ the desertions. ai fPhe officers--said. the. directive told the commanders to ‘warn every officer and man that his family would suffer if he should flee the Soviet Union. Other sources sald that deserters. returned to the Red army in Germany had been shot and their names posted on the unit bulletin boards as a warning to other would-be-deserters. In addition, it was said, regular

Report Drastic Steps Taken by Russians = To Stop. Desertions

~ Escaped Air Force Officers Say Captured Fugitives Have Been Shot as Examples

~Russia has taken drastic. steps te to hait desertions from her, HOg prices remained generally| Carmien especially in Germany afid other European countries, re-

Thayer, killed Mar, 29, -1945, in

troop orientation programs were conducted by political officers in| an effort to wipe out the favor able impressions the Western na-| tions had created among the mil-| Hons of veterans who chased the German armies from Russia. |

Egypt ; |

cial red seals,

bility for week-long rioting in| which a number of persons were killed and scores were injured. A nation-wide state of emergency was declared. Some observers doubted whether the brotherhood could be dissolved 80 easily. It is under a strong willed leader, the black-bearded: sheik, Hassah Elbanna, and has large Sumibers of armed, fanatic

United ‘Nations

THE WESTERN powers made - three’ new ‘concessions today to weaken further théir Palestine conciliation plan in a desperate| ‘effort to get it through the United Nations general assembly before this session ends Saturday night. The assembly planned to open final debate on the pian today or tomorrow. The United States and Britain, abandoning all hope of hing their blueprint through a assembly as it now stands;

PRIME MINISTER Lee Bum "Buk told the National Assembly

been largely trained and equipped by .the United States.

- AMERICAN OFFICIALS refected today an official Russian protest that Anglo-American Berlin airlift planes were flying too ~ low. The protest, citing 15 alwas filed with

Western Allied air traffic to Berlin travel at altitudes of more than: 3250 feet.

Japan AN ALLIED military commis-

sion today heard detailed accounts of Japanese brutality dur-

Germany, will be held at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Moore Mortu-

Hidedd Burial {will be in Crown

{who was 24, was a member of Co, EGYPTIAN AUTHORITIES A, 48th Armored outlawed the powerful Moslem Infantry Bat., Brotherhood today, raided its 3d Army. ‘A naheadquarters throughout the coun-tive of Indiantry, and closed them under offi- 2polis, he lived . in 3128 N. Key- : ki ; The government charged the Stone Ave. He brotherhood, which 20 gi mem-| Was employed as Sgt. Thayer

bership of 1,000,000, with responsi- An electric. welder in Detroit iwhen he entered service.

years.

School Study —

* {school principals, county and city

Rites: Tomorrow For Sgt. Thayer

Local Soldier Killed in Germany

Services for Sgt. Francis I. aries Peace

Sgt. Thayer,

He had lived in Indianapolis 22

Surviving “arf his wife, Mrs. Anna F. Thayer; a daughter, Miss Carolyn Thayer, Indianapolis; his mother, Mrs, Mary Jack, Charleston, W. Va.; his father, Francis M. Thayer, Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs, Marian Miller, North Vernon, and two brothers, Charles and Paul Thayer, both of -Indianapolis.

Group to Meet

~The newly formed Committee on High School and Callege Cooperation in Indiana will meet at 10 a. m., Dec. 18,-in Butler University . to discuss means of gaining closer co-operation between the state's high schools and colleges. The group is composed of high

school superintendents and repre-

Hog Prices

:

Hold Steady; Top Is $23.20

Yearlings, Heifers Trade Is Slow.

steady with yesterday's trend. in the Indianapolis Stockyards today, although weights from 230 pounds and less rose 25 cents a {hundred pounds.

Most good and choice grades,

160 to 225-pound weights, sold at 1822.75 to $23. Two loads of choice, ‘180 to = 210 pounders, reached $23.25, the top- price. Weights from 225 to 260 remained steady at $21.50 to $22.50. Steady prices of $20.75 to $22.75 were paid for 260 to 300 pounders. A few weights above 300 pounds held at $20.50 to $20.75. Weights from 100 to 160 re-| mained steady at $18.50 to $22.50. Sow sales on weights 550| pounds and less dropped to prices, from $17.76 to $18.50. In cattle trade, yearlings and| heifers remained mostly steady in| a slow, peddling market. Prices on| some common and medium low| lightweights remained .steady,| while others dropped slightly. One Load Unsold The rank and file of medium to|

just good lightweight steers sold]

at $22.50 to $26. Odd head rose to

$27. A load and several head of ————— good and choice grades remained Indiana Stocks “and Bonds

unsold. Common and medium mixed yearlings sold at $18 to $23. Me-| dium and good heifers brought | Age $22 to $25.50, Beef cows, canners and cutters, remained steady |

at $20. l Ls Most common and medium/Belt R & Stk Yrds com. grades of beef cows droppgd 50!Bobbs-Merrill pfd cents at prices, $17.75 to $19. Can-¢ ner and cutter sales held at $14. 50] Comin Loan 4% ptd. to. $17.50. Odd shells brought: £® $13.50 to $14. Medium and good beef and|Qummins Eng pid sausage bulls led bull trade at|Consglidated Ind pfd.. steady $20.50 to $23 prices.

tinued steady vealer prices held i at $31.50 to $34 on choice and |}

good; $23.50 to $31 on common Hook Fo, co “land. medium, ]

and $18.50 to A for culls, Sheep Prices Drop

hd © &L . Ind “In sheep trade, prices dropped ivdnis Lx 25 cents a hundred pounds to Indpls Water & $24.50 to $25.25 for good and|["d .- choice grades native lambs. The | Joiferson National Life com . Kingan & Co pid

top price was $25.25. Medium to good grades dropped to prices from $21.50 to $24.50. Common and medium grade prices

slipped to $19 to $21.50. Two toads}

of good and choice fed western lambs, 93 to 95-pound weights, sold at $25.25. Fed yearling sales were scarce, as slaughter ewes remained steady

sentatives of Indiana Solleges and universities. Harlan W. White, director of admissions, Purdue University, is chairman- of the committee; Wil-! liam R. Kendall, principal of :Hobart High School, vice chairman and J. G. Lee, of Rose Polytechnic Institute, is secretary, A noon luncheon in the wuni-| versity ‘cafeteria and an afternoon meeting will conclude the one-day session. George A. Schu-| is in charge of the program arrangements.

Report Slugging In. Local Tavern

v

treated at Methodist - Hospital early today for scalp injuries re ceived when he was glugged in a local tavern. John Ackerman, 30, of Morgantown, was taken to the hospital by two companions who told invéstigators he had been struck from behind as he visited with a waifress about closing time in the! tavern. His assailant was not!

ing the “rape of Manila” as " ~prosecutors-—sought -to+ fix command responsibility for ~athogities on. .ex~Admiral. Soemu, Toyoda, then commander in chief of the Japanese navy. - . ~The prosecution charged that

identified.

Parking Meter Study

To Be “Made “Today

+f City “officlals today asked In-

idianapolis- engineers to name ‘a’

A Morgantown man. was,

at $7 to $8.50 for good and choice {grades. Prices from $5 to $7 were |paid for common and mediunt| grades. Estimates of receipts were { hogs, 8300; cattle, 850; calves, 275, {and she sheep, 1 1800.

‘Ask Extra F Pay ay for € ors Wounded in Combat

LO8-ANGELES, Dec. 8 (UP)— The national commander of the

Heart today called for Congress to set up special compensation for men wounded ' in combat as

C. Parmenter, here attending a meeting of the Los Angeles {County Council of the group, said the Veterans Administration must recognize the combat veteran as a special case. He also called for a 10 per cent increase of disabled veterans’ benefits,

Jewish. Community Directors Elect Lyman i Carl Lyman has been elected

president of the board of directors of the Jewish Community

“Kiser, Emanuel Love and Mrs. Lewis Levy, vice presidents; Mrs. Frank Barnett, secretary, and

« Toyoda took no effective action tommittee to study parking me- Irwin Katz, treasurer. to halt “rape, murder, abuse, ters and recommend which types |

starvation, torture, destruction] ..and burning by Japanese armed

should be installed here.

. Mayor Feeney and department

U. S. Statement

forces” during January and Feb- heads conferred on the parking! WASHINGTON, Dec. 0 (UP)—Governe

ruary, 1945.

. meter question this morning.

Japanese Communist Teru Tak-| They plan- to install several |

akura was in the fourth day of |

makes of meters over the elty. -

a hunger strike in protest against

his arrest for making disparaging - remarks about the Allied occupation. > Japanese politicians protested today against plans to hold an election

Fire Does “Does $1000

Damage in Building Damage estimated at $1000 was caused by a fire today in Room

ment expenses and receipts for the cur-

| rent fiscal year through .-1- compared with a year i ea Expenses ne goa 302. "240 ses 5607 05: { Receipts 14,690,584,680 - 18, wr 506,813 | Surplus 532,809, 760 | Defleit , 242.717.500

{Cash bals 3,900,671,235 .3,260,031,802 | Public debt ® 23. 394 us 960 257,765,441,746

Gold reserve 24,176,426,535 22,681,182,921}

INDIANAPOL 18 ToL FARING BUST Clearings ‘ 13 351, 000

for a new house of {408 Holliday Bldg, Evelyn Pit Debits

representatives during the comIng holiday season. Théy complained that sake parties , would boost their campaign costs 50 per cent.

Austria

MARGARETHE OTTILLIN:|

GER, a high-ranking Austrian woman government official, has been seritenced to 20 years in

prison by a cloged Russian mili-|

tary court on charges of espio-

nage in behalf of the United | States, informed officials said to- |

Miss Ottillinger, chief of the! " government's planning depart- | ment and one of the principal ad- {

ministrators of Marshall Plan | ald, was arrested earlv last! month,

India

THE RASHTRIYA Swayam | Bewak Sangha, militant Hindu | organization whose leaders were rounded up by police recently, today opened a civil disobedience paign’in support of its avowed . aim of establishing a Hindu state, members of the organization were arrested in streets near the city market place when they shouted slogans and distributed propaganda leaflets,

Horse Hits and Runs

CROWN POINT, Dec. 9 (UP)— Richard IL. Camp, 35, Ft. Wayne

truck driver, complained that

front fenders of his truck crushed on a highway near * here by a hit-and-run horse which +gharged into: his truck and then

chke, 33, of 259 N. Oxford -8t., an occupant, reported to police. Clay Stovall, 44, of 1666 Mill | 8t., “building custodian, discovered and extinguished the blaze

Local Truck ‘Grain Prices

No. 2 red wheat, re 21.

No, 2 Jellow corn, $1.28. No. 2 oats, Tc w_No. 2 yellow soybeans, $2 6

T No. 2 white corn, $1.28,

at 8 a. m.

FOUND

ED 1913

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PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS

T. M “nics. PAT.OFF. COPR 1948 £OW. LA wArueA ALL MLuTe DeerpvED,

TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—Colder weather will grip the entire nation except slong the immediate Pacific coast for the next 24 hours: Government experts point out cold Canadian air | Dr. Gallagher said he put the gn Cemetery. which has been spawning up in the vast land area of central Canada will cause this weather change. [low voltage fence up to keep an- po attended Shortridge and Note the cold arrows at the top. of the map which show the path these icy-cold blasts will follow, mals away. City Prosecutor Mil- pp. Ripple High Schools before

Today’ s Weather Fotocast

Early Friday mraing temperatures over the country will range from intense cold of 20 below zero i to a balmy 75 at Miami. .

American States pf A m . Ayres Mav Ria ser ‘45.. R & Stk fd .

Va 1 Stokely~Van Camp

Con- 2

American Loan 42s 60 .. 90% Amerfean Loan 4lgs 55..

40 A312. Ch. af gis

{So Ind G&E 4.8 pfd.... ne [Denver

Stokely-Van Camp Terre Haute oMaiizanis

Union Title com % oid... ees | Kansas 16% BONDS hes Anaties A 11% | Alien ds Steen 68 67... ...euss. 95 POO

dvance Paint 8s 632......... » wer a Paul

oo 97 «ses |New York . I +[gEiahoma City

. Ry cs [Picts argh ‘e 8 Rurg

Bastian Morley 5s aL .

Ee SHOWERS

Vers SLEET

ae ir RAIN

official Weather

[Evansville R Wayne

Worth «{pdianapolls (city)

Shi 5 Lr THURSDAY, DEC 0

Servic . for Mrs. Rosle Smith, ’ who died Tuesday in her home, 2341 Caroline Ave.; will be held

at 100 a. m. tomorrow in Christ Temple Church. Burial will be in

] New Crown. She was 61. In Fence Case =. ee 1 Reserves Decision On Charged Wire [Church

: She is survived by four sisters, Judge Alex Clark used to ring/Mrs. Nola B. Payne, Indianapolis; doorbells and run, trespass on|Mrs, Susie Buckner, Louisville; neighbors’ yards and maybe even|Mrs. Lillie Boyd, Cleveland, and climb over.a fence or two. Miss Norrie Carpenter, Lexington, He admitted it on the bench of|Ky., ahd two brothers, David and Municipal Court 4 yesterday as salah Carpenter, Taylorsville, {he heard the case of Dr. R. D.|K 3 Gallagher, 1332 Burdsal Pkwy.

: charged with stringing a charged -~..harbed wire: fence - around = tos.

property.

¢ Neighbors complained after a squirrel was caught and killed = For It Loftiss the fence. They said the wire was| a menace to their children and| il fled told investigators the dentist put| i ; it up “because he doesn't like Fighter P ot Ki children.” On Italian Front Dr. Gallagher" denied the con-| gorvices for 1st Lt. Morrison

[tention in court yesterday but en said he had been troubled by chil- {Morrie} Loftiss, who was killed

{dren ringing his doorbells., In re-|in action in Italy Mar. 2, 1945, [sponse to a questign he said he will be held at 2:30 p. m. Sature (had no children.

Says Fence for Animals

~ {day in Flanner & Buchanan more ltuary. Burial will be in Crown

ton Craig contended .that the enlisting in the Army Ait Corps.

ence itself was 42 inches high , - land the wire four inches above 11 Yaz commitsioned. at Ale

. that, putting the wire out of the

reach of most animals with the 79th Fighter Group, 12th

| Air Force, based at Faro, Italy.

| UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAD “It sounds to me like you're, Survivors include his parents, -~ | Lincoln sacle an bt — ~Dec. 9 jane of those people who just don’t! yr. and Mrs. Joe M. Loftiss, 6250 Asked /incoln Loan 5% pfd ese... nu Sunrise... Sunset ©... 4:2 Ba Shilgren; Juage Clark said. Central Ave.; a brother, Hilman Marmon-Herrington com .... A | precipitation 24 hrs. end, 7:30 a. m sed to ring door s when I (Danny) Loftiss: a sister) Mare M Asphalt gies Y [Total precipitation since Jan. 1..... y . National Homes com ITI a 8 (Excess. since Jan. | goce Th 10H 1 was young and climb, fences and garet Rose Loftiss, and a grand103% N Ind d Pub Serv 5 A 1045 = The following tae hows the tem. (I don’t think I'd have liked the father, Amos” H. Holder, Indian1% N Ind Pub Serv 43% pfd .o. 11% 1814 [perature in other eitie idéa of a charged fence. apolis. 13 7, R Mallory com..." 18% 11, Station HER IeF | “There used to be a man in 293 Bub Berv of Ind (new) fom. 13h th Chet os 3 our neighborhood who said an/John Nichols ar hook com oi: ole . 3 nn [families with children ought to| Services for John R. Nichols,

FB «|have to move in the middle of an|who died Tuesday in his home; Lom 28 (acre. I personally think people like!1711 Prospect St., will be held at - 3 33 You ought to have to move in the| {1:30 p.m. tomorrow in J. C. WilD3 24 middle of an acre where you'spn Chapel of the Chimes. Burial 31 20 [couldn't hurt children.” |will be in Crown Hill. . 80 .. | He said he would take the case. Born in Tennessee, Mr. Niche 2 - under advisement and give hisigls, who was 50, lived in Ine 3 [enision next Wednesday. |dianapolis 47 years. He was & stockhandler for Indianapolis Union Stockyards 35 years.

-B 3 Local Produce

Citizens Ind Te Ves 81 IE aes Nn Antonio. Wp i ah > Bl Columbia Club 2.85" 63 6 94 : op Francisco Treri® | perro 2 pm Shin to suretved Sy<his wifgy ta Teen is 42 29 Wy fans ang over rtrude;-a-daughter, Mary | Hamilton Mfg Corp 5s 57 .... 99 under 47; lbs. and Legtorn s, 24c; spring- ¥ i in| Hoosier Cro vn 5 w ive % » :+| Washington, D.g 3, 3 ge and, rousisis, 30c; Jeno Fp yf ,/Lee Nichols; a son, Fred =, Ind Limeston oe 8 |Kuhner Packin . 97 “a ic; cocks c; stags, 0c; No. 2 pou by "| Indpis Deon % rs s 56 .. 97 | Langsenkamp ... 98 4c less than No. 1. bo (Nichols; a brother, William D. v +{ indpls_ PaL Ss 0 70 ve wn. 106 IN Ind Pub i Tv 34s 7 aA 102 |oEsas—Current receipts, 3 4 Ibs to case, | Nichols; ‘a sister, Mrs, Anna Farni 80 el 3s . . . rv ol os 02% | Trade aArge, rade medium, ¢ ndpis Railways se 61 ll 66 > 60 [Pub Tel 4% 68 oo... 100 "7 |54c. Grade B large, S4c; Grade A sman. k [rington, and a granddaughter, alt % i Investors T 61.99 vs Trae Term. Corp ‘(of Indianapolis. ;

+ Military —Order —of —the—Purple|-

against men ‘with ordinary sery- : Joe-colnetted disability. WM

+Center-—Assoetation; succeeding . {Theodore R. Dunn. ,Qther. officers. include... Julian. ....n..

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Judge Roca To Sr ¥

-{lived in Indianapolis 31 years. She —|was a member of Christ Temple =

Field, Tex. and served as a pilot.

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ress 5-had love, tos

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