Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 January 1949 — Page 7
" Beech Grove, at General Hospital. cally injured in :
-bridge abutment at Sherman Dr.
" Rushville, was killed last ight morning in an attempt to dettle tate
- today
passed 3 fourth traffic fatality of the year ko was recorded with the death of p p
3
an accident Friday morning when the car in which he was struck
SOUTH BEND, Jan. 22 (UP) Studebaker Corp. officials and members of CIO United Auto Workers Union, Studebaker Local No. 5, will meet tomorrow
and Pleasant Run Pkwy. Eugene M. LaVelle, 70, R. R. 4,
issues which were blamed for a Ra. 3, two miles south of Mitroy, Production halt yesterday. State troopers from Conners. ™*® scheduled to take a mass vile Post vote Sunday afternoon on e sald Mr. LaVelle was whethe trik struck by a car driven by Hoyle . - oe 8. W. . Jones, Richmond, as he pee workers in three walked north on the highway. passenger sa and nue divisions He told police he was blinded v*1® de When on oo members by the lights of an oncoming... a in protest over piece truck and did not see the pedes-'". giysenaker omcials said it was One person was killed yesterda; Quiet around the plant today as and four others injured in a oy tie rganisation operates on a car collision on U, 8. 40 at the a y week and is closed Satedge of Greenfield. urdays and Sundays. “ The victim was Orphis P. Sut-
ton, 47, Greenfield. I : . | mr Cuenta, Lambert Jorn Freight Sideswipes,
critical condition at M hospi- : T tal, Shelbyville. 230: nosy Passenger Train,
State police said a car driven, i - by Mr. Dewitt drove out of » Derails 12-13 Cars driveway into” the path of a car!
riven by George R. Boots, (UP)—A freight train sideswiped r . {the City of San Francisco, streamokomo Youth Killed {lined passenger train, on the Clarence Melvin McAninch Jr. Northwestern tracks about a 22, Kokomo, died en route to Mer- mile east of here today and decy Hospital in Elwood yesterday railed “12 or 13” of the passenger following the collision of two cars cars, the Northwestern station on Ind. 28 near Hobbs, {here reported n a critical condition at Mercy Onl person repo Hospital was Margaret Meyers, hurt a nt to 1 ne Pe Ipton, Six others also were hospitalization, although some n pas ngers were . State police said MeAninch was! was Dan Garcia, Shaken > ox
driving one car accompanied by, : | ployee, who was taken to & Cedar Miss Meyers and Charles Richie, Rapids, Iowa, hospital with a hip
BLAIRSTOWN, .Jowa, Jan. 22
22, Kokomo. The other cam was in drive jury. = 22, 38 oy Dureen Keith Floyd,| None of the cars overturned.
Washington Irving School 14 and its principal...
Pa
Old Rooms of School
E. Washington St. 0g “Its official address. was 732
John W. Thornburg
Niches in Walls to Hold Stoves
Public School N&. 14 lacked even a regular school building when it first opened its doors at the corner of Summit Ave. an
a
-l h.
14 Still Bear :
WR
{all police officers last night as {they went on duty.
{late Friday night and early yesterday morning.
AR ay
‘ Lue
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SINGLE TONE-ARM. CHANGER FOR BOTH LONG:PLAYING AND "STANDARD ‘RECORDS | in this phonograph-radio combination by
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Told at Roll Calls | At roll calls last: night police were warned to “keep an eye” on, Billie Holiday . . . blues all known gambling _establish-| singer arrested in San Fran
ments. i Nearly everything but the wall-| =. Tem 1 reofics . charge. |
paper was confiscated by police
in a raid on a room at the Holli-| " day Bldg, 241 E. Ohio St., Hod es to Retire: terday following complaints of! ’ hand-book operations in: the! : building.
. A | A squad led by Capt. John Sul- 5 Years iN Ar m . livan knocked foreefully on the | d door of Room 408 where the al-| leged bookie joint was operating] NEW YORK, Jan. 22 (UP) in a building across Ohio St. from (O€n. Courtney H. Hodges, war-| City Hall, [time and peacetime commander
Receiving no answer officers |°f the First Army, will retire;
; from active duty after 45 years: Squinted - through the mall slot | of continuous service, the First!
and saw two men hastily remov- | headquarters announced
E. Washington St. then, but the
street numbers have since been re-assigned. |
only the first three were taught there. But, in 1878, the Board of School Commissioners had authorized the construction of a new -building to house No. 14 and a two-story structure containing eight rooms was erected at 1229 E. Ohio St, where the school stands today. .
~ » INSIDE THE building, which is about 70 years old, the rooms still bear niches cut into the walls to hold the stoves once used for heating. Cts In the new school only the first six grades attended until future additions made it possible to ac commodate the seventh . and
eighth. During the interval between additions the latter two grades attended Schools 15, 9 and 7.
to capacity.
mar school,
The small building did not permit a large enrollment and |
s WHEN IT WAS built in 1876,
{ yeas, $425 for their second and $450 during the fifth. Top salaries started with the sixth year. Prac-| tice instructors started at $100 per year for their work. { School No. 14 received its name, Washington Irving, in| 1902, and became the namesake of the pioneer in American litera-| ture. :
| . ' Hs tt
Grocer Too Handy ‘With Emergency Brake | SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Jan, 22 {(UP)—L. L. Allen, a grocer, was Istanding in front of his store when he saw a driverless automobile rolling down the street.! He jumped. into- the car and" {pulled the emergency brake.
Overflowing classrooms led to| As he got out a man walked CLINTON, Ind. Jan. 22 (UP) FORD FIRST FOR UAW construction of the latest addition up. He said he owned the car. a paris. II. to the school to be made in 19286, | ' : but even that section is now filled just stopped it.” : |
“Well,” Allen said proudly, “I
“Yes, I know,” the man-Feplied. | “I was pushing it.”
No. 14 was a primary and $8 Two Hunters Killed
schools, the German
World War.
year for second and third
was included in the curriculum at : No. 14 before the start of the first| (UP)—Two hunters were killed jail at Newport, Ind.
As in most of the other grade By Mysterious Blast . language
LANCASTER, Cal, Jan. 22 today when a mysterious explo-
Teacher pay in the early days| sion jarred this desert commuof No. 14 ranged from $500 per
nity. The bodies were found near
instructors; $550 for first, fourth, the abandoned plant of the Vul-
60 Ol Wells Drilled |eror eine froientant the pus
. . “| "The freight engineer apparentIn. 39 Hoosier Counties iy railed to see the City of San y new oil wells were drilled Francisco,”* a station employee in 39 Hoosier counties last month, said. =
the Indiana Department of Con ’ No serious damage was reported servation said yesterday. to the freight train, but about! Although there were 104 wells|1000 feet of track was torn up. | Sompitied, only 60 of these now are producing, the report from the! redi 1 department’s Oil and Gas atvision| P icts First Bills sald, WASHINGTON, Jan. 22 (UP)| Iu Ca ra —— —Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas Choir. to Sing {predicted that the first. major i The Indiana University Men's iCFisIat Dug the House wil Concert Choir, George F. Krue
an be a bill to extend the reciprocal r - directing, will be heard Ino bb agreements act or a meas gram of choral music at 7:30 p. m.
{ure to boost the minimum wage. | ———————— ———————————. { in Broadway Methodist Pianist in U. S.
Church. | ———————— | NEW YORK, Jan,-22 (UP)—| MAKES PLEA FOR SEAMEN |Walter Gieseking, German pianist / WASHINGTON, Jan. 22 (UP) who has been accused to being ~CIO President Philip Murray pro-Nazi, arrived by plane to-| asked Draft Director Lewis B. night for a concert in Carnegie Hershey today to stop inducting/Hall Monday night. Mr. Giese-| merchant seamen into the armed king said: “I was never a mem-| forces. {ber of the Nazi party.” | E———— BB,
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REGULAR TEACHERS began their careers at $300 for the first was loca
fifth, sixth and German instruct- |canite Powder Co. outside Lanors, 10 S000 Per Year for seventh astar, Their rifles,
the jar, were discovered hundreds of feet away, and an auto apparently beiohging ta the pair oft. i
1700 W. 36th St. jaa Normandy beach landings
(a poolroom at 843 W. North gt. |Army in the liberation of Paris,
|some $200,000 worth of soybeans !R a drive to obtain §100 a month;
twisted by him.
others at St. Vernice, Ind, and Vermillion and
ing pads of racing forms and 4 ;
record sheets, | On his retirement Jan. 31, the When no answer was made to g2.year-old general will close a their second knocks, offices career that has taken him through forced their way into the room two World Wars. and arrested its occupants, charg-| The general, who gtarted his ing them with keeping a room for military career as a private bepool selling and keeping a gam- cause he found West Point's ing house. iii {mathematics too hard, will retire Arrested were Charles Jack- With a notable string of “firsts.” son, 26, of 2116 N. Pennsylvania In World War II, he comSt, and Amil Caroselli, 32, of|/manded.the First Army in the
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In another foray, lice ar-/3nd In the initial breakthrough rested 13 man in & dics game in at St. Lo. He also led the First
Warfleld Scott, 30, of 8431 w/the first thrust into Germany,
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Elevator Man Char In Soybean Theft MILWAUKEE, Jan. 22 (UP)—! grain elevator myn, United Auto Workers (CIO)
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{pensions and social security pay-| entrusted to his care. 'mets from the automobile indus-' Edgar Van Zant was arrested try, i {today on a charge. of grand = — oy . larceny. He posted $5000 bond {and was released from county |
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