Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1949 — Page 3
Mam
Ej asgre ren REA
: Show
ARAN
n home econen's activie
4411
omel
pastel st label ness of ‘give
r green,
4
i
er Again
. duced by Rep. Judson F, Hagger-
' . support and passage of his bill,
" Kessler and Mrs. L. J. Troy.
ain to Ban * Electric Chair
House Member Loses Battle By 69-10-21 Vote
By PHILIP F. CLIFFORD JR. BY well be back in two years for Ary.” Mansiel-
Hagerty, |
another. South Bend attorney, declared today after the House of Representatives gave the “kiss of death” to a bill that would outny capital punishment. torney for the Darrowian a that seeks abolition of
1s national at-|
the death penalty in all states of the nation. : He sponsored a measure intro-
ty (D. Indianapolis) that would strike from Hoosier statutes, the sppreme penalty upon conviction for murder, Beaten 69 to 21 | The measure was defeated yesterday after heated debate by a roll call vote of 69 to 21. “I contend that the death penalty Is a relic of savagery, perpetuated by custom and ignorance, maintained by false assumptions and consummated in a killing that is legal In name only,” the youthful Democrat charged. - During his impassioned plea for
Mr. Haggerty enjoyed a singular distinction since the opening day of the 86th General Assembly. He commanded the absolute “silence and interest from both members| of the House, and a Packed visitors" gallery,
rs } pe a Ana. AT 0 ma SHA,
takes, and innocent men have been executed.” Innocent Pay Pointing an accusing finger at House members, Mr. thundered, “If we accept the principle ‘a life for a life’, whose life shall be taker to atone for the life of the innocent man who has been executed by mistake?” He charged that those who would oppose his law are motivated by ‘vindictiveness and
Haggerty |
vengeance.” He said he was not § speaking in defense of murderers! °
or murders, and charged it was) '
society’s duty to get at the basic cause of violent crimes which result in death—economic deprivation.
Death in the: electric chair, he|
contended, murder. Life
ment and is often dreaded more
than death at the hands of the| |
state.
Red Cross Volunteers Plan Meeting, Party
Red Cross arts and skills volunteers will have a short business meeting and Valentine party at 7:30 p. m, today in the Red Cross Chapter House. Mrs. H. 8. Probst is general chairman for the party. Committee members are Mrs. W. L. Hunt, Mrs, Arthur Gaus, Mrs. A. L.
STRAUSS SAYS:
was no - deterent tol. imprisonment, he 5 concluded, i= a greater punish-|’
tiaunching
Three hours and 46 minutes later the bomber buzzes Andrews Field, Md., setting an unofficial transcontinental record. mile course.
Hying around six miles up, it averaged 607.2 miles an hour over a 2289.
TH
-
New Navy Rocket Goes ‘Pigay-Back’
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (UP)—| A large piggy-back rocket for faster - than -
A Valentine Gift For Me Tool—
You'll make a great hit with any little
girl with one or both of these on + St. Valentine's Day.
CANCAN PANTIES— exquisitely made— the i heart pocket— and the 3 rows of Cancan ruffles across the back are trimmed with red bows. Sizes | to 6.
LAWN sup of extra fine count lawn, sanforized bhrunl:
waits tha and the
ruffles, Sizes 4 to 12.
1.49 STRAUSS & CO.
ME TOO SHOP. FOURTH FLOOR
by the Navy. The Buck Rogers-like rocket.
type ever built, hoists the guided missiles up to the high speeds at| {which they operate more effi-|
letently:
In disclosing the rocket’s speed, the Navy said merely it is “high in the supersound range.” Sound travels at about 750 miles an hour at sea level. Ramjet Cuts In What the rocket does is carry
*Jgusaed milssiles, such 48 those
all the power at take-off. As the speed builds up faster than sound, the ramjet cuts in. The rocket finally falls away. to earth and the ramjet continues on to the target. The Navy said the rocket exerts a push “considerably in excess” of the 75,000-pound thrust developed by the Nazi V-2 rocket. The rocket already has been flown successfully ‘at the naval ordnance test center at Inyokern, Cal. It has a pencil point nose and graceful tapering fins. It is launched at about a 30-degree angle to the ground. It consumes solid fuels,
Schricker Picks
DP Agency
Gov. Henry F. Schricker today! designated the Indiana Economic Council as’ official state repre-
" |sentative in the resettlement of |
displaced persons. P. E. Middleton, director of the council, has scheduled a meeting of organization and governmental representatives to be held next Tuesday in the World War Memo- | rial to discuss the problem and to develop co-ordinated procedures. Included at the meeting will be representatives of churches, business, industry, agriculture, labor and civic and women's organizations. . The council will co-operate with ‘the Displaced Persons Commis-
-tsion in Washington and with pub-
lic and private organizations in the resettlement program, Mr, Middleton said. .
LENDS SPAIN $25 MILLION NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (UP)--National Bank dis-
Phot-pushed-o-Suon-fo.+8lease .a-ibbon:
Guided Missiles Ride | On Speedy Projectile |
Swo-0-00sh—
Bomber makes perfect landing at Andrews Field. Just as the plane touched the runway the
type parachute from the tail to pe. he. lending speed. |
Air Force Hopes 8-Jet Craft ‘Can Cross Nation Nonstop
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9—The another
| Base, Md.,
Oiders 100-Ton Plane to Make Flight; 6-Jet Bomber Needed Only 3% Hours
By CHARLES CORDERY, United Press Aviation Writer
Air Force hopes to give the na-
sound tion- -display -of -bember speed by- flying -a-100-guided missiles has been developed | ton flying wing nonstop from Muroe, Cal, it was disclosed today.
to Andrews Air Force
| Air Force officers said it was not certain yet that the eight-jet believed to be the largest of its B-49 Northrop bomber would be able to make the speed dash, but officers at Murdoc Air Force Base |”
have, been instructed to do so if: { possible. This - flight would - follow 7 {terday’s spectacular 3-hour, minute ‘cross-country hop or al smaller six- jet Boeing B-47 bomber. per hour over a 2289-mile course
nearby Andrews for an exhibition on Feb. 15 for members of the House Armed Services Committee. Any favorable impression their
these planes are not now a part] of the combat Air Force. There are only two B-47's fly-| ing. Ten are on order at Boeing’s Wichita, Kas., plant and more are expected to be ordered {soon. Orders for 30 B-49's re-| {cently were canceled and it is| {not known whether they will be |reinstated. They are rated at 500 miles an hour. Use of B-47's, which have an officially acknowledged range of| {2200 miles and a bomb load of 10 tons, in tactical units would seem to be at least a year away -—probably longer,
Private Eye’ Picks Up A Mess of Trouble
| NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (UP)— {Donald Visco, 37, a private detective, ran into as much trouble |as a radio serial private eye today when he happened by a tailor shop ‘and noticed a burglary in progress, He drew his automatic and captured James Bolden, 27. But just then Patrolman Patrick McDonnell appeared on the
laid both Visco and Bolden unconscious. He took both to the police station where the matter was straightened out. Bolden was
ted held on burglary charges and t| Visco was given first aid treat
mest.
set a new transcon-/ itinental speed reco altitudes. It is believed capable ‘lof higher speed. Not in Combat Force These and other futuristic
Housewife Wins
$
Mrs. Ruth Fallo, Biloxi, Miss., won {the Jackpot”
Fat and. Forty.” ....
{Rose Marte, who 18 undergoing |treatments’ for a heart condition. {She said she planned to use the|
automobile she won as one of]
planes -are' being assembled at{the prizes. to..go.-home -in- next
week.
| GENERAL COMING HOME
TOKYO, Feb. 9 (UP)—Ma).| Gen. Willlam C. Chase, com-|
|Gaftey.
"(Continued xrom Page od
leity’s “most no-
$23, 000 Radio ‘Pot’
NEW "YORK, Feb. 9 (UP)—
Police Trap Three Burglarizing Firm
rahan, 31, of 6 E. Wilkins St. and Lou Reese Smith, 41, of 419 8. West St, as three of the
torious safecrackers and ° burglars.” : Huddleston's “disappearance” © from jail last’ % Friday aroused
sought to
on the forgery complaint, Detectives Herschel Plummer and Dan Veza said they arrested Huddleston on a vagrancy charge {on suspicion of forging several /bad checks last Wednesday. They took him before Municipal Judge Alex Clark Thursday. The
have Huddleston held in jail for
him in a lineup for identification |
ev
Trains still Stalled fby Deep
a matter of a few hours.
Her tempest. A cold wave pushed out ahead of the blow and tem-
piperatures were expected to hit 25
below zero in some sections of South Dakota,
showed that 633 persons have
% died across the nation due to bad
weather since New Year's Day. Most of the deaths occurred in the stricken West. _ But the West wasn't the only
|section of the country experienc-
ing trouble with the weather.
{Torrential rains fell in the Gulf
states and some authorities feared rivers might flood.
identification. At the same Smith (time, Judge Clark said, he received a request from Criminal Court 1. to "hold" Huddleston, who was currently free on $3000 bond from the Criminal Court Hubbleston Released n both requests, Judge i {manded to Marion County Jail to be held without bond, for Criminal Court. Twenty-four hours later, after Criminal Court had failed to take action on its own request, Huddleston was released. That was Friday. Both Judge Clark and his bailiff said several phone calls were made to Criminal Court to
+ {inform them that Huddleston was " |being held. One call was made
shortly before the 24-hour de-
" |tention period was up informing {Criminal Court Investigator
Lemuel Glidden that jail attaches were preparing to release him, Judge William D. Bain of
' |Criminal Court 1 said the ar-
rangement was worked out by
| |Mr. Glidden, He said that he did | {not revoke the bond against Hud- © |dleston at the time of his re- | |arrest because the suspect's par-
ents who signed the bond had not requested a release. ‘No Further Action Taken Mr. Glidden said that no further action was taken to: hold Huddleston because the $3000 bond was “surety enough” to insure his reappearance in court, Both Huddleston and Hanrahan have been rearrested on vagrancy charge since they were granted bonds, but in neither icase have the bonds been re|voked. Police said Hanrahan, who has {a record of 20 arrests ranging {from thefts to murder, is current{ly awaiting trial in criminal court {for second degree burglary, He {was caught in the act of opening a safe at Harrington Hardware |store, 768 Massachusetts Ave, Sept. 20, police said, but was set free Nov. 10, on $2000 bond signed by Marty Frankfort, professional {bondsman, and Harry Howard. | Police pointed out that Hanra(han was arrested a month later lon a vagrancy charge but that [the charge was dismissed but the bond on the burglary charge re{mained valid. Prisoner Has Record The third prisoner, Smith, has
Kentucky Burial Today for Buckner
FRANKFORT, Ky. Feb.
tucky's most famous sons, Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, was
during World War 11.
Gen. Buckner was “to be buried near the grave of ploneer Daniel Boone and that of. Theodore) O'Hara, poet of World War I who wrote “The Bivouac of the Dead.” Gen. Buckner was killed on, Okinawa Jate in 1945 by a Japanese shell,
Kankakee Park Gets Gift of 800 Acres
More than 800 acres of land in Newton and Lake Counties have been given to the state for further development of the Kankakee State Park and Forest on the Kankakee River, the State Department of Conservation reyealed today. The gift is from Mr. and Mrs. Murray M. Baker of Peoria, Ill. Only a small strip of land now owned by tlie state lies in Lake County.
-
STRAUSS SAYS:
i
ia police record dating back to|
1924. Delphi bank holdup gang in 1933. ber of the old “Howard gang.” | Policemen Clifford Beeker, Jack Smith and Philip Miller were shot
Averaging 607.2 miles $23,000 worth of prizes on “Hit rounding up that gang in 1933. radio show over from Moses Lake, Wash., to An-/CBS last night by solving the (house and the adjoining Purdy drews Field, the Stratojet easily program's secret saying as “Fair, jeer jmotbsint
The trio entered Strohm Ware-
distributing agency by foundations. They "had broken into one safe and were working on a second one but apparently {found no cash, officers said. Two other burglars were caught |at the Star Liquor Store last night [after they set off the “silent”
" |vurglar alarm. ‘They had set out
{two cases of liquor and were {still inside when police arrived. | Police caught Alton Turner, |38, of 221 McLean Place, in the
feats might make on Russia in mander of the First Cavalry, will|window and found Dan Simms, the current cold war would be |depart with his wife Saturday 33, of 310 W. North St. welcomed by American officials from Yokohama .for. the. United in a rear room. but they stress the fact that'States aboard U.S.A.T. General |
|charges.
IN INDIANAPOLIS
(MARRIAGE LICENSES
James O. Graham pq Mabel Cla Clark, 62, be
Pastkowskl, 2{, 1002 Chester Allen Walker,
Pleasant
relma man. 845 Indiana;
Alice Maxine Simmons, 1 2303 Columbia. | . 3 ria
Lt . Janes 8. Lett
| Albers | J Barer. {Raymond Lloyd McCord, an 713 N. Dela-
2 Ft. Benja:
Ware,
Robert Allen Bergdoll, 34, 2366 Stuart; polo Jean Shannon, 20, 3369 Donal Marie Knoop, 24, 98 N, Oakland. Clarence Robert Corbin, 18, 1529 Sauley: Rebecca Veatrice Rey, 18, sa Sepa. George Willie Jones, Renjam Har atruon; Marie Olson Ruks, 30, 832 xr New York. Donald. Lee Dillow, 21, J Rock, n.; Pi Ann, 14, 2-H
Robert Thom ristown Nina Marie Mur, Road.
DIVORCE SUITS FILED
elon Stuper. Raz B.
Bessie Marie . Me Senbaw. ¥ Nirginia
BIRTHS Al St, Ab nivel aige, Mary iid
; Harriet
Md nis Helen Goings, 20, 4935
Gale. Mor Y» 0, ‘3018 Lafayette Henrietta
x TE St
Boys Franeis—Thomas, Dorothy Mar- i
Chris, Pear! Belcher; Martin * At Coleman—Donaid, Louise Parson: Wallace, Jerry Faris, Bari, Elva Helton: Welby, Dora Lon AL Methodist Orville, Georgianna Brouse: | ohn, Elsie Lambert; Ri orence Pics. Raymond, Sally Hiiton At St. Vincent's—Wallace, Bonnie Ole]. | land; Robert, Jean Arnes: Kenneth, Jane | Bickley, Jesse, Margaret Hubbard; | Robert, Shirley Brown.
Gir At St. Franels— William Harold, Beulah Dorothy Zappia;
Opal Bart) Deppe; Domon Clyde, Bthel Osborne.
N. Adams. . Hazelgrove, 2, Plainfield; Alice At. General--Allen, Elisabeth Smith.
At Methodist—Tommie, At St, man.
DEATHS william Fleming,
Busanna Henson
76, at St, ma. Mala Iva Gordon, % at Long. Hay, at N. Oxford, CArcinoma Louis J. Stahl, 85, us 520 E. Verment, cerebral omorriia , |Carl M. d, 78, at fa E. 12th, cerebral | __hemorr “i wi Man "Bowman, 57, al Genersl, coronary thr Yiols R. Carroll,
Saieihoma. William H. Drury, 64, at General, pneumonis. Ads Innis, o, at 5401 Oraceland, carci | noma. | Robert L. Kramer, 43, at 3710 EB. WashJohn kag 84, at 702 N. Alabama, or Bb oh, k Oscar 5. Vobgtle, 84, at 3245 N. Illinols, cerebral hemorrhage. (Laura Cohen, 63, at 2318 N. Capitol, car.
cinoma, award Dain, 71, st Methodist, arteriosclerot:
Dili iach, 33," of Qansraly shgabeal’
| hemorrhage.
Detectives said he “was a mem=~|
{breakin through concrete “blocik| Mrs. Fallo was in New “Yorks B
It flew at 32,000 = “$7 000-toot with her 13-year-old daughter,
Ki) five are held on vagrancy|
Vincent's, |
+ carcinomas
He was convicted with the
hiding
25 Below Zero doen in South Dakota
~The third storm in a week. swept the northern Rockies with 65-mile-an-hour winds and dumped heavy snows on thé mountain meadows of Wyoming,” Jdaho and northern Utah The new blow came off the Pacific last night, ripped across) northern California and Oregon and hit the Mountain States within
ee: Elkhart Freshman
A United Press tabulation|o8er
» Rockies ) rifts;
‘today
Shines in Senate
A new political star is rising on the Republican side of the Indiana Senate. Jolting the veteran Hoosier wmakers into action each day a young freshman Senator from Elkart, Russell D. BonHis frank Democratic and Republican measures has won for him the confidence of his older colleagues in both parties. A former prosecuting attorney and judge of Elkhart County, Sen. Bontrager's legislation thus far has captivated even Walter
(UP)—The body of one of Ken-
|
Vermillion, fiery minority leader oF the Senate.
Confer on Voting For the past three days, the Democratic elder statesman from Anderson, has been conferring with young Bontrager before
voting on all measures, Their colleagues have taken
referred to it as the “big deal” But the young lawmaker who introduced a bill to study hospi-
appraisal of both :
CO!
to
to be buried here today, Gen, the frequent two-man Bipastean. the period for admission; 2. Re soldier killed by enemy action) amusement. Some have “jestingly cen
tal conditions in Indiana said
admiration society.” Before any of the freshman Republican senators put in proposals of their own, they make a
trager for his “opinion.” Thus far| he had ruled three measures unconstitutional and each charge has “stuck.” Helps Push Bills He has helped both Democratic and GOP colleagues spearhead bills through second and third reading. Yesterday he made a point of saying on a bill before the Senate and then presented figures that both supported it and attacked it. Lt. Gov. John Watkins says
4
m
“We have just formed a mutual gr, 6 i Moving the
of
moval of the two-year limit on
mitted DP's
“Displaced persons can make & :
distinguished contribution to American life,”
the federation mmittee said in a preface fo its
recommendations. “The United States by reason of its prosperity and world position has a special
tunate people.”
The following specific legisla.
tive action was recommended by
the federation committee: 1. An increase in the number of DP's
be admitted to 400,000 and re-
i
eligibility
ie atr ake ai ll re
{move present discriminations.
point of contacting Sen. Bon-| The committee explained since there. now are more
30
that Sen. Vermillion has teamed|ecutive
up with young Bontrager to form
the “Unholy Alliance.”
t-know not what course others may take — but as for me — "It's the Dobbs"
A Dobbs "it has a certain character, 8 hi h bred taste, a of tomorrow thet sets , apart. You know
gives a man a lift — p
“It's the Dobbs" even without
Harrison, Bertha |
Vincent's—Alfred, Gertrude Hoh-
{
B84, at 1337 Brookside, |
seeing the label!
Dobbs’ chief competitor
is Dobbs ! And the Dobbs hats for 1949 — are even smarter, richer, more mellow, more value-able - than even last season's
Dobbs distin which, naturally, lead the field.
White, — through the and pastels to the da to the blacks. Whites through the sand tones, the tans— to the black-browns. And, of course, the new Greens and blues !
r Dobbs — is $10 A on finish Dobbs is
Of course, thers are Dobbs at
lesser and hi prices — but Dobbs ho
A Supe
Quished series —
rays —— grays
4
$15.
administrative dg fons
TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
