Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1949 — Page 2
“
Collision Covrt Hearing on Bus Fuss
“Injures 2 in Car | ' Two Children Hurt When Hit by Autos An Indianapolis couple suffered _ slight injuries and another motorist escaped Injury in East Side railroad crossing collisions with Belt Railroad switching engines| last night. t i Mrs. Ollie Hayes, 46, of 3231 N. © Adams St, suffered deep lacera- ¥ tions on the forehead and a _. bruised right side. She was a | passenger Ifi a car driven by her husband, Hezekiah Hayes, B50, which collided with Engine 30 at Adams St. and the Belt Railroad. Mrs. Hayes was reported in %fairly good” condition by Gen-| eral Hospital authorities today.! Mr. Hayes was treated in the hospital for a cut on the right side of the head. ’ Robert Gray, Indianapolis . Union Railway Co. engineer, told| police he was backing southwest at the time of the accident, Howard Myers, Box 11, Oaklandon, escaped injury 40 minutes
oy.
o Pid Fuss ona bus . , , Court hearing on
the case was continued to Apr. 4 in Municipal Court 3. The bus
Tah RE 4 we hw . . . i A Si : = oy Maa 3
‘Transferred’ "
charges of 72-year-old Charles Miner, 26 S. Capitol Ave., that bus driver Oliver Beaman struck him with a transfer punch yesterday, was postpensd today as e
, Vo
passenger said irate driver
struck him, inflicting a head wound, affer refusing to accept 10 pemnies for fare. Left to right are Deputy Prosecutor John Korbly, Policeman Ray Whobrey, Mr. Miner, Charles Steger, defense attor-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ AL a RAD Wale rn Plans to Retire |i.
lduties at the
‘|duties, Mr. Wade {has written sey.
later when his car collided with southbound Belt Railroad Engine
ney and Beeman, who is charged with assaulf-and battery. 9 at 16th St, and Sherman Drive. Mr, Myers was given a traffic
Flays High Cost ites for disobey; A Tl oedy : : A 14-year-old vicitint and a Of Real Estate
. S-year-old child were hespitalized ‘in other traffic accidénts late yesterday. Ronald Allen,” 3216 N. Kenwood Ave, received lacerations on the face when his bicycle collided with a car driven by| | Gladys Elder, Crawfordsville, at|/Ing credit too easy, the federal/little or no down payment. 37th and Illinois Sts. The youthigovernment is pushing real estate| was in fair condition in General Hospital today. elie, Jorsh Thieman 33 one Paaber Trost Co. n To. ena he tal =wwgyal Hospital when he was struck |dlanapolls, and president of the by a Citizens Gas & Coke Co. American Bankers Association, sound credit » + policies.” truck in front of his home. The|..iq4 here today.
| ———————————————— driver, Albert C. Baumgartner, : 45, was not held. savings tad morgage: "tasking PUIS Out Blaze x te i i Herron Prepares [sates sia houses are stanaing IN Beauty Plant | idle over the country because 42d Art Show
they are ‘priced too high for Preparations for the 424 an-
| prices being too high. Too Many Buyers market
iers 1h the
|{down. He emphasized that
prices beyond the reach of buy-ia11 we can to the financial wel
prospective buyers, “The crest of the high real
at Herron Art Museum May 1/saild. - through June 5 were under way today with the mailing of 700 entry blanks to Hoosier artists. |qences in Washington, D. C., still aint stored Sponsored by the Art Assocla-lon the market,” he told the 900/tre rear of the building. tion of Indianapolis, the annual/bankers this morning. | “wo Indianapolis residences competitive show is open to pres-| “In Cleveland there are 800.5150 were slightly damaged by ent and former residents of In-/In Portland, Ore. unsold homes fire today. diana. are estimated at several hundred.| pe attic and roof of a dwell Ten prizes totaling -$1225 will{In Detroit there are 2500 unsold yo occupied by Lester Raines, be awarded this year by a jury houses.” : 11532 Nelson St. were burned by of three artists, the association] Mr. Woollen sald proposals be-/ ene trom a defective flue. Flying has announced. Jurors already|for the government are asking as g,.rxs damaged half the roof of appointed are: Louis Bouche, much as 100 per cent underwrit-; rogidence at 722 N. Pershing famous muralist, and Julien Levi, |ing of home-buying loans. This| sve occupied by Warren Cunter of beach scenes, both of means nothing down, and he ,ngham, ? ew York. : pointed out no banker is likely to| ———— ———— Entry blanks are available at make a loan on real estate with ONLY ON CANARY ISLANDS the Herron Museum office, withino owner equity. Some 300 wild plants have been the deadline for registration set] Such an easing in the real found in the Canary Islands that "on Apr. 11, estate market, he said, must be are found nowhere else.
Asks Und iting company, 123 8. Capitol Ave.
| recognized as the reason for
operates
bility as bankers to -eontribute| ers, Evans Woollen Jr. chairman being of the nation and its cit-
“Included ‘in "this responsibility is the obligation to encourage
Red Cross Plans
‘He said putting too many buy- Fund Report The second report meeting for |against bringing housing prices solicitors in the Red Cross 1949 the fund campaign will be held at - [country’s prime need still is 10W noon tomorrow in the Ipalco! Bankers Say U. S. [cost housing but indicated that Ciub, 16th and Alabama Sts. e government w 0 Chester G. Minton, chaplain at Makes Credit Too Easy avout it-in-the right way by loW-vstarins Hospital, will speak on’ - Times Special ,. |ering credit terms and building tne services which Red Cross NEW YORK, Mar. 15—By mak-|up artificial ability to. buy with op 46ers for patients in both Vet-
| il " “It '1s our duty and responsi terans and Billings General Hos
tals. 1
{ences,
luncheon last
{$106,571, or 30
|
Damage was slight as firemen| IN Russ Spy Case
“There are 1200 completed resi-| prevented the flames from gpread-|
NEW YORK, Mar, 15 (UP)—
Valentin Gubitchev, 32-year-old C
{Russian engineer accused of espionage, said today that the charges against him were “startled for certain dirty political purposes to fire the feelings of this country against my country.”
| He refused in federal court to N. Tremont St, was found dead|.
!be represented by counsel. . | When Gubitchev refused to an{swer a question on how he pleadled to espionage charges, Judge Simon H. Rifkind directed that a plea of innocent be entered in his behalf, Judge Rifkind set Apr. 1 for |Gubitchev’s trial.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Carris win|A be honpred as the first members| oqiqeq at 5241 College Ave. They Ing of the Indianapolis Red Cross y,.e a daughter, Miss Lucille attorney general's office; a daugh-
$Four Gallon Blood Donor Club! a : v p einnati; and a son; Nick “Mrs: Joseph Bernard ZimmeY,' a veteran who | wade, rity en 3
has received more than 30 trans-| {Tugions, will tell of his experi-|
| First total report of the cam-; |paign was received at the firs; | Honors ursday when | r cent of the Firemen from Station 13, Ken-g350 250 goal, was announced by tucky and Maryland 8ts, had p Ww, Alexander, chairman. only to cross the street today tol ro ———————————
nual Indiana Artists’ Exhibition estate market has passed.” heltx pus neauty supply equipment 1TiCl Date Set
J »
Chemistry Head At Shortridge
Frank B. Wade, chemistry department head at Shortridge High School since 1910, will retire from active teaching
close of 1949. Active In Shortridge affairs apart from his chemistry
ahh
ganizations - and scholastic honoraries will honor Dr. Wade at a dinner Mar. 26 in the school auditorium and a special program in Caleb Mills Hall, . :
Dr. Wade
in 1901 and was Yared 38 Rom 0 MA degree . agra College awarded him a DSc. degree in 1937. Mr. Wade formerly taught at Lewis Institute in Chicago, now the Illinois Institute of Technol-
faculty-in 1903.
Science and Mathematics Teach- | ers, a fellow and past president of] *- |the American Association for the Ripple Methodist Church and
dvancement of Science.
‘70 Drivers Awarded | for Safety
| Seventy drivers of the western {division of Federal Express, Inc,
have been honored. with safety {awards by the company. Drivers received 57 cash awards with safety award pins and nine individual trophies. were presented for three or more years of accident-free driving. Presentation’ was made by Howard
visor of the Interstaté Commerce Commission.
Woman Found Dead In Home by Niece
Mrs. Lyda Flagler, 70, of 750
{in. her gas-filled home today by a niece, Mrs. Dorothy Edwards, 38, of 4971 W. 15th St. | Mrs. Flagler was lying on the kitchen floor. She was pro‘nounced dead by General Hos{pital doctors. Police said all gas
ogy, and joined the Shortridge
He is a member of Friends { Church, Phi Beta Kappa, Psi Up- apolis, Mrs. Cox was the daughsilon, Alpha Chi Sigma and Scottish Rite. Mr. Wade is a fellow Thomas, early settlers here. Her | and past president of the Indiana father helped in construction of Academy of Science, past presi-the present State House. Mrs, | dent of the Central Association of fea husband; Walter G. Cox,
With Mrs. Wade, the chemist
.-|Short
Mrs. Harry Geisel, Mrs. Cecil Byrne, Mrs. Edwin Steers, Mrs. (J, Worth Ser, Mrs. Tracy | Whitaker, ‘Mrs. James Hodgson, Mrs. LeRoy Bassett, Mrs. Evert (Johnson, Mrs. Clarence Flick, Mrs, William Vaser, Mrs. Russell Holler. 4 ; Also Mrs. William Lantz, Mrs, {Royal Colby, Mrs. William Reed, IMrs. Robert Hansel, Mrs. Harry 'Ohge, Mrs. Willlam Drake, Mrs. Cox, Mrs. Paul ‘Rathert,
| Blackburn, Mrs. Karl L.
\richs, Mrs. A. J. Sleloff and Mrs. {Glenn Campbell, :
Mrs. Nettie Co
mn The instructor is a native of Dies at Age 81
New Bedford, Mass., and attended the city's schools, He was graduated from Wesleyan University
Mother of Ex-Judge Daughter of Pioneers
Mrs. Nettie Juanita Cox, mother of former Circuit Court J Earl R. Cox, who died last night in her home, 6152 College Ave., will be buried in Mooresville after services at 1:30 p. m. Thursday in Flanner ‘& Buchanan mortuary. She was 81. : A lifelong resident of Indian-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
{ in 1928, She was a member of Broad
Queen Esther Chapter, OES. - Survivors include her son, Earl, no@aghief counsel in the Indiana
brother, Harry Thomas, all of Indianapolis, and three grandchildren. Serving as pallbearers will be Judge Dan V. White, Thomas E. Garvin, Wilfred F. Seyfried, Charles F. Murphy, William B. Bugg and Tom L. Melven,
Mrs. Ophelia Short
Services for Mrs. Ophelia Short, who died yesterday in the home of a daughter, Mrs. Mildred Elliott, 607 Dorman St., will be ‘at 1 p. m. Thursday in Jacobs
Fairweather, district super- Brothers West Side Chapel. Bur-
fal will be in New Crown Cemetery. She was 57. A native of Pulaski, Tenn., Mrs. lived here about four months. She was a memuer of the Pulaski Primitive Baptist Church. Survivors in clude three other) daughters, Mrs. Lura Belle Simon and Miss Lizzie Mae Short, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Fannie May, Garrison, Nashville, Tenn.; four | sons, the Rev, John W,, Curly and Foster Short, Indianapolis, and Harry Lee Short, Elkton, Tenn.;
Jets on the stove had been turned on.
one brother, Milton Bledsoe, Pulaski, and 22 grandchildren.
F.-Murphy;-ail-
ATR TC IN YE
. "a *
cal Vn ins
S. R. Harrell Takes . Reorganization Post Samuel Runnels Harrell, president of the Acme-Evans Co. of Indianapolis, has been selected by former President Herbert Hoover to. serve on the Citizens Com-
ganization the Federal Government. Notified of his
Mr. Harrell his acceptance. Mr. and Mrs. iy Harrell are in y Florida on a Mr. Harrell busines and vacation trip. Mr, Harrell is a trustee of the University of Pennsylvania, of which he is a graduate, is a director of the Wainwright Title and Trust Co,, of Noblesville, and is active in numerous Indianapolis civic organizations. Following his graduatiofi from the University of Pennsylvania, he received a law degree from Yale University and practiced law here with the firm of Smith,
i
SRNR 8 DE AW . :
Hoover Comittee:
Tere DAC
ri TUESDAY, MAR. 15, 1040
rival-ef Detroit authorities. lice said he will be charged in Detroit with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, The girl, whom Coner said he married in Michigan, was turned over to the Juvenile Aid Divi. sion. >
Gene Dawson Chosen As Press Club Head
Gene Dawson, aviation editor of the Indianapolis News, was lelected president of the Indianapolis Press Club yesterday. He will succeed Paul James, Indian« apolis Star reporter. "Editor James Stuart of the In
president. Jgmes Farmer of the Star and A. Brown Ransdell, Indianapolis correspondent for the Louisville Courier-Journal ' were named
Gordon Graham, WIBC newscaster, was elected to the “B” board
Remster, Hornbrook & Smith.
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dianapolis Star, was elected vice
members of the “A# board, and
Tru Der
WASI leaders we a last mim
They ‘warning t! with them The vot today. T bill would controls fo the present date. In t mittee is wv bill but its ~how long th See |
yi nisi ogee thou be would be | they consid ments. They cc though, th: prospect o amendment publican pre bill back to tee with in: federak ren! days. Other cc ments:
Reds
Chairman (D. Pa.) sa mon two C fore his Ho mittee to s a they would United Stal
to elaborate ment that f feat U. 8. should engs : - im
time that f to specific v “We = ha! weasel-word question,” | that we brc bar of publ - answer on country.”
Atomic Chairman Conn.) of sonal Ator tee said the embark ups power proj dreds of m
Cio The CIO Democratic editorial ‘or “hasn't pas major legisl all rank an the lawmi postcards, and telepho
Father's Rep. ‘Wal took time c eration of n lative prob] to legalize } Father, 1 has lagge« mother in the statute years behin Since Ma gotten” spec
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