Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1949 — Page 1
uraska 32 rraska, cashs ~ Block Co. the past two erday in St. il be buried lowing servday in Flanrtuary. She
lived in 3709 a native of lived in InShe
a member of LS. er husband, ughter, Mrs, her mother, 11 of Indian
Beatty Ollie Beatty, 11 be held at arnes Chapel, n Hill Cemes R. Simmons, will officiate. was 53, died incent’s Hos»
rsonville, she ant of Ladies rican Legion; sident of the of Federated
vived by her Beatty; and Minnie Green rner, both of Mrs. Lottie s, and Mrs, rand Rapids,
In Jes Pittman, y Sanitation years, who home, 2850 n illness of held .at 10:30 he J. C. Wilhimes. Burial Crown Cem=-
County, Mr, 83, had lived ears. He was 2 Teamsters
vo brothers, ed Pittman,
Smith TOW
zel H. Smith, urple Heart War II, who ans Hospital, vill be held at } Moore Morapel, y was 38, was Ind., but had 19 years. He
3iX years as a
the Basca He was a 3road Ripple nd the Broad an Legion. s wife, Gere Mr. and Mrs, rrysville; five , Judson, Ine rge. Kukurich, ‘Mrs. Harold 1, Ind; and n Smith, Per- . Parma, Mo:, ith, Kingman,
Fletcher . Mary Viola an St, will be 'uesday in the ywed by burial etery. : Dp was 46, died e. She was a rles, Ky., but of Indianapo-
ed from Mane and Eliza College of But= re her illness, religious and
her husband, ughters, Mrs, venport, Miss er, and Miss cher, and one Indianapolis.
right at 89
rs. Clara H, t of Billings, life, who died me, 3403 Park tomorrow in Burial will fole
who was 89, 1001 teacher in rs before her e of Iowa, she rapolis only a vag one of the PEO sorority * of the-Meth« [iles City. daughter, Mrs, indianapolis; a rkwright, Bille idchildren,
Jor Kathryn Cone y St, will be tomorrow in "funeral Home, St. Catherine Church, Burial 8 Cemetery.
1 i
Bobbs-Merrill
by a sister, three nephews
Service SIONS nality Higher Exchanged
Ter, 0 Sekviel
»
R Twa ty ric ot q
[scrapes ~sowarp) 60th YEAR—NUMBER 58
Gar on Tracks
Accident Occurs At Franklin Rd. B. & O.' Crassing
Another trafic story, Page §
Ivan Duchemin, 54, R. R. 10, was killed shortly before noon to-| day when his small coupe stalled on the B. & O. tracks at Franklin Rd. and was struck by 4 fast west-bound passenger train coming from Cincinnati. Sheriff's officers at the scene said the car was dragged more than a mile west of Franklin Rd. to just east of Independence Rd. before the crack passenger train could be stopped. Mr. Duchemin was killed. dnstantly, sheriff's deputies, said. Wreckage of the coupe was strewn around a utility . pole, some 200 yards west of Independsence Rd. Mr. Duchemin lived in the first house north of the track on the Franklin Rd., the sheriff's office’ said. He was alone in his automobile when the collision occur-| red, they said.
Discoverer, 19, Of Fungus Killer | Goes Back to Books
DURHAM, N. C., May 9 (UP) -—A 19-year-old Duke pre-medical
Joe DiMaggio, New York lumberman, holds a photograph of
RR er PY
The Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: Occasional showers tonight. Partly cloudy, rather cool to morrow. Low tonight, 52; high tomorrow, 65.
—
co oa
: ; MONDAY, MAY 9, 1949 ~
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postofice Issued Daily
janapolis, Ind.
Man, 54, Killed Two Guys Named Joo B3ea (Sate 9 T As Train Hits 8 = Linn Gets 2 To
PRICE FIVE CENTS |
Died on State's ‘Approved List) a
Records Reveal
Ft. Wayne Infirmary
Passed All Inspections
The Allen County Old People's ‘Home in Ft. Wayne, where 29 persons died in 34 days, was on ithe approved list of the State Department of Welfare and Roard jof Health, records revealed to‘day. } State law requires that all {homes housing welfare recipients be inspected regularly and ap|proved by the State Welfare Department, with approval also {based on inspections by the State {Board of Health and Fire Mar{shall’s office. | Warren Edwards of the inspec‘tion section of the Welfare De- | partment, said the home was on {the section's approved list. ‘Good Physical Plant’ Dr. Leroy Burney, head of the health board, also said the home| had the approval of his department, despite diet deficits which now are blamed as contributing! factors in the deaths.
CAN
by Texas
Twister
Rwy ER
Acme Telephoto.
The altar of the demolished Church of Christ at Sundown, Tex., escaped ‘damage during a tornado Saturday which ripped through. the litte town. Services were held yesterday in a home of
21 Years | In Gravel Pit Slaying
Home Where 29 Attar Undamaged
Pleads Guilty To Charge of Manslaughter
Surprise Move Made Before Going On Trial for Murder In a surprise move Robert C. Linn interrupted his first degree murder trial in Frank lin this morning to enter &. plea of guilty to voluntary manslaughter. The former Indianapolis prize fighter who was on trial in the 11947 gravel pit slaying of Theo dore Wolfe was sentenced to 2-toe {21 years in Michigan City and ! started his sentence immediately, ! The surprise move came aS | jurors were being selected for {Linn's trial in Franklin Circuit {Court room this morning. Sentenced At Once Linn's attorneys, Glenn Funk and John McNelis, attempted to win prosecution approval of a {plen - of guilty to involuntary
student went quietly back to his Joe DiMaggio, New York Yankees' slugger, as he sits with his studies today after startling sci- son, Joe Jr. age 5. Joe the lumberman is getting plenty of ad- | entists with his discovery of a Vice these days about how to cure *hat heel spur that is keeping new organism whicn kills ath- him out of the Yankee lineup. "Here | am getting famous,” he
“They have an unusually good physical plant well above the average,” Dr. Burney said. He added that the inspection section
one of the members.
Robbers Steal Jewelry
. manslaughter, Marion County Deputy Prose.
a - | Shan hai Uneas {eutor Robert Carrico said he ree { fused to accept this plea but ap+
lete's foot growths. Glen R.. Gale, junior from Mt. Croghan, 8. C., said he stumbled
and other named sons of Italian immigrants.
fungus’ says, "without doing a thing about it." Both Joes have brothers Dominick and sons named Joe Jr. And both, toe, are
is not sufficiently staffed to send men to “stand over them and ‘watch the daily diets.” |
Break Into N. Merid
to th ism § : : yo oir bacteria say in me univer. Gu Y @Ar=0Old Harold Nelson
sity’s botany laboratory. When he feolated it for study. the Killer organism proved able to stop the growth of fungus. » " » MR. GALE first told of his discovery Saturday before the an-| nual North Carolina Academy of | Science meeting at Chapel Hill A Duke instructor. Dr. John R. Warren, said he advised and assisted ‘Mr. Gale in his study.
Loses Valiant
Elwood Boy, Victim o Aided Financially b
The end came at 12:07 a. m.
tracted—and we believe it can— provide medical care.’ , : it may have practically unlimited, Harold was a victim of the possibilities in the treatment of rare Hans Christian Schuller displant disease, and certainly in'ease, a malady which attacks and treating superficial fungus skin destroys the bones. He was disease in humans,” Warren said. stricken at the age of 17 months Dr. Warren said the “killer” or- as the result of an ear infection. ganism had been tested success- Rallied Each Time fully against ringworm, athlete's. Doctors had many times defoot and two lung infections. spaired for his life when be beer came too weak to undergo treatiments. Each time, however, Harold had rallied and returned to Mayo’s Clinic for further treatments,
“If the substance can be ex- Indiana residents had tried to save by establishment of a fund to ** ®
Johnson Leaves For Memphis Tria
Marion County Jail lost its star On his last trip in February, boarder today. however, he hecame so weak that In shackles and leg irons, “Pub- doctors sent nim back to his farm lic Enemy No. 1” Clyde Milton home near Leisure to remain inJohnson started an automobile definitely. He was too weak to journey to Memphis, Tenn, to stand more X-ray treatments, stand trial for a $43.000 bank! Back home Harold became hold-up. He was accompanied by weaker. His fourth birthday on three deputy U. 8. marshals. Feb. 17 brought a flood of greetJohnson was. sufficiently recov- ing cards and presents from resered from bullet wounds received idents over the state who had Apr. 21 in his Monument Circle previously contributed to a fund gun battle with FBI men, to make to finance medical care for the the trip, officers said. (boy. ‘But Harold was too weak ‘to cut put the gaily colored cards Even a Bachelor's jor to play with the toys. i Hoosiers Finance Trips Money Isn't Safe | Hoosiers rallied to the aid of Delbert Dempsey, 52, is a the little boy last October when bachelor but- he awakened this The Tunes YeRorted his family morning with a hushand’s woes— ar unasle to finance further one of them, anyway. trips to Mayo’s Clinic, Gifts of Mr. Dem . cash poured.in to a Harold Nely psey told police that : someone had rifled th son fund, enough to finance severe pockets of nis al trips. Then the Clinic assumed pants, hung on the closet door the financial res sibility be of his bedroom at 1002 Fayette 3, Oe De cause of the rare nature of the 8t., and had taken his billfold boy's disease. But even after this containing $70. y e n
the family continued to receive; Mr. Dempsey's landlady, Mrs. gitts for the stricken boy from Adair Cox, told police that she friends who knew him only
heard a noise in Mr. Dempsey’s through news stories. room at about 4 a. m. but had He is survived by his parents, thought nothing of it. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nelson, a Sw brother, William Roy Monday Monaco Ruler Dead and a sister, Margaret Nelson.
Funeral services will be held MONTE CARLO, May 9 (UP) at 2 p. m. Wednesday in the ~Prince Louis II, ruler of the Shackley fiineral home in Elwood tiny principality of Monaco since and burial will be in Elwood Cem1922, died today. etery, it
Officers Have Awful Time, Deputy Explains in Rhyme
Prowl Car Poet Tells His Woes As on His Daily Rounds He Goes
Sheriff James Cunningham's office today issued a combination press release-public appeal—in verse. Deputy Don Maris, vers libre poet in a prowl car, listed the sheriff's woes in rhyme, more or less, in a poem entitled “Please.”
It is aimed at, rather than dedicated to, the taxpayers, who, extending from central Canada
Mr. Maris says, preplex the sheriff with traffic problems and hinder his operation om a low budget. — ala: Here is thelr offering: | Woe, sheriffs, drive the county | lanes by day, and night Rolling through the ‘chuck- | holes’ that drop our cars - two.” from sight. | Then the taxpayer says: Our siren roars, and red light |
alcoholic dew”
When asked, how many have you "had, always replied:
“Do this, or that, and do it this
Times State Service i ELWOOR. May 9---Death came early today 1o 4-vearsold Harold. Eugene Nelson, victim of a rare bone disease who has battled forthe poor diet was the use of ini his life against increasing odds for more than two years.
‘on alleged operation of a baseball quoted as saying he saw “no need”
{tinue this afternoon and tonight and present director of the Office {and tomorrow will
i Dr. Burney said the report of Miss Lelia Ogle, nutritionist of
the State Health Board who took ! oe Jewel burglars looted a Nor
At Home of Julian Bobbs
ian St. Garage : To Enter House by Connecting Door
th Side home yesterday. stealing
art in the investigation of the Fight for Life PE . showed eg the home What police said may be the largest gem loot here in recent years.
served no butter nor oleo. meat
f Rare Bone Disease, y Hoosier Friends
times a week. He said only one was served daily and that no bracelet and two diamond-set whole wheat bread was served. rings.
{mates to prepare food, instead of the missing gems. to the life that Indianapolis and full time trainec kitchen help, he > d
arm] Blames Malnutrition | Dr. Noah Zehr, Ft. Wayne phy-| isicilan who instigated the investi-| gation, charged that inmates were ‘undernourished and that the highi)., ing Behind articles which Mr.
reer comet pe Appeals Quashing s (death rate was in part due to ppg told police were worth sev- | [nal uthition: ‘eral hundred dollars,
» : Noma nstitution obviously, Years Now Robbery
lot of extremely old i i , From one jewelry box they took Dailey Pushes Charges \people who hadn’t been getting asl white gold wide band ring set
. ood food or ropri ‘Against 5 Accused Boo as FY rod APrODHAIE with one large diamond sur-
Prosecutor George Dailey 10day of their age,” Dr. Burney con- founded by six diamonds and sapfiled notice of appeal to Indiana cluded. 7 {phires; a yellow gold narrow band Supreme Court on Criminal Court, He said the report, plus rec- 'ing set with eight small diaI Judge William D. Bain's deci- ommendation of the state nutri- Monds and a white gold and platgion to throw out 19 gambling in- tionist, would be sent to the inum bracelet studded with nine dictments against four Indianap- Allen County and state welfare diamonds and three sapphires olis political figures and an ac- departments, From another jewelry box in countant. Meanwhile in Ft. Wayne offi- the second bedroom thieves seJudge Bain quashed the indict- cials said they were afvaiting lected a white platinum necklace ments Apr. 28, against Attorney the report of the investigation set with diamonds around the Thomas H. McNulty and his before making any decision on band with a cluster of three brother, Edward R. McNuity, a further action in the case. | marquise diamonds. : tavern operator; Attorney Wil-| ‘Not Enough Vitamins’ | Police said the owner said he liam B. Miller, Ralph Hitch, pro-! Dr. Zehr, fessional bondsman, and Hugh charged “politics” were respon- | stolen articles and he declined to Flynn, accountant. sible for the deaths because Make any estimate, fearing such Mr. Dailev said he ordered a Staff appointments were based on information might lead to further transcript of all testimony in- pasty wiiiationy Pater han pro- if IR i was inessional qualifications, today was su . : ‘ Yolved in the cage, which ninged : Mr. Bobbs is the son of the late for grand jury action, W. C. Bobbs, long president of He said the home was a ‘good, Bobbs-Merrill Co. His home is clean, well-kept” place but said one of the showplaces of Indithe management wasn’t what it anapolis and the formal garden {should be. Elderly persons were has been included in the annual underfed and did not get enough Park School tours of outstanding vitamins, he added. gardens of the city.
ruary, charged the ‘men 10. ’ 2 , “making and drawing” a lottery - You Sai take a retired farm Police were investigating the
and with failure to register their operating companies, Hoosier’! this home wit Novelty Co. and State Distribut-
locked connecting door.
in two bedrooms, selecting .only the four pieces of jewelry and
lottery Mr. Dailey will have 30 days in which to complete his written appeal, The indictments, which were returned by he grand jury jn Feb-
Dr. Zehr was quoted as saying. in a break-in at the nearby Louis iOnslo Dissler, a former farmer, Markun home, 4366 N. Meridian ing Co. wha the Founty clerk. was appointed head on Jan. 1. st. nage ain Yeelnred, when = Willlam E. Roussey, president Dog Breaks Loose rew out the indictments. that ,, 4," Ajjen County board of The, break-in was discovered they failed to state sufficient facts commissioners, ' said he would when the Markun family reand essential elements with take no action until he received turned home from the country
that degree of certainty required ) ’ 0 in criminal cases.” invastigator's Yeporis, last night, The family police dog
Gen. Hershey to Address IU Medical School Alumni
Mercury to Slip To Low of 52°
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
6am. 62 10am. 62 | Military Leader on 4 7a. m... 64 11 a m.. 62 | A 4 ph 8am... 68 12 (noon) 62 Program Wednesday y Sam... 64 1pm.68 Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, organizer and director of the warOccasional showers will con- time draft for the armed forces,
be partly of Selective Servige Records, vill {cloudy and rather chilly, Weath- speak at the Alumni Day program lerman Paul Miller said. of the Indiana University School
Burglars broke into the garage, lat the Bobbs’' residence and en{tered the house through an un-
They ransacked jewelry voxes|
who Saturday did not know the value of the,
| Starts to Close
2 125,000 Detroit workers.
cident. laden with “an |
. The mercury was expected to slip to a low of 52 tonight and remain below 65 tofhorrow as {cooler air in a high pressure mass
to the Texas panhandle moves {into Indiana. : Skies will clear by tomorrow night, Mr. Miller said. ' Moistureladen air from the Gulf tonight will eause showers to be general throughout the state, he said.
DROPS DUROCHER CHARGE
flashes, but no one pays | attention. { But onlv to ourselves, do we
way,” 80 from deputies to taxpayers, a few words, we'd like
NEW: YORK, May 9 (UP) Fred Boysen, 22-year-old Brooklyn fan, today withdrew his sum-
mumble our words of ap- to say: mons charging Leo Durocher preciation. “Give us more men, more cars With simple assault and then pubFirst it snows, then rains with and equipment, now, at licly apologized to the New York ice and fog, our side, Giants’ manager in upper Man-
But still. we travel far and wide, just to shoot a dog. « The man which caused the ac-
“So we can do our worst best better, with the sheriff as our guide.”
hattan magistrate’s court.
Charler's Restaurant, 144 BE Ohis New Jummer Mowry: gene 0 te N08: INoon Lunches, 11:08 te 2:00 P.M.
of Medicine here at 4 p. m. Wednesday. A native of Steuben County, Gen. Hershey will speak on the relationship of military and medical professions, considered timely since the armed forces are asking for young physicians and medical school graduates. He will address more than 1000 physicians
attending the second annual pro- %
gram in 1040 W, Michigan St. Also speaking are Herman B Wells, president of Indiana University; Frank C. Mann, professor in the University of Minnesota post-graduate school of medicine; Milton L. McCall, Jefferson Medieal School. and Lowell T. Coggeshall, dean in the University of Chicago Division of Biological Bclences, Gen. Hershey was a first lieulenant in the Indiana
Maj. Gen, Hershey
The jewelry theft was one of two burglaries in N. Meridian only twice a week and fruit three St. homes while the occupants were absent on Sunday outings, rust thee The loot from the Julian Bobbs home, 4038 N. Meridian St. invegetable in addition to potatoes cluded a platinum-set diamond necklace, a sapphir and diamond
i {
| “King” broke loose as the family!
Over 5th Column
U. S. Set to Help 1600 Americans
By CLYDE FARNSWORTH Keripps-Moward Staff Weiter TRINGTAO, May 9--The Communists are reported slipping saboteurs and agitators into Shanghai to bolster their fifth col-
n upstairs’ bedroom,
The family sald that after the
dog's outburst they checked and noticed that
missing.
(found the pins had been removed. {from the hinges of two locked {closets and $150 taken. A book {of travelers checks was taken Ibut was discarded. Burglars had carefully removed {the pins to enter the closets, {Mr. Markun said, and then had replaced them so carefully that
Mr. ed the house and rushed to umn and forestall any attempt byiprgw] with Wolfe Anoth lng fact | Police said Mr. Bobbs declined) t"'®" : hed ‘10 UTRR. ARG TAFaMA 20) A empl OY brawl wit er contributing factor to) MAI gg : Chiang Katahek to reilly» de-ivictim disappeared
fense of the city.
i (Meanwhile, Shanghai garrison $21.50 which had headquarters requisitioned private heen lying on .a desk was/trucks and jeeps for military pur
Page 11.
poses after losing Kashing, defense anchor point 50 miles southwest of Shanghai, to the Communists.) Private advices to Tsingtao from Shanghai indicated riots are being provoked and fires started. Known enemy agents are being
the theft might have. gone un- executed, it’ was said.
{noticed but for the dog. | Entry was made by climbing! to a porch roof and breaking ta screen on a second story window.
Outside Mediator Rejected by Ford
Other U.S. Plants
{ DETROIT, May 9 (UP)-—The! {Ford Motor Co. today snubbed all offers to mediate the strike against its two Key plants, increasing prospects of a prolonged! iwalkout that in 10 days will leave 100,000 U, 8. workers idle. In 30 days, the strike's effects will be felt throughout the world. The company sald that the walkout of 62,200 CIO United
i
i
superintendent possibility that the same burglars auto Workers against its River hout training,” were responsible for theft of $200 Rouge
and Lincoln - Mercury plants is a matter for companyunion negotiations. It is willing {to meet with the union and subimit the dispute to arbitration. ! The strike, now in its fifth day, forced the company to begin a wide program of plant shutdowns and layoffs in 16 states and Can(ada, starting tonight. One mediation offer was made {by Mayor Orville 1.. Hubbard of | suburban Dearborn, with whom { the company has been at odds for some time." Meanwhile, almost 50.000 workers, idled by disputes in the automobile industry returned to their jobs today.
RB Briggs Calls 16.800
Hudson Motor Car Co. recalled Hudson shut down last week when a strike at Bendix Aviation Corp.. /Bouth Bend, Ind. cut off its supply of brakes. Hudson was able! to reopen today after removing its brake dies to another manufacturer, Another 16800 workers were called back to the production lines at Briggs Mnufacturing Co., Detroit builder of auto bodies which was closed by a strike of 750 men in the door department, The strikers agreed to arbitrate their complaint of a speedup. Operations also resumed today at the Plymouth Division of
Air Escapes Unlikely - It is obvious any civil unrest
in Bhanghal would be attributed!
by authorities there to Communist intrigue. It is possible that strains inherent in 8hanghali's isolation, currency inflation, growing unemployment and declining food supply could touch off chaos. It is a great threat to the 1500
or 1700 Americans still hanging
on there, Those Americans are principally’ businessmen who still
{think it may be possible to deal
with the Communists, At the first major outbreak of physical danger, however, there probably will be a new rush for the exits, and renewal of demands for U. 8. naval protection, The possibilities of escape by air will vanish in the face of any great internal disorder or Communist attack upon Shanghal. Destroyers Stand By. American dertrovers are still standing by in Woosung anchorage down the Whangpoo from Shanghai. But it ig improbable they will ever be ordered up that 10 miles of narrow curving river to the Shangha!l bund. As an escape-hatch measure, however, our Navy has sent an LST to Woosung to stand by for possible embarkation of Amer.
icans, The Navy also is running
daily trips of one 1.CI between Woosung and the Naval annex wharf,
Say Plumbing
‘proved a compromise plea of {guilty to voluntary manslaughter, |” Johnson County Circuit Judge {Oral RB. Barnett passed sentence | immediately: | It was the second trial for Linn who with Herbert Brunner, 26, lof 820 Division 8t., was indicted in the murder of Wolfe, | Wolfe's body was found floats ling in a gravel pit on W. Ray. ‘mond 8t., July 13, 1947. Witnesses
identified Linn and Brunner as
ithe men ‘involved in a street the night the
Linn and Brunner were tried together in Marion County Crimie nal Court but thé jury did not
fab re npn On further investigation they , ead “Korea an Explosive Spot,” reach a verdict. After this they
were granted separate trials and {Brunner was tried along in April, 1948, and convicted of second des gree murder, | He later appealed the convies tion and was granted a new trial by the Supreme Court. His new {trial date is still pending. Meanwhile, Linn ‘was free une der $20,000 bond and wes to have istarted his second trial, venued ta Johnson County; today.
Robert C. Linn
a a ——————
Times Index 6 Movies esses 8
Amusements
Bridge ..... 5 Pattern .... 8 Business... 13 Radio ....s. 18 Childs ...... 10 Society ..... 4 Comics ..... 17 Sports... 12,13 Editorials .. 10 Teen Prob. . § Forum ..... 10 Weather Map 2 Hollywood .. 6 Women's ... §- Mrs, Mann're 8 Your Job ... 8
Stock Ample,
But Cost to Remain Same
‘When Builders Redu
ce Their Scales We'll Cut
Ours,’ Explains Stote Association Official
Don’t get the jdea that the plumbers are dunking themselves in
gold-plated, bathtubs these days. And as for the high cost of program wrench through a window,
They didn't get rich in the war, plumbing holding up the housing
that'll make 4 plumber mad enough to throw a pipe
The Master Plumbers Association of through Wednesday in the Lincoln Hotel, is far from happy over in the floor as the Romans had the plight of the plumber and ‘em, or square, round or oval" what people have been saying said Charles J. Kantmann, Terre about him in the housing pinch Haute, president of the associa« which followed the war. tion. , Cost Set at $600 Study Plumbing Codes “When the builders get their’ The Master Plumbers Are costs down, we'll get ours down,” going to devole their time to said Clinton F. Hayes, vice presi- plumbing codes, housing. mers dent of the association. Bome of chandising, apprentice training them lump the price of a house and the role of plumbing in
Indiana. convening today
Chrysler Corp. which had laid off and when the buyer complains health. Guard and a #tudent In Indiana 5800 men when the supply of they point to. the high cost of And this wouldn't be complete University when World War 1 be- bodies from Briggs was choked bath rooms, with out some crack about the
Nationa! sion,
gan. He then was commissioned off, |" “We can put bathrooms in plumber ‘forgetting his tools a first Heutenant in the U. 8. At Evansville, Ind. 2000 em- economy houses for about $800, which Mr. Kantmann says is-still Army. He was a member of the ployees of a Briggs body plant that's $175 a unit — bath tub, perfectly understandable,
general staff of the War Depart- and a Plymonth factory returned lavatory, toilet and hot water ment and secretary and executive to work after a strik» that began heater,” Mr, Hayes said. plumber can carry around all of officer of the joint Army and Friday over “unsatisfactory” There's no shortage of plumb- his tools. He needs about 3000 Navy selective service commis- working conditions. Agreement in ing fixtures. “We can give yoy tools and repair Py Aad \the dispute was reached Saturday. a pink or lavender bath tub, that's quite a load, ", . : 1 : Ta fal
“Why not?" he asked. “No
