Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1949 — Page 3

MONDAY, MAY 23, 1949

World Report— ge a West Berlin Wins OK Of West to Take Over ‘El's’ During Violence Fights Flare Up Again on Railways After Stormy Week-End With Gunfire

The Western mili -

tary commandants notified the West Berlin administration today that it could opcupy strikebound elevated railway stations where such violence occurred as that which has rocked the city for three days, : Bal Commanders of the American, British and French Garrisons here acted after a new flurry of disorders. The trouble today was on a scale far below that of the two. previous days in which one day with Adm. Badger aboard. It person was killed and some 1200/!¢ft Shanghai waters Thursday were injured. after the jan 2% American ae The city government was told bei 1 —— ind g that it would be given “prompt” Sleged ty put & the permission to take over control at stations hit by new violence.| KOT@Q : The decision was made after two! SOUTH Korean republic's ex-! special meetings of the com-ipanding army increased its mandants. strength by 1526 new officers to-! Compromise ay with he Fraduation of ca-i It was a compromise on a city |9¢'® from the A ean: Spon-} government request for I sored republics "West Point. to occupy all elevated stations in

West Berlin, By long standing four-power e ees

agreement the transport facilities

of all Berlin are under Russian : i control. Several thousand trans- St Wa n L el port workers struck Saturday to ;

back up their demand that they

[Champ Speller Off to Capital

Emilie Gray, Times Spelling Bee champion, waves to wellwishers as she departed today on a TWA D. C. and the National Spelling Bee. With the St. Patrick's olic school eighth grader are her escort, Mrs. Norma Koster, of

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

5 Hoosiers Die In Week-End Auto Crashes

Woman Killed as Train Smashes Stalled Car

Four Hoosiers died in traffic accidents on state highways yesterday and an Indiana minister died in Dunkirk, N, Y., as the result of injuries received in an automobile crash. The dead are: Mrs. Marjorie Brodbeck, 59, South Whitley. Walter Edison Stiles, 18, Corydon. ’ Donal Viance, 33, Delphi. . Harry Dale Brown, 20, Rising un. Dr. Herman T. Reinecke, pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Richmond, Ind. Mrs. Brodbeck was killed in‘stantly when her car stalled on {the Pennsylvania Railroad cross-

was struck by a fast freight train. Her granddaughter, Linda Loe, 7, North Manchester was seriously injured and was taken to Wabash

ane for Washington, ath-

Shrine to Jews Killed by Nazis

{ing a half mile east of Collamer|W in Whitley County yesterday and|

ls were expecter two feet: of morrow at La-

igh Wednesday

be paid in West marks, several

sponsored marks, Scores of thousands of Berliners were late for work because of the strike. But apart from a few early morning clashes between strike-breakers and railwayito guards, the city was quieter than it had been since the workers

; (Continued From Page One) times as valuable as the Soviet|are hitting the little investor as|

hard as the big one,” he explained. |

A Fingertip Subject

“Business profits percentagewise have never changed much. They've always been around 41%

5 per cent. When the gross is

larger the dollar profits are more but so are wages.”

the City Park and Recreation Department, and TWA Stewardess Dorothy Stevens. : »

City Champion Takes Off For National Spelldown

Emilie Gray and Escort Fly to Washington;

County Hospital in Wabash,

afternoon when he lost control of his car on State Rd. 335, two

{Harrison County. The car swerved off the road then back on and overturned, pinning the youth

Car Overturns Mr. Stiles was Killed yesterday

miles southwest of Crandall in

under it. Mr. Vianco was found dead in

te with

eight pork aly dee, + with au-

erformance fons

3.95 | with trans. de controls, ne perform.

walked out. And Ey was a finoa 9 1 gertip subject. Most of the counGreat Britain! try is still unorganized, Mr. BenBRITAIN'S nationalized rail- (Pett declared. roads moved toward a showdown| ‘There are about 60 million today with 500,000 workers de-|émployed (last figure, 57 million) manding incréased wages, ~ |and there are only 15 to 18 milThe National Union of Railway-|lion in unions,” he added. men threatened to strike unless| And percentage-wise business Recreation Department. the railroad executive withdraws |Das not slipped as much as most its rejection of the wage claims. Labor Minister George Isaacs

She was accompanied by

to prevent the walkout.

Local 8th Grader Makes 2d Bid for Title By ART WRIGHT Indianapolis spelling champion, Emilie Gray of St. Patrick’s| Rockfield in Carroll County yesSchool, left Weir-Cook Airport early today for Washington, D. C. to compete in the National Spelling Bee.

' | Koster, supervisor of special activities for the City Park and

nts partment rk board|Vss 10 attend a party in Spelling Saturday. people think. Mr. Bennett said|co-operated in staging The Times Bee clubrooms in the Willard Ho-/ volume was down $3 billion in Spelling Bee which again. at-|tel. was expected to take action today the first quarter—and that means|tracted several thousand gram-

his demolished automobile in Rock Creek, one mile north of

{terday. Police sald his car tore ‘down a guard post on State Rd. {25, and plunged over an embankher official escort, Mrs. Norma ©, "0" re’ creek. Time of ~|death was set at about midnight

i

Mr. Brown was killed when his jautomobile struck a culvert on . , {State Road 56, three miles north The champions from cities of Rising Sun in Ohio County yes-

Max Lindauer ohn Steinberger

“Lest we forget” . .. This memorial of granite and bronze will stand as a perpetual reminder that 3 million Jews died at the hands of Nazi cruelty. It was erected by their more fortunate brethren who escaped. They are doing their bit for the professional and economic life of Indianapolis. Mr, Lindauer and Mr, Steinberger unveiled -the monument during ceremonies yesterday afternoon in the cemetery of the Hebrew Cemetery Association, Bluff Rd. and Kelley Stas. ;

gt

U. S. Flags Fly af Half Staff

Wash! , followed that of Sen. Watson by jonly 10 months, She was 83. °

{suffered a stroke. : James E, Watson Jr. Chicago,

Mrs, Fiora widow of Sen. James E. (Sunny Jim) Watson, died last night in Garfield Memorial Hospital, -

n, D. C. Her death

Mrs. Watson had been hose pitalized since May 3. when she er :

and Edwin G. and Joseph C. Wat. son and Mrs, Catherine Gross, all of Washington, were at her bedside. Funeral and burial Atrange ments were being completed

*¥ day in Washington.

Sen. Watson died July 29 in Garfield " Hospital of the same type of ailment that brought about the death of Mrs. Watson. The Watsons were m ‘in 1804. Sen. Watson was first

ate and rose to Republican majority leader during the Hoover administration.

known in social circles, was mare ried to the Senator in his home town of Winchester, Ind., where she had moved from German« towd, O., after the death of her father. She had lived with a brother, the late Willlam KE, Miller, a department store operator, until her mariage. Several months later the couple moved to Rushville, where Sen. Watson practiced law until he was elected to his first term of what turned out to be a 40-year career in Congress, » » o

In Homage to Forrestal

(Continued From Page One) The coroner called the death He had been scanning a trans-(a suicide. That verdict was exlation of the somber poems of pected to be confirmed .by the Sophocles and Euripides. One/Naval board of inquiry ordered held that it is “better to die"/by Rear Adm. M. D. Willcutts, than to live on after a man has|chief of the medical center, . lost his reason. But from the President down, The last line on the open page the nation’s leaders hailed Mr,

Meanwhile, Food Minister John

He spoke at noon to a meeting

Strachey told Commons that he (Jointly sponsored by the Indi-

expected no cuts in Britain's 21 cents a week meat ration during|the

1049, ~

Hungary

THE Hungarian government

ana Manufacturers’ Association, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce and the NAM.

we are off only about 2 per cent..mar school pupils to elimination |

has fired Sanos Eros, its envoy

Shelburn Starts

throughout the nation spell only

voutests, day—on Friday morning—in|

It is the 13-year-old eighth On

tional contest. In 1947 she rep- Press Club. All other days will resented this area because she be devoted to seeing the sights] won The Times contest. {of Washington and surrounding, Arriving in Washington at historic points. and to other fun. noon, Emilie was scheduled for| The national champion will win!

the first of several sight-seeing $500 and the least Emilie could!

grader's second. trip to the na-| the auditorium of the National

read: Forrestal as a great American. terday. “The dead thou wilt not! Mr. Truman got the news over Dies of Injuries awaken for all thy weeping his radio at the Blair House. He

Dr. Reinecke, widely known in Indiana church circles, died yesterday in Dunkirk, N. Y., hospital of injuries received Thursday when a car driven by Dr. Howard Talbot, Youngstown, O., minister, was in collision with a truck, in

again.” Folded in the back page of the volume was a sheet of paper on which Mr. Forrestal had been copying one of the poems, the melancholy “Chorus From Ajax.” He had got as far as the 6th line,

sent word to reporters that he was “inexpressibly shocked and grieved.” “He was as truly a casualty of the war as if he had died on the firing line,” the President said. “He should be remembered

|

elected to Congress in that year. He later was elected to the Sens

Mrs. Watson, who was well

which ends

with

the

to London, for refusing to re-

trips this afternoon. Tonight she win would be $40.

a heavy rainstorm. "Dr. Talbot was killed instantly,

" ® turn to Budapest, it was learned Rebuildin I at London today. The Hungarian legation here said Mr. Eros was “on vacation.”| (Continued From Page One)

IN INDIANAPOLIS

The two ministers were returning to their homes from the Presbyterian National Church As-

But it was known that earlier|8 p. m. curfew was placed in this year the Communist Party effect yesterday for everyone. leadership had summoned him to Visitors Detoured Budapest to justify his political contacts during the “Fascist re-|the highways leading into Shel-| gime.” Mr. Eros refused to go. |burn yesterday but saw little as|tomorrow. The ousted envoy joined the they were detoured around the) See Weather Map on Page

Communist party in the waning|town. Very little damage was/One year ago today: High, 82; —

Says ot te ar and became an/done other than in the heart of|low, 52. active Communist member of the|the little city. Hungarian foreign service. Yesterday the town board met EVENTS TOMORROW

Lown 'to name a reconstruction. ram. Mang. Korg. wu ‘ mn BC, AER THE American diplomatic chief )

| Hon y yt can Aipl matics ows Board Member Emmett Conve on anton an ce im, Oscar|Power was chosen director and , Art 1 te. C. Badger, commander of the U. refused a salary. Co-operating Ta a ey "398, 0 . Stat 8. West Pacific Fleet, will discuss/are Capt. Kermit Lewis, state] Meet

Adm. Badgers flagship, the El-/ county chapter chairman of the dorado, dropped anchor there to-/ Red Cross.

Come to 150 E. Market St.

Low-Cost

INDIANA WEATHER A cold- air mass centered over Iowa, Nebraska and Wisconsin! will arrive in Indiana tonight causing scattered showers through-| Thousands of curious jammed OUt the state and partly cloudy skies tomorrow, | Temperatures will remain under the influence of the cooler air]

a a ntion—Final Day, Antlers Hotel. "Indians Artists Exhibition—

ES. Stated ting—8 p. m., temple, 15622 W. Morris

tomorrow the possible evacuation|police; Tom Jennings, American Rotirs Club 88 Luncheon Meoting—13:18) Aly, bY

TWIN AY, Methodist—Charies, Prances Lekens. At St. 8.

sembly in Buffalo, N. Y. : Dr. Reinecke, who was 57, was a native of Pennsylvania and a graduate of Princeton University theological school. He came to the Richmond church in 1938. He was active in Richmond's civic

13. Temperatures in Indianapolis "28, & and was an executive on

word [gratefully by the American peo“nightingale.” He had written ple,” said former President Her‘night , . and then stopped. bert Hoover,

200 CIO Laundry Workers Strike Here in Pact Protest

(Continued Yrom Page One) (the cards said. CIO in the jurisdictional dispute,

cumseh Pl, answered: on the picketline,

MShm BOYS {the Board of National Missions of 5 Nar fois Beatrice Heastand;|the Presbyterian Church. At_General—Alired, Ellen Parran; Julius, Clara Poindext 5 Chitord, Ballie Paicely, - * Oris

14 Indians Tuberculosis Association Conven-/At Col mane Wil Hancock. | al Set olny “ua Aiorvor: Tike, A MRR Rail, medic col iv Funer

psi. ow. Hic Glenn, Jeanie Mc! ie >. oY or = : Baldwin; ay y 4 Ve 5 ~~

usey; Don Marjorie Miller: Dr./for Mrs.

NY Etrilis Neeley: CteRos, Mary Shaw, former president of King-

of some 1000 Americans in South|Legion; William Donnelly, Sulli-| 2 Slavpool Hotel ; Hodse:’ Georse, Patty. Lyon. Waiter.) ’ ! ) 0 eta shr eta shrd eth 'shrdl 8 wife of the late John Maxwell China, it was disclosed at Hong|van County Red Cross disaster RE Fobert, ‘Mary Graham. John B.. Jané/an & Co., who died yesterday in ong today. chairman, and Charles David,| BIRTHS Fhmbertus Wahi, Caroline Walker: arotnodist Hospital. She was 73. GIRLS

is Welsn:| Mrs. Shaw, who was born in Ralph, Margaret Sti go: Vernon, Char-| Cincinnati, had lived in IndianVoie at, “hal Marts, L0e(oid, apolls 48 years. She was edu{cated in schools abroad, includ-

Cooper; Newman, Lillian Woodrutf, At General—Henry, Etta Wilson: omas, ling the Sorbonne in Paris. She At_Coleman—Robert, Henrietta Lawrence: | wis a member of the: Second

Francis—Jack L., Dor

Ethel Parrott; David, Leona Adams. Raymond, Icil Davy; rwin, lice Lemke; Robert, Margaret McMahan; Presbyterian Church, Woodstock

Monroe, Esther Schneier, bi - At Methedist—Clyde, Ellen Nerman; Jack, Club and the Propylaeum Asso

JMarionte leas Ralph, laste Pacey; jclation, onaia, uby andoiph; onaid, Ora | Garsneit; Samuel. Camilla Henry;| Her only immediate survivor Albert, Helen Thompson;

Genevieve Furnas: Robert, Barbara Ma- | rendt; George. Glenis Cain; Jack, Thel- Indianapolis, ma Lund: Richard, Jean

obbins; | Maurice, Mary Callender: Pr nkiin, Cle} ya Zchreer; Robert, Kapp Rhine: Mrs. i Eva Nesbit ' M ri, filma rockman; rel, uiia v Wi WEE ALE Sal, Sl GY Services and, burial for, Mr iy; eve, arle Patrick; | J ' . i nald, Gail McAuley, i v At St. Vincent's—Harold, Ruth Robbins; | BaXter Reed Nesbit, Indianapolis Marcus, Doris] Nickel; Charles, Wan. | Methodist minister who died in fobert, Betty wort, + ome Blavioniiyo44, will be in Bouth Bend to-

Maurice, [ig a daughter, Mrs, Blanche Mote, ‘

| |

{livan, Ind., Mrs. Nesbit had lived | ’ ’ gr AR Lv Tn fl Sentral ln Sotth Bend the past 10 years |Dantel C. Sullivan, 43. st 2418 Shelby, | pSYocaraiyl Infarciien. at 1544 Draper, | PArk Methodist Church there. myocarditis Surviving are four sons, Robert

{ Thomas A. Dally 73, at Methodist, cere. Nesbit, Terre Haute;

cardial decompensation

‘Ellsworth, Rita Brooking; Paul, Gerala-|" = It was repo ffm Sitind ity Bp ANGL| Services were being arranged several other elms: William, John Maxwell Ww, | “talking strike” Jack, h ; Paul W. Hel pack, y S mish Carri Pau sien Jo wife of the late John Maxwell dues had been deducted from

and was a member of the River

Harold {| Peter Hussey, 80. at Bt, Vincent's, myo-| Nesbit, Chicago; Owen Nesbit,

for

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T Miss Grace Nesbit, East Chicago, Mrs. C. C. Rafferty Ind., and seven grandchildren.

Services will be held at 10:30 Mrs. Alfred A. Storey a. m. Wednesday in Shirley Brothers Irving Hill Chapel for|Btorey, 4015 E. 34th 8t., who Mrs. Bessie R. Rafferty, 1739 W. died yesterday in Methodist Hos{Market St, who died yesterday in pital, will be held at 2 p. m. to-

born in Kentucky and lived in| Storey had lived in Indianapolis Shelbyville before coming to In-|33 years and was a member of dianapolis 27 years ago. She was| Forest Manor Methodist Church {a member of Shelbyville Baptist'and the PTA of School 73. She Church. Iwas 49, She is survived by her husband, |

| Mrs. Rafferty, who was 56, was|

Mrs. Dorothy Byrne and Mrs, fred Z.

G. and Carl J. Rafferty; sisters, Mrs. Louella Steiner and Mrs. Grace Havens; two brothers, | Louis and Jesse Russell, and two grandchildren, all of Indianapolis, |

Death Strikes Twice

WOODWARD, Okla, (UP) wDeath prevented fulfillment of the dying wish of 72-year-old V. E.

Bailey, who had wanted the Rev.| : oc oUR ROAST BEEF . . . C. A. Kurtz to preach his funeral have a fromen sermon, Forty-five minutes after Ewry 0 " PRIME BEEF RID Mr. Bailey died, the minister suf- dous standing con haw yours fered a fatal heart attack, ROAST and viu C08 OL .. you fhe foo RARE

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Services for Mrs. Goldie May

{8t. Vincent's Hospital. Burial morrow in the Hisey & Titus will be in Washington Park Funeral Home. Burial will fol- 13 9 Cemetery. {low in Crown HiIl . Born in Odem, Ind, Mrs.

Surviving are her husband, Dr. C. Carl Rafferty; two daughters, Alfred: A. Storey; two sons, Aland Eugene Vincent

Ruth Strafford; two sons, PaullStorey, and a daughter, Miss two Helena Margaret Btorey, all of. ! | Indianapolis,

“Of course I was.”

Mrs. James E. Watson

Police Probe

wien er on ar we 1, SIR StaDDING

Mr. Kruge, who lives at 1110 Te-| national representative, appeared He sald the strike was an effort by the CIO der investigation today as police

A West Side stabbing was une

Mr, Romer said he would ask|to move into laundry workers or- questioned a man and wife

3 hearing on She Sring today be- ganization. ore Robert Vogler, chief exam- Order iner of the National Labor Rela- Picketing ly tions Board. RR

laundries Were when a man and woman walkin

their paychecks. Herman Woods,

ets, said he was striking “for the peacefully to the picket line, right to vote for the union I want to belong to.” He sald the company had

employee about a month ago and

He could not recall in detail what 'front of the laundry.

STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TO . « h a

~~», DEAR SIR:

imorrow afternoon. A CALIFORNIA DEATHS | Mrs. Nesbit died Saturday in CASUAL +o [Bara cain, 20: ®t Methodist, coro-| (ne Memorial Hospital fn South ! give a man a good {Charles Edward Lines, 76, at General, | Bend. She was 74. Born in Sul- Soil oh, he | glomerulonephritis. |

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When a man kicks off a pair of vise-like heat-units : from his feet—and puts a \ bit of California under foot he feels good!

The elastic gore at the ide provides easy ingress an egress to the ds and ™ keeps. a smooth trim line

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i ]

BH

One of the policemen stationed

L STRAUSS & COMPANY, INC. MEN'S FOOTWEAR LOUNGE FIRST

another man in chnngotion” win g

the stabbing of Raymond Joseph

Picketing was orderly this Helm, 6106 E. 24th 8t., at Bloom-

ape — ingto . mor ~ = of a) X vel Of| vorpal La which fared up (Mr, a B because AFL , le, And released at General Hospital, in the line whipped out a bottle told police three persons jumped there took the bottle away from OD him and stabbed him after 25, of 1512/the couple, They at first pro- knocked one down for “making Martindale Ave., one of the pick-|tested the seizure but returned remarks.

Police arrested Mrs. Goldie

A few picketeers tried to or- Jump, 240 8, Hancock St, and ganize the line into march forma-| Paul Wison, 44, of 302 8, Hancock tion and others joined group St, on vagrancy charges and passed out union cards to each singing of spirituals and march

[arrested Warren Jump, 240 8,

songs. But for the most part the Calhoun St, on charges of asordered employees to sign them, pickets simply “kept moving” in!'sault and battery with intent to

{kill

UCH OF TOMORROW

*

3

4 Waghinrian Bia. early.