Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1949 — Page 1
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FORECAST: Clearing, much cooler, scattered frost tonight. Fair, cool tomorrow. Low tonight, 38-40. High tomorrow, 66. :
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[prs nowens] 60th YEAR—NUMBER 200 r¥ ~'. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1949 Bataced ur faoond- Class Matar at Pontoon ee
| Duty Defy
I Need a Doctor— - ‘He Feels It His Mayor Lashes
Rain, Hail, Sleet and Snow Feeney's Wrath Can't Stop His Mercy Flights By DAVID WATSON
(This is the fourth in a series of articles on the role of the Tim i doctor as a private practitioner.) of a story in The es dis-
Story on How
to Come, Motare Hardships es
Optimism Marks Parley Over Steel Strike Threat
Stunt Arouses
Mayor Feeney today vigorBy ROBERT BLOEM ously denounced publication
closing a method of gypping
He gets called
no matter how busy
rain, hail, sleet and
as well to the family
practitioner. He has
such thing as a 40schedule. In addition,
eral Hospital caring patients. He related a story
working days and
for her care. » Ld » DOCTOR B made in a driving rain to a the wife was certain was dying. He was
had feigned illness’
“patient's” sécret. Doctor C has a
still makes frequent
fee is slightly higher practitioners for the sists of complicated
perience qualify him
doctor spends man
hardly dare attend
makes it too easy to
can't get away when scientious, But doctor
profession are. The
otherwise available
tion, not the rule.
quirements of the \ seeks to elevate
tioner,
- ground, local doctors i be impossible to join ! or any similar group
—-—
scientific. meetings
hours must be spen
J
‘schools, -
THE FAMILY doctor may not be the institution he/parking meters installed here once was, but he believes he’s a better doctor and he still 5p an experimental basis. has some of the world's worst working conditions. The Mayor's criticism followed
he finds patients losing patience and himself losing clients. {1 He is imposed upon almost as much as he is needed by many the profession itself, both in edu-| Predicts Wave of ‘Gypping’ | persons.” The famed saying abou
Doctor A is an Indianapolis ing the number who can make
numbersof hours a week at Gen-/minimum requirements of law,
working nights. She paid mothing| (Tomorrow: They blame the ;
3 practice in & small central Indi- : ana town. He used to keep morning, Afternoon and evening office
hours several days a week. His Y own health forced him to discon- told today. servative leader and wartime
tinue this grueling procedure. He a gn Re 8 iy who had ocratic committeeman from Ar- He ripped into the Socialist re-
jammed his office evenings now 4 don't feel bad at all or, they man’s national health insurance famous wartime speeches.
in a luncheon speech at! Cheered wildl hen he do, they find they can make it in|Program : y when rose the morning or afternoon. He the Athenaeum. to Speak on the second day of d t
baby than are those of general]
practice or in a speciality which involves frequent emergency calls
game. The huBbub at a ball park
The parking congestion offers too]
Not all doctors are S80 CON“igeginer Bureau said today. | say most of the members of their|y, ..4 toqay after last night's
- refuses to keep in touch with a, or hin and hail on the city,| telephone answering service OF g.)1oq trees and power lines. Al-|
tients, they ‘insist, is the excep- gp, gige, Weir Cook Municipal Besides “his regular patients| pair and much cooler weather, | and charity patients, the. doctor win scattered frost, will follow has other duties. Practioners here, today’s partly cloudy skies. t for - example, describe the re-| prot will center in the north
General Practice, a society which|ioniont Otherwise the. state
standards rof the general practi-\preqiction, Hoosier temperatures
To belong and obtain the pro- night. fessional benefits, a doctor must] Showers and cool temperatures -~ have fulftraining, interneship and have pro duc i rope i at least two or three years of yields, the bureau said, but corn active practice. Without this back-{and soybeans are “reported in
make it possible to keep up wWith| ¢ 4 ym... 56 10 a. m... 64
Actually, the doctor, specialist Mrs
out of bed more often than a fireman. publication of a story by Times Reporter Jim Heyrock, who sale)
He works constantly with agonizing pain and misery or, py, was able to park indefinitely equally as trying, with whining and complaint. |simply by giving the meter crank | He can make a good in-|
come, but he isn't assured of pore hours than the minimum is widespread in Columbus, O., one. All his vacations and requirement at scientific and staff where the devices are also used. flinesses are without pay. ; . ‘dare not choose between serys 4 ing one patient or another, yet|With h
jan extra quarter turn after inor otherwise, must spend many serting his penny. The practice
He meetings. Without this time-con-| “The story was no good,” desuming work he loses standing clared the Mayor. “It was ‘low’ is profession and with hos- and a poor advertisement for, he may be! Ppitals—both far more rigid po- your paper. You might just as i licemen than any provided by well run a course on the art of] aw. picking pockets as to explain how it is such stern discipline by the meters can be gypped.” t cational standards and in stan-
now was dards of practice and keeping up “At least your headline was,
accurate,” the Mayor continued.!
“written about the men who carry|With progress, which leads often “It Was &. RV : | 3 . EYp. Are your people, nll the mail, but it could be applied to charges that doctors are oper 'so underpaid that they must Te-.
doctor, |ating a closed corporation, limit-30 Hi ER Tug, rl
meters?”
a practice the grade. - : \ of several hundred patients who, The doctors and the men and, ' Mayor Feeney Predicted 8 wave, pay their bills when they are Women who teach them their pro- of “meter gypping” when motor-/ sick, but do not get sick on any fession believe this discipline has
jammed. Police experts exam-
hour-a-week [brought the best scientific care
he serves alin the world to Americans. Mere ior Rouls said they did not suc-
ceed in jamming it. for charity they agree, might bring an in-| “uy, "man must have had an
{crease in the number of doctors. ; iq meter,” said Police Chief
of one such and they also agree that more o uls. “The system might work
: patient, A young woman, she ad- doctors may be needed. : mitted she earned $18 a week! But, they ask, “what kind ot 0" the one he tried, but it doesn't
jon ours. We tried it on one at
t 2 38 a night doctors? {headquarters and we can't jam
Moetor.) | “Besides.” the chief added, “of-
nn ficers will take care of parking
{
a night call! [violators by chalk-marking tires.” home where | 0C S I | Meanwhile, parking meter methe husband ‘chanics and police. continued.
in a coma, checks on the evasion techffique
she reported on the telephone. . als —and patrolmen chalk-marked The coma was a hoax. The man] 0 | ld auto tires. was only mildly intoxicated. He
to avoid a
tongue lashing for coming home| Speaker Raps Truman Hour Is Grave, be. Cera 20 he physician. Medical Program Churchill Warns
The wink was all the d got for his trouble, but he was a good Phaotes, Pages 2 and 3 LONDON, . Sept. 28 (UP) sport and didn’t give away the - ma—————— Winston Churchill denounced de- , By JOHN WILSON valuation as a ‘disaster’ today
substantiaj| American doctors must turnand demanded an early general out in full force for the 1950|election to- give the British peoelections. to stop the “trendiple a chance to oust the Labor {toward socialism,” the State Med- Government. ical Association convention was| “The hour is grave" the Con-
Dr. R. B. Robins, national Dem- prime minister told Commons.
kansas, attacked President Tru-|gime with all the vigor of his
night calls Fe described compulsory health on devaluation Mr.
{Insurance as “nothing more than|Churéhill said th in three different counties. I sa ree things called Doctor D is an obstetrician. His|50¢ialized medicine disguisedifor quick elections — the finan-
{thinly by a trick of terminology.” cial i to deliver a J y. |e crisis, the party conflict, and Efforts to enact the plan, he sald, the atomic bomb. y
service, but contain an “ominous” threat to] “Over. all there looms the
a sizable part of his practice con- the entire American system. atomic bomb which the Russians
cases which Won't Stop There have got before the British,
only his special training and ex-| “Let no one in this nation be- though happily not before the
to handle. (lieve that if medicine is nation- Americans,” he told the tense
The doctor, like many in his alized, the march to stateism will house and the jammed galleries. work, makes few house calls yet stop here,” Dr. Robins said. “So- i | babies are r conformers to a cialization of medicine has been doctor’s oni habits and the the first step in total socialization Food Costs Here y hours of of the state wherever the experi- Go Up 14 Per Cent many nights in hospitals. He dare ment has beén undertaken.” not even drink a bottle of beer| Dr. Robins, Arkansas Univer or a highball lest some sensitive sity medical school professor, mother detect the smeil of alcohol!called on his colleagues “to alert
DOCTORS who are in general) Jack Frost Due Fire Damages Home
Fire which started on the first
ists learned that devices could be|
{ined the meter last night and|
Food costs in Indianapolis rose vorced in Reno last year from would be held at the home of been extended to 70th St. and i i JRO 3 J is - Hopes for a settlement in the cess ter , . id par cent from mid-July to William Simpson, whom she mar- Mrs. Simpson's mother at 2029 Central Ave. and would have be- Ford dispute were increased a I ar ue Td Aust yr Department ried in New Yor) state in 3048; | Connecticut Ave. in Washington. come ‘part of the Central Ave. ,.norts that the company during in steel centers throughout the
Paintbrush War Rages New City-Wide So's, “Expect Break EE Transit Route cr Indien: tose In Deadlock
| » National League — St. Louis’
{ lead over Brooklyn was cut to . | one game by a &-to-4 loss to | anne Pittsburgh last night. St. Louis, 'meets Pittsburgh and Brooklyn . 1
: plays Boston today. May Result in American League—The Boston) Conference Takes Drastic Revision Red Sox retained their one-game; New Course After . lead by beating Washington, 6 to . : Of All Lines 4, while second-place New York) Industry Offer vis | , 2 beat Philadelphia, 3 to 1. New| 31 Mayor Feeney and the York plays Philadelphia today. Editorial, Page 14
|Board of Works today an- Boston plays Washington tonight ~ ITTSBUR ~ nounced plans for a transit] American Association Playoff P BURGH, Sept. 28 ltraffic survey which may re. —The Milwaukee Brewers haited| (UP) —CIO and U. S. Steel a It in wid y a evi ay g the Indianapolis Indians in Mil-(Corp, negotiators opened bar. suit in widespread revision ol waukee last night after three) ining on a new level today
i 'bus and trolle routes straight losses, beating the Tribe, 8% y 6 10 1. The two teams meet again with a company offer to meet
{throughout the city. | " tonight with the Indians needing “ ” | At the same time Indianapolis Yona one victory to clinch the the - "money recommenda- {| Rallways, Inc., withdrew a tenta- gerjes. « | tions of the steel board's pensions
| tive petition for major re-routin __ {insurance formula. pe J EB! International League Playoff Reports of a “major” devel
i {of transit lines on the North The Montreal Royals entered the| "=. som industry sources | Side only. Little World Series last night by| ¢ thered, Hopes The proposal, based on an ef-| as the conferees SA " | defeating the Buffalo Bisons, 8) for a compromise settlement beficiency study being made by the i, 3 They will play the winner =" "ac aire for a strike of {Utility and the Public Service ,r yp, Indianapolis-Milwaukee .., 00 basic steel workers {Commission, was withdrawn, the aries for the title. | 0b med; - {city officials said, to give the city! ~ (petails in Sports Section, Sune deadline has been set at
itime to study the effects on] _* Pages 18 and 19). . lother areas. Mayor Feeney said] a ———— 11:01 p. m. (Indianapolis Time)
the North Side plan alone . . y. amounted to starting out “half, Armed Miners Di U. 8. Steel Ofered to my the icocked” to work out the routing : six cents pe ur per bg Swany and traffic problems. | pensions our cen ance, recommended by President
Mayor Feeney did not indicate, d "paw " however, whether his proposal «= Penns ania Pits Truman's Suet finders A hoy Seated {study the traffic problem on a that employees also Son! * |city-wide basis meant he had de‘ Speculation arose a small
| |
{ |
|éided to join the utility and the Unmolested | wage meres hi offset he - |state in the current “efficiency” MW Pi ck |ployees con 3 iy as 1h study. He said the study woud By U els {to settlement o in disput nd
be made by police traffic experts, PITTSBURGH, Sept. 28 (UP) "%* is ag the city traffic engineer and en- __Heavily-armed non-union coal framework” of Ihe Jargs report. :
Photo By Henry E. Glesing Jr.. Times Staff Photographer. | neers ¢ India is Raflways.' That “Paint War" is on again. Last night some LitHe Giants Sineers of Indianapo YS: miners worked without interfer-ig, .;., offer was made at a special
of Wabash swooped down on the Butler campus and when the sun He a Jot mention Participation nce a Hom . Xaiding Jauds tor | bargaining session last night. The arose this morning evidence of their trip was plastered on the walk | Previously the city administra- gay but state police were fear- offer opened the way for “give. leading to Arthur Jordan Hall. The whitewash letters spelled tion declined an invitation by the ry] of renewed outbreaks of a in Begs ton High W-A-B-A.S-H and the task of removing the evidence fell to Fresh. |PSC and the utility to participate shootings. Both company and union nego men Dick Keilhols, West Lafayette (lef) and Joe Fosrderher, 3357 In the efclency sudy. Whe #i0cy| The non-union diggers turned i, ory were tight-lipped as they Baltimore St. Wabash undoubtedly expects a reprisal, either in |Jianmen oe , out in force at backland strip... ..q the conference room with
. ala {lishment of four press bus through westpaint form or on the gridiron, when the two teams meet Saturday. ana ad oo service to TE ed RO Tr less than 62 hours remaining be-
I ea 1. BE Bt ha. NAF joing sections of the eit. |qpenly vowed to use their guns Britain's No. 2 David to Wed The hat arin pects. who work west- hfough steel cormpany ofices.
' * t ithe city and utility had extended ern Pennsylvania's 400-odd non-iyy g ’s’ ins "2d Mrs. Simpson’ From U. S, =, in: muy fo mast. south union rp mines nd deep pits ayes contrivutions 1s pensions . and West Side, Indianapolis Rail have been “roughed up” in pre- was solely a question of “prine
-
. . {ways could submit their proposed "» cen hour Milford Haven Rocks Court Circles ; {route revisions for the North Side. po Sass ble state trooper Siple. Nien i a 3 d Sian With Betrothal to American Divorcee Meanwhile, J. P. Tretton Sr.1, Every Salat stale AOR ore tod bring 4vice president and general man-| me
By GERALDINE HILL, United Press Staft Correspondent lager of the transi il 0 .| Armstrong, Clearfield, Clarion| While the steel board recom- ! LONDON, Sept. 28—Mrs. Romaine Dahlgren Simpson, 0 year: er) with the a util Son and Cambria County districts. mended against a general wage |old American divorcee, said today it was “probably love at first|eficiency study plans. | The miner situation reached its increase, x i specifi that | sight” when she met the Marquis of Milford Haven and consented| Mr. Tretton said details of the critical stage as John L. Lewis’ PERSONS 250 'ARUraRne BIONIC 09 {to be his wife. conference were “not yet ready to|tOP negotiators resumed contract iar any to | ~The 30-year-old marquis and his flancee announced at a press announce.” His only comment on talks with southern producers.ati, “op. compromise formula, ine conference that they will be married in Washington near the end withdrawal of the route petition Bluefield, W. Va, in an atmos-|4,.4ry sources said. of November. Mrs, Simpson said, — to the city was that “it was ap- Phere of pessimism. + A U. 8. Steel settlement no she will retain her American citi-/come under the Marriage Act of parent the petition would not be Meanwhile, the threat of a na- doubt would set the pattern for zenship. 11772, which makes it mandatory granted anyway.” tion-wide rail strike next month the industry once more. Negotia~ “I am very much" in Tove for the king to consent to any Among the rerouting plans pro- was raised by David B. Robert-{tions with the other major steel with David,” said Mrs. Simpson, royal betrothal. posed in the now withdrawn peti- son, president of the Brotherhood companies “marked time” await. squeezing the marquis’ hand in| The king, however, sent his tion was a shift of the N. Merid- of Locomotive Firemen and En-{ing a “break” from the “Big
front of a number of newsmen “best wishes” late today, accord- ian St. coach line from N.. Me- ginemen. Brel Lies, Steel. biggest of th in a borrowed suite in Claridge’siing to Frank Shaw, the Marquis’ ridian St. to N. Illinois 5t. | Mr. Robertson said his unio chem Stee’, biggest of the Hotel. ? 'press agent. The proposal also would have would refuse a fact - finding] Independent producers, , offered
“It was probably love at first; Milford Haven, who. disquali- shifted that section of the Central poard’'s rejection of its deman ey als Deano mn,
{sight but I can’t remember. This fied himself as London's most Ave, trolley line which naw runs that diesel engines be manned b \husband is definitely for keeps.” | eligible royal bachelor with the on Delaware St. from Delaware an extra (ESFInes be manne thle Wp 3 contributory Iaurynes | Mrs. Simpson, mother of an 18- engagement announcement, said St to Pennsylvania St. The Illi- sregent crew of one fireman andl? The proposal was rejected by
months-old daughter, was .di-'it would be a “big wedding” and nois St. feeder bus line would have one engineer was inadequate. [the union and negotiations ree
! i of Labor reported today. | : “ ; line on his breath. {our fellow Americans” to the fact : ' .. Far Removed The best man will be British - . marathon negotiations had of- country also awaited the signal He limits his places of enter- that the government cannot fur- an eo food costs still 8.2 per and there will be several maids - The proposals also-‘included a foreq 83 cents per hour per man from Pittsburgh. tainment to a very few so that nish “something for nothing.” Se cent higher tha . ul Ds a Sauls, idly David of honor.” he said, previous Dian to make the Fair. for pensioris and that the con-| -. \ nd easily con-| “Whatever is given from Wash- nin -June chae ountbatten is a mem-; . ) , grounds line a part of the Central {,,.¢ id extend for 2% vears. Be Sah Dy y s gi {1948, and 119.7 per cent above ber of the royal House of Wind-| Comfortably Off line and serve its patrons by EE 45x ra that = Youths Get Terms , s 8 = (Continued on Page 2—Col. 2) Aug. 15, 1939. sor and between 30th and 40th in| Since he was best man for trackless trolley. The Fairgrounds cro Steelworkers were consider-. . me ————————————— line for the British" throne, -ad- Philip, Duke. of Edinburgh, at now is a branch of the N. Illinois ing an offer by U. 8. Steel to pay IN Bank Robbery
mitted at the press conference Philip's “marriage to Princess St. streetcar line. | . i # that he had decided to marry the Elizabeth, Milford Haven was — en 3.10-vent insiance-peision pack Washington and New York so- asked if the Duke would recipro- NEW SPENDING OK'd
| Two 18-year-old bandits were {age recommended by a presiden- sentenced to serve 10 years in a tial fact-finding board if its em- | nanitentiary today after they ade
| . » | : . a baseball Egp Vigit Tonight floor of the John Wright resi- ciety woman without the royal cate. | WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (UP) ployees made additional contribu- mitted in Federal Court the robe
miss a page.
he's needed.| \ is srom Jack Frost tonight, the
{dence, 1242 8S. Talbot St., ate ‘its approval of King George VI.
{way up through th: 5 | " Pollen Count . ; . 11 per cu. yd. way we ONE. the Seong Boot Milford Haven said he felt he it,” Milford Haven safd with re- mate, Senate and House conferees CIO President ' Philip Murray gent 13,
great a possibility that the outer Indianapolis can expect another| 2% brought jnides SoRtrel. DHgin | possible succession that he did not/ usually bachelors.”
“I don’t’ see how he can make — Breaking a month's-long stale- tions from their own paychecks. bery of a Mt. Summit bank on
was so far removed from any gret. “But anyhow, best men are today agreed on $852380.000 in was expected to answer the pro-| mp. youths, both from New new Marshall Plan spending. posal today. Castle, were flanked by their pare : ents as they stood before Judge
s interviewed) “y;nu0ually cool - weather con- New Mother
doctor Who|g ectrical storm that peppered .31}L {at
to his pa: tnough the storm centered on the
{
Airport reported .45 inch of rain. |
Academy of ang central portions of the state! the medicalitoracast is the same as the. local
will rangé between 35 and 40 to-
{
say, it would good to excellent condition. the academy .
which would LOCAL TEMPERATURES
new medical developments. a mm... MM. 3 : The Academy of General Prac-| g 4 og 0 » (Noon) “ Olivia De Havilland tice Teguires 150 hows Ye educa-| 9a m.. 50 1p .m,.. 69 HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 28 (UP) ional study Lo. e ot ae bog ~—Film Actress Olivia De Havilyears. y 1 Y b Times Index land today was the mother of counted for regular attendance at an eight-pound son delivered hospital staff meetings. . Amusements. 8 Marriage ... 4 after seven months of confine- : . =» | Bridge ...... 7/Needlework .'7 ment to her bed to avoid losing
! ANOTHER 50 hours may be Comics .....23 Othman ....13| her first-born. courted for regular attendance al Editorials ,,.14 Pattern ..... 7, The infant, named Benjamin |
of various Fashions .... 7'Radio ......,.15 Briggs Goodrich in honor of his
medical groups, But at least 50 Fix It Urself.17 Ruark ...:,.13 great-great-grandfather, one of
t each three Forum ......14 Side Glances 14 the founders of the Republic of
years in strictly formal medical Gardening .. 7 Society ..... 6. Texas, was born yesterday at : | instruction such as is offered by Hollywood .. 8 Sports ...18 19 Good Samaritan Hospital. ~ varjous clinics and medicallIn Indpls. ... 3 Weather Map 16 Miss De Havilland, wife of
Inside Tndpls. 13 Earl Wilson., §| writer Marcus Goodrich, was rs. Manners. 4 Women's .... 6|. reported in good condition,
oar 0? & ow
Fn » 5 ~ { . -”~
‘The Forgotten Men of Marion County— Robert C. Daltzel and admittod [taking more than $2000 from the
{ ° ° ‘ ‘Trial Has Been Pending 18 Months for Paul Brown, fc Sor tian S009 from tus
(State Bank of New Castle. District Attorney B. Howard
But He's Been In and Out of Jail Several Times . leis a Sih
{Wheeler and Chester Leroy
3 . i |ing arrested on a charge of va-1 The bond reduction was au- Wethington of menacin the History of Burglary Auto Banditry Case grancy, the details of which are thorized after a habeas corpus bank mn with a ar and Is Maze of Court Hearings and Postponements not disclosed in the records. hearing at which the state failed gun and locking him in the bank ro - rere ees rr tnt His bond again was set at $2500. to prove its case on the auto vault when they made their gets = (Fourth of a Series) — He has remained in jail since then banditry charge. away.
as far as the records show, |" Nine days later, Oct. 15, an en-, Wheeler was captured the same On May 24, 1948, Brown and try shows Brown was surrendered evening as he hid near his home his co-defendant, Freddie Eugene by his surety, the Capitol In- in New Castle. Wathington was Dobson, through their attorney. demnity Insurance Co. No reason arrested in New Castle the next John 0. Lewis, filled a writ of is shown in the record why Brown day, {habeas corpus arid a hearing was was returned to the court's jurist He Set for May 27. |diction. . Ha Granted Continuance A detective who dia not wisn Times Novel
: By PHILIP F. CLIFFORD JR. A trial for Paul Brown, indicted 18 months ago on charges of second degree burglary and auto banditry, has been pending 18 ‘months, ’ It has now been scheduled for Nov. 21 in Criminal Court 1 after a series of postponements. : | But Brown hasn't been in jail continuously all that time.
has been out orl bond three times. | 0 a : m ~ The first time, Judge William De Supposedly was in jall await-} ,. . ,...1t of the hearing, bond 10 be quoted said “he recalls
* |D. Bain reduced his bond from DE trial for second degree bur-',.',,i, men was reduced from Brown being picked up sometime Starts Sunday
$5000 to $1500 after a habeas 81aTY and auto banditry. [$10,000 to $5000. |between Oct. 6 and 15 for possen- Another best-seller {corpus hearing on the motion of | Wri J tie grate Jarveny| Their trial was set for June 28, 8ion of burglar tools.” starts in The a seller vel 8 [Brown's attorney, John O. Lewis. | rE Ht BE A apolis de.| 1048, but when they appeared be-| As a result, a new bond off day. It's “Cutlass Empire,” S| Brown's freedom on. bond|iective bureau. They were not fore Judge Bain, the records show | $7500 was then fixed by the court, py F. van Wyck Mason. started Oct. 6, 1048, and ended yyaiiable either the defendants asked for and re- the record shows. . In “Cutlass Empire” Henry |Oct. 15, 1948, when he was sur-|" Nor is the record available of °¢/ved ‘a trial continuance. | In December, the two men Morgan comes to life with all {rendered by his surety after hisiyy, person who authorized his This was accomplished, Judge again appeared before Judge Bain the swash-buckling, bloods |arrest on charge of possessing freedom last May and who set Bain said, by mutual agreement and asked for,a change of judge.| letting, love - that {burglar tools. . the bond at $1000. ' |betwéen defense coungel, repre-| By agreement between Mr. marked him as one of EngThe second time he was released | Returned by Surety sentatives of the prosecutor's-of-| Lewis, appointed to defend the| land's most. colorful buceas {May 24, 1949, in $1000 bond on &' pe records do show, however, fice and the arresting. officers. men, and the prosecutor's office] neer captains, charge of grand larceny. /that again he was returned to| “It is not unusual™ Bain Judge Bain qualified attorney| You'll share Henry MorRelease Unexplained lait by his surety after he was declared, “for either the state or Harry L. Galmé to act as special gan's adventures in the Ca-
He was arrested on this charge arrested May 26 on thie charge of defense counsel to request more Judge. : ; | ribbeans ... as he sweeps the May 19. But there is no record in carrying a pistol without a M- time to prepare their case.” 7 | Trial was set for Jan. 25, 1949.) western seas sacking Spanish
the Courtliouse ‘which shows how cense, y ! Brown and Dobson were re- It was reset for Feb, 8. Both re-| towns. For “Cutlass Empire" he happened to get out of jail be-| He was released tife same day turned to jail, pending further ac-| quests for a continuhncé ‘were Is chock-full of thrills of the [tween Oct, 15, 1948, and May 19, he was réturned by his surety on tion by the court. {asked by the’ defendants, the high seas. Rar 1049. ‘+another $1000 bond in connection In the Bond Record of Judge court records show, You'll want to read EVERY
available on why he was reieased days later, May 28, he was. re: showing that Brown was " s— the grand larceny charge whilejturned to the county jail after be-{Oct. 6, 1948, under $1300, , 1{Cantinued MM Page 3—Rel, 4 : .
« 0) : a ; "1h mesa ; whi Se : : pha A a
Nor i there any explanation with the ‘weapons charge. Two Bain's- court, there is an entry| wnat happened on Feb. 8 {s| Chapter... 8
: ! 3 AS - : 4 Sie aX a oy So , cari hgh
a PRICE FIVE CENTS 8
