Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1949 — Page 3

practicing 48 years,

the crash , afid two car, 1sém i of fear

am Perry r of the New York f the car, A A chest | a broken Beth, 13,

» hospitals Anitarium,

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Jniversity, Burwell

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endant of Recreation pide Golf

Miss., he IndianapA member t Church. :, Mildred , survives.

suerin jucted for "in, 1227 tomorrow s Church. turday in 9. Burial

Cemétery, .

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experts | behind locked doors at the U. 8. embassy at London today to plan’ cold war strategy in the Cominform's back yard. ! Nine ambassadors and ministers from Eastern Europe were, Joined by diplomats from Wash-| ing, London and Paris. The twoday meeting may help decide American policy in the general East-West cold war and the TitoStalin feud as well An unusual air of secrecy surrounded the meeting. Officials declined to say more than that the first order of business was an analysis of . Kremlin - directed

States and its allies. Ultimate Objective Bold recommendations for

Western support of Marshal Tito'apolis Lodge will take over major missioner. against the Kremlin were exjected|city offices for the day.

to be: made by Cavendish Cannon,

slavia. chair. Other officials will include secretary to Sheriff James Cun-commit a prolonged cliche, He is Observers and newspapermen “0 .T oct effective fresh.

the city today.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES No. 1 Freshman Senators of Year

1p :

Z5g i fir :

288 Bos ES | :

was labeled!

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a | one,” writes Pat Holt, the author ~ Mrs. Valera Draper, secretary to Sheriff Cunningham, took, oes oe i i | the boss's desk and his as Indianapolis Women of the gadgets, juke boxes, phonographs, Mocse ruled city and county offices for the day. and radio sets to acquire a million, dollars or so. He has sold free-|

Beckley, city controller, and Mrs. enough to win a seat in the SenRepresentatives of the Indian-| Hilda Switzer, city planning com- ate.

Termed Traditional

Rein. a re

Tg oo PR

Ee — cme ame

es Douglas and Dulles Did er nena res EFf@Ctive Work, Lucey Says Sen. Anderson's Efforts on Farm Bill |

Called Next Most Outstanding | By CHARLES LUCEY, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Oct. 24—A tall, white-haired, 57-year-old New| Women of the Moose will rule the safety board; Mrs. Anita enterprise Republicanism weil Englander transplanted to the Midwest, Democrat Paul H. Douglas of Illinois, emerged from the recent session of Congress generally! rated the No. 1 freshman Senator of 1949. On the Republican side, though ho served by appointment only One county office is included in| “Capehart is so much the tra- @ few months, the same honor rests with Sen John Foster Dulles of

Mrs. Vinera Smith, senior re-| the Moose Women’s special civic ditional American businessman | New York, retiring ambassador to Yugo-|gent, will take Mayor Feeney’s activity. Mrs. Valera Draper, a/that to characterize him is tol

The diplomats may even con- Mrs. Merle Hartlage, chief of | ningham, will move from her desk likeable, kind-hearted, and gen-| sider the possibility of furthering|police; Mrs. Beulah Botkins, fire/in the outer office into the/erous—a self-made millionaire the ultimate American diplomatic'chief; Mrs. Phyllis Doyle, head of sheriff’s chair for the day. ° |who was once a penniless farm|

objective of pushing Soviet influ-

ence out of Eastern Europe and; back beyond the borders of Rus-' sia proper. France | FRANCE turned tod ay to Georges Bidault, former Foreign | Minister and Premier, in efforts to find another centrist govern-| ment that will end the 19-day-old’ government crisis. Mr. Bidault, a Popular Republican (MRP), accepted designation as Premier| after Socialist Jules Moch and Radical Socialist Rene Mayer! failed to whip the middle-road parties into line. : Negotiations with party leaders were | complicated by a strike threat from Socialist workers. The Socialist Workers Force, the largest non-Communist union in France, authorized its executive committee to call a strike unless salary demands are met.

Czechoslovakia UNITED STATES embassy officials pressed the Czechoslovak government today for the right to interview Samuel Meryn, embassy employee held incommunicado isnce his arrest Friday ~n espionage charges. Mr. Meryn’'s Viennese wife was| packing, but she did not know whether she would be able to leave the country. Czech police

took her Austrian passport when

they arrested her husband. Colombia WEEK-END political rioting in the streets of Cali killed 22 persons and injured 50, sources close to police reported today.

China

CHINESE Nationalist forces have abandoned Kweilin to the

Communists and are preparing Young and his family also came to withdraw from the co-capitalito the city.

boy

This is the consensus of Capitol!

watching the Senate daily for 10 months. i

Mr. Douglas worked diligently |\28 to most opinion, was Sen.

Friends Pitch In, Rebuild |. uo meme 2 Hoosier Girl, 12,

® ® wpe oe 3 Hoosier Fire Victim's Home :i'uriin otto ally, alm a ca : [ Newspaper Story Spurs Sale of $500 Worth Pe Oe 4 Wer nove. ~ Of Fruit; ‘People Wonderful,” Says Worker

= “His million dollars, a minimum

estimate, qualify Capehart as one

COLUMBUS, Ind. Oct. 24 (UP)-—Monte Meredith, 46, a factory of the richest men in the Senate, TWelve-year-old Joyce Ann Krieg- S01 of Huey.

worker who never asked for help when fire wrecked his home but in his business enterprises; but got it anyway, counted lush profits from a roadside produce he never really got out of the stand today and prepared to move his family from a woodshed minor leagues.” to a new house. Pree Blames Salesmanship Mr. Meredith, his wife and their seven children lost their home| gen Capehart’s charging the

on the Bartholomew - Brown i ii,g their time and skill the loss of the 1948 GOP campaign County line and all furnishings gay before, finished work on the to lack of salesmanship is cited last July in a fire. \new house Mr. Meredith started,/as is his crediting his 1944 vicHe tried to rebild the house but |, 4 electricians prepared to wire tory to the fact that he shook a ran out of money and faced a jt this week. {hundred thousand hands all over cold winter in a wood shed. Mean-| yr. Meredith will be able to Indiana. Also pointed out are the| while, their eighth child arrived. ve nis family into the house good labor relations in his plant Yesterday, through the aid of perore the week is over. {in Indianapolis and his failure the Columbus Republican news-| mye Republican told the fam- to understand union opposition to paper, Mr. Meredith set up a ily’s story last week. Although| him because he voted for the Taftstand on a busy city street and, gppeal for help was made, con-| Hartley Law. sold nearly $500 worth of apples, ¢rytions of more than $100 cash| “In preparation for the 1050 cider, persimmons, nuts, sorghum'angq a truck load of household election he is already spending as and bittersweet gathered from the furnishings poured in. At first, much time as possible in Indiana,” woods and fields near his home. Mr Meredith was reticent to ac-/the article concludes. “Dewey Carpenters and bricklayers, do- cept help. {carried Indiana in 1948, but the,

Closed for Repairs {Democrats elected a Governor and! Alfred Young “I always feel like a fellow| Ven of 11 Congressmen. ought to be able to take care of Capehart won in 1844 by only Rites Tomorrow hima ne said. fy eae vil Soom, Alfred Youhs, native of ‘Bi " But Ind. 46 where he operated "5% » 2nd. 3 1 oo » I have a| land, who had worked as a glass. > Roadside stand Tor Joutists pe en = » | ween s 8 at a Columbus fac-| _ Blower dled yesterday in Tndian-| 2 was closed for repairs to a Disagree on Color,

ridge d h dn’ ugment : apoiss Sher a long illness. He {his ES a youd t au nent Paint House Half, Half

{crete block house was only halff BLACKSTONE, Mass. (UP) — a oun, eho lived 1 1927 inisned and the money was gone. Leon Ethier and Joseph Zmora, Fairmount. In a when he polis After the house was finished who jointly accupy a duplex dwellto Amneried. When the glass-| 20d the cider stand closed, Mr. ing, couldn't agree on a color to works moved its plant to In dian. Meredith said it was all like a paint it. Now Ethier’s half is light apolis several years 0, Mr |dream. {tan and Zmora’s remains the forago, ‘| “People are wonderful,” he said. mer brownish hue.

provincial. Sometimes he is deti- Wernts Early Start | Sen. Russell B. Long. Louisiana)

On. Political Career

Times State Service WASHINGTON, Oct. 24—

er of Jeffersonville has decided that she wants to be a member of Congress from Indiana when she grows up. So she wrote President Truman asking flow to proceed. The White House“gent her letter back to Orson EWO! s principal of the 1 which Joyce Ann attends.

He wrote the youngster a|too. That was Sen. Scott Lucas,

friendly reply and sent both the original letter and a copy of his own to Rep. Winifred K. Denton, Evansville Democrat, for Joyce Ann suggested she would like to start her career as a page in the House. At present only boys hold such posts. » » ”

HER LETTER to the President reads:

Sen. Paul H. Douglas ss = -

r————— a ———

|

in committees and exerted positive influence on much legislation. !

man Democratic Senator, accord-!

Clinton P. Anderson of New Mex-| ico, who cut a figure in the farm bill controversy in the last days of the session. |

ison of Kingfish Huey, got a high, mark in most books. He didn’t swagger and he didn’t bluster, and save for physical resemblance! no one would know he was the ~ You get violent argument when| |you try to rate Minnesota's new| Senator, Hubert Humphrey. Some irate him well up, but others say he loses force by over-employ-iment of an effusive gift-of-gab, { Another Illinois boy did what {turned out to be a good, workmanlike job in the last session,

| majority leader, | Early in the session it seemed] {everything was getting out of] {hand in the Senate and there! {even were rumors Mr. Lucas might resign. { | But he stayed on and by the {session's end —even leading a| |party divided sharply — he was {credited with doing an exception-| ‘ally fine job.

“Dear Sir: I am just a little

|girl who wishes to become a con- Muncie Strike

|gresswoman. I have learned that

000 to become a congress man or Front Quiet

woman you have to be a page. I}

{would like to know how to become

Times State Service

a page and how old you have to! MUNCIE, Oct. 24—All was qui{be to be one. I would give almost'et on the Muncie strike front|

|anything to become one.

Main St., Jeffersonville, Ind

{Sincerely yours, Joyce Ann trouble threatened Saturday when|

| Krieger.”

Please write me. My address is 629 Rear|'032Y

Sheriff W. Pete Anthony sala,

he was forced to move forgings

Mr. Trueworthy wrote Joyce srom the struck Broderick Co.

{Ann that he was “very pleased! {that you have set as your goal the

| position of congresswoman.” added the advice:

¢t Chunki der threat of new| Burial will be in Washi : ti Vi 1S ® ae of Chunking under threat of "o% ari arier servicer ar cn r'on IM Indianapolis—Vital Statistics

sources said at Hong Kong today. These sources said the few Nationalist government officials at

Chungking were preparing to;

withdraw to Kunming, Yunnan province capital near the Burma and Indo-China borders, after hardly more than a week in the new headquarters. Reports from Canton, occupied by the Communists nine days ago, said that a group of 2000 Communist officials arrived to take over administration of the former Nationalist capital. Ship, telephtne and railway communications between Hong Kong and Canton still were out.

Korea TWO U. 8. State Department officers said today closing of the U. 8. consulate in Soviet-con-trolled Dairen has aroused fears of police persecution among 100 Europeans stil} trapped there. The largest section of the foreign colony comprises a group of about 75 German women and children. The adult German men have been taken to Siberia. There is also a number of Poles, Hungarians and other middle Europeans, but no Americans or Western European traders.

Our black and gold trucks cover

{tomorrow in the Royster & Askin|

mortuary, The Rev. Arthur Kiesz, INDIANA WEATHER BIRTHS Cool air will continue to blan-| B

{pastor of the North Side Church oys { i of the Advent, will officiate. ket most of thesOhio and Missis- At, St, Francie Olle Wima Bel cectl

Surviving are his wife, Pearl;|gj i l ’ +'sippi Valley regions and spread| Edward, Gertrude Hervey, Dale, Ruth {two daughters, Mrs. Ernest Rich-|south and eastward tonight and! Mga La Driisrdi Georals: Juda {ardson and Mrs. L. A. Batten Jr. tomorrow. samvel. Doris Johnson; Ea rinoe, Helen both of Indianapolis; two broth-| XR

Gradual clearing over the state 7 ‘mint; Richard, Barpars Bennett ors, Alex Young, Detroit, and tonight will be de by fair| Charis Alice inatey: | Charles, “Win. ohn W. Young, Montreal. Can-|ang somewhat warmer weather! Jack. Mary Woodson: Donald. Marian ada; a sister, Mrs. Helen Wheeler, 4 oon Winds will shift gradu-| Potter; James, Margaret Hatton. Montreal, and two grandchildren. uy to a southern direction by, *‘wiliam. ann Boswell: Wayne Marcela late tomorrow. Sparks: George, Shirley Zeiss; William.

} ward, Stella Temperatures will range from a| gui Bitten’ Jom .

E 1 Mili motions to Be Bian sins, Sire MocHmIcE: low of 25-30 north and from| JiR, JUCy SE teCullar, Robert, 38-42 in the southern portion of Ann Bradley; Robert, Violet Sutton: the state tonight and from a Ash:

Topic of ; opi 0° Pane Jona, Helen Vawter: Robert, Irene

| Panel members will discuss maxim n south!at oi ; ; |healthy emotional attitudes in um of 53 norgh to 56 southia,Si, Vises, Bily, Jus Aus Srows: every-day living at the f h tomorrow. | Mary Jo Reckley: William, Phyllis Sager: Mental Health F ourth See Weather. Map on Page 8.| Thoms Jostohine Whitlow, Marnerd a orum at 8 p. m.\memperatures in Indianapolis one i : :

Shortridge ‘High School. Martha Cox.

J ommunity Fund Contest—Entries _to| . Job, Your Family, Your Leisure| Community Pund Contest. P.O. Box No | Robern ML Rev and Your Sanity.” | not ‘later than midnight. oo Do las ame, 109 = Bovias: Mary. Wack . raneis-—Os 0 acker: Panel members are Msgr. A. Rh Hotere Men State) ™) eonard. Mildred Van Lue.

i ana Title Association Convention— , Fussenegger, director of Catholic ough tomorrow, Lincoln Hotel. ¢ A ne ase h Broun

5

diana Mental H mon, president of the Indianapolis County 3 Mental Hygiene Society—8 p. m.,

y: - ; .|. Caleb Hall, Shortridge High Schoo. SP i Aissonia fon; Io olis” Public Libraries ‘Obssrve “Uni: . H. , personnel execu-| } ations Day"— Film t t .m., Central Library, 4 tive in Eli Lilly & Co, and Dr. E'8i dw & 5° °° adi] . John H. Gréist. local psychiatrist. ®23% De=esiate Gish, Dianer Mestine i == 'City and Sta Chamber of Lomytics Joint Luncheon Meeting—12 noon, Clay-

POO . Catherine Merrill Tent No. 9, Daughters of Union Veterans Noon Luncheon Meeting

ock: Garnett, Vivian Rhim. At Coleman—Raymond. Edith Combest.

i

A. Service Club Luncheon Meeting—Claypool

' ington .

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rium. West Side Christian Endeavor Ra eee x ., Belmont Ton Brstea

napolis Chapter, National Association sroc dues Herne Firat You Should Know

Co

artin; Edwin, Laverne Husbands;|

mick, Sherman Burns. 82. at 7132 Fletcher, PHOENIX, Ariz. Oct. 24 (UP)

N tonight in Caleb Mills Hall, year ago today: High, 57; low, 43.| ls hy a LH Ry etd history today after making

Helen

At St. Vieent's—Jomes, Martines Ming: —Central YMC rup; Albert, othy R Morris,

ei) jp |EVENTS TOMORROW Fi ytoety, Teoma “Ee "sation : 003° 3 ov? - lev Hote Pocohontas Convention yy A THS Y s0¢ diana aay, Linco Hota) Convention — Vizsil Dale Ramey, 33, at Veterans, rheuSpeedway LJ] oN choot Sumer Presont James Young. 80, at 428 Toledo, cerebral q school auditort "a hemorrhage.

plant, had been abated. Striking United Steelworkers {Union members protested the/ |gheriff’'s order for union truck (drivers to cross picket lines. Sher-| {iff Anthony said he issued the| forder in an attempt to carry out! a court replevin for the forgings. |

Rose Borst, 77, at 1429 Carrollton, ar-| “I have had no other replevin|

teriosclerosis. Almus C. McKelvey, 88, at 23 8. Butler myocarditis. {Earl H. Riffey, 52. at 508 8. Holmes | . myocarditis. {Edward W. Springer, 64, at St. Vincent's ! coronary sclerosis

| Nellie Hogan, 79. at 417 Harlan, carci-

noma. {Harry Reaker, 60, at Veterans, cerebra {| _ hemorrhage {Luther Sylvester Shoup, 85, | Illinois. cerebral thrombosis. {Mary Stevenson. 89, at 1429 Carrollton | pneumonia

la Dora J. Walters, 77, at 1207 Windsor

| _carcin carcinoma nephritis.

Texas State Fair Ends, Sets Attendance Mark

t Burbank, Cal. | DALLAS, Tex, Oct. 24 (UP)—|". ) The 1949 State Fair of Texas! Miss Darnell was married here

some history of its own by set

Walter Leckrone, editor of The EVENTS TODAY |At_ Home—Witbur “Anns Taslor. amsiting a total paid attendance rec. recovered from injuries received Times, will serve as moderator of | Drive—Ends at. midniens | seri n Place: Harold, Norma Ghisesy. ord f 2,047,540. in a rodeo. the forum, dealing with “Your Mason County General Motors Dealers 242s Sangster: John, ands Tomes + Ww »

Mary Brunner; wil-| State Fair. Charities; Mrs. Bert C. McCam- Mental Health Forum—8ponsored by In| guerite Durrett; Charles, Mabeiline spar. The 16-day exposition closed ing generals, and three other ofealth Society and Marion yesterday, with rain holding final|ficers were hanged today for

day attendance to 97,886.

eld; ) 3 . etty rger; Bert, Virginia Boyd: ard | Donna Kemp; Charles. Elizabeth Win-|

Junto Club Noon Luncheon Meeting—Wash.| Dowd: Clifford, = Ottsle Hults: Esther Hotel, Phalen; John, Violet Hall; Herman

13:

Even the LIFE Ro Sh Nem Luncheon Meeting —| Co-operative ub Noon Luncheon Meeteon Meeting —

of Your Drapes [site fiekiNoon Sanen May Depend on the Kind of Cleaning Job They Get

Mapleton B en's A Hat! - Eg

Tolox Nearing Confer, 41 E. Wash. MA. 0316

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OFFMAN is a good man to know, because he can!

Yes, as an Omar man, he delivers delicious Omar Bread and Pastries—fresh from the Omar ovens—right to your door! And Bob says, “Tomorrow I will be

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{John = Edward Barnhill, 66, at generar, And Doctor Married

Officials said the figure was Roberts, 326 Mill Race: James, Anna/@ new national record, topping! {last year’s record crowd of 1,{892,327 patrons at the Lone Star

If it's been a year BETTER SEE |

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{writs to serve,” Sheriff Anthony ‘said. “If I have to serve them I .'will do so and I'll move the stuff as the court orders. | “All is quiet here today, however, and I do not expect any ! trouble.”

‘Linda Darnell’'s Sister

| —Rodeo rider Monty Darnell, 21-year-old . sister of Actress Linda Darnell, honeymooned to|day with Dr. Dan D. Wilson of

{yesterday with her sister as matron of honor. She recently

{HUNGARY HANGS GENERAL BUDAPEST, Hungary, Oct. 24 (UP) — Lt. Gen, Gyorgy Palfty, one of Hungary's highest-rank-

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