Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1950 — Page 3
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saving will be a result, A 7 The one bigh school which willl be open will be Shortridge, where! teachers will hold their midsemester meetings. One of the biggest coal producers In Indiana admitted there is no actual distress either in industries or in homes. He sald industrial coal users are not getting the quality of coal they want, at the price they want to pay, or at the time at which they want it, but they are! - getting enough fuel to keep going. The same was. true today among domestic coal dealers. ~ They were rationing coal! spreading their supplies, to keep | any one family from freezing. | It was their rule that no one. customer could have a lot of coal, | but any customer could have a e.
Fuel Not So Good i What dealers offered wasn't! such good coal, but it would burn | with a little coaxing, and a little extra ash and dirt. The City Council last night voted to send a telegram to Pres-| Ano Fultz and Stanley Shafer. ident Truman advising him that the situation in Indianapolis is ed @ similar telegram sent to the “critical.” coal mine operators. who “are The resolution was introduced trying to force the Taft-Hartley by Joseph A. Wicker, Democrat, ” ky» law on the miners. who said, “We're fortunate in having a mild winter so far. But J. Porter Seidensticker, Demothe coal ‘situation here is critical, crat, wouldn't go' along with the ‘bad for hospitals, school, and telegram-sending. He said the all the people.” mayor had already done it, and Guy O. Ross, Demaqcrat, want- that was enough. e
ceiving ballots this morning
?
% WHY wash clothes
at home in winter? when ® it could mean ‘colds and flu? Tolophone MA. 1561
represent the city's laundry workers. Early
‘of the Moon ranch.
A cardboard carton labeled "Official Ballot Box, National Labor Relations Board," began rein three days of voting to determine whether the CIO or AFL will at the polling place, 2901 E. Washington St., were (standing, left to right) Frank Schmitt, Walter Amater and Lillie Mae Cole, and (seated) Miss Ida Easley,
Gen. Arnold's Body Flown to Capital
SONOMA, Cal, Jan. 17 (UP) The body of Gen. Henry H (Hap) Arnold, wartime chief of the U. S. Air Forces, will be flown to Washington late today for burial in Arlington National Cemetery. An honor guard of six noncommissioned officers and an Air Force lieutenant has guarded the coffin since yesterday when the body was removed to a funeral home from Gen. Arnold's Valley, Gen. Arnold died of a heart attack Sunday morning, the fifth in a series he suffered’ since his retirement in 1946. The body will be taken sometime today from Sonoma to Hamilton Field Air Base. A cordon of troops will line the road from the Air Base gate. for three-quarters of a mile to the C-54 that will fly the body east. President Truman's plane, the Independence,
personal will
‘carry members of Gen. Arnold's
family to Washington, where fu-| neral services are scheduléd for
2 p. m. (Indianapolis Time) Thursday.
There's extra prestige in home - ownership. You'll find HUNDREDS OF REAL ESTATE ADS in the classified columns of today’s Times. Turn to them now. The Times is NOW the newspaper with the REAL ESTATE ADS!
- Valparaiso, 30 days for selling to
Seeks Court Order
-
new wage contract on his terms. Mr. Denham could ask the court to order an end of the three-day week. In all 86,600 miners are out in’ six states,
Meanwhile angry rank-and-file
trolled the coal fields driving for NE an all-out strike to bring the MEA long-drawn coal contract dispute : to a head. | The pickets : {hour basis in Yd |vania, . The strike apparently was {stepped up by the anger of the {miners over the cutting off of eredit to strikers by a large chain store serving the coal fields. An{other chain considered similar ac- [ tion. The miners called the action -a “dirty squeeze play” and declared . they would close “every damn hs u {mine in the country.” | One local at Brownsville, Pa. sent out an invitation to other miners of the area to join them [in a mass meeting Thursday to {plan new action. { Called to Meeting However, in District 31 In northern Western, Virginia, UMW |officials called the miners to a | meeting Phursday at Monogah in an effort to end the walkouts. District President Cecil Urbaniak said the “policies” of the union
] Loca Permits will be explained and he felt sure the miners will go back to work
Charge Tavern With afterward. . The walkouts spread in westSelling After Hours
ern Pennsylvania, despite the efLiquor permits of two Indian- forts of officiais of UMW Dist. 5. apolis taverns were suspended to- John P. Busarello, district presi day by the Alcoholic Beverages dent, said he had spent the night Commission. touring the fields, but was unable Permit of James Wallace, 926 to get the men back. W. New York St., was suspended| “I'm just as confused as anyfor 15 days on a charge of selling body,” Mr. Busarello said. after hours and on Sunday. Bar-! Instead of abating, the strike tender George Green, employed in closed the last two big mines opthe Wallace establishment, wasierating in the district, Montour placed under suspension for the 4 and 10 of Pittsburgh Consolidasame period. tion Coal Co. The ABC suspended the permit pickets visited the pits during of Virgil Mortenbeck, 1021 Vir- the night. When work crews reginia Ave. for one week on a ported this morning, they hudcharge of permitting a minor to jjeq in the dressing rooms, then loiter on the premises. ‘ refused to enter the mine. The commission also revoked PRT " the permit. of Virgil Hurst of] Report New Violence Terre Haute. The permit had been abandoned. were ) Other suspensions ordered were: 10,000, were on’ strike today. Dionisiow Koutsos and Zora the Rivesville mine of Pittsburgh Mandula, Gary, five days for Consolidation, the 250 credit sales. M. J. and. Isabel Stinchfield of
cruised on a 24Western Pennsyl-
idle yesterday, more than
a minor. Bartender Ruby Vande- the Elk County strip mining field water also was placed under gus- in northern Pennsylvania, where pension for 30 days on the same charge. } Club Normandy, Inc., of Mish= awaka, and Bartender Frank Za- P: vor, five days each for selling dynainited late yesterday. after hours and on Sunday. Loraine. Knight,
ating. Mitana, Inc,
Always growing —and growing stronger all the time! Today, as the MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK begins its 85th year of faithful banking service, we wish to express to you our sincere appreciation for your loyalty and support. You have endorsed our tested principles of sound banking practices upon which our institution was founded in 1865. You have made our steady growth possible by utilizing our helpful services. We pledge our extensive facilities and our substantial resqurces to the continued service of the City and State and to you, our loyal, ever-increasing customers and friends,
5
ESTABLISHED JANUARY 17, 1865
Allied with
GHARTER Ne. |
THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK
The First National Bank in Indianapolis
Main Office: Meridian and Washington Streets « Tel.
{They hurled stones, smashing th
he escaped injury. In Pennsylvania, idle, more than were on when Mr. Lewis issued his back
‘day. in West Virginia, 7600 in Ken
Ohio and 1000 in Tennessee.
Col. Harold Johnson Heads Car Association
Col. Wiles dealers,
Harold D. and 3815
Johnson, o Johnson College Ave., to Indianapolis Association George Hoster
Automobile
Broad
- Ford dealer, was president; James O Motors, secretary, tGrawemeyer, treasurer. The two new directors of association are W. H E. W. Tobey.
Birr, of Bir and Indianapolis
“INDIANA
{ will disrupt moderate southeaster
will bring rising temperatures counties.
tomorrow. Temperatures wil
south. " The mercury 37 to 45 in the and from 52 to 58 in counties.
will’ range fron
'EVENTS TODAY Woodmen Circle—8 p.m Life Agency Cashiers’ Lincoln Rotary Club—Noon, Claypool Co-operative Club-—Noon, Washingtor / , Washington Forty-Niners’ Club—Nooun, Lincoln Mercator Club-—Noon. Lincoln Kappa Delta Sererity, Indianapolis Alum nae Association—8 p m.. 6262 Washing
Association
v Dairy Products Through Wednesda) Claypool Methodist Home Missions Conference Lincoln Indiana Congress, PTA-—Through Wednes day. Lincoln
Association
1865-1950 —————
BRANCH
38th STREET 21 W. 38th Street
BRIGHTWOOD 2355 Siation Street
BELMONT 2134 W. Washington
-—
MArket 6373 1059 Virginia Ave.
THE INDIANA TRUST COMPANY The Oldest Trust Company in Indiana
MASSACHUSETTS AVE. 811 Massachusetts Ave.
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
J John Herron Art Museum speaker —4 p.m Herron Museum Parliamentary Law Street Branch, Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae Associa tion-—-46 m., Butler University en's Association Methodist Church. » Indianapolis Allied Florists—8 p. m, 25 N. Capitol Ave
Club—8 p m,
ES EVENTS TOMORROW
poo Indiana Congress, PTA-—Lincoln Ladies of Charity, St. Vincent's Hospital 12:30 p. m.. Marott Ninth ard Republicans-—7:30 p. m., 52 KN. Bradley Alpha Chapter, p.m Indiana National Bank Crispus Attucks production, “Junior Prom Se. 8:15 p. m., at the School
Professional Women's Club in the church Chapter Special p. m., Chamber of Commerce Building Southport Chapter, OES--8 p, m,, Hall. Southport Liens Club-—noon, Claypool Junior Chamber Commerce — Washington
Athlete Club -
MARRIAGE LICENSES
and . m.. Indiana
ding Smith, 22, 1115 N. Keystone,
h er, 16, 1325 Carroliton les
— oils Sona
\
»~ \
To Be Sent Out Next Week
| For 5-Day Week | (Continued From Page One). | Mr. Lewis is a form of coerclon’c.ny out early next week : intended to make them sign a! gaat Jocations will be assigned
United Mine Workers pickets pa-{tions. All orders should be sent
In West Virginia, where 6500] Swollen Indiana streams gen-
At cennes
voted yesterday to return to work, out pickets kept the mine closed. New violence was reported in foot barrier.
on-union mines have been oper- X a which oper- joined National Guardsmen and,
ates an open pit at Weedville re- regular Army engineers patroling| ported a $75,000 power shovel was and
‘windows of his automobile, but
52,000 were, strike
to-work “suggestion” last WednesIn addition, 10,000 were..idle
tucky, 7000 in Alabama, 9000 in
Ripple re-elected vice northern
WwW. A Nash, rode
the Becker and Army
lain may change to snow in northwestern counties
range between 34 and 38 in the Jef Her! north tonight and 40 to 45 in the
north. tomorrow southern
Red Man's Hall gulm Noon, | y p
Indjanapolis Safety Club—noon, Riviera Club
38th| a4 Indiana National Bank.| a4
730 p m,
Indiana Dairy Products Association—Clay-
Omega Nu Tau Serority—-| " Washington Stregt Branch, | 4d sfethedist
Meridian Street Methodist Chureh Business ! 6:30 p.| Libraries—7:30| ay: Dourlas 8€ . 15th; Joseph. Ida Dubose. 1801 8. Churchnoon
Gerald C. Zander, 29, 1011 Dawson: Geral-
AN 5 0 Del
Order of Receipt ~~ * Determines Location By ART WRIGHT
Tickets ordered by mail for The Times Ice-O-Rama will
{in the order letters were received. {The over-the-counter - sale - will {open Feb. 1 at a downtown location yet to be designated.
Persons senditig/s their orders now will receive the best loca-
{with check or money order and stamped addressed envelope to: Ice-O-Rama, Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St.
Prices are: Box and parquet |chairs, $1.20; north and south {side mezzanine, 85 cents: east end | mezzanine, 60 cents. Prices in(clude tax. All seats are reserved. Making Costumes | The costume committee set up headquarters today in The Times building, at the 44 8. Capitol St. |entrance. Volunteer workers are | Cutting patterns and materials for the big production numbers. | Parents will sew the {for children in the show. | Designs created for the numbers surpass in color and unique-| {ness the colorful costumes which] thrilled last year's capacity crowd which saw the show All proceeds from the Ice-O- | Rama will be turned. over by The Times to the Infantile Paralysis Fund.
12000 Warned 0f Flood Peril
Alert Orders Sent to
Missouri Areas
(Continued From Page One) that they may have to flee from their homes. The order also alerted thousands of residents of Kentucky,| Illinois and Tennessee to prepare {for high waters. Hundreds of {lowland residents of the three states were being evacuated today. Hit By Blizzards Snow fell from the Great Lakes {westward to the storm-weary Pacific Northwest, and localized blizzards blasted some areas.
1
erally were falling, but at Vinthe Wabash still crept toward the top of the flood wall.
miners Soldiers and volunteers worked]
through the night to complete a 112-foot mud-box atop the 290-
Pupils and Guardsmen Two hundred high school pupils]
p
,sandbagging the flood wall. |
“It looks bad here,” Mayor|
who -operates William L. Betz said, “but I be-| South Kersey,|lieve the levee will take six more]
, another pit.at where. a $20,000 shovel was inches than predicted.” : |blasted last week, “reported the! The river stage this morning!
pickets attacked again yesterday. at Vincennes was 28.1 feet, and|
€/ the Weather Bureau said the rise] would continue to a peak of be-| tween 28.5 and 29 feet, expected Thursday. or Friday. The latest Wabash crest of 25.7 feet was reached yesterday at| Terre Haute, and today the| stream had eased down to 25.5. “| Yesterday's peak was the highest] 80 far this vear at Terre Haute.| While blizzards and snow| blanketed part of the nation, still] more rain was forecast for In-| dianapolis, beginning late tonight or early tomorrow. f. The long range forecast called
Chrysler for one-fourth to three-quarters
. of an inch over the state during
day was elected president of the the next five days. occyrring partTrade ly as snow in the north and rain
the state gripped the states from to Washington today, and the cold air mass eastward to the Atlantic seaboard on gusty winds Col. Louis H. . Foote, district engineer, warned southMissouri residents from the
remainder of cold border r Michigan westward
"in the Sub-zero
| east
IN INDIANAPOLIS | |
"WEATHER
A low pressure area moving. east from the Rocky Mountains]
ly winds tonight with rain through-
out Indiana, the Weather Bureau said today. Rain will begin late today and continue through tomorrow, but
Hoosier late
to southern and western
1
1 9, 618 B 50 Bellefonta ler. 2 2
Bradford Spa ce Milard James Foster. 22, Krise. 20. 929 / James Wicker, 2 lis Seibert, 21
1
). F Penn
DIVORCE SUITS FILED Pear! D. vs Maurice W. vs kK E
Dorothy
Velma V Letitia M. vs James vs Edwin H E jut
' vs v Mary Beasley WwW. Clark Norma [| vs L. vs ° y ROSeMAry H. Haehl Doris J ve Chsper re Matthew Womack: Dorothy E NM Reck
BIRTHS Twine
At Methodist Real! Gloria ter, boys
Jean Car Boys | At, St. Francis—Michael, Doris M. Schae- |
General—-Thomas, Alma Hamilton | | Coleman—Harry, Ann Bister:- Philip. | “| Theodora Caito; Clarence, Martha Cor
le At Methodist Edgar, Joan Seitz 3 Ruby Johnson, Ralph, Altalee 2) Herman, Evona At ome E. 20th Market, James Locke: John 8. Meridian 868 W._ North 1531 MN Senate | At St, Vineent's— Cecil, Avis Heath, Leland, Alta Smith ‘ !
iris At St. Francis—Arthur. Martha Lou VanBickle At General Rov. Lorine —~Willlam Jr »| Lloyd, Florence Craig . Cross; Richard. Doris Balley donna Hall: Jessie, Audrew Baker At Home—George, Dofdihy Mildner Clifton; Gerald. Dorothy Horne, 819 Locke; . Gabe, Lucille Washington Harvard: Richard, Dorothy Bruce w Amy Burris, 936
Robert Willis
i Vernessa Foster, 1011} Madeline Rose. 1601 W.| . 6368 1218 Darnetta Durham Frank, Dorothy Baker, |
James
0
Berry Julia Culligan Edna
Mary Mullen Pitcher
man At St. Vineent's— William holz: Norman, Marion Kathleen Dovle;
ay
DEATHS
. carditis Ida Rehm, 83, at thrombosis
Methodist,
diarrhea
G. Lowe. 77..'at Methodist, carci-
- noma ory _Jr.. 30, Evansville; Ruth Albert C. Schoen, 67, at Methodist, a 201 E. 33d. I” pendicitis. » gi
»
to Ice-O-Rama
costumes #8
Arkansas line north to above Cairo, Ill
acres of overrun a number of small com-| munities and affect an estimate 12,000 persons.
by Thursday. is 40 feet.
Louis, Lucille Holt: |
i 18 L STRAUSS & C0. THE MANS STORE
cerebral| | David Harrison. 67. 2864'; Paris: Oachey 0 , | Hughes, 50. 480445 Paris . Pamela Diane Butt, 3 months, at Riley | Mapion Belcher, 21, 4256 E. 9th; Joy Wel- Lena
\ Minds N NN
A
ad i a Jacque LaDuke, 4925 Carvel Ave., is one of The Times lce-O-Rama headliners who will be
back in the show Feb. 23 at the |
Fairgrounds Coliseum. A Times cameraman caught her ‘in rehearsal for her solo number.
29 mile
have to abandon their homes in the Mississippi bottoms if th Big Birds Point-New Madri
floodway has to be opened Opening the floodway just be- Ly 130,000
would farm
flood and timberlanc
ow Cairo
But it would free
The Weather Bureau predicte
a stage of 55 or 56 feet at Cairo ruled in his favor. Flood stage there;
Downriver, the Mississipp
sandbagging furiously -t
that they will
water from the Mississippi main channel and trial last week. reduce the pressure -of the river's levee gystem |
of Springfield, Ii, president the Tidependent Progressive nion, .
It alleges that the majority.
represented ‘by the Progressive union and asks for an NLRB supervised election. / NLRB officials said the United Mine Workers will be notified of the petition, but pointed out the UMW to date has not filed antiCommunist affidavits and other {wise has failed to qualify for rep{resentation on a ballot of a bar. gaining election. Should an election be con ducted, with the UMW falling. to qualify for a place on the ballot, the Julian workers will have a choice of voting for the Progress sive union or for no union at all, The Julian mine was operated as a co-operative fram 1927 until {in 1948 when the UMW, staged ‘an organizing campaign, picketed the mine, and brought about the signing of a contract with the John L. Lewis union.
Second Durham Hearing Starts
The second act in what he calls a move to oust “Patrolman” Jacque (Jack) Durham from the Indianapolis police force starte today in a Safety Board hearing.
The hearing of the “rebel in e the ranks” was bogged down by
8
4 the lack of final action in Dur= ham's first trial in Marion Coun~ courts here last week. The Safety Board attempted to whether its original decision that Durham be demoted 4 from acting detective sergeant and be suspended fqr 60 days was ‘upheld or overruled in an appeal
i |learn
No Formal Ruling | The jury to whom Durham apd/pealed the Safety Board decision But so far Judge Lloyd D. Claycombe had {made no formal ruling. Durham's j! counsel has not yet prepared en-
broke through a levee at Eloise, |tries necessary to the judge to Tenn., and fanned out over farm- make final ruling. lands. TT Dyer County Sheriff John Yar- 2 bro said the Eloise break was! relatively minor, but voluntéers Christmas trees are used in the were save another dike near Tenemo, one-third of them coming from Tenn.
1 MILLION YULE TREES
Approximately 21 million 0! United States each year, about
Canada.
TRAUSS AY S:
nn
MEN'S
TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
ALL-WOOL :
SOCKS-THAT SIMPLY WILL NOT SHRINK- ~~
(They are KROY Processed—which
takes the shrink out of them)
6x3 RIBS THEY ARE-SOFT T0 FEET-IN A GOOD WEIGHT FOR WEARING THE YEAR AROUND-PULL-UP LENGTHSIX GOOD COLORS
(Brown—Oxford Gray—Maroon—
Navy—Black—Dark Green)
SIES 1
0: T0 13-
THEY ARE A PREFERRED BUY, SIR!
Harry, |
1 Hezron Thomas. 83, at St. Vincent's, peri-| tis
os
the Julian ‘workers want to be
oF pet
a
A
