Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1950 — Page 3
MONDAY, FEB. 6, 1950
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———
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- is eyeing its property at 21st and
_ new plant. ‘And the Indianapblis
overnight,
‘are enthusiastic about the de-
3.Year Consiudion: Worth $6 Million
(Continued From Page One) -
warehouses which will be con-, centrated in the new building. An Indianapolis factory also
Montcalm Sts. as a site for a
Water Co. which once owned most of the land, visions a new - building along Indiana Ave. to house distribution and engineer-| ing departments.
Rumors Rampant
Rumors ran rampant through the concerns of other -eonstruction schemes and no one is surprised to’ find activity in progress’
i |
“RIGA NOW the Walls aré up Tor a Kroger Super-Market of some 12,000 square feet and a Steeg Drug Store of 6000. Total cost of the two approximately $185,000.
Managers of the various houses.
velopment over which the new $3.5 million soybean processing: plant of the Glidden Co. looks, down upon like a benign god-| father. The towering Glidden con-| struction will be dedicated to-
morrow. Mrs. Dorothy Flynn . . . the cash drawer is amply.
Talk in the area is of a termfnal warehouse which will house minutes from the heart of the: at least three concerns currently city,” said W. G. Brown, Good-|
cramped in downtown quarters,’ year manager. “We're out for|
more restaurants, retail estab- enough but not too far. lishments and gasoline stations. “It is easier for our customers - {even if they havé a bit of a First. Land Purchase’. [drive. Before they had difficulty] Honors for the first purchase parking. If they found a spot a of land goes to the Indiana Equip-/block or two away they always ment . Co. whose modernistic had to go get their car before
building along with that of the they could pick ‘up the merchan-|
C. H. Eberhard enterprises stood dise.” alone amidst dumping grounds Lauds Availability and open country for more than “Availability is the key” said a year. Leonard Lurvey. vice thir (Fs of Then came the flood. Buildings Hatfield. “Major highways shoot mushroomed on every side. In-| Tight through the neighborhood. diana Equipment sold land to ITt is ideal for the trucks which Western Electric Co., Inc. for bring us materials.” construction of a million dollar! “We have . attractive buildplant. Graybar Electric Co. a ings. They are good advertising,” close associate of W. E., built. [said Charles A. Rodebaugh, May-
“In short order such well-known tag manager. “This is a heavily reyolvers
traveled street and w v et and we get Plenty’ as commanding.
She said one held a gun on her] Mr. Lewis has demanded a 95-| while the other walked to the safe cent-a-day pay increase, a 15and scooped out the money. The cent-a-ton boost in ‘royalty pay-|
concerns as Bridgeways, Inc.; Behr-Manning; Hatfield Electric| Co.; Goodyear Tire &. Rubber Co.;| United Motors Service, Division of General Motors; H. J. Heinz’ vo} She Maytag: Co. were pe C. A. Rauch, WE Service man-
yusiness. er agrees with the majorit The concentration of orig: age needed space close aj ul nationgl business ..4aq a rail siding. We needed s given the area al, ,pea from-which we could dis-
of advertising that way. Look at the added traffic in the summer Vit baseball games and in the all with football at the Cathed-ral-Sacred Heart field.”
branches
“stability which promises contin=ip,. toh materials with the greatest
ued growth. It the general con-| ease. This spot ‘Ww. t census of managers that big sworn pa said. pot was the anbusiness hereby pays Di to aa Indianapolis as a growing market fn which they have great confi- Paight Mercy Slaying dence. ~._ |Trial Nears End Growing Pains
They believe the developm {(UP)—<The jury of nine mothers
- is setting a pattern which rapidly and three fathers hearing the
is being followed citywide as m Sr-death trial of Carol Paight growing pains must be eased. All previously were seriously morro cramped -in downtown quarters. The trial “of the 21 year-old They needed room ‘to breath and college student who killed her
‘to_grow, Parking space was the, father last Sept. 23 because .she
scurrying to the new _develop-| from a’ insurable. cancer was in| ment, recess today in accordance with Manager after manager placed Connecticut court p great emphasis on the ease of | Trials recessed over ‘the week parking, the lack of congestion in| end resume on the follo loading and unloading giant|da tractor-trailers, the availability The prosecution and de of railroad sidings. {rested last Friday after ne Se i are only 4 seven or eight! two Weeks of Jestimony.
greatest factor which sent them couldn't nari, him suffer 1
STRAUSS 347s: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF rovoRIow
2.39
1.00 og ey 100
for fas
. 1.69 5, 1.69 < -+ 89¢
or 1,26
Floor
or 2.95
. 2.59 or 3.00
Floor
Sa STRAUSS & C0, ne
en foi Area they =
“blitzkrieg” holdup at the Gates
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. Feb. §
probably will receive the case to-
“iof Arthur McLaurin.
-4robbery.-assault and battery. and... § drunken driving uf;
PSC Postpones — N {Phone Rate Case -
HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ot
<
| PA GE : 3
Her Purse
In Coal Strike |
‘Names Fach-Finders To Sfudy Dispute
(Continned From Page One) . it. Things are working just like!
ing us a contract, they are trying to make us work with a ‘club te ~—Called--Dirty-Triek 2 Bosko, spoke for a group of miners idling-their time away | in a Uniontown, Pa.; taproom. “I think Mr. Truman's doing’ us, a dirty trick.” | A companion, John Bell, said
{stand for it." ed 1 “The men are madder than! {hell,” he said. “They didn't use. ainst the steel ‘workers. The "Fart-Hartiey Taw “is just a ‘miners’ law it seems.” I Pete Smith joined in with * Taft and Hartley mine the Dy i \r m not going underground til we! {get a contract.” | 1 |
! ‘Stay-in-Bed’ Strike
For ‘the most part. the miners] simply stayed home. At Harwick,
was a “stay-in-bed” strike. When the whistle blew for work
Harmarville, Pa.. 900 employees lof a Wheeling Steel Co. mine met,
In A ene Hold _|yesterday and quickly voted for a “walkout.
| The signal for the strike was Threaten Woman {given Saturday. when Mr. Lewis . . | rejected Mr. Truman's twin proAlone m Office : {posal for (1) continution of colTwo armed bandits staged a lective bargaining during a 70'day truce or (2) acceptance of a - Presidential fact-finding board to Insurance Agency, 3345 N. 11linois | j,, vestigate the dispute and make St.. early today and escaped with recommendations. -approximately-—§950.——— 4 ~Fail-to-Show-Lp-Mrs. Elizabeth Vestal. 740 N. “The ‘Rochester and Pittsburgh Delaware St., who was alone in|Coal Co. mines near Indiana. the office, told police the two Pa. said maintenance crews! men walked in just like they were failed to show up at midnight, a customers and suddenly produced sure indication that the early | mining shifts would not be in. “Do not move,” she quoted one| The company mines in the area {employ 4800 men.
/bandits also looted Mrs. Vestal’'s ments to the UMW welfare fund!
purse of $5 and took $4 from the and continuation of the “willing -
purse of Mrs. Dorothy Flinn, 29 and able” to work clause.
W. 28th St, the manager who was The last UMW contract expired, ‘last June 30, but Mr. Lewis aban-|
out of the office. The bandits fled through a doned the traditional policy of parking lot and police believe they “no contract, no work” and or-| had a car I Wajting ye hearpy.: | week
The miners started a satiol] Grand ury 0 gs wide strike last Sept. 19 because
{welfare fund benefits were cut off, !buit returned to ‘full production |Nov. 9. They resumed the three-| day week Pet. 5 on Mr. Lewis’ orders but started the wildcat es Jan. -
5 Indictments
Slaying Count Among Those Returned
Jury handed down 46 indictments |
they do in Russia. Instead of giv-~
{he didn’t “think the miners will:
Pa.—a typical mining town—it
ithis morning. not a light showed: in the miners’ houses clustered
jon a hill above the mine shaft. | Bandits Cet | Some local unions went through ‘the formality of a strike vote. At
{dered his men on the three-day!
- (Continued From Page One)
| gave her pint, and dashed back. | to the rel Joni Criss is a stage name. In |
‘1. Us '49 yearbook she was |
Shirley Vicedman, of Chicago. | . Ld - A 1948 GRADUATE, ‘Fred | Wilt, long distance track runner | and agent with the New York
i office of the FBI, came to the | __| hospital to volunteer. his aid.
The “Flying FBI Man” had run 1 the two-mile race in Boston the. night before and has two other races coming up this week, so his name was put on a list to be ! called’ should Jerry need more | blood donors. His mother. Mrs, Inez Wilt, resides in Anderson, ind. Tw Throughout the day. other | I. U. alumni who got the word too late to join the initial group |
“of “volunteers called in to offer” their blood to Jerry. They'll be !
called if needed. Meanwhile Jerry was spend: A . ng a quiet Sunday. “His mother, Mrs. Ruby Dunaway, went to
| services yesterday at the Little
Church Around the Corner and spent most of the afternoon and “early evening with Jerry. She helped him spell some of the words as he wrote a letter to his “Daddy,” Earl Dunaway. - w n “DEAR DADDY” it read. “I am much better. My hand doesn’t hardly hurt any more. (Jerry had injured his right wrist and suffered internal bleeding.)
| | | i | i
“I am having a Jot-of “fun |
here. I am going to get well and | come home to see you and Jimmy. id love you. Your son, Jerry.” So far, Jerry is showing favorable outward reactions to his four daily injections of the | hog hormone extract which |
‘bat the incurable cancer of the bloodstream. eating ali his food every meal on a bet with his doctor. But the cautious doctors are still offering little or ‘no hope that they have found the cure to | the disease which has never been cured. # n = DEATH, which lurks always close to the leukemia ward, left an empty bed there today. The bed was that of darkeyed, good-natured Johnny, a boy Jerry had singled out as his favorite; -Johnny suffered from another type of leukemia, one for which ACTH cannot be used. Saturday night. long after hedtime, Jerry was still awake. He never goes to sleep without “Linda,” a little gingham doll “which winds up and plays “Rock-a- Bye Baby,” given to him by" an Indianapolis play<
mate, Amy Early. And Linda | .was missing. A nurse helped him look. She
found the ‘tinkle-doll in bed
with Johnny. - ° She started to hand back his
doll to Jerry. But Jerry stopped .
her.
“No,”"..he said. “let Johnny |
have her tonight. Johnny. you can have Linda as: long as vou want her.” And he went ‘back to his bed ne BR Seep. =
LINDA was in clutched in little Johnny's.arms when death came to his bed about two hours later. Linda was back with Jerry's toys when he awoke vesterday.
{ Johnny, the nurses told him,
had sent her back before he went away
BANG: rr ov RFEW
NEW YORK. Feb. 6° (UP)-
STRAUSS SAYS:
very best Materee: eat anaes p AA »
| medical science hopes to com- | lec}
Dies Here at 21
Power & Light Co.
- Employee 3 Years Duane Schulze Hammond, 2050! N. Tacoma Ave.
Hammopd had been
employed’ the last three years in | were ‘reported surfacing coal im
the stbek room at Indianapolis Illinois.
Power & Light Co's Morris St. branch. He was graduated from tighten down supplies for indus-
Technical High School in Janu- should
on mond,
rohq ve are used in Ruston Duly ite 2 4
Invokes TH Act” Manhattan's Hoosiers Rush Duane Hammond 8500 Hoosier = To Jerry's Aid With Blood
ers on Strike =
Minen coal miners stayed ame today. About 8500 fatled t the pits.
Oe i immedi tel] {tabbed the move as a reply to. ‘President Truman's threat to in- .
ivoke the Taft-Hartley Act which °
would restore them to. work- une. der the law for 70 days. ~<. * = Illinois miners also struck, fy- -
Aficted with polio most of his InZ UP both states with the ex- : ception of the Progressive Min-
ers Union of which about S000
The strike - was expécted to
{trial use, and if a cold wave come, to put pressure. on the home consumer.
Methodist SWING AT DRIVER CU TS ARM lifelong Indianapolis
, he traveled at Chicago when he was 9 vears old to play the accordion at the Music Fes“fival Tn Soldiers Field. He 13 survived by: his vam. swiped his cab, but the window gun-tofing merchant marine offi- Mr. : cer used bullets to sound’ eyrfew mond; on his daughter's wedding recep- X VOne; tion early today. Police jailed Lt. grandmother, Cmdr. Theodore Roman, 42,
PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 8 (UP) ~Cab driver Ed Hill-was treated for a lacerated arm today. : Police -said -he took -a-punch--at-the.. diver of an automobile who side~
was rolled up- -
and a GRAY HEADS UNIVERSITY
CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Feb. 8
The (UP)-—The University of North charges of wounding Raul Font, father is a patrolman with the Carolina board of trustees elected 30, and his wife, Dora, when Mr. Indianapolis Police Dept. Font refused to go home at the SrMARgHEntS lend of the festivities. 5
Funeral Army Secretary Gordon Gray as been the next president of the univers sity today by a unanimous vote,
CORA YN es
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is a pair
= THEY ARE POSITIVELY SUPERIOR any / L} athe United 2 Sein and « njoy a national reputation Only
WHEN YOU SEE THIS LABEL, YOU ARE LOOKING AT A PAIR OF
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And just in case the paint on the label is too small fo be readable— we quote, in part— "This is a pair of Levi’ positively superior to any made in the United States and enjoy : «They are made of selected ten ounce: American
a national reputation . . Denim—and sewed with the strongest thread."
y are
Yeoman?
AiG
~LEVI'S<=the original=sthe riveted-are in the Sportsman's Room—
SIXTH FLOOR.
3.95 Sizes 2 to 42 waist L. STRAUSS & CO, ic THE MAN'S STORE
o
Marion County's new Grand I I I AA ony
| today fn: ite first report. , Among the indictments, the | Grand Jury ordered George | Henry Green, 30, of 303% Agnes St., tried for the Dec. 3 slaying
The indictments were handed! down in Criminal Court 1. Judge William D. Bain and Judge Saul I. Rabb accepted the jury's find- |
e "majority of Indictments were\ for drunken driving, rob- * bery ahd assault and battery. | At thé same time thé prosecutor's officeannounced that 26 felony cases 11 be tried by affidavit, These tases also included
The Grand Juty\ report was signed by Foreman “Frank W. Wilson, It was prepared hy Grand Jury Prosecutor Samuel aid son.
Z £
Be :
With a DOBBS “new Spring hat between you and the changeable skies— —and with husky new (USTOMFIELD ~ brogues between you and the cold or warm— wel or dry—snowing. or sleety or warm earth as fhe case may And befween the two ~~ —the good wearables for «which STRAUSS is noted—(and many: of which are reduced in price)—you - are prety well set for now—and for the ‘months - ahead!
*
v
a THE MAN'S STORE
~Resumed Feb. 20
[case until Feb. 20.
ithe. utility. - Attorneys for the
Mr. Hill
The Public Service Commission {today postponed hearings in the {Indiana Bell Telephone Co. rate
._A-hearing scheduled for today. Qo oo was called off at the suggestion of
{company, were to“ have cross-ex-
laniined “Cyrus Go HIT Chicago” pie
[telephone - utility - engineer, who testified for the public last month. They elected not to cross examine
Consultant to: Testify Tomorrow had been set to hear evidence from Dr. Laurence Knappen, Washington utility consultant, and_Sven Hansell, New York actuary. Both were to testity for the. public. Their testimony, whieh has been postponed until Feb, 20, will be designed to show that Indiana Bell Telephone Co. is accruing more than is necessary for pensions and sick benefits to- their employees. Public Counselor William E. Steckler said the two ex- .. perts had been unable to complete preparation of the exhibits with which they hope to back up their testimony, .
“1 Pelley was sentenced to 15.
Silver Shirter : Pelley Paroled
| WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 (UP), William “Dudley Pelley, 60-year-told Silver Shirt leader, tod4y was |granted a parole after. “serving almost half of a 15-year federal {Prison sentence for wartime, .sedin
| years imprisonment by a federal’ 3 . “4 court at Indianapolis, Aug. 12, ’ : 1942. - ; Pelley, claiming that the activi- en : {ties for which he’ was convicted : were a fight against communism, (sought twice in recent’ years to Igain his freedom through - writ “of habeas corpus. He had been ~ eligible for parole since Aug: AL. an ; i
pia
