Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1950 — Page 3

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oa ea Great Britain

Early Turnout May Send Votes Over 26 Million

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent

LONDON, Feb. 23 — Ex-

tremely heavy voting was re-/

ported today in London and, other cities in the first few| hours of -a- “parliamentary election. The result will decide the. fate of British socialism --- Disregarding their tradition of voting in the evening, Britons

swarmed to the polls this morn-| ing in record numbers to choose!

Read Read Charles Lucey, Page. 6

between W Winston Churchill 8 Conservative Party and the Labor Party's cradle-to-the-grave welfare program.

Observers said the heavy early

turnout may send the ballots

soaring above the expected 26 million mark. There are 34 mil-

lon registered voters in Britain.

At stake were 622 seats in the new 625-member House of Commons. The victorious party will form a new government and rule for the next five years. Prime Minister Clement Attlee has promised to nationalize the steel industry and carry on the Labor Party's welfare progr am ir

~labor wins,

Mr. Churchill's Conteris Party has promised to maintain the Socialist welfare program, keep steel in the hands of private enterprise and reduce taxes and government expenses. The weather was crisp, cool and dry when the voting opened at 7 a. m. (Indianapolis Time), except

in some Labor strongholds in the]

West. “Rain which started in Ireland and swept east peited the ports of Western... England--and ~Seotland during the morning but did not affect the early turnout.

Stamp Fashion

HUNTINGTON, Pa., Feb. 25 (UP)——Employees-at the Juniata College student © postoffice were perplexed when coeds began buying stamps by color rather than —price-until- -one-explained the latest campus fad. “We want stamps to match the shade of our ink,” she said.

STRAUSS SAYS:

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

| { | |

x -

Hey will Foro nurses for Methodist Hospital of Indianapolis,

DG Welpert Logansport, and Mrs. Kemieth Thompson, Bicknell.

Clvirehes Plan to Launch Campaign for More Students

Bishop Raines Reminds Conference That

Indiana Is Setting Pattern for Rest of Nation

Women of Methodist churches of the state will conduct a student nurse recruitment campaign employing the “Indiana Plan” orig‘inated by Edward F. Gallahue. The feminine contingent will work through their Woman's Socletv of Christian Service. Yesterday, 75 conference and district officers and key women from all parts of the state lunched and planned together. absence of Mr. Gallahue, © who Bishop Richard C. Raines of was ill. Dr. Sumner E. Martin, ‘the Indiana area reminded -the-Indianapolis- district syperintendwomen that they “setting & ent, told of the origin of the -Indipattern for the nation.” since in- apa Plan, and Dr. Claude M. Mecquiries have been received from Clure, hospital chaplain and di44 states and points in’ Canada rector of nurse recruitment, preon the Indiana Plan He sald!gided. there is a national shortage of Among the leaders in the WSCS student and graduate nurses Iniof Indiana who attended a nurse every stage of development. -srecruiting luncheon yesterday in |. Armed with catalogs, applica- the Methodist Hospital were Mrs. ltion Wlanks, brochures and other C. A. Stillwell, Indianapolis bi information ‘on Indiana's three trict promotion secretary; Mrs. 1 Methodist Hospital nursing G. Wolpert of Logansport, ll schools— Indianapolis, Ft. Wayne County. Group leader; and Mrs. and Gary —the women will set put Kenneth Thompson of Bicknell, to interest as many qualified gins group leader. as possible in nursing as a care They will interview the girls Wa sonally and in case of those applying for admission, will keep in touch with them until they either lenter .a_ nursing school or choose some other occupation.

220 Students Needed

Robert E, Neff, Indianapolis _ [Hospital superintendent, said that 1220 new students are needed each] |year for fuil enrollment in the} WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 (UP) |three schools. President Truman won a 60-day I Hugh E. Wriggiesworth gave “breather” today in government instructions to the women in the {efforts to head off a nation-wide telephone strike. | The Communications Workers ; ;of America (CIO), and key units - of the Bell Telephone System accepted the President’s request for ja 60-day extension of the strike! C | deadline. “ The walkout had been sched[ed for tomorrow morning. Federal Mediation Director Cy{rus 8. Ching was expected to ‘bring pressure on Western Elec(tric. Co.—Kkey firm in the contro-| iversy—to participate in joint ne-| jertiations here. Negotiations broke down when ithe Bell subsidiary insisted that | ithe sessions be resumed in New| York. Mr. Ching has said the! {company gave no ‘satisfactory” FEASOR Tor refusing to “bargain!” here. ’ The Western Electric dispute is only one phase of the complex wage controversy. But the firm's 183,000 union members hold a strategic position. Scattered- ameng exchanges throughout the nation, they "are among 100.000 workers who were \scheduled to walk out tomorrow. (Other union members were pledged to respect picket lines. If federal mediators can persuade Western Electric and the ‘union to settle their differences! they feel the agreement may set.

are

Telephone Strike Delayed 60 Days

Union Accepts Truman's Request

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L STRAUSS & COMPANY, INC, 1 me MAN'S STORE i Jr

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NYLON Shorts in white and solid

‘a—pattern for other regional bargaining sessions between other Bell subsidiaries and union locals. Yesterday's strike postpone ment was the second in the “HHFEATER EA téYephione “tie-up. . The walkout originally was set . for | Feb. 8,

Warns Against Hasty Asiatic Aid Action

WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 (UP) Secretary of State Dean Ache—son— warned Congress today: against rushing into any anti--}Communist. Marshall Plan for {Southeast Asia until the Asiatics task for our help. ” : | Mr. Acheson told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that {the nations of Southeast Asia must take the. initiative if. they want American economic help |along the lines of the European | Recovery Program.

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massive-chested mannequin . GRAIN DEALERS 5 MUTUAL AGENCY, INC. - 1740 North Meridian $i. WAbash 2456

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summoned some men to push his there was

| minute, your ve got a flat tre”

‘merely because they are cheap.”

cent accuracy xecord

: PAGE 3

a On 3-Day Week | Electric Power Cut Causes Shift Slash

(Continued From Page One)

‘| believe the miners are | Lewis,” the operator said

defying “they

{operators are doing. Why ate with John L. ‘he can send the miners back to {work whenever he really wants to. 12

“This private army has a gun in the nation's back

if the people get cold énough and Phinney made in his opening sheriff called County Solicitor i if enough of them are out of fobs, statement, the attorney pe William H. Craig and that Mr, ine plunger was back, Mr. Phin‘they ‘will surrender. If these ir- replied: es Craig warned Dr. Sander in ad- ™®} Fecounted, ; : ‘responsible leaders are permitted “We found ne basis on which vance of his legal rights ae prosecutor said. as Dr. ito control coal, they will control he could be charged as an acces “Dr. Sander said he had no ob. Sander presse q_the plunger in everything. The public should be sory jection to- talking and again in the syringe, he said to Miss Rose told _that.” It was in his opening statement! the presence of the sheriff went air in the. vein will act ke Jn ‘Steadilv, Worse’ that Mr. Phinney, a former school-|Over the facts already outlined Fnholus (a bibhies or it 2 In Indianapolis, H. A. Rogers, Mate of the defendant, quoted Dr./2nd in addition made other state- Aen i Ct a : oF a _ ‘Mrs. C. A. Stillwell (left 3 to right), executive secretary of the Indi- Sander. as saying Mrs. Borroto's ments which you gentlemen wiljjHofrolo i den]

anapolis Coal Merchants

tion, sald supplies of denlers were, {death Mr. Phinney said subsequent fn-| ; " ir. P , getting ~'steacily worse.’ Mr. Phinney was recounting an vestigation showed that on Dec was Howe, Mr. Phinney ‘sald. FEPC Bill Passed “Some dealers have a trickle alleged conversation between Dr. 12 while dictating progress notes “The nurse then shifted her pocoming in at exorbitant prices Sander and County Medical Ref. on several cases, Dr. Sander di {sition toward the foot.of the bed, which they buy rather than run eree Robert E. Biron last Dec. 29, tated to Miss Connor in’ the{again looking at the patient's completely out.” he said “Mand the day of the defend: t's. arrest.| records office “that on Dec. 4 he face. She detected no change/"

Without Teeth

Mild Measure

calls are coming in here from persons who say their own dealers -are-out - - Gov.

an appeal from Ft. Wayne last! Mr. Phinney devoted nearly an BE | was to her, turned to oK'd by House night. “There, the report said, the hour to his opening. He said Dr.' MT. Phinney traced the patient's her and handed her the syringe WASHINGTON. Feb. 23 (UP) coal shortage was so great that! Biron asked Dr, Sander if he had hospital cate. listing the various a needle and Indicated that “The “House today passed. and-many, homes. were without fur- broken the law. } SUES Whish Jere admininesed s to| oe “ity was dead, Mr, sent to the Senate an FEPC bill nace fires “Dr. Sander said he might have "¢' : hem 3 w - ly De. Miss Rose noted the ‘ti stripped of all enforcement pro- At the same tine Labor Com- broken the law, but that the law OUs no Al ons rt al 5 te ng a 11:25 a. m. (De Py be We Ra missioner Thomas B. Hutson said was not right in this case, that comfortable eight hours” or was 25 a. m. (Dec. 4), he said. She

visions. The roll call vote on pas-

; aR ie , "g riplaced the syringe and needle on sage was 240 to 177. a supply of about 350 tons of|the law should be changed.” Mr. “| . under Medication. In e dresse " The action was a blow to Pres- coal a day was now available Phinney said: - a ow, Mr re at voce: an deed En jdent Truman's controversial clv- TOM a “new source” for state; “He said his conscience was Mrs. Borroto during the day and talking to Mrs. Borroto’s daughil rights program. Mr. Truman institutions. The “new source” clear and’ he believed he, wag night- of Dec. 3—The day pre- ter, Elsie, 19, and the doctor wanted a mandatory ban on ra- Was understood to be a small right.” ceding her death. } turned back and said the daugh= cial discrimination in jobs. mine which has signed a con-| Mr. Phinney said that during “Ww > ter was not coming in. ‘ J tract with the UMW the conversation between Drs. Weak, Rapid Pulse” B

The House rejected the President's proposal, voting to create instead a fair employment practices commission with power only to investigate, educate and rec‘ommend Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D. N. ¥.), sponsor of the President's bill, called the House version ‘nothing but good advice.”

An additional 50 to 100 car-

| Tenn. The coal was purchased by the state from the Tennessee Valley Authority

Public Service Co. and the Chi-|D

: ; : cago District Generating Corp. Phinney said. Supporters of the watered-down to invoke its new emergency The attorney-general sald that mouth were twitching, the prose- [turned from two years in Gers YePyon contended, however, that rules permitting cuts in service. in answer to another question, cutor said. many as a” WAC and civilian race prejudice cannot be elimi-| The cut to consumers in the | “Dr. Sander said he injected 10. Mr. Phinney said Dr. Sandar/worker. nated by law. They said educa- vm od 1s expected to. be on! 2 . msn tion is the answer, A Bary or x5 cases of mu { 3 C I CASES - vo rec y ; : DP WELLE ed or other vital! STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION Ww ITH A. TOUCH OF TOMORROW Think. You. Got Trouble? health services. Even household | jers will be asked to reduce |

Consider This Driver HASTINGS, Neb. (UP)—-C. ig ) a issue DY o ig yd well Have stayed president of the Board of School! |{Commissioners. Although both He was cruising around in his| {the tourney and the coal situanew car when he noticed he was tion were cited as reasons for about out of gas. Optimisctically, [dosing high STOOLS JOMOPPON, ut was clear coal was the de - he thought Re could coax the ig factor since no schools ever car to a service station. have been closed before for the! He couldn't. It conked out about tournament alone. 10° feet short. Elementary schools in the city, When he tried to start the will remain open Friday, howcar again, Mr. Dreher found his'gver, battery was dead. | Describing the general picture, Still determined, Mr. Dreher coal industry - spokesmen said _ enough coal being mined yet in the country to take “Wait aicare of space heating needs. | Shortages in homes, these spokesmen. said, were because industry still was absorbing some coal. . If home and institutional heatling become sufficiently critical,

‘power consumption. | The high school close order was | J. Dwight Peterson,

car up the incline. One of them yelled,

{may lie with a mass shutdown of

Wisest Investor S jad industry except public utilies to make the meager supplies

LOS ANGELES (UP)— When it, ‘avaliable ible for heating. omes to investing, men have to! climb in the back seat, because women can beat them at their arriage icense own game, a l.os Angeles invest-' ment adviser contends.

“Take one common, fundamental of investing, called timing,” Use gals L i advised investm2nt expert Sy d-| ney H. Stroud. “This simply! ALICE, Tex. (UP)—You don't! means buying the right 8tocks, hh, ve to use your marriage license | annuities, real estate at the right {14 week. Not even this vear. | time, Have you ever observed a| It's good as long as you're alive | woman

purchasing an expensive ng your sweetheart stays true. jout- of-season {tem unless she is, raya for instance, a case at trying to impress someone? Wom- pin, wells County courthouse en-knpow-prices-and-values.or-their budgets won't balance. {out the license 20 years ago. “A woman. conversely, will not, pjye children later they were buy an item merely because it 1s married. cheap. If the value is there and, ‘They lived together for the 20 the price reasonable, - nO yegre”™ explained Mrs. Juanita obstacle can. REY ED REL. FEOM. Jdislsaychiot-deputss forthe. oun: reaching the counter. ity clerk. “Both thought they had] “Yet men will buy stocks selling been married when the license, under $5 a share, or marked-down was fssied. real estate in poor locations,! <«phey'd never gone to a justice 'of the peace or minister for the, ceremony.” Mrs, “the license was still good and thev hurried out to a justice of the peace. |

Mr. Stroud punctuated the statement by adding: “These buys TUSTAlV Hed one Theaper™ ?

Noise of Locomotives Held Key to Weather

AMARILLO, Tex. (UP)—Wes Tzzard, - editor »f the Amarillo Daily News, has his own system of rain forecasting. Any time he can lie in bed at his home and hear Santa Fel switch engines, he farecasts rain.| “That means the wind is in the i east, and when the wind isin the least for any appreciable time, it's going to rain,” Mr. Izzard explained to ‘readers of his daily column, “From A to Izzard The system is not intallible but-Mr, Izzard claims a 92-per

Husband | Helps Solve Wash Day Problem

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP) — A friend of Mrs, Vernon Hardin has | found some use for a husband on wash day. The husband sits on top of the washing machine to keep the con traption from vibrating off its foundation,

FLOWERS

Beautiful Arrangements of

Admits Shipping Loot From Theft 1900 Miles

MINNEAPOLIS (UP) — A 19-year-old admitted he stole six {Jackets ‘and a topcoat and then {shipped them 1900 miles away. to |a friend at Seattle, Wash. I Police sald they would recover |the loot if they could find it

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{amination

fully of Schricker's office re ported quoted.

Sander

Mr.

they indicated, the final answer].

yr TI for Methodist Hospital ___ 350 Workers Death Preceded Injections, | ps Guess "Mercy Trial' Defense Holds

(Continued From Page One) that when he balmed the body of Mrs. Borroto| CC's.” he sible Trom her veins” jfecting the embalming fluid.

“removed all t

Recess for

It was expected that Mr, Cain's should take a look at what the! testimony might be used by the would state later In combating possible {mine owners contifitie to negoti- estimony by a defense pathologist | Lewis if they about the cause of death in an| O'B {doubted for even one minute that'autopsy performed Jan. [Thomas F.0r Brien arrived

Court recessed 2:30 pm.

Asked during the recess why] a real gun, the state had not held Mrs. BorThey are defving law and order roto's husband as an accessory, | and the courts in the belief that, in

Associa- husband urged him to. hasten her

Mrs. Borroto *

the air Dr

‘He sade he did

ness he injected

pd

The mam and woman took

Hulsey assured them that

5

a —

view of the disclosures

‘passed on peéaceand quietly after Infections

and Biron, loads of coal were believed to be physician was asked why he had on the way from Chattanooga,|injected the air. ‘A Good Fried’

Borroto's’ pleadings and beThe Public Service Commission cause he was a good friend and ‘expected both Northern Indiana probably in a moment of weak-

-jwag--summoned by 10:15 a. m., Dec. 4, ay arrived about an hour later. “He went to Mrs. Borroto's side, took her left wrist in the manner of one taking a pulse, and asked the nurse, Miss whether there was a 20 cc syringe {there,” Mr, Phinney said. The attorney-general said Miss Rose went to look for such a syringe but returned with a ‘10 cc syringe, a needle and an al-cohol-sponge.

1CC’s of alr successfully four times em-and administered a total of 40

he blood pos-| The prosecutor said this conbefore in-/versation between Drs. Sander {and Biron took place in the presjence of Nurse Josephine Connor, record librarian at Hillsborough

Lunch

{County Hospital, where Mrs.!| Mr, Phinney said Miss Rose ¢| Borroto died, and Miss Connor's! {noticed that Dr. Sander still was assistant. . at the patient's left side “as she Mr. Phinney said Sheriff lay there on her back in bed.”

at the! Mr. Phinney said the doctor {hospital about this time and that |took the syringe and needle and “Dr. Sander told the sheriff the with the alcohol-sponge rubbed’ {facts substantially as he had told a spot -on Mrs. Borroto’s arm them to Dr. Biron." near the elbow then inserted the Had No Objection needle into a vein + io Detected No Change The attorney general said the uppre-syringe was - empty and —

21. for lunch at'

Mr;

looked down at the doctor and

hear, saw the plunger- of the syringe

* Mr. Phinney safti

"had administered 10 CC's of air Mr. Phinnéy said intravenously, repeated f o u r! “The nurse will tell you that in times, and that the patient ex-(no time at all--not more than two pired within 10 minutes after he/or three minutes the doctor, started.” whose bac)

Sander was

“comfortable

By 6 a. m., Dec. 4, “there was some question as to her pulses,” Dachshund Flies. Over |

Mr; Phinney recounted. At Ta. m the day nurse, Elizabeth Rose, "Seas to Join Mistress reported; “She was able to get a| WHEELING, W, Va., (UP) A pulse, although {t was weak and two-year-old dachshund made a rapid and too. faint to count.” [trans-Atlantic flight to rejoin his Mrs. Borroto. was unconscious, ‘mistress here, © at this time and the records in-| The dog was left behind when dicate her arms, legs, eyes and] lita owner, Shirley Shintafféer, re-

the accused it because of the

air,” Mr,

2

WE DON'T KNOW ABOUT THE WEATHER

(and we don’t. know who does) —

BUT WE DO KNOW THESE TEMS AT THE MANS ~~ STORE ARE “HOT!”

SNAPARONGS-2 50

rR These are those Terry Cloth comirivances — that a man snaps around “his waist — when shaving or after his bawth — they dry him—

they make him presentable in a minimum sort of way— There is a pocket for his shaving impedimenta and such — (First Foor] :

FITZHUGH SPORTS SHIRTS—3.95

Fitzhugh — it "fits you" — because it comes in COLLAR SIZES and SLEEVE LENGTHS — it's in a Rayon Teca ~— which is washable and ory wearable! There are new colors — “Desert Tones” they are — that do a lot for man's torso — (First Floor)

SEERSUCKER ROBES—4.9%

Men like these especially for traveling — for week- ends — and for their home life. They're washable — they're light weight — they're - something that needs no ironing. Good-looking STRIPES — {Fir Floor]

HANDKERCHIEFS—5 + *1

A good grade of cottd?p— soft — These hemstitched — and priced to appeal to a’m a value when he sees it! — (First Floor)

BROADCLOTH PAJAMAS—3.95

Sleep undisturbed by price! There are stripes — and patterns— and. solid shades — Slipover or Coat styles — They are great. buys for a man's night life — (First Floor)

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wv WHITE handkerchiefs— a

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