Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1950 — Page 3
on . hearted, hool sophotin won't be er. beloved hool basketlinton High semifinals at
aturday. She
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ar. 8 (UP)— d today it is e around the t. Too many jules wander vays, officials
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thal Is King at Rushville z
Jerry
| New w Obstacle Defevis Challenge
Removes 7th "ge One Seat to Fill
: {Continued From Page One) _ hope that despite yeterday’s run "of bad luck, testimony might a¢-| {ually start today on the third - trial day, as it did in Watts’ pre-| #, Vious trial. Some of the states!
Duslerasy the Political Prison- than ever.
oy union and the Con- | sufferer, Mrs. Ruby Dunaway: gress of American Women, Mr. McCarthy testified that 41] his meals.” Jerry is the v
{Times for treatment with the wonder drug, ACTH.
‘lean Activities Committee as a
i» ‘two “weak FAmerican’ Hash Institute.” > = ‘way through: his second: "Mr. McCarthy told the cgmmit-/ week's course of treatment. tee that the Congress of Amer- Mail Pouring In _ lean Women was tagged as sub- il is ,still pouring 'versive by the Justice Depart- The mail is is hi ment and the House Committee. from Indiana to !
Appears Once
are grdered to be on “hand this. ~, afternoon, just in case, i : - Two at Session Two principal witnesses, State Police Major Robert O'Neal and ‘Capt. John Barton, were among spectators yesterday as was Attorney General J. Emmett Me-: Manamon, Mr. McManamon said he was “just looking.” Should Watts be convicted and again ap-| peal his conviction, the case would
Rushville high school busted out all over with gay decorations and. bunting urging the school's these purveyors of treason wil
dollar bills. Jerry's saving these principals;” and “Records and Herman, 35 of the YMCA, suflap. , den, Jean Bailey, Phyllis Garr, Charles Ray, Barbara Crapo, Frankie Harrison and Peggy Walker. tie A of unenspetting ans to buy a cowboy suit to go wh Record Cards.” fered, Jultiple ines Jat ght misguided -men y 10-galion hat his hero Roy reer . As usual; Watts sat impassive Rushville meets Clinton in a semifinal game Saturday afternoon at the Butler Fieldhouse. a i IS oh ay ot the 10 galle n al DEATH LAID TO MONOXIDE |secontd to fret floor ot the YMCA, —— hie TE Two in $51,000 Bank Theft Sentenced social or economic improvement Meanwhile, another Indianap:| ALBANY, N.Y., Mar. 5 Tht Police said her Herat, 28 Juror after EE ie as ane | HAMMOND, Mar. 8 (UP) —Al First State Bank of Kouts. and‘thus lend prestige to a sordid olis leukemia victim, 11-year-old A coroner's verdict ru at signed to detached service at the
stated that they already had federal judge seritenced an au-|
and dissolute ~ause. {Tyrone . (Tony) Diggin, is opinion as to his guilt. Of the 4 tomobile dealer to five years’ im-|
The punishment was meted out
for -this reason. \cashier to three years in prison wanger, 29, a Tefft, Ind. car
On his way out of the court! for perpetrating a $51,000 em- dealer, and Joseph L. Vogel, 35, organizations and Miss Kenyon reported “responding well” and in the cab i truck parked on Johus with possible internal inPr e house, back to the jail, Watts was! Two Children bezzlement scheme against the former bank cashier. more than a score of times.” # 'in good condition. a road near here. jaunty: ; : :
Sar SR TE anders UN Aid as ‘Red- |And "Eats Like a Horse"
McCarthy Raps | Leukemia Sufferer Weighs 60% Pounds; | Craig Urges Closer xy Dorothy y up Gels 4100 Pieces of Mail in Two Weeks Relation With God (Contintied From Page One) | ~NEW YORK, Mar. Jerry Dunaway is both fatter and peppler| (Continued From Page One) -
,Bail Fund Committee, the! That's today’s report from the mother of the 7-year-old leukemia |jca go to Church, Teach Children
“Jerry is just feeling wonderful, He weighs 603% pounds now Faith in God and Pray for Peace,” |and.he’ s eating like a horse. Heats everything I ‘bring to him and |pather- Carney’s letter read.
‘Mrs! Dean Acheson was listed in sick little boy who was. flown to to Principals to Meet movement, Legion officials said, - ~ Indiana Ss | records of the House Un-Amer- New “York by The Pon For Panel Discussion was conceived by Carl
+ sponsor of the Congress of Amer- "me's w his fifth week of treat Elementary Principals will meet A A RET
imother said today’s count was 4100 pieces of mail in two weeks.! After his. reference to Mrs. puch of this came after Indian-| es ae | Acheson, he said: > apolis disc jockey Easy pid n Powers. treasurer, ‘Navy Man Injured | “There is mo length to which began broade Panel subjects will cover “The| ~NY There gt j for his listeners to cheer Jerry.; o.. Day in Public’ Schools: In. Fall on ‘Y Steps
A few of the letters contained|«p Handbook for Beginning] Chief Machinists aay 2 sciadl be back in the attorney general's basketball team to capture the state title. Decorating the trophy case are (left to right) Arla Red- not go fo bring into their fold
undergoing treatment with ACTH mond, Ind, died of monoxide heel in his trousers. “Mrs. Acheson appears once on. ing. Mr. McGeorge, a truck | Veterans Administration Hose « t to William R. Bies- and its sister drug, cortisone ati poisoning. 8! Br xoused, 3" were set. otv| Crashes i in Stor a ormmer Da epuSraay the roster of ‘these subversive veri Hospital here. He's driver, was found dead yesterday pital attaches said he was_suf-
10 the end that we have all Amare.
Religion, have all reaffirm their’
The idea for the “go to church”
| Suedhoff, former Commander a the Ft.
| The Indianapolis Association of
two Panel members will include ae Ya: began fhe movement “a few : [Miss Maude Price, Harold Gos- AT AB: 3 leg The sett, Miss Charlotte Carter, Miss = Ee a |! {Olive Funk, Miss Agnes Mahoney| Movement, na in| . veterans group adopted the idea and Mrs. Murray Dahlman. and Bb: t completed plans fof ; His Association officers are Mrs. [an Save us! - pe mation Ee Edith Shirley, president; George ny 8 itten, vice president; Mrs. John S¢a!e. : eizer, secretary and Mrs. Esther!
still Henry O. McGeorge, 33, of Ham- Allison Plant No. ‘5, caught his
“Ready to go?” Sheritt Richard, Killed in Cribs Thayer asked as he brought out
the handcuffs. (Continued From Page One) STRAUSS SAYS: from L Where it had fallen onto the “Si, senor,” Watts cracked back plan
and they left.
Watts’ snappy clothes and fre-' quent change of outfits have aroused much comment here. reply to one question about where he got the clothes Watts, who! has been furnished counsel
na re finding only bits of flesh down there,” a worker said. “It doesn’t look like we'll find anyIn thing big enough to be recognized €/as being part of a human body.” Flaming fragments from the aticrash ignited the two houses on €8, either side. Hundreds of volun- * teers joined police and firemen in Jailers said, however, that Aly-| fighting the flames. Despite the mar Watts, who sued him for inear-zero cold and storm, 3000 divorce in November, has not persons jammed the streets of the ~ visited Watts since he has been | {upper-middle class neighborhood Jailed in Columbus: {to watch. Execution Stayed -The plane, flying Northwest Watts, charged with the shot- Airlines’ flight 307 from Washinggun slaying of Mrs. Burney, on ton to Winnipeg, had made one Nov. 12, 1947, was tried in Shel- attempt to land at Wald-Cham-byville the following January and berlain Airport here but the sentenced to die. However, his Swirling snow caused Pilot Donexecution was stayed time and ald B. Jones, Minneapolis, to again as he appealed the death) 10se the landing pattern,” offisentence. The National Associa- Cials said. tion for the Advancement of Col-| The control tower ordered him | ored People carried his case to 0 SWing around for another pass the U. 8S. Supreme Court which at the field. : last June granted him a new trial| AS he pulled up for a’ new on the grounds that he had been try, the plane's wing struck the deprived of his constitutional Ragpale at the Ft. Snelling mili-
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ON sca w
Jghts. tary cemetery about a mile from fs” tted both the the airport: «sma ra ““WHEts “admitted both the BEE Song
-mey slaying and that of Mrs. pi a. of the way through the Mable Merrifield as well as nU-| wing between the outboard enmerous attacks on other Indian-| one and the wing tip. The pole apolis women. He later repudi-| ug bent almost double.’
ated these confessions. The mur-| Chief Inspector Dal Benham of der.. confessions cannot be -intro-' Northwest Airlines sald Pilot Uuced as evidence in the new| jones notified the Wold-Cham-trial, because. of the Supreme periain airport of the accident Court ruling that they were ob-|ang they ordered him to glide tained in’ illegal questioning, in a into the field immediately. He period when Watts was impris- | answered:
oned without arraignment. . “I can’t, I can't. I'm falling. I'm going down.”
Lincoln Cox Funeral The Martin 202 Airliner; almost completely out of control, swung Held at Frankfort in a 10-mile arc from a northTimes State Service west to- southerly direction with
FRANKFORT, Mar. 8—Serv-/Mr. Jones fighting for altitude. ices for Lincoln Cox, retired Meanwhile, the rushing air tore « Frankfort farmer and teacher,at the damaged wing until it were to be held at 1:30 p. m. disintegrated near the Washburn today in the Hills Baptist Church Park water tower. A few seconds| here. later, the plane crashed into the Mr. Cox, who was 92, was home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clinton County commissioner for Doughty and exploded. The house
three terms. His wife, Louisa, iS four miles from the airport.
.. The other two crew members! died Jan. 30, {who died with- Mr. Jones were * jco-pilot William McGinn of St. A Paul and Stewardess Mary Alice
Kennedy of St. Paul. Miss Kennedy was@engaged to y be married ‘next month to William Stout, 25 of Minneapolis,
List of Dead ® [ Airliner Crash
= | MINNEAPOLIS, Mar. 8 (UP) op YE [= The dead in the Northwest Es 4&7 443 | Airlines Plane crash last night] = ee cep eR EE a CL Re Terese
CREW— : Pilpt ald B. Jo ones. Minneapolis, : = -Pilo Do Wiliam McGinn, South 8t
RB Si Buhmann, 34, Chicago. : Pafiora, Madison, Wis., and
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ki “Stewardess Mary ‘Alice Kennedy, St. . : + ea { FiSsexorns_ v ST , . : : Don Eberhardt, ‘Detroit, parts and serv- ‘ 8 Dy : Toe executive for Ford Motor Co. : 4 ’ [- v ; Un Helen Hott, Holmesville, O. ‘ ] } 8 } . } 4 :
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body—brightening to the spirit—
| 2
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