Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1950 — Page 3
Ea ed
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RUBE)
In Contempt Case [protecting 50000 persons trom
ing of Jessie Avery, Jan. 26, 1947. __ Police say the last word. puts Myles In Alabama, “where he could be working in a cotton fleld and never be found.” ~ Police ‘are still looking for Viola Martin, 28. According to the affadavit, she is charged with manslaughter in that she refused to have medical attention for her child which died. No trace of her has ever been found.
(Continued From Page One)
Watson opened the pre-sentence hearing by calling several witnesses who testified Judge Harris said in open court that “my hound dog Tobey is more friendly to me than the members of the Sullican bar.” Among the witnesses called by the state was Martin L. Pigg, defeated by Judge Harris in the primary for the circuit judge nomination.
Charges Unfair Treatment Mr. Pigg testified he was “not treated fairly” by Judge Harris in court after : the. latter was
S——— 1] elected. = Wo av ems Later, witnesses for Judge Har- : denial ris testified, however, that he was
Two taverns and one liquor wholesaler were suspended in Indianapolis this week by the Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Commission for violations of state liquor laws. The wholesale firm, Arch Beverage Corp. 31 E. Georgia St, lost its license for five days for - purchasing alcoholic. beverages from a company not holding a permit to sell alcoholic beverages, selling on credit, and discrimination among purchasers of alcoJholic beverages by granting al_Jowances not available to all.
Meridian St., was suspended for three days for selling liquor to patrons who were standing. The Noe Tavern, 5208 College Ave, was suspended for three days for making a sale under the fair trade price.
revoked by the liquor board elsewhere in the state and 20 others were suspended from three-to-30 days for liquor law violations.
HOUSTON THREE FAST FLIGHTS DAILY Take Your Family for '/2 Fare
Phone: FR anklin 1554 Or Your Travel Agent Ticket Off.: Claypool Hotel Lobby
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- Cream also accents the goodness of cereals . .. puddings...
fair to All the lawyers since He
: has been on the bench.” = dy lspension Former Circuit Court Judge
Walker F. Wood said that Judge Harris was “very good and very fair.” Judge Harris was co-chairman Jast summer with singer Paul Robeson of a committee protesting the trial of top U. 8. Communists, For this-he was accused of being a Red sympathizer by va {organizations in and-out of the |state. A Faces Second Charge
Judge Harris has another court battie to fight in Indianapolis. While waiting to confer with deputies from the attorney general's
“ Yyanny O'Neill's tavern, 1357 8,|0mce several weeks ago, he wax
arrested on the lawn of the Statehouse by city police on a charge of being drunk. Muncipal Judge Joseph Howard continued the case to July 14. As the pre-sentence hearing progressed today; the state attorney
on Of6 TGUOE PEFEAIL Wak “Ordered Boro oar a en
Thunderstorms, Mercury Hike Due
Thundershowers and warm weather were predicted for Imdianapolis for the last day of spring. The city will welcome summer at 6:37 p. m. today. A cold front moving down from Canada was expected to stabilize itself around Lafayette, weather forecasters said, and there was a strong chance that it would {not reach Indianapolis. Temperatures will reach 80 de-
grees today, drop to 64 tonight, | rrow.
and climb to 80 again tomo
-
cakes... sauces ... custards... and many, many other foods. Cream adds substance and satisfaction to the dish and the meal!
RR —-
./bla rivers left their banks.
the there, and two other breaks were reported in the 250 miles of earth‘At least 2500 persons have fled their homes as 20 British Colum-
Authorities said they believed! = the dikes could hold until night-| JA fall when the river is expected to drop. x 2 80 far, only ‘one fatality ‘has been reported. An eight-year-old boy drowned while playing in a flooded creek yesterday. A force of 1200 volunteers and 200 soldiers>sweated through the night along the $13 million dike Ey network ‘erected after a 24.71- ani foot flood crest in 1948 ca / : $20 million damage. - Floating Out Cattle Bales of ‘hay, chicken wire and tons of dirt, gravel and sand were; — thrown into the dike breaches {to slow the force of the water. . A state of emergency was declared at Agaassiz and Harrison Hot Springs where four to five feet of water swirled through the streets after the dike broke neéar| (Continued From Page One) the resort center, {he enters the germ-free tank. The flood emergency extended ys tank, enclosed by metal and {into the United States where the , (ow glass portals, has been Columbia, Willamette and KO0O- sterilized by live steam at 256 {tenal Rivers continued to rise qeorees fahrenheit. In this room (With a peak of 24 feet predicted sre kept the germ-free animals, {at Portland, Ore. first of - which were introduced | At Bonners Ferry, Ida. Stateiipere today. Engineer William York reported ifarmers were floating their cattle] Tod out by raft. Three dikes broke _-°4a¥y there yesterday covering 500 { by steam and water that was disGcres with water 10 to 30 fee! ijlled and then, to make doubly [<eep. sure, boiled.
abe . get into that compartment? That i 3 requires another series of painsHits in Ohio : ltaking precautions. A rat js a {| PORTSMOUTH, O., June 21 (UP) [good example. The first steps oc{—The second flash flood in south-jcur in small germ-free units {ern Ohio in four days sent three which to now were all the univer-
{feet of water rushing through the sity had. .
Will Aid Study Of Bacteria Effect
Sterilized Food the lab technician
Inight, . flooding basements and mother animal. doesn't impart trapping motorists. |any germs to the offspring. After A heavy rainstorm accom- making sure she has no heredi-
panied by lightning knocked out|tary or congenial disease, the sci- in cages at left.
{power lines and plunged sections entists let Mother Rat bear her {of Portsmouth and neighboring first baby by natural process. |New Boston, O., into darkness. Then she is shaved and thor{The flash flood developed when oughly cleaned. The’ rest of the {storm sewers failed to carry off litter is delivered by caesarian | Police said there were no casu- | alties. -
A home of your own makes ‘life fuller, richer, | curity, adds prestige. The time to! {buy that home you want . . . is operating cage. ay hild INOW! Prices are far below the passed from mother to chy ? {1946 high peak. Turn now to the Fed From Tube {classified pages of today's Times for a big sel of homes for until he's
affords se-
¥
Laboratory Technician Donald White in diver's suit descends info a 1500-gallon fank of an- | -tisoptic -on-his- way -to the germfree colony: cage in-Notre Dame's new laboratory. - ooo |
brought with him food sterilized }
|a 1.21-inch rainfall fast enough. section with the mother lying in|S¢21ed lock again, into the large
~ compartment while the baby|8¢I™m-free colony. time, it may be years before the Pact at Bloomington Today—when | was downtown horn into another sealed part| There he lives and is watched laymen .can be told of their re. BLOOMINGTON, June 21 (UP) sheppin with Mother at : of the germ-free tank. After de- constantly until ready for an ex- sults, before other. scientists can|__a union and a furniture manu- STE USS et saw the cutest 8 livery, the litter is transferred Ferment. Again through the draw upon them. facturer signed a new contract! pair of PJ's in the : ‘
{through a sterile lock into the germ has
Baby rat spends 24 days— weaned—in this J e y THe tered from a tube by|for files. eocironcnen 7
| berculosis for example.
Aid "LH * (Continued From Page’ One) admitted picking her up and taking her for a ride. However, he Drave Her to Country ing = | In his statement he said hey - picked the girl up, drove 10 theiter country and put his arm around was . ther and kissed her. He said when He was fined on she protested she was “not that at Flora, 1 ; {kind of a girl,” he told her to get Fairfield, early last year. | jout and walk home and that he went on to work. 5 | He denied slapping her andiin i ‘added: “1 did not force her to getica into the car or move closer to me while we were out on the
No Other Trouble He said he had "never been in any other trouble” but the sheriff's office today was checking th federal authorities, 2 His Uncle Roy was the latest
However, investigators said the girl, from a small farming com- wi munity, apparently unthinkingly|
iaccepted a ride to church from 3 Cw : _|of the Sheltons to die in the “one {the stranger, They said she us Vr So
luany attends 6 a. m. mass dally i — {with an older woman but went co aaiuskakeand ubele Big” panion was ill. She told investi- 1947, Uhele Hernife in" “1948,
ill, She In 1949 his brother “Little” Earl, c. was shot and critically injured . Urge Garbage » Handling Care
but recovered. The only survivors of the orige Health Officials List Precautions
[inal five-brother Shelton clan (Continued From Page One) | STRAUSS
lare his father, Dalta, a farmer Comes be FE PHIFAN 61 “the people HH] {some areas would fail to “put
{who has thus far escaped bullets, and uncle “Big” Earl, also target {of would-be assassins in recent . |out” their garbage for collection) {both the days designated. Under the new pian a single
years. ; ‘iweekly collection of both trash {and garbage Is made in six dis-| itricts which divide the city. No! {date changes are made and con|fusion has_been eliminated, Mr. {Barry sald. * Based on Volume The board president added that districts are based on the weekly .-|garbage volume collected in past |years. Under this system, he said, {there should be few cases of overflow. There would be none, he {sald, If proper size containers are
|
h
nN
| the new col n ayer {term was inaugurated, Mr. Barry declared, between 75 and 100 com-| plaints were made a month be“cause ho [ders were confused on collection dates, Since the changeover was made about four 3 ..jcomplaints have been received by| ¥ *1the boaru, he safd, = rps To cover each district the board concentrates about 5 trucks in each area. Last year the board asked for nine additional trucks but were given only five by the City Council.
The LOBUND technician prepares to feed water to animals
[lab technicians who slip their|speed the ‘search for'a ecounter{hands into rubber gloves which agent. = 3 are part-of the sealed tan':. Then Same - can be applied to dis[the rat is transferred, through a eases, ] { Because these experiments take
Upholsterers Sign
sealed lock, he is transferred to {the operating cage and J Quicker Results {conduct their experiments through! Quicker results have been ob-locked-in gloves in the sealed tained in the first series of expen. | The agreement was between compartment. |ments on tooth decay. First an-|; ,.q) No, 496 of the Upholsterers’ Besides rats and chickens, houncement was made today that {7oeon and Showers Brothers Co. these tests conclusively prove de- It 400 and 1, mice, Cay 1s caused by bacteria, ] 7 4 ® iid
with a clause reopening wage discussions “if a national emergency comparable to war should occur,”
ME.TOO SHOP—They are washable—sleepy, soft, COTTON BATISTE—~ Joat would be 10 coel Sor :
those warm s
guinea pigs, hamsters, cats, dogs,| It was back In 1028, when he contract becomes effective Gosh, : I'd love to have rabbits and monkeys. was an undergraduate at Notre July 2 for two years, replacing a a pair in with Yellow A | | Why all this effort to provide a/Dame, that James A. Reyniers two-year contract expiring. It trimeor Yellow with the |desirable but unattainable -exist- began working on his dream of granted a G&-cent hourly wage Blue—Sizes 4 to 14 " jence? |germ-free experiments. He started increase. 298 - = es Sulentists have Jong agreed it with a glass jar in a corner of| ’ . : ; sly important to 180- the lab building, advanced to a’ ; + late germs before they can learn wooden. cubicle until that blew up, Man Held on Morals, Do you suppose~=if I'ma real
{how germs operate, what they do, |then - progressed to metal-and-{and how they can be beaten. | glass Sa . Disorderly Charges
| Experiment without other germs | Walter Johnson, 42, of 304 8. {takes the complication a a a Re doctor of LOBUND, Pret. {Noble 8t., was held by police tofight. against one germ, like tu- ball coach than a germ-hunter.'8Y OB a ‘morals charge after his xar = 1Big and affable, the 42.year-ld,STTCSt In Dis home last night. | _ “Tt gives science a Iiving test |scientist is only slightly gray and| aoc bon aio was charged with {tube,” explained Robert F. Er- appears healthy enough to Dave orderly Sondust and leaking 18300Tate Teseareh professor, Then pony Se pen, of Hime In| he tried to hit them with an ash“LOBUND does a tremendous job germeitee He himaed. tray while they questioned him. in narrowing the field of possibil- : |ities in research problems.” | Takes the problem of atomic radiation, as LOBUND scientists soon will. By dosing a germ-free {animal with a radiodctive sub(stance, scientists can study the |eftects of radiation without the {normal, outside-world complica{tions of other diseases which {usually follow. This isolation may
Well Soodn - ws iM cs
. MET00 SHOP, SIXTH FLOOR
STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
GENTLEMEN-these are the oh GIOYWIE if
{pronounced cut-key)
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The Best Cooks a Use Stokelys |
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