Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1950 — Page 3
sasters throughor killed 220 perso, r, not counting ti vy on & Northwe
ir disaster of a March 12 this yea Avro Tudor plas ardiff, Wales, kil
erashes—this yer r killed:
Bolivian militay Cochabamba prof
8. Air Force C44, rtered plane earm Rican migratoi ed in the sea ao
Alr France plaa
Persian gulf a .
Alr France play 18 area, 39.
[ON' TARGET abatement was 4 ward smoke elim t is concerned als ‘rom gases, vapor d mists from a:
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Doctors Remove BB“
> up now are for the state office nomi-
The only contests
, for the State
State Treasurer Race Three are in the race for the State Treasurer n William Fortune, former state legislator, of Indianapolis and Hamilton County; James MeShane, Gary and Lester Yarger, of Marion. : David Hartley, Muncie, and Wilbur Young, of Lawrenceburg,
are expected to be opponents fori
the nomination for state Superintendent of Public Instruction, Several contests are developing for the Supreme and Appellate Court judgeship nominations.
. Supreme Court Nomination :
' Third) Supreme Court nomination is being sought by Arch N. Bobbitt, former Indianapolis City Attorney and former state GOP chairman and Clinton Given, Indianapolis attorney and former Superior Court judge. - Judge Frank Gilkison, incumbent, is seeking renomination from the first district and Floyd Draper, Gary;-is-seeking the fifth district nomination. The only candidates out far for the two Appellate Court judgeship nominations are Judge Donald E. Bower, Bloomington, incumbent, and Judge Harry Crumpacker, incumbent,, and Dewey | Kelley, of Whiting. ° Thomas Williams, clerk of the Supreme and Appellate Courts, is seeking renomination. Mrs. Ida Wilson, Boonville, may oppose him.
From Heart of Boy, 8
Whoo Opposition Several Contests in State Office Nominations; 3 Seek Treasurer Post © ‘Sen. Am. Chums Yia VIFNBY asgured. ot sescwinationy without opposition, as Republican leaders completed plans last x 3 for their state nominating convention Friday. - Since no candidate has been mentioned anywhere to oppose
Senator, party leaders predicted his nomination i acclamation| will be a mere formality at the convention.
|
only candidate mentioned so far “The Indianapolis district
State Officials Now Unopposed
Renominations
ing renomination at the party's convention Tuesday had no opposition up to last night. They are: i Secretary of State Charles F. Fleming, State Auditor James M. Propst, Treasurer F. Shirley Wilcox and Superintendent of Public Instruction Dean Walker,
Paul Rumple, Sullivan, is the! for the nomination for clerk of the Supreme and Appelate Courts, now held by a Republican.
Other nominations will include those for Indiana Supreme Court Judges for the first, third and fifth districts and two Appellate Court judges from the Northern and Southern districts,
Candidates listed so far for the Supreme Court include Benjamin Buente, Evansville, and Donald Rogers, Bloomington, for the first district nomination; John Gonas, former State Senater from South Bend and Henry Sackett, Gary, for the fifth district nomination and Benjamin Scifres, { Lebanon, and Clyde P. Miller, Indianapolis attorney, third district.
Activities Start Tomorrow Harold J. Tuberty, Logansport attorney, long prominent in Notre Dame alumni affairs, was the only candidate listed up to last night for the two Appellate Court nominations.
LOS ANGELES, June 24 (UP) start tomorrow noon with
+Jimmy Phelps, 8, whose heart'meeting of the State Democratic was opened to permit removal of! Central
a BB shot, will be well enough to|convention detaiis.
go hunting in a week, doctors!
said today.
He escaped death by a fraction row to elect members ot conven-
of an inch, the doctors said.
A playmate, with the gun only| The conventio a foot from Jimmy's chest, acci- a. m. (IndianapOlis time) Tuesdentally shot him with an air rifle. day at the Fair Ground Coliseum The BB lodged in the right ven- with Gov. Schricker delivering the tricle wall of the heart, X-rays keynote address after the party's showed that it moved an inch back platform, to be drafted tomorrow and forth with each beat of the night, is adopted by the dele‘gates.
boy's heart.
STRAUSS SAYS:
The convéntion activities will
Committee to windup
Delegates will convene in dis[trict caucuses at 8 p. m. tomor-
tion committees. will opel at 10
{ the winner of the ! bathing beauty contest which launched the va-
2 ing Newark, N. J.
Li
Miss Pat Berry MONTICELLO, June 24 — An Indianapolis coed, Miss Pat Berry, will be the Monticello lakes’ candidate for Miss Indiana this summer. The 20-year-old Purdue University junior is ‘Miss Lakes O'Monticello’”
cation seagon at Freeman and Shafer Lakes. Miss Darla Bruner, Logansport, won second place in. the contest and Miss Jo Ann Boucher, Kokomo, third. Miss Berry, a singer and actress, had the starring part in “The Desert Song,” 1948 Harlequin Show at Purdue.
Rogers, 319
Indiana University.
As World's Biggest City
right to the title of “biggest city in the world” today, Incomplete census returns show that New Y
London may be second. With the nose count in three of New York's five boroughs completed, the total as of Jany 18 cent, and Richmond, 191,015, 7,770,443. Greater London 88 rence of 9.5 per cent. 8,390,941, the British Health na Greater London sprawls over istry reported. Lou geist, with nearly half) 3% area of 3 a. —, a million new residents, and! 0 Dallas, Tex., are the fastest grow- Sion Js Safle! trated in about 359 ing cities’ thus -far tabulated, but) 9 Bs
Mr. an
ies 9 Accbrding to the best esti-| Dallas rival boom-town" of mates, the population of the ouston. still is unreported. 1 2.9 Seattle, Wash. 22d in the 1940/0 00d I¢ 2284563771. Tokyo, , y od . { Paris, ‘Shanghai and Moscow
count, moved up to 18th, replac- {rank in that order.fafter London tee Los Angeles passed Detroit for, and New York. fourth place and Baltimore re-| Chicago remains in second place among American cities, with an placed sixth place Cleveland, according to preliminary figures. The differernice of 620,498 be-| available tween London and New York|3 in the may be made up when returns | from Manhattan and heavily pop-| |277 to 1,954,036. Detroit increased ulated Brooklyn are tabulated. {about 214,000, to 1,837,617. Queens, The Bronx, and Rich-! Dallas rose from 294 234 to 432,mond {Staten Island) have been 805, Seattle increased from 368,-| completed. Queens has 1546,316(302 to 462981 — a preliminary| persons, an increase of 10.1 per | figure. cent over 1940. The Bronx, 1,-| No major city thus far shows a
yet for Philadelphia, No. 1940 nose-count, Los Angeles swelled from-1,504~
TRADITION WITH
THE KNOT TEST)
“Tie the sleeve into a knot! Not like that—but tight—pull hard—harder! Then untie—pat the sleeve—the wrinkles are gone!
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Miss Marilyn Ann Rogers
Miss Marilyn Ann Rogers, Indianapolis, has begun her duties as a stewardess for American Overseas Airlines on trans-Atlantic flights of the company’s double-deck Stratocruisers and sleeperlounge Constellations. Miss Rogers, daughter of Mrs Ww. 40th St, High School and majored
Before joining American. Airlines, a laboratory technician for the Indiana State Board of Health and worked for Eli Lilly & Co. She attended 3 a training course in Chic ago.
district
i=
I
N.Y. Challenges London = [GOP in Fifth
Elects Chambers
MARION, June NEW YORK, June 24 (UP)—New York challenged London’ s{ Fifth District Republican com-
24 (UP)~—
{mittee unanimously elected
ork is creeping up|G eorge O steadily on the British capital. When the final figures are tabulated, |nttor ney
Chambers, district chairman at
special - meeting held here today. Chambers’ succeeds James A. Fulton, Hartford City, who was chairman for 17 years. Mr. Fulton resigned because the illness of his brother made it necessary to devote more fime to thelr business, _ Mr. Chalmbers is serving his second--term as Madison County Republican * chairman. In another move, the commitalso indorsed Lester Yarger, Marion, for the Republican can|didacy for state treasurer at the
increase from 3,396,808 in 1940 to, GOP nominating convention In
13,631,835 in 1950. Returns are not/ ar Rpolls next. Neck. He =n
sl
With Those “Good Old Days” Low! Dies
Jennie M. attended Shortridge in bacteriology at-
she was
The!
Anderson;
{tion in its presént form,
peal, compulsory arbitration law for
1948, - whén the Democrats pledged themselves for repeal, TWO: No new taxes. A duplica~ tion of the 1048 ‘plank that was repudiated in the 1949 legislature. THREE: A state
in 1948 which failed through the legislature.
employment practices other major aim of the CIO. FIVE: munism and criticism of Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R. Wis.) Implication. :
Beverage Commission to counteract criticism of “beer. marriages” between Democrats and Republean liquor wholesalers, and SEVEN: Modification of the [Sadie bonus te provide for immediate payment to disabled [veterans and next of kin of men who were killed in service.Men who saw and worked on the ‘platform. draft called it! “most conservative,” in contrast| 8 to the convention pledge two years ago which the Democrats couldn't . deliver when they won all 6f the state offices and control of the house. .The “conservatism” was laid to, the influence of Gov, Schricker, who repudiated muth of the 1948 platform in his messages to e last legislature. He Is reported to have Hfetated most of the 1950 version.
EGGS GRADED TOP £
Nine out of 10 eggs Raving northeastern poultry farms for market are of the two top grades, according to a six-state survey by the Cornell agricultural experi-
Major planks in the Democratic LA oi Plt reported as calling for: ;
ONE: Modification, but not re-| & of the controversial 1047:
utilities, This was a reversal from)
minimum/| wage law, One of the CIO goals|?
to get) “=
FOUR: A state compulsory fair law. An-|;
Denunciation of com-| by
SIX: Praise for the Alcoholic! }
Cavorting happily in the Riviera Club pool, this twosome was only slightly more damp yesterday than the steaming citizens whe walked Indianapolis streets. Miss Doris : rides on. the shoulders of Miss Shirley Lewis, 3645 N. Chester St. b 3
Anderson, 2724 N. Gale St,
—_—
War Bride Loath to Return
sh lived. Hi a Thay a . aT They
NEW YORK, June 24 (UP) A disappointed 21-year-old French war bride “is going back to mother” today with her two young sons, thanks to the sympathetic help of some people in Dixie. Mrs. Suzanne Wesson, who charges her husband, 30-year-old Charles Fdware her, is flying hi
luxe style financed by citizens of Birmingham, Ala, where she lived for four years.
. ~ » . MRS. WESSON said she met her husband in tha war when he
ment station.
passed through the little Vosge
then
Wesson, deserted grieved je with Jackie, hope “1214, and 9-month-old Jerry in de-
mountain village of Etinal where
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