Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1951 — Page 8

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i ige - Plymotsh ." Spray ‘Stricken’ Ie w oca) Docg " City With bor | “County quotas are based on Tnited Pree > ‘population, farm and indus trial By Unite ress ‘ lincome. records of prey. ious bond Ww NEW. ORLEANS, Sept. 1—-Two sales. « helicopters sprayed New Orleans “We believe Hie oot are “with a' mist of DDT and water within reach. of évery county,

SY

I compe tg work at 6 a. m. They're

PACE 8

in Fight uota Set at New Orleans [92012 >!

bE Smal ign go been set at —T§5 million, "Cantpaign— | John Ramp announced 1ast nigh?

today so its inhabitants can ven- explained Robert W. Fowler, diture out, of their homes at night rector of the Tréasury Depart: without having to give up their jent's Savings Bond Division for ‘life's blood to support millions of 1hdiana. mosquitoes, , State. committees ‘have “heen ~The mosquitoes ruined the busi- formed to help: the - vampaign. ness of outdeor restaurants. bars, Eugene C, Pulliam, publisher of drive-in theaters and amusement the Indianapolis «Star-News, ‘is parks. They even risked the %aso- chairman of the Indiana Advisory

line, tobacco and bhottled-in-hond Bond Committee. fumes of Bourhon St, to get at the Those - in charge of specific rounders : and strippers. phases ‘of the Advisory Commit “They are raising hell around tee's work are: here.” Gasper Gulotta, the un-:- Public information, Walter official mayor of Bourbon St. Leckrone, editor of The Indiansaid. ‘‘Thev're not =o bad inside— apolis Times; payroll savings, most of the. places are air;con- Harold G. Ingersoll, New Castle, ditioned— but they're vicious along president of Ingersoll Division,

Borg-Warner Corp.; banks, James

the street.’ y M. Givens, vice president of Indi-

Strippers Bothered

ana National Bank; community The day bartender at . Dan's activities, Cliff Payne, New CasInternational Settlement, which tle; women's activities, Mrs. L.

County Saving

Director.

{He is president of John ‘Ramp,

s Bond: Pioneer Link-Bel

Employee Dies In Linton At 81

Services for Joseph J. Robinson, a millwrigh* who helped install the-first equipment in the Ewart] plant of the Link-Belt Co... will he at 10 a. 'm. Tuesday in ‘Royster

$5 Million

and Askin sW. Washington St. ‘Mortuary. Burial will be in Floral Park. Mr. Rbhinson died yesterday in| Linton. He wis 81. -

| - Born in ‘Wilmington, Delaware, | the lived in Indianapolis Six years and in Valiey Mills 25 years. He had been residing in Linton for {the last year and a half. He was employed at the Ljnk-! Belt plant 31 years. A daughter, Mrs. A. H. Carter, Indianapolis; . six grandchildren,

BOND DIRECTOR — ‘Jahn and nine great-grandchildren sur2 : vive, Ramp. : ep =o : & ~ MISS MARIE JULIA FLANMarshall® Vogler; labor, State NERY, 26, of 620 W. ‘13th St., Labor Commissioner Thomas Hut- former employee of - Stewartson; agriculture, Hassil Schenck Warner Corp. Services 1 p. m. Indiana Farm Bureau president, Tuesday at 17th. St. Baptist

'schools, Wilbur Young, state ‘su: Church. Burial in New Crown. perintendent of public instruction; Friends may call at Boatright Furetail stores, Joseph W. Dye, Ft. neral Home: Wayne, president of Wolf and

Dessauer,

N. Arsenal Ave, retired Temnes-

runs a continuous strip tease show and which is not air-conditioned. zaid they were giving the girls and.the customers trouble, “They sting me,” he said. “And

day, “Gallatin, Tenn.

Theater Owners Awarded ° ee - $450, 000 In Anti-Trust Suit

Expectant Mother With Polio Flown to U. S.

2ven more vicious at ‘night, MADISON. Wis., Sept. 1 (UP) ear. I'm safe behind Dt By United Press 20th” -Century Fox, and Para: A. polio - stricken, expectant doors at home when night! VICKSBURG, Miss. Sept. 1— 0 cuif Theaters. Inc.. of mother was rushed to a hospital zomes, The former owners of a theater early today behind a police escort

in Greenville, Miss., were awarded $450,000 today ‘in a = suit Mayor Delesseps 8. Morrison against the nation’s major movie became alarmed *after hundreds companies ' who were charged of telephone calls from smarting with violations of the -anti-trust taxpayers and after the idled out-/laws and with” conspiracy, in re-

Mayor Alarmed

door, businessmen pointed out straint of trade. that the city ‘also was losing! Federal Judge Sidney . Mize money because it can't collect awarded Joe Applebaum and

sales’ tax when people stay at Bertram E. Sims $150,000 actual home. : damages when the, jury returned So Mr. Morrison hired two-heli- a verdict 4n tHeir favér. The

opters from the Bell Helicopter court then trebled the amount to ,. °

services to spray 5 square miles cover attorneys’ fees and court of the city with DDT. He went costs. 2long on a flight before nightfall i to see how the fogging was pro- First Case in South gressing. | The ‘case was the first of its Frank Lee, manager of the kind in the South and it was Helicopter Services, said it would said that it would set a precedent

be sometime tomorrow before the for distribution of films in the helicopters, were through although South, at least. * they were spraying at 40 miles| In their complaint; Mr. Apple-

ying as low over baum and Mr. Sims charged that eould without they were unable to get first-| {run or high-quality pictures for

an hour, and streets as they getting tangled in treetops.

Spr ————— =i spe their Greenville, Miss., theater, land consequently were forced to Expect Enrollment ue

L They charged that the movie ‘'companies would rent, lease or Times State Service sell films only to theaters owned HANOVER, Sept. 1-—Hanover by them or by stock companies College officials expect a drop of controlled by them. i per cent in enrollment this year. | Defendants Named Enrollment for the ‘second se- | Defendants were the major mester of 1950-51 was 590. a companies, including Para550 are expected for the new se- mount, Metre - Goldwyn - Mayer, | Mester beginning Sept. 10.. |Columbia, Warner Brothers and

_ »

Orop At Hanover

p

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Greenville, The trial, months,

Miss. which covered seven was the_ longest case in

after being flown from Mexico in an air force mercy plane. Mrs. : Mason C. Dobson, kept the history. of’ Mississippi courts. alive by an iron lung, was met by Judge Mize's charge to the rv about 100 persons. when the Jur: specially-equipped plane touched was 300 pages long and took all down at the airport here just beday to. present. fore midnight. Attorneys for the defendants: Mrs. Dobson was stricken with indfeated ‘they would appeal to polio July 12 and was kept-at the the United States Supreme’ Court. American-British‘Cowdray Hospital in Mexico City from July 16 until yesterday. Susan, her 3-year-old daughter, contracted the disease also. She was returned to the United States earlier and is now recovering at Durand, Ii.

Wasissipai Officials Fate Federal Charges

JACKSON, Miss. Sept. 1 (UP) Cn \ —Top officials of Mississippi's Soldier Arrivals “Pro-Truman” state Democratic

committee will be arraigned Wed- The latest Ind polis soldiers

nesday as a result of Senate and grand jury investigations of al- mings, 1537 W. Wilcox St.: Pfc. leged federal job-selling. John P. Lavullis, They are among 12 persons in- 8t.; Sfc. Johnny C. Law, 810 Didicted by a federal grand jury last vision St.; Sgt. William Long Jr, July 20 on charges of conspiring 322 W. 25th St:; Sfe. Earl F. Mc-

a Clain, 529 Jefferson Ave. Pfc. to award federal jobs in exchange jy... + Vickery, 1133 W, 30th St.; for party donations or perjury

Cpl. Paul R. Williams Jr., 6499 E. before. Senate investigators. 14th St, and Sfc. John Zaryas, The party officials indicted in-|

2441 w. 10th St. clude former National Committee- R Di man Clarence Hood; Committee epresentative ies

Korea are: Sgt. Howard J. Cum-

Chairman Frank Mize;’Secretary-! FULLERTON, .Pa.. Sept. 1] Treasurer Curtis Rogers; Former (UP) — Rep. Albert Clinton Secretary. B. C. Beasley; and Vaughn (R. Pa.) died ' un-

Committee Attorney Forrest] expectedly of a heart attack at Jackson. his ‘home today. He ‘was 56.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Ointment Is an Issue— See

Delayed News: Pharaoh's Tomb Struck

CHICAGO | Strikes were ‘being. workers at’ least 3,100 years ago,

according to a’ University

(UP)

[Chicago scholar.

“About the time of the siege of workmen excavating and" decorating the tomb of the Egyption Pharaoh; Rameses III, walked out because their pay was

Troy,

Sept. staged “by

not forthcoming regularly.

The record of the strike is contained Egyptian. memorandum translated in current issue of: the Journal of,

jess Eastern Studies by William

in. an - ancient

F. Edgerton:

Edgerton is professor of Egyp- : tology and chairman of the department of Oriental languages

in the university's oriental

(stitute.

Complained of Hunger

Acording to Edgerton the work- 2 ers literally went on strike, leaving their tasks in the Pharaoh's tomb in Luxor's Kings.” When government officials were summoned hastily,

responded by saying, cause of hunger and ‘because of may have been working a primThere is no clothing, itive shakedown racket. One of no ointment, no fish, no veget- their relatives named To had been

thirst.

ables.”

The

record

"It.

is incomplete,

-the strikers is be-

1,

of :

the

in-

UNFAIR: TO EGYPTIAN

: TOME BUI DER

a Pw

Edgerton sayd the workers apparently -went on -strike five times

rations were inadequate.

Like Modern Racket ’ Edgerton believes the ‘strikers

appojrted vizier to the Pharaoh

but and was the second most powerful

Decide Fate of "In. ‘Guinea ‘Pig’ Case

R)

. pressure on their relative, ‘They ‘apparently mands each time, . “The first notice of the strikes] is found In 3 4ImStive fragment | of ancient«<pottery in a ‘Berlin museum, Edgerton said.

The continuing story was set down for the record by an ancient

won their de-

, scribe and the mutilated papyrus

on which it was written now iss in a museum ih Turi » Italy,

octor

VERMILLION; 8. D., Sept. 1

|(UP)—Soufh ‘Dakota regents of jeducation were expected today to

decide the future of a doctor who admitted giving drug. injections that killed ‘two “human guinea pigs.” The regents in a two-day session at the University ‘of South

“Valley of .thelduring a single year when their Dakota also planned to study reports on the university's possible .

- They're Even Now

liability in the deaths of Mrs. Ardys Pearson and Jack Clifford Dr. John Michalek, a member of the medical school staff, ad-| mitted at the inquest in the deaths that he gave the two injections: of the wrong drug ‘during an experiment.

[sity |P har macy, owned and oper-

SUNDAY, SEPT. 2 1051

Chauncey Hitch -

Rites. Tomorrow

Services for Chauncey R. Hitch,

§ man In Egypt. Edgerton said the active in Republican politics and “workers. may have been putting girkiin pharmacist, will be &t 3

|p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Broth{ers Irving Hill Chapel’ Cremation will: Jollow, Rich ie Mr. Hitch die ; : yesterday in the’ home of his son, wR | Ralph Hitech, Fez 4901 Flecher 5 3 ve. He was 74. g4 Following graduation’ from; Purdue . UniverSchool

ated a drug store in Lafayette. Surviving besided his son are a daughter, Mrs, Helen Menaugh,: of Alexandria, °

Mr. Hitech

‘Va.: three brothers, Claren F., of

Hazelton, Purvis of Peoria, Il,

and . Paul, of Pasadena, Cal; a sister, Mrs. Loella Curther; of Enid, Okla.

BOSTON, Sept..1 (UP)—Constable Ligum is back on even terms with his wife. The city tauncil named Mrs. Ligum a constable, too. :

o ~a 4 CHARLIE YOUREE, 85, of 2232 f

to arrive at San Francisco from

1593 Pleasant.

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