Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1951 — Page 2
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Minister, Child, Tw Others Die in Traffic
Senate Debates Postal Rate Boost
Mailman Pay Hike
By United Press
WASHINGTON, Sept, 6 The
Senate opened debate today on
legislation to boost postal rates and give 500,000 mailmen a pay raise. . ‘The nation would get back its traditional two-a-day mail deliveries in return. On a dollars and cents basis it would not be an even swap. The increased rates would bring in an extra $363,360,000 in the
Chil
A Terre Haute minister, ers and a traffic accidents yesterday. The dead: : The Rev. Joseph Smithhart, 69 Terre Haute, ' Mrs. Nettie Horton, 57, Moores-| ville, | Mrs. Nina McHaffie, 44 Mooresville, . { The infant daughter of Gene Ritchie, 30, Riddle. So Four persons were three seriously, in two of the accidents, and five persons were
hurt in three traffic crashes here
in Indianapolis.
The Rev. Mr. Smithhart was killed and his wife, Dora, 68 seriously injured in a _ head-on collision on Ind. 16 near Fairbanks. ' Paul Ireland, 39, Pales-
tine, Ill, ‘driver of the other car,
first year and $397,610,000 a year also was hurt.
after that. The pay raise would °
cost $201 million. } The extra mail delivery a day would cost the Post Office about: $100 million a year. Economy-minded Senators may try to block the extra mail de- . Yivery on the grounds that one delivery a day is enough during a national emergency. The Post Office, struggling under an annual deficit of $500 million said it needed the extra money from the postal rate increases.:: It was a shortage of - funds that made Postmaster §onera! Jesse M. Donaldson cut
death when her
A 2d Head-on Crash Another head-on crash, on-Ind, 67 near Martinsville, took the lives of Mrs, Horton and Mrs. McHaffie. In critical condition in Methodist. Hospital here was Miss Hazel Weddle, 39, Mooresville, a passenger in Mrs, Horton's car. Her chest was crushed and her scalp and face badly cut. Harold Cooper, 30, Gosport, driver of the other car, is in serious condition in Morgan County Memorial Hospital, Martinsville. The Ritchie girl was crushed to father accidentally drove a truck over her near
ail deliveries to one a day OD their home.
Apr. 17 last year.
Here in Indianapolis, three
The biggest bite on the nation persons were injured, none keriwould come from the first class ously, in a ecar-cab collision at
mail rate boosts—$306 million a Blackford and Vermont Sts. They.
year.
A regular letter would
were Powell N. Egley, 32, of 726 cost W, Vermont 8t., a passenger in!
four cents to mail instead of the the cab; W. E. Sharp, 28, Canton, present three, An air mail letter O., driver of the other car, and would cost eight cents instead of his passenger, Earl Willlams, 29,
#ix and the humble penny post of 3214 Martindale Ave,
gard would cost two cents.
{treated at General Hospital.
All were The
injured. _
two Mooresville school teach-
19-month-old girl lost their lives in Indiana
INDIANAPOLIS "TRAFFIC CASUALTIES
(248 Days) 1950 1951 Accidents J..., 5872 A545 Injured «.eee. 2158, 2414 16 38
Killed ...o00000
taxi driver was Freddie Sloan, 32, of 329 Park Ave,
An 82-vear-old woman, Mrs. W. E. Rose, 5321 N, Pennsylvania St., received a leg injury in a
collision involving four autos at Central Ave. and E. 17th St. She was treated at Methodist Hospital and released.
Mrs, Elsie M. Krall, 50, Glendale, N.'Y., was in Long Hospital here with a broken shoulder, the result of a two-car crash at N. Meridian and E. 46th Sts,
Held in Lottery Raid At .Cigar Store
Police, who seized 138 hooks of baseball tickets in seven raids here yesterday, confiscated two full books and partly-filled books in a cigar store at 30 S. Illinois St. today and made an arrest. . Mike Pappas, 30, of 30; 8. 1Ilinois St. was charged with keeping a room for ‘Pool selling and advertising a lottery and gift enterprise. : Raided yesterday were cigar stores at 601 N. West St, 128 W. 16th 8t., 2241 W. 10th St. 488 Massachusetts Ave (twice), 112
McClean Place and 29031; Clifton St.
35
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Truman Plans Tour of Sodden Kansas Flood Area
By United Press . KANSAS CITY, Mo. Sept. ‘8
— President Truman, worried over new flood threats in Kansas and Missouri, scheduled a personal tour today of the danger area still sodden and mudladen from the torrents of last July. The Chief Executive, rived yesterday for a five-day visit at his home in Independence,
inspection of the low-lying area threatened anew by rising waters. Mr,
wanted to see the multi-million
dollay flood relief program in aalics. After luncheon in the White
House suite of the Muehlebach Hotel in downtown Kansas City, the President planned to- motor through the Kansas and Missouri lands bordering the Kaw River, It was ‘there that the devas-
PRELIMINARY WINNERS—Misses Lu Long Ogburn (left) (tating floods of July did their
and Jeanne Moody. Jeanne Wows 'em—
Some Beauty Contest Stars Fall on Girl From Alabama
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS United Press Staff Correspondent ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. Sept 6— Probably the most nervous gal in America today is Jeanne Moody, of Cherokee, Ala. She the Miss Alabama of the Miss America contest. And what happened to her last night? She won the preliminary judging in the talent division of the Miss America contest, ! And who was Miss America last year? Miss Alabama: That would be Yolande Betheze, of Mobile. Jeanne wowed a few
is
[thousand people by shaking the |rafters with a terrific perform-
|gested downtown district
ance, . Miss Alabama this time was no copy-cat. The former winner | sang. . | Miss Moody did a dramatic ditty to pick up what you might call the lead in the run for the $50,000. This time she did a condensed version of the radio script called “Sorry, Wrong Number.” She did right well. { There was no judging in the evening gown section last night, but in the swimming suit division, you have Miss North Carolina. | That is Lu Long Ogburn, of Smithfield, N. C. She had it—and you can't floor a lot of professional judges. | Weighing in at 134 pounds, she thad a lot of other things, including dress size 14, complexion fair and color of hair brown.
Tonight, there will be some more of the same, in the matter {of judging.
One-third of the girls—the ones who sat it out in the bathing suit and other categories last night,
Councilmen Join Fight to Give City a Zoo
hv City Councilmen joined forces last night seeking to establish a permanent zoo for Indianapolis.
Times Columnist Ed Sovola did some tub-thumping. on this subject yesterday. | The Council-discussed the pos- | sibility of keeping the Indiana Conservation Building at the Fair Grounds open all year in spite | of heating problems which must be solved. Joseph A. Wicker made a motion before the Council that some plan for a permanent zoo be worked out.
No ‘Heating Facilities
The Fair Grounds exhibit, now drawing top crowds during the fair, has no facilities for heating. Four major sewer projects to provide Jong-needed relief for two sections of. Indianapolis drew a step closer as a $3,250,000 bond issue to finance them was submitted to the Council. The funds will be used for construction of the 34th and 37th Sts. main sewers and for part of ‘the W, 14th St. and W. 12th St sewers, City Engineer William R. Hunt said. . Turns Outlawed
Left turns into or out of alleys or private driveways in the conwere outlawed by the €ouncil, The Indianapolis Public Housing Authority submitted an ordinance calling for change in zoning of a proposed housing development in the area bounded by LeGrande and State Ave. Dawson St. and the Belt Railroad. The change would make the northern third of the tract available for construction of twofamily homes. The section now is zoned for business.
‘WHATEVER IT IS AT | "SEVILLE" IT WILL BE GOOD!
will vie with their rivals for a cup or maybe a scholarship—or liaybe a title of Miss America. 1f she gets a title she gets a whole lot of the world with it—
mink and a new Nash automobile and a smile from every man she meets and a request for an autograph every time she turns a corner,
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ATLANTA, Sept. 6 (UP)—In-
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