Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 April 1952 — Page 2
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Mrs. Hermann Dies Here at 85
W. Troy Ave. a charter member taught at the Jesuit college in 'N® Rev. Henry White, chairman of St. Roch's : , (West Baden Springs, ey was of the Marion County Crime Com- Look Your Best Extioite Charen, returning to his classes after con-'mission, needed last night to In a | ducting a week-e ¥ : follow in St. E [Chicago. clcend retreat In pring in a prowler. ; LEVINSON Joseph's Ceme- 4 1 The pastor of the Irvington “tery. She was Blame Broken Rall {Methodist Church spotted the $7.50 85 Railroad officials believed a prowler outside his home at 28
a
%
off production of 95 per cent of
ers of blocking a settlement by insisting on “unquestioning and ab acce " of the board's Shjesh Sceeptance - 8 26-cents- priest escaped death by {inches an-hour wage package, (in
dent of the CIO, replied that yt Ta! ripped through the window was the steel Industry and not the 0f ® Sleeper car just above union that was “forcing a strike.”
” : , “for crewmen were cut by flyl ass Richmond and Logansport “most Riad wu 2 Murtay mid, i) or bruised, none seriously Han lof today” to clear the right-of-of industry against the govern- nine cars of the “Southland” way. ment, against our union and against the American people.”
Mrs. Margaret Hermann, of 127
who died Friday, had long been
ligious activities.
Roch's Altar So- Mrs, Hermann
Burial of Roy Burns, local whole-| sale grocer, will be tomorrow in Rose Hill Cemetery after 10 a. m. services in Indiana Ave. Church of Christ.
Saturday in 8t. Vincent's Hospital, Indianapolis.
County, grocery branches olis, Franklin and Columbus.
three daughters, Mrs. Ben Parris, Mrs. John Butcher and Mrs. George Godsey, all of Blooming-
Stevenson and Mrs. Ruth Dou-| sthitt, both of Indianapolis.
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PAGE 2.
Telephone Union
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES... ~~. "" —. - -
Starts Strike With 43 States As Goal
We
Po . . &
MONDAY, APR. 7, 1052
300,000 idle . Expected in
Final Tie-Up Boost at Convention
By United Press : ! Telephone workers began nM By United Press ‘ 3 strike today that threatened to WASHINGTON, Apr. 7 = idle 30,000 other employees in 43, Mra. Robert A, Taft, a veteran states and the District of Co-| political campaigner, expects to lumbia, . . | be in Chicago in July to cheer. The walkout started at 6 a. m.| hes husband on in the nominafn the eastern time zone and tion scramble at the Republitelephone workers as far west as, Can convention, Northern California were ex-| Witty, nimble-tongued Marpected to leave their posts when tha Taft was an able votethe “local time” deadline passes,| getter for her husband in past Involved directly in the strike/ Ohlo contests, were 41.000 telephone operators) The doctor vetoed active and 15500 Western Electric em-| eampaigning in the pre-conven-ployees, all members of the Com-| tion presidential contests bemunications Workers of America| cause Mrs. Taft is not fully (C10). | recovered from a stroke sufTelephone employees in Ohio,| fered two years ago. Her left Michigan and Re set up side is still slightly paralyzed. picket lines, They were involved| She’ doesn't think. her abin separate disputes with Bell! sence will prove a handicap to Telephone companies, | the senator—"I think him well
Federal mediators made a final 2Ple to run his own campaign.” effort to avert the walkout four aM it Seg. Tah reaches the hours before the strike deadline. | e House, Mrs, Taft exMediator Francis L. Maher! Pects to carry on the social brought spokesmen for the two functions of a first lady, . districts together with company | No Worry at All officials at 12:40 a. m. Indianap-| qn, fiah-bowl lite of a Presi-
olis time, | dent's family would not worry ‘Strike Is On’ Martha: “Since my early days
At 3:50 a. m. Ernest Weaver, When my father was Solicitor director of Dist. 10's 10000 tele- (&REKAY —= (In Sen. Taft's phone equipment installers, an-| a ers a gp ration when nounced that “the strike is on.” | Tas " Washington SebuAn hour before the deadline, I a ore o Dist. 11, representing 5500 West-| #98 exposed to public life, and etn Klectiric distributors, an-| One realizes that the public innounced it, too, had broken off terest is not personal, but due
{prowling American Sabrejets to-|
i two more and damaged seven.
Hold Up Propaganda
In Korea Truce Talks |i PANMUNJOM, Korea, Apr.
.|/neadquarters today soft-pedalled um Market No. 1 at 345 W, Wash- ~~
{plans that could bring the Korean
Mrs. Taft to Give Hubby Red Planes Yeggs Get $4000 Here Traffic Death
Y ~~ Toll Hits 44 In Week-End Splurge - 1° Cunty
Hard Hit, Dodge Fight
By United Press SBEOUL, Apr. 7 ~~ The Com{munist air force, staggered by the {destruction or damaging of 53 of | its jet planes during the past eight] days, stayed out of sight of
Yeggs got nearly $4000 in apoliceman discovered the robbery series of burglaries ‘and holdups in progress. {
| ; 3 yp’ 2 traffie over the week end. Michael B. Marble, 30, of 3408 Mane Sotiniy 4 185 iia Approximately $3000 fn cash N. Bancroft Ave. owner of the “€alh tol climbe was taken from the safe of the Rail Club Tavern, 3619 Massa- 16 more than last year—after the Larman Furniture Co., Alabama chusetts Ave. reported to police second victim of a Friday accls and Washington 8ts., less than a/$250 in cash had been taken from dent died yesterday in Methodist block from the police station. |his tavern. He sald the burglar Hospital y day he theft was discovered b a broke into a back window after | . : | alg the policeman. y {he had closed up early yesterday; Mrs. Eulora Knipp, 64, of 6158 | The Babres patrolled “MIG Al-|
morning. |Guilford Ave., and her husband, lay" An attempt was made on the S ley Ph Jar Jonh As the Man-| 0 safe five years ago, but the| A tavern owner at 1548 N. Sen- Clarence Knipp, 65, were struck {ehurian a hg Irobbers were unable to open it'2le Ave, foiled a holdup at hisby a car while walking across Single Russiaz-built Je a down then. They took radios instead. Place shortly after he closed early College Ave, Rens 62d st, in Fei {aay alone, > | yesterday. Thomas Giroff, 52;day night's heavy rain. olice {four MIG-15s, probably destroyed Yesterday the Kautz Stationeryio, "wor "jaan cn 0 Ave, said the driver was Edward K.
{Co., 124 N. Pennsylvania 8t,, was : Hawki 41. of 234 Pennridge a Dages simmered broken into and six cash drawers d his car had a flat tire and Hawkins, , of 23 e g
he returned to his place of busi- Drive. down -to minor patrol clashes, [emptied of an estimated $450 in i (dow p cash and $160 in checks. ‘The ®™ to call for a service truek. Mr. Knipp died before an
drawers were taken to a rear A man followed him into the ambulance could reach the scene, alley where they were smashed place and pulled a gun, he told Mrs. Knipp died yesterday. {open. : vn Mr. yer said he thew Double services will bé at 1 Trew his own gun from under the p.m." Wednesday in Flanner & 7! In another downtown break-in (UP) — Allied and Communist yesterday, at the Paint & Linole- cOUDter and the would-be thief cayan Lary. Burial will So far this year there have {been 20 fatal accidents in Indianjapolis and 24 in the county area for a total of 44. In the same {period -last year there were 19 deaths in city (raffic and nine in the county for a. total of 28.
day.
Itheir propaganda voices and re /ington 8t., $145 in cash was taken strained truce negotiators as tops by a thief who escaped through commands of botH sides worked the rear door just as a merchant
separately on delicate strategv! i a {War to a sudden end. Hoosier M n Held
Armistice sub-delegates met In Girl's Kidnaping (livery truck and car crashed at there for only about six minutes . {Pennsylvania and Washington to see if either side had anything. SOUTH BEND, Apr. 7 (UP)—Sts., early today, but one of the Pallbearers Named Inew to offer on truce supervision Leonard L. Briggs, 23, Ora, Ind. passengers went to the hospital iprobléms. Neither side did, and Was held’ in St. Joseph Sountyianyway. For Hutsell Funeral ithe ti adjourned untj! Jail today on charges of kidnap-| Oscar E. Jorden, 26, of 425 St.| he Heeling Was Journ ing a 15-year-old girl at Hays Peter St. and his wife, Elsie, 23, Pallbearers for Jesse A. Bul. | Prisoner exchange discussions SPrings, Neb, and taking her to/were going to Methodist Hospi- Sell. Marion County Fo ona entered’ their third day of “in-/1daho Falls, Idaho, for immoralital when thelr car was in the T'S President, who died las urse
Crash Doesn't Bother Stork
| No ong was injured when a de-
negotiations, | to the office.” Meanwhile federal officials in| _ From the side-lines, Mrs. Taft New York arranged separate Nas much to say about 1052. meetings with industry and steel politicking. She sees red every union leaders in a last ditch effort to avert a nation-wide! strike at 11:01 p, m., Indianapolis time, Wednesday. : Nathing .P. Feinsinger, Wage
i
Sen. and Mrs. Robert A-Taft [R) time her husband's political op-
ponents come up with the chant “Taft can't win.” : “Results havé proved Bob is a good vote getter,” she retorts
Scissors in hand, she reads five daily newspapers and a number of magazines, Pertinent clippings are turned over
This 18 the first of a series of five sketches of wives of Republican presidential can-
Stabilization Board chairman, re-| 0 What she calls a “ridiculous” _ didates.) to Bob. Others go into a file. rted after a joint meeting yen: | accusation. “He never loses an y ; he is out of town, which Is ery Good on TV
rday that ‘gradual progress’| election in spite of what his was being made in attempts to Critics say, find a“peaceful settlement, Restricts Callers But an angry exchange of Mrs Taft spends most of her charges last night between Ben-| time at Washington in their jamin F. Fairless, president of gid.fashioned, red-brick house U. 8. Steel, and Philip Murray. in the Georgetown section. She head of the Steelworkers Union| restricts callers to old friends (C10), dimmed chances that a| such as Alice Roosevelt Longwalkout by 650,000 steel workers worth, The Senator telephones would be averted, her almost every evening when
Bank Furnaces Furnaces in the “big six” plants
were being banked in anticipation! of a shutdown which would cut
often. Her days are occupied readIng and answering a flood of mail. Many letters ask her to pass on advice to her husband. “Some tell him not to give so many facts, to smile more and be more relaxed,” Mrs. Taft reported. “Others say things are #0 serious that he shouldn't smile so much.”
Priest Barely Escapes Death in Train Crash
Times State Service
ELWOOD, Apr. 7—A Catholic!
She never misses a Taft appearance on TV and “like all wives, I give some constructive criticism, but I think he is very good on television.” Next to the suggestion that Bob-can’t-win, “I most resent his being called an ‘isolationist’, Mrs. Taft said, and ticked op details of his record to prove otherwise, “I think Bob will make a | wise and good President,” she said. “He has brains, industry, and character and. a broad grasp of governmental affairs, “He is not influenced by pressure groups but has a rugged adherence to duty. He would place national needs above personal advancement.”
the nation’s steel supply. Mr. Fairless accused union lead-|
Most of the 100 passengers, in-| cluding Fr. Weitzman, went on to! a Pennsylvania Railroad Anderson in the coaches that rewreck early today when a steel mained on the rails. : | Madison County Sheriff Joe his grodgdon said he expected it| would take Pennsy crews {rom
(TOMORROW: “Mrs. Ike” in Paris).
Mr, Murray, who also is presi-
berth, : Seven other passengers and|
“This strike should be recog:
jumped the tracks southeast of here.
“Thank goodness I was flat on Minister Uses my back,” exclaimed the Rev. . wo- Water Pistol to
Louis Weitzman, a sociology fessor at Xavier University, Cin-|
cinnati, who was unhurt though Neg b Prowler
he narrowly missed death in his sleep. | Father Weitzman, who formerly |
3% miles
BS Were Jo be toga) for An empty water pistol was all!
oo « YOur hatter
HARRY LEVINSON
37 N. Penn. illinois and Market |
Mrs, Hermann, broken rail caused the wreck. |N. Audubon Rd. He grabbed his All the cars remained upright, son's water pistol and stalked the though one spun halfway around man, across the tracks and another] "Phe prowler fell for the bluff tilted crazily. and when police got to the scene The train broke im the middle, identified himself as Robert N.|
active in re
Bhe was a member of the St.
baggage coaches going on some was held on a preliminary charge
ciety, > It eve trouble continually persists, don't A native of St. Ann's, Ind. distance. The last ning of the of larceny. [wits Coie ac Te Bui Mrs. Hermann lived here 70| train 8 13 cars ground to a halt, | “I don’t even think the water ordinary tired, irritated, burning, itching ars. She was the widow ofA Two cars behind the train and pistol works,” Rev. White said eves bathe them with Laveptik. 35 Years
" ood tuccess. Praised by thousands. Money it sure was g {refunded If not delighted. Get Lavoptik today. (Eve-cup included.) At all drugsists.
enry Hermann, who died in Seven of the last nine were de- today. - “But 1948. They celebrated their 50th railed. ‘enough for the bluff.” wedding anniversary shortly . BT — before his death, iS i Surviving are her three sons! Edward, Andrew and Joseph; a| daughter, Mrs. Leo Little; a ais ter, Mrs, Lucy Drew, Covington, | Ky.; 13 grandchildren and §
great-grandchildren.
hl
Grocer’s Rites For Scalp Treatment
In Bloomington
Times State Service
BLOOMINGTON, Apt.
Your hair needs protection and care. Your Sealp needs Thomas’ scalp treatment. Combing nd scratching your head is not enough. There is a hygienic necessity with every scalp. Hair -can be too dry and brittle. It can be too dily and the scalp can itch from dandruff scales. Any of this tells you to Go To Thomas where the expert is unusually qualified to give your scalp the type of Sreatmeny it needs.
” o-—
Mr. Burns, who was 58. died!
A life-long resident of Monroe he formerly operated in Indianap-
Martinsville, Morgantown,
Go to Thomas—He “is the world’s leading hair expert with 32 years of experience. Thomas’ PERFECTED METHOD may be
Survivors are his wife, thel:|
CONSULTATION
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Only Thomas Gives You—the benefits
from the experience of giving over 6,000,000 scalp treatments. This merits your confidence
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{song a chance to “develop addi- night at Ora by FBI agents, also!
{{the post-Armistice
with the engine and six mail and Rudd, 35, of New York City. He| Eye Troubles
idefinite” recess to give the op- PUrposes. {erash with a truck driven by wi- day n Greenville, Tex., have been 'posing teams in Munsan and Kae-| Briggd, arrested Saturday llam Pulliam, 36, Greenwood. .- |named. They continued after the wreck,! They are Mayor Clark; James “Mother and son L. Bradford, former Marion {County Republican chairman; {Police Chief Ambuhl; Fire Chief Hancock; Marion County Clerk
tional avenues” for resolving the/was charged on a federal war- Report later: POW question. jrant with unlawful flight to avoid doing fine.” It wis believed these private prosecution. = m = 'sessions, probably directed from| Meanwhile, authorities at- : [the highest levels, might result tempted to locate the girl. sherts Indian to Speak H. Dale Brown; County Council in an over-all compromise of all Wendall Hills, Rushville, Neb.,| “India’s Place in the United Na-/man Herbert Jose; George A. outstanding issues—prisoner re-'said the girl has been missing tions” wilf>be discussed at the|Heiny and Leo Litz. ; {patriation, Russia as a member of since Oct. 2, 1951. Briggs told Rotary Club luncheon tomorrow| Services for Mr. Hutsell will be truce team, authorities he abandoned -the in the Claypool Hotel by Nilkanth/at 1 p. m. tomorrow in Flanner & land airfield repair and construec- girl about a month ago in Butte,/Chavre, close associate of the late Buchanan Mortuary with burial ition. {Mont. Mahatma Gandhi. in Crown Hill,
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' MOND! Mi "Big |
6 Fee Floo«
B) BISMARC fce-laden wi River burst ing 1000 p day, house water and | drowned. O The “Big the North without war in minutes, Was covered water. And
The Missc above flood level since 1 reau said. A ice’ jam ra that it might
Wait The Miss: nearby Man Sioux River dike at Siou than 1000 homes there
And in Mo a tributary pounded at towns of C were in dan;
At Bisma waited all n weather ato rescue atten failed.
Lamps, and a varie property clu houses as t choked with ture, dead debris, swept Willie Red Mont., fell grabbed a c screamed. B cuers heard grip and wa Report Some repo! gorge choke Bismarck to Cannonball } At Mandar Bismarck, the the town’s d Although wa mark . plant, supply was s Most of t caused by ar miles south acted as a backed up be
A Trag For Loy
DARWIN,
' (CDN) —L0o0]
lifetime of Antonio Vin pretty good. “Just one 1 I'll be officia two workmat the Billy Hu the northern Then the 1 killing him.
Leave it ti to help anoth spot and su easily forgott
This is es of the minio junior deputy
Here's the Melvin “Lobb Beville Ave. | weeks ago.
His father | him carfare downtown, H paying off o the last thre aminations at per “100.” Melvin had stopped a mq
“will this on the street officer, flashir badge. He ex policemen us a' free ride.
Gave
The office couldn't ride f breeches and cents cash m Here you a between us,” | Today the back. Melvin use and’ ‘spotted badge numbe loan. Today, his Sr., reported with the cast
“Nye, 1912 Eng
Do FAI Rock,
PASTEETH, an sprinkled om UDD false teeth more slide slip or rock taste or feeling. (non-aeld), Does odor” (dentifie 2 sy drug sto
