Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1952 — Page 3

2,195

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TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1952

Adlai Works On Speeches For Western Campaign

‘Skunk Issue’ Sidestepped In Michigan

By United Press . SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Sept, 2

Gov. Adlai Stevenson pleased with

results of his Labor Day swing through Michigan, prepared today for a Weétérn campaign trip. The Democratic presidential nominee said the crowds were “better than I expected.” But he was a bit baffled by what to do about babies dumped In his arms and smiling gentlemen who want him to hold their pet- skunks, Mr. Stevenson himself created ane of the problems that came his way yesterday. He said in Flint that no one had asked him to kiss a baby, during his trip. Don Begley, an auto appliance worker, boosted his 3-year-old daughter Valerie into Mr. Stevenson’s arms. Mr. Stevenson held her gingerly but did not so much as peck her on the cheek. Mr. Stevenson was startled again in Flint when a man bearIng a. live skunk dashed to the side of the governor's car. Mr. Stevenson smiled politely but declined an invitation to hold the

pet animal,

He also - received a graphic demonstration .of how the bestmade campaign plans can be ruined suddenly by unforseen, events. As a crowd at Pontiac melted before a downpour of rain, | Mr. Stevenson shouted that he would not make any speech at all

yy

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

A BIT DAMP—Soaking wet, Gov. Adlai Stevenson told a crowd at Pontiac, Mich, yesterday he wasn't going to make any speech "because of this damned ram."

{back on TV last night.

Rosary Beads Ward Off Tavern Bandit

PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y.—|

“because of this damned rain.” [A tavern thief refused to rob a

Today Mr. Stevenson planned customer yesterday when the man 2040 to Keep his money but took from his;$150 from the cash register of

to work on a number of speeches took | George Hodges, the tavern owner.

he will make in the West.

pleasant to announce that effective October 1, 1952, Indianapolis gas users will save $550,000 annually on their gas bills. When this saving is added to the rate reduction made on February 1,

1951, the total yearly savings of Indianapolis gas

ipockets and began praying.

fe DAYS of continuously rising costs it is

rosary beads

ANOTHER

REDU

The thief told Jeremigh O'Cal-

|

, y £

So

PAGE 3

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ovement Haunts Greek | His Signals Down Ship Scandal

THE STORM surprised the ROME, Sept. 2 (CDN)—|

weatherman and sent him to the hospital. Bill Crawford. who has a weath- Greece's bridge-playing deputy er shown on WFBM-TV, was at premier Sophocles Venizelos' is the Fair when the umpredicted having difficulty finessing his gale struck way past an alleged scandal . His opponents, led by Marshal In the rush, he slipped and fell y)jxeander Papagos, accuse him | (on a beer can, he said) and was of entering illegitimately into the taken to Methodist Hospital. ishippihg = business. While the Nothing serious, and he was! United States was having its] {China ship scandal, they say,| Venizelos went to the States and turned sailor on his own account.| Venizelos is supposed to have .~ got himself an interest in the

Evansville Youth : : \Libe hip Crete. He is charged Dies of Polio Leia dh Ey A.

ath -of a 19-year-old Evans-/cover partnership with the open ville youth, Edward Hust, added oWner, ene Moatsos.

to Indiana's 1952 polio fatality] The American ECA mission astoll today. jsigned a crack tax expert of the

The youth died Sunday, Van- Bureau of Internal Revenue,

Craig Atkins, to force the Greek] derburgh County's first polio fa-| i ’ t sl tality of the season. SHIPPING SWHer 10 RY Th

Venizelos was never more than Meanwhile, Indianapolis re-mjqly cordial toward this Amer-

_|ported 52 cases to date, as COM-ljean effort. The tax intake rose -{pared to 37 in the same periodithe first year of the American

last year and 86 in the previous preform, then fell again. yeaf. Zid | Now, according to his.antog-| Because the Labor Day holiday onists, Venizelos has been sup(interrupted receipt -of infantile/porting a special law, No. 2087, {paralysis statistics from over the The owners, of the Crete asked |state, - the Indiana Board of!which would relax taxes again. |Health had not yet compiled its the special rebate. ‘weekly polio statistics today. Venizelos has struck back rests —n————— sharply at the charges. He denies any share in the disputed Liberty, and he challenges the . . /followers of Marshal Papagos to ' Planning Authority halt their press campaign @nd | Castleton has designated the fight it out in parliament. {Marion County Plan Commission rnt——p——

las its pl ” . |as its planning authority Douglas in Hong Kong

The commission will draft a zoning ordinance for the town. HONG KONG—U. 8. Supreme Harold W. Geisel, the commis- Court Justice William O. Douglas sion’s executive secretary, de- arrived here today after a six{scribed the action of the Castleton week tour of Southeast Asia. Betown board as “a step in the right!fore leaving for the United States. direction fo uniform planning in he will visit Formosa, Korea and Marion County.” |Japan.

Castleton Designates

\

TION

in your Gas Bill

strates its value to the gas users of Indianapolis: -

The Gas Utility is keeping pace with the growing needs of a growing city, extending its mains to all corners of Marion County; it is meeting its bond

obligations on schedule, paying for itself out of

users will amount to over $1,300,000 since natural Po cosa _ ,_———_——— 1 : - | ; ; gas has been secured. . as an E Xan ple— | . XG In order to utilize the natural gas supplies to the | I . If your present The comparative cost | best advantage, the BTU content of gas served to | __ monthly billis of 625 BTU gasis A saving of _ ; : | Indianapolis has been increased from 570 BTU to | ~$ 1.60 $ 1.46 14¢ : | - : : ~ | 625 BTU on September 2, 1952. These added heat 2.65 2.44 21¢ I . s . stl Of th | 3.70 340 . .-30¢ : units do not affect the burning characteristics of the | 4.90 4.60 30¢ i gas, but you will automatically use fewer cubic feet 6.70 ~ 6.38 32¢ I ‘ | = of 625 BTU gas to accomplish the same results as 9.10 8.74 36¢ | or : : |” 13.90 13.45 45¢ pre. 17.50 16.97 53¢ | The rate structure of the Gas Utility was simpli- 23.70 22.91 79¢" i fied and all brackets of users combined into one gen- 28.70 27.82 .88¢ eral rate schedule. The added heat units in the gas 33.70 3274 o% : | and this new rate schedule represent a sayings of |

.

120,000 customers) and a 3% savings to users of gas heat (approximately 10,000 customers).

Thus the public charitable trust again demon-

—_—————_—— —_—_—— ——— — — — — — — — — —— w———— al

about 7% to most residential users (approximately

©" CITIZENS

{

earnings; and it is supplying good gas service for less money than you paid for gas in 1935, seven-

teen years ago.

CY GAS AND COKE UTILITY

OPERATED BY THE BOARD OF

'Burglars Get $1800

In Four Jobs

Burglars battered open three safes and got nearly $1800 at four local business places late yesterday and. today. } They took $800 from Tom Walker's Restaurant, 38 W. Ohio

St., after breaking into an ad-

joining bowling alley and crashing ‘through a connecting. door, They netted $600, some cigarets and 60 blank money orders and cigarets at Smith's Super Market, 848 Blake St., yesterday. At the D & H Service Station, 2637 N. Harding St., they used a sledge to crack the safe and escaped with $178. Miss Mary Ellers, manager of the Center Cleaners, 4210 College Ave, reported that $200 had disappeared from a money box hidden among the soiled clothes

lke to Eat High | On Missouri'Hog |

COLUMBIA, Mo. Sept. 2! (UP)—It may rate as treason at native son level, but Gen. | Dwight D. Eisenhower. and not President Truman will receive the best ham from Boone County's fair. Stanley Ginn, Columbia attorney who paid $9 a pound for the 13'5-pound blue ribbon ham at the old Boone County ham | breakfast, said today he would send it to Gen. Eisenhower, For the last five years, Mr, Truman has received the cham-

: pion Boone County ham,

“President Truman has been eating high on the hog long enough,” Mr, Ginn said.

Inflation. Blamed

On-Congress by Senator |

1.08 ANGELES-—8en, John J.| Sparkman (D. Ala.) charged in a Labor Day address that the Republican 80th Congress was, responsible for the current inflationary spiral. = 4 The Democratic, vice-presiden-tial nominee told a CIO picnic

“lyesterday that his party success-

fully held the line against inflation during World War IIL “Then the Republicans got their hands on our inflation control machinery,” he said, referring to the election of a Republican Congress in 1946. “Prices haven't been the same since.” :

Expect 50,000 to Vote In Nevadd’s’ Primary

RENO, Nev.— An estimated

| pins a Hospital Guild tag on Raymond Gray, 3515 N. Pennsylvania,

Trip:

TAGGED—Nurse Wanda Broyles of St. Vincent's Hospital

as Elma Lucas, 1534 S. State Ave looks on. The annual Tag Week, : ending today, raises funds for the Indianapolis hospitals.

STRAUSS T SAYS: 0

. 150,000 voters were epected to go

to the polls today in Nevada's primary election highlighted by the challenge of a 31-year-old

political newcomer to the - power-| ful Democratic state organization| héaded by Sen. Pat McCarran

(D. Nev.).

Thomas W. Mechling, Colora-{ newspaper-|

ido-born Washington man who was comparatively unknown in Nevada until seven months ago, sought the Democratic nomination to the U., 8S. Senate. . Mr. Mechling’s opponent was Nevada-born Alan Bible, 42-year-old former attorney general now practicing law in Reno. Mr. Bible holds the full indorsement of Mr. McCarran. Sen..George W. Malone, a Republican, seeks renomination to

- {his second term in today's elec-

tion and was expected to win easily. a

United Press Telephoto

“MANHUNT ENDED—Joseph F. Bent Jr. is recovering from a flesh wound suffered when he was shot down by FBI agents at Texas City, Tex. Classed by the bureau as one of the "10 most - wanted ¢-¢riminals," Bent was

captured after an |8-month pur_suit across the nation.

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NEW ACOUSTICONS AS LOW AS $69.50

ACOUSTICON 16 N. Dela St. FR-1633

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ITH A TOUCH

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