Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 November 1950 — Page 1
SWEET
0 spend the perky with righten the do welcome so to get a bill of fare,
it a regular ould always able scraps, ‘an be hung f. and bore hittled twig. bughnuts on ! MONDAY
TAN WEN] Sereno
WIM) HAVE ) UTWEEY EASY ZE CHANCE EN MEET YOU!
EE. HE KNOW I
SHE ADMIRE AN HE'S A 2 JEALOUS MANS!
©. mother ee If.that. man. who. writes. the. re...
J. Hugh O'Donnell sketch, Winter Howled,
+ .or any day you desire to meet one
India
napolis
FORECAST: Snow: wind today, "high 30-32. Low tonight, 15. High tomorrow, 25, possible snow ' flurries.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1950
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily.
# i —Photo by Bill Oates Times Staft Photographer. "We've got our love to keep us warm . , arles Crispin,
2044 Mansfield Ave. and Barbara Anderson, 2122 Spann Ave., braved the cold and "blowing snow last night to window-shop for an engagement ring. While snow drifts up at their feet, they peer in a downtown jeweler's window.
The Times Clothe-A-Child Takes Sting Out of the Cold
Some Children Have No Coats at All
+ So Here's Your Chance to Thaw Them Out By ART WRIGHT It's colder than you think.
The thermometer doesn’t tell the full story. Not even your own
discomfort can tell how really cold it is.
But hundreds of ragged Indianapolis children know. Many of in their appeal for help from The Times
them have told us . . . Clothe-A-Child. Some of them don't have warm coats . . Some of them don't have shoes on W. «+ « NO shoes at all.
few days.
of doors . . . they shiver inside in The Times. their poorly heated homes. As one desperate, widowed said on the telephone: children are depending © on YOU.
SPR sv a
aditorial, » Page 2 24
ports about the weather wants to 0 § Did Pu due know how cold it REALLY is, 0 [ tell him to come out to our one room and he'll find out how cold people can. get—especially the chilldren.” Visit Unnecessary
Boilermakers Beat Indiana, 13-0
| While Old Man Winter howled You don’t have to visit desper- 3cross the nation yesterday, the ate mothers like that to verify Bojlermakers of Purdue howled that she's telling the truth. For to a 13-0 victory over Indiana. the past 20 years the Times Tne victory ‘allowed them to
Clothe-A-Child staff has found yeep possession of the Old Oaken similar situations each winter.
That's why there is a Times Clothe-A-Child. That's why The Times each *year asks YOU to contribute whatever money you can spare to help these poor, shivering children. Last year the people of Indianapolis provided enough money for Clothe-A-Child to outfit 2179 of them. Still there were hundreds who didn’t-get the warm clothing they needed. There wasn’t enough money. ; : Tomorrow Clothe - A - Child opens its headquarters to do the job again. The headquarters will on the
be next door to The Times, at western dashed Illinois’ Rose 208 W. Maryland St. ‘Bow! hopes beating them 14-7. How can YOU help? And in- the east, amid winter's ONE: Send a check or money fury, Cornell defedted mighty order NOW-—for any amount—to Penn 13-6. : Clothe-A-Child, Indianapolis But football wasn’t the only Times, 214 W. Maryland St. Every news in the world of sports. Here penny contributed ‘to the fund in Indianapolis, Tribe President will be used to buy clothing for OWnie Bush announced the apthe children. pointment of Don Gutteridge as TWO: Take one or more Clothe- anager of the Indianapolis In-A-Child children to the stores and 41ans baseball team for the 1951 buy clothes for them. Telephone Season: Hs Jakes the place of Al RI-5551 any day, starting at rioon naa is piovey ay an tomorrow, ask for Clothe-A-Child, Cleveland. and request a donor appointment. |
: : x Olympians Win An apfointment will be made . 5. Lota) too, slid into the J : . winter spotlight with the profesor more children. at Clothe-A- sional Indianapolis Olympians Child headquarters and go to the defeating the Balti e Bullet stores with them to shoo. Donors 8 nor ullels,
Photos, ‘Pages 2, 3, 15,
other stories, Pages 2, 15, 16.
Bucket, symbol of this traditional grid classic. This was labeled an upset. It wasn't the only one on the national football scene. Michigan upended Ohio State, 9-3, and gained a bid to the Tournament of Roses New Years Day. Their
to a 7-7 tie by Stanford. Kentucky Upset ¢ Kentucky was another upset
7-0 dumping end. North-
: 92-81. On the local high: school spend their own money “to buy gd the elothes for the children, par court, Tech beat Howe, 55 THREE: Place your dimes on
Ice is naturally a part of winter, but the Caps didn't like it as they were defeated on the ice at Hershey, 3-2, by the Bears in an
Better Hurry—
° American League hockey game. Only 2 More Days For complete sports details Take advantage of this big fu do the sports section, pages
. Pre-Winter Used Car Clear--ance Sale. New low prices— savings of $100 to $500— lower carrying charges—top quality cars—most all makes, models and years — among them is one that you'll be proud to own-—one that will take you thru the coming Winter, and years to come, - with a minimum of upkeep |
Man Burned: \ Working. On Gas Line of Auto
James Edwards, 23, of 2209
-
jon his hands and body yesterday ‘after his coveralls, soaked With gasoline, caught fire. Mr, Edwards had been working ‘cost. Buy now — beat the Jon a frozen gag line on his car,| price rise due to follow cuts | parked in the rear of 335 N. East! in new car production, St., the home--of his sister, Mrs.
Virginia Marcum. - His clothing Turn Now to Section 4 burst into flames when he atof Today's
tempted to warm himself at a TIMES
stove fire in the kitchen. Indlana’s Used Car Guide
by a blanket snatched tom 2 a bed’ in the next room by his
brother, Eugene Edwards, ;
. not'even shabby coats. the Mile-O-Dimes when it opens Washington St. within al Advance notice of the Some of them can’t even go out Mile-O-Dimes opening will appear
16, 28,;
opponent will be California, held
victim with the Vols of Tennessee
Martha St., ‘was treated for burns’
The fire was quickly smothered :
Dodging snowballs is an old Yankee custom. But these Atlan-
tans may take it up for the flakes have gone South.
be
Chivalry never shivers. Motorman's trolley stalls but it gives | him chance to scort M'Lady down the street.
ring Seon To Drag Its Feet
If you were on a sightseeing bus the spieler probably would
Anchors aweigh! Manhattan cabby barges through an over. sound oe be to the 9 are motor cars, Folks.
flow after rainstorm. Will ress ever sory outboards?
* * *
6-Inch Snow Due; U.S. Storms Kill 87
Reds’ Attack Blizzard Sets Record, Drivers Told Slugs at Allies Cripples All Transit Tq Stay Home
i Offord Vengeful Winds Found Unpredictable, UN ensive ~ Thousands of Workers Are Idled Power Crippled Grinds Forward Through County
UTHERFORD M. POAT BY United Press By RUTHERFO M. POATS 2 : ¥. RUTHE! Stat * Correspondent Winds of hurricane force, deep snow and bitter cold AIRPORT 4:30 p. m. 14 10:30 p. m. 20
Poi Sinday. Noy: 26 — lashed the Eastern states today in what the Washington |Allied troops ran into strong en- yy, “ 3 5:30 p. m. 12 emy counterattacks today as they VW” eather Bureau called “the most severe storm of its kind nr - 13 hid p. m. 2) moved ahead slowly in Gen. on record.” 7:30 p. m. 16 iis 2s sh : 8:30 p. m. 17
World Report, 9:30 p. m. 18
| 1 |
Page 2: THe weather bureau said the storm was worse and more Zp m
Help in any of the three ways
.-or in all three ways. Shivering # Inside The
Times
a = i TAY ny
Section One
Psychologists quiz five boys who blasted house with dynamite... Suburbs are forging ring of ‘‘roadblocks” around Indianapolis... Governor pleased by Indiana’s progress during last two years...
Page the extreme east sections as the 4 United Nations offensive went Sinto its third day, He described high and threatened to go higher. . 13 the counterattacks as strong and
Section Two
Don Gutteridge named new manager of the Indians......oeass. Scores of nation’s football games, complete sports coverage. ..
15-18
Eddie Ash, Page 16; Washington Calling and Our Fair City, Page 25; Potomac Platter, Page 30.
: Section Three
Katy Atkins’ column . . amusements ; , Pages 42-43.
. news of interest to women, Pages 31-41; . Henry Butler . , .
Erskine Johnson,
- Section Four
The Week in Business by Harold Hartley
by Larry Stillerman, Page 48-58,
: . real estate news 45; classified advertising, Pages
Other Features on Inside
About People ........ sai B Amusements ...... sends 43 Eddie Ash .... ivi vans: 10 Henry Butler ...vcsceeess 42 Crossword. ...oan.uee wees. §T
Editorials ,...... +» Erskine Johnson - Frederick C. Othman
Radio and Television .... 26 ‘Real Estate ..... sas 45-47 Edt Sov OI] .- aii 21 Sermon of the Week. eave 28 BPOTLE icc rianssnviv 15-18 Fred Sparks ......::¢.:» 21 Earl Wilson .......c.i.. 21 Women's vesssissensnisl-41
Grand Jury Will Take Up Julietta Charges Tomorrow
Probe Follows Second Expose by Times
Into Filth, Poor Food, Mismanagement
By BOB BOURNE The Marion County Grand Jury will begin hearing the Julietta
case tomorrow.
The five men and a woman of the panel will consider details of charges against conditions and management of the Marion Coun-
ty Home.
The jury already has heard two Witnesses who volunteered their, — forces estimated to total two
testimony earlier this week.
Jight witnesses, former inmates insanitary ‘conditions, “the “phan-
and employees, have been called tom meat which records show is
to appear tomorrow. expected to give
filth, poor food, and mismanage-'
ment.
The panel will investigate the and insane together. diet of poor food, dished up under
The $1000 Is FREE
@® It doesn’t cost you'a cent to get your share of the $1000 in prizes in The Times MATCH THE » TWINS Contest. Just clip the twins photos from your Sunday Times each
Sunday, then match them °
and send them in. ® You can win as much as $500 , . . and have -loads of fun doing it. The fifth set of the twins is on Page 20.
They are Purchased but little of which finds testimony of its way to the inmates’ tables.
They also will probe an increase n deaths and housing of sane
Prosecutor jeorge S. Dailey yesterday pledged ‘full treatnient for evidence .presented. “Our grand jury is. intensely interested in the Julietta case, and if it can do anything about cor-
recting the situation, it will be done. i Second Inquiry “They. have already heard a
couple of witnesses who came in voluntarily. I ‘don’t know what kind of testmony they had to giye, but the records will show. | “We want to get to the bottom (of the thing and find the basic \ [cause of conditions.” This is the second time in two land one-half years the grand jury {has been called upon to investi|gate the county home. | The. fifst,
>
. Prizes “ee Honors _ For Your Favorite Teen Ager ‘Miss Teen Ager of 1950’ Ld Coupon On Page II _
L144 BE followed articles in
oldsters for a time, but according 30th St. George Welch is in fair storm, Michigan re nil d b residents, “the place soon got, condition in General Hospital. ga ported 10,/Red Cross mobilized disaster re- batteries, 4 man : Yother
ousy again.” lot sain. ry
15
{northwest
in March, 1948, suc- terday while unloading coal from: [ceeded in bettering the lot of the a truck into a wheelbarrow on W. deaths resulting from the| Tennessee each one.
Thvestigations Walter Starks 1022 N. West St. New York State six. Indiana five, ANIC seaboard. Relief operations One local ie Times Mr, Welch, h, Who is », ives at 758 West Virginia and Maina ‘each "in Spon. 24th St.
| Douglas “MacArthur's offensive to Widespread than the blizzard of 1913 which swept Sreugh
(win the Korean war without de- the same general area: Indianapolis was due for a J. The present storm,
A~First-Corps-spokesnram-satd + r bureau. said, was cen: smothering..six inches of the. Communist assalilts were tered over Lake Erie late Tr and was “expected to snow by noon today. launched against the center and diminish in intensity during the next 24 to 36 hours.” A late forecast predicted
At least 87 were counted dead. Property damage was intermittent ‘snow through
(this morning, accompanied by The storm had these effects: winds of blizzard proportions. INDUSTRY—More than 500,000 workers we Gists leaching 50 miles 38 ! re. idl At one point the Communists ot pittshureh. whe 1 died ROUr were Packing the smow intg Bie I ero umists g ere. mills-are-jammed with--war orders-ldrifts- as high as four feet by 95th Divisions and drove to the Plants in the Cuyahoga valley in Ohio were forced to halt|— -
well co-ordinated. Drive to River .
{Chongchon River, where they en- : : Weather Map, Page 2. {gaged elements of the 2nd Divi- VANCOUVER, B. C., Nov. 25 (UP)—The community of |—— — 'sion near Kujandong. Mayo was the coldest spot in the Yukon te ’rritory today, the midnight, w h en the ‘snowfall
The spokesman said the main W¢ atherman reporting a low of 36 below zero. ‘measured three attacks appeared to be’ concentrated along a 25-mile area in the operations, furloughing at least central sector of the front. A 25th Division tank column
advancing toward Unsan, 15;
inches, : se The weatherman said there was 200,000 workers. In other a possibility of freezing rain here 85-mile eastern states government and- private businesses closed this afternoon or evening.
and sent their employees home. Highways north and south of % 5 cn . - Indianapglis were closed last : ¢ TRANSPORTATION —Railroad service was crippled night as wind - whipped snow miles above the Chongchon. ran throughout the storm area, airports were shut down, and blanketed Indiana and piled drifts into strong defensive - positions . . ’ as high as four feet four miles south of that fown as busses were as much as 14 hours behind schedule. State police warned motorists
the enemy launched a midnight Staten Island was isolated briefly as ferry service from to stay at home until roads can ‘eounterattack. Tn GIs Pull Back * New York to it and other points was suspended. Three be cleared. a Cr /S 0 0 The American column was busseg and several automobiles were blown from hig ghways hy Tro tie to. work u2 fares lo pull back several thou- in the Pocono Mountains. wind subsided. Snowplows in the sand yards”' and establish new > avan : positions around ° Sanggu, the COMMUNICATIONS—100-mile- per-hour winds blew Rerdcton awe any Denes Funk spokesman said. : » bo 2. : 01 ghts 07,00( 7 , ile Irma ce oi Stil another. enemy force hit! it lights in 407,000 New York homes, and telephone lines after highways began drifting 2nd Division ® positions near Sin- Were down through” ‘most of the storm area. badly and county roads became hung five miles east of Kujang- Ohio Bell Telephone €0., took only emergency calls over impassable. 4 ; ] y. calls over 1 8 Hishwave 2 dong. One American company 1 A i . A U. 8. Highways 20 and 8 were was ‘overrun and a second sur. itS long distance wires; and r adio stations had to broadcast ‘reported closed “in a number of
rounded along thé 'Paengmyong the order mobilizing the state's N: ational Guard. plates and U. 8S. 30, still open River. ° = . =. .rlast pight, was expected to drift Enemy forces earlier had push- FOOD PRODUCTION—About 80< million boxes of over by. morning. !
ed sizeable units well into the oranges, Allied rear and were threatening and v with a strong tank counterattack.
grapefruit and tangerines hanging on Florida trees, ley and Slick Here
egetables in the Everglade region were threatened by 'fivers appeared to be heeding “the vno-travel
In one sector American artillery the. 24-degree temperature predicted tonight. Fruit wo wera broadcast SS state was forced to withdraw but the ducers fired smudge pots all night.. police said. No casualties from unit managed to save all equip- n : highway accidents ment but one anti-aircraft gun. A city-by-city picture of principal metropolitan centers "'&"%al s had been re-
ported up to midnight. Practically all roads in the northern part of the state were ther blocked or “icy and slick.” Wi nds also ited drifts on northe
Probe Enemy in the storm area showed: 3 In the first corps area to the
west the First South Korean Di- " PITTSBURGH—Snow 221% inches deep stifled steel vision ran into stubborn enemy mils, either closing them or cutting production to a dribble; regimerits, They were ‘entrenched Iransportation was snarléd by the snow-clogged streets in positions about three miles and roads, and hotels jammed with storm-stranded guests, southeast of Taechon. teid Newspapers suspended publication, and some restaurants Hundred of Cars
United Nations artillery down a pre-dawn barrage as the Sent their patrons away hungry because food supplies were
offensive rolled northward toward meager or nonexistent. 2 Stalled in ‘County
the Manchurian frontier. Armored : United Natiofis spearheads probed NEW YORK—100-Mile-per-hour winds rocked the Em- ' 1t night for the
strong enemy defénses that ham- pire State building, the world's tallest building, 114 inclies horseless carriage. Be en Sajutany. off center. More than 100 calls were sent out for am- Hundreds of cars balked at the Communists were reported mov- bulances to aid storm victims, telephone and light services “POW #nd cold last night and ing many tanks Southwata to- were blown out in some parts of the city. arly today in Manon Count%s ward the highway city of Chongju : : Jeaving motorists to shiver un which was recaptured by a U. 8. CLEVELAND—Citizens waited for the Ohio National tow trucks came to their rescue: 24th Division task force. Guard to dig them out from the snow and ice which police 4 i nue soanties, a Air observers warned the unit ..;3 « ” SA reds maid Force Btevens'-that al52id compistely paralyzed” the city. drifts as county roads and some “large number” of Red tanks were CINCINNATI—Only a trace of snow reported, but a ajiiain Jighways became inpaan e. 1 sighed 12 ijes an ores ght serious fuel gas shortage was threatened by the second day where snow drifted up to car fhireatening 8%" of near zero temperatures. tops in Some. places; fo MARY : {vehicles were stuck that officials —— YOUNGSTOWN, 0.—Twenty-three inches of - snow ost count. x, Man . Struck ir Car
‘buried streets, and police reported no motor traffic of any A check of Ind
was a bad
In Fair Condition kind operated: ; Faged carly today showed that d Struck by an automobile yes-| pennsylvania reported 22] and Tilinols, Connecticut and by tow trucks last night and
morning. Most of them At Washington the American from frozen ‘radiators or
New Jersey 12, Ohio. eight lief crews to hélp along the At- unable to rock out of
Driving the automobile was’
garage for victims in Connecticut, New Pushed or Pulled. 3 a Fieorgta two, (Continued on. Page
four; Delaware four,
[ime S 2 ; | Su nday] |
1am ..2 ”
§
Continued on ‘Page 2-—Col. 1) ~ ~ n ,
