Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1951 — Page 1
¥
Ra re
RF
+ eA - Sie dk a APR
oy
he
ol he ge
=
A clever lawyer could | grass when there is five inches
else. Can a porion be
: be. nnd for w a more of snow underfoot?
Rail Strike Chokes U. S. Arms Plants
Mail Embargo Being Considered
By United Press The switchmen’s wildcat strike began to strangle war “production t Auto industry spokesmen at Detroit warned that both defense and civilian production will be) dlashed “very shortly” unless the “sick” strike ends quickly. Hundreds of carloads of ‘materials for. auto plants were tied up just as the automakers began to gear up tp produce tanks and other weapons.
| “If the strike continues as it| al
has for the past two days)” spokesman said, “we'll run out of parts.” Three plants already had been|
affected seriously. At St. Louis,
Fisher Body and Chevrolet sent, home 3000 workers: -Ford Motor| Co. laid off 2700 at Chicago. Auto. companies carry small stockpiles, depending on day-to-day shipments from steel
mills and supplier plants to keep,
assembly lines running. Short of Stocks Already those stocks were de-|
pleted by shortages of steel, cop-|
fet, aluminum and other materi-
pout 5000 switchmen — menm-| bers of the Brotherhood of Rail-| road Trainmen—were involved in| the wildcat walkout against 44) railroads in 28 cities. > Scores of industrial plants began shutting down, throwing at
least 50,000 persons out of em-|
ployment. The Post Office Department was
{Gntinued on Page 8 —COol. ul
Stop Just Wishing—For Your Own Home
only
UN Indicts Red China As Aggressor, 44 to 7
Votes After Limitation on Debate; U. S. Scores After 7-Week Fight
{study the next steps to be taken | {against the Peiping regime.
THREE: Creates a three-man commission of good offices to|
| . LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Feb. 1 (UP)—The United Nations GenIt decided, 32 to 5, against, UN Gains 3 Miles The resolution: -A typhus epidemic has hit the a—— lective measures — sanctions — {hand fighting below Seoul today U. 8. only when the assurance Korean front. day, reflecting an earlier ‘state- | “| Reds. At last reports, the assault
{eral Assembly today indicted Communist China as an aggressor, The vote was 44 to 7 with 9 abstentions. The Assembly moved with exceptional speed to adopt the reso{holding a full-scale debate on the] {measure, with members being! {permitted only to explain their] ONE: Finds Communist China| Gls and French Battle guilty of having “engaged in ag-| | 6000 Encircling Reds S7:otion in Korea” Chinese Communist troops in | Korea and “materially reduced their fighting capabilities,” an [pursue further pedce negotiations, | By EARNEST HOBERECHT committee will defer its report to United Press Staff Correspondent the assembly if the good offices, TOKYO, Feb. 1—United Ng- 8TOUP reports progress. | impose amid first signs that enemy ‘re- was given that sanctions would sistance is weakening. {be withheld if there appeared a | Bighth Army forces swept chance for peace. _ ment by Prime Minister Clement Farther east, a Franco-Ameri IR. Attles: in Lobdon that the ican regimental combat team iy...4 Nations should not adopt battled desperately at close quar-| ol 00D {was “under control.” | Six C-119 flying boxcars dropped gars {42 tons of ammunition and ra-
{ lution which the United States had pressed for seven weeks through | {votes in advance. Only 11 coun-! J TWO: Establishes a 14-nation BULLETIN | Army spokesman disclosed teo- |If the opportunity arises. Britain, reluctant. to I | h tions foroes plunged ahead up 10 sanctions against Communist across. 47 hills and through 46 British Delegate Sir Gladwyn ters to smash an encircling at- sanctions until it is apparent that |tions to the embattled combat! 4 |team in the Sinchon-Chipyong] Ike's’ S Re ort {area 10 to 12 miles north of Yom
SPEEDWAY SPECIAL
a hard-fought debate in the political committee. rtries spoke. WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 (UP) day. - | FOUR: Provides that the col-| |three miles in bloody hand-to" China, joined - forces with the, valleys along the broad western Jebb emphasized this position to-| tack by 6000 Chinese and Korean: Peace efforts have Talled, on Korea's central front.
ROO
| Reds in Retreat | Declares U. S. Can't
What 1 is it? The owner of any late mode Buick will be able to tell with one look if he parked |
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice
all In Five
Indianapolis. Indiana. Issued Dally.
ht To
Tmo Photos by Lloyd B. Walton
outside overnight, the hood and rill of his car looked the same.
Sow and streetlights bler.d with a sparkle in this scene south on S. Illinois St. from m_ Washington St. last night.
Inside The Times
Harold H. Hartley
|Collective Measures Committee to ‘Today in Business’ reported in a readable style by Page 16
\U. 8. policy ordering Chinese Nationalists to stop attacks has set up Red invasion of an island
near Formosa
.
Spy . Lary Crosby says
+ row he'd be broke in six months’ article about the fabulous ‘Mr. Music’
; The Market Basket ..... ‘If Bing stopped working tomo?
out 13. ating tn tchen-laboratory dn the The room was littered with trash, and‘ investigators counted 35 liquor bottles; some empty and some partially filed, they said. “1 suppose you're going to say I gave the kids liquor,” Dr. Simons said when he looked up at Juvenile Aid Division officers. He made the statement before they had time to read the charge to him of contributing to delinquency of minors. Two Admit Burglaries It. Forrest Higgs and Patrolman Irven Schwomeyer, both of
{Juvenjle Aid Division, said the raid resulted from statements of | two ‘teen-aged burglars.
First arrested as habitual truants, the two 15-year-old boys | {said Dr. 8imons’ office was their! [hangout where they drank whisky | land beer which he supplied them. ! They later admitted the burglary of ‘a nearby barber shop! which they said followed one bf their drinking parties in the dentist's ‘office. Three other teen-age!
boys gave substantiating state-| . ments and also said the dentist
either sold or gave them liquor. | Téll of Buying Drugs
: rear-of | They reported os at 1512 E. on She ren TOAr-Of contra) and southern
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Fol
low Years
12° Above
More than 6 inches of sno of 5.6 inches which fell in ‘inches fell. The Weather Bureau proms ised that fall would stop to-!
day and said the mercury would drop to 5 below zero tonight. The high tomorrow will 12 degrees. the bureau said. A low of 9 was recorded last.
most of today. Thousands of workers were un-| able to report to their johs, fac-| tories and department stores sal In city schools many students ale teachers were unable to get to their classrooms. Schools officials said that they were unable to supply. substitutes
land many classes had to be
doubled up. 1000 Cars Stalled It was estimated more than! 11000 autos were. stalled around "Indianapolis, The Hoosier Motor |Club worked around the ‘clock last night.
“We simply have been swamped, one
with requests for service
night and hovered around 10
a?
| p- m. while the the shivers enn ry ly
Predicted
For Tomorrow, White ‘Blanket 6 Inches Deep
Thousands Unable to Report fo Jobs, Crews Work All Night Clearing Streets
Indianapolis was faced with the task, of digging from under the worst snowfall in five years today and have to do it in sub-zero weather. w had fallen, topping 6 mark 1948. In December; 1045, 69
par ia a aoumued. : Coffin. golf course wt open for ta 10 p.m. daily while the sow
Lake Sullivan will be open’ for skating from € to 10 p. ma. | dally while the ice lasts.
Recreation centers in be
open for w
Ba m.. 10 Ta m.. 10 8a m.: 10 9a Mie 9
11 oa mn 12. (Noon) 9 dp mes hat
4 Humidity at 11:30 a. m.
mained and motorists not to travel. Py All forms of public t ; (tion were Sperating, but to four Fond c Planes were able :
highway information,” Miss Mary coq M:
Walters, travel,
ion.
TLR
Millions Suffer; No Relief Near
By United Press A great winter storm bat: {tered the nation relentlessly today. | - Swirling snow and sleet laid ‘a damaging, dangerous blanket of ice and slush from Texas to - rpNew England. Intense cold brought suffering to millions. The toll of lives and property mounted hourly. | The wintry onslaught had taken lat least 215 lives since Saturday.
: Page 20 Several of the youths also told More than half died in accidents] Park School plans spring garden tour ,. . Cdunter-
CEE
. . the third
Congress is considering compulsory rainy day savings, reports’ Peter Edson , , . a Talburt car-
toon . . . editorials
. . Page 30
Caps lose but keep their second place position. “ale Frank Anderson describes the Olymps’ victory over Rochester , , , Eddie Ash . . . Jimmie Page 32, 33 cuspidor also was covered with
Angelopolous .......
Plan bill to force state-supported universities to
TV grid games
Other Features on Inside
About People .. ares 29 Amusements 6 Jimmie Angelopolous .... 33 Eddie Ash Births, Deaths, Events... ° Bridge Bowling .iieeeciaces Comics .cvicanoveenes Editorials _ Baron H. Hartley Canad
aden
i
. . Page 21- 23 tioning
ynarcotic prescriptions which they|
of being sent to purchase nar-
cotics. JAD officials were ques-
the dentist on several
{said were
t “proper. »” { To reach
rear kitchen, in-
Page 5 vestigators passed through long-
[nites dental offices littered with trash, rusty tools, old rubber tires, kerosene lamps, girls’ clothing, golf clubs and dust-encrusted {equipment. ” | In one office, the one currently {used by Dr. Simons, five teeth
on ice-glazed highways. Sixty-one perished in fires. Others were killed in plane crashes or sleighing mishaps, or succumbed to ex-| posure or heart attacks induced by overexertion in the extreme cold, U. 8. weather forecasters at Chicago said they were “amazed| at the severity and extent” of the! storm. No Relief Near
Forecaster John Porter said no|
All major highways have been scrapéd and are open, but ice re-!,
Death Reach 215:
- grit.
manager. ff W\w contitions
Ree Stn state with 10 inches at Blooming-
were running low in most of the central part of the state, . Indianapolis Railways, Inc., was hampered by drifting of rs trolley bus engine compartments. Eight busses were halted this morning for this reason and kept repair crews busy. Few accidents were réported, police said, as most people stayed home. Most mishaps that. fas cur were minor and were not | ported. One motorist said while driving north on Ind. 67 he saw 11 smashups inv two cars each between 38th ‘and |Fortville. Six other cars were oft the road. County Schools Closed All Marion County schools were closed today and five town« {ships reported their schools would be closed tomorrow. They are Pike, Wayne, Decatur, Perry and (Lawrence. Robert F. Gladden, {county schools superintendent, advised parénts to call their own school principal if they were in doubt. He explained that condi{tions vary in each township de[pending on the .ability of buses
|clotted with blood lay among the relief could be expected today.'ts run,
tools.
blood. Traced Name in Dirt
..Page 33) 1p; Denzil Barnhill, representa-
. Erskine Johnson . 8 Gaynor Maddox Frederick C. Othman..... 30 Radio and Television .... 31° Eleanor Roosevelt ....... 21. Robert Ruark .. sere 2D BEd Bovoll «covicesensss 29 Sports «+32,.33 Earl Wilson. ..... 5000. 29 Women's
tive of the Indianapolis Dental Society whan accompanied the raiding party, said he understood the teeth were extracted last Monday and that the office had not been cleaned. since. In an adjacent -office, which Dr. - Barnhill said “probably | hasn't been used for years,’ tracted teeth lay among rusted
(Continued on Page 8—Col. 8)
ex-|
inorth central states tomorrow, he {said, but “will continue well be{low normal.”
The mercury plummeted to 50 degrees below zero at West Yellowstone, Mont, It hit 42 below at Bemidji, Minn., 39 below at Butte, Mont, ,and Grantshurg, Wis., 38 below at Laramie, Wyo, 34 below at Ft, Collins, Colo. 26 MIAMI, Fla., Feb, 1 (UP)— The Miami weather bureau issued a special warning today that a cold wave was expected to hit north and central Florida
The unwashed fountain: Temperatures will moderate in the| Two city schools were forced to
close because™of furnace breakdowns. They were School 18, at 1402. W. Market St, and School 28 at 93} Fletcher Ave. A mocksir raid drill which was to be conducted in-city schools today was also a victim of the snows, -Civillan defense officials said they would set a new date later. ! More than 400 students- from {Washington Township who at{tend Broad Ripple High School in the city missed classes when
10 a ma. 8s
their supplies of chemicals and Stockpiles of salt and sand
busses did not run. The school :
|itself was open for city students.
é
| Chinese Reds on the western a a moors. at |tront below Seoul fought as stub-| Carry the World ens water Bir. lpoenly as ever against Allied) By ANDREY TULLY spearheads, but American pilois| and CHARLES LUCEY
Registration of upperclassmen dat Butler University was delayed.
Convict Death-Car is ie Students unable to report today and 25 Will be permitted to sign up to-
Driver of Drunkenness ~~ on. A traffic accident which re- pelow at Denver and - Colorado MOrTowW, university officials said. sulted in death brought a springs, Colo. Hotels last night were reported. rdrunken driving conviction today! "At usually balmy Laredo, Tex, Sold out as many people remained {against Francis Renner, 34, of in the Rio Grande Valley, the downtown all night rather than
tonight with temperatures dropping to as low as 18.
3 Attr. home 1t.-ins, lath wil base.: suto. About % acre. HERMAN GREENWOOD. SPEEDWAY han Realtor Sate nlhst Whee th *BE-011
KILLER GETS DEATH Plane Carrying . 17 | ouisviLLE, Ky, Jan. Feb. 1 (UP)-—James '‘Shorty” Robinson, {reported that “large numbers” nf| Serlpps-Howard Staff Writers Reported Missing 32, of Irwin, Pa. was sentenced {Red troops below Seoul have be-| WASHINGTON, Feb. 1—Amer- REYKJAVIK, Iceland, Feb, 1 to death in the electric chair here gun rifting cro (he HAT cas role in this “dacade of Ge (UP)-A twin-engine DC-3 car. ot TIER Lr the sex saving lentrenched rear guards. "| elston, Gen. Dwight D. Eisén- (ying 17 passengers was reported| {last July 1. {1519 Central Ave. |mereury slipped to 22. The ice- fight. their way in the morning. Seven Chinese Reds surrendered hower fold an attentive Con- ‘missing today.. The plane last — ; | Renner was fined $100 and clad valley had suffered in be./Travelers also put up for the to Puerto Rican soldiers below|gress today “is to put munitions 28 heard from yesterday after-| N L ik |costs, lost his driver's Jicense for|low-freezing temperatures for night. Seoul under a white flag of trucelsn the hands of the people on our O00 When it ran into a blizzard 0 LiKe lone year, and received a YEAr'S!more than 60 hours. and 8 to 18 The pattern of the snowfall wis today—the first to surrender in|gide while approaching Reykjavik. The | LUTON, England, Feb. 1 |probation with orders not to drink | degree temperatures were fore- utform all over the state. WE a group since U. 8. Marines t00k| “There is not a moment to Plane Was on Ioute here from (UP)—A store which has [during that period. Judge Joseph cast for tonight, (Wayne, South Bend, Evansville large numbers of prisoners in waste” he said: estmannacyjar Island . off 1ce- been unable to sell 30 cans M. Howard imposed sentence in| The sub-zero blast hit Denver and Terre Haute ali reported a ‘northeast Korea in November. The Western he and’s south coast. of spaghetti and meat Municipal Court 3. so suddenly that residents were|depth of 5 inches. | ‘Turkish troops scored the day's said, “intend to build for our- balls, despite meat ration- On Jan. 13, Renner’s car struck caught unprepared, Garages and! Five persons suffered minor ihe {biggest gains on the western|gelyes a secure wall of peace and ing, put them on the side- : John Morris, 72, 1415 Park Ave, oj] stations were flooded with au-| {juries in falls. {front Digging entrenched Chinese gecurity,” walk today with the invi- and his wife, Retta, 39. Mr. Mor- tomobile owners reporting cracked| Treated and released at Gene out of foxholes with’ flashing bay- But he told Congress .that| a tation: “Free. Please help fris ‘died four days later in Gen-| motor blocks. Stocks of anti- eral a} Hospital were: they hacked their way successful defense plan could not WITHOUT HIS TOUPEE? yourself.” {eral Hospital of. a heart attack|¢reeze were exhausted. | lar Henderson, a. of through muddy, hilly country to! pe achieved without the co-opera- Hours later, only | super-induced by the accident, Ope motorist parked his ear my. Michigan 8t.; Ora W. TURN TO PAGE 5 | cans had been taken,
doctors: said. He had suffered 23d St; Cp | (Comtnyed on Page 3—Col. 3) (Continued oPage 3==Col. 1) pe pais voli un ere (Continued on Page aren Camp Col. 1 v y
® Just’ wishing won't find that special home you want for your. family! But . . . careful DAILY | reading of The Times Classified Real Estate Columns WILE~turn your home wishing into home owning. Buy NOW while you still have plenty of offerings from which to choose. Read The Times Real Estate Want Ads where you will find HUN- . DREDS of homes adver- « " fised For Sale EVERY DAY!
-¥
EVER SEE BING CROSBY
mocracies,
two
severe, injuries, Y ; »
GAN i a 0
ha com A 0K i I
