Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1951 — Page 3
12, 1951
{, Vt., Feb. d weather with tradiiversity of Dean Mary announced vear slacks when the es below
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ey Joins ath
1» an Indianestablishment life today as oined his wife,
as found dead police broke Dry Cleaning on Ave., when leaking. gas. dead in bed in he rear of the pand was unir beside the rly today at ithout having ess, hn McConnell, Rd., also was nd burned. He yn oil stove in as treated and Hospital. 1d police and had met the 'n and accomthe night behad continued es not know jets on the n without be-
ict gave the
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~ $1500 from President Truman. ' days in the Indiana State. Farm SOD, James Hickson, Indianapolis;
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MONDAY, FEB. 12, 1951 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
»
tyland of Sobe da. — Gr : ce - — PAGE" 3, Marriage py Shah Makes Capehart Heads Desk Used by Lincoln— . Lt Mayo Heath [Dream Come True— £3
Old Foe His Father-in-Law
Wedding Expected to Heal Breech With Chief of Powerful Hostile Tribe
TEAJRAN, Iran, Feb. 12 (UP)--The Shah o today to the 18-year-old daughter of his most Ridir Jo alpiciny CAMP ATTERBURY, Feb. 12--wre o¥Taya Isfandiari became Empress of Iran when she whispered|Sen. Homer E. Capehart, In-! + “ball’—"1 do’~to 31-year-old Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi amid diana’s senior representative in a sesting oF Qamiing Qriental Splendor. .. {Washington, headed a delegation| n love his auburn-haired, - today inspecting Camp Atterbury. ‘during: a dance —at- the Iranian| Ta a dark eyed bride rd surrounding areas. wy embassy in Paris two years ago. | . . . The Senator, accompanied by, The wedding healed an ancient Car Social Life Mayor R. W. Stevenson of Cobreach between the ruling house! lumbus, and several other notables of Pahlevi and the bride's father, | —some from Pennsylvania—were Khalil Isfandiari Bakhtari, a slated to have lunch on the post,
leader of the powerful sacar HONOIS Farouk as guests of Maj, Gen. Withers,
A. Burress and other Army ofThe bride's grandfather is rul-
ficials. i Ing chief of the tribe, which con-| Rich trols the land over which pass the | oO and Poor Hap PY Fospeet Military Bases { pipelines of the Anglo-Iranian Oil ver Engagement The visiting party was sched-i Co. The oil company pays the! CAIRO, Egypt, Feb. 12 (UP) ued to inspect a number of mili-|
Iranian government $37 million a tary installations and personnel year in royalties. [Celebrations honoring King Fa-| units as well as study the housing|
. Bitter Enemies ‘rouk’s 81st birthday and engage-!situation in nearby towns. The Shah’s father and the Ba. ment to 17-year-old Commoner While nothing official was avail-
i i i , able, it is known that inadequate khtari tribe were bitter enemies, Narriman Sadek sent Cairo’s so- housing in Columbus and other
but it was expected the wedding cial life to new heights of splenareas near the eamp have posed toa J ou Temove any remain-igor today. a serious defense problem. Inq | The king, clusion of the Columbus Mayor in Thick snow blanketing the min-| 1c King, whose engagement ©" Oy Tol Thue Dolev. arets and palaces of Tehran Was announced officially Saturday... ething may be done” about
turned the capital into a fairyland is expected to marry soon. The housing.
for the SaremonY, RL date has not been announced. | The Senator spoke in Lincoln Twe e gun salutes an- But the anno io City last night and was motoring the uncement of CIY nounced completion of the brief ; ort. 00 brought the cream B® north to Camp Atterbury this wedding ceremony in pink marble Cairo's society pouring into the morning.
Gelistan Palace. : i Surrounding crowds cried, “Mo- luxurious Semiramis Hotel on the|
! » parse = ies ee bee oe, 6, ne Man Facing traditional phrase that carried streets in glee. y
with it the hopes of the populace | Everybody was in a holiday
- ” . for. mile heir 1” the Hirone. mood. Banks and business houses! V ction Dies frog Pe} as divorced In 1948 closed. Restaurants were jammed | om Erincess Fawzieh, eldest sis- with crowds joyfully toasting the| ter of King Farouk of Egypt, for health of the monarch. | a eotlen Jai) Waa her Young men who attended school 1,4 kitchen range to get water. pcg Bmp Sori with the bride-to-be, daughter of The water remained off for more|
> a middle-class civil servant, pa- 9 -| 8 ; : : We Shahinaz. ; : than 24 hours until the Indianap R od R U All of L The bride wore a Christian Dior Faded Sroush Me stress fii het olis Water Co. learned that It was e S tp Pp ie | Ines, gown of silver lame, brilliant with : EE gma a F UNB I f 38th
: romantic Ars JS. 6000 diamonds and 1.5 million! antic Arsh Songs on.
Atterbury Tour - §
Columbus Housing ‘Believed Discussed |
Times State Service
as
K. P. Williams, Indiana University
rofessor sits in the Oakleaf Lincoln Library at the desk used by Abraham Lincoln as a lawyer. Looking on is Cecil K. Byrd, Lincoln scolar and assistant librarian at |
(Continued From Page One) | the yniversity, The Oakieaf library houses cne of the country's five
great collections ‘of material on the Great Emancipator
. Observers said Cairo’s nightlife; My. Allison said he had forgotten| 2 i feathers arranged in hoops. [LVF before had blazed so bril-ito sign a contract for the Water) Over the dress she wore a short liantly. : [last December when he purchased] (Continued From Page One) cape of silver lame and for the Most of Cairo’s 2 million per-ithe properties. _ least coast and 18 miles northwest Reds had thrown South Korean ride from her home to the palace 00° converged on the center of| Services for Mr. Lovell will beof Seoul in the west against neg. [oree# | ath into Hoengsong and a magnificient cape of whi t o thE city to admire the brilliant Wednesday at 2 p. m. at Speaks|ligible opposition. nves the city from the orth, mink (lluminations. Traffic was at a & Finn Funeral Home” Burial trat 1 A net veil over her luxu riant Standstill. Every public building will be at Floral Hill. {South Korean forces captured | FT& ors slipped through the rehair was held in place by a tiara |V2S lighted and many displayed | Born in Pittsboro {Yangyang, five miles inside Com. 1rea Sing A lies si threw up road of diamonds and her high-heeled [87 ee™ white and yellow neon! He was born in Pittsboro, and munist North Korea. They were! PIOCKS along the road south to silver shoes were encrusted with lights. had lived here for the past 44 supported by the U. 8 cruiser| op ig years. He and his family lived on Manchester and other Allied war-| Air observers reported an “the row” for more than 14 years. ships offshore. They met only enemy column moving toward the
simvlated diamonds. D k D oo a i “Gifts were piled in the palace, Drunken Driver e y els Surviving are his wife, Edna; scattered resistance at first. Hoengeong Wonju highway was On the west coast, American OP)Y & mile and a half away
including a mink coat worth aj . { reported $150,000 and a diamond-| 180 Days, Fined $100 four sons, Robert and James, In-| from Tt tonight at 4 boint fous studded desk set from Premier] Edward M. Savage, 48, of 3175 dianapolis, Cpl. John Lovell, Camp tanks roamed the southwest bank =. = south 2 Hoeh 2 in’ an Josef Stalin of Russia and a Steu- Washington Blvd., was fined $100 Stoneman, Cal, and Sgt. Harry of the Han River without oppo- gsong ben glass bowl valued at about'and costs and sentenced to 180 Lovell, Ft. Benning, Ga.; a foster lsition, but the Reds held firmly to| esider a Seoul on the north bank. ad Soraya’s bridal trousseau filled 'tpday by Judge Alex,M. Clar three daughters, rs... Mildred|Allied attempts: to seize a bridge- x 410 trunks. But she may not be! Municipal ee 2 Clark In arbor, Mrs. Edna Adams and head were beaten off. ands, # front Sispatch wll, pt able to leave town on a honey-| Savage was charged with Mrs. Catherine Myers, all of In-| Thr Chinese and Korean Reds}. S Ware bein oy y Srsan moon because she still is weak ‘drunken driving. The complaint dianapolis; a foster daughter, Miss unleashed their counter-offensive p OFS g -pressed 10 from the effects of a recent ill- was made by his wife, Hazel 'Mary Hickson, Indianapolis; his'on the central front just before : ness. But if she does it was be- who said Savage had taken her mother, Mrs. Dona Johnson, In-llast midnight. Chinese Reds! lieved ‘that the Shah would take car and driven it while he was dianapolis, and two sisters, Mrs. shifted from Seoul joined the 2d! her to Ramsar, a colorful resort intoxicated. Savage also lost his Martha Carns and Mrs. Emma and 5th North Korean Corps for
of the city. ‘Hoengsong still was in Allied
But a 10th Corps spokesman said tonight that no clear picture of the fighting was available because numerous enemy columns
on the Caspian Sea. 'driving rights for a year. ‘Faylor, also of Indianapolis. ithe assauit. had flanked and infiltrated the Allied positions. ’ a — Some small units were fighting AAA kt ee ————
the Reds to their front and rear and on both flanks,
night.
PRI
the Pusan beachhead perimeter.
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appearance” of the Communist } army. The Reds proved today that they have not abandoned South Korea to the United Nations. Murder Trial : \ : Opens for Youth Charged in Slaying
Of Local Lawyer (Continued From Page One)
{Miss Neal took little part in the preliminaries other than to take frequent notes while studying the prospective jurors. Attorney Harris said he had ad{vised his client he “could not (guarantee anything” when he ac[cepted the court appointment to {defend him. | Five veniremen were excused on prosecution challenges when they | sald they objected to the death
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hands, crossed and recrossed his |legs, and stared at each prospec{tive juror. ! Otherwise he showed no appre- * |ciable emotion one way or an- [“ other. He slumped into the court{room, handcuffed to a deputy isheriff and was directed to a
Indianapolis 4, Indiana {chair at the defense table. His {court-appointed attorney ‘did not Please send me the following fables == af $7.95 each {speak to him. Kelly sat apart > or 2 for $15 {from everyone, as all eyes focused
lon his lanky frame. { The case, one of the sordid in Indiana history, tracted widespread interest.
$1 DOWN DELIVERS—$1.25 PER WEEK Check Style and Quantity Desired
i The trio was arrested after A. | B. [C. | D. | police at Springfield, Mo. notified . (Indiana state police that an Name.....ooe.n Sahn eaves ®hone No....... ses Indiana car, occupied by three
(Give 1st Name of Both Husband and Wife)
men, had been wrecked on a
Address. .... oh ay aan x ia xR Zone No...... ie
(If R. R, or Box No., Give Delivery Instructions) death of a truck driver.
oh | 3 City. oooveniinnnnns sovnnesnenss State....o.oials Arvested in. Missouri Ja bl Where Employed .......... sass HOW LONG. cov inee Kelly, Dooley and Chalfin were 5 00 0 Cash 0 c.0.p, [J Charge te My Account arrested in Missouri and it was! DOWN DELIVERS | wm — — Yo ' {then that the younger men ad- | {mitted to authorities that they SERVING HOOSIERL D 1899 0 : had “killed and robbed an In- . AN SINCE . : dianapolis man and took his car.” ‘ PT n—— ' OPEN MONDAY .Dooley, described = during his R TG H : trial in Noblesville list Novem-
a . ; {ber as “a homosexual with psycoa} 9:30 A. M. to 9 P. M. pathic tendencies dating back to 0%" World War II,” was the last to
Tuesday Thru Saturday \confess to the crime.
: ; > . nip Both Kelly and Chalfin < have Ls ; 9:30. to § insisted they did not know Mr,
By ) y Thayer until the night of the { FREE PARKING »2i.'G: iin HINGTON ST Skies
WEST OF STORE jcrime. Dooley, they said, told
,
EERE
: ‘ {them he “knew a man with money : they could get to take a ride.”
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Before they were driven back, West and east. Communist iniil-
|Wonju.
he said. Communist reinforcements ware reported moving into battle to-
Communist losses — estimated officially at 200,000 since Jan 1-— may have hurt the Reds too much to follow up the opening punch, just as the North Koreans last summer failed to break through
| penalty. These included two moth-|
12d Division, recently was dec-ithe pilot. The operator can either jorated with a Silver Star for|stand, when on the ground, or lie {bravery in action. This was the faced down in flight.
isecond Silver Star awarded to Lt.!are extended outward into fittings
+ |
Escapes Death Finally Flies Like a Bird
War Writer Nearby, Killed in Korea
Lt. Mayo Heath, much-dec-
orated Franklin ‘war hero, nar-
rowly escaped death while on
patrol duty on the Korean war) front today when a war corre-| |spondent beside him was killed.
According to front line dispaches, Lt. Heath ‘was beside
Jean Marie de Premonville, 30, war correspondent for Agence,
France Presse, when he was hit by three Communist machinegun
bullets. Mr. Premonville bled to! are present.
death on the way to a first-aid station. The United Nations war corre-
®% |spondent and Lt, Heath were on a gf ridge northwest of Chipyong, 34
miles east southeast of Seoul. 5th Writer to Die
, Mr. Premonville, a former French resistance fighter in World War II, was the fifth United Nations war correspondent killed in action in Korea. Lt. Heath, a member of the First Ranger Infantry Co. of the
Heath.
Youth Conference Slated Mar. 8
Kenneth R. Miller Named Chairman
A state-wide citizens’ meeting cn the White House Mid-century
It Took 50 Years But Man
“£5
* suf
‘His Homemade Contraption, Powered | By Muscle, Carries Him 150 Yards
By BOB BYERS, United Press Staff Correspondent LA JUNTA, Colo, Feb, 12—Rolo 8. Ewers dreamed, when he was - {a boy some 50 years ago, of flying like a bird. | He tried what most boys have tried—jumping from the barn Of course that didn’t work. ! ¥ i But he didn’t give up. And this past week-end, at the age of {55, he attained the dream. He flew like a bird, using only his own’ muscle power and a home-made] Red contraption he built for $1000 PHOENIX, Ariz, Feb. 12 (UP) which seems to flap its wings. |~—-Willlam B. Stout, pioneer aero’ He made the flight Saturday nautical engineer and inventor, and sailed 150 yards at an alti-|applauded Rolo Ewers’ courage’ tude of 30 feet. Only 20 persons/today for “being willing to be | He didn't call in/laughed at” in testing his man+ [the public, for fear he would only/made wings. i {land on his face as he had as a| "I'm glad to see sbmeone makboy. ing progress,” sald the 71-year-old | The wing, which gives the fm-|déveloper of America's first coms pression of a giant moth, has a mercial monoplane and of the [30-toot spread, is constructed of|Ford tri-motor transport ship. -- aircraft spruce ribbings covered, He indicated, however, that he with parachute nylon and has a SE he ug hi pot bea {makeshift cockpit in the center. i pry omg : ooud Tells His Secret {help of a towing vehicle. :
| The secret of the flight, Mr. _ Lg ji {Ewers explained, is in the sponge Times Cooking
[rubber bands stretched between {the wing roots directly beneath School Opens (Contigued From Page One)
His arms|¢jons wn home economists. | are here the -school. [11988 the Undetsiag ot he wing Conducting the demonstrations | gliding or gain-|,¢ ¢o0d preparation is Mrs. Marie ing altitude is obtained by the Daugherty, director of the home pilot when he drops his body for-|seryice department of the Nationward onto the rubber bands. The al Live Stock and Meat Board, rubber bounces him back upright. She is being assisted by Miss Bev-
Each bounce adds power to the a forward motion. while the wings{ SY Swinham snd Miss Laurs
provide the gliding power {Overley, of the Board staff.
| Mrs. Daugherty also will be: In flight, it appeared that Mr. assisted on the Murat stage by
Ewers was flapping his wings.\yr., 4 gelaide Fellows, director of That, he said, was not quite thely ms economics for the Phileo: case. |Corp., Miss Lila Sheimo, souths’ The wing itself remainedwestern division home economist almost stationary, as do those of(ot the Philco Corp., and Miss
thay mow,
|
conference on Children and Youth|, conventional airplane, but his pari Schleicher, home service
will be held Mar. 8 in the Broad-
body and the bouncing from thelgjrector of the Radio Equipment
(way Methodist Church, according|rubber bands made his body rise'co of Indianapolis, Philco dis-
Gov. Schricker.
Principal speaker will be Dr.ig
Leonard W. Mayo of New York
City, vice chairman of the con-{behind an automobile with a tow ference and executive director of rope attached to the wing. As the| the New York City Association {for Crippled Children.
Appoints Chairman Gov. Schricker has named Ken-
Other members are Mrs, Robert
Council for Children. and Youth;
Mrs. ‘Joseph Walker, Ti A. Kleck-| wh Franzes|000 a year saw-filing-machine Rice, South American spice cake, ) Norwegian .
ner, R. C. Miss
Morgan, Mrs.
Olson,
John M. Moore, manufactiring company plans to Yorkshire pudding,
| Within a few hours, the massed to an announcement today by| 2nd fall above and below theitrputors,
wing level. Every step in the preparation of | The first—and thus far only— | ew ys Ey er : pt ba demonight was made with Mr. Ewersigi ated at the school. standing, saddled in his Wing, , .om;iete kitchen has been set up on the Murat stage and the car started slowly, Mr. Ewers audience watches the cooking. ran along for a short distance. The demonstration are So Suddenly, his feet left the streamlined that those atlending ground and he was being towed—|/don’t even have to take notes.
neth R. Miller, executive director!as if in a regular glider—by the/Recipe books showing how to preof the Indiana Society for Cripoled|car. Then he began the bouncing|pare all the dishes are given free Children, as general chairman of motion, turned loose of the rope'at each session.
: ; the committee. attempt to complete encirclement)
and was in free flight. : | Different menus are offered at The wing is guided by finger- each ‘session. Recipes from: other
F. Shank, president of the Indiana|tip controls reaching to'elevatorsjlands will. be shown tomorrow.
on “each end of the ‘machine, . [Among the dishes to be prepared Mr. Ewers. who yomp-#-$100,- are Hungarian lamb stew, Italian
Robert Yoho, Delmer Wilson, Miss|license the business to someone hash, Chinese pepper steak, SwedCharlotte Bray, Ray E. Smith|else and devote full time to his ish cookies and a frozen fruit
and Paul M. Rose.
| |
{
{
|
most | at-
| | |
1
bridge. The car was Mr. Thayer's land the crash resulted in the!
|
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