Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 April 1951 — Page 1
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~The Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: Fair and cool tonight. Tomorrow cloudy and warmer, showers by evening. Low tonight 40. High tomorrow 68.
[scmipps “owarnl] 62d YEAR—NUMBER 39
Tribute to Old Soldier—
FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1951
Anti-Gambling Drive Hits
72 Million in N.Y. Bury
Doug in Ticker Tape Blitz
Big City Opens Up Arms to Bataan Hero
‘Human Chain’ Lines Long Parade Route
Poll here
Doug's speech stirs Hoosiers ' “There Is No Substitute for
OTHER MacARTHER NEWS Page
Taft says Mac may force
policy change ............. 2
Russ succeed in jammin
Doug’s speech ............ . 3 Party stalls on probe of joint Chiefs «.ovvvnsaersennneness 5
Doug sparks new debate, both
parties shape fight ......... §
A general says goodby and
strong men weep .......... 8 shows MacArthur
supporters on the increase. 18
“This Will Not Fade Away”
«..an editorial ...........
Victory” . . . an O'Donnell sketch .cccevecccvnvcncens
14! 14] TE
1"
leave the Waldorf.
looked it.
General
BULLETIN WASHINGTON, Apr. 20 (UP) «~President Truman received
day as he arrived at Griffith Stadium to throw out the first ball in the delayed baseball opener between the New York
| Yankees and Washington Sena- | : | Scene of Molestings | Stepped up police protection ‘and a prompt decision on a per-
NEW RK, Apr. 20— manent cure for the Bates Street YORR, Ap tunnel at the New York Central
tracks was promised by Mayor
tors. , By H. D. QUIGG United Press Staff Correspondent
Five million New Yorkers
Plan Close Police
scattered boos and applause to- |
Watch on Tunnel
Consider Sealing
opened their arms, their Bayt.
windows and their hearts
to Gen. Douglas MacArthur and other city officials and rep|resentatives of the rafiroad. He {heard Mrs. Broadway gave its regards to gates St. outline what neigh
the General in a full-throated geserihed as unsanitary and dan-
today.
The Mayor met with six women representing residents in the area
William Feier,
roar from the Battery to the gergug conditions in the tunnel.
Bronx. East side, west side all around the town windows Were heen the frequent scene of mo-| thrown open to turn a Warm jestings of grade school pupils, April afternoon into a blizzard Mrs, Feiler said. She also said that the deep 8x8-foot tunnel freFrom the time the General quently is used as a race track
of ticker tape and confetti.
rolled away from the Waldorf- by “hot rod” drivers.
Astoria Hotel at 10:05 a. m. (Infor a parade through the city the shout of welcome rattled around the sky-
dianapolis Time)
scrapers. Pupils Hail Doug It ®me from hundreds
Park to hail the General
sidewalks from curbstone
the thoroughfare
the freedom of the city.
“How do you feel this morning, General?” this reporter asked as Gen. MacArthur set out to receive/tion would be increased to the the greetings and honors of the point “they'll think a man is sta{tioned right there,” he said. He sald both walking police and “Wonderful,” he replied, and he prowl cars would be ordered to special attention to the!
city.
Feels Wonderful
barriers outside his hotel. An open car of gun-metal gray tunnel. carried the hero of Bataan along| the 37 miles of the parade. Mayor ing a proposal to install iron Vincent Impellitteri, who told the pillars in the tunnel to stop hot that the crowd that rod cars. greeted him on his arrival from | Washington last night “was just| a sample,” rode beside him. The mayor knew something last | night. The big town knocked off work in the middle of the day| and jammed. every foot of space along the line of parade.
Wore White Orchid
Mrs. MacArthur,
Continued on Page 8—Col.
of!
and then remain for the biggest picnic ever organized in this town. It came from people massed on
There is no sign that give this 61d soldier is fading away. tunnel. Wearing his battered campaign cap and a trench ccat buttoned up to his neck .
'near-da
Proposes Sealing
George Farkas, school health proposed completely sealing the tunnel and! {construction of an overhead walk-| ‘way. Representatives of the railroad thousands of school children who 3nd City Engineer William R.
Hunt indicated the cost of such carried their lunches to Central an overhead might be several
and safety director,
thousand dollars.
The plan was taken under advisement as was a proposal by residents for a com-
to, plete traffic underpass to accombuilding line. It came from work- modate both automobiles
ers high on the steel framework pedestrians. of new buildings, who put down, Mayor Bayt told the neighbortheir tools to cheer. It came from hood delegation that he would the canyon of Lower Broadway— |inspect the tunnel with members of heroes— of the board of works.and the which led to City Hall and pres- city entation to Gen. MacArthur of what steps would be taken for {permanent change.
Bates St.
engineer before
Plans Close Watch
He promised that police protec-|
Other suggestions heard at the conference included a moderniza- | . he saluted tion program. It would include] smartly and waved to the crowd thorough cleaning and installathat broke through the policetion of a new lighting to provide ylight conditions in the
Mr. Hunt said he was consider- jack ‘that may
Conditions at the tunnel were
pointed out by The Times this | week.
Chicago Also Bidding
For Political Conventions | CHICAGO, Apr. 20 (UP)—Chicago political and business leadwearing « ers started an all-out campaign maroon wool dress, a matching today to bring the Republican and felt hat and a black sealskin Democratic national conventions Jacket, rode in the second car to their city next year. with her son, Arthur, and Mrs. ! Impelliteri.
A committee containing mem|bers ‘of both parties was formed She wore a white orchid from and announced it would fight convention bids from Philadelphia 4 and other cities. |
722 bors
and
deciding
%
FOLLOW THE LEADER—This crowd massed on the sidewalk to see Gen. Douglas MacArthur
EDITOR'S NOTES . . . By Walter Leckrone
Doug's Question: Will We
Be Brave...or Be Craven
Speech of Grim Old Warrior Makes A Global Issue as Clear as Crystal
WASHINGTON, Apr. 20—The lines are drawn, now.
Douglas MacArthur made the issue clear as cry
36 drama-packed minutes before the Congress of the United States
yesterday.
The grim old warrior, whose ears have heard in battle the were at the bingo game.
|
lit is wrong to operate a church|—Chinese Communist suicide |bingo, the proceeds of which are {to be used for charity, I see noth-| . . ling else to do but make an ef- forces from breaking into the|
|
Church Bingo
Police Raid Game In School Basement Marion County's anti-gam-
bling drive has invaded
touchy rrr ash Inferno 7
bingo.
Police last night visited the
auditorium of the school at
woe Red Suicide
St. Patrick’s Catholic Church at 950 Prospect St. bingo game.
Police made the raid wear: Troops Stall
ly. They said the complaint came] from a private citizen who originally Frank Fairchild and said she |was told by him to call police. |
reported to Prosecutor
Chief Is Reluctant Chief Rouls said he hoped oth-
er churches would desist from bingo so his officers would not be forced to repeat‘the raid.
He expressed his reluctance to
|strike at church bingo:
“If the complainant thinks that!
“However, complaints on church!
{gambling have a faint odor of, (city politics,” he said.
{wish to become embroiled in the the last high ground above the!
Nor did Prosecutor Fairchild
(previously -inviolate field.
“I don’t know anything about
|it,”” he said. He also refused to
comment on whether this would @ bayonet counter-attack.
istart a general crackdown against church gambling.
Up to Police |still held their entrenchments de-
Mayor Bayt said he was leav-,
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice
PRICE FIVE CENTS |
Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily. : ou
Fear 35 Lives
Lost in Ship
i
Four Saved as Tanker: Collide in Gulf Fog; Cutters Rush to Scene
UN Attack | One Abandoned Vessel Still Burning Fiercely; ’ ] Hold Position Despite. Both Craft Call for Speedy Medical Aid fa
By United Press i 3 10,000-Round Barrage nNpw ORLEANS, Apr, 20 Two Standard Oil tankers By FRANK TREMAINE
hed BANK TREMAINE crashed together in the fog-bound Gulf of Mexico today and TOKYO, Saturday, Apr. 21|it appeared that as many as 32 men lost their lives in an inferno that swept both vessels. : iF Both craft radioed for speedy medical aid. oF Four survivors of the Esso Greensboro, which carried a crew of about 35, were ress cued. A lifeboat from the Esso New York picked “up three survivors and
ox po - . 5 aio ra a
Sia
troops barred United Nations
Ci
Kumhwa valley for the second
: : [Ragd ¢ ’ J straight day Friday. 1 oesn now An enemy battalion dug in on i valley fought American forces «Ball Iv Earnin S bogies | from the water. A | ; a standstill with mortar fire ‘and | X poop deck of th Grnshor. from All the other crewmen of
Treasurer ‘Unable’ ed ( other ship, the Esso
To Give Data to PSC [2ir, Sib the ee lat a A. H. Warne, secretary-treas-other men badly burned. .
Hold Positions At the end of the day the Reds
spite a 10,000-round artillery bar-
ing the church bingo issue up to rage, nine air strikes and shelling|
the police chief.
|
| |
stal in his t5]d him they would it out of the papers.”
whine of an Apache arrow and the swish of a Moro kriss . . . and |
the echo of an atom bomb . .. heard, here, the cheers of a grateful nation. But he was home for more than a hero's welcome. Here,
| {
He pleaded yesterday not for
war—but for a hope of peace.
in the twilight of a |
lifetime in his country's serv- |
The tunnel is poorly lit and has ice, he did battle once again,
Or to Cringe The question he posed was simply whether now in an hour of crisis to defend America as Americans always have—with forthright courage—or to cringe and appease and retreat inevitably into a new isolationism forced upon us from abroad. The answer he gave broke like a ray of light through the ¢loud of gloom and defeatism and fumbling indecision that has hung over this Capitol so tangibly you could almost feel it in the streets. Today the nation, and perhaps its Capitol, seemed to rally behind his banner. For the moment the timorous
architects of futility were silent. To appreciate the report
Douglas MacArthur made to Congress you have to see the backdrop against which he made it. In Broadest Outline
Here in Washington, policies and attitudes, and (in general plans and programs, filter down from the top. Here in Washington men high in government, who know exactly what they are often will tell you frankly, if
For liberty to use the vast
fleets of planes and ships and |
weapons that we have—and our enemy does not have—to hold the line of America’s defense on the coast of Asia—instead of
| the coast of California.
Against surrender to the enemy of everything the armies and the navies under his command had won in the Pacific in four long and bitter years of war. : Agains' appeasement, and and futility. One Tremendous Ovation How many Americans agree
| with him is yet to be seen.
sometimes confidentially. Here, |
in broadest outline, is what Washington foresees in Asia: In Korea 250,000 American soldiers, and a token handful of Allied troops, face a Communist Chinese army of 750,000, backed by reserves of at least 2 million more.
The Chinese are
massing |
those forces for a gigantic at- |
begin at any time. : They will attack from a safe sanctuary, with supply lines and bases our men are forbidden to destroy, with odds of four or five to one on their side. Our “plan” is to try to stop
| that attack—in stalemate, not
in victory—
His reception home has been one tremendous ovation. Yesterday as he spoke to Congress his words were drowned out 20 times in 38 minutes by applause from an audience as hardened and shielded and immune from emotional appeal as any audience in the world. Again and again most of the. people in the crowded House chamber leaped
{make the raid
Police were so un-anxious to]
said
Police said about 250 persons
“They were very orderly and!
last night that of Chi {they failed to file a report on it.
police stretches ‘K try to keep which field officers said Is excel-| lent tank country.
by tanks.
Kumhwa. Beyond it the Kumhwa Valley, |
Yanks Capture Hill
United Nations: forces else-
urer of Indiana Bell Telephone Co., testified before the State PubThe Red stronghold is northeast lic Service Commission today that
the utility had derived from television facilities.
pori, 10 miles north of the he did not know what earnings 38th Parallel and 13 miles southSt. Patrick's pastor, the Rev. east of Fr. Thomas Fields,
its
“Mr. Warne was called to the stand by public counselor Walter five Coast Guard cutters rushed
million rate increase.
(co-operative about stopping the where :along the front pressed| Mr. Jones asked: game,” Sgt. George Martin of the steadily forward. An American
| police vice squad said.
{
{proceeds are used for charitable communists. works, chiefly for improvements (chinese Communists
He ridge northeast of Chipori counbeen tor attacked
to the church and said the bingo parties have operating for about a year and three
Profit to Charity Father Fields explained that
achool.
a half under sponsorship of the
Holy N Society.
Father Fields called it a “small
operation,” with cards going at {three for 10 cents. isolationism, and frustration |
|directive on church bingo was re|ceived
The pastor explained that no
from the archdiocesan
headquarters.
archbishop of Indianapolis, was out of town and his assistants would not comment.”
Home Show Exhibit
The Most Rev. Paul C. Schulte,
Opens Here Today
cheering to their feet — though | always some glum administra- | | tion supporters sat uncomfort-
ably. staring at the floor. When he finished Senators and Representatives . . . and newspapermen in the press gallery . . . were dabbing furtively at moistened eves. . Perhaps they, too, were thinking about 10,000 American boys . . . dead on the battlafield in Korea, in a war in
Home Show Section, Page 27.
today at the State Fairgrounds Manufacturers building.
Town, Country House Center of Attraction
Home Show gates swing open
Turnstiles spin at 4:30 p. m,,
to count off the first-nighter crowd.
All day today workmen polished
which there is no plan to win. and primped up the digplay house.
Long Is Appointed
debris out back exits as crowds Newly elected president of In-
Hawaii Governor WASHINGTON, Apr. 20
(UP |—President Truman has selected |Oren E. Long, secretary of the Hawaiian territorial government, OPening ceremonial.
Exhibitors put finishing touches
n display booths.
Workmen hauled construction
milled at front gates
Opening Ceremonial
The main event will be the It's to Le
to succeed Ingram M. Stainback held on a platform in the mall
as governor of Hawaii. The President will
Monday.
Mr. Stainback recently was ap-
in Town and Country House.
send MT. 1; he concluded with the anxiousLong's nomination to the Senate
American
attack, made under cover of a
ame Society and Altar heavy
fog,
Again, Mr. Warne answered
he
reached American!did not know. He added, how-|
lines and developed into a bay- ever, that it could have been part
fore the Reds were thrown back. or it might be part of Bell Sys-
Another Red attack
broken up by an artillery bar-
the daytime on a busy street. Edwin Hartley, 35, of 345 8.'2260,000 mainland Chinese in a
ers,
was tem'’s interstate cost. In response to a question askjrage which caught 200 Commu- jng how many telephones could]
nists in the open as the fog have been installed at the ifted.
Bold Thief Believes In Cash and Carry
A tobacco firm was short $732 Red Slaughter and 50 cartons of cigdrets today
TAIPEH, Formosa, Apr.
have killed
‘Jones in an attempt to block In- to the scere, it appeared that fe diana Bell's demands for a $8.2/might again close in and ©
on the' Thereupon, Mr. Jones asked if [°F & special, six he knew how much the utility | forces spent for the television cable from times during the day. One Indianapolis to Louisville.
|
cials identified the chief 'the Esso Suez as Walter Brehm, of Lyndhurst, N. J. isaid the ship's master is Edwin C. Geick, of Bayonne,
Identify Chief Mate In New York, Standard
As planes circled overhead and
DE |
\ oy *
Stands by Gutted Ship The Suez, although reported stern’
!blackened from stem to
onet and hand grenade battle be- of the utility’s intrastate expense Por:
evidently by a flash fire, was {standing by the gutted
I
i
A late radio report
the scene said the Suez was not {now burning, although there was
la fire for hours in her bow.
$24,000, cost spent by the telephone com-| pany on a letter to all subscribpleading the utility's case,
Mr. Warne said, “About 114.” | said.
20
because a bold thief operated in| (UP)—The Chinese National Defense Ministry charged today that ¢p
the Chinese Reds
Arlington Ave, drives a truck for ruthless attempt to stamp out all;
Hamilton-Harris Co., tobacco distributors. While he was parked {for half an hour yesterday afterInoon in front of 142 Virginia Ave.,! the thief entered his truck and slipped away with a bag of money, and half a case of cigargts. {
Mr. Hartley said the truck was!
locked. The thief sawed or chiseled the lock off its rear door. {
Of The Times
On the Inside
Page
diana Parents and Teachers Congress, presented with life membership to national group . . . Organizations . . . recipe and menus . . . other features “For Women” .. 9-11
front of the 1951 Midwest poiantly expanded Social Se-
it's
ly awaited opening of the display
house.
Built by Ben Olsen Jr. and de-
{pointed to the Hawaiian Supreme signed by Ewing Miller of Terre |Haute, the 1951 house was (ur
Then, if we can battle to a | draw, to try to negotiate with |
a victorious Communist enemy for peace in Asia. Because he disagreed with that plan and that policy Douglas moved from command of our forces in the Orient. Because he demanded that
MacArthur was re- |
his armies be allowed to fight |
to win—or not to fight at all.
Court.
Mr. Long, born Mar. 4, 1889, in /nished by L. 8. Ayres & Co.
Altoona, Kas.,, was employed by the Hawaiian school system for
ious in ‘equipment and furnishings
Modern, inside and out, ingen-
30 years before being named sec-|from a long list of suppliers, it
retary in 1946.
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
6a. m... 87 10a. m... 51 Tam... 41 11a. m... 58 Sam... #4 12 (Noon) 58 a.m... 48 >
‘They Can’t Call Me THAT. . .'—
Fight'n Capehart 'Out-Points' 2 Democrats
By DAN
KIDNEY
Times Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON, Apr. 20—S8en. Capehart is fighting mad—and
«to prove it he had a fight today.
The GOP senior Indiana Senator came to shoves and pushes with Senators Hubert M. Humphrey (D. Minn.) and Herbert H. Lehman (D. N. Y.) after a heated debate for a radio forum on Gen, Douglas MacArthur and Far Eastern policy. The program had been recorded for later broadcast in a Senate building office
when the scuffle took place.
Sen. Capehart said the words developed after the program ended. . He charged that as they were leaving the studio Sen. Humphrey called him an 8.0.B and didn’t do it with initials,
“That's when I shoved him.
I grabbed him by the coat tails
and shoved him right out of the room,” Sen. Capehart said afterward. : ,
-
ry 5 »
He then charged that 8en. Lehman grabbed him from the rear. “I shoved him back into the room,” the Hoosier said.
up with words.
‘After ‘the fuss the Hoosier went to the Senate press room and granted an unprecedented press conference. Right in the press room he. permitted reporters to question him at length about the
scrap.
“I'm tired of being shoved around,” he said. “From now on
I'm fighting.”
He indicated that he'd keep on fighting with more than words and use his fists if need be in the future. Asked if anybody helped him Sen. Capehart replied: “I didn’t need any help. They eon Aish '* out, but they can’t
Continued on Page 3—Col. 4
: A
Rh
y ©. ok ori?
{will interest the whole family.
radio program
Jack Bailey, Queen for a Day] conductor, will
MC the show. He'll describe the
display house and through it booths after the program.
[5 ;
National
lead a tour and the suppliérs’
Program to Be Broadcast
| After taking an 11-6 trouncing
curity law covers an addi- | tional six and one-half mil-
Short sketches of radio and
TV programs “On the Air” tONIBNL sun cierisincrrninnes last night, the Tribe prepares for the opener of a fourgame series with the Kansas City Blues . .. “500” payoff headed for a new record... other sports news ........40-42
W. P. Atkinson, National As- Other Features: | sociation of Home Builders pres-
ident, will tell how he made Mid(west City, Okla. spring into a
A. Naughton Lane of St. Louis, |
Producers, Inc. presi-|
{dent, will share the brief speak-
ing program. { Sen, Taft also was present and attempted to break the thing | Ride
There will be introductions of|
Indiana statesmen and presentation of a nine-girl Court of Honor representing the Home Show! spénsoring organizations and two] Indianapolis girls named Queen | for a Day at Jack.Bailey’s broad-| cast at the Murat Theater.
la 8
The proram will be transcribed |
nd rebroadcast at the show at! 40 p. m. heralding a full 10-day
schedule for the exhibition to con- | 'tinue throuh Apr, 20.
Amusements ... 37 Eddie Ash .......... wn . 40 Births, Deaths, Events. . 7
COMICS +.veuvsnnseensss S51 [Suffered Sunday, an elderly minBARROTIAIB oui svsisineea 14 ister who was critically injured Bill Eggert ..... tiasee 41 while crossing a street, and a
Clyde Farnsworth ..... Harold H. Hartley.... Erskine Johnson .:..... Gaynor Maddox
14 36 37 10
casa 0)
{opposition to their rule. <
i {
As for the Greensboro she ‘was
reported burning fiercely.
“We understand she has been
|abandoned,” Lt. Cmdr. B. L. Bénton of the Corpus Christi, Tex.
Naval Air Training Command,
ported that the Gre
He said the Esso New York resboro and
Suez were about 18 miles apart st noon (Indianapolis Time). P
The vessels crashed together in e Gulf, about 220 miles south-
{southwest of New Orleans, just
before 5 a. m. At 5:13 a. m. the
Suez radioed an “S08.”
A mo-
{ment later she pleaded for im~-
Cash-In on Your Un-used Items
NOW is the time to convert into CASH, your winter clothes . . . ‘and many other items that you will no longer use.
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Earlier Accident Fatal for Teen-Ager
Police
Other traffic victims included
teen-ager who died from injuries
public school teacher. In all, six persons were hurt in traffic late yesterday, five of them pedestrians.
intensified their traffic campaign today after four more children were run down by cars.
{mediate medical assistance for
injured crewmen.
The Coast Guard’s 8th District
{Headquarters in New Orleans, |directing rescue, never did pick {up a message from the Greens-
{boro, if one was ever sent. -
The collision tore a 20-foot hole
{in the Suez’ bow about 10 feet labove the water. Although she {can carry 9 million gallons of oil, she was in ballast at the time,
|
|
{enroute from Baltimore to Corpus
| Christi.
Probe for Arson In San Quentin Fire
SAN QUENTIN, Cal, Apr. 20
| (UP)—S8an Quentin prison offi cials today studied the possibility or arson in an investigation.of a fire that destroyed the prison’s jute mill, causing damage esti mated at $3 million. 3
a
Frederick C. Othman.. - 14 Policemen in squad cars and on Fred Perkins ......+use 14 motorcycles arrested 26 persons Teen Problems ........ 11 today in three hours starting at Radio and Television... 22 6 a. m. This brought the fourBA SOVOIA ¢vissivseesns 13 day total of moving traffic arrests
BPOrts ...covonvsevivese 40-42 Earl WHSON «eseeeeenes 13 WOMEN'S .ovvesesiveess 9-11 Joe Willlams ...co0000e 42
‘ ’ 8!
\
to 242. Yesterday's arrests—81-— hit the peak of the crackdown. _ Dead was Cove Carroll Abell,
| Continued: on Page $—Col. 4 >i Gene ot
3 Thirteen guards and conviels
Hon people. ....cei:vevnens s ar . pecialy weekly rate. OR, gyffered injuries, most of them Tre old Seidler [EY jude away, | ONLY 56¢ for one day, week minor burns and smoke inhaja“There is no substitute for | AY of Sunday paper. Sun- tion, Two convicts risked ‘their victory” —a cartoon by J. day ads accepted until noon |ljves to drag Guard James Ds Hugh O'Donnell ..... ven 14 Saturday. Powell, 28, to safety after he was
overcome by smoke.
oo
= Four More Children Are Struck by Autos Here
¢
|gorne Esso New ori, avo Has “Do you know whether the tele- done all of the rescue work 3 {tank-infantry task force captured phone subscribers of Indiana are, far, a that a thin, bd 4 a hill one mile north of the east- subsidizing the utility's television {Of bank hall been observed two , | ern tip of the Hwachon reservoir program?” {miles to the northwest and vf after a four-hour fight with 300, Mr, Warne said he did not INE Seward the Ships It da | know. ithe New leans VOR! Bureau
