Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 May 1951 — Page 1
7 17, 1951
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Anti-Gambling Set 'E Special Latest ‘300° Qualifier
Mobile Jail Ready to 1 Keep Speedway Clean
Dips, three-card monte dealers, dice dealers, card sharks and crooks-—attention. Stay away from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
You'll never make a buck . and chances are you'll wind up| in a mobile jail which will take!
You right to court after the race. Indiana, Marion County, Indianapolis and special Speedway
police were ready today to deal f& with any slicksters who may try to ply their nefarious trades dur-'~
ing the 500-Mile Memorial Day Race, Judge George Ober, Speedway Magistrates Court, will meet with representatives of all law enforce-
ment groups to be sure that there| ji
are no hitches in the program. Chief Jailer William Parrish gaid today that the sheriff's office will use their 30-passenger bus as
a jail at the Speedway on race | |
day.
Persons arrested there by any | of the plain clothes officers ming-| ling with the crowd will be] slated, finger printed and held!
ir the
After the race they will motor] to the court of Judge Ober where| the swift hand of mechanized justice will make their punish-|
ment fit the crime. ~
Man Found Guilty Of Beating 2 Boys To Appeal Verdict
A 21-YEAR-OLD man found guilty of beating two. 16-year-old
boys. one only recently released
from a hospital, today planned; appeal of the Municipal Court de-! cision.
Found guilty on two charges of vised bu assault and battery was Alfred tenant w
Sorrentino, 2830 E. Washington
St. He was sentenced to 10 days . o : fn jail and fined a total of $20 on| erinarians In the two counts. His father, Phil-! ’ In Drive Agamst Rabies Problem
By ED KENNEDY Indiana veterinarians joined the throngs clamoring for {action tc punish violators of the] THE BOWMAN youth, recently |qo0 quarantine laws and bring released from hospital surgery, |rapies under control here. Speaking for the veterinarians was Dr. Harold D. Cain, president | of the Central Indiana Veterinary Society. He promised his group's support to fight the problem. He said they would work out a’ mass vaccination plan for the ‘community when the basic steps to stamp out rabies were taken
lip, also charged in two affidavits
signed by the boys, was dis-|
charged. | Complainants Forrest Bowman!
Jr., 2827 E. Washington St., and! Howard Glatfelty, 3401 E. Wash-|
ington St., charged the Sorrentinos beat them as they attempted to retrieve a baseball which rolled from a nearby school yard. » ” »
was kicked in the side, head and, face after being knocked down] by Alfred Sorrentino, it was said. | A doctor's statement given young Bowman said he was in a! state of nervous shock and suf-! fered painful body and head; bruises as a result of the beating. The vouths charged that Phillip Sorrentino had taken the base-, batl-into his yard, and then told them they could have it if they came after it. When young Bowman entered, the beatings started. it was charged. Judge Joseph M. Howard set appeal bond at $100.
On China, N. Korea!
{UP)—The United Nations Gen-|
eral Assembly today ordered a| world-wide strategic embargo on Communist China and North | Korea by a 47-to-0 vote. \
India, leading a bloc of eight
voting, called on the United Nations to specify its Korean War) aims in line with Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's statement several | weeks ago when he said the world | organization would have scored a|
Korea of invading forces.
| recommend such an embargo.
For Valor—
“Adopted Hoosier to Get Nation's Medal of Honor
Hoosier from An- Anderson while her husband was AB adopied n overseas with the 24th Division. Lt. Dodd distinguished himself leading an attack against
derson will be one of three me
to be awarded the Congressional vy
Medal of Honor by President Tru-| poqa vijy fortified “Hill 256” in Ko-| man tomorrow at ceremonies at req jan 30-31. When his men | faltered under the heavy enemy To receive the nation’s highest fre he single-handedly charged a' military medal for heroism in a¢- machine gun nest, wounding everyone in it, His men, inspired by his cour-| Carl H. Dodd, 26, of 411 W. First age, then followed step by step up the hill wiping out one By his side when the star-span- position after another. ! Sgt. Stanley James, one of his his neck will be his wife, Mrs. squad leaders, said he told the Libble Rose Dodd who left An- squad a derson Wednesday to be at the ypder
the White House.
tion in Korea over. and bay the call of duty will be 1st Lt.
8t., Anderson.
gled blue ribbon is placed around
Presentation.
: “Lt Lt. Dodd is a native of Kenvir, pei! Ry. and entered the military jow me’
serviee from that state. His wife,
also from Kentucky moved to Continued on
sr ——— s———————————
62d YEAR--NUMBER 67
FORECAST: Partly cloudy-and warm tonight and tomorrow: Low tonight 60. High tomorrow 87.
*
‘The Indianapolis Times
FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1951 k Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice . js ess
m Up Again, Mom
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FOR TWO SHORT ONES, A TALL COOL ONE—Lemonade, soda and ice cream are OK, but there's nothing like cold water from a running fountain on a hot day. Swigging from the impro. bbler are Linda, 4, and Paul 2, held by mother, Mrs. William G, Bunce. Daddy is a lieu-
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Indianapolis. Indiana.. Issued Dally. -
American Unit @® pepe rls E- : act - crack Express
. ’ . ¢
kia Smashes Train;
| Miles Over Own Dead
| By EARNEST HOBERECHT w # ; | United Press Staff Correspondent . : TOKYO, Saturday, May 19 si Bt: —FElements of an American ha
division trapped in eastern Korea by the vanguard of a suicidal million-man Commu-
. " A ° : rs Link-Belt Research po ams mamnes wc Thre Missing Link-Belt Resear shattering artillery barrage.
acs sini I) Philadelphia Director Identified as Among Those Killed
rammed 20 miles deep into Allied United Press
By y ‘ flicted 904,788 casualties on BRYN MAWR. 'Pi., May 18—A crack Pennsylvania Camnunist. Toren in. Rores 30 On Ship Leap Railroad express crashed into the rear of a standing pas. from the start of the War Into River, Many Hurt senger train today and high police officials said at least 1% Hergugh Nay persons were killed. :
mim ee ES By United Press
lines in the Inje area. near the! PHILADELPHIA, May 18 Police Chief George A. McLaugiiin said 10 bodies had
east coast. : , ; . y 4 five hours They threatened to trap a bat- —A five-alarm fire swept a been removed from thé jumbled mass of wreckage five h
tered South Korean division, and waterfront pier and a mer- after the wreck and “at least a ; despite heavy losses. appeared t0/ohant ship today, forcing one more is in there... .,.. Victim From Here
be exploiting most of their first Usually Took Plane
successes in the three bloody Nearly 30 crewmen to leap One of those killed has days of their second spring of- into the Delawaré River to been identified as C. F. Laven- : ’ fensive. {save their lives stein, R. R. 2, Box 468-K, Indjan-, , C. L. Lauenstein, director of ‘Hordes Pour Through’ ” : = apolis, director of reasearch for research for Link-Belt Co., who
Three persons were missing and pi; Belt Co. here since Jan. 1. was kilied in the train wreck United Press corespondent n e 0. «1 Robert W Gibson He from More than a score others were The twisted steel cars and the would have celebrated his Hist the critical east central front that injured. heavy express locomotive ' were!birthday next Tuesday. He was &
: “ross trunk native of Evansville. fcan unit : ~ - scattered across the four 'n 5 seemed safely out of this Com. Fie Marshal George Kingtoh i... yo railroad in this fashion-| After attending the American
t the damage to the pier and - munist trap. the Chinese had not °C . g P able main line suburb of Phila-' Mining Congress in Cleveland, he i up their overwheiming at- the 5000-ton freighter Pineland delphia. |was en route to see a client in tacks. at $500,000. More Than 50 Hurt | Philadelphia, when, the wreck
: Ha] More than 50 persons were in- gecurred. ‘“ J | . Hordes of them smashed The missing included William jured in the wreck near the Bryn r hte 1 : :
southward, pouring through a madden, a pier timekeeper, and 'r station. Most of the dead! breakthrough in the American two members of the ship's crew. wt station, leave tonight aboard ‘the Spirit
v ; rire: and injured were in the sleeping! ; line,” Mr. Gibson said, describing! A police surgeon said a search gar which was telescoped and sy for his return to the entrapment. “They struck of ship failed to reveal any bodies. jn two. Several bodies were! hia tomate aid. be
down boldly in the wake of South : ie ; : ' { found under the locomotive. Korean units to the immediate . Probing for Sabotage Houte atipr the Wreck occurred. J5RA0Y traveled a plane on feast of the U.S. division Police said there may be as railroad crewmen with torches Diisiiiean ye I at hil Mr. Gibson said the shattering many as 30 or 40 persons in hos- and cranes were still trying to ) i y .
: Employed by the Link-Belt Co, of South Korean units enabled . <3 of twisted steel’ . . . from burns or untangle the mass of twis the Reds to endanger the Ameri pitals, suffering 0 in an effort to reach any other Since March. 1924. he served as
‘can division and to race south- eXposure. viettins. (chief metalurgist from 1939 until
ATR Sn - "a ¥ £ oN ar
— - -— —————— —————————— i — " WASHINGTON, May 18 (UP) ~—The Army reported today that United Nations forces had in-
‘Henry Kaiser
“The judges must live up to their responsibility and punish people who violate the quarantine law,” the doctor said. . » Whipped By England “England whipped rabies long before there was such a thing] — as dog vaccinations. They whipped! it by punishing people who did, Order Embargo {not comply with dog laws. “With proper enforcement and punishment of offenders we can y 3 rv : {do the same thing.” FLUSHING N.Y May 18 The doctor described the vacci-| nation of pets as an adjunct to a| program of strict enforcement of the quarantine. He pointed out that three years ago some 4000 pets were vaccii w e countries which abstained trom C00 CC oh Ean Sotke iment, but still rabies is a prob-
| most at the
{lem because the quarantine has 'not been made to work.
Action Urged by Others Other officials calling for punmajor victory if it cleared South 'ishment of violators include the {Marion County Medical Russia and her four Cominform Dr. Gerald Kempf, head of the partners refused to participate in city board of health and enforcethe vote after arguing that the Jen) omcets responsible for makbly was wered to|ing the guarantine work. AssomlLly Was ho. empe The Indianapolis Chamber of Only ihe Security Council—where Commerce is planning a meeting Russia's veto could block 1t— of all officials concerned with the could legally consider the meas- problem to establish a city-county ure. the Soviet delegates con- policy for making the quarantine
tended. work.
| said,
t one point to take cover the heavy fire. , ‘take cover, Use marching fire and fol-
ith the 112th Infantry Regiment at Camp Atterbury.
ton ~
{ward to cut the Hangye-Yonggae U.S. Navy representatives were, po Red Arrow rammed into a [if Promotion to director of re.
Built That One'— ™ ® ® : | said, i : ignal. ! American Ships Su PPI it sive vio ans se ares akan gb Aopen SIGE EL Ett Reds, Camera Proves
By JIM G. LUCAS Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
OFF THE COAST OF SIBERIA, May?18—The big Navy plane, a Privateer, dropped low over the water,
barely 150 feet above the surface.
Looking from the tiny ports, it seemed even a mod-
erately-sized wave could reach up and capsize us.
Lt. Bill McCord at the controls swore beautifully and
expressively. “It's another Panamanian!" he said. “Panamanian, hell,” someone answered. ‘Henry Kaiser built that one.” The big Privateer buzzed the lumbering freighter al-
mouth of a major Siberian 3¥ harbor. Some J crewmen caught on deck waved, probably in embar- § rassment. Or * : maybe you only Mr. Lucas imagined that . because you'd be embarrassed. Others scurried for hatches and doorways: The Privateer lumbered away into the murk. The freighter
disappeared behind. Slowly the |
Greenfield
Co.
Greenfield Grocer Robbed of $3000 By Lone Gunman
The Indianapolis manager of a any battalion in anv war." ! grocery store was Heavily censored dispatches MOSt of the injured were sea- Daggage car off the tracks. A robbed of an estimated $3000 from the front during this fluid MR whe jumped from. the ship Postal car Just behind the engine, early today.
Paul Starks. 3020 S. Keystone the real extent of the enemy suc- from the oil-stocked pier. Seralled. {did not know a single Hollywood Ave, said a gunman threatened cesses. { him with a revolver and forced him to open the Standard Grocery safe shortly after he had opened for the day's business.
plane turned and circled a local man.
back hugging the white-crested waves. Five minutes went by. Then the freighter appeared ahead again, beating her way slowly toward shore. Minutes were precious now because we must stay at open
sea. As it was we were only a |
few minutes away from several big Siberian airfields.
Lt. J. H. Marovish of Los |
Angeles, the co-pilot, opened the window. The rain beat into the cockpit. drenching us all. Lt. Marovish leaned over the side aiming his big camera. Again we passed over the ship at almost mast height. Lt.
Marovish opened and closed |
N The BIG Annual “500 MILE" Used Car Sale
his shutter and came back to
_his seat wringing wet. Almost angrily he put the camera back :
into his case. “Another for the files,’ he
The freighter carried the Panama flag sure enough but
everything about it looks |!
American.
“We spot five Panama-flag |
ships going to Siberian and Red
Chinese ports for every other ! kind we see,” said Lt. McCord. |
“They're not fooling anyone. They're American-owned, American-manned and carrying" American freight. On some even the decks are loaded. On others we can see
American crews — at least. |
they look like Americans from masthead height. Sure as hell they're not Panamanians.” We had heen on patrol since
! 8gt. James said in his dawn. It would be dark before Page 3—Col. 2 | Continued on Page 3 —Col. 4
|
i ——een esi can
State. Police Detective Robert : : Dillon said the robbery had the . . up at the pier caught fire and position. 2 Amusements ............ 20 I } i that a .number of crewmen were In railroad talk, the train “ac-! Births, Deaths, Events.. 2¢ appearances of bein g, wi For Witness n 'forced to jump into the Delaware centuated the drag detector,” a] Henry Butler .....ecveuee 20 planned.” but added this did not River to escape the flames. It device between two rails to catch] COmiCS .......ecenvevees 385 necessarily mean it was done by . . (was not known whether they anything hanging down from the| Crossword «..ccvescssnne™9 : : were among the persons taken to cars. This is a safety measure to EAHOTIAIS «.cvvavvrsrnanaa Store Was Empty Traffic Fatality | the hospital. warn crewmen the brake rigging! Forum ....... taresnvedia > Mr. Starks said he saw nobody ' re ——————— lis faulty, | Harold H. Hartley...... 38 near the store when he entered, | LOCAL TEMPERATURES | While crew members were try- Dan Kidney ......s sence 38 {nor were there any cars in sight.!
|Shortly after opening, at. about 16:30 a. m., he answered a knock at the back door. He said he opened thinking an employee was reportting for work. “This is a stickup.” the bandit said. and ordered the safe opened. Mr. Starks said he heard a car specd away after the holdup, but 2 it had disappeared before he could ‘AS€¢ against a convicted drunken determine the direction of flight.
NOW in full swing! «ss o | Sought iz Irma Dawson. who
If your present car i:n't just what you would like to have it, now is a wonderful time to trade it in on a sparkling,
late model car. Now you,
can get that car youve been wanting at a real ber gain. Hundreds of late mod. el, top quality cars to select from. Liberal trade-in allowances and easy terms on the balance. Prices are low quality is high. Shep around tonight or tomorrow,
Hundreds of Bargains in Today's Want Ads The Indianapolis Times 8
i , >
the door,
carries top penalty of one to five; years and $1000 fine. i
lateral road. |sent to the scene to inyestigate night express train from Pitts- {PERE phe fins of js Yeahs { But part of the American out- ,, qinijity of sabotage. burgh to Philadelphia which hadi "0 "0 Su ude wite, | it's main line east of Chunchon The fire started from an unde- stopped one quarter of a nile) ’ - h i ; | still held like a rock, Mr. GIdSOn |. att source on the pier, but from the Bryn Mawr station Bl the time or the he
a
{the Inje-Hongchon road
flanked crashed southward down... The blaze was believed to Witnesses said the Red Arrow ently had gotten Some soft. of * | through the Chinese line. ¥
ght have spread to containers of ofl | tore right through the rear sleep- signal or he wouldn't hay ! y 'stored on the pier. {ing car “Poplar Vale” from down.” Kill-Groggy No Report of Dead Cleveland. It cut it in two and] One huge piece of the -teles “Doughboys, artillerymen and : po : rose with it into the air in a flash scoped car pointed into the air, {airmen were Kkill-groggy and An attendant at the accident. flame. Then the locomotive its edge ripped as if a can open. (weary, and dazedly told stories Ward at Mt. Sinai Hospital first. 5cheq nose first into theler had eut it. :
of the human a of Chinese Said a number of dead were there : e | se inese, ol oq BTOUnd The drawn-out whistle before
that came on and on and would Put | So com ; th h, the terrific noise and n a : pletely was the sleeper the cras C noise an not. be denied,” Mr. Gibson re- P ire =u they had no report *| demolished that its parts could ihe Sash of flame when the locoyporisd, |" The five alarms, the third mul-|{ROt be, separated from the loco- Cg yar Neeper rosy toy enemy casualties were! le-alarm binze since Iast night, motive. A berth was caught/gether into , aroused resi. | credited to heavily sown mine-|, ght out all fire equipment 882inst the front of the loco- dents of the Majin Line commu- | fields, 2000 miles of barbed wire! ¢. om the downtown area. Three Motive and hung there swinging. pity outside Philadelphia.
and massed Allied artillery, 5.1 oats and a police boat also Clothing, suitcases, train equip-| : . Possible Perjury
(Which were writing a bloody joined the battle from the Dela- ment and jagged bits of steel “Division artillery fired an Mqre than 25 (fire companies blocking the east-west route. ; jawesome total of rounds in the fought the blaze at pier 46 on Del-! Three hours after the te eck. BY Actor Checked
chapter in military history. ware. {littered the four main-line tracks, !
12-hour period ending at 6 a. m. aware Ave. at Washington Ave. officials still were not sure how, WASHINGTON, May 18 (UP)— [Friday and went on outdoing it- The pier is owned by the Pennsyl- many were dead. Giant cranes Téstimony Actor John Garfield {self during the day.” United yania Railroad. had to lift the locomotive to pryigave the House Un-American Ac(Press correspondent Glenn A. All available ambulances and the bodies from beneath the mass tivities Committee has ‘been Stackhouse reported. police cars were pressed into serv-|{of twisted steel. turned over to the Justice Depart
One battalion fired thousands ice to take the injured to hos- Cars Derailed ment for inpestigation of possible {of rounds—a feat described by pitals. | i perjury, a cq member said officers as “an all-time record for | The locomotive dragged an today. z
Jump Into River empty crew dormitory car and|
Mr. Ga Apr. 23 thdt he was never a Come halted train also was URist or member of any subver-
period make it impossible to tel) When the roaring blaze leaped of: she sive group. He also insisted: he
| Huge clouds of smoke billowed, A Pennsylvania Railroad offi-| (through the midcity business area ial said the train from Plizs. Cominunist, and tory irs did not and attracted thousands of per- burgh had stopped west of Bryn ovement in Hollywood : sons from among the morning Mawr when it set off a trouble n ywood.
. Police Push Search rush hour. signal which automatically threw m, "Police reported that a ship tied the track signals ahead into stop Times Index
“The Driver Was Drunk . . . Sam..60 am... 7s ling to find out what was wrong Radio and Television ..... 28
The Child Is Dead” . . . an with the night express, the Red Ed Sovola .vivvevvesannss editorial . . . Page 26. i FL m. . os } Ya) » Arrow rammed into it with its Sports ...... a | gam. 67 1pm. 83 Whistle screaming, witnesses said.' Fred Spars ...ssssessss 19
Police and a prosecutor's in- a A railroad spokesman said the Ear] Wilson «cvvverennees 28 vestigator today intensified their Latest humidity, 60%. Red Arrow was traveling at “only women's cesssrrinesedd13-18 search for a woman who wit- about half of its normal speed” - nessed the death of a 5-yearjold boy in a traffic accident. The woman is sought so the
driver can be turned over to the grand jury, Prosecutor Frank Fairchild said today.
(formerly lived at 1530 N. Senate Ave. She signed the original affidavit ‘against the driver-whose truck struck the child. Wayne Johnson. 141 Alvord St., was killed Feb. 23 when he ran into the side of a truck operated by Macy Williams, 30, of 535 Minerva St. Williams was sentenced to 90 days on the State Farm and fined $100 yesterday by Municipal Judge Joseph M. Howard. Maximum imprisonment on the drunken driving charge is 180 days. Continued 8 Times
Mr. Fairchild said he will seek indictment against Williams on a reckless homicide charge if the! woman is found. She is believed | to be thé only witness. | The case against Williams vas continued eight times because po- || lice were unable to locate the missing witness and press the more serious charge, Prosecutor Fairchild said. Reckless homicide conviction
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