Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1951 — Page 1
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The Indianapo 1s Times
FORECAST: Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Slightly warmer with some risk of showers tomorrow. Low tonight- 54. High tomorrow 78.
62d YEAR—NUMBER 96
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Schoolboy, 8, Saves Fa
WEDNESDAY, JUNE
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Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffios Indianapolis, Indians. Issued Daily,
6, 1951
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Mass in Force On Iran Line
Strength Called Unusual for Patrol
By United Press TEHRAN, Iran, June 6— Residents of the border regions said today Soviet troops had moved in force to Iran's northern frontier on both
sides of the Caspian Sea and were engaging in “unlimited” activity. Three persons said they had seen tanks, artillery and air exercises on the Soviet side of the line on what appeared today to be an|
unprecedentéd scale and far in ex-|
Page Britain Hints She Gets Tired | B of Red China Tactics...... 2 UN Keeps on Pounding Reds.. 2 §
cess of the usual frontier patrol-| ing. One report said that several] days ago a Soviet fighter plane érashed while on a reconnaissance flight just across the border of North Azerbaijan, near Astara, on the western side of the Caspian. The crash scene was covered by other planes until the wreckage was removed, this report said. This type of fighter was said to be equipped with special meteorological instruments. The reports said the increase in Soviet activity has been going on since the end of April along both of Iran’s northern frontiers.
British to Fly Civilians Out | ; Jomo. sues wer Father of Child
Tehran early next week to try tol i, gp settle the Anglo-Iranian oil crisis,’ British authorities announced = Injured hy Car day. { ’ At the same time, British Over-/ - seas Airways Corp. announced J} that six extra chartered planes dines d will begin operating from Iran to] London tomorrow to evacuate families of 300 British oil workers.
Approximately 1200 wives and children have decided to remain!
in Iran. | Mrs. Earl Noble, 524 E. 9th St.,
Trail of Blood : | suffered a possible broken leg Brings Arrest in | and gash near one ear. He is in
General Hospital. Car Break-ins Neighbors reported the boy,
who was vacationing from school today, dashed into the street.
BULLETIN
a truck late this morning at | 9th and East Sts.
Billy Noble, son of Mr. and
BACK-TRACKING of a sevenblock trail of blood today ¥ed tol Ramis the admission of an injured man| The father of one of four chilthat he broke into two cars. The| dren injured in accidents yestershattered window of the second day blamed his daughter's inslashed his arm. - | juries on “City Hall buck-pass-Questioning of Daniel Eugene|ing.” Veach, 23, of 313 N. East St. in| “I've been trying to get city General Hospital was delayed be-| permission to put a fence around cause he was weak from loss of my place to keep the kids in the blood. | yard. But every time I try they
Ave. and Washington St. and! — taken to the hospital, {Desire for ice cream costs baby ® Bn» his life . . . Page 3.
sar aon SEALED his blesdy) ment to another,” said Charles east on Ohio St. to Walcott St. Le McDonald, 425 E. Louisiana tr Ya " Tound on the say His 5-year-old daughter, Donna car owned by John R. Beasley, | (12%: Was he ate crossing Odon, Ind. *
The father of 10 children, Mr. During brief questioning, Veach ’ admitted breaking . into another| McDonald has been warried
car before cutting his arm on the| about his children’s safety ever broken window of the second. since he moved to his present A ————————————— {home in 1948. 2 Need Play Area Seek Woman Raffles i “I need a fenced-in play area to protect my kids, but I only In. $150,000 Gem Theft own five feet in front of my "MONTREAL, Que. June 6 house. It's 18-feet wide, and you (UP)—Police were on the trail know you can’t keep 10 kids in today of female Raffles believed a space that size,” he said. responsible for the disappearance “The city owns about 20 feet of $150,000 in jewels taken from | a California movie producer's] wife. > |
INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC
Little Girl Becomes a Statistic
CHILD AND ANGUISH—Kenneth Green and W. O. Minton | Donna Kay McDonald while officer Don Darland makes a preliminary examination. She was struck | by a taxi driven by Ralph E. Miller at Virginia Ave. and New Jersey St.
An 8-year-old boy was serfously injured when struck by |
He was picked up at Arsenal| pass the buck from one depart- |
attempt to comfort 5.year-old
More Interested in Money—
Many Parents Don't Care How Children Grow Up
(Fourth of a Series)
| t By NOBLE REED Copyright, 1951, by The Indianapolis Times
Many Indianapolis parents are showing more love for ‘the dollar than their children. This was one of the dominant factors disclosed behind |charges made by more than one-fourth—5899—of 20,000 | Indianapolis school pupils that their parents were “too | lenient,” showing a “don’t care” attitude. | They wrote a long story of neglect in the survey con‘ducted by The Indianapolis
{Times and the City School Administration.
Judge Saul I. Rabb, Criminal Court 2, predicted today that the series of stories in The Times on juvenile delinquency | and crime “should win one of the annual journalistic awards in Indiana for 1951.”
28 oN i |. “SOME PARENTS do not seem| to care how their children act or where they go.”
|e Far-sighted Home
“There are some parents who
|fail to see their children's mis Makers, Buy NOW
{takes either by accident or on|
purpose because they don’t want|
8S. W. COR 108TH AND | - y - {to over exert themselves in help BELLEFONTAINE ing. Lge. 4-bedrm., 1-bath family home ° on ‘'s-acre lot, the dn. stairs, in-
cluding kit., has been remodeled and redecorated and owners were ready to start on the upstairs when transferred out of town. There is a full base., elec. water htr., complete storm windows and a 2-Car gar. Poss. is immediate and the price is
“Parents are apt to let their children more or less raise them-| selves.”
| just “$13,750. For appt. to inspect “Parents want you to grow up his roomy Home call Bob Houk, GL[too 1ast. { F.C. TUCKER CO., Realtors { * | | “Basic training begins in the| Far-sighted home makers {home. Children develop their| are buying BETTER HOMES
|ideas from the people that sur-| {round them and the things they see.” . | “If parents don’t give help at] home and have no concern for their children, the children will hardly know right from wrong.”| ® “If you do not learn early, you will be sorry. . { “Juveniles get quite a dot of] freedom and time to do anything they want. The most obvious ill-| use of this time'is racing around, in automobiles. I would not ride| with 75 per cent of the or ol this school. Some of the girl
NOW while they still have many from which to choose.
In the classified columns of The Times you will find a WIDER SELECTION than in any other Indianapolis newspaper! This large selection includes singles, dou- { bles, duplexes, farms, estates | and all kinds of suburban | homes! Read them over to-
immediate personal tion.
inspec-
The above ad is a sample from our today’s Real Estate Columns.
The jewels, belonging to Mrs. | CASUALTIES Achie Mayo of Malibu, Cal, | (157 Days) were recovered yesterday in a bus! 1951 1850 station dime locker. Police said] Accidents ...... 3327 3509 they had found the locker ticket! Injuries ....... 1457 1247 in the room of a “foreign woman” Deaths ........ 21 30 who was scheduled to sail shortly for Europe. lof ground between my lot: and|
Mrs. Mayo reported her gems missing after she left them lying on a sofa in the lobby of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.
" Beer-ded KENTVILLE, N. 8,, June 8 (UP)—The Nova Scotia
the sidewalk, but it's against the| law to put a fence on city| property. : “But now, as soon as I get the| money, I'm going to put up a) fence. Let them try to prove I| can't)’ -he declared. - Treated at Hospital According to City Works Board
{ Continued on Page 3 —Col. 2
Punish Killers of GI
Stay for Doomed Nazis
day, and choose several for a
|
First Veteran Bonuses July 2
342,000 Eligible For Payments
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ The Indiana Department of Veterans Affairs today an-| nounced about 342,000 Hoo-| sier war veterans, including 17| conscientious objectors, are eligible for the state soldiers’ bonus.
After processing applications for months, State Bonus Admin-| istrator Orville Bray disclosed about 23,000 Hoosier veterans failed to apply for the bonus be{fore ghat Apr. 1 deadline and no| {longer are eligible for payment. | Of the 217 conscientious objec{tors who applied for the bonus, {Mr. Bray said, only the 17 who were wounded or disabled in service will be eligible to receive a bonus payment.
First Checks Out July 2
{| The first bonus checks, about! 9000, will be mailed out July 2 to the closest relatives of servicemen killed in service. Later in the month, about 42 000 checks will be mailed out to Hoosier veterans wounded or dis-|
{ | { |
abled veterans will be announced) Saturday in Terre Haute at the ne - appy
lannual state convention of the]
{Disabled American Veterans.
| The total payment to next - Hoodlums Sou kin and disabled is expected to! [exceed $24 million, Mr. Bray|’ ; {said.
! . { new one ws] BEALINGS Here
Other Hoosier veterans will be {paid in 1953, when the state has BULLETIN laccumulated enough money in! Police ‘today tentatively idenithe special bonus fund to pay Wife hospitali; ing | A partial payment is expected to be paid in 1953 if the full sum thas not been collected by that itime. Mr. Bray said the Veterans Affairs Department already has rejected about 100 applications from Hoosier war veterans who applied after the Apr. 1 deadline. The deadline was extended from Jan. 1 to Apr. 1 by the state legislature to allow veterans additional time to apply.
Jersey St. He came out of his coma enough to tell officers his name and address but could give no other coherent details.
in 15 minutes.
inois St. last night by Miss Marilyn |Gill, who was returning home {from a skating party.
At Kelly Air Base y The man today is in General
SAN ANTONIO. Tex. June o Hospital—still unconscious with a
fracture. (UP) — A four-engined military skull traety
Tells of Slugging plane crashed on takeoff today police have sent his fingerprints
from Kelly Air Force Base, ap- to Washington to try. to identify parently carrying its entire crew him. of nine to death, and gutting a At 11 p.m, Prof. G. L. Mitten, filling station and a cafe by fire
in its plunge. {and 29th Sts. Base authorities identified the, “I was walking scuth on Meridcraft as a C-97, operated by thelian from the Indianapolis Life Military Air Transport Service|Insurance Co., where I am taking (MATS) with headquarters at|an insurance course this summer,” Kelly. | Prof. Mitten explained today. Six bodies were recovered im-! “I met the five young men— mediately and there was no hope three walking in front and two that any of the other three crew-| Continued on Page 3—Col. 3 men survived, authorities said. | wad Jr Civilian authorities reported one woman was badly burned in a fire which destroyed the Grey Eagle Cafe on Somerset Road, about 2% miles off the Kelly res-| ervation,
High Court Considers |
Love That Bar
CHICAGO, Jupe 6 (UP) A chocolate. bar that won't melt in your hand is being produced for soldiers.
The bar “the boys will love,” Dr. Kenneth T. Farrell of the quartermaster food and container institute said today, remains firm even in heat up to 120 degrees.
WASHINGTON, June 6 (UP)— The Supreme Court agreed today to consider a last-minute stay of| execution for the seven Nazi war crithinals even as the doomed men prepared to go to the gallows.
The men, who only Mondey Bare Warning were denied a stay by Chief Jus-| * 4 tice Fred M. Vinson, were sched. ON Nationalists {uled to be hanged tonight at the! WASHINGTON, June 6 (UP) Landsberg Prison in Germany. [Secretary of State Dean Acheson
drivers are just as dangerous.” . ! |
“Parents should - teach right Details Cleared Up—
U. S. Demands Soviet
WASHINGTON, June 6 (UP)
. BY DAN KIDNEY —The United States demanded
Times Staff Writer
Expect to Free Funds Today
Women's Temperance Union asked grocers today to stop delivering groceries # in beer cartons because it gave the brewers free advertising.
Children on Pilgrimage Among 28 Hurt in Crash
SAINT EULALIE, Que., June 6/ (UP)—A truck collided with a bus last ‘night on the trans-Canada highway, injuring 28 bus passengers, including 15 children, who had been on a pilgrimage to a
attorney Bryon Hollett, there is today that'Russia punish two Sono city board which can give Mr.|viet soldiers who shot and killed McDonald permission to erect his|y, 8. Army Cpl. Paul J. Gresens fence. Officials recall his plea, but|in Vienna May 4. say only he can attempt to obtain| A formal note to Russia also
from the Works Board an order| asked that damages be paid to for the city to vacate the land) Cpl. Gresens' family.
in front of his house. | ———————— Donna Kay, struck by a taxj at| | Continued on Page 3—Col. 1 Russ Envoy Going, Home
| - WASHINGTON, June 6 (UP) | —Soviet Ambassador Alexander
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
6a m.. 58 10a m.. 87 |S Panyushkin said today that he Ta m.. 59 11 a. m... 69 |Will leave for Moscow tomorrow 8a m.. 61 12 (Noon) 71 (for a vacation and that he hopes 9a m.. 64 1 pm. 42 |toreturn to the United States. He
said the trip had nothing to d
4 shrine’ at Cap de la Madeleine, \ Que - v
, «leatest humidity o...0, 63%
with politics, ’ . . ¢
WASHINGTON, June 6 — Release of $23 million for construction of the elaborate new Army Finance Center building at Ft. Harrison is expected today.
The Bureau of the Budget, which has not formally released the funds already appropriated by Congress, is expected to do so following a conference with the staff of the Chief of Army Finance. Budget officials today confirmed the fact that the delay has been a formality of clearing up details for the project and not an indication of any change in plans to build the new cture
* lupon long-range plans to move
|disclosed today that a U. 8. {Chamber of Commerce group in {China urged two yeprs ago that 'this country stop helping the wasteful, and corrupt” Chinese Nationalist regime.
| Mr. Acheson read to Senators
For Army Finance Center [orient the dismissal of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur a telegram Inear the Hoosier capital. dated Mar. 16, 1949, in which the [business group said Nationalist nied persistent rumors that the/leaders had no will to fight the impending retirement of Brig. Reds and were concerned mainly Gen. E. M. Foster, Chief of Army with amassing persona! wealth. Finance, would have any effect, Chairman Richard B. Russell
Earlier defense officials had de-
the Finance Center from St.!Foreign. Relations group had] Louis to F't. Harrison. {asked Mr. Acheson to produce and The big building—one of the read the telegram. Mf." Russell most expensive structures planned|said he used to be an “enthusiasother than in the nation’s capital tic” advocate of U. 8. aid to —will house the entire Army Fi-/Chiang Kai-shek's government. nance section, including the Army| But he said the telegram, read Finance School. |in secret to congressional commitThe school already has been tees two years ago, “discouraged” moved to the Hoosier location and him. Mr. Russell identified the some of the departments of the source of the telegram as ‘‘the Finance Center also are at Ft.|U, 8. Chamber of xCommerce in.
Indianapolis police today were hunting “for a gang of five punch-happy young Supreme Commander of the- At-/ second {lantic Pact defense forces against the Normandy beaches where his/fumes caused by using a stove ‘and slugged an Olivet Col- men landed.
» |lege professor. | : ine Feared Dead ii steerer Two Bi ed within a two-block area with-| [1] Big aC er S
hoodlums who seriously injured an unidentified man
|Kankakee, Ill, was slugged by a group of five youths at Meridian
(D. Ga.) of the Armed Service-|
State to Pay Victim of Slugging
STILL UNCONSCIQUS—Badly battered victim of slugging abled in service. The exact date i$ in serious condition in General Hospital. : of the check mailing for dis- i
. HA Ho | | ne o %
Became Sich In Class, Ser
Finds Relatives
Overcome by Gas A family of four owed their
lives to an 8-year-old boy and a Catholic who sent
in class this morning. Way Frank Rady went home
come or about to pass out carbon monoxide fumes.
Billy Rady, 18 months. Mrs, Rady put a large tub
she could do the family washing.
Started Fumes
The big tub over the caused the gas flame to burn improperly and, as a result of the improper combustion, carbon monoxide fumes started filling the house. Frank, who got a strong dose of it before he left for became ill shortly after rived at Holy Angel School
:
g gs
7 Years Ago Today Ike's Men Landed; Now He's Returned
was quickly dismissed home. ] At home he the family. out and his
able to speak. He rushed
| is g g 29%
Hi i Lh
| LONDON, June 8 (UP)—Seven |years ago today, at 9:35 a. m., an
¥
"Allied naval forces, supp {strong air forces, began
{northern coast of France.”
|
sians had long demanded. Today Gen. Eisenhower,
{Communist aggression,
{ i
, The unidentified man—his pock-| Nl [4S 0 ale emptied—was found at 10:45 . - - |p. m. on the lawn of 2822 N. Illi- n ICa20 i
Slaughtering Beef
| CHICAGO, June 8 (UP)—Two lof the “Big Four” packers closed {their beef departments here to- | day and shortages were predicted | at butcher shops. | Wilson's and Armour’s beef op- | erations were shut down and em- | ployees sent home. Spokesmen | said they couldn't buy any cattle { without breaking government { price control regulations. Beef production throughout the Midwest was slashed and Superior
Meat Products, Inc., Gary, Ind. pa
announced it was forced to close. Production was off an esti{mated 50 to 80 per cent in Kanisas City and 50 to 75 per cent at Des Moines.
Cattle to Be Had
|officer at supreme headquarters
| landing {Allied armies this morning on the
It was the opening of the Allied y “Second Front” which the Rus-/Gas Co. also
now for the
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pra
It
#4
gets enough air to burn with the usual blue flame,
Police Captain Asks Retirement
| Veteran police Capt. Ralph N, | (Pete) Chambers, who has been ill since a heart attack four months ago, today made applica« tion for retirement after more {than 22 years service. | Capt. Chambers had tried to [return to work several times since {he was stricken, but he was too weak to resume his old hard
ce. P He headed one of the vice squads for many years. Much of the groundwork for Mayor Bayt's drive against gambling and vice was laid by Capt. Chambers’ undercover work. His record shows |that during his career as a police
officer he was awarded six come
The cattle were available, but/mendations for outstanding serve
in reduced numbers. Shipments {to 12 Midwest markets for the {first three days this week total an estimated 146,000 head, about 50,000 less: than for the same period last year. | Cudahy announced from its {Omaha headquarters that 50 per cent of its employees there would be laid off, starting late today.
ice. “Pete was one of the best on the force,” Mayor Bayt said toe day. The 56-year-old officer named a captain early in 1948,
If You Miss
Chicago's Swift & Co. plant reduced beef production 95 per| cent and Wilson's 30 per cent! spokesmen said. | | The packers reported they can-| {not pay the current price that] {farmers demand for their cattle {unless they go over the federal] |price ceilings.
Won't Lose Money
James D. Cooney, vice president of Wilson's, said that 80 per cent of the cattle sold here yesterday and today went for aboveceiling prices. “Those buyers aren't going to lose any money,” he said. “That meat is going to have to be sold for over-ceiling prices.” Big packers, he said, were not among these purchasers, because they must comply with the rollback order “since we can't risk prosecution.” He said that smaller packers can and do take chances with getting caught by price investigators, They aren't watched
“You see a lot of new f started,” he said. “Some
Harrison. lone of the largest cities of China.”
tree in &
as closely as the big ones, he said. around the yards since controls g have only. a_rope, a knife and al’
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after being excused from class to find the rest of his family overs
water on the stove to heat so
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him home when he became ill
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