Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1951 — Page 2

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SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1951

Take Big Toll of Na

Kidnapers of Premier

THE U. 8. State Department said Siamese army forces! today captured headquarters of Siamese rebels during al

vy In Crashes on State Roads

furious fight in which a number "of stray artillery shells!

hit the U. 8. Embassy at Ban

injured. William T. Turner,

army troops were reported

charge! d'affaires at the Embassy, said/Ployees, the ministry said they

gkok.

Iran but released the water after a protest had been made. Alerting all officials and em- ||

must remain in congtant touch

have seized the only bridge across| With it even when off duty. ° |

the city’s Chaophya River

stormed across it into the naval headquarters building which the

atican City

rebel forces had turned into a/municated all Hungarian authori-

fortress.

The rebels have kidnaped Pre-

mier Phiban Songgram. Army and air force bombers

had aftacked the naval building| Czechoslovakia

throughout the day, at the same time demanding that the rebels release the premier. The rebels had seized him and Communications Minister Phya Thepatsadin at a ceremony in which the U. 8. was turning over to Thailand the barge Manhattan to be used in deepening the river channel. The naval headquarters building is about one-half mile from the U, 8. Embassy and on the opposite side of the river. The U. 8 Embassy staff watched as Siamese aircraft bombed the building and a torpedo boat in the river, from Bangkok said government forces took a heavy toll of the weakening rebels, The navy rebels, led by an army general returned from exile, accused the Phibun regime of corruption and excessive use of power. The Communist issue was not involved. ' . a vernment commimique sa the 2965-ton gunboat Sri Ayuthia, “pride of the navy, was listing and

sinking as the result

apparently of air force bombing. ! Three ns were heard

WILLIAM N. OATIS, 37, As- | sociated correspondent | from Marion, Ind, will be put | | on trail by Czechoslovakia's | Communist government in | Prague Monday, the U. 8. Em- | bassy in Prague was informed today. .

Briggs was informed Mr. Oatis

held since his arrest Apr. 23.

anti-state activities, But

Mr. Oatis has been charged with military espionage.

United Nations

meeting during June.

this evening in the United Press|

offices less than half a mile from

PRESIDENT TRUMAN faced the objectionable task of signing

chinery roiling but stripping them Si of some vital

He must sign the bill by midnight tonight, or all federal controls on prices, Sow rents, wages and credit will exMr. DiSalle pire, The watereddown controls bill was Congress’ ansWer to Mr. Truman's request for a two-year extension of the

| JACOB MALIK—No meetinas.

The last time he was president, in August, 1950, Mr. Malik averaged four meetings weekly as he fought for Red China's admission to the United Nations and against United Nations participation in the Korean War,

will be council president for July and will be followed by U. «|

Delegate Warren Austin in Au-| gust. {

present Defense Production Act with tougher powers. i Congress instead gave him only | a one-month extension of the | present act, and put a ban on any Immediate effect of the presi-|

i

Wealthy insurance broker John| : 1 be to can-/arrived in Singapore by plane to Woods, Covington; dential signature wil {Wells went berserk with frus-|including Mrs.

{trated love for his estranged wife Indianapolis; and four uncles.

cel government-ordered rollbacks on thousands of items which were scheduled to take effect

The Ofice of Price Stabiliza- | | | i

would cost the public beMion snd $2.5 bil- | year. agency gave of savings which | expected to result r rollbacks on shoes, textiles, and farm ma-

£5 +

|

H

passed the temporary

extension — which also forbids|in Nashville, Tenn. for the fatal

Price Stabilizer Michael V, DiSalle to impose new price ceilings na July—to give it more time to

law,

a permanent new controls! turn | Coun’ {with the June 11 death of Clinton taurant, | Calkins.

Foreign ro | fron

» BRITAIN warned Iran today it must face the “consequences” of any harm to British subjects

} blunt note was delivered

Ay International I 0f dustice heard a British i for an n ainst re pd the Iranian oll elds hy Shayegan and Dr. Mi Sadr, who flew here

ran to t their

while

Cody Fowler of Tam Fla, » (ABA president, appointed Jona] SCHIFF SHOES |W. Davis to head the committee 8 : : 10- yesterday, Mr. Davis, former|| for Men, Women and Children ior geo of he Dol mB omen | r al : | SINE | States, will sport the commit} Big 2: 1) E Nath. in New York néxt FSopien- p Stores 2 30s

: |dianapolis newspaperman, today!

Nashville banker,

court.

15th St, reported to police hey, was robbed of $45 early today.

stopped for a traffic

(Of Televising Congress

.| CHICAGO, June 30 (UP)—An {American Bar Association com/mittee today started a study of [the 'conpstitutionality = of . trans- G |mitting trials, congressional in- | vestigations and sessions of Con{gress over radio and television.

Far East

- FIVE TIBETANS who snes Kills

away their country's freedom to! the Chinese Communists, and five Communist officials en route to Lhasa, the capital, to take charge,

day from Hong Kong. The Chinese delegates, led by Red Gen. Chang Ching-wu, demanded priority at the airport immediation office over four |

}

U. 8. Ambassador Ellis o./R

The specific charge against Mr. Schneck Memorial Oatis was not oi poans The Seymour Ere eet Beech. a7. > eneral charge against him is ugene St; Ralph King, 25, a vite, Mr, lof 854 Eugene 8t., and Tommy

Briggs was informed last month Weeks, Chicago, a hitchhiker.

Air and Ground Forces Die, 12 Hurt

Local Man Victim

In Truck-Car Mishap f

Four shells—apparently from the rebel marine forces State Highway accidents today —hit the Embassy at one time. Other shells struck it later. The emhassy reported, however, that no Americans were

claimed the lives of four-—includ-ing one Indianapolis man. Twelve -— other stan Turkestan and crosses intolriously.

persons were hurt, two

The dead were: Paul X. ege Ave.

Larry H. Miller, 11, South Bend. |

Mary Fitzinger, 72, Decatur, Peter Bailey, 50. Berne. Seriously injured were;

| Charles Laughlin, 38, of 703 POPE PIUS XII today excom-| Virginia Ave,

Rose Conter, 67, Decatur.

ties connected with the arrest and| Mr. Dial was killed and three sentencing of Roman Catholic companions ‘including a hitch-

hiker were injured early today ARCHBISHOP JOSEF GROESZ. when the. Sonvertibie in: which

they were riding sideswiped al

INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC CASUALTIES “ (181 Days) 1951 1950 | Accidents ..... 3834 4031 | Injured ....... 1671 14538 36

Killed ........ 34

{truck on a curve on U. 8. 31 near edington in Jackson County.

The truck driver, George

would be tried in Pankrac Prison, Mitchell Jr, 34, of 1241 BelleWhere he is believed to have been (fontaine St, was unhurt.

The all taken

Hospital

injured,

Hurt on Motorcycle

Dial, 25, of 2646 Col-|

| se-| { iN

| | |

|

A.

| to| in|

Charles Laughlin was seriously

injured and Roy Laughlin, 40, of

RUSSIA'S JACOB MALIK 703 Virginia Ave, received minor| child fo rest on the road as she adjusts the bindings to hold her

steps down as president of the Cuts and bruises in a motorcycle youngest child to the eldest son's back as they continue their

Security ‘Council at midnight to-| accident on highway 67 near Post |

ight thout [Road early this morning. Charles | 3 - Javing calleq 8 aughiin was admitted and Roy

Laughlin treated at General Hos-| gas ya. : ia The Miller boy was killed + Rites to Be Monday Alabama Fugitive

he slipped and fell in the path of |

- |an automobile while playing hide » » jand seek in an alley near his I ity 0 er

pital.

home in South Bend last night. : Driver of the automobile, Bernie | H. Sanders, 29, was released un- | : » der coroner’s bond pending an] | g in oréa investigatoin of the accident.

wo 8 Fitamger Sid Me, Ba fley Services will be at 11 a: m. Mon-

intersection of U. 8. 27 and County {for Pvt. John R. Bugg, killed in Road near Decatur last night. | Rose Conter was seriously hurt. State police today announced a 1.101 Park. correction in the identity of a man killed in an accident on U. 8. 31! Lp a near Columbus Tuesday Incor-| 3 at the fu- fog rectly identified as Joseph Harri-| son, Cadillac, Mich., police said/ the victim was Claude E. Van! Patten, 17, Grand Rapids, Mich. Also killed in the crash was Alfred William Harrison, Cadillac, brother of Joseph.

21,

8ir Gladwyn Jebb of Britain Blame Frustr ated

ove as Broker Wife, Self

By United Press

Of learned that he

FLEE WAR RAVAGES—A

trek south.

BS

Acme Telephoto, Korean mother leaves her fatigued

\action in Korea July 24. Burial will be .in Me- on we | pe

Friends may

ineral home after 7 p.m. tonight. ’ Pvt. Bugg was§ reported missing #& lin action on July 127. Later his wife

{had been killed

iin action. ; | Born in Dan- Pvt. Bugg ville, Ky, 23

|years ago, he lived in Indianapolis only about seven years before

Russian Press

Is Noncommital

On Truce Plan

Continued From Page One

rean and Chinese Communists. The assumption

Nations headquarters

steps forward,” if Af a Korean tru

ybody does.

can be expected to give the Kremlin’s propaganda-for-peace campaign a booster shot. The Russians are certain to bolster their strident claims to sole ownership of the peace idea. The fact that the Kremlin may have decided to cut Communist losses in Korea or to set up the pins in another alley will hardly stop the “peace” pitch.

* (United Nations

The United Nations General

Assembly is prepared to open a | |series of meetings next week if ii. (Gen. Ridgway succeeds in arranging a Korean armistice.

Bus Strikers To Vote Today On Wage Offer

ANDERSON, June 30 (UP) —! Striking Indiana Railroad Bus Ireland, died Friday night at the Lines workers here and in Mun-| home of a daughter, Mrs William cie will vote today on a wage proposal which, if accepted, willl end their 10-week walkout. [Monday in the Usher Mortuary

An executive board of the AFL (20d at 9 a. m. in St. Philip Neri union workers met with John T. Catholic Church. Burial will be in

Martin, vice president and gen- Holy Cross.

| {

ral manager- of IRR, at Muncie]

ls Captured Here Hast night. [Sta

Officials said the wage dispute

A 24-year-old Alabama youth, |appeared ironed out, but that the lwho once vowed he'd never be board preferred to submit the!

‘taken alive after escaping from issue to a referendum. |

prison, where he was serving a 20-

The proposal, as originally sug-|

gested by the mayors of Muncie,| Charles, Newport, Ky., 10 grand-|year-murder sentence, today Was Anderson and Richmond, included |children and 20 great-grandchil-

in custody of the FBI here. ji cent hourly wage hikes for dren. jured in a car-truck crash at the day in the Jordan Funeral Home| Special Agent Harvey G. Foster Mechanics, 11 cents for drivers,

lsaid David Dallas Taylor, Man- 30d 4 for cleaners. |

chester, Ala., offered no resistance

College Ave, last night.

driving a stolen automobile and | admitted passing 24 fraudulent checks in eight states totaling more ‘than $1100, escaped from

1950. {

for second-degree murder, in addition to 12 years for larceny.

{he enlisted in the Army in July, {1949. He took basic training at {Ft, Knox, Ky., and was sent to Korea last June. While in Indianapolis he was {employed at Kingan and Co.

| Surviving are his wife, Greta,

NEW YORK, June 30 (UP)— °f 7135 E. Grant 8t., a son, Mar-

{tin, Leroy, his mother, Mrs. Orvie three aunts, Kathryn Reeves,

i

(when he shot her to death in a : {midtown restaurant, wounded his

! . ei o'r, co ut nena men xines mone FUNCT] SOFViCES

way home from the Korean front. They were told to wait | their turn.

Calkins. Indicted In Slaying Case

Harry Calkins, 60, former In-

was under indictment for murder |

police said today.

Wells, 50-year-old socialite

were having an intimate dinne {last night at which Mr. Walsh was trying to bring the estranged {couple ‘back together, Wells suddenly rose from Ris \seat drawing a pistol and fired Fox, retired executive secretary!

The murder indictment was re-| "8 Mr. Walsh in the stomach.

yesterday by the Davidson

Calkins, now free on

The 48-year-old Nashville man,

died from nearly a dozen knife| Ly wounds. The elder Calkins said {he remembered only one lunge at| the ex-banker following a three-| & Minister Bagher Kaz- poy, drinking party at the prothemi in Tehran this morning by er's house. % | British Ambassador Sir. Francis

ds Ho negotiate Trio Leaped Into over nationalization of Robbed Him, Driver Says,

eh, Car,

Chester Geist, 41, of 4948 W.

He said two men and a woman |

ing

|Street, an iment {bond probably will be tried in the PUllding where he jammed the

September term of the county Pistol ante his mout

pty | nunaate 20,000 more

undreds Flee

Missouri Flood

, June 30

{their homes today as flood waters {liam F. Fox Jr. of the Missouri River ard fts/,,, tributaries flowed over 800,000 Mine Workers Begin acres of land and dozens of towns Their Paid Vacation Missouri and Kansas, The “Big Muddy,”

wide in spots, was 14 umped. into his car .when he! » C juitipe light at Ward a crest that will

Michigan St. and Indiana Ave, l¢¥¢® In St. Charles C They left him. with an em | billfold, he said. | : . nT Sngitests warned that | » . | ver w cause 3 mil O ABA Testing Legality jdamage in this area Worn it lion its expected crest of 35.2 feet, the

second highest since 19018. In 1944, the river hit 36.5 feet, flood-

a huge area,

Red Cross workers, Coast uardsmen and engineers. raced to get families out of the threatened area.

five miles —John L. Lewis’ 480,000 United mbing to- Mine Workers began a 10-day top every pald vacation today. ounty andi acres Sun- miners’ contract provides an an-

i » |clubr®an, his wife Julia, 45, wa 301 Monday for , {his friend James W. Walsh, 64,

r |

Miss Frances Fo

Services for Miss Frances H.|

five shots at his two companions, |°f the Indianapolis Knights of iraq | Killing his wife with pan ir, (Columbus will be at 9:30 a. m.|Jr, former commander of the! stabbing of his brother, a retir the head and heart, and d./ Monday in Kirby Mortuary and|Submarine force of the Pacific

[at 10 a. m, at SS. Peter and Paul

While other diners ducked tor Cathedral, Burial will be in Holy

|Cross. grand jury in conection | COVer. Wells ran from the res-| oo

evading police on the d ducked Into the base. F19Ua O. She suffered a cere-|

of a nearby apartment "rl hemorrhage last May while

Miss Fox died yesterday in|

{there on a visit. She was 74. |

A and pulled! Born in Piqua, she was an Indi-

anapolis resident 55 years. She {resided at 2940 Central Ave. | Miss Fox was employed by the Knights of Columbus 25 years. She was in charge of the organization’s records until she retired in 1946. ®

Surviving are two brothers, {Joseph and Raymond, (dianapolis, and a nephew, Wil-

i

WASHINGTON, June 30 (UP)

The soft coal and anthracite

[nual vacation from June 30 to [July 9. It also provides a $100 vacation payment for cach miner from his employer.

| CHECK YOUR watcu

99.00.06 0 0 0 0 0 i] For accurate time | keeping on DEES mow Electric Mime 06raph, ween * Expert Watch Repairing *

George C. Vaughan, of Pitts.

!division of the Pennsylvania Ral-|

road with headquarters here.

A. Evans, who will resign tomorrow to become vice president {and general manager of the Belt {Railway Co. of Chicago and the {Chicago & Western Indiana Rail{road Co. |

[Ex-Phone Official Dies LAFAYETTE, June 30 (UP)— Frank O. Cuppy, 75, chairman of the board and former presidént of the Indiana Associated Telephone Corp., died last night in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. He retired as {president of the state's second jlargest phone utility in 1944, -

n

Assumes Navy Post [tof

and was not armed when FBI|€ach classification than the tran-| agents arrested him at 38th and (Sit firm had offered. IRR. em-| ployees in Richmond, who joined |

the strike last April, returned to! The FBI sald Taylor, who Was work earlier this month.

Paper Offers Reward

France. .

Heads Credit ‘Union’ {At Stark & Wetzel

ager of Stark & Wetzel Co. has been elected president of the company’s Federal Credit Union. Mr. Waddick has been with the company since 1937.

Paul Burch, vice president; Robert Cantlon, treasurer; John W. Keller Jr. George Weimer, clerk, and Leo-

It was 1 cent more per hour in|

months, the total of workers involved and the man-days lost de- scriptions. establish thejclined, the report said. .

{ , i ia R N ry {whereabouts of two missing Pennsylvania R ames British diplomats believed ‘to Division Chief Here Dave fled to. Rusa.

will

authoritatively, to avoid getting hich went irto effect involved in “housekeeping prob- tine order w

lems” as between the North Ko-

in New York. are waiting to see “who |Peaters.

‘results from the Malik cease-fire proposal, it

To Strikes Decline

—The Labor Department reported today that 1,750,000 man-days | were lost during May in strikes linyolving 150,000 workers.

a 4 started last month on top of 180 prison at Atmore, Ala. Aug. 7, |For Missing Diplomats { walkouts continuing from April, | LONDON, June 30 (UP)—The | While the number of strikes inHe was serving a 20-year term London Daily Express offered a) CToased over the previous three {$2800 reward today for informaition that

Closed for Inventory

By ED KENNEDY ‘Twelve persons were fined and 11 given jail sentences last night

way Magistrate’s Court for violation of the new state dog-quaran-

here June 10.

The fines—ranging from $6 to $30, including ocosts—were paid

to the charges. . Cited Tull Penalty

“I want you to know that the penalty which can be given under the law $500 fine and six months in ,” the judge pointed out to each defendant. . “This spread of rabies has got to be: stopped,” he told one mother. “I would rather send you to jail for six months than see your child bitten by your dog which became rabid by being on the streets. And unless things are cleaned up and these ‘dogs kept off the streets in keeping with the quarantine order of the State Veteranairan I will be forced to send someone to jail for the full sentence and hand out the stiff fines,” he said. One defendant failed to appear. Ordered rearrested and held under $50 bond was Betty Anthony, 29, of 2030 Hovey St.’ The stiffest fine was levied

‘Mrs. Bridget Cook Services Arranged

Mrs. Bridget Cook, a native of

Moran, 421 N. Beville Ave. was 91. Services will be at 8:30 a. m.

She

Mrs. Cook came to-the Unjted tates as a child and was'a nat. uralized citizen. She had been living in Indianapolis 15 years. | Surviving besides Mrs. Moran is | another daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth | Cunningham, Cincinnati; a son,

Man-Days Lost Due

WASHINGTON, June 30 (UP)

Judge Ober Suspended al lai terms pending no further a commands were not at he tions of the 'aw, but pointed out/of violators of the state quaran-

entences would become Now officials here, as at United that the ge the cases of all re-'would be charged with violations

iam Re bel Stronghold Fr alls

12 Fined, 11 Get Suspended Terms for Dog Violations

against, Arthur L. Wadell, 33, of 2112 N, Delaware St., who paid $25 and costs. Most of the judge's fines were

by Judge George Ober in Speed:ie,r g1 and costs, but he meted

out a little extra if the arresting officers had difficulty or words from the defendants during the arrest.

Sgt. James Payne of the Munici~ pal Dog Kennel said that arrests

tine would continue and that they

of the state law rather than the city ordinance.

At the same time the sheriff's

by all persons who pleaded guilty office announced that its new

dog wagon had been delivered and would be operating in the county next week.

Hope to End Problem

Health authorities were hopeful that the combined action of

Sheriff Smith working with city authorities, backed up with stiff punishment of violators, would end the problem of loose dogs spreading rabies. Once this problem has been solved the Central Indiana Veter inarian’s Association has prome ised a mass vaccination program for dogs. : Marion County has an annual average of 30 to 45 per cent of the cases in the state and is ‘a cone tributing factor to Indiana’s record of being the third worst state in the nation for rabies cases,

Police Hunt Man Seeking Dope With Forged Order

A man who tried to buy morphine on a forged prescriptio was hunted today by police.

ficers last night after a man about 32 in dark work shirt and grey hat tried to get 10 ‘quarter “dram” morphine tablets on a prescription blank with the name of Dr, Gerald Lowery. Suspicious because morphine tablets come in quarter-grains, not drams, the quick-thinking druggist told the man wanting the

{tablets, presumably for Mamie

Smith, 1830 N, Keystone Ave., to get the prescription corrected. Mrs Judd made the cost low, when asked the pricé, to lure back the man, But he dida’t return. In a telephone conversation with Dr. Lowery, Mr, Judd was

The department said 400 strikes told the doctor had not written

the prescription.

The doctor said prescription

pads had been stolen recently from his office and, since, he had had several calls regarding pre-

a Say it with . . .

SOUTH BEND, June 30 (UP)]

They are Donald D. MacLean, (—The Bendix products division|

burgh, bas been named assistant head of the American section of superintendent of the Southwest/the fore

British Embassy in Washington. Mr: Vaughan will succeed Lewis They

disappeared May 26 in

William Waddick, credit man-

Other officers elected included:

assistant treasurer;

ard Austin, membership direc-

PHILADELPHIA, June 30 (UP)—Rear Adm. John Brown

fleet, yesterday assumed command of the Fourth Naval district, succeeding Rear Adm. Roscoe E. Schuirman, who retired | after 43 years service, |

N. Y. Ship Movements

By United Press Arrivals—Caronia, Southampton: Medias, Liverpool Departures—African Endeavor, town; Atlan Barcelona: C Alexandria; argill, Dakar; Tangier; Ni am, Rotterdam; laide; Au i _ Satur rdyk, i ates] Adv aneiro; o Sha) i

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GEDERALAS yiags anp Hn

Me

“Joseph C. Judd of Baker's Drug. Store;-30th aha Talbot, called of-

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vu mn NEW . Btrand Th way's ffi house whe ‘and rema marvel wr structures decade laf the name

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‘Stran

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Recalls Y

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WEST Mr. Champ S—-A KJ? H—A 786 D4 C—A D8

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the ace of tr clubs,” he Turning to th “Not everybe my hand ags “And every a better resu to get,” sna “Play cards, “What are asked Mr. NM picked up hi and lead.”

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