Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1951 — Page 3
Ys gi TT.
xX
- TUESDAY, JULY 3; 1051 World Report—
0 = «
| Hungary Orders [| 3 U.S. Aids Ouste
Widen Search Accuses Them of Plot
, | : | To Overthrow Regime : By United Press ; . ‘demanded the recall of three United States diplomats on : . ed Leaders /the grounds they helped Archbishop Josef Groesz in an Fail to Appear for \were mentioned. : The demand, made in a note sent to the U. 8S. legation,
4 Mi or ISSING The Hungarian government anneunced today it has alleged plot to overthrow the Communist regime. No names Conspiracy Sentence ‘also ordered the closing down, =-
By United Press
lof the U. S. Information are 130 ffi h NEW YORK, July 3- Four. |, } . : | Missing American Communists 1C€ S library, motion picture Tra IC Deat 1S failed to appear in federal court| theater and concert hall in Buda-| : { for jailing today and- a mnation- pest.
. ‘wide. search began that might Archbishop Groesz, who suc- Predicted as U S. eventually spread to foreigniceeded Josef Cardinal Mindszenty . Sn "5
. shores, as head of the Roman Catholic 2 When the four men ignored an Church in Hungary, was sen- g order to show up at 9:30 a. m. tenced to 15 years imprisonment repares or (Indianapolis Time), Judge Syl- jast Thursday. Cardinal Minds- : ay yester J. Ryan declared their col- ,antv is servin i : ! ; Be! ) : Gul Eh zenty is s g a life term on By United Press Aective Ja0.000 ih Iorfeited r similar treason. charges. The nation’s millions will begin -3ench warranig for Lheir a The note to the U. §. said that celebrating the 175th ‘birthday’
rest we rdered yesterday when : Were Orders yesieroa) it the recall order is not fulfilled of the United States tonight
they failed to show up with seven the Hungarian government ‘will other members of the party's with .that the | Partysive compelled to take the neces. PY: nat the end of the Korean
A etleny Poyrturo lo beg sery sary measures.” It did hot elab- War apparently is.in sight; orate on the measures. Roads = were expected to be; It said. the U. S. Information jammed as families head for open All points of departure from Service Office had been used as country to enjoy the one-day their country were watched and a "cover for espionage and sabo- Fourth of-July holiday. the Justice Department warned it tage activities.” : : would prosecute anyone harbor- ’ is . jng the four men or aiding them lran : humiid weather, with showers, to escape apprehension. | BRITISH diplomatic sources east of the Mississippi and Judge Ryan ordered defense at- said ‘today the United States is Kenerally fair weather "in the torneys to appear in court this sponsoring a “standstill” agree- West. : afternoon and explain why their ment for possibly two months to. The clients had failéd to appear.. permit negotiations over the IranThe four men and seven of their ian seizure of the billion doliar colleagues were convicted in 1949 Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. of conspiring to teach and advo- Britain was said to be cool to p. m. tonight and midnight to cate overthrow of the government the plan but won't oppose it If morrow. by force. The other seven started Iran shows. a willingness to neserving five-year prison terms yes- gotiate, : terday. : A Hs ? Gus Hall, Gilbert Green, Henry Thailand ally long week-end. As a result,’ Winston and Robert G. Thomp- EIGHTEEN high-ranking Thai- {he nation's accidental death toll
Guard Departure Points
The forecast was for warm,
National Safety Council predicted that 130 persons would
Last year’s holiday fell on Tues-
missing Comunists, indicted June been dismissed following the L 20 on similar charges. abortive revolt last week-end. I.ast night's announcement of the mass dismissal of the officers : . : Edward Scheidt, special agent did not specify that those re- [2 fYenung on the Washington fn charge of the New York FBI leased were connected with the Monument grounds in the capital.
Order Bonds Forfeited
(
office, hurriedly left the court- revolt, but the government said Philadelphia staged a four-day Casey's downtown room after Judge Ryan had de- earlier that preliminary investi- program of pageantry which will hoping to prevent the suicide.
'“ clared the bonds forfeited. gation showed “high ranking be climaxed Wednesday night, Gordon McNabb, Atlanta real nurses, blood plasma, food and some day, eventually, the 4th of July Ih addition to the attorneys, naval officers” led the attempted with a re-enactment of the sign- tor, said he arrived seconds too Red ( ross workers in a test run will this gratefully be America’s Judge Ryan ordered into court “OUP: ing of the historic document in late. He was within 30 feet of the July 15 Se : 4 contribution to the World — and peoples Robert Ww. Dunn, who had signed = ey ere Independence Square. third floor room in the Atlantan : jaries Maxwell, Winchester, 2 evetywhere will cslebrate and hal . of 3 4 on} 3 1 1 : i alk a ‘hen the shell exploded wokkeeper with .a- commercial : y the bonds of $20.00" each which File Application to Build Despite the talk of peace. the Hotel Wh pilot's license, and Everette (nx The Declaration of Independence—
the Civil Rights Congress posted s : business of war went on. Thete | ~ for the four fugitives at the time $60,000 Housing Project was nq holiday scheduled on the Sora opovmgzanvicted: a Axnlication far a variance 'to fighting front and the country's
DAY.
‘Commission today. tons of gun metal this week. In- | Bélmont Homes, Inc. 4180 N. dependence Day shutdowns last {Pennsylvania St., asked to erect year cost 163,900 tons.
The area is now zoned for Fgce Gamin single dwellings. The hearing is 9 Charges
Iset for Aug. 9.
Gambling charges were on file tagainst eight men today after a
Walter H Lamb Dies raid last night at 29031; Clifton 3 : St. After Short lliness Melvin Atherton, 47, of 1221 W.
T viet iw 34th St., was charged with operatmes State Service AMBOY, July 3 Walter H. ing a lottery and keeping a room Lamb, 82, father of three wellknown Indianapolis persons, died Was arrested on a gambling today after a short illness. charge and six others on charges Mr. Lamb, a retired farmer, Of Visiting*a gambling house. leives his wife, one daughter,! Sgt. George Martin said he and Mrs. Rosalind Key, Indianapolis; his squad found a number of two 8sons. Dr. Emmett B. Lamb baseball tickets, policy books. tip and Dr. ‘Russell W. Lamb, both books and a sack of Pick-n-Win of Indianapolis. tickets. | Services will be at 2:30 p. m. Earlier, the same squad seized | Thursday in the Friends Church two policy books at 416 Indiana {at Amboy. | Ave, but made no arrests.
Hall Winston
$ Green Thompson
TV. Entertainers Choose ‘Ain't a Bit Backward'~ Screen Actors Guild
Trucker Set for Blood Test HobLYWooD. July 3 (UP) rucker Set for Blood Test Actors Gu e e hi bind gin for wire IY Fight to Gain Baby
working in six local -television film studios. A 37-year-old truck driver to-, He will enter Circuit Court FriThe guild was elected bargain- day said he will prove he is the day morning to claim possession Ing agent yesterday over the father of a contested baby by of a 26-day-old girl whom the newly-formed ‘Television Author- taking a blood test “if my attor- woman he married says was ity by a 439-to-48 vote. The Tele- ney tells me to.” fathered by her previous husband. vision® Authority challenged the “I ain't a bit backward about BAG's right- to represent the taking one” said Ernest H. actors, Hillyer, 1442 Prospect St. Mrs. Marie Hillyer, 27, turned “7 |the baby over to Marion County {Welfare Department on an inter{locutory order from Juvenile joo,
She said she had no place to {keep the child, and the father's {whereabouts were unknown,
According to Mrs. Hillyer, her {marriage to James Tague was {never dissolved by divorce, al[though she thought it was last Aug. 11 when she went rough the wedding ceremony with Mr. Hillyer. After the baby’s birth June 7 |in General Hospital, Mrs. Hillyer. {left the girl for care by the Wel[fare Department. Bearing the . name of Tague, the baby is cur- - rently in care of a foster family. Judge Lloyd D. Claycombe or{dered the Friday hearing afier | Mr. Hillyer filed petition of habeas {corpus when "he could not get “| the child. : Had No Place to Live
“As far as I know, I'm the father,’ said Mr. Hillyer. | “We never had a plate to live |together after we were married. {But I walked her home every Inight after work, I never stayed all night because her mother {didn't like me.”
Welfare Agency Gets Baby
{ | | |
{ing with her mother at 3433 N. | Parker “Ave. and currently is seeking work, her mother said
OON
wife half his wages each week,
pected child.
son were the ones’ who failed to land naval officers, including the was the greatest for any holidiv H lig TO i siglond ew ; ATE hes x : y was : : gh Casey, former : elie ~ show up. The. FBI feared they head of . the royal navy, Adm. jn history with a total of 855 dead ug 3 ‘ith the Brooklyn might have joined four other Luang Sindhu Kamolnavin, have 501 jn traffic. Pitcher
More than 175,000 persons are qavy with a shotgun blast that expected to turn out to hear was heard by his estranged wife President Truman speak tomor-.gyer the telephone. The shot also was heard by a 3
her husband's action on a paterSTeEt "4 "$60'080° housing project steel ‘mills worked full Blas Nese Nok In which-a was filed before. the City. Plan hopes of turning out 2.015000 girl named
for pool selling. Another man,
| Mrs. Hillyer (or Tague) is livs,
Mr. Hillyer said he gave his
.
Bk ThE ©
"I AM INNOCENT" "'—Those were the last words of "Fireman" |i} “have to be studied from the Hugh Casey; shown above with his estrariged wife, Kathleen.
die in traffic crashes between 6 Wife Hears Blast Over Phone—
Hugh Casey, Former Hurler CAD to Rirlift
By United Press
Yodgers, killed himself early to-
Jose friend who had rushed to hotel room
nto Casey's throat. Mrs. Kathleen Casey, 34, blamed
Hi Werom¥n accused the pitcher of being the father of her child: Sg She said Casey called her over
the telephone a few minutes be-
beside his hand when the body was found.
‘Pleaded With Him’
“1 begged and pleaded with him not to do it,” Mrs. Casey said. “1 tried to tell him that was for God to do and not for him to do. But he said he was ready to die . . that this was his time. “He was just as calm about it as if he was about to walk out on the ball field and pitch a game." Casey's last words, according to his wife, were: “I am innocent of those (paternity) charges.” Mr. McNabb said Casey called him shortly after midnight and asked him to come to the hotel, but warned: “You'll see me, but I won't see you.’ Casey's greatest season in bigtime baseball came in 1947 when
lhe won 10 and lost only four for
the pennant-bourfd Dodgers. He pitched in six of seven World Series games against the New York Yankees in 1947 and won two, without a loss. He won one of the games on one pitch, by striding to the Brooklyn mound in the top of the ninth and throwing a double-play ball that retired the Yanks. That was one of the most memorable games jn World Series history. Bill Bevens, pitching for the Yankees, had a no hitter going into the last of the ninth, when Cookie lLavagetto smashed a double off the right field wall that scored two runs and gave Casey the victory. Casey's downfall in baseball was literal. He injured his back in a tumble down a flight of stairs in 1948, the year after his greatest triumphs in Dodger uniform, He was called on to pitch in only 22 games and was released at the end of the season. Casey's luck continued to plague him and in December, 1950, special sessions court in New York ruled he was father of an illegitimate son born to Miss Hilda Weissman. after. she had charged, they had spent . four nights in a Brooklyn hotel room early in 1949.
Wife Backed Him Mrs. Casey said at that time she was confident he was ‘not guilty of being the father of this child.” - But Casey was ordered to pay $20 a week permanently to Miss Weissman and -pay her lying-in exnenses of $102, Last Jan. 31, the internal revenue collector of the first New York district put a tax lien of
wife for unpaid taxes, penalties and interest for 1949. Casey was just a big clumsy Georgia youth of .18 when Uncle
“anywhere from $15 to $25." for Wilbert Robinson, one of the most support ‘of herself and the ex- beloved figures in Brooklyn base-
{ball history, hired him as chauf-
He recently bought clothes for feur in Atlanta in 1932.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ASS Dh many Wakes hod Mon ill i 1$ 457 00 ALY Sorkus mal Mos OH Dodgers, Kills imse
HILDA WEISSMAN-—Casey city. The light planes will land
PAGE 8
1H: Cohen Shooting Victim Is Seeking Divorce : [0 p | S LOS ANGELES, July 3 (UP), .Miss David, now a film tech
Dee David, 29, former movie nician, and State Investigator -
y : gw bit playétr, sought a divorce today Harry M. Cooper were shot dows from the man she married after two years ago when glunmen fired oll | both were wounded in an assas-'at Cohen from behind a signe « simation attempt on gambleriboard across the street from &
5
Mickey Cohen. {swank Beverly Hills restaurant,
STRAUSS SAYS: Customary. Summer Hours Soturdays : 9:30 ‘till 1——Others Days— : 9:30 ‘till § as aswal
Senators ‘Go Slow’ | On States’ Rights | |
By United Press WASHINGTON, July 3— ‘Senate crime investigators deliberated today whether to! - risk a states rights battle by’ ‘starting contémpt action against Gov. Fuller Warren of Florida. Chairman Herbert R. O'Conor {(D. Md.) said no decision will be made by the Senate Crime Committee until next Monday — the day Gov, Warren had been subpenaed to appear here and testify. Gov. Warren returned the crime committee's subpena to Mr. l0’Conor last night. He said the committee has no authority to compel him to appear and called the subpena an invasion of “state sovereignty.” The governor, a long time target of' the crime committee, said lin a bitterly worded letter to Mr. 2 {O'Conor that the committee's "unlseemly” action might be the bhe-
ginning of the end for the tradi- S to the separation.” tional separation of powers be-
tween state and federal govern- IT. WAS NOT meant solely for the few ments. _millions at that time on American soil—
Committe reaction to Gov. but it encompassed all humanity. Warren's statement was a cau- / tious "'go slow.” Mr. O'Conor said the Monday session will be held as scheduled, but he declined to say “in advance” what action the committee will recommend against the geveérnor. Sen. Lester C. Hunt (D. Wyo.) would say only that the question
0]
Ty R v ES ¥ > RY aa
THE ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIFTH GLORIOUS FOURTH!
(An Editorial) } ce
THE DECLARATION of the Colonies dissolving their bonds to Great Britain and establishing independent status— was not. addressed particularly to the British Empire — but — (it stated) "A decent respect for the opinions of mankind — requires that they declare the causes which impel them
IT WAS, to be sure, a practical, concise statement of causes — But its eternal contribution to mankind — is its ethical and moral concept — which makes it the hope and the dream — and the inspiration of peoples everywhere — generation’ after generation! :
”
angle ‘of the committee's power to . We hold these truths to be force a governor of a state’ to self evident, that all men are created equol, testify. that they are endowed by their Creater { with certain inalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness—That fo secure i these rights, Governments have been instituted among Men, deriving their Just powers from the consent of the governed . , ,
AMERICANS, by the hundreds of thousands, have died on: battlefields the world over — have furnished billions in money — and at this very hour — blood and treasure are being poured out— in the preservation of that ideal—
THERE ARE agencies in force and in formation — to buttress and advance the . basic premise of the Constitution—
‘Wounded From Muncie July 15
The Civil ‘Air Defense .is going to “evacuate” Muncie to. Winches ‘ ter on an air belt. The CAD will fiy out the “wounded” and fly in doctors,
- of the airport, are. heading the experiment. Between 2 and 4 p. m., 11 two ® aT RP SE ey a “off every 2'; minutes and fiy ‘the 23 -air miles to and from Muncie. Muneie will. be the “bombed”
and it may then also be observed as The Declaration of Human Liberty— and with its final inevitable “concomitant PEACE— er EE ETERNAL PEACE ON EARTH.
L. STRAUSS & COMPANY
$6759.36 against Casey and his
i owe A a: Or . fore he shot himself. Police said denied her paternity charges. in a selected pasture. lin four ings at 12 \. Bel- : : : 5 GA et ili \ ‘mont St. y § 8 Seized in Raids, the telephone receiver was still 2
, ia}
Remember this special schedule of
banking hours for the week of July 1-7!
Banks will he closed for legal holiday on
LEN TRTTES
(independence Day)
Remember... regular five-day banking hours are — Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. te 2:30 p.m.; Fridays, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. No Saturday banking hours.
FA AT TT TE SS 00 0 03 2 00 8 80 66500800008 ssis raster testes tstirsitosnsssnnniinsen
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK FLETCHER TRUST COMPANY THE Live Stock EXCHANGE BANK |,
BANKERS TRUST COMPANY THE INDIANA NATIONAL BARK ~~ THe MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK ® &
“ [ : Fiperity TRUST COMPANY THE INDIANA TRUST COMPANY PROPLES STATE BANK
‘the child, even though Mrs. Hill When Uncle Wilbert was talked _ 4 yer refused to see him while she into becoming president of the A Was in General Hospital, and had Atlanta Crackers of the Southern - : already informed him he was not! Association, he found use for the
. a i the father and that they. were) , good-natured righthander on | | Ye a : is id ! + ) yo} mastien, Wd 43 i a ew half dub z Si, » i kt NX / Ba 2
