Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1951 — Page 1
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. forts bf law enforcement and village today.
- health Volunteer—search crews found the bodies of nine
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FORECAST: Fair and a little warmer tonight.
ndianapol
Tomorrow partly cloudy, warm and humid. Low tonight 65, high tomorrow 88.
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FINAL HOME
62d YEAR—NUMBER 127 y o .
Lo
He Tore Up Notices— : Man Gets Five-Day Jail Sentence, $25 Fine for Dog-Law Violation
By ED KENNEDY pad
A 22-year-old man was sen- : i tenced to five days in jail for violating the state dog quarantine last night by Judge George Ober in Speedway Court, In addition, Earl Morris, 422 8. Park Ave, was fined $25 and costs. In his latest effort to co-oper-ate with law enforcement officers to bring the rabies epidemic under control here by stiff punishments for violators of the ‘guarantine law, Judge Ober fined and gave jail terms to 15 others persons. The jail terms of 10 days each were withheld pending no further complaint against the defendants for quarantine violations. Two Fined $20 Tena Bell, 47, of 920 E. 10th 8t., was fined $20 and costs and Curtis Riggs, 49, of 317 S. Butler BSt., paid the same. Nine others paid $1 and costs § for a total of $6 each and were iE given the threat of 10 days in jail for a second offense. Judge Ober handed out the five days to Morris when officers testified that he had torn up previous notices to obey the quarantine law in front of them. In passing the sentence Judge Ober again said that rabies was a blight upon Central Indiana that had to be stamped out. “It has been proved to me that {f we can stop dogs running loose we can stop rabies” the judge
said.
EARL MORRIS—Learns dog warning tickets
: torn up. He'd Rather Jail Them ; P
«1 don’t know what it will take to stop running dogs, but I'd rather sehd someon® to jail for six months and fine them $500 as provided in the law than see an innocent child bitten by a rabid dog.” The judge's stiff treatment of quarantine violators was in keeping with an “‘get-tough” policy started through the combined ef-
By United Press
Air Force plane crashed and burned in the hills near th
; It was feared all 11' men were killed. authorities -
County. . Spearheading the drive is the crewmen.
Safety Council of the Indianap-
olis Chamber of Commerce. The : ; council several weeks ago called bombers in flight, ESE
on all judges to give Seflons dts It was based at Lakeheath AP Is Seeking tention to the problem and REP oy. Baga at Suffolk, in east- To Free Oatis -
eurb it. ford {érn England, and assigned to the +24 Bomb Wing. It was in Scotland
in: Marion
=
: f the Strateeigi Air Com: py Charges [mn for aso0-day fie or duty _ Desperate Effort
On a routine navigational train‘ing flight, the plane crashed into in Czechoslovakia. a hill after its pilot made a des-| perate attempt to pull out of a { spin. Farmers, shepherds and villagers found wreckage strewn over a wide area. The 3d Air Division at Ruislip,
‘or : WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP)— The United States today rejected as “a tissue of falsehoods” Communist Hungary's charge that three members of the U. 8. legation in Budapest are spies. In an unusually blunt note to the Hungarian foreign office, this
government said the ‘‘preposterous” charge was made “only to
it is exerting “every effort”
are not to be
The plane was a KB29, a tanker craft used to refuel
NEW YORK, July 7 (JP)—De-
' 7 E : o t A : i H ni lunder tations) train ro- Bouncing the trial of newspaper-| . Rips ut gar Y junde Ex : ing.» man William N. Otis as “an in-|
behalf of its jailed correspondent
SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1951
132 Arrested
In County Gaming Raids
Sheriff Says He's
Entered as fecond-Class Matter at Postoffice “Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Tonight, We
Through Warning
‘arrested when county law officers last night followed the lead of city police in clamping the lid on gambling. Sheriff Dan W. Smith per-
i'sonally directed simultaneous raids on five county establish- | ments, arresting four proprietors, i a housewife, a waitress and 23 i other persons. : The raids followed { Smith’s new order to deputies: i “No more warnings about gam“i bling to proprietors in the future. i Raid.” Meanwhile city police continued
i fiscated 626 books of | lottery tickets.
Five raids were made in
{ being a “dry run.” Four of the arrests ordered by ? the sheriff resulted in filing of
a lottery.
| Charged with operating gaming houses and required to post $1000 « § bonds were:
Cox, of 3634 Rockville
1 U.S. Airmen Feared im. nr: Dead in Scotland Crash
restaurant and tavern in May wood.
Jack Chenowith, proprietor o
Ilica, 54, of 772 N. Warman Ave.
CARSPHAIRN, Scotland, July 7—A four-engined U. 8. proprietor of a restaurant at 1935
is S. Lyndhurst Dr. ®! Arrested for operating a lot
{tery with bond set at $200 was Lawrence. Henry. 51. Clermont,
[tavern operator in Clermont. | Also arrested there were:
lwith visiting a gaming house.
| Mrs. Dorothy McCleasler, waitcharged with operating a
{ress, lottery.
Arrested on charges of gaming
land visiting a. gaming house an [ordered to give $500 bond ‘were: Richard - Tinder, "Danville, 144,
- of duty. conceivable act of injustice,” the ra 8, : duty: Associated Press. sadd-iasy. mighty Laney Pipes, #4; Lebanon.
on|
were:
Thirty-two persons were.
Sheriff
{ to carry out Chief O'Neal's cracki down edict by making three ar1 rests in 30 raids. They also conassorted
the county, one led by Sheriff Smith and Chief Deputy Fred Fosler
i charges against three men slated for operating gaming houses, and a fourth, charged with operating
a restaurant in Maywood; Graya
| Esther Munn, housewife, charged
38. RR 1, $4 - 4
{ “Arrested for visiting a gaming yesterday “against slight resist-| house - with bonds set at $250 ance.
; { Percy Dalby, 59, 115 N. AlaAP's board of directors de-l, st Fred Rohlfing, 48, 4501
scribed Mr. Oatis, sentenced by! - a Communist Court in Prague 101 poo St, Elza Belin, 36 iy 10 Fears mn. prison for esplo- gq Division St., John Blakley, 36, nage,” as a “competent reporter” 536 Birch St {who had been an AP staff mem-| a
: . Raymond Willoughby, 37, RR ber in the United States and o bE a Griffin,
They'll Talk T
After That . . . Who Knows?—
U.S. Warplanes 3," Things Look Peaceful Strike at Red As Gls Wait for News Truck Convoys
By JIM LUCAS
Scripps-Howard Staff Writer : | IMJIN RIVER BELOW KAESONG, July 7—A naked Night Raiders Bag - |soldier, hjs wet shoulders glistening in the sunlight, splashed . happily in the Imjin River. His dusty coveralls lay-in-a. 175 in Tw {32D J ’ n Two Days | tumbled wad across one of the bobbing pontoon floats. By WARREN P. FRANKLIN | Occasionally he climbed on the hridge to sun himself
United Press Staff Correspondent { ’ ‘ . . EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- and smoke. Then he'd dive back into the water, shouting
QUARTERS, Korea, July 7— excitedly when he came up
y . U. S. warplanes, struck for for breath. County $ Legion the second day today against Ten miles ahead, at the
; Opposes Truce Communist convoys pouring F001 of. Be shar) Tange of il Re w men “and supplies from Man- BS On ex arallel, layin Korean ar
Kaesong. There, th 8s he churia toward the Korean front it. the x m a y rumors had 3 . ' nemy a 'as in a big Red buiHdup.. es al moment wag
There was only light patrol patching up: the sparring along the 100-mile bat- hall. There, in a few hours, three tle line, with preliminary cease- Of our people meet face to face fire talks only a few hours away. with three of theirs in the first
No cease fire in Korea. Keep on fighting in Korea until ultimate victory is achieved is the stand taken by the Marion County American Legion. Feeling that any truce in ‘Korea could not bring lasting peace to
y
shattered city
ope,
uce
Reds Believed In Kaesong, UN Envoys Near
)
Deadline Set On Air Immunity
By EARNEST HOBERECHT United Press Staff Correspondent
TOKYO, Sunday, July 8
United Nations negotiators
prepared to leave an advance* camp for Kaesong today to discuss 1 Korean War cease-
fire with Communist delegates believed to be already in the city. They hoped that preliminary negotiations would begin at 9 o'clock tonight (Indianapolis Time) and that they may lead to a stoppage of the fighting next
Fifth Air Force night raiders, move toward the uncertain truce. that country, and that it would in action until dawn today, S ; mean a “loss of face” for the week-end. claimed they destroyed or dam- Sergeants Waiting U 8. in the Far East the Marion IP the belief that the Red dele- . aged at least 100 of the enemy A few miles back three Amer- County district of the Legion gates had arrived In Kaesong, a vehicles clogging a 95-mile stretch [ican sergeants were waiting to Voted unanimously that this coun- has against bombing the 100lof highway from Sinuiju, on the drive Gen. Matthew Ridgway's try should continue the Korean Be Ava A the anc i ( i vor Zones ioht ¥ > > : i 7 Manchurian border, to Sinanju, representatives to Kaesong. This Si uni the Reds ultimately ,.... o.o city was removed effec
¢ 40 miles above Pyongyang, North was the bridge they would cross
” ou on THE LEGION further advocates the use of Chinese Nationalist troops in the Korean War, and for whatever actions necessary to drive the Communists! out of China. Reason for this uncompromis-
Korean capital. After that . . . who knows? | This was as far as I was permitted to go today. There were It boosted the two-day toll of two jeep loads of military police vehicles to 175. ~ lon the Imjin's south bank as I s. Warplanes also. raked three came down the last steep’ hill. airfields and supported United|They were pleasant enough, but INation§ troops Teeting gic ee y they were forceful, too meses positions. ‘The Reds were report-| Could I drive tq the center of ed to have 350,000. men ready for the bridge. just to say we'd been a new assault if cease-fire talks there? Their sergeant, a tall fail. honest-faced boy, grinned. That The core area of the strength- grin said plainly enough he'd ened Communist foe was ngrth'of heen warned about reporters and the old Communist iron triangle their tricks. x d!of Chorwon, Kumhwa and Pyong- “Sorry, sir,” -he said pleasantly, "gang. : “I have my orders. No .ohe's
' 175 Vehicles Destroyed
. enemy
Legion's belief that the Korean conflict is the first of many Com-munist-inspired minor wars which are designed to test the strength and sincerity of the United States. : According to the report, a truce in Korea now will only invite future conflict elsewhere in. the
/the northern apex of the triangle rested near the river bank.
® {assert itself by Started From’ Seoul
war in Korea to stop future
Farther east, near Kum-| elsewhere.
song, an estimated-150 Commu-| T had set out from Seoul, denists were killed and 200 wounded termined to go as far as I could, in a two-hour fight. 'and had come 30 miles to the ImTwo: Red Plaloom Stacked jin River. You leave the wounded
United Nations positions ’ S east of Inje on the eastern front city and abruptly you're in the
early today, hut withdrew after mountains. two hours. Other enemy probing! Then suddenly attacks came during the night fertile plains of South Munsan.
Partial Victory
you're in
ing stand {§ the Marion County’
An Allied armored patrol probed going across until Sunday moin-| 1d. It.is the Marion County.’ 'to the outskirts of Pyonggang at!ing” A squad of; anti-fankmen foto Ti de that America it Yang: on schedule and to have
al “arslow the 2850 Saralistc They made
For Administration
London, said names of those abroad since 1937. { 0 : : : re the propaganda aims of the Near » : a 45, 2211 W. Morris St.; Beecher ro ans EE MN my aboard would be withheld pend- The State Department's Voice williams, 45, Maywood; Raymond NOMI West & ‘Yanggu sng Jar I was here that odr airborne . The charges originally were ing notification of nest ot Rin s Of NNEHE 0 Protasted the Bryan, 41, 2323 Hains Ave; a 8 aa BS 8 cope Thade one of thelr most i ely on 0 dC S made Bf ie OE ie RT ri ri Zain: pr: atis yester-\gprank Meslam, 41, 270 Barth r——— re successful jumps. Catholic Archbishop Josef Groesz farm includes Brockloch Glen day in broadcasts beamed to|pye. = i” J fil : By United Press who has been sentenced to 15 into which the big plane plunged, Czechosiovaita. Rep. F. Edward Walter Haverkamp, 50, May- The villages have begun to WASH Noon yy r= years’ imprisonment. watched the crash. 1 Soest (D. : La.) said it was wood; Lawrence Kelso, 2502 Col- up again. Many houses are gone, Last.diter, administration efforts 0 Mr. Campbell said he heald the’ no the newspaperman who was jjer St.; John Harmon, 34, RR 20, of course. In one village there's
a—— ee |
|plane coming through the clouds
3 Killed, 30 Hurt land believed that only two of its - four engines were working.
MEMPHIS, Tenn., July 7 (UP) — A high-speed highway crash involving three vehicles today| «It was in a nose dive,” he said.| killed three California residentsi.mpan it spun once or twice and and injured at least 30 others, in-lipe pilot got it fattened out. It! cluding 25 cotton choppers ent, neq over again and went into] route to Arkansas plantations. |,h5ther dive. Then it crashed.”
press itself.”
‘In a Nose Dive’ Bee-Bop DETROIT, July 7 (UP) —Edward Jefferson, 28, arrested for knocking a policeman to the sidewalk,
convicted, but freedom of the Indianapolis.; Isham Bearley, 67,
[2112 W. Minnesota St.; Billie] |Boyd, 29, 126 D, Allen St. Tyndletowne. David Leslie, 56, 3110 Mars {Hill; Rowlans Brown, 43, 1935 S.| |Lyndhurst Dr.; Richard Skiles,| (25, 3000 8. Lyndhurst Dr.; James |0dom, 56, 3225 Mars Hill; Paul | Kelso, 27, 2714 Mars Hill; Harri-
BULLETIN Shirley Lee Robins, 10, of 749 Belle Vieu PL, was critically injured after noon today when shot through the temple by a .32-caliber revolver.
to get a strong controls law appeared headed for at least a partial victory today on price rollbacks.
only the foundation left of the school house. In another a rusty,
locked safe is all that is left of
the post office. But the people : . fare there. The women are no The House Agriculture Com-
longer dirty. mittee, which has helped lead the They bear themselves with a font against rollbacks, indicated new dignity. The children laugh , “willingness to. back down and and play in the streets. Old men hermit some price reductions on squat and smoke thin-stemmed industrial goods. The committee
tive at 9 a. m. tomorrow (Indianapolis Time),
Five-Mile Safety Zone
Aerial operations still are forbidden in a five-mile ‘area around Kaesong itself, The United Nations negotiators were. under. orders. to cross. the Imjin River, 12 miles below. Kaesong, “at 6 o'clock tonight from the advance camp where they spent the night. It was indicated the camp was within 20 miles of Kaesong. The three Chinese and North Korean liaison officers and two
interpreters representing the Reds
Iwere believed to have left Pyohg-.
arrived in Kaesong, 112 miles be-
itheir journey in five jeeps and
# five trucks:
Two helicopters and three jeeps were ready to take ‘the Allied negotiators to the - cease-fire scene — helicopters if the weather permitted, jeeps otherwise. Nine-Minute Flight Their trip will take about nine minutes if the helicopters are used, but the jeeps would take up to two hours. Mine sweepers will precede the jeeps, if they are used, to detect any explosives on the road. The weather men said they expected conditions for flying to be good. The notification by the United Nations command here that the aerial immunity of the Pyong-yang-Kaesong Highway ended at 9 a. m. tomorrow (Indianapolis time) was assumed to mean the Allies had specific reason to believe that the Communists had arrived in Kaesong. Announcirig the end of the period of immunity of the highwey the United
TTT { Colin Campbell, another farm- was a free man today after | ! 3 . Times Index : lor: timed the crash at 5 a.m. (In telling a judge: : json Fritts, 28, 2814 LeGrande The gun accidentally dis- pipes. Black marke als ae previously ag Saken i stand fron aerial attack, | Amusements [email protected] 5 |dianapolis Time). “I saw a big bee land | charged . when the child full of American Cclgarets that all rollbacks—past, present Nations command sald: BODKE ¢ivess rrr nan 8] em ————————————— |. just above the 3 es col. oS, Squads pr Rested , Seraly Ba op and arabbed it F208 preparations. and futures—should be banned “The immunity from air attack Bridge im . | lar on the back of HE neck loon a Der the ert Hotel, | p and grabbed it = ith both sides waiting to see under any extension of economic granted to the 100-mile PyongTo Butler. 5 Blind Man Robbed | and I didn't’ want him to charged with operating a room for| from a shelf in the bed- what would happen, the scene controls. vang-Kaesong highway was Y Butlers serssessces (DEQ ] [pool ticket selling at 1101 Eng- looked mighty peaceful. I turned Chairman Harold D. Cooley (D. granted only for the purpose of Churches sessssessses 4 | While boarding a bus at the Bus get stung so I hit the bee as |ljsh Ave. Also arrested there FoOOm. to go back. N. C.) said the committee was insuring the safe conduct of the HO ae 3 {Eo minal, Sn den, in an) Bary as ! mds an were Harold Hoard £2 of 1435 ee ieee “What's going to happen over working with Price Stabilizer Communist liaison group. This mae ery yi] : d . Orcs {Deloss .» charged with gaming, 3 there?” one of the MPs asked. |Michael V. DiSalle on a price- immunity will terminate at midMOVIES auvsssrssensveese 7 | yesterday. A quick check revealed) LOCAL TEMPERATURES and John W. Robinette, 47, of 13 Cars Derailed “No one knows," I said. “May- setting formula for industrial night.” Frederic C. Othman ..... 8 |a pickpocket had stolen the mars, 6 a. m... 63 10 a. m... 76 [1226 N. Holmes Ave, charged GLEN HAVEN, Wis, July 7 pe we'll have peace.” goods which. would permit “ad-| This presumably meant that Obituaries .......e.ss.0+ 10 * |billfold containing $100 and al 7a m..65 11a m.. 78 |with operating a lottery and gift|{UP)—Thirteen cars of a Chi-| He considered that for a long justment” of prices if “current the highway might be attacked Fred Perkins ..occsvvesee 8 |safety deposit box key. Victim is| 8 a. m... 69 12 (Noon) 80 |enterprise. The three are slated|cago, Burlington & Quincy freight minute. “Maybe,” he said, “but production costs” are taken into by Allied plangs during the actual Radio and Television ... 6 [Clayton M. Smith, 60, Clifford, 9 a. m... 78 |fop trial- July 16 in Municipal train were derailed near here yes- I don’t believe in forgetting we consideration and a “reasonable cease-fire talks. A new immunity | Cour
SPOTS +vvevereassessesss 9-101 Ind. |
Latest humidity ...... 40%
t 3.
iterday. No one was hurt. always end up in another war.” profit” allowed.
The
WHAT TO LOOK
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Rc
lends thrill ci audi- FOR Ser ee an
Knee-Pants Set Proclaims PAL Circus A S
—Goggle-eyed youn sters get tips ir ig ll og
opeaing
ure Hit At Victory Field Opening
GREAT SHOW--Little Butchie Bauer and his J.year-old . * beother, Brian, among the thousands of young "fisst mighters” inns A : ; | :
on what fo look for in big PAL Club
3 Ad
{would have to be arranged for {the Communist delegation’s re~ {turn to Pyongyang. | Brig. Gen. Frank A. Allen, of{ficial spokesman for Supreme {Commander Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway, said the purpose of the .
{announcement was to make clear {to the Communists that “they do {not have free passage on that |road for all time.”
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