Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1951 — Page 1
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the greatest er gathered ge. Carmen mes, Candy 1, Hank Wilnds, one of rkey Bonano xieland from
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FORECAST; Fair and cooler tonight ; tomorrow partly cloudy. Low tonight 56, high tomorrow 77. ; -
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" Feel Worst Is Over—
Parley
Russ Blocks
"MEN
left the peace parley yesterday
DISCOMMODED—Restless Soviet delegate Andrei Gromyko
[scurrs “nowarpl 62d YEAR—NUMBER 188
Clears
! |
to pace the corridors and chat |
with an aid. The corridor became crowded and he sought sanctu- |
ary in the rest room. It became crowded, too, and he resumed
his conference room seat.
By United Press
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 6—The fourth business ses-|
the treaty Saturday.
The day's agenda called only for a continuation of speeches by spokesmen for the various na- | tions represented. The morning]
session heard from the small na-| tions, including El Salvador, Nor-| way, Haiti, Nicaragua, Egypt, Laos and Ceylon. ; The United States delegation] held a pre-breakfast meeting behind closed doors. Sec-! retary of State Dean Acheson] talked “with his chief treaty ad-|
|
i i , rife visers, experts on Soviet affairs Bobby Lee Ward, was crushed to|Wile, death in his car beneath a heavily Sandra D., 8 and Pamela K., 4;|
and congressional members of the delegation. It was believed they reviewed possible further moves, by the Soviet bloc, although dip-| lomats felt that the worst was over. Meanwhile, it was learned that Egypt and the Philippines were| prepared to voice reservations on the Japanese pact.
Gromyko Helpless |
The conference moved ahead with veto-less Andrei Gromyko prevented from filibustering by gag rules. The Kremlin representative shot his wad during initial sessions and found himself helpless to obstruct Allied progress for the first time at a post-war international parley. dé From Secretary of State Dean Acheson on down, the American delegation was surprised that the conference was far ahead of schedule. U. 8. officials predicted the treaty would be signed Saturday by all nations except Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia and, perhaps, Indonesia. This surprise and optimism yas clouded, however, by pessimism over what the Soviets and their Communist allies may be cooking up for retaliation against their rough treatment here. Some experts believed Red guns, planes and tanks might launch a new offensive in Korea.
Russ Won't Sign + While Mr. Gromyko made it clear that the Communist threesome at the conference would not sign the present Japanese treaty, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, Bolivia and Chile spoke for the treaty. El Salvador, Norway, Haiti, Nicaragua, Egypt, Laos, Ceylon, Pakistan, France and the Philippines were to notify the confer- ' ence today of their plans to sign the pact. And some of these nations will speak for others. . Mr. Gromyko had his day yesterday and he didn't get to first base despite help from Poland and Czechoslovakia. At the morning session, the - Kremlin agent lost his fight to get unlimited debate and to bring Red China to the peace table, the conference ruled 48 to 3 for a set of rules allowing each country oflly one hour to talk. Mr. cande. back quick-
strategy
!
J C C sh d b he was: a truck driver before be-| wanted 0 | ling called to active duty with the Birdseye. |machinery at the north end of the {of other stars, in its current tour) - | . Pe ) : , {eves : 8 the ’ {predicted all-out Red 3 Nn ar ni e : Yim came 5 National Guard. | But I don't think they'd do Fair Grounds. {the Caravan on salary from ' p offensive
i
Tractor-Trailer
Photo, Page 7
A 30-year-old Lebanon man,
loaded tractor-trailer at Traders his father, Homer; and a sister, Point northeast of Indianapolis Mrs. Wayne Renner, all of Edinburg.
this morning.
28th 6 State Veteran Die - In Plane Crash
A Hoosier ex-GI and ‘a Pennsylvania National Guardsman
were found dead today in the
wreckage of a private plane that crashed near here last night.
Air Force mechanic in World War II who recently bought his own plane to run an aerial taxi and freight service.
Pre. John Bedilion, 18, a member of the 28th Infantry Division
from Washington, Pa. who had | ® ~ * . é y fone along fo aroun A Hurt Little Girl Cries: ‘Mama
Benton Harbor, Mich.
at 7:30 a. m. today on the farm of Frank Weaver, northwest of here.
office said Mr. Weaver said he heard a plane flying around in the rain at about 8 p. m. yesterday. He found the wreckage about a quarter mile back from the road when he started work this morn-
ing. ison Township schools may have ".. 44, Black Oak, Ind., wept "as 42, Clinton, Iowa, was injured | .°g Dr. Breeding took off from the Set fires that destroyed two of the his ; Joo weal to Ruow He she told of the events that led seriously. He and Mary were | ri SY At dart Report the Franklin airport at 4:30 p. m. townships three school biuldings, Baer. “She’s fighting now for to the accident. the only survivors. | yesterday for the . round-trip Pear herz, Sheriff James E. Stur-| | or life” . The mother was a nurse here Mary's uncle, Adolph Jakel, | By United Press flight to pick up some repair Son said toady. | A highway collision last Tues- until her marriage to Mr. Rich- 35, said relatives have not | ON THE WESTERN parts for an Edinburg industrial This angle figured prominently day killed Mary's father, Rich- ardson. They moved to Tarry- decided what will be done with FRONT, Korea, Sept. 5 {concern. : |in the investigation of the fires ard Richardson, 47, Tarrytown, town, where Mr. Richardson Mary.
\ton Harbor shortly before dusk {last night. No further informa{tion about the plane was learned luntil the wreckage was found {this morning.
by his wife and two daughters,| {was an independent milk distribu-| fires may have been set by school-| tor at Edinburg.
|since serving three years as a
{mechanic in the Air Force in He said there was a stronger : a |cessant blast of enemy mortar |Alaska, he started taking flight possibility the fires may have, Ver 00S A ail Keeps the Show on the Road: artillery fire,
(training two years ago.
own plane and had set up a flight modern schools in Birdseye, just {service as a sideline, flying GIsacross the Crawford-DuBois| from Camp Atterbury home for| County line. : quick trips and making special delivery flights for sion of the Japanese peace conference convened today with Pusinessmen.
Kremlin roadblocks cleared away and sights set on signing | in "the 28th Division from fires is determined.”
North Carolina where he partici-| pated
. . Driver Is Killed {training maneuvers. |
"The son of Mr. and Mrs. Pres- ents in Johnson Township were watch the annual parade of floats, (ton Bedilion of Washington, Pa., dissatisfied with the schools and bands and pets or wandered]
|driver with Tank Co., 110th In- Said. |fantry Regiment of the 28th Divi-| |sion. His brother, Cpl. Robert, ig|ShiP Trustee Kenneth Speedy had softened the main race track, | assigned to headquarters of the 110th, also at Camp Atterbury.
; : THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1951 : : a ' Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice ase § PRICE FIVE CENTS :
E LCE
Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily.
i
Dazed, Exhausted Yanks Fight Out Of Red Trap, Bring Dead With Them
fmt + Enemy Bodies Left Stacked Like Cordwood
BULLETIN
Times State Service
NOBLESVILLE, Sept. 6—
Don Breeding, 29, Edinburg,
Hints Parents
Traffic Aftermath: All Alone at 7—
Four hundred and fifty-three persons died on the highways during the Labor Day week-end to set a new holiday traffic toll record and bring the nation closer to counting its millionth ‘traffic fatality. One accident last week wiped out an entire family with the exception of 7-year-old Mary Richard.son, now in critical condition in a Chicago Heights hospital.
with what little money they had managed to save. : They were en route to Medford, Wis.,, Tuesday to visit Mary's grandmother, Mrs. Mary Jakel, 75, who is critically ill with a heart ailment.
Soméhow they tcpk the .8th. ARMY HEADQUARwrong road became confused TERS, KOREA, Friday, Sept. 7 and tried to turn off the high-- | (UP) —The Chinese Commuway. Their car collided with an | pL. eo opened their second save automobile carrier truck. =~ | age attack in 24 hours last The driver, Robert Spencer, night on the Allied lines north
Found on Farm
May Have Fired Schools ==:%==",
{ that her mother, father ond two brothers were dead. Seven-year-old Mary Richardson’s sobs broke the silence of the children’s ward at St. James Hospital in suburban Chicago Heights. Then she fell into a restless sleep.
CHICAGO, Sept. 6—The little girl—her face and head swathed
The wrecked plane was found) “Mamma
in bandages—cried:
| By United Press { ! | bring my mamma.”
about 4 miles
The Hamilton County Sheriff's Times State Service ENGLISH, Sept. 6 — Disgruntled parents who did not want their children to go to
80 - year - old one-room John-
. “There was no insurance as Dazed and so tired they could far as I know,” he said. “The hardly talk, a detachment of
family was just able to make | United States infantrymen ar-
ends meet.” {rived safe back in the Mrs. Nevens said she would tonight. € back In their oWn lines
care for the child until a perma- | mp, brought their dead and nent arrangement can be made. wounded with them, after battling = ee eo ~ | their way for 16 hours through encircling Chinese Communists,
that destroyed the two buildings
worked as a plant guard and a {within 24 hours earlier this week.
credit investigator. Then, last month, they decided to move back to Chicago. They visited Mrs. Nevens and then inspected a filling station here they were planning to buy
N. Y., her mother and her two brothers, Jimmy, 11, and Daniel, not quite a year old. Mary's skull was fractured, and doctors believe her jaw may be broken. Her aunt, Mrs. Anne Nevens,
The plane took off ‘from Ben-
| Sheriff Sturgeon said there was, |strong evidence both fires were] {set by arsonists. He has asked aid of the state fire marshal’s of- : fice in the continuing investigaMr. Breeding, who is survived tion. y i He ruled out the possibility the]
mere : . 5 { nei . | ‘hating pupils who did not like the| Farm Folk Take Not a Drop in the House wr {| Their clothing was wet with A ti t idea of returning to school. A od { T WwW i 14 sweat and dirt. n aviation enthusiast ever a aco a onic 4 e
‘No Definite Leads’ | They were deafened by the in-
|been set by parents who have, But their battalion commander, Flight Service a Sideline | Y0olced Strong opposition to the By HENRY BUTLER ful of ingredients stirred with a Lt. Col. Robert J, Demers, Sparta,
i | lold school buildings and wanted, As Sun Pee S Out IL eH re ENE au | | They couldn't find any Hadacol boat oar. ona 3 : Six months ago he bought his their children sent to the more p Lon dey Tiadarcl Caravan speclal{from hot-shot publicity started|- “We got them all back. That Hadaco
: : gurgling in driblets includes the wounded and the | The rain stopped, and thetFEiD thus WOIRINg. ianc, origi- down some millions of throats. |dead. And we left the bodies of “We have no definite leads atl er Telds it patties all|nator and promoter of the touted| “It's not 2 Beverage 1h . onthe De Xs stacked up like cor Edinburg this time,” he said. over Indiana, the farm folk|tonic, here for the Hadacol Cala ator = quic go ar a n ak ies | “But we will continue the in- turned out this morning to attend |Van show tonight at the W. 16th he says he's preparing | They had been cut off by a savage drive of 23500
: r “ -| for Reader's Digest | & : ! , [St. Midget Speedway, said, “May for $5 million the Reade {sudden, DO a Teed rT Boh Farmer Day 2 the 95tH INdIas2 ve thar’s a case or two aboard, | for “libelous”® statements in the Chinese Communist troops on the Vernon Austin, Crawford Occasional sunshine peepea but I dunno whar it tyus.” - jauy Srdeie on Hadacol by J. D. western front 35 miles north of in the “Southern Pine” County superintendent of schools, through the clouds as the farmers Ie had to pose for Bop | Rovers e or not, it sells enougl eon, confirmed the fact that many par- gathered in the grandstand to|¢'S With an empty tonic BORLE,] ge or not, s enougl | 1t wag indicated that the en8 {using black coffee in one shot to to support the “$1 million Cara ‘emy thrust, made down the clas{simulate the elevating elixir itself. | van show, numbering Dick gic invasion route toward the Wore Smoking Jacket (Haymes, Jack Dempsey, Carmen capital of the Republic of Korea, The senator, now traveling with Miranda, Rochester and a sleWimight be the first move in a long-
their children sent to through the large exhibit of farm|
lof 50 cities, which started Aug! e { Tobey-Baltz Cancer Foundation, © ’ | The red shock troops, backed Expect Big Crowd ‘recent purchasers of Hadacol, | 14. and will close Oct. 3 in Lafa ib
yY Russian-made T-34 tanks, Attendance promised to be good| ea polka-dot smoking jacket Yette, La. home of the pep ex {drove a wedge three miles deep
[in spite of rain which last night| =" ews in Car 9, a Pull-|tFact. oli 'oilicr tamed medieinaril the Allied lines west of YonOak Hill causing the parade to move to|Man lounge coincidentally named “0 (chon before they were stopped. : : old tent-show days, Hada-| By ni : {abandoned this year when the, the inner cinder track. The Andrew Mellon. Iron-grey, ruddy-| y nightfall the fighting has
: . icol is equally good for man and gwindl (township was unable to get an|yweatherman's latest forecast (nosed and apple-cheeked, the sen-|, ast, the senator says. He feeds arms tg 1 exchanges of small
two dau hters, | eXtra emergency unit of state called for fair weather toda . to-jator looked like a Hadacol testi-|.¢ the Shetland ponies in the Cara-| & {school aid. The .Oak Hill pupils night and tomorrow. y monial picture of health. |van show pedi gimmicks. | 73.290! With humor and shrewdness, ..... are raised on his farm, |
Fair officials counted parried questions on the]
k anything as drastic as this,” he
He was assigned as a tan
Mr. Austin said Johnson Town-
|orderad-the School |
Mr. Breeding is survived by his
Patricia; Expect New Drive
: But United Nations troops | School. paid customers yesterday for a he also to cattle and poultry. {hastily threw up a defense pe ‘“Hadacol will help the feathuhs eter on the northwest bank of
{were transferred to the Conner
School building burned to thelseventh day last year.
So forceful was the impact of the head-on crash the car was] It
|
ing off the trailer’'s wheels.
extricate Mr, Ward from his! crushed auto. Witnesses said the driver of the tractor-trailer, Rufus Ransom, 39.! Chicago, swung his vehicle almost off US 52 at the south end of the Eagle Creek bridge in a| vain effort to avoid the crash. |
Mr. Ransom was unhurt. | Guard Rail Ripped
Witnesses . also reported the! speedometer of Mr. Ward's car, | which was northbound, was stuck| at 60 mph. Mr. Ransom swung the tractor-| trailer so far in an effort to avoid] the crash the vehicle tore away’ three sections of bridge guard rail. The car struck the tractor with enough force to bend the heavier vehicle's 12-inch frame. Then the auto smashed into the trailer, wedging itself underneath. :
Traffic Obstacle
A State Highway Department; employee who observed Mr.
|
It was necessary to unload it be-| fore it could be moved after the! crash. Traffic on the highway still was partially blocked at’ mid-morning. x
‘We'll Make Tt To New Orleans,’ Raft Skipper Says
WOLF CREEK, Ky. Sept. 8 (UP)—The coed half of the crew of the raft “Lethargia” insisted today that “we'll make it to New Orleans.” * This is the “social experiment”
crew of 24-year-old skipper Mary Ellin McCrady. They're trying to make the 1800 miles from Ni Kensington, Pa, to New Orleans, via an awkward-looking home-
made raft
driven under the trailer, snear- The Times Covers took state .pelice 45 minutes to Football Scene
The Times ex : | { $100,000 a year for 15 years. Hel ,nucements ...... ve... 18 troops of other Allied countries, ball preview Ms Its Tate flames, leaving only the one-| Items on Agenda is willing to let people know Had-/ Sssments aay 32 {occupied new hill masses in conthe national scene. room Eckerty School within the Earliest item on the day’s|acol gross sales last year were! CroseWord . isisvaniees gq (Solidating drives which gave township. : |agenda was finals of the brick|about $20 million. But he finds 1..dwell Denny 22 (them “Bloody Ridge” and the Local observations of grid Mr. Austin said approximately laying contest, to begin at 9:30 taxes easier on salary than on Editorials yr 20 |'‘Punchbowl,” prospects — which are being [39 Pupils were temporarily school-la. m. in the Bricklayers Tent his former income. Forum essere 22 | Fanning northward from presented daily on the sports |less because of the fires. He said/and run all day for a first prize] As the original sufferer re-. Ruth Millett ............ 14 |Bloody Ridge, American 2d inpages — will be joined next |it might be necessary to transfer of $200 and a trophy. lieved by the magic formula, MI.| Movies ............coes w18 (fantry division troops and their Sunday by a roundup of |S0me of the children to Birdseye| Indianapolis contributed the LeBlanc seldom gets away from| ‘Radio and Television 16 |Allies captured three major hills Eastern college football pros- (Providing there was room there./grand champion in the pie-baking the Hadacol saga. “Thar I was| Robert Ruark or "5; which North Koreans abandoned pects. Sheriff Sturgeon said he wasicontest yesterday, and claimed 60 days in bed In & N'YAWK| Society ».....eosonsorrs. 12 |in head-long flight. The Allies : : |awaiting the ‘arrival of Albertisecond place in the crocheting hospital, with authoritis in mah! « Lo rrrrerrrrretii ll ox [coufited 606 bodies of enemy dead Then will come a preview Breedlove, deputy state fir e|contest. | fect and hyands.” | BDOTIE i:vnviienrseenec 2D 2% on Bloody Ridge, only a fraction of South Southeast, the |marshal, who is to assist in the] Mrs. Paul J. Goben, 1844] “Some hel froin vitamin in- Iq SOvOIR s¥seeveerisis p of the Reds lost in that ‘battle Southwest, the Midwest, the |investigation of the fires. Koehne St., took first place in| isnt; re : hi Earl WiSon .ceexes:..0. 2 Uni St: : ? yes first . place in|jections led him to the now his-' women's 13. 14 nited States Marines and ocky Mountain Area, the | Steers temem— {the cherry pie division. In the|ioric experiments with the barrel- are Tra ' other Allied troops worked up two Pacific Coast, Pollen Count runoff against all other kinds of : parallel valleys on each side of Azain this season, the wise Grains per cubic yard of air. ple, Net avon creation won the ne the Punchbowl to wipe out enemy football fan wil be the one | Today ...\....)5... 317 8 prize. Ee |{Toops, now surrounded but stil who follows football in The Yesterday ......covs..> 693 Other Winners Listed ¥ [fighting savagely. « Times. LOCAL TEMPERATURES Mrs. August Holle Jr. 5615 The Marines are now. in posiT 6a. m.. 8 10 a. m... 69 suilford Ave., was first in the & tion to drive on higher ground to urn now to the sports Ya m.. 66 11 a. m... 72 butterscotch division; Mrs. Gayle 3 ) Ta: n pages for today’s foothall 8 a. m... 66 12 (Noon) 74 Kinnick, 3642 Hillside Ave., “00k | : Continued OF Tage J =), FN preview. 9a m.. 67 1 a.m... 8 top honors for chocolate pie, and | &.
They Dug a Hole and Dumped Him In'—
Ward’ rving out of its| jf §® ¥ ® ine vero tne crash thought ne PRIME "Slick Willie' Sutton { ,
driver might have fallen asleep.
The tractor-trail al : : oy me tractoriratier was on! Dead of Bullet Wounds
min
Then early Tuesday the Conner (slight increase of 668 over the amount involved in the Hadacol| |change of ownership. Best guess » h dai how- th to grow,” he says, adding, how-/the Imjin River in expectat ground. i Nobody will, be hurt too much | seemed to be in the neighborhood (ever. that no instance is known a renewal of the 2Xpec Hon Waits For Marshal should the last two days provelof $8 million. ~~ ~~~ of jts growing feathers on hu-.moment. ~All the pupils were transferred relatively unprofitable. Food and] ? $100,000 a Year mans. On the East-Central front back to the reopened Oak Hill drink sellers and the Ceétlin &| py. LeBlanc, as promotion and | ———————————— ——llInited States infantrymen op
School. Early Wednesday the Wilson Midway did a lot of busi-|ggjes manager, will draw a paltry Ti {Mari ’ Oak Hill School also went up in/ness from Saturday on. 1 ger, P y Times Index arines, Jill the suprort ef
Plan to See the Parade of Homes
This week-end starts the annual Parade of Homes . . . your opportunity to see the latest in planning engineer= ing, materials and comforts” for easy home making . . .
Dorothy A. Spiegel, 3029 Sutherland Ave., saw her pumpkin pie| judged the best. Mrs. Harriet Mikels, 2050 N.| Dearborn St., crocheted 1312 scal-| lops to take second prize among] 42 swift-fingered contestants. The winner, Mrs. Kathryn Watson, Noblesville, produced 14!; scallops in the same length of time.
PR Jee e ee ba. a8 Bag ir. ie ha 5 =
By United Press
Ohio and Mis-
| —The Philadelphia Inquirer said today the underworld “grapevine”. has reported that William (Slick Willie) Sutton, one of the most wanted” criminals, died recently of bullet wounds received in an armed robbery and was {buried by gangland pals near
'|Chester, Pa. The regional FBI office and, Chester and local police said they «1 knew nothing of such reports,
The last report on Sutton to reach
the FBI occurred last July 13, | , penely painted and decorated 2. when he was recognized by an Mrs. Housewife are you Kitchen RM LL hes - ex-convict acquaintance in Al- | having a food problem? Need’ | Dash SUN basement Good hetalr bany, N. Y., the FBI sald. | | some ideas? . Wooded lot. SSalas. She The Inquirer said the under-' | Then turn to page 12 right Ww. Jo PRInGES a SOR Tue world reports were lacking in de- = * now and see The Times food REALTORS, 340 N. DSi. tails but were “generally con- 4 page. You'll find a market Above is a sistent.” It said the reports stated basket telling how supplies ~ printed from Slick Willie was wounded Padly { will be at the produce stand selection of “in a New York robbery and z ile . tomorrow and youll find terings. If yo taken to the hideout near Ches- ‘SLICK WILLIE’ — Dead or | some tasty recipes, too.’ : oes
ter,
where he died three days
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 6 (UP) is
“10 4
ig
alive? - artist,
g a hole and dumped|of the Si-year-old bank so spr, pe
the
Nn
119th. :
! Other Indianapolis women who placed in the crocheting contest
were Mrs. Frank Power, fourtn;|
(Mrs. Leland Venable, fifth; Mrs. {A. O. Dorsey, eighth; Mrs. Paul |Eddingfield, 14th; Mrs. Leora |Garland, 15th; Mrs. Mary Domi, (17th, and Mrs. Lillian Rosemeyer,
‘Basket Overflows With Food Hints
Ee TTT Ere.
ET np ee
a a 2.2
plan to see some of these homes,
Also, plan to see several of the many hundreds of homes on parade, today and every day, in the Real Estate columns of !
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| Indiana's Largest Real Estate Newspaper
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