Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1951 — Page 2

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“PAGE. 2

UN Pushes Near P Nearly 30 »

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Barbara Sneaks

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

onggang

Killers Beat ‘Cafe King’

Tops on Hit Parade-—

Local Shrine Unit

By VICTOR PETERSON » Times Staff Writer .

\

3

SUNDAY, SEPT. 16, 1951

s Show Em How

100

CINCINNATI," Sept, “15—The ¥ Lik § Nobles of Shrinedom put on a . = NC v in to- See Tone 0 the Draw < i noble show here fousy, Ch i o DIA ; arial : ‘ “1 ; : omorrow some 95 who pa- é a . ! y RUSHVILLE w CONVERSRZE 4 ontinued From Page One on ~ _» raded the oasis .of Cincinnati will § ‘ ; o Jacket. Her companion gunned: the By United Press , be cooling their feet at home in oil : motor and they sped away. CALUMET CITY, Ill, Sept. 15 the five states which sent mem-\ Alm : SHELBYWILLE Mr. Tone's lawyer said the 45. —The “Cafe King” of Calumet bers to the Great Lakes ceremoOo year-old ‘actor's version of the City's rip-roaring honky-tonk dis- nidl session. ; the threa dl d pg 0 BROOK VILLE bloody love duel differed from that trict was shot to death early to-| Among them will be the 700 14 top F : FRANKLIN TO ‘ of Mr. Neal, the 37-year-old for- day by killers who beat him to who treked here from Murat 3 attempt t TOKYO (Sundav) Sept. 16 mer boxer. Mr. Neal said Mr. Tone the draw. Temple in Indianapolis. : sunaayys . swung the first punch. : Arthur Helfer, 53, was shot 11] A handclapping throng: lined . _ Another (UP) —Tank-led United Na- “1 did not swing the first punch !!M®s at a range so close that the streets; in this seven-hilled scheduled tions forces drove vesterdav at all,” Mr. Chantry quoted Mr. powder burns were found on hislcity, and tops on its hit parade whether to within 6000 yards of Pv i Tone, “I didn’t know Neal was SHIIt and hecktie. tog. Vere the Indianapolis units. ell jlo err \ yards yong ‘going to throw a punch, either. 1 - His body was found sprawled, The Oriental band. with . its up money. _ gang, nearly 30 milés above the had my face turned to him at the On the .front lawn of his home, pare-chested whirling, dancing With = t 38th Parallel and northern apex time he swung at me. his hand still clutching. a snub- jegder, brought cheers all along treasury - city of the Reds’ iron triangle in “I suggested we go outside to NOS€d S8-caliber pistol. One shotithe ine of march, and the High- Treasurer central Korea. 4 discuss our affections for RBar- pierced .the top of his head and anders, their bagpipes wailing, County Au ZS. Allied attackers met Tittle re- bara. ‘We talked it over for a another his. right temple. brought gasps of appreciation. clared the; “~#istance. However, on the eas . 800d while—about 15 minutes— _ Iolce believed Mr. Helfer was Tall and Handsome October cl - ern front, United Nations units and then the fight started.” ambushed by 1We men as he i sufficient f > were forced to battle their way \ : stepped from his 1951 Cadillac Many a Cincy lass looked long- It was e through determined Red opposi- Dr. Siegel was none too happy before dawn. ingly at the stalwarts, all of whom JR would leas BTHiom 10 Win 2% Ie SOrtart Tare. about Miss Payton's stolen hours Detectives believed there was must be at least six feet two 11,400 on « line west of Kansong. Both sides With the man she—at the moment more than one assailant because inches tall to be considered for rolls penn Sewere locked in bitter hand-to. —has decided she loves. Mr. Helfer was hit four times/unit membership. the A th --hand fighting. - “He shouldn't have that kind in the head with slugs from al A real show-stopper was the - uy Ee Onder Fali Maca of excitement, he murmured. "1 45-caliber pistol and seven times Murat Hawaiian band which sent i Be "he moon was full and bathed gave absolute orders -that no one ijn the body with 32-caliber but /island tunes rippling over the city. Lea the chilly bettlefroht in. en = not even the detectives were Jets. When the parade was over, the Mr. Com : eerie nalfAight withoat precipl- fo get into his room. at least un- Last June a masked gunman band wheeled to a stop before In- it up to the Stating the Red offensive which til tomorrow. shot at Mr. Helfer as he drove up dianapolis headquarters in the to decide ~~Gen, James A. Van Fleet warned DISASTER AREA—Indiana's drought-stricken counties. Mr, Siegel said he asked Tone to his home. __|Gibson Hotel. : checks and =. recently could be expected by . . > Ra i over the telephone if" he realized Mr. Helfer owned five garish; But the peole wouldn't iet them Board C| Zimid-September. It appeared the Continued From Page One FARMERS in the Hoosier visitors were barred. But he said night-spots along Calumet City’s off the ship float. They cried Dunn Moo: en ories of Allied killer drives may| counties: corn yield 25 per cent disaster area are eligible Yor he didn t bawl him out. . wide-open cabaret row, but Police ‘More, more” over and over. The : d i . 4 ; . loans from the government | “At this point,” he explained. Sgt. Walter Maciejewski, chief of crowds blocked all traffic for : — ™ RN oes - arise, gihave thrown the enemy time-! of normal, tobacco 50. per cent only if they can’t get them any- “his health is none too good.” detectives, said Mr. Helfer “was hours before the hotel entrance, iental Band of the Indi Jerming Jo Z table off balance, ~ ok. | or less, In Switzerland Connty, | where else. Robert W. Demaree, Mr. Tone passed his second day not mixed up in the rackets ‘and and band members smiled wanly, SHRINERS IN CINCINNATI—Orienta Ban o! e Indian. be made. £ a the past the » omiunisss tobacco poundage is up, but lafayette, state field director in California hospital lapsing in- never involved in gambling.” flexed tired hands and kept on apolis Murat Shrine play an impromptu concert in downtown Board is nc ere ine es light he i — quality is down, for the Farmers Home Admin- termittently into unconsciousness, Sgt. Maciejewski said he was playing. \ Cincinnati, . fare checks toy: |. Pasture is where they're orration, said the banks in the his face and head swathed in inclined to discount the theory Serenade the City | meme sri mre - The 14 w I The truce negotiations were really hurt—very. little hay . : iy ern counties were bandages from the pre-dawn beat- that Helfer's slaying was a gang- Finall when sate. trams . publican s #till in the state of a little cold| since the first cutting, and | PreltY Wek-loaned up. ing he took from his heavier, land assassination. He said it to Hal tie DENT rol Mars Hill Father Accused meet in Go = with ach side Saving it is| farmers have been feeding win- But Ohio County Agent {taller and younger rival. probably stemmed “from a per-/}3M » e ban move on, " : , 10 a m. t a War ac) Se TayiE . | ter hay to the cattle since mid- John said the banks in his “He is not out of danger.” the sonal grudge of long standing.” Sérénading Cincinnati * as they ny 1 ® ® called by = the other's turn to make a moy ¢ Jolv y : | eounty were leaning over hospital reported. “But his con- m= ae mentee tp Folisd DitOlBh Sowninws inn Of Knifing Soldiers Wife welfare sitt / Showdow y- : thi is 3 : ; , ; .s . ast n s ' s Gen. eS A on Ears That means buying hay from datkward lov the gLariners. Sutin 'mproven over ester RFC Official Admits funned out, took tn Coney Island, : dr aD headquarters said In an informa. Central and northern Indiana, rs a ow by 6 farm- Mr. ‘Neal 3 Golden! A . Li L hes Popular amusement &pot, for an A 33-year-old Mars Hill father, Atterbury soldier who told police with h 3 from Michigan and other states, | nservative, Bot ful Nea, 5 one-iime 'L;oden ccepting liquor, Lunches convicted last May of knifing a he had been absent without leave 2 im

- tion bulletin today it hoped the - next note from the

Communists

That's the kind of feed crop - losses the Farmers Home Ad- |

;plungers, and good credit

risks,” he said.

{Gloves champ who has kept fit ‘with barbells, said he was sorry

WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (UP)

evening of merrymaking and a giant fireworks display. The Coney session closed the

man, was accused last night of slashing a soldier's wife after

for five days, said they began

drinking early in the morning

decide whet cil into sess

would either enable resumption of . Mr. John doesn’t expect more 'about the battle on Barbara's —An RFC official said today he ; . : - the truce talks or end them fnjstrasion loans. are intended | than 50 of his county's 600 lawn in the wee hours of Friday got a quart of liquor and several Iwo-day SaIhering for an esti. yang He birth of bis tiny in Sontined unt fate atte. The a = finally. ol | farmers will apply for the U. 8. morning. f lunches from ficial of mated 25000 red-fezzed nobles : i H *“.. But the Communists continued | At the Cont of pauling or | loans. Bill Rice, county agent 4 “111 5 anything I can to help, the na I ithotold Rr JOM anglans, Ohio, Hiinols, SD oie Nanna en gs eran Joh a - Tri (a.] — t - yr & : ' Se, a : oy 2 1nar Michigan and Wisconsin, ah ay W was ume tor her 0 leav . to heap abuse on the United Na-| lors. Four hundred: thousand for Ripley, said he hadn't leven give him a blood transfu- while that firm was seeking a loan 8: preliminary charge of assault work, Manning offered to drive But at leas tions command in propaganda] : found any farmers even inter- sion,” he said through his attor- from the government agency : 1 . broadcasts. Peiping radio accused gallons were hauled in little ested. y ’ ? . Heads Truck Group land battery with intent to Kill. her. Instead, she told police, he councilmen

~~ Wednesday, when Gen. Ridgway |

the United Nations today of 88]

. air and four ground violations of| = the Kaesong neutral zone since

~ admitted a United Nations plane|

straffed the city by mistake.

A new warning of a possible * Maj. Gen. Ira P. Swift, command-|

er of the 25th “Lightning” Divi-|

Ohio County last month alone. But the cattle won't starve,

either,

if the Hoosier farmers

can help it. And recent rains,

too late to do the corn and to- |! bacco and soybeans any good,

have helped pasture.

BUSINESS has felt the blow. | Ohio County Agent G. I John

=

EJ]

However, County Agent O. H. |

McNary of hard-hit .Switzerland said he expected quite a demand for the loans. And Jefferson County Agent Ray Seifert said some .ex-GIs, who went heavily in debt to buy Deir farms, probably will apply.

ney. Milton Golden. “I'm terribly, terribly sorry about what happened,” Mr. Neal said. “I feel awful. I liked Tone even if we were both in love with the same girl.” She had been in love with both of them—engaged to each, off and on. over the past few weeks until her divorce from Burling-

His admission came after Sen. Karl E. Mundt .(R. 8. D.) reported a Senate subcommittee has evidence “some people” received ‘‘gratuities” even larger than a $272 fishing trip that figured previously in the investigation of loans to the St. Louis printing company. Lithofold got $645,000 in RFC loans in 1949.

FRENCH LICK, Ind.—Fred W. Gierhart, gwner of Commercial Motor Freight, Inc., of Indiana) today was elected president of the Indiana Motor Truck Association for the ensuing year at the organization's 20th annual convention here. Mr. Gierhart’'s company

Last May 4 he was fined $50 plus costs and given .a 10-day suspended. sentence on the same charge. Police said his record showed nine convictions and 10 arrests, dating back to 1937. At 3 a. m. yesterday Manning was informed that his wife had given birth to their third child.

drove her into the country and cut her throat with a pocket knife when she resisted his advances, It happened 4 miles east of Mooresville on Ind. 267. Manning told police Mrs. Gerehman’s throat was cut accidentally when a beer bottle “exploded.” After stitches were made in her

. be opposed

The Cou already has court order Council to 2 if it refuses Welfare no other “¢ mandate ac

: oy All who need loans must £0 : ; ; . an has headquarters at Indianapolis. He went to the home of Pfc. and 5-inch throat cut, Mrs. Gerchmah forthcoming : pSoe, a We ey said merchants in Rising Sun | to the banks first. The banks .=°™ Iowa Rutomohile Rag a: ee His home is at Columbus, Ohio. Mrs. Larry: Gerchman, 4102 was released from General Hos- State welf to ? 4 "| told him sales started falling off | will take care of as many as Sonn Payien a ts be Mr Farm Price Support He has been in the trucking busi- Farnsworth -St., Mars Hill. Pfc. pital and taken to police head- court actio x : . ink| about July 1, have dropped | they can. The county agents cl oaY: ® ; be . . ness since 1929. : Gerchman, ;a 21-year-old Camp quarters for questioning. recedented » But, he added, “I don't think sharply ever sirice. In Versailles | . 8 Neal. They were going to Investigation Sought — emma en ep ees em ete ee p

-

he will get far.” i He said most indications point toward a Red drive against his

and Vevay, in Madison, Aurora |

and Lawrenceburg, it was the

same story.

say only a small percentage of the farmers will be asking the government for help.

married in San Francisco. Then the voluptuous blond made another quick switch—to

WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (UP) —Sen. James P. Kem (R. Mo.) announced today he will ask the

knew of no County Cou propriate mx

- i | ’ x aay of ror 1 . And Esai f fund #512 Division on te Senin ont. rt vs | WE HEADED back through favor Mr. Tone. this Joe Aud Senate to make a full VERE age o in the front dros an co iro0PS NOW LET'S MEET Walter | Ripley Countyion U. §. 421, on that's what touched off the~fisti- Lo = “0 (art oo oF the mil. Early Nhe fran) wy aud carried out Stegemiller, 64. He and his | the bed of the Old Michigan cuffs. Re lions of dollars used in govern- Should a - 9 tt ii : = may Mean prother Harold till 155 acres, | Road which the forebears of : . ment price support programs, called, imm = Bn attack, De sald. “Some in-| o, "which their father settled | these farmers built in the 1530s. Challenged Union His objective, he said, is to dications, however, can be inter- : ; { . a : oy : bond issue v ted ; in 1899, along the Ohio River | Behind us, southeastern WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (UP) ‘determine the extent” to which that Octob preted poth ways—ofensive or de- just outside Rising Sun. Indiana was holding its head rer ' : ; anyone in the Agriculture Depart- iled, Mr pensive PRUs. | ‘They have 105 acres of corn, | high and refusing to cry The National Labor Relations oo" ce Commodity Credit toy tal ere e Ye Jie her of = Agu the rest tobacco and pasture. | “Uncle” Sam ¢r anybody Board ruled today that 101 chal- corp has misused the funds. per- vertising of = ‘will certainly punish them” | They had their last soaking | else. lenged-votes were valid in a union sonally profited through them. or SHior to 1D

Steamer Paces

rain Easter Sunday. “Our five-year average has been 77 bushels of corn per

{.acre a year,”

Walter Stege- | | miller said. “This year it won't |

on The crops have withered but the ‘ploneer stock has not.

affiliation election at the Frank Foundries Corp., Muncie, Ind.

fidence in the program.

used their positions to lessen. con-

neat b

must meet meet the Oc ditor pointec For the

- Old Hot Rodders

County will

Brause’'s Stanley Steamer still

pari

puffing comfortably ahead of the 1910 gas-driven Stoddard-Dayton

about dollars - and - cents estimates, just as you would be if someone asked how much

Rings should say—

; | go 10.” : ' : an estimate UTICA, N. Y., Sept. 15 (UP)—| ~ They're proud le, these i i ents fs Two ancient hot rods wheeled! Hoosier farmers. Therll admit, | on the box adds much fo the rings . . . bul nothing fo the cost ___pavments 1 . ! . vi] : oem ee BN ee teem and elderly = w—pinto the city at 3. p.m. (CDT). witheut—setf-pity—that—they've-: Si SR ‘ The welf: : with John H. (Jack)| taken losses. They're reticent | $42,000. An

will come in share in th sum, Treas

of R. H. (Rube) DeLaunty in money you make. would add thes Chicago-New York race. But a farmer has to get 35 Tl : 2 vancement © > e 70-year-old Delaunty, how- bushels. of corn an acre to ctions. ever, had clipped 13 minutes off break even. d ways love you le Mr. Raini the lead held by the 76-year-old 8 = able to adv: Brause. WILL Walter Stegemiller ap- : : ; of the 'defic The old-time speedsters stopped ply for a Farmers Home Ad- Diamond rings are a “We want

- here for water and gas-after cov-

ering the 50 miles from Syracuse in' one hour, 45 minutes. They quickly chugged off for Amster-

ministration

loan? “Not

ested,” he says.

He's droughts

been of

through 1901,

inter-

the 1930 and

of everlasting love . . . they

wonderful fradition . . . a symbol

can in this s said, “but w checks wher to cover ther

Route 5, where they plan to spend, red by Ohio floodwaters in | YS more fhan words can fel goes in’ sigr _ the night: — Foti] Eek Brisas MF Let Lord Diamond Experts Be 12 U. S. Prisoners | “rem, i ig help you make the best TE lil Only Escape From Jail bon pi Dn oF. arses selection for your bride the Hal Wali ation Pitre, ar in 2 Uy San Juri “weitere mn CALDWELL, IDA. Sept.’ 15 In RY Count: Te Js fii and for your budget. ° ; ee StS en route from Kansas City to. Me. decent’ rain June 5, scattered Join the stars with Magnavox three atten Neil Island Penitentiary, Tacoma, Le 10 an acre. for . - * wnat }

Wash., escaped from the Canyon

County jail here tonight, sheriff's

deputies. said. One of the prisoners was re-

- ‘captured a few minutes later, .

* ‘which to the ground hy blanket strips.

Officers said the twelve used a

~wentilator from the three-story

from themselves

jail to climb to the roof, they lowered

won't n

his. tobacco in 1950. This year,

he says, $500.

it will be less than .

His corn ran 75 bushels to. an acre last year. This year?

Forty to 45. Walter

Geyman, .a progres-

sive young farmer and luckier than most; will break even. He

eed a federal loan.

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