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

ebels

By United Press BUENOS AIRES, Sept. “President Juan D. Peron, armed with authority to impose the i@death penalty, prepared today to ‘sdeal swiftly with survivors of z rday’'s short-lived military

revolt, : » ib. $ Adm. Enrique resigned “as Navy minister today and was

Spromptly replaced by Capt. Ani bal Olivieri in what may be the rprelude to a sweeping reorganiza- * tion of the nation’s armed forces. «The emergency powers granted id Congress last night auEh him to review the officers 2f the Army, Navy and Air Force during the next six months, and + retire, promote or. dismiss them “as he sees fit,

Details Obscure

"Many details of the uprising “wwere obscure. There has been no official announcement on casual‘ties, but the pro-government tabloid ®l Laborista said today that at least one loyal soldier was “killed and one wounded and three rebels wounded, including 1st Lt. . Jose Menendez, son of rebel lead- , er Benjamin Menendez.

El Laborista’s report covered only the fighting at the Campo “de Mayo army camp outside Buenos Airés—one of four report- * od centers of the revolt. : >The arrest of the elder Menen- . ez, who is a retired general, was .. «announced yesterday, The army . _ ministry said today that “most” . of the other rebels have been arrested, but gave no figures, .. Authorized sources said later : that 14 army and air force officers had been arrested. The Pe-

x

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urviving | I Is Face Ax of Peron _

ers of the air force revolt, were among the officers who escaped ito Uruguay. jo | The Rebels who did not get away could expect summary treatment. Congres last night confirmed Peron’s declaration of “Ine ternal War,” authorizing him to itry civilian as well as military (offenders by court martial and to {impose the death penalty on those (found guilty. | Reports so far available indi-

cated that the revolt flared simul. ‘©

{taneously at: four points—Campo De Mayo, the nearby Palomar air {base, the naval air station at {Punta Indio, on the Plate Estuary {some © 80 miles southeast of {Buenos Aires, and in the inland city of Mendoza,

'Talks—Bradley

| Continued From Page One preparing new amphibious landings in Korea and said American strategists were hatching an op-| eration to “pocket the whole of; North Korea.” The Peiping broadcast said American paratroop units were undergoing intensive training in Japan and that the 40th and 45th| Divisions were being groomed in| Japan for landings on the west and east coasts of North Korea. The broadcast, which coincided] with the arrival here of Gen. Bradley, said two new fighterbomber wings had been transferred from their American bases to Japan and that the “heavy aircraft carrier”. Essex and a number of r warships had arrived in Ko waters in preparation for the new attacks. . x The Communist charges also coincided with the heaviest secrecy seen in months on the fighting in Korea.

TOKYO (Sunday)

Sept. 30

"| (UP)—Chinese Communist troops

entered Lhasa, capital of Tibet, on Sept. 9, Peiping radio reported

The broadcast said, “The people’s liberation army entered Lhasa, seat of the local government of Tibet, on Sept. 9th. The lentire population extended a warm welcome and cheered heartily” as the national flag and portrait of Chinese Communist Leader Mao Tse-tung “were borne

VICTORIOUS—From the balcony of the Presidential palace

in Buenos Aires, Gen. Peron

GEN

announces the failure of an

army-led revolt against his regime. :

Woodruff Place citizens hope to| raise enough money to pay their, own deputy sheriff, They will meet in the Community Hall at 7:30 p. m. Thurs-

{day ‘to begin a campaign for jail” 29 years

donations. Friday night the Town Board told them there was no way) to provide funds for a deputy’s salary in the 1952 budget because the budget had already been filed. |

Clarence East, spokesman for| escaped in 1938 from the Boys)

the citizens, said they would ask | Sheriff Smith to approve Hoyt Mingle, 887 West Drive, Woodruff Place, as their deputy. They said] a law enforcement officer was, needed to curb speeding in Wood-| ruff Place, the little town which is surrounded by Indianapolis but refuses to join the city.

ll Evita Peron Reported Weaker

BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 29 (UP) —8enora Evita Peron, ailing wife of the Argentine President, took a turn for the worse after hearing mews of yesterday's revolt, her physicians said tonight. She is suffering from anemia and will be given a new blood transfusion tomorrow. She was described as in a condition of “great weakness.” News that the rebels planned to assassinate her and President Peron was withheld from her for several hours in view of the state

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No More Kaesong| yy ood Pl. Citizens | Man Executed in Seek to Pay Own Deputy Utah Served 7

Indiana Sentences

Ray Dempsey Gardner, who was “born in the shadow of a and died before a firing sq in Utah State Prison yesterday, was in and out of Indiana reformatories seven times between 1938 and 1941. A records check showed he

School “at Elnora, after serving six months for petty larceny. In September 1938 he was sent to the Plainfield Boys School for petty larceny and vagrancy. He was released in 1989 and arrested later the same year for fancy and investigation of theft. He served three months and escaped. Gardner also spent time in the Indiana Reformatory at Pendleton and the Indiana State Hospital at Madison. The Columbus, O., native was executed for the 1949 sex-slaying of a 18-year-old Ogden, teacher.

Cuspidors Have A Following Continued From Page One

with their bulging jaws, are a powerful force on the side of the old gaboon. But what could possibly happen? “Reprisals,” said the official. “Reprisals?” I asked. “Reprisals,” he repeated. “They spit in the sand urns.” “Oh.” 5 “Take the Century Building on 8. Pennsylvania St.,” he said. “We don't have cuspidors there. Just sind urns.” “I thought there were no orders to remove spittons.” = » EJ

“THERE AREN'T. We just “forgot” them when we moved into the building from the old offices. One or two of the older employees seemed to object. They went to the boss. Thex asked him: ‘What about cuspidors?” . I leaned forward in my chair, “What did the boss say.” “NO SPITTOONS!” “So?” “We found stuff in the sand

This

pidors are unsightliness and open defiance of sanitation. They also are troublesome to clean. The problem becomes more

| complex when the finer points i of social grace are ignored in i the use of the urns.

NOT THAT GSA wants to be arbitrary about it. “It's still a free country,” the official admitted. “There's no law against anybody putting

{ anything they want into their mouth. But when they spit it

out again, else.” The .agency, charged with supervision of ‘federal government buildings, has the authority to issue the blanket “no spittoon” directive. What it lacks is a workable diplomatic technique to stem, minor rebellion. ; No major office moves are contemplated in the near future. This eliminates possibility of repeating the 8. Pennsylvania St. maneuver, The only direct removal action by GSA was taken inside the local office here. The lone spittoon has been tossed out. So there was truce in the marble halls today. Battalion-sized ranks of the tarnished brass gaboons lurk in their corners, eyed warily by their defenders. . And GSA waited for Wash-

ington. : SUNDAY DINNER

that's something

THE TROTANAPOLIS TiMES — = 4 Times Contest x [State No Longer Carries $8000 Plum for Entries

- 1859.95 donated by the RCA Vic-

Utah, Sunday school

| puts GSA on the | | fence. ‘Major objections to cus-

Continued From Pag» One

FOURTH PRIZE—An RCA Vie-| tor Victrola Phonograph-Radio| Console worth $199.95 donated by! the RCA Victor dealers of Indian-| apolis and Marion County, FIFTH PRIZE-—An RCA Vie tor Victrola Phonograph worth

tor dealers’ of Indianapolis and Marion County., PLUS—-60 RCA Victor “45” Record players and albums of six records of the winners” choice donated by the RCA Victor dealers] of Indianapolis and Marion County, and 120 season passes to individual theaters participating in} the contest by the theaters. i It's an easy contest, packed with plenty of fun for all* members of the family. Here's what you do: Starting next Sunday, clip the! movie titles from advertisements of participating theaters appearing in The Times Sunday and daily. Paste them on_a sheet of paper using not more than 20 movie titles, in a sequence to make a short-short story, statement or any complete thought. The thought may be several] !sentences, Between the titles you may add from one to three of your own words. Each entry must close with the statement “It's Movietime, U.8.A.” Here's an example, taken from movie titles on today's Times’ {theater page: Fie There being NO HIGHWAY IN| |THE SKY, THE GREAT CA-| {RUSO, one of the FLYING] { LEATHERNECKS boarded a | MYSTERY SUBMARINE with CAPTAIN HORATIO HORNBLOWER bound for THE LAST OUTPOST to see the CATTLE DRIVE and learn THE SECRET OF CONVICT LAKE. They landled in KENTUCKY and met the | PRINCE WHO WAS A THIEF | who bore the MARK OF THE RENEGADE. Although YOUNG AND WILLING, Caruso said “EXCUSE MY DUST” and HE RAN ALL THE WAY down THE LONG DARK HALL deciding to LEAVE IT TO THE MARINES and not be SATURDAY'S HERO while IT’S MOVIETIME, U.S.A. You can do much better. So clip the movie titles from the theater ads, paste them on a sheet of paper to practice this week so you'll be ready when the contest starts next Sunday. . DO NOT submit any entries now. Next Sunday's Times is the first paper from which you are to compile your short story or statement. It doesn’t cost anything to enter. When. the contest starts next Sunday you are to drop your éntries in boxes available at the 80 theaters co-operating. Important news about The

|

Times’ “Movietime, U. 8. A.” contest is on its way. So keep reading .| your Indianapolis Times this week

Population Center

"Continued From Page One

southeast of Columbus on the road to Versailles, A granite boulder marks that roadside spot. In 1910; Astronomy Prof. Wilbur A. Cogshill of IU found the population center in Bloomington, on the steps of the Shower Broth-

ers furniture factory. That was!

-

8

i SUNDAY, SEPT. 30, 1051

Continued From Page One dianapolis. women, through The Times Minute Women program, have been given the opportunity to fire the first volley.

the program can work—the women of the nation will be given a chance to take up the fight.

the only time in its 60 ‘years in! .Not all people can give blood.

Indiana thot the center-fell in a built-up area.

On a Hillside

In 1920 the center was on a beech-covered hillside near Whitehall, close to the border of Owen and Greene Counties. Another 10 years found the center shifting westward to a point three miles southeast of Linton. And after the 1940 census it was two miles southeast of Carlisle.

With hardly any variance from north to south, the center of population for 160 years has always fallen within a distance of 25 miles of a line due west from Baltimore, Its longest leap westward, in 1870, was 48 miles. The new center is on the B80acre corn field owned by Mr. and Mrs. Carl Snider, prosperous farmers of Dundas, Ill. Their home is half a mile away.

44 Fishermen Saved After Blast on Boat

CLEARWATER, Fla., Sept. 29 (UP)—An exploding air compressor tank blasted a three-foot hole into the side of a pleasure fishing vessel today and sent 44 deep-sea fishing tourists and crewmen diving into the Gulf of Mexico. A calm, quick-thinking captain, an alert Coast Guard and another

But everybody can work to recruit donors. is All club leaders are urged to be present at the Minute Women's muster Wednesday® 3 No blood will be taken there. The plan of attack will be outlined. A. simple 30 day program, which if aggressively executed by the women of Indianapolis will end the critical blood supply shortage. 4 Be sure that your club president will be at the meeting. Call her today and be certain she has the message. : Invited to take part in Wednesday's rally are the heads of all PTA and church groups, veterans auxiliaries, school mothers groups, sororities’ (business, professional and social) service clubs, educational organizations and all other organized women's groups. An outline of the meeting program will be in the Times tomorrow, Publicity chairmen of the groups are invited to attend with their presidents. The meeting will be over at 11:15 a.m. This is the most important project ever offered any women’s club, It is an urgent hour in our history. . Indianapolis women will prove themselves. worthy of their fighting sons during the 30 days following D: Day. Be And D Day is Wednesday at the Murat Theater for all wom-

i

party fishing craft nearby saved the lives of all persons aboard.

appeal for

for details before the contest ope

next Sunday. i

in New York.

"THE GIVING-—Responding fo armed forces blood civilian donations. lapse, Mrs. Marjorie Clay, wife of Gen. Lucius. Clay, makes a donation at a Red Cross blood center

Open Mondays Till 8 P. M.

en’s group presidents. H Hour is {10 a. m.

blood

N

‘We can not—we must not fail. If Indianapolis women prove

Minute Men and Women . | | Continued From Page One iy of donors _ suddenly

number dropped to one-third. . New goal of the Department of

obtained at the rate of 300,000 pirits per month. :

be accepted is limited by the facilities fof storing and processing. It takes rather elaborate eq ment to turn blood into a up plasma. And it takes a lot of cold storage space and fast transportation to get whole blood to Korea. :

As far as most civilians go, the progrédm will be just the same for them as when the Red Cross was in charge. All blood donated by civilians will be taken and processed by the Red Cross; the armed forces have moved in to make the need more dramatic to the’ American people. Blood taken from the men 'in uniform and from civilians working on bases will be processed by the military. :

Painlessness Emphasized _

The military is also supplying new processing and storage equipment to the Red Cross to increase the amount of blood it can handie. According to experts on civilian defense there is practically ‘mo limit to the amount of blood or plasma which would be needed in case of an atomic bomb attack on the U. 8. In one city alone, if ‘the: citizens had good warning-—an estimated 40,000 living casualties would require 120,000 units of blood in the first three-week period. If the attack came without warning, the quantity of blood needed would be twice that, experts believe, Emphasis in the new drive:is being placed on the painlessness

of giving blood. -

THE NEEDY-—Graphic proof ‘of where the goes—and why _ field picture from Korea, where a badly-wounded Marine is getting life-saving plasma from a

it's

needed—is this battle.

(Central Standard Time)

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adviser Donal ‘taken off the p ¢ a -= Allen E. Fre sistant RFC cc a job with a I

pad mink cc XE. Merl Young, peddler who

several RFC | subsequently a “White Ho Young said he baum back for On still an Gen. David J. moved as cor of the Detroit a House subc he had accept

tion of his off ond Army he Meade, Md., ni tial board to charges agains The FBI is 1 gift-taking sc: million-a-year partment at t son Air Base, ] high paid civili been suspende alleged gift-tal regularities” w connection wit Sen. John Del.), has bee fairs of the Ini reau for mont covered irreg the handling Williams’ retu Wilmington. might be more Fired |

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