Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1951 — Page 1
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~The Indianapo
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FORECAST: Clear, cool tonight. Low 40. Fair, a little warmer tomorrow, High 73.
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2d YEAR—NUMBER 222
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10
, 1951
Entered as Second-Clazs Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Indiana,
Issued Daily,
FINAL HOME
PRICE FIVE CENTS
.
50 Yank Tank
tiny village of Mundung, 23 miles © north of the 38th Parallel, and
| |
S
Stab 8 Miles
| | | |
By United Press EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 10 |—Fifty U. 8. tanks and near[ly 3000 infantrymen routed terrorized Chinese troops in a |daring stab eight miles into Com'munist territory today. The powerful U. 8. 2d Division task force made its hit-run| “killer” raid in an attempt to end the Communists’ month-long ve stand on bloody “Heartbreak .p i... Ridge” on the east-central front.) No. members The tanks rolled up the val-lo ne ooiciang ley west of the ridge With guns ins qo7r vip, blazing, thundered through the
{ | | ———e mee m——
By AGNES H. OSTROM Times Club Editor vou recruit
donor?
ed your of women's in The Times™ te Women's blood donor drive have, By telephone and personal calls yesterday was learned tlubwomen were signing up their husbands, non-club members and friends so their club will be credited in the drive. A number of the eclubwomen
pushed on two miles beyond the embattled northernmost peak of | “Heartbreak.” The task force was the strongest mustered by the 8th Army in
neighhors
‘Modern Minute Women—
Blood Donor Pledges Rolling In As Club Members Canvass City
The Blood Center, 18 W, Georgia St., is booked again to capacity tomorrow, Some reservations still remain for next Tuesday. Call Lincoln 1441 today to fill Tuesday's list. Minute Women should have their pledges in by Friday noon to be counted on the first unit tally which will be published in The Sunday Times.
Ambusher of Police
| wo F| News From Egypt, Iran, Page 3 ;
Seek Return 0f Man Freed
barger, 23 active members; 2d Battalion—Irvington Mothers Study
Club, Mrs. Robert Millar, 30, and
3d Battalion — American Wom- Two new charges were filed en's Volunteer Services, Miss Bet- today against a jilted lover ty Augustus, 60. who shot three policemen
Sixth Battalion--Decatur Cen- from ambush and then won tral PTA, Mrs. Walter Schellen- : freedom on probation.
berger, 300, and Wayne Unit, American Legion Auxiliary, Mrs, Prosecutor Frank Fairchild Marjorie 8. Wilson. 218, pressed new charges of assault A pa ‘and battery with intent to kill te en Againe Samu] Joseph Reynaid, : 2 34, formerly of 2352 Stuart St.
18 W. Georgia St., must have the Center on Leader's Day vester-
name of the clu
IT WENT DOWN, CAME UP—Sammy Carlton and Teacher he swallowed.
be
SHAKE AND COUGH—Teacher shows how she helped Sam. _my cough up the ring.
"Big Bright Ball’ Spotted Zipping Over Terre Haute
Times State Service “The rapidity with which it TERRE HAUTE. Oct. 10—A changed size could indicate only eircular-shaped object seen hurt- one thing—great speed,” said Mr. ling through Terre Haute skies ganner. He pointed out that a yesterday — traveling at least hajjpon would ‘drift with the twice as fast as any aircraft wing.” known to man—today revived amr Sonner said that from their talk of “flying saucers.” line of sight” timing, they tried Two of the persons who saw i, compute the speed of the obYesterday's white-hued “metallic ject by estimating its altitude. ball” were veteran aircraft ob Figuring 200 feet as its lowest
(recent weeks, ' | Engineering Feat = It bypassed a road in favor of a river bed trail prepared for
them by Army Engineers in what staff officers called the greatest
(Were making rersonal door-to-
door campaigns in recruiting ad-
ditional donors. They are making certain American servicemen in Korea will have ®life sustaining blood and plasma to come back home alive.
Strike Spreads >
Katherine Hatton look at the ring
Pupil Finds His Teacher First Grade
AMMY Carlton has new respect for his first grade teacher today. The 7-year-qld pupil at School 18 can thank his teacher for an operation. or possibly even from saving him from choking to death.
Sammy and 32 other pupils .
in Miss Katherine . Hatton's class ‘were watching a movie yesterday. Even though it was about ice cream, Sammy was kind of bored. So the little fellow started toying with the ring he wore. It waz a cowboy ring. and of course he was mighty proud of it. Sammy liked it =0 much that he put it in his mouth. Then suddenly, kerplunk. ~ gone mouth — down
r . THE ring was Sammy's throat. He let out a whoop and started coughing until his face was red. The ring stayed swallowed. «The stood.” But teacher acted fast. Although Sammy is almost as big as she, Miss Hatton picked him up and turned him over Holding the boy by the feet, she shook him like a rag rug. Sammy coughed again. Out came the ring. After a short cry, he was OK. Sammy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Carlton, 1801 Olive 8t., was back in school todav. From now on, he and the other pupils will believe their teachér when she lectures: “Children. let's not put things in our mouth.”
from his
other - children “just
At Borg-Warner
CHICAGO, Oct. 10 (UP) fast-spreading strike at
more : than 5000
and threatened automotive industry.
workers
Two new strikes broke out to- the Yankees were in day after 4750 CIO United Auto seat for the first Workers jumped a strike dead- the combination of the:
line at seven plants yesterday.
The latest walkouts were at the surely be enough to Ww in the two remaining g
Ingersoll products division
Nine; >t! Borg-Warner Corp. plants idled “clic
“Tshould Durocher decide
- A to win today
today three,” to cut into the they need four.”
Kalamazoo, Mich., where 550 men were idled, and the corporation's
Pesco products division in Cleves
land.
The Wage Stabilization Board
was assigned by President Truman
single engineering feat of the KoBe War, 8 i Remember all cards mailed
The Engineers had worked for Into the Red Cross Blood Center, {four days under a hail of Com- - : munist mortar and small arms fire to clear the riverbed. The sudden thrust took the Communists by surprise. { “We caught the Chinese with their pants down,” said Capt. Sam Freedman, a staff officer with {the attacking force. Some Communist guns and ‘mortars fire on the task force {but their shells harmessly bounce off the tough steel sides of the American tanks. Van Fleet Glad The task force returned safely at dusk, leaving death and chaos in its wake. It had struck just as elements of a Chinese army corps 30.000 strong were ‘replacing battered North Korean troops on the west side of the Mundung valley, Told of the success of the pis-
~ Continued on Page Colds
Odds Makers F
By United Press
jumping Communist Leader Gus Hall was escorted back into tha
guard | after his international flight to escape jail ended with his capture in Mexico City.
U. 8. and Mexican governments accompanied the 41-year-old sec-
PATLY. They took Halk and his luggage from an ancickt sedan and led him into the immigratian office. He was not handcuffed, and he said nothing.
s Feel iants Have Lost Their Magic Touch
By LEO H. PETERSEN i United Press Sports Editor
NEW YORK, Oct. 10—The New| » G A York Giants groped like shell | partment shocked men r miracle touch that carried them federal correctional institution.) to the National League pennant.! pawever Deputy Sheriff A. C.
ng the immigration office and looked back at the international bridge. Then he entered where immigration officials waited to interview him. He was captured in Mexico City
a
carried an overcoat over his arm.
announced
t t
From Across the Ria Grande Back fo U. 5. Bail-Jumping Commie Is Nabbed in Mexico
name Of the club which is to be credited with the pledge. If _you telephone your pledge, Lincoln 1441. be sure the operator gets the name of your group. New club groups registered yesterday by their presidents in-
clude 1st Battalion—ITS8C, Jenny Lind Chapter, Mrs. Donald Stin-|
LAREDO, Tex. Oct. 10—Bail- !
United States today under heavy
Four plainclothes agents of the | Wil
retary of the U, 8. Communist |
i X
Hall stopped just before enter-
GUS HALL—He looked back at the International bridge.
Monday night. Hall was wearingi seven other members of the U. 8. a neat brown suit, gray hat and Communist Party's Politburo.
U. 8. agents had been watching
Washington, the Justice De- Mexico City as a possible hiding {In Washingt that Hal Place for the fugitive party lead-
today for that would be placed immediately in a ers. but until Hall's arrest no posi-
ive lead on the missing four had urned up.
‘day. were. Mrs, Richard Stadling.’
Their manager, Leo Durocher,|Canales said he had prepared called on left-hander Dave Koslo 3 third-fioor, cell in the Webb to face Vic Raschi in the sixth ‘County jail for Hall. game of the World Series and] «Ag 1 understand keep the Giants’ hopes alive. spend the night here,” Deputy Trailing the Yankees, three Canale: iid. “Of course, the FBI games to two, after yesterday's hasn't definitely said that. They {fearful 13-to-1 shellacking. theiaren’t talking to nobody.” Giants faced a sudden end to Trailed to Auto Gourt
their cinderella story with the series scene shifting to Yankee! He was right. Newsmen were Stadium for the sixth and. if not permitted near the Red leader. necessary—the seventh games. “Get it from Washington,” one The feeling was that the Giants FBI agent snapped. “They have had at long last lost their magic all the details.” Extra precautions were taken to make sure there was no slipup
touch and the odds-makers supported that by establishing the! while Hall was brought across the border.
Yankees as 9-to-5 if Durocher sticks with surprise opening game WINNeT. Qmaers in cars and on foot paagainst Raschi. trolled ‘the entire area of the They hedged a -bit, however. yniigge spanning the Rio Grande. overnight: Hall was spotted by Mexican cher Jim undercover agents stationed on Yan the outskirts of the city as his car lig entered the capital Monday. He : the was trailed to an auto court "©" where he was arrested at 11 p. m. on his 41:t birthday. The three other fugitive Communist leaders still are missing. that Hall jumped $80.000 bail last July , along with Gilbert Green, Henry Winston and Robert Thompson. following their conviction with
s
K
Kos
to go with stuff-ball Pi Hearn. In that event kees will be only 17-10 They. are
"Tn
10
event, 17-to-10 picks w nlv
And
have
cried
“The Yankees Durocher
VAR
The prevailing feeling ops that
iefense,
nite)
Know - how and pi
LOCAL TEMPERATI RE Ga. m.. #1 9 a. 8. Mm... 43 10a . 58 49 if. a. m... 60
8 a.m... 8:30 a. m. 54 12 (Noon) 60 . 48
m . 4 Nuns Die in Crash, Page 23 { Traffic, the killer who never watches a clock, has taken three
m
Family Busy-ness i, ne wii Needs More Room
Every family that is growing in size also grows in family activities. If your family is going to need room for expansion in the next several years you will be wise to buy now the home that will adjust itself to your family changes for many years.
~ 14 ~ api CULATE BRICK rm.. fireplace, dirir rge bedrooms ath on first floor. Large, pa ipstairs. Full basement il SATAR® Acre exceplandscaped outheast. $21.500 EALTY. INC.. REALTORS
rm. kite! { shed KELLER R This—is—a sample ad from the many hundreds of home values offered today in the classified pages of The Indianapolis Times. You will find singles, doubles, duplexes, farms, estates and many suburban homes. From this wide variety vou are sure to find several that will interest you See them right away! TURN NOW TO 6K THE REAL ESTATE PAGES,
J “ A Killer Who Never Watches the Clock—
. Traffic Fatal to Three Here in 13: Hours
Reynolds is now living in Louis Chapter ville under a two-year pro : Mrs. given after being ay prohaune Sanford W. Whitacre, Grace shoaiing ote of the Ind apoli Methodist Church, White Cross Policemen. e was sen Guild: Mrs. Bernard M. Polisner, Sept. 28 by Special Judge Julia!
Indianapolis Section, National - |
Continued. on Page 4—Col, 1
Indianapolis Alumnae Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority;
Pace of Criminal Court 2. Doesn't Report in Person .
A check of records disclosed today Reynolds is not even yequired to report to a probation officer in person, He merely con{tacts him by letter. This {cedure was authorized by Judge | Pace, :
‘Emergency’ Used ; " To Buy Election, |™ cu... woo « men soos ; | three police officers, he has earned ; himself some time behind bars,” NAM Head Char p Mr. Fairchild said. { “If you let him get away with
somet like this, he can cause Today in Business, Page 23 Ee on shooting of By HAROLD HARTLEY (police officers.” Times Bpsiness Editor The new affidavits were signed Russia isn't a bear, it's a goat, by Patrolmen Donald Ulrey and used too often to kid the people, Merlin E. Lyon, both of whom iand herd them inte a welfare were gravely wounded in the state, : Mr. 6 ambush. They and Patrol- | And President Truman is in-'men Charles Bainaka ‘were pro{volved in a kind of “Red lie”, to tecting Reynolds’ former sweet{keep “the emergency” built up heart. Eloise (Boots) Smith, at in the minds of the people. her home at 3317 Roosevelt Ave. | The It 18 a Niagara of Yea pole 4. 3 ‘mone ing Tae Au, 8. had alle because: Treasury io make cheap money, 4% to kiif her heland buy election insurance for the C3U%¢ she would not return his ‘Fair Deal. {ove ‘| That's about the way he said!
it. William H. Ruffin, a sheet and ving pillow case manufacturer, whl Teyueide wis i gu ait He today sits quite .humbly. at the blast from his 12-gauge shotgun head of the powerful, shoutjng, One of the wounded policemen word-shooting National Associ® tion of Manufacturers. at Reyngds in he Mesum Ideas About Truman Fm Bill Ruffin is a plain man. Hey, Th Folicamen have, Rune thinks simply, but straight as an | nitals. Doctors said all will bear arrow. And he's got ideas, .in all permanent scars from the shootshades of purple, about the moral-'ing = , ity of the Truman government. |. The first ch - He says President Truman is nolds was rE age net a talking one way and acting an- Bainaka. whose intestines and other. working the words against |jjver were punctured by 22 shotinflation, but the dollars for it. 'zun. peliéts. Mr. Lyon: was You'd expect him to be a crusty, ‘wounded in the face .and neck hard-collar guy with a board in ang Mr, Ulrey, last to leave the his back. But he isn't. He says hospital, had his right arm and simply the government ought to leg mutilated by 66 pellets do what any sane businessman, p,., yu prosecutor John Daily does, and that is to keep a bal-' o.oo 4 erring with Reynolds attorney, said the defendant will let him know in a few days whether he will return voluntarily or fight extradition.
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 (UP) — Secretary of State Dean Acheson criticized Egypt te~ day for acting unilaterally te throw the British out of the S-u-e-r—Canal-— Zone; (Earlier Story, Page 3.)
Slight Quake Recorded
SEATTLE. Wash.. Oct. 10 (UP) -The University of Washington seismograph recorded a slight earthquake late yesterday In several Puget Sound communities in the same general area that was rocked by a heavy quake in 1949. No damage was reported.
Wounded ANN Three
Continued on Page 4—Col. 6
On the Inside | Of The Times |
Page Two thousand rampaging Cairo students called for the ejection. of British troops from the Suez Canal zone Three men are being considi ered for the managerial post of the Indianapolis Indians. 18 Amusements Crossword Editorials Forum MOVIES ..cconetesrisnres . Radio. Television Robert Ruark Ed Sovola Sports ...... Earl Wilson
Women's
a utility pole in the 2000 block of Northwestern Ave, on his way to work this morning. He died in General Hospital,
to work out a settlement. It was He leaves his
expected to consider the union's demand for a system-wide master contract that would replace individual agreements with BorgWarner divisions. The UAW had set a strike deadline at 10 plants, for today. The remaining plant involved was the
Ingersoll ‘steel factory at ‘New Castle, Ind. : Sith
a ———————————— | Red Feather Report . i To Stress Scouting | Need” for Red Feather dollars in the scouting program will be stressed at the third report luncheon tomorrow of the 1951 Community Chest campaign. The meeting, sponsored
Sears Roebuck & Co., will be the Claypool Hotel.
lives in three accidents in 131% hours. The victims. were an Indiana Ave. barber, a young hosiery mill supervisor, an elderly pedestrian. Their names: Edward Speights, 46. of 781 W, 25th St, who, with his brother
Latest humidity : a First Straw Vote Report Is Sunday
First tabulations in The Times Straw Vote for Mayer will be published in The Times Sunday. The figures are being com= piled from Official Tithes Straw Vota cards mailed to Indianapolis residents. Names of those who receive cards from The Times with the request they mark their cholcp. between Mayor Phil Bayt,’ “Democrat, and AleX Clark, Republican, are toieon from the City Directory, Names are ‘selected in a pat tern to include all sqetions of the city and all wage-carn= ing brackets. Watch for the first report on The Times Straw oi» for Mayor , ... next Sunday + « » in The Sunday Times.
Enter Times ‘Movietime, U. S.,A’ Contest NOW . . ..
servers, both Civil Aeronautics ,,.qinje altitude, the aircraft Administrationsofficers stationed (14 have to have been travelat Hulman Field here. ing 2880 miles per hour, the obComputing from their 15-3e¢- sarvers said. ond glimpse of the horizon-skim- Using 15.000 feet as the highest ming object, the veteran airmen pogsible altitude, the calculated estimated that the ‘saucer’ Was the craft would have been traveltraveling at least at 2880 mph ng as high at 42,000 miles per and possibly as fast as 42,000 nour, Fastest known aircraft speed 1s
wife and brother. Earlier, Mr. Hinton aad Mr. Mellon were fatally hurt ip aecidents a block apart. Mr. Mellon died yesterfay in General Hospital. He been hit by a car while crossi orth St. at Massachusetts A The driver was Henry Wolle 66. of 624 N. Illinois St. Mr. Hinton died last night in Methodist Hospital about T34 hours after he had been hurt in a two-car crash at North St. and Park Ave. He was riding in a car driven by Dick Ray Corntwell, 24, of 733 N. Grant St. Another passenger was Morris Boger, 31. of 2032 Southeastern Ave, whose left arm was broken. » They collided with a station ‘wagon driven by Roy Lee éPruitt, 24, of 2209 N. Talbot Ave. He was hurt, not seriously. Mr. Hinton, who had lived here
INDIANAPOLIS . TRAFFIC CHART (288 Days) 1950 6848 2586 56
mph. The startling computations around 1300 miles per hour, the came from eyewitnesses C. W. CAA experts said. Sonner, chief of aircraft com-| There was no way to establish munications and a veteran of 16 the object's actual altitude. Years of CAA work, and RoOY| «yoy can't tell how high a thing. Messmore, airways operation spe- jo plese you know how big it is.) clalist with more than 10 Years sng you can’t tell size unless you experience. know the altitude,” said Mr. Mr Messmore first glanced up Sonner. to see the hurtling disc at 1:42 ai Megemore said he was P. m. and call®d to "Mr. Sonnet previously ‘skeptical’ of flying who ran out to join him. To- gaycer stories, but Mr. Sonner Setter they watched the hie sald he had placed some credence right ball” for 15 seconds, be- in previous accounts. Frank M. S fore it disappeared-ever the ho- Other persons in Terre Haute utive of he rae! sxe rizon, saw the object, and calls of in- Council, Boy Scouts of America They discounted any “weather quiry Xo tHe airport prompted the will speak on the importance of | balloon” theories. two C men to tell their story. scouting to the community, |
\
we
1951 Accidents ..... 6451 Injured ....... 2810
Killed 49
Earl, ran the barber shop at 325 Indiana Ave. . R. Forrest Hinton, 25. of 1935 iN. Euclid Ave. general super{visor at the National Associated | Hosiery Mills. dames A, Melloh, 77, of 712 N.
¥
R. Forrest Hinton Edward Speights
‘East St, traffic death every 4! hours proaching the 56 fatalities listed ! The accidents covered a period within the city limits. up to this time in 1950. This ‘of 18 hours, T minutes—but the Indianapolis’ traffic death rec- year's figure is 49. {deaths were 13 hours, 30 minutes ord. which had shown improve-, Mr, Speights received a crushed % {apart. That's an average of one ment over last year, was fast ap-'head and chest when his car hit' Continned on Page 4—Col. §
$8000 In Prizes . . . . Details Page 5,
by | in
ed i
S38 4 4a.
