Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1951 — Page 1
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FORECAST: Fair and -warmer tonight.
62d YEAR—NUMBER 2: 225 .
It's Hardly a Contest, but We'll Humor "Em—
.
he Indianapolis Times
Partly Sisudy and mild lotorrow. Low Somght 93. High Sor 80.
Enter
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1951
Indianapolis, Indiana,
-
"| FINAL HOME
PRICE FIVE CENTS ed as Second-Clazs Matter at Postoffice reve
Issued Daily 1 ——— a
Indiana and lllinois Are at war— Egypt Alerts Armor
With Blonds, Brunets, Redheads
N obstreperous GI in Korea has dared to challenge the beauty of
Hoosier women. He appealed to the Illinois Junior Chamber of Commerce for help and that misled, myopic group had the gall to agree that Illinois’ heauties are more so than Indiana's. The challenge was taken up promptly today by the Indiana Jaycee board of directors. They say—unanimously, of course that Hoosier honeys are lovelier. Hoosier Jayce# President Val Williams said: “This is practically no contest. However, we'll he glad to give our neighbors their comeuppance.” Replying to the challenge issued by Illinois Jaycee President larry Buckmaster, Mr. Williams said, “Even the least attractive of Indiana's belles --OULShines--the-1inois- pest. "Jt al} started when Sgt. Norman K. Ball wrote to the Illinois Chamber of Commerce. The sergeant had made a bet with his buddies that the Illinois lasses were prettier in every way than their Indiana cousins,
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES and the Chicago Daily News will co-operate with the Jaycees in helping Sgt. Ball lose—or win-—his bet. Mr. Buckmaster rushed to the GI's aid. “Sgt. Ball is completely right when he says Illinois women are the most beautiful,” he said. * “The Illindbis State Junior Chamber of Commerce is prepared to come up with positive
ol proof. m ! “We challenge Indiana to BETTER, HUH ?—That's what pare their loveliest ladies a Gl in Korea thinks. This is “Hoosier oneve. a th HOOSIER HONEY—Carol Wine Wials of 1951, He says pirat ” One or — just one example of the true bea inois beauty is tops. Hii aves : : os y P Williams said in return. visits there. Sgt. Ball's home is in los He asked that pictures of Angeles, but he got high opin- both Illinois and Indiana variene 0 ils ions of _Hiinois girls during ties be mailed to him at his
To Escape Center Who’ I Be | Be Mayor? Wounded hy Gun See Siraw Vote
The first returns in The One of six girls who escaped Times Straw Vote for Mayor from the Marion County Juvenile,
Nine Are Charged In Attempted Theft
will be published in The Sun-
Center was taken to General Hos-, day Times . . . tomorrow. Of pital this afternoon with a bullet Many Indianapolis resi- d
wound in the arm. The 16-year-old North Side girl was hospitalized after police cap-
dents have returned the bal-
Nine persons were charged with lot portion ef the straw vote
pre-burglary today following the
tured her and two other teen- eards after marking their attempted theft of a safe from age runaways. . Fleming Gardens School. 4400 W. Police said the girl was shot by choice between Mayor Phil Washington St. a Northeast Side resident while Bayt, Democrat, and Alex Sheriff's deputies reported a
climbing a fence in his yard after escaping from the Center, 25th St. and N. Keystone Ave.
Clark, Republican. If you have received a Times Straw Vote ecard, fill
1000-pound safe was tugged and hauled from the basement of the {school after attempls to open It
The girls told police the uniden- : # . |had failed. tified man ordered them to halt '* 1m NOW and drop it in the A “crowd” © 8f people were then fired. The girls kept running.! nearest mail box. More cards trying, to load the safe into a -
Patrolmen Paul T. Pearcy and Dale Crittenden picked up the wounded girl and two other fugi-! tives, both 14, at Madison -Ave.! and Morris St. Doctors said the girl's wound was not serious. Three other giris who fled the Center this morning were still at large. T.ast reports had them
car when a passing motorist discovered them and called police. The safe was obtained from a {larger one in the basement of the! school, deputies said. Baken from _|the larger safe was $420 in nickels. Money from Festival Madison Shadley, school prinPlus Something to Eat cipal, told authorities the smaller hitchhiking on U. 8. 31 toward _DUrglars may be spending and sare contained about $100, pro Camp Atterbury, police ‘=aid. stuffing themselves today after ceeds from a PTA Fall Officials at the Center said the last night's break-ins. val held at the school last night. six girls escaped when a super- At the Clayton Carpet Co." The nine persons were arrested | visor unwittingly left a door un- Bernard Clayton, 31. of the Hotel at 922 E. Washington St. after locked after breaking up a fight! Harrison, reported the safe with|police found them in the car seen between two other girls. $200 cash and a $50 check was at the school.
. : rn - stolen. Arrested were James Roberts, Two Men Arrested | Bananas, lunch meat. 40 car- 21: Jerry Roberts, 18, and Georgia | {tons of cigarets, In Robbery Case Here
10 pounds of Roberts, 18, of 922 E. Washingslced bacon and $5 worth of candy, ‘ton St.; Keith Wright, 26, of 523 Police this afternoon seized two Were taken at Thomas’ Grocery N. Pine St.;
Lester Austin, 28, of men believed to be the robbery|at 3365 E. 20th St. Owner Thomas 926s Union St.;
are being mailed daily. Watch tor the first Straw Vote returns tomorrow , , , in The Sunday Times.
Burglars Take Money,
Glen Cosat, 24,
"suspects who led them on a merry Mocas told police intruders also of 202 N. Eastern Ave.; Madaline
[broke into a stamp machine and Adcock, 18, of 3031 Euclid Ave. and Louise Hayes, 26, of 1120 S. Fleming St.
manhunt Thursday. The men were beleived to be WO chewing gum machines.
James Earl Perry, 18, and Ken- LOCAL , TEMPERATURES
neth (Ted) Shaw, 22, who were Sam 47 Yam 65 | : i .m... 65 [Italy Feels Quake hunted by 60 policemen Thursday x a pm . 49 11 a. m.. 67 | taly Fee t Q ee iE, ll A Drpl woo gio 3 A.M... §5 12 (Noon) 6 | Brief earthquake tremors shook I ey Mare caught Sam. 4 1p. m.. 7 psmes today, but no damage or downtown, leaving a cleaning| — | 8 y. . 1 B store. Latest humidity ...... 35%, [casualties were reported.
Saturday's for Shopping
Yes, Saturday is a fine time to plan your week-end home shopping. Start with The Indianapolis Times Real Estate pages because there you will find the vast majority of the better home values that are advertised for sale in this area. Many hundreds of these homes are advertised ONLY in The Times. You will also find’ that many of the homes offered For Sale in The Times on Sunday are also offered in The Times on Saturday so that you whay get a head
Modern Minute Women —
1st Blood Drive Roll Call In Tomorrow's Times
By AGNES H. OSTROM five days scheduled at the Center|
Times Club Editor should be made as soon as pos-| Tomorrow will be a big day for!giple. Times’ Modern Minute Women. i —————— nA Sood For tomorrow, in The Times, will ~ SOMEWHERE IN KOREA, | be the first battalion roll call re-| Oct, 13 (UP)—Blood is one of port listing each club unit and the| the greatest life-savers in the number of blood donor pledges. Korean campaign, Col. H. BinkA full page in the Women's Sec-| ‘ley, 10th Corps Medical Officer tion will be devoted.to the Modern| said today. Minute Women drive. a “I can’t over-emphasize the f Yesterday it was announced, importance of whole: blood in that the all-time Korean War| this war. If we didn’t have this Nyrt on your home shopping record for one month, of 2133] reservoir of blood our death | pans. do mot mow take pints of blood, set in July, was| rate would probably double or | the Big Sunday Times just shattered. triple,” he sald. & ¥ :
Minute Women sweeping In- The death rate of Korean plivtie. PL 22a $58) by wi.
ight tonigh d order th dianapolis to support the men on! wounded is at an all-time low | convenient home delivery. of 1.8 per cent.
the front line, and the spirit they have aroused, have accounted for
BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY ESTATE
more than 2200 pints so far this| The scheduled dates remaining] 4 paiem® neoic eastern edge of cits. month. are Oct. 19, 23, 25, 26, 30 and 31.| Al steam heated. Barn’ with ‘box However, even twice the previ-/Call LIncoln 1441 now and pledge CARL N. BALDAUF, BE-1712
ous all-time high will not be enough to meet the pressing needs now which Indianapolis women dates will be announced. - More ave been challenged to do. days must be added if the demand dave above ad is from ToPledges to fill the remaining'is to be met, y's Times. , " i x
to give on one of those dates. As soon as they are filled new
Frederick B. Cline, Realtors
1313 Circle Tower Bldg, FR-3174
Festiy ‘He
{father awoke.
Tax Returns Of Revenue Staff Probed
Investigation of income tax Ireturns of top salaried U. S. #8. | Internal Revenue employees las (in Indiana was ordered today’
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iby the federal tax chief in -| Washington. | The “intensive audit” here will
|be part of a nation-wide probe of U. 8. tax employees to ferret lout tax chiselers in the Bureau lof Internal Revenue, recent scanldal target in Washington. Wilbur O. Plummer, assistant {collector for Indiana, said it was ithe first time in his 18 years with the bureau that such an investigation has been launched here,
Cites Senate Probe
Mr. Plummer said he surmised the probe resulted front recent | testimony in a Senate subcommit{tee investigation of the Recon{struction ' Finance Corp. That | probe brought to light the faillure of several high tax officials to make full income tax payments and resulted in several 'resignatiens under pressure. The probe in Indiana and all other states was ordered by John B. Dunlap, who became U. 8. Commissioner of Internal Revenue in August. In Indiana, the audit will cover
Times photos by Lloyd B Walton,
Mitchell, Miss Indiana of 1951, uty Sgt. Ball is challenging.
Korea address, Signal Service Co. 1. GHQ Long Lines Signal Group, 8226 Armyv Unit, APO San Francises.
in Internal Revenue. They will be top officials and higher salaried employees. Exempt from) Page (he special audit will be clerks,
Times Index
70,000 Ales
about 700 of some 1200 emiployees!
For Quick Action In Suez Showdown
World Crises at a Glance
LONDON —Great Britain orders troop reinforcements into Sudan. Tells forces in Suez to ‘shoot to kill” in case of any attack. CYPRUS—-All leaves of paratroopers canceled. Troops expegted to leave for Suez. TRIESTE—South Lancashire regiment ordered to depart for Khartoum, capital of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. CAIRO—Egyptian army armored units alerted for movement on hour’s notice; state of emergency proclaimed to prevent anti-British riots.
KOREA—70,000 Allies burn and blast way north on 50-mile front. United
Nations and Communist liaison officers meet tomorrow to attempt to arrange resumption of peace talks. VENEZUELA—Armed rebellion crushed. Ruling junta escapes assassi-
001 ‘Shoot to Kill British Troops At Canal Told
By United Press CAIRO, Egypt, Oct. 13— The Egyptian army alerted its armored units tonight for movement on an hour’s notice as Britain strengthened. its guard posts in the Suez Canal Zone. Other units of Egypt's army. were ordered to be ready to move on 24 hours notice to cope with “any eventuality,” although reliable sources said the instructions did not mean the army was being put on a war footing. Britain ordered its canal zone soldiers to “shoot io kill” in event
Blast Ahead On Wide Front
By JACK JAMES |
United Press Staff Correspondent |
EIGHTH ARMY HEAD-| QUARTERS, Korea, Sunday, Oct. 14-—Six United Nations|
divisions—70,000 or more men smashed ahead up to two miles in East Central Korea Saturday. They captured seven strategic heights on the Communist winter line below Kumsong. Three Chinese battalions were routed from strong fortifications) lon four hills after resisting a furious assault by American, Co-!
You won't feel tha full impact typists and other “minor” office UNITED NATION s AD- of an attack. of that new tax boost until personnel, VANCE unsan, Korea, Sources here said the Egyptian 1952 Mr. Plummer sald the audit Oct. a CU osit sited Nations orders were issued partly because Srrs erat enassasrtie ri and Communist liaison officers of possible disorders by givillan A series of treaty break-ups “would be nothing special if no agreed today to try again to DD
may be in the offing in the for the fuss being raised in Wash-|
!ington”. over RFC and revenue Middle East, says Ludwell officials. He added that he was Demy. ................. confident the Indiana audit will] AMUSEMENtS aes v.eu..vvin 6 uncover no irregularities. Bridge ..............; «iim “The special audit will include! Churches ................ 4 [practically everyone who judges Crossword: ......%..... 5 [the aceuracy of an income tax] Editorials ................ | return,” Mr. Plummer said. FOrumY ..........c0ceins 8 Will Be Checked Movies ................... 6 Radio and Television ..... 5 Mr. Plummer himself will come Sports ..........c........ gq under the spotlight. So will the, Women's ......:......... 3 [return of his chief, Ralph Cripe,
collector for Indiana. Mr. Plummer said returns of Internal Revenue employees are {audited every vear in Indiana. PARIS, Oct. 13 (UP) + U. 8. The new order calls for a re-
Navy Secretary Dan. A. Kimball check of those ‘audits and a
thorough inspection of returns. arrived by air from Rome today| gcpeduled po make the audit!
for conference with Gen. Dwight are H. W. Gaither and James D. Eisenhower and top French Slade. who are assigned regularly officials. to the Indiana Bureau.
— —
Couldn't Talk Very Plain’ pn
Kimball in Paris
Cops Turn Mommas, Care for Tot Armed Rebellion
A 2-year-old boy was found wandering cold and alone, clad only in a pajama top, on the street today
Police officers wrapped the tot in a blanket and rushed him to the Juvenile Aid Division where he was warmed and fed by lady police there, The boy, unable to give his name or address to the officers, was ‘“‘mothered” by burly police- §: men for more than three hours +: {before his parents were located. Officers who found the lad said he was shivering with cold and crying from hunger in the 1200block of N. Alabama St.
House-to-House Search
Police launched a house-to-house search to locate the tot's | parents after he had been fed and clothed at JAD headquarters in the basement of City Hall. Lt. Forrest D. Higgs, JAD chief, took. the boy with him to the neighborhood where he was found. . | The boy's’ mother, Mrs. Made[line Tinkler, rushed to the street |as the police car drew to the curb - and immediately threw her arms {around the baby. She told Lt. Higgs her husband {had called her from work to re- | port the boy was missing.
Just Wandered Away
The tot had wandered away from home while his father and two sisters slept at their home at 1220 N. Alabama St. He. was not missed until his
Juvenile Aid officers pooled funds at their headquarters to buy milk and breakfast food for the boy. A woman passer-by offered two dizpers for the boy. . Higgs reported the family|to leave the home. at the Ala-| Police wha found the boy said he first gave his name as “Larry
5, make with big smiles about his '
lived in one room bama St. address.
HOME AND HAPPY—Ronald Tinkler. 2
| arrange resumption of the Ko- | rean truce talks despite a Red | charge that United Nations | planes strafed the conference | area. A United Nations spokesman |
In Cairo, police proclaimedia state of emergency to prevent anti-British demonstrations from erupting into serious disturbances, The demonstrations have been staged to support Egypt's plan to
said the liaison officers will : d meet tomorrow “to settle ad- [3 Junk oi Jg38 ARglo-Esyiiay . ministrative matters deemed realy allowing tain to keep
essential before the main del- | troops in the Suez Canal Zone.
| egations resume the plenary | Trainmen Balk sessions” at the new site, Pan | From Port Said came reports Mun Jom. that railwaymen refused to trans-
F
rt newly arrived British troops Hiombian and South Korean troops! 1 yo y p
to military camps in the Canal
for 12 hours. Three other hills| | / Nl Zone. The newspaper Al Zamane were seized soon after the tank- / Fp Port Tewfik said two pt 1303 ofiled Allied push started. i$ oT Miles cers and men arrived at the port The main Allied drive was on al A ) =! | and a third was expected" hourly, flaming 22-mile sector south and} ! Sea 4 |0 3 Britain ordered troop reinforce‘southeast of Kumsong. But action | - ment into the Sudan and Sazed AN across 2 Bliamite front SUEZ CANAL-—Lifeline to cancelled leaves of all British after United Nations troops, f-| yu. Middle East. paratroopers on the Mediter-
yrAtlean Island of Cyrus. MaIneuvers there were called off, and {informed sources in Cyprus said the paratroopers soon would leave to bolster the Suez forces. British troops in the Suez area er of a bitter political disute between Egypt and Britain were told to shoot to kill if they are attacked. Authoritative sources here said,
however, that Britain would fer-
By Unied Prose. ‘mally hand-over her Suez bases CARACAS. Venezuela. Oct. to Egypt if that country accepts
equal partnership in a defense 13—The three-man military proposal offered by the United
8% junta ruling this oil-rich na- States, Britain, France and Tur- § tion announced today they key against Communist aggres-
‘had crushed an armed rebellion | Wants Pact Funhed |after escaping assassination at a {Columbus Day ceremony Britain would keep only enough At least two persons were killed troops to provide her share in {and five wounded through the na- the joint defense setup, withdrawi tion in a revolt officially ascribed ing the rest. Sources in London 3 to elements of the outlawed Dem- said Egypt's acceptance of the 5d jocratic Action (Accion Demo-|four-power proposal .would “su L¥ cratica) ‘Party and Communists, persede much of the 1936 Angi S | Col. Luis Felipe Llovera Paez, Egyptian treaty.” lone of the three junta members,| The treaty allows Britain te promised a nation-wide broadcast maintain troops in the Suez area {later today on what he termed'until 1956 but Egypt has ane
Continued on Page 5-—Col. 3
~ Venezuela Report
Continued on » Page 5—Col. 4
rn
| Continued on n Page 5—Col. ‘ |" |
''He Was a Mascot for the Marines—
Jimmy Would Have Made A Fine American Citizen
OMAHA, Neb. Oct. 13 (UP) ~—Kim Song Nore, a 13-year-old Korean boy, was found by six
| x j
would be a fine idea if Jimmy could be admitted to the United States so that he could enter | Father Flanagan's famed Boys’
8S. Marines. He had been Town. wounded by mortar and shell Word reached Sen. Hugh fire. Burler (R. Neb.) and he spons
When he recovered, the six Americans and Kim just adopt- - ed each other by mutual con- | sent. The Marines changed his | | name to “Jimmy,” and he became their mascot. Jimmy earned his way. He served with the Marines as a spotter, picking out enemy snipers, and he also doubled as an interpreter. Cpl. Robert Turk wrote his
sored a bill to permit Jimmy to enter the’ United States. he Senate of the United States passed a special bill waiving the nation’s immigra« tion laws. The way was clear. Mrs. Turk said yesterday that she had received a letter from . her son in Korea. Jimmy was riding in an. American supply truck. The truck plunged over a cliff, the
photo by Lloyd B. Walton, 2, and Sister Sharon,
‘adventure.
“I guess he was so cold he couldn't talk plain,” Lt. Higgs| said. ‘Besides. you can't expect
He reprimaded the. father for Gene.” They later learned hisla lost little 2-year-old to talk mother, Mrs. H. ©. Turk, | letter said. negligence in permitting the boy name is Ronald. lvery plain.” Omaha, that he thought it Jimmy was killed. ® ’ ! x “ : » So . 3 ¥ . - 5 x . i . = ¥ > i - ar 2 »- : 2 ? i : a i ul ih a
