Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1951 — Page 27
ve
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more diptish forces ng enough ' the Cairo t attack— sed “show lem states $ no intenast so it is
n's earlier 'wlessness, in the Suym followng. Also a nian and tish policy ve. Before | by Amep-
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Allies and
has assets orking for rourse, the hose coun~ hich reinely related tionalisms, Lr" issue, cursed as f national spect as a Am. heet is the power, der of anti. nore sober er a West-
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FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 1951 ____
i
with house” vear in office, Judge David I. Horuvitz, in his 50-minute. charge to the jury, sald Western' Union must serve all “legitimate customers without discrimination, but it is not required by its license to serve those using its facilities for illegal services.”
Four Children Hurt in Crash
Near tragedy last night interrupted the move of two Ohio families to Arkansas F8ur children were hurt, one
operating a “disorderly by handling $300,000 a bets through its local
Re. i = rr . dmits Slaying ester Union { | Plans Appeal in | Wife, Stuffing Comming Care DOETON, N. J. Nov. UP)—Western Union Telegraph uo ‘and its local manager planned 0 i |teday to appeal their conviction si charges’ of bookmaking. for [transmitting money order bets on ; By United Press {horse racing. LOS ANGELES, Nov: 2— A Cumberland County jury of A woman's dad in. Seven men and five women last 2 : curiosity and in night found the company and lotuition yesterday led to the cal manager Cries H. Franke arrest of housepainter John 8uilty under an old common law. Kelley Sr, 44, on charges of gtrangling his wife to death and stuffing her body in a trunk. Kelley confessed he killed his wife, Mrs. Margaret Theresa Kelley, 39, nearly three weeks ago, kept her body for five days in a trunk in their home and then dumped it in a vacant lot when the odor caused his two children to start asking questions. Deputy sheriffs would only credit an anonymous telephone call with leading them to Kelley as a suspect in the case and help-| ing identify the decomposing body
. which was discovered only last
week-end,
. But from other sources the United Press learned that a neighbor of the Kelleys in East los Angeles who had read ‘about the finding of the trunk and its grisly contents became curious and en-
tered the Kelley home, Identity Not Revealed critically, when a Pennsylvania . Railroad freight train plowed inThe woman, whose identity was to a car driven by one of the not revealed by officers, noticed fathers at the S. Holt Ave. that Mrs. Kelley's winter clothing crossing near Kentucky Ave. The
was still in the home although rather also was injured. the. husband had told her Mrs Gre Conditi Kelley was called to Boston be- rave Condition
In grave condition in General Hospital today with a brain conwas 10-year-old Ferris
cause of the illness of relatives, Last Tuesday night the woman telephoned the sheriff's office and sald she suspected the unidenti- His fied trunk victim was Mrs. Kelley. poo 0 "10 spent the night Because of the condition of the in the hospital, as did Clifford body, officers had been.unable to G, Blaney, 48. the driver, and his identify the woman. But with Jerry, 12. . their tipster's suspicion. sheriff's None of the four were seriously criminologists were able to pro-njured and .Nadine and Jerry vide the FBI laboratories in were discharged today Washington with that much of a Parents of the. Hoen chiliten clue to go on along with an in- staved in the hospital ast complets fingerprint. . night, too. although they escaped While waiting for the FBI to injury. They had no other place check on the print, officers placed ¢, 20. : Kelley's home under surveilance and after they confirmed the identity of the victim as that of 17
cussion Horn. sisters
Nadine, 14, and also
son
Truck Wasn't Hit They and another son, Duane, . had been riding in a, truck in
a toed Ris ite Coens look him into which the two families carried snide gue 8. part of their belongings. The Kelley broke down and ad- truck wasn't hit.
mitted he had strangled his wife and placed the body in the trunk. He was booked on suspicion of
Both vehicles were in a line of traffic on Holt Ave. waiting for traffic to clear to turn into Ken-
murder charges several hours tyeky Ave. Mr. Blaney stopped: after his confession the auto on the main line tracks Sheriff Eugene Biscailuz made state police said. publie the information that Kelley The engineer. Ravmond R
had confessed slaying his wife. Schaefer, 35. of 558 Eastern Ave The sheriff’ quoted Kelley as say- told them he was doing about 28 Ing he killed Mrs. Kelley, mother mph and started blowing his
of two children. Oct. 13 during an whistle a block before the crash. argument in their home .followintg wit agreed with his aeca drinking bout train dragged” the Officers reported
nesses ount The Kelley said car 25 the argument was over money The elder Horns may find ahand another woman. They said other place to stay tonight. But he told them he grabbed his wife today théy haunted the corridors from behind and “squeezed until of General Hospital, anxiously she became limp.” ; awaiting word of their critically The body had been so badly injured boy. decomposed when it was discov- =
ed th coroner's opsy . ied a er pe U. S. Will Draft 59,650 in January
feet.
Puts Body in Trunk
Kelley said. according to offi- J ie ral . cers, that after he squeezed his WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (UP) into unconsciousness he THe Defense Department today
wite stripped her clothes off stuffed her into the almost tique trunk -
issued a call for 59,650 draftees in January for assignment to the Army and Marine Corps.
and an-
Kelley said that when the chil- Of the total, 48.000 will be asdren, Richard, 7. and John Jr. 10, Signed to the Army and 11.650 returned from a movie he told © the Marines. he December call was for only
them their mother had been sum-
18 GOO nductions or 21 Yn moned east by an emerg v. 16.900. Inductions were suspended that month far th naliday De"he vatister said fn the B that nm onth for the holiday pe A : riod between Dec. 21 and Jan. 2 rur ir el cg days and Th unx J : te ANC The January call was set highon Wednesday the children began .. ¢ +} rail ~ 0 compensate for the small to notice an odor. He then loaded ,
December figure. omobile vacant lot undiscovered
15 days after
it into a owed aut
and dumped it in a where it remained
Two Soldiers Killed hg As Car Hits Bridge me m— NOLANVILLE. Tex., Nov. 2 ‘ 5 GUARANTEED (UPY—Two Ft. Hood, Tex. solWalch Repairing | diers were killed near here late
vesterday when their automobile 20 Years Experience
i= into a bridge ® HL WILD o
Officers identified the dead as fv. 7 £. Ohlo St.
Dorr
Ls 1/C James 8. Willis, 26, of Mountain View, Ark. and Sgt. «Melvin Ra O'Neal Va
Woman's Funeral to Be In Tavern She Operated
EALTIMORE, Nov. 2 (UP) Funeral for Mrs. Anna Zeberlien, 66, was to be today in the tavern she aperated for 20 years. “If my bar's good enough to make a living for me,” she had faid, “it's good enough to be laid oul in.”
Actress Loses Baby CANTON, 0, Nov. 2 (UP) — Movie actress Peggy Ann Garner was reported in “very good" condition today by Aultman Hospital officials after -she had 'a miscar"riage yesterday as the result of a fall. Miss Garner, 19, is. the wife of singer Richard Hayes, who accompanied her to her former home here. The hospital said Miss Garner probably would be released today.
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{face of federal
The state charged the defendantseday said he is
in Indianapolis $
1 iffy Shuffles
.His Numbers
It looks like a cold, hard winter for men at odds. ? Indianapolis gamblers continued
Police Shooter Gives Up in Court
| Samuel J. Reynolds, the love‘crazed gunman who wounded [three policemen from ambush, to-| day surrendered in Criminal Court | 2 before Judge Saul I, Rabb. He returned from Louisville, where he had been living since
to pull their stakes today in the<he was given a suspended sentence
tax onslaughts and threats of a tighter police squeeze on their operations. Isaac (Tuffy) Mitchell, long récognized as kingpin of numbers gambling along Indiana Ave. to“out of the numbers.” “I quit it about three weeks ago when they came along with this tax. I can’t operate with that kind of business,” he said. . Big Powwow Held Tuffy, who has a long- string of gaming arrests without convictions, said he is now in the business of teaching people to dance. “We do it by records,” he said. “You buy a record and it plays jand teaches you how to dance.’ The men of chance were re‘ported tq have discussed their i plight at a big powwow late yesterday, but they were mum about
| their decision today.
Operators of two games asked federal officials here if they come under the new 10 per cent tax and 50 stamp. One was the operator of the “Smile Jar” ticket pool, and the other operates a punchboard. Deputy Collector Wilbur O. Plummer of the Internal Revenue Burea here sent the query to Washington.
Bookies Hardest Hit Mr. Plummer-«disclosed that the first shipment of $50 gambling stamps arrived today. “We are ready to do business,” he said. Operators of a big lottery held their own “executive session’ last night and decided to keep operating. They'll try it by passing the 10 per cent on to .the ticket purchasers. Bookies seem to be hardest hit. More than half of the city's big horse bookies have cut off their wire service on track results and have halted operation. The Times learned vesterday. Others are expected to follow. Also reeling are football forecast gamblers, three of whom were thrown for a loss this week.
Panic Bris London Market
Other "Stories, Page 3
By United Press LONDON; Nov. 2--Panics sell: ing unequalled since the pre war davs of 1939 swept the Londo stock market today as Prime Minister Winston Churchill held his first top-level Anglo-Ameri-can conference in search’ of United States aid.
The stock market plunged to new lows for the sixth consecutive day since Mr. Churchill's
election victory. Panic selling in British government bonds, in particular, pushed
many of them to new all-time Hows. The best explanation of the
six-day slump centered around the certain economic crisis ahead, fears of domestic measures Mr. Churchill may take to meet it and uncertainty about getting more aid from the United States. Hit All-Time Low
The new government and watched
sat by 3's per cent war loan issues—the biggest single isSue of government bonds--fall to an all-time low. The issue sold lower than it did in the big break in 1939. Brokers were puzzled by fact that A. A. Butler,
stock the new Chan-
cellor of the Exchequer, did not | Send the government broker into the exchange to check the
slump. It was believed his appearance alone would have halted the qarop.
Air Pilots Get Pay Hike CHICAGO, Nov. 2 (UP) American Airlines and the AFL Airline Pilots Association announced yesterday that agree-
2¢-ofBerkiey “ment<has been reached on a hew pay raises to 1043 pilots and cotpilots..
contract which will grant They said the contract will be drawn up in a few days, but that it will be effective as of yvester-
day and terminate Apr. 1, 1853.
by Special Judge’ Jullan Pace at! his first trial. Judge Rabb ordered his return after filing of new charges of assault and battery with intent to! kill Patrolmen Merlin E. Lyons] and Donald Ulrey. He had been conwicted of shooting Charles Bainaka, the third patrolman. Original bond on the new charge was reduced from $5000 to $2500 by Judge Rabb today at the re-| quest of Deputy Pyuvsecutor John| Daily. Judge Rabb set Nov. 10 for Rey-| nold’'s arraignment. | The three policemen were wounded when they investigated a report of a man threatening a woman with a shotgun. Reynolds fired on the officers from a shed where he was hiding. The officers spent several months in the hospital recuperating from their wounds.
3 Youths Get |. S. Sentences
Three youths, who claimed they were lured into a life of crimie by a 31-vear-old “fence.” today were sentenced to federal penitentiary. But Federal Judge William E. Steckler imposed less severe sentence: on their guilty plea to a postal sub-station burglary because they aided ‘police in solving many safe burglaries and car thefts here, ! James Eaton, .23 of Beville Ave. and Buitron, 21, formerly of Illinois 8t., each were sentenced to four vears.' Eaton's 19-year-old brother, Eugene. was given three years. Maximum penalties! could have been six vears and a fine of $2000 { ‘Started Way Back’. ~ During arraignment, the older Eaton. told the- court the story of a start in crime stemming! from childhood associations with ‘the wrong people” and life in al bad neighborhood. } “This started way back when I was young,” he said. “I didn't have what
655% N.| Rudolph | 317 N.|
the other
kids had . . . they went to shows and had money for candy, but I didn’t
«3 quit school when I was 14 and went to work in a theater and then got in with the wrong crowd an dstarted stealing.” He also said: “We just lived in a bad neighborhood and moved from one to another.” Eugene's Story 7» His brother, Eugene, were approached by a who told them they could make $1000 in grocery thefts. The “fence” also pointed out likely burglary locations, he said. “He said he would handle what was stolen,” Eugene told the court. The trio were sentenced for the August burglary of a postal sub"station “safe in which they got $56 in stamps, money order blanks and other postal property. The younger Eaton was nabbed in Chicago while trying to cash one of the forged money order forms. The other two were arrested here, X
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