Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1951 — Page 3

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FRIDAY, NOV. 9, 1051 . Sagi

Keeps Eagle Eye on Russ—

Bradley Warns

»

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Echo of Hoosier Debut—

Stars Honor Jack Benny's

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PAGE * 3

Pays Landlady Rent, Cupid Finds a Way

i : oa. Then Ends His Cite | - LONG BEACH, Cal, Nov. 9 3 So (H ,. (UP)-—Blaine Simons, 28, an atCAIRO, III, Nov. § (UP)—Vie-yorney, became the adopted father

——r

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oi 'C k ¥ tor Ericson, 83, an old-age pen-yesterday of a husky sailor in a 10 rac S sioner, ambled leisurely about order that the youth might marry

U.S. Must Hike

Air Power Now

2 Years of R

S fown prieing guns at sporting his sweetheart before his ship By H. D. QUIGG ; i goods stores, safied. Seaman John Lindsey, United Press Staff Corresponden 3 - X ‘ aa1 i Finally he found one he liked 20'z years old and an orphan, NEW YORK, Nov. 9 — On a land bought it, discovered he couldn't ‘be issued bright St. Valentine's Day in Mr. Ericson. who once held a|? license to wed Rhoda Olsen, 21, 11894 (precisely 39 years ago, as seat on the Chicago Stock Ex- Without consent of his parents or lany radio fan will tell you) there change, went home and sought 8uardian. He didn’t have either. E l'was born in Waukegan, Il, a boy out his landlady. He paid her his TRIES ST SE Tip gr vig ot F SOMEONE WANTS YOUR By Unjted Press he's in today. Then he went to his room. A VACANCY ell reuters about ft . thn

CHICAGO, Nov. 9—Gen, Omar N. Bradley said yesterday there appears “little hope” that Russia will agree to world-wide arms inspection and warned that America “must

buy more air power now.”

The chairman of the Chiefs of Staff said it would be “more than foolhardy” to base this country’s preparedness strategy on any hope that the Communists will turn sincerely to peace. He said more U, 8, needed to achieve 4 “proper balance of forces’ among the Western Allies in their drive to coun-ter-balance Russia's growing might.

Gen. Bradley spoke before the convention of the American Petroleum Institute only a day after President Truman laid down a proposal for a world-wide arms count and reduction of armaments. Russ Must Change Tune

Enumerating the strategic con siderations confronting the U, 8 Gen. Bradley said that “the Soviet Union might change its prove {its peaceful agree to inspection on both sides of the iron curtain, loose the chains of its unwilling satellites and sincerely resume friendly re lations with the free world.” . “There seems little this possibility, in te of fictitious overtures to pe: of the Communisis hase our strategy ness on this hope would be more than foolhardy.” Gen Bradley listed ti posgibie courses of Nussian action

tune

declarations

hope for

e on the part he sand To

for prepared-

ree other

for which America must be prepared ONE: Russia may halt fighting

in Korea and Indo-Chjna, incite no further outbreaks and go back to a “cold war.” T™O: It ‘more-Koreas, more Indo-Chinas THREE: Russia may World War III

may continue with

unieash

Need Bigger Forces

Gen Bradley said that to meet any one of the four possibilities or a combination of them, “we

must have additional fotces in all

three services.’ He Indicated however, that the primary objective must be more air power In spite of the fact that air power alone can never be decisive n total war, the air battle niust

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NITIT ELT TE

i~At 6, he began studying viotin: At 16, he was playing in a Waukegan theater orchestra and iworrying about whether Jim Jefifries could make a come-back jagainst Jack Johnson.

| At 17 (the year was 1911), teamed with a pianist named Cora Salisbury, he made his first Iprofessional stage appearance. In windsor tie and gleaming white |suit, he stood in an amber spotflight in Gary, Ind. and played “The Rosary”. on his violin. Then the pair broke into red-hot ragi [time (“Everybody's Doing It") while the boy winked a blue eye at the balcony. Stars in Vaudeville | He became a star in vaudeville, la monologist who through the |years went out and held the stage alone, talking softly to the audience. Then one day 20 years ago he was asked to appear as a guest on the radio. He walked up to the microphone and said: “This is Jack Benny talking. Now there will be a brief pa€se for everyone to say, ‘Who cares?” Nobody cared but about 20 million people. That's the average of Jack Benny's weekly radio audience during the years since the comedian’'s -first appearance. Tonight, in the grand ballroom

be won if a war is to be won,” he| said. “In spite of all the new de-| velopments in the field of atomic] energy and the various military} the airplane con-|3% tinues fo be the best method of] projecting the power of the atom gs to the battlefield, and to the heart § of any large land-mass nationy He added that “we are experi-|§ menting with other ethods of delivery of the.atomic attack.” | Gen. Bradley indicated that the need for more air power is generated by Russia's “growing capa-| bility” in the air. He said this] was forcing our air force to shoulder “more than its share of the calculated risk.”

Hearing Date Set For 4 Suspects in § $93569 Robbery

By United Press MILWAUKEE, Nov. 9 — Three

young men and a woman charged

PRECIOUS PUDDLE—Marshall John Mauldi.

o, of AHanta points to the puddle of water that probably saved his life. When of the Waldorf-Astoria, surroundgasoline which had been spilled on his clothes caught fire, instead ed by an impressive array of

of running for home the lad lay down in the puddle of water from stage and civic dignitaries at a a recemt shower, and extinguished the blaze. He suffered

and second degree burns.

Friars Club, the boy from Wau- _ kegan who insists his age is 39 f will be honored for 20 years of in the robbery, along stood at the doorway as loukout radio comedy.

with a $93.569 bank robbery that

was run off with the precision of

Ing part . TER 1h " . oh : a commando raid went through with Harold D. Nall. 19 and timekeeper. Who's Who ibsistc MP. Benny day-long police questioning here ne : og ' ' 7 . 2 thei re ; : t Glen D. Marce. 2 »3. He counted off time as the is 57 But with tetevision starThe © quartet arrested three But Glen D. Marce, 21, and : a : : a : : i Be > ‘ . : is ; A . _bapdits filled pillow cases with ing him in the face, he's staring hours after the Northwestern Anne Slyder, 22, refused to Say ash und yelled “that's it, we've right back like a kid. He's nuts branch of the Wisconsin Na- gp ything about the holdup. got to go” just in time to beat about it. : tinng ink P: ‘es 7 s . 3 tional Bank was looted vesterday. Leather told agents that she the bank's two-minute burglar “I like television because in it was held under $50.000 bond each . . we alarm. set off by a cashier. h I did the tage.” set by U.S. Commissioner Floyd Waited in a second get-away car The bandits changed aUtoINC. do what did on e stage, Cy * a short distance from the bank, hoa A g 10- Mr. Benny said. And the re-

PE. JENKINS

and didn’t know what was going Piles near the bank and two men sponse you get from the man in

Arrested near Waukegan, Iil., . g ¢ 2 poh by: shapiff's depatios ona were OD at the bank. got into the. tym with most Of the street is terrific. _ : + ala ld : is he money. but they were stopped .m.. i hustled back to Milwaukee late Leather did most of the talking 2 . PE Twenty years ago when I

at a road block near Waukegan, 50 miles south of here, and of fered no resistance.

was on the road with Earl Car“roll's Vanities, everywhere I went I heard people talking about enitertainers I'd never heard of before—entertainers on the radio.

at the hearing Wednesday night as he and the two other men covered their faces with handkerchiefs under the lights brought into the rogm by television and

Wednesday night ance before Mr.

formal forma.

for an appearJenkins. He set arraignment on federal bank robbery charges for Nov. 14. Wise-Crack at Hearing

Superfortress Crash

The three men wise-cracked newsreel cameramen. Kills Three Airmen *] Neot to Mr. Cartel ane during the hearing but weren't so The robbery took place in mid- SAN ANTONIO. Tex.. Nov. 9 told him. 1 want a a gay when routed out of bed by morning as a snow-storm was at (UP} A B-29 Superfortress gotta get to Fadio, : oday ne jailers for questioning todaw: its height. Armed with a rifle, crashed and burned at nearby Same thing is Bphening n ie 18> Robert Murphy. FBI chief here shotgun,’ and revolver, the men Kelly Air Force Base last night on ey ts SE Eo said James Leather. 24-year-old threatened 12 employees and half killing three airmen. bien “ho Sw fey leader of the group, admitted tak- a dozen customers. One of them One man was missing. beopie mention 4 RE 3 ry YY Eleven other crew members . parachuted to safety befors the Mail Early to Gls big bomber crashed. WASHINGTON, Nov, 8 (UP! — The plane, based at Randolph The Post Office Department reAir Force Base here, was at- minded the public today that tempting to land after a 10-hour packages to Europe must be simulated combat mission over mailed by Nov. 15 to assure de-

ithe Southwest, officials said

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Jack Benny

Reds Awaiting Truce Orders

"My United Press PANMUNJOM, Korea

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Nov. 9

Communist truce negotiators stalled for time today. presumably awaiting orders whether to adopt Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky's demand for an Allied

withdrawal to the 38th Parallel.

Vishinsky's demand in th.e United Nations General Assembly in Paris yesterday was not ntioned during today's meet the armistice subcommit 5 threatened to wreck truce hopes. Communist negotiators had re-

luctantly abandoned their demand

for a cease-fire line along the 38th

GRAY—The

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which runs up to 45 miles north

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of the Parallel Meanwhile on the fighting front, American jet fighters shot dan 5 down three Soviet-built MIG-15 >

jets and damaged four others today in the second dav of blazing dogfights over northwest Korea All 52 U. 8. jets returned safely from today's two air battles with 50 enemy jets. On the ground infantrymen on the freezing western front beat off a of small-scale enemy probing attacks against hill west and northwest af Yonchon. Frost covered the ground and temperatures dropped to 24 degrees. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, supreme United Nations commander, toured Korean front-line positions in a light plane.’

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