Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1952 — Page 2
" PAGE 2
» pir
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES,
And Joy Conferring
By United Press TOKYO, Jan. 7 — Communist delegates adopted an attitude of indifference in Korean
armistice negotiations today, touching off speculation they may
Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, head
‘with Supreme United Nations Commander Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway on the deadlock. Although he insisted his visit had no special significance, Adm. Joy issued a statement warning: “With each passing gay, there) is Jess reason to think the Com-/ munists want a stable armistice. Certainly, no one can accuse them. of being in a hurry to demonstrate geod faith.” ‘Strongly Indifferent’
At Panmunjom in Korea, Com-
fifth :straight day rejected all United Nations arguments for a
ban on airfield construction and getting around in her wheel chair
for voluntary repatriation of all war prisoners and civillans held by each side. Despite the lack of progress, however, both subcommittees agreed to meet again at 11 a. m, Tuesday (8 p. m. today Indianapolis time). Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols,
spokesman for the United Nations quilts. But Mrs. Ewing burned to tinuing on to Dallas.
delegation, said the Reds seemed “strangely” indifferent to the out-| come of the debate in both subcommittees, 4 “They were rude and jli-man-nered, if not intentionally impolite,” he said.
EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Jan. 7 (UP)—U, 8. Sabrejet fighters, outnumbered more than five-to-one, shot down two Communist MIG-15s today to boost their two-day bag to seven in the biggest air battles of the new year,
al MONDAY, JAN, 7 1052
& ¢
IT'S
MURDER |
1 On the Highways
BEDFORD — Stanley Leon |
Anderson, 60, died Saturday | night after being hit by a cdr near his home.
SOUTH BEND—The 4-year-old be planning to break off the talks. daughter of a city fireman died! Patricia | f the United Nations truce dele- Moskwinski had been hit by a car ‘gation, flew to Tokyo to confer earlier in the day when she ran
here - Saturday night:
into the street.
Woman Dies
Wheel Chair
Every morning since her right leg was amputated two years ago, 77, brewed munist truce delegates for the her own coffee at 2208 Pleasant
Mrs. Blanche Ewing,
St. where she lived alone, She tended to her other needs,
without mishap—until yesterday.
Then she wheeled her chair to her rear door and screamed for help. Her chenille bathrobe was
afire. Robe Caught Fire
Neighbors wheeled her out and
death in her wheel chair, Police said her robe had caught
fire as she tried to make her
|
To Give Council Housing Say-So
A NEW MOVE to give the City| Council authortty to pass on pub-
council- will receive the proposal by Councilman Charles P, Ehlers! Sgt.
|for ‘approval before any work is
Set New Move Atterbury Signal Center | Receives So Odd Calls
Times State Service CAMP ATTERBURY; lic housing projects will be made|A light flashed on the long dis-| at the council's meeting tonight. tance board at the Signal Corps | In its first official session, the telephone center here. “My party wants to speak to John’ Smith of ‘the 308th! |that the Housing Authority of Midget Gas Co.” said the oper{Indianapolis submit final plans ator in a small Nebraska town. " The Army operator sighed and
{operator
.times impossible, to handle. A Like
|
{
heir, and his £9ypian dancing bride of six weeks, Samia Gamal, hold a press conference on arrival at New York's Idlewild airport
Carried Over Customs Office Threshold—
morning coffee at the kitchen gas
stove
ville, Tenn., her birthplace
Robert, Indianapolis,
ters, three brothers and grandchildren.
The hody was taken to Peoples
Funeral Home.
*
* |
Drink a glass of cold, cold milk ==
for breakfast, for lunch, for dinner,
and just before you go to bed.
Drink four glasses every keep as fit as a fiddle!
day to
ATTEN every meal...
Milk fits right into every meal, into
every diet, for every person
from one-day-old to 100
Every man, woman and
at least four glasses a day!
s
years. child needs
fits your budget, too!
Governmét figures show milk ~*~ . . _ actually costs much less than most ee
other foods — every dollar you
spend.on milk is worth. $1.36. To stretch food money, simply serve mote milk!
i
and Rufus and Verne, Nashville; three sistwo Gamal, Egyptian bride of Texas mitted that he intended to bypass)
By United Press 'his 80-year-old grandmother, Mrs.| NEW YORK, Jan. 7 — Samia § Ww. King Sr. He nervously ad-|
playboy Sheppard (Abdullah) Houston, Wpere his mine, Jor Kink, III, fumed today at those Jer my ig bbs Son a who call her a “belly dancer.” | ome. : “I am astonished and angry,” «I really don't know about {she said. “Naturally the stomach mgather,” Mr. King wistfully exis important, but the attention plained. (is supposed to be on the arms, the The couple had scarcely, legs and the shoulders checked into their rooms in a; Slithering Samia was running.Manhattan hotel when he was in-
such an emotional temperature formed that he had a long-dis-{that she lost interest,
begun.
lAve, THE HOUSING
bors. la petition against it. An earlier resolution died in {committee in the previous Demo- have called it the 467th Chemical |cratie-controlled City Council. Only other measure to be sub- unit's mitted tonight is annexation of Chemical Mortar Battalion. {the tract between Arlington Ave. {and Bolton St, .|14th_Sts.
fr -
Yarbrough, ‘Batts Retire As Policemen
Two veteran police officers —, | one a world pioneer in police radio | —today announced their retireTHE KING RETURNS-—Sheppard {akdulah) King, Texas oil | ment from the Indianapolis police
| department. Capt. Robert Batts, superintend-|
tried to smother the flames with |a + 4 . |ent of police and fire radio divilate yesterday. They plan a 48-hour stopover there before con I I a a, Sooo
will retire Jan. disclosed position with a local
/ A ! : 4 d f absence for six months, Capt. Yarbrough Mrs. Ewing had lost her leg as Texan S Egyptian Bride =: toi Chiet John E. Ambuh]
a result of a diabetic condition.
omnes Fussy on U.S. Arrival
She {s survived by three sons,|
| he was retiring from the force. Capt. Batts, who organized the
put through the call to Sgt Smith The proposal is the outgrowth —in the 308th Military Governlof Housing Authority plans to ment Group. {build more than 40 doubles on its| | site at Dawson 8t, and LeGrande ning supervisor at the 8ignal Center, made another entry in has her little black notebook. She been under heavy fire by neigh-/lists all odd calls—like from ChiMore than 2000 have signed(cago for the
And Mrs.
project
{Murder Battalion.
|Garbage Can correct
Battalion, name is
and 13th and translate. Like tion,” meaning Sixth Corps.
Neva Canary, eve-
wanted to talk to but remembered
467th Chemical
Other long distance operators
Most such calls are easy to “Sixth Corpora-
Reds’ Indifferent Attitude Darkens Truce Hopes In Korea Ridgway | — ~
“28th Information Division.” Last month, after most of the 28th Infantry Division had left for overseas, a long distance asked for its Social Security Detachment. The Security } Detachment got the call. Other calls are harder, somerequests for the orderly room or the charge of quarters, There are hundreds of each at Camp Atterbury. One woman couldn't remember, the name of the soldier shel.
“he wore a green patch on his shoulder.” A Detroit operator announced her party wanted to speak to Pvt. Daniel Boone. “Does he wear a coonskin cap?” asked Mrs. Canary, reaching for her little: black book. “But we discovered there is a Daniel Boone here,” Mrs, Canary said. “He's a mail clerk in Sixth Corps.” 2
WAN 3 k ES 3 BURIAL DELAYED —The body of Pfc. Thomas C. Reed, 19 (above), who lost his life in
Korea, has been held in a Phoenix, Ariz, mortuary for five weeks awaiting clearance for burial jin a veteran's plot. The owner of the mortuary said he received the body Nov. 28 but
21 to take an un-
; (lice radio communications here . He: remained here to develop the {world’s third police radio system.)
lat 3632 N. Colorado St., ithe highest paid police officers
: topped only by the inspector's
troit, came here in 1929 on a lives at 155 E, Fall Creek Blvd. leave of absence to organize > po-'§ S. Dr.
/moment, in the $10,000 mink coat {her idolizing hubby of six weeks!
{had given her for her first trip he said nervously.
{to the United States.
The shapely dancer and her 27- hair, then began unpacking the husband 14 filmy, arrived last night at New York| wore to charm Mr. International Airport. Mr. King such international celebrities as carried her across the threshold the Aga Khan and Egypt's King : | Farouk.
year-old Dallas, Tex.,
of the U. 8S. Customs Office. Mr. and Mrs. King planned al
| 48-hour stopover here before con-| she told her husband, “I tell you | tinuing to Dallas, where Mr. King|I have a feeling everything will { will present his dark-eyed bride to{be all right.”
for the tance call waiting for him from & a “Mrs. King” in Houston, 1
“I'll take care of that later,” Samia brushed out her red] - x
gpangled costumes she King and
“Go ahead and take the call,”
January
Local Couple
Imagine having more than a, million persons watch your wedding.
It'll happen tomorrow afternoon to Jack Walash and Patricia Bus-| sell, both from Indianapolis. They'll be married on a network, television program in New York.
WEFBM-TV is scheduled to carry! it at 1:45 p. m. Officials of the local station said the entwork audience would be more than a million. A letter about their teen-age romance that began in the church {of the minister who'll marry them {won Pat and Jack the CBS-TV {wedding on the “Bride and {Groom” program, gifts and a {honeymoon. The Rev. A. Glen O'Dell, their pastor at Brookside Evangelical {United, Brethren Church here, {will perform the double ring! ceremony. . { Tech Graduates
The titian-hatred Pat and_her {school-days sweetheart-went |“steady” soon after they met. {She's 18 , ... Jack is 20. They |were graduated just a year apart {from Technical High School. | In those days Pat curled her {bobby sox around the stools at a neighborhood. drugstore whéfte {Jack served the sodas. It was on (ther 16th birthddy that Jack gave
On National TV Program
{ Duluth and Minneapolis-St. Paul,
fo Say Vows |
After the wedding and a fiveday honeymoon |in New York, ¢ Pat and Jack will come home for a reception at the Bussell home Jan, 27, After that, they'll unpack wed!ding gifts at 1007'3 N. Olney st. and go back to their jobs, Jack is in the drafting departiment at P. R. Mallory C8. Inc. Pat's a bookkeeper at the Indiana National Bank.
CAB Shifts Roules - :
To Wisconsin Airline
WASHINGTON, Jan. 7-— The Civil Aeronautics Board today has renewed the Wisconsin Central Airlines’ license until Sept. 30 1955, and extended its local service to routes in Minnesota and North Dakota. : The board suspended Northwest: Airlines’ present route between|
-
Men's winter
Minn.,, and authorized Wisconsin Central to provide .direct service between these Points. |
Dies in 4- Story Plunge
FT. WAYNE, Jan. 7 (UP) — Carroll Cole, 44 assistant postmaster of Decatur, leaped from his fourth-floor room in Lutheran Hospital through a window pane Saturday and was killed when he
Clearance
in Ayres’ Men's Store
2.5% off and
all wool topcoats |
originally 85.00 to 135.00
ow 63.75 to 89.75
has not been able to obtain a grave site. Negro veterans have been buried in Greene wood Memorial Park in the past, but only after notarized reCapt. Batts, who is 48 and lives quests from local veteran oris one of ganzations. The boy's father, George E. Reed, said he should
with an annual salary of $5350, h J not have to ask for clearance,
rate of $5400 and the chief's pay of $6900, Capt. Yarbrough, who has been
Named Commissioner WASHINGTON, Jan. T (UP)—
| industry. lon the force 12 years, was head|Milton D. Green, of Seattle, | Capt. Harry Yarbrough, on (of one of the vice squads when he|Wash., law professor at Wash. Capt. Batts 1aqpested his leave of absence| ngton University, has been apworld’s first police radio in De- last April. The 40-year-old officer|ointed a hearing commissioner
of the National” Production Authority, it was _announced today, . i = a
AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80 YEARS 1872-1952
FR anklin 4411
Handsome Winter-weight topcoats right when you need them most! Most by famous makers. There's
imported-fabric Hunt and Winterbotham tweeds, im-
“Jack are
|her a birthstone ring that meant landed on the roof of the hos“the real thing.” pital’'s ambulance entrance, Supt. Jack's “flu” and Pat's appen- E. C. Moeller said today. Mr. {dectomy, separating them briefly, Cole had been treated several {started marriage plans. days for rheumatism. Mr. Moeller, | Pat is the daughter of Mr, and said, Mr. Cole suffered a nervous {Mrs. Walter 'R. Bussell, 138 N. breakdown several years ago.
{Belmar Ave. Jack is the son ef Mrs. Walter Hutchens, 941 N.| “Say It With Flowers” n their attendants... z Jack's brother, George Walsh, FLORAL co.
Gray St. { The two mothers and Mrs. and Mrs. Barbara Anoskey, botn, 3837 E. 10th St... « | |of of lngianapols,
O'Dell will attend the ceremony.
| .In New York with Pat and
FLY rs Fastest seusice to
NEW ORLEANS
ONLY 4 HOURS 22 MINUTES CES NEW Lows CONSTELLATIONS
Non-stop to Memphis, 1 hour 41 minutes! Fastest to Houston, 4 hours 17. ‘minutes! = *
Ri ee bsiueea--sssptmrscaioietie
FR1554 Or your travel agent Cre YEAR of PERFECT - SAFETY
Tr AT 1] LV A UT
_ Men's fine all-wool suits superbly tailored
ported gabardines, zip-lined models, and
100%, pure Cashmeres. Broken'sizes and models.*
Men's top quality all wool suits
originally 60.00 to 150.00
ow 43.75 to 89.75
by famous makers. Selection includes sharkskins, gabardines, worsteds. Single or double breasted models . . . to suit your taste. Some Hunt and Win. terbotham imported.fabric suits included. Broken
" sizes and models.
Buy n Ayres' ABC*
* Ask the salesperson . - about this Easy Payment Plan.
‘Ayres Budget Charge |
Ayres’ Men's Store, Street Floor, South Building
38
By R United Pee FALMOU I'he tug Tur listing Ame Enterprise : put” skippé mark today and heavin, safely into ) Early thi: was less th goal—Falm west tip o hero's wel Henrik Kur the crippled Rising w lantic swel Enterprise port early Hmited visi
. miles. The |
and the wi The deep —Was , repo! erator of tl but it caus “We will the operato
In
Capt. Cs spirits at ti his modern den out the freighter al a mate of aboard last
The tiny land at the knots. The terprise wa: gone withot
Army Make Of M
B WASHI! —A twowith suici placed tod of the hunted fug Sydney Longmead: in Massacl murderous crimes in ¢ tack upon farmer. The fugi FBI as da the list Anthony B a Detroit s tured by York. Dec.
MARTI} under a w with cros avoid pro identified tacked a farmer Ju: The far from his 1 said his ca they were | the road, t and dem: money. ed to alig but was sl who then the head heavy roc
After pl - the tracto back into into the he cash befo farmer's ously wou covered.
Pledge
WASHIN Rep. Way said today didates ple fauver (D. cratic pre will be ente primary.
Rites He WEST I “(UP)—The emy held 1 terday for crash of a 31 in Arizo
- Jurn On
PANMU. (UP)—The over to the letters fro: North Kor
cough, ches is not treat to take a ¢ less potent goes right tc help looser Puicym and eal raw, t membranes, Creomul creosote by time tested contains no No matte have tried, to please | money. test of man
