Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1952 — Page 2
ou
pacm 9
Korean Armistice
Hint Reds "May Break Negotiations
By United Press
PANMUNJIOMf Korea, Jan.
19—Korean armistice talks reached a new crisis -today there was speculation eds might break them g ations reached their lowe b since last summer with these rapid-fire. developments: ONE ~The Communists charged grave protest” that U. 8. anes machine-gunned a
i Red truce delegation con-
VOY n the Pyongyang-Kaesong
highwa erday. The United Nations promised a full investigation TWO — Communist newsman Alan Wir 1gton, a sort of unofficial Red spokesman, likened atmosphere” ‘in the truce iference to that of last Aug 22, when the Reds broke off "the talks for two months A Virtual Ultimatum THREE — A United Nations
delegate handed the Reds a virtual natum at another ‘“no progsession of the truce subnittees by warning that there e no agreement unless the cept a restriction on miliY ld construction. FOUR—The Communists rejected a United Nations proposal for exchange of parcels as well as mail for war prisoners, EIVE Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway retyrned to his United Nag tions Supreme Headquarters in| Tokyo following high-level strategy talks with Vice Adm. C,| Turner Joy, head of the Allied armistice delegation at Panmun-| jom. > : | The day's only favorable de- . velopment—and it was only ten“2 tative—was a Communist agree-| ment in principle to a meeting at staff officer level to try to work out safeguards against air attacks on prisoner of war camps.
Agree to Meet Again
But the Reds said they were] not ready to start discussions yet ' because they have not received a detailed map of camp locations fron Communist headquarters, Both stb-committees working on an armistice agreed to meet again at 11 a. m. Sunday (8 p. m. today, Indianapolis time), despite the gloomy outlook. The Communists lodged their fourth protest this week against alleged Allied alr violations only
five minutes before the start of and the child left New York yes- American civil the sub-committee meetings Sat- terday on a British Overseas his diplomatic status. However porters in Montreal, where she action to this has been unfavor- Present medical staff. |
urday. North Korean Col. Chang Chun San charged that four American
F-80 Shooting Star jet fighters ceau, accompanied by her moth- demanding the count’s mother de- child.
machine-gunned an appropriately
marked, three-vehicle Communist huys, an attorney and two pri- with.”
truce delegation convoy at Hangpo bridge, 19 miles north of Kaesong on-the highway from Pyongyang, capital of North Korea. |
UN Can Beat Anything |
>
-%
Ee)
Be
0
THE CHASE—Countess
- By JOHN LAW United Press Staff Correspondent BRUSSELS, Belgium, Jan. 19 Belgian Diplomat Count Ivan du Monceay arrived here from the United States hy plane today with his. 14-month-0ld son, object of a custody batisesapibissAmerican ashestos heiress Lorraine Dresseihuys du Monceau. Mr. Du Monceau, and military attache in Washington, was accompanied by his mother, Countess Emile du Monceau du Bergendal, who carried little Tommy Manville du Monceau. They arrived at Melskroek airfield and left immediately in a private car for the family mansion on Boulevard Auguste Ryers, in Brussels, The count refused to make any comment. During a 90-minute stopover in London before flying here, Mr. Du
Monceau said he had a good trip .
and that the baby slept all the way across the Atlantic.
Wild Chase Futile The child's 23-year-old mother failed to overtake her estranged hushand and the child in a wild chase to New York's Idlewild airport and then to Montreal yesterday, Mr. mother
Du Monceau, his
airways plane and made stopovers at Montreal and London.
The young Countess du Mon- issued a writ of habeas corpus York to start action to regain the yniteq States to sell Britain one C280 from their home at 6415
er, Mrs. Cornelius W, Dressel-
vate detectives raced to Idlewild after finding the child and his
Custody Fight Moves Overseds
Belgian air
“a
a - Tre we
THE INDIANAPOLIS “TIMES
ds Winnie Yields ‘On Sea Chief, Starts Home
‘By United Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 19— Prime Minister Winston Churchill, who likes. to call himself a “former naval person,” started home to London today after being forced reluctantly to admit that Britain no longer rules the waves. Mr. Churchill was to leaye this morning by train for New York. He will sail aboard the Queen Mary next Wednesday for England and a homeland disturbed by some of the decisions—especially on the Far East—reached in his conferences with President Truman. : The last Churchill-Truman decision was the bitterest pill the 77-year-old prime minister had to swallow. 2) Mr. Churchill finally agreed at (his last meeting with Mr. Truman to stop obstructing appoint{ment of an American admiral {to be supreme Atlantic naval commander in the North Atlantic Pact Organization.
Held Out for Year
| For one year—in and out of joffice—the old man, who during [World War I was first lord of “the admiralty, has been saying “Why, -no. That is the first I in effect that he would approve heard of 1” ” the paseision 3 give America command of the Atlantic y Married in 1948 over his dead body. only + The custody fight over the child] Mr. Churchill agreed yesterday started after the Du Monceaus, to let the American admiral be married in 1948, were separated appointed, but reserved his right about three months ago. The boy to press later for a change. His had-been with his mother on Long concession came only af ter-he Island. > had obtained “expansion of the About three weeks ago the area of control of the British young countess underwent an home fleet another hundred miles operation at a New York hospital. west of the British Isles, She was recuperating there when, Adm. Lynde : D., McCormick,
du Monceau interviewed by reporter at New York airport.
to “borrow” the baby to show to Fleet, is considered the most his mother, {likely choice as head of the NATO The countess agreed and later Atlantic naval command. received permission from hospital Rebuffed on Suez authorities to visit her husband's, On military matters, Mr. downtown New York hotel her- Churchill didn't fare too well durself. When she arrived, she found ing .his visit.to the United States. the count and the child had left In addition to having to back for Washington. She refused to return to the mand: hospital .and accompanied by a! ONE—Mr. Churchill wag redoctor and a nurse went to Wash- buffed strongly on his suggestion ington. At the count’s Washing- that the United States, France and ton home, it was said, she was Turkey send ‘token forces” to
4
Count du Monceau
father were missing from the dip-
lomat’s Washington home. told he refused to give up the boy Egypt to help the British protect Mr. Du Monceau had “bor- but agreed to permit her to see the Suez Canal against the rowed” the child, who was stay- the child. Egyptians.
ing at the Dresselhuy’s Long She consulted an attorney, but] TWO—He agreed to give at Island home, Monday, to visit his before he could take action Mr. least moral support to the U.S. mother who had arrived from Du Monceau, his mother and the plan to carry the Korean War Brussels. child, left Washington and came into China with pinpoint strateThe" count from here, gic bombings if a truce—when The child's re- reached—is breached. British re-
immune law because of
is mother told
yesterday Washington, D. C., Dis- missed . the count by six hours, apJe,
trict Judge Burnita 8. Matthews that she was returning to New| Rit he got a promise from the
However, her Attorney mijjion tons of steel during the
liver the child to the court “forth- Francis X. Mancuso said the coming year, and worked out a
countess may have to follow her. .¢ - Asked if he had heard of the husband here and battle for cus-| ain EE a
court order, the count said: tody in Belgian courts. much-needed aluminum now. The
Air Crash Survivor '
Files Damage Suit
BUFFALO, N. Y,, Jan. 19 (UP)
Money Order Ring Police Looking for Two
{United States will return the aluminum by the middle of 1953 {when new production facilities jare in operation.
He also got the United States
Vandalism Reported Here | sm Suspects | | Police today sought two 15-'to agree to buy 20,000 long tons
Mr. Du Monceau asked Monday commander of the U. 8S. Atlantic §
down on the Atlantic naval com-!
»
a SATURDAY,-JAN. 19, 1952
Talks At Lowest Ebb Since Summer
ge Suspett Arrested In Vandalism Spree Here
Big Day for ‘Captain Stay-Put'— °° Proud Little Town Greets lts Hero of Sea AEE Sh
By NORMAN A. CAFARELL tion was more to his liking than ;areq at the Colonial Hotel, 220 United Press Staff Correspondent 3 ra-iR8 3 h as 5 WOODBRIDGE. N. J. Jan. 19 the awe inspiring nde throug ; 8. Illinois St. UP Proud little Woodbridge the “Canyon of Heroes” in New| 5g got one, early today. And ! } Tou . 00 = r g York two days ago. the model used his clothes. wrapped itself in candy-striped, . lit ith ribbon today and welcomed home This fits his personality. The curtain went. up with a ! was modest by comparison. bang. just. after midnight. .The from the sea its most famous resi-/ No skyscrapers line the streets model smashed the mirror of a dent—Capt. Henrik Kurt Carlsen. jjke. towering walls here. ‘There dresser, in Esnel Welch's room, | In store for the captain of the was no curtain of confetti to blot while he slept. Then he put on Mr, Flying Enterprise was the biggest the sky and no screaming, sway- Welch's trousers and’ shirts. He parade this resort community ing mass of humanity to din the stj]] wore them when police are was capable of mustering. The ears. All of Woodbridge and its rived. keys to the city and a gilt-edged 15,000 residents would fit into a & 8 8 scroll Jauding his valor for stay-/corner of lower Manhattan which THERE were no curtain calls ing aboard his doomed ship for gave him a riotous land and sea .. bouquets for the model who 13 days until it'sank off the coast reception. signed the register as Willlam T, of England. The 37-year-old Danish-Ameri- gqorrells, 36, Indianapolis. It was the biggest day in the ican skipper will ride in the ton Mrs. Clara Navin, hotel owner, 238-year history of this Danish neau of an bpen, banner-bedecked didn't invite him back. S8he said community, once named the “typi- limousine, not through the clamor he started drinking and racing cal American town.” It was a of a busy downtown, but through yp oop he hotel halls and rooms big day for “Captain Stay-Put,” eight tree-lined residential streets after taking room 100. She
It
SOOTHING RELIEF
FOR COUGHS
DUE TO J (LIN ad
too. It meant the end of a‘round en route to the town square and claimed he did more than $100 of welcome celebrations he dreads the municipal building. damage. In one room, she said, he so much. More than 200 policemen, aux- wrecked equipment in a bathroom. But this home-coming celebra- ilfary officers and motor vehicle | Second show—today in‘ Municie | . [inspectors were pressed into serv- pal Court 3 ° ° {ice at the last minute to patrol Sorrells will appear on a dise Commission the mile-long parade route. orderly conduct charge. . | A Sunburst of Color P ¥ G 1 | From the start of the parade GIBSON: oS oes oO |route at the edge of the town - _|park on Elmwood St. to the mu- GUITARS Indiana U Aid rere building on Main . i | ® {everything was a sunburst o . color. Homes and stores were INDIANA MUSIC CO. Dr. Donald J. Caseley 1eavé® y.aneq with American flags and | 115 E. OH . ‘Indiana University Medical Cen-| «yajcome” signs; trees and poles ter, where he is medical director, were ribboned in red and white to take charge of a hospital com- 3nq bahners stretched across ‘mission. anc nr GL DE SAE, He will serve as associate di-| The biggest banner of all hung rector and head over the reception stand, where medical studies Mayor Hugh Quigley and Gov. for the Commis-| Alfred E. Driscoll were to make sion on Financ- the official welcome: ing of Hospital| After the reception, the official
Care starting dignitaries will take Capt. CarlFeb. 1. sen, his wife and their two chi!- q . The associa-dren to a private luncheon before ) | tion will study turning them loose to live in hosp italization peace again.
cost increases) (Capt. Carlsen said he was lookand factors in-ing forward to a quiet Sunday volved in main- with his family “more than anytaining high thing else.” quality hospital] “I'd like to live like a plain service. Studies start in North ordinary man again” he said Carolina and will be extended with a shy smile. “I hope the New into all states. v York police give me a ticket MonThe organization was formed day if I park in the wrong place. at suggestion of the American Then I'll know things are back Hospital Association. to normal.” | | Dr. Caseley was given a year’s {leave of absence from -the IU {Medical Center, where he had been affiliated for five years. In charge will be Dr. A. David MeKinley, assistant medical direc{tor, and other members of the
Win A Dr. Caseley
JOHNS
MEDICINE
USED OVER 95 YEARS
it's fun to save with the new
Dr. Caseley and his wife and ; two children move soon to Chi- > &
Riverview Dr. The doctor is a graduate of DePauw University. He secured his M.D. degree from Indiana University and practiced orthopedic surgery here until 1943, when he entered the Army Medical Corps. He was assigned to Army hospital units in Europe in War II with the rank of major.
a
>
* SATURDA
Giant | Of Mo To Aid
mothers will par: Jan. 31. i This hour-long ers is the “Porc tried out with s million mothers communities las sored over the ‘1 tional Foundati Paralysis. Mothers: will | nations at hor lights on, invitin Block-by-F Organized on basis, the campa p.m, The city | into 10 districts, by “captains” 3 chosen from arm women's organiz At 7:30 p. m., tors will pick u take it to a cen rea. . The March of substitute for th drive that starte ‘‘clean-up” projec fund contributor donations, loca officers said. Organization will be complete: of women at the 9 a. m. Friday. and Mayor Clar a film made by t Foundation of Mothers in Phoe will be shown.
Thugs Be City Mar
Thugs last rT man and robbed other bandits 1 Side liquor stor Earl Pearson, land Pl, said h leg cab on Ind had two men i him to near the course, beat hi his billfold, he Mr. Pearson aid at General According to proprietor of a 2624 E. 10th .St a snub-nose gur $75 from the ran out the doo
Ben Burr Times’ F A Ben Burrot pears on Pag Times.
It's a pleasar
pressing the id poet and adve developed his © human truths. You'll get a when you read Many people asking for mo The Times is nc sible for you to
Reds Throw—Van Fleet | ~—A $150,000 suit was filed in the
| : Judy Garland Misses EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUAR- county clerk's office yesterday in A money order theft ring has| ... 519 poys for questioning in of tin during 1952 at $1.18 per y
“Sketches” in size book. Ju
TERS, Korea, Jan. 19
(UP)= [connection with injuries suffered Gen, James A. Van Fleet said to- by a survivor of the airliner that'two months and has netted 377 gide house.
day that the United Nations have crashed’ near Little Valley on'blanks in five burglaries, postal
an army which “will defeat any- Dec, 29.
thing that China, Russia and] Mrs. Eva Woodward of Mi-| North Korea” can throw against ami, Fla., who alleges she rethem in Korea. ceived ‘a fractured . shoulder,
“If the present war ends,” Gen. Punctured lung, bruises and suf- ' Van Fleet said, “there will prob-ifered exposure and undernourish-
ably be no war for some iime. ment
And if they (the Communists) | start another one, world opinion will be against them and the
United Nations will probably be stronger.” The 8th Army commander was addressing a group of visiting Filipino Congressmen, officials and newsmen, | He said the Communist guer-| rilla problem in South Korea was “just about liquidated now.” He said 7500 out of an estimated 9000 guerrillas had been killed since Dec, 2; 600 had surrendered and the rest had been captured. |
INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC CASUALTIES
(18 Days) 1951 1952 ° Accidents ....., 409 374 Injuries ........ 166 142 Rille@ coveeeesss 3 4
ADULT CLASSES IN
SALES MANAGEMENT
Class meets each Thursday evening from 6 to 8 - p.m. Designed for men and women who wish to advance themselves in the business world or who wish to earn credits toward degrees. Write or phone for Bulletin giving complete data on this and more than 40 other courses in busi. ness.
Make Your Evenings Count
ENROLL Jan 1-Feb, 2.
Classes Begin Week of Feb. 4
TET Ea
Universily
asked $100.000 damages. Her husband, Paul N, seeks) $50,000 for medical and other expenses and loss of his’ wife's services, i
Outnumbered 5 to 1, U. S. Jets Down a MIG EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUAR-| TERS, Korea, Jan. 19 (UP)! American Sabrejets, outnum-|
bered nearly five to one, shot! down one Communist MIG-15 jet
fighter and damaged another in
a dogfight over North Korea today. Far East air forces in Tokyo disclosed that the MIG was the 340th enemy plane to he shot down by Allied aircraft since the start of the Korean War June 25, 1050, The FEAF put
Allied losses
[during the period at 460 planes,
all but 11 of them American. Most were believed to have been
downed by Communist anti-air-craft fire, The alr war was stepped up
while zero weather all but halted action on the ground. Two Allied raiding parties knocked the Communists from two low hills northwest of Korangpo on the western front, but subsequently returned to their own lines,
324 w. MORRIS
Oar, Mon Weds, Sat wil 90m, |
Bette Davis and Gary Merrill in "their first picture together since the
“night and took nearly $500 worth Points as far away as Westover| who gains too much popularity.
{the Fletcher Trust Co,
been operating in Indianapolis fOr yon aie of an unoccupfed West pound. This price is higher than Show=——But Just for Nigh
{the United States previously had| %_ been willing to pay. | NEW YORK, Jan. 19 (UP)— The pair escaped late yesterday, Mr. Churchill also got his long Singer Judy Garland, who can-
officials confirmed today. while police chased and caught gesired promise in writing that celed last night's vaudeville perOperation of the ring was re- four other boys running from a U.S. atomic bombers based in | formance at the Palace Theater vealed after bank officials com- wrecked house north of Oliver pritain would not be sent to hit|because of a sore throat, will be plained that warning notices had Ave. and west of the Indianapolis’), enemy unless the British gov- Pack in the show today, a theater
ACTION « FUN + SKILL AND IT TEACHES THRIFT
Hit your savings target with an
. JARS up-to-date bank. Come in and ir see this aid to savings.
been delayed for as long as six Union (Belt) Railroad. ; y spokesman said. ays. The four, 12 to 15 years old, eYNMment gives an oHaY: | Her physician, Dr. Charles Dep-| Postal officers countered that in| were taken to the Juvenile Ald’ _ | . |ping, denied reports on Broadway | only one case was there any de:|Division. Two had wrist watches Winslow Man Killed that Miss Garland had collapsed Jay, and insisted notices are and a stopwatch, police said. B c | d 61 {from ‘nervous exhaustion” as she given banks and other businesses Folice said the front porch had y Lar on ind. {did more than'a month ago when “within 24 hours” in most cases. been pulled off the house, all the! Times State Service she was forced to cancel a week More than $6500 in forged windows broken and furniture, WINSLOW, Jan, 19—Rentice of performances. money orders have been cashed overturned. ; |Robbing, 59, Winslow, was killed] The film star said that she had by members of the ring, officials last BignL on Ind. 61 one mile Sstersd a ore Hires Sor Joo of said, Three official stamps used {south of here. : {three days an not fee a i Le the orders also nave 91 Interceptor Crashes, | 28 body was lying on the ene could “do a good job” last i : ii way when was struc night. been stolen, Killing Crew of Two - driven by Robert Joseph g DOVER, Del, Jan. 19 (UPA Davis, 25, Oakland City.
MAKE ‘52
One of ‘Three Stooges’ * State police are making tests| A YEAR {F-94 jet interceptor plane crashed i AS LONG AS . . . | to determine if he had been] THIS FELLOW Dies in Hollywood in an orchard six miles north of gtryck by another car previously| AND NAD FOR YOU
here yesterday, killing its two- or if he had fallen there. |
rere i
HOLLYWOOD, Jan, 19 (UP)— Jerome - (Curly) Howard, 46, one man crew, one of whom came
of the original Three Stooges of through months of Korean aerial Britain Seeks to Recruit
vaudeville and film; died yester-|.omnat without a scratch . ; : ard of 900,000 day of a long illness which fol | The dead were identified as. 1st Home Gu dl ! |
lowed a stroke in 1946. Virgil I. Plunkett Ir. 94 | LONDON, Jan, 19 (UP)—Bri-
Lt. Mr. Howard, who died in Baldy tain has opened a drive to recruit View Sanitarium, was born in Portsmouth, Va., the pilot, and 2d 5 new 8 Ope guard of 900,000 men |S
Brooklyn and had lived in Call- Lt. James H. Gifford, 23, New hy spring. fornia. for the past 2 Yea York, radar observer. | The war office said each memeaves 8 widow. : : is Lt. Plunkett returned to the ber of the defense force will be aughter, Js ¢ thYaughter, Janie, and two broth United States last October after quipped with a Sten gun or a ers, Moe and Shemp, rifle -..,—.e winning the air medal with four .
ASORE THROAT DUE TO COLDS
{we Railroadmen’'s FEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSN.
21 VIRGINIA AVE
rr... oak leaf clusters for service in/ The guardsmen’s enlistment will $500 In Photo Equipment Korea. - be for two years, but can be ended The plane vanished a short On & month's notice.
Stolen From Auto time after taking off from the
A burglar with ah eye to pho. POver Air Base and Air Force, Can the Russian people re- | tography broke into a car last avy and Coast Guard craft from volt? What happens to any Red
of camera equipment and cloth- Field, Mass, searched for 12 hours You will learn the truth when ing. before the wreckage was found by, you read the series of-articles When Albert Ball, Angola, re- two wood-cutters. starting Monday in The Times. |
turned to his parked car behind! 20 W. 16th B8t.,, he found it had been entered, and the expensive cam-| era and clothes were missing, |
Come to Day Classes or Evening Classes at
BUTLER UNIVERSITY
Graduating January high school seniors or adults wishing advanced college training will find the course of instruction to meet their individual needs in Butler University’s broad Day and Evening Division curricula. Fifty major departments offer complete work in the Colleges of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Education, Business Administration, Pharmacy, Music, School of Religion, and the Graduate Division.
1
Our service embodies all that goes
to. give that after-feeling of satisfaction; the satisfaction of a beautiful tribute to & loved one yet no burden to those left.
HISEY & TITUS Hlostiearey
| Day Class Registration—Jan. 28-30. Evening Class Registration-tJan. 29, Jan. 31-Feb. 6 A competent, well trained faculty is available for-advising and , instruction in day and evening. classes. For complete information or
bulletins on Butler University’s day or evening classes. write or -call
INDIANAPOLIS,
951 NORTH DELAWARE ST.
olin:
INDIANA
"- "STARTS TODAY! CIRCLE THEATRE
——— stiri:
“Sketches,” Th lis Times, 214°
GUEST Sp
club me Miss M Social Work Bureau Auxili Orphan Asylu Monday in th James H. Ru Ave, The hostess by MesdamesEdwin Gable Riper and Che Final plans the “Mardi C given Feb. 2 | Club. An 11 meeting will ular meeting.
Railway Busi The India Railway Busi sociation, will Monday in th
Pleasant Rur hostess at 2 to delegates chairmen of Union of Clul Lofton will pi Guest spea Doyle, Howe ‘for. He will pressions and ing a threeUnited Nation Success, N. Y "Mrs, George - paign direct anapolia Ho
RON
