Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1952 — Page 2
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NRioters Disembowelod the British=— SLT
Their Bodies Were Hurled Into Bonfire:
Bs United Press BRI TISH HEADQU ARTERS Suez Canal Zone, Jan. 30—DBritish victims of last Saturday's
riots in Cairo were torn flo, 20 mobs, reports reachg headquarters here According to the reports several of the 10 British nationals
~slain in the Turf Club were dismembered and disemboweled
“and their remains hurled into »
bonfires, The reports were -the first de-
v 8
tailed a By int of the rioting to per-middle} class and equipped alth ough . 10 are believed to reach headquarters here. The ith paraffin (kerosene) and Nave died there, : names of the victims were not vor fire raising material.” The reports said two men made public : ; ind one Woman were “injured # “The attack on the Turf Club . ° The British reports said sev- imping from second-floor winwas wellcorganized,” one report eral British members. of the dow and a man was stabbed said. “Rioters broke dowr the Turf Club fled by the back doot to d ith as he lowered . himself front door with battering rams hefore the Egyptians could sur from a third story window on especially brought along for the round. it. But. ot h ers were "a rope masle of bel heets. purpose and proceeded to break hunted tQpough the top floors, “Four of the bodies were comup the furniture and set alight Vicious tabbed to death and pjetely incinerated t& an ex-’ four large bonfires. on the their bot diez thrown on the ‘fire, tant "incompatible with the ground floor. : the reports added. state of -the club and must ac“They were led by several Nine hodies have been recov- tually have been thrown on the
young men of the effendl (up- ered from the ruins of the club bonfire,” the reports added.
Sift McKinney Stock Status
By IRVING. Times St
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 30—How did Democratic National Chairman Frank McKinney make a 368,000 profit on a stock deal in Empire Tractor Co. when his name does net ‘appear on the stock certificate”
That's what the bankrupt company’s trustees are trying to solve today. They also want to find out, if he did not own actual stock in the company, why was he paid so handsomely. These questions came «up after a stormy. five-hour hearing before a bankruptcy referee here yesterday when Frank Cohen, chairman of the company, testified how Mr. McKinney and his political sponsor, Frank M. McHale, made a total of $136,000 fast profits before the company collapsed.
Another Hearing Set L. Roy Deininger, federal referee in bankruptcy wno presided at the session, directed Mr. Cohen to be available for another hearing on Feb. 13. Mr. Cohen yesterday blamed Argentina for. part of the company's presefi# financial woes. He testified he paid the quick profits to Mr. McKinney and Mr. McHale after selling $4.5 million in tractors to Argentina, However, the South American country refused to accept delivery, he claimed. The hearing was marked by vicious personality clashes be-
tween Mr. Cohen’s attorney, Jo-|
seph Sharfsin, former city solicltor of Philadelphia and the attorney for the trustees, David Rosen. Mr. Cohen insisted .it was not) unusual for Mr. McKinney's name not to appear on the stock certificate. He sald the stock orig-| inally was issued to him and he transferred it to Mr. McKinney| by signing a blank transfer slip.| He sald Mr. McKinney had nev-| er bothered to sign his name to fhe stock and added that Mr. McKinney's preferred stock certifi cates were missing from the com-| pany’s files. Other highlights of Mr. Cohen's testimony: ONE—Empire Tractor-used the| plant -and property of Empire! Ordnance Co. in Philadelphia to build tractors. Empire Ordnance is the much-criticized,and investi-| gated munitions combine in which, Mr. McHale was a director, stockholder and attorney. TWO~—Mr, Cohen disclosed that
Wilbur Young | Seeks Re-election
Supt. of Public Instruction Wilbur Young today became the first Statehouse department head to announce his candidacy for reelection. In a prepared
statement, Mr, Young said the long-range. program for im-
provement of Indiana's public school system “received splendid support from the 1951 State Legislature.”
He said his Mr. Young candidacy for re- : nomination at the Republican
state convention- July 3 is endorsed “by the same groups of friends of Hoosier education who urged me to seek advancement to the office in the 1950 election.” That was presumed to include township trustees and school bus
drivers, who supported him in the
last campaign. Mr. Young's policies have been criticized frequently by the’ Indiana Teachers’ Association.
Dear Home: akers: The first glimpse one gets ¢ ly the hall. other rooms.
double as a planned storage space. chests, We have some charming “small bachelor chests that A hanging shelf,
would bé perfect. mirror with matching bracke A desk can sometimes be fit
advantage, with a grouping of framed prints to blend them together. In a small space it is clever to use tiny geometric patterned wall paper over hoth walls and ceiling, without
the border. It tends to make in-its own right.
rcome. - We're just brimming w wip tothe Chicago Furniture share them with you.
Easy Terms Available | “Open Eves. Till 6
{transferred the shares to. other
{typewriter were identified as part oarth”
+3633
It is truly the gateway or introduction to the With today’s small home, oftimes the hall can
4214 College
I | I | I I I | | I | I I I | | | I I ; We have many small scale I | | | | | | | | | Lighted Parking bat iu Auu of 214 love
my —
LEIBOWITZ aff Writer
Messrs. McKinney and. McHale resold their common stock nearly four months after selling their preferred stock to Empire South American Industries, although Mr. McKinney previously had said the transaction was a “package deal.” THREEbigger profit protege, Mr. stock deal. According to Mr Cohen Mr. McHale collected $1,781.25 more than Mr. McKinney because his partner, Stephen Pan Britz, did “a little chiseling.”
Mr. Cohen explained Mr. Britz charged Mr. McHale a 2 per cent brokerage fee and ‘got it easily he asked Mr. McKinney for 3 per cent.” FOUR~-—Mr. Cohen testified Mr. McHale paid for his stock by sending ‘a check to the company but Mr. McKinney sent a check to Mr. Cohen personally. Attorneys, for the trustees pointed out at the hearing that this was “highly unusual.” : Mr. Cohen explained the money “usually was sent wherever it was needed most.” He added that
made a political on the
-Mr. McHale than his McKinney,
CLOUD OVER CAIRO—Smoke rises. over Cairo, rioting that followed Ismailia battles between Egyptian oh and British troops.
Waited Trial for Clue To Missing Daughter
Times Special “blackmailing me,” the mother GALESBURG, Ill, Jan. 30— had hoped that the trial of her Last month the 94-year-old mo- daughter's husband might shed ther of long-missing Freda LaDuron lay close to death.
80
lays postponed the trial for two
all the stock bad been Vssned tof She Jooked into ihe ¢ifcie of years. him in return for cash and serv-! ope pes al SuGcen.y ih Death came to the mother on ices he previously advanced the !Prough dimming eyes a face peo 17 in this Illinois town. It| , long absent from her
company and that he, in turn,
she had seen only in dreams. the “Freda,” she sald, reaching out. to meet again soon. that! But the face the dying mother | some of Mr. Cohen's complex saw was not that of her “baby” | stock transactions were ‘‘un- ‘daughter whose tragic disappear-| understandable” to him. lance in 1937 is still an unsolved mystery.
Resembles Mother
Stonecipher, missing woman
stockholders. Before the hearing ended,
referee admitted publicly Wrote of Quarrels
Muncie and wrote of violent quarrels with her husband, some be-| cause she refused to sign papers giving over property into the names of her children.
Police Recover : ies A Was uzan Part of Store Loot tiodkiter of the
térs ceased. Freda LaDuron sim-
Egypt, from burning buildings fired during
|
{been returned to the president's
light on what really happened to Mr, Johnson served as president Freda LaDuron. But repeated de- from 1946 to 1950. He succeeds R.
family was here that her mother last a meeting this week at the Omega circle, a face that in recent years... Freda, in August, 1937. Moth- House, er and daughter parted planning John Browde#, secretary; Carl . {D. Jacobs, E
|
{
Freda returned to her home in! secretary.
Then, that next month, all let- Suber.
Part of more than $2000 in NOW grown to almost the age of vy 4ropped out of sight, leaving
{loot taken from a Monument her mother at the time of her her daughter Suzanne and son:C Circle men’s wear shop was re-| \disappearance. The slim, blond Jacque. |covered by detectives last night.igir] hears a haunting resemblance] Her doctor-husband contended Police also are holding the to her mother. And to an old| {Freda had “left.” He said she was | driver of a 1951 car believed used woman, she was, for that instant, /three months pregnant; that there to haul away the loot ‘Freda.” had been arguments and she deFollowing a tip, detectives last Mrs. Pernilla Andersan died serted him. night found five sports jackets, without realizing her dearest hope,] But this was sharply contra20 pairs of slacks and a portable that of knowing the fate of the dicted by her family. They said typewriter in an apartment on youngest of her 11 children, her that if Freda left home, she would Martindale Ave. Police are hunt- «pahy Freda.” take her children and return .to
ing for the occupant of the apart-| Mrs. Andersan—like all other her own’ family, as she had be{ment. relatives of the woman who fore. The clothing—all new—and the “qropped off the face of the It is known only that she van-
—had long since abandoned ished one day after cooking lunch
of the loot taken from the Nat pope of ever seeing her daughter for her children in the gloomy,
Smith store, 58 Monument Circle. alive. The only hope she clung to rambling home in Muncie. Mr. Smith said his inventoryiwas of “knowing just what did SN——————————————————
ghowed the total burglary loot nappen to her,” i Holdup Man Gets $5
value was £2780, including a new | Trial Now Under Wa ] ay at taining £150 J . } cash register containing $150) ive even robbed the aging At Shoe Repair Shop A holdup of a shoe repair shop
i sh. nh cas an : mother of the one ray of hope in '. recent years, the manslaughter at 2618 Shelby St. netted $5 late Coury Welfare List trial of the missing woman's hus- yesterday, police were told. John band, Dr. Jules F. LaDuron, in W. Nolan, 55, the owner, said he Falls Off 2 Per Cent didt know whether the bandit A 2 per cent decline in Marion
progress today in Muncie, Ind. | Since 1950, when Dr. Jules E. {County welfdre rolls in the last LaDuron slew two men who were/was armed. three months was noted today in the quarterly list of recipients filed by the county auditor. The lists are available for public inspection in the auditor's office as a result of action by the
Guard Your Health |
1951 State Legislature. Auditor Roy Combs said only seven per- : sons have inspected the rolls with since they became available last October, The new list showed 7607 per- TEADY sons receiving old age and de- S
pendent children assistance, compared with 7741 three months ago. Welfare officials said total payment had similarly declined. For the first time, the names were listed alphabetically — for faster checking.
COAL HEAT
at all levels
Ll... changes invite all sorts of health hazards - ~ 50 stay snug and warm to ‘stay healthy this winter, Good Coal heat is good health protection .. . because Coal gives . .. you a-continuous, steady flow of satisfying. comforting ‘warmth.
by LOUIS RAINIER yf a new or old home is usual-
Consider a pair of
And remember — Coal has generous extra heat when you need it to banish the chills and drafts that bring colds and sniffles. ee
Stay on the safe and healthy side = with good Coal heat. Order from your Coal Heating Service retailer today.
/ thu foros. i |
Day and night, your CHS retailer is on call if you need service on your - . wl heating equipment. Call him, or
a wl
or perhaps an oval ts to hold lovely potted ivy. ted into a hallway to great
the room gay and important
ith new ideas from our recent Market. Come in and let us
Sincerely, LOvIS RAINIER and Stats
ur Phone. WM. 514
COAL
0] GREATER INDIANAPOLIS, | NC.
| | | | | | | | | | { |. | | | i. i | | | | pieces now, and more to | | | | I I | | A | A HU. 7%. |
IE
who kept a hand in one pocket,
Bar Again Elects E. L. Johnson .
vo ; Ei map|,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES eters oredr WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30, 1952
"New Price Ceilings Set For Printed Items ‘Sheep-Shearing School ~
/ N : (UP), The regulation, effective Feb. 4, Times State Servies | * | wasmsoron, Te aa covers spyat 40 -per cent-of the, LAFAYETTE, Jan. 30 — All. printing industry. The Office of day sheep- “sHearing school aasgill [dered . new ceilings for greeting Price -Stabilization said ° price pe held Feb, 6 on the Taylor |cards, ‘scrap books, weddin in- hikes * ,will “predominate” bu | Fouts farm south of Logansport, vitations and hundreds of other that they will be small. v $ 2nd Feb. 7 on’ the Oren Wright
The regulation does not apply a hand and forearm missing Ime, Wich WHI Jean sony newspapers, magazines, or farm near Greenwood. Purdue and another had the top of the Price rollbacks but ‘more increas- ;,,oxs which are exempt from University staff members will head stoved in. One body which es. price controls. supervise. was only scorched -but which Ee sh wag not positively identified sc a ] had compound fractures of both . wrists and was disemboweled.”
‘One of “them had a leg chopped off above the knee and
Ce ——
? ; 1 $ According to the fports, 3 : t \ another Briton's. body was y ! ; dragged acrdss a street, | , 3 J SETI stripped of clothing, partly =. gre ’ FR anklin 4411 >
dismembered and thrown on a “hastily constructed bonfire.”
T HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80 YEARS 1872-1952
. . n coty “vitamin A-D complex -cream
for the dryest, most sensitive skin!
try this new cream at no extra cost Cleansing Cream with trial
jar of Vitamin A-D Com-
For a limited time, the purchase of the above plex-Cream +.evvsvs..-1.00
Coty Beauty Aid entitles you, at no extra cost, to a trial jar of new "Vitamin A.D Com-plex-Cream" . . . the new beauty cream whose vitamins help your skin look smoother . . . feel
firmer, fresher, younger.
Regular Size "Vitamin A.D Complex-Cream", 2 or. .ceevivnsee....2.50
All prices plus 20%, tax Attorney E. L. Johnson ‘has Pastel-Tint with irial jar of Vitamin A-D Complex-
Cream dessriseciness: 1.80 *
chair in Marion County Bar Association, Inc. A founder of the organization,
“Ayres' Toiletries, Street Floor
B. H. Smith, who resigned and became first vice president.
Other lawyers named officers at
2044 N. Capitol Ave. were:
treasurer; Thomas Crowdus, second vice president,i|, ‘and Clinton Watts, corresponding
Rufus C. Kuykendall is the new chairman of the board of trustees. Other trustees are Wilbur H. Grant, R. L. Brokenburr, Henry R. Wilson Jr. and Edward N.
Committee chairmen named inclufe: Russell A. Lane, J. Morton | Finney, Howard R. Hooper, P. L. Harden, Mercer M. Mance and Patrick E. Chavis Jr.
Skin-Freshner with trial jar of Vitamin A-D Complex-Cream .......1,00
Sub-Tint with trial jar of Vitamin A-D ComplexCream ..eiecenises... 1.25 4
# greed & Ce. ie pon
AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80.YEARS
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1872-1952 S =
™
ee —
. VICKIE old ‘Vicki Attorney Portland, took her rie, to a her moth Sherrie's to sleep.’ ‘then dro sump ho Jada Z. |
gree mur
12 Unh
Smacks
SPOKA! (UP)—A coming in into a = flames anc night at Base. None of the six-eng injured, b: Officers mediately damage tc nor was ti determines
Find 17
MINNE. (UP) — Fj the 17th b ruing of : The origi at 17. The dren. four
a restaur where ag When th quiet e surround usual re: food, gq pleasant bined a
have tha
nd) Vo o« «
