Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1952 — Page 3
shelton
cause he kept
> her classes High School her story of
ced teen-ager rdered her to ve to her. He an hour, she
but she was ited. Franklyn B.
Army master iprings, Va.
ence Feb..5 (UP) eron, in her appearance peration, sat of governors husband. ——————
ase PE OM
spo wl
Ld ALAA Ll A
»
a
aS
2
Le + i oA ry LR
od
Ye
»
[af Sa ele MIE ES 4 *. Ae
: hy N ret
eed AY SS
yurchase umbo - b ags | 2.98
in front and sides; 42.in, green, rose, i
ge
rear os civ 299
it shoe
creves 2.98
stable dress
form ularly 13.98
11.95
for ever s. Cloth ks ss form ade. sizes 32.42
ial Sale “chest. 498 use wherever seded. Wood
vashable wall ne
o
®
"TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1052 __ z
Expect To Pin
Reds Truce
On UN Seats
By Uhited Press.
PANMUNJOM, Korea, Wednesday, Feb. 6—Top United |
Nations and Communist truce negotiators begin discussion of point five on their agenda today.
It was suspected the Reds may raise their‘ price for
peace in Korea to include Chinese and North Korean membership in the ‘United Nations. : When the full truce teams meet at T p.m. (Indianapolis Time) Gen, Nam Il of North Korea will submit a “draft of principles on agenda item five.” Allied negotiators believe he may demand that the truce negotiators recommend: ONE-—Immediate withdrawal of foreign troops from Korea.
TWO—An immediate political peace conference to blueprint the future of Korea. THREE — Re-establishment of the 38th Parallel as the political boundary between South and North Korea. a FOUR-—Immediate admission of Red China and North Korea to the United Nations.
The Aliles are expected to reject summarily any idea of the admission of the two Red countries to the United Nations or of a return to ‘the 38th Parallel the border. * They are expected to accept in principle only the idea of foreign troops withdrawal and a peace conference, But the troops would be withdrawn, and the peace conference held, only after an armistice had been in effect long enough to make sure that there would be no more Communist aggression. A “Voice of the United Nations Command” broadcast said Communist concessions: so far have been a “step in the right direction, but there is still a long way to go.”
UN Won't Debate War While It Rages
4 PARIS, Feb. 5 (UP)—The sixth annual United Nations General Assembly ended today with: the defeat of a Soviet attempt to force a debate on the Korean War, By a vote of 51 to 5 with two abstentions, the assembly adopted a Western motion to postpone all debate on Korea until a battlefield armistice has been signed or the West decides that sterner military measures are necessary. All U. 8. delegates to the As-
as
sembly agreed that the main re-
sult of this session was the solidarity of the free world against
Communist imperialism. But lines plane apparently were killed Communist Romania, was a Manadyn, a many delegates thought the grow- yesterday when it crashed in the friend of Robert A. Vogeler, who Academy of Sciences and a lead-tion” reports was imprisoned by the Hungarian ing Soviet authority on American Judy go free by
ing refusal of the small nations
was the most important single! trend of' this session.
Red Infantry Stabs ' At Imjin River Line EIGHT ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Feb, 5 (UP)| —Two Chinese Communist in-! fantry companies slashed at the| Allied -Imfin’ River today and drove back two United Nations outposts, However, United Nations infantrymen to the north moved out in sub-zero temperatures and re-| occupied an advance position] northwest of Yonchon. The light contact along the remainder of the battlefront reflected the new surge of optimism from the fruce negotiation tents at Panmunjom. Only normal patrols were sént out. There were no air battles. {
Anderson Utility Service Periled
ANDERSON, Feb. 5 (UP)—An “interruption” of this city's municipal electricity and water serv-| ice was threatened today unless] agreement is reached in a dispute; over the firing of three city em-| ployees. In a published notice, members of Local 108, UWUA-CIO, said ‘an interruption in service will occur unless a satisfactory settle-| ment is reached on or before 8 a. m. Wednesday. State Labor Conciliator Charles Wilson met with officials of the
jcity and union in an effort to The request also included a $300!
reach agreement. The union said a tie-up of municipal facilities would be “necessary to protect] our job security.” | Three men were improperly| fired by the new city administra-| tion, thé union charged. But! Mayor Noland Wright defended, his action, saying “the responsibility of determining the efficiency and competence of employees rests solely with the elected! mayor.”
15 Die in Crash BRUSSELS, Feb. 5 (UP)—AIl 15 persons aboard a Belgian air-
| |
western Belgian Congo,
to follow the U. -8. lead blindly reaching here said today.
Cc oun cilmen Battles for Back Pay—
Rap Julietta Ex-GI Finds
Management Dwarfs Barbed Wire
Two County Councilmen today | KALAMAZOO, Mich.,, Feb. 5 attacked Julietta Superintendent (UpP)—A former combat infantryDaily McCoy for failure to pre<iman said yesterday he came sent an over-all modernization across less barbed wire in Korea program for the Marion County/than red tape at home. Home, Jess Doan, 23, sald the Army Councilmen I. W. Cotton and gtjill owes him $1024 in back pay Clitton Hirschman took Mr. Mc-,. 0 yg.month tour of duty, seven Cay to task for “piecemeal” plan-{, ine of it in Japan and Korea.
ning of Julietta repairs when he, the Coun £4200 t He said he accepted his .disasked Comet) or / 3200 0 charge at Camp Carson, Colo.,
refrigeration plant. BUY 3 retvigera P 1 last Sept. 10 without putting up a Mr. Hirschman asked Why qo for his back pay “because Superintendent McCoy had not I figured if I.stayed around, they revised the old kitchen setup, re- would send me back to Korea to ferring to a State Welfare De- |, " {look for my records. partment recommendation that Since then. he said. he has been
seven kitchens in the institution yo iting the Army and Veterans
be centralized, Administration offices in a vala It’s ridiculous to have kitchens effort to collect what he's got
all over the place.” Mr. Hirschman coming to him. said, “Your kitchen setup is] worse than in any other institu-| tion in the state.”
‘Always Same Story’
“But it's always the same Bond Issue Needed story,” he said. “Everybody refers ime to somebody else.” The councilmen directed Mr.| Mr, Doan said he finally heard McCoy to make a survey of neces- ast December that his temporary stary changes and report it to the military pay record had been forCounty ‘Commissioners and the warded from Camp Carson to tha Council, after which a bond issue military pay division of the Army will be sought to, finance the Finance Center at St. Louis. alterations. * “They told me it was being As a-parting shot, Mr. Hinsch- processed,” he said. “But I haven't man said: (heard a thing,since.” “If you don't come in here with, Mr. Doan’s case is similar to the right kind of request, youthat of Riccardo Del Vecchio, a don’t belong out there: [Detroit GI who last week finally The Council warned all county|collected. $887.30 of the $1297 h2 officials to go slow on requests sajd the Army owed him for fightfor more money this year as they ing in Korea. considered extra appropriations! Mr. Doan said that he drew totaling $97,561. only $276 for his entire tour of \ , . duty although his mother received Cites Working Balance $30 monthly allotment checks regCouncil President Scott Ging ularly. said the county has a working, Mr. Doan said he was paid balance of $185,000 for the year. “fractional” amounts until he got His comment to county officials'to Korea. After that, he said, his was: : |pay stopped altogether because “We don't have a big tub full “the Army paymaster records of money and a big ladle, It showed I wasn't officially there.” just isn't there.” : : “Maybe 1 wasn't The economy note came as El- cially,” Mr. Doan said, “but I mer P. Warren Jr., chief deputy spent a rugged winter in Korea, Center Township Assessor, asked not to mention the time I put in for $29,620 for pay raises and at an Army hospital in Japan for to hire extra help for his office. treatment of an infected foot.” Mr. Doan, now an employee of
a year raise for himself. a power company, has retained
{press his case. But Mr. ‘Fisher {said he is getting the “same old
Admits Helping {run-around” as his client.
Slay Yank “If red tape could be converted
BERN, Switzerland, Feb. 5 (UP) into barbed wire,” Mr. Fisher,said, —Swiss federal police said today |“The’d have enough to put up an that a foreigner had “confessed” impenetrable fence around the he helped murder a U, 8. naval entire country.” attache two years ago.
“He said he is Ryan Taresco, 24, . . . 3 Rr Red Historian Dies Police said he admitted he, MOSCOW, Feb. 5 (UP)—
{pushed U. S. Navy Capt. Eugene Pravda, official newspaper of the But this source
Krape off the Arlberg Express, central committee of the Soviet near Salzburg, Austria. | Communist Party, reported the Capt. Krape, naval attache in| death today of historian Yakov member: of
| Communists. history.
’
there offi-,
U.S.to Try
an attorney, Jack Fisher, to help|:
the slightest
spring or early summer. i
«®
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES '_- LER CL
/Cutbacks Again Hit Builders Here
{ Andther Story Page 13
Red Tape
In grim-lipped silence, home builders and plumbing and elec ‘trical © contractors shook their heads today as they received word of yet another cutback in their |supplies of copper and steel for this year's homes. | Agreed to by both the Housing land Home Finance Agency and! the National Production Authorlity, the proposed cutback would limit the size of new homes to a
maximum of 1500-square feet of floor area by placing. the usage lof copper -and steel on a per-square-foot basis. - In a home with steel plumbing, the maximum poundage of steel {will be cut by 100 pounds to 1700 Ipolinds. Copper maximum will be {30 pounds—a drop of five pounds.
Maximunr fo Be Cut
In a home with copper plumbing, the top steel poundage will be 1450 pounds, as it i= now, but the copper maximum will be cut from 160 to 30 pounds, “As far as plumbing is concerned, this order throws copper right out the window,” commented George Roesinger, plumbing contractor. . “The average one-bathroom house today with a minimum of copper and steel in it requires from 300. to 500 pounds of steel for plumbing and 35 pounds of copper—about 25 pounds of this for wiring,” Mr. Roesing said. The ruling would hit hardest of all at the low-cost home, Clarence {Wacker, builder, complained. | “On a square foot basis, an 800{foot home would be limited to lonly 20 pounds of copper—which lis not enough for the electrical wiring alone,” Mr, Wacker said.
Outlook Dark
Builder Albert Thompson, a na{tional director of the National Association of Home Builders, felt the new order sounded a death f ° {knell for 11; and two-story homes. Jud A ain | ‘The HHFA expects to put the [new order into effect later this 3 SAN y PY ; jmonth following a conference By IRI TnLy {with the National Association of WASHINGTON, Feb, 5— New Home Builders, levidence has been-uncoveé red. It also limits all new homes to : a bath and a half, but builders |against Judith Coplon and she said that this was all that was (will be tried again for espionage, possibfe to build under present a high source in the Justice De- restrictions anyhow. partment said today. No indication | was given as to {the nature of the n e w evidence.
‘MAN WHO WASN'T THERE'—dess Doan, Kalama. 200, Mich., who spent a rugged winter in Korea and was treat. ed for a foot wound in .the Army hospital in Japan, says the Army still owes him $1024 in back pay he never received in Korea because he wasn't ‘officially there.’
Thugs ‘Probe’ Tax Office of $700
LOS ANGELES, Cal, Feb. 5 (UP)—Two' burglars pulled their own “investigation” of a Buregzu of Internal Revenue branch office yesterday. They hauled off a safe containing $700. In addition to the missing tax money, the FBI also was looking for a number of relov, expects to become pee mother sometime this| turns filed by income tax paymonth. Authorities here expect| ®T® and kept in the safe. she will ask a postponement Of EE ————— her trial. But they said it prob-
ably would get under way in ate Seek: Cease-Fire
isaid the Justice Department 3 “never had the intenof letting default. Judy, now Mrs, Albert H. Soco-
Miss Coplon
* Earlier, there had been some ON South Side question about the new trial. This/ arose from the Supréme Court's/ Iocal authorities turned to refusal to hear the government's General Hospital today in search appeals from rulings handed(for a eease-fire in a South Side
down by the Court of Appealsneighborhood.
— PAGE 3
+ 38
STRAUSS \ SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORR y
* @
GENTLEMEN:
Kr ol
“WE BROADCLOTH SHIRTS--
FUSED (NON-WILT) COLLARS—"PEARL" ~~ BUTTONS—A GOOD BROADCLOTH AND GOOD
na A HEA ATT TE
A
a a PIRI pa AR Gre AR
CUFFS— THEY ARE A SPECTACULAR BUY!
995
MEN WILL BUY THEM BY TWO'S AND
SHIRTMAKING—BUTTON
onjoys ‘Magic Flavor
of New ‘York and the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. {
The District Court of Appeals ruled that Miss Coplon’'s arrest) in New York was legal and that her sentence of 40 months to 10] years in prison was valid. But| it said the verdict should be set! aside and a new trial held if] Miss Coplon could prove that her!
Hurley W. Turner, central figure of a long-time gun feud, was temporarily reléased by a judge
on condition he be taken to Gen-}
eral Hospital for a mental examination. Turner had been before Judge Scott McDonald in Municipal Court 4 on charges of drawing a deadly weapon. Turner was arrested by two
Center Township constables yes-|
terday after he pointed a loaded
TW A hl,
ata
THREE'S AND i HALF-DOZENS— AND POCKET
ji slephone conversations with her
lawyer had been tapped. shotgun at them, they said. Tur-
The New York court, while say-|ner fled, then surrendered, when
ing that “her gullt is plain,” ruled|Constable William Lightcap fired Judy's arrest was illegal because one shot close to his feet.
FBI agents had ho warrant when| The constables came to 78they arrested her and tpok in-\year-old Turner's home, 1019 criminating papers from her Charles St., to serve a peace bond. purse. - A neighbor complained he had
threatened her with a gun. ‘Winnie Ruth Judd
Mr. Lightcap said Turner has | i a long record of feudin’ and ‘Search Intensified fussin’ with neighbors. | PHOENIX, Ariz, Feb. 5 (UP) = : — The search for Winnie ruth Realty Leader Dies Judd extended today from Mexi-| Services for W. H. Surbaugh, can border towns to Los Angeles, [former president of Indiana State | ! Real Estate Association, will be but ‘authorities complained of tomorrow in Anderson, where he
public indifference to the escape died. He lived there most of his of the one-time trunk murderess. life and was in the real estate|
PII iT I IER,
|} | I |} I |} ]
RDO
Sis RAR BE aaa
PLENTY OF SAVINGS! FIRST FLOOR
L. STRAUSS & (0. THE MAN'S STORE
pth ey
*
ons
Vocalist
RAO
:
wos
oss
a
| Sheriff's deputies said some business. Pp persons questioned about the 47-! | HORIZONTAL 3 Nomad [ (year-old murderess’ flight from y 4 Peck ! [the Arizona State Hospital for LITTLE LIZ + 1,6 Radio 5 Caldrong . 5 > {the Insane Saturday night even | WN LY Yocalist ‘Graf od, is expressed the hope that 'Mrs.| 4 13 Weird. 7 Oily ketone r His Judd made good her escape. | (3 14 Triumph 8 Cuddle RIMEANIERTA Some said they hoped she | | i-| 15 Transtorm 9 Average (ab.) WIT IR i i |“made it to Mexico,” the deputies .-| 16 Goddess of 10 Hindmost ; L The Magic Flavor of FALLS CITY said. ; the dawn 11 Cosmic order ieet “1g Primiom Gooiiv. Bs , a EE — Pt | 17 Follower yy 12Fish sauce mivm Quality Beer gives you rea Lv ; 18 Rebel (coll) 20 Lariat Young. oyst deep-down enjoyment! It's & taste treat. yi ‘Passengers’ . Take $20 | 21 Rives B Avice S Fixed } so Trams ot home or oway! ~ From Cab Driver | 1 3 Vanni 24 Shen ean 35 Fixed look 81 ot : : Gu pn ChE getting so that any girl with Se la MRT “wu; Here's a good fip=the very next time you lafter he picked them. up on a a.tmink Seat hi raed as a sus--) | 23 Shade tree 28 Soviet river ' { 43 Unkeeled $38in or visit your favorite favers or resleurgint= [phoned Jequest, ot or song Do Picious chuwrgcter. ow | 25 Beli gold Rally 45 He gained so 2nsppeovel) . : : 4 orsley, 21, o eloss warrio | AME eee § ——— . be sure and insist on FALLS CITY Premium Sta sad he was sent to the 6400! 2 Bird of prey, 3 Wartled , favorite of 'GOExisty ; , : [block of E. 10th St. to pick up a, | a Y S0Xers’ Quality Beer. You'll be glad you did} two passengers. The two men en- | 34 Stations (ab.) 31 Row “7 Retinue - , ch uw - tered the cab, drew guns and de- | | 38Lure, i manded the cabbie’s money. | 3 En Sates bi 15 . ¢ "41 Hostelry a 0 li "we 42 Trader : 2): . | ua - | r 44 Cotton fabric [8 fe | veg oct 8 45 Make lace Ll _} "1 }.} ‘ { ] i . he 2 - i Reupholsiering ®{ 0 Cf ett E11 7° I . pan ; X 49 He Sppsis of ] : : eT | ess of what you pay : ‘Q —— na ; , a. PREMIUM QUALITY EN 1 2000 modern reoms 33 Attempted ex i : wi , (}. oo clama - - I | Zaaagoruis Sok Jon want '| bath—radio—Muzok 5 American gout a Ba i - ! | : : ohn (Gaelic), | 1 ve price. our low prices spotless comfort 59 Young street - | still give you quality. | | Snrchiras timp vo rou. we ‘Phone CH-6T11 | : Nl ; : : ik : a Lo SHELBY | - i Eero ER wen | UPHOLSTERY GO. | ’ CCFALLS CITY BREWING CO. INC, LOUISVILLE 10, RY. - ; {fo sem massacmusgrs ave. © 1" 5 wn ng & wo SEE ER i + : i Hog y i . . - —— _—_— — ; rs o XR n ; r Le Eh TPs SE SOR na FR El age ~ gn, 5 on 3 le £ ER #5 Ae wT
