Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 February 1952 — Page 3
0, 1952 !
vill be host te Solo-ard y of the Inrs’ Associa= ng to Lawe A first vice
1 school stuparticipate i in Arthur 1’ and John nter. on, director » in the Hohe All-State yr. Charles ’ the Butler nd Charles st president e as local
Day
'n h, 9 (UP)— aker, Scipio ave birth to y, was iner husband, cer, 31, was in a B-29 an. egram gave
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"honored in pomp and pageantry|
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I _SuiIDAY, FEB. 10, 4952 — :
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PAGEss3 ©»
: ek THE INDIANAPOLIS TIME ae
Want To Mess
Police Map Bad Spots For Traffic Accidents “¥ Even If You're Afoot oN of
Up Your Car? Here's Where
; is it A 2NSTAND 16% Ox 3
SOULE NORTHWE
STERN CAPITOL PENNSYLVANIA § WASH BLVD yen 1 tt . t WALNUT AN PARK AND Poad MASSACHUS ov Yow. | Inogrw st yl |__| ||_E ¢
a 8
40th AND 49 # AND
viving the hazards of modern traffic depend largely on your
You probably aren't ‘aware, but. your chances of sur- | |
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| L_NEw] | York!
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Your chances of becoming a traffic statistic may be parlayed merely by your own notion to take a certain route | Hush-Hush * Knife Case Washington and Illinois Sts. : On that broad, five-pointed corner, according to police files, more | {12 months, your chances of mess- , : the hushed-up fatal stabbing of ing up the family auto are excela fellow Julietta inmate in the/ient at McCarty and Union Sts, !
downtown. (See map.) 1 e | : Set for Trial {Sectdens occ: than anywhere County Home last fall. land at 16th St. and Northwestern
choice of streets. For example, your best chance for bending fenders comes at else in Indianapolis. : v) Lewie 8. Thomas goes on trial Based on records for the past | L OHIO | for manslaughter tomorrow ®n Gee tae | Judge Saul I. Rabb of Crim-| Ave, 1 inal Court 2 has ordered a special | More Mayhem 7
panel of 50 prospective jurors for For sheer mayhem, you can’t |
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the trial. beat Washington and Noble Sts, - - -} ivi Shy serous Thomas is or | There, according to the records, [ p : \more injury accidents occur than |
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TRAGIC DISCOVERY—Josegh Kavchak breaks into uncontrolled weeping after finding the body of his mother, Mrs. Anna Bestenec, 72, buried under cardboard. boxes in the attic of her Pittsburgh home. Police are hunting for a missing roomer in the slaying.
Grieving Britain Paying
Final Respect to King
By United Press from a tree the King had felled SANDRING HAM, England, |himself. Feb. 9—A grieving Britain to-| Qutside the church local police, day began paying its final respect who knew the face of every vilto its late king, George VI, and jager and tenant by sight, were his successor, Queen Elizabeth II, stationed to assure that no ordered her court to wear mourn- gtrangar gained admission. ing until Saturday, May 31. | Grenadier Guards, who had First to .-bow their heads inig..4q the first guard—with rifles tribute before their departed .yorseq and heads bowed—after monarch were the villagers, the y;,. comin had been wheeled to country-folk of Sandringham. the church by torchlight to the
They came to the tiny church . skirling lament of a lone bagpipe, of St. Mary Magdalene to look, Stood duity on the grounds.
for the last time on their monFew Moments Alone
arch—the “Squire,” who they pag) known as neighbor, country] This morning, shortly before gentleman and friend. the public was admitted, the Queen Elizabeth and the royal|young Queen Elizabeth walked family had given the body of the|slowly past the tall yew trees in King back to the nation last night/the church yard and spent a few after a few brief hours of private quiet moments alone with her SOTrTOW. {father, then returned to the On Monday the body will be great house. removed to London where’ it will Then the doors of the church lie In state in the great oak-/- one of the most beautiful in all beamed Westminster Hall, to be Britain—were thrown open. The king's body lay in a flagby the kings, the queens, the draped coffin. A shaft of sunlight rulers, and statesmen, diplomats gianted across it from the magand soldiers of the Western world. pificent stained glass window deTribute From Workmen |picting a scene from the life of But the first public tribute came gt, George. The sunlight {lfrom the workmen of his Sand-/jyminated the inscription: ringham estate. Many still “Thou were the most courfeous clothed in the corduroys they had|knight that ever bare shield, the worn in the fields. And from kindliest man that ever struck villagers in stiffly formal clothes/with sword.” they wear only on the most me. Three floral wreaths lay atop portant occasions. [the coffin—tributes from the widThroughout the night, game- owed Queen and her grieving keepers in relays stood guardigauyghters, Queen Elizabeth II, over the simple coffin; carved ond Princess Margaret. Each bore a simple inscription —the Quéen Mother's: “Darling
Elizabeth.” The second read: “Darling papa, from your devoted daughter and son-in-law, Lilibet and Philip.” A smaller one, of pink’ carnations, carried the words: “To darling Papa from his loving Margaret.” : As the neighbors paid their last respects, preparations were being completed for Monday's procession to the little Wolverton Station and the journey to London where the body will lle in state until Friday's state funeral. 3 ‘Loving Elizabeth’ Royal Horse Artillery will draw the guncarriage on which the coffin will be taken from the estate to Wolverton, along a route lined with the school children and the townsmen of Norfolk and the local police. The gun carriage will be a two-
in ceremonial green. Strapped to the barrel of the gun is a polished coffin ‘board on which the wooden casket will rest. | « Artillerymen of the Troop of the Royal Horse Artil-
riage. :
Airline Pilot Found ¥ Beaten to Death .in NY
DEFIES RED PROBERS—Mrs. -Kathleen Barnes shown as she appeared before the .Sepate
said. “
Internal Security Committee in Washington. say whether she is or ever was a Communist. She used grounds of self-incrimination in refusing- to tell. the committee, “investigating the Institute “of ~ Pacific Relations, of any past affiliations. hovel ¥
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beside the had been crushed. Hi
i . ou a pa
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an BS : # = : 2 -wy
| Eads died two days later.
|Supt. Harry Barrett until it was| | forced | Times.
* |direct” cause of Mr. Eads’ death.lat 16th St.
‘Bertie, from your always loving|
wheeled, thirteen poander, painted |
King's |
lery will ride four of the six“bay horses which will draw the car-
..| NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (UP)—The nude body of Leon Haftunian, a 28-year-old Capitol Airline pilot, was found in his bldod-spattered bachelor apartment today. He |apparently had been beaten to death with a golf club, police
| +The body was discovered by a cousin who went to the flier's|. |apartment in Forest Hills, he refused to Queens, after the airline said Capt. Hartunian failed to take lout a scheduled flight. Police said Capt. Hartunian had been dead for 24 hours‘ before his body was found. Why : A bloody golf club—an iron— body. bi His head!
the knifing of Harry Eads, 61, . lanywhere else in the city. Total | | Oct. 21°following a quarrel. Mr accidents at that obstructed in- [ i | tersection are few, in comparison
il
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w N\A ST
Hushed 23 Hours The stabbing was hushed up t® other places, but when. one
for 23 hours by former Julietta [068 “Oocur, he Participants are
At Illinois and Ohio Sts, and |at Washington and East Sts, When Mr. Barrett finally made 2180: you will find excellent a report to County Commis- chances at becoming involved in
sioners, both he and former|S0me blood letting. . 17, Commissioner Fred W. Nordsiek; According to the records for J
into the open by The
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ILLINOI
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dismissed Mr. Eads’ wound as the past year, if you have suici- ] “minor.” |dal tendencies, you'll just love a Mr. Barrett is scheduled to/fast cruise along Washington St. KENTULKY AND testify as a witness for the prose- and North Illinois St. Beeause of HARDING
-
- - Is 1 1)
|| INJURIES AND
cution, along with Mrs. Helen|the heavy cross-traffic in the
Kell, head nurse at Julietta, and mile-square area, Washington St. = |
|Dr. George L. Jones, who dressed/is a constant hazard anywhere,
Times Special
WASHINGTON, Feb. 9—
Mr. Eads’ wound. |but for condensed car crumpling Could Cloud Case land crippling, try Illinois St, beA subsequent fence-straddling tween Washington and Michigan. verdict by Coroner Roy B. Storms That six block area has a bloodier is expected to cloud the state’sreécord than any comparable . case. |stretch of street in the city. | Dr. Storms listed the stab), A double winner in this un-| : wound as “the chief, but not the popularity poll is the intersection! (¢ | : and Northwestern | ongressman |The verdict also said “death was|Ave, with ad jacent Brighton caused by heart complications Blvd. adding to the gore. Atl A k p b brought on by the stab wound.” |injs sprawling junction lina] S S ro e If convicted on the juansigugh ite the traffic records, 22 persons ° ; : ter charge, Thomas faces a 2-t0-were injured in 10 accidents n Of K b {21-year sentence in state prison. ine past year. In 58 other acci-| y ings ury har dents there, the only casualties ‘British Got were the cars. M Check the 18 intersections des-| Doug Fired, t they stack up with the corners] d ded 3. 1 Says Pulliam you ve always considered hazard-| eman SORONADO, Cal, Feb. 9 pd The police traffic department —@Gen. Douglas MacArthur was ses constantly shifting controls! relieved of his Pacific commandit try and slow down the blood ©, ndiana were |because he refused England's de-|flow at the “hot” intersections. | avagant.'t® - jinands to set up the pound ster-ipg the accident file on a cer-|
in Japan, publisher Eugene Pulliam said today. /there and takes measures to ’ { con- | Mr. Pulliam said Gen. MacAr-itrol the fender bending. OB { (thur recently told him that for| Usually these methods consist G¢0r8e Bender, Ohio Republican ta long time he could not under- jof better control through an ay- regarded by most Washington obas “quick to cry wolf.”
|stand the real reaso | n why he tomatic signal or an offi - servers {had been relieved of his com- tioned cy Bot re a He said'the “bad-shell” reports (mand in the Pacific. remedy needed is an additional Came from chemists who were : But Be seine Saat he finally street light to illuminate the cor-|fired or transferred elsewhere. earne a e Ww n { > i Palllam said, a8 fired,” Mr.|ner, or warnings painted on the . Reports Called ‘Fantastic’ The reports brought an imme-
C./ment analyzes the conditions
The probe was asked by Rep.
Wism F icaue he had pavement. refused to set up the pound| The different methods are tried! sterling as the medium of ex-| , diate reply of “utterly fantastic” change in Japan. janet the accident toll subsides.
» - Ld MR. PULLIAM, president and| But some intersections seem in-|La Porte, Ind. publisher of the Indiana News- curable. At Washington and Noble| Lt. Col. William B. Graham told papers Inc, yu the Phoenix gts, the source of trouble is a The Times the reports were “unev Papers ne., spoke at the Monon - Railroad elevation, cut- [founded and untrue.” annual meeting of the Call- ting an oblique over the junction| The Kingsbury commander said
fornia Newspapers Publishers! 2 .” Assorintion. {of the streets: and obstructing/Rep. Bender's accusations “hit me
Gen. MacArthur said, according x to the publisher, that a British! commissioner in the Far East asked him to make the pound sterling the medium of Japan's exchange.
“MacArthur gave him a flat ! no,” Mr. Pulliam said. Mr. Pul- °P% DE
liam said Gen. MacArthur told! If you are a pedestrian, then|workers were paid for work they
Trestle Trouble
dded to this is the unusual place-icially emphatic in denying that
|der the overpass. The result is the from the sprawling artillery plant |bloodiest aceident record in In-/in northern Indiana. |dianapolis, with” 17 injury acci-! Rep. Bender sald “sources close
S | : him that 't "|try Illinois ‘and Ohio Sts. if you didn’t do, and that traveling exnr ae yy ET ish commis- 177, to flirt with fate. Of the 11 penses were padded. {have you. removed as Com. [persons injured there in the past| Col. ‘Braham countered that he |mander.” 112 months, eight were on foot. (never heard any complaints about
“MacArthur told m | But, these records merely are Such waste or padding. He pointed laughed,” Mr. Pulliam Just based on the last year; in 1952 a Out that the contract for rebuildthen quoted the General as say- [whole new set of intersections Ing..the plant was not on a costing: “‘but then I found out that{may win the awards for bringing Plus basis, but as a flat sum to {the long arm of No. 10 Downing new heights of misery and dam- the low bidder. {St. was even longer than I had age. Which corners these will be,’ Activation Began in '50 ‘Indiana firm, Tonn &
| figured.’ ” « {depends upon you. | An
{ : . | {Blank of Michigan City, holds the Plan Salute to Edison Truck Tieup Settled general contract, with specific | NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (UP)—| pa
{jobs sub-contracted by it. |Lights will be turned off for one| 2D ALEAS, Tex. Feb. (UP)—" Col. Graham said the activation
federal mediation commission] - minute at 11 a. m. Monday at the announced tonight that a settle- |p >8" 0%: ean i yu
Hotel Edison Here to mark the lanniversary “of the : birth * ment has been reached in the ; "a $3 million project. | : : Of | week-old truck strike which idled|™ "op. "a scumed command {Thomas A. Edison after whom|8200 workers in Texas, Oklahoma, | “= i 1051 the hotel was named. He was Louisiana and Arkansas. The deal '" APTl. ;
|born Web. 11, 1847, 9 Rep. Benton's statement added runs for ties years that “I am told” some chemists
at the plant “repeatedly objected to low-grade quality of ingredi-
¥ 1%
were ‘listed as troublemakers” and fired or transferred else-|}. | where.
| “If true,” Rep. Benton said, “the
n which are slow firing or duds.” ; Col. Graham laughed “bad shell” report. “Samples of all our shells are tested at Jefferson Proving Grounds (Madison, Ind.) and we have a very low ratio of rejects. We do not ship out inferior ammunition,” the Army officer said. ch Bi WL 4 Kingsbury makes nearly all ES 3 > % types of artillery shells from 203 ove : © millimeter up. ;
Sy ung
d Ui look and foul young! fit! our lessons at hots aaa ons Fred
[ 15 sme
No appointment nec. jessary—0pen 10 [ a.m. to 10 p.m. Air
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"HE KNOWS WHAT IT MEANS—Capt. Henrik Carlsen of | Flying Enterprise fame, salutes in silent tribute at the foot of the. !
Fishermen's Monument at Gloucester, Mass., after he laid an anchorshaped wreath honoring "They that go down fo. the sea
re ha Wiperse Fishing port In Romerme Get. Carliem Soros uw, vu: - LONG Fo et Mario's Award in th 30-year ary of fo port, 18 Wo Market ts
< BTN A Sr Tr ow # . 5 ag -
ms BRI tre ley ree ‘ ie ri
ignated on the map and see how, An Ohio Congressman today | investigation of
Nothing else
reports that costs of - acti-
{vating Kingsbury Ordnance plant “excessive and
He also called for a probe -of (ling as the medium of exchange tain corner grows, the depart.| TePOrts” that “low-grade ingre-
|dients” were used to’ make shells that may be *‘slow-fired or duds.”
from the commanding officer of| Kingsbury Ordnance, located ay
he view from every direction. between the eyes.” He was espe-|
‘ment of an automatic signal un-/inferior ammunition was ‘shipped|
|dents last year, crippling 22 per-/to the day-to-day operation” fre |
his : ents used in making shells” and|
plant may be producing shells! at the}
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