Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1952 — Page 3

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SUNDAY. FER. 17.10%

_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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PAGE 3°

"UN Agrees To Pact-Truce Talks But ‘Not On Reds’ Terms

Puts Limit yoo fs On Scope of New Parley

By United Press TOKYO, Sunday, Feb. 17—The United Nations today accepted, with qualifications, the Communist plan for a postwar Korean peace conference, But the United Nations made it clear that the Allies want to confine the talks to Korean problems. Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, chief Allied negotiator, told the Reds at Panmunjom that the Allies, in effect, will agree with the Red plan if the Reds will accept the United Nations interpretation of | the Red proposal. |

Adm. Joy, who celebrated his | 57th birthday today, said the Allies ‘still want the post-armis-

tice conference limited to Korean matters. The Reds had proposed that the conference discuss a Korean settlement ‘et cetera,” leaving the door: apen for possible discussion of other Far Eastern problems, After the meeting, gates formally tomorrow

the deleadjourned unti]

ORCHIDS TO THE GRADUATE—Col. John C. Lackas, deputy commandant of the Finance Seven Allied tank and infantry School at Ft. Harrison, presents orchid leis to three graduates of the school. They are (L to R) Pfc. teams slashed nearly two miles Anita Taucfest, Pvt. Lorraine Telles and Sfc. Beatrice Perez. The leis, made from 100 baby orchids

into enemy lines on the Korean western front Saturday while Al- : mr lied big guns hammered the Reds with the mightiest barrage of the Year. The Allied raids hit the ane OSS \ J

Reds along a 25-mile front.

each, were airmailed from Hawaii by Pvt. Telles' mother.

Early Tax Payers Boon to Teachers

al North Carolina today ' and rr - "s lt : mans request on Boveras {seized 10 ex-Ku Klux Klansmen - pe Newbold Morris, be given power on kidnaping charges that could A) “i ¥ to grant Immunity to witnesses [carry the death penalty, . ; R . is "unnecessary and fraught with Siskind Gane Biruner Fox

hearing before Commissioner T. 1. Of

FBI Arrests N.Y. Detective Quizzed Fear Grant

10 Kluxers 11; ty OF Immunity In Carolina In eS Theft Ring To Tipsters

, By United Press By United Press FAYETTEVILLE, N. C., Feb, WASHINGTON, Feb. 16—Sen, ¢ 16—FBI agents descended In force Herbert R. @'Coner (D. Del.) on, the nightrider hotbed of coast said today that President True

a, — Ce

the greatest danger.” The former chairman of the

The 100 men, including a ¢on-

By United Press

stable of Fair Bluff, N. C., were —ovehs. nh ¥ : detective and a member of the : hustied here for arraignment be- NEW YORK, Feb. 16 -A city police forcé for six years with a Senate Crime InVestigating Come jore & U. ». Commissioner. They detective. seized with three thugs spotless record. Mr, * Monaghan mitige is a member of the Senate were charyed specificaily -witn On charges of attempting a hold- spotless record . Judiciary Committee which will - tne abauction and flogging of a UP. was questioned today by Mr. Monaghan splattered, consider a bill to give Mr. Mor-, young white coupie in one of. at Police who suspected he belonged “louse,” “bum.” and “betrayer of Tis sweeping powers in his n= east 1L terrorist incidents in the to a §3 million burglary ring op- the public trust” at Fox, who hid vestigation of government agene last 13 months. eating in UU. 8. and Canada. his face in his hands when lined €les. Lo Unshaven, rainsoaked ang Officers were trying to..learn up with the trio with whom he - Mr. "O'Conor said that “te dressed in rumpled work and whether the men were connected was seized authorize such a temporary tarm clothes, tne accused mere With a ring believed ‘responsible Family Astounded assistant to hold blameless for

shuffled one at a {ime into the for snatching $1.3 million worth jewels and Hon. Bond was set at $5000 each, !ast 13 months, A hearing was set for Feb. 26 The burglars allegedly preved . ! here for them to enter their pleas on the rich, the socially promi- Seymour Siskind, Joseph Ganz, porary measure.” to the charges. nent and gelebrities fn Miami and Max Birner. Fox was seized: pe ‘said he favors giving Mr, (Miami Beach, Chicago, Cleveland, with them but police did not Norris power to subpena wit. Pittsburgh, Detroit; Atlantic City, know he was a detective until he nesses as Mr. Truman requested The arrest climaxed months of Buffalo and Toronto, as well as showed his badge and “service y+ that power “will be sufficient senu-otticial reports and rumors New York revolver to give the special assistant the of midnight floggings and intimi-, Police from Commissioner Fox insisted he joined the three oan to conduct a thoroughgoing dation in the Columbus County George P. Monaghan down were only in an effort to trap them robe.” area. State and local investiga- flabbergasted by the arrest of and “break” the recent wave of gan Clvde R. Hoey (D. N. C.) tions had produced no arrests, James Fox, 33, a third grade burglaries, chairman of’ the Senate's pers

~ manent investigating committee, agreed that the immunity power

Mr. Fox's wife and mother of even criminal Wrong-doing a pube furs here In the his two children and their neigh- lic official under any “tircum. ¢ bors were equally astounded. stances is too far reaching a Other . suspects. arrested were power to be granted by this tems

Caught at Dawn

Minor clashes were reported h y 3 MUNCIE, Ind; Feb. 16 (UP)— A score of federal agents elsewhere. t KR ) He Muncie’'s 410 public. school teach- rounded up the suspects in a United Nations naval guns On S or . unway re ers had their semimonthly pay rainy dawn. The charges on which

took the siege of Wonsan into its second year, making it the longest operation of its kind in American history.

Heres of ‘Wild’ Gas Well Shoot 150 Feet Into Air

RENOVO, Pa., Feb. 16 (UP)— ‘ A tower of flames, fed by natural gas gushing from one of the largest wells in the world, shot 150 feet into the air today. Each hour, the fire consumed an estimated 6,250,000 cubic feet of natural gas, worth more than $10,000. + Paul (Red) Adair, a gas well fire expert who flew here today from Houston, Tex., mapped plans to snuff out the flames with explosions of nitro-glycerine. He said that he probably would ‘begin shooting” tomorrow. . The gas well, described as the biggest in the leidy Field here, “blew in” with such a force yes-

By JOE ALLISON

A short runway at Weir Cook Municipal Airport has taxes early.

caused two jet fighter plane crashes costing U. S. as much as $200,000. The runway limit also is slowing testing of new engines being developed by Allison Divi- - . re a sion for new fighters and bombers, lion available for Weir Cook exThis was admitted last week Pansion. < ; by Allison spokesmen as city’ Then the Civil Aeronautics officials sought to figure out how:Board closed Stout Field, home of to get an ‘“Indian-giving” U. 8. the" Indiana Air National Guard.

to make up its mind about federal Stout is too close to Weir Cook,

aid for Weir Cook. A main runway more than a traffic hazard. quarter-mile short of “safe” With Stout Field closed the Air lengths is the cause of the trouble, Guard was homeless and the It's Not ‘Safe’ U. 8, In effect, told Indianapolis = 2 federal funds would be withheld The longest

: landing strip at, n4j) the Air Guard finds a home. Weir Cook, the only one equipped. mpg Air Guard still is homefor “instrument” landings in bad less but would like to move into weather, is only 5140 feet long. Weir Cook Airport and Allison officials =ay : s . Take Guard—IF «

a “safe and necessary” length is 7200 feet. The Weir Cook board has said it will take the Guard if the

Testing of new and bigger enGuard will make some improve-

gines being .built by Allison canHot be done here, the tompany ments on the field to take care of Guard traffic.

says. The big engines

-

are for big

the Board said, and posed an air settled up long before the May All

“will be going a little far.”

| Mr. Hoey sald he feels it is “a mistake to throw the door wide

a state line into South Carolina ° ® > open an s Forrest D. Carmichael, city|to the flogging scene. With Y outh in Holdu Woogie iy uch powers to school business director, had less| Under the’ Lindbergh Kidnap- - Attorney General J. Howard than half enough money in the ing Law, abduction of a victim By United Press there staring at each other for a McGrath has defended the re= tuition fund to meet a $90,000 across a state line can be prose- 1.OS8 ANGELES, Feb. 18 — A moment.”. quest as being necessary to any payroll yesterday. He asked cuted as a capital offense. wounded 19-year-old youth con-| Then Sgt. Haney ordered Mee- thorough investigation. He said Cotinty Treasurer Samuel Cun- Those charged, the FBI said, fessed today that he shot and han to-‘drop that gun, drop that it would he better to exempt some nington- for, a $65,000 advance of apparently had “appointed them- killed a police sergeant after a gun,” Mr. Turner sald. “But the ‘lesser offenders” if it meant tax funds. selves a general disciplinary holdup he attempted because he kid fired again.” helping convict greater offenders, Mr. Cunnington advanced the body to punish anyone they be- wanted money to buy a new ‘en- Md&han's second bullet hit Sgt. rT ma money and said it came from tax

: ~~ lieved needed punishing.” gine for his car, police reported. Haney near the heart but as the |} i Payments made BY Doeovs Nhe were identified as mem- Michael Meehan was captured youth fled, the Sergeant pumped Lincoln Like Democrats, instai- bers of a Ku Klux Klan “Klav- one block from the scene of the a bullet into Meehan's chest and Rep. Madden (D.) Says lern” recently ordered broken up'shooting in the downtown Wil- another into his leg. | Rep. Ray J. Madden (D. Ind) {by Thomas L. Hamilton of Lees- shire Distric{ only an hour after! An hour later, residents of a today told a mid-winter chon lville, 8. C., the “imperial wizard” Sgt. Marvin W. Haney died en boarding house in the area re- :

. = imeeting of the Indiana Women's Burns Received Dec. 5 lof the Carolina Kian . route to a hospital. ported hearing strange’ nolses.'n,. "2110 Club . Abraham

. * checks today-—because Delaware they were booked inciuded trans- Sergea nt Slain in Duel

County property owners paid their portation of the victims across

deadline for the spring ment,

1 : i ; Meehan, who came here from Investigating officers flushed Fatal to City Man, 69 Mr. Hewjiten sai 1odsy Coal Denver last September, is alleged Meehan, Linea ould be a Democrat if Thomas Lyons Sr., 69, of 209 he had iy 2 ok not in Wi fo have told police the sergeant “Don't shoot, officer, don't =~ we 8. McKim St. died yesterday of ‘heeause cig licies.” He re- fired the first shot. shoot,” he pleaded. “I'm sorry I| "If Lincoln were alive today. he burns received Dec. 5, 1951, in an ing with an po bout the ar. Officers said Sgt. Haney, 31, done it. I shouldn't have done would be fighting the cause of the early morning blaze at his home. fused to comment abou a and father of two children, it." . common people gainst the forces Rescued from his burning bed: rests. stopped the youth shortly after He told officers he needed $200 Of reaction and special privilege

“buy a new motor for my - - - but In the ranks of the Dem« car 80 I could go to Denver,” oOcratic Party,” Mr. Madden said, ode tn | He sald Republicans ebserve {Lincoln's birthday but dé “not

room by city firemen, Lyons was FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, Meehan had held up a market to taken to General” Hospital where «ho first announced today's ar- and escaped with $172 cash. he had lingered in critical condi- rests in -Washington, said that Meehan attempted to run. Sgt.

tion. ’ the 10-man raiding party awak- ganey ordered him to halt, police According to firemen. the blaze oneq Dorothy Martin and Ben said. Then the sergeant fired one Reds Razz Jazz

-

mention such other Republican terday that it popped “like a airplanes which cannot be landed i his made an Sfrer started from a gare, Alter Grainger of Fair Bluff last shot pver Meehan's head but Mee- MOSCOW, Feb. 16 (UP)— presidents as “Hoover, Coolidge, cork” a cap designed to handle safely on the main strip here, Not py id oT DEsciais 53) Lyons BDparently ro asleep oct. 6, : han pulled a gun and shot Sgt. American jazz was attacked to- Harding, McKinley and other 6000 pounds per share inch pres- only is the runway too short, air- 'S R ot UE Mavor Clark “snd mn Lvons Jr. dis. They were = blindfolded and Haney through the hand, they day by the newspaper ‘Soviet Republican statesmen (who) cone oes. Po oficials say, bUt 1 If Y9Oothey oMitials are seeking new covered the fire when he returned driven across the state line into reported. 4 Art” as a capitalistic invention ducted administrations that the n

” ” ” THE CAP and 10 tons of ‘tools : ior aiv op Ways of prying the were catapulted into the air, Era 32 Loe 220 U. 8. promised Indianapolis out 1 a. m. striking the 90-foot high steel there is a real danger that it of federal hands. drilling derrick and causing a would. crush the runway. : me ————— spark which ignited the gas. Six At some points the strip is only YMCA Membership men working at the base of the 4 inches thick. while 8 to 11 inches : : derrick escaped injury. is considered necessary for land- Drive Kickoff Set

THe roar of the igniting gas ing the bigger of modern military could be heard for seven miles in planes.

the remote north-central Pennsylvania area. In a matter of] minutes, the héat melted the’, derrick to the ground.

|

24th Leaves Korea TOKYO, Sunday, Feb. 17 (UP) —The U. 8. Army announced today that the veteran U. 8. 24th The 97th annual’ YMCA mem- Infantry Division—the first to| bership campaign will get under fight in Korea—has returned to| Tests Elsewhere way tomorrow night at a “kick- Japan, Right now, Allison is instafling off” report meeting in the audi- er ———————_ test engine in the bomb bay of torium of the Central YMCA. . an airplane. But it will not be. Maydr Alex Clark will be the Liz to Fly to England Mr. Adair, who put out a fire flown here. speaker. Judge Lloyd D. Clay-| HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 16 (UP)— two years ago at the Dorcie-Cal-| Allison will take the craft to combe. general chairman of the Elizabeth Taylor flies to New houn well 10 miles away, was ex- the giant Air Force testing ground campaign, will be master of cere- York tomorrow on her way to pected to use an asbestos suit or at Muroc Air Base in California, monies, assisted by John R. Jones England to marry British Actor

Shielg to approach the blazing hundreds of miles from Allison and Sherwood Blue, the co-chair-|Mithael Wilding, her studio sald

| laboratories, 3 men, < today. | Ironically, the $200.000 lost in the two crashes is only $10,000’ "TL Maurer Opens less than needed to make the ren §e al.

present landing strip long enough, airport officials estimate. David Maurer this week. an- The fitst crash nearly two years nounced the opening of a used car 380 ‘destroyed’. an F-80 jet branch at 717 N. Capitol Ave. to fighter as it slipped and slithered be known as the Night Spot Car 210ng the too-short strip made | Mart. : rslick ‘with rain-soaked silt. The! | The branch will handle all F-80 is estimated to cost $200,000. makes of cars as well as pick-up] The second came last year as| and panel trucks and - motor-|2 tire blew out on an F-84 when | cycles. Evening hours; until 9 the pilot jammed on his brakes § p. m. will help those not able to tO keep from running off the end shop in the day tirhe. {of the runway. The plane suffered - The Capitol Avenue branch is minor damage.” rd in a new building well lighted for! They're. Trying evening time shopping and has = Both planes were being flown over 60,000 feet of floor space. by Allison test pilots. Neither was The High Dollar used car outlet injured. and main office will continue to be Both crashes would have been operated at 901 N. Senate Ave. “unlikely” if the runway had been | “according to Mr. Maurer, ‘longer, Allison spokesman Roger ———— eee set Fleming said.yesterday.

Bye-Bye Conada Weir Caok officials are trying ’

: to make it longer. | OTTAWA, Feb. 16 (UP)—Field = But the U. 8. can't make. up its

Marshal Viscount Alexander had mind whether it will give India-

i JH New Branch AN INTERNATIC, o

MAGATINE

GOOD-WILL PROJECT—Conferring on the forthcoming issue

of Pen Prints, new international magazine designed to promote 80 many farewells to say today|napolis the money needed ‘to do good will, are (left to right) Prof Eugene T. Underwood of Indithat he nearly missed his train the work. | ana Central College; associat dit + Chri ti D. McC Il, of to Halifax, where he will sail for| The city last year passed a Assscated A ge, associate editor; Christian U. McConnell, o Britain tomorrow. He is going $1,750,000 bond issue partly on| Associated Arts, art editor, and Robert G. Moorehead, of Cen. back to London to become defense federal promises that the U. 8.| tral Publishing Co., the firm printing the magazine, The first issue, ‘minister. A Canadian is replacing would match about $1.2 million,| with contributions chiefly from the ‘United States and Switzer. him. making a total of almost $3 mil-| land, will be out Wednesday. :

Hoosier Sisters, ‘Oldest U.S. Twins,’ Are 92

SEYMOUR, Feb, 16—S8ide by together

side as always, -iwo ‘sisters be=. "Boun married Seymour men.

lieved to be the oldest living twins 1 ella wed Theo Groub, founder in the United States celebrated, the J. C. grocery: chain here

‘their 92d birthdays here today. |an4 Elizabeth became the bride

Mrs. Louella G¥oub and Mrs. ,¢ Ajexander Toms, a Baltimore Elizabeth Toms were propped Up g Ohio Railroad engineer. Even

in. their beds ip Mrs. Groub's ype, ney jived only three blocks home to reegive congratulations apart i

- from relatives and townsfolk with After Mr. Groub's death five whom they've been favorites since years ago, Mrs. Toms, a widow

- they wore pigtails. 15 years, moved in with her When Mrs. Groub, who is sert gi 4a. >

fously ill, couldn't finish her meal, | Together they attended. church _ her identical twin pushed back anq4 were active in Seymour's,

her own Birthday tray. | charitable organizations until ad-| The sisters were born in Jef- vanced years brought falls and fersonville in 1860 — the year fractures. Mrs. Toms’ hip was Abraham Lincoln was elected to broken 10 years ago. Mrs. Groub his, first term as President. But has been ill three years.

they grew up with this town. I

Up to then, their home had been’ They were 5 when they moved Headquarters for ‘their families. | here with their parents, Mr. and| Mrs. Groub has a son, Thomas, | Mrs. “Sam Clark, brothers -and sisters, all pioneer five great-grandchildren. ve settlers of southern Indiana. | Mrs. Toms has a daughter, = Seymour had just sprung up| Mrs. Louella Gressele, four grand-| after the business district of children and one greatigrand-| nearby Rockford had been burned child. The daughter was named’ by the notorious Reno brothers. |for her twin. . In long skirts -and flouncing| So alike are the twins—in not | petticoats, the blue-eyed brunet only &ppearance but in. mannerClark twins—already inseparable isms ‘and interests: that f

| {

ST i ne a ~trudged off to school here. » (own families still have trouble ~~ AT SPRY 75—Mrs. Toms (left) and Mrs. Groub, © ~~ They grew up to young woman-|telling thém apart, = 2 ; . rari ’ 4 2 ek ’ 3 Si a 2 =

’ hort! ter Horry County, 8. C., the FBI FOO Btjnome rom Wore rvomly uf "| director charged, and both were who witnessed the shooting, told Jazz, it said, is about as subtle would like , ,. to have the publie

!hood, dated and went to parties!’

and . nine Seymour, two grandchildren and

Al Turner, a newspaper vendor for “potbellied = businessmen,” present-day Republican leaders *

flogged severely. officers the two men “just stood as, a dentist's drill. forget.”

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