Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 February 1952 — Page 5
2, 1952
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FRIDAY, FEB. 22, 1952
Far and Away—
“ .
© THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
|
To Escape 3500 ‘Answer’ Air Force Call for 90!
t RED-FACED Air National |Guard officials in Columbus, O.,|
Firing Squad Iring Gua {tried to explain today why a test!
SALT LAKE CITY, Felfs 22 alert aimed at 90 Reservists,
(UP)—Utah’s baby-faced slayers brought nearly 3500 men report-|
ing to nearby .Lockbourne AFB.
—Melvin Sullivan, 21, Kansas 1525 They believed the extra “minute
City, Mo., and Verne Braasch, 24 Waterloo, Jowa-—last night had faint hope they could miss their date with a firing squad next week. > Their attorneys pleaded with U. S. Best Utah Federal District Judge; Jan Wilkowski, who escaped Willis W. Ritter yesterday for a|from behind the Iron Curtain, writ of fabeas corpus; charging joined the U. 8S. Marines in Los the youths’ constitutional rights Angeles, Cal, today after trying were violated. [two years. The 22-year-old man] Mr, Ritter; will rule Saturday. !lved through ‘the Nazi reign of| Unless he intervenes, Braasch’'and terror in his native Danzig, PoSullivan will be shot at dawn 'and, fleeing ‘on a Norwegian Tuesday for the 1049 slaying of freighter. . Though still an alien) a Beaver, Utah, service station Ne Joined the Leathernecks be-| attendant, Howard Mangione, [cause “the U. 8. has a better] Attorney A. Wally Sandack told Flandgid of living than any coun try in the world. Mr, Ritter that authorities re- . fused to give the youths the right Step Lively of counsel whan they were ar- James Granger, Detroit, rested in Las Vegasy Nevada, Mich., started a five-day jail senshortly after the slaying. tence today for throwing beer Mr. Sandack said there was no bottles at his girl friend’s feet to question of the guilt of Braasch make her dance. He said he got and Sullivan to the “brutal, the idea from a cowboy movie. senseless crime.” He said sallow- Loses Race faced Sullivan in particular, “is like a 10-year-old child.”
only part of the broadcast specifying just 90 Reservists were to report.
a0 ’
Tobacco heiress Doris Duke's German Shepherd dog, Michelle, finally got home
D dli S i from the races i i eadiine Set | Be | Duk lost the Mar. 31] on | hg at Santa
Anita race track in Arcadia, Cal,
POW Claims |
30 miles from -“ her home in Bel WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (CDN) Air. Cal. The -Deadline for filing prisoner of dog was seen
war claims against the govern-| ment is Mar. 31. There will be no extensions. Some 5000
vesterday in Altadena, near Arcadia, by a have woman who notified the Humane
Miss Duke
Americans
men” came because they heard
Over-Advertising Company Coming Robert Cass told" two plain-| clothes policemen in New Or- toward Japan eans, La. they could see the and Korea to- % { “bargain voodoo show” in his day. to entertain : shop for only 50 cents, Tipped servicemen. Miss that he'd gulled Mardi Gras Hutton and a tourists, the officers passed up troupe of enterthe offer and arrested him for 'tainers left Holhaving female entertainers in the jywood vester-
shop. day for Tokyo.
i i The group will Eating Again perform for The American tanker Strathbay wounded GIs at
sails for South America today hospitals in Ja- Sh from Providence, R. I., with two nq, sn flv to . “men without a country” wholP 2. then y Miss Hunton failed to get into the U. 8. by staging a seven-day hunger And No Lessons! strike. Adam Skokowskl, 33, and] John Czarnecki, 35, broke their|out of a store in Elmhurst, Ill. fast. Both are Polish veterans of World War II who fled through the Iron Curtain. They don't parked. “recognize” the Polish govern-jjng it. ment and now no government will Jeft in the c recognize them.
A
CA
a half block
the motor by hooking up a tem-
Family Service fate we: car: ignition 116 Years Old Service Over ? : One of the nation’s oldest
The Family Service Associa- ferries will pass out of existence tion, largest of Red Feather or- on Delaware River Mar. 31. ganizations, is celebrating its boats of the 116th year of service to Indianapolis today.
At a luncheon in the Columbia
Club honoring the event, Julius Birge, Association president, said
Philadelphia and
midstream and toot whistles,
river service
cities.
between
Three Cities [175 Dentists Face Draft in May Blackéd Out Comedienne Betty Hutton sev 1O Save Moan frat during May.
i TOPEKA, SSE Topeka and other Kansas cities . {were blacked out yesterday when aia 'a worker at the giant Tecumseh _
effort to Topeka.
Workers said Mr. Beem was|
: working on a When Mrs. Albert Sutrina came whan the electrical
By United Press
Kas., Feb,
Light Co. was injured critically £ (In an accident that forced a cut-} {off of electric power, Elevators fo [came snarled “and } tions slowed to a virtual stand-| {still as power plant workers shut the big substation down in an|
® plant of the Kansas Power a .
halted, traffic
save Floyd Beem of|
circuit
w
communicy-|
breaker | disturbance | » occurred. The exact nature of the] she saw her car at an intersection gq coident was not learned imme-| from where she giately, Mr. Beem was severely Other autos were dodg- hurned. It was believed some 8000] Her 2-year-old twin sons, yolts of a 13,000-volt line ar, yesterday started through his body. Kansas Power and Light Co. porary wire attachment installed offiicals immediately shielded the switch only eyewitness, Hugh Mize, from reporters. An explosion at the Tecumseh] plant in December, 1948, killed 12 men. | Power failed at Lawrence and TWO Olathe, as well as Topeka. The ) : 3 '% population of the three cities is Camden Ferry Co. will meet in zp0ve the 100,000 figure. d Power plant employees said {t marking end of 264 years of cross- would be “one to two hours” bethe two fore power is restored fully, but it was returned to Olathe in 55
passed |
Se
ou 2liloe PAGE § = It's time to dispose of those ut
needed Belongings, Get Cash. WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (UP) Feb. 11 for 335 to be inducted|'hem through a Times
—The Defense Department said during April, |Cinssirie 3d. PLY yesterday 175 dentists will bel The dentists to be inducted are!
priority one registrants who re- SAVE $40 5 4
Sixty ‘will be assigned to the ceived their education af govern- SEE E
Army, 90 to the Navy, and 25 ment expense during World i: 1 B. F. GOODRICH AD:
to the Air Force, (War II and were excused fron PAGE 12
[4
22
The new draft call for dentists service at that time to complete is in addition to the one issued |their education.
be-|
{
0d AR [LI T.1
GENERAL Jia):
New Hostess
the agency has helped 230 per : min WE \ “ } utes, Co ooo heiDeq 230 per Professional Amateurs | A of 15 per cent in cost during the Rudolph Fleischer, a Chicago Would Deport Doctor ? / / past six years. salesman, whose car has a short- IW 4 oe Y | /4 ) wave radio, flashed an SOS NEW YORK, Feb, 23 (UP) ; Guest speaker Rowland Allen,' " Tal y fasned an Hl yes The New York chapter of the] , 4 : — Personnel Director of L, 8. Ayres t¢rday when his auto stuck in the py, vgi0iang Forum yesterday! \ 4 Gs
& Co., talked on “Security in a Chaotic, World.” Mrs. Wyona Cummings, Miss Fadio Georgia Gault, Miss Klingman, Miss Charlotte Lieber, ator
snow near Gladstone, Mich. The operator
notified. his
varying amounts of money com- Society. After a brief wait, Miss Miss Ruby Little, Mrs. Mildred called Jackson, Mich. state police. | Medicine.
ing because a part of their service Duke's maid came to take her in World War II was spent in home.
enemy POW camps. Ho efuls y issi ould P The Claims Commission would Tre Brooklv: N.Y. public 6
pe 0 Set Jem pig or a ministrator’s office had its hands $1 or $2. In other the sums in-/full of Smiths today. Hundreds volved run inte hundreds, *_ of Smiths — and 50 Chapins — from the U. 8S. and foreign counAllowed $1 a Day |tries filed claims as heirs of] Most American ex-servicemen Harry Chapin Smith, a recluse who spent any time as war pris-|{Who died leaving $390,000 and oners are eligible for special com- no will pensation at the rate of $1 for ee... each day of their incarceration.
U. S., Mexico End | As of Feb. 3, a total of 112,555! |
had filed. WCC says the average Arms Pact Talks paid ex-POWSs in the Pacific area MEXICO CITY, Feb. 22 (UP).
is $985.33. For the Faropean ~Bi-lateral defense pact negotheater the average is $269.05. : . ~ Civilian internees in the Pacitic| ations between the United : =V an ber: of religiots States and Mexico were broken bss es md off yesterday with “no agreesects which functioned there dur- ment’ reached ing the fighting also were eligible | ro fi : sari to file for benefits. Most of those xican officials in a govern
: ment press release said they claims have been handled. “oul not ACCERE Certain Pro $58 Million Paid Out posals offered by the United So far the commission has paid States.
out $53,658,873. The money has Officials of the Mexican delecome from $120 million raised | Satlon sid the ifs may be rethrough sale of enemy property in newed when and if both governthis country at the time war ments consider it pertinent. began Five meetings were held during . ; .,. a threesweek period. All were . ne Sealine i fling ore behind closed doors. The proposed nally a ae ate to Bext pact would have been similar to gre agreements concluded with sev-
Maren Sr No claim can be 8C- eral other Latin American counSnould the former prisoner| tFi¢8 regarding Western Hemi-
sphere defense. have died in the meantime, WCC, Earlier, Mexican Army officials
says claims may be filed by his y.4 gaiq the treaty would “prowidow, children or parents In yige Mexico all the military aid that order of priority. Ithat she requires in arms, air-
Tee {planes and ships, but will not! PSC Ponders Ft. Wayne
{permit the presence of a single! Transit Hike Plea
| American soldier.” Ft. Wayne Transit Company's request for higher rates has been taken under advisement by the Indiana Public Service Commis-
STUDENT
ACCORDION 1 9%
sion. INDIANA MUSIC CO. During a two-day hearing, transit company president Don-/| 115 E. OHIO IM. 4486 ald H. Walker said the firm = n EE ————————
needed increases to offset higher wages. He said the company’s] net income last year was $39,000 but that wage incgeases totaled $62,000. The company sought a straight fare increase from 10 cents to 15 cents, or two tokens for 25 cents: a boost from a nickel to! \ 10 cents per ride for high school \ students, and a $1 weekly pass] for grade school pupils. Public Counselor Walter Jones
oA
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