Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1952 — Page 3
>
1952
a —
c
he
h 25 yburn disnned teledcasts of
commits.
yuncement etroit re[V broad. an Active Ing there | orders. ect,” Mr, ere is. no tting teleings. That ees.” st ban ap- . Rayburn
cks
ng (UP)—A earings of Activities levised tof the comof alleged into Michi« > industry, o start its 10 a. m. but Chief nner said ay calling
ner would committee " to start helieved a I the hearmong the rs present, pel admit $s “a main After an ). Charles I members ack to the for deci.
ision © stait the fedp. John 8S. nan of the that the televised. oom was spectators and pho8 no evim demonanizations.
500d Dr. Anna
ne of Bos-
d students sue and a 5 Medical 18, is 3till 8C0pe she
ce
»
» .
$4.74 million in 1951,
«4
/ MONDAY, FEB. 25, 1952
Al | Allies Of
‘Would Leave
} | Norway Cff . UN List | By United Press PANMUNJIOM, Korea, Feb. 25—The United Nations .offered today to withdraw their nomination of Norway to the
truce supervision if the Communists withdraw Russia,
Under the United Nations com- |
promise plan, the ‘supervision would comprise four instead of the previously agreed six neutral nations. The two Communist nominees would be Poland and Czechoslovakia. The United Nations has nominated: Sweden and Switzerland.
Chinese Col. Pu Shan retorted that the Allies had “no justification” to object to Russia's inclusion on the commission, but did not flatly reject the proposal. United Nations Col. Don O. Darrow suggested that the Reds reconsider the proposal seriously as a means of breaking a 10-day: deadlock in staff officers talks on Russia's eligibility to sit on the “neutral” commission.
“It is obvious’ that you intend
to delay these negotiations if you do not accept our proposal,” Col. Darrow said. “Rejection can be interpreted only as an indication! that you do not want a solution to the neutral nations problem.”
Meanwhile, snow and rain curtailed both air and ground activity along the
PSC Issues ‘51 Earnings Figures
jumped but net income of the Indiana Public Service Co. fell off about $84,000 to $8.32 million, the firm announced. After deducting dividends on preferred stocks, earnings were equivalent to $2.11 per share on the 3,573.991 shares of common stock ‘outstanding at Dec. 31, 1951. This compares with per share earnings of $254 on 2,846,643 shares in 1950. In the gnnual report, being mailed to shareholders today,! R. A. Gallagher, president, stated! that the company’s burden of direct taxation reached record levels. The total provision for taxes for 1951 of $10.74 million was equivalent to $3 per share of common stock and was $1.95 million more than. the 1950 provision, Expansion Planned
Mr. Gallagher stated the rising demand for electric service had made it necessary for the company to further expand and to extend its construction program through the year 1954. Total construction expenditures for the years 1952-54 are estimated at $102 million. > The revised program includes two additional generating units at the new Wabash River station (each 90,000 kilowatts rated capacity) and additional transmission, sub-station and distribution facilities, all of which, on the] basis of present studies, will be required during or near the .end of the projected construction period. The installed rated capacity of the Wabash River Station by the end of 1954 will aggregate 360,-000-kilowatts consistsing of four 90,000-kilowatt units schedtiled to
Sales of electricity
®be in operation December, 1952,
Decereber, 1953, July, 1954, and December, 1954. Total company capacity at the end of 1954 fis estimated at 896,000 kilowatts. The company estimates that, in! order to finance the construction] program, approximately $61 million of additional capital funds will be required during the threeyear construction period.
Sweden Studies New U. S. Friendship Treaty |
STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Feb. 25/ (UP) —, The foreign office an-| nounced yesterday that Sweden is studying a U. 8. draft of a new treaty of friendship, commerce and navigation between the two countries. { A foreign office communique
said the proposed treaty would re-||
place the 1935 general trade treaty |
{Trinidad Corp., owner of the Ft.
©
EO
offictal-Merchant Marine paper.
10 Courageous Seamen g Hoosiers War front ee Tale sR Get No Hero Welcome On Latest eR wast scared.” the a
By United Press
NEW YORK, Feb. 25—Half a fishing vessel was standing by to ship made fast to a trash-littered claim the stern for salvage. The Brooklyn dock gave 10 unnoticed U. S. Coast Guard sent the other
|sailors their rightful place among
the heroes of the sea.
all that was left of the Ft. Mercer, which was split in two with another 10,000-ton tanker in a double maritime disaster that took 14 lives off Cape Cod a week ago today. But to the 10-stay-put seaman
'who refused to abandon it in the
stormy waters of the Atlantic the “surviving” stern of the Mercer was proof of a job well done. They stood shivering on the steel deck of the stern yesterday as it was towed through Long Island Sound down ‘the quiet wa-| ters of the East River to the dock.
There were no shrill from harbor boats. serenade the 10 silent seamen heard was the hoarse blasts from whistles of four squat tugs which had towed them into harbor. Instead of a \ civic reception committee, only officials of the
Mercer, newsmen, photographers and dock wallopers awaited them.
The 10 men and six other Welch said the money was re-the parking lot behind the bus sailors who had ‘come aboard Covered from a hiding place un- station, a local man was robbed Capitol Ave.,
after the Mercer had split der Pellow's home. stamped their feet and pumped Hce susPected Pellow when they four” men early yesterda their arms up and down to keep found traces of cement dust in rey Lanum, 40, of 2054 N. tie-lines the trunk of his car during a Ave. routine investigation. a. ' Ct
“Mail T
At this season of the year he'll want ALL the Basketball scores and dope . . . and Especially Those Basketball Stories by Angelopolous.
warm after catching thrown to them. But pride was written on their faces as they came ashore. The Trinidad Corp. estimated their feat in bringing the rear half of the tanker to safety had saved the company $2 million.
Decided to Stay On
A crewman said the seamen had decided to stay aboard after
Martha Raye Refuses
To Press Slugging Case’
MIAMIA BEACH, Feb. 25 (UP) —Martha. Raye refused today '¢ testifiy against a New York television salesman whom she had charged with slugging her in her big, famous mouth during a row at the Five O'Clock Club Saturday. Detective Capt. Charles W.! Pierce told Municipal Judge Jack Rosen that Miss Raye wanted the charge dropped. The judge agreed. |
{Miss Raye and her husband, Nick
Condos—owners of the Five O'Clock Club—did not show. The, salesman, Francis Serpico, 32, of Flushing, L. I, appeared but was not called on to testify. —————————————
“Say It With Flowers”
FLORAL CO.
with the United States.
3837 E. 10th St. » « « BL-2417
% DISCOUNT On All Family Laundry
SERVICES: (1) Wet Flat ironed (2) Fluff Dry (3) All Finish . |
336 E. Washington 1502 E. Washington 501 W. Washington 13 E. 16th St.
936 N. P
py: st
o ’ at Vial *
slp » Improved Dry Cleaning SHIRTS (BR) swe thos $1.00 La 13 Convenient Locations
1528 Central 1564 -College Ave.
602 N. New Jersey 914 Indiana Ave.
VEY
Ege : ‘ .
> 2149 N. Arlington 927 S. Meridian 232 N. Illinois . 146 S. lllinois
ennsylvania -
JUNITED LAUNDRY
RAND DRY
HEEL
.ny
gator. $1667 cement block through the office Man Slugged, Robbed jand Washingion Sts. window ‘to make it {burglars had been there.
a nN
fer Deal To Drop
«
‘NOW THEY CAN RELAX—Four members of the Ft. Mercer's crew read about their feat in the
the ship had split because a small
half of the Mercer to the bottom the .casualties released today by of the Atlantic for safety reasons. Jesse L. Bushnell, 29, Pasadena, The hulk now safe in port was Tex. chief engineer and chief of}
ye
a.
THE INDIANAPQLIS TIMES
——
® 0 “
"
CEDAR KEY, Fla, Feb. 25
(UP)~—S8earch . bboats
{rescued a tiny,
stormy’ Gulf of Mexico. The frail houseboat by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Simpson,
north of St. Petersburg Friday night during a storm. Mrs, Annie Simpson, 41, alone.
was
sheltered waters, was ‘swept out) into heavy seas. | When Mr. Simpson from his trip, he found the boat gone. The ropes that had held it| to a dock were broken. He sald his wife weighed only 120 pounds and would not be able to handle ‘the 175-pound anchor.
Rides Heavy Seas An air-sea search was begun immediately, but- the houseboat was not sighted until shortly be-| fore noon yesterday. It was tossing in heavy seas about eight! miles south of the mouth of the Suwannee. : Despite her husband's estimate of her strength, Mrs. Simpson had pulled the anchor overboard and the boat was found bouncing 20 miles offshore from, this fishing village. Two boats, took her in tow for Salt Creek,
returned
minutive woman told her rescuers. “My two little dogs were more scared than I was. I've been on|
® Casualty Lis the water too long, and besides,
Eight Hoosiers are listed among {nis houseboat is. my home.” Meanwhile, the two men who {joined the hunt for Mrs. Simpson’in a speedboat were missing. The’ two missing searchers were
the Department of Defense.
KILLED IN ACTION Pfc. Lloyd E. Miller, brother
crewmen, sald he was confident of parold Miller, Spencer. (Pre- identified as Oscar Oblum and a
the stern would float after the
crack up.
“We didn't have it very rough at all on the stern end of the ship,” he said. “We were able to!
have heat and light without in-| terruption all the time. We ate Mrs. Margaret E. Morrisroe, V&l-
very well.”
Loan Firm Employee Held in Embezzlement
SOUTH BEND, Feb. 25 (UP)—| James G. Pellow, 30, was held under $3000 bond today, charged ST. Hagerstown. No Salutes |with embezzling money from a!
loan company wheré he worked
salutes after reporting the money was Columbus. {of The *only stolen in a burglary.
Pellow worked at the Local Finance Corp. as a credit investiHe told police he took last week and hurled a
look like
Detective Capt. William L.
He said po-
| conscious.
viously reported missing.) companion, believed to be “Bud-| WOUNDED |dy* Heath. Other searchers be-| | Pte. Theo A. Gaff, son of Mr, lived them to be safely stranded and Mrs. Jessee Gaff, Ft. Wayne, [OD One of the many hundreds of Sgt. Robert J. Morrisroe, son of Small islands around the mouth | of the Suwannee River because paraiso, Mr. Oblum is a native of Salt
{ Pvt. Robert J. Stemle, son of Creek. Mrs. Catherine Stemle, Jasper: T H { | Cpl. Alvin L. Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs, Witiés A. Stewart wo urt Sr., Goshen, Pvt. Milton E. Sullivan, son of |« Mr. and Mrs. Wade FE. Sulli¥an| Two persons are in fair condi{tion at local hospitals today as a Pfc. Nalson K. Young, son of result of accidents yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Hercshel T. Young,| "Miss Martha Katzenberger, 19, | 345 Burbank Road, {is at
INJURED | Cpl. Ronald G. Diodore, grand- Nose. She was a passenger in a son of Mrs. Bessie M. Diodore, Stopped car struck by another car Marion. |driven by Roy O. Baker, 25, of {2820 Brooksidé Pkwy. at "Rural
| Baker and his passenger,
In Parking Lot Here [Jewel G. Purdue; 23, of 1601 E.|
Ohio St., were charged with public Slugged while he walked across intoxication.
Carmen Benedict,
|
39, 842 N.
Park struck by another car making a said he was knocked un-left turn at Illinois St. and Fall Creek Pkwy., South Drive.
he Times to Servic
Woman Adrift 36 Hours | On Houseboat Saved
{through fog and rain yestérday wet and weary middle-aged after her harrowing voyage. woman who had spent 36 terrify-| He sald Mrs, 8impson had ®pent | | |Ing hours drifting alone on alall last night bailing the house-
houseboat that strayed into the béat with a bucket because a}
occupied work,
‘chael Wilding, began today to get
Here in Traffic management to stop tattling on
[Methodist Hospital with a broken|
is at General Hos-| of $60 and his watch by “at least pital with face cuts after the car/in the Town Hall, the board will y. Jeff- in which he was a passenger was decide on a new law to ‘force all
Russ From Reds’ Truce Tean
hut
bailing pump aboar® wouldn't
“Our
Simpson said.
; . Her husband was on a fishing trip. She sat helplessly ol In lala | while the 42-foot craft, butl for !
Crime Probed
A federal grand jury meets! here today to peer into the crime’ situation in southern Indiana. | U. 8. district attorney Matthew’ E. Welsh expected to call the chiefs of numerous federal law! enforcement agencies before the 23-member. jury to explain whether organized law violation runs rampant or is well under control. A similar study in northern Indiana by a jury at Ft. Wayne recently resulted in a report saying crime was under control. The investigation is part of a national survey ordered by At-|
torney J. Howard McGrath to ,¢ the biggest highway menaces— status of syndicated grynken drivers—was intensified cities, six county sheriff depart. today as a one-week state police ments and 24 state troopers will
study the
Mr. Welsh expects to call heads {raining course opened here.
of the FBI, post office inspection |
|
Mr. Simpson was aboard one of | groping the two boats that found his wife, | undaunted |
little dogs, Lady and broke loose from its moorings at Slick, were going around with the mouth of the Suwannee River their tails between their legs,” Mr.
5 wn PAGE -3.. 1
7
&
ON GUARD—Ed Mack, owner of property which lies in path of Pennsylvania Turnpike extension at King of Prussia, Pa., prepares for another night oT rave with his canine friend, Ted, and a high-powered rifle. He is fighting the bulldozers of roadbuilding contractors in the employ of the state. 3
Get Special Course On Drunk Drivers
Indana's campaign against one in_connection with intoxication. | "Police officers from 23 Hoosier
{be the students. Cities repreDr. R. N. Harger, toxicologist sented included Kokomo, Colums«
service, alcohol tax unit, treasury iat the Indiana University Med- bus, Elwood, ‘Evansville, Gary, intelligence unit, internal revenue {ca] Center, and Lt. Robert F.{Lafayette, LaPorte, Michigan
|department, narcotics bureau, se-|Borkenstein, state police laborajcret service and federal communi- tory director, will train 70 officers ville, South Bend, Terre Haute {in scientific detection techniques and Valparaiso- >
cations commission.
Liz Pines
For Privacy.
ALP D'HUEZ, France, Feb. 25 (UP)—Elizabeth Taylor and her new husband, British actor Mi-
some of the privacy they have been craving. Staff members of the hotel where they are staying refused for the first time to tell how the newlyweds were faring. They said they had been ordered by the
the hotel's most famous guests. | The order was believed the result of the Hollywood bride's {plaintive complaint yesterday: | “We thought we'd have more privacy: Unless we get it, we're (going away somewhere where we can find it.” | The couple slept late today-
Rocky Ripple Plans
New Dog Ordinance Rocky Ripple will declare war on stray dogs when the Town |Board meets tonight to draft a {new dog ordinance. Scheduled to meet at 8 p. m.
dog owners to tag their dogs and | register them with the town]
marshal.
emen!
BASKETBALL?
Have The Indianapolis regularly wherever he
While a letter from his and appreciated by ou
what is going on in the clubs and groups . . .
DO IT TODAY!
Send him the information he wants to have about his Hometown, friends and loved ones.
his hometown newspaper which lets him know
close friends and neighbors. -
Send him your letters from home often but let us send The Indianapolis Times to him daily.
*
% MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES * Daily & Sunday Daily Only Sunday Only
Times mailed to him may be. gh
home is most important r servicemen . . . it is community, in his own _ besides news about his
1 Month $ 160 $1.10 $ .50 : 3 Months 4.50 35 1.25 : or a : : .50- 2.50 Pill In Coupon and Mail With Remittance Today! S Menthe a a 4 | The Indminapolis ¥Pfmes =. | MAIL : Indianapolis, Indiana i ORDER et Ya 8 Daily Sunday | 4 COUPON Please send The Indianapolis Times Sunday Only Only | for...... 00008 iid ie tneloved. * Name (Rank ‘and Title) ................ Fs waits boninens sens avars iis heirs? } | * t, I p Seriocl No. ;...:......5...., l (® ) dibuvasuenane Stave tinnnea . . Kees sseseavens | The C 1 . shail omplete Address ............. “asinine Fiabe reas nde slisgiaenrasenve | | . : » . | Indianapolis fh isinss en re I: . : . Ordered BY: ee a aa a GG fui Lo, Been ons od i Times | | Name id i senda Re aie Wee soe vii SEs . essa anes o. | l i ra a ; i So re EAT : | i . MSerimms Minin Novapoper Address on OY a iu! Y . % : 5 2 on “
City, Peru, Richmond, Shelby-
STRAUSS - : "SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH QF TQMORROW
SS»
JUST IN— 2 (TWO) TROUSER SUITS OF CHOICE WORSTED—SKILLED
TAILOR WORK— MARVELOUS .FIT— SPRING COLORINGS | 1952 IN OUTLOOK © IN EVERY WAY (INCLUDING VALUE) THESE BRAND-NEW DOUBLE TROUSER - SUITS ARE LEAVING DOUBLE QUICK!
(A march at the rate of 165 to 180 thirty-three-inch steps per minute)
59.75 With 2 Troustrs yl i
In case you wish to leave the extra trousers with us—the price is 49.75 ° 5 -
©
L. STRAUSS & CO. THE MAN'S STORE
w*
