Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1952 — Page 1

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2 FORECAST: Partly cloudy and not so cold today. Cloudy and warmer tomorrow, High today, 46. Low tonight, 34. High tomorrow, 50. 63d YEAR—NUMBER 25 ‘°° SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1952 Enerad a0 Socond-Clas Mir 4 Postotic ine

1

BEAUTY WITH BRAINS—Rita Rosalie Hasley of Ft. Wa one of 14 budding Hoosier scientists honored yesterday. Her ing title: "A Study of Stomata in Relation to 7

14 Hoosier

Pupils Win

Times Science Awards

+ By OPAL CROCKETT A life That is prospect facing 61 of dndiana's most brilliant . yo . Scientific minds, Dr. H, J. Mater, Nobel prize winner, declared yesterday in The Times’ Junior Science Assembly, honoring winners in the Indiana Talent Search.

IU sbolof “All his

ment of leading humanity in its search for truth.” Twelve boys and two girls were honored = in| the fifth’ annual science talent hunt at the Claypool Hotel. Eight other high school pupils won honorabie mention.

The winners: Russell Noyes Jr. Bloomington. Winner

in the National] Talent Search. | Mary Ann Dawson, Connersville. Winner in the National contest. William J, Asher, Hammond; Joseph R, Cox, Culver Military Academy; William Starbuck, Culver Military Academy; Richard Eykamp, Evansville; Robert MecCutchan, Evansville; Harold Stovall, Evansville; Nicholas P, Krull Jr, Kentland; Rita Hasley, * F't. Wayne; Arlene McFarlin, Ft. Wayne; Robert Metzler, Nappanee; James E. Shields, Marion, and David E. Thomas, Elkhart. Honorable mention went to: Laurence O. Williams, Howe High School senior, of 5319 Ju-

the jo¥ lian Ave. Indianapolis; George,over death.

Fleck; South Whitley; James Fleming, Evansville; Charles Hayward, Terre Haute; Mark Hopkins, Evansville; Jacqueline Sims, Bloomington; Robert L. Spranger, Ft. Wayne, and Fred H. Wilt, Nappanee. 378 Pupils Entered

of Si play. and Bo work. pro

i — H ANA ” mast od » on a

4 ale 3 Vi os : % Le “also e the scientist 4s at| Hach play, for his work is His hobby. ‘enti ; He has a big part in the big move-

Sehbols completed rigid tests and 0 apa sn wae th 22 exhibits judged best by the committee representing the sponsoring groups: The.

Science and the Indiana Junior Academy of Science. Walter

Indianapolis Industrial Exposition, financed by 15 Indianapolis industrial firms. The Science Talent committee was headed by R. W. Lefler, Purdue University, as chairman. Other members were Lawrence H. Baldinger, Notre Dame; P. D. Edwards, Ball State Teachers College; ‘Theodore W. Torrey, Indiana University, and Winona H, Welch, DePauw University.

Altars Here Mark Joy of Palm Sunday

Sermon of the Week, Page 11; Ed Sovola, Page 19.

Jesus into Jerusalem. Their slender stems imparted before Christ's victory

A procession of the palms was to be held at Christ Episcopal Church, on the Circle. The choir of men and boys were to carry the leaves to the church where {blessings and communion would be offered.

” » .

American Association for the] THE MOST REV. PAUL OC.

Advancement of Science member-| SCHULTE, archbishop of Indianships, Indiana Junior Academy of| 5 polis was to lead Catholics in

Science certificates, and subscription ‘to the Scientific Monthly Magazine went to the 22 winners. Mark Hopkins of Evansville also won $heé Indiana-award made by the American Mathematics Association. It was presented by Dr. J. C. Polley of Wabash College. Entered in the Indiana Talent

Search were 373 pupils. Of that

number, 61 from 33 Indiana high

special blessing services at the |cathedral of 88, Peter and Paul.

° Central Sli, igh School wa or-winning pro as a jaw-break-ran spiration.” (Other Photos Page 3.)

Times, the Indiana Academy of

{Lee Tarole, weighed in at ju "under six. pounds at 8st ry

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Family Can Mark 3 Birthdays With Cake, Eat It too

THIS FAMILY is saving on cakes.

birthday Sa tes, BS {For oe TE Jr an

. Gladstone both celebrated their birth 1932, and

following year.

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Stalemate Hits Michigan GOP, Kansans Row

Ike's Men Claim 3 In Badger State

By United Press «

Michigan Republicans— hopelessly split between Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower -and

Sen, Robert A. Taft of Ohio

for “president—voted at Detroit yesterday to send its delegates un-pledged to the GOP presidential nominating convention. However, Eisenhower backers ied by John TFelkens optimistically claimed a 2 to 1 in delegate support over Mr. Taft. Charles King, head of the chigan - for - Taft group, declined to estimate the senator's strength among ‘the 36 district delegates and 10 delegates-at-large elected today. Despite its optimism, the “I-Like-Ike"” group could claim only three definitely pldeged votes, against two indorsements for Mr. Taft. An informal poll of the remaining delegates indicated a 50-50 split. Kansans Bicker Gov. Earl Warren of California and Harold E. Stassen, former Minnesota governor, did not figure in convention maneuvering. Stassen backers had a small hotel headquarters, but there was no evidence of the Warren cam-

paign. The bickering, claims and

__lticlans in Kansas will be put} gan into focus Thursday when more United Nations.

than 1000 party leaders meet in Topeka for the final say-so on delegates to the national GOP convention. None of the delegates will be instructed and most likely none will be definitely committed—a political maneuver designed. to allow them to join a landslide if one develops in Chicago.

‘Good Eggs’ Eager

Easter Eggs

Jenner Takes Pot Shots at lke's NATO

Ridicules It Along With UN

Photo on Page 9 By IRVING LEIBOWITY v The United States is being destroyed by an invisible superstate controlled by an

“inner circle of political masterminds,” Sen. Willlam E. Jenner (R. Ind.) charged here last night,

ing speech that ridiculed the peace efforts of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the

I rk. 4

“There is something wrong with the war in Korea, and in NATO, and in UN and in the Joint Chiefs of Staff,” the senator told a large crowd of 1700 that overflowed five din-~

Hotel lobby at the Indiana Republican Editorial Association's spring meeting. He said some . politicians are willing “to sell our country itself

selves.”

Ahybody any extra Easter

5 %

senter issued an appeal today 0 50 dozen dyed Easter Eggs. The eggs will be used as decorations

hospital. Now says Mr. Fangman they

Center in their egg hunt are invited to call PLaza T7535. Eggs need not be delivered to the Center at 111 N. Capitol Ave. until

snacks-at the Center over the Easter week end. a Persons desiring to help the

can celebrate three birthdays with one cake, and eat it too.

Fala Dies of Old Age Seven Years After FDR

By United Press w HYDE PARK, N. Y, Apr, 5— Fala, 12-year-old Scottie and pet of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt, died here of old age today—just one week short of seven years after the death of his master. : Fala, known around the world after he became a controversial “figure” during Mr. Roosevelt's campaign against Gov. Thomas

Thousands of Hoosiers—young

| and old—would take home palm { branches. The services today were the first of the week, as churches {prepared for Good Friday, hours of agony and finally, Easter, to {proclaim His resurrection next | Sunday.

E. Dewey, was the President's

WAVING palms on Christian constant companion during the altars in Indianapolis today re-|1ast fivé crisis-packed years of called the triumphal entry of the President's life.

Mr. Roosevelt's son, John, announced that the beloved pet would be buried at the western end of the Roosevelt estate here where he spent his declining years. Fala died two days before his

The graying but spry Scottie and his grandson, Tamas MeocFala, were the favorite walking companions of the late President’s widow, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, when she was at Hyde Park. President Roosevelt bought! Fala when the dog was just un-| der a year old, and named him after a remote Scottish ancestor of the Roosevelt family, Murray, | Outlaw of Fala Hill { Fala probably gained his great-| est prominence in 1944, It was re-| ported then that Roosevelt, who| was on a Pacific. tour, left Adak |

Island in the Aleutians without] the dog and sent a destroyer back for him.

noon, Friday.

13th birthday. -

Rep. Minn.), made the charge. Mr. Roosevelt denied the charge

Harold Knutson, (R.

during his opening campaign speech Sept. 23, 1944, in Washington, D. C. | *““These Republican leaders have not been content with attacks on! me, or on my wife, or my sons,”

he said. No. not content with that, now t attack my little

dog. 2 The President sald Fala’s “Scotch soul was furious” at

stories that a destroyer had been sent back for him at a cost to the taxpayers of “millions of dol-

~—and if we know our soldiers—|

itive statement which promised:

2 ithe nation of Communists, crim-

® cut foreign policy which will end

He made his charge in a rous-| »

terribly | -

ing rooms and into the Claypool

80 they can keep the colossal| power they have taken to them-

LOIS TIPP In mental hqspital,

a

He recalled that former Attorney General J, Howard MeGrath fired the admin tion's n hunter, Newbold self. He mentioned this to warn Democratic National Chairman Frank McKinney and Democratic National Committeeman Frank McHale they might be next. Indiana Junior Senator, a candidate for re-election, told the Hoosier. newsmen what no other Republican has stated publicly in Indiana—what the Republicans will do, if they win, It was a pos.

ONE--The end of secrecy in Washington so that the public can find out how its money is being spent. TWO—To “take the handcuffs off the FBI" so that it could rid

inals and traitors. THREE—To have the Army, Navy and Marines prepared to fight within an hour of attack.

FOUR~—To formulate a clear-

American dollars to countries where a third of the voters are Communist. To contribute “not one thin dime to let the United Nations convert America into a Socialist - Communist dictatorship.” FIVE—to return to private operation every activity that can be done better by American business than it can by bureaucrats. To use part of “the savings to pay off the debt and fight inflation at the source. Use the rest to cut taxes. ' In Korea, Sen. Jenner warned, “we face the first defeat in American history.”

CR

AN

PAUL JEVAI

BOBBY TIPP Picture near age 2,

In attacking the United Nations, the Senator said: “The United Nations cannot pre-| serve peace, It is part of the same| invisible empire that governs the| United States. It cannot even

PAUL JEVAHIRIAN SR,

Before he was kidnaped.

"The fingerprint did it."

_ Ronnle, iidnaped by a nurse.

. print left on a lotion bottle nine

_ 1a actually their boy.

Mece weré called—but the woman

keep its own employees from organizing into Red cells.” The Senator's speech

lars.”

Eisenhower for President.

uched Lilibet to Take Salute

off once, again the bitte feud | LONDON, Apr. 5 (UP)—Queen that has divided Indiana Repub- pjizabeth IT will take the salute licans between supporting Sen. on horseback at her offiéial birthRobert A. Taft of Ohlo or Gen. day trooping of the color June 5, «Buckingham Palace announced,

Can You Name These Hoosiers? See Page 19

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Mental Patient Linked |

To Strange

9 - Year Fingerprint May Solve Tangle Cases

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of Kidnaping

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Custody

Fight in South Bend

SOUTH BEND, folding here in the disputed

By DONNA MIKELS Apr. 5—The strange tale that is une

custody of a 9-year-old boy :

took another bizarre twist this week. : £0 A fiction editor probably would reject the newest

developments in the strange Charlie Joe Tipp case as “too fantastic.” - But this whole story is copy stranger than fiction.

It is truth,

Until this week, officers of 8t. Joseph County) Juvenile Court had only a mage of circumstantial evidence as they probed the claim of a Dayton, O., couple, Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Thompson claimed that South Bend schoolboy Charlie Tipp was in reality their son,

maid in 104 ‘The first solid link--and here's

the kind of thing that makes

this whole case so fantastic came this week from a finger-

The Dayton and police officers, both descriptions of the En womand and methods of operation. Therefore the definite typing of

Mrs. Tipp to the Detroit case gives a solid boost to the claim

of Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Thomp-

son of Dayton that the boy Mrs. Tipp claims as her youngest son 3

By now if the reader isn’t confused by double identity and over lapping crimes, he should be. So here’s a sort of chronological cast of characters, with synopsis of past events:

THE PAUL JEVAHIRIAN FAMILY-In June, 1943, an au« burn-haired nursemaid who gave the name “Alice White” worked six days for the Jevahirian family; caring for little Paul Jr, On the seventh day the family came home to find thé house empty, little Paul gone. A short time later a telegram arrived, signed by “Alice White,” who said she'd been: called away and that she would return Paul later. Po-

and the little boy, who was just 10 days away from his first birthday, never were found.

THE ARTHUR THOMPSON FAMILY — The Jevahirian case was almost forgotten in October, 1944, when Mrs. Thompson hired an auburn-haired woman who answered an ad to care for 20-month-old Ronnie Thompson. On her first day at work the woman who gave the name “Mary Wilkie” to litle Ronnie to the barber shop. She didn't return, From this point on' the plot reads like a replay of the Detroit case, A few hours later came a telegram. The nursemaid. said she had been called away, she would return later with Ronnie. Once . more, police shared the family’s alarm too late and the woman had dropped frem sight.

Police noted the identical descriptions, the methods of operation, the telegrams and econcluded that whoever took Paul Jevahirian also kidnaped Ronnie Thompson. But who that was remained a mystery. Then last year, into the cast enters: LOIS TIPP—In Tampa, Fla. Mrs. Tipp was arrested after police became suspicious of her story of how her 9-year-old Bobby “disappeared.” When the boy's bullet-riddled body was found shoved in an unused refrigerator, she oe charged with murder. . :

psychiatrist examined the woman who came from a prominent Southern family reputed to be

was his decision she had been “Insane all her adult life.” She was committed to a mental hos-

with another astonishing verdict: ‘This woman has never given birth to any child.” Now the pieces began fitting together, investigators thought. Dayton and Detroit police got

Detroit kidnapings long ago were linked by

But she never came to trial, A|

pital. And here doctors came up|-

gated and learned that Mrs. Tipp in each case had gone away 4hd come back with a baby, ng she had given birth to it.

In neither ease, her husband, South Bend mechanic

probation Tipp told tham; did he see either

of his “boys” until they were at or past the toddler stage. ot

pictures semblance between the viy Tipp boy, Charlle Jo and s began sults

Jo, now in custody who still believes h : “father.” } He But in Detroit, the keep adding to this work,

But it is no happy ending. Pictures which now found show a

was slain by a ‘woman who had gone to such extremes to have jhe children that nature denied er. There's only one hope to Jevahirians, And they cling os Says Mr. Jevahirian: 7 “We think the boy Bobby Tipp was our Paul. But no one ever has proved the boy found decomposed was Bobby. We still

nave hope.” t hope today is strongest in the Baap home, where ihe used nursery, now decorated for a 9-year-old boy, awaits the ch

that the Thompsons are sure will “return soon.” >

Today's News In The Times

Local

Half of GOP ward chairmen ON PAYPOH «uovenneisvivane Police give tips to bike riders BOIS .i..iii sini snnsnins 3 U. 8. school ald to embroil PTA convention .......... 8

National

Congress wants to do some more scandal hunting 5 , , Washington Calling ....... 21

Sports Stevens three hits help crush Tribe, 15-4 -.sioasinsvienis 18 Local ‘Y’ matmen capture state Crown .....ececoveves 18 The Wright Angle .....cu0... 14 A full page of bowling and the Kegler's Korner .......... 18

Women's % Page Farly gardeners «eoce..c.oss 29 Younsters learn competition early in IAC pool ssssavass 29 Caprices by Christy ......... 81 ‘Golden Age’ of fabrics ...... 83 House consultant advises balance siiviesecsssiaiiin 88 Brides +... ii0iv00evses 34 and 38

Other Features: Amusements ...,.es0 24, 25 Editorials vesnssnnasanes 20 Harold Hartley «.sveseess $1 Our Fair CRY. «ove oonees' 1 Potomac Patter ........ 10 Radio, Television .... 22, 23 . Real Estate ...... 41, 42, 56 Robert RUATK saseesnviinl® Ed BOVOla: cruesunannness 19 % Bports ..vcesssnsenens 13:18 © Earl WISoONn sessesasenss 18 Women's «iisisssecsse 20-40 What Goes on Here ,... 4 World Report «....sseee 21 Jack ‘Welsh BRERA ann 18

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