Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 April 1952 — Page 2

i

i PAGE 2

} Clark R

WASHINGTON, Apr..29

in Europe, and Gen. Mark W. mander in the Far East. The appointments drew praise from Congressmen of both parties, diplomatic and military leaders, and Western European statesmen.

- hy , John M. Vorys of Ohio, chief Republican spokesman on foreign affairs in the House, who sald President Truman ‘got the appointments backwards.” Mr, Vorys said Gen. Ridgway has done a fine job in the Far East but doesn’t know much about European problems, while Gen. Clark has had wide experience in Europe and knows little about the Orient, “So we're se each man where he doesn't ng” Mr. Vorys concluded.

Red Blast Expected Diplomatic sources predicted

will unleash a tirade agains

no definite word on when Gen.

for Gen Dwight D, Eisenhower, he is succeeding, has resigned as Atlantic Pact commander effective June 1. _ There was some speculation that

promote : fw op hn A . wer, sa

? down a heavy artillery outranked by Britain's Field Mar-\, ;, yi0q to take advance Superior, Wis., after daylong ne- Cecil B. DeMille, veteran 70-year-

Viscount Montgomery, who the pact Diplomatic circles sald the

will have no

All-Round OK

By Usited From

today with the high command switch that installed Gen. Matthew B, Ridgway as Supreme Allied Commander

aware eu Allied Offer

that Communist propagandists/journed until the Communists are t Gen./ready to reply. No word had been

Ridgway as the “war lord of|recaived from the Reds up to a o Korea” and will try to depict his|late hour,

The Defense Department had proposal are secret. y will leave the Far Fast UN Grenades Hurl

President Truman may ask Con-|8renades to

gress for special legislation to Re Py Bt strong betore §ency distribution of milk to chil.

; willbe: Kumbwa where the enemy laid remained to supply the needs of

bs na In chief of yey repulsed the Reds with hand stalemate on both scores.

‘change Hom a Shay te east of Kumaong. It ‘was turned the emergency distribution of ,¢ {ne “tremendous burden of in| Clark East com- pack {n the same manner,

disrupting on the Korean iruce talus, are being ra 0sely the Pukhan River and north and Siered trom Washington any- west of the Punchbowl, All were

eceive {

| |

— Nearly everybody seemed

Clark as United Nations Com-

Reds Ponder

By United Press | PANMUNJOM, Korea, Apr. 29 ~Communist truce negotiators were believed today to have referred a United Nations compromise proposal for an “over-all solution” to the Korean armistice deadlock to Pyongyang, Peiping and perhaps Moscow for decision. Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy, head of the United Nations armistice) delegation, handed the proposal to North Korean Lt. Gen. Nam 11 yesterday. | The conference then was ad-

THIRD WOMAN THEME—A judge put an end to a domestic triangle yesterday as he sent Marelyn Hopper to Indiana Women's ison. He ordered the 19.year-old "other woman's” boy friend,

Duluth Milk Supply Dried Up by Strike

DULUTH, Minn, Apr. Red Thrusts Back (UP)~~=All but a trickle of fresh week and a one-year contract. SEOUL, Korea, Apr, 20 (UP)—| muy wag dried up today by the The dairies held out for a twoYates. Nat Op er runny Simultaneous collapse of negotia- year contract although they in water-logg re ge jo tions with striking dairy workers agreed to the five-day week. along with a plan for the emer-| ———————

\dren and invalids. ‘DeMille to Dissolve

dawn today. Only a handful of small dairies Own Production Unit

The first charge came north of

barrage, 250,000 residents of” Duluth ind HOLLYWOOD, Apr: 29° (UP)= United Nations positions. The Al- tions yesterday ended in a 0!d movie maker who has never gotia y y n produced a box office loss, is dis-|

solving his independent company,|

grenades and small arms fire, “No acceptable compromise for|(s B. peMille Productions, because,

The other attack came south-

milk was reached, nor seems ..oased taxation and higher proy in the immediate future,” quction costs.” 8 P | Dr, Mario Fischer, Duluth “I have no intention of divore-! health director. ing myself from a business to * The strike was called Saturday which I have devoted more than over a contract dispute by thei30 years of my life,” he said.

The Eighth Army reported en. lie! emy “nuisance” attacks east of city

18

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APOLIS TIMES.

Pinned T

of his car.

through driver's foot.

|

“Cut ‘my leg off if you can't me out. My god, it hurts.”

g Frank Griffey, 39, of 2430 N. ... Kénwood Ave, cried out in pain Ser Ave ar Jie $31 ura 'as deputy sheriffs tried to free repo r brakes wen a him from the twisted wreckage E. 10th 8t. and Tibbs Ave. can politicians prepared to flood

Using two wreckers, deputies

‘worked frantically for an hour to pull the car apart so they could get the victim out. :

Mr. Griffey lost control of his

car in 8500 block 8. Meridian St. early today, sheriff's deputies reported. {wrong side of the road and 300 feet farther along crashed into a concrete bridge abutment,

The auto veered to the

The motor was driven back the car, pinning the

Mr. Griffey was taken to Robert

Long Hospital where he is on the critical lst. ,

Officers estimate the car must

have been going between 70 and 80 mph.

Await Identification In another accident police to-

day awaited positive fingerprint | identification from Washington, D. C., of one of the three victims of a two-truck crash near Lebanon early ‘yesterday. victim died several hours later in General Hospital.

The

State police tentatively identi-

fied the victim as Jack Watkins, 26, Encino, Cal., driver for the Red Ball Transit Co.

The other victims were identi-

fied earlier as William C. Berry,

hy | William Knapp, to become reconciled with his wife and family at pean t proof d i } 803 E. 14th St. and Mrs. MilThat the Atlantic Pact Allies are Naaay Sak fhe 1 mt By no 303 N. East St. The triangle came to Judge Scott McDopald's br Jean Marsha 3, of 1432 an attack on the Soviet armistice meeting. | court after Mrs. Knapp charged her husband struck her because [College Ave. Mrs. Marshall died . Details of the United Nations she refused to allow him to bring his Marelyn fo live in their home, |late yesterday. Driver of the second truck,

William Pollard, 32, Washington Court House, O., was reported in

20 dairy workers seeking a five-day len) eonghion at Witham Hos-

Five Injured

In the city, five persons injured car in

for indoors!

»

outdoors!

riding in the

Tour-A-Bed

for easy carrying.

Pinned Traffic Victim Asks Leg Be Cut Off - Steam Here

were which,

infants’

Sketched top to bottom:

Safe, sturdy car crib that converts easily inte car seat. Strong metal frame, safety strap, washable plastic construction. Special handles

A wy ‘ pT @ Hl » sis aa @ ‘

‘Pen Pal Blows

Taft-lke

SION IN KOREA, Apr. 29 (UP)—An: Army private who corresponds with 45 me pals . ved a for some By IRVING LEIBOWITZ | peord ‘grenades from a small The Taft-Eisenhower feud poy in New Jersey... : pted again today as Republi-| “He wanted to blow up the kid next door because he

Marion County with special lists, played his bugle too much,” exJue iyred include Natile plained Pfc. Richard Lax of

Smothers, 7, } .jof the pro-Taft and pro-Eisen- , Wanda Jean Carroll, 8, 832 N, Bi. hower delegates to the stdte con-' Duluth, Minn.

der Ave.; Ellen McClellan, 30, of vention June 7. = =‘ RN i Group Will Nominate

‘they were riding crashed into a|

pole late yestapday| Roxie Carroll, 31, 532

[telephone | afternoon. IN. Elder Ave. drives, of the car,

Elder . .| . John Royse, 5.2% of Pe ey fifa Care county Taft-for-President group;

were treated at General Hospita) Intends to have the list of pro-|Eqp Symphony Council . “e ‘ th - > but not-admitted. Ton Selegales out in She pre A meeting of the nominating

; lcincts sometime this week. In another accident in the city, | The Eisenhower forces, led by committee of the Maintenance

oka the BD as ey a County Clerk H. Dale Brown, are Fund Advisory Council of the Inand Raymond. St. early this [compiling their list of pro-Eisen-{dianapolis - Symphony Orchestra morning. lhower delegates now, will be at 6:30 p. m. today at i "Delegates to th# state conven- Standard Life Insurance Co., 2727

Says Man Was in Road tion will be elected at the May 6 Washington Blvd.

h Alan Clowes as chairman, Driver of the car, Austin N.[Primary. Thef, in turn, help Wit heet : lelect d tes to the National/the committee will present a list GC + R. R. 3, told police he | SIegales 20 he of officers for the Council in the

saw Quincy Samples, 37, of 3515 [Convention in Chicago, July 7. AnD ason 8. McClure Ave. standing in the | Rap Date Change | Organized this spring, the road, waving his arms. He tried! The Republican State Commit-|~ouncil composed of Indianapto swing to the side of the road tee's unexpected switch in the gis pusiness leaders, ‘will assist to miss Mr. 8amples, he said, but state convention dates, moving it {pe Symphgny in budgetary probe {hit him with the left rear fender. yp from July 3 to June 7 Pro-!iems and fund-raising. Mr. Samples is in General Hos- duced a how! from Eisenhower {pital with a broken leg and cuts|forces in the state, - . 3 and bruises 4 3 , The pro-Tke politicians claim Denies Wrong-Doing ores Drummond, 3, of 718 the switch was aimed at heading fae 8. Illinois 8t., ran into the side off an Eisenhower campaign for In Accepting Gifts of a car near her home late yes- Hoosier delegates. | DAYTON, O., Apr. 20 (UP)— terday afternoon. Richard Wat-| This was sharply denied by Capt. Jerry Mitchel told an Air chen, 34, of 216 Douglas Bt, was Taft headquarters today. Lisle Force court martial yesterday he the driver. The girl was treated Wallace, campaign manager for felt he “did nothing wrong” when for bruises and released. Sen. Robert Taft in Indiana, said: he accepted gifts and favors from “Gen. Eisenhower is scheduled contractors while he served as a

N. Y. Court Upholds Ban to make his first address upon his procurement officer.

return to the United States in| The 31-year-old Charleston, W, On Nudists Magazine Abilene, Kas, June 4. By that|Va. officer said that “there were time every state except Indiana no strings attached” to the gifts, NEW YORK, Apr. 20 (UP)—A will have chosen its delegates to He is accused of accepting about New York Supreme Court justice the Republican National Conven-/$116 worth of gifts while head of has upheld the ban against two tion. a unit at the base that handled nudists magazines on the ground “It is difficult for me to under- some $141 million in contracts they “attract attention by an ap-stand why Indiana would be the last year. peal to the sexual impulses.” one state that might need speJustice Thomas L. J. Corcoran cial campaign treatment by the out why they termed “an inter

. {ruled yesterday that the sale of General. He has campaigned in esting sidelight’—the popular pris

“Sunshine and Health” and “Sun all other states by being absent maries in seven states give Sen. Magazine” contributed to juvenile in Paris.” Taft 1,703,222 votes and Gen, delinquency and sex crimes. | Taft headquarters here pointed Eisenhower 1,561,025.

r—"

AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80 YEARS i 1872-1952

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8 0 80 8 sews

TUESDAY, APR.20,1952

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| Hon . Note

Ve

BO up by a went to in the s Even t would fa out the ¢ dicted th previous 1932 whe and Alfr the Dem: ‘But th Republics A. Taft c Gen. D scramblix of the st GOP nat

Ten de] opposed, mony” sl Mr. Taft, and six | other 28 contested Gen. slates we gressiona slates fi MacArtin eighth, n even thot urged hi Mr. Taft. The tracted however, general p ble nickn: ballots, st “Mae.” In ano state pe selling al main op hours, de! but in n 8 p. m. Democ? gates—16 tricts. E vote at | cratic Gi “favorite trol of m gation.

32 Tov In Cont

HARTY (UP) —Ge estimated almost a Republica delegates day’s par ential pol Gen. Ei right plec state con towns. E port in m nicipalitie the state pledged. The cau yesterday cut’'s 169 held to | delegates GOP mee The del lect 22 de conventio: The De: