Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1952 — Page 2
«The Allied soldiers were
PAGE 2
Western Cars Barred From Soviet Zone
By United Press BERLIN, May 12 (UP)—The Soviets nted U.' 8, and British military police from driving to Western Germany for the fth day today, neightening speculation that the Reds may be plotting a new blockade of Western Berlin. - Russian armed guards at the Berlin end of the 110-mile international highway across the Soviet zone turned back Allied police jeeps for the eighth straight time since last Thursday.
they needed new travel permits, which had not been printed yet. However, the Russians still ‘permitted other British and American military police patrols setting out from the western end of the highway to make their usual patrols designed top assist any Allied motorists in trouble. The Soviets also did not interfere with other Allied and German traffic along the highway. The daily U., 8. military train from Frankfurt arrived on schedule and reported no difficulty.
1 Dead, 2 Wounded
In German Red Riots ESSEN, Germany, May 12 (UP)—One person was killed and two others wounded seriously yesterday in an exchange of gunfire
between . police and 30,000 Com+| Ap already crowd d lif munist-léd demonstrators protests, y . ehoat ap-
ing the Allied peace contract with West Germany. . Eight police were hurt seriously .in the skirmish which also marked by stone throwing dnd fist fights. The fatality was the first to occur in such demonstrations in West Germany since the war, and the clash marked the first time Communist demonstrators had used gunfire against police. Thirty alleged ringleaders were under arrest and scheduled to appear in court today. Another 218 suspects were released after being held briefly.
told. It was while swi
A
Sb
To Pay for
By United Press SALT LAKE CITY, May 12— William H. McDougall Jr. today began his second career. For most of his 42 years he had
in Utah, Wyoming, Hawail and Japan and as a United Press foreign correspondent. But that Is over now, : Mr. McDougall yesterday was ordained a Catholic priest, “as the final payment for my private miracle.” ” he Jap-
Indian Ocean 200 miles off
that changed his life work, He had remained on Java beyond the safe evacuation deadline “just to get one more story” and had attempted to flee in a crowded Dutch steamship. Swaim for Hours But the vessel, Poelau Bras,
Writer Becomes Priest a
been a newsman--on newspapers
anese-conquered Java on Mar, 8, } 1942, that the incident occurred °
45 Arrested In Gambling, Liquor Raids
In four surprise raids, starting before dawn and lasting to about 9 o'clock last night, police rounded up 44 adults and one 16-year-old girl at three alleged illegal liquor! outlets and a gaming house.
At 3 a. m. yesterday, police armed with search warrants, raided ‘1902; Yandes 8t., where they arrested 23 men on charges of violating the 1935 Beverage Act. The 23d man arrested, Earl Martin, 36, of 1142 E. 19th St. was listed as operator of the place. In addition to this charge,! three men were charged with vagrancy.
Liquor Confiscated
In another raid at 829'% and 831% N. Ogden St. police ar-| rested James Hughes, 35, of 318 Arch 8t. According to police, this! raid was made after state excise
‘Miracle’
William H. McDougall Jr.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Reds Indicate They Plan A New BI
9 “i . gy
{tons gf cigarets on the morning
MONDAY, MAY 12, 1953
ockade In Berlin
|
Support Case
Figure Admits
|300-Pound Safe Near
Police Station Is Stolen - | ANDERSON,. Ind, May 13
Robbery Spree _ | (UP) —Proximity to the law held
A man, who has been divorced no terrors for burglars who ene and ordered by a judge to help tered a state auto license branch pay for the support of his little hyreau located directly behind girl, confessed to police today 10 the police station and carted out
jie sommission of geven bw |a 300-pounid safe containing about 8 Edward H. Darrah, 22, of 523 $2200 in checks and cash, over 8. Cable St, in a signed state- the week-end. ment admitted breaking in and, Police said the burglars evientering: |dently broke a back window ONE-The Veterans of Foreign across the alley from the police Wars post at 616 E. Washing- station to gain entry, and quietly ton St. where he said he got $35 hauled the bulky safe out of the or $40 on the morning of Apr. 16. game window to make their getTWO—Hubbell’s Fruit Stand, away. No trace of the safe was |Koehne and Washington 8ts.! found. where he said he took three car-|
HAVE YOU EVER
WISHED You Could Do Something About
of Apr. 18. | THREE—F & H. Sunoco Serv-| jce Station, 1604 E. Michigan St. | where he said he got $25 on the| morning of Apr. 20. FOUR—Sinclair filling station] at 1501 W. Michigan St. where] he said he broke in but didn’t) take anything, on the morning oY Apr. 28. FIVE—The same Sinclair sta-|
less
When Mr, McDougall returned,
Many died as the ship went down, {0 America from Java he wrote but Mr. McDougall escaped ma-| WO books on his experiences —
was sunk by Japanese planes. |
chine gun bullets and swam tor! Six Bells Off Java”
hours, {Eastern Windows.”
“My life went before me.” Mr, Nieman fellow at Harvard McDougall said later. “I had done everything that a newspaperman could desire. It was wonderful
and “By He became a in|
that I woul | “When I went to Harvard,” he Uld do something even sald today, “I intended to go
more worth 2 while back to Asia as a correspondent: peared. onthe horizon and he was Bul. After thinking things over Ij ‘hauled aboard. He was the last decided my true work should be
one. Other swimmers had t as a priest.” ; left behind. a hat to be Studied Three Years That was his private miracle. | Three years ago he resigned He reached shore in the lifeboat {rom United Press to devote his only to be captured by the Jap- full time to theological studies at anese and interned in a Sumatra Catholic University in Washingprison camp where he almost|ton. died before his liberation late in| His first priestly act was to be1945. stow a blessing on his mther Escaped Again 'Mrs. William H, McDougall Sr, | | It was his second imprisonment |other members of his family, and /by the Nipponese. He had been|1100 Catholics and friends who |Interned in the Shanghai bureaujattended the ceremony. | of the United Press when the war, His future assignment will be broke out in December, 1941, but/determined later, but it will be in had managed to escape with the Utah, where he had worked for aid of Chinese frienis. He flew|five years as a police reporter for
Police said the shooting started to the Dutch East Indies to cover the Salt Lake Telegram before
when Communist elements in the crowd fired pistol hurling rocks and flamigg torches) at the police. The police returned the fire, shooting into the owe | The victim was said to have been a 21-year-old Munich youth believed to have belonged to the] forbidden Communist “Free Ger-| man Youth.” | After the fight, Communists tried unsuccessfully last night to hold a torchlight parade in Essen. Police said they dispersed about 250 Communist youths,
Franklin Maps Preparations for Commencement
Times State Service « FRANKLIN, May 12-—Frank-Hin College, preparing for its 118th commencement exercises, elected eight alumni to its Alumni Counél, appointed two Chicago physiclans to the college board of di-
shots after!
| hostilities there,
Seven Hoosiers Added To Traffic Death Toll
Seven persons died In state|injuries received Saturday after-week-end traffic accidents, in-noon when a car struck him on cluding a 56-year-old grand-U, 8. .25 two miles east of Lamother who was crushed to death fayette. State police reported he by the car in which she was riding. was playing with a puppy when The dead afe: {he ran backward onto the road Mrs. Louise 8, Beneke, 56, of nd into the path of a car driven] Ft. Wayne. |by Joseph Brummett, 57, Lafay-' Billy J. Wright, 19, of 624 N.| te. Beecher 8t. |
i de Dale Moore, 24, = Driver Mur
Henry Lee Blanchard, 26,
E ille. ‘Charles F. Rex, 23, Union ol I Crash
George E. Thompson, 29, New-,
Wo Into Pole
'going to Asia in 1939.
Mrs. Beneke died in an acci-
rectors and named five persons to
Gary Lee Frier, 8, Lafayette. dent yesterday at an intersection] Making a right turn at High-|
receive honorary degrees. {six miles north of Decatur. Mrs. land Ave. and Michigan St. to-|
_/Beneke, William F. Beneke, 57, Selected for the Alumni Coun ner husband. and Joseph Min- | nick, ,
cil were Mrs, I. George Blake, Franklin teacher; Mrs. Eugene Pulliam, Indianapolis
Hougland, Connersville High School principal; Farwell Rhodes Jr. Indianapolis Star re-
dent, Midwest Mineral Co., Green-
porter; Maurice Johnson, presi- were takén to Decatur Hospital forehead. |
wood; Mrs. Erie Holmgren, per-| sonnel bureau owner, Ft. Wayne; Kiba L. Branigin Jr, Franklin) Mr. Wright died early yester-'
lawyer; and Dr, Willlam D. Province, Franklin physician. Drs. Harry E. Mock Jr. and William G. Hibbs were placed on the board of directors. : Doctor of Law degrees will be conferred on Everett A. SpauldIng, Gary Emerson High School principal, and Acting President J. Donald Phillips, of Hillsdale (Mich.) College. William A. Bridges, New York Zoological Park, will receive the Doctor of Letters degree. The Rev. J. Frank Lansing, pastor of the South Wayne Baptist Church, Ft
Wayne, Doctor of Divinity de-|
__gree, and Orvis Nelson, president of ‘Transocea Air Lines, Doctor of Science degree.
Report $200 Taken In Sluggings Here
Three East Side sluggings netted thugs nearly $200 last night. The first slugging was reported by James Brown, 39, of 2021 Columbia Ave, He told police he was walking at 19th St, and Columbia Ave. when hit over the head. He missed $82 and a train ticket to Cleveland. Later, police were called to 2533 Roosevelt Ave, where they found Albert Anderson, 61, who had been at ed while sitting in his front room. He said a young man slipped up behind him and beat with an object that looked Hike a crow bar. When Mr. Anderson’s mother screamed, the youth dived through a window. Police
§
Olney St. He said he left Pete's & Lunch and started into
i
fa fist
£2
lecturer a car driven by and newspaperwoman; John M.|53, Decatur.
C.|Mrs, Beneke,
day, a local motorist crashed into|
her grandson, were & government mailbox on tne
thrown from their car when it hit corner then struck a steel utility Wildred J. Krets. pole, :
The car smashed into a ditch and turned over on! William C. Jones, 23, of 941 N.| |Highland Ave, was taken to gen
Mr. Beneke and his grandson eral Hospital with a cut on his
where their condition Is reported Two pedestrians were fnjured | fair. iin ‘local traffic accidents yester-|
(day, one a three-year-old child.
Carl W. Torrence, 3, of 919] day when the car in which he was Locke St., was struck by a car at {riding smashed into the rear of a Blake St. and Indiana Ave. early |Semi-trailer on Ind. 67, about last night when he was trying to eight miles east of Anderson. |cross the Avenue. He was taken { Driver of the car, Robert E. Wil- to General Hospital where his {son, 22, 1110 Sheffield Ave. was condition is reported fair, {injured critically. He was taken! In the other accident, Thomas {to St. John's Hospital, Anderson, Miller, 77, of 2441 Shelby St., was {with a possible fractured back. hit by a car at Southern Ave. | Also hurt were Gilbert Shelley, and Shelby St. about noon yes-| |17, 2861 8. Roena St. and Harold|terday. Mr. Miller was crossing {Robert Taber, 19, of 8. Holt Rd. the street between parked cars. | Who. received minor injuries. {He was taken to General Hos- |. Driver of the truck, Walter Pital, where his condition is re-
Hits Rear of Semitrailer
Sizemore, 27, East St. Louis, Ill, Ported serious. |
La Moore was killed -S8atur-! ee eb {day afternoon when his car went 1 out of control and turned over on New Officers Elected Ind. 67, one mile west of the inter-,- = Times Slate Service : |section with Ind. 25. | TERRE HAUTE, May 12—New Mr. Rex was killed in a pre- officers of the Indiana Chapter of {dawn crash on Ind. 32, two miles/Special Libraries Association west of Parker, {there were no witnesses when his here are. Lawrence - C. Albert {car apparently swerved off the Arany, president; Miss Portia 'highway and struck a tree. |Christian, vice president and Mr Thompson died early yes- president-elect; Mrs, Margaret terday Jin Deaconess Hospital, Gallagher, secretary, and Miss {KEvansville. He was hurt in a Mary N, Slinkard, director at | 1ead-on collision east of Evans- large, all of Indianapolis and ville Saturday afternoon. {Haviland Morrison, Wabash Col- | Gary Frier died yesterday of lege, treasurer.
PN RE ARETE
Prices For Every Purse
Harry W. Moore's services are priced to meet the needs of families in every financial circum-
stance.
Budget arrangements are available to onyone desiring the convenience
of extended payments.
‘ recognition for his journalisticiat 340 Douglass St. on charges of | § performance and then returned to violating the 1935 Beverages Act! {the United Press in the Wash-and sent one 16-year-old girl to!
but I resolved then if I survived 'NEton bureau. [Juvenile Aid.
police purchased liquor from Hughes. Police confiscated 118 half pints of whisky, 119 pints of | wine, and 19 cases of beer, At noon yesterday, police arrested nine men and three women
Police confiscated eight half pints and two quarts! of whisky, and six cases of beer. “Late yesterday police arrested
HOOSIER FRIED—Between
charges of operating a gaming governor said.
chicken, Gov. Schricker proclaimed today through Sunday as "Hoosier Fried Chicken Week." One of the nation's-leaders-in
11 men’ at 2401. Bethel..Ave..on.. chicken, raising, Indiana _has a large crop of broilers this year, the
tion, where he said he took a metal box but threw it. away when he didn’t find anything of value in it on the morning of! Jan, 5th. f | SIX—Ralph’s Cafeteria, 2116 |W. Michigan St.,- Where he said] i he broke into a cigaret machine] and got about $9 on the morning] of May 2, He said he also found| la gun which he took" and later| threw in the river at the Michi-| gan St. bridge.
mouthfuls of golden brown fried
{committed the above burglaries
house and gaming. Roosevelt Lampley, 38, of that address was! charged with keeping a gaming Mother of Today's ouse an aming. olice contl Dl ator a be mother of (he Hit baby { n today in Methodist Hospital containing $4.07, a pair of dice was presented with a Florence and one round table. Nightingale lamp and a dozen roses by the hospital in celebraHere's One Way tion of Hospital Day. DETROIT, May 12 (UP) — Mrs. Dorothy Whitehurst, wife Alvin F. Bergman observed his'of Marshal L. Whitehurst, 1811 65 birthday over the week end N. Bancroft St, was presented by walking 65 miles, Mr. Berg- the lamp, an antique candleman, Leetsdale, Pa. said he has holder, and flowers by Miss observed every birthday since he Fredericka E. Koch, director of was 10 years old by walking one Methodist Hospital School of
. {he operated alone. i 1 SEVEN-—Mobile Gasoline Sta-| First Baby Honored 1811 W. Washington St. Mrs. Whitehurst, mother of two |where he said he and Clarence other children, gave birth to a|Harris, 21, of 20 N. Greely St., at-| 7-pound-9-0z. daughter, Louise | tempted on the morning of May | Kay, at 12:45 a. m. today. Mr.|7 to break in. He said they failed | Whitehurst is a chemical engi-|in their attempt because police neer at RCA. |came. He said he was hiding un-| {der a truck when he saw police When Dream Came True arrest Harris and then left. TURIN, Italy, May 12 (UP)— Darrah was arrested by police! Mrs. Margherita Giana, 43, won/on May 9th. He and Harris are $16,320 today on a national lot-|{now being held on preliminary tery ticket she had purchased on|charges of burglary and are
| He told--the- police while. held.
That Stained, Faded Rug!
YOU CAN!
Call 1M-3445 And Let General Dyeing, Co. Restore the Color or Give You a New Color.
GENERAL
Dyeing (o., Inc. 818 DORMAN ST." IM. 3445
State police said elected at the annual meeting!
mile for each year of age.
v
{Nursing and Nursing Service.
came to her in a dream.
the basis of three numbers which awaiting trial in Court 3, Wednesday. Ca
\ ’
5
“Smoke for Pleasure
w———
No Cigarette Hangover
No wonder rue
ference is delightful!
has gained more than two million new smokers in the past 5 years! Try PHILIP MORRIS yourself. Your throat will note the difference. And that dif-
\
Lomo!
ever wanted
MORRIS
You'll be glad tomorrow...
you smoked Ph
flavor, pleasant aroma... a clean, refreshing
smoke that leaves NO CIGARETTE HANGOVER!
] PHILIP MORRIS is ae differently from any other leading brand. And that
difference is your guarantee of everything you've
ete... tasty mildness, rich
in a cigarette
o
ilip Morris today!
MONDA
Crip Effec All O
By DENVER, effects of th of 90,000 oil w Finland to Hq 13-day-old wi: - shut off fiel However, r: pact betweer California ar independent 1 Workers was day. «Ne agreen 96 per cent n YWagt: Cnast for an avera, wage increase The pact, } fect on the n a coalition of other indenpe 0. A. Knig Oil Workers (CIO), said 1 agreement o nounced last was between coalition and strike pictur union had nof
Will Be § Barney Mcl resentative of fon, said the sibmitted to tion Board in The strike: into-the nonfuel supplies sends gasolin the world ma The strike airlines, whic number of de flights, and t ing its fuel s sential operaf But the ma supply of av United Air had cancele flights from flights inclu trips, three ai a trans-Pacif United officie 10 per cent would be elir
Strikers Si Of Gas in
NEWARK, —Gas station 118 - mile Ne pumped their into automob striking CIO delivery of ad The “no ga out dt one « Service Stati highway and all pumps Ww midnight. Six ing. custome: each,
