Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1952 — Page 3
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THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1952 Lig
® than his armies.
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LOOK AT THOSE TICKETS—Mrs. Gladys Patton, case worker at Crossroads Rehabilitation Center, and Officer Earl Phelps look on as F. J. Ferris turns over some tickets to the Police-PAL Club Circus to the center. Little Nancy Callahan and Betty Ann Buchanan watch the proceedings | _with h anticipation of seeing the circus July 19- 20.
Oatis in Red Prison One Year
slovakia, lest they come to the the nation would benefit.
Tke Pledges
Chicago Fight |
General Boards Convention Train
By United Press DENVER, July 3-—-Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower rledzed himself today to lead a fight to keep the Republican Party * lean and fit to lead our nation.’ Gen. Eisenhower, in a farewell-to-Denver statement prepared for delivery from the back platform of his campaign train to Chicago, bluntly declared that he expected to have a major hand in the fight because the GOP cannot go before the public and ask for votes “unless it comes into court with clean hands.” “I'm S00. to ask exery delegate to help in this fight for fair proceedings at the convention,” Gen. Eisenhower said in reference to the boiling fight over contested state delegations. Gen. Eisenhower, stung by
what he regards as high-handed Republican National Committee, tactics, boards his special train for barnstorming trip through the middle west. In his farewell statement to Denver, Gen. Eisenhower said: “There's a fight on in Chicago
| —not only a fight to name the |
candidates, just as important a { fight to keep our party clean and | fit to lead our nation. I'm going
{been a fighting man all my lite. land firing.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
Tavern Robbed Of 15, 000 In November, Hit
PAGE ~ 3
For 6 0
Bandits Slug Passerby While Making Escape
Holdup men robbed a near West Side tavern early today and vi-jordered Mr, Stoteltvch, “Don’t ciously slugged a passerby who move.” The sécond man jumped walked by as they made their gun-/to the top of the bar and directed waving escape. the bartender to open the cash Hit again as its cash register register. He then scooped out conwas swelled for nearby Kingan & tents of the register and the pair Co. payday was the M & C Tav-fled, ern, 544 W. Maryland St. The holdup pair, each armed with guns, took: $600 from bar tender Stoyko Stoteltvch. The 55-year-old bartender was| One man waved his gun at him robbed on another Kingan's pay-and ordered him inside. Mr day last November as he was Pean resisted. One of the bandits en route from the bank to thelfired a shot in the air while the \tavern, carrying $15,000 to cashother pulled another gun and workers’ checks. viciously beat the resisting man Resisted Gunman over the head. ? Slugged by the escaping bandits, They then forced him into the as he resisted their attempts to/tavern and fled. force him into the tavern was This was the third major theft Ralph Dean, 57, of 2103 Fern-in less than a year in the sector § way St. He was taKen toipolice call “The Hill.” All were Methodist Hospital“for treatment staged when taverns had extra of head injuries. cash on hand for the Kingan Today’ 8 holdup occurred shortly payday. after 7 a. m. Owner Christ Kuz-| - Markovitch Tavern, manoff and the bartender, both Maryland St. of whom live in the rear of the oct.
tavern, were cleaning up before The November snatching of bandits.
One: man pulled a gun and
Fired One Shot As they were leaving Mr. Dean passed by.
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NO SALE—Bartender Stoyko Stoteltvch stands before the empty cash register of the M & C Tavern, 544 W. Maryland -St., after it was robbed early today of $600 by two gun-wielding
602 W was robbed of $3000
Opening. in. the: Kiteh $15,000 from" Mr. Stoteltvch set . ps fest ti e_owner._was in the chen off a West Side chase which ended! . lace for s S and the bartender was alone in when James 8. Conner, 30, of 1145 Man, 64, Finds Re OF ch a Tieslioned the tavern when the bandits N. West St, was pursued to \discovered he had no billfold. He forced their way -in. Kingan’s locker room where pt Courting Girl, 18, charged his companion with tak- | .. Police believed a third man re- lice recovered the money. ing it The officers looked in her mained outside to man the get- was charged wtih grand A els Expensive purse—there was the billfold away car. ‘and is free on bond pending trial. Some days romance just hasn't : 2. : got a chance. THE GENTLEMAN said he Yesterday was one of that/lost four five dollar bills. The ‘kind for a 64-yeariold gentleman young lady found she had the who police found courting an 18-'money — but said she didn’t year-old girl at a cool grassy spot take it. in the 5400 block of E. Washing-| , Both were escorted to head-
“Jet With Brain’ Fires Nothing But Rockets
ton St, [quarters where they were charged By United Press against Mr. Oatis, a native of same fate. Reliable sources said Jo Chicago = pi soldier a =] | ~The police thought this was with being drunk. WASHINGTON, July 3—A year Marion, Ind., who was Associated|it soon became apparent that! gone. By United Press Design changes and armamenti TT ago tomorrow, while 150 million{Press correspondent in Prague. (ransom, not any legal or judicial, Then, referring to his battle, WASHINGTON, July 3—U. 8..make the Starfire a new plane . Americans at home celebrated] This government formally de-|consideration, was the object. | 4b ooh Robert A. Taft (R. 0.) air defenses are being bolstered rather than a modification of STRAUSS SAYS: CLOSED FRIDAY AND SATURDAY freedom, William N. Oatis lost|nounced Mr, Oatis’ arrest and| Besides cutting off travel in ‘for the contested ‘delegations, by a powerful new interceptor earlier F-94's now guarding the his in a dingy Czechoslovak conviction, and said his only of-|Czechoslovakia by U. S. citizens, ! | Gen. Eisenhower said that while plane, the F-94C, which fires United States and Alaska. ac-| courtroom. fense was trying to do his job— this government applied an eco- three weeks ago he had no inten- rockets instead of machine gun cording to a joint Air ForceA pudgy Communist judge gathering news for a free press. nomic squeeze. Trade dwindled to| ‘tion of going to Chicago, issues bullets. Lockheed Aircraft Corp anmounted his bench, cleared his| Congressmen wrote angry res-/almost nothing. ‘now have arisen of ‘deep and| Named the Starfire, the new nouncement. | throat and read from a sheaf of|olutions, suggested rescue by| There were some strong argu-| vital importance to our party plane has a speed well in excess Rockets in Nose } ‘papers: force, Newspaper editors angrily, ments for a formal break in‘rela-| and the nation.” {of 600 miles an hour and em“William Oatis, convicted of{took up Mr, Oatis’ defense. tions with Czechoslovakia, but] “Now that I'm in the fight,” bodies electronic controls that It is an all-weather ship, capaespionage activities .. . 10 years.”| Other Americans abroad were|these were discarded because cold| Gen. Eisenhower said, “I'm in it| perform many two-man crew ble of combat regardless of! Americans reacted vigorously to|forbidden to venture into Czecho-|logic said neither Mr. Oatis nor with all I've got. After all, I've combat chores including aiming Weather conditions on the ground the trumped-up Czech spy charge jor aloft. It can climb speedily to
Is it time for another Declaration of Independence ?
\ $
The men who wrote the. first one struggled to put new ideas into simple words. Humbly, they tried to set down clearly certain rights of man that could be called God-given, and hard-to-say things of a : spiritual nature—truth, equality, freedom.
people feel that man cann with his destiny.
And the words came alive, and the ideas the servant — of the people.
shoe. clear. The idea that each man is more important than his government; his independence more precious than his se. curity; his spiritual strength more lasting Independence.
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Upon these ideas, a nation grew great.
Therg are always people who fear such ideas—even today, even in America. These
make government the master — instead of "
Their distrust of the individual has spread frighteningly in the past few years. It can be stopped by ideas — the same ideas spelled out in the. Declaration of
It's time for public, to decl
ot be trusted
They are working to. . The trend toward more and more govern. ment controls is a threat to every business, every family, every individual. That's why this message is published by America’s busi-ness-managed, tax-paying ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER COMPANIES,
pendence —to speak up for freedom, and against anything that threatens it.
{about 45,000 feet. ‘The pilot is di-| rected toward invading bombers! by his own radar operator, who sits behind him, and by radar stations on the ground. |
Rockets are fired through tubes arranged around the plane's nose. | The ship carries 24 of the Navy-| developed 2.75-inch antiaircraft. rockets bearing the name "Mighey) Mouse.” Additional numbers can be oar ried in wingtip containers, where external fuel tanks normally are located. The same types of rockets are carried by the all-weather version of the F-86 Sabre, a sin- | gle- seat interceptor now in pro-. { duction.
Being Delivered
| The Air Force said Starfires {are now being delivered and a |spokesman indicated that they! {should be assigned to combat! units “within several months.” | | Lockheed described the plane las “the most powerful single-/ lengine airplane in production] " |today.” Its Pratt & Whitney J-48| engine develops 6250 pounds of] . [thrust —about the same as a: Rus- | notices—and the Store |sian MIG-15—and additionally | announcements regarding thas an afterburner. | the forthcoming (and the | An afterburner is a long tube Fourth coming) Store hours— {resembling a stove pipe mounted | in downtown Indianapolis— behind the engine. In it, exhaust And now they are
-b . . gases are re-burned to give the) . in what the magazine, The New
[plane great bursts of power and 2 | speed for take-off or in combat. Yorker, amusingly refers to as “the department of
Because of its high landing speed. the Starfire carries in a! utter confusion.” cylinder in its tail a parachute which is released at the moment it touches a runway to add braking power. B-47 six-jet bombers have such parachutes but the {Starfire is the first fighter plane :s0 equipped.
Here you see an otherwise composed and collected family group! But they've been reading the news
In any even.—we should like to clarify our own hours—with the thoughtful reminder “that Today, Ts Thursday ‘ 4 trauss is we ared- to Auditions Called bor | serve you AITO
Teen-Age Musical for the Fourth and afterwards.
Aulitions for the cast of an (The Store will be closed original teen-age musical, “Mr. . Friday and Saturday—
Tin Pan Alley,” will be held at 3 to 5 p. m. Sunday in Riddick au-' ¢ July 4th and Fifth— all Day)
ditorium, 1440 N. Meridian. The musical, composed by William Garri and Fred Offett, : HOR or THEREAFTER—we shall be on our usual Summer Schedule—from « . - 9:30 fill 5—Monday through Friday.
will be produced by a group of, {teen-agers from the Booth TarkOpen Saturdays—9:30 till 1:00. (No night openings—the customary
{ington Civic Theater. |..Sponsored by Mrs. Horace N. Thursday night openings have been given a vacation till early fall.)
Roberts and Mrs. John G. King-| han, the group will hold further auditions for singers and: actors at 7 to 9 p. m. Monday, and final lauditions for all performers, in|cluding dancers, at 7 to 9 p. m. | STRAUSS & COMPANY .
(next Wednesday in Riddick audi|torium, .
"After smoking Camels for 30 days, | found they get along wonderfully + with my throat. | especially appreciate . Camels mildness when Im making a picture !*
HRI
all of us, privately and in are once again our inde-
PIs 55 a
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