Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1952 — Page 23
ssmen. It was ag t Mr. Symington ry Truman, leadon in 1945.
in forming and lants in the east, gton went to St, » ailing Emerson ny. He not only even made peace demanding that
shop “so we can _
World War II, he oduction of $100 year. ese in the hardundoubtedly will next November, 'm that is most 111, there is someonality that even
HII
orum
word that you he death your
-
of The Times, I tter. It was write laining about the call,
".J., but I wonder this world would ones. After readlered for awhile, ime to my mind. lamp which could spirit when the This spirit could ing dishes and that made this ower to summon no matter where ight be. Isn’t the 1at I hear now is ed in cars, boats,
like if there were w_ would have te y time he wanted t like it wouldn't ie that bypiness matter how fast take a long time
| he grateful that ing as the tele
3050 N. Illinois.
Columbus, O., is get the same old
his fall as before,
ould have a camthe intelligence ople, not to the tincts we possess, e about “polished fact Gov. Stevents it. If I were the w that line too er off with some White House.
is fishing. If I fishing. The way then turned him Jicans whooped it Mr. Hoover, then . The General is o campaign. The we all knew peras been exploited
e. lk about “Demo1se one of those their candidate. sense knows they )0. : 1g “captive.” Oh,
—F. M., City.
7
dealers to explain keep his promise ts. was a “joke to , New Dealer ever
ement saying the But he stands toovernor the state
es of the last sese ead these figures
g, $40,000; 24 offi12 stenographers, orkeepers for the . This report does s at $1200 a year
vers is why they the Senate. How have? Also, why r the Senate? s promise to thes him next Novem-
sant, Danville.
Si decided she ean't bon commitments nited States signs ed line now for illion in arms ore next three years, um is the center itinies and strikes Socialists over the itary service. L 4 » 'HE Netherlands st of a five-wéek-risis following the ctory in the gens. No one has
form a coalition. .
Meanwhile, ac-
standstill.
ermany, the main strong military ture, is marking all when the big armament starts. rance will never ny to have a bigen the ratification 1an treaties may her paper agreeafter ratification n't be willing to ss she can build
divisions. * France’
Ay from agreeing NATO meeting
d until December.
* Fairchild’s “ Russell, and Lt. Dulin Judd, Po-|
* them with being prostitutes.
_ FRIDAY, AUG. 8, 1052 _
Judge ‘Reluctantly
aps Fairchild or ‘Bungling aid, Arrest
Special Municipal Court Judge Charles Mains today reluctantly released two women arrested in
a raid on an alleged downtown
house of prostitution and blamed Prosecutor Frank Fairchild for “bungling” the case. The judge emphasized he did not “condone” the operation of the house at 732 E. Ohio St., but said: “There is a correct way the defendants could have been arrested and properly charged.” Both defendants—blond, pudgy Patricia Morgan, 25, Cincinnati, and tall, red-haired Betty Kelly, 27. Lafayette—were in court accompanied by their attorney, Thomas McNulty. Judge Mains, in a departure from the usual Municipal Court procedure, issued a written decision releasing the defendants, both of whom were originally charged with being prostitutes.
Raps Prosecutor |
He declared: “It is not the province of this court to tell the prosecutor how to run his office but there is a correct way the defendants could have been arrested and properly charged. “Since this has not been done JT am obliged to apply the law as it is written which forces me to discharge them.” Judge Mains is the Democratic candidate for Prosecutor opposing. Mr. Fairchild. He was ap-
pointed a special judge after the| ing Robert Hoffman, 17, as they listened to the Grant Park Or-
’ .
i + 3 §
k
"I NEVER KNEW THE MAN"—That's what Carol Hoffman,
17 (right), said when she viewed
the body of Bernard Richardson,
25, who killed himself after slaying Patricia Kahler, 18, and wound-
defense attorney, Mr. McNulty, chestra rehearse on Chicago's lake front. Carol's name appeared in asked for a change from Judge| a love note Richardson left. Police are holding her, nevertheless.
Phillip Bayt on grounds of ‘“prej-: udice.” The raid. on the house was conducted July 1 by a special police task force led by Prosecutor, investigator, Charles, liceman Charles LaDuke and Detective Marshall Walke. Marion County’s Crime Commission, which had alerted the prosecutor’s office to the house, demanded action. Daylight Raid ..
normal police methods, went to! the house in broad daylight and without a search warrant. The Crime Commission immediately labeled the police raid “a farce” and issued a public statement declaring: _ “It (the raid) was bungled, but good.” :
women, today’s two defendants and Dorothea Callahan, 732 E.| Ohio St. All originally were | charged with living in a house of} ill fame. The arrest slips charged
Mrs. Callahan was released | earlier this week by Judge George | Obér, who also ruled the prosecu-|
With her is her sister, Betty.
Business Notes—
Ability to ‘Get- Along’ With People Is Vital
By DON TEVERBAUGH | KNOW WHO the most important man in the world The police raiders, contrary to,is today? He's the man who knows how to get along with
other people. Think those words over. and the world's is a direct result
of not being able to see and un- the capital of the Dominican Re- fended yesterday by Mr. Fairchild
derstand “the other side?”
How much
of your trouble
public, Caracas, Venezuela; Mont-
Once ‘Fooled’ Prosecutor
The prosecutor's office re-
vealed yesterday it had given a clean bill of health to a sus-
pected race bookie “visited” and ordered closed yesterday by Prosecutor Fairchild.
Special Prosecutor's Investiga-
tor Charles Russell, a former policeman, said he checked the D & C Engineering Co,, 126
W. Maryland St., July 16, just
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
room 2
/three weeks before Mr. Fairchild’'s' °
| visit Wednesday. Mr. Russell reported to one of
he found no gaming and said then
[that the place appeared to be an |
engineering firm as was professed. |
Mr. Fairchild said Mr. Russell was ordered to make the investi-| gation after an inquiry from In-) |diana Bell Telephone Co. | The utility was requested last year to remove phones from 20| suspected bookie joints and not to put them back without an OK from the prosecutor's office. The utility asked last ionth about a request by William D.| Wise for installation of four tele-| phones at the Maryland St. office. | Deputy Prosecutor John Daily! ordered Mr. Russell to make the! investigation. i
No ‘Earmarks’
Mr. Russell reported he entered the office with no difficulty. |He said he found no. scoreboard,
ino news ticker and no counter as
| Mr. Fairchild discovered Wednes-| day. { He said the office contained drafting equipment and Mr. Wise informed him that the company did drafting work for “four or five” engineering companies. The investigator said he found no “earmarks” of any gambling. Mr. Russetll said yesterday he did not check on Mr. Wise's record, did not ask him if he had a gambling stamp and did not check on the company’s license, is any, as a drafting firm.
‘who said, “The report was per-!
Stanley C. Allyn, president of rea] and Toronto, Canada, and fectly all right at the time. =
the National Cash Register Co,
University in Ohio. “Human relations is the most! important science in the broad curriculum of living,” he said. Orators speak of this age as an era of tremendous progress. And it has been—in science and technology. But we are still rank amateurs
Hawaii—all will operate with U. 8S.
{put his finger on it recently in a standards. : The police arrested threejcommencement address at Miami,
Paying Customers Servel is now paying customers to try its new line of refrigerators. They pay isn’t so much, but the hours are terrific. Prospective customers will receive $1 per day for a 10-day
trial of Servel's new gas or elec-| om °F tric refrigeiator. The company made his “visit” to the ‘“en-| , company Wednesday|
tor's office had failed to obtain! When it comes to getting along says it'll pay off regardless of
|
the necessary search warrant. He |
said any evidence was “improper- |
ly obtained.” Defended Raid Alex M. Clark
Mayor and
_ Prosecutor Fairchild's office de-|
fended the raid as “good police work” at the time. When the women were arrested and charged, two of them asked for permission to contact “our attorney.” He was Harry Riddell, | Prosecutor Fairchild’s chief] deputy at the police department. ! Mr. Riddell was “cleared” by! Prosecutor Fairchild of any “wrongdoing” but resigned any-| way. John Daily, Prosecutor Fairchild's top criminal handled the case in court.
o . people.” Fight Over Girl Those are important words and
Precedes Stabbing
A fight over attentions paid to a girl sent one man to the hospital with stab wounds and another man to jail charged with “assault and battery with intent to kill.” David Taylor, of 2339 N. Illinois St., was stabbed in his home when he objected to atten-
no as,
“ tions paid to a “Ruest, identified
by police only as “Josephine.” Arrested was Wally Jones, 26, of 712 Russell Ave. Police said Jones was covered with blood when arrested. Mr. Taylor was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital for treatment of stab wounds in the back. His condition is reported good. Jones ‘appeared in Municipal Court 4 and trial was set for Aug. 21.
Porter Will Filed
PERU, Aug. 18 (UP) — Music composer Cole Porter will receive the bulk of his mother’s estate. A will filed for probate here gives Mr. Porter all the estate except $12,100, bequeathed to the late Mrs. Kate C. Porter's friends.
[i
.
2 x ¥ « 8
‘PARTLY CLOUDY AND "CLOUDY AREAS
n economic crisi® high tide by then.
this hopes and asperations,
staff man, !
. March, The total
with each other—and that's heen our standing since creation. - ” o o ONE THING is certain, we cannot afford many more .big mistakes, not while juggling atom bombs.
Here are the words of Mr. Allyn to the Miami grads: “Wherever you go, whatever
you do, you will have cue thing in common: You will ali be working with people. Your achievements, materialistic and otherwise, will be measured by your ability to understand the other man’s viewpoint, to appreciate to earn his respect and co-operation. “Nothing will be as important {to yow throughout your life as {the ability to get along with
they score with force of a Purdue
Plant Delayed
The recent steel strike has canceled Westinghouse's plans to open its new lamp division plant at Madison next spring. Bethlehem Steel savs it can't deliver the necessary girders for
the battering fullback,
construction "of the plant as scheduled. The 1500-foot long building
will offer about 175,000 square feet of floor area when completed, but officials say construction will not be started until materials are adequate.
Our TV Exports
TV manufacturers are ning to find the export pretty lush. Our export valume jumped from 3650 sets in January to 7377 in for the first quarter of the vear was 16,107 sets worth more than $3 million. Leading markets are Cuba
beginmarket
Mexico, Brazil and Argentina. Five new markets are expected by the end of this vear as station operations will be completed in \
A
a at A Wy
“yp? eit
wy TAMER
ft nazym
whether or not you buy.
Gadabouts
American “housewives” are the says one of
travelingest people, the nation's tip airline officials.
“Federal records will
KEEP 'EM ROLLING —Marin
! get the "bugs" out of a jee Ist Marine Aircraft Wing's [ forwar
Hoosier Farmer's Vote!
WN
| e Pfc. Herbert W. Cottrell (right), | Mr. Fairchild’s chief deputies that) 2| |ndignapolis, and Cpl. Jack L. Boedecker, 21, Gibsonburg, O.,
engine, Both are members of the bservation Squadron 6, based at a d air strip in Korea. Pfc. Cottrell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Quiz Followed Bell Inquiry | Ancil F. Cottrell, R.R. 15, Box 729.
Made State of Texas
(EDITORS: President Truman yesterday urged Americans, who have one of the poorest voting records of any free nation in the world, to register now to participate in the November election. He didn’t tell the half of it.)
Ry United Press
NEW YORK; Aug: 8—A farm-|president pro tem, cast the tle-|though there is nothing he can do ier in Indiana made Texas a state breaking
of the Union—and that's how important just one vote can be.
being distributed by a business; information erganization in an effort to improve the “pretty sad” voting record of the free Ameri-| can people. { Only 51 per cent of eligible Americans voted in the last presidential election, President Tru-| man said.” And that makes us al-| most last on a list of the world's free nations. In recent elections,
And according to the pamphlet
published by the Bureau of Na-| show| tional Affairs, Inc., any one of
‘they’ did not get their gaming|those 47 million Americans who
{stamp until July 22. They kept| didn’t vote might have chang \everything out of sight until we history with a single ballot. had made our inspection.” i
Mr. Fairchild
wrestled with his conscience and finally went to the polls instead of the grist mill.
His one vote was the margin of victory for a state legislator, The
| legislator's one vote was the mar-|international {gin which sent Edward A, Han-|the past by the Democratic nomi{negan to the United States Sen-|nee is receiving careful attention.
ate. Mr, Hannegan, as Senate
vote that welcomed
Texas.
One congressional vote—which
: | could have come the same single marily because Gov. The story is told in a ‘pamphlet oie way-—also admitted Califor-|& new American name on his po-|lambs opened weak to mostly 50 cents (entitled “Just One Vote" presently nia, Idaho, Oregon and Washing- litical horizon.
ton to the Union,
One electoral vote elected Thomas Jefferson president.
One senate vote threw out the
| impeachment proceedings against|!Sm. Privilege
President Andrew Johnson.
One vote in Congress preserved the draft law a few months before Pearl Harbor.
can cause quite a stir,
HOME EASY. The Classified real estate
columns of The Indianapolis | TIMES have recently converted edito a very convenient system]
{Homes-For-Sale are now sepa-| 3 Texas’ admission to statehood rated according to the number of the Democratic nominee as a “sec-!
said his office was traced by one historian to a
bedrooms as well as
does not make any check with| DeKalb County, Ind., farmer who North, South, East and West.
the federal government on who buys gaming stamps.
However, Mr. Fairchild said he
’
gineering’
{after seeing it listed as the holder
‘of a gaming stamp.
Dividend Declared
A dividend of 35 cents a share
He's Edward G. Bern, vice presi-
dent of Airways.
Pan
Housewives make up the bulk of the Indiana Gas & Water Co.,| an-|
of passengers flying to South
America, he says. And the State! rounced today. It is payable in!
Department reports about 20 per cent of all passports issued
last year went to ladies who described themselves as. ‘“housewives.”
On flights to South America the passengers almost three to one. | Watch out gals. Up here they] whistle at a neat figure. South] of the border, they pinch as a sign
of appreciation.
Wheel of Fortune
n U S.A i#rge white, 60-62'%2c: hrown mix, Fortune magazine has a com- 60-61isc U.8 medium white. 53-581 2c; | . > i hrown mix, 53-58" a« 'holesale grade, ! plete roundup of business in the commercially graded 40 per cent, extra / yi1Q Q 0 large white, 49-352¢ brown mix, 49-52¢ August . Issue. It pre: ents some Current receipts, cases exchanged 39-40c interesting possibilities. Market steady. Receipts light at unchanged prices One is a buying splurge for the = Chickens—Red. 34-35c; white <rosses and
first few months of next year as pavrolls are swelled by. industry's
Good clearance expected catch-up boom. Butter Creamery. 90 score, 7T6c4 preMore inflation? ¥ortune's re- mium- butierfat, le; regular, 56¢ | port says ‘maybe.’ The odds are port sa) yhe Local Stocks and Bond against any runaway spurt such as we had in the second half of —Aug. 8, 1952— { = . ..| STOCKS Bid Asked 1950. But any increases of inter American Loan Xe or ) id ati i ‘hi merican ates Class A national tensions might whip up American States Cisse A, the spiral higher than it is now, | Avrehire Collferies com io Won : | L. Ayres 42% f : 2) Defense expenditures and Pro-) Beit, RR & 8tk ‘Yds com » 38} at y y .| Ba .R. & sD 3 b duction, which have been in | Bobbs-Merrill com €or Bn creasing steadily since 1950, ap-|Bobbs-Merrill 4%% ofd .... 71 . : Buhner Fertilizer 5% pfd ... 95 pear headed for a plateau next! Central Soya com ... .... 34% 36% year Chamber of Commerce com 22 Om Clifsens Tua Tel 8% ota... *S0w § aati « i Citizens In e D . x One interesting observation the C mmonwealth Lo Ne of 84 magazine makes, and one which|Cont Car-Na-Var ............. 1
has repeatedly popped
most business economists.
blinds them,
What the economists need and of
what most business leaders today need is imagination.
A little more imagination and
a little less pessimism.
oriey Sa - | Batesville Tele Co
SERTIERE ROWE
HUME OB
ladies outnumber the male
American-Grace On common stock has been de-!
yclared by the board ‘of directors
|L. B. Schiesz, president, icash Sept. 1 to stockholders of
‘record Aug. 15 .
Local Truck Grain Prices
Wheat, $1.98 White Corn, $1.87
®
Even half a vote—when it's the| the Belgians turned out 90 per | half vote of the President of the
cent of the vote; Britain 83 per| United States’ alternate to theljs perhaps the only American the Mr. Russell's report was de-|..ni. Canada, 75 per cent; Japan| Democratic National Convention|common Kuropean trusts com-|
71 per cent, the President said. i~
locationsiond Roosevelt”
ye Frees Two Women Of ee Charaas Bl Closed Joint (EE
Vice Charges
Europeans Glad lke And Adlai Are Global
By LEON DENNEN | Democratic party has a “sober unPARIS, Aug. 8—The European derstanding of the breadth and man-in-the-street is more con-jdepth of revoluntionary currents jvinced than ever that “Americaniin the world.” ‘ isolationism’ —a nightmare for-| Adlai Stevenson-—paradoxical-
ever haunting this war-jittery|ly enough —is also: gaining favor part of the world—has finally with the West's industrial tycoons been defeated. and what remains of Europe's
GOP nominee Dwight. D. Eisen-| gress” in the U, S. hower has long been regarded as, Somehow the word has gotten ‘a firm defender of the free world around that the Democratic presiagainst the threat of Soviet ag- dential nominee, like President gression, Now the word is spread- | Roosevelt, is a ‘progressive aris-
ing like wildfire that Adlai E. tocrat” who speaks the language Stevenson, the Demacratic nomi- of the “cultured European.” nee, is also a confirmed foe of Stecsutman ——————. isolationism and a “staunch,
(riend of Europe.” ! Hog Prices Up West Europe's common man is At Yards Here
trying hard these days to weigh] Hog trade opened active at In-
|the relative merits of the major] {U. 8. presidential aspirants. , dianapolis Stockyards today, BarHe realizes his fate is Irrevoc-| ve and gilts were fully 25 {cents higher, with the top 50
ably tied to that of the U., 8... He higher, than yesterday's
understands his future as free ang jman will depend on the man the averages. {American voters will send to the {White House next November, steady, Cows were strong in
“Fear to Tread” : clean-up trade, utility and com- | Foreign ministry officlals are yarcial cows going for $17 to iextremely guarded in their com-|g20 50,
Supply of slaughter steers and heifers was scarce but nominally
{ments on Gen, Eisenhower and) Hoey Jao; opened active; barrows and y . tits fully 25 cents higher. top 50 cents | Gov. "Stevenson-—-lest they step] gher: closed “Slow with inost ean loo | . v " but bulk sold at early advance; ulk Where angels fear to tread. choice 180-240 pounds $23.560-24; mostly ar yi y $23.75 up: about 200 head choice No But they are studying volumi- and 2190 275 pounds $24.25; little over nous reports on both presidential :23.75 late; choice 240-280 pounds $22.50- \ 23.50; few loads about 240 pounds 323.75 jcandidates, especially on Mr. | heavier weights 84 atce. chdice 160. 183 | pounds, 21-23.50: 120- pounds 50- | Stevenson, sent by their Wash-!ig 50. sows steady: choice 300-400 pounds few £2025: 400-600 pounds $18-
, "® . y £19-20; ington envoys. Every word on|ig%s Mees Acafce: boars steady S12.50“Cattle 400; calves 300; slaughter steers and heifer Supply scarce, nominally steady: cows strong in cleanup trade: utility and commercial cows $17-20.50; canners and cutters $12-17.50: bulls steady; commercial and good $20-23; odd head $23.50; four loads mostly DHINY 1315 vound Moers at $ ; cutter and u y ~21; ree to affect the outcome of the U. S.!loads high choice to prime 1235-pound at
| ‘ t ht t rrive; vealers med |election, retains his trust and con-| biter Schaet Mt ends, choles. a fn
steady; choice and prime fidence in Gen. Eisenhower pri-;$3130-20: commercial and good $23-20-2%
to $15; choice heavy
8 g| slaughter calves to $28 Stevenson is Sheep 400; supply mainly native spring
affairs uttered in
The average European, al-
lower; early sales choice to prime $29.50hole $0650.50, Around sai geod and The Republican party has had|geod and choice 36-8: cull and utility ia singularly “bad press’ in west-| $0: {ern Kurope. 1t has been de-| scribed as the party of “isolation-
and reaction.” The
More Polio-Trained
| Democrats, on the other hand, are| Nurses Sought Here
depicted as representing the] Red Cross is seeking polioforces of “liberalism and pro- trained nurses to give specialized {in the U. 8. [care to infantile paralysis at Long and Riley Hospitals. Five out-of-state nurses have Nevertheless, “le General Ike" arrived at Indiana University Medical Center in the past two weeks, two from Rochester, N. Y,, and three from Massachusetts. Red Cross is also sending let-
‘le General lke’
pletely. - But Mr. -Stevenson is
&
HUNTING MADE "2Pidly becoming the favorite can-|, .." 2200 Marion County regis-
didate of Europe's extremely Im-i, 4 1yrees, requesting their at-
portant and strategic anti-Com-|, q...e at a two-day Polio Inmunist and non-Communist left.) iitute starting next Tuesday, at Liberals and “progressive” in-|pjjey Nurses are needed to serve tellectuals are inclined to view|on full or part-time basis. Polio is starting its seasonal They are in-ypward climb but is below the |trigued by his statement that the|epidemic stage.
A
’
{ |
i
Yellow Corn. $1.67, Oats, 77c. Soybeans, $3.14.
iSprague Device Bg 20 Trpoiarriaal a
Produce
Feas—Prices F OB. Cincinnati, cases in-| Consumers grades:
cluded on graded ergs
white, 34-35c; hens, heavy, 19-22¢c; hens light. 14c. old roosters. l4c; market steady Prices unchanged, receipts light but ample
| I
Cummins Eng com
into -mYy| Cummins Eng 4% % pfd ....0. § mind, is on the pessimism of Eastern Ind Tel 5% otd .. It|
Equitable Securities com Equitable Securities otd Delta Electric com :... Family Finance com _.. |Pamily Finance §% ofd . Hays Corp EB .e Hamilton Mfe Co com .. Herff-Jones Class A pid . Home T & T 5% pid Hook Drue Co com . Ind Asso Tele $2 pid ‘a ‘ind Asso Tel $2.50 of Ind Gas & Wat Com Ind Mich E) 44% pfo
Indpls Ath Club Realty Co..:. eg Ind Power & Lt com vivs 2B Rs Indpls Pw & Lt pfd . 93 98 [ndianapnlls Water com 11% 9 (ndianapolis Water 4Y, pfd 99's {ndiandpolis Water 5% pfd 105 i Jefterson National Life com . . 11'3 13 Kingan & Cn com I 4% Kingan & Co pid 83 57 Lincoln Nat Life vere 147 151 Fvneh Corporation . 13% 13% P R Mallory rears, 3410 364 Marmon-Herrington com .... “av 5a Mastic Asphalt “aes 3 63 Natl Homes com 23%, Natl Homes ofd 10 103 N Ind Pub Serv com 25% 27% N Ind Pub Serv 4', pfd a4 9? N Ind Pub Serv 4'; ~1d ... 26% 28 | *N Ind Pub Serv 4.56 pfd L238 27a ~AProgress—baundry.. com «21. 2 Pub Serv of Ind 3'2 ofd . .. PJ Pub Serv of Ind com ali |Ross Gear & Tool com 48 ; [Schwitzer-Cummins 5'z pid . 17°, By So Ind CG & E com ' 22% 24% 30 Ind G&E 49 pfd 104 i Tanner & Co 5'2% pid 4 nd Terre Haute Mallrable 12% 133, Tokheim-Oil. Tk. Pump . 14% 18 ‘U 8 Machine com 2 United Telepnone 5% ofd LL Union Title . . 64
*Ex dividend
BONDS
Allen & Bteen 58 Tres ‘| American Loan 4'zs 60 ...... American Security 5560 .... | American Loan 4'as 55 Bastian M
Ch of Com Bidg 4% 6] Columbia Club 3-58 62 Equitable Securities 5s 60 {{ndpls Paint 4&;. Color 5s 64 JIndpls Public-Loan 5s 64 \ [ndpls Ratlways 58 67 (nd Limestone 4s 75 {nd Asso Tel 3s 78 Langsenkamp 5s 38 » i Maplehurst Fr.dnce 5's Paper Arts Co 6s 57
7.
J mtr
5
BREW ANG COMPANY
v
