Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1952 — Page 1
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"The Indianapolis Times
FORECAST: ‘Clearing, cooler tonight. Fair and a little warmer tomorrow. Low tonight 58, High tomorrow 83.
IG. 11, 1952
[a
FINAL HOME
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postofice Indianapolis. Indiana. Issued Daily.
Indiana U. S. Pro 0
tree
63d YEAR—NUMBER 153 .e TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1952
THE MARCHING DEAD—
Traffic Kills Three A D
pt: g
8
ay In Indiana Ses f.. Big 5 Confer On Arms Cuts
U.S. Boosts Tries to Meet School-Lunch Red Objection Fund in State
$1,470,023 Set For Indiana
3
|
To Ceilings Slams a Lid On Size of Forces
By United Press
/
DEATH ON THE HIGHWAY—Marion County's death toll reached 80 when a Gl died in this W. Washington St. crash yesterday.
(AGAR AAAS ARMA ASSAM tA A
TI WRN AS a
Hitches lke With Jenner
Brown Positive
Two Will Get Along
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ
“Indiana Eisenhower backers
RAR AAAS LAL A 44K
By ED KENNEDY Two young soldiers homeward bound from a place called Korea. High speed on a Marion County highway. | A crash. : Death for one, critical injury for the other. A Crown Point family out for a ride in Lake County.
will give ‘all-out’ support to Sen.! A smash-up with a truck. William E. Jenner.
“And Ike will win the votes and influence of the state's Taft |
supporters.”
was Clerk H. Dale Brown,
This rosy Republican picture today by County state co-|
painted
The mother of five children dead.
The truck driver dead. Seven persons injured—one not expected to live.
Death on Indiana highways mounted with such reports
City Rebutts
VD Charges
‘Don’t Blame Us,’ Says Dr. Nester
Indianapolis, tagged the worst ‘U. 8. area for venereal disease |among soldiers, today hurled back (the charge with a “don’t blame us.” t Dr. Henry G. Nester, city pub-| lic health director, pointed to:
'steadily declining VD rate among
—Capt. Kurt Carlsen of Flying Today, Enterprise fame fell from his mo- check for 43 cents to the federal) torcycle and broke his collarbone production and Marketing
| Uncle Sam today boosted [Indiana's school - lunch proigram allowance $39,606.
State Supt. of Public In-
struction Wilbur Young said the additional funds would be distri{buted to public schools over the state to help pay for the ‘“hotlunch” and milk programs. The federal government alloted
Indiana $1,470,023. Last year, the bieu. arrested in Miami by the state was authorized $1,430,417, y : ami by
but ran out of funds in April. | FBI in connection with the holdMr. Young explained the state; yp of the Bank of America, Los
ran out of funds ‘deliberately.” . “We used up all our money 0 Angeles. Five of the gang were |we wouldn't have to turn any picked up in New Orleans, and ‘hack to the federal government,” (he said. “By deliberately giving lo, schools more funds we are arrested, the New Orleans five
Injured in Fall | [not obligated to turn back any, had about $5000 in $5 bills. left over funds.” - . pn
—Times photo by Lloyd B. Wallon
United Press ‘Telephoto.
NABBED—Mrs. Estelle Roche-
Capt. Carlsen
another in Los Angeles. When |
From Motorcycle Mailed 48-Cent Check
KIEL, Germany, Aug. 12 (UP) Mr. Young mailed a
Ad-| near here last'ministration. He said it was the night.
only “leftover” school funds the . The Wood- state had.
bridge, N. J, Mr. Young added: skipper spent the, “We were able to figure our| night in a Flens- school-lunch program so closely| burg hospital, that we have only 43 cents left! where a cast gver.” { was applied to, Under a federal law, the U. B.| the collarbone. grants such school-lunch funds; He left by trainto schools in every state. In In. ‘Oday
‘Many Places All Over City’
‘Real Gambling
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y,, Aug. 12-—The United States _ today proposed a disarmament conference of the Big Five to consider permitted arms ‘and agree upon elimination of |mass destruction weapons, includling atomic bombs. | U. S. Delegate Benjamin V.
|Cohen made the suggestion to the \12-nation Disarmament Commis|sion. With Britain and France, he |submitted a supplementary working plan designed to meet Russian JR an to an earlier proposal {to put ceilings on armed forces. On May 28, the three powers proposed that the armed strength of the U. 8. Russia and China should be limited to 1 million to {1.5 million men and Britain and |France to 700,000 to 800,000. Other countries would disarm on a |proportionate basis.
| Russia Objected
| Russia rejected that proposal as
(“radically deficient” because it |did not deal specifically with dis{tribution of armed forces among {the land, sea and air services and |did not restrict armaments per{mitted for the support of the armed forces allowed. :
{
Municipal Judge Phillip Bayt| When the Big Five reached. tentold police officers there
[tative agreement on their own {armed strength, according to the
B
this morning for/diana, about 25 per cent of the are “real gambling places run-iplan, regional conferences would Rotterdam, Hol- school-lunch program is financed ning” here; as he returned a split/be held to decide similar ceflings land, where his by the government. The remain-| qu. icion in a gambling case heard fOr the smaller powers. . der is paid either by the pupils in Court 3 | At the end of this serfes of or in some cases by the local Par- ars J. iconferences, Mr, Cohen said, all ent Teachers Association. Dismissing the case against agreements on disarmament would Aids Nucdy Pupils Hazel Marquardts, 953 8. Meridian|be incorporated into an inter- ) {national treaty.
civilians here. He suggested Army | {medics “get busy with their own |personnel—treat them, clean them Cpl. Dallas L. Aynes, Lafay- Up.” ette, was killed Aug. 1 when his | “Our rate was going down until
vehicle overturned on night ma- [the soldiers brought it up,” Dr. neuvers in Germany, the U. S. Nester said.
ordinator of Eisenhower forces, this morning. For Marion County, the 80th traffic fatality despite the Sharp differences hei. 4p, year was recorded with the GI's death.
tween Sen. Jenner and the Gen-| * eral on domestic and foreign pol-| In Indiana, 684 persons—|
cies. an average of more than
This rather “happy-go-lucky’ : ! statement is loaded with politi- three a day—have been killed
Capt. Carlsen
new Flying Enterprise II is anchored. Capt. Carlsen, a motorcycle enthusiast, was driving from his’ parents’ home in Denmark to
cal significance, however, since in traffic this year, state police y . .Junc am was St- charged with keeping a gam-| "%/ ; " Mr. Seni and Sen. Jenner have announced today. Arey reported today in Heidel- | However, Dr. Nester and other Rorergam when the accident oc oO as AS ing house, Judge Bayt told police]. Ve make clear.” he sald, that been at odds for many years. The toll as of the same date _ °° local officials pledged their best|™ yo won worqwide fame last rural and city schools. The pro-| “There are so many gambling reductions, prohibitions oe
There still hasn't been any kiss in 1951 was 700. | effort! to help lower the Army!
and make up. |" Latest fatalities in’ the. state;injured critically when his car|Fate. Pentagon. spokesmen in Party Welfare First
lwere: [skidded out of control and over- Washington had reported the rate But Mr. Brown has indicated he! turned near West Kessler Blvd. 2mOng soldiers at Camp Atterwill not let “personal feelings”
winter for sticking with his sink-'grams are administered by pices all over the city—real gam- nations (of arms) should insure
ing ship, the original Flying En-|school officials or local sponsors. | {the balanced reductio - terprise, until it went down off, Mr. Young's office has sent out Png places that are running—1| Me 0a win n of over-all the southwest English coast. contracts to the various school don’t know how we can stretch a/ = :
Sgt. Gilbert F. Wiese, 21, Drexel} | lcorporations to prepare for their point on this.”
Hi near Sriiadelbie. Pa. land U. S. 421. He is in Methodist Pury and Ft. Harrison twice the Urges Policing
: . Hospital. rate elsewhere during April and = . 1 - a Stan if the way ot the party S| Mrs. Ivan Terry, 30, Crown a or ighier, Mabel May of 1952. It's Safe, All Right [1950.5 nant) 8. Jequire The defendant had been sum-| “When the limitation and rewelfare. The county clerk has been py in : “Very Mihor Part’ CHICAGO, Aug. 12 (UP)—Bat-! . moned from her quarters after duction in armed forces and
’ already has sent Indlana its first lice investigation of reported armaments provided by t tered but unopened. That's the school fund quota for the year— a ho ere Pp provided by the treaty case history of a safe at the Hill- $176,403.
Behan Lumber Co. Burglars yes-
adi Ww originating the In- { Mr. Peters, Michigan City, was Sredited n engine E | Kenneth K. Harrison, 40, Terre killed yesterday eg his ie inMr. Jenner, opposed by Deme- Haute. jured, when their auto struck a , cratic Gov. Schricker for his U. S.| Pfc. John H. Dixon, 25, Chicago. truck on U. 8. 20 west of Toledo. all-out effort to do what we Senate seat, already has indorsed John Gibson, 18, Muncie. | trees ican.” Gen. Eisenhower publicly. But the! Elmer F. Peters, 54, Michigan Mayor Clark pinned the spread
Senator said he would not discard City. { Manning Quads ‘of VD by civilians mainly on
gambling at a tavern she operates or treaties are completed, proat the 8, Meridian St. address. duction of prohibited armaments : : = . “alli or, had will have ceased, existing stockterday attempted to open t § Before calling her, police g . with y but en ne Sale Reds Ask Bail arrested bartender Ward Brim|piles of prohibited armaments : : "SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12 and a customer. Brim later wasjand facilities for their production
the fifth attempt to blas apart. It to blast the safe (UP)—Caljfornia’s 14 top “Com- fined $30 and costs by Judge will-have been disposed of, atomic
“Mayor Clark called for an
hs “nationalist” views to conform, Homeward bound to Philadel-| . 3 8 ; int te : “ ; ” | treetwalkers arhateurs.” em ——————— munist leaders, lodged in the Bayt who found him guilty of energy will be utilized for peaceto the “international” policies of phia were Sgt. Wiese and his| Go Home to Pink ® foe dlkers and ateu —— ‘Los Angeles County jail since “gaming.” A five-day jail sen- ful purposes only and the interGen. Eisenhower. companion and next-door neigh-| | “I'm reliably informed by our Lock Out Victims [their conviction Aug. 5 for plot- tence was suspended. national control authority will
bor back home, Sgt. F. J. Dougherty, 22. Life-Long Pals
police that houses of ill fame play a very, very minor part in this,” he said. “There aren't any
Sen. Jenner is a vigorous foe of the United Nations and Gen. Eisenhower’s old North Atlantic
CHICAGO, Aug. 12 (UP) — ting to teach and advocate vio-| A patrolman testified he saw have assumed its full functions. Burglars pulled a switch here last'lent overthrow of the govern- the bartender collect a $2 pet “In this connection, I should night. They locked Dr. and Mrs. ment, yesterday asked the U. 8./from a customer who had placed emphasize again the necessity of
| And Blue Nursery
ATI 14, OHIO
Sun-Times,
ner the Indiana. However, Mr. Brown saia “it is almost certain” the General will speak in Indianapolis next month.
Treaty Organization army. Brown predicts the Senator and General will “pe closer together on issues.” “Eisenhower can get along with Jenner,” Mr. Brown declared. “He ¢ has a great faculty for getting dissident groups working together as a team.”
Nevertheless, Mr.
together
‘Could Settle Differences’
“If Ike and Jenner get down to
and discuss issues
unite, realizing they have a common interest and a common foe.” Two newspapers, ‘he Louisville Courier-Journal and the Chicago indicated Gen. Eisenhower would give Sen. Jenby *kipping
have
“brushoff”
Times Index
Grains per qubic yard of air. Today Yesterday]
1
tessa ern
and
sometime
WEYMOUTH, Mass, Aug. 12
They were life-long pals. Grad-' (UP)—Quadruplets born nearly really operating on a very large Harold C. Brill out of their home Ninth Circuit «while they looted it of $5600 in for release’on ball pending ap- a
uated from high school together eight weeks ago to Mr. and Mrs. four years ago. Enlisted in the John J. Manning of South WeyAir Force together. Served their mouth were discharged from hitch and won their Korean cam- South Shore Hospital today. paign ribbons together. | The quads—three boys -and a | Late yesterday they were driv- girl-—weighed a total of nearly ing home. They had been dis- 30 pounds as they were taken to charged from the service at Fair- their home where the living room {has been converted into a pink fand blue nursery. The
INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC CASUALTIES
control on rain-swept U. S. 40. R Sgt. Wiese fought in vain to keep p, control. But his car smashed broadside against the I[ront of a truck driven by Harry E. Steward, Plainfield. Wiese Killed Sgt. Wiese died. Sgt. Dougherty was in’ critical condition in General Hospital today. Mr. Steward was treated, but not admitted to the hospital, Mrs. Terry was a passenger in the car driven by her husband
ichard, 8 pounds, 5 ounces; John r., 7 pounds, 3 ounces, and Robert, 7 pounds, 10 ounces. Mrs. Manning, 27-year-old mother of three other children, said the quads each take about five ounces of formula every four hours. : “So I guess I'm going to be pretty busy,” she said. Her husband operates a bus line.
Ballerina Star
of Kenton, O., yesterday. {Miss Shearer Howard W. Bankert, 53, a re- was married to writer Ludovic ‘tired Indianapolis policeman, was Kennedy in 1930s
scale.”
The Mayor sald the problem ¢ash, furs and jewels.
was one of education rather than of enforcement. Dr. George W. Bowman, city director of venereal disease con-. trol, confirmed the Mayor's analysis of sources of infection. He said his office has had difficulty security complete reports from
But he said it was ‘not alarming —not above the point where any special action is necessary.”
Names No Names
Col. E. P, Beyer, Ft. Harrison commander, said a study of post statistics over the past six months was being made to determine the post situation. Dr. Nester named no names in tossing the essential rate back at the Army.
But State Board
this year. a total of 1103 cases were reported here-—612 syphilis and 491 gonorrhea.
TTT
i Help PAL Camp ie P remiere, Of ‘The World In
recent gambling
| peal. which is similar to roulette.
from a capsized motorboat along with Mrs. Coretta Martin (right) and her husband, Stewart, 40. Mr. Martin drowned.
Court of Appeals the wager on the “miracle clock,” our working out effective mainnovation chinery to safeguard and police
{whatever programs of disarma-
— ment may
be mutually agreed lupon under the procedures we afe suggesting.”
| Governor's First | Grandson Born
daughters, one by George,
|
A to
| to buy one that does.
cases they infants were dressed in i ' could settle their differences, (224 Daye) 1955 white batiste dresses and yellow the miliary 8910 the ry At Plymouth any.” 5 952 knit booties, sweaters and shawls. ; ‘ Mr. Brown acknowledged the Accidents ..... 4942 4796 They were carried by Mr. and ane FL, Harrison authorities said PLYLMOUTH, Aug. 12 (UP)— Indiana Republican Party was Injured ....... 2142 2107 Mrs. Manning and two nurses. ey had received no word from Gov. S8chricker’'s first grandson somewhat divided this year but Killed ........ 34 34 no» Washiogion on a rise in VD rates was born. today. explained it away, saying: Sarees sti —' AT BIRTH last June 18, the 2MONg their men. | The boy, born to the George “Right now we're going through BR To, Kansas City, Kas., to- quads weighed about three pounds However, Lt. Col. M. H. Judd, Schrickers here, was named *® a cooling-off period. And when a the 8500 block of W. Wash- each. Today they weighed as foi- assistant to the post surgeon at George W. Schricker Jr. He was the Democratic orators begin to nl 2 a0 : Sh) owe: Camp Atterbury, admitted a {horn 18 days short of the Goverblast away at us, Republicans will gion . eir car spun out of Elizabeth, 6 pounds, 41; ounces: Slight increase” at the camp. north’s 69th birthday.
The Governor has four grandand three by Henry Jr., Columbus.
Wide Choice of Homes for Sale
If the home you are now living in does not measure up vour needs and requirements, NOW is a good time At the
| when it crashed inte a truck B : h POs pare BORN of aan present time there is in The tates iis 9; riven by r. Harrison at the nt rey hips . . : Times a WIDE SELECTION Bridge nungiyes Hesss hos junction of Ind. 55 and Ind. 2. ecomes Mot er parting {iseases here Santyacied of home values from which to BANOTIEe oot vesss : 14 Mr. Terry, their 16-month-old. LONDON, Aug. 12 (UP) -- Ate ia} Tee) ere the choose. ~FOrUM - vor evrrovos haa de 200 Garry, were taken to Meth-|M01ra Shearer, omy training until it moved to © : SE Radio, Television ........ 10 odist Hospital, Gary: in critical ballerina star of ff Atterbury nearly four a bl BANCROFT Society “sieeciiinnnn . +.6-7 daw ie Stier Meiners of fhe Erith wovie ago. ! : 2 ! a. Rm yD Sipe low, loyely Hvine . | / njured. § es, : | room. nice kitchen nty Bports ...evieinenn 14421627 Pfc. Dixon was fatally injured gave birth to a EX , the Indianapolis ve. | Spee, "ran new, “maces wily 3 and two soldier companions seri- daughter in St. herea Sv ate Fare or the last | Sard 2.car gar. . Shown by appt. LOCAL TEMPERATURES ously injured yesterday in a crash Mary's Hosptial ter: years, according 16 Dr. Nes SEO. ¥. CLAYTON: RLTR. CR-OfMS 6a m..69 10a wm... 70 4 the intersection of old U. S.'last night. oe Svonilis G This is one of several hun7a m.. n A al 31 and Ind. 252. | Hospital au- 1947..... 1954 is Bi i | dred honies being offered FoF 3 3 Re * 0 1 P. m.. 75 He died in Atterbury ‘General thorities said the 1948..... 1636 1213 | ‘Sale in the easy-to-read Clas- » Mh. CL Pe Mes WY Hospital where his companions 8-pound 4-ounce 1949..... 1402 1399 | sified Real Estate pages of Latest humidity viesers 1% ‘were hospitalized. baby, like her 1850. .... 1375 1115 Yivttedf Pras. Tokeal i today's Tumse: Want Ai Hos ] y 5 y : He Teer urn to The Wan sePollen Count Ji Toe. Muntie Youth die} nen mother has. red rokseses 1003 th Toi SAVED HIS SON—Eighteen-month-old Lester Hardwick Jr. dog paddled 10 minutes in the St. | tion, choose several homes : Miss Shearer Ja : rough July Joseph River at Mishawaka Sunday until he was rescued by his father (left). The boy was thrown | that seem to meet your fam-
ily needs and arrange to inspect them right away.
et
8:30 P. M.
