Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1952 — Page 4
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1952
N.Y. Siren Is Indicted As ‘Madam’ Of $500 Call House Se
Held Under $4500 Bail For Hearing
By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 27Red haired Erica Steel was charged formally yesterday
as the ‘madam’ of a flourishing a $500-a-night house of prostitution. 3 She pleaded innocent and was held in $4500 bail for a hearing on Oct. 6. The trim “28-year-old woman was accused of working with Minot F. (Mickey) Jelke, heir to a $3 million oleomargarine fortune, in a brisk cafe soclety call girl operation. The formal eriminal charges Included “conspiracy, keeping and maintaining a house of ill fame and maintaining a publie nulsance.” She was alleged to have used models and actresses in her rich-man’s sex syndicate. A NeW York grand jury returned the criminal information yesterday. It carries the same force as an indictment. The charges linked her with Jelke, the well-dressed, high-liv-ing, son of a millionaire who is slated to inherit his fortune in three years, when he hecomes 25. He was formally charged yesterday and pleaded innocent. The charges sald Miss Steel moulded the career in prostitution of Patricia Ward, 19... and introduced her to men for {illegal purposes. L LE The siren’'s Apartment, the charges stipulgle, was a "house of ill fame and assignation, a place for the encouragement and practice by persons of lewdness, fornication, unlawful sexual iIntercourse and other indecent and disorderly acts and obscene purposes.”
Ft. Harrison OK'd As Schools’ Site
Permanent location of the Army Adjutant General's School and the Finance B8chool at Ft. Harrison has been authorized in a new $5 million building program,
Erica Steel
The new building will house the .
offices and classrooms of both schools. Work on the new structure probably will begin early next year, according to an Army announcement.
Both schools now are oper-
ating in temporary quarters. They
have heen moved eight times.
New Kremlin Policy?
VIENNA. Austria, Aug. 27 (UP) Recent events in Russia and Its satellites have led qualified observers here to believe the
Kremlin {s entering a period of consolidation of gains and of conjeiliation of ‘ha West,
Russ Subs Hold Few Fears for U.
By KEYES BEECH
PEARL HARBOR, Aug. 27 (CDN)—The much adver- nerve-wracking war civilized man downfall of Madame Emilie Hon- real money. tised Russian submarine menace holds no fears for Amer- has yet faced.
ica's No. 1 submariner.
“Sometimes it can be just the enemy as it is to underestimate him,” says Rear Adm. Charles B. (Bwede) Momsen, commander of the United Btates Navy's Pacific submarine force, The Russians | are reliably reported to have between 350 and 400 “submarines to about 100 for the United,
States. But the Russian sub force figures Nr. Beech
must be “broken down’ to reach a true measure of comparative strength, Adm. Momsen says.
“About 150 of the Russian subs are the defensive type, little fel-
lows that carry only two torpedoes and have a decidedly limited range,” he continued.
“Many others are pre-World War II types, over 14 years old, with limited range and power. And it wasn't so long ago the life of a submarine was limited to eight years. Air-conditioning has extended the life span of the submarine, hut so far as we know the Russians haven't air-conditioned theirs.” It Is true the Rusians captured four of the newest type German
me to build him a winning submarine, I wouldn't know what to! OWNSTAIRS | RE e — (say, because there was never a { B Wh I weapon built for which there a anner :
wasn’t a counter-measure,” Adm.
production,” he continued. “There . 'is a grave risk in committing one-
. |stroyer hasn't a chance. It's now
{the butcher.’
them to where she had hidden the remaining loot, f | The fact the loot was no longer {there was laid at the door of one
’ wane nee Generosity, I'’Amour— [“Jojo the Breton,” a neighboring
{two-thirds the size of the conven- |, {tional submarine but loaded with the latest electronics gear and the) t eg an ap pi Y | |pander who had won his way to” PARIS, Aug. 27 egal age Hap 15 PIly francs, {fortune through Mme. Honore's
{best torpedoes. submarine is the most erosity and 'amour have been the|in cash—equivalent to $4280 in affections. Now Mme. Honore is
He thinks the battle of submarine vs. ore, a 62-year-old Parisian “chif-| me Honore's reaction was In jail and “Jojo” is on the Riy“It's like two men, mortal ene- elt Loo a at of a normal French eitizen, jera or somewhere; the police : \mies, placed in a pitch-dark room *|She staged a series of lunches, wouldn't know. as dangerous to overestimate 'and each armed with an ax.” he ing garbage cans. |dinners and banquets for her pov-' The cast of characters has planning, and the Admiral says says. “Each man knows the one It all began happily for Mme. erty-stricken friends. | been completed by the appearance if the Russians launch a large with the keenest ears will win, for Honore when her early morning| Came, then, two gendarmes who of an angry traveling salesman scale submarine building pro-/as soon as one makes a sound researches among the old to-{wanted to know where all of that Gaudineau who is still trying to gram they “can give us a grim audible to the other, he will be matoes and melon rinds suddenly/money had come from. _ |explain why he keeps his money time” in event of war. hit with an ax.” produced a neatly wrapped pack-| Mme. Honore told all and took|in garbage cans. “However, if Stalin himself] took me by the neck and asked
before it can itself be picked up.”|
S. Expert
Momsen said. “I would like to see our money spent on research and for the development of prototypes to combat whatever the Russians want to put up against us,” said the tanned, 58-year-old, much decorated admiral. “Then, once hostilities started, we would be ready to swing into
OPEN THURSDAY AT 12 NOON TO 8:30
MONTH-END CLEARANCE
self to one type of weapon, for there is no turning back. You have to use the ships you have. The sub-killing destroyer which! was once the terror of all submariners is no longer to be feared, in Adm. Momsen's opinion. “The odds between a submarine and destroyer: used to be about 50-50," he said. “Today, with the new, faster subs, the odds have shifted. Put two submarines to stalking a destroyer and the de-
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