Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1952 — Page 15
D, 1552 ir hich was
year ago, mpathetic
d his 12th against six e Preacher with three ning. an Roe’s e and rode Smalley’s. er Hacker tter ¢ Bruce ie Smalley.
by Frank e from the wards was e third. Ben lded singles Hank Sauer run of the
onal League
1e Yankees’ single game 2, while New hington, 3-2. apturing his the Tigers pitching Vir'rucks. Each in the first ahead when ubled in the ale Mitchell's s 23d home )son on base Cleveland in
ne villain as S were coned a two-run is first of the 1 tie. ‘Walt the Yankees a pinch home with two out ited with his ie out-hurled
opened the to left and s four-bagger 1ts.
A’s beat the 5, in the only night games 1 a game and ce Boston in le race.
iling, Be Today
ress N.Y, Aug. Orange, N.J., San Leandro, today to join rites into the e U.S. tennis ip. But Ken lia was ailing da postpone-
1-seeded forrful threat to 1stralian final ng champion has a pulled icated his first nst Cal MeY. N.J., may nday and then esn't appear. tle bid against Philadelphia, 950 titleholder, New York for
f Miami, HamBaton Rouge, of Brooklyn Bartzen of Ft. he U. S. seeded duled for open1st lesser op-
yesterday folway as Sedg"ic Seixas of arica’s No. 1 eded stars to
off young Al ti in 37 min- ), and Seixas 1k Okev of Ro-6-1, 6-0.
-Walter Johnwon 23 games of 37.
Eddie Stanky al League three walks,
The Indianapolis Times
tw
FORECAST: Cloudy, scattered showers, warm today. Cloudy, cooler tomorrow. High today, 88. Low’ tonight, 65. High tomorrow, 82.
Sunday
Edition
63d YEAR—NUMBER 172
es
SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1952 i :
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily,
PRICE TEN CENTS
JET COMES APART—Two fliers were killed when a F-89 jet lost a wing at Detroit's International Air Show yesterday. \Four persons were hurt when the wing struck an automobile. Forty thousand saw Maj. Donald Adams, Mt. Clemens, Mich., and Capt. Edward Kelly, radar observer from New York City, die. Maj. Adams was a jet ace in the Korean War.
lke Declared Hard Put To Swing Taft Into Line
By EDWIN A. LAHEY MONTREAL, Quebec, Aug. 30 (CDN)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s chances of winning the support of Sen. Robert A. Taft (R. 0.) are about zero. This and subsequent observations are the writer's own opinion formed after a long private visit with Mr. Taft at his summer retreat at Murray Bay, Quebec, about 100 miles north of Quebec city. There are conditions under which Mr. Taft could be induced to put himself and his numerous followers in the Republican Party to the job of electing Gen. Eisenhower, But it is inconceivable that Gen. Eisenhower would meet these con-
jditions, or that his managers, particularly the Dewey wing of the GOP, would permit the nominee to meet them,
wants assurances
{that the nominee is not going to repudiate the Taft-Hartley Act, even by indirection. | And finally, Mr. Taft would like
First and foremost, Mr. Taft to see Gen. Eisenhower talking from Gen./llke a Republican and acting like
Eisenhower that friends of Mr. @ man running for President.
Many of these assurances Mr.
cial teacher on leave from
Taft would be taken into the| government. Taft would want in writing, so And he also wants assurances/that Gen. Eisenhower could not that certain Republican leaders talk himself out of them later. are not considered by Gen. Eisen- | The conditions for real harhower for the job of Secretary of mony in the Republican Party
identity of the leaders upon whom Mr. Taft wants the right of veto, but it’s a safe bet that one of them is Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York. . Mr. Taft also wants some assurances from Gen. Eisenhower
Hint Archbishop Ritter To Be Named Cardinal
Hoosier-born Msgr. Joseph Elmer Ritter, archbishop of St. Louis, is considered one of the “most probable” choices of His Holiness Pope Pius XII for the Sacred College of Cardinals. A United Press dispatch from Castel Gandolfo, Italy, last night said the Pope was drafting a list of names to replenish the College of Cardinals to its maximum strength of 70 from its present low of 46. Vatican sources said the former Indianapolis bishop and Msgh; Richard James Cushing, arch= bishop of Boston since Sept. 25, 1944, are considered the two “most probable” Americans when the choice of cardinals is announced. The pontiff held his last consistory in February, 1946, when he gave red hats to 32 dignitaries from 19 countries. Since then 23 Cardinals have died. Msgr. Ritter, who was born in New Albany 59 years ago, has been archbishop of St. Louis since July 20, 1946, when he succeeded John Cardinal Glennon, who died
in his native Ireland when en
route to the United States after receiving his red hat in the 1946 consistory. Before going to St. Louis, Msgr. Ritter had been in Indianapolis since 1917, He was rector of the Cathedral of Indianapolis from 1920 to 1933 and was named bishop of Indianapolis Mar. 26, 1934. The name of Msgr. John Joseph Mitty, 68, Archbishop of San Francisco since March, 1935, also has been mentioned, If he were elected as cardinal the Pacific coast would have the first cardinal in its history. The United States now has four cardinals. Other points which might be honored include Quebec which has been without a cardinal since 1947.
Secret Files Of the FBI . . .
You'll experience all the thrills of a detective novel when you read the stories The Times will start tomorrow from the secret files of the FBI. You'll learn the “inside story” of how the FBI nabbed a hunted crook on Indianapolis’ Monument Circle because he couldn’t break a lifetime habit . you'll thrill to the story of the “Luckiest Murderer in the World” . . . plus other famous | eases, For thrilling reading start with the very first story tomorrow... ~ ‘COPS AND ROBBERS’ Facts From The Secret Files of the FBI . . ANOTHER TIMES EXCLUSIVE
State. One can only guess at the thus appear to be well-nigh im-
possible to attain. If the split sends the party down to defeat for the sixth straight time in {1952, it might be the beginning of the end of the GOP, in the minds of some observers. Taft Not Bitter I can state with certainty that Mr. Taft is not a bitter man over his defeat in the Chicago convention by the high-pressure leaders of the Eisenhower crusade. Mr, Taft, who will be 63 in an-
everything. He is windburned! {and sunburned from fishing and
(golfing.
We originally had a golf date, | but Mr. Taft begged off because he had played 36 holes the day before, uphill and downdale on
‘Ithe Murray Bay course. He said
apologetically that perhaps he] should lay off golf for the day. With the ordeal of disappointment behind him, Mr. Taft quite honestly is looking forward to a| reasonably placid life as an in-|
other week, is relaxing efficiently | and diligently, the way he does/40 miles south of Charleston, |
{seas in the harbor nearby tossed |
Map
Code Wit
‘Teeth’
Tech Teacher, Wife Found Shot to Death
Apparently Murder, Suicide, Sheriff Says
Glen S. Bailey, 57, commer-
Arsenal Technical High
School, and his wife, Elsie, were found shot to death last night in their suburban home at Eagle Village, 15 miles northwest of Indianapolis. Boone County Sheriff Rush Robinson said Mr. Bailey apparently shot his wife and then took his own life. Mr. Bailey, on sick leave from the Tech faculty, recently had undergone mental treatments, the sheriff said. Dead 7 Hours The double killing apparently went undetected more than seven hours. A neighbor, Newton Templin, discovered Mr. Bailey's body about 30 feet-from the house when he investigated the absence of lights in the Bailey residence. He called Maynard Moore, Zionsville town marshal, who {found Mr. Bailey dead, a 25-cali-ber bullet through his right |temple. Mrs. Bailey's body—shot |twice—was found lying across the {door sill of the bathroom. Investigating authorities said apparently none of the neighbors in the suburban community of 75 residents heard the shots.
Hurricane Hits 3. Carolina
By United Press CHARLESTON, 8S. C.,, Aug. 30 —The Atlantic hurricane struck inland over Beaufort, 8S. C., tonight, raking the coastal city and nearby areas with 70-mile-an-| hour sustained winds. A weather station at Beaufort reported the ‘“‘eye’”’—or calm center—was directly” over the city. Beaufort lies on the coast, some!
where winds in advance of the! 110-mile-an-hour stérm center toppled power lines and sent residents scurrying to Red Cross storm shelters. Gale-force winds of 50 miles an hour raked this historic old city as the Miami Weather Bureau announced the storm was not go-! ing to make a last minute turn out to sea. | City In Darkness Sections of this city were plunged into darkness. Heavy
dependent elder statesman, kind of life that would not be his|within sight of Ft. Sumter, the if he were in the White House. [famed Civil War citadel. ° The political attitude, which|
not a dog-in-the-manger act. Feels Responsible Mr. Taft feels more deeply re- in deserting the beaches. sponsible than ever to the prin-|
the two naval vessels lying at anchor |
Hours before the storm born! will look like a pretty strong bill in the doldrums of the South At-| of goods to Gen. Eisenhower, is lantic six days ago reached shore, | |thousands of Labor Day week-| end vacationers joined residents!
The Red Cross opened school |
who stood with him to the end,| and who now face a possible {black-listing by the leaders ule |around Gen. Eisenhower. ond | The bitterness of the anti-Taft! people in the Republican party, | NEXT
i
CARDINAL? — Arch-
particularly the hatefulness of! bishop Joseph Elmer Ritter. (Gov. Dewey, is in Mr. Taft's memory, very likely, when he
goes over in his mind the assur-
Views on the News ances he wants from Gen. EisenII ————"
.|ciples for which he has stood buildings and other sturdy struc- | and for the Republican leaders tures here and took in refugees.
Rain battered the rough cobble-!| stone streets, deserted by resi-| dents who took to their homes to await the full brunt of the! hurricane. One of the refugees who left a comfortable beachfront cottage] was South Carolina Gov. James F. Byrnes, who said he had weathered four hurricanes in past years but this one looked
CAKE BAKING CHAMP—Johnny Hamilton's a
"rassler,” too.
Dan Kidne
MISSISSIPPI voters decided to keep the states dry. They are against government regulation of their booze.
# ” ” UAW-CIO President Walter Reuther called Adlai Stevenson an “independent candidate.” So far, he has been independent of that Democratic platform plank
calling for Taft-Hartley repeal. ing would not remain secret, and persons were wounded tonight, [competition against some 500
n o ” U. 8. AIR FORCE planes are flying Moslem pilgrims to Mecca, proving the magic carpet isn’t red.
Times Index
Amusements ........ 16, Henry Butler seeeecceess Bridge csesesnsssssscace BOOKS s.2000000000s0t0ee Crossword sessescsceesse 17 Editorials ...ceeeveeciee 14 Fix-It-Yourself ..coeeeeee 4 In Hollywood seeesvesees 17 Our Fair City tseeenasss 15 Radio, Television ...... 6, 7 Real Estate ......-29-31, 40 Robert Ruark .......ess 18 | Sermon of Week ........ . 8 Ed Sovola ...ce000000000 13 BPOrts .,vceceeveessss 9-12 Earl Wilson .ceeeveeeee. 13 Women's sss sssssnen 21-28 World Report cease RNN 15 Your Federal Job cececeees 4
17 18 23 20
hower. too rough. | Mr. Taft is and will remain a! High tides that preceded the Republican. But until Gen. Eisen- storm rolled against shorelines hower makes pronouncements from Georgia to North Carolina. that Mr. Taft regards as authen-|A billowing tide knocked down (tically Republican, he cannot|four wooden breakwaters on {HoRestly get enthusiastic about |Folly Beach, 12 miles north of | him. here.
A meeting was pretty well ar4 Wounded
ranged between Mr. Taft and Gen. Eisenhower in New York . In Muncie Row MUNCIE, Aug. 30 (UP)—Four
this week, but the Ohioan backed {out because he thought it might {make matters worse. Mr. Taft knew that the meet-|
that he might be confronted with none seriously, by shotgun blasts newspapermen and photographers set off by a neighborhood arguafterward. | ment. Expected Newsmen He knew that if such a meeting! 50-year-old factory worker, who with Gen. Eisenhower failed to| they sald shot Charles Coates, assure him on the matters he is John Redwine, and Mr. and Mrs, concerned about, he would say so Clifford Redwine on a sidewalk. publicly, rather than be used as All were taken to Ball Memoa “unity” prop, and such a public| rial Hospital for treatment. declaration would have a bad| Authorities learned that Bright effect, and Mr, Coates exchanged blows Mr. Taft is taking his own|in an argument started when time about seeing Gen. Eisen- Mr. Coates’. 3-yedr-old boy was! hower. He will return to Wash- “picking” on Bright. { ington on Sept. 8, his birthday,| Police Capt. Ted Bebout said mainly to attend the wedding of charges of assault and battery his son, Horace, on Sept. 9. He with intent to kill would be filed and Mrs. Taft then will go to against Bright Tuesday. Cincinnati. ~ i EH. It is expected that Taft will i find some time in his two days| Garbage Collections in Washington to confer with] The City Sanitation DepartArthur Summerfield, Republican ment will make its regular picknational chairman, but it isjups as usual tomorrow. The
eo r 4 . re
Police held James E. Bright,
highly unlikely that the Senator|schedule will include streets |o Will 208 the Generalat that time.'north of 30th St, : >
Johnny Shows Girls How to Bake a Cake
i By TED KNAP guard and centerfield on | Two hundred-one girls won blue school teams. ribbons for the best cakes in the| ‘Main thing about baking a State Fair 4-H baking contest. (Cake,” Johnny said, “is to be careSo did one boy. Johnny Ham- ful. Don’t just dump in the flour {lton, butch-haired boy from BF he ugan you got to mix in a Perry Township, stepped into the little at a time. y p Fp Johnny baked his first cake a /girls and captured a first-place Year ago. It was a butter cake,
the
|blue ribbon for his butter cake, 2nd not bad.
unfrosted. Memorizes Recipe That may have surprised the| Johnny took his winning recipe girls, but not 11-year-old Johnny. from the 4-H book, and he’s got
He already had won blue ribbons it memorized. If the man of the
with butter cakes in the Perry Township and Marion County fairs. Even his mother, Mrs. John R. Hamilton, 8. McFarland Rd. admits she can’t bake a better butter cake than Johnny. “He makes them as good as they come,” she said. Johnny had been active a couple of years in the boys’ 4-H club. | But he wanted to try his hand at| cooking and sewing and since the boys’ club didn’t offer it, he joined the girls’. Johnny 1s a “rassler.” The
house wants to try, here it is: 4 cup butter 1 cup sugar 2 cups cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 2 eggs 25 cup milk 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream butter (with electric mixer) until mushy, add sugar and beat well. Add mixture of flour, baking powder and salt, alternating with additions of milkvanilla mixture. Separate eggs, add yolks and beat well. Beat sixth grader wrestled on the egg whites until stiff and fold in. Edgewood school team (2 wins, 4 Place in 9-inch loaf pan and
losses), and handles himself well bake 45 minutes in 350 degrees. ® gasketeall court and base| Then don't go peeking ia. the . r
To Wipe Out Slums Here
New Ordinance Covers 33 500 Housing Units
Officials Slap at Tenants, Owners
By CARL HENN Health and holising authorities here are preparing to make Indianapolis: the only
major city in the nation without a slum. They are writing a pioneer ordinance for minimum living standards, setting them so high as to affect one-fourth of all dwelling units here—approximately 33,500 out of 134,500 units. The code cracks down on tenants as well as landlords. It makes tenants responsible for keeping the premises clean and sanitary, in line with a eonviction expressed by Charles E. Bacon, city building commissioner.
‘People Make Slums’
“Houses don’t make slums,” Mr. Bacon said. “People make slums. Filthy tenants can turn a palace into a pigsty.” Preparation of the ordinance— strongest of any in the United Btates—was revealed yesterday by Thomas E. Grinslade, chairman of the Citizen's Housing Committee for Rehabilitation. “I think it’s something we must do,” Mr. Grinslade declared. “The hands of the building commissioner and the city health director (Dr. Henry G. Nester) are tied at present because we don’t
Times photo by Raymond Bright. BACK STAGE—Cast of a Claire Nunn production which runs through Friday in the Butler University Exhibition Building at the State Fairgrounds do some mending between acts. Hondind are Marty Pickrell (left) and Greta Gray. Front are Claire Nunn (left), Pat Buckner and Bobbie Scholin,
Police Speed Traffic at Fair
(Other Stories, Pages 2 and 9) Another record crowd, more traffic jams and plenty of fun facilities are due today as Indiana's centennial State Fair moves into its fourth day. With good weather, today's paid attendance is expected to surpass 121,000, largest crowd so far this year and record for Sunday attendance. Veterans will be admitted free By showing discharge, Legion or other veterans’ group button, State Fair attendance records toppled again yesterday as 74,488 paid admissions went through the gates. Old record of 68,251 was get in 1949. Police and Fair officials warned that today’s traffic jams are expected to he worse than yesterday, when cars lined up for .as long as nine blocks at the eight
’
have minimum standards” Mr. Grinslade sald. “If we. get this
and tenants of sub-standard houses and say: ‘Here's what you must do to bring the place up to standard.’ ”
Ban Slum Overcrowding
The ordinance would enable Indianapolis to earn the praise of a nation, by leading the way to elimInation of blighted living areas. The code would force landlords to renovate sub-standard houses or tear them down. Slum overcrowding would be banned. Equally important, it would call for fines or jail sentences for tenants who insist on living in (squalor and refuse to follow {health rules. . Mr. Grinslade said his committee will sponsor the ordinance. |Other members are Mrs. Arcada |Balz, William H. ‘Book, Paul J. {DeVault and Donald T. Jameson. If adopted by Indianapolis, the ordinance will be sluggested for adoption by Marion County. It would be available as a state housing code, according to Building Commissioner Bacon,
Use Committee Guide Mr. Bacon and Dr, Nester are writing the ordinance, using a guide prepared by the Committee on the Hygiene of Housing, American Public Health Association. “Some of the standards in the guide are a little stringent,” Mr. Bacon said. “We will have to
ordinance, we can go to owners
compromise a little, here and gates.
ere, Police sald they would make| «yt the intent of our ordinance several streets one-way as crowds wii] be the same, and many spe-
of motorists arrive. They charged citid~provisions will be the same glow ticket sellers were snarling|,g in the guide.”
movement at the gates. Minimum standards Offer New Attractions {the model code include: Two new attractions moved into] ONE—Every dwelling unit shall Hooslerland’'s biggest Fair today. contain a toilet, bathtub or showLed by Marjorie (Ma Kettle) er and kitchen sink, and faciliMain and cowboy actor Rex Al- ties for disposal of garbage and
listed in
len, Indiana theater owners rubbish and heating water. opened an exhibit at the Fair-| Health authorities estimate at lgrounds. {least 5000 dwelling units in In-
| The horse show, annual Coli|seum attraction, opens its sixnight engagement tonight The Phil Harris-Herb Shriner show closes its Fair engagement today with a matinee performance in the Coliseum. Biggest attraction yesterday was the parade of 4-H champions in the Coliseum.
Wins Sheep Shearing Event Milton Van Fleet, 26, Evansville, captured honors in the sheep shearing contests yesterday. He won the professional class and then went on to upset Will Horner, the barefoot farmer from New Zealand, to become champion of champions. Mr. Horner took the top award last year. Miss Bevera Boyle, Sullivan County, won top honors in the 4-H state dress revue, with 93 girls participating. Sandra K. Williams, Hendricks County, was runnerup.
Today's Events
(Daylight Saving Time) 11 a. m.—Hour of Worship, Coliseum. 1:30 p. m.—Phil ‘Harris-Herb Shriner show, Coliseum. 1:30 p. m.—Horan’s Hell Drivers, Grandstand. 2 p. m.—S8pelling bee, en's Building. 8 p. m.—Horse show, Jan Garber and Orchestra, Coliseum. 8p. m.—S8tate Fair Follies, Grandstand,
Wom-
|dianapolis lack inside toilets. {Many also lack septic tanks. TWO-—No owner shall occupy or let for rent any dwelling unit unless it is clean, sanitary and fit for human occupancy. THREE — Any dwelling unit which is so damaged, decayed, dilapidated, unsanitary, unsafe or vermin-infested that it creates a serious hazard to the health or safety of the occupants or of the public shall be condemned as unfit for human habitation.
NOTICE
To Our Subscribers In Marion County
Delivery of The Times to your home on the holiday to‘morrow (Monday, Sept. 1st) should be made an hour or two earlier than usual. - If your paper has not been delivered by 4:30 p. m. tomorrow please. report it at once to our Circulation Dept, PL aza 5551. In accordance with our usual holiday working schedule, Switchboard and Circulation Dept. will close at 5 p. m.
The Indianapolis Times
»
