Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1952 — Page 2
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES J THURSDAY, SEPT. 18, 1952
U. Ss. To Lop Off Party Faces
Days Without Any Leaders
WASHINGTON, Sept. 18 (UP) -The U. 8. Communist Party appears headed for a leaderless
future as the government lops off the new heads which crop up
to- take over the Red hierarchy. |
The FBI's arrest yesterday of 18 Red leaders in Michigan, Washington and Missouri was another step in the government's campaign to cripple the Communist Party by eliminating its leaders. The government started off with the American “poliburo” in 1949. Since then it has concentrated on eliminating “second team” Communists. Justice Department officials refused today to speculate about any future FBI roundups, but conceded that rank-and-file Com-
munists who move up in party ranks to fill the vacancies left by! jailed or arrested leaders might]
find themselves the next targets. All but three of the Commu-| nists arrested yesterday were held -on $25,000 bond. The exceptions, / whose bond were placed at $40,000, were James Forest, chairman of the party in Misouri; Saul Wellman of Detroit, national auto coordinator of the party, and Henry P. Huff, chairman of the Washington State branch of the party.
2 Killed, 29 Injured In Truck-Bus Crash
SOMERSET, Pa.—Two persons were killed and 29 others injured today when an eastbound Greyhound bus rammed the rear of a ftrailer-truck on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, six miles east of the Donegal Interchange. Names of the two dead were not immediately available, Au-!
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thorities at Mt. Pleasant, Pa.
Hospital said an elderly woman nick, and he died of self-inflicted combination resulted in moral!
died of fractured skull. The other victim was pronounced dead at Somerset Community Hospital. | Six persons were admitted to each hospital. Sixteen were treated at Somerset and released while one was released after treatment at Frick.
8 Killed, 30 Injured In German Train Wreck
HAMBURG, Germany — The, Luebeck - Hamburg Express, jumped the rails mand jackknifed, a crowded passenger coach around a bridge support today, killing eight persons and injuring at least 30 others. The train was jammed with workers. The passenger cars were strewn across the tracks blocking all traffic. Elevated service to the city was blocked by the accident. The engine stayed on the track.
Wrécking crews began work to clear the lines.
Reds Free Bishop
HONG KONG — Bishop John O’Shea, 67-year-old Catholic missionary from Deep River, Conn. arrived in Hong Kong today after being jailed by the Chinese Communists for seven months. | Bishop O'Shea was jailed for his,
. activities in the Legion of Mary,
a lay Catholic organization.
* PENDLETON—State police today sought {Wo licudies sécosria atory inmates who stole a state truck while working’ at a stone quarry on the institution's grounds. They were identified as Floyd Harshman, 29, Frankfort,
and Wililam H. Walls, 26, Moores- |
ville,
Safety ‘Expert’ Fined FITCHBURG, Mass. — Sports Announcer Milton (Duke) Savitt, author of a recent magazine article on safe driving, was fined $20 in district court for speeding. As he left the courthouse, Savitt was handed another summons for parking in a restricted area.
The Real Thing
NEW YORK—Two bandits held
up a local theater last night and! ran off with $400 while some 200
persons were watching the main feature—"“A Man on the Run.”
{aimlessly for four hours before}
| misadventure.
Hunt Escaped Prisoners | :
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TRAGEDY AT CROSSING—A loaded school bus was hit by a Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad
coal train near Connellsville, Pa.,
Murder, Suicide Ruled | In Lovers’ Deaths
LAS VEGAS, Nev.—A coroner’s| jury ruled yesterday the deaths of | two young lovers in a lavish Las| Vegas penthouse was murder and suicide. The jury held pretty Betty
Baron, 25, of Los Angeles died of gun shot wounds inflicted by her fiance, Adrian Lionel Grod-
wounds. Sheriff's Investigator Llo yd| Bell testified his investigation in-| dicated 19-year-old Grodnick, probably was anxious over his impending induction into the Army and the couple’s plans to he married next week at a formal wedding. He said this anxiety may have been the motive for the tragedy. The officer revealed Grodnick, heir to a New York clothing fortune, had chewed all his fingernails down to the quick, indicat-
ing high nervous tension. 3 U. S. Generals 8 Lost in the Woods ™ BADEN BADEN, Germany — Gen. Omar Bradley, Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway and Gen, Thomas Handy went astray in the Black Forest yesterday while in-
specting the French-American maneuver area and wandered
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finding their way here. The red-faced generals, in a 9-car motorcade, ran down two dead-end roads before finding the main road andethen made a wrong turn. They sped almost all the way to Stuttgart before realizing their mistake. No one would comment on the
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No. 1 Hotshots As They Pop Up
Capone Kin, Others Arrested at Fight
CHICAGO—A new police
Ruling Delayed ‘No Strings Attached’ In Stern Case Excise Cop Is Dead vicina
y DONNA MIKELS Schricker was quoted as -saying|they attended the Chuck Davey.
The “tough cop” of Indiana’s|‘if he made those statements ri Rocky Graziano fight last night,
by 1 liquor law enforcement program fire him.” The arrests were made by 15
Alleged ‘Obscene’ by 13 y detectives led by Lt. osep died today. | But after a conference in which( ie 8 baandor of a.neW tn.
Evidence Barred, 2 whith ST Cloyd B. France, explosive, hard-| Chie ance was report [timidation and extortion detail Prospector Fairchild’s office pytine chief of the state's excise have stood pat on his charges, he set up to investigate labor bomb-
Reds’
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{found its hand tied for lack of ‘remained at his post and contin-| evidence today in the trial of once nice, died early this morn, 4 to potshot at “political hand-| Ings and other gang activity. {ing in Vincennes Good Samaritan, | Held today were Matt Capone, Duke Stern, Indianapolis magi- cuffs” on liquor enforcement, es-| “ » i hay: ¢ i {Hospital where he had been a) th Lak a4 Marion 44. once known as the “good guy, can, on u “harge of posesig aUELL ge Aus. SL. pecan" Lake ana Marion 4, © KBE 08 800d, 03 Faced with repeated objections , .1N® 56-year-old police officer ountles. listed his occupation as “speculalby Stern's attorneys the prose. ad Deen ailing since February Today Gov. Schricker said of tor» The others were also deig called, onl yt i S \When he suffered a heart attack Mr. France: “We have lost aitaineq at headquarters. lOtficer a Oe a of the at Butler Fieldhouse, during a|fine public servant and good cit | vide squad {basketball game. But he had re-/izen. He had proved himself well New Talks Set |'sAlfter Special Judge Charles [fused to “slow down,” and hadiin his long public service -both i ik Cook’ refused to 2 art in evi./continued actively in charge of On the state-police force and as In Atkins Strike : ON a deck of alleged nec othe excise force between attacks. head of the state excise police.” | pederal mediators today set a leards, the state rested its case. | No Intervention | Career as Salesman inegotiations meeting between la{Judge Cook postponed a ruling! | he 56-year-old graduate of In-/Dor and management representa {until Tuesday. Chief France was installed as 4... University Law Scho ol/tives of the strike-bound E. C, Complains of R head of the state excise police joined the state police force in Atkins Co. Borg-Warner Division, Sinpiains of Kulings early in Gov. Schricker’s adminis-|1935 after a career as a sales-|f0T 1 P. m. Tuesday. During the legal wrankle, Dep- y > Iman Expected to attend are James uty Prosecutor James Rocap tration, after serving since 1935 . Robb, director of District 30, charged the state was not getting/on the Indiana State Police. He was the oldest man in the (yniteq Steel Workers of Amer. ‘justice.” The attorney shouted: He took the post on a “no|1933 recruit class—gaining him ;.; gam Macer, staff representas “The state is merely trying to gtr ttached” basis, warning thé nickname he never lost tive of the union, Harold Weisen, : S'IIngS 3ttaches.' Lass, € “pappy.” He continued with the get the facts before this court ne would not tolerate political in-| PpY. ‘assistant to the president of E. C, |and asks for justice. If we €an’t/iorvention in his enforcement of| Late Police untll Gov. Schricker Atkins, and James Sawer, plant - { . | “borrowed” him to head up the syperintendent. -
{do that we might as well do away , | {with the system of jurisprudence.” |" State's lquor Jaws, | excise police in 1949. Early this| The union has been on strike ° year he retired from the state since June 9.
| Mr. Rocap later apologized for| He never 414, his remark, explaining he felt] Apparently Stood Pat | police but he continued in the ex- — jcize: post, ' Dies in Prison
‘very strongly about the case.” | once, in 1950, he let out such a ‘Utterly Fearless’ MICHIGAN CITY—Nate Smiley,
' At one point during the trial : ited Press Telephoto. | blast at the Indiana Alcoholic! puted press Teles Mr. Rocap rested his case, but gp, ...06 Commission for “ham-| Said State Police Supt. Robert 68, Who was sentenced to 1-to-10 O'Neal: |years in the Indiana state prison -
w w | Indicated he "was pering” enforcement that Gov. 3 d about to throw it out court for, “In my opion ‘Pappy’ was ain 1947 from Vigo County on a . lack of evidence. |Judge Cook ordered attorneys on very fine policeman, He was ut- charge of assault and battery {both sides to submit briefs on a terly fearless. He would never With intent to kill, died of natural legal point. The judge said he give ground when he thought he causes in the prison today.
yesterday, killing at least two children and injuring 42 others.
Warrant Held Faulty
In early hearings all evidence would make a final ruling after was right, was fair all the way obtained in the Feb. 26 raid on considering them. |around and honest to the core.” | Beyond a Doubt - the New Novelty Shop, 10 E.| Stern, 39, of 3419 Hillside Ave.,| A resident of Petersburg, Mr... MEMPHIS—Josh Winbush, 65, -
ke’ Guided lke’s Ancestors Guide / o_o By War cine Religion Market St, was thrown out after is appealing his Municipal Court France is survived by his wife, has filed suit for divorce on ~ Judge Cook ruled a search war- conviction in the case. He was Helen, and his mother, Mrs. Lib- grounds of desertion. He said
y of George Wash- (rant in the raid was faulty. (guilty in March, sentenced to 10 bie France. Services are being his wife left him in 1911 “and - trusted officer of 8 The postponement came when days in jail and fined $100. larranged in Petersburg. she hasn't returned yet.”
, Ayres & Co. rains a AT HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80,YEARS i
1872-1952
By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 18 — Wars ington. helped shape the lives of Dwight | Maj, Burland, 2 great great ’ . \great-grandfather n, enD. Eisenhower's ancestors but re ‘hower, Yecelved personal eomligion dominated their thinking. 'mendation from Gen. WashingKnown factors indicate the ton, Another Eisenhower forebear, strength and spiritual force. {John Matter, was a private in Miss Rosalie Bailey, a fellow Washington's army. 8 of the American Society of] The American Civil War, acGenealogists, said those char-/cording to Miss Bailey, was a acterists are evident among all horrible personal experience for of Gen. Eisenhower's forebears. Ida [Elizabeth Stover, EisenMany were religious leaders. hower’s mother, who lived in Many others were warriors. |Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. Gen. Eisenhower's forebears| “It convinced her of the wickedsought freedom when they came ness of war but she believed that : . to this country from Germany. everyone had the right to his own,
Often, they were involved in principles and permitted her son wars and violence. [to follow a military career,” Miss! Attacked by Indians {Bailey said. |
Indians burned the Pennsyl-|
| 3 ' vania frontier home of Peter] Big Tom's Drawback | Eisenhower, great - great-grand- | Walter F. (Big Tom) Thompson father of the Republican Presi- today was ordered to appear in| dential nominee, in 1756, shortly Municipal Court 4 next Wednesafter he and his father, Hans day for possible jury duty in a Nichol Eisenhower, settled there. drunken driving case. But he may An ancestor of the World War have difficulty in appearing be-! II supreme commander, Daniel cause his own trial on gaming] Burkhard, was a major in the charges opens Monday in Crim-| Revolutionary War, serving as a inal Court 2. f
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