Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1947 — Page 5
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| Supper” Sunday
terian ve. : nister.
ip: World.
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SATURDAY, OCT. 4,
Reds’
New Battle For Rich Area | | Reported Near
For Harbin
By CLYDE FARNSWORTH Howard
1947 . i
glans have trained Korean troops from the peninsula of Korea onto the mainland, apparently to join in the battle for Manchuria, according to Chinese intelligence reports. The troops were moved from the Russian-controlled zone in Korea. Their destination apparently is § Marbin, which has emerged as the i Communist nerve center in the bat- | tle for Manchuria. Harbin is about 400 miles west of the Russian port of Vladivostok and about the same distance north of Mukden, which is held by the Nationalists. The intelligence reports from the northeast indicate high pressure preparations for battle.
ove Kor
Your Newspaper Boy
By BARTON REES POGUE
T uroveu heat and cold, through rain and snow, “Regardless of how the winds may blow, Your newspaper boy will make his route So yow.may know what the world’s about, What's doing here, what's cooking there, The bubble-gum contest at the fair,
cE 5
vii Bay
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Troops To Manchuria
3 in Hospital After Knifing,
Stabbing Victim In Critical Condition
Plot to Smear Freedom Train
Of Communist Plan
By FREDERICK WOLTMAN Seripps-Howard Staff Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 4.5-The mayors lof 300 cities to be visited by the [Freedom Train were warned by its sponsors today of the Communist party's nation-wide plan to sabotage the patriotic project in their ilocal communities, . The warning sent each mayor credited the “timely and effective lexpose of the New York WorldiTelegraph,” a Scripps - Howard newspaper, with disclosing the plan. At almost the very moment the warnings went out, the Communists launched their first full-scale offensive against the Freedom Train i campaign, which aims to build RE-ADMITTED — Lady Iris {unity among the American people Mountbatten had the blessing | - Attacks Truman today of the U. S. state and | The New Masses, Communist
three persons to hospitals. The stabbing victim, Howard i Morton, 31, of 2334 Yandes St, is in critical condition in General Hospital. He was stabbed in a free-for-all fight at 25th St. and Martindale Ave. Police are seeking a man known as “Little Joe,” identified by the victimmnd witnesses as his assailant. 5 : : Injured by Bullet A bullet fired by an ex-merchant policeman investigating window breaking in the Park Theater, 2441 Martindale Ave. sent Cecil Warren, 20, of 3211 Martindale Ave, to the General Hospital, where he is in fair condition. -
_
Ho Name ‘Certain Country’
_ of Chefoo, apparently are respon-
[ Ingkal was said to have necessitated
mE HATA
Meanwhile, Communist propaganda rumbles with the threat of a sixth Manchurian offensive. The Nationalists’ resounding successes in Shantung, capped by the seizure
sible for the new moves by the Communists. ! The Chinese intelligence reports referred to the Korean troops as the “provisional first echelon.” They said the corps was commanded by a man named Han Chen. The reports discreetly referred to Russia as “a certain country” but the implication was obvious. “Many political and military officers sent from a certain country are found working among these troops,” the reports said. The Communist defeat at Szep-
the new recruits who are yndergoing rigid training in mobile warfare 20 miles west of the govern-ment-held city of Changchun, according to the reports. Women Conscripted, Too A general mobilization commit“ORY pi N organized st Harbin and men and women between 15 and 40 are being conscripted. Harbin became the Red eapital for Manchuria with the establish ment there of several important Communist offices including headquarters for the northeast, an ordnance bureau and administrative and fiscal offices for civil affairs. The city has a rigid rationing system which helps the Communists save up to 200 freight car loads of foodstuffs to be shipped daily to Russian territory.
Old grudges flaming into news, The editorial writer's views, Society doings, garden slants, How te patch a pair of ts, What to buy, where to spe os What you read, and when, wil depend. On your newspaper boy, the little elf; And how much pride he takes in himself At being prompt, on foot or bike, TN And giving the service his customers like. His “plant” is a million dollar concern, And it didn't take long for his bosses to learn That all the writing, the printing, the art Are lost if he doesn’t do his part. Strength in the editorial rooms, Papers that come from impression looms, The hours men sit at linotypes, The Hoosier Forum, likes and gripes, The efforts of businessmen to sell, None will click-if -he doesn’t do-well - rp At learning the things each patron. demands, And getting papers into their hands. He's a businessman, and by his deeds The paper loses or succeeds, So here's to the newspaper boys, who go Through heat and cold, through rain and snow!
who was once a newspaper boy, is’ happy to pay poetic tribute to today’s newspaper carrier boys who will be America’s leaders tomorrow.
BRITISH COAL
By Frederick C. Othman
Today is NATIOMAK, WEWRPAPER BOY DAY. Your rhymster,
James Hardesty, 57, 2548% Mertindale Ave. called police to ine theater at midnight. They found windows in the box-office and door |smashed. Mr. Hardesty said he heard windows being smashed and | upon investigating saw a man run| from the theater. He said he called | to the man to halt and fired three shots at him when he failed to do so. | A few minutes later police found, Warren emerging from Douglas park. He had two bullet wounds. Hé was arrested on a charge of vagrancy. Police said Mr. Hardesty had a permit to carry a gun but that he| has not been given police powers by the safety board in the past six| | years.
Another Victim Hit
is in fair condition in General.
involved: noe Sight Heads held op a vagrancy charge. ' Police also are investigating two
curred last night. ' John Price, 75, of 2602 N. New Jersey St., told police he was strong-
Way Back Into U. S. originator of the Freedom Train
tice Department objected to the re-| nvsteria—terror—fear."
Another shooting victim, John Lady Iris Hayes, 23, of 1034 W. 26th st., also| learned today.
A bullet fired by Patrolman Os-|of Ring Seoree VI, car Donahue winged Hayes as ®ave this country Hayes disobeyed police pu Jf to!0f failure to live up to the terms|NUge money bag on top of the halt. He fled from Carl's Barbecue, ©f her temporary visitor's permit, | locomotive. {on W. 11th St. where he had been|She has re-entefed o
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'hold-ups and a burglary which oc- {Months her four-months visitor's Louis A. Novins, vice president and
armed and robbed of $35 by two
he was putting his car in the
THREE: Became involved in a . men who slipped up behind him as|Pad-check deal. | « M. Ipson p S
justice departments after she party weekly, has just published an was permitted to “re-enter the entire special} ro un eu a (WON In an attempt to discredit the gounny So bermaent VIS8 oroject, It tries to depict Freedom granted in Montreal. Train's backers as war-mongers, ® . 9 price-gougers, Red-baliters and underminers of the Constitution and [1S ns Bill of Rights. { It also attacks President Truman, !FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover and | Attorney-General Tom Cla r k,
idea.
Cousin of King George Chief feature of the issue is a . two-page cartoon by William GropGets Permanent Visa per, veteran party cartoonist. It By ROGER STUART |shows Freedom Train speeding past Scripps-Howard Staff Writer |& scene of wreckage, strewn with WASHINGTON, Oct. 4.—Neither skulls and bones and labeled “race
the State Department nor the Jus- hatred” “KKK” “red-baiting” and
admission into'the United States of _ Pletures Capitalist i Tris “Mountbatten, it was| Astride Freedom Train, a bloated {capitalist in silk topper and “The titled Englishwoman, a cousin swallow-tailed coat derisively waves was ordered to the Declaration of Independence. He Sept. 1 becauseSt@nds on the Constitution and
a permanent] The warning against the Reds’ visa issued in Montfeal, jplan of attack Is addressed to Lady Iris originally: “mayors. of “ctiiey ot trie NIE HeY ONE: Overstayed by several the Freedom Train. It is signed by
permit issued Oct. 21, 1046. |secretary of the American Heritage TWO: Accepted employment here! Foundation, sponsor of th# train, contrary to her pledge not to do ss
‘None Serious’
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—The following information on how not to|S2ra8e “None of these offenses,” a State run a coal mine cost me $3.50, cash. You'll have to decide whether 1| Archie McKenzie, 38, of Franklin, was stung.
Capital correspondents (I must report for background purposes) | °° & man who robbed him at theiter” when she applied for a per-
news from a big-wig is to soften him up with food. So we gave our man|C 409 W. North Bt, last night.
ENGLEWOOD CHRISTIAN CHURCH
X lars who slashed a screen » ham, spinach and roasted potatoes; | ¥ her re-admission, coffee and vanilla ice cream. That’s|the problem of getting the most for [d00T to gain entry took two purses
where my money went, for my their investment, chose “off,” so I from the home of Beulah C. Ham-
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Department spokesman said, wu NEWS Bo S said he lost a wallet containing $49| considered serious enough to mat-|
have discovered by long experience that one of the best ways to pry Po o¢ Of 8 knife in the Kentucky manent visa last month. “Under the law, there was no reason to refuse
She re-entered under the British! immigration quota, which for years
Maurice G. Lipson has been chosen president and treasurer of {the Newspaper Boys of America, |Ine., and its affiliated firm, she C. T. Nankervis Bindery, to succeed the late Charles E. Knepper, former
lunch and my pro-rata share of his. The question then arose as to whether he would talk on the record, or off. “On” meant that he'd be identified in print and (he being 9:30 p. m.—Sermon: a cautious soul) that he wouldn't “TAKING A, CHANCE, VS. MAKING [say much. “Off” meant that he'd . . remain anonymous and hence All Seviens a Stated é Time—| vould say exactly what he thought, with a minimum of quibbling.
NORTH SIDE THE REPORTERS, faced with
CHURCH OF GOD CENTRAL CHRISTIAN . a W.. on. BE. CHURCH W. W. KING, Pastor
Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Special Rally -Day Program, 10:30 a. m. Installation Service for Officers and Teachers.
Sermon Subject: “Well Digging.” Youth Fellowship........6:0 P. M,| Glad Tidings Mission
Evening Service ..,...... 7:3 P. M. 1112 BE. New York St. Subject—"The Love That Calls Us Services Tonight—7:45, Rév. J. 8. Hodges.
57 N. Rural Street
9:30 8. m.—Family Bible School 10:45 a. m.—Worship. Sermon: THE GOSPEL: THE POWER OF GOD.” 6:30 p. m.—Youth Vespers
Delaware and Walnut Streets (700 North) Dr. W. A. Shullenberger, Minister. Bible School-9:30 A. M. Morning Worship—10:46 A. M. Music by Edellent Choir - Sermon: “A World-Wide Family of Faith and Service.” Youth FPellowship—5:30 P. M.
errr".
Sons.” Sunday—2:30 p. m. Guest Speaker—Rev, R. L. Chitty Sdsten to Our Broadcast 10:30 P. M. 7:45 p. m.—Rev. Verdi Allen, w-1-8-H Supt. of Mission.
BEREAN GOSPEL TEMPLE
Carrollton Ave. at 13th St. . Ford Porter, Pastor BEREAN GOSPEL HOUR Every Sunday, 4:30-8:00 A. M., WISH Bible School
Preaching Service Evangelistié Service
ALEX LEONOVICH, Guest Speaker RALLY DAY, SUNDAY, 9:30 A. M.
so NA RO IE STS AE
BARTON FLETCHER FAMILY DAY bury Seminar r PAUL “WALKER'S cous y -
ANT BLACK GRAN inois y OUR FAILURE” Woo a ilk Supt. YOUTR HOUR, 6:48 Joseph C. Black, Minister
SECOND FREE METHODIST
W. I. Car or Mars Hill Bus, Pershing at Wilkins, 2300 West.
coal. The situation is one that|an attorney for the society for the | TE \would give John L. Lewis the hee- last 18 months, 3 Local Places . 0 ’ pp S
lean identify him only as a very tm- M004, 2 N. Talbot St. One purse has gone unfilled. She did so after) cident and general makagen portant person, or VIP for short. | Hed 342, : securing her permanent visa at the) Other officers selected by the di'Now go on with the story: . " office of U. 8... Consul-Generall,...... of the firm are Arthur E | VIP, who'd been in Europe trying North Winship at Montreal. Her|p 0 (ice president; George to learn how best to help our allies, £2 0cie application was filed there Sept. 1. yer girector, and William G |said he supposed that England] ' never did have anything to export,
I'Th - jon-| \ ® consul-general had discretion |Redderson, assistant sales manager. ary authority to grant the visa |g | ; {James A. Lynch, sales manager, and except brains and coal. ounse 0S |Without consulting the State De-\y. ion p Burkhardt will retain their ree not Jong % well with | Pa Aon me mais. oc | POsitions of secretary and assistant either one, are they?” demanded an i 8 me | secr Sites se ee Joseph N. Myers, Ind iis 30 \agked for advice. ecretary of the corporation.
{ Mr. Lipson has been an active “They've still got plenty of both,”|%0rney, has been appointed general| Both the State Department and|,epper of the firm since its organVIP replied judiciously, “but their|counsel of the Indianapolis Legal the Justice Department, with which |, ion in 1932 by Knepper, Lipson production for export now leaves Aid Society, Inc. the directors an- tate customarily maintains close pray ang associates. He has me something to be desired.” hd {liaison in immigration matters, | di " ley no nounced today. {were asked if they objected to the oor hoe hi NBA's advisory and HE THEN: gob , . He succeeds John K. Ricles whogranting of a visa to Lady Iris, both Pr Ho oa, serves Yo newspapers got off the subject of served as general counsel for the replied, “no objection.” yin We U. 8. and Canada, British brains and took up British past two years. Mr. Myers has been | : ;
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bies. Seems that the better the! He is a graduate of Yale Univer-| . mine in England, and the more sity and the University of virginia BUrglarized
| " modern its equipment, the lower law sghool. He served five years in At French Lick the production, the army, three of them in the Buiglers. ylia_entera] the Mc-
FRENCH LICK, Oct. 4 -(U.-P.)— A newspaper publisher, a congress-
pF
; The IRVINGTON CHURCH of CHRIST
25 N. Layman Avenue ‘ Invites You to Hear
C. E. McGAUGHEY of WASHINGTON, D. C. In a Gospel Meeting Continuing Through Oct. 10 Tune in Sunday WISH, 8:30 A. M.
had mot regained con- Wallace Charges Plot
“I'm sure I don’t know the an-|E. T. O., and returned from active Kinstary Ice Cream Co. office, 3024 sue 2 VID said 1 thought it was service as a major of field artillery. | Martinsdale Ave. last night, took] simple, when I got over there | I learned that each coal mine has| vo bang Docks, 3 Hobe Sov ¥90, man and an industrialist will speak its own, individual union. When : Wemmer to 0 |40 keys on a ring and two worth- | Ting % Swo.tiay annus) meeting man moves from one mine to an-| |less checks, police were told, / of directors of the Indiana State other, he loses all his seniority - 3 At the Whizzer Motor Sales. 958 Chamber of Commerce here beginrights. And some of these miners| E. Washington St., burglars got $500 ning tomorrow, are digging in the same shafts their dmpaign g |in cash ‘and - an undetermined| 1", Peakers are Eugene C. Pul-great-grandfathers worked in. | amount of checks. (liam, publisher of the Indianapolis “So they refuse to move, And| The formal opening of the Wem- | Harry Pettigrew, operator of a Star; Rep. Gerald W. lands (R. while there are a few modern coal mer-for-Mayor headquarters at 33 barber shop at 936 5. West St. re-| Ind) and 8. M. Jenks of Gary, genmines in the Midlands” it is very Washington St. will be held | ported burglars took 52 rolls of | °T81 Superintendent of the Cardifficult to get experienced’ workers: ida at 3 a. i neXt! nickels, two rolls of quarters and | Regie-Tllinols Steel Corp. into them. And even when that is iv 32 m. 83 tn loose change from his shop| 1° Addition, Mrs. Nina Pulliam, accomplished, they do but little! am Wemmer, Republican last night. associate editor of the Star, who work. I asked one of these men, | Mayoralty candidate, will deliver th Si AN recently returned with her hushand coming out of an ultra-modern col- the first of a series of speeches . . from a world reporting tour, will Nery, why? outlining his plans for Indianapolis, Baby Still Unconscious speak at a ladies’ luncheon. “He said, ‘If these folks have all ected. The directors will discuss develthis money to make an elegant coal | Short talks will be made by Mayor | 12 Hours After Fall opments affecting Hoosier business mine like this, then they don’t need | L. Denny; George R.| An 8-months-old child was in in the fields of labor-management any special hard work from me. ” Jeffrey, campaign manager for city | critical condition at Methodist Hos- | relations, transportation, state and > v0 OR oadiates, and Mp. Rathetie |, today with head injuries re. | federal taxatiori, social security and THAT CAUSED VIP to gulp. And| The Rev. J.T Saunders, pastor | ceived in a fall from a living room | BEriculture-business relations. then he began talking to British of the Shiloh Baptist Church will couch. ual ghuks, oth ih tnd out " he give the invocation. | sciousness after more than 12 hours. To lead U.S i nt, ey can't de-| estes intnti The child, Frank Earl Sipes, ‘9S cide whether they want to borrow DANISH PREMIER QUITS of Mr. and Mrs. John oo pes oa DO has Into, Wor |any more dollars or not. | COPENHAGEN, Oct. 4 (U, P.).—|S, Lynhurst Dr., fell from the couch! P) —Former Vice President Henry | “Some think another loan would Knut Kristensen resigned as pre- laie yesterday landing on the back| A. Wallace sald last. night tha ibe & good idea,” VIP said, “put/mier today after the Radical Lib- : Be Sal DEL al . ut | of his head. Deputy sheriffs, called | “powerful forces” were trying to (others came to me with tears in erals teamed with the Social Dem-|to the home, rushed the child and | steer the United States into bo | thelr eyes and said please, if I had ocrats and Communists to win a his. parents to the hospital. | Mr. Wallace assailed big business) any influence in America, to see motion of non-confidence, 80 to 66, The injury was reported as oOn- in his speech at municipal ud] that they got not another dollar. in the lower House of Parliament. |cussion and possible skull fracture. | yorium : y They felt that they could work out| '
“It is dangerous to have Wall
a
All Eyes Or, S52 Jerusalem AST LAH BALE PROPHECY
EVANGELIST DEWITT S. OSGOOD - SUNDAY, OCT. 5, 7:30 P. M.. At The
NORTH SIDE CHURCH
ee | t1IEIT OWN affairs and be better off! ad
\ |unconditionally.
(Street men in control of our gov{ernment.” he said. Mr. Wallace said that in order to prevent a depression or war, and to maintain capitalism “Americans {must prevent private interest from conflicting with the general welGirls | fare.
At Methodist—Fred, Arlows Worm; John | — 4 Georgia Singleton; Lennie, Mary Campbell; Delbert, Wanda Hornaday; Joseph,
Helen Entight, Coen, Ruby sling, I RESCRII i IONS 04 Robert, Bylvia Spees, and Adolf, Virgin a At St. Franels—Clarence, Marie Burgess, | a4 5S. 5 iw and John, Irene Williams { " ol Robe
At St. Vincent" rt, Beverly Lyons. J. XN DAUG STORES £
‘in the long run, if th | s mamas 7 I Indianapolis | ‘While VIP was about it, he took a careful look around France and! Germany. What France needs, Pe EIT RODAY ior opvitts said, is & government in which the| p. m., 42d and College. people will have more confidence. Bho Scout Kwa: What Germany: needs a a chance Hips eit tai to earn her own living. Indians Siste Association of White Shrine , on» of Jerusalem-—Hotel Linooin, “I WAS amazed to learn two EVENTS TOMORROW {years after the war that for every|Charch Serviees—Protestant World Wide 10 Germans there are only nine Teen Music Canteen concert—d p. m. Wor | {pairs of shoes,” he said. “We insisted that the Germans surrender
|At Bt. Francis—Joseph, Mary Amsted 17:90 At arence, Charlotte Haynes, y and Curtis, Rosemary Scott, At St, Viseent's- Donald, Pauline Stultz, and Ollbert, Ruth Smith,
Indisns Astromomtionl Seelety—2 { . r 5 p.m . School of Music, 190 E. North Bt. DEATHS
That made us Daward H. Claman, 84. Aine B. WashBIRTHS ny n, cor scle a (conquerors responsible for directing Toi Minnte B. Crary. 78, at 5750 Washington SHOP : them, for telling them What tO d0|s¢ wethodtst—umes, Katherine Drake, Harvey’ Ham. 6. at Bt. Vincents, coro‘and how to do it. The sooner we hie nary’ MORRISONS
‘ geclusion. mcob Turner Hill, 74, at TIT BE. 58th,
J realize this, the better for BEurope| ss metmedis cerebral hemorrhage. . Leonard at. 8t. Vincent's,
Boys t—Louts, Bdith low; y and the rest of the world.” : oo, Oru Bass
Indianapolis’ Lgrgest
pa SA End VIP's I hope the . v 7% loalyin PF. Duke, 83, st Methodist, carei-
Women’s Specialty Shop
\ Averitt, . auditor will decide my $3.50 was At ~ Louis, Catellier;
spent.
noma. VITgil W. Haakins, 43, at Velersu's, earNog ;
Wiis junire, sug Fran, . 3 West Washington 34 fe TE A GE ERS 455 i . : v ge |
NA A bi a
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WT...
THE CONTEST WILL STILLGOON -
» ol PAR
(OVER $3,000.00
IN PRIZES WILL STILL BE
GIVEN AWAY i
Repairs Are Being Made . . .
and just to make doubly sure another blimp is being rushed air express from New Jersey « « « which ever one is ready to go up first —qgoes—as close to the original height as possible.
the thousands of We Hope * * * people who visited us yesterday were so pleased with the appearance of the NEW PEARSONS that it made up in part for their disappointment at not seeing the blimp in the air. However, we want to apologize to all of you . . . especially to those who were here during : the short fime the blimp was up and entered ; the contest.
Take Another Guess . . . .
if you guessed at the height yesterday and want to guess again when the blimp goes back up—O. K.—moreover, both your entries will be eligible for a prize under the contest rules. k
The Contest will be held for 3 DAYS ... REGARDLESS
Counting from the | time the Blimp goes back up . ..
WATCH YOUR NEWSPAPERS
* OPEN ~ Today and Monday 9A. M.to IOP. M.
il
