Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1948 — Page 7

JULY 235. 1948

g Program ols OK Setup ucation Degree

NGTON, J ON, July 26 raining in ” master’s‘ degree has a co-operative prodiana State Teachers 1 State Teachers Col. > School of Education Iniversity.

ree candidates may Carry on work at any itutions and when 50 red 90 hours of credit attained at either of achers colleges they preliminary examina. ommittee of the three | if found qualified to 16 work will receive 8 to that éffect by the

fied candidates for the ee will be required to inal year in residence diana University.

' NEW RECORD for the first time on average milk producnerican cow was more pounds, approximately

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Though System Works "Occupation Still in Receivership; .

Demilitarization a Long Range Task py CLYDE A. FARNSWORTH, Seripps-Howard Staff W

First of

—7GKYO, July 26—The occupation of Japan, now

jis third year, is & success so far.

uch of a success, how much more it might have accomHow m - less it should have undertaken to do and to be done, are matters for conjecture and

plished or how m how much there t h e occupation as a labored compromise petween the extremes of right and

4 seit Americans who have had to do with the initiation and guidance of popular govern "ment here insist that the immediate danger is greater on the ¢ than on the left. They beHeve the greatest provocation to pring about communism in Japan would be a resurgence of diehard n. Jedction, in respects, notably in labor laws, the Japanese government has veered leftward. As one occupation expert put it, “They are closer to the Wagner Act. than the Taft-NMartley bill” He reminded that Japan's labor Jegisiation was enacted before the Taft-Hartley Law in the States. BR authorities understandably tend to overstate (for publication) the degree of Japanese initiative for political reform. Skeptical critics will tell you that every bit of reform has been spoon-fed to the Japanese. The balanced truth seems to be that Japanese initiative is neither #0 Jacking as might be imagined por American authority so omniresent. There is no accurate yardstick, put it is perhaps pertinent that the government section of the occupation headquarters has been reduced recently from a peak roster of 98 to 69, including clerks and stenographers, while Japan's two-house parliament, or diet, alone numbers more than 700, If Americans are still having to breathe down the neck of the Japanese government they are doing so with a creditable economy of personnel. Recovery Lags Economically, the occupation is still a receivership in the bankruptcy of an imperial nation stripped of empire and tremendously damaged in its home islands. There will be no recovery for Japan, even to a subsistence level for its 78 million people, without access to raw materials for its industries and world markets for industrial products int exchange ior food imports. Until that recovery comes—and perhaps it will be possible only under a “de facto” peace between Japan and one or more of the gllies—the United States will continué making up the difference between what the Japanese can grow on these crowded islands and what the people must have to eat. The prospects of a real and final peace treaty are not bright but they have not vanished. Militarily, t h e occupation achieved its primary aim a year ago with the physical demilitarization of Japan. But demilitarization in a broad sense is more than disarmament and demobilization of a nation bred to battle for world supremacy. JDemilitarization of Japan, as now conceived, entails the rebirth of Japan politically, economically and socially. And that is a long-range proposition : It is difficult to write of the occupation without using the word “democracy” and its derivatives. Communist exploitation has made its thoughtful use difficult. The word does not occur in Japan’s new constitution which Japanese will tell you sounds like a translation of an American document—and that is substantially what it is. In the Government section, American guardians of Japan's hew government fumble in- conVersation for synonyms of deMocracy. Some of them do not like to use the word because of Its inclusion in the lexicon of Communist propaganda. = They eauently/fettle on “popular govemment¥” which isn’t all they Mean, either, - If democracy is difficult for Americans to put in words how much more difficult it is for Jap2nese who never had it to put Into practice. But they seem generally willing at least to have a 8 at it. To date the greatest contribution of sthe Japanese to

their own future has been their docility,

Hog Prices R Highest Level

Hog prices today tied the year’s record set

stands

Rates from 25 to 50 cents high-! “700-1100 pounds er than Friday's averaged pre-|

Vailed in an active trade. Weighty butchers and sows

ingly.

st

Week, western cattle Coming into market, &re expected to drop.

July 26 HOICE

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. JONDAY, JULY 26,1948 __

U.S. Success in Japan

on July 12 of $3050 “700-1100 pounds ....c...... In the Indianapolis Stockyards. | 1100-1300 pounds

Some 600- 800 pounds were 800-1000 pounds |

Up more. The top was $30.50 sil 600- 800 POUNAS eres

The cause of today’s high liveStock prices is due to a between-|Common-qeasons shortage, authorities in ® stockyards said. In the next Good

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Columbus Calls Atterbury Parley

Meeting to Discuss Use of Army Camp

Times State Service COLUMBUS, Ind. July 28—A meeting of the inter-city action committee promoting the use of Camp Atterbury, has been called for 2:30 o'clock ‘Wednesday afterBoon in the’city hall at Frank-

L. E. Reeves. of Columbus, chairman of the committee, said the meeting would discuss available information on the use of Atterbury, The War Department recently announced that the big Hoosier military establishment would be reopened the first of the year. It has been reported here that Gen.. Jacob L. Devers, commanding general of the Army Ground Forces, will visit Camp Atterbury and Atterbury Army Airfield north of Columbus within the next few days.

2 Boys Blamed In Torch Injuries Of Hoosier Girl, 5

I — SOUTH BEND, July 26—Five-year-old Mary Jo Wolfe today was recovering from second-de-gree burns after two boys reportedly set fire to her dress yesterday. Neighbors of the victim, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jess Wolfe, extinguished the flames that almost destroyed her flimsy dress. Witnesses said that the boys had promised to give Mary Jo a dime if she would “stand still.” When she did, they said, the boys poured kerosene over her dress and struck a match to it. The child was released from St. Joseph Hospital after emergency treatment for burns on her left leg.

U. S.- Army Officer Weds Japanese Girl

TOKYO, July -26 '(UP)~—The daughter of Saburo Kurusu, Japan’s special envoy to the United States at the time of Pearl Harbor, was on a honeymoon today with an American Army lieutenant. i . Karuizawa Jaye XKarusu and Lt. Walter J. Waddox Jr, of Washington, D. C., were married in a civil service in Yokohama Saturday and an Episcopal Church ceremony here yesterday. The youngest daughter of the man who now is banned from holding public office in Japan, also is married to an American

White of Somerset, Pa., now employed in the allied headquarters, last Aug. 14. Kurusu himself married an American, the former Alice Little of New York and Chicago.

"Phone Industry Faces

Two Strike Threats WASHINGTON. July 26 (UP)

telephone industry today as four unions vied with each other to win the first 1948 wage increase for phone workers, - Federal mediation officials said

Ohio Bell Telephone Co. had completed filing under the Taft-Hartley law and will be free to Wednesday for a pay boost. The other strike threat was made by the Association of Communication Equipment Workers, affiliated with the CIO Telephone Workers organizing committee, CIO President Philip Murray is due to confer in New York tomorrow with ‘Western Electric Co. officials in an effort to avert a nationwide walkout of 20,000 installers of telephone equipment.

ise to Equal s of Year

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

5

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‘Peeping Tom’ Suspects Held Arrested After ‘ Series Of Prowler Reports Three suspected “ a. ne rey a gating prowler reports from scat-

tered sections of the city over the week-end.

A 14-year-old youth who admitted placing a ladder against an apartment building in the 2300 block of College Ave., was turned over to the Juvenile Aid Division today. » He was apprehended last night after Charles Watson, 664 E. 24th St., told police he had seen a man in’ a bathroom window from the ladder. ° Caught in Chase

While investigating the report of a “peeping tom” in the 1500

toms” | Mary

War Nurse Held as Siayer Tells of Love-Child's Birth

Calls Husband She Is Accused of Killing ‘A Father’ to Child Born of U.S. Sailor

MACHIAS, Me, July 26 (UP)—Atty. Gen. Ralph W. Farris was to disclose today why the state has charged blond Mrs. Margaret Marcil, 33, of Schenectady, N. Y,, with murder in the death of her husband Oscar, 56. . Mr. Farris had as his guide a pathological report, and statements by Mrs. Marcil, who, in defending herself from the charges, disclosed her J3-year-old daugh-j em ter Katherine was an illegitimate W885 given to her husband to inchild—born of a wartime ro- duce a fatal heart seizure at their mance with a U. S. sailor. {lonely camp near Vanceboro last “Why should I kill Oscar?” she Tuesday. :

sobbed in the jail cell she is T_T sharing here with an unkempt? Patrons Shot In Tavern Brawl

squaw who is serving a month adultery sentence. “How How Could drs] Two patrons who were shot Marcil. “He was a father to m ,jduring a brawl in a local tavern wedi TE nde geil ever early yesterday are in serious y, y y T condition in General Hospital toknew. He was even going to day adopt her and give her his own : mo 8 | The fight started when George

FREEDOM “TRAIN: PREVIEW—John P. Burger, 3619 Birchwood Ave., studies one of the panels in the exhibit of photographic reproductions of Freedom Train documents on display in the lobby of the Indiana National Bank. Fourteen of the most important documents which will be shown on the Freedom Train Thursday and Friday are in the bank exhibit, which opened today.

‘If Your Boy Friend Treats Us Right, We'll Treat You Right,’ Captive Told

MUNCIE, July 26 (UP)—Authorities today carried on a statewide search for two bandits who forced the manager of a supermarket here to open the store's safe for them while holding his fiancee hostage. They escaped with an estimated $7000. Don Tuttle, 28, said the two men accosted them early yesterday in a parking lot behind a drive-in movie and forced them at gunpoint to drive to thé market. th ier Mr, Tuttle’s fiancee, Mary Ellen Rush, 23, was held prisoner in a car parked on a nearby side street while he was forced to open the market safe. Wears Sun Glasses Miss Rush said one of the bandits, wearing sun glasses,

Mr. Tuttle said he first gave the two men his wallet containing around $10 but said they wanted “more than this.” So he and Miss Rush were’ forced into the bandits’ car and driven to the market they had just left.

Hunt Bandits Who Got $7000 While Holding Girl Hostage

told her that “if your boy friend treats us right, we'll treat you all right” as he held a -45 caliber revolver against her. Mr. Tuttle said he had tried

Then, he said, while one of the men “covered” Miss Rush in the back seat of the car, the other forced him to go inside the mar-| ket, open up a safe and turn,

a figure dart between the houses. " They chased the man and {caught him at 11th and Pennisylvania Sts. He was charged with vagrancy. ‘ When a resident of the 800 block of Elm St. heard .a noise on her front porch, she told police she turned on thé porch light and saw a man flee down the steps. A short time later investigating officers arrested a man whom

of a nearby residence in Cedar St.

Council to Discuss State Speed Law

The old question of a maximum speed law for Indiana is scheduled to come up Wednesday when the Indiana Traffic Safety Council meets to discuss possible new recommendations to legislature. It also was expected the council would discuss the possible need for the tightening of safety regulations on midget race tracks. The council, made up of representatives of various groups and industries interested in traffic safety problems, would make its recommendations to the six-mem-ber state traffic safety commission which in turn would draft proposed legislation. No specific recommendation on a speed law was on the agenda for the noon meeting at the Indianapolis Athletic Club, but the commonest maximum mentioned

block, N. Delaware St., police saw!

they saw crouched on the porch

thy

Army officer. She wed Lt. Frank g

~Two strike threats faced the In

independent unions representing 1 requirements N

strike after xB

to turn around after discovering the drive-in was closed but said the bandits, who apparently had followed them from the store after he closed it, walked up to them and told him that “we want your money. . . J’

Movie to Be Shown The Apartment Owners Association will hold a luncheon meeting at noon Wednesday in the Bamboo Room, Hotel Washing-| * ton. . A new color movie sponsored by the Indianapolis Water Co, ‘will be: shown.

contained some $7000 in cash and checks. : Mr. Tuttle said that after the robbery he and Miss Rush were driven to the edge of Muncie where they were released unharmed. The two men then drove off, apparently headed north, Mr, Tuttle said.

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HURTS HEAD IN FALL Helen Morrow, 6, was in senous condition at General Hospital today with a head injury suffered when she slipped and fell on the curb last night near her home at 919 E. 24th St.

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The wartime Navy nurse said Linder, 30, of 338 Beauty Ave, ‘even her husband's family did hit Malcomb Mabrey, right mannot {daughter of aA American sailor w. New York St. over the head \she identified only as “Paul.” | with a bottle, according to police.

| She had told them, she said,|

was killed in action. “I kept thinking Paul might come back and we would be married,” she said referring to the time before she met Mr. Marcil, who married her 10 months ago. | “Then I Met Oscar” “But I didn’t hear from him vagrancy. after Kathy was six weeks’ old, so I gave up. My letters came back marked ‘address unknown’ and after that I wasn't interested! ‘ N 5 in men. I guess I didn't trust ON Turnip Day

them very far. . “Then I met Oscar at a party] WASHINGTON, July 26 (UP)

in

Mrs.” Bonnie Alexander,

in the right side.

He came to the house often. He! Day” in Missouri. {and Kathy were pals on the spot.| He loved my baby.

believe I could kill him.”

for hearing here Thursday, de too. to plant some

nied official hints that something seeds with Congress.

P

i

Fa

Pretty, aren't they? Mother and daughter—and t

The kind you're seeing everywhere this summer

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Congress Convenes

PAGE! 7

Bank Burglary

Boys Find Bonds; Cash Still Missing

Part of the loot stolen from the Union Trust Co. branch, 1225 Kentucky Ave., by a clever band of safe-crackers last Wednesday was back in the hands of bank officials today. Four boys found $575 in war bonds taken in the burglary in a vacant lot behind 120 8. Rural St. and took them to the home of Mrs. Anna Perkins, 3001 E. Michigan St. Mrs. Perkins notified police, who made a thorough search of the lot and found other items taken from the bank, including a 150{pound money chest, 17 keys and an envelope full of canceled checks. ! 20 Bonds | The boys who made the find of three $50 bonds and 17 $25 bonds

know the child was the 28¢T Of the Pick-Way Inn, 928/¥ere Jack Trobaugh, 11, of 2829

{Moore Ave.; his brother, Walter, 8; Mike Franks, 13, of 40 8. Rural St, and David Bruning, 11, of

Police said Mabrey drew a guniggor Moore Ave /that her baby was born of. a and shot Linder in the abdomen) Police theorized that the yeggs marriage to a British soldier who h patrons wres ® who . ge {weapon from him. They said that|po¢ skillfully cut a hole in the the struggle that followed work

of the bank to avoid a netof burglar alarm wires, dis-

30, of] 706 W. New York St. was shot oso o, 811 but the $1500 in cash

obtained in the theft. The bonds were made out to

Both victims were taken to the Miss Rosemary Bowman, 1810 8. {hospital in an ambulance ‘Police Belmont St, a charged all three persons with She said

bank employee. she placed them in the money chest the day before the burglary.

Seized in Stabbing Of Wife With Harpoon

| NEWARK, N. J, July 26 (UP)

a year ago New Year's eve. He — The convening of Congress to-—Thomas Morris, 46, a machinseemed different than the others day coincided, as President Tru-|/Ist, was held on a charge of | —older, more settled, more stable. man has observed, with “Turnip atrocio

assault today after his

| wife, arie, 31, was alleged to

The President said that in his'have been stabbed with a home{home state this is considered the made “I don't see how anyone could best day for planting turnips to'around.” |{insure a good crop. He implied] Mrs. Marcil, held without bailithat it might be a good time, a homemade affair he used to legislative catch sand sharks on his days off.

harpoon for “running He denied the charge. The harpoon, he explained, was

\

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