Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 September 1949 — Page 25
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SUNDAY, SEPT. 25, 1049
Confusion Confounded—By Albert Ravenolt
Chinese Reds And Nation
> ' } " PA y re
8
Ne
Political, Military No-Man’s Land After Communists Cut Silk Route
CHENGTU, Szechwan Province, China, Sept. 24, — Although the Nationalists &nd Communists are fighting a bitter civil war, a hardy traveler can board an airplane in
Chungking, fly to Paotou on
the Yellow River in Suiyan
province, and take the daily train to Peiping, the Commu-
nist capital, ; "This curious paradox of Nationalist planes and Communist trains connecting at the same city is a sam-
Washington Calling—
ple of the of the civil war in China's Northwest. Most of Buiyuan and Ninghsia provinces has become a political and military no man’s land where Nationalists are at-
Russ Atom Blast Aids
Arm, Radar
Sharp Congressional Soviet Explosion; U. §
Expansion
Rebound Expected on . Stockpile Healthy
By The Scripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, Sept. 24—This country’s—even
world's—whole military picture shifted in few minutes it took President Truman to announce Russians have the
atomic weapon.
It gives new vitality to plea for 70-group Air
Force in-
stead of one based on 48 groups.
It puts steam behind drive for bill providing funds for far-flung
radar system to guard against sudden air attack.
It may mean expanded Atomic Energy Commission program. Truman annourfeement packed biggest security jolt in long
timie, but here are keep-your-shirt-on facts to ponder after you've
caught your breath:
“British and Canadians were
First, we've got healthy stock-| prewar partners in A-bomb devel-
pile of A-bombs. Second, we've
since first test bomb was dropped
$ lopment out since Congress passed advanced . as .jyjljan-control atomic energy act much again in atomic science ¢y)) exchange of information with | British has been curbed. It would gemonstrates dramatically the
at Alamagordo as we had up t0 require change in law for com-
that moment.
Cite 1945 Testimony HOW MANY bombs? We don't]
supply rests on public testimony back in 1845 by Dr. J. Ro Oppenheimer, now chairman of Atomic Energy Commission’s general advisory committee. Sen. Millard Tydings (D. Md.), now
|
Dr. Oppénhelmer Sen. Tydings Armed Services Commitee chairman, was questioning. It went
this way: : . Op elmer: “If we want to have, I will say, 1000 bombs, two
Tydings:
“In other words, it! so wonlg-take- two. }
rs... |
late 1000 bombs.” | Tydings: “If it were decided to make bombs from our peace-| time atomic energy, how long would it take us to complete 200?" Oppenheimer: “Maybe a little over a year.” Tydings: “How long would it take us to make 50?” Oppenheimer: “Maybe a year.” Tydings: “So that we are faced | with the prospect . .."” { Oppenheimer: “I think a year is too long; maybe nine months.” That was 46 months ago. Take most conservative slant on it—| rate of 50 per nine months. That | would -mean 250 bombs now. Take it other way-—1000 bombs
savvy is “way beyond where it| was when Dr. Oppenheimer spoke.
Expect Sharp Rebound |
CONGRESSIONAL rebound 10 ting increasing buyer resistance. Russian A-bomb announcement is | But General Motors and Ford are
likely to be sharp. House voted money for 70 | alr groups but Senate went along with Truman, cut it to | 48. House leaders say they'll not budge. Senate Committee Chairman Tydings has been | for 48-group plan, but big news | now may move him. Shoe is on other foot in regard to $600-odd million armed forces public works bill. This « measure contains $138 million of| projects — including vital radar warnings—for Alaska. But here Chairman Carl Vinson has blocked action despite Defense! Secretary Louis Johnson's warning that delay even until Janu-| ary “may prove tragic.” Senate)
on bill and it's on Senate’ “must” list.
Urge Big Stockpile
RESHUFFLING OF Atomlic| day; strike would halt oll and |
» Energy Commission plans will be necessary. Commission had al-|
more funds. How much more dependy on conferences between commission and national military establishment, with military calling signals. These conferences will determine needs for possible increases in output of fissionable material and finished bombs for growing stockpiles. Congressional call ‘for ‘“overwhelningly greater” stockpiles and since we've lost atomic monopoly, strength lies in stockpile size.”
. ” . ” Discovered by U. S. INSIDERS SAY U. 8. intelli- . _ gence officers, not British, discov-
ered fact of Russian atomic ex- |;
plosion. Top U.'S, British and Canadian atomic officials have
; 3 several days. British ‘suspected Russia had completed its first bomb but our own Information was elincher.
| tions, | treaties with this country. big congressional blast against doing business with Chinese Com-
plete swap of atomic knowledge. 1; reclaim their old self-reliance
" » ” ‘Reds Want Us’ QUESTION OF whether we hasten the day when Britain can know, ~but assumption of good recognize new Communist “Peo- walk unaided by America. be | pies Government” of China, now : {being set up in Peiping, probably will be put up to us in two weeks. arise from the new attitudes in Oct. 10 is likely date for launch Europe. Full employment, only
ing regime.
Reds want us—and Britain—to looked upon by some as a go whole hog, completely disavow hindrance to p Nationalists and accept Com-| But U. 8. is likely to spar for that it creates lower productivity time, demanding Reds assume all and lower real income. Similarly, of China's international obliga-| free gifts of money from abroad, list of once avidly sought, now appear
including long
Also
mies is certain. s ® ».
Hope for Steel Peace OF STEEL, coal and autos:
STEEL — Much of organized labor hopes there'll be no steel strike—Phil Murray victory or from European leaders who argue no. Reason is, long strike would emergency in years would be a lot of work, and which President Truman might the United States should prepare; the whole country would feel it.” pe forced by public pressure ‘to!to continue the financial support.| invoke Taft-Hartley law against Tie the first symptom of pol-| take © sin -Jf-{t--worked. re- 2008. ak " : Oppenheimer: “Yes, to eum ps would damage Tabor-taw Ye Uh Ménd-Theli- Ways {challenged 4he--Laborites to Truman and Mur|ray are smart enough to know
mean national
urray union: - peal efforts.
this. COAL — There's significant change in charges flying out of miner-operator talks at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Opeiators have been flaying John L. Lewis for stalling. Lewis was said to be awaiting steel settlement before talking business;
| mow he says that's what opera-
tors are doing. Add the two and you have indication both Lewis and operators think steel settlement won't be too favorable for union.
AUTOS—If Ford workers get, from present nite [th ate set in two years—and that would| Auto Worker negotiations with, . : mean about 2000 now. And our Ford management, they're likely |to spread to other auto Iustorles and
pensions
to That means higher costs,
chances for sizable cuts in car e hamperin traditions and prices go out the window. Recent | tI per'ng way.
price cuts indicate some smaller | economy.
independent auto makers are hit.
istill around peak production on
popular models. .
. ® . Steel Stockpiles Low ON steel supplies: Auto industry, user,
to six weeks’ backlog. -
Inventories among metal stam-|
pers-are lower; buyers are willing Park-Yur-Car-Cuss |
to orders. Ordérs from stove-makers fa
exceed supply even without strike. Construction steel supply| In east, stocks of plates
mm land structurals would last sev0 ites has acted favorably eral weeks; they're tighter farther west,
varies.
Pipeline tubing Is toughest spot—no inventories at all. Deliveries are used from day to
gas-line building quickly.
Over-all, consensus #4 manufac- | most finished its budget for fiscal turers would average one-month 1951 (beginning next July 1)— continuance; probably would but now it's almost sure to ask crisscross shipping to trade sup-
plies with one another. .
Sen. Vandenberg mn
SEN. Arthur H. Vandenberg,
longer.
aid bill
there. still
biggest steel the need for increasing produchas had eye on possibility tion, lowering costs of production treason ‘trial, which bore -a star|of steel stoppage for long time, and -improving selling methods tling likeness to the. 1938 Moscow has tried to build big inventories.'and abandoning Communist-in- purge trials. |One estimate is that it. has four spired strikes,
pay premium to get even small
a sick man, goes into home-town Grand Rapids hospital next week. Doctors have told him to delay no
-
tempting to retain the loyalty of in the northwest including The key personall the A al i oa Chinese Tukestan, are now complicated tical chess the Communists are seeking to scat | with remnants re- game is Gen. Fu Tso-yi, former negotiate a pehceful turnover: treat! into Tibet. Nationalist commandey for .The Nationalist .position in the capture of Lan- North China who surrendered China's vast and remote North- Chow the Communists placed Peiping to the Communist
armies last January. Gen. Fu Tso-yi, northwestern warlord, ruled western Suiyuan during the anti. Japanese. war, CE
BEFORE surrendering to the
themselves astride the historic silk route across Central Asia and split the Nationalists’ northwest position into the SulyuanNinghsia pocket and Sinkiang. fle the
Communist Commander Gen. slowly pushing north on the - Communists at Pel , Gen, Peng Eh-hual, advancing west Lanchow-Ninghsia highway the Fu became outspoke: opfrom Shensi nce, broke Communists are seeking to win posed to Chiang Kai-shek bethe highly publicized power of by ne, tions the area of In- cause he interfered in his Moslem warlords Ma ner Mongolia, more than four (Fu's) military operations
feng and Ma Hung-kwel, times the size of Illinois and
The armies of Ma Pu-feng, Inhabited by nearly 3 million over-all Nationalist commander people.
World Report— : Britain's Blunt Devaluation of Pound Decla
against the Communists and because of his faflure to allocate a significant portion of
Held to Reveal Self-Reliance
Compiled from the Wire Services Britain's devaluation of the pound the past week was ac cepted today as a sign of recov ery on the part of a nation that has been financially sick. The) cure is far from complete but the | patient definitely is on the mend. The British are taking serious-| ly the repeated warnings from the, United States that Marshall ald will be stopped in 1852. That means the receiving nations must § become self-sustaining in the next two years and Britaih is determined to meet that deadline. Devaluation of the pound makes possible many further meves in the direction of a {united Europe and a united west{ern world. It removes the veil of| {pretense imposed by pride and) |politics. The pound is again an honest currency. Devaluation
Signs that Yugoslavia had bolted the Soviet bloc in the United Nations appeared this .week when its delegates to the Assembly were reported campaigning for a seat on the Security Council in opposition to a Russian-sponsored candidate. Shown above is the Yugoslovakian delegation: Foreign Minister Edvard Kardelj (igh) and, left to right, Delegates Milovan Djilas, Viadimir Dedier@id Velko Micunovic. ‘Latin American delegations were reported enthusiastic about the move with Britain and the U. S. cool. ‘ .
of the pound| | determination of British leaders
and to face realistically the prob{lems of recovery, They want to
Curious Clashes
Some curious contradictions
the Socialist program should beias a foe of the Soviet Union and modified—especidlly - the social the “peoples’ democracies.” services—but admitted that there, The spate of confessions demight havé to be some retarda- clared that Tito, with the help of tion. ithe United States and Britain, He also said a British general planned to build a Balkan empire
yesterday a great goal, is now|
One school of economists holds
,/to be a danger. : Marshall Plan aid could easily become a poison which would slowly undermine the will of governments and peoples. The wisdom of setting a deadline of the pro\vision of American aid is all too evident. s An alhrming tendeficy has appeared recently in statements
course or falls back on “the found them out. miseries and Injustices of capitalism.” Sounds Keynote Meanwhile, Winston Churchill's Conservative Party sounded its 1950 battle cry Tat ah by ” charging that the govern-| ment's decision to devalue the Yygoslavia pound was a confession of Socialist Party bankruptcy. Party Chairman Lord Woolton sounded the keynote in a speech
British intrigue. . .
that their nations cannot meet the 1952 deadline and therefore
arguments when Commons de{bates devaluation next week. He|SOVernment. 4 o.an) ich Marshall ald+has the great re. early genemal election. —{sonaiiy-1a the HuRgani deeming feature that it is not| Lord Woolton made it clear the Russia. wanted |granted unconditionally. Conservatives would welcome any resent Yugoslav It requires that the receiving government move to seek a vote ith another “servile satellite.”
nation do something to earn it. of confidence on its decision to] Tito, as acting foreign mi
That requirement is to work with|cheapen the pound despite the. . panded over the Yugoslav] other nations to break down the!two to one majority held by Labor government's lengthly denuncia-| tion of the Budapest trial of Las-
false barriers to trade and inter- in Commons. course that have paralyzed Eu-| . {rope for centuries and provoked [past wars. : Hungary |" Regardless of whether the U. 8.! |can afford the donation of $5 bil- gary’s tough No. 2 communist yygoslav government
zlo Rajk.
|election within the next nine and had even persuaded Hun{months will determine whether garians to spy on their own Britain maintains a °' Socialistic country before the alert regime
Much of the examination of the defendants had little or nothing to do with the charges themselves, but concentrated on the alleged history of Yugoslav, U. 8. and
MARSHAL TITO last night|and war ‘handed the Hungarian ambassa-| {dor a note accusing Hungary and|
% {the Soviet Union of organizing a 3 foreshadowing the Conservative, = plot” to overthrow Tito's do for poison gs.
'sador, said Hungary and Soviet - to replace the government
alists Run A Strange War In No
have now turned Gen. Fu's antogonism toward Chiang to Red adavntage by sending the warlord to Paotou to negotiate with local Nationalists. As former senior Inner Mongolian warlord, Fu Tso-yl has great “face” in. that area. At present Nationalist Governor of Sulyuan, Gen. Tung Chi-wu, is a former Fu-Tso-yi subordinate. Many Nationalist officers and troops in Suiyuan and Northern Ninghsia were formerly in Gen Fu's command. Reports here on Gen. Fu's progress are skimpy. But
'
red a Sign
Plea for 70-Group Air {That a Nation Economically Sick Has Begun to Mend
Contradictions Begin to Emerge
bomber as well fighter force,
an atomic weapon.
swift and terrible retribution. this respect the news of
garded as bringing war closer, American . military
Vatican City
is outlawed.
proach.”
tates and the
Tito gave per- China —— GEN- OWU TEI commanders -chief of the Chinese Red Army,/'on charges in distributing the Communists the Communists newspaper to-| _ planned to . “liberate” Formosa, day accused the archbisho the Pescadores Islands, Hainan writing. Island and Tibet, Peiping radio;
{told -a political , conference
Peiping that
announced yesterday.
|
{a “judicial burlesque” and said it|of applause” from the more than church and LASZLO RAJK, once Hun- wag an attempt to attribute to the $600 delegates who ‘are shaping the vatican continues to serve the in. Neighborhood which caused come counter- framework of a new Chinese Com- {apests of capitalism.
{lions annually for European re- who helped clear the way for the revolutionary plans “which the munist government,
{not continue after 1952. Even if plotting to overthrow the govern-
the national income ‘of the U. 8. ment. {should go up to $300 billion a
Knowing this to be an unshak-\was “justified”. and twice said he Soslavia. {able determination, the Euro-qiq not want mercy. The court Lo. . peans will alter their ways, throw |, oreed, but accepted Mr. Rajk's United Nations ? | # {off the ancient hatreds, discard ),wyer’'s appeal for clemency any- RUSSIA'S {move on into a more stable, Two of Mr. Rajk’s co-defend-ants also were sentenced death, two received life terms and sup
Defends Devaluation Devaluation was defended yes|terday by Prime Minister Clement in prison. Charges against the General Assembly. Attlee at a Labor Party rally initwo army officers were transWales, held less than a’ week/ferred to a military court. |, Chilean Delegate Herman San after the pound was cut. All had confessed, almost 1 He appealed for all-out efforts proudly,’ with little or nq, falterto avoid inflation and pointed out ing.
sian “imperialist” moves Thus ended Hungary's six-day hi gave a 4
Testimony throughout was
He rejected suggestions that;pointed toward convicting Tito Andrei Y. Vishinsky.
rl sized or small countries.”
4
{ | 4
bly officers. {independent policy, judging eac
| to vote “mechaniéally.”
| Monday morning.
{have to say concerning Tito
| struggle with the Kremlin. | «0 . ”
‘Great Britain
changes In strategic | preparations on the | continent, | London said today.
. | bombers, )
plane from crossing its borders.
“Red Crusade” (way lagainst Yugoslavia was branded to|2 threat to world peace yesterday by Chile in the first open western | rt of Marshal Tito's vone was sentenced to nine years por at the hal T! ator | give the Communist armies [Hunan an almost unobstructed {route to Canton, the Nationalists’ where acting
ta Cruz, the man who brought theo esident Li Tsung-jen is still
Czech case to the United Nations |a year and a half ago, said Rus-| Molding out. against | “profoundly
The Yugoslav said it was not| 2 [Russia's “extreme hostility” that made his government bolt the Soviet bloc in voting for Assem-| He said rather that Yugoslavia intended to follow an
issue on its merits and refusing
| The foreign minister of the Bel- | grade government, Edvard Kabr- | del], is slated to be the first speak{er when general debate resumes
Western diplomats were curious {to hear what Mr. Kardelj would
Russia's achieyemen’" of an | atom explosion may mean major military European military experts in
| “ They said it appeared probable| that Russia would begin to switch some of its plane production from | Jet fighters Ho fast Strawaghurel
The Soviets had been mass pro-| ducing jet fighters almost exclusively, They figured that with-| | out the atomic bomb, the primary | duty of the Russian air force was to keep an atomic-bomb-carrying
Now the Russians will have to concentrate on an offensive
lief, the receiving. nations should|party’s climb to power, today Hungarian government, together, An order just issued by Gen- fecal aiso said during a short in. Who endangered children were be warned constantly that it willlwas under sentence to death for with the government of the USSR eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek will tory ; and the governments of the other result either in a general with- nowemen th head of the firm which bears his peoples’ democracies are dream- drawal along the south China de- at the Vatican could Gould be strpos 2 In*firm voice the lean, 40-year- ing about, twins aiid (ready tense line north of Canton or will 4j0 decree year, the aid shou stopped at g]d former inferior and foreign putting into effect against an in-gtrain what unity remains in the ; czechoslov streets, to his knowledge have not minister declared the sentence dependent Socialist country—Yu-|Chinese Nationalist front, a reli- echoglovakia becatise mot able source in the €anton govern- ,jios are active Marxists
ment revealed. . Chiang’'s order,
|draw to the Canton area.
southern capital,
” - . THE Nationalist blockade
5 av Do ‘A DRASTIC shakeup is ex-| ugoslav Delegate Ales Debler pected in the European top com-/onino from bad to wi fold a radio audience last evening mand of the International Relief 5 8 34 10, worse that the “East-West dispute is Organization thanks to the recent not so much a dispute between discovery that IRO trucks are lion refugees, is putting a severe
ideologies, as it is a dispute for being used to. smuggle cigarets strain. on the island's economy. paradise of Indianapolis with its communism strength. +
exerting influence over mediumiand other black-market goods Also,
|around Europe.
Harvest Moon
h
Traps 31 in Four Days’
As a defensive
At the same time, the United States, which. has been moving big bomber planes to Europe, may | mow find it wise to supplement these with its most powerful fighters in order to intercept any Russian bomber which might carry rats, two full grown ones.
The basic feeling among scien-| : . : tists and laymen was that the! On West Side, residents told Times they noticed unusual atomic bomb, like poison gas, efforts of rats or field mice trying to get into homes during cold
might cancel itself out as a war gnap, Some chewed through screen weapon because of the fear of| P 8 8,
In ussia’'s atomic achievements was not re-
missions have been touring Europe for some time examining the paths of possible invaders and their reports may form the basis of some form of anti-atom defense which would enable Western Europe to hold up or delay a Russian sweep.
THE semi-official Vatican City = newspaper Osservatore Romano! sald today it is “reasonable” t0||ega] department in court test of » tax 3 practice of te fear the approach -of World War! gigtricts for city departments. Heating separa! IIT unless the atomic bomb, a “terrible and inhuman” weapon,
In the first’ Vatican reaction Czechoslovakia to President Truman's announce-| | ommend, " ment, the newspaper sald the cused Czechoslovakia’s seconds| Peo unicipal sanitation atomic weapons race had begun rqnying Roman Catholic prelate district from city hall and set In earnest—"“a race between Who or treason—the first timé “such was the fastest, a race in whose speed, reasonably, war would ap-
It called on both the United) The USRR to reBounce 0.4 Wie sf he Place charged that Archbishop Josef humanity on thé brink of suicide. The newspaper did not mention the two nations by name, but its| meaning was clear when it asked tion degree against Communists. if between the two roads of peace) there did not lie. a third’ |course, “that of renunciation of know what an excommunication own the most terrible and inhuman/decree means? It is disruption, orm, such as it was necessary to Persecution, worse than fascism.icrisis for Indianapolis and Ham
The broadcast said his state- priest, said today there is no responsible for reckless operation The note called the Rajk trial ment was greeted with a “storm chance of Orchard
| ®_ =» ” this source; LONDON agrees with Wagsh-|plaint to persons not connected stated, has instructed the Nation- ington alist troops now defending the justify any attempt to negotiate error which appeared to attribute {Kwantung-Hunan border to with- a Pacific pact corresponding toiblame to this company for &
This move, if carried out, would treaty. in
” |really hurting Shanghai. Doctors ironic” ring to the proposal for 2 an ng iE of penibig five peace pact made Thurs- cijlin and other drugs. day by Soviet Foreign Minister)
Lom rh
.y a gat wil ; ; already individual Comnfunist and new money with the maine |: officers are reported tq have land commanders. oe been seen in Paotou pavticipat- Apparently, Moslem Gen. Ma ing In turnover negotiations. Pu-feng’s troops could have de- | Pilots landing at Paotou report fended mountainous i that Nationalist troops are province much longer if they: guarding the airfield and Com- had been given a portion of ~ ' munists protecting the railway the ammunition they had restation. quested. If the Communists through Fu Tso-yl in winning Suiyuan and Ninghsia, they will have won the entire north | west except remote Sinkiang, | And Sinkiang, pressed between Russia and Communist China, is too isolated long to remain
~ . y i
CHIANG’S attempts to halt mass defecfion to the Communists by the northwestern Nationalists is handicapped by the growing inclination of local leaders to climb aboard the Communist bandwagon and his personal reluctance ‘to divide the Formosa hoard of arms
Our Fair City— :
Family on So
Nationalist,
cometh it. BRIS Te
uth Side Wages Own Rat War,
Mayor Offers Hammond Legal Aid to Test Creatign of Separate Tax District Issue A SOUTH SIDE family saw so many baby rats cavorts ing in yard next door they decided on direct action. They set eight or nine traps. In four days, they caught 29 halfgrown
| Increase ih rats has been reported in other areas, too,
q
o CR NEST
: Mayor Feeney has offered City of Hammond help of City Hall
| | A
|
a A 5
RB
Impact of test here i it may determine whether Indianapolis can go ahead with multi-million dollar sewer project.
THE Communists today ac-
up as a separate tax and bonding | unit. That {serious charges had been levelled district
{here against a ‘major dignitary ithe church. 3 Communist - controlled,
cultural newspaper Lidove Noviny| 4 department. This t also the
Matocha of Olomouc was the into 8 A angemen here for
{author of a pamphlet which ex-! partm. plained the Papal excommunica- Departmal Eartier,
State ruled Indianapolis Health Depart ment could not continue to oper ate as separate tax unit and issue bonds. - : Ruling precipitated bonding
It added flatly: “Do the church dignitaries!
|a Judas service for exploiters. It mond, since court decision might
is treason.” } | | “Theodor Funk, the archbishop's gon 12 paritation units, ry secretary, last week . Was _sen- sewers city; needs: H d'8 tenced to 10°years at hard labor decision to test application of of “high treason” for ruling to sanitation department in ‘the pamphlet which courts thus affects our fair city, .e ns
P °f Not Responsible Minister of Health Josef Plo-| INVESTIGATION reveals that jhar, an excommunicated Catholic firm of John Ramp, Inc, was not
agreement between Of motor vehicles in state as long as the street-East Thirty-eighth street
{plaints last week. No conclusive The young, pro-Communist of- evidence shows reckless drivers few with a group of European R&mp employees. John Ramp, not carry out its excommunica- Name, says strict orders forbid against Communists employees testing cars in public
of the country’s nine million Cath. een violated by his men. Emsloyees back this statement, ate ribute ariving which caused come
that conditions do not with company. We regret the
the North Atlantic security |situation over which it has no.« control. :
” . ~ THE United Nations will be faced by the same problem which Exaggerated? faced the League of Nations at| FORMER Indianapolis resident the time of the Manchurian “inci-|now in Florida writes that Times {dent” if Hungarian and Bulgarian|gtory describing: tribulations of (troops disguised as guerrillas gioridans in hurricanes was ex
move in on the Yugosiavs; the Times 18 ‘qifrerence is that the United Ro EU ot
tions with American backing may urrica Bly where ‘the League did not SHS nen ois A eh in are. ” | Miami. » THE situation in Formosa is pier Hoopler. jos Batik The : v/ presence . of 300,000 Nationalist Was detrimental to state of Flori.
troops there, plus almost 1 mil-|da. “I have lived in this so-called
is gaining smoke and smog, also witnessed many days there in winter time that the street lights were on and car headlights were on at 10 and 11 in the morning,” wrote Mr, Betts, “Also Indianapolis is noted as a sinus belt and many people sufe fer from nose and throat troubles. I have fired a furnace in zero weather and carried out ashes, {run my battery down trying. to get my car started, also cracked my radiator.” Mr, Betts advised to this he ‘| preferred the hurricanes any day, Md r r FORMER Prosecutor Judson IL. Stark . and his former deputy, Glenn Funk, have agreed to end the law firm of Stark & Funk, friends sdy. Each will go his own way in law practice, with Mr, Funk opening his own office. . # ” . HEALTH INSURANCE men are still waiting for that (from the State attorney on whether it is legal to sell Blua Cross insurance on a city-wide basis in Evansville. ' y
: . =» ONE OUTSTANDING
