Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1950 — Page 1
mething a little , to please Dad, AL. yon. have ss... be a small rehe meal, unless open. h he remembers you. The com= rjoyed for many lk, you may go a bus, or drive
more interesting e observed, -and yut wild animals
ong remember-—«
pe, ) ALL IT TAKES § BUSINESS... ESMANSHIP// |
1
“NUMBER 98 ~~
Fee Ne
For Phil
In Geography,
Red Raiders ++eNo. 1— : Conquest Wave Again Heading
Islands Stand Near "41 Position %
ippines
World Politics
This is the first of three articles on the Communist peril to
Py OLYDE FARNSWORTH, MANILA, June 17—The
the innocent bystander of a time and place to happen.
Harbor, in Hawaii, and at Clark Field, 60 miles north of Manila, thumped out the prejude to a march of conquest in Southeast Asia and the western
Pacific. : Formosa was then the princi-
thrusts into Southeast Asia toward India and Australia. Formosa seems again to be the prin-
cipal key to Philippine and Asi-|
atic destiny. Whether the loss of that Jargs «Russian Communist - coalition would bring the Pearl Harbor of a third world war or merely broaden and intensify an easier,
Liberation Army Needs
COMMUNIST capture of Fo!
equipment now needed by the sel of the Philippines.
It is generally acknowledged here that thers is no Way presently to block a gradual infiltration of such supplies into the
Philippines—or for that matter) of Red reinforcements to help put them into use, Apart from such an undesérved fate for a nation of 19.5 million people who wers freed by the United States on 2) La Red subjection of the would seal the fate of
outflanked through Indonesia more easily than it could be frontally attacked through Indo-China. . The application of these mill_tary terms to the creeping kind
Future Tied fo Formosa
BUT AS in regular military
the future of the Philippines are closely linked. has written off Formosa to Communist con-
quest—though capture of Formosa is by no means an immediate certainty—and-has declared that {sland forms no
R gbjechvs 18 an important factor. «For that reason the fate of
The United States
can line of potential defense In the western Pacific. The Philippines are another matter. What the United States will do or can do to save them, without intervention in Formosa, is a new headache for our policy makers and defense planners.
The Communists already have a beachhead in the Philippines, A *people’s revolution,” with effective American leadership at com-~ mand levels, is now trying to carve out a “liberated area” in northernmost Luzon, significantly facing the southern end of Formosa, some 200 miles to the porth. It is known that the prospect or promise of greater outside help, after Formosa, sustains this Red rebellion. The present reorganigation of forces against it bears promise of its eventual suppres-
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imi JS Just. one. of OVER
ONE THOUSAND real estate ads in the classified columns of The Real Estate Section (Section Four) of today’s Times! Yes, you'll find the home you want to buy is -advertised TODAY in the
now for homes from every section of the city and suburban areas, homes in every price range, new homes, older homes, doubles, duplexes, farms, lots, business and A al properties . . . TIMES, daily and you
we fry ypomdest terms of ‘strategie geography -and- the. potentials of world-power politics, the Philippines—and Asia— are just about back to 1941 when Japanese bombs at Pearl
Howard Staff Writer Philippine nation is once more world collision looking for a
slower form of conquest is a question that only time will answer. The Philippine islands and the rest of Asia could be captured either way, or by a combination of both ways; full-blown international military aggression, or steppe le warfare; sab otage and subversion in the name of the people themselves, In a minor but persistent way the latter kind of war has been waged here under Communist inspiration ever since the defeat of Japan in 1945. As long as international communism & win that way, it's difficult to imagine another Pearl Harbor. But that is no guarantee,
Heavier Arms
rmosa would make available for
“further Red aggréssion an IMnienss Arsenal of heavier arms andi
f-styled People's Liberation Army
¢{~ Communist conquest that ms most to threaten the nonommunist Orient is of course more figurative than actual. The progress of communism from island to island and coun-
{world war
would be rather an infiltraof leadership, technicians, and supplies with which to
I
within each country toward seizures of power in the name of their respective people. Communism is, among other things, a way of inducing a nation to conquer itself.
of base
part of the Ameri-
slon—if it should be forced to stand alone. Without a fresh impulse of leadership, altered strategy, expanded following, heavier arms, more equipment or more destruotive techniques, . the rebellion could not unseat the present government, according to the most authoritative estimates. But it must be assumed that help will be forthcoming for the Huks, with or perhaps even without the fall of Formosa. The ca; of that nearby island with its military stores would merely make assistance handler, more plentiful and more effective.
Drowns as Son's Rescue Try Fails
Local Fisherman Is
Reservoir Victim A 16-year-old boy tried desperately but unsuccessfully to save his father from drowning at Geist Reservoir in. Hamilton... County just over the Marion County line
Larsen, himself arrested and fined TW the 1945 case which hinged on
testified secretly and under oath before a Senate Foreign Relations|
vealed that Mr, Larsen gave the subcommittee an almost incredible story of FBI wire-tapping, backstage interviews with Republican Senators, diplomatic feuds, and the dfiuence-of -a-potent-bot-. tle of “Southern Comfort” liquor.
he recently testified before a State!
Communist but believed that his had a “Communist slant.”
{ployee of the Office of Naval In-
and support violent minor- house
Larsen Accuses
Ex-Lt. Roth as WASHINGTON, June 17 (UP)—A key Amerasia case witness has informed Senate investigators that he regards former Navy Lt, Andrew Roth as a Communist and the principal conspirator in the Amerasia magazine stolen
documents case, The witness was Emmanuel 8.
the theft of hundreds of diplomatic and military papers, He
Subcommittee on June 5 and 6. Testimony obtained tonight re-
Mr, Larsen also revealed that!
Department Loyalty board that he did not regard Far Eastern Diplomat John 8. Service as a
Passes Papers ! Mr, Larsen is a former emtelligence and the State Depart ment. He has admitted passing classified government papers to Larsen was indicted and fined $500 in the case after pleading nolo contendere, or no defense. The Amerasia case has been
ceremon versity. th Holmes, 5945 Washington Blvd.
Homer Earl Capehart Jr. (left) turns to greet his friends while his father, Sen. Capehart, sneaks a kiss from his new yesterday afternoon in Sweeney Cha e bride is the daughter of Mr. and
hone Rate Reduction To Be Urged
Public Counselor To Demand Decrease
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ The Public Service Commission will be urged to reduce telephone rates throughout the state, The Indianapolis Times learned last night. Public Counselor Walter Jones will demand Tuesday that the PHO reject Indiana BET Tere phone Company's request for a $5 million rate increase and, instead, reduce the present rates, The Public Counselor will make
his demands in a lengthy brief summarizing the year-old hear-
At the same time, Thomas Stevenson, general counsel for Indiana Bell, will file a brief on behalf of the utility; urging the PEC to grant the full proposed $5 million rate increase. Utility experts sald the tele-
a
daughter-in-5 | Tapproved by the commission, would hoost average telephone bills in Indiana more than §1 a month,
wedding Butler UniWalter C.
bin
hotly ‘disputed in Congress for five years with Republicans charging . an administration ~“whitewash” and a "bungled prosecution.” High spots of Mr. Larsen’s hitherto secret testimony. ONE: One of Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy's investigators promised Mr. Larsen that “ g
would be much easier for you'!{--if Mr, Larsen testified before thei Senate committees “correctly.” 3 TWO: A bottle of “So TI
agedy that has and Joe, 4.
| They don’t know--it yet, of Department officials have insisted. se and probably wouldn't un-
torpedoed. any. hopes. of efectiver/ derstand it if they did. So they're ly prosecuting the persons indict-| NaVIng a good time playing with ed in the Amerasia case. THREE: Mr, Larsen admitted that much of his previous testimony in the Amerasia case was “unsavory hearsay,” inspired by a feeling that Mr. Service sought to “put the finger on” him. FOUR: Mr. Larsen admitted that a. transcribed account of his 1046 testimony before a house committee was “fantastic and ridiculous” in referring to present Secretary of State Dean Acheson as leader of a little group “forcing a pro-Communist” China policy on the nation, He told the Senators he had “much faith” in Mr. Acheson, FIVE: Mr. Larsen quoted Senate Republican Floor Leader Kenneth 8, Wherry of Neb,, as say-
Slack’s down the road. Four-year-old Joe, of course, has first call on being Hopalong Cassidy. Back home, their mother was washing the dishes. She washed each dish carefully — seemingly taking as much time as possible iso-the-job-would last. She isa
Soviet Seals Off Baltic as Its Own
Denies ‘Freedom Of Seas’ Prevails
By HENRY SHAPIRO
Communist "Bible’ in Home Of Seized Traitor Suspect
Dean Slack’s Little Boys Don't Know Yet;
Hard-Working Wife Not Resentful _By ANDREW TULLY, Scripps-Howard Staff Writes
0,-N. Y., June 17a the un Alfred al C3 bon oo aiden Rood hare 1s 1h 197 wagon n run over by a caf, In & way, it seems a symbol of overtaken two little
Tommy and Joe are Alfred Dean Slack’s little their FBI had entered his apartment|g,iper has been arrested as a. : 3 hoy and
‘tapped his phone wire, Justice
that old sawhorse at Uncle Louis
Utility and PBC officials who have followed the telephone hearing from the start have privately
~ Before PSC Tuesday |™
phane. rate. increase. proposal, fl.
Nearly Half of List Have Criminal Records; 6 Accused As Killers
Others Roaming Streets Face Trial
As Burglars, Rapists,
apolis, Some may be innocent,
the streets, ‘About half have!
One of them is charged with. murder. Five face man-| slaughter trials. Thirteen are be ing held on charges of robbery with a deadly weapon, and 13 more for strong-arm robbery.
Four “are ohargesd WIth FADE 0
two with arson and one with reckless homicide. more face b 18 are charged with assault and battery with intent to rape, rob or murder, 8 Violate Bonds charges of grand larceny and vehicle taking. :
Two have been convicted twice on other felony counts, 18 others once. By Indiana law, three felony convictions demand a life sentence under the habitual
expressed the opinion that the Commission would probably compromise and grant Indiana Bell a $2 million increase.
Charges in Brief
ttempt to that Indiana Bell contributes to woman of about 40 with glasses the “high earnings” of Western jand brown hair that is gathered Electric Co. {above her ears and even with her| Basis of the public’s case will {mouth in that tight line and her be a contention that expenditures eyes starthg away the tears she extesding $10 million WHICH Trndlis not unattractive, but merely ana Bell has made for extension, very tired-looking. It is clear that construction addition or improveshe has done a lot of hard work ment of its plant and equipment in her life. without approval of the blic She is not resentful of report- Bervice Commission, cannot ers but she seems numb, as as a part of the utlllthough it's hard for her to think|tY's rate base. clearly. She doesn’t want to talk| Mr. Jones will attempt to prove about-her-husband-except- to sayithat the utility has failed to supthat she saw him in prison in|POTt Any reasonable rate base, Utica and looked “oh, aljone of the key items In the case.
- 5 Children Hurt
ing of Mr, McCarthy: “ ‘Oh, Mac| -
has gone out on a Hmb and Kind| ores, Saf Oorrespendent
MOSCOW, June 17—The official
by the American Telephone and . Counsel-
of made a fool of himself, and we have to back him up now,’ SIX: Mr. Larsen said Republican Senators were “all eager to use me.” SEVEN: He disclaimed authorship of an article often used in
in the magazine “Plain Talk” in October, 1946, He sald magazine editors were
arguing the case which appeared go
“very displeased”
She seemed annoyed that anyone 8. ould ask her if she believed her husband guilty of giving explosive secrets to a Russian agent. . But she said nothing, Just gave the reporter a look. n 0 CCl e y Then, suddenly, she let go. “Oh, could say he was a good provider. Of course, I could. Of course] One Victim Here & needs defense, But I don’t know what good it will do for me Only One Week to say anything” «| Five children — one a Polish publication- of the law instifute| This house of the Slacks is one of the Soviet Academy of Sciences most Americans would recognize. {declared today that the Baltic 18! There is one like it in every coma “closed sea” and attacked the munity—the kind that always has {western powers for their views to that ‘unfinished look. Slack built [the contrary, : {it himself of cinder bloc 4 it The ' publication, “The BSovietijs 5 one and: one-half story job tate and Law,” discussed an ac-\o¢ no particular distinction. It jademic dissertation by Legal Scholar 8. V. Molodtsov which
stands off the road in a settle-|
immigrant who has been in Indianapolis only a week—were recovering today from injuries re ceived in auto accidents yesterday. Three-year-old Jane Balon was in fair condition in 8t. Vincent's hospital with lacerations above {the left eye.
{ She and her father,
Roman {Balon, 26, were riding in a car
termed “untenable” the viewpoint that the Baltic is an open sea. Mr. Molodtsov said the Baltic
with his original draft because it did not reveal a “Communist ele-|
ment of little farms several miles 4riven b ( y Jan Domjala, 21, of 639 out of Syracuse, It is a section of rg 3% | CORAIARTE Ee ee ray (N. Illinois 8Bt., which was involved sly. {in a collision with a car driven hy|
criminal statute, These peopls are lst to bond under law, But bond is easy to
make when it can be secured
First of a series of articles. By BOB BOURNE Rubbing elbows with law-abiding citizens are nearly 100 persons charged with felonies but free on bond in Indians
previous criminal records, 4
Arsonists
Their freedom technically is
legal, and they are awaiting trial in criminal court. : Actually 98 persons, charged with 110 crimes, roam
time Mrs, Burney was killed, He was battery with intent to rape, He was out on a bond he pur« chased from a professional bords« man for $12.50. Another headline czse was that of Herbert Charles Bobbs,
The Public Counselor's brief List of persons free on bond apwill contain charges that Indiana pears on Page 3, 2 .{Bell is “subjected to undue feder-| income taxes by reason of its/from a professional capital structure which is dictated at $5 on the $100,
And bond is no individual will respect 'y Six persons in recen: weeks have violated their. bonds, That is, they have been arrested for-sommission of erimes while jout on bond on other charges, {How many. others havs followed suit and gone free is & matter Probably the most notorious bond violator in Indianapolis history is Robert Austin Watts, Twice convicted as the slayer
¢
took off today from Pearl Harbor at 10:20 p. m. (Indianapolis time) in an attempt to shatter the world’s trans-ocean passengers ca record with a. op
d with sssamit and”
£7
oyna
9 od “ rae ai I Two-thirds of a full company
of marine reserves in combat
equipment, plus three naval offie cers on leave and 15 crew: meme
of Mra. Mary Lois Burney, Watts
ing he has “utterly failed to * Mount, whose own grandson
goings-or: in Los Angeles ... Up at Monticello, Paul D. Abbott,
«+» + In a glass-topped tank, .
situation on .ecivvavnrrnens
Second Our Indians and Kansas City tle, covers the 48th Intercollegiate
employed there.” The story of
nomination at the Democratic convention June 27, Andy : Jacobs or Alex Campbell, Noble Reed discusses ths :
bers packed the big four-engined
was free on $250 bond at theiflying boat.
x » 2 5 First Section State Department takes another blast at Sen, McCarthy, declar-
prove a single. 1s 2 Tipton judge, Cleon W. faced him in the court
C room, dramatically written by Reporter Irving Leibowitz, Shriners’
weary of oppressive taxes, is
going to jump in Lake Shafer today and stay all summer
Even the “experts” don’t know who is going to win the Senatorial i
{ entire trsvassrsnsseivissnessens J FBEE 2
Section 3.to 3. Btaffer Jim Heyrock Rowing Regatta at Marietta,
0. Detroit gains another game in the American League by winning as New York Yankees lose. Southern California wins NCAA track crown, Eddie Ash's sports roundup, George Gahagan’s Hoofbeats, Art Wright's automobile racing col umn, Frank Anderson's Outdoors column, batting averages.
in the American and National Leagues and the
Association Radio programs and “On the ‘Alr”
Sessa sshesnprnnn
Meets Jaffe The published version, Mr, Largen sald, represented the work of Magazine Editor Isaac Don Levine Victor ‘Toledano, and Alfred Kohlberg, who has been charged
last night. The victim was Morris Pierce,
fishing with his son, Morris Jr., and a friend, James Crose, 27, of 1119 Deloss St. { As Mr, Pierce fell, his son tried to grab his arm but the father] sank out of sight. Mr, Crose also
-|tried to rescue Mr, Pierce.
They enlisted the .aid of two men at nearby Martin's Bait House, George Seats and Lee Matthews, who also were unable to find the body, Marion Coun-
Hamilton County deputies in
Mercury in Line.
For a Comeback 1 The mercury will make a slow “comeback” today following the lowest overnight temperature in two weeks. An afternoon high of 75 will be warm enough for golf, fishing or picnicking, but a mite too chilly for swimming.
gray clouds and no rain in store for the state today. kl Forecasters said the mercury
37, of 117 Shelby 8t., who fell in, from the bank where he had been|
ty sheriff's deputies brought a boat from Indianapolis to assist!
dragging the section of the lake.
To Hel
- That was the word of the weatherman who saw only a few!
with heading a powerful Nationalist China “lobby.” Regarding former Lt. Roth; Mr. Larsen said he is convinced that the former Naval officer “is a
{Communist, and he is the principal United States, Britain and Fra
conspirator in this ease.” It was Mr. Roth, Mr. Larsen said, who first introduced him to Mr, Jaffe while both were working for Naval Intelligence. :
{
from-the State Department.
Times Bicycle
\
- By ART
| club. re The Times is organizing a
club’s name implies . . . a “safe
ment” in the State Department.|
Thereafter, Mr. Larsen sald, he World War II and caused “severe pean Slack supplied Mr. Jaffe with coples of damage to the vital interests and country. It Mliehed sane classified documents which he re«/the age-old rights of the Soviet __a house built for his wife and movéd from the ONI, and later Union as well
p Prevent Mishaps
Safe-Rider Bicycle Club . . . an organization that will offer plenty of organized fun, outings, and even prizes. Se It will be free to every youngster who meets the qualifications. | And there will be only one qualification: To pledge to be what the ‘neat, if undistinguished. Every-|asve. He received minor injuries.
{Straits are a “seaway to a closed Ladder Still Stands Baltic mea” and the the Baltic powers have the right to close its yellow; -but Slack “hadn't finished approaches to warships of non- painting the window facings Baltic powers. ~~ oY _igreen. The stepladder he had been [He added that the Baltfe “Ha- using still stands against one side {tions also have an “exclusive/of the house. A start has been right” to establish a “navigational made on a lawn and some sap{regime in the Balfic straits which/lings and shrubs have been would Insure their operation and|planted here and there. In the protection.” (driveway, which is merely a The thesis the stretch of bare clay, is the Slacks’ nee jalopy —- ( for “illegally insisting on the full alt Yi. A Tort soupe {freedém of navigation.” a truck body, and an unlicensed Lt The Drineigle oe Jreedom, 1937 Chevrolet sedan. LC ged, ie 0 gross acis o : > i‘ violence and illegality” during Wis house gives ai} indisnl ate to his tit is
condemned
as other Baltic/two kids by a man making $75 a
+
igtates.”. ........ tory. Safe- In the long living room, there (are. a couple of {stuffed chairs,
® Riders a wrinkled rug and a couch. In one corner
tan
WRIGHT {ils an organ. It was Slack who |8lack, The piece on the music {rack was “I'm. Forever Chasing Rainbows,” by one Joseph Me- | Carthy. It is’ a ‘good house, solid and
club to be known as The Times
rider.” - thing seems to match pretty well did
in debt for them.
leather over-|
{Joseph M. Morgan, 35, of 134 W.
21st St. 3 t, : : The main part of the house is <8 at _.234 St. and Capitol! 1umntst Ed Sovola pland a “beer bust” in Washington ...Page 19
Ave, { The Balon family came here {only a week ago, bronco Poles Hunt Driver: Police were hunting a driver who was sald to have abandoned {his car after it ran over Jimmy (Biacett; 6, of 533 N. East Bt; near {his home, The boy was taken to Methodist HoBpital with head injuries and possible. internal injuries after the accident, which
occurred when he ran into the]
street. Linda Cooper, 3, Ft. suffered fractures of both legs {while running across the street in front of the home of her grandmother, Mrs: Louise Burnett, 1034 |W. 31st St. Bhe was hit by a car {driven by Dale Joslin, 18, of 1417
{ported as good at St. Vincent's Hospital. William Halsey, 3, of-512 Birch 8t., was struck by a car driven by
: Lexie Campbell, 33, of 15 N. High-| : iis a television set and in another iand. Ave. on Birch 8t. as he was Need a home in Broad Ripple?-Real Estate Editor Larry Stiller man gives the details for a $4 million housing project to go up in the northeast section of Indianapolis . . Business Editor Harold Hartley writes one of his columns . . . Automobile news . . . Exclusive real estate advertising etesstessssennssrssanvasassasnssecnseages dl-if
i i py he street. H | Indianapolis youngsters are going to have their own bicycle played this, according to Mrs. BE a.
injuries, John Quandt, 6, of 2933 Ma. Pherson 8t., was hit near his
home by a car driven by Aiford|
|B, Thacker, 43, of 3521 Guildford
Police, meanwhile, moved their
The Safe-Rider Bicycle Club will be The Times’ contribution with Slack’s reputation as a 1 to Indianapolis’ campaign to eliminate deaths and injuries among hard - working man who. drive -aSainst. spesders closer io youngsters on city streets and-highways.. It won't be a “lecture” things for himself rather than go
the center of the city. A total bf 52 arrests were re-
Wayne,
eiub, The youngsters will becomd safe-riders while having fun doing it. . : fa
. | | The club committee is working on the rules and schedule of th
ird book from the left or the charged against violators ranged
’ ‘iported between midnight and a] Everything, that is, except that |ate hour last evening. Speeds
would dip to 50 early this morn- : after- plenty of surprises.
ride rules
cycles should keep reading The Times
A Se OH OS I.
the fun program . .. and the members promise to come up with top shelf of the bookcase. 2 | Its title is “Das Kapital” and it was written by Karl Marx, and
|
when they can sign up. |it is the bible of communism. : ¥ @* 8 A :
i
from 38 mph to 56 mph.
BEE hE
the highlights .c.ovevveenes
American saseesteisees sree ss PAges. 18-168 «+ + « Complete listings and all srassnsnierassionsinsnseniage 18
|The Sunday feature page ... All the dope about Vincennes sesquicentennial , , . The complete text of “How to Guess Your
F
Editorials, Hoosler Forum, Dan Ki
Age” by Corey Ford and Gluyas WHHAME vs cuev ves Rage-35.
dney’s Dear Boss report from
Washington, world report, Our Fair-City and Washington
| Calling sosse
at the Fairgrounds, Latest r column and Erskine Johnson f{
natal care; the birth and the
South America ..ceveseesies
tO ON 2h Leese a tasiasatess Howe High Senior Judy Springer
recipes ccocvevsranacennnsnns
Amusements ..eesese.24, 25 Automobiles .s..assessees 58 Eddie Ash . Births, Deaths, Events... Business ... «+41-43 Clubs 33 Crossword ... 42 Editorials 22 FASHIONS svesascsnneones a7 Food Gard 8 sesvsscsnsnnne 38 Erskine Johnson ccsesses 25 Mrs. 10 -
sesssssdnca
seansnse
/
Seren anns sara RNass ERs RERaS trsanssaniy
CHARA RssEREARE
Sresssssscasssenens 4
i
exclusively in The Sunday Times for the next four Sundays . « + Katy Atkins takes her readers into Brown County and wily | {June is the month of weddings _ and [weelc-as-a-chemigt-in-a-paint faci 78th St. Her condition Was ré-| . a eerestosns is Teen of the Week . ,
on wedding manners . . . Fashions, Ee as arhenns veessssanss Pages 36-40
Fourth Section
Times Critic Henry Butler discusses all the plans that are nec essary to produce Starlight Musicals, which open July 11
ecord listings, Earl Wilson's n Hollywood «...«... ages 24-25
Third Section .
Mrs. Louis Mahern, Indianapolis mother, tells her.own story as she plans for the “natural” birth she expects late this month for her fifth child. Her detailed story, including her pre-
post-natal care will be told
you will read about _ ves Pages 53-58
Sess ss Renny
.
gardening and
« +» Times
Obituaries sesesnunanueis 26 i OthMABN cesessnsssasesss 19 2 Radio CEASA PRERNIERNAN NS 18 Real Fetate vovesovssesdl-43 Records ...iescnsnsnnnse , RUATK ssssesssssnsanpens 19 Soclety cevesssasnensadl 38 i " Ed Sovola essa snsinnse 19 Sports sense navaREN «13-18 TEENS «.cssssssvansoncns 38 svssennsses 11 5
