Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1950 — Page 13
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culty in figuring out what Purdue students do with their time, I became pleasantly aware members of Lloyd Smith's surveying class were every bit as interested in learning as any college student you want to meet at IU. One man, and he might have been joking, mentioned before the work was under way what a fine night it was for drinking beer. But he didn't dwell on the subject and that certainly is an indication that the young men of today are taking university work more seriously. I'm sorry I don’t have percentages and figures to throw in hefe at this time. - Mr. Smith, the instructor, put me on surveying team No. 4 with Bob Richards, Bob Staten and > We Joaded levels, rods, chains and tripods into automobiles and headed for the rehdezvous point, intersection of Speedway and Gent Aves, : ~ 1 gathered the problem was to survey a section of the road to determine the surface variations. My observation with a naked eye of that miserable stretch was ignored. Richards said he couldn't plot the description on paper and get a grade. : : The levels (I call them telescopes) are power-
<5
there had been any nurses looking out the windows, No. 4 crew would have been able to count freckles, -Shelburn started as rod man, Staten worked the level and Richards jotted the readings. I asked if a man kept the same job throughout the whole evening, \ Richards said since everyone was equally incapable of doing a good job, they switched. I wasn’t the one to question their proficiency, If they lacked anything in experience, they made up for it in show. Almost a Hollywood production showing the life and times of sufveying with John Wayne as top tripod man,
Same Old War
NEW YORK, July 10—This would be a costly way to preach a sermon, this trouble in Korea, but we are paying the price and might as well absorb the lesson. : Remember all that who-struck-John about the next war, the push-button war, the war of airpower, of guided missile, of germ and infected ~ cloud? The bold claims of the air forces and the test-tube commandos, the rocket boys and the Abomb babies? Okay. So we got a war. Insofar as the record goes, this is World War III. No deadly dandruff yet has powdered the shoulders of Korea. No clouds have spilled their poison on the Northern Koreans, No atomic bomb has been set off, Very few buttons have been pushed. 7 ‘The “useless” Navy has been fetched ‘out in ! force, to protect a flank and blockade Formosa from undue attention. The Marines have been called up. The first consignment of dogfaces has landed. Bayonets are still being worn, The friendly injuns panic and blow up the wrong bridges too soon and kill some more friendly injuns.
Picture Is Unchanged WE HAVE resolved into war again—war as it was recently fought, with cursing infantrymen struggling in the mud, airplanes dropping bombs in the wrong places, the gallant allies occasionally fouling up the detail, rat races at headquarters, bum communications, lousy weather, lousy chow, the Navy at work, the Marines at work, the infantry at work, the airplanes at work. In a sad way it is comforting. We have caught an awful lot of cheap conversation from thé politi: cal protagonists of all separations of service since the last signing of the peace. All have sounded off into whatever michrophone or mimeograph they found at hand. You would have thought, from the uproar of four years, that any after-dinner speaker, breathing into his half-demolished peas and chicken patties, could have knocked off the enemy with a rolled~up copy of his speech. Scrap the Navy,
Hoosier
x
Ha
As an of IU man who always has had difi-
ful. We trained ours on General Hospital apd.if..
++ « ALL COMMUNICATIONS O
/ Dam? Overpass? . . . Not this week but future engineers and Boilermakers alumni (left to right) Ralph Shelburn and Bob Richards are trying. Men called readings, shouted at one another. “Hey, what's that turning point again?” “Hold that rod steady!” “Get out of the way, how do you expect me to get my reading?” I looked through the level (still telescope to me) and my only observation was that our team should have had a nice-looking babe holding the
out, however, is rapidly
teur radio operators—commonl
known as “hams”--are organizing with a national group to make it impossible for any sort of disaster to cut Indianapolis and vicinity off from outside communications.
Co-operating with the American Radio Relay league, with headquarters in West Hartford, Conn. some 250 amateur radio enthusi-
becoming Quietly and without much fanfare a
A
radio organiza‘ion.
i
UT.
Spch startling headlines are highly improbablé but not alto-| The ARRL unit here also cogether impossible. That statement about communications being oPerates closely with the Ameri-
an impossibility. ° group of Hoosier ama-
——
ordinator in the Indianapolis area. He says he has .received splendid co-operation with other “hams” in the territory and now has a roster of some 250 who would be available in time of disaster. In addition to the 250, a smaller group of “hams” has gone farther in setting up an emergen y mobile This group
larea are preparing to *urnish or-| ection with the national set-up
girls go to Purdue? i Surveying must be fascinating. Probably a Sanized emergency communicawhole lot more fascinating if you know what tion in time of major disaster. is being done. I wasn't about to try and figure it 5-2. out in one evening. If Richards called 4.4 as his GEORGE 8. WOOD, 3607 reading, I wouid call 4.4. We came out even all New York St., the time.
{in order to be prepared for any Am
emergency. Currently about 20 “hams” have
imobile radio units built in their 24 hours daily and stands ready E.'cars and Mr. Wood predicts that to rush mobile equipment to any recently was ap-/the number will be ~lose to 350 Stricken area in the territory in a
When in Doubt ‘About People— GEORGE KING, James Davis, Charles Ball! man, Clyde Winkler, James Jones, Al Wochna,!
‘G Charles Warren, William Blevins, Ray Gong, Mar-| Boy, 1 4,
ion Bruce and Martin Bruce were the other men: giving Mr. Smith a hard timd. The unwriften rule)
| The thing that impressed metthe most about | the class was the fact that in their books they! have the heights of all fireplugs up and down! Meridiari St. They measure the heights as part of their course. Boy, would I like to have the! figures. " ¢ Just imagine walking along the street pos-|
sessed with the height of every fireplug in the father yesterday to investigate n vicinity.
inch, too.
1 hate to say it about rival they're on the ball.
Victim From Reservat
Purdue men, but | Reservation in Tama County,
Two Protest Rent Decontrol Here
U. S. Expediter
Receives Telegram Times Washington Bureau . WASHINGTON, July 10—Although the rent decontrol resolution passed by the Indianapolis city council has not yet been recéived: by Housing Expediter Tighe Wood, two protests against its approval came to his desk today. One was signed by Clarence L. Lyons, president of Local 23, United Automobile Workers, CIO.
By Robert C. Ruark
the airplane is here to stay. Junk the airplane, the guided missile is just around the corner, Destroy the guided missile—the scientists have perfected a radar-directed halitosis that can kill everybody with one whiff. But here is your war. What's news? The Navy's out. The Marines are landing. The infantry has arrived. The airplanes are in business again. Supplies are on the way. Gen. MacArthur, an old relic wha has merely fought successfully in two centuries, again is the hour's man. Soon we have the merchant ships, laden with hot-stuff, with the same old bonuses for the merchant seaman, and the same old no-dough for the men who man the guns. The Red Cross is girding itself for action. Mud, blood and censorship. Guys shot by mistake. People stepping on
pointed ARRL emergency co-
It was a telegram saying that he|’
within 60 days.
’ 1. : ets’ Indian aan et ah in doubt, = With Bow and Arr OWS
Backyard Prowler Wounded Three Times;
ion Pays Drunk Fine
By OPAL CROCKETT Richard Millais, 14, turned tables on pioneer history today. He! | shot a full-blooded Indian with a bow and arrow.
oises around their house in Des
Exact height to the hundrdths of an Moines. He aimed and shot three times. The arrows found their mark. Police found Edgar Poweshiek, 19, of the Sac and Fox Indian
Iowa, in the bushes. He pulled out the arrows—wasn't injured se-| riously, The Indian was charged! with intoxication and paid a $10 fine,
» ” ” Believing her husband is alive,! Mrs. M. F. Stralley of Ft. Worth, Tex. chartered a power boat in Prince Rupert, B. C., for a trip to desolate Princess Royal Island where her Air Force husband was lost in a bomber crash last February. American and Canadian rescue parties searched futilely for days for Mr. Stralley and four other Americans among 17 men bailing out from a cripped U. 8. B-36 when one of the plane's engines caught fire,
” # » Allan H. Warne Sr. will be host tomorrow night at a buffet dinner
their own land mines. War, the great conf: sion, but with a part for everyone to oy Ue7% | protests decontrol oR rents. in Now is a real fine time for the people who|indianapolis on behalf of 3500 have read the papers and listened to the radio Members of the union. addresses of the spellbinders to fix a simple fact| Letter Quoted in their minds. i Another was from a renter
whose name was not disclosed for War Means Men fear of reprisal which read:
NO ONE weapon wins a war. A plane is not a. “Dear Mr. Wood: Please, for} weapon. It is a messenger that carries a weapon, goodness. sake, use whatever
Wars cannot be won by mechanical aid alone, Power you have to keep this deWars need people—soldiers, sailors, fliers, mer- control from going through in In-| chant mariners, Red Crossers, Wacs and Waves, dianapolis. The city council has Wars need goldbricks and rear echelons and/voted for decontrol.” ; morale inspirers. Wars consist of mud and mis-, 1f the council resolution is takes and stupidities and courage and cowardice.{Properly drawn and passed there No machine will win one. No single branch ots. JIOHHING he tan go der ihe ’ {new rent control law which went the service will win one. No selfish publicity cam- int ffect July 1. Mr. Wood's paign will win one. Wars are won by taxpayers] no eilecl Juiy L :
{office pointed out. oe War in our time seems to be an ignoble neces-| a in Indianapolis City
sity, with the. wrong people getting killed and a Clerk Richard Stewart said all inspurious air of sportsmanship governing the OP- formation would be forwarded to eration. War is unfunny, undignified; and often|washington today. uncouth, but when you get mixed up in one you. ~ need everybody, not just some Buck Rogers with!
a handy-dandy chemistry set. : 4 Bitten by Dogs: |
a father for the fourth time in
in Hollywood to # appear in the
“TT WASHINGTON, July 10—Until last’ Sunday night Zimmerman's Hungaria, Inc, Irving J. Balaban, prop. was a large cabaret in New York, with a modest floor show, and an unfortunate = sreity of customers. Proprietor Balaban, an intense little man in heavy -horn rims. blamed this- onthe r= ment’s 20 per cent tax on everything eaten and: drunk in his place. So he fired the floor show and bounced the-dance band in order to eliminate the-tax. ih oF To the Senate Finance Committee, considering excise taxes, Mr. Balaban presented pictures of . A sign now hanging in front of Zimmerman's Hungaria. |. “This says the new policy Is sensational,” said Ben. Ed Johnson (D. Colo.). “What is sensational about it?" : “Allow, please, a little for advertising exaggeration,” said Mr. Balaban. “You use the word, sensational, to get the people to read the rest of what you've got to say.” : “But what did you do?” insisted the Senator.
No Concert Orchestra Tax
“INSTEAD of the band, the dance team and the girl singers, I put in a concert orchestra,” replied Mr. Balaban, “There is no tax on concert orchestras.” “But your sign says gypsy Sen. Eugene Millikin (R. Colo. “A gypsy concert orchestra,” corrected Mr, Bal“And it goes on to say that there are also table strollers.” the Senator insisted. “Do they wiggle while they stroll?”
music,” interrupted y.
Wiggles and Tax By Frederick C. Othman Rat Nips Boy, 1
Mr. Balaban said the strollers did nof wiggle.
They were members of the band, who fiddled, not sons bitten by dogs in Indiwiggled. A wiggle, it turned out, is taxable un-{anapolis and one child bitten by
der the Bureau of Internal Revenue’s regulations; a fiddle is not. : In quick succession the Senators considered the taxes on whisky, cigarets, cut plug chewing tobacco and numerous other items. They gave each| pleader, except Mr. Balaban, who got more, five minutes. Eventually they reached A. K. Barta, secretary of the ethanol committee of the Pro-| prietary Association. These are the people who! use alcohol in patent medicines and who do not think it should be taxed. The Senators were in-, terested. : !
Sen. Millikin muttered something about Peruna. “Whatever became of Peruna?” Mr. Barta said Peruna had its greatest popularity long before "his time, but that he understood it had a tonic effect on many patients, | “Oh,” said the gentleman from Texas.
Whisky $1.75 Gaollon <r]
‘CAME THEN R. E. Joyce of the tax council of the Alcoholic Beverage Industries, who reported that it only cost $1.75 to make a gallon of bonded whisky which the government taxed $9. Was this fair? He never got an answer. : Sen. Connally said hé knew a distiller who told him. it cost 20 cents to make a gallon of whisky. “I am amazed and astounded that you say it costs so much,” he added. “Corn was cheaper then,” retorted Mr. Joyce. The went on from there. but this seems to be an appropriate place for us to leave.
The Quiz Master
222. Test Your Skill 22?
What makes a rubber ball bounce?
When was natural gas first used for lighting ose? :
purposes?’ ~ in 1821 at Fredonia, N. Y., the first gas well in this country was drilled. Four years later, gas from, this well lighted the, Sawa. ; A i * . : { How to fish in a lake live through the winter when freezes over them?
ler. 327 Douglas St. | Roselyn Scalf, 3110 Martin SL. 'ywiniam P. Moss, gave birth yes-
-Police today reported four per-
a rat over the week-end. Four-year-old Timothy Anger, son of Charles Anger, 1743 Lyndhurst Dr., Speedway, was treated in Methodist Hospital for bites on the face, arm and leg inflicted by a dog near his home. Miss Barbara Lee Higgason, 15, of 4623 Norwaldo Ave. was bitten in the leg by a dog to. Edwin - C. Tharp, 5105" Indi-
anola Ave. James Wright, 2, son of Davi Wright, 336 Agnes S8t., was
treated in General Hospital for a cheek wound after being bitten by a dog belonging to Ora Weav-
was bitten in the right leg by a ¢arqay in Hollywood to her second child, William Paul Moss III,
dog tied in a vacant lot through! which she was walking. | Two-year-old Larry Cosby, 134; 8. Sherman Dr. was treated in| General Hospital for a rat bite in his finger. He was attacked by the rat early yesterday as he'lay in his bed. >
Parks Horseshoe Tourney
To Get Starte
Open Free to All Boys
Qualifications for
movie, “Mr. Imperium.” him-are his wif the former Doris Leak, 34, dance and their children, Cecelia, 8, and Piertro, Mr. Pinza has a daughter; Claudia, 23, by 2 for= mer marriage. * =
m
cial fraternity,
ware St. : secretary - treasurer of the In- © diana Bell Telephone Co., is a member of Indiana University| Mr. Warne ._epapter of The-| ta Chi along with his son, Allan Jr. The latter is vice president of | the alumni, |
» » r Harry Meyers, motorcycle pa-| trolman of Atlantic City, N. J. used 14 bullets to kill a 250-pound | shark which swam seven miles up! an inland waterway yesterday. |
= ” » Ezio Pinza, who starred in the
stage show, “South Pacific,” ex-|
pects to become
December. He's
With
8. Mr. Pinza
x
: ”. FE Aug. 6 has beén set as the date
actress, who .
” ~ » ! Jane Withers, one-time child ovie star and now the wife of
to ' Indianapolis Alumni Chapter of Theta Chi, so-
in his home, pon to St, 6933 N. Delain 1uded:
Mr. Warne,
tables drinking beer. : biich they saig.X Germ George Knuckles, 81, who lives/ Spt .‘o American ) at Ho a8, Sl, hie | yer songs, ‘things from Carousel, Miss volation-of-the 1935 Beverage Act.| Liberty, Gershwin -and soon. FRA Mee ist {Tt was his 41st arrest, police said.| we wanted to show them. we, J. +g amunist Fifth |Others were arrested on disorder- have an American Culture and behind. ly conduct charges. pt / for the marriage of William Police found a 32-caliber re. DRYS sald. {Grant Sherry and Marion Rich-volver which had been thrown ” : belonging: ards, 23, former nurse of hisjunder a table. Also confiscated] And how were they received? ldaughter, Barbara, They'll mar- were seven.cases of beer, 11 halflry at Laguna Beach, Cal, where pints of whiskey, and wine. q he lives in a hotse given him in {property settlement signed with! A Bette Davis, d vorced him July 4.
MONDAY, JULY 10, 1950
i - MR. WOOD also explained that
" {the Indianapolis unit of the ARRL
{is co-operating with the national defense setup which is being re- ' ivived throughout America. Plans lare being laid for handlivg com'munications on a relay basis in case of any defense necessity.
can Red Cross and other relief agencies, fire and police departments in the area and other protective agencies. The “hams,” in other words, are
much needed assistance in the
which might hit the area. Since the ARRL is a national organization, it is pointed out, “hams” outside a disaster-stricken
ance from virtually any point in erica. Mr. Wood said the Indianapolis unit of ARRL is subject to call
imatter of minutes.
In Bus-Car Crash
2 Killed, 35 Injured | Near Greenville, Ill. |
GREENVILLE, Ii, July 10 (UP)—Two hospitals today were! caring for 35 persons injured in|
{a Greyhound bus collision’ with a The boy took his target bow and arrow and went out with his!
private car, in which two persons] were killed. |
passenger were catapulted from] the bus and dumped in a field bordering the highway when the vehicle overturned and its top ripped off. Among the injured were six Indianapolis persons and four other Hoosiers. One passenger, Mary = Mon-| ninger, 52, Indianapolis, was trapped under the bus for a half hour until rescuers dug her out with shovels. She was not seriously hurt. One of the dead was identified as Victor H. Bilyeu, 23, Sorento, Ill, driver of the private car. His companion, Miss Maxine, Reddick, Greenville, suffered a broken leg. The other victim was identified tentatively as Mrs. Ellen Hobbs, Mount Vernon, O. A bus passen{ger, she was dead after arrival at 8t. Joseph's Hospital in Highland, Nl. . x
organized to give valuable and. event of any sort of disaster
{area are organized and ever on:
y : ‘the alert to render relay assis measuring rod instead of Ralph Shelburn. Don't asts in the greater Indianapolis| "010% PITHY Sis 40 Sof y :
it The bus driver and all but one
"Ham" operator George B. aster service.
~ Fi |
ms’ Ready To Lend Emergency Radio Aid In Disa
Group on Call 24 Hours a Day; - Linked With National League
By CLIFFORD THURMAN INDIANAPOLIS bombed . . . tornado leaves city in ruins
Wood . . . standing by for dis-
10 Hoosiers Hurt (Germans Tell Purdue Group They'd Fight on U. S. Side
“17 Singers Swap Good Will With Reich
Students; Due Back Here Wednesday
By WILLIAM MeGAFFIN, Times Foreign Correspondent
LONDON, July 10—There are who develops out of the Korean affair. At least, that is what they tol versity glee club: The Purdue pa Hockema, are flying home today
a good many students in Germany
would like to fight on the American side if a new world war
d the members_of the Purdue Uni» rty of 62, including Dean Frank after a most successful European
our. John Engstrom of Chicago, who is the glee club manager, said it would be a bitter choice for the Germans as it is generally accepted in Germany that the Americans would fall back across the Rhine and use the river as a defense line. The students told Mr. Eng-| strom, “We would have to leave our wives and sweethearts be-| hind in territory that would be occupied by the Russians. But we would do it.” Life With Russ LIFE even now in the Russian zone of Germany is so unappealing that many of the students
State Loyalty Probe Continues
Top Officials Confer On Security Setup
curity risks in the ranks of state employees was continuing today in a series of inner-department conferences conducted by Maurice Hunt, director of the state public welfare department, :
now studying in Western Germany are there illegally, having
Indianapolis Injured Indianapolis Victims, g
John L. Burk, 34, bus driver, 030 Albany 8t.; Miss Peggy Wagner, 10521 Virginia Ave ; Mr. and | Mrs, Ted Vaughn, 757 Lexington Ave,; Mrs. Manninger, RR°17, and John Feland, 534 Drover St. . | Vivian Schwartz, South Bend,! and Juanita McMillion, Anderson, also. were taken to St. Joseph's,! where two of the 30 were said to| be in critical condition. i Miss Ruth McCleary, Frank-| iin, and Mrs. Lora B. Thornbury,| Columbus, were among five i jured taken to Mark Green Hos-| pital, Vandalia, Il.
Raiders Snare 13 At Drinking Party | Arrested early yesterday at 340]
Douglass St, 13 persons today
In a raid led by Police Lt. John
dmitted Attacker “Sen To Insane Colony-
Joseph's Hospital, | 18)
|create good will—and from all {accounts they created plenty,
[that it is. not all borrowed,” the
detained for &
The glee club is directed by Albert P. Stewart. Etheridge Baugh, executive secretary of the Purdue Alumnt Association, is on the trip, too. 2 Sing ‘American’ Singing American music all the way, the glee club has appeared in Paris, where it sang at UNESCO house, in Luxemhourg, where it sang at one of Perle Mesta's fabulous parties, in Berlin and the American zone of Germany. and at the Inter. national Music Festival in Llangolen, Wales, . The boyz all agreed that Germany was the high spot of the tour. They toured Germany on a special train provided by Hicog, the American administration in Germany, under whose auspices they appeared. The aim was” to
They stayed away from Bach,
Foran and Sgt. Clinton Auter, two| Beethoven and Brahms because ~ [squads moved in on the establish-| “the Germans “would be bored “ment at 3:20 a. m. after com-| With that—they hear that every {plaints of loud noises were report-{day.” Except for one song, “A ed. They found groups sitting at| Mighty Fortress Is Our God"== which they sang in German-—the
folk
>
“Received Well
In Munich, the students paid
‘them the supreme compliment of stamping on the floor as well as clapping. At Marburg the students chipped in to hire a bus so they, ‘could
take the Purdue vistors
An 18-year-old youth, who po. OF a sightseeing tour. At Erlan-
lice say admitted seven or more
gen,
the students—-200 strong
assaults and criminal attacks on ®8corted them to the station, sing-
Event Sponsored by City, The Times
By ART WRIGHT the City Parks Horseshoe Tournament Soe s 12 through 19 years of age will start Wednesday a par DY totirnament again is sponsored by the City Park and) Recreation Department and The Times. The Times will award, medal
BOY, 10, KILLED BY BUS MUNCIE, July 10 — Ten-year-old Cecil L. Foster, Muncie, was killed Saturday when he was struck by a bus at an intersection here.
d Wednesday
1210 19
8 to the winners at the finals to be held Aug. 20,
will be used for qualifications. Each partici-
~The point system pant ‘will pitch 50 shoes. 12 will be in Class “A”
0 in Class “B” and the Class "C.” i
Thursday qualifications will be held at Ellenberger Park for participants from Ellenberger and! Christidn. : Friday qualifications will be. held at Willard Park for partici-|
Of Reckless Driving
{Indianapolis women, today was {placed in the criminally insane colony at Indiana State. Prison. Joseph Robert Taylor, 1209 E. 17th St. was adjudged insane Saturday by Judge William Bain in Criminal Court 1 after examination by three psychiatrists. Taylor, picked up in a routine arrest Apr, 25, orally confessed to the attacks after questioning by detectives. Among the crimes to which police said he confessed were the beating of the 22-year-old wife of an Indianapolis newspaper] artist and the beating of two unmarried women in their apartments. ; :
Motorist
Faces Charge
Robert Fair, 37, of 535 W. 11th’ St, today faced a charge of reckless driving following his arrest
at the end of a shot-punctuated chase in the early morning. :
Thomas Williams said Fair attempted
ing and waving lighted torches,
[because of the military operations
Patrolmen Roger Harrison and ting their feet on home-town soil to elude them after they!
They hadn't done that at Erlan-|
gen since the war. i
“When we saw them coming down the street with those lighted torches we wondered if it was a revolution, said one of the Purdue lads. “Then we discovered it was not a revolution but social acceptance.” There was a dramatic moment for Wendy Schwartz of Lafayette, Ind., at one of the receptions. He met a young German
who had fought in the same airs
battle as he during the war. There were no hard feelings
now that it was all over but it
down| to a case of individuals like this. Delayed by War The Purdue party would have left yesterday but their plane reservations were put back 24 hours
she has/to confer later t what! Attorney Gene! in regard ‘to
Mr. Hunt said his investigation is centering on two women
escaped from the Russian zone. ®MPloyees of the department who The boys from Purdue met one/8'¢ accused of peddling Com. pretty 19-year-old German stu-|Munist propaganda. Sh] dent who was caught as she was| After having heen closeted prying to sneak across the border. with various department eme was
year by ployees, Mr. Hunt said he plans f Taal sal wi P
th the
the legal asp f ‘the case involving the wo en, ” No Dismissals
No dismissals or other actions have been ordered yet, he said. Meanwhile, Arthur Campbell, Gov, Schricker’s executive secre-
tary, said the Governor has not . yet sent any directive to heads
of state departments following the security check in the welfare department. He said Mr. Hunt is handling the departmental proble himself.
Mr. Campbell said that in indi vidual cases where evidence is
uncovered, or suspicions bared,
they will be handled by the department concerned, Nabbed by Police Mr. Hunt said he is ‘devoting all his attention at present to the case of Miss Eva lola Klass, 42, 5335 Ohmer Ave. and Miss LaRus Spiker, 38, 167 E. 11th St. ~ The women, consultants for the
A probe to bare loyalty and se.’
child welfare division, were picked up by police Thursday in the 2400 block Roosevelt “Ave, following =~ complaints about the distribution of a world peace petition has Communist backing. i Blasted b on Meanwhile, it ay today by American Legion National
| the so-called peace {petitions being circulated in ths {United States. ; a “This is a coldly calculated, i Kremiin-directed plot to soften up {the minds, morale and will power of the Amefican people to resist ‘aggression,’ Mr. Craig said in an {appeal to citizens to ignore such petitions, a
a i
|
Socialists Win German Election
KIEL, Germany, July 10 (UP) ~The Communists and Nazi-sup+
ported - rightist parties. were
snowed under in a German lelection, , today.
final returns
The Socialists polled the votes—360.256—In the
in. Korea. They expect now to ar- WARY
rive in Washington tomorrow and |,
entrain there for the Midwest, put-
once more on Wi It has been a But
- ost :
