Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 July 1950 — Page 3

"he wounded nknown. srpsmen has ication,” he . drew. more i them out

res’ erk of Freeofficer, said was “shot to unists i

ounded m,” he said. my have no Cross and until we get aboard be-

the war are 3 and corpsugh enemy ng areas to

they refused often meant jury. Many pcessary for d into tanks the enemy

Farget ch, Nashua, t target of at Chochi-

acuate the ut managed safely,” he

ankel, East litter driver, . off an enKum River psman was

ne of us adle the other ie said. “We t with our as sure glad . Without it lost.”

10del USED ly for sumtrips, that i. Turn now imns of toselection of is the Used

{ Indianap-

——

n 4411

decision to seek workers’ loyalty] declarations after the board met] in special session today. Se It came as the latest develop-| ment to a department “housecleaning” which followed disclosure that two women workers) were circulating “peace petitions” of the Civil: Rights Congress, an organization on the U, 8. Attorney General's list of “subversives.”

to call for loyalty oaths: Mr. Hunt said the loyalty signature will be “voluntary.” But he added any refusal “based on disloyalty” would “certainly place that employee in a position of bearing scrutiny.” 1000. To Be Checked

Kenneth Kunkel, director of} |

the Conservation Department, today announced he would ask some 1000 full and part-time workers in the department's 11 divisions to swear to their loyalty. | A department spokesman said; the oaths would be “voluntary, and without coercion.” He said no plans had been made to cover; refusal of any employee to sign. | Meanwhile, in the State Weifare| Department, the director said he

____ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ,__

Fliers Plaster [Report Reds

Taking Beating

{casualties in excess of 11,000.

To Cross in Force

“are being chewed up, too.”

jon. Its main forces had pulled: porting fuel to the fron’ lines. uarters. The city was re- end of the pipeline,” he sald.

Mr. Symon the wt tery Eo yo the and air support.” he sald. Kum River, apparently because of “It Was a Good Day” trouble in getting the heavy stuff. “It was a good day of operathe stream. The U. 8. tions” he said. “In other words,

when v fell back. is very encouraging to me.” Shel K » Attack | References to the South KoSouth Berean a rean 1st Corps from front line A spokesman at Eighth Y news dispatches, he said, also. in-

Korean units in central Korea torces have organized to the exhad launched an attack on "tent where a unit the size of a in Sat area, St the extent had oo red to that as an encouraging not become clear. sign. Another South Korean unit a A Navy Spokesman said he ad counte: no information on the report o near the American flank, inflicted three unidentified submarines op“heavy losses,” and then fell back erating in the area between Kyto its SOrDEGE poeitions, ! © SPOKeS- shu, Formosa and the North man reported. China coast. A dispatch from Eighth Army aie imme po Headquarters suggested that the = * . turning point in the war might 00SIer ir a have been reached. ? |

“Now it may be said that the

{forces had blown the bridges the plays were clicking better. It

k - Reds at River | (Continued From Page One) aad rom one 'a. m. today estimated Red battle Amerasia case... .” ; i ack Efforts | “They're taking a terrific beat- concluded the Democratic maw ing as far as casualties are cop- jority, “we are constrained to/ Ynnocuous,” a little above the C*Piain cerned,” he said. “Their supplies Suggest that the department was/}S NIOCUOUS, “etilye ROt legally adm [fortunate in securing the punish-|'®V' Ch 2A-cup Sosalp’ and ‘silly’ yy tomored the (Continued From Page One) | He said reports that only four ment that was meted out.” rad he Feopenly retognized. his yyy tig ¢an line just north of Taejon held North Korean tanks were operat-| Ben, Sage took a contrary Shyiously Ine was © {ing south of the Kum River may point of view. Ot front reports Indicated the'be an indication that the North) “The basic question still re-|oUStice to pass on the applicability|p cy U. 8. Army had written off Tae-| Koreans are having trouble trans-'mains,” he said. “Why was the 8. whole Amerasia case handled in _ Switch Excused Contradiction out. as had American advance “They're getting down near the what appears to be such a timid The majority report excused the .

(Continued From Page One)

“Under all the “circumstances,”

admissible for the Department of of a military classification.”

—almost apologetic—fashion by department's switch, midstream, Here the majority report coms

headq i 4 : (from one grand jury to another. tradicted the of the 5 | ual eserted. | It looks like a definite stiffen- the attorneys of the criminal di- : *| prosecutor himself, Mr. .: ported virt ny ae rted a “con- Ing Of our forces, that we're on vision, Department of Justice, as| This as done, it sald, as a mat. [F008 latter, : po build-up and getting artillery regards the prosecution against. © convenience and because : to

the indicted defendants Jaffe| N° CASe was complicated and|lo0d a, Ey a '|involved and the documents tion: ; Larsen ang Bom Sah | setzed were not en Ques the “Why ack x od No swer { This explanation was contra-/close association with the Com= No satisfactory answer was dicted by Sen. Lodge. He reported! munist leaders and Communist

obtained,” Sen. Lodge went on, asthe reason given by Robert M. friends? ; ’

{to why they “failed to prosecute Hitchcock, the prosecutor, as fol-

sourcefulness and enthusiasm.” i and EE ores sald South! SWS @ispaichet. 16 sald. alee. In; Throughout he referred to their 8T jurymen) had just com-|there was no doubt in

i

munist forces reported MAasSINg| ois in operation. He also re-

}

{

| {

¥ aa Mr. Hitchcock: “There was mo

with vigor, imagination, re- — “These people {1 e., the first Jaffe was

cooling-off period,” “marked and Pleted seiving their three months. about it ny = puzzling change of heart” and|It was insufferably hot here inl i “apparent case of jitters” follow- Washington. Many of them had, Son: Tydings steadfastly ng the Indictments. made arrangement for vacations, fused to call the Judge, to find ' During the executive sessions,|aNd they had been away from|' [Dat were true. Sen. Lodge revealed, ‘he had business and didn’t want to be And Sen, Lodge, in his dissents called upon the majority to seek held over this intervening time.”| NE Views, said he was advised “the benefit of the impartial opin-| ‘Hot’ for Servicemen that lawyers customarily do not lon of expert legal authority” on! Sen. Lodge commented: “Ameri-| "X® it for granted that judg these questions. He characterized Can soldiers, sai'>re marines '¢ acquainted with the faets. their refusal as “most regret-/and airmen in the Pacific at that! untried cases from what they table.” {time also were finding it ‘insuffer-| "80¢ have read in the nespapers, Stolen Documents {ably hot’ due both to weather and Jaffe Treatment 3 The majority report dealt gin-|D8ttle conditions. { Concerning the treatment of gerly with the disputed stolen| OP One point Sen. Lodge agreed| Jaffe, Sen. Lodge stated: 2 documents, center of much con-| With the majority: Whether there!

.

“Another disconcerting fact is

: {troversy during the i fry. Ear-|Wa8 any sinister connotation to! G% inves - : ns Allies are ready to turn from the| i g nquiry. Ear {that Jaffe, whose Communist af and {he bound sHll ate vestige) Harold Leonard Smith . . . no dents in his red wagon. { defensive to ay offensive,” United! p ense liS _|ler, both Chairman Tydings and the fact hat Mr. Hitchcock, upon filiations were well known, was = Attorney General's office as ® a =» » {Press Correspondent Ralph Teat-| [James M. McInerney, chief of the ln ine the I ayarnment service, invited to make what can only “subversives” employed in the M . . !sorth reported from headquarters. | jcriminal division who defended © law firm, the be characterized as a ‘deal’ with vrs Hoar some per: ercury Drops 16 Degrees in 15 Minutes; | “Where and when and how they| (Continued From Page One) (the Justice Deparment's role in Senior partner of which was an|ipe government and was assured rons named on the lis have been Gusts of Wind Measure 47 MPH ae of cour, itarsfbesvmpn by Sits pecsonnet Bh Sus, blir Hose sonints Fle of ak een re TILE s are still bein | secret.” {train y the Air Force, i: Orris, assis 5 e sbi would get merely a light fine. eeu to ng By DONNA MIKELS | The North Korean radio broad-| After training, spotters will be committee counsel representing| Tas Mie merit or proper| “Regardless of a ase orate, pending completion of the A 9-year-old boy knocked unconscious by lightning in last/cast a propaganda claim that the able — the Air Force hopes — to/the Republicans, uncovered a doz-| n. 3 {pects of the situation, this mae probe. night's violent thunderstorm awoke with one big worry today. {Communists killed 2500 American, distinguish the types of planes fly-|®h oi of the utmost impor-| Deal’ Accepted jneuver must, at the very least,

Harold Leonard Smith, 548 Chase St., wanted to inspect his troops and captured 100 -others/ing overhead—friendly or hostile.

to new red wagon, a gift from his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Audie Smith, after surrounding a U. 8. bat-| The main air raid warning staMother of Seven

to see if it was damaged by the bolt that flashed from angry skies. talion northwest of Taejon. . Harold was in his wagon, startin Drowns in Auto parents, Mr. and Mrs, Max Gent, = 522 Chase, right after an apgry Marion County, trees were felled place yesterday in the Taepyong-|Planes will be based. thundersquall moved in on Indi- during the violent storm that sent| Ni area on the south bank of the

LAWRENCEVILLE, July 18 (UP)-—Mrs. Mildred McCarty, 49, a widow and mother of seven children, drowned last night when a steel bridge collapsed as she;

There was a blinding flash and

The radio said the action took/ment and interceptor fig

Blinding Flash degree a minute for 15 minutes.| Taejon.

drove her automobile acros the a crash. His grandmother ran to Of thundersqualls which moved yesterday, and an Eighth Army|8anized for total mobilization—

Authorities believed the bridge, Ying under the truck belonging

z { The Democrats’ report accepted |De regarded as a most reprehens Despite the public interest in|, its entirety the Justice Depart-|Sible error of judgment.

[tion for Indiana will be Selfridge their contents, the report fafled|ment's explanation for making a| “It is shocking that the gow

6 from he home of is grand. No Such Acton (Feld, Mich, where radar equ 5 describe 8 single document of ick “Gaal with Iafie. wherkby|STument should have made any

2 {it would recommend a fine and no|deal with this man, seized by the FBI It mentioned itrial in return for a guilty plea “Remember that this was &

The remainder of the civil de- 'WO trivial ones in order toThe explanation: The disclosure cae in which the President had anapolis at 6:30 p. m. yesterday. the mercury down more than & Kum River 13 miles northwest of|fense pattern is forming now. demonstrate “the ridiculous ex-|of ijegal, pre-arrest entries by the Personally ordered the most vige

{Johnson County, under the lead- tremes to which the documents py has plac 3 ) \ a eo 8 placed the entire case in Orous prosecutive action; many The storm was one of a line] No such action was reported|ership of Robert D. Wolf, has or-|in this case were classified. . . .” serious jeopardy. of the documents found in this

Military Papers + | President Truman's orders to Man's possession include matters

: across the state last night, the spokesman said U. S. casualties resources and manpower. { The report did reveal, however, press the Amerasia case vigorous-| relating directly to the very Embarrass River. (the door and saw her grandson Indianapolis weather bureau said| were believed light for the last 48| 5 Deputies {that 117 of those confiscated, in-|ly “were well and faithfully fol. Safety and lives of American today. Blinding sheets of rain hours. | Mr. Wolf has five deputies un-cluding 49 from Jaffe’s office injlowed” by the FBI, Sen. Lodge Soldiers, sailors and airmen; this

which was posted with a “con-| tO Mr. Gent, which was parked in

were accompanied by wind which “We still hold Taejon and our|/der his command, one each for the headquarters of Amerasia commented. “Whether the Presi. Was a wartime case, and a noe

demned” sign but not closed to front of the house. averaged 35 mph, with gusts mea- line still is holding aorth and/engineering, protection, medical magazine, were “military and dent's instructions were carried torious Communist was involved.

traffic, was weakened by the pas-|

Relatives theorized the lightsage of a heavy truck loaded with ning struck the truck and the

the!asia office, the report conceded,

Carty approached. (boy. He apparently was jerked cook Municipal Afrport station. [4:30 a. m. (Indianapolis Time). |available manpower in town list-| The car plunged 30 feet into out of his wagon and pulled under = The storm blew itself out quick-| “There has been little or noled for special jobs. the water and submerged. The the truck by the impact, ly. North Side residents reported enemy contact all through today| The unit lists all doctors, phar- duct on the part of those respon-|to subpena Supreme Court Justice Was not taken to resolve once and

body, still in the car, was found| The family said the boy didn't seeing a huge rainbow in the East, iand none yesterday.

early today.

The accident happened six'and that most of his concern was] The weather bureau predicted|are trying to rebuild the Kum under the central command.

county road connecting Ill. No.1 ninth birthday May 14.

i i

suring up to 47 miles. |west of that city,” United Press care, evacuation and public in-'quasi-military.” {out with regard to the prosecutive! “The situation called for vigor | The temperature dropped from War Correspondent Robert C. Mil- formation. Each division has a wheat shortly before Mr. Mec- shock was carried to the little gq ¢, g8 in 15 minutes at the Weir ler reported from the front atithorough set-up with all

Their presence in the Amer- | aspect of the case is certainly bY the law-enforcement branch of open to doubt.” " Ithe government.” y “is evidence of a reprehensible! Sen. Lodge revealed that the! “It is regrettable,” the Senator and despicable pattern of con- majority turned down his request concluded, “that the opportunity

| American macists:and nurses. It even has sible therefor which defies con-/Tom C. Clark. Mr. Clark headed| for all the contradictions and ‘appear to know what happened at about 8 p. m. {pilots report that the Communistsithe Civil Air Patrol working donation.”

{the criminal division and was la- vagaries of this part of the probe

| In his report, Sen. Lodge said ter attorney general while the lem.” : $

miles west of Birds, Ill, on aover his wagon, a gift on his cloudy and warm weather today, River bridge so they must get! Eventually, all Hoosier counties many of the seized papers ‘were Amerasia case was pending. | He urged the Senate Judiciary {cloudy weather tonight and show-'them fixed to get their tanks and will be expected to follow the pat- Of great importance” and added:! Quick Plea ‘Routine’ Committee to study the drafting | Elsewhere in Indianapolis and ers tomorrow artillery across. tern set by Johnson County.

with Chauncey, Ill.

HOW MILD CAN A CIGARETTE BE?

As disclosed in a Nationwide Survey:

MORE DOCTORS SMOKE CAMELS

than any other cigarette!

113,597 doctors in the 48 States polled by 3 leading independent research groups!

Cro Sects, USA

“TNE 30-DAY VEST certainly made sense § to me! Pack after

agree with my throat!” Aqua skier, F Margie Fletcher.

RADIO ANNOUNCER, George Ansbro:

“Throatirritation

An actual fact, not a guess...a thorough national poll, not just a spot check! 113,597 doctors were asked: “What cigarette do you . smoke, Doctor?” The brand named most— CAMEL!

. Yes, family physicians—surgeons—throat specialists— doctors in all branches of medicine had the same direct question put to them. Just like yourself, doctors smoke for pleasure, too! They were asked to name their personal choice in cigarettes. And, among all these doctors, the brand named most was Camel ! If you're already a Camel smoker, it's easy to under- | stand this preference among We ask you to test Camels doctors. If you're not—we ask as your steady smoke—for 30 you to test Camels for your days. Judge Camel's choiée toown smoking enjoyment. But baccos on a pack-after-pack, make it: a sensible test! Not day-after-day basis. Use your # “gquick-trick” test where own “T-Zone" (T for Throat, you're asked to take one puff T for Taste) as your proving of this brand—then one puff ground. Compare Camels for of that. Not just an exhale of mildness—for flavor. Then de“A” cigarette and an inhale cide! When you make the 30of “B". ; Day Test, you'll know why...

7

SRoAOWAY SoNcSTRESS Decoes Fon uewseur PATRICIA Morison, | | | MORE PEOPLE SMOKE CAMELS star of musical comedy, reports: “I made the Camel 30-Day Mild- THAN ANY OTHER CIGARETTE!

ness Test. It was the one sensible test I've read about. Smoking Camels for 30 days proved to me how mild a cigarette can be!”

TV COMEDY STAR, PETER LIND HAYES,

‘Not one single case of throat SIVES HIS VIEWS “@ irritation due to smoking Camels

ra) 4 Yes, these wers the findings of P } noted throat specialists after a i hk total of 2,470 weekly examinations of the throats of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels— and. only Camels—for 30 consecutive days.

NOTED THROAT SPECIALISTS REPORT ON 30-DAY TEST OF CAMEL SMOKERS...

MILDNESS 1 Bermiin

Want te ell wee oo —-| Jaffe's sudden, Saturday morn- ©f 8 constitutional amendment oy fant to gel a Teun, yp guilty plea was also defended Making it legal in wartime for 8 or oF » 0, 1 {as “routine” in the majority re-|the government to use

one of the {stolen documents Brokers advertising in the classi-| rt. On Saturday mornings nj In evidence,

5 | Washington, the report said, a _. 4 ? Jed columns of today's Time > judge is always assigned to auty Gives Longevity Rule s in touch with buyers ready! i to invest in sound, going busi-|'® handle emergency cases and CLEBURNE, Tez. (UP)—T. J noniA i “brief matters for the convenience Coyne observed his 103d birthday ; re —————————————— | OF SOUSE]." | by attributing his age to “tobacco At the same time, the report and whisky. Wisi

¥ *

STRAUSS

SAYS: SUMMER STORE HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 930TH S q SATURDAY, 9:30 TIL 1

(OME AND GET IT! BOYS’ SUMMER’ SLACKS!

On the famous Sixth Floor—Spectaculer VALUES in washable SLACKS for boys and younger boys! \ COME AND GET IT!

SALE! WESTERN JEANS—1.89

Sanforized—8 oz. weight with any _ Zipper FAly—Sizes 3 to |4—Were terrific ~~ came out brighter and clearer : at 299—NOW-—1.89

SALE! JUNIOR WASHABLE SLACKS—3.7%

Were 4.98 to 5.98—Sizes § to 12— David Copperfield Slacks—There are : od plaids, rayon tropicals, solid shades— Cate fancy and fancier patterns—NOW Loe Other Summer weights—were 250 fo aS 3.98—NOW 1.89 fo 298

SALE! PREP WASHABLE SLACKS—3.79 Waist sizes 25 fo 31—were x . 4.98 to 5.98. Really something special ~~" at 3.79. Other washable slacks TE that were 298 to 750 She Suning seemed $8 4 sities. NOW 2.19 to 598 i