Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1950 — Page 2

8

+ >

tic measures was signaled from both Washington and London. _ Secretary of State Dean Ache-| = _#on- sald no more moves were

3

7

pected that. In London,

* Moscow. . Diplomatic Moves

These moves just about closed the books on their diplomatic!

moves:

ONE: The United Nations Se- | curity Council called on the North

ia to otuse Joe shalling yards at Pyongyang.

TWO: The United States ‘asked Russia to use its influence to call off the Communist attack, Russia

THREE: India appealed to Russia and the United States to seat

Communists voluntarily returned to the 38th Parallel. Nobody ex-|

High School Journalism

}

(Continued From Page One)

The First Cavalry got

five miles southwest of

Communist China on the United #74 Sutomatic weapons.

Security Council, Korean conflict.

in the Security Council,

; Neo Peace Likely Mr.

and then have the council take up the Russia agreed; the United States declined, assertAng that there could be no “deal” “on problems that were not related. . FOUR: Great Britain started direct negotiations with Russia, but ran into Soviet insistence that Communist China be sented is was the price for discussing the ; isspe, Even for this g ussia did not promise a cease-fire in Korea. Great Britain have no part of such a

n told a news conthat this coun-

Jy Dana

peaceful settlement in the near

terday no further diplomatic end the fighting. He w.no likelihood of a

There was always the

Fight on East Coast

fronts,

enth Fleet.

ents Peter Kalischer and Robe

battered remnants of the

21st Regiment The 24th Division's 21st

While the First Cavalry Di-

United Press War Correspond-| rt Bennyhoff said the First Cavairy| men moved up to the front past 24th|

division's advance command post | and opened fire with small arms enemy machineguns pletely stopped by the naval bar{rage.

Miss

On the east coast, American and {British warships commanded by its Rear Adm. J. M. Higgins mainbaptism of Communist fire from tained a heavy and steady bar- & group of about 20 Red guer-|rage of shells 1000 yards ahead of | rillas who crossed a river ford the American and South Korean the troops advancing on Yongdok.

Shore observers reported tha were com

The

ent earlier this week. Gen. MacArthur's communique

Postal Burglar Gets Three Years

Drug Store Thief

ity stands behind the table.

ettagon Caling

Allied troops found | | Yongdok completely leveled as revision moved into the battie line*UIt Of a flerce naval bombard southeast of Taejon, units of the ™ 3: Sai Tiopie HgEuing®. Di reported that one American cruis-| on the central and east coast ©’ Killed 400 North Koreans and destroyed a radio station just The Americans and South Ko- Porth of Yongdok firing only 38 reans recaptured Yongdok, 88 rounds of ammunition Thursday. miles up the east coast from the, 1g U. 8. base port of Pusan, yester-| day under cover of a heavy bombardment from combined U. 8. and British warships of the Sev-|

Drury, Marie

Key Men Direct

By GALVY GORDON

t

|ington,

were: - ONE:

learned “nothing new”

{

headquarters.

Plans for Atterbury Activation Readied

. Pennsylvania St, and 62

Division's 19th and 34th Infantry| Regiments falling back to rear] areas to regroup.

ogi! ment tried to hold the Commu.| ct man. nists some four miles southeast of

Taejon yesterday, but were driven

Pleads ‘Ignorance’

Nathaniel T. Rutledge,

{ Instead,

the previously

before the federal bar of justice,

Mary Drury of Manual High School (third from left] emphasizes a point in a class at the annual Conference at Indiana University. At the table are { Lucetta Rice, Ben Davis High School; Pat Roach, Ben Davis: Prime Minister] Clément Attlee has acknowledged * failure of Britain's efforts to get peace through direct talks with)

clockwise from left) ig, Dyer Town. ship High School (Lake County); Barbara Sharp, Nappanee High Scheol, and Gordon Graham, Broad Ripple High School. Prof. Poynter McEvoy of the IU facu

Yanks Near Taejon Brace P For Expected Red Push

{were captured in the First Diviwith “good to excellent results” #ion area, on railroad bridges and the mar-/

Plans to prepare for “immediate reactivation” of Camp Atter‘bury were being rushed to completion today as Indiana awaited {mobilization orders from Wash-|

Indiana Selective Servjlce Director Brig. Gen. Hitcheock, |

of conferences at the Pentagon with National Draft Head Maj.| (Gen. Lewis B. Hershey at Guard!

Other developments In the Hoo- | sier military manpower situation

state adjutant general, told The|,¢ Times Washington Bureau he had the Army did in a series;

of-|

Military

‘WASHINGTON, July 22 (UP)

~Present mobilization plans indilcated today that there will be at

least 2 million men in uniform by the year's end. More will be called to active duty. soon after

that. :

When the Korean War broke out, féwer than 1.5 million men were in the Army, Navy, Marine

Corps and Air Force. Since then, in the services have issued a series, march — in his German-driven of calls for Reserve and National] Guard units’ needed to bolster | hard-pressed Yank forces in the | Far East. | ~ Defense officials have made it clear there would be no let-up in future until the ‘Armed Forces reach their legal limit of 2,005,000 {men. And both the House and | Senate already are considering proposals to abolish evBn this

manpower ceiling. + Enlistments Extended

In another move to strengthen the services, the Senate yester-

day passed a bill to keep in uni-

form for an extra 12 months

some 193,000 servicemen whose!

enlistments were scheduled to expire this year. The House is scheduled to vote on this bill and the companion manpower ceiling measure Tuesday. The latest Defense Department move to supplement fighting men came yesterday

‘Its entire organized ground re- | TWO: The only two “nondivis-|5¢rve-—47,000 men—to active duty ional units” of Indiana's Guard,(®?d the Navy called up nearly 56 Indianapolis men in the 915th/#000 persons in its organized air {Ambulance Conipany, stationed stele units. {South 8id uard Armo { 8 . G A ry, 2015 going out by the thousands to ficers and men of 3658th Ordnance e0listed and officer reserves of (Company at Camp Atterbury, stii|the Army, Navy and Air Force

In line with the Pentagon policy keeping the enemy guessing, not disclose how

many men were involved.

Marines Called The Marine Corps has ordered

At the same time orders were

{plan toaceompany Guard to sum. °" an individual basis. Selective

|mer training. Pentagon

cessful Indianapolis drug store affairs in order.”

thief was beginning a three-year; THREE: Indiana Military Dis-|

commented:

2d to Come Within Federal Jurisdiction

After relating how the Ameri . ‘@an government and people, the 5 United Nations and so many free

another three miles city, by a new Red attack.

Americans “planned ‘withdrawal lines of natural defense.”

made

§

The second Indiana slaying to

come within the jurisdiction of Southern District Federal Court

in Indianapolis was being investi-

Saied by FBI officials today.

f

* Late yesterday FBI officials

took Jack Osmon,

33, Terre

Haute, into custody on a federal warrant charging manslanghter on a government reservation in! connection with the death of Frank J. McGough, Terre Haute

cleaning plant proprietor.

| §

The body of Mr. McGough was!

Terre Haute Ordnance Depot. H Osmon is indicted

‘found two weeks ago at the

September Federal Grand Jury in session, U. 8. Attorney, E. Welsh said, ne will cuted by federal authorities but Chapel. under state statute. | ’ _falled to make $15,000 pastor of the Bridgeport Church federal bond last night and was of the Nazarene, of which she was . remanded to Vigo County jail.ja member, will officiate, Buriall had admitted beating Mr. Will be in Floral Park.

Argument over the purchase of The only other slaying to be|

George Barrett. Barrett was conVicted and sentenced to hanging Ia “ani py by former Southern District| death of her husband two years ® SPiritual front. Judge Robert C. Baltzell,

Plans to Activate State Guard D State Guard Drawn

in the

with & blackjack in an

i

From Page One) 1 enlistments by veterans to call into

‘conjunction with “the Civil and State Police for concerning the state's : units

Muncie.

{is survived by a son, Virgil Leslie Adams, N 3 . od Hattie Newcomb, Streator, Ti; The Vatican newspaper Osser. as materia {two brothers, i ‘ «Streator; and John Ogborn, New| who are not! York City; and a grandehild, Ar-| Federal serv. |1€ne Ann Thomas, Pennville.

seeks to create “the ‘Natio a

On Christian Education Na

hills between Taejon

runs north before looping west around Taejon. | As major battles neared, Gen. Gay ordered all Korean civilians|® Pharmacy at 3811 English Ave. evacuated from the fighting area in an attempt to prevent infiltration of the American lines py| tion of federal law. Communist soldiers disguised as! civilians.

Gen, Gay himself was fired

upon, apparently by one of the! infiltrating North Koreans, as he restaurant operator, was given moved toward the front to set three years in prison on a charge up his command post.-He was not ©f receiving the stolen spirits. (hit. Two Korean guerrillas later,

Mrs. Downing

Services Monday

Lived in Pennville

Last 2 Years Rites for Mrs. Lydia Ann Down-

Moore & Kirk Ben Davis

The Rev. Nathaniel Urshan,

Mrs. Downing, who with her

{husband, the late J. C.~Downing,| _ the cleaning plant. {lived 23 years on a Wayne Town-! ship farm off W. Morris St., died! prosecuted by federal authorities Yesterday in Jay County Hospital, in Indianapolis was the murder Portland. .0f an FBI agent in 1835 by

race Thomas, following the 0. She was a native of near

In addition to her daughter she

Miss Martha Whitehead, 222 8.

Downey Ave., will attend the fifth |

national workshop for the di- ahaa rectors of Christian education at! FLEES TO U. 8. SECTOR BERLIN, July 22 (UP)—Karl Hermann, chief of the East GerCommunist

{tional administration, United Christian Missionary Association, | Disciy 8 of Christ. 3

back to the vicinity of Okohon, below the

Gen. MacArthur's communique! saia the

g. former Marion County resiMatthew dent, will be held at 2 p. m. Monbe prose-/day in

The new defense line is in the!

and the ; & federal | es railied to South Korea's section of the Kum River Which 3 ers Wa Reserves “key” personnel were (0d2y investigated the cause of a| m

| truck- as ar here last! being contacted at increasing rate| !fUck-car crash near here last | Graston, assistant U. 8. attorney. g rate, by direct communication from the Night in which four soldiers were He was caught breaking into om he killed and three persons injured.

.

‘I wouldn't have broken i there ir I'd Disguised Communist soldiers °ffice.” Rutledge told the mingling with refugees fleeing south to escape the war have| proved a major headache to the| Americans ever since they entered the fighting. |

Other i Judge William KE. Steckier in-| St cluded the sentencing of three, Hon were being prepared for| Pvt. Robert Eabans, 17, Lapeer. | Anderson men in connection with PO#sibility of activation as a “rou-| & $1300 whiskey theft from ap tne matter of defense.” : : Civilian experts needed to main-|

{prison term and trying to scrape trict personnel be together $100 to pay his fine fol-/a centralized ind lowing conviction yesterday in 342 Massachusetts i {Southern Indiana District Court open Monday for processing of

a “| to: better | gi Ah of post office bur-|

n drug store breaking,

The store's contract postal sta-| tion placed It under the protec-!

nown it was

action yesterday by)

{interstate shipment.

John W, Johnson, 59, Anderson:

Willlam A. Asher, 39, and Ar- { thur I.

Bailey, 55, both New

York Central Railroad employees charged with the theft, were sentenced to four years confinement. Bailey's term was suspended and

{ he

i three. years, 4 Ne——

Baptists Open

was placed on ‘probation for

‘World Congress

CLEVELAND, O., July 22 (UP) A veritable United Nation of

Baptists opened the eighth Baptist World Congress here today, {but language barriers for the 52

no

Vatican Paper Raps

‘Romanian Church Law Vv

nations

Typical character of the five-day program . Is that one of the first prayers St, was bound over from Muniwill be said in Japanese by Rev. cipal Court B. Kimura, pastor of the First Clark. Baptist Church in Hiroshima. The more than 20,000 delegates were greeted by Dr. D. R. Sharpe,/!26, of 453 Minerva St, She had made her home in| Xecutive secretary of the host latter's hom

Pennville with a daughter, Mrs. Cleveland Baptist

{who “described the gathering

represented will handicap. of

prove

the International

as

ATICAN CITY, July 22 (UP)!

Association, today.

Minerva St,

Street an

Ave,

July 31 for intial

{Board 52.

{Pentagon for reactivation.

Awaits ‘Green Light’

Col, James A. Murphy, com/mander of Camp Atterbury, said ®utomobile n the camp was being whipped into| Michigan soldiers. The large milk st Shape as fast as possible, “wait. tank crushed the auto, pinning idge. 18 for the green light.” He em-|the soldiers inside. phasized other camps and military| nstallations throughout the na-|

tain the camp were being inter-|

viewed today and asked to make i themselves available in event ofl SVITIENRt Roept Ful Haney, who| Ih Tvdings Delfiocratic ma

was dead on arrival at Hunting-/jority report itself says: ton Cdunty Hospital here,

activation,

gan establishing! uction station at| to be

Army and Air Force recruits and : 72 Hoosier Rutledge, self - acknowledged 1-A’s from Marion County Draft! alist 1 |

FOUR: Individual ground force

{ i

Truck-Car Crash

Service officials also were roundIf Ignorances were an excuse calling nondivisional Guard units/!"8 UP 20,000 men to fill the first in nation yesterday. Indications draft call since the outbreak of 32, of 615 were that only units which haq DoStilities. +» today would be aifinished summer training would {be called and they would be given suc- at least 30 days to get personal

Kills 4 Soldiers

| |

regular;

when the Army called selected | units of the Organized Reserves and the National Guard. A high Army spokesman said some “may |§0 overseas.”

| { {

|

{ {

|

Up State Accident Injures 3 Others

Times State Service

i HUNTINGTON, July 22 Police | y

A milk truck, crossing four-

flane U.§. 24, was struck by an

bearing six young

The dead: { Pvt. Dennis Smith, 17, Detroit. |

_ | tervliet.

The Times called attention to

possible reactivation of Atterbury two weeks ago.

Grand Jury Gets Murder Charge

Suspect, 65, Held Without Bond

A 65-year-old man today was bound over to the Grand Jury

Camp

|two other

Pvt. Hallenback was listed &s serious with a crushed chest.

Pvt. Russell Haney, 17, Pontiac. |

2 Soldiers, Trucker Hurt

closed session:

Volkswagon.

a's wm IT IS to Maj. Soboloff that.

the camp commander goes for needed supplies which Soboloff, in turn, obtains from old Wehrmacht stockpiles held by the Russians, Soboloff has a classroom headache as well. He supervises Russian lessons given to each GI, Sometimes six-hours-a man per week! The Fritzes are not learning how to chat at a Moscow tea party. They're only concerned with Russian army commands . +. the words for tanks, planes, cannon, bazookas . . , at present rate the new German Wehrmacht will be able to obey orders in two languages—but it will still have one master: Field Marshal Joseph Von Stalin. But with all these controlled channels, the Russian high command in the Reich definite-

Jaffe Called Espionage Agent

Possibility Described In Tydings Hearings

By FREDERICK WOLTMAN Scripos-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, July 22—Philip

J. Jaffe, key figure in the Amerasia case, was not only a Communist but an espionage agent as well, in the opinion of the counsel and chairman of the Tydings Senate Subcommittee,

Their view is shared also by

James M. McInerney, head of the Criminal Division of the Justice Department who was in charge of the Amerasia prosecutions.

This appears in the transcript—

just released—of hte secret Tydings Committee hearings.

From the day of Jaffe’'s arrest

on June 6 1945, the government withheld all information of his | Communist connections.

Closed Session

“I think now that Jaffe may!

hin torsos ve ia] (he GUEDING rater spect began, orseeght came om Lh

have at that time.”

June 26, Edward P. Morgan, | {chief counsel, declared: “I have {no doubt about Jaffe being a

In Bond Drive

Indiana buyers of U. 8. Savings nounced they would advise the Bonds have topped the 1950 In-|gine to abdicate in favor of dependence drive Yuota by moreicyown Prince Baudouin, 19, who

than $2 million, State Director ,ccompanied his father back from Robert E. Fowler announced to-|gwitzerland.

Even in the barracks, brassknuckles or no, little bits of

over, » =

» ONE NIGHT, recently, in the tank school at Grossenhain, a vicious commissar was almost

of a beautiful lady shock work= er, one man held a blanket over his head while two others smashed him with monkey wrenches until his bones snapped like lady fingers. He never saw—and so could not identify—his assailants. Often thé pictures of Stalin pinned on every wall have death heads superimposed. And at Grossenhain recently one Soviet “adviser's” car suffered slashed tires three days running.

tively out of range of recording ears, they crack: “What nation is like Adam and Eve? Don’t know, do you? It's Russia. Why? Because Adam and Eve had nothing and lived in paradise. Russia has nothing and thinks it lives in paradise.”

jibe at the Red soldiers’ habit of riding on the outside step of Berlin trolleys. They ask this riddle: “What hangs outside a trolley and stinks?

TOMORROW: How Stalin turned German POWs into new Wehrmacht officers.

nd the Chicago Daily Nes Inc,

State Tops Quota

day. 15, had a quota of $17,875,000

campaign requirements.

Gov. Schricker as well as

Nationa Betting Odds Boss ‘Quits’

Jimmy Carroll

Closes Offices

(Jimmy) Carroll, na-

{lated whether it was temporary |

At a later executive session onor for keeps.

Communist, and I have a pretty |

good idea that Mr. Jaffe Pvt. Bernard Stanley, 18, Wa-| "Pr age agent. I am inclined to agree with you,

“It would be hard to prove, but

|

{Sen.. Millard E. Tydings (D. Md.),| State police said all were killed| the chairman, remarked.

reason

Mississippi

Carroll, himself, wasn't talking. | His plush offices across the| River in Kast St. [Will be withdrawn from the reLouis, Ill, had been closed since |S€rve fleet at Suisun Bay, San Is an Monday and his lawyer, Morris Francisco, and one from Olympia, | Shenker, said he understood that| Wash. All will be reconditioned {Carroll had gone out of business. |2Nd put into service as soon as Sources close to gamblers here | POSSIDIe. sad Shey a anal had pe withdrawn from the mothball cause of the “heat” put on|[i¢et at Astoria, Ore; three from

“The record reflects that by gambling by the current Senate

of the pro-Communist

The injured, under treatment connections of Jaffe, particularly, among other things, the case was

in the same hospital, include the! | soldiers, Pvt, James regarded | Frank, 18, Detroit, and Pvt. Rich-| | {ard A. Hallénback, Pontiac, and government documents and pos-| {the truck driver, Parke A. Pear-{sibly espionage on behalf of the) In Chicago, underworld sources lson, 28, North Manchester, Ind. |Soviet Union.”

None of the injured was be-|

More than 1500 motorists were |

{estimated to have crowded the| ‘highway about 6 p. m. while the!

without bond in the fatal shoot- tank containing 1000 gallons of

ing of another man during an! buttermilk.

argument,

Emmett Street,

Street was first-dree murder of Rober

Lonnie McIntire, 35,

witnesses

they were

to the {vatore Romano said last might shooting. All were released on Joseph. Ogvorn,) ania has established a new their own reco church law designed to “destroy Clark. {the Roman Catholic religion in Police said Romania.”

440 Hiawatha parently had stopped before at-|$20,000 five-ton load limit br

charged with the

gnizance by Judge,

told d other men were present

An editorial said the statute in Ward's home when Ward en-|

h ot met — and a prey to the atheistic Com- WOUNDED EVACUATED

munist regime.” . {

fled to the American sector of} political refugee, Al-} sald today.

i WATCH

Berlin as a

SHOW Every or Operation — Come in and Compare Sets

police training post and

i

fricials

Every Night WwW,

TOKYO, July 22

.

REPAIRING Immediate Service On ® MAIN SPRINGS ® CROWNS

the shooting.

basis for a tered and began the argument! nal Catholic Church,’ sep which culminated in te from the universal chure {

the United States is en route .to| the Fairfield-Suison Air Base near| San Francisco, it was announced)

{VATICAN AID IN SEOUL

Msgr. Patrick Byrne, /delegate in Korea, was believed still in Seoul! with his secretary, Father William R. Booth.

GOING ON YOUR VACATION?

(UP)—The, {first planeload of wounded GI's {from Korea to: be evacuated to!

Based at Ft. Knox

had hit gambling operations 25 a Communist-in-/&1! across the country and par- Va

crime investigation.

They said the sweeping inquiry hard

spired effort to secure classified ticularly in the St. Louis area.

{ing

2 Fined $75 for ‘Wrecking Bridge

soldiers were removed from their car, which was crushed under the

Jaffe got off with a $2500 fine

guilty.

Times State Service

+ Underworld Divided

{was “the best time to get out.” | Others predicted he'd resume! {operations after the current in- gate botany department. {vestigation had ended.

“He's got it in his blood—he

TIPTON, July 22—Fines total- won't quit for good,” said one

Police said the truck driver ap-|drivers who Wednesday destroyed |

Investigating officers

VATICAN CITY, July 22 (UP)!

———

~‘lanta, Ga.| !

{tempting to cross the highway, near Windfall. 4 by Judge Alex then drove in front of the soldiers’! : | car, driven by Pvt. Smith, {Warren Carlson, de- were fined after they were found t Ward, termined the soldiers were based guilty of wrecking the bridge tucky Derby in the'at Ft. Knox, Ky. and said they|/with loads of steel wei © about 2:15 a. m. apparently were returning there tons each. after visiting in Michiran., Two! of 626 of the soldiers had travel orders COSts for driving an overloaded) was wounded slight- and train tickets for ly by a bullet from the same re-| [volver which killed Ward, according to police. McIntire was! {treated at General Hospital, i He was one of four persons held

ruck over the span. A similar | i { .| against Carlson, plus another fine of $25 and costs for driving a

i {truck with a “leaky load.” They | Catholic sources said tons | were tried before Justice of the|

idge man in his 60's who looks like a highly

ing $75 and costs have been man close to the Capone syndi- | {levied against two Gary truck | cate. |

Carroll, a mild, soft-spoken |

i

successful corporation |

Walter W. Vickroy, 29, and executive, for many years has set |

Vickroy was fined $25 and!

39, yesterday|the nearest thing to “official” | jodds on the

World Series, Ken-| and other major

ghing 35 sports events, He also set odds! {on the presidential elections.

ne and costs was assessed!

ce Homer Henley. i

v

Map Shows Bombing Routes

When you come to consult us about service, to arrange for payment, or

"to talk over any phase of the service.

CAN RUSSIA FLY BOMBERS TO INDIANAPOLIS?

Story Tells Details THE SUNDAY TIMES

YOU'LL FIND US

EASY TO TALK TO

anti-Russianism keep bubbling:

i When the GI Fritzes are posi- |

The Deutsch doughfoots also |

“For the 11th time since 1941,” Mr, Fowler said, “Hoosiers have ance on the throne. oversubscribed their savings bond

accepted the challenge voiced by local

{Tex.; four from Mobile, Ala.; five from the Hudson River at New

|ington, N. C.,, and James River,

Butler Alumnus Named ‘were divided in their opinion. | Professor at Colgate

{Some said Carroll had been want- | t of Am i fter pleadlieved to be in critical condition. in the Amerasia case after plead ling to quit for a long time and Indianapolis, has been made a full {probably had decided that now | Professor by the board of trustees

SERRE Uk

After 5 Years Appeals to All Fe a

de BORCHGRAV By ARNAUD RAY B Belgium, July 22.

_ |King ‘ Leopold, ringed by guns,

bayonets, and armored cars, returned home from five years of exile today and told his bitterly divided country the throne is his and he means to keep it. The King’s address to the nation —part of which regards him as a traitor because he became a German hostage during the war-—was firm but conciliatory. ‘The 49-year-old ruler appealed {to all factions to forget their idifferences. He said that in anv levent a king is “an adviser placed {above the fights of parties.” | "Role Is His “Whatever new trials the future {may impose upon us this role will ibe mine,” he said. The King returned to a grim land heavily-guarded city to re|elaim the throne after five vears |of exile in Switzerland. He landad iat Evere Airfield outside Brussels [this morning and was taken under larmed escort to Laeken Palace. His six-minute broadcast to tha {nation was recorded in Flemish ‘and French. As he spoke, his Solelalist opponents were preparing 'to call a general strike Monday. 9 Councilmen Resign Nine Socialist members of the Council of State, a 28-man body {which advises the King, resigned in advance of a meeting called

Copyright, 1950, by The Indianapolis Times PY Teopold for this afternoon. a

{The Council meets only in na{tional emergencies. It has been called into session only twice be{fore in 120 years. At the same time, the six liberal {members of the Council an-

Thus, more than half the Coun-

The drive, which ended July cil members either had resigned

|

jor otherwise made known their {opposition to Leopold's continu-

Fruit ue) Mothhall Ships

|

bond chairmen and committee-|

men on July 11, and bought = (Ordered to Duty

bonds to push Indiana to 111 per

Troop Transports, | Freighters Included

WASHINGTON, July 22 (UP) |—The government has dipped into its mothball fleet for 32 ships to help transport troops and supplies {during the Korean conflict. | The Maritime Administration's lorder yesterday applied to 12

"But last May 4, Mr. McInerney, ST. LOpIS: July 22 (UP) .— troop ships with a combined capaepresenting the Justice Depart. James J. vi Ships ent, told the Tydings group in a tionally known “betting commis-|-° "igh-speed Victory cargo ships, !sioner” and oddsmaker, was in| retirement today and members of

icity of 35,000 servicemen and to

So far a total of 64 merchant

| vessels has been ordered into mili{tary service since the Korean War

mothball fleet and 16 from privvate firms.

Troop Ships Eleven of the 12 troop ships

Of the other 20 vessels, one will {Olympia ; three. from Beaumont,

York, and two each from Wilms-

Oran B. Stanley, formerly of

of Colgate University, Hamilton, N.Y. He is chairman of the Col

Dr, Stanley, son of Mr, and Mrs. A. D. Stanley, 917 E. 46th St. is a native of Mooresville, He was graduated magna cum laude from Butler University and received his doctorate at Yale University. He joined the Colgate faculty in 1943,

Oost Terms | © monest costs

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