Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1950 — Page 3
ve # have
tains
Nicoloff, 939 Congress St, who —Jleft his wife, at home
~—XKentucky Ave; pulled out their
¥. itd tik fi
fi J g f
Fix i i
father, vers. Goodby Kiss -
le
shouted “Headquarters Company,
fall in." Helen Spaulding, 1174!
‘W, 20th St., kissed her husband. Stanley, 21, goodby as he obeyed the command. Daughter Linda
Kay, 2, watched. They'd left son|
y Lee, 10 months, at home. Police Sgt. Ed Clark, 2103
Union St, handed Pfc. Vincent!
Gatto, 1431 Union St, his address and wished his friend “good luck.” .° ‘Mrs. Ruth Ernst, 1414 Spann Ave, poured coffee for a Marine from behind the Red Cross stand where she and 12 other ladies served food and drink. In a nearby line stood Cpl. Roy!
because “I didn't want her to] looked out the windows into _the|
have to wait-around:™ As the Marine-loaded busses prepared to move forward, a young bride stretched to kiss her tow-headed husband. Then her bandanna-covered head dropped to his hand, which she clutched as she wept. The bus moved off
pulling their hands apart. She]
stood watching until the bus] turnéd from Riverside Dr. down! Capitol Ave. ad Flderly ladies waved both hands, horns blared and the Ma- |
LE
Inside the Armory, Maj. Robert, a Shepard, 3321 Ruckle St,
= The show is here and ward Yates unload the Fly-O-Pla buzzed with activity 3 the shows were unpacked and erected.
these workers to right) ‘Norman Webb, Har ets toiight) Narmnan Webb.
old ‘Jameson and Edway. The Midway grounds
today as a dozen or more rides, including the giant twin ferris wheels, and all
maps. Others]
2 [Chimes Nationalist Government
daFK Station.
| Downstairs the men stopped
| cheering, the women dried their jeyes, and they left for lonely | homes. The boys had marched
{off to war again. :
Malik fo Resume lis illegally in the seat of the Chi- ? : a
He declared yesterday that if
1 | ithe report is not so deleted, “I : fp iwon’t he able to vote for it” He } : did not use the word veto, but no
{one doubted that he meant it.
Mass Friday For Mrs. Conerty |
A requiem high mass for Mrs. up for discussion. Lillyan B. Conerty will be sung at!
U. S. Formosa Stand |. Council postponed action on Mr.
Slated for Attack
iMalik's proposal! until all dele-
gates had had time to put all sug- |
gestion by Ernest ‘Gross, alter-
day, Mr, Malik fought in nate acting in the absence of a secret session to control the Warren R. Austin, chief U. 8.
rines waved back as the busses ® a: m, Friday In" Holy Cross council's annual report, as he has, delegate. bound for Union Station forced Catholic Church. Services will be fought all through August to con-| Urges Transcript
traffic to curbs,
The boys shouted at girls in neral Home. shorts, and little children too Holy Cross Cemetery. Mrs. Conerty, who was 63, died!38th Parallel. Monday in St. Vincent's Hospital.! She was a lifelong resident of Council the threat of another RusIndianapolis. She was a member sian veto. Mr. Malik made the of Holy Cross Church and thejthreat Altar Society of the church.
young to know what it was all! about waved, too. Inside the busses the California-bound lads Jaughed and joked. “It'll be different after we get on the train,” one Marine said. As the ‘contingent, under Maj.
town behind a 25-motorcycle police escort, downtown theatergoers cheered. Firemen at Station 13, W. Maryland St. and
engines, red lights blinking and sirens wailing in a loud sendoff. The men formed quickly outside Union Station and marched
jat 8:30 a. m. in Grinsteiners’ Fu- trol the Councils investigation of Burial will be in North Korea's assault on the unrepublic below the
plain yesterday when he ! ! own the rule waich he but would, also “certainly avoid on hand early to watch the Cet-| Mrs. Conerty lived at 237 Ran-|{Wishes the Council to follow in the dangers of condensation and|lin & Wilson Midway Carniva Nick E, Presecan, moved through/dolph 8t. Surviving are drawing up its report. : i Proposes Deletion He proposed that all proceedings between Jan. 13 and July 15 aiming at ‘was an official review ,riar dawn. be deleted. He declared all these of
James E., Wilmette, Ill, and Raymond W., Los Angeles, Cal; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Helen Bennett, Danville; a brother, Edward | Were illegal because, in violation J., Callahan, Chicago, and five
of Security Council procedure, led by the = they had been accomplished in the ing all month to offset Mr. Malik’'s rolled in blankets beneath trucks absence of two permanent mem- repeated appeals for Asia's sym- and other shelters. But a crew
8 DIE IN FARM HOME FIRE
through. the crowd, past the War Mothers gathered at the bottom
EAST GREENWICH, R. L| Mr. Malik walked out of the Aug: 29 (UP)—Six persons, in- Council on Jan. 13 wher it refused No final action on the report is/ Where shows and concessions
Usually Council business is summarized in the annual report.
Mr. Gross suggested that all KoHis new fight casts over the rean business be set down in {transcript form. He said this
would make ‘a bulky document,
{of editorializing.”
19-month-old son of Happy Rose,
player, protested when his mother placed him atop an automobile | ° to keep him out of the way as the carnival unloaded.
Intense Activity Grips Gu Sic a Area Preparing Exhibits
Many Are in Place and Some Judging
|
Scheduled to open at 7 a. m.,
position was expected to be bigge ever before in history.
carpenters. panies dermis Le te amps to ge” he Communit Short laeved and ready for opening day. rying hay, grain and equipment parge which kept China from loth (can't be Fair officials pointed out thal ,.coekary for the nine-day stay getting U. 8. arms aid following cloth (can beat more exhibitors had reserved at. the : falf {the mission of Gen. George C. for wonderful » han ever “% » | i Space for the 1950 fair than ey Switch engines shuttled cattle Marshall. | . wear), Crowds of curious and excited Cars onto a siding within the The document attempts to Fashioned with a i mostly youngsters, were rounds as anxious owners of Show the numerous conflicts in| oked back and : : blue ribbon stock awaited an op-jadministration Torus poliey Ini pleat, it 4 fre 0 Korea and Formosa. unload. The train was late in val Foituatty Ynload snd establish Miitary authorities are quoted | makes a wonderful [ving but advance agents werel In the Woman's building, ex.|—Gen. Marshall included—in foppar for gym hibits were already in place anq/|testimony showing that if aggres- shorts or blue jeans.
| What Mr. Gross seemed to be javing out the midway shortly
pathy. . New Accusations
the anti-Communist propa-| {ganda drive which nine delegates, U. 8, have been mak-
Sleepy carnival men, the ad-| [vance guard which traveled by truck or automobile, remained
|with tape lines and stakes husitled about designating spots
of the platform stairs, and’ up cluding three children, burned to to seat a delegate from Commu- expected until after Sept. 7. Iti Will be set up. : into the cars. Once inside the death today when fire destroyed nist China and he has steadily will take that long to shape up' ‘In the cattle birns, the swine
cars, some set up card tables. their farm home.
7
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— Atlantic Storm
| NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 29 (UP)
-ibarns and sheep shelters husky
| Hoosier 4-H Club members started ‘the never-ending chores of keeping their prized cattle, hogs and ‘sheep in tiptop condition for the exhibit. Shortly after dawn big cattle
Hits Guf Coasts
Reaches 115 MPH
hea tropical hurricane, broad in the beam but rather weak in the | middle, splashed the southern] (coast of Mexico with heavy rains| and winds today. Squalls billowed |
across the Gulf as far north as
The storm was centered about! 340 miles west of Havanna. Its] indicated northerly = movement! would bring it near the Texas coast sometime tomorrow, , Another hurricane hundreds of | miles out in the Atlantic. zipped | along at a 17-mile-an-hour clip| also on a northwesterly course, The two storms contrasted sharply in size and shape. The Gulf biow sprawled over a| wide area but carried a relatively] puny punch of 75 to $5-mile-an-| hour winds. The Atlantic tempest
winds spinning at 115 miles per] hour. ~ | The new storm, the third of! the season, was located about!
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Engineer Retires Charles Bowman, who {is retir-| ing after 27 years service as chief
tal, will be honoréd tomorrow af-| ~ternoon by the hospital adminis-. trative staff and fellow employees. A party will be given in the hos-. pital coffee shop for Mr. Bowman.
Going Fishing on Your Vacation?
! |
After a day on the Lake or along your favorite ‘stream, why not sit back and enjoy your favorite hometown newspaper.
Make your 1950 vacation complete in every way. Have The Indianapolis Times mailed to your vacation address at no extra cost. 2 Daily 25¢; Sunday 10e. Daily and Sunday, 35¢.
Phone—Riley 5551 The Indianapolis Times Circu- -
lation Department,
=»
.
What a way to treat a guy at a carnival . . . Darrell Rose,
Into Campaign as Top Iss | (Continued From Page One) | But, the (GOP paper observed, reason’ How, 0. Keep the Korean “the policy of no protection for report. secret. : | Formosa South Korea ot + this report had ‘been aval TC and 8 "WA able,” Mr. Knowland said, “Con-| 3oTuptly reversed -when the gress could have raised questions North Korean Communists atas to whether the South Korean tacked in June. Until then it was forces were ‘sufficiently strong. said, “our military forces were Congress should not be denied unaware South Korea would be this report now.” | defended.” Me GOP “White Paper” | The Republicans then attempt Sen. Ferguson, protesting the to demonstrate hteir own fore-. action which sought unsuccess- sight, and cite GOP support for fully to have Gen. MacArthur'sithe Economic Cd-operation Ad- ' |views suppressed, commented: ministration and other overseas “The difference, between this p x . republic and Russia is that we But this last i= sure to draw can discuss with our people these Democratic fire. The Democrats problems, and they are the judges will produce roll calls showing who should be aiding in the that many Republicans opposed formulation of our foreign pol-| Korean aid, and that many GOP fey.” members tried to whittle down Mr. Ferguson insisted that “this'overseas aid programs. ; was a case of a man trying to It all adds up to putting domespresent to the American people tic issue in the shade in an elec- = {his expert opinion, not on foreign tion campaign in which the Far I policy, but on military strategy.” East and Korea will. get mast ¢ | The Republican National Com- attention. mittee’ “white paper” on the Far{— ~~" 8 East showed with what obvious, STRAUSS { |glee the GOP this fall will take to| gy gC. {the people a case it hopes will : :
{gain it control of fFongress, { National Democratic Chairman - Willlam M. Boyle has made it plain that the Democrats want je part of the Korean War as a Ceflin & Wilson Shows trumpet |¢2MmPaign issue. i : Charges ‘Sell-Out’ ! The. Republican document reaches back to the Cairo, Tehran !and Yalta conferences in an at-,
“Their (Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin) Yalta agreement not only upheld Communist control of !Outer Mongolia, but gave to Russia the Kuriles and part of Sakhalin Island; pre-eminent rights
Starts; Crowd Watches Carnival Arrive
By CLIFFORD THURMAN
SRA LER Lash amen BresnBind Soabioniine, ME Hooslerland's biggest show --the 1950 Indiana State Fair--was/C . 3 . =) {Continued From Page Oné) [gested corrections in writing. Tt just around 2 as from reality today. #.Chinese-Eaatern and South Man,
States made against it will come also postponed action on a sug-
_____The State Fair Grounds were a heehive of activity today 28 Roosevelt administration at-— ra : Ste
judging has been in progress for {sion began in Korea our position
three days. Prize ribbons will be there. would be untenable, It's smartly displayed on winning fine arts and t Yet, i 18 xonianded. whi De-| tailored—with domestic arts entries Thursday. . e.r a oy 8 *0 IAKH french cuffs—and. . was asked whose decision pulled! ollar Girls’ School Opens out our troops, he said it was a! . open cqlla that - The Girls’ School opens today, top echelon” and not & military! makes a "terrific with 275 young Hoosier women ‘decision, _ : combination with attending. They will attend regu- Notes Reversal | skirts and jumpers. lar classes throughout the fair. It is pointed out that on! ; : Judging will continue dafly in Dec. 22, 1949, the Joint Chiefs of! Sizes 7-14. the various divisions with 4-H Staff recommended a military ; boys and girls holding the spot- mission to study the Formosan - 1.25 light in. the major portion of military position but’ that the! events. next day the State Department in' aE “Gates to the grounds will open a “secret” memorandum asked its a i 3 daily at 7 a. m, (CST) and ac- people to pass the word that L STRAUSS & (0. . tivities will continue until mid- American aid to Formosa would | Melee Shop—Sixth Floor
i J
| = [r= ; . a — Weak Hurricane STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW!
+
T=
350 miles southeast of Bermuda.
Agora:
engineer at the Methodist Hospi-|
Arthur and fount operation of the. A BLOUSE THAT'S : |churian railroads by a Soviet] “100OKING FOR ye
Thursday (CST), the annual eX- Chinese company (this always
r, better and more colorful than means Soviet control”) : ACTION The GOP white paper cites 5
night
be “useless.”
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