Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1950 — Page 37

{ .. War Harry Woodring), hires one lawyer to handle

en ¥ ” : + 3

¥

Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola

N, Sept. 14—One of these days the S8 Several newspapermen, worried about the uni Yarmouth will pull up her anchor-and wiggle to changing leads of the unchanging stories, have

aa » . - e . » =~

"The Indianapolis Times

: ; 3 a ~

= $f

Nova Scotia. That's where the International tuna been cutting pages out of sports magazines. A

THURSDAY

matches are to be held. ——cduple from different parts of the country have . Everyone seems to think the worst hurricane swapped entire stories... co. since 1944 has blown itself out. I'd just as soon One reporter is worried that his boss wil think stay here at the dock another day and make sure. pe got drunk and missed the boat. The first part Of course, you don’t express yourself that way is true. in most respects, but _he certainly didn't

about ‘the ship. You're liable to get a stout rod miss th A i or wrapped around your neck mss e boat. That's not saying he won't fall

All Practically in Tears

THE FIVE MEMBERS of tuna teams, several judges and eager spectators on board are practically in tears. All day and far into the night you hear them talking about the matches that

The way parties get started is fascinating to watch. In the morning, everyone is jittery, itching to get under way. The weather is the chief topic of conversation. ' Then comes SEE SR ERT ERs RRR SR Re Rens REO “Kip -Parrngton:— famous Herrman ami a> Of -dbguish..can. he heard (rom..all parts —of the thor of several fishing books and guiding force ship. For a few minutes there's a deathly calm. of the international tuna matches, dashed around Maybe a sob or two or a rod splitting against a the ship early this morning and announced that raft. > : : if we sail tonight everything will be dandy. Pretty soon ‘someorie will say, “well” and get : to his feet. It's sort of a signal. This will be fol-

The plans now are for the team members to “ » get into their fishing clothes on the ship. The sec- 10Wed by more. “wells” —nothing more. Stewards appear in the passageways with pitchers of ice.

ond we dock, team members, judges and com- . Ru mittee members will be rushed to Wedgeport, 12 Soon there is laughter throughout the ship. ’ I happened to wander into a rollicking state-

miles from Yarmouth, and «then put to Soldier's : room yesterday where sportsmen were busily en-

Rip, where the fishing takes place. There is high ; hope the tournament will be over by Saturday gaged in oiling their reels and things. A pleasant night. : © gentleman handed me a glass of something that looked like ginger ale, and ‘we proceeded to spin

Personally, I find being: aboard ship rather |. : a : . lies. Well, Sir, when I left, the strains of “Sweet leasant. After all, we ha th S : ! ! p ve'the comforts of home Adeline” strong in my ears, the reels were well

here. You might say this is like a small, self-suf- °° : ficient community. oiled. Good ginger-ale. I met Capt. William BT Corning, the skipper. Cg PY) : py] last night. and jestingly suggested he put a foun- Seasick Pill Sale Good IF WE SHOULD SAIL, an enterprising bloke could do a brisk business selling seasickness pills,

Up Hit Target mp.

Tests Pave Way for : War Missions by B-45 Tornado Craft

By MAX B: COOR Scripps-Howard Aviation Editor Two-ton bombs now are being dropped accurately from jet-pro-pelled Air. Force. bombers speeding at 500 miles per hour over 20.000 feet up. Successful tests just completed have solved a difficult problem which had threatened to nullify the value of Uncle Sam's newest

the announcement that sailing

Se

3

fighter speed. As a result, the Air Force says, North American B-45 Tornado

bombers, now in production, are

dation under his ship and go into the hotel business. He is not speaking to me anymore.” Maybe

he didn’t get the point of the joke. When 'I go to Every day those weak of heart have stuffed them- ~¢3dY for high-speed: bombing town today for supplies (liquid), I'll bring back selves with pills, anticipating a bout with wind missions. several building blocks and try again. A man has and wave. Next day the precautionary measure . First of the four jet planes to to do something to break the monotony or else would be repeated. Now the drama is all gone. fly in the United States. the

Tornado could perform service in Korea. It can cary 10 tons of bombs over a combat radius of S00 miles, enabling them to operate from a base in Japan. And this radius, the Air Force says, can be extended greatly through use of external drop fuel tanks. They can fly above. 40,000 feet if necessary.

Fall Erratically

Prior to tests just completed at Edwards Air Force Base in California’s Mojave .desert, air turbulence at high speeds caused bombs to tumble and fall erratically. The highest speeds at which bombs could be dropped accurately ranged from 350 to 400 miles per hour. { North American engineers and Air Force specialists found the answer to the bomb dropping, problem in the bomb bay doors of the jet bomber. They installed overlapping doors which slide upwards inside the plane. This permits the bombs to fall almost directly into the air stream. With the new doors 27 bombs were dropped-at the 500-mile-per-hour speed. The heavy bombs fell out smoothly and scored bulls-

he'll start talking to himself. yeoman People have read every available piece of literature on board. Some have run out completely and have taken to reading each other's palms.

Kip Farrington told me ha talked to Tony Hulman and Wilbur Shaw in Wedgeport on the telephone. They're fine, the weather is bad, etc: Just so I get home before Christmas.

NEW YORK, Sept. 14— The mall has been massive on a treatise I recently devised on the doctor's

draft, and seems to be split evenly. The “Ayes” are contributed by grizzled doctors who performed

By Robert C. Ruark

we need them at home, and we certainly need thenr with the services here and overseas: In a matter of fairness, who gets the priority? Tired old docs who quit their profession to take as military healers in the last war. The “Nos” heavy pay cuts and depart their homes and famflood in from the young men who have just com- ilies last time out, or young men who yet have pleted medical education, beginning in World: War paid small or .no interest on their obligation to II, at government expense. : their land, which exempted them from combat in Some of the letters I have received point pride- the last emergency? } fully to the steady drudgery of preparing for a It's of no real importance whether medical medical career, Whether or not the government Students were potential draft-bait in yesterday's subsidizes it, as if it were a medal, and as a ~Tacas, or whether they had any overt control of justification for their aversion to being drafted. Beir disposition as student or warrior. The fact Some explain indignantly that they were tapped, 'S that some did and some didn’t. The “didn'ts” at government whim, and had nothing to do with ©We large obligation to the “dids.

shaping their own future. Over-all is an anger at . : 3 being singled out for service now, as an exclusive Garrison Troops Penalized ONE OF MY correspondent, with a fresh-

group. . This would call for a little squaring away. hamen M. D. after his name, mentions the horAs I re-read the last effort, it was aimed at a Ts a Lome aiving i par acha drilling, A ; ’ ) ivin nder Army discipline, plus attending a fullgroup of 4000 medicos who got educated free =.= 0. school. This . .. was not a better

while their elders dropped established careers to li ’ 54 Yew voy. life than that ‘being led by thousands of garrison fight. These 4000 saw no service. Twelve thou troops here in the United States.”

sand other government-educated sawbones saw But the point is that even the garrison woh ry servi / y p - : : . 8 Jome piiia y service and/or went on active re were, being penalized by interrupted professional eyes on the targets. Small obs y oareers, while their opposite numbers were being tumbled at speeds over 350 miles

I know of fighting men with much combat time et er hour. High-speed runs with —one with four years overseas, and a wife and expedited professionally on governmert dough, ils eEhia 500 .to 4000

i ; minus the jeopardy of beco: POE children, now-—wlioc. have. just. been. called-back- to T8000-0dd ) pardy epg ghe.oLthe Crosses. sunds were successful, engineers active duty. I know men who are interrupting TJust BOC 8 tere kh ia : DT their civilian lives for the second instance at gov- ander 4 bo Ir a ex-lieutenant comernment demand. Reservists, they are. ander, a bone specialist. “It never occurred to The Tornado, now rated as a

me Ha You were the same man I treated for a racture in the Russell Islands,” he wrote. “I .. i is i We Have a War on Our Hands looked up your record and noted that on Apr. Re, light bomber in comparison with THERE is a United Press dispatch in front of 1944, you sustiined a comminuted fracture of the the Air Force's B36, Is ag jorge me which says that Selective Service Director shaft of the left humerus as well as fracture of and flies as far as World War 11 Lewis Hershey has informed the Senate: that the the neck of the left humerus. You were aboard N€2VY bombers. It.is powered by nation “would have to draft World War II vet- the U. S. S. Afoundria. I have kept a record, in. [our General Electric-Allison TGerans If it wanted three million men in the Armed cluding all the X-rays of all the fractures I pinned 190 engines mounted in pairs unForces. He said veterans under 26 would have to while on the islands. Therefore, I have your X-rays der each wing. be Ploetd in the same position regarding service on file , , .” } " t was flown first in Mah, as World War II veterans who were members of This would b Te 1947 and had completed its Air the National Guard and the military reserves. keep files on a nay eansciondile pos in Force tests within a year. iighty Let us admit then that we have a war on our a sweaty jungle island, so that I rE finally i Ni streamlined, its only protuberance hands which is big enough to invoke economic vited to Chicago to close the case six years Tater. is a canopy over its pressurized controls, a draft, a call-up of the Reserves and I am in favor of letting him stay Boris this trip. cockpit where a pilot and coNational Guardsmen and a draft of the young in order that the young bloods can ac uire — pilot sit in tandem. kids, with Universal Military Training lurking = practical field experience in return for Their w he The bomber's effectiveness at Just around the political corner. We need doctors time education on the taxpayer's dough Thigh speed and high altitude has

RE, Cy ~ TT - Trt p— been under exhaustive testing i during the past two years. It is He’s Not Punchy

‘now ready for active service. Another Air Force jet bomber «WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 The services of Henry Grunewald, who used to be a prize fighter

also is in production in Boeing's plant at Wichita, Kans. It's the and looks like it, come high. Nothing :punchy about Henry.

Has 4 Engines

By Frederick C. Othman

he never tapped anybody's line. All he did was see whether somebody else was engaged in this dirty

Stratojet, a six-engined, longbusiness.

range bomber in the 600-miles-

Jets 20,000 Ft. ‘Angel’ of Mercy Aids Wounded Gi Korean War

“jet bombers capable of flying at «

‘A Charming Impostor’—

Hospital Records Checked 7 5 |S" on i In Arrest of Fake Physician Parleys Collapse |: wuts mes

ords of at least eight New York metropolitan area hospitals today |

(himseli was treated oy Macleod: recently at Dobbs Ferry Hospital, worked gave the sentenced him

Peteon for practicing without a was senior resident physician at cent-an-hour pay boost ense » 3 ‘

SEPTEMBER 14, 1950 ~ PAGE 37

a Fault of GOP,

[ i Ra

por ren oy Ee Ei ~ Blames Defeat of Aid Bill for Aggression In Talk Béfore AFL

War in Korea was a result of the “isolationist” voting policies of’ Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R. Ind.) and Republican colleagues, - Alex Campbell declared today. Mr. Campbell, Democratic nomi= nee for Senator in opposition to ~ ‘Mr. Capehart this fall, said defeat * of the Aid to Korea Bill in Congress “started the burst of military stock-piling in North Korea,

war materials on the border and resulted in military aggression less than six months later, Sen. Capehart voted against the Aid to Korea Bill this January. Speaking before the State Federation of Labor convention in the Claypool Hotel, Mr, Campbell said defeat of the bill convinced Com-= | munist leaders that the “reaction« ary isolationists” in this country ‘would never let America come to the aid of South Korea. ; Freedom Dying. “Every time a free nation dies.” | Mr, Campbell said, “a little bit of our own freedom djes with it. { “Every time the Communists | bite off another piece of the free | world, they have consumed a little bit of our hope for a world in which all nations can live at | peace and in freedom,” he added. {~The former Assistant U.-8-At+ |torney General derided the “calamity howling” of Sen. Capehart {in claiming that “we are too {weak and unable to resist attack jor defend ourselves.” “When you tell an enemy that you are weak,” Mr. Campbell said, “you are inviting him to attack | you now.” | Denounces T-H Law In a denunciation of the Taft. {Hartley Act, Mr. Campbell told his audience of 800 labor delegates and guests: To. “We must stand together in ablhorrence of government interferjence and domination of union

; : {activities.” : Harvester Wage | He praised the American Fed. Checked |

|eration of Labor for preventing Communist trade union domina-

Korea's setting ‘sun illuminates an otherwise dark horizon as a Medical Corpsman administers blood plasma to a seriously wounded American Gl aboard a jeep transporting him to a first aid | station. The soldier was hit during fierce fighting on the Pohang front. Times-Acme Staff Correspondent Stanley Tretick, who took this picture, suffered a slight shrapnel wound in the same action.

has so consistently maintained

: litself as a bulwark against infil. UAW Rejects Offer {tration of subversive and Com-

Of 10 Cents an Hour |munist forces as has the AFL” ‘Mr. Campbell sald. o By United Press

The CIO United Auto Workers » i to learn whether William H. Macleod ever made a fatal “mistake” and two big strikebound arm Jake Ss Bouncing

in the five years he masqueraded as a staff physician, equipment firms broke off negotiMedical associates of MacLeod, 37, were “amazed to learn that ations today. Check Bounces the man they trusted as a “highly competent” surgeon and doctor | | : was only a self-taught medical CCL up is UAW's Local 600 at Detroit rati- Him Into Jail ake. | medical knowledge while a private fied a new five-year contract with] JAKE MADE two mictares

After serving successfully as a in the Army Medical Corps, was the Ford Motor Co. |

staff physician in New York, ; ary and New Jersey hos- caught’ when he dropped two pay-| The UAW broke off negoti-| hoy N€® in Jail Tye deat See pitals, MacLeod was unmasked ments behind on his new car. |ations with International Harves-| = "0, "000 2 yesterday as an imposter with no, A Hartford finance company ter Co., paralyzed for nearly three Take. Serban operator of a more than a high school diploma. COMPplained to the police who made weeks by twin strikes of 22,000) qieaning establishment in 834 Ft Cets Year In Prison a routine check and learned he UAW Tmembers and 32,000 mem-| yo one Ave made his firat mis. lla never had obtained a New York pers. of the Independent Farm "when h : 1d { d th Judge John T. McCormick, who state medical license, Equipment Workers Union. ue prog sw PE arn All—the hospitals —where he: UAW International Representa: rppe thiid Ay NS eg i J “charming, jolly tive Anthony Connole flatly Te lerty of a state policeman n doctor” high recommendations. He jacted -Harvester's-offer-of-a—10- Then Jake Tound himself Tos

ing Judge George Ober, in Speed-

N.Y. Police Seek to Learn if ‘Highly Polished Doctor’ Ever Made a Fatal ‘Mistake’

DOBBS FERRY, N. Y., Sept. 14 (UP) State police checked rec-

to one year [Dobbs Ferry. FE

rp , negotiators continued talks ‘T' can’t imagine him being a wih

State police said that MacLeod, Harvester representatives in y 3

y : Stew Je ivr gm " listened to Jake's story, fined him ; : ) Co It seems, said he, that P per-hour class, and -also test-'who claimed he delivered. 475|fake, Superintendent Miriam chicago. . Say you're a jittery executive of an airline and ‘has as vice president a rl ot Jmeriean Airlines flown late in 1947. babies without mishap in one year Watnick of Brooklyn Women's 8 (325 and costs on charges of reckyou think maybe some tough customer has tapped Sam Pryor, who kept thinking he was being aed Using 18 Jato assist rockets, at a Erooklyn. hospital, nad to Hospital said. Judge McCormick Talks Broken Off |less driving.

your phone line and maybe put a plug-ugly to railing you. What you do is call Henry, the press agent deluxe. é He spends 15 minutes inspecting your phone to learn whether any microphones are hitehed to it. Then he tails you (his phrase) for a couple of days to see if any other tails are wagging along behind. His fee for this ranges between $750 and $1500, according as to your ability to pay.

“What kind of Darby (Rep. Kas.). “Jumpy,” said- Henry. “Very suspicious. He thought the other airlines, the British maybe, were following him.” © °° . So Sam retained Henry to investigate this in 1944. Henry found no private eyes in Sam's wake and submitted a bill for $750. Sam got jumpy again in 1948 and Henry made another of his high-

fellow?” demanded Sen. Harry

run. A-bomb carrier.

Nudes of Coeds

speed investigations. This time the bill was $1500 | Sounds Easy, Pleasant “They_got plenty of money. adaed tens 1) - D8 UES Foye : THE--BROKEN-NOSED- Grunewald with the referenc “to-Pan- American, “so” vou. can charge: £ - Ve A

cauliflower ears spent several fascinating hours em describing for the Senate District Committee the R . efuses to Explain

nature of his work. It sounds so easy and so ‘easant, with all that fresh air and excit t " —— p excilemen HE REFUSED on advice of his counsel to tell the Senators the nature of the business which re-

that I'm thinking of taking it up, myself. The pay;-furthermore, is so excellent that Henry quired him to rent a three-room hotel suite here eqs taken in the interest of sciin the name of ex-Secretary i ]

keeps a private chauffeur to drive his automobile, he had a kind of partnership

maintains a suite by the year at the Washington Hotel (under the name of former Secretary. of which wasn't really a partnership at all. This sity of Washington promised tocaused Chairman Matthew M. Neely (D. W. Va.) day. : ‘to demand that He ‘repeat himself. Mr. Grunewald Indignant girl students pro-

- piece. when he gets in jams with the Senate. did and it came ; out the same. The Senat - tes / What the Senators have been trying to learn® sided in puzzlement. ator sub- tested to the university this week

Ahese-many-weeks-is-who-foots the bills for-listen= Mr Grunewald 2156 Tefused to" ing in on .the phones of bigwigs, like Howard ‘Hughes; the airline magnate, when he visits the capital. To date they have gotten precisély nowhere. They know that a local cop plugged in on

SEATTLE, Wash, Sept. 14

his real estate deals and retains a separate mouth-

go into his long- i suits without betime friendship with Police Lt. Joe Shimon, the a handy man with the pliers, who tapped phone “While this project is an impre a win Nor Would he tell why he paid fre- portant one from the standpoint risits ‘the office o . Brews i i "Di the lines of Mr. Hughes’ associates, but they .I would say that Mr. Grunewald still as much Hr ries al, haven't learned who put him up to it. . of a mystery man as he.was when the Senators was ly fully exptained to the The cop is a pal of Grunewald's—as is Sen. first started looking for him. A well-paid mystery students due to the large numOwen W. Brewster (R. Me.)—but Henry insisted man, that is. . ’ ’ ber of women concerned and the

4 Removed After Seeks $10,000 for Son's Taft Raps Green He aid taking "of pletures has Jail Break Fails 'mivry on Fun Ride On War Policy

been discontinued and all films already taken would be deUS. Ind.. 8 14 (UP) A suit was on file in Superior : COLUMBUS, Ind., Sept. 14 (UP) : i 0 DAYTON, O. Sept. 14 (UP). ~The population of the Bartholo- Court_ 2, toaay asking $10,000 =P (UP)

stroyed. . Taken for Research mew County jail was four less today because of &n attempted jail break. : The four prisoners didn't escape, but Sheriff Richard Thayer i discovered one set of bars sawed Caught in a merry-go-round. trough and a start made on cut- - Steven's father, Thomas M. ) ti~7 the outer bars. Gregory Jr. 425 Devon Ave. en- Hartley Law at Jheriff Thayer said Fred Miller, tered the action on-behalf of his mee 2'. Greensburg, was found saw- Son. It charges the boy's foot was ing through the lattice-work. He crushed and permantly deformed. and Clarence Clark, 22, Jennings Joe Cantor, awner of the. theCounty, were taken to the state ater, is aiso named. Mr. Gregory prison at Michigan City immedi- 2lleges the merry-go-round was;

: improperly adjusted. Mies! E RZ Cm... Fs ee le ho mo stil rv co. Missing 86 Sough

V § |rageous procedure” worked b William Crawford, 38, Brown ARMY EMPLOYEE DROWNS | Yin New York Woods County, and. Herman Garrett, OKINAWA, Sept. 14 (UP)— [Pion bosses during World War" pop nv “sent 14 (UP)—

ing taken for research study by the Constitution, Laboratory, a Columbia niversity Medical School using the Korean War to advarice research preject. his political program. 1 ) y Sen. _ director of the project, said the B. Toft defended the Taft idea was ‘to. determine if a rea campaign jationship exists between an inting . last night, denying Mr. dividual’s behavior and his phyGreen's recent claim that the Siqué and. to establish norms for labor act should be repealed on medical diagnosis and treatment.” grounds it would hamper recruit- Miss »dioneyman took the picment of skilled workers in new tures herself. war projects. !

Drive-In Theater. The suit filed re-election in November, says on behalf of ‘Steven Gregory, 4, AFL President William Green is {asks damages for injuries received when the boy's foot was

the Stratojet can get into the air their knowledge never with a full load after a very short patient or+committed a It has been called the jet medical error.

records of two Brooklyn. institutions, and Conn., and Preakness and Bay- using forged degrees from medical {ville, N. J., plus the Dobbs Ferry schools Hospital, to make certain.

¥ Quebec, was tripped by a financial Hospital in Brooklyn as a_res- * ‘error. Girl Students Peeved — About ‘Science’ Photos Hearts Bowed Down by Woe—

® Pennsylvanians Honor Gls Woodring. He s: + : po illed T T "mm won ye rod ence, wil ve aestroves, Previent [lle on Troop Train

(UP)—Nude photographs of €o--

—after-they.-were.photographed.in... i. who left

=wtoday-in-fldg-draped coffins:

to receive them,

day will arrive at the Lehigh Val-

friends on departing for’ Army Des . training at Camp Atterbury, Ind, Were crowded with worshipers.

damages from the Shadeland Sen. Robert, A. Taft, fighting for’ —The-nude photographs were be-. : in the rear the next day by the Pennsylvania Railroad's of St. town, O. Barbara Honeyman, executive* on the journey home by an honor escort. of their “buddies” of the here Wyoming

ons carriers waited at the station trons in appreciation for the S8ento take the coffins to the Kings- ator’s efforts in behalf of fedton, Pa., armory. The route was eral «id for schools here and in identical to that over which the other defense industrial centers,

Field Artillery Battalion were set to Washington, renewed his at-

“lost” a said “he seemed to be the real serious McCoy. ‘IT am amazed to. learn he never even worked in ‘a drug the store.” Police sald MacLeod obtained Hartford, Conn. his first job as a doctor in 1945 at at Manchester,'the Brooklyn Women's Hospital

” ~ ” In East Moline, Ill, Deere & JAKE WAS out of money at Co. announced that it had broken the moment and persuaded the off talks with UAW officials rep- judge to accept his check. That resenting strikers at seven plants. was the second mistake. Approval of the Ford pact byl Tha check bounced” when Judge Local 600 assured final accept- Ober took it to the bank. A ance of the new contract an-| ‘The judge did not charge Mr. nounced on Labor Day. The lo- Serban with issuing the bad cal, which voted 18,578 to 12,224 check, he just took the view that in- favor of the agreement, rep- the fine had never been paid. ‘resents more than half HU AW's Ford members: “ranother-check to replace the bad The Bendix Aviation Corp. one. plant at South Bend, Ind, was “No soap said the judge, and closed by an unauthorized strike the state policemen took Jake to of 5500 CIO United Auto Work- jail. : ers. The day shift failed to re- That's where he- was today, port yesterday, apparently in pondering his two mistakes,

But they" were checking two in

hospitals

in Edinburgh, Scotland and Frankfurt, Germany. In 1946, MacLeod, born--in St. Cecile; he transferred to. Prospect. Heights The “doctor,” "a former dent doctor.

dissatisfaction over terms of a i

new wage contract signed last 3 Rew Kidnap Suspects ; . The contract gave . Bendix : : 33 Dead Return fo Their Homes Today; - workers a five-cent hourly pay Seized in Chase Public Barred From Armory Services boost, less than the increases State police early today cape

WILKES-BARRE. Pa... Sept. 14... (LP). Thirty-thres soldiers. WON DY UAW locals.in bargain: tured two.ex-convicts, accused by here last Sunday to serve their country return home ‘8 With other auto industry em-'a 20-year-old woman of kidnap- . ’ ployer. . ing--her; : 5 : —— — Nabbed ‘after a five-mle chase .$230,773 Grant Made of 70-t0-90 mph on Ind. - 37 in . Southern Marion County were For Atherosclerosis Study Thomas E. Burnett, 25. of 738 8. . WASHINGTON. Sent. 14 (UP) Richland. Ave., and George E. ’ ' lav 97 « N xr 2 The Federal Security Agency Payne, 27, of 4309 E. Iowa St.

The Wyoming Valley, its heart heavy with grief, was ready

A funeral train bearing the coflink of the victims of the Isleta, O., train wreck last Mon- — Plans for a mass burial were ley station from West Lafay- Abandoned, allowing each family

Cette. O. to decide whether it wanted a ,.. granted $230,773 ‘0, four pri- The young woman told, state The station is the one in which Private funeral service or one ts {natitutions for research in police the men: forced her into the soldiers just four days_ago With full military honors. oa type of hardening of the arteries their car at New York and West. sald goodby to families and Flags flew at half staff, busi- hat yiiix more than 300000 StS. They drove along. county s- houses closed and churches ryepicans annually. roads and threatened to aftack

The grants, made by the Na- Der: she charged. tional Heart Institute, will under- he woman jumped out of the write research in atherosclerosis, CAF In _Glehns Valley and ran. lwhich-feads—to-heart-attacks. State Policemen Victor Waller Receiving ‘the mon2y are: University of California, at Berkele¥, £81,000; Harvard School of Publife = Health, Boston, $43,702; "leveland Clinic, $57,903, and University of Pittsburgh, $48,168,

Escorted by Buddies : Their troop train was rammed Charleston Has Parade Honoring Capehart Times State Service CHARLESTON, Sept. 14 -Hund dreds of citizens turned out for a 10-block long torchlight parade last night in honor of Sen. 109th - Field Homer E. Capehart.

“Spirit

near NeWronieres then chased the two men, who

were cruising nearby. Burnett was charged with .resisting arrest and violating parole, while Payne was charged with disorderly conduet and resisting

Louis”

The bodies were accompanie

Valley's

SH : : arrest. Both were held in Mar Artillery battalion, The demonstration was spon . . Ar "Thirty-three open Army weap- sored by Charleston. school pa- It Costs fo Die lon County - Jail under 310000

bond each. VANCOUVER, B.C. Sept; ws 14 (UP)-—Cemetery operators noted today the rising cost of dying. A Washington ‘State . Cemetery Association official told a convention of 175 Canadian and -Ameri--

Lt. Schwartz Heads Police Legion Post

Dean Schwartz, a police traffic ; lieutenant, last night was elected commander of Police Post 586,

109th traveled on its way to serv-| Mr. Capehart, who has been ice. - : conducting a campaign - for re- . The guns of the 967th Armored eleftion in Indiana between trips

‘Glasgow, Ky. also were impli= Aud-A: Mitehell, 36 of London; cL Who charged pe oh Sen. T rt r-ground rescue parties eated In the escape plot, Sheriff Ky. an Army civilian employee, said get a job, Ben. Tat searched isolated woods today for Thayer said, and he transferred Was drowned Saturday off Okin- * } a missing F-86 jet fighter overthem to the Shelby County jail awa. the Army announced today. Farlier. Sen. Taft was greeted que on a routine flight from Grifat Shelbyville. Both face charges Mitchell fell overboard while on a bY boos‘and catcalls when he en- foe Air Force Base near here. of grand larceny. i boat ride with friends. His body tered the Moraine city plant of The plane, carrying only a piamie was recovered. “.. the Frigidaire Corp. ‘ lot, was last reported in the WaCHILD KILLED BY TRUCK 4 In gampaign- talks there, Sen. tertown, N.Y. i ..m. Sept. 14 (UP) - ¢ | tertown Y.. area at 1:30 p. m

Taft charged that by cutting ‘the yesterday with only a half-hour Kathryn Marie Landis, 13 months, TOKYO, Sept. 14 (UP)-—Singér Air Force back-to 48 groups, al- fuel supply remaining. Later; a

JOLSON. REACHES JAPAN

to. a hospital here after being Pan [American World airways for a 70-group force, President plane crash in the woods between

truck by a truck while playing plane on his way to entertain Truman put the nation in danger Osceola ‘and Houseville, Lewis in front of her home. = = American troops in Korea. of Russian attack. - ' _ County. :

4 k BRC et of rye: y - > 7 i pr 2 : - - Rar 5 4 i ¥ - ic, re : : : ; SA y : Nee eX ¥ 5 : ! pis “in > Marae TEL rs Ee OC ROR SER SRR ag 2 La HT PRCT "ER mari u £ ‘ te fa ir vivian fir ata TRY Caen : he? g TPA

up to boom a salute across the

with 1000. Pennsylvania National Guardsmen wearing summer dress uniforms with combat boots, helmet liners, blue neckerchiefs and : white gloves, Edinburg, died yesterday en route Al Jolson arrived today aboard a though Congress granted funds lumberjack reported hearing. a arms.

armory, to leave the ‘bereaved _ (families alone, with their dead, | collision near here. t - i i -

ute across the tack against the Truman admin:

"American Legion. He succeeds

4 n can Cemetery - Operators Susquehanna River which separ-|jstration foreign policies in. -a that * grave ype have Police Detective Louis Gohman. ates Wilkes-Barre from Kingston, speech. < tripled and cemetery labor Mr. Gohman received.an award

Public Barred cortege

from state Legion officials for : “meritorious service in policing £0 the recent siate Legion convenCl DL To lon. No Legionnaires were ins CONSTITUTION DAY SET jured and accidents and damage Gov. S8chricker today pro- were kept to a minimum, the eis claimed Sept.°17 as Constitution tation declared. 114 (UP)=Two Niles, Mich. men Day agd urged -all churches, ‘Guests at last night's. meeting were killed and two other persons schools and civic organizations to included Mayor Feeney and Muni-, were hurt today in an .auto-truck participate in special patriotic cipal Judges Alex. Clark and . ceremonies on that date. a Howard. . =~. . .

He declared that bungling on. foreign affairs led to the war in Korea and failure of the ‘United States to be prepared for war.

costs quadrupled in the past

The route was lined 17 years.

2 DIE IN CAR CRASH

They - carried side- CHICAGO HEIGHTS, Il. Sept.

The public was barred from the

. Rennie aa i TEE JIS

b- the concentration-of troops and

the, When confronted. Jake offered - .

and John Kiein picked her up and"