Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1950 — Page 10

PAGE. 10 a a" Sa

b Ses Says s Czechs will Rise

. On'Way to Korea ? Give Better Treatment To Severe Wounds:

By JANE STAFFORD . Sclence Serviee Medical Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 30—New Aressings almost as. big as a “lanket are on their way to Korea ‘or better treatment, of large-sized wounds “and burns our - fighting} men may suffer. The -smaller of the two new iressings is-about five times larg«r than the largest size single 'ressing now in use. It measures '9. by 34 inches. The large one measures 43 by 45 inches. The dressings are made of a ‘ayer of highly absorbent fine 1esh gauze, a layer of absorbent ‘otton, a layer of non-absorbent ~ellilose and an outer layer. LOf} haper, { The gauze layer that goes next of the wound may be treated to reduce irritation to wounds. The von-absorbent layer prevents bac-| oria from entering the wound] ‘oth gauze and paper are buff

a

Prof. Vaclav L. Benes, who chose frendom, poinks to his natien, bound in Communist oppression. *

He wiirned the American public not to take at face value

es State Service BL OOMINCTON, Sept. 30

The Czechs will rise again and

ler iv anln o Cited | eliminate their oppressors, reports of co-operation of his One advantage of the new! Pref. Vaclav I. Benes, newly| people with the Communists. ressings is that they. can be left. aPpointed Indiana University | “The Reds may compel them

faculty member said yestérday. “The love of freedom cannot be wiped out in one generation by the Communists,” said the nephew of the martyfed Eduard | of the Benes in Czechoslovakia, | who fled oppression to take up a new life in the teaching profession in America.

but they” won't win their allegiance,” he said. The 40-year-old Czech patriot, who represented his nation\ at the 1945 United Nations Conflerence in San Francisco, is now teaching international law and political organization in Balkan and Baltic countries at IU,

n for as long as two weeks, intead of having to be changed very day or two as at present. nother i§ the greater ease and eed with which the big wound r burn can be covered. 4 The extensive burns and wounds] om high explosive bombs, blast nd fires during the last war 1d the possibility of extensive urns and wounds in case of any| ‘No Direction’ —

iture atomic bomb bursts a to A '™M Wh . 7 f thi rag. te ‘Amy Medion an Who Can't Love'

: evjoss Research and Deveiop- Leaps bo Death i in Chicago ‘olice Raid Nets | Immigration Rules Barred French

Yobbery Suspect, Bride of Three Weeks From U. S. | - CHICAGO, Sept. 30 (UP)—Murray 8. Mayer, 29, married three

tight for Gaming {weeks ago to a French girl on the Riviera, slashed his wrists A SUSPECT who tried to par- land plunged to his death from the eighth floor of a Loop hotel

way ahead last night— -until po- love cannot live.”

‘a stepped In. His body was found in an alley behind the Planters Hotel, Wiley Clark, 70, a watchman at| In his hotel room, police found a| e American Creosating Co. oh|partly.empty whisky ‘bottle and 28° In a note to his wife, Mr.

Sherman Dr., was slugged and notes to his parents, his brothers [Mayer wrote: *bbed of $72 last night. He rec-ianq his wife. “If there is an afterlife I pray fined Ho atiacker ang Same Among the scribbled messages |God that we may find true love \f 3649 Terrace Ave. : (was one saying, “Having made a/there. You are a wonderful girl [terrible mistake. Mental and emo-|3na. I havé let you down.”

Tamme Gans, ol

g|Pilots Torch

i Hay, Explode Tank IL

FORCE

thik agamst. the North Koreans, including prop wash. =

and rockets.

get a roaring. blaze going.

'Bafning, but the tank just would not blow up.” . » » »

CONVINCED that their schertie

~—+would not work, the pilots called

for other fighter planes to come in and knock out the T-34 tank. planes in, the tank blew up. “It banged and popped real pretty for a while,” said the other pilot, Maj. Harry H. Moreland, Mobile, Ala. “Although: the con-

"|troller and other pilots saw it,

nobody” else will believe our

story.”

Takes 2 Police To Nab Woman, 67

As usual it took two policemen last night to bring in a 67-year-

was her 180th arrest. The arrests started in 1926 ‘in Terre Haute. They have been for investigation of narcotics, vagrancy, prostitution, disorderly conduct, forgery, profanity, keeping a house of ill fame asl] har-| Ber Coe a | boring ' a vicious a smete other things. This time it was drink,

bir V_o« o mele

ov A St loot in a crap game was today, leaving an explanation that “a man who can’t love or accepti. To celebrate Ruth sang “hymns

rom her cell. Police mopped their brows. “It always takes we of us” one sighed.

block Ft. Wayne Ave. last night. She is just a little over § feet tall. “But she's a scrapper,” the tired | policeman added.

POLICE FOUND * porter in a (tional trouble. Driving me sas His Philosophy

| ry “interesting position-—on his «+ nees in the street at 1231 Ma- Mr. Mayer's father, Walter H. Mr. Mayer summed ‘up” his “ira St. He and seven other Mayer, a textile importer here, philosophy in his note to his paren were huddled around a set identified the body. The son had ents which said: “I exonerate +f dice and dollar bills. slice rolled craps to the game, ‘orter reported he was winning. The eight participants were harged with gaming. Porter as also booked for pre-robbery.

Pike of Cleveland, O. A coroner's {responsibility in my death. jury returned a verdict of suicide.| «ye 7 were-to place the responsi-| Vacationed in Europe

who had gone to Europe on a vacation, had been dejected because immigration rules prevented |

"ocal Couple Aids his bringing his bride home when

. . - njured Sheriff _ |he returned Sept. 9. The family| A vacationing Indianapolis|/iives near Kenosha, Wis. ouple drew attention in Birming-| Murray Mayer fell in love with am, Ala., this week by stdpping|Maria St.

direction.

“When a man- can get no joy

in living. I live fram day to day

Georgla, 29, at theiheg you to take pity on a son

wn and fatally injured when » tried to stop an alleged moon\iner's car. oe The couple, Mr. and Mrs, Clarnce A. Mackey, 1655 N. Alabama , drove Sheriff L. T. Bozeman et Shelby County, Ala. to a trmin lirmingham hospital after he was jured

they -v were married three weeks 8 lof f happiness.”

Sheriff Bozeman was struck 3 he and other peace officers rung a trap in a field in which hey had found five . stills, He - sas struck down when he tried

Until registered at the hotel as Nelson both- of you from any guilt or/because he was “unavoidably de-

[bility anywhere I would place it Place. The meeting, sponsored by on: my- inability to have or accept|the Indianapolis Postal Alliance, The father sald that his son, ove. A ‘man's life must have|will feature a debate on campaign There are ‘two things|issues with Charles Brownson, [that give direction to- lifé—love| Republican candidate’ for Confor a girl and love for a cause. gress.

J ————p—————————— t of either, he has no purpose| BAR TO HONOR JOHNSON and that has been unbearable, Ijdianapolis Bar Association for » aid a sheriff who was run|Monte Carlo, the family said, and who could not find the essentials beth set for 11 a. m. next Friday : rt, “Room

Jacobs Caricels Speech | Rep. Andrew Jacobs last night, canceled a speech scheduled for today at the Senate Ave. YMCA

tained” in Washington. Attorney {Patrick Chavis will speak in his

Memorial meeting of the Inthe late Emsley W. Johnson has

. AT AN AMERICAN AIR BASE IN KOREA, Sept. 30 (UP)~They are using every-

they were all out of ammunition] : wi decided to fan the fireloc, th the breeze from their whir- : ring propellers to see If they could working with British soidiers as it

“We made sweeps over the stack for about a half an hour Italian

a big blaze going,” surrender to the Brit commander of the as

As they were leading the other| British and Ttallan guns boomed

old woman familiar to police. It|

She weighs 102 pounds. | vessels. ; 3

y It was on Sept. 8; 1943, that the fleet sail Salled to Malta to

In August of h Méarterranean . fleet, Admiral Sir John Edalatotn, put into an Italfan harbo A few Ris later the Italian naval chief of staff, Admiral Romeo Oliva, sailed into Mal aboard his flagship .. ndrea Doria.

again. This time it was in friend{ly salute, as joint Italo-British naval maneuvers began to test Mediterranean sea -defenses and train Italy in the role she will play as a full partner in the At|lantic Pact. The joint naval-air maneuvers ended but special Britikh and Italian fleet units are continuing exercises aimed #t protecting convoys and keeping the Italian

attacks.

Jets, and something more, than

toldianapolis street an incident

coastline free’ from amphibious City Motorists

They say a soldier 1s Something

a man, ; ; Last night on a downtown In-

showed how one GI was more, and another GI less, than a man. -Hardly anyone noticed as the blind beggar started to cross the the! Med street. A young soldier, the despite a few et had under his OD belt, took the man's arm. Gently, almost like he was .son leading father, he helped the man|" : LE Be > TWO MP’S were standing on the walk, It is the duty of Military Police to see that soldiers make a good appearance in. thei civilign community, Just as the soldier released the blind man’s arm, one of the MPs stepped up. Did he pat his back with a “Nice going, soldier”? No, in a tone strictly GI, he said:

He mumbled, “Yessir,” straightened the tie and walked straight away.

Italy is limited to a navy of 67,500 tons.. She cannot possess {aircraft carriers, submarines, new {torpedo boats“or landing craft under the terms of the peace) treaty. She has only two 25-year-| old battleships, the Andrea Doria and Calo Duilio, five cruisers, four|,, {destroyers, 16 old torpedo boats] land 19 corvettes in her fighting) forces, plus 35 minesweepers, eight | - patrol beats and 73 auxiliaries, fuel ships, tugs, etc. 1 With this force, manned by less| than the treaty quota of 25,000!

fend a 1,700-mile coastline and

{two islands, Sicily and Sardinia.'more than two blocks af i She was picked up in the 900 Under the Atlantic Pact, she hm 3 after park

team with Britain to keep. the

{Mediterranean open for allied three-fourths can drive to within {a block of their downtown destinations, >

Tavern Owner Charged With Firing" at Crowd |

Police last night arrested a {tavern owner and charged him | with shooting into a crowd which | gathered when he ejected three | men from his bar. |

rr Harry Pearson, . 48, proprietor, of Pearson's Tavern, 413 8. Pine St., was held after spectators ac-| cused him of irresponsible shoot-| ing. No one was wounded by the | two shots. Raymond Simpson,. 22, of 19] Harrison St., was treated for. a lacerated forehead at General Hospital. He was one'of the men lejected from the bar. Pearson was ed with

Superior Cot Court,

shooting with felonious intent.

o stop a racing car, but succeedd in shooting one of the tires of he vehicle out even as he fell, Deputies arrested the driver f the cair and hailéd the Mackvs, who were passing by. The! heriff died shortly after being! 1ken to the hospital. The Mackeys were on their way | rome from a Florida vacation.

Two Boys Nabbed Aunting in City |

Paul King can resume build-| ‘ng his home today. King, 40, of 2230 N. Capitol \ve.,, "had been apprehensive the ast few “evenings because he eard gunshots in the 700 block of W., 13th St., where he is building a home. He called police. Patrolmen “Albert Booth and . Tames McElroy verified his appreension, In fact, they had to duck necausé bullets whistled close | verheads ‘ ’ Stalking the area, the policeen nabbed two boys, 15 and 18, carrying two rifles. Orie of them irried a dead rabbit. The boys, who reported hunt- £ birds and rabbits in the city as excellent the last few days, ere turned over to juvenile uthorities.

BRIGHT PLAIDS FOR SCHOOL

Boys’ Sport Shirts

51 49 ” $1 19 Boge all ages love bold’ plata

shirts ard these are beauties! Trim tailored with long sleeves, breast pocket and | neat collar. Choice of warm cotton flannel, rich broad. ‘cloth or poplin in lovely Fall colors. Each one is Sanforized for less than 1% “'. shrinkage. Sizes 6 to 18.

IS. Supreme Court

‘eopens Tomorrow

WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP) The nine Supreme Court jus- . Ces return to the bench Monday ith issues of communism and}: ieial segregation ‘at the top of 1e docket.

Broadcloth Poplin = . Flannel

su

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Lous’ Winter Caps

a $1 2045]. Lr

Three styles in boyy’ dips Tor sclicol oF pata An all wool cap with cotton suede lining comes in red, blue, green or brown block plaids; sizes 614 to 67%. A corduroy eap in red and black Norse plaid has a cotton suede lining; sizes 63; to 7. A cotton gabar-’ (dine ski cap has a quilted rayon lining; comes in-tan

AND SPORTS

INE

*

rief .ceremony, and attorneys, "ill be admitted to practice. Then the court adjourns for a 5 eek while the justices deliberte on- whether to accept or turn wn some 300 petitions for reiew which have come in-during - 1e sumtimer. On Monday, Oct. 9, : ae. justices will meet for a real usiness session and start hear1g arguments. ; : |

See our FULL PAGE AD on page 24 in the

i When the juris take = their Zz - zed, #4 2 ’ arly in : laces the 16ist co session will - ave begun: The f meeting is iv - ways short. The will be a

. Magazine of ~ Today Sundoy Times

ranging in population from 5000

said, nearly a third of the motor-|' officers and men, Italy must "de- ists Fim A into downtown eon.

Walking More

CHICAGO, Sept. 30 (UP)—City motorists are being forced to walk more than they ever did. The American Public Works Association said growing congestion is forcing motorists to park| their cars farther from: ‘their {downtown destinations. . .. The association cited a study of iparking problems in 46 cities

to more than one million. In the big cities, the association

{ness districts were forced to'walk

In the smaller cities, almost

Jones, 736 is Ave., will celebrate their golden anni-

came to Indianapolis in from Fountain Run, Cy Tie Tompie, Lewis are residenfs of i anapolis. Mr. Jones refired in 1946 after having worked 21 years for Armour & Co. Mr. and Mrs. Jones also have six grand-

children and three great-grand-“Ggt that tie straightened, Bud.”| chi oe The soldier looked bewildered.) -—— :

The

With a goal of $1,472,760 for the 49 Red Feather Agencies in

|the city, Chairman Richafa ™

James said last night that all advance drive ‘had been completed. ; Churches were expected to “as-

fl [sist in the 1950 campaign. Lead-

ers in all faiths were prepared to mention the annual drive in ser-

' | mons today.

The 1950 goal is almost $200,

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It Will | In Atte me CAMP or — First servic tral Indiana World War ¢ at'3 p. m. to The center time Frank! Armory, inc such games, tables, tenni sion.

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