Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1950 — Page 11
49
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i they plainly visible? - 2,
(3-pe, set) - Nght to ferret out the illusive address.
ET re re ¥ sidewalk 1h front of your adobe haand locate your address numbers, Are
are you won't be able to find h numbers. Of course, you put them up in the day‘time and promptly forgot them. You know what the number §s and where you live. ’
Is a Great Inconvenience
THAT'S ALL FINE and dandy if you don’t care if anyone finds your place or not, Don't care if an out-of-town friend pulls in late. and
~~ pokes around the neighborhood searching for your.
number until he gets picked up for peeking. If you don't care that a doctor some dreary night wastes precious minutes pounding on doors and hopping on and off porches. Things like that have Happened. My public service molecules today are kicking up a fuss. I'm hoping to create enough interest in the problem so that you'll go out and correct it it it needs correcting. We're going into the dark and miserable part of the year which should be an added incentive to paint, replace or relocate numbers so they can be seen. I took a tour around the city the other night and discovered so many hidden and missing numpers that it made me wonder if people are deliberately hiding them. Man, alive, if I had a house I'd want that address to be out there for all the worl@ to see. At ]east so I could see it. The tour started in the 900 block on N. Alabama St. Some sections wolld be pretty dark even for a owl. Apartment houses were in deep shadows you see in J, Arthur Rahk movie pro-
* ductions. My peepers, which have become accus-
tomed to nocturnal duty and are considered in some corners as the best in the business, failed to make out numerals on several homes, Business establishments were without any visible numbers. I've always been under the impression that an address is important. It's one of the main components of advertising. And yet this slipshod way of "doing business is in evidence in all parts of the city. When you are out with the specific purpose of finding or not finding house numbers, you become impressed with the number of porch lights that are turned on. But the light serves the master Mttle. ‘There's no number. Or the number is placed in such a way that the presence of the light merely throws heavier shadows and obliterates it. At 1341 N. Alabama St. is a good example of the way a house number should be displayed. Black on white, you don’t have to use a search-
Churches often overlook an address and, taxi drivers tell me, this negligence is most disconcerting when the church is not well known. Bushes and awnings and the elements all combine to make matters difficult. A home owner will paint the numerals the same color as. the house. Homes that are set hack.from the street a mile ought to have the number on the steps near the sidewalk. Many do. Many don’t. I'm convinced few home owners take the prox-
’
.
ee On o Sey By Built for 14 lowa Fray Tn. A fio IU Activity
~ Blanket Hop, Queen Selection Keep Social Circle Swirling
Times State Serviee
Holmes would give up the search for somé in the city,
imity of their porch lights into consideration with the placement of address numbers. They'll have a bright light near the framework of the door and the numerals will be on front of the-porch over the stairs. Fine in the daytime but only a blur at night. The Coronado Hotel, 2101-2§05 Park Ave. can’t be missed as far as the address goes, It is paintad/
on the front doef. The hall lights make it stand dumped the highly touted Univer-|
out in bold relief. Street lights offer a great opportunity to place numerals in such a way that they can be seen readily. In order to do this, however, a nan has to go dut’in the evening to pick his spot. A good] example of using city lights to an advantage can be seen at 2467 Park Ave. Examples of poor planning are to he observed on almost any street in the city. It was impossible to see in one extended tour streets where an ideal address situation existed along the entire block. If you know of such a section, let me know, ’
I's Covered in the Law |
SECTIONS 438 through 442 of the City Code provide that occupants of structures display the
address in a “conspicuous place.” How many, people bother with that? - the code? How much thought have you given
your ‘address? The mailman can see-it during the day and that's good enough. Do you know I missed a friendly little beer and poker party at a buddy's house one time just because he had his address behind a bush? And the street was one of those dark babies that give me fhe creeps. One pass along that thoroughfare and I headed for civilization with neon and juke boxes. Take a look at your number. No, do it tonight.
Police Scandal
By Robert C. Ruark
' NEW YORK, Oct. 2-We have been making a big political thing here of a cleanup in an evidently graft-ridden police department, with bookmakers inging merrily, cops being called on the carpet, a w police commissioner being appointed, and even Gov. Dewey sliding into the act for whatever political benefits may be gleaned thereby.
It is the kind of circus at the city loves — dramatic headlines daily, new elopments every hour on the hour, and finally, the kind of robust hassel which builds potential governors, mayors, and even Presidents. Mr. Dewey got his shot at immortality from a sensational prosecution, as did Senor William O'Dwyer, now south of ‘the border.
Old ‘Friends’ Are Absent
BUT THE CURRENT big peast beating has no Lucky Luciano or Jimmy Hines or Lepke Buchalter t6 hang a conclusive rap on. Not yet, anyhow. No big pigeon has fluttered out of the grand jury chambers, Our new cop chieftain, Thomas Murphy, is an able, honest man, but he is up against a practically insoluble set of circumstances, You can’t definitely stop corruption of police and politicos by gambling combines for many basie reasons. One is that people will always gamble, up to 30 billions a year worth, and so long as there are gamblers there will be gambling combines to accommodate them, Being illegal operators, bookies have to have protection. Protection comes on two levels, very low and very high. The cop on the beat gets his
_five-spot. Who knows what the lieutenant and the
captain and the inspector gets? Who knows the size of the Christmas present to the really big official? Who knows the amount of Kick-in to the campaign fund? Until something is done about chain- of-com-mand nobody will ever be able to swab up a rotten relationship between crook and official. The private can't take without the sergeant’'s knowledge and permission. The sergeant must operate under
the lieutenant, the lieutenant under the captain,
and so on up the line until you reach into the!
vitals of your local ang even national government. Evervone on a crooked take operation must be strictly in cahoots, because one honest link in the chain is a danger to the takers,
Another flat guarantee that nothing very much can be done about cop-bookie collusion is vested in the old and creaky system of punishment that has always kept a police force cynical. You rarely
fire a cop when you catch him stealing—or rather,
when expediency demands that somebody take a fall to satisfy the righteous. What you do is transfer him, and demote him, and then, when the heat dies, quietly restore his| rank and move him back to a fruitful beat. In the
last year Mr. O'Dwyer transferred whole precincts to purchase “I” blankets for out-| of officials as a reprimand, with all the force and standing Hoosier athletes, Hoosier athletes. practicality of removing a dollar from one packet
and putting it in the other. The boys went righ on doing business. They merely swapped Era
Morally, loss of job, at least, must be the basis | of punishment for betrayal of job, and the cops have never based it that way. A guy gets caught in a bribe case, or is found to be spectacularly in-/ competent, he just gets transferred to an unpleas-!
ant precinet. The ‘buck is passed; dishonesty or
incompetence is perpetuated. Our new ball of fire,
Commissioner Murphy, plans a shakeup in which hundreds of police will be demoted and transferred. It means as little, in reality, as stirring a stick in a hopper of wheat, Individual grains swap position, but the mass remains constant,
Honest Lads Out in Cold
IT 1S PHYSICALLY impossible to enforce hon-| esty of individuals in-any large town; there is the possibility of topside corruption. The boys cover up for each other, and the honest lads’
‘find themselves walking a bleak beat in Canarsie.
‘I admire the nobility of aim in our current crusade against wickedness; but am cynical about
the cops and politicians. People are built that way.
Peek at Europe
"WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—I am pleased to report
‘(except for twinges in my left arm every time I hit this typewriter) that taking a trip to Europe is a good deal easier than it used to be. The diplomats have unwound some of the Ted tape that used to trip tourists. What's cooking is. that when next you hear from me I'll be in London, having a look ‘at the House of Lords and taking a scientific sampling in a pub to see.what strange brews those Britjshers are drinking for beer.’ These flying machines are wonderful. Trans World Airlines is opening a new route to London and Germany and I'm going along for
the ride. While I'm abontdt I'll drop down for a few week while the French masterminds decided Saturday to- Robert Meyers,
days each in France, Switzerland, Italy and Greece,
Just a General Good Look
MY IDEA is to find a seat on the curb by the ‘Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and “have a good, long look at those Russians across the street. In ‘Rome I want to discover, among other things,
“whether the Excelsior Hotel still has signs in its
‘bathrooms urging the guests to deposit their soap - in the office safe. i
In Athens; I understand, I'll have tea with the: for any of my old scars; said I had to have a!
‘king; never. having seen a “genuine king up close (except when I ran into a fellow named Carol from Rumania in Mexico), I am anticipating this. In Switzerland I hope to buy my bride a genuine ‘Swiss watch. In Paris I intend to see whether
the ladies of the Folies Bergere still are wearing cow and pumped a small bucket of serum into} my arm. It immediately began to swell, stayed
costumes of talcum powder and goose pimples. You get the idea. . My reports from Furope will be letters home
Jnare. interested in reporting on a ride (if I can
By Frederick C. Othman
wangle it) in a volkswagon, | than on “what ‘Ernest Bevin thinks about the world situation. Getting started was a pleasure. The State Department .lady at the passport office seemed
glad to see me. All she wanted was two pictures Prief. After attorneys are admit-
of me and $10. The green covered passport came up a few days later with a notation saying that
“recent treaties among all the nations involved
made visas unnecessary. -. That sounds like a small thing, maybe, but in my wanderings in the past I've spent more time, arguing with clerks in foreign embassies about visas than in actually going out doing my work.’ I remember once I was stuck in Paris for a solid
whether they'd let me land there again on my way back home. I put that week to good use on a ~ street the GIs call Pig Alley, but my employers
how one small clerk in a Foreign Office could cause me to buy all that champagne.
U. S. Wants Fresh Scar’ OUR\ GOVERNMENT does insist, "however, that anybody going abroad be vaccinated against smallpox before he comes back. It wouldn't settle
© were a little i ce They couldn't understand t
fresh one, That was easy; a couple of scratches and no after effect. It turned out also that travelers headed for Greece must be innoculated for. typhus. The doc hauled out a syringe like the vet uses on our)
and blue, Had I known, I believe I'd have ski
been much of a tea drinker, anyhow,
House numbers . . . Af night, Sherlock he for alumni this week-|
Did you. know about
BLOOMINGTON, Oct, 2-—Ac-| A (tivity at Indiana University today| centered on plans for traditional]
end when the Fightin’ Hoosiers meet Iowa's Hawkeyes. A variety show, Homecoming | Queen election, competition in! decorating fraternities, sororities and residence halls and the annual Blanket Hop are on the pro-| gram, as added attractions for alumni returning to the campus]. to. see the grid team meet a re-| juvenated Iowa eleven that
|sity of Southern California last! week-end in its season opener. Vote Thursday i Queen candidates must register) by tomorrow for the honor of] competing for the ,homecoming! diadem. Only women whose par-| ents or grandparents also. attended IU are eligible. On Thurs-| day, students will go to the polis to register their choice for .gqueen.| In the past the queen.has not] been announced until between-| halves ceremonies at the ball game, However, this year the win-! 8 ner. and her court will be intro-| duced at a homecoming variety show Friday evening in the IU] auditorium. The show is sponsored by the Marching Hundred, Indiana's marching band | Another homecoming activity on Friday evening will be a torchlight parade through the campus, | winding up at Jordan Field, where there will be a bonfire rally. = and pep session for the next day's football game. Long: before dawn on Satur-| day, fraternity and sorority] pledges and freshmen in undver-| sity residence halls will be out in their front yards erecting tradi-| tional homecoming decorations,
|
urday morning. Queen Ceremonies |
MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1050 = :
3
HR ¥
$
3 i
3
Photo by John Spickiemire, Times Staff Photographer. Bicycles are the favorite mode of transportation for the John Pierce family, 2248 Lesley Ave., |The displays will be judged Sat-| even down to 2!/;-year-old Steven. A little too young to pedal his own, Steven rides in the luggage (jose to the ministry of defense basket as his father does the work.
ore arene univ ant ve Eran World Must hae Couple Dies in Crash
queen-crowning ceremonies just before the flag raising at the start of the ball game.
o - . _ In After the ball game, from 4 to Guard Liberty Hull
6 p. m,, there will be an alumni
reception in Alumni Hall of the Says U S Can't Relax With End of War
activities will be the Blanket Hop, WASHINGTON, Oct. sponsored each year by Sigma Cordell Hull, America’s wartim | Delta. Chi, journalism fraternity,| Secretary of State,
Memorial Union Building attended by faculty members. The windup of the week-end
less elements.”
The free world, he said, must]
‘Red Cases Fac Cases Face “get on fire with the spirit of { liberty.”
American men
Supreme Court
Tribunal Opens
The accent was on communism in
The court faced an array of cases related to wo {varying degrees, Some already are on the docket while others| are working their way up from lower courts.
several years.
few days ago. The six lawyers tne United Nations. who defended them and were sentenced for contempt previously had appealed their convictions. If the court refuses review, the | convictions in both cases stand. The race question also is before the court again in a variety of forms.
The opening session is always pe A he said.
ted to practice, the court adjourns for a week.
~—Burns suffered when he fell into he said. a pool of gasoline proved fatal :
Martinsville.
Hing: to escape. He was helping in[stall a relay fower for Blooming-| {ton television station WTTV at hospital. Saturday
Widow of Fishing Accident Victim
Dies as Car Smashes Into Parked Auto
For the second time within four months, three Indianapalis chil- |: sore for three days, and at this writing, is: black | dren today prepared to attend the funeral of ome of their parents. to Japan from Turkey in August) Services for Mrs. Betty Pierce, killed yesterday in an auto acei- . from a tourist on a two-weeks’ vacation; I'll be Greece, including tea with the king. I've: never | dent, will be held at 10 a..m. Wednesday in the Robert W. Stirling a then Was transferred to Ko- | Funeral Home. Burial will be held in Washington’ Park.
The Quiz Master 22? Test Your Skill 22?
When did Trygve Lie assume his present “position with the United Nations? Th During its session in London the General Assembly on Feb. 1, 1946, elected Trygve Lie of Nor-
way as its first secretary-general. : * >
With t country is Niello art associated? The town iof Nakon Sritamaraj, Thailand, 1000
“years old, is the home of perhaps the most dis-—-
tinotive Thal art, the “Niello” work which has : been practiced for mo han eight centuries. ... @
. What are the pringipal breeds of dairy cows. rs ( J0.the United, States? 1 Brown Swiss, Guernsey, Holstein and Toa
aiid se
What is the fastest transcontinental. passen-
ger run ever made by a single train?
17, when he slipped from the, —
bank while fishing with his son, Years. She is survived by her step- | Maiirice Milton Pierce, 18. .* |son, Maurice, and two sons, Ste-| : phen Earl, 6, and Robert Alien, 2. Mrs. Pierce, who was 25, was| Mrs, Plerce also is survived by | killed" when the car she was | {her mother, Mrs. Catherine Ben-| Ruth Gregory, .. Jn October, 1934, a diesel-powered stream- driving struck a parked car in|nett, Linton; her father, Walter ‘address. f=! -
Hits Parked Auto
liner made an experimental run from Los Angeles front of 3034 W. 10th St. at 3| | Patrick, ‘Dayton,
to New York City, a distance of 3258 miles, ing, m, yesterday. 56 hours and 55 minutes, including stops en route. Frank Lookebill, "$20 Virginia anapolis, and a sister, - ‘Marilyn
® Ts e
‘the sun? -
The earth moves ara the sun with an avervelocity of about 1108 miles per minute. It
{ 2 Sa a
What is the speed 0 of the earth ir its orbit about
Ave, riding in the car, was cut) | Newman, Linton, and bruised.
alert” against the world's “law-|
{should not relax now Korean War is ending.” he said. "They must stand united and act| ‘together “in a spirit {partisanship and with
1950-51 Term Today tional interest alone at heart.”
WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (UP) Mr. Hull, celebrating his 79th. tired several years ago. birthday, observed the occasion the Supreme Court today as the DY receiving long-time friends — i, yendricks County and lived in Justices donned. their robes for SOMe famous, some obscure, the start of the 1950-51 term. also took the opportunity to speak were members of the Speedway out on world affairs in the most ~pristian Church and Speedway forceful language he has used in Chapter, OES. — :
Mr. and Mrs. Phillips, who lived
trips to their farm .every year. Mr. Phillips was a retired agent of the Aetna Insurance Co. He (UP)
Both he and his wife were born
He indianapolis for 15 years.
“Hnited Nations Mr. Phillips was a member bf the Speedway Masonic Lodge. He was a past master of the Jamestown Masonic Lodge.
Served Record Term
Mr. Hull served as Secretary of Th I State from 1933 to 1944—longer e appeal of the 11 .Com- than any other American. the chances for practical success. So long as horses Munist leaders convicted Sf con- gti)} colsely follows the run there will be bookmakers, and so long as there SPiracy in New York last year national developments—including are bookmakers there will be. corruption among reached the high bench only atejecasts of Russian speeches in
Surviving are two foster daughMrs. Esta Thorpe, apoiis, and Mrs, Mary Lottes, Leb-
Mrs. Hull received newsmen’ in the Wardman Park Hotel suite, The free world, he said, should | be constantly on guard to * tect all that is most precious so long as any lawless Hiteytoni, That applies to Fuope as well as to the United
sisters of Mr. Phillips, Mrs. Grace . Mooresville, and Mrs. . Jeffersonville; his brother.
, Charles Rutledge, ; seven foster grandchildren, foster great-grandchildren and several neices and nephews. The couple will be returned to Indianapolis for funeral services
rean question,
AT am certain that with time ‘and patience, and with devotion and ‘sacrifice on the part of the . {free nations, the Unjted Nations Plunge Into Burning will steadily grow in strength and a capacity to fulfill Gasoline Fatal to Man function, the preservation of inCOLUMBUS, Ind. Oct. 2 (UP) ternational peage and “security,”
Local Marine Fighting in Korea
Walter R. Gregory, (son of Mrs. Frieda Eckstein, 1402 As fighting with the 1st Marine Division in Korea.
» terms, ion.
24, McDuff Condition ‘Good’ ;
A burning rag accidentally feri ~Faul- McDuff, Marion County into a gasoline drum, and Mr. Democratic party chairman, Meyers fell into the fire while try-|gaod condition today at Methodist | had hing ton | Hospital. He was admitted to the High School, has morning for been the time, treatment of a stomach. Ailment.
forimerty a fi
‘Children Mourn 2d Parent | Killed Within Four Months
ing hie basic
co oy m » Lejeune,
t Show and convention in In{dianapolis to--imorrow, Wednesday and - Thurs-
His mother said that he wen
His latest letter home was,
| Her husband. Maurice, 37, drowned in the Geist Reservoir June said she received the letter Fri-
‘will speak on “What Is. Your . {Competitor
tie just said that “he was all! right,”> she said. Pfc. - Gregory has a brother, or Fred Eckstein, and a sister, Miss} Bing! both of the home yi. president of ay,
| brother; Howard Patrick, Indi-| Do g-Go ne KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Det. (UP)—Edward S. Bowman has won a diyoree on grounds that his wife, her . dog and himself shared the ‘marital:bed for four years.
In another accident, Sawara] Police: said Mr. Lookebill was Dawson, 53, of 704 W. 24th St, dazed and walked to his home, was in fair condition in General where he received medical treat- Hospital today. He was struck hy! ment. The couple was returningia car driven by James “Milton | rapid in January, whey we are nearest from a visit with mutual rg Hiatt, 41, of 510 Bright St., while aud slowest is July, whew we 424 Surthoss Mrs. Pierce, who was born ee Ea had lived here seben sm near 20 St
n|walking ' across = Northwestern , derness and kin Yesurang, :
to South Dakota Lake
Mr., Mrs. Raleigh M. Phillips Killed
Returning From Trip to Western Farm
An -elderly Indianapolis couple, - farm in Mott, N. D., died yesterday as a result of injuries receive oy when their car crashed through a guard rail afd plunged into a Berta Ie ar ta e South Dakota lake. Raleigh M. Phillips and his wife Pearl, both 68, were en route free nations today to be “déuble- to Indianapolis. Their car skidded on oily pavement, South Dakota state police said ——— " | Mr. Phillips was dead when taken, {from the partly submerged They said he Apparently was stricken with a heart attack. Mrs. Phillips died later at a Flandreau,
1st. Red. Reaction.
To Ultimatum Du
Vishinsky Expected To Answer in
returning from their. wheat
PAGE 1
World ‘Report Sa 2
Russ Feelers ~ On Korea Fail a To Budge UN
Seen as Trap To Lull U. S. in False Sealy
By the Wire Services Persistent reports circulated today at the United Nations that
{Premier Stalin would welcome a
peace meeting with President Truman. The reports come mostly from diplomatic sources of the so-called neutral capitals—-8tockholm, New ™elhi, Cairo and second-handed from Berne and Geneva. They are sp persistent thas is generally agreed “that the Rus-
'sians themselves are planting
them. New Delhi seems {o be a favorite spot, probably because Prime. Minister Nehru has attempted to assume the role of . East-West mediator. The really remarkable “thing, however, is the reaction. Until June 25. when Korean Communiste roared their Russian made tanks across the 38th Parallel, the idea would have found vast sympathy at the United Nations. Course Is Set Rut the Korean War and the part Russia has played in it has convinced even the most hopefully optimistic. that the Kremlin s course of conquest. is set and can be stopped only by for-e. A Truman-Stalin meeting tn frame a 50-year peace would be,
it 1s agreed. only a trap to lull the United States into a false state of security.
If Russia sincerely wants peace, it is pointed ouf, the United Nations 1s now running six days a week hoth at lake Success and
[Flushing Meadow and the Soviets are free to indicate their peace
desires from day to day.
"France
A FRENCH military writer
said today that Russia planned to strike simultaneously at six vital points if it. went to war against the Western powers. The writer, Bernard Simiot, wrote his estimate of Soviet plans for the well-informed magazine “Hommes Et Mondes” (Men and Worlds). He said a Russian army , of 175 divisions, backed by massed tanks and planes, would attack Western
Persian Gulf and Alaska simultaneously,
— Soviet Union
THE RUSSIAN Foreign MinisVery charged today that the United States, Britain and France are using the issue of unreturned {German prisoners of war for propaganda purposes. |. The charge’ constituted Russia’s reply to the notes on the war prisoner question submitted July 14 by the Western Big Three.
LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.. Oct. 2 (Russia announced some time
-Russian Foreign Minister ago that all of her German PWs Andrei Y. Vishinsky was expected had been sent home, except for to give the first Communist reac- 13,000-odd ‘‘war criminals” and tion today to Gen. Douglas Mac- gick. A series of Western notes Arthur's surrender call to the since have asked what happened North Koreans.
to millions of Germans left un-
Like the rest of the world. the accounted for by the Soviet state-
Korea's reply to the surrender demand broadcast Koreans by the United Nations field commander. ‘Battefront developments — including Pyongyang's ment that
T'N Opinion Split But in the United Nations Gen-
"eral Assembly's 60-nation political committee, now debating the KoMr. Vishinsky was expected to give the first 4ip-off on the Communist attitude toward Gen. MacArthur's terms Conervatives, opened its largest today.
awaited North
to the North
announceits troops. had withdrawn to new positions and the fact that Allied planes were meeting the heaviest anti-aircraft fire of the war indicated that the Red Koreans were not ready quit.
to
ment.)
Germany RESIGNED Marshall Plan Administrator Paul Hoffman said today that “the difference between West Berlin and East Berlin is the difference between economic life and economic death.” Mr. Hoffman, who now ig touring Germany on a special mission for President Truman, said West Berlin showed the “live, _he!pful hand of democracy’: and’ East Berlin “the dead hand of Kremlin communism.
Great Britain THE BRITISH LABOR PARTY, intent on stopping the comeback of Winston Churchill's
political eonvention at Margate
News that. the. South Koreans today.
There were some delegates
like India's Sir Benegal Rau iwhose ‘eyebrows raised. Others {like - the - Phillipines’ Brig. Gen. Carlos P. Romulo held that ex {isting Security Council Tesolutions. empowered Gen. Mac- tc weak held on the House of — Arthiir to cross the 38th Parallel » at will.
“Texan to Address Restaurant Parley
Patrick D. Moreland, Austin,
staurant
y. - Mr. Moreland
He has been
Moreland [Texas Res-
|taurant Association since 1942. He is also a director in the Amerjean” Trade Association Execu- oonies pestan . | tives’ Council and president of the | “Washi piet Restairant. Association ‘of . Trade: ngto
| Executives.
(COMBINES : SCORE HIGH
Ninety -er cent of the nation’
wheat erop and 80 per cent of th {oats crop was harvested b: com- | i Y Ee aa
rtnea this year,
Indiana
“dance of the In.
had ‘pushed across the 38th Par- Chairman Sam Watson told allel, apparently on American 1519 delegates at the 1950 meet orders, even before Gen. Mac- ing that the Socialist government Arthur broadcast his surrender had hrought Britain from the split United Nations opin- “nhrink of bankruptcy” after the
«war to the period of its greatest wealth. : no Before the week is out the Labor party will have to hammer out a platform on wages. rearmament, nationalization and foreign policy in an effort to strengthen
Commons. -- “At Southampton, meanwhile tha troopship Empire Windrush loaded 1201 troops today -to join the hry {forces fighting in Korea, Eight’ hundred other fighting men sailed yesterday from Livers pool aboard the Transport -Em-
{Tex., is one of seven nationally pire Pride. known food experts who will ad-
(seas, in southern Europe and the jSieas the -17th annual
Restaurateurs to Honor Chief
Elston I. Ireland, Portiand, Ore., president of the Nafional Restaurant Association, will be honored Wednesday at the ane nual fellowship hanquet and
diana Restaurant Asgocia‘tion's 17th annual convention, Mr. Ireland is expected tp give
port” on latest Wem b“|developments in Mr, Ireland {the nation’s capa itol. He will be accompanied by e Ralph G.- ri nde RA of -
