Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 October 1950 — Page 13
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Filled
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anapolis
“ID LIKE to know what that big, fat cow Y that I haven't got.” RE
~to Elsie, Borden's favorite bovine. Elsie is seldom called that. And “big, fat cow” is used by employees of Bordens only when they want to get .Cows are usually such gentle creatures that Rosedale Helen's crack almost made me fall over backwards. One second we were pleasantly talking about the 2d International Dairy Show . and the next Rosedale Helen sounded like a woman.
“Just because she uses Henna Fur Glaze, Eau de New Mown Hay, Meadow Mud Pack, Hoof Nail Polish, does that make Elsie better than the rest of us working girls?” Rosedale Helen obviously had been working herself up-to a snit for a long time. She was chewing her cud furiously.
_ ‘Elsie Really Isn’t Better’
I TRIED to explain that the luxuries Elsie enjoys don’t make her better in the strict sense of the word. Elsie happehed to have the certain something in the right place at the right time and rang fhe gold cowbell.
AY “Elsie, Elmer and Beauregard are very nice, Rosedale Helen,” I said. “You can see the family has class but they're not highhorned about it. Can't we just talk about the dairy show and forget Elsie, Elmer and Beauregard?” Z Rosedale Helen's big brown eyes began to fill. She wasn’t fooling me but I thought the old gal ‘ought to be allowed to get it out of her system. I didn't even bother with the ol’ standard about “we all can't be Elsies, Gables, DiMaggios.” * You can't blame Rosedale Helen for being proud. She has a good job with a-good outfit. She’ll average 48 pounds of milk a day. Fortyeight pounds of milk a day is not to be sneezed at. Rosedale Helen's butterfat record last year was 521 pounds. . Of course, her family tree is a little obscure and she has relatives scattered from New York to Michigan and even in Texas. There isn't a thing wrong with young Hank. He's about Beauregard'’s age. Hank is straight-backed, rugged for his age. He's going to be a big bull some day. - “Hank can whip Beauregard, I'll bet,” Rosedale Helen mooed when she finished talking about her favorite buil calf. I didn’t argue. So Hank can
whip Beauregard, so what?
It wasn’t long before Rosedale Helen ran out of steam. I could tell the minute she asked whether Elsie was really as pretty as her picture. “Every bit as pretty,” I answered. ‘Maybe prettier.” Rosedale was silent. She swung her head sideways and looked at her coat. It wasn’t spick and span and there might have been more than 13 areas on her body that were in need of Eau de New Mown Hay. A Kleenex would have done some good, too. The hair on her head was in need of a good brush. “Does Elsie really have all those fine things I've heard about?” Rosedale Helen asked. She wanted confirmation so her dreams would be more real. Ever the female.
Rosedale Helen (a big, fat cow) was referring
| About People—
"What's Elsie got?" . . . Rosedale Helen, a cow if there ever was one. sounds off about the . bovine queens.
I drew a word picture as perfect as possible for Rosedale. She had that faraway stare. She was] looking at one thing and seeing something else. When I fglked about Elsie's dressing table, Rosedale sway to and fro. houseslippers she kicked the ground. . She became serious when I got around to the library that Elmer and Eisie have. Fine set of books. Several which have enjoyed best-seller lists include: “The Bull in the China &hop”; “The Farmer With the Cold Hands”; “How to Live on 5000 Quarts a Year”; ‘‘Bulliver’s Travels” and ‘Practical Bull Psychology.” “I wish Hank was able to have some of those advantages. But he's so bullheaded, just like his father, that I doubt books would do him .nuck, good.” Rosedale sighed and reminded me that Hank was a “good bull” even though he kicked up his little hooves.
Feels Sorry for Herself ‘
“I WISH I could get all slicked up and go to one of them big shows and show em what a working girl looks like,” Rosedale snapped. She was feeling sorry for herself again. She was just as good as Elsie again. Hank was every ounce as good as Beauregard. There was no mention of Elmer.
It was time to go to work and Rosedale Helen swung toward the barn, head low, tail swishing." Too bad it wasn't in my power to make Rosedale Helen the queen of the Dairy Show for a day. She'd probably blow a valve. Oh, well, some got it and some ain't. Rosedale will get over it. And best of all she knows her place. She's a big, fat, dependable cow who loves her work. She'll get along with a little pull.
Hideous Howl
By Fred Sparks
SEOUL, Korea, Oct. 10—“From clerk to com-
mando in 30 days.” One hundred Army typewriterpounders, secretaries, pencil sharpeners and paper pushers have just made that quick change. (Today they're the 1st GHQ raider company). When the North Koreans first hiked south— as quickly as a drunk through a short beer—the Tokyo command set up a hideous howl! for “special danger” f{roops. The answer they got: “None around.” i A colonel with an imagination (a combina- - tlon as rare as cigar-smoking giraffes) looked over Tokyo's battalions of bureaucrats-in-uniform and said, “Let's not bust into any Marine or infantry unit. Let's give waffle-bottoms a chance. We'll put it on a voluntary basis—with guts and muscle, in that order—as entrance requirements.” Typical of typéwriter-pounders anxious to stop changing ribbons and start changing ammunition was Cpl. James Young, 22, whose brick top barely reached the medicine chest. It had been two years since he triggered a gat, and to study the lot of pillow around his belt you'd never have guessed he quarterbacked back home—Lake-In-The-Hills, -Algonquin, Ill
Seek Raider Assignment
SEVENTEEN HUNDRED male stenographers like Jim Young-—soft on the outside, hard on the in—sought the raider assignment. The heroic hundred were picked for telephone-wire nerves by an officer who can spot the yellow in a man like an X-ray can spot a swallowed can-opener. Marine Corps sergeants, who are never known to pamper trainees, put the paper-pushers through a pressure-cooker four weeks that melted Jim Young's 20-pound pillow belt—and flunked half the originals. A month later each raider could swim a mile, knife a sentry in seven selected ways, and run along the beach quiet as a sandfly with sneakers. And one dungeon-dark night six weeks after he stopped typing everything in triplicate Jim Young and nine ex-swivel chair sluggers stepped into a rubber boat (from a frigate) and paddled
the eventual Inchon landing.
No airborne earth-quakers preceded them; no ‘Yes sir.” naval guns shredded the path ahead. They were ened and
lonesome as prairie dogs.
The trembling 10 pushed several vards into over and replied, the beach and covered 50 other oncoming raiders. answer.”
Then: A Communist machinegun struck out its fiery tongue and they were baptized with bullets; three killed. Ten minutes
reveal positions in the dark. Not to let the enemy before.
In Next Month
With the mention of ;
jury rackets asked Irving Greenberg a question and 11 times-he re-
600 yards to the Communist coast, 75 miles from you drive
nothing new,
Sa = 7 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10; 1950 PAGE 13
Many Voters Cut Party Lines; Registrations Set New Record
Think Only of Man for Office All Demand Improved Changes :
By FRANK ADAMS JOE AND MRS. VOTER appear today to believe they have something bigger to chew on than the sticks of gum political workers § hand out with campaign literature. All polls have their limitations-—obyiously. But I have never seen stronger evidence of the roots of nonpartisanship among voters
ke Plans Speech a Day
823 Boys Eat Way Through 10 Miles Of Free Spaghetti
The social -calendar of Gen. - 5 than that which I noticed yesterday. Dwight Eisenhower makes him In the final hours of Marion |——————m——— | — look like the “I have my own views,” she §&
County’s long, record-breaking . Co registration period yesterday, dur-({Said, “on that and other things.
didate he says he A ® = = : * ing which a new high of 279,960!" “ Co rt put their names to the books, at| COMING FROM a “family of i
Gen. Ike, who's “ Democrats,” she said she had } the Court House, I “followed, . o gele 431s bop watched and talked to one voter Once been “very partisan.” 25, gets 300 inyi- after another. I am convinced’ But things have changed since tations a day that: she first registered at 21. ‘and has a speech ONE. More voters than ever “I think,” she said. slowly, i every day from before either are jumping party “there should be a change in polinow until mid- lines, splitting. them, or consider- tics in this town. “There should i November, th é ing such actions. |be a change in everything in gennew magazine TWO. That almqst of themeral.” , Gen. Ike “People Tdday” want changes, to one degree or Money is wasted, she said. The reports in its first issue which hits another,”and want her for the Korean War and the heavy spendthe newsstands today. etier. ing, except for defense, bother her ’ a = = THREE. That two World Wars “We need entirely different What—No Meatballs?
and the shadow of a third, plus people, in there,” she added. a 59-cent dollar and all the other A 21-year-old beautician, Miss The 823 residents of Boys Town ills of the disturbed world today Betty Hutchison. 411 N. Drexel celebrated the opening of Nation- are making the voters think of Ave. said she'd “like to vote for al Macaroni Week in a big way. the man for the office, not the the right persons.” As guests of Lloyd Skinner, pres- party. “I don't know
presidential can-
ident of Skinner Macaroni Co.,, FOUR. That there is a grow- much about it,” they ate their way through 10/ing neutrality, Sn fndirference she said. “But I The determined voter in this case is a housewife . . . Mrs. Jean miles of spaghetti. n the voter's attitude towar e want to find . Enety. politician and his hangers-on. gut » Van Stone, 2626 E. Northgate St. self-sufficiently takes care of Shaggy Dog Story He wants less politicking and «Neutral,” she | her daughter, 10-month-old Donna Louise, as she registers at the
,» more accomphlghments from the gaiq4 when asked _ Court House. A son, Billy, 4, also was along.
There'll be no cries of “Sissy men he elects to office. about her party
if Oklahoma City men plop into Mr Lucy E
i i ’ 3 ase t “The | ; i 1 situatior Worley. 625 RE. the chair in their little woman's] AS THEY PASSED by the affiliations. The internationa = ] favorite beauty parlor. Okla- gcores through the three lines to Her interest is bothers -me. I want to vote for 25th St., has been neutral. out homa Attorney General Mac Q. the desks and counters at which spurred by the the person to help—not the party. will be Republican this year. Williamson ruled yesterday beau- they registered, most seemed to WAT and no one “I have no party in mind,” she She's worried about the general ty shop operators may cut any- ignore the party gimcracks and Nad to talk her Raid, as.an afterthought. sitiatiop. Lr” sl * “Its not ! ! - . s bad.” she said 8 ne body’s hair at any price. It's ex- lapel streamers which added a Into ONE LOTR: n\yyrf yyyionison A FORMER MINISTER, Who ood for one party to be in too pected this will bring males, who carnival note to an o‘herwise Ister. . ., still preaches, Mrs. Carrie Bar- Bo Ea are tired of $1 haircuts, into serious atmosphere. All five children of Mrs. Mary bieur. 1534 Olive St. hesitated os 4 wonderin ‘We beauty shops which unlike bar-| Picture. of party candidates C. Marsh, 440 N. Parker Ave. a about telling her m Jus onde: ng no bershops have no fixed prices. beaming down from igh on the Widow who works in the bus ter- age because she pave p given on 50 0 with No C = nt “ walls drew little Benton minal, “got after me to register. still preaches, on mie stration, we never ’ - » » “ o ommen BO e im and “they like Hobbling through the line on
» pression that iff ONE OF HER sons, George W. , g ones” some of the sen- Marsh, a Navy reservist, will go Chan ging her timent I sound- in service Saturday. He has sent mind. she said it ed grew in much his wife and two children to was all right to
Eleven times the federal grand) investigating Philadelphia
crutches was Alexander McClelland, 28, of 1135 E. Market St., who was injured last Tuesday in a car accident. Not freed yet
lied with, “I refuse to answer.” | more volume Florida. Another child is ex- _ -, he Finally an attorney asked, “Do there might be pected. . — say from the hospital he took off to i an auto?” and Mr.| changes “in the George, Mrs. Marsh said, bought a Republi- reg ster hen he was permitted Greenberg hesitantly answered, silhouets ofa home at 438 N. Parker, “but can.” she said. to ¥ioH ome I'd ever miss a The attorney bright- many, of the never lived in it.” “But the main y way 53
Charles R. Barnett. 31-vear-old vote would be if I were complete-
asked, “What kind?” portly figures is . ote We € The cagey witness thought it seen through the oc: -cial assistant thing 13 PR Mrs. Barbieur ly out” he said. . “I refuse to hali-open office BO e United future generations. I'm afraid AFTER asking a political workMr. Sheridan “Re p ublicans slonary Society § we're drifting toward more re- er's advice, he said.
“Straight Democratic.” George Meyer, 967 Dorman St.,
strictions and not the freedom.
» = ” Marine landing in Korea was and Democrats i And ‘we need-
according to Maj. alike,” said Leo O. Sheridan, 3535 been
are pretty much! in Irvington, has voting
that followed were lessons in Allie Boutwell, military historian Broadway St. “You could shake Democratic. to Bet back to 1s Democratic but ‘would “vote tor self-control. The orders: Do not fire back! Not to for Indiana, who says they did it 'em up in a bag and they'd alll “I believe, how- re oH an Vi Some of the party workers ores A Marine landing force come out alike.” - ever,” he said LIS. Jean van : part. bagi vr after a little & Stone, 2626 KK. ent had little or nothing to do.
know how large the recon party. assaulted and took a number of
Soon the necessary information concerning the forts in Korea on June 10, 1871. area was obtained, i “feint” tossed, ing I Cause of the fighting was firing transport clerk said the trouble the case of a
ming up the Inchon beachhead opération, the Army credited the raiders’ raid with slashing allover casualty lists by pulling some of the enemy 75 miles out of .line—away from the body blow to Seoul. :
Work and Fight Together
TODAY, HAVING been blooded, the raiders retired Philadelphia compare well with long-time Ranger or Marine jeft half of a units. For Jim Young and his clerical company to care for his own grave and there will be many more dark trips from sub and the other half to go for care of destroyer—via swimming trunks and rubber boats the grave of his dog, Snooky.
—to mysterious beaches. Realizing that even a statue of Gen. could get the jitters swimming through the un-
chummy waters the raiders employ the buddy bear
system. Two men work, live, swim and fight together, : Jim Young's buddy is a Japanese-American
duces a handkerchief. * The buddies watch over each other like a movie star watches her chin line. Besides Communists, Korean waters can slug a man—they’re populated with a brand of jellyfish that stings lie a cobra bites. All told, the transformation of these clerical forces to commandos is quicker than a Charles Atlas course which guarantees to make you a new man in 10 weeks.
Swiss Alp-Hopping ~ By Frederick C. Othman
LUCERNE, Switzerland, Oct. 10—The ‘Swiss are a long-suffering people. i They even stood still while I played an Alp horn on top of a mountain. Alp horns are made of hollowed-out pine trees, varnished and decorated with red bears; they cre 13 feet long. Blow in one end and from the other comes a mournful sound as of a broken-hearted moose pining for a lost love. ms ) The Swiss use these for signaling from peak to snow-clad peak. When not telegraphing each other they blow into their alp horns for the fun of it. So much for the artistic end.
Not Even Safe for Goats ; OUTSIDE OF TOWN is one of the déggondest mountains you ever saw, called the Pilatus-Kulm. It goes straight up for 7000 feet. It’s not ‘even safe for goats, . : : So the Swiss have built a railroad all the way to the top. This is so steep the wheels are geared to the tracks, called a funicular. The locals are proud of the fact that it is the most nearly vertical railroad in the world. : Other people can talk about the breath-taking views from the windows. T was plain scared. But we did get to the top, where an ola codger named Anton Hug was playing on his alp horn. Never before had I seen such a small man getting noise from such a big piccolo. He let. me try it. I put the little end in my mouth and the big end on the ground across the street. Then I blew and I swear the glacier quivered atop the mountain on the other side of Lake Lucerne. Maestro Hug said I was an apt pupil. Plenty of wind. He told me where I could get an Alp horn to take home and I now am having an argument with Trans-World Airlines, which is being stubborn about cutting a small hole in the rear end of a Constellation so I can get my musical instrument aboard. :
The Quiz Master
While waiting for this to be settled I did some . other shopping for lesser items in Berne, which is celebrated for the fact that when the clock in. the town tower strikes the hour a ‘parade of wood-
en bears strolls out (via big brass gears) and mony,
dances on the balcony.
. u Berne also is the capital of Switzerland. There Reason Enough
in Christian’s hardware store I bought a vest-. pocket machine shop. It looks like a penknife, but it contains a crosscut saw, a screw driver, a
awl, three sharp blades and a small drill for, I. presume, dentistry. I had planned to give it to my favorite 12-
~ = ~ 1 t I'm beginning year-old back in Washington, but g Royal Blood Donor
to believe I need it for myself. Ld , wo r did 1 forget my bride. For her to tle —— a Beck or our Guernsey I bought a Swiss cow bell, one foot in diameter and rich in tone. Soon we will have the only cow in McLean, Va., that sounds like a cathedral. For Mrs. O.—lucky girl—I also bought for two francs a genuine Swiss mold to make cameds in
the shape of rosebuds on each pound of butter pro- #8 duced by our. musical bossy. Then I looked at a |
small still for the production of cherry brandy.
Pays for Missing Pretzels HERR CHRISTIAN said the quality was good and the price right, but I reluctantly passed it up on the theory that our revenuers might be sticky about my souvenirs. - So I dropped by a beer stube for a tall one in a stein. The fraulein brought a bowl of pretzels, which she counted one by one. Before she'd let me out she took another inventory of the pretzel sup-
A » = ply and charged me for the two that were missing. Happy Ending Iz
I suppose you'd call her, if your tongue didn’t get twisted, a thrifty Swiss miss. Pretty, too, in a thin-nosed parsimoniogs way.
22? Test Your Skill
seas to Korea. They met by!
‘What is the governmental organization of North Korea? : : It is called the “Korean People’s Republic” and ‘was established by Soviet Russia, presumably ac-. cording to the desire of the people, in 1948 with a ‘Communist constitution, a Supreme National Assembly, a prime minister and a cabinet of 13 ‘4. In what zone is Aachen, Germany? The British zone.
What year is the next presidential election, and|
‘on what date will the future president-elect take] office? rt |
The next presidential election will take place Nov. 7, 1952; the winning candidate will take office Jan. 20, 1958. : rrr hb
Do American Indians have the right.to vote? tory today .for deportation to) American Indians are citizens of the United Poland on grounds he was a eran of two unsuccesful presi-state, seems to be working out shops, 100 officés ‘© States and have the right to vote in federal elec- member of a Communist organ- dential campaigns and three pre-
tions ymless their state has
crant Big Chief Deadeye. |
ever bagged, in that state, was shot near Newberry, Mich, by
D: P. ‘eless, s from Maui, Hawaii—Cpl., Shigeki Hisao. It is said an wr weless, Jramiramack
that when Jim sneezes Shigeki automatically pro- gne arrow from a distance of 40 4 feet.
JdtFested 105 asalittug Lon wis. Taking No Chances This Time— a , fr r who can opener, a corkscrew, a pair of scissors, an ..... wis door to visit, explained to police: “L thought he was a relative.”
was blood
| cobs, Muskogee, Mich., and intel- «g Jot of fakers” because of their guess I'll vote for him.” | ligence officer Capt. James F * failure to pass a national fair King, Worcester, Mass, had to employment practices bill in a Dewey has done a good job in the
: | shelve marriage plans here in the | which : 7? [4 8. when he was ordered over. | COD ETess & they contol.
chance last week in Korea and | 1g : were married -Sunday in Tokyo, | Sectors of the economy. It's “the |cratic-controlled New York City Ployed.
Czeslaw Grzelak, vice president late Al Smith. He pays high trib-imargin to win. of the Gdynia American Lines, ute “to the memory of that be-!
regulations. against it. ization. -
te ” : “ot i - , oer ety .
Questions weren't too many. Man helped wife through the lines, and son and daughter helped mother
Northgate, St., showed up in line with her two
" ” = THE 60-YEAR-OLD postal thought, “that in
on our surveying boats by the is that “no one is campaigning on|good Republican . Soros a platform I'm for.” Inflation Tog hip 44 for: i. children, Donna and father and voters helped one Three Americans died and en- Woes are his frst concern, he nym» Mr. Wright 1 ouise, 10months another. emy casualties rumbered 350. said, adding that hc believed] The heavy spending doesn't 0ld and Billy, 4. | The smiles of the precinct
stalwarts grew a little wan and
them to be caysed by the world pother Mr. Barnett, who lives at “I don’t votea | : jit wasn't all wearine.s. Some
[Fitvation; 333 5. Butler Ave. Straight Party Y sticks of gum were bending, un ] | ES [oe ticket,” she said. Mrs. 4 ere bending, unWalter H. Davis, 70-year-old] «] WOULD LIKE to see some lo-| a I resom you have a 8.52 0% Irs. Van Stone noticed. There was disinterest. iii ig cal changes, too,” he said grimly, " .;" 0)’ it is a privilege to live changes locally and nationally. !00 much distinterest—in the old , adding that he. . . .ntry where ~e select our There should be some cleaning Stand-by pamphlets.
didn’t have-much Jy » A people's concept of politics leaders (he stressed the word) by up in Indianapolis and Indiana. | : hope, but would ooo If we want to live here we (and politicking, if you will)
» » » contribute ‘his h . SHE TOOK her place in line, Seems to: be flowing from the e people to lead , share with a Show ehose the people asked for no favors, gave her block, the square. the city, counvote. i - : occupation as housewife and ty, state house and even WashA sergeant in “ndfana’s Air ) . Ernest Me-{ Guard RErpean A. Wright, 24- handled Donna Louise very easily ington. It's moving around the Peak, 41, of 934!yo0: old veteran, might be called With the aid of an apparatus re- world. N. Highland, Guiy sembling a hand truck. | Fixing a traffic ticket and getAve. Air Force! «gome of the nation’s policies _ Raymond G. Hobbs, 44, 3740 N. ting the water turned on quickly veteran of World «peing made and carried out are Kenwood Ave. just back from through the intervention of the War II, “don’t'not what * think they should be,” three years in Japan as a criminal old precinct workhorse is losing 1{ke the way gajd Mr. Wright, who lives at investigator for the U. 8. Air 8round to wars and cold wars tings are going 2124 Broadway, Sore, missed voting for two 20d dollars worth half a dolar, all over.” years. . res * ‘War and inflation are his chief " 1. 2 “There's always room for im- ECA to Aid Britain
“I'M NOT a party man” was i concerns. . - ; provement on either side,” he said : . his answer to the stock question “yp ."oo)iioar nicture “There 1s In Anti-Locust Fight
“I'm a who owns his own “yp y " n on guy iii gigi on affiliations. “I'm a man voter.” ~~ changes should be made. WASHINGTON, Oct. 10 (UP) 1 The world sit- He doesn’t think .spending
Can't Yoke It With You
A seven-foot, 850-pound black believed to be the largest
A bow and
Mr. McPeik
= ” ou
What's in a Name?
Princess Anne, daughter of
Princess Eliz a- The Economic Co-operation Ad-
beth, will be oT Ve Dan mos uation bothers should be cut in view of the Ko. ministration has agreed to help christened Oct.) and or ae LAA, and he rean situation, but wants wage Britain combat a locust plague in 21 in oné\of the| a oil - inks We can and price controls now and does Africa and Asia. state rooR's of De - {do better” local- not like the administration’s de- The British will direct the Buck Is g - B Mocral but Ty and nation- : lay. . three-year campaign and pay 97 ham Palag “Her gu a Re-a]ly, governmen- American foreign policy, he Per cent of the $10 million cost.
publican this tany, time. |. Mrs. Rosemary 1 learned a White, 21,1210 E. lot in the war|15th St., houseand since.” wife and “neuHe Fa husband tral in politics,” { ‘Mrs. Sonta, 0 rs. Carolyn wa s registering "48 Jean Sontag, 25, for the first time. | of 1815 Eisenhower Dr., Speedway, | is a Republican. William Bray, Toronto, Ontario, - —————————
father, Puke of Edinburgh, will 3& fly from. _ his ¥ naval station in the Meéditerranean for the cere-
said, was “in its infancy.” ECA will contribute $179,000 for “I'm an independent,” was the sSpecially-built' trucks to spread firm reply to “Democrat or Re- Poison over the locust breedirs publican?” ‘grounds in Saudi Arabia. ] ® 2 = } The locusts threaten to swarm HORACE STUCK, 39, 2019 E. over the two continents from Minnesota St., a bartender, was Pakistan to Nigeria and, if unjust as emphatic. “I'm a Demo- checked, would endanger.the food As for voting, “all should con- crat,” he said. “As long as they supplies of more than 500 million tribute,” she said, adding: keep Democrats in it'll be okay.” persons.
Princess Anne
Mrs. White
“ Hw
Dewey Out Slugging Against Another Democratic Upset Doesn't Intend for Rep. Lynch io Pull Acting Mayor Vincent Impellit-/ Mr. Dewey also is hitting hard
. oo teri, a Democrat, is running as an at a scandal involvin raft i A Truman on Him if He Can Help It York City
independent candidate for mayor the funds of thé New York City Some soldier wounded in Ko- By EARL RICHERT, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer because the Democratic nomina- school system. And he is talking rea may now be a blood member = UTICA, N. Y., Oct. 10—Again, as in 1948, Gov. Thomas E. .'07 Was handed to Justice Ferdi- about the possibility of higher of the Japanese Dewey is engaged in a political campaign where the prevailing notion "*19 Pecora. pay for New ¥ork teacruers to imperial family. seems to be that he is a shoo-in to win.. g ; “A bunch of crooked bosses help them meet “the Truman inPrince Taka- But this time, running for his third term as New York's gover- down in New York,” Mr. Dewey flation.” * ma tsu, second nor, Mr. Dewey is taking no chances. He doesn’t intend, if he can fells upstate crowds, “got Mr. “School teachers in New York brother. of Em- help it, for his little-known Democratic opponent, Rep. Walter Lynch Truman to ship Bill O'Dwyer off City, you know, were promised peror Hirohito, of the Bronx, to pull a Harry ~~ tm to Mexico so they could have-a higher pay,” he says. “Butr what donated 300 Truman on him. York, Mr. Dewey looks to be no special election and carry the happened? The Mayor (O'Dwyer) grams of “A” Dewey is slugging. He is doing MOr® than 40; state. You're not going to let raised his own pay, walked out on type blood to the more street-corner campaigning He has changed his appearance them get away with that, are the teachers and went for a United Nations and he's entering the heart of somewhat -by a drastic thinning you?” Mexican hayride.” Blood Bank in Democratic strongholds. land trimming of his Mustache. MER ToL: Prince iv caing names. Theres 108 Get and bist mustache Soi South Bend Man Prince volunteered but One Of the “sweetness and light” | o,,4rqgt to the old bristling trade- For | ing Draft Takamatsu goctors said she Nat marked his 1948 presidential | O04" : or ignoring ura not strong enough to give |SATIPAIEN. : You hear it said time and again] A 23-year-old man charged =, ASHINGTON, Oct. 10 (UP) % | Uses Strong Terms that Mr, Dewey “has been-a good with refusing to report for physi-'__qne Defense Department today - . | Democratic leaders in New governor. cal examination and induction asked for a draft of 922 doctors, York City are generally blanketed Often the remarks are stated: —... g.jective Service regula- 300 dentists and 100 veterinarians : ; as “a bunch of crooked bosses.” ‘I don't” particularly like him. for Army during November, DeArmy nurse 2d Lt. Anna Ja- " 'But he’s done a good job and I tions was under FBI arrest today. & . . National Democratic leaders are *! Lucious Fleming, South Bend, cember and January.
was arrested yesterday in a room- | The department said tuat the It is this feeling that Mr. ~, ouse there on a warrant Navy and Air Force have indilissued by the district attorney's cated their oresent plans do not agent call for similar doctor drafts. | The department specified in its request to Selective Service that 300 doctors be provided for the Army by Nov. 15; 300 ‘doctors, 300 dentists, and 50 veterinarians by Dee. 15; and 322 doctors, 200 NEW DELHI, India, Oct. 10 dentists, and 50 veterinarians by ‘ (UP)—Fire swept a large bazaar jan 15. : — And the .special New York building in the old city of Delhi’ . : ' /mayoralty election, engineered to today causing damage estimated FIRST INTERIOR SECRETARY Now 49 years old and the vet- help the Democrats carry the at $2.1 millions: It gutted 250 Thomas Ewing of Ohio was the i and 150 apart- first secretary of the interior. He -
Defense Calls = For 922 Doctors
Ta
|
governor's chair that constitutes
: |office. Harvey G. Foster, | Mr. Truman is blamed for the Je Win Semen: ot Be Strength it charge of the Indianapolis FBI,
prices “rising every day” in all wien a police scandal in Demo- Office, said Fleming was unem-,
I -f
Sl [Truman inflation” to Mr. Dewey. which seems sure to cut the Dem- ... ee BRE U. 8S. DEPORTS POLE | -About the only Democrat Mr. ocratic vote there -—- where the Fire Sweeps Bazaar NEW YORK, Oct. 10 (UP) Dewey has a kind word for is the Democrats must roll up a huge
was placed aboard the liner Ba- loved man.”
to help the Republicans by ments. No loss of life was re-' was appointed in 1949. = = vious races for Governor of New splitting the Demaqgratic strength. ported. : : : ? eo Zachary Taylor. 3
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