Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1950 — Page 1
3
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tonight 40; tomorrow fair and mild, high 70.
Sunday
Edition
ae
* © SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1950
Entered as Second-Class Mutter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Indiana. Issued Daily,
Ladd dl]
PRICE TEN CENTS
nun
Have Fun, Win Cash— | Match the Twins— $1000 In Prizes
Pictures Will Be Published Each Sunday In The Times for 10 Weeks, Starting Today Match the twins and win a prize. Be The Sunday Times today opened a contest in which readers can earn cash prizes by matching sets of twins. The first 10 twins—out of a totdl of 100—are pictured on Page 9 in today’s Sunday Times. In all, $1000 in cash prizes will be given to 53 winners. First prize is $500, with the next two winners receiving $100 and $50 each.
The Match the Twins contest promises to be interesting. Participants will take the 100 pictures and try to match them into 50 sets of twins. ALL twins match, but if some of them look doubtful, it's O.K. to guess. The first prize winner might not have 50 sets of twins accurately matched.
Today's first 10 pictures start the contest. You
can begin matching them now. Pictures of 90 other twins will be published the next nine Sundays, 10 at a time. The contest ends 10 days after the last pictures are published. "Contest rules can pictures on Page 9.
be found with the first 10
==Stwe=] olst YEAR—NUMBER 281 °° asl i : E 3
Times Straw Vote— Republicans Lead By 7 to 3 Ratio
gt ag Bt ol 5 Democrats Gain Slightly; Jacobs Leads Party ‘Intiéase All Democrats picked up strength, although not much, in the third week of tabulating The Times’ Straw Votes. : Republicans slipped slightly, but retained commanding margins that were generally better than 7 to 3.
Their ratio last week was about 3 to 1, with a bigger lead in the sheriff race. This was the first week Democrats showed a
y per cent from Republican One week of tabulation re- Dan W. Smith. mains before the Nov. 7 elec- Indication of ‘the Demotion. : cratic rally is seen in the Rep. Andrew Jacobs STHERt party votes. At the wed the best re end of the sgcond week, Shovel a ih ey straight Democratic votes four offices polled. He picked ran 10.9 per cent while Re-
ublican straights tallied up 5,4 per cent from Repub- Eo “py, ce dane total is lican Charles Brownson.
Alex W. Campbell recovered 4.3 per cent from U. S. Sen. Homer Capehart, Republican. Democrat George Dailey, defending champion in the fight for Marion County Prosecutor, gained 36 per cent from Frank
and 49.0 GOP. Considering only the third week's tabulation, straight Democratic votes climbed to 14.0 while Republicans :slipped-to 36.0. : Following are the results in percentages, showing the Fairchild. » Sheriff J ames first two weeks and the Cunningham picked up 3.1° three-week total:
U. S. SENATE
2 Weeks 3-Wk. Tot.
Homer kE. Capehart (R).:sseersescessss 75.8 7.3 Alex W. Campbell (D)...ccosovesnicnnvas 244 28.7 CONGRESS . Charles Brownson (R) ...co00cvsveisees 759 | 70.5 Andrew Jacobs (ID) ....cervcvnninenesse 24.1 20.5 PROSECUTOR Frank Fairchild (R) .icicovesnnssrnesse 748 71.0 George Dalley. (D)iuesvueieeisincassses 354 29.0 SHERIFF Dan W. Smith (R) ....c00000 sessinanses 855 82.4 James Cunningham (D) .....ic0eeieeee 145 17.6 PARTY TRENDS Straight Republican Votes ...sveieeess. 55.2 49.0 Straight Democrat Votes ......ooovvnee 10.9 124 Scratches .....ovivseessssvsassnnricnss 23.0 30.7 No Party Preference .......ccevessivaee Tl 7.9 Democrats for Republican Capehart ..... 10.4 12.9 Republicans for Democrat Campbell .... 3.2 5.2 Democrats for Republican Brownson .... 12.0 13.2 Republicans for Democrat Jacobs......e0 2.9 59 . Democrats for Republican Fairchild..... 115 13.6 Republicans for Democrat Dailey ....... 4.4 6.6 Democrats for Republican theses 10.1 21.8 Republicans for Democrat ham.. L1. 24
Looking only at the third Demacrats also gained a 's tabulations, three little in third week ratio ho bin were losing by of independent voters going ng their way, but the GOPsters less than 2 to 1. were still 3 to 2 ahead for This is how latest returns (hree candidates, with Mr. came in: Smith heightening the trend
Sen, Capehart ees 64.9 to 5 to 1. . Mr. Campbell sessnseee 351 to go to the polis Mr, Brownson ........ 81.8 - are : voters in Marion Rep. Jacobs ..iuieeeee 384 unty. The Times Straw ciensssse 855 Vote take a cross-section
Mr. « Fairchild Prosecutor Dailey . ‘8485 of theses voters and asks Mr. Smith ..... ..v¢e0s TT them to return-mail a ballot Sheriff Cunningham ... 22.3 card. Sra | The Straw Vote is NOT to be comstrued as a Times prediction qf who will win the Nov. T election. It is presénted only as a public feature so readers can draw their own conclusions. i the ; an ’ In previous years IMMEDIATELY so tabulaStraw Vote has proved to ; be an accurate barometer of Hon Sethe San keer Bp with
Vo
now 124 straight Democrat
nor of vice for the opposition.”
|scepter, died today at the age
.|a. m. today (1 a. m. Indianapolis, Time) after suffering a chest It's a sad day for Hoosier football .. but Butler upsets Western Reserve .. (Diagrammed football pictures, scores, Eddie Ash, race results, other sports, Pages 15-19) pupils visit United Nations . r (Editorials, Our Fair City, Washington Calling, World Report, radio, TV, Inside Indianapolis, Earl Wilson, Robert Ruark, Pages 25-30)
Section 3
All's Fair in Tech ToOWn ...coccuivannns (Society, women’s news, Katy Atkins, Louise Fletcher's Counter-Spy, Our Readers Write, gardening, fashions, movies and ‘the theater,
Jacobs Breaks With McHale Over ‘Bossism’
Attacks Own Party |
75 Mile
Committeeman in |
Brownson Debate By DAN KIDNEY
'man, broke with Democratic| [National Committeeman| Frank M. McHale last night. | In a blistering speech before! an Americans for Democratic Ac-| 2, tion meeting at the Hotel Antlers FRANK ADAMS Rep. Jacobs charged that Publish-| SHE WAS as happy as only a er Eugene C. Pulliam is a Repub- {bride of two months can be. Life lican party dictator who is trying was just ‘beginning for the 21to take over control of the Demo- [year-old brunet who left home cratic party through Mr. McHale. |with her husband yesterday afterHe said Mr. McHale is Mr, noon. . Pulliam'’s “chief political lawyer.”| New furniture the young couple “From reliable sources I learn Was buying was arranged neatly that my fellow Democrats wanted |in the apartment. But the three to expose Mr. Pulliam as the GOP rooms were crowded with the dictator,” Rep. Jacobs said. “But Wedding gifts from Sept. 1. {Frank McHale protested such| And now there were more prestreatment of his client. \ents—which the newlyweds had “I hold with those Democrats Purchased with wedding presents and Republicans that he who pre-/0f cash. tends to serve two masters is a| Mrs. Mary Lucille Davis, her Judas to one. " dark, short curls bobbing, excited“Just who Is he, democratic !y supervised the loading of Her national committeeman or the latest treasurer into the car. ” ” = = mouthpiece ot he SOF Joss} ote SHE WAS GOING to show her another debate with his Repub-| bares Yhese Jatest 2 ia, Her hue lican opponent, Charles B. Brown-| que : pry oh t pit roy hi as son. It followed a dinner spon-| Be at 4s pI. 2 80D pian No, 2, where he does experimental sored by ADA and several unions. | Outlines Labor Stand iwork in the chemical department. Rep. Jacobs started b; tlin-| Theis Wasnt much ume. but in his stand rh y ou D-lenough-—when they drove off from 8 and on labor legislation, the 7900 block Zionsville Rd. The and then wheeled into the field new Ford picked up speed of hot politics. He sald Mr. Witnesses reported the was Brownson previously had called rep » a traveling at “very high speed him a “hyprocrite and stooge,” when it happened and he wanted to show how Mr. : Brownson is part of the “Pulliam
Wedding Gifts Crowded Home
By BUD SPEAKE and
” 5 » AS THE CAR sped through the dictatorship.” {7700 block Zionsville Rd., it hit “Let me challenge any man to/# dip in the. highway and the name the person who ‘dictates to driver fought for control of his me,” the Democrat congressman|Vehicle for about 200 feet. Then said. {it crashed into a utility pole some “A good many lobbyists would|15 feet off the road. The pole like to know who he is. “If I have ever taken a stand except to oppose domination by one man or group of men, let my opponent name that and I
3 es My |blouse, dark skirt and saddle shoes she lay in the cornfield.
Firion other i ; p wnson, Rep. continued: PB. J segs uec I All around her—and the wreck were the newest t5—
“The right to be free of domiwedding giftsMixmaster, for a bride's kitchen, pots, pans and other utensils. o * = HER HUSBAND, his face
hairpin. Mary Lucille Davis was alive
“Two free parties are necessary to representative government. But
cracked and the car bent like a §
when they | . out. But she he Si le Jer. Bu: Dressed in her neat white
A Bride of Two Months
sae mon i Tha Future
tonight one party is the captive of a publisher who has designs on the other party. “I make this statement as a matter of public duty, not from personal animus, Considering that I am a Democrat, I acknowledge reasonably fair treatment at his hands. “But my obligation is to the, public rather than to my personal! friends. I have never claimed a! monopoly of virtue for my party,|
Cites 870 Million Cost | Rep. Jacobs then charged that! the Pulliam papers had brow-| beaten all Republican politicians) until the publisher won party con-| trol. He cited the Arizona Pulliam papers as. pulling for a multibillion dollar irrigation project which would benefit “420 desert landowners” while shouting for federal economy everywhere else. “It would cost the people of Indiana alone $76 million,” Rep. Jacobs said. 23 i “Mr. Pulliam poses as an en-|
(Continued on Page $—Col. 8) |
bleeding, was pinned with both
Two fal
thers— the
Gls Stage New Landing s From Manchuria
main- the groom's —bent together, sob
Ig
Looked Bright
socal dh aad AL It Eight weeks aga, wedding bells and a new life for James Allen Clarkson family lost in a traffic
fegs crushed against the re | ing section of the pole. As sher-/bing, near the body of iff’s deputies and an Indianapolis By then an Army. blanket had wedding that her younger brother, Power & Light Co. érew worked been spread to free him, several hundred persons crowded near the scene of the accident. .
over her. » » =
IT TOOK 40 MINUTES for sheriff's deputies and volunteers
bride's and. to cut James Allen Davis loose. daughter, Georgia Lou, 10.
0f Sweden Dies
Monarch Succumbs At Age of 92
By FREDERICK LAUDON United Press Staff Correspondent STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Sunday, Oct. +29 King Gustav V,|
King Gustav V IGE or
ferred a tennis racket to Earlier Story Page 7
on dope racket...
ces
of 92. ~~ The aged monarch died at 6:45
cough that blocked his breathing] and strained his tired heart. | The king took a sudden turn,
er (Continued on Page 5—Col. 1) Hoosier # » a 8 Po }
”
Pages
Browns
About People «.essassvse T Amusements ....seues 42,43 Henry Butler ..veessees. 42 Business cessssaen suas 20-07 ‘Crossword csvssassasssss 47 -Editorials Ststsrasrnsgrry 26 Events sass sReEIsRET any 59 Harold Hartley «..cevees 45 Erskine Johnson eeeeessé 43
Mrs. Manners riavensats 29,
cera
(General news and features, Pages,
Section 2 . Big Three lose
81-44)
* Section 4 burg gets $950,000 housing site ........ Harold Hartley's “The Week in Business,” Larry Stillerman's real estate news, classified advertising including your Market for Homes, Pages, 44-60) Obituaries
Othman Potomac
“ene
Inside The Times
Section 1 _j Halleck finds going tougher. . . . Dan Kidney visits district . . . other political news Sweden's beloved king who pre- Plants here raid neighboring towns for employees . BIS’ Criminals reap narcotics gold . . . first of a series
ER
ses ens
sees ssa
Pesaran
Page. 2|
; Page 4
Set for Today
Mass meetings of Cathoiics and Protestants will feature religious activities today. Catholics ‘will demonstrate their belief in family prayer with a rally at 2:30 p. m. in the World War
Page 14/ © Editorial, Page 26
Page 15
Page 25
‘Page 31
.. Page 45
sessrsnsuassss DD Wesessscinsines 20
Patter ......... 20
Radio and Television..... 28 Real Estate .......... 45-47 Records
sssssassssensess 30
RUATK sosssnesspsnssancs 29 Society +ccessesssissnecs 33
Ed SOVOlR siviesrivsanss 20 sassvenessansnsa15-18
Sports Earl Wilson «ceveees
|Memorial Plaza. The Rev. Fr. It was {Patrick Peyton, C.S8.C., Albany, Hoosierland's Football Big Three {N. Y. and Hollywood, will speak./as Indiana, Notre Dame and PurHe founded and directs the Family due all wound up together on the
| |
|
Theater of the Air and the Family Rosary, Crusade. Approximately 12,000 persons are expected to participate in a Protestant Festival of Faith at 7:30 p. mi. in Cadle Tabernacle. Dr. Robert W. Searle, New York, editor of the Protestant World,
will speak on “The Reformation—
Unifinished Business.” A robed
chorus of several hundred singers| from the city’s churches and] ministers in pulpit gowns willl march into the Tabernacle at the
festival opening.
Five for Five
That's the “pleasant . Sunday" batting average for October weather: Forecasters said today will round out the perfect record. > The prediction’ was "fair and warmer, with a high
the girl.
was six weeks after Mrs.
on Photo by Bill Oates, ‘Times Staff Photographer Dr. J. W. Clarkson . . . sobs over the blanket-covered body of his daughter, Mrs. Mary L. Davis, 21.
Religious Rallies State riders
Tth Division Pours 27,000 Troops Ashore
Yanks of 24th Only 44 Miles From Red China
BULLETIN
Life Promised Rich Rewards
They used hacksaws, crowbars and hydraulic jacks. There was too much gasoline around to use the acetylene torch which had been rushed to the scene. He was taken to St. Vincent's
Hospital with leg injuries. His condition was reported to be fair., NEW DELHI, India, Sunday, Last Friday Mr. Davis had! Oct. °9 (UP)—Press reports
taken his Army physical exam-| ination and expected to be called within a few weeks. ”
BUT THAT still was in the future. It had been a happy eight weeks since the wedding cere-| mony in the Eighth Christian] Church. There was the apart-| ment, the gifts which stood out in every corner, the furniture for United Press Staff Correspondent
which they were paying. | TOKYO, Sunday, Oct. 29— There was really nothing 0. The powerful U. S. Tth Infan«
worry about. - -— The resourceful girl he nad|try Division swarmed ashore
married was to graduate nextiin a new amphibious landing January from the Lincoln Chiro-| practice College. | today on the Korean east Both her parents, Dr. and Mrs.|coast within 75 miles of the J. W. Clarkson, 3353 W. 16th St. Manchurian border. are chiropractors, The 7th Division, which landed ® = {last month at Inchon and fought THINGS HAD gone well since nto the southern section of James Allen left Technical High Seoul, landed today at Iwon, 100
School. Until he took .the night/®ir miles and 176 road miles job about five and a half months |Portheast of Wonsan where the
ago, he had been enrolled in a/U. 8. 1st Marine Division landed
Purdue University Extension|last Thursday. couFSe—Before this job there had| Iwon was, captured last week been the one with Stewart-War-{DY South Korean troops driving
| the east coast. There was no ner. His father, Melville M. Davis, |UP 1221 N. Belle Vieu PL, is a steam. OPposition to the American ine
said today the Chinese Commu= | mist government's order te | troops to advance on Tibet has now developed into a fulle fledged Invasion and that the Red armies have entered from Sikang province.
By RALPH TEATSORTH
' {fantrymen. is| user His mother's name 5 “We are going to the nl {rian border, destroying any
was the second child théy, o.oo ting in our path,” said
aj. Gen, David G. Barr, comMary Mander of the Tth Division. aR \ ae : 3 i Pa Leo's Division now numbers 27,000 men, {First to land were troops of the James, 8, was struck and killed 17th Regimental Combat Team, ow . who ashore from by a car at an Intersection near avy amphibious vessels.
the family's home. The Clarksons have another Navy searchers found no mines in the waters off Iwon, the qnly unmined port found so far in the wake of the retreating North Korean Communists. 3 At Iwon the Yanks were only 40 miles south of advanced spearheads of the South Korean Capital Division, which last was reported fighting within the port of Songjin to the northeast. The South+Korean 3d Division, striking inland to the northwest from the coast, last was reported closing in on the big Chosin and Fusen reservoirs about 75 miles west of Iwon. Smash Road Block { On the west coast, meanwhile, troops of the U. 8. 24th Division drove within 44 miles of the Manlchurian border in a combined American -British - Australian’ drive toward the New North Korean Communist capital of Sinuiju at the mouth of the Yalu River. The Americans drove through 600 North Koreans trying to hold two roadblocks. on the route into Taechon, 42 miles south of the border, and stopped last night just two miles south of the town. They estimated they killed 300 to 400 of the Reds holding the roadblocks. Units of the South Korean Tih Division joined the drive on Taechon, halting for the night a few miles to the east of the city. | Far to the south, Marines of the 1st Division attacking to re|open the east coast supply road, {which had been cut by Commu'nist guerrillas, were caught in an |ambush near the town of Kojo. Two Marine forces of the 1st {Division totaling nearly 250 men were ambushed and cut off by
(Continued on Page 3—Col. 1)
What Are the Advantages of Home Ownership?
tragedy. Mrs. Jack Leo, a sister of
>
Go to Woodshed
Indiana, Purdue,
Notre Dame Lose
By EDDIE ASH, Times Sperts Editer a winless Saturday for
|
ishort side.of the score, | | In other words, it was a clean sweep in reverse on the state's imajor gridiron front.
of
Butler, beau type, a
BLOCK eolonial rm. m brick, large liv, rm, with attrac lovely kit. nd bekist, hdw. firs., %a bath on
{ t time it Has happened that ig Bh \way over a long span of years. [I "aoi*"He "hath with | The trend of football de-| shower, fall bemt. Sith shower lemphasis continued at South Bend er Biro oil furhace, heated at: jas Michigan State nosed out Notre| Ji" FL rly om o£ 5 Dame n a ree-scorin, a reas. price. raiser, 36 to 33, the third Setback] CAM el REALTY
{for the Irish this fall against but| itwo victories. i Purdue Bows { The trend also continued at| Lafayette as Purdue bowed in| another intersectional battle. to] UCLA. It was the Boilermakers’ fourth defeat in five starts and their third since turning in that early season Na, 1 upset over| Notre Dame. The Californians won, 20 to 6. i .Over at Champaign, Indiana's Hurrying Hoosiers drew a goose egg for the first time this season as the Illini rolled up a 20-to-0 triumph. It was Indiana's second setback against two victories and
® There are many advantages to owning a home. Among them is Economy. Put your money into a home rather than collect useless r e n t. receipts, Home ownership is the strongest foundation for financial security and independence. It is one of the safest investments and gives you a better credit rating in the business world. ] ® The home above is just one of nearly 1
| " ! a tie. gi:72 Sagrevs. = Indiana, like Purdue, apparent- Four, the SPECIAL i loaded ly was unable to recover stride te Section of » | rm (Continued on Page 3—Col. 6) i ohms? : = : a
i
