Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 February 1951 — Page 2

{ Towns Seized Tn Nillr Push

Reds Continue Flight

Before UN Forces =

* (Continued From Page Ome)

Ir

yang, capital of Communist North, ~

Korea, and damage to one south-|

east of the city. United Nations forees on the central front launched their patrol

stabs into Hoengsong after win

turing hills west, south and south-|

east in advances of up to four] miles yesterday. A reinforced American patrol| of tanks, infantry and engineers was the first to enter the empty city 35 miles south of the 38th] Parallel at 6:30 p. m. Friday (In-/ dianapolis Time). | Allied Air Forces flew nearly 500 sorties in support of the ad-| vancing ground forces, hitting

targets just behind the front and jg,

far to the north. Okinawa-based B-29 fortresses dumped 210 bombs on Communist bridges and marshaling yards between Pyongyang, the Red capital, and Kanggye, just south of the Manchurian frontier, { An Air Force bulletin reported evidence that the Reds Were turning increasingly to pack animals to replace trucks and trains knoeked out by the United Na-| tions aerial offensive. Pilots claimed to have destroyed 80 pack animals and 28

tons of]

northwest Korea. They also claimed 74 enemy

ox carts by late afternoon, 50 of them in the Chonju area in ore | .

-aged. Six railway bridges and one road bridge likewise were de-

vehicles destroyed and 20 =. Troops—Dewey

boxcars dropped tons of ammunition, ies and other vital equipment to units whose ground was slowed by foot. mud and thaw-swollen

raliwayl |

Super-| i }

the background,

{

Sunny Side

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: rE TNDIANAPOLIS TIMES

of Cage Tourney

. Times photo by Bill Oates. High on the southeast turn of Butler University's football bowl sit three Ben Davis High School students, warmed by an infrequent winter sun, Nancy Sheffer, Phyllis McFall and Shirley Lieske (left | | to right) chat between basketball games of the sectional tournament, held in Butler Fieldhouse, in

'

there is nothing “any living man 8ive war by the Kremlin is not! can do about it.” remote.”

& 3 3 CRA

Welfare Fund

Case a Washout

Charges Money Withheld Fade Away

(Continued From Page One)

~~

Quite a Jar At the End | Of Those Bumps |

GARY, Ind., Feb. 24 (UP) — !C. B. Rust, 58, Gary steel worker, | lwas driving his 1930 model auto-| mobile carefully through the]

Gen. More Dies |

After "Copter Falls

Climbs From Wreck |

Apparently Unhurt |

(Continued From Page One) |

rector again asked for the names, dense fog today and making out withheld pending notification of) the committee chairman bluntly all right until he got to the inter- next of kin. |

refused. Mrs, Eleanor Moore, president of the county welfare board, later was given the same blunt treatment. “I'll give my facts to your attorney, Albert Stump,” answered Rep. Andrew. Many of the questions seemed to carry many innuendoes, Buys Newspapers? For example, the county director was asked if the welfare funds might be used to buy newspapers, When Mr. Mueller admitted that such was probably the case, Rep. Andrew asked if any attempt was made to control what newspaper was purchased. The director, shrugging his shoulders in amazement, answered, “Why of course not.” “You mean to say,” bristied the chairmhan, “that these people could use welfare money to buy the Daily Worker?" “Well I suppose, like any other American citizen, they could buy any newspaper they wanted to,” Mr. Mueller answered. “The department does not try to dictate what newspaper anyone should read.”

. | The chairman then abruptly He backed this up by stating dismissed all the welfare officials that no dictator ever denied his who had been ordered to appear the ‘very essentials of before the committee.

we will withdraw into fortress life” to maintain incredibly large] Outside the Supreme Court]

wg | “ the hearing was . America. {armed forces “unless he expect {chambers where Pleads for Action ‘No—Beaten. Beaten’ fto. use them PECIS pod, the welfare officials ruefully Yoo ’ |

in all-out warfare] A { | {admitted that they had had no] To Avert War li ” He Shjested is A Proposal byfat the moment of .his own ¢hoos-| , 4vance indication of what in-| Contt (Sen. Lyndon B, Johnson (D. Tex.) ™% : {formation was wanted and con-| ( usd From Page One) that the resolution “should be, Gov. Dewey's 4000-word state-| sequently could not prepare any]

Mi we couldn't live—would nromptly buried.” {ment represented the strongest|gpecific information on any of!

“A vote against it (the Wherry | resolution) would show that we've grown up,” Gov. Dewey insisted. [A vote for it says in effect that people

I |indorsement he h i | rivers, ' . | “No--beaten, beaten!” Gov. e has given thusithe cases. Far up the northeast coast, the| 1s a bored Mr. Dewey said. as the troops-for-Europe pro-| questioned after the hearing, €5,000-ton U. 8. battleship Missou- i; . hite ates doesn’t do, sov. Dewey said failure to sup- - Lu Rep. Andrew said the “informari: turned 1ts 16-inch Guns on SUp-|would be caught without uiites PCT, GON: Eisenhower's army with |g bbed tion on the cases,” to which he ply points near Songiin, 182 miles would be caught without allles| American troops would “paralyze” en Robbed of $85 had referred, was given to him! and “we'd De by an Indianapolis attorney. |

above the 38th Parallel. The oneton shells destroyed a warehouse apparently containing ammuni-

Bombard Wonsan Area The U. 8. cruiser Manchester, destroyers Ozbourne and Sperry, and patrol frigates Sausalito and

Since y night, the ships have hurled more than 1500 rounds into the Wonsan area.

outnumbered 14 the capacity of other free nations : ” 2 to 1. [to defend themselves. And Wrist Watch | However, he refused to release And through loss of foreign, “we are not maintaining or Three men last night reported any of the information for publisources of vital materials-—such reinforcing our troops in Europe being robbed of a total of $85:cation, insisting again that he as the Belgian Congo's uranium as a matter of grace or of and a wrist watch in three hold- | Would turn the documents over deposits—we would have “no ma-charity,” Gov. Dewey said. “We! to Mr. Stump.

|section of Fifth and Bridge Sts. {police said. Then he noticed that the roadway was becoming increasingly| bumpy. He got out to see what imade the bumps and how to get (his car off the bumpy stretch. | He found out that somewhere {he had left the road and was driving down the Pennsylvania railroad tracks, { While he stood beside the ltracks, a fast-moving Chicagu-to-New York Flyer came down the track and demolished his car, Mr. Rust was unhurt.

Gambling Raid Weaknesses Cited

| Sheriff's Office

Scored as Case Fades

(Continued From Page One) lofficer before becoming comman-

itional. He said his court had no choice but to dismiss the charge leven though there were indications of horse book operations. | “You're being freed because 1 can’t do otherwise by law,” hé told the defendants. “If you've got any sense you'd better lock

Gen, Moore's body lay in state at the hospital tonight and will| be flown to a rear area Sunday] morning. The general formerly was in| charge of the U. 8. Military!

Academy at West Point, N. Y He was a veteran of both the)

Pacific and European campaigns | of World War IL

Maj. Gen. Oliver P. Smith, commander of the 1st Marine Di-! vision, was named temporary commander of the corps, which includes American and British

commonwealth forces.

Gen. Moore, from Ellsworth, Me., led the 164th Infantry Regiment ashore at Guadalcanal. Later he commanded the 8th Infantry Divisidn in France and Germany.

He returned to Italy after che war to command the 88th Divi: sion. He served eight months as U. 8. Army Public Information

dant at West Point in 1948,

Gen. Moore was born July 6, 1894. He was commissioned as an infantry second lieutenant in August, 1917, after being graduated from West Point and was

promoted to a first lieutenant the!

Sally Rand Fans Out at Harvard Freshman Affair

CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Feb. 24 (UP)—Sally Rand left the stage in tears last night when an audience of Harvard freshmen tossed pennies at her,

The applause and whistles that /

greeted the pretty fan Mancer when she arrived at Sanders Theater to entertain at the annual freshman smoker became deafening when she took off her ermine

wrap and revealed a strapless

evening gown. ’ 3 “That's as far as I go tonight,” Sally said. The audience remained friendly as Sally read a poem and pre= sented a -skit about her intere pretation of “the thing” But when she whipped out a five-page speech on the world situation, a student tossed a penny on the

stage, #® " ”

“I ONLY know one animal that throws a scent,” Sally said, causing most of the audience to laugh again. However, as she continued her speech, more pennies were tossed on the stage, Sally ignored the pennies and read her speech rapidly through to the end before she fled to the wings with tears rolling down her cheeks.

Boost for Mayor Finds Clark ‘Coy’

Still Non-Committal

same day.

up that place because the next] {time the law may not be in your moted to captain, and in 1942, he!

favor.” The defendants were Fred G. Scott, 46, of 901 N. New Jersey St., charged with keeping a gam-

ing house; Sam B. Tyner, 36, of |

2444 Pierson 8t. and Bob Jones, 42, of 2237 Central Ave., both charged with visiting a gaming house, and Andersonville Lewis, 32, RR 15, charged with possessing a slot machine. Wants ‘Proper’ Cases Judge Ober said he did not expand his criticism last night pecause neither Sheriff Dan Smith or his chief jailer, Willlam Parrish, was present. But today he added:

1 1 “I believe every case should be

|a proper one. I'm more interested! how a lieutenant genera {in upholding the law with refer-| hd 1,

ence to search warrants and il-

After 7th Ward Move

Judge Alex M. Clark today said he was “flattered” by the unani-

In 1918, Gen. Moore was pro-|

{became a brigadier general. He!

was made a major general in 1945. 11 ous request of Tth Ward Ree

| Gen. Moore served with U. 8. pyblicans that he seek the coms forces between the two world wars ing mayoralty nomination. But in China and in American terri- he remained non-committal about torial possessions. He was Pro- announcing his fesor of military science and tac-| candidac jean ye tics at the City’ College of New| The youthful York in 1937 and at the Univer-| ity of Iilincis § Municipal Court sity o nois in 1939. (4 judge has been §& Stationed in Italy mentioned re-H After the victory over Japan, peatedly as a? |Gen. Moore was stationed in likely RepubliItaly. Later he became com-can mayoralty manding general of U. 8. troops candidate b ut {in the free territory of Trieste. |has thus far de-

He was brought to Korea to clined to confirm

‘relieve Maj. Gen. John B. Coulter that he will seek the office.

| *1ast night after the Judge addressed 7th

Judge Clark

| Gen. Moore's military decora-

terial with which to fight except are doing so as a matter of hard ups. bows and arrows.” necessity for our own self-| Wayne McManus, 1124 8. State U. S. Search Plane Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper preservation.” |Ave., said a man who stopped _°' ~'

1 80me honk the Wonsan|(g, a oi Gov. Dewey. that if, i Fe EE. 1 ,

“Wrerry <reselution it-weonld =be an

He said the nation must face

# to approve “the ita “inescapable duty” to build up; Manded - his waliet, ring and.

“'foreg=to -pre- Walch hut settled for the watch,

him at 9th and Illinois Sts_de-.Sights 12 Missing Men. |

“supinely abandoning” its right vent war instead. of inviting it.” [Valued at $55. lof the Norwegian cargo ship 88

to determine policy. “No sir, no sir,” Gov. Dewey re- ing Western Europe is “the only|

Still farther south, the Austra-/{orted.

lian destroyer Warramunga

the Kangnung area 20

vy cruiser St. Paul 16 Communist boats off the coast and fired on troop connorth of Seoul.

&¢ a ;

He recalled that Republican so obviously great that the 14) . pounded Communist troop posi- President William McKinley had conspirators in the Kremlin will $40.

George Marr, 2219 Columbia

He sald the program of rearmve, sald a man who slugged

Florentine, which sank in a storm

TOKYO, Feb. 24 (UPJ-—S0mé told officers 1 am _avaitab GT tHE 12 ‘missing crew members issue search WATTERS"

{legal seizure and universally re|cognized legal principles than havAR headlines I. have repeatedly to

sentatives of one afternoon news-

Tuesday, have been sighted in a/paper along on the raid and ad-

‘course which will develop strength Dim at Martindale Ave. and 25th|jifeboat by a U. §. search plane, mitted he did not have a search

|

St. took his wallet, containing!

the Far East Air Force announced today.

sent 5000 U. 8. troops to China not dare to plunge this world in-| William Miles, 337 Parkway, FEAF said the lifeboat was as part of an international army to the final war of the atomic Ave. said three men with whom [sighted about 275 miles southwest to quell the Boxer uprising. age. |he was riding beat him severely, of Iwo Jima by Pilot C. C. KearThe precedent for commitment! “I doubt that it is necessary for robbed him of $45 and ejected ney. The radio report said the of troops by the President has me to point out,” he said, “that him from the car at 1800 8. Ar-|crewmembers could be seen mov-

been established, he added, and| the possibility of all-out aggres-|lington Ave.

ad

-

Jacques Fath design for Joseph Halpert

m-

; Navy Organza

|ing about in the boat.

(warrant, But he added that the first in-

{from that paper. He also said he {did not get a warrant becaus) |“we didn’t have an eyewitness to state there was gambling going jon inside and no judge would have

Chief Jailer Parrish took repre-|

tions included the Distinguished Ward Republicans, James E. Ul-

|Service Medal with, an oak leaf

Leluster,-the. Silver Star. fog action

3 a Log + 2 for ing-vote-f prema PIE the South SRE Wor ta 0 “pp oobi STARE prs HE Ts 0 ar IT the. 1agion Yor Marit. an 2 favoring “Jadge. ClATK for

{oak leaf cluster to the Silver {Star and the Bronze Star with a cluster.

given us one without that eyewitness.”

rich, 9th precinct committeeman,

ayor. There -was -a unanimous {response from the more than 100 {persons attending and heavy |applause, " | Today, 7th Ward officials said the motion and response were | “spontaneous,”

formation on gaming had come!

and that Judge

that he did not try to get a war- support. ’ rant' on’ what information he did! “Naturally I'm flattered,” Judge have. Warrants are frequently Clark said today. But he said he issued on information that certainistill had no plans to announce

Mr. Parrish admitted, however, Clark had made no overtures for

{places are gaming establishments. his candidacy.

of a feminine you

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March 4, 1951

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