Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1951 — Page 1
__co-operation” ‘to Indiana's 92
Wik
he Tadic nap
FORECAST: Occasional rain or snow this afternoon turning into light snow tonight and tomorrow. Not much change in temperature. High today 35. :
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61st YEAR—NUMBER 365
Forgetful Legislature—
Red Roundup In State Must Wait on Law
Won't Be Effective for 7 Months; Emergency Clause Was Left Off
fon By NOBLE REED : Indiana Communists can't be touched for at least seven
months. : Arrgst of Communist Party members was blocked
‘today by discovery that the anti-Red law passed by the!
legislature will not become effective until October or November. ; Prosecutor Frank H. Fair-
child had assigned investi- Strik Off N gators to a round-up of WS e dames known Communist Party members here in the first prosecution attempt under the new law. Of 39.000 Voters
“However, after setting up the Eligibles in County
investigation for immediate acCut to 238,000
tion, I discovered there was no emergency clause in the law,” he id. “ie May Be November Names of more than 39,000 votWithout an emergency clause, ®'™ in Marion County have been making the act effective upon Po rom the permanent Ble A of registered voters, members o passage, the law will not become the Registration Board disclosed today. : The purge list, amounting to 14
Attorney General J. Emmett McManamon, today offered “full
was announced by the board as it
per cent of all registered voters, |
se
Rowe's Friend Denies Helping Land RFC Job
Attorney Admits Getting Fees for Loans
MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1951
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Indiana, Issued Dally.
Reds Turn Tail For 38th As 70-Mile Line Caves In
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON, Mar, 12 (UP) «— Attorney General J. Howard McGrath disclosed today that the government will seek perjury, conspiracy and fraud indictments in the RFC investigation. : By United Press | WASHINGTON, Mar, 12— Former Rep. Joseph E. Casey, (D. Mass.), said today that RFC Director C. Edward Rowe is an “old friend,” but he denied under oath that he helped Mr. Rowe get on the RFC board. : : Mr. Casey told-a Senate Banking subcommittee investigating the Reconstruction Finance Corp. that its recent report claiming "he
was “instrumental” in Mr. Rowe's appointment was unfair.
attorney, admitted he formerly had an arrangement to get 20 per
for the law firm of Washington Attorney Joseph H. Rosenbaum, a key figure in the subcommit-
[tee’s charges of “favoritisit and influence” in RFC,
Mr. Casey, now a Washington,
cent of the fees on RFC business}
All Six in Family Injured in This Crash
olis Times
FINAL } Th. Loe PRICE FIVE CENTS
Ridgway Sees Chance
i
nk
For Great UN Victory
If War Ends at Border
Foe Believed : - Quitting Seoul By EARNEST HOBERECHT
United Press Staff Correspondent | United Press Staff Correspondent +
| ON. THE CENTRAL} TOKYO, Mar. 12—ComFRONT, Korea, Mar. 12—Lt. nunist resistance collapsed 'Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway along the 70-mile Korean said today that it would be!central front today and Reds a ‘tremendous victory for/fled headlong toward the
“Chinese Myth Held Deflated
By PETER KALISCHER
[the United Nations” if the|38th Parallel.
{Korean War should end at the Aerial observers reported signs {38th Parallel, (that the Communists also were | The 8th Army meanwhile, has abandoning the former capital punctured the Chinese Reds’ myth, city of Seoul, threatened by an ot invincibility, he declared. {Allied flanking drive to the east. | But the United Nations ground! Nine United Nations divisions commander said he knew of no reported gains of up to threes Plans to end the hostilities at the miles as they moved cautiously {38th, north along the central front in [~ His press conference atement the wake of fleeing Chinese and
a
tors in enforcing the |,repared the master files for the! RB > : : F ; i ut he said the . anti-Communist law. City primary balloting May 8. |ended last August ot ho Be et
Mr. 4 McManamon sald he | Cancellation of the 39,000 regis-|became
would ¢sll a meeting of the |trati el : a member of the board. ons reduced the total eligible! Works for ESA
state’s prosecutors this sum- |yoters in the county from 278,000! Since th Mr { en, . Casey said, he|
followed by five days Gen. Doug-| Korean Reds. They advanced at las MacArthur's prediction that will, :
the Korean War would end in an| Tank and infantry task forees inevitable stalemate under pres- darted within sight of the big
Cain oo CM : |enemy base of Hongchon and the HIT BY LOCOMOTIVE—Six members of the Cooper family were injured when this car was ent restrictions on his bffensive ©" struck by a railroad engine last night. Police are shown talking to the engineer, Ray Shaefer. Mrs. authority and without major al- ®2st-central Koreafi crossroads
; lied reinf : {town of Changpyong. Van essie Cooper was still in the car when this picture was taken. enforcement were within 24 miles of the : p P Made Its Choice oi
Parallel.
mer, probably in June, to. dis- (to 238,000. | cuss the Conmimunist situation. Eligibles at New Low |has represented only one case beAt this meeting, Mr. McMan- | The total list of eligibles inside, °T® the RFC — a “smal loan” amon said, the state will out- [the city limits (the only voters atter in which he got no fee. line a uniform procedure to ~id \who can cast ballots in the city, MF Casey now is working under .Jocal authorities In coping with :
sma AE i
the Communists.
effective until the new 1951 acts are promulgated by the Secre-
low of 187,800.
elections this year), was reduced 1 pis; Buablliner Eric A. from an original 220.000 to new/gonnston's agency. He was the Register board members |: headed by Sen. J. Willia. tion {Fulbright (D. Ark.) began ioe
rst witness as the subcommit-
Father, Wife, 4 Children Reports Paying
1
| An American officer, comment-| ‘No Contact’ ing on the two contrasting state-| Most of the advancing United ments, said: Nations: "columns reported “mo contact” with the enemy. The
° . =e s warned that unless the purged HH t EF 4 t { | . MacArthur was speaking to rest reported onl t wo} shades tary Jot State, probably as late Jotees totaling 32,500 in the city, fato leans totaling %3 million to urry as : ngine I S ar Boo le ‘the United Nations, Ridgway was adic Lae oa a Tee as November. e-register before the Apr. 7 dead- ron eel Co. -a . . ee ! | ‘ " dora, Because of the long delay inline, they will not be eligible to| Sen. John W. Bricker (%. 0.) Mother, 2 Youngsters in Serious Condition; ’ ! speaking to the battalions, guards. so and getting the acts promulgated in vote in the May 8 primary. proposed that as a result of the Costello Stopped Gen. Riagway emphasised that), lee Nee iaous FepoltA
the anti-Communist bill.
recent years, most of the major bills passed by the legislature are designated “emergency,” which makes them effective upon signature of the Governor. J Legislators apparently overlooked the in
‘Can Run Wide Open’ “The Commies here and elsewhere in Indiana can run wide open and scot free for at least another six or eight months.” Prosecutor Fairchild said. The anti-Communist law imposes a prison term of one to three years on persons convicted of being members of the Communist Party or other subversive groups that “advocate, teach or
The campaign to register voters for the May 8 city primary, when Democratic and Republican candidates for mayor, city clerk and the City Council will be nomiDai. will get under way Mar. 20 branch offices in every city Ca i Notices Mailed Out The purge of names from the voters’ files is based on the state law which requires the Registration Board to cancel out names of voters who voted in neither the primary or the general election of the previous year. Official notices were mailed to all voters who failed to cast ballots last year but there was no response from 39,000 of them. Thus, under law, they must be.
He said the house, occupied by |
disclosures, the lending authority
Belt-S. Keystone Ave. Crossing Is Scene
be cut off for the multi-billion-
jury also began today -looking! into the evidence which has been turned up. | becommittee said it (was told that Mr. Casey had beew “instrumental in bringing about| Rowe's appointment” but that “Casey does not take credit” for it. Mr. Casey said any statement that he helped get Rowe appointed “is in error.” He said “I was not instrumental in bringing about (Rowe’s) appointment. I had nothing whatsoever to do with” it.
Admits Fees
Old Man Winter—the mean old in the deal.
Mr. Casey denied having any|
In its r t { Inquiry a report on its long,
All six members of the Cooper family were seriously injured
dollar agency. A federal grand|last night when their car was struck by a railroad engine at the
8. Keystone Ave. crossing of the Belt Railroad.
Edward and Bessie Cooper, 8120 Pendleton Pike, were on their|
way home with their four children and the family dog from a visit : « to relatives.
Police Cut Off | ‘Firewater,’ Quell
. * * Indian Uprising lished. Police last night quelled the tracks and almost demolis
{Ave., according to police.
{In the current central front of-|scored hi uprising re- Police said Mr. Cooper told them of Roosevelt Raceway, was the smashing Arst Indiana Indian pm aD ane had started across the tracks first witness to appear as the, athony Wayne's peace treaty in after an eastbound . New York committee opened what promised He said the 8th Army has demAng |Central train had passed. He was|to be the gaudiest and most re- Onstrated that the skill and worth
| Illegal Gambling
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff. Corregpondent NEW YORK, Mar. 12--Gam-
‘bler Frank Costello was paid 5°
Their car, 4 1941 sedan, was $60,000 over a four-year period to tried in yain to throw the United dent {hit by the engine operated by | keep bookmakers away from a Nation forces into the sea—"and from the east-central \ Jeporied oa {Pennsylvania Railroad engineer harness racing track here, a wit- they will continue to fail” {Ray Shaefer, 34, of 558 Eastern The lcar was dragged 60 feet down the Vestigating Committee today.
ness told the Senate Crime In-|
the life of {that the Reds were digging in | of every Allied soldier 15! long a line anchored on Hong
. |“precious,” but said the choice in'chon. some 20 miles south of the
Korea was “to lie down or fight.” “The free world Beant, rs Shel Tor a new Sand by Choice long ago,” the 58-year-old] But front dispatches told of neral said. nothing but enemy retreats. He said the Communists had| United Press War CorresponWilliam... Burson re
“Reds who were concentrating Gen. . Ridgway sald the 3th|formidably here three days ago {Army was killing, wounding oriturnsd into headlong flight |capturing more than 60 Red toward the 38th Parallel. Ameri-
George Morton Levy, a director soldiers for every Allied casualty can and South Korean infantry
They were summoned to 936| Struck by the westbound Pennsyl-|vealing of its public hearings.
Under cross-examination by Mr. Ft. Wayne Ave., where a Redskin Vania train which, according to
wn. Richard Cooper, § compound
Mr, Levy testified that Mr. Cos-
set up for television cameras, The
successes all along the 40-mile-wide sector.
Capture Peak >
*, ap of United Nation troops is “im-| _ Only on the road to Changmeasurably superior to anything|PYOD8 did United Nations troops
rensive,
which we deflate her military Soksa, final junction for roads reputation, to that degree we in-|leading north to the 38th Parallel
Mrs. Ruben Glanzman, was dam- critter with one foot in the grave | WITH A straight pale face, fracture of left thigh, serious lights made the jam-packed tiny aged to the extent of $5000 and| today did his utmost to make Part in a “web of influence the \runicipal Court 3 Judge Joseph Elizabeth Cooper, 10, fractured courtroom on the 28th floor of the fuente the thinking of millions and east to the coast. The Reds that damage to furniture waslife miserable for Hoosierland. jSubsommmittes claims involved the yoward today suspended a fine left leg, fair. federal building resemble a movie d sia. {had abandoned it. Three hills
about $2000. Mrs. Glanzman was |
which was caused by a coal fur-| nace exploding. |
Delphi Boy, 3, Hunted | In Cold 6 Hours, Found
DELPHI, Ind. Mar. 12 (UpP)—|
Running a steady freezing tem-
with . light snow—a harrassing tactic he is expected to continue tonight and tomorrow.
cast called for sleet or snow over most of north and central Indiana today, state police reported that all roads were clear.
. land work farm sentence against away at the time of the blaze, perature, he sprayed Indianapolis) AD attorney, he said, is needed}, e Bad Gun for being drunk.
jas an “advocate” for loans be-| lcause “what you get from the
ladvocate to show” that the loan| lis needed. | Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R.|
{Ind.) said “I can’t conceive of any
stay away from the fire water,” > |RFC is the most cursory kind of | judge Howard told the 33-year-old Top Red Quits Although the statewide fore- an examination. It's up to the syjj.hooded Cherokee who had ’ strayed from his home reserva- U. S. Jailhouse
released with head cuts.
“Cut out the war whoops and
tion at 4300 Millersville Rd. | te ————— NEW YORK, Mar. 12 (UP)
Dies of Crash Injuries
|ing televised. He said he discussed employing
het Costello with the late Benjamin Downing, chairman of the
Racing Commission. The attorney {and race track executive said he old Mr. Downing that he had known Costello 25 years and he
s t i § ) { Emma Cooper, 13, treated and set. Mr. Levy didn’t object to pe- th Eventually, it must react on|farther west also were captured
e political action of their gov-| without opposition. ernment. This would be of tre-| Allled planes caught one col mendous importance. umn of North Koreans marching He said he did not believe the north through the eastern moun-
Chinese were as ready as they tains and claimed to have. dewere a week ago fo launch an|
stroyed 80 per cent of it. attack because ‘‘they have lost | - yed pe ; a fine line of departure and great
quantities of men and equip- Bars Down—
Three-year-old Stephen Lloyd Eugene Dennis, General Secre- Was “one man who had the repu- ment." Cn safe wor his Prac Light snow over the week-end ability that an attorney can use tary of the American Communist tation’ of getting along with! “we have retained the initiative] CASSELTON, N. D., Mar, 12. today after being lost im near covered part of Indiana with alin getting a loan.” He said it is; HUNTINGBURG, Ind. Mar. 12 y . : ; ’ th ted gamblers.” and forced him (the enemy) to! (UP)—Officials aren't worried freezing temperatures for six thin blanket. But it disappeared [Simply a matter of “filling out the Services were planned today for Party, was released from the fed- po caiq he then went ahead about any crime wave here
hours. One of 300 volunteer searchers found Stephen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Finis Gipson, huddled in a clump of bushes four) blocks from his home. Cold and
frightened, he was taken to Home| | Teeth Are Sharp, Too— al
Hospital at checkup.
On the Inside Of The Times
Page Family talent show planned for Tech PTA meeting tomorrow . . . Blackwood’s informative column for bridge players ..... Crippled persons find help at
Lafayette for
Chsirsssnasany 4
rapidly. Burial services for Old Man Winter have been scheduled for 4:26 a. m. Wednesday, Mar. 21.
|forms, presenting balance sheets Carl Wood, 43, who died in Stork eral
and presenting the facts.” “You'd never get a loan on that basis,” Mr. Casey replied.
house of detention today Hospital here of head injuries suf-{ after serving 10 months of a onefered Saturday night when his year contempt of Congress senauto ran off Ind. 45 near here. tence.
A Mink Gnaws Away at Nerves in Capital
| Little White House A
| By Unit
nswers
| All Questions With: ‘No Comment’
ed Press
' KEY WEST, Fla, Mar. 12—The little White House seemed in | something of a sweat today over what to do so say about the Charles F. Brannan whose ears still are ringing, was miffed today | White House stenographer with an $8540 mink coat and a husband at people, practtcal jokers, newsmen and mink. In about any order, | mixed up in the RFC Investigation.
At the moment, Mrs. E. Merl Young still has her job. What! | happens from now on igs anybody's guess.
Seek to Link Stenographer’s Coat With RFC Investigation
By United Press
Mar. 12 Agriculture
WASHINGTON, Secretary of
too. : Mr. Brannan's troubles started with this ad in Sunday’s Wash-
ington Star “found” column:
and asked Mr. Costello to undertake the job and the gambler said he would, leaving it up to Mr. Levy what he was to be paid. Mr. Levy said he suggested $15,000 a year and Mr.e Costello replied: |“that is more than agreeable with me.”
Asked Question
| Rudolph Halley, chief counsel {for the committee asked Mr, Levy, |“just what did Costello do?” Mr, | Levil replied that he didn't know | Mr. Halley, quoting testimonv given at a previous closed hearing, told the witness: “Costello told the committee that he wandered to a few bars and talked to a few people whose names he couldn't remember and
give up ground in key terrain| |features,” he said. “He (the enemy) is farther from his objectives than ever before.”
Hoosiers Earning $5000 Warned of Quarterly Tax
Due Apr. 30, Past Leniency to End;
10% Penalty Plus Interest for Violation By IRVING LEIBOWITZ . Hoosiers who earn more than $5000 a year must pay sta gross income tax every three months, This reminder came today from thé Department of Revenue, where state agents are preparing to crack down on tax dodgers and persons who are unaware of this regulation. Conn J, Sterling, Commissioner of Revenue, reminded Hoosiers of this tax regulation so many
They sold the jail to a man who plans to tear it down and build a garage of the lumber,
r——
|» —eeeo ee | t0ld_them ‘any bookies caught. at K r er: Fora Y= S10 Gross Yosdy Rehablliiation By pe Tittle Witte tion whether Mrs. Young will be | xara ae bi vestigating ‘undue influence” ithe frack are going to get heavy taxpayers San a Hg bg bans file eB wn aren , hot even e e e . jcoat, . : : - RL a onal expense o en , y . Center lsueistunivuitrions 8 ae “At any rate, three sepa- transferred to. another job. Saturday morning. OR. 6226. Drought to Bear Ou the govern-isentences; interest.” J > turns, This must be paid to the A new column on radio and . y y p . ‘ ’ that of the ment lending agency. Did that seem like $60,000] SL rate sets of reactions—each with Just ‘No Comment The address is a Mr: Brannan has had troubles ‘ According to Gross Income Tax
television by R. K. Shull . .. to appear in The Times on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays ..... dices Reivers 9 The Life of Jesus . . . chapter two of an inspiring interpretation of a classic story by Dr. Edgar J. Goospeed ..... 13
. Other Features:
Amusements ,....co00000 8 Henry Butler .........i. 10 Crossword ......%.v0eeee 8 Editorials Forum Erskine Johnson ........ "8 Dan Kidney .....ee00000 14
sesssenssssnen 14
sesesssessasscess 14
a different shade of meaning— came from President Truman's vacation headquarters over the week-end. ‘Heard’ of Firing The latest furor over the minkclad stenographer was touched off by Rep. Kenneth B. Keating, (R. N. Y.), who said in a Washington broadcast he had just “heard” that Mr. Truman fired Mrs. Young. © First official reaction was “no
comes - But“fn a matter of hours, a | White House official who checked with Mr. Truman said there was
To a reporter who wanted to
offered to resign, Mr. countered: “No comment on that
subject.”
decided to keep Mrs. Young on the payroll, Mr. Young, former RFC examiner, was accused by a Senate subcommittee of exerting ‘“influence” on some RFC board mem|bers in government loans. He
White House. OR. 6226+is Mr. know whether Mrs, Young has Brannan's home telephone numShort |per. |
or any other question on that|of the mink coat belonging to
with minks before. A group of mink ranchers claim that on the advice of the Agriculture DepartThe coat fits the description ment ‘they fed chicken heads to
their mink. The heads, however, Mrs. E. Merl Young, White House had been injected’ with female
Mr. Keating insisted he told|stenographers whose husband has|) rmones. they said, and the the truth, but that Mr. Truman been named as a key figure Ini inks stopped begetting “got his back up” and apparently an “influence” web in the Recon-/ ....
little
[struction Finance Corp. Abked for Help Not So Funny Mr. Brannan said his telephone | After a few hundred calls Mr. began ringing at 8 a. m. yesterBrannan didn’t think the joke day and rang continuously for |was very funny. He said that hours until he asked the phone {whoever placed the ad was a company for help. The company l“cruel sadistic damned fool.” agreed to “screen” his calls to
worth?” Mr, Halley asked. “It did in my opinion,” Mr. Levy replied. “The mere hiring of the fellow was invaluable as far as Downing was concerned.” After he hired Mr. Costello, Mr. Levy explained, there were no {complaints from Mr. Downing of bookmaking -at the track.
Truman Has ‘Good’ Talk With Leaders
KEY WEST Fla., Mar, 12 (UP) President Truman held a “very satisfactory” long distance telephone conference today with his
State Department of“Revenue by
Director James M. Propst, the APT. 30. |penalty for violating the quarterly, Payments for the remaining gross income tax returns is a 10 three quarters are similar. : per cent penalty on the tax plus, Here's an example of how the ‘an additional 1 per cent for every quarterly tax return works for month it is not paid. someone on a $6000-a-year salary. 175,000 Returns Short The person would average About 125,000 quarterly returns ¢ys44 for a three month period {now are coming into the Revenue (quarter). One fourth of his regu- { Department. Mr. Sterling said tax ;,. yearly $1000 tax deduction |experts “conservatively estimate” would be $250. This deduction subs |that the state should be receiving tracted from his quarterly salary {about 300,000 returns. would leave him with $1250. One In a prepared statement, MT. ner cent of this is $12.50, the
Sterling said: amount which must be paid quar “The Revenue Department has terly.
H sense “ ha - 3 hat lenient in the past! 1n addition, the person who vill Movies .....oeieeses 8 ] |testified he bought the mink coat, “If you fellows are treating make sure callers knew whose legislative leaders on the man- been somew . ion . Frederick C. Othman .... 14 go truth 10 the Depo: that Mrs. or his wife. g this as a joke,” he snapped at a number they had. power bill and the troops-to- but effective with-the first quarter pays the $12.50 must also pay the ot Radio and Television ....- 9 Bowers nian ” Subsequently, it was testified reporter, “you ought to have full-| The Star explained that the Europe issue. payment of 1951 the quarterly tax tax for the soldiers’ bonus, an-
Robert Ruark ....eceeees 13 Ed Sovola .csieeneecnees 13 Bports ....ccoee00000 15,18 Earl WHson .i.ieeeeesss 13
tary J osep
Then, at a Sunday news confer- that the coat was paid for .by time ence, White Houle Press Secre- Joseph Rosenbaum, Washington asylums.” Short replied with aattorney who r when asked if Mrs, York furrier n fopps Jaeckel in
curt “ es y ] los’s 1 pant, 144%. Ole, Busi. Y till has her job. Mr. Short/an RFC loa : Pes Tens . Toungy “no comment” to a ques-|later was turn
pplication that down,
staffs at the Insane ad was printed by mistake. A
tion with the Youngs, or the Senate su
tee in- address.
man telephoned it in late Satur-|Mr. esented New, Mr, Brannan hak not in any day night and the employee who proposal that |way been mentioned in connec- took it did not~make the usual Vincent Auriol address a. joint retury works: RFC check on the phone number Or session of Congress off his forth-|
The Little White House, said Truman even discussed a French President
| |
coming visit.
regulation will be enforced.” |other one quarter of 1 per cent How It Works [This adds up to $3.12. Thus, a | Here's how the quarterly tax person receiving $6000-a-year |salary would have to pay Le Any Hoosier whose gross Lp gross {ficome ‘tax of $15. ] come for the first: quarter (Jan [three months.
. ly
! A my
| {encounter anythin resembling A aid and abet tn movements for the purged until they are re-regis- Fulbright and Sen. Paul H. Doug-|was reported giving war whoops the engineer, was moving about, tello, reputed head of a nation-| approaching what the enemy nas| organized ne and there | overthrow of the present form of | tered. las (D. Ill), Mr. Casey admitted while full of fire water. {12 miles an hour. |Wide gambling syndicate, was -a| " ‘Let the Air Out’ only sporadic small arms and : government in the United States.” | —— he had received fees from Mr. “Youll never believe it if I tell] All six members of the family, 80lfing and occasional dinner rn {machine-gun fire was met. J Te old Man Winter Rosenbaum in connection with you,” the brave told officers when were rushed to General Hospital companion” whom he called in! “We have shown the free peo-| YA U, 8. 7th Division unit Loss in Home Blaze cases before the Maritime Com-|they asked him his name. and five were admitted. Only the When Re OW ork Sate Hal pie of the world a determination captured mile-high Mt. Taemi : ; x ow [ness Racing Commission threat- able Placed at $7000 ® Takes Final Fling on er Mr. Fulbright's mies “UGH. We'll take a ehgnce {998 Sataped hn fam: {ened to close down the Roosevelt fo fight aggression and smash nent th Su] a ] 1 /they said. . [track in 1946 because of book- he said. : 1 An estimat¥d $7000 damage to| LOCAL TEMPERATURES tioning, Mr. Casey also revealed 0} “UC. Edward C 42, the father shot : : | | , you'd better look at my| ward Cooper, 42, ''making operations there, foo. BE i 2 home and furnishings was re-| 6 a m... 31 10 a. m... 31 [that he had been a stockholder in|, 0." J you'll know I'm not|fractured leg, fair. g . |e around. ea Pas ae Torges The ud Codiess Victory Som ! ported today by Isaac Goldman,| 7 a.m... 81 11 a. m... 32 [a firm, American Overseas Tank-|, ading » the man said. | Mrs. Bessie Cooper, 36, in criti-| Perspires Profusely inflated. balicy 0 "g r out o e|pleted the cross-country conquest 1022 8. Illinois St. owner of a/ 8 a.m... $31 12 (Noon) 38 |er, that bought five tankers from “'r .\" | ved. Silas Bad Gun, cal condition suffering shock. Mr. Levy, a short-grey-halred|ss rs etanianasons ncaa 7 (of Sast-central Korea's most for house which was burned- yester-| 9 a. m... 31 1 p.m... 34 [the commission, and that Rosen-\,,.."ro.q It was hard, but they Jean Cooper, 5, fractured skull, \ man, sweated profusely as he A hchens,' ald. . | bidding mountain wilderness,” day at 1018 S. Illinois St. | Latest humidity ...... 86% [baum had a “minor participation believed. serious. testified under the Kleig lights : . eET0e 0} J outh Korean troops :sefgsl
