Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1951 — Page 1
sturdyl oaxing |
tor rec= r higher | Beeche l Food, ormaila,
n and advers ncil on Foods il Association.
eve,
ite! inks,
dor!
ueen illusodels also an,
i}
"nounced a program to syn-
ianapolis Times
‘ FORECAST: Light snow diminishing to flurries tonight, ending tomorrow. Continued cold. Low tonight 29. High tomorrow 35.
s-wowarol] 62d YEAR—NUMBER 2
City Pledges To Synchronize
Traffic Lights
Smoother flow of downtown traffic was promised today by Traffic Engineer Frank Gallagher as he an-
chronize lights at 49 intersections. Aimed at reducing red light atops,. the praject will enable motorists to travel at least several blocKs at a stretch on green signals. Work will start this week. It is expected to be completed within six weeks. Synchronization of the lights will ‘be good news for harried drivers who bump into red lights at nearly every corner. Traffic
Hint Vandenberg Losing Ground in Fight for Life
Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.) kept constant vigil at
was reported his fight for life, One member of the family said Michigan's senior Senator was “gravely ill and only a miracle wil save him.” ” » o
SEN. VANDENBERG'S son
bedside constantly as his condition became worse. The son,
be with his father. we 146%
Sen. Vandenberg’'s longtime friend and physician, Dr. A. B. Smith, who has been optimistic, admitted the 66-year-old. Senator’'s condition was serious. “Unless a favorable change oc-
considered grave,” Dr. Smith said.
officials said the timing devices in traffic light have been “off” for years.
Area Outlined
| The area to be re-timed lies ve-| tween Maryland and North Sts.,| and between Alabama 8t. and| Senate Ave. i Co-operating in the project is the State Highway Department, which has jurisdiction over some of the streets. The state has already installed a master device to control lights at the 49 intersections. The control bex is located on*Washington St. near Meridian St. i : Timed lights will be similar to those now in use on Michigan and Vermont Sts, both one-way thoroughfares. They are synchronized for traffic to move at
Spy's Wife Tells Of Link to Russ
Backs Husband
In Accusing Kin ¥ By United Press NEW YORK, Mar. Mrs. Ruth Greenglass testified in federal court today that her brother-in-law told her money was no object in spying out American atomic secrets because the money was coming from. “his friends, the Russians. Mrs. Greenglass followed her
stand and backed up his testimony that his sister, Ethel, and
23 miles an hour. Speed Not Yet Set
Mr. Gallagher said the speed synchronization has not yet been determined for the downtown area. “The timed lights should help move traffic downtown,” Mr. Gallagher said. “With luck, a driver may be able to drive through the entire downtown area! without a red light stop.”
Mr. Gallagher said exact cost)
of the project has not been esti-
mated yet, but it is expected to total ‘several thousand dollars.
Urges 750 More Parking Meters
Mayor Bayt today recommended to the Safety Board that the city add another 750 parking meters in the Mile Square downtown area. He urged a survey be made to determine most desirable locations for the nickel-an-hour machines, and invited requests for meters to be placed along streets outside the downtown area. The Mayor said he will carry his recommendations to the Works Board tomorrow. He will ask them to approve purchase of 750 to 1000 meters, holding some in reserve because a shortage is expected to develop. i Brings in $1000 Weekly The 542 meters now in down-
town Indianapolis bring a weekly revenue of about $1000. Already
approved and ordered are another measures there were and whether the project was camouflaged.
350 meters for the Mile Square and 186 for Fountain Square. The Mayor said installation of
greater turnover in parking space users, enabling shoppers and other quick stoppers to find space.
scription of the atomic bomb in-|
her husband, Julius Rosenberg, were wartime spies for the Soviet Union. | Mrs: Greenglass, accused of being a co-conspirator in the plot but not a defendant in the trial, said she carried an espionage invitation from Mr. Rosenberg to her husband in November, 1941
ready has pleaded guilty of spy-
ing. ; Trying Two Years A tall brunet clad in a tight black dress, Mrs. Greenglass said Mr. Rosenberg told her he had been trying to get in touch with people who would help the Rus-| sians for two years. “He went on to tell me that he knew David was working’ on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos,” she said. “He said that his friends, the Russians, had told “He told me that the atomic bomb was the most destructive weapon constructed so far and that it was a joint project of the United State and Britain and that he thought the information should be shared with our Russian allies.” Paid for Trip
Mrs. Greenglass said Mr. Rosenberg gave her $150 for her travel expenses to New Mexico and asked her to bring back specific information from her husband. She said the information he wanted included a physical de-
stallation, the number of persons
working there, what security|
“He also told me to tell David |
not to be obvious in seeking in-| meters downtown has brought a|formation . . only - what he retained memory.”
. to relate to me| in his
She said she carried out Mrs. |
Favorable acceptance of the Rosenberg’s instructions, that her]
Mayor's plan was indicated by Le-| husband supplied her with the in- stockpiling cars in large numbers,
-GRAND- RAPIDS, Mich;,~Mar: 14 (UP)—The family of Sen.
£2 Celebration
father’s bedside today as the Republican foreign affairs leader losing ground in
and two daughters were at the
Arthur Jr, had returned fecently huge. engine was unveiled on a from Brazil, where he works; to|fower and. flag-bedecked , stage.)
curs soon, his condition must be|engine to the U. 8. Air Force. Maj.
14 —|
when she visited the latter at Los! thelr jobs at the division's other | Alamos, N. M. Her husband al-|plants here. |
Movie Glitter Marks Allison
Firm Completes 10,000th Jet Engine
By ANDY OLOFSON With all the glitter and
glamor of a Hollywood premier, Allison's new super jet aircraft engine today was in-
troduced to the world. As 3000 workers -cheered, the
Tn the shipping department of Al lison’s sprawling, 40-acre plant, flashbulbs popped. TV and movie cameras ground. Celebrities stood and cheered. In a joint celebration, Allison’s proudly presented its 10,000th jet
Gen. Orville R. Cook, Wright Field, O., made the formal acceptance. - “This engine,” he said, “symbolizes American teamwork that is so vital to our combat pilots.” Recalls War 11 Event Gov. Schricker, another guest, recalled that he had attended a |similar celebration during World [War II when the Allison Division [celebrated its 50,000th reciprocating aircraft engine. { Allison's workers cheered loucest when First Lt. William O. Lightly, who had flown 100 combat missions<in Korea, praised the Allison jet engine. “If I want to destroy a target, it’s Allison jet for me,” he said.
mittee Chief Counsel
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1951
HOME
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Entered as Second-Class Matter at: Postoffice
Indianapolis, Indiana, Issued Daily,
Allies Recapture Seoul; rive 15 Miles From 38th
eee
Saving His Face?
Costello Uses Props, But You ‘See’ Him By United Press NEW. YORK, Mar. 14—A. pair of hands, a microphone, a water glass and a bottle of water became the greatest things in television ‘today. : The hairy, swiftly moving hands belonged to Frank (the Invisible Man) Costello—a shy racketeer who refused to have his face televised for fear he would: make a “spectacle” of himself. ; But although they couldn’ see his face, millions of TV watchers from the East Coast to the Midwest kept their eyes on their flickering screens hoping to see “The Boss” tripped up in his testimony with Senate crime investigators. : a8 = THE FREEDOM -OR -JAIL drama starred the man accused of being the nation’s No. 1 rackets boss playing opposite ComRudolph Halley, who obligingly wore the sort of horn-rimmed spectacles
The Speedway High School band with its attractive drum’ majorettes provided music for the
husband, David, to the witness gala occasion.
Only the weatherman frowned on the show. He grounded seven |
General Motors vice presidents who were to have flown here from
| Detroit. Gen. Sook had to start 130 000 In bash from Wright Field by car at 8 '
a. m. He arrived in the midst of
i
the celebration here.
While the big show was going!
on in Plant. 5, some 10,000 other
Allison workers were busy at
Luncheon Follows
met for luncheon at the Indian-|
Maj. Gen. Roger M. Ramey, director of Air Force operations. Doubt. that..commupism will provoke World War III “in the immediate future” was expressed by Gen. Ramey. The Communists aim at complete military conquest of the Korean peninsula but hope to gain other immediate objectives in their campaign for world domination by exploring the fear of war rather than “early resort” to war itself, he said. Gen. Ramey spoke as representative of Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Air Force chief of staff. He warned that there is ‘“no real assurance eof peace” and said America must build up its strength to counteract the “tremendous’ military power with
“bold and brazen political war-
{ fare.”
{Senate Crime Investigating Com-
that have almost become a trademark fer video performers. ” ” n
Bookie Tells | Of Liquor Deal = |
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, Mar. 14 — The |
son officials and honored guests Costello, alleged head of one of
operating capital comprised $40,000 to $50,000 in cash in his city
Television’s Biggest Star
SHY PERFORMER—Crime Boss Frank Costello refuses tc face the music—or in this case the television cameras. Here's ali he would permit to be televised, declaring he doesn't want to make a “spectacle” of himself.
Is an Invisible Man
Patrols Enter pa . Oity Without pete Filing 2 Shot
pair shop owner said. “But I've Raise ROK Flag
been standing in front of this . TV set all day. Just can't seem| Over Capitol
to pull myself away." | By EARNEST HOBERECHT : The viewers watched Mr. Hal-| United Press Staff Correspondent 3
Joy Haminer out questions de-| TOKYO, Thursday, Mar. 15 signed to make the rackets chief admit to crimes. Then the cam- —South Korean troops Yeo Re era would switch to Mr. Costello’s|cupied Seoul without firing a shot Wednesday and hoisted
Does He Hide Light
place at the witness table.
" » ~ : . THOSE WATCHING saw his| their flag above the capitol. bands twist a handkerchief, a; The Reds fléd north from Seoul
carry a cough/and elsewhere all along the 140mile Korean battlefront. Allied
tank patrols pursued them to within 15 miles of the 38th
glass of water, drop to his invisible mouth. Then they heard him answer hesitatingly In nervous words with &|pgpajle] without catching up.
broken aceent. re ve strong South Korean paIt brought the American feel-/trols of the ROK 1st Division
ing for the underdog to the sur-
face for some of those watching the television screens.
“I'get to feeling I almost wish
The fascination of the drama lyn Bridge ‘kept many’'a worker he will ‘get. off scot free,” one
in Foley Square federal
courtifrom his job. house in the shadow of Brook-|
“I've got work piled up that
housewife remarked. so pitiful.”
“He seems
A City's Tribute—
Civic Banquet to Honor
Chamber of Commerce Reveals Plans For Dinner at Butler Monday Night
Win or lose come Saturday, the Tigers of Crispus Asucks High!
will be honor guests at a “turkey-'n-trimmings’ banquet Monday
night.
And. win or lose, they will receive individual In continued celebration, Alli-/ mittee today sweated from Frank emblems as a tribute to their skill and fighting spirit.
gold basketball
Bunker Hill Deal
Attucks Team, Win or Lose Signed as ‘Favor
Ex-Trustee Admits | Giving Approval
By DAN KIDNEY o Times Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, Mar, 14—When
{
Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce officials today completed UP to the Pike Township trustee
{IHSAA tournament, and nounced details of the affair.
{two nation-wide crime syndicates, plans for a tribute to the city's] ——— apolis Athletic Club. They heard the admission that part of his basketball finalists of this year's
* Plasma Processing = i: 2
apartment and $90,000 to $100,000! The banquet will be held at 6,
in a bank account. It was an uncomfortable morning for the swarthy underworld “Boss,” reputed to have close “business” relations with the Capone syndicate of Chicago, “Lucky” Luciano, deported vicelord, and top leaders of New York's Tammany Hall. Mostly Impassive His face for the most part re-
ter at Butler University. Team to Be Honor Guests
team and théir parents, Coach Ray Crowe.
mained impassive but he kept twisting his feet and hands while three Senators hammered away at his admitted links with the slot machine racket in New York,
sell Lane will be there.
Connecticut, and Louisiana and his efforts to take over foreign each of the high schools.
{liquor importing and distributing] which communism supports Its on a large scale.
He was forced to admit the for-
IHSAA Commissioner Phillips and his staff will welcome the Indianapolis Board of
members of the C. of C. ath-
|threatened with a charge of per-|C. of C. and Junior C. of C. and ars al ¢ {jury. The committee's lead came| h
hy
{with a henchman. |
At Fair Grounds eas box, he added that he]
maintained twice as much money!
Owners Are Dealers |! Waiting on Market By IRVING LEIBOWITZ Hoosier. automobile - dealers,
Admitting the existence of the]
|
n a checking account.
tomorrow. -
First mention of the strong
{box came in a wiretap conversa-
roy Keach, Safety Board presi- formation and that she relayed have converted the State Fair-i. = =o... in yulv 1043 in which
dent.
Residents Agree With Firemen, Place Is ‘Firetrap’
RESIDENTS of the apartment | building at 111 N. Alabama St.| are beginning to agree with city | firemen who described the struc-| ture as a “fire trap.” | Smoke and flames today drove third floor residents outside for
|
the second day in a row. Yester-iy;,g yogeler doubts that the
day 17 occupants had to be rescued by gas-masked firemen as smoke from a basement fire-filled the building. An oil stove in the apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Niece, be-| came an inferno this morning when oil in the burner flashed back into an oil storage tank. Flames swept through the room and burned a hole through the wall to an adjacent third floor dwelling.
» ” " MRS. NIECE, 29, and her four children are becoming experienced in fire evacuation, Mr. and Mrs. Niece rounded up their family and retreated to their automobile. “I'm going to find a new place to live,” said Mr. Niece. Other residents of the building looked on calmly as firemen fought the blaze. Fire Chief Fred Dilger said he will order another inspection of the building by safety officials. “That .place is full of rubbish” he said, “And it has to be cleaned up.”
Spain Arrests 100
BARCELONA, Spain, Mar. 14 (UP)—Police seized more than
100 new suspects today for the food price riots of Monday.
|it to her brother-in-law when she grounds into one of the largest
returned to New York. |
On the Inside
Of The Times
Indianapolis branch, American |
Association of University Women elects officers and | directors . . . organizations . . recipes and menus....
-4 |
Local soldier, wounded in the
chest, body and legs, crawls | 250 yards to safety ...s.... 8
Reds drugged her husband to get a ‘“‘contession” .'. fourth chapter of a series of stories depicting the drama
of Christ's last days on On the outside, streets—$3. earth vu... Gat reno ais 15, Dealers who have cars parked on the lot reported that they]
Tribe primes for opening exhi- |
bition game . . FusariBratton fight opens scramble for the welterweight crown | “Can Reitz beat At- |
. a
tucks? Yes,” says Jimmie | Angelopolous ...........18, 19 " » ”
About People scecesensse Amusements ....coc0n000 Jimmie . Angelopolous..... 19 Births, Deaths, Events... 28 Bridge Sess essenstrnnsnn T Canasta
11 20
Sevens sssnsstne 7
ComiC8 ...eoecenncnasess 27 Crossword .yecececsesess 11 Editorials ....cc000v0000 16
19 16 10
Bill Eggert.ccceeeceseees FOrum sceececcsossesenss Harold H. Hartley #i.... Erskine Johnson......... 20 Dan Kidney......oco00eq 16 Gaynor MaddoX.....ce0e0 7 Radio and Television..... 17 Robert Ruark.:.o.eeeeeee 15
Ed Sovola ..cccevsiienes 15 6a m..27T 10a m.. 30 BPOrtB.cesssssssnenns 18, 190 | Tam. 25. 1 a m.. 81 Earl Wilson..eseeeanees: 15 8a m.. 28 12 (Noon) 33 Women's...coovedoseess d, 7. 9a m.. 29
5 3
automobile lots in Indiana. More than 1000 autos and | trucks of all sizes, models and
{Continued on Page 3—Col. 2)|
makes — new and used — are ACQuits Browder
parked in buildings, along walks] and on streets in the Fair Grounds. | Carl Tyner, secretary-manager| of the Fairgrounds, said about 15 or 20 car dealers have parked more vehicles at Fair Grounds recently than at any time in his experience. . For parking at the Fair Grounds, the car dealers pay the Fair Grounds General Fun a special monthly rate, Mr. Tyner said.
Here's the monthly parking fee|
per car: On hard floors inside—S$5. On dirt floors inside—$4.
store automobiles and trucks on| the grounds until ready to sell them. One dealer said: “We bought all the cars we
could when we could. We did this Gy
in hopes of getting a better mar-|
-— Federal Letts Communist Leader Earl Browder |of contempt of Congress charges. | Mr. Browder served as his own! attorney.
from
. hearing last April.
Of Contempt Count
WASHINGTON, Mar. 14 (UP)! Judge F. Dickinson] today acquitted former|
The judge said there was noth-
ing in the record to indicate an,
Mr. Browder,
the party in 1946, was
=
{from ‘a wire-tapped conversation |letic committee, as well as. Butler
University officials.
Businessmen Invited
Topping the list of honor guests will be members of the Attucks] plus |
Coaches and captains of the other teams in the Indianapolis) Sectional will be invited to attend, along with the principal of
LV.
tune cached in a strong box in his|School Commissioners, city school | New York apartment when officials, directors of Indianapolis
p. m. Monday in Atherton c= Center fo Be He {
Lilly, Armed Forces
Announce Plans A major center for processing
Student managers, cheerlead- Pl0od plasma in the Midwest will [Pike Township trustees back in ers, Coach Crowe's staff, Attucks P¢ Set up here under a plan December, 1946, when Howard L. faculty staff and Principal Rus- drafted by the Armed Forces and Pemberton, Indianapolis test pilot,
Eli Lilly & Co. The pharmaceutical firm today {announced immediate start: of (plans to set up the unit on-five [floors of Lilly's building 50 at {Delaware and McCarty Sts. Blood for will be collected and
To Serve 29 Counties
It will serve a central Indiana —— area of 29 counties and will have | two mobile units as part of its|
One hundred Indianapolis busi-| equipment.
team members.
If the fund goal is attained, a check will be handed to Principal
Lane as a college scholarship fund vVolve {for Crispus Attucks athletes who plasma from cells, a freezing step maintain good scholastic records.|in which plasma is frozen against the inside surface of a rotating
inessmen will be invited fo attend] After three hours on the stand and contribute to an Award Fund. company processed more (today, the committee excused him The fund will underwrite cost of |two million pints of blood for the| until 9 a. m. (Indianapolis Time) the guest dinners and awards to| Services, using a process similar to that to be employed under the
Dr. Herman L. Shibler, superin-
tendent schools,
of Indianapolis will be master of cere-
public
monies. Tributes to the team will be paid by Mayor Bayt and Arthur Campbell, executive secretary to Gov. Schricker as the Gov-
ernor will not be able to attend. Ice To Present Awards Harry T. Ice, vice president of
the team awards.
Officials arranging the banquet
more than i50 questions put to/have made provision for it by {him at: a Senate subcommittee saying that ‘details of the cere-| mony are not complete.”
-r-g-l-e, G-u-r-g-l-e
ket.” | Better Market Now Dealers agreed that there is a better car market now than there was a couple of months ago. And, most dealers reported, they were looking forward to a still bigger and better car market in the near future, when the automobile factories cut down on civilian output and cars become. scarce again. Some car dealers—but not many—have been reported ‘“holding back ¢ars from the market,” waiting for prices to-go up.
LOCAL TEMPERATURES
: Latest humidity serene 80% ©
o
ACH DU LIEBER.
Himmel, Der Beer Is Coming Bock . . . Ja
Get set to make ready yet—Bock lovers—8aturday is the
day. Down by Liederkranz Hall, will make with the reception fo Getting ready for Saturday
1417 E. Washington 8t.. they r His Majesty, “King Bock.” night, they are stocking up on
Bock Wurst and Braunschweiger—the limburger is under wraps—and Pumpernickel will be there. King Bock himself is
ready for tite bung starter. ' ” » LILTING refrains of “Ach Lauterbach” will be rendered
o » LJ Du Lieber Augustine” and “Zu by Carl Kiefer and his little
German Band—plus any others who care to join in,
Ja—excitement is running week. %
bg
high at Liederkranz Hall this’
current program. The
“centrifugation” of
bottle, the drying of
which produces evaporation with
out melting, and the capping of
the bottle with an aluminum seal
A companion bottle of diluent
also will be produced and sealed Into Single Unit both
After containers
be sealed again
}
in|restricted as classified security in- x x2 = Communist boss who was expelled Butler Fieldhouse Saturday the rormation.
occasion is expected to take on an, {charged with contempt because/even more jubilant atmosphere. he refused to answer 16 out of]
lair attack.
World War II credited plasma
with greatly increasing the num-|
ber of recoveries from battle
wounds.
Follow Tribe With Eddie Ash
Old Man Winter may have taken over here, but it's sunny down south in Kissimmee, Fla. where the Indianapolis Indians are training.
Times Sports Editor Eddie Ash, dean of American Association sports writers, Is with the Tribe to bring you an exclusive account of spring
®
. training. :
Read these exclusive stories in The Times. y -
\at Bunker Hill in Miami County
i
sign, he is apt to be turned down because “he was a stranger.” | THat was the net of what the {Bonner subcommittee investigat{ing the Bunker Hill School of {Aeronautics learned after an {hour's questioning today of {Charles Shepler, the county asses|sor at Peru. ‘ : Mr. Shepler was a farmer and
| brought him the paper which the committee examined today. It was a plan to get War, Assets Administration surpluses for a private venture called the Bunker
began crossing the Han River in fishing boats at dawn Wednesday. Di : They moved freely through the streets of the war-shattered capi« tal and at 6:15 a. m. (Indianapolis Time), the fifth patrol raised
the capitol. Allied reoccupation of Seoul came two months and 10 days after Chinese Communist troops drove United Nations forces out at the elimax of a massive of«
back from the Yalu boundary with Manchuria. This was the fourth time the battered South Korean . capital had changed hands. United Press Correspondent Robert Vermillion quoted an 8th Army spokesman as saying the
River
\a man from Indianapolis comes Allies will stay in Seoul this time
‘if they can.” An 8th Army communique re ported “little or no contact” with the back-pedaling Chinese and Korean Reds anywhere else across fhe 140-mile wide Korean penin8 . ue 3
Security Blackout
The United Nations clamped a Security blackout on the exact whereabouts of its 200,000 troops pursuing the retreating Communists toward the 38th. Front dispatches describing the chase were held by censors. But at least one of a halfdozen or more armored task forces was known to have penetrated to within 15 rhiles of the 38th Parallel without finding the Communists in force. U. 8. warships headed by the
the Republic of Korea flag above
fensive that hurled the Allies:
plasma processing | located at the dollar-a-year-leased shipped | (here by units of the American |Red Cross from volunteer donor t© me and so I wouldn't sign,” stations. Plans call for the open- MT. Shepler testified. {ing of the local Red Cross station at 18 W, Georgia St. in May. |the Shepler farm accompanied]
During World War 1I, the Lilly than, ——————
method basically will inthe Tr. Pi
frozen plasma through use of a vacuum
have Indianapolis C. of C., will .present passed the sterility test, they will in a moistureResponses will be requested proof carton and supplied to the “obdurate” attitude on Mr. Brow-|from Coach Crowe and as many| Armed Forces as a single unit. der’s part and that the court, team members as feel inclined to| could not permit a verdict of| Speak. guilty-in this case §
Cost of the. program and ‘the 2 : [volume of plasma to be processed Should- Attucks win tTWo games under the military contract were one-time U. S./and the state championship
It was disclosed, however, that blood shipments will he made here]
® tom maior cies n ane sues UN Reported Losing Hope The plasma {is regarded as an| ® * {essential in civil defense against Qf Unifying All of Korea
Reports by medical experts in|
45,000-ton U. 8. battleship Missouri: joined more than 1000 Allied planes in smashing at the Communist route of retreat, troop concentrations and key targets far behind the enemy lines. Still Shell Wonsan The “Mighty Mo’ on its return {to action trained its 16-inch guns jon railway and road” bridges at ~~ [the northeast Korean port of
Chongjin, only 50 mil th of 3 Good Reasons (Chonein, ol so mies sou o To Buy Now |
{Hill School of Aeronautics to be
Bunker Hill Naval Base. “Mr. Pemberton was a stranger
So Mr. Pemberton came out to
(Contirued on Page 3—Col. 4)
Other warships bombarded Wonsan on the east coast for the 26th straight day and also hit |Sonjin, between Wonsan and Chongjin. An 8th Army communis que described the situation on the ground this way: Western Front — “No icant enemy activity.” West-Central Front— "Light ene emy contact.” Central Front—“Little or na enemy opposition.” East-Central Front—' No sige nificant enemy activity.”
2.BEDRM. BRICK BUNGALOW
3425 N. Denny: bit, 1941: tile bath: full bsmt.. with bar: auto. heat: fenced yd.: good transp. By appt. JOE BERGER. REALTOR Associated Northside Realtors 6325 GUILFORD, BR-8772. BR-6442
signife
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY because ...
ONE: It will b> a long time before your money will be worth more than it is today.
- TWO: Buy today A MORE SUITABLE HOME for your
; family for their present com- ati 1 - fort and their future security. United Nations military com
é manders wondered whether there . SHEER: There are still oiont be a political explanation plenty of home values offered ¢." tho sudden Communist with-
For Sak, but the number is 4,,0a) toward the 38th Parallel expected to drop sharply in all across Korea. >
t . jlo Sea} fuire; of tiie. many They speculated whether Gen, hundreds of home offerings Douglas MacArthur's prediction vou will find in the Classi. (Of AD inevitable military stale. fied Real Estate Columns of mate and dint that he would (await new orders before crossing
today's Times. the parallel had anything to do ~ SEE THEM NOW! with it. yihing
What Can Be Salvaged ?—
MacArthur Not Expected to Get OK
On Bombing Red Nests in Manchuria
By ERNIE HILL LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.,, Mar. 14 (CDN)-—The United Nations {was reported today as having given up hopes of unifying Korea by |driving Communists out of the northern half of the country. In a series of informal meetings, the decision has been made [to refuse to give Gen. Douglas MacArthur authority to bomb Manchuria or furnish him enough troops to overwhelm Chinese Communists in Nerth Korea. Without additional authority Would furnish the Chinese Reds {for more troops, the United Na- With military information. tions army is expected to do no| Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgmore than hold its position some-| Way's recent statement that the‘ |where around the 38th Parallel| United Nations will have ac|while efforts are made for peace COMPplished its purpose by elearfsettlement. | {ine the Communists out of the | United States diplomats de-| .orcan republic was made, it is leline to confirm these decisions 5 ated. wt approval of the peace which other delegates discuss Se zation. more openly. : e question of what can be salvaged from the Korean War - The Americans say they could|remaing undetermined. . ) not be expected to do so since it cog 1951, for The: Indianapolis Tyee
«
