Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1951 — Page 2

a

due for discharge between to-| some 300,000 to 400,000 men

who served at least a year dur-|' :

months following outbreak of the

: . than three weeks ago.

f ust Serve Anot

*

‘SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1951

er Year

+ By ‘United Press WASHINGTON, July 7— Enlistments of servicemen)

morrow and next July 1—

_—have been extended for one The order, announced by President Truman last night, does not apply to ees, who must serve for 24 months, but technically Includes enlisted reserves. However, enlisted reservists

ing World War II are eligible for inactive duty after putting in 17

Korean War. Reserve officers are unaffected by the order.

Under New Draft Law

Mr. Truman issued the order| under authority of the new draft law which became effective less

. Defense Department officials gave rio specific reason for the order except to point out that the law authorizes such action “to maintain the level of the Armed Forces.” Recent draft calls have been slashed drastically, !

The President's announcement, appes for assistance of "alert

caught the Pentagon by surprise. gt . SE gave an “edu-| fugitive Communist Party

cated estimate” that 300,000 to) Green, lllinois chairman; 400,000 enlisted men would bel man; Gus affected. More than 3 million —— men now are in uniform. The

- Armed Forces’ goal is 3.5 muon Indiana Bell men, |

~ Unofficial sources believed that the order best could be explained)

- { by the need for trained men = Maps Hi h Court | ing the present emergency. | It is likely that hundreds of gm |

. thousands of men will be in the | Far East indefinitely even if a

obert

f ._Momaam armistice is reached, and” & =~ more experienced men are néeded| <Indiana Rell ‘Telephone =~ CO. Uy nearly seven years.af snying.,

both in Europe and to trainifojled again in its efforts to-add draftees in this country. + (more than $8 million a year to t July Call its customers’ bills, planned toCut July day to ask the state Supreme;

if You Run

THEY'RE WANTED—FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover is making an leaders. Left to right (top): Gilbert

Hall, Ohio state chairman; Henry Winston, party organ-

Acros s These Men—Cal

ization secretary. Bottom (left to

citizens" in locating these eight

Thompson, New York state chair-

ant national labor secretary; Fred Fine, party public affairs commission secretary; William Marron, New York executive secretary; James E. Jackson Jr., southern regional director. (Acme telephoto}

| the FBI

ui

right): Sidney

i

Steinberg, assist-

- {report claiming that dismissal

Iran Blocks

Cain Ch arges ira Report— Mac firing Exodus Fro

Senator Seeks: Backing of Report

By JOHN L. STEELE United Press Staff Correspondent ° WASHINGTON, July 7—| Sen. Harry P. Cain sought bi- Mao Strasse?

partisan ppo toda EAST GERMAN cities have ou rt y for a been ordered to rename at least one street each for the Chinese Communist leader, Mao Tsetung.

visas from now on. Earlier t

of Gen. MacArthur was unjustified and charging that the State Department “pulled the

rug” from under Nationalist Japanese Treaty China. THE JAPANESE peace treaty The Washington Republican Will be signed in San Francisco

Sept. 4-8. . All 53 nations which apparently faced an uphill fight technically were . at war with

in lining up strong GOP backing Japan would be eligible to take for his version of findings on thé part. This would include Russia

week investigation of the/and her satellites, but State DeSent wes firing Te the Senate partment officials expressed doubt

the Communists would join in Armed Service-Foreign Relations signing a treaty which they have committees

a consistently opposed. Sen. Cain's chances of getting . some Democratic support seemed even less hopeful. | No Justification

Chairman Richard B. Russell (D. Ga.) told Sen. Cain last night it would be at least two weeks before the investigating group could meet to consider a report because many members will be in Europe consulting with Gen. Eisenhower. It was understood that the Cain document fell somewhat short of supporting in full Gen. MacArthur's program for waging the Korean War, including bombing of Red supply centers in Man-

Cupid in Crete WARM LOVE made its first inroads on cold justice today for handsome Costa Kephaloyannis, sentenced to two years in jail last February after he kidnaped and wed a Cretan beauty—and almost started a civil war. Greek Justice Minister George Mavros announced he had asked King Paul to pardon the hot-blooded Romeo.

Thailand

Calm About It All— Young Spy for FBI Looks More Like Typical Coed

Two Men Held In Kidnaping of

churia and use of Chinese na-gram last week in an abortive re'tionalist troops. |volt against the government. Sen. Cain found that Mr. Te » . man fired Gen. MacArthur with- . lout military justification, and ap- Perils of Peron |parently under “pressure” from : PRE DE Suck Doron said ! s, including some of| today that international plotother nation g loday that SieehalieNal Nev

| i d Nation Allies. The re[ne YS that the committee column” tactics against Argen-

By United Press serve my country by joining and ng. port also ti WASHINGTON, July 7—|forwarding whatever information| d ere {has not yet learned all of the rea-| tna. ; Mrs. Mary 8. Markward, a pry was available.” ; : ‘son surrounding the dismissal. | ©¢ young -‘ housewife, described to-| : atfong Opposition Egypt

Testimony- Revealed Work oh Communists for the FBI as| Secret testimony on June, 11 be-

nonchalantly as though she were. .. iyo House Un-American Acchatting in a beauty parlor,

Slight, chestnut-haired and revealed

tivities subcommittee i

The Army cut Its July draft court for a review of its action looking younger than her 29 Mrs. eall to 15000, the lowest In a blocking a big rate increase. |years, Mrs. Markward regarded first time yesterday. She told] year and 5000 below June. Au-| Meanwhile, billing, department her career as an FBI informer how she joined the party here in

¢ on hy? $ $ »r|1943, eventually becoming treas1s will fake 22,000 operations in the ¢ompany's In- as just a chance that came her, x gust grant sal « . _-ldianapolis offices were suspended. Way ‘to serve her country.’ Cldd urer of a policymaking unit.

oy wr

in a yellow cotton dress and gay!

There was little reason n : pt her. the 24 hours taken belief thaf he was a re-

| Normally, bills would be pouring The new order does not affect Sut this time

whose enlistments expired | by } NE the past year, hut were, i0usands o i he " extended by a shnilar order of Yesterday's court action and’ last July 27. That orde kept follow-up order by the state pub-| 205.000 men of all services in lic service commission may delay uniform for an extra year be- the mailing of bills by days or cause of the Korean emergency. even weeks, Current enlistments run from Bell executives, hampered by a minimum of three years to a the absence of President Harry six-year maximum, Enlisted men Hanna, who was out of the city, affected by the order still may met for hours yesterday studying apply for hardship discharges, the court's writ of prohibition

but officials expected about half against Marion Circuit Judge to re-enlist voluntarily. [Lloyd Claycombe. The writ had ————————————— the effect of blocking the rate al s hike granted six days ago by Elimination Runs Set [00 TL. In Truck Roadeo The PSC followed up pith i : order re-establishing a May 3 Only nine of the 28 contestants Gr op . o v XTs £730,000 ¢ p { ly a will survive eliminations runs to- BT 000 dn IE day in the Indiana Championship Son alin \pi Yruck Roadee Bf State Fair- = mp utility. which serves more grounds L.altle ar. than 500.000 customers in 82 The three highest men ih each cities and towns. announced last of the three classes of events, all night that mailing of July bills scored on a point system, will (1d be delayed “in the hope

compete over the same S8iX-.hat.a review of the court's writ obstacle course between 10 a. mM. may be had within a few days.” and 5 p. m. tomorrow, with ad-| But the Supreme Court was not mission free both days. expected to meet, again until July Presiding over today's cere- 18, At that time, it will decide monies is Miss Roadeo of 1951, whether the temporary writ isMiss Ingrid Thrasher, who will sued yesterday by Judge James award trophies and prizes to the A. Emmert should be made perwinners tomorrow afternoon. manent.

‘I'd Kill You Damn Reporters’ —

U.S. Revenuers Seize Virgini

While She 'Battles’ Way Back to Spokane

By United Press SPOKANE, Wash. July 7—Virginia Hill reached Seattle today on her return air journey from a mysterious one-day Texas trip to Spokane, where federal tax, agents have seized her luxurious home. She acted sweet as cherry ple 8he even smiled. for photographers in contrast to the violent distaste she had shown for newsmen in El Paso, Tex., Denver and Balt Lake City. The gangsters’ girl friend ex plained she was tired from (he trip and that curious crowds which met her nearly everywhere were the main reason she got angry. “I would have been better off if I'd robbed a bank,” the ganggters' girl friend said here. "I've done nothing wrong. I can't un-

Virginia Hi"

derstand why everyone Keeps hounding me. t hil porter Neil McNeil when he tried 4 nt, meanwhile, A. revenue age : to interview her at her hotel,

was stationed in her fashionable $35,000 Spokane house and Stanley Fogerquist, chief of the Spo- porter Walt Finley and screamed kane revenue office, said a $160,- “That's my private life—and no000 lien had been filed against body's. damn business” when he

TWO. Slugged Herald-Post re-

the underworld: queen for unpaid asked whether she was “going to!

income taxes from 1044 to 1948. Mexico to join your husband and

She had shown definite hostilty child.” toward newsmen at previous stops Refused to Tell Plans on her trip to and from Ei Paso. JTHREE: Slapped and clawed

y ’ hoot ee Sad shed axe RE RC Mr. Finley at the El Paso airport, re Thad a gun I'd kill you’ knocked off his glasses, and tore damn reporters.” she said, UP his notes.

Not the Sweet Type investigator for the Denver dis-

to trict attorney's office, in the mis-

Dusing theo here to porter when he plane stopped to El Paso and there last night. : © | Miss Hill refused repeatedly to : tree reporters whether she is planre to I

a RR

of ‘the month to apron brook,

FOUR; Slapped at Larry Stone,

fave the country or/|

in her nearby” Chester- were .:18 ~ Communist; clubs Va., homs, she more. like a coed than Her bricklayer husband, and 4-year-old Christine in occasionally as Mts. Markward ment or had relatives in governtold of her spying activities. ment service, there were at least “When the FBI first contacted [two underground groups of govme” she sald, “I didn’t know ernment workers, she said. One why. I have reason to believe Ijcell, known at “W37,” was com-

chimed [bers who worked for the govern-

know now, but I don't feel free to posed of 12 employees of the job.”

divulge it. They approached me Washington Navy Yard.

as ‘a loyal American and 1 volun-|

looked | Washington with about 230 mem- Harold Williams a spy. bers. Although it was party policy [COmplices in the kidnapping of feared. Secretary Acheson said George, [to drop from the rolls any mem- Donald Borgman, 611 Taft St, another factor was strong oppo-|velt Jr, was awarded the Bronze fowa. His wife is in Papeete. A ol sition from other United Nations|Star medal posthumously in cere-| . hen the state troopers and members to a policy of “hot pur-| monies yesterday at Governors! city police went to the addresses/ suit” permitting U. S. planes to|Island.

| Fast action by state and local police, and the confession of &ii

ture early *oday of two men be-

ieved wanted in connection with

Markward’s work for theithe kidnapping of a local fam- of the Rashin and ly June 19. phases of the MacArthur inquiry.

Joe E. Brown, 27, escapee from

Pendleton Reformatory, who was explained Rashin was ruled out| ; jeaptured by the FBI yesterday, asa bombing target because it Late Gen. Roosevelt | “Mutiny on the Bounty,”

She fold the subcommittee there last night named ¢ Gilbert. Hall, |jg*only 17 ‘miles from the Rus-| : in (23, of 2332 Indianapolis Ave. and! sian Shean border, and viola. Awarded Bronze, Star

as - his

/his wife and child last month.

Police “might pe pulling another

Within minutes they received a|

teered to join the Communist/Mrs, Markward to testify again New York St, a filling station |

Party. I thought I could

w

Her Terms Are Strictly Speaking— Rita's Back in Hollywood;

Aly Sends 2 Peace Envoys

VIRGINIA MacPHERSON ciliation when they stepped out of United Press Staff Correspondent v trans-Atlantic airliner, They HOLLYWOOD, July 7T—Actress will ily here Monday. Mr. Torem Rita Hayworth said today she indicated his client was willing to would be glad to talk to Prince do anything to win Miss Hayworth Aly Khan, but she'll go ahead and pack, divorce- him anyhow, But the: glamorous

By

red head

best!/in open session next Wednesday. by four men. :

Twelve patrol cars pursued the four robbers, who had fled on foot with $200 in cash and $1200

{in checks.

Closing in.on an area hordered by 10th, Wiley and North Sts. and White River Pkwy. the police captured Gilbert and Walter

Secrest, 23, Anderson Hotel. The other two robbers escaped with the loot.

Police believe the “Harold Williams” named by Brown may be an alias of Secrest. Both men are being held on a pre-grand lar-

Two cupids with brief cases wasn’t impressed. ceny . charge for further quesarrived in New York from Paris, “Of course T'll. see’ Aly when toBIng. ; : hoping to persuade her different- and if he comes. We're on good Mr, Borgman and his family ly.-. Her attorney, Bartley Crum, speaking terms.” were forced into their car by and Aly's lawyer, Charles Torem, : three ‘men on June 19 in- front both hinted at pfans for a recon Barricades Herself of their home. . After the men —— eyiipm— drove them around the North

Rita slipped back «nto Hollywood unannounced yesterday and

barricaded herself, her two Hill’ rR daughters, their nurse, and a few a i S ome other servants in a lavish bunga-

low at the exclusive Reverly Hills Hotel.

She gave orders she was “not

‘he ap x abs er i aki . whether her husband, German ski {, pe disturbed. But when reinstructor Hans Hauser, Is In pgrters began camping on her Chile with their baby sen. /

. .dborstep, under the eve of armed “The happiest day of my life guards, she decided the only way

will be when I leave this damn to get rid of them was to see country,” she yelled at Mr. Fins them ley. Attorney Crum sald there was She apologized to Mr, Stone 3 chance Prince Aly would fly to after taking a slap at hint when the U. 8. himself to see Rita he and another investigator shout the reconciliation x ~ sr about pos- ire wi % sought to question her about p« It's a possibility,” ‘Mr. Crum

sible contacts she might have . .. weon the Prince is still in Rd. Indianapolis, was treated at!Plainfield, Sam Philpot, 72, Col-

with Denver hoodlums, Later she volunteered swer the officers’ questions.

love with Miss Hayworth.

an “ p After all, women always pre-

They

to

LOTUS i ~ n did not reveal what information SOFVY She right to change their gave them jp 3 " she gave the Surprises Everyone stips in Interview ni ¥ Rita's sudden appearance In

Miss Hill slipped once during gollywood on what she said was

a tirade against a United Press w reporter who interviewed her by studio business” surprised every-

telephone. The reporter asked one. Neither her father, dancing whether she was going to join instructor Eduardo Cansino, nor her husband. : ~~ her brother, Vernon, she “How in hell could I join him was coming home. withaw! a Passport ’ He's IM Rita's status at Columbia StuSouth America,” she shouted. dios, where she reigned as a An airlines clerk at San Fran- via queen before she settled

Siete aa that or for the title of “princess” is still aus “Ooug tL up in the air,

self and his son to Santiago, : : so Chile, recently. : It has been reported that Miss Hill and her family would like CHECK YOUR WATCH! to leave this country since the] e © © eo ©o oo .¢ ¢ o o For accurate time keeping on DEE) new Electric Time

Knew

notoriety she gained when as the star witness of the Senate In|vestigating Committee's New York television show,

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Side of the city for a half hour, they were released unharmed. The four bandits involved in last night's robbery approached the station as the attendant, William Phelps, 21, of 1440 W. Ohio St., was closing:

Brownsburg Youth Killed in Crash

Times State Service DANVILLE, July 7—A Brownsburg youth was killed early today when his car sideswiped an Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc., delivery truck gn U. 8, 36 four miles east of here. Oris Dean Burcham, 17, died instantly, Driver of the truck, Leroy M. Pelkin, 25, of 2903 Holt the scene for facial’'cuts and released.

Our

satistaction; the beautiful tribute

-

EGYPT has rejected a British

islators,

A COURT-MARTIAL was pre-|

British m Oil Port

. gu Un ustified | EVACUATION of British persofinel from the Iranian ; oil port of Abadan was halted abruptly today when the

government's oil board demanded the right to indorse all exit

oday, Iran rejected the world

court's proposal to run the disputed Iranian oil industry but left the door open for future negotiations.

Pickets Manhandle Doctors, Nurses in Hospital Strike

By United Press MINNEAPOLIS, July 7 (UP)-— [Pickets manhandled doctors, nurses and other non-strikers today in an attempt to keep them out of 10 hospitals but police broke through the lines and got them through. Flying squads of police in many cases had to hold the pickets

~iback bodily, . Man Jon-strikers stayed in the hospitals overnight

to keep from going through the picket lines. | The strikers, members. of the |AFL, Service Employes Union, (went on strike Thursday for wage lincreases and a five-day week. |[Volunteers, including society ma|{trons and debutantes, have helped [keep the hospitals in operation. The hospitals asked an injunction to end the walkout, Hospitals administrators said that picket lines had curtailed the normal flow of food and medicine—including oxygen and blood {transfusions — because union

{truck drivers refused to cross the

pared today for navy plotters who! kidnaped Premier Phibun Song-| Picket lings,

James N. Hall, Bounty Co-author, Dies in Papeete

By United Press i PAPEETE, . Tahiti, July 7

| | | { i

: The “document; still being Ie ,,¢. maying new proposals for (UP)—American author James escaped convict led to the cap- yised by Sen. Cain and other leg- settlement, of the bitter, years- Norman Hall, 64, died of a heart was particularly critical long dispute over British military attack yesterday at his home “hot pursuit” bases in Egypt and the future of Where he spent half his life writ.

the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, well- ing of his beloved South Sea Is{informed sources said ‘today. {lands. Secretary of State Acheson has) ee — | Famed as co-author with the

{late/ Charles B. Nordhoff of Mr.

service embodies

goes to give that after-teeling of

yet no burden to those left.

HISEY & TITUS Clostecarrey

951 NORTH DELAWARE ST.

|

supplied by Brown to arrest the pursue and engage Red planes medal from Lt. Gen. Willis D. two, neither was home, remarked at the time that the! churia. two

for a limited distance over Man-| Crittenberger, 1st

| mander.

Army com-

: [Bal had lived in the South Seas

since 1920 and will be buried

ac-'tion ~of Soviet territory ‘was “NEW YORK, July 7 (UP)—The here. plate Brig. Gen. Theodore 'Roose- I

He was a nafive of Colfax,

and a married daughter, Nancy,

His widow received thelis on route to Tahiti by schooner

\with her husband and child. Mr.

{Hall started writing upon gradulation from @rinnell College in

{ The award was for heroic ac-i1910, In World War I he was an

{tion “in North Africa in 1942,

sion. Gen. Roosevelt, {President Theodore Roosevelt, died of a heart attack in Normandy, France, in 1944.

Horse Kills Child

Hurt in Traffic Accidents Here

Two children all

Injuries and an elderly

pedestrians, were in- 2.vear-old son of Mr jured in city traffic accidents late oui Wagler. | County Hospital.

man,

vesterday.

joriginal member of “Kitchener’s

- v {when Gen. Roosevelt was assist-| i The House committee has called report of a holdup at 1501 = Three Pedestrians = commander of the 1st Divi-| ATHY: He later loit thie British | son of]

service and joined the Lafayette {Escadrille. | He wrote several books in Eng{land after the war, then went to ithe ‘South Seas in search of ad- | venture.

Teaming with Mr. Nordhoff in

WASHINGTON, Ind. July 7— Tahiti, he published two books suffered when he was before kicked by a horse were fatal yes- Bounty” terday to Kenneth Ray Wagler, and Mrs. He died in Davies to

their “Mutiny on the appeared in 1933. It was followed by “Men Against the Sea” and “Pitcairn Island” complete a trilogy on the story of the British ship Bounty.

In fair condition at Methodist] Hospital is Jesse Allen Ruther. ford, 3, of 379 Prospect St., who was struck while crossing Pros-

INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC CASUALTIES

(187 Days) r 1951 1950 Accidents ...%..... 4017 4166 Injured ....e6.0000 1738 1619 Killed ¢ive0staves.. 36 37

pect St. near New Jersey St. by a car operated by William W. Schoch, 37, of 107 E. Sumner St. Theodosa Fitzgerald, 7, of 4195 Ruckle St. was struck in front! of her home when she ran into the street. Car was operated by - Ann J. Malott, 28, of 2022 Ruckle| St. The child was treated by the! family physician. | Injured at the bus terminal when he walked in front of a bus operated by Robert Pool, 24,

jumbus, was treated and released from General Hospital.

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troversial Theater and few organiz the U. 8. Ct to be a little production p] 52 season. ANTA am sponsor eight Playhouse |r

the season fi Thos 10 ge by the eritic: a few which tainment, th from the st were not the productions new playwr should be do announced af

‘20th Ce

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