Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1951 — Page 3

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Press Sept. 1—Ex« e ravaged a of ‘the governins butadiene est of ‘here..to- » persons and 2d 1000 families

» with a chain s which’ rocked ustrial city and 40 miles away. 1irough the day f 16 towering illed: with - the adiene, a natduct used in 1anufacture. a team of enosives experts snuff out the rate explosive

eau of Investinquiry into the e, but Special kins of Dallas y indication of

he was ordered ing plant, oper= nment by Philn. .through fis: i Chemjgal Co," nse production. Bucnavista iny, was manned t 60 men when an near a conauges theeflow mixing with ss called “step uction of syn=-

A. D. Leonard irns and eight spitalized, with . egree burns, at . | Casa Serena

unch : Drive y Sept. 1 (UP) an will launch

e bond selling War II Labor

an and Secreohn W, Snyder ive radio net1., Indianapolis appeal ‘to every The President Francisco, -Mr. 1 Rapids, Mich. first since the ed 14 months the mobilizaa] of inflation unting defense

ong Last ept. 1 (UP) | led for divorce Aly Khan, asknd reasonable” \ could put a $3 » royal moslem

2 cost! |

| Best . ad

' government in World War II and

President: ONE — Authqfizes— gre federal

Truman To Cut

Slashes Size Of Payments, | Eases Payoff

Only $2400 Down On $12,000 Home

-- By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 1—President Truman signed today a law putting the government behind a drive .to build housing in defense boom areas and easing credit on| homes costing ‘less ‘than $12,000. At, the same time, the President put off until July 1, 1953, a dead-| line for disposing of more 5than| 200,000 housing units built by the

or being used again for emer¥gency homes. Mr. Truman said that the de-| fense workers and people in mili-| tary service living in the temporary housing “deserve better ‘accommodations.” “I am going to “do. everything| I can to speed the. ‘building of | better, ‘permanent housing for| them,” he promised. THe. new law signed by the |

commitment of $1,635,000,000 to! spur construction of housing at] new and expanding defense plants] and military installations such as Army camps. Of the amount, $1.5 If private builders fail to come forward, the government can build-up to $50 million worth of!

+. public housing in the areas.

TWO—Lowers the down pay-| ment . and lengthens the pay-off) ‘period for purchase of any ‘house costing $12,000 or less or renting] for $85 and under per month. | The extent of the easier terms, will depend upon the willingness|: of ‘mortgage lenders to grant them. The Federal Reserve Board and the Housing and Home Finance ‘Agency immediately. revised its Regulation X on home credit in line with the new law. Under the new bill, a $12,000 house henceforth “can be pur-| chased for a $2400 down -pay_ment. Under the anti-inflationary

“curbs in effect since last fall, the|— ‘HOW GOOD IS YOUR SCHOOL ?”’—

down payment has been $3096. Pays Only $960 -

SUNDAY, SEPT. 2.1051

billion" is} . for “liberal” mortgage insurance.,

Signs Bill - Lo Home Costs

rT a

Reds Demand Ih Ridgway Agree’.

| Won't Take No, | They Indicate

By United Press TOKYO, Sunday, Sept. 2 The |{Communists‘demanded today] - that Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway “conscienciously ‘and responsibly deal” with alleged Allied: viola-| tions of the Kaesong neutral. zone |

<= |armistice talks. | The Communist conditions for | reopening the suspended Kaesong| conference were laid down in a sharp note to Gen. Ridgway by | |Gen. Kim Il Sung and Gen. Peng! .{Teh-huagl, North: Korean and] Chinese commanders. The note was” broadcast! over Peiping| Radio. “If you are determined to take| up the negotiations,” the Communist message said, “you should] openly and formally declare your determination to do- so instead of consistently carrying out such provocations. ‘You Should Agree’ “If “you have the intention to; resume the Kaesong talks in # lorder to seek a just and reasonlable armistice agreement,” it t ladded, “you should agree to the "following demands of our side: “Namely, your side must con-| Iscientiously and responsibly deal {with the series of grave provocaitive incidents from August 22d to September 1st and must

|the Kaesong armistice meeting ican be resumed.”

that an allied plane bombed and|

WORRIED—Mrs. G. V. Fairfield, wife of Navy veteran, sits | on front porch in Marlene Village, Portland, Ore., wondering |

'to murder” the red delegation.

whether she will be next on eviction list. Nine have received eviction notices from builder, Harry Mittlemen, after VA refused low interest Gl Hype financing because some of area was flooded. Mrs. Fairchild is shown with two children, Roger and Nancy.

{“frameup” -and the ° faked.

All Rejected

two in- the air. All have been rejected by the UN command.

H. L. Shibler Praises New Times Series on Schools

" H. L. Shibler, general superintendent of education-for|

yesterday, {dropped : two bombs within

Korean Gen. Nam Il, senior Com-

“a fine service /tb parents and others interested in good Shoe The new series starts tomorrow|

THE INDIAN AcOLIS. TIMES |

They're Right of

- lif he wants to resume the Korean| — | 7

thoroughly guarantee that there Prayed hard and” often that. we| will be no recurrence of similar Would be found. I have slipped acts ‘which ~ violate the Kaesong from the church in recent years, ~ neutralization agreement so that but I'm back in it now.

(found because we realized we

Thé Communists broke off the| were much farther north than talks en Aug. 23 after charging We had intended to go.

‘strafed the truce city and “tried day of our flight from Lac La ™ |Ronge in my Fairchild plane. We"

An immediate on-the-spot in-| found out we were well above the] vestigation by Allied liaison of-| tree line and into the northwest ficers. showed the attack was a |territories, about 150. miles north tive. evidence, lof where we were found.

'the shift in the winds and the OF five times that many. magnetic disturbances. Once duraH 2 | sinde then there have been ling the flight, I pointed the plane {four other violations charged by|at a large lake and my compass \the Reds, two on the ground and |went all the way around.

stayed there a week. Then we got|With our Arctic equipment and In the latest. alleged incident ‘a favorable wind and we took off sleeping begs we couldn't sleep day. » the Communists ang headed south until our gas|well charged ‘that an Allied plane pecame so low we had to drop |down on Snowbird Lake: Where our cooking pots was thick ice| ‘the Indianapolis Public Schools, hails et new Times series yards of the residence of Northiy, were found.

munist delegate to the truce talks.|gent 1, today, and then walk out./we had brought along eight weeks) A United Nations spokesmanliys wag lucky that U. 8. Air Force supply in the plane, but during said Allied liaison officers whoig 47 rescue plane sighted us|the last two weeks we lived off|

PAGE. 3

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TURNS TURTLE—The Pelican, a 50-foot fishing boat, capsized yesterday when a riptide caught | it off Montauk Point, Long Island, with 52 aboard. Nine dead were counted but 256 still are missing. It was fearnd they: were trapped i in v the cabin. Nineteen were rescued.

I'm + Back i in the Church'—

The Black Flies Naiily Killed Us,’ Writes Dr. Tasche A Rescue

jwanted” to conserve food in the

.Editors Note? Dr. Jo hn i levent we had to walk ‘out. Tasche of Sheboygan, Wis., and | goynately we never had to.

Miles Eikenberger of Plymouth, : Wis.,, were reseued’ yesterday ee oe a as from the zarren wilderness of lern trout at will. But I'm fed u the Northwest territories P where they had been marooned 29 days after they became lost on a fishing trip by air. Here is Dr. Tasche's story of their We became lost on’ the firsti ordeal. to my, wife and family Ly A

The black fifes in that north] The mental anguish we -sui(country almost killed us although fered at the thought of our famwe had repellent and it was effec- ilies was really the worst of our At one time I counted 266|troubles. bites on myself and Miles (Eiken-| Miles celebrated his sda birth{berger) must have suffered four day on Aug. 29. We should have |observed it on the 27th, but someThose black flies were thick and; ‘how we lost track of two days. they bit hard. For his special birthday supper We had a.good tent that kept We tried to shoot the only grouse the. flies out. . But during the We had seen on the nearby island,

nights it turned so cold ‘that even but we had no luck. landed on. the lake sanding He had fish again for his birth-

By DR. JOHN TASCHE As Told to United Press {

THE PAS, MAN., Sept. 1-We|

We had little hope of being|

trout every day. We kept a diary of the events {that occurred and I included in| . {it a personal message of farewell!

The thing that put us off was]

We

Tt Was se cold that tite water in Colonel Carried AWOL

in the mornings. We had plenty of food because

We planned to stay there until

from his post at Elgin Air Base

|with a fish diet now. We ate!

A veteran buying the same, The Times.

$12,000 house under a loan guar-

anteed by the Veterans amine] be re-|

tration henceforth will quired to put only $960 down. | VA has been requiring $1896. The pay-off period, now generally 20 years, was lengthened to 25 years. : The nev measure will allow down-payments as low as four per cent on-‘GI housing” costing less than $8000; non-veterans would need 10 per cent. GI purchasers of homes costing $7000 to $10,000 would need six per cent; others would need 15.} In the $10,000 to $12,000 range, GIs would have to pay down]

eight per cent and non- veterans parents may use in evaluating the presented in a breezy, easy-read-|

20 per cent. Old houses sold under conventional financing have been free of credit restrictions all along.

Thrill Gone BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Sept.’1 (UP)—Some people get a thrill

. out of watching the trains come

and go but not the Overton! brothers. It's old stuff to them. The three brothers are. train dispatchers on the same division of the Louisville and Nashville rail-| road. Company officials estimate

they dispatched more than 1,600,000 trains,

Here is what Mr. Shibler said |

about “HOW GOOD IS YOUR! SCHOOL?” after a preview reading of the afticles that will ap-! pear ‘in The Times: “I think the publishing by: the Indianapolis Times of certain chapters from the recent book by Dr W. A. Yauch, entitlea. How Good Is Your School,” is a fine service to the parents of school {children and others interested in good schools.

“In this book -Dr. Wilbur A. {Yauch has presented, in the lay-| man’s language, material that

|school their children attend. Not, lonly. may the parent check the

school program, but also

school facilities in the way of equipment, supplies and ‘building. | In addition, Dr. Yauch has set up some criteria by which parents

The Bare Facts—

may. judge teachers and admin- made an on-the-spot investiga-

listrators. “In this book, Your School?” the author has] answered many of the common

questions so often asked by par-}j ents relative to their child's edu-|

‘cation. Parents are often quite concerned if Johnnie who is sev-| en years old doesn’t achieve a much as Mary did when she Ww seven years old. Many times? 0 course, there is no reason for concern at all, because by the time {Johnnie is 15 - years old he! may have surpassed Mary at a! considerable distance in educa{tional growth. “The material in this book is

ing fashion which A makes the material quite easily understood land the answers given without]

the reading a great deal of material to find them. I can heartily rec-!

lommend it to parent-teacher] groups, other child study groups, and parents in general.” .

“How Good Is

tion decided that the Red claim | was another fake. The Allied spokesman raised the possibility |that the Reds had done the bomb-| ing themselves. |

|

Gromyko Grouchy | As Train Arrives | At San Francisco

; By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 1—| {Russian Chief Delegate Adrei| | Gremyko refused to disclose Saviet strategy for the Japamese| peace conference tonight as Sec-| retary of State Dean Acheson] warned thdt the Pacific. democ-|

racies have forged “a strong re-.

solve to resist aggression.” “No statement no any state-

| ment.” Mr. Gromyko snapped’ as

Finds Many Wives Prefer To Sleep 'Like Mother Eve’

United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 1—One in| every twb husbands likes his wife | to wear. a nightgown, Boudoir

§ By JAY BREEN | N

“But actually the trend .is the other way.’

Upkeep Is “Tedious He said his probe indicated

he alighted from a transcontiinental train. with the rest of the | 40- man Soviet delegation. | | The Russians, in the last two cars of the train, arrived across| | the bay at Oakland, less than two] {hours after the United States, | | Australia and New Zealand] | signed a ‘mutual defense treaty. | Mr. Gromyko and his retinue | pushed through a crowd of about 300° persons and the chief mem-|

| Investigator M. C. Schrank said that many women objected to bers of the party climbed intol

today. | But a continuing survey on the |subject, indicates an alarming,

switch to pajamas and a pretty |

5 ERE bef ore ny an ‘ for. the

® | “Now wouldn't you. think that

WSEAUTY ON WING—Carel: Mitchell Miss Indiana, postd

| tacts. In the .past 10 years,

jshociang increase in ladies who

don't wear a blessed thing. ls «That last ‘statistic is pretty delicate,” Mr. Schrank admitted.

“But you have to face the bare) the

{percentage of nude sleepers has been climbing steadily: «We find now that nearly two in every 10 women less than 40] |years old go to bed just like Mother Eve.” He said the girls are sleeping) ~ peeled in spite of the fact that 76

{per cent of America’s husbands]

don't like it one bit. The Sehrank organization's latest survey, in a| regular study of male preferences, indicated 49 per cent pined to see ‘their wives in nightgowns, with | \plenty of lace and frills.

| 21 Pet. Like Pajamas Another 27 per cent said they,

their better halves popping

| bed wearing just themselves.

“It's pretty astonishing,” Mr. Schrank said, ‘because the sur-

veys prove that women don't give) their husbands’ preferences much | thought at all. Actually three out of every four women questioned sald they wore pajamas almost

It's not a case of the gals being ignorant, either. Mr. Schrank! said hig. Investigators asked women, “What form of garb does| your husband prefer you to wear at bed time and why do you think he has this ‘preference?’

ly added that their hubbies:

way. , . cin

all the time. It would seem to suggest they don't give a rap coming at me,’ whether they're alluring or not.”|didn’t.\ I had a gun in my pocket

thought they looked. sexier. that

| frilly. nightclothes because ‘the

upkeep - is tedious and the cost! of such a wardrobe is expensive.

“Those filmy things, with all

the lace and bows, can take half

a day to do up,” he said. “And of course, one wearing is enough to get ’em good and wrinkled.”

Mr. Schrank, whose firm makes both nightgowns and pajamas, isn't to concerned over

‘how the battle turns out between the two types of. sleeping gar. ment. “We're keeping a nervous: eye oh that bare trend, though,” he said. “It could be murder.”

“Best in the Business’ —

{three waiting Cadillacs flying the hammer-and-sickle. Preceded by three motorcycle | policemen, they pulled awa yl quickly for suburban Hillsborough | where the Russians had ented a| $1.6 million mansion. The Russians were reported to| be planning to block early signing | of the Japanese peace treaty but Mr. Gromyko testify refused any | comment, , “I already have said I have no comments to ‘make,” he said with a scowl when reporters aps proached him again as he. waited | in his car. ;

Slayer of Florida Banker

"Wanted to Be: a Lawyer’

| By United Press | DETROIT, Sept, 1 old boy who killed a Jacksonville,

{law yer.

“As it is, I'm ore of the best

{house breakers in the business,” bragged Charlie Bashlory The , slight, detailed the killing of (John Stephenson in his Jacksonville

A 16-year-| Ga.,

sallow-faced boy]

home|’

| Bashlor was born in Atlanta, and his mother left his father when he was five. He, his

thought pajamas were okay. Only Fla., banker and claimed a string father, and brother, Clifford, 19,| 24 per cent said they didn’t mind of more than 300 robberies said moved to Bay City, Mich. in today he always wanted to be a

“Everything ‘was okay until Cliff left home to come to De-| troit and I followed him three] | years ago. The cops picked me up| ‘and I went to the detention home" in Bay City.”

From. there he went to the

with the calm of a many-time boys’ vocational home in Lansing,

loser,

he said.

so .I shot-him.” In his young ‘life of crime, Bashlor said that he had looted

more than 300 homes, dapartmepts. and ‘hotels - in Detroit alone— ‘in fact; 30 Since I got

‘back from, Florida ‘this week,” The product of a broken home,

‘hig mother and father, “If I had had a normal’ lige,

into this mess. 1 never “stole ahead But, _

sh, a

hé said,” “I#ouldn’t have gotten: to

| Mich., where he escaped and fled

“I told the- old man to -stop to Texas. . - “He

He returned to Detroit last) | April and was arrested for house | breaking. ‘and sent to live with a Detroit] family, he fted to Savannah, Ga.,.

and then to Florida. “I stole.the gun in Miami, he said, adding *“that's.-. a sweet |

towh.” | * He said he broke into the Ste-

He said virtually all of those Bashlor blamed all his. troubles phérison hdme figuring no one

who answered “nighfgowns” free- with the law on.the separation of was there.. . money." tm]

“because 1 feeded

| When Mr: Stephenson — ‘him, Ire shot.” M1 didn't know T killed anyone unti Loy Sou, old

yesterday.

fish

and berries

because

ps Cadets Rush to Beat ND Deadline BE

48 Men Apply Out of the 90

‘» PBy United Press | SOUTH BEND, Sept. 1—VWest {Point's ousted .cadets rushed! to | beat the deadline today for ace . cepting the offer of a mysterious {millionaire to give them free education at the University. of Notre | Dame. . | The offer iready has obligated :

ithe wealthy benefactor, who dee manded his identity be kept secret for fear he would be branded a | “publicity* seeker,” to the extent | of about $60,000 during the next {nine months alone. -

| “A man who makes a mistake | should have a reasonable chance to rehabilitate himself,” the mile | lionaire said.

Hours = before ‘the midnight { deadline, 48 of the West Pointers [who were discharged for cheate ing on exams had asked for ade mission. That was more than. {half of the 90 who were. sent away. | More “ay Apply

| ‘The Rev. Louis B. Thornton, | director of admissions, said more | applications might arrive later. | Dr. Thornton- said any letter of | application postmarked before midnight would be accepted.

The benefactor offered to pay school and living expenses for all 90 from now until they are graduated. If -all accepted, were admitted and spent four years at | Notre Dame, it could cost between $400, 000 and $500,000.

| “The offer was announced Aug, 21 by the Rev. John J. Cavae {naugh, .CSC, president of the Catholic school for men. Next day, the applications started coming and they rolled in daily ever since,

Refuses to Comment

Meanwhile, a “guessing game” continued on the identity of the anonymous millionaire. Latest name mentioned was Joseph B, Kennédy, a millionaire Catholic, who formerly was U. 8S. Ambassador to Britain. Mr. Kennedy is a member of the lay board of trustees of the university, University officials not only ree fused to comment on each “guess’ t but also withheld the names of all . -

WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (UP)—|cadets who applied. The Air Force said today that Lt. Col. William R. Maxwell is a sidelines at football and basket “few days” absent without leave|ball games. They won't play inter-

At Notre Dame they'll sit om

,|collegiate sports at all, That was

Fla. It was addéd that he is nowlone of the,conditions the benewe|being carried AWOL.

factor insisted on.

Placed .on probation .

Let your eye and ear be the judge!

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