Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1952 — Page 1
1052
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The | Indianapolis imes ?
FORECAST: Mostly cloudy and windy with showers tonight. Tomorrow cloudy, windy, colder. High today 48, low tonight 30, high tomorrow 35.
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; 32d YE
OE ———————————
PRICE.FIVE CENTS
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis, Indians. Issued Dally
AR—NUMBER 344 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1952
fa PCE = Ee Ee
Speed Needed If U.S. Tries Bardin Case
Bulky Report .] Slows Action :
By DAVID WATSON Time became a major issue today in the muddled tax affairs of Lawrence Bardin, former Indianapoiis beer tycoon, i
The federal government must
act in hiscad#i "ki tax case before March, 1953, or be forced, to drop its plans to seek a grand, jury indictment against® him.
33 Adrift on Hulk Of Shipwreck After site of More Are Re SCU ed
day that objects resembling
————
b+ Flying Discs
co a SE
Over Korea
AF Investigating Pilots’ Stories
Fis
As
TUR a
“flying discs’ have been sighted ~ over ane by crew
members of two U. S. bombers. wl ¢ | Top officials have ordered a dar
Asks King To Protect 50
expedi-
Bardin, former general man- |full investigation-of the reports, : . " Fi ager of the now defunct Indian- which came through regular mili- y= ® A by | . R . And Pitches apolis Brewing - Co., the govern-| ; i ried this new A charges Ds a Ri, tary intelligence channels, : | Pavin Plan rc eo ogica uins ! internally to dollars in taxes on his 1946 in-| A spokesman said the objects By United Press ; sm for hours come.” were described by four eyewit- . ADEN, Aden, Feb. 19—WenUB is highly A year from next month is the nesses as globe-shaped, bright dell Phillips, 29: leader of an i ei Nn 0 Ba ust rub it on deadline for possible criminal] orange .in color, and emitting an or IIc p American archeological |
ue to fatigue, ise. The new , counter-irme
prosecution, forcing Uncle Sam to abandon its grand jury plans. A $490,231 tax lien against Bardin’s property remains in force, however, |
Long Delay Seen
District Attorney Matthew! Welsh, who ‘last week received! from Washington the bulky files on the Bardin case, said he doubted the Feb. 25 session of] the grand jury would receive them. ) He added it may be next fall before the investigative body will be called on for a ‘decision in the case, barring a special session. The attorney descriked the Bardin file packets as “a foot thick” making it almost an impossibility to be ready “for the grand jury on such short notice. ~ Mr. Welsh said the impending investigation involves only ‘Bardin, not the activities of. the \old! Indianapolis Brewing Co. or its officers. : X The brewery made headlines last week when it was disclosed
paid taxes. Linked to Brewery { " The names of National Demo-
cratic Chairman Frank McKinney charged with conspiring to vio-
and Democratic Committeeman
~ Frank McHale have been linked
to the brewery. Indianapolis Brewing Co. also settled for $50,000 a treble dam-| age suit for $533,068 %iled against] it by the old Office of Price Ad-| ministration. i Meanwhile, Bardin, from his home in Texas, denied he ever had| served a sentence imposed in Fed-| eral Court here as a result of] putting fal$é labels on beer pro-| duced by the brewery. i Bureau of - Prisons records in| Washington, however, showed Bardin served
tence he received in 1948.
It is known Bardin had made ‘In October or November, plans to fly his personal plane to 1945, Mr. Hamjin dnswered.| the Ashland, Ky. Federal Cor-| Lohr, Nancy Rosenfeld, Richard.
occasional flash of bluish light. He indicated that several were sighted, but did not give the number. The Air Force, which has {thrown cold water on hundreds) of previous “flying .saucer”
‘stories, apparently was impressed around Monument Circle took! his expedition, a turn for the better today tractive woman fwhen Mayor Clark said he|
{by the circumstances under {which the new sightings were reported by its own personnel.
Parallel -Plane
Wants $100,000 Job Done This Year
Outlook for new: paving
favors doing the work this year.|
{tion to the land of the Queen of | Sheba, appealed to the King of} | Yemen |archeological ibeing destroyed by Arab tribesmen, it was learned today.
to prevent priceless]
masterpieces from §
Mr. Phillips and 19 members of including an atsecretary, fled
to this. British protectorate from Yemen last week.
Mr. Phillips, of the American
FBI ‘Spy’ Describes Communists’ School
\years maintained a dual role as
3 “devoted” Communist’ Party the firm had settled a $612,087 tax. member and an undercover agent
liability for $4500, and later re- ;\. ne FBI, says the state leadceived a $35,000 refund for Yer ership of the organization rigidly |controlled new ‘membership.
testified yesterday at the trial of
of 1945.”
A complete job, costing about| Foundation for the Study of he first report reached Air For eet officers from $100,000, was ouflined for the Man, published an open letter two ‘crew members of a B-20 Circle last year, but was put off {here today to the Imam (King
fortress who said they saw , {of Yemen). | Super ortress who ey in favor of using the money for The expedition was alleged to
the objects flying parallel to their] ul ] N plane at about midnight on the repair of streets in outlying dis have been fired upon by the night of Jan. 29. The plane was tFicts. {King's guards. It fled across a lover Wonsan, Korea, at the time. But Mayor Clark said today desert inhabited by hostile tribeshe favors getting the rapidly/men to the desert outpost of
This report might have’ bee i ; liseantog as A ry ore breaking up pavement replaced Belhan in this protectorate. Equipment sacrificed
(But on the same night, a B-2g)this year If the State Highway /from a different squadron re. Commission will go along with a} ' . 1 : eneral . repair rogram for r. Phillips’ letter said: turned to its base after a flight 8 p P g | “I have just sacrificed over 200,000 worth of equipment to
present. over Sunchon, Korea, a consider- Meridian St. north of the Circle s Samuel Hadden, Highway Com- 8avé the lives of my Americans,
y o 16th 8t. “Lohr opened the discussion by able distance from Wonsan. | saying that the educational com-| TWO crew members told intelli- 1, ion chairman, said today he Egyptians and Somalis, for in hopes to start this summer re- America we value human life
mittee of the state Communist ence officers that they had seen / Party was sending outlines to be (Ying discs” moving parallel to paving of Meridian St. from above all else, ‘including archeo- We Michigan to 16th Sts. if the U, 8. 108ical wonders. :
_itheir plane at a high altitude. used in a fundamentals of Marx ism course for beginners, and that| I ney fixed the time at about mid- |; give financial help. | "Your Mdreb ruins of the anthe school would be organized as DIEHL. ; cient capital city of the Biblical soon as we have received them.” | “The objects remained with the Will Recommend It {Queen of Sheba represent the Mr. Hamlin testified that he and B-29 over Wonsan for five min-| Maj. Henry Oaks, U. EB. dis- Sreatest known archeologocal Miss Rosenfeld were assigned to Utes and with the B-29 over Sun- trict engineer, said he wilt treasure house remaining anyassist with the class taught by chon for one minute,” the Ar recommend the U. 8. pay 50. per (Where and the monumental circuLohr and William Reich, county Force said. cent of the Michigan to 16th St. lar Jeupie of Bilgis alias Sheba . \ educational director. | W cost, 8 absolutely an unique stiucture, Humist fiasses js Rea indoctrina-| “pom an instruction outline is- _ -Fust In Jupe , A contract for repaving of| “We partially excavated Bilqis Sf jpundreds on. schogls at San Diego, and _ 4 by the California Comimu- While officials declined to elab- Meridian St. from Ohjo to Mich- till forced to flee Yemen and un-|
he spoke during an almost con-! jorate, the open-minded Air Force | 1 ur maje in Sali nist Party, Mr. Binns read a| » {igan Sts. probably will be let in|i®88 Yo ajesty tinuous barrage of objections, cage by Lenin entitled
fy ie defense attorney Ben Is to Be Done?” which maintained |the blunt SKeBlielam it has voiced already have been asked for on He identified George Lohr as that revolutionary movements’ pe ous sightings o mys- the $14,000 project. jects in the skies. “a person sent down by the state must be kept in the hands of a (Reds) to become chairman of. Select. few, TIEMIy controlled avd He Cort pact a San Kept from the masses to insure Was made in June, 1947, by a pri-| Engineer William Hunt calling Diego County uring the Samm, | secrecy. | vate pilot named Kenneth Arnold, | for a complete rebuilding of the] g {who told reporters he saw nine base and pouring of a concrete! {shimmering discs flying at high roadway.
SHE'S GLAD—Mrs. Lloyd Hamlin, wife of the FBI agent who posed as a Communist for five years, with her family. She says she's glad it's over.
a
' By United Press LOS ANGELES, Feb. 19 Lloyd N. Hamlin, who for five
Adams and some others were
Nl 3
BRIDE—Eileen Salama, secre. tary of the ill-fated archeological expedition, yesterday mar. ried Charlie Macallum, a member of the party. -
Mr, Hamlin, 37, of San Diego, 15 California Communist leaders
lently overthrow. the government. The Navy weteran told of Com-
enes Ur'hronze
Sabean masterpiece from complete gtr i destruction by looting tribesmen, yed by Indigo tribesmen.
Pavement of the Circle will be and its loss to world science will audience were left unanswered
appeal. :
Priceless’ Stat ues “Respectfully submitted,
“Finally I beg your majesty ; : urgently to consider above the American Foundation.” speed near Mt. Rainier, Wash. Around-the-clock work on the; Value of our trucks, generators, Eileen Salama, Soon similar stories were pouring| Circle is planned to finish in| refrigerators,
» “When did you first her a dis-
‘and even from such distant points| business tieup. effects the unbelievable [as Alaska, Scandinavia, Chile and
| Turkey.
rection institution, where he was’ to serve out his sentence. : But the U. 8. Marshal ordered
othr Charge Man Forced
Reynolds, 28, shot
* . The Air Force set up a special| {Investigating body, dubbed “Proj-| lect Saucer,” to look into the re-|
1ports. After two years of work,
{men who were riding the wreck-
“As my recent pleas for an
the beautiful
photolab, medical secretary of the expedition, mar. dens Hills, L, L-
. " toda yl cussion of organization of schools! five in the county committee”? Mr. in from all” r | supplies, food, rifles months of the six months sen- Hamlin was asked by Prosecutor, ! Bie all ‘parts of the country, three weeks or less to avoid SUPP and personal ried Charlie
{U. 8. Attorney Walter S. Binns. | j
Macallum, the road) loss to expert for the party, yesterday. |In8, winds up to 35 knots whip-
in which nearly 400 separate
him transported by car, just as any other federal prisoner.
Today's News -
and killed his wife and wounded, {himself critically today when she
“sightings” were investigated, the Air Foree reported in December,
Bars on Bonn Boys to Open Grave
Coast Guard To Sink Wreck
By United Prem CHATHAM, Mass, Jeb. 19 —= Thirty-eight. sailors ve been rescued from two broken tankers, 13 seamen are dead or missing, and 33 are alive and drifting on one of the broken hulks, the {Coast Guard anounced today. | Latest to be saved were four {men - pitched. into the sea from {the bow of the tanker Ft. Mercer which, like its 10,000-ton twin the Pendleton, was split in half by | mountainous seas off Cape Cod in a Nor'easter yesterday. The bow section overturned and {the Coast Guard Cutter Yakutat, {which rescued the struggling men {In 20-foot waves, said the hulk would be sunk by gunfire.
Considers Tow
Meanwhile, the Coast Guard
1 {Cutter Eastwind, standing along- | ‘side the Ft. Mercer's stern some
{40 miles away, was considering (towing that portion of the vessel {to Boston without remo 33
age. | Thirty-two crewmen were rese {cued last night from the stern jof the tanker Pendleton as it {drifted about two miles off the {Chatham Bar. One man was lost
science if oue rubber-latex copies In the rescue, anothér leaped to of new inscriptions Ni# death from the Pendleton’s fall prey to your irresponsible
representatives or if the priceless ! ala plunged from the Ft. Mercer's “What attitude contrasted sharply withthe next couple of weeks. Bids gently nothing shall save this cently 2nd. slabaste Eas ip! a
w some five miles away. Early today five or six men w and could not be vescued. Fight to Side 1; At mid-morning a daring crew
|a small boat, fought to the side {of the Ft. Mercer's bow and took
The first “flying saucer” report'a major job, with plans of City be irreplaceable. : [resort to this final court.of world {rom the cutter Yakutat launched
“Wendel Phillips, leader of the °ff Frederick C. Paetzel, of House
|ton, Tex., the master, and Purser Edward E. Turner, of Kew Gare
But the weather was worsen-
ping the waves ever higher, ‘The Yakutat radioed no further boat rescue attempt could be made. It {said an attempt would be made to fire a ling aboard the broken ship and use rubber rafts to perform any further rescues. At the stern of the Fort Mercer, {separated from the bow by about
en wi
ra a; . By ~. HE TE CE ir SE
EUR
In The Times
Local
{threatened to tell their neighbors (he often beat her, a witness told police.
Times Special By United Press | . MOSCOW, Ky., Feb. 19—An In-
LONDON, Feb. 19 — The Big! diana man was held here today
jon charges he forced two frighty s, 28, was Thr f ste Reynolds, 28, was | ee foreign ministers reached ened boys to dig into-a grave for
Page yilled when she was shot {agreement today on all “outstand- | because of the short sentence he Policeman escapes death in al- |," 41a face in the nor Truman Loses ling issues” barring the way to! pig AT 24 Vi ; ce on, 24, n-
was required to serve. ley battle with gunman.... 2p 0e.r0om house. Police. were Shey | West. German participation “He was also fined $1000 in the Re RT péters, jormer siate 4/told Reynolds then walked ie ON Immunity |Gen. Dwight Connes, Yas Srvesiod Jeaienday | » ’ - . 1 1 : pi. labeling case, and the brewery ‘an adjoining room and fired the WASHINGTON, Feb. 19 (yp) European army. crated. Two boys said Lampton
was assessed $600. lother #charge from a double-| American sources said Secre-|
|Lampton found out from 18-year- 40 miles of lashing ocean, the
old Jerry Adams that-the boys’ s grandfather was buried —sup- charge. Fastwing nad. take | posedly with 4 large sum of mon-| Ordered to Port ey—in the abandoned Moscow |graveyard. There had been no! Coast Guard officers conferred burials there for the past 35/t0 determine whether to make an years, : |attempt to get a line aboard and Friday night, Lampton ordered | tOW the listing stern to Boston. Jerry and 16-year-old James Core! Commander of the" Eastwind
Reports on Probation 1949, that it was satisfied that
Bardih was not required to re- there was nothing to the scare.
port to “probation officers follow-, Mrs. Irene ing his release in December, 1948, in D. Eisenhower's
" pages of The Indianapolis
On Pages 7, 8
§¥ . eh
Bardin's ability to. escape seri-! ous consequences in the civil and
Editorial Page
criminal courts apparently has U- 8. has heavy bets on Lisbon
been coupled with the hiring of
high-priced attorneys with ‘high |,
political connections. ! Bardin stated that John Nunan| Jr., former head of the Internal Revenue Bureau, has represented him. « } The long delay in grand jury| action, however, has been at-| tributed by some federal officials
conferences and the Three session . ndiana Central College An Indianapolis Asset , . editorial ime is running short Iran... Ludwell Denny ..
National
Big
Pag
to the “complication” of the tax Bank Robber “Slick Willie”
issue. i Core of this argument is that
Sutton captured while trying to save three bucks
Bardin did not fail to file a: tax Notes hint socialite bride who
return. He merely failed to pay| it. > The follow-through of reasoning is that proof of “wilful” fatiure-to-pay=is- difficult to prove.
Make a House
Make your home completely whale by adding the pleasures of home ownership to the utility of shelter and saving. Every family is: entitled to these satisfactions that make a house a home . . . conveniences of living, enjoyment -of the land, security of tenure] neighborhood ad vant a ges. You'll have moi of all of these when you live in a home. of your own. - r
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6208 COLLEGE . RLTRS. GL-2251 Shown here is just one of | the many HUNDREDS of home values advertised For Sale today in the real estate
Times, From this wide selection you'll be able to choose several you'll want to personally inspect right away. Read thram over NOW! ~~ ..
Tox Refund List
Illinois, Towa win, eye game Saturday a
| A Complete Home rddie Ash's sports Roundup. . Olymps play host to Boston
It’s official, Novis are in ‘500’
(Butler visits Tigers’ den .... 16 Dick Dunkel’'s basketball rat-
[Nyers,
|City’s pin
kiHed husband victim of mental conflicts.......... .
this|U. 8. expected to fire ‘hel
Page
14
14
. 14
[barrel shotgun into his abdomen.
=—-The House Judiciary CommitHe was in critical condition at tee refused today to give Newbold confident that all major bars to]
{tary of State Dean Acheson was’
Schneck Memorial Hospital, but Morris, the government's “clean- speedy establishment of the Eur-!
authorities said he might reéover. No charges were filed immediately. : { LOCAL TEMPERATURES
a.m... 32 10a. m... 34 7a. m... 32 11 a. m... 38 8 a.m... 33 12 Noon. 40 9am... 34 : wih
€ Latest humidity .......
63% |
up'man,” the power top grant immunity to witnesses. President Truman had re-
lquested such power for Mr. Mor-| {ris, as an aid te securing testi-|enauer announced that the Big
mony about vrong-doing in gov-
fear of prosecution.
‘Faceless GI
Her Boy?
ott on Shell Never Be Sure
Sports
title Celtics tonight
ings
* Norwegian wins third Olym-
- pic 201d medal ..cccovseess Bryant near end of scoring race irae cores hit skids, Kegler's ‘Korner .........
Women's
‘Modern furniture on its toes.
Indiana Farm Bureau's 8S & E conference opens in the Murat «.oceocnensdonevsoss Dompthy Thompson to be Town Hall speaker Friday
- Other Features:
Amusements .i....00000. 10 Bridge scesecensssissensee 4 Comics 23 Crossword «rivvissceenss 17 Editorials ... 14 Harold Hartley «.sseeeee 15 In Hollywood ....coe0eee 10 Radio, Television ...co0ve * 9 Ed Sovola .i.cosvsennesss 13 Sports: ....cee00s00000. 16-18 Earl Wilson s.esaveveses 13
“assesses
srs as aims
Women’s «veevnsecssnes 4.5 What Goes On.Here ..... 12
~ .
Page
17 to view for herself the body sent|
17 as her son. |
By United Press DENVER, Feb. 19—A grieving
doubts that the casket , , tains the body of her son.”
. con-
"The day saw .these imgortant developments in London, Paris and Lisbon:
ONE—Chancellor Konrad Ad-
opeanc army had been removed.
{Three foreign ministers in Lon-
{ernment from persons who might don agreed to give West Germany {be otherwise afraid to talk for an indirect voice in North Atlan-|
tic Pact affairs and also agreed [to lift all direct controls on Ger-| man war production. { | TWO—The U. 8. and Britain] |pledged to stick to their previous) |decision to maintain armed forces) {on_ the continent even after a |European army is created, That |allayed French fears that the |Anglo-Americans would pull out after the army is formed, thus giving Germany a chance to build,
- Denver mother - attends a mili-| The complaint said “nor willlan independent military machine,
16/ tary funeral today, still unsure
the flag-draped coffin she wept
8 over contained the body of her and she be permitted to view
soldier son killed in Korea.
Mrs. Constance Kisser was
16 faced with- one of the greatest
decisions of her life yesterday—|
|back from Korea to identify it|
She- will remain forever in
17 doubt. |
The mother of 23-year-old Cpl. Robert Dittler had armed her-
-. Self with a court order to open
4/the coffin returned from Korea to bé sure the body inside was [that of her son. | The Army said the young sol|dier died when a mortar shell
os |exploded in his face while fight
{ing near Chupari in North Korea |last Oct. 16. : “How can they kpow?” she {sobbed softly in the mortuary) |“How can I-be sure?” :
she be satisfied as to the identi(fication of his remains unless and until said casket shall be opened the remains.” Two cousins of the dead soldier volunteered to look for the grieving mother to spare her the shock. With faces drawn and white, Joseph Streml and Conrad Sack returned to her from the room where the open coffin rested. “Is it my boy?” she pleaded, |“Is it my Robert?” Both men had to admit they |were not sure. “There's nothing to see,” Mr
{Sack said, “there's no face. Don't 1s 9600 The, identification tag is pinned to his/continued to keep Indianapolis
he school children home today. A “believe us that it is|
torture yourself by looking. {the right size for Robert. (enirt Believe the. Army,” {Pleaded, Robert. But don’t look.” . Several times Mrs. Kisser | started up from her seat to walk to the open coffin, only to be
| Mrs. Kisser based her doubts Urged back by her relatives.
'that the coffin contained the body!
Finally, sobbing quietly, the
of her son on the fact that she Mother gave in to the pleas of jpad received no identification relatives not to look.
"|tags, clothing or personal effects Jot her son. : on | A complaint filed with District |Judge Henry 8. Lindsley, who issued a court order permitting opening’ the coffin, said the moth-
er “entertains. i | and serious
*
“If you're sure, I couldn't tell,” she said, “if his face is...” -
Mr. Streml turned to the
funeral parlor representative and|’
ordered the coffin closed. The mother was led gently from the funeral home, ~ :
NATO council
| THREE-—The deputies in Lisbon completed a draft agreement which would,
{
commit U. 8, forces to West Ger-|
|many's defense if she were at-| |tacked. The agreement will be| {presented to the full meeting. of| [NATO leaders opening tomorrow. | FOUR—The French Assembly {indorsed the plan for a European (army with possibly 400,000 Ger{man troops but attached condi-
[tions to prevent Germany's re-|
vival as a military power.
Illness Keeping
Flu, colds and wirus infections
spot check of public schools indicated 9600 pupils, otf about 16 per cent, were out. Absences from : the county schools ran about 4000, or about 20 per cent. Authorities said there was no thought of closing schools. Normal absence rate at this time of year is 7 per cent, but school officials said it has run as high as 40. : Indianapolis industries were hit less severely by “the bug.” A spot
Pupils Home |
jforced them into the eerie night-
time looting at gun point. Sheriff Robert Lee Bolin said
UN Accepts Reds’ ‘Etc.’
By United Press . {
—Truce negotiators agreed today on a recommendation for a Ko-! rean peace conference, but split further over Russia's eligibility
to police an armistice.
the withdrawal of foreign troops from Korea, “peaceful settlement! of the Korean question, et cetera.” |
to take him to the grave, where W28 Capt. Oliver A. Peterson who
he drew a gun and made them Was directing this portion of the
|dig, they said. But they didn’t/[®SCueé operations. Alongside the
find treasure.
|Eastwind was the Navy cargo
The boys, who said. they were Carrier Short Splice. Aiding the
“scared half. to death” while dig
Sing, related the experience to [their parents. They discovered the aon | open grave and called the Sherif. had been one of the first in the Lampton was charged with
PANMUNJOM, Korea. Feb. 19 0Pening a grave and carrying a
concealed weapon.
Vincent Cleared Again
| “ WASHINGTON, Feb. 19 (UP) The full armistice delegations/—The State Department loyalty agreed to recommend to’. theirland security board today cleared governments that talks begin veteran diplomat John Carter| within 90 days of a cease-fire on|Vincent of charges that he was|
a Communist,
Yakutat was the cutter Acushtiet down from Portland, Me. The cutter McCulloch, ‘which
rescue work, was ordered back to port in event some other emere gency arose. It had been standing by the bow of the Pendleton but turned that duty over to the Pole lock Rip Lightship.
3»
The agreement completed nego-
tiations on the fifth and final ifem on the armistice agenda, but the] delegations still were poles apart on key sections of the two pre-| ceding items—supervision of the truce and an exchange of war prisoners. |
Staff officers of the two sides if :
argued fruitlessly for two hours! over the United Nation's right to veto the Communist choice of Russia as one of six neutral na< tions to police the truce. United Nations Col. Don - O. Darrow accused the Communists of breaking an agreement by refusing to withdraw their nomination of Russia and name some other country. He contended they had agreed that all six nations
sides. x Chinese Col. Pu Chan retorted that Russia qualified as a neutral because it has no combat forces in Korea.
Sabrejets Shoot Down 3 MIGs in. Dogfights
‘EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Feb. 19° (UP)— Heavily outnumbered. Amerigan Sabrejets shot down; three Communist- MIG-15 fighter planes today in “MIG Alley.” : On the ground, there were
check indicated absences only slightly above normal, y
-~ a
minor - skirmishes; »
on the neiitral advisory commiis-| sion must be acceptable te both!
.1y| She is going to the Shri OB Hospital for Crippled Children. | 2 bi i ol viii,
HOPEFUL—There is grow ing hope in the home of Mr. “and Mrs; Virgil Tollardo, Oakland, Cal., that their 2-year-old daughter, Norma (above), shall ‘yet lead a normal life, Born
believe Norma may be able 15 “use artificial limbs if she de“velops "sufficient equilibrium." ners
x %
without arms or legs, doctors |
/Patrolman Robert Wade saw his duty early today, He didn’t hesitate, despite odds that could have killed him. Patrolman . Wade chased a burglary suse pect into an alley to come face fo face with a gun aimed by the thug. The officer lunged, and ‘one shot burned his hand as they struggled. Knocked down, Patrolman. Wade ‘looked again into the gun muzzle, The thug fired . . . the gun jammed . . . the thug fled. Patrolman Wade didn’t catch him—this time— but he’s still a hero today. . Further details on Page 2
|‘Fiddling’ Charged
| During Cairo Fire
”
| | Jan. 26. wy | oe gl Din Pasha, the | charges, was too bi of down
