Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1952 — Page 21

5

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3 ocratic leaders ins:

xt week choose

(Buck) Taylor, or Stuart SyJames Kem in

ry Jackson op-

opposes Sen, to Mr. Bricker, mps get licked

Guy Bard will r. Martin has Governor and

Mansfield goes

Schricker, al- } Sen. William

ere the result 'k, where Sen, could be close. ‘eady to put up y Cabot Lodge

Ralph Flanders -aska, Ed Thye 8 in .Delaware fair possibility th Alben Barkepublican John 1.- Tom Under-

Sept. 9 to go Wisconsin, A upset. » or Adlai Stent will depend in the Senate. our everything ate control, too,

® ® : ginia country is fine, al moonshiners ed off in weeks. othed the road lace, The Japdn’t amount to did the ticks. ir » ING job deluxe, paint the make only one coat, ed. Our house iding cake with fresh and the the shutters) a lda says is turught to know; days mixing it. ed out so well, number of our

tanding in line 3 of our paint-

till living upe -

garage and I'm charging them

* hand, they're ind they promse ye on the estab we leave it for ror of Another orld where we till rains. What squish my bare ud again. ing for a jaunt ean. Not only in, but no poli1 be what the alls a welcome

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y argues straeinstead of nachallenges the concept of the as the south rope. It insists rranean is esne between the Far East, and 1 be the heart llied Mid-East er than merely hern command \tlantic' Treaty NATO) defense Mediterranean first as a Midd base, the su- | would properitish who have and longer nce there. past the British * of the argue eir theory is 1e very practi lows: n > ES of an ine t defense sys than ever now tionalist dictaken over Iran nwhile the Ale the best of } in that area rdination with

Turks, Greeks, nch will accept ne commander nean. A Turk'oup command reated with an ral in charge, y- them, under ert B. Carney,

'n Commander

ie British Med» as the only dinated Allied ion outside the fense. The ob And apparently e Ong now—is 1 tbatfen ymmander in Naval Come

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quantity. But indféations are that instead, lighter, faster, more bombers may be bought-—such as North American jet B-45, maneuverable short-range Boeing's B-48, or a counterpart of Navy's North American AJ-1. Argument against big bombers: They're too slow, don't fly high enough, cost from $15 to $20 million each in latest form. Also, atam bomb no longer needs that kind of carrier. We're . now producing lighter A-bombs. Republic F-84-G

..Thunderjets are able to earry

them in external racks.

Big bombers may be needed to carry H-bomb when-it is ready, for a time at least... but no one's talking on that.

Week's Primaries

IN MISSOURI, Stuart Symington expects to beat J. E. (Buck) Taylor, Mr. Truman's man, in Democratic senatorial primary. Winner runs against

Sen. James Kem in November.

Mr. Taylor's stronger in western Missouri, where Pendergast organization is backing him. But St. Louis is expected to roll up big plurality for Mr. Symington, and he's strong in southeast Missouri. Mr. mingtong has campaigned hard, has newspapers back of him, has been helped by his guitar-playing, hill-billy singing son. Mr. Taylor's been attacking Mr. Symington as a john-ny-come-lately to state, Michigan: Rep. Charles Potter is favored among Republicans battling to oppose Sen. Blair Moody in November. In Kentucky, Democrat Tom Underwood and Republican John Sherman Cooper are unopposed in primaries. In Tennessee, it's young Rep. Albert Gore against veteran Sen, Kenneth McKellar for Democratic nomination which should mean election.

No Ghost Writers

NEW DEMOCRATIC national chairman will be selected within 30 days, according to best word here. Gov, Adlai Stevenson will pick him. And Gov. Stevenson wasn't kidding when he said campaign speeches and planning would be his own. As governor, he's worked that way. Many of his speeches have been written by hand. When aids prepared material, they'd seldom see any of it in final draft. Gov. Stevenson's sprightly—and scholarly

§ —style just can’t Be copied by

ghosts, friends say. But he may have to accept some help for last strenuous weeks of campaign, when he'll be making several major speeches a week. As to Gov. Stevenson policy: His private conversations are weighted heavily with talk of need to get government on a sound financial basis, stop deficit financing.

Doubts Early Truce

GEN. OMAR BRADLEY, chairman of joint chiefs of staff, does not share Adm. William Fechteler's optimism about truce in Korea. Adm. Fechteler returned from Far East this week saying Reds want a truce, will agree on terms eventually. Gen. Bradley talked with him, wasn't convinced, He's closer to view of Gen. Van Fleet, who says prospects were never darker.

Refugee Problem

IRON CURTAIN refugees in West Berlin, center of storm which threatens to break soon, have been subject of sharp disagreement on our side.

Hot intra-American row has gone on over whether to encourage them to escape—— when there’s no place for them on our side except primitive wooden barracks, less than a minimum standard of living. They've been arriving in West Berlin at rate of 300 to 1000 per day—and unemployment. already totals 300,000 there. Facts seems to be - that whether we encourage them .or not, people who hear Voice of America, and other programs get the Idea everything is better on this #ide of curtain, try to get here on their own. y

Worried About Steel

“ AJR FORCE is still worried about steel. Though most of the industry has made its peace with CIO, some of ‘the firms making high-tempera-ture, special alloy steels needed for jet éngines have not, Tem-

s ‘

SUNDAY, AUG. 3, 1952 Washington Calling— .:

U.S. May Decide To Junk Program For Big Bombers

A Weekly Size-Up_by the Washington Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

WASHINGTON, Aug. 2—A dramatic shift in Air Force tactics and strategy may be in the works. And the long-range bomber may be on the way out. Quiet conversations are taking place this week at Air Secretary Thomas Finletter's summer home in Maine woods. No_‘“big bomber” men are present. Undersecretary Roswell Gilpatric, buyer for the Air Force, is sitting in. So is Gen. Nathan F. Twining, chief of staff, and his deputy, Gen Curtis Lemay, head of Strategic Air Command and a “big bomber” man, is not there. Gen. Twining, who now seems more likely than Gen. Lemay to succeed Gen. Hoyt Vanderberg as Air Force chief of staff, has never been for all-out big ships, such as B-36, B-52 and B-60. Just before start of Maine sessions, Mr. Gilpatric announced B-36 would be “phased out.” Gen, Lemay will fight hard to have it replaced with B-52, purchased in

Sy-

Radio Free Europe -

Gen. Lawrence S. Kuter.

emphasis on

signed withtone, Crucible Steel, and production will resume there. But talks with some others have made no progress.

Cut in Payments

DOWN PAYMENTS for new homes will be cut sharply by October, housing officials say. They expect Regulation X, which keeps down payments high, to be ditched about Oect. 1. It must go — under 1952 housing act—whenever rate of new homes starts drops below 1.2 million a year for three months ina row. It’s running well below that.

Probe Hearings Due

SEN. WILLIS SMITH’S subcommittee to investigate alien property division. of Justice Department expects to hold public hearings in October. Counsel A. W. Sapp is organizing staff, will start soon analyzing information already in subcommittee's possession. So..far jt's had no trouble getting records from alien property custodian’s office. (Chelf Committee, investigating Justice Department, says it’s been blocked at every turn on records.) Some complaints coming in on alien property are from persons who say they've been unable to get claims settled for as long as 10 years. mittee wants to know why.

Rift Still There

POLITICAL wounds resulting from defeat of Sen. Taft by. Gen. Eisenhower forces at convention weren't healed by Ohio State GOP Convention this week. Old guard Republicans showed théy were still mad, still sitting on their pocketbooks, instead of forking over campaign®funds. , New GOP Chairman Arthur Summer field unintentionally prodded sore spot when he said —Tright after talk of healing rifts. that Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, mastermind hehind Gen. Eisenhower's victory, was available for consultation. It made Ohio Tafters mad all over again.

Plenty of Rum

PUERTO RICO, biggest supplier of rum to U. 8S. has rum surplus at same time U. 8S. distillers have ‘a hig whisky. surplus, so current low prices of both will continue. Puerto Rico, trying hard to regain trade here, is advertising that

law now prohibits export of rum that hasn't been. aged properly.

Inside

‘World

Affdirs

WASHOUTS of new United States F-84 jets by Italian plots in training are too high. But American observers are forgiving because the same phenomenon took place in U. 8S. beginnings.

EL i A DANISH BRIDE was married recently in a gown

made from the silk of the parachute which saved her pilot bridegroom’s life in an

air collision a year earlier.

28 a = IF INDIA’S former ambassador to Red China, Sardar Pannikar, stops acting like mediator in the Korean war, Allied officials will be just as happy. Mr. Pannikar's reports of what the Chinese Communists will or won't agree to have been confusing,

n n a" POLISH COMMUNISTS couldn’t resist putting a political slant on the election of Chicago's Avery Brundage as chairman of the International Olympic Committee. Said the Poles: The United States ap-

“plied “its now familiar meth=

ods of intimidation so often used by its delegates at the United Nations.”

tJ sn WEST" BERLIN authorities are asking that abductions be handled in the same way as murder or attempted murder— in an effort to check kidnappings by Red zone political hoodlumas. .

” n » GFOLOGICAIL ‘experts in Israel say conditions favor the discovery of oil here. But it will take at least four years to make sure,

- . - A RELATIVE of the Span-

. ish royal family is being sent

as West Germany's first ambassador to Madrid. He is 66-

year-old Prince Adalbert of Bavaria. wii

acting

Subcom-

. powers to ratify peace

World Repori—

Allies Sweat On Reds So That It

Fate of Yoshida Hangs in Balance

Compiled From the Wire Serviees American officials are try-

ing to help Japan find a yardstick by which to measure its traga with Soviet bloc countries’. especially Red China, Peter Lisagor, Times Special Correspondent, writes from Washington. But the quest may take longer than Japanese politicians facing a general election this fall would like. The issue of the kind and amount of trade with the Communist mainland has become a political sizzler in Tokyo, with

Prime Minister Yoshida’s fate

possibly ‘involved. Japan's over-all trade picture also is clouded in those Western countries competing with Japan in the world market.

" To get a start on dealing with Japanese trade problems; a five-power meeting is being held in Washington among officials of the United States, Britain, France, Canada and Japan. They're seeking to set up machinery for. developing what one official calls “a mutual yardstick for trade with Communist countries.”

Purpose Is to Check

The whole idea 1s to check the flow of strategic goods to the Soviet bloc through export centrols * which will give no competitor an unfair advantage over the other, American officials are not yet ready to discuss specific items on the embargo list which . Japan. inherited from U. 8. occupation authorities, Mr. Lisagor says. : This list, many Japanese contend, is stiffer than othse maintained by other countries. It was patterned after the Amerfcan list of embargoed goods. Opponents of the Yoshida government in Tokyo are making a -great deal of the premier’s subservience to the

‘United States, and are wooing - financial

and moral support from Japanese businessmen

who favor expanding China trade.

Raiding Markets

Meanwhile, it'is in Yoshida’s interest to get a relaxation of the embargo so that he can counter the campaign of the opposition parties in the coming elections, says Mr. Lisagor. The Japanese have said they would like to have the control board, or agency—or whatever comes of the present meeting —Tfunctioning by September, or In time enough to have some action taken before the elections,

Japanese exports already are making a dent on British markets in Sputh Asia and threatening to do the same to French customers. The Japanese haven't really turned on the steam becaiise they have been spared a problem of earning dollars to pay for imported goods by their output for Korean War consumption, American officials point out. But the nervous businessmen foresee the day when this dollar bonanza will,end—and they want to know what their prospects are with China.

Free Germany

THE United . States became the first of the three Allied contracts with the West German Republic which will permit it to join the defense of Western Europe, President Truman signed a “peace contract” convention among Britain, France and-the United States and the German Republic, and a north Atlantic treaty protocol covering the raising of Weat German troops for integration into Western

TE EE Tn TE RE > .

wo

Europe's anti-communism defense forces. The Senate approved U. S. ratification last month. The British House of Commons completed parliament's approval of the contracts. But Queen Elizabeth has not yet signed them.

Egypt A MEMBER of the Egyptian royal family was selected by Premier Ali Maher and Gen, Mohammed Haguib Bey as president of the temporary council of regency. Prince Abdel Moneim is in his. late fifties and lives a secluded life in Heliopolis. His wife is the granddaughter of the last Turkish Sultan. Two secret- police bureaus whose principal =~ job was to crack down on political foes of ex-king Farouk were closed. The Interior Ministry -announced abolition of both its special bureau and the police political bureau. The two bureaus spent most of their time tracking down Nationalist, Communist and other political agitators considered potentially dangerous.

Czechoslovakia

URANIUM deposits have been discovered near the small towns of Pezinok and Grinava in Slovakia. ; The townspeople of Grinava have received a warning that they: may have to be evacuated for ‘military purposes.” Czechoslovakia has already one of the world’s richest uranium mines in Iachimov, Sudeten country. President Klement Gottwald

named two new cabinet minis- _.

ters in a reshuffle.of the Com=munist government, the Prague ladio announced. The post of minister of: heavy engineering went to, Julius Maurer, deputy minister.

A is cn THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

aot

ain

r

Josef Pospisil, a former Com-

munist railroad worker, became minister of railways, a new post,

France

AMERICAN officials hit the ceiling at French charges the United States has welched on aid promises, revealing a serious rift in Franco-U. 8. relations. They were particularly hot-under-the-collar at reports the © French may carry their grievances before the North Atlan-

"tic Pact high command.

France claims the United States has failed to come through with about $500 million in pledged defense orders for French factories. But Ameriian authorities say there just wasn't any such promise,

Great Britain

PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL, a sparetime artist himself, took a look at American Artist Douglas Chandor’s developing portrait of Queen Elizabeth II and pro-

nounced himself ‘deeply impressed.” The painting was commis-

“sioned by Mrs. Eleanor Roose= velt as a gesture of friendship in return for the erection of a statue of her husband in L.ondon’t Grosvenor Square. The portrait will hang in the British embassy in Washington.

Canada RUSSIA and her satellites withdrew their recognition of

the International Committee of the Red Cross and prepared to carry their fight against new ‘by-laws for the Red (Cross community to the floor of a plenary session. Gen. Nikolal Slavin, the chief Soviet delegate, and Madame Ii Teh Chuan, of Communist China, declared that if the new by-laws were adopted by a plenary session, they would not recognize the ICRC as an

POTOMAC PATTER . . By Andrew Tully. Bicycles Clutter Up Washington's ‘Veep Street’

WASHINGTON, Probably the most - famous neighborhood in Washington these days is out in Spring Valley, a section realtors would

describe as “comfortable.” It's an area of $25,000 to $35,000. homes, with neat lawns and garages cluttered with bicycles.

Anyway, these days Spring Valley is boasting the residences of both Vice Presidential candidates—Sen. Richard Nixon (R. Cal.) and Sen. John Sparkman (D. Ala.). They live within a few blocks of each other, and: only 'a few doors from a defeated Presidential candidate, Estes Kefauver,

Also in the neighborhood are the homes of Sen. Lister Hill, Sen. Sparkman’s Alabama colleague, and Rep. Charles Halleck, the Indiana Républican. It’s no noisier than most neighborhoods, though.

Aug. 2 —

Mad by Degrees ~~

Speaking socially, we're not

as mad at some Iron Curtain countries as we are at others,

For instance, not a soul from the State Department showed up a few months ago when the Czechoslovakian Embassy gave a party to celebrate the Czechs’ independence day. *But Dean Acheson sent three of his boys to the Polish Embassy shindig the other night. Protocol Chief John Simmons was. there, which took care of the formalities. But also on hand were James C. H. Bonbright, Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs, and Harold Vedeler of the Eastern European desk. The Navy also was being polite; it sent its third ranking

x

official Assistant Navy Secretary Herbert R. Askins: It was a swell party, as long as you didn't mind taking a Turkish bath with your clothes on. The temperature outside was 96 and inside, the EKmbassy had al the coziness of a blast furnace. Despite the heat, though, the free-loaders gulped down every drop of booze in sight, then made a rush for the buffet, where they stowed away

enough ham, turkey, sturgeon,,,

caviar and roast beef to nurture the population of Omsk for a month. By standing real close, you sometimes could make out what that three-piece string ensemble was playing.

Global Gwen

Oh, you won't .admit it, but I know ydu've been dying of curiosity, wondering what Gwen Cafritz, the hostess has

—een-up-to-—t ely eee

Well, you can step lying awake nights, because I've just

received a report from my Paris spy. She says Gwen is tossing

parties all over the Continent. Nothing but dinners, either, she reports. She says Gwen has had beaters out for weeks, runing down the best truffies and the finest guinea hen breasts and patede foie gras. Guests at Mrs. Cafritz’'s nosebags, she goes on to say, curTently are the best-fed freeloaders in all of Europe. Mrs. Cafritz also is quoted as saying every candidate she ever igave a dinner for was elected. But there's no use of Ike Eisenhower or Adlai Stev-

_enson rushing to Washington;

4 -

TT Met

Gwen won't be home until she’s done Greece and Turkey.

Better Late . . .

(yuests who were unfashionable enough to show up on “time for a reception for the War College's retiring commandent, I.t. Gen. Harold R. Bull, were put right in their place. They were made to wait 10 minutes out in .the

street at Ft. McNair before a squadron of ‘colonels under the command of Army Chief of Staff Gen. J. Lawton Collins opened Gen, Bull's door.

Even then, however, it took a long. time to-get into the house because there were so

many guests on hand the recaption line reached a half a block. Once inside, of course, You could revive yourself at two bars and a buffet where two white-capped chefs sliced up. ham and turkey so you could make “your own sandwiches, 6f thé guests “were Afmy brass and if vou were unlucky enough to rank “below major it was a good idea to.stand quietly in some corner and speak only when spoken to.. In all, there were 26 assorted generals on hand,

Recipe

With everybody. trving to

«Cool off. Sen, Margaret Chase

Smith” (R. Me.) has come forward. with an old-fashioned recipe she guarantees will send shivers down your spine. Sounds perfectly simple, too, go long as you have a couple

of free weeks to prepare the.

stuff, which is called raspberry shrub. You take four quarts of red raspberries; cover them with a

Over Handling Trade Embargo Won't Strangle

Japan

. HOW HAVE THE “MIGHTY FALLEN — Atlan. tico, the once-proud white stallion Benito Mussolini rode in scores of Fascist parades and reviews, now humbly pulls a sightseeing carriage around Rome. Immediately after the war, the 20-year-old horse was bought by a movie company and used in several films. Then it was sold to a cab service and until a few months ago hauled sightseers. Now, with little demand for horse, cabs, the owners of Il Duce's old steed accept any pay load, such as a load of

hay.

impartial international custodian of the humanitarian principles of the Red Cross and the Geneva conventions.

Hungary BUDAPEST cafes, restaurants and railway stations were being raided all last week by Communist police to discover some of the 8000 persons who had disappeared before they could be deported. Few were found. The population gave no assistance to the police,

South Korea

N A TIONAL "Assemblyman Suh Min Ho has been sentenced to eight years imprisonment for shooting a South Korean army captain. A milltary appeals court reduced the death sentence handed down July 1 by a court martial,

Colombia . THE foreign ministry distributed to correspondents of foréign news - agencies and

publications identification cards entitling them to fille uncensored news abroad. Correspondents must have the cards to file. A correspondent._who in the opinion of the

foreign office files erroneous*

or slanted dispatches loses the card and his filing privileges. Heretofore foreign correspondents worked under what amounted to unofficial censorship. But Foreign Minister Juan Uribe Holguin says that is all over now.

Australia

LIKE a man who finds he overstuffed, Australia has paused to “digest” 650,000 fmmigrants, . The government has decided to cut the intake of migrants in 1953 from 150,000 to 80,000 and also to ease off immigration the rest of this year. This marks the third cut in immigration targets. There are just not enough jobs, homes, goods and services to go around.

quart of cider vinegar and Jet them stand for four days. Strain, and to each cup of juice add one cup of sugar. Boil 15 minutes and bottle when cold. Then you mix one part of the shrub with three parts of water and you've got your thirst-quencher, You've also, probably, got into November.

Austerity

Economy Note: The Army now greets distinguished guests at National Airport with a 66-man infantry com-

pany, instead of the 156-man.

company formerly used.

Alias

Mrs. John Theron Coulter, wife of the (ol. Coulter who is deputy chief of operations of the Armed Forces special weapons project, is the leading lady in the play, “IL Found April,” at the nearby” Olney Theater. Luckily for the box-

billed under her maiden ‘name Constance Bennett,

Etc., Etc.

Officials of the Ceylonese government apparently believe in the old. British tradition of dressing for dinner in the tropices. Anyway, it was strictly black tie when Sir Oliver Goonetilleke, Ceyon's minister of agriculture and food, entertained at a dinner at the Shoreham Hotel. New ambassador coming from India. He's Ganganvihari L. Mehta, an ex-newspaperman, + + « First thing Sen, -Sparkman did when he got home from the Democratic Convention was to check up on how his lawn was doing.

Our Fair City—

fe

Pressure Is on | County Crime ommission

_ PAGE 21

‘ By The Times City Staff : PRESSURE IS BEING brought to bear on at least

two members of the Marion €ounty Crime Commission by a high city official to ‘lay off” in investigation. The screws are being worked in the meanest of manner . . . threat to job security that has nothing to do with investigation of crime which is spreading in

metropolitan area,

The two threatened vow they never will bend under the heat from this political source to protect their jobs. They also throw back their heads and snort fire when sources label them as “do gooders” without any sincerity

in their efforts.

Situation is building to climax which most likely will pop many things into the open that this political official and others in his stable would like to keep quiet.

MAYOR CLARK'S remarks about political activity by gamblers has brought a reply from Judge Phillip L. Bayt, his opponent in last fall's election.

Mayor told Marion County Crime Commission known gamblers have as much right to take part in politics—and contribute to political cam-paigns-—as any other citizen, But Judge Bayt, Municipal Court 3, declared: “No candidate for public office should receive any contribution from gamblers or racketeers, Such contributions can mean nothing but evil for the public and make for poor law enforcement.”

i ; Gamblers’ Woes THERE'S new trouble hrewIng in the already troubled plunderworld of city's gaming fraternity. And it is a woman who's kicking up all the fuss. She claims she scored a $1300 hit in one of the pools operated by a czar in the gambling world here’ and the Kingpin won't pay off. She is threatening to hire attorney. The gambler charges it was a phony, that the hit was made through a hook-up of the woman and one of his runners,

Cop Makes Friend

I'T- PAYS to hehave, Motorist driving north on Meridian St. followed another through red light. Motorcycle cop on other side of intersection signaled them to stop. First motorist took out for the greener fields, second went to curb and waited. Cop chased first motorist, took 15 minutes bawling him out and handing out. ticket, Then he went back and found second still waiting patiently. Cop was so happy to See second had not left he gave him a big grin, politely told him he was a bad boy and sent him on his way.

Escort Bureau

MOVEMENT of explosives by truck through Indianapolis worries police more and more as shipments increase. Not only dangerous (top of one truck hit underpass and stuck recently, scared everybody) but city ordinance calls for man-

power-short police to escort trucks, This takes an hour or more each time, and escort

calls average 12 to 15 daily. Chlef Ambuhl who sees pres-

ent code as benefiting only truckers, says: “It requires us to help them do something they shouldn't be doing.” Safety ‘Board still is trying to get City Council to make

the trucks bypass Indianapolis. Meanwhile, police lately take longer and longer to answer escort calls, causing truckers to delay. If trucks roll without escort, they violate the law,

Slight Delay

SCITY HEALTH authorities nailed up “Condemned signs on group of old housing units on W. Washington St. just west of White River bridge then took signs down again, Reason: They discovered Redevelopment Housing Authority

had instituted condemnation proceedings there almost a year ago, will raze structures this fall after court sets price agreeable to all. Meanwhile, people go on living in same ‘deplorable quarters, but feeling lis, “it's been that way for years, it can wait three more months.”

Too Much Mail

POST OFFICE peopie here are biting their nails walting for Army Finance Center, It will amount to some 1.5 million pieces a month, at minimum, with bulk falling within a 4-day period. . i PO can handle it, but it will cramp their style and call for use of more private buildings at rental rates, But they still are in midst of negotiations which - might result in change of Army mail plans. It would work this way, Instead of dumping the load into Indianapolis for distribution, it could be sent in huge lots, by zones, into post offices located close to military areas, Major reasoning behind such set up is that states are geared. to handle normal military mail coming into their districts. Washington brass will study situation.

Another Hurt

ANOTHER unreported slugging of an inmate of Julietta,

Marion County Home, has .

come to light. County Com- . missioners didn’t hear of it until the victim appeared before them on another matter, Then an 80-year-old man told how he was attacked in the hallway by a fellow inmate of an attendant. § showed a gash on his head and broken glasses to support his charge. He was unable to identify attacker, he said, because he couldn't see when his glasses were knocked off. County Commissioners have sat on their hands regarding case which came out shortly after court ruling which, temporarily at least, has thrown out new Jaw to take Julietta out of politicians’ hands. Commissioners are dead set against the law which city favors.

Manhunt

FACES should he mighty red around Sheriff Smith's county jail. Warrant was issued May 15 for a certain party. It was served July 31, But it wasn't served on the man until he turned himself in. True, there was a wrong address on the affidavit. But, according to the defendant, he has lived at the same address for the past six years. During the time he’s been listed in all * phone directories, the City Directory and the Indianapolis Criss-Cross telephone directory, He also went to work daily, and since the date the warrant was issued, he says he has been out of town only one evening.

Do as | Say SHERIFF'S deputies will hear a lecture on safe driving when ' four new patrol cars are delivered soon, Dr. Golden P. Silver, presi dent of the County Commis-

sioners, plans to deliver the talk. It's prompted by the r#sh of accidents involving

Sheriff's cars. “We're going to curb these cowboys,” Dr. Sflver said. Sheriff Smith has complained . in the past he has been unahle to patrol roads effectively because of lack of ears. County Garage Supt, James Powers reported five or =ix Sheriff's cars have been ine volved in accidents this year, one car twice. But -Doc might flush a bit during meeting. Recently he bumped up a county car a bit out on U. 8. 52 which is under repair. A matter of meeting some ofl drums used to warn motorists gf danger.

Well, They Might Try a Milk Bath

we office, though, Mrs: ~Coutter—fg——r——mrrn fo

A NORTH SIDE couple forgot to tell the milkman they were going on vacation.

‘milk in the couple's reliigers

ator. “0 3 They returned to find 19

. quarts in the réfrigerator and

‘A kind-hearted neighbor lady °

with a key to house put the

Y

another four souring in the milk box. anit Ey

He