Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1952 — Page 5
23, 1952
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SATURDAY, AUG. 23, 1952
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 5
Lightning Raids Keep Reds From New Bunker Hill Asal
UN Fighters POLITICS IS WHAT YOU MAKE I .
Catch Troops Good Citizenship Is A Year-Round Job For $250,000 Damages
Off Guard
By United Press {
SEOUL, Korea, Aug. 23—| United Nations infantrymen| launched a lightning-like raid|
on the eastern front today and caught surprised Communist troops completely off guard. Allied fighting men crept up on Red positions south of Kosong in the early ° morning darkness and suddenly opened fire with | rifles, hand grenades and light machine guns. The raiding party faded back to its own line after more than two hours of fighting. An esti) mated 30 Communist troops were | killed or wounded. Delayed reports revealed that | 17 Reds were killed and 20] wounded in fighting north of | Korangpo-Rin last night. | Near the truce village of Pan-| munjom, United Nations infantry-| men dug in deeper on their hard- | won prize Bunker Hill after driv-| ing back another "Communist! probing attack. "Reds Lose 3000 Men The Chinese Communists, who sacrificed more than 3000 men in futile attempts to take the hill] last week, showed no signs of} making another costly assault. Elsewhere, rain and clouds Sov} ered most of the battlefront limiting action to minor patrol clashes. | American Sabrejets damaged two Communist MIG-15s late yes-| terday in a 10-minute dogfight south of the Suiho Reservoir in North Korea. Six Sabres had a tacked 10 MIGs near Re earlier but made no claims.
Auto Hits Train; 3 Hoosiers Die
Times State Service CROWN POINT, Aug. 23—| Three young persons were Lior
last night when their car plowad Voice of America taunted Soviet|
into a speeding
By JOSEPH
E. McLEAN
| THE effective citizen-politician will do more than worry
about primary and election campaigns.
year-round job to be done.
There is a
Either individually or as a member of one or more
groups, the year-round citizen watches and talks with his elected representatives.
He writes his Congressman when things are wrong. He also writes his Congressman when he does the right thing. A Congressman trying to fulfill his obligations is often caught in a daily crossfire from organized interest groups.” He would appreciate some guidance from the general public, which all too frequently, has nothing to say. © Following are 10 suggestions that may help the yearround citizen improve his effectiveness.
ONE: If you live outside a large central city, read a local newspaper as well as a large
metropolitan daily. The small newspaper often provides important news on the activities of your local party officials and elected representatives.
TWO: Have someone in your
{| organization keep a score-card
on the votes and other actions
| ‘of your representatives, or bet-
ter yet, persuade your local new. Spaper to keep such a score
Voice’ Taunts Wife Sues Mate Who | Soviet Chiefs
Asserts ‘Mortality Rate Is High’
By United Press
card. Learn the rudiments of parliamentary procedure. THREE: Attend your town or city council meetings or have your organization assign one or more members to that responsibility. Remember, in most communities only the special interest groups bother to be represented at budget hearings and other significant council meetings. The good public official always welcomes testimony from a group devoted to the general public interest.
FOUR: Get acquainted with your neighbors; discuss local problems with them; persuade them to take part in local political activity if they are new in the community, talk over such problems as good utility services, adequate garbage collection, etc. FIVE: Try to develop an understanding of propaganda techniques and the maneuverings of political leaders and groups. A program in the public interest is often blocked by the “yes, but--" technique, by honeyed words of lip-service, by crippling amendments offered ‘by “avowed supporters of a
. No. 6—
‘Learn to Compromise’
program, by repeated referral to committees, by the call for further study, and by a few damning emotional slogans that utilize the catch-words of democracy, unity, tradition, and the, .like. Look out for, the committee that is “loaded” in favor or against a specific proposition or candidate. Look out for the big-lie technique used. by the smear artists. Learn the difference between an idle statute and a law that is really being enforced.
SIX: Learn to compromise —not with your principles, of course—but in ways that will facilitate action by your organization. Group- action de-
Can't Remember Her
By United Press
BALDWIN PARK, Cal, Aug. 98} ronich. ” ghe said.
—Melvin E. Hewitt, 28-year-old | Navy veteran whose heart stopped | {for 15 minutes before a surgeon
“He loves to play the har-
of the few things he has remembered.”
Mr. Hewitt fell outside an El- diana Ave. employee of Radio massaged it back into action, has ‘monte bar last Oct. 2 and was Station WISH. Services 1 p. m.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 -The, been sued for divorce by a wife he ynocked unconscious.
doesn’t remember.
His mother, Mrs. Mabel Wer-| train near Crown leaders today with the question| ett said Mr. Hewitt's brush with
Point.
He was taken to a clinic, Were
|doctors pronounced him dead. |surgeon cut open his chest, on " an =
“That is one,
pends upon compromise. The individual who is uncompromising stands in the way of any effective action. The other extreme would welcome a totalitarian approach in which the rank and file follow a party line slavishly. In between these extremes is a system of self-imposed discipline that does not surrender freedom of thought. SEVEN: As a member of any non-partisan organization, help your organization to participate in citizenship development and action in keeping with its charter and purposes. In other words, don't try to lead a non - partisan group
{West Side Chapel. Crown.
Burial,
JOHN LEACH, 71, of 900 [n- Crown Hill Cemetery.
Tuesday, New Light Baptist dent of the Westside American
{Church. Burial, New Crown,
Local Deaths
MRS. VIOLA MARTIN (FRED), ' Rites Monier 45, of 949 Camp St. Services Mon-|
day, 1 p, m, Jacobs Brothers’ ing, 65, of 16 S. Harris Ave., will New be at 10:30 a. m. Monday in the
Cameraman Sues GOF
down the partisan by-ways, | x By United Press humiliation by beirg “forcibly as but try to keep before the WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 saulted physically and removed group fits civic responsibilities |—Stanley Tretick, United. Press from the convention floor.”
broadly conceived. Do your par- |photographer, today sought $250,- The suit said some 70,000,000 tisan work outside. 1000 from the Republican National television v lowers Witnessed HT nen Re Committee and its chairman, of it was published throughout (Arthur E. Summerfield, on the world.
issue, we are all politicians, | we can be good politicians only if we participate actively in partisan and non-partisan organizations. Politics but not democracy, has been for many a bad word. Yet in a democracy more people can take part | in politics and the people can have more influence on government than. under any other form of government. NINE: Remember to register | and to vote. But remember | also.that voting is not enough. Good government requires constant watch and activity. It is easier to watch your government at the local level. Your watching at the grass-roots should improve the caliber of the men and women who move on to state and national office. TEN: Finally, keep in mind that the individual voter is not a cipher. When he enters the voting booth he does it as an | individual citizen, While there he may re-examine his judgments and is capable of doing unexpected things. This puts the individual voter in a position of lasting significance. End of Series.
Anna Whiffing
/charges that he was “forcibly | assaulted physically” while trying] Marine Hero's Parents
to take a picture at the GOP na-| Will Receive Medal
|tional convention in Chicago, WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (UP) July 9. —A medal of honor will be pre The suit filed in federal district sented Wednesday to the parent court, said Mr. Tretick was of Marine Pfc. William B. Baugh {struck by Clark Springer, an al-| {who lost his life smothering an /ternate from Indiana, and then enemy hand grenade to save his by Chicago policemen whose comrades, {identity he sald he did not know. | The medal—the nation’s high-
bravery-—will be Mr. Tretick said in his suit that ot award for |he had started down the aisle of presented to Mr. and Mrs, Leslie
J. Baugh of Harrison, O., in the the convention hall to take a pic- veterans Administration's Brown
ture of a delegate who apparently Gieneral Hospital, Dayton, O, The (had fainted when Mr, Springer father is a patient at the hos'struck him and rendered him pital. {weak and helpless with no chance Pfc. Baugh was with the first Ito defend” himself. Marine Division in Korea when Then, the suit charged, the the Communists attacked a mo|sergeant - at - arms seized him. lorized column on the night of While so restrained, Mr. Tretick Nov. 29, 1950. As members of
charged, he was * » his squad piled out of their truck OT 3 "aliacked” hy to take on the Reds, a hand gre-
nade landed in their midst. Mr. Tretick sald his “body ab- —— peon—— sorbed two more blows by offi- : cers’ fists,” and that one Pd Film Actress Recovering drew’ a revolver but returned it| LONDON, Aug. 23 (UP) - to his holster after being re- Katharine Hepburn was recoverstrained by a reporter, ing today from an attack of Declaring that his suit wag laryngitis which threatened to “reaffirming freedom of the take her temporarily out of the press,” Mr. Tretick said he suf- title role of the Shaw play “The fered grief, embarrassment and Millionairess.”
Services for Mrs. Anna Whiff-
{Conkle West Michigan Street Funeral Home. Burial will be in
Mrs. Whiffing, a lifelong In-| dianapolis residence, died in her home yesterday. She was presi-
Our service embodies all that goes
to give that after-feeling of satis-
|War Mothers and a member of faction: the satisfaction ot
lthe West
Washington Street
Robert J. Kenealy, 21, who was, driving; Viola Mercier, Ethel Fuller,
of what has happened to so many death has left him In a world of|gyar, childhood recollections with no| with his fingers until it started
ain. 'cluding his marriage to his wite,| PeaUNE 28
15, and of their comrade commanders. 17, all of Gary, There seems to be a “high mor-
memory of recent past events, in-
were found dead in the mangled, tality rate”
among Red leaders, Delores, 21, of EI Monte,
and massaged his heart
He was in a coma for a month, |
Methodist Church. a beautiful tribute to a loved one
Survivors are her husband, Wil-|# {llam; two sons, Wally and Wayne,
CRAIG MIDDLETON, 55, of id W. Vermont St., apartment bulld-, {ing employee.
"yet no burden to those left.
vehicle. | The car was traveling parallel] to Ind. 3. It struck a Pennsyl-| vania locomotive,
|
Defense Area Housing | One-Third Completed |
the, Voice said, pointing to the| |disappearance of nearly half of| {the 139 top Communist leaders] elected to the Soviet Communist, {Party Central Committee in 1939. Intended primarily for Soviet ears, the broadcast was the first official Ametican comment on the’
{They were estranged before his |near death last Ooctober. | Mrs. Werrett said her son was) served with papers in his wife's, divorce action yesterday, but he aid not understand what they! meant. “He can’t even remember being
WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (UP) | Moscow announcement that the married.” she said.
~The government reported today
(first Communist Party Congress
that one-third of the 88,456 houses in 13 years will be held Oct. 5.
and apartments programmed so| far for 182 defense areas have been completed or are under con-| struction. The Housing and Home Finance
Agency sald that 10,735 dwelling Pointed out Tat ies Red piles
held in 1942, 1945, 1948 and 1951.
units have been finished and an-| other 16,332 are in the process of] being built in 152 areas. Housing credit controls have been relaxed in these areas to encourage construction because of a shortage of shelter for military personnel and defense workers.
Landlord's Hot Water | Is the Wrong Kind
CHICAGO, Aug. 23 (UP) Vito Salerno, 74, was up-to his neck in hot water today. His two tenants haled him into court for contempt because he ignored a court order to share his hot water with them. Then. his lawyer served notice . he would wash his hands of the whole affair unless Mr. Salerno connected hot water for the 'tenants.
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ~—Aug. 23. 195
|
Sunset 8:30
5:04
Sunrise Precipitation 24 hrs end. 7 20 a.m Total precipitation since Jan. 1 30.72 Excess, since Jan. 1 385
The following table “shows the temperature in other cities Station High Boston : “es 80 Chicago teinisriees 68 ‘> cert 9 ne! 3 8
Low 54 Cincinnati 51 leveland enver Evansville : . Ft. Wayne rearing i Ft. Wor th ‘os cine 101 Indianapolis . 4
3)
) 46
’ ha 89 81
Miami Minneapolis New Orleans New York Seis ewiys Oklahoma City ............ Omaha Pittsburgh San Antonio 8an Francisco .e 8t. Louis . Washington, D. C. ...
Vi
$ 7
8 12 8 i8 74
56
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bride, 16, and groom,
Soviet Chief Twitted
The Voice twitted the Soviet {hierarchy for calling the “lon, overdue” party convention,
conventions It recalled that Georgi M.|
Malenkov, who is frequently mentioned as
Mrs. Hewitt’ charged him with mental cruelty and habitual in-
of their two-year-old Lucinda.
daughter,
stopped might cause pérmanent! |damage to the brain.
Youngsters, Watch Your Piggybanks
Indianapolis
underworld ‘temperance and asked for custody stooped to piggybanks yesterday. ..,. gealer. Servic One containing $25 disappeared Monday, from her apartment, Mrs. Ruth Hcme.
| Cal. ond doctors warned then that the Stuart Mortuary. Burial, {lack of blood flowing to his brain] |Crown. "during the time that his heart was| s x =
HAROLD H. BENTLEY, 46, Ft.| { Wayne, former Indianapolis resi: dent. Services, 10 a. m. Monday, |
|Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel.
“won
HARRY MAGIDSON, 69, of 201 dlana and retired hard. months. es, 10:30 a. m.!
Tacoma Ave.,
Aaron-Ruben
Mrs. Werrett said Mr. Hewitt. gexton, 528 E. New York St., told brew Cemetery.
jnewspapers and magazines.
a politburo member|
Stalin’s successor, five years ago) Firemen Fi ht “found it difficult to explain why|
the present congress has been | {delayed for so many years. Then the broadcast added that
{another five years had passed
despite Malenkov's 1947 remark’ at Warsaw that Communist Party programs were “out of date and aould be replaced.”
Everybody on Wheels But the Preacher
MT. CLEMENTS, Mich... Aug. 23 (UP)—They'’ be rolling in the aisles tonight at the wedding of Muriel Jean Bishop and Arthur Stanley Beagle in the Arena
{Roller Rink.
It was at the rink that the 22. of Toledo, met each other and later became engaged. So they decided to be married there—on roller skates. Their parents, accomplished skaters, also will roll to the altar. So will the maid of honor, bridesmaids. best man and ushers. Only the Rev. Theodor A. Tunge, pastor of the Zion Evangelical and Reformed Church, will walk. He doesn't know how to roller- skate.
‘Rest Cure’ Ends
PARIS, Aug. 23 (UP)-—French Communist Chief Maurice Thorez
may return to France shortly from his almost two-year ‘rest cure” in Moscow, the French Com- , I munist Party newspaper, L'humanite, indicated today. Traffic Headache WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (UP)
--Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer estimates there will be a recorded hicles registered by 1952.
13,363.000 motor vethe end of
Blaze 1 Hour
Flames Destroy War Surplus Goods
Firemen battled a two-alarm blaze for more than an hour yvesterday at 824 E. St. Clair st. The building, Aero Mayflower Transit Co., leased to R. V. Greathouse, who used it as a storage building for war surplus materials. No one was injured during the blaze which sometimes sent flames shooting 25 to 30 feet in| the air. Eighteen student drivers attending a training class for the
moving firm were out of the build-!
ing when the fire started. Nor-
mally they would have been in|
session in the rear of the building but their instructor had called a 15 minute break.
termined and loss to the property |
and its contents not estimated. Burned were Mr.
store of war
was
Greathouse’s surplus electrical
wiring supplies and the building. |
2 Girls Seek to Keep Jobs by Falling. Asleep
TORONTO, Aug. 23 (UP)— Two pretty Toronto girls said today they're going to start staying
up nights and having fun so they
can fall asleep on the job in the daytime. The job is a suspended mattress ,with shiny stars overhead, and white fluffy clouds floating by. Anne Hooper, 17, and Nancy Fockler, 19, take turns trying to look peacefully asleep for advertising purposes.
painful ordea
us and let us tell y
For your convenience added a parking lot in home:
G H-HERRMANN
FUNERAL HOME ISOS SOUTH EAST ST.
« Mo. 8458
~ ® Many of your neighbors have planned with us the things they want when their own end comes . . .
thus forestalling a | to those they leave behind.
Our Pre-Arrangement Plan can bring peace of mind to you also. Why not visit
ou about it?
we have recently the rear of our
owned by the] was|
| Cause of the blaze was unde-|
It| Who left a ‘hospital only recently, police.
remembers things for only a few, (Claude W. Stamper reported the | minutes although he reads the theft of a child's bank containing
$3 to $5 from his home, 241 W.|
{Morris St.
| |
ilour sepury
dollars invested in a savings account add more dollars, Build a long term savings plan and watch it grow,
|
HH HAH
$
Plan your own Social Security now!
Railrnoadmen 3 LR rh RL ETT tA:
PLaza 5551
Services, 1 p. m, one grandchild, and one great-
New grandchild.
Funeral! Sanders Burial, Indianapolis He- | Stopped his car on U. 8. 31 south
Savings and Security. Home ownership Is,
Convenient Shopping.
Large Selection.
HISEY & TITUS CNloslicarrey
Accused of Passing $2000 In Bad Checks
Herman Sanders, 30, awaited |arraignment here today on charges of passing more than $2000 worth of bad checks in In-| Illinois In recent!
State police troopers arrested yesterday when they!
lof here. |
You Should Buy A Home
NOW-
in the long run, a more economical way to live. Your “rent” payments grow into a substantial equity and add to your financial security. Own your own home and retire in mortgage- free comfort and
security. ’
Comforts and Conveniences. A really suitable home of your own you will choose
for its convenient location as well as for the comforts and conveniences of the home itself. In your own home you are more likely to install additional details you really want.
Home shopping and moving are much easier in warm weather, And, The Times real estate ads are conveniently arranged, by the number of bedrooms and by location, to help you choose with ease the interesting homes you want to personally inspect.
The Times brings you a far larger selection of homes For Sale than any other Indianapolis newspaper. Many hundreds of these home values are offered EXCLUSIVELY in The Times. And, The SUNDAY Times has a complete section devoted to real estate and building news, as well as this large selection of home ads for your inspection.
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