Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1952 — Page 16
.
PAGE 2 :
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
iw
SU
U.S. West Unable ~ ToDo More At This Time
. By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 30—The Btate Department said today it is (Mdeeply disappointed” at Iran's| pefection of President Truman ‘amd British Prime Ministq' Win-| #fon Churchill's personal plan to| a the dangerous Anglo-Iranian/
dispute. 4h an extraordinary joint met Mage to Iranian Premier Moham-| ‘ed Mossadegh today, the two| Western leaders proposed a five-| int solution calling for major tish concessions and a $10 miltion U. S. aid grant. { But the aging Premier promptly | announced in a special radio broadcast from Tehran that he would reject it outright.
Cites Peril of Coup
|
5 Mr. Truman and Mr. Churchill | 2
made their bid to end the fester-
head off a possible Communist a0up. | U. 8S. officials sald Mr. Mossa~ iegh’s action increases the danger sf such a coup, or at least ecoaomie collapse. They sald they didn't know what else the West could do immediately to ease the situation. The department said it wouldn't somment further until it has received more details on the rebuff from the American embassy in Tehran. Mr. Mossadegh said he would call both Houses of the Iranian parliament into special session to draft a formal rejection.
Hope for ‘Break’ State Department officials sald they still hoped there might be “a break” or that the Premier] might have a “change of heart.” They said they really had hoped he would accept the plan.
The White House had. no im-| nediate comment. Iranian officials sald Mr. Mos-| sadegh objected to submission of the question of compensation for the seized British oll industry to) the International Court and to the smallness of the U. S. ald offer. | He also was sald to object" to antering into a “partnership” with the British Anglo-Iranian Oil Co.| to market Iranian oil. But oM-| cials here said he apparently is “reading more into the proposals| that he should” and that some of the differences might be ironed out.
tention of accepting.
the average American.” in Gen. Eisenhower's latest “cru-/sight of Manchuria when 100 Smoke-Eaters He added: sade.” |MIGs battled 79 Sabrejets high “Mr. Average Américan may They are organizing “Ike Cara- above the Suiho Reservoir on the Cured on Ham have some coins in his pockets vans” composed of young voters! Yalu and over the Communist city Six fire trucks, motorcycle that jingle-jangle-jingle. But ask to drive into Indianapolis Sept. 9 of Sinuiju farther south. _|IMrs. American how much those for the General's rally at Butler! In the ground fighting a United policemen and the polics emer |colns will buy when she goes pjeldl : Nati trol killed or wounded ency squad, all with sirens wall- " . nis ° Kleldhouse. ations patro d | gl | shopping. 30 Communists in a 55-minute |
ing, came to a screeching halt In front of Kingan & Co. early| last night. |
Billows of black smoke rolled|While touring the State Fair. A ,.,,)is newspaperman, has been]
from the plant as firemen dashed |candidate opposed by Democratic
Then the aroma hit them and Schricker.
inside.
the hook and ladder boys turned slightly sugar-cured. The packing company was smoking hams.
Shot During Quarrel | NEW YORK —Harold Lake, 33,| shot and critically injured his wife in a quarrel early today | while their two children slept in|
another room. i
ing’ oil wrangle in an effort to »
[nery and improved technical pro-| The Premier was reported “re. cesses should make this the Youth for lke ceptive” when the plan was out- Golden Age for Americans,” Sen. | lined informally to him Wednes- Jenner declared. “But when you Keith C, Reese, co-chairmen of day but apparently he had no in-/study the facts, it becomes ap-|the Youth-for-Tke Committee, are| parent that no Labor Day in manyispatking a drive to enlist young! years ever looked more dreary for men and women all over Indiana began late in the afternoon within |
By United Press (Guard Republicans” as “fright-|
SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Aug. 30—| 004 bon “triohtened by progress|
and they want to march back-|
of U.S. Troops Abroad
jov. Adlal Stevenson tonight urged American troops in Korea ‘and Europe to cast their absentee ward Into a comfortable and i {ballots for him for President to safely Republican past that no| prevent ‘“weak-kneed” Republi-|longer exists and cannot be dis-} |can policies from bringing this interred.” lcountry closer to World War IIL |
jot a program to keep American, ,..i,rs and hoping to stem the soldiers and sailors abréast of the rip-tides of history by damning
|political campaign. mocrats.” | Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, | th De
GOP candidate, was given the! same privilege. Mr.
released by his headquarters here domestic policy’’—would mean, ltonight. l“hot only disaster at home, but| < . Men' | disaster abroad.” | Called ‘Frightened Men “Perhaps we can afford the| The Democratic nominee re-|ittle America’ policy of the jected the idea that a third world|jjttie, frightened men,” he said] war is inevitable as so much| ith a note of sarcasm. “familiar Communist talk.” But\we don’t need strong friends and| lhe expressed fear of what might | good neighbors. |happen internationally if the Re-|iq 1¢ really up to any mischief. hublicans win control of the gov “Perhaps if we let him take | . “ Korea, that is all we would have | He characterized the Old | ranted—just as Hitler had only
j= A F lone last territorial demand—only|
{one, that is, before he was ready | | to launch the bloodiest war in his-| tory. Perhaps we can all relax! and go to the ball game—all of us, that is, except you.
By United Press sian roulette with all our futures. TOKYO, Sunday, Aug. 31—The pe Democratic Party is not a afraid to ask the s|people to do the hard jobs that
United Press Telephoto.
A FRIEND IN NEED—Mrs. Peggy King, assistant probation | officer of Ft. Worth, Tex., entertains "Little Miss X," found aban. [Communist Air Force suffered doned in a Ft. Worth tavern last Tuesday. The woman who aban. [crushing defeat Saturday when R doned the little girl is believed to be from Waco, Tex.
Political Roundup—
Says Americans Gyped ‘By Truman Inflation’
By IRVING LEIBOWITZ * line a giant Labor Day celebraBen. William E. Jenner declared tion in Petersburg tomorrow. here last night the average Ameri-| It is sponsored jointly by the
skies in strength in a futile effort in the wisdom and backbone of to halt the blazing new allled an informed people.”
aerial offensive. oi American F-86 Sabrejets again proved their mastery of the air almost in the Communist backyard and shot down five enemy MIGs and damaged 12 others, one of which was listed as probably destroyed. J The Red Air Force was goaded into action by the four-day-old ffensive which left the North
can is being “swindled by the United Mine Workers, Petersburg © in Truman inflation.” businessmen and Pike County Korean capital of Pyongyang The Indiana Republican's re- farmers,
marks on wages obviously were, Plans call for a colorful down- and power plants a shambles. aimed at workers celebrating town parade In the morning and| But the appearance of the Red Labor Day tomorrow. a plenic in the afternoon at Horn- fighters gave the American pilots ||
“New inventions, better machl- aday Park. their biggest kill of the month. The next largest was four MIGs
destroyed and nine damaged on Miss Barbara A. Corbitt and|Aug. 5. : - 5 30 Reds Wiped Out
The series of aerial
| ruins, and enemy communications | {
battles
Blish Appointed
Tours State Fair
Sen. Jenner made his remarks Tipton Blish, a former Indian-
for re-election, he is
| |
First Arrest Hic—a Fair
Fairgrounds police have picked, up one man for being drunk. He| was—but is no more—a Fair-| grounds police officer, ! ” ” » STATE POLICE have been] checking the State Fair for such vice and gypping that you can expect when several hundred, thousand people are out for fun. : So far, police say, it's been like | a church social.
Take pickpockets. The slick- s fingered boys just love milling hoasts highest percentage of lean women. crowds, but so far police reportimeat in the steak and roast seconly two pocketbooks lifted. On tions.
the other hand, 12 purses and wallets have been lost, some still! not claimed, Four plainclothes officers have been looking for known gamblers | around the horse race track. So! far, no pickups.
One Midway game has been|and eight others hurt, four eriti- shooting. getting the sharp eye from police. cally, in a three-car collision on It's a sort of auction, possibly|Ind. 3 five miles north of here.
with betting involved. Bids run
to $5, $10 and $20. The operator|ler, 36, Montpelier, Ind., and Mrs. ‘is cleaning up, and police say it|Flossie Lowe, 34, Gadsen, Ala.
smells a little. But the pitch is so fast and smooth that
thing illegal to it. “suckers” seem to love ft,
~ » ” MIKE (last name unknown), a| 3-year-old Indianapolis boy, isi
champ of the wandering children{¢our soldier aus; 3 s s when he smashed haus; department. He was lost twice in|into the Lowe car. The soldiers ments committee. (were hurt, none seriously. |
the same day.
~ ” » FOOD CONCESSION operators are griping about a price squeeze. | Before the Fair opened, they were paying 80 cents for 100 pounds of ice. Then, when the crowds poured in, the “ante” was boosted to §1 per 100. Some use more than 1000 pounds a day. ¢ Polar Ice Co. which has exrlusive rights to sell ice to State: Fair concessions, explained .the boost was needed because extra, high-wage help had to be added.
tJ ” . ONE PERSON who can't read this item and another, who can't hear you tell him about it should be interested. 0]
William McMaster and Mrs. Two dolled, Eight Hyp [Ton Ss *eneiairnen, Go : ( & . - au Kei retary of the Hayes Stellite Divi- J In 3-Car Crash Palmer K. Ward, chairman, | : 3 cen Ty and Rufus Kuykendall and H, §°n of 1 nion Carbide & Carbon HARTFORD CITY-—TwWO0 per- n.ja Brown, in charge of the le- Co. in Kokomo. He was Indiansons were killed’ Saturday night gal department and trouble- apolis secretary. of the Con-
police| band and their three children! haven't been able to pin any-|were taken to Blackford County!co-chairmen, veterans committee. And the Hospital here in critical cond!-| tion, They were Bobby, 3; Caro-'captains. lyn, 10, and Anita Fay, 12.
Church, 70, Lafayette, was killed tee. yesterday when her auto was| struck by a Wabash Rallroad| James Gregory, Willlam McMurtrain at a crossing near Buck|trie, Ben Hatfield and Thomas Creek, state police said.
li AR) <a >
Lr’ re, one 2 a '% \
ow
8a Ss = tae.
To
dawn fight west of Chorwon. Both| sides uséd heavy mortar and artillery fire before the allied! appointed publicity director orjpatisl returned to its own lines. GOV. tha Schricker-Watkins Good Gov-| Flsewhers along the front ernment Clubs. several United Nation patrols Hitting out at federal taxes, y;. Rian, 958 N. Pennsylvania fought up to 25 minutes with ComSen. Jenner asserted: St., formerly worked for the In- munist squads. a Soukle Sele IPA dlanapolis Times, Louisville Times Bhi) 4 and Ti | they started with withholding tax." yya ine MARIAING Hann's rh Reds Protest They figured it was a wonderful ype. id pry Si ® way to rob you even before you ingly Division im W orld POW Casualties got paid.” Ww Dan Kibler, state director of . Phi Ls | PANMUNJOM, Korea, Aug. 30 Watkins to Speak the Democratic clubs organized: pn; nen, ‘Nam. 11, chiet Comhs . to elect Henry Schricker Senator { John A. Watkins, Democratic and John Watkins: Governor munist truce delegate, today procandidate for Governor, will head- rads tio a solntment last nl ht. tested to the United Nations the , PI : BNL. death of one Communist pris-| ° | s |oner and the wounding of- 26 at Fair Name GOP Committees {others in Allied POW camps. —— Mayor Clark, Marion County| mpg North Korean general reg-| Republican chairman, announced|(qtered the protest in a note * appointment of these campaign panded to United Nations liaison icer committee chairmen and mem-|,rricerg at a brief sub-delegate bers after a party organization| { 2 {truce meeting. meeting Friday night: | : representing progress of beef In- Hoyt Moore, assistant county Allled “authorities announced dustry. chairman. | three more Chinese Communist First is a buffalo, main source, @G. K. in charge of| Prisoners were wounded Thursday \ lin a camp on Cheju Island.
Johnson,
of meat during covered wagon headquarters and registration. | ; days. Mrs. Walter Pritchard and Mrs,| The report brought’ casualties Next is Texas Longhorn, popu- George Jeffrey Sr., co-chairmen, | Within United Nations stockades lar for half a century as main speakers’ bureau. to a total of six Reds killed and| lr source of steaks and beef roasts.. Willlam Sparrenberger, 11th 80 Injured during July and The hardy Longhorn could forage District chairman, and Quentin
miles for food and withstand long F. Burgess, chairman, Young Retrips to shipping center. publicans. Modern favorite is Shorthorn Mrs. Lucille Mathews and Mrs. steer, squat and compact. He Hoyt Moore, co-chairmen of
Noble Pearcy, in charge of absent voters. :
August. ate seinb——————r————— Frederick L. Secord, Dies at Kokomo | |. KOKOMO—Frederick IL. Secord, businessman here, died at his home yesterday at the age 0 of 67. 0 Mr. Secord was assistant sec- Al
trilers Institute of America. { John Ticusan Jr. and Jack In-| Services will be 2 p. m. Tuesday nis, co-chairman of committee at Rich Funeral Chapel, Kokomo. The dead were James P. Chand- for checking registration. Burial will be in Memorial Park.|
Mrs. Mabel I.owe, chairman, Surviving are his wife, Mrs. land Otto Lee and James Wads- Rhoda G. Secord, three children, H. E. Lowe, the victim's hus- worth, labor committee. (Mrs. Robert Anderson, Mrs. James Birr and Thurl Rhodes, | Jesse Ricks and Frederick L. Secord Jr., all of Kokomo, a brother,
Noble Dean, in charge of block Harvey Secord of Ontario, Can-| Mrs. Katherine Adkins
ada, and seven grandchildren. and a ——— —— — _— Mr, Josephine Reardon, co- | John Ruckels- i | i] and arrange- | nro ow |
empted to pass a car occupied by chairmen, and For Fall Term
meetings Think of this! In four or five weeks ao beginning stenographer will earn in salary” an amount equal to the entire cost of stenographic training; eight weeks of earning will usually repay training costs for secretarial and beginning accountants. The cost of other courses can be met in proportion according to their length.
Y.M.C.A. WELDING SCHOOL
Electric and Acetylene Office open 830 to 4:30 o 6:30-9:30 P. M. Monday through Thursday | Eovviltatan, on mathation: fo
| Term begins September 8. Bulletin on request. Phone or write Registrar
Police said Chandler at- Miss
Edwin McClure, chairman, and George Johnson ; and George
LAFAYETTE — Mrs. Viola Heiney; election night commit-
James Stewart, chairman, and|
{Hicks; publicity committee.
—— 1
Beginning Tuesday, September 2 Enroll now
Y.M.C.A.
‘310 N. Illinois St. PL. 133}
| them {brought to Sasebo, Navy rescue ships.
; in
Avoid Capture As Tug Sinks
By United Press
That Stalin
By United Press NEW YORK, Aug. 30—A sup-
Iporter of Gen. Dwight D. Eisen{hower for President pictured the)
‘General today as the “one person in the world
TOKYO, Aug. 30—Almost 100 above all others
| “I must say,” he added, “that|pattled the sea for seven hours| | The Democratic nominee made it frightens me to think that such|after their ship was sunk by a| a 2500-word broadcast to mem- men might influence the fate o® Communist mine rather than | 'bers of the Armed Forces over-ithe nation, At home and abroad swim to the nearby North Korean | {seas on time made available by they are champions of a ‘Little shore and certain Red capture, {the Defense Department as part, nerica’ huddled behind its ocean survivors said tonight.
crewmen of the Navy tug Sarsi Whom Stalin fears.”
The statement, made by Sen. Irving M. Ives (R. N. Y.), was| jssued from Gen. Eisenhower’s| campaign headquarters in re-| sponse to a charge by Jacob A. Malik, Soviet delegate to the {United Nations, yesterday that
Two crew members died and {ho Republican candidate pro-
Ninety-two survivors, seriously injured,
Japan,
three were listed as missing Inlposed to plunge the world into a {the sinking of the 1589-ton tug|‘mad arms race” and unleash a He also expressed the convic- only three miles off the Commun-{third world war. Stevenson tion that a GOP victory in NO-iist port of Hungnam Thursday. made a tape recording of his talk|vember—"a change to a rampag- The ship sank in less than 20 Eisenhower is but another posisome time ago and the text was|ing reactionary Republican|mnytes,
“Malik's indictment of Gen.
tive proof that Eisenhower is the
four of one person above all others in
were/the world whom Stalin fears,” by | MT. Ives said.
| “More than any one person in the world today, Stalin—as rep-
The explosion had damaged the | .esented by Malik—hates peace.”
Chief Bosun’s
“Perhaps tug’s communications equipment.
The Soviet blast at Gen. Eisen-
Mate Donald hower was principally against the Perhaps -Stalin| Hertz of San Francisco said his retired General's speech before men were bailing out their life the American Legion last Monday
boats when the ship started to|in which he said there could be sink so fast they leaped into the no lasting peace until satellite sea and started swimming to|countries had been freed from the
avoid being pulled under.
“I was holding up one man hop-| ing he wasn’t dead,” Mr. Hertz said. “But toward morning one of the men without a life jacket]
began weakening fast.
“The only course I could see]
: WS Heels | “The Democratic Party doesn’t | open was to take the dead man’s] think so. The Democratic Party life jacket and give it to the man 4 |
| thinks that would be playing Rus- who still had a chance. I hated
to do it.”
{Kremlin’s domination.
Pledges to Labor “Gen. Eisenhower outlined in
this recent American Legion speech the foundation for a sound and lasting peace,” Sen.
Ives said. “It is that to which Stalin now so violently objects. “The attainment by Gen. Eisenhower of a peaceful world would
The other casualty, Mr. Hertz be the one result that Stalin can
American said, was in the same group.
not allow to happen, because it
| “I guess he actually talked him- would mean the end of Soviet ag-
| lin his life jacket and died.”
on Indiana’s ow
y CN ® iy
. « » 100 years old r=
and sill
\
Kore have got to be done to back you self into it,” said Mr. Hertz. “The gression and his own destrucfighters swarmed into the Korean ,.- ¢5. we have unlimited faith|chances for survival seemed pret- tion.” ty small, so he just leaned back
Mr, Ives anticipated that
sr a
NDAY, AUG. 31, 1952"
Officials Fear Red Coup After Iran Rejects Oil Accord Stevenson Bids for Vote 100 Crewmen lke Declared THE Man
Most Fears
paign Gen. Eisenhower would be the victim of “cruel, savage and
|despicable attacks” because of the |Soviet fear that his election would
bring a peaceful world. Meanwhile, Gen. Eisenhower promised labor that he would not seek to coerce it with laws if he is elected President, but added that he would try to serve the worthy interests of every group of Americans. The Republican candidate vowed in a Labor Day “pledge to the working men and women of America” that he would lead the nation along the “broad middle way” to peace and prosperity without setting off any group of people by class. His test of every policy, he said, would be: “Is it good for America?”
lke Calls on Baruch
NEW YORK-—Elder statesman Bernard Baruch declined after
Eisenhower today to name his choice for president but he added that when he looked at the General, “you can tell I don't hate him.” The GOP nominee dropped in at Mr. Baruch’s Fifth Av, apartment at Mr. Baruch's in. vitation. Mr. Baruch, a lifelong Demo: crat, held a similar conference with Adlai E, Stevenson, Democratic nominee, earlier this week.
Baby Electrocuted
EFFINGHAM, Ill. — John B Scott, 14-month-old son of Mr and Mrs. James Scott, was elec: trocuted when he touched a faulty lamp and a radiator at the sams time while playing on the floor
throughout the presidential cam-
%
or ed
growing!
For_ 100 years it has thrived like th
in his home.
we pin a congratulatory blue ribbon
Fair
e tall corn of th i i
# $5 v
\_ serves. Froni~pickles to. Percherons ao from tatting
7
to threshing machines, the State Fair parades its festive thow-
f of-many-sights.
/ This year's gala Fair Week ......
Thursday, August 28 to Sa
£9
é
in the Women
All times
* Sunday, August 3! Xa and Monday, September | through Friday, September 5 “ov l
} ’
Saturday, September 6 oh 11:30 ‘a.m..and 13:00" tC :
. Praising home ond harvest, it's
3
turday, September, 4
i a 4 3
See Ayres Fashion ‘Shows
's Building, Feirgrounds
are Daylight Sav gi
3:00 and [700 pm 3 - pm
AT _HOME IN INDIANA'FOR,80,LYEARS 1872-1952
conferring with Gen. Dwight D.
a
SUND
BL
Cou Tol Gen
Marion the line 2 next yea posed 18.
An ecc is expecte cents fron meets Tue budget. The new set at on Year's 59, come fron levy. The sta proposed sioner Gol cleared up at a State flood of e knock it o Sl The cou county’s | slashed sc requested | budget, it The tota 709,799. A major come in re county job of budget set a ceilin; hikes next None wa budget, exe to bring ¢ checks up The coun: year, inste: are justifie Biggest : County Co prepared b; reductions Commissior in the Co $106,000 in Home budg The cour with disfav bitious plar ing for fo tions, pain supplies. The ‘co traveling s will find hi get punctur ‘A reques for 10 addi them next reduced to men. During last week, called in t He lowere: cars but s; 10 new me The six ¢ two he has to spot two four distri That ver plained, he on patrol down and ing used f to state ins Thr “We don for the peo at all,” Sh Concensu that the 1 after it wi Smith, his
‘chief jailer
which are duty. Other big include $69, Center Tow P. Warren, Clerk H. and $23,000 Commissior
Hersc Retire
Herschel the Divisio: diana State retire tomo
Mr. Wri
formation cards ig an introduced largely thr
‘practice of
tificates wa
Youngs Polio B
Youngste of Park A benefit va Kirschbaur oi Some of of the she Sheila Br} Connie Zi and Carol
Junior |
Contest BLUFFT Junior Mis be held he! Climax o ton Free § select the talented t diana. La Janice Bur Top priz $50 and $:
Polio V Are Fin NEW Y( sis cripple get jobs t persons, I of the Ins and Disab at the A Physical }
