Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1952 — Page 2

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PAGE 2

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Hammer Big Power Plant, Supply Center |g

By United Press SEOUL, Sept. 13 — Waves of U. 8. planes defiantly carried the Korean War to the doorsteps of both the Soviet Union and Red China today. Thirty-five B-29 superfortresses struck first with 300 tons of demolition bombs at northwest Korea's vital Suiho power plant, directly across the Yalu River from Manchuria. They reported “good to excellent” results, Then light Navy attack bombers from the U. 8. carriers Princeton and Bon Homme Richard in the Japan sea smashed at the northeast Korean supply center of Hoeryong, within sight of the Manchurian border and only 40 miles west of the Soviet Siberian frontier.

Barracks Destroyed

Navy pilots said they destroyed eight of 30 barracks in the center of Hoeryong and damaged all the rest. The United Nations command described Hoeryong, in the northernmost corner of Korea, as the “Manchurian border gateway from Russia.” On the ground, South Korean forces charged up Finger Ridge °! on the central front and at last & reports were locked in bitter hand-to-hand fighting with the Chinese defenders on the smok-, _ aa ing crest. One-ton bombs dropped| by supporting United Nations

siti Here's Where To Register

yards away used bayonets, knives | and rifle butts to repulse the fifth Chinese Communist astempt| in a week to recapture Capitol] Hill. Action along the rest of the hoards will visit Lawrence Town 155-mile ground front was con-ighip tomorrow. fined to patrols and light prob-| ing actions.

Attack Second of War

The B-29 attack on the Suiho| yen 2 and 9 p. m.: power plant and a dam. the] "Cusieion. Grade Schoo, ’| tleton. was the nd of the war. | Lawrence Central High School The first raid last June 23 E 56th St. brought protests in Britain and in| Lawrence Grade School, some other allied powers that ang, 46th St. assault so close to Red China's homeland might extend the war./jandon,

However, the United Nations

to vote in the Nov. 4 election don't put it off another day

sion for the new attack. It was the following sites: persumed Maj, Gen. Stephen|. School 21, at 2815 English Ave. Shoosmith, a British officer named, School 39, at 801 S. State Ave. as a deputy to Supreme United Nations Commander Gen. Mark] pect St. W. Clark as result of the furor over the earlier Suiho attack, lish Ave. also was notifed in advance. The Suiho plant is the Keystone of a tremendous hydroelectric) English Ave, development which serves not{ Store room, 2359 Prospect St. only North Korea, but also East-| ern Manchuria, the Soviet Siber- register in the Courthouse basefan port of Vladivostok, and ment. The Registration Board Soviet bases at Dairen and office is open from 8 a. m. to 10 Port Arthur. Ip. m. daily. The Air Force said Suiho was)

“ripe for attack” again and the! § Pranksters, Liquor

new assault was designed to shut : . the plant for good. | Jail Driver as Drunk NEW BRITAIN, Conn.--Jesse

Third Red Flees F. Atwater faced a drunkenness

opt charge today because five youths Into UN Lines {went out of their way to do him PANMUNJOM, Korea, Sept. 13

dirt. Police said Atwater had been

(UP)—The third Communist sol- drinking and was sitting in his| all| car.)

dier to flee into the United Na- automobile, The youngsters, tions lines from the Panmunjom Juveniles, reached in the neutral zone within a week sur- turned on the ignition and started rendered to two U. S. Marine the engine. Then they shoved Atcooks last night water behind the wheel and put Pfc. O'Neill Forbes of Berlin, the car in motion. N. H, and Cpl. Amiello Montie The car went a few feet and af Providence R 1 Ware ore crashed into another auto. When annoyed than delighted by their police arrived, Atwater was still catch behind the wheel, a bit be-

“ys i wildered, I'm not going to get up every _ =

Branch voter registration

If you aren't already registered venson ended his nine-day

Cas- Eastern states,

Voters in the 16th Ward will] : command sald the Joint Chiefs of find it convenient to register that took him 7600 miles through “Where the law has been violated, | 12bor union. : Staff in Washington gave permis- during the same hours today at 10 states, Gov, Stevenson made the Justice Department has. in-| . Mr. Dunkle, however, gaid he

Fire Station 3, at 1136 Pros-| Public Library, 1125 Spruce St. | English Ave. Boys’ Club, 1400 was believed he would make his

It you're downtown, you can|

Adlai Ends Trip West, Prepares to Tour East

By MERRIMAN SMITH

United Press Staff Correspondent

“But where Communists are {concerned — men bound to the

. 13— 4 lai E. Ste-!inist tyranny — we must root Sept 3—Cov. Adlai St | them out and expect them to bear

*'tour of the West today and ery to all that America holds

Visit one of these locations be-| Planned a few days rest before, dearest.’

{ The Illinois Governor also took | starting a similar tour of the a sarcastic SE

The Democratic presidential “shrill discovery of the Commu- » nominees was scheduled to leave nist. menace” saying that “three {here at 12:30 p. m. (Indianapolis/lon@#years”’ before Sen. McCarthy

8301 Time) on the return trip to his found the Communists the Demo-

| Springfield, Ill, headquarters cratic administration instituted a

Oaklandon Grade School, Oak-/aboard his four-engine chartered federal loyalty “system.

| plane. “We have prosecuted the Com-

In winding up his western tour munist leadership,” he sid.

{brief speaking stops at Phoenix dicted and convicted the crim-| rand Tucson, “Ariz, yesterday and inals:” rr { a speech here last night. | Following his Albuquerque After a few days rest in Spring- speech, given in the Highland] | field he planned to leave Sept. 18 High School gymnasium before

Fire Station 15, at 2101 Eng- for a tour that will take him into'an estimated crowd of 5000 per-

|New England, New York, Penn- sons, Gov..Stevenson attended a sylvania, Ohio and Indiana, It/ reception at the Hilton Hotel,

| first eastern speech in Connecti- | cut. {2500 in a downtown movie house, |Gov. Stevenson took note of the | meeting yesterday between Gen. Eisenhower and Sen, Taft by saying: “Now we have the spectacle of the candidate who won the nomination seeking out his defeated rival and begging for a kind word. I am. beginning to wonder who won at Chicago, anyway, and who my opponent really is. Maybe the Republicans now have a six-star General?” | Gov, Stevenson, however, reserved his strongest words for Sen. Jenner, the Republican Senator from Indiana, whom he described as having been promoted to “Eisenhower’s first team.” He reminded his listeners that

‘Salesmen of Confusion’

| In all three appearances yesi terday, Gov. Stevenson continued his critical appraisal of the Re{Publican Party and his political! opponent, Dwight ‘D. Eisenhower. Last night he denounced Republican “salesmen of confusion,” taccusing his opposition of twisting the issue of communism. Earlier, in Phoenix and Tucson, he accused Gen. Eisenhower of begging support from Sen. Robert A, Taft and adding Sen. William Jenner (R. Ind.) to his team. , While denouncing the utopia” offered by communism, Gov. Stevenson said “we must take care not to harm innocent people, “We must remember that liberals are not Communists, and that Socialists are not Communists and that radicals in the American tradition are not Communists,

“fake

George C. Marshall, Gen. Eisenhower’s chief during the war, “a living He.” “The only conclusion I can draw, therefore, either that the General agrees with Sen. Jenner -—and this I still doubt—or the|

night to take a prisoner,” Cpl Montie said. The same two cooks also had, accepted the surrender 24 hours earlier of another Communist sol dier who stole a Russian-built truck and raced it from a point south of Pyongyang, the North| Korean capital, through the truce] village of Panmunjom to the United Nations lines.

Seven more winners have col-

Seven More Get $5 ‘High Noon’ Awards

lected thir $5 prizes for their! Picture collected their $5 yester-

| Republican team is not going to win many games this next few| weeks, And this is the first time have heard a party go into battle under the slogan: “Throw the rascals in.”

Reports Armored Vests

Two of the five in yesterday's + ’ Saving Many Marines

voit rcled’ in Tha Times day: Policeman Jack Croydon,! WASHINGTON -—- Rear Adm. TTT pieiures creed In ©7625 8. West St. and Mrs. William Lamont Pugh, Navy surgeon H . High Noon” Photo Faces. H. Hull, 3760 Broadway. The general, reports that armored Catholic Theater Guild Identified in the photo which others in yesterday's photo have vests have saved the lives of To Hold Auditions appeared in Thursday's Times until 4 p. m. today to claim their many Marines in the recent bitter

The Catholic Theater Guild will Were: Miss Marjorie Townsend, hold auditions for its first play 2343 N. Pennsylvania St, an emof the season at 1:30 p. m. to- ployee of the Indiana Wholesale morrow at the Catholic Com- liquor Dealers Assn. in the munity Center, 623 E. North St Kahn Bldg; Mrs. Doreen R The production, directed by BPythe, 1126 Woodlawn Ave, and Jerry Vance, will be “Curse You, Miss Frances ‘Miller, 1723 Alton] Jack Dalton!” old- fashioned Ave, both employees of the Re melodrama. Auditions for “cleo” !ail Credit Co. in the Lemcke| acts, also to be directed by Mr. Bldg: Lucille Shawver, 1609 W : Vermont St., Marjorie Wentz, 526

Vance, will be announced later.

— —— KE

Fall Creek Pkwy,

bi. | ¥ ro Ls

Pp Ey ¢ Ve

© yesterday, you will ‘get $5 from The /

al. Ey : : a:

HERE'S FINAL ‘HIGH NOON’ PHOTO FACES—If your face is- circled in this "High Noon" photo taken of a downtown crowd | Times. You must identify ‘yourself at The Times by 4 p. m, Monday. :

prizes at The Times editorial fighting in Korea. offices, Adm. Pugh, who recently reThose in the picture appearing turned from a tour of Korea, said, |

today in The Times must identify 3 ai SeFtaly Lene ale many| themselves at The Times by 4 arines \ving ay who would p. m. Monday. be dead if they had not worn the The “High Noon” Photo Face bullet-resistant jackets.

The Army, which has been prizes are distributed by The A : Times and Loew's theater in con-| Orking on a similar laciet of ita;

: junction with Gary Cooper's SR design, recently ordered

movie, “High. Noon” which is curtently being shown at Lowe's.

its troops in Korea, * |

5 %

¥

A

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

U.S. Fliers Carry War To Doorst

the consequences of their treach-|

Comments on Meeting | In his Phoenix speech before charges he wrote a letter to CIO

Sen. Jenner had once called Gen. another.”

£5,000 of the Marine jackets for er, will address the Wheeler Mis-

Charge Family With Aiding Gl Deserter

| Federal

Washington St. All were acused of

Army for desertion.

arrested the soldier at the W

Accused in Holdup

{merly of 2115 N. Arsenal Ave.

conspiracy in the same robbery The indictment charges

jat the station at 961 8. West St

United Press Telephoto. {Conviction on the charge carries

_AIR FORCE TARGET—Thiz is the power plant at Suike which was blasted by B29 Superforts,

a mandatory 25-year sentence

hiding Frazier D. Taylor, sought by the

A family of three who tried to w| fight off the FBI arrest of their {ison and brother today faced aj Court hearing on a

An indictment against the trio |was returned yesterday by the | Federal Grand Jury. Named were | Frazier M. Taylor, 53, his wife,| | Ruth, 49, both of Evansville, and their daughter, Anna, 261914 Ww. |

}

Last Aug. 7 when FBI agents

| ‘|

Washington St. address, they! |said other members of the family tried to prevent it, starting what! was later described as a “scuffle.”|

In other action the grand jury| {indicted William Banks, 46, for-|

as an accomplice in the robbery of a postoffice substation. He is| now serving a three-year sentence] lin Leavenworth Penitentiary for|

flit him| EMERY. | with taking part in the holdup!

9 |

Wilbur Daugherty, the second

Bi |

|Steckler, Obscene Letters Charged

= | Ul | | John Henry Jenkins, 63, Brazil {was indicted on a charge of]

{ The word “Communist” written Brazil widow.

| importance into Federal Court |

here, |

Results of the case may de- her. { termine whether it is a criminal] The woman drove Jenkins

in an envelope address. {den officer listened to the conver‘sation. She stopped her car at

S y court here le tate wi a jury | Police headquarters where Jenkins

ai ins Earl D. Was arrested. indictment yisaimst accused of| Clifton Mourning, 40, of 1305 | using “defamatory language” in| English Ave, was indicted on a {addressing a letter to a major charge of stealing packages from : jan interstate Railway Express shipment last month.

RNR » - Postal Worker Indicted knows riothing about it. An Indianapolis postal employee {was also indicted, accused of

Indicted on 2 Counts He was indicted on two counts |Stealing $10 from the mails while

|

in the robbery, is already]

. {serving a 25-year sentence » {imposed by Judge William E

|

|

| writing obscene letters to a young]

| ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. service and defense of the Stal-{on the face of an envelope has| The letter writing victim rep {ported it to police, who hid | tonwids.. , who an| tossed a decision of nationwide officer in the back seat of her| car. She then drove to a spot| {where Jenkins proposed to meet

pe at Sen. Joseph offense to imply anyone is a/around the city for 20 minutes | 'R. McCarthy (R. Wis.) for his] Communist by including the word keeping him talking while the hid- |

|

{employed as a city letter carrier. |

yesterday, the second accusing yg, js Shannon Wallace, 37, of

him of unauthorized opening of [1361 8. Belmont Ave. |a government letter.

The indictment against Dunkle Military

offices in Kokomo, addressing in this manner:

| Two young men who refused induction for religious reasons face Federal Court hear: it |ings on indictments charging {them with violation of the Selec-| [tive Service Law. They are Donald|

“Communist International Or- | Hurley, 23, Covington, Ind. and!

ganizations Masquerading as The | john 1, Weaver, LaGrange. Comintern’s Little Brother, C.1O.,| Andrew Jackson, 22; Willie 1054, 292 685, 213 W. Sycamore, | Biggers, 31, and Jack Watt, 37, City.” {all of Evansville, were accused The numbers and initials which [in indictments of selling marifollow the word “brother” make |juana cigarets. They were charged up the legitimate address of the under federal laws which prevent union, said Charles O'Connor, as-'sale of marijuana without paying sistant U. 8. attorney. a federal tax. Mr. O'Connor said the “charges Trucks Stopped

against Dunkle are based on Al ILJo yd Kerber, 26, Madison, federal law prohibiting the use of sthpped tires, batteries and wheels

defamatory language on enve- from surplus military trucks he lopes.

{was under contract to deliver Defamatory language, covered from Camp Campbell, Ky., to a by the law, he sald, is that “cal-|qyartermaster depot in Pennsylculated by its terms to reflect vania, the grand jury charged in injuriously on the character of 4p indictment against him. “Loss [to the government totalled about {$1500, the indictment stated. | William, Patton, 30, Muncie, was charged with taking a stolen car across state lines. Attorneys

‘Implies They're Reds’

The government's case contends the address used by Dunkle/ implies officers and members of gai4 he escaped from the Muncie the union are Communists, {jail before the theft. The letter was’ mailed Mar. 19," pw, Indianapolis men were according to the indictment. lindicted on charges they drove Courts already have ruled thatstolen cars across state lines. falsely labeling anyone a Com-/rhey gre Leonard R. Ragon, 23, munist is defamatory. This is the ,¢ 1240 W. 30th St., and Lindsay first Indiana case which could yawson Jr, 25 of 3240 W bring a decision on whether the Morris St. ’ : label could be construed as a) criminal violation of law. Broadway’s liveliest column, by Dunkle also was accused of Earl Wilson, appears in your opening a letter from the Office Sunday Times. of Rent Stabilization addressed!

to a former tenant of his propA 120 BASS $ 50 The landlord and tenant were ACCORDION engagod in a rent overcharge dis- |} New ...o...... |

pute, Mr. O'Connor said, and Dunkle apparently opened the letter in an effort to keep abreast of his tenant’s position in the case. He obtained the letter while! employed as a city mail carrier, § the attorney said. {

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Mrs. D. V. Griffith, Bible teach-

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‘SATURDAY, SEPT. 13, 1952

ep Of Russia And China

Fight Against Crime... No. 4—

FBI Girls Spot Crooks Daily—By Fingerprints

By JOHN A. GOLDSMITH

United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 —The FBI located some 28 fugitives from justice today in a big government office building. It was nothing new. It happens every day. A group of bright-eyed government girls—who prepared for their ordeal with lipstick —put the finger on the law

evaders. They were armed with non-explosive reading glasses.

The locating took place in the deep filing cabinets of the FBI identification division. The agency serves as the nation’s central clearing house for fingerprint information. Police in various communities who arrested the 28-odd fugitives are being advised that their prisoners are ‘“wanted.” So are police in other areas who are seeking the fugitives.

The arresting police had submitted the prints of the prisoners as a matter of routine when the men were arrested. The FBI “search” showed that the prisoners were wanted else-

where. ~ » n

MORE THAN 10,000 fugi- |

tives were identified that way in the year which ended in June by government girls who are currently “searching” new prints at the rate of about 19,-

000 daily. About 125 million |

fingerprint cards — many of them duplicates—are now filed in the five-story office building. Prints are submitted by the Armed Services; by federal, state, and local agencies that fingerprint job applicants; by agencies _that request loyalty checks, and by police all over

the nation. Each set is searched |

and then filed.

A special identification section handles inquiries that pour

into the building by every |

imaginable communication — including a wire-photo receiver:

“These fingerprints, on the

axe handle, are they the same |

as these others of a suspect we are holding?” asks a small-

town sheriff, .°-. _..] “They are,” the identification

division replies, “and the man is wanted for robbery in four states.”

“A man with these prints jumped from the shrubbery and |

killed two strollers in our

park,” a big-city police chief re- |

ports. “Can you identify?”

In a matter of minutes the |

FBI sends the man’s name and the probable location of his

family, He had never been ar- |!

rested, but he was a. veteran and his fingerprints were in the

service files, » » .

IDENTIFICATION has its grisly side. The FBI establishes identity in about half the fire and floodcases where prints are submitted for bodies that cannot be identified otherwise. And the identification divi. sion is. constantly “searching” the fingerprints of unidentified dead buried: in Korea by military burial units. In about 92 per cent of the cases the FBI has made identification in the “killed in action” and “missing in action” files of the Armed Services. If you have ever been fingerprinted—in service, at a police station, as a job applicant— your prints probably are in the master file, If they aren't you can submit them—just for use in identification. About 46,000 private citizens sent in theirs in the year which ended June 30, (End of Series)

$548 Reported Taken In Two Thefts Here

Loss of $548 in two thefts was reported here last night, police ‘said today. { Julius “Henderson, 55, of 518 Bright St., said he put $480 in a icloset. last night and planned to take it to the bank today. He {told police someone took it. Mrs. Stella Matau, 5044 Alla. meda Road, told police $60 in dimes she kept in a beer mug jwas taken last night from the {Central Cocktail Lounge, 1833 {Central Ave. Mrs. Matau and jher ‘husband own. the place.

S—— —

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South Hears On Mi

By R United Press

Dwight D. ¥ centrite on a

the full treat lican preside: hour rail trip section of Ho While the 1 was to enabl to change fre another on- hi ord shows. th the St. Jose for the Demo the second lar Truman in an

Makes 2 Lake Cou Eisenhower m rear platform the South B Thomas E. D 000-vote Trum at Gary and |

Gen. Eisen] South Bend ai ter. He will speak from town, Republic Scott expected downtown er history.

Outside Lak

Allen Coun Wayne, where opens his Hoo:

Other |

Gen. Eisenhq through two counties witho Whitley, home GOP Gov. Ra as general

party’s nation a few weeks is Porter. G

2

The Eisenh Ft. Wayne ¢

Evansville for a.m. This is Mr. Truman c: County by 50( one of the tw 11-member Hc delegation — Benton—hails

Ie

The Brida

Barb:

EIGE, was tl by Miss 1 for her we

Steinberger The Very R Bosler was t ring ceremol Arc Catholic The bride Mr. and M Croker, 405 Steinberger and Mrs. FT Logansport. Miss Janet 8S. Pinkerton were the att were James Woodruff. s THE BRI beige silk re matching sl *dress. The b of deep beig quet was bi ivy and gold to her mothe book. ” A RECEP’ home follow was to prece parture on : the bride we and navy an Residence w Broadway, 1 Thursday. Both brid attended Bu Mr. Stinber Purdue Uni member of ority and | a member Fraternity.

Double W

Two siste wedding da gowns for a 9:30 a. m. ‘ti Arc Catholic Miss Hele: the bride Krug and } lagher was Stuart Sap