Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 September 1952 — Page 3

9, 1952 ors

ears

r the Bureau that allowed cent gapital fits from his n Europe.” would have [T per cent.

Issue

1ade his ina day after last at Gen.

urday night, sed the forgly, twisted, ” of United

or-satd Gen. led “several mpaign issue in Korea, wal of troops venson said: isenhower’s) t that while "of the U. 8. f Staff adrea was of rest to the ecommended nited States try.”

apes rash

voman nary yesterday Ar jumped a d off a fire

suitcase the her hasty ed against at 2501 W.

driver, Louis W. 28th St., ide a U-turn, , appear in today on ness, drunk ing. disobeyaffic. signal ) a driver's

MONDAY, SEPT. 29,

ff &

1952

"Reds Base 2500 Planes U. 3. Planes

In China, Manchuria Hit Greeks

By United Press TOKYO, Sept. 20—Gen. 0. P. Weyland, commander of Far East Alr Forces, said today the Chinese Reds now have 2500 planes based in China and Manchuria.

Of these 1100 are jets, mostly!

presumed to be MIG-15s, Weyland said. The Allied commander told Irving R. Levine of the National Broadcasting Co, the buildup of

Ridgway Raps Airfield Lag

By United Press PARIS, Sept. 29—Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway disclosed a serious shortage of Allied air fields in Europe today and said the “rock-bottom minimum?” needed for defense would ‘not be reached even by next summer. The Allied supreme commander said there were two main reasons why the North Atlantic Treaty Organization lacked the facilities they need to hold off any Russian attack:

ONE—Gen. Ridgway himself lacks effective control of the logistics (transport) and supply situation. TWO—The difficulties of operating in foreign countries, including complicated inter-govern-mental negotiations. : Speaking at a press conference Gen, Ridgway singled out for special mention “French laws and the attitudes of French labor unions with respect to working hours, overtime and so forth, which has also presented problems to us.” It will be a long time before the Western Allies have enough

Gen.

the Chinese Communist air force| Y Mi appears to be ‘leveling off,” al- IS 4 p though the jet fighter total orld y resents a “slight increase over| earlier estimates.” | Air Force officials vetioved.

earlier this year the Reds had 1800 planes of all types beyond

By United Press SEOUL, Sept. 29 — Rampaging| American Sabrejets knocked So two Communist MIG-15 jet fightlers today and damaged two more the ¥aly River. lin a force of 150 which tried des-|

SE eh aihet. Fad perately to halt Allied fighter-| h : » i | said. He believes the peak was| bomber sirikes Jn northwest

reached three or four months ago. | Today's air victories brought

Gen. Weyland said the Reds) the Sabres’ September toll to 60 are undoubtedly constructing new \i1Gs destroyed, seven probably

airfields, especially in Manchuria. destroyed and 55 damaged.

“However, since our air opera-| : ’ tions are restricted under current| JOWever, the aerial victory was) partly offset by the tragic mis-|

licy,” he declared, “I am unable| ! po pola specifically on any take bombing of Greek infantry-| ¢ r | Sunday by four American]

new airfield constructi ide| men China or Ee Ss Tus on ing ® F-80 Shooting Star jet fighter-| | Gen. Weyland said also it is/Pombers. “well-known” that Soviet Russia The bombing forced the gallant is ‘maintaining modern fighter Greeks to abandon “Big Nori" hill]

bases on Sakhalin Island, within|after they had captured it in a -

sight of modern Japan, and in! bayonet and grenade charge and) /{the Kurile Islands. {beat off 10 Chinese counter-| | “The number and types of air- attacks. craft deployed on Sakhalin and] A Greek officer said almost |

time to time,” he said. “It is suf-|the top of “Big Nori” was killed

lity definitely exists there.”

lhad mistaken “Big Nori” for a|

For security reasons he declined nearby Communist-held hill. | to identify the new devices now| Op the ground, Red comman-| |being carried by F-86 Sabrejets in|qerg threw veteran Red troops and| | Korea, the existence of which was tanks into savage assaults at [revealed recently in Washington. (jpijted Nations positions along a| | “It is too early to state as yet jo.mile front last night and early] |the degree or value of improve-/;,qay. They backed their attacks| {ment,” he said. The Communist with thunderous artillery and| MIG-15 jet fighter, he added, has| ,,rtar barrages. {received no basic alteration or im-|

{provement | Reds Silent

Gen. Weyland was asked {if

{there are any “immune” targets) On Truce Offer

remaining in North Korea, such |as the Suiho cower plant and the] PANMUNJOM, Korea, Sept. 29 {Aoji oil refinery, which finally|(UP)—Red China and North were hit by United Nations Korea were silent today on three |planes. |new United Nations proposals

“I do not consider any military|for breaking “the Korean truce

in the Kurile Islands vary from every Greek soldier who got to| !

[ficient to say that an air capabil-/or wounded. The shooting Stars

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

big, 0

amt

PAGE 3

'UN’s Toll Of Red Jets In Korea Hits 60 During Month |

{

| {

"PLAY WAR" CASUALTY—Fred Brooks is attended by Riley Hospital Nurse Louise Mattingly. The |4.year-old boy was injured by a shell which killed his playmate, David Thom.

‘Dud’ Explodes in Teeners' War Game; 1 Dead, 1 Hurt

The bazooka shell wasn’t really Methodist Church for the Thom

{

“dead.” |boy. Burial will be in South Lawn But a little boy is. {Cemetery, Dublin, Ind. A shell long regarded as a, He is survived by his parents,

“dud” exploded yesterday, killing Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Thom; four 14-year-old David Thom and in- brothers and a sister; Pfc. Carl juring another 14-year-old New Thom, with the army in Korea; Palestine youth, Fred Brooks. {Paul, Indianapolis; James, Jo- | Fred was reported in fair con- seph and Mary Beth, all at home,

in the other six rooms will be completed in December for pupils in grades)

New Warren

School Opens |

Opening of a new grade school in Warren Township today eased the classroom shortage somewhat, but parents still were not satisfied. | They charged still another school was needed nearer the city limits to meet: the bulging school enrollment. Today, 280 first, second and third graders took up their stud-| jes in the new Warren Township| school at 8500 E, 10th St. Six rooms were opened to pupils|

$650,000 structure. The,

four, five and six. The new pupils were drawn] from the other township schools to relieve the acute classroom] shortage. | The opening allowed 137 pupils!

attending classes for the past two | {50 persons jammed the PSC hear-|

Plant to return to Shadeland{ing room.

weeks at the Naval Ordnance

School. More Pressure

Meanwhile, disgruntled Shadeland School parents were heaping pressure-on Township Trustee Charles F. Kohlmeyer for construction ‘of still another school.

A spokesman for the parents charged the school is overcrowded and a fire hazard. The parents are preparing a 1000-namg¢ petition demanding the trustee close an option on a 12-acre building site at 30th St, and Ritter Ave. They want a new school built by September, 1953. : Unless the building site is acquired at once, the parents contend, it may be lost since the option runs out next month,

Site Suggested

The parents also are offering an|

Crash Injures Boy On Way to Hospital

A T-year-old Ft. Wayne boy was injured slightly today when the taxi he was riding in was hit by two cars at Michigan, and West Sts. The boy, Thomas McMillen, was taken to Riley Hospital for treatment.

Teen Drivers Get Works

Teen-age drivers drew adultsized punishment in Municipal

The cab, driven by Thomas E.|Court 4 today, Rutherford, 23, of 3705 N, Illinois] Warning that youthful offendSt., was struck by cars driven by ers are as dangerous as adult Joseph A, Cameron, 72, 3317 N.i traffic law violators, Judge Scott New Jersey St. and Wilbur Mey-| McDonald handed out heavy fines ers, 59, of 6045 Central Ave, jand in some instances jail sene ————————————————— tences to four ‘teen-age defend-

" ants, | One 18-year-old, Dale A. DuJunie, 1326 DeLoss St. was in

court today after his sixth arrest for a moving traffic violation in a little more than a year, Charged with reckless driving, he was

On Phone Sale fined $25 and costs; sentenced to

By TED KNAP 10 days in jail and his license

What may be a long battle over|Suspended six months. farmer Se TNE to in- Given 10 Days vade the rural telephone business opened today before the Indiana] AlsO sentenced to jail 10 days

|was 18-year-old Robert Denny, Public Service Commission. About| oo S. Union St. charged with

driving without an operator's li At stake is public or private Seas and Srseeying an auto. |ownership of 13 small telephone|Matic signal. companies. Service is reported] Denny told Judge McDonald he |poor, they are losing money and|has been driving two years withthe owners are ready to unload Out a license. He was fined $25 them. land costs and sentenced to jail The Hoosier Telephone Co-oper-| On that charge and was fined $10 ative, Inc., a nonprofit organiza-| ANC COSts oy disobeying an auto{tion of farmers ‘who have been|Matic signal. 17, of 1103

Charles Cullivan promised a federal loan of $6.6! » million, is asking the PSC for Kappes St, was fined $50 and

{costs and his license suspended gh a mpanies. lon days after officers testified he

{was traveling 60 miles an hour like the federally-sponsored rural|’o® electrification system. in a 30-mile zone in the 3400

Opposing public ownership is a block of Fall Creek Blvd. group of subscribers who favor Must Pay Own Fine private operation. They have be- Warnin , g the youth's parents hind the scenes backing fromiy.: cunjvan is to pay his own

prviate telephone utilities, includ- fine, Judge McDonald placed the

ing Indiana Bell Telephone Co. Howard W, Miller, Attica attor- yous Ang pokation 50 a =

ney, said he understands private). , ont driving while your license telephone companies, especially is suspended you may as well

alternate building site nearby./Indiana Bell, are willing to buy

|

bring along your toothbrush.”

{dition in Riley Hospital today,

{

air bases, Gen. Ridgway said. | On the logistics and supply sit-| uation, he said it was difficult] enough for the American services themselves to co-ordinate things, and much more difficult to co-ordinate work of the 14 NATO countries. “Gen. Ridgway’s statement came on top of a French-American dis-

target as immun€ from attack,” deadlock, but indications were the he said. “Our target is a dynamic/ Reds would reject it. one that changes almost daily., The Peiking and Pyongyang We watch various targets andiradios did not mention the offer time our attacks when we think made Sunday by Lt. Gen. William

{it will hurt the enemy the most.” K. Harrison, chief United Nations

truce delegate. He suggested the Reds take 10 days to give it ‘“mature and careful” consideration. There was neither pessimism

5 More Hoosiers

0K's Highway Building Plan

{with leg and eye injuries received when the youths’ make-believe |“war” suddenly became grim reality. It Was a ‘War’ ‘Game | The two boys were “playing war” in the front yard of the {Ferdinand Rode home, R. R. 1, New Palestine. Main prop in

pute on air bases in this country. American soyrces charge that the first three combat air fields in France assigned to the United States Air Force are inadequate. : The French call this charge exaggerated but admit that repairs will be needed before speedy American jet planes can use the fields.

Home Robbed $197

An evening out cost James H. Taylor,” 31, of 1034 Udell St,

$197 and a 32-caliber revolver last night. When he and his wife returned home, he found burglars had entered by an unlocked Tear door,

Wounded in War

Five more Hoosiers have been

nor optimism in the United Nations truce camp at Munsan.

\their “play war” was the bazooka | Highway Commission recom-|

{shell which a member of the Rode |

mendation that counties be per-

wounded in Korea, the Defense Armistice delegates sat back to

Department announced today. wait for the Communist answer The men are: Oct. 8 the next scheduled meet-|

mitted to receive more federal aid for construction of new roads and bridges. The program would triple the

family brought back from Camp Gordon, Ga., several years ago.

The shell, regarded as “dead,”

ARMY Pfc. William J. Frankenberger, son of Mr, and Mrs. Sylvester J.

ing—or before then if the Reds reqtiest a meeting.

{had been used for target prac(tice, had holes shot in it and had |

number of county roads eligible for federal funds on a 50-50 basis

MUNSAN, Korea, Sept. 29 (UP) —Chinese Communist front-line of Mrs. Mary L., Greencastle, troops seized and held prisoner MARINES for seven hours today three AmerCpl. Robert L. Garrison, son of ican goldiers who accidentally Mr. and Mrs. Clarence L. Gar- moved in a jeep outside the 1000rison, Logansport. yard radius neutral Panmunjom Cpl. Gerald S. Harvey, son of armistice zone. Mr: and Mrs, Glenn C. Harvey,| The soldiers were returned unFt. Wayne. {harmed after a meeting of ComSgt. Douglas 8. Kier, son of Mr.| munist and Allied liaison officers. and Mrs, Kenneth M. Kier, Lal The Reds insisted on a receipt for Porte. {the men. :

Frankenberger, Evansville. Pvt. Curtis G. Miller, husband

{been run over by cars, neighbors | ¢ sharing costs with the individsaid after the tragedy. lual county. David threw it as a ‘“rocket| State Highway officials said |charge” but as the shell struck federal approval of the request is {a nearby tree it exploded, spray-|practically assured. {ing both boys with shell frag-| Marion County would have its Iments and blasting out two win-|eligible roads increased from 52 |dows in the Rode home. | miles to 159 miles. This would David ran across the road and ‘cover most of the principal roads lcollapsed in a barn lot, dying al- maintained by the county. | most immediately. Fred fell County governments have been {wounded by the shell. using only about 10 to 20 per Services are planned at 10 a. m.|cent of the federal funds .availWednesday in New Palestine able. One of the chief reasons is {that roads now eligible. do not need new construction. Mere maintenance does not qualify for the 50-50 federal aid. Marion County's federal aid quota for the current year is $54,400. Total for all Hoosier counties is $1.8 million,

Egypt Chief Off On ‘Whistle Stop’

By United Press CAIRO, Sept. 29—Egypt’s mil-

itary” “strong man,” Mohammed Naguib, today carried his fight with the powerful and defiant WAFD party to the Nile Valley in a “whistle stop” campaign of a bitter anti-British nationalism. Mr. Naguib, who has demanded the ouster of WAFD leader Mustapha El Nahas for alleged abuse of power while serving as premier during the anti-British riots of last spring, urged tumultuous throngs who turned out to hear him to forget partisan differences in the fight against the British, The general who made himself premier decided to take his case to the people after the WAFD had defiantly refused to oust the aged Nahas and had challenged his power to force a party reorganization. He obviously was determined to steal Nahas’ anti-British thunder and win nationalistic support for his own efforts and government.

Gas Kills Trucker WEIRTON, W, Va.— A body| found Sunday in a parked truck] has been identified as that of Lloyd L. Kerber, 26, of Madison,

They said a 16-acre plot could be acquired for $20,000, about $5000 more than the other site. The parents have held two meetings in the last week on the school housing problem. Another is scheduled for tonight to discuss the petition. Harold Kohimeyer, brother of

new E. 10th St. school. STRAUSS SAYS:

{the 13 tottering exchanges. Another teen-ager, 16-year-old

| “This co-operative move to buy these telephone companies is a dangerous socialistic tendency,” | Mr. Miller said.

| He has‘asked the PSC to cross

examine Hoosier co-operative wit{nesses later and also seeks a con{tinuance of the hearings to let

Gov. Schricker today approved, the trustee, is principal of the him prepare arguments against

ithe public ownership invasion.

James L. Moore, 2632 South eastern Ave, was given a suspended jail sentence, fined $25 and costs and placed on probation 60 days on a reckless driving charge.

Keep up with fashions with Betty Locher in your Sunday Times.

1

Ind. Kerber apparently died. of] monoxide poisoning after he parked to sleep on a trip from] Zanesville, O., to Camden, N. J. |

A [Bvely basket of gifts awaits you as an expression of goodwill trom public spirited focal merchants if you have just moved to the city, are a new Mother or have moved within the city. There's nothing to buy. No cost or ebli‘gation. “Arrange to receive these ye i Call your Welcome Wagon ostess whose phone’ is listed below.

Welcome Wagon

New York @ Memphis @ Los Angeles

3 Toronto Fi. PHONE TA. 2796

Tisshoe Wing Tip 23.95

GENTLEMEN—WE GIVE YOU

TISSHOES +

and Tisshoes give you an enfirely new luxury of comfort on Earth!

There are no other shoes like them—none! (They are made without an inner sole!) And yet they fit—and hold their shape marvelouslyl

The upper is attached directly to the Sole—{no innersole) less bulk—a new flexibility! (You can bend a Tisshoe double easily)—lighter in weight—a new luxury of ease— and yet they give perfect support——and SMART!

A Personal Note When Tisshoes first appeared about a year and a half ago we couldn't believe it! We tried them out—in service—amonyg ourselves! After our own fry-out we announced them to our patrons—and the results all around were so enthusiastic—=that we present them—with real pleasure—for you—Quite a few are here—now!

MEN'S FOOTWEAR=First Floor Mez i

Mezzanine £0

‘ er & a ;