Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 July 1950 — Page 5

Y 4,190

lonous id out about it s played. in the ainted with all ompany makes dvertising and

your particular into the whole rocess. Think ore efficient, If

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artment. Have ns to offer? If , ss would wel« hem on to him, ability to fore

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HARNESSED ER COLE ELLEN EERE EEA E TEAL EEE IADR ERE EEDA LLALLLE OEE ELLER TREND

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TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1950 .

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Seen in Korea Show Chinese Weather, Yerwein:

Free Forces Abandon Suwon, 20 Miles South “Slow Down Battles

~ Of Seoul, Head South in Orderly Retreat

(Continued From Page One) ,of his forces “will be treated in

worse terrain for tank warfare. Korea is a land of $6,000

‘capital, Monday and “killed and Principles applied by and recoginjured many persons.” They Rimes by Siviiied nations indro more than 600 , the! V° n armed conflict.” Piped ? bombs te) “I will expect similar treatment

sald. | The North real sald Amer-| for American nationals and mem

the rainy season and it usually lasts through early September. In World War II the great tank

le.

|divides the. Russian-sponsored

Yanks Rout Red Forces Hildiey Koreans, Separale Roce, In First Korea Action After 53-Hour Battle

History Begins With Founding of : Tangun Dynasty About 2300 B. C.

By Science Service’ : WASHINGTON, July 4—At the entrance of many country By United Press _itowns in Korea can be seen curiously carved posts, representing There isn't likely to be any the $ ve Fain: generals. Thise fendrals are supposed to prevent the = tzkri en o spirits from the five po of north, east, south, west } hs iby Rares by sither Tog and center. It must be said that the generals have not done too, tacked Pyongyang, the northern cordance with humanitarian {good a job for Korea down through the ages. 4 1

I h { particularly right now. This islg uare miles and about 25 millioniand rocky. The Han, however, ri Less than half the land/Which just about bisects the

bel lel, whichjcountry below the 38th. parallel, 1s low the 38th parallel, whic ean be navigated for 150 miles.

km. Bungalow, Decision Weighed

Real Bargain (1 Sewege Plant coir ons, LOW DOWN PAYMENT | Both. Sides Finish |vnen miitons ot motorists wit

5-Rm. mod. bung. built in ‘dl. : . - {when millions of motorists will. me © priced accord- Injunction Evidence [head home at the close of the. Both sides finished presenta-

i ty, 6143 Hillsrde. See it. LI-440i. gins REALTY. INC.. Realtors . | four-day holiday week-end.

Influence

ot tion of evidence yesterday in _.a 585 Killed ’ a f you are looKing for hearing on a temporary injunc- 5 vs : a a S5-room bungalow [tion in the Speedway Sewage| Since 6 p. m. Friday, 504 pers. & which can be purchased Disposal Plant case in Superior sons had died in all types of accle

4t a real bargain price and exceptionally low down payment, invastigate the home advertised above. It's just one of

(Court 2. . |dents. In addition to the trafia’ | After three days of hearing victims, they included 113 who witnesses, Special Judge Edward were drowned, 14 dead in x M. Slocum said he would view the . wned, airplane se e © crashes, two heat victims and 99

{proposed site of the project to-

yang yesterday.

‘Jean planes also raided Pyong-|

. Seek Identity of Planes An investigation is under way to determine the identity of planes which blew up a Seuth Korean] ammunition train and strafed American infantry Monday, the spokesman said. One American was wounded in the foot. Several witnesses sald the planes bore Australian Air Force symbols. However, the spokesman said the bullets recovered from the strafed area’ were - definitely North Korean. This raised the

bers of armed forces of the Unit-

commanders, such as Gen. George North Korean Republic from the! '

ed States, as well as nationais/PAtton, made lightning sweeps American-sponsored South Kore- Geaut Rite Marks |

and members of other armed forces who may join the United States in the Korean conflict and who may at any time be in North Korean hands,” Gen. MacArthur] said. ie : “Operating” pursuant to resolutions adopted by the United Nations Security Council and as commander of forces placed under my commands by such resolutions, .I will hold responsible]

any individual acting for North! Korea who deviates from these). There may be even more seri-|

down the hits: - -

around the enemy-flanks. It was an Republic. But more than two-| a fast-moving, fluid war with the thirds of the people live below the situation changing eveiy hour. But in Korea the tanks have to o 5 wallow through mud. The coun- ROfe4ns are itryside is dotted with innumerable rice paddies: and when the rain falls they turn into little lakes. In| the hilly terrain the roads simply! strains.

disappear and in their place ap-ip 4p the Chinese and Japaneselters. : ipear freshets that come

Independence Day

More than a thousand Hoosier

crucial parallel. presumed to be of | the Mongol family although no/Boy Scouts participated in solemn one is quite sure. There have been Independence Day ceremonies toadditions to the original stock of day where the men who fought to, both Caucasian and Malayanisecure that independence once They are distinct from/camped through two harsh win-

bubbling yn appearance. | They ie part of the 7000 Scouts) To Y. {from District Seven, Indiana, Ili 1050-Year Dynasty ‘ Inois, Michigan and Wisconsin, Korean history began with who along with 40,000 other {Scouts from throughout the na-

Typhoons in August |

the HUNDREDS of home bargains, from every section of the city and suburban areas, ad.vertised in the classified columns of today’s Times. Daily and Sunday, The Times now brings you the: GREATEST SELECTION of homes for sale! . . , plus farms, building lots, in. vestment properties, Yes folks," The Times is now

the, newspaper with the

REAL ESTATE ADS!

|morrow along with an engineer and an attorney from each side, | “I expect to reach a decision {tomorrow afternoon,” he said.

Fight Plant Project | West Indianapolis citizens and

{members of the Tibbs Ave. and {Eagle Creek Civic Association

dead in miscellaneous mishaps. tory was predicted at sunset as

they deserted last . Saturday. Railroads ' scheduled 46 extra trains, ; A heavy stream of tourist traf« fic boosted 's death

{brought the injunction to pre-

|vent the start of construction of tion. The state listed 45 persons ° {the proposed $445,000 plant by/dead, 29 in traffic, nine by drown= : a -— ett wa rr {ing a ind ~miscellaneous -

[Speedway City.

= The plant. has been proposed

count. fo the highest in the na-

and seven in accidents, Cars were

on a 75-acre plat of land owned be lined up solid for eight miles ‘by Speedway City. It is located tonight, waiting to be ferried

The greatest traffic jam in hise’

New Yorkers return to the city:

possibility that the North Koreans|principles or who causes, permit€ious handicaps to the armies if| somebody named either Dan Koon might be using allied markings or orders any deviation from such to confuse Gen. MacArthur's principles.” 7

forces. . yi No American air strikes along] Marines Await the front were announced today) te / because the air effort has been di-| Sailing Orders rected to ‘more strategic targets,”| / the spokesman said. i Announcement Issued First announcement that ‘American ground forces were in! action came from Gen. Douglas Kérean war front.

' . {rainfall is 40 inches. {when ~Ki-Tze Macarth Ube neadguaries di The Marines were marching in| There are few good roads in China with several thousand fol-|

kyo. { Sa | .|a‘holiday review at Camp Pendle- Korea. Two all-weather highways lowers. a Bak, afteshoon om ten yesterday when word cameiryn southward out of Seoul. One| which lasted another thousand infantry action since Japan's sur-/ {rom Washington that the divi-goes southeast to the port of years. The name Kore render in August, 1945: {sion was ordered to join the Far Pusan and the other one due south|from the Koryu dynasty whic “United States Army forces Bastern command. through Suwon. All other roads lasted from 918 to 1382 A, D. went into action late yesterday Bris. Gen. Edward Cras, a5. in Korea are almost impassable China Influence Strong for the first time in the unpro- sistant division commander, said when there is heavy rain. A rail-| voked invasion of South Korea” the 7000 men and their 1000 ve-iroad runs northwest from Pusan By noon (9 p. mM. Monday, In-Dicles would be ready to boarditoward Seoul and reports indicate fluence of China on the culture of Po) ship in 24 hours. He sald he ex-ithe Americans are using it to/the Koreans was quite marked. pected official word to move “atmove ground troops.

sweep across oF

i hoons RY a oe If that dynasty which lasted 1050 years,

{the Korean Peninsula. “ |happens, the fighting will come la standstill,

3 | { LOS ANGELES, July 4 (UP)—|yiginility have handicapped both 8innings of a religion. {The famed First Marine Division, tne American and the Korean, There was no name two Air Force B-20 units, and a communist air forces. The sum- whole peninsula in those days. It!

dianapolis - time), North Korean)

they are still fighting next month./or Tangun, who began his ruletion,

t ’ -iof the country in either 2257 B. C.[Forge, Pa. for the National Scout [August 1s the month when occa-/0f hS COURIEY IR €or a Tan paree. ‘Husband Shoots

to/He taught the uncivilized people'visit from President Truman, {of . Korea agriculture and the art/honorary president of Boy Scouts of building and introduced the be-'of America. The Heavy cloud Wastes ani Joo welcomed by Gov. James H. Duff for the of Pennsylvania.

léatherneck aviation wing await-| mer weather in Korea is hot and received a name which probahly/section of the camp include scout-

ed fina) orders today to head for | something like Chosen &'S muggy and the average yearly sounded nS eed trom France, Austria, Germany, Nor-

way, Canada, Mexico and several N. Riley a dynasty South American countries. Re ; sportsmanship and fellowship of a is derived the youth stands as an example hito their elders in the United Natio

{the jamboree are this time, the in-{3908 University Ave., Troop 4; During all . t Harold Marshall, 1126 Trowbridge St, Troop 3, and Morton H. 3 Another Literature of the higher class was/Goode Jr, 2540 Boulevard Place, The victim's mother witnessed) Cucaracha was second,

lat Little Eagle Creek 700 feet across the straits-of Mackinac. {south of {ts intersection with Ver- rT

Imont St. 'Sits on Bench While

. | Stanley Lawton, attorney for . Wife Fatally 7 ithe city sald: ‘Harris Serves Term : SULLIVAN, Ind. July 4 (UP)

: . “The city” has been planning! An irate husband fatally shot this thing for a long time. This! _Joe W. Loudermilk will sit as his wife last night when she re- really -the best - location for judge pro tem of the Sullivan Cire fused to leave his mother-in-law’'s it.” leuit Court beginning tomorrow home and return to their own Lewis E. Marine, attorney for while regular judge Norval K.

are encamped at Valley The jamboree opened with a scouters were

Delegations at the international

the remonstrators said: Harris is at the residence. — a e ‘State Penal from England, Scotland, - Whitley. 2¢. of-1402|. The proposed site adjoins a Farm. Quinetis Whitley, 2% -e “city park, and is the center of &| Harris was sent to the farm

Ave, died of several The! wounds in her head shortly after police arrived at the home of her mother, Mrs. Georgia Barnes,

fine residential district. There for 60 days last month by the must be better places where they| Indiana Supreme Court for cone could build.” |tempt. He appointed Jesse Bed

> : {well as acting judge, but the ape ns. 4934 E. Elliott St. Wins Yacht Race

|pointment was voided and Mr. ~(Loudermilk was appointed by a Among Indianapolis scouters at| _ The husband, Maurice, 28, who,/ SAN DIEGO, Cal. July 4 (UP) panel of the sheriff, clerk of - George = Gill, police said, admitted firing the —Al Frank piloted his yacht An-/ court and county auditor. fatal shots with a revolver when gela to victory in a handicap race! Mr. Loudermilk testified for his wife refused to go home, was|for the Commodore Bowles trophy the state against Harris in the arrested on a charge of murder. yesterday. John Washington's La contempt hearings before the Suwith John preme Court, while Mr. Bedwell

flanking columins had driven to Pungdukchori, 15 miles northeast of Suwon, and to Kumyangjang, 25 miles east and slightly south

of Suwon. | North of Suwon, enemy tanks! had driven to Anyang, six miles! Away. He said the road south! of Suwon was filled with South Korean soldiers retreating in| trucks and other vehicles. i Still. farther east, front dispatches said, another Communist] column threatened Chunjet, 70 miles southeast of Suwon. | Seize Russ-Built Tanks { Front reports reaching advance | American headquarters - said the South Korean forces captured four Soviet-built tanks and four armored cars at Chechon, 87 miles east southeast of Suwon, this morning. It was the first! time that the tank-shy southern army has captured any enemy) armored vehicles, | . Although enemy troops at Chechon and approaching Chunjet apparently were limited in num-

bers, front reports said a column! issi i totaling nearly 1000 men ‘wan For Missing Writer

moving toward Wonju, 52 east of Suwon, in an apparent attempt to split off the South Koreans in the Suwon sectors from any rescue forces farther east.

any moment.” At March Air Force Base, the Seoul to the coast, but it is in although an ingenious 25-létter 22d Bombardment Wing was Communist hands,

U. S. Deficit Only’ $3 Billion

I ‘WASHINGTON, July 4 (UP)—|Japan. The Japariese paid for be sent 10 South Korea to bolster, federal overaent ended these favors by trying to conquer |

readying three squadrons of B-29| Superfortresses. Thirty B-29s are assigned to the group but Air

Force spokesmen refused to say)

how many would go to Korea. | The aircraft carrier Boxer may

U. 8. forces battling to halt the! Communist invaders, it was indi-|

cated today in a" dispatch’ from Washington.

The big warship was expected DaPpens. The |Afreraft Wing being sent to Gen. bY the Treasury last night was| 00 oo a= vine Koreans pro-| Douglas MacArthur's Far East $3.211102357. President Truman/,,..4 an samiral with a little of headquarters and to serve as their had told Congress just six monthd| oo aneis Drake in him and a base of operations off the South 280 Sl .00.000. OT A4ir for inventions. This admiral, The 92d Bombardment Wing at The actual deficit was less than | . at Spokane, Wash,, Air halt as large as the gloomy saz Sad saval also was preparing its B-29s for billion forecast by congressionall =. gs... final orders to proceed to the Far economy {three months ago. | Nevertheless, it pushed the na-|, ., jnyaders off from their transtional Set dy J257,315, 555.01 ‘ports and finally routed and deita a child in the fon i oyed the Japanese: navy. ue t ; ‘| Koreans n't see the Japa t 9 ARE § SUCCESS, N. Yo July 4 ae per capita debt alone rose by again for another 300 years. : [{UP)—The Un ations Cor-| :

to ferry units of the First Marine!

Korean coast.

East.

Ask Lie to Aid Hunt

| respondents Association last night!

Lie to ascertain the whereabouts

} i

The afternoon communique re-|0f Maurice Chanteloup, Korean)

ported that American B-26 light correspondent for Agence France

Bombers hit a railway overpass seven miles southwest of Seoul and strafed troop concentrations. The communique credited] American and Australian fighters with destroying or damaging 13! trucks, a bus, a half-track, two!

armed jeeps and a freight train among newspapermen, He was

in the Seoul area Monday. F-80 Shot Down An American F-80 jet Shooting | Btar fighter was shot down by, an enemy tank eight to nine miles north of Suwon, the communique, said. the plane exploded when it hit the ground. . The North Korean government radio sald American bombers raided Pyongyang twice Monday,

dropping 800 bombs and “indis-|

Presse, and obtain his release if]

Communist North Koreans.

Mr. Chanteloup, a 35-year-old lost $40 to four men who ran

4 away. the French The run of bad luck started at

2 a. m. in the 1300 block of N.| {West St. for William A. Rentas, Security regulations at the capi|27, Hedwich, Ill, and Ted Iwan,|tol similar to those in force dur28, Chicago. lof

correspondent for i agency, -was believed to be the first! casualty of the Korean war]

believed to have been taken pri-

soner by the North Koreans last Tuesday.. i

To Give New Punch

rea - will give the defenders a sorely-needed offensive punch.

railroad runs northeast out of exclusively in Chinese characters,

{Troop 2.

ithe 1950 fiscal year with a deficit/the land, beginning with pirate] far below administration esti-Taids and then in 1502, staging a,

mates — something that seldom 300,000 man invasion. 2

20.81

asked “Secretary-General Trysve Travelers Lose

$40 in Holdup

Two holiday travelers ran out

Ke is being held prisoner by the ©f gas here early today, ran into) untypical Hoosier hospitality and]

: | While Mr. Iwan went scouting| B-29 Superbombers Set for fuel, Mr. Rentas stayed in the sald the precautions are being lear. \turned. around and pulled up tions.’ | WASHINGTON, July 4 (UP)— alongside. Three of the occu-| |The U. 8, B-29 superbombers that pants got out, one holding a gun, ably will be called in to enforce will join the battle for South Ke- another a razor. Mr. Rentas told police they re- Packages at the door. {lHeved him of $40 and drove away. !

‘the shooting.

Fox’ Zorra third. ie

{alphabet, with 11 vowels and 15 consonants was developed for everyday use, { The Koreans were a sort of a bridge for the transmittal of cul-| ture and religion from China to

{ Admiral Stops Japs

red ink figure announced This invasion would have suc-|

{

ANNER-

| Y1 Sun Sin, invented the first iron-| ships. They looked like! were propelled by oars; arrows emanated from less than no tioles in the sides. With these) |ghipe, the admiral cut the Japa-|

advocates

Korea is a mountainous land, with very few plains worthy of, the name. Everybody says its climate is delightful, although there is a rainy season which lasts, | through July and August.

| Most of its rivers are shallow

‘Security Tightening-Up : Slated in U. S. Capitol

WASHINGTON, July 4 (UP)—||

Their car was out/Ing World War II will be put in| |force tomorrow. |

as. | x Capitol Architect David Lynn

Another auto passed him, taken because of “world —condi-

Mr. Lynn said extra police prob-, rules that tourists check all large

TB DEATH RATE CUT

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red

’ PRACTICAL

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among our hundreds of

METAL UTILITY ABIES

Plasticized Enameled, -

‘% MAIL AND PHONE ORDERS FILLED

: Free Wheeling Casters

‘“iwas a defense witness.

FURNITURE:

A

home values

* chief of staff of the 24th corps, WAS & veteran of 66 tombat mis-

© automatic flow of post exchange said ht. Harding was killed on the

| © An undisclosed number of the i ums criminately strafing the peaceful big four-engine bombers are being & Communist conquest of South) my, tynerculosis death rate in population.” ~~ |flown to Far Fast bases by the Korea would “pave the way for y,o.n hag been among the high-. At sea Gen MacATthil’s head- Strategic Air Command. Only 30 Word War TI oe... eSt in the world for the past 30 quarters satd, an—Amertcaf light have been stationed there. | Je said stemmilng the North crufser operating Ini North Korean, Up to now, the Air Force has Korean Invasion fs “as important’, co. ated by the Supreme Com- | whters sank six enemy vessels relied primarily on F-80 Shooting 25 Was stopping the Japanese in| ;yang of the Allied Powers are Monday, bringing its two day bag Star jet fighters to stem the their conquest of Manchuria, og;cing the excessive death rate. to 11. . |sweeping advance of the Commu- stopping Hitler's conquest of HN | A. With U. 8. ground_forces in ac- nist-led invaders from North Ko- Lhineland or stopping Mussolini's tion in Korea, Gen. MacArthur set rea. They admittedly were ill. NVasion of Ethiopia. And those] Wigs TT SLATHOLION up U. 8. Army forces in Korea equipped for the job. “jwere the.three steps which leg} Any etyle. (nelndes $ 95 (USAFIK) as a major command, The speedy jets, hampered by '© World War II {f§ Haircut. Soft Water ¥ * to function directly under his own foul weather, have been barely corse N. Craig, national com-|lf Shampes and set Far East command. {able to reach the battlefront trom Mander of the Legion, kalled oni AEAMTD AL

BEAUTY. Maj. Gen ‘Willtam F: Dean was thelr bases in Japan atid have had), aid, would “scare Russia to Cottage, Ine. , «§7E]

appointed yesterday: as over-allonly 10 to 15 minutes over the! Bid,

commander of USAFIK. {target area before heading home. | death.” Garvin in Command —

MacArthur also estab. Slain Yank “a Hero

Gen,

under USAFIK at the southeast 4 Korean port of Pusan with Brig. FT. WORTH, Tex., July 4 (UP)

"l—1st Lt. Revier L. Harding, one 3 Gen. Fits for, as con {of the first two Americans killed Gen. ' Garvin was formerly|In the shooting in the Far East,

which landed in Korea in 1945 sions in World War II.

and remained until the Korean| Lt. Harding, 26, had flown in republic was established. ' ithe <Air Force eight years. He “Plans have been effected held the Distinguished ' Flying whereby - American troops (in!Cross with seven oak leaf clusters. Korea) are now getting an| His mother, Mrs, Azle Harding,

HELPS YOUR HEALTH.. |

1 Bs. VAL 2%

supplies, including cigarettes, second anniversary of his martoilet articles and other neces- riage to the former Barbara gities,” a headquarters com-/Conkling of Midland, Tex. Lt. munique said. “Copies of the Harding's wife, who lives in ToPacific “edition of Stars and/kyo, expects her first child this| Stripes will be delivered to our|fall combat forces starting today.”

MacArthur Warns North Koreans

TOKYO, July 4 (UP) — Gen.

"

“Their letters home recently | were just full of good news,” Lt. | Harding's mother said. “They were going to come home with the | baby before Christmas for a big family reunion.” The Pensacola Journal sald it

years but health programs in-§

SE Y

_Built to last for years—roll them wherever you need ; extra space for work or storage . . . into the kitchen, . nursery, laundry, sick room, le “play room . .. extra work | surface, shelf space, roomy “drawers for cutlery or small ~~ | items. See them tomorrow! —¥

AR ARE 3 Styles:= oss sass e ss

All 16x22,” : 30%” High

Three-Shelf Style now

~ Two-Shelf with Drawer.

8.95 | prpleat == + I

8

4 (a)

(b)

. Koreans who fall into

Douglas MacArthur announced today that he will hold the North Koreans responsible for any mistreatment of Americans or other members of armed forces under his command In Korea. :

The supreme commander made!

the announcement soon after -U. 8. ground forces went into

“— action for the first time in thé

WAT.

ur said all North the hand

CABLE SPINET

a

understood the sub was sighted three miles offshore between Ft. Walton and Destin, The Florida

newspaper said. - : Says Loss of Korea Could Start New War

(UP)—Sen, Lister Hill (D. Ala.) told Alabama members of the

highway patrol was asked to take! Navy officials to the area, the

HUNTSVILLE, Ala, July 4

: Fyes Examined GLASSES ON

ot (c)

Style, Opens fod2’, . <2 Shelves, Drawer