Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1950 — Page 3
FRIDAY, JoLY 7, 1950
E- Re ¥ Dig In for New Korea Stand
“Gen. Dean said ‘that he believed casualties in the understrength| - flicted.” It added that thé Ameri- {American battalion : of 500 men! cans were in confused retreat. [Cut off by the initial Communist’
Continued From Page One) | captured and great losses in-|
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Bridge, _
Three Groups Set Up
A responsible source estimated] PTUSt south of Suwon Wednes-| Arbitration Boards
American casualties in the 12-
cent. day-old Korean war today. at no ayy but four men were killed tion Is expected to be posted be- Companies B and C to form al
day would total less than 10 per| (Continued From Page Oné)
Earlier ‘reports had said
MONICA, Im, July 7 (OP)
[Yank With Lost Battalion B-2s Rip Subs |
rr " Pr Ss That He M Esca e lr Santa Fe officidls today . ; me ToExpose Gougers rays From Page One) [of ay = ape In Korean Port TE) ae of 0 Ton under ane of the HI
support. But with ceiling zero, he Smith gave the withdrawal order volving the railroad’s swank Bl coaches” Plank surfacing at a must have known he’ coulan't/balf an hour later. Craft Believed _ Capitan streamliner. : I grabbed a helmet and started; get it. ito Tun 4 al 1 A To Be Russian The first wreck took place here At 8:30 a. m., during & Jull in own along a slope over-| ;
esterday morning, killing’ nine/two trains sped eastward toward
looking a rice paddy. A mortar, Continued From Page One) - {Chi on tracks. the firing, Col. Smith called onf OFT © FO8 PACH a ( u 8 [persons and injuring 70. The sec a cago parallel §
| oil re ationd occurred at Galesburg, IIL, !El Capitan, slightly more than 20 dead and 50 in- perimeter defense on the saddle of 2d in hitting the dirt T disto- yesterday at aa Bess: ¢ last night. No one was hurt, ed and . several Jared, a dispatch from m advance | “Ounded or captured. fore the week-end. the hill. > [cated my trick shoulder, | Wonsang on ‘the St Soa o Peoria County Coroner Chaun- knifed in “front of the Chief. i {North Korea an at railway U. 8. headquarters said. {U. S. Oil Firms Ban Yesterday the apartment 10UP, '} left my foxhole and helped; ITeset Ron the run. . yards and bridges at Kojo, about cy Wood said there were definite! Many of the injured were in. "sta Gen. William PF. Deanpoy Eq hi representing more than 200 apart: the medics dig a trench of their] MEN WERE stumbling and 30 miles to the southeast. indications that “something broke critical -or -serious condition at commanding general of U. 8. taf st S ipments jment owners managing 70 per, own. isobbing as they struggled to get| Excellent results were obtained, | loose” from the EI’ Capitan here | hospitals in Peoria and Galestroops in Korea, estimated that, WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP)— cent of big rental units here, Dy Na got to ae . rt over the crest of the slope as the the Air Force communique said. When it derailed into the path of | | burg, nL the SMES Jorhun, win American oil companies were un- adopted a resolution calling tor ‘depend on I e en. our lives North i Koreans began laying No Sppositien was i by or angap guy Ce dt of i Wg Bie nh YE Capitan = -'modera own fire from the hill we had!these raiders, eithe Fu “Yisions totaling 95000 men ang d¢r Orders from the State Depart-m RoR In Mmeresses, 1 orn orks filed with water just evacuated. | Other bombers and fighters at- railroad planned ‘to inspect the suffered a mishap last night.
tanks into -its invasion of ment - today to withhold all of} ‘Korea. - |shipments to the Far East lest Said the resolution {they fall jnto North Korean!
At least two divisions with peveral score tanks are spear-ip. heading the main drive alone the!
Seoul-Suwon-Taejon highway, he! in
said. : Although the North Koreans! have had things pretty much their own way so far, he said, onl small detachments of American! troops have been in action. He expressed confidence that when the steadily-reinforced|
able the Air Force to hit North wach
Korean tanks and armored cars channeled along the main highway stretching back through hills and rice paddies to Seoul. Blast Enemy Bases Rain and clouds have kept
The order was issued as an 1 f th formal request yesterday. Offi-| been the polity o
y| | ght control the government is) exerting over exports of all ma-| terials. of potential war value to} the North Korean and Chinese «
cept for emergency purposes were canceled at this major northwest Air Force base today, Col. : Alan Bennett, base commander, ATHENS, Ga., July 7 (UP)—l|the bolt with his 45-automatic. | York, Tremonton, Utah. announced. , City Patrolmen Alan Hansford Four times the call went out for| I decided to stick with Capt. He said persons on leave at and Ralph Veale have been re-|‘medics,” and wounded ;were| Corder and the other two because |
nds,
{tion over the years.”
. {hands were ‘ swollen- ~from rice aircraft fire, Crewmen fin two|eral Manager J. P. Morris, Me- | here, it was moving over a transa sure it would ‘be; ly The a Huan Heine a Col. Smith ordered Capt. Will! paddy leeches. lother aircraft were by ground chamical Superintendent J. W. | ter track to the Santa Fe's right= ne., will mee onda -| | It supplemented the already [steps to organize ite i Mig ake Corder of Carthage, Mo., an ad-| Soon the battalion was strung! fire. {Altkenson and Assistant Vice! of- -way when three units of the
Americans get set for offensive _Crmunists. {control on a fair basis,” explained turned to support the North Ko- couldn't kee; STRAUSS SAYS: en ; - . pup. The acting bat-1 bols on their Soviet-made Yak - ) A ey wire be Soierte Handle McChord Air Base [Acting Chairman W. E. : Noe rean infantry. talion commander refused. {fighters e oreans in shcrt order. 3a Oi arbitration ki , “Well, this 1 ik He said the Army was “praying Cancels Leaves ‘to retain equitable rental rela-| arte Bil began rocking win company,” podria Faia. Look Like Mustangs : i for good weather”. shat would en-. “M¢CHORD AIR #ORCE B ASE tions would be established. PMD the wheep, wheep of small arms| I'm waiting for my sergeant.” The Yaks closely resemble the,
ers of Tental tal units here.
fighters and bombers away fromthe present time were not hein 5 the front for the past three days, oe however. 2 2 leased - under bond pending
but they have been busy striking
bases far to the rear, in North but only for extended leaves of hauled away 12 cases in a police north slope of the hill. not wounded. He got sick from jeommuique said. Korea, absence. car.
The order did not apply to reg- Nearing on charges that they | velling. “There they come!” and'and because he had a compass. at enemy concentrations and/ylar passes, base officials sald, broke into a beer truck an
trent re ——————— a —————————————_——————— bimini “
A0A Manager William Be up to the ankles within 25 min-/ UP ahead I ran into Capt. Cor- tacked enemy troop concentra[study of each situation ‘to insure Utes. jcontinuation of the just and fair! About the same time, we saw treatment to tenants which has 3000 to 4000 North Korean troops: is organiza. debarking from ‘trucks on the!
Tuesday the property. manage- group, and his sergeant ‘to make marching south through pouring, reported United - States intelli-. Mr. Tucker said Inspectors as the train slowly rounded » 4
jment division of the Indianapolisia break for help down the east raid Capt C £t1 r con-/found several ties which appar-|curve, {Real Estate Board will meet tolside of the hill Pt Corder ‘asked 4 om Stace gfficed IN Rares The
agree to keep such rentals as we
July T (UP)—Leaves ex- represents 42 managers and own- builets. ~ PRETTY SOON Sgt. Allen]
POL [OE HEL D IN BEER THEF chinegun ran out of ammunition./UP exhausted. He was supported
wrecked coaches of both trans! The train, Santa ¥Fe's No. 21, ig (der, and he told me he and his tions, tanks, trucks, and railway! {today as derricks hoisted them! traveled to Galesburg over the oa sergeant had only gone 800 vardsi targets, just behind the fighting from the dirt, sand and gravel! Burlington Railroad’s track to {on the rescue mission before being front in South Korea. in which they were imbedded. |by-pass the scene of yesterday's pinned down by small arms fire, Two B-26 bombers were lost. Among those present for the in-| collision.
{road north of the battalion hill. | four and one-half hours. His! lyesterday, one of them to anti- (vestigation were Santa Fe Gen- | At Galesburg, 30 miles west of
lviser to the Korean military lout in a single, irregular file! Another Air Force communique | 'President Clarence Tucker. . . |four-unit diesel jumped the track
pany commander to slow the|/vinced that the North Koreans, y 10 a. m,, five tanks had re- pace since some of the wounded are painting South Korean sym-
{American-made ¥F-51 Mustang! fighters. Four planes with South {Korean markings bombed South {Korean troops near Osan, 11] miles south of Suwon, yesterday ‘at a’ time when it was determined definitely that no South Korean] planes were in the air. { “This confirmed earlier reports! that “illegitimate” methods of i deception are being used.” the
The battalion's 50-caliber ma- Palmer, Mendon, Ill, staggered
|The sergefint manning it blew out YY another man, Sgt. Gordon)
'brofight in. {I admired Capt. Corder's decision,
a, group of Americans began {because I knew him personally, !
fred their carbines down the It developed Sgt. Palmer was
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Lt. Gen. George E. Straten-| 2 A. eating green cucumbers on the meyer, commander of the Far! I CRAWLED out of my foxhole march. | Kastern Air Forces, said in a re-| totake a look. I saw perhaps a! “It's just my luck,” I said to| port on air operations in Korea! Ea
hundred . North Korean soldiers Caps. Corder, “to-get caught be-ithat American air might was ‘inching forward about 100 yards cause a guy ate too many eucum-| shifting from the first defensive
down the slope. They wore green| bers and can’t walk fast.” iphase to co-ordinated operation ¢ jand brown uniforms and conduc- But later it developed Sgt. Pal-| {with Navy and ground forces. itor-like caps. mer was worse off than we! So far, he sald, American; | I went back to the medics sec- thought. | planes of the 5th and 20th Air
{tion and wondered whether it.was| We passed through several | Forces have flown 1100 sorties.! unpatriotic of me to want to get Korean ghost villages. All the in-| | Since completing their original! out as much as I did. [habitants had fled south to join | task of evacuating 850 civilians A blonde sergeant, wounded in the long columns of refugees. {from South Korea, they have de- |. the arm, walked over. He said he! Sgt. Palmer was close to “ol strayed eight tanks, 156 trucks; 'had just crippled a tank with a/lapse. We saw tanks and infan-{11 locomotives, 28 railway cars bazooka when one of the Koreans|try in the rice fields. We pulled {and 14 busses and put out of
jumped out of the tank and shot up at a small village where in commissich at least temporarily {him in the arm. |pidgin Japanese I acquired a Ko-| SVEN" More Vehlgles. .. vehicles. “He had his hands up, too, rean guide named Kim - the --- --- —--" the sergeant said.| Kim said he would lead us on U. S “Plans Sch School
At one o'clock the enemy be-a southeast course past the! gan flanking the hill to the east farthest North Korean advance.
than 250,000 conductors, voi) n : tri d p ff {men and yardmasters have en-| At ft Harrison tered similar demands for 40-hour : , a {weeks with’ no loss in pay as :
: won by 1 million members of 16! Group of Officers (Other Days, 9:30 till 5) n dl [0a S “‘non- -operating” unions last. Sep; : . { :
tember. Inspects Site Here
Rock Island Still Yesterday, President Yuma} (Continued From Page One) : \ : Tied Up by Disput is 3 factuting board 0) Soham ordered the Public In-| 1ISpu =| ‘ p by pute {ant Gop ductors. The action ge [Ormation School from Carlisle a uy
CHICAGO, July 7 (UP -Trains layed a strike for at least Barracks by April, 195). began rolling today as the AFL'days. Gen. McGaw sald the Army,
: would probably move into Ft. ’ Switchmen’s Union called off a Federal mediators were still Harrison by January, 951, if ‘the| os strike against four western rail- holding sessions at Chicago insite was given final approval in| : : |roads, but the 8000-mile Rock Dopes of averting a strike! Washington. { ‘
o [Island system was still strike-| threatened by the regular con-| He said the move was ordered
|ductors, trainmen and yardmas- because the Armv War College : . ¥ a | bound. iters, The strike could take place at Ft. Leavenwo.th, Kan. was : 4 | Switchmen'’s President Arthur any time after July 15. transferred to Carlisle Barracks.'
Glover called off the 12-day-old|— os strike against the Chicago Great! | Western, Great Northern, Denver & Rio Grande Western and the i Western Pacific lines late yesterday. He took the action in the face ‘of President Truman’ warning, {that he would take “drastic action,” if necessary, to provide shipping facilities for the Wheat | harvest-and- livestock:
A unioz spokesman said the i strike was continued against the : | Rock Island because parallel lines! a {provide facilities. for shippers. | “Let someone try to make an emergency sut of that,” he sald. ~~ Operations to Resume The Western Pacific was ready lo resume normal freight opera-.§ tions this morning. Passenger) service will return to normal to-| morrow. The Great Northern, the only one of the five struck lines ‘to maintain some service during the = strike, and the D&RGW hurried to restore full schedules | "as quUICKIY a8 possible.” Great Western officials were. meeting to determine how soen their trains could commence runLNIng. Rock Island officials were bitter about the -union decision to prolong the strike against their i line. A spokesman denied the |union’s statement about parallet--Ling routes, He sald a. wide area, | particularly in. Kansas, had no lother- means-of shipping. There are at least 10.000 in- JF i dustries and 700 stations that { have no other railroads but Rock Island to ship over,” he said. | Seeks 40-Hour Week { The - continued strike against! {Rock Island apparently meant {that the union still had not {abandoned its demand for a 40{hour week with no reduction in pay. Members now work 48 and!
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