Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1950 — Page 3
her two sons ildren, all of
al. held at North
«Clelland
aries M. Mc« Walnut St.
5 to be in Me-
died Friday vas 72. A re~ he had ‘lived years, He was on.
je his wife,
sons, Newton,
a sister, Mrs, three grande fianapolis: a es
| very
ou're
as dp-
t frim,
ns Je In Raidin 3 . As Bombs and Shells Stall Enemy
American ‘Victory of the Korean army on the
‘pected Communist guerrillas be-
Fords
g Korean Reds’
~ Americans Building Up Line for Stand
(Continued From Page One) [were fighting the South Korean the first American newsmen to ak. Chungju, 53 miles northeast of 5° 0 the front in Korea and American sources refused to Taejon. ~~ : for 21; days last week was cul disclose the exact extent of the! sald the off with American troops behind Sammanis a vane along the South Ko 1500 to, Communist lines. The - Com dispatcher Toke iL 2000 = nists in’ a counter-! munists falsely claimed to have bombardment of enemy columns ened thon ery pe SUSERL captured him. In the following at Chonul, 28 miles north of Tae- area. dispatch, he analyzes the reajon, and near Sengi, some 25! x K : sons for the Red successes and miles north { Spokesman at advance U. 8. for the American setbacks. 5 :
{headquarters said reports from : = 4 Situation Stable {two reliable sources asserted bat- By PETER KALISCHER United Press Staff Correspondent
A spokesman at advance U. §./tle-hardened A Manchurian Comheadquarters said the situation munist armies are fighting with] TOKYO, July 10—The North Koreans are not supermen but so
was stable all along the American, the North Koreans. TRY ont late waday wih only minor | These sources said many -ex- far they have been equipped with Jeirmishe oor ed by advance patriate Koreans who served in'better and heavier weapons than olding forces south, China's Communist armies have the green American troops facing (returned to North Korea and were them.
of Chonul,”
* Gen. MacArthur reported that drafted into the North Korean! And there have been many more the Soviet-trained Norfh Koreans army to give it a corps of veteran Communists than Americans. had thrown four divisions into fighters. This is why Americans are their attempt to break through| Prisoners ca ptured recently, being shoved around. the American lines of south of they said, included some who had, I've witnessed the Communist Chonan. spent their entire lives until re- sffensive from only 150 yards. | Two other divisions, he said, cently in Manchuria. The bold; tenacious tactics of the enemy are backed by tanks, guns!
Free Koreans Break Backs [ii oe evita Of Communist Guerrillas
One of the Reds’ nastiest wea-| By RUTHERFORD POATS United Press Staff Correspondent SOMEWHERE IN KOREA
July 10—The South Koreans deal out quick punishment ‘to sus-
{
\
{pons is a Russian 40-ton tank,| {mounting a rapid-firing 76 or| mass and crashed the butt of 88-milimeter gun. One of these! his American rifle into the back|tanks last week smashed .an|
ing men. Their backs broke with a sicken-| They break \N8 crunch which could be heard! The Reds bring up anywhere 100 yards away. {from 10 to 30 tanks to the front Mr. Rankin hunted up an Eng- under cover of darkness. Then| straight
Punch Through { hind their lines. their backs, then execute them. . United Nations Military Ob- | server R. J. Rankin of Australia !ish-speaking policeman and asked!they punch and Indiscovered this today when 30 EXplamation: «terns “Guerrillas,” said the policeman rain or cloudy weather when the parked in front of a grove over- with a gesture at their backs. - [American Air Force is blind. | looking a river. | We bang bang in woods.” | Twice these tactics have over-| At first glance, the passengers He indicated that the prisonersi,un American positions before
we came upon two open trucks
might have been mistaken for "Ould be taken to nearby woodsithe GI's knew what was hap-| columns.
picnickers. |and executed. But it seemed un-|pening. Then it was too late for |
Air Force Damage Seen by
' of one after another of the kneel-| American 105-millimeter artillery| rea, July 10—I1 have just flown west of Taejon. ‘emplacement like a marshmallow. | behind the Communist lines in a
| through! chonan sector tntil North Ko-| Along a. MAR, L0AM-e RISSLANI ID. roan. 30-miilimetes. guns. drove. Us. adage matin
for a shave before he goes into action.
Wr
By CHARLES CORDDRY other wrecked vehicles and ‘burn-| United Press Staff Aviation Writer [ing buildings along a highway at us,
two-seated Piper Cub. A high-ranking pilot whose mation overtake their own armor, lines. name I cannot give flew the L-5 which was strung out along the liaison plane, as the Cub is'highway around a bend from ato look known in the Air.Force, over the ridge. : : What appeared to be howitzers SAGA THe
away, - Koreans.
We saw the results of the
isr giving North Korean armorpd the damage done by the Air
RD FoeB the. North danded safely at this
2 : Telephotos by Ed Hoffman, Acme Staft Photographer While American wounded were being evacuated from the battle lines in South Korea they pass a column of troops moving up front. One Yank is a mite fastidious. He is lathering his face
ite
The North Koreans were firing We did not waste time U. 8S. AIR FORCE BASE, Ko- pear Sengi, only 25 miles north- trying to find their positions. > : The pilot put the Cub through We saw U. 8. infantry march- evasive maneuvers and climbed {ing forward in squad column for? high and away toward the U. 8.
He had told me, “Your job is (Soviet-built {North Korean planes).” Fortunately, we saw none. We
for Yaks
front fines:
We were circling fairly low EH —— terrific pounding our Air Force near the ridge taking notes oe DRIVERS FALL TESTS One out of e ery three persons |Force when we suddenly heard tested for an Oklahoma driver's
780 W. Nortn st. tSay. 11 Ty ; rd it wasn't a display of pe found policy lemon drops that drew proprietor Be ike and a rundown Max Price. 50, of 1022 N. West] _ os i St, into Municipal Court 3.; ss . : Bes : charged with advertising a lottery, Lilibet Gets Rolls Royce and gift enterprise. “.- 7 I~ LONDON, July 10 (UP)~ _.| Sgt. Peak said a policy book!in case Prince Philip h bearing today's date and a run-/is boss in Princess Elizabeth's down sheet were in plain sight on new “Rolls Royce state the candy counter, her seat is “a trifle narrower, Sgt. Peak and his men also ar- more upright and farther forward rested Max Hazelwood Jr, 25, of than the other,” a reliable source
{ ,
{948 Indiana Ave. on charges of said today.
STRAUSS NL SAYS: USUAL SUMMER STORE HOURS 9:30 TILL § (Store closes on Saturday at | o'clock)
A
BOY! ~~ ONTHE BOYS' FLOOR---THE SIXTH--YOU CAN STILL “COME AND GET IT”
"Odd lots—and broken sizes, of Te course—but there is plenfy—more
air base
PERFECT RECORD
But not for long. - Some 40 persons were crouched
enough for the formal execution. | ] ® I . e ; of the trucks A" Ronen poier | Toe poteman maid the pin sone oo Phony Red ‘Peace’ Drive Hits Democracy
man stood in the middle of this
Calls Flood Stat Reserve Centers
Many Expected to Return to Active Duty
Reserve Army officers and en-
{
listed personnel in Indiana are’
holding up patriotic traditions of
—Hoosiérland in the current war
crisis.
Col. H. A. Welsch, senior army | instructor, Fifth Army. with headquarters at Ft. Harrison, | said today the 11 Organized Re-! serve Corps offices in the state] had reported a deluge of tele-| phone calls and . personal in-! quiries over the week-end.
“We have not tabulated the
the reserve corps plan to enter! active duty. “I believe, however, within a| few days we will see large num-| bers responding to the govern-| ment &all for experienced mem-| bers of the reserve corps to assume active duty.” vila |
11 State Centers
The Organized Reserve Corps throughout the State maintains 11 centers with the centralized command at Ft. Harrison. The reservists include Army, Air Force and WAC personnel. Col. Welsch explained the call for organized reservists to go on active duty immediately would not effect the Organized Reserve Corps School scheduled to open at Ft. Harrison Sept.-15.
The school, will be primarily
vanced instruction for new reservists or those specializing in some particular field. Meanwhile, recruiting offices throughout the Indiana military district report a general upsurge in applications for enlistment in virtually all branches. . ; In most cases, recruiting .officers say, those volunteering for
- enlistment are seeking to choose
their own branch of service
rather than awaiting the draft.
a
PHILADELPHIA, July 10 (UP) Miss Jennie C. Powers, 78, a former secretary, completed 75 years
—of perfect Sunday school attend --ance yesterday at the West Side
Presbyterian Church.
NEW
and bear better than ever!
| |
1 + ;
i i
Send wday for
1s £3 iif 28 gilt gf i
i
calls,” Col.- Welsch sald, “and, as| yet, have no way of knowing just! how many officers and men in| :
Paving Project
: |the world's free peoples to its side tras tor private parties, plays for
| friendship is vitally needed.
B ¢ | “We need, from our govern
We saw overturned trucks; a staccato noise.
{license last year failed.
than plenfy—good choosing.
likely that many would live long the Air Force to strike and the
oners had not been caught in| sians action with the North Korean| marming. aia Ri ate arel army, but had been picked up by|.onfirmed. {police around the South Korean goant lines as suspected guerrillas. | { Communists Shot
1 icle. He said armed Communists m Tg crippleq venicle
American military advisers {helping the North Koreans Were army woefully underestimated
'shet on the spot. both the equipment and training
Tt seemed probable the Commu- | up in many states. As, soon as prok lof the enemy. They discounted, an military “aid was ord-
ered to Séuth Korea, the so-called {labor conference started a petition|ing committee for the world peace churches, a retired Protestant{drive for Its immediate with- appeal bishop drawal. : World headquarters of the Red Radio Moscow June 23 broadcast. superintendent of the Methodist peace” petition campaign is the {Stockholm World Peace Congress.! It issued the “world peace appeal,” {on which the petitions in America and elsewhere are based. Paul Robeson presided at its March People meeting. The Yugoslav delegates SYNag0gues, were barred. i This congress, the Soviet govinfantrymen debark from trucks ory ment told its peoplé in a oh York left-wing bakers’ union last urgently needed than ever,” anand begin to envelop the jcast June 23, proves that “all na: month voted to promote “ ‘peace’ nounced the Communist Party. eas who have een cut off. lige | tiONS approve the wise Lenin- bags for rolls.” The idea was to i 6 sooner Americans rea'lzé gig)in fore liey and the/get employers to bake rolls in poygl Estimated Cost Se Russia is putting its best foot struggle of a Po state for bags labeled “Eat in’ Peace.” la ug as peace.”
'nists were applying at least as tanks as an offensive weapon vigorous measures against collab- i pacause narrow roads and! orators with the South’ Koreans. marshy paddy fields do not make As we drove away, policemen ¢raq4itionally good tank terrain.| climbed out of the leading truck] Maybe they don't in the book, dragging several bodies. but the North Koreans are. In the second truck, the guard's writing their own. rifle continued to thud into the backs of prisoners.
OK's Butler Ave.
I've watched an American bat-| talion throw every standard anti-tank weapon it had at the North Korean army without slowing it down. : | Once the tanks have pushed] through eur lines, North Korean|
At $27,853 i forward in this “test” war and $ ! must be met by the -best the ler Ave. from 16th St. to three retreats will turn into countersquares north was approved by the Works Board today. otfensiyes and victories. The pavement, to which curbs _ . i will be added, will be installed | under private contract at esti- as 100 ow
mated cost of $27,853. |
| |
A proposal to annex an area = bounded by Hawthorne Lane, 21st| St., Ritter Tve, and the city I les g limits was under study by the a Board. ; | (Continued From Page One) Submitted to Council { " { { "An ordnance which woulq S0Tgeous ening JFowna. 1 love; authorize the annexation was, 20 ing | {submitted to City Council last] 2 85.4 (week. The Works Board is re-. SAMMY SAYS there's a change lquired to attach its recommenda-/in style show music. Instead of ‘tion before councilmen act. light Strauss waltzes; he now! | The Sanitation Department has gives out with “deep classical mu-/ J filed a recommendation to deny sic.” And he’s convinced tha the p= Barry Sr., president of the Sani- fashion buyers select their mer- {& /tation Board, said the city sewage chandise. —— - {treatment plant and intercepter| Even before the fashion shows! {sewers are inadequate for service Sammy Wilson was playing pi-| {needed by the area. lano. Forty summers ago, when {In other action the Works Board he and George Gershwin were 14, {named Raleigh Burk, contractor,iihey both walked New York low bidder for construction -of pavements looking fof pianists’ storm -relief sewer in Arlington jobs. They both found them, on {Ave. from Sth St. to St. Joseph /the same day, with different muJ. The low bid submitted was gic publishing houses.
1 1 +“ WAS better than George,” | Willkie Ur es U S [Sammy says. “He couldn't trans-| . w'pose. . . . Then they thought I
| : |was going to be the big shot.”| {He grins at that.
To State Ideals | Besides working for music “houses and with Victor Herbert]
a" Sammy found time to encourage i HAMILTON, N. ¥., July 10! struggling young talent. Hei (UP)~—The son of the late Wen- pejped Oscar Levant get. started, dell L, Willkie said today the he says, by throwing. small jobs;
United States must issue a “great his Way to ilavine i fath " | In addition to playing for fashstatement of principles” to rally shows, Sammy books orches-
| i
jand win’ the east-west conflict. 5503] events and leads the band } Philip H. Willkie, Repubiicanipimgelf three or four evenings a representative in the Indiana leg-| week. islature, said passage of civil] ® 5 = rights legislation would be one| gqu,, 4, enjoys the fashion|' |
way of proving “we mean what| ws Tr he especially likes al
we say” to the vast numbers of | model he } . plays a special tune for. peoples in Asia and Africa whose... entrance. He made it up and
the sings it under his breath. “You He spoke at Colgate Univer-|,,, I . .. You are so
|sity’s second annual foreign policy! wonderful Your gown is conference, “ [simply divine.” He said American soldiers "may! 1s 3 model trips on a stairway, Shed their Blood because ot the he gives whatever he's playing, . nate filibuster on President Tru-| «yet 5 little break but I don't man’s civil rights program. {burlesque it.” Ae Mr. Willie salle for the gov. 1 asked him, and Sammy says ernmen employ an approach he doesn’t understand it, either.| | “like that used by Woodrow Wil-| = mow models can do all that! json in 1918—a 14 points, 80 0 walking and still smile, you know | speak. their feet must ache.
£ EEE me
stand,” he said. Traffic court was scheduled for
i ————— { ., AUTHORIZED DEALEN a busy day today following 128 E {traffic arrests over the week-end. : ; PS ¢ .} | Police continued the crackdown
DIAMOND RINGS |.
king J
AL
§
{Continued From Page One) title, “Peace Information Center.” orary degree from Harvard.
One American Ser- ran for alderman on the Com-| who * bazookaed a tank p,nist ticket in New York City 19 the many other local and national . |said two Koreans jumped out of years ago.
Radio Moscow in a broadcast to Minute Women for Peace in Bos- carries new lists of petition sign-
| American clothes who are caught | {the Russians last Dec. 9 hailed wore Who trained the South Korean! he conference as ‘‘the true voice ton,
{of America.” Branches were se
_jm The congr#s” United States mittée for Peace, led by the Rev. man who started war in Korea.” A street paving project for But-lyrnjieq States has, the sooner Ouribranch in New York City, head- Robert M. Muir, picketed Secre-/And the American government quartefs of the petition drive tary of State Dean Acheson on plunged into “aggressive, criminal here, goes under the disarming June 22 when he received an hon- military intervention.” rear Riser tt reset tee retort : :
| + E
for refresher courses and ad. annexation-of the zone. Oscar F. right music, played right, helps | ~~
’
And the savings are just as plenty! There are summer washable wearables for boys of all ages— swell for wearing right now! And there is year-round clothing with good chunks of the prices missing! Clearance groups here and there throughout the floor— You owe yourself a look through!
L. STRAUSS & CO, INC. ‘BOYS’ FLOOR-SIXTH
latter has sprung The Daily Worker serves as official mouthpiece for the “peace” campaign as well as for the Communist Party. Almost daily it
From the “peace” committees, such as the
Another, according to the ers from all walks of life: t, Communist Party's Daily Worker, staged a ‘baby carriage rally” for ur ? One list of “prominent Protestpeace In Pittsburgh on July 4. {ant leaders” included the secreA United States youth Sponsor- tary of the Michigan Council of
‘Prominent Leaders’
| goes after the" young mpiscopal bishop of Albany, a fpeople. It got a nice hand in the yMCA official and the district {church of Wyoming. Justice James tH. Wolfe of the Utah Supreme The youth committee, accord-| ing to the Daily Worker, gathered COUTL Was a signer, according to 100,000 signatures from young The Communists’
“ ; blow at in Ee oa world peace in Korea has served
to intensify their “peace” drive : ‘here. The Korean invasion “only As part of the campaign, New mayes the peace petitions more
‘Eat in Peace’
{sports clubs.”
Its reasoning was simple: Gen. MacArthur “planned” “Korean provocation.” John The Massachusetts Action Com-/ Foster Dulles was the “trigger-
Be Hi
HOW FAR DO YOU DRIVE TO WORK?
wb
How many hundreds of dollars can you save each year by riding transit?
NO MATTER WHAT IF YOU DRIVE - DAILY TRANSIT
KIND OF CARYQU OWN THIS FAR DALY YOU SPEND Dany J COST 15° ONLY Sek di : PARKING 7 ToTAL 3 PWS. | amis | os $57 $90 | $24 Camas | 6 MILES | 49 57 106-13 ep 8 nes {06 SEE Tae A 10 MILES pt , 82 : 57 1.39 : at Ae. 12 MILES a TNE 24 vo 14 MILES 1.15 57 1.72 24 —y 16 MILES 132. 1.89 24
* Bosed on 8c per mile as computed by thé American Automobile Association, which figure includes, repairs, wearing out, insurance, gasoline, oil : y : and fires.
** The parking cost of 57¢ is the daily average for 94 parking lots in the city’s ‘‘mile square”.
*** Yearly savings ore based on a 50-week work year, 5 work days per week—a weekly transit cost of $1.20.
® The private automobile is fine for pleasure riding, vacation .
trips and week-end outings. However; the private automobile
does not make dollars and sense in the matter of transporting you to and from your job each day. Let us do the daily grind through traffic for you . . . we're equipped to do it. Drive your #
_ automobile during your leisure time. The dollars you save riding
transit daily will help to make your Iéisure time more enjoyable.
