Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1950 — Page 3

st chow in y. Menu for oxtail soup, 5 of gravy d coffee. can go next for a beer— dinner look= Stalin over where the me pins his

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(Continued From Page One)

to ceilings if they are treated

equitably. Recommendations

Other recommendations made to the Senate committee by Mr. Baruch:

ONE: Continue rent controls, | with provisions for clearly justi-| 3 increases. ]

fiable TWO: Create an over-all mobRlizing agency to synchronize all our efforts. THREE: Postpone less essential expenditures. Establish a committee under the Secretary of Treasury to review all capital issues, public and private, deferring less essential projects to make sure housing, schools, hospitals and other essential needs are met first. : FOUR: Strengthen the United Nations by co-ordinating our efforts with it in common defense of peace, FIVE: Speedier assistance in rearming those nations ready to

resist aggression, along with the expansion of our own defense

forces. Organize for Anything

“What I propose is that we or-|

ganize ourselves—all our resources of men, money, materials, morale—so that whatever happens—new aggressions abroad, possible destruction at home— whatever happens, the Armed

.Forces can get what they need,

when they need it, with the least necessary dislocation of the civilians,” Mr. Baruch said. He said he thought it still possible to prevent another world war by all-out mobilization.

The main job, he said; is to re-| duce the gap between our state trols. Then he added:

of unpreparedness and the Soviet Union’s mobilization for war. “Korea is not the arena of final decision,” he said. “It is to the basic disparity between the advanced Soviet mobilization and the lack of mobilization of the democracies that we must direct ourselves, “While we have been stocking

+

Lt. Otis Bryant Jr, 1320 8. Keystone Ave., former purchasing agent for the office of Secre-

| staff. Lt. Bryant is the first state employee to leave for service in the armed forces, Mr. Bryant was an Air Force reserve and will report at Camp Atterbury for active duty assignment today.

§ msn

jour homes with refrigerators and f

y x . television sets, the Soviets were 4 Veterans’ Bars Get Suspensions {stocking tanks and radar.” | Four posts of veterans organi-|seiling to non-members. In the Strikes at Inflation {zations were named on a list of case of the VFW post at Logans-

i { Mr. Baruch struck repeatedly |port, the license of Melvin E. lat the dangers of inflation. He license suspensions today, by the, Sturges, bartender, was suspend-

Isaid, for example, the increases Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Com-oq five days on a charge of sale|

in the new social security bill mission. {to non-members. {would be nullified by the failure mhe units, charges and lengths) ‘Lloyd & Geneva Ingle, 732 N. jof Congress W pass an effective . .oooutions: |East St. Indianapolis lost their {price control law now. _{license for five days on a charge | He also said he was opposed] American Legion Post 43, De lof permitting minors to loiter, 9 {by inclination to government con- catur, sale to non-members, three ein days; American Legion Post 24,| “But the gravest threats to the Columbus, offering alcoholic bev-| preservation of the American sys- erages as a prize, three days;| tem today are not government! VFW Post 3790, Logansport, Sun- : controls. They are military defeat day sale, five days; Willlam W.[first place honors yesterday in

WINS PLOW TITLE GREENCASTLE, July 26 (UP)

labroad and further inflation at Ervin, bartender, care American|the state plow terracing contest Boatman, Lebanon, from Lake

thome. Let tose who eas, as 1 1egion Post Sh Alejaniina, sale, the fourth annual Indiana soil ido, too great a dependence onto non-members, ee days. |government ask what could make| In the Decatur case Roxie; SORser vation field day held at {people more depend on govern-| Kessler, bartender, faced a seven-|the Mooreland farm, three miles

uly READER’S DIGEST ‘reports

the same research which proves that ~ brushing teeth right after eating with

COLGATE DENTAL CREAM STOPS TOOTH DECAY BEST

peo ‘ment thar inflation?” day revocation on a charge of west of here.

-

(Two Boys Nabbed Yanks Smash d Pr Two Boys Nab Driving at Sea Base Flank

—Clyde Hurt, Martinsville, took Sheriff's deputies and state police

y Better Than Any Other Way of Preventing Tooth Decay According to Published Reports!

Rapes DIGEST for July reports the results of “one of the most extensive, costly and ractical experiments in dental Biscory™! Be sure to read this issue. And remember these additional important facts: The toothpaste used exclusively in these experiments was Colgate Dental Cream. Over a two-year period, leading scientists found that brushing teeth right after eating with Colgate Dental Cream stopped tooth decay best! Better than any other home method of oral hygiene known today! Yes, both clinical and X-ray examinations showed the Colgate way stopped more decay for more ple than ever before reported no all dentifrice history!

Even more important, there were no new cavities whatever for more than 1 out of 3. Think of it! Not even one new cavity in two full years! No other dentifrice, only Colgate Dental Cream, has proof of such results—the best results ever reported in authoritative dental literature for a dentifrice of any type!

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1 A ————————— rp rien.

wo

In Vandalism Ring Police Blame Gang - For $5000 Damage + Two boys were held today as members of a gang which police blamed for $5000 in vandalism,

They were caught while seven others escaped yesterday evening

{when Police Detective George

King spotted ihem smashing a vehicle. Police said other members of the gang were being named by the youngsters. Nabbed by Detective King, the boys, 7 and 8, live on the South Side. Detective King was working in his garage hear a vacant lot at 140 E. Palmer St. when he heard glass being smashed. He ran to the lot and saw nine boys breaking the windows of a 1946 truck-tractor., He nabbed two. The others fled down adjoining railroad tracks.

have caused $5000 damage in the jarea, most of it in the vacant lot, {during the past year. The lot is used by three nearby firms for parking vehicles. ° | | Auto Burned ! | Three weeks ago vandals

. s A litle later a spokesman at | tary -of State, is given a rousing sendoff by Charles F. Fleming; secretary of state (left), and his Pushed rubbish under a car and U. : ux!

{lighted it. The auto was destroyed. { Four months ago a 1936 auto-|

“|mobile was destroyed by bricks. ground strike on the south coast.|y, 0nanolis Time) to fall back Mr. Symonds said.

| The vandals smashed all win-| {dows, batters the hood, and hammered the motor beyond repair. : Three months earlier a 1940, tractor was battered. i Detective King said he has been watching for the vandals) for nearly two years. He was especially watchful because a iwindow and fogiight in his own {car had been smashed.

Body Taken From Lake |

| MONTICELLO, July 26 (UP)—! ‘recovered the body of Lester J.

Freeman yesterday. State police said Mr. Boatman, 55-year-old {president of the Lebanon Rotary Club, apparently fell from a boat while fishing.

Detective King said vandals

{Continued From Page One)

on subbornly to positions they held yesterday.” However, field ports later than the period covered by the summary said the two American divisions manning the central front dropped back as much as five miles to new positions. A spokesman at headquarters here acknowledged the withdrawal Yongdong in the hills of central Korean, but said it wis only an adjustment of the line. He said the front situation there has been stablized somewhat. Beat Off Attack

Gen. MacArthur reported that the U. 8. First Cavalry beat off 'several attacks in the Yongdong area and inflicted heavy casualties on the Communist troops and jtanks. : oe { The spokesman said enough {troops were in Korea to protect {the beachhead, and supplies were ‘moving in ahead of schedule by air and sea.

at Red Pr

came under mortar and small arms fire shortly after it began firing at one enemy position. It finally turned two of its 105-milli-meter guns in the opposite direction and began firing point-blank to wipe out a guerrilla emplacement only a quarter-mile away. “Artillery men reported the Commies had uncanny methods of spotting American gun positions involving use of guerrillas and certain signals. “Two women spies were caught

radios on their backs. A collapsible rifle used by guerrillas also has been captured.”

Yongdong Deserted

Yongdong itself, 23 miles southeast of Taejon, was reported a No Man's Land. American patrols town under early today

and found

rean police units already to have retaken Cho 83 miles northwest of Hadong, and Namwon, 32 miles northwest, Moreover, he said, the Reds could be checked easily in the mountain passes west of Pusan if Field reports indicated that the Communists had passed through Chonju and Namwon without leaving garrison forces behin The new American withdrawls east and northeast of Yongdong, former northwest anchor of the Allied line some 80 miles north of |Hadong, were +enortcd in front

wearing green fatigues. There dispatches while Gen, MacArthwere unconfirmed reports thatiur's spokesman was discussing women also have been found the situation. : | United Press War Correspond-.

{ent Robert Bennyhof. reported {from the front that heavy dayattacks by North Korean troops and guerrillas forced back the right flan" of the 1st Cavalry {Division front east of Yongdong. | “However, the withdrawal was

penetrated to thejorderly and the troops moving cover of darkness backward joined a new battle line it de-/which had been planned for soms

Speaking before the disclosure gerteq, [time in the event the Americans of . the south coast action, he, ypjts of the 25th Division were shoved back by the Korean calmly dismissed the Communistipnortheast of Yongdong also re-|forces,” Mr. Bennyhoff said. push along the south coast halfiireateq after 21 days of con-| Almost simultaneously, United way to Pusan. {tinuous Red attacks. The Reds Press War Correspondent Gene Set Town on Fire i last night. {the 25th Division northeast of The units withdrew a short, Yongdong also pulled back to stance to consolidate their po- prepared positions after 2% days sitions, then disengaged entirely of continuous Red attacks. at noon today (9 p. m. Tuesday,! “The withdrawal was orderly,”

“All equip«

8. Fifth ‘Air Force Head-| 3; quarters in Korea reported the “beautifully co-ordinated” air-

The spokesman said the Shooting Star rocket strike set the town of Hadong aflame, and! there were unconfirmed reports! that the U. 8. ground troops drove the Communists from the town.

to more favorable positions. iment was saved.” An 8th Army headquarters| communique said that there was|disclosed that 25th Division units little action in general along the/not only beat off all Red attacks entire United Nations front in|yesterday, but counter - attacked daylight today. and RC Chongaan, 15 Ls Gen. ‘MacArthur's spokesman miles north of Yongdong. There pat rLant of 2 Jmerican op said the virtually unopposed was no indication whether the dis : al sector were NOY communist 4th Division drive vision’s withdrawal today = ens disclosed, but the spokesman told| no the south coast to Hadong, tailed loss of Chongson of alr support of “American in- g & . fantry assaults on the south coast and river ports.” STRAUSS joining in grouse mboacconint®| SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW western and central front for the] ! - first time, struck in the Yongdong and Hamchang area “with| excellent results.” | U. 8. carrier planes flew four| separate missions of ground sup-| port today on the western and! central front, he said. i A spokesman for Gen. Douglas| MacArthur's headquarters dis-| missed the Red thrust along the! coast as a “minor menace” which would be taken care of in plenty| of time to save Pusan. | War Gear Pours In | The spokesman sald American | withdrawals south, east and] northeast of burning Yongdong represented only an adjustment in the American line. The front] situation now has been stabilized! and may be called “optimistic,” he said. There are enough troops in Korea to protect the Allied beachhead and supplies are flowing in ahead of schedule by air and sea, he sald. . | A spokesman for the 1st Cavaly Division in Korea said the division had killed an estimated 2500 of the enemy since it went into action on the Yongdong| front Sunday. He put the divi-

No Other Toothpaste or Powder AMMONIATED OR NOT Offers Proof of Such Results!

Koreans slowly but steadily drove {back the division by an endless

First Cavalry Division troops, east of Yongdong fell back three to five miles today after around-the-clock attacks by North Korean troops and guerrillas. The Reds staged one of their first night attacks of the war last night, Other 1st Cavalry units south of Yongdong also withdrew to protect their flanks and keep out guerrillas. The division spokesman said the 1st Cavalrymen in the last 24 hours had fought off two enemy divisions and destroyed five tanks by air and artillery action. Peter Kalischer United Press Staff Correspondent with the First Cavalry, said the North

process of advancing and Infiltrating. “The enemy is dressed in all kinds of uniforms, green, brown, American fatigues and plain white,” he said. “One American artillery unit -

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{hit them from three directions | Symonds reported that units of

Gen, MacArthur's spokesman.

Seersucker type of Suit — that gives |