Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1950 — Page 12
By Uni
: The government organ Izvestia said today that the western powers had built up in West Germany a German military and
semi-military force of more than
The entire group is under the jurisdiction of a single unified Douglas MacArthur paid ‘a
staff, Izvestia said.
The article by Ivan Fedorov broke down the figures as follows! y gu itoday and returned to Tokyo
British Zone—107,400 soldiers)
under various guises, plus armed meeting with key Cabinet mem-'more confident than ever of
police forces totaling 166,000. American Zone—Troops plus armed police totaling 242,000. French Zone—24,000 armed police, In addition, Izvestia said, there were 16.400 ‘black guards” and “storm detachments’ of armed Nazis, intended for use in suppressing the movement of democratic workers. Izvestia said the Western Powers were using the Ruhr and other
German industries for big scale’
manufacture of war material. * Meanwhile, the authoritative Soviet publication New Times said that the United States is increasing the danger of a new world war by its intervention in the Korean War. “The whole world knows that the American government intends to increase the Army, Air Force and Navy to a level far exceeding the requirements for the aggression in Korea,” it declared. (Editor's Note: The Russians have been known to tip their hand by accusing others of doing what they themselves do.)
Great Britain
PRIME MINISTER CLEMENT ATTLEE will tell Britons in a radio speech Sunday to tighten their belts in order that the nation ¢an mobilize against Communist aggression, An announcement that Mr. Attiee would make a major speech on the radio Sunday at 3:15 p. m,, Indianapolis time, cabinet meeting, the third this week. - The government's original defense budget this year called for $2,184,000,000. The government said yesterday that would be increased by $280 million.
Belgium . STRIKES by more than 300,000 workers protesting the return of King Leopold III virtually paralyzed four major cities in the South Belgium industrial belt today. -
Socialist - led general strikes
halted most business and indus-|
trial activity in Liege, Charleroi, La Louviere and Mons, The creeping paralysis was expected to spread to Brussels tomorrow. Pro-Leopold Premier Jean Duvieusart
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MacArthur
General Praises Troops Following Battlefield Visit
By FRANK TREMAINE United Press Staff Correspondent
TOKYO, July 27 — Gen.
ted Press
500,000 men.
{12-hour flying visit to Korea
i
§
|bers today, and Cabinet sources ultimate Allied victory. said later that troops may be The Supreme United Nations called out if the labor situation commander left here in a grim becomes worse. jand business-like mood. But when - 'his unarmed C-54 transport, BaThe Interior Ministry said five taan. landed here at 4:40 a. m.. Socialist labor leaders-—three in Indianapolis time, he was smiling] Mong and two in Liege—had been proadly and exuding confidence, arrested with explosives in their: He told newsmen at Sth Army posagasion, | Headquarters in Korea before his United Nations departure that his talks with nis {top ground and air commanders THE United Nations Security and his own inspection of the Council, heartened by the rally- situation had given him “a feeling of the western world to its ing of optimism.” fight in Korea, was confronted, “That does not mean that vic-
today with a new complaint of tory passes to us instantly andi.
aggression in Palestine, without a long, hard row and the Lebanon demanded that the most difficult struggle,” he said. {Council begin an investigation of “That we will have new heart|“fresh criminal aggressions” it breaks, new setbacks, is inherent laid to the Israeli government, in the situation, but I was never which, it said, “have not met more confident in victory—ultiwith effective sanctions” from mate victory—in my life than I {the United Nations. lam now.” | | The case in point, cited by| Gen. MacArthur was expected Lebanese Foreign Minister Phil- to report during the night to !ippe Tacla, was a charge that a President Truman on his visit to Lebanese civil aircraft carrying Korea. A source close to him in[24 civilians was shot down by dicated he wanted to make an at
{an Israeli fighter plane over least preliminary report as soon (Lebanon. {as possible. 1 i Pays Second Visit Formosa
| GENERALISSIMO CHIAN G/ ond war-time visit to Korea for KAI-SHEK sald today reform of| ls the governing Kuomintang party| aR of-the Fpot_appeaieal the has rid the Chinese Nationalists ie han of inner conflicts in their struggle '2Nce . fghter airstrip bid Korea against the Reds. and went directly to 8th Army | Headquarters, = . : In an interview attended by 9 8 ! Madame Chiang Kai-shek, the There he conferred for 80 min{Generalissimo said: > {utes with Lt. Gen, Walton H.| | “We Tot oD the Communists Walker, commander of the 8th ‘because of our mistakes in the Army and of United Nations past. The ile] Puro He with Lt, Gen George Stratemeyer, | : 3 Sticommander of the Far Eastern jconilets mong Siiques within the Air Forces, and Maj. Gen. Earl party il — a a ye Es Partridge, commander of the 5t . against communism, so that our Sth Air Force cause will be vindicated.” Back at the pirstelp for the | Chiang yesterday aboiished the/ {OTE OF CUE UI Ht Central Executive € ye and ing pleased him more than the
{the Central Supervizoty- Comi news he was to get some British {mittee of the Kuomintang. {Commonwealth troops to reinIndonesia fares his Eighth Army.
| | “I have fought in association | INDONESIAN armed forces with them for many years and I have landed on the south Mohicca have a degree of confidence in Islands of Ceram and Boero, and them which could not be exheavy fighting is going on, a celled,” he sald. “As you know, | Moluccan representative said to-|
a g waged in Korea. “Reactions are sure to occur in the interval of time between a the initiative that the enemy has and the initiative that he is going to lose,” he said. “I am completely confirmed in ithe estimates that I made to the President of the United States last week that the enemy lost his great chance for victory in the last three weeks." Gen. MacArthur said he knew American units in action in Korea were fighting well because "Amerfcan troops always fight well” “Gen. Walker and his division commanders are handling the situation with marked energy and superior efficiency,” he said.
in...
Proud of Dispatching FULTON, Ky. (UP)-—-Samuel Leonard Brown, who retired after 568 years of railroading, said his proudest boast was that in 40 years as a dispatcher he never had been responsible for any accident that resulted in personal injury or property damage.
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Gen. MacArthur paid his sec-
He said ups and downs must be held an emergency day. {expected in the type of war being
ground forces, and for 25 minutes §
Telon-—1adio-plooquply
Pvt. Tommie YanCleave :
Pvt. Tommie VanCleave, 21, Lafayette, is reported missing in Korea. A member of the 24th Infantry Division, which was the first to see action against the Communists, Pvt. VanCleave was reported missing in a telegram received Tuesday night by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milton VanCleave, Lafayette, He is the nephew of Mrs, Harry Lingenfelter, 3318 E. 25th St. The War Department tele-
ing since July 12. He was in the 21st Regiment.
{day that a home-made “incendi-
la. m., filling the first floor press jand mail rooms with smoke,
~~ World-Telegram-Sun NEW YORK, July 27 (UP)~ Lee B. Wood, executive editor of the strike-bound New York WorldTelegram and Sun, reported to-
ary device” exploded outside the newspaper plant just before 9
The: explosion occurred 20 feet from the area in which members of the New York Newspaper Guild (CIO) were picketing, Mr. wood said the extent of the damage had not yet been determined,
and one-half hours . . . = swish comfortably ~. through the skies at 500 miles per hour. ® That's what the experts are predicting for the near future . .. the fastest public transportation ever conceived, ; ® How this may be accom-
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but that no one was injured. Mr. Wood said pictures of the!
INEW BLOW TO POLIO gram said he had been miss- | tryptophan fighting polio and common colds. meter events.
OPEN MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, 9:30 TO 5—SATURDAY UNTIL 1
device showed that 16 firecrackers!
{were wired and taped together so {that when one went off, the others, | would explode. He sald he beliéved!
the package also contained a
ichemical because “it fiercely,” Police put flames,
| There were no arrests, but aJapan in three events if Coach ldetective was assigned to investi- {Bob Kiphuth gave the okay. gate. |
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plished . . . how fast your
For Mrs. John Bean A 22-year-old polio victim, formerly of Indianapolis, died Monday in El Paso, Tex., two minutes before her second son was born, relatives here said today.
Rites in Knightstown i
Bro
urday in Shirley : will be in Wash+
Chapel. Burial
5128 E. Walnut St, died Monday
later, a month premature. Mrs. Bean, a 1945 Howe High
School graduate and student at
Yale Swimmer Ready To Meet Jap Star
TOKYO, July 27 Marshall, Yale's
(UP)—John world - record
Butler University one year, was married here in January, 1948; to
John Bean, a saddlemaker, for-io7 merly of El Paso. x {Medal of Honor winners, exempt Their first son, Billy, was born from service because of their the following October, after they awards, said today they would burned smashing swimmer from Aus- moved to Texas. A native of New go back in uniform in the event
out theltralia, said today he was ready Castle, Mrs. Bean had lived in In-|
Joseph Fulton;
Mrs. Virginia Bean, daughter penker and Mrs. Edgar Johnson, of Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson, all of Indianapolis, .and Mrs,
‘Charles Scrofe, Grosse Point, Mich., and two brothers,
i Ray+ in an El Paso, Tex., hospital. Her| 4 ,nq john W. Lovell, Ine son, Don, was born two minutes ;i,nanolis.
Pe ee 3 Honor Medal Men Ready to Go to War lll
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. July (UP)—Three Congressional
{the Korean conflict erupts inte
to meet Hironoshin Furuhashi of dianapolis since she was four. World War IIL
Marshall, who arrived here to-|
to Delta Delta Delta Sorority.
day with a 10 man U. 8. squad for ter, Mrs. Caroline Sabol, Indian-
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{a three-day meet here next month, apolis, and her grandfather, John called 5-methylisaid he'd like to compete against/M. Johnson, Knightstown. Serv-| in| Furuhashi in the 400, 800 and 1500 ices and burial will be held injcan
Knightstown at a future date,
ETT
Other survivors include a sis-|ployee;
While at Butler, she was a pledge! The heroes are John Sjorjen,
Administration em« Richard Viug, a mail carrier, and Franklin Pierce, a {policeman. All are members of {the Michigan National Guard, but be separated from service at {their option.
{ Veterans
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# Miss Pat prise miscells Miss Kraft a Aug. 19, in St. Assisting Constance Ze Guests w mothers of tl Craighead, A. Kolker, Sydn: Zeller and J, | Also at the Edith Volz, Janet Baumg Carroll, Mar Patricia Quin Miss Mary the honor g daughter par day afternoo of her aunt, Connell, on Miss Ellio Woerner will in the Irvi Church. Rece Connell and the future b Nelson Ellio ward Wilson,
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