Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1950 — Page 1

ow 94.50

and a lot of en- _ 193.05 now 137.50

AGAINST THE park down. y gray broadloom, $179 now $105

Flgor Coverings, ith Floor

Il the Breaks! STER LIVING

WN — Our rubber

quit. are stuck! Nice tern, too, prevent pa's carelessness, o a glass, but detick to our shelves, green or yellow, 8 for 1.95. Good-

ASTIC — 'Smatter It's got a low int, and it Jooks ome we can’t sell aspoons, stirrers, stirrer sets, 6-pc. pc. beverage sets, r sets, all plastie astically reduced. 4.50, now 50c to

AM —— Plenty of <

and a few sit_tight or our a trailer king alad plates, sugar ets, celéry dishes ng pieces (not the atare odd around i5¢ to 3.95, now

a ond Crystal Shop, th Floor

A Dim View These

TA LITTLE BIT ONED, and there loo many Marys. y table lamps are eople with young 4.95, now 7.95.

Lovely Lamps, th Floor

t in a Storm

I, any time ne of these fieldWere 4.98, now

Sporting Goods, he Annex

tf the Century

'R CHALLENGE on’t put it down goodness -that ‘were 2.98,

'E YOUR FURN-

u can thrill your ne of 60 Ranch- -

uses. And if you he language far int than that let's it. Were 498,

ys, in the Annex

BUR

you

- sake! _

at Victory Field last night.

© wearing purple moccasins,

61st YEAR—NUMBER 158

Troon I GS fpy Pe, oy,

i

>

A MAN's blood white hot pennant rabid fan.

By ED SOVOLA pressure takes an awful beating ed a race. The losing team has Sethi on a

I called upon science in the forms of two St. Viieent s Hos- | pital nurses to help me see the ups and downs of my systolic | guard against Job much popcorn

and diastolic, temperature and z x

fact that senior student nurse

m-had-&-pight-off-an ‘baseball; -and-that—

Pop bottle for the ump...

hospital officials saw no harm in having them accompany me with the latest scientific equipment like the thermometer, stetho-

with broken glass and mercury might foul up the scientific data they hoped to glean. Shortly Miss Clones reported she detected a samba rhythm the stethoscope and Miss Wilhelm, reading the pressure machine, announced I hit 350. Indian pitchers coming and going provided most of the activity for several innings. In the “big” seventh, Dom Dallessandro, slipped through enemy lines and scored. My attendants changed mercury in the pressure cooker and took a new reading. I was alive although you couldn't prove it

sh the Place Can Take Off Shees and Put

Old Manners

FF WITH A 2-HOT—-Lawson it scores high in Ing room, rose or , and we've got , In case you're pany. Were $169,

D UP AND NO yO BUT HOME — pe sofa with two ns. fringed base, brush edge trim, gold matelasse.

vitch digits and -

NGE STORY. so well sit down In ounge chair with over and a price 1 from $298 to

SITS UGLY an't barrel to ade've got 6 barrel very swang with Vv lees and brass 39.95 each, now

3E SELFISH = WHO CHEAT

EN OUT OF A .

achelor dressing compartmented atch the other 19.50, $110

OLD FASHught to fell you de is not to cone think it's for . . . atching 4-drawer . was 79.50, 59.50

Fine Furniture, x h *

+ oi Our side, one run se

with the stethoscope because by that time it had curled up and was fast alseep. : i 2 ” ” ” ” ”

“| Heads Slap Ban'*

BY Clots aid ir Labor, Hauling

{partment casualty. of the Korean | War

| The commission's action fol{lowed reports that state highway |workers have been using state- - a Btate-1

{forms are needed during the pres-

{missioners prepared to end the|

{ partment.”

THURSDAY, AUG

Entered »

MaMer ab Ind)

1, 19850

ERATE

State Highway

Liddd

Capture d As Murderer

~|GI Tells How Enemy

On Give-Aways

No More ‘Handouts’ Of Free Materials,

“By IRVING LEIBOWITE

| The State Highway Departiment today banned all “giveaways."

| That means no more free ma|terials, free transportation or free labor, according to Samuel Hadden, chairman of‘ the highway board. { Republican Commissioner A.J. |Wedeking estimated that the {state could save hundreds of! {thousands of dollars by enforcing} |a political reform system de{signed to halt state highway | “handouts.” The order, he said, makes politics the first State Highway De-

“Action Follows Reports owned materials

and politicians.” Recognizing that political re-

for “friends

{ent war crisis, the highway com-|

Acema Telephoto

A captured Russian- built j jeep provides cover or r Col Robert E. Cail

{long years of a political spoils | system that has “cursed the de-|

In a specially prepared letter, written by Maintenance Supt. Earl B. Lockridge at the request of the commissioners, state highway workers were urged to re-

scope-and blood pressure gadget, heiped a lot. Jinn Lom ang away, sain)... Placed on Standby. Alert; up to the first baIf of the frst. |e vine of ot a 31 ang rg Ordered Up in Bahamas | th SEplodeq, for. a Hans likey paid > IL MIAMI, Fla. Aug 17 (UP)—A tremendous "polls The two angels of mercy cautioned me that popcorn mixed y

ter threatened violators of this

atest policy with immediate ais-(gpg the Florida peninsula was

missal. is now a lar Letter Sets New Policy Ts -

The letter said in part:

“jothers,

{your friends and make more, but Summer. do not hesitate to say no when | no | is the correct answer.

IN THE EIGHTH Dale Coogan ook a bat and hit a baseball.

He was allowed to touch three bases. The entire visiting outfield | was addled. Dallessandro noticed this and. hit the samie lucky ball among three Saint. No one wanted to-be a hog so they let | it fall, Our side had two runs now. Then the umpire threw in a | new ball and the Indians were through. From the mass of data the nurses gathered, two little figures | stood out like a sore.thumb—-4 to 2. They packed their systolic | and diastolic’ and softly Stole away murmuring, “Never again, never again.” !

Can I help it if thermometers don’t come equipped with be

strings? You playum good tonight, Indians, ugh, burp. ;

office . . . that certain of our em- coast. ployees have been too liberal in He said the storm was moving |the matter of giving away state-'at about 10 miles an hour with purchased materials and lending, winds estimated at 140 miles an’

{the use of state-owned equipment | hour at th at the center. land labor paid by the state.

“You must recognize that if

you wrongfully give away state| ‘Heat Makes 2d materials to please or accomodate

some one individual or even * Day Stand; High

community, you bring on the displeasure and condemnation of

“It is nice to able to say yes to a friend, but more commend- ed down on Indianapolis for the able to be able to say no, yet re-|®econd consecutive day to mar a tain that friendship, Please keep heretofore cooler than usual

The mercury was expected tol {rise to about 80 degrees sometime | “It is recognized that on occa- between 3 and 4 p.m. today betore ‘expected thundershowers

(Continued on 2 Page 3—Col. 2) . - Looking for Investment Property ? 7 Mk SID 3; Bodrmy. & Sain _ bo gar. Any Time: HE 0098. HU-1 Should stand good loan. BARTH REALTY CO., Realtors ® This one. is in a good location, and is only one of HUNDREDS of Homes for Sale in the Classified Columns of today's Times. There you will ind a large number of doubles, duplexes, investment and ‘business“properties as well as a {holes of the 36-hole final in the complete selection of |8tate Open Golf Championship. | homes in all price classes, | Wampler was playing with all types, and from all {Wayne Timberman, Meridian Hills *= sections of the city, sub- [professional, who yesterday tied urbs and the country. The Times is THE [turning in 137 totals. NEWSPAPER with the = Timberman matched par with Real Estate Ads! . — a 35 this ‘morning.

High yesterday was 1. 8 at 4pm.

THE “INDIANAPOLIS Water] Co. officials reported the city used more water yestetday than in-any| other day this year — 70,270,000 gallons. The record was on Aug. 27, 1948. when 73,060,000 gallons were pumped, a

. N. OF FALL

Wampler = 33 in State Open |

"(Earlier | r Story on Page 31) - |

“TERRE HAUTE, Aug. 17— Fred Wampler Jr., national inter. {collegiate golf champion from In-| |dianapolis, pushed into the lead]

{this morning when he fired a two-

Marines, Near Goal, Forced To Turn. Back To Rescue Army Units In Peril

Twice in this Korean War American Leathernecks have had to cut short thelr own mission fo rescue besieged Army forces. This dispatch was logjammed under censorship wraps In Tokyo for four days. An official Army release has now cleared it for publication. Keyes Beech, who served as a Marine combat correspondent in World War II, states privately at the end of this dispatch: “I realize that as an ex-Marine I'll be accused of bias, but unfortunately the foregoing is fact”

By KEYES BEECH, Times Foreign Correspondent

WITH U, 8. FORCES ON THE SOUTHWEST KOREAN: FRONT (Delayed) ~— Bunday our baffled, angry Marines found themselves back wheré they started. They were halted just short of their Objective and sent back

| to get the Army out of a jam.

Trailing salty epithets, none of them. complimentary to the Army, they turned back on Army orders after a 27-mile-advance in in. Zar days to within two miles of Bashon, n, 10 miles south of They were getting ready to push oko. | Bachon when the orders turning them around came. Bachon has an important air strip and air strips available to American planes are getting scarcer all the time in Korea. They were were called back to their jumping off point to rescue the Army's 5th Regimental combat team. The 5th, after adNorth Koreas guanine "10 the Test and both Saaks by guerrillas.

‘Gold Coast’ of Florida Periled by Heavy Blow With th Shugging 1st

hurricane rolled across the Atlantic toward south Florida's “Gold Coast” today. Hurricane warnings were ordered up in the northern Bahamas put on a standby alert. and severe hurricane,” caster Grady Norton said at 9:30 a. m. | placed the storm center 480 miles/ “Information has come to this east of Miami moving toward the

Yesterday 896 |

SWELTERING weather Sama The Market Basket lists cur-

| Kd Bovola finds local motorists i

bring relief tonight and tomorrow, Last night was Shrine night at

tunder-par 33 for the first nine ~————

{for the lead with Wampler, hoth Humidity at 11:30 a. m.

pass

Ordered Men Beaten —

Until They Were Dead

BULLETIN u. 8. STH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Friday, Aug. 18 (UP)—North Korean artillery began shelling the

. bank of the Naktong near Waegwan. i By ROBERT VERMILLION, United Press Staff Correspondent:

Aug. 17—Twenty-six bound and helpless American captives were shot down by the North Koreans last night. The Communist lieutenant accused of ordering the murders has been captured, it was announced tonight. The lieutenant is the first enemy to be captured and accused of war crimes. He was seized by American troops on Hill 303, north-

LAKE SUCCESS, N, Y., Aug. 17 (UP)—Soviet Delegate Jacob A, Malik summoned a surprise secret meeting of members of the United Nations Security Council for 1 p. m. today. No reason was given for the sudden call,

west of Taegu. - Five survivors of the massacre stand ready to testify against him. High officers said one wounded survivor

identified the captured lieutenant as the man ‘who ordered

the Gls beaten to death be- NmmY-guns came forward snd cause they had worked loose. seized the rifles of the surrending The Korean prisoner was troops.

sent to 8th Army Headquarters] “They stripped us down, took tonight for “higher: echelon” our helmets and shoes, and tied handling. us with shoe laces,” he said.

Cpl. Grail Fights

rn gs

a

is in the thick

fighting in South Korea.

chief storm Fore- ( Indianapolis time), He

(High School two years ago, was pictured in an Acme telephoto, received by The Indianapolis Times today, using a captured

On the Inside Of The Times jeep as protection against Red! . Page snipers.

Russia's Jacob Maltk is No, 1 Cpl. Crail entered the Marines bogey-man as T-V brings [goon after receiving his high his United Nations tirades |gonool diploma. He is now with and sneers right into Ameri- , |the 1st Marine Divsion.

can Hving rooms ...... i Girls get chance at varied ?| Favaret Flgwery x | careers through IU's health He had been working after TRAUCATION COUTSE +0vessrnns

|a greenhouse. Had it not bee for the troubled international sit uation, he would have followed al career of floriculture and land\scape gardening. i Cpl. Crail, now 20, ‘is the son Col Peter | he x Grail, nav of Detrok| {and Mrs. Mildred Scott, 2519 E.| ar! | Washington Bf va | His grandmother, Mrs. ence Crajl, lives at 1026 8t. Paul! 8t. He has one sister, Mrs. John|

rent bargains in fresh fruits and vegetables in Indianapolis grocery bins .......... 10]

are bum steerers; C. Bullard, who commands "© 40,000 Hoosier Reservists, is leaving Ft, Harrison ...:.

Victory Feild; a good time. was had by all except the

Indianapolis Indians ...... 31|Cook, 1348 W, 34th St. He is] Amusements ............ 18 |#ngle. : | About People ...cec0vven 16 Cpl. Crail was home in June Bridge «cose eerneindiaie, 9 (for a long furlough; and returned Classified .............34-38 [to California just before the Com-| Comics .urusueronns eves 39 munist invasion of Bouth Korea,

—A-—short-time later the 1st Ma-1 irvine Division. was shipped. to ha).. battle front.

126 | grains iin Russia.

The North Koreans faded into the hills to let the enemy pass’ through toward Chinju ‘Gap, then struck in a pre-dawn attack Saturday. The attack forced our artillery to abandon its gun positions and flee. From hills overlooking the valley observers could see deserted artillery pieces, The Marines withdrew in good order, some of them in Russian-made jecps and motorcycles which the Communists had abandoned in their hasty departure from Kosong. The Marines, who left 200 vehicles in the Btates because they didn't have shipping space, pounced upon the enemy vehicles with great glee,

_Some enemy jeeps had American tires.

i ss 8 » [ The road beyond Kosong was littered with burned-out enemy vehicles. The first enemy dead I have seen in this war lay twisted and burned alongside of them. Inhabitants of Kosong, who saw the Leathernecks run the Communists out of their town, watched with amazement as the Marines pulled out, The Marines ‘were assigned the task of mopping up the ridges in. the 25th Army division's rear. This, as one Army general conceded, was an admission that the Army couldn’t do the job itself. This was -the second time the Marines had been diverted |

An Indianapolis Marine who! ‘would rather he growing flowers who still showed signs of life. f the front line

Cpl. Robert E, Crall, who was ‘graduated from Warren Central/by the Americans who rescued’ him told the most coherent story. attacking up the hill, and the sure

Le Hag een Sorking aft in Showdown on Taequ

Fior-| throu

“They sald that if we were good The star witness againat him " |could not be reached tonight, but P°Y® they would not shoot us. |other survivors told the Suey to Raised a Fuss {reporters In a hospitsl her Shot Twice

The

a Une of _—_ a. ‘then came back and shot the head any prisoner

said.

and heard them grunt and groan.”

later was wounded acciden

The boy sald he was 18. But vivor said: {he looked like the oldest man in! "We tried to talk (the North

the world. Koreans) into geing down to the

His unit surrendered after it Americans with us and 5 getting jwas overrun by North Korean good chow. All they had to eat

tanks on Hill 303, he sald. He said Hvopa Sarrying Russian (Continued mn Tage 3 Col. 8)

Tanks Lead 30,000 Reds

By EARNEST HOBERECHT, United Press Staff Correspondent ‘TOKYO, Friday, Aug. 18-Tank-led Communist forces some 130,000 strong struck within 20 miles of Taegu today in an offensive which sent South Korean troops reeling two te three miles. - The assault on a 15-mile front dented the Allied beachhead at its northwest corner. But a spokesman at Gen. Douglas MacArthur's |headquarters said ‘early today the setback north of Taegu did not

{appear to’ be a major breakPpes } ake econd American: offensive of the “As far as we know the North] war. [Koreans still are pressing the| The two battles appeared: to. {South Korean positions in the Mark the start of a» {north,” the spokesman said. “The (Continued on Page 3—Col. 4) South Koreans are giving some ga

d, but d t k er 2 Sk oottaon Marines to Recall Inactive Reserves

outskirts of Taegu early today from positions on the west

1ST CAVALRY DIVISION HEADQUARTERS, Korea, .

The American captives spent the night on the hillside, bound

"A couple of the guys — our guys—raised a fuss,” the survivor “I think they beat them to They hit them in. the th a GI shovel and I

tally| About 9 or 10 a. m. today, 11, 8. troops could he heard eounters

RAO

or something bigger.” =_Shooling the Works’ | “CHICAGO, Aug. 17 (UP)—Col, Amerienns 25 miles southwest Frank M. Rélnecke; Marine Corps lof ‘Taegu, meanwhile, were Recruiting officer, received word

Mrs. Manners .....ccoeess 12 _ TT “shooting the works,” according|from Washington today that ine Movies ....ees crveerenes 18 SByeRuss Aid, 2 Others to front line reports from United active reservists across the nas Othman ...ceeeesceress 21 | Press Staff Correspondent Rob- tion with the rank of buck serge. RAGIO «ivneereersrrrnis . 33 Cited in Spy Probe ert C. Miller. eant or below “are to he recalled Society «.eieeavesiciinse 9 NEW YORK, Aug. 17 (UP)—| « h 0 ¢ to service immediately.” Ed Sovola....... ceived 21 | A ‘federal grand jury today ins Re ope long Toad north Col. Reinecke said he was in= Bports ....cee0000000..31-33 dicted Julius Rosenberg, 33, his Mr. Miller said. “As one Army formed that six-month defers Earl Wilson .:....... ++¢+. 26 wife Ethel, 35, and a former mm... put it: “If we lose this one, | Meénts would be granted in hardWomen's .....". ress aree 10 8oviet vice consul on charges of we might as well prepare for a ship cases, and that deferments ETT E Antes | conspiring to commit espionage. ong winter.” would be given to medical stu= LOCAL -TEMPERATURES | pe indictment also named, but, Li | dents, dental students and pers 6a m..7 10am... B2 |. 4¢ defendants, three co-con-| Looks Like Showdown | sons in key civilian jobs. Tam. 7 11a m.. 85 (0000s including Harry Gold,| In that area U, S. Marines and! He satd the callup is ‘ ‘effective 8a.m..7 12 (moon. BT |. nfessed Soviet A -bomb spy|24th Division Army troops forced|immediately.” : Sam... Lp m.. B88 |oourier who worked under Dr.(10,000-. enemy soldiers to give| The Marine Corps announced renee 58 Klaus Fuchs. ground on the northern and Aug. 7 that it would call up all The former Boviet Vice Con- southern flanks of the Com- 80,000 reservists, and today's i Today's Pollen Count sul, Anatoli H, Yakolev, is now munists’ big bridgehead in the order apparently was the first"

| Nakfong River elbow... It was the| step.

9 , War Raging in Washington, Too By JIM G. LUCAS, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Aug. 17-—-8even thousand miles back of the Korean front, another kind of war is being fought in Washington. While Gen, MacArthur's men battle to hold a beachhead | around Pusan, each branch of the Armed Services in Washington is jockeying frantically for position so it can claim later on it “won the war.” Fach service is convinced it Every communique is ammu- will deliver the knockout hition ‘for somebody. punch—or could if the other It's probably not as cal- | fellow would step aside. ~ loused as it sounds. A cer- | Each is convinced that it's tain amount of rivalry and | not getting enough credit. esprit de corps is a healthy It also suspects the other thing. And the acid bitter- “guy is getting too much. And, ness of a year ago is missing. Occasionally, there's complaint of a “low blow,” put more often they credit each other with a “master stoke.” It all ‘boils down to this:

that this country’s ability to win future—and much bigger —wars will depend in large part on who gets credit for winning this little one.

from their mission to come to he Army's rehgt. sirice their arval in Korea, The 5th Army regiment had been assigned the job of clearing the road junction near Chindong to permit the Marines to through to strike the foe at Bachon. But the offensive Si4u't Stir. MOVIE WRKH to days atar, atl She Marines had

‘cleared the enemy from one ridge and relieved the Army on

another, The offensive, as It was hailed in Tokyo finished with the Army fighting to get back to the

finally, each firmly believes |