Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 September 1950 — Page 3
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Indianapolis Man ‘Gls Ready to Back Up Marine Thrust in KoreaMighty Mo's 109 4 Prfeser wim jg pi Umbrella
a . . | (Continued From Page One) planes had joined another naval succeed. That much could be/ble means of supply and support } + Times State Service : ; a ; ies in C on a Admiral James H. Doyle had !3Sk force in softening up the sald by the people ~ho knew from North Korea. Guns Blast Port | BLOOMINGTON, Sept. 15 = Covers Landings 4, siniaiBheibosilnie odode BORO a —OPAOPOd I mrsommmmes a x - & eS on -
west coast of Korea with a days- enough about it to speak with . Saves Allied Lives {Samuel Yellen, associate profes-
cpl R.E Wilson | “This mission must be success- i Sombardment at ang ‘on authority. d Gen. MacArthur’ 1 Prescnia the Com. i uals 27 nama Laver. Moves r . . BB. full e er side o nchon. | revive . CArthurs munists a two-front war at ' “" 43 Killed in K I re ropa uy Toa hiy Vice Admiral Arthur D.'strategy famous in the second a time when they were reeling Bombardment Marks | (Latest Model)” in the current Prevents Red : in Korea leven prevent the major amenit. Struble's 7th Fleet furnished the World War. The landings bore his from heavy losses in the south. | Return to Action [Hiew Fore maghant. Toward Beachhead (Continued From Page One) ious assaul ) eavy cruisers and destroyers for trademark: | ‘FOUR: It aimed a highpowered sy : ens hunorOus essay brother of Clarence Basey. hs push Ee hanen Tn. the air-sea assault on the in- “Cut Them Off” ,. | wedge at the only good communi-| iy Fo Faas wi a satirizes magazine fiction writers) (Continued From Page Ome) ney : vigor despite loss or difficulties » VaSion coast. | “Hit them where they are light cations route running north-south ed somewha ty =n she as ald who describe their college pro-|/crashed and exploded at Okinaws Pvt. Donovan S. Jacks, son of The Wolmi assault team hit The amphibious assault on the and cut them off.” That was his iP Korea. . w = 7 mu ak in Jarpion fessor heroes as athletic World during a takeoff. One of the 11 Mrs. Virginia G. Jacks, Gas City. hard and its losses were small, N€art of the Communist strong- creed as he fought the Japanesé FIVE: It saved Allied lives. be- a vo 20, pw aps War II veterans in their mid 20's crewmen is missing and two fires Pfc. Millard 8. Moffett, son of The pulverizing support fire '0/d was made at an unorthdoX from New Guinea through the-Cause it obtained a military foot- |, = there 15 da ~ d her ski Ne Jang Iivfeional o> |Neb Sghiing Iie jeitiiy uM ! Mrs. Lor Newburg. {rom navy ships and ‘airplanes, NOUr—early in the afternoon. The Ehilippines from 1942 to 1945. (hold in the north that would have HN a oy IL ow promotion, were killed. Ten crewmen werd. Jil EE a roma Ss AoA RE Te 2A BN WT RAGE ET or A i 3 A Br Be AL AN Mien ms “BFOkenly, today< af “SHE~TOld “Gr EirsettentiE up BeTove the Attack, To C0 DECKUSE OF THE WIHETS TUE Rreft"NCHTeVed “INE ~ Hegree or SEMURE -Sivongh- the ragged ire SOSLAL, COLLIS pe FF dE PATIENT Heit Derg a imoth@ planer en F-00-st; Se ‘being notified Wednesday that had broken the back of Red re- 'Uating tides. : surprise in the Korean~offensive Detween Taegu and Seoul. Headquarters disclosed that the romanti€' fictional hero type isilost slong with its pilot when one of her two soldier sons in Sistance. And the rolling barrage : Hope for Final Battle that he did in his Pacific cam. At first the details of the land- Big Mo. arrived in the Korean extremely slight, Prof. Yellen as br fraMinona lowe Korea was dead _ from cruisers, destroyers and United = Press Correspondext paigns. ings were skimpy, as is the case theater after steaming 11,000 concludes. - eve strafing pass, Be —killed in ac- planes kept the.defenders of the Robert C. Miller, who went in There was ample evidence that With all major military opera- miles at hign speed from Norfolk, . 'y Fhe warplanes loaded out m, tion. . shattered island on the run. (with one of the Marine landing the landings were ‘an ill-kept tions in ‘which information might Be route he, We A ajraite 3a Detore indugtrt al Cpl, Robert E. | 30 Reds Surrender » (Parties, said the amphibious op- secret, that the enemy knew P® of value to a floundering a cane. off 2h aiteras, lar | me S t t ii Fig wiry from. Wilson, 18, was eration was launching “what we pretty well, where the force was enemy. - tvaded ‘a ‘tropical storm at} : ’ SR Hay Joe : si At least 80 Communists surren- | United Pres Panama then’ rode into-Korean| (the North Korean Communist fighting with the | hope to be the final battle of the going to land. ea J ; Press Correspondent | 8 ar Tota! 4 pp ro flo ichine by the Air Fores, It "25th Infantry Di- -dered -to-- the Americans. Their Korean War.” | Military sources calied it a Gene Symonds reported from sth Waters on’ the tail of a typhoon. 4 [Ar CHIE BY Hie Xr cone vision when he dead still are uncounted. He reported that (he whole sound operation, because: Army Headquarters that Soutfi| A! the break of dawn today, rozen ’ m jie Dlines gus stieid : Ted Bept. Eighty-eight minutes after the gperation had been blyeprinted in. ONE: It drove into the heart of Korean commandos landed behind the big battleship-ran up the Unl-| centrate on close-support and ine Bor. Mia first Leatherneck hit the beach, the smallest detail, the : supplies the Communist ‘army, and shifted the enemy lines just north of {ed Nations ‘flag. Then all hell, |terdiction missions. Jewell Nation Fi ig |were adequate, the men were the mainfront to the vital center Pohang Thursday night. broke loose Re SNE hpteg 20 une Terms Extended lat Hammer Rou lemons the ’ earn 3 : secure.” |trained, they carried the “dead of the invaded Korean republic. An 8th Army spokesman said r | mered learned. two days Allied Air and Naval forces had jjegt oh one we possess.” ad | TWO: It left the bulk of the the “youth battalion” of specially ®Ning bombardment. Year After July, 51 [U. 8. Sth Air Force ham
plastered Wolmi for two days be-| The big amphibious o rate Commun iat arn trained shock t . At the outbreak of the Korean, (Continued From Page One) elements of the North Korean" , : 1 v alon the Cc roops went ashore od : 4 Cpl.-R.- Wilson... fore the Marines went ashore. nyq tie Mh and PACKING to beachhead perimeter a i ust above Pohang, 26 miles down war —the-Mo-—was—on—the—east Presidential “freeze order of en- 4Fmy-in-300-close-support sorties, One of the richest prizes in the the coast from the Yongdok site C08st of the U. 8. serving as a jjg¢ments of reservists was taken Meantime, sweeps were made Seoul area will be the Kimpo air-
2go. Cpl. Wilson had 7 been in Korea six weeks. He arrived from
; ® 0p. : of the Marine landing, and were training .ship”in a reduced com- on against nine enemy airfields north Diana July 24 Shordy ore port northwest of Seoul, where § ’ lengaged in heavy fighting. They Mission status. She has been the to Include the Guard, too: “The of the 37th Parallel to insure that son. 20. went Do Korea with the ne big commercial air liners called for air support. only U. 8. battleship on active Impression was wrong, but this the Communists had no opportu= Signal ‘Corps landed before the war, One re-| ] | The Communist radio broke the Service in the past several years. is official,” Gen. Hitchcock sald. nity .to mount even limited air Both formerly carried The In- POT! said a unit of Marines were (Continued From Page One) (space to prop up a writing pad. news on the Marine landing by . She was commissioned in June. | The “involuntary extension” for °Trensives.
dianapolis Times. Both were Striking for the airport. Mr. Poats combat veteran who came to a Nearly everyone has slept for reporting Thursday night that de- 1944. Besides the Iwo Jima and men who do not plan to to re-,, “TOE Pe airfields ut ware _members of the West Washington [6PoTted that the drive generally south Korean port directly from hours on end, curled up on the fenders of the Inchon area had Okinawa campaigns, she partici-'gniict also applies to about 500 N0s¢ at Pyongtaek and Kang.
“Street Church of Christ. was Inland toward Seoul. |the front lines. They were loaded decks or stretched out on bunks, sunk four U. 8. landing craft and Pated in the 3d and 5th fleet mon in the Air National Guard aa No LUVIEY. as Shatrved Cpl. Robert Wilson's last let-| Doyle in Command lat the same port where they ar- collecting the time lost in fox- three destroyers and damaged raids on Japanese home islands Gen Hitchcock said. A A rt Aires, One truck ter home, written Aug. 30, told The amphibious assaults on Tived early in August. holes and during night vigils in three other landing craft. {ln World War II. | Other developments on the yarmaceg during thése strikes of his worry when he heard that both coasts of Korea clamped a| But it was a differant group the front lines. | Around the beachhead perime-| She was returned to the U, 8. Hoosier mobilization front: Two planes and pilots were lost his. brother had arrived in the long range pincers on the waist/of men who trudged aboard this [Every deck has a dozen card ter, the fighting was paled into Shortly after Gen. MacArthur re- ONE. A “courtesy visit” this yesterday R . same war-torn country. lof the peninsula. Its closing|ship after five weeks of battle ames going, cribbage, poker, and insignificance alongside the land- céived the Japanese surrender py, ,rning by Col. John H. Gibson.” An F.80 jet fighter crashed and Cpl. William Wilson's most re- would trap the Communist army|in Korea. all the rest. {ings to the north. aboard her. The peacetime duties recently appointed Chief of Indi- burned near Tabu -and an F-51 cent letter was written from and solve the problem of what| These are the véterans. who. The rifles and machine guns —- Reds Lose Angang. - included a trip to Rio de Janeiro ana Military District, with Gov. Mustang ‘fighter crashed a ?
Taegu, around which some of the to do about the 38th parallel, came from the states, cocky and have been cleaned and oiled care-| On the northeastern front. the “0 President Truman aboard g.nricker
was labeled “strictly tensio fiercest fighting has been carried border between North and South eager, with brand new equipment, fully for the'20th time. On them South Korean capital division re. Md a trip to 18tatibul, to return gocial” But it was believed that none Kuksa, a duntegratads, on recently. | Korea. joverflowing with wisecracks. The Was lavished the loving care that captured Angang, eight miles the body of a U. 8. ambassador.iy, “conversation.” in which Gen. berger ——— . Cpl. Robert Wilson, son of Wil-| The grand strategy of the care- five weeks wrought great changes. comes from long attachment. southwest of Pohang. Cron a a Hitchcock participated dealth Coad Post ‘Pin-Ups’ liam D. Wilson, Phoenix, Ariz, fully prepared United Nations | Their cockiness has been replaced] The paper work goes on; The South Koreans and Amer- GE, Union Near Accord largely with the role of Ft. Har- oec osture in-Ups attended Manual High School offensive emerged from the by a quieter dignity. ‘throughout the ship. Various icans were shoved out of Angang NEW YORK. Sept. 15 (UP). '1#0n will play in all-out mobili- Rejected by Thief two -years -before enlisting Nov.;Marine- landing. It was-to-slice| They know they-are good. They sections handle the thousand and Sept. 3 by the big offensive Which mu ep or]
l 7 ; ; zation. } | , « 10, 1949. He took basic training across the waist of Korea, cuthave proved it. But they also one details assoiciated with war./cracked the Allied right Wing. | (1 qenonaent) sonmmced. tages! TWO: A House bill passed yes-| ITHICA, N. Y., Sept. 15 (UP)—
at Ft. Knox, Ky. |off the Communist army massed know tke price that war takes, In the upper deck staterooms| News of the Allied INVASION yp it has “reached a tentative terday providing for the draft of Cornell University coeds breathed His parents and his brother are around the allied beachhead rim, and they know what is ahead of weary senior officers confer over swept the Taegu front today. settlement of all contract issues” Selective Service registrants to easier today their posture: sile I the only immediate survivors. and destroy it there, nullifying them now. [top secret maps and Jocuments,| It spread by word of mouth! 'butld up the Coast Guard was ex. NOuettes were back under lock ight ; , with the General Electric com- and key. Mrs. Nation yesterday wrote to the issue of what would happen! Many faces are missing in the memorizing - details, making to GIs in their foxholes and to pany. The union represents some Pected to have little effect on In- . - the Defense Department, request- When it was shoved back to the weathered ranks which trooped changes and suggestions. Any of South. Koreans on the streets. It 45.000 workers in GE's plants diana. | The silhouettes, stolen last ever ing that her sole remaining son 38th parallel. 4 |aboard the big gray ships. Some the items might: mean the life of was the best news they had heard throughout. the country. | ————————— !spring from the physical edueabe transferred to duty in a peace-|- The amphibious landings were of the missing are in hospitals, any part of the assault force. |since the Korean War began. | NEIouL 18 couny. {500 STRIKE AT WABASH tion department, were returned ful area. |commanded by .Rear Admiral recovering from wounds. Others There is no rest for them, and! The only ones unimpressed were GETS $3 MILLION CONTRACT | WABASH, Sept. 15 (UP)— via express by the unknown thief. 2 #8 (James Doyle, veteran of many will never leave Korea. the responsibility is the heaviest the North Koreans, who launched, ALBANY, Sept. 15 (UP)—Gull Some 500 members of Local 923 The silhouettes, used to remedy . Trapped for four days behind beach landings in the South Pa-| These last few hours have been in the world. They are the ones attacks on almost the whole of Contracting Co., Flushing, L. I, of the United Electrical Workers postural defects, are {identified es. : Communist lines in Korea, Pfc. cific during the second world war. spent in various ways. The mail who give the word that sends the|the 120-mile perimeter and suc- has been awarded a $3,473,519 (Ind.) struck the General Electric only by numbers. For a time, uniRichard F. Wentworth and other| It was supported by the famous/sacks bulge with the before-the- attack into high gear. Once ceeded in driving back the weary state contract to erect a section plant here today, demanding al versity officials feared they would GIs fought their way back to the Task Force 77, commanded by battle letters scribbled wherever started; there is nq turning back. 1st Cavalry Division 1000 yards of the Van Wyck expressway in “living “wage” and company-paid turn up as pin-ups in the male U. 8. forces. The next day, just Rear Admiral E. C. Ewen. His there were a few square feet of This is it. i [northwest of Taegu. ‘Queens County. : | pensions. | dormitories. when “things looked better,” Pfc. " : : " - Bloor Wentworth was wounded. #2 : ga caught in the bocirclomont Ave| STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW STRAUSS SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW 16 in the Pohang area. He and . é other GIs were left without food } ’ ; : . and water. In heavy. fighting, : — im ) sometimes outnumbered 100 to 1, they slashed their way back on Aug. 20. Pfc. Wentworth was wounded Aug. 21. He is now in a Pohang hospital. | Pfc. Wentworth, in the Army ~ three years, had been stationed fn Japan before he was shipped to Korea early in July. He is
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with the 19th Infantry Regiment 9:30 TO BE = : of the 24th Division. 3 : g *» Pfc. Wentworth, 20, attended 5:00 HE ie - Public School 52. : gmp Pfc. Clay was killed in action \ . in Korea on Aug. 10. He entered DAILY IF E :
the Army Mar. 14, 1949, and was home on furlough last June. Soon afterward he left for Ft.| Lewis, Washington. He arrived in Korea on Aug. 1 and was assigned to the Second Infantry. Pvt. Clay is the second Anderson soldier to be killed in the conflict. : gg Sgt. Basey was wounded in action in Korea Aug. 23. His brother, Cpl. Dallas Basey, was Eide wounded Aug. 12. 1 ~The boys entered the Army in ii 1948. They were sent to Hawaii
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= and later to Japan and Korea. F Both soldiers served in World £ War II. Leonard served three —
years and Dallas was on active duty for eighteen months. s » o Cpl. J. B. Spencer was wounded in the right leg during Korea fighting Aug. 30. A recent letter to his sister told of the wounds and reported he was resting com- _ fortably in an Army hospital. ~The 30-year-old GI had served - BX YORPE TH tHE ATTY, TET [remoteness overseas service during World War II. He had lived in Shreveport, La. before joining the Army.
Polio Epidemic Teams : Fight Utica Outbreak
CA, N.Y. Sept. 15 (UP)— .
Infantile paralysis epidemic teams
eA A ‘GENTLEMEN! A SERIES OF FINE FLANNEL SUIS I x i TAILORED AT FASHION PARK FEATURED AT . ere era - mint : TT “DEAR SIR=YOUR fall arma moss S353 SE RE RS SR Ep utilis ion
swamped with polio cases brought
“here from four upstate counties = : : $ : : : during the past two months, : Ten Tm HA | i ERE RI i i ( | oT : - . x =~ A ———— - = } -
Held Under $5000 :
Bo Bonk Theft | It could be a special fur-felt—for say— REE Tiegh Bs Hisilod nde; Pork oti he I a : . a ''card of introduction The flannels are rich under $5000 bond on a charge of h 50 . : } _. to those who may and supple— embezzling $14,078 from the First ) : National Bank of Central City, » - = . Coe not as yet have experienced = Suits of cosmopolitan BY ot agents arrested him yes- : i ui AT ES the exclusive: satisfaction character—including those ; fore 0.8. Commissioner Carl E.| OR—a DOBBS, featured af ve in possessing the "Smartest that seem to : a orarpant was Lh — ; . - in the clothing world" Tia ~~ remove poundage from Co s1 i &%1 5 (Fashion Park clothes— men of girth—and to r ~ : AI | ) _ in the judgment of give height to men i : : . many men—are in THAT - who can use it! RU ARK If might he d CAYANAGH—Tor category!) * Naturally—Such noteworthy : : * And presented as value as this price—would vs. $20 or $40 tor a compliment . have a powerful influence on fF MEN he Spr Ti deer tel rrertem efpinie —————— +o those who already — _ ‘the upper ranges—3$85 and $95. TF. : The thi ; ber is—th hat will look goo : ; A , joy lence. IN| mososmseemes, | wml ilies Rood Robart Rugs } Way to the wallet! Wonderful for the money! : 2 : . C.D wi : : : Wine awa ll 1:0 L STRAUSS & C 2 it i L.-STRAUSS & CO., THE MAN'S STORE. THE wens 5d oC ee EE ec. coop 0. INC. ~~ (IOTHING FLOOR—SECOND. 45 SECONDS VIA | || @aui= | THE MAN'S STORE © EECIRIC STAIRWAY FROM STREET FIOOR ~~
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