Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1950 — Page 3

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Mr. and Mrs. Phillips i Die in Auto Accident ~ Double services for Raleigh M. | Phillips and his wife, Willameta, Pearl, who died in dn auto acci-| {dent in South Dakota Sunday, will {be at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the [Conkle West 16th Street. Funeral Home, Burial will be in K. of P./ Cemetery, Liston. [ Mr. Phillips, who was 67, a retired insurance agent for the Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. A native of Brownstown, he was a charter member of the Speedway City Masonic Lodge, | past master of the Jamestown) Masonic Lodge; and a membér of the Speedway Chapter of the OES. Mrs. Phillips was born in Liston and was a member of the Speedway Chapter of the OES. She was 69. i | Mr. and Mrs. Phillip€ lived in Speedway City 20 years and were|

Classes Kept - Realistic as Possible;

New Centers to Be Put Into Service By WILLIAM McGAFFIN, Times Foreign Correspondent FALFIELD, England, Oct. 4—Sirens wail; planes rumble overhead. Comes the spine-chilling whee-ee-ee of ‘bombs falling swiftly through Ine night. Explosion follows explosion. ~ €8 Spring up, and in their flickering light jagged silhouettes of Bomi-sagqelad houses are faintly visible, =H me are totally collapsed. Others are stan arious states of damage, with corners Sieg ia v knocked off, walls cracking, floors Air Vice Marshal Andrew Macsagging, roofs and windows gone, Gregor, formerly of RAF fighter +. . But they have something in!command and well known to common. In the ruins of each are many Americans. In addition, human beings, trapped beneath two more “rescue streets” are be-| the brick and debris of fallen ing operated in the heavy indus-| timbers, groaning in agony asitry cities of Sheffield and Bir-' they await rescue. . _|mingham, Now, the United States is think-

For Atom Bomb Raids

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ing its way through churned-up Husted of the National Security rubble, comes a civil defense res. Pe ooIres Board. ia. eoming to cue squad—eight A {Falfield sometime this month to members of the Speedway Chris-quad-—eight men in a big, get measurements and blueprints. tian Church | brown van complete with ladders| From all over England, men CT { and tools. la ; Surviving are two daughters, : ‘ {and women come to take the 3%- : y With giant cutters that snipiw. Mrs. Esta Jane Thorp, Speedway Piweeks course. Then they go home through brick walls like a SUT-| {0 ‘instruct others. - City, and Mrs. Mary E. Loppes, geon’s scalpel through an appen- Cobyright, 1950. by The Indianapolis Times {Lebanon; and a son, Emerald dix, with oxo-acetylene blow] 0d The Chicago Daily News. Ine. |{Schockensey, Arlington. torches that burn through steel Mr. Phillips is furthér survived J girders as though they were so " {hy his brother, Herbert, Danville; much cardboard, with native cun-| arines 0 d y " . itwo sisters, Mrs. Grace Neal, ning that knows just how to jack| “ After the big bang comes the tough part of it—cleaning the Monrovia, and Mrs. Edna Arnold, up a fallen house, how to take » . 155.millimeter Howitzer. Here : Pfc. Thomas Smutnik, Cpl. Ben. Jeffersonville. Mrs. Phillips is advantage ol Syery Loeiontal 13 Air Squadrons jamin West, and Cpl. James Towhey, all of Battery 8, 108 Field alo a oan Brother, e , . . . . “harles Rutledge, Danville. the rescue squads go to Work. | Artillery Battallion, clean out the bore with rags and oil. ) . x» : : Calvin, A. Hartle | SOME 38,000 Inactives y ‘ y ? OMETIMES it takes two or! : . UN N S Calvin A Hartle, for six years| three nerve-wracking hours. But| Also on Corps List ; S arrow quea Ja, clerk ii the 1ndigns Duresy of| rent 1 | . s, yes y at| event ually the casualties are res i are Cerne wnnounces to | n Korea Bares Ke o his home, 1310 N. Olney 8t., after| What gives? Are these real! "| Y t an illness of a year. | casualties? No. That is not rea] Gay it is calling up men in 13] In A native of Blufrton. he lived) Hood ut Aegan po Reserve ightr re 50 are ans war 0 fom . $ Bone om "he bcher shoved i iacive Reserves bios ne Frohveran Cnc at Bowel realistically into an opening in . . . . § a piece A Par tube pulled 8 ver Jun® 30. Superior Communist Tactics Rather ber of the Modern Woodmen of th vs 1 Th t 1! About 11,300 of the 38,000 inac-| : . . . America and Woodmen of the e man’s leg. Those are not really; . pocerves to be called up al-| Than Nationalist Corruption Cited ; intestines hanging out of that p World. man's stomach but part of Lord have received their orders By CLYDE FARNSWORTH, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer Services will be at 1 p. m. to-faked-up belt tied around nis| Vhen to report for duty. { WASHINGTON, Oct. . 4—When you consider our own narrow morrow at the Flanner & Bumiddle. The houses along this Maj. Gen. Merwin H. Silver- squeak in Korea before sufficient troops and a superiority of arms chanan mortuary. Burial will be street have not actually been thorn, assistant corps comman- could be brought to bear-on the Communists, the disastrous failures in Memorial Park. bombed but have been built in Sant, Sutlined the Marines’ plans ,¢ the Chinese Nationalists are easier to understand. Surviving are his wife, Myrtle;| this crazy way to look so. The co : 8 4 Fuse Armed Services| 4 ,mchair stategists, professional and amateur, who thought the five daughters, Mrs. Laura Green-| explosions and fires are fright-| tne ex ud Sh x Investigating Nationalist defeat stemmed entirely from corruption, inefficiency, the wood, Pine Village; Mrs. Mildred eningly real but not dangerous.|femse forces. — nation’s de- | .onomic mess and a consequent China was being won not so much | Holawell, North Vernon; Mrs. For the rest it's done with ampli-| Rilv loss of popular support among China was being won not so much porothy Teeters, Northwood, N. Pp Gen. Silverthorn' said the . by better tactics as it was being|y. : fied sound effects. {Marines plan to have 166,155 (China’s infinite population, now." Ititude of stumble- 3.) Mrs, Rdna Pickering, Indianya |p hes pian 10 hay June 30. The Dave reason to think again. oe multitude of stumble-lapolis. and Mrs. Evelyn Buhr. Los| IT'S ALL PART of the training forces, he said will include omy Chinese Communist tactics, There had never been a proper Angeles: 2 fon, Bawin, Indiansp-/ here at Falfield’s civil defense full strength divisions and 18 lifted intact from the Russian estimate of Communist guerrilla ols; a Sister Mes. Anna Rarnes. training school where English squadrons of fighters, part of P0OK on guerrilla warfare, pe tactics. Or, if there “was, there an a did a . 1+ men and women are being taught them at full strength. (duplicated by the Korean Reds .,q no sign during the early and “28% A en and two) how to cope with atomic air raids! 15 Remain # \under Russian supervision. They .n¢imistic days of the Korean ex- STéat-grandchlidrer. if they come. | mam 'n ii Whi employed agdingt American pedition, that the lesson had ! = d ” Everything is made as realistic, The Marines already have mo- {roops for the first time. €Y caught on. eeney to Atten Meeting i gg 1 ized worked too well for a long time.) , { 8s Proeinie it's realistic it's a A he En | Manchurian ‘Graduates’ One Agatmt 15 Mayor Feeney planned to leave| " the schools leal to “service t the! . i I was at the field headquarters Indianapolis today to attend the waste of time,” says the school’s called in o service two oO . And in the early July days of jn Taejon and can recall the con- two-day National Mayors’ Confercommandant, Brigadier Maurice Marines’ 30 reserve fighter squad-\oyr near-disaster in South Ko- fidence with which American offi- ence on Civil Defense in Wash-| Toye, who won the Victoria Cross rons. 'rea American military men on the cers viewed the imminent collision ington, D. C. Mayors of ESOT

as an 18-year-old boy in World| Gen. Silverthorn said there are spot saw and felt the kind of of the North Korean offensive cities w ; . b's : a i { 8 will hear top d y 1iWar I. i > ino plans now for calling up the fighting that licked the Chinese with two" thin American .com- itary officials and ta THE BRITISH are ploneers in personnel of the 15 fighter squad- Nationalists. = |panies which had been placed far ministrators. They are also schedthis type of have rons remaining in reserve. Many thousands of their Ko- yp the road toward Seoul. \uled to meet Presideg{ Truman. |

another at Easingwold, in York-| Gen. Silverthorn said that as!

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an foe were graduates of Rus-|

shire, and will open a third in of June 25 the Marines had 125. sian and Chinese training in'Man- dug in to take the full weight of

These forward elements were) Scotland i

Korea. | The North Koreans would bel Although we had a military ad- set back on their heels on the/

. Plan Halloween visory group in China following most important wing of the South | the defeat of Japan, American Korean front and the line would]

i . To Aid Others officers were never close-range be stabilized long enough for the

| Young people of the Washing- witnesses of the Communist-Na- full divisionto take its place and. = — tom Street Méthodist Church, [tionalist struggle. - thrust forward. : | | . The bald head of the G-2 colonel] |

{ they celebrate Halloween ’ Me. N, | {oer Pon't-Go-Near eamed with confidence. |

* . . 1 a ee The Joint United States wini- # “When we move from there we world's hungry children.” tary Advisory Group operated will move in only one direction—| under a don’t-go-near-the water north,” he said, “toward Seoul.”| Instead of destroying property| girective from our State Depart- Positions Overrun and making the evening difficult| ...¢ and devoted its effort, sib . for the neighbors, the young among the Chinese Nationalists That night -Koreans overran le will collect money for the. . the positions and artillerymen| peop! |to staff problems and paper work. . © FOU Cl Co aghting for United Nations International] mnhe American mission, if any- in " i . gh ng for Children’s Emergency Fund. The thing, helped perpetuate the tra- t Bir lives ith carbines, to my By a wu milk ditional Chinese concept. of et re corres ondents near! for hungry children of the world. massed infantry glued to defen- (° fastening eapon lentg neg Saturday, the young folk Will give positions, cities and lines of joing American stragglers, place coin. holders ju Places of | communication. without weapons, half - dressed business near the church. The| geidom was the fight carried 10 and sometimes TL | night before Halloween, they Willithe foe and only then by the They had cast aside everything| {go-about the neighborhood chap- movement of whole divisions and that impaired their flight across eroned by an adult, and solicit armies in hopeless pursuit of the the paddy fields and mountains! gifts of money for the project. highly mobile “columns’—not from an enemy that outnumbered| One dollar, they report, Will givisions—of a foe that could tra- them and swarmed their flanks buy sufficient powdered milk to ye] faster because he traveled and rear. There was a sudaent serve 10 children one glass of jgnter and in fewer numbers. [lull in criticism of the South Ko-| milk for seven days. Miss os | infiltration ‘Foreign’ ireans. Power is president of the Youth? 1.4) ation, envelopment and a| And for those who still rememFellowship and the Rev. Howard | .;mando style of infighting /bered there was a new footnote

WM. F. FOX; JR. STICKS HIS CHIN OUT!

He gives you a transcribed interview

of a guest coach— i. ule, pastor, and Mrs. ore as foreign to the Chinese to the Nationalist defeat in China. i i Oller. are sponsars. Nationalists as they were com-|__ - ~~ (this week it's Stu Holcdmb) [Naz Sy. [PLAN PITCH-IN DINNER and then in person he picks Signal Proposed As the Nationalist divisions| The Brookside Mothers’ Civic out the highlights of were sliced up in Manchuria and [Club will give a pitch-in dinner|

At H | St North. China, the idea fastened | tomorrow noon in the Brookside| arian . itself upon many Americans that{Community House.

and touches upon City Traffic Engineer Frank | oe " 1 Gallagher today recommended a | — . " i

the personalities. railroad flasher signal at the | So different...

last Saturday's games—

And then—he has the * |intersection of Harlan St. and the | nerve and the - |New York Central Railroad] ' {tracks. It was the scene of several | stug (that s spelled fatal accidents in recent years.

backwards) and the The engineer also asked that|'F 's th E. 36th St. be made preferential fomerity (that 31e from Emérson Ave. to Keystone polite word}—to _|Ave., except at Sherman Dr. This ive you predictions action followed' complaints by

iN

residents that children attending school at Gale and 36th Sts. were endangered by heavy traffic. Capt. Miles Hubbard, commanding officer of the Naval Ord- a

of Saturday's major football games— Not merely who's gonna. win-—but the SCORES!

He intends also to

wonderful. nance plant, asked the Safety - — et Board for a stop light at 21s{ St.

and Arlington Ave. to handle

dict next Friday's local {heavy traffic serving. the plant, Rohsehool sores" [oP Viger = No OTHER ad RI My »* conversation on the live Yopic of football a OFFIC LIES HAS A «unless you listen in i: Pp ' FLAVOR hen Fox sticks out i. — Rel om a ~~ SOCIAL QUITE LIKE ~~ STATIONERY

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at Taymouth Castle, 731 ‘Reservists, including 26266| 1, and Communist China, the Red assault down the main near Perth, in December. The officers and 99.465 enlisted men. . + pack into North Korea last channel of the invasion. They Taymouth commandant will be Of this total, 39,838 were in the ..n and winter, according to were to hold until reinforcements . |Organized Reserves which were , ....ican intelligence, for just the could be moved into the line—one ¥ J STRAUSS pressed into service first and... which: they eventually division against 15 for the swift ; : : SAYS: {55,593 in the inactive reserves. |e 151.4 the ‘invasion of South recapture of Seoul.

3 7.7.43 \ “id

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