Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 October 1950 — Page 5

ELLE OA NLRB A ELL EEE REEL E RELIED ROR REE TEER REO E EIRENE E TED REEL TRO ETRE UOC E ELITR RNO RO OTEOROETV EERE CONTI TT OOOORaRAt LIS LETTEREORORNIETERILHTNITIETS

(CDN)

for

——

WITH THE

munist snipers,

tonio, Tex.

Bowly 4 barely 48 hours ago.

I was the guest of the 7th/tened ou - Cavalry Regiment which took = over the narrow-gauge Tallway| from the Communist corpora trols overran this little railway

—A railway handeart— carried me 12 miles

te TUESDAY, OCT. 17, 1950 -

By lovely luck I met up with a fellow jeep-traveler, of the 7th, Lt. Col. William Harris, San An-

ern accent thicker than

aL le

Takes a Fling Into Red Zone

Braves Enemy Snipers on Puti-Putting Handcart

By FRED SPARKS ; I 7TH CAVALRY INSIDE RED KOREA, Oct. 17 propelled by putt-putting motor—just toward the bleeding heart of North Korea.

It was very much unlike a trip on the Atcheson-Topeka-Santa Fe we rolled through an unchumm

gophers. . ~~

Or

y countryside populated by Com-/that he and other businessmen, enemy tank during heavy midt like steam rollered

Aunt

here. We figgered it was all shot up but one of jhe guys tinkered with this handcart and had it

When we reached S0INg In no time. We've already

Kaesong he invited me to dejeep/PTOUSHt out many badly wounded and board the front-line express.| 315—it cuts about 30 minutes off The six other passengers bris- the trip. tled with artillery like porcupines. The engineer, Sgt. Bennie Davis, |

Savannah, Ga., kept one hand on'T the throttle, one on his carbine. |North Koreans that had flushed PY Parties who hung up when the

a

. clous looking bunch of Koreans a8¢-sparked charge—was almost Deir names to proper authorities. Capehart Assails our bridge into the next world.

in a rice paddy. railway

. tain fired a few rounds overhead tracks were open-aired and = |isten to Doug,

Fires Few Rounds

We took

The good cap-,

Flies Cover Wound

Approaching ne Feo ve made to their homes and officcd Shortridge High School and was

jout of a rice paddy. The prisSitting up front holding a burp oners kept their hands locked be-

al

|

gun, Humphrey Bogart style, was ind their heads. One had a miser-

Capt. James Webel, Minneapolis, Minn.

able wound in his right shoulder, formerly of and it was covered with flies.

The bridge over the river—capcurve and approached a suspi- tured intact by the 7th in a cour-

Both sides of the

to make them reconsider any river sprawled some 200 offensiveness planned. They flat-| below.

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Our light putt putter could have been as thoroughly derailed as a toy electric train running over a folded napkin in your parlor. | It was time to repeat the local gag, “here in Korea we're all fugi-| tives from the law of averages.”| It took maybe 40 minutes’ to Harold E. Stassen has make the trip on the front-line president Truman this alterna- out new social security benefits, express. The end of the line is Paeckchon where I heard machine-gun jas MacArthur on Far Eastern given him under the Defense Profire too close and saw army flying issues, or face the wrath of the duction Act.” rocketeers massage a hiliful of Republican Party and the Amerifoe a few thousand yards off.

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Ai v

A

et

| Tells President

Iti

|

|

{ {

{Republican Party. Although the} {GOP national committee distrib- 2s lt uted copies of the speech, it made|| "'' *'"® YoU quality

It at tt et tear! | indOrsement.

Shelis, Regroups Units _An Indianapolis man has been | cited by 8th Army Headquarters *+lin Korea for the rescue of a jeep-' load of live ammunition, and for complaints to the grand jury. J scattered troops. The former publisher of the, Capt. Robert B. McBride, 30, of \Marion County Mail told police 5273 N. Illinois St. rescued the and reporters several weeks ago ammunition near an exploding

jattorneys and politicians were

night fighting. being plagued by mysterious calls

While under enemy fire, Capt.

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deliveries. He said pro: MeBride- organized a pearl ONCE-A.YEAR EVENT! AMAZING VALUES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT! officeholders were among the'of South Korean ‘troops who had | : ) oh Semis beeri...scattered bythe en Sd = sudden surprise attack, and

TR — » A ; MR. DAWSON charged that he pl and several others were bothered) Capt. McBride is the son of by the following shernanigans: (Col. Robert B. McBride Jr., compHearses and taxis, unordered by troller, 6th Army Headquarters, | the victims, were sent to their Presidio, San Francisco, Cal. Mrs. homes. {McBride's parents are Mr. and Unauthorized flower deliveries Mrs. Peter Lambertus, 5273 N. were made to their homes. {Tllinois St. Numerous telephone calls were . CaPt. McBride is a graduate of

aced them in position to fight,

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[ i "nu NS a student at Indiana University em na phone was answered. Many of for three years. He has been in

[these calls were made between the Army since 1934.

#1 WA At nS

7

/ a}

jth During World War II Capt. ’ : {10:30 p. m. and 5 a. m. i p Ae Cho N Mr. Dawson gave newsmen the McBride served in the European Ss ce of 60 Styles of \\ inames of two men who are said ‘heater for one and one-half Pecial App

to have perpetrated the harassing Years.

campaign, and said he would give

Iversary Price} \

Price Increases

| CORYDON, Oct. 17—Sen. Ho{mer E. Capehart, Republican can;didate for re-election to the U. 8. |Senate, charged here last night |“price increases since last April have cost the Air Force 750 jet P} fighter planes.” Fa . | The Indiana To Accept Advice | continued: WASHINGTON, Oct. 17 (UP)—| “Despite the terrific increase mn given prices which has already wiped

Stassen Warns

senior Senator Salesman’

lot! The

ve: President Truman continueg to Accept the advice of Gen. Doug-play politics with the powers

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"NO CARRYING CHARGE

The Senator charged President can people. Truman’s failure to act on deIn a radio address over the Na- mands on price control “amounts tional Broadcasting Co. network to sabotaging our defense prolast night, the former GOP gov- gram.” - ernor of Minnesota assured Mr. — meee Truman that if he adopts the THE MOST PRACTICAL In“MacArthur plan for -Asia” he dianapolisites are using Times would have “the united enthu- Want Ads to sell, rent," swap, hire J siastic backing” of Republicans. and find. Turn to today’s classiBut . he warned that if the fied columns and see for- yourPresident ignores Gen. MacAr- self the. variety of ways you can thur, dodges controversial issues, make money through The Times. {

or tries to make political capital out of his meeting with the genQuality Reupholsiering

eral, the American people will regard the whole episode as “a sinful political escapade.” “For Shame” sen added. Mr. Stassen, now president of Sesardiens %.. horred - the University of Pennsylvania, mpg So. mp spoke only for himself, not the Iv dysilty work sou want

“The nation will say to Its President—for shame!” Mr. Stas-

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Mr. Stassen devoted a large part of his talk to a discussion of; “a number of -circumstances”| about the President's flight to

Wake which, he said, sound] UPHOLSTERY Co. | “more like politics and less like 8631 MASSACHUSETTS Ave | statesmanship.” {

ew MILD car 2 cigarette be 7

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