Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1950 — Page 7

ols Charge Building Saved ‘on Orders’

By KEYES BEECH TOKYO, Oct. 20 — The United

States A a a of defending Seoul’s Chosun Hote! munists The of juxury, rising

Curiously enough the Chosun|

°

{hot and cold wars;

1 Good News | ONE: 'rean War and much more quickly, than we anticipated. A large-:

Many Lives Saved Because Conflict Did Not Go Deep Into Winter Months

By HARRY FERGUSON, United Press Foreign News Editor Balance sheet for the week between good news and bad in the

surface she appears to be co-|

We have won the Ko- operative and willing to enter

into projects for peace, but ex-|-

perience shows she always has

from’ ins of a capital, ‘scale mopping up. operation re- something else in mind. The best {has been re-putfitted and set aside 1 aine but the enemy seems in- guess is that things may be quiet| for colonels and yeneral officers. capable for forming a stable de- in Europe for a time, say a {fense line anywhere. Many Amer-|

month or two, while Moscow

was one of the few buildings Inijcan and Allied lives have been works up another surprise for the|

downtown Seoul to escape majo:

ino accident, but a command de-

j

i

cision. I “liberated” the Chosun the day the Marines liberated Seoul and was joyously received by the! hotel staff. i New Reception My reception the other night

| {was rather different. Returning Bowl e {from a long, hard day at the them! " h 8 bl . n ; /front, with two other correspondi ‘ents, I entered the hotel to find it svarall ! 0 ¢ 1g = . L [0 0 LLL ig istoutly defended by a small Army detachment headed by a full colonel. Call GEN. TE LLY NOW The Chosun can accommodate 200 guests. It had five®that night. Yet the colonel — whose name 1 1) s ed E E TE LE-P LA i fortunately don't recall—refused us permission to sleep there. I pointed out that I was the . .- t first American to register at the Here's Admiral's fa- {Chosun and had entered the hotel mous rectangular at some personal risk. The colonel s « ‘was repelled by this display of screen console, with » gross sentimentality. big-as-life 16-inch pic- It is alleged that in the disture tube! Built-in di- cussion that followed I called the : a colonel a “desk clerk.” This allerectional rotoscope [I gation is correct: antenna! Gorgeous, We stayed at the Chosun that modern console! Ll ‘night but only after intervention by the 8th Army chief of staff $ 35 Hr who somehow resented being callany ed from his comfortable living - . space on so trivial a matter. os < It was the first time I had slept - ai in a bed in Korea since the war zs jane began. I regret I didn't enjoy it. - (Plus Fed. Tax) bi Copyright. 1950. for The Indianapolis Times H ee ee ee A DADO 15 " LT : 15 MONTHS iH Carl L. Schoemake a= TO PAY! oH . : HH Rites Tomorrow 0 v pc A city newspaper vendor for 12 . ave your Home [NY years, Carl L. Shoemake, 34, died . LOL FREE! h yesterday after a year’s iliness. H CA L L PL ! | Mr, Shoemake had operated the ie 2 Ly] H {newssatnd at Senate and Washa L123 4 (ington Sts. for 12 years previous Hi N YOUR Wome LCT IT [to his illness. He resided at 720 ol ' H { Russell St. -e ES | Services will be conducted in W. C. Wilson Chapel of the {Chimes, at 2 p. m. tomorrow, {with burial in the New Crown {Hill Cemetery. {i Surviving Mr. Shoemake are {his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Shoeimake; four brother, John, Dewey, FE 1 $ i (0) SS William and Ralph; sisters, Mrs. | Y k § "J Frances Weiss and Mrs. Betty Jenks, all of Indianapolis, and another sister, Mrs, Virginia Lewis | of Monterey, Cal. BUY NO BECAUSE PRICES ARE DEFINITELY GOING UP *® We Guarantee You . .. Savings From 524° to %96°° on Power Mowers If You Can Prove Otherwise R E E rea Le We Will Give You the Mower 264

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-

Iisa by the fact that the war West, damage. ‘Gls insist that this was Co DY

did not go deep nto the winter because cold weather hampers offensive action. TWO: President Truman and iGen. Douglas MacArthur are closer to agreement on an overall Far Eastern policy as a result iof - their conference at Wake Island. There still seems to be some doubt as to wnether they agreed on how to handle the Formosan problem, out they apparently have charted a joint course

for the remainder of the Far East. THREE: The climax of the

Korean war found a real international army in action under unified. command, It proved that ithe United Nations had found a formula for resisting aggression any place in the world. If the Democratic nations can hang together long enough to revise the United Nations rules of procedure, the machinery will have been set up to checkmate international communism whenever it makes its next move.

Bad News ONE: The Communist threat to French Indo-China grows by the day. A real offensive is under

‘way by the Reds and the French

are in the bad position of lacking enough planes and heavy artillery to do the same kind of job Gen. MacArthur did in Korea. Any attempt by the United Nations to send troops into the fight would meet with bitter Russian and Chinese Communist re|sistarice and nobody has yet figured out a formula for reinforeing the French, TWO: Kim II Sung and the other Korean Communist leaders apparently have escaped. Gen. MacArthur warned them he would hold them responsible for atrocities and other violations of international rules of war, but so far nobody above the rank of colonel has been captured. The testimony of the Korean high command would be invaluable in proving once and for all that Russia and the Chinese Reds

gave aid and comfort to the

{North Koreans.

ee ‘peace offensives.” On the

BROWN and WINE

| Not too strong, not too mild =

THREE: Russia seems about!

to embark upon one of her peri-| THE CHOCO z

Berlin and Vienna are places lo watch,

Mrs. Belle Melntyre Rites Tomorrow

mes. State Service | COLUMBUS. Ind, Oct. 20 —| Services and burial for Mrs,

Belle McIntyre will be held here at 3 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. McIntyre, mother of Al-| bert - McIntyre, lieutenant of police with the New York Central! Railroad in Indianapolis, died, Thursday in Bartholomew County Hospital. She was 86. In addition to Mr. McIntyre, Mrs. McIntyre is survived by another son, Norval, and a daugh-| ter, Miss Sue McInetyre, both of Columbus.

SIX L OSE ST.

L LIVES IN FIRE JOHN'S, Newfoundland, Oct. 20 (UP)—S8ix persons, including three children, were burned to death today when fire destroyed two tenements. Three! persons were trapped and died within the burning buildings. The three children were resciied but died shortly after they were taken to a hospital. ’

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