Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1950 — Page 3
b Terms
WEEKLY
ry L DIAet in an mount. wand for
ib Terms
ERB
$ :
of UN Tuesday . Truman to Address Assembly; . Soviet and Satellites to Celekiate
| By EDWIN S. ROSENTHAL, United Press Staft Correspondent i LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Oct 21—The great and small riations| nited orl 8 wl mak the fifth anniversary of the birth of the ' o setings, speeches, ants, an io Seat Gaited Nations Day” a aa 2 TMdis programs me or the day in Moscow, London. W hingto smaller capitals will be “there shall be peace.” = an
: No longer do the member nans accept the cynics’ forecast
press, radio and movies will fea-' J
. Bly Tuesday. The president spent action as a dangerous precedent.
ARE TREES
t the world organization es-|ture United Nations Day. tablished in San Francisco in 1945] While the rest of the world Il suffer the frustrating fate of points to the united action in ¢ League of Nations. Korea as a milestone to the I President Truman is ex- United Nation's future, the Soviet, pected to express ringing conii- bloc nations will dwell on other dence in the United Nation's tu-|United Nations accomplishments ture before the General Assem-and probably blast the Korean
a quiet week end working on his®
speech. He will speak for 135 or . 20 minutes at about 1:30 a, m., [ Indianapois time.
* To help the 60 member nations commemorate United Nations Day, 18 United Nations informa- Bor
tion centers throughout the world Rave distributad 2.5 million pieces Further Rotreuts
of anniversary literature and post-
ers in the languages of member nations. Are Ruled Out 4 No Division HANOI, French Indo-China, There will be no. division be-/Oct: 21 (UP)—French troops
have abandoned Langson, their, last great fortress on the China! frontier to Communist Viet Min!
tween East and West. Both sides plan big celebrations. Moscow theater lobbies ‘will be crammed with special United Nations exhibitions. Leading Soviat| newspapers will trumpet United] Nations accomplishments, and re-| cordings of Soviet speeches at the United Nations will be heard at Te sala Jangson, oxionial base et cendozens of meetings. Similar cele tury, gateway to the Indo- China. brations have been planned for rice - bowl. ‘was ‘abandoned with Kiev, Minsk and other leading out a struggle.
cities. ; | Ho Chi Minh's Red forces now! South Korean authorities have... +. 280 uninterrupted mites! proclaimed “United Nations Day | of French Indo-China's border! Oct. 24 as a public holiday, and yy © i ina. i top officials uf the republic will ommunist Chin
a previously prepared défense line just above Hanoi, it was an nounced today. The official French communi-
The communique declared the
POW Says De March Killed Dean
Reports General Di On 85-Mile Trip
PYONGYANG, Korea, Oct. 21 (UP)—An American prisoner of|
address a meeting at Seoul's Na- pranch planned no further re war Who escaped from bis Com-|
tional Theater. treats, but would launch a counBrig. Gen. Carlos Romulo, Phil- ter offensive as soon as French ippines foreign minister, speaks in| nits — regular army, LegionRio De Janeiro, Brazil, and the ,.i.ee Moroccans and natives— following day in Sao Paulo, pag been rearm . Brazil. Gen. Romulo, one of the a- and Aegrgan most influential United Nations, possession of Langson poises members, was forced to decline i Communist troops within 30 miles other invitations to speak. of Hanol. But Ho disclosed last Uses United Nations Stamp. | week that he intended to regroup In Bolivia a special commem- his winded troops, armed and oratige stamp will be issued, and trained during the past summer La has decided to name one jn Communist China, Before of its streets “United Nations." striking into the rice bowl Jawaharlal Pandit Nehru. In-| mi ———r———r dian premier, will adress a public meeting at New Delhi and renew 2 Boys, 17, Admit | his plea for “ohe world.” Egyptian authorities have made Burglary Series arrangements for a ‘prayer for, peace” with the Moslem high’
riest of Egypt officiat ? In Israel, the the radio whi broad- ‘boys. 3 es of recent bur-| cast United Nations anniversary) abd recovery of 33000 in programs in Hebrew, - Arabic. © Boi ing in London's a hme at 520 Bright 8
to which Prime R. Attlee has been invited. In Gothenburg, Sweden, streetcars will carry small flags police reported. Fh Jatials > an The confessions implicated a side, passengers will find posters ¢ 42-year-old man in the Bright fllustrating the work of those St. neighborhoed, police said. The) agencies. School children will sell man was arrested aftér thé boys small United Nations Day said they had intended using his for the bénefit of the United Na- home as a storage house for stolen goods. Hous ASRORRUOR, tiois Stone | Pre-burglary charges were fled Mexican authorities have con- ‘against all three. The boys we turned over to Juvenile Aid au-
typewriters, a television set, a power lawn mower and jewelry,
ducted school contests for the thorities. best essays and posters on United ing the dedication of a stone mo ‘Hunt Airman Who ument to the United Nations. rangements were under way for T fn international concert to be a MINGHAM. a " On
Nations Day and were consider“In Canberra, Australia, ar- 'Chuted From B-50 broadcast through the nation. Isearched through swamp and
In Czechoslovakia, Poland, and farmland today for ‘the last of i
other Iron Curtain countries, the, four men who parachuted from a -> : B-50 bomber last night. The third man was found early this afternoon, crawling along with a broken ankle and a back] injury. “Two others reported in last night, pilot landed the plane here safely. The plane, with five men- still! aboard, made a safe landing here
ris of ‘Savannah.
"IFEWELL TO SPEAK
Windell W. Fewell, Indiana Boys’ School superintendent, will speak on “Whe is Delinquent” at
Club Club Wednesday.
oo
Paratroopers
% Morris Plan Investment Certificates earn
Confession of two 17-year-old 1 h ended. ‘boys a a series of recent burg" 85-mile" march ende
shortly after theirisyged its annual convention to-
under guidance of Lt. Henry Mor- elected were:
the luncheon meeting of the Lions|
Not Easy and Not Soft—
munist captors said today a North| Korean Colonel .told him that Maj. Gen. Willlam F. Dean, former commander of the U. 8 24th Division, died during a prisoner “death march”. from Taejon to Seoul. 24 Lt. Douglas W. Blalock, 27, Savannah, Ga., and Heflin, Ala, also formerly with the 24th Infantry, said Gen. Dean was seen alive. 15 days after he was reDr missing in action July 19. Lit. Bialock said the colonel, iwhe was trying to persuade him {to make propaganda broadcasts, {told him Gen. Dean had been captured and perished just before!
| ‘Inquired About Dean Lt. Blalock, who was- captured] |Aug. 9 pear Yongsan, in one of
Has they seed the boys the battles of the Naktong River they were Eatelng a vacant/bulge in the Pusan beachhead,
said that at one prison camp at
Prime Minister ca The boys DE 20 bur-/which he was held he met a glaries Re loot included! ieutenant who inquired about Gen.
Dean. He said the lieutenant told him that he had been with Gen. Dean| and several other soldiers hiding, in mountains near Taejon for about 15 days after that city fell.| The lieutenant told him, he said, | ‘that Gén. Dean and his party were 'separated when Red soldiers found them and he never saw the gen-| eral again. Gen. Dean, 51, was listed ofTe ticlaly as missing in action and) {possibly wounded on July 22, | | He disappeared July 19, after, {he was seen passing ammunition) ite & bazooka team during the| '24th’s losing battle for Taejon. |
ihe
Columbus Man Heads | | :
Motor Truck Group | FRENCH LICK, Ind. Oct. 21] | (UP)—Paul Newsom, 47, Columbus, Ind., was elected president of {the Indiana Motor Truck .Assoc.
He succeeds C. E, McColley, South Bend, as the organization con-
day. Mr. McColley will become chairman of the board. Other officers
I. J! Cooper, Indianapolis, first vice president; Frank Ferguson, (Valparaiso, second vice president; William Bell, Decatur, third vice president; W. Dan Kibler, Indianapolis, secretary, and G. Fred Kumps, Indiamapolis, who was {re-elected treasurer.
Jump in Korea
(UP) old widow and her grown son and and sister and then shot himself. ed daughter were found in separate;
39% interest per year from day issued.
£ * Ceritficatessmature in 4 6 months and may be 8 automatically renewed. | 2 * You may receive, in“terest by check each six monthsor: © + Lgtinterestaccumulate
and earn 3% a year compounded twice a
year. : J % Certificates are issued” in multiples of $1,000. “% Morris Pian Savings, in passbooks, earn
. 92 interest, com-
pounded twice Str saving with an
SI a
es so. si
a year,
=f or more.
"And it took me by
With Jeeps, Trucks and Guns
Gls Take Town North of Pyongyang
Within Minutes Against Light Resistance By ROBERT VERMILLION, United Press Staff Correspondent WITH THE AMERICAN 187TH PARACHUTE REGIMENT IN| KOREA, Sunday, Oct. 22—I learned the hard way that you can run |into 2 traffic jam falling from an airplane. , i was with the American paratroopers Friday when they made the first combat jump of the Korean War, about 25 miles Porth of Pyongyang. It took the ComUnited Press War Corre-
munists completely by Surprise. tee. spondent Robert Vermillion,
| We jumped at about 1:45 P. m., landing in a stubble of a harvested
; i ; ‘he hobbl For the first time in any war te the tal 7 theater, went down post he i menial Samad with jeeps,
three-quarter-ton rucks and big 105-millimetér how-/I dropped into my parachute itzers. Both troopers and heavy canopy and collapsed it around my equipment poured out of the C-119 shoulders. Fiving Boieaia. | As a result, T plunged the last We expected a soft and easy 20 feet without any help from the landing when we took off from parachute. Airdrome at noon for the I landed on my left leg, break-
Kimpo jump. But it was neither ‘soft nor ing o” badly spraining my left
an e last man to jump ¥ spent alot Friday atersonn
Exclusive Times.Acme Telephotos by A Korean woman wails nearby in Chongpyong while the bodies of atrocity victims are dug up to see if any of her loved ones are forces. They are falling back or among those massacred by retreating Reds.
Mother, Bavslmer And Son Found Slain
CHARLTON, Mass, Oct. 21 “The bodies of a 58-vear- Wojziewski said the son, Richard with a single shot killed his mother caliber rifle that was found beside the body of Richard in the
today. each with a single bullet la ht ‘wound in the head. They had aughter, heen dead for several days. Medical Examiner Dr. Anthony room. They
Morrison, 24,
The “body of Mrs. Morrison, 58, cellar. EE |
STRAUSS SAYS:
We don't like to get too technical
and refer to certain groups Be of suits by name as our tailors name them to us—but you really should know the PARKWEDGE tailored at Fashion Park—
It's not in any sense a staple
conservative suit—nor does it go
overboard i in the other direction!
It has been developed and ; refined through the years— 2 On it Fashion Park lavisptd the fullness of its designing genius and
Richard
‘parts of their small cottage here ,was found in the kitchen. Dorothy, slumped in a chair in the dining all had been killed
Corporal FY How Communishs Shot Any Prisoner Who Couldn't Walk
TT es, Photograph, Page 35
PYONGYANG, Korea, Oct. 20 (Delayed)—Three American ! prisoners of war who were among the first liberated in North | Korea said tonight they hid for several Says in a cave in. the hills | west of Pyongyang. Anti-Communist guerrilla called
them. . “Mr. Tak,” the men said, is a! tite I thought it was broken, luniversity educated, English-| 50 I volunteered to stay behind Ispeaking Korean named Tak-, With the wounded when the ore
‘hwahang. He controlled an anti-| ‘Red village of nearly 100 persons Seoul. ‘which supplied his guerrilla band, In Taejon, medical attention ‘with food while he and his men Was fairly decent, but after
“Mr, “Pak” looked after
der came through to move to’
A STRAUSS. & CO, NC. THE M
attacked the Communists. i The escaped prisoners are | Cpl Johnny Catchings, Saginaw, Mich.; Marine Pfc. Clayton Edwards, 20; Council Grove, Mo., and Cpl. Leonard Sweat, Patterson, ga.
THEY slipped off a train tak-
| ing them north from Pyong- |
| yang the night of Oct. 16 and | rejoined United Nations forces | today, after “Mr. Tak" and his men escorted them down from | the hills and handed them ovér | to the South Korean 1st Division. Cpl. Catchings said he was captured Aug. 1 near Kumsan, South Korea, after being cut off for 12 days without food. He is a member of the 34th Regiment of the 24th Division. “They surprised me while I was. sleeping in a farm house,” he said. “At first they tied my hands, but later gave me water
Her and were nice to me.” was He said he was taken to the
Taejon police station, where he was put with about 50 other Americans.
un » ” “I WAS suffering irom what must have been a very badly sprained ankle, although at the
TAILORED AT FASHION PARK
‘miles to Seoul.
that there was no .reatment at all. Many died without treat ment. I reckon 20 per cent of our losses were due to lack of medical attention.” Finally, he said, 79 Amerilcans were ordered to march 210 Seventy-eight arrived. “One was shot because he couldn't walk any more,” Cpl Catchings said. In Seoul they were forced to march through the streets with Communist banners in their hands. ” ~ » “BUT OTHERWISE,
| tions were good,” he said. “We
were housed in a school with mattresses, blankets and two meals a day of vegetable soup and bread. Altogether there were 373 of us.” When American artillery fire could be heard from the direction of Kimpo Airfield, The men again were headed into tha road and forced to March—this time to Pyongyang.
By PETER WEBB: United Press Staff Correspondent he
oma iiss
{ |
| i i
condi«
| { | {
|
About 20 died from over-exs
haustion and dystentery. Seven«
teen were killed by the guns of U. 8. jet fighters which caught
tailoring skills—it has won deep and increasing favor among cosmopolitan gentlemen, It is the pride and acme—the height—the summa cum laude of
Fashion Park's talents.
Scmefite when the spirit moves you—drop in—suggest a Parkwedge for a try on, We think you'll enjoy the experience in great style!
The Parkwedge is available in
single and double suits—in the various textures—in the
various price brackets a
$85, $95 and up
AN s STORE
{
| them napping on bullock carts, '
