Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1950 — Page 3
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\rmers are appear not ed by Sen, cation “the th the. pres-
ic about the f the women » their sons rehing away id. He added * because of eral condipredicted a le from the
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Swarms Ashore (Continued From Page One) — the Communists he a en by-passed ‘miles north of the 38th Parallel, They fought their way out of the trap with the aid of off-shore destroyer bombardment and airplane fire. But a Marine Corps spokesman said the units: had - suffered “some casualties.” : Even farther south, United Nations forces were battling guerrillas in what United Press Correspondent William H. Burson de«scribed as “cowboy and Indian” warfare, ! Fighting Through, The United Nations 65th Regimental Combat team ‘was fighting through mountains near Yongdong, 125 miles south of the 28th Parallel, in an effort to clean out Reds who apparently had been hiding there since the Allies broke out of the tiny Pusan beachhead more than a month! ago. . { Communist resistance was stiffening all along the northern front, where the enemy was fighting with his back to the Manchurian border. "A Marine Corps spokesman said | the Leathernecks had beén alerted for more guerrilla assaults such as the sudden ambush near. the east coast port of Kojo, where Reds sprang out of rice fields and] hurled grenades right in the Ma-| rines’ faces. ! The Reds were being reinforced, | and Chinese Communists captured | by the Sofith Koreans said | the 5th Regiment of the Chinese; 8th Army had been sent in to! fight in Korea, Heavy Opposition
® = = fo id American infantrymen of the { i 24th Division got back into the 1 2 Mother Released | race for the border and were re-| al osion In Baby s Death | K nist China after running into " year-old pregnant mother was Reavy souk opposition. = « Starts Flash Fire released tonight when Coroner t 3- old d hter, whose bod in the ‘south guerrillas burst out A hidden ox W Hose iveid of hiding places to turn the war Into : Attracts Thousands ~~ monia. Between 1000 and 2000 well-| Damage was estimated at more Mrs. Carl Burnham, mother of armed guerrillas pounced on the than $100,000 yesterday when a! Ane el they paunes down 20-minute flash fire on the South- child. Cheryl, died Oct. 10 of railroad track south of Kojo, east Side destroyed two frame fered from s . | 3. vi pastic paralysis since] about 65 miles north of the 38th buildings and a nearby brick paint = premature birth, the mother id.
ported within 47 miles of Commu- ELKHART, Oct. 28 (UP) —A 32Burton E. Kintner ruled that her Reds were fighting harder and Pall of Smoke before burying ‘it, died of pneuinto a /game” of cops and rob- | five children, said her youngest { {natural causes. Cheryl had suf-| Parallel on the east coast and 130 8hop where the blaze started with 5
air miles southwest of the deepest an explosion. ities tt was al South Korean penetration on the. The parallel frame structures, Boies al] ere might | Soa st. % 400 feet long, were at 2200 and pe charged with failure to procure The Reds had recaptured Kojo 2300 Fletcher Ave. The flames a death and burial certificate. The | and seized 70 railway cars filled dso iicked at a large brick build- child's body was hidden in a box with supplies and a Republic of ing at 2200 Fletcher. beneath the bed for three days! Korea supply depot. As oily smoke reached, hundreds before Mrs. Burnham buried it. ' Marines Surprised of feet into the sir pole fought, ‘oo ptmtnbtsieeies ‘The Marines, who had made an to control thousands of watchers Grandmother Faces unopposed landing at Wonsan who crowded to the scene, . 1 only a few days before, were! About 25 off duty riremen Charge in Girl s Death surprised by the members of the joined in fighting the blaze | SOUTH BEND, Oct. 28 (UP)—| “Diamond Mountain Gang,” which,and it was estimated that almost! Authorities , planned .today to is believed to be led by a Red as many civilians assisted in|charge a 68 - year - old woman brigadier general. handling. the 20 lines of hose with homicide in the death of her | ‘The ambushers, ‘many of them used. > i granddaughter if the elderly wom- | in civilian clothes, fired small| Sixteen units of fire depart- an lives. | arms, automatic weapons and ment equipment answered , the] Mrs. Minnie Baker and Bertha mortars, United Press Correspond- alarm. Eggleston, 15, were found -overent Charles Moore reported from Telephone and electric wires come by gas in the grandmother's 1st Marine Corps headquartérs. and poles were brought fowy by; home Jesterday. The Sl ied is . ‘the fire, cutting off communica- St, Joseph hospital last n an as genes olf with tions in the area. |Mrs. Baker remained in poor con- !
i 3 the Chinese Reds had crossed the Shop Unoccupied dition. Yalu River in force and moved The paint shop ‘was unoccupied aa puty Coronet I, Tale Nejson into the North Korean Mountajns. when the bldst occurred at rel and her granddaughter if Allied authorities were frankly 1:20 p. m. i the county welfare department baffled, however, by conflicting re-| Damage to the larger brick took the girl away from. her. ports of those prisoners and four building, ' main plant of the = . ¥ captured earlier on the western Tucker-Dorsey Manufacturing ;, vq IN TRUCK CRASH Co., was limited to its exterior. Py front. | The frame structures, which . BOONVILLE, Oct. 28 (UP) According to the Chinese there | = sed the. Madden Manufactur-| Waiter G. Anderson, 55, Louisare anywhere from 2000 to 60,000, Co. 20 ‘years ago, had been Ville, Ky. was killed today when Chinese Communists south of the ,;c.4q recently by the Superior 2 truck -he was driving struck a Yalu River, but the more they Trajler Manufacturing Co., owner bridge abutment, skidded, and have been questioned. the more of the buildings. They were cov- overturned on Ind. 62 four miles confused the picture has become.'ered by insurance. ._ 'west of here.
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This frame building at 2200 Fletcher Ave. was one of three structures destroyed yesterday
a i Cx "sii Ca. 1g | A fignt for favorable fegisiation id Er on BR xX will be launched in the 1951 Gen- With Me jy : ‘eral Assembly By members of the | = : . i :
Photo by Bill Oates Times Staff Photographer. in a 20-minute flash fire
met et settee eens
are all alone in first place unde- A. & M.
Chiropractors to Seek Favorable Legislation =
: Inditina Bureau of Chiropracties. Indiana, Purdue, . | The chiropractors declared in|
; ; the fall convention meeting at the Notre Dame Lose
Hotel Washington last night that | (Continued From Page Gney | (0c medical monopoly iad con land poise after achieving victory pie sractors lo of existence emy of dictators while he clutchlover Notre Dame. ” A ? to he 4 mation’ of ¢¥ the Republican party by its : : = : Action for 0 » S38 ' ¢on- | But while the state's Big Three chiropractic board of examiners throat, She neve a aa {was batting .000 yesterday, there yo urged by Hugh E. Chance, for the throat of the Demoeratic {were some good things &round .,,nse! for the International party by employment of its nas {Hooslerdom. , : Chiropractors Association. tional committeeman as his po- | Butler's Bulldogs turned up The annual banquet of the Bu- litical lawyer. And even in this (with a surprising decisive 'vic- reau was held in the Gold Room election contest, his lawyer has {tory over Western Reserve in of .the Hotel Washington last the effrontery to object to Demo= {Cleveland, 25 to 14, and DePauw night, Mrs. C. 8. Simmons of crats telling the truth. {also came through, 34 to 14, over Nashville, Tenn, was the princi- “If T am a stooge, name the out-state foe, Kalamazoo, pal speaker at the meeting which man to whom I am a stooge. I'll Also, in a night game, Evans- more ‘than 250 chiropractors and guarantee you it isn’t Gene Pul« ville downed Dalta State of Mis- their wives attended. liam or his lawyer, nor anyone isissippi. @ ’ else for that matter. i At Indianapolis’ Delavan Smith Thousands Jam Rome “This may be poor politics. Sun Field, Indiana Central's Grey it is the truth, and the only thing hounds weren't fast enough to For Dogma Ceremony I'm ashamed of is that I've walitoutrun the Anderson College ROME, Oct, 28 (UP Pilgrims ed so long to tell it.” Ravens and tHe contest wound from all over the world were ar-r Pounces on Charges up in a 7-7 tie. riving today to hear Pope Pius XII Mr. Brownson pounced on the Canterbury kept its winning Prociaim the Roman Catholic Jacobs charges as soon as -he streak intact by smothering Rose dogma of the bodily Assumption got the floor.. He refused to take Poly and kept its hold on the of the Virgin Mary into Heaven them too seriously, however, and Hoosier Conference leadership. It Vatican officials estimated that 4. was the Knights’ sixth consecu- more than 500,000 persons will 1 wish T had a speech writer tive victory, five in ‘conference fill St. Peter's Basilica and its like my opponent. That was ®& competition. Rose Poly is not a giant square when the dogma is, ... ‘But there was more criti= | member, - proclaimed Wednesday. cism of the Democratic party and Valparaiso, the state's only feated and untied in conference the newspapers than of me, other undefeated and untied hy m » tition I just want to state that noteam, kept on rolling at the ex- '° pe i body writes my speeches, nor do pense of Ball State, Biggest surprise in the Big Ten | wear any man’s collar,” was the Michigan-Minnesata 7-7 He then proceeded to discuss
AMacks Own Party Commitieeman - (Continued From Page One)
Ohio State's Buckeyes played
football track meet stvle at Co- t®- Minnesota had lost four such issues as a pay-as-you-go lumbus and buried the Towa Straight and was a 21-point un- gjd-age insurance plan and Taft. Hawkeyes, 83 to 21. It was a derdog. It was just another Hartiey law changes. The latter
rough afternoon on the score- Chapter in the topsy-turvy college he supports with Sen. Homer E, keepers and the keepers of sta- 8rid season. Capehart, who heads the Repub tistics, which stretched out the [Elsewhere over the nation the Jican ticket. proverbial mile © principal games followed the form Efforts to reach Mr, McHale It was the Bucks’ third Waest- sheet, although Baylor surprised and Mr. Pulliam for comment ern Conference victory and they the dopesters by defeating Texas on the Jacobs talk proved fruite |less late last night,
——
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