Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 December 1950 — Page 3

Pays Vist » of Marchi

(Continued From Page One) |

. ne JG Re: AY : 1 J In Sc Grows Every Year en. about gt if job of geting| The ti eg : With Column of Marching Communists -GIOWS EVEIY TEN ox. revere dines aado ote su have seve

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5 i . {oe itell their stories. Donors, the same today as it was 20 years! to es Clothe-A-Child “0 Hold Positions Until Detected by Reds, by is Hiflemet Suldistanced rod Idea Started in 1930 Jpeopie whe wasted jo take shil-lagy in 1930. tre “rest. The Tim wr \ Chin tarted /dren to stores and shop for them, the children may receive warm Then Shoot Their Way fo Safety as we tame along a patn a BY Times Reporter uuu meet the children there. | Clothe 22 many of the, very Two children from other fam. By JOE QUINN, United Press Staff Correspondent |machine gun he on us| (Continued From Page One) | Reporters wrote their stories 'is the only plan DE a . lies were made happy Yesterdny. WITH THE 1ST MARINE DIVISION, Korea, Dec. 5=Three he said. “I figured it was one of volunteered. Soon there was a between stray words from tired- Child. N. Y. ; i Two kind ladies met them at U- S- Marines who escaped death by ‘marching undetected through ours so I yelled ‘We're Marines” definite campaign on. Someone eyed youngsters, slipping them Year after year the public has| Miss Fern A. Goulding, director

{ i i #1, 4 2 Clothe-A-Child head the night with a column of Chinese Communists were among 800 I was told to advance with my thought up & name. They called nickels and patting thelr worried roarizoq the sou of Clothe-A-lof the School of Practical Nt . Maryland St, an 298 wounded and frostbitten Leathernecks rescued in the airlift from rifle over my head and a Heu-/it Clothe-A-Child. jheads. : pe of the of

; ! | Child's job . . . for The Indianapolis Pu i took them to the stores and out-| the Chosin Reservoir area. tenant refognizéd me and let the! phat first December in 1930 Everybody was broke Before Cans Job is the only a ing of the pa dbo fitted them. « Their stories told of the heroic efforts of the Marines to hold three of us come in.” . .:. 20 years ago . . . 380 needy the week ended. Not from squan-'to which the needy children can|Schools, is in New York as & Many other people and {six fanatical Chinese Communist | Pa “Another Marine rescued in the nijgren were clothed. |dering—from contributing niokels look with confidence to obtain/member of & committee developzations are calling Th. organi- visions at bay along the peri-| airlift was Pfc. Mike Raimondo, | tn 1931, fewer children were and dimes and quarters to the un-|warm clothing at Christmas time, ing ° curriculum materials and each day and 8 ne he Times jeter of frozen Hagaru Airfield | 120, of Baltimore, Md., who Was qoineq., |, . 350 of them. In‘fortunate families that sat in The. The public . . . that's YOU . . standards for nutsing or _pointments to take Clothe. 1. until the last wounded man was with a machine gun crew at the joa0 405 children. 1936 . . . Times office, {has given generously year after

Child children to the stores to _Cn» tO safety.

Optfit them. They want to see the' I C: Oscar J. Kessler, 34, of Yelled ‘Surrender’

(Child was growing . .. and it con- one realized that if a newspaper the warm clothes. Many people/one in Indiana, is one of few in- ; v | “We machine gunned hundreds +: 004" to grow, In 1935, 1241 was to be published, a separate have come each year to e/augurated throughout the counGarry smiles Sn the poor il. Petersburg Va. told now he anid 4 of Chinese all day nd picked yiigren were outfitted. 1036 . . [headquarters must be established children fo the stores and Saks try to train practical nurses to % saces when they get their two other Marines fell in with a hf off those that broke through our y.gs 1937 , , 1665. 1938 . . .|for Clothe-A-Child. for them. [relieve the shortage of registered new, warm clothes. column of tHe marching enemy, y= |crossfire,” Pfc. Raimondo sald.';goy | Each year atfer that, a special| Take last year for example: Of/nurses. = ° JOU 100, can bring joy into un-'wno had cleaned out their com- Wi - Bhs “They finally had us circled and ———". - — fortunate children’s lives by tele-| nt. When the, ‘about 9 o'clock at night they; phoning RI 5551 TODAY and ask- pany Sunday night, n the,

jrushed in yelling ‘Surrender Ma-|. STRAUSS SAYS: STORE HOURS AS USUAL 9:30 TILL.

Ing for a donor appointment. Chinese dissovered them, the three “a irines!” But we shot hell out of,

Two other ways to contribute Marines shot their way to safety. lor 14 of them if we were spotted. them and did the same thing) ON SATURDAYS PRIOR TO CHRI STMAS 9 TILL 6. to Clothe-A-Child are: | “We'd been slugging it out with “Just before dawn, when it was when more came back at 2 in| : : ONE: By sending a contribution them for four days and nights just turning light, the guy in'the morning. by check or money order, for any when we broke contact Sunday front of me turned around,” Pfc., “At dawn we counted 46 dead } amount, to Clothe-AChild, Indi- evening,” Pfc. Kessler said. Kessler said. “Before he could Chinese in front of our gun alone! anapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland] Pfc. Kessler said that he was open his mouth I put a bulletiand we had lost only one man.| 8t. All contributions are listed in|forced to abandon his position through his belly. The riflemen’ Then we got orders to withdraw.” | The Times. land was joined in retreat by two shot the guys in front of them Another rescued Marine was : TWO: By placing one or more Marine riflemen. . and we ran off as fast as we Pfc. Gerard F. Hierro ot New dimes on The Times Mile-O-Dimes/ We Saw a squad of Chinese could. The Chinese were so sur- York City. He was with a squad on W. Washington St. in front of| OVINE across the crest of a hill prised they didn’t open fire until whosé two machine guns cut| ~ the L. 8. Ayres and S. S. Kresge 50 We decided to fall in with it. We had a good start.” {down 250 Communists in one stores. Uniformed city firemen are| We figured we could kill the 12° Pre. Kessler said that he and! night.

jChosin: Reservoir. 886. 1934 . . . 1205. Clothe-A-| Then came the day when some- year to provide the money to vl The Indianapolis school, ghly

oo. uty 24 hours a day at al 4 Chi ; =e 1 wa Yan Phas ma Sy ot hore % way 81 tim e Tighten Steel Ill. S. Files Charoe le-0-Dimes to make change. | [R@ inese lighten Steel |). J. | g their shopping yet. How soon they

| s king the youngsters to the i HN | : star taking te youngsters 0 1 RING ON Trapped Yanks On Red China

depend upon how} quickly YOUR help is received. It] (Continued From Page One) (1500 killed around the Chosin

is needed TODAY. ling Communist trap at any hour. | Reservoir. : ; CONTRIBUTIONS {Chinese reinforcements, however, ‘ Rake Supply Centers , : |p (Continued From Page Di "oni : Previous balance ........ $ 947387 were pouring south to stop them. B-20 Superforts from Okinawa ‘Assembly session g =i No Gossip Club ......... 10.00] Air reports said other waves blasted three supply and com- | The ibn lll submitted by | Current Knowledge Club.. 15.00/0f Red reinforcements were pour-{mand centers north of ‘Pyong-| the U. S. Britain France Nor- | Calvert & Turner Sales © Ing toward _ south Pyongyangiyang with more than 17,000 fire} ay. Cuba and Ecuador. was re Unit — Stanley Home “like crowds leaving a football bombs. Hit were Songchon, Sun-| ay, oil ‘by. Observers 2s surpris-} Products ........ cevens 12.00,game” in pursuit of the 100,000-ichon and Kanggye. |B mild. It contained only the | Woman's Auxiliary, Local man U. 8. 8th Army as it fell] An unconfirmed front report charge: : Mig | No.5 LIU. ..c...vivnn 5.00back in an orderly retreat fromifrom a patrol east of Sinmak,| « Armed forces of the Central! Indianapolis Section Na- the Red capital. 2 45 miles southeast of Pyongyang. pegple’s Government of the Peo. tional Council of Jewish Sets Up New Line lsaid United Nations forces there!yi.:s Republic of China are con-| Women .............. + 10000 One front report said the sth/had clashed with groups of Chi-| quciing military operations) Mrs. Paul Ferdinand. ..... 10.00, Army has established a new de- nese soldiers. It was belleved the against the United Nations forces |

1 forces | = Howard Cavan, Elwood, |fense line was believed to be a Reds were driving down through ; "i rea » i iad

Indians’ ........ srsess + 25.00 tempora rearguard action to central Korea in a bid to cut the . i Tepper ........... avs eny. 2 100 hi EA Whi bo Mi across Sth Army's line of retreat. Up to Committee 3 The Thimble Club........ 5.00 roads leading into the Sth Army’s| Chinese patrols began to enter] The memorandum will go before! Naphtali Eskenazi ....... 10.00/1ine of retreat. |abandoned Pyongyang about 9 the steering committee this after-|. Robert Erwood ....... eee 2000; Masses of Chinese troops strik- p. m. Monday (Indianapolis time) noon and that 15-nation group is Mae Engle .....c..c..55 5.00iing south in the Chosin and!and air reports said they were certain to decide to put the item! E. 8. Huggins............ 10.00 Pyongyang aréas were under con- streaming into the burning city on the agenda for debate before 7 _-|tinuous blasting by the full fury in hordes by early afternoon. [this Assembly session—originally!

Today's total se0e0s:8.138.00 of Allied Air might. Planes! Gen. J. Lawton Collins, U. S. scheduled to adjourn Nov. 30—|

“ ————{from the powerful Task Force 77|Chief of Staff, toured corps and quits for Christmas. : Total to date...... .$108587 joined with Far East Air Force divisional headquarters on the, puscia is’ represented on the DIRECT DONORS fighters, light bombers and B-29 northwest front with Lt. Gen.!gqomnvieces put it has :ho veto Milton Law ............ 1 Child Superforts to hit the Reds. {Walton H. Walker, 8th Armyi,ower Paul Rinne ............ 1 Child] Navy and Air Force fighter pi- commander, in an evaluation of) i ER Se CTP {lots claimed 3500 Reds killed the deteriorating military situa- - GM HIKES PRICES {Tuesday in air attacks. F-80 jet|tion. UN Korea Pli ht DETROIT, Dec. 5 (UP)—Gen- pilots said they turned the Pyong-| The 8th Army completed its |

eral Motors announced today a yang area into a “death trap,” withdrawal from Pyongyang,

price increase of “something less with 2000 Chinese killed there. without a fight early today, but . than 5 per cent” on its 1951 model Marine fighters and Air Force a new threat rose some 70 miles, ur Ses ee passenger cars. {light bombers claimed another to the southeast. : : !

{Continued From Page One)

SHOP EMRICH'S WEDNESDAY UNTIL 9 P. M. |] ssi soma shou be remvaces

if 2 Allies are forced out. i - . 5 : cials described yesterday's - Also Open Monday and Saturday Nights : White House conference as an

“expository” meeting at which the a : 3 aus ivi iff British and Americans for the : : : . : : : VV first time told each other in com- : : plete frankness what they thought eo . ; (about the Korea War and touched the rather general opinion in the ih ; jon the problems : ?

: jon confronting | them, : ERE ARE EXCITING VALUES | eThese sources said indications clothing trades— : 3 : Attics later} i reiterate the po- : : : ; sition o! e two governments ! : . odi i ; » - . # > Joe, uty ot loves Sie bo bee fen a Er affirmed and re-affirmed by a million

long-range strategy. . ; | Addresses Conference : fM A J h P bli h a Te tied or so of Mr. John Q. Publics—that his talks with Mr. Attlee, the = : 3 President told the Mid-Century > . . . White House Conference on Chil- : White Hous Comp om Ol © there is virtually nothing inthe ~~ | tions forces in Korea are battling ‘against “tremendous odds” and

Said there Is a grave risk of clothing world—in their field—to general conflict . . . deliberately

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“Bar Compromise’ - _ Meanwhile, Korean Ambassador| ? : : 10P COATS at : Sh Chang called at the State TR TR See EE nn

Department and reiterated after- * : ‘wards that there must be no eom-{ dein ety ea er A 5 may a a os ; Vari promise in Korea. y 2 i “If we lose pow,” Mr. Chang

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