Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1951 — Page 3
TT
REG
HR TERN
25, 1051 re v
ed a greater erican’ public an policy in en Lattimore. imore wrote: to let South to let it. look ed it.” Prere had ‘used about Free
» [r. Lattimore ng just that. i were being th Korea and » Administraling $150 milto South Kotered by the ing the stage fall, without 2 pushed her, andoning the » were plead-n-until their e organized, ed sufficient orea to resist ‘hat has been erlin, but we flag flying in of our protec1as not been
to blind us
soapstone, ts silicate, ——
2.36
1.19 i 3.79
1.49 1.49
1.59 $.95
.49
' MONDAY, JUNE 25,
‘UN Foe
Hails Unity War Enters
By United Press
TOKYO, June 25-—The textein part of Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway’s statement on the 1st anniversary of the Ko-
rean War:
people.
One year ago today, the Republic of Korea was at
peace, its people absorbed in peaceful pursuits, its modest military establishment organ-
ized, armed and disposed solely for defense.
and its defense forces were suddenly assaulted by their heavily armed neighbor, which secretly planned and criminally sought the
One year ago today that 2 No Sign S of
That act has far greater significance for us than the mere criminal conspiracy which it revealed. For the first time, it gave positive proof that the Communist leaders who planned and executed
! - 5 sr rnriasi Slowing Down
- , ¥
1051
Of Outlaws'—Ri
Air Crash Kills 2, |
Breaks Up Picnic
POMEROY, O., June 28 (UP)—
as Korea
H. B. Plckett’s relatives were picnicking on the lawn in front of
his mother’s home last night when his war surplus training plane
This day has great significance for freedom-loving
2d Year
War Reveals
Battles Raging
Hand-to-Hand
By EARNEST HOBERECHT United Press Staff Correspondent
it were fully prepared to use armed force on whatever scale) might be required in their efforts| to attain their ends. It gave positive proof by actual| deeds that the ceaseless profes-| sing of these same Communist leaders of their devotion to ‘“democratic” processes and the maintenance of peace were utter shams, and as false as all the other utterances with which these leaders of communism have] showered the world for years. | Deep Significance ‘ This day is of deep historic significance for yet another reason. It marks a year of achievement by a great world organization, dedicated to the employment of the collective strength of free peoples to repel the aggression of international outlaws, to act together in mutual self defense for the preservation of their liberties, and to respect their obligations for the maintenance of international peace and security. We cannot permit this day to pass without renewed recognition of the fidelity and valor of the armed forces of the Republic of Korea. We cannot permit this day to pass without drawing new courage, new determination, and new hope from the heroic actions of those of the United Nations, who clearly saw In this criminal aggression a threat to principles for which the United Nations stand; who fearlessly branded the aggressor as a breaker of peace and who swiftly began the mobilization of armed forces to support the principles on which its charter and its life depend. Unsurpassed Standards We cannot permit this day to pass without renewed recognitjon of the unsurpassed standards set during the past year in professional competence, fidelity, loyalty, courage and spiritual stamina by the men and women who have served, and those who are now serving, in the United Nations command in Korea. It was this command, with these qualities, which challenged, met and hurled back the most vicious forces which have yet threatened mankind in its age-old struggle to gain and preserve the dignity and freedom of the individual. I believe it quite possible that because of this action, history may someday record that the crest of the Communist wave of cold - blooded aggression was broken against the arms and the will to fight of the United Nations battle team in Korea; and that this menacing flood, reaching its high water mark on the Korean front, thereafter began its repession in Asia.
Flooded Kansas Hopes for Relief
LAWRENCE, Kas, June 25 (UP)—Dozens of towns in floodsoaked northern Kansas were under water today, but the promise of comparatively dry weather brought hope of relief. Crop experts, however, said that the Kansas wheat crop already | had suffered some damage and | that harvesting would be held up| until drier conditions prevail. The Topeka weather bureau re-| ported that all the rivers in its area were receding after the re-| gion escaped additional rainfall yesterday. John Crown of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce said “our picture is definitely brighter. It| looks like things finally are under control.”
TOKYO, June 25— The United Nations marked the first anniversary of the Korean War today with the re-!
FULL HOUSE AT COURT—Judge George Ober and dog owners.
crashed less than 30 yards’ Br nO one Te
ger, Donald Duffy, 30, both Gallipolis, O., were burned to death. |
STRAUSS SAYS:
CALLING ALL AMATEUR - GOLFERS!
capture of a key height and|
the destruction of their 13 Ohio Minister To Head DePauw
Communist plane in nine days, | Hand-to-hand fighting raged in| Dr. Russell J. Humbert, one of several sectors of the 100-mile Qh10’s outstanding Methodist
iministers and civic leaders, has ground ry nt. Tere he ho $I&0 been named to the presidency of of any slackening o e battle! g despite Russia’s proposal for a DePauw University, The Times
learned today. Korean cease-fire. » An 8th Army communique to-| though the appointment has
night disclosed that Allied troops had swarmed again to the crest of a hill south of Kumsong, 20| miles above the 38th Parallel,
not been officially announced by the university, it was confirmed in Ohio Methodist circles that the Youngstown, O. minister will take over the presidency of De-.
faying Toscanini
against “moderate reuistance.” : |pg.w at the start of ‘the fall term.
He will succeed the retiring pres-
Allies Fall Back ident Dr. Clyde C. Wildman. The Reds had fought bitterly m appointment brings Indi-
for the hill until today. It changed! > 48. . hands twice yesterday in tierce 202 the 46-year-old minister who
close-quarter fighting, and the! Allies were half-way back up last night when called back for the night.
ognition for both his church and’ civic leadership.
{ Fulfills Ambition The Allies also stormed a hill It also elevates to college presjust south of Pyonggang, 17/idency the Barberton, O., boy who miles west of Kumsong, with bay-| worked in a general store to go onets and grenades in an attempt through high school and fulfill his to wrest it again from Reds who ambition to enter the Methodist threw them off it yesterday. | ministry. Hand-to-hand combat likewise) Since he was ordained in 1930 broke out farther west. United Dr. Humbert has won national Nations patrols ran into an recognition, He accepted the pasenemy company northwest of torate of debt-ridden Firestone Yonchon and close-quarter fight- park Methodist Church in Akron ing was still under way at last jn 1935 and in five years had paid reports, off the church indebtedness of] Bags Red Plane $25,000 and doubled the member-
ship. : A Communist counter-attack| pg, has repeatedly spurned of-
northeast of Yanggu on the east- rors to leave the ministry fori
ern front forced a United Na-| ; b: d in tions patrol to withdraw. just ect to
ecent years declined the secreThe air war blazed anew, t00, |} B ber of. and the U. 8. 5th Air Force shot | t2ryship of the Akron Cham {
ommerce “because at the age of down In flames its 13th Commu- I decided to be a minister and| a” plane in nine days. fothing has happened since to > 3 was bagged by Capt. Milton hance my mind.” E. Nelson L during a Jo-minute dog-| * 15 1938 in Akron, he was voted Sabrejets and 30 Sovi wy F-86/the “outstanding young man of 15 jela along th et-built MIG-|iyo year” and received the Junior | 8 Yalu River\cnamber of Commerce distin-|
Manchurian border. The Russian, who ducked {guished service award that same
|year. Porters hw redding His speech,” pre was a delegate to the Methfor negotiations ons to his calll,4ist Foumenical Conference to This was note-worthy. uel? held in London this year, but
cancelled plans for the trip to asprevious peace feelers from Com-|syume wn th of ol og munist China have insisted that| Although he was born of Pres-
the Peiping government be given pyterian parents, Dr. Humbert membership in the United Nations embraced the Methodist faith bein place of Chiang Kai-shek’s| cause his early life was influenced regime and that the Nationalist|)y the Methodist minister of Canal island stronghold of Formosa be Fulton. O. | surrendered to Mao Tse-tung’s| He worked his way through forces. as the price of Korean Canal Fulton High School and peace. {later through the College of {Wooster, earning his B.S. in 1928. [In college ‘he paid his way by| |serving two ‘small pastorates, but] still found time to set a track; record fo 220-yard run.
| | |
sks to Go to Tomb
MILAN, Italy, June 25 UP) Arturo Toscanini, who was too! grief-stricken to attend his wife's m funeral yesterday, asked
Married Classmate
Shortly after graduation he| to'b arried Margaret Lundy, a col-| 0 De lege classmate and the daughter taken to her tomb today. {of one of the owners of Marts & Doctors said the 84-year-old| Lundy, fund-raising specialists of conductor had spent a relatively New York (City. For several quiet night. years Dr. Humbert worked as a Mrs. Carla Toscanini, 74, whocampaign specialist for educadied Saturday of a heart attack,|tional and church groups but left was buried in the family vault at/this job to be ordained in 1930. Monumentale Cemetery following] He entered Boston University, services at the Church of St. earning his S.T.B. and S.T.M. Stefano. degrees while serving as pastor of | H ithe Squantum, Mass., Congrega-| i {tional Church, He then returned to | a Heroes Oppose | Ohio; holding pastorates from api ion’ : {1933-34 at Beach City, O. Meth-| pity ation’ to Malik lodist; from '35 to '40 at Firestone] A group of Indiana heroes has Parkin in Akron; from 1940-44 at| condemned “dishonorable capitu-/Epworth Methodist in Toledo, and! lation to (Russian Jacob A.) Ma- Civic Leader lik’s proposal” for cessation of In each town in which he served Korean hostilities, from 1944 to the present time at} The executive committee of the Trinity Methodist at Youngstown. |
{has won state and national rec-
He sald that the Kansas River Military Order of the Purple he has beer an active civic leader. | here was falling about an inch| Heart, Department of Indiana,/Sought as a speaker, he once gave an hour, {went on record yesterday against/410 speeches in nine months and
The Kansas River boiled chest-| high through the Manhattan business district where 30 blocks were under water. The Red Cross evacuated 100 families from the inundated area of the city.
Unhanded
CAMBRIDGE, Mass, June 25 (UP). — Ralding what was described as a | $10,000 all - night poker game, police sald they heard one of the 11 men arrested complain: “I draw four aces with a $299 pot— and the cops come!”
THICKEN .... ROUGH “rm : Our varied menu offers
any “armistice . . , without the'in a year’s time spoke at or atcomplete withdrawal of Chinese tended 500 meetings. Communist troops and other for-| In Akron he was chairman of eign allies and advisers from . , ./the Chamber of Commerce and of Korea.” Ithe Red Cross Roll Call, as well|
MONTHLY INTEREST REDUCING
HOME LOANS |
AT LOW COST
® No Service Fees woe d
® No Commissions At
‘complete dinners or a
la carte suggestions.
EaZprd
Where It's. Pleasant to Eat {
FLETCHER AVENUE SAVING & LOAN ASS'N.
642 East Maple Rd., Intpls. |
1
fd 150 E. Market St. Phone MA. 3411 | -
> g ¥
‘boards of the Chamber of Commerce, Community Chest, Council of Churches, Boy Scouts, Intergood Group Good Will, Inter: Racial Committee, chairmanship § of the Planned Parenthood group, vice presidency of the Family Life Education group, chairmanship of the United Nations of Youngstown, and membership in numerous civic groups. His family includes his wife and three daughters, Martha, a student at Mt. Union College, Caroline, 15, and Sarah, 10, both attending school in Youngstown. The family will move to DePauw the first week in August. Dr. Humbert once was profiled by Keyes Beech, later a Pulitzer Prize winner, who said of him: “He's good looking, a good Re speaker, good worker, good at everything except golf. His rise Dr. Russell Humbert has been so swift that it is a [tribute to his perspective that he as the distinguished service still wears the same 7% size hat.” awards recipient. In Toledo he was president of! the Kiwanis Club, vice president Big Mo's Having Fun
of the Council of Social Agencies! and served as committeeman on| Cl ERBOURG, France, June 25
the Red Cross, Council of| (UP)—The United States battleChurches, War Chest, Commu- ship Missouri steamed into harbor
ny Chet Boy Seu, THC today with 1050 Nava Academy it nAus- | midshipmen aboard on a summer In. Youngstown his activities/cruise. She came from Oslo, Nor-
The annuel STRAUSS GOLF TOURNAMENT at SPEEDWAY GOLF COURSE . :
Next Wednesday— June 27
From dawn #!I darke-
NO ENTRY FEE (Greens Fee $1),
Call Speedway Golf Course (BE imont
4694) to reserve starting Himes
8 TROPHIES in these Divisions: ; -Low Gross —Low Net ~Junior ~=Father and Son
it's a great fournament-it's a
swell warm-up for the State Amateur!
L. STRAUSS & (0.
have included service on the way.
THE MAN'S
—
STRAU j : SAYS: TRADITION WITH A. TOUCH OF
E LEMEN: > a . . ey i : ney THICK . Jy x } ahi mi ° (AIA Finer “5 y s85 pl BE ng : x Hina Ean 35 Ti gis if Ed Ld . LI —-— y La eRE \ HE vain SHADE! : Aa \ : ® i celiniAg ROBLEE IT a 15— te N 3 y Ky. em 12.95 : : L. STRAUSS A C0. SRT . ; A \ KANT a mix a. a bs 2 2a LB FIRST FLOOR HAR»
a Oat
van
Es Tad wig
Progress Mill-Method Laundering = Can Keep Your Woolen Blankets Fleecy and Soft as New....for Years
We
16th at Penna. 1118 N. Illinois 2141 N. Talbot 4137 College
uarantee NO SHRINKAGE «= Progress
—
I aI
ve AL ¥ fo Agim te wm
wp Ay
Ep
Fam www a AO
Just Telephone MA. 2431 and Progress Roufeman WI Call Promplly at Your Home
#
Tp ay
RTE RR SO RG a
