Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1951 — Page 2

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eign. Affairs Chiefs 2 Houses Pledge Back Truman Plea dent Truman's request for a resolution ending

s state of war with Germany was applauded by foreign affairs leaders today.

Just How Far Will Reds Go With Tricks?

!

{fon County Plan Commission. | » : » If rezoning is approved at the I p aii commission’s July 19 meeting, 25

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

Seek to Build

oil oo Suid eis B20 Gl Bags imi MIG as Jets

were on file today with the Mar-

big tanks will be constructed in| "a

By LUDWELL DENNY Seripps-Howard Staff Writer

WASHINGTON, July 10-—8uc-

“Chairman Tom Connally 2 (R. Tex.) of the Senate For«smign Relations Committee said 29 “place it before the commit- : at the earli‘west: opportunity.” xh Blithe 7 ‘womrds (D, 8.C.) ¢ withe House F eign Affairs

willleted approval «=ifr"a day or so.” «i22The resolutio “wouldn't be a “formal peace treaty with Germany Because Sen. Connally ~ Russians are still in the country »:#nd their agreement is needed. “fi . Crime Gambler Mickey Cohen went to Jail in Los Angeles for five years ow

: today for cheat-| was “careless” in writing checks 58 _ Ing Uncle 8am without sufficient funds. 80.

Far East

out of $156,000 income taxes. It

served months on a m isdemeanor bookmaking charge. He has 10 days to decide whether he will

__ remain in counMickey Cohen ty jah

where] i time isn't deducted from his sen-| 5, thr in a poll among American include political questions, in vio-, tence pending appeal, or whether newsmen in Washington, Tokyo lation of Moscow's pledge to,

he'll enter federal prison,

. . -

cess or failure of the ERAN aN OR Seems Armistice negotiations will turn smacked of Ukranian national on thse factors: Thes a Be ism. A Pravda editorial charged , = = .. 4, Salis a the poet did not emphasize the trickery Bain y tion of the “new prosperous TWO thshevik Ukraine” in relation stall Whetks to the Soviet Union. The poet/®r S'# B sald “One cannot think about the Permit United Soviet Ukraine separately from Nations inspeethe mighty growth of our multi. tion teams for national state.” truce enforce-

Songsters ry

{ THREE~— Egbert Van Alstyne, whose “In Whether

Stalin

the Shade of the Old Apple Tree,” Will Insist on pois still a favorite of barbershop litical bribes for quarters, died yesterday, at 73, in ® Cease-fire Chicago. Hollywood and New 88reement.

York ofters failed to lure him| ©n the first from Chicago. He wrote 720 and overriding question of good

songs ‘in all. faith, conditions are never favor5 sw =» lable in dealing with Stalin or his Lynn Carver, Hollywood night- stooges. The record is clear that club singer, was free of bad check his word is worthless and that he

Mr. Denny

was his first sen-| tence since he! five|

world lightweight greeted Gov. Dewey in Korea to- Soviet deputy foreign minister, day. They talked fights—Jen- and when Gen. Matthew Ridg-

{kins in New York, 1940-41, The way responded they told the | governor, flying in helicopters and world United Nations forces were

light aircraft, twice was within requesting a truce. earshot of Allied artillery fire, | Wanted Political Issues

vote, 8 to 1, for firing Gen. Mac- to Gen. Ridgway they tried to

and Korea and at the United Na- Washington that negotiations

{tions. Reporters said the Presi- would be confined to military’

A blonde blue-eyed T7-year-old dent's right to remove a military matters.

girl who wanted to show her doll man must be preserved.

to Sugar Ray Robinson, world middle weight champion, may have met with faul play, police said today. .The champ and his trainers had not seen Christine Butcher, nor was she found by po- . . lice, soldiers, and] Mr. Robinson Britain's - famed * Household C a v-| wt WindsorGreat |

“YG !

Forest. : = o . ”. - i INTERNAL REVENUE BUREAU officials settled—down to. wait “a reasonable length of, ' time” for Virginia Hill to settle Peace with Germany Fe oe editorial . . . Page 12 her $160,000 back income tax bill. The hot-tempered redhead, home| padlocked, clothes locked up, Hving in a Spokane hotel suite, sald “I'm broke.”

|

” u u LAS VEGAS police searched

today for ‘“love-crazed' Frank

W. Kristy, 48, and his step- * daughter, Betty Jean Hansen, 20. Kristy's wife, Margaret, 38, said Kristy forced the girl in her car at gunpoint Thursday and said he was “madly in love” with her. ou »

n . Laugh Lines A 37-YEAR-OLD Philadelphia jeweler said today he didn’t see anything to get excited about in his marriage to an 84-year-old widow. Sidney Koch =aid his bride fs simply “very lovable.” He courted her eight years.

o » ” MURIEL PATTERSON gave a federal court in New York a bad time. Bookkeeper for the ‘Civil Rights Congress ball fund, she was questioned about the $80,000 bail forfeited by fugitive Communist leaders. Repeatedly she refused to answer questions until asked what time she got up. “I think about a quarter of 9,” she said. o LJ rv A RUSSIAN-MADE truck cap tured by Gls in Korea remains loyal to communism. Every time we got somewhere, {t just quits, complained U. 8. infantrymen, o n n

the pace but he tried. A team of horses broke loose in Dallas, Tex., and swung into six lanes of speeding traffic. The team couldn't make the standard 45-mile-an-hour speed and gave up

’ (famed Glory Tre Ol’ DOBBIN couldn't muke [264 Glory Tree is no more

its leaves started to turn color

For the preliminary meeting a NH : ‘they converted the supposed 94 “neutral ground” of the alleged “open city” of Kaesong into Red {territory under Communist armed ‘guard. | Of course the price of dealing ‘with’ the Reds in any way is to put up with inevitably trickery. |The preblem is to decide when the price is too high | The most serious development 80 far is that the Reds are usmg the negotiation period for bringing in large military reinforce.ments from Manchcuria. . y-Phis ois. the same dodge used

4 Kai-shek «in ‘China Bv the same

(shall truce only to prepare for ‘more successful aggression. Perhaps Stalin's best trick is the designation of Gen. Peng as “commander of the Chinese volunteers” —instead of official repOBSERVERS concluded there resentative of the Peiping’ Ped would be no major developments regime, which he is, If Gen. Ridgat United Nations headquarters Way accepts his credentials as after United Nations Secretary- Spokesman merely for “volunGeneral Trygve Lie flew back to!teers” in Korea, nothing Peng Norway from United Nations, Si§ns will be binding on Peliping or future “volunteers.’ Regardless of other terms no

Trygve Lie

N.Y. to firiish an interrupted va-

cation, Lie had just unpacked whén Jacob A. Malik proposed truce is any better than its teeth. cease-fire. Thorough going over of Unless Stalin is willing to accept Far East political issues is ex United Nations inspection terms pected when the United Nations in North Korea io prevent Red x reinforcements and other viola(General Assembly convenes at , = . ; Faris in November tions, any armistice will be a % . trap : SGT. STANLEY T: ADAMS Finally, if Moscow-—despite its who received the Medal of Honor Pledge that political issues will from President Truman for brave not be raised at Kaesong— tries ery in Korea, has been commis R fake a truce conditional on le C a's y oR sioned a second lieutenant in A Bina's admission to the Army Intantry United Nations, possession of ; x = Formosa, or dictation of a Jap-

anese treaty, these negotiations

INCREASED “will be a hoax.

“Communist

stimulated ¢haos” and lowering of the iron curtain in southeast Asia, unless America helps nations in the area get on their feet economically, was predicted {today by Foreign Aid Chief William Foster. He warned military production in Western Europe is far short” of what it must. be 2 to ward off Communist aggres- —¢ . _ a

sion,

Ge PERFECT FOR Storm Uproots Famed Glory Tree in Kokomo |

Times State Service |

KOKOMO, July 10 Kokomo's

The tree, which annually drew big crowds of speetators when

each fall, was one of hundreds f 1 X

of trees uprooted by yesterday's READY-CUT SPAGHETT)

storm.

the New Augusta area, north

and south of 86th St. near the 8TH ARMY HEADQUARTERS,

|New York Central tracks. Appli-/Korea, July 10—U. 8. warplanes {cation for rezoning from agri- shot down their fifth Russian‘cultural to industrial was filed puilt jet in four days over North lyesterday.

'Korea today and soldiers died in Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. plans fierce ground battles while 10 men to build 11 tanks north of 86th worked for a cease-fire at a confor $500,000 to $750,000. It will ference table in Kaesong. join with Sinclair Refining Co.| A B.29 Superfort gunner, Sgt. and Phillips Petroleum Corp. to Gug Vv, Opfer, Opportunity, Wash.,

build 14 tanks south of 86th for h MI wh $750,000 to $1 million. {destroyed the enemy MIG-15 when

by Mr. and Mrs. Hugh E. Hauk , . airnort,

2d Mb, ana Mrs. Paward Phas | In four days of futile challenges you have to go this is the best p. ‘The area covers more 'against Allied air might, the Com- Way.

100 acres. {muists have had five jets shot

f{down and four damaged. No Al-

In this case the Reds broke faith repeatedly even during the Zukerman, laughter of Mr. and SGT. LEW JENKINS, former preliminaries. First they sug- Mrs. Abe Zukerman, 1103 Union champion, gested a cease-fire through theSt., fell down cellar steps while vacationers, plunged 300 yards|

» » ” } PRESIDENT TRUMAN got the, Then in their formal answer

five 'vears. ago = against Chiang:

‘Red general Peng Teh-huai now} at the Kaesong conférence table i=—he agreed to the so-called Mar-|

when the wagon they pulled threw a wheel.

” ” n ATTENDANCE WAS bad and] people couldn't hear for merry-| go-round music when Price Sta-| bilizer Michael V. DiSalle plegded for agricultural support of price controls before Banresville, Minn.,| farmers last night. “Not many of! us like him,” one farmer said.

~ ” ” A scholarly:looking man | whose bite may be worse than | his bark was sought by Long | Beach, Cal, today. Dolores | Fulton complained that the man barked at her pooch night- | ly and that she was afraid of | his intentions, |

v—ymant ___ PICTURES

~ FRAMES

reported.

Fast In Ending

a flight of jets struck vainly The properties are now owned ,..n.t hombers blasting the Stn-|

Both Sides Using American Guns

TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1951

erman War

For Many, Cease-Fire Will Be Too Late—

As the Killing Goes On in Korea

By JIM G LUCAS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

ABOVE YONGSON, North Ko-

rea, July 10-—At least we were |certain of one thing — the kid (never knew what hit him.

He had been standing there one minute as alive as you and I and

{probably hoping that tomorrow they'd call the whole thing off,

The next minute he was one of the mangled dead.

A mortar had landed right on {top of him. That's the hell about mortars — you never hear them!

until they hit. The one that hit this kid had split him in two. He couldn't have felt anything.

Today the eyes of the world are on Kaesong where the cease-fire negotiations are being held. But in other parts of Korea the war goes on. Men will continue to fight and die up to the minute of an official ceasefire order. In this dispatch Scripps - Howard War Correspondent Jim Lucas tells how real the war still is.

enemy’s main line of resistance. St It's 2000 yards away. Our line is 4000 yards back. Th knob. There's more on that’ hil

We kept telling ourselves that if We've got em on three sides.”

Lt. Col, George Parish, Marid-| * son, Wis., couldn’t get the kid off gay » the colonel said. Glass Cuts Two Children tea losses or, damage have been his mind. |

In Separate Accidents

“Poor devil,” he

muttered.

As we reached the hilltop our| {artillery to the rear opened up.! “We've had a real duel all

e enemy is| y 1| opened up. We heard the shells”

just north of the river, There's Whistle overhead and explode less about 30 on that hill in front |than 100 yards behind us.

“Tv had one man killed and 1} {wounded. I want to bring as {many of these men out alive as [ ican. What's a little more ge« lography now?” | Someone shouted a warning, Without asking why we stumbled {into the trenches. Enemy mortars {began exploding on the small hill {to our left. We counted eight bursts. “I've a patrol over there,” Bob ack said miserably. Our artillery roared its answer, {Then the Red artillery really

There was no counting them | now. The whole countryside {seemed to erupt. The duel lasted about 20 minutes, When it ended the silence hurt our ears. We climbed out.

“Since dawn we've fired 425

“Poor. anivsky devi He Wes 2 rounds. They've fired 104 rounds. | Sharp local battles flared along . | They were shooting at us just, py ) | Two children were hurt by the east-central and the eastern damned good soldier. Too bad he|parore you got here. That's what | The devil of it is they're firing

“We Didn't Leave Them”

I. \fronts. Chinese Communist and|couldn’t have lasted a little got the kid. Most of them landed American guns,” the colonel said,

broken glass last night. | James Dunn, 13, of 1234 Kelly St, dropped a water

tion in St. Francis Hospital.

In the other accident, Irene! JASPAR, Alberta, July

several probing attacks and 8128s, houred heavy mortar and artillery grabbed for it and cut the artery fire into United Nations positions. | charges today. A judge ruled she never keeps an agreement longerin his wrist when the glass broke re emer than it is to his advantage to do in his hand. He is in fair condi-

| Two Killed in Bus Plunge

10 are thinking about quitting. (UP)—A glass-topped sight-see- there's a cease-fire tomorrow the pack?

ing bus, packed with American silence will drive us all crazy.” At the top of the hill the ys

North Korean troops launched longer.”

lon the other side of the road or|‘“Lend-lease from the last war I

We walked back to the obser-\y, would have been hurt more.” imagine. We've spiked most of

vation post overlooking the enemy’s positions.

“This is the roughest day we've| had,” Col. Parish said.

Capt. Bob Stack, Danville, Ill. walked over to where we stood. ~ Our artillery ceased firing.*The You men gathered ‘round to ask about

can't tell me those guys over thereto cease-fire talks.

/playing in a neighbor's yard and down an embankment from a colonel outlined the situation.

cut her left shoulder on a broken mountain road yesterday, killing|

| bottle. She was not seriously two women and injuring 20 other blister,” he said. | hurt. ; { passengers, five seriously. i ES ———— —

0K

If

{quit fighting?

“We're sitting our here on a|

~ chintz ac

What's going on? Will we pull Will the Chinese really et back to learn about the Or will they let Peace negotiations. I shook hands put down our weapons and all around. then attack? i

g the guns they've captured. They're

(firing in batteries of four guns and 'we didn't leave that many be- | hind.” | It was time to leave. I had to

“Tell 'em not to sell us out,”

Col. Parish pulled out a grimy Capt. Stack said. “Tell ‘em not

“That razor-inotebook. ‘back ridge over there is the

to trust those guys. Tell 'em

“In the last 12 hours,” he said,| not to give an inch.”

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