Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 284, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1950 Page: 1 of 8
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7
d
Last Word In
Johnson County
Pi»
i"A Friend of the Family
0
Onited Press Full Leased Wire Service — NEA Telepboto Pictures — Established 1904 — Published Daily Except Saturday
5c PER COPY
8 PAGES
CL.EBURNE, TEXAS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1950
Indo-China War
3
Defeated
U. S. With Vital Report
Harold E. Stassen, former Repub-
will
I HUMAN, (M. 16 (U.P)
I he
the border of
conference with
Hickman Field in Hawaii at 6:28 Stassen’a speech la not being spon-
IIa did not speety who he wax.
The latest retreat left the out-
4323:
on
t:3
slated until after producers have
their
Texas Jet Pilot
arc, before Pyongyang.
130-mile
coastal highway to positions with-
, in five miles of the great Indue*
CIARLMSTON, W Va net. 16—
From GOP's
day. He compiimentod the Capital
Firemen Put Out
lar drive from Pohang, an advance
sent thi
phase of the push into North Ko-
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16—(R - previous 18
Thomas E. Dewey of New York.
— The fie was frut repotted An the. 2
Ing action south of Seoul in the'
ac-
counts are not affected, but the
| Stiff new credit rezulntions b"- hoard Mill may clamp down on
r me effective St 13:61 n m EST. them, too. , ' 151
The federal reserve hoard prom-
sed to review the new installment
department.
Angry retailers and automobile
15 to 25 per cent and the down
Hold Kick-Off
former
Ray McCullough.
hit
the Fort Worth District,
uesday morning at 8 o'clock. Dr;
of
UALIFY
1
ports."
--
Mf
i
uhnoticed in the confusion,
of Altadena, Calif., senior ad-
viser to the South Korean 26th
The Weather
between Inhung and
hung.
4 $
1
e
4
!
‘git
iiit
State Fair Is A Madhouse On
Record-Setting Day Saturday
New Credit Regulations Will
Start Today; Dealers Unhappy
Optimists Will
Hold Grid Fete
Items, the balance must be paid
off in 15 months instead of the
vision sets, refrigerators, and oth-
er household appijances today. ,
the boys to
night and ea
White
left ।
ened more miles of jungles
mountains to the Rebels.
more will hold a protest meeting
today in KI Paso, Tex Delegtions
THEr SHOULD
STOCKHOLM,
tered all
‘anngson.
aars ndezrees la pha
edezres ia paat
of the war, and later
m* k t unity 'OH • Katase
tanks
Heavy rain in the east coast re-
si
T
Na
To
MacArthur
The President's "Flying
fir—■ nerth ef Wensam en the East
Cuxt sf Nert Kam
as they are, depending on outcome
of the survey.
last reported in the railway
tunnel, however.
I went to the scenes of the
: JJowcly 506a
By moc.
ment.
The officials said that in order
WITOR s son The tellewime aw-
paws was sent by the mIt Ameriram
I Ing Hawaiian* dreused in every-
thing frob bathing trunks to fow-
PRESIDENT | ______,________ ..._____
President: llcan governor of Minnesota,
G”
to home Saturday
y Sunday," said a
“They were too
today.
to avoid the label of "carpetbaz-
gers' the administrators were be-
rhlng
IMi
unsuccessfi
denev, L-.
><
iq
n
„_7 ...._____.... ______ TCU Dec. 5 through 10th.
1 football star and president of the The current re
lodged in his back near his spine.
If Hood continues to improve, he
police official.
rushed to make their dally re-
fled devotion to peace; unity with
our fellow peace • loving members
of the United Nations and our de*
terminntion and growing strength.”
away
Under the new rules, the down
home soon, attendants at the hos-
pital reported.
The lead slug was not removed
from the injured man’s back. Sur-
geons at the hospital said the slug
may be removed later.
COSTLY LOM
at Kanawha Airport here, later he
said he had no recollection of the
confident we can surmount these
dangers with three assets.”
Ne listed the assets as "unqunli-
through pelting rain and mud to
the environs of Hamtung which
with its twin city of Hungnam an-
, chors one of the richest industrial
’ areas In all Korea.
"we are fully
gers which lie ahead but we are
a
Thanx to the TEL Class of Field
Street Baptist Church for Ptee Milk
& Ice Fund contribution . , . What
port to the nation Tuesday night
at the San Francisco Opera House
the birthplace of the United Na-
tions five years ago. White House
informants said it was unlikely the
President would proclaim a new
policy toward Asia but more likely
would restate the United States’
attitude.
Before he boarded the planv, Mr.
It changed .................-—■ ----------,
Five states were reprexented nt | Tvuman flew toward the mainland
n meeting here yesterday, and five today to deliver his report to the [
roN,BOWL
Allied Troops Move On Red Capital
Hour Of Decisions For ; Protest Faces
A. in.
TO TESTIFY BEFORE GRAND JURY—Mrs. Randi
Mast, 24-year-old widow of Harold Mast, murder vic-
tim ambushed at Medina, O., is shown at the bizarre
"press conference" held in her Medina home with
Elsie, her 2-year-old daughter. The Norwegian war
bride is scheduled to testify before a special grand
jury Wednesday, Oct. 18, when it meets to consider
the indictment against Max Amerman, who alleged-
ly planned the murder. (NEA Photo!
Immediately after his two-hour |
conferenee with MacArthur broke ।
up on Wake Island Saturday, the
President Issued an 850-word com-
Truman Winging Toward
er the plans were in open defiance
, of the United Nations interim,
I commission on Korea remained to.
era torch ought the back fire afire.
Instead at dunking the Ure in a
nearby tub of water, she wsider
become excitediand called the fire
Growing Torrid
or knelt in a schoolhouse pris-
on. A portrait of Soviet Premier
Josef Stalin looked down on
the carnage
Civilian refugees reported yes-
terday that up to 1,000 Amer-
ican war prisoners had been
seen in a railroad tunnel 17
miles west southwest of Yong-
I and Moroccans.
mTThesrutrontsiformnnc) mrtrea......The veteran ,S.24th Division, first to fight in Ko-
which wAs deserted lant week, opt rea, stormed back into action on the left wing of the Al-
biggest fortross on
Communist China
vanguard.
Some 70,000 American, South Korean, British and
Australian troops were fanning through North Korea,
CST) for the 2,300-mile flight to
U. Ark San Franelaco’s International Air-
port. He is expected to arrive about
I payment on i
I at one-third but the balance must
horpalr o in 1 instead o‘ 21 Chicken Fancier
| shaped Up, higlofietatsof -the
South Korean government said in
The curbs were st If toned only
33-daj after the boerd ivpswsed
._l original “regulation W" to
uhmuyum ii । ~~ « drawn A tear
-mom tmperature ® decrees • rear
Inga to his many 4
friends from the COTTO
he said, the credit rules will be that the board acted in "bad
tightened further, relaxed or left faith." His group, he said, had ' —-s
“ been pgiven the impression that the president.
the northeastern coastal front
that the Cnnital Division plunged
munique, approved and initialed
by the general, in which he said
aware of the dan-
numbered French uoops defend-
Ing nicked carefully from among
North Koreans who fled south
ahead of the Communists. Wheth-
service had been opened by two nity Chest. This year directors of
of Stockholm’s most notorious bur the Community Chest voted against
glars, the local organisation functioning.
phone •
IA. Dohald Watt, Thomasville,
Go., flying another Jet tn the
squadron, say Pack's ship losing
altitude and signaled with his
arm that he would lend him to a
landing Peck selected a runway
that was too short for his high-
speed ship, but Watt cut his own
plane in front of him and forced
the semi-consclous major to take
a longer strip, . . .
Reds At Hand
TOKYO, Tuesday, Oct. 17. aup Four Allied columns
raced through the rain drenched Korean hills today in a
converging sweep toward Pyongyang, the Communist
capital city which lay only 30-odd miles ahead of our
than a month.
The return of the 24th Division
was announced in the climactic
blown out of the plane when
the froezins air rushed in. Pieces
of plexiglass tore a gush over his
left eye and ripped away his
crash helmet and throat micro-
Seoul, that plans were being push-
ed to appoint local, and provincial
officials in North Korean towns
loyal to the Republican govern-
Final Victory Plant I Americans fought a violent six-
As the plans for the final vic-] hour battle with some 1,444 Com-
torv over the North Koreans munist troops dug in among build-
‘ ‘ - ings and rubble of the towa.
____________ nothlpzhurnig
except the truck eushiiniwhieh
h«d caught from a welding toreh.
The Duck wa* being repnired in
the shop when the ireodqured.
Tho fire reminded ,(Homan at a
similar incident a year ago, Mhen
they were called to extinguish a
burning bicycle. The bloyle was
being ropaiked at a South Mato
Street blaoksmith shop. /he weid-
Task Force Is Racing To Save 1,000 American Prisoners
* ..... In some cases, a single'hul- -u-e—« - 4- —
let from the eneniy'a Russian
rifles penetrated all four
the capital. Out of the worst of
the rugged country. It was In posi-
tion lo match the speed of the
South Korepns in the race for the
capital.
Dash U Milas
At the northeast end of the
Cotton Control
MEMPHIS. Tenn., Oct Hi cun-
Orcanized protesta to the federal
order limiting cotton exports arose
* from the south today, as congreas-
; men nnd growers set out to have
Texas gum. Gale Manager D. Y. I1 ........-- —
Robb said "several hundred” per- will be allowed to return to
Department store charge
Gen Douglas MacArthur, who
nxing tuck seat ushin
die of mheeitysyintrueks
td britb Btackamlth Shop
21*
‘tiiii
tested to the virtual collapse
the North Korean defenses.
All persns who havesbeen con-
tacted to serve in the Salvation
Truman said he "tentativoly" had
finished the speech he will deliver
in San Francisco.
of the GOPa senatorial campaign
committee: )
The White House staff was irri-
tated no end by insinuations that
the President's trip was "polities"
The officials veralon was that the
Prealdent needed an aerosu-the-ta-
hle conference with MacArthur be-
fore Congress resumes
Mr. Truman, who evidenced an
unusual waspish mood en route to %
Wake Island, was the picture of
eonvivillaty yesterday as he toured
the diamond hear area. His route
was lined by thousanda of cheer-
dscuas the Wake Island meeting
ouny 1 uvu r min rvpor . m l na nationwide radio broadcast to-
t nitod States on his Wake Island night at 11 30 p. m EST.
Plans were announced by the
Republican National Company
By Wiiliam Chapman
YONGCHUNG, North Korea.
Oct. 16 uP--An American-
। or Oregon suid he “completely" (
1 agrees with Dewey s choice of the
... . ; ' five-star generat turned educator ;
Ues , . . , „ . , ' and predicted Eisenhower could
Hr said the situation "elearly win the 1952 election “very eas-
------ demanded drastic action and it ||y,” Morse responded enthusinsti-
autontobiles remains was taken." V . < callv at Anchorage. Alaska where
.... -------- —-------------— he is starting a Senate subcom- (
! mittee inspection tour of Alaskan
(U.m An Air Force lei pilot, dazed
and blinded by blood after the
canopy of his F-84 ripped oil in
flight Hew 100 miles lo n afe
, landing yestorday,
Mal. Thornton Peek, 30. of Gran-
service tomorrow .. .; 1
The USB Fort Munqan, an am-
phlbiogirTWWi of thefAanding-
ship-dock type,‘and the UBS Ver-
million, an attack cargo vessel,
were re-commissioned with cere-'
monies at the U. S. Naval Station 1
here.
The USS Patapsco, a gasonhe
tanker, will go Into service tomor-
row.
The vessels will be assigned to
the active U. B. fleet.
The Beaumont show is one of Fund Drive To
। SAIGON, IndoChina,
W( -Communist troops
! 'hr frontier fortress of
Honolulu time (10:28 a. m. sored by the committee. However,
the University of Pennsylvania pre-
l sident will be introduced by Sen.
Owen Brewster, R., Me,, chairman
The speaker was presented by
Jack Sanders
Special guests will include
Coach Jerry Sadler, 15 members
of the Cleburne High School foot-
ball team, and Jack Proctor, edi-
tor of the Times-Review.
Lewis Armstrong, is chairman of
the program.
STAAfEAEMLLS RUNNER
WELLINGTON. New Zealand.
Oct. 16. (U.m Champton Halr-Miler
Philip Brady Jr.. IS. bent down on
the mark for his specialty at an
athletic meet When the official
starter fired his cut-down service
ridle. Brady fell tatally wounded.
Police blamed the blast from the
blank shell. _____
Consumers start paying more Down payments will be requir-
money down and bigger monthly ad on all purchases of $50 or more,
payments on ‘ auto-no bitea, tele- i The eMAhnit was $100 - - •
Hew into the Wonsan airstrip foi
a front line Inspection. tour Mon:
than snoradic resistance any-
where. The speed with which the
Allied forces were advancing along
the main roads of North Korea at-
gar, Tex., fainted seconds after he
brought hin speedy fightor down
Fight to Rain
United Press Correspondent
William Chapman reported from
local sportsman dropped $1,406 re-
। cently in a DALLAS horse bookie
joint? . . . BMU Sports Publielst
i LESTER JORDAN sand]
wih Seuth
Traffic Victims
Two Fort Worth persons were in-
jured in an auto accident near
Burleson last night.
Patsy Tgylor, 20, received cuts
and bruises and Robert TaylOr, 12,
received a broken collar bone,
when the driver toet control of a
station wagon and the vehicle ov-
erturned in a ditch.
Both victims were treated at
Memorial Hospital. Th* youth was
transferred to a Fort worth hos-
pital for further treatment
still in French head*.
The well-trained black-unifor m
ed Viet Minh Rebels were reported
remrouping nt Nnehom pnd prepar-
i ‘n* t<< push southward pant a
string of blorkhouses and watch:
i vost evacuated bv outnumbered
and t-ltering French Legionnaires
xmn, ueume ...... It said. Pyongyang.
_______ ndmitting that in one sector the To the northeast, the U. S. 1st
In sparking the boom for Eisen- : North Koreans were "falling back Cavalry ran into a flurry of resist- •
howet. now Columbia University , in order lo reach more advantag- once at Namchonjon, on the main
.............. .---- , Dewey “definitely and eous defense positions." ISeoul-Pyongyang highway. The
original "regulation W" would re- finally" removed himself from the Finat Victory Plans t Americans fought a violent six-
main unchanged for at least 120 I GOP presidential field in 1952 and
■ ---l.sr ni-1 amacaa Wsu.m ■
I Some auto spokesmen said they ! pression nil right, but I'm sure (he -eKo.
I will be forced to close up shop un- board didn't make any such prom- 1
1 lea the curbs are eased right 1 “
Texas Hereford
Wins Top Award
KANSAS CITY, Mo,, Oct. 16 (U.R
—A Hereford steer exhibited by a
16-year-bld Texas youth today wn*
named grand champlon of the
1950 American Royal,.
The top award went 0 "Jug,”
shown by young Eom Reeves Jr.,
of Fort Stockton. YTex, Reevas is
a 4-H Club membn but entered
his steer, which weighed 1,200
lbs., in the open classes. Th* own-
er is a member at the Pecos Coun-
ty 4-H Club, which last yaar ex-
hibited. as a club, “Judge Roy
Bean," grand champion stoer of
the International Livestock Exhi-
bition at Chicago.
“Jug," bred by W B. Mitchell’s
sons at Marfa. Tax., traveled to
the Royal in a spedal trailer which
also conveyed “Roy Bean" to the
International.
HONG KONG, Oct. 16. (U.PH—Fiye
Chinese cooks employed in th*
Hong Kong police barracks re-
ported to police today that their
joint sweepstakes ticket had been
stolen from their kitchen. They
said the ticket had won a $150,-
000 prize in Saturday’s drawing.
of more than 300 miles in lose
I be seen
I The Seoul report of the U. R.
1 1st Cavdlry Division sourt indicat-
ed that this armor-tipned spear-'
head was running a close second
to the South Korean 1st Division
1 in the race toward Pyongyang.
! The Rerublicans last were re-
vorted in the aren at Suan, to the
notrh df the 1st Cavalry.
Front reports said the Commu-
nists were nutting un no bettor
some of them at breakneck ped. They were bent on"iNir‘oeingWashinttnp ' ?
reaching Pyongyang thi* week. The hour of decision for Susicion that xomeone "high-
the shattered Communist army was Hi hand. I er up" than Secretary of Aurteul-
Th.- South Korean 1st Division led the big push ontonsfhoro
Pyongyang it drove through sporadic resistance to theisv Re’, E c. Gnthinis
area of Sunn, 38 miles southyest of the capital.
The veteran U. S. 24th Di
"mm
Any toward Pyongyang. capa-
lai of North Korea, In an at-
temot to save an estimated
1,000 American war prisoners
from possible slaughter by
their Communist captors
Fears lot the safety of (he
Americans were aroused by
the discovery of the mutilated
bodies of more than 500 South
Korean war prisoners shot,
bayonetted or turned in this
east coast city by the retreat-
tog Reds •
The dead included 100
N wounded or killed aa they toy
15 to 25 per cent and the down burne chicken faniers, nre show- - - — „
payment for furntture was raised ing pens of prize winning birds, at in these perilous times
from 10 to 15 per cent. On these the South Texas Fair of Beaumont " > ** "
KN ROUTE WITH
‘oday and the French army or-
Republican National Committee
but a spokesman emphasized that
sons were turned back as they
tried to enter with the counter-
feit ducats.
Police dealt with the worst
traffic situation ever, but there
were no serious accidents direct-
ly resulting from the rush around
the Fair Ground. Even th* police
don't know yet how many mi-
nor atcidents occurred. "We told
bunding. When firemen at-
leg a new line lust above the Red. ------ ----. ---- -n
River delta. Indo-Chinas "rice >»' Cavalry Division, brenkingous
bowi." of the last of the mountains
The French high command the road to Pyongyang, raced 14
tald it had ordered the civilian miles Into Sohang. 42 miles south
evacuation of Langson for secur- of the capital.
Ity reasons and to free the threat-1 The division had charged
•nod town of non-military respon- : through Namehonjom and was
sibilities. I making a beeline northward for
nutrition, maltreatment or
were killed during the march
north from Seoul. The trek
began in mid-Beptember, just
before the liberation of the
South Korean capital.
The South Korean 3rd and
Capitol Divislons forced all
male residents of Kowan to
go through the schoolhouse
yesterday atternoon to view
the victims of their Communist
rulers.
Emmerich said ft was "most
terrible thing I ever saw."
Smith agreed.
“This type of thing ian't sol-
diering," Smith said. “It’s junt
terrible..” ..
the most outstanding poultry
- shows in the Southwest,
Other Cleburne chicken raisers
are preparing to show pens of fine
' birds at the Oklahoma City show,
‘exnemz ana vciTr: Patr uru af- led task force raced west to-
.lernoon teats*' tut turedez. Nowmuch
behanue in hemperature Gente %o moder-
urf-tzagigrapupgemu after.
Tuegur-Bnantiacogier
tn the Panhandle tonigh- engTUeSdmY*
nih! • Menday
yom."""“0n »•-
Ee 22
2 noon
DALLAS, Texas, Oct. 16-(U.P-
Almost everyone knows by now
that Oklahoma defeated Texas,
14 to 13, and Squthern Methodist
trampled Oklahoma ARM. 56 to
0. in the Cotton Bowl Saturday.
But the doubleheader football
feature which drew some 151,-
000 fans to the concrete saucer
on the State Fair Grounds was
rivaled by some other hi-jinx in
Dallas' wildest week end.
For example:
Attendance at the State Fair
Saturday was 289,307, a world's
record for a single day in any
annual exposition. The old record
was 283,000 on Labor Day nt the
Canadian National Exposition in
Toronto.
No one knows how much the
revelers spent, but the 289,000
fairground visitors Saturday and
another 221,000 yesterday bought
1,500,000 rounds of soft drinks.
Total take: 1150,000.
Saturday football fans bought
38,000 hot dogs from Cotton Bowl
concessionaries. Laid end to end,
the dogs would have reached al-
most 2% miles.
On the Midway, Sally Rand's
Girlie Show shared honors with
LM A
9 5
■ Sh ,»■.
iAg
{2
Cleburne Times-Review
Shooting Victim
Reported Better
A. M. Hood, Santa Fe employ*
injured by a stray bullet last week,
was reported Improved today.
Hood was transferred to a Tem-
ple hospital after an examination
here showed a .22-caliber bullet
the sky wheela, twin fervis 1
wheels, on the same axis, one
above thp other, 1 1
Some 20,000 lined up to ride th* i
sky wheels, and Miss Rand's show
had one of its biggest days ever,
taking In 118,280 from the Satur-
day fans who wanted action t- ,
whether on the football field or
in a sideshow tout.
Many foolball fans were “rook-
ed" by counterfeiters. An unde-
termined number of bogus tick-
•t* some.at premium prices-
were peddled for the Oklahoma-
civilians to evacuate
a. ui i Army annual drive for funds, or
|| Tootbail star ana presinent Ok une The current eason WII cioselothers, who would like to serve are
I Football Officiate Association of with numerous John County chic- invited to attend a kick-off pro-
the Fort Worth District, will he ken raisers showing birds.at the 1 gram at the Lberty Hotel Grill
I guest speaker of the Cleburne Op- ( Fort Worth Fat Stock Show, on fi
I timist Club at its regular noonday -an.. 26
I luncheon Tuesday at Liberty Hotel
ered kimonos. Many shouted, "Hel-
lo, Uncle Harry!"
The White House staff wm well
aware that many Americens were
puuled at th* shortness at his con-
Terence ‘with MacArthur. Mr. Tru-
man was closted with the General
alone tor an hour and the two met
with their top advisors for another
hour. . 1
vy Craft Put
Active Duty
ORANGE, Tail. Oct. 18 4uR 8-
The navy oskjtwg mop Vessels
out ofJtaresrse flet today and
a thtrdi Was scheduled to enter
। B. Lan el lo said he “certainly hopes
Gen. Elsenhower is interested In,
becoming a great national leader
□ 45TH YEAR NO. 281
Gen. Douglas
- . -- 8a3882
1′14355
•,3
“I am much concerned over
the fate of our American pris-
oners of war," Emmerich said.
"I want to assure everyone
that necessary action will be
taken in an all-out effort to
save these men from the fate
of the South Koreans massa:
cred here.”
Two o( the five survivors of
the Yonghung mass murders
said 100 American war pris-
oners had marched with the
South Korean prisoners from
Seoul to Yonghung.
But they said th* Americans
were separated from the
doomed South Koreans and
marched off toward Pyong-
yang before massacre began
Friday These Americans were
not believed part of the group
opy buret at 20,000 foet.
). Only Packa snatatrap and shoul
dor harness saved him from being
press box Saturday . . . Lkewise
HAROLD RATLIFF.
Gridders BILL MIMS, JIM ROS-
SER, DICK MILLER, GEORE LO-
GAN and HABOLD KING bucking
the heavy crowds on the State
Fair midway Saturday . . ..Pretty
DENISE CALDER greeting a group
of friends at a downtown intersec-
tion . . . Departure time tor YEL-
LOW JACKET grid special next
Friday still undecided.
Beauteous MYRA MILLER over
from DALLAS to spend the w**k j
end in quiet surroundings.. taaMd
vacious MARGIE 8M2MsdhidMm
some early momiegiaha
House," the Independence,
said 3Q0 other South Korean
war prjsoners had died of mal-
' militarv posts.
At Olvmpia. Wash., Gov. Arthur
milos of the 40th parallel, almost 1 here. Thov comniained that the
200 miles north of the old border limit of 2.000,000 bales for export
between North and South Korea. ! before March 31 would make it
The vanguard of the Republican vaster for synthetic yarns to take
push up the coast rt«n into noth over cotton markets.
Ing more formidable than the fire Congressmen sald. the delegu-
of machine guns end small arms 1 Hon should demand that the or-
The Republicans saw no enemy der be withdrawn, and not ront"
Regiment, set off along the
railway late yesterday.
Oct f6
oeupied
Nacham
r (57
J J
Rop. Albert Gore D„ Tenn., told 1 p. m. CST,
entton men here thet they should Mr. Truman will deliver his re-
and lied drive. It struck up the Went Coast toward Haeju, 63 tK Sr"INhtWnwisoclritymR.
miles south of Pyongyang II was the Eighth Division, nonreen Hoard "whv didn't you
plus H British-Australian bris ;adc, to join the push. and Btnnnnn consult the producers
A report Erom -Seoul sald te — : hefore Issuing the exnorl order.
‘1 - • ■ - " ...... And second, whom did you con-
The advance pul the CapitaiDi- suit?"
................ — growig strength." I
There were indicnrlos that the 1
Republican pakty mN) he pinnningi Burhine Gshion
to beat Mr. Trumun to the vueR" VMIIO9 NMNVP
politically, h labelliig the onfet- A binding' tuck seat AM
eno* nn ectton-ypar move t Win “ “
favor tor"the Democrat* fom m- _ --------------- ,
- . _________■ dependent voters who now may *a- on Smith Street darly twin morning,
axparisne* after his ptexIglaM can- noclato the admintstratlom-mote h--— -------da-*
closely with the MacArthur-led vlo- shop I
uwy in Korea. . . -____<e -lued,
-------—■— --------------- excent
atrocity at dawn yesterday
with Emmerich, Smith and Col.
Lee Chiep. commander of the
South Korean 26th Regiment.
More than 400 of the South
Koreans had- been slaughtered
with grenades, rifles and bayo-
nets in an apple orchard on
the southern edge of town, 28
miles north of Wonsan
Ripening apples still hung
on the branches. But the trees
also were littered with pieces
of flesh, torn clothing and
pitiful personal bundles of the
victims.
The two survivors told us
that North Korean guards forc-
ed the prisoners to line up
in files of four. Each man. be-
hind the first clasped his arms
around the man in front of
him. •
________ _.... -- - flew back to Tokyo Sunday from Fen ii qoulne tits biutor retrent.
Dewey, atp titular peednof the • hanaemp"rum ron’wnee "ih log -nn.....*—" -
ourtoHe^t^’^orirWa/nT^^!^ b/achho(U1 ln
pteme commander in Europe to The plight of the Communists _ , M ..
the White House in 1952. was rellected In d communique cavalry Meets Resistance
But Eisenhower, Who publicly from Pyongyang. D said the North Foremost -elementa of Maj. Gen.
disavowed all providential aspira- Koroans were "oontinuing the hit* I John Churchs 24th Division moved
seq to review me new nsnument 0-aa» oner une poerg IRejtions and wants "nothing to do ter battle with the advancing en* Inlo Yonan, 48 miles northwest of
h ying curbs "reanonably soon" to ; its original "regulation W" to with politics,” refused to see re- emy on all frontn." Fresh forces Seoul on the wew roast highway
see if ’hey should be revised govern installment buying. norters who went to ask his rear- were thrown into an attempt to to Haeju, tho big post and trans-
A beard spokesman said the Chairman Maury L. Nee at the tioa to Dewey’s remarks yesterday erash through th** renter of the port center 63 miles south of
check probably would be made retail industry's national planning on the NBS television show. “Meet Communist defense line, it said. ] Pyor
in about three weeks. After that, committee, immediately charged the Press"
Songnae, throe days earlier
There was little hope that the
Americans still were in the
tunnel, but it was believed
they might be found a lite
father along the railway,
which runs west to Pyongyang.
Col Dick Emmerich of New
Ulm, Minn., senior American
militaiy adviser to the South
Korean 3rd Diviaton. hurriedly
arranged for South Korean
troops to try to rescue the
American prisoners
Three truckloads of Infantry
led by Maj. Malcolm Smith, 32,
. trial center of Hamhung.
The Fourth Allied column spear-
NEW YORK, Oct. 16 UR—-Liher- (.Division elemont yltwwasestrikinK
al Republicans Jumped aboard an due westfrom.the Wonsan, areat
IkellorPresident bandwagon lo* through Tongy anK 6 m C °**
dnyXin a boom for Gen. Dwight of Fyongyang.
D. Eisenhower sparked by Gov. “
sotnitetnigrzmoenindpothterlhousen Showing Poultry
I hold appliances were boosted from j. E, Swanson and L. B. Mx. Cle-
been ronsultod nnd given
gion teeth Sunday and Monday side of the question.__
.held down air aetivity. Hut the
... ----- - ------ South Koreans slogged ahead
part of the South Korean Capital without asking for help.
Division dashed 5 Lt. Gon. Walton H. Walker, Iniesred in Fliht
‘ "....... ' commander at the U. 8 8th Army. ”... "... .M1
Alton Nash, local drive chairman
announced today.
_______________len, Oct. 16 Tom Davis, Liberty Hotei owner
(uPPolice were curious when ad and manager, will serve free
vertisements suddenly appeared In doughnuts and coffee to one and
thousands of Stockholm apart- all at the Kick-Off.
ment buildings and homes promis- I The drive is to raise funds for
ing night watchman service | welfate relief during the next year,
against burglars for a fee. They Heretofore funds for the Salvation
investigated and found that the Army has been raised by Commu-
Langson is nine miles south of
DonEdang. a rock-wailed fortress
known as the "door to China " The
garrison from Nacham fell back
to Dongdang to allow the Rebels
within 160 miles of vital Hanoi
since their surnrise capture of
Dongkhe Sept. 18.
Ike Gains Boost
m. w
---------
ipm— - n
Mart— temu
M houra
vialons leading regiment within 14 About 200 industiv leaders met
bodies As fast as they fell,
the South Koreans were push-
ed into shallow trenches and
ditches, doused with gasoline
and set afire. Some were burn-
ed aliye.
By the time we arrived, only
staeks of charved bodies re-
mained, horribly bloated and
discolored from exposure to
the sun. Still on top of one
trench was a 50-gallon gaso-
line drum.
1 The other 100 South Korean ,
prisoners, too lit or lame to
walk to their graves, were shot
and bayohetted as they lay
in a schoolhouse prison in Ko*
wan, five miles south of Yong-
hung. •
The two survivors, who
feigned death and escaped
I {
g
• «i \ 2 -.
r -jlsimsmn
I
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 284, Ed. 1 Monday, October 16, 1950, newspaper, October 16, 1950; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1432840/m1/1/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.