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| | THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1961} | rs Dr. Holt Dies WOODSTOCK, —().—Dr, Har CAE KEY WEST CITIZER llied Troops Pull Back Into South Apri Holt, 78 | 26. parents), planes collide. noted educator, d nis slee | at the Day Kimball hospital today = He was stricken with a coronary ; | thrombosis late y I | = MM _— ascension a. —- -- —-—_—_ ——: — ee —_——— «| | Dr. Holt was iden asses Of Red Troo Ss Have ‘ ” | ep Donald Hudson of|¢meritus of Roll “ea Pp “GEORGE €. BELL” |'Tidermans Sell (Today? i | CITIZEN REPORTER Donald | Hudson ofl ier Park, Porida . (Continued from Page One) Ee - i ~ Sur ed Across 38th Parallel Continued From Page One} 14 a | (Co g Fears hese] le ; g One went }¢ nniversaries | ladder. A body was born over his 54 years ago.| Mail The Citizen to Relatives | Ohio Property errs + | shoulder. It seemed to be stripp: : : B eenis ae 1785—John J. Audubon, famed] * 4 TOKYO, April 26—(AP)—Allied troops hav e|to pieces in midair. The) | te oxnithologint-autbor, whose coe all clothing on i i 5 siwestera front: ‘other, the airliner, veere vr. and Mrs. LeRoy Tiderman,| sal “Birds of America” is still the| The ladder was removec c given up their last foothold on the western front in Ko-| 5 thie left and cent into a|ho formerly resided at 506 Front} greatest work of its kind, born in| diver disappeared in the crowd rea, aes street, recently sold their prop-| Santo Damingo. Died at Audubon| bending over his last piece of sal nosedive. erty in Warren, Ohio, and have! Park, N. Y ) | vag PRICE WITH oa ce Sewer stan : arren, Ohio, a E foe N AX. Sen, 2 1851, age. M Masses of Red troops have surged across the 38th Thus reported Captain} purchased the Livingston Bethel} 1813—Charles W. Couldock, n¢ Darkness approached stealthily ATCH parallel and down the road that leads from Yonchon in} Walter Byrd, of the Sal- propertyist 1411 Petronia street. | ted longtime actor, giving awa vy and private craft b tc AND i a a es : : % ne Tidermans came to PSN prectics ally all carnings to th leave the area. Just before 7 p.m UALITY Seoul Korea, to Uijongbu in South Korea and on to vanes ~~ ‘Geor or WN), lwest tour years ago MATthe ed |poor, born in London. Died Nov.|the light dimmed so that fur to e- Citizen today con-| vice of their physician | 27, observation was difficult. On Allied forces have pulled back south of Changgo. cerning the PAA-Navy air- Mr Tidermans work has taken} Frederick Law Olmsted,|the salvage barge remained * That's four miles south of the border and 15 miles north} craft here yesterday in|}. hes ais, t as be cae Wemeds Hancscane /des/gnerarchi= patien He os thes abs fe a0 at Vij b : Bd . ie has een in Europe. He} tect, who shaped this art in| sedy which took the lives of 3: longbu. : : which 43 lives were lost. {says he has never yet found aj America, born in Hartford, Conn, | Civilians. About 300,000 Chinese troops are pressing toward Byrd said they fired up eumats that equals that of Key) Died Aug. 28, 1903. As the last sun ray’s slanted iti sapital. They are withi ; A vest } 1834—Charles F Browne| from the west, the big craft mov Seoul, the traditional Korean capital. They are within’ immediately and put out |“ hirs. Bethel will continue tol (Ae ane ae gprowne| from the west, the big craft mow) 20.miles of the battered city. to find the spot of the ; live at the Petronia street address.) morist of his generation,born in| turned “broadside The I¢tter < The Chinese have taken Munsan, an important highway town 21 miles northwest of Seoul. It was at Munsan that the Allies made a last lw 18 crash. | erford, Maine ow |GI TREATMENT SAVES hen we were about aj MARINE MUSTACHIOS mile off shore we ran into} HAS THE BEST BARGAINS Died March 6,! Y 50-54 stood out plainly on the | hull: 1840. High John Clark Ridpath, in the superstructure, a paratroop drop WITH THE FIRST MARINE ted DePauw University historiaa,| few men clustered, some of ther MEATS and PRODUCE are plentiful now .. . and you'll see month. * ace apis ene Scinss e Cee an oil slick. We followed it; DIVISION IN KOREA. —(4»).—; author : of poner historical] leaning over the side as if ex some mighty tempting “BARGAINS” (?) . IN PRINT... ‘ ines ' . ecards ean ; ad anchor Thara| Marines in Korea sport the most; works, born in Putnam Co., Ind. hausted) Below on the deck there | ap sg ; Thus, the Chinese have] FORMER KEY WESTER |and dropped anchor. There| Marines in Korea sport. the most) Norse, por oo reese e overeat, S|) But, remember, it's only @ bargain if quality is there, too, two spearheads driving to-| (Continued From Page One) -| Were two coast guard boats) an carly American melodrama. | 1862—Edmund C. Tarbell, fa-|/ There was only the stark sil-|] Don’t buy on price alone... Look and compare! Consider ward Seoul. They tried to] Birmingham, Birmingham-South-| about one mile away at the} The apparent favorite is a bushy| med Boston artist, born in Gro-] houette of ragged metal where t size, freshness and quality at these prices, and w4 believe that send other forces rolling|ern College and Duke University. time.” job with long, twisted points . . .| ton, Mass. Died Aug. 1, 1938. now stilled plane engines were|| °7° : SE REPeE Piehiee id > bet th He has been practicing law}... : the longer the better ———_——— piled in a silent mound. || you'll agree ARCHER'S MEATS AND PRODU . sou Fa between these) a: port Pierce and Vero Beach.|, .CaPtain Byrd further described} A¢ first, the points presented ea ntwirl their prizes with the pci sua || SENT TOP VALUE. his findings eofumns, but the third force] since 1949, Prior to that time he they approached} problem: What to use for best of old villains Don .G. Mitchell, president of j ' the plane, “We found a necktie has‘been stopped in its| was an attorney in Miami and Today, however, the problem is! The final answer — GI saddle| Sylvania Electric Products, born| ‘be ) n ' that was°fully tied and a package : ad hueky: tea es ea RET esonicaco neat | tracks by Allied artillery ie West am At8- | of cigarettes, We knew then that|"° “Ore ond tucky: le athernecks | ee in‘Bayonne,,N- J., 56 years ago. |] Gpape “aA” WESTERN saturation. He was in the United States} had a long job ahead of us i The only thought we had in mind »@¥he Allies are withdraw- ing’slowly and in good or- der, trading ground for Red lives. One U.N. unit coun- t€rattacked, but it was or- dered to get back in line with the retreating forces. “On the eastern front, the Allies Navy from 1943 to 1946. He is a member of the Amercan Legion, a Mason, an Elk and holds mem- bership in several scholastic and honorary fraternities. He was admitted to the practice of law in Florida in 1935. He also has been admitted to practice be- fore the Federal courts, including the Supreme Court of the United at the time was many bodies for survivors. J.C. Byrd, brother of the Captain, said, “When we went down to pull out the bodies, the pilot or the co-pilot had a wrist watch that must have run under water. It had stopped at to recover a possible and look CHUCK ROAST © 65¢ GRADE “A” LARGE mel DOZEN 59 EGGS M& WHITE and PETRONIA STREETS MARKET 12:17, I presume the crash oc- curred at a few minutes of twelve.” The two Byrds with their other brother, J. C. Byrd, were the first persons to arrive at the scene. They picked up a life raft six feet under the water along with personal articles including purses, wallets, luggage and clothing. The Byrds were credited with recovering two bodies from the airliner before the navy arrived. States. WILSON’S LAUREL SLICED BACON LEAN PORK SPARE RIBS U.S. CHOICE BONELESS CLUB STEAKS OLEO—COLORED AND QUARTERED have started pulling back care- fully. This sector has been held rather firmly so far. Now the Al- lies ‘are’ dropping back during day- light, protected by heavy fire- power, They dig in at night, against expected Red attacks. However, one unit has been WaPped north of Uijongbu on the western front. It has been cut off by perhaps three Chinese divi- may be high. are taking The latest ts Red cas- the start of Select tne servies that selects its men—U.S. Marines . w 45¢ w 39 93¢ ® the columns break and the sur- vivors dash for cover. Only about half the Communist troops make it. That happened last night. An Army medic said today that Chinese soldiers bayonetted wounded Americans and tossed phospherous grenades into am- bulances at the start of the Com- munist Spring offensive. Corporal Kenneth Bottoms, Plattville, Wisconsin, said his out- fit was cut off by attacking Chi- Quality Products at Budget Prices... That's What You Get at fj the M. & M. Market and You'll Like the Friendly M. & M. Service » 49c| ARMOUR’S CLOVERBLOOM GRADE "A” FRYERS ever-mounting losses. | Unofficial estimate ualties at 30,000 s the’ Spring offensive Take one incident . . It’s the east central front. Success: in life is happiness. Your Grocer SELLS thet Good STAR * BRAND Al- lied troops are dug in around the He lay in an open field— “ase big Hwachon dam. It’s night . ing dead—as the Reds swarm-| AMERICAN LB the’ time the ChinesSe Communists! ed past him and CUBAN FFEE ARMOUR’S BANNER GR. “A” WESTERN P choose to infiltrate or-to attack frontally. Suddenly. . . High voltage searchlights blink on;-one by one. In their glare, aBo&t 1,000 Chinese soldiers are picked out. They are marching down the road that winds around the jvestern end of the dam American artillery shells start the He says... “My only thought was for. my wife, Rose Marie, and my _ little daughters, Linda Ann and Mary Lee. I thought I would never see them again.’ Allied tanks stormed through to the rescue ——TRY A POUND TODAY— Lb. 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