The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 27, 1951, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT 35,000 Reds Have Been Killed By Allies In Past Four Commies Are Spending People Like We Spend Ammunition TOKYO,Apr. 27. (AP) % —All Allied troops in Ko- réa: have been withdrawn) below the 38th _parallel| along the 100-mile fighting| -front. In general, there was lit- tle contact today between} the Allies and the Reds. But U.N. troops beat back Red attacks in the center aimed at roads leading to Seoul. ‘In the extreme west, Al- lied forces fought a stub- born delaying action 14| miles northwest of the former South Korean capi- tal. On the eastern front, the Allies pulled back below the 38th parallel after giv- ing up the town of Yanggu. This was the aétive fighting front. | The Allies also broke contact with the enemy) soyth of the Hwachon re-} servoir on the east-central | front. The U.N. withdrawal} was.so rapid that a huge no-! man’s land was. created in| this-sector. On the western front, Al-} lied ‘troops have fallen back | below the town of Uijon-| gbu, and the Chinese are! now about ten miles north| of Seoul at this point. However, the U.S. Eighth} Army commander is con-' fident the Reds can be halt-/ HUNDREDS OF ‘Continued From Page One} PAA plane e here just before noon. They stream into met by Hamlin and officials. They then give a complete description of the lost one. Hamlin has large brown pa- per bags on the floor in which are the scraps of clothing, rings, the County Courthouse’s second floor and are the other THE KEY W * | MaeARTHUR ASKS | (Cor tinued From Page One} {coated persons in Soldier Field gave MacArthur a standing ova- a eon: | Earlier, when the triple-war | hero at one point said my public life is now closed, h occurred the ‘crowd interrupted to shout: | ‘No. No.” As the general resumed, he said: “It is closed.” And Mrs. MacArthur and their 13-year-old json seated on the platform shook ‘their heads in agreement. | | Milwaukee Today .. . | ch celeb! “welcome tion for MacArthur was and other articles taken from the ‘le*cribed as the biggest and nois bodies at the morgue. All remains of the victims are “ther mammoth reception faced! iest in the city’s history. An- taken from the Naval Hospital to the general today when he mo local funeral homes. Nine bodies are being fo Hemlin said. ater today eight or nine more ‘hich MacArthur left bodies will be released by coroner death eertificate, following positive identification. As Seen.From A Window C The Citizen reporter sat in the last Allied Naval Base administration build. hold. in Red Korea on, the’ ing this morning listening to the hear the aster and naval board of inquiry eye-witnesses to the d looked out the window. The Navy picket boat drew up at the dock. Still another tarpaulin-wrapped figure was placed in the wire basket. Sen- ior Medical Officer Commander R. Goodman and the sailors looked at the remains, quickly covered them, and placed Tag No. 39 on the wire basket. This number explained, because it is the 39th torso recovered. Parts of bodies are not numbered. Eight Friends And Relatives Cannot Positively Identify Girl Eight friends and__ relatives came to Ki West yesterd: identify one girl. She ‘has ‘s not been positively Hamlin said. Meanwhile, the sea-soaked lag- ill identified, flown x burial to Cuba this afternoon. after he has signed tt Ze ‘lifieate, tlle c ne thal last. visit to Milwaukee was 39 is being used, he to ed north of the Han river, | gage, clothes and_ other arti¢les which runs along the south) that were picked Uy i the “At- 3 : antic were movet is‘ Morning fringe of Seoul. |from the officer-of-the-day head- During a frontline tour,! the Eighth Army boss, , Lieutenant General James Van Fleet, said: “We are) withdrawing in order. We; are: keeping units intact. We are taking a tremond- ous toll of the enemy while! mangled aluminum which once Publishers enduring minimum losses.” | The United Nations com-| mand estimates that 35,-! 000 Reds have been killed ithe past four and one! aff days. One officer said: “They’re spending people like we spend ammunition.” ! only Will Interview Disabled People E. L. Miller, counselor vocation- al rehabilitation Nl at the Monroe County Clinic on Tues- day, May 1, from 2 to 5 p.m be Wednesday, May 2 beginning at 8:30 Mr. Miller will be glad to inter- Allies Batter Red ( and | — jtored to his home city of Mil _waukee. A huge civie — tribute jplanned, with some 700,000 p sons expected in Milwaukee. 33, ago for West Point. The general's years ago, when he attended the funeral of his father—Licutenant | General Arthur MacArthur, who died at a reunion of a Wisconsin 'Grand Army of the Regiment in 1912. MacArthur's Intelligence Chief Coming Back To U.S.... In Tokyo, MacArthur's intel ligence chief, Major General C A. Willoughby, has disclosed that Republic ke will return to the United States late in May to join his deposed commander. Willoughby ied a formal statement after news of his forth coming return was announced ‘in Washington by Defenst | Department. “Needless to j wrote, “I have considered it great privilege to have served | with the general and I expect to ‘join him to offer what modest | services I can render.” Willoughby said that before j the initial Communist invasion of 'South Korea hig intelligence of- fice twice had warned the Army in Washington that a North Ko- rean attack was expected he t say,” Willougby ' Hoover Says MacArthur cuarters at the N. 1 Base to 4 & the Courthouse. There’ families’ Reincarnation Of St. Paul . . . and friends will identify these] «4a New. York last night, former items. Simultaneously .« huge crane drew up at the Naval Base dock in front of the Administration Building. Next to No. 39 was the huge pile of tangled and had been the Cubana plane. The crane dropped its hook in- to the landing gear strut, re- trieved by the Barge Marianne yesterday. It began loading all the plane parts that have been recovered so far from the 28 | feet of water. Every p of the plane is be- ing preserved as evidence for the official examinations and investi- gations that will be conducted by the Civil Aeronautics Board. The statue of the minute-mart in bronze marking the ‘spot in Concord where the “embattled farmers. fired the shot heard round the world,” replaces a bush j which sprang from the soil fer- tilized by the blood of one Davis, who fell at the battle of Lexing- ton and Concord , View any disabled people who are interested in vocational rehabilit- ation If fensive | ie} | 20 {STATUTE MILES \ Sibyon A Kumchon Chok song) TW Kopyong sUijongbu ii by, THE COMMUNISTS’ BIG KOREAN OFF: las been stopped by Allied forces on the but it continued to gain ground in the wi arrows halted the Chinese Reds . CHUNCHON. \ SOUTH ~ KOREA S \\ Hoengson semen *Chipyong >) Wirephoto Map ENSIVE (white arrows) eastern end of the line. est. Allied troops (black seven miles south of Parallel 38, and counter-attacking northwest of Chunchon on the central front. U.N. forces were jn good position to hold yong. On the eastern front..a U.N. force re-ente: another repulsed Red attacks at Yanggu. pulled back abruptly. A trapped po kas been reached by an Allied task force. north of Kap- red Injo while In the west, Allies rear element unit near Korang- resident Herbert Hoover de- seribed General MacArthur as a reincarnation of St. Paul. Hoover made an unscheduled address at a dinner of the Bureau of Adver- ticing of the. American Newspaper Association. When introduced as the man who s ed the great debate on U.S. eign policy, Hoover said: “Now the great debate | placed by a bigger debate, led by ‘a reincarnation of St. Paul into great general of the Army, who came out of the East.” ex-President went on to ay, however, that: “Uncle Joe will get no satisfaction out of the great debate.” He explained “We have only to recollect how Kaiser Wilhelm, Mussolini, Hitler and Tojo mistook our family dis- cussion for division.” Hoover con- cluded: “This republic has a habit of closing ranks with a solidarity and a punch that is final.” is re- i Bradley Writes About Another MacArthur-Like Incident General Omar Bradley writes ‘in his forthcoming book that General Eisenhower was involved in a MacArthur-like incident with Winston Churchill The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff writes that Eisenhower messaged directly to Prime Min ister Stalin about the plan t halt Allied armies on the E River before the fall of Berlin and Bradley says the then Brit ish prime minister prote angrily that Eisenhower's act |an unwarranted intruism by thc military into a political problem But Churchill’s greatest anger Bradley writes, was over the plan jto have the Allies stop short of Berlin. Bradley says. Churchill was greatly disappointed and disturbed that British General “although: home” | years} CONFLICTING left. After making almost a three-quarters turn, it nosed | down and crashed into the sea. Severa tod and yesterda on that | left “as if it were turning back! — BUPLDING PERMITS AMERICAN TRAITORS | | | (Continued From Page One) |'?W#'d Meacham Field’ 1 (Continued trom Page One) (Continuea from Page One) The ne ‘ nigh eset | the court scheduled for i:39 | Several of the II witnesses! royains to his porch, Harold Gib- | could’ be apprehended in a : Jevelope t this afternoon. |said that the two craft hit onl 3, 4401 Pine strect is ter vak ours on ; : The witnesses were not all inj their left sides while others said|¢599 yepairs to his house and eight or ’ ‘ T agreement about the course of the| that they cle on the righ! garage. H. R, Laubscher, 1224 igi me ES n 1945 two aircraft Were traveling, the| Some said © traveling) Seminary, is mak in ¥ tee ae a : angle “of their collision, or even i | pairs to his porch, Philip. Gibs eee soli , é wa, D eM parallel course others| pairs to his porch. Philip On, | cessary that detention camps bt Vine r Nghe seniors 1 tated that they were coming! 1024 James street took out a $100 | CoS") os B, 20odore Leisen, Jr., cdi-) ;. ~ EVEREST |told the court that the ele cad eee " on A Charles Roberts, 12 Georsia Verte Bo Peckine, viet 1 ps peda |planes “appeared to be separated! ies ag iia! - . 2 ms | street took out a pon : sy Chiltone Ce. Sa Jat the time that the trainer cx-|/ ffm the srvund, said that 1 Nehin repairs to his home, This is oe Gee mine elephon |ploded. He said that they seem-| 59 ore than| not the City Comptroller Rob- i abroad to be a con- | s ‘ td to be. following mclaren ts|200 feet above him. Another wit-| erts, Leo Lopez, 1917 Seidenburg |’ sevice SR ey ‘ to : Mowing relatively] ness, Lt. ( urd Ardubkle, | : ol shed {cert viol Le ieiaigl aecabal nt is re parallel courses and that the| DCS} (7h U8) HM have been One 2 MBORERY POPE, | te publishing busine call — jsmaller was.a little behind and] 3 high as 7.000 feet. | at & Cost of $50. - to one side of the transport ” Wiis ; ; George W. Reese, 1118 Olivia] yan has between 20 and 30 Miteciite) ecpiedion (chile While one of the witnesses |street is making $200 in minor} i, a the | , | said that the airliner appeared ) mil n tu navy craft, the civilian plane |repairs to his home. James D | = * ne | to go through or close to a |"< HRC el maintained a steady course, | | Roberts, Jr., 306 Olivia street is) i large cloud bank, several others | , ae n| ddan losing altitude and beginning | pelieved that there wore ae | making $40 repairs to his porch. | slowly to bank and turn to the ° |G. H. Ramirez, 1713 Von Phister,|]/ THREE HOTELS IN at POPULAR PRICES | rid appeared to be the | transpor Ja left ne of | crash who appeared! | yesterday, Lt. Pierre J. L. Benet t a French naval « ri¢ | in |Lt. C. V. Knott, ar | pilot ioned at Bor |both said that the Cubar | }banked Icft just — bef | | | j crash iz | Three witnesses today sz i erally the same th | Jerally the same thi | |neth Krantz, SOS aid| the DC-4 was n si and} disappeared into a cloud. As it| emerged, he said, it banked left ¢ pproximately the « posite d ter the ision, the fuselage of the smaller| plane scemed to be sheared off One wing and the cockpit appe: ed still to be attached and fel unit, spiraling slowly tow the sea off the Mole Krantz was in agreement most of the other witnesses when he said that the trans- port lost part of one wing, beyond the outboard motor, and that it continued for sev- eral seconds in controlled flight. It lost altitude and to about 1200 feet w over and dived int Krantz W. H. Pierce, AD2, VX-1, said that the liner was going south while the’ small plane was com-y ing in roughly an opposite direc-/ tion. He also asserted that the; larger craft was banking to the , ard down ed wa: t a Sir Bernard Montgomery’s was not reinforced with Ameri cans and pqinted toward Berlin in a desperate effort to capture the German capital before the Russians took it. Bradley says in the book's rent installment, appearing in Life magazine, that the decision to stop Allied forces short of Ber- lin was taken to avoid and to minimize the Elna tii ofl See \ force cur- asualties isk of ac- cidental collision between the Allied armies moving east and the Russians approaching from the opposite direction MacArthur To Testify Next Thursday The Senate's Rep chief, Robert Taft explained that R want to tell ] y leaders how to run the Korean war, but that they do want to prevent appease ment of Red China. Yesterday Senate Chiefs Tru The blican policy Ohio, blicans don’t of has mi Taft charged speech that the of Staff are under the administration's thumb. Ohio lawmaker red to a Chicago speech last week General Omar Bradley which Bradley advocated President T limited against the MacArthur. talk “a foreign policy written, in effect, by Department.” General MacArthur in a Joint by war” theoric man’s a proposals of General Taft called Bradley ech, the State ed to testify on the Fz t policy issues next Thursday be fore a joint meeting of the Sen. ate Armed Servi Relations Committ and Foreign but tt } but there EST CITIZEN clouds in the immediate vicini- ty of the crash. is adding to his present home at All agreed that none of the|# cost of $2,000. Jose Machin, 917} pia « ¢ ‘ heaped Eaton. building a tile porch at f. A tip of or iS pone] #1 estimated cost of $250. is no agreement as tol a " During the meeting of the| called the brittle star are found | court, from 10 a. m. until noon, a{in cold northern waters than in navy derrick vorking at the] tropical areas. > of of dd wreckage ansport that lay on de. One wheel and Imost intaet of tortured aps of ¢loth there was of death ANYTHING CONCERNING AUTOMOBILES SEE THE TWINS 1130 Duvat St. PH. 1870-1871 id wire ung to the pile 2 sweet, rotten anc odor lo HAVANA THREE FLIGHTS DAILY TO HAVANA TO KEY WEST Leave Arrive Leave Arrive Flight Key West Havana Flight Key West Havana 952 10:15 A.M, 11:00 A.M. 951 9:00 A.M. 9:45 A.M. 954 1:45 P.M. 2:30 P.M. 953 12:30 P.M. 1:15 P.M. 956 4:00 P.M. 4:45 P.M. 955 3:00 P.M. 3:45 P.M. AEROVIAS *"'Q" S. A. = ROGELIO come?! Agent PEARLMAN’S| INCOMPORATED ee ee “THE STORE OF QUALITY” Key West's Largest LADIES’, MISSES’ and CHILDHEN’S Store 7 ' ° 4 THAT'S WHAT YOU WILL PROBABLY HEAR BEING SAID IF YOU, TAKE. ADVANTAGE OF OUR PRESENT; SELECTION OF Prom and Class Night Dresses Come In and, Sée Them WHITE SHOES Pumps and Sandals In A Large Assortment of Styles for Graduation, Prom and Class Night . . . Also for every day of the week wear ... Low Heels, Wedges, College Heels, Cuban Heels and High Heels Trim-Tred and Fashion-Craft Shoes For the Grown Ups Poll Parrot Shoes For Boys and Girls Star Brand and. American Boy For the Growing Boy and Young Man Robin Hood and Brown Bilt Sandals and Play Shoes For Children of All Ages Complete Assortmen: of Tennis Shoes GET THE HABIT of SHOPPING at PEARLMAN’S FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1951. Days |MOBILE TELEPHONE HELPS MIAMI Located in the Heart of the City RATES WRITE or WIRE REASONABLE ROOMS for RESERVATIONS with BATH and TELEPHONE Ford Pershing Miller Hotel Hotel Hotel 60 N.E. 3rd St. 226 N.E. Ist Ave. 229 N.E. 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