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Anti-Red North Korean POWs Fice Alied Prison Camps S. KOREAN GUARDS REVOLT AGAINST U.N. COMMAND By OLEN CLEMENTS TOKYO (—About 25,000 mili- tant, anti-Red North Koreans fled Allied prison camps today as South Korean guards turned their backs in open revolt against the U. N. Command. President Syngman Rhee or- dered the prisoners freed in an hee) edented move that caught ies flat-footed and left them sacbonw Rhee’s arbitrary order for the first time turned South Korea’s | vociferous anti-truce threats into direct action. No official source would specu- late whether that would delay or block an armistice that had seemed only an arm’s reach away. First reaction from observers | 5 a. m, 25,000 prisoners had slipped away in the darkness and scat- tered. With most of the 16,000 South Korean guards standing by idly, small numbers of surprised Amer- Tifle fire, but they were too few. Nine prisoners were killed and |16 were wounded. | U.N. troops recaptured 971 pris- joners, even as Lt. Gen, Won Yon | shal, warned that anyone whc jto arrest them—‘regard of nationality’—would be dealt with | severely. He said he had ordere them freed on Rhee’s comme High South Korean of urged the people to feed, h | and shelter the prisoners. As the news became known, U. S. Eighth Army cancele jaaee for Allied troops. | The problem of rounding up the the all icans tried to stop the flight with “he Duk, South Korean provost mar- | t a strong undercurrent of resent- st Rhee and his follow- FC Bill Nadolske of Akron, O.,| said: “We gave him everything. We do everything for him and now around and kicks us in , a spokesman at s headquarters ment accusing the of collusion with soners, saying: ht and dawn to- ke out of Uni-| id “prisoner of'| asan, Man- | Korea. uted to high} public of Korea | that the action} c Planned and co-ordinated at top lev- | Church Of Rock Humming With Activity Here 90 People Attend Communion Service At New Church Key West’s newest church, the Church of the Rock, has been hum- ;ming with activity the past two weeks and will continue with a full schedule with the Daily Vaca- tion Bible School now in full swing and which will close with a4 special program Friday evening, June 26. SNATCHED FROM BRINK OF NIAGARA (Sr. was that Rhee’s move would not | Prisoners appeared almost impos- keep the Allies from signing an |Sible—many were South Koreans armistice agreement. jwho had been impressed into the However, ‘some sources said the |North Korean army. All Reds might balk and demand de-|easily pass as South Koreans un- livery of the prisoners. They were | marked by language or physical part of 4,380 anti-Red North Ko- | differences. Feans and. Chinese who refused to| The U*N. Command was rely go home and thus became a prob- | ing almost entirely on radio broad lem that was resolved only last|casts asking the prisoners to re- week after months of negotiations. |turn, even as South Korea’s Ra order came last night. By|dio Pusan broadcast Rhee’s mes- | sage urging civilians to house and ve feed them. Sue E | ete i | The U. N. broadcasts told the |prisoners they had made a mis take in leaving the prison camps. They promised no repr and assured the prisoners they would be set free after an armistice is signed, Meanwhile, Maj. Gen. Thomas W. Harran, U. S. Commander of POW camps, conferred with Ge Sun Yup Paik, South Korean Arm) chief of staff, without reaching any solution. From Allied soldiers at U ON SALE AT FAUSTO'S Food Palace could | b n the Korean government and] nce was fur-| POW’s in their mass Sunday, June 14 had been pre- | viously set as a day of full sche- |dule and on that date, during the | morning service the complete roll |of 73 new members was called of |whoni four were confirmed, seven re of actual collusion | Following the Confirmation and ROK guards and the Reception of Members, the Rever- end Ralph W. Rogers delivered a “the mass escape, the brief but powerful sermon. Holy N. held just under 125,000 Pris: | Communion was then partaken of oners a Army ecur- ed as guards at| ae POW camps did little to pre-| DOROTHY STUBER is helped from the rapids above Nisgara Falls, N. ¥. by James Mackay, Niagara Frontier State Park patrolman, after she Girl To] Husseys | j LOS ANGELES (*— ter for actress F Hussey and | her husband, R Longenecker, a television agent and performer. The 6 pound 7 ounce baby ‘was born yesterday at Good Samaritan ’s a daugh- with Elder Wm. W. Hill assisting the Reverend Rogers at the Com- munion table, About 90 poeple were present at the morning service. On Sunday evening, June 7, a Congregational meeting was held with 44 members present. At this meeting these members elected to tollow the Presbyterian Book of Church Order as a form of Church headquarters in Tokyo there was | Hospital. The couple also has two sons, |government. Election of officers followed with these results: Elect- ed to the Session (Ruling Elders) were Richard E, Evans, Modera- tor, Ralph D, Noble, Clerk of Ses- sion, Fred W. Enander, Atwood G. Mount Everest finally has been scaled by man, VICTO CASH MARKET 1028 Truman Ave. U.S. HEAVY WESTERN We Deliver srion STEAK ». 59 we SWIFT'S PREMIUM FRESH FRANKS Hamburge oo FIRST CUT WESTERN Pork Chops «39 Special Soap Deal OCTAGON GRANULATED i) LARGE BOXES 43c Heavy Duty Dish Cloth In Each Package ao ROLL BUTTER MARGOLD Lb, Franco-American Maxwell House SPAGETT!) COFFEE | 2 cos 29e|u PETER PAN PEANUT BUTTER ARMOUR'S EVAPORATED OLEO MILK Sands, Wallace B. Kirke, Robert | H. Garrison and Wm, W, Hill. | Elected to the Diaconate were | George C, Ehrhart, Chairman, Ev- jerett P. Winter, Secretary and Treasurer, James A. Gamble, Sr., James A. Gamble, Jr., Harry M. |Baker, Elmer F. Nonnemacher, {Mrs. Walter H, Bell, Mrs. J. 1. | Brent and Mrs, Emory J. Harris. | Trustees are W. Curry Harris, =. P. Winter and G, C. Ehrhart. The Diaconate will be ordained and installed at the morning ser- vice Sunday, June 21 while the or- | dination and installation of Elders will take place Sunday, June 28, B | The 73 members make up the Phone 2 2013 | initial group who are in the main | responsible for the founding of the Church of the Rock, * GROUND LEAN |Mid-Texas Farm ENNIS, Tex. (?—Thirty-five feet | southwest of a gnarled old pecan | tree, four men are digging with picks and shovels on Ernest Raphael's pasture in hopes they will find an iron chest buried 12 |feet down containing gold bars | worth 35 million dollars. They have reached between 6% | and 7 feet. As they dig In 100-degree heat, | a fifth man sits nearby in a car} studying a map he won't show any- | one. | There fs a ‘egend that 3,000 | pounds of gold bars are buried on Raphael's farm. Legend says the gold was mined near a mission at} Santa Fe, N. M., and, in 1820, was dispatched to Gaiveston, Tex., to be shipped as a gift to the King | of Spain. The goid was supposedly | buried near this central Texas town | when Indians pursued the cara- van, Raphael has heard the legend | since his childhood. When the men | approached him early this week, he gave them permission to ex-| cavate The four digging are from Ennis. The man with the map is a strang- er. None was available for com- ment tonight. And nobody seems to know their names. “They have an old map but they won't show it to me,” Raphael said. “They say it was handed down from one of their ancestors.” “ft don't think they'll find any- Raphael said. “My wife kind of goofy to let ny Pasture.”” itted he has —with 2 red on a piece of scratch he i get half of 33e 69c¢): td On jay Os ANGELES (®—An alert po- | i. The case om whict | § cont ag wit had waded into the swift-running shallows with all her clothes on, Miss Stuber, 31, former welfare worker of Buffalo, N. Y., was literally snatched from the brink of certain death by the quick~thin! man who strung a lifeline around her waist. (Inter Ike Declines To Name His Speech Target “Book Burning” Speech Brings Questions At News Conference By G. MILTON KELLY WASHINGTON (#—Sen. Jackson (D-Wash) said today President Eisenhower “‘in fairness” ought to clarify his declaration that the State Department has his permis- sion to burn books containing down- right Communist propaganda. Eisenhower made the statement at a news conference yesterday and, when asked, declined to say whether his gibe at “book burn- ers,” in a speech at Dartmouth College Sunday, was aimed at Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis). Eisenhower’s reply was that he never deals in personalities. McCarthy, who said he was sure he was not the target of Eisen- hower’s remark, said after the news conference: “I think he has given a com- mendable clarification of the Dart- mouth speech, which apparently has been misunderstood by many newsmen.” McCarthy amended the comment later to “misunderstood by many persons.” The President's denunciation of “book burners” haa been inter- preted widely as aimed at Mc- Carthy’s successful fight to remove from U. S. overseas libraries what the senator contends are “330,000 Communist books” by somt 200 | authors. McCarthy said he doubted the Dartmouth speech could apply to jhim because “I have burned no | books,” and, since “it has been the President’s own administration that has ordered the book burn- ing,” Eisenhower could order it: stopped. Jackson, in a separate interview, | said: “President Eisenhower in fair- | Ness to all concerned ought to state | specifically what he did have in! mind. This controversy over book | king patrole val Exclusive) Champ Weds PALO ALTO, Calif. (7»—Bob | Mathias, generally acknowledged | as the world’s greatest athlete as | two-time Olympic deéathlon cham- | pion, married his college sweet- heart yesterday after a 2%-year romance, Mathias, 22, and Melba Wiser, 21, senior dramatics student from Vallejo, Calif., exchanged vows at the Stanford University chapel. Mathias is scheduled to go to San Diego soon for summer train- ing with the Marine Corps, then return to Stanford. He faces two years active duty with the Marines following December graduation. He has one year’s football eligi- bility left, but said-he would not play next fall. Costly Wolves WEEKES, Sask. () — Wolves continue to take toll of purebred livestock on the Py ranch here. The owners, George and Arthur White, estimate each $100 bounty | for a wolf killed actually means; $200 in relation to livestock saved. burning has such tremendous pub- lie importance the President and Secretary of State Dulles should leave no ground for misunderstand- ing of their policy.” Jackson said he intends to write to Dulles “at once” demanding that he make public the whole list of books banned from U. S, infor- | mation libraries abroad. “As I understand it,” Jackson said, “‘the test isn’t what's in the printed words of the books, but in who authored them. But this never has been made exactly clear.” Eisenhower said at the news con- | ference he did not advocate in {Sunday's speech the use of public | funds to distribute books which | try to propagandize readers asd joining the Communists, If the State Department 1s burn- | ing books which .make such open | | appeals, he added, it can go ahead | and burn them. | Eisenhower said the U. S. must | encourage a very wide freedom of {discussion and in general should | ikeep in its libraries abroad the} | same books carried on fbrary | j jshelves at home. But he said it would be the height | of silliness to expect this country | to follow a policy which would make it a party to its own de- struction. | j j TO TERCH "@ OUTLAY —"THE Game AND LAK) WOLATOR — NEW TRICKS. But You CAN MOLD THE THOUGHTS OF CHILDREN utTO CONSTRUCTIVE CHANNELS oF HATS THE LDEA Bem THE Sunio€ SHORTSMEN'S CLG MovEMENT. THESE FOLKS ARE THE BEGINNING OF A REW ATION CONCERNED WITH AND PEDGED TODO SOMETHING ASOUT THE DISAPPEARANCE OF OUR NATURAL RESOURCES. FUTURE HINTING & FISHING OPPORTONITIES DEPEND UPON FOYS AND CRS . WEP SVE CUR WadLiFE / June %2, 1983 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page 9 ARCHER'S Superette Market. The Best Deal In Town! It’s Natural At Archer’s! 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