Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 15 February 1951 — Page 1
y|)l XLIX. No, 39,
TANKS SMASH COMMUNIST ENCIRCLEMENT
■ i|*• I'•■ ■ ' * ■!, ' '■" ' _ j 1T ’ ' 1 ■ ''' '■ ' 1 11 ' ’■' 1 ™ ' 1,1 ;' ' ■ ! ' ' 'i .1.1. ~,s i i ...i i, > Sectional Draw Announced
Decafur Teams C|ash In First Rbund Thursday Annual Sectional • Tournament To Be Held Next Week Iweiitur’s two high school net will clash In the opening riiiifld <>r .the annual Decatur sec--ijutpil tourney next Thursday, uc,<?n|iiiK to the fortune of tin- diuw. lh>'4 Wednesday by the II ISA A at |ii<l|inii|tHll''. and itnmmnecd this . riioffliiiiK. Yellow tucket* ainl tin Coin r giiiip- ol the opening night schcdul, i*x Bipmxlmately it o’clock, it will ill i line in the hi im j of - |fcwo schools that they have met din |||e huskdthull, court, Their first lip tying wus In the sectional finals which the VclldW Jackets vijoiphy a as. IB score in a fine hall ■ -, i jp- Pleat■■tin Mills Spaiiuijs and t. 1.0 ||h fl < i* ton Warrior* ,1 rew ,i In h<>’n|n of me\tlni! In the tourney-typt-lVr, which will siait pimupih dt 4} 3<> o’c o<-k next Thursday eve ninili ut fl e Decifur gym, The l.ieifie fliiCis and Adams (’cnltul Ylt< ybo.tnds will tangle In \thc seci mult lit hi 7 •!'■ o'clock, followed by 111* I treatUl Clm+h J IJ'rii ■■games fw||j he played Fri-« •dayflight, with the Geneva Uurdlthe Haftford Gorillas ■ ~t .Im'pluck. The county chiitnpiou Eagks, which drew th< bye.iliwiii pluj at 8:15 p.m Friday, vHc»j|Hltt'i'iiig the. Winner of the Ph-ajant Mills.H ffei soil tourney opener. ■ ■■ ■ S«iii-finals will open Ut 1 phi. Sutif’day, with the winners of .the' second and third Thursday games • playing in tine first tilt, followed by the Filduy night winners. The cHamplonship game will start at l.'ifl'ofclpek Saturday night Stjpson tickets for the sectional will fed on -ale in the nine Adams ' edumy high schools Monday. The tick|js are pik ed aJ $1.6(1, and no doutfl will go out in a hurry, with .hpnijeds of kins unable to obtain the |lighly priced ducats A i' odjiciats for the assigned ijy the IHSAA, will be William Ellil and Merle Shively, both of f vyifwaw ’ . \ 1 j To Fort Wayne Tire winner of the Decatur secgioiili will play in the. Fort 'Wayne Ti gllnal at the Norin Side gym March J. ih< etlngj the' w inrf( I of Ihe Kendallville sec tiojhf The Fort Wayne and Au burn i winners will meet pt 1 pm, vm|li Du- afteiiioon wlnnets imi-llng Al 'g pm for the regional ciown, T| Fwi'l't \\ aytic ia eioti il winu« i ' W'klH'omp. te. In Hie Kokomo oiul iitiuf- lontney, shifted Mum b iliiT'-yiur, on Siituiduy.. Mmcli In ■f'tie| Kokomo and Mjup la winners wllihm.'Hf .it I pin , followed by the, Fmt|fW>iyne and. Million IHIIhIm . J ■laic finals will be plavtd at llhji Im sh Idboii <• lit Indhimi l< Mwrch IT, with" the hnd IndlnniiPjOlls witinri” play lnf« jil I p 111 , follow cd bs tile K(>j komp and. I.afnyrlle wlnnei ' , l‘iililii''< for heal by st'ctlomib' 1 At Fort Wiyne South Wednesday !l hin South Hide vs -Liifayetie iTuri l« (*•■» t»l»»
‘Tftedifattot't ! (Rev. W L. Hall. Monroe JMethckHst (’liurch) > “ON ROBBING OURSELVES” | J “He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God. and God in him". 1 John: 4:16. . !j We can’t afford not to love. When we refuse to live in love, wok rob. ourselves of God’s best We destroy lour own wojl-being and limit our own \achievehients. , | A doctor said. “A fit of anger or fear or jealousy or envy can £htuge in a twinkling the best steak hr chop into a poisonous mess in s stomach To eat a meal with hath is to get little nourish-\ nwitt from the finest batoquet.” If that is true what must these' untying emotions <!*> to the mind, apd personality? \ f'i'he great forward movements m the world are led by men, whb are motivated by love. The world's society is now being threatened try hate. '• « 7 \ I Jesus ‘was not talking about some Impractical sentiment when j men to love. He knew theh very health apd. success des | • pS«(i on it. lie knew that love alone malto* them big enough tn maWer themselves and Hjelr world. 'll ' ' ‘ ■ , ; ■ .!■'■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT ONLY QAILY NEWSPAFtR IN ADAMS COUNTY
-4- : J — BULLETIN New York, Feib. 15—(UP)— /Last ditch negotiation* to head off a nationwide, strike by 70,COO textile workers broke t down today and the textile workers union (CIO) ordered employes of 161 woolen mills to strike at midnight tonight t ' ' Senate Group For Draff Os 18 Year Olds Also Vote To End Deferment Os Childless Husbands / j Washington. Fc >. lV> (UP) lieniocrallc Irndip\cimfldepf the fcmite. will iipprovt (he |N yiur oid illiift, slifdvnl It !<• nporurily ,today pi tiding m tlon on t n* ('oiltrovU'isliil troops for Europe l«-.ue, ' (’lfalrnnin llidiaril 1! ltd “ClI ai\l tn« draft mrfisure mianlimnmlv up pkiveil by fils arimcl Mp’vmrs com mlttrc Is ‘.'a fine Id) ” Tip Georgia lif mm in sahl ihliik« coiuficss will pa-s |h«- hls|oih[‘ iirilyrisal ’ mllhnt y st i vice u oposal "hiili Htjintlully" us It standit {No acthm u.i- by the u'tiaf,' until -H h di<eld<d whether loi limit shlpmeiit of (’.H troop*for the At hint |c l pm i anny IHilKxi'll Maki lite y nafe'i tleclshm on whal should b, dpio to help Gtm. Dwight I). Fist nht^rr 1 * Eurn« pehn defense force will "have u direr! effect ' on“‘ the [ 'manpower ikiue.’’- ■ I * . ' The committee vp rd to draft is yefiradds on an oldest’ fhst basis, but only after boards have exhausted po\ds of imp 1J) through 25;j The committee also! voted tb nid deferment, of non-vete.ians who are childless husba ids or have a single dependent. ' The committee set the service period at 2f>-mon|hc. but draftees eouM complete thei 1 service in 24 months and then fate two pionths ;of terminal leave. ' i ' (jongress, and the president are givjfen authority tjo{ cut down the st i vice period* when vyorld conditions warrant. Another committee provision piakts it clear that all drhftees j regardless of their tige would get four months' basic I'afning before ,being 'sent ovepsens " Sieg .'Wayne Mwiiit, R., Ore., said lie [will Introduce sKvfrttl amend meiytw when tile bi 1 reai'li/s the IH-Ilc floot ' ■ Fiimil ti'ims of the bill, ♦specially Ils h’HiVlHlon I")' in Iversul peace Him fraining; repO-H »nif‘d a HW»»epIng depurture fnini the present th aft of men l!» throi ah 2.‘> to svive 21 hipntlis ' ■<)[thei <"*«,iilial pyoVlMiloiis'of lh> bllli'H-A .Ippi y v 1 (t k by Urn committee I 1 Autlioilty for rHsldeni Tin muiji; to extend cm out rti’|l*tmi ni ~ (•xplllllg betVirOMl .ll{th ID. iMI, Htld Jills' 'I IH '■ Mil mill orn . lind (or -a aljhgb year Term* of uervlea, fm im.([ivi • and muhmtil guardsmen on actlvr duty uko ipmld )»♦* extend fed hi tlx iToioinh p rhid Meii yolingci than. IN could hr th set ted by Ptillullng hi Ihr mitiimtil gimrd. pi ivlding tflah goviri ipn-H proclaim this policy I* nrcjr sill y to itvip 111 ‘Klrei.gth :tj After llirlr ItMt al fourunonth ♦Twf« T« roar M«» '
Send 100,000 More Troops Into Europe I i Marshall Rejects II Gy 0. P. Proposals \ To Limit Trpops i Washington. Feb 1&. -(UP)’— 11, f. use secreiary (ledrge Mur--hall said today the United States plans to Bend about ibO.miO more ground tioopa to Europe and warn- • d that "we'd be in very serlohs danger" of hivaalon Isl Rusalii oven run| Europe. I'[ ’ ' 11 lie i< jty it'il* Republiciib-sponHor-♦<b piiipoHula to put a limit on number of I S. troops si nt to Euiope or to send only naval and aiiunits us IhJ- countiy’s eontrihu tiori to thd mu th Atlantic unified defeli-e force i ■ . "The fewer limitiitiphx you Im- • pose upon the military eatabllah* merit, the belter off we will be," Vlarshiill -aid, because.the prpHnt world situation la "exceedingly crl* i leal." ■ Ma'iwhull le«i|flv<l before a Joint aeHHlon of the aenute forrlan t’clib tloiia And Hi med art vices committm a on the tmops-to Eiiro|H‘ laaue. 11, atild thla country, doea not tuii a,', m tiding huge "ground hi ink a" |j» Europe But he firmly oppoavd any effort to write a linktatlon pn the number of ttoopa a ent tb Europe bontuue It would tie the hamla of the military In merting any future situation I Marshall said present plans are to station six divisions of- U.Sground troops in Europe—four more than This, lie said, would involve sending "about 100,000" niorej\ troops—72,ooo. in I the four divisions and more than 20,000 .supporting troops. He said there is a possibility niore may have to be- sent. {■ : | < llje also said it may be necessary to kedp AmeU can troops it> Europe for a decade. Asked whether the United States, would be in danger of invasion we fail and Russia overruns Europe?’ Marshall replied. '. "I'd say we’d be in very serious danger.” , \ ■ \ Marshall said i\t “certainly" would raise the. possibility of air attacks "at will" on this coirntiy. Marshall made i( clear that be -oppost (I ‘* l effoi Is by many Repuß-1 (■ahs and some Democrats to Im(mh l*a*r -Twn > i Oratorical Contest Friday Afternoon Three {Students Tp Compete For Honors Tom I Im- -e, jun ior In |'he Deeiltlir Uiilholle high « luml. (Olupli-tieH (be list of iiiiiiivm of HtudentH who HIT lo jui’itlclpiiir In the Aiiierlcnn Li'dlmi't oratorical contest, lb be held In HR’ imenlur high kijhool giidltmlum yrldtiy ut I :it) pm Ed Juberg, cliiilimilll lif the rvcnf for AdunixH’ie i |!|, coiihly apoinsora, diitrd today that the public is invited to attend the coiliieat, and he extended n special ihvhutlbn yto English and speech (viichera and cliissi throughout the/ county. The Decatur Catholic high gchool entry raises the total to three conwho will vie for t,he, cash awards being offered by the I)(ecalur Ajneric'ah Legion post. Marilyn Hoblet. of Djecatur high school, and, Edith Steuijy. of Adams Central were named previously. The Legion is awarding $25 to the winner, sls to the runner-up, and $lO to the third place entry. INDIANA WEATHER Cloudy, occasional y light freeiing rain or drizzle north and central tonight and in extreme north Frjiday. Slowly rising temperatures becoming above freezing ih extreme \ north Friday forenoon. Low i tonight 20-25 north, south. High Friday 34-40 north, 39-45 south. Hazardous driving conditions central half this' afternoon and early tonight and in extreme north to- I night and Friday morning. |
i ilnA i II ■■rill iI. u I I Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, February 15, 1951.
■: — ] Ice J am Maroons Ohio Homes ri »*■=”-' -’**■■*» J' 1 ' T ■■ -■ ■— .■-! —-T~ ■ ' ’*< tJff, 228ESEr"*' s i f • i.‘- > pTu'; P | . ' Bwr" It i !(•. 11 c * '' A r- >'i i' *■ lr ■* s/ Aor- i BRAVING AN ICE JAM, V. Voant: Guard craw rtactiea an «'l<l«-i lx miin Marooned in M bn Verniilllon rlviii- mi Vermillion, 0 Victim (-an ba aeon <-llinlHna over wlndowalll Many home* .are |ao luted by worst h r conditions] In many year*. Jam is two; miles long
Seeks To Prevent | ■ Berne Annexation File Remonstrance In Circuit Court ; A iwmonstratiee was filed lln Adams circuit : court Wednesday in an attempt to stop the territorial expansion Rf -the' city of Berne. The complaint was fifed by Virgil Haines. through attorneys | Custer and Smith, apd named the I city of Berne as defendant, t Setting down the fabt that he is-a property dwher in the Specific ' territory—some north and mostly east of the city r Haines stated that the "adding of such territory to the city will not be for the best interest of the city of Berne and ' will hot benefit i persons owning property in the territory . . - but will cause manifest i injury toljthe plaintiff and other jargons . J." The complaint adds that the "prospeilty of the city . . . will in ■ no way be retarded and the safety /of the Inhabltunls and property thereof in mi way ’end|tngered ' A Hrtmmons wnsl Vsuel for .Mayor Andrew Sprißlger mid cieiktreasurer 0. C. Moser, Jr„ for'u In .ii Ing March 8. The members of the mmiin-i-otim-ll hud (pusHed up ordinance .lunmuy n which annexed \cmit|gimuM teU-ltory ft. 8.-rm-/ Tlie remopKtrum e filed by Halnea h the first Min h tictlon; Mine* the ordfniUlCe’H pilMUllge. The i rux of the eouncllmißilc n< ITwPM T« l"»ur rjIVM) frank Winegardner Dies This Morning Funeral Services 'Saturday Afterhoon Frank H, xyinegardndr, 74, retired laborer who lived on North Tenth street, died at 6“30 o’cl|(M-k this jnorai-ng at the Adams county memoiiul hospital after a . three months Illness of infirmities. 1 He, was born jin Penns Creek, PaSept. 21. 1876, a »<>n of Henry and Anna Winegardueir. and had lived in Decatur for'the) past six years. His wife, Caroline, preceded him in death.\ [ . He was a member of the Decattir Missionary church. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Olirt Wood of Jackson, Mich.; 'two grandchildren; two . dren, and a brother,.- Peter WineJ gardner of Lewisburg,?Pa. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m, Saturday at! thei Gillig & Doan funeral home, the Rev. H. J. Welty officiating Burial will be in the Decatur cemetery Friends may I call at the funeral home after 7:30 I o'clock this evening. • ' IT? ' 'ft ,“J / r ' H • /V s
CouhtyMinisters Will Meet Monday Th* February meeting of the Adams county ministerial assoc! in ion mH! be held at the Bettie t'litirch of the Nazerene Monday at 9 30. a.in. Hawing found the Axchange of ideas on church publicity very helpful last mouth., the ministers will discuss for Febn.ary the thnety subject! “How (ah we revitalize our church's ministry to service- personnel." In the absence 'of President Robert Hammond, vice-president Pritchard Amstutz of the Berne Missionary church will conduct the business session. | |* j)*:i S . 1 ' \ ° ■ P ’ ' '. h ~ * . I . | Employment Shows Drop In January Employment Well Above A Year Ago \Ttie employment roll iri six local industries slipped downward by 21 dining. January, compared ;to a l,«»-x5 peak in December, the month ly Chamber of Commerce business bai<m|e|tr shows. l ■idist month the six reporting Industrlcs hud 1 Oil employes on the payroll, an Increase of neatly 3im <»v*t th* for January. ISSo. 'l’hr payroll reported was $443,7611 Idleven building permit 4 reprruruiittff. SilT.'iOO in > tmw coftatrtfclion wino issued lust month This eomparfs with seven for $76,(150 In lb t ember and |o for $53,327 u year ago ’■ 1 i; ' Cnrlohdlngs In and out of Decatur i»io lud u m<w high of 2,946 in .tun ilityy, compared with 2,DM In DeccmtH. r and 1.843 a year «>o. TH* Coat of direct poor relief In Washington township wassß76 las\i month, compared to $1.76! for! t hie samp month In 1950.. ) January births reported were 4(1 and deaths 12. A yeas ago 50 births wer'c reported lb January and 48 last December. \ Postal receipts continued to show an increase over a year ago, reporb ed at 26,005 for January, compared to $5,627 a 1 year ago and $10,648 for December. Loc.al utilities continued to show new Installation of services for the month compared jVith a year ago. Livestock Barn Is { By Fire Connersville Ipd.. Feb. 15.- 1 (UP)—Damage was estimated at SIO,OOO today in the fire that\ destroyed a livestock barn on the Frank Hudson farm at Everton yesterday. Th* Are killed «6 hogs and l|7 head of cattle.
Trapped Allied Forces Rescued After Four Days Os Fanatical Red Drives
■ ■ - r ■ I I ' U. 5. Casualties In Korea T0ta148,035 List Total Deaths Now At 8,154 Washington,, Feb. 15’- (UP) — Announced U S. cbmbat casualties in Koresf reached 4k,035 today? an Increase of 647 ovfer a week The new casualty summary Includes those whose nextof kin have been notified through midnight last Friday Because of a time lag of one to three weeks in notifying families, the summary does not include all casualties which have occurred up to that hour. . The list. Included 7.245 killed in ucilAn. 31,245 wounded in action a|)d\ 9,395 m|lsslng n act ion i Total deat|hs\ were listed at 8.154. I’liis includes killed In act lon. fata Ily wounded and those Originally listed as missing who later were found dead. The htenkdown . Total casualtte* 3D,f>oo itrm>. 566 navy, 7,588 marine corps and Bft I all tol l e Total dent ha , - 6.672 army. 82, mavy.j 1.366 marine cotps and 145 uh fArce • ' , ' Killed In Helion 6,891 army, 73 navy, 1.143 murine corps and 138 air force. Wounded In action 24.711 army. 42fi navy, 6,227 marine corps and 31 air force. Missing in action — R.BBB army. 67 navy. 21,8 imiilnp cotps and 212 afr' sot co. Man Given Sentence For Snjoking In Bed Indianapolis. Feb. 15. (UP) John J. Voyles. 53. began a 180day term at the state farm today for violation of a icity ordinance banning smoking in bed. Plplice Voyles' cigaret i touched off a $5,000 fire at thp Linden hotel Feb. 13. No one Was injured in j the ;fire , .| i ' • ■■■ Parrish Overrules New Trial Motion Rules Against State On Inheritance Tax Jud** My It"' F. I’nrrifb. in the Admits circuit com Into Wednesday, overruled n motion fm a new Dial Unit wn hd by the Indlumi department of *itate revenue In the Arthur Shuy.'k estiitc cio-P On Jiinumy |0 Judge I’m 11*1) do tiled the stiiie iwvi tie departnmnt from (he lt<<iu< | .Il th* lAt* Ailhiir Hliock io the Milliner’s hospital for’ crippled children, u charitable co.r lioiMitbm and In lm<i|hmratetl In the fflit* '»t i'olo|mio \cc<»dl|ig to the Will of the Ihlc Arlhm Shock ihe crippled chlldrrh'M hospital Im to receive $60|102.73j and the state uiieippted to colled more than $6,600 tux on the beqm -t Tim action of the] court Mopped the slate from -a tax grub; the court gave as its rfasons for the denial -if the <)f the' silate to collect the (tax because the hospital I* a charitable Institution and that it is exempt from taxation under the Indiana Law. In denying the state a new trial, the court saiid that the present law is clear and understandable but that the inheritance fax, division has perverted the intention of the legislature Ln its rush to collect ( taxes, even from charity. After the court ruled o|i denying the state a new trial, the Indiapa department of state askied that an appeal be granted to the appellate court of Indiana, Whitjh'was* promptI ly given by the judge. > i Thomas Longfellow |ot the firm of Jackson. Longfellpw .and Jackson represented the fehriner> crippled children's hospital. John L. DeVoss represented th* estate 'and Lloyd C. Ilufchinaoti. deputy attorney jtueral. represented the inheritance tax division. 1
Bitter Attack I Unleashed Al GOP Majority State Republicans Likened To Fot-mer Ku Klux Klan Days •f . K ItHlluriupollx. Feb. 15 TUP) I•• iu(m rat i< \ nilmo l|y loader Hugh ,Dillin of the Indiana house donned a Ku Klux Kliiti liiM'd today In a bilb-U pollikdl blast al the Re-publU-un majority which he accused of foliowlng the dictatta of a k G()P policy (ommlttee \ IJillln <-i It i<-jzed the R< publicans .for ' voting like puppet* on u [Vtiipk" UH-indfiol by an "Invisible i^ov.-i nmeiH" of 23 GOP leader* yeiviug on a leglelatlv* policy lion id i At one point In his speech the first violently political uddress since the sesglon begun Jun 4 1 Dlilln < Innimrd a KKK liornl over ' his head arid mimicked what he Miild WHS II G()l’ lender trlllng a '' lli'pilblb'un hgl-liiloi how io f.o, ‘ an Issue ? “We had .Invisible government In j • the 2<' c'' D'llln Mhouled. "which 1 was associated with the Republican*. It looks as if the wine filing • is happening again ' • "Who do thise hidden forces think they are that to control thd legislature by forcing members of the majority to vote like puiipets on a string?" Dillin said. When he sat down, house majority leader Glenn R. Slenker rej l» lied: ' . ‘ "Nobody is telling us what to do.' [ We are deciding these things in party caucus." Dillin rose when Democratic efforts to force action on two house bills amending workmen’s coinpen-, sg|tion and occupational disease I laws were beaten down. House speaker W. O. Hughes had recommitted the bills to the insur-j antfe committee. Dillin said it was because of an amendment to let an! injured workman choose his own doctor, and that the GOP policymakers wanted the amendment re moved. ’■ I ■' - ■ Regional Meeting Os Assessors Next Week ' | -■ i I . (’minty Hssessor Albert Hail, a will lead Aduinn county downalitp trusleea to * l<-p.loi|ill meeting of all ussessoiH th be held njsxt Tua* day, at tin- i.<>,!;.-<• iioni,-. In , Fort Wav hr The purpos* of the )m*«ttng. culled tlirmighout t.t ttatehy the Hlnte board of tax com mlMMlonera, Im to Instruct .till those perxoitH vbo will **rv* as *mm<> *or* of real rMtate, which begin* March 1. , Rnpyenentalive* from Allen, IK> Kalh, Huißlttglon, Noble, Steuben. Well* mid' Whltb’v. a* well a* Adam*. will attend the meeting H o low ul MO Hinted firn t a not h 1-1 meet ■ Illg wll b* held before 'March 1. '
Wedding" Is To Be Repeated Tonight
The things that men will sometimes do ‘in the name of charity are unbelievable yet often highly amusing. A case Ih point is the first of two performances pf the "Whmantess Wedding.” sponsored/ by the Decatur Lions club and presented in the Decatur high school auditorium Wednesday. There were many, men not memIbers of the Lions pclpb who contributed their time and efforts in making the first evening's per- 1 fcrmance entertaining to the approximately 750 persons, gatherel 1 to/ witness the wedding. The wedding was the climax of ■ the- performance; before Deane Dprwim as the bishop, intoned the I ceremony, niore than two score ' men hud paraded through the, audience-on their way to the stage.'
Price Five Cents.
I- , I Red Siege Forces Put To Flight By Blazing American Relief Columns 1 Tokyo. Friday, Feb. 16 —(l’P» American tanks smashed the colminunist encirclement of Chipyomr Thursday and rescued the trapped French-American force which ha* held the vital central Korean road hub against four days of'fanaUcal <R*d attack-. I Red siege ford** south) of t'hl|» yorig were put to flight hy the blazing American arr**vr*d relief column, /which shot its way into town after a 14-in lie dash from the Voju ai'eS (O the south Hut central front dispute he* said the Reda were massing 112 b- . Chinese communist troops north of Chipyong and Wonju for new assaults on the two anchor posts of the United Nations Him Two Chinese commu|tnl<t urmie* or ::<i.<h)() men each were gathering north Qf-Chipyong. the dlapuiche.H said, Another »l(>,(l(»(( Chinese Reds Were mussing north ot Wonju 19 . mlit-s southeast. 'Fhe American relief - column. |(lescrHied by one officer hm "|oh<l *<l for henr.f’ jumped off to the I rescue Wednesday night It |*miiahrfl and scattered a commun- , ltd battalion holding ii road hits k In tio> hill* around Koksu. i'v miles south of Chipyong, and then | roared on iijto town. The Yanka, and Frenchmen in '(.’hipyong, stipidied by air during [the fotir-day siege, atilt were holding an unbroken defense perimeter when the rescue column arrived. Another American force, the U. S. 3pd division!' holding ground west of Chipyong. also defied the .' Reds to attack-again and take more losses of 148 to one as they did Wednesday. The Reds threw a regiment against the 3rd division command post and walked in’an allied trap which killed 1.993 of them in a j single day's fighting. [ A Allied planes dropped leaflets [to the Red commander of the I raiding ’ force, Gen. Kim Bern; Moon. . "Count your men," the leaflets advised the Red commander. Total casualties inflicted on the Reds in the past 22 days of fighting are according to army announcements. The Bth ariny'H “meat grinder” tactics continued Thursdiiy Alli.-.i artillery in the Wonju area blasted Red troop concentrations there w|tb ii continuous bombardment Allied planes, favored hy clear weather, smashed again and again ,nt tin- Reds The sth air alone racked up flpncombat sorties by 5 p im <2 » m, chT) With other Immiiors ami carrier planes the total for the dpy wtis lexpecfted tn )ui»s the 1,006 mark Four of the general officers directing* the sth i army's battle Oialuai the Reds were -given pro motion* hr rririiloiilns near the front Thursday. One. Maj. Gen John It Coulter; tjne of the army* foremost iiulh t (Tara ta Fage *t«>
It was a toss-up, though. whetker the audience enjoyed the hilarity more than did the members of the cast. V ' The buildup was quickly-paced, as W. Guy Brown, serving as a- - who introduced each guest as he arrived, had the situation well in hand at all times. ' The build-up culminated, of , course, in the weddihg. featuring Robert S. Anderson as the bride, and quaking Mayor Doan as his groom. I ■ The members of the cjast pre-< Jented a. varied program, sjfiging. ancing included, but mostly gen-. eral horseplay was featured by tha t characters as each came through - * ' the audience to the stage. *«'*; h Soma of the cast wan expected (Tnra T® Pa*. Five)
