Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1951 — Page 3
f it. Many the Men's
25
ES
rators orig-
0 to 149.50
Floor
} erlack 0 to 16.69% yd.
only. to 3.50 yd. 00- to to 1.98 ea,
sidths,
Oria-
10 yds. 69¢
only.
“29 yd. LLY,
inal ly yo 89¢ yd. ncjudOrig: ” c ta 89¢ yd.
ony
AXceive: 5.95
SELFi... 17.98% EAVE, ..34.50
sach, vel29c each.
FLOOR
s rm —————
\DS 3
aperies in full sizes.
ESTICS,
aT
AR
NE
FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1051 Truce Talks Still Off —
Keep Kaesong Neutral
Zone or Switch Site, ‘UN Chief Demands
By EARNEST HOBERECHT a United Press Staff Correspondent
‘UNITED NATIONS BASE BELOW KAESONG, Korea,
“Saturday,” July*"14—The Communists rejected Friday’ “u approved:
United Nations ultimatum which breke off Korean ceasefire negotiations until correspondents for the world free press are admtited to Kaesong. The Reds offered to resume the negotiations on their| own terms. They said there) vee | must be a special agréement |”: 55 p. m. (Indianapolis Time),|
(and delivered to Adm. Joy and on admission of newsmen. |Gen. Ridgway. Nam II said: Gen, Matthew B. Ridgway, Supreme United Nations command-| correspondents were stopped on er, countered by making a newithe way to Kaesong because there and stiff demand that Kaesong h been no prior agreement on be declared a neutral zone, free their admittance, but this was no of armed troops and Red obstruec-' reason for breaking off cease-fire tion, or alternatively that the talks. conference be switched to some TWO-Neither side. should ad-
other place. ‘+ | mit correspondents to Kaesong Gen. Ridgway addressed his-de- until there has been agreement mand direct to Kim II Sung, ‘on both sides:
orth remie d com : North Kutean Drosier an gon THREE—The Communists prohoa ; Rad cnm. Posed that the talks be resumed Teh-huai, the Chinese Red com at 9 a. m. Friday (6 p. m. Thurs-
mander. day (Indianapolis Time).
The Red reply was not delivered until after the suggested time for resumption of the talks. But Gen. Ridgway instead: sent his own new demand. It. was broadcast over the Seoul radio and delivered by helicopter courier Korean Gen. Nam Il. chief Com- to the Communist outpost on the munist negotiator. It was ad- road between this base and Kae-
dressed to Vice Adm. C. Turner SOD&. Joy, chief United Nations! “Extension of the present recess negotiator, in reply to Adm. Joy’s'and the delay in resuming the declaration there would be nol conference , . . is solely due to more talks until Allied cor- those unreasonable and unnecesrespondents were admitted to sary restrictions against which Kaesong. my representatives have repeatThe Red reply was handed to edly protested,” Gen. Ridgway a United Nations liaison officer at said.
{
Prospects Dim The Allied command now awaits a Red reply to Gen: Ridgway. Prospects seemed dim for a resumption of- talks today. The first direct official statement by the Reds since the talks were interrupted came from North
FIT TTI TIT ITI TIT TIIY Shop SATURDAY—ALL DAY—9:30 to 5
Lamp SHADES
‘Regular $3.95 Value
89°
*Some slightly soiled
SLIP COVERS SOFAS... $10
Regularly $17.98 to $19.98
Bolton and Benton Patterns in green, wine, blue with gray. new.
CHAIRS .. . $5
Regular $8.98 to $11.98
Bolton and Benton Patterns in green, wine, blue with gray.
SOFAS ... $10
Regular $17.90 to $19.98 * Sellers Kitchen Gale pattern only, in green or * Chrome Breaka wine, * Kitchen Utility * Coal Heaters
* Lounge Chairs * Radios * Gas Ranges * Lace Panels * Bed Spreads
* Blankets * Rugs
Drapery
REMNANTS
Values up to $2.49 a yd.
89: per yd.
* ODD DRAPES * BEDSPREADS
* COLORED SHEETS and PILLOWCASES
* SOFA PILLOWS
ALL GREATLY REDUCED
* Linoleum * Bedroom Suites
FIA
$100 TRADE IN
for your old Radio on any 1951
TELEVISION CONSOLE OR COMBINATION
OK'd for Dana
% Odd Chests and Vanities
80 Housing Units
‘Critical Are’
Eighty housing units hive been -for the recently. {fied “critical area” encompassing Montezuma, Newport and Rockville, J Earl * Peters, director of the Federal Housing Authority disitrict office here, made the announcement today.
Credit regulations have been
‘relaxed in this area under the
{approval of the Housing and]
ONE—“Naturally” = the Allied Home Finance Agency and the|
Federal Reserve System.
Rent and Sale The housing will include 40 rental units and 40 units for sale.
The rentals will include 15 two-| bedroom homes, to rent for $80,
per month, and 25 three-bedroom homes, renting at $90.
Homes built for sale will in-|
clude 15 two-bedroom homes valued at $10,000 and 25 threebedroom homes at $11,000. The FHA and Veteran Administration approved loans for this housing will be eligible for immediate sale to the Federal National Mortgage Association under the relaxation of credit regulations, Mr. Peters said. War veterans using loans guaranteed by the VA will receive more favorable terms than nonveterans, using FHA insured, or non-government loans. Initial approval of applications may be limited to 10 rental units and 10 sales units, but applicants may apply for additional units, Mr. Peters said. Additional information may be obtained at the FHA’s Indianapolis offices. Applications from builders will be accepted July 17.
op Shown Are Just 4 of the MANY SPECIALS for "SATURDAY SELLING!
BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN for the best selection
x * Xx %
REMEMBER —this is no special sale merchandise secured for this occasion —but regular Colonial Quality Merchandise which you know so well. Each day, as we clear our old warehouse we find bigger and better buys for you! Each day we move more merchandise onto the floors.
have had in stock for several months, other pieces are comparatively
ALL AT PRICES THAT WILL THRILL YOU,
Cabinets st Sets Tables
* Lamps
* Occasional Chairs
BIG LIFT-=Taking time out from the national convention, 250 members of the Indianapolis Mu- 'he deserted his master to take rat Shrine entertained more than 5000 patients and nurses at New York's Bellevue Hospital yes- part in the siege of Vicksburg § Greenwood, and With the Union forces.
terday. Sax playing Shriners are Charley Kemp, Indianapolis.
We Learn the Hard Way—
Negotiations With Reds Running True to Form
A ‘Desirable Showdown . . . an editorial ........ Page By LUDWELL DENNY Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, July 13-—The Korean armistice negotiations
a9
Some we
1.25 Weekly on any ‘purchase up to $50 « INo Carrying Charge if Paid in 90 Days)
Listed Are Only a Few of the Many Pieces in This Sale
* Wardrobes, metal or wood
* Occasional and End .Tables
* Dinette Sets in wood * 2-Pc. Living Room Suites
* Cotton Throw Rugs
red Sofas red Love Seats
* Hollywood Beds
FURNITURE
* Hollywood Headboards
Don't Delay—SHOP COLONIAL SATURDAY
Sorry, we are not ‘able to give our usual shopping service on this merchandise. DUE to LIMITED QUANTITIES ALL SALES MUST BE FINAL—ALL MERCHANDISE SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE
* Free Delivery to Your Home—Anywhere in Indiana
olonia
* Lamp Tables & i * Juvenile Lamps * Dining Room Furniture * Upholste * Upholste * Upholstered Bed Chairs * Innerspring Mattresses * Box Springs x Kehr Bed Davenports LL ywood | € 0 FURNITURE CO. 3 ; 47 SOUTH MERIDIAN
“MHE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
|
timatum Rejected, Ridgway Sends Reds or
4
(left to right} Bob Rich, Kokomo;
have run true to form. In almost all Allied-Red conferences, our hard way. They are saved —if ever-—only when Stalin overplays his hand. Gen. Matthew Ridgway and his chief negotiator, Vice Adm. Turner Joy, are the latest —but prob-
Americans rep-| resentatives who | still could not be. careful enough |
Mr. Denny
in dealing with the double- ~Cross- |».
ing Reds. - : i -When the Reds substituted’ Kaesong .in no-man’'s land, fori the original Ridgway proposal of| a Danish hospital ship as a meet-| ing place, we apparently accepted Kaesong on the assumption that it would be neutral unarmed territory and that the two parties
would be equal’ . /
Reoceupied Tow n
Kaesong with troops ad armed guarts. Adm. Joy's delegation! were photographed along with the guards as Red propaganda]
}
fodder to make it appear that they were the defeated, begging|
cease-fire from the victorious] Communists. Whether the negotiations are to; be resumed as the Allied author-| ities seem to expect, or will be| delayed indefinitely until Allied] military victory, Gen. Ridgway and his associates hereafter cer-| tainly will be sterner” in their! diplomatic and military dealings! with the enemy, | They Are Fighters First In fairness to Gen. Ridgway and Adm. Jovy and their brilliant battle records, it must be remembered that their profession is fighting rather than dickering. If Stalin repeatedly outsmarted such political aces as Churchill! and Roosevelt; if President Truman had to learn that the Red dictator was hardly the good fellow he appeared at conferences: if such canny negotiators as Cordell Hull, James. Byrnes and Ernie Bevin had to learn the hard way, and such crack military, +brains as.Marshall, Eisenhower, ! Clark and Clay were not tough! enough in dealing with.the Reds at first; it is Hot surprising that our present negotiators have been jolted a bit, In most of these cases, whether American or British, Allied negotiators who acted in good faith and were tricked, came out wiser and more effective representatives In almost - every - case,! however, they did not react sufficiently until Stalin had repeated the doublecross and over- . played his hand. {
Not Ruthless Type
Perhaps one explanation of Stalin's ability to fool Allied ne-! gotiators at first is that the Western mind, however hard in actual military warfare, is in-; capable of being equally ruthless in conference.
To the democratic m. i n d. treachery is not the purpose. It is the Communist purpose in “peace” ag in war, because. to Stalin ‘‘peace” is simply a camouflaged form of war to destroy the democratic “enemy.” Therefore, every Red conférence is a trap, and the best agreement is only a temporary ruse to be broken whenever Stalin thinks he can get away ‘with it
10 N E Ww B U S E 5 (36-passenger coaches) Give you more tips day and night ! between
FT. BENJAMIN. RARRISON ond
DOWNTOWN INDIANAPOLIS
Ride the orange and green buses regularly and save on 10-ride tickets. { Only $2.40-no tax.
TW UL {oF
Escaped Convict's Thirst man on garrison duty with a §
Results in His Capture a citation and a medal at the APPLETON, Wis, Joseph Stinski convict at the state prison farm free man to-
July 13 (UP) 75th anniversary celebration of
have been a
might day if he had been able to control _, Sa : . S thirst a littie Yonger. steamboats and helped build the Urges Improvements Black Creek, , escaped from the farm near Mr Two policemen some relatives who live near here and spetted the culprit/,, join her husband. railroad track ‘
his
Waupun Monday. checked
walking down commandeered and set out after
They
and the officers lost
forewarned pp, without a struggle.
" Spans
re
_ Uncle Joe Is Gohe—
Civil War Veteran, 107, Dies in Hospital -
By. United Press DETROIT July 13 “Uncle Joe" Clovese, the nation’s only diving Negro, Civil War veteran, . Tied “at 9:40 a. m. today in Dearborn Veteran Hospital. He was 1107 years old. Doctors said Mr. Clovese entered the suburban veterans hospital on Monday. They said cause of death was a combination of heart, kidney and “old age" ail- § ments. : Last Jan. 28, the citizens of | Pontiac, Mich.,, where he has lived with a niece since 1948 honored “Uncle Joe’ at a com“munity party celebrating his [107th birthday. At. the time he said “there wouldn't be no trouble in Korea if folks would do more prayin’ and lovin.” Drummer Boy
Born in 1844 on a St. Bernard Parish plantation: in Louisiana,
He first became a drummer boy #§ and later served as an infantry- §
negro regiment, He was presented
"UNCLE JOE" CLOVESE-— Dead at 107. ;
ms —— omc
47-year-old the Battle of Gettysburg in 1938
After the war, the sturdy exslave worked on Mississippi River
first telegraph line between New Orleans and Biloxi, Miss. . Clovese lived in the South until 1948 when his niece, Mrs Valrie Daniel, came to Pontiac
In Brownstown Jail Times State Service BROWNSTOWN, July 13 = Brownstown jail was given bad
r : billing by the Indiana Department “I just came along in case she .r public Welfare.
needed somebody a little older to take care of her,” he said. down the Mrs. Daniels, 50, said “Uncle
a handcar Inspector Maurice B. Holland recommended new wiring in
tracks and into a clump of Woods Joe had a lot more pep than peo- Sheriff George W. Abel's quarters him: ple half his age.” and the jail, and new plumbing were told and paint
The old Negro soldier used to
that tired from take a daily walk when the Jail break and fire hazards and « x as ar ably not the as the chase, had gone to a nearby weather was pleasant and “hard- improper facilities for segregation : ile iy tavern refreshment. They/ly ever” was sick. Partly deaf, of hardened criminals from first of capabe andi.,,5q him and arrested he enjoyed the radio when it was offenders and of juveniles from
turned up loud
‘STORE Subees
adults were criticized
GENTLEMEN: HERE ARE
YOUR “FADED BLUE"
“
l
Just about "perfect for a man's vacation—or his domestica duties—or his leisure—or his active life outdoors. Good substantial denim—in a ''faded blue" shade—that you
~ will like—Sanforized—which means it WASHES
without shrinking over 1%,. And the slacks are—A REAL PAIR OF SLACKS! They have style—with forward set pockets—saddle stitched seams— high rise, with pleats and drape—continuous no-seam waistband—Sizes 30 to 44 waist. And the price will make you rub your eyes!
Second Floor— : right at the . top of the Escalator
a
