OCR Text |
Show SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1931 Page 3 TI1E JOURNAL w. YOUTHS CAPTURED AFTER WIDESPREAD SEARCH . , . This dramatic photo shows armed police In Arcadia, Calif., closing in on two youths who had been sought in a widespread search after four men had kidnapped and robbed a doctor in order to get his drugs. Rawley Ray Poe, 29, and Robert Nausbaum, 24, are seen at right as they were flushed from culvert hiding place and taken into custody by officers carrying pistols and tear gas bombs. Two teenagers were later found in hiding in nearby bushes to complete the roundup of suspects in the crime. All prisoners were booked on suspicion of kidnapping and robbery. ... He might be a sculpMODEL a heroic statue, but for model tors hes a real hero P.F.C. Robert Buyers of the U.S. marines and the dried blood streaks and wounds are real. He was the victim of a Communist grenade in Korea. JUSTICE CLOSES IN . . . Maj. Walter Reder, officer, ex-Germ- an stares straight ahead in court in Bologna, Italy, where he is being tried by an Italian tribunal for being responsible for massacre of 1,750 Italians during 1944. ! HUK SLAIN . . . Police bullets ended the bloody career of Nlcasio Pamintuan, Iluk hatchetman, in Manila. He was wanted by Philippine authorities for a dozen murders. In the wild gun battle, he fatally shot three army officers. This battle followed a similar shooting incident in another part of the city. Death toll in the two clashes was six dead on the government side and two Iluks fatally shot. The Uuks are aided and abetted by the Communists. ... A Czech private and staff sergeant DIDNT CHOOSE FREEDOM who were among the passengers aboard the freedom train which crashed the iron curtain into west Germany are shown with U.S. M.P.s and border guards shortly before they were turned over to Czech authorities. Before they were returned to their homeland, the private was found with his nose glued to a show window looking at the first bananas he had seen in six years. ... All has been smiles and cordiality beFRIENDLY EXCHANGE UN commanders in Korea when they met to extween the Reds and change notes upon armistice talks, with wrangling and recrimination during the actual talks. Here, Lt. Col. Norman Edwards, head of the UN liaison smiles as he accepts a note from Col. Chang, top North Korean liaison officer at Pun Mun Jon. The note contained Red offers to renew armistice talks immediately, but terms could not be accepted. JUST LIKE HUMANS . . RED BARLEY FOR BRITAIN . . . Russian barley is pouring into the holds of a lighter from the Russian freighter Staneleve at Surrey docks, London. The grain is transhipped by vacuum power. Last year Britain took 800,000 tons of Russian grain for which she paid in machinery and material needed by the Russians. Recently the British contracted for one million tons of Red grain from this years harvest. Britain defends this as vita! to her economy. FIREWORKS FOR BRAZILIAN GOVERNOR . . . Governor Eugenio de Barros, his wife, two daughters and a son take refuge in a huddle on the floor of the Lions Palace in Sao Luis, Maranhao, Brazil, when a rebel force of thousands greeted him with guns, knives and clubs on his return after a federal tribunal had confirmed his election. Four persons were killed in the demonstration and about 20 others were wounded. The opposition contends too many ballots were thrown out. . Occipital vulture, when screams fail to scare intruder, pulls in his neck and goes into hiding. This one is in London zoo. |