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Show rri J TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1951 The Dragerton Tribune, Dragerton, Utah CASKETS OF MARINES KILLED IN KOREA . . Four of the 57 caskets which arrived in San Francisco recently containing remains of servicemen who fell in battfe and were buried in Korea are shown after they were unloaded from the transport General Randall, which brought them home. Standing by the caskets are members of the guard of honor. This marks the first time in history that war dead have been returned to the United States from a foreign theater of war while the fighting continues. all-servi- Latest reports list about Pg S ce 60,000 IDENTIFY MISSING SON FROM NEWS PHOTO . . . Mr. and Mrs. American casualties of the Korean war. Fred Mans, San Francisco, recognize the face of their son, William Mans, missing in action in Korea since November, in a picture of Americans reported held prisoners by Reds. The photo was released in New York by Eastfoto, source of Red propaganda, and transmitted by American news agencies. GRATEFUL SALUTE . . . Three liberated Americans salute two Korean lads who aided their escape from enemy bands by taking a message to an American patrol. Left to right are P.F.C. Ellie L. Wadley, Leacb-vill- e. Ark.; P.F.C. Kenneth Moreland, Alexandria, Va.; and Cpl. Walter C. Smith. The boys also directed the American patrol to the village where the prisoners were held and then deserted by the fleeing Reds. The Americans are recovering from their ordeal. GERMAN GENERAL CHARGED WITH ATROCITIES . . . Accused of murdering 150 persons whose mutilated bodies were found near Brest in 1944, German General Hermann Ramcke looks at magazine in French military court, "Cherche Midi," in Paris. Ramcke made an attempt to escape from an army camp in the United States last February. Two other German generals on trial, Kamitschek and Marstelle, are shown seated in the backgound. PLAYTIME . . . Senator Estes Kefauver, chairman of the senate crime investigation committee, lets his hair down and bounces tip and down on a pogo stick for the amusement of his daughter, Linda, 9 (not shown). OLD CURMUDGEON . . . Harold Ickes, former secretary of the In- terior, leaves White House after conference with President Truman. Ickes denied reports that he will be named head of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. $ ' 'I , , fid n r h eiiri X v , v - f o ' I , tv , i'jf , '. '' A 'J L & A - jS ' 7 S v 4 t VvXW'' f V r' V f FRANCE OFFERS HAND TO U.S. The friendship of the French nation for the United States is symboilzed by the extended hand of President Vincent Auriol of France as he and his wife arrive in New York on the Be de France as guests of the United States government. Behind Mme. Auriol is French ambassador Henri Bonnet. Civio officials and other dignitaries were on hand to welcome the distinguished guests. I f, 1 s, tf AX vV y in ... REPLACEMENTS FOR EUROPE . . . Boarding an army transport in Brooklyn are some of the first shipment of European replacements. AH of the new G.I.s were trained in army camps throughout the U.S. and processed though Camp Kilmer before assignment to an European area. General Dwight D. Elsenhower has been promised four full divisions for his European army and 95 per cent of that manpower win be assigned through Camp Kilmer, in New Jersey. 4 6 ' f 'ft , ' 5 y V & f vt. '' A.'.' v S V ft ' , , , ,, . e jiOW THEYVE GOT IT . . . Argentine President Peron (right) and Austrian scientist, Ronald Richter, announce that Argentina has made successful atomlQ tests, |