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Show SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1931 TIIE JOURNAL Page 3 INTERNATIONAL CAMP . . . Leis of welcome are offered by Joan Castroverde of Hawaii to Marilyn Stewart, Oswego, Ore., and Kiyoko Yamanouchi, Tokyo, Japan. These girls are delegates to the international Girl Scout encampment at Home Valley, Wash. There are 96 Girl Guides and Girl Scouts here from 14 countries and territories. The encampment Is pioneer in style with all the girls living in tents and cooking their meals over open fires. REDS PLAY HOST . . . Two North Korean soldiers haul a case of beer across the courtyard in Kaesong as the Communists played host to allied delegates at the truce conference. The talks on a cease-fir- e agenda for the Korean war were in recess at the time until the Reds could get advice from Peiping. The Communists finally acceded on their demand for removal of all foreign troops in Korea. ... HUSBANDS NOTICE! . . . Writer Revecca Reyher, back from Africa, says man doesnt pay enough attention to his wife. She cites as example a chief who took 104 wives, but lost 54 of them because they became lonely. EDITOR . . . J. Parnell Thomas, former U. S. representative who was convicted of padding his office payroll, will serve as editor and publisher for Community Press Publications, which will operate three small weeklies in New DULLES BURNED IN EFFIGY . . . John Foster Dulles was hanged and burned in effigy in Manila, while over 5,000 indignant demonstrators denounced the U.S. ambassador as betrayer of Filipino-America- n relations. Organized by the Liberal Youth League, the burning of Dulles reached the climax of the Philippines protestation against the unfairness of the proposed Japanese peace treaty when it sidestepped reparations to the Philippines for Jap war damages. Leopold III, fourth king of the Belreign. He gians, signs abdication papers, ending an unhappy abdicated in favor of his son, Prince Baudouin (standing at right) who was formally crowned King Baudouin I in ceremonies before the joint house of the parliament. Controversy over King Leopolds rule caused rioting and near revolution in the nation recently as factions clashed with groups on the streets. KING LEOPOLD ABDICATES . 17-ye- ar pro-Leopo- anti-Leopo- ld THE STORY . . Words arent ld WAR POSTSCRIPT In Berlin, a monster is pushed into a truck as the relieved neighborhood, cautiously keeping a distance, peers at the police and detonation experts. The monsters are undetonated bombs, droppd by allied planes during the last war. Although dormant for several years, the fuses are still intact and sensitive to the slightest jar. ENLISTED MEN FRATERNIZE . . . While United Nations and Communist armistice delegates disagreed over a demarcation line in Korea in their cease-fir- e negotiations, two soldiers of opposing sides get toOn the road to Kaesong, Cpl. Early F. gether for a little McIntosh, Brooklyn, general headquarters photographer, receives a Chinese Mao Tze-Tuemblem from a Chinese Communist soldier. The ceremony was performed in mock seriousness. by-pla- y. ng needed with these pictures that show Jersey Joe Walcott taking heavyweight crown from Ezzard Charles. |