Memphis World Memphis World Publishing Co. 1951-12-25 Chester M. Hampton WISHING WELL Registered U.S. Patent Office. HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. Fear Allied Prisoners May End Up In Red Labor Camps Fear that some Allied prisoners might wind up in Communist slave labor camps will spur United Nations delegates today in renewed armistice conference efforts to get full prisoner information from the Reds. The negotiations will be resumed in Pan Mun Jom at 11 a.m. (8 p. m. CST Saturday). In addition to biting exchanges on the prisoner issue Saturday's talks were marked by a blunt charge by the Allies that the Communists are seeking military advantages in the truce conference that they could not win on the battlefield. An Allied spokesman, Brig, Gen William P. Nuckols, charged that refusal of the Reds to tell the number of prisoners they hold "is out and out blackmail." Nuckols added: "We want all of our men back We do not want some of them to wind up in slave labor camps in china or North Korea. We do not want a forgotten legion of UN soldiers to wander around Red territory for the remainder of their lives." Nuckols said the Allies were not issuing an ultimatum but empha sized it will be impossible to make progress in the prisoner negotiations until the Reds tell the number of captives they hold. In the Subcommittee debate on armistice terms and inspection, Maj. General Howard M. Turner told the Reds they could not gain at the conference table "military capabilities which you do not now possess." The Reds have claimed that the Allied demand for inspection of read areas during an armistice and a ban on building Red airfields interfere with North Korean internal affairs. Gen, Turner declared. "You are not threatening our rear in any way: are not preventing up from rehabilitating airfields or building new ones; are not conducting serial surveillance of our communication centers; are not preventing unlimited rotation and replenishment; you do not interfere with internal affairs of our side. "On the other hand, we do hold islands which threaten you rear, We do keep your airfields unusable by constantly attacking them. We do conduct surveillance throughout your rear. We do limit the extent to which you can replenish your forces by our air interdiction program. SEASON'S Pictured left to right Max (Uncle Bud) Studivant, John. Simmons, Milton Steinberg, and the one and only Harold Streets. This efficient personnel will be on hand all during the holidays to help keep the holiday spirit up. This store carries a complete stock of whiskey, wines, gins, scotchs, brandy, cordials, and cocktail mix. And remember you can find what you need for Christmas and throughout the New Year, at this well stocked store. WISHING YOU A MERRY XMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR NO 2— 207 S. HERNANDO No-1—159 S. FOURTH ST. HARLEM HOUSE RESTAURANTS No 3—941 POPLAR AVENUE No. 5—237, No MAIN ST. America's first chain of good restaurants for colored! Why Not Visit Your Harlem No. 6 At 336 Beale Ave. Mrs. Williams Granted Divorce Mrs. Massie V. Williams, 1749 U street northwest, last Wednesday was awarded an absolute divorce from Clifford J. Williams, 2512 Ontario road northwest on the ground of desertion. Both Mr and Mrs. Williams are well known in Washington. According to Mrs. Williams, She and her husband began living separately under the same roof in September, 1943. She said he moved out of their home May 1, 1948. Mrs. Williams testified that her husband never contributed anything toward the purchase of their home at the U street address, which is held by them as tenants by the entireties by which they are both owners but the interest of neither can be severed. She put up the entire down payment and made all the monthly payments from her own funds, Mrs. said. Her husband's name was placed on the deed, she added, to placate him and induce him to be a good husband on the condition that he remain faithful to his marital vows. Mrs. Williams said she earns her own living from running a small delicatessen at 1840 Eighteenth street northwest. This store was leased at her instance with her money, with the understanding that it would be her store, she said, but to afford him with visible means of support and to teach and encourage him to work for a she asserted. Williams never tried to make a success of the venture, she stated, and she had to take personal charge of it...... She said he would come into the store and take money out of the cash register and if she protested he would threaten her with bodily harm. Williams denied her charges. He said he made regular contributions to the upkeep of the home. He stated that her-suit was-the first information he had of any condition under which she claimed she agreed to put his name on the deed to their home. The store was originally leased in his name in 1932 and for a long time be an it without any assistance from her, he said. In 1940, stated, they began jointly running the store and this continued until September, 1948 when he ceased to be jointly engaged in running the store in over to avoid further unpleasantness with his wife. Williams denied that he had been in the habit of taking money out of the cash register or threatening his mate with bodily harm. He admitted that he refused to transfer the lease to the store to her. The Williams were married September 16, 1931. Both were prominent in the night life of the city. Richard R. Atkinson an attorney, represented Mrs. Williams. Life is a question of checks and Balances—to be exact, bank balances. Modern miracle: The manner in which Santa Claus gets into some apartments. TIM TYLER By Lyman Young FELIX THE CAT By Sullivan for CHRISTMAS Mississippi and Walker 1248 FLORIDA ST.