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Globe-Gazette from Mason City, Iowa • Page 2

Publication:
Globe-Gazettei
Location:
Mason City, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4, 1953 City GIobe-GnetU, Mason City. Victim of Dog Faces Big cnown if its teeth were also used the attack. Ah 8-month-old girl, Karen 3rown, also is undergoing the two- day Pasteur inoculations. A mongrel seen licking her face was ound to be carrying the disease. Crisis CHICAGO (UP) watched "Mr.

apprehensively Friday to see how many glasses of water he may drink as the mad dog victim approached the greatest crisis of his life. Meanwhile, a 3-year-old boy, the third victim of a rabid dog here in two underwent the first in a series of inoculations aimed at saving his life. "Mr. who is 44-year-old Harry Snarr, was bitten 14 days ago but went untreated for seven days, unaware the dog carried hydrophobia. The minimum incubation period of the disease is 14 Requests Reds to Punish Own Criminals WASHINGTON (UP) --Chairman Jharles E.

Potter of a Senate task- orce investigating Korean War )rison atrocities Friday challenged First Symptoms Thus, unless the belated Pasteur Inoculations have destroyed the virus before it reached his nervous system, he could manifest the first symptoms of the disease Friday-convulsions and intense thirst. If that happens, doctors can only watch helplessly he dies a painful and repulsive' death within a few days. No treatment can save him. Snarr, a Cherokee Indian, wa: cooly "resigned when first told his danger. "I was bitten by a rattlesnake on a reservation' in he told doctors.

not 50-50 Chance Dr. Herman N. Bundesen, city health 'commissioner, said Snarr has about "a 50-50 chance to Bundesen disclosed that little Herbert Borner'was the latest mad dog victim in Chicago. child was scratched on the face Nov. '15 by.

a dog that died Tuesday of rabies. The dog's claws could not transmit the disease, but it -was not he Communists to own war criminals. punish their RUDOLPH--AND THE BLUE-NOSED REINDEER By ROBERT L. MAY TROUBLE? ALL I CAN SAY rr's A GOOD THINS you UNCLE 6BY, you SURE GOT ME INTO TROUBLE WITH SANTA UNCLE Of? NOT, YOU CAN'T CALL SANTA CLAUS A SILLY OLD I CAN'T, NO, SIR 6OIU6 BACK TO HELP SANTA RISHT COME BACK THIS INSTANT'' "If they have a government with a conscience, they themselves will junish the war criminals," the Michigan Republican declared. He described the brutalities, be- ng aired before his Senate Inves- igating Subcommittee in conjunc- ion with U.

S. atrocity charges in he United Nations, as "crimes against man." Crimes Punished 'Even in a Communist country," he said, "I believe crimes against man are punished." Potter made the statement as 10 more witnesses were summoned to testify in what was expected to be final hearings in the present phase of the investigation. The first witness was to be Col. James M. Hanley, a war crimes officer in Korea.

Potter challenged Andrei Vishin- Russian delegate to the United Nations, to accept an American proposal to appoint an impartial commission to investigate the atrocity charges. Vishinsky has branded them a lie. "It would be the best propaganda in the world for them if they can prove that they are false," Potter said. hands behind their backs with bootlaces. Manring said his unit was captured by North Koreans and was being marched along by the Reds tied together in groups of 10 when he suddenly heard shots.

Manring said he was hit by several bullets in the arm and leg and was topped by his falling neighbor. He managed to wiggle under his dead companion. But the Reds came along kicking the bodies and "I made a grunting sound." "That's when I caught it in the gut." "I got shot in the gut," he said again and broke into tears. Breaks Down Roy P. Manring Jr.

of Chicago, a honeymooning ex-GI, broke down and wept Thursday as he told how North Koreans shot 41 Americans in cold blood after tying their TELEVISION See the Famous Bendix Sets 1 Clearer Pictures--Better Sound More Beautiful Cabinets i A Cftristnias Gift For Family Entertainment Antennas With Sets as Low as $35.00 Evening Appointments Welcome PHONE 619 i Service Refrigeration Co. 510 SOUTH FEDERAL Godfrey Seeks Race Winners NEW YORK WV-Arthur Godfrey, whose name is almost synonymous with radio and is hope- a before many years roll around he will be as well known in horse racing. And the redhead is basing his immediate hopes on two well-bred horses--a colt and a filly--purchased at the Saratoga yearling sales last August. The colt, a son of Case Ace out of Dutch Cut, cost him $38,500. He paid $9,500 for the filly, a daughter of Pavot.

To the colt he has given the name Lord Willin', "which Godfrey fans will recognize as the signoff on his radio and television shows. Fraulein is the filly's name. Godfrey admits she got it, because he got the breeding the two yearlings mixed up and thought the filly's dam had the Dutch connection. Godfrey talked of his horses and ambitions Thursday night before the annual dinner of the Thoroughbred Racing at which he was master of ceremonies. "''I've been in horses and have exhibited show horses and raised hunters and saddle horses," he said.

"A long time ago I made up my mind I would own a race horse when I got enough.money to purchase the best stock' a employ a top Need Further Evidence in Hardin Ouster DES MOINES Gen. Leo A. Hoegh said after an hour's conference with County Attorney Lester Ose of Eldora Friday that further conferences and additional evidence will be needed before a decision on what action, if any, to take against the Hardin County Board of Supervisors. The situation arises out of a critical state auditor's report and a request by a Hardin County Grand Jury that the three supervisors resign. This the supervisors have refused to do.

Hoegh and Ose a i three courses of action are open to them. One is an ouster proceeding. Another is to resubmit the matter to the grand jury. A third is to take no action at all. Members of the board are Hillis well armer ai Wilson, 65, Iowa Falls farmer and ing machine, board chairman; Frank Beran, 60, Garden City lumber dealer, and Martin Ryken, Ackley farm owner.

The auditor's report said that the county, in 1952, had purchased $1,968 worth of materials from the Beran Lumber Co. owned by Supervisor Beran. The audit report called attention to the Iijjva law which forbids members of boards of supervisors selling materials or supplies to the county. The auditor's report also criticized the supervisors for using county labor and equipment for private purposes. Rites at Osage for Peter Eagen CARPENTER-- Funeral services for Peter Eagen, 83, former blacksmith at Carpenter, Elma and Osagc, will be 'held Monday at 9 a.

in. at the Sacred Heart Church in Osage, with -burial in the church- cemetery. He died of pneumonia at a hospital in Osage Thursday. Survivors include a brother, Leo, of Los Angeles, Jack, of Sacramento, and Robert, of Sisseton, S. D.

Born in Wisconsin July 23, 1870, to Joseph and Catherine Eagen, he came when a child with his parents to Mitchell County and" settled northeast of Osage. He was married McDonegal, Rockwell, who preceded him of in death. They lived in Mason City where he operated a garage, later moving to Minneapolis, returning to Osage in 1930. In addition to his trade as blacksmith he had also been a well driller and oporated a thresh- On ffie Radio Beam I A Nlf.HT NETWORK lUGHUOHTS Edward It. i "2:00 Mr.

1:30 Stags Struck; World Dances; 9:00 CapHol Cloakroom. a i Heatter; Mutual 7:00 Take Number! 7:30 or False; 8:00 Great Day Show; 8:30 Oft and On the 9:00 A.F. of Frank Edwards. Ono Stan's a i 1:00 Coke Time; 7:15 Rosemary Ctooneyt 7:30 Name That Band; 8:00 Parade of Bands: Pick and Play With Bob and a i 9:00 T.B.A. AP Wireplioto TWISTER DAMAGE--The generalstore at left was and collapsed and the house at right unroofed and damaged by a tornado which struck Leander, Thursday.

Seven deaths wefe reported in this town and at least 11 were killed as the tornado hit other Louisiana towns. With Fellow Worker Husband Admits Wife's Death for Insurance DENVER young salesman and a. co-worker were held Friday after police said they admitted a holdup-slaying to collect insurance on a pretty telephone operator. Detective Capt. Charles Burns described the strangling of Mrs.

Leick, 26, last Tuesday night as one of the Reveals New Pill Remedy for Ulcers AN ADDING MACHINE ANYONE CAN OPERATE At a Price Anyone Can Afford 1 Your choice of keyboards. Christmas Special: $12.50 Carrying Case for only $7.50 until December 31st. Complete line ot adding machines. Electric, Hand New, Used, Rebuilt. Sales Rental Service WOLFF TYPEWRITER CO.

401 South Federal Phone 1339 THEY DESERVE AL NEW You can be sure when you choose a Gruen your gift will be the finest the one they'll cherish most proudly! In our wonderful selection I ore Gruen Wokhet, to please' every tasle (and every puuo). They are unmatched for beauty and fine performance. NO MONEY DOWN-A YEAR TO PAY HE- No or Carrying Charge PRICES INCLUDE FEDERAL TAX Open Tonight Till 9 P. M. Researcher Brands Colossus of Rhodes Nothing But Sham LONDON UPI The Colossus of Rhodes, one of the seven ancient wonders of the world, was described by a British scientist Thursday night as a hollow sham.

Herbert Maryoh, sculptor-archeologist, 'told a meeting oi the Society of Antiquaries the giant statue was: 1. Too small to stand astride the harbor of Rhodes. 2. Made of thin bronze sheets in stead of solid bronze. The statue, of the Sun God.

He lios was the work of a sculptor named Chares, who spent 12 years on his masterpiece. It was erectec 280 B. C. An earthquake tumbled it 53 years later. The story handed down through the years is that the statue stooc with a beacon in its hands and one foot on each side of the harbor en trance, with enough clearance for ships to pass underneath.

trangest ever investigated Denver police. In custody were her husband, eRoy Leick, 30, and Gene Dukes, 0, employes of the same broker- famous for famous brands Mail UitLetA Piatttfltly failed SAME PRICES So. Federal at First, Mason City, Iowa SAME TERMSI your feet will float! hours of standing st the sink or ironing board get easier with an AKRO oval sponge rubber mat underfoot. A slick combination of comfort and good. looks, it pleases your as well as your feet.

In red, blue, grey. Better get a couple today and give your feet a treat. OVAL SPONGE RUBBER MAT WITH tUOYANf SPONGEt BOOMHOWER HARDWARE ge firm here. Detective Capt. William E.

Flor aid both signed statements admit- ng a plot to kill Mrs. Leick but ach blamed the other for stran- ling her. They were quoted as aying it took 20 minutes. Found Dead Mrs. Leick.

was found dead in the jack seat of the family car 20 minutes after her husband was discovered, bleeding and semi-con- cious from a beating, in a down- own alley. His wife's sister, Miss Monroe, had been pushed out of the car in another alley, also after a beating. Leick and Miss Monroe told officers then they were clubbed by a man who rose from the back seat of the Leick car as the trio left heir apartment house and started ST. LOUIS Ml--A six-ply pill was described as a new and promising treatment for stomach ulcers in an exhibit shown Friday to the American Medical Assn. It combines four different anti- acids to counteract excess stomach acids causing or worsening the ulcers.

The fifth element is an oatmeal extract which binds the acid- fighters together and releases them slowly for about two hours. The sixth ingredient is a gummy material which forms a protective coating over the lining of the stomach or the duodenum, the first part of the intestine. These new pills, not yet on the market, have relieved pain within a few days in most of more than Western Iowa Gets Snowfall of 4 Inches DES MOINES A swirling snowstorm dumped up to four inches of snow in Northwest Iowa Thursday night as the forerunner to a cold spell moving across the state Friday. Highways were snowpacked and slippery in the northwest Friday and scattered icy spots were reported on other roads throughout Northern Iowa. Sioux 'City had four inches of snow and 80-mile-an-hour northwest winds caused some drifting.

Everywhere You Go THERE RADIO Dial 1300 5M Watf KGLO-FM .2:45 to 10:15 P.M. Basketball the (7:30 p. SeTlistening for M.C.J.C.-Marshalltown J. C. a movie.

Detectives reported Thursday other men had volunteered the nformation that Leick, married in 1948, had offered them money to lelp make the death of his wife ook like a holdup slaying. One said this took place in 1951. "Never Let On" "Imagine thinking about it for years," said Burns, "and never etting on to her what was on his mind." Officers said their investigation centered on Leick after word of the purported plot and discovery of Mrs. 'Leick's $7,000 life insurance policy naming her husband as sole beneficiary. 250 patients treated so far, according to the exhibit.

The exhibit is staged by Drs. Leo L. Hardt and Steig- mann, Stritch of medicine of Loyola University and Cook County graduate sehool medicine, and Clarence A. Maaske and Robert Grover of the University of Colorado school of medicine, Denver. The pills are known to have helped the healing-over of ulcers in the stomach, Dr.

Hardt said. And X-rays of many patients show no ulcer scars in the duodenum, an area which can't be seen by the gastroscope, a tube which takes pictures within the stomach. Snow plows were out and as yet there were no reports of blocked highways. Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. here reported Friday ,179 long distance circuits in Northwest Iowa were put of service.

Five towns, Sibley, Hull, Rock Valley, Rock Rapids and Boyden, were without communications, company said. The severe storm in the area and ice caused the wire breaks. Snow, enough to turn the ground white, and rain fell over most of the state during the night. However, the -largest part of Iowa missed the snow as a deep storm center passed to the west of the state, cutting across the northwest corner before moving into Southern Minnesota Friday morning. game followed by the Mohawks vs.

Cedar Falls game. Saturday Highlights Kitchen Klinic Homemakers, the "Kitchen Klinic" with Mary Kielson is a Saturday morning must on your radio listening list. Lake Show (10:00 a Spend a "Saturday "At the Lake" for a full fifty- five minutes of wonderful entertainment with Doug Sherwin as your host. Drama Sets Dec. 74 as Date Wallace to Plead on Charge Patrick Wallace, 25, 918 9th N.E., waived formal arraignment before District Judge William P.

Butler Friday on an indictment for manslaughter and asked time to plead. Judge Butler set the time for 1:30 p.m. Dec. 14. Wallace has been held in the county jail since his indictment Nov.

25 by the Cerro Gordo County grand jury. Wallace was the driver of the car in which two companions were killed in an auto accident early Nov. 15. Roger E. Lewis, 21, Nora Springs, and J.

Mooneyham, 19," 547 9th S. when Wallace's car left the highway netr the sugar plant as they were' returning from Manly, Officers said blood tests showed all had been drinking. Wallace Is in jail for lack of $5,000 bond. Seeking Dismissal of Mayer Suit DES MOINES UPt--Attorneys for Walter M. Mayer, New Mexico rancher, have asked that a $50,000 suit filed against Mayer by the estate of John C.

Wisdom, be dismissed. Mayer was acquitted Nov. 24 by a Davis County District Court jury in the slaying of Wisdom May 2 on the latter's farm near Bloomfield. Federal Judge William F. Riley set a hearing for 2 p.

m. Tuesday on the motion. Mayer's attorneys that notice of the action was served illegally on Mayer during his trial. They argued that Mayer was, not subject to service at that time because he was in Iowa for the "sole" purpose of defending i against the murder charge. lowan Talks to Father Following Escape From Reds AD EL Ronald K.

Brown of AdeJ the Czech war bride whose family' fled their Communist-dominated homeland by hiding under a pile of lumber on a railroad car, talked.to her father Friday. Still excited after learning Thursday of her family's spectacular escape, Mrs. Brown said- she talked with her father, Bedrick Cech, 52, in a 10-minute overseas telephone call originating from Linr, Austria. It was the first time they Had talked together in over four years. "I hardly speak my language.

I hardly knew what words to said Mrs. Brown. They talked Czech. "Father was so surprised when I told him I knew all about the escape," Mrs. Brown said.

"It was hard him to understand that the news was all over the country here." Brown left her home in Cefvena, Czechoslovakia, in May, 1949, and fled to Austria. It was while living in Linz that she met and married Brown, then with the U. S. Army. (11:05 a.

"The Crystal Candlesticks" proves that happiness is where you find it on Cream of Wheat's "Theater Of Today." Fun For All (1:30 p. Enjoy "Fun For All," the comedy quiz with Arlene Francis and Bill Cullen sponsored by Toni. Friday P. M. 5:00 Clear Lake Show 5:15 Wizard of Oddi, Manhattan 5:30 Curt Massey, Alka-Seltzer 5:15 Sunshine Sue, Corn Product Co.

6:00 News, P.G. E. 6:10 Mason City Today, Hcrmanson Dairy Across the Footlights. Cool Spring (1:30 I.es Paul and Mary Ford, Llsterina 0:35 Sports, and Weather, Motorola TV 6:15 Edward R. Murrow, Hamms Bear 7:00 Mr.

Keen, CBS 7:30 M.C.J.C. vs. Mnrshalltown 8:15 Mohawks vs. Cedar Falls 9:50 Sports Camera, Phillips "B8" 10:00 News Roundup, Globe-Gazette 10:35 Music Out of the Blue 10:30 Music Out of the Blue-Umax) 10:45 Bculah, General Foods 11:00 News. CBS 11:05 Dance CBS 12:00 News, CBS Saturday A.

M. 5:30 Morning Houser (Truax) 6:00 News (Mlnshall) 6:05 Morning Rouscr (Truax) Let's Go VlsHInj, Allied Mlltf Farm Equipment Sales Improving DES MOINES WJ--Farm equipment business is on the upswing again after a slump earlier this year. Karl Fredrickson, Dayton, who was elected president "of the Iowa Retail Farm Equipment Assn. here Thursday, said business had been picking up" the past two months and he looked for a good year in 1954. "We can't sit down and take orders any more like we used to'," Fredrickson said, "We'll have to go out after the business." Strikers Close Another Newspaper YORK Strikers closed another New York newspaper Friday as 'federal mediators met with union and publishers' negotiators in renewed efforts to get the presses rolling.

Eight newspapers now have been shut down in the week-long strike situation--seven of -them the big Manhattan dailies and the eighth a smaller paper serving the householders of Queeris Borough, Their combined daily circulation is nearly 5,600,000. As a three-man mediation panel met separately management and AFL photo-engravers representatives on the seventh strike day, it was' indicated both sides had settled down to a tug of war. Farm Reporter, State Brand 6:45 News, Mid-Continent 7:00 Musical Clock News. Ca.ihway Lumber Co. Almanac 7:45 Keep Time With 11:15 Holsum Headlines, Holsnm Bremft 8:30 Kitchen Klinic, St.

Charlei Mystery Melody 9:00 Bible Broadcast, Senlman 0:15 Today In Osage, Glare Merchant! I.cs Paul and Mary Material 9:35 Lot's Pretend, CBS 10:00 Saturday At the Lake 10:25 Galen Drake, General Foodi Saturday At the Lake 11:01) News, Campana 11:05 Theater of Today, Cream of Wheat 11:30 Les Paul and Mary Ford, 11:35 T.B.A. 11:45 Farm Feature Saturday P. M. :05 The Man On the Street, Prltchard'i 12:15 Musical Varieties 12:30 News. North Iowa (Kew) 12:45 Employment Views 1:00 Paul and Mary Ford, Ltsterlnt) 1:05 String Serenade, CBS Fun For A Toni, CBS 2:00 Best On Wax (Tmax) 4:45 Dnve noso 4:55 Safety Tips KSMN tWO DUI lilt For Best in Listening la Mkim City.

Full Broadcast of All Local School BASKETBALL 'KRIS' MBS--DIAL. 1490.

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