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The Kansas City Times from Kansas City, Missouri • 1

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(THE Morning, KANSAS CITY STAR) VOL. 114. NO. 281. KANSAS CITY, NOVEMBER 23, 1951 FRIDAY 32 PAGES.

PRICE 5 CENTS BIGGER WAR HINT DRIVE RED WEDGE Ike Keeps Lead With Straw Vote About Over. The national Eisenhower Taft straw, poll, with tabulation almost completed, shows these results: Elsenhower Taft The Star 13,716 7,437 Boston 11,801 9,947 Philadelphia 8,800 11,840 Hartford, Conn. 2,392 1,338 Portland, Me. 2,120 2,554 Burlington, Vt. 1,183 347 Springfield, Mass 1,373 1,041 South Bend, Ind.

1,534 852 Houston 4,728 2,728 Network Broadcast 6,780 THE HEATHER COLDER. Kansas City and vicinity: Mostly cjoudy-and colder today; high near 30; low tonight near 25. Fair and not so cold tomorrow; high near 35. The temperature readings 1 p. p.

rto 2 p. 32 1 9 p. 30 3 p. 3110 p. 29 4 p.

30 11 p. 28 5 p. .......30 12 midnight 27 6 p. 30 1 a. 27 7 p.

30! 2 a. 26 Unofficial. A year ago yesterday, high 57. low 33. Precipitation in 12 hours ending 6:30 p.

.01. Highest wind velocity yestprdav, 19 mile. River stage 7 p. m. yesterday.

8 feet; rise of .1 of a foot since 7 a. m. yesterday. Relative humidity. 12:30 p.

92 per cent; 6:30 p. 88 per cent. Barometer reading, 6:30 p. 30.16 inches, rising. THE ALMANAC.

Sun rises. .7 :09 a. m.Sun sets 4:59 p. m. rises.

.1:09 a. m. Moon 1:47 p. m. Moon phase New moon November 28.

Morning stars Venus. Saturn. Mars. Evening stars Jupiter. Mercury.

Cloudy and cold today; highs 25 Missouri Cloudy and colder today: much east and south; highs near 30 north- The Western Bisr Three wes'- 40 oulheast- A UC VVCSLCill AJlfc, J. (De wiled observations on page 3 6. INTO ALLIED FOLD Security Investigators Report Infiltration in Rail Industry Through a Union. A SECRET MESSAGE WEB Contempt Citation for Leader of Dining Car and Food Workers Is Asked. Legislation to Raise a Barrier to Such Activity Also Urged.

rPir 8TORV PAGE 14. Washington, Nov. 22. (AP) Senator McCarran (D-Nev.) said today the Communist party has established the nucleus of a courier system on American railroads for communication among its underground leaders. Washington, Nov.

22. (AP) General Hoyt S. Vandenberg indicated tonight that the United The6 RedshTye gTined Crfoot. JOLLY OFF STAGE, TOOj States might decide to probably will be completed late today. Ballots postmarked before midnight last Wednesday night will be included in the final count.

44,864 The tabulation of ballots in The Star straw poll on Republican presidential preferences FRIENDLINESS CHARACTERIZES, TED MACK, RADIO-TV M. C. Tonight He AVill Conduct Ills Amateur Hour In the Arena for Benefit of Baptist Hospital Fund. Powers and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of Ger-! C4 spvte a stated 4V.sJ"ifes Marksmanship May Force many agreed today on thej Male to neTlse 0piion. main principles designedj Ithaca, n.

yT Nov. to make West Germany a a womans place is in the Allied -me Pbceman Joseph Humble nearly sovereign told his wife at 6 EGYPTIAN WOMEN STUDY GUERRILLA TACTICS Armed, ironically, with British Lee-Enfield rifles, Egyptian women members of the so-called liberations battalions undergo combat training in Cairo. Their grim occupation adds another disturbing note to the intense British-Egyptian dispute regarding the Suez canal area (Wirephoto). Accord on Cease-Fire Line. a.

m. today when he went hunting. At 7 a. Mrs. Humble shouldered a rifle and went out to try her luck.

At 7:30 a. m. she bagged an 8-point, 175-pound deer. At 6 p. m.

her husband returned empty-handed. HOLIDAY TOLL IT SLOWLY. Deaths This Year May Not Equal Last Year's. (By the Aociated Prr.) Accidental deaths over the Thanksgiving holiday mounted slowly last night, indicating they would fall short of the record total set last year. nation.

They decided to keep the principles secret because some details remain to be worked out. After a 2-hour meeting, the Western foreign ministers and Adenauer, who serves as his own foreign minister, issued a communique saying: The occupation statute with its powers of intervention in the domestic affairs of the federal republic will be revoked when the agreement comes into effect probably early in 1952. To Keep Special Rights. They agreed the three Western Powres will retain only such special rights relating to the stationing and security of the forces in Germany, to Berlin and to questions concerning Ger many as a whole. A communique issued by Sec retarv Acheson, Anthonv Eden, inert KK OX PAGE 3-1 An Irishman named Maguinessj arrived at the Municipal Air er- whether we wVlf continue fight minal yesterday afternoon, ex- jng a war Df half-way measures changed first-name greeting with ln Korea-a war which, at I ent halts our air Power at the Yalu river and gives the enemy sanctuary in Manchuria.

Air fighting ln Korea now is a peculiar type of operation, Vandenberg said. He cant knock out the enemys potential at Its source. He are operating mainly in a tactical role the role of air power to assist ground forces. fifty civic and social leaders and was hustled into a Cadillac which led off a procession of twelve limousines, whirled uptown and installed in the penthouse of the Hotel Muehlebach. It turned out that he was a casual, very friendly sort of a guy, busy as all get-out shaking hands, reading telegrams, searching around for a place to The outcome of the present truce negotiations holds the key lay his coat and hat, talking into microphones and stopping from time to time to chat with a 6- One of General Douglas Mae-Arthurs disagreements with Truman was over the year-old girl who seemed to be restrictions placed on American in the forefront of his admirers.

Television and radio audiences know this modest, smiling s- Ma beyond the actual battleground. Macks Original Amateur Hour show called the Family and a air power in Korea. MacArthur wanted to extend the area of attack and hit at supply bases Administration Folicy. British foreign secretary; Robert deaths Schuman. French foreign min-; ister, and Adenauer made no.

mention initheir communique of Field possible recruiting of German troops to join the Western worlds defenses against communism. But they said they considered Castro (API um. me ocu a big A An 4 MOUMTAIM hold in the railroad industry through a small independent union of dining ear employees, a Senate internal security subcommittee headed by 3IcCar-ran reported. McCarran said: It will be obvious that members of a Communist-dominated union of this character establish for the party a message channel as effective and more secret than the United States mail. Directed by Communists.

The subcommittee identified the labor organization as the Dining Car and Railroad Food Workers union and said that since its founding in 1947, its activities have been directed from the Communist party headquarters in New York City. An investigation of the union was made by the subcommittee, which announced findings in secret testimony taken during July, August and September. The report was the second recently by the subcommittee on labor organizations. The earlier one dealt with the American Communications association independent union ousted from the C. I.

O. as run by Communists. McCarran said both studies underscored the need for protecting the nations key industries against subversive infiltration of their labor forces. New Legislation Sought. After the subcommittees communications inquiry, McCarran introduced a bill to prevent certification as a bargain ing agent by the National Labor relations board of any Communist union.

In its new report, the subcommittee recommended preparation of similar legislation for railroad labor organizations. It also urged that Solon C. Bell of Chicago, president of the Dining Car and Railroad Food Workers union, be cited for contempt of Congress because of his refusal to answer numerous questions. Bell was one of fourteen officers and organizers of the union who were identified as Communists by witnesses at the hearings, subcommittee sad. In his appearance before the senators last September 2d.

Bell refused to say whether he was a member of the Communist party on the ground that the an- an ing with the 1st cavalry division. Brothers Are Honor Guard. The two others, who were Valley, Nov. 22. assigned by the army as an Did you ever see such; honor guard for their fallen mountain lion W.

R. brother, bore grim reminders thekcontractual arranernVntsDunn exclaimed today as he of the grievous wounds they suf-to be concluded between at a stretch of country fered in Korean fighting. Governments as well as the three mile away through field Cpl. Henry Needham, 21, lost treaties for' the creation of an glasses. jhis left leg and his left arm integrated European commu- He watched the animal move.was paralyzed when he stepped nitv as essential steps to the one direction, then Imon a land mine on suicide hill.

The short, slenderly built sol- achievement of their common I. another, sometimes leaping high ll.l.lSIOW Hour. Ted is here for a benefit performance of his Amateur Hour at 8:30 oclock tonight in the Arena of the Municipal Auditorium. The proceeds will go to the Baptist Memorial hospital fund. Dinner in Denver.

He had Thanksgiving dinner Munsan, Nov. Communist and Allied delegates today agreed in principle on where to draw a cease-fire line in Korea. A United Nations command spokesman said the agreement gave the United Nations exactly what it asked for at the beginning of the talks in July. Even though agreement is reached on a ceasefire line, three other major issues remain to be settled. It was pointed out that the agreement by the subcommittees on the cease-fire line still must be approved by the full 5-man truce committees of each side.

The compromise solution apparently ended debate which began July 27 on the demarcation line issue. If the full committees approve the agreement, as expected, they will move on to the third item on the agenda, supervision of the truce. The cease-fire line agreement provides that both sides will draw a demarcation line immediately and will accept it as the final line if a full armistice agreement comes within thirty days. Besides agreeing on supervision of the truce, the negotiators must still reach agreement on exchange of prisoners and recommendations to their governments on eventual withdrawal of troops. The Allied subcommittee today accepted the Red demand that if agreement is not reached within the 30-day limit they would wait to revise the cease-fire line until just before both sides sign a final armistice settlement.

Earlier, the U. N. command had shied away from setting up any line that would tend to become permanently fixed in the event negotiations dragged on interminably. The Allies had feared that the Communists were seeking a cease-fire only and once this was achieved, would delay the rest of the armistice negotiations in endless talk. Apparently the U.

N. command now was willing to take the chance in the hope of reaching a truce settlement before Christmas. At least 102 persons were killed accidents from the time the holiday started at 6 o'clock, Wednesday night to Thursday niSht- Highway mishaps ac- counted for seventy-six of the UO.y AM Dunn called the sheriff's office. Deputies spotted the animal through their field glasses and called for rifles. They crept through shrubbery into shooting range, then made a discovery What they had been tracking was an alley cat.

DINNER FAR FROM HOME. Foreign Students Are Served Turkey at Decker Home. students from Pakistan, Jordan, Poland, Germany, Japan, Iran, Egypt, Jamaica, Estonia, Italy a aim: A unified Germany in-into the air. But when the ani-tegrated within the Western: mal headed for a herd of cattle. a few hours earlier in Denver! a baby A-bomb has been de-with his father and stepmother, veloped.

He said the recent Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Maguiness.jfom'c est Frenchmans His father is a retired railroad in Nevada have given the brakeman, and Ted had flown force a new atomic tactical Wednesday from New York to) weapon which can be utilized be with him and Mrs.

Maguiness: against armies in the field. on a part of Thanksgiving day. He added there are still some In the crowd at the penthouse) bugs to he taken out of the were two old cowpunehers. One weapon, but that these problems was Joe Nolan, a city council- will be solved by the time the man who has been buying cattle air force is built up in Western on order at the stockyards Europe. U.

S. May Go All -Out in Korea if Truce Talks Fail, Air Chief Indicates. READY WITH BABY A-BOMB Gen. Vandenberg Reports, How, ever, There Are Some Bugs to Be Worked Out. SCORE 6 TO 1 ON MIGS In Some Respects F-86 Is Better Than Russian Plane, He Declares.

fight an all-out air war in Korea if the present truce negotiations fail. Air power has not been really utilized in Korea, the air force chief of staff said on a radio show. Fighting in Shackles. The administrations policy is to limit air strikes to Korea for the present. Bombing beyond its bborders, the policy makers have felt, might bring Russia into the conflict at a time when the United States is not fully prepared.

Vandenberg confirmed reports Few B-29 Losses. As of now, he said, we have had eleven losses out of 11,570 sorties. As to jet-to-jet combat, we have knocked down six to their one. The situation Korea. OLD SHOE WORTH HUSiTIXG.

Jewels Yalued at $18,000 Are la It Somewhere. rsen-fe-e ot tho Xrw York Yonkers, N. Nov. 22. Somewhere in a pile of refuse, perhaps in the city dump, is art old shoe containing 518,000 in jewels belonging to Mrs.

Irene Madden of Yonkers. Her husband, Edward Madden, reported to police today that his wife took the gems out ot a safe deposit box in a New Isnnb NaAaLam T4 -a. York City bank October 15. For safekeeping, until they could be appraised, she put the jewels in the old shoe. Today, she wanted the jewelry to wear for Thanksgiving dinner.

Then she remembered shed thrown the old shoe in a rubbish can several days ago. Lost were a 55,000 diamond ring, a platinum and diamond bracelet worth 59,000, and two unmounted diamonds valued at 52,000 apiece. AMBUSH A BRITISH BUS. Two Soldiers Killed and Two Wounded liy Egyptian Terrorists. Ismailia.

Egypt, Nov. 22. (UP) Two British soldiers were killed and two others wounded when terrorists ambushed a troop-carrying bus in the Canal zone last night. Save parkin safety. Call Ye; worries ride with Cab, GR.5000.

Ad, Many wonderful values ln TV jets. Jenkins Music Co 1217 Walnut. Ad, European community. The ministers reaffirmed their intention to strive for the es- tablishment of German unity. They agreed to support proposals now before the United Nations to find out whether free elections can be held simultaneously in Western Germany, the Soviet zone and Berlin.

To a Basis of Equality. The communique described the general agreement as a decisive step toward the integration of West Germany on a these many years. The other was Ted Mack. Their conversation naturally turned to cows, years a wav It developed that Ted born in; Jp chajlenged reports that Greeley. got his start lnj American losses of the big B-29 fn distranytardays (about bombers are heavy in Korea Guided missiles, Vandenberg reported, are still quite a few The American custom of observing Thanksgiving was intro-.

iduced last night to thirty-five basis of equality a jstudents from foreign countries community itself included a jvvho attended a dinner at the developing Atlantic commu-. home Qf Dr Clarence R. Decker. president of the University of The four ministers also agreed that their principal aim was a peace settlement for the whole Kansas City, and Mrs. Decker, 5100 Rockhill road.

Among the guests were JOY HAS PATHETIC SIDE THREE SONS RETURN TO MOTH-ER FROM KOREA. Even Though One Is Dead and the Others Severely Wounded, It Is Her Happiest Thanksgiving. Lansing, Nov. 22. (AP) Grief-strickcn Mrs.

Josephine Needham had what she called her happiest Thanksgiving today. Her three sons came hotne from Korca One is dead, one crippled and the third is recovering from wounds. The oldest of the three. Sergt. John Needham, 25, was brought home for final burial.

He fell in Korea in January while serv- dier was awarded five purple heart decorations and a bronze star. Cpl. Richard Needham, 23, got two Purple Heart awards for wounds he suffered with the 24th division in Korea. He was given medical discharge November 16 after spending several weeks in army hospitals in Korea. Richards home-coming wag marked by a reunion with his wife, Theda, and his first glimpse of their 3-month-old son, Stephen.

The widowed mother of the boys disregarded the advice of physicians and went to the railroad station in the early morning hours to see her sons arrival. Governor Also Is There Gov. G. Mennen Williams, Mayor Ralph Crego and a large turnout of army personnel and representatives of veterans organizations also were on hand to pay homage to the boys. Doctors had told Mrs.

Needham they feared the trip to the control of thirty-eight men holding its ropes. It slammed into a lamp-post and poof! With a sigh of escaping gas the sad monster settled and flattened on the street. Balloon doctors with patches and fresh supplies of gas rushed to its aid but all efforts at revival were unavailing. It was the first balloon casualty in the twenty-five years of the parades. A throng of 250,000 youngsters, plus probably as many of their elders, lined the 2-mile parade route down Central Park West and Broadway.

Thousands more saw the show in which Santa Claus was guest of honor on television. The police said the youngsters behaved real well all along the streets. Only a few scooted under the sidewalk barriers to get a better look. out into the yards as a flunky. Maybe there didnt seem to be any future in punching cows in and out of gates.

Anyhow. Ted He similarly declined to say ifjwent to Denver university to F-86. he had an occupation or if heiStudy law. But after a couple of Vandenberc said aircraft nr was president of Ihe Dininz in the I'nited Si.les iond nRra'i r0hed eten The He went on rod wltH but he did not ion or ne een Knew oi indicate to what extent the fac- Ted Maguiness and his or- lories are behind schedule. Bell formerly was biferiiation wre piayintr at San! The wre very high al representative of the Hotel jqofThe first for lhe industry, he said and .1 rl "0, in 15-0.

11IC 11 tj is that in some respects our F-86 is superior to the Russian MIG-15, while in other respects the Russian MIG is superior to our later an fit tee ot he mmt i AH station iRht aggravate an illness brought on by news of the multiple misfortunes suffered by her sons. Tearfully, she insisted Thanksgiving day would not be complete if she did not see the train arrive. She wept softly during the brief ceremonies at the train, but finally sobbed I'm so happy my boys are home, as she collapsed in the arms of other members of her family. The family passed over plans for a Thanksgiving observance today. Instead, it spent most of the time at a funeral home with the fallen soldier who will be paid final honors at a military funeral Saturday.

RE-ELECTED IN ONTARIO. Toronto, Canada, Nov. 22. (AP) Ontario voters today returned to power the Progressive Conservative government of Leslie Frost, premier. An increased majority was indicated.

scholarship students at the university. dinner included turkey, cranberries and mince pie. Dr. spoke informally on Thanksgiving day customs and students responded by songs and relating stories their homelands. Across street from the Decker home, Christmas lights on a tree on the university campus were turned for the first time this season.

of the foreign students, Norway, Germany, Hawaii and Pakistan, were the Community Forum last night on WDAF-TV, STRIKE AT SHIFT PLANT. Buenos Aires, Nov. 22. thousand workers at the American-owned Swift packing at La Plata, about forty southeast of Buenos Aires, staged what the called an illegal strike. are The Decker the singing about the on Six from Holland.

on program (API-Five plant miles today government j- iA few nights electri-, emPbasized, how' A. F. international In 1047 and "Le 'ha' Ur a'r is ntt suffering for lack of planes in of Germany freely negotiated between Germany and her former enemies. They left the question of the final boundaries of Germany until such a settlement. There had been speculation that some boundary problems such as the Oder-Neisse line, which divides Eastern Germany and Poland, might he dealt with in today conference.

On leaving the conference at the French foreign ministry, Adenauer told reporters: I am very satisfied with what has been achieved. At least six treaties and conventions will have to be signed one of them the European army plan before the Western Powers change their occupation laws to a peace contract with West Germany. Wont Have Own Forces. The restrictions the Allies still will impose on Germany are these The German government will not be allowed to have Its own military forces except as members of the European defense force. Germany will have no uncontrolled heavy Industry that could make munitions for war.

The Allies can move In when tnere is an emergency that thev feel makes It necessary to preserve order or oppose Invasion. Allied troops, now an ocupation fore, are to remain on German soil and their expenses are to be shared by Germany and the Allies. Adenauer and an American spokesman, in separate news conference, called the 4-power conference highly successful YftH FIRST MOVIE AT 117. Dialogue Is Not Understood by Mien Mexican Carpenter. Brownsville, Nov.

22. (AP) Francisco Gomez, a native of Michoacan, Mexico, who says he is 117 years old, saw his first movie today. He had little comment after the show, which was understandable because he doesnt speak English, and the film was fresh from Hollywood. Gomez, a carpenter, is still active, and walks to and from jobs. He said he came to the United States in 1850.

and his A right Lewis, It smashed the on the COLI) Portland, Nov. 22.AP,- Thanksgiving dinner flew into the home of Robert 34, here today. was a Chinese pheasant that through a window in Lewis house, and collapsed the floor with a broken neck. Lewis already had his own Thanksgiving dinner, so he gave pheasant to a neighbor. AM) CLOUDY TODAY.

that, failing In that, they then met with Communist party leaders in New York to plan creation of the independent Dining Car and Railroad Food Workers union. In 1948 the union won a repre- sentation election on the Penn 1922 Tcd recalls) he carried he ancy title of assistant buyer I for Armour Co. we had the buying all ldone noon he said. In af(ern0ons they shagged me His Band Here In 33. Remember Ted Mack and his orchestra playing at the Hotel Muehlebach? Probally you don't.

It was away back in 1933. Ted had a trio of girl vocalists with him just little girls, he Sisters. Our band was here at the Muehlebach the night prohibition went out, he said. Remember that night? They were rolling beer barrels down Baltimore avenue. Well, one thing led to an other.

Ted joined the late Maj- Bradshaw said he felled it with a 30-30 rifle slug, just as a second and third bear crawled from the den. He shot both between the eyes, he said. The story was confirmed here today by Mrs. Emil Stusek, Burnett County undersheriff. Bradshaw, who enters the navy tomorrow, said two of the bears weighed 300 pounds each and the other, 475 pounds.

sylvania railroad and now is thejSaid- They were the Andrew Lamppost Goes Fishing and Comes Up With 60-Foot Giant JEW YORK, Nov. 22. (AP) A gust of wind caught the huge bag and whipped it out of the High Near so la Expected Raln'certified bargaining agent for about 2.200 of the lines dining car workers. The subcommittee said these other rairoads are represented in membership: Southern Pacific. Union Pacific, New York Central, Illinois Central, Chicago.

Milwaukee St. Paul, Chicago Groat Western. Atchison. Topeka Santa Fe, New York. Colder and mostly cloudy weather with a high temperature near 30 degrees is expected in the Kansas City area today, H.

L. Jacobson, forecaster, said. A clearing sky is forecast for tomorrow, with a high temperature near 35 degrees. -The low Edward Bowes, the famous old originator of the Original Ama- New Haven Hartford, Wa-jf0111 Hour, about 1936. He was bash, and Delaware, Lacka- the majors assistant, man-of-wana Western.

(Continued on Second Page.) 60-foot fish was caught on a street right smack in the heart of Manhattan today. And of all things it was a The American predicted that that snagged the whop-all the conventions could bejpCr completed by the end of this Thousands of screaming spec- first job was with a railroad in what is now Oklahoma. He doesnt smoke or drink, but doesnt credit this to his longevity. God willed it, he said. WAR It EM f.V ROOD SPIRITS.

Doctor Says Hcciipcrallng Governor Progresses Satisfactorily. San Francisco, Nov. 22. (AP) There was no Thanksgiving reunion for Gov. Earl Warrens six children today.

Only Mrs. Warren was per mitted to visit the 60-year-old G. O. P. presidential aspirant, recuperating from a Wednesday operation for removal of his appendix.

The governors physician, Dr Junius B. Harris said Warren was progressing satisfactorily in good spirits. Arrangements were being made to provide his University of California hospital room with a television set, so he can view the big game Saturday between Stanford and California. He has seen it every year since 1908. Fish nd seafood dinners.

24-hour service. Muehlebach Coffee Shop. Ad Youth Overcomes Three Bears When He Stumbles Into Den Q.RANTSBURG, Nov. 22. (AP) A 17-year-old St.

lowed, clawing at an overshoe and ripping off the buckles. tonight is expected to be near 25 degrees. Jacobson eliminated an earlier storm warning issued by the weather bureau which forecast sleet or freezing rain over parts of Kansas and Northern Missouri today. New weather trends indicate that the front expected to cause these conditions will row be pushed back south and east, he said. Highway patrols in both states reported no icing conditions last night.

Earlier yesterday spotty ice was reported in ex treme Northern Missouri and Northeastern Kansas. The high yesterday was 57 degrees and the low 30. The mean of 44 waa 3 above normal. Precipitation totaled .01 of an inch. Temperatures ranged from 67 to 33 degrees a year ago.

The highest temperature recorded for November 23 is 69 ln 1936 and the record low Is 7 degrees ln 1898. tators witnessed the spectacular event. The excitement was tremendous. A whale of a fish story so far, eh? Begins to sag a little now, though. You just cant keep a real good fish story going forever, even though a lot of fellows have tried it.

Now comes the bald truth of this promising tale. The fish was one of those giant gas-filled balloons that delighted the children and their elders in the annual Thanksgiving day parade. At Columbus Circle, a strong year. The European army plan proposed more than a year ago by France, and still under negotiations. may be a sticking point.

The plan so far drafted callsfor a 43-division of which Germany would supply twelve, France fourteen, Italy twelve, with five more from Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg together HIND OVERTURNS A TRAIN. Buenos Aires. Nov. 22. (AP) A tornado today derailed an Argentine taking 600 pas-senger' from Rosario to Tucu-man, overturning the cars and injuring forty-eight persons.

Place Sunday Star Want Ada today! ODen'til 8:30 p.m. Avoid the Saturday rush I Dial HA. 1300 lt'a so easy I Ad. Paul, youth has told a harrowing story of stumbling on a den of three sleeping bears and killing them after they attacked him. John Bradshaw, said he was hunting deer near Danbury, Saturday, when he stumbled into a hole.

His foot hit something soft, which proved to be a bear. As the youth scrambled out of the den. he said, a bear fol Dumont prices cut. We trade. VestQl Storage and moving.

Local, long dl. TV. 20th Clay, NKC. NO.3319. Allied AaC, VL' 0123.

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