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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1950)
COMP HOtilnl fcl?i)In) CMilniy jRU(0)Q)Q)DInl Up U. oi C. Library Ore. TO ADAPTABILITY Joseph Demetor, left, and William Hicklin ere handicapped veterans employed at Bob's Salvage Yard at 2328 No. Stephens. They are capable workers in jobs for which they are fitted, according to L. H. Fitisimmons, who is an advocate of the program to employ handicapped workers in positions to which tney may adapt their abilities. National Employ the Phy sically Handicapped week is currently being observed. (Picture by Paul Jenkins.) Roseburg-Junction Highway Work Let To Portland Firm ruru r-x c 15 3lcivi, yci. ir, The state highway commission j today awarded a $134,514 con-, tract for grading and paving .53 miles of the Garden Valley ,an.Rn..nro ..rtinn of the P,.naroara mmer, win give . - - -j citic highway. The project is at the north city limits of Roseburg. The successful bidder is K, F. Jacobsen & Co., Portland. The project requires 10,600 cubic yards of excavation, 9, 800 cubic yards of topping ma terial, 1,300 cubic yards of crushed rock or crushed gravel, 690 cubic yards of concrete in curbs, gutters, stairs, walks and islands; and 5,000 tons of as phaltic concrete. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS Add this to your collection of strange facts about our country: In New York the American Com munist nartv maintains a training school for communists. It is called ine jenerson acnooi oi aw-iai rci-: ence. ll is me principal irauim center for communists and commu nist sympathizers in the eastern part of the United States. It was founded in 1944. and since 1947 it has been on the U. S. at torney general's list as an "adjunct cl the Communist party." It expect an enrollment this fall of about 4000. in.-, uui-iiuii .. .7 What kind of people in this conn- try want to go to a communist : MlHKJl iu ii ttin iiicinnrivra uvr skilled and competent communists? This, I think. . the answer PF.OPI.E WHO HOI'K , THE TIME WII.I. COME WHEN THEY ANO THEIR II. K CAN SEIZE POWER AND RUN THE COUN TRY. A cra7y hope, you say? Not TOO crazy for cracked minds. Run back through the list of com- j munist satellite countries-particu-. larlv those behind the iron curtain in Kurope. How did they get that wav? They got that w-ay when a little band of native commies, with the aid of Russia. SF.IZKI) POWER BY KORCK AND 1IKI.I) IT. Czechoslovakia is a good example That is how it happened there That is how it has happened nearly everywhere it has happened. (Continued on Paee Four) LUCKY BARBER SPALDING. Eng. i.P The ' prire in a local battle of. Britain : anniversary competition was free haircuts for three months. The winner: W. J. Thompson a narner. Medics' Assn. Against Socialized Medicine t,l-IHAfc7U lAfl The : j locn .j :.: 'he d.nger of socialised medicine and th in, trend .w.rdim.er W Stalin today w a , state socialism start, Sunday. Igreeted vh mixed reaction at The AMA will place advertise-, c - heme and silence from Moscow, ments in every bona fide daily and .. . ,. ."essen. an unsuccessful seeker " i.jw u'.iii.inq kly newspaper in the ImN Slates. Hawait and Alaska -about II (. in all Fnll nan. an. s-,II k. run in 30 national mainlines, in- !,", . . , , ,L ... letter suggesting further cr;es cludmg Sunday newspaim suppie-: w .',i""!r' fl!rec'or ' the AMAs ponnpn,.. or , ace-to-fare meet- ments, and a score of advertising . trade publicaljons. . wno '"used them of "political Some l.snoHadio stations in all frrt' "d of "headlong re the states an,! Ihe two lerr.lorie. tTr. from P".bl,c discussion of this will broadcast AM A-sponsored spot a.inouncemen'a,ONer a two-w e e k pti.od. w The campaign will run the a s- sociation's rlay m its fight asatnst cnmiWory health insur- ance to well over H.rjno.OOO in two years. Administration supporters of 7 . t ; . I ; MM ! Mil 11 Institute For Teachers Slated The Douglas County Teachers in stitute will be held Friday, Oct. 1 13, at the Roseburg junior high school. It will follow the two-day elementary learners wuriunu. (jet. 11 and 12, also at the junior njsn building, The day-long institute will get underway at 8:15 a. m., when a Sutherlin choral group, directed by short concert Following this, an Oregon Edu cation association business meeting is scheduled. According to County School Superintendent Kenneth Barncburg, any townspeople inter ested are invited to attend the re mainder of the day's activities. From 10:25 to 11 a. m., Frank Bennett, Salem cny superin lendent 'of schools, will deliver an address on the basic school sup port bill number 306. From 11:4S to 12 noon, Mclvin Miller will sketch his itinerary through Eu rope. Afler Innch. ttie Riddle high school band will play a brief con cert, followed by a panel discus sion on youth problems. This panel, moderated by R. R. Brand, junior high principal, will include repre sentative of the home, church, el ementary and high schools, a lo cal business man and a member ol the juvenile court. A detailed schedule of the work' shop program will be announced mental hygiene. High school teach- i ers will attend a workshop in ' Springfield Nov. 2 and 3. A 1 Alaska Polio In 'Epidemic' Stage (By lh Auoctatod Preuf territorial neann otiicers nave ,jnni ,h. ihi -niH.mie" nn ih. Territorial health officers oulbreak of on.,,, Fairbanks and Anchorage. Alaska. Two additional cases of polio! were diagnosed in the latter city to 14 since Aug. 1. i Ten rases at Anrhoraee. two in Ketchikan and one at Juneau are also listed by territorial health of- fieers. As the disease continued to spread, the National Foundation or inf'am;ie Paralysis moved in wHh aid Tne Kounda,lnn ,aid jn New Yoik it had flown four respir- ,, north (rom sl,ppv cen,er, jn xs Angeles and Portland. Ore. Six Red Cross nurses are being re cruited for work in Fairbanks and Anchorage. A consultant of the service is enroute Two additional "iron lungs" soon will be put in service at Anchorage One. purchased by the Lions clnbi ' is expected to arrive tomorrow. The j Klks lodfe said it alcn wi neo,.. tiating to purchase another respir-' ator At Fairbanks, where schools have been closed for more than a week. the Night Club Owners association authorized purchase of a JJ.500 iron lung. Readies Drive . ' American Medical association . l.. . n (.mpiian fgatniT wnflT IT ca t ' ...... .i.. I. .' . : neal'n '"'""I" P" have criti " "-" "rriling Cam public issue." Whitaker and Ione Baxter. ! (ay director of the AMA s national education campaign, said this year a budget set aside S.VM.0O0 for 7rch. "one-shot" ads in the newspapers. IVm.nnn for radio ad - vertising and J2j0.000 for national magattne ads. i.-.ci. mc nciini uKmt wi i;oi western allied reports that ai Establish 117 Rail Traffic In Vienna Paralyzed Highway Also Blocked By Trucks, Plows Buildings In Russian Zone Seized In Anger Over Collapse Of Strike VIENNA P Communist demonstrators halted all rail traffic in and out of Vienna to day. , The federal railway adminis- ning into or from the Austrian capital in any direction. An American, Curtis T. Et tingor of Scarsdalo, N. Y., re ported tho Communists had set up threo road blocks at St. Poelten on the highway lead ing from Vienna to tho Amer ican lone. He said: "Communists have turned over trucks and plows. They are refusing to allow any Aus trian trucks or cart to go through." Police, despito Russian orders not to interfere, tried unsuc cessfully to stop tho demonstra tors. VIENNA. Austria fit Angry Communists waged a war of build ing seizures and traffic disruption in the Russian zones of Austria today following failure of their "general" strike Wednesday. The Reds occupied two federal post office and telephone exchange buildings and were driven off by police in an attempt on a third. Other bands roamed Vienna streets, slopping streetcar traffic i and fighting with car operators. the Communists also blocked three secondary railway lines in the Russian zone a local line from Vienna to Baden, a commu ter's line along the Danube, and a northbound line from Vienna to ward the Czech frontier. A sabojge attempt was'reported at the huge Donawitt steel works in Grai, in the British zone, where Communist workers doused the fires in all the blast furnaces. The fires were immediately rekindled by other workers. Their actions, plant officials said, saved six months production. Three Commun ists were arrested. The renewal of anti-government demonstrations came on the heels rnm,irm ; k.j , " 'a ih. a. ia. , i . . " for a putsch against Austria's coali tion government. Car Linos Damaged Koving hands of Communist fan- miC,VhnTeblr,:l3,,1,40 """"'lic.n soldier, taken prisoner by I''l rty-'tcar power !the Conimilnjs, ,rm, ut ,he total equipment and switches in at least u,,,: sueeu-ar oarn in ine KUS- sian sector of Vienna Thev m1H 1 , " ' lney. plTa ,n .. ... ' n... Ith. e.nii.t r " At least seven streetcar operators were injured ,hrp(1 f ,pr ist violence v......u... . . .. . heed n Iv hv lf r .h V w" LSdkl1t'JS.."Xn . n j I " . """-'- trolled factories. Today even these; were resuming operation. pase Rumors Spread o n n -l By UerrtOS, Dewey Claims EN ROUTE WITH DEWEY T r:...-APn.. i. . i- n. f " mat cniidren will have to attend ! school on Saturdays if he's re - elected. "When thev oet ihai Inu ih. ,h,ve allllaly gotten below t h e 'ev'' 0l" Tammany sewers," Dewey ! told an Olcan Republican rally last night. Dewey said a Republican woman worker had told him her son had ! brought the tale home from school, Mixed Reaction At Home, Silence From Stassen's Bid By OLIVER W. DeWOLF W A C IlfWTAV y ri tl u 'lican Harold E. Stassen s bid for a sort of citizens' peace confer- . . . enpe win nmmimi. Kuctta I're. 'H 'he 1948 COP presidential nomination. disclosed that move Wednesday He made public a ing miblicly reported with Stalin in air effort "to stop the drift toward war." The State department promptly announced that Stassen's pirjital had o no official inspiration But it said if Sialin agrees to meet with the University of Penn- i svlvania Preident, Stassen tin- I doubtedly will get a passport to i Moscow. Stassen. queened by newsmen I about the poliWil implications of ROSEBURG, Roseburg Soldier Wounded In Korea Pvt. Robert Grove, above, has been wounded in action in Korea and has been flown to Madigan General hospital at Tacoma. ac cording to his mother, Mrs. E. W. Brittain, who returned today after visiting him. Mrs. Brittain said her son was shot through both arms and through both legs, and that he 'S suffering from gas gangrene. His condition, however, is tood, and ha. Dollmtf alnno .at if artnril V i ...a Pvt. Grove, who attended Rose burg schools, entered the service last February. He was sent to the Korean theater afler training at Fort Ord, Calif. He told hii mother he fought in the war 27 days with out relief. He arrived in the United States Monday. Atrocity Toll May Mount To 25,000 TOKYO JP) The Red re treat trail back to North Korea is strewn W'tth buried and unburied bodies of an officially estimated 2-VOno murdered men, women and children in South Korea. ! Where they could, the Reds cov erea me eviaence 01 nornuie uru talities with earthen entrench ments. In haste of retreat, they left many bodies in exposed mounds at some places. Some of the victims were Amer : is not known. Amr,. . vaid th. mer. ; all 25.000 figure is only a mini- " estimate ... the tragic to tal may run mucn mgner. South Koreans said most of the Victims were bludgeoned, speared, burned or hacked with hatchets for opposuvz communism. Mass graves, large and small. re bv""1 acned 1,0 in town' !.."' .""I" lh Dioooy retreai rome. Vanv oravP have not vet heen opened by American officers prob ing the mass murders. IT C Atr.ee fiw thol '.nuae-.l hundred" Americans ;tn 1 rI.4!Lt.L;4 whom the!'u,in Reds took into North Korea may be massacred before the onrush-' ing United Nations forces can . I reach them I N0 LONDON t.Vt Rajah, an In- Lii.. .i.i..ni ,. i I was put in chains today for con- ! duct unbecoming a gentleman. 1 Raiah pushed a hole in a wall ; at one end of his rage with his : head. He was greeted by screams. , On the other side of the wall is the ladies' powder room. For Peace Conference With his action, said it was "non - nol - ittcal." hut was "definitely a nvne I rom " individual in the Repub - i llca Part" r.. . ,. , j chance the State department report edly ''e4 ,"' ":rvcr, , V ' ..a .. iiuium..in; rAutri m. hi tic J'''a.I',. j . . . . ... wassen s letter nm not expiiciny asK tor a meenng wn statin nui uir nirriirr . iiiiicmii a Ki.riui,i said that was its "primary objec tive. " Past Criticism Recalled There were sigrs that Stalin Mht be less cordial toward the idea of talking vt Stassen than when the two flrsHnet in Moscow in IA4T. For one thing. Stassen's letter sfronglv denounced Russian as gression and her "refusal to coop- been that tension between East Soviet Union s rearmament of Last eraie in stoppir.' the Korean War. and West can best be eased in the i ern Geaany and with other re Then, too, t!)Mosrow Literary United Nations. 'Cent acans of the Soviet Union." ORECON THURSDAY. OCTOBER S, 150 Sheriffs Gun Ends Life Of Crazed Youth Pursuit Of Parolee, 19, Wanted on Theft Count, Ends Near Amity, Oregon MCMINNVILLE, Ore. UP A craied youngster, one jump ahead of police for hours, was shot to death in a stubblefield Wednes day as he ran screaming toward Sheriff W. J. Jones. It was the fourth time since Von- day night that police bullets had: been fired at Charles Farmer, 19. who escaped from police custody i at Bingen Wash Jones, searching a barn on a" vacant farm two and a half miles south of Amity a town south of here heard a noise. He turned ana saw farmer coming out 01 the house. carrying bundle of clothes. Jones waited until Farmer was about 50 yards from him. Then he called to him to stand still. Farmer laughed, screamed and yelled: "You'll have to lake me." Then, tugging at his belt, he ran toward the sheriff who fired one shot nvpp Farmpr'a head The young man, still tugging at his belt, continued on. Jones fired a .30-30 bullet through his chest, and Farmer fell dead. He had no gun It '.nrted hunt that staried it Bingen Monday night, when Far - mer, pirxcaup on a ourgiary charge while on parole from the Monroe, Wash., state training school, broke away from i'olu Chief C H. Wiermnn. Wierma firavH fmir timpe. within ha It in C ' Farmer. The hunt started again shortly after 11 o'clock Tuesday night when State Patrolman Robert Cooney, checking a man sleeping in a car at Bellevue, seven miles southwest of here, learned by radio the car was stolen and the driver was Far mer. Cooney fired three times in the darkness as Farmer, awakened and ordered from the car, fled. Five hours later the trail warmed found when a stolen car wai wrecked on a sharp curve on the Amity-Bellevue road. Then State Patrolman Joe Fore saw Farmer walking down a rail road track and fired when his halt order was ignored. Soon a resident reported seeing Farmer, and 20 patrolmen and Sheriff's officers converged on the area. Jones, trailing the marks left hy Farmer's cowboy boots, made the find. Immediately after the hunt was ended, McMlnnville patrolmen were ordered back. They were pall hearers today at the funeral of Patrolman Dale Courtney, shot to death in a chase of teen-age re formatory escapees Sunday. n .T Gene POWC-!.S C1..JU D.UUaJ Gene Powell's Master Studio on or an unaeierminea mourn oi cash and merchandise sometime last night, t'ity Police Chief Cal vin Band reported today. The robbery is second such crime committed Kosebui s in the past two weeks. On the nicht of Sept. 21. Knudtson's Jewelry u mkhnt nf merehanHise and cash, Chief Baird said the intruders entered the studio hy smashing a window near the hack door. Police : and Powell are checking the store to determine how murh merchan- dise and cash were stolen, 1 fiazelte had already nroDosed Stas sen for eventual trial as a war 1 criminal. J : ' "mmT" mi a mnnth m thai organ, which often re fleets oflirial Soviet policy, ! ITV V? TllTn'lZ I "en also told reporter,: .agression would "meanl. He plans to take a lease1 of that war will come lo Moscow " absence from his university next The Literary Gazelle said Stassen month to make a five to six weeks . --. . ' . - - was advocating atuwiic war. What Stassen'a proposal envis- W'hat Stassen's proposal envi . ,.,,,.... K,,wefn Sia- i ages is a 'eonference between Sta I in and Jeadine nolithuro mem ,, ,nd j,,, phuro mem- hers on one hand and himself and ' four or five other prominent Amer-i 1952 "I will be more likely aup 1 tcan citizens on the other. StMoicn porting some ether Iran for the declined to say whom he hait in mind for such a mission. The Truman administration has Stassen said he fni nd it impos Inoked coldly on recent suggestions : sible to reconcile Stalin's professed for high level V. S -Soviet talks, I desire for peace with "the North although the President has said Korean aggression, the Soviet he would welcome Stalin to Wash- Lnion a refusal to cooperate in ington. The official position has slopping that aggression, with the Third U. S. Ship Hits Mine Off Korea; 21 Men Missing x WASHINGTON (API The mine sweeper Magpie has been North Korea. Twenty one men are It was the third ship to hit e destroyers the Brush end the Mansfield were damaged by earlier collisions with mines end I I men on the Brush were iost. Twelve survivors of the Magpie were picked up by sister ship, the minesweeper Merganser. The commending officer of the Magpie, Lt. J, G. Warren R. Person, is among the missing. Total casualties from the three ships now ttend at 1 1 killed, 17 injured, and 24 missing. The navy has said the mines ere Russian-made but prelum- ably were sown by North Koreans, Lieutenant Person was the son of Roy Person of Pacific grov f4;f .', . .' c . . CL L. , . .. . Admiral Forrest P. Sherman, navy chief of operations, told Congressional committee last Mondiv that a "great many" Russian-made floating mines have been found in Korean waters, He said they had been "recently laid and not long out of the storehouse." Talks Between Railroads, Unions Point To Fresh Wage Hike Demands For Workers WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 '. the railroads and Firemen's and upon today as the first ripple of a new wave of wage demands for 1,250,000 rail workers. The Brotherhood of Firemen and Enginemen, headed by David B. Robertson, end the fleers, led by J. B. Shields, were neqotiators on their delayed demand. ;; Registration To Close Saturday Registration for the Nov. 7 elec tion will end Saturday, Oct. 7, ac cording to County Clerk Roy Agee. The clerk's office, located in the rountv courthouse, will remain Kuinriiav ml aaiurusy iu open until 8 p. r handle late registrants. Persons wishing to register may do so at the court house as well as with some 41 official registrars ihrnuphnut the couiitv who have !!" pii"'1..S: KAK"i"e1L- irars mar I,,,., clerk s office for the following dis tricts: Azalea, Camas Valley. Can yonville, Comstock, Days Creek, Dillard, Dixonville. Drain, Elkton, Garden Valley, Gardiner, Glendale, Glide, Green, Uunler, Looking glass. I,oon Lake. Melrose, Myrtle treek. Oakland, Reedsport, Riddle, Scottsburg, Smith River, Sutherlin, Tiller, Tri City. Umpqua, Winches ter Bay, Yoncalla. An additional registrar has heen appointed in the Wilbur and Rose burg districts. For Wilbur residents registration may he done with Mrs. Elsie Broszio. Besides the court house in Roseburg. voters may reg ister with Mrs. Grace R. Pope of 203.' N. Stephens street or at the Democratic headquarters with Mrs. The Democratic headquarters will open at a m. Saturday and emain open until 10 p.m. for reg - Grants regardless of party, ac cording lo Mrs. llannon. Train Strikes Oil Tank; More Than 40 Injured ERIE. Pa. I. VI A New I York Central railroad flyer clipp - i ing along at heller than a mile a minute smashed into a derailed freight oil tank car early today, . aettinii off an explosion which Miraculously, no one was killed. Between 40 and SO were injured but none was burned although flames from the burning tanker lapped at some of the cars on the palatial westbound express. Moscow Greet Joseph Stalin - , Stassen said the letter was Ihe ; result of a long series of confer ences with KeDuhl ican senate ann - ! house leaders, university presi dents, retired military officials and tourof the Far Fast to study con- ditiWis and confer with leaders in most Asiatic countries other than Red ( hina O 7 He now anticipates that I Republican presidertial) nomm anon than he invoh ed myself. 223-50 By Reds navy announced today the sunk by floating mine near missing. mine in Korean waters. Two (API Exploratory talks between Engineers' unions were looked Brotherhood of Locomotive Engi. set to start talks with railroad Firemen and enginemen want a 40-hour work week for 4ft hours' pay. Engineera reportedly are seeking a 20 percent pay boost Those demands were held up while the trainmen and the con ductors wrangled this summer with the nation's railroads. The lines were seized Aug. 27 to avert a strike of the 300.000 trainmen and conductors whose dispute still i" unsolved. They turned down one , .., h.,.rl n.u in. crease for yard service employes and a nickel an hour for those on the rolling trains plus cost of living increases for the next three years. The switchmen and yardmen ac cented the railroad's offer hecause mest of their members would get the 23-cent increase. i The railroads committee, headed by Daniel P. Loomis, has to talk with all of the rail unions press ing for the shorter work week with out loss of pay. New Pay Demands Due After today's preliminary session with IiOomis' committee, the en-1 . -f.i r gineers and firemen will come up!e ,n " ,,',h 'nnin9. -with brand new wage'demands in!'1 crossing the home plate another 10 days. At least the union I after singling, Advancing to chiefs have called their divisional j third on another single, by Wait chairmen to meetings here next I l... i i: II. i.ii.. operating rules proposals. In addition to the firemen and enginers. claiming to represent nm! .l) locomotive crewmen """"" n h non-operating field , "" 7 j ' " "m 'purpose Oct. 11. 1 he hers do not ride the trains are under the general leadership of George E. Leighly. president of the Order of Railroad Tele graphers. Pressure for a substantial wage ! increase for the non operating unions was touched oil a week 1 apo hy AI .1. Hayes, president of the International Association of I Machinists, who said increased liv- 1 menl necessary. j The 15 non-operating unions were i placed on a 40-hour work week i without loss in pay on Sept. 1. 1949. : I hey had also received a seven cent hourly wage increase effec- live in Oclohcrfl, 1918. NEW POLIO CASES PORTLAND '.PI The stale hoard oi health reports there were 2H new cases of poliomyelitis m the state last week, as compared with 40 the previous week. Light were in this city, three ounv ne am inoman county sec - 1 tors, turee in Linn county and two each in Clatsop, Marion and I ma tins counties. Portland s total for Ihe year is 71. The Weather p. Cloudy with thewtrt today, be coming portly cloudy with icot- tortd light thowors tonight and Friday. - , Highttt temp, for any Oct. Lowott torn p. for any Oct . Highott torn p. yotttrday . LoAoit tomp. lait 24 hrt. ... Procipitation latt 24 hrt. Precipitation from Oct. 1 Procipitation from Sopt. 1 Exctit from Oct. 1 V17 l.M Suntot today, S 41 p.m. tunrito tomorrow. i:H A.m. Reds Defeated In Desperate All-Day Fight Allied Army Of 175,000 Readied For U.N. Permit To Cross 38th Parallel Br the AMorlaum PraW South Korean forces captured the North Korean town of Chang, jon, 60 air miles north of the 38th parallel today, and continued their advance. The Korean republic't Third di vision beat down the strongest re sistance yet encountered north of the border to take the town in an all-day fight. Thirty-five miles south of this deepest penetration into Commun ist territory, the Republican Cap ital division engaged a bypassed force of about 1.2U0 Reds in the hills west of Hwangpo. The South Korean gains were announced as 175.000 American and allied troops massed along the par allel with United Nations approval of invasion assured. The United Nations political com mittee, on which all members of the assembly are represented, hai given the go-ahead aignal for mea sures to unify Korea, and Gen. MacArthur's headquarters h a 1 made it clear his forces are ready to go into North Korea as needed. Peace Plans Drawn . A vote of the full United Nations assembly giving the implied per mission for the invasion is to come swiftly, perhaps the end of this week. This plan, sponsored by Britain, Australia, Brazil, Cuba, the Nether lands, Norway, Pakistan and the Philippines, permits the U. N. forces to remain in Korea long enough to achieve unity. It calls for elections for all Korea under U. N. sponsorship, economic re- nantiitalion of the country, and a new U. N. commission of seven members to see that the directive! are carried out. This plan was adopted by a 47 to S vote in the political committee last nieht. with only the Soviet bloc voting against it. Thus far only South Korean troops are across the 38th parallel. in ine souin, trapped ana widely scattered Red remnants were turning to guerrilla tacticr in at tempts to harass rear areas. Cut olf by the V. N. push to and across the 38th parallel, the Reds have degenerated intn disorganized elements, raiding villages for food and staging small group ambushes against U. N. troops. Teams Tied In 7th7 1 to 1 In the .econd game of the World Series todey, the Yan kees end Phillies were tied l-l at ih end of the sixth inning. Opposing pitchers were Rey nolds of the Yankees and Rob erts for the Phillies. The Yankees scored first. In the second frame, when Cole man walked end reached home on singles by Reynolds end Woodlina. Tk. PkMi:.. L ... J il. .'. . '""7 Ashltrn s long fly. rtOUSewlfe If limed BV EXposjon Of Hot Tor "plosion wr lor Batty Steward, wife ef River side school teacher Earl Stew ard, was seriously burned this morning as e result of e fire accident. She was heating tar te apply te the reef ef a building near har heme at the north end ef Harrison street, whan It ex ploded, splattering the contents ' ! ever her clothes and body. She was rushed te Mercy hos pital for treatment of second or third degree burns. She was burned severely en the arms. "A paqo li only to long and to wido. Evon tho linotyp can'tL iqueoio typo." READ What Wendell Webb Soys about TH! PAGES ARE KEADIfp o Page 4 Today ine Levity Fact Rant By L F. Reuenstein First person to act increased 175 pay under th expanded social !) security law Is Miss I. H. Ful ler. Coincidentally appropriate. w o . O