Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, May 21, 1955, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    cPODGZRS BEATEN
dlevqdleaS
; Cut. by Detroit! . :
By THE .VSSOCIATffn PRESS
The Cleveland Ind'ns' American League lea was primmed to a
thin hali-asme Friday night when .the Trtbe took an 11-4 lacing
from te Detroit Titers and the second tyace New York 'ankcrs
whipped, the Baltimore Orioles, 7-5.
The Tigers broke the came wide nnen ?ih fk. m in id.
seventh against the lndians. Until then, things hd been fairly close,
I although neither starter Bob
Foul Costly
In 880 Race
LOS ANGELES W Arnie
Sowell, Pittsburgh's great middle
distance runner, today refused
to blame Tom Courtney of Ford-
Seattle Dnibs,
Portfaitf 11-2; j
Pads'Triurripfiji
Whitman Extends
Hitting 5tfeak
JBy UMJED PRESS
Tie San Diego Parties roifed iff
their seventh straight victory Fri- j
day night with an 8-2 decision
over Sacramento behind tie effec
tive pitching of John Carmichacl,
who is making, a belated bid for
rookie f the year boners in the
O
O
News in Pictures
Lemon of the Tribe and Billy
Hoeft of the Tigers lasted b-
yound tne fourth.
Lemon hung on until the third
gave up four runs and was Pacific Coast League.
cnargea wiiti the defeat. Al Aber, The front - running Tsds now
the third and cleanup man of the have won 17 of their last 18
Tiger hurlers, was the winner. A games. Carmichacl, wintess until
crowd of 50,004 was on hand. Uiav 5. is credited with four of
Bob Turley received credit for those victris hh ha M
his seventh victory of the cam- The 25-vear-old riehihander has
paign for the Yanks, but it did vielrieri nnlv five rim. in Pninri
ham for knocking him out of the'not comc the easy way. He wasn't. the distance in all four triumph;.
BBu-yara run in last nights Coil-!"" ie uur-i ,. ,.,,
seum Relavs. jing his tenure, he walked nine, h-"Ak. H-Jth
Courtney was disqualified outnd struck out only three. Man- CaraiichacK who had a 20-10
of his victory in the half-mile inW Stengel decided he re"rd with Yakima of the West-
nr.- f i rii,,,i,fi ... had enoueh when he nassed thclcrn International League last
rhillv weal her i,nt ,.!first four batters to face him ini'cat'- Sav P nine hits " Sacra-
records to a minimum, to the
mild disappointment of the crowd
of 56,173.
One of the relay marks set was
by Wes Santee, America's prem
ier miler, who ran the four laps
in 4:05.5 to set a new mark for
the event. Billy Tidwell, anoth
er Kansan from Slate Teachers,
was second nearly 20. yards back
of Cantee while Phil Coleman of
Chicago was third.
The other two relay marks
were in the javelin throw and the
hop step and jump. In the jave
lin, world record holder Bud Held
was eliminated despite his pro
testa when his fourth qualifying
throw failed to land point down
and break the ground. Cy Young,
the Olympic champion, emerged
the winner after Held was dis-
the sixth.
By the time Jim Konstanty got
the side out, the Orioles had
edged to 6-5. But he. and Tom
Morgan held them at bay the rest
of the way.
ATHLETICS EDGED
In other American League ac
tion Art Ditmar tossed a smooth
mento but was tough in the clut
ches. Me was backed by a 12-htt
attack, including Eddie Kazak's
third homer. The Padres gave
him a four-run cushion in the first
inning off loser John Briggs 3-4.
In other games, Seattle stayed
3'i games behind the rampaging
Padres by shellacking Portland,
n i. r C....1.... ....... u:
ten hitler against the Chicago 7r ':Z ZSZ v, T
White Sox to load the Kansas QsLw S7 L
m i' in 1 n ..;,,,.,!, ...hii- thud straight, 5-3, over Los An-
tWX "d TrfAinTf Ot
itic hurling of Bob Porterfield 7; bphl,n! Jolnt tJnnhl.t
and Johnny Schmitz, turned backi?'"'" Cal HS"e an1 Bob
.. u,t- va c.. i i (Garber.
it. f Tt. ' " " V "
I ias'v -Luff - -,'
in t. i
r i-sr-'-. I - ! li - . . ?
DuK Believes
Ike Will Run
e
Announcement
Seen Next Yer
1 Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore. Sat.Iay 21, 185 7
Russian Air Fgrc?
BuilfUP;Cut.D6wn'.
WASJJJNRTnM inTho Snviei 1 Rn Wavitu M. Si!f. S.j
: wn ind then cat rejrtS t have foii Betroa
air force eot bittlt wn ind then cat i
WASHINGTON t Two of daw in s swift change of wds aadience"The fissi. air forte
, f President Eisenhower's roost r- Friday by anoUier U.S. Air Force is carrentiy al ieast as good as
dent supporters in the fcenaie oKieer. iosws, possibly iiRr.
said Saturday they are convinced' u. GcBi Timas S. Power, in MISQUOTE CL4IM
he wiile a canRidatc for a sec- U ljj pren8re f0T a Bosioa GEn, fisihm F Twinfes Air
ond terra but will delay wL. Srf l".:.J2Z
announcement untU Hext year, i vrton
ben. ituii tK-raj.one 01 inejjargesl sir force and ' resources!
first Eiseshower-for-Prestdentiin manpower d snaifriei wel
d Boosters in saas, saia in an inter- youid not jwssiBiy mateii.
jvtew:
m not tell tine truth" and Jt4
exaggerated" In his tneech. Br-
gesa entered a claim that he ha3
rmvr.Fs mr iteen roisaaoted. Annaiaistratioa
The President is hfld in such iiwrim (,, ... poiicy seemed to be assnriias ii-
extraordiwsry puMic esteem that forever. Power changeS his txt srtf sinre Bssrgess' Detroit siats
it will be almost impossible for to credit the Reds with only "a j ment k exactjy snaare wsfls
him to refuse the nomination, as f...A h President Eisenhowers tsscss-
1 see it." (Snvieis 5sv ironj-Mjivj. i-sj)r-js aient the situstion.
HATCHET MEN" in manpower and Hiateriei," with-j At his news conference ft'ednes-
Sen. Aiken (H-Vt, agreeing out staling thai this country conid day, Eisenhower rejected any
with Duff in a separate interview, not match them. vte? that the United States has
isaid "apparently some top Demo-f The Hassians saffered simiSari'"5 control cf the air to Ttussis,
eratic party officials also are con- casualties Thximiav when Brie, i " !s 3ast not true," fie eata.
vincea tnat iiKe wiii run again.
"That is why they have some of
their hatchet men busy sniping
at the President," Aiken said. ,
"These snipers are the ones that
the Democrats would miss the!
least if they are defeated." j CoKticl jrom Page One)
In the National League, the
The Rainiers sealed Portland's
Philadelphia Phillies showed they '"TV " "f0"' ' ns
were not quite ready to he buried i'"'1";0 '"m"RS off.R7ee
by beating Brooklyn, 5-3. It was
the Brooks' fourth loss in a row
and cut their lead to 6!i games
qualified. Young won with a I because the second place New
throw of 256 feet, the best of his (York Giants squashed Pittsburgh,
career. J 6-3.
In the hop, step and jump, Cincinnati routed St. Louis, 10
Brazil's Ademar Da Silva leaped, 7, and the Chicago Cubs defeated
50 feet, 9Mi inches to break the: the Milwaukee Braves, 4-2.
relay record of-47 feet, 10 inches! Dittmer was the complete mas-
but he was a little less than a'ter of the White Sox, permitting
foot short of the mark of 51 feet,
7 inches set in the 1932 Olympic
games here.
It was 30 minutes after Court
ney was announced as the 880
winner in 1:50.3, fastest half-mile
of the year for a college runner,
before the judges decided he
had fouled Sowell and disquali
fied him.
Ron Delaney, the Villova frosh,
was moved into first place, Lon
Spurrier, the unofficial world's
record holder into second, Lang
Stanley up to third and Mai Whit
field to fourth.
Cougars Down
Vandals, 9-5
MOSCOW, Idaho Idaho,
struggling through one of the
worst seasons in memory, fell be
fore Washington State 9-5 Friday
for its 12th straight Northern Di
vision baseball loss.
The Cougars got to Vandal start
er Aubry Stevens for seven runs
on eight hits in the first two inn
ings. Reliefer Tom Vopat allowed
only two runs and his successor.
Roger Ranta, threw no-hit ball for
Idaho in the final three innings.
But the Cougars, whose biggest
blow was a double by Ron Foisy
in the first, had the necessary
points to coast to victory.
just two singles, walking three,
hitting one and striking out five.
No opposing batter got beyond
first base. The A's scored the
winning run in the first inning
on singles by Enos Slaughter and
Vic Power and a sacrifice fly.
j Lint. Bob Balcena drove in four
runs with a pair of singles.
Rayne Duren yielded six bits
and fanned eight in posiing his
second win against one defeat. He
tired in the seventh, however, and
John Oldham finished tip.
Portland's only bright spot was
Dick Whitman's infield single
which extended his consecutive
game hitting streak to 24.
Bearden, the former Cleveland
Indian ace, yielded seven hits in
San Francisco as the Seals dis
placed Oakland in fifth place.
Bob DiPietro helped the 34-vear-
old southpaw keep bis record un
blemished and tops in the league
Porterfield and Schmitz per- ty driving in three runs with two
mitted the Red Sox only six hits, singles and a double.
Porterfield, who has been plagued errors AID SEALS
by hard luck during nis major Two of the Seal runs im.
league career, was forced to re- earned . comme on errors hv Steve
nre aner nve mimics wnvu nis huso and Jim Fanning. Starter
piicning arm muiciiku b icsim George "lktU21S was the loser.
ot being strucic oy a line arive ny
B'djy Klaus in the second. He got
credit for his fifth decision,
though.
FOURTH LOSS
The Phillies collected enough
runs in the first three innings to
drop the Dodgers, lapping Billy
Loes for two each in the second
and third. Andy Seminisk added
an insufance home run in the
ninth. Robin Roberts, who has
won half the Phillies 10 decisions,
went all the way for the winners.
The Phils had lost 15 of 16 games
before Friday night.
Bill Taylor, another of the
Giants' pinch hitters extraordin
ary, broke up the ball game when
In Hollwood, Cal Hogue got a
rare starting assignment but was
lifted in the sixth after walking
six men, hitting another and tin
corking five wild pitches besides
giving up two hits. Garner -came
on and pitched hitless bail the
rest of the way to preserve
Hogue s first victory.
R. C. Stevens with three singles
led Hollywood's 10-bit assault
against loser Bob Cain, George
Barberger and Fred Besana,
Linescorcs: '
n ii k
San rJpEo 4A0 W1 fVlft 8 12 0
SacrnmenM DUO 11& rtrtl 2 9 1
Ormlohael and Hallev; Brtggfi,
Braztc 8( and Sheely.
RUE
Oakland I(M fWI flrtrt 2 2 J
CONNING TOWER OF SV'PERSL'B The conmtig tower
of the Seawolf, the U. S. Navy's second nuclear-powered
submarine, gets her new number in preparation for her
launching in mid-July at Grotort, Conn. The Seawolf is
under construction at the Groton yard oJ the ESectric
Boat Division of General Dynamics Corporation, where
the nafion's first atomic sub, the USS Nautilus, was
launched nearly 16 months ago. The two subs are much
alike externally, but there is a difference in the atomic
reactor propulsion plants.
30,000 Watch
AIR FORCE RELEASE
The ears that maybe Itttssl
jfcari got ahead stemmed from a
Air Forre release last week tei-
iW of powerful planes tse Has
isians paraded over Moscow on
: May nay. Some skeptical legisla-
Aiken declined to identify! ,- m. ,1,.. - irs felt mayfce the release was
ihens but an increasing number w w S to impress Congress,
o Democrats both in and out jOT'an hcur al. where the A ?wce tadget is
ot Congress have. beet. puWtclyLl int3 divisioRg gng tofefS1. al t 7Bb?A nd
criticisms the President and kisl . .,,. . . . seared the t ttenry. Ti Art
administration recently. f" ' ' thjJ ,m. ;v 'A it was jst being
iraKK wi ?Re taxpayers.
Burgess Is chief of imeSSiEenc
.... 7-7
' ' " 1 1 ' , ' f
' -U ' I 1 . ri i
" " 'Si if . ' i , 1
: V T7 - : - At
oc more ihan 10 cash nd mer-
WEEKENr TRIPS chandie prizes.
indications in the weekend " i.w w
(he President and Mrs. Eisen-i . " ""i ' 'r "" """ j senersi is
hower are making to their Jarm "' " "T".T ' t ?Z ?csearcfl
there this weekend. , iV . aKlS
fuiiy passed the time in games)-1
of tag.
There weren't many complaints,
however. Ail the kiddies got free
Bailey Guilty
(Continued rata Fape Ont)
SYZVGY IS WORTH A BIG LAUGH President Eisen
hower enjoys a really big laugh with the National Spell
ing Bee Champ Sandra Sandy) Sioss, 13, o Granite
City, Hi., after the President asked for and got the
correct spelling of "Syzygy." Sandra visited' the White
House after becoming the new champion over 61 other
crack spellers.
in the worid' Buff said. "After
aii, as a soldier (his is liis first
real home. He could continue to
spend much time there during a
, . . , , , iee cream at tile end of the pa-fH knowledge of his firia'a prae-
; i 'i r . ,. j irade route, pins tickets jor worm- ee ot Jorgsng oiiis ai jading
fi! ? V3, he.ls.con Mcni west League professional baseiall with which it oetalned credit
I ifrS?jf.tK ' ora6 won P"ICS 0 Mn-iram th nrst Nt!o!al Banlf of
w ..... ... . . ssderabie value. tagene,
j The grand prize winners were; s Venn said Bieiiard Baiiey was
KITS WHITE HOUSE Caroi Knowiion, g, of atSS W. h ine "motivating power" in the
Du visited the White House Ave s ijjis8 from Sears'; firm's scheme to obiain bank
rnaay wun . znacner iB- Jackie Ktilogg, 13, of lil Horn loans.
ilreieh, 34-year-Did Kepiibiiean y's bike frosa Wards'; The District Aiioraey told jar-
i'V, J,"r and Kick Wilde, iVi, sisVi . ism ors it isn't rcasonabie tfeat five
;lma, uv Miu e oju hov St., Springfield, together with Bailey Lumber Co. employes
the second-term issue. Melody Clemens, 44, and Paie couid forge hills ollading during
If anybody, other than the Clemens, 2, hoth of 878 W. 27th a five-month period August
President, knows his future polifi- Ave.. S58 cash from the Heeister-throaeh Eecemher. lsa nrtb
1 ral plans. Duff said, "1 don't know Guard and Sariio Station KEKG. about ?250,O88 without the de-
svno nicy arc. tie annea tne Tf(flI!E CATS ASB A SQG tendant being aware of the tile-
i ressnenc is wise co oeiay any nraeiire.
.onccnjcnl . or doe to win her bike, and Jackie! Jooe, defense attorney,
s u: . ,j .., 1,1, w- eonientiesi m ha ciosing argu.
Aiken said (he prcsidcniial de- 'irI ,,,.. Ri(,v .n, Mntiviment ibat Alfred Baiiey, the de
cision should be delayed until a!! ooit parjs jB a jjAV;r ctfendant's brother, bad been sole-
mancs begin. U, . motintod cardhoard eav-it5.
When he makes the announce-Lj .., nitimn "Al was on a merrv-zo-rsund
ment then the Remncratie sniping f and couidn't eet off. He was
hp u-alt.d a hnmp run u-llh two ! Hollvworirf
mans ,m 1,1 nit ui" anrt S-lft:
mo ran six 7 jo 1
17, Rcimna ffl)
came on me nr.u pucn oy Max hii.
Surkont and sent the Buccos down
to their eight slraight loss. The L Aneci.s ... om oifi wm-s ?
Giants hari In pomp frnm behind i San FrancUco 1(12 11(1(W1k 8 11 Q E
In lie it with (wo in the seventh. I ti. Pv s. Kuntl (I) nd
was the
winner. ., . . i v
ij-ufijrfnu inn mi, um, j o
ISpsllle 1)22 lHx 11 14 1
and
Barlnw. Stock 19) and Bich. Goldfn . . . . ..... -t. ..... Ginsberg.
(S); Sltvun, Vopat (2), Kama l7)i1"H U,S uiu-i "ie iiuiiiiK
mri Mnu-arH a na,pc. nanpn nomp run dv mo- . . F
mnh n.,e flta I hlDtf II 1-lhO I I I L .
,,.,. nnJ .,. villll-iO X JL) 1 11UU AWjg
Reliefer Hoyt Wilhclm
lUcinu (ill.v lime liita name iciii-t
i ;,u : .
m u.e mm,.. , cincinnati traunced the Cards JiJ
wsc 2sn lit m 9 it 3 the easy way, collectmB six mns Lint. Alexander 2. Han si
IHaho m ins (mi-5 n i.nn two hits in ihe e chlh inn me. Koiwr,MI1; uuren, uianam 5i
key Burgess. The triiin
Axemen Golfers Beat Ke,ris' f0l,rlh in 3 Inw f d s"a?d
,i five-game winning streak of the
Corvallis, South Salem cards.
Eugene's prep golfers defeated , The Cuhs had to go 10 innings
rnrvalli. and Soi.th Salem in to P l lh vi?l0?T .V" .the
WENATCHEE t.P U'enatcheci
pulled six runs out of four hits if
and three walks in the ninth inn-1 ft
ine to edee Sookane in a weird ) $
Northwest League baseball game,
match play Friday at Sa.cm J- F
the Axemen tuned up for defense
The tilt saw seven pitchers per
of their state title in the state l.,n, '"'l T". L.-" fnrm 'or ,he tw0 lm vo of
meet Monday and Tuesday at ,n '"" ' them coming in in the last two
Glennoveer course in rortlann.
STANDINGS
Gordon Marian was medalist
with a 73 as Coach Larry Dag
gett's Axemen whipped Corvallis
19.9 nn4 ihnn h)anlrtA Smith
CI Vn I NDltTIIWEST W I.
Salem 15-0. ntr) 17 s
Marlatt, Lcightnn Tuttlc, Gary Kucene 1
Geertzen, and .Inn Masterson i -rity 12 i
were named by Daceett as mem- y" o in
hers of Ihe learn that will com- iuira 12
iSpoKsnff . 5 IT
FTMay'i Rillls
Fnfiene It. Salrm 0
1, Spnvan. 10
Yaklml 4
pete in Ihe stale mrct.
Prl.
.77
.!
..US
.524
.lid
.227 12
r,n
Baltimore
Friday"! FtrtiilM
Wah(ncton 3, Bo, ion 1
rtetrolt 11. Clevrlenil
Kansa Otv 1. Chtcnso ft
w York T, Baltimore S
i NATIONAL LEA OIK
Prl.
.fiSS
.fits
.aoo
.54.1
.129 7
.419 7
.S R
.313 11
r.n;
r 1 1 T i ' Wenatrhoe ll
d rones 11, bears 4j t-i"" .
YAKIMA Ifi The Lewiston Americas i.EAGtE
Broncs collected their 12 hits in i j.,,,.,,,,,,,, ;
btinchcs Friday night In take an : New York :
11-4 Northwest League baseball ',
victory from the Yakima Bears. in,,"n
The Broncs had two big innings, j wawrston ...
the second and Ihe ninth.
They got three runs in the sec
ond on four walks and Hillis
Layne's single. Four sincles. a
stolen base, a walk and a sacri
fice fly produced four runs in the
ton of the ninth.
Yakima's big inning was
eighth when the Bean combined : ,s"
triples bv Gene Jacobs and Dei :st. Li
Charmihas with a single and
arrifirp flv for three runs. .
Rill Faanks went tht route for . Philadelphia . in
Lewiston. Cliff Babbitt'started for! .., J'MI',,,.R'l'!";
Yakima but gav way t Ralph j s, p!n,hTtti j j PORTLAND 11 To reduce to
Wilerson in Ihe sixth. ! rinrinrfaii m. st. i,ouu 7 , ;the 'PScific Coast League player
b h'k Shit-., iiluke. J 110 innlnjJ)mil of 2j tht Portiad Beavers
l-'lt"8 mfl 1)12 1M 11 1J i.ri-C COLt. XJtXWr. i Frirtav sntrl nnn.man tir! ro!r.a.rt
iklma ... JlH BOO ITO 4 11 - f t. ivtT fiRi ' -V
rr,jjk 1 (rN'mai4); Babbitt,. rlPSo Bill
Utlerwin (fil atl Lurar. ISeaf' . 2 3d .S'
r
Mil .
. MllwaiiVpi
I Cttirlnifa'l
; PHth(irch
W
2.1
ia
19
is
, 17
1.1
11
OB
Prl.
.75S
.Ml
.SSft
.S17
.son
.419 11
.114 tf'a
.32.1 14
innings.
Wenatchce started the scoring
in the sixth with one run but fell
behind as Spokane added two
each in the seventh and eichth.
The locals moved ahead with a
5 U-run splurge in their half of Ihe
'eighth only to have Spokane take
fl,, over with six runs in the ninth.
wenatcnee rapped three Spok
ane pitchers in its grand finale
and wound it all up with a slug
foci nnlhiisiaQiioallv r,arli.lnt4
in by ail players from both teams, t
inc UMiruiis stanco aner too it
Vanni, Wenatchee manager, was i
V4 heard lo say one of his players
'.'had been tripped by a Spokane (
7,jman at third. Only bruises re- J-
t't sum:,!.
Snokane'a F.ddie Mtirnhv on
two doubles during the tilt, one ? ,
a three-mnner in the ninth.
Linescore: -ret
b r r. . 1
DIK,n, 32. 111 1 1
'P7,irnre ... inn, ,ni) n,fl jj i)
TrJerwr-tlrr. Crawforo is
9), Roo l&. Flannlcan
H Sbeet; Marhell, lurlnghattf ( and
a'i Jenney.
IH 3 . 1 -V .. atjaV .
Pickups Hit;
Youth Hurt
A Junction City youth was seri
ously injured fate Friday after
noon when a pickup track he:
added touch. jatiam to ten sis Brother taooat
For cM-tlmcrs, it wouldn't have if"" "."'"
ibeen an authentic Pet Parade If
!. IJt , I . j
Willie Knickerbocker hadn't been "1E. J,aH !"
in it. But Wiiiie was. Next fait ouistanding sue
he'll be 88, Wiiiie said. Saimriay i J JtosiuesJ as bis brother.
he was in there, his raring bite p"3-
sporting smaii America to! LTl
carry out (ne Armed f orces Bay ' , ,V V i Tv
thense, and bis wiry legs pumping
got himself Uno trouble, snd that
.
V'
LOOK, MA, XO HANDS Waiting to (io his lt ! a
parochial school music festival at Yoiingstown, Ohio
this -youngster sat calmiy with his hands in his pockflts,
eivitig his bubble fittm a good workout. There were 2,281
other students from 24 schools on the program ami
6,000 people in the stands hut they didn't bother him
one bit.
.t'H
) i r f
i-IJ 11 1 'A . -
, 1-iifdlVo f ii..
19) nt
Beavers Pare
Playing Roster
,ir i i
Viti, ir m, n 8t "his own ferothcr" into toa-
waa riding ia coiiiried with an-displayed by younger participants. Me tf!U6h.. efifie"
oiner picxup ai me soum eosei t jy.
of Junction City. j j tHiehard Baiiey was charged in
Ernest Eari McCuSioch, 13, ofiEIklOn Sawyer r"" i,(r?nsPirfn8
itt. 1 (Territorial !W.J, Junction p : , r , wife bis bro her to obiain jnoney
City, was taken to Sacred Heart benOUSlV Injured faise pretenses from tbo Fir
Sfosnifai bv Eueene Arohuiance. . National Bank of Eagene tbroagb
ife was treated for multiple jaw! E- 3. ti use rf false tokens.
fractures and was in "fair" con- on timber sawyer tor Sneil- (Alfred pleaded guilty to cb-
(iiiion Sa'urday strom Lumber Co., was serioasiyitajBing money under ale pre-
n-t. j - ct,. injured Friday when feia saw tenses lastQctober and was sen-
rTA8 S T 'JSS fZ h h fe the Wrf ree years in the pent-
minrie jj no? Lu Tt 8 Keart tentiary. He waJa fey stated
he hosoital Hospital and immediately to sure- ness t ooth triais, a!)d testified
The driver of the other vehicle W He was in "fair" condition that his brother had eorcpiete
was Charles N. Jones, 45, of Row- Saturday. knowiedge of the JiiegaJ manipn-
burg, who was not hurt. A company, spokesman said 8ilatonsi.
The coiliilon occurred at 1st iesacl series of events Is unknown. In imai (nsiruciions so we
and Ivy, near fhe Durham miU. Jfe said it Is probable that an jury, S.f KsnS tW the body
Slate poiice ciieri Siayier for edging tripped the saw while Ifig-ps soie functions was to decide
faiiing io yiciri the right-of-way gins had his hack turned. The ibo facts in the case and take
io Jones wben pulling onto the saw hit him in the bark and cat the law given by the court and
highway. W under the shoairfer Marie. !PP?y it to those facts.
Churchill Thoroughly Enjoying
; Secondary Role in Campaign
By Ai.VSX STEIN'KOPT ! district made un o the fewnsfvisit to Kassia when Georgt Mal
ot Tti AmiciI'4 Km Lf ft'ooriford and Wanstead mayjenkov was prirae minister, wrote
lON'iXtfJ W Surely no one!11 him out in next Thursday'sjjfcat Malenkov was boss, rather
in Britain is having more tunjclection. But .that is all mock ler-jti,an Niitiia Khrashcbev.
than Sir Winston Churchiii, ouliror. In the 1051 election ii gave)
jelectioneering. L !lh(( wro bT eliicT right
lie has pat on bis tavonie cam- r fe mjje JJe js , ba(j Juije
paigning bat, a high cylinder o?vfT OV TEf.EVfSfO.V ni form"
Mack feit. tt manages to look like churchiii bas been trying tog . u,jinnr sl s mns si
a fat bomb, and it seems to beh oul of he main arena. WS ,hAhTr nriabt
made of iron. Churchiii beams is not on television. He is not fite Vifw alter all L gc? r
and chuckles, and ambies from hmi the majflr attraction s ec farmy fi
meeting to meeiing wavmg cigars conservative 1'arty raiiies. Tte Mb? an aU
and making "V" signs. His bcabjhaii na, fe, passed to bis P-griSn wanS
appears good. lege. Sir Anibony i-rfen, and j '
iiis speeches sparkle with wit.Jcharchiii seems pleased wish tbeP6,
Occasionally he markes the haiis :;n,3nI,Pr j whicb Eden has been would not he an act E Eeith,
ring with miehty phrases in tte'cimmg it. WKt$$ ? f ? i
old Churchiiiian manner, fie siiiij SnciMsi speakers f ' -! baf BrlioT
ioves a fight. And be is ihe only h h - !h fn)crva4!t saiJ ,ras d not
campaigner who draws a big I eJ.e(" "ST dismTsd sfsnrf up ,D ti53iirnf'- Z
erowd wherever he goes in tfc7 Ztol&tlSnr lh" B"U
rather -apathetic election hattic. prinw minist(,r wa, due to andcr-in !JIB ran'
J'l.EARANT TASK (cover pressdrea. Thp chargejBACIAl, Qt'KSTlOX
In his Jtlst vear the former makes t'horehiif snori, and in nss A egro wanted w raw whcih-
2'
S'4 at- Paul ot tPt iWnencan Assn.
-"V--
:a;
fi ! prime ministw va to be inoreibcsf Mood anri-ihunrier manner be er Sntam jjroposed to rfb
"'relaxed than he has been forWinges evervone's hair and pledges; Ihina abmri rsrisi lifffirniiies Jn
Jvcar, . Shis iota! bvValty p Eden. fa dominion of South Africa.
COIGNS WJARK 3iKA)Ann; If iere cre .ai-
At ieasi, someone els is carry- fhnrhiii is setffng a iot of fan1 "Vou must tdetand that wo
ins the iiipremc responsibility. teaig fhe sapporiiSg Vbaraetfrs are a eiRimnnweailh, f.harcijiii
! Affnaremlv he finds being an eld-(hn nofcticni staw Tie taraet'said. in Srilain ran do noth-
er statesman, and a mew eandi-Uf nencb of bis wit Is Aneuriniing sbWervMe Ss the domestic
date for seat in ih .
Coajmons,sn iejp
J-lteaMig me sapporimg Fnari:iey "l"Ml"1
o ihe pofcflcsl stage. The targef. said. t"We in i
li- of nSicb of bis wit Is .Wuriniing io'inierve
ih Jfoaso ofigevan, left-wing Socialist whose ifirs of Sph Africa, any !ore
jpiV'ed adli2rf-emcnts witif Ciement All- hao we o?dior om$es in
1