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Show Page 7 The Dragerton Tribune, Dragerton. Utah WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1931 . 'ATC-- IWAIW vl WW V SX V' V i- v h sM x;: .. I f'J V ' 1.1111.11 I, S V A t, , AsL v .v -- u' v VV O'- - - 4 v.- ''VS. v s v 1 v x .V'. V y '' v s v k. ' : Ak A KOREAN FOWS HOLD SERVICES . . . Chinese and North Communist prisoners of war voluntarily attend a camp religious service conducted by Chaplain Harold Voelkel, a former missionary in Korea (right, with book). In Pusan, Korea. Many of the prisoners, including Christians who had been forced into the Communist armies, have even built their own churches. Christian services, conducted in Korean and Chinese tongues, POWS are encouraged to hold services in their consist chiefly of morning prayer meetings. own rites by the chaplains of the United Nations forces and some have done so. v x 0 x- AA K 'V-,,s y - - c . . l TOO LATE . . . Medical aid arrives too late to save life of an American soldier of the first cavalry division who lies dead on a stretcher somewhere on the Western- - Korean war front. Medical corpsmen are . s rr ' kfrrsf s- 7" s 4 r'V'Xv K THREATENED . . . Concert singer Ruth Swain has filed suit for $35,000 against lyricist Otto Hoffman In New York charging that he threatened to subject me to Involuntary flagellation' with a riding whip. He denies this. f , a; S f1 f I i 1 'A , !i MISSION SCHOONER . . . Jesuit missioner Father William Rively, voyage In the Romance, 45-f- t. Altoona, Pa., recently completed a 4,300-mi- le schooner. She carried Father Rively of the New York province, with a crew of five, from San Francisco to his mission at Truk in the Caroline islands. Rively was a landlubber until his superiors in the mission told him to return to the States and buy a boat for the mission. With no money and knowledge of boats, he fulfilled mission.' v , Tif" w K Wt V Ai- i( ",C . -- r A- 4 MW a " -- 'vv - $ f AyIt f - t- 1 ' y :V7i AxA ' 'A i v , VS Y&tw M 1 f " ' j vf. 4 I ' $ f v&b V, ' . " "XT: i S . y . . Av. O a' V A'X s4 'uWi'li -- .w A V At;, swim suit styles were introduced at the beach at Santa Monica recently. Models were all set to smile prettily while whing displaying suits called of waves a when ding whing ding came along to wet them. . . . 1952 J -- vj ' ,a XnA.' C, . m t ' i. 7 f , $- .' L & v V' r :..'7yk v ' X ' v- x I 44 ' V, K . A. . y A ; x ? r y! - 7 Al V A- '7 44 V 1 j v 'h-Z- ly,Ar'lX 'V' .'. . A- rf $ - A r , 'a- I i ; WM'V.V, , "Sl two-wee-ks' M . r i Aai!r V ,. i Ay, y f&$ V 77 s . t 1 - It Ralph Klner, 28, Pittsburgh Pirate outfielder and national league home run king, were married recently in Santa Barbara, Calif. Hank Green burg, general manager of the Cleveland Indians, was best man. The honeymoon in Acupulco, Mexico. They couple left for a to in live Pittsburgh during the baseball season. plan ' jM 1 . i ;1 , , xeitoS a , v TENNIS PLUS BASEBALL . . . Tennis star Nancy Chaffee, 22, and AV - v 0 ' 4 .$ V , - y.. sr ' ' 'a 'I I'" 4 'xSA5 SUSPENDED ACTION . . . Sometimes the camera catches and holds a play in sports which the naked eye is incapable of appreciating. This unusual photo was snapped in the first quarter at Baker field recently as Yales Arthur Martin (40) was stopped by Columbia's Robert Schwegler and (bottom) Robert McCullough. At the moment the camera clicked, the runner and both tacklers in the action were off the ground. Martin gained flye yards on the play. 4M, Jlf.VV.A Aft V V IV f aw60cUo6afeiy. WHING DING Viwutlw tv y'f V I V 'VV-- i J, v 4MuVd( V.' , w&,i06tto Lgl? t sr Y-- ' V ,V' j v, '' S X x" - ' i V Jl?- ' ffi( S1 t- , , - t 5 ' f-- r ir A5e - recently. T J 7? ' I'TT f er - !i A.ViVi? ' ' . 5 FOOTBALL CASUALTY . . . Mr. and Sirs. John Higgins of noutzdale. Pa., watch over their son, John, Jr., 17, the first major grid casualty in western Pennsylvania this season. The quarterback, resting in an oxygen tent following brain operation in St. Francis hospital, Pittswith another burgh, has been unconscious since he crashed head-o- n school-Coopschool the In football Houtzdale high game high player If v.s - - A tg 4JVi A , - - ' 1 H , s A - v XV t x & f ;v V - r t& -- i:' ' 3), r ry. A if til lllllOTlLWiWyWI , Emihmp$ l?3 A -- m irpwmwps . 11 - V?: yf ,S. N A '1 seAjvv' !, 4- r-- - r Asf p? 1 ' pwoi f " i w vf oeMMcMPtv iZSfrirJl e' ft 5 A - K'- f - r 4 attaching the tag to the dead soldiers clothing that reads ''killed in action. Identity will be made and a study of how he met his death, and bis nearest of kin will be notified. He will be burled either In a military cemetery in Korea or the remains will be sent home. -- m-th- " f X 5 T , 4 ,s oV 'A ? riemtoc-k-.- s A ffT Vfrr . v X h ty- ':' f s A v 7 Av-- - . v ' 'A? w ' y , & u A- - Vx : 5- v Non-Christi- an v- v Vs't'f J 'A '' vV?i V' s' ' f is , I. t - Nfe .ikA v" ;u, . MCA . -; , - - 1 r ,, r i, 4fr.vv, ' ' fz 1 Am IN REVIEW . . . Marching past high ranking Army and Navy officials is the 43rd National Guard Division, , XA, Europe-boun- d, giving a final salute to U. S. |