OCR Text |
Show TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1051 The Dragerton Tribune, Dragerton, Utah " V.WWAW.f'.'! WViV1 z rr 4, A - ' " .. - ' ' , Y: 4 t X x f'- S - r V. V ,..tv ': .;;Hv J ' T! & ..'. -- & ' v- .. " -' '-' , . , v - - , f ' v Vv -- ' ' . y t - y' ,'A' ' , y ' v V ' -V ' Vv.v V - Vv :: '" ' ' X , i) ' '' . x- - ; '",'l i '?S A i 1 S& 0 F v T ri s 't' v?'V V ',4$. ''X y AAz ' 'i 2 $5: - vv ' " s , v $ A Si- - ,v'v c ""'K i yv , v V, .A .si yK J ,x , hj n lLrrrJ t o' 'A "'-- ' ( ij " ,v s , s v - z- s AS ' v Z' ; P- - v i A '- -' , s - i - ' t W -- ? V' ? . .& r. ,'' $ ' , T - jl - ' y v... ; . ," Page 3 S Ss V .y,, -- : ' v, j4' $ S' s ' X . " s 4 X ''4J x ' V 'V i- e - ? 4 xlt I S'-- ' i. v v -' :- x 4--' .r -- rs J t J ARMY PLANE CRASHES . . . Two officers of the United States air forces, one with a radio walkie-talki- e set in his hand, stand by what remains of a 9 which crashed and exploded eight miles north of Woodcrew parachuted to safety, but the fate of the land, Calif., recently. Eight members of the nine-ma- n ninth fs unknown, ne Is known to have left the plane safely, but It is feared that he may have landed in the Sacramento river. Eyewitnesses at the scene of the disaster said the big bomber was afire before it crashed and burned in this sugar beet field. Note the long ditch dug by the wreckage which still burns. t B-2- " V ' V v V - - ' - t . ; . ss ', : " t.s',TV i 4 ' v i j f s y 1 y i v V 'X sX " ' ' j V i X ' ' ' i " 'w t W - P, - T' ''' . V-v- . w s. " '? v 4 ; f -- i- ' 1..$ v .,; ? .i j i " ,4 t .. : h y i I HV iO 'v tw.ikrninnmiiii''iin MAN THREATENS LEAP . . , Convict Thomas Blackburn, atop water v A v t X Avv' 'It tower at Joliet penitentiary, turns a deaf ear as Prison Chaplain E. Grey Winlnger pleads with, him to come down. After shouting insults at prison guards for five hours, Blackburn descended of his own will. Warden Joseph E. Ragen said that Convict Blackburn refused to give any reason for his act. The water tower is 90 feet tall. Blackburn Is shown in middle of tower catwalk. ' s V ' llwrWW wi aWWWffl?WWWWWvlW "'v - v M r. . ti r - , - Kx' S - - , - . rr 1 . x -- i mn'nrtifffifr Vitfiini'nirVtf nintismi HONEST NETTER IN ARMY ... Junius Kellogg, Manhattans center who refused a bribe and set off New York's basketball inquiry, passes through chow line at Fort Meade, Md. He's so tall the army doesnt have a suit to fit him. ' V A long procession of FIRST MARINES ARRIVE ON ROTATION cars bearing feted marines, returned from Korea under the armed services rotation plan, proceeds down Montgomery street in San Francisco through the financial district as. the city pays homage to the first group of marines returned under the new plan. These men, 774 fighting men along with 400 wounded, are fresh from the Korean war front and are given a welcome that Is due heroes. JO ' ;rs $ fI !. y " ,r Sitm y-'- v. s -' s, 9 $: ' vXviW; x' ., . $ '' svO. m&' x i f s s s ' T ' ' '4? V4f .. rVA r - ri. i rsT?. x - w., j ' A 4'- - 0 yirA ) ',;vi - '. - i sW A I Ay A . i z A- CJ of ouis Gebhardt, has announced Itah bacteriologist, solatlon of three types of polio irus. The discovery is expected o lead to a polio vaccine. It cli-nax- ed ..... ..... , v' .., J : - : . f -- j ' m.- & y - i Z ' ..'. ix f 'A ;z f ' , ; vyi P - S AI j 1 !: ' j - v vViV t '.. yf "if - v 'Z. ; ,rr ... Dr. University '. Si NABS STEPSON AS BURGLAR . . . John Slmerleln, retired policeman of New York, captured his stepson, Louis De Ford, as the latter tried to burglarize the Slmerleln home. Acting on a hunch, after a series of minor robberies at the Slmerleln home In Jamaica, the former policeman hid in a hall closet and nabbed the youth when he entered the house. Slmerleln (left) looks on as police search the youth shortly after his arrest by his stepfather. y1 i - S Ax niw , vV r i xk'..r: A y OLIO PREVENTIVE? it i V;; 'XJ i two years of research. '- 1 ' ' A 'K?' ; Z ',& i. . ')kMa A'v.n. - i 5 A - sii k- ViV : I f L :: : u .v 1 X .. X ' v; t o? A ' I V 1 ' ....... s Sis. ... v'5 p-V"jli i i1 .Syv.k . l IJ 5v ' - I - s - v ii j r .v- ' 'ft 4 y 1 "'v, .v.yv'v:. y Zvi X 'y'y A ... A United SOLDIERS RUN FOR SHELTER CARRYING WOUNDED States lieutenant, two soldiers and a Republic of Korea soldier run for the nearest shelter bearing a wounded United Nations officer on a litter. They are under the direct fire of an enemy burp gun, as the grimness of their faces testifies. . . . Four GIs In Korea sent word to New Yorks NICE COOKIES Hunter College saying theyd heard of the classic beauty of the coeds, but while pinups were fine, a cake or a cookie was finer. So three students in the home economics department," Eileen Walsh, Florence Henninger and Elaine "Brooks, got to work and cooked up 'this batch for the boys. Here they are tasting the cookies which they hope the boys will appreciate more than pinup pictures. |