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Show SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1931 THE JOURNAL WILDCAT STRIKE TIES UP PORT . . . Military equipment fills the Staten Island, N. Y., port of embarkation as the wildcat strike of longshoremen prevents loading. But authorities were hopeful that a compromise was In sight which will effect a settlement of the dock strike which has shut down the entire port of New York and also hit other eastern seaboard ports. A spokesman for the striking New York longshoremen promised that if a satisfactory compromise is effected the dock workers will return to their jobs immediately, pending further negotiations. MAHARAJAHS VALENTINE . . . Former actress Nancy Valentine unpacks in her cabin on Queen Mary as she sails from New York to London to wed the Maharajah Some columnists if Cooch-Beha- r. is she already married to him. lay GRILLED . . . Joseph Li Calsi was inestioned by New York police the slaying of gambler Willie Morettl at a restaurant in Dliffside, N. J. The tip about Li Calsi came from an unidentified nroman who said she drove the murderers to the spot of the ibout SHOW PLEASURE . . . AND LIBERTY BELL . . . Irans Premier Mohammed Mossadegh visits Philadelphia on the first leg of a trip to Washington which scheduled him to have lunch at the White House with President MOSSADEGH Truman. Mossadegh pauses a few moments to feel the Liberty Bell in Independence Hall. The subject of liberty is especially close to the Iranian premier right now as he fights to rid his country of British influence created by the interest of the British in Iranian oil. BRITISH UNITS IN ISMAILIA . . . Britain clamped a blockade on all Egyptian rail traffic in the Suez canal zone and Egypt retaliated with a stoppage of movement along the road from Cairo to embattled Ismailia (18 miles south of Cairo). This scene shows British armored trucks cruising the streets of Ismailia. The new battle of blockades broke out as Egypt was threatening to bring Britain to severe account and was expected to charge England with aggression. Page 3 FIRST KOREAN WAR BRIDE ARRIVES . . . Sgt. John Morgan, 23, Is greeted by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Morgan, Bremerton, Wash., as he brings his Korean war bride on the transport U.S.N.S. Patrick. The young wife, Yong Soon Morgan, also 23, and Morgan were married last February after they met in May, Korean military army group at Pohang. 1950, at headquarters BROTHERS MEET IN KOREA . . . Three brothers meet In Korea for the first time in 17 months. All three are In the army and had a reunion near the battle zone. Left to right are Sgt. Robert A. Lambert, 25; Sgt. Richard E. Lambert, 20, of a heavy tank battalion with 15 months in Korea; and Fred A. Lambert, 23, from an infantry division. All are from Ironton, Ohio. The site of their meeting was not disclosed by military authorities for security reasons. . . . Tony Anastasia, brother of Albert Anastasia, of Murder, Inc. and dock strawboss, talks some reputed triggerman of the striking dockers back to work at the army base in Brooklyn. The men went back to work when Anastasia arrived with 200 men. Anastasia STRIKE-BREAKIN- G r, was labeled by the Kefauver committee as a strongarm g and said he wanted the model. He denied his act was men to go back to work for patriotic reasons as the army wished it. cast vote before UN Security Council on Turkeys Selim Sarper (left) and Warren Austin, hands upraised, strike-breake- strike-breakin- British-Ira-n oil question, defeated 8-- 1. |