OCR Text |
Show 5 i THE HER Monday, July 23, 1951 In HOW DID YOU GET Hew Record For & THINGS THOUGHTS Dr. Brady Says DREW PEARSON SAYS Cause anti Effect L THOSE STONES? HE ASKS Soldier's Account Do-Nothingn- CAPITAL observers been such a agree that not in years has there congress-atiud, p. less, indifferent, which t! . s.nd. The famed 80 h congress, against 1948. in to victory , Truman !,, aq.r.t m-- mrU-- r campaigned by comparison. Not onlv has the 82nd congress failed to pass a single appropriation by the end of the fiscal year, on June 30, but a good many members dont seem to care. They don t even seem to care that they horse-meaaie being called the congress. Never in my recollection have both morale and morals been so low, leadership so lacking. MOST Of Big Flood ; i t Here Larsens t" Never inny recollection has 'there been less idealism, less dispatriotism, such poor party cipline; never such shameless absenteeism. Some congressmen Pearson a week. ate pa -sent in Washington only one day Then- aie three main, overriding reasons for tins political paialysis: of a tired, uninspired ad- 1 This is tfie tail-en- d end of a long period the inc.Ni rat.u.i probably o! 1 mm uit.c rule. Nobody, except a few incurable op ,miis, teally expects this administration to b ie-- t lTtfd. and "hen that frame of mind s u i ongress theie can be no party discipline, r no leadcslup. And without leadership every congressman Un-mwhats good for the country, he votes good for himself or the lobbyists who h pod nil his campaign chest. He knows that, in problems, the nation's interest ln.s to bo put above his districts interest. A J iood-- i on! t id icservoir may dislocate a hundred or so pt 'p'e in his distiict, but their dislocation bein. iv s.oe i no lives and property of millions an I'll get ll w the icxeivoif area. However, nine, you git youis spirit has become rampant m toneless. The law of the lobbyist and the local inter t.st migns supreme. 2. There lias been no firm hand on the reins. Tins is Hue both of the While House and of the Denim nitic leadcis on Capitol Hill. and The president has alternately begged si added. He has seldom inspired. aie some of Pvt. itemd, written un- considerable difficulty, during the flood: Manhattan got 64 inehes of rainlnll, and the Kansas Kiver rose three inehes an hour. We were on Area that night, on a night problem. We got bark to camp at 11:30. We found that the river had flooded the lower half of Manhattan and Junction City. The water had risen until it ssas about a foot from the top of the dike, and we walked guard that day and night. We moved all equipment to the top floor of the platoons. We have used all the mattress covers for sand hags. When we ran out of them, we took our pillow cuscs too. When they were gone, we took to the hills, where we are now. you can see the riser from iieie, but we cannot see camp. A truck just came hack. All Camp Funsten is evacuated. There are helicopters and smalt planes obseivlng the riser and towns. Largare dropping iood to the people er planes, DC-3in the hills behind Munhattan and Junction City. der 7-- x.-t- vit'i fes s, "- lags -" v.! vt O 1 got thies houis sleep lust night. Many of us didn't have food for 24 hours at a time. Wo left our packs at camp. They said they would biing them out for us. But our pack, are .till Imck in the barracks. All the clothes 1 have aie tho.se Im wealing. . . "When we come In off guaid duly, we gather around a car and wring out our sox and the legs of our trousers, and pour the water out 'of our shoes. . . How - are flooded out of camp, and we have only three days supply of food left. I need a tuzor, shaving sonp and blush; some candy and canned food. "AH the cities here me evacuated. I am writing this in the moon light. It looks as though it won t rain tonight. I was going to bring my camera out here, but it is in my pack, flouting around somewhere. . , All my money is in the barracks. The barracks might not be there when we get back. By now sve TRANSCRIPT OF TI1F. TRIAL of William N. Oatis, American newspapei man sentenced for espionage in Czechoslovakia, gives any news paperman a chill. Oatis was The Associated Press correspondent In "Prague. Czech communists nnested him on April 23 and eventually sentenced .him to 10 yems a : 4 , : In prison. A spy? Evidence presented at the trial indicates that the American correspondent merely was z urr.s ing out the duties of a correspondent as tlio free press understands them. Under Communist ground rules, however, any good foieign correspondent might be tagged a spy. O - The Herald'Joutnat mi REFLECTS Communists BY HENRY MeLEMOKE f Oatis story, as the prosecutor unfolded it, shows the dangeis faced by any western correspondent in an iron curtain country. The prosecutor always referred to Oatis news stones as reports to London or "reptuts to New Yoik. Routine AP queries to Oatis wore referred to at the trial as espionage orders. Rival newspapers and news services constantly send such message to their cm 'espoiidcnts to gel them to check rumor or published news atoiits. That became a crime m Czechoslovakia. O' Oatis, who presumably had been worn down physically and spiritually beiore the trial began, admitted everything the prosecutor anted hun to admit. So aid oilier witnesses. v The Czech who was giving a running translation ot the testimony got ahead of the witness. This seemed to indicate that the testimony had been reheaised so caielelly lhal the lianslalor knew the witness story by heart. Oat.s aso repeated phi&ses that nppm rally had been drilled into him about a contact, Jut Miul-chOatis said: a. I gathered that he was an enemy of the peoples democracies and 1 concluded that I could use him for my "espionage work. Some time latei, Oatis was asked about another contact, Vlasta Pankova. Oatis replied: I gathered fiom her letter ami conversation that she was a person who disliked peoples democracies so I decided 1 could use her in my I t espionage work. Still later, Oatis was asked about Ho droned Czech, Helena Kucherova. gathned that she was an enemy of the democracy and that I vvuuid be able to in my espionage w or k. The Herald -- another on:, I people's use her Journal Printed Every Day Except Sunday at Logan, Utah M f. vi : tc United fress dtrei t wires Audit Bureau ot Oiruuitmn Pirifiu l oflut Advrfisnu Service SvndifHte Kins features Bell features Entered in Ltt;an Uosl Oltice as semn! class matter MeNnufcM f f ''I .1 M r One 'One . 1 i !' 1 ? T One One One Kn'iiman Oilman. Mrlmi National Advmitini KepreMtnatvr M BSl KirTION BATES mnr.tn, carrier t lift Kuu year earner year mail on Cache Valley) ............ 13 (X) 15 uo yeaj mail (ouU)de Cache v'ulley) 3,75 year (Saturdays only) Corgi is like a team of horses. e- -s It knows reins whether the driver is a team of horses, you cant alt. l. intciy lash congressmen into a lather, then coax them up a lull. ui.i ine Ltd of the Co. i: pen nl, and, like Tills A KTF.KANS of Foreign Wars, Pennsylvania bianch, 1ms ceine up with a new one for the handling of Communists in this high-minde- d UK CAN' DEMAND it because in gaining election to these men have placed themselves in a special position. They are indeed representative of the people who choose them and they should be. But when they take their seats in the Senate or House, they are something more. On their shoulders has fallen the burden of guiding the destinies of the whole United States. Con-gre- They are, in other words, charged with a responsibility to rise above ordinary considerations. They are given the duty to act in the interest of the nation, not simply of the district or state they represent.' Human imagination being what it is, it is too much to hope that all 531 lawmakers would understand this high obligation and live up to it. But Congress is not composed of all average men. Thei e are able, brilliant, courageous men sprinkled among the tluong. It these able legislator" that we must look. They are fully capable of understanding the lawmakers lesponsibility for national statesmanship. When they attain their rightful pi .sit ions of leadership and influence, they can give wise direction to their colleagues. TAKE MOKOTAI. for cvampl. Of course, we would have to buy or tent this Spice Islands gem Horn the Dutch, they being the owntrs. I believe. Eveiy thing that lutes has a housekeeping unit on Moromi, or at least that vn my exper once, I dont mean tigois and lions, and things like that; I mean all the little ci aw ling, tlv- ing (matures whose menu is nu.'Ye up ot man. is to - j j They never become satiated. Th y start biting at you in the on nunn'ng, continue tnroujrn luncn, enjoy a high o.i olr you. and when night falls they s.t down to u big, dinner. Tin n tney raid the icebox, so to speak, around nudnignt. One has to be caret ul of leprosy in Moiotai, too, which fact inases it an even more appealing place to send the American Reds. In most periods of American history, we have fortunately found gifted lawmakers in position to affect the course of affairs. In a few, we have not. Unluckily for all of us at this trying moment, this appears to be one of the times when what able men there are do not seem equipped to lead and influence their fellows. rKTKII KDX)V, Washington columnist for XEA. mvnt-!- y observed that this is a completely unpredictable, runaway Congress.'' He adds that what if coming from Capitol Hill now seems to be entirely the result of individual lawmakers ow n coin icti nx. right , In sum, this is a Congress without the control of strong leadership. Its majority party members cannot be held together in support of the Piesidents program. Much of that program is either beaten of watered down by the loose coalitions which form to combat specific issues. Neither the majority nor the minority of the Hill has offered a substitute program of its own. ANOTHER ISLAND 1 have in linnd is Bougainville. Bietty ns nnnin-ta.i.- s with ns putpu-tmteend lovely Kmpics- - Augusta IT,, it i.-- not the spot I would choose for a pumanont about". If sent to Bougainville, the Commiis should not be allowed lo cany umbrellas, which means they would stay soaked to thh ekfi a giod Do per cent of tlft tune. Bougainville ram is diLcr-e'- .t from any other ram I have ever t mounted d. It doesnt come down in sheets; it comes down in I IniiKets, counterpam s. afghans, and comforteiv The drops aie the size of golf nd the ram apparently bails, has r.oibing else to do but rmn. It nevir takes time off. to play bi.'ly canasta, golf, or ju-- t take d In such a situation, Congress is largely at the mercy of Individual whim. Irresponsibility runs riot. Who is there to curb it? Legslation of vital national consequence emerges only after painful ordeal, if at all. It must inevitably run a gamut to sniping amendments. We may as well face it. Unless some presnt member of Congress suddenly arise as new and potent leaders, thus is the way we are going to have it until the election of 1P32. Since that prospect isn't too 'likely, citizens who yearn for resnon-sibgovernment have some pretty agonizing months ahead of them. V a nap. AND THEN there is a peonUor amina! on Bougainville which 1,:. Cl s came to ea i ; Our ley. It lives in the dees,, i nd at night mixes the unholie .t urn imaginable. All night long it wails, making sleep all hut on- possible. There simply is no de- - Om-fpe.x- lie does not look upon it as an assembly of seholats and statesmen. He appreciates that politics is the piime motivating force in the lives of men on Capitol Hill, This is true in the House, where members must seek ; every two years. If all this is so, why then is it .fair to belabor Congress so persistently for its failures and weaknesses?- Arent these t'.n ordinary signs of human frailty that appqar in all of us? Now can we demand so much from men who merely reflect the character and purposes of the people they represent? IF THE SCHEME of the Veterans Foreign Wais snould be carried out I have several islands in mind which I think would be tndnently suitable for the sneaking Americans who have citizenship papers but no loyalty or love for their country. I ran across these islands during Woild War II when I was r, a lFC assistant to Genet al in chaige of nothing. On my way from Australia to the Philippines I came across some beauts, worthy of the vvoist Commie of them all. is, s CRITICISM is heaped on the members of that they must feel pretty resentful. It must sound to them as if the press and others were expecting miracles of peifeetion from them. But no reasonable man really does expect tint. lie Knows that Congress is a fairly accurate cross section of the American people, and that consequently it is made up of bright men and dull ones, of hard workers and loafers, of the honest and the dishonest. country. The members firmly believe, and have adopted a solemn l elution saying so, that the United Stairs should set aside an island in the Pacific to which to skip folks who believe that the red flag P prettier than Old Glory, and that life behind the lion Curtain is nicer, say, than in California, Texas, Arkansas, New York or Pennsylvania. NOT A BAl) IDEA, at that. Theto he treachoious Americans could plaster the palih trees with picturi s of Uncle Joe to their henilr content, hold bloody purges under the light of the silvery moon until not one of them was left, and convert the animals, birds and fishes to their vicious way of thinking without a soul In the world giving a hoot. n LACK OF LEADERSHIP SO MUCH X Mac-Ailhu- PJ ink. OF CONGRESS 1 1 The State Department tianseript of the trial Is the only complete stoiy to tench this side of the Iron curtain. It shows that the Czechs icgard only one type of news as legitimate. This is the ofticlal news news published In the government-controlle- d press or contained in government press releases Everything else is unofficial" and gathering unofficial news, hr the Communist book. Is Editorial IRRESPONSIBILITY Would Treat O Today the water is about 100 feet from Highway 40. , , Our bunuchs aie floating around and the river stilf is rising. We sandbagged some more dikes. . , O m .vv. fcnbmg the sound of this ctea- - j IF TIlFirE TWO islands tore A mixture compounded of'wauidiiT suit the purposes of the of Forcqn Wats, I have the try of a !o- -t soul, a beginner Vorei-arI am sure there are Aim on others. an p accordmn, the iig of fornwr Gts vv!o sir eeh of n street car rounding thon-ia im-in drv Lacks, the sola wend he pVd to furni-- h tVir of n j i.,,1, end the bellow of a, own root mmenil.oio1,-- , lie o e jul.ticinn, would be sweet vWti ibue d by IP, Nan .lit niuf in comparison. Syndicate, Inc i'.-t- I j d Whon the pusident calls the Alger Hiss cut urn a Red Honing one day, then revvaids with a judgeship; when he the Bos calls the Fulmight P.BC reforms "asinine. then adopts the Fuihnght RFC reforms himself; when ho vito s the Keir Natural Gas Bill, then appoints a power commission chairman who adopts the Keir Bill- - congie-- s knows that an unsteady hand is holding the loins. pio-ecut- Cholelithiasis is the proce-- s t iasis) of foimatiun' of gall stones these (lithos) scientific terms are a cinch for a high school sophomore wlfo has had a year of Latin and a year of Greek, school studtnk should have, no matter what else. Especially the student who to follow a professional taieer. Acute or chronic inflammation of the gallbladder may occul s without stones, but in most galistonec are present or form eventually, and must be removed or, possibly, dissolved, if the tiouble is to be cuied. GALLSTONES are composed of material that is normally present in the bile, such as bilirubin (bile co.oiing matter), cholesterol and a gallstone calcium. Sometimes hall the size of a fist fills the Or there may be fiom two to' hundreds of small stones present. Only a few gallstones contain enough calcium to films, but by use sh:iw in ot a dye before the y picture even pure cholesterol is mau" stones (which aie not opaque to ordinal y may be recognized because of their negative Mzm J turn p;i,. - ' or Haiiv Tinman will go down in history as a co.oaginus piisilkni and on his major policies a com oil picsulcnt. But he will also be known ns an unstanh. unpopular president, and in lead-i- g umicso, popularity and stability is what counts. The piesidents leaders pn Capitol Hill are no Ixitoi partiv because they dont particularly m the president's policies, also get bo) iev working for him. Speaker Sam Rayburn, who once held a steady hand over the House of Representatives, now' dot nt care much whether school keeps or not. Sam is older, more tired, more discouraged than in the days when he controlled the unruly House of Ri picsentatives for FDR. Those were the days when he pioneered the securities and exchange laws t rough congress; then the Holding Act both great landmarks to his legislative caieer. But its doubtful today if Sam would have the coinage and stamina to reepat that lc.islative performance. In i he senate, the presidents leader is a genial, hard-vvking, sccared senator from Arizona, Ernes! Mi Kurland, who is ,so woAded he will not be i itcd that he spends more time looking over Ins should r at his home state than at the national pn olems pitched at him in the senate. ca-e- gall-blaud- er r. X-r- shadow. SOME GALLSTONES are very hard. Some are soft as putty. Wien even a small gallstone and enters leaves the its duct very painful colic occuis. This is often attended with a chill and fever, pi i haps vomiting and sweating. Jaundice may follow. In recent years physicians have found that injection of calcium chloride solution into the much relief in gall-sfevein i biliary) colic as well as any other colic. IN FA 1 ERRING to the possibility cl dissolving gallstones I have in mind only the fact that the stones form from precipitation or concentration of substances normal'y ptesent in bile, and so It is not umeasonable to that if liver and bile conditions are irapioved the stones may be dissolved again. I know of no medicine that will dissolve or cause galstones to be dissolved. I REMEMBER how atrociously victims were deceived by a nostrum that purported to dissolve or remove gallstones back in the days when Uncle Sam winked at lying on the label. The victim first tool, a huge dose of cottonseed or other oil, of course colored and favored to disguise hUt-r- on r r- hYKi ur l)r. u ( ot two JiVs to- ) b ,rtheaH aii0 Mo 1,u a'is riudlRe tO S llfrl(J,r' u,i. of O .... F'.I Dl Cf BraJ.I gan, The d .- -$ id a l.our viiji " tdiiin -- M- flarlow is with the 10th, Infantry Division at Ft. Kiley, Kansas, and has been in uniform since in salvage January 8. His outfit has been actise Kansas-Missou- ri operations in the aiea, and has literally been forced from their military home by the racing ss liters. , cysl. s A YOlMl MWs unpretentious account of some flood events in Kansas is contained in a letter sent by Pst. Hat low G. I.arsen to his folks, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Larsen, Ness ton. i; CHOLECYSTITIS is the med- ica! teim fur inflammation of the gall (bile, choler) bladder ess -- i s.,a,,y the poo the ( i dW Lic!fd is ith lunijj y proudly d,,clor (naa. n n Ready a that the pne how to icmoveganJ OF II IREK FACTO i uphy-- n iieiaily cens.! siKinsjl le f i ilUtones i.v.on O d.et mclu mi ch ( hu.t - iol and i3 the only .v that Should tlim.i, ueorcuffibai., Oi" niun, is lS. Slims, s iv s Webster, j , .j Pa o' ( - the in.irr.al fiuw qJ in t.ry crunn or vessel; irg Mol. Well, thats 'not true Tn. Cm is do not i J - m . ( 1 ju.--i i.vv iggishly. I AR the hver afe w ere it the old ci in et t d Ier-uadeLie customers Jj c w ere necevvc circus at lac ze p t'un- - s'ured up ioi the cathartics j (.id vn; n.s more har 1h r the caipiamt itself. Thill uav we toll howtc vent cr collect stasis. 80 Oi LVIIONS a AVSVUK I sc Blunt Jvcivsors In the last year or twe - my nostrils so Jmg that they be I have carefully with sc.xs.us. But isnt: hens ii'.skI- grown nnil'tg. then a belter vv,,. (R R.) Afisv, i ho. e blunt sc. J u'hng ti. m out may rfe. sonous liu .lion. R-- Tell Me Kuid'y 1, T me what t., rlci gy and w nut tan be doit G M. Allsll'- 111 be you and the woild - happy It if I eieri b!e upon the cause. For I can1 only offer sugpe. o, i.illu.hve oi pi tv entice a m :it. Sc nd -- t imped self-ad- icnvclcqie cold .xk for par RELIEF lui". :.e ALLERGY. Entity ? I'd like to Know if ya a )'son or ;u1 pape" (c lun, n. ("!,s. T. LC r raly Ans.wi -- veil Or, X t half, a week, i I'm d tys ms, ofi would avenge out-thumn. I submit the same am of copy for daily and Sundq 1 have submitted for yean much shall be punted the ud ed: determine. i 1031 by John! (Copyright it. An DilieCo) ON THE LINE -- m lf McFarlands Assistant, Lyndon Johnson, squeek-o- d mio the senate from Texas by the narrow m u gin oi 87 votes and. having done so, has adopted a poliiy of antagonizing no one a policy w Inch d s not help to pass Mr. Trumans meas-sui- s and which has won for y ndon the nickname Lying Down Johnson. T-- Ti'"icfoie, the senate toda Is treated to the spect.ic'e ot vv niching th" presidents two leadcis unhappily voting and working against many of the poliiu- - thiy me supposed to push. 3. The lurking fear of civil rights really dominates tin" Senate. This is something never talked rib "in publ.ilv Dirt which is the most basic factor coalition. belaud the Kepubliean-Dixiecrat Two years ago, when southern leaders found that Mt. Truman was really serious about push-ir- g n Ins program, they formed a u.th noithein Republicans the followers of Abiaham Lincoln to sabotage civil rights in letuin fur southern help tn blocking part of Trumans economic piogtam. rvil-iigh- coal-itu.- ts That is wbv lust enough northern Republicans always vole with the south to block cloture and to continue any filibuster against civil rights. That is nl- - why you will usually find just enough souikein Democrats voting with the Republicans nrd against the Democratic platform to kill some of the Truman economic and labor measures winch the Republicans oppose. The h' artisan foreign policy has been pretty nine n on the, rocks ever since the leath of Michigan s Seiiator Yandenberg. But today a much fumer, though' never discussed, bipartisan domestic policy has taken its place. Engineered primarily by Russell of Georgia and Tall ot Ohio, 't ooerates so smoothly It is almost automatic. And it has become a basic tac-tin the stultification of a congress which wilj piebrhly go down as one of the most in history. Tommy Farr Would Like To Fight Again In America LONDON (INS) Tommy Farr spoke to the waiter at the empress club in flawless French, ordering our lunch, then lapsed back into his odd mixture of Welsh and Broadwayese to explain his ring comeback. . With an old world wave of the hand the mauling Welshman dismissed his reported huge Josses in the bookmaking (legal) business, and subsequent law suits, as the root of the fiscal troubles that bi ought him back to the ' ring. Seems that ai edict of the labor government is the cause. It is called the "land development tax " Tommy had paid 22,001) preshrunken pounds (about SDO.oOO) for a laige plot of land near Brighton and was prepanng to build a Lock of 68 flats (for another 68,000 pounds) to realize a completed pioperty which would then be assessed at 150,000 pounds. But the "land development tax" would have taken all of the between 68,000 pounds and 150,000. Tommy was in pretty heavy, found himself strapped, nteded quick money, and was advised by 'Tack Harding to come back to the ring after an al.ence of more than a decade. V.WIINCTON PIPELINE muiee aoesrig toe munitions board has mend i sinndaid zing all automobile and airplane e ic.ris A real blow to the Kremlin: Since J Lov the Ametican Steel industry has increased tiouiicLon by more than Russias total . . t;;p Yvhite House got a report l'st vv.'w; that American industry is now delivering S.T T,i Xi.i'tO worth of guns, tanks, planes, aid m'.r.r to t ie at nod services per month. This will oo jumn to Sal0,000.000 per month. . . . T ie j r.' 'Crl prme irciease granted the Machine-tco- l nd" si,-- u.s by Mobilization Boss Chr.r-l.- e Y, ii on over Mike Di Salles head. . . . General Washington that Japm E,';..y a!i in.ormed v ;u . 1 r riiv.s ens into e p it f at) n e g. t i o.id.s. Tunning of the Japanese., pull liM . ..j been go.ng o. secredy, ,.ioq.,a p , s bet a row Democratic Japanese army will soon be announced. ... Y-- . d cor.i- recom- its a unique charity. expenses going to admmistw Id like to do my bit to Li along. Farr thinks hell hang for ket ns after ftrtk four moie fuhts on this gloves which time, as he sayi have consolidated now holds ihe Welsh and K heavyweight tiths such are, and the S ottish chsmf) hofellow nain- i Shaw is . Neyv Zealand. n I ctoni e' inw JackSA-cba ma ov ci is me f"r British ihe Jack Ganiiit it Rm i s pion vvlia ey saii Woidiurk, 1 male He mam- - - erse.f. own deals, m. remains business man He re'ain5j es (1 a Pa: and spat i in bandC"! n basis, and fight. His hands befoi j r Bright home in H ' rounds ,('r a laige d s" the it. Toniiny ' -ci h ,,d dees ha wall run week. He cm 1 seconds in a shade m 1 I ' 32; KH Far 1 . ' f aur.d tili . ' ai1-- rr n h t ths min tc ?3tt, 1 I t h- - HAEHn!j tu 1SU become i'" Bar ai'. An to sports R K:,v o.e inns win . uence l,f came, as a iti, 5 Fr . THE RECORD BOOK ovei heie says Tommy is now 37. but hes a bit older. If he is 40 or 41, he must be one of the men of that age in the world. He only 201, as compared to his 208 on the night he fought Joe Louis 15 bloody rounds nearly 14 yeais ago. He has had six fUhts since he returned to the ring and won four of them, sufiei ing a TKO at the fist of a big ungainly club fighter named Frank Bell, whom he'il fight in a return in Manchester in October at the opening of a new 13 000 A business hear seat arena. In his fiist churn fi0ht in j.is native Pontypridd; where he won back his Welsh heavyweight title after a lapse of 12 yeats, Farr drew 36,000 fans. That was His subsequent fights, i SOU declS1u-Ma- of the of a national tad.o . C aw v. denn im an! mad? Br.'i- -i the h- - 8nl ,e e: ,mXreasr'-en- of the fi h'; u son's me i r1"' ,f,rUH to fumd ie ,js. rings, him moi e ih'-- i ,r,c. is'en .no r. r, t 'h -- d'" . their Peer Wilson Luuieis m the the papers they hit u J ' demands tor an the broadcast u'0 hjnd'' . hous ,e , comr all nvell attended, have resulted in a composite purse of about 22.000 pounds, much of it e because of losses in real estate.. HED LIKE TO come back to New York, but not as a challenger SOMETHIN a blanket of ) '; A" for Joe Walcotts title. settled over the I miss the guys over there, midst of the ce twinkle-eye- d the man Turp n ' ietory. said in his sincere way. What womens Td like to do is box an exhibition isponsond by " against Joe Louis for the Runyon captained by I I0(i Cancer fund. From eveiything I (Continued on iron-face- Ii fl5i (fri t - u. la- - tnl-- , ( w in h x cica rr the way up crueu.' They had been this one bit of pl'irJ ..air, of years e sP"rts complained. pajogwi Mr. Deloy tax-fre- 2 i ..ml that sourf'd thrmi h the ; jf ASr Jf nrCoii 0 4 i: |