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Image provided by: George F Johnson Memorial Library
THE DAILY BULLETIN Serving Endicott, indwell. Vestal and Western Broome—Eastern Tioga Counties The Wtothtr Cloudy with —- -— early tonight, possibly bscotninf mixed with rain on Sunday. Low tonight. 28 to 33. High tomorrow, 33 to 38. 5 Conti 10 Page* Endicott, N. Y.. Saturday, Nov*mb*r 27, 1954 T *l*phon* 5-3355 Vol. 90, No. 61 Teenager Held in Remington Jail Killing Vigorous Campaign Planned U. S. to Against Gales Lash Britain, Worst in 30 Years Seek Force of 'Outrage of Red Chinese World Opinion Jailing 13 Pilots LONDON (ft — Seven teamen the drama of the broken Flying were (eared dead and the fate of hundreds of others hung In bal ance today as hurricane-force winds and raging seas battered ships around the British Isles Two ' ice this year vessels were reported sunk \ ' J n The wind and rain threatened Kngland with its worst floods in 30 years. Thousands of acres al ready were inundated in the south and midlands, and weathermen predicted the storm would contin ue two more days. The 20.125-ton tanker World Con cord broke «in two and Its halves drifted miles apart A German trawler hit a World War II mine A lightship went aground An uni dentified vessel of about 1.000 tons was feared lost A Dutch motor ship wu swept on a rock Thirty five men were taken off the stern end of the World Con cord, a Llbenan-registered vessel, by a lifeboat crew The ship had broken apart off the coast of South Wales. Then the lifeboat radioed it would attempt to save the seven nwmen reported aboard the for ward section, which was reported sinking The Royal Navy aircraft earner H lust nous stood by to help, and the tug Turmoil, which aided In Enterprise three years ago also steamed tn to assist Helicopters flew into the storm to try rescues The big ship, just put into srrv is owned by the Are Handed Angry Note WASHINGTON. UP» — Sen. Know land (R.. Calif.) proposed today the I nlted HUtem rlap a tight blockade on C ommu- nlst China if the Reds refuse demands for the Immediate release of IS America* airmen Jailed at spies. By JOHN 1*1. HIOKTOWER WASHINGTON i*—The govern- her side on a sandbar • ment nM decided to preSS a v * or - Coast guard reports said seven ous campaign for release ol 13 of the crew ol eight were trapped Amencans imprisoned in Commu- inside ACS Air Force helicop- i nlst China by rallying mternation- ter from Ramsgate Base snatched | ^ opinion in th efree world against the eighth crewman from the ves- u,^ fj^j outrage sel The rescued seaman said four | A demand lor the prompt re- shipmates were trapped in the gal- | ie&se 0 j ,j, e u military men and ley and the other three in tin air- - • tight compartment He said there World Tanker Corp headed by Greek shipping magnate Stavros Niarchos The vessel was reported bound empty from Bntain to the Eastern Mediterranean The lightship South Goodwin, pa trolling the treacherous Goodwin Sands outside Dover Harbor fn the English Channel was ripped from her moonngs and wound up on 6th Anniversary 'Memorial Rites For Geo. F. George F. Johnson memor ial service* will be held la Riverhurst Cemetery tomor row at 2. SO p. m. They will mark the sixth anniversary of the great industrialist's death. Representatives of Triple Cities Chambers of (ommerce and Endicott Johnson Curp. workers will attend the rites beside Mr Johnson's K r ave The Re\. George C Oape- t anion. pastor of Endicott First Church of Christ. Disci ples, will officiate at the ceremony Mr. Johnson, co-founder of TJ and author of enlightened labor policies that earned him worldwide respeet. died at 91 oa Nov. 29. 194S. 2 civilians was delivered to Red , China s diplomatic representative was little hope they could have m London yesterday by the British survived 1 foreign Office at the request of The helicopter returned to the i ^ (j.g. State Department ship with a cutting torch and div ing equipment The heavy seas hammered at coastal walls rebult and fortified after Britain s disastrous floods and storms of 1953 Churning wa ter tore a jO-yard gap in the sea wall at Seaford, on the channel Washington officials said the same angry note was being de livered also to the Peiplng regime Death Car Driver Faces Grand Jury The driver of one of the cars Hiss Leaves Prison, Asserts His Innocence LFM ISBL'RG. Pa UP- Alger Hiss convicted ol lying when he denied KIMJIJ ; government set rets to a Communist spy nng, was re leased lrom federal prison today. He immediately proclaimed he was innocent asserting the charges against turn were un true Hiss, dressed in a business-type hat and well-worn grey topcoat brought to the penitentiary by his wife told newsmen at the pnsoa gate I shall renew my efforts to dis pel the deception that has been foisted on the Amencan people Hiss spent 3'i years ol a o-year sentence in the penitentiary at Lewisburg Specifically he was convicted of lying at a congres sional investigation which looked into charges by Whitaker Cham bers, admitted Soviet spy couner that he had obtained government documents from Hiss a former State Department official Father Baloga Spoke on Vatican Radio FBI Lists Robbery As Motive The Rev. Herbert C. Baloga with Papal Mom MI to Endicott Priest's Voice Goes Behind Iron Curtain • • • f,470 Auto Accidents In West Coast Smog LO SANGSLfiS ill — For the, fourth successive day. Southern California was in the grip today of traffic-paralyzing, eye-aroarting smog and fog that the weather man says will continue over the w eekend. Indicative of the blinding effect of the fog. which rolled 10 miles inland from the Pacific, was a traffic report of 1.470 crashes since the dense, ground-hugging mist started last Wednesday How ever only two deaths were at tributed directly to traffic Fog closed Los Angeles Interna tional and Long Beach airports again last night. Lockheed Airport at Inland Burbank. usually free of fog. was closed for an hour and then reopened Football games schedued for last night were postponed. Visibility in Ijog Angeles harbor was three quarters of a mile The log slowed but did not stop the movement of ships Fog horns m the harbor at Santa Monica had wailed steadily for 48 hours. Even Santa Claus was grounded by fog in Santa Monica. Retail merchants there had arranged for him to arrive by helicopter. The children were on hand, despite the gloom and mist, but old Santa just couldn t fly through the fog The -''-need signals and Santa finally showed up late, rid- ..,<>..ng bus The kids wen'n i impressed Cities in the metropolitan Los Angeles area were asked to re frain from burning trash until the smog and fog setge Is ended. Dr Frederick D. Newbarr. Los Angeles County's chief autopsy surgeon, said microscopic studies will be made of three infants who died of respiratory ailments and added but we have no test to determine definitely that smog in any way contributed to their deaths.\ Autopsies indicated yes. terday that two of the infants suc cumbed to pneumonia A 6-pound girl was born early today in a car because her par ents, Mr and Mrs. James Crock et, 35. of Norwaik lost their way in the fog while en route to a hospital Three Endicott Teenagers Held In Theft Case Two Endicott youths are in jail, and an Endweli youth le cilia his 13-year-old son. Tony — — r ^ — i . . . . . and attorney friends, Chester Lane through the British diplomatic rep , Reived a lata! accident • ^ Roben H ^^am™ As he resentatlve in that Communist i Thanksgiving Dav at Henry and wa]ked tnrougn tnP big double capital Bntish channels were | Fayette Streets in Bmghamton ^ door of , np hugp bnck used because the Bntish maintain ,w ill face grand jury action. Dis- WHUed nson , hp , ormer pnsor .er diplomatic relations with Redltnct Attorney Robert E. Fischer , No lgl37 ttas surroun< jed by near ly ELEANOR SWEET Bulletin Staff Writer \Drahi bratla 1 aestrv na Slovenska. Donasium vam srdecny pozdrav od vasich Dodakov in Amerike \ an Endicott voice greeted Hiss was rnet^byhis wife.^Pns- ( the p^p^ n f Slovakia recently over the Vatican Radio. Europe's most powerful short-wave broadcasting system. The voice was that of the Rev , ———————— Herbert C Baloga OFM Conv vsas sponsored by the Arch-Dk> China, the United States does not Actios im L. N. And at U N. headquarters In New York Quel, b. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. handed a copy of the protest to the U.N. Secretary General Dag, Hamraar- skjold with a request that it he circulated to all «u osaabar na tions. The America* note was one of the toughest which has been dis patched by the State Department in a long time. It flatly accused the Chinese Communists of vio lating the Korean armistice agree ment by holding the 13 and in directly warned them that there said this afternoon Joseph C Catlin. 37 of Mont- arrested rose Pa was drunken driving and reckless driving charges after the acci dent He waa to have appeared in City Court again December 1. Eleven persons were injured In the accident, and one ot them, Mr* Sarah Bliss. 69. of 10 Chap man St.. died at 7:30 last night | in Qtvr Hosoital 1 As a result of her death. Dis trict Attorney Fischer ordered action stayed In Citv Court against Catlin and said the dis trict attorneys office would present the case to the next ly 100 reporters and photogra- i phers. on , The drone of a helicopter over head almost drowned out Hiss words as he shouted \I m very glad to be out but I want to reassert my complete in nocence ' is a Umit to the patience of the Broome Grand Jury American people. i - It also made a preliminary de mand for \punishment of the Chi nese Communist officials respon sible\ and for compensation tor the \wrong\ done the 13. Map Strategy Authorities said today thejj were PHILADELPHIA I*— Joey Giar- dello of Philadelphia, a contender for the middleweight boxing title was arrected today on six charges leased In custody of his parents.; - — - , followine arrest hv Pennsylvania i studvm g *U avenues of following State Police in connection with up i\'\'\* 1 1 deman <*. apparently a theft in Warren Center Pa I ln tne bel,ei that even Chinese The Endicott youths are identi- ! Reds - 18olated as thp y from fled as Paul Welch 18 of 1'„ 1 westem world, can not ignore Madison Ave. and Ronald Wil- ,hp mounun 8 pressures of public kins, also 18 of 2 Washington I °P mlon Ave The Lndwell vouths .HPH Among these pressures already \ ~~ titv is withheld because he \s\ \ the ,tand ta)wn by I rTJSli only 16 years of aire ,ne Bnt,sh government which .n I ^'ardello was charged specifi Welch and W.lk.n* were re comments at the U N and in Lon- ™'y *<tn meting a not not ag- v »„Kins were re-, don denounced tht> t„ atItl< , n , of gravated assault and battery. |ar- the Americans as \outrageous\ l^ny by tnck, fale pretenses and Boxer Held On Assault Bluebook Omits Astor, Vanderbilt I NEW YORK <*>-A Vanderbilt i and an Astor havp been dropped from the 1955 Social Register so- , riety s bluebook j Among the missing from the 827 page book wer<» John Jacob Astor the former Ulrn French Vander bilt one of tw in daughters of Rhode Island s former Gov Wil liam H Vanderbilt and New York investment broker V* ilham C Langley. of Westhury who mar- ned into the entertainment world Astor made the following mar pastor of Endicott St Joseph« 1 cese of San Francisco and in- Church in Italv on a Marian rinded 95 pnests and pilgrims Year pilgnmage I | P d by Archbishop Mitty of San His opening greetintr above 1 Francisco Arrangements for translated was 'Greetings) Father Baloga were irmde brothers and sisters in Slovakia I through a member of his parish I am bringing you heartfelt here travel agent John M. So- greetings from your countrymen | chor in America ' He recalled today that he went on to give them words of encouragement to he patient, ami to -keep their faith. Back in Endicott today after completing the several thousands of miles the Itinerary included In -a tour of European shrines Father Rologa said the oppor- tunifv fn bmadcaxt to the lands hehiprl the Iron Ciirtai'i «m n hichligh? nf his fnu\-ne\ ^e ' MP! was a surprise srif• f n Mm from members of the parish Papal Audieneea The Endicott priest said he ro reived an invitatfnn to make *he broadcast through an ncquam i tance Mnnsienn' Re/rlicek w ho | head\ ^t John Nepomucene Cnl- leer in Rome He said the ad dress in his native tongue was eight minutes lone and w-ns re- I corded for rehrortdcast (wire at the Iron Curtain lands of central Furope He added that some of the ptl Two Endicott women who also made the pilgrimage were Mrs. Lawrence Belko. 78. and Mrs Mary Hranck, 67. The group sailed on the Constitution and returned on the Queen Mar} It was Father Baloga*s first trip to Europe although not his first ocean vovage since he served in the Pacific in World War IT I Although the Fndicott priest's four was a pilgrimage he did •nanaee to squeeze In some secu lar pleasures For example he was runner-up In shipboard ping- pong championship competitions on his transatlantic vovage. turned to Pennsylvania late yes- terday. and were arraigned be fore Justice Of the Peace Ar- , thur C Brower In New Milford ] |L_ nn linlrc They were remanded to the Sus ' '* c quehanna County Jail for grand Jury action. The 16-year-old was permitted to return home In custody of his parents and will appear in Juve nile Court in Montrose at a later date. To Leave Hospital WASHINGTON I* — Senator McCarthy's physicians reported today his condition is good enough to permit him to leave Bethesda Medical Center to morrow barring any complica tions. AUGUSTA Ga . <.T»- It was more of the same for President Eisenhower todav—more relax- ital news this year resulting from what police called I On Aug R he married Mrs i grims in his group who had gone a notous assault at a gas station Dolores Fullrnan after getting a on to Munich fold hire they had Mexican divorce from Mrs Ger heard a broadcast there and trude Gretsch Astor | weir amazed t,, hear him spean While Astor was honeymooning j ing on short-w ^w with his third wile Gennide i I 'thct naiticMlar highlights of \ting moved lor a separation contended t- < tnn he said todav werel The sources said the Pope would the Mexican divorce was invalid the tv» o Papil audiences he at return to Rome later today from his summer home at Castel Can- Pope Again Stricken III VATICAN CTTY <m — Reliable Vatican sources said today Pope Pius XII has suffered a recur rence ot fhe hiccup attacks that afflicted him last winter The Pon tiff reportedly also has been vom- to commit unlawful .ng around the Augusta National | ' Golf clubhouse and more firing, aw-ay down the rolling fairways conspiracy acts Arrested with the boxer were Victor Man am. 24. and Joseph Bonadies, 24 Police said the smashed up a gas station operated by Prank Gallo in South Philadel- and tied up a considerable portion trnd. I a' i\ast -| Gondolfi one of Astor s fortune The suit is still ; , rl v ,te and one puhlu his vns.t d\\'' » s Planned but would cancel pending , -o the m I.tarv rem.terv at a scheduled visit to Rome s Basili- from rampe An7l „ , „,„ Assisl w h „ rP Church He has been suffering After returning \r\7\n a v ISI 1 t 1 > rancts (mm a serious gastnc ailment lor three men Astor and his third wde separated 1 ^ ^, > rann^ the founder. „ o , mo . _ . „„„, P . v'anderhi i mar , , , I some time Last January, the ned^ N«T ?nrt C ^ Andre 1 M ' h f r ' ^ '*'T ^ stomach disorder, complicated by ned a New 1 orK law^\ ftnnrT I de- an d the opportunitv he had hir ,-. n - Newburg last I>ec The mar .... ^ hu cups, nage received onh a t»i>word Trip for Tito BELGRADE. Yugoslavia The government announced to day thar President Tito will ar rive- in India Dec 16 on a state visit of 18 days He will go on to Burma later Oh, Deer! i.f* — Fred a buck— the OGDENSBURG Hourruel is short four-legged kind. Houmiel had hung the 7V l pound spike horn' deer outside his garage This week he told police someone had nit down the carcass and carted It off J. C Police Trap Snares Phone Masher A 27 year-old Binghamton man, employed in Endicott, is in Broome County Jail to day, after pleading guilty to a disorderly conduct charge which Johnson City police say involves annoying wom en with obscene telephone messages. Fred Charles Malenich, of 88 Rotary Ave. was taken into custody late last night, as police *'sprung a trap \ during investi gation of a series of Triple Cit ies area complaints The trap was set under direc tion of Johnson City Police Chief Floyd L Allen with the co-oper ation of a 16-year-old Johnson Citv girl, one of the complain ants. Chief Allen said the girl had received a telephone call on November 17, after her picture appeared in a Triple Cities newspaper The caller, who did not identify himself sought to make a date with the girl, and used obscene language in his conversation. The girl slammed Ask Law Change Chief Floyd L. Allea said he and a Broome County Sheriffs Deputy, Holland Lewis, are seeiriag a revision la preaetit laws, which wouW permit 4 •tlffer penalty for disorderly conduct convictions, when war ranted. T»e sUaortferiT c*n*toct law \cover* a multitude nf BUM.'* \ the riuef said, and the per mitted penalty following con viction Is sometimes very light In view of the offense Involved. He said he and Depwtv L*wfe have di«eomed the matter with State Senator Warren Aader- the receiver and told her par ents of the incident. Her father talked to Chief Allen, and as a result, a trao was set under direction of the chief. The girl made a date with the unidentified man on his next call She agreed to meet him in the En-Joie Theatre, which is located In Willow Street al most next door to the police station in Johnson City She told him where she would be sitting, and wore a flower in her hair for identification The flower had another pur pose too Its removal was a signal to police to close in disorderly conduct charge Ar raigned before Justice Richard F Rath he pleaded guilty, was fined $23 and also ordered to spend the next 10 days in Broome County Jail. Ponce said Malenich Is mar ried and the father of two chil dren. Chief Allen said police have The young girl went to ttejbeen conducting a lengthy in- l^lJ\ 1 *\ d 88t '\ivestigation based upon . series the section agreed upon. Sev- .. 1\ . era! others were there on the' 0 ' complaints from women resi- \dote\ too: a couple of special denls of the Triple Cities. Each policemen, and some regular of th- complaints has stated that officers, including the chief him-l ,n< ' man on the telephone used _ • j obscene language After a few minutes, a young man came m and asked whe ther the seat next to the girl was taken. She said no, and asked him whether he was oer \blind date.\ He said he was. she removed the flower from her hair, and the police closed in. Only then did Malenich learn just how \blind\ a dote be was on noUce in the Social Register - Vanderbilt - New burgh among i \Marriages of 19M t o r: md |c ' M ,i ss Shrine in France 8t Large Pilgrimage His tour also took him _ r so weakened him that he Lou.dcs had 1 to be fed intravenously The sources said the Pope's physicians had warned him recent ly that his strenuous schedule to Nixon Target In $150,000 Suit SAN FRANCISCO • F- Vice President Richard Nixon faces a $150,000 suit, charged with assault, battery and false im prisortment by a man ejected from a political rally last month after a heckler shouted Tel us a dog story. Dick The heckler s remark came as Nixon was finishing a speech a' a San Mateo, Calif ralK Oct 29 Guards began escorting James Heavey 33 of ^an Fran Cisco, from the auditorium but when the speech ended Nixor called htm back and lectured him on freedom of speech Heavey's suit charges that he was assaulted hattered and falsely detained by 12 men under Nixon« supervision suffering \grave and severe humiliation, embarrassment and shame in cluding shock and irjurv tn his nerves and nervous system ' of audiences, appearances and I Naples On.vi Flora nee the rhurch on wmcn he has itv Fren<h River;- Lisieux in Nor-| s|Stpd wouJd caus< , trouble man.K with its shrine to <t The Pope reportedh is extreme- The-»-v .i 'c. P ^ns !•>< n four | v tired from the strenuous pro- da > st i\ and to San Sebastian gram he maintained during his in ^na Ust four months at Castel Gan- The Marian Year pilgrimage dolio. Main Stem Flashes By Barn«y Frs>ngh- Several attempts had beA made to snare the caller, but each tune he had eluded the snares Chief Allen said the Broome County Sheriffs office has been active in the Investiga tion, and that he worked with deputies on at least one such •trap.\ which proved unsuccess ful. The chief said he believed other a tea law enforcement offi- Hp was taken into police rers might want to question hoadjqnarters and booked on al Malenich. Blaze Probed PUSAN, Korea i/p» — Investi gators set out todav to And the 1 cause of a fire that raged for! seven hours through the I.' S , Army's biggest quartermaster depot in Korea, gutted three- fourths of the sprawling Installa tion and burned 20 homes. There was no immediate estimate of datmage from the fire which Army sources called the most disastrous military blaze in Puasma history. Lou (Attyl Starikov traver sing I nion s Mam *<!em ,n I the chill of the ayem with his hands neatly covered hut es chew ing anv head co\ ering Funds for that are not i in the budget he avers. I Eddie Bender of I'nion Cen- I ter Rd happv to have his ! wife and new daughter Gloria I Jean at home and all doing ' so nicelv . The little lass was horn at Wilson recently i . . . Congrats Betty Hand and her fiance making a \erv attractive couple in a tour about the area making calls here and there. Mrs. Charles (Betty) Thomas in a fair way to be Queen of the Day in her own household tomorrow as she plans to celebrate another birthday event. Laura Mldgley listed as being among those who will receive birthday greetings and salutation* tomorrow. Rov Wlke and the missus among the holiday weekend visitors to town and both looking fine and fit. Mr and Mrs. Joseph Santsv- re.IU reaching another mile stone in their married life tomorrow and anticipating en joyment of a party to mark the anniversary occasion at their home in Broad Street with their daughter* Mrs- Jo seph Foti, hostessing . . . Congrats, Robert (Boats) Bart of End- well feeling right chipper about his ultimate success as a hunter as he displayed a fine 4-point buck deer, his first such bag of game in 31 years of trying . . . Congrats. Ism Shaw having fun rig ging up things for a success ful pancake <wpper to be held in Odd Fellows Hall. Union next Wednesdav ev» ning with the Rebekah'c in charge . . \ And the public s invited. LEWISBURG, Pa. — Th« Federal Bureau of Investiga tion has accused a third pri soner a 17-year-old juvenile delinquent — of murdering William W. Remington in prison. Remington was slain Mon day in his dormitory in the federal penitentiary here. A former government economist, he was serving a three-year sen tence for perjury on his rela tions with Communist agents. The FBI yesterday revealed ^ that robbery was the motive for the murder. Remington waa killed b> a head Wow struck, with a hnck w rapped in * sock. That there was a third prison er involved in the murder came to light yesterday when the FBI filed a murder complaint against Lewis Cagle Jr.. 17, of Chattar nooga, Tenn. Admits Killing Cagle. nerving a 15-month term for juvenile delinquency, admitted that Remington was killed wtien he surprised him and two other men while they* were ransacking Remington« cell, the FBI said. The other two prisons**—• George J. McCoy, 34. of Grundy, Va. and Robert C Parker, 21, of Washington—had previously been charged with the murder., Norman H. McCabe, special agent in charge of the FBI at! Philadelphia, said that \C*gie admits that he. together wit* McCoy and Parker, planned tot ransack Remington's room on* the morning of November 21 and that the aeaault took place while they were in his room,\ Loot Vnlnetaaa A prison spokesman wan quoted as aaying: \Tnere was nothing in Rerningtorifc raonar of any value. Only cigarata, a fevr candy bxra and personal Items* Absolutely no money. - ' AO three of the assailants are charged with first-degree murder. The FBI la still In vestigating tha case. Shortly after Remington died following an emergency opera tion in the prison hospital Tues day morning, his attorney in New York City said that the lockers of Remington and his cell mates had been looted four times in two months and that a mattress had been burned. The first - degree murder charge was authorized by U. S. Attorney J Julius Levy at Scran ton and fued bv the FBI before U. S. Commissioner An drew A. Lelser Jr. in Lewis* burg. To Call Jury Mr Levy said that a federal grand Jury will be called next Wednesday to consider th* murder charges against th* three convicts. Cagle was sentenced Sept. 21, 1951. in Chattanooga to serve three vears for Interstate trans* porta tion of a stolen motor vehicle McCov and Parker are servin* similar terms ln the Lewisburg pnsoa The 17-year-old was paroled Julv 10 1952 but the parol* was revoked after another con viction in the following Decem ber and a 15 -month sentence for the second conviction was added to the time remaining on his original sentence. Remington went on trial twice over alleged Communist connec tion? At the second trial h* was found guiltv of lving at his first trial when he denied giving classified documents to Elizabeth Bent ley confessed former Soviet spy ring courier. Simple Services Held for Victim RrDGEWOOD N m— William W. Remington today * received the last rites of th*. Episcopal Church in simple fu neral services in the small, stucco house of worship of hi* boyhood Fifty persons Including his widow father and mother, at tended the 1^-minute service for the 37-year-old convicted per- lurer in St Flinbeth's Church three blocks from the heme *f- his parents. Six policemen stno.* guard out- ' •ide the church because, accord ing to Patrolman Nick Lmhov-. - - anonymous phone calls of a' threatening nature had beast., made to the funeral home the rector ot the church. Moschok Hurt George Moecbak. Mt,\*T^1p|: \ Floral Ave.. Johnson CHy-ymml attended ln Wilson 'Timiilsl Hospital last night for fracture of the kits* Ht^n .pB .T^ his left hand. He mimm4 *1mM$'ij injury during « b <»sfcethettv 'sjBaa , »j^ in th* Wnsframtaai llsttfc. T&fc'itfi