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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1

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MUM.U1D, U' 'U. TCJMrj TUTHtM manrvATt m4 victnitti Fair Today aad Taaigfcl, low High Bnn. UU. MT4IM. MAT OH 'SO II.

UfSMt tVNlaNM ej Uf THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER mt. DAILVt SUNDAY: FIVE CENTS -11 1th YEAR NO. 135 DAILY nr-o-rj MONDAY MORNING. AUGUST 20. 1951 MCWS iUMCU.

Nw Vk Tie, Aneiistad lnMtiMl Nmi UM f'M A Wiweete nn innpr Desolate Failure, LlSiO a-aea-s---xx-Bes-- anBMB Of Figuring Done GOP GrOIip 3yG Now Hits Hexico By Foe Repulsed. Reds Protest "Atticli" In Neutral Zone Of Policy In Asia xtufunugmku i i i. By Kigiiieers' Carps, Uwcikers Assert. In Jirsaica Wake. r.j'ARTHUR IS UPHELD if Only "Positive Plan For Korean Victory 1 l.

-rJ I I Estimates 30 Per Cent Off, Taxpayers Are Stung, 7 Committee Reports. V. r. Tim Washington. Aug.

19-Disctosing 124 per cent InereaM In the emit at civil work project line they were authorised, Houm appro pristions subcommittee ehargcj today that mart than 90 per cent the rtM wu the result of "In-deouate engineering pUimtng and minuting" by the Army Corpt of Engineers. Seventy per eent of the tncreaat resulted from higher price. As Negotiator? Meet Again Four Peaks Seized Air Victories Scored. VS Base Near Kaesong, Aug. 90 4 Monday 1 1INS1 Hand-to-hand fighting flared today along the 135-mile Korean front.

Mean, while, a four-man cease-fire subcommittee met at Kaesong after Gen. Nam II. the chief Communist negotiator, protested a mysterious United Nations "attack" on a village inside the five-milt neutralized rone Sunday. UN force Jn ridfe-scarred Eastern Kores repulsed a Red counterattack and secured a hill on the second day of the "battle of the hills." The commanding height. Just Inland from the East Coast, was wrested from three Communist companies which offered Stubborn resistsnce," Earlier, the I attack poshed to the tope ef for peaks, earn aa Om ef the awl Ittee'a of the dsssaam of atrortteo aad the large sever aad ha 1 era end Reed fret project aew high as tjm feet, la heavy aetfcw supported by artillery, naval aad ksmbarameat Thousands Are Homeless-Kingston Is Shambles 67 Convicts At Large.

Miami. Aug. 19 IL'PI A mighty hurricane with winds of 130 miles an hour banged into the coast of Mexico tonight after leaving at least 76 dead and thou. Mnds homeless on the tropical island of Jamaica. The Miami Weather Bureau Mid Coxumel Island, Just off the Yuca-tan Peninsula of Mexico, had re.

corded 110 miles-an-nour. winds, as the hurricane's frontal rumbled Inland at 13 miles an hour. The prninsuls's eastern coast is made up largely of high bluffs and mountains and is sparsely settled. A lata Mtlmate by government official on Jamaica placed the dead at at least 7a. The hurricane struck the fertile British islsnd with 125-mile-an-hour winds Friday night Klh'OSTON HARDEST HIT.

The capital city of Kingston ap. parently took the worst besting, with at least 33 persons killed in flic'isis also indicated that the town of Morant Bay. an important seaport, waa leveled and that United Fruit Co. central sugar factories were wrecked and thou. Mnds of bags of sugar lost In the hrlenNoland.

Miami. United Preu staff correspondent who flew to Kingston, Jamaica, to get first-hand knowledge of the terrific damage on the British West Indies island. Mid death and de. atruction were widespread throughout the resort playground. British Gov.

Hugh Foot told Noland it was "the worst storm ever to hit the Island." Eattmatea ef damage ranged from the Ooveraor'a eatimate of mUUan to It million ap to aallnon by ether official. RED C9MMM APPEAL. The Red Cms appealed for clothing, food and iodine. A Brit, ish frigate, due here Tuesday, was rushing supplies from Barrados, on another island in the West Indies. gwventy-alx prtaoaere who gaiaed frsaSsas when the terrific wiada of the storm Mew dewa the walla of the laland peatteatiary were etsM at Urge.

This was of little raaeera at the moment to the authorities una were belpiag clean hp and preveat leotlag after the AnocUliS Piwi wirtrbMa, COUPLK NOW HOPES TO KEEP CHILDREN OFFERED FOR ADOPTION. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Davey, Columbus, Ohio, said yesterday they were amaied at the response to' their offer to allow adoption of their seven children. Davey, 34-year-old truck driver, faced eviction with bis family from their two-room home, because of illneM and debt A factory owner, hearog of the adoption offer, suggested that the Daveys let him consolidate their debts, and insisted that none of the children be put1 up for adoption.

"I don't think we'll have to give any of the children for adoption now," Mid Davey. Ths children, seated between their parents are, left to right, Ronanna Mae, Carl James, Richard William, Charles, Marguerite. Nancy Ann, 5. and David Michael, 2. Colonel Flies 628 Wiles An Hour, Sets World's Oval Course Record LIE STILL CONFIDENT.

I'nited Nations. N. Y- Aug. 19- '(NYT) Arriving here today from a five-week trip to Europe, Trygve Lie, Secretary-General of the United Nations, reaffirmed his optimism concerning efforts to obtain a cease-fire in Korea. "I still think that in the end there will be an armistice," he Mid as he arrived at New York International Airport Mr.

Lie took a four-week holiday in hia native Norway, followed by a week attending to UN matters in Geneva and Paris. too etart iiaslraatlea ef aew atvN werke prejsets. "with the raoejea ef swejeete mvejvmg coa-ssdiralliai ef grove mspart" noi'Rcs am acAxirco. "The cot estimate at the time of authorization of the 183 proj-ecu on the civU work program wu their cost wa estimated lait ipring aa 15.912,-461,000. an InereaM of 83.273.933.-000.

Authorisations were spread over a number of Actual cot ha gone up till more met thoie eeumatea were given to the Houm and 'the Senate, the committee report Mid. "New tentative coat estimates have Just been compiled by the Corps of Engineer (a of July which indicate that them lMetvU works projects have increased in 5 an additional lilt mutton Sovt the The coat considered by the Senate twhen It pawed the civil work appropriation bill Augurt 15 wr uTofdate" the report added. mmm eetentlsne) oe- His, Report Finds N. Y. Timet Speciaf.

Washington, Aug. 19 Eight Republican Senators Juiaad today in a statement calling the Truman, administration's ar East policy catastrophic failure," adding that it "represents the most desolate failure In tho history of our foreign policy." They placed the entire harden on the admlaUtratt laying the tiense partiealsrly on the atata Diasrtmsat, and rejsctad aH IntlSMtlsas that tha'rar East goney "in achieved nader Mpartfaan speasarshlp, aad that all must bar the responsibility for the failure." The authors of thete views were Sens. Styles Bridget, New Hampshire; Alexander Wiley. Wisconsin; H. Ale, andrr Smith, New Jersey; Bourke B.

Hickendooper, Iowa; WUliam r. Knowland, California; Harry P. Cain. Wash-Ington; Owea Brewster, Maine, and Ralph E. rtanders, Vermont They aU Mt aa members of the Joint setaion of the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relation Commit-less, which lasted for eight weeka.

inquirng Into the dr. cwmstances surrounding the relief of Gen. Douglas Mac-Arthur as supreme commander in the Far East The Joint committee decided on Friday to issue no report and conclusion, on the ground that formal evi. dene at disagreement in the Senate on far East policy might have a derogatory effect on the Korean true nego. tiations and the signature neat month of the peace treaty with Japan.

riNDINOt OP MINORITT. Had there been a formal report, theviews expresae today by the eight Republican, would Prbly have or. Mated the section usually given to minority findings. In uchaTehicle. the Senators elected to nVrtttnsUU M.

was th- author of the motion to dispense with a report Today, after fe.rw.fUT eightofhla colle.guea were making publie their view, as a result of the hearings, ha issued a attic- ThematE In which General MacArthnr was relieved by thVPrerrtMr. SaltonstaU Mid, "ahowad 1 lack of tadtt and foslgnt." Oa the other hand, he conceded WwXt I In other world General MacArthurs periodic public Mtfanents csused considerable doubt as to whether was sympathy with the orders of hi. superiors." and that they created serious doubt as to whether he or the Preskient, through the Department of State, was the spokesman lor our government', position in the Far East. Ne credited General XoeArthnr with a saitlve peaVr In the Korean campaign. If a-ereaafal, k-aald.

KtnM and the flghtlng with a prampt victory, wheeeM "tba ad-KtaUtrtiM's pauey, a im ran wta only by wearing own of the Chinese Cemmaalats," Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R. MaM.) atUched a brief note to the statement of the eight Senators, saying he Intends to submit his own views soon. AQP.EE WITH CRITICISM." "Without endorsing all of the statements In the compilation of views to which this letter Is appended." he wrote.

"I agree with its criticism of the way in which fieneral MacArthur's dismisMl was handled and Communism was given a 'green light' in China and Korea. I concur In Its tribute to the valor of our troops." The bulk of the eight Senatora' expression of views was divided into what they called "areas of agreement" and "areas of disagreement." The matters on which they considered all members were agreed were the following: President Trams bad nadispnted anthorlty to rsmsvo General BtarArthar from his eeenmaad In the Far Eaet, bat the method of accossiplishlng the reaaoval was UN reeerd eet twe yearn age la a CVveiaad-ladunapolis rue. His elapsed, time for the round trip was 44 minutes and 356 second. Lieutenant Baisley's victory caught the press a bit short. Hia name waa not listed among the official starters.

He took the plsce of another First Lieutenant, Harry MonseU of Shreveport, I ji. No reason was given for the last minute shift. Following Lieutenant Bsisley on the basis of elspsed times were Lt. CmU William E. Bertram, with a 572.395 mph average and an elapsed time of 45:13.6.

end 1st Lt Jacob Krapp with a 521.825 average, and an elapsed time of 40:30 A. Kip Mone of Youngstown, Ohio, won the consolation event ot the Continental Motors Trophy race 1 or midget planes thia afternoon. With an average speed of 177.560 mph, Mone beat out two other midget plane pilots who had the poorest times in three Continental heats yesterday, and three other pilots who failed to qualify for the finals. litre, that a no tm tk. eest ee Pe tmt -m laUwtuUM eett MM.

"was atmoeaeMe IWHrt eagtoMiuff ptaaawg and RUT Dll TO TMCKM. The rinliler ef the mI 111 ar wt WM the And in the air, UN planes scored a victory over enemy jets in a huge sky battle. Ground fighting flared also In the Central front sector west of Chorwon, southesstern tip of the old Communist "iron where the Eighth Army Mid the Red offered "moderate resist anee Xerth of Cborwan, the Reds aa4 VS foreaa were engaged band to-hand rembat South of Kumsong, Red build-up center east of the iron triangle, UN force, first withdrew under Red pressure, then counterattacked, killing 92 Communists. Peiping Radio Mid Gen. Nam 11 lodged a protest with Adm.

Turner Joy over a mysterious "attack" inside the neutralised gone. Earlier the Red Radio charged the violation wu "pre meditated attempt" by the UN "la wreck." the cease-fire parley. "ATTACK" BY VS MEN. Presumably the same matter was taken up at today's fourth meeting between a UN and Communist four-man subcommittee Mt up to attempt to break up a lengthy deadlock over a neutral lied buffer zone between Communist and UN troops. Despite tenaten created by the flare-up la the rkxhttag and the Red attempt to make the meat of Baa day'a alleged vtsiaUeo, the UN Young Beauty Quits Films To Become Catholic Nun Police Chief Walter Calder told 1 (BY assocMTtn must Detroit.

Aug. 19-Col Fred S. Ascani, flying an F-80E Sabre Jet plane, set a new 100-kllometee 162-mile) closed course Vorld speed record today with an average apeed of 628 698 miles an hour. Colonel Aaeaal flashed his or. aaga-nescd apeedater aroajad the aval course la the one-piano Thompson Trophy speed event, feature ef the two-day Natieoal Air Races.

Hia elapsed time for -the miles waa an aatooadiBg five ntlnntoe U. Mt aeronde. The new mark la recognised of. ftcially by all aviation authorities. It eelipare the eld record ef MS.lt mph set by John DouglM Derry ef Great Britain la a Brit.

Ish-made DeHavtUand ea April 12, jat. The old American mark was 494.937, set more than five years ago. John Paul Jones. 31. of Van Nuys, Calif.

upheld the proweu of the civilian pilots by exceeding his winning record of 187.55 mph set in the Continental Motors Trophy race last year. Today, in the concluding event, he averaged 197.218 mph over a 15-lap, two-and-one -half-mile course. Jones, a descendant of the fa-mous Navy hero of the same name, was an easy victor over his principal opponent. Steve Witt, man of Oshkosh, and four other rival in the Continental race. However, Jones failej to come up to his elimination run of 199.778 mph reached yesterday.

A crowd of 91.000 gasped in awe as Colonel Ascani streaked across the Wayne' Major Airport at the stai and finish of the dash. Colonel A- -ni. 34, of Rockford. Ill, ran up 53 combat missions in World War II and holds virtually all of the top Air Force decorations. He is director of experiments! flight testa and engineering at Edwards Air Force Base, Muroc, California.

The Thompson dssh was the second major event of today's air lis and back, race ached le. Karller 1st IX William D. Baisley ef 'Ma Fmnrlaea won the Allison Trophy race to India aapo The IS-year-oM BsMeys aver age speed la winning the asm saila Allison dash waa AM .8 It mile, per hour, abnu14 mph abort of the t- Noland there was little looting so far. Calder Mid one of the more serious problems wss finding haven for hundreds of homeleM families. Five hundred persons were sheltered in one Kingston school I iota alone, it was reported.

Others were sent to the hurricane-damaged public maternity and mental hospitals. Noland Mid several ships were capsixed, aground or badly damaged in Port Royal harbor. The airport at Kingston wss described as a "collapsed Jungle" of wreck age. Governor Foot Mid Linda Darnell and a crew or Hollywood screen players, who are making a British film, were on the oppoute aide of the islsnd, which suffered slight damage. The huge sugsr crop of the Island waa unaffected, the Governor Mid, but Jamaica'a rich banana crop took a bad beating.

After hitting the island and taking a passing swipe at the British colony Island of Grand Cayman, the hurricane gained steam as it rumbled across the Caribbean Sea. from their Irajn River at a. m. (8i99 n. sr.

1 Los Angeles, Aug. 19 (API-. Juanita Quiglcy, at 20 a beautiful veteran in motion pictures, has forksken her screen career to be. come Sister Quentin Rita of the Catholic Daughters of Mary and Joseph. Kneeling in a bridal gown a seen in the accompanying picture, before the altar of St Paul the Apostle's Church yesterday, she promised herself to Christ.

Her promise was given with those of two other young women in ex. erases conducted by the Most Rev, Timothy Manning, Auxiliary Bishop of Los Angeles. Miss Quiglcy was known as "Ba- by Jane" when she was a child star in films. She hss appeared in scores of pictures, her last being "National Velvet" starring Mick, ey Rooney. Juanita's sister, Rita, also was an actress, last appearing in Joan Crawford's film "Susan and God." Rita has forsaken films for marriage and now is Mrs.

Ar. thur Goehner. Juanita began turning down movie and television parts more than a year ago and devoting herself to studies. A year ago she told her mother. Mrs.

Wayne Quiey, that she wished to become a nun. "Her lather and 1 thought perhaps she should have time to consider, such an important atep." Mrs. Quigley Mid today. "We suggested thst she make a trip abroad. She did so.

Six months Ister I received a call from hei. She had Just arrived back in New York. 'Mother, I am of the same eaaj, EOT, far the Faajrth ass elea at St sea sag. Today's negotiators were MaJ. Gen.

Henry I. Hodes and Rear Adm. Arleigh Burke. Nam li protest to Admiral Joy asserted that "a military patrol of our aide was attacked by over 30 armed men of your aide who en lered the neutral zone and pre pared an ambush." CHARGE IS "CONFIRMED." "Loca I residents and material evidence at the site of the Incident fully confirmed the truth of the facts," be protested. "Ever elaeo both aides reached sreenaent oa the aeotral aene are Kaeseag yeor aide hu violated the agrmocat again aad again.

"lonr aide coatMnansly violated the oewtral aene hy Hying over It and repeatedly atrafed aaapir ve KIDI1AP-ATTACK Reported By Girl, 14. mt ortee ehaagee and aoAertaed mnf erteoeJeoa for wale so ti.n-- rM attarhed to the Oerp. OiUdung the Corp, the corn mine Mid: "The Chief of Engineer inlormed thi auboammittee on Apnl 1, 1951. that the Corp rompleted the definite project before atking Congreu to decide the crucial quettion of whether to appropriate fund to etart con-atmctioa Thi procedure, he Wed. would aature a eound cot eatimate and an economic reevtl-tietion upon which CongreM could act.

The fact of the matter it that thi procedure ha eeldom been observed Significant Mving could probably have been made in the. categorie if the Corp of Kngineer had more carefully planned and engineered the 183 prefect after authoriMtion. "The Corp hi had the reputation of being the finett body of engineer in the world and ha enjoyed almoat unlimited financial badung from Congrec. TO SAT THE LEAST '-It incongruou. to My the kait.

to find that 7.1 per eent nmiMiona in engineering estimating (the category of inadquacyl have cost S188.97S.00a standing alone, might he Justified by competent engineers em the ground that cost increases for unknown and changing factors ore to be expected for large construction jobs. Rut the fact of the matter is that allowances for such uncertain factors are made separately amount to an additional 23 5 per cent, costing another $620 million. "A private owner osold not taterate sacs) lock of englsieertog relktbUtty wtthwrt tavtuag beak-ropery. The 1 larloilio la eotapablt that the Corps puaabag tee these projects, before coo otioitlao was iftartoa. was as-adesjoate, aad that taspayrra hava hoea paying the price ever stats, year by year.

"Even worse from the national ttandpoint is the fact that the S800 million increase, if known to Congress in whole or in part when Initial con it ruction fund were appropriated, would have weighed heavily in the action which Con-Cress took then. That was the hour of decision. At that time the economic Justification for many projects hung in delicate balance. Any reported coat in-crease would have had a profound: effect on the crucial congressional decision of whether to initiate construction. Undoubtedly, some rf the 182 projects would not be under construction today if Con-eress had had reliable information from the Corp of Engineers, de-sloped by competent engineering TAIL FATAL TO WIDOW.

Mrs. Delia Roach. 81, a widow, died last night at Good Samaritan Hospital of a right hip fracture suffered July 77 when she fell at tier home. Rosemont Ave, Price HiM. the office of Coroner Herbert P.

Lyle reported. er ear erkgsu aad sen of jroar aide freamenU I I i' I CCrtt TO TKIXX CF IT: MacArthur violated no military directives, nor was there serious dimgreement between him and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Hia recommendations were based on a sincere desire to achieve victory in Korea and hia integrity, ability and accomplishment are beyond criticism. The spread of rmmalm to Japan has been pao vented by General MaeArt tsar's rteatalstratlon, and Jason la the only exeeptlso to the adasialatratlen'a "foJaetropme faHnre" the Far East the only portion of Asia "where the repatation of the United States tar firmness, generosity and fair dealing has been npheJd." FIGHT W1THOCT PRECEDENT. Involvement of U.

S. forces in the Korean fighting was without precedent, aa was collective armed action by an international organization, such a the United Nations. The constitutional question concerning the power ot a President to commit troop to fighting at the call of an international organiuthm. without a declaration of war by Congress, must be resolved before another incident of the kind occurs. Dean Acheson.

Secretary of State, assumed military functions when he persuaded the Joint Chiefs of Staff to withdraw permission for General MacArthur to bomb 5cbin- NrUJ Kor aupply depot situated near the Siberian border in the vicinity of Vladivostok. T.ie State Department, after considerable vacillation. In now decided that Formosa must not fall into un-tnenoiy hands, as a result of the MacArthur hearings, Nationa must not terminate it responsi-bilitiei in Korea with the end of hoetilitie. la the pertton devoted to the -area ef disagreement," Benatore traced the preaent evlla they ontllned to the Talta ascementa of Mas which "the United mate frepodUted eemo of Ma eolema eMIgatssna, yielded toinerU aad gave way to appeaaemeat wMefe vrUI be regretted for decodes aad all for mythical reason." The victory won the Pacific has been aonaa-eVred aiaco 1945 by dlptomata reapsmlblo for 489 mUlien of oor termer Chinese allies Into enemlea." President Truman and his adviser have been unduly Interested in the defense of Europe to the neglect of Asia. It is considered that "while granting the importance of Europe and while recognizing the military and economic potential of that continent, we cannot help but feel tnat there has been a myopia approaching blindness whenever we have dealt with matter of the Pacific." It was amneoptr of President Tramaa to label the Korean conflict aa a -pollro actien," alaro the raeaalties has cansed to date, isjUmsled at nearly SMI9, hava been greater than the combined total aaffered In the Rev.

ototien, the War of 18U, the Mexican War and the SpaaMi-Anteriraa War. A positive program for victory in Korea would run no greatei risk of starting World War III than now exists, and "it is utterly inconsistent for the administration in take the calculated risk of provoking Russia in Europe and to cower at taking a similar risk in Asia." At aa andilnsslni stage of the deiUepsmat of Par East pel icy. Cinimnalst faftaeocee the (Mats Deawrt-imnt began to tofhteoce The prebltm of Csssnianlst ln-entratlen of that agency still exists, and -we are aatta-fled that the troth abort the pro-Cemmonlst State De-perUneot groap turn not yet been revealed." President Truman has refused to assist Congress in petting at the truth of this situation. He has refused to grant full access to He ha described charge of such infiltration as a "red herring." antrum m. wimnww.

SISTER QIEXTL RITA. she Mid. "You merely have delayed me six The Quigleys have a son, Quen. tin. a Captain in the Air Force.

The father operates a chain ot food stores in the Los Angeles area. Juanita wore her sister Ritas wedding gown in yesterday's service, but before she entered the San Vincente Novitiate she donned the blsck robes of the Order of the Daughters of Mary and Joseph. Mie took the name of her brother and sister Quentin. Rita. She will atiidy canon law for two xears.

She mav withdraw at that time if she feels she ha made a mistake. Otherwise ahe will be-CYfT at teacher in the Catholic primary gradea. Lends Plane Safely With Reiicei Help After Losing Wheel Detroit. Aug. 19 API A young pilot, aided by radioed instruction! from his former flying in si rue tor.

safely Isnded a crippled plsne carrying four passengers at Detroit City Airport tonight. The plane made a belly land-Ing a firemen, crash crews and police stood by. It had lost a wheel in taking off at Williams-port. Pa. Glenn H.

Lament. 24, of Detroit pilot, brought the shirks after receiving radio assurtaiJ) from M. Wesson, flying rn-struct or. of Detroit Lamont. his parents.

Mr. Sod Mrs. Glenn J. Lamont and a friend. Mrs Leonard Wis son.

were returning from a trip to Washington. "We vrere taking off when the ship pulled to the left." Lamont Mid. I bounced it off the ground and mw the left wheel rolling down the runway." fired on the aeatral aone." The North Korean chief dele gate demanded the UN "culprits" responsible be punished and that his Protest receive an immediate reply. "the third attack on Pan Mint Jom is far graver than the second incident We request that yon wilt give us a Mtiafactory answer and guarantee by the United Na trans that such incidents violating neutrality will wot reoccur." TOTE lECXTTCS XTOLET. Cast el Gandolfo, Italv, Aug.

19 IAP Pope Pius XII today received Mai. Gen. Patrick J. Hurley-, former American Ambaasadoe to China, and a group of boys front the Roosevelt Institute of Palermo in a special private audience at his summer home here. 31X1 THI ET.UCZ3: Takes Ts Kealarkf Bj Two Met Aad Held Captive 54 Heirs, ML Adtsii Jivraile Sajt.

A 14-year-old Mt. Adams girl reported yesterday that she was criminally attacked by two men who took her to Kentucky and held her captive for 54 hour before releasing her late Saturday. The men, also believed to be residents of Mt. Adams, are being sought by Cincinnati detectives and Federal Bureau of Investigation agents on a kidnsping charge. The girl reported that the two men approached her about 7 p.m.

Thursday as she wu walking to her parents' home after visiting a nearby relative. Instead of driving her home as they promised, she related, they drove her to a Main Street cafe and forced her to drink beer and whisky. She later fell asleep and was driven to a spot near Maysville. Ky, where the attack took place, she said. The men forced her to pan two nights near Maysville with relatives of or of the men.

They then drove her to a street near her home, where they released her at 1 p. m. Saturday, she reported. A medical examination at General Hospital confirmed hex story, police reported. Isn't this a better time than Pegler 1 Pageai Amusement It! Classified II -t Comics 91 1 Crossword Radio-TV is Real Estate It Rie-el Smiles Society News 10 Editorial.

4 Journey's End i Sport. la-zo Talk of Town this to check up on the condition of gutters, downspouts, storm windows and such) Markets SO Mirror of Qty It Obituaries 14 Opimoaneii 8 Weather Map It Word Gam lt 1.

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