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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1946)
Revival of Two-party System Sought Trumai) Purge Aimed at Restoring Party Machinery By BAUKHAGE Newt Analytl and Commentator. ITNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, I). C. WASHINGTON, D. C.—Before the Parla Peace conference even got Underway we learned that the rulea committee, which heard »o much heated or atory, waa as powerful as the powerful rules committee of the house of repre sentatives. It wasn’t until after the pri mary returns were In, and Represents tlve (Truman - hater) Slaughter of Mis souri, a mem ber of the rules committee, was cereatert, that moil laymen rem ised the Importance of that battle, and why the President stuck his neck out as far as he did In help ing to beat him. I can see the President now bs he looked up with that pert, blrd Uke glance he has—Just enough of a smile to make you try to listen sympathetically — and sny that If Slaughter was right, he (the Presi dent) was wrong. Think what Slaughter could have said If he had been elected I But he was defeated — and the day after the primary, the real sig nificance of the battle became clear. Never In American history has any administration been up against the situation which developed when the Roosevelt honeymoon ended. I am not arguing how or why that ■A, + sltuotion came about. But the fact Is we have had a situation where party lines meant little, and the age-old principle of majority rule, the theory on which congress, as a working body. Is organized, has been violated. Outstanding example was the rules committee. There were five southerners — anti-administration Democrats—on that committee, and with Slaughter’s help, they could tie up the vote and tie up any legis lation Truman asked for. Now maybe the fact that the ad ministration couldn’t get its legis lation before congress, or couldn’t get it passed when it did, was a good thing. I am not discussing that. I merely say that what hap pened Is not a good thing for the two-party system. And as the situ ation grew more acute, congress wasn’t a working body. Let’s take the testimony of a thoroughly loyal Republican mem ber of the committee and acting minority leader. Representative Michener of Michigan. If the Dem ocrats retain control of the house, Michener said, the absence of Rep resentative Slaughter will permit the rules committee to function the way it was intended to function; namely, the legislation of the party in power will be sent to the floor. That didn’t mean Michener want ed Die rival party's legislation passed. It simply meant he knew thut Slaughter, teaming up with the anti-administration Democrats and the Republicans, was able to tie the vote and stymie action. And that isn’t two-party govern ment. •4 4 Air Power Is Big Killer in War Tills has been an aviation year. The first peacetime year that America hus been acknowledged as mistress of the air as well as of the sea and the land. It has been a time of reminiscence, of recapitulation, as well os forecast and foreshadowing. 1 remember the interview I had with a certain army official dur ing the war. His Impatience, smashing the ordinary rules of cen sorship, had revealed the secret of the bazooka kept "confidential” long after it was in use, and the details of which Germans had long since learned to their sorrow. (The bazooka functions on the rocket principle.) The officer pointed to an old print on his wall. It was a picture of American soldiers discharging a rocket projectile In the War of 1812. Why, then. If the rocket princi ple was known to us In those early days, did we not develop it as the Germans did, I asked. The reason the rocket was neglected In the Civil war period, 1 was told, was because ordnance experts were concentrating on the development of the breech loading firearm, and the perfection of rifling — the making of spiralled grooves Inside the barrel which gave the bullet or projectile a twisting movement, and kept it from tumbling "head over heels.” This Increased range and accu racy. The emphasis was still on the rifleman rather than the artillery, and such statistics as we have Indicate that the infantry in the Franco - Prussian war of 1870 ★ ★ wounded 10 times as many men as the artillery did. Undoubtedly the bayonet claimed many. By 1914-15, however, artillery produced one-half the wounded, showing the rapid advance which, in part, mnde experts forget the rocket again. Artillery, according to the old def inition, is "group-served, mounted firearms of caliber greater than that of small arms." This definition could easily be made to include the firearms, shells, or bombs car ried by planes, or contained in the war-head of a rocket. 1 mention the effectiveness of "artillery" in the latter sense, not to belittle the doughboy who is really the "ultimo ratio," but be cause the projectile, either carried in a plane or by propulsion in a rocket, is what might be called the definitive weapon. The point is we did not develop the rocket in the Civil war because we felt we had something better (breech-loading rifled artillery and small arms). And again the rocket was set aside by a decision arrived at before we engaged actively in World War II when our experts, both in the army and out of it, including the great indus trialists who could gauge our pro duction capacity, felt the airplane was a superior weapon. We did not entirely neglect study and experimentation on the rock et during the war, however, and now we are probably farther ad vanced in this type of "artillery" than any other nation. We also have learned to project our "artil lery" by means of the "drone" (pilotless airplane). A A Is This Ihe Army, Mr. Jones? In World War I when YMCA and Red Cross canteens were established right up Into the sone of the advance, and even nearer the front, some of the "old timers" of those days wrote to the editors Insisting that the Civil war was won on “salt horse and likker" (I recall that phrase in one of the letters) and we were Just softening the boys. Well, it didn't soften them too •oft for Chateau Thierry and the Argonne. Then came World War II, and some of the veterans of the earlier war raised their eyebrows at the USO, turkey dinners at the front on Thanksgiving, ice cream (in stead of beans, salmon, corn willy or nothing). But. soldier, you ain't heard nuttinl When they say "This is the army. Mr. Jones.” to you future G.I a. you'll hardly believe it Did you hear what Field Marsha) (blood, sand, and green for the Normandy hedges) Montgomery had to say? He believes enlisted men in the British army ought to live like other folks. Bedrooms, not barracks. •\’ou had your breakfast in bed before." goes the warning song, "but you won't have it there any more " Maybe not. But if Monty has his way, British soldiers can read in bed. And what about those tricky uni forms American soldiers are going to wear? Blue! (like the boys in blue who said good-bye to Blue Bell). And perhaps "two-note," with a light er shade for the trousers! And overcoats AND CAPES! You aren’t in the army now, Mr. Jones. You’re in grand opera! And then there is that terminal leave pay bill passed by congress. I suppose, to pacify the fellows who got out of the army without knowing what they were going to miss. Almost three billion dollars dumped into G.l. pockets to even them up with what the officers re ceived for furloughs they hadn't taken. -——.. i zmm i&mm wmmzm TOGKTIlFIt AGAIN—IN JAPAN . . . One of the most touching meet ings wh n the army transport, Fred C. Ainsworth, brought a con tingent of American wives and families to Yokohama, Japan, was this one between Sgt. Delbert Jenkins and his wife, Marietta, both 65. They had not seen each other for four years. Jenkins enlisted at the age of 61 and saw service In the Pacific campaign. NEWS REVIEW Dardanelles Row Looms; . Nations Ask Soft Peace DARDANELLES: Hot Spot Another major International row appeared in the making with So viet Russia’s demand upon Turkey that she break the Montreux con vention of 1938 and share control of the vital Dardanelles straits lead ing to the Black sea with Moscow. Under the convention, the Turks have been entrusted with the guardianship of the strategic wa terway and, while they have ex pressed a willingness to maintain the present arrangement, they have informed the U. S. and Britain that they cannot hold out against the Russian proposals alone. By grant ing Russian demands, the Turks would be forced to permit Red troops to occupy parts of their soil along the straits. PALESTINE: Turn on Heat The Illegal Jewish underground organization, Irgun Zvai Leumi, called upon all Jewish resistance movements in Palestine to unite in the fight for attainment of a Jewish national home in the Holy Land even us British officials lambasted Zionists for seeking to high pres sure the government into acceding to their demands. Poirtting out that it was necessary to press their drive now while the British were being hard put to maintain order in Palestine, Irgun suggested that the two other re sistance groups, Haganah and the Stern gang, combine to form the nucleus of an underground govern ment and army. FREE FOR THE TAKING . . . Plagued by a shortage of labor and an abundance of woodchucks. Autumn Van Den Ileuval. West Nyack, N. Y., farmer, has In vited all-comers to “come and help themselves" to his 80 acres of sweet corn as well aa black berries and grapes. I PARIS: Wanted: Softer Terms Addressing the delegates of 21 Allied nations at the peace confer ence in Luxembourg palace, rep resentatives of Italy, Romania and Bulgaria pleaded for moderation of terms on the grounds that, as co belligerents of the victors In the closing stages of the war, they had made substantial sacrifices for vic tory. Speaking for Italy, Premier De Gasperl stated that his coun try hud contributed troops, na val power and materials for three years and that the Al lies should think twice before internationalizing Italian dom inated Trieste and submitting 180,000 Italians in Venezia Guilia to Yugoslav rule. He also as serted that excessive repara tions would weigh down the Ital ian economy and reduction of armaments would imperil the safety of the stat^ Foreign Minister Giorgu Tatar escu of Romania followed De Gas peri to the speaker’s dais and as serted that no less than 385,000 Romanians had fought on the al lied side during the last six months of the war. Furthermore, he said, German and Hungarian forces had inflicted large-scale damage of Ro mania after she had deserted the axis cause. Tatarescu asked for a larger army and scaling down of heavy reparations. On behalf of Bulgaria, Foreign Minister George Koulishev claimed that his country had suffered 32,000 casualties during the eight months it fought on the allied side. He charged Greek demands for $750, 000,000 in reparations were exces sive and asked that Bulgaria be permitted to disarm within reason able limits. Regulation of traffic on the Danube should be the inter est of all the countries bordering the river, including Bulgaria, Koulishev said. FURLOUGH PAY: Fast Action Application forms for vets' un used furlough pay will be available at all post offices by mid-September but disbursement of the five-year bonds will not take place bofore the end of the month because of time required in printing. In announcing the procedure to be followed, the war department stat ed: 1. Applications will be acknowl edged when received to assure the vet his claim is on record. t. Disbursing officers will accept sworn statements of applicants un less there is suspicion of fraud. S. Army vets unable to deter mine how much unused furlough pay they have coming, figured on the basis of 2H days per month, can apply for information to the adjutant general's personnel records branch at St. Louis, Mo. WTI-IYFLA TION WEAPON Federal Spending Curb Urged CHICAGO. — Terming a curb in federal governmental expenditures "the nation's most powerful weapon against inflation." William K. Jack son. president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, urged immediate congressional action to slash spending. Jackson, who addressed busi ness men at the 23rd annual Na tional Institute for Commercial and Trade Organisation Executives on the Evanston campus of North western university, urged that con gress establish an over-all budget committee to recommend a ceil ing on appropriations and to co ordinate the total spending with ex pected revenues. Retnrn State Powers. Jackson also urged local govern ments and business organizations to work for the return to the states of powers and controls usurped by the federal government. “Several state agencies have de veloped the enervating habit of looking to Washington as the source of solution for every difficulty," he j asserted. “They seem to have for gotten that this seemingly easy treatment becomes a two way nar cotic. It is habit forming in Wash ington as well as in the state capi tals.” The chamber of commerce has asked business groups to refrain from seeking special federal appro priations for the benefit of individ ual states or local communities, he reported. Hits Mob Role.' The business men were asked to campaign for legislation to "equal ize the responsibilities as well as rights “of labor and management. “Jurisdictional disputes, boycotts, coercion, intimidation, mass picket ing. blocking of public highways by strikers, and prevention of access to private properties do not repre sent law and order, but mob rule,” he asserted. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR. GOOD Chevrolet agency and implement line In North Dakota. Building, lOOx 140 feet. Well equipped, well stocked. $100,000 for building and equipment, stock at Invoice. Pay for itself in 4 years. A real gold mine. Never offered before. Good farming and stock raising community. Town 1,500 population Ad dress Owner, Box ft, Lemmon. S. D. GOOD PAYING drugstore in rich farming commun. Big fount'n trade. Reason: poor health. Creston Pharmacy. Creston. Neb. WE HAVE IT POPCORN SEASONING THIS IS THE DEAL—With every 200 lbs. POPSWELL South American Popcorn you purchase at $8.75 per 100, we will ship you a case of 4 gal. Seasoning at $8.00. Shipped F.O.B. our plant. Write, wire or phone at once, only a few thousand gal lons left at this price. Buy as many deals as you want at the above rate. I1ERNAU PROCESSING PI,ANT LAKE CITY - IOWA. ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT I WALKER HYDRAULIC floor Jack. 1 Hammet quick charger. 1 G. E. slow bat tery charger. 1 Marquette slow battery charger. 1 4-drawer steel filing cabinet. 1 medium sire safe. 1 hydraulic automobile hoist. 1 Wayne electric gasoline pump. 1 Burroughs adding machine, cash register. See CHAPMAN •25 Kith Ave. • Council Bluffs, Iowa. FARMS AND RANCHES Farms, Ranches Wanted List with us for quick sales. We have cash buyers. ALBERS REALTY CO. 1828 Lothrap St. Phone ATIuntlc 11119, Omaha, Nebraska. Well improved 12,000 acre South Dakota cattle ranch. Cuts 600 tons of hay per year. Well watered, all fenced and cross-fenced. Will carry 600 cows yr. round. Write owner. E. E. HARRISON Mobridge .... South Dakota. FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP. BOOSTER Id < K with Fnrmall II Fittings, good condition. Several 12 ft. D1C rakes. 1 John Deere rake, all usable. 3 6-ft. IHC No .7 and No. 9 horse drawn mowers, 1 2,000 watt 32 volt Paris Dunn Wincharger, used. No. 11 John Deere Grub Breaker slightly used. Wanted Ford tractor, also late model IHC and John Deere universal mowers, cash or trade. ED ARNOLD, address Nemel. Neb. Phone 232 - - Cody, Nebraska. New *175 Manure Loader Units ....$99. New *27.3 Steel Haystacker .$152. New *95 Bulldozer $49; Scraper . .$59. B1LZ MANUFACTURERS. Bill City, Neb. __ HAY. GRAIN, FEED WANTED—NEW OR Oi l) ALFALFA FRANK HOWLAND, 0220 S. 44th St. Phone Market 1X00 - Omaha, Nebraska. _ HELP WANTED—MEN__ MECHANICS AND BODY MEN. Highest wages. Ideal working conditions. Estab lished Chevrolet and Oldsmobile dealer for over 25 years.Pasco Auto Co.,Pasco.Wash. HOME FURNISHINGS & APPLE UNFINISHED Drop Leaf Solid Oak Table, Size 38" x 34" with leaves up; 22" x 34" with leaves down; height 30". Easily as sembled by attaching the four legs with furnished lag screws. Beautifully sanded and ready for you to paint or finish in your own individual taste. A real buy at $14.95; mall check or money order to STAR MANUFACTURING CO. 5301 No. 21th St. - - Omaha. Nebr. INSTRUCTION PREPARE FOR BEAUTY CAREER You can earn up to $75 per week as a beauty operator. Enroll now in the Larg est Beauty School in the State, where your training at this famous school of promi nent hair stylists and teachers will help make you an expert and should protect you from unemployment. We have an easy payment plan or you can work for your tuition, board and room and small salary while attending school. CAPITOL BEAUTY SCHOOL Opposite Public Library 1808 Harney St.. JA 4821. Omaha. Neb. COMPLETE your high school at home in spare time with American School: text furnished: dinloma: no classes. Booklet free. Write AMERICAN SCHOOL. Dept. X. P. O. Hex 182, Omaha. Nebraska. LIVESTOCK _ Hereford Hogs. We are breeders and ship pers of better Hereford hogs, tried sows, fall gilts, weaning pigs, fall boars. Write for prices Hansen Implement Co.. Bloomfield. Nebr. SEVERAL Palomino Brood Mares, some mares with colts — some broke saddle horses. A. C. Jackson. Eh. 296. Wahoo.Neb. MISCELLANEOUS s 1 XP. ROLL developed and printed 25c. 2 free enlargement coupons. F ist service. DEPEND-ON PHOTO SERVICE 6700 No. Keota Ave. - Cbicago 20. 111. HAY FEVER, ASTHMA sufferers. Allerga sol now available! Big FREE introductory offer to sufferers. Dont delay! Write! Chcmtronic, H9 Malvern. Newark 5. N. J. SEEDS, PLANTS, ETC._ PRIZE WINNING PEONIES Send for list. DARTS' GARDENS. 2904 North 59. Lincoln. Nebc. IRIS SPECIAL. Twenty 25c Iris $4.00. all different, labeled. DARTS' GARDENS, 290-4 North 59. Lincoln. Nebr. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! WNU—U 35—46 ARE YOU MU WEAK.TIREO due to MONTHLY LOSSES? You girl* and women who lose so much during monthly period* that you're pale. weak, "dragged out"— this may be due to lack of blood-Iron Bo try Lydia E. Plnkhamb TABLETS — one of the best home ways tc build up red blood—In such case* Ptnkham'* Tablet* are one of the I best blood-iron tonic* you cm buy1 COLUMBINE LODGE up Cache a La Poudre Canyon In Cool Colorado Kockiei Meals, Riding Horses, Fishing. A few cabins by tne week. Write. Wire or Call 0018R1. I). J. OKI'LINER Fort Collins, Colo. ~~SPRINGSIDE RESORT ~~ On Upper Gull Lake. 8 Miles NW Reduced Kates (or Kept, and Oct. of Nisswa 10 comlortably iurntshed housekeeping cottages, screened porches, good beds, electric lights, gas. sinks, running water in some, spring water on grounds. Good dry floats. Excellent game fishing. Write or phone A. K. Peterson, Pequot Lakes, Minn. HELP WANTED TEACHERS WANTED—We have abund ant calls from chief cities Pacific Coast, Rocky Mt. states and Mo. Val ley. Top salaries. All lines open. With our 29 vrs. experience and acquaint ance. we can serve you well. Write today. DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE, 529 Stuart Bldg., Lincoln. Nebr. HELP WANTED CARPENTERS WANTED Boys Towr Project located ten miles west oi Oma ha and Dodge St. Highway approxi mately 18 months work, scale $1,625 per hr., working 46 nrs per week, double time being paid for all overtime. Apply Employment Office. Peter Klewit Sons' Co. Bovs Town. Nebraska. BRICKI .AYERS WANTED Boys 1'own Project located ten miles west oi Oma hB and Dodge St. Highway, approxi mately 18 months work scale $1,825 per hr. working 45 hrs. per week, double time being uald for all overtime. Apply Employment office. Pefer Klewit Sons' Co.. Bovs Town, Nebraska. MISCELLANEOUS ACE WELDING AND REPAIRING. We handle trailers and farm wagons. 1833 No. 20th St. Atlantic 2569. Omaha. Nebr. SUNBEAM & (IK. IRONS FOR Sale—Sunbeam and General Elec tric Irons. Latest post-war models, auto matic, streamlined. Delivery from stock. Postpaid $8.95. Order at once. THE ARIIOR CO. Nebraska City 4, Nebr. Good Breakfasts Studies have shown that children who eat proper breakfasts have a better chance to do well in school than the children who don’t eat a good breakfast. One study among factory workers showed that only 12 per cent of the men workers and 26 per cent of the women had in cluded fruit or fruit juice in their breakfast. Seventy-three per cent of the men and 36 per cent of the women ate breakfasts containing eggs or meat but not fruit. A good many women and some men had nothing but a cup of coffee for breakfast. Electrify Oil Operations Oil well electrification, the equip ment including electric motors for pumping and time clocks to start and stop operations at vital stages, is spreading rapidly, according to reports from the southwest’s black gold belt. One company in Arkan sas reports the electrification of 150 wells, with a 33 per cent reduction in pumping costs, and plans to bring at least 60 more wells under automatic control before the end of the year. Postwar Paints In a survey of new products and services, the New York Journal of Commerce comments that bright colors, long wear and easy appli cation are features of postwar paints, and that quick drying has been developed without sacrifice of durability. Ease of application is stressed in anticipation of a pro longed shortage of skilled painters. Watering Plants In watering, give all plants a long slow soaking and let them show signs of thirst before watering again. This keeps their roots deep in the soil where they will be pro tected from heat and cold. “Use the hoe instead of hose” to keep moisture on plants during dry weather. Producing Deadly Ray The germ-killing radiation in bac tericidal lamps, now available for the home, school or office, is created by electric current passing through mercury vapor at low pres sure. Avoid Mildew To avoid molds and mildew dur ing the summer rainy season, home demonstration specialists suggest that closets, dresser drawers and other places where mildew is likely to grow be kept as dry as possible, Ruffied Curtains If you have ruffled curtains which are still good though the ruffles may be worn out. -they may be remade by substituting ball fringe for the ruffles. Housed in Trailers During the recent war. the United States government purchased 35.000 trailer coaches which, through re peated occupancy, were used to house more than 500,000 persons. Drinks Impair Vision One or two drinks may lower appreciably the visual alertness of some automobile drivers and pedes trians, thereby making them prone to highway accidents. Prolongs Life Liberal amounts of vitamin A tend to postpone ageing and to pro long life, certain scientists say; their tests were made on rats. Flaming Fat If fat in broiler pan catches fire, turn off flame at once, throw a handful of salt into fire. Never try to put it out with water. Tattoo Machine The electric tattoo machine was first used in New York City's Bow’ ery in 1875. The tattoos were called “tattaugraphs.” JT ALWAYS has been our belief that the time to compare ath letes is at the end of their careers. For example, why try to compare wiiiiams, aner five seasons, with Ty Cobb’s 24 sea sons? Why try to com pare Bobby Jones, retired for 16 years after win ning 13 national and international champion ships, with Byron Nelson who so far has won 3? And don’t Ty Cobb iorget mat Jones ran 1-2 in the U. S. Open eight out of nine years. Ted Williams and Byron Nelson have many years left in which they may rise to even greater heights, or for one reason or another sud denly fall away. I recall just about the outbreak of the war when more than a few were placing Joe DiMaggio above Tris Speaker as an all-around out field star. DiMaggio was and still is a great ball player. But even Joe’s most vehement supporters to day wouldn’t place him above the flight of the Gray Eagle, the class of all outfielders in the air or along the ground, who could also hit from .350 to .386 in his better seasons through a long stretch of time. Take Ty Cobb and Ted Williams. Few pitchers could. Ted Williams is the longer, harder hitter. But how many remember that Ty Cobb led the American league nine years in a row — that he led the American league in 12 out of 13 consecutive seasons. Think that one over. What hitters were in Cobb’s road? What was their class? Prac tically no one except Shoeless Joe Jackson, Napoleon Lajoie, Tris Speaker, Babe Ruth, Wahoo Sam Crawford, Bobby Beach aud a few of that ash-tinted ilk. I see they are now comparing Bob Feller and Walter Johnson, certainly two of the greatest. No one can tell me that Bob Feller or anyone else had Johnson's speed. Feller has a greater vari ety. But Johnson’s speed was enough. They usually beat him 1 to 0 or 2 to 1 and even working with a weak-hitting outfit, he still could win more than 30 games a year pitching against some of the great hitters of all time. But none of these great hitters was on Old Barney’s side. The idea is that Johnson has already turned in his 20-year record. Feller still has many years to go. Feller isn’t working with much of a ball club, either. He is to a certain extent in Johnson's spot. Johnson, pitching for the Athletics in those days, could have won 40 games more than once. Feller, working with the Red Sox, could be another 40-game winner. There will be time enough later on to rank Johnson and Feller. 'Old Pete’ Alexander If you talk to hitters who faced him and who have been around, they won’t nominate Walter John son or Bob Feller as the top mas ter of the pitching tribe. They won’t give you Cy Young who won 510 or Christy Mathewson. Their nominee is an entry known as Grover Cleveland Alexander, also known as “Old Pete.” Working with the lowly Phillies, Alexander won 31 games in 1915. 33 games in 1916 and 30 games in 1917, a total of 94 games in three consecutive years with a ball club that never belonged — outside of Alexander. In 1916 he pitched 16 shutout games, most of them in the Phil lies’ bandbox park. Through six years, he had an earned run aver age under two runs per game. As a rookie in 1911 he won 28 games with the lowly Phillies. Alexander was a stretcher bearer with the army in 1918, one of the tough jobs of any war. He then had been pitching seven years. On his return to the Cubs in 1919 and 1920, he allowed 1.73 and 1.91 earned runs per game, an incredi ble performance. Through his career Old Pete had no interest in any form of training. He hap pened to be an eccentric genius, a great artist, which so few are. He knew exactly where the ball should go to certain hitters, and he could put it there too. Johnny Evers, who had batted against the best, once told me that Alexander was the only pitcher he ever faced who made him feel like throwing his bat away. "I knew how useless it was,” Evers said. • • • Cardinal Class Overlooking the boisterous and heartfelt boos from Brooklyn, the Cardinals have been the class of the league from the start. They have had no better ball players than Dixie Walker and Pete Reiser and Pewee Reese. But no sane baseball follower can tell you that the hustling Dodgers have the class to match Stan Musial. Marty Marion, Country Slaughter. Red Schoendienst, Ter ry Moore and Whitey Kurowski.