to date to 110,700 compared witn 135,500 last week, which included' Memorial Day when the markets were closed, and 161,500 a year ago Sales records at the Chicago stockyards, the nation’s largest, show that small packers are taking the bulk of the limited offerings. Comparatively heavy shipments also are being feent east.Thle big packers have contended that] the-prices asked are too high for them to comply with govern-All no aIped what Maj. Gen. Charles A. Willoughby rates as one of the most daring and successful espionage rings in world history.He built the network from scratch. Through nine productive years hemilked Japan dry of nearly all its ■vital military and industrial secrets. A tall, stocky German with crhel eyes and arrogant bearing, he posed brilliantly as a Nazi journalist and became the confidante of I top German diplomats in TokyoRICHARD SORGE: The hang* man interceded ‘before Stalin.*7 II N 71 111 I ntsor. nut neicner tms story nor previous censored field dispatches leftany doubt as to the identity of the mountain.)From this height the Allies dominate the mountain road and valleycorridor up which other troops were pushing. They are in position topump artillery fire into battered Chorwon, 17 miles north of the 38th parallel.Farther to the east mud-caked United Nations troops Wednesday*31 f rs A f ZT TTi nr /vi* m! sion,By CAPT. JAMES JABARA, USAF Written for Air Force Magazine I had begun to think I never was going to get that fifth MIG. *I got my fourth on April 22 but the pickings had been pretty lean since1 that time Then about five o’clock in the afternoon of May 20, ! 14 of our F-86 Sabres from the 4thI . A- A «/ASv*■w *vi✓ tRARIIP.il QAYQ