The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 March 1947 — Page 1
4
l, TH* WEATM* ♦ Hill AM) " A«'^ R +
5LUME FIFTY-FIVE UNIS CLUB 'trophy GIVEN JIM HAMMOND ! v v, vl TK.tU CUB AWAKU M\Vt. AT THURSDAY'S Ll N(HBON
■ j.Muiiv Hammond, alar {juaul ^e OreencasUe high school LkotbHii team, received th Kiwams Club awai-l ursJay as tlic outstanding L ioI on the Tiger Cub squad
L ni the past season.
| Thc trophy is presented on the L,. of athletic ability, spoils Loop and scholarship. Han.„as selected by his team Ues and approved by the fac-
bgthlctic board.
IriK ltd" Kiwunis winner has regular guard on th.
THE DAILY BANNER “IT WAVES FOR ALL”
GREENCASTIE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1947.
NO. 133
AWARD WINNER SAFETY TOPIC
AT HOME EC. MEETING HERE
'
HKAR FI UK CHICK AND COUNTY AOKNT ON TUESDAY EVE
CITY HAD ANOTHER SHOW OH THURSDAY Although March is nearly gone, Old Man Winter conlinu- s to hang on and as a result it snowed again Thursday morn-
ing.
The white flakes began drifting down about 8:40 a. m. an I by !> o'clock there was a hri.-; f* lowfall. The temperature in Greencastlc at that time was T2 degrees above zero. The minimum for Wednesday night wsh 27. according to The Banner
thermometer.
Tile weather forecast for Kri-
SOVIET ZONE IN AUSTRIA IS RUSS BUSINESS
Irn 8
team for two
Me was a un-
Iwiica.dh'
Ljght seasons
Lious choice as guard on the |l-So U th Cential Conference lu^l named by the eoactles of various liigh schools in thi i inference. H<- reted a guard Pit ion on The Daily Banner's jootional team and also reived honorable mention in tli> Lional tourney at Clialon. He captain of the team this
jitter.
The Kiwunis luncheon, honor-
the local high school ncl
Ld. was held at the Presbyjnait clmreh at noon. Charles dnian, of tlie DePauw athletic artment, acted as toustmast-
The principal speaker was Hickman, coach of the Dr
|u« Tigris Indiana collec ■
■dwood court chain pious, he formal presentation of tin
kill trophy was made by Jet vis
Jtlinr-r. Kiw.inian presiilent.
V guests of honor at th* 1 hclieon wen : Coach Kern Mctlldin. fn lunan coach Ralpil |rtjiMiii, junior higb couch Har-
Phates, Jim Hammond. Are
g'rt.H. Ji»‘ Matihai t, George lyd. G'orgi’ Stewart, Lloyd lii.ii's, Dick Rowland, Bill RcyIkis. Charles Miles. Ed Mason,
M.irkefllo It., Merle Fos.< student manager Forrest
Jrvel
rs. Hallie West Dies At Hospital Hrs. Hallie Lae West, age 62 Ars, widow of William H. pt, died Wednesday night at I Putnam county hospital. She I been in ill health for some
.liinniy llammond
Band Concert This Evening
M rebus of Aloha Delta t’hi, I'« hI music fraternity at Indiana University, and several I. It. ffi.eiilty members are sell dnled to it tend the first DePauw University band eoneert of the : asen, to be presented at 8.15 p.
this cv ivng on tile
ca n.p'is.
j Representatives of life Putnam j county Home Economies Clubs i beard K. W. Harris, county \ agent, and Chief William LawII nee of the Grecncastle fire department tit the safety meeting arranged by Lueile Sinitb, homci
demonstration agent, held onl day, liowcvcr, was clearing and Tuesday, March 25th. I warmer.
With spring lioiisccleaning just 1 | around the corner, homemakers! will have an opportunity to cheek their home for hazards and themselves for dangerous practices. Most hazards are neither difficult nor expensive to correct and it is often easier to do things lately than unsafely. Mr. Harris and Mr. Lawrence both stressed Hu: importance of adequate wiring in the home, the use of approved fuses of the cor reel rathig for euclt circuit, proper care and repair of all nppli
ences and equipment.
II is good business to take
Gas Restrictions Are Announced
•AIM. HEAVIN' WILL SING SATURDAY MORNING Bill Heaviu, member of th ■ Cloverdale Scrioi class, wiio w . awarded an Indiana Music scholarship last week, will ho heard in the county music audition in roen 208 at 8:45 Saturday morning. it is announced. The first place winners in the county contests will appear in the district contest to be held at Terre Haute
on April 26.
28 Known Dead In Mine Blast OENTRALIA, 111.. Mulch 27
(UPl Rescue workers fotii. l II more bodies early today near the center of the blast area deep in the Centralia coal mine, bringing
to 28 the number of known dead ! P ei,s for an early agreement on
PUTNAMVILLE GIRL REPRESENTED CITY Miss Joan Parks of Putnamville, a. student in Grecncastle High school, ably represented Grecncastle in a district Rotary
MOLOTOV TF.LLN MAKMHAI.I j Club s P eoc h contest held at ACTION THERE NONE | Crawfordsville yesterday. Miss OF F. S. BUSINESS j Parks was tire entry sponsored
by the local Rotary Club. She
MOSCOW. March 27 (UP) l" scd as hor object "It Must Be
S'viet Foreign Minister V. M Molotov has told Secretary ol
State George C. Marsh ill that it is none of the United States’ business what the Soviets are doing with Griiniin as ds in tin Soviet zone of Austria, it wn
learned today.
Molotov's emphatic "ra" to all of Marshall's suggestions for re, solving Uie deadlock over German assets darkened tire pros-
To further safeguard the supply t 0 the present users o; natural and mixed gas of high B. T. U. content, the Public Servic ■ Commission of Indiana issued an order on Thursday, March 20t!i, placing further restrictions on the installation of new space beating equipment, according to Melvin Mallory, district muiiHgcr of Indinnu Gas Water Com-
good care of tools nmi equipment
of id) kinds even though safety j P ,,, iy. Inc.
DePauw [ js )lol (.y,,,, consideied, stated Mr, Mr- Mallory state that a ion reHarris, j suit of furtticr hearings and in-
Gliost com'uetor will lie l.)r, R-ibort L. Sanders, drear of the School of Music al Indiana, win will lead the eoneert band in hi:
The film “Home Safe Ilomc"' vcsUgatlons by the Public Sorstressihg safety in and around] vice Commission, it has deter-: j the home and “Dawn of Bettor j mined that tire present emor- ! Living” showing the importance j ST'Uiy caused by the disparity hoof adequate wiring was shown tween the volume of natural or to the group. high B. T. U. mixed gas avuil1 Safety wor k is an important, fu r distribution iit the state part of the Home Economics uf Indiana and the customers’ Club program this year. The 1 demands for sueh gas are suelt | various chib groups have been j tlia t an emergency still exist a I requested lo make a sur vey of' bud will continue to exist beyond I heir boine :1s Die first step to- 11"' Present winter heating soa-
I wriril better safety in rural areas, sun.
Those attending were Mrs.! I" view of this condition, the George Tennis, Mrs. Nellie Jones,! commission, by supplemental Mrs. Lyman Berkley, Mrs. Chits, order issued last Thursday, pineHutcheson. Mrs. S. D. Early, ed further restrictions on the Mrs. D. A. Kendall. Mrs. George supply of gas for consumption by Sims. Mrs. Lee Flanigan Irene puce healing appliances. These Crawley. Mrs. C. L. Cougcr,i new restrictions become effective Mvs.-CJliirenue Steward, Mrs. j at. 12:01 a. m. March 21. 1947. Perry Michael. Mrs. Walter No customer's of n utility comParker, Mrs. Ciark, Mrs. Frank pany distributing iriitural gas or Houskii, Mrs. Eslil Rowings,] mixed givs having a substantial Mrs. Ruth Hagan. Mrs. Ethel | eontent of miturul gas will he
Tire pallbearers included Dr. J j yf. irl | n un( j jvirs. Durbin O’Hair, j permitted to install either gas
K. Gillespie, James P. Hughes Edgar Prevo. Dr. H'lssell Vcrnril heating or gas-designed space heating equipment in newly eon-
eompasitii.u “Symp;i(iny for Concert Band." Professor F. 1 . Ingli-s, directur of the university band, will randuel th- remaiiylor of the pro-
gram.
Rites Held For Dr. McGaughey
Funeral services for DWalter M. McGaughey, .vho died Monday night, were conduit d from tire Rector Funerfd hnjpi at two o’clock Thursday after, noon by the rtev. Tennant, pastor of tire Gobin Memorial elnirch
and Ur. C. E. Wildnum.
front Tuesday’s explosion.
an Austrian pea.ee treaty.
The Sovi. I rejection canrc in a five-page inenrorandum replying to Marshall's suggestion that
the
It \. as feared that 87 othei miners still imareoiintcd for Were dead. The tl bodies found
today were badly mill Mated hyj^* 0 ^ ( n ministers bypass the the blast. question of legal title to German
assets in, Aiustria. Marshall sug, gested Hurt lire deputies be instructed to define the assets anil set up arbitration inugltiitcry to
handle disputes.
WASHINGTON. March 27 * UPl The .Federal Coal Admin istration was tile primary target today of a senate investigation into 'iresponsibility for the Ceiv traiia, HI., mine explosion. Cliainnaii Hugh Butler. It. Neb., of lire Senate Public Lands Committee, said he hoped to appoint a apreinl subcommittee sometime today to undertake the investigation. Tire committee wants to send its own investigator to Uie scene without delay,
he said.
The Senate authorized an inquiry by Butler's committee late yesterday at Uie request of Sea. C. Waylarid Brooks, ft., III., who pointed out that the mine was under Uie control of the fr lerul government. At tire request of Senate Democratic leader Albert W. Barkley, the investigating com- | mittee was inst.uuciA'd to determine whether negligence of stale, local or enrpor.it’or ole 'ficials was a factor in the ex-
plosion.
of the Spirit." Her speech was delivered in a straight-forward ; and convincing manner. She exhibit"d great |>oise in Iter presentation. and Lite subject iiia.tter of h r speech whs excellent. All of tire speakers in tire district contest wife young ladles. Each of them triad" a striking presentation which complicated tire task for the three judge.from Butler University who selected the winner. The entry of the Lafayette Rotary Club was declared the outstanding speaker of the group. She will represent the district in the next branch of the contest which will be held
late in April.
Tire Rotary committee was composed of Wilbur Eekardt and Rev. Ralph H. Saunders.
NEW ORLEANS IN GRIP OF MILK STRIKE ARMED AND ANGRY FARMERS FIRED ON TRUCKS IN PROTEST
NEW ORLEANS, March 27.— (UP)—Armed striking milk farmers who raided trains carrying milk cargoes threatened a “fight to the finish” today as the AFL striking Teamsters’ Union warned: “There’ll be no more deliveries of bread, dry Ice, meat, groceries or any foodstuffs to dealers who sell milk from the local dairies." Angry dairymen protesting a 50 cents per hundredweight price cut for their milk boarded two Illinois Central milk trains in “Jesse James” style, and fired on trucks running their blockade into New Orleans.
Fred Pease Is Rotary Speaker
LATEST
WIRE NEWS
Following the annual
lion. Jack Rogers Crouch. Burial was
Hill cemetery.
ami Roberl
in Forcsl
Big Plane Is Landed Safely
• conversion equipment which replaces other means of spaci j
West hid been making hwic with a step-son, Basil RA on the Greeircastle-Stiles-|lc road, Shi was a member of Stilesvillc Christian church. *. West was born in Hendricks pnty, where she spent most of
r life.
urvlvors an- two step-sons, mil West, GrecneasUe-Stiles-
»le road and Everett West, west | lcn;l '
1 Cottrsvilh and one nephew, Ws Lee Griffith of Clevc-
K Ohio.
■wcral service# will be held purday afternoon at one o'- ^ from the Campbell & ►well Funeral Home In Coatesr' hriends may cull at the Iren| hoine.
Lilienthal Vote Delay Continues
WASHINGTON. March 27. i UPl Senate leader s said todn.v that a vote on David E. Lilieuthttl's nomination as atomic com-
mission chairman may I"' delay- h id
cl until mid-April. At the .sunn j out." Uie pil'd, W. A, Erickson, lime, Sen. Kenneth McKellar, D..|:.'0, la.ndrd the 159-Um plane last claimed Hint Iris ilriv night on a broken landing gear 1 against UlientUal was gathering a feat that Army Air Force ex-
27 i UPl
bomber, lire XB--"6. was all in on," piece today, thanks to a civilian test pilot who risked iris life to bring iris $20,000,000 plane down .vith a damaged
landing gear.
Afl r all but one of his crew
obeyed his orders
Greek-Turk Aid Left To Senate
structcd homes or commercial; WASHtNGTON^ March 27 establishments, unless proof Is: p) Housr 1( . U(it ,,,s were deprovided 0f ll ; ,> ^ ld, ; nC i 0 || ,,f _J J | termijred today to let the Senate
the ball first on President
dinner on Wednesday, the Greencast le Rotary Club heard an inIcresting and instructive talk by Fred Pease, well known Greencastle business man. Mr. Pease took as iris subject, “Conserva-
tion. Your Problem."
“Conservation in u science whose principles arc written in
the oldest legal code in tire world n’^ar Shelbyvtlle Dee. 5.
tire laws of nature," said Mr j Pease, “and ignorance of the j laws of nature has been and still J is more responsible for the in-! fractions than willful malprac-j tide.” The speaker continued. | “It is therefore necessar y' before S iiliy real progress towards eon-'
The turbulent strike already has cut in half this big city’s milk supply. It was estimated Urat more Uran 75,000 gallons of I milk had been dumped from j trains and trucks into ditches j and bayous since tire strike be- | gan Monday night. New Orleans ua.ry products j distributors showed no intention j of negotiating with the upstate ] strikers. One said “we’ll get milk j from the Midwest—Wisconsin j has been crying to sell its dairy
products here.”
In Tangipahoa parish where blood was shed in a strawberry farmers dispute eight years ago, two trains had been stopped in 24 hours. Dairymen flagged
Ham Price and William Johnson, j down the trains—one freight and both 47 charged with tire trturder t lre uther passenger with milk •>f .vtat." pnlir eiiiaii Herbert Made car! , broke open the car seals
and dumped the milk.
COM AIBUtS, .Ma,reli 27 (INS)—An outbreak of influen/a among jurors in th" teen-age
smelt nurruer trial brought about a
recess today.
Judge George \V. Long iof Bnrt.iudoiiievv circuit court ordered the recess to enabl- physicians
to examine My jurors.
The (rial defendants are Wil-
WASHINGTON, March 27— F.NS)—The Senate voted today to. extend the second war powers aet until June 80. Rut ex-' empt'-d sugar ami rubber controls
fnmi tile aet.
Tire net ion would end the see- > <>r id war powers ncl a I Mm- same
W. D. Bee, special agent of the IC railroad rescribed the raids as “acts of terrorism worthy of Jesse James." He said that more i than 250 farmers took part in | one raid at Amite, some 100
! miles north of here.
State public safety chiel Hunt-
serial,on can take place Ural the, ,.* |( ires. i tr state police educational fraternity shoulder'• ] S(>|| |.;i|,. nr | ( , r |> | 4I askod • <:arfi il '*° 1,10 tro| ibled zone with large part of this responsible]^ „ M is,- to In- orders to “Keep the roads o|>en.”
elmle sugar controls in the a.- farmers were carrying rifles Mon, llut no motion to (nut ef eel and ' shot K u "« °l K ' n »' not fivcn mas made. ! objecting to their pictures being
FORT WORTH, Tex., March | bona fide contract lo install such ( The world's biggest i ( , r ,„ip,n, nt prior to December 21,1 ^, a " >
1946, in those areas lo which the eonriiiission’s order of December 20, 1916. applied and prior to March 21. 1947, in those areas to which the commission’s first sup-
plemental order applies.
In the latter areas, the , us-
to "bail j turner s arc required lo submit
proof Unit tire gas-«lesigii“d pace li"irling equipment was in-
pcits said was almost Impossible.
Turkish aid program
Authoritative eungn ssional I sources said Semite debate or. the measure would suirt. on Airril 7 n week after the deadline set by the British for ending their
economic help to Greece.
Tire House leadership felt thui since niembers of ihe senate foreign relations committee ap
iiicoinpleted construction
steam.
[rebate on Lilienthal s apisrint -p( )c j s th.' only plane ment was sidetracked In nra're,.^ Uu- W()| . ll | vv |,i l .|, ran take n way for mietr “must” legislation 0 f bombs mid make a
as extension of controls on sug „ r( Unite ! States ' .,...1 rents, and Tn:- Zy Inhabits, ar-a In the | ^..dalio,, '->de r the main part
aid for Greece
stalled and in regular p.-ared to I); in unusually close at tire same premises pr ior 1°'touch with foreign policy dovcl-
Murch 21. 1047. or hr the case of | „ plm , n t s , it won Id be well to wait Icy Miller was named alternate; ad.ide.
burden.”
In Iris timely talk, Mr. Pease discussed tire four types of conservation. namely: water, soil, minerals and forests, and explained how these are inter-re-lated .and Ire stressed the importance of educating the people to conserve our resources since inneh of tire destruction is due to the lack of knowledge of the importance of conservation. “Wr have taken steps forward through courses in soil conservation, forest protection, etc., with the aid of state and federal governments and we are making progress,” said Mr. Pease. Ernest Collins was named as il'lcgate to the district meeting of Rotary to be held in Richmond, lud., on April 2i!rd. Har-
Rtibber and sugar controls are takl>n b y newspaper photograph-
tieing (lontiiiivsl in separate legis-1 crs. Sam Gurco, Jackson, Miss.,
I prodduce trucker said that he WASHINGTON, March 27.— was fired on from ambush when t l\S)_Herbert U.„ Nelson, ex-, be failed to halt at a road blockecutive \ice president of the Na- ffbola riddled a fender and al Real Estate .shattered his windshield but Boards, today a-ked Congress to I Gurco pushed through. He said reiuine controls from the build- that he was not hauling milk, ing industry’ to solve the housing I b< ' farmers evidently thought
problem. ■ s,)
j 'Ted Micco. another Mississippi
('LEA ELAND, Mar.'h 27 — P roduc '' f ucker said tliat he ran (INS)—Cleveland ftre depart- the blockade because he thought nient's arson -quad probed Mr- 'f was a holdup. A shot puuciIh.i lb," ruins of a spectacular tured a tire but he drove into the
sloo.ooo chureli Ma/e which kill-, city on Uie rim.
e<l a fire crtplain and iiijun'd his
home or living quarters that sueh equipment was specified in the const ruction contract and tire
■’I until the j mate has acted on the
m Named City femo Chairman [irinakl Cox, First Waqi work •'"•I ^-‘cn named as eity Demo►fic rimir nan for the Green“le electior th ts year. I A pri.mil, nt local Democrat in P*“ c,n f Mr Cox's selection t rirairniHt. Tlrnrsday, stated r aa Vet no candidates foi L lUl municipal offices have r The deadline is April 8 «lay.s before tile May pri* date. WcarsAp lN UKEENCANTIjE
man's program of alU lor i.rerr.- w(l| .|,|
and Turkey.
MeKellm nminliiine'l Uu'l his
campaign to block Lilii'irtlial'si 111
confiriiialion bod pir ked up support within the past week. IT'
cited as an example an mdi-LII- 1
ientlral statement by Sen. Horn r
Ferguson. R.. Mich.
Lilienthal has served as Inter
ini chairman of the Atomi • Energy Commission since th • army yielded control of the program last Dec. ."1. To continue he needs a confirming Senate
rvera drew a parallel beKriekson’s daring and
I lu.t of proii | s. a captains who have gone down with their ships
than, abandon them.
Erickson and his co-pilot, G. BGreen, .'"I, wlv. refused to ball out. w re at tbe controls wire" the plane made its maiden flight
last June.
They had helped put it through tests ever since it was built by ciinsolidiileil Vultce Air Corporn-
of the structure in which the equipment is lo be installed was completed prior lo March 21,
1947.
Jerome Hixson In Chapel Talk
Alice
cm. o. fa.V and son, L " Were visiting in Kansas
'AlHhonm.
li aii, f " ® ^^“n underwent
at the hospital.
,/" d Mr * Vernon Shirley i«. Il| Khler ’ Virf{uila ' were in L i t Throop 8 * w ai
r at English'!
uU#.
vote and McKellar said he doubt- lion. Now in Hi experimental (d it would be forthcoming. stage, the piaii" is rehcduled foi Th<‘ Senate was proceeding on formal acceptance b,v tlic Army a “sperch-a-dav” basis on the Air Forces next June^ It ha.s a Lilienthal Issue. Yesterday Fe tail as tall as a Rvir-Ztory buildguson told the Senate the non:- ing It ca.x By eight nri^sahmre hu e was n "soeialisl -aristocrat” the earth and travel 10.000 .nH~ who would push the United Slat- 'nil loaded an I return os down the totnlit'irlnn road The plane was erippli'd on Its taken by Russia. Later twin.', t ihe-off from the Fort Worth ArSen Styles Bridges, R„ N. II my Air Base at t2:.!0 p. m. yeswus expected to urge rejection “I tcrday. when a sid-' brace strut
Lilienthal n-s too “soft" toward
Rnssla.
GUESTS OF THEATER The Grecncastle Tiger
on Die main lauding gear broke off from a wing connection. It loft one wheel dangling as the
plaiv soared into the air. Tn nd ’JUon to Erickson and
Green, 12 crew members were
Ts theater In
Cubs aboard the silver sky monster,
and Coaches were the guests of They were Army Air Force men tire Voncastle Th atru. VV'ednes- ; from Wright Field. O.. Corsair's
d»v evnimr in appreciation of civilian experts and observers , , . their Outstanding work this sea- from eon panies which supplied Joy lies forge ting ourselves m their out , g tor ^ p iiU , e , the objecU of devoted service.
Educated people are expected to use their minds to find one thing worthy of devotion, Jerome C. Hixson, professor of English at DePauw University, said In his morning worship chapel ad-
dress.
Speaking on the practice of sacrifice today, Mr. Hixson declared that Intelligence In sacrifice is as Important as patience. “ Ultimately," Mr. Hixson said, “lifelong sacrifice to a constructive goal seems to make people forget the cost. Tire blessing is all. There can lie no blessing if there is self-pity, foi si If-pity proves that the object of sacrifice was less than self. “If sacrifice Is to be illuminated with the lamp of beauty, it must be costly. Then only can
It give blessing.”
The blessing of sacrifice is no. in Uie return but In the giving. Professor Hixson concluded. The
Greek-Turkish matter. II took I tire snare position on the $850,- ] 001,000 general foreign relief bill which has already been approved by the house fortign affairs
eommitlec,
liidieutitig in luulerslniidiiig uniong Senate leaders lo sped ecmsideralion of tin Gri-ek-Turk-ish measure, Sen. Tom Cnmmlly iof Texas, ranking Ix'inoeral on i the senate foreign relations I committee, told newsmen: "1 think we‘.I have a bill out Iof committee by the end ol this
delegate.
Don Jones, Prentice Hall Publishing Co., representative, and Dent Chancy were guests of the
club.
Committee To Broaden Probe WASHINGTON. March 27 (UP) The He,use mnAmerioan activities committee lias been given a go-ahcH'd to broaden its
I investigation of subversive activities, it was disilesed today.
week."
Senate president Ail Inn Vnndenberg, who is also chairman of tlie senate foreign relations committer, originally thought the house should act first because tbe Grcck-Turkish aid bill was
in the nature of an appropriation prupriatc $50,000 for their work measure. It is customary foi tire |-| n SH j,| th e aevessnry legislation house to originate all appropiia- w . m |,| i^. approved wsui by the tion bills. But lit- now has i House Administration Comclianged his mind and decidid 'o mittee.
push with all possible speed for
action in the senate.
Cliainnaii J. P.iriwill Till/,mas, R.. N.J., rai l House RepilbliCHii leaders had okayed a prepusal to p rinit the committee In hire additional investigators and to ap
Till* flaiiM-s wen- helit-uiJ to bail- start'll in tbe ehoir loft iof lire old' Franklin Boulevard Methodist cl.fm'h, si'eond oldest cliari'h I, dUiiig on ('lewland's
west shle.
GARY, lud., Miireb 27 (UPl Police and lire officials today plaiued an investigation of tbe death ref Jimmy Miggcrson, 15, a m wspH|>er delivery lsi> wbo was electroeiitivl wiien ne tfUch-
ed a steel light pole.
Jimmy was killed yesterday while making his newspapei rounds. He .rode his bicycle to a ••.'irner near his home and sat on the curb t<> fold bis papers. A school friend passed. Jimmy waye-J. His hand accidently
tc, ichcd the pole.
Leo Carter, representative of the striking Teamsters Union said that all. New Orleans AFL locals would extend their boycott to steamsjiip lines, shipping companies or any other organization which continued to use the milk. Carter said that .striking unions, however, would supply hospitals with milk Tree of
charge.
HOG MARKET
Hogs 7,000. Opened generally $ I lower than Wednesday. Rather slow at the decline. Good and choice barrow and gilts 160-225 lbs., $26.50. top $26.75 sparingly, 225-250 lbs.. $26.25; 260-275 lbs., $26; 275-300 lbs., $25.75; 300-350 lbs., $25.50; 350 lbs. up $25.25;
I asKcrs-by L Jbd-ltt" lbs.. *22.26-123.25. Early
found him lying in the The pole was smoking.
street. I sales sows confined largely to
lightweights at $22.75-*23.
MASONIC NOTICE Called meeting E. A. degree. Temple Lodge No. 47. C. K Hastings, W. M. » RICKETTS IMPROVING
Other irn nibers s 'yl Uie action j i should enable the committee to I expand its cheek oT nommunist ! infiltration ol the radio and ■ovie Inlustrles. FBI Chief J. j Edgar Hoover said yesterday it ! was iirg iit to root Conimuniats ! ml of p'lbllc opinion fiel Is. Hoover, who testified on legislation to curb or outlaw Uie ('omiuimiut party, charged that
HALT LAKE CITY, March 27 (UP) Four Indiana men, arrested near Helper, Utah, at the climax of a spectacular chase, were questioned Malay about 14
robberies in five states.
They ’.ve.re held in the Salt Lake (aninty jail under a cha.rgv of violating the federal Dyer a/ t bv stealing a car and driving it
across s state line.
OTIcers said the men. sll from Mitchell. Ind., gave their names as Batllle Eugene Ikitts, Earl Lewis Wilcoxeix Paul A. Cooper
0 Todays Weathw % • and • • Local Temperature 9
Mostly cloudy extreme nortli tonight, clearing and somewhat warmer tomorrow.
M. D. Ricketts who lias ,M ' t ’ n : American Coniniiinlatz hit try-i and Nomiau Saltsman. All were seriously ill for the past fewj| n g i 0 overthrow this govern-j in their early 20’s, weeks is reported making spicn- ,tient. In case of. a Russian- Sheriff Joe Dudler of Carbon did progress during the past few American war. h<^ said, they | county said fmr men broke indays. would support the Soviets. to a service station and fled.
Minimum
27
6 a. in.
30
7 a. in
31
8 a. in
-32
9 a. in.
3A
10 a. m
35
11 a. in
39
12 noon
30
1 p. m
39
2 p. m.
49
»
