Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 133, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 7 July 1949 — Page 1

T

SULLIVAN COUNTY'S ONLY DAILY NEWSPAPER

WEATHER CONTINUED WARM Indiana: Partly cloudy, scattered showers, tonight and Friday. Continued warm.

VOL. 51 No. 133

UNITED PRESS SERVICE

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1949.

INTERNATIONAL PICTURE SERVICE

PRICE THREE CENTS

ioard

:esps;

Case Settled

An expected court fight

the removal of the three Re

publican members of the County Welfare Board failed to materialize this morning when one of the .. three- members suddenly offered her resignation to Judge Norval K. Harris. Mrs. Belle Tison, of Dugger, was the board member to offer her resignation, and Judge Harris said that he would not continue the action to focee the ouster of the other two memler:. With Mrs. Tisoh off tha board, the Judge will appoint a re

placement, and the new member,'

being a Democrat, will gi 'e that party a three-to-two majority on the board. Still On Board Still on the board are Will

Thompson, of Sullivan, aad William Stafford, of Carlisle, the two Republicans, and Mrs. Hannah Murray, of Sullivan, and Ray Newkirk, of Pleasantville, the two Democrats. Judge Harris is expected to announce the name of the lifth board member tomorrow. The new member will be a woman, as law requires that two women serve on the board. The' law fc so requires that three members be of one political pari. The, court room, was well-filled with persons interested in the case. Many of them there to testify in the hearing, which was called to remove the three Republican members for political activity in the election last November. Before 4ie election, Judge Harris campaigned on a platform of revising the welfare board. ,

Noland To Air Record 01 Congress WASHINGTON, July 7 (Spl)

Two Indiana Democratic Congressmen will take the air this

week to report to their consti

tuents on the, progress made by

over t ie 81st Congress.

James E. Ncland and John R. Walsh, Congressmen from the 7th and 5th Indiana districts, will review the results of the first six months of lawmaking by both Houses of Congress in a radio broadcast this week. With only a few weeks re

maining before July 31, the stat

utory date for adjournment of

the first session of the 81st Congress, the Democratic legislators

are making a concentrated effort to pass a major portion of President Truman's legislative pro

gram.

A long range housing bill has passed both Houses of Congress. Aid to education and minimum wage legislation are scheduled for early action.

T-H Repealer Action Urged By Truman

The discussion between Noland and Walsh will be broadcast over radio station WAOV in Vincennes at 4:30 p.m. Sunday, July 10.

Soldier Bonus Blanks Will Be

Ready Monda

' TvrrT a t a Dfir tcr"'T,,i,; j; m D1

Distribution of application forms for the veterans bonus will

hf marlp hv thp State Denartment

of Veterans Affairs tomorrow Snyder will be Canadian Finnight or Saturday morning, State1 aice Minister Douglas C. Abbot, Bonus Administrator Clinton i who, came here for the CommonGreen said today j wealth financial conference next Green said the forms would be!wef,k; Canada's financial future mailed to varans organizations' 13 1Inked closely wlth those of

--o i 1 1U .1 T T : 1 j ni. J

uuui me u ni Leu juaies a.iu

WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP)

- President Truman expressed

the hope today that House Democratic leaders again will bring

up repeal of the Taft-Hartley

labor law for consideration.

The President told a news con

terence tnat House leaders are

considering the advisability oi

bringing up the Taft-Hartley re

pealer again, nut tne decision is

theirs, not his. He added, however, that he certainly would like to see the labor bill taken up in the House. The Senate has passed a labor bill which is a 1S49 model oi the present - Taft-Hartley act. It does not fulfill the President's campaign pledge to remove the Taft-Hartley act. Asked whether he would accept a House-Senate compromise

on the labor bill, the President

said he could not answer that

question until a bill was before him.

The President also expressed

some doubt whether he would want power to cope with local

strikes.

This came up during a series

of questions about the continuing

dock strike which Has tied up the

shipping in Hawaii for more than

two months.

The President repeated today

that he has no power to step into

By R. H. Shackford Tol A , 4 . ;t , ,

United Press Staff Corresnondent ... o. ... A "T "'""""V?

TTr ,"1 i"e oenaie to give mm tnis LONDON, July 7 (UP) For Dower, thp Prpciripnt saiH Via rfiA

the third time since the end of innt i-n,,,!,. i, ,.,j .u

the war, Socialist Britain turned authority to intervene in local

iuuay iu uie unitea states lor ctrikp-s

help in -a financial crisis.

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir Stafford . Cripps, formally will ask the United States to help this country escape bankruptcy at a conference beginning tomorrow with U. S. Secretary of Treasury John W. Snyder. The conference may prove as ;rucial as those of nea.'3y 20 fears ago, when Britain went off : the gold standard :ind the vorld plunged into the bl iekest economic depression in history. In On Conference . Sitting in with Cripps and

rifain Aoain

Asks Help Of United States

Schricker To Speak Af Amvef Meeting

Old Settlers

Reunion Opens

At Hymera

MUNCIE, Ind., July 7 (UP)

Officials of the Indiana Depart C

ment, American Veterans of

World War II, said today' they expected 400 delegates to attend

the organization's fourth annual : A speech by Lieutenant Gov-

convention which opens here ernor, John A. Watkins will be tomorrow for three days. the highlight of the first day of

Department Commander Ralph ' the 45th annual Old Settler's Re-

A. Stewart, Muncie, said vet- union at Hymera. The Watkins

erans housing, pension legisla- address win oe given tonight at

uon, a ieaerai bonus, an in- 8 o ciock as Democrat night is creased Federal income tax and celebrated the first 1 evening of

other controversial matters would be brought before the convention.

Governor Schricker was sched

uled to speak at the convention, and band

Amvets from Terre Haute, East parade. Chicago, Fort Wayne, Hunting- , Two more bis days

ton, BloomingtorrT Elkhart and main after tonight.

other Indiana cities were ' ex-1 vf Legion Night pected to attend. I ; On Friday night Joseph Klein,

John C; Hynes, Muncio, . wss of Lake County, chairman of the

the only announced candidate Military and Veterans Affairs to succeed Stewart as dspait Committee in the recent Indiana

the reunion.

The big affair got under way this morning with a parade at

11: o clock, and baseball games

music followed the

will re-

ment commandler. '

Airliner With

Engine Afire

Lands Safely

General Assembly will talk on the veterans bonus law which the Assembly passed last winter. He will appear as the speaker

for Legion night.

and county veterans' affairs 'officers throughout the state and

should be ready for distribution to the individual veterans Monday morning. , . '. "We'll accept - the completed applications as fast as the veterans can get them' back to us," Green said. Hoosier taxpayers have been

paying for the bonus througn a surtax on ' the gross income tax

since July 1.

The bonus was estimated to cost from $105,000,000 to $175,-

000,000, and no payments will be

made until the entire amount is

collected. , .. . Veterans may apply for the bo

nus between now and Dec. 31,

1950, when the Department . of

Veterans Affairs will total the

applications and report to Gover

nor Schricker and the General Assembly how much, money will

be needed.

Mrs. Martha Holder Dies In Michigan Mrs. Martha Elizabeth Holder 72 years old, of Dugger, died this morning at 8 o'clock at the Bowen Nursing Home in Kalamazoo, Mich. She died from the shock of a broken hip suffered April 6th while visiting her son. Dr. Charles O. Holder in Kalamazoo. Mrs. Holder was born August 26, 1872, in Scotland, Ind. She resided for many years in Dugger and was a member of the Dugger Methodist Church. She is survived by three sons. Dr. Charles O. Holder of Kalamazoo, Mich., Falan I. Holder of Peoria, 111., and William F. Holder of Logansport, and four grandchildren. The body will arrive in Terre Haute Friday night and will be taken to the M. J. Aikin Funeral Home in Dugger, and will be removed to the family residence Saturday morning. Funerad services will be held at the Methodist Church in Dug ; ger Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock with the Rev. . V. M. Suddarth "officiating. Burial will be in the Prairie Chapel Cemetery at Lyons, Ind.

Britain. Cripps indicated at a

conference last night that he will

present a concrete plan to Sny der. Details' were a closely guarded secret, ' but Cr'pps hint

ed it would include a suggestion that the United Sta;es buy more British goods, for its own ' sake

as well as Britain?.

"If the United States reases to

buy rubber, tin, jute and cocoa from the sterling area," he said, "those countries von't huve the dollars to spend ,in the United States." , At the same lime, how6v,er, Cripps announced i. Commons yesterday that "he government has called a halt for three months and perhaps longer on all new purchasing ' from the United States. Only by such drastic means, he said, caa the government halt the run on Britain's gold . and dollar reserves, now down to $1,600,000,ooo. '..'; .

Carl J.Gobin Oias' A! Carlisle Carl J. Gobin, age 70, life-long resident of Carlisle, died at his

home this morning at 5:30 o'clock. He was born March 2,

1879 the son of Thomas and

Sarah Gobin.. He had been an employee of the Highway De

partment' for several years. He vas a member of . the Carlisle

Christian Church and the Ma-

onic Lodge at Carlisle. ', t Surviving are the wife, Faye; a niece and several cousins. ; The body was taken lo the Schulze Funeral Home ami will be removed to the - residence Friday morning. 'Funeral services

will be conducted Saturday aft

ernoon at 2 o'obcic at the residence with the Rev. L. H. Gra

ham of Sandborn officiating. Burial will be in the Odd Fellows. Cemetery at Carlisle."

Truman Says Atom Agreement Is Necessary WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP) President Truman said today the United Nations must agree on control of atomic energy before there can be any effective discussion of international lisarm-

ament. 1

Mr. Truman expressed the opinion to his weekly news con

ference that the world is moving

slowly and gradually, toward peace.

He again spoke his belief that

the ultimate eoal of full world

Drews' ,,.',, peace would be achieved.

Yesterday, Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, R., Mich., called on the

President to lead a "new crusade" for peace. Vandenberg asked particularly that the President underscore this country's good faith in disarmament and to curb the UN's veto. The President said in response to a question, that disarmament is a question before' the United Nations and when the atomic energy part of the program is agreed to by all nations, then we can talk about disarmament, but not before. He said that since he took office in 1945, he has made a continuing crusade for peace and would continue to do so. He said he did not think he had missed a single opportunity in public addresses and statements to talk about the need of peace, and that it had been the keynote of his White House service. ' .

Child Drowns In Tub Of Water Near Dugger Richard Allen Bedwell, two-

year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Cecil Bedwell of near Exline Corner, drowned yesterday afternoon at 3 o'clock when he fell

into a tub of water at the home

of his parents.

The child had . been playing with his two small brothers, Marvin and Dennis, and when his mother missed him she began to look for him. She found bis

body in the tub of water. Efforts at resuscitation failed I and Coroner Stanley Jewell pronounced death due to accidental

drowning. He is survived by the parents, the two brothers, anl the grandmother, Mrs. Sarah Bedwell of Sullivan. The bdy was taken from the

Newkirk Funeral Home in pleasantville to ihe home cl thj par

ents this afternoon. Funerjl services will be held at the Hickniy

The Labor night speaker will Church at 3 o'clock Frday after-

be Frank Aliah, of Kansas City, noon with burial in Hickory Mo., who is an international Cemetery. ! board member of the United 1

!Mine Workers. Mr. Aliah, who was the speaker for the . Alum Cave reunion last 'summer, will deliver a timely address on im-

SHANNON. Ireland, July 7

JP) A New York bound strat- mediate labor conditions, ocruiser carrying 63 persons j Bean Dinner :aught fire over the Atlantis to- I The bean dinner, annually one lay, but raced 300 miles back to of the outstanding events of the Shannon Airport for an emer- reunion will be held at noon to?ency landing. . 1 morrow, and the general public All 53 nasseneers includine Is cordially invited to attend the

Comedian Danny Kaye and Ten-

dinner.

a ; 1 i t

lis Stars Louise Broueh and Mar- ! carnival . aimospnere pre-

laret du Pont and 10 crew vai,ed in Hymera today as the members donned life jackets in -reunion opened There will be reparation for "ditching" at entertainment lor all during the 5ea after the fire broke out in ,thre? da7s .of festivities. Band

l music, singing, ano contests tor all will be held along with the

baseball and Softball games. The grand, finals Saturday night will be a fireworks display at 11 o'clock Saturday night.

DIVORCE SUIT , VENUED HERE

A divorce suit filed by Reba

Goings against 1 Chester F. Go

ings has been venued to the Sul

livan Circuit Court from Vigo

county.

Mrs. Maggie Dilley Dies Al Hospital : Mrs. Maggie Dilley, age 56,. of

Paxton, died at the Mary Sher

man Hospital Wednesday night. She was a member of the Full Gospel Mission Church of Sullivan. -

Surviving are the husband.

Rev. Emory Dilley: one steD-

son, Arthur Dilley of New York; and one half-brother, Ed Ragons of Lawrenceville, Illinois.

The body was taken to the

Railsback Funeral Home and was

removed to- the residence in

Paxton this afternoon where it

will lie In state. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday ai'ternoon at 2 o'clock at the Full

Gospel Mission Church on East

Jackson Street in Sullivan. Bur ial will be in the Webb Cemetery. .

TODAY'S TEMPERATURES

The unofficial temperatures in Sullivan today were: at 7:30 a.m. '78 degrees at noon , . 87 degrees

che right outboard motor. The flames burned out in 45 minutes, however, and the huge Pan American airliner came in to Shannon on three engines and an escort of two Liberators without further incident. A dozen fire trucks stood by unneeded as the plane landed. ;" ' . .. The passsengers, who also included Paul V, Mv;Nutt,. former

U. S. Ambassador to the Philippines, said there was no panic aboard the airliner. But McNutt said a power dive from 19,000 to 6,000 feet "in an attemp to extinguish the flames was "absolutely terrifying." The same plane, named the America, also was forced to re-

turn to Shannon two weeks ago! Gre;hound bug

, t ""c" car driven by Charles B. Rhoades, mgly while the air inerwas fly- lage 25i eight miles south of

jug uatu iu iue uiiiieu o la ies ngrg

trom a Jaris air snow.

Identify Victim Of Sunday Bus Wreck INDIANAPOLIS, July 7 (UP)

, Police said today the third

victim of a bus-car crash last

i Sunday morning had been ident

ified as Samuel Owen Stafford, age 19, Indianapolis. Stafford's body was burned badly in the accident, when a

a

The first sign of trouble today again was a drop in oil pressure in the right outboard engine while the plane was far out over the Atlantis on a direct London to New York flight. That was at 12:30 a.m. CMT (6:30 p.m. Wednesday CST). x1he pilot, Capt. H. G, Gulbranson of Great Neck, Long Island, tried unsuccessfully to feather the propeller and decided to turn back to Shannon because of his

decreased speed.

Rhoades and James Yates,

Jr:, both of Indianapolis, also were killed. All three victims were in the car. Stafford was identified through the use of Naval Reserve dental pharts after his family made a tentative identification based on a watch and identifcaton bracelet found at the scene of the accident.

About an hour' later, the pro

pener nub began showering some to the Sullivan Circuit sparks and the engine caught fire, from Vigo County.

DAMAGE SUIT VENUED HERE A damage suit filed by Marguerite Fortune against t he City of Terre Haute has been venued

Court

Free Taxis For Churchgoers Fill Angola's Nine Churches

ANGOLA, Ind., July 7 (UP)

Ray Myers, 23 year old war

veteran, drew plaudits today

from Angola clergymen for an

idea that has boosted church at

tendance and increased his taxi

business 25 per cent.

Myers gives people free rides

to and from church on Sundays.

The nine ministers in this In

diana town of 8,000 said his service has brought in backsliders in a way no church walls could

have done. One said many irregular attenders apparently had

Come back "out of a sense of shame" after the plan was started.

Churches Full . Some said it was the first time

they could remember that they

haven't preached to almost empty

churches during the summer usually the "black season" in the church attendance.

Myers, who served with the Army in the Philippines, bought out the cab business with his Army savings two years ago. "I got tired of just cooling my heels on Sunday," he said. Three months ago he tmnounced that his drivers would give

free rides to everyone who want-

sisted of two used cars and mon than 300 persons accepted his offer on Easter Sunday. His family had to pitch in tc handle the jam. His father, Clyde Myers, Sr., a truck driver, and Clyde, Jr., age '29, took turn: driving one car. Lou, age 13 was a dispatcher, and his mother, sister, and 19-year-old wife, Janice, handled the telephones. The plan improved the business from the start. , Helps Business "A few people thought we were wild and foolish," Myers said. "But people remember us during the week. In fact, some think up reasons to call taxis after; we refuse their money on Sundays." The churchmen said they have been "truly amazed."

The pastor of St. Anthony's Catholic Church said the new

spirit is "wonderful." The Con

gregational minister, the Rev. Glenn L. Utterback, said it was

"splendid to see the old folks

and invalids getting out to the

services now

Myers admitted that

House Group Plans Probe Of Hawaii Strike By Paul Harrison

United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP) The House Un-American Activities Committee today voted to investigate the 68-day Hawaiian dock strike to determine whether it is Communist -inspired.

A member said the c-om-nittee '

decided at a closed session to send an investigator ' to Hawaii after the strike ends. After leceiving the investigator's report the committee will . dre'de whether to go into the matter further. The commitee member sa'd (he invest! StttTr will inquire into reported Communist fill ration in the Islands and into key unions. He said the investigator

will not go to Hawaii until the strike ends so there can be no accusation of attert.pted strikebreaking by a Congressional committee. The committee decision was disclosed soon after President Truman told a news conference he has no power to intervene in the crippling walkout and voiced

some doubt whether he wants

such power. Mr. Truman made the ' state

ment when told that a bill to

grant him such authority is iDout to be introduced in the

Senate. '

The measure, draft. I by Sen.

William F. Knowland, R., Cal..

ind other West Coast legislator, -eportedly would authorize the President to invoke compulsory

arbitration and seize struck

flipping and waterfront facili

ties.

County Still Leads In Buying E Bonds INDIANAPOLIS, July 7. (U.R) Hoosiers purchased 84 per cent of their state quota of "E" bonds up to June 25 in the opportunity drive, State Bond Chairman Eugene C. Pulliam announced today. Pulliam said eight more counties had purchased 100 or more per cent of their quotas. Sullivan County still led the state in purchases, with 140 per cent of Its quota, Gus Lowry is the Sullivan County bond drive chairman. New counties which surpassed their quota by June 25 were Scott, 119 per cent; Madison, 111; Bartholomew, 105; Parke, 104; Ohio, 103; Hendricks, 101; Dubois, 101, and Franklin, 100. The drive will continue through July 16, Pulliam said. Total "E" bond purchases in the state were $23,642,805. The goal is $28,220,000.

Heat Wave

Record; No

Relief In

Sight

Dewey Appoints

Dulles Senator NEW YORK, July 7 (UP)

Gov. Thomas E. Dewey today

appointed John Foster Dtlles as interim Senator from New York until Dec. 1.

Republican Says Atlantic Pact Is Soviet Trap WASHINGTON, July 7. (UP) Sen. Ralph E. Flanders, R., Vt, today denounced the North Atlantic pact as a trap the result of a Soviet plot to bankrupt the

United States.

Flanders told a surprised Sen

ate, which for two days had heard nothing but praise for the defense treaty, that he will vote

against it and the related $1,450,000,000 program for arming free nations. He declared that the Russian

Politburo the handful of men in the Kremlin world who rule the

Communist world has "set out to ruin us economically" and that the Truman administration has fallen into its trap. Flanders said the pact and arms program would fail to stop Russia. . He said the Soviet "wave of 'conquest will continue to roll until it has swept Europe ' and Asia into subjugation" and threatened Africa and America with the same fate. "The Politburo," he said, "has victory within its grasp. It is at this moment running our country. It determines our policy . . ." By spending billions for national defense and foreign aid, Flanders said, this country has run into a "budgetary ambush" erected by Russia. Despite Flanders' opposition, which apparently was not discounted in advance, the administration appeared to have plenty of votes to assure ratification of the Atlantic treaty.

No Prisoner Of War Pay Blanks Available Prisoner of war pay blanks are not yet available, the Rev. Tom Jennings, veterans service officer, said today. He said that recently

a number of persons have come into his office seeking them. He stated that his office would bej glad to file applications for such pay. No commission for prisoner of war pay has been appointed yet,1 Rev. Jennings said, but annlica-

By United Press '-. The worst heat wave of -the year seemed likely to break all-

time records today as the nation counted more than 400 deaths due to the soaring temperatures.

Almost everywhere from the

Rnckv Mountains to the East

j Coast, the weathe bureau pre

dicted "continued hot and humid." Scattered showers brought temporary relief to some towns but the mercury climbed right back to a Hades-like reading as soon as the rain stopped, " : The East Coast drought went into its 42nd day with brief, sprinkles teasing farmers who had lost an estimated $70,000,000 in crops. Many Die A United Press survey showed that 411 persons died of heat exhaustion, sunstroke and heatinduced heart attacks while 294 were drowned while seeking respite at beaches. V was so hot at Newark, O., that hundreds of eggs discarded at the garbage dump started hatching. Kids ran to the dump to get free chicks as pets but most of the young fowl died shortly after they poppei from their shells. The eggs had been , thrown away by a hatchery as

I unfit for use. I At Indianapolis, Iceman Lester ! Tallnforrn'e hnrep shnwprl the

good sense horses are noted for; Weary of hauling tons of iee to cool humans, the nag walked in-! to a canal, pulling the wagon

: after him. Taliaferro had to in.

hitch the wagon o g"3t tne. horse out of the cool water. Water System Out The 950 residents of the town of Cdell, lying on the steaming Illinois prairie, wore hit by a water shortage that forced them, to carry buckets from privaielyowned wells. A section of piping . dropped into the 1,500-foot city well, caught on a rock ledge at the 400-foot level, and threw the entire city water system out of commission. Mayor Lawrence ready said the situation .. would be "dangerous" if a fire : broke out in the three days it will take to repair the break. Forecasters at Chicago said the heat wave would begin breaking all-time records there if their . predictions for continued hot weather came true. The temperature was expected to stay over 90 through tomorrow, setting a new record of nine days of 90-degree heat. The violent thunderstorms an companying the heat did more harm ihan good in some cities. ' At Red Wing, Minn., a storm flooded the city's sewage system and knocked out more than 400 telephones. At St. Louis, a sudden shower dropped the temperature from 91 to 76 within an hour but the temperatures rose swiftly and the moisture from steaming pavements added to the humidity.

Dulles, Republican fore'gn , tions containing name, serial

policy expert, will fill the Senate i number, date of capture and date seat left vacant by the resigna-;of release may be filed in the

office in the they will be proper chan-

ion of Robert F. Wagner, Demo-1 veterans affairs

crat. (Court House and

forwarded to the nels.

A special election will be held

Nov. 8 to choose a Senator to fill the remainder of Wagner's

unexpired term. Wagner resign

ed because of illness. ,

Dewey, in announcing the ap

pointment said he thought it unlikely that Dullei would be a candidate for the office in Nov-

He said he had made the ap

pointment because of Dulles' wide knowledge of foreign affairs.

"The foreign affairs issues be

fore the Senate made his ap

pointment the greatest contribution to the Senate that I could make," the governor said.

Dewey was asked whether j Vinson, D., .Ga., of the' House Dulles, an American delegate to ' Armed Services Committee that

Dictator Fear Absurd, Truman Says Today WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP) President Truman today described as perfectly absurd - tha feeling that the Secretary of Defense might become a military dictator under a Senate-approved bill increasing his authority. Mr. Truman was told by a re-

porter at his news conference of ! a ffAliner hv Choii-mon r"o.l A

President Bullish On Nation's Economy WASHINGTON, July 7 (UP) President Truman said today he is bullish on the American economic situation. Mr. Truman was asked at his news conference whether he was "bullish or bearish on our economic situation?" Bullish, the President replied,, advising his questioner to read stock market reports for the last few days. Stocks generally have been going up on the New York Stock Exchange since mid-June.

"Bullish" is a market term denoting bettering conditions. The President deferred discussion of a plan in Congress to set up a $15,000,000,000 standby public works program as a bulwark against domestic unemployment. Asked how he felt about the plan, the President sali IVis

question would be answered in his midyear economic report that goes to Congress Monday.

the United Nations, would have

to resign his UN post because of his Senatorial duties. "I don't know," Dewey said. "That would be up to the ad-

he, and ministration.

the so-called Tydings bill as drawn might result in the creation of a military dictatorship. That, the President said, was a perfectly absurd opinion. He

said as long as the President is

ed to go to church and take them his drivers don't attend church. I Dewey made the announce- the commander in 'chief of ti e

home afterward

Myers' taxi service then con

"How can we go ourselves and. ment in his suite at the

take other (people?" velt Hotel here.

T" I ft 1 T- .

xvoose- Armea d orces, no otner person could possibly take them over.

SHOCK KILLS RJEJVI.C. LINEMAN LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 7. (UP) Frank M. Davenport, age 49, Lieden, a lineman for the Tipmont R.EJV1C., was killed today while working six miles south of here. State police said Davenport received a. fatal shock when his head touched a high tension power line carrying 6,900 volts of electricity.