Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 148, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 27 July 1949 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES WEDNESDAY, July 27, 1949

- ENDS TONIGHT - $ $ COME EARLY $ $

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Rayburn Says Congress Can Stay In Session

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CRASH BLAMED ON OVERLOAD . MISHAWAKA, Ind.', July 27. (UP) H. C. Biddle, manager of Sportsman's Airport, today blamed an overloaded plane as the cause for the crash which slightly injured three men here yes

terday. The plane struck high tension wires on a take-off. The injured were Pilot Dean Hepler, age 25, Mishawaka, and William J.. Gibbons, age 21," and Ervin Scheriever, age 22, both of South " Bend. None were hospitalized.

WASHINGTON, July 27 (UP) Speaker Sam Rayburn said today that the nation still is legally in a state of emergency and that Congress therefore can legally stay in session after Aug. 1. . He and Vice President Alben W. Barkley. have voiced hope that Congress could . get away early in September. The speaker's ruling on the state of emergency was in reply to an inquiry by'Houje Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin, Jr. The legislative reorganization act of 1946 requires that Congress adjourn by Aug. 1 unless the country is at war, in a state of emergency proclaimed by the President, or Congress itself has taken legal action to stay in session. Martin argued that President Truman's messages to Congress have indicated the wartime state of emergency no longer exists. But Rayburn ruled otherwise. Other Congressional developments: MARSHALL PLAN-iTie Senate accepted a cut of $569,820,000 in the administration's request for Marshall olan funds for this fiscal year. Without a fight, the Senate approved its appropriation committee's recommendation of $3,628,380,000 for the Economic Cooperation Administration. The administration wanffed $4,198,200X00. The Senate committee calculates that its p-nmmpndation is $299,871,000 below that voted by the House.

MONOPOLY Donald R. Richberg, former labor . lawyer and head of the New , Deal's NRA, urged Congress to put labor unions under anti-trust laws. He said big unions are as t much a menace to free competition as big businesses. REORGANIZATION A number of businessmen and Chamber of Commerce representatives spoke out against President Truman's plan to put the Bureau of Employment Security under the Labor Department. They told the Senate Executive Expenditures Committee that the Labor Department is "bias toward labor." DP'S Plans for increasing the number of displaced persons who could be admitted to this country were virtually put on ice, Chairman Pat McCarran of the Senate Judiciary Committee said he saw "no reason" 'for rushing changes or ' taking any action "before next May.",

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Club Meetings FOR THIS WEEK

Family night of the Frank Neff Relief Corps will be held at the city park July .29th at 6 o'clock. Bring covered dish, table service and articles for white elephant sale.

The Christian church choir will have rehearsal at 7:30 Wednesday night.

The Wabash Homeniakers club will meet at the home of Mrs. Don Greenwood Thursday, July 28th at 2 o'clock. 1

Pocahontas club will be entertained by Martha Deckard Thursday, July 28, at 7 o'clock. Bring own table service.

Stated meeting of Merom chapter O. E. S. Thursday night, July 28, at 7:30. Initiation. Officers and members are urged to attend. Visitors always welcome.

Pythian Sisters iwill meet Thursday promptly at 7:30 p. in. Note time of opening. All members are urged to attend as there is important business to be discussed. A musical program will ' be held at the close of Temple.

GLOBE GLEANERS 9 Sooth Main Jack Smith Phone 477

Emma D. Reed Past Noble Grand club will meet at the Odd Fellows Hall Thursday night, July 28, at 6:30 o'clock. Bring covered dish. All members are urged to attend.

U.S., Germans

Stop Lynching Of Russ Officers BERLIN, July 27. (UP) Two Soviet Army officers were rescued by German and American military police tonight from a riotous German crowd bent on lynching them, German police reported. ' Police said the Russians, one of them "obviously drunk," walked along a main street in the Schoenberg district and made "obscene gestures." A crowd gathered around the Russians and rapidly swelled to thousans of persons, some of them shouting threats," authorities re

ported. ' ' Three German patrol cars and an American military police car sped to the scene and dispersed the angered Germans before any harm befell the Russians. One of the officers was taken into protective custody by the U. S. military police and the other by German police. The Russians were reported to hove entered the American sector on a shopping tour. "The crowd would have lynched them if the police had not arrived," a policeman in the Schoenberg precinct station house said.

this time is the fact that a U. S.British-Canadian working agreement entered into on Jan. 1, 1948, will expire in another five months. , Under the agreement the three countries have been exchanging non-weapons information in such fields as raw materials supply, health and safety, reactor research, chemical separation, and radioactive isotopes for research. The agreement was discussed fully with the House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee when it was drawn up.. Section 10-A-l was brought up and the committee that time agreed it did no bar the kind of cooperation then contemplated.

The Tri Kappa picnic will be held Monday, Aug. 1, at 6:30 p. m. at the home of Clair Kerlin. Bring covered dish and own table service.

The Modern Manner Home Economics club will meet Tuesday evening, August 2, iat 7:30 p.m. with Mrs. Bailey Shake at 460 South Section Street. Dcn't forget articles for auction sale.

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF ADDITIONAL AFPKOPUIATIONS The taxpayers of the School City" of Sullivan are hereby notified that the Board of School Trustees of the School City at its regularly stated August iiiLotirij; on Tauisday, August 11, 1!)49, at 4:00 p. m. in the ouice of the Superintendent of Schools will consider the following additional appropriations which said trustees consider necessary to meet the extraordinary emergency existing at this time: . A. General Administration 546.00 lb. Secretary 165.00 ta. Su;jt. Salary .... 335.00 6d. Other expenses.. 46.00 B. Instructonal Teaching.... 9,245.00 . Elementary 1. Prin. salaries 300.00 3. Tchrs. salanies. . 4,0u0.00 High School 1. Prin. salary...... 220.00 2. Clerk H5.00 3. Teachers.. 4,000.00 Voc. Tchrs 700.00 D. Operation 705.00 Elementary 4. Light and Power 100.00 High School 1. Voc Janitor,... 550.00 3. Water 55.00 G. Coordinate and Aux. Activity 1,000.03 7. Vets. G.I. Ag... 1.000.00 I. Capital Outlay 3,200.00 5. Furniture 3.200.00 Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have the night to be heard thereon. The additional appropriations as finally made will automatically be referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners which Board will hold a further hearing within fifteen days in tiie office of the County Auditor,, or at such other place as may be designated. At such hearing taxpayers objecting to such additional appropriations may be heard, and interested taxpayers may inquire of the County Auditor when such hearing will be heard. Dated this 26th day of July, 1949. H. W." Branstetter, Secretary Boird of School Trustees 1st ns 7-27-49 2t. "

Congress Hears About Sharing A -Bomb Secrets

By Joseph L. Myler United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 27. (U.R) Secretary of State Dean Achescm and Defense Secretary Louis Johnson went before Congress today to discuss the administration view that this country for strategic reasons should share its atomic bomb ini-ormation with Great Britain and Canada. The adminstration believes it has full legal authority under the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 ;to bring its wartime atomic partners up to date on improvements in A-bomb design and production made since the war's end. But it wants to convince Congress of the wisom of its plans in order to forestall legislative action which the aGministration argues might destroy the original three-nation atomic partnership and jeopardize this country's bomb output for want of raw materials. Acheson and Johnson went before the House-Senate Atomic Energy Committee at 12:30 p. m. CST. Several members, particularly William F. Knowland, R.," Cal.. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R., Ia., and Millard, Tydings, D., Md., argue that the Atomic Energy Act forbids exchange of information about weapons. The Atomic Energy Commission and the administration argued that it does nothing of the sort. They agree that the Act flatly prohibits export of atomic explosives or bombs. They say that this prohibition is not at' issue in the discussions which started July 14 at the Blair House conference called by President Truman at the request of Acheson. What brought the issue up at

Judge To Ask Panel On Rent Control Law

CHICAGO, July 27 (UP) Fedeial Judge Walter J. j,a Buy said today he would request that a three-judge court be set up to rule on constitutionality of the national rent and housing act, challenged in a suit filed here by 20 property owners. In their suit, the property owners alleged that the act is unconstitutional, that Federal officials, be enjoined from enforcing it, and that landlords be allowed to raise rents up to 50 per cent, the money to be held until constitutionality of the act is settled. In his statement calling for creation of a three-judge -court, La Buy made no reference to the decision Monday of Federal District Judge Elwyn Shaw, who ruled that the Trent' Act was unconsitutiona 1 because Congress improperly delegated powers to the states. ' ' Set Hearing La Buy set Sept. 12 for hearings by the constitutional or the three-judge court. At that time, the property owners asked that an injunction be issued against Chicago Rent Director Norman Shogren and pisirict Attorney Otto Kerner. The rent office and the district attorney,1 however, argued that the suit should be thrown out because Tighe Woods, Federal housing expediter, and Attorney General Torn Clark should be named instead of their subordinates.

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Chiefs Of Staff Plan Tour Of Pad Nations

By John L. Steele United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 27. U.R) The U. S. joint Chiefs of Staff will leave Friday on a European tour to consult North Atlantic treaty nations on the proposed military organization under the pact, the Defense Department said today. ' While the announcement did not say so, the visit also will give the joint chiefs an opportunity to discuss President Truman's proposed $1,450,000,000 arms aid program. The Defense Department said the joint chiefs will not be able to visit all the pact nations on their 10-day tour. But "it is hoped," the announcement said, that talks "can be arranged with military representatives for North Atlantic Pact member nations at any place covered in the itinerary convenient to them." Inspect U. S. Forces.

The joint chiefs also will inspect U. S. defense forces in Europe to gain "first hand information" on their , status. They will visit Frankfurt, Germany; London; Paris and Vienna. The announcement said a rep

resentative of the joint chiefs "has already begun informal talks" with a representative of j the Canadian chiefs of staff. Making the tour will be Adm. i Louis Denfeld, Chief of Naval

uperauuns, ijcii. umar in. tsraaley, Army Chief of Staff; Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Air Force Chief of Staff, and Maj. Sen. A. M. Gruenther, ' director of the joint staff. Before leaving they will testi-

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Housewife Fails In Channel Swim DOVER, England, July 27. (UP) Mrs. Willi Croes Van Rijsel, age 30, a buxom Dutch housewife, was in exhausted condition today after failing by one mile and a half to swim the 19-mile wide English Channel. The nude, grease-plastered channel hopeful was pulled into a boat accompanying her crosschannel at 10:25 p. m. last night. She was found to be suffering from cold and exhaustion, having been in the water for 14 hours

'and 16 minutes, 23 minutes less than it took American Gertrude

Ederle to complete the journey in 1926. Mrs. Van Rijsel, who hoped to crack the 23-year-old mark established by Miss Ederle, was forced to quit when she ran into extremely heavy seas within sight of Dover. She was plunged into a hot bath and fell into bed. too exhausted to talk to reporters. Mrs. Rijsel followed the same couse Miss Ederle took in August, 1926, when she set the record of 14 hours and 39 minutes. The Dutch swimmer's? failure was the second marked up this season.

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BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS - ' '' Mr, and Mrs. Ollie Head . of Carlisle, are the parents of 4 daughter, Doelher Kamaies, born July 23rd at the Mary Sherman Hospital. v

Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Mit nhell of Dufeger announce th$ birth of a daughter, Patricic! born -Tulv ?fith at the Mary Sherman Hospital. . : ;

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Monroe of Sullivan. R. 1, are the parents of a son, David Jo, born July 26th at the Mary Sherman Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Theriac oi Carlisle, R. 1, are the parents ol a daughter, Mary Helen, born July 27th at the Mary Sherman

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