Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 169, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 25 August 1949 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

SULLIVAN DAILY TDIES THURSDAY, AUG. 25, 1949.

Jute Denies

Defense Mm

n Red Trial'

What a Wedding! 1 TODAY'S GRAB BAG

SULLIVAN, INDIANA

NEW YORK, Aug. 25 (UP)

Federal Judge Harold R. Medina

denied a defense motion todav

that the conspiracy , trial of 11

top Communists be declared a

mistrial.

Medina overruled the defer.se

request mat tne trial oe stopped

because Russell Janney. juror

No. 2. discussed the proceedings.

"The motion is denied in all

rcvid, jivxcuxiia axiuvuu' c a hv-

er nsienms to arguments uv de

fense and government attorneys.

' t Medina upheld the argument

cr u. s. Attorney jonn n . js.., mc-

Gchev that the affidavits, news

paper cuppings ana memoranda

submitted by the defense on the

lace ao not supoort a cnaree oi

bias" against Janney, I

I The defense argue i that his

owl-oi-court statements snowed

that Janney. a theatrical ro-

ducer and author oi the best-'

Bells." could not "be exoected

to return a fair ver-Jict on the

evidence."

1 J'lSf L. ."'sa.vW !

TK ANSWER, CjyiCK!. '1. 'js frog an ornamental fastening of a coat? . 2. In the' native drama of what country are property, men on the stage during ,the plays, after making the scenic effects? . 3. What character in the Bible died twice? 4. Who was the first musician to' play jazz in New York's Carnegie Hall? 5. Who went to sea in a sieve?

FOLKS 0? FAME-GUESS TXS NAMS

WEST POINT is In a stew over possibility of a far-too-large crowd at wedding next June of June McFarland . and Cadet Ralph Stephenson, who won $4,610 on a radio quiz show and Impetuously invited the whole audience to attend their wedding. The West Point chapel holds only 1,200, but many . thousands . have accepted. Commandant Col. Paul Harkins is "gratified," but asks thera "not to attend because of the physical impossibility of accommodating such a gathering." (International)

HAPPY BJRTHDAY Felicitations are due to Willy Pogany, illustrator and book reviewer; Sir Max Beerbohm, novelist; Phil Baker, comedian, and Preston Foster, actor.

IT HAPPENED TODAY 1572 Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve (massacre of Huguenots) in Paris. 1759 William Wllberforce, English philanthropist, opponent of slave trade, born. ,1847 Charles Follen McKlm, architect, born. 1931 Labor government resigned in Great Britain; King George V asked Ramsey MacDonald to form a coalition government. 1939 President Franklin D. Roose- . velt asked Germany and Poland to avoid war.

N , S

1 Born at Niles, Mich., Mar. 6. 1885, he was first a reporter on an Indiana newspaper, sports writer for Chicago papers, editor of Sporting News, syndicate writer, and author of books. Among his many .books are You Know Me, Al, in 1915, Gullible' Travels, Own Your Own Home, Treat 'Em Rough, . My Four Weeks in France, The Young Immigrants, The Story of a Wonder Man, Round Up, and a play, June Moon. He died Sept. 25, 1933. Who was he? 2 This 19th century American poet was born in Portland, Me., Feb. 27, 1897. As a boy he wrote prose and verse for newspapers and 1 magazines. He taught at Harvard, but tiring of teaching he resigned and turned his whole attention to poetry. Tales of a

Ey LILIAN CAMPBELL Csn?; Press WtUst - - - Wayside Inn, Evangeline and Hiawatha should identify him. '-He traveled much in. Europe and was acclaimed a3 a celebrity there. He died March 24, 1882, and two years later memorial to him was unveiled in London's Westminster Abbey the first American poet commemorated there. What was his name? (Names at bottom of column) IT'S BEEN SAID . The art of pleasing consists in being pleased. To be amiable is to be satisfied with one's self and others. William Hazlitt.

Union Seeks

Better Livin

Board Is Told

YOUR FUTURE An exceptionally busy, active, important and successful year is foretold for you. Look for a remarkable personality in today's child, for which sacrifices made for education are worthwhile.

WATCH YOUR IANCUACE SERRATE (SER-ate) Notched or toothed on the edgo, like a saw. Origin: Latin Serratus, from Serra, a saw.

I By H. D. Quigg United Press Staff Correspondent j' NEW YORK, Aug 25 (UP) America's l,000,000steel workers "make no bones about" their desire for more than a minimum living standard, a union economist told President Truman's steel fact-finding board today. I "This objective is not only appropriate and fair but it is also economically desirable because increased demand must accompany increased production if there will be a market for the : ever-growing products and ser

vices of American industry.

Robert R. Nathan, Washington economic consultant, told the

board.

-Nathan opened the 16th day of the hearings before the threeman board, which was appointed by the President July 16 to avert a nationwide strike by the United Steer Workers of America (CIO). It was the third day of rebuttal testimony by the union against the contention of 58 steel comrjanies that the in

dustry cannot meet the union's fourth round demand for a 30cent package wage Increase.

JUMPS FROM WINDOW, PATIENT DIES SOUTH BEND, Aug. 25 (U.R) Adolph Romanowski, a 24-year-old surgery patient who apparently escaped injury when he leaped from a third floor hospital window yesterday, died today. The coroner said he would investigate the cause of death. Memorial Hospital attaches said Romanowski was operated on for a stomach ulcer last Tuesday.

HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted Aug. 24: O. T. Bledsoe of 217 East Jackson Street.

Dismissed Aug. 24: Mrs. Marvin Jones and daughter of SulliI van; Mrs. James Smith and son of Dueger. Dismissed Aug. 25: Betty Slu1 der of Sullivan; James Enochs of Sullivan, R. 5.

WIFE SUES FOR ANNULMENT SOUTH BEND, Aug. 25 (U.R) Varrie May Metcalf of Osceola , today filed suit for an annulment of her marriage with Robert A. Metcalf on the grounds that he had a wife in Lafayette when they wera married last July 17. Mrs. Metcalf said they separated two days after the marriage as she learned Metcalf had faileu to get a divorce before marrying her

Why Do We Have Such Bargains? Equipped Farms, Business Opportunities, Rural ' Retirement Homes To sell through the UNITED FARM AGENCY, a proper-

iy .UVVIlt'I III US L MlUlllll ins iuvvcm putc, gic icaauucLuic A 1 II 11 L.l

terms u possmie ana nave a logical reason ior semng. ';j i

We are listing such bargains every day, and we pass them right along to our buyers. If a property must be sold at once, must be thrown on the market at a sacrifice price for quick action, the UNITED man is on the job.'

No charge for listing, through your Local Bonded Repre-

sentative, James W. LaFoIlette, Sullivan, Ind., R. R.. 4, Phone 9073.

document was that Odium msys have supplied $6,500,000 to

President Truman s campaign i last November.

Denies Charge Kimball denied Worth's sworn

statement that he (Kimball).

knew who had written the memorandum. The memo, first circu

lated among Concressmen last

By Charles Ccrddry April, touched off tlia -House

United Press Aviation Writer Committee's B-36 investigation. WASHINGTON, Aug 25 (U.R) i when the " hearing resumed

Odium Denies He Got Favors

From Official

(3 Miles North on U. S. 41)

-fcall-roiiiiicoat

itii . ..

Floyd Odium, millionaire builder of the B-36 bomber, said today he never had received a favor from the military services or any public official in 30 years

of business life.

Odium, whose name has been

linked with alleged .political favoritism in the award of B-36 contracts, denied specifically that he ever had received any favors from Defense ' Secretary Louis Johnson or Air Secretary W. Stuart Symington, or any other officials. Odium is head of Atlas Corp., which controls Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corp., which makes the Air Force's giant intercontinental bomber.

Attacks Program He testified before the House Armed Services Committee after Chairman Carl Vinson, D., Ga., said that "plenty of people-' in the Navy had a hand in the nowfamous memorandum utlacxing the B-36 program. Odium's name was mentioned in the memorandum. The memorandum said that Atlas Corp. was trying to take over the Defense Department. . , , . .The memorandum was wn;:en b Cedric R. Worth, assistant to Undersecretary of the Navy Dan A. Kimball. Worth, who admitted authorship yesterday, changed his testimony on an Important point today. Worth testified today that he had not told Kimball he had written the .-looumem, although he testified to the contrary yesterday. One of the rumors in Worth's

today, Committee Counsel Joseph B. Keenan plunged right into a vigorous cross-examination of Worth aimed at making him tell the source for each of the 55 charges made in his memorandum against rcraft manufacturers and such top government officials as Defense Secretary Louis Johnson and Air Secretary W. Stuart Symington.

Cosl, Stcsl Strike Threat

To

US Economy

By Charles II. Herrold United Press Staff Correspondent, WASHINGTON, Aug 25 (U.R) The feakdown of soft coal negotiations threatened the ' nation today with a simultaneous shutdown of its basic steel and coal industries within the next month. x Government officials regarded this possibility as a grave threat to American economic stability. They said the potential effects of such a shutdown would surpass even those of .the prolonged labor disputes of 1946. In 1946, they said, there was a huge backlog of demands that encouraged both labor and management to settle heir grievances and get back to work. Many Strike t Even so, the steel industry

HOW'D YOU MAKE OUT? 1. Yes. 2. China. 3. Lazarus. "' 4. Paul Whiteman. . 5. The Jumbles, in Edward Lear's poem. aiotisjSuo'l

was struck for 28 days, coal for 59, General Motors for 113, two big , electrical manufacturing companies for more than 100, and shipping for 60 days. The companies at that time

: were assured of tax rebates un-

der wartime laws, and the work

ers had accumulated savings from their steady wartime employment. Both sides believed they could afford the strikes. This year, however, the back

log of orders has almost disappeared, the wartime tax rebates have been wiped out, ,and workers' savings are down. Soft coal operators and John L. Lewis' United Mine Workers J union broke ' off negotiations at

White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., yesterday until Sept. 15. That's the day after the date set for a "strike or settlement" showdown in the steel industry wage dispute. May Close Mines Coal operators, led by the steel industry's "captive" mine representatives, indicated that if the steelworkers strike, the coal mines probably will be closed down at the same time in an effort to end Lewis' three-day work week in mines east of the Mississippi. Some co a 1 ope ra to rs are d.scussing the advisability of 'filing multimillion dollar jjamago suits against the United Mine Wovkr ers when the showdown with Lewis comes. They claim they

have suffered heavy operating ! losses under the short week I which was imposed on the industry last June 30 by Lewis. I The operators contend ihe Lewis order was a breach of contract. Under the Taft-Hartley law, labor unions can be I sued for contract violations.

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SMALL BOY KILLED BY TRAIN MICHIGAN CITY. Aug 25 (UP) A 17 months old Negrc boy was killed today as he tod died on the New York Centnv Railroad tracks in front of ai eastbound passenger train. Ronnie Worlds, son of Mr. and Mrs. Noble Worlds, was killel in front of his home, four miles east oi here.

DIVORCE SUIT FILED HERE Max Eugene Brewer has filed a suit for divorce against Betty Lou Brewer in the Sullivan Circuit Court.'

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Sullivan, Ind,

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