Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 189, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 22 September 1949 — Page 4

PAGE FOUK

SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES- THURSDAY, SEPT. 22. 1949.

SULLIVAN, INDIANA"

SOCIETY TO ATTEND CONFERENCE The following ladies, members of the Sullivan Business & Professional Women's Club will leave Sunday for Indranapolis to attend the Regional Conferences Misses Mabel Nowlin, Ruth Hinkle, Kathleen Sims, Elizabeth and Josephine Scott, Whilma Snavely and Mesdames Edna Rosenberger, Katherine Lippeatt

and Alice Medsker. Mrs. Elizabeth Springer who is the state music chairman will also attend. The meeting is to be held at the Claypool Hotel. One of the highlights of the meeting will be a report by Sally Butler, president of the' International Federation who will tell of her experiences in Europe. She presided over the. International Board meeting in Hels'uld, Finland. The national president, Dr. K. F.' Scott will also attend the

meeting. Dr. Scott is not only a physician but a teacher at Smith College for Women in Northhampton, Mass. ' ,

BIRTHDAY DINNER A surprise birthday dinner was held Saturday evening in honor of the 80th birthday of W. D. Buck. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Gib Price of Hymera, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Willis of Evansville, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Miller of Linton, and Mrs. Frank Miller of Linton.

Horonic Survivors Heard io Alarm CLEVELAND, Sept. 22 (UP) Survivors of the Noronic disaster testified at an inquiry here today that they heard no fire alarm and that few crew members were present as the passengers fled the burning ship. About 40 survivors from Nor

thern Ohio appeared at Cleveland's council chambers before Cuyahoga County Coroner Samuel R. Gerber, who is conducting the inquiry as a spe-cial deputy of Ontario's Attorney General Dana Porter. . Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Koss testified they neard voices and footsteps outside their stateroom on D-deck, the lowest passenger deck on the ship. Ross said,. "1 opened the door of the stateroom

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ARRIVING at New York aboard iie Queen Elizabeth, ailing heiriss Barbara Hutton Troubetzkoy Jiscounts reports she has been on diet which reduced her weight to 80 pounds. "I'm suffering from lome odd complaint," she said. "Nobody knows what it is." She told newsmen she weighs 92 pounds and that her normal weight is from 98 to 100. Her husband, Prince Igor Troubetzkoy, Is coming to America soqn, she lisclosei fTntamatinnalX and saw smoke in the corridor. We threw on some clothing and left." Ross said Re and his wife saw a member of the ship's orchestra directing passengers to the proper gangplank and said they also noticed a man, who they thought was a ship's officer, knocking on doors to waken the sleeping occupants. Th,is was the first indication that crew members hadrattempted to rouse the passengers.

Republicans Still Wondering Why

Farmers Voted For Democrats

22.-

SIOUX CITY, la., Sept.

(UP) Republican leaders came to the cornbelt today to find out why they lost the farm vote in 1948 and how to win it in 1950. As they gathered here for a two-day national Republican farm conference opening tomorrow, the GOP chiefs assured fanners that the meeting would be conducted on a "you tell us" basis. They said the conference would be light on political speeches and heavyt on "down-to-earth" meetings to find out what farmer want in the way of long-term farm legislation.

At every opportunity, they I cific issues would be built

Midwestern finance committ

men to discuss money problq

in preparation for 1950. In keeping with the attit

adopted by the GOP for the oJ

lerence, .National Kepubln Chairman Guv Gabrielson avo

cd specific issues and promised

a nationally broadcast speech Jf night at his home town of Siil

Rapids, la. lie stopped there"! a "Gabrielson Day" celebral

en route here for the farm m

ing. Gabrielson said it would

improper for him to out!

party policies in detail. He

the Republican platform on si

contrasted their approach with

what they charged were .Democratic efforts to "sell" the farm income plan of Agriculture Secretary Charles Brannan, particularly at a similar Democratci rally at Des Moines last June. While the Republicans weren't ready to present a specific farm program for 1950, their conference was regarded as a kickoff for the year's campaigns. That was emphasized by a meeting today of

Congress.

, He charged that the Democr

ic party "has become infectrl

by the "poison red fog" of statii

Republican leaders who v speak include ' Senators Karl Mundt,' S. D., and Kenneth Wh ry, Neb., and Gabrielson. Rep. Clifford R. Hope, R., Ki ranking Republican member the House Agriculture Comn

tee, will keynote the conferen

tomorrow.

ssia Tiring Cold War, iton Says

haps 20 regular .divisions,, the Russians might even be persuaded to withdraw from those parts of Eastern Europe outside , their own country, Martel said. "Though the Russian bear casts a big shadow, that shadow is much bigger than tha bear himself," the retired general one of Britain's outstanding tank warfare experts said. "The animal could be put back behind bars of his own cage a lot more easily than is supposed." Writing in The Daily Mail, Martel said: "The Russian (or Russianized Communist) bosses who have been installed in the iron curtain countries 'are already Intensely hated by so many of the ordinary folk that they rule; so much so that in some of these lands active resistance movements have developed. "These movements would not require so very much encouragement or assistance to burst into open flame." ,

UN Chairman

x itf?

LONDON, Sept. 22 (UP)

Lt Gen. Sir Gifford Martel, head

of the British military mission in Moscow in 1!M3, said today it appeared that the Russians were tiring of the cold war. If the Atlantic pact countries build a first class army of per-

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PHEASANT HUNTING SEASON IS SET INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 21. (U.P.) Slate Conservation Director Kenneth M. Kutikel announced today that the 1940 Hoosicr pheasant hunting season would be

from Nov. 10, to 12, inclusive, and

warnecv tnat only cock pneasams were legal game. Those who shoot hen pheasant will be prosecuted, Kunkel said.

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3

ARLOS P. ROMUIO of Pht

pines ia chairman or me currn General Assembly meeting of tf

United Nations at uane oucci N. Y. (InternatioA

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