Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 51, Number 190, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 23 September 1949 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SULLIVAN DAILY TIMES FRIDAY. SEPT. 23, 1949.
SULLIVAN. INDIANA
m mi
Ex-Miner Fi
Lewis, Bridges
WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 U.R)
r One of John L. Lewis' former
miners is seeking the ouster of the union boss and Sen. Styles Bridges, R., N. H., as trustees of the United Mine Workers welfare fund.
G. H. Livengood of Georges
Township, Fayette County, Pa., filed a suit in Federal district
court here yesterday charging the trustees with "malfeasance cf
office" in the administration of the $100,000,000-a-year fund. He asked the court to throw the trustees cut and take over con
trol of the fund temporarily. Ezra Van Horn, the operators'' trustee, quit last week. Bridges said he had not had time to study the charges yet. But he said he is so used to being sued as a trustee that he was not impressed by Livengood's suit. Lewis was not immediately available for comment. Retired Miner Livengood described himself as a 54-year-old former financial secretary of UMW Local 6308. Until recently, h e said, he has been drawing disability benefits from the miners' welfare fund. He retired as a miner because of a heart ailment. His suit charged that the trustees had "dissipated" the fund by paying benefits to ineligible persons. Furthermo it alleged that the trustees had used their positions for personal gain and for "wielding political power." Livengood did not produce details to substantiate tht
charge..; Lewis blamed the failure of cent-a-ton royalties for the funds financial status. The suit, filed by Livengood's attorney, Robert 'P.Smith, Washington, also asked an injunction against misuse of the welfare fund, a full accounting, to the court, and restoration of "unlawful dispersed'' sums.
jap twins citizens by marriage jExpefts Comment '. - i
Oil Russia's Bomb
AUSTIN WELCOMES COLLEAGU
AMERICAN CITIZENS by act of Congress, 4-year-old Japanese twins Teiko (middle left) and Yoshiko Carpenter hug their stepfather, Washington university Professor David B. Carpenter, and half brother Gary, on arrival in St. Louis, Mo. The twins became citizens as result of Carpenter's marriage to their mother (left) widow cf I Japanese navy captain. (International)
By United rress An American scientist said to-
i day that the atomL' explosion re
ported in Russia could have been a premature blast in a laboratory; and another said the United States probably learned of it from a tell-tale atomic cloud.
Prof. William W. Watson, head f
of the Yale Department of Physics, said the explosion was noi necessarily caused by a bomb. "It c.uld have been a premature blast' in a laboratory," he said. Dr. Edward C. Creutz, atomic expert at Carnegie Tech in Pittsburgh, said the radioactivity
loosed from an atomic cloud i could be detected in air currents j miles away.
President Truman's announce- I
I ment that Russia had produced i
an atomic explosion even caught by surprise soma of the men who helped develop the atomic bomb for the United States.
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fe t . ? . ' joint
Deflation Ahead, Economists Say;
9uld Balance Tsxes, Spending
if s
3
Following experts:
is comment from
Dr. Harold C. Urey, atomic pi-
joneer said in Chicago that it was
WARREN R- AUSTIN, chief of U. S. delegates to the United Nations, greets newly named colleagues in New York as the UN General Assembly opens at nearby Lake Success. He shakes hands with Mrs. Ruth Eryan Rohde, former minister to Denmark who was named alternate representative to the UN by President Truman. Other new delegates are former Senator John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky (second left), General Assembly delegate, and Wilson M. Compton,. president Washington State college, alternate. ' (International) CZECH ARRIVES FOR UN SESSIONS
By Raymond Lahr sure now that this powerful ecoUnited Press Staff Correspondent nomic force will be used wisely. WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. (U.R) The way to use it, they said, is Two economists told Congress to tax lightly and spend freely on today they believe economic fac- sound projects in bad times, pil-
tors point to some further deflating up whatever debt is neces-
tion in the national economy. sary, and then to reverse tne proTheir opinions were expressed cess when business is inflated, reafter thev had presented to the placing the debt with surplus.
Congressional Economic
Ar least part of this swing
Committee papers prepared by 13 ' should and does now take care 0f
top university economists urging
Congress to get to work on an automatic scheme to raise taxes
and cut Federal spending in prosperous times. They said when times are bad taxes should be cut ; but government spending raised, j Rep. Wright Patman, D., Tex.,, asked H. Christian Sonne, chairman of the trustees of the National Planning Association, and , Arihuh Smithies, Harvard econo- j
mist, whether they believed inflation was ahead. Downward Side. "I believe there is more weight on the downward side rather than upward," Sonne replied. Smithies said, "The possibilities
of deflation outweigh the possi-i
bilities of inflation. ' , Dr. Simeon E. Leland of North
itself. But the economists said this isn't enough. They said Congress should consider laws under which tax rates and Federal spending programs would shift up or down automatically as the economy hits specified points. The roup said Congress made a mistake in cutting taxes in 1948, but that "it is one thing to de
plore past mistakes and anothetf to correct them on short notice."
THE KEYNOTE 15 PEACE, ANYWAY
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THE UNITED NATIONS General AssemDiy opens on a Keynote of peace, but apparently Britain's Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin and Russia's Foreign Secretary Andrei Vishinsky aren't kidding themselves. Bcvin listens to a speech while locking at nothing in particular and Vishinsky also stares moodishly into space. (International)
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"inevitable" that Russia produce an atomic bomb.
would
"Apparently they developed it faster than most pe-ople thought," he added, "but nit much faster." "There is only one thing worse than one nation having the atombomb, that's two nations having it." Gen. Frederick Csborn, permanent U. 5. representative on the United Natiors atomic energy commission, said: "I am sure the report is correct. I know that we are equipped to know. . . .we have observers at different points." Gen. A. G. L. McNaughton, Canada's chief spokesman on the atomic energy commission, said
he was "not surprised" at the Russian achievement. Amazasp A. Arutiunian, Russian delegate to the United Nations said he was not surprised at the announcement. "There is no surprise urder the sun," he said. ' 'eRussian Foreign Minister An
drei Vishinsky reSused to vorri-4
ment "at this time." He is sctocd- i iuled to speak in the United -Kn-
tions General Assemoiy later, but i
his secretary would not say whether Vishinsky will mention the atomic announcement.
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 23. (U.R) Hogs 12,000; only moderately active, barrows and gilts about
western University read the two i steadv. although some weakness
papers unanimously agreed to by on light and light mixed offer-
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LOOKING PLEASANT, Foreign Minister Dr. Vladimir dementis (right) arrives in New York from Communist dominated Czechoslovakia for ' UN General Assembly sessions. He Is greeted aboard ship by Vladimar Outrata (left). Czech ambassador to the U. S. (International) UP TO BAT AGAIN MATRIMONIALLY
NOTIt'13 . OF FINAL. SETTLFMKNT Nulioe is hereby given that Hit uh-tlKi-B.biioti i'..:vi;ini' ol' lilt- OKia.H ijr
'im iviaiiiMw li.u iin,s ijny illed in the (ifl'ic! of thf. clerk of lue iiuii,vii Ciicuil LuUiL ln.4 im.ii roiiLirl nr' Ii;k
I Hr. ouut wiln wuil estate, and that .tlie I
same wi:l be liennl ; by tile Suliiviui Liiciiit Couit on the l.ith day ol I f'limi'i-, Hip wiine bi-iiib' the 36th ' judicial day of the Svpu in'.ier inu ! iiHi) Ol Said rum I.
CrKditurs, hi'iis and legatees jirf said dwedtiit thcirfuiu are hereby notified to ttppcxr in enid totut .i said day and show cause, why said "piiit slimild mil be approved, HtANK KRAHUIjEC,
Kxct-utor. '
Wilr.e"! my liHiid i,1Kl ,,pal f gafi court at Sullivan this 23rd day of September 1319. EARL, A. ENGLE, rip'-k of Roiiivan Ciuriiu Cnu, l. "nys ft Hiv. Attorneys. 1st ins 9-23-49 2t.
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Ty Cobb
Mrs. trances Cass
TY COBB, bHseball's famed "Georgia Peach," will marry Mrs. Frances Cass, o9, Buffalo. N. Y., who has bscn married twice and hs two children. Cobb, 62, was divorced in 1947. (tntcrmtioncl)
the 13 economists at a meeting
last week. They had been called together by the National Planning Association which represents agriculture,, labor, industry and professional groups. In them, they warned against any change in taxes right now. They said the nation is about in the middle of the economic scale and a cut or boost might start a swing either up or down. The economists said the ideal of a balanced Federal budget every year must be abandoned. They said an always-balanced budget is "certainly undesirable'1 and that it probably can't be attained, anyway. They submitted their recommendations in two statements to a House-Senate economic sub
committee drafted at
sponsored by the National Plan
ning Association at the subcommittee's request. Spending Too Big.
The economists said government spending has grown so big that any significant change either in taxes or spending throws a jolt into the national economy. They said Congress should make
, , nrtt
ings, bulk good ana cnoice iuu270 lbs., $19.75 $20.00, extreme top $20.25 sparinly, most for choice around 230-250 lbs., , odd head up to 300 lbs., $19.25 $20.00, 165-190 lbs., $19.00 $19.75, 100-160 lbs., $14.00 $16.00, sows abcut steady at $16.00 $18.50, odd big weights down to $15.50. Cattle 250, calves 400; good and choice grain feds absent, few sales common and medium native grassers about steady at $17.00 $22.00, some inquiry for good and choice fed yearlings; cows steady, odd head common and 'medium $13.00 $14.50; vealers opened slow, bulk steady but choice grades $2.50 lower, bulk good and choice $26.50 $28.50, common and medium $19.00 $26.00, few
The statements were medium and good , grass calves a repent, ennfprpnre its nn coo nn
I Sheep 800, native spring lambs 'barely 'steady to extreme 50c lower, bulk 1 good and choice ' $22.00 $22.50, medium and good $20.00 $22.00, common mainly $16.50 $19.00, ' slaughter ewes ' scarce, steady, mainly $6,00 $7.00, good and choice lightweights $8.50.
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THE BEER WITH THE SUUKr DOLLAR ULAVOR
TERRE HAUTE BREWING CO, INC. "On (lit Bank, of Ih Woboih" TERRS HAUTE, INO.
NOTICE To Water Consumers ' Following is a new schedule of rates applicable to water service- All billing for service after September 19th, 1949 shall be computed accordingly. SULLIVAN COUNTY WATER COMPANY Sullivan, Indiana SCHEDULE FOR METERED WATER SERVICE AVAILABILITY , Available to any water customer. Applicant must be located on the company's distribution mains suitable for supplying the service requested. t
DR. ALIAN HURST, director of National Jewish hospital, Denver Colo., examines white, sponge-like plastic developed by Laurence Heightshoe of Denver to replace lung tissue of tuberculosis victims. The plastic is being- pioneered In lung collapse cases by Jewish hospital, (International
For the First For the next For the " For the "
For the For the
For the " For the " For all ovec
RATE
10,000 gal. or less used per month $..r0 net per 1,000 gal.
20,000 gal-
30,000 30,000 60,000 150,000 200,000 500,000 1,000,000
.
$.45
$.40 $.35 $-30, $.25 $.20 $.14 $.10
' MjNIMUM CHARGE PER MONTH ,; $1.65 per meter COLLECTION CHARGE Bills are due and payable monthly. If paid within fifteen days from the due date the net bill shall be the amount to be paid, otherwise there shall be added a collection charge consisting of 10 of the first $3.00 of net billing plus 3 of the amount in excess of $3.00.
