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Cumberland Evening Times from Cumberland, Maryland • Page 1

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Cumberland, Maryland
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1
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Jurist Delays Action On T-H Decree The Weather Cloudy tonight, tomorrow. Low 44-50. High 50-55. Fair, cool Friday. High, 75; low, 41; noon, 53.

River, 2.38 feet. Relative humidity, 64 per cent. VOL. 290 FINAL Associated freu Service Af Pkotofox CUMBERLAND MARYLAND, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1959 United Press International 22 Pages 7 CENTS Steel Union Appeal Seen From Order Jurist, Attorneys Confer As Hearing On Plea Deferred PITTSBURGH of a federal court hearing to determine if a Taft Hartley injunction will be used to' end the 99-day steel strike was delayed today as the presiding judge pored over his law books and conferred with attorneys. "He got up at the crack of dawn," said an aide of Judge Herbert P.

Sorg. The hearing, which began Tuesday, was to have resumed at 10 a.m. Shortly before 11 a.m. Judge Sorg was still in his chambers conferring with government attorneys and counsel for the United Steelworkers. End Could Be Delayed Even if an injunction is granted an end of the strike could be delayed by an appeal.

The court would not have stay the injunction while an appeal was acted upon. The government argued Tuesday that lost steel production was threatening the nation's health and safety. The striking United Steelworkers Union said the strike v-v was creating hardships but QIC Ull 1 iJjCt not endangering the national' 1 economy. U.S. District Judge Herbert P.

Sorg took the case under advisement after listening to arguments by both sides for nearly, three Eisenhower Meets With Space Exp HE DIDN'T GET Policeman Lawrence Duke poses with holdup suspect Gordon Powell, 37, and bank teller Mrs. Mary Briggs shortly after Duke arrested Powell in El Monte, Calif. Powell fled with $1,737 but police spotted his car ten minutes later. Bank employes had given them the license number. Powell praised police for fast work.

(AP Photolax) ordered the Justice -Deartment to seek the injunction. The Sleelworkers Union Issue Slated In Assembly UNITED N.Y. (AP) General Assembly headed (for a 'today on Tibet, an Cool Weather Due For Area BALTIMORE day forecast: Temperatures will average a little above normal. Cooler and cool Friday. Warmer Saturday and cooler again Monday.

Occasional rain Thursd-ay- fendants in the case. The steel firms represent almost 90 per cent of the nation's steel production capacity. An injunction, apprehension among many Asian delegates. The vote will come nn if issued by Judge Sorg, would send the half watered-down resolution by Ireland and Malaya to put the as- Monday. Precipitation will total about one-third- inch.

Normal highs are 60-65. Early ai morning lows are in 40s ex- ouig, viruuju oeuu me nun million striking Steelworkers back sembly ron record reaffirming the U'trtXf nt T'iUrtfnM HH cept in 30s in mountains. rrmuon siriKing sceerwoncers to the mills for an 80-day cooling ght uthe Tlbetan eopie to IVeilJieay off period. choose their own way of life. Meanwhile, the industry and the! The resolution make no men- union would be under court 1 of Communist China or the Highest Court Approves Stay For Chessman WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court today granted a stay of exectilio'rrfor'Caryl Fifth Quint Expires At Texas Base Wife Of Airman Recovering After Toylike Tots Die SAN ANTONIO, Tex.

(AP) Baby the last survivor of the Hannan quintuplets, died at 6:40 a.m. today. Word of the death of the last baby spread rapidly through this vast modern hospital which is called the largest and finest in the entire Air Force. The basement cafeteria was crowded with nurses, and military personnel coming to work. "Oh, my God, they were just like baby dolls," half sobbed a technician in a blue dress.

The word spread quickly from table to table. Several persons left their breakfast uneaten. Mother, Father Asleep The mother and father were asleep at the time of the last quint's death. They were not told immediately. Both had been in a near shock status at times during the night, hospital spokesmen said, and had been given sedatives in an effort to ease their nerves.

The last baby to die was the fourth born. The physician who made the last desperate effort to save the baby was Capt. William D. Munroe who had been on duty since 11 p.m. Tuesday.

He had worked almost constantly on the one child throughout the long night. Four of the five toylike girls died within hours of their birth Tuesday. FINANCIER M. Birrcll, left, New York financier wanted in U.S. on charges he defrauded stockholders of two companies of $14,000,000, leaves police headquarters in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, pending hearing on charge he used bogus passport.

He could be expelled from country. (AP Photofax via radio from Rio de Janeiro today) Herter, Ike Discuss Pre-Summit Talks WASHINGTON Eisenhower met with Secre- to consider of exectitiorrf or 'Gary rGtessmaiT iney were the--children nerier-iCpoay-apparentiy to co under sentence to die Friday in'Lt. Charles G. Hannan, 29, and France's go-slow approach to an East-West summit meeting. California's gas chamber.

jhls 27-year-old wife, Cecelia, al- In a 40-minute conference at the White House the two i 11 hp1 JnvoH Vi The stay was granted to permit; the convict-author to file a new appeal. The appeal must be filed! by Nov. 3. to try and negotiate a permanent! chal es that the Peiping i TJ settlement in the long and costly stamped out an anti-Communist uprising in the Himalayan land of the Lamas Asst. Atty.

Gen. George C. Doub limalayan la of tne Lamas ild Judee Sore that 265.000 work- last rm The sponsors ehmi- told Judge'Sorg that lastl Tlie ns rs ellumU ANC ELES former ers have been idled by the strike' nate su ch ge in hop es th ey. Senate prober says the Teamsters' in addition to the half million woutld a the fears of Asian Union altered its pension plan to strikers. He said unemployment neutrals would continue to mount if the strike continues.

"Such a strike is an invasion Counsel for "Chessman had asked Justice Douglas to grant a stay, but Douglas referred the request to the full court. In granting the stay, the court noted that Chief Justice Warren had disqualified himself from the case. Warren is a former governor of California. The decision to grant a slay on behalf of benefit President James R. Hoffa 0 Ca ia a ta The resolution received strong I UJm support from the United and hls aides at the ex en se to further Supreme: i ti voter an i coiisi tiers ion of the Ccisc 'You wanted a girl," the blonde, pretty mother tuld the crewcut father.

"Now you have five." But Baby so designated to indicate order of birth, died at 5:40 p.m. CST. Baby A died at 6:10 p.m. Baby died at 9:25 p.m. and Baby at 10 p.m.

Capt. Munroe said at 1 a. m. that the diagnosis then for baby "is guarded and the outlook is not good for the surviving child." added that he is "not very that the baby would sur- jvive. Doctors warned from the were ProbersTold Woman Gave Up Red Role LOS ANGELES housewife she served in the Com- muhist party for 15 years as an undercover agent for the FBI.

"My principal job was to infil- trate'the Douglas Aircraft Plant in Santa Monica," Mpisclle Clinger, 42, told the House'Unamerican Activities Committee believed to have talked over ways to settle the backstage Allied dispute on the timing of a meeting with Soviet Premier Nikita Khru shchev. Afterward, Herter declined to say anything about their talk, leaving all that" to the President. While the two were in conference, the French government an- Agency Fate It Settled At Top Session Brucker Hints At Decision On Army Missile Program By BEM PRICE WASHINGTON of the Army Wilber M. Brucker hinted today that the fate of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, deeply involved in the space race with the Soviet Union, was settled at a White House conference today. Brucker was a previously announced participant in a meeting between President Eisenhower and his top space advisers.

Thc session was set to solve the problem of how to push the United States into stronger competition with the the outer reaches. Referred To Ike Emerging from the talks some time after the others had left, Brucker was asked if there had been a decision. the missile agency and its crack team of space experts headed by Wernher von Braun. i jj He first replied that was a matter in the province of the President. Asked if that meant there been ho decision, Brucker answered: "I didn't say that." About the same time the White House said Eisenhower probably will make a.

statement about the meeting after he arrives in Augusta, Ga. The President left directly after his space conference for a five-day golfing questions before the White House conferees included the disposition of the agency, and specifically what to do Hunlsville, project for development of the Saturn huge cluster of eight rockets with Vh. million pounds of thrust. That is half again as much Lhrust as anything the Soviet Union is known to have and would hurl bigger payloads farther into space. But the Pentagon does not need ence, me rencn government an- uco HUL necu nounced its approval in principle that much push for military rock- for ah East-West summit meet- cts and has been Piling back on ah East-West summit meeting, but approached it as business for next spring.

Eisenhower is understood to have proposed a summit- session of the Western powers early next supporting the program. There has been talk that Saturn support might be-shifted to the civilian National Aeronautics, and Space Administration, and NASA at one time made a direct bid for of the rights of the public. are yi here by virtue of a tragic which accused the Communist of veteran union organizers, trying to frighten delegates away fay of collective added. tragic bargaining," U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot The union denied the accusation The eight justices then will de- to by Robert F.

Kennedy, for the Senate committee icide represented I third set of quintuplets in Stales medical history and only She said she left the Communist month in Paris," preliminary to a a 1 one tlme made a direct hid icssion with Khrushchev the wholc Huntsville Funds Have Been Cut The Saturn program has been suffering from malnutrition. Word has come down that its funds have session with Khrushchev first 10 days of December. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan Chancellor and West German a Adenauer were reported ready to accept been cut from 135 million dollars Denies Facts Provided Arthur J. Goldberg, the union's sembly general counsel, argued the gov-jcold war. ernment has no facts to support "We have been asked to believe (Continued on Page 2, Col.

4) party three years ago. Eisenhower's plan but the ParisHo 70 million. Maj. Gen. John B.

Lodge made the charge after So- gating rackets I the 47th in all recorded annals. "I reported to lhe FBf at least would mean that Chessman's con- reaf- Medaris, who has headed this ef- annoQnccment only aggravate i ui me i-uui a cJu- a year for life even if he -werejtion was contained in an order Ho if j- 1 (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) cou 'd do, physically. In other He said, it was distributed to news- I rvirtn Kit 4 A 13 ounces and 1 pound 13 ounc- words, I'd had it." trihunal publte re- that Communists that is a provocation for vis to, talk about." Lodge asserted. length I He-said the changes would i financed by cutting back the Many Asian and African dele- Slons of veteran organizers andjT A Castro Aide gates have privately expressed re-! Slons ot eteran organizers and, Ullliei sentment over having to vote on makin the new Pension retro-.

a resolution that may have the actlve for 15 vears CflhJf CAMAGUEY, Cuba (AP) of their people but which! A Teamsters spokesman in del Castro's military commander.their governments don't want any Washington said Kennedy was in! in PamaniiPV nrnvinro tnnk 'rofncro nnrl nf (ViMntrioe tinvt In firrnr 1UU 111, IN. H. (AP) Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Slayer Of Tots Believed Insane in Camaguey province took refuge part of. Countries next door to.erro' 1 in his military headquarters today Red China are particularly re-! "No one will take a beatin after being accused of treason, fluctant to take any stand that he said.

"When the 1 Castro himself flew here to lead might arouse the ire of their bigifinally formulated, it will be an assault on the neighbor. bearded leader of the 1 ALLENTOWN, Pa. 41-year-old widow of a Peruvian! diplomat who admitted killing ey peared confident, however, that Mrs Clincer said the Comrrm bachs a talks would iron Mrs. nger saw the Lommu- nitch withjn nist Party biggest headache was' vhile the President fs JJ its difficulty in raising money. resls in A Ga 8 We were always holding par-j Mainl reassurc De Gaulle ties in an effort to get money, howe Eisennowei has ex SB OUr dU readiness to fly to Paris strategy meeting.

was to children may be sent to a 1 sala onc OI ke coino uenPdgr IUnC-1 maUc aulhoriti said such parlcy could set a date for aslate GirFs Slayer Pays Penalty WETHERSFIELD, Cnnn. W) George J. Davies, 40, died Tuesday night in the electric chair at meeting and agree on for the 1957 sex slay- llxt; tiuiuiKii may ue beni 10 a meeiing ana agree on apparently mlenlion-'Pcnnsylvania mental hospital. partleTs was Ilcld at the home of ithe issues the West wants to dis- 31 to the nuclear submarine. Warden George Albright of the Lawrence Lipton.

The Ilished. As Plumber Has Cuban revolutionary government IT i -n paced up and down the main PIans For Boinb Proof POSUIQ street of this provincial capital City Made At Cornell while his radios appealed to work-j ers and farmers to join him in ITHACA, N. Y. Corthe assault. mell University team is designing Two of Castro's military bomb-proof underground city.j manders have accused Maj.

are no plans actually to' YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) Mat- bert Matos of treason against thejconstruct such a city, but the Sampieri found a stranger OJ that he wanted Ruth Mae Ur- whcre the world's first atom-danivia transferred "where they ic-ppwered vessel is being better facilities for caring hauled. for her Capt. Carl A. Johnson, acting; Mrs.

Urdanivia was taken to the shipyard commandant, who so prison after being arraigned. She IIL fiaer ft 4 KM cuss. Scattered Episcopal Seminary In COOPERSTOWN, N. Y. The Episcopal Church of the Unit ed States plans to build a thcolog-iSmilh.

10, a summer camper revolution. I sign could serve as a model. Ike Flies To Georgia Club For Five Days Of Golf, Rest WASHINGTON (AP) to Washington Sunday eve- to a spur of the moment impulse, nin or ear 'y Monday morning. President Eisenhower flies today to Augusta, for five days of go'f and sunshine. in his bathroom Tuesday "Who are you?" he asked.

"Plumber," replied the man pressing his'ear against the wall. "Is it sill leaking. Joe?" Ihe man shouted down the bath drain, i No answer. "Tell you what," the man said; tn i S.STS 1 -niMi vr- Ass iatcd srf ing of a 9-year-old girl. At Davies' request, State Police LI.

Wilbur E. Calkins, a principal witness at Davies 1957 murder trial, witnessed lhe execution. A half hour before the execution, Davies sent word to Calkins that a confession he had made nf the 1952 slaying of Connie described the Tr a 01 "1 ca P'ans to build a thcolog-iSmilh. 10, a summer camper th Ve UntS i SAN QUENTIN, Calif. A P) on a site Wyoming, was a muraer.

Caryj chessman schcdu cd to dic San Juan, Puerto Rico. Thc Rt. girl was never found. in San Quentin's gas chamber Frk Rcv John Bentley. vice presi- He said he did not want to go day, wants his remains nt of thc Church National Coun-ito his dcalh with this confession and the ashes scattered to the cil said (h seminary would have on his conscience.

Davies had'ad- a class o) fl hcn it opened in the milled two slayings, including the I That's what he told one of his fa of 19fil ne for which he was tried. Rosalie Ashcr, Tues-j (day. He gave her his will and au-j thorized her to dispose of his per-! sonal effects. But he won't get the wish. Asher explained to Chessman the; Survey Suggests: Salk Shots For Babies Shouldn't Be Too Soon By ALTON BLAKESLEE Hagerty announced late Tues-, that in mid-afternoon Eisen-l up his and the University of Michigan.

auxj ii IIIC ctpdl L- mr ment below." ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)- Salk vaccine, containing dead turned on the shower. ll ul abies are ahout 6 lio viru s. stimulates the human Steelworkers Aren't Happy About Working Under T-H said the remains of the MORRISVILLE. Pa.

(APi-'ville Gardens are Steelworkers i who has spent IVn years on dcath from barlender ToiTV from the Fairless Hills Plant of i TOW lor KHinan. rrthnnrv ann at-: IT i Iaw rohibits scattering his ashes. illtllU like the press 1 wav tcr rl turned on the shower poovrussmue theuman fo kdnaobnoryn listened quite a while to thef onl old hest to create its own protective tempted rape on Los Angeles lov- Kanc most his stcelworker Sl Coip. here. The long 0 glve ant 'olio shots, a i nm sir Ke las iclleri some 7,000 em- didn't come.

i uu LAIA luv-l tStrikp iH 1 give antinoho shots, a against future invasionlers' lanes will be placed in a mau- customers aren't too happy study suggesl, jbyjiving. dangerous polio thc prospecls of going hack Si Harry coid he caught early iasi monin.iuona] Golf Club since his ciiy But Press Secretary James in 1952. The famed course-shuti his a artment Hagerty added (hat the Presi- dent's general health is excellent and that the cold was not a fan down each year from May until' mid-November is being opened Chemist Expires about three weeks early to receive i Thc reason is that the vaccine curiously seems to be nullified by But babies are often born withi antibodies against polio arid other diseases. Thev have ho 0 KuzzcII Kites diseases. They have them because their mothers had them floating 8 totf Prelen natural protection which their own bloodstreams, which babies temporarily inherit shared with the infants before their mothers, the research finds.

1 birth. A (AP Dr Louis When they are 5 or 6 months oldij Known as passive antibodies i ,1 NEW YORK Funeral David J. McDonald. i wn, Oi Jirfi i work under Taft-Hartley injunc- Lykens. 33, said that he felt very tion.

And they're 100 per cent be- bitter about the situation, hind United Steelworkers Presi- "The steel workers that I've i.i^i^uuuju. talked to," Lykens said, "are op- services will be held Thursday fori "It's like a hammer over their posed to the Taft-Hartlcy inju'nc- Loring B. Buzzell. 32, president ofihead," Kane declared today.llion. And they're very bitter the Hecht, Lancaster Buzzell "They 're eager to go back to work Even the ones with eight or nine Music Publishing House.

He suf-ibut not under the Taft-Hartleyjkids who are really hurting. foffll llAlr-t I 1 I 11 tei 8 tS tori 11 I 1- I I more unless he gets vac- few me iitoiuu ui akCci plani. Buzzell married former singing to work they'll go back." and the conditions we work under star of the Arthur Godfrey pro- Kanc said that about 80 per cent! don't know how bitter the steel- gram, Lu Ann Simms. his customers at are today.

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About Cumberland Evening Times Archive

Pages Available:
213,052
Years Available:
1894-1977