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The Daily Chronicle from De Kalb, Illinois • Page 1

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De Kalb, Illinois
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THE DEKALB DAILY CHRONICIiE FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR NO. 280 DEKALB, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28; 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS a km sill mm patois ti I Mrs, Brown of WORKERS MAY Chicago Taken At International Livestock Show .1 II I. Ml .11.1 CALL STRIKE IN PROTEST COUNCIL IS STALEMATED This Morning FACE DRAFT Mm. Johanna Brown of Chlcaflo, a former resident of thtt commu Meters Being Installed on Third Street On Wednesday meter posts were placed on the west side of North Third Street alongside the new Drs. Smith building and this morning the parking meters were placed in operation at this spot.

There have been no meters there during the period that the new building was under construction as nity and a lister of William Mih- negan. of Afton Township, passed away this morning at 2:45 French Cabinet Works Into Leftists and Partisans in Italy o'clock at the St Loretta Hospitjal Foreign Ministers Meeting at London Being Delayed by Stubborn Reds. In Chicago. Overtime Period to Take Action. Take Over Milan Prefect Today.

la addition to the brother ike -4 -y also leaves a number of nieces a (id the street had been barricaded and nephewa In this community. Tfce MAY NEED FORCE THAT'S ONE WAY no cars were parked there. body li at the OBrlen Funertal NO CO-OPERATION Home at 3157 West Jackson where friends may calL Now that the barricade! have been removed and vehicles are again able to park there, the meters have been installed and are Paris, Nov. 28. (UJ5 The new Funeral services will be conduct French government, grappling with ed Monday morning at 10 o'clock London, Nov.

28. OJJ9 Ruuila again today blocked action by the Council of Foreign Ministers on at the St. Catherine's Church, Ok now in operation. a nationwide strike of 2,000,000 workers and fresh outbreaks of violence, today recalled for army service about 80,000 men of last German frontiers and the economic Park, and burial will be in the Mount Carmel Cemetery. Rom.

Nov. 28. CULP The government today ordered Italian military authorities to take over control of the key northern industrial city of Milan where leftist demonstrators and partisans have taken over the federal building and called a twelve-hour general strike. Whether the government's order to the Army meant that troops APPROVAL OF year's military class. Premier Robert Schuman's cabl a -y Integration of the Saar Into France.

British Foreign Secretary Ernest Beviin submitted a formal proposal to establish an allied commission TAFT ISSUES net. meeting for four hours In emergency session, was reported to PLAN WAITED or commissions to study the Ger 1 have discussed the mobilization of striking dockers, miners and rail way men. It did not reach a de A CHALLENGE cision. United Nations Assembly The council of the prefecture of police cancelled the appointments '4 4 cr bt police commissioners named Edges Toward Decision on One Tough Problem. Senator Claims "Good Faith- jam, -a after the liberation on the strength of their records in the resistance man frontier question.

Secretary of State George Marshall and Foreign Minister Georges Bidault of France, accepted Bevin's proposal, but Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov refused to dlscum It Molotov took a similar stand on a formal proposal that the minis-ten, agree in principle to the economic union of the Saar with France. New Trouble The council waa confronted by the prospect that Communut-m. of Administration Is Somewhat Weak.

movement. The dismissal was pre United Nations Hall, Flushing would make a forcible attempt to drive the left-wing adherents from the federal prefecture In Milan was not Immediately known. However, the government order aid that "military authorities" had been directed to assume all civil and military power in Milan at 3 p. m. (11 a.

m. est). Police Advised Milan police headquarters was advised of the order which was believed to-, be a preliminary to declaration of a state of martial law In the turbulent northern metropolis. The general strike and occupation of the Milan Perfecture was decreed by the left-wingers in protest against the ouster of the Milan Perfect by the Rightist govern ceded by an attack by the police N. Nov.

28. (U President officers union on grounds that the Oswaldo A ran ha of the United Na nominations did not conform to V1 Washington. Nov. 28. (UPJ tions General Assembly predicted regulations.

Authorities claimed nairoreadth approval of the par Secretary of Commerce W. Averell Harriman told Congress today thit that the dismissal was routine, and not connected with the current tne administration hopes to roll spirea chaos in France and Italy might preclude negotiation of any crisis. More Meetings back the prices of meat, steel and lumber under iU anti-inflation tition of Palestine today as the 57 United Nations edged toward a decision on the fate of the Holy Land. The assembly chief made his forecast to the United Press in the closing stage of the erim assemblv program. The cabinet scheduled still another meeting this evening, to be vumairumiae on uermany.

Before the ministers met for their fourth session. Secretary or Above alL he said, the admlnis. tration seeks to halt the upwartd louowed by an executive session of the so-called Inner cabinet of irena or prices. iignt over plans for splitting Palestine Into Arab and Jewish states by next October 1. Harriman made the statement top ranking ministers.

before the ioint Congressional Faced with a slow but steadv spreaa or tne strike wave, the cabi Arlo Janssen, of Garber, proudly exhibits his three Southdown wethers as they arrive here for the 48th International Livestock Show, which opens Saturday, In Chicago, November 29. Combined The time for decision drew near in the spotlighted General Assembly hall while thousands of miles economic t-ommttee which is considering President TrumanFi net dec-ded to ask the national as. ten-point anti-inflation Droirrami sembly to be ready to meet at a weights or the sheep total 295 pounds. (NEA Telephoto.) iciiw iHrxe v. waranail conferred at length wtth Foreign Minister Georges Bidault and received a peajdmistle first-hand report on the political and economic difficulties which already have half-paralyxed France.

High American offldali suggest. that the United States would be -foolhardy" to make any compromise agreements on Germany befor ascertaining how th away the Jews of Jerusalem pray fiarriman testified under auea moments notice to push through crisis measures. tloning that rationing and prloe control of "such important items as "The government has decided to meat is one of the matters the pro FEW CRASHES SENATE WILL make public order and the liberty gram contemplates dealing with. 7 worK respected by all means at ts disposal," Pierre Abelln. secre Aak for Plana tary of state in Schuman's office.

of Communist strength In France and also In Italy will end. He suggested that the commit ment In Rome. The prefecture was occupied as the climax to a march by thousands of leftists on public buildings In Milan. Partisans and workers were bivouacked In the prefecture courtyard, eating lunches sent from communal kitchens. The leaders of the demonstration entered th offices of the federal building.

Only half a dozen of the regular civ.l officers remained. Streets leading to the buildings were blocked by demonstrators who parked trucks crosswise in the roadways. Milan. industrial center of North Italy, was tied up by the strike and the demonstrations. The Communist party reported that 128 mayors In tiwns of Milan province I ad resigned ir.

sympathy with the protest. The freslt outbreak of unrest came on tr-e of the IN THIS CITY VOTE MONDAY said after the meeting. tee ask Secretary of Agriculture Canton P. Anderson about BtmM Two Crashes Are Reported on Thursday Two accidents were reported to the sheriffs office yesterday morning. In both crashes considerable damage was done and one person was injured slightly.

At 11:35 o'clock it was reported that Bernard Kocher of R.F.D. One Toe army call-up affected the ed ior partition at their sacred Wailing Wall and leaders of Palestine Arabs rallied their followers for possible action against a partition decision by the UN. Most of the world waited anxiously for the outcome, fearful of a bloody religious war if partition is rejectd and worried about a possible Arab uprising if it wins. Much Lobbying In the corridors and anterooms of the sprawling General Assembly hail, Jews and Arabs lobbied fervently in eleventh-hour efforts to assure enough votes for their con- plans for a roll-back in meat nrw But hi rpmlndaH (h. I Aid Fromiaed Marfchall waa understood to have pramUed Bidault every possible aid to combat both the CommunUu and the rirht-wlnf first half of the milltarv class of 1946 men who were twenty jrears old in that year.

It was calculat-to pot about 80,000 more men back Passage of Aid Program and that there would be less meat net Bad Driving Conditions Pre year man now. i uuaiut uiupc Mr. Truman hi. into the army. "Gen.

Charles DeGaulla. vail Over the Holiday in This Area. Cominsr Soon. the emergency Msjdon of Rochelle was traveling south on Some Recalled Only last week the rovernment Route 23, about one mile north of inov. 17, asked standby rationing and price control nowera whirh However, it waa believed that Marshall probably conceded to Bl-aault that if the United States had to choose between the CommunUta and jDeGaulle, America would have Sycamore and James Riley of 703 recalled the second half of the mcung claims on Palestine, Although driving conditions over naaiunKwn, ixov.

40. ine I would oe usea onjv ir necessary on Class Of 1947 youths who were A reliable count at mooting tim. Senate quickly adopted two scarce, basic cost-of-living items. Thanksgiving were treacherous, no undergoing training but had heen South Cross Street, Sycamore was going north on the highway when the two cars sideswipe d. showed the advocates nt serious accidents were reported in released.

That eroun mimhereH tion of the lira by fiS 4 per cent InJ possessed just enough votes to se amendments to the 5597,000,000 -tamer, Committee Chairman emergency foreign aid bill today, Robert A. Taft, Ohio, chaj-one seekine to eive U. S. officials lenged the "eood faith" of an support the former Free French lieader rather than see France to the city of DeKalb. A number of about 40.000.

exchange fr the American dollar. Riding in the Riley auto with "-v ueiauii to tne communists. The new military call came as tragic accidents happened in the northern Illinois area over the free access to information about ministra tion request for limited re- tour other passengers was M. Strahl of Paw Paw, who was injur While American quarters saw reports of striker sabotage became the distribution of relief and the Y11 or the wartime system of alt- cure two-third approval of their plan to split Palestine Into Jewish and Arab states by next October 1. A tall, blond Briton busily mingled with Latin-American diplomats and in fluent Sranih nrr holiday with heavy snow blanket The devaluation was expected to wipe out the black market in mnv-y, and to er.murage exports.

The new exchange rate wai 589.47 lire to the dollar. It had ed. He was taken to the Sycamore other to ban use of relief fund's to 'ocaung industrial materials more and more frequent. Police were being called upon to clear strikebound railway stations and ing the highways and causing an prospect of any explosion at the London conference which would produce an irrevocable split between east and west, they alao con Municipal Hospital where he received treatment. There were buy arms or munitions.

iari, chairman of the House The amendments were adopted Snte Economic committee, clash ed with Secretary of Commerr- icy surface. lactones. three passengers in the Kocher Those traveling out of the city been .150 to doMar. The rate to refrain from supporting parti-will fluetua'p morth'v. according tion in the final ceded that the critical situations In Sabotage reports came from rail the stop-gap relief authorization.

'fveri1 Harriman over whetht auto. for Thanksgiving found the driving conditions most severe. Several stations in Paris and the provinces. Senate passage of the bill is tetcl aunumstrauon was asking The other crash occurred earlier rrance and Italy probSTH would prevent the ministers from arriving at anw marwwi ureat Britain has officially professed a position of neutrality lh the angry destine fight, but the for Monday. fm in fans, strikers jammed a signal box at the Austerlitz station, threw in the morning at 10:30 o'clock on The frea ncreaa amanrimant lira I inches of snow fell in this area yesterday.

The snow stopped falling about noon but late in the af Route 23 about one and one-half a paving block at an engineer in a offered by Sen. Homer Ferguson, miles north of Route 30. M. A. Baie campaigning against the partition plan was the British dele tmiuviii uii vrnnany.

Bidault told Marshall today that he considered thst a general discussion on Germany useless until tae question of Germany's frontlets locomotive at Vanves outside the Mich. It called on govern- (j. HOlISCWert ternoon it started turning much Montpamasse station, and turned of Hinckley was driving a truck south and made a left turn. colder and this morning thermom tion liaison officer for Latin American delegations. American officials, including mem- aSSCS Away loose a locomotive under full steam at the La Villette freight station.

eters hovered near the zero mark. Robert Wisted of 1009 Market A top assembly officinl tio- Ders oi tne Appropriations ana I -v i t- Yesterday three minor crashes Street, DeKalb, was behind the quick Action Foreign Affairs Committees of vUK 1 arK were reported to the DeKalb po lice. During the noon hour auto The cabinet session still was on this afternoon when word ed the final vote would come late in the afternoon or tonight. When the meeting ofened. however, ten nations were on President Oswaldo Aranha's speakers" list ami hif congress, complete freedom of iff- -uy reaencK Housewert of formation aRout what is done with Cortland passed away last evening relief commodities.

about 9:30 o'clock at the Oak Park truck and was unable to stop in time. He tried to avoid hitting the vehicle, but skidded into it, causing considerable damage. leaked out that compulsory mobili mobiles driven by Edward St. Lawrence east on Oak Street and Thomas A. Kuusisto north on senued.

However. Russia equally is Insistent that the frontier question be put aside until an agreement is reached on the future government of Germany. Lewis Douglas. U. S.

ambassador to Great Britain, sat in on the meeting of Marshall and Bidault. French sources hinted that the subject of interim aid to France was discussed. zation had been taken up. Would Ban Funds. Hospital where he had been a pa- Sen.

Glen Tavlor. D. imnn. Uert for two weeks. Authoritative sources said the dozen preliminary votes were cer Seventh Street collided at the in to the average of free market transactions" for the past month.

Protest Ouster The Milan demonstration was In protest the ouster last night of Er'ore Troilo, leftist prefect of Milan. The office is that of the federal covemment's top reprsnfative and administrator tn Italian The prefect answers to the Interior Ministry. Gataro Imemirzi. Milan Communist lidt'r. announr-ed on the Milan radio this af'emoon that the radio would stop transmitting In keeping with the general strike.

It tppear-d that the Communists had assumed at lea.s control th radio, which normally Is under control the s'ate radio monopoly. Aj former partisan and wir veterans marched in compact formations toward positions at the ci'y hill and prefecture, the order for the ntywide general strike va issued by the Communist controlled chamber of labor. government would introduce legis tain to oe necessary. sored the amendment to ban the lle was born September 6. lRsn tersection.

Another accident was Urges Safety lation in the national assembly lat ipade-bearded Sir a 1 1 a use of American relief funds for at Byron and was united In dun reported during the noon hour, er today to provide for the mobili zation. the purchase of any kind of arms, rige to Carrie Mae Van Patten onj rvnan or Pakistan hit at the par-tition plan In the opening speech W. A. Gullin of DeKalb was back munitions or other implements of August ira at Beloit, Wis. MnJ ing his car from the curb on South The dockers, miners and railway Program for the Holidays Mayor H.

J. Hakala today called war. Housewert passed away January 2 wirmnif me assembly that the 1.200,000 Arabs of Palestine would Walt Reply possibility was seen that men comprise the bulk of the The There were these other develop- 1928 at their farm located on the Seventh Street near the highway and struck a fender of a parked car belonging to A. W. Summers of not cooperate In setting up the rench strikers, although the ranks are swelled by scores of ments on foreign aid: oid Lincoln Highway east of Cort upon the residents of DeKalb to n.rao nan or a split Palestine.

j- House Kepubiican Leader iana. Mr. Housewert had been walkouts in other fields. co-operate with the National Safety Eldorado. Marshall would reply today to Soviet Foreign Minister V.

M. Molo-tovs demand for the quick creation of a German government and an in tne Arabs camD there Charles A. Halleck promised "ex- making his home with a son, Her- council and 130 other national or Few Minor Crashes New sabotage was reported as the national economy strained to ganizations to make this year's Thanksgiving afternoon about early, oerman peace conference. emergency reiiei diu in the House, .1 ward the breaking point and the still hope that Liberia, one of the large group of fence-sitters, would vote "no," thus making it necessary for partition to clear 30 votes. Arabs also kept Dressing tn vet Christmas holiday accident-free.

1:30 o'clock the auto belonging to Communists spread their agitation He said debate probably will be- bert of Srt AIter Marsha11 prom gin there the middle of next week. red. 1 syca- Ised statement, the forei mini Christmas is the time for happi Walter Taylor of Berwyn was be ing pushed on the Lincoln High with a vote the week after that SZ' lte" council will decide whether to more, and Clifford of fsA manf1tkS1ila.A. I to Algena, France's most import ant overseas possession. It was Impossible to a let delegate from Siam accredited by ness, and we must make sure that sadness and grief will not mar our celebration," the mayor stated.

"It continue the two-dav nVhai. The Hons Fnroicm Affir. rnm. Wales way by one driven by Lawrence o-- -w i rT iidKtlh t-IopKor ire new government In Bangkok is each person's job to make cer on its version of th of CrUand. and Judith Housewert in 'ime to revive the previous Si amse vote against splittinz Pales ter In Paris bvufie boxes were crammer! full and mailmen Larson of DeKalb.

The cars had stopped for the sign at Fourth Street when the Larson vehicle was struck in the rear by one op tain that his holiday season, and of DeKalb; and one great-grand- 'preparation for the German peace treaty. Including frontiers and procedure," or whether to refer It to their deputies and pass on to the third item of the agenda, Molotov, the Russian foreign tine. The Bangkok government z. government nnanciai ad- son. Jimmie Wales of neKnih vere not picking up or dellverlnz that of his family, is a happy, joy ous one, and a safe one.

mail. were down to a erated by John Briggs of Cham athlete nrrs Ponttac. 111., Nov. 4JS. U.P A Bradley University basketball player and a companion were killed and four youths were injured yesterday v.

hen their automobile collided with a truck while they were dnvini to an exhibition single pee printed on both sides. disowned the Siamese delegation here as the assemblv went into the final phase of the Palestine debate on Wednesday. ropean naUons dare not dig any serv'ce will be conduct-deeper into their slim supply of fternn at 2 o'clock gold and dollars to finance their ne Ronan Mortuary with Rev. paign. The Briggs auto had to be 'It is an easy job for us to do, if we will but make the effort.

All it takes is a little extra caution hauled to a garage. iminister, had now put his country as the champion of early On Wednesday autos driven by R. reconstruction and relief "ater, pastor of the Cort- Asks for Vote Schumann promised the assem hly action today against the strik ers while asking for a vote of con own needs. and a little extra courtesy on the street, in the home and at play. iana wietnoaist Church, to officiate.

Burial will be In the Mound J. Kivell of DeKalb and Jim Ebright of Chicago collided on the Lucinda Avenue bridge. The De 3. Rep. Claude Bakewell.

Accidents are not hard to prevent; Rest Cemetery at Cortland. fidence for his new government. proposed that long-ranee aid iiroce nor ootn uermany and Japan. IHe advocated early peace for Ge r-many on Wednesday and said yes-iterday that world peace was lro- (Turn Fag. 11, IMese) it is merely difficult to set your CITS TURKEY; SLICES FINGER Springfield, 111., Nov.

28. James Mulloy was nursing a neatly sliced finger today which he re-reived when a knife slipped while he was carving meat for Thanksgiving dinners at a restaurant bere. Friends may call at the mortuary until the time of the service. game. William Dobler.

nineteen-year-otd athlete, and Glenn Zarndt, both of Carpenterrolle. 111., were killed. Zarndt was driving Dobler and the other four from Peoria to Dundee. Dobler is a former Dundee Higi Schorl iar. The vote was 322 to 186, far short of the personal, 412 to 184, Schu- Kalb auto was going east and the Chicago car west at the.

time of mind to it. "Let's all of us in DeKalb work man received Saturday. together to make this a joyous holiday celebration. Remember Individual strikes started almost every hour and Communist labor leaders began to set up a national the accident. This morning Arnold Swanson, Rural Route One, DeKalb, reported that he was driving east on the highway and struck the rear of an auto, which had stopped Scots Planning- ior that Christmas time is not only the season to be merry, it is the season central strike committee for a gen eral strike.

be granted to Europe with the understanding that participating nations would try to set up a United States of Europe. He said such a program should include integration or at least co-operation of armed forces and merchant marines of the sixteen "Marshall-plan as well as a common currency backed by the combined dollar reserves of all the nations. One Withdrawn. Another proposed Senate amendment to the emergency relief bill in front of him at First Street. If they planned to get a eeneral But little other activity was re strike going at once, they had to Oihtnan Claims Coal Easiest ior Homes to be wary as well." Are Placing Decorations ported to the police over the holi win over the general cartel of French government workers, who day.

A few ambulance calls were received and yesterday afternoon Their Annual Feast Chicago. Nov. 28. UP-The Baron Lovat and an 500 members of the Illinois St. honorary member pf the society Andrews Society all descendants jsent the society a haggis from the" of bonnie Scots rummaged Into old country for their annual ban- voted last night not to call a een Arthur Taylor reported that his at This Time eral civil service strike that had bicycle had been stolen.

been under consideration for today, With the Thanksgiving holiday house, all right, he added, and was withdrawn today by its au Wednesday evening at 9:25 J. ine cartel includes 2.000.000 Shearer reported to the police that wieir Kimes toaay andnquet. workers in eleven federations of thor, Sen. Dennis Chavez, N. M.

His proposal would have made U. S. factory, road-building and pipers practiced, pibroch skirls for government employes. The doss! bility was not discounted, however, he had been robbed at the point of a gun. According to the report the two men had been at a tavern and had then gone to a car parked transportation equipment avail that the Communists might pre over and the Christmas holidays rapidly approaching, workers this morning started the installation of the Christmas decorations in the DeKalb business district.

Although the weather was a bit snappy this morning the erection of the decorations was started and all of them are expected to be up able under the emergency pro vail upon Individual unions to go gram. On the suggestion of Sen the society's annual banquet tomorrow. The real, the true, the honest-to-goodness Scottish haggis was on its way from New York and the celebrants of the society put out the fiery cross they were ready to on Girard Street where the ate President Arthur Vandenberg, out. despite the vote. Four federations voted for stranger had robbed Shearer.

He Chavez decided to withhold it un stated that the stranger had a .38 strike, six voted against it and the til the long-range Marshall plan policemen's federation abstained, reaches the Senate, revolver. Shearer described the man as being about 35 years of age and of medium build. on the ground that Its services In the House, "Halleck Indicated some aay i need to keep It warm. Encloses Chunk So he enclosed one lump of coal with the compliments of the industry thit lights the way, fuels the future, and powers the progress of America. That I hasten to add for the benefit of the natural gas, atomic, and petroleum industries, is a coal man talking; not me.

I burn corn cobs. Coal Man Day gald In order to protect my new piece of coal he and his associates at the institute had given it two coats of varnish. They had. txo, and I only wish I could have been there watching the head coal men in their frock coats sitting around the board-of-directors' table varnishing my coal. It's as pretty a piece of coal as a fellow could want; sparkles like BY FREDERICK C.

OTHMA.N I nited Prr Staff Correspondent Washington. Nov. 28. U.F You don't hae to push buttons or worry with themow hatsits when ou use coaL Just shovel it In the furnace (keeping on your hat in ca of soot) and it. heats your rouse.

There's never any shortage of coal, except of course when John L. Lewi gets ideas. Coal, h-n varrtshed and allowed to dry, ii beautlfuL These- and other fact as Interesting, plus a chunk of burnished coal, came to me by special messenger In a baby blue box from T. A. Day.

the go-getting coal man. Coal Man Day, a pokesman of the Bituminou Coal Institute. nlch 1.4 an affiliate of the National Coal AvocMTion. wild he iw hy the papers where somebody in Sacramento. Cal sent me a brickbat.

Thati a start toward a were essential now to maintain or However, when it arrived In New York the Bureau of Animal Husbandry of the Agriculture Department threatened to destroy it because farm animals In the British Iles are suffering from an epU demlc of hoof and mouth disease. They feared It might carry the disease germs to U. S. animals. Members of the society sounded a call to arms.

President Robert Black declared that Scots throughout the world should go Into hioumiing over the government's sacrlllgjous act. In a letter to official, he pointed out that the hsg-gls was already cooked, that Lout Lovat had been shipping the dUft here far many years, and thst "no der. Dy early next week. The decorations this year are different than in the past and are expected to meet with wide favor. The decorations are being erected by Harold Erlckson and Louis Moulton.

The eighteen key unions includ Ing railroads, building trades and THE WEATHER metal workers that already were send 'round the world to call all local Scots to arms against the U. S. Agriculture Department. Haggis is one of the favorite dishes of Scots. It consists of the heart, liver and lungs of a sheep or calf, mixed with suet, onions, oatmeal, herbs and seasoning and cooked in the stomach lining of the animal.

It has the consistency of turkey stuffing. For Many Years that the Foreign Affairs Committee probably would approve its bill early next week. Chairman Harold Knutson, Minn, of the Ways and Means Committee, interrupted him to say that there were many opponents of the bill who wanted to be certain there was ample time for House debate. Halleck replied that it was up to the Rules Committee to determine how long the House debate would last. on strike were Joined last night by three new unions power workers, motormen and garment workers.

The more than 2.000,000 on strike had crippled the nation's railroads. Only a few trains moved, and they were manned by non-Communist union crew. For DeKalb: Mostly cloudy tonight and Saturday with light snow tonight. Continued cold. Low tonight around fifteen, high Saturday, 24 to 28.

Outlook for Sunday: Partly cloudy and slightly warmer. Sunrise 6:56 a.m., sunset 4:21 p. m. FAMOUS HOTEL BURNS Honolulu, Nov. 28.

CUD The historic Courtland Hotel was destroyed last 'night by a fire that left more than 100 guests homeless. Property loss was estimated at 1100,000. As he has for many years pasL iTora to Page 7, Pleaae), Simon Christopher Joseph Fraser, (Tura te Page fleaM.

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