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The Terre Haute Star from Terre Haute, Indiana • Page 2

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Terre Haute, Indiana
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I I THE TERRE HAUTE STAR, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1949 Mrs. Nellie Hussey Dies at Her Home Mrs. Nellie McKeen Hussey, for many years prominent in local church and social circles, died at 6:30 o'clock yesterday evening at the family residence, 504 North Eighth Street. She was the widow, Warren Hussey, who had been cashier of the First National Bank. For about a quarter of a cenMrs.

Hussey served treasurer of the Rose Ladies Aid Soelety. She also was treasurer of Rose Home for Aged Women from its founding in 1921 until her retirement a few years ago. Mrs. Hussey was a member of: St. Stephen's Episcopal Church and had been active in the church life.

Guild. A member of St. Stephen's she had been its treasurer for many years. Surviving are a son. Warren Hussey of San Diego, a sis-.

1er. Mrs. Thatcher A. Parker of Terre Haute, and two granddaughters. Funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon at St.

Stephen's Church. the Rev. Thomas Mabley officiating. Burial will be in Highland Lawn Cemetery. The body was taken to the P.

J. Ryan Sons Funeral Home where friends are to call after 3 o'clock this afternoon. At noon Thursday the body will be taken to the church. China China ('antinued From Page I States' State Department's white paper on China. said today it took "serious exception to views and statements on many" questions conlained in the document.

The white paper. released Aug. 5. blamed Communist successes in China on the military, political and economic incapacity of the Chiang' Kai-shek regime. It warned the: ('hinese Communists against aggression in neighboring The forcign office issued a brief statement Acting Foreign Minister George Yeh which said the government "will state more fully al an appropriate time its position and relevant facts" regarding the white paper.

Rebel Leader Slain ATHENS, Aug. 16. (API Greek Guerrilla Chieftain Perdikas. was killed by police near Tripolis tonight, the ministry of public order announced. He had been charged with terrorizing the Pelo-! ponesus for two years, committing! hundreds of slayings and atrocities.

ULCER PAINS AND GAS BLOAT RELIEVED -MAN ENJOYS LIFE AGAIN "For years I have been soffering ulcer pains. WAR afraid Lo eat because ererything. seemed to sour and become indigestible causing me to bloat with sinmach cas. felt like the lining of stomach was befng eaten up. started taking Ead-All: the pains are rible bloat.

Lite again is pleasant." This gone. enjoy eating withnut that is One of many testimonials receired. Kad-All 1k new medicine that EnCE right to work giving symptomatic relief from burning stomach, awful gas and ulcer pains resulting from hyperacidity. Miserable people soun feel different. So don't go on suffering.

get Ead-All. Sold by all drug to CHICAGO Non-Stop-1 9 Min. Over 12 Years of Perfect Safety Phone Crawford. 4227. Ticket Office Hulman Airport.

CHICAGO SOUTHERN AIR LINES HEAR- -BUT DON'T UNDERSTAND? 2 smallest SONOTONES BUILT FOR GREATEST UNDERSTANDING! Investigate! SONOTONE of Terre Haute New Location S. 7th St. C-4001 F. P. Sayre, Mgr.

Business Continued From Page 1 1.000,000 jobs by crossing his fingers against the possibility of big strikes in the coal and steel industries. THE COMMENCE Department said the nation's total output of goods and services fell to an annual rate of $256.100.000.000 in the second quarter of 1949-a drop of 2.4 per cent after a slump of nearly 2.9 per cent in the preceding quarter. The annual rate, computed on the basis of 1949's second quarter, ord rate established in the was $14.200,000.000 000 below the recfinal quarter of last year. The department said that business. rather than the consumers or the government.

was responsi-! bie for the drop, because it held down on buying and thus diminished the market for goods and services. BUSINESS inventories were liquidated at a rate of $3.000.000,000 in the April-May-June period. the department said. after having been accumulated at an annual rate of $4.000.000.000 in the first three months of the year. Otherwise, the department found a lot of cheer in the picture.

"Both personal income and personal consumption expenditures were markedly stable in the first half of the year. "Personal income was at an an-: nual of $213,000.000.000 in the second quarter. virtually constant for five consecutive months from February through June. "Personal consumption expenditures at an annual rate of 000.000.000 were fractionally above the first quarter rate." PROPOSES TAX CHANGES WASHINGTON, Aug. 16 -Up) -President Emil Schram of the New York Stock Exchange.

today handed President Truman a faxrevision study designed to increase! private investments and provide more jobs. Schram after the White House meeting, that the report. prepared Stock Exchange staff and entitled "Jobs and contained four specific recommendations for changes in income taxes. They 1. Easing of the double, taxation on dividend income allowing a 10 per cent credit against it.

2. A dat 10 per cent tax on long term capital gains instead of the present sliding scale which ranges up to 25 per cent. 3. Reduce from six to three months the length of time an as-: set must be held before a realized gain is taxed as long-term gain and not as ordinary income. Schram said this would stimulate stock market activity.

4. A change in the law governing capital losses to permit them to be offset against ordinary income for $5.000 in the year the loss is suffered. plus equal amount in each of the succeeding five carryover years. Polio Continued From Page 1 reported by the State Health Department today pushed the Illinois total closer to the 1,000 mark. Cases to date this vear number' 989 compared with 239 a year The unofficial death toll reached today.

with one fatality in ville. Joliet, Centralia and Alton' today. Centralia and Marion reported the 100th case for that, In Springfield city officials dis-1 puted whether a three-week-old Harry, quarantine should be lifted. Mayor Eielson called a meeting! tomorrow with medical experts on relaxing restrictions. Springfield has had 55 cases and 10 deaths.

Social Security Continued From Page 1 Jan. 1. 1951: to 212 per cent in 1960. to 3 per cent in 1965, and to 314 per cent in An increase of $160,000,000 a year in federal grants to state public assistance, or home relief, for needy persons. Creation of a new categorytotally and permanently disabled persons-for aid both under the surance and public assistance programs.

About Your Eyes Be careful with your eyes! Never rub them with duty fingers. Refresh, and comfort ordinary local eye with. pleasant, cooling Lavoptik. Promptly tiredness, burning, soreness. itching.

inflammation and granulated eyelids or money hack. 310 sears sucPraised 1housands. Get Lavontik today. -Adverlisement. MILES TO GO HEALTH SPOT SHOES Your youngster's tiny feat will walk an estimated 63,000 miles in life.

That's why it's important to them off on the righi path now in Health start Spot Shoes. Stop in today and see by X-Ray how the curved insole and the built-up heel wedge helps and promote proper foot to support young and body posture. -BAUGHMAN'S HEALTH SPOT SHOE SHOP WABASH AVE. C-5240 618 Mrs. J.

R. Adamson Is Taken by Death MRS. J. RICHARD ADAMSON Mrs. Richard Adamson, the former Catherine Elizabeth Caffee.

of the Bell Apartments, died at 9 o'clock last night at St. Anthony's Hospital following a critical illness of three weeks' duration. She was 22 years old. A native of Terre Haute. Mrs.

Adamson was known to all as "Betsy." After her graduation from Wiley fligh School. she was a student at DePauw University. from where she was graduated in February. 1948. with the A.

B. de-: gree. She was a member of they Delta Zeta sorority. Until recently she had been employed in the personnel department of Meis Bros. Inc.

She and Mr. Adamson, who is a member of the Tribune editorial staff. were married last Dec. 31 at Stephen's Episcopal Church, where she was a member. Airs.

Adamson was well known in the younger social circles the city. She was a daughter of Alfred H. Caffee and the late Lucille Armstrong Caffee. Besides the husband and father. she is survived by two grandmothers, Mrs.

Catherine Caffee and Mrs. James L. Armstrong; an aunt, Miss Hazel Armstrong. and an uncle. Dean Armstrong.

all of Terre Haute. a The body was taken to the P. J. Ryan Sons Funeral Home. Ocean Dive Continued From Page 1 identify it, but it probably is an eel.

"There is a shower of starry things passing the window. I think. they are squid or luminous shrimp." At 4,500 feet. he couldn't see any point in continuing to 6.000 feet. "There are so many, things against us." he said his lack of light.

"The ball is jumping up and down." he added. His first attempt to go down in the bell yesterday halted at 2.500-foot level after the lights failed. A second effort this morning stopped at 400 feet after a flood light was smashed. AS SOON as repairs were however. he started his third, record-breaking descent.

Barton was required to keep talking. because workmen on the barge were under instructions to haul him to the surface the instant his voice stopped coming over the communications system. The scientist said there were of mysterious under-sea n.orals swimming past the crystal window through which he' observed the wonders of a new! world. "This is an unbelievable world down here." he said. Barton wore a blue peajacket over a bright green plaid shirt and a T-shirt when he entered the 15- inch porthole in the benthoscope.

Woolen sweat pants, socks and rubber-soled shoes, a sweater and blanket in his hand, also served to keep out the under-water chill. New Earth Tremor Shakes Ecuador Cities GUAYAQUIL. Ecuador. Aug. 16.

-(AP) A strong tremor today shook Ambato, third industrial of Ecuador hard hit in the earthquakes that struck Aug. 5. The new tremor, felt also at Riobamba, Guaranda and recorded Laguna in central Ecuador, was at 3:15 P. M. First reports said it: tumbled many houses at Ambato.

CITY DEATHS MRS. CARRIE TRADER FLINN Mrs. Carrie Trader Flinn, 76 years old, died at 1:50 o'clock yesterday afternoon at the residence. R. R.

2. Terre Haute. She 15 -aurvived by a daughter. Mrs. Marie Fleming of R.

R. 2. Terre Haute: a son, Walter Flinn of Indianapolis, and three grandchildren. She was a of Alma Rebekah Lodge, the Pythian Sisters and Jobn Baird Corps, G. A.

R. The body was taken to the Thomas Funeral Home where services will be held at 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon. Burial will be in Highland Lawn Ceme-1 tery. Friends are to call at the funeral home after 7 o'clock tins evening. I ROBERT EUGENE M'ELRANEY Funeral services for Robert Eugene at 1:30 McElhaney, o'clock 34 this years old, afternoon at the P.

will be held. J. Ryan Sons Funeral Home. the Rev. A.

J. Graham officiating. Burial will be in Highland Lawn Cemetery with the Lawton-Byrum Post, V. F. conducting military rites.

CARL GREGORY Funeral services for Carl Gregory, 24 years old, who died Sunday, will be held at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon at the Bell Bracken Funeral Home, Burial will be in Grandview Cemetery. Friends ATe to call at the funeral home Thursday afternoon. EIZO TURNER Funeral services for E170 Turner, 46 years old. who died Monday, will be held at 1 o'clock this afternoon at the Hutton Church, the Rev. James Kelley officiating.

Burial will be in Summit Cemetery at Brazil. The body will the DeBaun Funeral Home in Prairie Creek until time of the services. BYRON W. BRENTLINGER Funeral services for Byron W. Brentlinger, 53 years old, Jocal business man, who died Monday, will be held at 2:30 Martin o'clock this Funeral afternoon Home.

Burial at the will be in H. Highland Lawn Cemetery. LAWRENCE GENE M'CORMACK Funeral services for Lawrence Gene McCormack, 43 years old, who died Sun. day, wil be held at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the Gillis Memory Chapel. Burial will be In Highland Lawn tery.

MRS. MINNIE LEACHMAN Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie Leachman, years old. who died urday, will be held at 10:30 o'clock this morning at the Gillis Memory Chapel. Burial will be in Highland Lawn Cemeter" VALLEY DEATHS JOHN DIERDORY JASONVILLE, Aug.

Spe- Jahn Dierdorf, 73 years old, died at 9 o'clock this morning at Street. the resi. dence, 724 South Lawton He survived by the widow, Laura; a son. Arthur Dierdorf of Kansas; two daughLa- ters. Mra.

Virginia Daugherty of fayette, and Mrs. Kathryn brother, Henry Hartman cf Oak Ridge, a dorf of Centerpoint, and a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Stearley of Brazil. The was taken to the McClanahan Funeral Home and Wednesday morning will be returned to the residence. Services will bet held at the 2:30 Jasonville o'clock United Thursday afternoon at Church.

The Rev. Bert Sanders and the Rev. Stanley Sipes officiate. and burial will be in Lebanon Cemetery. WILLIAM E.

JOHNSON HYMERA. Aug. Special. I- William E. Johnson.

88 years old, at 3 o'clock this afternoon at the restdence, one and one-half miles south of here. He R'as a member of the Linton twO Red Men's Lodge. Surviving are sons, Everett Johnson of near Shelburn and Homer Johnson of Sullivan; two daughters, Mrs. Lennie Lang and Mrs. Mary Lang.

both of R. R. 3. Sullivan. The body was taken to the McHugh Fuheral Home and Wednesday afternoon will be taken to the home of his son, Everett Johnson.

Services will be held at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon at Claiborne Church, with burlal In the adjoining cemetery. The Rev. Bert Sanders will officiate. JONAS G. LONG BRAZIL.

Aug. 16 G. Long. 71 years old, died of heart attack last night at his farm south of the cits. He is survived by the widow.

Cora: a son. Clarence J. Long of Terre Haue: a daughter, Mrs. Juanita DeBruler of Terre Haute: a brother. Andrew Long of Terre Haute: two sisters, Mrs Mary Denny of Jasonville Mrs.

Cora Lune of Brazil. and two, grandchildren. The body was taken to Miller Sons Funeral Home, from where it will be taken to the residence at 10:30 o'clock Wednesday morning. Final services will be at 10 o'clock Thursday morning at the Asbury Church, with the Revs. Mr.

Leader and Mr. Emmert officiating. Burial wilt be Cemetery." in Summit Lawn CE.CIT. P. BOND CAYU'GA.

Aug. 16. Special. I- Cecil Boyd. 65 sears old, Cayuga hardware dealer, died at 12:15 o'clock in morning at Lake Vlew Hospital Danville.

Ill. following 3 ten-day illness. He had been in the hardware business in Cayuga for the past 40 years. survived by one son, Howard W. Boyd of Cayuga; two brothers, William Rod of Indianapolis and Bernice Bond of Moore-tille.

Ind. and one sister, Mrs. Geraldine Boyd Duncan af San Mateo. Cal. The body was taken to the Watson Funeral Home in Cayuga where funeral: services will be held at 2 o'clock Thurs-: day afternoon.

Burial will be in Eugene Cemetery ARTHUR E. HUNT SULLIVAN, Aug. 16. Funeral services for Arthur E. Hunt, 81 years old.

who died late Monday night at the Mary Sherman Hospital, will be held at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at the Billman Funeral Home. The Rev. R. E. Pavy will officiate, and burial will be in Center Ridge Cemetery.

Surviving are a daughter. Mrs. Grace Kelley: four sons. Frank Hunt of Chicago, Harold Martinsville, Walter Hunt of SulliHunt of Washington. Paul Hunt of van; A brother.

Addie Hunt of New Lebanon: seven grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren. S. METCALF SULLIVAN. Aug. S.

Metcalf. 69 years old. died 6 'clack this morning at the residence, 258 West Thomas Street. He is survived by the widow. Fannie; two daughters.

Mrs. Esther Mitchell and Miss Ruth Metcalf. Metcalf both of Sullivan: a son, Mrs. Harold of Muncie: two brothers. Roy Metealf of Sandborn, and Ed Metcalt of West Unlon.

Ill. The body was taken to the Billman Funeral Home where servwill be held at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon. the Rev. E. E.

Aldrich Center officiat-: ing. Burial will be in Ridge Cemetery. JOHN C. DICKEN CHRISMAN, Aug. Funeral services for John C.

Dicken. 78 old, retired farmer and livestock dealer of Chrisman. who died last night Paris Hospital, will be held at 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the Chrisman Methodist Church. Burial will be In Wesley Chapel Cemetery, near Scottland. and He is was a survived native by of two Prairie daughters.

Town- Mrs. Mahel Davis of Terre Haute and Mrs. Ruth C. Vail of Paris: a son. Fred Dicken of Chrisman, and a brother, Dr.

W. A. Dicken of Wynnewood. Okla. GEORGE P.

BRUNETT BRAZIL, I- Aug. George P. Brunett, 58 years old. a tired clay worker, died at 4 a'clock this afternoon at the home of his sister, Mrs. Ed Pearce, 517 0 East Mechanic was a member of the Annunciation Church and the Veterans of Foreign daughter, Post Mrs.

No. 1127. Courtney Surviving Brown are of Riddell Pamplin. another sister, Mrs. Anna of Terre Haute.

and two brothers, Leo and Fred Brunett, both of Bra. zil. The body was taken to the Lawson Son Funeral Home. MRS. ELIZABETH CASTER CLINTON.

Aug. services for Mrs. Elizabeth Jane Caster, 28 years old. who died at the Vermillion County Hospital Monday horning as the result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. will be held at 2 o'clock ednesday afternoon at the Eugene biethndist Church.

The Rev. Donald Donahoe will officiate. Burial be in Eugene Cemetery. The hody will be removed from the Watson Funeral Home in Cayuga to the church at 2 o'clock. MRS.

ETHEL REDDEN OAKLAND. Aug. Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel Redden. 76 years old.

formerly of Oakland, who died yesterday at Clearwater, will be held at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning at the Oakland Methodist Church. Burial will be In Oakland Cemetery. Surviving are the husband, Bert Redden: two stepsons, and a sister. PHYLLIS IRENE CLARK COALMONT, Aug. -Funeral services for Phyllis Irene Clark, 19-month-old daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Jess Clark, who died Monday, will be held at 10:30 o'clock Thursday morning at Friendly Grove Church, with burial in the returned adjoining cemetery. residence The body was to the from the McClanahan Funeral Home. WILLIAM C. WINTERS MIDLAND.

Aug. 15 Funeral services for William C. Winters. 74 sears nld. who died Monday, will be held at, 2.

n'elack Wednesday afternoon at the Lebanon Church. Burial will be in Fairview Cemetery at Linton. Archduke Sues Kin NEW YORK, Aug. Franz Josef of Hapsburg fileds a $949.999 damage suit against brother and sister-in-! law Supreme Court today, claiming they had sold the family castle and other ancestral property in Austria, without giving him his the receipts. The defendants are Archduke Anton and his wife, Princess Ileana of Roumania, who are now said to be living in Buenos Aires.

Percenters as chemical chief in 1945. Waitt had been acting head of the chemical corps. He said he figured that if Hunt was to aid him. it would be by helping to get his appointment confirmed by the Senate. "Such assistance as came' to mei from the outside." he said, "came to me from leading scientists who felt I was best qualified for the job." He got the job.

term as head man neared a close, Waitt realized that seldom, if ever, is the chief of the chemical corps chosen to succeed himself. YET, HE SAID, "I must confess that thought my leadership should continue." Furthermore. he said, leading, lists American also wanted scientists him and to stay industrial- on as! head man. "If anyone feels deeply about a said Waitt, "he has to go out and get it." So Waitt went out to get it. He talked with my closest friend in Hunt, he said, knew "I had been.

in touch with General Vaughan, and that General Vaughan had en-! couraged Added Waitt: "I put myself in the position of being conceited. but in justification, I can say that I was only en-' couraged by American scientists." Continued From Page 1 Vigo Tax Vigo Tax Continued From Page 1 I for the two taxing units over the current county and city rates. The coming year's proposed levies are considerably under, those proposed for the current year. To be raised under. the tenta-: I tive levy for 1950 is the total sum of $1,711.588.

as compared with; the advertised proposal last year. $1,755,439. THE PROPOSED 1950 levies and amounts to be raised by the tax are as follows: Levy on Amount to Funds- Property. be Raised. County revenue .744 977,970 Sinking fund.

.0611 77.190' County welfare fund .5196 656.428 Total 1.3547 $1.711.588 Total budget estimates for the county for the coming year are as follows, according to the advertise-! ment: General fund, sinking fund. $82,150, and welfare fund These compare with the proposal: for 1949. as follows: General $1.161.913: sinking fund. $15,320. and welfare fund, $2.070.147.

U.S. Judge U.S. Judge I Continued From Page 1 for the place, as has Representative Donald Rogers, Democrat. Bloomington. Both are from the Seventh District.

If John Hurt, Martinsville law: yer and seretary of the Democratic state committee. gets the federal district attorneyship, politicians say appointment of either Judge Seal or Rogers would be unlikely. SOME QUARTERS saw in 'the recommendation last week of H. Nathan Swaim of Indianapolis to! the newly created place on the' Appeals Court at Chicago a threat to Steckler's hopes. They said it was not politically loxical give both federal judgeships to the Eleventh District (Marion County and Indianapolis).

However, McHale has refused to be drawn out on the possible final selection of a lawyer for the key judicial job. If Judge Baltzell should decide to stay on through the October term of court, Democrats may not get to recommend to the White House their choice until next Spring. The October term ends in April, 1950. Dew does not fall; it rises. It is the condensed breath of the earth.

All Under Control VIRGINIA BEACH. Aug. struck the Charles J. Duke home here punching a hole through the roof. Then the rains came and water streamed in through the hole.

No matter. The hole was right over a bathtub. The water ran into the tub, down the drain. and not even the floor got wet. Novelist Novelist Continued From Page 1 several years ago and has been a semi-invalid since.

MARSH and his wife left their small. unpretentious home last Thursday night to walk to a movie. As they crossed the street at a walkway, a speeding car crossed over the center line and struck the writer. Other than newspaper stories when she first began her career. Miss Mitchell's only work was With the Wind." Published in 1936.

it sold 8.000.000 copies. second only to the Bible. It was practically a lifetime job for her. She retold in it the tales she had heard as a girl. Miss Mitchell attended Smith debut.

She joined the staff of the College and made her socicty Atlanta Journal in 1922, but resigned a year after she married March in 1925. L. M. Cook, Retired Druggist, Is Dead Louie M. Cook.

72 years old. a retired druggist, died at 9 o'clock last night at the residence, 1810 North Seventh Street. For 47 years Mr. Conk operated store with the late Fred Black." Their place of business was at Seventh and Tippecanue streets in the Great Northern Hotel for several years. A native of Germany.

Mr. Cook came to the United States when he was 14 years old. He learned the drug business in his uncle's store in Greencastle. In 1895 he and Mr. Black founded Black Cook Drug Company.

He hari retired from business about four years ago. He WAS a member of Terre Haute Lodge No. 19. F. A.

M. lle is survived by the widow. Mrs. Daisy Cook. The body was taken to the Cross Funeral Home where services will be held al 2 o'clock Thursday after-: noon.

Memorial Burial Park. will be with in the Roselawn Terre: Haute Lodge conducting Masonic rites. Trucker Dies Trapped In Blazing Wreckage WABASH, Aug. -A young truck driver attempting to avoid a head-on collision with an oncoming car burned to death cast of here today when his heavy tractor-trailer rig plunged over 3 50-foot embankment. Coroner L.

W. Yoder reported witnesses said the driver. Jack W. Harding. 24 years old.

of Route 2. Logansport. died in the flaming the truck after he was trapped by the weight of his cargo of steel castings. The alligator has a eyelid. SURA RANCE Have you moved recently? It so your ad.

dress should be changed on all existing policies. Some-' times a change of location means a change in insurance rates. See us, perhaps we can save you some monev. FORREST SHERER AGENCY 24 NO SIXTH ST CHANTICLEER BLOG C-5041 -MONEYTO BUY BUILD OR REMODEL YOUR HOMEOur direct reduction loan means that you pay interest only on the amount of money due on the Ist of each month thus providing you the Ideal mortgage plan. BRING YOUR MONEY PROBLEMS TO L'S AGUA On WABASH Savings! SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 10 N.

6th St. Ross Harriott, Sec'y. of every faith J. Ryan Sons Funeral Home 6TH AND POPLAR STREETS PHONE CRAWFORD 5008 Printers Stand By Contract Policy Reject St. Louis Repeal Proposal BY MORRIE LANDSBERG OAKLAND.

Aug. 16. The International Typo- graphical Union today swept aside a convention move to abandon its embattled two-vear-old policy for bargaining with employers. Delegates shouted down a pro-: posal by the St. Louis delegation to repeal the contract guiding provision in I.

T. C. laws. The resolution drew some support from the floor--but none at all in the voting. T.

T. C. President Woodruff Randolph announced the decision as unanimous. "Abandonment our policy." Randolph told the convention. "means complete surrender." DELEGATES also: Defeated, a without general debate labor a holi- proday until the Taft-Hartley act is repealed.

a 35-hour work week to include all government empluyes. Selected Washington. D. as the unannosed site of the 1950 convention. Several sueakers declared the collective bargaining policy had not been successful.

It was evolved in 1947 as the union's defiant answer to the Taft-Hartley act. BACKGROUND of the convention dehate was 3 string of I. T. strikes throughout the country: its biggest dispute against Chicago newspaper publishers, now in its 21st month: a Federal District' Court order that the 1. T.

U. live up to a provisions; and 10 management complaints to the N. L. R. B.

Fred Berlemann, St. Louis. argued that many of the clauses in the I. T. U.

form contract had been ruled illegal under the TaftHartley act. Randolph took the microphone to defend his policy. The I. T. U.

has insisted on the form contract to preserve as much i of its past benefits as possible under the Taft-Hartley act. Either that- or no contract at all. Randolph said that "all we have asked the employers to do is accord us the things which have been ours for years and not outlawed by the Taft-Hartley act." On the whole. he said. management does not want to destroy the union.

However, a he renewed his attack on the American Newspaper Publishers' Association and the Printing Industry of America. Inc. an organization of commercial printers. PLATENLESS TYPEWRITER An improved platenless type- writer, which utilized the table under it instead of the familiar rubber roller. Is designed to write impress the type upon paper or other material located under the machine.

By the use of this machine. there is no limit to the size or character of the material upon which the typing is done, ITCH Don't Suffer Another Minute No matter how long you have suffered bow many remedies you have tried for the Itching of psoriasis, eczema, infections, athlete's foot or other externally caused skin irritations-you can get wondertul results from the use of WONDER SALVE-a war time discovery. Developed for the hoys to the Armyfor the bome folks. No acida, no alcobol, no painful application. WONDER SALVE is white.

greaseless, pain relieving and antiseptic. No ugly appearance. Get WONDER SALVE -get results It la wonderful. Sold In Terre Haute Dy Miller. Knok, Gillis and Ratif Drug Stores or your hometown druggists 'ment Ask Your Grocer For HOLSUM Southern Style White Bread IN THE TANGO WRAPPER STOCK ONLY A FEW DAYS LEFT HURRY! OUT CLOSING ENTIRE SALE New owners (Dave Rosenthal and Frank Smith) shaking hands with Jake Hulman, who is retiring.

SAVE SAVE The Demand Has Been Tremendous But We Have Many Good Bargains Left SO YOU MUST HURRY! SALE ENDS TUESDAY AUGUST 23rd and Save Outfit Your Children for School AND MORE Lined and Unlined MEN'S FELT HATS $1 00 Don't Miss This Buy! SURPLUS SALES 328 WABASH AVENUE "Sale Going On At 328 Wabash Store Only" 12 POINTS STORE-1254 LAFAYETTE AVE. C-2913..

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About The Terre Haute Star Archive

Pages Available:
48,869
Years Available:
1861-1973