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Miami News-Record from Miami, Oklahoma • 1

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Miami News-Recordi
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Miami, Oklahoma
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1
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MB VOL XLIV No 8hA i 2 of free by the until a Acquitted by Tribunal THE WEATHER is one reason only for said Boren defeated for renomina Discovery of the watch led to the hope there might be suf ficient wreckage at the scene to identify the crashed plane and hence help identify the victims There is no basis for speculating whether the reported captives were in the same crew as the men whose skeletons were discovered Meantime soldiers were slogging painfully across moun tainous western China seeking the captives They set out from Si chang last week Traveling without radios they have no means of com munication MEAT BECOMES MAIN ISSUE IN POLITICALTALK RADIO CONGRESS MEXICO CITY Oct Committees of the first inter American radio congress studied today a plan for an organization of radio broadcasters manufactur ers and listeners that would cam paign for freedom of the airways Among objectives would be to make recommendations whereby governments would guarantee ra dio transmission the same freedom of speech and thought guaranteed the press A WASHINGTON Oct (Pi ormer Secretary of State Cordell condition was described as "essentially unchanged" today A 9 a Navy department bul letin on the retired cabinet mem ber ill at Bethesda Naval hospital said: Hull rested very well dur ing the latter part of the night His condition is essentially unchanged" Hull for 12 years President secretary of state has been described as seriously ill It was the 75th birthday of the man who guided the Stale de partment for the first three years of World war II A light brain hemorrhage Mon day night left him partly paralyzed and semi conscious Late yester day the Navy issued a bulletin say ing his condition had become serious" Bulletins which followed through the night said he had failed to im prove MAGIC CARPET LOS ANGELES Oct a new wrinkle in college ed ucation a course in rocket navi gation Ten students who enrolled in the course will make hypothetical trips to Venus Mars and the far side of the moon Dr Samuel Herrick assistant professor of astronomy who will do the instructing said the journey around the moon may lead to the discovery of new craters WENDOVER Utah Oct 2 W) Army 29 plane crashed in Buffalo Valley 80 miles southeast of Battle Mountain Nev and Ar my authorities said today they be lieved there were no survivors Number of men aboard was un disclosed but a 29 crew normal ly is about 10 Wendover Army airbase au thorities Said cause of the crash was undetermined The plane was enroute from Grand Island Neb Jtp Hamilton ield Calif Army officials said an 18 year old farm girl living in the region saw the plane fall to earth yester day morning They added that a sheepherder remained at the scene until representatives arrived from Wendover Way Is Paved To Rescue 5 liers In Lolo Sector SHANGHAI Oct Three Americans flew to Sichang today hoping to pave the way for res cuing five airmen reported enslav ed by Lolos and to ident fy three skeletons brought here Saturday The skeletons were found three hiking distance from Sichang where they had been taken by Chi nese They were examined care fully by medical experts but no identifying clues were found Chi nese who discovered the remains found an uninscribed wrist watch and a piece of parachute sik which also were brought to Shanghai 1 building with 16000 square of floor space BOMBAY DEATHS BOMBAY Oct One man was killed and another injured dur ing the night as communal disturb ances continued to take their toll of casualties in Bombay The continuing wave of Violence was marked by a large early morn ing fire in a shop district which authorities said apparently was in cendiary origin TULSAN DIES AT 69 TULSA Oct Phil Hawkins 69 manager of the Tulsa stockyards died suddenly at his home today He had resided here 1935 when he moved from Parsons Kas where he had man aged stockyards since 1932 A na tive of Brumley Mo fie previous ly engaged' in the lumber business in southeastern Missouri and in livestock raising at Pocahontas AriC Army Authorities Indicate 10 May Be Dead in Nevada Accident Admiral Tells Legionnaires 'Adequate Network of Bases' Essential SCORES LYNN'S DREAM DARDANELLES ISSUE ISTANBUL Oct In formed sources said the Turkish foreign office was maintaining close contact with the United States and British governments as itworked today on its reply to fresh Soviet demands for joint control of the Dardanelles The cabinet has instructed the foreign office to prepare a reply for study at another meeting later this week Some sources said Tur key might answer Russia by the end bf the week while others fore saw several delay tion hart He meat question that there will be a publican in the November congressional elections On the other side Senator Lucas (D Ill) said in a separate inter view that he did not believe the meat shortage would be a political factor is short but nobody that I know of is hungry or he said Pittsburgh Traffic Slowed by Strike PITTS'BtlRGH Oct 2 The daily life of this great industrial city beset by a power strike today moved largely by rule of thumb in this case a frantically waved digit to indicate the need of trans portation Cessation of public transporta tion provided principally by a 1 200 car trolley system worked the greatest single hardship on the in dividual in the ninth day of the costly work stoppage Thousands relied on hitch hilfing to reach employment downtown Others were lucky enough to live near commuting rail points or to make arrangements for service from friends with automo biles SAN RANCISCO Oct (M American Legionnaires some stiff muscled froirf their long tu multous parade to the cheers of 100000 lining Market street "to day heard fresh warning against disarming to a precar ious point in this troubled post war era Adm Halsey war time commander of the mighty Thirdfleet which pounded Japan as serted in a prepared address the United States should maintain a powerful navy andean adequate network of bases id our ocean A navy re designed on the basis of information gleaned from the Bikini atomic bomb tests he said could serve the 'nation well in an atomic age possibilities of employing a speedy mobile fleet in an atomic counter attack "are very promis he declared Maj Gen Lewis BHershey war time director of Service urged a universal mili tary training as the fysSt insur ance for national and scoffed at the idea the atom ic age would mean a war involv ing only a few technicians on the shooting end the he said: in a pre pared talk must train every one to know what to do to sur Pawhuska Obtains Clothing actory PAWHUSKA Okla Oct William Crownover president of the Chamber of Commerce an nounced today that the Kaynee Go Cleveland Ohio manufactur ers of clothing would estab lish a manufacturing plant here Crownover said the plant ex pected to employ 250 probably would be in operation by next Jan It will occupy a two story ieet HALSEY POINTS TO NAVY AIMS Plenty of Beef Will Be Served or Cattlemen WOODWARD Okla Oct 2 iJP There will be no shortage of beef in Woodward riday and Saturday Ample supplies have been pro vided for two barbecues for those attending the annual meeting of the Northwest Oklahoma Cattle association It opens tomor row and runs three days Cattlemen from adjoining states also are ex pected Department of Agriculture officials and experts from federal experiment stations and Oklahoma A and college will address the cattlemen Approximately 1000 stockmen in 10 counties of the northwestern section of the state are members of the association They are prin cipally concerned at present with mounting costs of livestock feed OPA controls on meat prices and a proposed state brand law to pre vent livestock thefts irst Series Game Is Set for Sunday CINCINNATI Oct The world series will open in the Na tional league ball park on Sunday Oct 6 weather permit ting the office of baseball Com missioner Ai Chandler an nounced todays air and warmer east1 and south tonight Thursday fair east increasing cloudiness west continued warm air afid warmer tonight and Thursday KANSAS air land slightly warmef 'southeast and extremeeast tonight Thursday fair east increasing cioutuness west Boren Hits Anew At OPA Control WASHINGTON Oct The current meat shortage was at tributed by Rep Lyle Boren (D Okla) today to blocking of the path the OPA the meat who was tion in the Oklahoma primary is will be plenty of meat and plenty of everything as soon as OPA quits blocking the path of free he told a re porter be plenty of anything but shortages the day that OPA is Advice Given reely but No Solution to Supply Prob lem Sighted WASHINGTON Oct The administAtion was reported casting about today for some means of easing the meat shortage but no ready solution appeared in sight Aides of top policy making offi cials told reporters they thought there was little chance the gov ernment would take either of two steps which Agriculture depart ment meat authorities described as the only apparent ones for increas ing supplies These are (1) Easing of con trols and raising prices in order to encourage marketing of cattle and hogs or (2) Government requisitioning of meat animals from farms A third possible step was sug gested earlier this week by Secre tary of Agriculture Clinton An derson He said the government might find it necessary to seize livestock arriving at markets Experts said this might lead to better distribution of available meat bdt would not increase total supplies Statistical evidence of the short age came in an Agriculture depart ment report that federally inspect ed slaughterers produced 80000 000 pounds of meat last week This was only 27 percent of the 292000 000 pounds listed for the compar able week of last year White House attention to the problem' was indicated by Rep Spence (D Ky) He told newsmen after a talk with President Tru man yesterday that he ered the the govern ment might some remedial But Spence declined to say what that action might be On the political front: Senator Capehart (R Ind) said reports reaching him indicated that "the people of America are up in arms over the shortage of meat and are rightly blaming the admin is the result of administra and OPA Cape added to a reporter said that to his mind the shortage had removed any Democratic Nominee Declare GOP Can Offer Only 'Stagnation BARTLESVILLE Okla Oct UB Roy Turner Democratic candidate for governor declared here last night Wat his opponent RepuBTlcSn Olney lynn could offer Oklahoma voters no more than years of stagnation state In a speech before a crowd com posed mostly of party workers Turner charged that if lynn were elected he would have power to translate his opinions into ac tion on either state or national is lynn recently declared that election of a Republican gover nor would be a quick way to dispose of OPA which the GOP nominee said he had found to be a major political issue in parts of the state He suggested that if Oklahoma chose a Republican as its gover nor for the first time in history it would be a warning heeded by Washington officials Turner however said that as governor powers will be lim ited to state policies and state legislation I shall not waste your time or mine by giving you my opinions on national issues opinions are worthless without the means of translat ing them into The Democratic nominee reit erated previous party assertions that a Democratic legislature would not enact a Republican gov program but said he was not posing the threat of a Demo cratic strike against Republican 4 TO PILOT INDIANS OKLAHOMA CITY Oct GP) Schalk has been re hired to manage the Oklahoma baseball club of the Texas league next season Announcement was made shortly before Schalk President Harold 6 Pope and Vice President Jimmy Humphries of the club left for' east Texas' to try to arrange for a farm club Vinita Girl Will Marry War Hero SAN RANCISCO Oct A marriage license was obtained here yesterday by red Phillip La Boon 31 of Chickasha Okla and Miss Helen Jeanette Reed 20 of Vinita Okla La Boon national vice command er Of the American Legion and vet eran of the Bhtaan and Miss Reed are attending the national Legion convention They plan to be married riday at the conclusion of the convention Miss Reed is the daughter of Dr and Mrs Willis Reed Her mother is national vice president of the Legion auxiliary VA Official To Be In Picher riday Bob Taylor contact representa tive for the Veterans administra tion will be at th' irst State bank in Richer riday to advise ex ser vicemen on matters pertainjng to the GI Bill of Rights The VA official is at the USES nffide in Miami each Thursday Monroney To Beat Bushes for Votes WASHINGTON Oct Rep Mike Monroney (D Okla) headed home to Oklahoma City today check over the district and do a little After a brief vacation in New England Monroney has been aid ing the Democratic national com mittee here in preparing its fall campaign publicity He also has been working on an organization to oppose efforts to change the congressional reorganization law which reduces the number of com mittees The Oklahoman was a co author of the congressional staeamlining law Bites for Pioneer VmgnrTmorrow Oct 2 unefalWo will be held in Ino for Mrs Mary Cruse 103" a resident of Rogers county for the last 40 years Bom in Decatur Ill Mrs Cruse moved in 1898 to what was then Indian Territory Her husband John Cruse farmer and stockman died 33 years ago Her grandmoth er lived to the age of 104 Survivors include of Claremore and two Minnie Baldwin Spavinaw and Mrs Virgie Hayes Eufaula ms Miami Daily NewsRe Adriatic ARIS Oct i YuiosUvIa accused tha 'Uhl ted States and Great Britain before the ptiaf con ference today of betraying tbeBig our agreement oq the free state of Trieste in order to establish a Britlib Americap mUitaiy base on the Adriatic In an angry torrent of rapid fire rench before th? Italian political tad territorial commission slav Delegate Dr Moshe fijade de dared the "Anglo Saxon had renounced the impor decisions of the foreign min council pertaining to Trieste principles iq the British American and rench I a a declared gone with the The Yugoslav delegate assailed the British proposals for statute governing the new international ized' arenof Trieste as putting the port on par with a British col ony Recalling the foreign min agreement that leg islative and executive authority should be organized along demo cratic lines Pi jade declared: cannot see why the people of Trieste should be' forced to ac cept a colonial type regime in a military He said both i British and proposals for the Trieste there are five different proposals altogether one from each member of the Big our nd one front Yugoslavia us speeches yesterday by 1J 8 'Sen ator Tom Connally and British Delegate Glade yA Jebb that Trieste in their minds is not to become a truly free state but a military base under an Anglo American "The American British and rench proposals in my'v ay corre spond with the foreign council decisions he added Pijade spoke so rapidly to crowd his remarks into the 10 minute speech limit that official stenographers were to keep up with him In a short tumultous scene Chairman Leif Egeland of South Africa rappe for order at the end pf ibp ID minutes when Pt jadehttempted the fate ilially the commission agreed to grant him two minutes more: Pijade flayed the British pro posal for a transitional regime which he said meant imposing foreign rule on the city backed by Anglo American military forces now occupying Trieste Nazis wi" Lead er Spurs Un ion AVIA Owners To End StriKC oist 2 Maritime Commission Acts Lscain uy rniny ji(uau 11 Their Clemency Pleas ail Wermmm Goering left and Rudolph Hess listen with grim concentfa tion as the War Crimes Tribunal verdict was md in NuernbergThiapiftura was made before Goering heard himself sentenced to hang nnd Hesajvas given a life sentence (NBA Telephoto) Goering eels Control Of A Bomb Vital to Peace LONDON Oct 2 The Evening Standard said today Hermann Goering believes "possession of the atom bomb decides the future of the and the United States does not hold its lead in this field it will mean the extinction of the The No 2 Nazi and head of the former Luftwaffe who was one of 12 German leaders sentenced to death for war also believes Prime Minister Stalin was the most outstanding of Allied war leaders including Prime Minis ter Churchill and President Rooee velt it said views the Standard reported were expressed in a question and answer interview given the condemned cell where he sits waiting for The standard did not specify when the interview was obtained The newspaper account contin ued: Asked where he thought he stood in the opinion of the Ger man people today and where he would stand 20 years hence Gder ingjtpliedi present there jsmo such thing as a and therefore there cannot exist an of the German presume some will curse me as there is no possibility for objective opinion years hence if a Ger man people still exist then it will judge me and my endeavors Asked of Germany in the next years accept a system closely approach ing the Russian one? the Stan dard said Goering replied: does not depend on the German people but on the true intentions of the Anglo American states and their willingness to stand up for their own Goering refused to answer when asked: did you impose your influence noticeable to all observ ers of this trial on your co de endants and their you think this has been a fair the Standard asked answer this Goer ing countered would have to be determined what means As things are the court could not be objective as the trial was a political one One really could not say that all the possibilities of defense were at my did you the Standard asked it not have been more fitting to have sought death in action the same death that up till the last minute you demand ed that the German people and armies have shirked death neither in this war or the the for mer No 2 Nazi answered gave myself into the power of the Al lies because considered this to be for German inter by doing so was it pos sible to present matter's from a really responsible position the uehrer having vanished through suicide should like to stress that I consider it right that (he uehrer chose to commit sui cide" In each reference to sui cide Goering used the polite meaning "free rather than the common meaning odif Situation Is ReaUfrBad Solon Declares at KANSAS CITY Oct 2 U7 Rep Thomas A Jenkins (R Ohio) chairman of the Republi can congressional food survey committee laid today the food situation is "little short of a na tional Hero to conduct a hearing into the meat shortage tomorrow Jenkins slid the committee had met a "rising tide of resentment against the OPA food controls from ths housewives and the pro ducers" The group held the first of its three Mid west hearings yester day at Sioux City la "The American he said "has been compelled to un dergo burilens which were un necessary and unbearable The food situation today is worse than it ever has been and little short of a national 29 REPORTED IN ATAL CRASH County Teachers To Hear Tulsan Speak Saturday Dave Temple principal of Irving school in Tulsa will deliver the address at a meeting of the Ottawa County Teachers associa tion scheduled for 9:45 a Sat urday at the high school auditorium here Music will be furnished by the Miami high school band under di rection of Claud Killion During the business session re ports on finances and resolutions will be read Officers for the 1946 47 school year will be elected HULL REMAINS SERIOUSLY ILL Navy Dept Reports Condition Of Ex Official 'Euen tialfy Unchanged' Negotiations Continued To Bring Quick Settlement of Dispute Crippling Industry WASHINGTON Oct 2 (AP) Conciliation Director Edgar Warren said today that all parties in the mari time strike negotiations here were being called in "to try to drive home a Warren talked to reporters after morning discussions between the unions involved and the ship owners He was asked whether the situation was such that an immediate settlement was possible He replied I am an but he added that he saw no need for further adjournments in the negotiations Continuous negotiations begin ning at 1 thus appeared to hold an answer to a prompt end of the strike Prospects of settlement brightened after the Maritime commission moved in on the strike A commission official said the agency had Bet forth its labor views in the dispute and that there was a for an early settlement The commission had not yet made a public announcement of its attitude But AL and CIO union leaders said a typewritten state ment of the policy was circulated at a negotiating ses sion late last night Government officials who asked not to be iden tified said the same thing The union men told reporters that the commission gave assur ance it would enforce on all gov ernment owned vessels any changes in working conditions agreed upon by east coast ship owners and the two unions which represent captains mates and engine room officers The main stumbling block in the dispute has been the refusal of Pacific coast shipowners to go as far as the eastern companies in meeting demands for more Warren would not comment on the maritime report ed intervention excep to say he was "very hopeful" an agreement on all points could be reached soon More negotiations were set for today at the Labor department be tween the shipowners and the CIO Marine and the AL Masters Mates and the two seafaring unions involved in the nation wide walkout which be gan yesterday CIO Longshoremen striking on the West coast were reported to be near agreement with their em ployers at San rancisco Parties to the Washington pro ceedings believe that if the ship walkout can be settled the longshoremen also will end their strike and the maritime industry may live in peace until next sum mer GqriiTgJHis i Pa Wnn ri vK'hVTHOMAR'AREEDY Nuernberg Germanyoct 2 Lawycrr for the 11 icon damned German jE war criminals disclosed today they planned to 'appeal tof the Allied control coun yciUte change the death sentences y'from hanging to shooting if 11 other pjeaa for clemency failed The last court of tesort for Here aVSteUSWybentrop and the otherj from the ignominy of the rope 'Vwas formed of the four Allied gen MtUug in Berlin aa occupy tion authorities for the four zones Germany A twelfth German Bormann was sentenced In absentia to be hanged attorneys drew their peti r' tions the fopr power tpmalteion representing the held an all day session oq ar rangements and details for the executions Oct in Nuernberg owe the festival the partyTheytalked glso of' transporting seven of the'waf criminals toRerilnJo start their prison term A redoubled force of American soldier guards Surrounded the an cient courthouse and jail whew the convicted meh were held sand theyhad orders to shoot toTdll tm provo cation All three men in the history making international' trial which established planning aggres sive Avar as a supreme 'erime re mained in jail overnight TJiey had no other place to go immediately Hjalmer Schacht the truculenWor mer finwice minister planned to remain in jail at Jeast another night saying he had no money ration card nor home 1 rans Von Papeh ajked for viqa to the rench zone in which he has two castles near the Rhine Hans ritsche may have to return to the1 Russian sone whence he gajpg for trim as a prisoner of war German for ield Mar shal Wilhelm Keitel and Col Gen Alfred Jod) both relegated to the gallows led the legal staff in mak ing appeals for clemency and for shooting rather than the rope if mercy is denied The doomed militarists were re ported making a special request for firing squad which they consid ered a more honorable death for a soldier A lawyer for ritz Sauckel con demned labor leader attached to (Continued on Page Two) Three Nazis who Avon full acquittal Jri the Nuernberg 'war crimes trials in NnarehTtiro'nrt with that thevdon't want fne nic iures made This photo was made ip the courtroom after they heard' the words which meant' their freedomYLeftAo right: ritzsche rdnz von: Pappen and DrHjalmarSchact (N'EA Radiophoto) 35 4 4 a a a iv a BSAn ur a a si i vk i i i i a a wr wr rw a rv airms aw ft WiJiTnir Auiaii CORD Jills? sm as rtve "CMTO 'J ar JM fr 1 1 i Ir a UK iWW JAs Vf rt i JOa A 4 1 Si 4 4 rs Mr W'b 1 iAO41 Jl if fl rig lfl 4S.

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About Miami News-Record Archive

Pages Available:
150,656
Years Available:
1923-1969