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The Evening Review from East Liverpool, Ohio • Page 1

Location:
East Liverpool, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I A I I II i-'inuh: Hiul i' sda' EAST LIVERPOOL REVIEW ni, unir n) Wellsuillc, Chester and HOME IO l.s r.MUJMlKH IN N- I OCTOIIKR THREE CENTS TWELVE PAGES President Directs T. S. BRUSH, 42, Efforts To Settle FORMER REVIEW Rail Wage Dispute MANAGER, DIES FORMER RESIDENT DIES Calls To Conference After Board Decides Carriers Should Withdraw Reduction LONG-RANGE PROGRAM OBJECTIVE OF PARLEY Secority Board Says Ohio Still loeligible To Get Pension Help Son Of Newspaper Publisher Succumbs To Long Illness At Tuscon, Ariz. By Tht Atsociaird Prfit. WASHINGTON.

On rrcsii- dint Ron.xi-vnlt innk I toilay uf to i I'fi i a pcacpful uf tin- iriiicai railroad uagc The eliii ixii piivi ealli li pre- tentative? of rail iiuinagemi-n! and labor to the White Ilun.se to uni- Mder long range program to id the Of immediate imiiortami. tiow- ever. wat the 1 pereeiii wa.c'e reduction ordered liy the roads for Dec. 1 and the tliiesjt of almost l.OOO.Ooü rail workers lu strike if he cut is carried The President's nn igi luy raii- road investigating hoarti recommended Saturday that the railiexids withdraw their notices of the reduction. which would lip tiOO annually from their jiayrolls.

Executives To Meet riefore the House confrr- eiiee there was no inditafion wheth- the roads woiilii aeei pt tlie rec- nmniendotion. A committee of 'he executives was asked to meet during the day. chairman, H. A. Enochs, said the wage qncs- lion probably would nirned ba( to th(' individual During a recess of this iiuaiiiig.

Enochs told newsmen he probably would be able to announce lati in the day the date of a meeting for members the a.s.sociafion in Chi(ago. to di.scus.s tiu' fact-finding boiird's recommendations. There were reports the meeting would be held early next wee'k. Enochs said that are all dis- with the report, "but we must give it calm and deliberate all law-abiding citizens and had this ease lieard liy a very hiarti of men." he said. Silent On Action Kiioehs dei'Iiued to predict what action railroads would lake.

He said he had received no eommuui- tations from any road indicoting whether it would reject the proposals. The report to the President said the board had exerted every effort lo bring about a sotilement of wage dispute without success. It held that no wage reUnction was justiffsd because railroad salaries were not higlirr than those in other industries and because financial distress of the carrieis tar a slion-ierm" prob- iem The iioard suggested that rep- ipsentatives of the government, the carriers and the public set down together to work out "an adequate. national transponaflou policy." It offered no specific legi.sla- I ion. In New T'ork.

executives said the administration might grant the (arrier.s of rehabilitation loans, which could be le- paid on easy terms, here said, however, tin railroads most in need of such loans might have considerable difficulty obtaining the intersiate commerce I 1 approva! required by existing law vast lending w.i- (ii- Hy Ttir ASHINGTUN. Oct. .11 The social security board said to- it was unable to find, in effect, that Ohio was eotnplying with Its and therefore was ineligible to reeeivi' federal fuud.s for old age III a ineiii wliieh also was addn sse i to an iai eom- inittei of the (-bio icgislalnre. the board "The lioard is uiialile to make a finding that tlieri' is no longer a failure to with the provisions of the social act which finding is neees.sary laToro the board can a grant to the secretary of trea.sury. The board had withheld an 0 tuber grant of federal funds for old age for lllnno p( rsons in Dliio after finding iliere administrative defieieiules in the division of aid for the aged.

Needless BoRixl officials said a communication had lieen received from an unofficial eonimiltei of Hie (Uiio inquiring as to the prospect of roiiewal grant to the state. In its liK liuaid said it ngrets tin needless suffering caused tin- failure of the Ohio divi.sion of aid for the aged to furnisli information iieces- sary for the social security board to make a finding. The boaixl's stutement lollows: In September immediately after Mr. Wray Bi vens was appointed chief of the division of aid for aged, the board scut Us representative. Robert C.

G( km 1- win, to rail upon him to offer ro. Thomas Brush, former circulation director of Hrush-Moon Newspapi r. Inc. and former bnsi- nes.s manager of the Ea.si Hlverpoul Review, (in at 7:20 Sunday ni.i at Tiiseon. after an illne.s.«? dating from He was 42 old.

Mr. Brush was the son of and Louis Brush of Salem. His father is pn'sbb iit of tuib- lisbiiig (orporal ion, Wlnm Mr, Bru.s|i ('iicounteit failing health he went troiu Caiifon to tfar'aliae. N. ilnn lo Di.igoun and a year ago to Tu-ion.

Kuneral services win he at 2 p. at tin- church in R. v. c. Smith will liHVt h-irge.

Burial will he Grandview eeineii'iy in Salem. Body To Arrive Wednesday The body, sent today from Tus- eon, will reach Salem Wedm sday night Mr. Brush was horn 12. 1806 at Salem. He rt'etqved his al ly i DAVEYPONDERS FCC Launches Investigation PLEAS TO ZkVV After Radio Fantasy Of War STRIKERIILITIA5prearfs Hysteria Over U.

S. THOMAS STEWART BRUSH In Death eshurt 8 DRIVERS JAILED 12 Killed In State Mishaps, Including Air Accident Middletown Requests Guard Requests Sponsors As Clash Menace Looms jq Furnish Transcription In Plant Reopening of StarWing Broadcast; Six W(ie buri slightly in a sei- of trafiie in East iiiify ov( i week end. I i agcncit rt ported edmatlon in piihlie schools at Sa hrlvers. three of lern and tlien enrolled at IMiillijis AndoM'f aiademy at Graduating in 1 6 he went to the University of Miehigan and left in to lor student offi( cr.s’ training at the Gk at Lakes traiiifng station at I'hUago. After the war hq to Salt and in Deeetnher of Ihls hi' came to East Liverpool.

Two vears latt'f lie heeanu' a.vsoeiateil witli his fatlo in the niaiiagemein of tlie Liverpool Review iud the East rpool TrihuiK now merg'd. at Andovir, In met Miss Kafhanii' Jiigliani and on 20. 1920. they were niarrieU. Lived Here Eight Years They lived in East tor whom iiivohed in aceident-s.

An aii jilane (rasli and traffic aeeiil' Ills hioimht deaih to 12 Ohioans over he Vt eelv end. I'Mdit I'l liz Robert Black. of the aiea. were slightly hurt wlnii fheii ar.i collided larly le.day in tlie log while oil roiiK 61 niilcR east of Lis- lion I hi' (ar- wi it liadl.v dam- Ug((l. Iltottll ol Raveiiswood, liiud 81(10 jiinl costs uii drunken driving by Mayor G.

Rauch of Lislioii atief hi.s ear overturned early nio.rning on the Sa- lem-Lishoii rd Companion Injured anipanioii, Roy Williams. vva.s the picket line," Fulfhr said, cut about the lata Th. driver B.v COLl MBUS. Oct. 31 Gov Martin L.

Dnvey, whose guherna torlal eaioer has been punctuated with critical labor strife Issues, weighed today a persoual, dramatic appeal from Middletown officials for national guardsmen to prot'M't reopening of the atrlke-houiid P. Lorillard tobacco plant. falling upon the governor at tht' exeentlvc mansion, the Middletown pleaded Sunday night for mllitarv aid to prevent violent clash wlileh. they impended between aroused citizens and of the pioneer tobacco workers. CIO affiliate which tailed the strike (At 1 fity Manager Walter Braun told the governor in a conference that lasted until midnight that several hundred Middletown citizens had volunteered for emergency police duty in reopening the plant which normally employes persons at a weekly payroll of 130.000.

CIO To Import Men The strikers represent only a fraetion of the plant's workers. Braiiii charging the fio plan ned to import hundreds and perhaps thousands of armed pickets to overcome the volunteer policemen. At fincinuati, Paul W. Fuller, director of the CIO. said Braun charges that pickets would be Imported was "too absurd to rc( "We have no intention of invading the place and not going to have people go there to increase (Turn To PENSION.

Page DURIAL LOT SALE VIOLATIONCITED Securities Leader Prepares Findings Against Firm I Turn To RAILS, 3 WARRANTS ISSUED Charges Made Against Girl, Husband And Mother Thr PrvNK. I'RESTONSBI RG. Ky (Jd. Floyd County Jiidse Edwin P. Hill today signed, wanants for Fleming Tackett.

14, liis (liild-hride. Rose, and Tackett's mother-in-law, Mrs. Grace Colurahus. The warrant against Tackett barged the miner with rape. Rose, who was reported as "under 14," in a second warrant was charged with lieing a delinquent child growing up in and crime.

Medi- (ai record.s in (ounty show Rose is years old. Mrs. CoIumbii.s was charged in the third warrant with conspiring with Tackett "in the crime of rape upon the person of Rosie Columbus." Judge llili said officer.s went to the Tackett cabin in the hills near here early today hut found no one Hill said the Tacketts and Columbus were reported to have gone to Paintsvllie in adjoining lohnsoii county and that Floyd jounty officers bad taken the warrants there. County Attorney Forre.st p. Short arlier had said a guardian for iiofic.

a bride of a week, would be I sought. By The tlcl, 'H thai officer: and of Kor- esi Glen. Im a (xuie developiiicnt firm vioialerl stat. statutes ihc of burial plots were prepared today by Han 1 secure tic.s liicf. In a ln-pag( diHUineiit.

Moore charged -pcdfic violations in ihe of proinissury noK via! agreements wiili nop niiu contracts for Jury To Get Findings Tilt se findings are h(mg red to the Franklin eminty piose- eutor 01 grand jury and (liininal action," asserted. takrii in our investigation of Forci'i Gien, Inc. lias indi( ated violatiun.s in Krauklin and at le.ist five other eountii We plan to uur policy III Momgonieiy, Craw told and Delaware will return similar in (aih of them it the cvi- df lice warraui-, charged that notes issUf'd to purchasers of cemetery p- reseincd a ''promise by the torpor atioii to pay a specified sum of money at a eertaiii date, with 6 percent x. "The fact th.at th(' notes in aeh instance werr acconipanitMl by an application fur the of ttcmeteryi set tions. to this to ho a subterfuge so as to give the impression tiiat the actually wei'' being lo the purchaser.

li is nut the actual fact. The divi.sion finds Dial ilitsc not's shuiild have htcii reg- i.stered by (jualificatioti x. Hit Hitting at "special agreements" which he said were to as.sure lot pureha.sors not only iutercsf. but a substantial increase on ital contribution. M'lorc asserted: "The division further finds that the manipulation of the cemetery lots in what appears to he no more than an investment contract is an attempt to evade the provisions of the Ohio securities act Testimony from Robert Marshall of Marion, vice president of Forest Glen, former salesmen of the firm and customers was taken at hearings which opened Oct 11.

Moore said other customers would be interviewed when the investigation is resumed Thursday in Marion. penalty in the event of conviction for violatipn.s listed. Moore said, was five imprisonment and a fine of on each count. ahdiit ight years and il wa.s liere niiliiiri, Offlcers Gole and Howard llessingi ut Salem stai'- pairui harracks. Dowell, vvho vvas lieR) lh(' jail ili lieti ut liis fine And' uf EaM iwiul (I and custs today in 111 11 II i(i pai court un charges of driving whilr iiitoxieati'd, aiul driver', li'i-u-, sirspi-ndeq for 90 il.

w.is aiiCHied un Fifth le. Ollieers and I r( Uofger. Hwmin SJiapii-o nf was trcatcd l'or lacerations Suo- day in City hospital hillowing an accideiit on route 7 in wliieh bis car loft road and a fencc as ho f(. -iq colliding ilh aiiother car. William ot was io apji.ar in muniefp.i! court that their only son.

Tlioma.s Stewart Brnsh. horn Feb. 1. 1922. Brush was a iiicmitei ol liie East LiV( rtK)ol Country dub and was affiliated with Masonic and Elks lodges, the ricoii gioii.

th( liotary duh, Kiieke.ve club, the Gliamhej (if (lid St. Steplien'h Episcopal diiirdi. In 1926. they went lo New York. Brush to join the York Herald einiulatKtii ment and Mrs.

Brush to develop her talent as an author under the pen name of Katharine Brush. divorced In 1929. Their son. now IG. reside.H in with hi- mother Went To Canton In 1928 Brush went to Canton in 1928 when the headquai ler.s of Brush- Moore Inc vvas slab- lished there.

He took (harge of the Canton Repo.sitory circulation and al.so directed tin The present picket line is made up of Middletown residents, he said, and included no outsiders. "All fighting for is for the Lorillard company to comply with the Wagner act, FYiller added. Sam a CIO union organizer, filed with the national labor relations board at Cincinnati Saturday charges that the com panv violated the Wagner act on the grounds that Lorillard offtctAls iostered a company union. £Uk)tt Uevey, ney for the Independent Employes association, asked the company to resume operations. "It is In the pay and employment of the I Braun fold Davey he was inform- I ed the CIO unit demanded a closed shop, seniority rights and a check(Off dues system, then called a strike before New York officials of afiurtiuiiii nil hargf-f: uf ifckle.sfi the company could reply.

H. vv.is The company, he continued, will ly ,,,) (uii, remove operations of its Middle- jlulic- 'liu. Aiiki im struck, town plant to other factories rather (lefmrtnicnts newspapers in East Livcrpuol. Halcm, Slenhenville Marion and Portsmouth, In 19H1. Brush and Kiur- ence Taylor were married at Salem and tliereaftcr maintained their re.sidence in Canton until Briisir.s liealth forced him to retire from active work Mr.

immediate Hurvivurs are his father and mother, widow, his son. Thumas Stewart Brush Jr. of New York; liis Turn To BRCSIL Page in) WA6E11 HOUR UW AIDS SEUP OFFICES 22 Men And Women Launch Duties As Inspectors driv.n by Mnih-n of than atleiiipt to reopen In the face Clair threatened trouble, unless ade- qiiate protection were guaranteed i for returning Seek To Save Rayroll We are trying to sarve that imo weekly payroll for Middle said Braun, "and the community is aroused Gov. Davey, sent troops to Ohio steel making seetlons in 1937 when he was Informed CIO strikers were intimidating a majority of the workers who wanted to resume their jobs, gave no Immediate answer to the Middletown officals. He recelv'ed also reports from Gen.

Gilson D. Light and Brig. Gen. Frank D. Henderson, national guard observers who were sent to Middletown last week after city officials to Adj.

Gen. Emll Marx for military assistance. The governor indicated might l5oiir decision late today or tomorrow. Braun at the con- I a cal oiic wa liiirl, 2 Hurt Ncar Chestei lii and huk 10 iwo iiijijiud III auci- Fru.l Hutty i Va 11 (' iv ((1 tiijiii les lu bis h.o and Mi- aruljii' Hav-uii of Hvria -ii-laiiHal alid lacera-, tioiis iii ln ul-uii cullif-iun OH rulllu ul' hu.Mtur af p. III.

I A cuiipi (ii u. II coilidi'd wiili a drivan hy F. L. Cupcland of Itaitlu Crcrlv, Ir. III vvhich Ifuiiy wa? a OH a iirvi- iii ir hihc giovc.

Tile impiic! liiri'W iln- dan a hiiiall (-mhiiHkmciit. Th' uei'u lakcn ihc offi'c uf .1 K. Hall in i- for P' iiH-ylvania 1 iH'i Wcru IH.K dam.tiH'd Craven Urges Caution REPEAT PERFORMANCE SOUGHT BY LISTENERS By The frsM. NXASHINOTON, Oct. 31 The icdcral communications commission licgan an Investigation of a dramatic radio broadcast which led some people lo heliove last night that men from had at- t.icked the United Slates.

Chairman Frank P. Mc.N’inch asked the Columbia Broadcasting System to furnish the commission with an elex'trloal transcription of the broadcast, a dramatized version of 11. imaginative story of the McNluch said: "Any broadcast that creates such general panic and fear as this one is reported to have done Is. to say Ihe least, Woman Liatanara Faint Some women listeners to the broadcast fainted. Others became hysterical.

Thousands believed the drama lo be authentic news re- T. A. M. Craven said, "the commission should pro- ('eed with great caution so as not to take any action which would Impede radio's being used for development of the dramatic arts. Warning against any attempt at "censoring what shall or shall not be said over the he added: do not believe isolated instances of poor service necessarily constitute grounds for the revocation of the license of a station.

This does not apply to criminal Craven said he agreed with that reports of last broadcast demonstrated the serious public respoDsIbllRy of broadcasters. Rspaat Parfermance Sought He added this thought: "The public not want a Bpincleas Station WSJV, the euUet for Cohimhla. said It lecelv- EaitLiverpoolTiines Families Flee Homes In East To Escape Horrible Death At Hands Of Mars Men In Realistic Recreation telopboM ealts today The Aksoriafrk WA.SHINGTHN. On. uf 22 men and vvoineii iiegaii estah- lislimein todav of tumpurary fices for I'liforcemeni of mliiimiim wages and maxiiiium liuiir regula- lioiHs fur iliu Tliey for tliu new wago-liour admiiiistratiuH, repuit- iiig directly lu Arthur Fletcher, iii eharge of cuopuratiuii and givun them hefurti for their posts in four temporary area.s mtu wliich mini.strator Elmer has the country.

iruludeiJ sug- gC.stioiHS they shouM esiahlisli offices in social board he.ui- quarters vvhere ixjssib)('. Tlu-i temporary and as-ign- nient.H ponding u.stah- lishment of 12 regional planned by included: Area Wa.sh- ington; We-t Virginia and Kentucky; W. Hahlherg. axting areti director, Wa.shingtoii. Area Chicago; Ohio.

Indiana and J. Libert, acting supervising inspector. Chicago; Cavanaugh, Detroit, and l.eo Fhck. nati. I At ri'ion a hv Aiiirn.Mii,- I.aiidrillo of Chester I '(Ollid'd vvi'h a (onpe chairman of the city com- IJolin J.

Kalil of Clevrlaiid he Roy poiir.e chief oi ner ot Third and Indiana ave. Uharles Walke, Butler county lit copnectloQ with the broadcast. Five out of six, said, wore requests that it be repeated io- nfght. None of the commuoicatinna com- miaalonera who commented had heard the program. Eugene cv expressed agreement with McNincb and Commisslopei Paul Walker said; Incident illuatrates the need for radio being in the hands of pcraonn with proper judgment, proper peiBpectlve of fitness of things in the fine aense of the qualitieg of hroadcaating pro- grama." Son.

Clyde L. Herring of Iowa said he planned to Introduce in congress a bill "coritrolling Just such abuses as was heard over the radio last night, radio bas no more right to present programs like that than someone has in knocking on your door and scream, he added, City Paul Trenton, N. near I bo localti of the fictional invasion, said he would demand an invcstigatirm by the fed- yal communications commission "with view of preventing recur- renco of what Liverpool radio listeners with others throughout the na lion, today were recoveiing from fright after a too realistlc broadcast Sunday night when "Martlana con- querevl New Jersey. liOCHl pi'ople In on tin "horrlhirt catastrophi' when of Mar.s the nation's euHteni listened as long as thdr nerves held out. then heslegrnl public agencies and the telephone ('om- pany for more Information or assurance.

mistook the program for news broadcast of actual warfare. East reuctioii wa.s mixture of relief and censure. Some took it as a and others said governmenf do something about it." Raady To Call Kin One worried woman was ready to put a long distance call to a relative in New Jersey. Another spent a sleeplesa night, worrying what daylight would bring. The phone firm was preparing to call out extra operators to handle Ihe deluge of calls from anxious Ilateiiors and it go so the operators simply said merely a raxHo play, be instead of going through formality of Inquiring Into the nature of the call.

hysteria apparently only gripped those who happened onto the program. Those who listened to broadcast in its entirety were toW four times by the announcer that it was lerely a play and not an actual happening. concluding comment to "suspect a Martian If someone rings your doorbell for a Halloween joke softened the (Turn To MARTIAN. Page 10) dridg IM ndes TOLLS TUESDAY New Schedule Brings Lower Rates For Local Users Tuesday at 12:01 the new toll rate schedule on ihfT Chester- East Livrtrpool bridge, recently qulred by the Ohio bridge commission, will go into effect, ibMiiging reduction local renl- dents and fending to the toll for through paeseugei car traf fic PHONE CALLS SWAMP POLICE AND STATIONS By CHARLES A. GRUMICi.

XxnorlNtrrt Staff Writer NEW YORK. Oct. 11 horrible fantasy of war waged mi the I'nited Hfate.s hy fearsome, apace- conquering men from Mars brought near panic to that jvart of the radio audienci' which was not tuned in last night on McCarthy's rival radio prtjgrani. In the donhle-qnick tempo of the iicwH iMdadcasters, the fiction of a program so real Istlc that hysteria prevailed among listeners throughout (he Lnited States and Canada. Deiiiatuls for investigation and correetloii came apace today with the belated reports of almost fantastic imnic.

Some apart ment in New York were emptied hurriedly by frantic listeners to program and by second and third hand accounts that multiplied the impending peril. Woman Attampta Suicida A woman In Pittsburgh tried suicide, saying "I'd rather dio this way than like At a high point iu the program the electric power failed at Concrete. a town of 1,000, and tho lights went out in most of tho homes. Many thought (he invaaion had reached west coaat. Women fainted and men prepared take their families to mountains Switchboards in newspaper offices and stations were swamped with from ter.

rifled people, many of them weeping. Some they could smell tho gas and sec Ihe started by the attackers. People gathered In groups to pray for aalratton. All over, tho area. Panicky persons lumped into tha fir opea BPacm to aaeipe the bfnf of hiew- York.

Church Diemitsd wl. up hy intruders wh- 1 1 worW was com- qiilch them ed feplii. they hal been 7. 'brightened and duped. The broadcast was an adaptation of Tl.

G. imagiuativo "War of the further dramatized. and enacted hy Orson Welles, rosHiiigs, Hif. 21 year-old Broadway Iheatrle- Welles Americanized The cash rates foi which will mainly transient al prodigy, traffic, follows; pa.ssenger autoino-! haale and situations, bile, 2.5 cents; li-ion truck. 25 dwhig (he program, 2i-toti truck, 50 cents; over in chcsK r.

dnvcr wa.s hnri. The rnrs wru datn- aged Clii'-r uf F'liivd Lyon.s iinidi no an iit'K inv estigaiioii. Tallioi, of the peoce, com iiiiu his drive again.si kh'ss weuk nd drivers hy filling om and cosis for driving while inloxieaK and another the for driving. Ray 01 was fined irberiff. A national labor relations board examitier ruled last summer that the do unit was the bargain- agent for the Lajrillard plant workers.

The company filed exceptions to findings and 1 those are pending before the board. Braun said that an employes as- s'Kdation of the plant, which has asked for a labor board election to determine the bargaining agent, (Turn To TRAFFIC. 10 To STRIKE, Page 10) Local Temperatures Kidnap Suspect Released ULC.MBL’S, Oct, 11 J. of the federal au of iu-; vestigatioti annouiKcd today re-, Iciifco of a transient hchl here since Oct. IS for questioning in f.

ni. tl. bunday mi.Jr.ight to-' Charles Mattson kidnaping at Ta-1 day 6 a m. 29. today noon 47 coma.

Wash. Smith said the imum 1 inaiini'im J'h precipi- ient's fingerprints wrrc those the kidnapers. Jam 41, Funday tj Out Of Town Shoppers Shop and Save In East Liverpool! FARES REFUNDED. Come any way you like railroad, street car. bua or your own automobile your fare will be refunded every Wednesday and Friday.

Condemned Man, Executed By Firing Squad, Aids Science With Heart Beat Recordings Convicted Slayer Participates Willingly In Experiment To Learn How Bullet Pierced Organ Functions tiy The 31 firing squad executed John W. Df-ering at dawn today in state prison while an electrocardiograph recorded probably for the first time the action of the human heart pierced by hulieiH Deering, who had in eveiy way to speed bis death and who participated wlllinglv in the scion- BlltTIUH SEND TNOPS INTO moro JAFFA 24-Hour Curfew Imposed In Extension Of Drive Bg TI AMoriaUS JERUSALEM. Oct. battalion of British troops today was sent into Jaffa, largest purely Arab town In Palestine, in Britain's conti'nu- ing intensive drive to quell Arab insurrectinn against her rule in the Holy Land. With the ancient port under a pall of smoke from a lumber yaid blaze believed to have been caused by incendiaries, officials had imposed a 24-bour curfew before the arflval.

Soldiers immediately cordon off the city and began gystema searches as the curfew force and all In and out of the riot-ridden city ceased. Jaffa, with a population of about 50,000, has been In turmoil moro than two months and at least 500 Arab insurgents are believed to have it their headquarters. Banks, port officials, railroad station and the freight depot have been robbed. ontd naie into tific fxpcnnu-ni to d'tirrnine how- long his heart would heat after being Htriu was alm to the end. The five men' firing was given order to fire at fi.46 a.

mountain Btaiidard tinif- and at a. in, iKeriijg was pronounced dead 111 expiation for th. 9 holdup murder of Oliver R. Salt I jh City businessman. TjKre were ominous louds against thr pale skv the moun- from his celt block and strapped in his chair against a prison wall.

Electric wires were attached to his wrists and tarried to a delicate machine his last heart beats. Scientists began an immediate study of record but said it would be a number of hours before they could announce any findings. Utah is the only state in the union now' using a firing squad. as Deenng was led q'lickly 1 (Turn To PRISONER, Page COUNCIL GETS FINANCE PLAN ON POOL TONIGHT of council will meet in special session tonight for the purpose of voting on legislation financing the $38,500 share of the proposed $70,000 PWA swimming pool project. Following invitation of location in Thompson Park by members of the park commission Wedoeaday, the body is expected to pass a resolution naming the park aa site for the pool.

24-fon (ruck, 75 cents; two-wheel trailer, 25 four-wheel trailer, 50 cents; husscH II bicycle, ped- CHlrlan or moforcycle. 5 ceiifs. and ml elhaneous heavy cqnlpinent up to 20 loiiK gross weight. $2. Passengers Not Charged There is no harge for pas.xcn- geiH in any of these Prepaid dcbigned lor local traffic and u.sors of tho bridge, will he sold at the following rate.s: automobiles, 25 tlckots for 12: IJton trucks.

25 for 15; ton trucks. 25 for $10; over 2J-ton trutks, $15; two-wheel trailers, 25 for four-whefd trailer 25 for 110; bicycle, or motorcyele. 60 for $1,30, jind busses 100 for $80. Bus lines making morti than 2000 average crossings a month will pay at tho of $250 a month. All prepaid tickets will gootl for one year from the date of issuance, and thereafter become void.

Tickets will 1)(; at the toll house oil the Fiist Livorpfml end of the where they will go on tomorrow morning. All tickets purchased prior lo Tuesday will be good for crossings over the bridge until used. No chargo for extra passengers in autos or trucks will be to users of these tickets. LfvestJck Classified Horse drawn vehicles or a horse and rider will be considered in the class as automobiles and accordingly. Livestock will be considered lu the same class as pedestrians.

Heavier than ibat allowed In the toll schedule will not bo permitted on the bridge without written permission of bridge manager. The new schedule was adopted after completion of a survey by Robinson and Steinmau, consulting engineers of New 'York. Bridge commission members estimate the change will increase the yearly revenue between $40.000 and $50,000 to an approximate aggregate of $300,000. CILS pointed out. tho announcer sfrcsRod that the story was nothing hut fiction.

ThLs coinfortinK reiteration either escaped nuiny of those who tuned in for the full program or was lost to part-time list- cners or late for It failed lo prevent a hysteria unknown td the United since the World war. Welles, who thcati'r ocularly last hy portra.ving a Caesar in modern dress with Fas- cIsMeaninga, wa.s overcome by tha unbplievablo reaction to his tutlon of the Wi lls turned horrlffei. In a statemeiit expressing "deep over ajiprehension caused among radio listeners, Welles said: "Far from expecting the radio-au- to take program as fact mther than a fictional presentation, we feared that the classic II. Weils stoiy. which has served as inspiration for many moving pictures, radio and even comic: strliM), might, apjicar too old- fashioned for modern consuniption.

Special Bulletin stirs Nation "We can only that siioclal nature of radio, which often heard iu fragments, or in parts disconi.cctcd from the whole, has led to this the acKfr-dramatist added. The Theater of tho Air program started out last night in routine fashion with announcements and a few bars of music. Suddenly "We interrupt our program of dance music to bring you a special bulletin, Twenty minutes before eight. Far- Fire Sweeps ScKools TOLEDO, Oct. be- llcvcd of incendiary origin, caused damage eatimated by Fire Chief Louis Leonard at $75.000 to St.

John Catholic High school snd Franklin public school in Delphoe, early today. (Turn To Page 10) TORN LIGAMENT PUTS GOLDBERG IN HOSPITAL By Auaciatcrf Prcii. PITTSBURGH. Oct. Goldberg, great fullback who two against the Fordham Rams Saturday, lay in a hospital today with a torn ligament.

Pitt authorities said they did not believe the injury serious but would not venture an opinion whether an AU-Americaii halfback, of last season, would be in condition to play in the Carnegie Tech game next Saturday. He was hurt in the final play of the first quarter Saturday, but stayed in the game until near the end..

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About The Evening Review Archive

Pages Available:
381,489
Years Available:
1885-1977