WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1932 Lewis Says WSB Stealing Milk From Miners' Babies WASHINGTON, Oct. 21 (/P) John L. Lewis, rebuffing a plea that he order 322,000 striking soft coal miners back to work, today accused the Wage Stabilization Board of try ing ‘to steal “milk money” from • miners’ babies. This indicated a possibly prolonged strike over the board’s decision to slice 40 ROKs Hurl Reds Back In Rainstorm SEOUL, Wednesday, Oct. 22 (JP) —South Korean troops in a pelt ing rain hurled back an hour long attack by about ' 1500, Chinese Communists Tuesday night oh the slippery, muddy slopes of Sniper Ridge. The Reds charged through fog and rain soon' after nightfall in a renewed effort to force South Korean Second Division troops from the important Central Front position. Heavy Communist artil lery and mortar fire accompanied the assault. By 8:40 p.m. a hail of Allied rule, machine gun and.mortar fire forced the Chinese to withdraw frontline dispatches said. . The Communists were “slither mg around up .there in the dark,” an Allied. officer said, but the slope leading to Pinpoint Hill, ma lor South Korean stronghold on “ho i*ihge, was too slippery for the ■tieas to climb. Ridge RedS attacked onl y Sniper U \ S ‘ Seventh Division troops on nearby Triangle Hill, north of Kumwha, reported their positions were very quiet.” In the past week when the Reds hit oni of the two Central Front hills, they also attacked the other, a weather also hindered' bouth Korean attacks on Iron Horse Mountain, less than 20 miles west of the Sniper Ridge action President to Travel Through County Today President Harry S. Truman will pass through Centre County to day, but he is not expected to make any speeches. The presidential train will pass through Lock Haven, How ?,i-,^ llesburg > Unionville, Port Matilda, and Tyrone. 'Godless Communism' H By Ike in Boston Speech BOSTON, Oct. 21 (JP) Gen.' Dwight D. Eisenhower blasted “godless communism” today as a terrible danger that must be re pulsed and emphasised that his ideas on the Soviets were “not of the Yalta or Potsdam kind.” gave this backhand slap to the Democratic administration record in addressing a huge crowd on the Common in predominantly Irish Catholic and anti-Commu mst Boston. ' Eisenhower said his reasons for opposing - communism were not theoretical. They are not based just on reading books by Marx and Lenin and Stalin," he said. “They were reinforced by some first hand ex periences with communism and Communists . . greatest outpourings of his entire campaign roared a welcome to Eisenhower here a police -estimated throncr rangina from 50,000 to 100,000 persons ' Afterward, Eisenhower went on to Cambridge and another large turnout, and to Harvard Square where yelling Harvard students descended on him with such en thusiasm and energy that euardc couldn’t hold them back ® People lined the Boston .streets from curbs to storefronts as the Republican presidential candidate waved from an open car during his journey from. North Station to .Boston Common. Eisenhower came into this pre dominantly Irish-Ctholic city after cents off the $1.90 daily wage increase provided in a contract Lewis recently obtained from the operators. The board held that the increase was.in violation of the government’s anti-inflation rules. Replying to the operators’ re quest that he end the walkout, Lewis declared the men would work when they get the full $1.90. ' A- total 0f'322,000 of. them were idle today, and the coal carrying railroads began to lay off hun dreds of their employees. How ever,-the nation as a whole won’t feel the squeeze for some time, since in genera] the supply of already mined coal is sufficient to last ten weeks or so. Board Called Ruffians The Lewis attack on the WSB came in a letter „o Harry M. Moses, president of the Bitumi nous Coal Operators Association who had made the back to work request. Lewis ridiculed wage board Chairman Archibald Cox as a “little. Harvard professor” and accused him of “contemptible ac tion.” Lewis said that Cox, three other public members of the board and four industry’ members whom he called “ruffians” representing the National Association of Manufac turers, formed a “cabal to steal 40 cents a day from each mine worker.” Negotiations Out .. There had been some talk that if Lewis and the industry wanted to they might legally renegotiate their contract in such a way that the 40 cents could be paid to the miners in “fringe” benefits such as increased- vacation pay? . B ut today’s letter with its fight ing words appeared to rule that out. . Lewis told Moses, the. operators’ spokesman; “We have a contract. We expect your cdmpliance with its provisions. Miners will work when you honor its provisions. , , .you do not like the con temptible action of the NAM labor baiters and the little Har vard professor and his quavering trio, appeal and ask for review and reversal. You are the sole petitioner and plaintiff.” angrily charging the Truman ad ministration with falsely accusing him of anti-Catholicism and anti semitism. The Boston crowd broke into Eisenhower’s, speech with ap plause time and again. When he .- a ? on . e point he was not a politician m the common sense, a man yelled: “That’s why we want you.” As he attacked “godless communism” as a terrible menace that must «£?P ulsed > another man shouted: AmSsanf- riCa back to the How Many > Pumpkin Seeds in Cinderella’s Slipper Win a Free Ticket to the Jr. Prom Highlite of Junior Class Week Nov. 12 - 16 "I'iliE DAILY COLLLCiIAN, STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA WEDNESDAY, OCT. 22. 1952 Gen. Dwight D, Eisenhower will fly from New York to Hartford* Conn., for a speech on capitol steps and then go by train to Springfield and Pittsfield, Mass., and to Albany, N.Y., for a night speech. Gov. -Adlai Stevenson will speak on the Noire Dame cam pus at South Bend. Ind., and then go by train to Elkhart, Ind., Toledo and Sandusky, Ohio, and Buffalo, N.Y. for night speech. Sen. Richard Nixon will campaign in lowa. Sen. John Sparkman is rest ing at Beihesda, Md.. Naval Hospital under treatment for cold. President Truman will speak from Pittsburgh, Pa. Red Delegates Rebuffed in UN ■ UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct. 2-1 (JP) The United States, and the Western majority rebuffed attempts by Russia to have ' sc i 9 h L?a and North Korea take nart m UN General Assembly de bate on g e r m warfare charges against the U.S: . Disregarding repeated aries by Soviet Delegate Andrei A Grom vko that the U.S. was taking a cowardlv” attitude, the assem bly voted 46 to five Soviet bloc against a Russian proposal to dis pateh invitations immediately to the non " rrlem bers of Earlier in the day. U.S. Ambas sdor Ernest .A. Gross, succeeded m choking off debate on the pro nosed invitations in the Steering !r° mn ?. ltte e- contending that the 60 nation Political Committee was the place .to talk about such a move. * Convict Soaped In Prison Slip SUNBURY, Pa., Oct. 21 (JP)~ 'r.frc is only five and seven eighths inches between the bars m the cell in Northumberland County Prison, but last night a slim Shamokin man soaped his donf and slipped trough to free- Prison officials said they found soap on the bars of the cell’s win dow but didn t find Stanley Pitch tho I w Wariiei !/' c ! :01 ' Angeli said the 32-year-old Pitchuskie went through the space-between the rUn cross - wise °n the r'^£ riso l ? er in a neighboring cell, wf g £-'rf ?ga r t -, of Northumber and, tried a similar break but got stuck. His groans attracted foe 90* mim? ° f a guard. It took about S Y Angeli said, to free Bogart by chiseling away the ma sonry to shift the iteel bar The tavern ITALIAN SPAGHETTI MEAT SAUCE . VEAL CUTLET . PARMIGIANNE 'GRILLED HAMBURG STEAK MIXED SEAFOOD PLATTER PRIME SIRLOIN STEAKS Political News py the Associated Press Truman Attacks Ike Before Pa. Crowds ■ E . N ROUTE WITH TRUMAN, Oct. 21 (ff)—President Truman, drawing some of the biggest crowds of his career, blasted Dwight D: Eisenhower across New Jersey and Pennsylvania today in an all out .drive to capture the working man’s vote for Adlai E. Stevenson. He wound up an exhausting day with a Pottsville, Pa., speech declaring it is a “dead sure cinch” that the Republicans will wipe out all price and rent controls if they get into office in the Nov. 4 election Truman was mad, and he frank ly acknowledged that Eisenhower was getting under - his skin with talk of “Democratic high prices.” He moved into the hard coal with a free swinging counterattack on Republicans in Congress who voted against his controls proposals. He said Eisenhower is singing a different tune on major issues in various parts of the country—is handing out “the fanciest brand of double talk I have ever heard.” Then at Pottsville, Pa., the President picked up the high price issue and aimed it back at the Eisenhower camp. He said he has fought constantly to keep prices down. He said it is the Republicans who “drove the knife into the back of the con sumer” by sabotaging one price control measure after another. As for Eisenhower’s blaming high prices on the Democrats, Truman said: You can draw your own con clusions about the Republican candidate. Either he’s completely uninformed on economics and on his party’s record in Congress or he’s indulging in the sheerest hy pocrisy.” If you elect, Democrats,” Tru man said at Pottsville, “the Demo cratic party will continue to worry a h°ut the 99 per cent of the peo pielJrhe 1 per cent w hl take care of themselves as usual. . And we’ll continue to have full employment and full- prosperity for the whole country.” Truman, who left his campaign train at Jersey City, N.J., and motored through New Jersey and into Pennsylvania on behalf of .Cov. Adlai E. Stevenson and the Democratic ticket, aimed most of f:ire at. Eisenhower. like . Bricker in Ohio, like McCarthy iri Wisconsin and , like Dewey in New York,” the President said, referring to Ohio ben. John Bricker and Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy as well as to the New York governor. All three are Republicans. Final 'Varieties' Tryouts Tonight is the last night for tryouts tor “Junior Varieties” class talent show, Betsy I b ei gI er . co-chairman.. of the talent show committee, has an nounced. Tryouts will.be held at 7 p.m. m 100 Carnegie. Miss Seig ler urged juniors to support the s s?w because it will be the kick off for activities of the iunior class weekend, Nov. 12 to 15 HUNTING LICENSES We Are Running A SALE I on Odd Lots of BOOTS and JACKETS A Common Expression in Town and on Campos You Cah Oof It at METZGERS 111-115 S. Allen NE Storm Hits Florida; Three Lost MIAMI, Fla., Oct. 21 (/P)—One of the worst northeast storms in .years swept Florida today, sink ing three vessels and leaving many others in distress. At least three lives were reported lost. Winds lashed Atlantic and Gulf waters into dangerous waves and the Weather Bureau urged small craft around the state to exercise extreme caution. More than four inches of rain tell in one section of the rich farming area around Lake Okee chobee, already saturated with recent rains. The St. Lucie Canal gates were opened to relieve flood conditions. Sea Farer Sinks ~ Coast Guard said three ri s h ermen apparentlv drowned when the 69 foot fishing vessel bea Farer went down off False Cape, near Cape Canaveral on the east coast. ti,f n T a u COn ?£ anying ' Ashing boat,- the John Wayne, saw the Sea mPJrf sink u the whitecaps. they searched for the crew with out success. One of Worst Storms , The Captain Alfred, a shrimp boat out of Ft. Myers on the west coast, sank off the Campeche fish ing banks near Mexico. The crew was removed by-the Katie, an other fishing boat. The Miami- Weather Bureau called the storm “one of the worst northeasters Florida has experi enced m recent' years.”( Strongest winds on the east coast were 45 to 50 miles per hour with gusts in the high 50’s. On the west coast the highest was around 35 to 40, with gusts some what higher. Clerrsson Group Studies College Ag Facilities Nineteen members of Clemson Agricultural College’s traveling agricultural building committee met with College officials Mon day to study facilities available for research and instruction in ag ricultural sciences. The committee arrived by. plane Sunday and left Tuesday to visit six other land grant institutions. Also PAGE THREE State College
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers