SATURDAY. OCTOBER 1. 1955 No Trouble Seen By Ike Cabinet WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 ( JP ) —President Eisenhower’s Cabinet, “greatly cheered” by his pro gress toward recovery, said today the government should run smoothly while he is away. A formal statement, issued after a White House meeting presided over by Vice President Nixon, said: “After a full discussion of pending matters, it was concluded that there are no obstacles to the orderly and uninterrupted con duct of the foreign ana domestic affairs of the nation during the period of rest ordered by the President’s physicians. Policies Are Well-Known “The policies and programs of the administration as determined and approved by the President are well-established along defi nite lines and are well-known. “Coordination of the activities of . the several departments of the government within the frame work of these policies will be con tinued by full cooperation among the responsible officers of these departments so that the functions of the government will be carried forward in an effective manner during the absence of the Presi dent, ” Kidnappers Of Till Boy Free on Bail GREENWOOD, Miss., Sept. 30 (&)■ —Two white men accused of kidnaping Emmet Louis Till, 14, walked free on bond today a week after they were acquitted of slay ing the Chicago Negro. County Judge Charles Pollard bound Roy Bryant, 24, and his half-brother, John w.. Milam, 36, over to the Leflore County grand jury and set bond at $lO,OOO each. ' The two waived preliminary hearing. The grand jury meets Nov. 7.. Men Found Innocent A Tallahatchie County grand jury last Friday found the two men innocent of slaying Till who was taken Aug. 28 from the sharecropper shack of his uncle, Mose Wright, on a plantation near Money, Miss., a small community near Greenwood. A body taken from the Talla hatchie River Aug. 31 was .identi fied as Till’s by his mother, Mrs. Mamie Bradley of Chicago, and Wright. Body Appeared Older The defense, however, intro duced witnesses at the murder trial who testified the body ap peared to be that of an older per son and showed signs of having been in the water from eight to 25 days. The Tallahatchie jury returned its acquittal verdict after 67 min utes deliberation. Two Leflore County s officers testified Bryant and Milam ad mitted taking Till from Wright’s house but said they released him after Mrs. Bryant told them Till was not the Negro who allegedly wolf-whistled and made indecent proposals to her. Meanwhile/ Negroes in Detroit held a 24-hour mass meeting to protest the acquittal of Bryant and Milam. Bad Check Passer Gets 2 Years in Jail PITTSBURGH, Sept. 30 (JP) Richard Victor HI of Pittsburgh today drew a two-year prison term for passing $lO,OOO in worth less checks. Victor was arrested on Feb. 24 while a patient in St. Francis Hospital. He was charged with passing a bogus $3500 check on a Mexican bank and using the mon ey to open an account in a Stroudsburg bank. Navy Grants Commission In Reserves to Landy WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (JP) The Secretary of the Navy to day overruled a special re view board and ordered that a reserve commission be granted to Eugene Landy, 21, whose mother was once a Commun ist. Secretary Charles Thomas held there was no indication that the honor graduate of the Merchant Marine Academy had ever beeh influenced by his mother in a subversive way. He said the youth’s association with his mo ther was the "natural relation ship of mother and son and not a sympathetic association with her political beliefs.’’ Mrs. Deborah Landy of Brad ley Beach, N.J., the mother, had admitted to 10 years membership in the Communist party. She said she left it in 1947 at the urging ef her son. Nixon's 3d Time Today was the third time that Nixon has presided over a Cabi net meeting, but it was the first time when Eisenhower’s absence was due to illness. As on the two other occasions! the President’s chair in the Cabinet was left va cant. Nixon used his own chair. As had been announced earlier, the White House statement noted that Sherman Adams, top presi dential assistant, was leaving'for Denver today. It said Adams “will be available there, in consulta tion with the President’s physi cians, whenever it may be ap propriate to present any matters to the President.” Murray Snyder, assistant White House press secretary who issued the statement, declined to expand on it when asked what subjects were discussed. Typhoon Wrecks Japanese Island TOKYO (A 3 ) —A big typhoon roared up the Sea of Japan- to day, a little spent after wrecking the southern island of Kyushu but still a serious threat to the northern islands. Police said the stoym left 20 dead, 10 missing, 105 injured and 120 fishing craft, lose, in the churning seas. British Steamer Bombed LONDON, Sept. 30 (A 3 )—Radio Peiping said four Chinese Na tionalist planes attacked the Brit ish steamer Tefkres off Swatow today, damaged wireless appara tus and a storeroom and injured two members of the crew. Hotel Strike Looms PHILADELPHIA (A 3 )— Some 2,000 service employes in 10 of the city’s major hotels have voted to strike at midnight tonight when their contract expires. Last August, the Navy with held the ensign’s reserve commis sion for which young Landy had worked at the academy at Kings Point, N.Y. He stood second in his graduating class, and among other things won the award given by the Daughters of the Ameri can Revolution for attainments in naval science. The Navy said then, and Thom as repeated today, there was no question of Landy’s personal loy alty to the United States. Landy, who has begun the study-of law at Yale, said at New Haven. -Conn., that “I’m very hap py" and “now I can start on a normal life again.’* He said he had talked with Thomas in New York yesterda; and “I knew he was going to be very fair about it. He was a very sympathetic person." Mrs. Landy said she, too, was “very, very happy.” “This suspense was getting us down a little,” she said. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA French Walk Out Of UN Assembly; Threaten ta Quit UNITED NATIONS. N.Y., Sept. 30 (A 3 ) — France walked out of the U.N. General Assem bly tonight and one high rank ing member of the French delegation said his country might quit the world organi sation entirely. The walkout followed the Assembly action in deciding by a one-vote margin to take up over bitter French objec tion the torrid issue of Al gerian independence. Immediately after the vote French Foreign Minister An toine Pinay asked for the floor and in grave tones told the representatives of 60 nations that France would regard as null and void any action taken by the Assembly on Algeria. Moroccan Sultan To Leave Throne PARIS, Sept. 30 (A 3 )—French informants said tonight Sultan Mohammed Ben Moulay Arafa has promised to quit the French Moroccan throne peacefully for the sake of calm and order in the protectorate. A statement to this effect was signed by the againg Sultan with out any conditions and he is ex pected to leave ,in the immediate future, said these usually reliable sources. This information apparently su perseded advices from Rabat, Morocco’s capital, that the Sul tan had sent a letter to France’s President Rene Coty offering to quit if the French would let him name his own successor or desig nate the members of a projected three-man regency council. If the French informants’ state ment is true, it would clear the road for Premier Edgar Faure’s reform program. Increase in Polio Vaccine Predicted WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (A 3 )— President Basil O’Connor of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis said today there might be enough Salk polio vaccine available next year to vaccinate 24 million children. Also the Public Health Service announced release of another 2,- 604,153 cubic centimeters, or “shots,” for current programs. “There is no reason why there shouldn’t' be adequate vaccine next year,” O’Connor said at a news conference. O’Connor said there are about 30 million children in the one to nine-year group, but more than six million first and second grad ers will have received two shots under the free programs spon sored by NFIP this year but not yet completed. Mayor of Lock Haven Turns in Resignation LOCK HAVEN, Pa.. Sept. 30 (A 3 ) —Mayor Charles E. Herr, 82, finishing out a four.year term, today resigned effective tomor row because of ill health. In submitting his resignations to the city council Herr cited his failing health and “the tension and pressure of being mayor” as his ] asons for wanting to leave office. His term would-have run to the end of the year. A new mayor is to be elected in November. Herr, a Democrat and print shop owner, was serving his second term as mayor. He was first elected in 1840 and then in 1952. Police Link Peron To Teen-age Girl BUENOS AIRES, Sept. 30 (A 31 ) —Federal police revealed today what they described as the story of Juan D. Peron’s “intimate rela tions’’ with a teen-age brunette who wants to meet him in exile in Asuncion, Paraguay. The police released two letters from the fallen dictator, 60, to Nelida Nelly- Haydee Rivas, 16, after a raid on her suburban Buenos Aires home. Authorities said they found $23,000 worth of jewelry and $22,000 in cash in the home of the girl, sexy-looking daughter of a janitor. The story of Peron’s romance was the most amazing revelation of his activities by investigators of the new revolutionary govern ment < who daily are unearthing new evidence against him and his 10-year regime. Police said the romance began before 1953 indicating it bloomed not long after the death July 26, 1952 of Peron’s blonde wife, Eva. In one of the letters Peron addressed Nelida as “My Dear Child” and signed off “Your Daddy.” The romance was carefully shielded from the public, but police said they were seen to gether at the 1953 International Film Festival in Mar del Plata. She overnighted at the official presidential residence, police said, and Peron at times introduced her as his niece, One letter was written Sept. 20, apparently from the Paraguayan Embassy wheic Peron fled for asylum. In this the • one-time strongman told Nelida “to be calm and wait until I send for you ...” Persons who have seen Nelida describe her as “a petite brunette, not beautiful but sexy” with a whistle-provoking figure. Peron wrote her: “I am tired and need some quiet time. I think I will get* it.” He said she could write him through the Paragua yan ambassador. “I am very sad at seeing so much anxiety and so many sacri fices,” the . letter went on. “The workers and poor people now will begin to know who Peron was. Nevertheless, I am not repentant for having renounced civil war. So many would have died and the country would have been de-! stroyed.” Pay Hike Offered By Westinghouse PITTSBURGH Sept. 30 (/P)— Westinghouse Electric Corp, to day offered four unions represent ing 70/100 employes a five-year contract with pay increases it said totaled 16 per cent. The company announcement said the proposal includes wage adjustments now for day workers, plus a three per cent increase for all hourly paid employes. In ad dition, Westinghouse said, the proposal calls for three per cent, increases in October, 1956 and! October, 1957, and for 314 perj cent increases in October, 1958, and October, 1959. ! Macmillan Warns Reds On Upsetting Middle East UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Sept. 30 (JP) —Foreign Secre tary Harold Macmillan of Bri tain today warned the Soviet bloc against upsetting the Mid dle East balance by selling arms to the Arabs. “A heavy responsibility will lie on any country which introduces any new and disturbing factor into this delicate situation,” Mac millan said in his first speech to the UN Assembly. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Fernch Foreign Min ister Andre Pinay, who have ad dressed the Assembly, are greatly worried by the deal. But the fourth member of the big power ministerial circle, Russia’s V. M. Molotov, has gone about his busi ness here as if nothing untoward had happened in the lense Arab- Isrreli siturt ; on. Vaclav David, Czechoslovak Rain-Swollen Rivers Flood Gulf Highway MEXICO CITY, Sept. 30 (F)— Rivers flooded by Hurrican Jan et’s heavy rains covered or wash ed out highways and communica tions lines over a long stretch of Mexico’s Gulf Coast today, delay ing reports of the storm’s toll. Coastal towns from Tuxpan to below Nautla, a small fishing port 75 miles north of Veracruz, have not been heard from direct ly since the season’s most vicious tropical storm crashed inland yes terday and beat itself out against the Sierra Madre Mountains. Floods extended inland as far as Pachuca, 100 miles west from the coast and 70 miles north of Mexico City on the main tourist highway from the United States. There was some radio communi cation with the fringes of the flooded area and no reports men tioned any deaths or injuries. Before dying in the mountains, Janet had taken an estimated toll of 200 lives in Mexico, chiefly on Yucatan Peninsula, plus 200 oth ers as she roared across the Carib bean Islands. Court Upholds Gl Conviction WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (F)— The highest military court upheld today the ■ conviction of Cpl. Ed ward S. Dickenson, 24, the first turncoat American tried on char !ges of aiding the Communists while a prisoner of war in Korea. The military court of appeals unanimously sustained an Army courtmartial’s conviction of Dick ensor. and Lis sentence—lo years at hard labor plus a dishonorable discharge and forfeiture of pay and allowances. Dickenson, from the little town of Cracker’s Neck, Va., is servi-.g h : s sentence at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. His attorneys had raised var ious legal objections to the court martial. Killer Asks Life Term PITTSBURGH, Sept. 30 (F) William D. C01e,'29-year-old con victed murderer, asked the state Supreme Court today to red ice hisdeath sentence to life im prisonment. foreign minister, followed Mac millan to the rostrum. However, he took Molotov’s lead and said nothing about arms barter with Egypt. His speech mainly was along the lines laid down by Mol otov last week. Molotov plans to depart tomor row for Moscow to prepare for the meeting of the Big Four for eign ministers in Geneva Oct. 27. The Russian obviously was pleased by Macmillan’s speech as a whole. Its theme was one of moderation and an appeal for de velopment of the Geneva spirit. Molotov smiled and applauded when the British minister con cluded. On his part, Macmillian expressed pleasure at what he called the moderate tone of Mol otov’s speech last week. Macmillan urged the Russians to accept a unified Germany base don Western plans which Macmillan said would guarantee Moscow full protection against any German threat of aggression. PAGE THREE