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Image provided by: George F Johnson Memorial Library
WENE and WENE-FM- ; TONIGHT § 1:16 Counterspy ^r .OO—Town Meeting 9 llJ(»-N\ews of Tomorrow. fir, v'f **' \f** No Flood Aid -Sndieorr, *N< Y., Tuesday, April 4, 1950 Vol. 85v No, 54 Wc<Wby,\<iV^^.fUM|t and colder wit$*t**** aq^'ftirries BEely.. fiuWiear 42. Jj * 'Port Job Inclefmitef As Squabble Forces Both Candidates Out % Broome County Board of Supervisors 1>Tew apart this g_ afternoon in an unprecedented squabble over appointment f ~Uf ~a -manager for the new $4,000,000 county airport I The explosion may delay the appointment indefinitely, It .Board Members told The Bulletin as the. stormy secret session ad journed that neither Roger C Tyne, TrkCitiei Airport manager, n nor Douglas Wolfe, Baltimore airport executive, could \how ex pect appointment under-the pres- ent sentiment of\ the county board. • Fo r the second day, members ' of the. Board of Supervisors met as a committee of the whole be hind closed doors to consider the matter The meeting was marked by bitter battles and expressions of extremely intense feeling. I 76° Record | May Crumble I Late Today if Ji # Greater Endlcott today = emerged fr_om winter long enough to esTabhsha probable •x *ieat \record llicii &e *2 £rfc-£ar-lh£_ i snow hanks Gean DiLauro, U. S Weather Bureau chief at Tri-Cities Air* port said the heat late this afternoon would probably equal - if ~not surpass an April 4 rec ord of 76 degrees reached in I 1903. i He made this prediction at 2 —. p m.. when the mercury hov- ~ ered at 74 degrees. § Meanwhile,- the area cast a k -wary eye at the swollen SUsque- f hanna Rtver and its tributary creeks. Mr DiLauro said he - would make no prediction whe ther there will be a sizeable ~ flood this week ' It all depends on the size of the showers we get.\ .he said. And \w're going to get showers - showers of rain and snow be ginning tonight. The mercury will plunge to 38 tonight and there'll •' be high wind and snow tomorrow Al l the rest of the week there will be precipitation— either rain or snow —he said The Susquehanna JRlver at Vestal was. already more than 17 -feet deep and the surface was rising steadily this afternoon. Mr. DiI.,ai.iro said it may. reach 20 feet- late tomorrow morning. Overthrow of Tito Rule Bednasek -Case Goes To Jurors NavyDisowns Flying Sa ucer When Ute Board came out of the executive ~ seSStonr~ shortly before one this afternoon, many ' o f the members were obviously shaken 2nd several were still white with fury Supervisor Ben L. Joggerst, chairman of the Airport Com mittee, and Supervisor Henry .Baldwin, chairman of the County Kmployes Committee, said in a joint announcement there_would pe no committee report today on any candidate for the Job. Supervisor Varry D. Prew. who has (wen leading the fight for the Tyne appointment, said that he did not plan to bring the mat ter up at the late afternoon ses sion. This means that the subject •will not be- brought -up until the May meeting bf the Board, if then. .The supervisores blamed the Board split on outside pressure for the Tyne apppirrrtneru The Airport arid County« Em ployes Committee last week -an- nouncd that they would\ recom mend Douglas Wolfe a deputy manager uf the Baltimore, Md.. airpdrt for the job. at a salary of 56,000 a year A campaign for Tyne was immediately -started. Superviiors who were not ln«- volved In the verbal exchange today «aid that they were deeply concerned aver the splil because it could involve the future of tfie Airport. The supervisors want a promoter with aviation business experience to he manager of tho airport. The actual operation of the field will be directed b> an assistant nfianager The man ager will be expected to attra.-t the genera) public to the Md and build up sources of revenue having nothing to do \with avia- tm The major part of revenue fur All airpous_ -is obtained from concessions. There is a definite possibility that the supervisors will examine the hst of all can didates for the Job. A rccolutton -from lh £..J3lflfct. 4 1 UPBiursda^ hamton City Council endorsihj • • Washington, CP — The Navy pays, in comment on the latest flying saucer report (1) It has not developed any pancake- shaped je t planes and <2> It I s not experimenting with any suacer-shaped missile. In fact, the department re ported through a spokesman, the —IIIMP'SI —thing to a fifing saucer - it ever developed has not flown Sinre 1917 The spokesman-, was comment ing last night on an article in V S News and World Report which said engineers have con- F rmdeoTfhaT the' oTT-rpporU'd sau cers are jet-powered planes of a new; design developed by the Nav>* Th e magazine said the saucers may Have sprung from experiments by Charles H. Zim merman for the National .Advi- sof-y Committee for Aeronautics At TSngTey Air Force Base.In '^ci(f BufnS 50 Virginia, Zimmerman said he • tvo^-en 1 o n an ^rppHmentai nan-- -cM Tokye-.faT> t — A streetcar and cake-shaped model jMane .during a truck loaded\ with sntpttnrto- The, war thts was the one the and hydrochloric acicfi collided jsfnvy said, last flew in 1947— in downtown Tokyo last night nut he didn't regard\'it as a Fifty Japanese were burned by forerunner to\ the flying saucer, the spilled chemicals. • Ex-Red to Testify—A former Communist who left the party in 1931. Freda Utley revealed *he- ha.\ Iieen «»ked 4 »y-Son,jJo- seph McCarrhy (R l Wis., to ap- pear_before a Senate subcommit tee in Y\ashmgton as a witness against Qwen Lattimore Far Kastern oxpert A*> a press con ference she said her testimony uill hp based on Lattimore s writing* 'I think I can prove they follow the Party line.\ she declared i International I Connally Sees Senate Balk On Subpoena *> Uanhlngtan. LTl=Thc Senate Communist investigation headed for a possible stalemate today Senator Connally tDI Tex., pre dicted the ' Senate would not vote contempt citations for offi cials refusing access to secret lovalty files A Senate Foreign Rela tions subcommittee investigating •charges by Senator MrCarthv |R> Wis that the State Depart ment i> harboring Communisfs and is being \influenced by Soviet spies, seemed balked at every turn Tt faces the necessity of ob taining 8 contempt citation - - which Connally told reporters It stands little chance of getting- to reverse President Truman's decision against opening the con fidential files. Without much hope of success. It sought means of l'>rcinc Mc Carthy to. mal<e available six documents he turned over to the FBI in connection with his charges that Owen Latlimpre, writer on Far Fastern affairs, is a Soviet agent in the State* Department The subcommittee will give Lattimore who already has call ed McCarthy's charges an \un- nriitigfffed lie\ a chance to an swer them formally in a heai-- 0 low* Citj, lowav LT)— A jury of four women and eight men at 11 n'J a ' ffi (EST) today began deliberations on the fate of Robert E_ Bed nasek who is accused of strangling a pretty Univer sity of Iowa coed The state, in a surprise move last night, asked th e jury to send Bednasek to the gallows. Two 'nirmliers of the jury told the court prior to their selection as JurPrs that 'they op posed the death penalt«> The jurors nwiwd the case from District Judge James ~P Gaffney at the conclusion of lengthy instruction!, by ban. The judge told the jurors they could return ojie of four verdicts: First degree^nuider which car ries B KtMitenrr nt death by hang ing or life in prison Second degree murder which carries a sentence of 10 yean to life In prison. Manslaughter which .carries* a mandatory 8-year prison term. Acquittal. The judge advised the jurors that if they find the ^l^oar-pld psychology student guiTty of mur der in fhe first degree triey must recommend-whether he be sen tenced to death or life in prisun. Judge Gaffnev also told the j»m»rs thfct +f they do- -not find ' beyomfc any reasonable doubt that Bednasek is guilty of any of the charges they then must find his innocenl. Hijackers Kill Truck Driver, Take $2,200 Voroshitov Statement At.20-Nation Parley Heralds New Drive v 41 London, (INS 1 )—Soviet Marsha] Klerj*enti Voroshilov pi*fe. . dieted today—eoirteiderrt with a reported military conifen encc of Kusstan satellite states in BtSIapest—that MarshST Tito will be overthrown. Voroshilov in Budapest with Communist military and political leaders of 2i> countries to celebrate tftv fifth anniversary pf Hungary's \liberation\ from Ger- # Sub-Hunting Destroyer Checks Guns—Crew members of U. S. S. Colahan check a 20mm dual mount gun as craft speeds full draft enAute to-a point off coast 280 miles north of San Francisco in search of an unidentified sub marine-reported in the area. Destroyer returned after four- day search and Capt J. A. Hollbrook, skipper, reported he believed that sound contact was made with one or more subs during the search. , (AP-vVirephoto) 2 Contacted hy Radar Foreign Subs Off California Coast 'Probable,' Navy Says # San Francisco, ».i>i—The Navy saya foreign submarines / \ ery probably\ have been eperatTng*~oTf the California coast A four-dav search by surface and air craft produced only \in conclusive*' roB »Its. But there wasn't much that could have been Russians Ftying Russian Planes, Narion^iisrs Say done-- about it since the strange - \\**\\ manvalso declared - '''Plans of the imperialists are doomed. « All threats of atomic and hydrogen bombs will not deter us from continuing the fight for peace ' After predicting that Marshal Tito, head of an,U»CominfQrm Yugoslavia, win be overthrown. Voroshilov added that Yugoslavia will regain its pace \alongside thepeoples democracies.\ Voroshilov and other officials from Soviet bloc nations review ed a -huge parade o f military forces and civilians tn the Hun garian capital The Soviet marshal said: \The Western powers are mis taken if fhey bellevo the Yugo slav people will support them or ran be incited to wa r against the Soviet Union \The Yugoslav people know their place Is Within th* camp of peace. • \The working class In Yugo slavia undoubtedly will over throw Tito and regain its place lrT the ranks or 'the' peoples* democracies \ Referring to tha Soviets' \Fight for Peace.\_h« told; Hungarians it is \our duty la dead ifiroes who cave thpir Uvea liberating^ the coiinfry^ppt t o lbt tyf* h«P* Mr Tyne was received by the Board of Supervisors and filed The Board late today is ex pected to authorize advertising for bids for the building oi a hew highway department garage and warehouse at Chenango Bridge, ^o replace one that burn ed down. Th e motion for the bids will be Introduced by Super visor Lelahd L. Jones. Connally said he Iieve the subcommittee, the full committee which he heads, or the Senate would vote to cite lor contempt. •Secretary of State Acheson. Attorney General Mr - (frath ..or Harry Mitchell, head\ of th£ Civil' Service Commission The three officials were in structed by President Truman, not to let the - subcommittee, headed by Senator Tydlngs ID) Md . look at secret loyalty rec ord* Senator Brewster. <R> Me,\ «ald that if no contempt pro- SWdlnKS' Wflf uiilmud. the Gen* ate would b? in The position of hacking -down\ on its vole to clothe the committee with sub poena powers to get the files. • Chappaqua, OF) —Roadside hi jackers shot and killed the driver of a Reader's Digest truck yes terday and got away with a ' —\ iSaSHO cash eargo that waa being ptuneir-\definitel; didn t r**9* taken to a bank Four bandits used a trick to halt ihe tnlck, which was en- route to Pleasantville, with TT load of mail, cash and checks. Asjhe truck moved along a private foaa 'of fhe publishing firm, two men staggered in front of it. pretending to need help. The truck- slowed xo a stop. The men drew pistols. One of them fired through the glass win dow of the truck cab, wounding Andrew Petrini, 33, of Mt Kisco, in the eye Tho gunmen, joined by a third from the roadside, bound tho dy- • Taipei, Formosa, L/P-^Ari a[T- headquarters spokesman today Raid Ruaslan-bullt planes which downed two Chinese N&tJonulWt fighters undoubtedly were oper ated by Russians. Thn spokesman said tho .-re-of-Rus sian manufacture.\ And, he added: Judglay from their technique, \they moil certainly wlTn manned by Rtim»l«n».\ •£be--NatlonaUst fighters uern «hat down Sunday during n raid on Red shipping- In Hangrhow Bay south of Shunghal. That opposition, the fln»t the Nationalists have encountered hi the air In four yenra of cl\ll war was «een by many today as a\ ominous forerunner of < ommunist air attacks* nn For mosa. Out of the Miff of History (54) Ing driver, and his helper. Wil- Iiam Waterbury, of Pleasantville Both were shoved- Into the back of the truck One of the bandits then drove the truck to ward Pleasantville, while his companions rifled . through the mall hags and ban pounches A fourth bandit followed in another truck. * Both 'rucks turned off onto a .dirt road where, the bandits abandoned-the magazine's truck, ana. fled i*-ffie other vehicle. XL N._App roves i I nternatrpnalizing~ Of Jerusalem / #- Oe «e *-aV Swltaerlakd, CD—The United Nations trusteVhlp coun cil today formally approved a statute setting up *an inemailohal regime for -the Jerusalem area—> .a move bitterly opposed Jiy both'- Israel and.Hashimite Jordan. The U. H. nu no actual pov»»r , to enforce intejnationiizatkirL and - cuunctt-ptwideftt Roger Garreay of France waa, instructed to seek ~, th* , 'fullc^>aoe^atton• v , of Jstael and•Jdrrtaa.'.whs*n»# pirrnpy thj!. Today's Lenten Lines Rev. Paul J, Trltschler The KcanKetfHf T.uthrr»n < harrh OI The Holy Nativity ihdltor'n Note — Thl« l> thr Iflth In s urlei ol J^plrn nirmtn. ' written by treA rlrrsymefl. nlilrN are appearlas ia thti tparr durln( ~i>eaM» . TflTrlpr ' tMa treptm season submarines were in international waters. t t 2 A Holbrook. eom- • 'of the Dcs'ro^r Cola- turned yesterdav from the and reported having made [ twice through radar and fcnnar with obiects be believed were submarines Captain Hol- lirpok is a former submarine offi cer After evaluating the captains report. Rear Adm R I Ent- whlstle. vice commander of the Western Sea Frontier, said the contacts made \very probably - r-r- were -ope--oc «*o«v foreign submarines on routine peacetime patrols.\ At no time during the search was anv suhmannp sighted, either bv surface 1 1 »ft or from the air Although investicfti(on of se\- eral reports of submarines hav ing been sighted is continuing, the WSF said sparch was hcing suspended \pending further de velopments \ lonely Hearts' faithful C&rlstiafls again\ \haVe\ devoutly heard* . thought fully \read prayerfully contemplated and re/erently meditate! upon the Passion of our Lord Jesus Christ. This they have done \in their homes and by the wa > \ t It la a sad and solemn ptorj' they have again -itsteficTf UK Its center and chief character 1s Jeaua of Naaareth. tho Soiw A k rnH i, U- I j of Go* aad the Son of MaaT\ /^DSenf -Mirided our beautiful Saviour. The} , aay ratfcir—vve, see Him the . alatesa'jUaah of. God, hated, ^aJected. fplscly «c- Appeal Denied 0 Albany, i/P>=—A Nassau County prosecutor denied todav before the Court of Appeals that tw o convicted \lonely hearts\ killers had been \coerced' into .making confessions Philip Huntington, assistant district attorney, told, the high \court that Authorities iff New York and Michigan never knew Mrs. Janet Fav of Albany had been slain until Raymond Fer- 'iiaudez and Mrs Martha BtVk tflld thH5~ io. FerHtgaoi,\ and Mrs. Beck. hi« 29-vear-oId .paramour, were found crullty lastr August of first-degree murder in the .death of the 66-year-old Albanv widow at Valley Stream. L. I., In January. J949 Fernan dez had met Mrs. Fa y through a \lonely hearts\ correspondence club.\ A Vienna aiapatch to the Lon don Daily Telegraph said an important military conference involving Russia and hef satel lite states is taking place under cover of the official jpelebrations marking the Russian army's Avar- time entrv into Hungary The tenor of the celebration speeches gave rise to belief that the Cominform 'nations, may be nlarming a kfflt expected' gprtflg; offensive against- the Yugoslav regime, of Marshal Tito. Tito herfrsy was a main topic of speakers The \liberation.^ ceremonies - are. being attended either b y de fence ministers or senior defense advisers of everv Cominform country * The leading military repre sentatives of the Soviet bloc are headed bv Marshal Vorcsbilov. In addition to »he pastern states of Europe, Communist China is represented by Gen. Pine Chang-Wu. military attache at Moscow Besides the military chiefs of Czechoslovakia Bulearia. Poland. Albania and Romanta.' there are present In Budapest leading non- mitirarv ©meiais Yugos Back Soviet Stand On Chiang ' # Lake Success, (rN» — YtJjpg. slavia Is working today in sup port of Russia's demand for tha ouster of Nationalist China from the United. Nations In a diplo matic maheuver aimed at pre lecting fhe Tito regime. The paradox In\ which Yugo- - sjayla — denounced by- Russia and other Cominform nations\ lea \ not toeing- the f>remlln* tine — i s supporting the Soviets steins _ from, a desire for self-preserva tion. The move by Yugoslavia t o helpr emf the U. N. deadlock on - China amounts to a precaution ary measure by* Marshal Tito to havo a t hand powerful diploma- ' tic., weapons as a safeguard against any Soviet attack against his domain. Top Yugoslav sources at U. N, indicate that\ tha winter lull jn Soviet \pressure against Tito- his not - tHmlrflshsd th e threat pt. \ . v1 <>knt T de-ir»Ioprn«n^n v 'trj ^la<a' tacks by guerrillas\ Operating out of Bulgaria. Hungary and Aus tria. Competent sources assert that such outbreaks along the Yugo slav frontiers are not possible without direct instructions and military aid from \the Ttussian government.\\. Thus Yugoslavia will have sufficient cause to hall' the Soviet tfnlon before the U. N.' Security Council on charges of aggression, if trouble starts. With that background in mind, U. N. spokesman. Ales Bebler, is readily-support ing renewed British efforts to in duce Security'Council members like Cuba. Ecuador and Egypt to swing their-votes against the continued membership of Tlngfu F. Tslang. Nationalist China's delegate to U. N. r .Lack of $20 May Release Jailed Debtor Attiomr these - are Ana Pauker Romania's w man foreign minister an d tnto' Hrotewohl chancellor of the Soviet-dominated Fast German regime. No 'Meg-Edrl Tie • London, 0> SJ —The Hon. Peter Alastair Ward, second son of the Earl of \Dudley. »aid today in a statement to the London Evening Nigws that there lsTfb foundation\ t o reports he Is en gaged to Princess Margaret Rose. • I • Til 'i in Mavat-- # KuWavay VW m*gf- yeteran Bernard J. Smith, tha Vermunter who • has bean 1m • prisoned more than a year be cause He cannot pay a $2,673 •judgment, may go free because he does not have $20. Smith will appear on Friday before Jail Commissioner George M. Goddard in Rutland to_lake_ the poor debtor's oath. The «ath* '\ may be sworn to by anyone who possesses less than $20 In attach able—property. Commissioner-. Goddard can then order the 24* year-oljl jirisoner's release TV & Stem Clerk Sues Self for Divorce 0 Mayor Burdette Farkhurst teetering on the threshold of an other birthday event. .-. . HI* comes tomorrow and the rhail- man'll probably have an addi tional load 4n tho way 6f greet ings to deliver. \ AngeIo~TNaahT = GIordano Trfos- '•> • 'By BVnfyL F^»h<h n Earl GaaUae, formerly of Ves tal and now getting his mail at Athens, Pa., burning up the tele phone lines to let the home folks know that 'It's a boy\ . -Th«'—£ Hltle la d war born Sunday m< r « Waverly Hospital . . His monv is the former Jane gallon. •—.' soming out like spring itself to- Mary J» Gtaager havjnit all\ 4 day with a brlghjt yellow and the fun that goerwith a-Dit'lhto «r sessk i MII»I —4 .ii { n >!\ l>m '\^ r cruelly ertteMed and laid la' • CleveTaaoT (INS—^Tfie case of the te«u*/ Carl Yedlicka — a Ctevelander - -L> X ™o sued himself for divorce— WhV»'art truly the guilty? Who raises an interesting - problem ._ .„ , ^ - . crucified Him? Hi s ow n un- < that merits the attention of all )£bete rn i»*fchj:thetUrN. General godly nation? Yes. The leadera-. cjvlj servants. ™„„. »,,„, ^v,~ ~ ^Asa ^nWy^vbt^ -last peeet ^er % t ukienplei. JCgfe .The^mu ^^edjk^aiJ^HyjnarrW Jpr ^%^ndUure oFlO., W to Kf up a sepaarateTegime for tude?„,.Yes.,,The Romans? 3gST.»3»J \** \S^'f^^^^m%t mr^rrwmhtt, S w> \ Uthe reUg^ri^tatv, _ The„h^U^'*uler»? Yes. Tlut ^j |^;whe« tte iherirf^o £fJ«8 \ H 'miii. does lWti «^teLe the^-lttt of^aei^huTi wito «i «unwnohs,.yesw today, •Wat«> Piitt-faJi.tiirVinK hlmaej. I -S;.rpcrt to the'-\Iune-council ;^H»n^s«swersV*r^;l8rael-JuA^ dan. Both^ ! «Yate : oppose4 Inte^- \iiationalixatio«; ; rdiirina: -the v purple bow tie Chat his contem- porariee— -\g ^K^wftii\ = t . Every-man toh^asle, we . r _ always say. 4 mtobe^e^a--few^ay»>wh * - 4 battles whatever the bug. is that '*J M - Fred («W.) StapletM fajdng devastating people these days, TT -'• visible jjride out of his handl- • _ C -T^.^fej: work In. /finally developing a 2- n - MravBemsaa (rWnm) ,la*ss*: buck 1 \camera case wUfch neces- P^ktog; out a reai^k* tl d^,.;a», - T '- t o celebrate thtAsawatl .ii ***** --^^mm rs.- #Flr»tof» - rnet ,r at.