Kingston Daily Freeman, The (Newspaper) - November 12, 1945, Kingston, New York ifn Uiter OF KINGSTON N Y MONDAY EVENING PRICE FIVE CENTS Arnold Says Interstellar Raids Will Come lief of Army Air Forces Foresees Thousands of Robots Will Be sent Across Our Shorelines Washington Nov 12 nil Hap Arnold that lomic bomb warfare waged from interstellar space is within tie foreseeable The white-haired chief of Army fa Forces gave in his third an report today an eerie picture f conflict for- which the Hates should be prepared Said War may descend upon us by thousands of robots passing across our we act to prevent them And the way to do that is 16 be ready to strike at the source of lack with a strategic air force one or two atomic which should suffice for That method of bomb delivery for today's style of war morrow's he said will be like should be ready with a capon of the German V-2 rocket laving greatly improved range and and launched from great V-2 is ideally suited to eliver atomic explosives because defense against it would extremely difficult If defenses which can cope en with such a hour projectile are developed be ready to launch such projectiles nearer the target to give them a shorter time flight and make them harder to detect and destroy We must be ready to launch them from unexpected directions This can be done with true space ships capable of operating outside the atmosphere design of such a ship is all but practicable today research unquestionably bring it into being within the foreseeable ture Arnold said three types of re- sistance against the atomic bomb are Make certain that in the world are atomic being made secretly devise every possible defense against hem disperse cities and move vital industries underground which would be overwhelmingly Next Moves Steel Are Expected to Indication of Status of Relations Unceasing patrol of the world under guidance of the Nations Organization would do much to prevent the bombs Arnold said Among the for the future of the air force Arnold included the maintenance Continued on Pace Nine manufacture of atomic their present Woman Recounts Slabbing Burning Children Blames Fairless Says Burden Rests Squarely Shoulders White House Has No Word on Report Attlee Suggested Atomic Bomb Pool Big Three Joint Statement Will Come President Truman Honors Unknown Soldier on tewey Says Old Rules Must Co Are Only Way to Solve Labor Disputed 1 Ithaca N Y Nov of force an violence In settling labor disputes must be replaced by based upon a1 knowledge and of the economic processi ernor Dewcy today monies formally the new State School Of Industrial and Labor Relations The governor in an address pre- pared for radio broadcast p declared that the school was dedicated com- mon interest of the employer arid employe and the whole tlie American people of The knowledge and ing of the economic he said would be expanded by the school in a field where too often passion and override judgment and truth Recurrent outbreaks of strikes underline the fact that labor re- lations are never static and that no formula can be devised which wholly wine out disputes Nor does anyone who values our way of life wisl to end the continuing bs both management and labor to ad vance their own interests the old rule of the tooth and clew is out of date and should come to an end The school first of its kind In the country was authorized by the 1944 Legislature and set up this year Enrollment for the Srst semester included 107 dents 60 of them veterans Day Ivn Abe Dr Ezra Pay dmt of Cornell University of which the school is the 14th di- vision and Irvine M ity leader of the Assembly dean of the school also spoke at the ceremonies Declaring that It has been only a years since the right to a labor union was a ter which had to be settled with Woman Hatred Screams Her of Japanese tare fists clubs sticks oa TCI and Bonus Is Asked for of War 2 M Nov 12 Xw York Stale Association ri publican Clubs asks M ihc Male cadi to veterans War 2 A payment of mas fey Board cf Governors Of Act M and employe alike with d t Jo penalties nr as ty the 5 the General at End of Testimony Manila Nov 12 scarred Filipino woman sobbed out at the crimes trial of Lt Yamashita today a story of the fatal stabbing and burning of her four children mother by Japanese for the record that in her were thus brutally mistreated and massacred within a month The witness Malvecino concluded her testimony with a Yamashita see what you have done to my scene near Santo Tomas Batangas Province she aid that we were tied in groups of five and led into a nearby field A Japanese officer told the soldiers o line up behind us and gave the order for to start stabbing i She was bayoneted 12 times and einted death to escape further wounds could hear my children around hie crying Mother and screaming to me before they died she said Later ture was piled on the bodies ed and set We prayed saying our last words to God knowing that we soon would be testified another witness Soledad Lacson She said that 20 in her group of Filipinos were taken to a etery and stabbed after Japanese had made a personal search of the women evidently stripping them to steal Philippines rency As she left the stand she ed at The witnesses were not examined Sole objection of Ihc the of particulars charging were overruled An American investigator ward O'Brien added a final some note lo the day's proceedings with testimony that he saw the Washington 12 labor-management conference in Armistice recess the capital today watched big and automotive for the next move on the chessboard of trial relations Leaders of United States Steel Corporation shortly will consider and reply to Secretary of Labor request that they resume wage talks with the United of America Benjamin F Fairless U S Steel president wired last night invitation to resume negotiations under a special conciliator Wednesday will be taken up when company are the Fairless stated any new negotiations on the un- ion's demanded daily wage in- crease cannot be expected to duce results until acts on price increases to which the steel industry has long been entitled reason of past heavy increases in its If an impasse exists Fairless added responsibility for it rests the His remarked though the present wage contract runs until next October and a union has a strike vote No- 28 Fairless last turned down first request for a renewal of conferences on the ground that should act first on the price issue The secretary's second appeal mildly rebuking the corporation said the government was riot insisting upon any mcht as to Ja wage but only fpr an bargaining President Harry S Truman wreath in hand walks to the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery Washington D to place wreath on the tomb as part of Armistice Day ceremonies as British Prime Attlee Prime Minister kenzie King of Canada and other officials look on Left to right in official British Ambassador Lord Halifax Lt Cmdr naval aide Brig Gen Harry Leahy Prime Minister Attlee ana Prime Minister King In foreground soldiers wreaths later pi laced on tomb Attlee and King This was first visit to the tomb since in body of a Filipino boy of 4 with flesh neatly sliced from the left he said of cannibalism bv the Japanese The prosecution estimated its case would be complete within a week Denies Fraud Pontiac Mich 1 rence J 29 one of two men KM in connection with the death of Mrs Alberta Rose Young de- nied lo county authorities today that he had defrauded Mrs Young ol as charged by Edward he man held in ihc caic lold county officers hat Mrs Young an Army Air had spent money wilh him voluntarily He added that she sprat money on herself and others A taken for Jodny ty DmM C 12 Soviet of In American and British in Moscow lo have reduced to a mere formality j There has no official an- of a change sind he die 1 Mmt trial an a But If or almost all Press any In the auto industry too It was a cue of watchful waiting the threat against one of of the Big general Chrysler and Ford went on a 24-hour t The companies remained as a strategy committee took full charge of the United Auto Workers fight for a 30 per cent wage increase The committee headed by president R J Thomas was by the union's executive board in session here to act as it may sec fit in support of the wage demand vice- president Walter said this would permit a strike call on immediate notice if developments warranted The workers have endorsed use of the strike weapon in ducted balloting Meanwhile two groups offered bystander reports on the management The National Labor Relations Board said unions are asking new strike votes at the rate of 43 a day and that October brought an avalanche new requests for strike polls more than double the previous record The Bookings Institution in t report On labor policies of the eral government said that labor agreements should be made gally enforceable if the ment wants business to engage in collective bargaining edly The report concluded very Tew limitations are on strikes picketing or boycotts even if interfere with inter- slate commerce and that groups of workers can strike or picket to interfere rights granted lo the majority union in a plant ae Is at Beacon Li Crackup Pacific War Famed Carrier Work Was Aboard Navy Craft in Accident Beacon N Y Nov 12 Dixie Kiefer Pacific war hero who lived through ten major wounds in two world wars was killed the crash of a navy plane on Mount Beacon three miles northeast of here The wreckage was found today Five other persons also died in the crash Commodore was widely known as Captain Dixie of the Him The Fighting Lady He was commanding officer of the First Naval District air Edelmuth Vetoes Pay Boost vm for City Workers Mayor Says Corporation Counsel Department Heads Can Fix Salaries Council Will Act Rules Mayor William F Edelmuth has filed his veto of Local 3 of 1945 which provided for an increase of 5240 each for city employes during 1946 with City Clerk Leo P Fennelly The veto will be read at the monthly meeting of the Common Council Tuesday evening when the aldermen will take action whethei to override the mayor's veto or sustain it The mayor has vetoed the local law on the ground that a question of legality was raised at the lic hearing by a proponent of the measure and that he had asked Corporation Counsel Arthur B Common Council Canvasses Votes Official Results in City Election Are Given Vet Rung for Office Tokyo Nov 12 ably discharged veteran of United States Army in World War One is candidate foe election to Japanese Diet He in born in Japan years ago He went lo United Slates 1311 and alter working in Calif at a salesman en- in the United Army in May it KIR independent lo UTCC lion bases and was stationed at the R I air station First Naval District in Boston today confirmed that Kiefer was one of the victims Several hours earlier a municipal who declined use of his name had reported the commodore was among the plane a twin-engined craft was en route from N J to and was last heard from yesterday afternoon as it Hew over Stewart Field West Point N y It crashed IS minutes later The wreckage was found al 3 a m today wreckage spread over a large area of the mountainside was first reached by Joseph Brown Sr and his son Joseph Continued on Page Action Common Council met this morning in the city hall as a board canvassers to canvass the vote ast in the city at the November The official results For bram R 5050 F Edelmuth D F A.L 510 plurality For John J Schwenk R 6.071 Ernest D on Human Cough Sometimes Becomes By FRANK CAREY Cincinnati Nov 12 The human cough is a wind thai can attain velocity and exert a force or outright of the The chest physicians are conjointly with annual session of Ihc Southern More than doctors from 17 stales arc or more of Jhe MM of a Mid Slates in a i h 111 Nov 12 man thai condition of German is 30 The wjr act on a Dr of til the hunun COTCh js it leaves Jhe throat has row al Jhan an She American in an tH Chest Physicians you can well call it of lhat violence clear She of R as But he said there ftR She Jo lung release the Swat f a Jiullct can ty she WOUT he ahal relict in motion Ho a trill csn revolt fmly in JOT cause ttf lend a fanatic id ribi tout alto in Ihc couth to pass upon its legality The proponent to whom the mayor refers in his veto message 15 George E Jr business of the Metal Trades Council Mr Yerry had filed with the mayor at the public hearine a communication urging that the mayor approve the local law Mr in his communication a copy of which was press Unofficial been made that the law is illegal Our unions arc not competent to make such n de- and arc not attempting to do so We do know however that even official opinions are not cor- rect in every instance Whatever may bu the final opinion in this case it appears lo us that the Common Council which must the city budget has clearly on the record that it approves a budget with Ihc salary increases in the law The mayor In his veto out that the corporation counsel in his opinion that the city charter reserves o the several department heads the lo fix except those of Board of Health j Mr Kwic mayor writes also pointed out local law was not in conformity with the city home rule law for one reason in particular namely i lhal Ihc law had not been on thei desks of he members of be Com- mon Council for al least seven calendar days exclusive of day prior io final Mayor calls Mention in his Hal Legion Ball Goes On Tonight With All Star Program Only Few Tickets Remain fur Sale When of Auditorium is Annual Victory Ball of Kingston 350 American Legion and he municipal auditorium is to be crowded to capacity or the event featuring Jerry Wald's radio band and a ded program of Advance publicity stimulated icket sales lo the extent that the jail was regarded as a near ut requests for over the week-end leaves he Legion Without any concern bout n large n seating arrangements to the patrons The doors and box office will at but there will be ery few tickets left for sale Arrangements to broadcast the ill over were completed vcr the week-end and the ram will IK on the air from n wilh a half hour out from o 10 p m for a Mutual hook-up Only headline will at Hie auditorium tonight This will be the greatest show ver seen in Kingston said N M of WOR who tcd with William T Roedel of music and ment in arranging the gram lo he Jbc on and he Kill that Jhc Common Council Jaon So em- velocity Jt suits tte that as huilt tap Ihc in- j j I i i VI Vlll Mr oi ihc Common Council both wilhin Jhe jurisdiction the council Tn a mil taken cl cf Almost Had Fuse Nov 2 The almost explosive in the clorine ol the war second mnrt by ttc d for all til the would fians the local case Ihc mayor vetoed the Jaw 291 Canceled York Nov 12 cancellations at LaGuardia ield rose lo 291 today as log and rain made flying conditions poor he United talcs for second consecutive sy Airlines reported all nights at he field had been booked solid or Ihc Armistice Day week-end nd estimated 5.009 persons had The last flicht ar- vcd al LaGuardia Field last at p m Out bound flights at p a The fuse had and tests mounted on missile for OK Allied when the into Allied Parked Car Stolen Arthur Buds ill 39 no tUs morning Ws Ford that he had Mi in front of I aJie tot mud o'clock No Indication Given When Conversations Are to End Atomic Talks Are Resumed Eben Avers Has Talk With President After Cruise Washington Nov 12 re- port that Prime Minister Attlee of Britain had proposed the creation of a United Nations pool for the atomic bomb and other scientific secrets brought no comment day at the White House Presidential Secretary William told reporters that will have nothing to ay on the progress of his current discussions with Attlee and Pre- mier L Mackenzie King of Canada until they arc ended Then he said there will be joint statement by the three A reporter referring to the pooling report said the British already have announced tome hings and asked it there would any companion rom Mr Truman substituting at a lor two ailing press secretaries replied that ha say a word There was no indication as to the conversations will end or when Attlee will leave for his return trip to London Until then Hassett said the three government leaders will be in continuous ot less Attlee saw the President breakfast this morning before moving from the White a Saturday to the British embassy The atomic energy talks were be resumed at the White House this afternoon with Secretary at States Byrnes Sir John Anderson of the British atomic energy advisory commission andj ithen sitting in Hassett said Mr Truman wai lot seeing any callers today in ler to devote all of his time to he atomic world-unity ions An official In a position to know who declined to be identified s to position or reporters the British Prime Minis cr had suggested to President ruman and Premier Mackenzie of Canada Unless atomic and other rics are channeled into controlled uses for peace they will be given ver to purposes The best way to channel these into proper uses is to hare them with other nee safeguards for the future are set up The official added that any s by the three countries now olding the secret of the atomic omb would require co-operation y Russia France and the other Nations The others pating would be asked to make heir own developments available o the same pool There was no comment ic White House or other official on this report after Mr ruman Attlee and Mackenzie ing relumed last night from a cruise on the Potomac ver where they continued ons begun Saturday Eben Ayers acting White House secretary conferred briefly ith Mr Truman upon the then told reporters there ould be no statement of any ind The three talked before sitting oa Pitt Nationals to Win Candidates Assured of Victory in Election Held Sunday Nov 12 representing Marshal Tito's front were assured cC today by t from Sunday's Assembly that more than 93 per cent of Uic nation's had cafl ballots parties had 1C ty not lip but it was reported iat practically no voters upheld he ty iway from A absence WAS liy av Women o lor the first and the cf hdr large was Jaf an assembly of wo tw ali drafting ntw 1 iV ffl