if" W 5 fl -P "'11 J I) 0 ?9 "Ax RUN ON COFFEE While waves of panicky buying have cut deep into coffee stocks, U. S. roasters are hustling to keep supply channels filled. Here, William Redman and John -Nee, coffee, blenders at a Boston, Mass., plant, load bags of green coffee beans on a carrier to so to the roasters. Industry spokesmen say there would be plenty of coffee if customer! would only buy normally. 'Gerhart Eisler's Conviction Stands If He Returns To U. S Effect Of High Court's Ruling WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.-0) The Supreme court Monday tossed out an 'appeal by Gerhart Eisler, the Communist leader who jumped ball and fled the country while the justices were considering his case. . ' v Eisler appealed to the Supreme court from a contempt of Con gress conviction. He sat in the court chamber while lawyers debated his case earlier this year. But he stowed away on a Polish ship last May and fled to England, and then to Germany, before a decision was reached. , ' The court puzzled for a month over what to do in such a unique circumstance. Finally the jus tices voted 5 to 4 to put the case in a sort of suspended status. It was taken off the docket, but technically remained before the court. Recently, solicitor general Louse, Commercial . and Industrial Wiring : Electrical Trouble Shooting Motor and Appliance R& pair Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service 17 years Experience ACE ELECTRIC '' Licensed Electrician 316 E. 2nd Ave. N. . Ph, 1743-J Festive finale to your Thanksgiving dinner Is a holiday-Inspired mold of delicious and flavorful ice cream. Order our sparkling ice cream fantasy now, and take bows for It later. HORN'S SUPER CREAMED STORE 328 N. Jackson V, 5 1 ,0 1 Philip B. Perlman suggested that the whole business be thrown out of court. Perlman noted that Eis ler has taken public office in the Soviet zone , ot Germany and shows no signs of ever return ing here. He urged that the arc fieal which had been granted Eis er should now be finally dis missed. -V ' The court today took this' ad- A gay and gala fixln' for the holiday meal, looked forward to as much as the turkey ' Itself is ice cream. Be sure you have a sup ply for second helpings, too. ' Phone 981-R Thanksgiving Dinner served at , CARL'S HAVEN GARDEN VALLEY ROAD OPPOSITE VETERAN'S HOSPITAL 1:00 p. m. to 8:00 p. m. CLOSED ALL DAY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27 Writer-Alcoholic Committed To State Hospital LOS ANGELES, Nov. 2SUlP Craig Rice, author of many hard boiled whodunits, has been com mitted to a state hospital as an alcholic. . Her daughter, Mrs. Nancy. At- Vv'-'.S"', lilli 1 WCiiuiiStilli' COlirt yesterday that 41-year-old Mibs Rice has used liquor to excess for four or five years and needs institutional care. The court ordered the writer of 'iThe Lucky Stiff" and "Trial by Fury!' to Camarilln State mental hospital tor an indefinite period, Several of her books have been made into movies. The detective story novelist re cently filed a divorce suit against her fourth husband, Henry W. Demott, Jr., 29, but later said she loved him and wanted a re conciliation. She divorced her third husband, Novelist Law rence Lipton, in 1947. Miss Rice was released from a hospital Sept. 2 after police said they found two bottles of sleep ing pills in her hotel room. She told a judge she wasn't intend ing to take her own life but wanted her husband to hear about it and return to her. On Sept. 6 the writer was found un conscious at her mother's home and police said there, was evi dence she was under the Influ ence of sleeping medicine. She was unconscious 40 hours. Only One In 35 Survives Crash OSLO, Norway, Nov. 23 OT) A 12-year-old Jewish Refugee boy. woke this morning from a good night's sleep his first since he survived the nightmarisli plane crash Sunday in which 34 persons died. Little Isaac Allal, one of 28 North African Jewish children flying to a Norwegian rest camp. was the only survivor. Isaac's whimpers led twa searchers yesterday to the forest-hidden wreckage .where he had lain trapped . among debris and bodies for two cold nights and a day. Two brothers and a sister died in the crash. Isaac doesn't know yet that another brother is dead at home in far-off Tunis. That brother, a 17-year-old, fell dead when he learned of the tragedy in Nor way. The Dutch chartered plane crashed in the forest 30 miles southwest of Oslo Sunday night as it neared the end of a flight from Tunis, in North Africa. Be sides the 28 refugee children, the plane carried a crew of four and three nurses. . , . About 330,000 British and French troops were evacuated to England in the epic Allied re treat from Dunkerque -in May, 1940. .. ' .,- :- : .. vice and dismissed Eisler's case with a brief order. It noted that 1 Justices Douglas and Clark took no part In the action. Action on other cases ' In other matters, the court: 1. Agreed to say whether the U.S. District court here properly dismissed government anti-trust charges against the National As sociation of Real Estate Boards and the local real estate board. The lower court held that It is no more of a law violation for real estate men to agree on com mission rates than it is for union members to agree on the mini mum wages they will work for. 2. Upheld, 6-2, the United States patent office in its 1945 disbarment of Vernon M. Dor sey, 80-year-old Washington, D.C. patent lawyer for submitting a "ghost written" article in a pat ent application. The tribunal overturned the U.S. Court of Ap-i peals here, which had branded the disbarment proceeding as an example of "bureaucratic lynch law." 3. Held, 6-2, that Georgia courts should give Richard J. Brown a trial of his $5,000 dam age suit against a railroad. Brown, a brakeman, sued as the result of injuries suffered when he fell after stepping on a large clinker. Georgia courts threw out the case on the grounds that the presence of the clinker in a rail road yard could not be consider ed negligence on the railroad's part. , Eisler was sentenced to a year in jail and fined $1,000 for re fusing to be sworn as a witness before the House un - American activities committee. He was at liberty on bail at the time he filed appeal to the Supreme court rne eiiect ot today s action was to leave the conviction and sen tence hanging over Eisler's head should he ever return to the Unit ed States. RELIGIOUS SERVE Munich rmw. owned by Lowtst Diabttic Rat Credited To Richland, Wash. NEW YORK M With less than one of every hundred persons affected by diabetes, Richland, Wash., was disclosed to have the nation's lowest diabetic rate. i v . . - -,-' ' The disclosure was made by the American Diabetes association after a nation-wide survey. Five per cent of all Americans are pos sible diabetics, the association said. Richland's tendency was but .54 per cent. , " A fir : 1 : .)(. " Franciscan nuns serve at refreshment bar of the Buerter Theater. their order. Proceeds help rebuild war-danuged Franciscan center Greatest concentration was In the . southeastern United States where the survey turned up a po tential of 6.3 per cent. . The survey, made last month, covered only about 34,000 persons. They were picked by sampling to represent all areas of the United States. .- -. '.'.., - LIKE JULY 4 ALMOST. . FROSTBURG.Md, UP) It was almost like the Fourth of July as several hundred persons VST 1 gathered to celebrate the 50th an niversary of the cornerstone lay ing of Frostburg State Teachers college. The outdoor celebration was featured by a colorful, hour-long DRESSMAKING ALTERATIONS - Zoe Newman 925 Cobb St. Phone 387-R , , . this Island of Liberty, this sanctuary for all who believe that man's right to personal freedom is a divine right. Let us give thanks for the insight of those first Americans who conceived o pattern for government which is both stable and dynamic, geared for individual achievement within a framework of security. ' ' i . ; Let us, today, and every day put aside our petty grievances, our pointless hostilities, our doubts and fears and thank God for this climate of freedom where the pattern of our lives is shaped by our own will and disciplined by our own conscience. Wed., Nov. 23, 1949 The Ntwi-Rtvitw, Roieburg, On. f First Parachute Invented MOSCOW m A Russian Invented the world's first para chute, the Soviet armed forces newspaper Red Star claims. The inventor, G. Kotenlkov, de signed the ehute in 1911, said the newspaper, and all present-day parachutes are patterned accord ing to his principles. Kotelnikov died five yor boo. (The Encyclopedia Brittanlca records successful parachute jumps from balloons as early as 1797 in Paris. That parachute, of course, wasn't too good and wob bled quite a bit. But men kept on designing new parachutes and jumping out of balloons until 1912, when, according to the en cyclopedia, a Captain Berry made display of fireworks. But there were a few ou-of-place circumstances. 1-The thermometer read 28 de grees. 2-A stiff wind was blow ing. 3-It was snowing hard. Quickly Relieves Distress of A few drops of Vicka Va-tro-nol In each nostril work fast to rtliiv head cold dis tress, make breath ing easier. And If used at first sniffle or sneeze. Va-tro-nol helps to vwtnt many colds developing! Try It. Follow directions in the package. VICOSVA-TRO-rcOL fortius! OouWi-lkir I Nost Drapt : V Worit fast! i By Russian, Red Star Claims the first successful Jump from an airplane in St. Louis, Mo. That, of course, was a year after Red Star 'said Kotelnikov designed the chute.) P KEEP THE WEATHER OUT on a freezing day, the weather belongs outside. Keep it out with full home Insulation of blown rock wool. Buy from a home owned, home-operated insulation firm. Metal Inter locking t weatherstripplng ap plied. Only fireproof rock wool used. Written warranty with every installation your proof of quality and permanence. Builder's Insulating Co. , "Chuek" Edmonda . A Home-Owned Business 230 N. Rteph?:-.s St. Phone 1018-R for free estimates vv.