Taft Supporters Hope Rural Vote Will Put Senator Back in Post (Continued From First Page.) in the re-election of Gov. Lausche and the election of the entire State ticket—far more, according to report, than it is in the elec tion of Mr. Ferguson, although it goes down the line for him too. On the other hand, organized labor is doing little if anything for Gov. Lausche, whom it has not even formally indorsed. This does not mean that Gov. Lausche Will not receive a large labor vote. It does suggest, however, that two distinct campaigns are un der way in the State—one by or ganized labor to defeat Senator Taft and the other by the State Democratic organization to re elect Gov. Lausche. Their com mon interest is the election of Democratic candidates. Mr. Ferguson, at the time of his nomination for Senator in the Democratic primary, was given practically no chance what ever to win. The betting odds at the time, according to reports, were 11 to 1 in favor of Senator Taft. Now the Democrats say, the professional gamblers are of fering little more than even money. The change has come about in the betting odds because of two things. First, the heavy bar rage of criticism and vituperation laid down by the organized labor committees against Senator Taft,: plus their feverish work of or ganizing to register and get the vote out against him. Second, Mr. Ferguson's own previously demonstrated ability to get votes which earlier was ignored and now is recognized. Four times he has been elected State auditor, and the last time, in 1948, he received the largest plurality ever given any Demo cratic candidate for State office in! Ohio. Republicans United. Taft campaign managers point out that the Republican Party in Ohio today is wholly united; j that Senator Taft in his cam paigning urges the election of Don H. Ebright, the GOP candidate for Governor. They say, too, that the Senator's indefatigable cam paigning in every county in the State is bearing fruit. Not only does he go into county Beats, but also small towns, where he meets and shakes hands with hundreds of people day in and day i out. He speaks two, four, six or even a dozen times a day. Indeed, the Republican organi sation has been greatly perfected for his campaign. The Republi cans insist that while the labor campaigners for Mr. Ferguson may have done a lot to register newT voters, particularly in indus trial centers, the Republicans have been no less active, with stress on the rural and farm areas and in small towns. U.N. (Continued From First Page.) tural and sentimental ties with Spain, which originally colonized them. The United States position was reported to be that, since the original resolution did not succeed in its aim of replacing the Franco government by moral suasion, it was foolish to keep it any longer. While the Special Political Committee debates Spain, Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky is expected to give the 60-nation Political Committee a vigorous rebuttal to western attacks on his “peace plan.” That plan, encompassing a new Big Five peace pact, labelling thei first country to use the atom bomb a war criminal and banning war propaganda has been coun tered by another resolution from the West. Sponsored by the United States,! Britain, the Netherlands, France,’ Mexico and Lebanon, it asks the U. N. to tag aggression the gravest crime against humanity. By im plication it defends the atom bomb as a means of combatting aggression. Intervention Rule Studied. The Political Committee also has before it a Bolivian resolu tion condemning intervention of one country in the affairs of an other to effect a political change and an Indian proposal to spend money saved by reducing arma ments on aiding backward coun tries. The Soviet Union yesterday ended its nine-months boycott of the U. N. Military Staff Commit tee, but the East-West disagree ment was said to remain un changed in that group. Maj. Gen. Ivan A. Skliarov of the Russian army, chief military delegate from Moscow to the U. N., showed up for the regular meeting of the five-nation Military Staff Committee. He made no comment on his absence, it was reported, and settled down to work just as if he had attended the meeting of the Military Staff Committee two weeks ago. Walkout Last January. The committee is made up of high officers of the United States, France, Nationalist China, Britain and the Soviet Union. The Russians walked out last January because of the presence of the Nationalist Chinese, but made no reference to that walkout yester day. This was the third major U. N. organization to which the Rus sians have returned. They came back to the Security Council August 1 and to the Economic and Social Council earlier this month. Metal Class Still Open Wednesday will be the last night for registration in an art metal work class which began this week At Kensington (Md.) Junior High School. The class will be held for three hours at 7:30 p.m. each Wednes day. ' Mobile movie units are making a hit in India and Bombay State cow has 36 of them. Nobel Prize Awarded To Two Mayo Doctors And Swiss Professor By th« Associated Press STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Oct. 27. —The 1950 Nobel prize in medi cine wras awarded jointly last | night to two Mayo Clinic doctors and a Swiss professor for their work on two hormones that re lieve rheumatoid arthritis and open a new field of research on other diseases. The winners are Dr. Edward C. Kendall, 64, chief of the bio chemistry laboratory of the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn.; Dr. Philip S. Hench, 54, head of a Mayo Clinic medical section; and Dr. Tadeusz Reichstein, 53, pro fessor of chemistry at the Uni versity of Basel. They will divide prize money of 164,303 crowns ! ($31,715). The official citation said the prize was awarded “for their dis coveries regarding the hormones of the adrenal cortex, their struc ture and biological effects.” Studied Cortisone and ACTH. Cortisone and ACTH are the hormones—cell secretions that stimulate the activity of cells elsewhere in the body—on which the three have specialized. In addition to work at the clinic. Dr. Hench and Dr. Kendall are both professors in the Mayo Foundation, which is part of tire graduate school 6f the University of Minnesota's Medical Depart ment. Part of their cortisone re search was carried on with uni versity funds. Dr. Reichstein has worked independently in Basel. The Caroline Institute, which awards the prize, decided that Drs. Hench, Kendall and Reichstein had made the greatest contribu-i tions toward the discovery of cor tisone. which is produced by a cap like gland atop the kidneys called the adrenal cortex. The cortisone discovery led to findings that ACTH, a hormone isolated at Berkeley, Calif., had almost ex actly similar effects. ACTH is produced by the pituitary gland at the base of the brain. King to Make Presentation. The award marks the third time in 50 years that the medical prize —financed by the Nobel Founda tion under the will of Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite— has been divided among three men. It will be formally presented to Drs. Hench. Kendall and Reich stein by Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf at colorful ceremonies here December 10. The 1950 winners for physics, chemistry and litera ture, to be chosen November 9. also will receive their prizes at that time. The 1950 peace prize has been awarded Dr. Ralph Bunche, an American Negro, for his work as United Nations medi ator in Palestine. Dr. Kendall, tall, genial research chemist, isolated cortisone a dec ade ago, but little was known about its possible uses for years because the substance was dif ficult to make. Production Improved. Dr. Hench, a physician, was studying rheumatoid arthritis at the Mayo Clinic at the time and his experiments led him to believe the hormone might be valuable for the ailment. After World War II. Merck