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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1934)
roflon MARKET IDDLING CLOBE ihA a 5 lo| 102. No. 77. Mrs. Roosevelt Contradicts Wirt Argument echanics’ Demands for Higher Wages, Shorter Hours Refused is ONLY OBSTACLE ther Labor Troubles Be ing Studied by Boards Of Mediation By The Associated Press Hopes for peace in the automo o industry were mixed as repre htatives of 18,000 tool and die kers refused to entertain wage 4 hour demands of the Me anics ]‘:dm'r’\ti()fléll society, which < threateped to, wallk out at idnight Thursday unlegs “satis otory answers” were received. The refusal wasg made known tor a 2 meeting of the employers’ presentatives with Matthew J. ith, general secretary of the echanics society. The workers 4 demanded wage increases of per cent and a 36-hour, five y week Conference Called Executives of the trades wunion mediately called a conference of sicials to consider . their future urge Union representatives have esti ated that approximately 18,000 ol and diemakers employed in o local shops would respond to grike call and that the effect ould be felt shortly in many ading automobile plants. The threatened walk out of the ol and diemakers was the only esent obstacle to complete peace the automotive industry and deral mediation agencies today ere endeavoring to - bring about compromise between the work ¢ and employers. Workers at an Enid, Okla., oil biinery postponed _indefinitely a rike scheduled for 8 o'clock this orning pending mediation efforts r the federal labor policy board. The result of a vote by 3,000 riking shipvard workers at Cam n, N. J. on an effort of a 10 r cent wage increase was to be ide known Wednesaday. The rikers had demanded: a 25 per it inerease and a closed shop. Statements Conflict An announcement by the man fement that the Campbell Soup bmpany in Camden, N. J., would fsume operations Wednesday ugnt a statement from a rep sentative of the 2,300 strikers it the walkout would end- only hen workers’ demands are met. Aireraft workers in Connecticut arted what they said would be (“"‘“*:"'wi\.w strike by walking out 1 propeller factory, threaten ik 10 strike at anether plant ednesdav and a third Thursday fliess demands for wage adjust jent re met ' oceurred Tuesday in ‘ N. Y. where 2000 air °_Workers are oWI sthike, ' A Y 600 tried to break U= a police guard and reach “ehreakers leaving an airplane Mounted ' police = drove © Toters back THUNDEROUS APPLAUSE ARION, Pa. —() — Lightning - a transformer outside the ! v schoul Tuesday night , Midst of a student play, b, 5 & score of windows and ot U 8 T 490 Spectators to their k. year-old Mary Belle k. "Dt on . with her piane har 10Ut missing a note. Y that averted a panic" thool officialg, alue of Supervised Activity in Treatment Of Mental Cases Stressed by Psychiatrist 5 Vity . and applica - t arts and crafts , Most important iiment of men - W AR en Mii the large crowd ‘St Night &t the in the Academic & him b 18 as his subject L 3 ta] Mi*f'huhi::rm: and E Pon Mental Life and : t cuped the mechan : t 158€ s: the so-call- Yehologieal processes tive of Integration X 'V and result in the L t of the individua; k ment, and the SO e tthological processes , N disintegration ang R He restricted his E. t liscussion of a few b anisms, s i Meyer)® ‘he said s ressed the import. thinking habits as ental disorders. the . "' being the hpabit of ¢ s self with his own b 1 he ealls autistic et - 0 tHe bre-psychotic and Slates, these theughts HArent]y Phantastic, ang to a ATHENS BANNER-HERALD Full Associated Press Service TO STAR IN MINSTREL. 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Square dances, Virginia reels, clog dances and old time “callers” will be among the features of the program. CHILD FOUND DYING [N DESERTED HOUSE 13-Year-Old Boy Confess es to Holding Girl, 2, Captive in Ice House CHICAGO (AP)— Little Dor ette Zietlow, two years old, died Wednesday of cold and starvation a short time after.a 13-year-old boy confessed holding her captive for two days in a c¢rumbling attic . Police announced that George Rogalski admtted luring the child from the home of her grandmoth er to a deserted building. The boy was locked up for juvenile author ities. He induced the child to go with him last Sunday, his statement said, by promising her some can dy. Then police quoted him as saying: . “1 took lher - to the. building, jumped through a window, helped her down, and carried her to the attic. The stairs had been wreck e and I had to climb up the wall, getting a foothold in the plaster. Left Her Alone “l went away and retruned later Then I left and did not go back Monday, because I went to school. Tuesday afternoon I went Dback, and I thought she had been mov ed. I was scared. No cne was around so I wasn't so scared. “I thought she needed food, but I was afraid to let my parents know. I looked out a hole in the building and saw some kids start ing up. I chased them away. Then I left and went home.” Afterward two boys made their way through the wreckage of the building, an abandoned ice house, and found the child naked, dirty an unconcious. They thought she was dead, and went home, so frightened they did not speak of it. Later they told others in the family and Tuesday night police found the child. A flicker of an eye-lid told them she was alive and they rushed her to a hospital. There physicians rubbed the stiff body with hot oil to stimulate the circulation, and injected heart stimulants and food. They announced, after many hours work over her, that they (Continued on Last Page) {large extent are motivated by a i pain-pleasure mechanism. The in !dividual's attempts at adjustment [« - . having met with failure or frustration, his situation in rea! life becomes so painfial that he lescapes to a life of phantasy. Here the pictures himself in a more fav [orable situation, his instinctive de imands are more easily gratified jand his emotional reactions are :generally those of pleasure instead %ot‘ pain."” | Dr. Allen explained that as fore jrunner of this flight from reality, jthere are anxiety and fear states jand that this flight from the life isituation to a life of phantasy may |be a substitute for the voluntary !ending of the struggle. The escape iinto phantasy,, he said, is then rec ognized as a defensive mechanism i which tends to preserve life, but at ‘a lower level “As a patient's frustration or un resolved conflicts between instine tive impulses and reality are often centered arcund the sexual instinct his thoughts are apt to have a strong sexual coloring, and in autistic thinking are usually a di rect expression of gratification of ~ {Continved on Last Pags) Minstrel And Square Dance Features Of Market Show Fliers Rescue 83 " Marooned on Floe, Rush Aid to Others MOSCOW. —(#)— Thirty-three members of g party of 83 men marooned on an ice floe in the Bering sea were rescued bx dar ing Russian airmen late Tuesday night and early Wednesday. Plans were rushed, said reports to the government rescue com mission here, for the rescue of the 50 castaways still imperiled on the cracking floe. Twenty-two persons were taken to safety Tuesday night by the Russian fliers, Kaminin, Kolokov and Slepney, in threa separvate planes and flown t, Cape Van Karem, Siberia. 5 Parly Wednesday, the aviators Kaminin and Molokov picked up cleven more. The marooned men were mem bers of the Wrangel island ex pedition of Prof. Otto Schmidt. They took refuge on the ice when their vessel, the Cheliuskin, was crushed in the ijce and sank Feb ruary 13 on the return trip. Fliers have been trring for weeks to reach the 89 men. Pre viously., the ten women and tavo childrer marooned with them had been removed by plane. RAST TO DIRECT EROSION PROJECT Graduate of College of Agriculture to Take Charge About May 1 L. E. Rast, gradnate of the Col lege of Agriculture in 1926, will have charge of the soil erosion project located in Clarke, Madison and Jackson counties, Dean Paul Chapman of the College told Kiw anians Tuesday at their regulair meeting, held in Costa's. Mr. Rast will take charge around the first of the month, Dean Chap man said, and will have offices located in down-town “Athens. His staff will consist es approximately 20 members. Until he opens the offices here, Mr. Rast is making a tour of the country, linspecting other similar projects in other states, “The value of this soil erosion work is inestimable,” the Dean lsaid. YAt a recent meeting in ‘Danielsvllle. the large number of !tarmdrs present enthusiastically jendorsed the plan, This section of ithe state is badly eroded, and that !is one reason why farmers here '(‘an't make a living. Under this -:project, much farm-land will be ;reclaimed, and the government will [spend $300,000 in ‘assisting the {farmer in this work.” { Mr. Chapman [opéned his talk gwith a brief discussion of the ex itensive depopulation of this sec !tion of Georgia. He also showed ithat the farmer's income has in | creased over 60 per cent in the na ’tion. and almost 100 per cent in ’Georgia. The last portion of his ;address was talked up with a dis {ocussion of the rural rehabilitation program. “This,” he stated, “is the sound !est part of the relief program since Mr. Hopkins took charge, and it should be in full swing by the end of the month. Under it, 27,000 farm families in Georgia will be made self-sustaining. This pro gram will not take place in Clarke county, which is considered an urban county, but the surrounding distriets will all be helped, More 3 Co W Jast page.) , Athens Ga., Wednesday, April 11, 1934. Second ‘‘Farmers Frolic” To Be Held Tomorrow Night at 8:30 Misses = Alice Burch, Oleo Han cock, Minnie Mae Huff and Mrs. Georgia Wallace wiil be end-men of the Business Girls' club min strel to be - presented Thursday night in connection with the Far mer’s Frolic at the Grower's Mar ket on Washington street. "Mrs. Alice Jones Wood will act as in terlocutor. ‘ Features of the prograia will in elude tap specialties by Misses Annie Vie Bullapd, Mary Harris, and Irances Evans, songs by Mrs. Louvise Lanier and Miss Eulalia Vaughn, and a comic novelty by Misses Vera Parker and - Alice Bruch. $ The minstrel will ‘agin ‘t §.30. following the cake-wall, , Jduring which four cakes will he eiven away, Mrs. Bessie Troutman, market master in charge of the rolic arnounced. ; Following the show, the floor will be thrown open for square dancing, with music furnished by the Roberts boys from Jefferson, who also played. for the first Frolic. held some th}le ago. Miss Nell Johnson, who has called dances in the mountains. during the summer, will call sevéral of the numbers. During the evening there will also be tap - and buck dancing contests, Mrs. Troutman announced . ' The booths in the market will be moved away s 0 as to give the dancers plenty of room. The or chestra and callers will be on a platform in the center of the building, and there will be chairs around the hall for those who want to. come and enjoy them selves but aren’t up to theo stren uous, exercise .of the old-fashioned dances. Admission will be 25 cents for children and 35 cents for aduls everybody -is assured of a good time. Proceeds will go towards refreshing the market and send ing Business Girls to the club’s annual. conference this summes. “Sinee the first ¥Frolic,” Mrs. Troutman said, ‘I have had many requests to hold another. This is the answer to those requests, and with the added attraction of the minstrel . this Frolic is going to be bigger and better than the first, and we want everybody to come and have a good time.” LARGER NAVY MOVE ATTACKED IN SPEECH BY JEANETTE RANKIN The Vinson bill was labelled a symbol of the power of the ar mament ‘makers and profiteers by Miss Jeanette Rankin Dbefore a meeting of the Georgia Peace So ciety last night. “If this group has the power to put - through the Vinson bill they later, if they find that they can make profit by war, will create WAar., .t ¥ p “This 18 the time for every indi vidual to decide whether he shall continue to. walk in. the direction of war by following our war habits or whether to change gur war hab its and walk in the direction of peace. We are now walking in the direction of war,” she gaid. University students made stir ring talks for peace under the title, “I Take My Stand.” Those making speeches were Claude Green, Clayton, recently elected president of the University Y. M. C. A.; Miss Agnes Highsmith, assistant direftor of the Voluntary Religious Association; Fred Birch more, Athens, and Milton Richard son, Macon - Norman Shalfin told of his work in investigating the peace sentiments. of the student —ESTABLISHED 1832 MARKET DEMOGRATS REJOICE OVER [LLINDIS VOTE Consider Ballot “A Tri bute to Administration National and Local” CHICAGO .—(/P)—Leaders of or ganized Democracy in - Illinois whose candidates won nomination in -Tuesday’s. state-wide primary almost as they. pleased Wednes day labelled “the . tremendous gl)e'mocrat.ic vote” as a “tribute E_a,nd a . compliment to the Dem ogratic administration, both na mfl and local” The significance of the election lay largely in the fact that it was the first in which an entire state was afforded opportunity to regis ter its .opinion of its congressmen since the Democratic landslide of 1932. Henry T. Rainey, congressman from the 20th district aud speaks er of the house of representatives, gseored a five-to-one victory over James Kirby, a state represenfa tive. Not A Direct Issue | The national administration was inot a direct issue, the Democrats having been content for the most (part to campaign on local issues. The possible nomination of a lßepubllcan candidate in the tenth Jdistrict came closer to having ad minigtration significance, perhaps than did the wide victory of Speaker Rainey. That was the (Continued on last page.) ATTORNEYS AND DOCTORS BATTLE Prominent Citizens Battle Each Other and Donkeys In Game Tonight BY F. M. WILLIAMS The Young Business Men's club defeated the S. A. BE. fraternity, 3 to 1, in the second game of Donkey ball series here Tuesday night. The game as a whole was much better than that of the first night, for more about the game was known, and many new stunts were put on, “Dynamite,” that powerful little base-running mule, was again the star of the game, and remains the favorite of the fans. “Dynamite” scored two runs in the game Tues day, one for each team, but did he give the sucessful riders plenty of jolts—he bucks from home plate to second base before he ever gets started. “4Bill Murray,” a new mule be cause the teams who played the first night did not use a stortstop, also gave the fans some laughs. beginning in the first inning and lasting until -the end.of the game. “Bill” was resting quietly—llying en the grass—when the first short stop eame out to start the game And right then the mule started bucking. kicking, braying, and bit ing. The littie donkey ended up his night of fun by wandering out in right field in the last inning and beginning to eat grass. Fans Satisfied Most of those who witnessed the game Tuesday night went away satisfied, for at lasy a man was found who could get “Mae West” 10 move off first base. Yessir, Mar vin Tucker had no trouble at all with “Mae,” which proves the theory that any one who moves that stubborn mule is certainly a ladies’~-man. . Carrying a man like “Yank” Ludwig was too much for “Lady Plushbottom,” and in the fourth {nning she lay down for a rest, and no power on earth could have mov- CUBAN MORATORIUM ON FOREIGN DEBTS CALLED FOR 7 YEARS Nothing to Be Paid on ~ Principal of $50,000,- 000 in Bonds in U.S. DEEMED IMPERATIVE Officials Say Government Employes Would Go Unpaid Otherwise ‘HAVANA -—(#»— Cuba has de clared a two-year moratorium on about $50,000,000 in loans from American and DBritish houses and leaders said Cuba it may be ex tended even longer. It was a case, government officl als explained, of letting national obligations, including salaries of public employes, go unpaid, or of suspending payments on certain international obligations. Cu b a chose the latter course. Under the moratorium, approved by the cabinet of President Carlos Mendieta Tuesday night, nothing will be paid on the principal of bonds floated through Speyer and Morgan from 1904 to 1927 totalling fifty million dollars. Interest To Be Paid Officials emphasized that the interest will he paid. Although the moratorium was announced for two years, Treasury Secretary Joaquin Martinez Saenz said “it really will be effective un til a time when Cuba can sustain (Continued on Last Page) EDUCATION GROUP TO HEAR ATHENIAN Dr. Paul'R. Morrow to De liver Four Addresses at GC.E.A. Meeting Dr. Paul R, Morrow, associate professor of education at the Uni versity and named by Chancellor Phillip Weltner as chairman of a committee to revise the secondary curriculum for the state of Geor gia, will deliver a series of four addresses before the Georgia Ed cation association meeting which opens in Atlanta Thursday. ! Dr. Morrow’s first address will be Thursday afternoon to the Su perintendent's association. His subject will be “How Superintend ents May Cooperate in Civic Pro grams.” Friday morning he will speak at the Phi Delta Kappa breakfast on “Curriculum Research,” a subject in which he is excellently versed. Two other addresses are to be made Friday, one on “Teaching of Speech as the Educator Sees it,” before the Speech association, and the other, the’ most important of the series ,on “Progress of the Curriculum Program.” The last address will be delivered before the High School Principals asgo ciation. Dr. Morrow {8 among the out standing educators In the state and his addresses will be features of the general meetings of school heads and officials. BUCKLEY ANNOUNCES DONKEY BALL CAME LINE-UPS The line-ups for the Donkey ball game tonight at 8:30 o'clock on Sanford field, as prepared and given the Banner-Herald by Mayo C. Buckley, chairman of the American Legion committee for the game, follow: —LAWYER'S TEAM— Will Be Ridden By .ABIT NlX—The Man for Governor .LAMAR RUCKER—Can't Explode With Me .RUPERT BROWN-—Over the Bounding Waves .ARTHUR OLDHAM—Curves Don’t Bother Me .WANE HAWKINS—I've Got Him Boys .CARLISLE COBB—Don’t Lynch Me & .HENRY WEST—TI'II Cover Lots of Grouad JAKE JOEL~—In the Air .JOHN GREEN-—TII Move Him .W. G, CORNETT—Watch Me Shimmy .ROBERT WINGFIELD—BIowing Along EUGENE BEPTING—And How! JOKE WEBB—Floating Ig Right .TED MIDDLEBROOKS-—Old Man River Rolling Along MAX MICHAEL—AI that Glitters Is Not Gold —DOCTORS TEAM— ’ Will Ride—Donkey ; .MAE WEST—Come Up to See Me Sometime .MOON MULLINS—Watch the Derby Come Off .DYNAMITE—Watch Me Explode .LIGHTNING—I Won't Strike Twice in Same Place .LADY PLUSHBOTTOM—PeopIe This Bottom - ’ Is Not Plush .CLARA BOW—*IT” and More of It r . MA FERGUSON-—-Ma’s Crazy, and I'l] Cure Her. .N.R.A. (No Riders Allowed)—Maybe Not, But I'll Ride Her. .FOP-EYE—This is Going to Be Rough Sailing .MICKEY MOUSE—Mickey’s a Honey .TILLIE THE TOILER—How She Toils .GRETA GARBO—I Tank Aye Go Home .KATE SMITH—When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain I'll Be Holding Her Down. .FLOATING POWER—Watch Me Free Wheel .BATTLESHIP~AII Hands on Deck = (g Donkey Ma Fergugon . . Dynamite . . « .« Pop-Eye . « & % Mae Weat ~ ~ , 4 Bootlegger . . . . Judge Lynch , . . Aeroplaneg - . . . Ninety Days . . . Stone Mountain . Clara Bow . . . , Hurricape . . . . Three-Point-Two Floating Power . Steam Boat . . . Gold Fish . . . . Doctor N. G. Slaughter . M. T. Summerlin . Marion Hubert . . Pope Holliday . » H. W. Birdsong . H.B - Harmy . . . J. Weyman Davis R. W. Hartman . C. 0. Middlebrooks John Hunnicutt . Paul Holliday . . Carl Holliday . . Herbert Winn . . Is N. Betts ~ . . rc, J. ms . s 0 A. B. C. Paper—Single Copies, 2c—sc Sunday BOARD OF REGENTS MEETS IN ATLANTA ATLANTA — #) —Finance and education committees of the board of regents met joint ly Wedneslay to set up bud gets for cperation of the Geor gia university system in the schoo! gession of 1934-35. A- meeting of the whoie board was set for Wednesday after noon to pass en the recom mendations of the joint com niittee, One of the !tesrs of business hefore the board as a whole was the selection of a- succes sor to Izzie Bashinski, secre ‘ary and treasurer of the Uni versity systann wlhe died un expectedly last week. Professor J, W. Jenkins of the commerce department at the University in Athens was dis~ cussed as Bashinski's probable suceessor but none of the Uni versity officials would com ment on the repost In advance of formal action late this af ternoon. JAMESON ON STAND AT CANNON'S TRIAL Says He Didn’'t Know the Name of the Group He Gave $65,300 WASHINGTON —(AP) — Ed. ‘wln C. Jameson, who gave Bishop ‘James Cannor, jt., $65,300 for use in the Southern Methodist Church ‘man's efforts to defeat Alfred E. Smith for president in 1928, tes tified Wednesday he did not know the mame Of the organiza tion to which he was contributins‘ ‘until after the election. “ He resumed his testimony in the tida) of Bishop Cannon and Miss Ada L. Burroughspn a <harge of | 'violating the federal corrupt prac tices act through failure to re port receipt of the entire contribu tion. Whether the amount was in tended for the southwide organi zation known as “headquarters committee arti-Smith Democrats" }or the “Virginia State Anti- Smith committee” has been a point |of contention at the trial. | ' Jameson said he had intended the money to go to “the committee ‘or committees” engaged in the anti-Smith campaign. l H. F. Healey, Jameson's sec retary, told of a call from Cannon in February 1929 during which hei said he and Cannon discussed the‘ reporting of the Jameson contri bution to the clerk of the houael lunder tre corrupt practice act. “Cannon said,” Healey teutmed,i “that under the law it was not necessary ‘or him to report them."| Taimadge Club Head Selects 3 Officers W. W. Secott, president of the Clarke County Eugene Talmadge for Governor club today announ ced selection of three more vice presidents of the club. R. M. Todd, prominent farmer represents the Sandy Creek dis trict, and Claude Mahaffey ‘and Young Davis will be vice presi. dents in the city organization. Mr. Scott said that progresg is being made by women organizing an auxiliary to support the men’s organizations. EQUCATOR 15 TOLD HE 15 NOT NEEDED FOR MORE HEARINGS President’s Wife Denies Contention of Com- _ munistic Project : INQUIRY IS HALTED Only Minor Officials to Be Called Despite G.O.P. Outcries WASHINGTON — # — Mrs, Franklin D. Roosevelt Wednesday contradicted the contentions of Dr. William A. Wirt that the aub+ sistence homestead project at Reedsville, W. Va., is “a Commun-~ istic effort.” The wife of the President gave her views in response to questions at a White House conference with newgpaperwomen. e \ A while befere, Dr. Wirt—on a visit to the capitol—had been told the house investigating committee desired no furiher testimony from him and he “could turn in his ex }pense account and go home” to }Gary, Ind. Mrs, Roosevelt said Wednesday: - “Never in this country to my knowledge has it been considered Communistic for an opportunity to _ be given to people to earn their own living and own their houses.” . She added that while it is a fact that the government will provide the initial capital on this particu lar prolect, any private enterprise that wishes to do so may estab lish the sama s=ort of communities. ' “It is hoped that many private enterprises will wish to do it,” she declared ; “The government is just point ing the way.” After Wirt testified before the committee yesterday, he was told then to appear again this morn. ing, but the committee later decid« ed he was not needed. ' From _Republican ranks there came cries of “gag” and “whites wasn.” ! | The maljority men, after listen ing to the Gary, Ind., school-mas ter, made clear they have no inten tion of summoning any of the king pins of the so-called brain trust. They frankly expressed the op inion that after six guests at Virginia dinner party attended by Dr. Wirt testify next week, the in quiry will be all washed up. The guests, most of whom hold minor positions, will tell their stories be ginning Tuesday, = Republican members of the spec ial house committee, however, wers vehement in demands that sub poenaes be served on the bigger “brain trusters’’ quoted second hand by Dr. William A. Wirt Mon day as plannping to “overthrow our existing social order.” : Although Wirt conceded that his allegations were based largely on statements the “staellites” made at the September dinner party, he made clear that he felt Rexford Guy Tugwell, assistant secretary of Agriculture and so-called “No. 1 Brain-Truster,” was a leader in the “revolution” move of which he professed fear. Wirt’s intimations, however, swayed neither Chairman Rulwin kle,. Democrat, North Carolina, of the special committee, nor his two Democratic colleagues—Arnold of llinois and O’Connor of New York. Since the Deinocrats outnumber the Republicans—Lehlbach of New Jersey and McGugin of Kansas—it was likely that their views would orevail. - In fact, Bulwinkle told repert ers: o “Wé do not plan to Summon Tugwell or any other real brain trusters.” It was equally pateny that the committee is through with ~Dr WwWirt, Bulwinkle asked him to turn in his expense account at once and said he could return to Gary whenever he chose. . ; The only persons the committes new intends to hear, he explained, are Dr. Wirt's companions at m McLean Va. @inner. Sy He named them as Robert Bru ere, chairman of NRA's textile code authority; David C. Coyle, (Continued on Last Page) LOCAL WEATHER Fair tonight and Thursday, colder in extreme north portion tonight. B el The following report covers % the 24 hour period ending at Is,» 8:00 A. M. today: e % TEMFERATURE "' Hlghest. .. ... cisers saanicißibe o 8 LOWeSt.... s vassss eass<iliii N MORN. ... .u-y “sevs sasssiu iiG E Normal.... ...iye s-se snaafil Ol RAINFALL S Inches last 24 h0ur5........ 0.00 Total since April 1....7...‘,5 ; Deficiency since April 1.... .70 Total since Jantrey: Tesssudfilh