ii mn mf H" T T t ""ITT ' " - ' ihi i n, i m im i ii nw mil ii 1 ii ii ii , i i mi I i.i mi in i i Hill ... - - 1 'ft' , ' ; ' " L S !.: . I J ' ' ! i The Trade J i Stalemate THE United States dropped a hint last week that Russia and her satellites might be able to buy more American goods if. they would mend their ways. It is the first intimation and on what conditions the U.S. might ease a tight, IS-months-old ban on -Soviet purchase of industrial materials. -It came from Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer in a speech at the Canadian International Trade Fair in Toronto. : Sawyer said Washington is utilizing export control to implement Ameri can foreign policy but declared that no "rigid formula" had been set up. He declared: "It is clear that so far as possible w should, and we wish to, permit the free flow of trade . between all parts of Europe and between all parts of Europe and the United States, . . . If improvement In relations be tween eastern and western Europe takes place, we can look for a larger volume of trade to the benefit of both east and west." Vain Search Meanwhile .at Geneva, Switzerland, representatives of east and wwt la bored in search of a way of exchang ing information to help expand trade. ' The new Committee on Develop ment of Trade, set up by the United Nations Economic Commission for' Europe, deadlocked on its primary problem collection of information on which ah increase of east-west trade could be built. Paul R. Porter, American delegate to the Commission, said, "The meet ing was a Complete failure, resulting from refusal of the Russians to dis ' close any information which had not already.' been published. -With . this Russian refusal, the satellite coun tries, regardless of their own view, fell in line No Soviet view on the meeting could be obtained. Officials of the commission's secre tariat do not view the meeting as a complete failure, however. They say the meeting brought out all the issues Involved and governments of east and west now can determine how far they wish to go. x Wool Conference Also In progress, at Florence, Italy, was the 18th International Wool Con feience, concerned with economic, technical and scientific problems In the production and manufacture of wool. The U.S., Canada, the Union of South Africa and Australia are par ticipating, A technical commission is studying expects of reform of the international price and quality arbitration system In force before World War U. There was unofficial talk that world Wool stocks, which had been expeit - ed to last four or five years, were Dealing exhaustion. Science Prospecting by Air Buried oil and miner ab now can b f junri 'quickly and economically by aerial prospectors. A new technique makes use of magnetic, gravity nd electrical records of the earth taken frim the air, which show' likely spot where oil and mineral, may lie. This aerial prospecting takes but a fraction of the time needed for iru.s toinary ground surveys and costs run from I 20th to l50th as much. A Canadian engineer, Hans Lund berg of Toronto, described the new method last week ina report to the United Nations Scientific Conference on CMiservation and Utilization of Resources. . In use now with airplanes is the magnetic airborne detector, developed duung the war to find submarine It records differences in magnetic A Id in the earth, and indicates the lota t ion of likely oil-bearing rock or ether ore-bearing formations. "Already the new routine has been tried in many parts of the world and in all cases it has proven superior, cheaper, faster and more - revealing than routine surface surveys," Lund Vberg said. Sidelights The Post Office reports that the Writ Virginia town of Mole Hill pop ulaUon S3, has officially changed its name to Mountain. Id Buenos Aires, Princess Ileana of the exiled Romanian royal family pawned a jeweled crown for fSt.000. It is now for sale at the municipal pawnshop. At Dravosburg, Pa., work on a new high-level bridge across the Monoo gahela River has been "detoured" around a steel pier on which robins built a nest and hatched two eggs. Bridge workers built a steel rage about the pier to insure privacy and put up a sign: "Danger Keep Away IX Not-Disturb Robins. In Houston; Tex, Ella friddle fUed suit for her seventh divorce in five years from her husband George. Ella is W, George 59. They married for the first tisne in 1944 after a Lonely Hearts Club correspondence. George and Ella were each married four 'times before they started marrying: each other. George has eight children and Ella two. "Six months married was a long time." EUa said. She said it was the longest time they had been . married at one time since they met t "4"- ' i ' l St -''" - 1 - "hp ,r ii ( a f I Sxgfy & I I I t at: 1 0 f' ft 4Jf iti Jtmmmt t Jllliiiill QUAKE DAMAGE Workers prepore to repair the 100-ton cupola atop the Olympia, Wash stats copitol, damaged In th April 13 earthquake. The 210-foot fnctined hoist will be used to lower the massive stones on m cradle held by steel cables. People Haven for Gerhart Gerhart Eisler, described by a Con gressional committee as the t p Com munist agent in the United States, succedod last week In ducking be hind the Iron Curtain. The British dragged him off a Pol ish liner a fortnight ago at the request of tie UJ5. State Department. Eisrier had jumped bail of $23,500 dad stowed away on the liner in New York. Then a British court ruled the United States had failed to prove Eisler had been convicted of an extraditable offense. The dciilon held that Eisler's falsifi cation of passport information was not the equivalent of perjury under English law. , Ki'sler triumphantly quaffed a mug of English. beer, addressed a few Brit ish Communist meetings. The best thing for the rest of the world, he FUGITIVE EISIER ... freed to Kmm . . orated, would lie a few more setbacks like this for American Imperialism. Lajt Monday he boarded a Czech airline plane and made a non-stop flight to Prague. lie was accompanied to the London airport by three Czech embassy official but his name was not on the passenger list and his bag-' gatt bore no labels. iivr L I iiiJ4i ruin iitii iii ictrjim had iued him a travel permit Eisler nlAnnod to p. k to P.,!. rv4 then t Grrmany where h" had been offered a professorship at Leipzig University in the Rusitan zne. In Prague, Eisler said U.S. Attorney General Tom Clark j. a "damn foul" who ought to be fiu-d. In Wash ington, Clark said be did not care to comment ' ' Last week theCommuxust-dominated Peuple's Congress, meeting in the Soviet sector of Berlin, named Eisler one of 400 candidates for the People's Council, highest body in the republic to be set up in the Soviet zone of Germany. . , In Short . . . Killed: In a traffic accident near Washington. W. A. Julian, treasurer of the United States, whose flourished signature appears on every piece of currency. Placed: By the. Bolivian govern ment, the whole country under a state of siege; officials declared strik ing AMietn tin miners brought about a "state of civil war"; the death ton exceeded 30, including two American engineers, i Agreed: President Truman and bis Congressional leaders, en a new Sen ate legislative program, giving repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act priority ewer the North Atlantic Pact MR fUffM JUMrre. AT Nrvrltatvrtt) L mm Dates M n day, Jane t Anniversary (fifth), D-Day. in vasion of Normandy, France. American Medical Association meet at Atlantic City, N. J.' Swedish Flag Day. Anniversary (105th), Yjmrvg Men's Christian Association. Wednesday, Jane 8 International labor conference op-n3 at Geneva, Switzerland. Thnrsday, June 9 National Open golf tourney opens at Medinah, III. Saturday, Jane 11 Blmont Stakes horserace. New York. Botany :New A Ho Ha Strain f American agriculturists, combing 'the world for alfalfa to resist diseases attacking th American variety, came acruss a single, amazing alfalfa plant in a Turkish goat pasture. The 'plant covered several square feet. It grew like Bermuda grass, which no known alfalfa .had done. From a single root, runners spread, putting down roots at short intervals, and sending up leaves at that point. The alfalfa plant has changed ge netically in self-defense. The Turkish goats had grazed so closely that the alfalfa could not produce seed. But instead of dying, the plant had devel oped runners which replaced seed. I This single plant was carefully dug. iand nurtured during a month-long trip - to the United States. Here the 'new alfalfa proved unadapted to this country. Thereupon, says Dr. P. V. Cardoo, administrator of the Agricultural Re search Administration of the U.S. De- t m . ti . . . . Ptment ofnAir?cuJtare-. J?: " wrT called in to finish the goats work. The breeders produced seedless. still like Bermuda grass, that grows well in the nurseries of several states. 1 The potential value of this new Strain, says Dr. Cardon, cannot be overestimated. '5 J. x . K for Salvatore GviTkmo, Skulnn bandit, who government lenders to a cJwel PARIS: Talk, Tallcj Talk THE Big Four! conference went into a familiar tactic last week in Paiis. The, foreign ministers stopped talking on a subject on which thy could Inot agree and started talking on. another. ThVtheory is that somewhere in the shifting, if they can talk on long enough and about enough topics, someone somewhere may make a concession. The subject on which the Big Four deadlocked was the political unification of Germany. Soviet Russia Radio War of Words American and British broadcasts to Russia now are breaking through Soviet' jamming only for brief and scattered periods. Voice of America and the Brit ish Broadcasting Corp., working to gether, are able to use only 61 stations to beam broadcasts over the Iron Curtain. A Voice spokesman said that as many as seven and eight Soviet transmitters are being used to jam a single Anglo-American station. Boh British and Voice programs have been drasticailry changed. AH music and features have beln dropped. Only news, commentaries and head line summaries are broadcast on a "24 hour a tfay basis. j The Russians had beer jamming Voice programs intermittently for months Two months ago they stepped up jamming operations, virtually drowning out Voice! broadcasts in tfce Russian language. The Voice has 36 transmitters 1ft trie United States, four in Munich, two in Manila, one in Honolulu and five leased from the BBC. ' A new Soviet jammer, used for the . first time last week, consists of eight inui-al note broadcast simultaneous ly at high power. The discordant blast bloti out everything else and makes 'use of earphones extremely unpleas ant. Britain Conservatives Alerted Winston ChurchilL has railed on the Conservative Party to mobilize for a possible general election in Britain thm fall. The ruling Labor Government is empowered to call a general election at any time. Normally, general elec tion are held every five years but there is no specified time for ballot ing. The last general '. elec tion was irip 1945 when the Labor Party swept into power. The Conservatives made substantial gains in the elections of big city, borough, district and rural governments in England. Scotland and Wales early last month Churchill said he had heard the opinion expressed that it might be better for the Conservatives not to win the general election and to leave the Lahontes "to reap the folly they liave sown." -v He said he hoped and believed "no such attempt to sabotage the free workings of constitutional goverh ment" would be supported by the British people. Stage Good Will Ambassador U.S. Ambassador Lewis Douglas and British public leadWs praised American stage and so et-n star , Dan ny K3e last week at a luncheon in the Savoy IIoteL Douglas, wearing black glasses to shield his injured left eye from the glare of Kl;eg lights, described Kaye as "a better ambassador ol good will fthan all the. sedate personalities of officials." The Lord Mayor of London de clared: "I'd like to see every meeting fjol ministers preceded by a little turn of Danny Kaye. That might even have an effect on Mr. Vishinsky." Kaye, in a nearly gagless speech, said be thought emotions were the same the world over. The actor, cur rently at London's Palladium, has made a terrific hit with the English public, attracting repeated visits by members of the royal family. A K a-i fat the recently. f.S. He wasn't there. ; 9 Chi . wants a centralized government with headquarters in Berlin and. of course, a veto power on all decisions. The western powers want a federalized democratic state for, all Germany under the Bonn constitution, already adopted by their three occupation rones. Both sides were adamant. Each re fused to accept the other's views even as a basis for discussion. Experts on the staffs of foreign min isters foci now that the only hope for any agreement in Paris is to arrive at some working arrangement for revival of east-west German trade ahd solving the Berlin problem. Thoj,e were the next questions on the doc ket. IT'S SO EASY TO ' w A AERIAL: Big Bomber Probe The B-36 Controversy The B-36 is the world's biggest bomber in mass production. It is ca pable, says the Air Force, of deliver ing a formidable bomb load any where in the world. Its specifications are awe-inspiring. They include winjspread 230 feet, speed over 350 miles an hour, opera tional ceiling over 40,000 fevt, range 10,000 miles with a 10.000-pound bomb load, armament of 16 20 mm. cannon, rrew of lS. It is powered by six "pusher" engines with a total of more than 20,000 horsepower The newest models are equipped with four jet pods. Service Rivalry The Air Force claims the B 38 is the nation's first line of defence, that no fighter plane can shout it down at the high altitude at which it operates. The Navy says its new Banshee jet fighters can take the B-36, and so can some foreign makes. Since the first of the year, the Air Force has cancelled contracts with four other aircraft companies in or der to build up its fleet of B-36s. In January the Air Force, with approval by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, cancelled orders for 81 lighter bombers to con centrate on the big 38. In April or ders for 43 Boemg bombers were voided to find funds for 33 more B-Ms. Louis A. Johnson, who took ovet as Secretary of Defense on March 28, quickly squelched the inter-service fight One of his first acts was to halt rtataZS RtIiUTU Jswup of PrWcj Afy was macf ofYer weckffng at Vallaurit, Franca. Atonp Quarrel Splits Official Washington TTO fight between David E. Lilienthal, chairman of the United States Atomic Energy Commission, and Sen. Bourke Hickenlooper tH-Ia) lst .week became one of the most bitter, wide-open quarrels in recentWashington. history. It concerns the whole atomic energy program and the way it is being handled. The eyes of the world, some of V Dr. Cecil Nertbeef executive secretary f the LondoVr Mission ary Society: "The freedom given to the Christian Church irK Soviet areas is a freedom of condescen sion and sufferance." Frank J. StarseL general man ager of The Associated Presi. "Courage in the editorial chair is the real bulwark of freedom. Our way of life cannot survivexonce we succumb to the sugar-coated pill instead of the .bitter draught of straight, unvarnished facts and truths. fart, 1mmiM fx ADVISE OTHERS construction on the Navy's superear-, rier. Congress Stirs Within the pat foitmght, reper cussion of the feud boiled up on the floor of Congress. Rep. James Van Zandt fit I'a.i, a Navy Reserve rap tain, called for. a complete Cohgres btonal investigation. He noted the fol lowing claims: Consolidated Vu.tee Aircraft Corp., maker of the B-3G. is cooti oiled by Floyd Odium, reported to have been a heavy contributor to the Demo cratic campaign last fall. Defense Secretary Johnson fas a director of Consolidated V'ultee be fore he Ix-came a Cabinet member. Theje were ruljfTors that Air Force Secretary Symington is about to re sign and accept an executive post with Consolidated V'ultee. Fact and Fiction Democratic House leaders rallied to the defense of Johnson and Sym ington but quickly agreed that an in vestigation was necessary to sift fact from gos:p about bomber procure ment and the relations past, present and future of top defense 'official j with commercial aircraft interests. Chairman Carl Vinson (D Ga.) of the House Armed Forces Committee personally asked his committee to ex pedite the inquiry and made arrange ments to conduct public hearings. One of the first prospective wit nesses was Air Secretary Symington. He said he welcomed the inquiry as a chance to prove that VancZandt's statements about him were " obvious ly and demonstrably false." Or 7 '&X ;. I y- r L KXUN STRSCS-Cae Arary dkmn try vainly ta pry switches fmm wfiifa Onan railway aiea look oa. Nan-Cammwnist worHra damandW payment tW watt rathe than east marks. them hostile, shifted from the Paris parley of foreign ministers to the more dramatic and potentially more dangerous show in Washington. Hickenlooper began the quarrel by attacking Lilienthal. charging him publicly with "incredible mismanage ment and demanding his removal. Lilienthal, a veteran of many Con gressional hearings, was stung by the attack. He said it went Jbeyond "politi cal scuffling." and accused the senator of "smear" and ' un-American" tactics. Ceefrmtatioa st The Senate-House Atomic Energy Committee, of which Hickenlooper is former hairman, ppnod a public inquiry into the charges. P.th an tagonists confronted each other be fore the committee with Hickenlooper presenting hi case first. Both llickenl.ter and Ijlienthil asked full public exploration of alt the facts. The AKC chairman sa:d the gravity of the charges was sikIi that unless they were prove. 1 f.ile they would "undermine the confidence 'of this country and the people of west ern Europe in the principal security enterprise of this country.' Sen. Bi ten McMahon (D Coon), the joint committee chairman, said he hoped the inquiry could be com pleted in three weeks, but indicated h was not too optimistic about this. Full. Fair, Factual "The Arreric.in people are not oing to !e satisfied with anytlvn? Ies than a' pretu complete report from 'the rommitti-e, and a f.iir one." he said "Let it be written on the events that are to come.' The. Federation of American Scien tists, which include; many of the men who' helped develop the atomic bomb, lined up,m Lilienthal's suppoit. They said on the basis of evidence, so far presented, none of the attacks on com mission policy appears well-founded. Sen. .Robert Taft of Ohio. Senate Ropa.blican policy leader, supported Hicke.ilooper. Taft soid he voted agiinst Lilienthal' confirm -it mn t vo years ago because "I didn't think he 'was the right man for the job and I don't think so now." Labor Cars & Coal The Ford Motor Co. and the CfO United Auto Woikers opened t.'ks on a new contract last week while the bulk of the company's lOo.OoO woik ers stifl were in the doldrOms ('-. uU ing ihr: the 24 -Jar strike on pP ' up char p,es whirh ended lat Siintbv. Ford t xerutivei estimated it m,"ht take another week to 10 da s h-f i e full production could be rcMiml. They said the key River flour plant will have- to get inio full swin; mak ing parts befuie th.- otner 41 Fin d plants in the nation can rew.li nor malcy. Crfitract negotiations had been slated to start May 15 but Ford V fused to entT them while the flare up strike continued In the nw con tract to start July 15, the umon if asking a ?10O month pension plan, health -and andent insiiramv anJ ionie foi m of wage increae. Safety in Mine Meanwhile in Washington. John L. Lewis aked 'Congies to art now for greater safety in the nation's coal mines by apiroving a propositi ixll giving federal inpc-Urs the ribt la c lose diiruiL-rous mines. Lewis dramatically denounced some mine operators as "poll-cats' with no concern for human life. Tes tifying before a Senate labor sub committee, the United M"ine Workers chieftain iUid 1,259.081 miner hav been "maimed, mangled and killed" in the coal mines during the post 19 years. Glowering and shouting. Lewis said if he had the powers of a magician, he would march "the quick and the dead before Congress so that law makers might see for themselves the blood and gore on which the indus try is run. 1 JL)