The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 08, 1951, Page 1, Image 1

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Wulainette River -U feet
' TORECAST (from U. S. weather bu
reau. McNary field. Salem): Partly
cloudy this morning, . becoming mostly
ekxriy with showers this afternoon
and tonight. Little temperature chance.
High today near 66, Ipw tonight sear 43.
CmtW ft riw GrtwA tf Crtpa
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.. . . ' - - , ... ? - I
lClst YEAH : 20 PAGE3 - Tit Oregon StatMznazw Saleixw Oregon. Thursday. Ncjrefiiber 8V JS51 ' " ', . . i PRICE Sc ' ! ' ' ' -,-.
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'r Search Continues for 5; Deaths at 7
', . ; . . ' . . . . . - i - j. ."."..
' SEATTLE, Nov. lJpy-Twentj-tour survivors of the fire-wracked
death-freighter George Walton were headed for Vancouver, B. C, to
night while a spreading search was continued for five crewmen still
unaccounted for. ; I I .
Seven other men from the freighter are known to. have died, three
in the fire and four who were lost from their lifeboat during rescue
- The Robert Shaw Chorale at the
high school auditorium Tuesday
night ushered in what promises to
be the most brtuiani musica.
ion in Salem's history. There are
three series of concerts with, a to
tal of 12 performances scheduled
for the city. Included are some of
the world's greatest musical art
ists. The music loving public real-
ly is drooling over iu- j
for seldom does a city of this size
on this coast have as rich an as
sortment of musical wares as that
made available here this winter.
The Associated Students of Wil
lamette university are sponsoring
"The Distinguished Artists Series
which will be initiated with a con
cert by Bidu Sayao, soprano, on
Saturday evening next. Miss Sayao
is a native of Brazil who has be
come famous on the concert and
opera stage. She sang here a num
ber of years ago, so her return is
anticipated wiu pleasure by those
who heard her, then or have heard
'her since. ' - - .
Others in the series are Yehudi
Me nun in, well-known violinist,
December 20th, making his first
- ..-. Snlnmnn. man
istTjanuary 17; and William War
field, bass, one of the younger art-
Next Tuesday night, November
IS the Portland symphony orches
tra under the direction of James
Sample will give the first of its
-- Mncerts scheduled for Sa-
lom In addition the great tenor
singer Jan Peerce will be a fea
tured artist Other dates for Port
land Symphony are January 22
and March 4th. ' ' 'f-
Portland Symphony has an es
tablished reputation in the render
in of mnnhonic music and Direc-
tor Sample has proven his ability
as a conductor, riere men oppor
tunity is provided residents ox a
; lem and vicinity to
' (Continued on editorial page, 4.)
; Lodge Issues Call
j For Red Probe in
I State Department
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 - (ff) -
Ron a tor Lode (R-Massi called
s again today for a i)i-partisan in
vestuzation of charges that the
state department has been infil
trated by communists.
The charges have been leveled
repeatedly by Senator McCarthy
; (R-Wis) and by others. Lodge
- wants them sifted by a bi-partisan
commission "soieiy answeraoie vo
. congress. , .
! l 'Such an lnvestigation,w Lodge
said in a statement, will result
' in, cleaning out the -unfit and in
j- ending any unjustified . suspicion
i ox ine une men anu women wiiu
! t work In the state department.''
Lodge , is sponsor of legislation
j f to set up the inquiry commission
i salem mrcnTTATiov
k ibn tun ex w earner xcar. bck. i
i This Year - Last Year . Normal
t f 10 73 IXJO I SJn
Animal Crackers
6y WARREN C000RICH
.I'm not sure, but I think yov two
" "
0 W HA YOCM. liSti. taa
' '. s- i -! r-i . . . - - ' - - - - - - -V ; ': -K;:Kf- ;- -
I operations.- t
Tonight, a coast guard cutter and
airplane and a submarine were
probing the ; rainy, wind-swept
area around the still-burning ves
sel for a possible, clue to the fate
of the missing five. .
' The search task; was complicated
by mountainous waves and a cloud
ceiling that sat almost on the wa
ter. But, ironically, the George
Walton's burning Idecks Were cast
Ling -some light oh the scene and
possibly acting as 'a beacon of hope
to any survivors who might be still
afloat. 11
Added toother urelLeht .were
flares , from the hovering airplane
and the sweeping searchlights of
the cutter Wachtisett, which ar
rived just at nightfall,
Meanwhile, the submarine Sea
Devil, dispatched by the 13th naval
district from an undisclosed posi
ion, arrived ! and began inching
along the surface' in a waterlevel
search. ; I I
The 7,141-ton freighter probably
will be saved, officers of the cutter
Wachusett reported to 13th district
headquarters I here; The ship re
mains on a relatively even keel
and appears in no danger of sink'
ing, the Wachusett reported. The
cutter is awaiting further orders
from the ship's owners before at
tempting any salvage operations.
No attempt is being made to put
out the flames which broke out at
o'clock yesterday afternoon, kill
ing three men in a short while
and driving the rest of the crew of
36 overside to await the slow-to-come
rescue. ?
Indian School
ins
Advancement
(Picture on page 5)
Russell M. Kelley. superinten
dent of the Chemawa Indian
school the past ;f our years, will
leave Thursday for Minneapolis
to become area director of Indian
schools in Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Michigan and North Dakota.
Kelley, who has been active In
Salem in the chamber of com
merce, Rotary club, Knife and
Fork club- and the Presbyterian
church, will be succeeded at Che
mawa by Martin - S. Holm, now
assistant director; of Indian edu
cation in Alaska Date of 5 Holm's
arrival was not announced.
Mrs. Kelley currently is chair
man of the Marion county home
extension committee. They have a
son, Russell M.
now with the
Oklahoma Natural
Gas company
at Tulsa, Okla.
Since Kellers
arrival at Che
mawa, enrollment has increased
from around 400! to 600; facilities
nave been improved; two once
unused dormitories have been re
opened, and older buildings have
been removed - to beautify the
campus. 1
Keller, a native of the Salina,
Kas, area, went ( into government
service with -the! office of educa
tion in 1931. He transferred to the
Indian service in 1934, was su
perintendent of Haskell institute
at Lawrence, Kas- from 1934 to
1939, and 'was area superinten
dent of Indian education for Okla
homa and Kansas from 1939 until
coming to Chemawa in Novem
ber of 1947. j
Russians Said
MOSCOW. Nov. 7-WVMarshal
Rodion Malinovsky bitterly char
ged American leaders today- with
conducting a policy of -aggression
and preparing for a new war, but
said the soviet union is "luiiy arm
ed" to meet any attack.
Intermittent snow fell in below
zero weather as! Malinovsky re
viewed a long parade of motorized
and mechanized army units across
red square on the 34th anniversary
of the bolshevist revolution. Jet
planes and four-engined bombers
flew overhead. !
: Leading members of the pollt
buro, headed by Lavrenty P. Ber
ia and Georgi M. Malenkov. sur
veyed the scene! from the top of
Lenin s black tomb.
(There was sot mention in Mos
cow dispatches of the presence of
Prime Minister Stalin or V. M.
Molotov at the anniversary obser
T 1 TWTJ
Director w
Fully
Armed
vance.)
ruinan Offered
To Step Aside for
Ike PaperClainis.
r ' NEW TORK, "Thursday, Nov.
S-VThe New York Tines said,
today i that President .Truman
effered to support General
Dwight D. Elsenhower as a 1952
presidential candidate but that
Eisenhswer rejected the offer.
The offer, which "necessarily
concerned enly the democratic
nomination" was .: reported by
Arthur Krock, the Washington
correspondent of the New York
Times.:
In Washington, Joseph Short,
presidential press secretary,
aid: 1t is net trve." ,
Krock said that Eisenhower
"did not .specifically reject
Truman's offer of support -in
1952 "but he strongly implied re
jection; by suggesting that great
difficulties were presented ' by
his fundamental disagreement
with the administration poll-
Krock's dispatch added. This
correspondent was assured today
by a person whom he believes
to be j thoroughly reliable and
Informed that snch was the ex
change between the two, pre
sumably at their private lan
eheon Moaday."
II
jaue Bennett
Recall Plan
PORTLAND, Nov. 7-tfP)-T h e
recall movement against city com
missioner J. E. (Jake) Bennett
got at least a temporary set-back
today. I
The jelty attorney. Alexander
Brown, jruled invalid the prelimi
nary recall petition filed yester
day by George Barnard. He said
Barnard filed as an . individual,
whereas the law stipulates a re
call can ' originate only with a
group, i .
Barnard Indicated he would
start at once to organize a group
to file a new recall move.
Commissioner Bennett suggest
ed that the recall petition filing
be timed so that the election could
be at the same time as the May
primary next year.
He said this would save the
city's taxpayers i about $50,000.
Bennett said he would not want
to remain on the city council "if
the majority of the people are
opposed to what I stand for or the
methods used. . .
. i
Thief Gets
. i
Only Advice
PORTSMOUTH, N.H- Nov. 7-
A young, would-be holdup
man tonight entered Mrs. Anthony
Krisuk's grocery store and de
manded: "Hand me over all the
money !in the cash register.
Said !the 40-year-old Mrs. Kri-
suk: "You get out and earn your
money Ithe hard way. The way I
do."
He left without the tilTs con
tents which Mrs. Krisuk told po
lice was a. small amount. -
Black Leopard Escapes,
Then Returns to Cage
DALLAS, Texas, Nov. 1-UPi-
Mxke, a black leopard in a zoo
here; escaped from his cage this
week, i . -
An attendant saw him loose and
fainted; from fright
Mike calmly returned to bis cake;
Strikes Snag
Frankie, Ava Trade Vows Amid
Bickering with Photographers
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 7-(ff)-Frank!
Sinatra interrupted his
bickering with persistent photog
raphers long enough tonight to ex
change! wedding vows with Ava
Gardner but only after threaten
ing to knock one of them "flat on
your back.
The double ring ceremony took
place in a colonial style stone
house on a quiet street in the
fashionable West Germantown
section! of Philadelphia. It lasted
10 rninutes. '
No . newsmen or photographers
were permitted inside the house,
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Sacks, h
- A score of them tramped about
the damp lawn, however, for as
long as . four . hours, waiting a
chance to talk to the Sinatras or
snap m picture of them.
A photographer induced a ser
vant to take a note to Sinatra. It
suggested that if Sinatra would
cooperate with the press, the press
would be inclined to reciprocate.
Sinatra himself burst out
through the door.
New Plan
PresMted
T61J.N.
PARIS, Nov. 7 -iJf)- A world
peace plan for regulation and re
duction of all armed forces and
arms, including atomic weapons,
was presented to the United Na
tions by the United States, Brit
ain and France tonight.
President Truman, broadcasting
from Washington, hailed the plan
as "foolproof" in its ironclad pro
visions for insp-cuons and ver
ifications and called on Russia -to
join in reducing the world's stag
gering armaments burden.
jU. N. observers were almost
certain, . however, , .that , Russia
would reject the three-power dis
armament scheme because it in
corporates a number of proposals
for arms control already turned
down by the Soviets in the U. N
New Element . . 1
jThey pointed out that only the
inclusion of. atomic weapons in
the general reduction of arms and
the . proposed . preliminary ' world
census of arms were new in the
I three-power proposal.
me western . peace move ap
pears designed mainly for propa
ganda purposes - to throw the
Russians on the defensive and nul
lify any benefits they might ex
pect from their own peace of
fensive. The Russians have con
tended the idea of unlimited in
spection is just part of an Ameri
can scneme to build uo a. hugs
spy system. .
Restricts Production
A key paragraph of the an
nouncement said:
'The three governments believe
that a workable program should
include, criteria according to
which the size of all armed forces
would be limited, the portion of
national production which could
be used ' for military production
would be restricted, and mutually
agreed national military pro grams
would be arrived at within the
prescribed limits and restrictions."
The three powers said tney be
lieved discussion of such a pro
gram should begin now, but it
could not be put into effect "while
United Nations forces are resist
ing aggression in Korea.' f
Furthermore, they ' added, the
major political issues which have
divided the world can and must
be settled concurrently with the
taking effect of any such pro
gram.
Rock Gushes
i - :
Dallas Man
! Statesman Newt Service
(DALLAS, Nov. 7 Ray L.
Boggs, 24, Dallas, was crushed
fatally today in a logging acci
dent in the Black Rock area west
of Falls City. -
The coroner's office here said
a rock rolled on Boggs while he
worked as a choke setter at the
Willamette Valley Lumber Co.
logging operation.
: Witnesses said the rock seemed
to disintegrate as it struck Boggs,
burying him in debris. His father,
Leonard Boggs of Dallas, was
working near him when the ac
cident occurred about 11 a.m.
Boggs died instantly. - , !
s Also surviving are the widow,
Lylia Jean Boggs, and two chil
dren, Gerry Ray and Linda Lee,
all of 612 Church st, Dallas,
his mother, Mrs. Helen Roberts,
Drain; and a sister, Betty Jean
Connell, Tillamook,
i Services for Boggs, a veterans
of Worli war li, will be an
nounced later by the Bolllman
mortuary.
"OK," he demanded, "Who did
it? Which one? You? You? You?
"Now," he barked, "you're not
going, to get any pictures. You'll
get shots from the commercial
photographer when he gets around
to it."
t "I'm going to shoot, ' cried the
photographer who had sent in the
note. . . . . ":
-ni betcha $500 you don't
Sinatra replied, "and if you do 111
knock you flat on your back.'
. Then Frankie went inside, slam
ming the door. '
. Frankie and Ava sneaked in the
back door of the Sacks home at
5:30 pm an hour and a quarter
before- the ceremony.' . Plain-
clothed detectives . guarded - the
doors and when the Sinatras were
whisked away from the home
tnree nours alter the ceremony,
three patrol cars kept them from
newsmen, who were unable to
speak to them.-1 , . : t -,-
One private photographer
snapped pictures of the ceremony
and distributed them to newspa
pers and wire services.
j . , i . . . ; s i ...
Handshake Sign
.x.
PARIS, Not. 7 U. S. Secretory of State Dean Aehes en (left) shakes
Secretary Anthony Eden (right) as they meet with French Foreign
at the French foreign office in Paris as the sixth General Assembly
; Wirephoto by radio from Paris to The Statesman.)
to Cut
rtsi
TightenLoans
LONDON. Nov." 7-WVWinston
Churchill's government announced
today it is going to cut its buying
abroad by nearly a. billion dollars
a year ana make money dearer to
borrower at home in order to get
Britain out of the red. , I -
Austerity, which the British
have been taking for the 12 years
since , they got into the war j with
Germany1, is coming in bigger and
more bitter doses. . I !
Imports to be cut will include
food and stockpiling materials.
R. A. Butler, new conservative
chancellor of the exchequer; an
nounced in the house of commons
the bad news forecast by Churchill
yesterday. - : . j
Butler said ithe nationalized
Bank of England is raising its bank
rate immediately from the pres
ent two per cent to 2ft per; cent
to check i inflation. This means a
borrower will have to pay more
interest for a loan from any bank
in England. This was the I first
change in the rate since 1939.
The stiff new program also calls
for: . ! !
1 Reductions T In the nation's
food supplies and the' end jof a
number of non-rationed extras,
such as canned meats and fruits
brought in from abroad. j
2 A new tax on excess profits.
2 A ban on all new building
for the next three months except
dwellings and rearmament factor
ies.' r . : ' ; . i ' ..
4 A new drive to increase pro
duction by British industry in an
effort to! provide more goods for
export.',! ! : J. '
5 A 60 per, cent cut in the
amount of money a Briton ' may
take out i of the country, a reduc
tion from 100 ($280) to 50
($140). k : ' i
8 -A meeting in January of fin
ance ministers from, throughout
the commonwealth to discuss the
problem jof restoring the world's
confidence in the pound sterling.
Stores to Stay
Open Armistice
Most Salem stores will remain
(men Monday but will halt: busi
ness during the Armistice day
parade Scheduled for 10:30! ajn,
it was announced Wednesday by
Richard jL. Cooley, president of
Salem Retail Trade bureau;
HolidaV observance on! the
Mnndav i frVPowine actual Armis
tice date will include the closing
of public offices at city hall, the
courthouse , and- state buildings.
except for emergency services.
The post office will close and mail
will not-be delivered, i I
General display of the V. S.
nag has; ben urged ror Monaay
by public officials.
8TTJDENTS ELECT COLONEL
STORRS, Conn-, Nov. l-UPh
Edward i F. Stevenson, i 57J was
elected president of the freshman
class at i the University of Con
necticut ( today.1 A retired army
colonel, Stevenson enrolled at the
college this fall to prepare for law
SChOOL I v ; ! "
Britain
WHO
Day
Monday
..... . I :
Causes
Of Schools at Detroit
StaAesmajt News Service
' DETROIT, Nov. 7 Fourth case of poliomyelitis In Detroit grade
school within a week brought closure j today of the grade and high
schools for the remainder of this week, at least. None of the cases was
considered severe. I - ' .
Latest-victim, taken to Salem
Michael Howland, 12, a 7th grader
wno was stricken last week. Sons
of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Howland of
Detroit, they are both in the hos
pital; but both in good condition
and not experiencing 'paralysis as
yet. .- -
i The school board -announced the
closure Tuesday night but did not
reach all pupils, and many showed
up Wednesday morning. Enroll
ment is about 200 elementary and
50 high echooL ,
This afternoon about 60 parents.
teachers and board members met
in the grade school to hear Dr. W.
J. Stone, Marion county health of
ficer,: and to ask questions. He
pointed out that cancelling classes
would not harm the situation but
should not be considered a meas
ure that would stop spread of the
disease. He reported that those at
the meeting did not appear highly
alarmed but were extremely in
terested in what they could do.
The health officer urged that
children especially avoid new con
tacts and over-fatigue. .
The other Detroit polio cases are
those of Wanda Jennings, 6, a first
grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Jennings, a neighbor of the
Howlands, and Donna Watts, 10,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Myron
Watts. Both have returned home
after treatment at Salem Memorial
hospitaL j
Plan Explored
MUNSAN, Korea, Thursday, Nov
8-P)-U. N. command negotiators
conferred for two hours and 20
minutes with Communist delegates
this morning in an attempt to ob
tain a clearer picture of the Reds'
latest buffer zone proposal.
After a brief recess the subcom
mittees went back to work, with
out taking time out for lunch.
"We have just begun exploring,
We are trying to find out what this
thing means,", Maj. Gen.. Henry I.
Hodes, U. N. command subcommit
tee delegate, told newsmen at Pan-
munjom.
Plane Wreckage,
Bodies Found Near
Paulina Lodge -
! KLAMATH FALLS, Nov. 7-P)
-Ground searchers today . came
unori the wreckage of a private
mane and the bodies of three
California physicians, missing
since Saturday.
.The. nlane crashed a half mile
ftiith of Paulina Lake- lodge.
about a hundred miles north of
here in rough, timbered country.
The : search ; centered near the
lodge after a report of a crash
in that area and it was there that
SSgt. Richard H. Bailey and two
nth- in his McChord air force
base communications unit found
the wreckage toaay, a nunarea
yards from the lodge road
iThe victims were Dr. A." D.
Mverc Baldwin Park. Calif- the
niiAt Dr. Hush Brown; Monte-
bello, Calif- and Dr. Byron Bald
win. San uaDneiy cam. iney naa
taken off from the Redmond. Ore.
aimort. 70 miles north of the
crash scene.
Red Armistice
hands with Britain's new Foreign
Minister Robert Schnman (center)
of the United Nations starts. (AP
- ;
Closure
Memorial hospital Tuesdav. is
and brother of Dennis Howland, 9,
Disease Hits
Korea Forces
TOKYO. Thursday. Nov. 8-OP)
A mysterious disease has brok
en out among allied forces in Ko
rea ( (hiring he past few months,
Brig. Gen. William E. Shambora,
surgeon for the Far East com
mand, disclosed today.
.Tbe disease strikes suddenly
and is characterized by fever and
a headache common symptoms
of the " early .stages of several
acute infectious diseases.
An official, release from Gen.
Matthew B. Ridgway's headquar
ters! said it- is strikingly similar
to a. disease first reported by the
Japanese among their Manchur-
ian troops in 1929. i -
"It is still too early to assert
that the two diseases are, without
doubt, identical the announce
ment added.
The' Japanese believe the dis
ease is caused by a tiny virus
carried by field mice and trans
mitted to man by mites. They
called it "epidemic : hemorrhagic
fever." - 1
The outbreak among U. N. com
mand troops has not been checked
by .the use of either sulfa drugs
or anti-biotics, Shambora said.
Blood transfusions from men who
have recovered seem to ease the
severity of new cases, he added.
Shambora said some patients
recover quickly. Others develop
further symptoms, including hem
horrages under, the skin, around
the eyes and internal organs.. In
other eases, the disease affects
thej kidneys. ..':.' - i; .
Chinese Attack
Captures Hill
VS. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD
QUARTERS, Korea, Thursday,
Nov. 8 - () - Allied j infantrymen
withdrew from a ctrateffie hill in
western Korea early today in the
face of an overwhelming commun
ist attack. It was the seventh time
the: hill has changed hands in two
weeks. .)
Allied trrwvn Huff in on another
hill near the Imjin river west of
Yonchon. beat off an assault by
screaming, whistle-blowing Chin
ese reds during tne nignu
A U. N. command briefing offl
rr ulri a email allied unit a ban
doned the newly-won hill north
west of Yonchon, some 35 miles
north nt SmuI. when it snotted a
force of 600 to 800 Chinese mgving
up ine siope. - '
MOSSADEGH GETS SOS -
TEHRAN, Iran, Nov. 7-sr-Shah
Mohammed t Reza Pahlevi,
distressed over Iran's worsening
economic and political crisis, has
cabled Premier Mohammed Mos
sadegh in Washington a request
to return home immediately, an
authoritative source said tonight.
NewMystery
3
Trumaii
roval i
By Ernest B. Yaecare j
WASHINGTnw M n' :
- 1 -wt. --jr--
President Truman rhali----
Russia toniehl tn arrant a '
Proof" disarmamn -.!--. i
which United Nations , inspectors-'
would police each country's ttat
es and weapons, mcluxlmg-etee-bombs.-
' ; . . . Tri
That is the nath fh
would prefer to take toward real '
MeKfnd iT Present"
said, but added: - t ... i
We will do It th tM
we must by going forward as we
are uoin? nnur tn n.k. .i. . ;
w2f o strong that no would-be
aggressor would dare to breal, the'
f Mr. Tnntia.l. LIJ - !"-
lin to Join in "this great enter
prise for Peace" was made kTZ
ISSS ddfess totheV
-- wiuta was h A s m - a -
wroughout the world
by
tiaV
voice of America. t
rTu . . . '"-HUixu wmcn i me
ffi&lMtain and FraS:
"u maae a fw in..-,
earuer, for submission, to the U.
general assemblv n Pari-T S
Giant Inventory 1 t
, w iouowci by cuts
in armament, -nrt .
t. , llUMia nas calked at
the continuing outside inspection
which Mr. Truman In w.'Si
and the three nations In their V
. proposal made the basis of their ?
T In. f the Russians refusal k
the -past. to go along wiOi im
inspection system, officials ! here
were asked whether the big three
plan was primarily V propaganda 1
They replied that It was d ser
lous proposal worked out Inv
many months. They; said! the '
United State ( nn.-.--
- - r iw biij it
behin It and carry it out if Ru- z
ki grees. . i- ;
Notes Past Attitode f ' ! '
The r resident tiinV nn(a n tj.w
sia's past attitude toward Inspee
tion and asserted: f l i
"Any nation whfoh f
ing . to agree to this step, and
carry out, is not reauy interest ;
ed In disarmament' , h . s '
He took note, too, of j the
doomv historv nf mi, -ti
tions with the Soviet Union,"! and m
said it is true that "we have ex- "
nerienced much had faith imU .
and broken promises." i j
nevertheless the efforstmust
be made because it Is ! "the- right
thinr ti TUri T .,-- . ..IJ v
we cannot permit tne nlsrory g
our times to record that we failed
by default" f . '
. The president coupled his tr .
posal with an implied promise
that a share of this country's sav
ines from reduction of the arm
burden would be devoted to
peaceful improvement j of the lot
of peoples. I v.: '- .1 ' : i -"If
that cost could be iuced---if
the burden of armaments could '
be lessened, new energies and re
sources would he liberated fnr ;
greatly enlarged programs of re- -
Mnrff'ir'iflAn - anrl 4B-e-r-k1r-rn-Lem4 9 :
VVllOMUVUVU CUAVS V VlVnKUI
he said. -A .. I ! t
Speeifle Steps :- ' . f ' . j .
, Mr. Truman gave thls-iwtline
of the specific disarmament steps: '
"First, we ? propose a continu
ing inventory of all armed fortes
and armaments be undertaken.
This inventory would i take place
in every country having substan
tial military power, and it would
be checked and verified in feaeh
of those countries by inspectors
who are nationals of other cow- ,
tries, working under the United
Nations. . These , inspectors l Would
have authority to find out whet
the real facts are. f : f I
"Second, we propose that, Who
this process of inventcry and in
spection, is taking place, the na
tions work out specific arrange
ments for the actual reduction ot
armed strength. : 1
Third, we propose ,otl the
basis of these two steps, that the
reductions which are the goal of
the program be made as soon as
that can be done, with full knowledge-and
fairness to alL" :
.. -.;.,,' i ; 4
Meat Price Bise j
Order Due Today ,
WASHINGTON, No v. 7 J
Price controllers said 1 today; that
housewives may have to pay con
siderably more for veal and slight
ly more for lamb and mutton un
der new. pricing orders , to; be - is
sued tomorrow. f '. -
One of the two orders will eet
dollars and cents ceilings at whole
sale on Iamb and mutton. The sec
ond will provide retailers ! wiia
methods for computing new! ceil
ings on Iamb, mutton, and1 veal
based on their prices from -wholesalers.
-. r : '.!-.''