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The three "western powers have
launched a peace offensive of their
own. it was given aaamonai im
petus in the radio address of Presi
dent Truman Wednesday , night
The program is in brief one. for
orderly disarmament. "It calls for
an inventory of armaments in all
major powers; agreements for seal
ins; down the array of weapons and
then the actual reduction. The pro
gram mlcht also include fixing ra
tios of national production which
might be devoted to armament.
The purpose of the proposal Is
two-fold, lirst, to appeal to itus
fcia to end the senseless Dilina un
of arms and to convince Russia
and the world of our sincerity in
support) of peace; and second to
lighten the burden whose weight
is pressing down on the backs of
people of the United states ana
rrtirularlv of western Europe
who are just now convalescing
from the latest war.- ; , v
As might have been expected
Russia promptly rejected tne pro
oL Vishlnslnr eallinf it ludi-
mtti." ' this In nit of the fact
that Russia has steadily given lip
service to the idea. The plan called
for inspection by an international
eammittee of United Nations.
which always has been resisted by
Russia in connection with atomic
merffv pnntroL Tha nresldent.
however, can say that we made
the appeal and hope that that will
clear him and us at the bar of
history. :
I wonder, however, If he Isn't
Setting the cart before the norse.
Armament is the result of Inter
national friction, thouzh as it pro
ceeds and becomes more highly
competitive it may create addition-
. al friction and suspicion. It seems
to me that the first moves should
be in the direction of reducing the
friction. That way we would be
getting at. the
(Continued on editorial page, a..)
Seattle Unions
i -
Criticize Plans
For Mac's Visit
SEATTLE, Nov. -P)-PQWtTtvll
CIO and AFL labor groups joined
voices today in criticizing the
scheduled visit here next week of
General MacArthur because of
"strong political connotation out
of keeping with a civic celebra
tion .
The AFL leader stressed that
they are not opposed to General
MacArthur but to the persons
sponsoring him and particularly to
having Sen. Harry P. Cain (R
Wash) Introduce the general.,
Officials of Greater. Seattle, Incn
civic agency planning the year
long celebration of Seattle's cen
tennial, replied that political con
siderations had nothing to do with
arranging the general's visit and
nationwide broadcast next Tues
day. - i ' '
But tha Seattle Central Labor
council, composed of all major AFL
unions in the city, threatened last
night to withdraw all financial
support t from the hard - pressed
Greater Seattle unless the organi
zation showed evidence of drop
ping, what the council termed its
'"political characteristics."
I .
6 More
In Ship Mishap
SEATTLE, Nov. 8 -JPh Three
ships plowed through the storm
tossed North Pacific tonight with
80 survivors ' of tha burning
freighter George Walton.
Six members of the Sfi-man
crew are not making the home
ward voyage. They arc "the dead
- and missing.
, The final six known survivors,
wet and weary after being tossed
for 35 hours in their lifeboat, were
rescued before dawn today by the
coast guard cutter Wachusett
They were found about 22 miles
from the burning freighter, about
800 miles off the northwestern tip
si Washington state.
Animal Crackers
y WARREN GOODRICH
Saved
1 I I I Jxri
f BALD
i I ' EAGLE
1 -
mm to say Tat 90m U UU
Oe pop AUjttyjftr
-4
NEW YORK; NovV 9-(Friday )-(")-The
"25- day - old longshore
men's strike that has crippled the
ports of New York and Boston was
officially reported settled early to
day. ' I' ' ' '
New York state Industrial Com
missioner Edward Corsi, head of a
fa t-finding panel announced that
the striking dock workers will re
turn to work at 1 p. m. (EST) to
day. ' r-r : ;
, His announcement followed a
four-hour dosed meeting between
longshoremen representatives and
the paneL f - --J A' M
Issues in the billion-dollar wild
cat strike, that stemmed from a
revolt within the AFL Interna
tional 'Longshoremen association
over a new contract still were to
be ironed out I
i The panel issued a formal state
ment in which it said negotiations
"will now proceed in an atmos
phere free from tension."
'John J. (Gene) Samt .on, leader
of the striking longshoremen, said
the settlement means "approxi
mately 25,000 men will be going
back to work.V - " :', '
Some of the stevedores loyal to
HA President f Joseph P. Ryan,
nave continued to work. Sampson
said, however, that not ' more
than 3,200 men; went back." v
Dead
woman
Revives
at
Frisco Morgue
.. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 8-v?-A
woman presumed dead revived
at the city morgue here today and
hours later still clung to a faint
spark pf life. .
Mrs. Theresa Butler, 60, was
found in, her bath by a maid this
morning. A doctor pronounced her
dead at 11:45 aum. and police list
ed her as an apparent suicide from
an overdose of. sleeping pills. -
Butjust before. 2 p.m.as Dep
uty Coroner James Leonard pulled
her stretcher ifrom a coroner's
ambulance at the city morgue, he
said he heard gasping sounds and
saw faint signs of life in Mrs.
Butlers face. She was rushed to an
emergency hospital.
- -Tonight, after being given oxy
gen, blood plasma, stimulants and
artificial respiration, she was re
ported improving but still in criti
cal condition.
Dr. Edward Mclin, who first
pronounced the woman dead,
gasped m amazement wnen in
formed by a ireporter she still
lived. ! I . "
"She looked as dead as they
come,' he .declared, adding that
there were no signs of breathing,
no heart sounds and no reflex
from her eyeballs when he per
formed the usual testa for death.
Doctors at Harbor . Emergency
hospital reported they found no
respiration; and no measurable
blood pressure when Mrs.. But
ler arrived there. .
3 Automobile
Wrecks Result
lines
Three separate automobile ac
r1Hont ThnrsHav. resulted in chest
and head injuries to a 70-year-old
man, and bruises to a tsrooKS wom
an. I I ' '
. Most severely injured of the
people was Frank Millett of 2279
N. Church st, who sustained chest,
head and other injuries when his
ra, i-nlllHwl with one driven bv
Gerald E. Crandell, 1765 N. 5th st
at Church j and Madison streets.
City police charged Crandell with
driving with defective brakes.
Muriel O. Fitts of Brooks was
bruised and shaken, slightly in a
collision between her car and one
driven by Harold R. Burk, 1250
Tierra dr. fat Cottage and Hood
streets Thursday morning. Both
ran wpr Kartlv damaeed.
A car with three women skidded
on wet pavement and crashed into
tnn tin t 25th and Mission
streets, but no one was injured.
Driver of the car was Alda Ruth
Huber, Marion. In the car with her
was Mrs. ELryiPickard, and Mrs.
Karl Huber, both ox Marion.
Athletic Director ;
Appointed at Pen
Appointment of Glen Burch, 31,
as athletic: .director, of the state
nonitpntixrvl was announced bv
Warden 'Virgil CMalley Thursday.
Burch was born in Independ
ence and graduated from tne uni
vritv nf OremiL He taueht in
the Milwaukie schools and has had
six .years of athletic experience.
While in Milwaukie he served as
recreational director for several
The previous recreational direc
tor at the prison resigned shortly
after the last legislature. Burch
nnMx4 his new duties Thursday.
FOO SUSOTJDS OSEGOT
Western Oregon, from Portland
south to - Medf ord was enveloped
in a heavy fog Thursday night,
with portions of visability in the
area north of Salem down to 40
feet Motorists reported visability
in Salem was about , a block, and
a half at midnight, with the fog in
creasin i
101st TEAS
By-Pass;:;:
PORTLAND, Nov. 8 -OP) -The
state : highway commission today
earmarked $900,000 for construc
tion of the Salem ty-pass route on
highway 99E. 1
. The money was part of nearly
$4,000,000 approved for expendi
ture ifrom the emergency bond
highway program authorized by
the last legislature. The commis
sion said contracts would be let in
the first, three months of 1952.
' The Salem by-pass allotment
includes $750,000 for building a
bridge over Mill creek, two rail
way j grade separations and 11
highway grade separations, and
$150,000 for grading the State
street-Turner road section of the
route. j .
i The $900,000 is all the bond
money expected to be used for the
by-pass route, which will cost an
estimated $2,165,000, W. C. Wil
liams, assistant ( chief engineer,
said. Federal funds probably will
be used to pay the remaining cost
of the project. I
.' Today's bond i fund allocation
also included $1,500,000 for three
projects on U. S. highway 101, the
coast! route. "
The commission approved spend
ing another $725,000 for - eight
structures on the Hood River-Mo-sier
section of the new water lev
el U, S. 30 highway. Largest of
these, is an overcrossing at Hood
River to cost $230,000.
Williams said an additional
$526,000 tentatively earmarked for
that section of the new route was
enough to pay for grading, paving
and landscaping. !
Today's $4,000,000 designation
brought to about $22,000,000 the
total j approved i for contracting
with I highway bond funds. The
legislature voted a $40,000,000
highway bond Droeram but stinn-
lated that no more than $15,000,-
wu couia oe issued in any one
year. -
to Step
for Ike
WASHINGTON: Nov. 8-UPW
President Truman' said today
"there'a not a word of truth" in a
published report: that be had of
fered: to step aside and support
GenJDwight D. Eisenhower for
the democratic presidential nomi
nation in 1952. i -
Aides at Gen. Eisenhower's su
preme allied headquarters in Eur
ope also discounted the story, pub
lished In the New York Times.
They called it "purely fictional."
mere was no immediate com
ment' from the live-star general
himself. Aides Said there would
be none. ! S
The Times article was written
by the veteran! Arthur Krock,
chief of the newspaper's Washing
ton bureau, who has had the in
side track several times in White
house news breaks.
Krock told a reporter he
thought Mr. Truman's remarks
were; "pretty harsh.
: Gov. Douglas McKay said Thurs
day he still thinks General Dwight
Eisenhower Is available as a re
publican candidate for president
He is the governor's No. 1 choice,
i Governor McKay was asked to
restate bis position on the presi
dential situation
in the light of
statements made
by the general
during his recent visit to Washing
ton, D.C
i 1 want to make it clear, how
ever, 'that I will support whoever
wins s the republican nomination,''
Governor McKay averred. "We
must i get rid of President Truman
before he ruins the country..
lruman
Denies
Offer
Aside
McKay Thinks
Ike Available
Legal Tug-of-War Starts Over
$72,000 Given to Pacific U.
i A legal tug-of-war over $72,000
which was signed over to Pacific
university' by "a Salem woman
started in Marion county circuit
court Thursday. , . . ,
; The amount was turned over to
the university as a trust fund by
Mrs. Laella A. Torrens, 83, of Sa
lem through a third party on Feb
ruary -27; according to tne com
plaint filed by her guardian, Fran
kJe L. Grant.
The complaint charges that un
due influence in the transaction
was exerted by M. B. Stegner of
Salem, named with the university
in tha soil. He was called in the
2 SICnONS-24 PAGES
Soviet Scoff
: ' .
... . . f . . - ..... f -
Decrees P.M
Manufacturers
To Add Rising
Costs to Prices
WASHINGTON, ' Nov. 8 -P-Price
control chiefs revamped reg
ulations affecting 100,000 manu
facturers today and said that gen
erally higher price ceilings can be
expected on many consumer goods
as a result. ...... 4 -
They suggested that congress is
responsible for what may happen.
Price Director Michael V. Di
salle said the changes were ne
cessitated by the Capehart amend
ment to the economic controls law,
by which congress required that
price ceilings reflect most cost
gains that occurred from the out
break of the Korean war to last
July 26. V-jW V
This is the amendment which
President Truman denounced as
"an economic boobytrap" and
which Senator Capehart (R-Ind)
and other backers upheld as sim
ple fairness, i-
The affected manufacturers
produce a wide variety of things,
such as processed foods, furniture,'
household appliances, farm ma
chinery, chemicals, hardware,
hand tools, machine tools and rub
ber goods.
Other Actions
In other actions today affecting
consumers : and the people who
manufacture things for them: : , '
1. The national production au
thority (NPA) virtually ffroze"
the introduction of new auto mod
els after next February 1. The
same freeze would apply to mak
ers of washing machines,' refrig
erators and similar appliances.
The action will not affect 1952
model cars. . I
2. The office on price stabiliza
tion (OPS) approved new price
ceilings . at wholesale for I lamb,
yearling lamb and mutton. OPS
officials said the next effect is ex
pected to be higher prices in most
butcher shops for lamb, mutton
and veal.
Stockpiling to Halt
- 3. A halt was ordered in gov
ernment stockpiling of tin so that
all available supplies can go to in
dustry. The defense production
administration, in announcing the
ction, said further cuts will be
maae in civilian use ox tin plate
(used in tin cans), brass and
bronze. .
Disalle said manufacturers must
calculate new ceilings and- put
them into effect not later than De
cember 5. u
Fuse Lit to
Warren Boom
SACRAMENTO, Calif., Nov. 8-(T-Top-ranking
California repub
licans urged Gov. Earl Warren to
day to run for president in 1952.
As the first step, they asked
him to authorize selection of a
national convention delegation
pledged to his cadidacy in the
California primaries next June.
Republican leaders touched off
the fuse for a Warren-for-presi-dent
boom in a letter to the third
term California governor who has
remained silent on his intentions.
Warren, twice before a presiden
tial hopeful and his party's choice
for vice president in 1948, sent
word to newsmen that he won't
say anything until his regular Fri
day press conference. j
BUS STRIKE SETTLED j
BEND, Ore- Nov. MVPacific
Trailways buses are expected to
be back on their Oregon-Utah
runs Saturday morning. A settle
ment announced today ended a
strike that began October 20. A
spokesman for the. union said.
complaint a ''trusted friend'! to
whom, and on whose advice, Mrs.
Torrens turned over a $72,000
check and trust fund agreement
for the university. . 1 J
An attorney for the university
which is located at Forest Grove
said last night that Mrs. Torrens
was- receiving - a - higher Interest
rate from the university than she
had been receiving from previous
investment of the money. He said
two interest payments have been
made to date.- - - t
Sterner said he was "a long-time
friend of Mrs. Torrens and of the
university' j
Tli Oncjon Statesman, Salem,
Soil Conservationists Discuss
JH ' ' -i :, ' -i I ' ' --1
1 I ' "' '' j J
T ' , J; - )" r "
Z T. t k, ,m W I i ' t ' I
V i- v" ?!-- -" ' :- f
- x'x' : ; CT".v -i
I . . c: ' I' r
i l :.!..:; '- t
r.. v-
Full color photorraphs of various
mmtm vwu vwubwtshwu uumivm vwiiTwuwa in . owcni muiuftifl ' tun TKWur U pnOWS are. Ram
left. Forrest Serorsin, T7nin, president; Edward Gilbert, AumsvUle, viee president; and CUade Mey
ers, Peadletoa, secretary-treasurer. The photos were displayed by the federal agrlenltsral department.
(Statesman photo.) - ; ,.....,- -i.:,. .-v . .....
ins
Dec
Poses Problem
- By IJUie I. Madsen .
farm Editor The Statesman.
Increasing population and de
creasing food production! worries
members of the Oregon (Associa
tion of Soil Conservation District
members and should worry the
entire world. -f j
That's what speakers Indicated
in their talks at the opening ses
sion of the two-day ' convention
Thursday at Marion hotel. The
convention will close Friday aft
ernoon. Approximately 1200 are
in attendance. . :!
'F.icrhtv ner cent of all! the ma
terial we use : each day comei
from .the land tuid yet 8U per
ppnt nf nil the neonle do not know
what soil conservation ' is-," was
the way Ted Silverwooa, jKecuana,
Califs national '. vice president of
the soil conservation association.
put it A democracy can only ex
ist, he said, so long as food does
not have to be rationed except
in times of emergency, j
w.We can't dissipate our top sou
and remain a strong nation or
keep our present standard of liv
ing," Ollie Finx, coiumrxis, umo,
executive secretary of Friends of
the Land, said as he explained
that while there is only one acre
of land per world capita it ac
tually takes 2tt acres of land to
provide a person with j food ' to
keep him in good neaitn ana oin
er materials to maintain the pres
ent standard of American living.
. XTm in Amr4ra lire fortunate."
he continued as he told that "we
have almost 3 acres perr person.
That there is an abundance of
water to keep every stream in
the state flowing provided proper
storage is practiced, Charles S.
Stricklin, state engineer told as
he talked on water conservation
in Orpcmn He added that the wa
ter situation was encouraging in
the Willamette valley as ei wa
ter reservoir permits had been
issued here since JuneJ He re
gretted, however "that j most of
the reservoirs are. Deing maae too
small
ftnvernor Douzlas i McKay, in
bis luncheon talk, said mat
vhthr wa like it or. not we
hiv in have more lobs for more
people. They are here and they
AAMflnna 4a wme t , .1 i
r.. A: Snraeue. rmblisher of The
Oregon Statesman and former
governor of - Oregon, expresses
pleasure at "the ; fine group of
man whA arT Interestintt them
selves in the -soil conservation
program," and added that the pro-
Vieinff : its : "oolitica!
taint" which had seemed to ding
to it some years ago. -Forrest
Scroggin, Union, presi
Am nrMdded. .and in his annual
report urged farmers to "use up
all of their own mental ana fi
nancial resources before' they
called iot zeoerai neip. f .
f Additional details on page 2)
lining
Food
t- ... ...... - t l .:-., j- - . r , ' '
i 1 -i "- vv : 1 ' - x - . v . .: : .. - If'
' : - - t-
Oreaon, Friday, Norember 9,
's at West's Peace Plan
phases ef soil eeaservation were available for study by delegates te
Cutiins Wood Offered
i As Substitute for Relief
: 'i '. : -"Li - ";'v" l By VTInstoa H. Taylor " " i
' - Staff Writer. Th Statesman
! Unemployed Marion county men can cut cordwood this winter to
remain off the welfare rolls, the county court announced Thursday.
: Except for a brief experimental period last spring, this is the first
such program here since depression days..
! Payment of $7 per cord on a lot; at Mission Bottom, for burnin
at the courthouse, is "to afford opportunity to able-bodied men" to
earn, according to county judge
Rex Hartley. The project I" has
started already, with a small num
ber of workers, supervised by
Harvey Girod, county road patrol
man. . ; i i .
General assistance payments by
the county; welfare office were
down In October from a year ago,
mainly due to securing of more
lobs, said : Marion Bowe, admin
istrator. She said no men able to
work are being placed on the rolls
yet this fall. General assistance
declined from 261 payments of
$16,908 in October, 1950. to 143
payments of $9,631 last month.
Law Affects List
Miss Bowen said a few have left
the old-age assistance list because
of the law holding relatives re
sponsible for support and some
because of the prior claim law
giving the state recovery of pay
ments from the welfare recipient's
estate, she i pointed out In the
former case, Marlon county's gain
ed one such which repaid a son's
19 months of liability for aid to
his parents.
Old-age payments, now aver
aging $55.70 per persons per
month, totaled $84,495 to 1,519
persons last month, compared td
$84,260 to 1,522 the previous
month and $80,760 to 1,524 in Oc
tober, 1950.i
Miss Bowen credited me in
crease to a raise in food standards
a vear aeo and to the moving of
some recipients to convalescent
homes to to higher rent for lodg
ings because of razing of many
old buildings. .
List Declines 1
The aid to denendent children
roll was considerably lower last
month because of the availability
of seasonal work during the late
summer' and the cooperation of
the district attorney in finding
fathers who have not been sup
porting their families. Miss Bowen
praised District Attorney E. O.
Stadter.' in. for this work in
funds for children.
i Stadter nointed out that a new
law permits bringing the father
before a court in another state to
gain his cooperation,' thus allow
ing him tor continue work there
and not be returned to an Oregon
court. . 1 ' i-.. . ,
4 This list was 128 children, with
their families paid $14,114, com
nared to 165 and $19,329 in Octo
ber. 1950, and 125 and $13,863 in
September, 1951, ' "
Other categories include blind
assistance, level at 24 cases but
payments: down from - $1,669 to
11.530 over the year: aid to the
permanently and totally disabled,
a new program tms year, in cas
ea at 18Jt38r medical care. $4,325
a year ago' and $2,071 last month.
19S1
PRICE 5c
O
Em
Problems
Cuts .Ordered
For 27 Firms
PORTLAND. Nov. 8 -4JPi- The
state tax commission today order
ed a one-sixth reduction in the
personal property ; taxes of 27
Multnomah county firms.
!The action, Sheriff Terry
Schrunk said, may cause a large
part of the county's tax funds to
be tied up for months.
The commission ordered the
sheriff to scale down the assess
ment ratio of merchandise of the
27 firms from 60 per cent to 80
per cent of its true cash value.
The reduction would cut "county
tax receipts by only about $40,000.
but Schrunk said he feared that
other personal property taxpayers
might go to court Jto seek similar
reductions.
"The point we raise Is that the
order does not treat all merchan
disers the same." Schrunk said.
If the reduction has been Riven
these, others are entitled to it"
The commission order reversed
and earlier ruling by the Mult
nomah county tax equalization
board. .. .. . -
Yoiing Driver Gives
Up After 3 Wrecks
(Three wrecks In two months are
too many, Robert Jack Kremble,
19, Tillamook, advised Secretary of
State Earl T. Newbry in a letter
here Thursday..
He enclosed his driver's license
in the letter which he surrendered
voluntarily. Kremble Indicated he
would defer asking for another
driver's license until he is older.
Max.
57
SO .
33
Min. Precip.
Salem ,
Portland
San Francisco
Chicaro
4 J5
48 . J.1
fc 43 v, jOO
17 ,J0
o joe
New York
U
WiTI-mctte river -l.S feet.
FORECAST (from VS. weather ba
nra, McNary field. Salem): Mo-tly
cloudy today and tonight, with a few
bowen todav. Little chant in tent'
perantre. with highest today near U,
lowest tocabt near 40.
SALXM mCTPITATIOH
ghM Start ef Weather Tear SepC
This Tear
i iS.7a
XMtTar
13J4
Normal
. aJBT
Price LMs'
Multno
mahTax
No, Ej:
Russian 'Can't
Help Laughing' .
Ms0ffer;
PARIS. Nov. 8-MVSoviet Rat-'
sia rejected the west's new anas
reduction plan In the United Na
tions today. Soviet Foreign Min
ister Andrei Vishinskyr clashed .
head-on with Secretary of State
Acheson in a debate wincar left
few delegates hopeful of concilia
tion. . ' -.? ' 4 j . '
VIshinsky. dismissed ai ludicr- :
ous, . trifling and spurious a Jotot
American - British - French res- -olution
embodying the proposed
fool-proof ; regulation of armed
forces and arms, including atom- .
ic weapons;- "- . j '
: He proposed instead a four- '.
point resolution which would pro
vide for a world : disarmameat
conference by next June l. ' ;
; The U. & secretary of state had
appealed for support of the three- .'
power plan; which President Tru
man commended to the If, N. m "O
a broadcast address from ? Wash- -
ington last night. ' ' f
The diplomatic duel ' between
VIshinsky and Acheson showed bo
lessening of east-west tensioas.
Each accused the other's govern- ,
ment .of responsibility for- tha -
world arms race, the Korean war .
and kindred problems, r j . ' L"
They agreed on only one thiag:
the world wants peace. "I
, Both Acheson and VIshinsky
ended their speeches with appeals-
for peace but both showed clear- '
ly they were poles apart- on what
they meant by peace. - . t ; r
anna vwciiwvnu
Acheson- outlined i the west eta
plan this morning and i urged a
program of arms reduction with
out "catchwords and tricks' Ha
called on the Russians to give tha
word for a halt to the- Korean
conflict and said a settlement af
the Korean problem could opea ,
the door to broader consultations
on other aspects of the Far East
ern situation. 1 f . !
Acheson made it plain the Unit
ed' States will not begin; on a
program of arms limitation which ,
would eventually include a count
of American and Russian atoraie 1
bombs if good faith prevailed, un
til the Korean war is stopped aad
existing world problems settled. '
VIshinsky went to the rostrum -when
the assembly reconvened in '
the afternoon and said , the btsj
powers of the west had not nry
given birth to a mouse, but to a "
"dead mouse.' ; I
"I could hardly sleep all night
last night f because I could not
keep from laughing," , he said.
"Even from this rostrum I can't
hold back rny laughter.", i
Finds Nothing Good I
VIshinsky ranged up and down r
every policy of the United State
and the west and found nothing
good about any of them, especially
the North Atlantic treaty organi- .
zation. He I then offered four-
point resolution calling for: ' -
1. A finding by the general as
sembly that participation in the '
"aggressive Atlantic bloci and
establishment of foreign I naval.
army and air bases in any part of v
the world is incompatible with tha ,
principles of the U. N. ! !
2. A cease-fire in Korea, with
trooos to be withdrawn in 10 days :
from the 38th parallel; and all
foreign troops to be ; withdrawn
completely from Korea in tnret
months. . I ' -
3. To ask all countries, in and ;
out of the U. to scrutinize at :
a world conference : the : auestka
of the reduction of armed forces t
and armaments and to recommend
that this conference-convene aa :
soon as possible, at least! before
June l. 1952. - i
4. A biz live peace pact
which all other peace-loving states
would adhere. ' i
GI Turns Down
81,000 Reward j
BEND, Nov. MThe f soldiei
who found a crashed airplane near '
a high mountain lake refused a
$1000 reward today. i ? '
SSgt Richard H. Bailey ef Twin
Falls, Idaho, who was searching
for the missing plane as part of a
search-rescue unit from McChard
field, Wash, said it was part of hie
job, and . he. did not want the re
ward, which was offered; by th
family of one. of the three Caliser
nla physicians killed in tha crash, ':
VETERAN'S DAT SET '
PORTLAND, Novj &-jfy-Stoar
day will be observed here aa "Vt-' ,
eran's day. Thafs the new nam
being given to me Armistice slay
observance by local veterans ar
janizations whlchjhavi arransad 1
for a parade; addresses and ctiaey
observances. . . :- . . .. V