The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 12, 1951, Page 1, Image 1

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1651
101st YEAR
10 PAGES
Tlw Oregon Statesman, Salem. Oregon, Monday, November 12. 1S51 .
PBICE 5c
No. 223
CKurchill
To Visit
Observer
CCiiora
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Saoodi
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f omeday this will b the Edgewater street ramp off the new Marion street bridge, la use possibly by
next September. At a eves later date, you wont dare approach It from this eastward direction be
cause It will be one-way off the span, after the entire brldre and approach project la completed by
the state highway department. This picture shows workmen building the forms for the concrete, deck
of the approach, on top of all the false work revlred In construction. (Statesman photo).
Gale fury Lessens in
Salem Area Sunday
Storms in the northwest continued Sunday at slightly decreased
tempo and with considerably less damage in the second day of lashing
wind and rain for the area. Weathermen predicted continued taper
Off
SKIDDS
to) cms
RepubUcansifiave their guess
ing game over Ike whether he
will or whether he will not run
for president. (They seem to have
little doubt that he is a repub
lican). The democrats have their
guessing game too whether Tru
man will or will not run for re
election. The party politicos say
he will, and the administration
stalwarts say he must; but Tru
man plays "Brer Rabbit" and he
just don't say nothin'.
Those convinced he will run
again offer as supporting evidence
the fact that he has built up no
one in the party as his successor;
that he believes he has done a
food job; that if Taft runs Tru
man is sure to take him on, for
he regards Taft as his perennial
adversary.
Prophets of a Truman renun
ciation declare that he Is tired
and would like to quit, that his
family objects to another term,
that the adoption of the third
term denial, though not applying
to Truman, points him to the gate.
Some say his announcement of
sending an ambassador to the
Vatican was a smart political
move to discomfit his foes in the
senate and regard It as a sign he
Isn't going to be a candidate again.
Meantime the southern demo
crats are doing their best to make
sure he will not be the party can
didate. The opposition, this time
is led by two of the south's most
distinguished leaders and skilled
politicians: Senator Harry Byrd
of Virginia and Governor Byrnes
of South Carolina. They are not
having truck with the States'
Rights party of 1948, nor are they
becoming political pals of Sen.
Karl Mundt and his coalitionists.
They are working within the dem
ocratic (Continued on editorial page, 4)
SNIPERS IN SUEZ
CAIRO. Egypt, Nov. ll--The
British said today Egyptian snip
ers fired on a military hospital in
the Suez canal zone and charged
that other Egyptians made a hit-and-run
automobile attack on
three parachute troopers. None of
the hospital patients was injured.
Animal Crackers
y WARREN COODRICH
r Junior! Yeg feawt fighting aiaTl
Dm. r HAYPtN-PT Vm. Wit Jc3
ing off for today.
Gusts of wind up to 50 miles
per hour;, were reported by Mc
Nary field weathermen Sunday
morning only three miles per
hour less than: Saturday. Portland
reported gusts to 70 miles per
hour. )
But electric; ' power and tele-
Ehone linemen and street crewmen
i Salem were occupied mostly
with continued mop-up of Satur
day's damage. ?"Practically every
thing that would blow loose went
Saturday,? one tired worker said.
Storm to Moderate
Weather forecasters said the
storm would moderate by today
with showers and some gustiness
and winds 15 to 20 miles per hour.
Snow was predicted for higher
elevations. ,i
A totali of .68 inch of rain on
Sunday by 10:30 p. m. boosted Sa
lem's total for; three days to 2.57
inches of j rainfall, McNary field
weathermen said.
Telephone linemen continued to
repair damage to lines and replace
poles Sunday after working past
midnight Saturday, it was reported
by Manager E. A. Berglund, of
Pacific Telephone and Telegraph
company. A few men were on the
job all night, be said. '
Phone Lines Out
Telephone outages on Salem
outskirts effected several families
for comparatively short periods
Sunday. In the Capitola area down
poles shorted f lines to the wet
ground Sunday evening. Other
poles down in the Keizer district
and on South Liberty street near
Salem's edge put. a few families
out of service for awhile. Tree
limbs caused ' spotty trouble
throughout the city, it was re-
S)ited by L. M. Flagg, Portland
eneral Electric superintendent
Clear Debris f
City street crews worked until
near midnight Saturday and again
part of the day Sunday clearing
debris from Salem streets.' Clogged
catch basins and fallen trees and
limbs caused most of the trouble,
i Snow on Santiam pass was re-1
ported Sunday but rain had re
duced it to slush by Sunday night,
state police reported. Three inches
of snow Was s reported in Burns
Sunday. ;; 1
Lightning from thunderstorms
in the Coast Range mountains was
visible in Salem Sunday night.
The two-day storm Dlusxed
Chinook pass In Washington with
snow and more than 16 Inches of
snow fell at Paradise . valley on
Mount Rainier in 24 hour;.
South Demo
Revolt Doubted
HOT SPRINGS, Ark Nov. 11
- (JP) - The Southern Governors
conference opened today with pro
Truman forces strongly hinting
they are ready to challenge any
move to split the democratic par
ty in next year's presidential elec
tion. I ;j . . .
And there were growing signs
leaders of the -states' rights demo
crats may have decided this is
neither the time nor the place to
launch a "beat Truman" cam
paign. )
Party loyalties with . young
Gov. Sid McMath of Arkansas in
the lead grabbed the early con
ference spotlight with outspoken
opposition to; any states rights
democratic move similar to that
which divided the south in 1948.
"I don't think this - conference
wQl.be the scene of any demo
cratic revolt, McMath said at -a
news conference. -
MOSSADEGH. TO DEPART
TEHRAN, Iran, Nov, 11 -WV
Premier Mossadegh has cabled
Tehran that he has completed his
talks with American officials in
Washington and will leave for
home : Thursday, an official 'an
nouncement said today
. J i
-1
1
Work on Bridge
Now Centers in
West Salem
Two parallel highways will
carry westside Salem traffic when
the Willamette river bridge pro
ject, now concentrated in West
Salem, is finished, officials said
this week end. The work is on
schedule.
One four-lane through highway
is to be atop the gravel fill along
the rivers The fill is essentially
complete, and is being riprapped
with large rocks to prevent its be
coming again part of the Willam
ette river.
The other thoroughfare will be
Edgewater street, for local traffic
and business. What the parking
situation will be there , is not yet
under consideration by city offici
als. The state highway department
will require only that parking be
denied within 200 feet of inter
sections where traffic channeliz
ing Is necessary including Edge
water and Wallace road.
By September SO ,
If steel to carry: the new span
across the river's expanse arrives
In April, according to its present
fabrication schedule, it can be put
Into place and the concrete deck
poured, and traffic can' begin
next September, according to
Luther Jensen, resident engineer
on the project He said the sched
ule calls for readiness by Septem
ber SO. '
The entire east approach has
been completed to the river bank,
except for painting of the pedest
rian hand rails.
All other approach work for use
of the span should be done by
April, said Jensen, leaving the
following months for the steel
work by American Bridge com
pany. Complete Decking
Current approach work is con
centrated on the ; connection be
tween Edgewater street and the
new bridge. The decking is com
plete from the river to the point
at which the new through high
way will split off southward.
From that point westward, crews
are preparing forms pouring the
concrete deck for several hundred
feet, carrying the approach to an
earth AIL
Tha row of piers now broken
by the west approach to tha Cent
er street bridge will carry west
bound traffic from Marion street
bridge to the highway on the fill.
Under it will pass cars from
Edgewater stret and Wallace road
to the eastbound bridge.
Here is what must be done or
started next summer to imple
ment the remainder of the river
crossing project:
Pave the gravel fill at the river
side being allowed to settle this
winter. It will swing in and join
Edgewater at Patterson street,
though eventual planning calls
for the fill to be extended so the
new highway will pass over Edge
water and the railroad near their
crossing.
When Marion bridge is finished,
remove west approach of Center
street bridge, which will have a
tighter curve when remodeled.
This will permit completion of the
new road's approach to Marion
bridge and erection of a new Cen
ter street approach. The ' latter
contract has not been awarded. v
Max. Mia. Predp.
lika
Portland
San Francisco ,
U S M
S3 4S M
63 40 7 jOI
64 SO M
Chicago
Mew York M 45 40
FORECAST (from T7.S. weather bu
reau. MeNarv field. Salem): Partly
cloudy with occasional showers today
ana lonignt. unit ensure u tem
perature with the high temperature
near m ana Mrw near ew.
I IALE1I PMClPrTATlOX
Since ttart ef Weather Tear fpt 1
Last Year
Normal
Truman
KEY WEST, Fla., No. 11-flP)-President
Truman and Prime Min
ister Winston Churchill of Great
Britain will meet, in Washington
early in the new year.
Presidential Secretary Joseph
Short disclosed today that the
meeting probably will take place
in January. " -
Short said there had been an
exchange of cable messages be
tween the president and Churchill,
who recently was returned to
power in the British elections.
Short was asked if French Pre
mier Rene Pleven of France also
would attend. He said he "hadn't
heard of that." '
There was no lnriirntinn that
the Washington
involve any others than the presi-
aent ana the prime minister of
Great Britain,' beyond top mem
bers of both governments.
He was asked if there had been
any suggestion that Premier Stal
in of Russia mlsht loin th u
liberations.
"I've heard nothlnff alnnar that
line," Short declared.
Short's assertion followed up a
previous statement bv th
dent that the president and
Churchill would not meet in Key
West where the president expects
to remain for weeks, working on
his "state of the union" budget
and economic messages.
There was speculation Church
ill might address a joint session of
congress.
Police Protest
Vote Result
With Tickets
YONKERS, N. Y., Nov. lMJP)
The battle of the traffic tickets
threatened today to boomerang on
Yonkers police.
Since the voters last Tuesday
turned down a proposed $500 a
year pay boost for the coppers,
the officers have issued 1.934 traf
fic summonses compared with
only 73 on Monday and election
day.
Now embattled citizens are con
sidering another' election on po
licemen's pay this one a refer
endum to repeal a $500 raise voted
two years ago.
"Any move in this direction,"
said a former member of the com
mon council, who refused to be
quoted by name, "will stop this
spite drive in its- tracks. The
whole city is stirred up." ;
Official action already has been
started to find out why the police
have been so zealous in their traf
fic enforcement duties.
Lost Seattle
Hunter Found
In Roseburg
ROSEBURG, Ore., Nov. U-4JPI-
Richard W. Slunaker, 20, Seattle
hunter missing for a week, was
located today in a Roseburg, Ore.,
hotel.
City police took him Into cus
today after he had telephoned his
father-in-law, George Senty, ' in
Seattle at 11:45 ajn. and told him
of his whereabouts.
Slunaker told his father-in-law
he was in a "dazed" condition, his
car was broken down and that
he was flat broke. He said he had
no Idea how he got to Roseburg.
Police will hold him here until
his father-in-law arrives. '
Slunaker was the object of a
widespread search in Grays Har
bor county last week. He had
gone there after elk and was sup
posed to have returned to his
home last Sunday. When ha did
not appear, his wife became
alarmed and a search was started.
Scores of persons joined in tha
hunt. Other hunters in tha area
had reported seeing Slunaker's
car abandoned on a side road.
However, later it was reported to
have been 'removed. At that time
the search was called off.
Johnson Mill
Sale Arranged
NEW YORK. Nov. 11 -WV Ar
rangements have been made for
the acquisition oil;. JJ. Jonnson
Lumber Corp.. large Pacific north
west concern at Toledo, Ore., by
Georgia-Pacific Flywooci company,
officials announced today. ;
Negotiations for the sale.' which
is not yet final, were reported by
George R. Birkelund, chairman of
the board, and Robert F. Johnson,
president, ox the Johnson, corp.,
and by Owen R. Cheatham, presi
dent of Georgia-Pacific.
Cheatham said stockholders rep
resenting over 85 per cent of John
son stock .have indicated they will
accept the offer of $80 per share
made by Georgia-Pacific The of
fer was made by letter Saturday
to holders of the other & per cent
ox tne atocJc.
VV1
V-
SEOUL, Korea, Nov. 11 A hat too
big for his head shades the eyes
of "Willie- a 5-year-old "adopt
ed Korean boy as he site on the
: shoulders of Conrad Lanteline
i ef the Canadian army, to watch
a show near the front In Korea
- as Canadian Brigade troops are
entertained. ,(AP Wirephoto ie
The Statesman). i '
Armistice Day
Parade Due
This Morning
Armistice Day still a symbol of
peace will be observed in Salem
today by a . parade of patriotic
groups, and a holiday in public
offices. i i I
i The five division parade includ
ing five marching bands will high
light the day's activities commem
orating the 33rd anniversary of
the signing of the armistice clos
ing World Wari I in 1918.!
Maj. Gen. Thomas E. Rilea, state
adjutant general, will be grand
marshal for the parade which will
form on North Commercial street
near Marlon- square at 10 ajn.
Marchers will be reviewed by Gov.
Douglas McKay and Mayor Alfred
Loucks enroute- to the courthouse
square where a traditional armis
tice day program is scheduled.
Marion County Judge Rex Hartley
wiU give the principal address.
In case of rain the program will
be moved into the Salem armory.
: Public workers In city,' county
and state offices will enjoy a holi
day along with the county's school
children. The post office Will re
main closed and no mail: will be
delivered. I i
Most Salem stores announced
intentions to remain open today
but will halt' business during the
parade and armistice program.
Robert W. Holweger, president
of Salem Federation of Patriotic
Orders and chairman of Armistice
day activities,! joined with Govi
McKay in asking Salem citizens
to display flags' in honor of the
day. I : ; j
Korea Naval
Action Mounts
U. S. EIGHTH ARMY I HEAD
QUARTERS, Korea, Monday, Nov.
12 -(JP)- Communist shore bat
teries Sunday splattered shell
fragments on ; the cruiser Toledo
during a three hour gun! duel at
Hungnam. Meanwhile deep-stab-'
bing Eighth army patrols on tha
central Korean front stirred up
Chinese ground resistance.
' Far East Naval headquarters
announced in Tokyo that j the To
ledo was not! damaged and there
were no casualties to Its! person
nel, i -) i
i It was the heaviest day of ac
tion for the flagship of task force
&5 since the ! Inchon landing on
Sept 15,. 1950. !
Red shells i soma coming as
close! as 35 yards fell on each
side of the Toledo and her escort
ing destroyer, tha USS Halsey
Powell, before the two warships
succeeded in ' silencing the com
munist fire. I I
Scott Forecasts
Civvies for Ike
NEW YORK, Nov. 11 0P)-Rep.
Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) said today
that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
might return to civilian life short
ly after the first of the year and
make his position dear, on the
presidency. -1
Scott said that January SI, the
deadline for filing in the nation's
first primary; in New Hampshire,
was "a good day to keep in mina."
i Scott onetime republican chair
man, la a plugger for Eisenhower
for president.
Crosby Finances Work
On Method to Tape TV
i By James R. Bacon "
' HOLLYWOOD, Nov. ll-(P)-Research financed by the golden voice
of Bing Crosby is at work today on taped television a method of
recording pictures on magnetic tape.
A lazy way of TV programming, Hollywood sees the new inven
tion as the thing that could lure Bing himself into television.
The method is similar to theh tape recording of radio shows that
now allows Bing more freedom
to fish and golf and otherwise lead
the life of Crosby.
Engineers of the Crosby enter
prises estimate that another six
months will see commercial use of
the process which,, they say, will
equal live television.
Old Movie Recorded
This reporter witnessed a dem
onstration in which an old movie
of poor quality was received
in the Crosby lab on a standard
television set. The telecast was
recorded on the magnetic tape and
the tape was then fed through the
TV receiver.
The taped picture was hazy but
nevertheless convincing. In com
mercial use, the tape recording
would be made directly from the
television cameras. t
Engineer John T. Mullin said
the biggest hurdle getting the
picture on tape has been con
quered. No Major Problem
"The degree of quality in sound
and picture offers, no problem but
time," Mullm said.
Mullin, along with Engineer
Wayne R. Johnson and Frank C.
Healey, e x e cutive director of
Crosby Electronics, , created the
process.
Healey says that the artists Will
love it because "television show
can be made in takes just, like
movies and many radio shows."
If a line is fluffed, the picture can
be erased from the tape and done
over.
Brother Larry Crosby would
not disclose how much of Bing"s
money went into research but did
say more than two years of lab
oratory work was entailed.
Fatal Head-On
2-Car Wreck
Said Deliberate
SUFFOLK, Va., Nov. 11 -(P)-A
35-year-old man was killed
near here early today in the head
on collision of his car with another
car occupied by his wife and a
young soldier.
Clarence O. Thomas, of Ports
mouth, died in the wreck on U.S.
route 460 five miles east of here.
Said State Trooper N. C. Dav
idson: "To me, it looked like a case of
one car deliberately crashing into
another.";
Thomas was alone in one car.
In the other were his 28-year-old
wife, Pauline, and James Wilkins
Breakfield, 26, of ; Portsmouth.
Witnesses told Trooper Davidson
that Thomas speeded past the
Breakfield car, suddenly made a
U-turn and swerved into the lane
in which the other car was com
ing. . :
! Hospital attendants in Ports
mouth said Breakfield is in satis
factory condition and Mrs. Thom
as in poor condition. Hospital rec
ords show that Breakfield's wife
gave birth to a son there last
Tuesday. : . i
CHINA INCREASES AID
HANOI, Indochina, Nov. 11-flP)-A
French army headquarters
spokesman declared ' tonight Chi
nese communists are increasing
their aid to Vietminh forces in
Indochina. . -
Missing Scientist Rumored Held
By Russia as Spy for Truman
! ROME, Nov. 1 l-P)-Two Rome
newspapers gave a new twist to
the Bruno Pontecorvo mystery to
day by saying the missing British
scientist had been arrested by the
Russians in an effort to plug a
leak of their atomic secrets to
President Truman. '
: The papers, II Tempo and Mo
menta Sera, quoted unidentified
Russian sources in Stockholm of
saying 38-year-old, Italian - born
Pontecorvo, who disappeared more
than a year ago with his Swedish
wife and three children, had been
arrested as a western spy in the
Soviet Union.
It Tempo and Momento Sera said
the Russians believed the United
States had a spy among their top
ranking atomic scientists and that
Pontecorvo may have been the
source of information on which
President Truman based his an
nouncements of atomic explosions
In the UJ5.S.R.
i An official of the ministry of
supply in London, which employed
Pontecorvo at Its chief atomic re
Judy Garland
Collapses in
Midst of Show
NEW YORK, Nov. ll-(P)-Act-ress
Judy Garland collapsed back
stage at the Palace theater tonight
and her doctor said she was suf
fering "nervous exhaustion."
He ordered her taken to a pri
vate sanitorium for "a few. days."
The singer now appearing twice
a day at the Palace in what critics
had hailed 'as her comeback after
several illnesses in -recent years.
Dr. Udall J. Salmon, her physi
cian, said he had forbidden her to
go ahead with the evening per
formance after he examined her
shortly before 9 p.m.
However, he said, she Insisted
that "the show must go on."
She appeared on stage for her
opening number in the variety
show. Later, members of the audi
ence said, she appeared to become
ill, then asked for water, and fin
ally left the stage.
Reds Demand
Verdict Now on
Armistice Line
MUNSAN, Korea, Monday, Nov.
12-i"P)-A U.N. command spokes
man today said allied and com
munist truce talkers made abso
lutely no progress at their Monday
morning session.
Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols
told newsmen after the two hour
session that the reds had insisted
the allied proposal on a buffer
line separating the two forces was !
"not loyal to the agenda." i
The allies have offered to draw
a cease-fire line wherever the
battle line might be when an arm
istice is finally agreed upon. The
reds want a line marked now.
"It is more and more apparent"
Nuckols said, "that what they de
sire is a line and zone across which
military action cannot take place.
They are seeking a defacto (in
fact) cease-fire by indirection."
Casual Bump
Brings Deatli
FRESNO, Calif., Nov. 11
David Shubia, 37, of Fowler, was
strolling along a sidewalk with his
family last night
Suddenly, an unidentified
stranger bumped into him and
cursed. j
"You wanna make something of
it?" the man snarled.
Subia was speechless from sur
prise. Then the man whipped out a
knife, stabbed Subia twice and ran
into the darkness as his victim
slumped to the sidewalk dead.
Police Lieutenant E. F. Kraschel
said the assailant evidently was
drunk. A quick search was un
availing. search '. center at Harwell, com
mented: "It is intriguing that such
news if it were true should
have percolated through the iron
curtain." . . -
' Finnish police and officials said
they had heard no such rumors
from refugees from Russia or any
other source.
The Rome newspaper story was
a completely new assessment of
Pontecorvo's role. More than a
year ago British Supply Minister
George Strauss admitted that he
had no definite information but
said he had "no doubt" the miss
ing researcher had skipped to Rus
sia.
' Only a few months ago the
United States s2nate-house atomic
energy committee declared Ponte
corvo the second most deadly spy
in all history, ranking only below
his reputed bosom friend, Klaus
Fuchs, in passing; valuable atomic
secrets to Russia. Fuchs, a tier
man-born British scientist is serv
ing a 14-year prison sentence in
iJiglana. ' .
International
Ransoms Pay
Dollars to Reds
OA e rlAXNUloUU, wov. u-ijfy-Sen.
William F. Knowland (R
Calif.), aid today he has asked tha
state department to Investigate a
huge shakedown racket through
which the Chinese communist gov-'
ernment is reported obtaining mil
lions of U. S. dollars, j
Meanwhile leaders of the big"
Chinese colony here took steps to
halt the flow of money. They aay
the reds are forcing Chinese citi
zens to obtain dollars from their
American relatives or friends ta
kmj iiuca, wxci aim rents av
face execution. i
At least three residents of Saa
Francisco's Chinatown are report-'
ed to have killed themselves im
despair recently after sending re
peating payments to save relative
from death, t
To Go to U. N.
Knowland said he will ask tha
state department to place the isstta '
before the United Nations as a
"menace to international morality
and basic human rights."
He called : the communist de
mands "outlaw acts" and declare
"international kidnaping cannot be '
permitted any more than kidnaa-
ing in any community." i
Asks Registration - ' . '
Lee Dai-Ming, editor of the In- :
fluential Chinese eWorld here, '
called oh the .Chinese Americans -
of San Francisco, who are r
"equeeze" victims to register so a
plea could be documented fas
presentation to the U. N.
Reporting s the three suicide .
here, C. S. Mong, editor of tha -
Chinese Times, said "It's the only
way out." 1 . -i- l;
"A man here whose wife was .
arrested by the communists . iai
p&iu ruisuins unui we cwn
pay no more. He killed Tiimself
rather than live in the knowledge
that he had failed, for lacki
funds, to save her from torture aoA
death at communist hands."
Peron Holds
BUENOS AIRES, Monday, Nov.
12-lPt-Prptripnt Juan D. Peron.
seeking ire-election for a second
term, swept to a commanding lead
early today in unofficial return
from yesterday's general election.
With 23 per cent of the esti
mated 6,000,000 votes counted,
Peron t was leading with 65 per
cent of the vote. In his first elec
tion in 1946 he won 55 per cent.
The latest unofficial tabulation
for 6,748 of the nation's 36,223 pre
cincts gave Peron 902,745 votes ta
479,306 for Dr. Ricardo Balbin,
candidate of the Radical party,
chief opposition to the Peronistaa.
The morning newspaper Uemo-
cracia, spokesman fori the Pero.
government, said the unofficial to
tal, with one-fourth of the vote
counted; was 1,103,049 for Pero
and 526,514 for BalbinJ i
La Nation, the only big inde
pendent newspaper left in Argen
tina, reported a general Peronist
victory in the election. ; Leaders of
the Radical party, chief opposition
to the Peronistas, privately ad
mitted defeat. ; ' : '
At midnight ships : docked at
Buenos s Aires blew whistles t
celebrate the Peron victory.
aves
A Marion county Jail trusty
walked s away from kitchen duty
about 5 pjn. Sunday and was sttill
at large early this morning, th
sheriffs office reported.
He is Louis Percy Tucker, 31, at
Westfir, serving six months far'
petit larceny. He was convicted
of attempting to steal a wallet at
a Portland restaurant last month.
Tucker, as trusty in the kitchen,
was allowed outside freedom whil
working until 6 pjn. j
Cabrielson Asks v
Pacts Renounced
NEW YORK, Nov. 11 Rv
publican National Chairman Gu$
G. Gabrielson today called for de
nunciation br the United State
of the Yalta and Potsdam agree
ments. XI- a AAA Tnrwilnl9n.liMt.
cans at an ; anti-communist rally
that the agreements permitted, es
tablishment of communist govern
ments in Poland and Yugoslavia
gave Port 'Arthur and Dairen t
Russia, and threw open Manchuria
to Chinese communists. -
"Isn't it about time that we de
nounced all of these1 once-secret
i agreements?" ha asked.' ...i
Large Lead in
Argentine Vote
County Jail
rwt i Til
irustvLe
- - -; s i j s