ANNIVERSARY
June 24 will mark the beginning of the
third Sear of f'h,in ln Korea. Pictures
,nd a summary of events during two years
this unique police action to halt Com
munlst agression will appear in Sunday's
Blster-Guard.
12 PAGES
LAME COUNTY'S HOME NEWSPAPER.
The Weather
Forecast: Partly cloudy.
Temperatures: High Saturday, 73; Sun
day, 80. Low Sunday morning, 49.
leel Operators,
Inion Parley
Jlempt Fails
Defense Output
Grinding to Halt
NEW YORK (UP) Union
d industry officials made
jw unsuccessful attempt
lv to reopen negotiations
3 at settling the 20-day
lei strike, it was learned
iurday.
With the nation's defense and
ui m reduction slowly grinding
i. halt representatives of Philip
l,rrav's 650,000 CIO steelworkers
top leaders in the industry
u . . tl in nn pffort to
t nere seti'j ...
the negouauuus bwmb
'lirr AFTER several talks dur-
i. rfav. the situation was
Kiht back where it started" and
k meetings ended abruptly Fri
Jy night, a reliable union source
lid.
'Industry officials said after the
ifsk up of White House sponsor
i negotiations earlier this month
hit only the union shop issue was
Hiding up a settlement. However,
kt union contended then that the
tilt pattern still was not saiw
ictory.
',.:4i.A unlnn tint industry
llltllllCl Mil - -
ders would indicate over what
te the talKs coiiapsea.
r . nroeirlant ftf th CTO
i in New York and participated
talks. Ha refused
Imminent and was reported to
It returned to Fittsrjurgn. une
1 union leader will deliver an
portant" speech to a mass
ting in Gary, Ind on Sunday,
union sources said he would
lain the meetings then.
'KDDSTRr LEADERS who
lire here included Adm. Ben
(mil, board chairman of Jones
juughlin steel uorp.; Benjamin
u.luc PreciHpnt nf U.S. Steel:
lirles' White, head of Republic
ktl, and Josepn jarmn, repre
htmtr R.thlehem Steel.
Still latest failure of union and
iduitrr to get collective bar
ring machinery in operation
pi walght to reports President
L... . ,.., M th. T-
rtley law to halt the crippling
In. ........ ....
ouse Votes
e
Controls Ouster
.Aiu.iuivn itrj iiir
km hai tentatively voted to lift
rt controls rrom rirtuaiiy an
imtner goods and drastically
MuiIm the Wage Stabilization
hid.
p ripped and tattered eten-
Of the administration's de
an production aot faces ether
l"P changes when it comes up
ra next Wednesday.
nt big vote then will be on a
priilon requesting President
Wn to invoke the Taft-Hart-
l w Injunction proceedings ln
P steel strike.
.iTITH A yilf.mnw - tj .
Weans and southern Democrats
tmiroi of the legislation, ad
stration leaders concede they
m little chance to block adoo-
of that proposal. Absences
" "pped the administration's
strength.
'The Senate wmtA a imiin.
" Into its version of the ex-
law.
jtom the standpoint of the
UHlZatiOn aPPnploe lha nHra
nttol amendment hit hardest
sponsored by Rep. Talle
'wa) it was tentatively an-
by a 148 to 88 standing
fjlS PROVISION would re
I lifting of price controls
y '"'ties of services which (1)
?,.sold below ceiling for three
or (2) are in adequate
5U supply.
? amendment defines an
e as being in adequate sup
! n it isn't being rationed
JHocated. Nothing is rationed
"and only a lew metals are
allocation controls.
s1ence (D-Ky-wh0
w-M the Talle amendment,
it i L w?ultl amount to killing
-"'iwuis,
ftherlin Votes
mager Plan
FHERLiNvoter. here I
feci
I
EUGENE, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1952
CITY EDITION
Phone 5-1551
Sucker Fishing
Offers Prizes
For Teenagers
COTTAGE GROVE Kids up
to 14 will have a chance to fish
for fun and prizes for the next
three months and at the same
time help the fishing.
The Cottage Grove Eagles
lodge is sponsoring a derby
with prizes for the biggest trash
fish chubs and suckers. The
prizes, donated by seven local
merchants will be awarded the
last Wednesday of June, July
and August at 7:30 p.m. at the
armory according to A. W.
Thomas, secretary of the lodge.
A grand prize will be awarded
in August.
The fish will be judged by
length.
Besides providing fun for the
kids, Thomas says catching the
trash fish may benefit game
fishing, as suckers and chubs
are known killers of trout.
I, " vuwirs nere jri
&J ww city charter
for y man"
ta, Ruveuimeni. ine
' t 124 no. The
tn," aroused considerable
I rsy with opponents of he
r re charging that the new
icSt!Vuernment will result in
tutorship."
fcVrTT"1 of the new chart"
t Vu Coun:il is expected to
(tan y ,0 aPP0int William
t.ha, new city manager.
tv.uJ , serv'n8 temporarily
lei ,,p!n "tendent since he re-
riVield!Urer reCrder
Mn V?,?rtfir has ben u"der
fcL lLth,erlin 'rem tome to
BPA Funds Gel
Group's Okay
WASHINGTON (JP) Sen. Cor
don (R-Ore) said Friday a Senate
appropriations subcommittee has
approved appropriations totaling!
$73,123,400 for construction and
operation of Bonneville Power
Administration facilities in the
Pacific Northwest.
The figure is the same as that
previously approved by the House
in passing the Interior Depart
ment appropriation bill for the 12
months beginning July 1.
Cordon, a subcommittee mem
ber, told a reporter approval also
had been given to start construc
tion of the Kennewick division of
the Yakima, Wash., irrigation
project. The actual amount of the
funds for this work was not avail
able. The subcommittee approved a
total of $2,750,000 for access road
construction in the O&C'lands in
Oregon. All but $700,000 of the
amount is earmarked for road con
struction in connection with the
salvage of windthrown timber.
Rehabilitation of the Savage
Rapids Dam at Grants Pass, Ore.,
also came in for $700,000, Cordon
said.
Of these amounts, only that for
Bonneville was contained in the
House-approved bill. The others,
if approved by the Senate, still
must be acted on by the House.
"WffTTVU " r - """" ff-,.wsri
5
l- . .... ,: ,,.. 8., .,-- TTrrMimiMiTii'irmmTil'itai' at, lanrf
(NEA Tclephoto)
GERM WAR DEBATE IN U.N. In unexpectedly mild speech to the United Nations
Security Council in New York, Soviet Delegate Jacob Malik skips expected charges
that the United States used germ warfare in Korea and asks that the nations ratify the
Geneva protocol outlawing bacteriological weapons. U. S. Ambassador Ernest A. Gross
immediately called Malik's maneuver a ."fraud." Left to right are: Malik, council presi
dent for June; Constatin Zinchenko, assistant secretary-general; Britain's Sir Gladwyn
.Tebb, and Gross.
Vida Man Found
Guilty of Assault
By MARVIN TIMS
Xetliter-Gillrd Stiff Writer
A Lane County circuit court iury took only 25 minutes
Friday afternoon to find Arden Louis Rhoads, 37, of Vida,
guilty of assault with intent to kill.
Court officials believe it is the first conviction on this
charge in the county in recent years. Under Oregon law the
conviction calls for a sentence of life imprisonment or one
to 20 years in the state penitentiary.
Rhoads, according to testimony, scuttled May in the
car of Myrtle J. Sfece, a worn-
Stevenson in Race
Close Sources Say
Illinois Politico
Sprague Tells
Editors' Duties
PALO ALTO, Calif. (TP)
Charles M. Sprague, publisher of
the Salem, Ore., Statesman and
former governor of Oregon, told
the California Newspaper Pub
lishers Assn. Friday night there
Is a crying need for better-written,
more informative, more in
teresting newspaper editorials.
Editorial writers, he said, should
avoid "Afghanastanism" writing
only on remote problems. Rather,
he said, they should not be afraid
of dealing with local "hot potatoes."
Sprague said the first essential
for an editor today is awareness
of his responsibilities.
"The editor," he said, "is in
midstream and ought to get into
the swim. He should not hesitate
to take on dragons abroad or the
crackpots at home."
Sprague said that readership
surveys have showed mat, un
fortunately, many editorial
columns get consiaeraoiy jess
readership than the sports pages.
He declared that this is partly the
fault of editorial writers who
should make their copy so in
teresting that readers would not
pass their pages by.
Lattimore Trip
Alerts Officials
WASHINGTON OP) Ae State
Department disclosed Friday night
it has alerted U. S. Customs
guards to halt any attempt by
Owen Lattimore to leave the
country.
The department said it issued
the order after receiving a tip
from an "official source" that
Lattimore planned a trip to Soviet
Russia or one of the Iron Curtain
countries. Officials of the depart
ment said they did not know
whether the tip was correct.
Lattimore, a Johns Hopkins
University professor, is a former
State Department consultant. He
has figured as the target of re
peated attacks by Sen. McCarthy
(R-Wis.)
Lattimore, who has vigorously
denied McCarthy's charges, told
newsmen in Baltimore he was
mystified by the latest furore. He
said he hasn't asked the State De
partment for a passport and has
no plans to go abroad.
Breaking a day-long silence, the
State Department finally confirm
ed that an order to halt Lattimore
if he should try to leave the
United States without the neces
sary travel visa was issued on
June 3.
BPA Council Will
Hold Eugene Meet
SPOKANE (IP) Members of
the Bonneville Advisory Council
voted Friday to hold four area
meetings late this summer in an
effort to bring the council's ac
tivities down to a local level.
Meetings will be held in each of
the Bonneville Power Admlnlstra
lion's areas, at Seattle, Walla
Walla, Spokane, and Eugene, Ore
Dates were not set.
(NEA TlDho1n)
PHFW David Kerr dangles upside down from top of this
f" Z'tlZ pol The was Painting (left), at Everett Wash
after he slipped out of his bosun's chair. His foot caught
? Vwfctv rone saving him. He hung for half hour before
PeHmeTanVert jjs IfcWlg "jS
bring him iowa. KiK ga
1st Summer Day
Greeted by Rain
Ushered in with partly cloudy
skies and scattered showers, sum
mer offically arrived in Eugene at
3:13 a.m. (PST) Saturday.
That's the official date of the
summer solstice when the sun
rises farthest north of east, reach
es its greatest noontime altitude,
and sets equally far north of west.
COMPARED TO the same time
year ago. Old Ma Nature has
had a kinder smile for Lane
County during the days leading
up to summer this season.
Last year, you mav recall. T.ani
County was well into a three
month drought period when the
first day of summer came around.
Only traces of rain were noterl nil
during June and no real rainfall
was experienced in the countv
from May 23, until August 28th
a period which withered many
neia crops, curtailed logging op
erauons, ana Kept lorest men
chewing their nails when they
weren't actually battling forest
blazes.
IN CONTRAST, the countv has
already received 1.88 inches of
rainfall during the current month
enough to give crops a good
soaking and keep forest hazards
at a minimum.
Traditionally the longest day of
the year, sunrise for this first dav
of summer was at 4:29 (PDT) and
sunset will be at 7:58 p.m. But,
taken to nearest minutes, times of
sunrise and sunset have been the
same as Saturday's for the past
mree days.
And on paper, Sunday will see
one more minute of sunlight with
the sun coming up at 4:29 a.m.
and setting at 7:59 p.m.
an friend from Vida, and in
the struggle shot her through
the leg with a .32 caliber
automatic pistol.
During the morning ses
sion, Miss Stice testified that
Rhoads pointed the gun be
tween her eyes and threaten
ed to kill her while the two
were sitting in her car in Eu
gene,
The argument started, she aald,
after he asked her to go with him
to Seattle and she refused,
WHEN RHOADS took the stand
Friday afternoon, he denied many
portions of Miss Stice's story,
Here is his versions of events
leading up to the shooting
She unlocked the car and we
got in. We sat and talked a few
minutes. I asked her to go to Seat
tle. She said she would think it
over. I had the gun in my Belt
and nulled it out. It was pointed
at the dashboard. She grabbed it
quickly with her left hand.
"Then she got on her knees on
the seat and swung her left leg
toward me. The gun went off un
der the dashboard and she said:
Oh My God, I've been shot. Then
she asked me to take her to a
doctor."
Rhoads said he then Tan around
and got in the car on the driver's
side and started to the hospital.
"I DIDN'T SAT I was going to
kill her ever. I was just going to
scare her, I guess. I didn't know
if she or I pulled the trigger dur
ing the scuffle. We both had our
hands on the gun."
Under cross-examination Rhoads
denied he ever said he would kill
her and take his own life.
"When I took her to the hospital
and placed her in a wheelchair,"
he recalled, "I said I was going
to leave. She said: 'Stay with me.
I love you. It was an accident.
You have nothing to fear.' "
In the morning sessions Miss
Stice testified she pinned the gun
and Rhoads' hand against the
car's roof with her left leg before
the shot was fired.
Rhoads denied this. He said the
shot was fired while the gun was
under the car's dashboard.
DEPUTY DISTRICT Atty. Eu
irpne Venn in the state's closing
aruument said Miss Stice had put! claws, the African war clubs and
up a struggle because she "hon- the skeleton of a two-headed baby
estly felt" Rhoads was going tolborn in Philadelphia, there is a
kill her. "Why would she struggle 'lamp made from the bladder of a
unless she had fear in her heart?"! camel. There is also a- pair of
Defense Atty. Robert Carmichaeljshoes. They are just like any other
contended in closing argument no shoes execept they are size 36.
evidence had been presented to I None of these is the star of the
show intent to kill. "If he wanted "Believe it. or Not" wagon show
to kill her, he had seven more parked across Broadway from the
bullets. And why would he take First National Bank. Star attrac
her to the hospital if he wanted tion is the statue which looks
to get rid of her?" human, as well it should.
Judge G. F. Skipworth will sen- The people who filed through
tence Rhoads in court Monday the wagon Friday didn't have
morning at 10.
Allied Infantry
Forces Back
Big Red Attack
Desperate Fight
To Control 3 Hills
By ROBERT UDICK
United Prut SUff Wrllpr
SEOUL, Korea (UP)
Fresh American and Filipino
infantry replacements beat
back the biggest Communist
attack of the year west or
Chorwon Saturday in a des
perate battle for control of
three strategic hills.
More than 400 Chinese were I
killed or wounded in the
fierce six-hour battle.
The 179th Regiment of the U.S.
45th Division and men of the
Philippine 19th Battalion combat
team absorbed the initial shock of
the 3,500-man red attack.
In the air, American Sabre jets
shot down one Communist Mig-15
jet fighter over the North Korean
capital of Pyongyang in a dog
fight with five of the Russian
built planes.
LT. GEN. JOHN W. (Iron Mike)
O'Daniel, commander of the U.S.
1st Army Corps, said the compar
atively green newcomers on the
western front met the mass Chi
nese attacks with the "cold steel"
of bayonets.
He said they were capable of
repelling "any Chinese offen
sive."
The American and Filipino foot
soldiers repulsed the hordes of
Chinese in the bloody battle
which marked the Reds 21st fu
tile attempt to recapture the
strategic heights wrested from
them by the 45th Division 10 days
ago.
The Reds moved in behind a
heavy artillery barrage which
poured 60 shells a minutes on de
fending United Nations forces.
SCRAPPY U.S. soldiers climb
ed out of their foxholes and took
on the raiding Reds in hand-to-hand
combat with grenades and
bayonets. B-26 bombers came in
low over the battle area to bomb
Communist concentrations.
This main enemy attack, a
pincer movement designed to cut
off the hill positions, lasted four
hours, but the Reds jabbed back
in lighter probes for two more
hours.
Richard B. Russell
Senator Russell
Says Lower Tax
Talk Is 'Foolish'
Says Military Might
Vital to U. S. Peace
Confessed Ax-Slayer
In Oregon State Pen
SALEM (u.B Albert William
Karnes, who police said confessed
to killing Mrs, Susan Litchfield,
82, with an ax in the shed of her
home here two weeks ago, was
in Oregon State Penitentiary Sat
urday. Karnes, who was being held in
The Dalles for the hammer assault
of a woman there, was dressed in
at Oregon State Penitentiary here
Friday atfernoon to await trial on alongside the Ferry
EWEB Plant
Open to Public
first degree murder.
More than $300,000 In new fa
cilities owned by the people of
Eugene will be on display Satur
day until 8 p.m. and again Sun
day from 2 to 6 p.m,
The new office-w arehouse
building and new shops of the
Eugene Water & Electric Board
will be open for public inspection
Saturday evening and Sunday af
ternoon. At the same times, the
EWEB will show interested per
sons through its big steam
plant, where mountains of saw
dust are converted to electric en
ergy.
The EWEB installations are lo
cated at the east end of 4th Ave.
St. Bridge
PORTLAND (AP) Sen,
Richard B. Russell of Georgia,
here to confer with Demo
cratic party officials in his
campaign for the presidential
nomination, thinks talk about
a tax, cut now is "foolishness."
He told a press conference Fri
day that if he were President he
would not ask for a tax reduction
until at least 1954 when the pres
ent arms buildup is complete.
"This talk of cutting 40 billion
dollars or 15 per cent of the bud
get is foolishness," he said.
Rearmament, he said, is the
most important subject facing the
U.S. "If we had overwhelming
military might we would have an
honorable peace in Korea now,"
he said.
RUSSELL CRITICISED the
campaign of Gen. Dwight Eisen
hower who is seeking the Repub
lican presidential nomination. "It
won't go too good for him if he
keeps up this 40 billion dollar tax
cut talk or this business of saying,
as I'm told he did in Denver, that
there is no more danger from
Russia than from a pollywog
swimming down a muddy creek'."
Russell reaffirmed his opposi
tion to a proposed fair employ
ment practices plank in the Dem
ocratic platform. If it were adop
ted he would repudiate it, he told
reporters. But he added that he
thought a platform acceptable to
all candidates could be written
and adopted.
WHEN QUESTIONED about the
current steel strike Russell said:
"I would have invoked seizure
under the provision of the selec
tive service act of 1940 which
authorizes seizure of industries
necessary for the national defense
which failed or refused to meet
the defense requirements."
He concluded a talk before a
group of Democrats with this
statement:
"I approached this decision to
run with humility, but the more
I looked around and observed the
other candidates, the more my
humility ebbed away."
Truman Friend;
Problems 'Over'
Other Candidates
Active in Contest
By RAYMOND LAHR
United Preii SUff Correspondent
WASHINGTON (UP)
Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson of
Illinois has decided to make
himself available for the
Democratic presidential nomi
nation, party sources said bat
urday. THESE SOURCES a high ad
ministration official and a senator
in close touch with behind-the-scenes
maneuvering In the Demo
cratic camp said they had "heard
from White House quarters that
Stevenson had solved "personal
problems" that have kept him
from announcing his availability.
The administration official said
he understood Stevenson would
announce his decision Monday.
Stevenson has insisted that he
Is running only for reelection as
governor, although he is reported
to rate high with President Tru
man and is favored by many
overpass.
'Human ' Statue Star
Of Curiosity Show
Nestled among the polar bear
show. Not really. But after seeing
the shrunken human head from
Ecuador and the peanut which
grew in a corn cob, spectators
filed past Mrs. Earl Seitz, who
has a pile of money in front of
her. Most drop a few coins on the
pile. Proceeds go to the Marine
Corps League for the league's dis
abled veterans fund
Mrs. Seitz and her husband,
Guard Parades
For Governors
WASHINGTON (P) Pres
ident Truman is reported to
have told friends he would be
delighted to have a Democrat!
ticket headed by Gov. Steven-.
on of Illinois, with W. Averell
Harriman ln second place.
Although Truman has re
frained from making any publis
commitment, men long associ
ated with him ln politics now
are privately working for the
Stevenson-Harriman combina
tion. Their chief difficulty in this
connection, these men say. He
in the contlnned personal deter
mination of Stevenson to avoid
becoming a presidential candi
date If he can help it.
Northern Democratic leaders. The
governor has said repeatedly that
he could not accept the presiden
tial nomination.
The Senate source said he had
conferred with Democratic lead
ers who met recently with Stev
enson. He named New York State
Democratic Chairman Paul E.
Fitzpatrick as one of this group.
The Senator said he thought
Stevenson would announce his
availability soon, but did not
know if the announcement would
come Monday.
THE ADMINISTRATION source
said it was reported that Steven
son's reluctance to run for Presi
dent was base'd on purely personal
reasons which now have been
cleared up.
This official said that according
to his information, Stevenson's de
cision to make himself available
for the nomination had no con
nection with the eventual Re
publican presidential nominee. It
has been reported that Stevenson
might run if Robert A. Taft of
Ohio is nominated on the GOP
ticket.
MEANTIME, Gen. Dwight D,
Eisenhower's supporters braced
for another defeat in their battle
with the Taft camp for Republican
National Convention delegates.
The Louisiana State GOP Com
mittee was scheduled to meet at
Shreveport to decide seven con
tests over district delegates. The
committee is dominated by Tare
followers.
The Eisenhower forces held
little hope that the committee
would rule in their favor. They
lost two other contests Thursday
when the Virginia State Commit
tee approved two Taft delegates
from a contested district,
Barefooted Woman
Walks Over Stubble
PORT ALES, N.M. (IP) Next
time Mrs. Bonnie Pewterbaugh
goes flying, she'll wear her shoes.
Her husband, an airman at nearby
PORT LEWIS, Wash. (VP).
The 5,500 National Guardsmen of
the 41st Infantry Division paraded
tneir troops, tanks and truck be
fore the Governors of Oregon and
Washington Saturday in the fifth
annual march since World War II.
The division paraded for its new
commander, Mnj. Gen. Harold G.
Maison of Salem, Ore., for the
first time. With him were Gov
ernors Arthur B. Langlie of
Washington and Douglas McKay
of Oregon, and numerous North
west military leaders.
The event marked the end of
who have been w th the wagon trHining pro(!rnm.
,n mumus, iicautjuiiuci jii new Dritf fan tu n -n p....
York' iTacom'a, new commander of thci' Dcnison, Tex., his birthplace,
But more about this statuejdivision artillery, led the big gunlw.nre,.,he wa", to "ddress a group
which looks human. It is made imii. r .t,. , .toi. ( h,. ; of Gold Star Mothers. I rom there
of wood, mostly. It is also madejmarch. The 161st regiment from
of the sculptor's very own teeth, 'Spokane and Seattle areas was
toe-nails, finger-nails, hair and commanded by Col. Ralph S.
THE LOUISIANA district dele
gate disputes were among 23
contests referred by the Republi
can National Committee this week
to state committees. The national
committee took jurisdiction over
72 other contests involving dele
gates elected at large from the
states.
Eisenhower headed from Denver
glasses.
much to say. Most were young
and much impressed by the amaz
ing exhibits, including all the
stabbing tools. There was a
.iDngn.u rlaaa. n Tittftton ilaaffcir
and a "mystic dagger.' I THE SCULPTOR, a Mr. Masa-
'kichl by name, wanted to make
a peneci siaiue 01 nimsen, io crev Robert L
ate a man in nix own linage, ine Iflflth
siaiuo wnicn peers out irom a
MOST JUST looked and laid
"huh."
The burglar alarm at th First
Phelps, Spokane.
Commanding the two Oregon
regiments were Col. James D. All
good, Dallas, the lft2nd, and Col.
Irving, Roseburg, the
Governor Tonglie presented
rem. conversation, i ne uhiik people , i , . . u . l"-i'Ml-a uim.m.urfi.i wm.
seemed to be testing their alarm'0"'?1" 1" breech-cloth and glasses, lo the 41st reConnaissance com
to take her first plane ride in his real conversation. The bank people i"1"," . cas? lo"k', .D!'csspd, replica of the Eisenhower trophy
new era 1 1.
She didn't have any shoes on,
but went anyway. About two
miles from here, the craft crash
landed in a stubble field.
Nobody was hurt, but Mrs. ihand"
Pewterbaugh had to walk a half ,lgmp
mile Darn luoiea w ui
teoa bouatk
and it kept going off.
That was almost as amazing as
the copy of the U.S. Constitution,
all 4200 words of it, "writ by
he looks ready to speak, or pcr-pany of Bremerton for attendance
haps to shiver. and Drofjciency in training. The
Mr. Masakichl finished the! 41st Infantry Division Assn. trophy
statue in 1883. len years later, for outstanding service during the
the back of a postage !the legend says, he died, "poor;vear went to Capt. Jesse T,
With room to spare,
TMBM M MO ftuffl
but famous." And, although the
I legend doesn't point this out,
theitaetUtia. .
Wilkins, Jr., Woodburn, Ore.
commander of the 180th iniantry
tfUMni Me
he will go to Dallas to deliver a
major campaign speech Saturday
night.
The general told newsmen that
"I'm going to tell them what I
think of this Texas situation" in
his Dallas speech. He referred to
the fight for Texas' 38 convention
delegates, the most hotly-contested
anf the delegate disputes. This con
test will be settled at the national
convention.
In other developments:
W. Averell Harriman, a can
didate for the Democratic presi
dential nomination, told a news
conference ln Dcs Moines that no
presidential candidate can reduce
taxes in the next two jean and