Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, August 15, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

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    M
THE WEATHER
PARTLY CLOUDY t a I f h t.
Band j. Little causa la tern
aerator. Law tonight IS; hire
Sunday, 71.
Growers Vole
7-1 for Wheat
Quotas in '54
Oregon Producers
Overwhelmingly
Support Controls
Washington ( The nation's
farmers have voted over
whelmingly to accept rigid
control! on next year'! wheat
crop in return for continued
high government price sup
port. The action, approved by a 7-
l margin among the 'rrmers
.voting in Friday's referendum,
eased pressure on farm-belt
Republican members of Con-
gress facing campaigns for re
election in 1954.
Preliminary returns announ
ced by the Agriculture Depart
ment showed 381,302 growers
voted for marketing quotas on
the 1054 wheat crop. Only 53,-
252 opposed. The restrictions
will cut production and sales
about 20 per cent from this
year's 10 per cent above nor
mal crop.
The returns showed a favor
able vote of 87.2 per cenfar
1 above the 66 per cent re
quired and the biggest propor
tion ever piled up in a wheat
quota referendum. The Agri
culture Department said it ex-
; pects little change from that
percentage when the final offi
cial tabulation is made.
Oregon 4841 to 385
Portland VP Oregon wheat
growers Friday voted 4,848 to
385 to continue marketing con
trols on the 1954 wheat crop.
(Coo tinned n Par ft, Catena I)
Heat Breaks
After 94 Friday
Clouded ikiei and cool tem
perature! prevailed over Salem
and vicinity, Saturday morn
ing, an abrupt change, follow
ing the wilting heat of Friday
when the mercury hit a maxi
mum of 94 degrees in the city,
A trace of precipitation was
recorded for the' city early Fri-
day evening. . ..
A flow of cool air moved in
on western Oregon generally
to bring relief from the intense
heat of the past few days. In
eastern Oregon, the warm wea
ther is due to continue over
the week-end.
Scattered thunderstorms
were reported throughout the
mountain area over Friday
night, and more of them are
due in those areas through Sat
urday. Forecast for the week-end
for valley sections is for con
tinued partly cloudy skies with
no mention of rain. Tempera
tures will continue about the
same as for Saturday.
The Dalles -had the top
scorching mark for Friday, the
maximum there being 105 de
grees. Medford listed 98, down
town Portland 98," Pendleton
88.
Seek Settlement of
Anglo-U.S. Dispute
United Nations, N.Y. U
Diplomats of the 16 countries
whose troops fought for the
United Nations in Korea met
for three hours today, seeking
to settle Anglo-American dif
ferences over the forthcoming
Korean truce conference. An'
other session was called for
tomorrow.
As delegates left U. S. dele
gation headquarters they in
dicated that "a lot of progress"
had been made toward settling
the apparent rift between
Britain and the United States
on whether to Include Russia
and India in the Far Eastern
conference. '
Britain Won't Aid if
Rhee Breaks Truce
London UJ9 Prime Minis
ter Winston Churchill warned
today that Britain would uot
support South Korean Presi
dent Syngman Rhee with her
fighting forces If he break the
truce.
At the same time, Churchill
aid Britain would Join 15 oth
er Korean Allies in resuming
and extending the fighting
should be Communists wreck
the armistice.
HELD FOR ROBBERY
Klamath Falls UJS Stau po
lice early today arrested Rich
ard Bridwell Young, 23, Oak
land, Calif., for the armed rob
bery of the Unique market here
Weather Details
Mutmmm mHt. til atatana te
St. H. Tatol S4-kMT TMiIUUa!
tmm fw MM 11 Mi !. .14.
Ma srarMuttaa, Ml rmtl. MM.
amr ktltkt. -M law, (Braart k V. .
WmUmt Bums.)
65th
Estranged Hubby
Bites Off Third
Of Wife's Nose
Los Angeles ( A man bit
oft a third of his wife's nose
last night, police report
The woman is Mrs. Joan Sa
vllle, 40, an insurance com'
pany secretary. She told of
ficers that her estranged hus-
oana, culvert Hack, 37, a
Cleveland, Ohio, television
technician, grabbed her as she
left an apartment building
where she live.
She said he dragged her
into a vacant lot next to the
building, bit the tip of her
nose and fled. Officers H. L.
Gavlin and W. M. West re
ported. They quoted her as
saying" the left her husband
last April and that he had
threatened harm when she re
fused his repeated plea for
her to return to him.
The officer reported they
could not find the missing
nose tip. Police began a
search for the husband. -
Reds Seek to
Pep up Strike
Paris UJ9 Communists la
bor leaders today ordered
member of their unions to
stage sit-down strike in
French factories Monday in
an attempt to put new life into
the week-long labor revolt
against Premier Joseph anlel's
economy program, --, .
Socialist and non-Commu
nist unions, which originally
touched oft the chaotic strikes
affecting 4,000,000 laborer at
Thursday's peak, appeared
disciplined to go along. They
took advatnage of the lull cre
ated by the long Assumption'
day week-end to confer pri
vately and unofficially with
government representatives on
a compromise formula.
The Communist were de
termined to prevent any cool
ing off of the labor crisis dur
ing the holiday.
They instructed their power
ful- Metallurgical union to be
gin an unlimited "sit down"
strike Monday in the Bouches-
du-Rhone department That
area include Mareellle, second
city of France, stronghold of
Red militants and frequently
the scene of violent riots be
tween worker and security
forces.
Tent City Will House
23,000 Anti-Red P.W.s
Munsan, Korea VP) A huge
tent city is being built near
Panmunjom to house 23,000
North Korean and Chinese
prisoners who refused repatria
tion. '
Some 3,000 army engineers,
working around the clock, are
erecting 1,100 tents. They will
house not only the prisoners
but medical and Red Cross
Units, guard troops, supervis
ory personnel and Communist
officers who will attempt to
convince the POWs to return
to their homelands.
IKE SIGNS OREGON BILL
Denver (U-B President Eis
enhower today signed a bill
giving Oregon's Gov, Paul
Fatterson jurisdiction over
criminal offenses and civil
causes of action committed on
Indian reservations within
the state. . . , 1
Report Against Trade
Street Opening to 12th
The planning board of the
city zoning commission will
Tuesday night recommend
against providing funds to ac
quire right of way for the op
ening of Trade Street through
to 12th.
Roughly the cost Is estimated
r $45,000, an expense which
the board does not think, would
be warranted.
The idea originated in the
city council and the commiS'
sion was requested to study the
possibility of extending Trade
from Winter to 12th to facili
tate the movement of heavy
truck traffic to the Trade Street
area.
The planning board does not
feel," the report will say, "that
this expenditure is feasible at
this time for the following rea
sons: .
'All Improvements would
have to be borne by the city.
"C o n s i d e r a b le property
wcild have to be condemned
and purchased by the city.
'The -expense of necesssry
fills and bridge make the pro
ject extremely expensive for
the results gained."
The report ad.is that no at
tempt has been nude to study
other alternative such as the
Capital jOohfMI
i rt '
Year, No. 194
23 New Fires
Started in
Slate Forests
68 Acres Burned
Over South of Sandy;
10 in Southwest Area
Twenty - three fires w e re
started Friday in Oregon forest
lands coming under the juris
diction of the state forestry de
partment with the largest one
in the Clackamas-Marion dis
trict Sixty-eight acres in size, this
fire was three miles south of
Sandy and was in a logging
operation. It was brought un
der control by 7:30 p.m. Fri
day.
Most of the 23 fires were
from lightning with 15 baving
been started by lightning, four
from. logging operations and
four miscellaneous fires. -
Southwest Oregon had the
largest number of lightning
fires with a report luaiie to
the department Saturday morn
ing listing 10 lightning fires,
and more lightning strikes ex
pected in that area Saturday.
Of the 10 tires, all that crews
had reached had been brought
under control.' Others were in
fairly inaccessable areas but
were small. '
Saturday morning the state
forestry department sent the
department's plane down to,
that area for patrol work with
Al Larsen piloting it, Larsen
will also drop supplies to tne
fire fighters if they are need
ed. . - .
A 20-acre fire was reported
in Western Lane district No
recent report has been received
cn that telling whether it had
been controled yet or not
The Klamath district which
had been expecting a number
of lightning fires, reported only
three fires. Eastern Lane dis
trict had two lightning fires.
Of the other fires reported
two were in Northwest Oregon
district and were small and con
trolled; one was in the Polk-
Benton district and controlled;
one was in the Central Oregon
district, near Kinzua, and was
very small and controlled; and
one was in the North Central
Oregon district and controlled.
The latter was a miscellaneous
fire and was started from a
burning building.
Lowering of temperatures
and the rise in humidity has
eased the fire danger somewhat
but the heat of the past few
days dried the forest areas so
much that there is still a Haz
ard. Humidities in this area Fri
day were low enough that log
ging operations were closed
part of the day.
2 U. S. Captains Land
Behind Curtain, Held -
Heidelberg, Germany (U.ID
Two U, S. army captains, en
gaged in field maneuvers near
the Iron Curtain frontier, mis
takenly landed their light
plane in the Soviet zone ol
Germany and were reported
today as "missing and presum
ed held by. the Russians."
The names of the two men
were not disclosed, pending
notification to their families.
MILWAUKIE MAN INDICTED
Portland W A County
Grand Jury Friday Indicted
Wesley Leonard Mostert, 28, of
Milwaukie,' on a charge of first
degree murder. He -is accused
of the fatal beating of John Ed-
ward Krall, 60, on July 28.
widening of Mill Street.
The board consulted various
interested concerns.
It found that the Southern
Pacific Company would prob-
ably grant permission for the
extension to pass over existing
right of way.
But Willamette University
would not want the street im
proved. One of Its planned
classroom buildings will be
very near, and the noise of a
truck-traveled street says the
report would be very annoying.
The university, says the report,
would be very reluctant to give
the necessary ground at 12th
Street for street purposes at
this time.
"A cursory examination,"
says the report "shows that the
university owns property on
both sides of the railroad right
of way, making it necessary to
acquire considerable ground to
make the improvement prob
ably by condemnation."
In addition to the ground.
says the report, it would be
necessary to enlarge the bridge
over the mlllrace at Winter,
and to bridge the race between
12th and University for about
300 feet
(Cmtiaaea a Face $, Cohraa t)
Solem, Oregon,
Serves Wife and
Children, Then
Loses Own Life
. Chelan, Wash. ( A her
oic father saved his wife and
two children from drowning in
Wapato Lake Friday night and
then sank from exhaustion.
- The victim was Fred Mar
ie tte, 30. Manson. Wash.
Marlette was fishing with his
wife, Carroll, and two children.
aged one and seven, when their
boat capsized and threw the
group into the water. The
father brought his family to
shore and then sank.
His body was recovered and
artificial respiration tried un-
succesfully.
Typhoon May
Miss Okinawa
Nana, Owlnawa W Trop
ical winds shrieked over this
key American military base
Saturday night in an ominous
warning of an approaching ty
phoon, but the island may
escape the full fury of the big
blow.
The typhoon, one of .the
wildest ever recorded in the
Pacific, may to -pass Okinawa
if it remains on Its present
course, said Maj. Maurice R.
Fowler,1 spokesman for the
Ryuky.us command.
The storm's center, carrying
160 mile winds, may strike
Formosa, weather observers
said.
Winds of up to 75 mile an
hour lashed Okinawa Satur
day night and were expected
to increase to 100-140 miles'
by morning. . .
But the island was ready. In
last minute preparations, farm
ers gathered crop and strung
ropei over roofs. American
were housed in concrete shel
ters.
The big storm was last
charted 157 miles from Okin
awa, moving northwest at 15
miles an hour.-
Allis-Chalmers Gets
Transformer Order
Washington W The In
terior Department Friday an
nounced approval of a contract
for six 343,000-voIt transform
ers which it said will be per
haps tne highest capacity trans
formers In the world.
Allis-Chalmers Manufactur
ing Co. of Milwaukee, Wis., got
the contract with the Bonne
ville Power Administration
BPA with a bid of $2,005,378.
The transformers will be
used on a 345 kllovolt trans
mission line of BPA to deliver
power from McNary Dam to
the Portland area.'
Homes Endangered
By Sheridan Fire
Sheridan UJ0 A grass and
grain fire yesterday threaten
ed several homes in this area
and destroyed fields of hairy
vetch ready to be harvested.
The Sheridan fire department
said cause of the fire was not
known. Fanned by a stiff breeze
the blaze cut a swath a quar
ter of a mile wide and two
miles long in the Mill creek
and Buell areas near here.
Heaviest loss was suffered by
Bob Guttry of Red Prairie. He
lost 30 acres of ripe vetch,
Firemen said hot weather and
low humidities have increased
the hazards of the harvest now
in full swing here. Grain fields
are tinder dry, they said.
v .
Disloyal Gls Face
Treason Prosecution .
Los Angeles WV-Atty. Gen
Herbert Brownell said Satur
day that American prisoners of
war who collaborated with
their Communist captors In Ko
rea may face charges of tres
son.
Brownell said at a news con
ference that the Justice De
partment will "study applic
able laws and ascertain
whether we will be warranted
in prosecuting these men."
Nine More Returned
P.W.s Reach Travis
Travis AFB, Calif. U.P Nine
repatriated war prisoners, in'
eluding six stretcher cases and
an amputee on crutches, re'
turned to the United States to
day on the second "freedom
flight" since the Korean armis
tice. '
Service hospital plane carry.
ing the war -weary fighting
men home after months of
communist Imprisonment land
ed here at 6:55 a.m. (PDT).
WONT STOP NEXT TIME
San Francisco UJ9 Senate
floor leader William F. Know
land warned the Communists
today that if they renew the
Korean War "neither this na
tion nor Its allies" will remain
south of the 38th parallel.
Saturday, August i Nooano Naona
ccjanis
r.h ft.,. ; ,0
- .
Victims Hash
Frantic Colls
Tremors Subsiding;
Relief Need Grows;
U.S.A.F. Helping
Athens, Greece UJ9 Thou
sands of homeless people iso
lated by week-long earth
quakes on the ravaged Ionian
islands flashed frantic mirror
signals for help today to
American and British ships.
The twinkling reflection
from the mirror attracted the
attention 'of men aboard ths
ships and they landed with
jeeps and helicopters to go to
their assistance
Victims of the vast trem-
Mors that reduced the islands
of Cephalonla, Ithaca and
Zante, described in Homer's
epic poem, "The Odyssey,"
wandered over the broken gut
ted land or huddled in masses.
The Athens observatory said
the force of the earthquakes
was declining and the last 10
shocks were light V
But the tragic need created
by the earthquake and fire
disaster gave, rescue workers
an almost impossible task. An
estimated 1,000 persons are
dead and whole town have
been destroyed.
At Wiesbaden, Germany,
the U.S. air force ordered "all
out air support" for the
Greeks and began an airlift of
168,000 pound of supply to
the shattered islands off
Greece' east coast '
Radford Takes Over
As Military Chief
wasningion J-ra A new
team of generals and admirals.
headed by Adm. Arthur 7W.
Radford, took over the mill
tary high command today with
the assignment of taking a
new looK- at tne nation's en
tire defense set-up.
Only simple ceremonies at
the Pentagon marked change
over in the membership of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. But from
the change may come decisions
revamping national defense
policies followed for the past
several years.
New chairman of the Joint
Chiefs and the first Navy man
to noid the top military post,
is the 58-year-old Radford who
succeeds Gen. Omar N. Brad'
ley.
Sheridan Boy Lost
In 5. Yamhill River
Sheridan, Ore. VP) A 15-
year-old boy drowned Friday
while attempting to swim
across the South Yamhill river,
three miles south of here.
He was Walter Foster, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Foster. The father and four
younger brothers live at Mc
Minnvllle, the mother In Port
land. The victim had been liv
ing here this summer.
' Lenora Wilkinson, 18. Sher
Idan, saw the boy disappear
in the water and tried to help
him, but failed. It took two
hours to recover the body,
which was taken to Portland
for funeral arrangement.
152 Japanese Dead,
800 Missing, Floods
Kyoto, Japan UJ9 Japanese
officials listed .152 persons
dead and hundreds missing to
day in a flood near this ancient
capital city of Japan. Press re
ports estimated as many as 300
dead and 800 -nissing.
Unofficial police reports
placed the number of dead at
232 with 132 missing. Police
said another 276 were Injured
Twenty -thousand Japanese
homes were reported destroyed
by the flood waters.
Hurricane Passes East
Coast, Little Damage
Boston UP) Atlantic hurri
cane B, for Barbara, swung
out to sea Saturday after leav
ing heavy rains, but little
damage, in its wake as it
skirted the New England
coast.
The weather bureau ssid
the hurricane, the second of
the season, was about 200
miles at sea by 8 a.m. EST and
moving northeastward at about
27 miles an hour.
LOOTERS WARNED
Athens UPf Advices from the
quake devastated Oonian Is
lands said Saturday looters
would be executed on the spot.
An order to that effect was
issued after arrest of two loot
ers Friday.
QPgTI
VELCOMES
.1. ., l,m,mt,
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- ' " MM L
Lt Col. Thomas D. Harrison, Clovis, N. M, Just returned
to Travis, Calif.,' Air Force Base from Korea following hia
release from a -Communist prison camp, is embraced by
hi wife, Doris. He lost leg in the fighting.
Ike Vetos 3,
Signs 15 Bills
Denver (U-B President El
senhower vetoed three bills
and signed 15 today to 'com
plete.-action on all legislation
passed by the adjourned Con
gress. - i
The three pocket vetoes an
nounced at his temporary
White House offices here in
volved two private relief bills
and one bill for the relief of
the city and county of Denver,
The President also Issued a
statement explaining his sig
nature on s bill giving Califor
nia, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ore
gon and Wisconsin jurisdiction
over criminal offenses . and
civil causes of action commit
ted on Indian reservations
within the states.
Promtos "Basle Equality"
The President said he bad
'grave doubts" about some of
the provisions of the bill but
approved it because its basic
purpose represented "still an
other step in granting complete
political equality to all Indian
in our nation." -
As the President finally
cleared his desk of pending
legislation, he approved a bill
closing the tax law loophole
which permitted persons work-
ing' abroad for 18 months to
escape payment of federal in
come taxes on money earned
abroad during that period.
Numerous novie stars have
taken advantage of this section
of the Internal Revenue Code
drlng recent years. .Under the
new law a 820,000 limit was
placed on tax exempt Income
earned outside the country.
10 Die, 50 Hurt in
British Train Wreck
Manchester, England VP) -
Two British train crunched
into each other atop a viaduct
80 feet over the River Irk to
day, killing 10 passengers and
injuring 50 others. .
One coach somersaulted into
the river bed, landing upside
down after ripping a 30-foot
gap In the viaduct wall.
j
Unemployment in State
Highest in Four Years
Summer-time unemployment
the highest in four years,
the State Unemployment Com
pensation Commission said to
day.
Unemployment continued at
well above recent summer
periods despite Increasing calls
from late harvests, food pro
cessing plants and other sea
sonal line.
Claims reported by local of
fices for the first week of
August totaled 12,311, com
pared with 8371 a year ago and
7125 in 1931, New layoffs In
plywood and furniture plants
increased initial claims to 2177,
highest at this time for several
years. -
Payments to those unable to
find jobs last month were
$678,602, third highest July In
the 16-year history of the law.
Last year's figure was $469,156
and in 1951 only $358,130 was
distributed among the unem
ployed. The number of jobseckers
Price 5c
P.W. HUSBAND
N.W. to Get Million
To Fight Forest Fire
Portland 6U9 Oregon end
Washington state forestry or
ganization will receive more
than $1,000,000 of federal
fund to assist in control of
forest fire during the current
fiscal year, the U.S. Forest
Service said today.
The fund are an annual
allotment under the Clarke-
McNary law of 1924. ,
Oregon will receive I591,-
056 and Washington, $541,227,
Forty-one other states and the
Territory . of Hawaii receive
federal fire control funds.
Elemsnt-'X- -
Just Table Soil
Medford W "Element X1
the mysterious substance that
two pilot have been dropping
in clouds to prevent hall on
the Rogue Valley fruit crop,
was reported Friday to be
nothing but common table salt
Harvey Brandau and Eugene
Kooser, two former Navy pi
lots, who have been salting the
clouds in the Medford area for
five years, made the report
They have kept their meth
od secret all this time, calling
the substance "element X."
rney were required by a
weather control bill passed by
the last Legislature to identi
fy the substance. The bill re
quires the operator to state
"the method and type of equip
ment and type of composition
of materials that the applicant
proposes to use.
"""""" " t
TWO RFC OREGON LOANS
Washington W9 The Re
construction Finance Corp. to
day announced approval of
two Oregon loans, one to a
Portland firm and the other to
an Astoria woman.
An $11,000 loan went to
Herbert J, Reimann for new
equipment for hi steel-drum
conditioning firm and a $2450
disaster loan went to Esther
Elizabeth H. Junttl to repair
flood damages.
reported from 26 local offices
on Aug. 1 was 24,565, about
tfuu less man a month or two
months ago. It was the highest
at this period since 1949. Of the
total 9361 were women, and in
crease of 1519 from June 1.
Unfilled job openings also fell
off, from 1474 in July to 1290
this month, lowest in four
years.
More than 20,000 persons
have filed claims since the start
of the 1953-54 benefit year
July 1. First payments already
have been made tb more than
halt the number. Both figures
are about 30 per cent higher
than a year ago.
Of the 7343 claimants receiv
ing compensation during the
last week of July 1434 were
logging and lumber, 1339 from
food processing and 497 In con
struction. Nearly half of the
total were from the four-county
area around Portland. Salem
and Eugene each had about
nine per cent
FINAL
EDITION
I!c;c:n
CrCwdS!:n:j
Rd Priicncrj
Violence Flares To
day at Panmunjom;
50 Yanks Freed '
Panmunjom (5 The V. K.
Command said today South
Korean civilian (toned taunt
ing Communist war prisoners
moving north for repatriation
yesterday, injuring 314 Red
and tuna American, guard.
The outbreak of violence)
near Inchon brought no imme- .
diate echoes at this dusty vil
lage where 400 more Allied
prisoner were freed . from
Communist prison camp to-'
day. ,.
(Picture on Fat f)
' Fifty Americas!!, all of them
apparently hale and hearty,
were among the group freed
on this, the 11th day of the
great prisoner exchange. -
Nine other prisoner Iberv .
i ted earlier eight of them se- .
riously ill or disabled were -due
at Travis Air Force Base
near San Francisco today after '
a flight across the Pacific ,
The second ' troopshh) . to
leave lor the United States)
with liberated Americans was
to sail from I nchon Harbor
Sunday morning. Aboard the
transport Gen. Hase are 43 T
American repatriate and oth
er troop en route home on
regular rotation. The trio la
expected to take about 10 day.
The- U. N. Command said
some - 3,600 : Red prisoners,
flaunting banner and chant- -
ing Communist songs, hurled
boot and metal canteen at
South Korean bystanders as
they were being trucked to a
rail station from Inchon Har
bor. The South Korean respor-d-ed
with rock. The U. N. POW
Command laid 814 Red were
slightly injured. Nine Ameri
can guards also were hurt, two
seriously.
Saturday's liberated Ameri
cans added to the (toxica of
horror In Red POW stock
ades. And Communist Peiptog
radio continaedv the war of
word over the withholding of
some prisoner. . ,
Pelplng aid the Red had
protested to the armistice re
patriation commission against
what It called "the forcible re
tention of a number" of Com- '
munist prisoners due for re
patriation, .,' .
The broadcast accused the
U. N.- Command of "brutal
treatment and murder of Ko- '
rean and Chinese POWs."
The broadcast said the oro-
test were lodged Friday and
that an "explicit answer" was
demanded within three day. ,
Nixon Heads
F.E.P. Group
Denver U-B President Els
enhower selected Vice-Presl- ,
dent ' Richard M. Nixon a
chairman and eight public
members. Including John
Roosevelt son of the late dem
ocratic president of the gov
ernment contract committee, a
newly constituted organization
to combat employment dis
crimination in plant holding
federal contract.
J. Ernest Wilklns, Negro at
torney of Chicago, was ap
pointed by the president a
vice-chairman.
The committee will meet
with the president at the
Waldorf Astoria hotel in New
York next Wednesday morn
ing. In addition to Nixon, Wil
klns and Roosevelt the presi
dent appointed:
Fred Lazarus, Jr., Cincin
nati, O., department store ex
ecutive and vice-president of
the American Jewish commit
tee. '
George Meany, president of
the American Federation of
Labor.
CIO President Walter P.
Reuther.
John L. McCaffrey of Chi
cago, president of the Inter
national Harvester company.
John Minor wisdom,. New
Orleans attorney and Louisi
ana republican national, com
mitteeman.
Mrs. Helen Rogers Reld.
chairman of the board of the
New York Herald Tribune.
NOTED NOVELIST DIES
Gallup, N. M. UJ9 Funeral
arrangement were pending to
day for Gouveneour Morris, 77,
noted novelist and g:eat-grand-son
of one of the framert of the
United States constitution. Mor
ris died here yesterday after a
heart attack.
'HI
!
a
!