Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 03, 1944, Page 1, Image 1

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Normal ...1.13 Ltit year ....
forecalt: Showrra.
Saturday Shoollnr Hour.
Orrfon: Open 7:01 C'loae ..
Tulelake: Open ......,. 1:12 Cloae ..
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PRICE 5 CENTS
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 3, 1944
Number 10305
LY
on
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oni
4a
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tlio
iWA ,, ; " huvo been
'f r iu li.fl""' Th,,e
1" , G J m nn hrnid. ore
roil"""."".
, buhIoiw. advancing In
Ihrco. col " ,..,. U.K.
t"1 Ty. i,'f fir column I''"1
f m al tells l own
b DKTKHIOHAT.NO Oct-
wldo plulm are a
hlCC. f. rllv
'2 heir own W. U will be
...m t.,11 vnn Hint
our mop wi
IK UI1I1U llll'ill V
ijiry will be guiie.
nil mid otiu-r win . "-
ituck so M.AU .v v.-
it thai iiiw i"-" i
.i iMr carefully treasured
tiers lo meet II.
iMi oown ";,,' "
r thni. III V A
(GLE DAY r l war.
AC ARTHUR announces thnt
l Leyie and hmnnr am
lily in our hands. China-
td Liberators sum n jp
. 4niiiiiun ii .Inn trans
:f.iL. cnllTll riMNA SKA
It enemy's ONLY remain n
Icr route to the ivasi incucu,
hyi intt minim.
dia-basca u-sim, - carry inn
knt.ih WifiU ntr ii ir.
msiJi uiiw
iso lar known In air warfare,
ia.nftn U llnrimi Hiin.
til Uurmn 5 principal harbor
tail CCIIUT. mi on wiiii-iiiiv
j 11 ....... el.. 11.. Piim
Q0WI1 W 11 lioiil uiv uu.iiiw
Ve-
Entwhere south of Burma
Iia hiu At Kitnuui iiiwi inn in
OCCOti, 0 poweriui uruisii
, 13 OpLTUUIIJf, - mv
tr nave me ntivai airuiiKui
tniiii.ii iw im-vt jt
u hu rlnu (ln nnl fit
t( DYIT IIIU JIUlJCCl Ul till
8
IE movinir (inner, you see,
frrp rl unl'l'lM-i It
ALO UUL IT 111 Ainu. lb
Is DOOM lor .Inn militarist
ycfmoii nnzi nunc,
llS Question Is cnnstnntlv in
Lr mlnH nnrl nn nnr Unit
men will Jnpiin nncl Germany
Imsllv bcnlrn nnd llin WAR
firivi
rtiLf
It a question thut NO ONE
in inswer,
Iran'l Kn mumi-nrt linnnll an
Pic facing somelhlnK NEW
re uiuttvrn woriu iwo pco
1..tv vujflilll.lL (II III HIU ULI'
t lvhnn minrlu titittn liAnri
f led and disciplined and In-
I THEIR MASTKliS n
fm (mcaninfj within recent
iji-u us niivc Lvir
fcnooied, disciplined and In
nnatrrt hr.fnr-,.
JeMASTKHS of the Japs and
f Toms have everything tq
i noiainK u lose by UO
'OV Pirill'iMMr- .
Wtn Ihc war l-ihIs. THEY
niso.
SSIDERINCI 1 Ii I
fjilch Is new in the modem
j.iiuw can we suess WHEN
i win cnu;
hvr, "L'h ' win-innybo by
linV J n p n n and
"writer bus a strong notion
miiST. vc "ccn Riving
"'"11 IIIOIIC it ti WHF.N
lar ...;n . " ... . . '
Ii . " CIU. Wc " better
iZ l'V,w'rs ot '"i nnc
A IritO Nil n,i II
11 Is wlmt will crnck Jap
1
tiiS"8? ,roin cl''8e and
I : ."'"inrRcs, Hero Is
it Ihrn u.il..-
f 'itlicatc that t,lc President-
riYoric rtL. T 10 ),rc(lict
In in if.1 " summing
Willi ...'.
m POLITICALLY con
I b' Jn. they may break
MhcWh,mK',ct "f being
Ihev i, " ""swers. Dul
hSnml 'n this case
i iu a surprising ox
conviction.
PtlwlT, '.'0- Nv. 3
car
M1)
.IW M nnJ ' r
iffM side bv s de
'? nme riu ii.. '.v.' .
I"1 rcporlo, i'i IL wnr tlc'
" n Italy1 lcm mlssi"B
Yanks Set Death
Trap for Ormoc;
Leyte's Fall Near
By MUHLIN SPENCER
GENERAL M.cARTHUH'S HEADQUARTERS, Philippine!.
Nov. 3 ll'l Cm. Doualai MacArthur, irom room whor. an
onomy Illor'i bullet mliiod hi. haad by 12 lnchoi, announctd to
day In near and ol the Layte campaign ai hi. land, iaa and air
lorcei tat a daath trap tor Ormoc. lait port of night ior the
Japaneie.
Juit two week, alter he returned to the Philippine.. Mac-
Arthur', lour dlvi.ion. were cornering bewildered Nippone.e
on Leyte'. we.t coait, pre.ilng lor a kill which would .well
enemy ca.ualtie., already pa.t 30,000.
(Aoociated Pre.. War Correspondent Richard Berghol. re-
Sorted the Japaneie were throwing in their line.t ilier. a. they
allied to .lave oil the onru.hing American.. Bergholi de.cribed
a enter aerial dogiignt at ormoc ye.terday. In which 27 ot the
enemy were shot down without
breaking cover over the convoy
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 (I')
Superfortresses carrying record
bombloads today raided railroad
marshalling yards at Rangoon,,
in Japnncsc-domluatcd Burma.
No nlancs were lost as a result
of enemy action, the war depart
ment announced.
Tlio B-2ils took off from bases
In India. The department fol
lowed up an initial communique
telling of the raid with a sup
plemental announcement saying:
NO L.OMM
"Thcro were no losses on this
mission as a result of enemy action."
A 20th air force communique
said the daylight attack was
made "in substantial force and
that "preliminary estimates of
damage Inflicted arc good."
i no communique reported mo
13-29 raid was mado in coordina
tion with clement .of. the sustorn
air command. This was the first
report of the giant bombers
working on a mission with small
er aircraft. ' ' ,
B-17. or B-24.
Word that the Suoorforts took
off from Indian bases suggested
that the planes from tlio eastern
air command may have been
B-17 Flying Fortresses or B-24
Liberators of the 10th air force
based in India. The 10th. and
14th air force, the latter with
(Continued on I'ago Eight)
Chinese Take
Jap Bastion
Bv The Ai.eclated Pre..
CHUNGKING, Nov.. 3 P
Lungllng, principal remaining
Japanese bastion on the Salwccn
river front In southwest untnn
was recaptured today by the
Chinese after a blazing five-day
assault, the high command an
nounced. This removed the last
major obstacle toward a junc
ture of the Ledo and Burma
roads and reopening of a land
supply route to China.
But in south central China
the Japanese pressed hard
against the pivotal Kwangsl pro
vince city of Kwcllln. One col
umn on the cast was only two
miles away. A Chinese army
spokesman predicted Kweilin
would be able to endure a long
siege.
they were protecting.
"The Japanese fliers were
definitely above the. average
ho rcixirtod returning tilers as
saying. "They Hold a tight tor
million over the ships ana re
fused to break under repeated
passes."
No Yank. Loit
No American planes were lost
In the eight-hour melee.
Today's communique suggest
ed attention was swinging to
other islands of the central
Philippines, reporting attacks by
four-cngined Liberator bombers
on Ccbu and Ncgros, west ot
American holdings on Lcyto and
Samar.
The general Issued the com
munique after a close brush
with death. A strafing Japanese
plane sent a bullet into the wall
of his room, just missing him.
Disaster fast engulfed the
fleelne survivors of Japan's 16th
division which once so arrogant
ly tortured the American- ii
inlnn heroes of Bataan.
Carlgara has fallen. The hard.
flohtlnc 24th division of Maj
Gen. Frederick A. Irving, irt the
thick of action from the time
it Jandcd October 20. at Palo on
the east coast, crushed the .ene
my's last big stand south of the
town yesterday and swept out
of Leyte valley to the north
west shore, . . .
Passes
George D. Grizsle, former
Klamath county judge, died at
hi. home, 927 Jefferson, at 3:25
p. m., Thur.day, following a
lengthy illne...
TAKEN BY DEATH
By HOWARD FL1EGER
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3 (f)
President Roosevelt, ready for a
campaign home stretch drive
through New England tomorrow,
appeals to the voters to beware
ot "hysterical, last-minute" po
litical whispers.
"Tills campaign has been mar
red by even more than the usual
crop of whisperings and rumor
Ings," he said in a campaign
speech broadcast from the White
House last night. "I do not pro
pose to answer in kind."
Last Addre.a
Mr. Roosevelt will make his
last major address of the cam
paign tomorrow night at a party
rally in Boston. En route to Bos
ton he will speak Informally at
Bridgeport nnd Hartford, Conn.,
and at Springfield, Mass. He
also plans an election eve mes
sage to supporters.
"We have been told," he said
last night, "that unless the
(Continued on Page Eight)
Klamath Falls Precinct
Polling Places Listed
Lists showing the city precinct polling places for the general
election Tuesday were given out by the sheriff's office Friday.
Election workers arc still badly needed for both day and night
shifts In all city and county precincts, It was also announced.
Polling places for county precincts will be listed tomorrow.
Bolow are city polling places: ,
Precinct Location Address -
1 P. J, Towcy, 133 S. Riverside.
2 Conger school, California.
3 Baldwin hotel, 31 Main.
4 Palrher's grocery, 331 N. Third.
5 Valley hotel, 415 Pine.
0 Presbyterian church, 601 Pine.
7F, w. Abbey, 030 Lincoln. , . . ,
8 Court house basement, 4th and Mnin.
0 City library basement, 5th and Klamath,
10 Arcade hotel, 1034 Main.
11 Lake hotel, 1220 Main.
12 Covenant church, 823 Walnut.
13 Bulck garage, 1330 Main.
14 Lombard Motors, 424 S. 6th.
IB Viola Klefer, 2242 White.
16 Mrs. O. W. Lohrey, 2144 Ebcrlcin.
17 Cecil E, Wilbur, 2229 Wantland.
18 Duko building, room 6, 023 E. Main -IB
Mills school, E. Main. : ' '
20 Shepherd Music company, 345 E. Main.: .
21 Mrs. C. L. Case, 220 E. Main. . , .
22 Balslgcr garage, Main and Esplanade.
23 Ylaria Hunt, 305 Hillside.
24 U. S. Balcntlno, 1004 Huron.
25 Mrs. Harry Larson, 1033 Melrose.
20 Roosevelt school, 1125 Eldorado.- .' , '
27 Peter Rozcndal basement. 1444 Crescent, i
28 County library, Mon Clair. -
20 Falrvlew school, 1017 Donald '
30 Jack Miller, 725 St. Francis. :
31 Peter Rolncrs, 1037 Oregon.
32 Mrs. Burko (Shlppington), 1108 Hanks.
. ,v -.
George D. Grizzle, 72, for 44
years active in county and city
affairs of the Klamath. section,
died at his home, 027 Jelferson,
at 3:25 p. m. Thursday follow
ina an illness which had con
fined him to his bed since last
March.
Mr. Grizzle served as Klam
ath countv Judge from 1032 to
1938, was Past Master of Klam
ath Lodue No. 77. A. F. & A. M.,
and served as deputy district
Grand Master ot tnis district
for two terms. He was a past
Grand of lOOF and a member
of the Henley grange, active in
the Klamath Falls Presbyterian
church, pf which he was. an
elder, holding that office from
1910. until the time oX his death.
Son of Pioneer.
Born near McMinnvillc, Ore.
June' 6, 1872, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Douglas Grizzle who
criMsed the plains bv oxcart in
the ' mid '80s, George Grizzle
spent virtually his entire lite in
Oregon.- As a young Doy ne
became interested in the cow
country of the west and rode
the range in souinern Oregon as
well as in the middle west. He
worked on a farm in Iowa where
he broke horses, and in 1897
he returned to Med ford where
hn .learned the trade of a mar
ble worker in a monument
works there.
Mr. Grizzle moved to Klam
ath Falls in 1900, and opened a
business in a little shack on
Main street, dealing in monu
ments. In 1928, he sold' the
original property and erected a
modern brick building at the
corner of 11th and Mam,
. Indian Trader
He told many amusing stories
of trading with the Indians dur
ing the early years of the cen-
(Continued on fago &igmj
Nips Warn of
Further Raids
Bv The Associated Pre..
Nervous Tokyo radio warned
the Japanese people today that
the appearance ot American bu
perforts over the capital Wed
nesday would inevitably be fol
lowed bv bombing raids.
An almost simultaneous im
perial communique said Nippon
ese planes raided U. S. air fields
on Saipan nnd .Tininn islands in
the Marianas, previously de
scribed by Japanese broadcast
ers as the probable base of Wed
nesday s reconnaissance flight,
Bucharest Rises
In Revolution
LONDON, Nov. 3 (P) The
Bucharest radio said tonight
revolution is in full swing In
Budapest.
The report came as German
broadcast acknowledged that
Russian troops liad driven with
in 14 miles o" the Hungarian
capital, reaching the area south
ol Bugyi.
The broadcast gave no details
of the reported revolt.
70 WORKERS NEEDED
Klamath county .till need.
70 election worker, for Tues
day's general election, it was
reported today by the county
clerk to the chamber of com
merce, which i. undertaking
to help recruit workers,
Employers were urged to
relea.e one or more employe,
to work on election board.
Tue.day. Mr.. Jack Murphy.
vice chairman of the county!
republican central , commit
tee, ha. recruited a large
number of worker, for the
election board...
TANK FIGHTER
PLANES DOWN
N CR T
Dusseldorf Target of
British Bombers
After Battle '
LONDON, Nov. 3. W) A
thousand British hoavy bombers
laid about 4480 tons of explo
sives and fire bombs last night
in Germany's greatest arsenal of
Dusseldorf after a day in which
U. S. fighters of the eighth air
force won "their greatest victory
of the war over the Luftwaffe."
A special communique from
U.' S. strategic air force head
quarters gave this description to
day and told of the destruction
ot 2uH oerman aircraii over me
synthetic oil center of Merse
burg. It scaled down American
losses to 40 heavy bombers, and
19 fighters. One bomber and
nine fighters, previously listed as
lost in yesterday's operations,
landed safely at French bases.
Tile communique said "still oth
ers probably landed beninu our
lines in Europe and were un
able lo report immediately.
130 De.troyed
Fighter pilots destroyed 130
German Interceptors in the air
and 25 aground, some on Berlin
airports 100 miles from Merse
burg. Bombers shot down 53
while attacking the great Leuna
synthetic oil plant, which once
supplied Germany with 50,000
(Continued on Page iigliu
Havoc of War In Aachen
i warn mukwmmmmmttmK:.wmmim
I -Tr-,. !iXr-T T-,T.a...tfi?'
Mi-CHIDl
: Bv SPENCER MOOSA
CHUNGKING, Nov. 3 P)
Foreign Minister T. V, Soong
denied todav reports of Amer
ican pressure for a solution of
Ohlnas communist prooicm ana
predicted a new deal m rela
tions between China and the
United States.
Soong opened an interview
with a written statement in
which he' stressed the declar
ation that recall of Gen. Joseph
W. Stilwell was "entirely a
auestion of personality.
In discussion he said Gener
alissimo Chiank Kai-Shek and
the former commander-in-chief
of U. S. forces in the Ohina-
Burma-India theater did not like
each other, and could not work
together. He said this relation
ship dated from the first year
of stilwcH's stay in omna.
Soong said he believed future
relations between China and the
United States would be "more
understanding, more intimate
and more fruitful."
He emphasized that no "dif
ference of policy" between
China and the United States was
involved. -The
foreign minister acknowl
edged that the communist ques
tion has been discussed between
the Americans and Chinese but
only, he said, in the most friend
ly manner. .
m-Mmmm
Hurtgen Drive Nets'
Advance of
4 Miles
De.troved and qutted buildings line the rubble-filled streetc
of the German city of Aachen,' enemy strongpoint near the Bel
gian border, after its capture by U. S. forces following a severe
artillery and aerial pounding. (AP wirephoto from signal corps).
Four-Way Situation Exisis
In City Political Campaign
Four mayor candidates, four
council candidates, four ; city
measures, and four city offices
to be filled that s the four
way situation that exists in the
city political campaign to come
to a - head at - next Tuesday's
general election.
City voters will get their bal
lots right along with the state
and national ballots, voting in
32 city precincts. All city vot
ers will participate in the elec
tion of ' mayor and city treasur
er, but only-the voters in wards
Nos. 1 and 4 will vote on coun
cilman this year.
The mayor candidates were
Allies Pursue
Nazis in Greece
ROME, Nov. 3 VP) Allied pa
trols pursuing the Germans in
northern Greece inflicted cas
ualties in an attack on an ene
my rearguard column entering
Phlorina, within five miles of
the Yugoslav frontier and 40
miles northwest of . Kozane, al
lied headquarters announced to
day. The patrols derailed an ene
my train of 60 cars-a headquar
ters communique said, and
Beaufighters destroyed it north
of Salonika, now in allied hands.
: ABOUT LETTERS
No further "letters to the edi
tor" on any side of election
question, will be accepted for
publication by The Herald and
News, due to the nearness of the
election. Late letters often
stimulate answers which, ' al.
though deserving publication, do
not come in before election day.
An attempt will be made to
"clean up" signed letters on
political matters Saturday.
all beating the streets for votes
today. They are Councilman
Walter Wiesendanger, grocer;
Ed Ostcndorf, retired auto deal
er; Kenneth McLeod, sawmill
efficiency expert; and Marvin
shepherd-, music- store operator.
Women Candidates
City treasurer candidates are
both women. They are Mrs
Ruth" Berry and Mrs. Ann Ma
son, who have campaigned
quietly for votes. There are no
incumbents in either the mayor
or treasurer contests.
Councilman candid ates in
ward No. 1 are Angus Newton.
painting contractor, and - Matt
Fmmgan, sporting goods store
owner, in ward 4, the candi
dates are Paul Landry, general
insurance man and Lynn Koy-
croft, life insurance man. .
City Measures ,
The four city measures Include:
1. Measure to transfer money
from the emergency police fund
to the iaa construction fund.
with the purpose of making this
(oontinuea on Jfage tignu
Nippon Novr Fifth
Rate Naval Power
SAN DIEGO, Calif., Nov. 3 (fP)
Japan has been reduced to a
fifth rate naval power by the re
cent battles off Formosa and the
Philippines.. Vice Adm. Marc A
Mitscher,- commander of task
force 58, reported today on his
return to the mainland.
The admiral also said Japanese
naval aviation had practically
been eliminated, but told a press
conference that despite the Jand
air and sea victories in the Paci
fic- the war there would slow
down instead of speeding up be
cause of the supply problem.
,y WILLIAM FRYE
LONDON, Nov. 3 (P) The
first U. S. army thrust forward
another two miles from Vosse
nack southeast of Aachen today,
and the Berlin radio said Lt.
Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' Jabs
along a 30-mile front were "fore
runners of the forthcoming of
fensive." The drive, which . netted a
i four-mile gain in two days after
me snove inrougn me nungeu
forest, resulted in the capture of.
the village of Schmidt overlook
ing the Roer river, whose muddy
clay banks interpose the next
major barrier to the Rhine.
Flushing Taken
Gen. Hodges' men, who broke-'
the concrete crust of the Sieg
fried line at Aachen in the first'
two weeks of October, jumped
ot as the battle to open the
supply port of Antwerp came to
a virtual close with the capture
I of the ancient Dutch port of.
Vlissingen (Flushing) and Dom
berg on Walcheren island.
Two more islands north of the
Schelde estuary North Beve
land and Tholen were cleared
of the enemy. German resist
ance flickered out south of the
Schelde. In the drive north of
Antwerp toward Rotterdam and
tne Mass (Meuse) British, and
American troops restored and
consolidated three bridgeheads
across the Mark river and canal.
from five to six miles south ot
the strategic Moderdijk bridge.
Capture Eight Towns
American and French troops
battling deeper into the Vosges
slopes on the southern sectors of
the alliea irom, captured eigne
towns, including Baccarat, and:
approached to within three t3
eight miles of the first towns in
side six passes to the Rhine fron
tier... .
A German high command
spokesman - said the - Americans ' "
were probing German defenses
all the way from Waldenrath
above Aachen, to Hurtgen, in
cluding the Geilenkirchen and
(Continued on Page Eight)
Presidential Polls Indicate Photo
Finish Between Roosevelt, Dewey
M1T-W VADV Mrtr 3 fiP Tim
presidential polls indicate today
mai n limy uc puu.w
tween Roosevelt and Dewey.
Thrart .ml inn.wirir. nnlls report
the president leading in 20 states
Wlm a comoinea eieciomi vine
of 198. Gov. Dewey, they say,
leads in 13 states with a total of
143 electoral votes.
All three, falling to agree on
who's ahead in the 15 remaining
states, decline to forecast which
candidate is likely to get the
266 electoral votes that are
needed to win.
A fourth poll, conducted for
Fortune magazine by the Elmo
Roper firm, finds Roosevelt
lavored by oa.o per cent oi vne
civilian voters, but this poll docs
not go into the electoral vote.
Population shifts, an appar
ently close division of voters in
many states and the impossibility
of telling how the soldier vote
will go are the chief reasons
given by the poll conductors for
their unwillingness, to make a
prediction:
Dr. George Gallup's American
Institute of Public Opinion re
ports Dewey leading in 22 states
with 255 electoral votes, Roose
velt ahead in 21 states with 206
electoral votes, and five states
with 70 electoral votes divided
50-50 between- the candidates.
Newsweek magazine, basing
its verdict on the reports of 118
political writers throughout the
country, puts the president ahead
with 249 electoral votes to
Dewey's 247, and looks to
Pennsylvania's- 35 votes to de
cide the election. -
The Crossley! poll, giving
Roosevelt 52 per cent of the
popular vote after trying to esti
mate the service vote, says the
president would get 354 electoral
votes to Dewey's 177 If sngnt in
dications in doubtful states are
borne out. .
All . three of the latter polls
give Dewey the edge in Color
ado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kan
sas, Maine, Michigan, Nebraska,
North Dakota, Ohio, South Da
kota, Vermont and Wisconsin.
They see President Roosevelt
leading in Alabama, Arizona,
Arkansas, California, Connecti
cut, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi. Montana,
Nevada, North Carolina, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Tennes-
DETROIT PLANTS
DETROIT, Nov. 3 (fP) A
strike of approximately 18,000
members of the Mechanics Edu
cational Society of America in
more than a score of Detroit
area war plants began at 10
o'clock this morning. It was
called, according to Matthew
Smith, MESA national secre
tary, in sympathy with a juris
dictional dispute between the
MESA and United Automobile
Workers (CIO) in the Toledo
plant of the Electric Autolite
company.
First of the MESA members
to leave their jobs were ap
proximately 2000 employes of
the Nash-Kelvinator corporation
plant. Smith said workers in 24
other Detroit factories had been
ordered to quit their posts.
Among them were the plants of
the Detroit Tap and Tool com
pany, the Michigan Tool com
pany, the- Parker Wolverina
company and several others.
Sympathy Strike
Besides the strike in the Elec.
trie Auto-Lite plant 24 other
Toledo plants were affected by
sympathy stoppages.
At Cleveland, Emil Pettitto,
national MESA vice president,
said "No plants in Cleveland
are out yet," but, he added,
executive officers were voted
authority for a sympathy strikej
a few days ago.
Caused by Discharges
The Auto-Lite strike was pre
cipitated by the discharge of six
employes whom the company
claimed it was forced to dismiss
because of a maintenance of
membership clause in its con
tract with the United Automoe
bile Workers (CIO). MESA of
ficials contended the- men wero
fired at the request of the UAW
(Continued on Page Eight)
see. Texas. Utah. Virclnia nnrl
"Washington.
Here's how the polls split in trying to determine the prefer
ence in other states: ,
: Electoral
Delaware 3
Idaho 4
Massachusetts . ...10
Maryland 8
Minnesota 11
Missouri. ...........;:i.,.15
New,. Hampshire.:,. 4 .
New Jersey '...........16
New Mexico ;.. 4
New York , 47
Oklahoma s -10
Oregon .: 6
Pennsylvania .'' 35
West .Virginia......... 8
Wyoming 3
Gallup Newsweek . Crossley
50-50 FDR Probably , FDR 52
TED 52 FDR Probably , . TED 52
50-50 FDR Slightly . 50-50
FDR 51 TED Probably FDR 51
TED 53 FDR Probably 50-50
TED 51 . TED Probably FDR 51
.TED 51 TED Probably , FDR 51'
- 50-50 TED Probably ' 1 50-50
TED 61 FDR Probably ,, , FDR
TED 51 TED Slightly 50-50
50-50 FDR Probably v FDR 51
. 50-50 TED Probably 50-50
50-50 -' 60-50 ' FDR 51
TED 61 TED ' ' 50-50 '.
TED 53 . FDR Probably - TED 62
U.S. Outlines
Postwar Air Plan
CHICAGO, Nov. 3 (iV) Tho
United Slate made public today
its draft of a convention for gov
erning international civil avia
tion, setting forth in formal lan
guage the plan outlined for tho
first time yesterday by Adolf A.
Berle Jr., leader of this coun.
try's delegation to the world con
ference. In view of the withdrawal of
the Russian delegation thrco
days before the meeting opened,
interest was attracted to the out
line of an executive council in
the United States draft giving
two of the 15 places to the soviet
union, -