Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 08, 1949, Page 1, Image 1

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Solons Ask
Change For
Pact Terms
WASHINGTON, July I W Ten
rnator today announced a am to
rrtlae th I'nlled Nation charter
nil iri up a world alllsnr backed
by aa International polle fore.
Senator Flanders (K-Vt.) Hid th
ultimata mm will !m to xtnd th
North Atlantic defense part Into
world alllsnr open to (II nations
that accept IU principles.
Th plan I similar to prupoasls
Biade by Kir Culberlaon. th brldis
rxperl, wh hH bran conferring wllh
senators an hla Ideas for a "Little
I'nllrd Nsllens" wllhln lha I'nlled
Nation.
Senate;-: aponMning tha resolution
ar PUndrra. Cparkman ID-Ala I
A. ken IK-Vt), Cain (R-Waah ),
Capehart IR-Ind ). Ilrndrlrkson (R
N. J ). Johnson ID-Cnlo.l, Mundt
(R- D I. Horr (D-N. C ) and Bien
nis id-mud.
Open Door
Mundt told a reporter Ui plan
JOuld throw open tlta North Atlantic
llart to anr nation agreeing to tha
principle of free democratic nalona
Rut, Mandl aald, member ah
would agree lot III a vet power,
aarh aa Knaala ha been Being af leu
la tha Intled Nations: Itl aa mili
tary aa of atomic bam bat 131 Inter
national control af atomic energy:
and 14) aa Intmiallanal polle fore.
Tha propnaal cama while tha ten
at waa working on tha North At.
lantlo pact and Uw European recov
iv program.
Tit situation lined up about thla
av:
North Atlantic treaty
Menal kadera hap la reach a
final vol aa tlx pact either Monday
ar Tuesday. They npeet overwhelm.
Ins approval af lha U-nation alts,
aacw but aat anlll alter auea aena.
Ura are aasured their vol wilt not
commit them U ratlni far lh rv
araeaaieal at w eater Euros.
Siskiyou Area
Blaze Rips
Timber Land
GRANTS PAM. July I eukl
y u and atata fnreat rorvi today ar
battliuf an uncontrolled foraat fir
which tarted U th O Brlrn area
yerterday atlemoon and haa eaten
Its way armea th rtai Una toto
'Northern California
Tie fir started In th vicinity of
the Elk creek mill, two and one-half
miles from O'Brien and a quarter
mil from th Redwood htihway
Vh mill property sunuined some
damsii. Offlrula of both forest
service! ar attempting to determine
th cause.
Much of th timber Involved Is
f art of th Siskiyou national forest
although soma stale land I Included
Report relayed from th seen Indl
ctt that heavy gusts of wind hav
hampered fir control, th bias
Jumping tin fir lines. Mar than
JOG men. Including caterpillar crews,
n-ostly from tha Siskiyou and atal
forest stations In this area, worked
during th night. Pifty additional
men wer recruited from Grant
Pas this morning.
A caterpillar which was wrecked
at tha time of th fatal Injury of
Clinton J. Eager. July S, was In th
path of th flame and waa de
stroyed. Victory Seen
For Fast Time
PORTLAND, July ( ( Daylight
laving sponsors wer close to success
today In their campaign to keep
'fast tlm" In Portland and other
Northwest Oregon cities.
They reported they needed only
1100 mor name to complet peti
tions that must hav a total of
ls.3 valid signature by July 1 In
order to forestall a state law ban
ning daylight saving tlm.
Th petitions also would force
V"rrendum vol on Die law at
iUM election.
Reporter From The Herald-News Takes .
Courtesy Trip On Board Newest Train,
Tavern Car Closed, But
By RKD III'RD
An eight-year dream cam true
this week and your local yokel had
tha opportunity of riding on th
"dream" from Klamath Falls to Eu
(en Thursday.
I'm speaking of tht Southern Pa
rities new Shasta Daylight stream,
liner, which starts Its regular Port
land to San Francisco run, and vie
Versa, Bunday.
Thursday trip was a part of the
exhibition tour staged by th HP to
acquaint persona with the train's
Innovations and opportunities to see
Ihe breath-taking scenery from Port
Is nd to the bsy city In comfort and
In pis In daylight. .
About the first question thrown at
mti on my return lo the office was
"Well, how was the tavern car?"
this query was always ai-krd wllh a
tiiretlous grin,
I'm happy to report that the
famed Tlmberllnr tavern was beau
Cful but It wasn't stocked. They'll
do that when they hit Portland and
prepare for the first regular run,
But the beautiful dining room waa
tpen and yours truly didn't hav to
be coaxed to accept a "snack."
yWhen Keeper of lh Kitchen
Drldley apologised end aald that
1 mJ) TTTV IV rSX I '
' Y1 frf I X . f WEATHER
'rr I XOOal OXV-'a J l V Ve l.-.iH-.ll. .. vle.al.r- .lr. !
PRICK FIVE CENTS TO" KLAMATH ?i&'4 FRIDAY, JULY . 14 Telephen 1111 a. 221
. r -
(WiiMiii!t Eyes Steel- Threat
' adkaa.' aaaaBaTawaW' t '
A
la. . aMaaa-a a. in ill - in i aaaaaaawaaaaaal
RADIO PREVIEW Jock Insley, Klomoth Foils insurance
man, (left) gets a first-hand peek at the new inter-car radio
hook-up on the new streamliner during its visit here Thurs
day. Possenoer Agent Fred Miller is explaining the tricky
gadget, which not only is used
but con be tuned to loco I stations as the from nears vonous
towns.
American People Buying,
And Saving, More E Bonds
Than Any Time Since War
By ( HARLE8 MOLONT
WA8HINOTON. July I WV-Th
American peopl bought mor of
lh government's series I bonds
during th first half of this year
than in any similar period sine
the wr.
Purchases of the bonds totaled
ouo 000 for tit six months
RECORD
PORTLAND, July I (vore
gonlana. Ilka th rest of th aa
Itoa, beughl a peace lima record
amount af K bands during tha that
hslf of th year.
Hales of K Sonda la Ores an
totalled tlg.Mg.4H mere than a
million dollars share sales la tha
eocTea pending period of IMS.
that tnded Jun 30. This topped
ling's previous postwar record by
J's per cent, treasury officials aald
today.
At tha asm tlm that they were
saving mor In E bonds, peopl wer
spending lesa In department stores.
Th dollar value of department
slot galea acrosa th country was
shown In s federal reserv board
report for the first half of 1M to
have fallen 4 per cent under th
first half of last year. Lower prices
wer a considerable factor In th
decline.
Th treasury-federal reserv data
confirmed commerce department
findings that, although their Income
shrank somewhat In IBID. Ameri
cana saved more than they had
they weren't fully prepared lo serve
but that we'd hav a "snack." that
was by far th largest understate
ment I've yet to hear.
A huge salad bowl and a delicious
piste of assorted cold meats and
cheese, topped off with cake and a
bowl of peaches, left little to be
tirslred.
Thanks to Kmmelt Fllrpstrirk,
editor of the Southern Pacific bill
Irtln, for squiring me around and
Introducing me to all the train nffl
clnls and explaining the background
of the new daylight train.
Th Idea was conceived eight years
sue by Claude Peterson, vice presi
dent in charge of passenger traffic
IVtrraon wss on this good-will tour
Billing bsck In the comfortable
seats In th chair rar while you
skirt magnificent Odrll lake and
travel swiftly but noiselessly Into
Wlllsmelte valley through the Ihlrk-ly-populaled
forests, sprinkled wllh
s. reams and rivers, la an experience
which your writer can't fully ds
acrlb In cold print.
Railroad men arc Interesting peo
ple During th dinner graciously
offered by Superintendent L. P.
Hopkins In his own private car, lh
conversation drifted around to th
; I . " 1
os a public address system
when they wer. taking In a Urgcr I
to?L . . I
Purthermor. treasury officials
said, peopl hung on to their ssv
ings mor tenacloiuly .
Cah-ins of R bonds, totaling
gl.7O3M0.OO0 for th first six months
of this year, dropped a solid 10 1
-
per cent under the record for th
first hslf of Ipso.
For th first half of 1W. new
purchases of B bonds exceeded
cash-ins by IMS .000 000. providing a
"net" to th govmmrnt that topped
th mark tor th same part of last
year by M per cent.
Th very success of the bonds In
absorbing money that might hav
been spent was criticised privately
by on official outside of the treas
ury. This official said he things
thla Is a bad tlm for "anil-Inflationary
bond buying.
Although the accumulating bond
holdings which hit a record high
of 133.137.000.000 on June 30 formed
a reservoir of future consumer buy
Ing power, fresh government report
showed businessmen still ar cut
ting down Inventories as rapidly as
possible.
LOW BID
PORTLAND. July (ffv-The low
bid for completing the North San.
tiam highway across the Cascade
waa submitted to th bureau ot
public roads by Rogers Constructlou
Co., Portland.
The firm bid I1M.MS for the
bituminous surfacing ot 13 miles
the last remaining bottleneck on
th trans-Cascade mule.
Trip Beautiful
fact that railroad men, on or off the
Job, always "talk shop."
Railroading la their life and It
seems lo be a pulse that Isn't stilled
when they "punch out" on their
rhlft.
A&il.itant Superintendent L. R.
Clmlth explained. "It's a 34-hour Job
fur every railroad man because the
railroad runs 34 hours." That
summed It up.
But It's hard work, too, and Spe
cial Agent B. V. MrCabe rounded
nut the conversation succlntly when
he said "It's a fascinating drudgery"
That seems to adequately mirror
the feelings of a railroad man.
I can't possibly mention all the
otllrlals I met on the trek but. In
addition to those I've mentioned
there waa also Carl O. Olsen, assist
ant general passenger agent: SP
Photographer Norman O. Butler;
Chief Special Agent A. J. MrKonna;
H. R. Williams, supervisor of station
service and Bob Robinson, assistant
superintendent.
Conductor on the Klamath Falls
tn Eugene stretch was A. W. Cole.
Thomas Wormack englner"d to
Crescent lake and Al Crockard took
over tha huge (1000-horsepower sn
gln from ther.
Some Relief
From Heat
Felt Today
By Tha Associated Press
There was aanw relief In Barta
i af lh nation's heal belt today but
there' aim lota af hat weather
around and asora earning.
TbuneVrshowera a a d Caaadiaa
brseeia helped coal off sous f the
hot spot la lh eastern alatee and
lh t.rrat Lakes regloa. But the
hot and bamld weather of tha last !
week persisted from the Karktea
southward Into Texas.
There wer no MMlrgrce readings
yesterday over th eastern arras, j
Rain fell In aome sections. But there j
was not enough rain In the north-,
eastern slates to break the seven- i
week-old drought. Parm crops have '
suffered millions of dollars damage
from the long dry spell.
Mercury la S's
Th mercary bit In l the Mi la ,
Medians, the Daketaa. Iowa, Minne
sota. Nebraska. Ohas and Okla-
hasaa. It waa above KM) la parta
f Texas, hilling 11 at Abilene aad i
AamartU and 1M at Hoaatoa. Mil
araakea waa la Ha for sobs of ,
tha root air aad lha day's high waa .
71. t'hleago gat eaca cooling off.
loo. aa shower brought temporary
reuef. Yesterday's high waa U.
Thundershowers fell over widely
scattered part of th country, i
Then w rain In Missouri. Arkan- J
sas. th Ohio river valley. West Vir-
ginla. Virginia, North Carolina, th
th central and northern Rockies, i
A fsll of 10 Inches was reported
at Evansvtll. Ind.
Rain In Eastern Peniuylvsnla
measurarl up to on Inch In some
aeriion.
No rain waa forecast lor New
Tartu which haa not had a heavy
for 4 dayS.nvl
waa la pcoapaet
general rainfall
warmer weather waa -la aroaaact
far lh Northraatera Hla tea.
Yesterday 'a highest temperature chased after them to see Ihe excite
waa 17 at Yuma, Arts. The wea- menu
i ther bureau aald Ihe country's low.
... H ,t tmkt, fallf
and Duluth, Minn.
US Anti-Sub
Defense Gets
Top Priority
WASHINOTON. July ( UPi Th
navy Is giving "anti-submarine war
tare" high priority because Russia
haa a fleet ot 250 to 300 ot the most
modern undersea crafu
A secret navy report to this effect
became public today through release
of testimony before a senate ap
propriations committee.
Admiral Louis K. Denfeld, chief ot
naval operations, told senators:
We ar psytng a great deal of at
tention In tha navy to anti-submarine
warfare. We figure It Is one
of our major missions and one of
our most Important missions."
Senstor McCarran DNev., with
out mentioning Jxussia by name,
asked about published reports that
"a certain nation has much ad
vanced submannea and that It la a
matter In which we ar pomewnat
behind."
Denfeld disputed this, saying the
United 8tates navy and other armed
force "are ahead of other countries
In the world. However, we have
not yet obtained the complete
answer to this new type ot sub
marine." The testimony indicated that navy
officers and senators were referring
to the Jong-range, modern sub
marines developed by the Germans
at th end of the last war. Equip- j
ped with a special apparatus for ob
talnlng air while submerged and !
other devices, it was able to remain I
under water for long periods to '
void detection.
Shanghai Reds j
Hold US Consul
BHANOHAI. July I OPi U. S. Vice
Consul William Olive.. 32. of Iron
ton, Mo., still waa held Incommunt- I
rado by Shanghai police today de- j
spit efforts of th consulate to ;
obtain hla release or send him aid. i
Even a message from hla wife was
rejected by police.
They charged In the communist
l iberation dally newspaper that, !
Olive was "very arrogant. nashed
Inlngs on the desk at tha polu t sta
Hon and damaged the watch and
fountain pen of policemen."
His action, when he was arrested
for a traffic violation 34 hours ear
l.cr. "violated police regulations." :
they ssld. The red newspaper said
the American still was being Inves
tigated. The consulate aald It had been
unable to learn Olive's condition or
whether any charges had been
brought against him. The consulate
said It had learned he waa beaten
severely after he waa taken to the
police station. I
1 1 . . j
' ' f v.. X;t,
My
PRESIDING JUDGE Michael
J. Roche is hearing the ..Tokyo
Rose treason cose now in
progress in San Francisco.
Speedy Fans
Too Much For
Fire Laddies
BED MINSTER, N. J.. July t
Th' tmy community gets a big kick ,
out of following the tire engines.'
hut Police Chief Fluid R. Christian
j "on says us got to Slop.
-Xroer th alrml sourKled and
th tire engines rolled. As usual.
residents piled Into their cars and
when they got to the outskirts of
town the fir engines stopped.
uniei i,nnisii. nuu ww ,uaa. p,wrr . call a steel strike-thrill-seekers
It was all a false, Tn, USw leader said his past re-!
alarm to get them together. , ruul to sign a noncommunist af-!
He warned them they'd better not
follow the engine again at less than
100 feet, unless they wanted a sum.
mon.
j Th. strsw that broke the camel's
back, lie explained, was at a
cent fire, when an avid spectator
got to the scene before the firemen
parked hi car In Ihe driveway, and
effectively blocked th engine from
getting near th bouse.
Phone Books
Mailed Out
Mall delivery ot The Pacific Tele
phone and Telegraph company's new
tZJSZtJ-JXi? ilS
middle of next week all of the 13.000 i
telephone books should be on their
way to the company's subscribers In
this area,
Klamath Branch Manager Charles
Seavey said today that th new edi
tion differs little from last year's,
although It Is larger. The main
section haa 68 pages compared to
60 last year, and the classified part
of the directory has 176 pages as
gslnst 172 In 104S.
The directory was printed by the
Smith-Bates Printing company. In
all. 17.000 copies were run olf the
press, but about 5000 will be held
for distribution to new subscribers
through the year.
Designer Says
Necklines On
Their Way Up
HOLLYWOOD, July i i A
Hollywood designer says women's
necklines soon will be back where
they belong "at the neck Instead
of the naval."
"Paris fashions are tending lo
destroy the morale and morals of
the American woman." Fashion
Designer Helen Rose told a
newsman. 'Indecency Is never
smart fashion, you know. The
well groomed woman prefers to
be on the best dressed, not the
bast undressed fashion Hsu."
The naughty French bathing
suit and the deep plunge neck
line, said Miss Rose, mske Amer
ican women look like chorus girls
from th follies bergere.
Miss Rose, who designs clothes
for June Allyson, Kathyin Gray
son, Elizabeth Taylor, Esther
Williams and other actresses',' ssys
th new French Influence la mere
ly a passing fad,
"Because we are, basically, g
moral race. Women are going to
realise once again that conceal,
ment Is more Intriguing to male
than revealment."
That'i what Mlsa Rose said.
4th Round
Pay Demand
Refused
PITTSBURGH. July t l,V-Another
basic steel producer teay re
fused contract demands of the (.To
talled hteelwarkera aa the federal
gevernanent awved t avert a threat
ened aatiaa-wide steel strike.
Tha anion aaaoaneed that Cru
cible titeel la. of America had flatly
refused ateetwarfcers' deanaada far a
wag inereaac and far eoaspaay
financed Insurance and pension ar-grams.
A union spakesman said contract i
negotiations were broken off.
The U. 8. Steel Corp. turhed down I
the ssme demands this week. I
Crucible employes some lo.OOO
unlonuu at Pitteburgh. Midland,
Pa., Syracuse, N. Y., and Hsrrlsor., I
I N. J.
The government's growing anxiety J
becam apparent Last Bight whea f
Cyrus 8. t hing, director 4 Ihe fed
eral aaediatiOB and conciliation
service, samasaaeal Philip Murray,
areajdeat of the tailed bteel V ack
ers, aad John A. htrphra. vie
peraident of the I. 8. blcH Carp,
lo aaeet la Washingtan aa Maoday.
Both Murray and Stephens
promptly agreed to answer the call.
Murray also repeated his charge
that Ihe sieeJ corporation waa r
sporuibl for th impaase la negotia
tions that for the last two days had
mad a steel .ink a strong pos
sibility on July 16.
'
Th U. 8. 8teel-UAW negotiations
in recent years a major factor In
in. w.e. .ar.,. h
iher inrin.ireahna.t riom-n l.-i
Wednesday.
r .a '
Rejects Demand
Brnjsmia F. Fairless, t.
8.. ttlerl!
!ta faeiarfh rLj"lTl
'" tl.
war wage boost. Previously he
turned down the anion's demands j
for pension far it MS. aaeraibera.
Murray quickly called a merlins
of hla policy committee her aext '
TMMalav Tkia h.a Ik :
I fidavit would be brought up for
: consideration at the commiuce meet-
ing. Should he and other USW of
ficials sign such affidavits, the 8teel
Workers union could make use of the
national labor relations board mach-
I Inery in charging U. a Steel with an
unfair labor practice In refusing
to bargain on pensions.
Murray, la going to VYaahinrlea
Mooday. win also be areseal far the i engine trouble developed aa the
unveiling there af aa economic re- I plane started on a flight to London,
part by former Government Eco-1 It was the second such Incident
nam ist Robert Nathan. ' In two days.
Inereaac Seen The stratocruiser. with tl pawn-
Nathan, engaged fa make the re- i Rpr "hoard Including Former Wash
port by the t lO. haa aot dierlooed j "Won State Gov. Mon C. WaUgren.
the nature of hi finding but It has I '"ded at New York International
been felt In Industry circles that a ! u-port about 30 minute after the
wage Inereaae weald he recommend- j takeoff.
ed. CapL C. R. Titus, the pilot said
bor-aATbsolu'entul,
Murray has described a wage
So
far. however, he has not disclosed
how much of a raise he wants for
his steelworkers who now average
$185 an hour. Including three in
creases ranging from 13 to 18 's
cents in the last three years.
As matters now stand, the V. S.
Steel negoliationa are at a
still.
' I m
"a cliUwa
WATER OVER THE HIGHWAY A dike broke this morning on the big "C" canal of the
Sam Wcng ranch north of Merrill, flooding fields and spilling water over onto the high
way. Woter in the ditch wos shut off and tht break was expected to be repaired this
afternoon.
Benton County
Jail-Break Aide
Takes To Hills
AI.IIL'QI KRQIP. N. M. Jaly I (. Fifty eity. sUte. eounly, fed
eral and military officers eeeubed lha rusgrd Maniano mountains east
and south of here today for a man believed involved In a t orvallls.
Ore, Jail break aa June 4.
Th aaanhont followed aa all-night "eapa and robbers" ehsa
through th street of Albuouere, during which police fired HUN
shots la aa effort 1 stop the fugitive.
City police IdeaUfied th sua aa William (Billy) Haynes, alia
Bill Brady.
Th search waa first launched when a second man, Marshsll I.
Huff, 47, waa arrested at Moonlalnalr last halurday and charged with
car theft and bogus cheeks.
A man known as Riehard Hall, alias Rkhard Brsdy, escaped from
lh Benton county Jail la O reran a month aga, aided by two mea whs
broke la from outaldc.
Justice of th Peace John H. Garrtsoa. Moantalnalr. who arrested
Hoff whea be asked him to cash a check, said Huff gave him th aliaa
of Riehard Howard Hall.
Deputy sheriff Ed Jackson. Alboo,uer,ue. said today Haynes wsa
i first seea last night by two deputies driving a black 1941 ladilla
I ardaa with California license 4BU. '
The deputies. Joined by other patrol ears, pursued Hay nee off aad
oa throughout th Bight. He gave them Ihe slip toward midnight.
Th car waa found abandoned about 39 miles southeast of Albtt
uevaue at 7 - as, today. Th right rear wheel had locked aad tha
eoginc waa "a boot burned ap, Jaekaoa said.
The search centered at midday In
the Juan Tomas area, 30 miles ,
southeast of here In rough, rocky
country. The fugitive was believed
lo be heavily armed.
MP's Aid Hunt
Underxheriff Prank Mann was no
tified by Corvallla authorities last
week that Huff, the man arrested
last Saturday, waa wanted there for
jall-breaklng. Oregon officers were
to come and get him this week.
Officers were not clear on what
role they believed Haynes played In
the Oregon Jallbreak. Th apparent
toe of several overlapping aliases
added to the confusion.
A man known as Richard Howard
Kail, alias Richard Brady, escaped
from the CorvaJlis Jail on that data,
taking a batcil of the deputy sher
iff's badges, funs, handcuffs and leg
bona.
Radio alarms were broad, sst this
morning to residents of Kan la Rasa.
Msemrty.Xstaacia aad Moamtalaaar.
warniBf tbeas to watch I heir cars
and be wary of strangers. The Broad
casts amid th fagitiv waa desperate.
One report said the man had
i nuouwjuca lua car ui buuhhhuujs
jj mlla WFSt of Fuv,,
.,. ....
rlJ "! were fragmentary.
; White said officer from the Ber-
I ralillo county Albuquerque i sher-
Itfs office, the city police, th stat
police and the FBI were engaged.
Tha pursuit started mat Bight, ra-
N,r, th h
ta wild rae through Alba-
qaersjue city streets. Th fugiliv
escaped and the search waa reaewea
daring eany morning hours.
Stratocruiser
Turns Bsck
After Trouble
NEW YORK. July t UP A Pan
American Airwaya stratocruiser re-
turned here safely early today after
one engine of Ihe low-motored
1 crait -acted a in tie rougnr ana ne
decided to turn back. Before re
turning. 1200 gallons of the plane's
heavy gasoline load tor the trans
Atlantic trip was dumped Into the
Atlantic
Wallgren said there was no alarm
among passengers. They were sent
to hotels to await another flight this
afternoon.
BULLETINS
WASHINGTON, July t ivrv Th
fcrase voted pay raise today far
cabinet officers and tZ ether high
government elf trials.
Aa attempt lo cut congress
asembers la for a basil waa
blocked by a aaruaaientary ab
Jeetlen. Before passing th bill by a
voice vat, lh hoooe changed H lo
ret the aa7y of FBI Director J.
Fdgar Hawrer at It i-SH a year. Ha
now gala Slf.tO aad tha kill, a
reeoasasejsded by tha Psoas arrH
scrvic committee, had pesp td a
rain t IS..
NEW YORK. July t (P Tb
Alger Hiss pcrjary trial Jury re
ported for th second tlm today
that It can aot agree s a verdict
rad th Judg sent It back I try
st aim.
BALBOA, t'aaal Zone. July 1 1'"
A V. S. aavy patrol plan with
aine persona aboard caught fir
!a midair and crashed In la th sea
today wear Cor hobs, la the Canal
7an. At least ana body waa aeea
near the wreckage.
LONDON. July t Dotlar
ahort Britain has secretly agreed
la buy nearly l.tW SO tons of
coarse grain from Ruaaia la th
next year, aflbrml asarcea dm-,
closed today.
The inforasanta added that part
af a barter deal agreement waa
Initialed hs Private la Moscow last
weik a few days act ace Brtuia
economic pe-aaers announced a
thrrc-aaoolh Tttandstill a dollar
spending.
WASHINGTON. July t (Pi
Cengrrae today com pic led aelioa
pb BoulU-hilli. dollar long rang
housing leglslatioa aad sent It I
President Truman.
The senate shouted approval af
the row promts aseasar shortly
after the bouse okayed It by a
voice vote.
That gave Mr. Trmm.au the first
major victory for th far-flung
domestic prograaa ha calls tb
"fair deaL"
WASHINGTOX. July X (PI
Senator Taft (R-Ohlol said today
be may vote against Ihe North
Atlantic security treaty, because
he thinks It probably cannot e
ae para ted from th proposed for
eign arms program.
Taft made this statement to re
rorters after he had told th sen
ate that he la "absolutely opposed
to providing ana for Ear-ape."
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