TMnffl AiffllMS Mil o) o) M ft n Tim ... I itytr y r)T 'yZ? weather j Dan's Hews 3JDfSf WMi ESS rrelltallea U4 M fcsra.. I Br FRANK JENKINS" H8 the word art written, I've Just finished reading tin news ununary o( President Truman s long-awaited eooiiuinlc report to the congress. Out of it I in I he Im pression Hint, Ilka fabled. King C nut. the little nun from Missouri I learning Uil titer are force loo powerful to be arbitrarily con trolled by mete null a command, e e e "H5 stubborn Cnule, according to legend, wa Irked by the In coming UUes. Ho he undertook to handle the alluauou by decree, lie took hie aland on Uie beach and ordered the tide to quit coming in. According to Uie alory that haa been handed down to u, the tide kept right on coming and Canute had to move bark up the beach to keep from gelling hta (eet wet. President Truman waa annoyed by (lit creeping tide ol InllaUoii. which threatened to upaet our apple carl. Alao, he waa cuiuldrrably ael up by hi generally unexpected Unci, elide election. So, Ilk Canute, lie a tld (in ellecti: "l'U tlx thla Inllatlon business MX OHDKlt IT TO bTUH. I'll tell II that ll II doesn't atop 1 11 Jack up taxes and 1 U creek down on prlcea and wsgea. 1 hat II lit IU dock." fO he made hta pitch. II called lor the higher use. He demanded hta price and wage control. But the Intlatloiury line wasn't blulled. ll kept runt en creeping up the beach until It reached the atag ol flood and then It began to recede acting Juit as the udt did in Uia ca ol Canui. e pKESIDr.NT TRUMAN haa acted preclaely a King Canute did. , He ha retired back up the economic ' beach to keep from getting hi leel wet. He aayt In hla meaaag thla morn ing: "No major Increase In taxes ahould be undertaken at una time." Me adda: - W can not expect to aihlete a budget aurplua lu A declining na tional economy." e TIN FORTUNATELY, legend fall to u tell u what King Cnut did alter he retired up the beach to keep tram getting wet. Privately. I uspeel he ahrtuged the altuation oil and changed the aubjecL May be ha started anotlier war to Uk hi lollowera' mind oil hla boner In the 3as of the Uda. Canute didn't have to face the voter at some in y sellable future alert ton. King had lot of leeway In thoae day. e OUR Prealdent Truman la In a tougher a pot. He dor have to lac uia voter or a least hi party haa to, which mount to Uie aam thing. But he doe thla morning what Cnute probably did. He change the subject eo a to get people minds off onto pleas mar Utings. H ay no crisis aruon I needed because our economy Is STRONG AND HEALTHY. He adda: -Our economy CAN HIT A SOAR NO ANNUAL OUTPUT Or WELL ABOVE MO BILLION DOLLARS IN A PEW YEARS." e FHINKINO of the joo billion dollar Income we're going to have in the golden future, w can be expected to forget about the trouble of the Im mediate present. I d tar hla strategy 1 good, every thing considered. Police Seek Two Who Beat Woman Florence Chorktnot Thompson, 4-yer-old Bestty Indian woman, wa rushed to Klamath Valley hna pital at 2:4J Monday morning when found by the city police near the city dump with a badly-battered face. The woman, who aald that two while men had beaten her. was un clothed except for a girdle, when .found by state police. 8h said sh had walked three mile. Kaler'a ambulance moved her to the hospital. Her assailant had not been found at noon today, POI.IO DEATH LITTLl! ROCK, July 11 mAn other polio death wa reported In Arkaruaa over the week-end while tht total of case for the year reached tht 223-mark. rourteen-yrar-old Johnnie Pord of Hot Spring died there yesterday of polio. Hi death wa the 12th for the state thla year. WITH BEETLES AND CHIN-WHISKERS, DOC STILL JAUNTY AFTER MOUNTAIN RESCUE FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 11 OP) With a bnttleful ot beetle and a chlnful of stubble. Dr. Melville T. Cook, 79-year-old Louisiana botany professor stepped Jauntily from a rescue plane Isst night with Ills wife and Pilot Bill Curringlon, The trio, object ot a week-long search by more than 30 military and civilian planes, were snatched by a helicopter only 24 hours before from the side of a '3200-foot moun tain M miles north of the Arctic Circle and M miles north of Port Yukon. Their slngle-englned Ces sna crash-landed on Uie Tundra slop when CurrlngUin became lost and the gas supply ran low. Despite their apparent calm, Dr" Cook and Mrs. Cook, who la alio 7 near go, and Pilot Curringlon weie 'emphatic In declaring they have g m i1- -i i r .-4 i,a I PKU'K HVK CENT l-O- KLAMAT .r EON, MONDAY, Jt LY II, 141 Tdephen (til h: UOX . . Mediator Seeks ' Steel Agreement Philippines, China Join Against Reds BAdl'IO, Philippine. July II otl President t.lpldlo llulrlne and lien, ermllsslm Chiang Kai-shek tonight called fee a union of the countries of Asia and the Parlfle la "contain and counteract" the threat of rem an vn lira. The Joint statement of the Philip pinea president and retired president of nationalist China waa Issued at Hi conrlusion of two days of talks here. It aald. "A preliminary con ; ference of the authorised rcpresen j tatlves of tlios counlrte desiring to ' particliMte in the formation of the 1 union shall be convened at the rar . llest pustlble moment to devise ron crete measure for It organization. More Hoped For j "II la eur hope that ether eoun-1 tries In Ada and the Parlfle will events lie respnd to the highest ales of the pee posed anion." Chiang aald. "Although f have coma to the Phllippiiiea upon the invitation of President Qulrlno to confer with him in my private ca pacity, I shall aa ihrad) of the kuo mlntang (nationalist party) under take to advise and request the Chi nese government in give Ita full sup port and to take steps to Implement the agreement announced In the above Joint statement ' ll waa wot expected lhl India would participate In the anion. Japan participation waa consid ered -out of the picture at present" beraa a ilsle of war technically exists anlll the signing of the peace treaty. Earlier Informed source hd lut ed Dr. Byngman Rliee, president of Korea, aa an Immediate participant, iuvitatlou were extended to Slam. Imlotirsia, Korea, Australia and New Zealand. It wa felt that 1h sooner the union could be brought Into being the sooner the United State would take an Interest. Rain Breaks 49-Day Dry Spell In East By The Assoc Is led Preaa Thirsting crop in eight north eastern droughl-slrirkrn sutes hsd their first real beneficial rain yes lerday in 4 day . A steady day-long shower brought almost an Inch and a halt of moisture to some pan of the area where crop damage had mounted Into the million of dollars. Weathermen ln New Jersey ssld Uie drought In thst state hd been washed out but farmer there and elsewhere throughout the northeast aid more moisture would be needed soon. Crop damage tn New Jersey alone haa been estimated at Ml. ooo.ooo. Although the rainfall measured only a little more than a trace at some point It was sufficient gen erally to be a life-saver to crops that were on the verge of doom. Drought conditions were report ed definitely broken In western New York. ln New Englinri, where crop dsmsge hsd mounted to tlo.OM.ouo, many point reported an Inch or more of moisture. Old Town, Me, had 1.4 Inches. INVASION HALTED LEBANON, Ore, July 11 (At Sul phite liquor from a paper mill and DDT halted an. Invasion of cater pillar here yesterday that had kept housewives busy with brooms and garden hose. Firemen later burned grass and thistle patches where the Insect hatched out early Saturday and began moving across lawn and garden In unnumbered horde. had their fill of eggs and Alaska mosquitoes, Uie world' hungriest. They had a cargo ot 90 doxen eggs aboard consigned to a roadhouse when tht plant put down. Only a tew eggs were cracked In the crash, "We ate them raw, we ate them cooked," ssld Dr. Cook. To toll the tormstlnn nf buu bombing mosquitoes, Uie three slept Inside the plane at night and sealed up Uie cracks with emergency band age tape to keep the Insect out. They sent up dally amoke signals In hopes of catching Uie attention of rescuers. ' They wert sighted yesterday morning by a lOlh rescue squadron B-17 piloted by Capt. C. E. Hale. They aald It was the first plane they had seen since the rrssh despite the fact that aircraft had bracketed No Quail Hunt Here Klamath and Lake counties will hive no vsllcy quail season this fall. If rules tentatively act by the state game commission go Into effect. The game commission reported this morning from Portland that It considered the kill by severe winter weather "excessive" in tills area and that there were few quail lelt. Noon October 21 through Oc tober 90 waa tentatively set for quail season In all adjoining counties, with bag limit of five day and lfr for the season. Pheasant arason for Klamath county may run from noon Oc tober 21 through October M and a much longer split season I considered for Lake county. Northwest Forest Fires Under Control Bv The Associated Preaa Pacific Northwest forest fires were reporter! under control tooay aa a thin cloud cover began moving In from the Pacific ocean, bringing moisi air ana lower irmp-rsiuiss """ " , T . ranaru auuve ursim jc-iriu.. but lorest crew nevertlieles msn-1 , . sgrd to check severs! blsies. I Spilng heat other than Durum Two major fires In Oregon were I "nwed at 207A1S 000 bush under oornroi. One waa In Southern I 'U' compared with 2MA6J 000 last Oregon In the Siskiyou national ' vr,r ,nd J1JJOO for the ten forest. It broke through fire lines ! J"" verage. and blackened another SO acre be- fore crew, rinsed it Earlier ll had thought under eontml after consuming 2'v mile of timber. The other blue wa In the Mal heur national forest, controlled alter destroying 1000 seres of scrub and pin forest. A crew of TS men controlled a 00 acre burn In the Olympic national j forest near Lake Crescent In Wash- j In Ion. I A 330-arre fire ale slowly at log ged -off land near Lake Cowichan on Vancouver Island in British Co lumbia. foresters warned that a return ot i clear skies again could make fire conditions extremely hesardou. Tacoma Man To Head Elks Lodge CLEVELAND. July 11 UPl Th Benevolent and Protective Order of Elk today elected Emmett T. An derson of Tacoma, Wash., a grand exalted ruler. President of a printing firm there he Is t pait exalted ruler of hi lodge and a former district denntyi grand exalted ruler for the Wash Inetnn southwest area. This ws the third day of the Elks' Uth convention. It end Thursday. , Anderson succeeds Oeorgt L HU of New York City. Rep. Russell V. Mark (R-Wash.) made the speech nominating An derson as hesd of the lodge which reported MS.3g7 paid-up members as of Isst March. During Hall's year In office, the Elks added 39.703 new members. Wheat Subs For Landing Lake MOSCOW. Idsho, July 11 ( When you must lend a pontoon plane and can't find a lake, try a wheat field. Pilot Robert Drafabaugh and pas tana. They couldn't find Coeur d'Alene. tested the method today. The plane nosed over gently on the forced landing but the men received only scratches. They got M miles off course re turning from a fishing trip In Mon tana. The couldn't find Coettry d'Alene lake so they settled tor t field of walat-htgh wheat. more than 400,000 square milt In the exhaustive search. A helicopter settled yesterdsy afternoon on the mountainside, picked up the Cooks and Curringlon and flew them to Fort Yukon. They were then flown here In a Wlcn Alaska Airlines plane. Despite the peril of their sltustlon. Dr, Cook could not forget he waa a scientist, and spent his dsys catch ing Insects peculiar to Uie Arctio and gathering apeclmrnts of grw, flowers and fungus. The first thing he did on arrival here last night was to wave aloft a bottle' of beetles. "Look," he said, "what I got for the museum at Louisiana university. The three sulfered only bruises In the crash, which washed out thi Estimate Of Crops Shows Wheat Down WANIIINGTON. July II UT The agriculture department today foee east this year' earn crop at SJdt. lU.ttt bushels and the wheal crop at l.l.t.0t bushel en the basis of July 1 conditions. Thla ta the first estimate of the year for corn. It compares with last j year s record of 3.650 -i4..000 bushels and with a ten-year (ll-47i aver age of 2.77 ;ig 000 bushel. The wheat estimate Is US 2M 000 bushel lea than liMjnt.MU fore cast a month ago. It compares with last year big crop ol lJS8.40e.000 bushels and with titer ten-year aver age of Wl.ftO.0O0 bushel. Winter Wheat The winter wheat crop wa put at eJ2.wi.ooO bushels. This is 104,- 644.000 bushels leas than 1J334.741 000 forecast a month ago. PMIAM.- 000 last year and 72a.4W.0U for the ten-year average. I All spring wheal waa ealiasated i at gS4UH,e bushels. This as U,- .. lea than Ist.rU SO forecast nth ago tmJM.ast aat year ten-year j and XUJM.tH for the : average. rr ki a vc M , lh. lmnll w iS.n?ir!Hawaii Dock j h year for thla type. laat year waa 44.1 I.i tM.. . rB m B, U -S SO I . producUoa wa put at i .l.te bushels. ThU la tM. less lhaa tkl.gsi.aM forecast month ago. It compares with 111.- M1.t last year and M4.74I4M0 fee the ten-year average. - - Estimates for other crops not previously forecast this year, com pared with last year and the ten year average, respectively. Included: AU hay t7.er71.O0O tons; MJH6SXU and MAJ8.0O0. Pslaieee Mg.t9g.ttt bushels; 43. tM.ttt and SU.4tl.ttt. Leathernecks Swipe Plane; Forced Down LAS VEOAS. Nev July 11 iTV Two young marine recruits swiped a private plane In San Diego and were winging toward their home In Oregon when engine trouble forced them down Into the hands of the law. Sheriff Olen Jonea re ported today. The leathernecks, Gerald E. Ban dim. 20. of John Day. Ore. and Laurence L. Whlsmsn. 11. of Baker. Ore., wert held on charge ot grand theft. Sheriff Jonea aald the pair, sta tioner at the marine base tn San Diego, told him tht tory. Whlsmsn and Baucum. who haa a private pilot's license, yesterday piled Into a single-engine Cessna, parked at the Convslr air terminal near the marine base and took off. The craft belongs to Oeoree J. Mad sen. 8n Diego. After the engine trouble forced them down at Alamo. Nev., airport and they left the ship to hitchhike to Las Veg, Airport Manager Oeorge Crockett became suspicious. He picked them up ln his auto and turned them over to the sheriff office. MEDAL WA9HINQTOH, July 11 m House approval sent to President Truman today a bill providing spe cial medals for service personnel who distinguished themselves ln the Berlin airlift. plane'i landing gear, popped oft Uie doors and twisted Uie propeller. Mrs. Cook, whose face and neck are slightly marked by mosquito bites, said they were unworrled until after the fourth day. "Then," she ssld, "we began to fear that nobody would look for u so far north." The Cooks aald the misadventure will not alter their plans to com plete their vacation tour of Alaskt. They will go from here to Anchor age and to other sections of Uie territory and do not plan to return to Baton Rouge until September. Dr. Cook, widely known as botanist and author, Is a member of Uie Louisiana Bute university. Curringlon, a native of Sacra mento, makes his home In Pair banks. He is 31. i i - .v k m i ACCUSED Shigetsogu Tsu- neishi (above), former officer in the Japanese imperial ormy appearing as a government witness in the treoson trial of Mr,. Ivo Toguri D'Aquino I (Tokyo Rose) in Soa FronciSCO, ; hoi been oeeuied bv Mark Strceter of Idaho Foils, Ida., ... . , . ! os ,ne perpeiraior or uirotiucs i ogoinst ollied prisoners of war ot Bunko prison in Tokyo, where Streeter was held. Strike May Be Long One HONOLULU. Ju.V 11 ln 1 ,lae in Hawsiis' 72-day-old do.k j ,mke agreed totU thsi: 4 , i. The cnppluig lieup auVgo on another two or three month unless the federal government step In. 2. Each day the strike continues. It builds up emotional friction for a blowolf that would end the absence ot serious violence to dste. The CIO Inlernstional Long shoremen's and Wsrehousemen s union walked oft the piers May 1 in a demand for a 32 cent hourly raise from $1.40. The employers seven stevedoring firms offered and then withdrew a 12 cent Increase. Negotiations have broken off. There Is a chance of federal Inter vention If congress and the presi dent approve a bill Introduced Thursday by Senator Know land iR-CsUti. It would authorise presidential board of Inquiry to ask both side to accept it finding as binding. Employers oppose the bill; they dont want outsiders to fix wsgea. The union favors the plan. Trio Hurt In Car Accident An automobile accident at Eber leln and Martin t:M pm. Sunday sent Robert C. Lanta. 31. of 1S45 Halsry. to Hillside hospital with a badly bumped head and a rut arm. Ernest Mamn Allen. 35. and his wife, Zetta. also 36, suffered only minor bruises. City police said that Allen, driv ing south on Martin. Jumped a stop sign and veered directly Into the path of a vehicle driven by Lanta, traveling west on Eber leln. Allen was cited for failure to obey a stop sign and paid a IS fine in municipal court. Rodents Blamed For Canal Break Quite an area was flooded when a canal break occurred Saturday momlng In the main "C" canal near the 8am Wong ranch. A crew dis patched there Immediately had the bank repaired by 10 a. m. This wa the second break that occurred within a couple of days, and a section between 60 and 60 feet wide had to be repaired. The first one was about 40 feet wide. Both break were caused by rodent bur rowing In Uie canal banks. No estimate of the damage was made. Smoke Overcomes Womon In Room One woman was slightly Injured when she was overcome by smoke In a small tire In her room at the Cascade Apartment hotel early Monday morning. Injured was Mrs. W. B. Whlt romb. who was taken to Klamath Valley hospital by Kalcrs ambu lance. She 1 reported to be resting comfortably. The city fire department waa called to the scene at 1:43 a. m. The blase waa probably caused, by a cigarette, firemen said. Big Steel Stands Pat On Refusal WASHINGTON, July 11 r The steel labor crisis swept Into Wsab Ingtsa today In It rwsh toward a possible waUoa-wlde strike next bat avdy. Keeking t avert a vast Meet abut i down. Cyrus S. thing, g-feot-7 di- recta- of the federal aaeeliatiaa and ; railed for eenrillatiea service, prepared ta w mtT hlT( tht mainar m4 fortunate experience of liquidating hash ever the dispute with both I m Miar inflation without tailing rata a severe recession. the three sides this afternoon. i atember eswncil reported. He Invited to the conference , , . -,n to win the acclaim of business. Mr. Truman Philip Murray, president of the CIO United Steeiworkers of America, and official of several large companies 'nclua"1 M P-"Un United j jotn, between . the union and U. 8. 8ier ."ell apart " " Pltuburgh. the union ; .". 2 I ,nd ,uu reduce price and make substantial profit. No Increase sne The company aald higher wage , mnji snesa higher prices, and II re- , fsed any wage Increase at alL Dis- I gates over pension and beneflta were deadlocked toe. The anion has never formally de manded a specific wage figure. But Arthur Ooldberg. the union's gen eral counsel, said ln an tntervirsr j that a 20-cent figure was used In I the negotiations by way of tllustra j tlon. U. S. Steel save the average I basic hourly wage la now SIM. In that connect!. Murray plaa , ned to fortify himself by bringing I awl today ta hi other capacity of I prealdent the f'lO new report 1 by Economist Robert R. Nathan to ; help Justify the demands of CIO i "T . " VT onieats far a fovnh post-war reond sxt raise, fsteel worker get a aloe of It's rents In 14-2. IS cents la 147 aad 12 cents la 141. Haynes Eludes Posse, Steals Second Auto ALBUQUERQUE. N. M. July 11 (v William "Billy" Haynea. 30-year-old desperado, gave a New Mexico posse the slip last night. Officer expressed belief the armed fugitive eluded police trap I In the raln-eoaked Mrnzano moun- tains, returned afoot here and stole an auto. The auto taken wa a 1941 blue Mercury sedan. Cyril Luker, re gional soil conservation service di rector, reported It stolen from hi home at 1 a. tn. today. Half an hour later Ivan Poote. oil station attendant on U. S. highway U. aaid he gassed the auto. Prom pictures, he later Identified the driv er aa Haynes. The search now cen ter along the highway aouth of Albuquerque. Through tht night, cold and wet officers combed the mountain for Haynea who has been hunted since Friday when the wrecked Cadillac he drove was found abandoned tn mountain ditch. Haynes, alias Bill Brady. Is want ed for auto theft, for questioning In a Utah post office robbery, and for helping Marshall Huff escape from the Benton county Jail at Corvsllls. Ore, last month. Huff is ln Jail here. Pole Denies He Spied On Britain MANCHESTER, Eng., July 11 (JPi Msrien Kacxmarek. 40-y e a r-old Pole, pleaded Innocent today tn charges of spying on Britain and a U. S. air base near here for an unnamed foreign power. Kactmarek is specifically charged with eight violations of the British official secret act. The prosecution charges thst Kacxmarek was especially Interested In Uie workings of Uie U. S. airbase at Burtonwood, west of Manchester. U. S. B-29 bembera and plane used on the Berlin airlift are serviced there. Missing Guard Found At Home MILWAUKEE. July 11 P)-One of Waiter Reuther bodyguards, mysteriously mivtlng for 36 hours, waa located today at his home ln Detroit, The finding of Matt Evans, 31-year-old unionist assigned to guard Reuther after the latter waa shot April 30, 1P48, was reported at Uie CIO IJnlted Auto Workers' con vention. Evans and Olenn Brayton were picked by the union's International board to guard the union fiery rhlef after the assassination attempt. 11-Point Plan Seelcs Gain For U. S. Production By STERLING F. GREEN WAHHINGTON. Julr II m Prealdent Truman today eanrelled hkt call for a M 0 eo So Ul Inereaa. He bowed to a temporary deficit apending policy to head off any depression. "No major Increa la taxes should be undertaken at thia time" - were the president's weed. Also: . "We cannot expect to achieve a budget aurplua 1st m declining national economy.' In stunning reversal of hi stand, Mr. Truman sent to congress A midyear economic report wiped clean of hi put demand for price, sale or other business control. Instead staling that anemployment le acala In some area he proposed li new taw to build ap Jobs and production, boost censamrr t Incoea and buying power, and loo federal lending. 1 All the Idea were fsmlllsr. Moat were not drastic. They Included 'public work planning, but not more public works; the Brnnn farm plan; expansion of social security and Jobless psy; extended Ol benefit, j Crisis action Isn't needed. Mr. Truman ssld. because the economy still 1 strong and healthy. It can hit a soaring annual output of "r ell ; above 300JM0XXMO00 in a few years, he predicted. That one-fifth '" higher than today's national production. "But there Is nothing healthy a boot more anemployment or less production." eengrea waa told. "Much trends can and must be re i versed by positive action, private and public. ... I -Our own people Insist upon the maintenance of prosperity, and ; will not tolerate a depression " Optimistic Outlook i The president council of economic advisers. In an accompanying w ... iMMh,i mnr nntimtstte in aeneral tone than Mr. Truman. j ,u. bum, outlook reassuring. But agreed that federal action look hu n4Ild aK1mst any major increase In Uxes. i .... i n,M ihmiii he raised, he said. He added : lh-, Z, inuwooruiuon tax on j . oI ln corporation n. no-terf results: lai better loss In federal revenue. In place of ., menm tsm ahwh the genomic message and lor which Letistatera Hit The president flailed at legislators who insist aa gevemasent eesaasay to the point of cutting "essential waUetsal aregrama" like defense and foreign aid. "Nothing could repeeeeat greater economic folly." be aald. sj. -r, . tt t lne husinesamen to lower Dricea where possible, to ketp lna production high. But I nriA k. TiJd- that crlDDles the These were bis request to congrea 1 Shu aar awssar Ui aweas. excewt ei siiMrs liberalise the iL- ealsle and sift i ...tkm the Urn limit kasines by the reromtrnctioa finance eorporatiosi. I. Launch a atady of the taveetaaeot and development weeded for aa expansion of the eeeawaay. ... . Adopt "a. Improved prograas at faro. Useoea Mpporta. ICongreaa I badly split aa Us tare sewgraat; how deeaocraU win auaraa a stand tomorrow.) .... y tl,e use minimum wage fro 4 rents an hour to at least IS. Broadea iU coverage. (Sack legialattoa as still ta cmns rite ess capital bllLI j. grins mere Industrie aader aoessplovnvent eons wens Hon. Iarreaae the benefits. Length the period of Mlenesa covered. 1. Extend for one year to July IS. Ia the vetciW i adjustment allowance. e ao-ealled "SS-Hf ymgraat The twograa get It Btckaaaa irons the erevtoJoa fr anemployment pay to veteran at toe rate m tzw m ween . g. Bah aerial security benefit. Extend coverage to mere penon. Increase direct public aid grant. IA eoeiel aecarity bill may come from the boose way and asean committee la about a week. I t. Let federal agrnrje arsa liie advance planning a federal wart and araaire site. Help (Uie and lecaliUea to do the asm. It. Provide technical aid to develop the world s backward areas and encourage foreign rnveatasent. ii ,. iho reeinmral trad acreeaaenU act, to bolster world commerce, (The boase haa paaaed such a kill: a senate fight awaits. I In general, the message was calculated to reassure business. No where wa there mention of the array of anU-lnflaUon powers which Mr. Truman demanded of congress In his January report demandt which congress has largely Ignored. Now dead for certain, they Included standby price and wage control authority: allocation of scarce materials: extension of bank credit controls and Installment-plan buying curbs: regulation of grain and other commodity exchange to curb Inflation. Neither was there men tion ot the aovernment building industrial planu when private capital fall to do so. Russians Choke Off Trucks In 'Little Blockade' BERLIN. July 11 (V-The Rus-1 sians have choked off track cargo for West Berlin to four an hour M a day on the Helmstedt Auto bahn. All other highway to the city have been comp .iely dosed. A report to the American military government that all truck must be completely unloaded for Inspec tion indicated that this figure might be further reduced. An average ot 300 truck a day had been travelling tht Helmstedt road lately. There has been no explanaUon yet from the Soviet military government for the "little blockade." Russian border guards said, however, they were acting on telephoned orders from their highest headquarter in Germany. One truck leaving the British tone with 10 tons of glass for Berlin took an hour to pass the Russian check point because ot Uie unloading and loading provision. In the meanUme no other trucks were allowed to pass. Mercury Soars To Season High Sunday was a scorcher with the mercury hiking up to 91 degrees, no season high this year. If Uie weather bureau's prediction holds true, today's late afternoon temperature will beat yesterday's by one degree. The forecast Is for a maximum of 93 with fair skies to night and tomorrow. CAA'a 11:30 a. m. reading today at the airport chalked up (0. but tht mercury was still definitely on tht climb. Sympathy Murder Deaths Probed PORTLAND. July 11 0P Two elderly brothers died of bullet wounds yesterday ln what Uie coroner's office described a a "sympathy murder" of the older man and suicide by Uie other. Found dead at home were Henry T. Holford. 94. shot In Uie chest while tested In his bed, and his brother, Bert, 60, who hsd fired a bullet Into hla heart. goods should be wiped out and the taxes should be liberalized. nrolil for Industry: idi a smau nes the thumping boost tn corporation oresident asked tn bis January he poke again only month ago. don't cut wage tn order to reduce workers buying power and vrjon they are of -vital Importance. Bepeai in srne"- tax. carry-ever of loose by for repayment at loans made to Calgary Opens 7eek-Long . Stampede CALGARY, Alta, July 11 tCP All the colorful pageantry ot the old west ws on display today aa cowboys and Indiana in full war paint and feathered headdress, opened the week-long Calgary Stampede. Calgary wa a real cowtown and mighty proud of It. High-booted cowboy clumped about Uie street in 10-gallon hat and gaudy shirt. They had no parking or feed prob lems for their mounts. Along the main business street Eighth avcnui wooden feed troughs, filled wun hay, were at their disposal. Officials aaid there were 641 en tries In the cowboy events, with about one-third ot them top nanus from the United States rodeo cir cuit. The colorful parade had the eastern "tenderfeet" goggle-eyed. A goodwill special brought 250 from Toronto, headed by Mayor H. K. i Buck i McCallum of Uie eastern city, who will officially open the western show thia afternoon. Fifty thousand persons watched the parade, and It was estimated 60,000 would attend the first dsy performances at Exhibition park. Hooded Hoodlum Arrests Made BIRMINOHAM, Ala., July 11 0) A Brookslde, Ala., policeman was the first man arrested today on charges by a grand Jury which In vestigated mssked mob violence in the Birmingham district. Thirteen other men were tabbed for arrest on charges of hooded terrorism. Elmer Brock, the first man arrest ed, posted bond ot 1300 each on two indictments. One was for Intlmlda Uon of a witness and Uit other for neglect of duty. At Brookslde the night of June 10 a robed and hooded band Invaded a reitaursnt, cleared out Ita oc cupants and forced them to witness a cross burning.