Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1950 — Page 1
breath carys famous wedications bronchial eep-adtion is cause so
STREET
OMFORT
drove .to Julietta, * Indianapolis.
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fst YEAR—NUMBER 261
[SCRIPPS — HOWARD §
Tims
FORECAST: Partly cloudy this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow with little change in temperature. Low tonight 1, high tomorrow 32.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER >= 1950
n
Entered as” Second-Class Matter at Postoffice
Im 3S
mrp e————
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Issued Dally.
dianapolls, Indiana
Brand Jury On Surprise Julietta Tour
Expected to Spend All Day Checking Over-All Conditions
..By NOBLE REED
In a surprise move, the Marion County grand jury today made an unannounced tour of inspeection of Julietta, the Marion County Home. i Without even notifying investigators or members of Prosecutor George Daliley's staff, members of the jury got into their cars and southeast of
The jurors were expected to = spend all day checking personally the reports of insanitary conditions at the home and the quality of food served inmates. Part of Investigation The inspection was part of a Bweeping investigation into shocking conditions at Julietta which were disclosed: in detail by a series of articles in The Times. Times Reporter Bob Bourne, after working at the home for 10 days disguised as a tramp, disclosed mistreatment of inmates by serving substandard food described as “slop.” He said the institution was infected with vermin breeding from. neglected filth. The jury opened its invéstiga-
tion yesterday when six witnesses testified about conditions at that ’ home for more than four hours. one p
Auditor Testifies Part of tha testimony yesterday]
Gregory McCracken, 4, of
included that ef Ralph Moore | Bills Expected county audiior, who identifiel A $ records showing payments for To Be 20c Higher
food purchased at the institution By IRVING LEIBOWITZ during the past year. J : Telephone bills in North CenThis evidence was presumed to rill Ti early 20 be used in attempt to check re- tral Indiara wi fg.»
He Thinks It's
|
‘Lots of Fun’
~
Photo by Bill Oates. Times Staff Photographer
5120 W. 15th St., gets practical experience on adult problems by ,
digging his toy car out of the avalanche of snow that has blanketed Indianapolis and the Midwest. Unlike his elders, Gregory enjoyed his chore. : (Addifiona) photos, Page 13).
All Major Streets Are Open As Old Sol Works On Snow
State Highway Situation Improves With Only Northern Roads Still Bad
Old Sol beamed brightly on Indianapolis today and Old ‘Man ‘Winter cringed. : Early this afternoon Tony Maio, street commissioner, happily announced “all major streets in Indianapolis are open.
The state situation was slowly growing better, according to
| Je |
i
Reds
U.S. to Build H-Bomb Plant In S. Carolina
Project to Make
Explosives Will Start™By EARNEST HOBERECHT, United Press Staff Correspondent
Next Year WASHINGTON, Nov. 28 (UP)—A congressional source announced today that ‘construction of plants to make H-bomb explosives will
start early next year at gite in South Carolina 15 miles south of Aiken. The plants will be built by E. I. Dupont de Nemours & Co. on a 250,000-acre tract in Aiken and Barnewell Counties, South Caroline. Congress had appropriated $260 million for the project. The plants will produce tritium, a heavy form of hydrogen which will be the prime explosive of the so-called super bomb. If ‘the H: bomb should prove not to be feasible, the plants could be used
.S. Brands
2 widening hole torn in the right flank of the United Nations prepared to ask the United
’
War Started, hinese ‘Aggressors’
Enemy Swarming Like Plans UN UN Plea Locusts Through Gap, Tg Kick Foe
Ready’ to Spring Trap q+ of Korps
Doug Puts New Crisis Up to United Nations, Calls Walker and Almond for Urgent Talks | Security ‘Council Session Tense as
New Crisis Arises By BRUCE W. MUNN
United Press Staff Correspondent
TOKYO, Nov. 28—A horde of 200,000 Chinese Communists swarmed over North Korea today, threatening to trap desperately fighting Allies in an offensive which Gen. Douglas MacArthur said marked the start of “an entirely new LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., war. ~ Nov. 28—The United States The Chinese, pouring like locusts over the country side ‘called the Chinese Commusas far as the human eye could see, ripped through a nists “aggressors” today and line. They could be seen along “every ridgeline,” Corps spokesman said. As the Chinese se ensive an hinese seized the offensive and rocked the "Ihe Security Council met in an les back on the defensive, Gen. MacArthur issued la atmosphere of tension that ape bristling statement accusing the Chinese of hurling the proached that of the tone meetings after the Nort oreans major part of - their fighting force against the United pushed across the 3Sth Parallel Nations. into South Korea. Places Issue in Lap (Secretary of State Dean Ache~ ; . ap of United Nations on told Senators today the ‘Chi« Gen. MacArthur said China's full-scale intervention in Communist intervention in the Korean War posed issues beyond his authority and Korea presents a “very serious”
a 1st Nations Security Council to order them immediately to withe draw from Korea.
__Ceunty Home today reported ‘ ‘an b s 000. “improvement if conditions,” about-$600.00
ee gioged shocking conditions. i —————inmates-said-more-than-26- “of 5s “utility include:
cents a month under a new rate state police. ports that there were wide dif- schedule due to go into effect State highways in the extreme
a 8 4 TEMPERATURES
ferences between the quality and month. northern section of the state re- LOCAL quantity of food served and the He State Public Service Com- mained, hazardous, but ice and 6 a. m... 23 10 a. m... 21 amount of money spent, mission has tentatively approved snow drifts were dimipishing. In Ta m.. 2 12 (Noon) 28 Other witnesses ‘ncluded Mr. , (i qar granting the Indiana the lower half of ihe Jie high- 8 a. m... 2 24 12° (Noon) y 30 Bourne, former attendants, and , .qociated Telephone Co. a rate ways were reported irlv safe’ 9a m... 26 1pm... 8
cooks at the home, along with a ;/ .reace of about $600.000. with. the exception of a few icy
Jormer head nurse at the insti- The .telephone utility, with spots. ution headquarters in Lafayette, serves v County Reads Hazardous The grand jury was expected 39 cities and towns in 15 coun- . . to return to the Courthouse to- .:.. County roads remained hazardmorrow to héar more witnesses. 0 ous. Authorities also said some aD Order, written by Repub. of the.secondary roads probably
ican Commissioner Roscoe Free- would be impassable until Thurs-
Note Improvements: = 5" 55: soir, Ti : | Commission Chairman Hugh, high drifts. ” A C . H The weather bureau reported
{Abbett, Democrat, has been {studying the report but has de- optimistically the mercury might . Julietta Inmates | Cite ‘Changes’
Humidity at 1 30 a. m. 81%;
Snow- Battered = Plants Humming
Normalcy Returning To Eastern Areas
By United Press Operation Digout gained mementum ‘today as the industrial ‘East cleared its roads and began
lclined to allow fit to be made climb above freezing during the 'public-as yet. afternoon. Details Not Giv In an extra- adked forecast the etalls Not Given weathetnfan © in. Indianapolis’ Mr. Freeman refused to revea: erased the prediction of ‘snow -flur: (details of the commission's orde: pies
and substituted = “partly . : ee . : By BOB BOURNE specifying the amount granted. cloudy today.” A low of ¥7 was Putting its factories back into However, it is understood that forecast for tonight. A high production after the week-end's
Sources inside the Marion 4). great storm. The latest United Press survey showed 278 deaths due directly or indirectly to the storm ‘and cold weather in the U. 'S.. and
.L£anada,
order gives the companv mark tomorrow of 32. - othe: it iso still freezing.” a The utility originally asked for weathér expert- said, “the sun is a rate increase of 21.1 million. doing ‘mutch to ‘help’ clear streets The cities znd towns served by, and.state:highways. “The sun apd
~eomtifided pounding” traffic abbte
‘since a series of stories in The Times
the worst mattresses” were , at $200 million and some experts burned, and the kitchen Fas bei; C Lart: Valparaiso, Wabash. {og by highway crews and snow- po t200 TITIOR Ant 1 $400 girly gun serving fresh fruit and bacon aavette. . Logansport, Green- poy js clearing the thorough- Ne SYeq Xt Tq bm castle, Connersville and Angola aa : lon. and eggs on alternating mornings. gi teleph a 1B 10 fares. Smoke poured from the stacks The Times discovered that ¢ le epaone company 430 . > Ohio's 3 serves communities in the follow- In Pretty Good Shape’ of Ohio's major industrial in-
bacon and eggs were almost never served to the inmates, and fresh
stailations today for the first time
“The Street situation is in pretty ! ] since the blizzard struck, burying
good shape,” Mr. Maio said. “We
ing counties: Porter, Elkhart LaPorte, Lake, Wabash, Steuben,
fruit was seen only. duri s a seasons when it id Jaring holiday DeKalb, Cass, Tippecanoe, Put- have all "major thoroughfares me stale nde as much. as 30 terested groups. : nam, Fayette, Madison and clear, all major intersections are inties of how i; Confirms Rumors Union. clean: and the sewer outlets are Win roa ie ere Seren: milk; thm oa DIE! an 00 veries .reHarty Barrett, home superin- The commission. has held hear- open and ready for the Jrainage sumed. ending’ the black market
today confirmed the ings on the Associated Telephone deluge. 1 would ‘say things case for the last year. be in normal Shape tomorrow ssa we don't have more snow.” One man was burned to:.death, another was. found frozen and a woman was killed in a highway
tendent, bacon and eggs rumors saying: “We are adding on to our menus all the time. We are trying to do- Son of Sinclair LeWis
the be £ e st we can with what we * Charged With: Assault
if that had ‘sprung up. Labor to Clear Roads Industrial Pennsylvania, blanketed by the heaviest snow in its history, was having a hdrder time *
have in the way of money.
“Of course we have been sere. T T o pi accident in the state. All three recovering. Factories -were not ing fruit lately. It was donated ~BONDON, Now, 23 UP "tragedies. were attributed to expected to resume norma. proby various groups at Thanks. Michael Lewis, 20, son of author other conditfons. . duction until the end »f the week. giving time. There were some Sinclair Lewis and columnist The dead: oy : Road crews labored to clear Apples and some oranges.” Dorothy Thompson, was charged Andfew. Keuneke4 83, Terre Hee E3dngh vara fron r. Barrett said “ es Sr 4 __ Haute, . streets a jays . my knowledge es, af today. with assaylling fim actress Paul Henry Etson, 45, Elkhart, western part of the state while tresses have been burned.” Helga Rustin, 2 lennese refuges Mrs.- Borothy Brown, 26. Bat- central and . eastern portions In the Times articles, a chargé Miss Rustin, 24, who Playeq 2 {le Creek. Mich worked to clear tlood debris: of keeping urine-soaked mat- small part Inv the movie "The Mr. : Keuneke was fatally Many areas still were isolated. Third Man,” swore out a sum- burned when his hathrobe caught About 154.000.persons still
First to Offer Assistance
“they will buy warm outfits for
onvenient to donors.
teresses and doling them out to : i inmates was made. mons naming Lewis, a student at 5.5 ¢. 0.0 open fireplace in his lacked electricity, lights or Real
Mr. Barrett said “the home is the Royal Academy of Dramatic p mo His housekeeper, Mrs. in the New York-New Jersey metbeing cleaned up.” . Art. Marie Eberhardt, 54, suffered se- ropolitan area and 117,000 were “If we were in the wrong, we A private hearing, was set fOr yore hurns when she tried to Without-telephone service. are trying to clean it up, of Jan. 4 at Marylebone Court. smother the flames. : About 100,000 telephones were course.” Miss name’ Mr. .Etson died vesterday out of service in New’ England
RD use real Residents reported that inmates is Helga Singer, ‘appeared briefly after being found hadly who have never worked before at 4 closed hearing in the cham- near his ‘Elkhart home. ere “pitching in” to get the place bers of Judge Geoffrey Raphael, Killed Near Peru i cleaned up. Young Lewis did not appear. ' ; : ' vania and Ohio again today but ; NY —r— etm. Mrs. Brown was killed on U. 8. the fall was light. Temperatures
31, near Peru, when a car op- pgyered near freezing, adding to Clothe-A- Child— erated “by her husband. William the discomfort of heatless . fam-
and thousands in the area were deprived of lights and heat. Snow fell in parts of Pennsyl-
frozen
G., 27, was hit broadside by a jes. Richardson Co. Workers. civic som in Ror "iis o on ana penne : ert McDaniel, Kalamazoo. vania were proning aside the
State police said the truck driver lost control of his vehicle on the igv highwawy, the tractor and
heavy blanket of snow on streets and highways. ;
Office Group Decides to Outfit Needy Girl trailer jack-knifedl and swerved Push Through prifes ns I ak . hri Gif into the Brown car..s wal; main roacs In Uni nstead of Evehonging Christmas itts | Police said the Michiganders clear ‘for emergency traffic but vehicles needed chains which
™ ART WRIGHT were en route. to Bloomington V The Christmas season's first “good neighbor’* showed up, "at The Where they maintain a temporary, Times Clothe-A-Child headquarters today. (Continued , on . Page 3—Col. The women office workers of Richardson Rubber Co. provided —- meme topes the funds for two of their group to take Clothe-A-Child's first needy Times Index. youngster to the stores. Realizing the increased need for Clothe- A-Child this year, the women outfitted alittle girl in-
were sold on a priority basis assigned by the civil ‘defense chief 5 at Columbus. At Pittsburgh, volunteers and regular city workers were battering. their way through drifts to clear. the city's streets. Flood situations ‘ in
About People ....;ie0000 13
, Amusements ,,..v.0 0.00. 10 western
stead of exchanging Christmas ments may be made by telephon- Comics sessansasssrrsaee 23 Pennsylvania and New England gifts in their office. ing. RI-5551 and asking for = TOSSWOrd ...vvssessnsuy 8 were easing. : An increased number of office Clothe- A-C hi 1d headquarters. FQGHOrials ..vovsedandea, 14 West Virginia National Guardsgroups and organizations have Forumr ....c...... ve 14 men and road crews freed 30 per-
Another ‘outstanding need of Clothe-A-C hild is contributions to
Clothe-A-Child | youngsters , this the fund Which Clothe-A-Child's year instead of . exchanging experienced shoppers will use to Christmas gifts for themselves. . buy outfits for the children. Con- - Accepting Appointments tributions —in any amount —. Clothe-A-Child is néw accepting should be made by check or appointments from donors ‘who money order and sent to Clothewish to take one or mote childreh A-Child, Indianapolis Times, 214." to the stores and buy clothes. The W.. Maryland St. They also may donors spehid their own money to be delivered in person to They .outfit the youngsters. nt- Times or to Clothe-A-Child: "ments to take Children. oe headquarters, 206 . W. Maryland ' stores will be made for any ay St, next Boor to The Times ‘builg- ‘World Report, Viveesssi 2 pOWer breakdowns which hamAppoint: he 2 4 | x, =. pered Beisiguration. 3) » »5 a ‘¢ » .! “ot at
Harold® H. Hartley. . 18 Hoosier Heroes .....4s00s 8 Erskine Johnson .....0.. 10 Mrs. Manners .....osoue. 24 Obituaries ssesss’ B Frederick C. Othman Sons 14: Radio and ‘Television sees 1B Ed Sovola Fred Sparks ............ 13 Sports” caieeaenanaaiins 16,17 v Joe Willams «.eventeeses 17 “Karl Wilson: sevrneadineaes 13 WOMEN'S :..isiessisnes 6 7 by. polluted water, seepage
sons marooned between Morgantown and Grafton and officials expected to reach 18 coal miners soon. at a’ minehead where ‘they were trapped by deep snows at National, W. Va. New. York City food inspectors dondemned $1.5 million ‘worth of spoiled food at processing plants and in | wholesale ' and retail stores. - About 350 inspectors’ were searching * for joodstusts .spotiey §
reported to Clothe-A-Child that
Corisiirtoarir 13
Ja
. government.
Damage was estimated,
to make A-bomb explosives. No weapons will be made on
the site, only their -explosive contents. had shattered his ‘high hopes” Aided by Committee The AEC and Dupont spent Christmas.”
four months looking for a suitable site for the new atomic works. They were assisted by a caused a crisis. five-man committee representing ’ leading U. 8. engineering firms.
Gen.
The new project will be known conference. They arrived in Tokyo soon after they received!
as the Savannah River Plant. The his orders. river bounds one edge of the’ | tract. Du Pont will
asked the United Nations what they wanted to do about it.
Korean War that would get American troops ‘home by
There was no doubt that the Chinese assault had -cipitated MacArthur summoned to his headquarters his top field commanders in Korea for an urgent Nations line in North Korea.
Lt. Gen. Walton H. Walker, start breaking commander of the U. S. 8th niscent of the series of U. 8. with-
situation and may mask even more serious Russian intentions
In a special signed communique, he said Red China in Europe.)
Delegates were excited by a special communique from Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who charged that Communist China had pre‘an entirely new war” by sending mare than 200,000. troops against the sagging United
of an early end to the
Gets Urgent Instructions The United States delegation | received urgent instructions from the State Department in Washington to press for Security Co ‘cil action today on an America
drawals early in the war.
I ground for the plants as soon as Army which was reeled back = Tye entire 24 Division had with- Sponsored resolution that would
the corps of Army engineers has
acquired title to the land for the oN the defensive under powerful drawn attacks River, arrived back 11 miles from Kujangdong pull qut of the Korean fighting.
..10 the vicinity
Chinese
It will be necessary to remove Cross Northwest Korea abdut 1500 families and re- -estab- at 8:20 p. m. ‘lish ‘them elsethere in the next Maj. Gen. 18 months:
Communist
Edward M. Almond,
Map Boundary Lines a. m. He said en. MacArthur's
Specific boundaries of the site call came as a surprise will-be announced tater-after ef Ceived-it=at-the= front: a i gineering studies are finished. The, yesterday. The Reds
general area, however, has been assaulting’. on the laid out. northwest front were moving “Communities frigide the region atong a ne 13 miles south of the include Jackson, Ellenton, Dun- point from which the United Na-
barton and Snelling. The tract is tions offensiv: started Friday
about. 20 air miles: southeast of One, and perhaps two. enemy Augusta, Ga. regiments wv.ere reported to be An area of about 25 square RMOVIng west along’ the Taedong miles a short distance southeast River, near Pukchong : of Jackson and an .area about Communists vushing west
twice as large in the center of the. threatened th> torn remnants of tract will be evacuated first. . the South Korean 2d Corps, which During the first six *moriths of Was trying frantically to organiza: the construction project, du Ponts a defense lin: along the U. S. 8th
. building force is expected to reach Army's right flank
about 8000. Call For Air Support The $260 million appropriated Officers said if the Reds sucfor the new plants is just a start ceed in driving west along their er on the H-bomb project, present line of advance. they will
‘Explosives manufactured at the threaten the main Allied supply ! Savannah River plant will be line from the former North 'Komade into bombs at secret works rean capital of Pyongvang, which \lsewhere. : feeds the Chongchon River front. Du Pont built the mammoth The ground forces called for wartime works. at Hanford, desperately needed air support, Wash., where the A-bomb explo- and Allied planes went out to sive’ plutonium is manufactured. pour bullets. and bombs on the There will be radiation hazards Communist flood. But they could at Savannah River just as there not stem the Red tide. Air obare at danford. But it was em- servers said theré were more tarphasized that protective measures gets than they could handle perfected hy .the Atomic Energy A report from 1st Corps HeadCommission have given operation quarters in Korea ‘said the U. 8 of atomic furnaces a safety rec- oq and 25th. Diyisions had been ord better,than general INAUStrY’s. ‘driven back about 10 miles by Red hammer blows on the north: ‘Uncle Will’ Pyle - west tron! Yanks Pull Back : * . 1 Is Resting Easy The: Americans were pulling back behind the northeast sector Times State Service TERRE HAUTE. Nov. 28--Wil- of the . Changchon - River hne, liam C. (Uncle Will) Pyle, 83- While rearguard units fought a
year-old father of the late Ernie desperate delaying action. remii-
- Pyle, famed Indianapolis Times war correspondent, was ‘‘comfortable” today at Union Hos-
pital. Mr. operation. but doctors. today said they ‘were trying to avoid surgery
because of his advanced age. Miss Mary Frances Bitto, his ‘Next July’ to Satisfy nurse, said he was . receiving WASHINGTON, Nov. 28 visitors: and, walked. in. the hos- Joseph H. Martin Jr., said today pital halls today. He is disturbed, have to meet until next July to
quested by Presidént Truman “Im surprised ‘hat the from a lame duck Congress.” a gredt- progressive .step when a few years ago it was decided to do away with lame duck Congresses E “I.am greatly
she said, because.‘ Aunt Mary" couldn't get to” the hospital be: ‘cause of the weather. ,
2 2. HE
New
surprised at the reactionaryism of the New Deal.’ » ‘Martin's comments pn the 19point legislative prograin outlined "by Mr. Truman came after’ a meeting of the House Republican + Policy Committee. “Martin said the - Policy Committee discussed only the excess profits tax issue and decided against taking a formal stand on it at this time. : Shans the "President's . propBals for the final month of the ‘R1st Congress, only hie request | for more defense funds $ sure of : Songressignal approval, .¢ .
LEFT
kr
a
commander of the 10th Corps in trying to hold back a Communist formally Northeast Korea, arrived at 9-15 force estimated at three divisions Reds for the first me of aggres-.
He re-
rept Yeanghyery sara
Martin Criticizes Demands
Pyle i& awaiting an eve On Lame Duck Cong ress ‘Says It Would Have to Meet ong
(UP)
Mar
| {Cutitinund on Page 8—Col.
below the
Chongchon demand that Chinese Communist and by night had moved and any other
“outside” troops
State Department, aban“wajt and see” attitude, accused the Chinese
of Won-Ni. The Elements of the division were doning its
to ehable the 2d Division.to with- sion in Korea. draw -its artillery and vehicles. “This is aggression by the “To the west; "the 25th Division: & ommunst-ivina regime - was being pushed back under the Spokesman Michael J. McDermott impact of a Communist advance said... ; } that threatened the walled city ~ Assistant Secretary of State 2 mse See Hickerson: swho handles: Informed quarters interpreted United Nations affairs, telephoned’ Gen. MacArthur's communique as the U. 8. delegation here on ina plea to the United Nations to structions of Secretary of State give him authority to handle the Dean Acheson, who went to his situation “in accordance with Washington office ahead time military necessity.” * to assess lhe latest grim<reports : from the front.
| May Cross Border To military ‘men, this meant Austin to Present Case
the right to strike back across the A delegation spokesman then Manchurian border at Communist announced that Warren R. Aus. China. tin, chief U. 8. delegate, would pin Gen. MacArthur said China al- the “aggressor” label on the ready had sent into Korea a “ma- Chinese Communists when he jor segment” of its continental SPeaks before the Security Coun armed forces with the obvious ©! intention of reinforcing * them The spokesman said, however, from the 400.000 to --500,000 re- that the United States did not serves beyond Allied reach in Plan to ask the U nited Nations to Manchuria accuse the Reds of adgression. His estimate of more than The chief American aim right 200,000. Chinese in North Korea now, it’ was indicated, was to obe was nearly 3; times greater thdn tain speedy action.on the rescue that given at the start of his ill- tion calling for a quick Chinese fated Allied northwest offensive Communist withdrawal from three days ago. Then Allied in- Korea, where the Red hordes are telligence estimated that there threatening disaster to American were 60.000 Chinese and 40,000 and attier United Nations forces, North Koreas massed before the If was plain, however. that the Allied line U. 8. ad not now have the solid B-29s Lead Attack ‘support thd&t marked the. begine © . gins Far "Eastern Air Forces Ning of the Korean War, when hurled every. plane they could the Russians, were in, the midst gt off the ground against the Of their boycott and did not show advancing = enemy. B-29 Super- up to block United Nations action fortresses-led the aerial armada. in Korea. : ; In northeast Korea, Communisi China Delegates Present a he second There were many who had "rine EEG ¢ o lu m n thrusting doubted the wisdom of Gen. MacArthur's “home - for - Christmas”
(Continued on Page. Sato 4) offensive last week when hopes, were high that negotiations for an over-all peace settlement in the Far East might be started upon the arrival of a Chinese €pmmunist delegation. The delegation, led by Gen. Wu Hsiu-chuan, arrived Friday and was present as the Security Couns cil began ts debate today,
In Indianapolis Today—
. gy Want Ad trend is to The Indianapolis Times. Many, many thousands of folks have this year placed Want Ads in The Times for the first time and they have found that they do get more results at far less cost. That is why, so far this year— THE TIMES GAINED : .OVER 1,100,000 ADS - ® To sell what you no er want, to fill a vacancy, ndable
The
President
House Republican - Leader the lame: duck Congress would dispose of all the legislation re-
to take: searilonsy “It was called
Dealers: want tin told newsmen,
Chances are godd for action on _ rent. control .and aid for Yugoslavig but there is only an outside chance for passage of ran excess profits tax. Most of Mr. Truman's other proposals, stymied when Congress adjourned .two months ago for the 1950 political campaign, will stick right “there. Southern Democratic Senators 1 were, called into a strategy Huddle to discuss House-approved bills to| grant statehood to Hawaii and! Alaska. Mr. Truman urged tion on the statehood |
nate ac18’ yi i
