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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 1

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TODAYS WEATHER NORTHERN KENTUCKY Mostly Cloudy, With Shower An Little Change In Temperature To-fey And Tonight High, 74. TV TT ENQUIRER Kentucky News On Paget 22 and 26 KGNTUCKY DITIOU Copyright, 1947, the Cincinnati Enquirer 107th YEAR NO. 200 DAILY Sntni Mondlin natter ui. ist. tht Put Olflc.

Clactanitl, OHM. Act el lit. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 26, 1947 144 Paget 7 Sections 12 CENTS IN OKMTEH CINCINNATI AND CA 111 EH TOWNS. nrrrKN cunts UWWIUK UVU IT THE CINQ MS mum THIS IS PR wrep repeal PR! 1 An Editorial Is Unfair Trial ACCURATE TOE (MBWSSSMSMBSMSMSSBBBBS Of Jessen Margin In Thriller Before 30,000 Spectators. Map Rigid Plan For Control On Grain, i Other Short Foods.

In Too Many Cases, Is Johnston's Protest. ent. Those Councils were the 1935, 1937 and 1939 bodies. Herbert S. Bigelow was the independent in two of those Councils and successfully supported a candidate in another.

Because of the four-four splits of the major groups, this single member was the balance of power. These 4-4-1 Councils were elected in the lean and hungry 1930s, when the people were dismayed and readier to adopt a new philosophy that held out bright promises of succor, Suppose that in the days ahead a restless minority should splinter off and follow a Communist Pied Piper as a minority followed Mr. Bigelow. Remember, under PR, it takes only JO per cent of the voters to send a man to Cincinnati Council. How do you think he would use his bal-ance-of-power vote? From where do you think would come his direction? Remember that the Communist line is to infiltrate, stir up unrest and chaos.

Perhaps we are painting too gloomy a picture. But you read the newspapers. You are aware of what is happening. What do you think of the future? What do you think of the chances for peace? What do you think are the chances of getting along with Russia? In the light of your own answers to (hose Twenty-Eighth ol Series pi 35 Artieles. BY BRADY BLACK Other Attacks On PR.

There have been five unsuccessful efforts to repeal PR in Toledo. Objections raised there are that PR undue prominence to small, racial and doctrinaire groups, that it is not understood and therefore suspected by the voters and that it deprives the public of the opportunity to register its opinion of the entire city administration at the polls. Wheeling complains of failure to understand the system and that it "smacks too much of foreign ideology." In Yonkers PR has been called "a vicious attempt to break down the political organizations that have been the backbone of the American system of free government." The basic reason reported ior dropping of the system in Cleveland is that the people "didn't understand it" and "seemed to prefer to elect their Councilmen according to the predominant sentiment in neighborhoods, rather than in accordance with their religious and racial backgrounds. "Ashtabula is the only American city which ever voted out PR at the polls on the simple question of PR repeal uncomplicated with the Manager Plan or other important issues presented in the same question," George H. Hallett Jr.

explained. "There have been more than a score of votes o'n proposed repeals of PR either with or without other changes and only the Cleveland and Ashtabula votes were successful. Ashtabula, first American city to adopt PR, tried it from 1915 to 1929. One reason given for abandoning PR there is that minority representatives made themselves so obnoxious. (Tomorrow: Block Vote Experience.) pstions, do you think it wise to risk a system qucs ofel relection which is based upon minority repre We don't believe it! We don't believe that 1,297,069 of New York City's 7,454,995 residents are Communists or Communist sympathizers.

We don't believe that that many free peoptt? living in the biggest city in the greatest nation in the world have embraced the doctrine that is reaching out, octopus like, from behind Russia iron curtain. Reaching out to fasten its tentacle upon free men. Yet that is what the 1945 New York City Council election indicates. Two of the 23 members elected were avowed Communists and two others were "fellow travelers." That is 17.4 per cent of the membership. that is a correct reflection of the inroads Communism is making in this nation, then the declaration of political warfare upon this country by Communists is even more serious than it looks.

We believe, rather, that what happened in New York is an indictment of the election system used. We believe with the New York Times thai Communists have infiltrated the New York Council because Proportional Representation "makes possible the election ol extremists who could not otherwise hope lor public office." We believe with Raymond Moley in the Wall Street Journal that "resourceful minorities get behind the stage and pull the strings that givci them representation which is wholly disproportionate to their legitimate Mr. Moley thought the problem was not Communism so much as it was "the introduction of bitter racial am), religious hatred into elections." He found that Communists made many separate appeals, being a "true son of the Italian-American people," to Italians; an "enemy of British policy in Palestine," to Jewish voters; a money-raiser for their church, to Negroes, and so on, in whatever fashion was best suited to divide and conquer. Whatever is true, it is a foreboding situation in the light of the head-on diplomatic struggle between the world's two giants the- United States and Russia against a backdrop of apprehension for the future. 1 is foreboding if the Communists make up 17.4 per cent of New York.

It is foreboding if, even though numerically weaker than tha't, they have found an election system which they can manipulate far beyond their trufe strength. New York, like Cincinnati, is trying to get rid of that system by public referendum this year. No Communists have been elected to Cincinnati Council, you say. Does Cincinnati have the same problem as New York, you ask? Let us look a little at history. Cincinnati has had three 4-4-1 Councils.

By that we mean four Republicans, four Charterites and one independ- Film Industry Leader Asks Congress To Stop Being "Prosecutor And Jury." Washington, Oct. 25 (UP) Eric Johnston, President of the Motion Picture Association of America, tonight urged Congress to curb the "prosecutor, judge and jury" powers of its congressional investigating committees. The movie industry Is now under investigation by the House Un-American Activities Committee for Communist Influence. Johnston is scheduled to testify as the committee opens its second week of hearings Monday. Others to be heard Monday are John Howard Lawson, mentioned In the hearings as leader of the Communists In Hollywood; Movie Writers Dalton Trumbo, Emmett Lavery and Alva H.

Bessie, and Roy E. Brewer, representative of the International Alliance of Theatrical and St. Employees and Motion Picture Operators of America. BANISHMENT CRY RAISED During the first week of Its investigation, the committee heard producers, directors, actors and writers urge Congress to outlaw the party in the United States. Several witnesses said that the Communists concentrated their efforts through the Screen Writers Guild.

Howard Rushmore, New York Journal-American editorial employee and former Communist Daily Worker staff member, said party followers among the script writers were instructed to give five minutes of Cammunist propaganda In each script. In a letter sent to Senate and House leaders tonight, Johnston wrote that congressional Investigations are necessary and Important, but "the time ha come for tho Congress, to overhaul its procedure in i committee Investigations to clarify and make secure the rights of individual ALL ON SAME COURSE. Procedure of the Un-American Activities Committee, he said, "good and bad, is the common practice of all investigating committees." "I am thoroughly aware that a congressional Investigation Is a fact-finding Inquiry and not a trial, that a committee Is neither a prosecutor or a court, that It. neither indicts nor convicts," Johnston said. "But In practice, the committee becomes prosecutor, Judge and jury, and the individual becomes the defendant," he tcld Speaker Joseph W.

Martin Senate President Ar-thur H. Vandenberg and other leaders of Congress. "With no vested right to be heard and no vested right to challenge accusations against him, the innocent citizen Is helpless," Johnston said. AT MERCY OF WITNESS. "He can be indicted and convicted in the public mind on the unchallenged say-so of a witness who may be completely sincere, but can be either misinformed or riddled with prejudice." "Without fear of reprisal, a prejudiced witness can exercise venom as well as veracity." Johnston referred to the usual committeo practice under which witnesses may be accompanied by counsel, but such attorneys are barred from making statements or cross-examining witnesses.

sentation? Minority representation as low as 10 per cent? Until PR was introduced in a few cities in this country the American conception of elections had been of one large party in office, with a similarly constituted party outside subject to go in if tha ins should let their foot slip to a degree where tho public should disapprove. To stay in, the ins had to do the will of the majority. That still is tho generally accepted system. Only 12 cities use PR. That is how President Roosevelt came into power.

The people voted a change. Tljat is how the political control of the Congress was shifted last year. The people voted a change. PR advocates that each flavor of opinion should have its own individual voice. That asks for a conglomeration of voices which must deal among themselves to express a majority opinion.

So far, in Cincinnati, Jhe fusion City Charter Committee and the Republican party, with three exceptions In 11 Councils, have been able to hold the two-party plan even under PR. But PR asks for division. And PR is most likely to bring division when the people least can afford it. Dare we risk such a system as we plunge ahead into an uncharted sea filled with the reefs of Communism? What is you opinion? The Enquirer's conviction is that PR should be repealed! Muskies Outrun, Outpass Foes Stephens Figures In Two Great Plays. BY DICK FORBKS.

Tom JesKsn, sophomore tackle from St. Paul, kicked thres extra points after touchdowns to give University of Cincinnati a 27-25 victory over an inspired Xavicr eleven in a score-packed game before 30,000 reeling fans at Nlppert Stadium yesterday, The greatest grid crowd ever to gather in the Queen City saw the underdog Musketeers play a brilliant offensive battle to completely explode UC's goal line Irfvlnclblllty that has plagued all Xavier teams in the past. Also exploded was the myth that Xuvler's greatest strength lay in its defense for the Muskies ran and passed the Bearcats dizzy throughout. As a matter of fact, both teams might just have well done without a defense In a game that was replete with scoring opportunities on which both teams capitalized. FULL OF EVERYTHING.

was a game of blocked kicks, Intercepted passes, and long touchdown tosses, and the only thing that Xavler Ucked was Roger Stephens and a place kicker. The Musketeers outrushed tha Bearcats, 150 yards to 90, and outpassed them, 170 yards to 122. They ran up 13 first downs to Cincinnati's As far as the line work Is concerned, the Bearcats were outplayed. The Blue forward wall consistently opened holes through which Johnny Oliver and Jim Liber raced tor great chunks of yardage, Stephens must take a great deal of credit for Cincinnati's victory, although tha "Rocket" made a blunder himself that eventually gave the Musketeers one of their touchdowns. ROO STEALS BALL Stephens figured In two Important pinys that really gave Cincinnati the game.

The first was Rog's theft oi ths football from ths hands of Oliver, "X'S" dlpsy-doodls halfback, Just after he had raced 16 yards through the middle of the line to the UC 20. Oliver was in the set of falling when Roger suddenly grabbed tha leather and scooted 15 yards up-field before he was downed. The play very possibly stopped another Musketeer touchdown bid. Roger's second great act came late in the fourth period. The Bearcats were tunning a fourth down on 7-yard line when O'Malley hit him with a pass.

Three Xavier men surrounded Stephens. The "Rocket" suddenly gave one of his famous "hip 'n' a twists'" and scooted across the goal line, leaving five blue-clad players lying on the ground. Yes, Roger Is qulu a football player! SCORES EARLY. Xavier gave notice with only two minutes gone that it would take some slam-bang football to subdue the Blue. Running the ball on the first play from scrimmage, Tom O'Malley fumbled and Mike Vlkertosky, center, recovered on ths UC 20.

Jim DeFranco snagged Bob Mc-Quade's on the 3-yard stripe, and two plays later Jim Liber rammed center for a touchdown. The Bearcats tallied for the first time early In the second quarter after Xavier had consistently kept them sudued in the first period. A 13-yard pass from Don McMillan to Stephens, plus another run by the "Waterloo Wonder," moved to the 43. Two plays later, Stephens raced 28 yards around left end to the Muskle 15, after which Richards punched over In three plays. Jessen kicked goal.

Forty five seconds after UC kicked off, Bill Anderson blocked a Xavier punt on the 10, with Floyd Shorts falling on it out of bounds on the 2. Sabato his left guard to score, and UC lead, 13 6. The Musketeers received a gift touchdown with two seconds to go in the first half on a queer play. UC was deep in Its own territory on Continued On Pago 37, Column 3. GOP Drafts Own Proposal Combat High Prices Outwitted, One Says.

'Washington, Oct 25 (API The government tonight blueprinted rigid Federal controls over grain and other world-shortage foods while Republicans drafted their own plan of battle against high prices. One Republican, Sen. Ralph E. Flanders, Vermont, credited President Truman with outwitting the GOP by grabbing a prime 1948 political Issue the high cost of living before Republicans awakened to Its voter and Sen. Homer Ferguson, Republican, Michigan, revealed In separate Interviews that Republican lawmakers are drafting anti-Inflation plans to match those which will be offered by Mr.

Truman to the special session of Congress opening November 17. Meanwhile, at a closed session of the 19-member Foreign Aid Committee headed by Averell Harri-man, Secretary of Commerce, It was learned that a demand for food allocations at the producer and distributor levels was made by Chester Davis, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis and Wartime Food Administrator. CONTINUED AID URGED. "White House advisers, it was reported, are working on such a plan.

By regulating the flow of wheat, corn and other foods into the hands of Industry and exporters, the administration might hope to curtail total demand and thus indirectly depress prices-while simultaneously earmarking quantities lor Europe. In the wake of Mr. Truman's broadcast plea last night for prompt and courageous action by Congress to combat Inflation and provide an estimated 000,036 program of foreign aid this winter, eame these developments. (D A nine-member House committee, fresh from Europe, declared that "continued aid should be furnished immediately." Seven of the signers of the statement. Including Chairman Dewey Short of Missouri, are Republicans.

DISTILLERS TO SHUT DOWN. (2) The Harrlman Committee, working on the long-range Marshall Plan, was reported to be arriving at the conclusion that It cannot make any appreciable net cut in the $22,400,000,000 request delivered by 16 European countries. t3 At least 95 per cent of the distilling industry-whisky makers and industrial alcohol manufacturers alike-are shutting down tonight for 60 days to conserve grain, Charles Luckman, chairman of the Citizens Food Committee announced. (4) Three-dollar wheat fell off the Board of the Chicago Grain Exchange, in further apparent response to Mr. Truman's special session proclamation and the threat of government control.

Wheat for December delivery dropped to JJ97Vi-H at the close. BUSINESS DEALERS MEET. (5) Some 90 business, labor and. government leaders including a high proportion of advertising men were invited to an "off-the-rec-ord" meeting at the White House Monday by John R. Steelman, Presidential Assistant.

The plan was said to be to swap ideas on for-ign aid. 6) The Commerce Departments national summary of business conditions reported that wholesale prices in October kept their high September levels, wheat hit a new high, and butter, corn and meats declined presumably in response to the Mr. Truman's voluntary "self-denial" campaign among consumers. (7) The President's speech was front-page news In all European countries save those in the Soviet sphere. It was hailed in foreign offices and finance ministries.

"Excellent, excellent!" said one Trench Foreign Office official. THE WEATHER: Winter ure is on iti way, Apple cidcr'i on (tinplay. Red Minority Different From Others In Nation; It's Alien, Paper Says IrEC'IAT. DISI'ATUH 10 THE X.XQmHEIt. New York, Oct.

25 The following editorial, captioned "Full Family Rights For An Enemy," appeared today in the New York World Telegram, a member of the Scripps-Howard chain of newspapers, in Its campaign against Proportional Representation. In Cincinnati, the Post, a member of this chain, 1 supporting PR. The editorial fol-lows! Between now and November 4 you're going to hear more and more glib talk from PR defenders about the Communist party being a minority just like other minorl-, ties and therefore democratically entitled to all the representation and influence it can get with the aid of PR. Don't let this false argument for a moment confuse you or disturb your democratic fair play conscience as we have said before and expect to have to say again: The Communist minority roots up utterly unlike other party minorities. It Is an anti-American alien, Moscow-serving minority bent on eventually suppressing and supplanting all other political parties in these United States.

It aims to overthrow this nation's whole present form of government and force upon the American people a Soviet patterned dictatorship utterly foreign and repugnant to American political traditions and principles. Therefore to go on saying the Communist minority must be treated exactly like other minorities is like insisting that a sinister dangerous intruder who plots to destroy your house must be treated as a member of your family. New York voters know a destructive menace when they see one; also any voting method which, however plausible in theory, in practice helps Intensify that menace which should mean an overwhelming vote for repeal of PR. STREAMLINER Derailed In Florida. Distilleries Begin Shutdown To Save Grain For Europe; AFL Workers Plan Protest New Fires Break Out On Wind-Swept Coast; Disaster Rides Maine TWO MEN DIE, tion." Previously, officials of the union have indicated they may file damage suits, request "standby pay" for displaced workers, or file unfair labor practices charges with the National Labor Relations Board on grounds of lockout.

Luckman has oftcred his service, If necessary, as a neutral agent in helping get workers reassigned to jobs In the bottling, labeling, shipping, maintenance and other departments which will continue to operate. Announcing that all distilleries of Publlrker Industries, were complying with the voluntary shutdown request, President I Gun-son of the Klnsey Distilling estimated that there was nearly four years supply in warehouses. A spokesman for the Distilled Spirits Institute, representing 60 per cent of the Industry, has stated: "There will be no shortage of liquor, we expect none, and there is no excuse for raising prices." Washington, Oct. 25 (AP) Distilleries making up more than 95 per cent of the country's alcohol capacity tonight are halting production for 60 days, it was announced today, but one distiller said it would take Americans four years to drink up the stocks on hand. Charles Luckman, Chairman of the Citizens Food Committee made the announcement.

He predicted that the other 5 per cent of the industry, from which he had not yet heard, would "Join wholeheartedly" in the shutdown to save grain for Europe. But the AFL Distillery Workers International Union, contending that 10,000 to 12,000 workers would be laid off, "urgently requested" employers to meet with union leaders In Chicago October 30. Joseph O'Neill, Union President, said the session was "for the purpose of defining the union's posi At Least 20 Passengers Hnrl, None Seriously Cars Jump Trac Year St. Augustine. St.

Augustine, Oct. 25 (AP) At least 20 persons were reported Injured today when the northbound Champion, first Miami-New York streamliner, was derailed within the city limits here. The Florida East Coast Hospital said "20 or 25 people" were given emergency treatment, most of them for superficial injuries. None was reported hurt seriously. The last 11 cars left the rails one-half mile from the station.

The Florida East Coast Railway office here said no fatalities had been reported. George Beebe, Sunday editor of the Miami Herald, a passenger, said the diner apparently left the rails first. "There was a sort of soft bumping and I knew we were off the track," Beebe declared. "There was no panic, however, and everybody left the train calmly. I Judge we were traveling about 30 or 35 miles an hour at the time." None of the cars turned over completely, but the double track was torn up for a length of a dozen cars.

All traffic on the route was halted temporarily. Three Firemen Hurt Taft Says He May "Go Along" On Limited Aid To Europe; IN THE ENQUIRER: Iowa Girl Planning To Marry War Vet Doesn't Favor Extended Plan mm at -w Cincinnati and Vicinity: Mostly In Leprosy Hospital Bar Harbor, Maine, Oct. 25 (AP) The entire state of Maine was a disaster area tonight so proclaimed by President Truman as forest fires spread new destruction in the northeastern states. Rising winds threatened the defense gains made during a calm night. The death toll mounted from 18 to 20 In the nation, and in New England property loss now stands at 327,000,000.

The situation In other states was this: Massachusetts: Fires were reported out of control in Fitchburg, Falmouth and Gloucester. New Hampshire: A 31,000,000 loss was reported In Rochester. Two fresh fires sprang up there today, and one still is spreading. New York: Fire fighters were called to two new blazes In Southeastern New York State near the Kensico Reservoir, north of White Plains. Maine counted tonight a toll of 13 dead, 6,000 homeless or displaced and 100,000 acres much of It valuable timber-land burned over.

The damage rose over the $25,000,000 mark, with 1,000 houses destroyed. Plane Tragedy Studied; Cause Remains Mystery Bryce Canyon, Utah, Oct. 25 (UP) Engineers tonight used a new DC-6 Douglas transport as a model as they attempted, with little success, to fit together the pieces of the DC-6 airliner that crashed here yesterday and brought flaming death to 52 persons. The engineers were at work in the wreckage as a Coroner and his deputies picked up the scattered bodies In baskets and put them in crates so they might be taken to a near-by Southern Utah mortuary for Idcntifica-catlon. By noon, 18 crates had been filled.

(Speed Flier Roscoe Turner said today In Indianapolis that the crash was "very likely a case of sabotage." Turner said he was "certain'' there was nothing "mechanically wrong" with the plane. (At the same time, Lumberman Lou Ohlson of Oro-vllle, said he was a passenger in another United Airlines DC-6 that, he said, made a forced landing in Salt Lake City because of a baggage compartment fire similar to that which killed the 52. UAL officials In Salt Lake City Insisted that a defective smoke warning signal caued the unscheduled stop In the Utah capital.) Investigators said they would remain at Bryce Canyon for at least 10 days. Carrvllle. Oct.

25 (AP) In 'Cleveland Blaze At Shingle Plant Flaming Taint Thrown By Blasts. Cleveland, Oct. 25 (AP) -r Two men were killed and three firemen burned seriously as a $400,000 fire punctuated by explosions of paint products swept a shingle manufacturing plant early today. Charles Bastar, 63, night watchman at the Perma Products Co. plant, was Identified as one of the victims by keys found beside his body.

William Chevln, 49, a shipping clerk, was believed to be the other dead man. His dental work was being checked by detective In an effort to establish his identity. Three firemen suffered serious hand and face burns. Witnesses said the three were playing a hose on the eastern end of the building when a 80-gallon drum exploded. The burning stain enveloped their heavy rubber coats and blazed as the screaming men ran and tossed themselves into a shallow pool of water.

Other firemen turned hoses on the three, putting out the flames before their coats were burned through. A Fire Department rescue squad rushed them to a hospital. More than 100 firemen from 15 fire companies fought the early morning blaze for three hours. of spectators ran frantically for cover as large drums oi paint and stain exploded, showering sparks and flaming liquid over the neighborhood. The Injured firemen were James Hajck, 30; Anthony Karlovic, 30, and Carl Shacha, 40.

Tage Garden News 4 Real Estate 1-4 Section Three. 'Amusements. 1-4 I Auto News 4 Radio 6 7 Travel Talk 5 Section Four. Arrangements. 1 I Art Circles 10 I Club Calendar 8 9 News Section.

Page Black 2 1 Hromfleld 6 Clem. Ads 39 Court News 8 Danny Dumm 33 Dogs 18 Editorials 6 James 6 Journey's End 3:4 Luke McLuke. 6 Markets 37-38 Maslowskl 3 News Review 28 1 cloudy, with scattered showers and 1 little change in temperature today 1 and tonight. High, 74. STATE FORECAST Ohio: Mostly cloudy and mild, with some scattered light rains Sunday.

Kentucky: Considerable cloudiness and warm, with a few scattered showers Sunday. Indiana: Increasing cloudiness Sunday, with scattered showers. Little change in temperature. Cincinnati Weather Bureau office record for October 25,, 1947: rope In a reasonable amount. But now I hear that under the permanent Marshall plan we are to give Europe $8,000,000,000 the first year." On the other aspect of the coming special congressional session, high prices, the Ohio Senator was asked from the floor about price control.

Taft replied he did not favor reinstatement of controls and that he did not think anyone else did "except the CIO." Price controls in time of peace, he said, "will not work" in this country. High prices, he asserted, primarily were due to failure of coin crops, Increased foreign exports, stimulation of wage Increases, "spreading U. S. dollars over the world," and high taxes. Taft said he understood that were to be asked of Congress to provide coal for Europe in the first year of the Marshall Plan.

Cleveland, Oct. 25 (AP) Sen. Robert A. Taft declared today he might go along with a limited aid-to-Europe plan but expressed strong doubts about any permanent multl-bllllon dollar arrangement. Picketed once again this time by six ClO-United Electrical Workers Ignoring the wishes of their regional director the Republican presidential candidate disclosed he conferred recently with President Truman on the scope of the Mar-shnll plan.

"I ssked the President," he told a capacity City Club audience, "if we were to consider both (emergency and permanent) Marshall plans at the same time, and the President told me that he would have the permanent plan ready by November 17 and hoped for quick congressional action." "I favored continued aid to Eu Cruzan Engagements Food News Glendale Notes Horse Sense Kibitzer 6 11 6 IS 33 37 Pearson rpgler Portraits Rlesel Sports 4 Authorities at the United States Leprosarium told the story today of a healthy, attractive girl who has decided to marry one of the patients, a handsome war veteran from California. Dr. Frederick A. Johansen, Medical Director of the Leprosarium, said the couple planned to live in New York, although the man was not completely cured. Johansen said New York was the only state that did not have a segregation law for persons suffering from Hansen's disease.

The girl, an Iowan, said she came to Carrvillo from the late Almee Semple McPherson's Tabernacle, where she had been a staff member. She is doing secretarial work here. Parents of the couple have consented to the marriage, Johansen said. Temp. Hum.

Prec. 59 80 11 7 Stamp News Wlnchell 7:30 a. m. 7:30 p. m.

7 7 35 10 1 67 76 Marriages Star Gazer Suzanne 1947 '48 '45 N). Section Two. Class. Ads 5-18 Fix It 4 Women's News 8 Highest temperature 73 68 81 62 Lowest temperature 68 47 47 42 Precipitation 0 .68 .04 Today Sunrise 6:59 a. m.

8unset 1:45 p. m. Moonset 3:25 a. m. WEATHEB OBSMVATIONS ON FAOI Si Comic 12 pages Pictorial Magazine 21 pages This Week (Tabloid) 31 pages.

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