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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 1

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Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

REPUBLIC Weather mm mpm wy mm THTF IZOMAJKEPU BLIC Safety Tip Prevent accidents, instead of repenting having caused one. Partly cloudy today and tomorrow ith M-attered showers thi pvenmt; little change in temperature. THE STATE'S GREATEST9 NEWSPAPER Phoenix, Arizona, Tuesday, July 8, 1947 War, No. 50 21 Pages WW a) jnL Ends Strike Pact vy East Indians i Study Arizona Highways Puzzle Of 'Saucers Continues To Grou; CHICAGO. June 7 (UP) The fantasy of the "flying many of which were attributed to pranksters.

A Montana pilot said his airplane had knocked a mystery disk out i i in niiurii nilot had admitted makinp lin thei i that none of its residents had make air searches for the missiles. Scienti.sts and psychiatrists scoffed at "eyewitness" reports. And pranksteis added to the confusion. Residents in all hut a few states had reported having "seen" the discs zooming across the sky. Some "eyewitnesses" reported discs landing (in a mountain region and it would take several days to get to them) and taking off (a disk got away before anyone could get to it).

AT BOZE.MAN, Vernon Baird, pilot of a commercial pho tographic plane, said he was flying a jigninmg r-jn vei Western Montana yesterday, tak- mg piciuies 101 a Kuvnmnnn agency when ne sign ten a nisc. Baird said he was flying about 360 miles an hour at 32.400 feet when an object, which he corn- 'pared to a yo-yo 100 yards behind appeared about his ship. I HAl Willi VV fT-s: mm Jl A Tx 'V Young Engineers Like Weather Here j-ie saio me yo-yo got caugiu. in, earner, ine ministry sain six na-my propwash and the thing camej tions had accepted formally, and apart like a clamshell." eight others were expected to do so But, in Los Angeles. Archer said: soon.

The six are Belgium, Italv. Baird had admitted the story was! Portugal and Turkey, pure fiction. Acceptances "in principle" have "THREE OR KOI'R of us received unofficially from LOCAL VALLEY weather made three voung East Indian engi- neers feel more at home here heen in fheir count rv-wide four yesterday than any place they have to study American highway construe- niethods, but the trio also hopes to find someplace I National Contract M. ttniAVri nr A WASHINGTON. 7 (AP The I nitf-d Mine Wor kers 20o-man policy committee tonight ratified "i m.s of a new rational wage con-tr'- and voter) to et in to wor H'fr the pact is officially signed omorrow.

KP ceremonies will take place the union headquaiters tomor-niH in a. a spokesman for tr I'nited Mine Workers told after a 90-minute meeting p' the policy committee. Tr ue of the word "national" er.r ra' was explained by the as meaning that this is a nationwide contract and that before any operator in any of the count ry can expect Union rr.Tnners to work his mines, he must accept the terms of the ra'ional con'raot. THE CONTRACT was executed Kv ter.resentatives of the northern s'cel company operators and the union spokesman said the terms of tni contract could he hy any ot her association or ind: 'dijal operators ho wished 10 T.ep? 1 S-'uthern producers weie scheduled 'o meet at 10 a m. fomoiTow 0 over the Northern-steel con rar.

Sou hern and midwest operators tic-re reported ready to come to turn's The far weMern represen-taruf-; left town last week after tre 'o; industrialists of the steel and northern commercial interests harj negotiated a tentative agree-TTfr ws'h John Leu is' union They left town without telling ra! their position would be. THE I'MW spokesman said that policy committee session Le was frequently applauded for what he called this rroc' beneficial of all miners' contracts. The spokesman added: "The policy committee by unan-irvioii. vote has aooroved the na- rmal bituminous wace contract! and authorized its execution. The j-rprpsentatKes of the union and rpera'-r will meet at lf a m-j'.

5. tr. officially sign the agree- kf-r, tKc ronttart is officially m-neis employed in mines e-d hv the contract will be rii.ed On Paee 2. Col. 4 Gunman Slain In Bus Battle NrW YORK.

July 7 INS i A was shot to death and a ei.an wa wounded seriously ios.y a gun name lougnr anoarn a New York City bus crammed 4i' passengers. A't'-Augh 10 shots were fited in he riref. deadly duel, no us our bed zi. was fought in a crosstown bus at the of 1 '-o Aver.tie of 'the Amer-( ras si-fid the screams and shout r' Ten and women. They leaped r- rover a mad scene of con-i '-n and terror.

According to police. Joseph N. Jt na naez, of Tampa, leaped aboard the bu when it stopped at: t-e corner. He allegedly was flee-l from a hoidup at a ioan r.iel Murphy. 20 vears followed Fernandez and t-e gunirian pushed his way to the: ba of the tius where he tried to U-e a oman passenger as a He to Murphy.

"I'll get tefore ynu gel me!" rnander finally dropped with sa. v.ourd near the heart. Miir-i pty wa taken to Roosevelt Hos-j two wounds in the right' Fo', re said they found on Fer-; rar.de' bony a "$10,000 diamond 'ng and several other valuables' taken from the office of the Pru- Collateral Corporation. Goal i i i I I I i i contrast to their native India before thev return, Poring over blueprints and engineering books in the office of Five Cents ire II cl Cli To a a By At REEll Hi-public's Washington Ritreati 1.1:17 National I'rcss Building WASHINGTON. July 7 campaign lo win support for Arizona's plea that the -Dowries le-oltitioti go to the sena'e public lands comiiiiitee instead the committee on he judiciary appeared tonight to have won considerable support.

Strength mi both sides of the. paily aisle was building up to -u-tain the motion by Carl I lav den. Arizona senator, to override the decision of Arthur Vandenberg, Republican. Michigan, senate presi dent, to send the resolution to the judiciary committee. Anzonjans 'fear that if it is so touted, it slay there indefinitely, and resiiir.

in long delay for the Central Arizona reclamation project. ALL DAV TODAY Senators Hav-den and Ernest W. Mi-Far land spent eveiv available minute seeking siippoit for their po-ijion. Tiny go to the floor for tie debate now limed fur Tu'v-iday at 4 Washington that thev have made a strong fight, regardless of the out-! come. Senator Hayden today addi esserj ja letter to all members of the sf setting forth the legal reasons the resolution helongs in the public lands committee.

This morning, bold senator-, ap-I pea red before the public lanos committee and stated the Arizona case. TUESDAY, just before the debate begins. Senator McFar-land will place on senator's rie.sk a compilation recorded istalemonts hii-h lend to how ithat. senate rules to lh eontrarv not it list a nd mg. the puhlir Uins 'committee already ha jurisdiction over the McCa 1 1 an-Dow ney resolution.

Today. Hugh Butler, Nebraska Republican srnatm chairman of the public lands cumin it tf-e. toll The Arizona Republic lha! he i piopared to support Senator It.iv-den's appeal on the floor if es-sary. "This icsohiiion clearly belongs in my rommitlee." Senator F.utier said. "It involves gency wa'er rights The Mrl'ai an-t ou ni-v lesoluljon.

oner turned over to t'e judicial committee, ought he laved indefinitely. I shall fav--r its consideration bv the committee instead" HIS STATE colleague. Senator Kenneth Wherry, who the Republican whip, said thai perhaps, the resolution should (Continued On Page 2. Col. 1' Haifa Plague Causes Fear HAIFA.

Palestine. Juiy 7- INS Foutteen residents of the Palestine port city of Haifa were with dread bubonic plague today and authorities took de.perate measures to forestall an epidem.i The port district was declared an infected area. An official announcement said: "HEALTH OK the pubhc in the Haifa district is senou-dy threatened by a threat or existence of he plague Public health squads cic ordered to make house-to-house visit to clean, ventilate and disinfect infected premises and isolate persons suspected ot having been exposed. Incoming and outgoing be quarantined if noreai and all oilier steps considered necessary will be taken in all of Palestine or any part of it. MIMCIPAL workers began a fine-comb cleanup of slum quai-ters.

A reward of $1 was offered for every rat brought into sanitary offices Serums and DDT in huge quantities were lushed to Haifa. A particularly careful search was cn cried out in the old Aran quarter known as Tin- Town and many shanty stiuetures were put to the 1orrh. Two fatalities already have been reported. A nine-year-old Arao girl was one of the victims. Water Short At William WILLIAMS.

Julv 7-AYifh the Dog Town reservoir water supply now exhausted, the town of Williams is being supplied by the Saginaw reservoir but soon may have to begin di awing on some gallons stoicd in the Old eserv oi i Rationing mnv become necessary unless heavy rains fail soon. The storage in the Old reservoir would be exhausted in about four months at the present rate of consumption. Rigid water economy mav he necessary to assure the town of water this winter, Williams cares for water needs not only of its own residents but 'supplies stockmen and farmers, ithe Valle airport and the commu-inity of Parks. Survey of a proposed Frank Adams homestead dam to further develop the Bill Williams mountain drainage area now ls being I considered at i Arizona highway will be the ohief interest of three Eiifct Indian engineers during their week in the Mute a part of a nation-wide tour to study road-building methods, they are not mi swing any "point of interest" either. The Grand Cnyon and other scenic spots are on the itinerary of.

left to right, M. S. Bhatia. New Delhi: P. B.

Sarkar, Calcutta; W. R. I'. Wallace, assistant engineer of the Phoenix office of the Public Roads Administration who is their guide; and M. S.

Bisht of Lucknow. (Republic Staff Photo.) New Plea Made For Ref ug WASHINGTON. July 7 (Up) President Truman asked enngies.s again today for prompt action to OOO.OOd anti-Communist refugees from Eastern Europe who are now concentrated in the Western Allied zones of Germany, Austria and Italy. In a message lo the house and senate, Mr. Truman asked early enactment of egisla-! tion to make effective this government's pledge of support to the United Nations' International Organization.

CONGRESS ALREADY has sanctioned American participation in the IRO. but the President pointed out that special legislation to increase the existing immigration quotas for Eastern Kuiope is needed before anything practical can be done. "Our plain duty requires that we join with other nations in solving this tragic problem." lie said, reminding the legislators' that other countries in Western Europe and ltin-America already have thrown open their doors to; large numbers of displaced per-i sons. A judiciary committee is holding hearings on a bill to admit 400.000 refugees over a four-; year period, but it is doubted that measure will be reported out at this session. Mr.

Truman emphasized that he was not asking for a general revision of the immigration laws hut merely a change in the pres-j ent "wholly inadequate" entry, quotas for Eastern Those admitted under this proposal, he said, still would have to meet the igid requirements of the exist ine: law He did not set any specific number to be admitted, but he (Continued On Page 2. Col. 2) i KIATIIIi'U' I Iff.fTlft vosnmislon nf nenrfm settlement of jtnp inir applied also to the Cali- fornia central valley. United States to sue the basin states to settle water problems. HE SAID THAT such a suit should be completed within a ear if promptly prosecuted.

Present for the hearing today was a delegation of Arizonians headed by Hugo B. Farmer, state senator, of Yuma county, and Charles Carzon. attorney, repre- j. if ssrt A I i i i Czechs a rk l.9 1 6 I i By JOSEPH K. DVNAN PARIS, July 7- API Czechoslovakia was reported tonight lo have decided.

despite Russia's stand, on acceptance of a British-French invitation to attend the Paris conference which opens Saturday fin the Marshall aid-Europe plan. An Associated Press dispatch from Prague quoted semi-official circles as saying the decision had been reached at a closed session of the Czech government. WHILE. OTHER countries in thel Soviet, phere of influence delayed any immediate decision, sources here hailed the Prague report as a possible indication that "Eastern," as well as "Western." European would be present at the mations meeting, designed to start the Marshall plan rolling. The French foreign ministry said tonight it had decided to wait until replies had been received from all 22 invited nations, before mak- ing any further announcements of acceptances.

Holland, Luxembourg, Au Denmark. Iceland Norway Swed iiM.iiim.sirv i i mi tfn h.7 said Holland definitely had ac- r-entorf m.oeI. nm-crn SIA KLrlnrJ) last week. at. the Three-Power conference here 1 to participate in a British-French plan to implement the Marshall nrnpiam.

However P.ritish nnrt I French sources said they still had not given up hope that the Soviets would attend Saturday's conference. These hopes appeared slim, however, in view of a new Soviet attack against Britain and France, delivered in Ceneva today by Valerian Zorin, Russia delegate to the United Nations-sponsored Economic Commission for Europe. Zorin told a tense session of the conference that Britain and France planned to dominate the economy of Europe "behind the back of the Soviet t'nion." He added that Russia could not participate in what he called "an erroneous and wrong policy quite evidently aimed at interference in the internal affairs of European countries." REPORTS FROM various European capitals indicated that the Marshall plan had posed a political dilemma, particularly for those governments which are communist-dominated. This was the picture: Poland A foreign ministry spokesman said his government (Continued On Page 2, Col. 3) Highway Fall Proves Fatal GEORGE BOND, fifi-year-old Phoenician, died Sundav afternoon in Florence General Hospital of in juries received when he fell from a truck near Superior July 4.

it was learned here yesterday. It was the 113th fatality resulting from motor vehicle accidents in Arizona January 1. Graveside services are scheduled at 10 a. m. tomorrow in Greenwood Memorial Park.

Mr. Bond, who made his home with a daughter, Mrs. Leo Lawson, 1013 West Washington street, was visiting a friend near Superior at. the time of the accident. Born October 6.

1880, in Camden. Ihe Phoenician w-as preceded in death by his wife in 1936, and a son in 1944. In addition to Mrs. Lawson, he is survived by another daughter. 1947 This Date 1946 114 124 Mrs.

Earvin Hamilton, Morenct; and five grandchildren, G. L. Lawson, Phoenix: Billie Jean. Jack, Mickey and Richard Hamilton of Morenci. CRASH VICTIM DIES MESA.

July 7 John William Halton, 73 years old, died today in a Mesa hospital of injuries suffered when struck by an automobile June 29 on Apache Trail east of Mesa. It was the 114th fatality resulting from motor vehicle accidents in Arizona since January 1. Mr. Halton was a retired rancher, and lived in the Mesa area 11 vears. He was a native of Fort Worth, Tex.

He is survived by his wife. Nellie May Halton. of Mesa; two daughters, Mrs. Flossie J. Abston and Mrs.

Mabel Hooley; one son, Sgt. Neeley Halton. stationed in Alaska and now en route to Mesa, and four grandchildren. Funeral services are pending. Republic and Gazette Average net paid circulation for June, 1947: Morning and Evening 97,430 I to off as the first riav of their week's ohserva- r.

Bhatia, New Delhi, wearing the the Sikhs; P. B. Sarkar, Calcutta, and M. S. Bisht, Lucknow.

Although two had on suit on suit coats. and all declared the weather was no annoyance to them as they are used to even more humidity, the engineers said thev would be wearing shorts and shirts at their homes, and advocated a change of fashion for Phoenix men. "WE WERE AI-'RAID to put on our shorts here, as we were told only the girls wear them," Bisht laughed. Materials used for a rapidly- expanding highway development program in India, are same as those on this nations the engineers agteed, but; the means of processing are dif-i feient and it is these phases of' highway-building on which the, visitors are taking notes and gathering information. Before they entrain for los Angeles at Grand Canyon a week, from today, the three will he con-j ducted around valley road-build-1 jing projects, win onserve ine Black Canyon highway under! construction, and will study the (Continued On Page 2, Col.

2 Spain 'Votes' Franco's Law MADRID. July 7-(AP)-The Spanish government announced tonight that the proposed Franco "law of succession" had been approved by a better than 12 to 1 majority in Sunday's referendum. The announcement, said provisional returns showed 12,628.983 votes for the measure, 501 against, 295, 208 blank ballots and 25,669 nullified votes. An earlier tabulation by the Associated Press of returns from out of 32,656 voting places gave 7.822.917 for the measure, 462,656 against, and 241,598 blank. The opposition was prohibited from campaigning against the measure, which confirms Generalissimo Francisco as chief of state for life and empowers him to name a king or regent to succeed him.

Oi llirr r. lmi 1 1 1 x- i Iho slnrv a hoax. Archer said the story. Kansas a dry state boasted reported seeing "flying saucers." ARM 1'llflTS stood ready to Airborne Objects Watched TWO SII.VKRV halls flashed across the Salt River valley north of Phoenix at o'clock yester-j day afternoon and were nr.H wore waff hed for 25 to 30 seconds by a score or more persons in upper floors of the Heard Building. All the witnesses were agreed on the main points: FIRST ONE "ball" was sighted, then the other.

At first glance the objects were thought to be balloons until the extremely high speed of west-east flight was noticed. Both objects appeared to he identical in size, were estimated to be at 5.000 feet altitude, and to he "about twice as large as an airplane." THE OBJECTS were flying on two levels until near the end of the valley passage when the lower "ball" climbed sharply to the level of the upper. The estimated distance travers- ed while they were under observa-i tion. and the endurance of the flight, indicated a speed well over miles an hour. SEVERAL, OBSERVERS noted that at the time of the flight the air was so still that smoke columns rose straight, to high altitudes, and flags hung limp against their staffs, there was no notice-i able air movement for an hour, when a rain storm began to approach the city from the northeast.

The Ar izona Republic during the afternoon received a number of calls from persons who said they saw the "silvery None re-j ported the "flying saucers" which have been reported from so many parts of the country. Phoenix Gets Touch O' Rain IT RAINED yesterday in Phoenix. Although last night's precipitation was limited to the merest fraction of an inch -and hardly dampened the parched earth it was joyfully received by thousands of Phoenicians. It was the first measurable rain in the city since May 10. when 1he weather bureau recorded .30 of an inch.

Yesterday's official total was reported at .04 of an inch by E. L. Felton, local weather bureau chief. The fall began about 5:30 p. m.

and lasted a little more than a half hour. The weather station at Sky Har-hor Airport recorded only a trace of rain, while at the co-operative station near Alhamhra the precipitation totaled .20 of an inch. Some other sections of the state also reported light falls, with Cochise Airport leading with a trifle less than one inch. Flagstaff received .17 of an inch, while Pres-cott was favored with approximately the same amount as at Phoenix. Unofficial reports noted that the rainfall north of the city was 'slightly heavier.

submission to the next legislative session. Mr. Taylor said the hoard decider! immediately to employ a superintendent, believing that "we should start out with someone who knows all the problems and needs of a suitable institution of this type." Mclnt ire's duties at the outsel will be to collaborate with the architect, to be selected later, in mapping plans for the long-needed institution, and to survey the state, locating all its mentally deficient children and winning their confidence and that of their parents. TAYI.OR definitely announced that the ehildrens' home when built will be located on the 80-arre tract of land near Mesa pur- 1 i I Public Roads Administration on the ll0n tour of w.pre M. S.

beard and a bright green turban of House Vote On Tax Cuts Today Seen WASHINGTON, July 7 (AIM Republican leaders today rushed their new four billion dollar tax-cut bill into position for a vote in the house tomorrow on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. Forestalling any move to -hane the hill, the GOP-dominaled rules committee barred last -minute amendments from Ihe floor before the show-down tally. Many Democrats conceded that the hili. sponsored by Harold Knut-son. Republican, Minnesota, chairman of the house ways and means committee, will pass its first test by more than the two-thirds majority needed to override a presidential veto.

HOWEVER, the question of mustering two-thirds in the senate is still in doubt. Action there is expected late this week. Fighting to the end, a number of Democrats launched a bold, if futile, drive to substitute a bill that would remove 10.000.0(H) low-income persons from the tax rolls completely and apply to all states the community property method of lav computation. This system, which materially reduces taxes in some cases by splitting a family's income between husband and wife, is now legal in 12 states. J.

Vaughan Gary. Democrat. Virginia offered the substitute meas ure in the face of the rules com Continued On Page 2, Col. 3) Berry Guilty Plea Awaited ST. JOHNS.

July 7 -(UP) A. J. Berry, one of the principal figures in the Northern Arizona gambling cases, is expected to plead guilty to a charge of conspiring to violate the gambling laws which was filed against him today. Named with Berry, owner of the Log Cabin Trading Post on U. S.

Highway 66, was Ed Moore, alleged operator of a three-card monte game in the trading post in which tourists admittedly were fleeced. BERRV HAS turned state's evidence and testified at the preliminary heating of John L. Sullivan, attorney general, Harry T. Hendricks and Jack P. Christy that Moore paid him 10 per cent, of the winnings in the tnree-carn monie game and that his share ran from $90 to $150 a day.

Marion V. Gibbons. Apache coun ty attorney, and Dodd L. Greer snerial prosecutor, were exnected Aro iru to dismiss a bribery charge pre- i i i sitting around the hangar gassing. anH we inst marie it un." Baird i was quoted as saying.

"Somebody must have heard it: and spread the word. 1 ve been so. busy on the phone since it got out that I haven't been able to do any flying all day." Eleven military planes searched: the Pacific Northwest yesterday without finding any trace of the! flying discs and there was growing belief that a concentrated air 'search would prove the saucers to be optical illusions or the work of practical jokesters magnified by 4roused imaginations. ANOTHER SIGtiESTION. advanced by a Chicago scientist who declined use of his name, was that a few persons have seen something in the sky a cloud, or the reflec tion of an air plane.

I he rest of reports, he said, probably are ithe product of the imagination. If jso, hundreds of usually normal per-Isons across the nation were imagining things. At Grafton. the Rev. Joseph IBrasku.

a Catholic priest, kept in rertory for investigation hy the Federal Bureau of Investigation, a jmetal disc 18 inches in diameter 'with "gadgets and wires" around a hole in the center. He said it Clashed into his yard yesterday with a mild explosion. He admitted that the disc bore the lettering "steel, high carbon 100 per cent steel" and that it looked exactly like a circular saw, including the teeth. He said he might have been the subject of a practical joke but. that! he could nol explain how the disc got into his vard or whv he heard a "mild explosion." The FBI at Mil- waukee indicated that it was not interested.

Pain Cause Is Removed DOUGLAS. July 7 (AP-Strange things have been going on in the head of Ben Brown for the past, three years. Brown went to a Douglas physician Saturday with complaints of severe pain in his jaw and of difficulty in opening and closing his mouth. THE DOCTOR looked at the roof of the patients mouth and saw strange looking metallic object. The object was removed and Brown learned that for more than three years he had been harboring in his head a knife blade three inches long.

BROWN, a porter at Badge! Motor Company here, was stabbed in the forehead in March, 1944. The wound was dressed but not X-rayed and nobody suspected until last Saturday what had happened to the blade. The physicians who removed the blade explained that the knife had entered the side of the victim's forehead, lodging in the skull but not injuring the brain. The object had then gradually "worked its way" down to the roof of the mouth. Vote Of Favor Given Ramadier PARIS, July 7 (AP The national council of the French Socialist party gave a vote of confidence today to the coalition caihinet of Paul Ramadier, Socialist premier, and approved the principle of the Marshall aid-Europe plan.

The motion of confidence was carried 2,576 to 2.058, with 127 abstaining. However, the party threatened to withdraw from the government unless immediate -tens were taken to halt inflation. The steps demanded were reduction of the budget through reorganization of a I i 1 rat ive agencies, tax reform, and cuts of military credits; issuance of reconstruction loan; reduction of the number of banknotes in circulation: and harmonization between price, and salaries. Murdoch. Counters California Attac Head Of Children's Colony Is Chosen By CLAIBORNE MfKOLLS THE ARIZONA Children's Colony Board yesterday announced By FRANCIS W.

Republic' Washington Bureau 1397 National Press Building WASHINGTON. July 7 Hearings on reauthorization of the Gila Project before the house of representatives public lands subcommittee on irrigation today were delayed at least until Thursday, due to pressure of other business. During today's sessions, California witnesses before the committee sought repeatedly to have John R. Murdock, Arizona attorney general assigned choose between the two pressing 1( board. selection of J.

Thomas Mclntire to serve as superintendent of states long-sought home for mentally deficient children. Mr. Mclntire. now ihe second ranking officer in charge of the South bury. training school for mentally deficient chil- (Arizona reclamation projects.

"If you can only get. one. "Ill do nothing of Ihe sort, Mutdock retorted. viously filed against Berry. Hems Poulson.

congressman of i Vn'ter rights in the basin In was alleged to have handed a.fornia. saiid. "tell ns, which you. Antonio M. deputy sheriff a sealed envelope pi efer.

the Gila Pioject or the1Npw MtxU.0 congressman he containing $50 in an effort to buy. Central Arizona particularly anxious to see ere. scheijuleri to take over. les in Arizona September L. Taylor, chairman of noard.

who has juM returned a iSit to the Southhury described Mclntire as one S' r.f outstanding men in his f.eV rf wr-rk in the nation. KEEL that we jr very 'o get hifii." Mr. Taylor "The only reason we have r-eer cces.sful obtaining his ff is terested in re a new that ne is highly ln-the challenge of start-in i i from -rat ch." The lPfh legislature appropriated funds to pay the superintendent salary for two years and tn engape an architect to -rrk vntn Mclntire in preparing for a children rolony POI LSON HAZARDED a guess Shaw urged immediate passage that "Arizona can have only onejof a resolution now offered in both u. iiii i hoo itn'i houses of congress, authorizing the protection for the gambling! racket. A CASE charging Sullivan.

Hendricks and Christy with conspiracy is set for August 11 in Safford. Charges of attempted bribery against Sullivan and Hendricks will be tried after the conspiracy case is over. Another case pending in Apache county charges Robert W. Cassidy, Highway 66 lodge operator, with conspiracy in placing slot machines in roadside places on a percentage basis. The Cassidy cae is set for enough water for both." Murdock replied with statistics Annually 10,500.000 acre feet of water flows through the mouth of the Colorado river into the gulf, he showed.

The Mexican treaty requires but 1.500.000. California witnesses today included Raymond Mathew, chief engineer of the California Colorado Evening and Sunday 14 in St. Johns. I River Board, and Arvin B. the state of Arizona.

tOnvtinued On Page 2Col- 1), pteRM fct 9Ay fori.

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