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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 1

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Rhinelander, Wisconsin
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and THE MEW NORTH TMIRTY-riRST 215 RHtNELANDER, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 26, 1948 S. Earmarks $1 Billion for Farm Price Support WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 The government has out set $1 biihon to help farmers keep their prices up on this year's record harvest. This outlay, under the price program, may reach $1,750,000,000 before the 1948 crop marketing season ends, a survey showed today. Bulk of the money has been distributed as loans on storable products, particularly grains and cotton.

Whether the government gets its money back on these loans depends on future market prices. Farmers have the option of (a) paying off this debt and reclaiming their mortgaged products, or Ub) turning the products over to the government as full payment of the loan if prices do not rise above the support levels before the loans are called. And whether the government loses money on products it takes over under loans also depends on future price developments. As 'a matter of fact, the government made money on products taken over before the war. They were sold at inflated war prices.

Loans are limited largely to non-perishable production. In the case of perishable items, the government buys the surplus outright and tries to dispose of it at home and abroad. Cotton tops all products in price support outlays. The government has put out about 385 million in loans on 2,294,000 bales this year's bumper crop of about 15,150,000 bales. Potato Supports.

The potato support operations, however, have attracted widest attention. The government has bought about million bushels at a cost of about $90 million. It has spent $10 million more transporting them institutions, to schools for lunch -programs, to starch and flour mills, alcohol plants and to livestock feeders. Little if any of this outlay oh potato supports will be retired by the government. The government also has bought $6,411,000 worth of surplus dried fruits for sale to -countries receiving Marshall plan aid.

For $34,864,000 it bought 27,674,000 pounds of dried to 81 million dozen shell: whicihiitvtiflSS 175,000 pounds 'to the school lunch program. About .153,117 bushels of sweet potatoes have been bought at a cost. of; $232,745. These probably will be contributed also to the School lunch program and institutions. In the case of grains, the government offers both loans and purchase agreements.

Under the purchase agreement, the government contracts to take a fixed amount of grain off the farmers' hands at a later date if in the meantime he has not found a better market. CIO Set to Pick Slate of Officers PORTLAND, Nov. 26 The CIO, having told the world how it feels about Communists, prepared to re-elect all its officers today and put on a wild demonstration for Philip Murray. Murray, 62, silver-haired, pink- faced, now begins his ninth year as undisputed leader of the organization of 40 unions. His policies arc supported by at least nine-tenths oi the delegates to the convention that ends today.

During four stirring days of this convention, Murray departed from his peace-making tradition of past years. He rose up in public with a series of onslaughts against the leftists that will cerUu'ily echo in CIO meeting halls throughout this country and may have a considerable effect in the inuunutional la- oor movement. MacArthur to Tighten Secrecy on Executions TOKYO, Nov. 26 MacArthur made an apparent effort to lighten secrecy on the impending executions of seven Jap war lords today by ordering all news releases on the prisoners to be issued through his own public infor- ation office. This means that the actual veri.

fication ot the deaths of former Premier Hideki Tojo and six others will be issued by the general headquarters and not by the U. S. Eighth Army, which will execute them. The public information office said that it would issue a statement each morning at 10 a. Japan time (7 p.

m. CST the preceding day) stating whether the seven war leaders had been executed previously. 8 PAGES TODAY PRICE FIVE CENTS Wardens Concerned About Youthful Violators Here wardens expressed concern over the fact that many of the deer hunters arrested for game law violations so far this season have been boys between 17 and 21 years of age. Four of the 10 hunters fined in county court here today were in that age range, and a fifth was 23 years old. Wardens said they were alarmed because it indicated many youths are inclined to unlawful hunting and may became frequent violators in the future.

William O. VanErman, 21, Covert, charged with hunting without a non-resident license and using the license and tag of a Wisconsin person, was fined $50 and costs by Judge H. F. Steele. The fine range is-from $10 to $100, but Weather for Wisconsin: Partly cloudy and colder tonight, Saturday cloudy with light snow north and light rain southwest portion.

Bbteelanrfer Weather: A maximum temperature of 33 degress was recorded here yesterday with a minimum of 25. Last night's low was 30. The reading was 33 at 8 o'clock this morning, 33 at 10 and 33 at noon. The prevailing wind is from the southwest. There has been .12 iach precipitation in the past 24 hours.

Weaker One Maximum, 18; minimum. no procjpi- Lost Hunter Is Reported Found A McNaughton resident, Fritz Ottinger, reported lost since late yesterday, found his way out to a road late this morning, it was reported to the sheriff's office at noon. (First reports that the man was missing came to the sherriff's office at mid-morning from McNaughton. While wardens wee organizing a searching party here, word was received that Ottinger had found his way out of the woods. Details of the case were not learned here today, but it was reported that Ottinger failed to return from a hunting expedition yesterday and was lost overnight in the McNaughton teritory.

Business Losing 'Fear' of Truman NEW YORK, Nov. 26 who crawled into their holes after the election are beginning to stick their heads out and sniff the economic-political wind. Maybe things aren't going to be as tough as their first dismay led them to fear. Various public characters are seeking by Taking "these vdices together, both those in business and those in government, and adding up their thoughts, their points seem to be: 1. President Truman isn't going to be as hard on business as Some of his die-hard critics say, and probably not much more hard than economic and international circumstances would have forced Dewey to be, had the results been different.

2. And the President may not be able to put all of his ideas into effect anyway, for practical political reasons. So, the boys are taking heart again, and more and more of them seem to agree that the American free enterprise system isn't doomed yet, no matter what some alarmists said on Nov. 3. Even the stock market, always skittish, seems to have got over its first fine frenzy of fear, although it is inclined to take a bearish view of business conditions for 1949.

Along some lines, however, business men seem to have resigned themselves to the inevitable continuance of administration practices they had hoped to see the end of, had Dewey made the grade. For example, they appear more willing now to give in to the government request for voluntary allocations of scarce materials and products. Hunter Finds Body Of Missing Man BARABOO, Nov. 2'' 1 The body of Carl Wetzel, 76, of North Freedom, missing since Sept. 8, was found by a deer hunter yesterday.

Dist. Atty. R. J. Kasiska said that Wetzel's body was found by John Gaetzke, North Freedom, in a woods.

Wetzel's family had maintained a constant search for him and employed a posse of 50 men to comb the area at one time. Kasiska said he was investigating the death. the court assessed the $50 fine because VanErman had attempted to avoid paying the $50 for a nonresident license. Door Dailey, 42, Monico, whose license was being used by Van- Erman, vas fined $15 and costs for another person to use his licenses urtd Oihers Geiuffftes. Others iMAd were: Kenneth Bowman, 18, r.iterprise, and Donald Bowman, n9, Route 1, Rhinelander, $10 for Bvvlng a loadad rifle in their car; Mchie Fle.t»'.terstein, 29, and Williatf both of Harshaw, SM Steve -V'irtz, 23, and August tfiilnekc, TO, both of Milwaukee, each fbr having loaded or uniAsed rifles in their car; LaVern A.

ArnoUi 18, Star Route 2, for having a loadedV gun his car; and Ernest Kunda, 30, RfVtie 2, Rhinelander, $50 forfi'OJsessioii of a spike horn buck. 3 The BowrrU'ris'were yesterday in the town by Warden Harley MjcKeague of Rhinelancjiv. Judge said a $10 fine suffice for two inasmuch! --s they had only gun in the cai Warden by Carl Herman, special wn- Jen from the Rhinelander station, arrested VanErman and Dailey in the town of Konico on Nov. 23. In entering hie guilty plea, Dailey told the court he had advised VanEr- man against attempting to use his hunting, license.

"I told him that any warden would know our descriptions didn't match, but he took 'ny license anyway," Dailey said. McKeague and Herman also arrested Arnott and Kunda, the former on Nov. 24 and the latter on Nov. 25. Arnott, apprehended in the town of Newbold, was fined $15 instead of the usual $10 for having a loaded gun in a car because Dist.

Atty. Donald C. O'Melia reported the youth had killed a doe last year but had escaped punishment because his father took the blame and punishment. Kunda Gets 'Break'. After learning that Kunda's wife is ill and he has seven small children, Judge Steele ordered $25 of the $50 fine remitted upon payment of the remaining $25 and costs.

The offense took place near Kunda's home in the town of Sugar Camp. A similar charge against Forest Turcotte, 41, 684- West Davenport street, was dismissed when it was asked Turcotte to help him-drag the spike buck out of the woods after it' had been shot. Turcotte was with another party of hunters and happened to reach the -scene at the wrong time, Dist. Atty. O'Melia said.

Warden Arthur Kmidtson of Woodruff, who arrested Flecker- stein, Harkner; Wirtz and Hehneke, said the four men were found in a car with three loaded guns. The offense took place in the town of Lake Tomahawk on Nov. 24. Deer Hunt Toll Rises to Nine By the Associated Press A Sank county hunter was wounded fatally ninth death of Wisconsin's 1948 Vteer hunting season which is seven days old. Raymond Uebersetzig, 35, Waunakee, was mistaken for a deer in woods in the town of Merrimac, Sauk county.

He died before a doctor could be summoned. Arnold Boneske, 43, Athens, (Marathon county) was struck in the leg yesterday when his hunting party opened fire ou a buck. Boneske fell to the ground but managed' to get in three more shots at the deer. One was successful. Then he and the buck were carried tut of the woods.

In another hunting accident yesterday, Rudy Zeincrt, 35, Wittenberg, was hit in the Jog by a stray bullet. Greek Premier Has Two Heart Attacks ATHENS, Nov. 26 Themistoklcs Sophoulis, 88, stricken with two heart attacks in two days, passed a comfortable night, but his doctors said today it would take 36 hours before it could be determined whether he will recover. $15 Billion Ceiling for Defense Is Aim, Solon Tells Military WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 Sen.

Tydings ip-MdJ served notice on the armed services today that the new Congress will aim al a $15 billion ceiling on defense costs next year. "We must keep America strong and the world at peace," he said, "but do that with the idea that the taxpayer also must survive. We will cut out every bit of military expense that iar not fully justified." Tydings, due to become chairman of the Senate armed services committee when the Democrats take over Congress Jan. 3, will be a ranking member of the appropriations committee, which has a hold on government pursestrings. "It is my hope," he said, "that for purely armed services at home and abroad we will make expenditures less aad certainly no greater than the present year." viinvAt doftast! ranges around $15 billion but next year, Tydings said, "we may be able to cut it to.

14Va, 14 or 12. Vve'll have to be a little tough and make them prove their cases." Tydings said the armed services committee plans to call in Secretary of State Marshall and Secretary of Defense Forrestal at the start of the next Congress for a full report on world conditions. "We want to be brought up to date on the hazards to peace both in the east and the west. Then we want to know how they affect the peace of our own nation," he said. He said the armed services group also will take a fresh look at the draft law to see how it is meeting military manpower needs.

Tydings said he plans to reintroduce legislation to put the air force on a full 70-group combat basis. The House approved such a plan session but the Senate later Record High Budget Requests Handed to Gov. Rennebohm MADISON, Nov. 26 requests totalling $121,317,105 a new high for the state of been presented to Gov, Rennebohm in recent hearings. The total, an unofficial estimate, does not include requests of approximately $44 million for proposed construction, or $48 million in proposed state aids during the 1949-51 biennium.

The governor and the legislature's finance committee will study the requests together with estimated revenue from taxes. Gov. Rennebohm has until Feb. 1 to prepare his budget message to the legislature. Two years ago the late Gov.

Goodland received requests aggregating $97,768,602. These were pared down to $91,579,011. The requests by departments includes: University of Wisconsin aeronautics Commission national guard public welfare vocational education department of taxation historical society $635,205. Teachers' colleges in' stitute of technology conservation department department of agriculture Stout Institute commission on human rights Grand Army home at King, $1,386,624. Board of health public instruction motor 'vehicle department public service commission radio council free library commission industrial commission budgets and accounts $334,725.

Water pollution committee bureau of purchases state audit bureau of engineering bureau of personnel veterans' affairs $5,000,000 for postwar rehabilitation fund; annuity and investment board insurance department $424,670. Savings and loan department deep commission bar commissioners circuit courts crime laboratory law library secretary of state supreme court veterans' housing authority athletic commission securities, board of 'tax appeals land' 'planning department' $117,895. Revisor statutes legislative reference library $128,752: employment relations board attorney general $464,280, and state treasurer $1,070,857. Jail Break in Chicago Foiled CHICAGO, Nov. 26 (ff) One prisoner was killed and eight others surrendered after they sawed their way out of the jail last night and were trapped in the jail yard.

Two jail guards thwarted the daring attempt of the prisoners to climb over the 22-foot wall after escaping from their first floor cells. The nine, awaiting transfer to state prisons, fled from the jail shortly after 7 p. m. after they and about 1,000 other prisoners had been sent to their cells. Warden Frank G.

Sain said they sawed through four-foot metal panels that are part of the cell walls. They reached a gallery and then broke an unbarred window and fled to the yard. Sheriff Elmer Michael Walsh today suspended three guards at the jail for "failure to count heads throughout the day, which would have ascertained that three men were missing." Sain said Nicholas Fcrri, £4, a guard stationed in the yard, spotted the nine men immediately. When they ignored his command to halt he fired one shot over their heads. The shot attracted the attention of William Riley, 41, a second guard in the yard.

The warden said one of the prisoners had started to climb to the top of the wall and when Riley approached he dropped to the ground and the nine prisoners, one of whom was carrying a rope fashioned from two torn bedsheets, advanced toward the guards. Riley fired one shotgun charge which hit and killed the column leader, Andrew Evans, 28, Of New Orleans, an ex-convict with a police record dating to 1937. The other eight prisoners offered no resistance. Riley and Ferri returned them to their cells where officers questioned them to learn where they had obtained the saw. Cold Weather Not Curbing State Polio MADISON, Nov.

26 (ff) Recent dips in temperature have had little affect on incidence of polio, the state board of health said today. Eleven more cases have been reported. In former years, incidence of the disease dropped off sharply when cold weather arrived in the state. Two of the new cases were reported in Mondoe county. Oihers were in Burnett, Door, LaFayette, Marinette, Monroe, Milwaukee, Racine, Sheboygan and Washburn.

There were 246 cases in Wiscon- at this timi- last year, nnd 1,200 in Officers Seeking two Fugitives in Vicinity of Tripoli I.MERRILL, NOV. Lincoln county authorities, who Wednesday captured two youths Who escaped recently from the Wisconsin School for Boys at Waukesha, today said two others still were being sought in this area. Frank Richey said- the fdur boys had been living in a sfianty in the woods near Tripoli for several days and had been stealing food from farmers in the neighborhood. They also had stolen a'car. In the stolen car were scribbled the names of notorious gangsters of the Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, Baby Face Nelson and, Al Capone.

The youths held were 16 and 18 years old. Sheriff Rickey said they walked into the arms of County Traffic Officer Clarence Baldwin who had been trailing them Jn the woods. A farmer saw the four boys in. the car near his house and thought they were burglars. He notified the sheriff's office.

A check of the license number established that the automobile had been stolen. One of the two boys still missing is an Indian and thoroughly familiar with the heavily wooded area around Tripoli. 'Baffling' Road Killing Solved U. N. Bill Listing Rights For World Peoples Nearing Final Form Substitute for Taft-Hartley Law Mapped by Democrats WASHINGTON, Nov.

26 administration is preparing a substitute for the Taft-Hartley labor law with built-in compromises to meet possible objections from Congress, industry or labor. This, it was learned today, is the plan being followed by a five-man lawyer team assigned to draft the new law: 1. Write labor legislation which can be sent to Congress with Mr. Truman's blessing, and 2. Write alternatives for several sections of their draft, as possible substitutes along what may be a bumpy legislative route.

They plan to file the gist of the suggested new law with President Truman's aides by Exactly what it will contain is a carefully guarded secret, but it was reported to call for reinstatement of most of the old Wagner act, plus some modified Taft-Hartley provisions. Secretary of Labor charge of backing up Mr. Truman's pledge to replace the Taft-Hartley act with a "fair" labor said he expects to seek advice from industry and labor. The drafters' work probably will be changed, in some respects at least, on the basis of these talks, with further changes likely in Congress. That is why alternate drafts of the most controversial parts of the suggested legislation are being drawn up.

Right now the drafters expect Taft-Hartley repeal iind a substitute to be offered to Congress in a single bill. BELLAIRE, Nov. 26 With three men under arrest, including a father and son, a solution claimed today to the highway- pursuit killing of Gerald Lee, 25. The once baffling case turned out to have one of the simplest of explanations. -State Police Capt.

Earl Hathaway Brown street. said that Theodore McNeil, 19, Grand Rapids factory worker here for deer hunting, admitted firing the fatal shot from his father's car but only with intent to "scare them." young man said, according to Hathaway, that the shooting followed a pursuit of Lee's light truck after the two vehicles had bumped traf fte jSeve.ral snbts'wefe firetf wHa Lee was killed south 'of here early Wednesday by a rifle shot in the back. He was driving with Mrs. Goldie Long, 22, his "date" on an earlier tour of taverns. Mrs.

Long, who is estranged from her husband, escaped injury. For a time police worked on a theory that Lee -might have been shot in revenge for his alleged rape of a girl, 14, but this proved groundless. Lee was awaiting trial on the Grab Your Guns, Folks, Bucks Are Coming tp Town "Grab your gun, Walt, it's coming down the street." That was the call this morning on Brown street as a big nine-point buck came running down the middle of King street to the intersection with rape charge. Held with McNeil on an open homicide charge were his father, Charles McNeil, 41, of Bellaire, and Rex Loveless, 19, of Grand Rapids. and climbed the curb in front of the Schlitz tavern.

Glancing in the tavern window, the animal appar- en ti saw his reflection in the glass Congress Unlikely To Ad Against 60 On Communist Issue WASHINGTON, Nov. 2G Congress apparently will drop contempt action against some 60 people who refused to say whether they are or ever were Communists. There, are three reasons: 1. The justice department a passed the word, informally that it's best to lay off until its own cases against Communist party leaders are out of the way. 2.

The House committees and un-American couldn't get their members together before the end citations. 3. House legal experts doubt that contempt action begun in the Pacts May End Maritime Strikes SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 26 Terms for settling waterfront strikes on east and west coasts today cleared the decks for early resumption of normal shipping. Negotiations in the 86-day CIO longshore strike on the Pacific coast announced settlement terms last night.

Earlier in the day negotiators agreed on peace in the 17- day strike of AFL longshoremen on the Atlantic coast. HUH 1IILIJ Itrii ui £itu Both tentative agreements must lhe hearings aroulld 40 perao ns be ratified by the union member- lo answcr lnc big question ships before 515 strike-bound ships i and made one leap for the "other deer." Shattered glass flew and the buck took a seat on the sidewalk after his likeness had disappeared. Standing nearby on the sidewalk was Esther Kurlinski, Route 2, who was quite astounded by the whole thing and started "to take cover." From the tavern the "citified" creature marched down the sidewalk toward the center of town until he again caught a glimpse of himself, this time in one of the huge plate glass windows of the Hildebrand Furniture Store. By this time he had quite a following. Grabbed by.

Men. Before he 9t; Russell Rhinelander, and Ed Traeder, who has a barber shop next door, With Olson holding the hind legs and -Traeder nabbing and clinging on to the antlers, Clel Bowman, also of Rhinelander, "knifed" the already wounded animal in the throat. And life expired for the animal just in front of an appropriate place, the Hildebrand Furniture Store, in the basement of which is a morgue. A large crowd gathered around the fallen beast. Norman Ehlke took a series of pictures, one or Historic Paper Calls for End of All Discrimination PARIS, Nov.

26 wotMd bill of rights, proclaming freedom and equality for everyone, approached its final form today. Delegates of the 58 United Nations completed the last of 28 draft articles of a declaration of human rights. Only the preamble and "a possible new article or two remain to be acted on ueiore the historic document moves from the 58-nation social committee to the general assembly for final approval here this year. The declaration has been in preparation more than two years. It provides an unprecedented meeting place for the thoughts and ideas of dozens of different peoples, religions and governments.

It combines principles of the constitutions ol Russia, the U. England and France. Civilizations and cultures of the Orient and the west find expression in the lists of rights. It is nailed by U. N.

officials as "one of the great landmarks of civilization," though it will have only moral autohrity, at least at first. It proclaims a "common standard of achievement for all peoples of all nations" and calls on "every organ of society" to recognize and observe the rights. The declaration calls for an end to discrimination based on "race, color, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, property or other status, birth or national or social origin." It would prohibit slavery and the slave trade and ban torture. Equal in dntp ri ghts in mar- Marriage may be contracted "only with free and full consent of the intending spouses," the measure says. Freedom of religion is proclaimed, with the right of everyone to change his religion or belief.

Freedom of opinion and expression are spelled out-with the right- to "see, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers." Rights of children born out oi wedlock to the same social protection as those born in marriage are more with Bowman posed beside proclaimed. The document calls for the animal and more when the fallen beast was loaded into a conservation truck. Warden Harley McKeague has stated that the buck will be sold. The Daily News heard first re- to act on contempt of the "city-bound" buck to act on contempt about dock tnis morning when Carl Sandvick called the office and said that the beast had present Congress could be carried over to the new one. Their curbstone opinion is that any contempt involved was against the 80th Congress, but that the 81st couldn't cite anybody except for contempt against itself.

The labor committee was considering contempt action against union spokesmen who were witnesses at investigations to determine the extent of any Red infiltration into their organizations. Dur- put to sea. On the Pacific coast four other unions are involved in the strike, but the longshore terms are considered the key to peace. The four other unions scheduled meetings with management today. Final settlement would return 92,000 to maritime jobs and many thousands more to work in other industries halted or curtailed by the strike, IU would release some $30 lion of Marshall plan cargo in eastern docks and restore business I running into the millions of i The Pacific tieup, second longest in history, has cost by estimate of the Pacific American shipowners about $344 million in trade at the rate of $4 million a day.

Here's Won-Tad's Promise to You do," says LU' Wan-Tad. "I solemnly promise to take your message to more people at less cost, than you can get the job done in any other way. I won't charge you for the days on which your ad does not run. I will word your ad clearly. I will be always at your service." "If you want me call 1000." they were 1 or ever had been Communists.

About a score more; declined to come out of the swamp back of the Citrran School. Enroute to the downtown district, the animal went through several yards, including Sig Eckman's back yard. Eckman, who has a new rifle and hasn't seen a buck yet while hunting, didn't witness the strange sight. Thence the beast proceeded through the yard of Dr, J. C.

Mctternich and then down King street until he reached the King-Brown intersection and a surprised group of shoppers. Examination has shown that the animal had been wounded previous to his downtown "excursion" by a hunter who had shot it through the el suinu muii: 4U answer the same question at last, mouth and throush both hind legs just above the hoofs. No Draft Deferment For Chiropractors WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 W'l Selective service today refused lo defer chiropractic students from summer's spy hearings of the un- American activities committee. Most of the witnesses claimed that answering the question would tend to incriminate them and that would be unconstitutional.

Here's how contempt actions are handled: If an investigating subcommittee recommends such action against a witness because of refusal to answer its questions, then the full committee must vote to bring a contempt citation before the House. If tfie House approves, the case is turned over to a U. S. attorney for prosecution. So whether the new Congress can act on the cases or not, the full committees would have to move first.

And there is some doubt that they could. The labor committee hearings were conducted by Reps. Kersten (R-Wis.) and Max Schwabe (R- Mo.l. They investigated the CIO electrical workers union, the fur and leather workers union, and local retail, wholesale and department store unions in New York City. JCersten and Schwabe are out of was and there are no signs that the labor committee could muster a quorum for a meeting before Jan.

3. ANNOUNCEMENT Beginning Nov. 29, 1948, the price of The Rhinelandur Daily News delivered by carrier tq homes in Rhinelander will be increased 5 cents per week. Part of the increase will go to your carrier salesman. Like most other things, tfte costs of printing good newspapers (print paper, wages, news services, features, etc.) have been continuously inci'tasieg, which this the draft.

National Chiropractic Association and the National Capital Chiropractic Society had protested to Director General Lewis B. Hershey after a special selective service "healing arts" committee recommended- deferring medical, veterinary, osteopathic and the dental chiro- free, universal and compulsory edu-. cation, along with "equal access to higher education on the basis of merit." Other articles outline legal rights and equalities, the rights of labor, social security and the protection of constitutions. CHINA TROOPS GIRD FOR MAJOR BLOW By the Associated Press Chinese Communists fighting easi of Suchow shifted suddenly southward today, closer to the Yangtze river in the crucial battle north of Nanking. Nationalist troops in the Peiping- Tientsin area of north China prepared far a major action which.may break any time.

Gen. Fu Tso-Yi, supreme Chinese commander in the north, said confidently his troops are ready and willing to fight the Reds "at any time and any place." Dr. Sun Fo, son of Yat- Sen, who founded the Chinese republic, became premier of the shaken land, replacing Wong Wen-Hao. Sim is a bitter enemy of Russia and has the close support of rightists in the legislative Yuan, of which he was president. Oscar who enjoyed U.

S. citizenship for many years and then i enounced it to jojn the Communist Polish government, accused the U. S. in the U. N.

assembly today of "an economic cold war against the eastern European countries," which Russia controls. He was attacking the European recovery program, which is costing U. S. taxpayers $6 billion this year. Russia opposes the ERP because Communism thrives on disorder.

The U. S. Britain and France were disclosed in Washington to be to publish new 1,000 page volumes about Russia and Spain, dealing among other things with the Hitler-Stalin deal to divide Poland. The U. S.

opposed in the U. N. a British proposal that might take the desert of southern Palestine from Israel. The general assembly voted regret that South Africa refused to place southwt-st Africa, which she has ruled since 1920, under I' N. trusteeship.

students, but omitted pr-actors. "This flagrant discrimination has resulted from the economic jealousy of organized medicine," the society asserted in a resolution last week. Selective service offered this answer in letters to the chiropractors: 1. Since the armed forces needs doctors badly, medical students are being deferred to maintain a supply. 2.

The armed forces are not looking for chiropractors therefore there is no special reason for deferring chiropractic students. Another deferment problem was dropped on Hershey's desk today by the National Society of Profes- The Hopesfcir 00 WPV- sional Engineers, which asked "uoi-! that shg bad suffered form national regulations" ou stu- er damage" in howliujf deut of leav-1 £uk'. No fuorthti ward W3f the dedsiou up to local (voai Iktj shjy. Continues For British Ship NEW YORK. Nov.

guard ami Air Force plants continued a uear-bopeless search today for tha British star and her crew 37..

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