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Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 1

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Albuquerque, New Mexico
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Good Morning nm Mealra Rancher Arm Wanting Rain-Making an a Par-aa-lt-Ralna llaala. Hi'd IJk tn Bur a Half-lnrh Khnweg Hurt er Twice a Meek for the Front Vard. T'would Bava Dragging tha How. Today's Smile CHICAGO. Or.

a rXS Mra. Victoria Vamxn Katrlifi, 34. former rirrua aerlalist. tola divorce. Judge today her husband, Fred.

82, went ta a wrestling match on their wedding night, she was granted divoree. ey 1 XT Volome 290 ISt I Car Number 1 Katered aa aecond class matter. Albuquarqua, N. Poat Offica under act of Congreaa 18'l Wednesday Morning. October 10, 1951 Published Every Mrnin 20 Pages in Two Sections Price 7c Amdersoh's Flam perms Dollar Ji rinmam Presideet I (T C- (111 lv For Million Library Reds Propose Senator's Letter Says 'Tax-Savings' Could Raise Fund Only Big Taxpayers Contacted; Site Would Be Grandview, Missouri Here's Text Of Anderson Fund Letter Here is the complete text of the controversial letter sent out by U.

S. Sen. Clinton P. Anderson to solicit funds for the Harry S. Truman Library.

It was released by the senator Tuesday night: i fi'f- n-S aa Power Line Electrocutes Tree Pruner Billy G. Ellison, 21, was electro-cuted by a 3200-volt power line Tuesday afternoon as he pruned trees in the 800 block on Gabal-don Road. "An employe of the Asplundh Tree Expert Ellison's pruning shears evidently came, in contact Finnegan Short On Paying Taxes During U. S. Job Former Internal Revenue Collector Testifies Before House Group WASHINGTON, Oct.

9 GP) James P. Finnegan told a COMMISSIONERS TAKE OFFICE: City Commissioners Clyde Tingley (right) and Dan O'Bannon are sworn in by Police Judge Findley Morrow at Tuesday night's commission. All three were elected in the Oct. 2 municipal election. A few minutes after the swearing in ceremony, Tingley was elected chairman of the commission, regaining the dominant role in city government he had lost five and a half years ago.

Morrow's new term doesn't begin until April. (Kew photo) More Cease-Fire Parleys at Once Enemy Radio Reveals Note to Ridgway Asking for Discussions TOKYO, Wednesday, Oct. 10 UF) The Communist high command today proposed an immediate resumption of the Korean cease-fire talks at the Red-held village of Panmunjom. The Red leaders suggested the question they raised of extending the neutral zone to include advance Allied truce headquarters TT rn riintnn P. An.

I zm addressing this letter to Tingley Takes Chair you in the hope that you will be' f4 interested in the program of the person Tuesday ni-ht found with the cable, polic said A fire department resuscitator! House inquiry committee tO- was used for about 20 minutes and day that his own income tax Of City ommission County Approves Drivein Theater, Hospital Contract The County Commission Tuesday approved issuance of an occupation license Jor a drivein the a physician administered an adrenalin injection, but efforts to revive the man failed. payments fell $2444 short during a three-year period of his job as federal tax collector at St. Ellison, who came here five i Louis, Harry S. Truman library. You himself the center of a nation- will find enclosed a booklet en- i titled 'The Harry S.

Truman Li-je controversy Oyer a let- This reveals the plan to ter he Wrote Seeking dona-erect a special archives building ti for Harry S. Truman Lion the Truman farm at Grand- view, Mo. You will see that a brary and wnich Ped out proper corporation ha3 been form-j much of the amount contributed ed under the laws of the state of could be deducted from taxes. Missouri, that the president has! President Truman himself disagreed to donate a site on the! frnm ih ram. In Harmony Session Longr-time Citv Commissioner Clyde Tinsrlev took be reserved for dis- years ago from Safford, lived at 215 South Fourteenth.

He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Edna Ellison, 906 West Central. French-Fitzgerald Mortuary is in charge of funeral arrangements. Chinese Troops, ater in Armijo, three liquor li-j majority leadership of the Commission without incident fusio" by At.1.e delegations later. The Allies have to objected Tuesday night.

Commissioner Don Wilson made the nomination and Commissioner Tony Gilbert seconded it. On the roll call, cense transfers, and a revised contract for construction of the County-Indian Hospital. The drive-in, to be near the intersection of Arenal and Isleta Deficiency assessments for that amount were levied against him by the internal revenue office in Chicago, he said, for 1947-48-49 when he was making more than $30,000 a year practicing law while holding the post of collector. Finnegan, who is under grand jury as well as congressional investigation, said earlier he had tried to quit the collector's job three times to devote all his time to law, but that President Truman and others had talked him out of it. Supplies Tax Figures He supplied income tax figures Commissioner Dan O'Bannon, such an extension of the zone.

The Reds, broadcasting from Peiping the text of their note to the supreme Allied commander in advance of its actual delivery, said they had instructed liaison officers to meet Allied officers at 10 a. m. to discuss resumption of full dress Continued on Page Two N. M. Ranchers Want New Terms On Rainmaking elected on the same ticket with: Roads, was approved after Marlin! xinlev a week ago, and Com-' Shifted to East, Check UN Drive Butler, the owner, and his at Batsel Proposal Commission Pass missioner Paul Batrel voted "yes.

torney, John timms jr. toia xne; Tingley, himself, also voted commission the theater was being aml Dr0mDtlv eot a round paign and said he would have stopped the letter from being sent had he known about it. The proposal called for a million-dollar library to be built on the Truman farm at Grand-view, Mo. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch set off the controversy when it printed excerpt3 from the letter, which it said was furnished it by a "prominent and indignant Washington resident." That newspaper also obtained the statement from Truman denying knowledge of the letter.

9, Defends Letter Senator Anderson defended the switched from a prior location of appiause from some 150 per- Yl r7M the road from St. Anne-son3 who had crowded into the Ull I If Iff HO i lULd across conierences Dy the major delegates. Two Allied liaison officers departed from Munsan at 8:45 a. m. today in a motor convoy for Panmunjom to meet the Reds.

Signed by Premier Heading the party was Lt. Col. Church. Commission meeting room in City in TT.ll rrt i The commission last month Thpn xrrmt th rhair A move by minority Commis- Paul Batsel to make the that showed his law work brought By the Associated Press him $36,783 gross in 1947, $30,867 i One of five New Mexico firms, in 1948 and $37,406 in 1949. which paid hard cash for increas- Finnegan's tax return for 1949 ed rainfall last summer and got showed deductions of $4631 foren-in return one of the dryest years tertainment, $3093 for transporta- on record, will seek to put rain-tion and $3212 for hotel bills.

making on a "pay as it rains" Rep. Curtis (R-Neb.) com- basis, mented: "To a country lawyer likel Southeastern New Mexico farm- structed County Clerk Ramonaand congratulations from Batsel: jsioner Montoya to refuse a license for Once the preliminaries were out City Commission a hearing board; Norman B. Edwards, acting in the the theater at its first location of the way the Commission waded! for any PrPsed city firings Qfipgrj J. Kinney? U. S.

EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Wednesday, Oct. 10 (JP) Chinese Reds, shifted suddenly to the East-Central front, today joined North Koreans in battling Allied forces near the bitterly contested Heartbreak Ridge area. On Heartbreak Ridge, French and American troops of the U. S. 23rd Regiment battered at the last Communist stone wall positions on the north end of that, after petitions signed by 468 resi-, i face at Tuesdays meeting.

The message, addressed to Gen. dents of the area opposing it were accumulated over the 'past three1 Newly-elected Chairman Clyde presented by the pastor of St. weeks, including action on five Tingley drew resounding applause prise." ate the retainer fee from their "lCi U1U" Fineean. who served from lfl44 rnntrart with Wator Resources taming to tax saving by contnbu- paving districts. tions were taken from a proposal Anne I unu lctugmei uuui jjJCLmiuia until last April, told the committee Development Corp.

of Denver Matthew B. Ridgway, supreme Allied commander, was signed by North Korean Premier Kim il Sung and Gen. Peng Teh-Huai, leader of the Chinese Bed army in Korea. It formally replied to Ridgway's Honor to Batsel "I wish I when he tcld Eatsel that he wasn't particularly inter They want to fix a minimum rain An MPmffnt rt cnrnrJca nrant of Beardsley Ruml, head of th. Business Committee of the National Planning Organization (a fall figure, somewhat below the average for the region, and pay Traffic Survey The new site Is about 550 feet from the nearest residences and 500 feet from the church, Simms ested in the $10,000 collector's salary and spent only three or four hours a day on the job.

He said into the opening procedure whenlyeu'd j3rouSht th when you Commissioner lOon Wilson, pro-1 were first elecled." with-posed, immediately following i drew the motion after Commis- private organization which i3 not saddls-shaped terrain. The Allies said. ihe was making more money prac- only for any. rainfall in excess ol-VVyAll Uv, ifect corporations would do better Tingley's election as Chairman, si0ner Don Wilson uoheld the Heartbreak assault entered its Heine law message of Oct. 8 agreeing to the Red oirer to meet in the Panmlifl-jom area.

Panmunjom is six miles east of Kaesong, where the first County Engmeer Lawrence v. inai we cnoose a. permanent aci Talked with Truman fourth week. Hitchcock was instructed to sur- m- chairman." He nominated Paurprese system of appeal avauame Dr. Irving P.

Krick, head of the Denver firm, has been paid or He tried first to quit in 1949, Just west of Heartbreak, Chi- vey traiiic ai isieia au fli Batsel for the nost. to aiscnargea employes to make donations to a university or research organization than to spend so much money for advertising deductible as a business expense and hence also tax ex- Roads to determine if a tratnc. The vote again was' unanimous" Firings Rumored nee Red reinforcements shiiteo. 11C iu, anu went ni iuj wm ictnve unuci iuu-fmm nthor cotorc: intf telephone the "Little White House" I tracts with five New Mexico jit was the first time in a nu-nbert Batsel- had said: "It's been light will oe neeueu. Liauor license transfers in TT Wacf 1T1 a nhoro A Tr Tt-ii- cfmimc ixrHifVi Vi i rl him to in- "CIS Too-- V.of qU- hard- the area to bolster the i rmnroH thprf'll ho vsrinus and Tn 1 lirii- i-onitiu-inrt I r- -i 1 1- t- t-nni nil it inn nipt i -i unnrnvpd for Moises Santillanes, I ciVi tv.

v.ui sundry firings I don believe The last time, he said, was in i The five contracts blanketed the nh.e "'nntThVt October, 1950, but he was ad- state's 121,666 square miles. n1ed, out. th.at fruitless truce talks were held. Want Zone Extended The Red leaders however were insistent that the first full-scale armistice talks deal with the question of extending the Kaesong neutral area to a rectangle running from Kaesong on into Allied territory around Munsan, 12 miles southeast. This would include the Red checkpoint at Alameda, from a cafe to the oldhad been selected "for that )oh mm Omen 1 i Omer itnac.

1 move mat xne city pressed North Koreans. The surprising Red maneuver, involving the probable transfer of a major Chinese unit, checked an Allied advance. manager. discnargin an vised to remain in office after Precipitation neGearch 111 5 $100 emplove, report to the City Com- 6 i.Utnuai uu.vu,M. 01 ley uuae Kancn; anu num were making a bid ior co for 10.6 inches of rain ri Vj tary Matthew Connelly and "also $75,000 7m Tslpta Road, to: yf Undecisive Fight wV'Rar mp address t.

give full particulars that such Borneo Bar, same aaares. Batsel said after the meetine krin Allied officers still remain con ly S20, "and all the rest President of the United which fell from March, 1950, to liV" States." iSeptember, 1951. I of The He explained: "They weren't in Not Discouraeed 'f avJ, Art inn was deferred on awara- "vc inp ar; inn ra ac rnm nlPto 1 i fident their men can clear the; 1 money would have gone nurrhase of I Deiore tne ity commisbion. 1 1 c-t Darlc nff PeartVireaV a Horn jsuiunse auu xie ieii noiiorea Dy es anyway. Wilson said he thought "the less position to aopoint a successor! Southeastern farmers and ranch the nomination Communist assembly area.

Butlat Khe time and" asked me stay era will pay the largest lump of rence W. Hammer and Thomas E. Hushes told the two bidders huge sum S75.00U. Thev are Quote From President "Piuml pointed out that It Is wiser for corporations to give contributions to a university or the City Commission has to do with monkeying with employes, the better off the city is going to be. The city manager is director Morrow Gives Oath Police Judge Findley H.

Morrow administered the oath to. Tingley Finnegan was a witness before poking a contract which will per- present that a meeting would be inconclusive fighting raged all Ridgway was willing to consider the highway linking the three points as a free-from-attack zone but not to make it a full neutral area. The Red leaders followed their usual custom of assailing Ridgway in. the opening paragraphs of their reply. They reiterated charges that the UN leader deliberately held up the arranged next weeK wnen and (TBannnn aftor fittr flarh- ization (and I dav TuSdaV on eartbrk and a Ways and Means subcom- -itthem to pay for Ue rainfall nTerch organiz on two hills of Kim II Sung Ridge "ee nyestigating reports of ney receive ra.her.

than a flat aVsure hwould hav of personnel I have added the irrr presented them with in his judgment. The merit sys- iuct in the "west nmauu uicsuiaimes iii ieu- certificates of their election. i tem hss machinerv for aDceal amine the bids. Harry S. Truman Library had he thought about it) than to spend TTrocV.lv srriuoH plpmpnts of a 13X Collection OltlCeS.

Ol 1.111 M-i 1 II II I III I If I vMuhMMa li.M The ceremony was brief and it Wilson Isn't Worried a L.i.; of th? ninn v-us i was accompanied by flashing; Wilson said substuting the Com into his handling of tL St liui! the ranche disco -ney on adtng or pub-office. Intelliuence a-ents for the a.nd bIame rick for J.etr Submitting Dias xuesaay were Sr truce talks by creating inci- ck for that machinery (the the the Shoup Voting Machine Cc and from ths scectatQrs lus about 100: personnel board) might "break! dent: Automatic Voting Machine Corp. 1 ii the Automatic "Voting Machine Corp Red army corps yielded part of another hill to the U. S. 38th Regiment.

The 23d, Ninth and 38th all are regiments of the U.S. Second 'Internal Revenue Bureau have ine, A.ac,K ra.m- Continued on Fane Two told the House group that Finne- ainiau in tne area wasn't even in gan or his family reecived third of normal, but Moore Truman has a "great personal in-f ef t.1 who were a nartv to the con. terest." and added: "I know that party jjcrisuiis wuu luuiun nuwu imuiQown xne wnoie rein eiiiexii. anu the room and were forced to standi merit system." in the halls. Following the interchange, Com-1 Only hitch in the proceedings missioner Tony Gilbert sad he Lows insurance firm Cntured Chinese told soldiers ICC Denies Move To Stop Casa the President would be happy to have George Allen, as treasurer, drop in at the White House and wanted to cast a vote of if the CC i tbey had been shifted I which the agents said sptecialized Vz2 scc.or from defenses westiP bur ners wnh pcopl? who we.e in City Man- tract knew the: were paying for aa ihs ocher groups and their to Avrick: or.n Lidro Ranga Improvement much confidence ager Wells.

show him your contribution." ot the r.oTi.i-'oum uKnan wver. Korssm Hurt The shift of Chinese Reds to The St. Louis newspaper which uouoi; nn tne coiiscior oi-fice. Finnegan said the money was for legal fess. He said that when he took the job, starting at $7500 Com.

xhis is th? larcest tinftin sti "I'm not worried about Charlie Wells," Wilson said. "He'll be all right. He's served the city a long time." SANTA FE, Oct. 9 UP) A par-: eastern Korea meant two things to Continued on Pane Ten State Expected To Go After Fees For Pipe Lines ip the controversy, report-quotation from the presi-vas transmitted to it by 'ecretary Joseph Short: contract in the siai.e covering 000 square miles in northwestern den New Mexico. Ihe croun is head-'Pre tial victory for New Mexico in I Allied officers on that front: its fight for lower freight rates! 1.

The unending JN hill as a year he was assured by Robert iiomicgau, men iiiieinax levenue PH hv HnuiarH TVT mr nf FBI Holds Man For Transporting Gaming Devices Federal agents arrested a 47-year-old Arizona man here Tuesday on a federal complaint charging interstate transportation of gambling devices. He was identified as Charles LeRoy Scott. Coolidge, by Norman H. McCabe, Federal Bureau of Investigation agent in charge here. was reported today by the State saults have at least parily ground Corporation Commission idown the rebuilt North Korean know anything about the tter," the President was commissioner and later Demo- querque and will have to pay only cratic national chairman, that it the minimum of $17,500 to Krick.

would be all right to continue IS' Smith ccArn Wafni" Labor Federation Chooses Nine quotya, "and if I had knowV I would -have Tipnt I'nrn Thia liooHnH stnnnoH if'w Jneina con tti; b'v-ft ff- mtm Commissioner Dan Sedillo said army, the Inte-state Commerce Corn-) 2. T're bat Is, which was al-mission has overruled motions to read--' to us is probably going to dismiss two class rate cases in- get volving the West. U. S. Eighth Army estimates One of 'ie cases involves class! placed Red losses at 80,000 men rates within the 11 western since Aug.

23 when the Kaesong xuuiCgi iLiuaiiy axa resign oy s. U. Browni.eid oi Deming. Sees FoIiUog-Move April 4 of this year. imust pay $45,000 lor operations' Anderson commented: "Th From The Journal's Santa Fe Bureau SANTA FE, Oct.

9 The state probably will actively seek to collect $1,500,000 in license fees from gas and oil pipe line firms after the Corporation Commission has Nine Albuquerqueans have been; ut and th Communists. This is equal to elected officers of the New Mex-: XT fk. in A complaint authorized by U. S. 1 1 XT 1 A Atty.

Everett Grantham was filed wo Dig leiepnone rate over u-million acres. President is afraid it might be in- Sought Snow Pack terpreted a an attempt tor solicit A northeastern group haded by money on the basis of his name, rancher Albert Mitchell is paying; It that at all. The letter $25,000 for work over 125 square went to only 50 or 100 persons miles. who are good friends of the Presi- Moisture Production Corp. His name wouldn't mean a group of southern a.cvv Iwe.rko one way or another far vailsy v.lio a.e pay.

ng" 33 influencing their contributions." CIO.OjD an in the The senator termed criticism of in porthern mountains, the letter "merely a poor attemDt Sandia Chest Total Tops Last Year's Two-day-old Community Chest solicitations among Sandia ico State Federation of Labor. em statgs afe trying tQ get the Allied losses during the same James A. hnce, iiosvieii was ICC tQ adopt a uniform scale of period have not been announced, re-elected president and b. rates within and from and to the In the past, however. Rsd losses Roberts of Albuquerque was on the same mile.for-mile usually wovked out about five to elected secretary at the orgamza-; basis a3 tne scale wnich thg ICC times as many as the Allies, tions annual convention at do- r- innn ib.

bv agents before U. S. Commis- ca. me journal learnea roaay. sioner Owen J.

Mowrey. It charg-L amst the Id firms has ed Scott on or about Sept. 16 bogged down lately. No official ac-transported from Eads, to110" has en taken in the matter Raton eight machines the 16 months since the attor-as gambling devices under fed-ney. general filed a complaint eral law against the firms.

McCabe said Scott admitted the! Corporation Commissioner Dan lntprtat transportation of theiSedillo said the commission i. tV.CH JA UC1 CU 1U1 ti I COO IC1 11 fa l- lliu; iwZ lJ A. 1000 Allied casualties. 3500 employes had collected two-thirds of the nation. i.iujt tuiiuatu vaucu lur a 10 pui noinics into a tninff in io mesaay evening already conus ior aoove average periorm- which no politics has been in Shortest Mileage In another case, the SCC today po.6o daeau ol last, year total.

ance. ieeaiess to say, mere were tended VIS. Albuquerqueans named to vice-president posts are W. G. Wiley, carpenters union; Gustava Holo-han, hotel and restaurant workers; F.

Lorimer Ratliff, typo The Weather ipht machine th Haw Hne T'would like to close it up." But he an Chest workers reported solicit-1 no bonus payments this year, ing $10,125 on the first dav of i Rainfall in the state was 69 per declared abandonment of a 62-imile railroad between Roy and "I still think the letter Is right," he added. AI.BtQlEROlE An VICIXITTs Fair from Arizona through Utah. Wyo Dawson would increase southwestern freight rates. Some today and Thursday with high cloudiness Thursday. Mild temperatures.

High to- 1 -1 in th. vili.tf "When I read Ruml's suggestions, they sounded so sensible to me that I drafted th l(tter graphical union; R. Allen Wil-J liams, electrical workers; Johnj ii i i i the drive Monday' and $3600 Tues- cent of normal. Usually New day. Supervisory personnel still lAexico will average 7.59 inches are to be contacted and workers the first seven months.

In 1951 are anticipating a totat sclicitat'on only 5.73 inches fell. Th SCC told the ICC that if is'in the have to wait on the attorney general's office before it takes further action. And the attorney general's office is now involved in the im- ming, Colorado and JNew Mexico since last March. The machines were in operation at carnivals, McCabe said. They are being held for riisnnsition bv the TT.

S. Dis wcuoweiu piuioa dx.a M.m the southern Pacific Railway is ters: Jos Bermudez, laborers; Ben' in tVw to abandon the branch lETiTfO: Fair today and Thurs- of about $15,000. Plant popuja-i ranges are poor over the state. in temperatures. Hiph i H.

Green, asbestos workers, and hr a11e.n20.-1T 75 to north, so" to soition has incrcr.rsd mare than 50 Cattle are being shipped to the south. per cent over last year. Chest moist Miawest in greater num- Floyd Wyman, iron workers. i continwd an Pate xine The 1951 convention closed! Committee Member Ted Sherwin'bers than ever before. Many which was sent out.

Ruml, of course, argues that not all or even most of the money would lost (to th- government), because when a grant is given to a Univer- Continued aa Pa Ta Senator Taft Expected said. herds, which took "years to build Sunday. Next convention will be in October, 1952, at Rosjrell. trict Court. I pending Mountain States Mowrey bound Scott over to Pnone rat case.

Jim Cooney, as-federal District Court and" released I sistant attorney general, is ex-hira on $100 bond. He said Scott's pected to handle the pipe line case, was the first case here under a But Cooney also has his hands full new federal law effective Jan. the telephone case, where he 2951. jwill appear as the commission's McCabe explained that claw- i attorney. up, are being sold off.

Some Dissension Traffic-Worn State Paving Here Slated for Improvement Senate Confirms type slot machines used at State The commission is attempting to I Fair last week did not come under some 22 years of back fees, I hpSTPY tjOWlS Several stretches xne law oecause tneir com siois- xiima. xne pun; of traffic- "There's quite a bit of that xne winter wneat crop was a total loss. Farmers planted grain sorghums and are now being urged to bale them to keep the state's remaining cattle alive during the' winter. A spokesman for the San Ysidro groups says there is plenty of dissension over the renewal of Krick's contract for the coming year. Many ranchers expected at- least a slight increase over.

was brought under a 1949 attor-j WASHINGTON. Oct. 9 iTPi The, worn state paving on main city had been taped shut. To Announce Today WASHINGTON, Oct. 9 W) A formal announcement" that Senator Robert A.

Taft Ohio) will seek the 1952 Republican Presidential nomination appeared imminent tonight. Jack Martin, Taffs admlnlstra tive aide, hinted to newsmen that that gas and oil pipe lines must; Bowles as ambassador to India provement as soon as the "DroDer arrangements" can be made. City over snarp protests Dy senator Taft of Ohio and other Republi (See Story on Page 10) Court Rules Telephone Necessity for Girl of 19 CHICAGO, Oct. 9 (INS) A Chicago judge believes a teen-aged girl needs a telephone to keep on being popular. Superior Judge George M.

Fisher today ordered Joseph Devlin, a street car conductor, to pay his enstranged wife. Ann. weekly support of $15 and to restore the telephone in her home. Mrs. Deviln's attorney- told the judge that the couple's daughter, Barbara, 19.

suffered in her social life sinve Devlin had the telephone removed. Mrs. Devlin bas a divorce suit on file, charging cruelty. Peron Steps Down Until After Election BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 9 (JPh- state paving that needs improvement," Tingley said.

"We'll get around to that whenever we can." Among streets in need of work are New York, Las Lomas, Rio Grande and others, he said. City Manager Charles E. Wells said he had been attempting to make arrangements with the State Highway Department for some of pay a state fee although they have not since, the law was enacted in 1929. Sedillo estimated, meanwhile, that the telephone case would Commissioner Clyde Tingley declared Tuesday. He said the city also will do something about filling in gaps at intersections where city paving cans.

The 43 to 33 vote, largely following party lines, came after Democrats praked Eowles, former povsrnor of Connecticut and war- Juan D. Peron announced tonight from take at least a week to hear. He that he is stepping down As- r. of Arpniira lint-l auaea Iflai in? aOdJlfte stons at the rieht-of-wav Ji- and New Mexico's usually modest rainfaH. Instead they got what the Forest Service says is the driest year since 1750.

On the other hand, many have taken the attitude expressed by hearer nr- nr. -5 'the "ribbon" laid r.v work, but had not met with an announcement on the senator'i decision may be forthcoming tomorrow. Any mystery as to Taft's Intentions was virtually dissovled when his office issued a statement saying Taft has received more than 1150 messages from Republicans all over tha country urging him to run. b3 dr-' nerlrir1-: for Republicans. Taft siats isn't wid pnn -ii sn far.

after t3 election ci Nov. 11 which is a candidate for re- v- in oz, could 'action i cided the commission is con- szid ha knev? of no one "less a completely paved intersection. He celled the Congress to meet ducting the Mountain States hear- If they just lend us some of their equipment, we could do some of tha work ourselves," he said. ing but that it probably would be qualified to be diplomatic spokes- Such conditions exist along Las man for the nation in one of the Lomas and East Central in the touchiest parts of the world eastern heights. Moore of the southeastern group.

If conditions aren't right, you can't expect miracles. i cn Ott. 11 to approve an acting pfa aafieot in his -place. decided later..

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