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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • 1

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Ogden, Utah
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Temperatures rTetnperaturet for the 34-hour OdUUf at SataBOaj Max Mm Max Yan llew Orlea TO The Weather UTAH Generally cloudy Sunday and Monday Rain and snow Sunday morning northwest portion with mow in Wasatch mountains above 5000 feet Colder north portion Sunday warmer Monday OGDEN AND VICINITY Cloudy Sunday and Monday with rain and snow Sunday Colder Sunday rnier Monday High Sunday 45 Low Monday 30 ovquerqu 48 31 New York 68 -V Atlanta 82 Omaha S3 40 Vi IM PKnn) Tn 73 57 Pocatello 45 JS 5ut' 38 23 Portland 53 40 Cheyenn 45 28 Provo 46 31 Chirafo Si 48 Reno S3 23 unvr 5-i MjSait Cd Junction 43 34 San Vsaas SO San 3 14 St O-rfa 58 31 Lo An-lej 80 St Louis S3 30 Mmat aj Seattle S3 3 Minneajx la 38 Wot Yetlat 25 14 The United Prui Seventy-seventh No 00 Thm Associated Pres OGDEN CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 1948 40 3 SECTIONS PRICE 10 CENTS I i I T- Senate Leader? Truman Orders Arabs Urged: Make Peace Truce Chief Reportedly Tells Them Their Position Is Hopeless He Red Charges Greeks Plan Gas Attacks and Britain Know of Plan Says Vishinsky PARIS Nov 6 (AP) Rus Minimum: 'lans Hint( PARIS Nov 6 A United Nations source said to- ignt lour Arab governments have been advised their mili tary position in Palestine is "hopeless" and that they had uener maxe peace This authoritative informant who I mm "mm sia's Andrei Vishinskv sr charged today that Greece with the knowledge of the Pay Increases Suggested For Top Officials WASHINGTON Nov 6 A senate subcommittee vole to Indict Balkan Trio Stalled in United States and Britain is preparing to hurl poison gas Marshall Plan Backed T-H Repeal Favored By The Associated Press WASHINGTON Nov (AP) Strong backing for the Marshall plan high suppgt prices for farm products and repeal of the Taft-Hartley law are indicated in an Asso Sen Scott He Enunciates 'Hard Boiled' Policy for 1950 WASHINGTON Nor 6 (UP) President Truman to day laid down a "hard-boiled'' spending policy for the iscil year 1950 which Budget Director James Webb said would hold federal expendi at Oreek guerrillas This was part of a general blast insisted upon anonymity said Brig Gen William Riley a United States marine corps general and chief of staff of the United Nations truce mission in Palestine "minced no words" in a three-hour conference with Syrian Egyptian Lebanese and Iraq representatives The meeting which took place on the initiative of Dr Ralph Bunche acting mediator was attended by Bunche and his deputy Henri Vigier the informant said "Truce a Dead Duck" The source said "Riley made it clear that in the- today proposed raising the pay of 218 tot irovernment offi PARIS Nov 6 The Soviet at the United States in which the Soviet deputy foreign minister charged the Truman administration cials to help the president get and keep high calibre ex- dioc tonignt stalled a vote on a United atinns nwnlntinn yecutives Yugoslavia Bulgaria and Albania suggested raises wnuisi hike is building a network of military bases directed against the Soviet Union and other countries He did not amDlifv or snnnort with evi xut aiuiug oreeK communist guerillas and endangering peace in the Balkans The 58-nation political committee Lucas in Front For Senate Majority Post WASHINGTON Nov 6 (UP) Sen Scott Lucas (D-Ill) seemed tonight to have a clear field to take over as majority leader of the senate whpn Sn Alhan ciated Press survey of mem dence his charge concerning poison IICQL Marshall Nay Remain Till Treaty Drafted pie who have to try to work it the truce now is a dead duck" The conference coincided with bers of the new congress But sentiment runs against giv nours or procedural wran- SlinC and listeriinO tn inmnMnl Vishinsky and another Slav delegate Dr Julius? Katz-Suchy also delivered bitter nersonal attar-Ue charges that the United States has MlwJtJ AS ing the president standby pise tures "to tho lowest possible levelfife This announcement came after a day of mnfaiujLie between Mr Truman and various cabinet members during which Defense Sec-aetSty James Forrestal disclosed he reports published in Cairo but denied by Trans-Jordan officials Kuuieu me worio with military bases directed at the control and rationing powers agains John Foster Dulles foreign affairs advisor tn Clnv Thnm Poland tried to push through a Almost half the men and women Dewey and dragged in the there that King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan already is suggesting a separate peace between his country and Israel Rilpv was MnnpfoH tn hmr tnlit Barkley (D-Ky) steps into the upusai to set up a sun-committee who will make up the eighty-first vice presidency presidential election Before Committee does not intend to stay tne congress expressed their views 'Sjsj najor questions Answers to all or some of sae iuay ui cnarges and countercharges in the Greek dispute It was defeated 23 to 6 Andrei Vishiafki of Russia then Drooosed arlimirnmont until toe Arabs that as military man he The speeches were mad tuf returns showed that the Democrats had clinched control of the senate no other likely competitor has ap aaestions were given by 27 sena the 58-member political committee of the general assembly in debate tors and 235 representatives who will serve in the new congress Not day This too was defeated 21 to 6 Once again only the Soviet bloc peared Lucas himself has said nathtaat uii me Daman proDiem uuues told the same committer vpstord all of them would allow their Webb reported after bis talk with the president who leaves tomorrow on a "working vacation" Key West fla that he directed all agencies on July 22 to "plan to continue operations at or below their fiscal) 148 level cabinet officers from $15000 to $20000 a year milium i istslf St $18009 and assistant secretaries to $15 000 Undersecretaries now get $10000 to sisjea sad asaMssd secretaries 310000 Bsads Of most independeBfpfjBs Cjas boards and commissions would have their salaries boosted from $15000 to SUASO Most USOT a $10000 to $12000 Their sistants' pay would be increased too Chairman Ralph Flinders (R-Vt i outlined a tentative bill which the three man bi partisan subcommittee had drafted He said tt should have top priority in congress next January" He predicted ft would be passed lllteaet Tear Cesi The bill would cost an estimated $1100000 a year Sens Herbert O'Connor (D Md) and Raymond Baldwin (R-Conn) joined tn the recommendations-Flanders and Baldwin sponsored an almost Identical bill at the last congreas but it was killed in the closing minutes of the session The Vermont Republican said he thought the bul would serve as a "base" on which any similar recommendations of the Hoover com vuieu iur tne propoaai Then the wav mu4 il-n earlier Soviet charges that the SOUghl worlfi mactorv mora except that he is available if his colleagues want him T4a ho kun names to be used and many were undecided on some of the ques- the majority proposal to indict the a member of the senate for 10 years oeuves lime BBS come tor the Palestine truce of last July to be replaced by some more suitable basis for peace The Jews he pointed out are in complete military control of Palestine He was said to have advised them ft will be difficult) if not impossible for the mediator to administer the) truce much especially if he has to enforce the security council's latest order to Israel to withdraw from the strategic positions 'flMb occupied in the Negev in the Oct 14-21 fighting with the Egypt- ana uemocratic wnip and assistant "vicious falsehoods" The committee wrangled from 3:15 to 8:50 pm without reaching a conclusrriv vnta nn ih rni By Behasi Waianlssj PARIS Nov 6 (UP) Official American sources said today that Secretary of Stat George Marshall may decide to delay his retirement until the end of next summer so he can complete negotiations for north Atlantic defense treaty They thought President Truman would persuade Marshall to do so despite the secretary's of ex re ssed desire to quit at the end of this year However American a tending the United Nations meetings as well those in Washington already were speculating on an ultimate successor to Marshall Present Bndjet 4 2 icauer ior toe Dast two years It Was Understood that Siti Bih iwc ouviei sa ten lies jsut Yugoslavia came up with a proposal for UN intervention in the sentencing to death of 10 Greeks by the Greek government That Started a lnrnt nrnraHirral HagS Others qualified their answers From All Over Sfce answers came from all over the country and reflected a cross-action of congressional thinking Balkan case and finally adjourned ar a nusseu (u-tiaj had re jected suggestions from some of his southern colleagues that he seek untn monaay wnen the delegates will tackle a mass of proposals Vishinskv sairi HrMra uraa mrf debate Finallv thA decided by a vote of 43 to 6 that it The IMS budget calls for spending $42000000000 in fiscal Svear ending June 30 Speculation had Put the 1050 budget at about £45 -000000000 1 1 BO had said that only where "exceptional cixtrurnstaxices- make it ira- the job of floor leadership Although he is a fairly consistent administration supporter Russell supported the Taft-Hartley law last Hf destroy the Greek partisans "by any means including toxic gases He adder! that tho Omsv ma not nave tne right to ask a stay of execution But than it i--f Panayotis Pipinellis has shown "he to 0 to have the committee chairman confer with Greek Delegate Panayotis Pipineijs about the executions RJBaioie to aeep 1950 year ana led tne southern fight against President Truman's eivil rights' program He was the choice of snuthorn rioloeratoo fK rism was wen acquainted with toxic gases" The maiftr nnrtinn at VtehlnW oown to or below 1948 win hieher hnrfct The security council is to take up Monday a British move to extend to all Palestine the call for withdrawal of Jewish troops from aitions occupied since the beg in -g of the 'truce Tn ctffafri tKie WMi14 nnnmnn attack was directed at Dulles and ocratic national convention for the considered Heading the guess-list here Webb said aftr a two-hour con- American j' vuif ui uti nomination Sen Joseph Mahoney dor in LotfnOcir TV Avrfl Wm mission ror got tetomapt wyoj wno also was regarded as a that ths follow ization eouid be possible candidate for the floor ments The commission will Israel to give up positions she took in fighting with irregular Arabs in northern Galilee a little ever a WAkr nan that MnTv ioZ wwt miu come as close as possible to avoiding any deficit in me 12 next year The proposed bill does leader job indicated that he was not interested He told a reporter that chairmanships of the Joint congressional economic committee and Jat of today on all four questions Boiled down here are the remits: 1 Do yen savor farm support present levels? One hundred and thirty-five Democrats and 33 Republicans said they do several of these advocating even higher supposes than the present 90 per cent af parity Six Democrats antf If Republicans said they are opposed to price support on basic farm commodities Seventeen Democrats and 27 Republicans were undecided although some of them said they favor letting support prices drop to 60 per cent of parity after 1949 SS provided in an act passed by the eightieth congress Do you favor giving the president power to fix price controls sBflV allocations? Ninety-three Democrats sad four Republicans said they do Twenty-seven Demo-Bjgste and 76 Republicans said they do not Thirty-seven Democrats their attempts to reach a vote on the majority resolution and at 8:50 pm (2:50 Rm EST) adjourned until Monday It would have ordered the UN special committee on the Balkans to continue its work for at least nether year endorsed the committee's finding that Greece's three northern neighbors knowingly helped Greek guerrillas "on a large scale" and held that such aid "endangers peace in the Balkans" not cover raises for the president and vice President Flanrlr 1H The mediator in a report to the security council today said Israels mm aciiate committee on ulterior and insular affairs would keep him busy man roving ambassador for the economic cooperation administration and Former Assistant Secretary of State Dean Acheson Meantime preparations for negotiations of the north Atlantic treaty were being stepped up Representatives of the five western union powers Britain France Belgium Holland and Luxembourg will meet next Thursday in London to discuss the position they will take in later talks with the United States and Canada Their desire for a clause binding all members to nitch in if arw mm troops now occupy 15 villages inside Lebanaon and charged they engaged in "extensive and systematic looting" The report charged that Israeli he personally thought "their salaries should be higher" But be said they were in a different category from the administrative appointee's and should be covered by other legislation Confident of Support juit 1 IJM9 The president a proved allotments for 16 departments r' SSSsf agencies not including the si llMif services Webb would not disclose their totals But he said that in the Cne of Bsl agencies the allotments were Isslow Bssse nto -vided in this gear's budget Vebb said these allotmenti'-BJj- Pace" Bn oBsers that will follow as fast as possible Would Not Speculate and Arab forces were guilty of a roreign policy in general Referring to a statement made bv Dulles yesterday that the had stooped disarming because ot the world's fear of Russia Vishinsky asked: "Who Is Threatening? "Who is threatening you? How is the Soviet Union threatening you?" He said the Soviet Union is threatening no one but the United States is the one who is threatening He said the has 228 bases in the Atlantic area alone 'Where aren't there American bases?" he asked "If the doesn't dream of world domination" he asked "why build all these bases all over the world?" Turning to Dulles he said: To say that you do not want world mastery is a story for small children" Both Vishinsky and Katz-Suchy chided Dulles on the Republican defeat in Tuesday's election which dashed Dulles hopes of being secretary of state TpPave and inexcusable violation of the truce" in that fighting which raged several days along a wide Dixieerats Hold Legislative Balance of Power ber country is attacked must be reconciled with the clause in the Constitution which fnrhirU Arabs Ask Questions The informant whn was in He would not overall sire of th side the conference room said the SB Ban antinnatoY wff United States from committing itself in advance to participation in a war Flanders a wealthy industrial-SV'Urho often has voted with Bat Democrats on economic issues said he was confident the proposal would be supported by the incoming Democratic leadership to OStV gress Flanders said "our whole salary structure is full of anomalies" and should be equalized and brought up to date Scores of able men he said either turn dowaigB BBSeuiment jobs or are forced? leave them because of the relatively low pay "sdeet of these men have to make a sacrifice" to serve Flanders said WASHINGTON Nov 6 (UP) and 14 Republicans weren't willing to comment Taft-HarMy Repeal Do you favor repeal of the Taft-Hart ley law? Ninety-four Democrats and eight Republicans said they do Twenty-two Democrats and S3 Republicans do fjgs Thirty-seven Democrats and 33 Republicans advocated revision of the Crossing Accident Takes Six Lives DES MOINES Nov 6 (UP) Five members of one Iowa family and the three-year-old son of their friends were killed tonight and three other persons were injured seriously when a Burlington train crashed into a station wagon at a crossing here The dead were Harry Bullard 37 his wife Grace 39 and their three children Marilyn 12 Elaine 9 and Bobby 4 and Bobby Miller 3 The fniitnwl war TaKm vrm i current fiscal veer Truman in August estimated thai deficit St BUBB0O00O0 "We are forced to make the budget as tight as possible this year to keep it aj nearly BS balance as possible" Webb told newsmen hether or nrvt t)- t- ooutnern uemocrats whose rebellion wasn't strong enough to stop President Truman't election still Will hold a fillffiriffmt rnntrrpecinn AraD representatives Adel Ar-slan of Syria Puad Amoun of Lebanon Mahmoud Fawzi of Egypt and an agent of Iraq asked many questions of Riley and examined the maps he produced But they committed their governments in no way The source said Riley made no imArifie rnlittrnl nennABal thmitfh al "balance of power" to whip him WASHINGTON Nov 6 (UP) Administration sources indicated today that President Truman would welcome a decision by Secretary of State George Marshall to continue in his present post after next Jan 20 Informants believe that if Marshall does retire from government service it will be solely his S3BB decision and in no way that of Mr Truman who has a high regard for the soldier-diplomat law but not outright repeal win depend on revenues syBteetls policy will be to Bold down expenditures to the the tenor of his talk conveyed the 4 Do you favor continued foreign aid through ECA and direct on important parts ot nis legislative program if they care to A combination of Dixie Democrats and northern Republicans would be big enough to put the skids under nnv hill Tho fata of swusi possiDie level that will aw to Greece and Turkey? One iaea mat tne AraDs snouid Begin to think of their relations with the Jews in terms of an armistice It is possible that Israeli repre (Continued op Page Two-A) (Column Six) some of the president's more con- A a BBS needs of the country Mr Truman previously he hopes to hold defense to about 1 4 vm fwi fw vwuu millet Bancroft la father of Bobby his sentatives here will participate in a iroversiai campaign promises sucn as repeal of the Taft-Hartley law hinffes on the attitude rrf tho south 8 wile Bea 25 and their four-year-old daughter Joan The two fnmili iimuar neart-to-neart taiK with 3unche and his top aides soon Mrs Hails ern Democrats to Des Moines when the aeHdent The Dixie bloc badly defeated at the polls in their states rights drive to oust th nresidpnt ronortodlv train pnirinAAi- M( wants to return to the regular Dem Truman Victory 20J000 Ducks Die Due to Lake Oil MONTREAL Nov 0 Some 20000 migratory ducks made helpless by oil in Lake St Peter have been destroyed Government game officials estimated today that probably no more than fire per cent of the flock which uses the lake SS a stopping place on its way south is alive now The oil which came ftOBB Iftko ships was so heavy it COSted Bie ducks' wings and made them unable to rise from the water Intosh Knoxville la told state safety patrol officers that he had been slowing down for a railroad bridge at the eriire rtf Ties Mnin Voting Returns Nearly Complete WASHINGTON Nov 6 (AP) Nearly complete unofficial returns compiled by The Associated Press from Tuesday's presidential election showed with 130309 of the nation's 125855 polling places reporting: Truman 23388584 (304 electoral votes) Dewey 21383772 (189 electoral votes) Wallace 1109025 (No electoral votes) Thurmond 878470 (38 electoral votes) Total 46859851 (266 electoral votes needed to wart) ocratic ioia lx ine price isni too New Wage Demand BOSTON Nov 6 (UP) The CIO Textile Workers Union of America will demand a 10-cent per hour general wage increase for it? 90000 members employed in the woolen and worsted industry It was announced today Union President Emil Rieve said the action was authorized by 400 delegates representing workers in 160 woolen and worsted mills in New England the middle Atlantic states and the midwest PARIS Nov 6 Mrs Elea when the accident occurred Too High a Price French Moderates See Vole Victory PARIS Nov 6 France's moderate "third force" tonight confidently anticipated victory in tomorrow's elections which will choose a majority of the council of the republic upper chamber of But observe helieve the south nor Roosevelt tonight hailed the results of the American elections as a strong endorsement of the new deal program of her late husband In his July letter Webb said the tight budget policy was based on the assumption that prod action aH employment will continue high and that prices and wages will con-Vio at level end August Webb would not name the agencies whose budgets were approved today He said the sum of their allotments would run about fer cent of the tmdget but would set the pace for the budget generally 'We have adopted a hardboUed tight budget policy" he said ebb said the president's "tight" policy will extend to foreign alt and military expenditures "Realistie Policy" J2LWUl -Jattic po! rev" ho added "Whatever the nrMH tie estimated his speed at about 25 miles per hour Mcintosh said the car approached the crossing "quite fast" and seemed to be racing us" He added 'they almost mari it Ht erners will consider civil rights and outright repeal of the Taft-Hartley law without substitute labor controls as too high a price Mr Truman asked tho vntoro for She sale' President Truman for whom she announced her support HTMV IS quite" in October stood for the "continu a Democratic congress They gave ation" of new deal policies The station wagon was pushed about 30 feet and over an embankment by the crash The people not only voted for Gen Charles lie's hnnu to mm But that is no guarantee he will have smooth sailing next year when he tries to make good on his camnaien nledees 4 winning a majority in the coun-j1 eil nnH ustner it tn fnrco Republican verconf idence Caused Defeat Says Dewey him as president" she said "but voted to give him support in the senate and house which he needed In order to put through his MsV Ides" Gunning for Dixieerats NEW YORK Nov 6 Mrs Eleanor Roosevelt will call for Stern measnrpo a trains ih In a lecture to a French audi ence Mrs Roosevelt praised the Breaks Only Good Leg INDIANAPOLIS Nov 6 Lady Luck was looking the other way when Herman Walker who wears an artificial right leg was struck by a truck yesterday Doctors in general hospital found the 4R-Vfar-n1d TnHianartnlis man had president's firm campaign stands crats for bolting the Democratic in housing high prices and labor legislation party the presidential elections in a broadcast she will make at 10:45 am flTCTl anj The poor showing of Progres- dve party candidate Henry Wallace me American Broadcasting enmnanv suffered a broken his good left feels is necessary to do the job be will recommend In a hint that the budget may bo lower than the $45000000 000 which has figured in speculation ebb said some of today aOet ments were "somewhat lower than allowances in the 1949 budget WebhSBid the president recent announcement about military spending in 1850 was in line with this policy Beads of the armed -services had proposed to spend $23000000000 But the president directed them to come back with a aew figure around $15000000000 This total Webb said includes ALBANY Nov (AP) Gov Thomas Dewey set for an Arizona vacation today blamed Republican overconfidence for his stunning defeat in the presidential election The candidate toll news conference: "I was quite surprised by the very low vote "It looks as if two or three million Republicans stayed home (from th nolli rtiit nt nvrrnnfi- announced tonight one demonstrated that the American people know the difference between "liberal democracy" and 1 a CS a elections appeared to have been blasted by recent events The communists also were given little chance to score significant gains Most observers agreed that the socialists radical socialists and pro government splinter parties would win control of the council Two hundred and 69 of the council's- 320 members will be chosen tomorrow by an electoral college which was itself elected Oct 7 by departmental and municipal councils throughout France and her major colonies 1 The remaining members will be named by the national assembly and other colonial voters between now and the -end of the year -The council a watered down version of the prewar senate has no original legislative powers However it can veto by an absolute majority vote any measure approved by the assembly preventing it from becoming law un-Ijjt it is repassed by an absolute assembly majority communism Mrs Roosevelt said Saturday's Football Finals She added hastily "Mr Wallace For example farm belt senators may oppose price controls Even on a standby basis for fear they would lower farm prices Sen Elmer Thomas (D-Okla) has said he would oppose any legislation which might hurt farm prices Mr Truman will discuss his legislative program with Vice President Eleet Alben Barkley national committee Chairman Howard McGrath and other top advisers during his two week "working" vacation at Key West Fla First Steps Taken Mr Truman already has taken steps toward repeal of the labor law It was learned that he has instructed Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin to prepare a "Democratic" labor bill for the new congress Exactly what Mr Truman wants in the bill was not revealed But administration sources indicated it will retain some portions of the Taft-Hartley law These probably will include the ban on secondary boycotts and jurisdictional disputes and "cooling off" periods if strikes threaten the nation's welfare is not a communist" By The Associated Press But she noted he "never took dence" aouuuuuuuo lor stockpiling any stand against either the support of the communists or the fact that many people felt that some of his advisers were influenced by intention of trying a third time for the presidency But he made it clear that he did not plan to withdraw entirely from the political scene He said his decision not to try again for the White House "doesn't mean that I do not intend to be useful to my country! Ho shot back a brisk "no sir" when a newsman asked wheth er he would give up bis role at titular head of the Republican party for the next four years Dewey leafed through a pile Of telegrams on his desk which hesatd were from students "all ovetf BkS country" commending him fot BaS kind of campaign be conducted Some of his advisers it is known urged htm to abandon his high level" campaign and stag It ont with President Truman That idea was vetoed by a majority of his aides Referring to the telegrams from students Dewey said they show "the youth of this country believe the Republican party is the best instrument for their futures" He added jiff earnestly hope they all will stay in the Republican party and materials Ktt a whirlwind series of Far West Utah 12 Colorado A 3 Colorado 28 Utah State 14 Oregon 13 Washington 7 California 28 A 13 St Mary's 19 Portland 0 Denver 30 Detroit 27 Santa Barbara 27 ralWnmi a ommunist ideas The people she said had to rentes today Mr cussed uraent worid ao confidence in the way Wallace problems with cabinet said he would bring about better relations with Russia gies 6 Princeton 47 Harvard 7 Cornell 14 Colgate 6 Holy Cross 1 Duquesne 13 Yale 32 Kings Point 0 Brown 36 Western Reserve 0 Trinity 46 Amherst 0 Boston university 33 Fordham 7 Coast Guard 19 Colby 14 Delaware 33 Gettysburg 27 Union 14 Middlebury 7 New Hampshire 27 Tufts 18 Rochester 14 Vermont 14 (tie) Arnold 7 Worcester Tech 0 Maine 7 Bowdoin 6 Upsala 34 Trenton Teachers 0 Rensselaer Poly Institute 27 Clarkson 14 Sampson 14 Brockport Teachers East Stroudsburg Teachers Cortland Teachers 0 (tie) (Continued on Page 13-Al She added that the was Idaho 28 Montana State College of Pacific 32 Montana 14 Colorado rnllorr 1 ci When a reporter asked Dewey whether in his judgment that was the main reason for his defeat he replied: It's one factor that stands out in the returns so far" Refreshed by lots of sleep the New York governor announced: "I am going to get a little holiday I am going to Arizona to get some sunshine" He will fly to Tucson from La-Guardia field In New York tomorrow He will be accompanied on the two-week trip by Mrs Dewey their sons Thomas lfi and John 18 Mr and Mrs Carl Hogan and their son Jack 12 and Mr and Mrs Roger Straus The Hogan and Straus families are friends of the Deweys Dewey reiterated that he has no reedj for peaceful cooperation with Russia but American patience will not be "everlasting" "There is no fear in our hearts Nebraska 27 other high officials Cabinet changes are expected tS figure prominently in matters the president will take up during his vacation He is expected also to tackle such problems as next year's budget military defense and how-to make good on the Democratic platform pledges The president will leave Washington by air at nine a i No definite time has been fixed for his return to the capital but aides bsM he probably will aaaa Oregon Stats JI Txr-ui State 56 (tie) Greek Cabinet to Quit LONDON Nov 6 (UP) The Exchange Telegraph agency reported tonight that Greek Premier Them-istocles Sophoulis has announced he will present the resignation of lit government to Kins Paul -t Miners Defy Reds PARIS Nov 6 Th arm East and therefore we can be generous" she said "But by this time the should realize that is impossible to Intimidate us and patience while it hi long suffering cannot be counted on to be sverlasting" i ernment said today more than Army 43 Stanford 0 Penn State 13 Pennsylvania a Dartmouth 26 Columbia 21 per cent or ranees coal miners have returned to work in defiance of a communist-led strike uomf more active in it in oroer to make it a better and more effective political organization" Nov.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
572,154
Years Available:
1920-1977