Senate Treaty Vote Is Not Likely Soon Full Report To Be Ready Coming Week Bandenberg Is To Give His Support To Peace Charter Sua Francisco, June — (AP)- The l'iiitcd Slates Sen ate, with power enoujrh to pro mote or kill a I'nited Nations peace organization. will g;et a full report on the San Francisco conference next week from two of its members. American delegates expressed conlidencc that the Senate wilt ratify the charter of t.ie organi/.at i■ in which they and representatives of 4J> other nali · : ,· produced here in nine weeks . : w rk. But no. e w. 0:1 ι>ι ■ ,i.,■ t ι May that it would be (.one · ·>.·· liately. in time for President 'Γι ι to report it at the July big three .ueeting at Berlin. In fart, it appeared ce-faiu the Senate commii'et er.ii ini:-. a p.-el::ο ι nary to debate on : at. I 'eat i ι . could riot begin until tir .-ocoud week in July, when detailed reports -Ί eon feienee debates will h a \ e become available. These and ι : ; t e r |>i'et i\-e statements on van points of the charter ut'e coo .d ■ : · i c.-st .".tia 1 t > Senate discus-r Chairman Connally ■ : the SenaC Foreign Relations C ·■:: mittee. and Senator Vandenburg. both members «>t the American delegate n, have ar ranged to leave ht re tv.a In ::rs alter President Truman addresses the closing session e\t Tuesday night. Flying to Washington with the charter, unies.-. M: Truman himself takes it back dirictly. Connally will make a report to the Senate on Thursday. Vandenberg, who will travel with him. will then make a further report and state his own position as chairman of the Repub lican senatorial conference < η Fri day. At San Francise ι Vandenberg has taken care, even as an American delegate, lo keep his position lluid. so that if he did not approve the charter in its final form he would lie at liberty to say so II >wever, now that it is finished, it i- reported that he will become ι ne of it> most ■> it spoken supporters. Senate rati fica U u regarded as the key to actnaI ci · ' > "I the new intrenational league I'nle.s ill the big five countrie ι ..Iil.v it along with a majority ·.· th. ■ nations, i it will not becomi et ! cet ι\ ι More Stocks Reach High New Υ..ι-k, .In·;.· 2^ ( ΛI ' ) - ,\s S"i ted rails, st< els. rubber-;, amuse mi nts, utilities .1; <1 specialties c■ >11— tinned to push i..rvv;.rd in today's stoek market, many 1 ■ > 11 : u 1 : s Inr the past oieht year:·, allh-'Ugh light sell ing stalled many leaders. Among favorites v.ere Canadian Pacific, Atlantic Coast l.ine. United States Steel, Γ S. Hut·.···.. Stum blers included United Aircraft. Southern Pacific, General Motors and Sears Roebuck. Bonds were rarrow and conun^li ties mixed. BOATLOAD OF HAPPINESS ARRIVES KSS-. HIGH OVER NEW YORK HARBOR a Coast Guard hclicoptcr t< ·· Ί; this photo of the Queen Alary as she steamed toward her pier, loaded to the gun wales with 14,526 American soldiers on their way home fr.'rn Europe. Many uX the men aie slated lur redeiiloymeot- (International) Negro Saved Ten Minutes Before Death March Call; Two Others Are Executed Raleigh, Jan. 22.—.(ΛΡ)--Clarence li'M'd. 21 Cabarrus county Negro, was saved Irom death in the State's mi chamber today by Governor Cherry, who ordered his sentence commuted to lite imprisonment. News of the commutation reached I,"I'd scarcely ten minutes before he was scheduled I- die for the shotgun slaying of his sweetheart, Elder Phil'er Karlier, I.'·: ■ ! had told Prison Chaplain !.. Λ. Watts. "1 still have hope that 1 won': die this morring." He admitted \ uting the girl, ex plaining that Ihey were to bo mar i ci, and that .-he began goijijr with othi ι boy-, when he was out ot work and had no money. He told the chap lain, "1 feel tha' 1 am a Christian, and I am not afraid to die." Governor Cherry said he received a petition this morning signed by eleven of the twelve trial jurors in the Lord case, urging thta the seu le nee be commuted. Shortly after the commutation was signed. Cherry said, the twelfth juror, who had not been located in time to sign the petition, phoned the governor, ask ing that his name he added. Λ letter sig; ed by Judge Λ. H. Gwyn >i Iieidsvilie. asking that the sentence be commuted, reached the governor several days ago. Henry French, 31-yiar-old Mont gomery ,ounty Negro, one ol three scheduled to die today, entered the gas chamber at 10 o'clock and was] prone Linced dead eight minutes later, ι French, convicted of. fhc murder of Duck Legrand. ι Negro woman, told Chaplain Watt.-· this morning that lie killed in solI'-defense and did not think he was guilty of first degree murder. He said he felt ho was a Christian. William Jones, â3, Wake county Negro convicted of iho murder of his wile, was pronounced dead seven and one-half minutes after the gas started rising. Witnesses in Jones' case tcsHlied that he threw his wile national ity." r CS House Votes Extension Of YearToOPA Republicans Fail To Reduce Period To One-Half Year Washington. .I111111 22.—(AP) The House today defeated a Republican-sponsored effort te hold Ol'A's new- lease on life te six months instead of one year, the vote beinj' 177 to 126. The vote Ιοί π :ι:1Ι year's exten . sion eame after Speaker Rayburn ! of Texas, walked into tin· House and ; appealed to the membership not t< i rle.·· troy ΟΡΑ. Sueh action, he said would bring inflation, "in which may people won't have anything t< eat and wear." 1 "This is a confusing a"d destruc j live amendment," Rayburn divl.ued of the six months limitation pro posal. $38 Billions Requested By Army In 1946 Washington, June 22.—(AP)—A $38,500,285,951 W :i r Department supply bill went ' < the House floor today with an ar ny promise to speed victory «νιΐ Japan by "an overwhelming application of force." l!s approval by the appropriation·; committee accompanied publication ni " " •·ιινι· week.- nl testimony by which high army officials who fore saw deva-tation loi Japan more pow e ι Γ11 ! than tiia<, ν men battered tin Nazis to their knee.·.. Tc -timon.v ot Generals of the Army George C. Marshall, chief of stall, and Η. H. Arnold, lu·. Ί of the air forces, disclosed plans to use 1 , 000 R-29s daily in the Pacific war and to drop 2,700,.000 tons of bombs in the Far East in the fiscal year starting July 1. WICKARD APPROVED AS REA DIRECTOR I Washington. June'21.—(AP)—The Senate yesterday confirmed the nomination ot Secretary of Agricul ture Claude W ckard to a 10-year term as rural electrification admin istrator. The vote was 56 to (!. The Senale already has confirmed President Truman's choice of Hep. Clinton Andi-r-mi (D-NM) to suc ceed Wickanl in the cabinet post. Senator S!,;pstead (D-Minn) led a futile light η the agriculture com mittee and oil the floor against I Wickard's confirmation. He told the ' Senate that I!!·.A had been "misnia; i aged" as a dr ~mn of the Agricul 1 lure Departra lit under Wiekard. and ί had been mai,· a "political football." The Scale approved legislation ι recently h remove REA from the I Agriculture Department and make it an independent agency. The House I has not yet acted on it. Shpistead averted that the reason ! loi removing HEA from the depart , ment was to take it from Wickard's i "maladministration." He said that ! representatives ■ f several rural elec tric cooperative-· had opposed con 1 firmation. WfATHiR roi: \ortii C arolina. Partl\ ( Ι·'.ικ1\ and warm to night: scattered showers south east (:it 11 island base, 325 I miles smith ol' Japan. j 'Γ ■■.;.· ι i; repor.od Premier j Su/aa λ .ι i l u ■ : ne! ;in itiva I sio.i of japan was impending, and aal '.'il· |je j/.· ■ ·: Kyushu. home ::e e>! ι ι, ι. ; ι ι. were pre j ,····.'."i ' an i - i, convinced the enemy will certainly land there." Paci;..· lice: headquarters made no bottes about the fact that Okl iiiiwii τ t : ■ ι ι · 11111 ■ !u. ■··. ard staging ! 111 m which \> unbeis and fight ; h ι at·.- ran c π r assault waves .-triai ..' .Japan or China, or both. An ■■lia . me:: . ndum from Ad am al Chester Nimitz' headquarters aid .Is·· an American naval anchorage, in the center of waters ri nei'ly patrolled :\v the Mikado's j imperial iieet. I'll an-up sip.ads Ί Marines and ; : '.antrymen i mted over the 1 haried hills - : southern Okinawa i A'ith ! I.' i.i . we:rifles and ■ II·:: '··.·· ''..agi · t ■ add to the 10.401 era": y dead. .Ι,.Ρ'ίκ-ι ■ : " ay mass suicides in their caves or drowned in the surf. The air was permeated with the stench of death. ( nhe: Yank . en: ι ,t to keep L*. S. cas: alties from mounting too far above the ne rd ligure of 36. ">88, pleaded ihrough tank-borne d s}n'a se:·.- ·' r Nipponese to crawl •ut of their holes and surrender. Four thousand already have. All ! . (.·> .1 a ρ .nos e dead. Ami πι·, i: ■ ■su,· !':<■,. Νιρρ< ese pris iners—were records for any island taken in the drive which had car ried Admiral Nimitz's forces from p,■ , ; ! i| .ι . 1 iie d>">rsteps of Japan—and Okinawa was the great ■>t prize jBaruch Asks I'or Destruction For German Industry Washington, June 22— (AP) — Berna:': ΛΙ B;>riU'h urged today that the United Nations "break once and l'or all Germany's dominance of Eu j :··>:><·" λ :lh -:·· .· ·.!·, industry-by industry destruction of Germany's war potential. I The financier and advisor to pres idents also recommended, in testi . ·;.» :·>ι· tne· Sonate Mili tary Affairs Committee, that "this • Co. :i 'tli ont lie used as a I basis for a comprehensive, all-em I i>i',ii'!r.s an* wth H issia," on major peace îvnblems. lie s.id · r.r'A ive age of bomb shelters" would be "the price of fail ire ·.· ;,ch:t ο :h -se objectives, or to I'.itiiy » n:.'-ce by universal milita', y 1 other 'fceans the United Xai: >:> charter now mm π : Μ ι' : '.et m at Su:i Fran Liuchow Japs Flee Before The Chinese Chungking, June 22.—(API—Chi M'se troops have ittackivl the for : ι or American ai:: . !u on the south ern outskirts m L.i iclniw, aban doned to the Japanese seven months ago, and have inflicted considerable casualties on t! ο enmy. the Chinese high command announced today. A Chineso army spokesman de clared that the bulk ol the Japanese forces at Liuchow had withdrawn northeastward to Kweilin, another tormer American airbase city. The spokosnι."η said only 1.000 to 2,00(1 enemv tr m;is wore left behind ι to defend Liucho w . Major Go oral Robert B. Mc I ciure's headquarters at Kunming : said that, acci rding to unconfirmed I reports, the city ol Liuchow, within three miles ··! the airfield, was so closely invested that its occupation might be a matter of hours. These reports said tlie city was burning and the airfield had been destroyed. Jackson Plans For Collective Trials For War Crim inals High Germans May Face Allied Court By End Of Summer London, .Juin' ΊΊ. (A Ρ) — •Justice Robert H. Jai'kson an nounced today a I'niied States plan to prosecute Germany s war criminals in one collective trial and expressed hope that it ! mi^ht start before the end of the summt'i'. Justice Jackson, the chief United Staler, pri sec.itor, emphasized at a press conference that lie could η )l speak fui' tin· three other major western powers, but said no objec tion to the proposal had yet been lodged by Britai: . Hussia or France. Ihe British Foreign Office an nounced that ι epresentatives1 of the United States. Britain. France and Russia would open discussions m London early next week to draw up a list of thi- major criminals and settle plans for their trial. Jackson elaborated upon informa tion of the collective trial plan ob tained earlier in the day from a re sponsible American source. The United States plan envisi his trial by a military tribunal with each . ol the lour major powers represent ed by "one or two judges," Jackson said. As now drafted, it carries no prevision for representation by Vie smaller powers. At the outset o! the press confer ence, he emphasized that "no man will be given immunity because he has held a high military position il there is evidence to prove he is a war criminal." In the first exposition of plans for the trial of war criminals given to newspapermen here, the Supreme Court justice said that the- trials would start "at the earliest possible mome' t—just as soon as we have a reasonably complete case." Eisenhower Hurt !n Fall At Platform Abilene, K.ins. .June 22. -(ΛΡ) General Dwight Π. Eisenhower, \vh > had many nan >w escapes Γπιιη death or injury as he directed mil lions through three years of war fare. turned up a casualty on his gi/atest day—Ε-Day and his home coming. The general was innping noticeably as the result of a tall last night on the Topeka railroad platform, where he got off to greet a couple ot purple heart soldiers. The train started without h:m. and as tin· general started to ran !.>:· it he tell and in jured his U-g. rather severely. The train was halted for several minutes while the general was help ed aboard and the injury treated Overnight, the sprain gave him a noticeable limp. Cotton Rises By Fractions New York. June 22.—(ΛΡ)—Cot ton futures opened unchanged to là cents a bale higher Noon prices were unchanged to ten cents a bale higher July 22.95. October 22.76. December 22.69. March 22.60 22.61 July . . October December Pv. Close Open . 22.93 22.95 . . 22.76 22.77 22.69 22.69 May 22.56 I Invasion Symptoms JESSE1TONV BRIT^. »* —' - ry ÎNÎORTH j MABUAN6'. Λ Vî^nu BORNEO * jtvJZ NETH. ti.li·.-. north o! Tu guegurao. Headquarters announced the guer rilla seizure of Tuguegarao in a con ini:!ii(|ue today, which also dis closed a new landing on west Borneo by Au. "'.man ninth division ipie.ps. putting the aivaders both north and south of the prized Seria oil fields. Cherrx Appoints State Commission On Stream Purit\ Raleigh, June 2:] (ΛΡ>- -Gover ! nor Cherry : 'day i| (pointed -ax J.St ate officials to serve as a State stream sanitation and conservation commission, and name ! ten repre sentatives of industry and the pu: - lie to serve with them. The State's will ser\e as ex-oflicio member- on the commis sion, which will have as its purp >se the coordination of activities "f State departments in the mainten ance of sanitary, quality and econo mic utility of North Carolina watc courses. The commission was authorized by the 194.Ï legislature. A representa'ive o! the l'e*./ilizei ι industry to serve for ι period o; five years is Τ F. Bridges ol Wil son. 26 Superforts Claimed Lost In Raid On Japan Guam, .lune 22.— (ΛΡ)—Four hundred fifty B-2i)c t iday attacked Japan's large naval a:>^"ial a:"d riv»· big aircraft factories with 3,000 tons if demolition bombs in a precision raid made visually from medium altitude in clear weather. Seven other small industrial tar gets were lire-raided Monday and Wednesday. Japan's two large arsenals, Osaka and Hiro, previously were virtually destroyed. The Kure plant, blasted today, manufactured guns up to 16 inches, projectiles, fuses, propellants mri torpedoes. It covers app n\j nately 11,000,000 square feet The >ther five targets were the Mitsu bishi and Waw.tsaki aircraft plants, 20 miles north of Nagoyp; the Kawa nishi aircraft plant and the Kawa saki aire: a!". plant at Askashi. both in the Kobe area, and the Mitsu bishi-Mitsumina aircraft factory ninety a iles west oi Kobe. Λ Japanese communique claimed 26 ot the aiant raidets were shot down r damaged·