Himîtersmt Bally Btspatrh
thirty-third year ^/ΐ^Λ^^τΕον^ί:^ Henderson, ν. c., Friday afternoon, april 19,1946 « ν , . w * five cents copy
Innocent Bystander
THIS GERMAN CHILD looks at a po
liceman with appealing eyes and
wonders as some 2,000 Berlin res
idents were rounded up in a black
market raid. The child was with h is
mother when the civilians were
Questioned. UntcrimUmiai)
U.S. Building
Big AirF orce
In Europe\
c
71,000 Men Will Be
In Organization;
B-29's To Be Used
Herlm. April IS) ι.\Ρ)—Λ new t
'' ^ an- force III 71 .·>()(I lilL'll is bein.î t
built up virtually from .--cratch in ι
buii'pc undei orders. winch well j
qualified sources say, came dircctly f
from General Carl Spaatz, comman
der in chief of the I'SAAF.
Π-29 Superior tresses, appearing
for the first time in Kurope, will
serve as the basis of the new force _
which is expected to be in full op
eration order before the end of the '
summer. Two hundred Superfort
resses already have been shipped to
the L'nited Kingdom and 300 more 1 1
are on the way or on order. Four
fields for them arc being built in
France and two more in Germany '
are completed.
Λ-26 attack >nii>·.·:·:; and I'-ii'i '
fighters, the new super-.-peedy jet
craft developed toward the end >f
the war, will also play an important
part in the force.
Dr. Will ter Dandy,
l· anions Surgeon,
Dies In Baltimore
Haltimore, \ ι nil III. f \IM Dr.
Walter I I)a11·ι .. ii.'f
known lir.un .-.ni Licon 11 ie<i this
morning at John Hopkins Hospital
where hi* had performed hi.- greatest
work. I it· wa ■■ (in
I >1 Dandy's brain work astound
ed the world ι ■ : modicin·· and
brouuht him international Honors. i:i
1918. he announced tlie discovery
and development o! a method of lo
cat inn and opérai in·; on brain 1 a -
mors and other intracranial lesion.-.
This method, le'low surgeons saut,
reduced that dilïicuit operation. I>
almost an exact science. Ii.v 1 U4<l. Dr. j
Dandy , fame was such that w hen
Leon Trots.v lay dym; in Mexico
City. < » ι an .is assin's hammer blows,
the Hopkins urufu w. ι ~ flown ίο
Mexico in a chartered plane in a
ilesper.ite attempt to save TrotsKV.
Pilgrims Flock
Into Jerusalem
Jerusalem. April 19. — (ΛΡ)—Vast
throngs if ρ i i ti r ι ; ι -, s_ .-oa,e carrying
ero.-ses, walked along the Via Do.
lorosu from, Pilate's Palace to Ml.
Calvary toda\ as the Holy Land held
Good Friday services comntea'orat
ing the last h mrs and cru ifixion
of Christ.
Despite tension caused by a para
lyzing strike ol 50,000 ci\ il workers
and the prolonged conflict between
Jews and Arabs, one ot the largest
crowds m reci> t years pressed
through the dingy, cobblestoned
streets of Jerusalem's old city.
CHURCH GROUP TO
STUDY EDUCATION
Miss Ethelene Sampley, director of
religious education at Centenary
Methodist church, Winston-Salem,
and chairman of the North Carolina
Council of Churches' committee on I
visual religious education announc
ed today th" completion of plans for
the most complete visual religious
exhibit yet held in North Carolina.
This exhibit and three-day demon
stration of the latest visual mate
rials and equipment for church Ui,·
will be a part ol the statewide con
vocation of churches opening at the
First Methodist church here Tues
day morning, April 23. Dr. F. L. Hill
man. president of the North Caro
lina Council of Churches, will be one
of the principal speakers on the
opening day.
Reds Claim
Capture Oi
Changchun
Fate Of American»
I»i City Unknov n;
Ν υ Katiio C'-ntict
( ίί\ I ii" Λ v.οι iaU'il I ri··· .1
*: ii o*! ici ι i f !ι·ι· · t 1. ; ...
ι ! :·■ iia .·■ ist f il \ ii.ιιι. ;ι >r ι
h' a iqtra 1er*, t·· · τ ρ ι ι <> the
«·:ι,»! <ι · οι" { Ιι.ιι- ■ "ii'i·;. ι .ι ·ιίι. ' οΐ
e \ U \va: t ι>· ιι ν ". 111 : 'ι·.·
lri .nl· ι«ί ιν.ι·» ι -ni-·1 by ;'ι···
.':·>.<>(■ alii! : - in ...ιι c'iM!i
l 'SCO.
. il ■ i · .; le.· '. >, the ■'<>. in of
a v ι - ' in ι * (■·■. , " .·:·, »·
Κ or. ru ! ι ·■ ί. II. ill (ίί - ;:;ι t ίι
fi - .·: < hutr t Υ· .··, ι " ■ 1:
"Πι · city «f t'h ·!> vîi'ui :ia .
Lorn eonip'.ftel.v cleared ci
anrse .ni:l pupoot trions
iaindits (lliis presumably re
ferred to < tiiii,· r (<overmn-.it
Iraops), ait: r Connmini - led
popular f.ncrs — a dciiiicatic
■ >n ar:n;.—enier-d ili · cit.v lu
establish pcac·:· au I order.
ί III NGKING ! Χί*Κ( TS
I IK Λ VI ( AS I VI.TIFS
Chungking. April 19. -- (AP)—
China's Government expected word
momentarily today of the fall of
Changchun—with heavy casualties—
before an overwhelming Chinese
Communist attack. Seven American··
were in Changchun but η ι ri-ports
have been received concerning thei.·
safety.
One official Central New.- Ag ncy
dispatch from Mukden asserted -
without confirmation that four οι
five medium tanks driven and .tun
ned by "officers of a certain ι··tun
try" led the attack on the Manchur
ian capital. "It is obvious," the dis
patch added, "that these tanks were
I'tiiiii ned by that certain country."
Mold Two Buildings.
Government dispatches fr ο m
Chinhsoin pictured the < itnumbered
isolated national garrison as holding
inly two building in artillery bat
tered Changchun yesterday, : nd un
able to hold out longer than morn
ing today.
There luis been no reported radio
contact with Changchun . nice ve.
terdav.
News of the American- five cor
respondents and two i:;ilitary ]-·,
;onnel- have been lacking since tiie
U. S. State Department reported
them "safe and sound ' up to Wed
nesday. The fighting began on Sun
day.
The battle spread a fieiv back
ground for General Ma; hall':· re
newed efforts to brio.; ρι-ai e and
unity to China. A.·· he be -„.n a se; ··
of truce conferences m Chungking,
news from the north ' ο I ci of a bar
rage of incendiary and high ex
plosive shells blasting. one by one.
the few remaining stron , points of
Changchun's defenders.
Proud of Award
EIGHT-YEAR-OLD Joan Dewey
M.ickay χ prrienccd h or greatest
thrill when she rccXvcd in San
Francisco, Calif., the Purple Heart
Medal won by hor father. Sit.
Everett Doublas Mackay before his
death in a Jap prison camp. The
child's pleading letter to Gen. Mac
Arthur jo "try to find" her dad's
medal bi ought about 'he presenta
tion. (International Sounclpholo)
New Dispute
Over J apan
Sha ping-Up
MacArthur factics
Are Protested By
Two Allied Agencies
Washington, April 19.—(AP) — A
first ciass political row appeared to
day to be shaping lip between Gen
ual Douglas Mar Arthurs command
nnd the twn mtei '-Allied agencies
dealing with Japanese policy and ad
ministration.
lu V/ashin ;ten, a committee of the
far eastern commission, II nation
polity making agency, scheduled a
iiicct.ng Li ι (ii.scu.--s the recent United
State,. oeci-i".n t<■ ..end more than a
h .1! a tr.il i: η tons of food to Japan
during the fu-t six months of this
y cii r.
Ar.'i ir Tokyo, the lour nation ad
visory council, whose Russian and
(!: :·. member have v<.iced objec
tion i-. cei'tain 'actu . of MacArthur
and .-· :::e -I hi- officers, adjourned
until April 30 without agreeing
whether MacArthur should present
requested information in writing or
by sending a spokesman to deliver
Wlii ι. W'.' Zealand. Indian and
I '! 1111 ). u- --ι i! -e : · - : the far east -
ei !i 1 i"ii exi'.--sed ctmcern
at a :!.■■· '.h: ye tviday . \er Amer
ican intentions — at .MacArthur's re-*
que.-' - t" .-end lood to Japan, it
marked the second time that body
liau |>o!icies ι f the su
preme ι nr.mand.
LIKES ONE AS WELL AS THE OTHER
■ · —·. tw. .·. . λ·.·.·:·:· - ---- ·.· · — jMMMM ——
WHEN TWO-YEAR-OLD William Francis Hincser went to the Children's
Zoo in Bronx Park, New York, he couldn't quite make up his mind
whether to give his attention to a baby pig or a pink-eared rabbit,
lie compromised by dividing his ailection between the two and every
one was happy including the zoo keepers. (International)
Ukranian Bands Terrorizing
Peasants In Southeast Poland
By LARRY \Ι.Γ.Γ.\.
Warsaw. April 19—(AP)—Strong
ly armed bands (it Ukranian na
tionalists are terrorizing .· > itheast
ern Poland, erasing the demarkation
line fiom the Russian m de Ί the
frontier and burning villages, car
rying off livestock and leaving thou
s; ι ds of Polish peasants iι· ■ i:■ "le -
Hands whose strength sonv i t;e
nunibers upwards o. l.uOO men ar·
(.stiir-ateri to have burned Villi \ ι ! -
agi- within the last lew mourns,
king peasants' homes and then
linging ttrehes ont > the straw
th· '"hod roofs.
The wave of terror, extending
soi't.H'ast of Rzes/ow along the Se
San riser, is being fought by sev
eral divisk' s of Polish mil.tiamen
and security corps men.
The bands sweeping across th
l'r mtier, usually about midnight, ar·
believed l· be act inn in retaliatioi
for their transfer from Poland t<
thlie Russian /.one under a Polish
S· viet emi'nt. Those Ukraniati
have ilisi. ted upon their right t
;Γι on Polish soil and also hav
i. a: . e : tl. ; th·· Ukraine be tn.au
im:i"m pdent tate Many ol th
Ρ >1»·.·.· ■;<·<ι .ue living in h. me
ι nee m i ipied by I'kranians.
The destruction of a dozen village
along the San is also π almoi
nightly occurrence. The terror ha
struck so deeply that the peasant
no longer 'ndn··- when they g
to bed The villages have impro
\ t.-ed alarm systems.
Rail Strike
Threat Still
Is In Offing
Walkout Depends
Upon Acceptance
Of Board Findings
Washington. April III - '.MM
—The throat el a nation-v. i(l«' I
lailroad strike hinges t<> î.t\ «m
liiM.ing 1'oa.rii's wage boost roe
oinmendatit.n for in ire tha ι
JOP.IOO locomotive engineers aiul
trainme n.
Ί ho government heard siig.
gested a H> cent, hourly boost,
with certain changes i:i working
conditions, bui the tindings can
lie either accepted or turned
down by the carriers or the two
unions involved.
The Brotherhoods of Locomotive
Engineers and Ί rainmcn had post
poned a scheduled March 11 strike ι
pending the board's study. Under
the Railroad Labor Act, the strike1
now is b;:rred until May 18. Most i
.·. h fact finding reports in past
disputes Jh.ave led 'to settlements '
without strikes.
The two ι ions called a meeting
next Wednesday at Cleveland to de
termine their stand. Alvanley John
son. head of the engineers, told re
porters at Cleveland the b ο a r d's I
recommendations were "not as much I
as we asked lor." A. F. Whitney. j
trainmen's president, declined com*
mo t.
SC mVFLF.NBACII PLAN'S
m;\v coal parley.
Washington, April li). — (AP) - '
I Secretary of Labi r Schwel lenbaci
>:iici today he would talk with .Johi
I. Lewis and th·· s >fî coal opera -
!> r s so. ara I ly again next week ir.
in effort to end a strike of 400,00·!
niners.
Srhwellenbach told White Hons.
I i ei>< liters that he wanterl tail;
! with Lewis, près alert ot the United
! Mine Workers and his group in one
(ι ference, and hold another eon-1
erenee with the operators Monday ι
j or Tuesday.
The operators announced vester
I day they were earn: to their home
•ities after waiting eight days for
; ι resumption of the contract nego
. iations.
Soft coal management represen
' ative.·; left Washington, telling the
I a bur se"]··. î.i ry that they would re
j urn hniuediat'-ly on his call that it
j vi m Id be "possible to negotiate a
■ ntraet." As the strike entered its
'9th day, additional workers in r.
ated industries were made idle and
lroduv'tion -} ar.perl in steel mills
<nd automobile plants'.
One of the bright spots on the la
or front w; - the settle.nonl of the
lii-da.v 1rik* of .'ΐ.ΓιΟΐι (ΊΟ copper
liners at I-îutte, Mi.nl., who ap.
• •'o\ ed a r ι t l act calling for an
lonrly wage ''ike of ltt 1 :! cents and
eiroaetive pay of 9 1 I cents an
.our from la. t October 1.
The same ti rtns were agreed upon
ty 3,500 other copper workers at
\naconda Cooper Mining C'n. mills
ml smelters at Great Falls, and
\naconda, Mi nt.
The nation - idle bre.iuse η labor
isputes remained about 7 40,000.
Iran Denies
Censorship
Teheran. April 1 L>. — (ΛΡ)—Prince
■ Ι· ν.;ιΠ;η· Firou/, minister ot state·
.nd director o! propaganda. cate
.(irieallv denied today that the re
çut suppression of two dispat. hes
y the London Times correspi ndo :t
instituted an Iranian censorship.
He denied that "any censorship
vbatsoever has been imposed."
(An official U. S. State Depart -
nent announcement Wednesday said:
('The An.eric; ι embassy in Tehe
,.n has in'ormcd the Deparment o!
state and foreign correspondents in
ran have been notified officially by
ne Iranien ministry ol posts and
elegraphs that it henceforth will
wercise censorship ol dispat hes
iled by loreign correspondu ts
here.")
Firouz said the ministry of posts
ind telegraphs refused to transmit
he telegrams to the London Times
• accordance with the provisions
>!' article 26 of the international
nosts and telegraphic convention to
.vhich both British and Persia 'Iran)
■ire signatories.
He said the telegrams 'Vontained
•intents against the throne and oth
m fantastic stories and rumors, the
•irculatii » of which in this coun
try is contrary to law and can at
my time be followed up by public
prosecution."
RUSSIA WILL GET
COAL FROM POLAND
Warsaw. April 18.- (Delayed)
(AP) Fon-ign trade exnerts sa.v
1 c » i«·* !!··.-- ι 'irobablv will tot vir
- tuallv all ol P< land's coal export
fi ι the next year. Under a new
s · ommercial agreement signed re
t i centl.v in Moscow, Russia and Polan"
s have aereed to exchanges équivaloir
s to $196,000.non from April 1, 194«
r> to April 1 IP1" ;· d coal is the prin
- nle product wtj:rh Poland at presen
I is able to export.
IT'S NO JOKE, SON!-NEW CAkS ARE ON THEIR WAt
ABOARD A NEWIY-DESIGNED FREIGHTER, with a t'<p de-!; patterned after aircraft cnrnr··?. a γ:··-!»ο γ new 194fi
Plymouth, Dodge, Chrysler and Buick care are shown about to leave Detroit. They were being shipped to
Cleveland and Buffalo—the first to be delivered on one of the new type steamers. Ice in the Great Lakes lias
prevented the vessels from going into service unM recontly. (Internal, jnal Souudohoia)
Aussie Proposal On Spain
Gains Support From Council
5-Man Committee /;
Would Be Named
To Make Inquiry
X ( ■ \v V· ·: k Apr;! S - Λ Pi—Λ
compromise proposal by Australia
gained 1J ; / ; ι ' ! i ' t all (i legates of
the United Nations Security Council
today as a p<i.-sι ble solution to the
cuntrover.-ial Spanish question.
The proposal, submitted by Aus
tralian Delegate W. Π. Hodgson
■hort!y bel'··:·», ih· e.Hinc.i adjourn
ed yesterday for the Easter holidays,
rails for the app intment of a five
man sub-committee which would in
vestigate the Spam.-h .situation and
report back by May 17.
Most of the delegates were reluc
tant tu (mu,mit themselves on the
Australian suggestion immediately,
but they generally expressed inter
est and it was conceded by some to
have a good chance of being approv
ed.
Iran ( asc First.
llefore the < < un -il resumes its dis
cussion of the Spanish question,
11< ··.< ver. it will ta1 kle again tha
Iranian «mm·, win ii ... interrupted
Ί i.v.-.i u.;. . ■ ; ι . See:, iai.v - General
Trygve Lie submitted a surprise op
iiiii-n t!i t ;. doubt as
I ■ whelm ι 1:. ii ii.ian ease could
legally be kept < π :ne , ;euda.
Γ1ιi.-s w.i! i>:■ th..· ύ· -t ι:iing on the
council's docket when it reconvenes
Tuesday.
Ί iir v..... v. ,i · .. ne i ',.<]■ a new
floor fi.iiht on the Iranian question
\v r.en l he ί ■ : .iillee n( ex
perts on rules and procedure report
ed tl,.·. ι.: ■ l· . .. Willi t he
: ·· ι "uneil has
full authority to keep a ease on the
age mia as. 1·.;. , a.· ϋ inmKs neces
sary.
Λίαν Accept Ruling.
I'!;·· ι · iously had
I ICI Γ, ... , Ihl' (| I lOStlOll
ι ! ... : if the case,
was expected to accept the opinion
: i!.· ' .·. then \ ote to
keep the question on the agenda un
1.1 Mil · i'.v which Russia
is supposed to have all Bed army
troops "lit of Iran.
The three members of ihe com*
·:·■■■: ι ■·. ., ,:i the minor
ity were the representatives <>i" Rus
:a, Kr;.!i.-i i'< . ·. the three
I v. ι v. ι f.ivnivd dropping
the Iran:,ai c a-c.
The council was expected to come
back to the Spanish case by Wed
nesday or Thursday at the latest. It
was generally agreed that the Pol
ish proposal for a world-wide rup
tu.c . it <. i ! ι ) ί · · ι · . t ΐ ie relations with the
I Franco regime had little chance of
• Licci'^.- il brought to a vote now.
Solons I neertain
I low Homefolks To
Take \ ote On ΟΡΑ
Washiitttti·' At. ιi 19. ( AP>—·
House members crossed their fingers
ami headed I. >mcward today for a
short I'.'ι>tcr mi·-, thai eiiuld change»
the pietiiM· el the iltimate fate of
draft and OI'A U .^i.-lation.
A number of departing lawmak
ers intm:..H'd 1 hi > are not exactly
Mile whethei they voted right on
those two burning issues but that
they hoped ti· fmd out when they
got back among the "grass roots"
of then home districts.
WEATHER
FOR NORTH CAROLINA.
Fair this afternoon, tonight
and Saturday. I.iitic tempera
ture change except slightly
warmer in the «est portion to
i uigl^t v| d in the s<>itli and
west portions this afternoon,
t Sunday, partly cloudy and mild.
Congressmen Head Home,
With Many Tasks Undone
Washington. April 19. - (ΑΡι
Administration leader:- rcpuriwi i\
trimmed their legislative sails today
to live " must ' subjects m an ettoi;
to get an irritated and often rebel
lious Congress out of Washington by
early July.
The unofficial dcci.-ion appeared
likely to direct major efforts toward
salvaging ΟΡΑ and the draft, pass
ing regular appropriation bills and
getting approval for the 7 Γι ι ' .()()(>, -
000 British loan and a loug-ranyo
housing program.
If this program is follow··. . legis
lation to merge the arm. force .
increase the minimum w.iue rate,
broaden social security, c mail la but
disputes, -et up a pern:;.:: ·η' !-.rr
Employment Practice (.'onimissin:
and abolish state poll taxes won! ι
go by the boards until the next ses
sion in January.
Two Hills Approved.
Of these, only the mina iuni wage
and anti-poll tax bill ha\e approval
of either house. The Senate loaded
the wage measure with ! am prie··
boosting anviidment the .. In mi t.a
t ion oppose:·. The I Ion · -appro\ · ■
poll tax bill laces a Sen . fil bn. l■ .
any time it is calird up.
Also marked !'· m· di ■; it h Under the
program would bi· many relatively
less uni ' ■ r t ;. 111 measiies nil a wide
variety ni .-abjects ranging iron:
public works t(< presidential succes
sion.
Kk'kod .■·undly in the teeth by the
H'ai-'.· '·η Oi'A and draft extension,
the administration was represented
in sor.H Capitol liill quarters a.-, be
licv.iiK that it might be better for all
concerned to let the legislators go
home as soon as possible.
Senator Claud® I'epper (D) o!
Florida, a supporter of the Truman
program, said that on the basis ol
the House's recent actions. Congres:
app'-ared in no mood rmu to do any
ti; '11 , about a lot of problems he fell
were pres-:lig.
Kven the sliced down program is
e::|lectec! to require Congress' pre
sence here until early in July. With
the House off on an Faster recess
that la ts until April 31). the Senal··
ι . pectcd t . clea away today addi
ti n il debate obaacles that till ι,ro
bably will delay a vote on amend
ments to th·· 1 !ri1 :sh loan |>iopo.,al
uni il si .nie tune n« st week.
Russia Is I r<red
To Start Talks
For 1 ,oan Shi»rt!\
Washington Λρι i!)
'I hc United Si , !... -
Russia begirt negoliati<
two month- loi' a .rl.l'a·.
from the Exp irt-Imp···
An official whi ι
have hi..; na e ·..·· i.
, eussion also would C":
Balkan trade pact.-. !
! United States had ·γ.·»,
question ol whether !.'
the United X:·.·. :.
. trade organi/.ati >n.
Jap Premier
jWon'l Ο nil
Tokyo, April 1H.—(AP)·—Premier
Shidahara ilaily :>·. ise't tomghï ν
ai·.ede to dca and.- ol hu r p. hi:cai
parties that he rt.l»
He gave l:i< a ι : - \·. er ι η I ν few
hour-' after MVllaro M 'M.-ler Tilosh.
As'hida tinned in 11> p< 1". iolio r
support h, the liberay party's nxovt
to oust the Shidahara guvea :ia al
Ashida is a liberal.
The liberal party demand for tin
cabinet's resignation was supporte,
by the social democrats, and tw<
minoi p; rties. the cooperate ,.n·
communist.- Althi .ugh the li.viai.
led in the number of seats '.< in it
139. ι ο parly obtained a mm : .!·.
ot ll;o -166-seat diet at the riven
elect i' >n
Shidahara said he W".il ) 1" ra
his e! loris to fi rm a en,.1:1.· η .;<>\ -
eminent for the May diet se - on.
Xo other cabinet resignations a
party reasons were anticipated.
! Arthur Chevrolet,
^ioneer Maker ( )t
Autos, kills Soil
S; a loll. La.. Λ prit 1 , ΛΡ) Λ.
Ίι u' Chevrolet. > ι ο oi the founder
h the Chevrolet Motor C'o commit
rd suicide by haii'"ng I ίό-.Ί. γ
hi.- home late last nieht. act nj cor
oner H F. Gautreaus of, St. Tam
■rany parish reported t 'day
The automotive pi' neer. v. ha
cen despondent, was a native ο
Switzerland. ,
Λ Ρ
.1 t!
ιί ru; 1 loua.
1,900 ιNazi
<*
η ïi «
Prisoners
Ρ oisoned
Fi; nkturt. ,\. : 19. ι AI1) — Λ
1 my ■ t .ι ι. .i i.- .i..'. I » · istmini· ha
struck down :.:<>> German p: i. "li
er.·· cl \v;,; at ■ : American intern
mcnl »·;«!!.i· ·.· .. Νucrnbui « dte au.
ι the past ΐί-t hours. U. S. army head
I quarti-i'.- ai>; nuiiced t·,ulay.
AU the vicMn.. ait1 •"soriou.-ly ill'
, it \\.ι· said. Nu deaths were reported
I ht· pii··1 :h.t> wi'i'e seized with
| arsenic ρ* ι · i:!::.; ivi Stalag 13 nca
I Nuernberg, the announcement said.
Marly reports ironi the camp show
ed bread containing arsenic had
beeii iound and was believed tu be
i the· cause.
Hea.dq-uart.crs said the bivad fo·
ι he prisoner.-. "in accordance with
normal pr<>cedure." had been secured
!'π·η. a local German bakery by cun
t ract.
Housing Bill
Snugs Again
Washington, April 19. - ( Λ Ρ ) —
The administration drive to provide
•J 70(1,1 in-1 new hoi :c thi.- year air
•. ·■ t - i : 11 led ΐΊ· >lt.· 1 eenl er tm ta\
\\ ; * : iuii hope it! action for ai leas
If? ·
Frantic el forts t·· work ι ut a las
n.in,'te ompioinisi o! Senate-Houst
diiference before representative:
jit sail their Fa-1er recess tailed dc
spite twii set's i' t s yesterday in thi
1 I ο : : ,.ν ot Maioritv Lcade
1 iai! kley
Ha: . ley My told t he Senati
was "-i.u.-: liait rhinate" that tin
veteran's housing measure had no
l··. en ι It ared.
The Senate ρ ·.-.·«·ι! the emergenc;
housing measure April 10, writ
ι n,4 into two provisions the Hons
- hati omitted One calls for $600,
- OIH'.OOO in > ι li s i cl i es to break bottle
net's- in e ι struetion materials th
I ι ther guaiantees manufacturers
• cet 'm ,.j) to L!U0,U0U pretabri
cated houses.