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Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 1

Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 1

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Albuquerque, New Mexico
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69th Year Volume 281 Number 42 Entered aa sacood class matter Albuquerque. N. M-. post office under act of Congress 1S79 Thursday Morning. August 11, 1949 Published Every Moraine Price 5 Cents Heowir asft Mik? to CollectiYisiiM Sees Bradley Reveals Rearmed France Pivot of Defense Senate Told WAA Expert Was Paid $86,000 by Hotel Nationalists Re-Occupy Chungking Joe Heaston Replaces Tingley on Fair Board; To Take Office Monday Governor Thomas Mabry Wednesday appointed Republican Joe G.

Heaston to the State Fair board, succeeding former Governor Clyde Tingley. Mabry said Heaston's appointment would be effect- Birthday Speech Warns Against Federal Spending PALO ALTO. Aug. 10 (AD Former President Herbert Hoover tonight delivered a fMrathinjr attack on government spending and taxas which he wud threatened the nation with collectivism. In a major address clmaxing hi 75th birthday celc t- i a yfa-A I BaBBBHBaBBB.

Am i bration. the country I living former President Mrrt-! ed that "through government fpend.rg rsd taxe crjr nation it dmirg daTi I the back road" and it en the lt mile" to collectivism. A crowd at belviren SOOn and 10.000. including many ioldtime friend and Post Plans Albuquerque Story Soon Los Alamos Man Held for Fatal Shooting of Wife LOS ALAMOS. Aug.

10 Pv A murder charge was filed late today against the husband of a 23-year-old Los Alamos housewife whose nude body, a bullet in her back, was found in her home early today. Earlier, a coroner's jury held that the woman, Katheryn Murphy, mother of a two-year-old daughter, was slain by a bullet apparently fired by her husband. The murder charge was filed by Assistant District Attorney Abner Shreiber against Merlin 30, a security inspection service employe. No bond was fixed by Countv Justice of the Peace Ralph Carlisle Smith. Murphy In Hospital Murphy was in a hospital in nous wound condition with a bullet 111 1.13 SlL'llldLlI The Saturday Evening Post the ddrei in the vehrt agreed to publish an article on srecn Frost Memorial Bcm-L ncrt-Albuquerque in Its "cities of led amang the trees lmot in the America" series.

Mrs. Celeste shadow of the Hoover institute Catling of the Albuquerque Civic, and Lb on revolution Council reported Wednesday. Mrs. Catling said the national I and lce-magazine had already contacted) It a much l.ke a large, 1r-Neil Clark, of nearby Cedar formal family gathering. Trie Crest, to write the article which crowd was ouit.

When APPOINTEE. Joe G. Heaston, Albuquerque motor dealer, was named to the state fair board Wednesday by Governor Mabry. Heaston replaces former Gov. Clyde Tingley, who was 'fired'' Tuesday by the governor as chairman of the fair commission.

Two Plague Sufferers Recovering Two bubonic plague cases in New Mexico were confirmed Wednesday. But the sufferers, a Tr man in the Veterans Hospital here, and a boy hospitalized at! Taos, were both reported out of danger. Public health officials reported that the disease had been arrested in both cases before it reached the highly contagious stage. Credit for the recovery of both cases was attributed by physicians to "newer anti-biotics of the penicillin family." The disease, which in years past was considered so deadly it was known as the "black death," has occurred only 21 times in the past 25 years in the United States. The two New Mexico cases are the i i i CANTON, Aug.

10 (JP) The Government today is hastily packing the official archives for the long, sad journey back to Chungking, the wartime capital. Little more than three years ago, Chiang Kai-Shek and his government triumphantly moved out of that far western city and returned to Nanking. Japan was beaten. Now another of Chiang's old enemies, the Chinese Communist, threatens. Red armies are little more than 200 miles to the north.

The Red advance has put two provincial governments to light. The Kianesi nrnvinpp povernmpnt fied from menaced Kanhsien to Hweichang. Kanhsien is 215 miles northeast of Canton. Hweichang is ou nines suuuieasi ui xvaiinsieii. The Hunan province government, in the path of the main Red advance, has cleared out to northwest of Canton.

The gloom is thick in this refugee capital deep in south China Few believe Canton will remain the Nationalist capital much longer. Six weeks at the most, say some. Some officials already have gi.ne to Chungking. Others have left for Taipeh, capital of the island fortress of Formosa. Unless plans are changed, Chungking again will become the Nationalist capital.

But the seat of Nationalist power as everyone knows will remain with Chiang at Formosa. In the civil war fighting, the Communists were said to have thrown fresh forces into a hot battle northwest of Kanhsien. It is in this area that the Nationalists by official account assert they have 11,000 Reds encircled. Whether the fresh Red troops were sent to the relief of this force was not clear. Ram Sale Opens At Fair Grounds With 400 rams of ten breeds and cross-breeds and 30 purebred ewes as the offering, the twelfth annual New Mexico ram sale opens today at the State Fair grounds, it continues through Friday.

The consignor list includes leading breeders from New Mexico, Colorado, Utah and Texas. Their consignments were reported delivered Wednesday evening. Sale Manager Ivan Watson, who arrived Wednesday praised this year's offering as the best in the 12-year history of the sale, a non Sheriff John Carroll of Los Uldl Alamos county appraised the casej Meantime Tingley. who made it a -homicide and attempted suijplain he had not resigned but was cide The inquest was conducted! fred', sau he ahead bv District Attornev Bert Prince wth plans for a fair board meet- of Santa Fe. in Mrs.

Murphy was shot piuuamy win ue puousnea nexi fall. Clark has contributed a 1 1 1 ni 1 1 a number of articles to the Saturday Evening Post. A lengthy correspondence with the magazine resulted in the decision to publish the article, said Mrs. Catling. At first the publication's officials said that Albuquerque would have to wait a a considerable time, because it recently printed an article on Santa Fe.

But Mrs. Catling persisted. "I sent them gobs of literature everything I could lay my hands on, sne saia. A neipiul contact was David W. Cogswell, adver tising representative of the Post who came to Albuquerque in Mav and called on the Civic Council through her bodv.

piercing her Mabry offUy discharging him, heart, officers said. The other but was expecting it "any minute truck her low in the back and'no-. slanted off. Th-. bullets wer- cancer.

An ambulance driver, summon-d by a telephone call from the Murphy residence, found both doors locked and broke in with a neighbor's help. Thev found ilsner na memoer or me Doara Murphv lvir.g unclothed" on Slded Wlth Tingley in the livirje room floor near the tele- controversy, arrived Wednesday phorte. The receiver was hanging 'afternoon to attend today's board i i which has placed a number of, as head of commission which ads in the national magazine. proposed economy in government. Mrs.

Gatling conducted Mr. and In his address he lashed out at Mrs. Cogswell on a tour of the 'new Federal and state proposals city, and the highly-impressed for spending taxes, advertising man announced he i Toward Farlm would contact Post editors in an; ''Along this road of spending. effort to get an article on Albu-j Hoover said, -the government querque either takes over, which is So- Subsequent letters f-om the cialism. or dictates institutions! magazine were more encouraging and economic life, which" is Fas-and finally Clark was notified ofjCism.

the assignment, Mrs. Gatling I The American mind is troubled only ones reported in this country tarv tQ ex.Senat0r Hawkes so far this year. iN figurec in testimony about Recoyerinff the hotel deal. He was paid $5000 Raldon Gutierrez, 3,. a farmer bv Hunt as and at Placitas, 27 miles southeast of, ivi said but seldom Santa Fe.

is expected to achieve. dvi He denied that the complete recovery within another, in reali wag a fee week physicians at the Veterans steering Hunt onto the profitable Hospital reported. Lido Beach transaction. Solomon Salazar, 10 who con-; registered lobbyist rear uipy saia. I 1 Killed Her Verner Jeppesen.

the testified at the inquest that Murphy told him. "I killed her. She's in the bedroom. When asked whv. Murphv re plied, according to Jeppesen.

"on 1 account of the beating I ve been laKing arouna nere. Jeppesen said the Murphy's daughter. Mertene. ran into the living room before her father was taken to the hospital and cried, "Daddv hurt Mommy:" Time of Mrs. Murphy's death; Arms for Europe Slated for Once Powerful Land Force Aug.

10 (AP) The strategy behind President Truman's $1,450 million foreign arms program became clearer today as the military high com. mand disclosed that the bulk of assistance would go to rearm once powerful France. General Omar N. Bradley revealed that a strong French army is at the heart of the administration's plan to build up forces in Western The idea, he said, is 'mmediate assistance to make our European allies strong enough to delay and hamper any aggressor until the United States could get into action. Bradley declared the $1,160 million earmarked for European members of the North Atlantic Alliance will not give Europe the military strength to stop an attack by Russia.

The Army chief said it will take five or ten years "no one knows how long" for Western Europe to build up her economic and military power to a point where she can do that. But he added that the aid proposed now will strengthen her to the point where there may be no attack. Plan Secret Bradley said details of the plan to channel the bulk of European arms aid to France would have to be given to Congress secretly. It is no secret, however, that the enormous army with which France went into World War II lost most of its equipment during that conflict. The French air force Continue fare Nina East Swelters rider Years Hottest Wave By The Associated Press Easterners sizzled Wednesday in their worst heat wave of the summer.

Most of the Midwest was hot, too. and forecasters said no break was in sight. A cool air band, reaching from the Pacific Coast to northern Michigan, stalled over the nation's maue ii uie nones.i aay oi the vear for the nation's metrooo- ills, and the hottest Aug. 10 on record. Warm and humid weather con tinned in the Midwest with Chi- cago sweltering in mid-90 degree 1 1.

i sections of the central area, but 1 for brief periods More 'heat uiny iur uriei perioas. inore neat ana moisture was the Chicago area. forecast for New Mexico was warm, but temperatures were well below seasonal tops. Men Held Here Wanted in Swindle T3, tt A 1 and Marvin R. Donnelly, 34.

iAlhambra. arrested in the Hilton Hotel here last week by city police, are being held in the local jail for Los Angeles police, who hold felony warrants for the two men. stancin, 33, Los Angeles, now in jail there, are charged with 15 counts of grand theft in an alleged $80,000 insurance swindle. rlfXFe.s-Plp- Dist. Atty.j charge that Donnelly misappropriated $30,000 in premiums from a Chicago insurance firm for which he served as Los Angeles manager.

Lindley charges that the three men gambled the money away. The company, he said, handles insurance for used car dealers. Stancin is in the Los Angeles jail in lieu of $10,000 bail. Father Sues Motorist For Death of Son Suit for $25,992.14 was filed in is fat strict Court Wednesday by a father who charged negligence on the part of a motorist caused the death of his 14-year-old son, Charles Reynolds, on U. S.

66 last December. Clint Reynolds, who brought the suit, said the boy died instantly after being struck by a car driven by Olaf Marringer, a resident of Illinois, near Grants. i i Housing Chief Woods Says Vaughan's Plea Granted for 'Hardship WASHINGTON. Aug. 10 (AP) Senate investigators were told today that James V.

Hunt was paid $86,000 for helping a hotel firm repurchase the Lido Beach hotel for half what it had cost the government. Hunt received a $5000 check from the hotel firm while he still was employed by the War Assets Administration as a $50- a-day consultant, testified Francis D. Flanagan, staff investigator. Hunt kept the check three months, then returned it, quit his government job, got a new $5000 check and was paid the rest in fees for services to the Seiden Hotel Company, Flan-nagan went on. With Hunt's help, the Long Is- land hostelry which cost the Navy $1,300,000 when it was taken over for war use, went back to the V- 1 i til kill piU.J inuuuUUi the witness saicL He was quoting he' added from records of Hunt the WAA The special subcommittee looking into persons who allegedly sold businessmen their "influence" ir the government heard also that: 1.

Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan. presicient Tru man Army aide, called on Housing Expediter Tighe Woods asking him to "please hurry" trie granting of a construction permit to Tanforan racetrack in California.

The permit was granted the next day according to testimony. Paid for 'Services 2. Albert Lewitt, former secre- in 1947, sent letters to his paying clients describing fictitious interviews he was supposed to have had with top-ranking leaders of ongvess. He calmly admitted the talks never took place, but said 1 thlS WHS "Of nO Concern tO lllS Angrily. Committee Counsel William Rogers barked at him that the committee is concerned Continued on Pane Nine Cuba Girl Killed In Auto Mishap automobile on the highway a half mue norm oi luds.

An attempt to save the child's life was made by rushing her to the local hospital immediately i i i QTTar TnR arr upmi in an -Provided I bv the Cutter-Carr Pjane Prov iaea DV me yuiiei v-dii to the i rencn-t itzgeraia Mortu- haunting Yei-Be-Chai or night chant of the Navajo. Wide-eyed youngsters will marvel at the hoop-dancers of the Jemez. Indians come from many states the Pueblos and Apaches from New Mexico: the Utes and Paiutes from Utah; the Hopis and Apaches; bom Arizona: the Kiowa, Chey- enne, Caddos and others from Ok- lahoma: the Sioux from South Dakota; the Arapaho from Wyoming, the Nez Perce from Montana. Sometimes California and New York Indians take part. And Navajos from New Mexico, Arizona, Utah and Colorado arrive by the thousands as hosts.

Each morning, decked out ia i Monday. The announcement followed by 24 hours Mabry's disclosure that he had fired Tingley as chairman of the fair board after Tingley had been accused of "non-cooperation" by the state racing commission. Heaston said he would "do everything possible to cooperate with the present board and keep harmony between the fair board and racing board." Asked if he would vote to retain Leon Harms as manager of the fair Heaston replied: "I'm not in a position to speak as a member of the board yet. But speaking as a layman I think he has done an outstanding job." He declared: "Very definitely the fair manager should be responsible for hiring and firing," Fair employes. He made that statement when asked if he be-J lieved employment at the fair; plant should be on a political patronage basis.

Asked if he would favor an extension of the state fair racing season here, Heaston replied: "The racing commission has announced it has always opposed any Ji" extension of racing dates for the lr. very definitely I can ''y sa ne naa noi yet re- "-riginany ungiey naa planned today's session as a joint one with the state racing commission, but members of the latter group indicated they would not attend. Floyd Rigdon, Carlsbad pub- lantieu Fae Elrvea 3 New Mexicans On Missing Plane BOISE, Idaho. Aug. 10 (P) Idaho's air search and rescue squaaron today could find no trace of a missing plane with four persons aboard.

The lost plane took off from about Id. and Miss Edna Talia- ferro. Mrs. Gay's sister. Oregon and Washington volun teers, as well as the Idaho force, were hunting the airways for the missing Piper Clipper.

Four B-17s from McChord Field, Washington, also aided in the search. anT l.rmin UK Km he London 'Vampire Slayer Dies on Gallows Rope LONDON. Aug. 10 John traa today The dapper 40-year-old businessman who killed for profit was executed at London's Wands- worth prison. A crowd of 500 waited outside the gates for the posting of the official notice that he had paid with his life.

The Weather Al a. Ql tRQl Al MCIMTT: Sct- ckouiiiBMa Thurxliv and Fndav aft- rroon. etheria fair. Sujhtly wanner. H.a jX low 63 IB tfca S3 tha Tmlir.

MIAICO: Partiy cloudr after-itoona ana crnmics. Wtir -atired thun-tmiormt or nmfiiiiy fair Ttiur- iM Fndv. hn rbance in Tmpra- tu.r titn Tnurwlay tu-W t. ive profit event sponsored by the northern fringe. Northern Maine New Mexico Wool Growers Assn.

also benefitted from a Canadian The sale is slated to start in the cold front, sheep ring at 2 p.m. today, when But the rest of the east swelter-six Rambouillett and four Cor-jed. riedale stud rams will be Boston had an early afternoon their fleece weiehts announced temperature of 100. New York's the northern state likewise was considered out of danger and convalescing. sent here from the Western Contagious Disease Control Cen in q.n Frnrin tlH Anri.

Continued oo Pace Two Cancer-Doomed Boy Happy Over Get-Well Cards HOBBS. Aug. 10 6P) Clar Linden Underwood likes get-well was fixed at about 11 p. m. Rob-, Bremerton.

Sunday on a ert J. Hazel, the ambulance driv-' flight to Santa Fe, N. M. and has er. said a telephone operator in-! been unreported since.

The pilot formed him that a man had cai- did not file a flight plan and his led at 1:05 a. m. to report a shoot- probable route was unknown. ing at the Murphy address. i Aboard the craft, which may Murphy was covered with have headed for Boise from Pen-blood when Hazel and Jeppesen dleton.

were C. G. Walsh of broke in. they said. Santa Fe: Mrs.

Charles Gay, Los The shooting was the first such Alamos. N. her son. Charles, entered, and when he speaking, they sang finished "Harpy Birthday to You. From all over the country, and the world, came congratulations to the elder statesman.

He acknowledged the arparently tT of thousands" ef rreetire he had I received. ine lormer president aia cn "3'h birthday that while "we have i not had a great socialization of the result was brirs i achieved by government spend- ing oi ine peoples saving. Hoover spoke at Stanford Uni versity at ceremonies honoring him on his birthdav. lie onlv re- I cently finished two years of work ov me trowin oi cuuecuvisni throughout the world. "We have a few hundred thousand Communists and their fellow travelers in this country.

They can not destroy the republic. They aro a nuisance and require attention. We also have the doctrinaire Socialists who peacefully dream of their Utopia. ''But there is a considerable group of fuzzy-minded people who are engineering a compromise With all these European infections. I Thev fail to realize that our Amcr- k.

ZtZlT" n-C tion that a collectivist economy can at the same time preserve per- sonai hbertv and constitutional government." But. Hoover said, the "Auster- ity- in England should be a jI- Caatlavr Faa l.lnn Motorist Injured In Train Smash Henry Foreman. 22. of 2121 Iris Drive, was recovering Wednesday night from injuries received in a railway crossing accident that demolished his auto- Foreman suffered a deep gash on the forehead and cut on left forearm and was taken to the Indian Hospital. The crash occurred at Indian School Road crossing about 12:30 a.

m. Wednesday. Foreman and two witnesses told police the train bore no rear lights. The two, James Pierce of 214 South Bryn Mawr and Jerry Rigdon cf 116 South Stanford, said they were waiting on the west side of the tracks while Foreman's vehicle was on the east side. The Foreman auto started ahead and mllirtrl 1h rear of the train, officers said.

UN Little Assembly Seeks Prolonged life LAKE SUCCESS. Aug. 10 Mn The United Nations little assembly decided today to recommend to the general assembly that its own life be extended indefinitely. This body, known officially as the interim committee of the general assembly, originally was set up in 1947 at the suggestion of the United States for a one-year period. It was extended last fall for another year.

The committee is composed of representatives of all the 59 member nations, but Russia and some of her satellites have boycotted il since its creation. cards. The nine-year-old hopes1 he'll get a lot of them in Rising' Angeline Trujillo. 8-year-old Star Tex hospital daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Belar- Ctlrly haired Clar doesn't knowmin Trujillo Cuba died in that he has a cancer of the left Presbyterian Hospital here Wed-eye or that doctors have told evening from injuries re-parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Un-iceived a few hours earlier when derwood of Buckeye, N.M., that dashed into the path of an death at Los Alamos, officers said.

Mediator Called Rv Clerk's Union -1 i he can't get well The physicians say the cancer is slowly closing the gap between his eye and his brain. Clar was stricken in February, i4a. tie was treated nere, at Lubbock and Dallas before going i to Rising Star. flying service. Clar's father works f6r an oil! Deputy Sheriff Ignacio elarde.

company at Buckeye, West Cen-jCuba, said the little girl darted tral Lea County community. around the end of a wagon di-, rectly into the path of a car driven ASK ESCAPEE'S RETURN h' Forrest Randol, 209 South vv in An Third. Albuquerque. Witnesses said. Unification Law Is Given Teeth WASHINGTON, Aug.

10 T1) President Truman signed into law ioaay a medsuie the nation's fiehtine forces into 'trim, taut unity lm. taut unity. The oresident said that the legislation, which strengthens and revises the unification law of 1947, should enable the United States to attain "a Daiancea ana effective national deiense. The measure gives the secretary of direct power to ii ml activities, oro- steer all military activities, pro vides for a permanent chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and of. possibly vast importance to American taxpayers creates a centralized, business-type budget and ac counting system which has been held capable of saving hundreds of millions of dollars a year.

Sleeping Driver Dies in Crash FARMINGTON. Aug. 10 iJP) State Policeman Andy Anderson said William C. Privvett of Cortez.j fell asleep today at the; wheel and was killed in a crash; his truck. The accident happened about 5:15 a.m.

near Shiprock on U. S. 666. Roger Olden, Cortez, a passenger, was not injured. House Told Amendment Would 'Uncover Women WASHINGTON.

Aug. 10 T) Ronrocontntivo Melon Haha. gan Douglas once an actress unintentionally stopped the show today during the House debate on minimum wages. Mrs. Douglas was pleading for an amendment designed to preserve a provision of the wage-hour law without change.

This provision exempts employes of telephone companies serving up to 500 subscribers. The bill before the House tfould have moved the exemption to 750, taking more people from under the law. "I am speaking for women, Mrs. Douglas said. "Unless you adopt this amendment, 10,000 women will be uncovered.

After two solid minutes of laughter, her amendment won 153 to 103. I Frank Ahe of the States conciliation service at El ,11 federal LODOy UnitS Faso due to. arrive here today i to assist in settling a wage dis-' WASHINGTON. Aug. 10 )-pue between the Retail Clerks The Senate rules committee today International Assn.

and Safeway approved an investigation of and Barbers' store here. lobbying not only by private pres- M.5S Vivian Shorr. secretary- groups but by federal agen-treavjrer and international organ- jcief" of the union, said she invited The committee recommended Ashe here She the present, that ioint Senate-House com-wage and hour contracts with the' mittee be created with broad two chains expire at midnight powers and with $50,000 to spend. Fndav and the union has voted to li turned down, however, a Saturday unless new con- a 1 of Senator McCarran tracs a'e gred Nev.) for an anti-trust m- Apprcmatelv 60 clerks of the ir- into life insurance compan-tf stores of the" chains belong to' cost of $100,000 the union, which is affiliated with i The House already has ap-the American Federation of proved lobbying resolution. EddVcounty prisoner who escaped sald the accident was unavoidable.

Names of the missing were not will" be returned to New Mexico Randol was not held. learned. from San Antonio, Tex. Governor! Besides her parents, Angeline, Gillis and MacNeil got into dif-Mabrv todav approved requisition survived by four brothers and ficulty while swimming. The two and the rams sold, along witn tne The sale resumes on Friday at 10 a.m., when 400 range rams go on auction, with Walter Britten, College Station, as the auctioneer.

The ram sale committee mem uay, sale on staple certification. Wat auu better will apply on all rams of- Conrinnrd ea Pace FlftiTa FoUX DrOWIl Oil Coast j. i I 1 ilI Lape Breton Island INVERNESS. N. Aug.

10 (JP) -A human chain trying to rescue two youths from drowning were rt 'caught in an undertow off this Cape Breton Island town tonignt and four persons drowned. At least two others are missing. The dead: Malcolm Gillis. 17; Gerald MacNeil, 14: Simon White, 62. and his son.

Melvin, 27. All oro rnm Tnvprnpsc whites and others went to their aid but were caugnt in tne under- itow- their gorgeous feather headdresses, buckskin and jewelry, the tribesmen move slowly through the paved streets in a parade which they enjoy as much as do the thousands of spectators lining the curbs. In the afternoons there are rodeos, spiced with squaw log- Ping at night, by the smoky 1 ght of giant pinon and cedar fires, there are the dances packed with tradition and accompanied by entrancing chants handed down through the centuries. Although white businessmen manage the affair through the Inter-Tribal Ceremonial CUaae4 mm rac 8U.tea for Aaron J. Simpson who fledfive sisters.

The body was taken July "2 while serving a sentence for forgery. Labor. The ur.ion asked $5 increase merely as learn- ure for it was ed. Present ware scale is S45 a vMif a nrf Thousands Thronging Gallup As Ceremonial Starts Today 5 a week after two vears ex-. George Haigh.

vampire slayer of per erce inine persons who drank the blood and store heads' of his victims and dissolved their ro meeting Wednesday, but bodies in bubbling acid, plunged Ms Shorr expressed hopes that to hiS death through a hangman By ROBERT A. BARNES GALLUP, N. Aug. 10 It's whoop-it-up time for the Indians. Members of some 30 tribes have invaded Gallup for the 28th annual inter-tribal Indian ceremon ial For four days beginning tomor- row tribesmen will camp among the scrub cedar on hills around this northwest New Mexico town for their own special kind of con- vention.

Braves will whittle on sticks while they watch the spine-tingling war dances of the Cheyenne and the Kiowa. Blanket-draped squaws will curse babies as they listen to thei i settlement can be reached to- day. Tokyo Rose Prosecution earing End of Case SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 10 T.e government brought its' 'th litres to the stand today in the Toko Rose treason trial. la.

him "shiniiro told of turur.g in the propaganda broadcasts which Mrs. Iva Togun D'Aquin is accused of making to demoralize allied troops i in the Pacific. -TV- hnrt I S.e. i'-i Uus week. 4.

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About Albuquerque Journal Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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