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Show 'C" M .ion TEMPERATURES SUUoa Provo . . .Salt Lake Mas MinSUtioa Max Mia . 3T IT 'San rran. St 3S MOSTLY CLOUDY Sunday with some light snow showers. 19 Los Angeles 7S SI Ogden ZS 20 La Vega 1 IS Bole 40 zt Denver 4 31 39 3 33 32 52.3? Yellowstone 2 4lChlcaco ... Portland . . , Seattle . . . 49 3 New York 17 40, Atlanta , . . VOL. 24, NO. 33 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH. SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS V Mabey Named Speaker By Republicans Kerr Named Majority Floor Leader During Saturday Night Caucus SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. li (U.R) Rendell N. Mabey of Salt Lake City, was elected speaker of the house of representatives rep-resentatives for the ensuing session of the state legislature, legisla-ture, at a caucus of the Republican Re-publican legislators, held Saturday Sat-urday night at the Newhouse hotel. Clifton Kerr. Tremonton, was elected majority floor leader. Both Mabey and Kerr were named by unanimous vote. Mabey is a widely known, much respected veteran legislator. He was the only attorney in the house during the 1945 session and the 1946 special session. Kerr has seniority over Mabey as far as the legislature is concerned. con-cerned. He was minority leader during the last session. The Republicans will hold con trol by a wide margin in the low er house, but in the senate the Democrats hold control by one vote. Alonzo Hopkin has already been designated as the Democratic Demo-cratic choice for president of the senate. With speakership and commit tee assignments out of the way, Republicans will settle down today to-day to map out a legislative program, pro-gram, the program which the legislature will have to follow. Among the things they'll prob ably decide on is just what labor legislation to push, and just which of the administration desires to allow through and which to thwart. Freight Rate Cut Essentially What Geneva Requested The. way stood clear, totjay. Son effective peacetime operation of the Geneva Steel plant as a study of new freight rates granted grant-ed Friday revealed the company received essentially what it asked ask-ed for. The rate of $9.60 per ton to Los Angeles, Sain Francisco and Portland Port-land amount to the $8 rate requested re-quested sofrie time ago by the company, plus the 20 percent freight increase recently granted generally throughout . the nation. The rate decrease to the three major west coast points represented repre-sented a decrease of 22 cents per 100 pounds. A similar cut granted grant-ed in the rate to Seattle reduced the latter, to $10.80 per ton. Previous west coast - Geneva rates were generaly $12 per ton before the national blanket increase, in-crease, which boosted them to $14. The new rates to the west coast place Geneva in the competitive position which it . calculated it would grain from the requested $8 rate, because the 20 percent increase was applied nationally and affects other steel shipments in an equal manner. r From Los Angeles Saturday' came a Uni'ed Press dispatcn Quoting the steel committee of the Western States council as saying, a "tiuly western" steel industry has been established by cut in steel freight rates for shipments ship-ments in the west. Chairman K. T. Norris said the new rates "marks the culmination culmina-tion of efforts to establish a truly western steel industry." The new rates were agreed upon iriday in Chicago by four major railroads on which Geneva can ship to the coast. The various railroads and the shipping points concerned are as follows: Over the Rio Grande and Western Pacific railroads to San Francisco, San Jose, Oakland, acramento. Stockton and intermediate inter-mediate points. Over the Union Pacific line to Los Angeles harbor and intermediate interme-diate points. Over the Union Pacific to Portland and intermediate points. Over the Rio Grande, the Western Pacific and the Great (Continued on Page Two) vNavy Band Leader Dismissed; Gets Prison Sentence ANNAPOLIS, Md., Jan. 11 (U.R) .The U. S. naval academy tonight to-night announced that Lt. William iima, suspended academy band-. band-. leader has been dismissed from .the navy and sentenced to one -ayear at hard labor on charges jarising from an all-night party. s- The sentence was announced in an open letter from Secretary of Navy James Forrestal. The letter.: which did not specify the charges against Sima, directed that his sentence be carried out at the Portsmouth, N. H., naval prison, Wreckage of Missing Navy Plane Found In Antarctic; Six Survive BULLETIN ABOARD THE USS MOUNT OLYMPUS WITH ANTARCTIC EXPEDITION. Jan. 11 (U.R) A navy search plane, equipped with j.t propulsion pro-pulsion take off equipment, took off from the seaplane tender Pine Island late today to rescue six survivors of a navy patrol plane which crashed and burned in the frozen Antarctic wasteland 13 days ago, the command ship announced. WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U.R) The navy ' reported tonight that the burned wreckage of a lost Transport Hits Dover Cliffs; Five Killed ASHFORD, England, Jan. 11 (U.R) A British Overseas Airways corporation Dakota transport ran out of gasoline late today while trying to find a fog-free airport and crashed a few miles from the Cliffs of Dover. At least five of the 17 persons on . board were killed. The plane crashed less than an hour's flying time from the London Lon-don .airport.it left at 9:45 a.m. for Laeos. West Africa. It was scheduled to make a stop at Bor deaux, but the weather was too bad there and the pilot tried Paris and Brussels both in vain before in desperation he tried to make it back to his home field. The plane crashed into a hill on the farm of Samuel Hammon, skidded through a row of trees and snapped in two. There were 16 persons aboard 11 passengers and five members of the crew. The pilot and co-pilot were believed to be among the dead and nine persons were reported to be injured, some lighiljv 4wn.' grioBlyH they were riven blood trans fusions as soon as they reached reach-ed the hospital. . A BOAC. announcement said three passengers and two crew members were killed. Among the injured was Thomas M. Horabin, 50, a Laborite member mem-ber of ' parliament. All of the injured were taken to Willesborough hospital in ambulances am-bulances and private automobiles. Firemen and policemen had to pack the injured across a 500-yard-wide mire in the darkness and in a beating rain. The spot where the plane crashed is about 15 miles inland from the Cliffs of Dover. Besides the rain, the countryside wasi swathed in fog. Even so, the pilot saved hisj passengers from a crash in the! channel, which probably would! have drowned them all. Voting Begins In Iran Cities icxin.i, iran, Jan. ii v.r. vomig iui canaiuaies lur parliament parlia-ment started today in 35 Iranian cities. The vote was light in Tehran. Voters have six days in which to cast their ballots. The rest of the country will vote when the government considers that normal nor-mal conditions have been r established. estab-lished. The new maplis is expected ex-pected to be sworn" in during April. Election officials in Tehran said most of the ballots were marked for Premier Ahmad Ghavam Es--Sultaneh's "Democrat" candidates. candi-dates. Many voters wrote in Ghavam as one of their 12 selections, se-lections, "although he is constitutionally constitu-tionally barred from being a can didate. Ghavam is more than 70 1 years old. An opposition parade by university uni-versity students who rode through Tehran in 10 flag-draped buses turned into a small riot when Democrat supporters tried to disperse the students and were beaten. It Won't Be Long Non-Buyer's By JAMES McGLINCY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Jan. 11 U.R)That shining post-war dream known as a "buyer's market" is on the way at last in just about everything every-thing but it will be six months to a year before it really comes true, a survey snowed today. Along about next fall it ought to be possible for a citizen to walk into a store, say what he wants by color, size and quantity, and walk out with it without feeling feel-ing the price is too high. Maybe things will even reach the point where the clerk will smile and say, "thank you." The United Press sent reporters out to see the experts on autos in Byrd expedition airplane has been sighted in the frozen Antarctic wasteland and that six of its nine-man nine-man crew are alive. The navy communication did not disclose the fate of the other three crewmen, but a brief dispatch from H. D. Qufrr. United Press staff correspondent with the. expedition, ex-pedition, said they were reported re-ported dead. Quigg is aboard the USS Mt. Olympus, flagship of the expedition. expedi-tion. The navy department here said atmospheric conditions were such that communication with the Mt. Olympus was slow. It said conditions might improve during the night. The wrecked plane a Martin Mariner, had been missing since Dec. 30. When sighted by a navy search plane, it was 50 miles north of Cape -art. The navy did not know how far this was from the seaplane tender Pine Island from which the search plane was operating. The Mariner took off from the Pine Island at 5:45 a. m. Dec. 30. The last radio contact with it was at 7:25 a. m. when it was 250 miles south of the Pine Island. The position riven by the navy anouncement located the crashed plane in the area of the Thurston peninsula near the Demas mountains. There was no indication whether the plane crashed into the mountains. Fog, clouds and bad weather generally have plagued the expedition ex-pedition during the past two weeks and has hampered the search-. The nine men aboard the plane when it disappeared were: Capt. Henry H. Caldwell, Norfolk, Nor-folk, Va.; Lt. William H. Kearns, Jr., Boston; Lt. Ralph P. Leblanc, St. Martinsville, La.; Ensign Maxwell Max-well A. Lopez, Newport, R. I.,, Aviation Machinists . Matt 1c Frederick W. Williams, Hunt- ingtonr TwHVviatioo Radioman Calif.; Aviation Machinists Mate 2c William G. H. Warr, Reading, Pa.; Aviation Radioman' 1c Wendell Wen-dell K. Henderson; and , Chief Photographer's Mate Owen Mccarty, Mc-carty, Sonoma, Calif. The navy said the following message had been received from , the commander of the task force in the Antarctic: "PBM on search mission from eastern group has located burned (Continued on Page Two) Hughes, Grant Turn Up Safe After Search NOG ALES. Ariz., Jan. 11 (U.R) Howard Hughes and Cary Grant, two of Hollywood's most famous figures, were en route from here today to Mexico City in an obsolete obso-lete Douglas twin-engined bomber bomb-er after it was feared they might have crashed on a Cross-country flight from New York. The multi-millionaire motion ,Vfr nrnr 6nnrtcm. 0h i flyer and his film star compan- f"'?", "J.e"d11t0 "vie thJf pc" A J'2 is ,so,big that J1 Tk ion arrived here in a converted I lflm that foowed World War, be stored out-of-doors. So each B-23 at 630 a m MST and left'1- Tnere is no assurance that army plane will be sprayed with five about two' hours later for Mexico and navy expenditures will es- different coats of plastic. The re-City. re-City. Hughes planned to stop at oe the Republican axe. suit the AAF said, will be an Guadalajara en route and hoped But Stassen, a navy command- airtight synthetic cocoon seven to reach the Mexican capital to-' er in tne recent wr. emphasized times stronger than rawhide that njght that he did not favor cutting the will keep out harmful moisture Hughes and Grant left New" (Continued on Pae Two) (Continued on Page Two) York near noon yesterday. Theyj stopped at Dayton, O., and left! there last night They were un- reported after passing over In-( dianapolis an hour later. i Air authorities and the press j started a search for them andi finally caught up with them after checking airports for an hour. They had expected to reach Ama- rillo, Tex., late last night but no trace was found of them. In auick successifti came word l that Hughes left Municipal air- coast line, the first in United port at El Paso, Tex., early today States history, it was revealed to-for to-for Nogales and that he tele-j day. phoned from there to New York Young who is 49 years old and officials of Transcontinental &has parlayed a $3,000,000 invest (Continued on Page Two) Detroit, on furniture in Grand i Rapids, on clothing in New York, I on produce and fruit in Los An-i geles and Washington. "What is the shopping outlook for '47?" the reporters asked. "Not bad," was the way the answers added up. There will still be shortages of automobiles. electric washing machines, men's clothing, and diapers. Prices still will be high on many items. But, by and large, the peak hasbeen hitand from now on things are eoinatONpe better. AmericV-wjlLjeat as well as it ever did, for example, and it will probably cost less than last year. Women will spend as much for their clothes, but get more value.. Stassen Urges Budget Slash Of 5 Billion Wants 12Vi Percent Income Tax Cut On $300X00 and Under By JOHN L. STEELE United Press Staff Correspondent Washington. Jan. n (U.R) Harold E. Stassen cal led on his fellow Republicans: m congress today to slash $5,000,000,000 from the $37, 528,000,000 government spending program proposed by President Truman in fiscal 1948. The former Minnesota govern or, who wants to be president, said at a news conference that the budget submitted to congress yesterday and already headed for a Republican pruning was "wasteful and extravagant." He urged a 25 per cent cut in all items exeept those covering cov-ering national defense, veterans vet-erans care, housing and interest in-terest payments on the national na-tional debt. This, he said, would provide a $6,000,000,000 surplus for the fis cal year. Half of that amount should be used to reduce the national na-tional debt and half to cut taxes, Stassen said. Stassen said such a reduction in spending would make possible a 12 per cent tax cut on incomes under $300,000 and a 10 per cent cut on incomes over $300,000. Meanwhile, house Democratic whip John W. McCormack. Mass., former majority leader, admitted that Republicans have enough votes in congress to put through a 20 per cent tax reduction pro posed in a bill by Chairman Harold Har-old R. Knutson of the house ways and means committee, I McCormack said Democrats would oppose the bill vigorously because "an across-the-board reduction is not the proper way to approach the problem." But he indicated no' hope of success. The Republican carving on Mr. Truman's budget probably will begin -sooq after-Jan: 20Qn'that-date 20Qn'that-date Chairman John Taber, R., N. Y., calls his house appropriations appropria-tions committee - into, session for hearing's On 'money bills cdvering the navy, treasury-postoffice, labor-federal security, and the interior department. Taber " said Mr. Truman "has allowed very liberal amounts" but that the committee com-mittee "will show him how ther can be trimmed down and increase the efficiency of the government." He expects to get on Monday a report on the unspent and unobligated unob-ligated funds in the hands of every ev-ery government department.. Taber Ta-ber said he figures on recovering a lot of that money for the treasury. treas-ury. The first Republican budget slashes will be aimed at spending. spend-ing. The question of reducing taxes will be decided later. Knutson Knut-son is running into considerable "wait-and-see" sentiment among his own colleagues as well as among Democrats. Some administration leaders are worried over the possibility that Republican cuts in national defense expenditures would weaken this country's military po- Young Plans Coast-to-Coast Railroad Combining 10 Lines By T. XV. KIENLEN United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U.R) Robert isus of R. Young, newest colos-American colos-American railroading, plans a $6,000,000,000 coast-to- 'ment into a billion-dollar Market Due Here is the outlook in various fields: Durable Goods the automo-lpeake bile industry estimates it will turn out 4,500,000 cars and trucks in 1947. There are several if s to that if there is no auto strike to cut production; if there's no steel strike to delay parts; if there's no coal strike to shut off the steel supply. The same if's apply to electrical appliances. " In any case, the experts estimate none of these articles wHl be available in quantity before another six months anyway. No price drops are in sight; indeed, there may be increases. It depends in a large (Continued on Page Two) - 0) n Marshall Pauses on 0 1 I? til x I Gen. George C. Marshall, newly appointed Secretary of State, is greeted by his wife at Honolulu, T.H., upon his arrival there from China, where he has spent 13 months as President's special envoy. Marshall made no statements regarding his appointment. The general was to pause for brief rest in Hawaii before returning return-ing to Washington, D. C. Radiotelephoto from Honolulu. Marshall In Hawaii; Waits ror worn rrom wasmngron HONOLULU; T. H., Jan. 11 (U.R) Secretary df State Gen. George C. Marshall today held his first press conference since his appointment ap-pointment and said he was awaiting await-ing word from Washington before be-fore resuming his aerial trip to the nation's capital. He told reporters at an inform al press conference on the spac ious front lawn of Fort Defussy 1,500 B-29's To Be Stored; Placed In Synthetic Cocoons WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U.R) Fifteen hundred B-29 superfortresses superfor-tresses soon will be put into synthetic syn-thetic cocoons of plastic to preserve pre-serve them for emergency combat com-bat use. The army air forces said to-j I uigm uiui me Heavy uuuiucta now stored at various AAr bases throughout the country, are in danger of being destroyed or seriously damaged by the ele- ments unless something is done. road empire in the past 10 years,, revealed his blueprint for a transcontinental line in an, inter view in the current issue of Ad vertising Age. He said he planned to combine 10 roads in a one-management line between the east and west coasts. It was Young who battered bat-tered down old railroad preju-riirec preju-riirec with a direct advertising railmnrwal tin the nuhlie and succeed ed in scheduling through pull- man service from east to west Young told the magazine that he planned two eastern spurs for the Droiected line one using the 'Lackawanna from New York to j Buffalo and the other the Chesa- & Ohio from Washington to Cincinnati. After he gave the interview however, Youngi announced that the Alleahany corp., wmcn ne heads, has bought 162,500 shares of New York Central stock, wall street estimated it cost him $1,-925,000. $1,-925,000. Since young is a good friend of Harold S. Vanderbilt, whose " family holds the biggest single block of New York Central stock, it appeared that line might be substituted for. the Lackawanna Lackawan-na :- in" his- plam. -t At Buffalo, Young said, trains would be routed over the nickel , (Continued n Page Two) Toward Homebound Trip on Waijtiki that he planned to remain; re-main; in- Hawaii through the weekend and as much longer as the situation would, permit in order to get maximum rest before be-fore undertaking his new duties. He refused to comment regarding re-garding the Washington factors fac-tors which will determine his departure. "I am just beginning to feel rested," he said. "It took a little time to get started after that 36 hour flight from Nanking." The last two days have been ones of social visits for the new secretary. He was, still staying at the fort cottage with his wife. Tonight he has a dinner date with Lt. Gen. John Hull, commanding general of the middle Pacific 0S i ; II ; - I 5 - . armed forces. jsible only by Vandenberg's The dinner will be at the home ("wholehearted and intelligent co-of co-of Gov. Ingram Stainback, who 'operation." called-on Marshall yesterday. j In his 15-minute address, Marshall also saw Pacific fleet commander John H. Towers and Maj. Gen. George Decker, mid-Pacific mid-Pacific chief of staff. In the mid-afternoon mid-afternoon yesterday, Marshall called on Hull at Hull's Fort Shafter headquarters. Arnall Quits As Georgia Governor ATLANTA, Ga.. Jan. 11 (U.R) Ellis Gibbs Arnall, whose liberal regime gave Georgia an 18-year-old voting law, eliminated its poll tax and "swept him into national political prominence, resigned the governorship today but made it clear that he will not yield the office to anyone but Lt. Gov. elect M. E. Thompson. Arnall HanHH hie rpcianatlnn to secretary Gf state Ben W. Fort- son, Jr. It came two days before the state legislature "was scheduled sche-duled to settle the tangled gubernatorial guber-natorial succession issue, precipitated precipi-tated by the recent death of Gov,-elect Gov,-elect Eugene Talmadge 23 days before he was -to be inaugurated. Probe of Tink Professors7 In U. Si Colleges Proposed WASHINGTON, Jan. 11 (U.R) Rep. John E. Rankin, D., Miss., said tonight that as soon as the house unAmerican activities committee com-mittee is fully organized he will ask it to begin an investigation of "ping professors' in American colleges. Rankin . said he had received hundreds of letters from all parts of 'the country 'pr6 testing that teachers and professors are "trying "try-ing to indoctrinate our college students with Communistic ideals." - "These letters aren't confined to any one section of the country," Rankin said.. "They come from, all over. That's a good" indication that these subversive activities are organized on'a' wide scale and rir Vandenberg Asks For Shake-Up In State Department Byrnes Hopes Argentina Will Come In With Other Western Hemisphere Nations; Vandenberg Says Byrnes 'Great American' CLEVELAND, Jan. 11 (U.R) Secretary of State James F. Byrnes said in a valedictory address tonight that he is "more confident than at any time since V-J Day" that the nations of the world can achieve just peace through cooperative co-operative efforts. "We must not let ourselves believe that the struggle for peace is hopeless -because we can not at once find ways and means of reconciling all our differences," Byrnes said. tie caiiea lor continuation of his "firm policy toward Soviet Russia." Byrnes addressed the Cleveland. Cleve-land. Council on World Affairs after his Republican UN associate, associ-ate, Chairman Arthur H. Vandenberg, Van-denberg, Mich., of the senate foreign relations committee, had lauded him as "a very great American." Vandenberg also paid tribute, trib-ute, to Byrnes' successor, Gen. George C. Marshall, but called on him to shake up the state department and "hammer out a permanent foreign policy.' There should be a long-range program, Vandenberg said, to reduce re-duce the need for "catch -as-catch-can improvisation and expediency. ex-pediency. Vandenberg approved in principle to the Democratic administration's . foreign trade program and called for continuation continua-tion of the bipartisan policy in world affairs. But the GOP leader made it clear that his party reserved the right, if occasion arises, to voice earnest, honest, even vehement domestic differences of opinion on foreign policy." Vandenberg said the top U. S. representative in the United Nations, Na-tions, now Arren R. Austin, "should be a permanent undersecretary under-secretary of state." Byrnes said the United Nations Na-tions had been able to progress during the past year because U. S policy has not been that of "a political party" but rather "has been the policy of the United States." This country's unity on foreign nolicv. he added, was made nos Byrnes singled out only one na tion Argentina for special mention. He expressed hope that before long Argentina would comply with the act of Chapul-tepec. Chapul-tepec. That act provided for negotiation negotia-tion of a mutual assistance treaty among the American republics Byrnes told the council thai there had been time during the past year's peace negotiations when he was "deeply discouraged." discour-aged." "Our repeated efforts to achieve cooperation in a peaceful world seemed to be meeting only With contant rebuff," he said. "But we persisted in our efforts with patience pa-tience and af irmness. "Today I am happy to say that I am more confident than at any time since V-J Day that we can achieve a just peace by cooperative coopera-tive effort if we persist 'with firmness in the right as God gives us the power to see the right'." Byrnes did not refer in his address to his retirement or to his successor. Most of his talk was a review of international ne-( ne-( Continued on Page Two) . aren't simply local outbreaks." ; The committee faced a fight for its own life, meanwhile, as a result of a. resolution introduced in the house by Rep. Adolph Sabath, D., 111. Sabath, a veteran opponent of the committee, asked that it be abolished. Sabath tried to introduce a similar resolution the opening day of congress but was blocked by House Speaker Joseph W. Martin, Jr., R., Mass. in his anxiety to get through the -congressional reorganization re-organization plan without opposition. opposi-tion. Rep. John R. Murdock, D., Ariz., a member of the unAmerican committee, said sit - could be abolished by a simple majority vote. But-he said he doubted any such ' action would be taken. Firm Kussoa United Nations Wants Man For $20,000 Position LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Jan. 11 (U.R) The United Nations is looking look-ing for a man who will accept $20,000 a year in payment for a permanent headache. If, among other things, he can juggle hot potatoes in each hand while crossinr a field of eggs barefoot, he may be just the man the UN needs : for governor of the free territory ter-ritory of Trieste - : - - j The UN security council has about six weeks in which to find the right man and disprove the old maxim that you can't please everybody. Unless the candidate gets the approval of the Yugoslavs, Yugo-slavs, the Italians, the Russians, the British, the Americans, the French and his own wife, he can't have the job. The governor's post may prove to be one of the most difficult public jobs in the world. It was established by the Big Four in their plan to internationalize the problem city of Trieste and its environs and thus put an end to Italian efforts to keep the area and Yugoslav attempts to annex an-nex it; For about 90 days after he is sworn in, the governor will have some 5,000 American, British and Russian troops as a police force They will be withdrawn in three months unless the governor convinces con-vinces the UN security council he needs them longer. Eventually, the UN's policing job in Trieste may be done by an international force which will take its orders from the governor and its chief of police. " Italians make up a clear-cut majority of the 250,000 persons in Trieste itself, but the population popu-lation in the adjacent area included in-cluded in the free territory is predominantly Slavic. Stocks Decline, Sales Moderate NEW YORK, Jan. 11 (U.R) Stocks declined 1 to more than 3 points today on moderate trading. Liquors were hard hit. Schenley broke, more than 4 points to a new low. At 41, the issue was 59 points under its 1946-47 high. National Na-tional Distillers and American Distilling also made new lows and Distillers Corp. Seagrams equalled its low. Park & Tilford lost 3 xk points. Du Pont broke more than 4 points. Southern Railway and Santa Fe lost more than 2 points each. Losses of a point or more were noted in Bethlehem Steel, Chrysler, General Foods, Deere & Co., Grumman Aircraft, International Inter-national Harvester, Kennecott, Pullman, Standard Oil (N. J.), Goodyear, and Goodrich. American Sugar Refining preferred pre-ferred ran up 3 points on two sales. A few other issues made minor gains, but the main list showed losses. Trades were selling sell-ing the so-called consumer goods industry shares. This classification classifica-tion embraces amusements in Wall Street lists and that group sagged to new lows in the lead- ' ing isues. . Dow Jones closing stock averages: av-erages: 30 industrials 175.25 off 2.18; 20 railroads ' 48.50 off 0.99; , 15 utilities 36.15 off 0.45; 65 stocks ' 63.18 off 0.91. ; Sales totaled 620,000 shares compared with 300,000 shares last Saturday; Curb, volume1 was 180,-000 180,-000 against 100,000 '.shares last Saturday. Bond turnover of $2,-. 480,000 compared, with $9,282,900. |