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Show WEATHER UTAH Scattered elands to-day. to-day. tonight sod Saturday, slixhU ly cooler northwest today, rising' temperatures northwest Saturday High today 78 to 85. except SS la Dixie. Low Saturday morulas" 85 to 45. TEMPERATURES Max. Min- Max. Min. . . II 4IIH Angeles 13 It Salt Lak OgSea . . Batt . . , Seattle PrtUn4 Sam rraa IS 41 Albuquerque II 5 It 41 Denver . . IS 5 2 ZT.CfcJcag ... IT IS 4S,Wahigton II 39 J 41 New Vrk 9 4 ,AtUmU ... U il SIXTY-FIRST YEAR, NO. Bids Sought On $300,000 Water Line Provo to Launch Work On First Unit of New City 48-Inch Line Notice to contractors asking ask-ing for bids on construction of Provo's new water main from the mouth of Provo canyon to the city reservoir near Rock canyon will be publishd within with-in the next few days. Water-Commissioner Water-Commissioner J. Earl Lewis said today. The job, estimated tentatively at about 8300,000. will be a major unit of the city's million dollar 'waterworks Improvement fund for which it bonded nearly a year ago. The aqueduct wiH be a 48-inch 48-inch line, running from the Gillespie Gil-lespie warehouse near the mouth of Provo canyon approximately 18,000 feet to the city reservoir near Rock canyon. City officials are in hopes the work can be completed in time to use the new line next year by the time the water shortage season arrives. The line will remove the present bottleneck in the city's water system, which has plenty of water but anhadequate line to bring enough of it from Provo canyon to city users. The old aqueduct will remain in use after the new one is installed, in-stalled, -and Provo will, for a few years at least, have a surplus of wtaer until the city's anticipated growth uses it up. With this in mind, officials met Thursday night with farmers of the Pleasant Pleas-ant View area below the city's old aqueduct, and discussed with them the possibility of supplying irrigation water from the surplus. sur-plus. The water In the old main, some of which would go into the reservoit, would still be pure spring water, but the available surplus could be made .available to farmers for irrigation. Wilford Stubbs was named chairman of a farmer's committee commit-tee to further develop the plan from their standpoint. Meeting with the group was Commissioner Lewis Waterworks Superintendent Superintend-ent Clark Newell, and Hamilton Calder and John O. Becsley. The latter two are members of the utilities division of the city planning plan-ning board. Alarm Spread For Kidnaper Of Young Wife LITTLE SILVER, N. J.. Sept. 27 (UP' A man posing as an FBI agent entered a boarding house today and at the point of a gun forced a pretty young wife to leave her husband's bed. dress and leave with him. State police broadcast an 11-state 11-state teletype alarm for Chalmers Landbaugh, described a.s a 35-year-old Washington, D. C. gambler, sought in abduction ol Mrs. Mary Kimmey. 26. wife of Sgt. Glynn Kimmey, a soldier stationed at Fort Monmouth, N. J. The Kimmcys lived at the home of Mrs. Charles Muth. Mrs. Muth told police that at ? a. m a man came to the door and said: "I am an FBI man and I want to talk to Mary." Mrs. Muth told police that he flashed something in his hand as if it were a shield. She invited him into the house and led him to a second floor bedroom. On the way to the second floor, he told Mrs. Muth: "Mary is a very dangerous girl." When they reached the door of the bedroom. Mrs. Math said the man kicked the door in. Kimmey and his wife were in bed. Mrs. Muth said she heard their voices raised and at one point, Mrs. Kimmey said: "But were married." The man ordered Mrs. Kimmey to get dressed. She donned a red checkered jacket and a red wool fckirt. When Kimmey protested he was knocked to the floor and the intruder and Mrs. Kimmey left the room. As they were leaving the house, Mrs. Muth said she heard him say: "Everything will be all right, don't worry." They left in a 1937 black Ford sedan with either a District of Columbia or Ohio license li-cense tags. Kimmey informed police that his wife told him of a Chalmers Landbaugh. a man she knew as a gambler in Washington. Kimmey said that once she mentioned she had been threatened by Landbaugh. Land-baugh. SCREWBALL TO RUN FOR U. S. SENATOR . HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 27 U.R Professional Screwball Jim Mor-an, Mor-an, fresh from his triumph of hatching an ostrich egg, en-nounced en-nounced himself today as a candidate can-didate for U. S. senator from California Cali-fornia on a Buffalo ticket. 85 U. P. Flyer Cracks Seven persons were known to be dead and more th an 70 injured in the telescoped cars of Union Pacific's crack Transcontinental Limited, which crashed near Victorville. Calif. The engine of the passenger train jumped the tracks, spilling coaches over the countryside. Brick Plant At Lehi Sold For $375;000 SALT LAKE CITY. Sept. 27 (U.PJ The war assets administration administra-tion has sold the government-built government-built silica brick plant at Lehi, ;Utah, to the General Refractories company of Philadelphia for $375,000, it was announced today, j Joseph S. Willes, Salt Lake regional re-gional director of the WAA, an nounced the sale after receiving word of its approval from the disposal agency's price review board in Washington. i . The General Refractories Co. was the high bidder for the plant ; when the WAA opened bids 13 days ago. Its offer was higher than those submited by the Glad-ding-McBean Co., wartime operator oper-ator of the property; Utah Fire Clay Co.. of Salt Lake Pity, and the Shanandoaa-ftriek hd "Tile Co., of Winchester, Va. 1 The purchase price must be , paid to WAA within 90 days. In 'its bid offer, the General Refractories Re-fractories firm promised to put the plant into operation without delay for manufacture of silica ,brick and associated products, , About 75 persons wil be employ- eu. ine oeneva oieei plant is one of the major customers. Attempt To Kill Bolivian Prexy Ends In Failure LA PAZ BOLIVIA, Sept. 27 , "va, in aaoiuon .o me nui.idi p. s. Parker, Alhambra. Calif.. (U.R) -An unsuccessful attempt to , P1,ce' were. hos? of.a,raan abou,,the engineer, was thrown from assassinate President Tomas Mon- u ana a gIrl aDOUl lt5- his cab an descaped with bruises, je Gutierie of the Bolivian Junta! While the waters were receding but it took several hours to re-was re-was made tod-.v. I in the residential area of the move fireman R. J. Zetalmaier. The attempt to kill the prcsi- town, the San Antonio river into 'Monterey Park, Calif., trapped dent was made by former Lieut, Louis Ublitas Bustamantc who was seized immediately by a mob and killed. The president was not hurt After kiling Bustamantc the crowd hung his body from a lamp, post in the Plaza Mkrillo. STOCKS IRREGULAR NEW YORK, Sept. 27 j.PJ Stocks moved irregularly in the final sessions of the week todav on the smallest volume in month. Today's Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington ooo oo Boston 112 01 Newsom. Hudson 3 and Earlv; 'Hughson and Partee. Home run: Higgim. Bos.. 2. none on. i i.. I 1st game St. Louis ioi ooo looa 8 i ; i03?0 21, 1 SX 7 13 -2; and Helf ,x nw i t , Home runs: McQuillen. StL.. 1st 1' L none on; Christman StL. 3rd, none I on; Helf, StL. 7th, none on. I I NATIONAL LEAGUE 1 : 1st name Pittsburgh ooo -'Cincinnati 012 Bahr and Selkcld: Beggs and Mueller. Home run: Lukkos Cin., 2nd, 0 on. Chicago at St. Louia night game. 14-Year Old Girl First Time After CHICAGO. Sept. 27 (U.R) The doctor tenderly removed the bandages and Betty Goudy, 14, saw the world for the first time. She touched the doctor's lips as he bent over her and asked "What's that?" "I'm your doctor," said the kind voice that belonged to the lips. "You're looking at my mouth." "It moves when you talk," the girl exclaimed. Blind since birth, Betty was given sight through the eyes of a new-born baby. The PBOVO. Up Near Victorville California Train Wreck Toll Placed At 6 Dead, 70 Injured VICTORVILLE, Calif.. Sept. 27 j (U.R) Union Pacific railroad officials of-ficials scheduled a thorough investigation in-vestigation today of the wreck of their crack transcontinental passenger pas-senger train in which six persons were killed nd more than 70 injured in-jured when the engine , jumped the tracks on a desert grade curve. '' Speeding across the California across me vwuonnd,. desert less than three mile from this railroad division center yes- terday. the westbound engine lcftJ the tracks, pulling the . tender Six Drown In Texas Floods . AIAJSTQNJp Tex.Sept. 27 0J.R) M. least six persons were drowned and property damage; ran nuzn loaay m inc wane ui rampaging flood waters of three Creeks in this area. Six inches of rain fell on this historic city during a 12-hour j period, but this morning the rains had ceased and the flood waters, uu iu iwwv. The bodies of six victims. among them three military po- liccmen who had helped rescue' ...,-,.. nihi wn.-P crews durine, the night were luu.m ,,: '-"- - ' desert country only a short dist- WC.St ,8 kC ClfC , fF t dincc from a bride across the hnLv' Cnnt the Mohave river. Ambulances reach-heavy reach-heavy downpour. tne ECCne wth reatest difficultv. Only one of the dead was!irnured Dasscnccrs not flown to identified immediately. She was Patricia Painter. 16. The other 7 bodies, in aaamon to tne military wnicn tne crecKs now cominuea w rise souin oi me tn;, anu a :ncav' loss oI property was icared in the lowlands. The flood touched its peak shortly after midnight when the water was knec-deep in many beci.ons oi ims Aamo c.vy. runa said many homes had been wash- ii m At : . r i : . led away completely, especially in the south part of town. Two hundred military police responded to emergency call from a ; nearbv Fort Sam Houston to aid i local police and firemen in rescue work and direction of traffic. Flood waters backed up to a height of 25 feet in Olmos dam on the San Antonio river. The dam held, however, and the flood in San Antonio was causod only k h cfoo,. "-" J , " "K"". j which began late yesterday. A misty drizzle continued today, but weathr officials said the worst was over. The flood was reminiscent of a '(disaster 2o -years ago on Sept. 9,i,,ji I . n.. . .... - ...a . , 1921, when 50 persons lost their lives and milions of dollars in property was destroyed by the rampaging waters of the San An - lni,nroiyer;-C'ty oicjalsJaer!day to meet new contract de- : xi u,t w mands or face a nationwide strike Olmos dam built. at midnight. Sept. 30. Last night's level was the high-1 The Independent Power Work-est Work-est recorded since the dam was ers union in Pittsburgh rejected completed in 1926. Sees For Operation corneas Of a stillborn child had been transplanted into her own eyes by Dr. Richard Peritt. When the bandages were taken off yesterday she could see, but her vision was blurred. It will be for some time, the doctor said. Her sight will come gradually. Betty's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Goudy, a farm couple from Artesian, S. D., found that their own vision was clouded as they stood by her bedside. But the tears were those of happiness. UTAH ' COUNTY. UTAH. with it and dragging the baggage car sideways. The three coaches behind the baggare car telescoped and were left in a tangle of wreckage wriich extended for hundreds of yards. Most of the 207 uasencers still were in their berths. The ma-, i ... "Vf" ""V acraumem invoivea oniy me tore forward coaches. ine identities dead, taken to a .. .. k., Union Pacific as Fidel T. Erlizza. 35, Los Angeles; Edward Koch, 58, Staten Islands, N. Y.; Mrs. Joseph Stein, 58, Canton, S. D.; Velma M. Reinhart, 41 Long Beach," aJso identified as Magdalene Magda-lene Reinhart of Ohio: Dorothy B. Palcnlr.-Wrirorr River: "Mich., anrf pullman. porter William Henry Pope, jos Angeles. r, , ., u."' - v..m. purses, were found in the wash- r00m of an overturned coach , ThiHl. . r, , injured were flown to Losltack " h,S forei8n Policy. Angeles Good Samaritan hos- In a ful1 dress Policy speech, nital in nlnnf from fhn VJ-tr.r-1 : ville armv air base Tn maioritv of inillred were ' V-?T L r- removed in flat cars from the d in wild LoS Angeles were taken to the air base hosDital. ! , in the wreckage with a broken. iCg. !ld Parter. -Tv; beei TaHrSTd- inc for 41 voars anrl this une my first accident that amount. ed to anything." Richard Henke. Los Angeles ,.i, i, . , 10 ' j L ' j """ Ju""un- i&edfd asVUoelievI 'able that mo. n.nni ! either wifed or badlv hurt." Pittsburgh, Hollywood Still Plagued By Strike Troubles By UNITED PRESS .ers' jurisdictional strike corn- Pittsburgh power workers, re- pletely halted production at MGM jecting a new company contraband Warner Bros, and hampered offer, continued a walkout which had disrupted the city's industry today, while at Hollywood police sougnt to quiet violence in a workers strike at major i fllHirt j In the onl otner ,abor i dispute. CIO dockwofkers gave mr,in - . .,n a Duquesne Light company con tract offer last night, refused to arbitrate and resumed picketing. Union President George L. Mueller said the company refused to change its .offer which granted a five per cent wage increase and revised holiday and pension plans. Workers had been awarded an 18-cent hourly boost earlier this year. Mueller said the company again had suggested arbitration. The union feels the arbitration offer is "entirely out of line," he said. because the union membership rejected arbitration a week ago. The company's generators, manned by supervisors and maintenance main-tenance men. maintained power output at only 35 per cent of normal as the four-day strike tightened its grip on an 817 square-mile area and 1,500,000 persons. In Hollywood, the studio work FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER Australian Proposal Voted Down Byrnes Slates Address On American Foreign Policy For Next Week By R. H. SHACKFORD United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Sept. 27 (U.R) Australia's Aus-tralia's proposal for establishment estab-lishment of a European "court of human rights" was rejected by the peace conference confer-ence today as Secretary of State James F. Byrnes revealed re-vealed he will deliver a full-scale full-scale address on Am erican foreign policy next week. The Australian proposal was voted down 15 to 4 after a slashing slash-ing attack on the suggestion by Andrei I.. Vishinsky, Russia, who said there was neither a legal nor a political basins for the proposed pro-posed court. "Why not a world court of human righto?" Vishinsky demanded. "Why not a court to protect human rights in India and Asia or for the black people of the United States?" why Australia was displaying "so .!"k ni..w f- h ,,r,ho,. a""" v "Why forget the people of other ""'", ......oj. may need as much solicitude. There was little support in the:or Drofit data on at least one conference for the Australian suggestion but no delegate put his views as bluntly as Vishjnsky. Both the United States and Britain Bri-tain took the view that human problems should be handled by the United Nations commission on human rights. Byrnes foreign policy pronouncement pro-nouncement will be made to the American club in Paris next Thursday. It will be his first pub- l'c declaration on the crisis caused by Henry A. Wallace s at- Uyrnes Will tell tne American club and the world that at Ica1 or ,he Present the United 1 Statei H carry on its "firm ; hllf f.-H, sia. Byrnes' advisers have been urging him to make a major foreign policy spech before leaving Europe. He will make his customary radio report to the nation when he gets home from Paris. He made his first public utterance ut-terance since the Wallace episode epi-sode yesterday. In a statement to American reporters he said he found President Truman's end-dorsement end-dorsement of American foreign policy "most reassuring.'' Pointing Point-ing out that it was a bi-partisan policy, he said it gives the world assurance that the United States will stand by its policy regardless regard-less of which party was in power. PARIS, Sept. 27 U.R) A special spe-cial peace conference subcommittee subcom-mittee on Trieste prepared today to admit total failure in its effort (Continued on Page Two) work at other major studios Police swinging nightsticks sub- idued conference of studio union pickets at MGM and Warner Bros. sUidios yesterday after the union members tried to stop non-strikers non-strikers from crossing their picket pick-et lines. The union had placed pickets in front of all major studios. Five pickets were arrested after they stopped a carload of non- strikers who tried to crash their lines and tore loose the automo- ( Continued on Page Two) Missouri Vets SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Sept. 27 (U.R) More than 1,000 veterans from the rugged Ozark hills, angered an-gered by the failure of the state legislature to pass a bonus law, assembled a motor caravan today for a drive to the state capitol at Jefferson City in the nation's first postwar "bonus march." The veterans, led by former Marine Corporal Murl E. Owen, sent a telegram to Gov. Phil M. Donnelly, telling him they would knock on the statehouse door Saturday Sat-urday to demand a $400 bonus. "And the governor had better be In town or we'll go after him," Owen said. 27, 1946 ooiferol T Fate Of 22 Nazis To Be Announced On September 30 Guilt of Nazi Leaders Already Decided But Announcement Is Deferred; Steps Taken To Insure Keeping Verdict Secret By CLINTON B. CONGER United Press Staff Correspondent NUERNBERG, Sept. 27 (U.R) The war crimes tribunal almost certainly has agreed upon the fate of the 22 Nazi leaders, it appeared today as officials threatened to prosecute prose-cute anybody giving an advance hint of the verdict. The guilt of the 22 men fixed. Translations of the Shipbuilding Profits Probe Called Off By SANDOR S. KLEIN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 (U.R) The exigencies of nolitics today cut short the house merchant ma - rine committees investigation oious rjsk Q being prosecuted by 1 Chairman Schuyler O. Bland, D., Va., called off further hearings hear-ings until after the elections to give committee members time to campaign. The postponement left undone a rnntrmnlattd reauest more shipbuilding firm and a scheduled look at the maritime commission's relations -with shipbuilders. ship-builders. Bland said it wasn't positive, posi-tive, bat that further hearings hear-ings might be called in November No-vember te complete the com mittee's investigative program. pro-gram. Representative Alvin V. Wei-' R., O., who pretty dominated the questioning of wit (.llVli A i V., av J - r . . . v . - - nesses in the four days of hearings hear-ings in the past week, told news men he would insist on a recall In November of west coast In dustrialist Henry J. Keiser to ex plain "some discrepancies in his! testimony. "From evidence we received since Kaiser testified before us," Weichcl said, "we want him to give more definite testimony backing up his claim that he saved S250.000.000 in the building build-ing of Liberty ships." The only one of the 19 companies com-panies slated for investigation which did not have any opportunity oppor-tunity to appear before the committee com-mittee was the Southeastern Shipbuilding corporation. Its officers of-ficers were in the committee room yesterday waiting for their chance to testify, but Bland decided de-cided to suspend the hearing before be-fore they could be called. OPA To Approve Price Increases On Meat Dishes WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 (U.R) The OPA announced today thai it soon will grant price increases on meat dishes served by restaurants. restau-rants. OPA said the new ceilings foi meat dishes will be based on June 30 ceilings plus an increase factor. The exact amount of thCj increase has not been figured out yet, but will be announced next week, OPA said. The increase will be uniform throughout the country, according accord-ing to OPA. Until the new prices go into effect, restaurants must observe the 'current OPA rollback order which holds restaurant meat dishes to June 30 ceilings. The decision to increase the prices followed extended meetings meet-ings with restaurant industry, which had vigorously protested the rollback order of Sept. 17. Plan Bonus March On Capital The caravan of automobiles, j trucks, jeeps and jalopies will leave here tonight for the 180-mile 180-mile trip. Owen estimated that 500 vehicles would make up the caravan. He said the ranks of the veterans were swelling with each hour. "We'll make the trip in anything any-thing that will roll," he said. Veterans filled their gas tanks, painted signs for their cars and tossed food and sleeping bags aboard in preparation for the "invasion of Jeff City." Veteran leaders said the group and the six Nazi organizations finished verdict appeared l complete and probably have been mimeographed. Secretaries and interpreters interpret-ers who have seen the verdict ver-dict were under close guard. The British, French, American and Russian justices were determined de-termined that their decision in the historic trial must reach the world only through open court sessions next Monday and Tuesday. Tues-day. An official anonuncement said for a .r - tne r-ct n, . seri ! the tribunal or the American! army. The threat of prosecution was made by the tribunal's general secretary against anybody who "prematurely Causes to be published pub-lished or publicly announced" any part of the decisions now being reached prior to their announcement announce-ment in open court. Reading of the verdict in history's his-tory's greatest trial will begin Monday morning and continue into Tuesday. Fate of the 21 Nazis waiting" in, Nuernberf cells, the '5. nuw w 'w 9 l" missing Martin Bormann nd.vc rther s?lve the Prob their organizations will be an nounced Tuesday, ... . ... . ' Jk,.di t prevent leaks or disturbances. The tribunal ordered the courtroom court-room cleared of all cameramen. Earlier it was disclosed that any death sentences imposed will be carried out in private, with reporters and photographers barred. bar-red. Only official record pictures ! will be taken of executions, ac cording to latest plans. Military police mounted guard over the courthouse room where the verdict is being prepared. Others watched the living quarters quart-ers of translators and scrutinized conversations between confident- ial personnel and unauthorized, persons j , ij ; Gathering pressure was evident around the courthouse as the verdict days approached. The 21 , defendants waited in the cells which some have occupied for more than a year. The defendants saw their attorneys at-torneys for the last time today. They will be permitted to receive their families for short visits both Saturday and Sunday. Hermann Goering was said to be holding up best under the tension. Defense counsel described describ-ed all 21 men as "courageous and not depressed." The press corps was expanding toward a peak exceeding the 400 who covered the trial opening last November. The medieval city. badly bomb-damaged, was bath ed in autumn sunshine as news-, men ana iriai observers gauiereu. Army Reduces Meat Demand WASHINGTON, Sept 27 (U.R) The army today reduced its priority demand for meat by 20 per cent. Maj. Gen. T. B. Larkin, army quartermaster general, announced an-nounced that the army was scaling scal-ing down its demand for meat from 15,000,000 to 12,000,000 pounds weekly "to meet the present pres-ent crisis due to the meat shortage." short-age." would stay in Jefferson City, camping in pup tents on the State-house State-house lawn and on the grounds of the executive mansion if neces sary, until Governor Donnelly promises to order a special session ses-sion of the legislature to enact a bonus law. If the governor prom ises but then fails to act, the vet erans said, they will return to Jefferson City next week. Owen said a "Missouri veterans bonus committee" would be formed Saturday on the steps of the state capitol to "take the bonus issue and veterans' affairs out of politics." PRICE FIVE CENTS More Ample Supplies Of Beef Predicted Hannegan Abandons Plans To Meet With The Decontrol Board WASHINGTON, Sept. 27 (U.R) Democratic Chairman Robert E. Hannegan today abandoned plans to discuss the meat shortage with the decontrol board as the administration ad-ministration closed ranks in its determination to maintain meat controls and present price ceilings despite pleas by some members Hannegan announced his decis ion after President Truman and cabined members discussed the meat situation at the first cabinet meeting since early August. At the same time, civilian Production Administrator John D. Small told the sen- -ate war investigating committee com-mittee that the current meat shortage is leading straight to a shoe shortage. "There is no question about it," Small said, adding that the drop in cattle slaughtering will begin to snow UP ,n decreased shoe pro oucuon wunm mrec or xour monms. Mr. Truman reviewed the meat situation with the cabinet as vote-conscious vote-conscious Republicans and Democrats Demo-crats angrily blamed each other for the shortage and the justice, department intensified its inquiry into charges that the shortage was partly created artificially to smash meat price controls. The president said in a state- -ment yesterday that an increase . in meat prices or abandonment off' meat controls now would aggra- lem. He predicted more amDle supplies of beef "soon." Some Democratic party leaders,' notably House Democratic Leader John W. McCormack of Massachusetts Massa-chusetts and Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago, had urged relaxation re-laxation of meat controls to satisfy sat-isfy a meat-hungry public, whose votes in November will decide whether Republicans or Demo-crats Demo-crats rule the next congress. The executive committee of the national Democratic committee had asked Hannegan yesterday to discuss with the decontrol board and any other proper authorities means of increasing the meat supply. Hannegan told reporters today wis,in full accord with Mr. Truman s statement and that he now had no intention of talking itn decontrol board, Lack of Meat Shuts Down 15 Coal Mines By UNITED PRESS Fifteen coal mines in Illinois were closed today because the miners refused to work without meat At Dalhart, Tex., in the heart of the cattle country, only one family in the vicinity had fresh meat for dinner. A member of the Arthur Ledbetter family shot a: 250-pound bear Th meat shortaefl harf homm a major political issue in Washington, Wash-ington, but despite the charge and counter-chargesof Republicans Republic-ans and Democrats, housewives still found fresh meat almost nonexistent. non-existent. At Cincinnati, police were called call-ed to quiet 250 shoppers at a downtown meat store. The shoppers shop-pers had rushed the doors of the shop when a rumor circulated that fresh meat had been delivered de-livered to the store from Chicago. Police ordered the crowd to form an orderly line that extended for a block and a half. At Santa Fe. N. M.. ft woman told her butcher that she had te have meat because be-cause Secretary of Agriculture Agricul-ture Clinton P. Anderson was to be her guest. She get ne meat. Employees of the Fort Green meat market at Brooklyn, N.Y allowed pregnant women to gel at the head of a line of about. 2,000 meat-hungry shoppers. As" one woman took her place at the' front of the line a pillow dropped from beneath her coat. Threaten- ed by angry housewives she fled . down the street At Chicago, the world's largest; meat packing center, housewives; were . reported voting "over-?-whelmingly" in favor of ending-price ending-price controls on meat in a poll taken by the ' Associated Food Dealers', Inc, at neighborhood markets. ! |