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‘HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXXII, NO. 11,033 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1948 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS ELECT TRUMAN PRESIDENT, UPSET RAGE President Is fo Dedicate Self To Cause of Peace in World and Prosperity, Happi { Hom perity, nappiness ai iome i fpots 2 el pRC RN o By ERNEST B. VACCARO K2NSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 3.—P —President Truman promised mdayi | peace in the world” and ‘“prosperity and happiness at home,” as he won one of history’s greatest upset vic- tories. | He promised to “serve the Ameri- ity” # the four years ahead. o“ (ONGRESS And he acknowledged the con gratulations of his defeated opror- — ent, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, and commended him for his ‘“Tine sports-| WASHINGTON, Niv. 3.—®— “I feel very deeply the responsinil- | gress today. The majority in the ity which has fallen to my lot as|House approached a landslide. the result of the election,” said hic! The Voters—In a startling upset— simple statement. “I shall continuz unseated 50 or more GOP House to serve the American people to the members, and gave the Democrats to dedicate himself “to the cause of can people to the best of my ab'l- (By The Associated Press) manship.” best of my ability. a majority in the Senate, as seem- “All my efforts will be devoted to ingly they decided to revamp the. the cause of peace in the world and legislative body that President Tru- prosperity and happiness of our man calleq “do-nothing,” history's people here at home.” |second worst—even “idiot.” And he wired Gov. Dewey. “I If the breath-taking trends con- thank you sincerely for your con- tinue, the new Congress probably gratulations and good wishes. Your will look something like this: fine sportsmanship is deeply ai~ House— precicted. We jolntl_y owe congrfn- Democrats—242 seats. eomnsioiedionsd .‘Amencnn people who Republicans—192 seats. have once again shown the world AmtEioan LAbor.—1 seat. the vitality of our free TRUMAN 1§ VOTE GETTER ~ IN ELECTION ‘DemocraficTe;ders Tried fo Dump Him But He Kept Republican Headquarlers in New York Looks Like Hurricane Had Hit If; Gloom PreEil_s By HAL BOYLE i | cold gray dawn of the morning aiter. If Harry Truman had walked in- to the hotel arm-in-arm with| NEW YORK, Nov. 3. —P—Repub- | | licans who stayed up all night at Dewey Conce it | | NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—P—Gov.| Thomas E. Dewey today conceded | the Presidential election to Presi-| den. Truman. The Republican Presidential| nominee’s press secretary, James| | Hagerty, announced at 11:15 am.| Truman, Sends Congratulafions | wish TOOK LEAD EARLY VOTE, KEPT IT UP. Was Astounfin—g After Pre- balloting Predictions— des Election of election. The text of the telegram: “My heartiest congratulations to you on your election and every good for a successful administra- tion, and I urge all Americans to unite behind you in support of every effort to keep our nation strong Democrats grabbed control of Con-| National headquarters to celebrate | looked at dawn today like haggard brides left waiting at the church.| It was so quiet around Hotel Roosevelt that you could hear a poll-taker's chin drop. But if there was a poll-taker in the place he wisely kept his mouth shut. There were no Republican chins any longer even able to fall open. They had all done that hours before. i ! It was a scene of political car-! nage over which spread the length- ening shadow cast by the little i man from Missouri. Harry S. Tru-/ | man, stubbornly riding out threns} of a Republican landslide, had liv- ed up to the tough motto of his state—"“You got to show me.” Win, lose, or draw, he had—al- most single-mouthed—smashed Re- | publican hopes of gaining control of both Congress and the Presi- | dency. { The tidal flood of Democratic; { votes completely ruined the Grand 1 0ld Party's brand new victory par-! Franklin D. Roosevelt they couldn't have been more surprised. They felt pretty much that is what he had done anyway. ——e On, Road fo Victory By WILLIAM L. BEALE, Jr. ‘WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—#—Win or lose on the final count, Harry S. Truman's amazing vote tally inj the presidential election demon- strated a quality of political lead- ership that measures well by the| | Roosevelt yardstick. i ( lA | M E D ! Five months ago organization ;Inders in the Democratic party Y lABOR.Med to dump Mr. Truman. He B ! t couldn't win, they said. Henry A.| ‘Wallace organized a splinter pro- gressive party. A group of southern- ers holted the Democratic conven- . . tion in anger over Mr. Truman's Joined with Farmers, Small jcivi rignts program ana_ ormed e . States’ Rights party. Poll-takers Buslness 'O Put Demo counted Gov. Thomas E. Dewey as Party Across By NORI;(:N—WAIKER an after-midnight acceptance speech to convention delégates that kin-: A O oy clameddled a flame of hope—of fighting, au n":;:" ?ls;?;stein e';eo :e);vy vote | R€ver-say-die battle to win the elec- tion. barrage laid down for President Tru- How Did Truman Win? | good .as elected. That perhaps was the low point of Missouri’s Truman. Then he made «well wishers today, as he won one ot {to win a term in the White House tions.” insu'u-I ity. (The GOP controls the 80th Con-{ v, o.o o Manhattan version of | (EST) that Dewey had sent a tele-|and free and establish peace in the gram to Mr. Truman conceding the world.” TRUMAN IS GREETED BY ALL CLASSES Receives C—on_gratulafions as Winner, Greatest Up- est Race in History By ERNEST B. VACARRO KANSAS CITY, Nov. 3.—(P— President Truman, a smiling, happy man, received the congratulations of ' | history’s greatest political upsets; | publican opponent, Demo Congress, Too (By The Associated Press) President Truman, in an astounds ing upset of pre-balloting predic- tions, today won the Presidency. He will have a Democratic Senate ;and House to work with him. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, his Re- conceded Mr. | Truman’s election at 11:15 A. M, EST. At that time, Mr. Truman was | leading in 28 states having 304 elec- toml votes. Needed to win are 266 electoral votes. Dewey was leading in 16 states with 189 electoral votes. Four {states with 38 electoral votes had been captured, or were leaning to, States’ Rights candidate J. Strom Thurmond. James Hagerty, Dewey's press secretary, announced that Dewey had conceded the election in a telegram to Mr, Truman. It read: “My heartiest congratulations to you on your election and every good wish for a successful adminis- in his own right. i ‘gress House 243 to 185—with two | American Labor members and five | vacancies) . | | Senate— | 9 | La Ejfifis Eleced Gov., Washingto (By The Associated Press) Washington’s voters are hitching Democrats—54 seats. Republicans—42 seats. (The GOP now controls the Sen- ;ate 51 to 45). | WUp to 6:45 am. (EST), the Dem- ocrats already had turned out six Republican senators in winning 18 of the 33 contested seats. They led |in six other races. Only one-third |of the Senate’s 96 members had elections this year. man and the new Democratic Con», How did President Truman win !tration, and I urge all Americans igress. The said record numbers of work-: ers had joined with farmers and| the support that poured in those millions. of votes? These factors! ] Some 300 happy party workers stand out: i the eve before Waterloo. crowded into the Gold Ballroom of | I:he hotel, confident they would see|STall businessmen in support of the| j My Truman's own personal| i a Democratic debacle {Democratic party'’s “forthright!fign¢ against the overwhelming odds ! A score or more television andPledges” to deal with inflation, hous= o' 5 party split wide over his nom- newsreel cameras were trained on|ing, civil rights and repeal of the|ination, splintered by factions, ap-| the flag-draped: balcony, wheye | Taft-Hartley labor law. parently crumbling under the load| Gov. Thomas E. Dewey was expect-| 1O union leaders immediately be-[5¢ 16 years of continuous rule. i y jer i 1, (8an building up hopes for an earlyl 9 mis choice of issues, including £ o, delver hBRx::mrysas‘fi‘s!(ulflllmem of those pledger-—even}what he called the “idiot” 80th Con- i iig“’" the Wklli:elflou]se picture had {gress—the second worst in history.” |become completely clear. (He hammered at: (A) Enactment | Jack Kroll, director of “‘_‘_C_IO‘S!over his veto of the Taft-Hartley = ;polmcnl action committee, said: {law so bitterly opposed by organmdl | “The people of America have|japer, | before midnight. aides had composed the speech two | days ago. : Crowd Gets Uneasy The crowd stirred uneasily the Democratic d:nik eyn:md e Re; Bucila, oyl |early returns showed Truman given their mandate, They look: to! (g) Failure to vote legislnllve' publican elephant in the same se In the battle royal for supremacy| shead. But they cheered When|the Democratic party to carry out{eontrols for a soaring cost-of-liv- of harness to pull the state through ijn the House—the chamber the: ampajgn manager Herbert Brown- |jts platform.” E z the middle of the century. Republicans were sure they couldn’t With more than half the Ever- lose—Democrats had ousted 40 or green state's 3457 precincts re- more Republicans and one American porting on yesterday’s election, it Labor Party member, Rep. Leo appeared that: |Isacson of New York. 1. Washington's Not one Democrat who stood for votes would go to Harry TYuman. reglection had been turned down. eight electoral ing. ell, grinning widely, stepped out| And, speaking about the Taft-| jon the gallery and minimized the partley repeal pledge, George Mea-) figures—again ~ predicting victory.|ny treasurer of the AFL's labor Housing Shortage range program to relieve the hous- lliving room of the plush suite to (C) Failure to provide a long-|( Cheers went up from his hend-! quarters in the hotel Muehlhnch’ Penthouse, as word of Gov. Thomas A E. Dewey's concession of defeat was | conveyed to him. A long line of old friends, includ- ing newspapermen who have covered his campaign, - swarmed into the | | shake the President’s hand and to congratulate himi on the “give-'em- hell” campaign which upset the dopesters. The impromptu celebration also included secret service men, who dropped their non-political role to shower their congratulations upon “the boss” to whom the whole White House detail is devoted. . Joy Of Nicholson VICE-PRESIDENT BARKLEY ¢ [ to unite behind you in support of | every effort to keep our nation ! strong and free and establish peace jin the world.” : The last Republican hope that | Dewey might nose out Truman in | the electoral vote, even though he | was™ tratling well behind in’ pops © Iulxr balloting, 'apparently faded i with late California returns put- { ting Truman in front in that state. States Won By Trumin At the time Dewey conceded, Truman was leading in or had won the following states: Arizona, Arkansas, California, i Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, :Imnols, Iowa, Kentucky, Massa- | chusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Mon- | tana, ‘Nevada, New Mexico, North : Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode i i i | The joy of, Henry Nicholson, big, { Island, { Tt was the last grin of the evening. |jeague for political education, said: { Some Republicans left.then, sure| «That's our fight and we mean; {Dewey had won. But they were probably the only ones who got & 'peal now, we're going to look for-} ing shortage. (D) Lack of action of his civil to continue it. If we don't et re-i . o pooam A recommendation! ¢ that cost electoral votes in the South 29 PASSENGERS, 60 TONS CARGO, { Tennessee, Texas, Utah, | Virginia, Washington, West Vir- | ginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming. ’ States For Dewey rosy-cheeked Irishman, knew no; bounds. One of the assistants to James Rowley, chief of the White House detail, Nicholson has been| 2. Arthur Langlie, Republican, Among other personalities, Rep.|g B 5 . { | % & g .1 good night's rest. ward to 1950. la pronounced partisan throughout | | Dewey was leading in these: would replace Mon C. Wallgren 85 ygrolq Knutson of Minnesota, au-. - For ater midnight deepening - Labor Against GOP ;Sutt qou?;fss :g::d n fgu:xei: POPUIAT i3 500 miles of campaigning with Mr. | pR'“(ESS louIsE| Connecticut, Delaware, Indiana, Governor. (Lt. Gov. Victor Meyelfs thor of last year's Requllcm tax- | alarm swept the gaily-bannered | Withs gow, ekoSpHlodi Labor organ-'r Dae lga iy :eolt fi;eulne&; s Truman, ; " 4 | Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Micha was having the fight of his politi-icytting pill, was trailing in his)room. The faces of the crowd were |jyations worked against the Repub-!oent weeks over grain price declines,| A former capital police officer,| TS san, Nebraska, New Hampshire, cal life with Republican Herbert arinnesota election. He is chair- Hamblen.) Iman of the House Ways and Means 3. The state would send twWo committee. Democrats back to Congress in-{ Rep. Fred Hartley (R-NJ), co- stead of just the one they elected author of the Taft-Hartley Labor to the 80th session. Act, did not stand for reelection. His And all but one of the lesser district elected a Democrat to take state offices were going to Demo- his place. crats, Otto Case, a Republican Byt House Speaker Joseph W. who changed his politics with this Martin, Jr., of Massachusetts, and election, was leading Jack Taylor most other Republican big wheels for Commissioner of Public Lands. in the House survived the Demo- icratic on-slaught. These included . |Lhe Republican leader, Rep. Charles M In A. Halleck of Indiana, Chairman oe 1John Taber (NY) of the Appro- priations Committee, C hairman Charles A. Eaton (NJ) of the Fore- R I ed jgn Affairs Committee, Chairman Leo E. Allen (Ill) of the Rules Committee, Chairman Jesse P. Wolcott (Mich.) of the Banking NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass.|Gommitee and Chairman Clifford Novs—(P—Joseph W. Martin, Jr.!p Hope (Kas) of the Agriculture Republican speaker of the 80th | Committee. Congress, was reelected easily In/ A pemocratic victory would re- his home district, despite a Strongi;.n Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas to Democratic tide in Massachusetts. |the speaker’s chair, replacing Mar- His re-election is for his 13th, tin, who unseated -him when Re- jeri. - ipablicans took control two years B 0. L E ol MG B r BB unep. Robert L. Douglton of North A ® ! Carolina, who won another term at ¢ WEATHER REPORT ®|age 84, would step back lh:mwfl;: THER BUREA chairmanship of the powerful Wa AR e : ,;:“ : {and mansp commicl:?ae. replacing @ Temperatures for 34-Hour @ nutson, e In Juneau— Maximum, 49; Rep. Brent Spence of Eentucky 5 eulionm. - 2 ¢ |would replace Wolcott as banking o At Airport— Maximum, 49; @ mmittee chairman. Rep. Sol e minimum, 41. g Bloom of New York once again 4 ©lwould become the Foreign Affairs 2 FORECAST ¢ ! chairman. Rep. Harold D. Cooley, ) ‘-’"“' 84 Viela ® lof North Carolina, would take ;)ver i o 'the Agriculture Committee helm. :. nfi“;‘zcsz‘:;’;:;t;r:;;;fl o| More than the chairmanships e ature tonight and Thursday. © were at stake. The party in control e Southeasterly winds 25 to 35 o |als0 holds a majority of the com- e miles per hour. o | mittee memberships. . IPBECIP]TATIOMN: @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today e In Juneau — .71 inches; @ m‘"[n Movmms . 1, 168 inches; © : Z::: :101; 11, 48.09 inches. ©| All American steamers tied up e At Airport — .27 inches; by coastwide strike. e since Nov. 1, .27 inches; 0‘ Princess Louise scheduled to re-| e since July 1, 33.02 inches. o'turn from Skagway _southbound ° . o | Friday morning at q. ocl?ek. sail- e o 0 o 0 o o o o o o ing for Vancouver at 8 o'clock. a slow-motion study of confidence jjcap candidates because the GOP- changing from surprise to doubt, | from doubt to disbelief—and then !on to stunned fear and panic. | As Truman bobbed up like a; That the unions’' rank and file cork, the Republicans began w;hacked up with vgtes their leaders’ ldrift home, disillusioned. iire was evident in _coast-to-coast . “And I waited for this night 15!rezum5 from yesterday's election. ! years,” said one old man sadly, as| he departed. H The announcement Dewey had i carried New York state gave only |a momentary lift. “The Union League Club ought to hang up Henty Wallace’s pic-; ture tomorrow and burn candles before it,” joked one young party worker. stirred by Mr. Truman's arguments controlled Congress wrote the New|inat the 80th Congess crippled the Mr. Truman’s veto. { Republican administration would bring back 1932 farm conditions. { Less apparent was the part play- Ied in the outcome by the interna- |tional situation. Both candidates “We concentrated our fire Whe"'pledged firmness toward Russian {we were strongest,” Meany said. “We| Communism and peace for a free fee] that we were responsible 10r'|western world. getting out the big vote. Fereign Affairs “We worked hard and we feel Wei jack Kroll, director of the CIO- were instrumental in changingipojtica] Action Committee, which atout eight semators and at leastirougnt for Mr. Truman's election, 50 representatives in Congress—alljteq the Democratic platform plank on the basis of the Taft-Hartley!,n joreign affairs as a contribut- Act.” ling factor to the President’s showing. Among the early Senate casualties | gro)) stressed also,the Taft-Hartley i H | | | Fading Hope it |16 ‘n Democratic Boston. Labor Relations Act into law over|price-support program and that "l 19! : {War 1, with whom he served in!at 4:30 this morning. Skipper If| Migissippi and South Carolina, | France. he got his taste of politics in Ward | | I also ap-| The others on the detail peared as happy. Mr. Truman was surrounded at ne point by old comrades of World | The President’s face was wreathed in smiles as the full import of his victory became apparent. Almost singlehandedly, in a se- ries of cross-countsy stopping tours! which would have worn out & weak- | ar man, the President had rescued ! victory from the jaws of defeat nnd! swept a Democratic Congress into office with him. Charles G. Ross, the President’s secretary and an old high school 1here. Sixty tons of cargo were un- ‘The Princess Louise came in from New Jersey, New York, North Da- the South last night at 8:45 o'clock | gotq, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South with 29 passengers disembarking| pakota, Vermont. Thurmond was in front in four loaded and more than 1500 Sacks|giates having a total of 38 elec- of mail. She sailed for the Northliory) yotes. He had won Alabama, Captain Fred McGraw. jand was leading in Louisiana. In Passengers were: John Anderson, i Tennessee, two electoral votes are Howard Adams, Mrs. Rita Badyk,|in doubt between Truman and Mr. and Mrs, William Barrington| Thurmond. and children, Rene Bourget, Mr. Mr. Truman plans to return to and Mrs. Carl Bloomquist, Mrs. Beth | Washington from Independence, Burnet and children, Mr. and Mrs.|{ Mo., tomorrow, then go to Key Lloyd Coe and children, Mr. and|west, Florida, Sunday, according Mrs. Harold Foss, Edward Hanson,|to Washington friends who have Var Norass, Mrs. Louis Keithly,| been in touch with his Kansas City Leonard Leaman, Clifton Lewes,| neadquarters. Douglas McDonald, Percy Oakman,! Even before the President’s vie- Mrs. Muriel Paliament, Donald He reflected the fading hope of {some GOP leaders that Wallace might cut down Truman’s tally enough in other states—as he had | Il who voted for the Taft-Hartley 'flwl:w, the cost-of-living, housing and were Republican Senators C. Wn}“]cwu rights. land Brooks of Illinois, Chapman; yn the farm belt, according to the Revercomb of West Virginia, and|pemocratic Secretary of Agriculture, George A. Wilson of Iowa. Charles F. Brannan, there had! mate of Mr. and Mrs. Truman ln'{ Independence, beamed at everyone he saw. “The President was certain some| Sangster, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ste- jer, Mr. and Mrs. Williamm Tobey, Henry Vaisenen, Lila Walker, Miss Irene Williams. tory was assured, the returns had clinched Democratic control of Congress, wresting it away from the Republicans who won it two years ago. here—to put Dewey in. By 2 a. m.,, only 100 people were left in the ballroom, and workmen quit hanging up the depressing | figures on the big scoreboard. At 16 am, only 22 die-hards were left, including a cop on duty, who was reading a newspaper. The room looked as though it had been hit by a hurricane. And it nad—by a hurricane wearing a | “Made in Missouri” label. Ash trays, glasses and & .few beer, bottles littered the flgor. The wrath of the survivors ap- peared directed in large measure at the pre-election polls which forecast an easy Dewey victory. “That fellow out in Independence said the polls were all wrong—and he’s right,” said a middle-aged Republican. Presumably he was referring to President Truman. NEW HAVEN, Nov. 3.—P—After Jest About Polls |a lapse of two years, Connecticut re- Then they began making bitter tyrneq to its practice of sending { jests about polls: a woman to Congress. “They sure polled the wool over‘b Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse, our eyes.” Democrat, former college professor, “The ought to call those guys poll-bearers for the Republican On the other hand, six senate SUP- lpeen 5 gistinct shift in sentiment porters of the labor law are assuredlin the 1a5t two weeks. new terms. All are southerners and| p.o are the Democratic Congress- three were unopposed. men and Governors elected yes- | Among the House contests, Laborlm,dly who do not owe a good mens-‘ leaders were particularly gleefullyre of their success to Harry Tru- about a Democratic victory in thelmap:s crusading leadership. If the 10th New Jersey district over theipinsi yote count continues him in Republican-designated successor t0the white House, it will be as'al Rep. Fred A. Hartley, Jr. political leader who has literally; Hartley, co-author of the 1abOr itteq himself and his party by his! law, and House labor committee |, Political bootstraps in an ex- chairman, did not stand for re-elec- traordinary comeback. jtion. That, in its turn, would spell a different President Truman in the next four years than the one who succg¢eded Franklin D, Roosevelt on April ‘12, 1945. House Dean Reeleded ——————— Connedicut Woman Is Going fo Congress \ 1 trict. She defeated . Rep. Horace Congress since 1907, is going back CHICAGO, Nov. 3—iP— Rep.! won a House seat in the second dis- | Adolph Sabath, who has served in! hours ago of his election,” Ross said That Truman Smile Nevertheless, when the press as- sociation bulletins on Governor| Dewey’s concession were brought ! in Mr. Truman smiled broadly. The President was expected to is- sue an official statement later in/ the day, G ! A fat, little man came out. of an| adjoining room where he was clos- | eted priefly with the President. He was Eddie Jacobson, former haber-; dashery store partner of the Presi- | dent. Almost overcome with joy, he told a reporter: “I cried and I prayed for this.” Yesterday while newspapermen | wondered as to his whereabouts he; | i | | i | i !left his home at Independence at! |3 pm. yesterday to drive to Ex-j celsior Springs, 32 miles away to| spena the night in the Elms Hotel. “I got there about four, took one jof their hot spring baths and rub-| idowns” he said. “Tfien I ate and went to bed. “I woke up around midnight,| heard a news broadcast and went | ! Seely-Brown (R). ifor another term. 1 She is the second woman sent w| The dean of the House—82 now— Clareiwas reelected yesterday. He is a party.” But nobody laughed. ‘The little man who took theiCOnsren by Connecticut. place of “that man” wasn't leaving |Boothe Luce, Republican, preceded them much to laugh at on this her in 1942. ‘amrm, normally Democratic. back to sleep. I woke up again about 1U. 8. Steel 9%, Pound $4.03%. :4:30 a.m. heard another broadcast,’ and decided I'd better drive back to| ! Democrat from a Chicago West Side town and have breakfast in the | industrials 18246, rails 5852, util- ipenmouse." } MOVIES OF GLACIER BAY T0 BE SHOWN AT Congressional Lineup The indicated Congressional line- p is: Senate: 5¢ Democrats and 42 Re- publicans. (HAMBER MEET, THURS. | Jioue: 26 Pemocriis: 1as e bor. Af the Chamber of Commerce| ypie these may not be the final meeting to be held on Thursday tigures, it is clear that Mr. Tru- noon, movies of Glacier Bay and! z s . |man will have a working major- Tracy Arm taken by Trevor Davi>) .. 0 nis own party in Congress will be shown. Glacier Bay is the|y porey st proposed site for a governmnt tour- | To thix MAodiiy 5 ca: SNNE the legislative program over which 1. 5 f th: Chamer 152150 on' tomorrows| e aud the GOP-run a0th Congress agIndA | quarreled—quarreled so much that 2 fa v Mr. Truman called Congress “idiot” and the “second worst” in history. This program includes power to K put on price controls, housing eglslation, and the so-called “civil NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—(®--Clos-|rights” measures which led many ing quotation of Alaska Juneau |southern Democrats to break with mine stock today is 3, American|Mr. Truman. Can 80%, Anaconda 35%, Curtiss-| Legislative Program Wright 97, International Harvest-; Among the civil rights proposals er 28, Kennecott 577, New ym'm laws ‘hgainst race segregation’ Central 15, Northern Pacific 19%,!0n trains and buses crossing state lines, against making a voter pay Sales today were 3,230,000 shares. ® Poll tax before he can ballot in PR TR i . federal elections, making lynching ages today are as IOlOWS: |, federal crime, and forbidding an (Continued on Page Six) STOCK QUOTATIONS ities 34.28. i