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The Des Moines Register from Des Moines, Iowa • Page 11
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The Des Moines Register from Des Moines, Iowa • Page 11

Location:
Des Moines, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ds Moines RegVerPaae 1 1 MlS CiirolillP Nh. I. IH3 Missiles in Parade, Red Leaders Watch THOMAS TELLS i PROBLEMS! 1 (Tht Rnistf'i twi Serv.ct) WAVERLY, Thomas, six times defeated ac the nrialict I yL taiucilllcu a 'candidate, spoke for al-J most three hen i jTh rsday a without once i Srs' r7, betraying his age. He's 78. Outlook for Soviet Wheat DealBrighter By Charles Bailey WASHINGTON.

D. C. Prospects for the sale of American wheat to Russia and other Soviet-bloc nations brightened suddenly Thursday. At least one deal that could set a pattern for much larger sales was reported close to final approval. Auth i a i U.

S. sources said only details remained to be worked out before the announcement of a sale of 100,000 tons (about 3,300.000 bushels) of wheat to Hungary by Cargill, of Minneapolis, Minn. Senator Hubert Humphrey i Addressing a Wartburg Col lege audience of 1.400. Thomas said i there are three l-'i. thomas major problems facing society today race relations, economics and peace.

Disagrees With Debs He said he disagreed with Eugene Debs, an early U. S.j socialism leader. Thomas said Debs believed; that if a broth-1 wmrii erhood fl ptSMbnES workers could: be established! there would be a natural! crossing of the color line, Thus, according to Debs, the AHP 7WIS CHARM IS FOR TUB FORBIGNAIP WIREPHOTOS Minn.) said there is now a "real possibility" the deals will go through. Khrushchev Optimistic In Moscow, Soviet Premier 5-Day Term for 6 Traffic Tickets Tass, the Soviet news agency, hinted that some of the weapons were anti-missile missiles "capable of hitting any up-to-date air-space attack weapons." New Soviet weapons roll through Red Square in Moscow Thursday during a parade marking the forty-sixth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. seal, and $5 for overtime parking.

The tickets dated back to July 16. Donald Simmons Asks Bankruptcy Donald V. Simmons of 3215 N. E. Forty-eighth a truck driver, filed a bankruptcy petition in Federal Court here Thursday.

He listed debts of $3,151, assets of $750 and claimed all assets exempt. LA i r)' V'-r v-- i John E. Baccus, 16, of 4049 Fifty-sixth was fined $72 on six delinquent traffic tickets Thursday by Municipal Judge Howard He went to jail for five days when he failed to pay the fines. Brooks fined him $25 on two tickets for having a loud muffler; $35 for speeding 60 in a 35-mile-an-hour zone; $4 for overtime parking; $3 for no current Nikita Khrushchev, who Wednesday had threatened to' break off negotiations, said things were now "going better." "Today I got news that grain dealers in America have a reasonable ap- proach and we can reach agreement if we bargain on the basis of equality without discrimination," he aid. When President Kennedy approved wheat sales to the Soviet bloc, he specified that U.

S. ships should be used if "available." Russia has refused to pay the higher U. S. rates. Compromise Deal The key new element in the Hungarian proposal by Cargill was the blending of wheat and freight costs into adoption of socialism would be the answer to race problems.

Thomas said this is not so; that any system would only be used to exploit the Negro, especially with the past attitudes of Americans. Thomas said there is no longer such a thing as free enterprise or capitalism. Both Karl Marx, the godfather of Communism, and Adam Smith, the Nineteenth Century advocate of laissez faire, would be disappointed in the economic systems being practiced under their name's today, he said. He said the United States has tied its financial well-being too close to the arms race. Garrison State "Ten per cent of our gross national product is directly involved with the arms race.

America is rapidly becoming a garrison state. "We are spending bil a single package price. sky, Soviet defense minister; President Leonid Brezhnev; First deputy Premiers Anastas Mikoyaji and Alexei Kosygin; and Nikolai Podgorny, member of the Presidium. Reviewing the anniversary parade from the Lenin Mausoleum were several top Soviet officials, headed by Premier Nikita Khrushchev (second from left). Others from left are Marshal Rodion Malinov- RUSSIA- Continued from Page One real warheads, would be de- considerable amount of fleeted more when they plunge actual employment to get I into the atmosphere.

The the best out of them." The U. S. grain exporter would shave its price to some extent, while the buyer would absorb a slightly higher freight cost. The proposed Hungarian sale by Cargill would require use of U. vessels for up to 50 per cent if ships were available.

It is expected that there might not be that much U. shipping available. It appears that the only factor holding up final closing of the Hungarian deal was uncertainty about the price at which U. S. shippers would make vessels available.

fense against a missile is Sprint rocket is designed toj He added that, as a second i beyond the Soviets tech-j intercept them at relatively advantage, "we would have lions of dollars for a war we hope will never happen at the expense of education health and welfare. "We go on the philosophy that we need this arms race for jobs." Among other comments by Thomas were these: "The United Nations Is too weak. We need an organization built on laws not war. nically. I think many who short range.

had a technological triumph businessmen, Khrush said Communism and capitalism have to live together like the animals in Noah's Ark "two clean and two unclean." "You think you are the clean, we think we are the clean. Our concepts are not absolute. "We want to live, trade But although McNamara over the Soviets. Some day has shown more enthusi- there will be a great ballyhoo asm ahnut the Nikp than that the Soviets have an anti- work on it feel that perhaps it can never be successfully accomplished, because' the whole problem, as you know, take ana he ever did about the Zeus, he still has ndt agreed with ballistic missile and we do not. The claim may be largely sham and propaganda, but we is to have 100 objects flying through the air at thousands e.

lo and have Eood relations of miles an hour, to be able to "America can't play God Senator Jack Miller Almighty all over the world. Pick them out: and if yu can installing it. V'" Things useful to us are use- "We have not reached the, I ful t0 you too. i drink to the "We need a ho war. an at- a a ere 1S an auvamage, it seems to me.

to the 118 aeveiopmem, health of the businessmen of i i tn foc. t. rah nn where a production decision i wnprp a TV nn I it inn npnsinn iensive Decause can jj.pa mey pour 77," me umieu amies. 1 nu Jin ano nr cou'd properly be made, he; Nettle U.S Envov Deaceful coexistence for a CU Will llrf vr III IH 1.11 told the House Military Ap- long time." MOSCOW, RUSSIA () mii nucu ine u. in.

umang, -J propriations Committee Kai-shek doesn't reoresent going ahead with work on the But that -v a iiuici uai iv ivji wn. were we at point Prem.er businessmen'after the China he represents the i anti-missile system. Secretary today I do not know what at the United States would recommend to you, be-lcnamPa8nf toasts at a Krem U. S. Seventh Fleet.

of Defense Robert S. Mc lin reception Thursday night Ia.) Thursday charged that Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman has used "shaky figures" in claiming a $200 million saving from the proposed sale of 150 million bushels of wheat to Russia. Miller said storage, handling and transportation costs for more than one billion bushels of surplus wheat totaled $201 million during the last fiscal year. He asked how it is possible that a reduction of only 150 million bushels would lower costs by $200 million. DAwTblSASTER AID MILAN, ITALY UPt A cause it would be a very, very that U.

S. Ambassador Foy difficult decision. The de "Churches were extraordinarily un-Christian in their attitude toward race relations until recently." fense, in my does bonier questioned mm aDout Namara has backed the Army's request for about $334 million to continue research and development, most of it on the Nike which is the advanced version of the Zeus system. appear to be lagging behind i 11 Kremlin reception, Khrushchev proposed a toast to investment capital, and said it should be invested in the Soviet Union. "You will get a good interest rate," he said, "and you will get your capital back when you want it." He added that anv loans "Where is the spirit of the offense.

On the other side, Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, chairman Moscow?" Kohler asked calmly. "I don't hear any of it. I haven't heard any toasts I could drink to." ine Mouse approved me.

nf ctaff I i tiiv uuiiik vinih Uo-P i believes the Nike Zeus should me pinn-ipai ctuvaiiicigc ui the Nike as compared with Khrushchev looked some-woud be guaranteed by the what startled He turned part of tne So. 'VrW FWse Alarm At Home Federal Fi-ernen were sent to the "ome Federal Savings and oan Association building at Sixth and Grand avenues at p. m. Thursday after rorne cne reported smoke was coming from the roof. District Fire Chief W.

J. Car-berry said the only "smoke" firemen found was steam vapor coming from an air rvuuici auu aaiveu nun tu n-un Milan newspaper says it has received $1.8 million in its fund raising drive to help survivors of Italy's Vaiont Dam disaster. the Zeus is that the former destroys the enemy rocket warhead closer to the ground, where it is easier to discriminate between the genuine warheads and the decoys. have been put into production some years ago. "Had we crashed the Zeus program we would now be learning by doing," he said.

"As far as my ex perience goes with new weapons, that it the only way you can make any great progress. It takes a if First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan interjected: "The party never cheated anyone in 46 years." a toast. Kohler declined the invitation, saying it was Khrushchev's party. The "spirit of Moscow" reference was to the atmosphere of amity that marked the nuclear test ban treaty last summer. The exchange came at a gathering of about 2,000 in the Congress Hall celebrating FUDGE The theory is that the de conditioning unit on the roof.

I coys, being Jignter man tne Fined $100 for Carrying a Gun William Winifred Byrd, 25, 1 1 i your dog's waistline with Cslorie Controlled STRONGHEARTI the forty-sixth anniversary of of 940 Tenth pleaded the Bolshevik revolution. guilty Thursday to carrying a Among the guests were weapon and was iers who are visiting Moscow. I fined $10 or 30 days in Jai1 same great Slaw Khrushchev told the gather-i by Municipal Judge Luther ing the Soviet Union will be- T. Glanton, jr. come the world's No.

1 na-j Byrd was placed under tion in seven years. $10fj bond 3Q 11 a tiro rn an tnof an A mon. lie ui iiivt mui an ii i in which to pay the fine. Byrd was arrested about 9 p. m.

Monday in connection with the search for Edward J. Miller, 25, of Des Moines, i 0 ft PlJ0P Yl -a wig StC7 IKQ ft can attack on Cuba would bring retaliation against U. S. allies closest to Russia. He said he is sure there eventually will be an agreement to heal the rift between the Soviet Union and Red China.

"From a poor country we have come a long way to become the second country in the world," he said. "We give capitalism another seven years, then we will be first. It is as inevitable as the sunrise." Addressing the American the accused slayer who escaped from Polk County Jail that day. Police picked up Byrd on a tip that he had obtained a gun for Miller. Byrd said he obtained the gun for protection because "there is bad blood between me and Miller." Reason why an Idaho baker tastes every bit as good fried is simple: it grew up in Idaho.

Nurtured there on mountain water and volcanic soil at the perfect potato-growing altitude. This means the flavor is grown-in to stay. Won't fry away-ever. Sure, Idahos are famous bakers. But have you ever tried frying some for your family? Absolutely out of this world.

Buy some, fresh or frozen, fry them your favor ite way and you'll taste why. Jiffy 'WRAP The ORIGINAL Polvethvlene Plntilr Fnnri Wrnn LOOK ALIKES AREN'T COOK ALIKES REGISTER PHOTO BY LARRY NEIBERGALL Tech Open House Des Moines Technical High School opened its "house" to parents and other interested persons Thursday night. Among visitors were the parents, brother and a friend of Robert John Short, 16, shown at the right identifying wood used In the school furniture shop. From left are Robert's mother, Mrs. Earl Short, 1423 E.

Seventeenth court; Charles McCann, 12, of 1655 Capitol Robert's father, and Earl Short, jr, 4890 N. E. Thirty-ninth ave Robert's brother. Open house activities at other Des Moines schools are scheduled the next two weeks. BE SURE THEY'RE GROWN IN IDAHO Wrap it In a Jiffy with Jifty-WRAP KEEPS FOODS FRESHER LONGER At Your Favorite Food Start.

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Pages Available:
3,432,461
Years Available:
1871-2024