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Show JINGLING THE NEWS VDMIRALB.E-E-R.D7 lie LADIES fix Pearl - Harbor THE WEATHER . UTAH Clear fhla .. afternoon. Increasing high cloudiness Tuesday. Tues-day. Silently warmer Tuesday. High today in middle 30'e. Low Tnai1 tetv A 1 K. Tiieitt matftOT bn HUSBAND KDDIEL'S odd i '-'rf first name; ' IHejr think it should be under- 30 in UUh's Dixie. tp i SO husband's any doggone GOOD. &tan Arnoia XUrb 35 Low:. ...14 v PRICE HVE CENTS sixtieth year, no. . 165 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS : TEUCGKAP. KEWS EBViCK PROVO, . UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, MONDAY.- JANUARY 21, 1946 UTAH'S ONLY DAILY SOUTH Or SALT LAKB fm KLJU VI A Bo) rufl Eeiiry D. Taylor Named Sharon Stake President At Conference Sunday Pres. A. V. Watkins Released; Watts and Holdaway Cqunselors r Henry D. Taylor, bishop of ahe. Pleasant View ward, was Sustained as president of the Bharon LDS stake at the quarterly conference, Sunday fco succeed President A. V. Watkins who has sfirved at Lhe head of the stake since it was aken from the old Utah stake more than 15 years ago. Released Lvith President Watkins were his ounselors, Samuel H. Blake and Sidney H. Cluff and C. Maston .Ventz, stake clerk. Sustained as President Tay lor's counselors were Bishop J. fclayton Watts of the Sharon ward knd Bishop Walter P. Holda- vay of the Vineyard ward. The eorganization thus leaves three vards in the stake without a nishop, the vacancies to be filled nrithin a short time. John Jt. "JAylor was named 'stake clerk. Elder Stephen L. Richards of he auorum of the twelve apostles represented the general authori- ieso the church and conducted he reorganization. Elder Mark '. Peterson, also of the quorum f apostles, was also in attend ance at all the sesisons. They vere the principal speakers at the tnal session of the conference ,nd spoke to members of the .riesthood at the afternoon meet- ng. "The entire membership oF the high council was released with a vote of thanks and the following new high council members were sustained: Stanley B. Harris. Carlos D. , Miller, Kenneth E. McEwan. C. M. Wentz. William C. Faulkner, Thornvald E. Rig-by. Rig-by. E. Carlyle Bunker. Elroy Murdock and Clive Pulham. Named members of the stake unday school superintendency frere Edgar E. Booth, supt., Ches- er Graff and Milton Kirk, as istants. Reva Rohbock was named pres- ient of the Young Women's MIA ith Norma Hales as a counselor; llary Rowley, seretary: and Mrs. ames Norton, organist. Board lembers include Vanesse Woffin- en, Noreen Bliss. Marian Ercan-rack, Ercan-rack, Phyllis Hancock, Velma 'ronk, Leah Rowley, Lillian 'rince and Mrs. Lewis DeHart. Latter-day Saint Girls' organ- ation officers named include Eva Gillespie, chairman, Myrtle liristensen, first assistant: Anita arley, second assistant; and ",dna S. Reese, secretary. Home lissionaries sustained were Law-ence Law-ence M. Palmer, misison presi- lent; Vern L. Johnson, LiilyJ table Johnson, Ora Viola Guy- lan, Samuel S. Johnson. Ethel D. "inch and Maud J. Park. President Watkins was given ilgh praise by the visiting au-horities au-horities upon his release. He (Continued on Page Two) Two Children Meet Death In .Hurricane Fire HURRICANE, Utah Jan. 21 -OIR) --Funeral sers ices were pending .oday for two small children who .vere burned to death Saturday jiight in a fire at lome The victims were Robert Lloyd Bate, 3. and 18-month-old Donna! -nc iwo investigations, to De , (June Bate, son and daughter ofjmade by special subcommittees,! 'Merchant Seaman and Mrs. Max W. Bate. The father has been'troduced by Sen. Pat McCarran, I serving in the Pacific but was i a r ' i xpeciea to arrive in an c ran-isco ran-isco today. The children were burned while heir mother was at her parents, ettlng some milk. Neighbors and volunteers were unable to .bntrol the blaze. Bodies of the children were recovered from the living room of their home. New Sugar Law Gaining Support cat t t a vrir riTV .Tan 9t fnpvoeni to succcea uci). unaries ue- Representatives of the nation's i6"""' wno res,snfd last night, beet sugar growers and producers! Tne Communists issued a corn-meeting corn-meeting here today got squarely nunique demanding election of behind a proposal to enact a newiToorez to the DeGaulle post after sugar law which would perm it 8 noontime meeting of Commun-and Commun-and encourage increased sugar! ist deputies. Thorez is secretary production in the future. & A committee of 12 members was appointed to investigate a sugar' law which would succeed the sugar act of 1937 due to ex-plre-at the end of 1946. New Presidency - "Vf r n HENRY D. TAYLOR President . 4 " '. V,i- mi 1 y CLAYTON WATTS First Counselor .WALTER P. HOLDAWAY Second Counselor COURTS MARTIAL PROBE APPROVED WASHINGTON. Jan. 21 (U.R) The senate judiciary committee j today approved a full investiga-; mL ,' ' . - if 3 w'"' vivify i ' If a Hurricane,""" Ui anuj -uu uayy mamai, as wen as a muay oi awaii after Dec. 7, 1941. were Droviaed for in a bi t D.. Ncv. I De Gaulle Quits; Communists Seek to Gain Power in France By JOSEPH W. GRIGG. Jr. .Communists were demanding the United Press Staff Correspondent! presidential post in a new Coali- ; PARIS, Jan. 21 (U.R) Thejtion government. Communist party made its great- i : j x : -C . i day by demanding that its leader Maurice Thorez be named presi- general of the party. Jacques Duclos, Communist! party secretary, announced after conferring- with the Populat Republican Re-publican party leaders and later with. Socialist leaders that the! South Africa, France Scored In UNO Speech Two Nations Treating Trusteeship Charter As "Scrap ol Paper" LONDON, Jan. 21 Prime Minister Peter Fraser of New England today accused accus-ed France and South Africa of treating the UNO trusteeship trustee-ship charter as a "scrap of paper" by trying to keep their old League of Nations mandates man-dates from control of the new world organization. Fraser was cheered and ap plauded loudly as he told thei UNO general assembly that both. France and South Africa hadj clearly implied that they intend-l cd to annex the mandates given them by the league rather than turn them over to UNO trusteeship. trustee-ship. Makes Impassioned Appeal His accusation was made in the course of an impassioned appeal to all mandatory powers tb recognize recog-nize as a matter of national honor their obligation to convert their mandates into trusteeships. His .statement., apparently was also an implied rebuke to to the United States which has indicated it intends to retain re-tain strategic control of he Pacific island mandates wrested from Japan by American Amer-ican forces. The trusteeship issue came to the fore after the UNO's political and security committee had adopted unanimously the Moscow resolution for establishment of an atomic -energy commission. The resolution was adopted 46 to 0- The Philippine common wealth delegate was the only member present who abstained from voting. The Philippines raised the only objection to the composition of the proposed commission. com-mission. Some of the small nations pleaded for a delay in the voting, but they were overruled. The vote came unexpectedly today to-day after the big powers had appealed ap-pealed for quick action. British Foreign Secretary Ernest Ern-est Bevin led the campaign for action now. He said the resolution resolu-tion had been circularized for 16 days and no nation had proposed an amendment. If there ware further fur-ther delay, he said, the world would not understand. "The people of the world may think we are not as serious seri-ous about this important subject as we should be," he said. "This commission should be set up as soon as possible to begin grappling with its j serious problems." Sen. Tom Connally, D., Texas.lmitted they didn't know why opened the debate before the committee with an appeal for quick creation of the commission. (Continued on Page Seveu) Rapido River Attack Explained BROWNWWOD. Tex., Jan. 21 (U.R) The 36th (Texas) division was ordered to cross the swift Rapido river in Italy "for the purpose of diversion supporting the Anzio beachhead operation," i nreordino tn Mai flpn Frri T. ' Walker, former 36th commandant. - j - Walker made the statement yes-(of teraay in a speech accepting a stato narlr nn hohalf rf the rlivl- sinn F.nrlW in" th- HiirUJnn'. two-day reunion, he had declined to vote on a resolution demand. ing a congressional investigation of the order by Gen. Mark Clark. The resolution was adopted over whelmingly. The resolution, referring to the rn-,"Ramdo river f iaro " Mairhori losses totaled about 2.900 men in two days in January, 1944 The Communists are ' the largest political party in France, but they are too weak to form a government without with-out joining. a coalition with at least one other major party, probably the Socialists. Excellently Ex-cellently Informed political observers believed the Communists Com-munists would fail In their efforts to capture the presidency. presi-dency. The consultative assembly was expected to meet at 3 p. m. Tuesday Tues-day to hear De Gaulle's reslgna-(Contlnued reslgna-(Contlnued on Pare Two; - Move Sedn To Force Speedier Demobilization WASHINGTON. Jan. 21 (U.R) A move was underway in congress today to force the army into speeding up demobilization de-mobilization by slashing its funds for feeding and housing hous-ing troops. Rep. Everett M. Dirksen., R., 111., said he would offer the proposal as an amendment amend-ment to a bill coming before congress next month to return re-turn approximately .$6,500,-000,000 .$6,500,-000,000 to the treasury. Most of it, he said, its from funds previously appropriated to the army and navy. Dirksen said frankly that his theary is that if the services ser-vices do not have money to feed and house personnel, . they will have to bring them home. Instead of giving the army and navy lump subsistence funds, Dirksen said the appropriations ap-propriations should be allotted allot-ted in monthly quotas, based on the number of men scheduled sche-duled to be released each month. 5,400 Utahns, Metal Workers Out on Strike By MURRAY M. MOLER United Press Staff Correspondent SALT LAKE CITY, Jan. 21 (U.R) All but two of Utah's vital major steel and copper mining and processing plants were closed today by strikes of some 5400 union workers. In addition, the state was plagued- .by a strike at one of its largest meat packing plants the Cudahy Co. in north Salt Lake to make the Bee Hive state's labor picture the darkest since long before the war. Five-thousand members of the United Mine Mill and Smelter Workers Union (CIO) began a long-threatened walkout at 8 a. m. in their effort to bring Utah Copper industry wages up to the Sl-a-day-higher scale prevailing in the Coeur D'Alene, Ida., area. The strike forced suspension suspen-sion of all operations of the Utah Copper Co., the American Ameri-can Smelting and Refining Co., and the United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Min-ing Co. Affected were the copper pits and mines around Bingham and the mills and smelters at Magna, Arthur, Garfield, Murray and Mid- vale. Only the International Smelting Smelt-ing and Refining Co. plant at Tooele remained in operation among the copper - processing i plants and IS&R officials ad- they hadn't been struck, loo, un less "the union has some odd strategy up its sleeve." The national CIO steel workers' strike took effect at four Utah plants at 12:01 a. m. The Columbia Steel Co. plant at Ironton was closed except for production of domestic gas for the Provo area, which continued under a special arrangement by 100 union workers. work-ers. The steel walkout also closed the Columbia iron mines at Cedar City, the Griffin Wheel Co. at Salt Lake City and the Republic f t , cruaui.rr l .ti. ml ii tiiiiiiit The Peace-curtailed ooerations the Geneva Steel Dlant con- tinued unabated because the workers there have the American Federation of Labor as their bargaining bar-gaining agent, one of the few AFL-represented major steel works in the country. Prospects for settlement of any .of the three strikes were dim. The steel' and meat strikes were keyed in with natlnnal Hntit a nil 4Ia ! copper workers and companies com-panies each said that resumption resump-tion of conciliation efforts would be up to the other side. The strikes were peaceful. County authorities and the state highway patrol stationed special squads, at the affected plants at (Continued on Pace Two) Message Longest In U. S. History WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 (U.R) President Truman's combined message transmitting the budget and reporting on the state of the union was the longest message ever sent congress. It was ap proximately 32,000 words. The message and the budget made' a document of Via printed pases. It was the size and shape of a big city telephone directory.' 750,000 Steel Men Oil Strike In 30 States U. S. Steel Production Choked to Negligible Trickle by Walk-Out By J. ROBERT SHUBERT United Press Staff Correspondent PITTSBURGH, Jan. 21 te The nation's steel production produc-tion was choked to a negligible negli-gible trickle today as 750,000 CIO United Steel workers struck in 30 states. It was the largest single walkout in the history of the country. The strike was labor's answer to management's refusal to meet President Truman's proposal a wage increase of $1.48 a day. Operators, headed by giant United States Steel Corp., offered $1.20. Intervention Fails With failure of the president's 11th hour intervention in the wage dispute the union's once-postponed once-postponed strike call became effective ef-fective at one minute after midnight. mid-night. Pickets marched to the mills to take up the wage battle. More than 1,200 plants ' closed. Virtually all had banked furnaces and shut down mills in anticipation of the walkout. Some were closed as early as a week before the deadline by premature pre-mature walkouts. Local grievances and disagreements over maintenance arrangements arrange-ments for the shutdown were blamed. y. S. Steel Corp. estimated the strike' will cost the nation 200,000 tons of steel a day -enough to build 1,750,000 ref rig-era rig-era torsT Giant Aluminum Company of America also was closed down. The aluminum workers union merged with the steel workers in 1944. Civilian production administrator administra-tor John D. Small in Washington (Continued on Page Seven) Pickets Throw Lines Around Provo Plants The first day of the nation-wide steel strike appeared to be passing peacefully today as far as Provo is concerned, with quiet and or derly lines at the two struck plants, Columbia Steel and Re public Creosoting at Ironton. "Normal operations" were pro gressing at the Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe plant, vitally affected by having its gas supply shut off, according to O. Harvey King, vice president in charge of operations. Wood and coke stoves were being used as gas substitutes, and a full crew reported for work today, Mr. King said. The pipe plant appeared to be the only point where gas was not being furnished. Service as usual was being dispensed by the Mountain Moun-tain Fuel Supply company, gas utility, whose manager reported pressure "good" this morning. The gas company is reciving gas as usual for its customers in Provo. Pro-vo. Springville and Spanish Fork through arrangements made with the union at Columbia Steel to operate the coke ovens sufficiently sufficient-ly to supply this amount. The pipe plant is not served through the jgas company, but by direct line from the plant. The estimate of the number of men still working at Columbia Steel today was revised downward down-ward by CIO officials to about 95. leaving approximately 165 idle from the total of about 260 production and maintenance men ; affected. It was formerly thought l only about 75 would be idle, Work eaine on at Coinmhla i I Steel will be rotated among all'1 50,000 would go for the bureau's ; men who have the abilitv to satis-1 survey of the Missouri river basin ifactorily perform the job. Ralph it. peters, ciu regional representative repre-sentative said. Production at the Republic Creosoting company was halted completely. About 20 men are Idle as a result. Office workers and supervisory T:J.XlZCvKZ Picket lines jCU.R) Many communities in Utah According to R. G. Glass, vice plan,ntday to construct Mem-president Mem-president in charge of operations !rlal building, and parks to com- Geneva mill has enough iron ore stockpiled to operate "three or four months" at its present rate 6f one blast furnace turning out 550 to 600 ton of pig iron a day. Geneva's iron ore supply was shut off when Columbia Steel's Iron Mountain ore mine near Cedar City struck aldng with the parent plant. Geneva has been stockpiling stockpil-ing ore in anticipation of the strike for some time. Geneva,; A. F. of L. organized, was operating op-erating on schedule today. T 4 urg es government Spending Favors Wage Increases Major Points In WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 (U.R) man's 32.000-word message to congress: DOMESTIC PROBLEMS STRIKES Cause "deep concern"; again urged statutory factfinding fact-finding and cooling-off periods; most industries should make "substantial "sub-stantial wage increases"; "business is a public trust and must adhere to national standards in conduct of its affairs"; labor too mnct chnu? crpatrr rAsrmnsihilif v. TAXES "This is no time for tax reduction." i proposing to cut government DRAFT AND DEMOBILIZATION Draft must continue unless! spending almost in half in the more men volunteer; 2 000 000-man army necessary throughout! 1947 figcal y ar and urginff this year; by June, 9 out of 10 men whe were in service on V-E1 . . . . , " . day win be out. ' general industrial wage m- INFLATION Is "our chief worry"; price and rent control j creases, must be renewed; price control must be extended to new and old He opposed further tax rcduc-houses; rcduc-houses; food subsidies must be continued. Hon at this session. He asked for BUDGET Fiscal 1947 expenditures to be $35.8 billion; re-, emergency extension of price con cepts $31.3 mmon: acticii 5-j.j niuion. ue spite aeiicit, national debt to be reduced from $278 billion to $271 billion in 1947 by cutting treasury's large cash balance. WAR AND MILITARY COSTS Will be $15 billion in fiscal 1947; direct cost of World War II to U. S. now totals $354 billion. AFTERMATH OF WAR $4.7 billion for veterans payments in fiscal 1947; $5 billion for interest on debt; $1.5 billion for tax refunds. HOUSING "An immediate emergency and a major postwar problem." Stop-gap actions have been taken; production is the real answer. Wage and price adjustments will be made where necessary. Price control needed on sales of old and new houses. FULL EMPLOYMENT "All the policies of the federal government gov-ernment must be geared to the objective of sustained full production produc-tion and full employment." AGRICULTURE Food prices must be held to present levels, subsidies continued; government will make good on price-support commitments; farmers can be confident of another good year or two. SOCIAL SECURITY Congress should extend benefits to those not covered; provide prepaid medical care, with sickness and dis ability benefits. - WORLD AFFAIRS - , WORLD PEACE We want to "build and preserve ust peace." This can be done only on a basis of justice for all nations. UNITED NATIONS ORGANIZATION "Our ultimate security . . . requires that we begin now to develop UNO as the representative representa-tive of the world as one society . . a great voice to speak constantly con-stantly and responsibility in terms of world collaboration and world well-being." ATOMIC ENERGY Favors mutually-effective safeguards through UNO that will permit fullest international control. INTERNATIONAL FINANQE Lend-lease settlements on basis that will not encumber world trade: continued foreign loans to stimulate U. S. trade. U. S. in next 18 months will put $5.3 billion into export-import bank loans, British loan, and participation in world bank and stabilization fund. THE PAST AND THE FUTURE "We have won a great war we. the nations of plain people who hate war ... in the test, we found a strength of unity that . . . crushed the power of those who sought by force to deny our faith in the dignity of man. I doubt if the tasks of the future are more difficult. But if they are, our strength and our knowledge and our understanding will be equal to those tasks." Provo River Project Alloted $3,102,000 In 1947 Budget The reclamation bureau proposes pro-poses to spend $3,102,000 on the Provo river (Deer Creek) project for new construction, as part of the $139,000,000 great western program of water and power projects in fiscal year 1947. pre sented by President Truman to congress today. Mr. Truman recommended a construction p r o g r a m whichPwer administration for 1947 would cover further work on 27 reclamation projects on which work was curtailed or suspended during the war, and three brand new projects. In the current 1946 fiscal year. $147,427,213 has been made available to the bureau for con struction work. The 1947 fiscal year begins July 1 this year. Of the $139,000,000 construc tion total for 1947, $30,000,000 would be spent on the Columbia river basin, $25,000,000 on the central valley of California, $15,-000,000 $15,-000,000 on the Colorado - Big Thompson project. $15,000,000 on Davis dam, and $18,696,000 for the Missouri river basin. The 1947 budget would also give the bureau $11,000,000 for I conducting general surveys and investigations. In addition, $2,- and $500,000 for its investigation' Utah Towns Plan Erection Of Memorial Buildings, Parks SALT LAKE CITY, Jan. 21 Utah servicemen and women Salt Lake City veterans' groups were taking the lead by planning a sports arena or civic auditorium patterned after Madison Square Garden in New York. A - civic center is one of the greatest needs of Salt Lake City, Mayor Earl J. Glade said today. He aid he was firmly behind such a program. In Tooele, the Memorial Center committee was pushing plans for a civic -center which :they-have Almost Message Major points in President Tru-i jof the Colorado river develop ment. The message recommended a 1947 budget of $16,973,069 for construction on the Bonneville power project- For the operation and maintenance of its electric system, it added. Bonneville will require $4,200,000. Revenues of the Bonneville j were. estimated at $16,148,000, gntiy oeiow the $i8,l7,ouo. tne I project expects to take in during the current fiscal year. The mes- sage attributed the decrease to the adjustment of loads from a war to peace-time basis. The message also recommended 1?'SJ.lJ,jKLof Xhe bu reau of Indian affairs, The public roads administration would get $305,838,792 'for the resumption of peacetime highway construction." He is a partial list of the way the reclamation bureau would spend the proposed $139,00:,000 allocation for new construction: Boise, Idaho Anderson ranch $2,847,000. Boise, Idaho, Payette division $2,573,000. Minidoka, Idaho $1,000,000, Palisades, Idaho $1,500,000- Sunriver, Mont. $96,000. Ogden river, Utah $102,951. Provo river, Utah $3,102,000. been attempting to obtain for the past two years. Carbon county was planning to construct a war memorial in recognition of servicemen of both wars, according to B. H. Young, county clerk. In Loa, World War II veterans will have a memorial dedicated to them. The United War Fund committee hoped to '. fashion a memorial after their' courthouse with funds from farewell and welcome home dances. . Cache county had ho plans for memorial structures as yet,, according ac-cording to Mr. R. Hbvey, secretary secret-ary of the Logan chamber of commerce. - - Cut Half: in Asks Extension of Emergency Price Control Authority; By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 wai" President Truman sent to congress today a message trol authority and urged that it be expanded to put a ceiling on sales prices of old and new houses. Two-Million Army The president said the armed services even a year from now must total 2,000,000 men. The selective service law must be continued con-tinued beyond its May 16 expiration ex-piration date if voluntary enlist-ments enlist-ments are inadequate, Mr. Truman Tru-man said. He asked for a decision on selective service extension in March. The president deplored work stoppages and called for collective bargaining adjustment adjust-ment of disputes.' He said lonr . continuation of major strikes would heavily check the reconversion prorram. But he cave no plans t - evp v with labor problems other than collective bartaininff. fact-finding - boards and a general upward wage trend. Full employment and increased production, Mr. Truman said, are the only safeguards against the disaster of inflation and consequent conse-quent depression. He unqaull-fledly unqaull-fledly endorsed the senate version of his full employment bill and asked again for enactment. The president warned that serious depression in the United States could disrupt world economy. The communication to congress was a combination budget and annual messages on the state of the nation. It contained upward of 30,000 words- It was read to house and senate by clerks. The budget proposals were for the fiscal fis-cal year 1947, beginning July 1 this year end ending June 30, 1947. The . legislative proposals were for immediate attention. The president estimated fiscal 1947 expenditures at $35,860,000,-000, $35,860,000,-000, compared with $67,229,000,-000 $67,229,000,-000 in the current fiscal year and a wartime top of $100,000,000,000. Receipts in fiscal 1946 will be ss i,3 13,000,000, . compared with diia.uuifjflju.uuu. i i if n, a 1 r i 1 1 i. MO AA AAA Ann rrl tn, ' of $4,347,000,000 will be covered by drawing, on treasury cash reserves re-serves Instead of borrowing. The current 'year's deficit was esti- mated at $28,620,000,000, Mr. Truman said that,, during the next fiscal year he would reduce re-duce the national debt from $275,-000,000,000 $275,-000,000,000 as of June 30, 1946, to $271,000,000,000 also by drawing on treasury reserves. That, would be the first down in the national debt over a, 12-month period since the fiscol year 1930- Treasury reserves re-serves will be. reduced in the foregoing process from approximately approxi-mately 26,000,000,000 to $3,200,-000.000. $3,200,-000.000. Business Public . Trust-In Trust-In discussing work stoppages, Mr. Truman said disputes must be settled by collective bargaining and with government assistance,' but not by government compulsion. compul-sion. "Private capital and private management," he continued, "are. entitled to adequate, reward for efficiency, " but business must recognize that its reward, results , from- the employment of the re-(Continued re-(Continued on Page Two) Tvvo Dead After Car-Sled Crash POCATELLO, Ida., Jan. 21 (U.K Two persons were dead. today as the result of injuries suffered in a car-sled accident late, Friday night, one mile east of Inkom. ; Marjorie Ellis, 16, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Murl Ellis, Inkom, died in a hospital here Saturday night, and Enock Stanger, 14, son7 of Mr, and Mrs. ' Grant Stanger, lso of Inkom, died yearly Salur- . day. v . I- The mled was beinff nulled bv a car driven by Dell Whitworth, Inkom, when it was struk by av car driven by Everett Curzan,. also of Inkom - ? - |