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Show . " V i TEMPERATURES .. :PrVO .s 3 Salt Lake Of dm .... Iofa St. . tS'Oanabt Vtf at Anccles Fran. !' SSiChlcar SZ Dulut -v.- r .., : ..tV ! ; lxnAAT7AVTV7. n Z. I I - : . . . Vx Jj I York j!Nw SStMlaml .... . ' PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, $70. Billion . 3 O ves WEnem Plants Planned for Handling Strategic Ore I of his hours after it the JOHN L. CUTTER Wilma Fillmore, 17, Lehi, and her cousin, Mrs. By United Press Staff Correspondent multi-millio- n Plans for Wanda Kinsey Murdock, 17, Heber. , WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 dollar search for strategic All three were in a car which skidded out of control on (U.R) President Truman metals in Utah and surround- an icy turn of a mile above Wildwood in Provo sends to congress Monday a construcing states and the canyon and plungedxinto nine feet of river water. The budget expected tion of mills and processing occurred in Wasatch to exceed tragedy four-tentand $70,000,000,000 , a mile of were county, plants in southern Utah call for the biggest tax inabove the Utah county line. announced Saturday. Bodies of the two young wom- crease in history. R. I. Ludwig of Dallas, Tex., en remained in the car and were If congress . approves, the resident mana- recovered soon after the accident Associwhich occurred shortly before 3 nation will be launched on the ger for S. Y. Guthrie and heaviest spending program ever ates of Dallas, said the operation p.m. Friday. At about 2:30 p.m. laid down without a formal dec would develop "revolutionary of Mr. Doug the body Saturday, new processes" discovered by a was found after most of Provo laration of war. las "Utahn for treating uranium ores river had been turned off at the Most of the money will go to WASHINGTON. Jan. 13 (UR) Douglas, 25, By UNITED PRESS sister-in-la- Price Control Proposal May Be Coming Up and .rare metals. V. Di- Paul B. Cardon, a native of Price Stabilizer Michael from first his back bounced salle Logan and former Utah State conof wage-prithe setback destudent, Agricultural college trols fight Saturday with a new veloped the new processes and bid for action to halt runaway for director will act as research living costs. the, new firm. The roly-pol- y controller, wnose Assoand Guthrie said Ludwig a for scheme general wage- ciates has already purchased Drice freeze blew up in his face conChem-Meta- ls Inc., a Utah it leaked of word week after last cern organized by Cardon, and out prematurely, wasn't talking nushine work on uranium about his new plans. mining properties in Wayne and But he called off his customary "week-en- d Garfield counties. and trip home to Toledowith ' overtime session went into Process Nw his staff. Sources close to him said Details of the new process of he still hopes to get something ura01 ores treating refractory done about consumer prices. nium and vanadrunxand low grade prices, now at record levels and ores of manganese, columbium, threatening to go right through not were tantalum and zirconium, the roof. They indicated, he has disclosed. But Ludwig cnaracier several alternative plans in mind. read "makins Disalle was believed to have ilv available many strategic them over Friday at an talked metals required in atomic re- unannounced conference with Desearch and jet . plane develop- fense Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson. ment." But he refused to say any more He said the new processes can than that they had "discussed easily break down uranium va problems of the job." nadium ores of mgn nme conwm diffi- - Go - Slow Policy pkk A 11C .omA vT Wins uio, " truA for the Economic Stabilizer Alan Val combination, cult - copper-uraniui iuc oaiu. Thau nrm have Drevi- - entine, who killed Disalles plan because he didn't ously presented difficulties in the thinkfreeze it would work' at this time, .economical extracxion oi also conferred with. Wilson Frioxide. Guthrie and his two principal3. day. The seperate meetings stirthat Valentine associates, A. K. Grafe and T.and red speculation w a be varied urging have might again of Dallas, Bate on oil mobilization the and chief, coal in policy interests extensive three men will get a chance ' lands ; and we engaged in . th to- All air their views on what to do contracting and food processing about inflation later this month. Industries in Texas. t wau said the croup has se- - when Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney's is economic committee rnrpd an oDtion on extensive joint question them. uranium holdings in southern scheduled to said he could find .no by CMahoney Utah which were assembled the record of any "positive" steps that R. Weeks interests and hP been taken to halt the Kentucky-Uta- h Mining Co., a have inflation. He demanded present Immediate City firm. sait Tjke nii for removal of over immediate action. Disalle, while obviously disburden on several locationsin selturbed by the lack of action on the claims of a ected on group prices said in an inarea south of consumer Henry mountain terview that he was entoday TTtah Salt Lake City" the voluntary agreeXtdunovuiv, couraged by Reed and Gibbons contractors ments reached in the big basic have visitea tne ciauns vo hjw industries. op sites for the uranium mining He said the cumulative effect eration. of those agreements is beginning to make itself felt and should beBaying Ores n to erect a come more marked in the next "large, continuous" operation mill few weeks. in southern Utan to nanaie new Agree Not to Raise ores with the copper and sulThe Dlant will also The lead-zin- c, phur industries already have artrD o a nistom mill. not to raise prices without At the same tme, the combine agreed advance notice to Disalle, and a a construct and to desien nian similar is expected very accord area Lake 250-tmill in the Salt n hnnHlp mancanese ore wnicn shortly, on a company by company basis, with the steel inwill be procured in Nevada. Ammonia producers also dustry. .mean the in that said Ludwig nriranization was DUr are expected to go along with the the voluntary - control plan abd DiTantalum Columbium chasing salle said similar negotiations nrpt in Idaho. Colorado, New are continuing in other basic infor Dakota South and Movin cCin in Salt Lake City. He dustries. said enlargement of the present uc-iresearch laboratory was now use the for Licenses pushed. of the processes by others will be granted to "qualified firms in the field.'V Ludwig said. Former Utah Attorney General WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 (U.R) Grover A. Giles, is handling neM. Baruch, longtime adthe Bernard for work and legal gotiations vocate of said. an all-odefense efChem-Meta- ls Ludwig group, fort, held an unexpected conference with Defense Secretary ltfF.rflANTC KILLED MTTSKEOON. Mich.. Jan? 13 George C. Marshall Saturday to (U.R An Explosion test indicated give him "a few ideas on proit was safe to start weiaing an duction." mDtv casoline tank Saturday Arriving by plane from New but Mechanic Weirengo, 40, wasn't York, theto elder statesman went Marshall's office in sure, lie aroppeu m uum"i straight' of naner to make sure. the Pentagon. nin A defense spokesman later said The tank exploded and Weiren Baruch was en route to his go was killed. Georgetown, S. C, plantation for several days' quail hunting and stopped to ask Marshall to go with him. Marshall could hot acMarshall's spokesman adcept. Doctor notes increasing close ded that Baruch, one-timental in health, Interest adviser to President Truman and more cites need for patient now estranged, also had "a few buildings at Utah State hosideas on production that he wantpital. Page 3. ed to pass along to General MarCentral Utah ready for shall." start of 1951 March of Dimes campaign. Page 4. Provo rodent control campaign gets underway. Page 4. Other Features Today Pages TOKYO. Jan. 13 (U.R) The Central Utah News . 2. 3. 4. 5. 6 Japanese business world will tell 2 Deaths "Flnrer Print Don't Lie" . . 2 John Foster Dulles during his 3 forthcoming visit to study peace News Briefs 3 treaty problems that Statistics Japat should 6 be 'Round the World rearmi with to permitted . 7, 8, 9 SporU S. was it U, . Business help reported Sat10 Page . 11 urday. Editorial Page 11 Dulles, Republican adviser to 7, Sec. 2 Secretary of State Dean Ache-so- n, Badio Programs is expected here soon with Women's Features 1 to 3, Sec. 2 Church News 5, Sec 2 members of the state and defense , 4, Sec. 2 department School News mission he will head. Classified The four leading organizations 8, 9, See. 2 .... 8, Sec. 2 representing Japan's top man Cttnaics ce 30-d- ay m 30-d- ay m"" go-slo- r- " tri,.,;n on ng Baruch Meets With Marshall ut Inside The Herald me : ' "Mrmr-Cia-Hnan- A ........ ......... if ar hs Deer Creek dam. allowing searchers to spot his body caught on a bar about 150 feet below where the accident occurred. Finding of Mr. Douglas' body cleared up the last question of an accident which from the first was fraught with mystery and lack of information. Identity in Question For several hours the identity of the two women was not known and at one time it was thought that Mrs. Donna Douglas, 21, wife of Mr. Douglas, was one of the victims. This was proved in error when it was determined she was 's safe at the home of Mrs. mother, Mrs. Pearl Kinsey .in Midway. Then, after Mrs.- Murdock, wife of Ralph Murdock of Heber,- and Miss Fillmore were identified, it was in doubt whether Mr. Douglas, a Geneva Steel worker, had been in the car. He was last seen as he left the home of Mrs. Kinsey to give Mrs. Murdock and Miss Fillmore a ride to He ber. Passing motorists who had seen the car insisted three people were in it before it plunged off the road. Only the women were found in it, however, with the doors jammed shut and only a relatively small opening through the "broken windshield. Trooper M. W. Grant, first officer to the scene, said it was of course pos- sible the man had been in the car, but that it looked improb able from the circumstances. Search An search of Heber and Midway failed to find him, however, and officers under di rection of Wasatch County Sheriff Eugene Payne and State Trooper Mike Gale began searching the river early Saturday About 1 p.m. Saturday permis sion was obtained from Provo (Continued on Pace Two) Mur-dock- - - Ail-Nig- ht all-nig- ht Romania to Get Diplomatic Snub In Envoy Shift Jan. 13 (U.R) The United States plans to toss a diplomatic snub at Communist controlled Romania as part of an impending shift of American diplomats to new posts in Europe and Latin Amer ica, it was revealed Saturday. Administration officials said that Rudolf E. Schoenfeld American minister to Romania, will not return to Bucharest following his current talks at the state department. No successor is being consid ered now, officials said, and chances are dim that a top en vov will be sent to Romania in the foreseeable future. Recent American - Romanian relations have been dotted with Both coun recurring disputes. tries have banned travel of such other's diplomats outside a small area. Schoenfeld's main duties have been to deliver protests and receive rejections at the Rooffice. All manian American foreign diplomatic and military personnel have been embarrassed and hampered by Romania in carrying on their normal duties. Schoenfeld is slated to be the next American ambassador to Guatemala but the appointment is not imminent. This country's relations with Guatemala also have been strained for many months because of an informal request that U. S. Ambassador Richard C. Patterson, Jr., be recalled on grounds he had interfered in Guatemala's internal WASHINGTON. high-ranki- ng build up defenses Dlanes. tanks, guns, atomic development and a force of 3,462,000 men and women in uniform and to gird allies against Russian aggression. Other Projects Cut Mr. Truman already has prom ised congress that projects will be cut to the minimum and that other monej will be spent "only for urgen; needs." At the same time, he wants defense spending, which now runs at the rate of about $20,000,000,000 a year, to hit by the end of next December. In his economic message Friday the president figured that over a two-yeperiod, from last July 1 to :June 30, 1952, the United States should commit itself to spend $140,000,000,000 for 'primary national security programs." To pay for it he wants taxes, raised $8,000,000,000 last year, hiked again. The figures of has been mentioned if defense spending is to be put on a basis. That would be, by far, the biggest tax boost in the nation's history. The late President Roosevelt asked congress for a increase in 1943, in the middle of World War II. Congress approved v bill to raise $2,250,- - agement officials announced they will present a plan calling for: 1. Permission for rearrriament in the interest of domestic peace and order and national defense at the same time, government officials have warned thqt Japan cannot bear the burden of reAmerican armament without help. 2. Peace with a majority of the nations Japan fought in World War II in other words, a peace treaty without Russia. 3. Territorial and immigration considerations in view of main w jv 1V i J pay-as-we-- go 10,500,-000,0- 000,000 Tax Message 00 lter Mr.' TrUman hasn't said, yet exactly how much, new taxes he wants or how they should be levied. He will send up a special tax program later. But he has told congress he wants "much more" than the $8,000,000,000 approved last year and that it must be borne by every segment of the economy. "The new tax increases, now required, must press harder upon ," every source of available he said in his economic message. "Corporations should pay much higher taxes. Individ- uals should pay much higher taxes. Excise taxes should be higher and more extensive loopholes in the tax laws should be closed." , Republican leaders served advance notice that any new tax increase will have to be accompanied by sharp cuts in spending. Despite economy demands, the budget will have to be extremely (Continued on Page Two) rev-enu- - . non-defen- se Utility Customer With Conscience ALAMEDA, Cal., Jan. 13 "Joe Doe," a man with a conscience and a long mem- 14 (U.R) Radio Moscow said today ; . X r M. POATS By RUTHERFORD United Press Staff Correspondent m 7 X'. TOKYO, Sunday, Jan. 14 (U.R) The U. S. 2nd division lost control of strategic Hill 247 just outside Wonju on the central Korean front today as enemy troops threatened a powerful flanking attack from the southeast. United Press Correspondent Joe Quinn reported that the United Nations troops withdrew from the high point on the southeast edge of the Wonju defense line for the second time in two days, after recapturing it late yesterday. ' At the 'same time mountain-- 1 (I climbing Communist infantrymen wheeled around the eastern allied IT6 " IianK in cenvrai ivuiea IN RED HANDS This photo, from a Communist source, purthe 65 of miles to within portedly shows prisoners of war from the U. S. 1st Cavalry speared line. Division registering with an officer of the "Chinese People's oldUNPusan beachhead enemy pounded artillery Volunteers." The caption was supplied by the Communists. positions along the Wonju line throughout the night, and the allied line remained stabilized as to two LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Jan. 12 close as one and one-ha- lf miles outside the city. No in- 'UP) The United Nations main reported after political committee fantry contact was beat Saturday back Red night . overwhelmingly 2nd division troops approved hours Saturday a five-poiassaults for five for halting in the Korean program war and authorized morning and counter-attacke- d the afternoon. its immediate dispatch to th Chinese Communist government. Leaves Question should be acted upon by the legis-- 1 Dispatch By JOHN L. STEELE The committee votUnited Press Staff Correspondent lauve Drancn. not make ed 50 to 7 with 1 abstention for did Front Dispatches WASHINGTON, Jan. 13 U.P Taft also blasted U. S. accept - clear whether the Americans the five points which call for the Sen. WaMer F. George, D., Ga., ance of a proposed cease-fir- e progressive withdrawwithdrew from Hill 247 cease-fir- e, joined Republican Sen. Robert plan for Korea. The proposal pro- simply troops, estabtactical reasons or were al of for A. Taft, O., Saturday, in demand- vides for discussions with the driven off by enemy assaults lishment of a unified '.independing President Truman submit to Chinese 'Communists on. their adKorea, and Quinn said that division offi- ent, democratic congress the issue of sending mission to the United Nations cers the enemy to big power conference Including expected more American troops to Europe. and possible acquisition of For- launch a and take up heavy attack today or Communist China George broke sharply with mosa. the, questions of Formosa and tomorrow. Chairman Tom Connally, D., Tex., "That is a The threat of an envelopmentfPeking s admission to the UN. great mistake," Taft of the senate foreign relations said. "It is Soviet Opposed the west also increased as from appeasement. complete committee. Connally shares Mr. I would said large enemy The Soviet bloc, El Salvador a air withdrawal from reports prefer Truman's views that while con- Korea to China voted keep our hands free in forces were spotted between Osan and Nationalist sultation with congress is ad- Formosa because has always and Yoju moving southeastward. against the plan. The Philippines that sent can be the visable, troops been more important than Korea." Yoju is about 18 miles west of abstained. without specific senate-houap- The United States he said, Wonju and 33 miles east of Osan, More than two hours after tht proval. "shouldn't consider yielding" to which is on the- main highway vote, the committee resolved a Taft reiterated his demands Red demands for the UN seat now south of Seoul. debate on complicated procedural five-poithat congress act before the held by the Republic of China and More Reds Massinr nt how to transmit the He sent. are told over for the republic's troops reporters taking to Peking; by the simple plan of constitutional island bastion of Formosa. that, regardless More and more Communist solution of getting the commitarguments, it is a "major matter Won't Have Unity trooDs were reported massing be tee chairman to hand the plan to of high national policy" which office fpx The cease fire agreement is low Seoul and sending sizeable UN secretary-general- 's under UN debate. It calls for end- patrols down the main highways transmission to Peking. It was understood that David ing the Korean war, withdrawal to the south Some 35 miles to the southeast Owen, acting secretary-generof all foreign troops, and eventual forces other enemy in the absence of Trygve Lie, negotiations between the United of Wonju States, Britain, Russia and Red crossed the upper reaches of the would dispatch the plan by comHan river and penetrated nearly mercial cable direct to Peking. China. crest of the So It was likely to reach the Chito the 5,000-foon Democrat George, ranking UN ar nese Communist; capital some the foreign relations committee, baek mountain range. 2,000-ma- n a on up time opened tillery (Continued on Page 12) enemv unit in that area, but TheSunday. vote on the transmission there was little available infor method was 45 to 5 with 8 abWASHINGTON. Jan. 13 (U.R) on the engagement. mation stentions. The Soviet bloc opA major fight is brewing in the However, all reports said North posed, the Arabs, El Salvador, the new congress on whether a naKorean Communists, now joined Philippines and China abstained. tional sales tax should be imposed by the Chinese, were slipping Russian Deputy Foreign MinisUN defense ter Jacob A. Malik led the Soviet to meet mounting defense costs. past the astride the central bloc in opposing the peace forperimeter Some members said a sales tax south of Wonju and on grounds that the poliROME, Jan. 13 UP The Ital- highways down the mountain mula would be about the only avenue reached its decommittee tical pouring Saturday the ridees of rugged east - central cision without participation of open to congress if it meets Presi- ian senate approved Atlantic policy by Korea. dent Truman's demands for up- government's North Korean and Chinese Com161 votes to 92 following a addiwards of $15,000,000,000 in munist representatives. session in which Enemy Planes stormy tional revenue. communist shouts drowned out An undetermined number of But other members said ,they every mention of Gen., Dwight in Flu planes, believed to be enemy oppose a sales tax under any cir D. Eisenhower. five .bombs and A leader of this craft, dropped cumstances. The vote asking for the sen- strafed UN positions last night group, Rep. John D. Dingell, D., ate's "reaffirmation of loyalty to near Sojong, seven miles soutn Mich., said it would hit hardest the Atlantic pact" was held after of Osan. One bomb fell at the low income groups. 1,000 Lives Premier Alcide De Gasperi asked southwest of the town and just the "I am uncompromisingly op- for a supplementary defense ap- other four were dropped east ofi LONDON, Jan. 13 (U.R) The of posed to a federal sales tax," he propriation 200,000,000,000 there In Great influenza outbreak said. "There are other revenue lire $307,607,607 to improve The communists apparen 1 1 y Britain has taken; more than 1,000 sources to tap before we hit at "Italy's modest armed forces." were driving to cut between the lives since fall and the peak has the working man with five child Four senators abstained from UN central and east coast armies, not been reached, it was disren. voting while Vittorio Emanuel capture the important Tanyang closed Saturday. Rep. Daniel A. Reed, R., N.Y. Orlando, last survivor of the Ver- Dass through the sobaeK range toll reached 548 for The death ," of the sailles defenders voted tax the of GOP member force the and against ranking Jan. 6, ministry week the ending on means the Atlantic 12) house and ' (Continued Page ways government's policy. writing showed. of health figures cona committee, told reporter Flu deaths began to rise in gress "will have to go to all sorts er of and reached peid-em- ic Authority of lengths if it is going to meet 'Stripped beproportions n the week the fantastic revenue demands of fore Chrislmas,,; after which the president." deaths rose fronv 54 to 102 and Rep. Robert W. Kean, R.. N.J then to the 548 figure, week by one of Reed's colleagues on ways week. and means, said he personally had always opposed a sales tax but RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, Jan. that "we will have to consider it (U.R) A total ot 160 persons 13 CHICAGO, Jan. 13 (U.R) The news correspondent recently sent have died in the epidemic of if we are going to raise taxes saySatSwitzerland a from News said dispatch" anything like as much as the Chicago Daily will here, !the munlcfp-prove cor- ing that the French were selling health department urday that time president proposes." reported Sat- ComMr. Truman has not yet sub- rect in reporting that Gen. Doug- steel rails to the Chinese urday. MacArthur had recommended munists. This story was denied mitted his tax proposals to con- las that officially in Washington,, he said, gress. In his general statements withdrawal from Korea, and him of but subsequently proved correct. to date, however, he has made Washington "stripped to speak freely on the In his weekly column, "The clear that congress will be called authority" Publisher Notebook" war. Editor's upon to close the iap between S. Knight of the News and federal spending of around $70,- - Basil L. Walters, evecutive edi- John other Knight papers said that: 000,000,000 a year and revenue of tor of the Knight Newspapers, "Beech's facts are essentially News in Detroit the said that about $55,000,000,0001 correct. They were obtained from ORAN, Mo., Jan. 13 UE The a the denial" of had "anticipated The president has said repeat- stories. sources which are both reliable "Big Inch" natural gas line, edly that the rearmament pro to have the story stretching from Texas to New "We don't intend to continue and anxious gram must be on a to attention of the Jersey, exploded in the communithe brought the debate at this time," he said. American basis. ty operated by the Texas Eastpublic." proper time we will ern Transmission corp., near Beech's out Chairman Robert L. Doughton, "At the that Knight pointed and it will be one' of the havOran Mac Arthur's Saturday., Injuring four about D., N.C., of ways and means, said speak stories of newspaperdom. dispatch withdrawal men, two of them: seriously. recommended Saturday the committee will open great are ing standing by Beech. Our first was rejected by military Two employes at first reported hearings on tax legislation Feb. 5 "We correct. We know where censors. mission later were located. after disposing of reciprocal trade facts are Local officials 6t Texas East- "After a few minor changes," and war, contract renegotiation theycame from." a on out (Continned on! Page Two) . bills. that He pointed (Continned Pag Two) daily ! ilQQSG"! Plan Approved By U. N. Group George Joins Toft in Stand Truman Should Ask Congress About Sending Troops Away nt 60-nat- ioh - "non-Korea- n" ; - se - Many Opposed To Federal Sales Tax al . ot Italian Senate Votes Okeh of die-ha- rd six-ho- ur (L'.l! Outbreak Great Britain Takes ory, felt much better today. He walked into the Alameda office of electricity Friday, saying "I feel I owe you folks $40. Fact is, I've owed it to you for 50 years." Glenn Baxter, bureau secretary, said the man handed him two crisp $20 bills, smiling while he did so. "Now I feel much better," Baxter quoted him. "You do things when you are young that you wouldn't d6 when you get older." "Doe" told Baxter he gyped the company in 1901, when he hooked his house wires up to a main line. That way. Doe said, the electricity he used wasn't measured by a meter. Doe refused to tell Baxter his name. "Just put the money in the till and let it go at that. This has bothered me for 50 years." "Big-Four- , mid-Octob- Newspaper Stands by Writer In Report on Gen. MacArthur nza 1 taining the j livelihood of the Japanese people. 4. Unfreezing of frozen Japanese overseas assets. 5. Permission to organize "industrial defense corps" in key industrial plants deemed susceptible to possible disturbances. In Osaka Saturday, Japanese Finance Minister Hayato Ikeda said Japan would not be able to rearm herself, and called "an economic impossibility" a reflection of government plans to ask for American; assistance, in event. Japan is permitted to rearm. v ent : TOKYO. Sunday, Jan. a "liberated" Kangnung and continued to advaace southward. Kanrnung is 20 miles south of the 38th parallel. Atlantic Policy Pays Back $40 BULLETIN The broadcast said Communist troops on the .east coast se ar Reds Threaten Powerful Flanking Move Heavy Attack Expected Soon Osan. non-Commu- non-defen- t that North Korean and Chinese tanks reached the 37th parallel in western Korea after passing: Ansong, 15 miles southeast of U. S. Japan Wants Permission to Rearm -- - . hs win-the-w- 5 Nsiir Wtnijjyt w, six-tent- ed 14, UoSo By Congress to Receive Provo river gave tip its third drowning victim Saturday Budget From Truman afternoon with the finding of , the body of William B, Calling for Tax Hike Lehi 24 lives took By THERON H. LUKE JANUARY Strafes! Hill hmk War Budget Due Monday Ccao-- kodlsQffif Dcy .Rood . Mills and Processing newly-appoint- ... , . Utah Group To Develop Rare Metals . ... , ... .... ... VOL. 28. NO. 33 t - ;?.. ; . . ZIIBDtt UiYallowston it'Dcavar 1 i ' PortUad . Ocorg Xn tan 1 . 'Big Inch' Blast Injures Four Men . pay-as-we-- go i V .V-" 'ft . -- ; |