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Show 'i 1 Gas Parley On GenemBring :do Fear SUNDAY rfftLP ISgr plated By THERON LUKE ' Th deneva "Steel plant will continue reduced operations Monday Mon-day on a. new contract to replace th old one expiring tonight at midnight,- but 'possibility of an even further shutdown is seen in a recent- meeting between plant heads and members of the Utah The meeting took place in Salt; Lake City between the commis sion, : Walther Mathesius and Merrill Russell, Geneva president and general counsel, respectively, Press dispatches quoted Donald Hacking, commission chairman, as saying the group discussed probability, of a request to modify the freeze order on industrial gas, to .permit sufficient quantity for the Geneva coke ovens if and when the plant is completely shut down. Mr. Hacking said no de cision was reached. It is known this matter was discussed, even before the present 'reduced-. operations,, as a means of keeping the coke ovens warm enough to prevent disintegration. Local officials could not be reach ed for comment today, but it is Presents i Solution Peace Miinro to "Wori YA IUs BY PETER EDSON NEA Service Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Nov. lOl-With-in a few short 'days, .if ft hasn't happened already, the army is losing one of its smallest and most prxyisb majors, tie w Major Mun-ro Mun-ro Leaf, known lall over America as the author of "Ferdinand the Bull," "The Watchbtrds" books, and the "Can Be Fun" books. . During the war, Leaf put in his time in the office of the under secretary of war and in. the education edu-cation and information branch. He started out as a first lieutenant lieu-tenant in public relations and went n frpm there, writing pamphlets so that soldiers -could understand them, winding up With a- tour of Europe to find out how soldiers ,felt about things and why. In the course of his inspection, Major Leaf got his fill of the more rugged side of war and the nonsense non-sense of it all. So he decided to do something about it. He decided that the reason people behaved the way they did was because were doing. Sohe decided to call m FIG. 2 believed a decision on the matter i they didn't understand what they '-would' rest with D P C of f lcials in Washington. . While.. pig iron now being produced pro-duced at the plant from the one blast furnace will be sold to the Pacific coast properties of Bethlehem Beth-lehem steel, it is generally known that the plant is operating at present pre-sent only to keep the cook ovens warm and not with the particular aim of producing pig iron. Should enough industrial gas from other sources be made available avail-able to accomplish this purpose, reliable authorities here feared a ; complete shutdown of the plant, I with only the guards, a few main- tenance men end a handful of ' men to feed gas into the coke ovens as the remaining payroll. The plant is now operating one t blast furnace, one coke oven and ' the power house. The remaining three coke ovens are being kept . warm. Operation of the blast fur ' nace and coke oven is intercon- nected in the Geneva system, each 1 necessary to the other, and both necessary for the production if J gas to keep the remaining three coke ovens warm. U. E. Employment office figures listed the Geneva payroll at i, slightly over 1500 as the week closed. It is slated for a cut to between 600 and 700. Most of the , cut is expected to come between now and Nov. 15. The plant car- ried a force of better than 4,000 , at peak operations and .was employing em-ploying about 2,400 when D P C orders were received to cut to the present operations. t Present plans call for the new . contract to run for eight months, or until some disposition is made of the plant. FIG..1 logic age. His opening chapter reads like this: WHEN - OUR ANCESTORS LIVED IN DARK, DARK CAVES THEY WERE VERY ROUGH ON EACH OTHER. (See Fig. 1.) The reason, Historian Leaf points out, was that there wasn't enough food or clothing and his book, "Let's Do Better." And to make sure that it could be understood, he wrote it as a children's chil-dren's book.. The result is an 80 page book for kids. The type is nearly half an ' inch high and there are only about a thousand words of printing. print-ing. Mostly the book is Leafs kscrewy art work of the type kids can understand. On each page there is food for a week's ! FIG. 3 l 'thought. The thing has social significance that socks you in the ijaw. j With the permission of the publishers and copyright owners, :C. B. Lippincott company, here are the highlights of the story j In Leaf's pixylated style, one sentence and three picture become be-come the history of a whole geo- Marital Mix-Up Ends in Shooting everybody was scared. Until a few wise people decided this was very stupid. S they lived together as tribes, splitting up the work. And as Anthropologist Leaf points out, THIS MADE SENSE. There was still a catch in it, however, for there was always some other tribe not far away who were always stirring up trouble, the whole mess leading to a thing called A WAR in which SOMEBODY ALWAYS GOT HURT (See Fig. 2.) But Vest Pocket Evolutionist Leaf finally discovers that in the course of time THINKERS ap pear on the scene, and LEADERS THE MAKERS AND DOERS WHO CAN BE GOOD FOR US ALL. (See Fig. 3.) AND THE SELFISH CHEAT ERS WHO MESS THINGS UP, (See Fig. 4.) Well, the upshot of this whole business, as Moralist Leaf dis covers on page 76, is that IF WE WANT THIS WORLD TO BE A BETTER PLACE WE ARE THE ONES WHO CAN MAKE IT SO. LET'S BE THINKERS THINK-ERS ALL OVER THE WORLD. (See Fig. 5.) fHCHIGAN CITY, Ind., Nov. 3tYI (II PI A !i.vpar.nlfl Mirhinan CHy business man, enraged be-; Cause his wife wanted a divorce, ended his marital troubles in a! Xvild shooting orgy last night. tWith seven shots from a revolver, re-volver, Joseph W. Gezarkiewicz killed his wife, shot and seriously Injured his baby daughter, Wounded his wife's sister, then1 fatally shot himself, police said, t .vLorctta Gazarkiewicz, the -couple's 14-month-old daughter, IW&s taken to St. Anthony's hospital, hos-pital, where doctors said she might die of bullet wounds in the : eg and spine. I r'vLa Porte. coynty police said the,; iad woman, Mrs. Irene Gazar-j fciewicz, 29, had filed suit for' divorce several weeks ago and; gloved to the home of her sister, '7 ' Mrs. Herman Novak. i r';At a preliminary hearing in superior court yesterday, she had been granted temporary custody of their two daughters, Loretta, ud four-year-old Lotta. Gazarkiewicz followed his wife 5U the Novak home, police said, fetter a final plea for reconciliation reconcilia-tion had been rejected, j' Police", said Gazarkiewicz walk-!pd walk-!pd in the door brandishing a gun. Asmed althis wife, his bullet struck his sisterMn-law, Mrs. ftovak. in the. arm. A second shot hit Mrs. Gazarkiewicz -in the thigh, and a third. went wild., FIG. 4 FIG. 5 children and ran across the street to the home of Mrs. Kluzc. Gazarkiewicz followed, flopping only to reload his re- Jyolver. he burst in throuch the JtJtchen door and fired two shots At, Loretta as she lay in her pother s arms. ; A sixth shot struck Mrs. Gazar-Siewicz Gazar-Siewicz in the heart, killing her flhstantly. Gazarkiewicz then fired KM) (MM More Families Will Have To 'Double Up' WASHINGTON, Nov.l 0 0I.R) National housing administrator John B. Blandford, Jr., estimated today that 2,000,000 more American Ameri-can families are going to have to "double up" on housing accommodations accom-modations by the end of 1946. And unless veterans are given preference in future vacancies, Blandford said, they and their families will comprise more than The mother picked up the two1,000'000 of this numter. In a letter to the mayors of Edward all-U. S. cities of more than 25,000 population, Blandford urged each to appoint an emergency committee commit-tee on housing to establish or ex pand '.veteran " housing services. speed production of housing and combat inflation. He emphasized the need for new housing and the threat to inflation in-flation in the present shortage; aounet into nis temple ana tne (Housing, ne said, is primarily a 4iext moment- lay dead beside her; community responsibility. He Police to Question In Woman Slaying PONTIAC, Mich., Nov. 10 (U.R) Police prepared today to question ques-tion Edward Bellm, 49, a former policeman, whose attempt to kill himself changed his status from a "useful witness" to a "definite suspect" in the slaying of the pretty wife of an overseas army officer. Bellm slashed his wrists with a razor blade yesterday in his county jail cell while waiting to confront Lawrence Theis, 29, the man he had accused of murdering Mrs. Alberta Young. His condition condi-tion was not serious. Police Lt. Clark Wheaton said that Bellm would be questioned again as. soon as his condition permitted. urged that cities recognize the; emergency and make plans now for their long-range needs. . The emergency period .in housing, hous-ing, he said, may last "two or three years in many communities.' Jvlew Pontiacs On Display Here Monday J0ts, -iniii i fti-Mitin--' - ' TliK v. "''-- --.. -. ' V" Motorists of the Provo area will be among the first in the nation to see the 1846 Pontiac models, when the first new car since 1942 goes on display at the show rooms of the United Sales andt Service, 150 North University Ave. Monday. A preview look at the new Pontiac reveals advanced styling which emphasizes the road-hugging appearance and plane-like contours. At present Pontiac pro-' duction is concentrated on the two-door Streamliner sedan-coupe, a popular typei&troduced in the low price field. SEARS SAG-RESISTANT Support the Rheumatic Fever. Committee. ' Support their. Amateur Benefit .Show.' 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