OCR Text |
Show V if WEATHER TEMPERATURES Ftot SS 3Sa rru .88 St Salt Laka . TS'SSlL Asles St . . f . It 48 iUl VU 85 SS Rail ..... 11 )4Dtim ... 1 I Rottc .. .. 4 SttSt, LmUs . 1 Seattle ... SS Chleat ... J rartlaai ... ICWasJuagtaa IS UTAH Parti r cloudy north, and clear senth portion Sunday, slightly coaler north portion. Low tempera tare Sunday snaming generally 35 to 45. VOL 24, NO. 17 PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH. SUNDAY, . SEPTEMBER 22, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS L.D.S. Presidency Confers With Top U.S. Steel Officials ;J, Reuben Clark Pays Glowing Tribute To Dr. Walther Mathesius, Reminds Visitors IThat State's Industry Brings Problems SALT LAKE CITY. Sept. 21 (U.R) An important con- cern of top United States Steel officials the attitude of the LDS church toward future the subject of a conference porat ion's board of directors One source suggested the ofa peace making conference, in view of the fact that it is known several church officials long opposed industrial expansion of ine state. This source, whose information is considered con-sidered to be unimpeachable, told the United Press Saturday that one high church leader for many weeks attempted to block efforts, later successful, by U. S. Steel to, acquire the Geneva Steel plant north of Provo, the core of Utah's new industrial growth. The church must, and ap-'i ap-'i parently has, accepted the in-"dustrial in-"dustrial expansion of the . state, now that U. S. Steel has acquired Geneva and t plans to operate it full blast," k the source said. U. S. Steel Board Chairman Irving S. Olds, President Benjamin Benja-min F. Fairless and other direc tors of the firm described the visit as a" courtesy call an "important" "im-portant" part of their three-day trislt to Utah. -we are very nappy mat u is the United States Steel Corp. which has the Geneva steel plant rather than a group with lower standards." J. Reuben ciarK Jr., first counselor in the. first presi dency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, told the steel corporation's board of directors Saturday. The presidency paid high tribute trib-ute to Walther Mathesius, president presi-dent of the Geneva Steel Co. George Albert Smith, president of the church, said: "We often wonder won-der if the United, Slates Steel people really know how good a man they have out there." "We have a peculiar commun-itiy commun-itiy for an outsider to understand, but Mr. Mathesius tried to learn and did learn," said Mr. ClarK. "We are most delighted that he is to remain here. - "You brine us a great inaus-1 try, but you also bring us a grave threat to our people," he explained. "Our people have certain cer-tain moral standards. To bring amnno fhm 9a vntl will. Other (people with other standards will inevitably threaten to Dreax down our people's morals. "Mr. Mathesius, however, has assured me that you have no desire de-sire to break down our standards nri will h bannv and anxious no cooperate with us always LDS President George Albert Smith accompanied I the group on rge ol inounaoi unneea- in intensive inspection Friday of,ed ngr"m w ntS? nSSn fit Gen.?V.a cintlnued1". lfSt culminating in a trip to Brignami . Young university. ' Directors were scheduled to leave by train this morning for San Francisco. : Fully 75 of Utah county's leading lead-ing citizens toured Geneva and Ironton Friday by special invita-, lion with the corporation board 6f directors, to have the most definite assurance yet received that the directors like the plant and that they intend to run it to capacity as long as the market warrants. "We are mighty proud to have hthis plant, and we hope you are rproud to have it in your midst," Was the way Irving s. urns, chairman of the board, put it at the luncheon given visitors in the Geneva plant cafeteria. . From President Benjamin S. Fairless came the direct state- kment: "I speak for the directors when I say how happy we are to own and operate this plant and take our place in this commun ity." I - Dr. Walther Mathesius Intimated Inti-mated again the full production planned when coal and freight Kcar shortages let up by his state ment: "I hope the directors have liked what they saw. and I know they'll not be disappointed in the spirit in which Geneva is going to go to work." Sewell Avery, member of the V board and nationally famous as the center oi tne governmeni-Montgomery governmeni-Montgomery Ward dispute during dur-ing the war, said: "Geneva has the most beautiful setting of any industrial plant I have ever seen." "It is a steelmaker's dream," (Continued tn Pare Two) Russ Radio Hits Churchill Proposal LONDON. Sept. 21 (U.R) Rafcio Moscow, commenting on Winston Churchill's speech at Zurich, said today that his proposal for the creation of a United States of Europe was anti-Soviet project destined to provoke war against L Russia. Utah industrialization was Saturday between the cor- and high Mormon officials. meeting was in the nature Utah Republican Leaders Predict Victory by GOP SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 21 (U.R) Charles John Stevenson, New York state publisher and radio commentator, Saturday told a Utah Republican platform convention con-vention that "Henry A. Wallace is the most dangerous man in America if not in the whole world.'" Stevenson described the ex-cabinet ex-cabinet member as a "crafty, keen, unscrupulous searcher for power." The Cambridge. N. Y., publisher pub-lisher of a weekly newspaper, said to be the .oldest weekly in the United States, added that "Wallace has the 'complete confidence con-fidence of the CIO political action ac-tion committee, the left wing, radical new dealers, fellow travelers trav-elers and' other subservient groups of the estimated 15,000,-000 15,000,-000 fanatics in our country who are bent on destroying the world." Candidates for four state-wide offices in Utah also addressed the convention, joining Stevenson in predicting the GOP would regain control of congress irj the elections elec-tions thicialL Practically all of the speakers concentrated on the fight among democratic administration leaders that followed Wallace's split with President Truman and Secretary James F. Byrnes on foreign policy. Arthur B. Watkins of Orem, Republican nominee far U. 8. senator decried suggestions sug-gestions by the International Union of Mine. Mill and Smelter Workers (C I O) which has a heavy Utah membership that non-ferrous meals mines be nationalised. national-ised. "This is another suggestion from the left wing, which dominates dom-inates the Democratic party," Watkins said. He described the democratic government as "one 1' Quantity" and advocated dis- LaGuardia Warns Of Need For Refugee Organization By ROBERT J. MANNING United Press Staff Correspondent; LArE SUCCESS, N. Y., Sept. 21 (U.R) Director General Fio-rella Fio-rella H. LaGuardia of UNRRA told delegates to the United Nations Na-tions Economic and Social Council Coun-cil tonight that they were courting court-ing a rebirth of Nazism in Ger- Army To Request Only 6 Months Basic Training BUFFALO, N. Y., Sept. 21 (U.R) Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson has disclosed that the army will ask for only six months basic training in the compulsory military service am 10 dc oiicrea the next congress. lilt 1 1 111 A. mm I Patterson revealed the scaled down program for all men between be-tween 18 and 23 years old at a banquet of the United States National Na-tional Guard association last night. The army formerly advocated advo-cated a year's training. Your Opportunity To Subscribe Due to the return of many servicemen who were receiving receiv-ing The Daily Herald by mall, we are now In a position to accept 200 new subscriptions. The newsprint shortage makes It difficult U accept more subscriptions than this at the present time. If yon wish to have The Dally Herald In your home, telephone 493 or contact your local Herald carrier. Air Crash Survivors Evacuated Helicopters Effect Hazardous Rescue In Newfoundland Wilds By GEORGE V. FRASER United Press Staff Correspondent GANDER, Nfld.. Sept. 21 (U.R) Coast guard helicopters swooped down into the Newfoundland New-foundland wilderness in a hazardous rescue operation today to evacuate the surviv ors of the Belgian Trans-At lantic airliner crash and had brought five of the most critical ly injured here before darkness fell. Two Americans. Helen Roth Henderson, 47, New York, an executive of the Girl Scouts, and Rudy Revll. 39, New York composer, were among the first rushed to the Sir Frederic Banting Memorial Mem-orial hospital here. The others were Jean Roocki, one of the two Belgian steward esses aboard the Sabena airliner; Walter Devos, 48, of Ghent, Belgium; Bel-gium; and Renee Jacquet. 43, of Courtrai, Belgium. Mrs. Jacquet previously had been listed as among those killed. Little was known yet about the condition of those flown here, but Miss Roocki appeared to be the most critically injured. Both her legs were broken, and she had severe face cuts and burns. The young stewardess was brought out first. The worse injured in-jured "survivors had priority. The survivors were flown out one by one in a U. S. coast guard helicopter which set down precariously pre-cariously in a plateau one quarter-mile from the crash scene in the deep spruce and birch forest 22 miles southwest of here. They were taken by helicopter heli-copter to lake six miles "awir where waiting coast guard PBY amphibious planes Immediately noW-Hsff - ahd fcrotfght them here. , , In darkness hampered opera tions, the best guess was that it would be noon tomorrow before all the 18 survivors could be flown from the crash scene, where the 26 bodies of the dead still were strewn around the burned wreckage of the silver airliner.. air-liner.. The rest faced another night in the makeshift camp set up by the rescue party in the woods. They already had spent two nights there in the cold and rain. the first without any protection Ifrom the weather and the second with only army sleeping bags. The helicopter was one of two dismantled ones rushed here from New York and Elizabeth City. N. C. in air transport command C-54's. They were feverishly assembled as-sembled in a hangar here, and the first left for the crash scene at (Continued on Pace Two) many and Austria by delaying the establishing of an agency to care for l.ouu.uuu reiugees anu displaced persons. Unless the council establishes an international refugee organization organ-ization to take over UNRRA's displaced persons work next spring, Allied military authorities may turn the refugees loose without food or lodging, LaGuardia La-Guardia said. "It would provide the stIU remaining, now silent and in-hiding Nazi-minded leaders lead-ers of Germany with a fine little nucleus for re-establishing a new movement similar sim-ilar to that which brought ruin to the world." he said in letters to each of the council's coun-cil's 18 members. T ,. , j j , . inounced from his batterea head- LaGuardia criticized delegates jqutrters he had received no for their reluctance to set up theU of fatalities and that the ...K-Ki-,... -a""- j"1 At his proDaoie nign cost to countries I of the United Nations. The council Dlanned another effort to agreement on the pro- posed agency next week when a draft constitution, agreed upon by art 11 -nation subcommittee, will come up for approval in a plenary session today the the blow made an accurate as-agency as-agency was not considered. Dele-! cessment impossible immediately, gates turned instead to several The islands of Saipan. Tlnian other matters, including some and Rota, stretching to the north propositions which they agreed to place on the agenda for the current meeting. These included Czechoslovakia's complaint that the United States is illegally holding Czech Danube river craft in Austria, an American resolu tion under which the council would take over certain UNRRA aerologisU, roared into the Man-welfare, Man-welfare, activities, a French reso-anas chain out of the East at lution providing for creation of about 1 a.m. Saturday, ripped up United Nations research labora-J buildings, disrupted communica-torie communica-torie and a draft proposal for ations facilities, overturned ve-conference ve-conference to straighten out in-(Mcles, toppled palm trees and international in-ternational passport and frontier I tered the island's roadways with regulations. debris and wreckage. Chamber Wants Secretary Of Broad Training WASHINGTON. Sept 21 (U,R) The U. S. Chamber of Commerce today urged President Presi-dent Truman to appoint as Henry A. Wallace's successor "a man of broad business experience, ex-perience, proven attainments and unquestioned devotion to American ideals." In a telegram' to Mr. Truman, Tru-man, the chamber said: "The Secrets rj ot Commerce Com-merce can be a vital influence in promoting a sound national economy and. building a spirit of mutual confidence and respect between business and government, so essential to continued national progress." A&P Tea Company Found Guilty Of Trust Law Breach DANVILLE. Ill, Sept. 21 (U.R) The New York Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea company and 28 officers ano subsidiaries were found guilty today of violating the Sherman anti-trust law. but the company served nJce that its four-year legal fight with the government would continue. The company said it would appeal ap-peal the decision of Federal Judge Walter C Lindley In the eastern Illinois U. S. district court. A company spokesman contended the 117-page decision was "in direct conflict with the facts in the case and the letter and spirit of the Sherman act." The government charged the defendants with conspiring conspir-ing to control prices and injure in-jure and destroy food manufacturers. manu-facturers. Independent retail merchants and others. The huge grocery firm claimed that its policies and business sys tern did not violate anti-trust laws. - Lindley said he had found all the defendants guilty "in manner and form as charged in the in ormatiow.u - "Congress, did not condone good trusts and condemn bad ones," he said. "It forbade all." "Despite the claim of high character 'of the general business and economic policy of the defendant, de-fendant, I cannot escape the conviction con-viction that by their cooperation in the promotion of the plan of operation which invloved illegal actions, illegal restraints or trade, they rendered themselves subject to the penalties of the law." The maxlmumrpenalty for conspiring con-spiring to violate the Sherman act is $10,000 fine, two years in jail and government seizure of the properties involved. Lindley sharply criticized the Atlantic commission company, a subsidiary defendant, charging it with being "the rotten thread of the fabric, and it so permeates the entire texture arid ties together the other threads as to result in an imperfect, and illegal product pro-duct unreasonable interference with competition and power to monopolize." The company termed the decision de-cision "a severe blow not just to A&P but to the millions of consumers whose patronage made this company grow." In announcing the plan for appeal, ap-peal, the A&P said the decision hand "in effect knocked the props out from the entire Ameri- ,can business system." Companies named as defend-( defend-( Continued on Page Two) Marianas Lashed By Destructive 100-Mile Typhoon GUAM, Sept. 21 (U.R The U. S. military base on Guam looked like it had been hit by an enemy air -attack today as a result of a destructive, 100-mile-an-hour typhoon ty-phoon that lashed the Marianas island chain for seven hours. Guam Island commander Rear Adm. Charles A. Pownall an- 1 only seriously injured casualty :v.as an unidentified army air force man wno Droke hts back. Pownall conceded that damase to buildings on Guam would run into millions of dollars, although disruption of Intra-island communications com-munications by the wind and tor rential rains that accompanied of Guam, were still cut off from the outside world late Saturday, hours after the typhoon abated, and Pownall could only surmise that they, . too, suffered damage similar to that on Guam. The typhoon, which had been tracked for four days by navy As G Maritime Walkout Terminates Strike Called Oil Late Saturday By CIO Maritime Committee BULLETIN SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 21 (U.R) The nationwide Maritime Mar-itime strike, which tied up the west coast one day longer than the east, was called off ' at 6 p.m. (PST) tonight by the CIO-aomlnated Committee Commit-tee for Maritime Unity. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21 (U.R) The U. S. maritime commission today demanded west coast shipowners "stop quibbling" and put into effect the parity wage scales on government-owned ships to hurry the complete end of the maritime strike that until, yesterday yester-day gripped all ports around the nation. In a telegraphic answer to the west coast operators request for "clarification" of the government's govern-ment's arbitration awards to striking CIO seamen, the commission commis-sion demanded that no "technical objections should prevent immediate imme-diate settlement of the strike." "Stop quibbling and go, to work," the ' commission said: . But a spokesman for the com T-w4iaa4on "admitted it was doubtful r ii: members of the-Pacific-Amer ican Shipowners Association could be rounded up for action over the weekend' and predicted final settlement -on the west coast might be held up until Monday. Mon-day. ' L. C. Flemraing, assistant executive exec-utive of the commission, said he privately believed that shipowners shipown-ers would accept the formula for vessels under private operation, thus completely ending the walkout walk-out now in its 16th day. But a back-to-work movement Monday would bejtminously close to the Sept. 39 cleSo'line set for strike action by four other maritime unions demanding new contracts and higher wages. The commission's demand for immediate action came in a telegram tele-gram from A. J. Williams, secretary secre-tary of the Maritime Commission in Washington, D. C, and addressed ad-dressed to J. B. Bryant, president of the Pacific American Shipowners Shipown-ers Association. It was released here by George Hilldebrandt, West Coast representative of the commission. Walkout Ends For 55,000 Auto Workers DETROIT, Sept. 21 (U.R) The CIO United Auto Workers union tonight announced settlement of a small supplier strike which had idled some 56,000 auto workers in the Detroit area for five days. Emil Mazey, director of UAW region 1, said 1,800 workers at one plant of Briggs Manufacturing Manufactur-ing company, world's largest auto body builder, had agreed to return re-turn to work Monday pending arbitration ar-bitration of a dispute over the firing of a union Stewart. ' It was this small strike that forced Briggs to layoff 15,500 of 20,000 employes in four other plants and blockade the intricate intri-cate system of supply to auto makers dependent upon it for bodies and parts. Japan Attempted' Assassination Of Stalin Iri 1939 $QRi?4eaih Documents; Disclose By EDWIN IX. NEWMAN ' United. Press Staff Carrespoadtmt WASHINGTON, SeptTZl ftUO Captured German documents re vealed tonight that Japan attempted at-tempted the assassination of Russian Rus-sian . Premier Josef Stalin in January. 1939. ". i . "v The documents were contained In volume four of "Nazi Conspiracy Conspir-acy and aggression. a collection of evidence used against big-shot Nazi and Nszl organizations in the Nuernberg trials. Volume four Is the second of eight to be made public by the office pf the U. S. chief of counsel: at Nuernberg through, the war department. In addition to the assassination! 0) Out Of Cabinet But Ousted from the U. S. cabinet Ex -Secretary of Commerce -Henry. A. Wallace is anything but out of the political spotlight. He declared de-clared in a farewell speech he would carry on "the fight for peace" and that means more speeches even though he's blacklisted as a Democratic party-sponsored By R. H. SHACKFORD United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Sept. 21 (U.R) Secretary Sec-retary of fStaic James F. Byrnes and Foreign Secretary Ernest Beyin- conferred for an hour and five minutes tonight on an align- Rebellious Tribes Raid Provincial Capital In Iran TEHRAN, Iran .Sept. 21 (U.R) The government roshed strong forces of troops, with tank and plane support, today into the Persian gulf province of Fars, where rebellious warriors of twoj tribes were attacking Shiral, the, provincial capital. I A high official of the Iranian Ministry of Interior said late today to-day that the tribesmen were falling: fall-ing: back before the advancing government troops and "now are practically surrounded.' The warriors were of the Bakhtari and Ghashahi tribes. They started their attacks last night and renewed them today. Busy government telephone and telegraph circuits from Shiraz to Tehran testified as to the seriousness serious-ness of the situation. The leftist Tudeh party claimed, that the tribesmen planned to overthrow the central cen-tral government and suppress the Tudeh party throughout southern Iran. Simultaneously, the government govern-ment was occupied with another serious problem in the north of strife-torn, Iran. Government troops who went to take over the Zenjan, capital of Khamseh provr tnce, were refused entrance by the Azerbaijani. The government of Azerbijan, which asserted its "autonomy" earlier this year, had agreed to turn over Kamsheh province to the central government. govern-ment. attempt, the book documents Nazi brutality and callousness. i . : v The plat against Stalin was: ' .revealed, by German SS Chief. . " nelnrich Ilimmler wha Itarn--s . Pt . It from . Japanese- sVienVt i '.Gen. .lllroshl Oshlma, one- .' time .Japanese ambassador ta -. Germany and - now , en - war " , crimes., vnu, in, xoajo. -Tfc7?'?jvt XCtthixba'vtold . Hlinmlerithat he w . ? :.-: v-? ' that he was "undertaking long-range Pfo- Jects , aimed at the disintegration of Russia ana- emanating - from the Caucasus and the Ukraine.'! y- 2TutJiermre.,, .Hlmmlert ;re-, Alignment of Foreign Policy ported, ' "he had succeeded up ;to n GKM Still In Spotlight V3 S campaign speaker. mcnt of Anglo-American foreign policy under the impetus of President Truman's ouster of Henry Wallace from nis cabinet The BymeslBevln conference was conducted with an unusual fanfare of publicity apparently was designed to show that the United States and Britain are still presenting a common front to the peace conference against Rus sia and its eastern bloc. Bevin arrived tonight from London and went almost di-' rectly to Byrnes' hotel Mea-riee Mea-riee suite to discuss the results re-sults of the Wallace crisis on the conference and the resounding- TOta of confidence given Byrnes by the ousting of Wallace from the U. S. government. It followed by a few hours a hearty endorsement of Byrnes and Mr. Truman given by former Postmaster James A. Farley wno paused here on his world tour to say that world peace hinges on all-out support of Byrnes get tough-with-Russia program. The Byrnes-Bevin meeting was regarded in conference circles as unusually significant since it followed fol-lowed so closely on Wallace's re moval and because it afforded a concrete demonstration -of -the solidarity of the United States and Britain. Byrnes, it has been noted, has not met -with Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov since the ference began. His aides have ex- Dlained that there is not reason for private consultations between them. Both the American andBritish delegations today made a point of circulating the news that. Bevtn and Byrnes were getting together. togeth-er. " There was - no re portion -what they discussed but it was . presumed pre-sumed they clarified their positions pos-itions in the light of the U. S. foreign policy crisis. Some circles felt that Bevin was making a gesture to show that Britain stands behind Byrnes regardless of the flare-up over Wallace. now to sena lu Kussians . swim bombs, across the; Caucasian frontier. fron-tier. These Russians . hadtfie mission to kill Stalin. A. number of v additional Russians wham he had also sept across had-been, shot at the frontier. " - - . . , -c . . This was not -Ibe end J of ; Os-hima's Os-hima's ingenuity. He had anti- Russian: leaflets flown "into-Rus- la.rron raiana in smaii oauoons whtn" th wind s win avorahla. According 1 tor Hfmmler. Oshimn "had, reports and 1 proofs ?i from Russia 'that ; they, had arrived - in good condition and that they: obviously ob-viously were being" passed around (Continaia an. rasa -:Twsl' (2) h . ked Spgiksof Demos Also Truman Shopping For New Secretary To Succeed Wallace Washington; Sept. 21 (U.R) Democratic headquart ers, in a follow-up to the political po-litical and foreign policy explosion ex-plosion that blasted Henry A. Wallace out of the cabinet, tonight blacklisted Wallace and Sen. Claude Pepper, D., FTa., as party-sponsored speakers In the congressional election campaign. The two foremost disciples of the Roosevelt New Deal will be at liberty to make as many .speeches as they wish. But they j will be on their own. i The Democratic national committee com-mittee left the ex-secretary of commerce and Pepper off its list I of campaign speakers. Rep. John J. Sparkman, D-. Ala., chairman of the Democratic speakers' bureau, bur-eau, said the committee would not sponsor any speeches mad oy eiuer in is xau. While Sparkman acknowledged acknowl-edged that he was not speaking speak-ing for the committee, a committee com-mittee spokesman said Spark -man's decision would stand unless reversed by Dema- - eraue -Chairman ' Robert E. Hannegan. The spokesman said that was not likely. Sparkman said the Wallace campaign speaking schedule would not be re-scheduled by the Democratic speakers' bureau; that any speech-making by the deposed depos-ed secretary of commerce would have to be on his own. Pepper got the brush-off for recent public utterances considered consid-ered too critical of Mr. Truman and the administration. The fiery Flordlan recently told newsmen he would rather see Wallace in the White House than its present occupant Pepper spoke at the same New York,rally at which Wallace made the go - easy - on - Russia speech which cost him bis job. In his address. Pepper was even more critical than Wallace of U. S. foreign policy. And last Tuesday, in a speech before the Brotherhood Brother-hood of Railway Trainmen at Miami Mi-ami Beach, Fla., he not only endorsed en-dorsed Wallace's foreign policy talk but accused Mr. Truman of (Continued on Page Two) Poles Fight To Retain Territories WARSAW, Poland, Sept 20 (UJ0 The Polish national council opened a special session on parliamentary par-liamentary elections . today by adopting a pledge to fight ,to the last drop of blood to retain German territories east of the Oder and Neisse rivers. The council, which will pass a new electoral law and decide the date of parliamentary elections, heard a bitter attack by President Presi-dent Boleslaw Beirut against the Stuttgart speech of Secretary of State James F. Byrnes and th Zurich speech of former British prime minister Winston Churchill. Beirut said the two speeches were creating a situation "which will result in catastrophe." "Poland has come to stay on the Oder and Neisse and no power pow-er wil be able to .remove the Poles from their regained territory," ter-ritory," he asserted. (Byrnes in his Stuttgart speech reminded Poland that the final' German-Polish boundary had net been set Churchill called for formation of a United States of Europe, led by Germany and France). .Beirut expressed gratitude to Soviet foreign minister . V. M. Molotov and to Russia as "sole defenders of the Polish cause." At this point; the council gave a hearty ovation to tne boviei ambassador, am-bassador, who was present with other diplomatic observers. - - , The -electoral law-which the council is expected to approve was presented jointly : by " the Socialist and Communist parties. which will be opposea in ine Balloting-by the Polish, peasant parry. It is expected the council's decU , fMuiMvd SuiMiav.:' - Lop Pepper From List |