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Show 1 8 .Sunday, April 6, 1947 SUNDAY HERALD Establishment of a Ceiral Administration for Germany: BV R. II. SIIACKFORD United Press SUfr CarrespondentiMinister Andrei Vishinsky and U,! MOSCOW, April 5. tU.fi The big four foreign ministers agreed tonight to early establishments of a central administration for Germany Ger-many as the first step toward economic unity. ,They disagreed, however, on some of the functions and powers of five proposed central agencies. The agreement closed "a day of discussions marked by a Yugoslav demand for Carinthia and $150,- AAA AAA MMaMftAna 4?m Anatrta and an angry excnange m a coordinating co-ordinating committee session be- Middle East Oil Glue To World Tension tween Soviet Deputy Foreign - m. .mm r . -mm Yoiinn Survivor Gomes nome J 20 States Study iicyuiumm tr NEW YORK U.R Two significant signifi-cant statements' which appeared in financial journals on the same day indicate the real mportance of Middle East oil in the increasing increas-ing tension of wotld politics. . -The oil situation may explain part of the tension. The statements were unrelated but coincidental. It was by accident, acci-dent, not design, that they appeared ap-peared at the same time. One statement by the. giant Texas Company which has interests in-terests in the Middle East was to the general effect that the search for new oil deposits in 1946 was disappointing. The other was by Sir William rures Fraser, chairman of the board of f British S. Ambassador Robert Murphy. The coordinating committee's report on' the future provisional government, of Germany furnished furnish-ed the. basis for the minister's agreement to set up as soon as possible central German agencies in such fields as transport, communications, com-munications, finance, industry, and food and agriculture. They agreed, too. that three months after establishment these agencies, a German ad- visory eonncil should be created cre-ated which eventually would become the provisional government gov-ernment of Germany. Differences arose over Soviet insistence that the four allied military commanders in Germany j retain a veto over the agencies, which the British and Americans; contended would make the agen-j cies useless. Under the Anglo- American plan, zonal military commanders would lose all au- thority except over occupation) forces and security. I Disagreement also arose on thei composition of the German ad-' visorv council and tne enures question was sent back to the coordinating committee for fur ther study. Russian Foreign Minister Via-; cheslav M. Molotov. insisted that the advisory council include representatives rep-resentatives of political parties, trade unions and other anti-nazi organizations as well as repre- j sentatives of the state legislat-' :. .. , s Auto Equ yvy- 32 Japs Left On Peleliu-May.Try Banzai Charge ; Wart, Harbor. ADrii3'(u.R) -A Japanese renegade who sur- rtnaered- yesterday warned that 32 -well-armed 'Japanese still holding, put in the caves of Pele-lixtx Pele-lixtx island ' might attempt a final banzai 'charge rather.7 than give themselves up peacef ally,, it was reported rhere today. M7Sgt. Mike Dowd, of Pittsburgh:-Pa a marine corns cor- j areai www,, to. 1iveAtfltougB te.lgnacnt. said in a disnatch Wir Mtmemwnf,sii!isn;';, trom : PeleUu- that although the 1 ' 'WASHINGTON iuefEfjL- ro- ; posed bmpef ore.lbe Kansas legis-Jlatweols legis-Jlatweols passed all strolling- Kan-? I tsarls -will be required -to Wear tall I JighVwtaerrthey..walk ) !. California, motorists-: 'will have ta Install -I og, tight:rbeJorehey flSEA Ttlephoto) Eighteen-month-old Paul Vick; sole surviyor of January C. N. A. O. plane crash in China, which took lives of his parents -.and older brother, still smiles as he arrives in San Francisco en route to his grandparents in Rochester. N. Y. Little Paul was met at the airport by Dr. Ralph Kmidsen, dean of Divinity School, Berkeley, Calif., and Mrs. Daisy Skoglund, Berkeley, whose husband cared for Paul after the crash. The Knudsens will care for the youngster during his stay here. the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. He said it would be no exaggeration exaggera-tion to assert that- the - Middle East oil reserves compare to those of the United States. New Oil Expected ' Sir William's remarks were perhaps more pertinent to the actual situation in the Middle East, but deep in the Texas Company's Com-pany's reports were facts and figures which revealed the ex panding importance of the Mid- cue East production Foreign Secretary Er nest Bevin and Secretary of State' George C. Marshall, who presided : over today's foreign ministers meetintr. finally accented a Move Seen To Strengthen Armed Forces Amnesia Victim Is identified C 1 r kxthk" Kill a" rfrlinl wun . motor v venici, eauipment now being studied by,., 20 st ate legislatures, according to .a National Highway: Users Con ference survey.' The survey shows that; many -states are spotlighting safety, oiv their highways, with most .pills concerning lights and reflectors.. However, some 'deal With , safety glass,, fenders, mud; guards, bumpers and ignition switches. . V i California and Colorado are both" considering side clearance lights on wide vehicles. California's Califor-nia's legislature also has before it a proposal which will force' all cars to install a . light, fixed to jshlh$. on the arms -of jiand-sig- Kef lectors Urged- , Othr elates rvinairlorino hillcl op lighting, equipment include Jlowa .Nebraska, Tennessee, New Hampshire, North Carolina and New York. The Highway. Conference said so many states are studying installation in-stallation of reflectors for emergency emer-gency use that "a significant trend appears in the approval of portable reflectors in lieu of flares as emergency equipment lor dis External Pressure On Greece, Turkey Makes Necessary island "command doubted, - that such ; a charge would materialize, immediate precautions were being be-ing taken. y: , ?f avy Capt. L. O. Fox; island commander,' -moved all navy families living in a base area near -Bloody Nose Ridge, where the Japanese are hiding in caves, to another area farther away. Armed guards were posted in housing areas, and night , patrols were doubled with marine observers ob-servers equipped with flares to signal if an attack should occur. Machine guns were installed on roofs of high buildings. Auto- If matic weapons, mortars and flame throwers were readied for instant use. By JOHN L. STEELE United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, April 5 (U.R) ! The senate foreign relations committee com-mittee -today informed congress that "external pressure" on Greece and Turkey made'Amerh can assistance "a matter, of urgency." ur-gency." The committee made public a detailed report on the Near East crisis to back up its. unanimous recommendation tor approval of President Truman's $400,000,000 aid program. on belief that "it is vital for us to check Russian expansion now." The committee's finding were based on long hours of closed sessions with Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson arrn "up-to-the-minute" data furnished by Lincoln MacVeagh. ambassador to Greece, and Edwin C. Wilson, ambassador to Turkey. The committee said Greece was threatened by Communist guerrillas guer-rillas apparently receiving "assistance "as-sistance and direction from sources outside Greece." It said Turkey was beset by a eounro ornnnm in strain ff mXklTlm The diplomatically worded re-ar.mA fnr , the "external pressure" but onlyf a few hours before it was released Sen. Walter F. George, D.. Ga., a- ranking committee member, announced that his support for the president's program was based BISBEE, Ariz., April 3 l'.P Bisbce's mystery man, an amnesia am-nesia victim who has been living meeting, ""f"-" irnx! t cxiriri r h hC nCt CSr,?nr the French t United Pres SUff Correspondent as a 6uest of the Cochise count' did not yield, under the French WAWTNrTn Anri, (UP, jail here since Feb. 16. was ten-plan, ten-plan, the council would be com- WASHINGTON Apn 15 R j tatively identified today as John posed of three representatives' Sen. Chan Gurney, R.. S. D , re- Bruce -KmE Caliente Nev from each state legislature but;vealed tonight he soon will ask, . 4 ' . ' Tax Cut May Be Made Retroactive Back to July 1 WASHINGTON, April 5 (U.R) Chances of beginning lower withholding with-holding tax rates on July 1 were wiped out today. But a strong possibility remained that an income in-come tax cut would be made retroactive to then. July 1 as a starting" date for U7iihVil4imB iov pAHimi innc uric abled vehicles." Colorado, Newin.i-j . ,17,n v,o CDo no- Mexico, Delaware, New Jersey, :publican leadership gave labor New Hampshire, Ohio, Utah, Min-Upgisiatjon nrioritv over tax leg- Hughes Tests Trouble Plane nesota and New York are all considering requirements for use of reflectors. islation Chairman Eugene D. Millikin cf the senate finance committee from each state legislature it would be required to "consult" political parties and trade unions. The clash between Vishinsky congress to give navy the added the strength m An t T x i nxsrT l r An T mn ArwA army ana . 'I?-.. ikpvwiicu iie awujve mis murniiiK anu tllt.T ' . i y-iu: ... i let need to deal with any emergency ?uV;n,"TS. iajrmKv WA. At off U7h.n that may result from President 4 f r Kt I 1U a.UA VI J ci- w . a IClUlil VfX I ItClllUi . ! . i "i-riimon c nrnoram to nna raniinr ... ... . . i Sir William added that the pos-i Murphy objected to ana aispuxea. ?r " 'r He recalled living in Caliente. ! l.w ."tempered' or "case-narden-. siDumes 01 aiscovering new on utieurein ; , . wev., ana rememoerea tne name iyj mu"'j oaxiy deposits in the Middle East are States had both federal and state The chairman of the senate ;Mrs George Schuman, for whom, glass. much greater than in the United police. ' armed forces committee said ne,he tnought, he once worked ! Pennsylvania is considering a States. Vishinsky, who had been at- would ask his colleagues to speed ; However, his memory again lap- j requirement to weld metal regis- "The operating advantage; tempting to make an analog. ac- work on army-navy unification, scd ancj he could not recall his; which the Middle East has over cused Murphy of distorting theuniveral miltary training and an 'name, . most other oil field areas is com- Soviet position on division of "adequate" military budget. A lo, distance telephone ' j i .j power between tne cenirai ana you can i tain a lougn loreign cnecK witn Mrs. benuman in large idividual fields and com- state governments of Germany, jpolicy without having the means Caliente disclosed that she once Jf81IlSSnUtSid fhTA:! Murphy said he wouldn't at- of backing it up." he told a ". erican Institute of Mining anditempt to convince Vishinsky on porter. man answering tne description 101 Metallurgical Eneineers ! how the American police system Gurney said he wants the army isDee s amnesia vjcum. mis Wl?r WUliam explanted that the worked. and navy brought up to an "ade- she said, was John Bruce proved oil reserves on the Middle "We have had onlv 170 years in quate level of strength. He said; East are contained in six fields In federal government." Murphy he would ask army and navy; l ie name was relayed lo the Iran, two in Iraq, one in Kuwait, said. "Rules governing the police I chiefs to spell out their present victim an elderly man who looks three in Arabia, one in Bahrein are provided for in our constitu-i ability to deal with "any emer- to be 50 or 60 ears old but !ld nd nC in thC QaUr Pen- on.Pbut I will refrain -ILrVisS 'fa miliar. "Herecalfea A linVn n inC '1:7 oa working for the Lincolnpounty However, Nebraska, New York, i said May 1 was the earliest a tax North Carolina, Oregon, Verfnont, I bill would reach the senate floor. Washington, and Wisconsin now He said probably would be be-require be-require use of flares or fuses. tween May 1 and 15, "barring " I: unforeseen delays. Glass Regulations ! i A New York bill would require polaroid glass in all vehicles, while a Texas bill would .require safety glass in all used cars and j a Washington proposal would al- tration plates, on auto hub caps, giving the owner's name, address, and registration number of the car. Proposed bills in Iowa, Massa chusetts, and Oregon deal with ;t ion CULVER CITY, Calif., April 5 (U.R) -Howard Hughes, multimillionaire multimil-lionaire movie producer and plane builder, today successfully resumed his role as test pilot by flying a duplicate of an experimental experi-mental army plane which nearly cost him his life last July. Flying alone, Hughes test flew the needle-nozed XF-11, photographic photo-graphic reconnaissance plane. keeping the sleek, two-engined ship in the air for an hour from 11:03 a.m. to 12:03 p.m. (PST). "This model handled today like the one that crashed, except that the propeller worked this; time," Hugnes said after the flight in which he circled over the field at an elevation of 6.000 feet. The earlier model had an eight - bladed counter - rotating propellor, which has been abandoned aban-doned in favor of a four-bladcd prop. Hughes was jovial and well pleased with the way the plane flew. The left wing, he said, was a little heavy but that could be easily corrected by the company which made the wing. 1 A similar model of the plane is at Wright Field in Ohio and is being dismantled for observa- "as long as severe external pres sure under which she labors con-, tinues to be applied to her." Immediate objective of the pressure on Turkey, the committee com-mittee said, was to "abridge Turkish control of the Dardanelles," Dardanel-les," and to cut off parts of eastern east-ern Turkey from the rest of the country. "The ultimate objective," the report said, "might be to deprive Turkey of her independence." The committee's reference to the Dardanelles was the first interjection in-terjection of that strategic Mediterranean-Black Sea waterway into congressional debate. Russia on repeated occasions has asked for bases on the Dardanelles and for a greater voice in administering administer-ing the waterway. Present annual capacity of the U. S. steel industry is about 91,-890,500 91,-890,500 net tons of ingots and steel for castings. fender or mud guard requirements require-ments on trucks, and in Michigan and Minnesota with changes in bumper requirements. During the war, the army had ordered 101 planes of the XF-11 type but this order has been cut back to three. For FLUORESCENT LIGHTING FIXTURES or Prompt Efficient Electrical Work Phone 1017-J TS. J rctMTRACTO ?8 NORTH 7TH WCS7 PRQVQ UTAH K.m)wtMmjM.,v-:v--4 ajwjwit'iiitiiiiiiwuijiiujwiiiui X i fi i . Tho inHivirtuat i . 41,., tko .,1!,... iCVdOd. OnCrill J3CK of giant size," he continued. "Two "1. -7. i-iTh ! ed for strengthening the armed t " of them, Masjid-i-Sulaiman and s"t -mJZt,,t Mimiii forces. George, on record with a'"" . 7 Fogliani. call and Haft Kel in Iran, have already . f vemu.iiy ; statement that it is "vital for s aown ana s(wiugn,cu iu muinnj, . produced about 100 million tons approximately 700 million barrels) bar-rels) each, and a third, Kirkuk in Iraq, is approaching the 50 million- ton (350 million barrels) mark. "In terms of current rate of output, after only the great East Texas field, Haft Kel has the distinction dis-tinction of being the largest pror ducing ' field in the world. East Texas is producing at the rate of Yesterday a Tempe, Ariz., resi- J A 117 I.I .1 l ' i i. d : : Miiieiii vrauner uumner reau a aHmittin he was not as com- lrnitH Pr.B r,aK1 nhollf lh. petent as Murphy to discuss thef i country must be Kept; mysl mans, piight. Today he American ponce sysiem. Now There Are Only Six Foys iieveathat Mr wMM.- 000 program to bolster Greece and -fo Mont mining Turkey- would lead to war - But man The victim claims 'to have' he said there was a possibility ,vnrkpfl as a minina n,jnf,Pr in that the world might "slip" into a Troy and added ne possessed a conflict inadvertantly. number of cold mininc claims DALLAS. Tex.. April 5 (U.R)! " "u"ul mere. The reunioh last month of the - t""'-T about 17 million tons (119 million seven little Foys of vaudeN-illei i i he senate prepared to open barrels) per year from, " I am j fame turned out today to be the : historic debate Tuesday on the told, about 24,000 wells, whereas ; final one for the talented young- oreeK-iurmsp aia progiam. -r- rt f . rr Haft Kel is producing nine mil-;sters, who had top billing in the 2 The senate foreign relations O D6 3C6ll6 Vl lion tons (63 million barrels) periShow world nearly three decades committer reported "external; year from 24 wells." ago. .pressure" on both Greece and Tur-i CQSigf GTVICGS Sir William noted natural pro-1 Tk. u, e n h Fnvcikey ano said U. S. aid was "a mat- - ft ter of urgencv . The committee.; rmv niTTcc a-ii Historic Spot 1 Al 1 A . 1 .. uueuun aavanxaes oi xne on. it ft now jieios in Persian uun area nave in the past been largely offset by certain physical drawbacks. He said: ,r "The long tanker haul to European Euro-pean markets, involving a circuit of Arabia and the passage through the Suez Canal, has been; UIgLiiLV. lire iruiiimiiicc.; Tirp. nAT.I.PS Hrc Ar.i-11 Richard E. Foy. 42. one of the!whkh unanimously approved the ((J R) A samc where ' seven children the late headliner K ' Tu . Methodist missionary told the Eddie Foy. Sr.. used in his act re,D"rt that Greec? was threaten- Easter stor; to the redskins 109 the lush days of vaudeville, ea y?m";,un,.s gueirnia ioic-;yegtrs ago i Indian win pre8ci in died of a cerebral hemorrhage in'cs receiving "assistance and direc-'the gospei to the white men here a Dallas hospital last mgnt. uuiwur wmm this Easter Sunday. The entire Foy clan was re united for the first time in 26 it ritH nnt iHft-Hf' l v i . . t.. tf rw w - ..tf L1 J 3 Chairman Robert A. Taft of , "ev- y - "i"""" tit mnuttw. : years last month on the network lhc senate Republican policy com- Indian missionary of the Church of Christ, will conduct Easter a substantial nanoicap " .miH;""; ,- . . ui. "The geographical disad van-i snow in wnicn isaaie foy, jr., is ""-: -uv:,"--e V" sunrise servicesai. historic Pulolt Lram Rock, where Rev. Daniel Lee, I 4-Diplomatic sources revealed '"ndrf thf original mission at Uhat a $500,000,000 project for re- The Dalles, told of the miracle !haKiiitatir.r. of. r,I,i,.F "ro of the resurrection in 1838. Rev. and a similar grant to France will ack is pastor of the Indian mis- ilUM Ml iYltrVJIllK.V , OS". tages still remain, but mav be the stellar attraction much reduced when the project ed large diameter trunk pipe lines; I Inrlorcon WnrfnrP from the Persian Gulf area to WnueiiCU TTUIIUIC Granted Priority the Mediterranean are eventually in position." ibe pushed DISCHARGE COMES I WASHINGTON, April 5 (U.R) ! 5- Rep. Chester E. Merrow, R.. .... . . .... ... . . AFTER DEATH 'The navy has given top priority N. H.. a member of the house v.ote. for .the ad b,1, although be- ELIZABETH, N. J, April 5 OI.Rr to undersea warfare studies be-iforeign affairs committee, said neving us. cnantes oi stopping Private William F. Pancoast got cause it considers modem sub-1 that swift U. S. aid to Greece and, communism were highly ques-his ques-his discharge papers today post-marines a "positive threat" to; Turkey can check Russia's plan tionablc. huniously. They are in the publicj'his country s sea power, the for "world domination and pre-files. pre-files. They showed .he was 1ion- House was informed today. ! vent a third world war. orably discharged in 1863 after The statement was contained in Merrow said in a nation-wide "serving nine months with Com- a report prepared by the house; radio speech (NBC), that by aid-pany aid-pany 8 26th regiment. New Jer- prmed services committee, urg-jing the two countries, "we will sey Volunteers, in the Civil war.'ing approval of a $30,000,000 ap-jcall the bluff of the Soviet Un-Pancoast Un-Pancoast died in 1916. ' propriation authorization to per-;ion." niit the navy to build two ex-' "The Russian policv Of expan- rOLISII SIUP COMING BACK ; perimental submarines. The re- sion, of spreading communism and NEW YORK (U.R) Transatlan-: Port said that existing American of world domination will be tic service of the Gdynia-Amer-,nt-submarine methods are in- checked without the firing of a ica Line will be resumed with,lequate to cope with present i gun or the shedding of a drop of he sailing from Southampton ofay undersea craft, such as those:blood .. Merrow said the motorehip Batory for New i built by the Germans in thei paui a. Porter, chief of Presi-York Presi-York April 6 on her first post-, closing days of the war. dent Truman-S economic mission war "maiden voyage. The ship1 The committee, in referring to to Greece said on the same pro-has pro-has been reconstructed after her "foreign high-speed submarines, I gram that the Greek aid pro-troop-ship service during the! did not specify any particular j gram ..wili lead to freedom" war. 1 vuuini j . Taft told reporters he believed be-lieved the president's program pro-gram would be approved. But he predicted a sharp fight over amendments to limit use of American funds to civilian supplies and delete de-lete all aid to Turkey from the program. It was learned that Taft would ho says you're only young once? Important Person who's arriving. First Class Upholstering and Frame Repairing John Liebhardt Telephone 1114 R 491 East 4 No.. Provo. Utah Tasted, elaaa. fertile Mortkla litmi mdi yrodac saxfanaa wastera etvpa bcw tk7 , spedallr Minted It wnImi hn(i mm mdmmfrd to LOCAL cUBaKe conditio. T h (r J9mr .mp.Jy ( ik. kika( quaHty iMdt jw-mtrnmy cs bar. jma fecal Morlhrop. Cia 4air or write to . . . . 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