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Show Sunday, April 27, 1947 SUNDAY HERALD Germans Afraid West Powers May Now Pull Out of Berlin BERLIN, April 28 (U.R) Fear that the Western powers may pull out of Berlin as a result of the failure of the Moscow conference was expressed by the German man in the street today but these rumors were immediately and flatly denied by top American and British officials. Berlin press comment on the conference's ending differed according ac-cording to the zone in which the paper was published. But in gen- Chrysler (Continued from page one) the final session ending at 7:45 p. m. tonight after more than .10 hours. The contract will be referred refer-red to Chrysler workers immediately immedi-ately for ratification. A joint statement said that salaried sal-aried and office workers and plant protection, numbering some 3000 in addition tp the 70,000 factory fac-tory employes would receive a nine per cent pay hike, with a minimum increase of S26 a month. "Our signing a two-year contract con-tract is indicative of our mutual desier to continue our relations on a friendly and cooperative basis," a joint statement by Con-der Con-der and Matthews said. "Both the company and union recognize that it is to their mutual advantage to settle differences peacefully through collective bargaining bar-gaining in good faith and to achieve productivity and efficiency efficien-cy in the company's plants. The statement said that besides pay for New eYac's Day, Memorial Memor-ial Day, July 4, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, the agreement provided for some classification rate changes. Under ihe wage negotiation clause, either party will have the privilege of re-opening the question ques-tion of rate adjustments only once during the life of the contract and then only upon written no tice. A provision, also contained in the GM-UAW contract, calls for the company to pay workers called cal-led to duty for at least four hours whether or not they work. The previous call-in pay was three hours. Both sides agreed that the contract con-tract must be ratified by May 6 in order to make the new pay rates effective, beginning Monday for hourly-rated employes and May 1 for salaried employes. It was announced that adjustments adjust-ments also were made in vacation pay eligibility requirements. The new contract raised the average av-erage hourly pay at Chrysler from about $1.32 to $1.47, compared with the new average scale of $1.48 at General Motors. The Ford rate currently is about $1.34, or about two cents higher than the old scale at Chrysler. A MESSAGE TO SERIOUS MINDED MEN and WOMEN DO HOT 0& fileu . N1 EW but tried and tested. ' is available and will be sent request. Gro-Hair is not a hair dressing, but a scientific formula designed to grow hair, eliminate dandruff, relieve itching scalp, and stop falling hair. On sale now at your Favorite Beauty Shop, Drug or Department Store, $8.50, plus tax. FOLDER "yH4 Jlai" by DARRELL will be sent upon request. Just fill in and mail the following coupon cou-pon to DarreU's Beauty Products, 144 So. Main, Salt Lake City. Utah. Your name Address City W eral the average German seemed disappointed over the outcome. The American licensed newspaper news-paper Tagesspiegel said the con ference was a failure because "two worlds, not 'four allies, were opposing each other in the Russian capital. The newspaper added that humanity hu-manity had lost confidence irf the world's foremost statesmen because be-cause their wisdom was unable to solve crucial problems. The Russian licensed news paper Neuss Deutschland praised Soviet Foreign Minister Viacne-slav Viacne-slav M. Molotov for "resisting intimidation" in-timidation" by the other allies and preventing Germany from being split in two. Wallace (Continued from Page One) nal struggle" to aidfXhe Amer ican farmer was under senate fire today. The broadcast was beamed to Europe last Wednesday as the former vice president carried his campaign against administration foreign policy into France. The state department said the script was prepared before Wal lace left for Europe. Sen. Walter F. George, D., Ga., told the senate he doubted that the state department knew "at its right hand what its left hand is doing." He told reporters it appeared "ridiculous" to have the department "lauding" Wallace, while the former vice president attacked President Truman's quarantine Communism program. The state department made available a partial text of the 800-word broadcast, delivered in the German language, but Acting Secretary of State Dean Acheson declined comment. The broadcast encompassed a book review of "The Wallaces of Iowa," by Russell Lord. State (Continued from Page One) nearly all expressed the desire to use natural gas for fuel, at least for part of required fuel needs. The Provo chamber of commerce com-merce issued a statement Satur day placing a high degree of responsibility re-sponsibility in the matter in the lap of the public service commission, com-mission, and declaring that the commission should realize the needs of the public at large should be placed above those of private interests in the matter. A dependable supply of natural gas is necessary for future industrial in-dustrial development as well as for residential and commercial needs, the chamber statement declared. de-clared. Also expected to attend Monday's Mon-day's hearing is a delegation of real estate men interested in development de-velopment of new areas. Believe Ut MiftGcleA 'THREE contributing (actors lead to loss of hair and baldness. They are: Dandruff, Itching Scalp, Falling Hair. Wc believe it is possible to correct these danger ous symptoms by following Dar rell's routine as little as one minute min-ute a day. If you seriously want to keep the hair you now have if you want to grow new hair DarreU's scientific formula will help. RESULTS IN 30 TO 90 DAYS Ample proof to you upon State Aft FOE (5 irIS)AY Independent, CIO Reach Agreement PITTSBURGH,. April 26 U.R Jpnes & Laughlin Steel Corp., large' independent producer, to day announced final , agreement has been reached on a new wage contract with the CIO United Steelworkers union which gives its employes the same 12 Vi cent wage increase recently negotiated negotiat-ed by the United States Steel Corp. and the steelworkers. The corporation and the union made a joint announcement that a new two-year contract had been agreed upon. It will be signed next Tuesday. In general the contract follows the pattern established in the Big Steel contract and provides for a basic raise of 2l,i cents an hour, or $1 a day. It also provides additional vacation benefits, termination ter-mination pay, correction of in equities, and the settlement of other economic issues, making a total increase of more than 15 cents an hour. Capital (Continued from Page One) Bodet and Finance Secretary Ramon Beteta. MEXICO CITY, April 26 (U.R) President Truman's private plane, the "Sacred Cow," landed at Mexico City, Central airport today. It will take President Miguel Aleman on his official visit to the United States on Tuesday. The big plane, carrying only its American crew, landed at 9 a.m. CST, after a flight from Washington. It will be given a complete mechanical checkup be fore its scheduled takeoff for Washington Tuesday morning. Between now and then, the plane will be under constant military guard. Foreign Minister Jaime Torres Bodet and Treasury Minister Ramon Beteta, two of Senior Aleman's top cabinet members, will make the trip with him. U. S. Ambassador Walter Thurston also will be in the party. Plastic (Continued from page one) been cheerful and optimistic all through the trying waiting period, according to her father, Raymond Brooks. "I almost gave up hope when I saw her a couple of days ago," Brooks said. "The tip of her nose was a dark purple and it looked terrible. But Dr. Rambo said that was a good sign as it showed the nose was still alive." There were two others anxiously anxious-ly awaiting the doctor's verdict today, too. They were Deputy Sheriffs C. G: Roth and W. V. Godair the men who crawled on their hands and knees in the roadside weeds to rush it back to the hospital. Deputy Godair carried the severed sev-ered nose back to the doctors in his hand. "I brused the dirt off it a little so it would be more presentable," he said. Republicans (Continued from Page One) greater hikes in their omnibus recommital motion. It would have instructed the committee to ap prove $20,278,000 for the Bonne ville power administration, $13,-100,000 $13,-100,000 for Central Valley project, pro-ject, $7,183,000 for the Colorado Big-Thompson, $16,063,000 for the Columbia Basin project and $23,-000,000 $23,-000,000 for the Missouri river basin. MRB got $9,435,000 in the bill. The Provo River (Deer Creek) ; project remained unchanged as I recommended for $1,000,000. Here are the votes of western .congressmen on the Democratic! motion to recommit the interior I appropriations bill for mandatory fund increases: j Idaho, voting against the mo-Ition: mo-Ition: Goff, Sanborn. Montana, voting for the motion: Mansfield, D'Ewart. j Utah, voting for the motion: Granger; voting against the motion: mo-tion: Dawson. Wyoming, voting against the i motion: Barrett. Every Afternoon (Excepting Saturday) and Sunday Sunday Herald Published Sunday Morning Published by the Herald Corporation. Corpora-tion. SO South First West" Street. Provo. Utah Entered as second class matter at the postoffice in Provo, Utah, under the act pi March 3, 1879 Subscription terms by carrier in Utah county. $1.00 the month, $8 00 for six months in advance. $12.00 the year in advance; by mail anywhere in the United States or its possessions. posses-sions. SI. 00 the month; $8.00 (or six months: $12 00 the year in advance. mi 9 o I ! Telephone Strike Still Deadlocked (Continued from. Page One). the smaller figure as it had the L. L xoiuEni, iiowcvcr, vjcucrtu , Electric Corp. fell in line with the general wage pattern established by U. S. Steel, Westinghouse and others by granting its workers a 15-cent an hour increase $6 for a 40-hour week, tl was considered likely that Schwellenbach would cite this to Western Electric. The A. T. & T. has contended! from the beginning that it cannot j make a wage offer on a national Dasis, ana nas insisted on local arbitration of all wage issues. since its rates are set locally. In Chicago, the Illinois BeU i area -trusteeship is not clea, but wurae"-Telephone wurae"-Telephone Co., an A. T. & T. sub-i the odds seem against it. J L. H. Purdy, Colorado federa- sidiary, rejected a union offer to; go back to work for a one-cent-j an-hour wage Increase 40 cents a week plus local arbitration of remaining wage demands and other issues. The company said it was an effort to "force a down payment on wages" before arbi tration was put into fore. Beime said as he left Schwel-lenbach's Schwel-lenbach's office that he "hoped that between now and Monday we might get an agreement." Marshall (Continued from Page One) staff, nevertheless does not con sider the Moscow meeting a fail ure. His reports are expected to be somewhat less than gloomy. He has described Moscow as "the first round" and said as he left the Soviet capital that "later on when we look back on the work here it will appear that we have done much more than we thought at the time." Marshall's plane left Moscow shortly after mid-day Friday. It stopped at Berlin, Iceland and Stephensville, Newfoundland. Accompanying Ac-companying him home were John Foster Dulles, his Republican ad viser on foreign policy; Benjamin Cohen, state department counsel; H. Freeman Matthews, director of European affairs for the state de partment; and Charles E. Bohlen, a foreign service officer. Dulles plans to make a radio broadcast Tuesday night, prob ably from New York, on the conference. con-ference. The Columbia Broadcasting system announced in New York it would carry Dulles' address but would broadcast its regularly. scheduled commercial program at the time Marshall makes his radio report. "The state department set the time without consulting any of the networks," CBS said. "CBS previously had offered 10:30 p. m to 11 p. m., either Sunday or Monday. Deaths Frank Brew PAYSON Frank Brewton, 57. native of Pay son died Thursday in his home here of natural causes. He was born Feb. 2, 1890, in Payson, a son of David and Ruth Simons Brewton. He married Winfred Allen Dec. 22, 1942. He was a 'member of the Payson lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and a veteran of World War I. In addition to his widow he is survived by two brothers, Homer Brewton, San Mateo, Cal., and Orrawell Brewton, Springville, and two sisters, Mrs. Viola Kjer-gard. Kjer-gard. Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Susie Ulet, San Mateo, Cal. Funeral services will be conducted con-ducted Monday at 2 p. m. in Pay-son Pay-son Third ward chapel of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Latter-day Saints. Friends may call at the Valley mortuary Sunday afternoon aft-ernoon and at the family home Monday until time of services. Interment will be in Payson cemetery. jVIUSCLE POWER IS EXPENSIVE NOW Out Electric Power is Economical ! Just as tractors and modern farm machinery machin-ery have replaced muscle power in the field, electrical equipment is replacing muscle power in the farm home and yard doing more work in less time at less cost. There are more than 200 jobs that "electric "elec-tric farm hands" can do and they're doing more every day as more new electric elec-tric equipment becomes available. III X, .SLTI tUY FROM YOU ELECTRIC EQUIPMENT DEALER 11.11. to Meet On Palestine Issue (Continued from Page One) position afforded by the mandate. iThis could be a MH iviw sm trusteeship, Tne iiruisn ao noi warn a wo- & Telegraph Co., and the Moun-lution Moun-lution which would "tend i the uin states Federations of Tele-power Tele-power and prestige of Russia in: that part of the world. phone Workers were recessed to- The Jews: ' day until Monday without any The Jewish agency and other j Zionist croups apparently wui 'now accent a oortion of the Holy Land free of British or any other outside domination and free also of immigration bars. This is a; retreat from their original de-;to mand for all of Palestine. Wheth - ier they would accept a strategic More extremist Jewish groups, such as the Hebrew committee of national liberation, want an in dependent Jewish state compris ing all of Palestine. With free dom of immigration they are con fident the Jews, now numbering about 600,000, would rapidly in crease and outnumber the Arabs who now total about 1,200,000. A third Jewish element, a minority. mi-nority. Is represented by anti-Zionist anti-Zionist groups like the American i i. .k.,. t ' .nM I .J. i1;" inereiure Miuuia not uvcumr Jewish nation. They do want the present immigration restrictions eliminated, however. The Arabs: As outlined by Arab spokesmen, spokes-men, the position is this: The Arabs want Palestine declared de-clared an independent state immediately im-mediately but the UN can have some military and political con cessions in it. The state would be Arab-controlled because im mediate independence would give the Arab majority power to cut off Jewish immigration. That is why the UN's five Arab states are trying to make the assembly dispense with fact-finding- ideas and settle at once whether Pale stine should get independence. The United States: Oil and the Truman doctrine are at stake. President Truman's $400,000,- 000 Greek-Turkish aid program would be worthless if there is a settlement which will extend Russia's power into that part of the world. President Truman has unmis takably endorsed the immediate entrance of 100,000 Jews in oppo sition to the Arabs and the Unit ed States has committed itself to formation of a Jewish homeland. Soviet Russia: Russia wants oil and warm water. That is why the Russians have made passes at Iran (for oil concessions to match those held by Britain and America) and at Turkey (to get a foothold in the Dardanelles and thus to a pas sage to the warm waters of the Mediterranean.) Five Hurt In Lehi Accident LEHI Five persons today were recovering from injuries re ceived late Thursday night in a two-car crash at the fork of highways 89 and 91 a mile east of Lehi. Mrs. T. A. Dewey, 44, Ogden, and ner parents, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Davis, Lehi, were traveling travel-ing east toward American Fork when they collided with a coupe driven by Ethel Kat Deck. 58, Murray, which had just entered the highway, officers said. Miss Dack was accompanied by L. W. Kirk, also of Murray. Mrs. Dewey suffered a frac tured right wrist and possible chest injuries; Miss Dack was treated for shock and knee lacerations. lac-erations. Mr. Kirk received a broken left arm and face lacerations. lacera-tions. Mrs. Davis had cuts about both knees and possible internal injuries, while Mr. Davis suffered cuts about the nose and forehead and possible chest injuries. i M.T.&T. Co. Colls Recess In Meet With the Workers DENVER, April 26 (U.R) Negotiations Ne-gotiations between officials of the Mountain States Telephone change in the 19-day-old strike picture. The company still was demanding demand-ing that the issue be submitted to a board of arbitration and refused consider "under nv rnnrii J? , " Jl!! V- tIons wage incree 'or the won president, asserted that management saia tnai unaer no conditions would it consider a cash increase, and made no offer of money at all not even one cent." The Vnion, following the national na-tional federation's action, informed in-formed the company that it had reduced its original wage increase in-crease demands one-half, down to $6. Purdy explained that the requested $6 wage increase would be a final settlement on the basic wage issue, and the em furThe? T, w i; in dispute." MST&T officials rejected the new proposal. They have main tained mat a Doara ox arbitre- tion. composed of citizens of the mountain states." be appointed to study tne dispute. ; Evening Parade Ruled Out For Centennial Fete SALT LAKE CITY, April 26 W.PJ Tne huge centennial parade which was to have been held during the evening in downtown Salt Lake will be held the morning morn-ing of July 23 and the afternoon of July 24, instead, the centennial commission reported today. The commission said the change was necessary because of the expense ex-pense of providing individual lighting for each float involved. COME.. SEE OUR GREAT fl FREE DEMONSTRATIONS ALL DAY EVERYDAY jA , WITHOUT VJOnU! , ALL WITH THI FAMOUS fTTHT automatic tae Launch Hie Bendiz performance will amaze you. You'll see the work-free washing that's been thrilling lucky Bendiz owners own-ers for nine whole years! It washes, rinses, damp drys, cleans itself, drains itself, shuts itself off all by itself! You don't even put your hands in water! Come in let us show you how Bendbt sets you free on washdays! NO WAITING Immediate Delivery . Exclusively at Cleanup King, Queen Crowned As 2000 Kids Attend Movie ' Jo Ann Littlefield. Fairer, junior high school seventh grader, and Jack Hansen, first grader at the Joaquin school. Saturday were chosen Provo's Centennial cleanup king and queen for a day. They were selected at a Para mount theater special morning show, attended by 2000 kids, as reward for their efforts in the Centennial cleanup campaign, concluded Saturday under direc tion of the Provo chamber of commerce. Jaycees will cooperate with the city waste removal department de-partment next Saturday' in a city-wide city-wide pick-up service to haul away the trash accumulated by the cleanup. Jo Ann is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Littlefield, 1049 East Second South, and Jack is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Hansen, 573 North Fifth East. The lucky boy and girl each received a bicycle and an outfit: of clothing donated as cleanup prizes by Provo merchants. In ad-' dition. Jack received a wrist; watch and Jo Ann a pearl neck-i lace. They will both go to Salt Lake City Saturday where they! will meet the governor in his! office at the capitol building,! have lunch at the Hotel Utah,! visit the University of Utah,! radio station KSL, Centennial1 ARE YOUR SAVINGS EARNING 3 WITH SAFETY Interest Compounded Semi' Annually Utah Savings & Loan Assn. 172 West Center Street Provo DTI headquarters at the Temple bloc and other points of interest. r Thirty kids, .in addition to the king and queen, received prizes donated by local merchants. . " Winners of the Centennial cleanup poster contests sponsored in conjunction with the cleanun campaign were also announceiTtyl Saturday. Reed Kendall, Provo high school, was named first place winner and Ray Christensen, also of Provo high, won second inthe class A division. Winners in the junior high division were Delina Collard, Dixon, first, and Aniv First place in each case won $5 and second place $2.50. Generators Armatures and Starters Unconditionally Guaranteed. Rebuilding Service f johnson ; Automotive Electric j 935 So. Springville Road Provo W. r . 5 4 A WAN POWU UOMT CO. MUSAOf |