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Show December 28 , 194T SUNDAY HERALD Anti-Reds Force Resignal Turkish T moved by polio. nd were being re- tht ce. "I S8 that the city to clear fti m .Today department stores opened open-ed as usual but few shoppers ventured out. SUffi in ail the stores ware short since many workers Id the suburbs still could not eat to work. Moat factories and offices ware closed as they usually are on Saturdays. Stations and hotels, jammed to capacity with stranded commuters, com-muters, began to clear. Mayor William O'Dwyer cut abort bis winter vacation at El .Tax Bills (Continued from Pate One ) o " 1 ' ejeult any broad scale tax cuts, v Congress is supposed to approve a ceiling on government spending by Feb. 15, each year. Last year the senate and bouse failed to compromise a $1,500,000,000 dti ference over cutting federal ex e-nditures, and no ceiling was es blished. Taft said GOP leaders win try again next year to write . a limitation an federal ex-. y neadltares, bat that aaeer- . Jainty abeat action ea the foreign spsndlng program ; may delay a spending ceiling .: an til araand March 1. v Taft Included in his list of 80 legislative measures both propo sals that will be the subject of prolonged debate, and possibly filibuster action, and those that can be expected to be non -con- He emphasized tnai list was not complete and that waa "no xuarantee" as to which measures would be placed high on the legislative calendar. , However, he listed prominently the Taft-Ellender-Wagner long-range long-range housing bill. Taft indicated ibat it may be revised after a "get together" with organisations sup-sporting sup-sporting various housing programs . 3Be added that congress "should ado something this session" about housing. Loyalty Board I CCenttoned trees Page One) richt to see the FBI's confiden tial report, or to cross-examine his accusers. At a lam-nacked press confer- iaiiM HiehnFflson was questioned closely about the FBI's role in rthe lovalty campaign. He said that the FBI's report in each case be only a statement oi and would contain no roe dations or conclusions on FBI's part as to the employe's altar. - "The FBI ia the only investi- gating organization we can turn ;to," he said, adding: "And I have ; the fullest confidence in the good faith, experience, integrity and : honesty of the FBI t He said the FBI informed him that only under the moat unusual conditions would it be able to 1 disclose its confidential sources ; of information even to Richard 'Son. To do so, he said, would de stroy the sources forever, Richardson added, however, that the FBI would evaluate the reliability of its informants I s I i I : t S would tfacts the tlav Calif.. But the worst of the over before n. which 5:25 a. m. yesterday and ended at 3:05 a. m. today, was ex pected to cost the city 'between $2,500,000 and $3,000,000. It took a toil oi 30 aeao over lis iuii r and waa flyiaal M. aMl he arrived .. ,;B3?;;S352 Already s host of legends about the storm were building. One man organised a "3 :39 club of 47." to be made up of passengers aboard a train which left the city at 3:39 yesterday and reached reach-ed its destination 21 miles away, more than la hours later. But aged survivors of the "blizzard "bliz-zard of 88" scoffed. Augustus Post, 74. past president of the "Blizzard Men" said the one in '88 cut New York off from the world for three days. But Post made his statement today from bis sister's home in Locust Valley L. I. He was unable un-able to get bade to his apartment apart-ment in New York because of the storm. NEW YORK, Dec. 27 U.R) Singer James Melton who collects old cars had to use a helicopter today in order to leave his snowbound snow-bound Connecticut farm. Slated for an afternoon broadcast broad-cast in New York, Melton, whose West port Conn., farmhouse ia two miles off the main road, chartered chart-ered the helicopter from a New Jersey concern and "just made the broadcast" More important, though, Melton Mel-ton said, the helicopter pilot brought badly needed insulin for one of the workers on Melton's farm. Asked if none of his ancient cars could cope with the two foot snow, the singed laughed and said, "If I hsd fired up all my old steam-run Job)?, maybe I could have melted a way." But the helicopter was quicker, explained. he Names Sought (Continued from Pare One) firemen today in a pitched street battle which forced the resignation resigna-tion of five university professors. Only a firm stand by a hastily mobilized force of 500 police and firemen prevented the mob from attacking the Soviet embassy The demonstration, climaxing week - long anti - Communist campaign In the Ankara newspapers, news-papers, compelled the dismissal of four allegedly Communistic Ankara university professors and the resignation of Dean Sevket Aziz Kansu. The demonstration began in an Ankara suburb, where members of the National Students' league assembled a crowd and started a march through the city, carrying banners denouncing red college teachers and Georgi Dimltrov, Communist premier of Bulgaria. Growing in size ann fury as n progressed, the mob surged to ward the Soviet embassy. Police cordoned off the street. protecting the embassy from the mob. The rioters then made for the university, where they smash ed windows and marched on the dean's office where a faculty meeting was being held. The dean's appearance to an nounce the dismissal of the four suspected professors was the sig nal for shouts that "the dean is a Communist!" from several stu dents. The mob seized the university official and dragged him to the street, while police and firemen with gushing hoses fought to free him. After a battle in which the streets were flooded and several persons sufered minor injuries, the dean broke away and began to shout that he had resigned. This auited the crowd, which soon dispersed without causing further damage. Every Afternoon rExceptioa Saturday 1 and Sunday Sunday Herald Published Sunday Morning Published by the Herald Corporation. Corpora-tion. SO South First West Street, Prove, Utah. Entered aa second class matter at the postofflce In Prove. Utah, under the act of Starch a. 1S7S Subscription terms by carrier in Utah county. $ 1 00 the month. SS.00 for -six months. In advenes. $13.00 the rear la advance; by mail anywhere ia the United States or its p oasts Ions, si.oo the month; SS.00 for sis: months; S1S00 the year ba advance. voiced by senators who are in vestigating commodity speculation. Since the commodity ex change authority baa long since completed its Chicago investigation investiga-tion of these matters, I trust you will provide the committee with the desired information by Jan. 2, 1948," he wrote. Andresen did not name the commodities in which the federal employes allegedly were trading. He said he understood the com modity exchange authority made its investigation last August or September. Barlier, Andresen announced that his group is going out after non-resident aliens who play the grain markets but are not required re-quired to pay income taxes on their profits. "The numbean of such aliens in the market is probably a small fraction of all speculators," . An dresen said. "But I believe it may run into a good many millions mil-lions bf dollars from which the government receives no income." Andresen, whose committee was set up to investigate commodity com-modity speculation, said he had already made a "private" investi gation of market activities of non-resident aliens. He added they are exempted by law from paying income tax on capital gains. "We have non-resident aliens of many nationalities including some so-called refugees engaged in Wiej1ra cnontilotinn in T V i rv aHVVIMSISIWU - li 1 J country," he ssid. "I am not go ing to name any names, how ever, until the committee has s chance to investigate. No Decision ' (Continued from Page One) I CASH For Your Gun at INNES Sporting Goods 31 A West Center PROVO 11 The Philadelphia mint issued I Br I the first American coins in Oc- 'toner. 1792. . I HOW DO YOU LOOK? I ssssssssssssaW Ye ssssm Watch your figure. . . every- V I u fsrNlfl body else does. . . keep your amJsL appearance trim, smooth, and fia?S. I ba fashionable looking. ! . W vi b TREU METHOD SALON I i 1 ROOM 6, XOVO BLDG. SALON PHONE 2218 OR 2751 W into Konitsa by guerrilla artillery, including short-range mortars. During the day, guerrilla forces attempted to drive a wedge be tween Konitsa and the commanding command-ing Prophet Elias heights to the north of the town. First reports did not indicate whether the at tempt had succeeded. A government detachment was reported on the way from Kalpaki to the strategic Bourazani bridge, between Konitsa and the Albanian Alban-ian border, in an attempt to wrest it from the guerrillas who seized it yesterday. Government sources claim that the attackers invaded Greece from Albania. If this were true, the Bourazani bridge would be an important link communications lines between Konitsa and Communist-controlled territory. J Germany: Front Li ne In the Cold War rions of Magfgstel iMl'l .uJkmmsx?sssn Dec. 27 tun r m MTTfl HMMHa zrxvjrzi: " mob of F::::;;;g.Ll WB I M mOBSaOiySySyjyA 1 if s3hm tease veer 1st WBKm iW JHH " ,ieh m ,ron curtoin 'ound ' II lit was continent eWe Gor- nV "'ijj Va ried Cases Handled by Provo Court Eden to Visit Middle East Post-office (Continued from Page One) proximately $100 la postal employes credit union funds, taken from a postofflce drawer, and slightly over $10 In stamps taken from the drawer. Gates was then fingerprinted at the Provo police station, and Inspector Hammer said he allow ed Gates to go home, alter re ceiving his promise that he would surrender himself to Hammer in Salt Lake City on Saturday. Sat urday afternoon. Gates, accom panied by his wife and father, surrendered to inspector Ham mer at the latter's office in Salt Lake City. When the custodian of the Provo postofflce arrived at 4:30 a. m. Friday lor ms usual open ing-up, he found lights biasing on the upper floor, second floor of flees systematically wrecked, tables smashed in the lobby, marble pried off the walls, and other extensive damage. No outside doors were forced, and officials reason the intruder lurked in upstair halls when the building was locked at 9 p. m. on Christmas night. Inspector Hammer said Gates was a resident of Provo for about two years until he moved to National, Carbon county, about Nov. 1 of this year. He was a coal miner in Carbon county. He is married and has a young son. Gates is a veteran of World War IX No instruments were found in the postofflce Friday which might have been used in the wrecking process other than a heavy table leg, broken from a table in the lobby. Hammer said this obvious ly had been used as a club. Department heads of the wrecked 'second-floor offices said Saturday that expensive and in tricate calculating and comptometer compto-meter machines had been smashed smash-ed to the floor during the wrecking wreck-ing process. Extent of the damage to the machines had not been determined Saturday, but they were out of commission. The machines, new, cost thousands of dollars each. Map highlights the Split of Germany and Europe due to the collapse of the London Big Four Conference of the Council of Foreign Ministers, the machinery set up at Potsdam to make peace. Germany now becomes the front line in the world's greatest diplomatic crisis since before the war, with the world's greatest powers farther from agreement than they have ever been. Neither a time nor a place was set for another meeting of the Big Four. Moscow Declares West Losing the Battle of Europe LONDON, Dec. 27 U. Radio Moscow, in a review of 1847 and a forecast for 1048, said tonight that the west was losing the bat tle of Europe. Commentator Linotsky predict ed the collapse of the Marshall European aid program and In- POPE RECOVERS FROM BAD COLD VATICAN CITY, Dec. 27 (UP.) Pope Pius, recovered from a cold, walked in the Vatican gardens for 45 minutes today and will resume Christmas audiences tomorrow or Monday. 'These subsidies accounted for 80 per cent of a 828,588,000,000 federal deficit, which was incurred in-curred despite the fact that nearly near-ly 817 billion more was collected in taxes than in the years 1824-1930 1824-1930 " "With all the vast increase in taxes and public debt there was actually 10 per cent less public construction in the second period than in the first," NAM charged. It said permanent public im provements resulting from public works and work relief programs of the 30's were "very small in volume compared with the extraordinary ex-traordinary level of public expenditures." ex-penditures." Work relief snd grants tend to make local governments more dependent on the federal gov ernment and its treasury, NAM continued. Out of this ,it said, grows "administrative dictation, extravagance and waste" besides the necessity for enlarging existing exist-ing and creating new federal agencies. County Budget (Continued from Page One) county funds will be highways for 1948. A budget of $200,000 has been set for this department, which will include about 850,000 in special "B and C" road money from the state. The revised 1947 road budget was $150,000, and the' department spent in addition about $31,000 unbudgeted "B and C" special funds, for total 1947 road department expenditures of about $181,000 Principal item missing from the '48 budget in comparison with 1947 is the welfare fund. Whereas $216,000 was deemed necessary for this item in the 1947 budget, commissioners did not have to allot al-lot anything for it in 1948. Budgetary Control Of Grants-in-Aid Demanded by NAM NEW YORK, Dec. 27 OJ.R) The National Association of Manufacturers urged congress today to-day to bring under budgetary control all federal grants-in-aid. Unless congress takes this step, an "over expanding federal bureaucracy" will "take over more and more functions properly prop-erly belonging to state and local governments" the NAM press release re-lease said. During 1834 and 1840, over 821 billion was spent in grants-in-aid. the release .pointed out. addingijaow not accent such a Program. "Tne relative strength of countries coun-tries of the new democracy has grown in the international arena and these countries are amalgamating amalga-mating their forces to protect the common cause of international peace and security," he said The broadcast concluded "The year 1947 was a year which saw further success of the idea of unity of democratic forces. It is no accident that reaction re-action directed its blow precisely against this unity. However, the forces of democracy and socialism social-ism are incomparably mightier than the anti-democratic camp which opposes them. creasing successes for the "forces of democracy," in which he included in-cluded the new Oreek guerrilla "government." He said that all European na tions today faced the same prob lem: "Either the Marshall plan and conversion into a colony of American capital or free develop ment on the basis of national in dependence." The broadcast said efforts to solit the labor movement in Brit ain, France and Italy would fall. leader of the newly-formed workers force that seceded from the communist-led general con federation of labor, led this movement in France and socialist Giuseppe Saragat was the leader in Italy. In Britain, he said, the trade anion congress carried en the same tactics by back ing the Marshall plan denouncing communists. All these efforts, he said, were aimed at splitting the world trade union movement but the workers of Britain, France and. Italy 'Bama Prepares For Sugar Bowl Tilt With Texas BILOXI, Miss., Dec. 27 !. Alabama's Sugar bowl - bound Crimson Tide rolled into this gulf coast resort city today and set up camp to prepare for its New Year s day meeting with the University Uni-versity of Texas at New Orleans, The 38 - man Crimson Tide squad, including 20 veterans of previous Alabama games In the Sugar, Orange or Rose bowls, went through a snappy workout on the Biloxi high school field shortly after arriving by bus from Tuscaloosa. Coach Harold "Red" Drew said his team was in excellent condition condi-tion for the game with Texas and I'm just hoping that this nice weather holds up." Hurlin' Harry Gilmer and understudies un-derstudies Johnny August, Monk Mosley and Ed Salem took the kinks out of their passing arms while Tide kickers practiced punting. Chinese (Continued from Page One) 4,000 mmbers of the unofficial church organization, the Rev Jack R. McMichale. New York. former chairman of the Young Communist League and now ex ecutive secretary of the federa foreign policy as one "giving to the rulers of the corrupt machines instead ox to tne poor." Gen. Feng, in this country to study water conservation meth ods, answered an attack by Rep Walter Judd, R., Minn., without mentioning the congressman by name. "In China it la a struggle of Democracy against dictatorship." he said. "I ve asked the United States to help the forces of de mocracy in China. An American denounced me. In doing so, he is following the generalissimo in labeling Gen. Stilwell (the late Gen. Joseph Stilwell) a com munist "I trust this man would be op posed to the generalissimo if he opened his eyes." Gen. Feng denied rumors that Gen. Fung was going to establish an anti-communist coalition gov ernment in China, or that he, Feng, welcomed United States control of China. He asertad that there are no atrocities committed against christians in China by the com munists, adding: "Some heads of the communist party themselves are Christalns." Turning again to the National 1st government, Gen. Feng de clared: "There is utter corruption and inefficiency in the Chinese government gov-ernment under the generalissimo. Any one who speaks about him is classed as an enemy." lvrry C Adams, 18, Orem pleaded guilty in city court Friday Fri-day to a charge of reckless driv ing, resulting from an accident at 3300 West Center in which his car assertedly struck a utility util-ity pole, knocked down 150 feet of telephone line and 111 feet of fence. Adams and three companions, com-panions, two of them girls escaped es-caped with minor injuries. City Judge W. Dean Loose gave Adams IS days in jail and suspended it for six months probation, pro-bation, stipulating that he must pay for half tne cost of tne damage. dam-age. Adams. 17-year-old juvenile ! companion was turned over to i juvenile authorities, with the i understanding was that he would be made to pay for the other nan of the damage. In city court also Friday. Shir-lef Shir-lef L. Powell, 27, 287 West Main street. LehL denied charges of drunken driving and his trial was iset for Jan. 28. He was released to the custody of his attorney, and previously posted bond of 8125 was returned to him. Earlier in the week, Cecil Han sen, operator of an American Fork turkey plant, appeared be fore the court and asked for a ! preliminary hearing "on the com i plaint against him which charges him with refusing , to let a state food inspector maae a required inspection of his property. Han sen was released on his own recoanizance and his prelimin ary was set for Jan. 27. City court forfeitures last weea included: Vernon Whiting, 289 East Fourth North, 915, failure to stop for pedestrian; Marva Hodson. 57 North Fifth East, $1S running stop sign at First East and Center; D. J. Finiayson, 87.50. no driver's license; Per shing Scott, Pleasant urove, $io, making left turn without proper signal: Ralph Shumway. 815, no drivers license; Lorraine roster Avery. St. George, 815, failure to yield right of way to a lire truck; Florence Bullock, 721 North Yale avenue. 88, unlawf u U-turn; Reed Peterson, $18, no drivers license; Fenton Hersni, $15, no driver's license; Delbert Brown, $5, no license plates; Bruce Brand, 88, no license plates; Ernest J. Cahill. 825 shoplifting shop-lifting heating pads from a local store. Guilty pleas entered last week by persons appearing on charges included: Franklin E. Kelsey. battery, charged with beating wife. 20 days in jail suspended on six months probation; Carlos Bunce, Springvllle, running stop sign at Seventh East and Fifth North, 815 pr seven days, stay to Jan. 15 to pay the fine: Jay Peterson, Pe-terson, 715 North Eighth East, running stop sign at Seventh East and Seventh North, fined $45; Veda Williams, 237 East Cen ter, running stop sign at Sixth East and Center, fined $15. LONDON, Dec. 27 (UJD For- British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden leaves tomorrow for Iran to visit tne Anglo-Iran-ian Oil company, on a trip which coincides with the latest tension between Iran and Russia. Eden's three-week visit to the middle east also will take him to Saudi Arabia, where he plana to meet King Ibn Saud. The Iranian visit, described as private and informal, will en able Eden to study tne development develop-ment of oilfields there, the York- shire Post, Eden's organ, reported. The Analo-Iranian Oil com pany is considered in London as great purveyor of oil to com monwealth countries. Including India, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand, and a potential dollar dol-lar saver for the commonwealth. The company produces approx imately 20,000,000 tons of oil a year. CHRISTENSEN SPEAKER AT FIRESIDE CHAT Dr. P. A. Christensen will! be speaker at a Provo stake fireside chat to be held tonight at 840 at the Joseph Smith building un-v der the sponsorship of the MIA. J. W. McCallister will be in charge of the music. All stake members are invited. A St. Louis hospital has a room specially fitted for operating on children. It is decorated with scenes from fairy teles. The cotton spinner, a curious sea animal, defends itself by spinning spin-ning sticky threads to engulf its enemy. 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