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Show 2 Sunday, January 18, 1943 JUT ID AY HERALD Takes First liook Through World's Greatest Telescope PASADENA, Ca!., JanT 17 (U.B . Man has taken bis first exploratory ex-ploratory ."look" at the universe -through the new 200-inch' tele-: - scope atop Mount 1 Palomar, the California Institute of Technology announced tonight. r- - The first man to . observe through "the world'a greatest telescope - (6,250,000 project ; rtpA In nrobe - farther into , apace than scientists of .a gener ation ago ever creameo was ut. John A. , Anderson, Caltech sclen v list who supervised the .mirror's grinding and polishing. - -- But he discovered no new stars, or .constellations. - Dr. Anderson, tall, slender and in his sixties, took his, historic "new look" at the universe in ' stride. . . ' . "There was no more sensation pension, Ifealth Pav Combined In Raise Demand Y DETROltJan. 'lT' dw -i-The CIO United Auto "Workers union ; today split up the 30-eent-pack-'age" it will-demand for 230,000 ; General : Motors employes this , Spring into a flat 15-cent hourly ""pay boost,' 10 cents for a pension plan and the remaining five cents - xor 9 neaitnv insurance, program; . ""'A 200-mari national CM con- - .ierence. made up of UAW lead v ers from 100 company plants, also - "Voted to resume its- fight for a union shop when it asks the slant 4 'i- corporation - to reopen rpegou ations Feb. 28. A union spokesman - said the delegates voted three to one to pare down their 25-cent . wage , demand to include 10 centa; for . the retirement plan. ' -,3t;. However, the unien official .. said the conference would U- - -r crease Its flat pay demand ; ,i back to Z5 centa If a "sound" u pension plan could not be negotiated. ne-gotiated. ... , V. Revival of a pension plan de mand.. which was won by the .union last year in negotiations -"with the Ford Motor company but rejected ? by" the UAW rank' and-file in favor of a pay in-.-crease . equivalent to 15 - cents -ourly, came as- a - surprise. . i- The decision of the. conference i was announced by Joseph Zingar-xo, Zingar-xo, Tarryton, N. who is chair-iman chair-iman of the UAW's nine-man GM t negotiating committee. UAW President Walter P. Reu- t Ither. whoabeads the union s Gen ess wwivia wai sc;s)4. w vum -not comment on whether he ao- proved of seeking a pension plan gjn addition to a wage hike at this u Younger delegates to the con inference favored a hard drive for icasn benefits only, but- the older .? representatives were willing -rtol j surrender more immediate casn -' - tr a - a. i : . . . gains zor a long-range remrmem ?! program. X Delegates endorsed the action sof their president, who filed a petition with the national labor r relations board for a security election to give UAW officials full power to enforce the de- xnands. Truman's Former 3 (Continued from Page One) Jucta Co., in which "they formerly iwere partners. i Cullum is the commodity mar rkets operator who handles cotton I speculations for Sen. Elmer Thomas, D., Okla. Moore is an t'M trittnA nl ThAtnai urhnu I market operations are under I scrutiny by a senate committee. . Senate investigators made pub- J lie a previously-discussed letter i from Brig.-Gen. Wallace H. Gra- t ham, the White House doctor, to ins broker, it was dated Oct. 29, I 1947, and instructed that his ' "commodity trades" should be 'held open "from time to time as i directed by me." Graham previ- r ousiy saia puDiiciy ne quit traa f ing in commodities on Oct 7, two r days after Mr. Truman's speech j denouncing "gamblers in grain. Through his attorney Graham ' acknowledged his signature on the Oct. 25 letter and -said the e contradiction of his previous statement was due to his ignor J ance of the meaning of holding a xraae open. than a mechanic has when he goes to -the shop and turns a lathe ! over. It will take a long time and lots of adjusting to find out what saw" Dr. Anderson related.-; It was late in December 'when Dr. Anderson,, who had spent 11 years grinaing ana poiisning tne great eye, and fellow' scientists first had a preview of what has been billed as astronomy's greatest great-est forthcoming spectacle. ; "I wasn't looking" Just check ing," .Dr.- Anderson said.; "There are millions . of stars, of course.'! suppose I may have seen ' some that man has never seen before. No, I didn't see any new constellations that could be named in the future. No.. I didnt notice even any 'new asteroids." , Dr. Max v Mason, Caltech ob servatory council chairman, explained, ex-plained, "these - were only ., test Observations,' both visual and photographic, and, the first "of a long series that will have . to-be made as completion of the telescope tele-scope progresses.'' - i Dr. Anderson used a small read ing glass for an eye piece to peer at the image formed by the -big mirror, taken to Mount Palomar only a month ago. - ....-. He didn't wear a white jacket Other scientists glimpsed "the great beyond" as matter-of-factly as did he. "In reality, we were not ob serving at all, but using stars as a source of light by which to further test the mirror. Dr. Mason-exnlalned. "We were very pleased to get our first test pnotograpns so soon," ' The first test observations were made to locate where the axis of the telescope cuts the photo graphic plate and to check the entire instrument under-- actual operating conditions. Dr. Mason announced, v " Other; tests will be made t as adjusting and completion work Droaresses. Actual research wun tne mir ror will start this summer, Caltech announced. w ii t :s I a f : ,' Vcr.-n's Crcups M POSSEO?;;:; Y M UMT tbosure WASHINGTON, Jan. 17 (U. Representatives of : 35 women's groups today submitted to senate president Arthur- Vandenberg and sneaker Joseph W, , Martin, Jr., a petition calling on congress to pass universal military train ing legislation. . - .' - , The peution was signed oy ouu delegates to the women's patriotic patri-otic conference here on national defense. - ' Mrs. Lee W. Hutton of Excel sior.'. Minn..' president of -. the American Legion auxiliary,, presented pre-sented the - petition, r Vandenberg assured her, that it will be submitted sub-mitted to congress. ' . Mrs. ; Hutton was accompanied by Mrs. Grace Brosseau of Greenwich, Green-wich, Conn,; a former presiden tial general of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and Mrs. Sally Cannon of 'Washing ton, past . president of the wo men's auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Mrs. Hutton said the petition's signers represent more than 2,000,000 women. - The conference adopted reso lutions assailing communism and demanding v that no potential war materials be shipped to any nation that tries ' to obstruct u. S. efforts to rehabilitate western Europe. ... It also called for greater, u. a. air power- and strong- military preparedness generally. Delegates dedicated themselves to "recog nizing and exposing communism wherever it is seeking ' to entrench en-trench itself or has already done so.? ; '' After, spirited debate, the con ference defeated a resolution calling for an investigation of the National Education Association and the office of commissioner of education John -W. Studebaker. The defeated resolution said the commission and association had been a "spearhead" of subversive sub-versive teachings in recent years in the public school system. The resolution .was offered by the New York City colony of New England women. Chinese General Commit s Suicide PEIPING. China. Jan. 17 (UJD The suicide .in north -China of a victorious - nationalist general made remorseful by "excessive" casualties was announced today as battlefront report! said that Communist forces in Manchuria were -digging in for a long siege of Mukden. The government's north China spokesman said Gen. Lu Ling-yln, the victor of Laishue, waited until the final phases of the decisive north China battle were over and then shot himself. The spokesman said that Lu, commander of the Third army, had killed himself "because bis army had never suffered such los ses in men and material" as those incurred in their victory north of the Great Wall. , Government casualties in the battle were reported as 500 killed or captured, 20,000 wounded, and scores of machine guns and field guns lost, according to the spokes man, 10,000 Communists were killed and 2000 captured in the battle, before the balance of the Communist force fled into the mountains. Lu reportedly waited until the wounded had. been cared for and the Communist prisoners shipped back to Peiping and Tsingyuan Paoting before commiUng suicide. His body was sent to the Great Wall city of Wanchuan (Kalgan) for burial. Something to Sing About IT - Lehi Council Fills Offices X Wallace Gets Endorsement or .1 5 - Marshall Plan (Continued from Page One) County Spends ' (Continued from Page One) might offer an amendment to the Marshall plan bill to bar Shipments Ship-ments eastward from western European Eu-ropean nations of any materials essential to an atomic energy pro gram. McMahon said he saw no reason rea-son why. European nations should object to such a proposal. And committee Chairman Bourke B. Hlckenlooper. R la., said "care ful ' consideration a lot of it-will it-will be given" to means of assuring assur-ing that the Soviet atomic pro gram is not advanced through U. S. help for Europe. Marshall has warned that the long-range assistance program faces the avowed efforts of Rus- Isia. io .Voppose . and., gabotage" its purposes. His statement today indicated in-dicated that the misconstruction of Forrestal's words was a part of that effort. The "misquotations' 'arose from cross-examination of Forrestal by Sen. Alexander Wiley, R., Wis., before senate relations committee on Thursday. Wiley, in lengthy questioning of the defense secretary, observed that possible acquisitian by the United States of strategic bases "fits into, the picture" of the Mar shall plan. Forrestal replied: "I would not .quarrel with your thesis I am sure that the secretary secre-tary of state will have It in mind I simply want to underline my own belief that in order of priori ty I would place the fundamental recovery of national confidence and belief in survival of the part of these nations that we are try ing to help." . sion. During the year just ended, the highways department spent a total of $181,443, including 30. 856 in unbudgeted "B and C state road money. Mr. Bennett's report listed total 1946 highway expenditures at $122,291, includ ing $32.69 in unbudceted B and C" state funds. Increase in the 1947 highways total over 1946 was therefore $59,154. Other principal increases over '46 expenditures were in the exhibition ex-hibition and advertising fund, where $21,888 was . spent, principally prin-cipally for the Centennial, as against $4870 the . previous year; and in the assessors and recorders record-ers offices, both of which listed total '47 expenditures about $10.-000 $10.-000 more than those departments for '46. Principal decreases in various departments under 1946 spending spend-ing came in the welfare department, depart-ment, with about $80,000 less as previously mentioned and In elec- . Three-year-old Herbert David leads these three prospective war brides from Psris to song in Philadelphia, Pa after Immigration officials told thero they could remain in Ajnerlca. They were given ' 90-da paroles in which to get married after they missed the Ellis -? Island deadline because their plane couldn't land in a New Voric ' snowstorm, ' Seated is Anne Stiene, 88, engaged to Frank Marker, lot Fall River, Mass. Standing are Martha Donas, 25, who will -marry Roy Morrison. Atlanta, Fla and Herberf mother; Fernanda W David, 23, who ia off to San, rranclsco, CaUt, and Harold Skeegs. Deaths , 1 Chester Peterson - LEHI Chester M. ; B. Peterson, 44, died of a heart ailment Thursday Thurs-day at 8:30 a. m. at his family residence. . He was a well-known Lehi car penter. Born Sept, 8, 1903, in Lehi, son' or Ellis -Aionzo Peterson and Emma Abigail Lott, he was married Sept. 26, 1923 to Georgia Catherine Whitman in the Salt Lake temple, , . ' - . He Uved in Lehi all his life and was president of the elders quor urn, Lhi Fifth LD5 ward, and scoutmaster at both First and Fifth wards. Survivors include his wile; three sons ' and two . daughters The sons and - daughters, all of ieni, are vaino w., itonaia viair and George Arthur Peterson, and Mrs. Emma LouGen Kirkham and Miss Laurel Peterson. Other survivors include two Krandchil- dren and Mr. Peterson a mother, Mrs, Erma A. Peterson, Lehi; five brothers and three sistes: D. Ly dale, Bert E. and Berl Peterson and Airs. Donnett uoimsteaa, xars. Dorothy Nelson- and Mrs. Norval Holmstead, au of Lehi, and Clair E. Peterson, McGill, Nev., and Norris G. Peterson, Provo. Services will be announced later. Samuel Altaian ' Funeral services for Samuel Allman - will be conducted Mon day at 1 p. m. in the First LDS ward chapel under direction of Walter P. Whitehead, former bishop of the ward. Friends may call at the Berg mortuary Sunday from 6 to 8 p. m. and Monday prior to serv ices. Previously the body was scheduled -to Be viewed at the home of Mr. Allman's brother, the late Thomas M. Allman. Martin Winnie T. Giles LEHI All incumbent- appointive appoin-tive officers of Lehi have been re appointed by the city council ex cept the city clerk, an office usually usu-ally .filled by appointment of the successful candidate in the elec tion for city recorder.., Ia this position, Leland Powell succeeds B Jr LOtt., . - f 1 . " ' The city council also has desig nated .heads of departments of the city government for the. next two veara. ", t ," I' Appointees besides Mr. Powell are as follows; George A. Ricks. marsnai; ueii- Asay. night - mar shal; Abraham Anderson, Memorial Memor-ial . building v custodian Richard Gray, superintendent of water works; J, Rulon Morgan, city at torney; Charles Brooks, .city electrician; uelbert x;oates, as sistant electrician Ford Roberts, sexton, ana naroia v, Christen sen, dog tax collector; - ' -1 - " Appointments tq departments,! with the chairman named first, were: Public lighting. L. Carlos Coates and Lynn R. Webb; waterworks, water-works, Mr. Webb and , George.'. W. fcany; sewer, R. Gam Holbrook and Jonn w, Zimmerman; cemetery, ceme-tery, Mr. Leany and Mr. Coates. ' Streets and walks, Mr. Zimmer man and Mr. Holbrook; police department. de-partment. Mr Holbrook and Mr. Coates: city hospital,. Mr. Webb and Mr. Leany: Memorial build- Imev n4 , atiin1a ' URm C T aanv anH 1 $!) atywiivf eaa' mu Mr.iWebb; city parks, Mr Zim merman ana ar." HoiorooK. Mr.; Holbrook was also named the council's representative on the Lehi metropolitan water board to fill the unexpired term of Alma Peterson, retiring councilman. PC A in Bid for Presidency m mm m i . wmw m . w - w r . . "super profits maqe at the expense ex-pense of American living standards,' stand-ards,' The . Republican, party, bm said, long - have been hand-tn- ;. A.. F. Whitney, president . of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen., Train-men., - -- f v - ' "y" Wallace has bnilt his plat form, which he is expected to test, in Minnesota, California and x Oregon primaries, en -and anti-war" gronnds.. Before- the . PGA! holding' its second annual convention here with some 600 delegates from 26 states, Wallace charged the Truman Tru-man administration with paying only lip-service to labor and the nation a progressives. - He accused the president of steering the Democratic party alongside "big business" and the "Wall street interests' toward LEHI Mrs. Winnie , Thomas Giles, 62, former resident of Lehi, died Thursday at her home in Huntington Park, Cel., after a lingering lin-gering illness, Lehi relatives learned Friday. Mrs, Giles was born Sept. 12, 1885 at Lent, a daushter of Wil liam and Ellen Barnes Thomas. She resided in Lehi until moving to Huntington Park 12 years ago. She was a member of the LDS church and active in the Lehi Third ward and in the Hunting ton Park ward Relief societies. She was married to Dennis Giles Dec. 12. 1906 in Lehi. She is survived by her husband, a son and three daughters, Daryl cues, Mrs. Russell Peterson and Mrs. Alvin Duncombe, Huntington Park; and Mrs. Fred B. May, Loa Angeles; six brothers and sisters, W. C. Thomas, Blackfoot, Ida.; Mrs. J. C. Wanlass, Lehi; Mrs. E. J. Hunter and Mrs. Otto Schwarz- rock, Provo; Mra. U. Ashton Jones, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Roy E. Francis, Morgan. Funeral services will be con ducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. in Lehi Fifth LDS ward chapel, by War ren uoates, bishop. Friends -may call at the Wing mortuary, Lehi, Monday, and at the home of J. C. Wanlass, Lehi, Tuesday from 10 a.m. until time of funeral. Burial will be in-Lehi cemetery. There is no" difference between a railroad ana a railway in tne United States, where the terms are used Interchangeably. New Construction (Continues) from Page One) will be In the field by the end of tne weea - George A. Lewis. 371 North Center, Lehi ' Lehi and Cedar Valley; LaGrande Adamson, RFD box 82, American Fork Alpine and Hyiand; Henry S. Chipman, 445 Thornwood Drive, American! Fork American Fork; Benjamin Walker. Pleasant Grove Pleas ant Grove and Lindon; S. Hj Blake, Rt, No. 1 Box 388A, Provo Orem, Geneva and Vineyard Lyla A. Bell, 159 North 6th East, fnnrsri Ml TTmwt ath NArth Pmm --East Provo-. H. Lewis Clegg. 501 South 4th East. Sprinaville Ironton and Sprineville: Chris M. Sorensen, Rt No. 1 Box 151, SpringvtUe Mapleton, Thistle; Birdseye. Tuck er and Colton: Ancus Hales. Sll North 3rd. West, Spanish Fork- Spanish Fork, palmyra and Le land! f, M, Davis, saiem saiem F. R Bellows. RFD No. 2. Spanish Fork Lake Shore; Archie Huff, RFD No.-1, Spanish Fork Benjamin; Ben-jamin; John C Taylor.. 311 South 4th West, Payspn Payson and Spring Lake: Andrew A. Borge-son, Borge-son, Santaauin SantaquJn and Genola; Russell Nelson, Goshen Goshen, Elbert, Mosida and Divi dend, . A butterfly's wing may be made up of more, than a million tiny scales, arranged like the shingles on a roof. (Continued (rem Pare OaeV , glove with the 'big-money boys.' Together,' Wallace told approxM mately 600 s delegates . .from' 28 states, the two parties are aiding an inflation wmcn aireaay t setting off a chain reaction which can result in the most devastating explosion in the nation's history .t , Wallace said the president made ne honest effort te en- -ftree : Wa" vetf of 'the TafUrs tlartley law, and Instead let I hia senate and house leaders . knew that It would hake no " real difference hew they et i ed ea evtrrlding. The sincere st way to-halt Infla tion, Walaee aald. is to take the profit out of it This can be done by Increasing wages, re imposing excess profits: taxes and reestab lishing price cqntrou. -It is clear that the big profi teering corporations, raking In the largest profits in, all history, must pay Increased wagesJ Increased taxes, and? must - lower prices to stem tbeTnfiatioh for which they are responsible. They can pay the GuerrUlas blew up a train onJbUl and , stni: maka legitimate n railroad In eastern I profits,- he said. G'jc-rrillas Clou Up Trdn on Grec!c Rsilrond ATHENS, Greece. Jan. 17 (UJD the Thessalian Greece today, derailing 20 cars, as the united wauonai special au-kans au-kans commission officially re-Dorted re-Dorted that the Greek xueriilas army has been receiving military aid from Albania, Reliable sources said that In ad dition to blasting the Larlssa-Volos Larlssa-Volos i train.-' guerrillas- also de stroyed two bridges on the Thes salian line. There were no reports In Its second interim report to UN secretary-general Trygve Lie, the UN frontier commission said that "guerrillas operating in Greek territory are being fur nished logistcal support from Al bania. The commission aald that its conclusion was. based on . "care fully-studied" reports from Its military observation team. Although no similar charge was leveled at Bulgaria the commis sion added that ureex-emganan relations were not "cood nelcb- borly" and that Bulgaria had failed to comply with recommendations recom-mendations of the UN general assembly. That Bulgaria favors the guerrillas guer-rillas was indicated "clearly", in a radio speech by Premier- Georgi Dimitrov, Dec, 81, the commis sion said. (Xxeeothur ana sunaay Every Afternoon Satimiavk and Sunday Herald PubUabad Sunday Maralaa Published by the Herald Corporation. Corpora-tion. 80 South first West Street, Provo, Utah, Entered as seeona elan nutter at the postofflee la Prove, Utah. . ttndar th at mi March S, 1S79. Subscription terms by carrier hi Utah county, SIjOO tba anoaUi, fa.OO (or ai inontba. in advance. 1 12.00 the yoar in advance; by mail anywhere ' la the United State or its peases. sioaa, S100 the month.' $$.00 for six months: $11.00 the year ia advanoa. At his press conference earlier in the -day, Wallace said it was too early in 4xia-campaign to tell which , states would furnish 'the bulk -of hia aupport, but , that e figured he would get more Democratic Demo-cratic party votes than , Republican Republi-can in the eatsern states. In the middla we$t, he paid, it might be just the opposite. ' If he were elected, he said, he would count on the people getting get-ting his programs through congress. con-gress. He would go direct! to the people and let them tell their congressmen bow to vote, because "congressmen have to face' the electorate, eventually." CLEVELAND. Jan.17 J. President A. fYr Whitney of the Brotherhood. oX Railroad Train men today resigned from the Progressive Pro-gressive CiUzena of America -in protest of the organiaation'S in dorsement ex ; aienry wauace s third party. " Whitney, long a member etthe PCA'a board oi directors, aald he joined the organization when it was formed ."because I wanted to do my anare wware promoting fulfillment of genuine democracy to this country. My position in. that respect has not changed. "Yet Idealism' must often be UmMred with enousti raaliam to keep lofty goals from being, for ever out ox reacn. - xnat is wny i cannot go along with PCA -ln Its indorsement of a third partar lor the elections of mi." , Electric Motor a Repair . ror Prompt Servtee ; On Motors Si -Appliances CHAPMAN :T ELECTRIC SERVICE 163 East 2nd So, Ph: U1CM (Continued from Pace One) to do about the Marshall plan for European recovery. He said he still thinks the $8,800,000,000 down payment asked by the administration ad-ministration for the first 15 months of the program is necessary neces-sary for its success. tions, which listed' spending of $1739 compared to $22,791 spent in the 1849 election year which had county, state and national offices at stake. A big drop showed show-ed in the weed control fund, with '47 expenditures of $12,858 listed against $27,084 for '46. FOR LATE RESULTS ON ALL BASKETBALL GAMES CALL TOPPS DRIVE INN 2388 ;; 1 1 --. : fc t M If (SE3 GOING BERSERK? 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