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Show THE WEATHER UTAH: i Scattered afternoon clouds . and .widely, scattered afternoon thunderstorms In mountain areas; mostly clear tonight to-night and Thursday; continued warm with little chance In temperature, tem-perature, i Temperatures High 90 Low 57 So They Say Wherever want and scarcity oc-f oc-f car. distribution becomes an affair af-fair of religion. --Canon Edward N. West, Cathe-. Cathe-. "dral of St John the Divine, -New York City. V. SIXTIETH .YEAR, NO. 23 Philadelphia to Okinawa From Philadelphia's Independence Hall, where, on July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was signed, to Okinawa, far-flung outpost near Japan's 'homeland, the national independence for which the Stars and Stripes stands has spread Nations -subjugated by the Nazis in Africa and Europe are liberated peaceful island people of th 2 Pacific hail the rebirth 4 freedom after the tyrannical rule of Nippon. Plane Crash AtflHmore . .The plane crash deaths at! wide independence. Fillmore yesterday of John J. 1 Workers at Geneva, Ironton, the,trailroads and other Barker, 43, pilot, and Mrs. j plants vital to the war needs, re- . j Roma Carpenter, 20, a pas-j ported to work as usual, al I Jfnn minfi senger. both of Provo. was ! though many of them were grant-1 w I U 1 1 wUUIUy probably a "pilot problem" in her first Independence day: T j. which the pilot was either! holiday since 1940. Geneva work-j fl ITS KJ I Ct. frozen to the stick through ;ers were at their jobs for fulls - ns if confusion or a heart attack. 'shifts, but several mines andI KnH flPC This is the opinion of Men m, smelters operated with sketonB" ayilVI UIC9 "vo City airport, who was" at Fill more at the- time and witnessed the crash. ; n TTnn-ic cou t !.io aeronautics inspector' of the CiviijSome lucky. enough to have gasjft to go bver the top. State war;o Air Authbrity. who went by plane to the scene of the crash, said thatl Mr. Barker's last previous medi - cal record will be gone into; thoroughly to determine if an! autoosy will be performed to seeoneer park, sponsored by the if Mr. Barker froze to the stick because of a heart attack. Mr. Barker was stunting at the annual an-nual stock show and race meet at the Millard county seat, when the accident occurred. According to Mr. Christopher- son. the plane which was owned, by the Provo Flying Service, had been thorouqhlv checked and was' hpn fhormiohlv rhnrltpH nnH wa' l?Uf? perfect living it left the Provo airport. . "U W,V'? ha,ve bf,cn a'mo.st a" :, ',r'u . ,. -"u"- ak'e rc "prm n"i We" aS causing personal injuries. all the controls and if the stick . were let loose it would haveJcv- McCORMlCK FSTATL elled out." ' ISOLD AT AUCTION The Provo airport msuager al- so stated thst it is possible that! Mr. Barker put the plane in "snan roll" and keot eoine uolthe 2b-acre estate of the late when the plane could have stal-Mary Virginia McCormick, heir-led heir-led and eone into n snin Accord- !es of the Chicago harvester fam ing to Mr. Christooherson the!y. nas oeen disposed oi lor sim.- plane circled 12 to 15 times as it1 125, at a public administrator's spun to the ground. ; auction. The fatal crash, which occurred1 Under the public administra - at 3:ia p.m., shocked hundreds of tor since Miss McCormick s death watchers as they saw the plane in 1941, the state consisted of a plummet to the ground about one(24-room mansion, 14-room guest half mile from the fair grounds, house, 20 servants' rooms and a Sheriff Culbert Robison who took two-story, 14-car garage. (Continued on Page Two) : Utah Pilot Killed In Bomber Crash Sacramento, Cal., July 4 (U.R) An army pilot killed in the crash of an A-26 medium bomber 10 miles northeast of here Monday Mon-day was identified today as F9 Clayton B. Sullivan of Leeds, Utah. McClelland field officials said his next of kin was Mrs. Shirley O. Sullivan, also of Leeds, Utah, but it was not determined if she was his wife or mother. Sullivan was stationed at ftose-crans ftose-crans field, St. Joseph. Mo., and was taking off from McClellan to return there when the crash occurred. He was alone in the plane. PAGE 2. 'SShSSS.'SSS't'SJf" DAILY HERALD Pilot, Passenger Meet Death In Crash at Fillmore (Continued from Page One) immediate charge was one of UTAH'S ONLY SOUTH OF SALT M 4 v "J ? ' I ' i y 1 i m , La ; ,,.!- (I i 'vx - ? - ; V' . . V - .'""V ' ' V v "ft Sv:" ' ( ..v.-..y.-.-.:-.: . " . , .X- -WtflWHiyri -. . - It 1 ' :; i " - &rv " . " ; , - j - t " "SV v 1 Quiet Independence Day Observance Prevails Here Provo Utah county an4 the stated generally, observed Independence day quietly and solemnly, tempered by the realization that thousands of men are fighting for a world- There was little noise, with a' i tight can ! fireworks on firecrackers and and most persons mprpiv "lonfprf" nut the Hav coupons flocked tp the lake. theinance "J??1"66 officials gave canyons and lavorite fishing : spots. Only celebration in Provo was a patriotic observance at the Pi- Bonneville ward. A rodeo in Le-hi Le-hi attracted big crowds Monday and Tuesday nights, auguring a still bigger turn-out for tonight's show.- Other celebrations were staged at Springville and Payson. ; jT. . Meanwhile, P. L Df uh hiSwavr ureed mllkVJ, t?"' a"ee,ithe. Naona.l Anthem and Dixie! ists to duDTicate last year's Tulv , !i-5u?i A.5,,6?, . , r. . - " "'j traff c fatalities 'i Forest officials reminded those who were able to purchase fire- works that explosives have caus ed many disastrous forest fires as rAaAUEwA, Cal., July 4 (U.R aince valued at a million dollais.' Taft To Carry Fight Against Bretton Woods Monetary Agreement to the Floor of Senate By ANN mCKS United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 4 (U.R) Sen. Robert A. Taft, R., O., said today he would carry his fight against the Bretton Woods monetary mone-tary agreement to the floor of the senate. The senate banking committee last night approved the Bretton Woods proposals 14 to 4. Taft was one of the four voting "No." Afterwards he told reporters he would make a fight "against the whole thing" when it reached the floor. That is expected to be the week of July 16. Taft would not go into details! 16-Year-OId Boy, Circus Employe, Turns Up Missing BILINGS, Mont., July. 4 (U.R) Authorities of three counties had joined with Spokane, Wash., police today in search of Leland the S. O wings, Sheridan Wyo., DAILY LAKE Heavy E-bond sales during the 1 iCW;- uay5 DrouKni u'an ! oumy up to v per cent oi me .quota, wiyi only a lew more aaysi "7" ,l 3 . chance to make the grade. although the rest of the state has practically assured a quota subscription sub-scription for the "Mighty Seventh." Sev-enth." i Utah cobnty's gain was the best! recorded In the state for the day, jumping from 58 to 70 per cent as the war pond purchases poured in. It was conceded that the coun - ity could go over the top provld - 1 J - . j ci T i- M .State war finance o oiaie war unance oinciais pre- 'dieted th! state would attain its $20,000,000 E-b o n d quota by July 7. The state already has attained all other huotas during the Scv- enth war loan drive. Edrd rf. Bff comndingi where the prime mincer employ- TolnV5nday WSTS neral of the Fourth servicifd every $m "v?!i.rat0r5 'nTff thl milfL A ain r,f hmmand at Atlanta, Ga.. whose to coP wlth his "ecklers. L1' Jff the qJUOta' . A Sain ofentrance into city was herald-l j?.D1.:!' Z yearuny, w - i tT', 4 V"""!" lvv" E-bond quotas. murutsnu uotsATAiiufl SAN FtANCISCO, July 4 (UP) a Toky broadcast recorded by the FCCfhas this sage comment today on ihe resignation of Harry Hopkins as presidential adviser. "He is either 'resigning of his own accord or yS being discharged.' dis-charged.' about the nature of the fight he, would make. It appeared, however. that it would consist oi an at tempt to gain senate approval of amendments he sought unsuccessfully unsuc-cessfully do add to the bill in the committee. Taft said he wanted to have the Bretton Woods plan postponed "until conditions are more stable," The bill as it will go before the senate provides for U. S. participation to the extent of about $6)00,000,000 in a $9,100,-000,000 $9,100,-000,000 world bank for recon-structlomand recon-structlomand development and an $8,800,000,000 international stabilization stabil-ization fluid. The bank would make loa-hs to war-ravaged coun- )7 16 - PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. Governors Of Both Parties Bach Charter Resolution Endorsing Charter Presented By Bi-Partisan Committee By ALLEN V. dWlING United Press Staff Correspondent MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich., July 4 ce Governors of the sovereign states .of the American Union'took an unprecedented un-precedented step today toward to-ward world security. In an historic renunciation of partisan sentement, an Independence In-dependence day resolution en-horsing en-horsing the San Francisco charter char-ter was reported to the nation's chiefs of .state at the 37th annual governors conference by it resolution reso-lution committee. The resolution, presented to an assembly of 22 Repulican and 20 Democratic eovernors aDDeared' ta Sss JEKZ !?ppSEh to! partisan approach the question of U. S. foreign policy. pol-icy. It read in part: 'We believ that the San Francisco Fran-cisco charter lays a firm foundation founda-tion upon which future progress of world organization for lasting peace can be made. No more ! worthwhile achievement could be , 1 1 9 1 i 1 reauzea py ireeaom loving men , and women. "We endorse the United Na- tions Charter, as drafted, the ; ,rau,mw" 1Cu, ..u uclMi n prepared a resolution sup-its sup-its prompt approval by the Unit-1 .1 ' ul k,r(l firm cd States senate so that the ca oiaies can ieaa me v-ay in miSj Action on the reso ut'ion cliJ ACllun on me resolution CU-i hovpri a four riav mpotinff of thi conference and followed person al appeals for support of the world pact from President Tru- j asserting he will support the man. Republican Titular Head : charter, argued that " would Thomas E. Dewey and Cmdr.lbe unconstitutional to give the Harold E. Stassen Tnnfnfp T.T. S. TTnitd Nations mnfcrpnpp dPioation Unanimously supported by bi-partisan eovernors executive! committee, the resolution not on- lv renresented the first United i policy since the Declaration of Independence 169 years ago; future legislation creating tne to the day but dedicated this na office of American delegate to the tion to a policy of indivisable In- council.!' terest in the affairs of other Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, peoples. i R.. Mich., who served with Con- Gov. Herbert Maw. Utah, saldjnally as a delegate to the San he felt the contribution of the ! Francisco conference which conference in unifying nationwide! drafted the charter, refused to advocacy of the San Francisco j debate it at this time. Charter represented a "tremend-: He indicated, however, that he ous gain in the field of govern-! did not believe the question of mental wisdom.' Vicksburg Joins In Celebrating Independence Day VICKSBURG, Miss., July 4 (U.R) nno i.nnn o tv,o etrutc Vicksburg ran red with south ern blood, and it took its residents 82 years to forget that it happened on Independence Day. National unity overcame heartaches heart-aches and bitterness and tears to- jday as the city's 24,000 population I rplpriratH th Fourth nf .Tulv for the first time since Vicksbur fell to the Union Armies of Gen. U. S. Grant on July 4, 1863. Thi, lUafinn.nivnn lino fortDH ir , a n-nsnnh in tv, hiitnrv I . V. j , books. Army bands alternated onSLaborite strongholds last r.JH .nM,iaMi for more than three-quarters of a century threw off its wraps to produce the grandest day of festivity this section of the south ,nas ever known". " rr ied far differently from that of the I Yankee' leaders who broke the "backbone of the confederacy." Every civic club in the city was represented in a "Welcome, General" parade which moved past stores and business establishments establish-ments shut tight for the day. Afternoon events included a free barbecue, a baseball game between two service teams, a parade retreat by military police, a family picnic, a military demonstration, demon-stration, tennis ' matches and a water snow. tries for reconstruction. The fund woujd De used to stabilize ex- change values. The banking committee added three amendments that would: 1. Make it clear that none of the fund's resources were to be used for rearmament. 2. Write in as a statement of policy that the U. S. believes international in-ternational agreements must be reached speedily toeliminate "obstacles" "ob-stacles" to orderly world trade. 3. Delete a house amendment which stipulated that when the United States defined the par value of the dollar for the fund it did so in terms of gold. )) ffiRtivsrite UTAH, WEDNESDAY. Night Marshal Badly Slashed By Drunken Man SALT LAKE CITY, July 4 (U.R) William Caloway, Mid-vale Mid-vale night marshal, reportedly reported-ly was slashed acros the head, shoulder and right arm last night by a man he was booking book-ing at Midvale city jail oh a charge of druhkness. The marshall said he had nearly completed the booking when the man, identified as Harold Gessler of Denver, reportedly re-portedly drew a knife from his pocket and attacked the officer. He said he subdued and disarmed dis-armed the man, finally turning turn-ing him over to county sheriffs. sher-iffs. Bushfield Claim Against Charter Gains No Support B JOHN' L- CUTTER SUff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 4 (U.R) Chairman Tom Connally, D., Tex., of the senate foreign relations rela-tions committee today welcomed the support of Sen. Harlan J. Bushfield, R.. S.D.. for the Unit ed Nations Charter but rejected his argument that one section of . 0 it is unconstitutional 4 . lifAanurViilA H rAfifiliitiinM rnm .mja4.A tV a trvxrmrrmf rfr1T- ence meeting at Mackinac island. 1111 tKC V a aav v t Unit-(ound.on upon whicn future pr0gress of world organization for lasting peace can be made Tnerougn tne Kurile islands to the(ese put the torch to a big nospitai a4 nn th rl. nnrfh atiar- Knmharil no turn .Tan-1 (hero a Ha v Ivfnr th Allstralian' . olution today. Bushfield. in a senate speech Nations Council authority to cast la vote which would take this a'country into war "There is 'Thor. 1c nn n..(ion of con- slitutionality mvoivea in xne treaty as it now stands." Connal- even be a factor in the proposed constitutionality can be raised in I connection with the senate's con-; con-; sideratlon of the treaty, sched uled to start next week. Bushfield based his argument on the constitutional provision that only congress can declare war. He took the position that: congress cannot relegate this power to any source, either through the treaty or subsequent legislation. Churchill Booed By Laborites At Closing Rally LONDON. July 4 (U.R) Prime Minister Churchill, ashen-faced and apparently exhausted by his strenuous campaign tour, was booed and leered in East London s - I-U4 wnjrn n Pa Labor party in tomorrows election would "get a thrashing such as never received since it was bron. Organized heckling and shouts of we want labor" interspersed I a 40-minute Churchillian speech at the Walthamstow station, Tive-By-Five' Sheriff Forced To Wear Barrel ROCKFORD, III., July 4 (U.R) Kirk S. King, Rock-ford's Rock-ford's flve-by-five sheriff, wriggled out of his pickle barrel today and into a size 52 suit. The oversized sheriff, plagued pla-gued by an acute shortage of king-sized clothing, draped an empty barrel around his 300-pound frame, pinned his star to the hogshead and stalked over to the local office of-fice of price administration yesterday to make known his dilemma. King had sent his only summer sum-mer suit to the cleaners, he said, and it was a choice of the barrel or nothing. The OPA couldn't do anything any-thing for him but a locaLde-partment locaLde-partment store did. Its manager man-ager heard about the sheriff's difficulties and phoned to say the store had one only one size 52 suit. King paid cash on the line, donned the suit and heaved a sigh of relief. "That " barrel's cool and pretty comfortable," he admitted, ad-mitted, "but it's too heavy to cafry around for long." KewMan To fight ii WASHINGTON. Julv 4 (U.R) Meat Shortage Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson is going to fight the meat shortage, not the OPA, with the extra power granted him by congress, he revealed today. Anderson toia reporters wax on Monday, his first official day on the job, he conferred with Price AS A . - tm iA ' HauiIu JULY 4, 1945 Japanf lames Under 29th Straight Raid Tokyo ays Ring Of Underground Defenses Thrown Around Island By WILLIAM F. TYREE United Press Staff Correspondent GUAM. Julv 4 o.jrJaDan - , , . - . By HUGH CRUMPLER flamed under American; Um d Press w Correspondent bombs and aenal gunfire for, MANILA, July 4 The fa" of Balikpapan ap- the 29th straight day today 1 peared imminent today as veteran Australian troops crack-and crack-and jittery Tokyo broadcasts! ed through light Japanese opposition to capture the last said a vast ring of under-1 .fortified ridge before the smoldering Boreo oil port. ground fortresses was being thrown around their home island to meet the coming vasion. in-. Radio Tokyo' said Japanese' ot Balikpapan, source of one-soldiers one-soldiers and civilians were work-! sixth of the oil consumed by the ing day and night to complete J Japanese war machine, was ex-the ex-the anti-invasion fortifications! pected momentarily. v "around the entire coastline of the Japanese mainland." Unlike the battlefront away from tho hnmol9nH h Amori!l""--BU'i """ "x own e'vS 517.! own eyes what the Japanese can ' do once the enemy is within ouri boundary,' MAvauwaob soiUt Another Japanese spokesman , said 120 American fighters shot 1 un shiDDinff and shore tarsets in t - r o the TOKVO Area todaY. following S he&W flight hlOW bv 450 tO 500 -r V ! oupenoriresses max urea iourjby the plunging fire Of American more of the enemy's industrial! cities- I Simultaneously, Tokyo said an 'American naval force was ranging I A. J"TJ' . " .7 anese strongholds there early, yesterday morning. A partly-in- audible Japanese broadcast said! uie warsmys sneiieu rweiiu ana Sifka Teraska islands. The fighter foray over the To-: kyo area apparently was designed ! I to cover a scouting mission by,uf : .:. . Z CvT !; three Superfortresses that f lew i :j j uvcr slern nonnu l inm-My todav Tokvo said rthe Americans a&,.ri aUUatipns reasC north and south anese homes shipping and "civilian The attack carried the non-itop American assault on the Japanese homeland through its 29th straight day. It followed by only a few hours a pre-dawn Superfortress raid that spread fire and ruin through Kochi. Tokushkma and Takamatsu on Shikoku island and the Honshu seaport of Himeji. Upwards of 3,000 tons of fire bombs were showered down on the packed industrial cities and returning fliers said great conflagrations con-flagrations were raging below when they left the target areas. li was tne iirst time any ot the (U.R) Thomas Paine, who gave!sor, ired M. Vinson, nut nis ad-four ad-four cities had been bombed in ; the United States of America its ! ministration in OES has also been force and the first Superfortress blow at Shikoku. The four-way attack was the seventh in an eight-day period during which some 2.050 to 2,250 B-29's dropped 14,500 tons of fire and demolition bombs on 25 Japanese Jap-anese cities. Tokyo acknowledged severe damage" in the raid and broadcast the grimmer admission that 4,-900,000 4,-900,000 Japanese in five major cities Tokyo, Osaka, Yokohama, Nagoya and Kobe had been killed kill-ed or bombed out of their homes by Superfortress attacks. Truman Calls On Nation to Honor Creed of Liberty WASHINGTON, July 4 (U.R) President Truman in an Independence Inde-pendence Day statement- today called on Americans to honor the nation's "creed of liberty" and the men and women of the armed arm-ed forces "who are carrying this creed with them throughout the world." Noting that U. S. forces are scattered acros the . face of the earth Mr. Truman said the peoples of lands where they were located would "understand why we celebrate cele-brate for freedom is dear to the hearts of men everywhere." He urged the nation to celebrate cele-brate 'the day with "humility" and with confidence that "we soon may crush the enemy in the Pacific." Pa-cific." WPB Order On Up Automobile WASHINGTON, July 4 (U.R War Production Chief J. A. Krug, in a move to eliminate-one of the chief bottlenecks in the manufacture manu-facture of passenger cars, has ordered or-dered a 25 per cent reduction in war plant inventories of sheet steel. He directed a similar cut in inventories in-ventories of strip steel, used in the production of household ap- nliances and many other items The WPB chairman said that recent military cutbacks are creating large stocks of idle and excess steel in the hands of munitions muni-tions contractors. "It must be put to work in the reconversion industries," he said. German Psychology Manuscripts Sent t To BYU Profesor Several manuscript copies of lectures, seminar studies and other writings of Dr. Hanz Prlnz-horn, Prlnz-horn, eminent German psychologist, psycholo-gist, have been received by M. Wilford Poulson, professor of psychology at Brigham Young university, from Sergeant James Brown, of the U. S. army servina COMPLETE UNITED PRESS TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVICE Fall of Balfcpapan, Jap Borneo Oil Port, Expected at Any Time Veteran Australian Troops Crack Through Light Japanese Opposition to Capture Last Fortified Ridge Before The City me two major ainieias covering jtauKpapan aireaay were in Allied hands and field dispatches said only a small, isolated Japanese force barred the. way to the city. A high-ranking Australian commander said the fall United Press War Correspond- lent Richard G. Harris reported . . . . , . casly ach'1" ,, . k aJ - 4" being held'By CHARLES H. HERROLD up for almost 24 hours by a fuel tank explosion that flooded the slope with blazing oil. r. vc;as ugiia avi uiui munimio anrl IaIH Hicnothoc in AW K4- ika T -kriAe a eKalran VCU bllQ IUC MapPUVOf Oillll warships standing offshore in the Macassar strait, were abandoning the port. An Aneta news agency j report said the retreating Japan-; .JT'lslsL V:T,.l" , i landing, killing an unknown, I number of patients MacArthur announced that the oepiiiggaiig ainiciu bia nines taBl !of Balikpapan had been captured; extensive use' of sanction Manggar field four miles farther , v,, ",c mum uumu !St lABct In milpt lnnff On the, western shore of Borneo.'115. rrj 2t"i Australian forces dvne6tfLLPV' -LV"! Iwltl miles (? way from Beauffort to Jesselton, behind a heavy aerial and naval barrage. Uoiat7.nmv m SS, iSK on Mindanao they captured the Agusan valley strongpoint of Waloe. Tardy Justice ForThos. Paine NEW ROCHELLE. N.Y.. Julv 4 name and, in some measure, the fighting courage of its convictions, was restored to citizenship in this suburban city today 136 years after his death. "An injustice our city did him 139 years ago while he was yet alive," was formally repented andV corrected by Mayor Stanley W. Church at Fourth of July ceremonies cere-monies on the farm deeded the revolutionary - patriot by the; grateful state of New York. New Rochelle denied Paine the right to vote in 1806, maintaining he had lost American citizenship by becoming an honorary citizen of France. Today Mayor Church proclaimed: proclaim-ed: "I . . . do reinstate posthumously post-humously Thomas Paine, first citizen of America, to full citizenship citizen-ship and the rights thereof in this city from July 4, 1945, onward." Goering flight Rumor Denied LONDON, July 4 (U.R) The war office refused today to confirm or deny a report that Hermann Goering had been flown to Britain recently, with several other high Nazi leaders. j A - "There have been lots of such stories in recent weeks," a spokesman said. "Someone has seen Goering in a railway station. Someone has seen him in a plane. Someone has seen him on a road. But we have nojnformatino as to his whereabouts." Steel to Speed Manufacture The automobile industry is the chief user of sheet steel: Auto manufacturers who were authorized author-ized to make 245,000' civilian cars in the next six months are de pendent on ! non-priority 'steel on the free market to meet their assigned as-signed production quotas. The permissible inventory for sheet and strip steel was reduced from 60 to 45 days supply, effec- tlve July 9. Virtually all users of this type of steel must cancel or reduce any orders after that date which have alrarfv kn i.vd where the scheduled deliveryifnts of the Japanese garrison in would result in excess of the 43 headlong retreat toward Xhungtu. day's supply. 20 -miles to the northeast ' What About Provos Proposed Charter Form of Government? EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the third and last Installment of a statement relative to the proposed charter form of government for Provo. submitted sub-mitted for publication by the civic welfare committee. At a regular meeting of the civic welfare committee held Jun PRICE FIVE CENTS Davis Favors eiZUTe Ut United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 4 (UPJ Stabilization Director- William I H. Davis, who "threw the book" at United . Rubber Workers (CIO) strikers at Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Akron, O., appeared roaHv iiAav wmMmnH ftH eral Seizure of th plant to end the walkout there now in its third week. Davis may ask president Tru- .... .. . . , . hours to take over the plant in ArHor irk tfAt TrrA 1 1 t i rr nf tirade nian wixnin me nexx xo a jj y,v th armv nH naw rolling again j u against the workers yet attempted by his office to bring an unauthorized un-authorized walkout to an end. He j has requested reclassification of oTll awards such as shift premiums and vacations. With federal seizure of the plant the strikers wil become liable li-able to the penalties of the war labor disputes act. The law provides pro-vides $5,000 fine and a year in prison for persons convicted of encouraging others to remain away from work or preventing others from getting to jobs in a federally-operated plant. ! Tliis was probably the first case in which it was possible to use several ot the sanctions provided by executive orders. Davis has made wider use of the sanctions than his predeces- marked by speedier and more numerous nu-merous federal seizures. Mr. Truman Tru-man has seized almost as many companies for non - compliance with WLB orders in slightly less than three months than Mr. Roosevelt did since the WLB was established. Davis' office said he will continue con-tinue the policy of full sanction wherevere possible and quick seizures to prevent dangerous in terruptions to war production. - Congress Takes Holiday Respite WASHINGTON, July 4 (U.R) " The house took a holiday respite from its fair employment practice committee dispute today but saw no immediate prospect of breaking break-ing the deadlock blocking approval ap-proval of funds for 19 other war agencies. Rep. Vito Marcantonio, A-L, N.Y., leaders of the FEPC sup porters, said they were prepared to carry on the fight "all sum mer, all fall and all winter." Previously Pre-viously he had said only "all summer. A rules committee maneuver late yesterday made it possible for 10 war agencies to be knocked from the pending $752,000,000 appropriation ap-propriation bill the second being sent through congress. The first was scrapped by the house appropriations ap-propriations committee two days ago afteri the senate had inserted $250,000 for the FEPC. . Chairman Clarence Cannon, D.. Mo., of the house appropriations committee asked the rules committee com-mittee for a special rule, waiving parliamentary points of order against' items in the bilL Since FEPC was not among those items it would be subject to a point of order unless the rule was amended amend-ed on the floor. The rules committee, however, refused Cannon's request, making 10.nther agencies subject to Dointi of order when the bill is called, before the house tomorrow. CmXEsE DRIVE JAPS INTO RETREAT CHUNGKING. Julv 4 fliwL- Chinese troops who , recaptured Liuchene ; 15 milea "north of the American? air base city of Liuchow. . todav dravtt mn- to be derived from a charter form of city government. Due consideration consider-ation of - this matter leads us to believe that - this form of city government would be of considerable consider-able advantage to the citizen in the administration of the city government under which he must live, and which advantage can- |