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Show TEMPERATURES SUto HulfiiSUUM Max Mia SI ZSISaa Fraa. . 8 $ Salt Lake . 41 11 Ui Aagele 74 JJ Ogea .... 4S 11 Ut Vegas 7 S B( . S 34 DTr ... SS 27 YelWwstM SS 17;CMcat ... 54 47 4 4C New York si st Seattle ... St 4 i Atlanta ... SIS rtUa , caiU .. OVERCAST T with snow showers north portJoa this afternoon and tonight. Partly, cloudy Saturday. Continued cold.1 Low temperatures Saturday morning- 25-35. SDCTY-FIRST YEAR, NO. 1 10 PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS in v n iaiirorn ia ueer Hunter Succumbs To Crash Hurts Long Beach Lumberman Dies In St. George Hospital From Injuries Suffered Tuesday; Companion Fatally Injured In Same Crash ST. GEORGE, Utah. Nov. 1 (U.R) William W. Furr, 41, Long Beach, Cal., lumberman, died yesterday in a St. George hospital of injuries suffered Tuesday m an automobile auto-mobile accident near here. Fred E. Sutton, Hemet, Cal., also was injured fatally in the mishap which brought death to Furr, and died within a few hours of the accident. The two were returning to their homes after participating participat-ing in the Utah deer hunt. . Utah County Tax Collections Running 50 Ahead of 1945 Utah county tax collections to 1 668.15. Last year by the end of the end of October are running October, only 3,087 notices had nearly 50 percent ahead of last been cancelled for a total of i life year ior me same period, according ac-cording to a report today from County Treasurer Frank T. Bennett. Ben-nett. At the time the treasurer's office of-fice closed yesterday. 4.090 tax notices had been paid and cancelled, cancel-led, bringing in a total of $149,- Coal Trucker Saved By Rail In Accident Lyle Davis, 32, Price, narowly escaped death or serious injury early this morning on the high railroad bridge at Thistle, when a tire blew on his heavily load- i . . . . ; a j vviiiiuwaivn twist uv" ed coal truck and he barely L., .......i k j,.- a payable on the regular Nov. 30 deadline: $104,325.78 in paid taxes. The 1946 returns gave rise to hopes that collections this year will at least equal last year's percentage of between 96 and 97 percent. Meanwhile, the county commission commis-sion announced that taxes are due by Nov. 30. and that no extension of time will be granted. The announcement an-nouncement was made today on expiration of the period during which taxpayers may petition for such an extension. The law decrees that such petitions, pe-titions, signed by at least 100 taxpayers, must be filed in time to permit two legal publications of the request before Nov. 1. The county commission is then empowered, em-powered, if it so wishes, to grant a 20-day extension. Since no such petitions have been received, and only one in quiry, the commission today de- OPA Removes Price Controls On 100 Items Local Price Control Boards To Be Closed Monday. OPA Announces By HELEXE MONBERG United Press Staff Correspondent Washington, Nov. i (U.R) OPA today removed trice controls on nearly 100 items, including some dairy machinery and machine tools, matches, and paper diapers. Continuing piecemeal release re-lease of its master decontrol order, OPA said it was discarding controls on these items because they are not important in business or living costs or because they are in good supply. The OPA now has passed the halfway mark in decontrolling decon-trolling the nation's economy. Daring the peak of wartime controls, 80 per cent of (he nation's economy was under price ceilings. Now the figure has drooped to less than 40 per cent, with much of the decrease registered during the past three weeks under President Presi-dent Truman's decontrol speedup speed-up order. Late yesterday. OPA announced an-nounced that its remaining local price control, boards would be closed Monday. This means dismissal dis-missal notices for 8.613 employes as of Nov. 12. OPA area offices will take over rent control functions. A previous announcement re vealed that controls had been re moved on various kinds of wear ing annarel which account for 10 per cent of the nation's clothing j offices in Salt Lake City, as well purchases. These included men's " control offices throughout and women's hats, neckties, bath ing suits and trunks, some fabric gloves, handbags, belts and sus penders. British Embassy in Rome Damaged by Sabotage r r - i V 1 i- T- lime bombs planted in two suitcases on doorstep of British Embassy in Rome. Italy, demaged half of the block-long structure beyond repair and injured three persons, one critically. Radiophoto shows damage to main entrance hall. ewis U Nine Utah OPA Price Control Boards Closed After more than four-years Predicted Tidal Wave Fails To Make Appearance at Oahu Opeia UMW : Wage Talks Lewis May Withhold Contract Demands Pending Krug's Return; Policy Changes Necessary Before Wages Can Be Increased By RAYMOND LAIIR United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (U.R) John L. Lewis' United Mine Workers (AFL) move into a government conference room today for negotiations which may direct the next turn in federal wage policy and fix chances for labor peace this winter. Reluctantly waiting at the bargaining table were officials offic-ials of the federal coal administration which has operated the soft coal mines since their seizure last May. Lewis indication whether he I " United States Bucks Paying Half UN Costs escaped going over the bridge to the tracks 40 feet below. Only the steel guard rair saved him, according, to J3eBfitySheriff1 Merrill Smith who investigated. Davis was turning onto highway 89 with 11 tons of coal when the weight shift caused a tire to blow and the truck skidded for the guard rail. The rail was bent badly, but held. Both drivers received charges today from State Highway Pa-.By RICHARD C. GLASS trolman Kenneth Harris; follow- United Press Staff Correspondent ina a collision shortly after mid-1 MIAMI. Fla., Nov. 1 (U.R) W You're Wrong, It's $750,000, Says Errant Cashier night near the No. 3 gate at the Geneva Steel plant. Lymon O. Smith, 32, Beverly Place. Orem, was charged with not having a TTtah roorietratinn and .Tnhn F Prentice, 19, Lehi. was charged today the correct figure was with not having a driver's license r rY u J 4J, . w i;7. k.. -k. I Nickel was arrested last nizht a i... ... -t.at .inn. th- ihew hours after New York police . ln. . , 7 broadcast an alarm for him. De Arthur Nickel, 46, a smiling $60 a-week cashier arrested in the lobby of a swanky Miami Beach hotel and accused of embezzling $600,000 from a New York firm, hishway for 105 feet from the point .of impact. The cars collided col-lided as Printice came onto the highway and Smith was on the highway traveling south. 92-Ton Transport Plane Test Set tectives Ernest Harrison and Clarence Huddlcston took him in to custody as he emerged from the elevator of the Colony hotel where he had been staying since Wednesday under the name of Philip Haas of Baltimore. When the detectives told him he was wanted for embezzling $800,000 from the Mergenthaler Linotype Co., New York, Nickel rcpiiea: "You re wrong. It was BURBANK, Cal.. Nov. 1 (U.R) j $750,000." The maiden test flight of the t r",tff k t Zr? ,gM ex; Lockheed Constitution. 180-pas-! ""J ?"Lr l10 T' . . ' . ... T i lurtner on the charges, saying he senger, 92-ton tranpsort built forihad an attorney a aj g t r HONOLULU. T. H.. Nov. 1 (U.R) Beach residents of the Hawaiian Ha-waiian Islands evacuated their operation. Utah's nine remaining homcs and fled to tne inJand hills office of price control boards early today when Pacific Fleet closed to the public today, ac-Headquarters warned that a tidal cording to H. Grant Hins, dis-i wave might strike the islands, but trirt riircrtor. Ivin iri. however. i they returned several hours later I that the district price and rent when the wave failed to appear. The navy had warned that a violent earthquake in the Aleutians Aleu-tians had churned un a wave that the state including Provo will lwaa expected to strike the islands remain open. A telegram was sent late Thursday by Mr. Ivins to all The newest list of nearly lOOI-fi V1 SLb items includes a number of dairy machine items such as chums. milking machine, cream andJnilk ' a a a ' m separators, ice reirigeraiea mux 4ot)!e.ftrlgrieuTtwal and-Bperftt; ed sprayers -and dusters. Wooden and paper matches were decontrolled because the match supply is equal to demand. Other machinery items decontrolled decon-trolled were gasoline and diescl engines, certain sizes of pumps, a number of incandescent lighting fixtures for industrial and commercial com-mercial use. Among metal products decon trolled ai- fluid milk shipping tviiMiucis, wilt; eiuui i:iiik lau- Salt Lake City, Ogden. Provo Logan, Richfield, Cedar City i vernal, .Cphraim and Price thanking "board members and OPA personnel IocJth "patriotic and unselfish work performed. It was a goocL-Job, well done at 5:49 a. m. HST (8:19 a. m. Evidence Proves Japanese Plans To Attack U. S. As you know, the accelerated decon trol price control program hasiRv PETER KALISCIIER removed price ceilings from most, of the commodities previously supervised by local boards. For that reason, board offices will be closed November "4. Paid personnel per-sonnel will be given 30-day termination ter-mination notices on November 12. Between now and the date when services are terminated. United Press Staff Correspondent TOKYO, Nov. 1 (U.R) The trial of 27 leading Japanese accused of war crimes approached its climax today as the prosection outlined the plan that touched off the Pacific Pa-cific war. This phase of the trial marked the introduction of prosecution ric, school' and passenger bus bo-lhey will do the work necessary evidence to show that Japanese dies and parts i v-o.... Lumber items decontrolled in- f 'milahr . telegrams were sent elude Redwood cigar box lumber. .ut to chairmen of outboard pan-Sawn pan-Sawn circplar heading for fiber elfs working under the direction shipping drums and Walnut lum-!f pr,e oar- Mr. Iyins, accom-h accom-h panied by W. Adrian Wright. Controls also were removed on!!cputy !'.strict. directr. left foi icution would furnish its strongest a number of chemical products oenv" 'nursaay nignt to attemi including fused quartz and fused -V"niL,c.ntf 31 ne.rcglT? , ,in. office relative to liquidation of OPA activities. OPA local board' offices originally orig-inally developed out of the 95 militarists regarded diplomatic "conversations" as a smokecreen for a conquest they hoDed would yield them a substantial part of the far cast. It was expected that the prose silica Machine tools decontrolled include in-clude connecting rod aligners. dogs, hand operated dowel and was set today for Nov. 9. Police said he had $700 cash on a crew oi pilots ana engineers him uhn h 9rr.ct who directed the monster four- Nickel had been sought since engined monoplane s extensive Monday when he disappeared ground tests will be ab.oard when from his home at Freeport. Long the craft takes off from Lockheed air terminal The ship first was revealed to Island, a few hours before police arrived to arrest him. Police said the six-foot, one the public Aug. 22 when it was; inch, 170-pound, dapper clerk rolled from the closely-guarded hangar where it was assembled. Designed as a . personnel and cargo carrier, the Constitution has a speed of 300 miles per hour and a miles. was a "genial prisoner. He was held on a technical vagrancy charge until New York police arrived ar-rived with a warrant. Accountants and auditors had range in excess of 5,000 1 discovered the embezzlement last It is capable of carrying a pay load of 69,000 pounds. The ship has a 189-foot wing span. 156-foot overall length and a single tail fin that rises 50 feet above the ground. week-end when they went over ihLs books. They said he had matie jout approximately 100 checks, rod machines, file holders, cards I re-rationmg boards set up by ithe civilian defense council in (Continued on Pace Two) Livestock Still In Short Supply WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 l.t: Acting Secretary of Agriculture Norris E. Dodd reports that livestock live-stock on the' hoof still is in short supply despite the nation's rapidly rap-idly refilling retail meat counters. Dodd also listed most cereals, dairy products, beer, distilled spirits, soft drinks, candy and jams and jellies on his November short supply list. The only foods dropped from the list were buckwheat flour, fresh oranges, canned vegetables and vegetable juices, cured fish and fresh and frozen Atlantic sea herring and alewives. All of these evidence against Hideki Tojo, the militarist who became premier two months before Pearl Harbor and who was Japans wartime leader until the invasion of Sia-pan Sia-pan in July, 1944. Associate Prosecutor Carlisle W Tliuoinc Witntnn.Salpm N. C. iaicr. ooarns were conson-; told the court of Japan s diplo-datcd diplo-datcd so that OPA operated 68lmatic offensives and her secret price control and rationing j mjijtarv preparations, boards. After V-J Day. and the The "prosecution will introduce rationing program was discon-j rccords of heretofore secret cab-tinucd, cab-tinucd, the number of boards wa;.;inot ana prjvv council meetings reduced to 25 and then to the and captured Japanese army and nine to be closed Friday. lnavv documents. Higeins promis- At tne peak or the war. Ju!y.;H He said the evidence would PST), but at 7 a. m. HST (9:30 a. m. PST) only slightly abnormal abnor-mal waves had appeared on the shores of Oahu and they were gradually receding to normal. The navy issued its warning warn-ing through Honolulu police who ln turn alerted thousands of residents along the beach areas north of Diamond Head, many of whom had seen their homes demolished or badly damaged in the devastating tidal wave that hit the islands last April 2. By 5 a. m. HST (7:30 a. m. PST) most of the beach residents bad left their homes and were cowering in the hills awaiting the wave: - - . Wave water rose several feet near Koko Head, slightly north east of Diamond Head, but other wise there was no unusual wave action reported. Seismographs throughout the United States recorded the Aleutian Aleu-tian quake around 3:25 a. m. PST (11:55 p. m. Wednesday, HST). The California Institute of Tech nology seismologists listed its in- tensity as 7Vi on a scale ranging from 1 (minor) to 10 (gratest). The quake that generated the tidal wave last April had an intensity in-tensity of 7 12, according to the Pasadena seismologists. The tidal wave which hit last April killed 173 persons, injured 291 and. left thousands thous-ands homeless in the island teritory and caused $20,000,-000 $20,000,-000 damage. gave no would unfold his new contract demands today or treat the first session as routine, pending the return of Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug from the west next week. Krug named Capt N. II. Collisson, federal mine administrator, ad-ministrator, to represent him at the meeting. Both wanted Lewis to negotiate with the mine owners, bnt Lewis wanted a new agreement with the government first. Neither Krug nor Collisson has conceded that Lewis could reopen the present agreement, although Lewis viewed their invitation as amntancc of hi claim that the contract could be reopened. He"te " much , as 25 per cent to was reported to have a commit- the annual budget, ment on -that count from other. Senator Arthur Vandenberg, administration officials. !(R Mich told the UN gencraj Meanwhile, Krug's aides tookjassembly's budgetary committee the position that they would at, that the proposal by a committee least hear what the miners had:of experts for a 50 per cent U. to say. g snare was "entirely inadequate But what the government does to the total considerations which about Lewis' demands will bejghould be given international as-more as-more important. The HVa-centijessjnentj wage increase granted tne unwi By ROBERT J. MANNING United Press Staff Corespondent LAKE SUCCESS. N. Y Nov. 1 (U.R) The United States today vigorously opposed proposals that the U. S. pay half the United Nations' operating expenses but indicated willingness to contrib- in the government agreement last May war the-maXlffiranv lltrw-p eral plea for economy In the ygndenberg, making & gen- 1945. OPA operated through 5661 local board offices. An army of 125,000 unsalaried board members, mem-bers, assisted by 110,000 addi- show: 1. President Roosevelt sent a triple priority telegram to Em- narin Hirrthifn fhpniicrh Amhas- tional volunteer workers, helped sador Joseph Grew in Tokyo in control prices on eight million' hich tho resident made a Der- commodities, issued one billion (Continued on Page Two) Denver Butchers Out On Strike DENVER, Nov. 1 (U.PJ Ap- Stocks Advance 1 to 5 Points NEW YORK. Nov. 1 (U.R) Stocks advanced 1 to 5 points today to-day with the general average at a new high since mid-October. Volume receded moderately from yesterday's pace. Most stocks held gains from the opening to the close. A few, including in-cluding Bethlehem Steel and American Telephone, had a period peri-od of weakness but rallied later. A new buying spurt just before closing time left the list at the day's best levels. controls Sugar and sugar solutions including in-cluding syrup and molasses corn ranging from $2,000 to $9,000 to sugar, corn syrup and rough ana fictitious firms since November milled rice are the only foods and (Continned on Page Two) feed products still under ceilings. already had been freed of price j proximately 1,500 meat cutters jtm2 ermperor which the president made a per sonal appeal to avert war. This telegram was delivered to Grew 10 'a hours late because of "deliberate "delib-erate orders" given Japanese postal pos-tal authorities to delay all such messages. 2. Shigenori Togo, former foreign for-eign minister and a defendant, lied to Grew about the time he gave the president's message to Treezeout' Campaign Eyed By Colorado Springs Landlords and clerks today left their jobsi because of a breakdown in negotiations nego-tiations involving approximately 130 stores and markets in Denver. Den-ver. The vote to strike was forthcoming forth-coming at a joint meeting this 3. Tojo and some other defend ants took part Nov. 5, 1941 at an Hopes Brighten For Settlement Of Pilot Strike WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (U.R) i Prospects brightened today and ' t t eaitlflmant r4 (Via 1 A a V' old strike by Transcontinental & Western air pilots. Chairman Frank P. Douglass of the national mediation board reported re-ported himself optimistic as he continued separate talks with TWA and the striking air line pilots association (AFL). "I think there is some hope of finding a formula for getting the planes back in operation and sending the difference to arbitration," arbitra-tion," he said. "Everybody is in a better mood. I'm hopeful of an early settlement." Douglass recommended that the dispute, which centers chiefly about higher wages for pilots of four-motored planes, be referred 10ft KILLED IN COMMUNAL RIOTS LONDON, Nov. 1 (U.R) An exchange ex-change Telegraph agency dispatch dis-patch from India said today that officials had announced that 100 persons had been killed and 150 COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Nov. 1 (U.R) Colorado Springs landlords, demanding removal of OPA rent controls, today considered consid-ered turning, off the heat and letting let-ting their tenants "sit and freeze to death." A "freezeout" campaign was suggested last night at a rally of the El Paso County Landlords association by Frank A. Mobley, attorney for the association. "Give them 10 days notice and then shut off the gas," Mobley said. "It will serve a lot of tenants ten-ants right." He said he had found a legal loophole which would allow landlords land-lords to freeze out their tenants. ten-ants. He said Colorado state law Meat Cutters Union, Local No 634, and the Retail Clerks Union, Local No. 7. both of which are affiliated with the American Federation Fed-eration of Labor. a tenant after a 10-day eviction! Negotiations had been under notice has been served. way between officials of Denver's Therefore," Mobley declared, larger chain stores and union of "If you are not renting to a tenant, you don't have to abide injured in communal riots in Bi- provides that tne occupant of a bar province. dwelling is not longer considered by provisions of the OPA. He proposed that each member mem-ber of the Landlords association take it upon himself to instigate the "freezeout." "We can be accused of conspiracy con-spiracy if we got on record as having voted to conduct this move as a group," ie said. "But by taking tak-ing individual action we won't be violating the law." Mobley also proposed , that Colorado Springs landlords refuse re-fuse to re-rent any homes or apartments. He said "lots of landlords land-lords can afford to do it" long enough to make themselves heard. decided that Japan would ad vance southward even if it meant war with the United States, Britain Brit-ain and the Netherlands. 4. On Sent. 6. Taio called a con- ! morning of the Amalgamated ference at which it was decided to proceed with military preparations. prepara-tions. At the same time, it was decided to continue conversations in Washington. However, if they did not end "satisfactorily" for Japan by the middle of October, Japan would attack. "As the hours of peace ran out. it was Japan who kept watching the clock," Higgins said. "Pearl Harbor and Singapore were but tactical objectives." The grand strategy caned tor imperial conference where it wast a three-man mediation board " . i Ua ninrtncaH that A4n cino rnffm ficials for more than two weeks, but no agreement on the new contract could be reached. The contract expired at midnight last . '"a JZ 71 . !, u DylNew Zealand and India,' UIU31 iMuwua uwfc uie an mc was He nroDOsed that each side choose one board member and selected a third by agreement or mediation board designation. The union is asking about $15,-000 $15,-000 annually for pilots of four- motored ships and a $1,200 a year bonus for pilots flying overseas. UN pointed out that the budgetary experts, in their report and recommendation, had themselves admitted that their estimate at best was an "educated guess" and they didn't really know how much money would be required. Vandenberg opened the budget fight as the assembly shifted from Flushing Meadows to nearby Lake Success and split into corn- able under present wage policy Any contemplated policy changes must be adopted before new wage concessions can be granted to the miners. Lewis was expected to ask a reduction in the miners' 54-hour 54-hour work week with pay raises to offset, at least in part, the resulting cut in weekly take home pay. An indication of how a strike would affect the country was, mi t tees for the "shirt-sleeve given by the solid fuels ad-j phase of its work before consid-minlstration consid-minlstration last night. , Thejering in plenary session such con-agency con-agency reported the nation's coal t troversial issues as the Spanish stockpiles on Oct. 1 contained question-,- world disarmament and az,J07,uuu ions, a .w-aay suppiy.!ne veto. There was a 3o-aay supply on hand Sept. 1. There was a 58-day supply last spring before the April-May strikes, which the White House termed a "national disaster." Because of unequal distribution distribu-tion of stocks, a strike would have an immediate effect on some consumers. The SFA report showed electric utilities had an average 70-day supply Oct. 1: by-product coke ovens, 23 days; steel and rolling mills, 35 days; cement mills, -41 days; Class 1 Railroads, 30 days: other industries, 58 days; retail dealers, 12 days. 3 Countries Ask Seat At Peace Treaty Meeting WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (U.R) The Netherlands, Beligum and Luxembourg today served notice on the big four that they want to be represented at the foreign ministers meeting that will draft the German peace treaty. Charging big four domination in writing German peace terms, the three small nations formally appealed for representation in notes to the United States, Britain, Brit-ain, Russia and France. Ambassadors of the three countries coun-tries advised Undersecretary of State Dean Acheson that their nations na-tions want to share in the responsibility re-sponsibility of determining Germany's Ger-many's future status and frontiers. Meanwhile, the question of permanent home for the world parliament was thrown open again when tne united biaies asked UN to consider the greater New York and San Francisco areas, as well as the Westchester county. New York, and Fairfield county. Conn., areas in its consideration consid-eration of a permanent site. The U. S. move was taken as an effort ef-fort to head off reported backstage back-stage attempts to shift United Nations Na-tions back to Europe, perhaps to Geneva, Switzerland. Secretary - general Trygve Lie opened the proceedings of the budgetary committee by submitting an est imated budget calling for expenditures expend-itures of $23,790,008 during 1947, a boost of more than $4,000,000 over the 1946 expenses. ex-penses. "Let's not bankrupt peace! Vandenberg warned after Lie presented his report. He warned that "premature expansion" of United Nations might mean that UN actually would retrogress to the point "when any peace-loving nation no longer can afford to belong." Vandenberg emphasized that he was arguing solely about the administrative ad-ministrative budget in suggesting; that the U. S. might be inclined to pay as much as one-third of the expenses of some operational budgets such as that of the International In-ternational refugee organization. Nobody Yants to Run U. S. Zone In Germany; Truman May Have to Decide Higgins under way. However, the meat cutters and clerks held an early morning session to decide what action to take, and concluded the session by voting to strike. Management and labor heads held a night-long session which ended In discord at 3 a. m. today. The joint meeting followed at 6 a. m., with the strike vote being taken. 'said. TOKYO TAXI DANCERS PROTEST NEW TAX . TOKYO, Nov. 1 UJ Eighty of Tokyo's best looking taxi dancers, representing all the dance halls in the ity, marched on the city hall today and "persuasively" "per-suasively" appealed for abolition of the 100 per cent tax recently placed on them. BY JOHN L. STEELE United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (U.R ! President Truman soon may be asked to settle a months-long squabble between the state and war departments over who should run the American zone in Germany. Ger-many. The army has the job and doesn't want it. But the state department de-partment is politely but firmly refusing army requests to take over. j Secretary -of State James F. Byrnes and Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson have been tossing the issue back and' forth like hot potato for months. Byrnes told his news confer ence with a smile yesterday that every time Patterson's administrative adminis-trative headaches Increase he tries to pass Germany off to the state department. Byrnes told reporters re-porters his headaches' already were quite sufficient in number. The war department's chief concern is the financial burden of German occupation. It is con cerned deeply at 'cuts it must make in funds earmarked for "essential" military operations in order to foot the occupation bill. Assistant Secretary of War1 (Centime rage Twa) Resumption Of Wage Talks Asked WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach today requested officials of Allis-Chalmers Co, West All is. Wis., and local 48 of ? the United Auto Workers (CIO) ; to resume negouauuns iur nuus . aw 1 ftfi jl.u Allia fhBlmlr strike. He asked them to reopen negotiations here at 10 a. m. Monday. Mon-day. Schwellenbach said he acted On the request of Mayor Arnold tu Klentz of West All is, who telegraphed tele-graphed him two days ago re. sponsored conferences in an effort ef-fort to end the dispute. The, secretary sec-retary sent copies of bis request to Klentz, company Presidents Walter KeisL and union President Robert Buse. L |