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Show 14" T DAILY HERALD FRIDAY. JUNE 25, 1954 Utah County, Utah , 1 British Proposal For Pact With Reds Meets Opposition Churchill, Eisen hover Old Wartime Friends Ker WASHINGTON XUP) con gressmen applied heavy pressure today to; make sure the administration rejects Britain's proposal that the Allies sign a pact with the Communists in I non-aggressi- on business at lunch and in . 'inforBy MERREVIAN SMITH United Press White House" Writer mal" afternoon talks. -- j - ... -- Prime Will Be Reunion WASHINGTON (UP) I t Asia, Rep. John M. Vorys said members of the House For eign Affairs Committee will confer with administration officials hi the next few days to see what this country' official position is. He said the committee may move to bar any foreign aid for countries involved in such a pact if there appears to be any danger of the United States underwriting -- . (R-Ohi- o) .Minister Sir Winston Churchill flew For the prime minister and the here '.today for crucial talks with President, the conference is a rePresident Eisenhower on the great union of old wartime friends. But policy differences plaguing the the atmosphere, was somewhat n effort to halt Com- tense in view of the deep policy ! divisions: munism's advance- in Asia- and - . - - ' t ' . . theor around cnurchiu globe. , brought with him The grand old man of Britain his dream of a Big Three meeting I " i I . : i. M. Ma has conferred with three U.S. witn soviet Premier oeorgi , massive prob- lenkov, and Mr.-- Eisenhower still presidents on the r lems of ceace and war.' But fie is considered cool to the idea. : : considers his j harmony mission The prime minister also brought I' antithis weekend one of his most diffi- Eden's proposed Alued-Re- d cult. aggression pact in Asia, and the ' V Lee President Richard M. NixonJ administration and key congress Secretary - of State John Foster- men are dead set against! it. The idea of a Southeast Asian Dulles and a host of. other digni-, " ' uJ . : ! ! to the ; . turned , greet put taries alliance, ' the exchange of atomic f; statesman 'on hisarrival energy information, trade "with : cr at National Airport. Iron Curtain countries and dozens ::K ... After the brief welcoming cere-'-" of other world problems also were monies, Churchill and Foreign Sec- up for discussion. Eden were due at Sir Winston suggested' the meet " retary Anthony to meet - their ing several weeks ago when Anglo- White House, the weekend hosts, Mr. and Mrs. Ei- American differences reached a senhower, and to buckle down to critical - peak. Mr. Eisenhower quickly agreed.' He suggested the informal weekend at the White House as a step in maintaining a strong bridge of cooperation be tween the two countries. JLancneonischeauied f The first opportunity for business was at lunch with the Two dent and the today, minister Presi PORTLAND, Ork UP) prime sitting Seattle lumber mftls, closed in a for the first time with .their foreign estithree-stat- e strike involving an secretaries around the! table in the mated 106,000 lumber workers, re- small family dining room in the opened yesterday after reaching White House. wage agreements. After lunch, the secret talks were The Tyee tumberj and Manufac- expected "to shift to the President's turing Company reached agrees study. There may be parment with the AFi Lumber and upstairs conferences between some of allel Sawmill Workers, Union on a 7 with the Churchilr and experts hourly wage increase. The their American opposites such as firm employs 130 workers. Sir Edwin Plowden, head of the The Burke MiHwork Company British Atomic Agency, and Lewis . '..":: ':V : i employing 45 workers reached L. Strauss, chairman i of the U.S. I . hourly Atomic Energy Commission. " agreement on a GENEVA EMPHASIZES SAFETY Safety engineers at U. S. increase ;will The talks will continue The wage increase. through Steel's Geneva plant have found a new spot for .advertising be paid wjjen the industry-wid- e when Churchill will move signs.. Never content just to talk and write about safety in strike. is settled, at which time the Sunday from the White House? to the Brit basis will be (the every media from hard hats to shop walls and conferences, industry pattern j contract.: ish Embassy for two nights before Columbia-Genev- a Division: safety men in Utah have come the for permanent to Ottawa late Tuesday. out a new with brand Idea: Plaster the company vehicles with The AFL union, struck mills flying Eden outlined some of the a And talk. division aloirff the Columbia River, in the lems ,of the Conference whenprobsafety personnel vehicle carrier seen here ' he ? "PnrtJnd area, adding at least 3000 popped his proposal mpn to", the estimated 103,000 ' al-- tnis week in a House Df Commons Disgusted Ball Player' TPartv on strike for higher wages. speech, i The union, along with: the' CIO In The reception of the Eden pro Throws the Game Away ternational Woodworkers of Amen posal in Washington ' L , . from ranged 12 By ROBERT "L. ROSE a is demanding cold to angry. State Department PHOENTX Ariz. (UP) An Ari United Press Staff Correspondent : . Increase. officials were resentful, in Some ES MOINES, la. (UP) Des League player literally Tn San Francisco, Federal Me cases angry. Some in threw Republicans Mbines was its battle a ball Thurs winning he said away game diator! George Hillenbrand Congress reacted bitterly. ' T against the highest flood crest in had gotten in touch with the Pine Diplomats also noted that Eden day night; U the city's history today. Industrial Relations Committee warmly praised Undersecretary of Bill Van Heuiftr left fielder for . Guardsmen and Army Engineers f and the Northern California council state waiter Bedell Smith in his f thP AFL. union, but "couldn't speech but did not even mention the El Paso Texans, presumed in still- - patrolled the five and a half the ninth inning that Jack Spence miles of levees protecting this develop arfything that would cause Dulles. They said this suggested a of Stars was crossing city of 178,000. distinct coolness between the two thethe Phoenix J me to call a meeting." with the winning run, But Col. Nelson F. Le Clair, plate Federal Mediator Arthur C. Viat- statesmen. threw1 so ball over the left the he tn F.nrpka to aid in negotiaDespite the stresses that mav field fence inl disgust. Jr., Army district engineer, said "We're winning." ionc with the Redwood District develop in the secret conversations Then Jack Haley, who had sin been a desperate fight," Council of. the union and several the conference was certain to end gled to! left field, continued around he"It's with a readded. independent plants. the bases to score and Phoenix However, officials warned the of Anglof American won. Some 700 members of the Cali- statement The danger won't be over until the meeting does not fornia Central Council of tne union friendship. n ctrikp in the San Francisco seem designed or destined to come surging Des Moines River falls most aeree-with up and oldest almost seven feet to belpw flood box detailed Bermuda's ironclad, several neainst l J ments on the next move .in the tug noted industry is the growing stage. That wasn't expected until rr companies. .",..! of war with --Communism. rand exporting of Easter lilies. midnight Saturday. ' use 4- ' , tribe Masai , Men of the - weighing as much earrings jis three pounds, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Anglo-America- i - - - - -- i j j h , '' - fi v:'.:iJi- , .T. ; : vn : I - - : " ' it. J- - - ii This danger does not seem acute. nave, maae it plain toe proposal was a surprise and a disappointment, that it would imply recognition of Red China and would therefore be totally to the United States.'unacceptable Nevertheless, Vorys said t h e President or Congress "must make it "crystal clear" that this country will have no part of the idea The project is "more than appeasement," he said, "we'll have to find a new word for it" A agreement with the Communists would mean "an utterly worthless guarantee against their further aggression," he add- vmciais non-aggressi- on ' ed. - , - 1 Llv h j : vrr- - :n Jo' .- ' - i I L- -: i "yrn-i- .: , , . . i ! 7 , I -- i i ! - 1 , . r , ' Inter-Ameri-c- time accident. 1 non-aggressi- on ! " . t zona-Tex- " as j - ! i , j j 1 i.r.t i ! . t hands-across-the-s- ea , 1U-- 9. ). - . I I 1' 1 .7 -- OAS and rejected the plan for an Des Moines Winning Flood Fight i ; , an ) against the back drop of Geneva works open hearth stacks, indicates thateven when the steel men ride to and from wjork,. safety is the most important watch ward. Proof of this motto may be demonstrated in Geneva's recent safety record of 176 days, over three million man hours, without a lost ' . j 11-nati-on .. v no , ' 7 - anti-Locar- i f another committee member, attacked the British proposal which is modeled after the 1925 Locarno Pact "The idea of a Locarno is a inrowDacic- oi aDout so years wnicn aia not work to avoid World War H and will not work to avoid World War HI he said.. The administration's $3,479,000,-00- 0 foreign aid bill comes up for action in the 1 House early next week. Vorys said the mnvo unit rnmJ ftiAvt if tVi a 4m- istration hasn't made- its opposition clear beforehand. Committee Chairman Robert H. meanwhile said Chiperfielf (R-nthat Allied relations . may have come to the point where an "agonizing reappraisal" of U.S. foreign policy is necessary. He said the next two or three weeks may reveal the fate of the Big Three alliance which he said UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UP) The United States was expected to make a new effort today to switch consideration of the Guate malan war from the United Na -tions to ithe hemispheric Organiza tion of American States. - U.S. Ambassador Henry Cabot i) Lodge Jr. agreed to convene the U.N. Security Council at 3:00 p.m. EDT, although he previously had objected, to any further "considera tion of the Central American situa tion bv Ithe U.N. Lodge acted late Thursday after Guatemala and Russia had de is coming to a "crisis." manded! an "immediate meeting of the Council, the Soviets session be held SLIGHT ERROR BY that the urging LOYAL ST. LOUIS MAN Thursday night. convoked the However, Lodge t LOS ANGELES. Calif. (UP) Session 'at the request of Brazil John Flannigan, vice president of and Colombia,' who asked for the Anheuser-Busch Breweries, forgot demeeting! "because of important he was Los Angeles instead of in took which velopments" place St Louis -at the opening of .the Wednesday before the 'dollar company's- new 20 million Peace Commission. here. plant The Peace Commission is a fivemaster of nation offshoot of the Organization ; Flannigan, acting - as uos introduced Angeof American States. It decided that ceremonies, Norris Poulson as "the an observation team should be sent les Mayor to Guatemala, Honduras and Nica-- 1 mayor of our great city, St Louis." ragua to report on the war. Guatemala refused to recognize the jurisdiction of the IPC or the : Two Lumber Mills Reopen Lodge Agrees To Call Security Council Meetingi team from the igroup to visit the area at observe hemi-fepheric loact ae Inner as th FOR Oiiatpmalanc. A new danger was posed by the early today "We're in good jcharge-i-- as Honduras and Nicara flooding Racoon River, which joins shape." gua provided assistance to the ami the Des Moines here. It was ex- The river stood at 29.69 feel ear- - Communist insurgents. pected to crest at 6 p.m. CST ly today and was falling s lowly. its crest yesterday was si; ghtly today at 16 2 to 17 2 ieet, five more than 30 feet. to , six feet above bankfull. iVE Rain-swollrivers were still More than 5000 men, women and elsewhere in Iowa I and children worked frantically at the rising two more lives, claimed j height of the battle to strengthen Two little Janice Larson, sisters, the levees, against the flood. At least 3000 persons were evac- 5, and Eunice Larson,JB, drowned when they uated and 100 homes were flooded, near Elkader yesterday hole gash40 in the threatened Riverview stepped into a nine-foarea and 25-- to 30. southwest of ed out by the floods. Their deaths the Racoon-DeMoines juncture. brought the state's flood toll to. Then, as the crested river rush tour. ed past, it became apparent the Kising water was reported at RALPH'S RADIO levees would probably hold. There Tracy, Van' Eddyville, Ottumwaj 226 So. Univer. Ave. were minor breakthroughs in the! Meter, Belle PJaine, Iowa City and; Riverview area, but Le Clair said1 veuar i ; 1-- HEADQUARTERS FISHING EQUIPMENT! GET YOUR LICENSE; 1-- repair en at j GEIGER. r- !' . COUNTERS ot s. 272 WEST CENTER itapias. ! J jj x Notices gal Probate and J : Frl i : v . - . Guardianship Notices of . ;). , . I . i r- - r I fi f H NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION . inl h pi&pgsteii fllf rivil , No "18.384 TN THE DISTRICT COURT OF JUDICIAL DIS IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH. Ln the Matter of the Voluntary Dissolution of CLUB VEGAS IN CORPORATED, A Corporation. Kntiop is herebv eiven that on the 23rd day of June, 1954, Club Veffas Incorporated, a Utah Cor c poration, filed with the Clerk ver the above entitled Court, its fied. application fori discontinu ance and dissolution as a cor poration, pursuant to- - the pro78. of Title visions Chapter Utah Code" Annotated, 1953, and pursuant to an order- of the above entitled Court made on The same dater in said proceeding, hearing on said application will be had before one of the Judges ' of the above entitled Court at the court room thereof in the City ana County Building, ' Provo City, County of Utah. State of Utah, a ten o'clock A. M., on the 13th day of August, "1954. That any per son, firm, or corporationrmay file herein his objections to such application, or to the granting there of by the above entitled Court a any time prior to the' date fixed for said hearing, and attend upon said hearing, and if no objections are. so filed, the said application will be granted and an order made by - said Court dissolving said corporation as provided toy the aforesaid statutes. .IN WITNESS WHEREOF, haves hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the above en titled Court this 23rd day of June vniTRTTT i .1 I V . i - i '1 Special for New Homemakers! I . " . 1 the Consult County Clerk Further for Signers Respective ' ) Information. VTTTT- - .... . P I I'M I 1 TRICT .1, - i I r Complete Living Room Ensemble At a Sensational t - : ! 5 ! i . - 2JPC. LIVING ROOM SUITE - i ' ,Wool frieze or. hylon covers many colors Choose from Davenport or sofa non-be- d r. Value! 2 END TABLES 2 TABLE LAMPS 1 -- A. Df 1954. ALL FOR ONLY A Regular $250.00 ti COFFEE TABLE June 25, July.2, y f l N M v I" . BY.TIIE COURT WARREN P KIRK , Clerk of the Fourth Judicia f District Court, in and for the County of Utah, State of Utah GEORGE S. BALLIF Attorney for Club Vegas Incorporated, A Corporation Suite .211, .Knight Block ' . Provo. Utah Published in Herald The-Dail- r I . ii j ". ; "i . ' , i : i Open 'fil 9:00 pirn. Tonight '' 3-Pe- BEDROOM SUITE ce 'toltth rrrJ-HrA-ii- i At A Special Purchase Price y ' 9, 16, 23, 1954. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE-- MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF BARBARA A. CHATELAIN, Deceased. Creditors J will present claims T ; j ' i. z rB 1 -- SI i - Beautiful stylingl Panel bed, double dresser,; and night stand (or book case bed and no night stand.) j , with; vouchers to the undersigned at his office at 32 West Center, Provo, Utah, on or before the 19th day of August, 1954. ELMER L. TERRY - Administrator ' j i -- 18, 25, July 2 50 C : i - DEAN E.TERRY Attorney for Administrator"? Published in The Daily Herald June v "; EASY TERMS 'ii .: "r 1 l" 1 " FREE PARKING I I .V , 1954. 4 I 1 ; ! I - X KV I 5 " rl i" i |