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Show , , ' THE WEATHER , - '" , ' ' - - - , ' - , :WEATHER REPORT, PAGE VOL. --- . . ' - - - - - L. - - a42 No 28 , TELEPHONES- - ' -- - - - , Informatio - , , - - - ' ' : v.- - - - v - - 75 ., , , , , - - - , . ' A-- LAKEsCITY 'UTAH SALT -- - , . . , , , - - - i g)2 ga rttatt , d - -- ' , ,. -- - - Continbed Foggy, - little Change' , 4,.. .. - ' , , . ' ' Ij '1 - ,) - -- al -..' 1..1 If . - , . 'THE AtOT)'NTAINWESTS . FIRST 'NEW$PAPEI tOAttiYeall IN ITS NOW , Editorial ,. , ' ' , , ' ' ' - 81 . - . - - -- , 5c. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1954 ', - , 0 ''' Z , 17 , ' , ' F t' ,, lit ' - , f.,, - ', - J" ' , , ,, , k I0 ' ww.d '' . , sfi . ,, , :.''- ',' r Predicted , - - ,, . s. ' 01 IN toof , . , L 0 iii ,, ,.., s' ' ' ' , , - , ' ., ' , ., . 2 - n et latc'j , ,4,1 ''''' 0, ' l''',., ti' . - . , ,.4.0. Groundhog Can't ' . ' ,,, , ''' , ,, ' ',', , ' : s''. ...4 . . - --1 , , , P., tsZC:t. L.,' ,' - ,41-- .. ' , ,,, j so i:' ' - ', '''' ',I .. . ,.. - . ., , - ., . ' l .., ,' ' , , ,' , ,, , ', ' , ' , , . , ,, ; '' ' - I ., ' i - I . -- - , ' I ....t,,,,...,.......,,..,,,,.....J ,,,,,,,,, All traffic at the Salt Lake Municipal Airport groped to a stop Monday night, and was . TISIS SHOTPhotographer openedthe not resumed until - Tuesday. shutter wide for a short timeto get Planes bound for Salt Lake ' shot of the North Temp Viaduct. this landed at City Ogden. tracers left by pass car lights.) .. (Note Causes Accidents ' ' ' I '.. '' 14 , f . ' ' PI 't" thick-1 t f The fog seemed to be ". , . . . 4;7 , ' ' k .. est in the Davis and Salt Lakel , ' I , . , ' . , t,.. ,,',., , County areas, resulting in sev-- 1 ', . ' . ' ', I eral automobile accidents. Two 0 l I ti , , , , , t .A , , , ,,,,,,,,. , persons were injured in a mis4. - , , , ,,, . i ( ',....,,,v,..-1 i hap at 7000 S. 17th East shortly ,.. ,,,, . I , ,,,,,1.., ., , After 7 a.m. Tuesday. An hour -- ,. .,,, 111 ' N.)." ....I .0 1II 7;',. a- - siebtattollision. 1r . , t J10 , 1 , , ,, ot , . ...., .,, ti .,, ; 411111' 1 ,,, South Kajtsville hospitalize . , , ... 11 i , "' two more. i . , ' i i ' 10 ' 1 i Highway travel wail confined ' ' 7 ; s. f ' 1 to "not more than ,. mph" in the day. early 4' ;"" 1 ,,,..- ..,,,,,, Forecasters expected the man' tie to lift by late- afternoon over most of the state but predicted 'l more of the same thick sir ' Tuesday night and Wednesday ..' ' morning. , , Logan residents Tuesday were . , loomoomaws.,....,,,,,,..,....will ' stumbling through the third NOT-LONDON SCENEThis was a view in succcessive day of fog. Highway day as fog rolled Into every nook of the city; patrolmen reported poor visTemple Square look like something out of I , ibility from Preston, just over usual inland mist ,caused several traffic mishaps. D UNP, Building on upper Main St. , the Idaho border, ,to as, far , '' south as Nephi. .: , ' , ' ' t 4 Forecast' for 'Salt' Lake City a ' and vicinity was night and InNterior , . morning for and low --clouds Tuesday and 'Wednesday, with ' , fair weather seen for both after, ss, noons. High both days is 'ex- $0:00:01,1.-...;0.4.p.,.T0-11,,.Ploropetted near 37 degrees, with al , lbw Tuesday tight of 27. WASHINGTONNWChall . More Fog Forecut By DON BRANNON head .eat the reclamation sub The views of others, as given man: Miller (R., Neb.) of the For Utah, the forecast was to the Deseret News and Tele- House Interior Committee decommittee. ! News :Washington Doreen and morning fog ,in the . , night state 'government gram, were (in order of senior-IV- ) manded Tuesday that 'the Wyoming's ' western valleys, oiheiwite fair WASHINGTON;rhirteen of put itself on the record during as follows: sui-'- . ,N Tuesday, Tuesday' nighe and the House Subcommittee. on the hearings in support of the , A. L. Miller (11.,- Neb.), chair. budget bureau prepare a et re ci plemental Wednesday . LittleLcchange In Reclamation Individually back project. Harrison's question.1 man of the full Interior Com- f'unds to bel ging-negattin e'!:. the temperature was been.-botstl public mittee and a member of the and reclamation River stor lag during the Colorado Upper -, projects. dais on the subconunittee: I'- s Afternoon highs "I'm , for the t, a poll of the group session was manifestly Miller said he was "quite j were expected between 32 aqd his side of from the as Incolleagues project the supported by disturbed" over the arbitrary - 42 in the west; 46 to 56 in the 'showed today. Basin states. terior Department." Nearly all, ho w eve r,- ex- - Upper wittier he said the bureau and 66 in the extreme east,; Wesley D'Ewart (R., Mont.): showed in considering , Inreservations , ' about ' ' . , south.- Low temperatures Tues--da- pressed "One or two of the participating-pry-night terior Department- recommeare expected tletween somend aspects 'of the over-al- l -ojects d plan-aproposed ,Ce tor 'new starts." 7-- 20 ntalons and 30, - Treasury-Heabill will to have like would of said grant Approval 13 gress Millet t . appol..m projects to see upper basin development In 10 states, that all Portions 'this year. many, of which started." -- ' The subcommittee, which , had been authorized byi Con' started out numbering 14. Re- Years of Planning gress, had been cut from the -' and 10 Democrats, E. Y. Berry (R., S. D.): "I'm Interior Department'S reThe nation's hottest and publicans reduced by one with the , , , - for Western development." quest for appropriations. He coldest locations for the past vac last week of Rep. resignation ' . William'A. Dawson (R., Utah), did not list them. ' 24 hours as reported to the Of WASHINGTDN Eugene J. McCarthy (D authoraoneof-t- h three bills Lake Woather131ireau Those remaining now appear to the Treasury Humphrey told under consideration: "This tiroj-- 1 , ' . , , , were: ' be 13 in favor of the project, six Congress Tuesday the basic pur- ect ...- represents the culminal 117 l Cal. degrees doubtful three unavailable for Burbank, , ton of years of hope and planpose. of 01,4 billion dollars in Caribou, Me. ... -- 40 degrees - comment and one opposed. ning. It has had the approval 04110-Pt.:04.1.clO- Utah's hottest and ioldest: , Although committee chair. actual-o- r proposed tax cuts this of two secretaries of the Inter- St." George ... . ..,. 66.degrees men by custom do not express year is to bring "more jobs, ior. It should have the approval on legislation be- - ter jobs and' higher and better of this committee." 1 : Bryce Canyon .... 3 degrees of living." -- - is , 'Jack Westland (IL Wash.): (Salt Lake, 'maximum 43;. fore their groups, thereof bo ,standards ' '' tax With this doubt about the opinion -, program, Rep, "I think I'm generally in favor. minimum 28.) , --- Chair, H. Harrison (R., Wyo.), phrey said, he is confident "this A lot. of minor WASHINGTON will , changes nation can make the transition have to be made. However, the man Butler , ,:r ) Tuesday I ' to a period of less costly mil- Provision--of ' water --and power e pre&tedthiSenate1ntertor without seri- for this area is essential." , itary preobredriesa -- -, ---, -Churchill-StAtclin- ous interruption Commi,ttest will in our econom- - Clifton-Youn- g. (R.- Nev.):. "I . ,. ic growth." Y ,, tend to go along with the bill. to vsend an Alaskan statehood ' t before Humphrey's testimony Most of us front - ,. , fee)111 to the:Senate "whether or Economics the, Sea at about reclama- not the subcommitteeThis cornthe way Committee amounted to a vigor- tion." , - - - -- ' ' its work."-- ,,- - , . ous defense of the Eisenhower d.): "At , pleted Hosmer risk the bill "We'll perfeiting Churchill Minister e of administration's Mouse him tax Prime LONDON prograni, the upper basin is .con- ' majority self learned to strip the Belgian under' fire from some Dem.). I think the development On the floor," he declared when Commons by a rifle, fired it lad week and pro... trots' on chargesit faiors. big water is their business asked by a newsman what hapMonday night . approved the notinced- - it "first rate. Labor business and corporation stock- should 'anus ' theybe able to go pened if the territories subcorn, Conservative government's de critics termed it too komplicated holders. . 's ahead.- - My only concern ls that mittee doesn't complete its Tommies British Ind asserted it was being adopt. cision to of, out'. water ,remain usable In Humphrey led a draft - of the bill by Thursday. ' With thenew .30 caliber Belgian ed to satisfy American demands cabinet members, procellzn citillity as well as quantity." 'The full Committee agreed of Britain's own that N A T 0 forces use a labor leaders who will testify ,, , rifle Instead Arizona Joins ', over the next few weeks on heavier caliber weapon. 4.28 caliber weapon- .last week to vote on the Alaska ' - (Ri, Aria):) refusal of 'abill by Feb. ' 4 and to meet During the debate Woodrow Pres. Eisenhowees economics : JOhn. The t awdefinitely in favor of lölne Wednesday to discuss' possible govern- mesilge to Congress:The-Presidenmotion - to censure - the Wyatt, said the current business Idnd of comprehensive project amendments t? the siibcommitended ( a - long ment war undersecretary, acgoverrunent -cused the prime min-lat- dip likely will end in a few, for the upper basin. I wouldn't tee drafL wrangle Aver the relat1veCVO-11of adeliberatelyfalsifying" months and the economy then wait to say that I am for every The subcomMittee only Mon. of thetwo rifles. The Laborites ' contended all NATO nations 'Int I orms ti on. At Churchill's should turn up again, but any detail of the day got down to a discussion Clair efigle (D., CaL)r'll do of language Ind' already reportshould adopt. the, British gun -as 1 angry demand, Wyatt apolo- economics troubles must not be ' '. , ECHO PARK on rags A4 edly has run into snarls. ..See treated Withdrew and , tired complacently. tke remark. standard equipment. , ., . , ,. . . , . -- 1 - - . , i , , r , 1 . , . ....... ., -- ,.4 - , ,s., . . , 1 1 1 I 1 13-20- , --- .' t -0- . f - , , , , -- ' - . , , ' , ' Demands New - I Projects NBudget i - ' ' Solon 1,13..of...-':-.23.-:...00..-,,';.4t.s;,.tool...0.0..tliSi....- , - , - - 10-da- y - - . - . ,'- , . - and Cold Hot - ' , , - , - go,-but- Tolls Purriose , ' - '. Of- Tax- Slash ,M.)., .Salt ' , - - . ' Ohltaiká'Bill:, , - - . Hum-Willia- m ,,- - . -- ,. (11.,-Ne- - . b.) vote-Thursd- ay . , - 0 n Choice of Rifles the-Wes- !e . - (1C org 34-vo- c , 11 - . an . , . - - . n 266-23- 2 -- er -- - . " - -- - - , , 1- 1 ' ' '. - - '. .. '..- ' , ... ,,- . . - ,,,7 ,,',4 -,1,-.- , ',;. - 111 . - ,, 21'11' ' (I,IP)---Se- . - ''' '' '..7.7'' -- ''' ' Pt - , : , - - ' ,Id ovietAllitude ' i isappoin - s' Germalilidi d , , , Visit Members thei'., In Buenos Aires - 0.-Mc- - N I , ' , - wal lb. , - - ' -- ers 1, . be . - - three-contine- nt , . , - dnting - ' .- e' well-reste- st d - - - ' . ' , Five- - Children av i , ' 3-- tielly-U-Plital. r, Perish in F.ire ' Vis1t - , , . 4-- nige , , I - - , ----N, NN C IclEpit,Fire '''''''.--4- -------- In-th- e Bla7d or U. Y, 1 ' - - I , -- - -- - . NN - 1 ' T -- ---- - - -- -- - , s , . , , ,:...., - cy. neW-peac- - - , , ,f- ....... ,. -' , BERLIN of State John' Foster Duller rejected e Soviet Foreign 'Minister Vyacheslav M. Moltov's plait ' for Germany, Tuesday ,nd called on him to "end foolish Chat. ter" and get down to serious negotiations 'We urge- that Mr. Molotov agree,to- create quickly by alt. - - -- ' German elections a ' gerthanl r ' government that .can genuinely 4 a 1 all for of and Germany speak , thus thinned out. provide the indispensable 'S I As blend has : it, if the basis for a peace 'that will last, a' peace of groundhog sees his shadow because it will-- be ,, , , , and ducks back into the hole, consent," Dulles said. 4 we're in for six more weeks I Speaking at the eighth lea- ' sion of the Big Four foreign I of winter. But in all t is 'gray stuff, conference, Dulles replied for l West to the "Molotov Cock, who can teljAwhether it isn ' 1 tail" which the Soviet delegate already s ingr eteioded Monday. Molotov plan ! -- 13.NN GERMANY Le --' Both , , baied on was ideas completely I' Adenauer government and ,the to the United unacceptable States, Great Britain a n- d its Skielist opposition . , ,1 pressed deepest disappointment Diversion Tuesday it the unchanged Rus-To si gthhtagtioill'el'ivehrti; attitude toward Germany. "pla'tiellmesoIoctohavig.t,edsou aA government spokesmanliaid . i outs fithoismutrhgeenset rimouesrmdiasnrstosipoine Shvselatv "oeloigton s Mr epsetuert4on l - , , of l , by injecting a series of charges all the --old Russian arguments United the States, Great . against BUENOS AMES. ftilb P problem in Ber. tiden- David of the claimed are trying to- form Ai lin a petofdataayrun poninott Church of Jesus Christ of tatter- military block directed against for vieuv.. ' ' , -day Sainte s the Soviet Union," officials pointed "I will not take time at hotel Tuesday., He to - reject these out there was very little change conference In American .church here . in detail," Dulels said. In the basic Russian attitude, charges Tuesday 'night, President Mc- eneee is nothing new in them. which was quite unacceptable to Kay postponed until Wednes- - They have been refuted time the West. Molotov proposed Mendel at the Berlin Big Four. scheduled tour of six Church after tline; year .after year." Iauxiliary-headquart, , ' Dulles ."-an internationaliger- - The Molotov parlerthat plan, in the , A laid, would require the west- - man peace eonference be held .1lueno1 Aires area,. Chilieh leidevern powerrive accept the'Red Wes thin. Yam-- , The Memel . arrived here from Montevideo East German government 'as followed old Soviet lines al. . with Mrs. McKay and their soli, one of : the 'principal organs ready repeatedly rejected by ', RobertMonday to continue his whereby the German problem the West, A statement on behalf of fa, visit to Church is to be solved." missions in Europe, Africa and .Even before Dulles spoke, cialist opposition leader Erich y,i 011enhauer ala also took South America. Western the gloomdelegates bad When he.' walked Into the- most abandoned hope for a view of the way things were , walting room at nearby Ezeiza 'broad settlement of the Ger-- going in Berlin. firm ozt . could be -were peace treaty until At the most "Hail to the Prophet! and "We a freely elected all. of the conference, Molo1German session Thank Thee 0 Pod for it tov government to take invited France to I Mondayin negotiations Prophet." 'part from break the and away West , They also put some of the Appears Well4ested - strengthen: her ties With the dead- lilame for the East-WePresident McKay appeared SoViet Union. lock onto Western refusal to tand cheerful as he t The Sovie- diplomat also abandon the Defense European was introduced to nearly all plummeted western hopes for (E D C). : i' of a solution to the German prob- - Community group; most . whom s p o k e Spanish.' ' Elder lem to a new low by offering-pose- d The Socialists have always the defense, community Lee Valentine, president of the conditions for a settlement Argentine Mission, made the which were totalliinacceptable project and said Thesday PolitY of integration only makes Introductions. President McKay to the west. difficult , if not inv. spoke a few words in Spanish Molotov's demands exploded things more to each person. Westem optimism with such possible. " Among the Buenos Aires re- - force that western diplomats ' ,.' President Mc- - called his speech a "Molotov EtaysPschedule were .Florida, cocktail," - the wartime term Caserns, Floresta, tinier, Ter- - used to describe a powerful Rus- - ' reno enN Rivadavia and - Villa sian antitank ' weapon. I Sariniento. The atmosphere-wa- s one of ' ii,, one week stay gloom and . disappointment During i , as President will also McKay western delegation officials met heake m wies ON. . C. two trips from the to line he up their reply to Molo, dren perished in fire that de--- citY,---Owiltbe to the,oldistrict tov2ast po the questions of' s troyed their frame home here ,of Eva Peron German unification and -a Ger-- early Tuesday, -'Plata) and another to Ro ma, peace treaty. . Coroner, Robert - ' E. eoudy Schedule Outlined , ., ,, 517i identified the dead- as Shirley , ' The detailed' l ' scheduel G r a y Knight,11,- - daughter' of ' Court - Refusesi , Tuesday: sTreme Odessa Knight: Betty Jane Har. - Wednesday,' Feb. to Sobe I Case 3rd'Time ri s,eLlTaeMargaret-liaren;-- 4; ' 'the district of Eva Peron (f " H GTON,40 The Su- - Charles ilarriS, 3, and Maxine I1 . TueSday had re- - Harris, 2, all children of Mr, to preme Cou 7huraday, Feb; Trip - and Mrs. Charley Harris. The ind refor fused to the. time Rosario, 225 miles northwest of view of Morton Knight 'girl was spending ,tbe ' . Buenos. ?tires, with brief stop- ,thenocwonvcoicrtv ;Iv Harris home. aS ' - 30 year,' overs on the way at Pegamino The oldest three children I and San Nicolas, In the evening , prison term for conOiricy to Niwere sleeping in a room at the espiona . President McKay will conduct commit wartime ' rear. of the hoUse. a meeting le the Rosario head- - ' Sobell was convicted .with l Harris and wife and his and pis . . Ethel Rosenber quarters to which all Church Julius b were Ed who executed for atomic rother, Harris;escaped la. 'the members in have been area - lie t7 at -, ' . -- ,,, espionage last June In. , Invited. ' : reception Friday, Feb. ,t, --s '"'7.-nuenot-Aire- s. Mission -- ---I 'House. Those Invited Include . the leads of the MISSiOn and -- - . , their wives, the directors of the . - 0 of the auxiliary organizations 1 mission mild their- - wives, the , leaders of' all the districts in ,,... . . , 4 , ' , Argentina, including the presi-- - ' TOKYO aNS)-T- he U. bodies were recove dent, two counselors and secre- ta-tand their wives: the lead-- ,Force said in Tokyojuesday a Monday afternoon-- byan ers of the branches of the tins- - fire in the cockpit caused the phibious rescue plain. 1,1 sion and their -- wives, and the crash Monday of a C46 Corn- - -- The Air Force said the - ,z,,, manclo plane, with 35 American, on a regular courier rim from missionaries. to Feb. Chitose, radioed at i- military men aboard, in the Tokyo-Saturday, l of waters 1:45 7--No that the cockpit was . - ,, ,Tsu Feb. p.m, freezing Japan'A open Sunday, -, .N ' Straits. ablaze. Three minutes later an. meetings. One will be in the garu morning, other in the after- - , Meanwhile three 'Air Face other message from the ,pilot ' , noon. Both will be held at the planes,. aided' by a Navy shiw,saidwas-goin- g to ditch the ' Patrol boats, airaaft .. Consejo de' Mujere,s in down- - and Japanese started a isearcht at dawn for All 35 persons aboard met icy town Buenos Aires. bodies of 33 of thevictima who , death in the waters of - the Monday, Feb, of President McKay and his perished minutes afternrunging Straits. The plane apparently waters be- - splashed info the water with party 'shortly before neon from into the ' Ezeiza Airport to Santiago, tween kions'int and Hokkaido such force it broke tip almost at -:' x. - -' -- , !Island& ..,.."..s ,. Chile-:once. , , ,, , P etident McKay - , - , , Chatter,' Dulles Tens Soviet ii.,.. ,c )d 'e , - -- , -- ''4 , The blanket of soup-lik- e air coming in from Washington and Oregon extended over the westem half of the state from Logan Cedar, . - ..,,,,. - . A dense fog rolled over the ' The groundhog wasn't even sure he could find his way out of the bole Tuesdayslet alone see his shadow. With most of the stste COW, ered with e thick mantle of fog, Mr. Groundhog's annual predicting had to hold off until afternoon when clouds ,,,, ' ' , -- . , , state again Tuesdays blockipg air travel, slowing highway travel to a "walk" and causing a flurry of mishaps. ,E Even See Way C)ut of His Hole di ' ':.,41 - ti,71,11112' ' -,. ,, , ' ' : ,or,t f.,;71 ,''' ' '' ' 40 -- - Angeles) -- , c !hoe 4110, sisal , ...vki4,,,;,t.,4,,:;,,,,,o,soks,,,.i,,,,A,,1 - - Lit 212T , ,..-,' '. r,Pve. 11 ....,,,...,,,,..,,,,v,...,,,.4.,..,,.,,,,,,..,,,..,,,..,..,, ' .1"1 ' - ... tri Alt' Again Tonight ' . .., , - . . ' .' '. 1 ar Y ail 4' 4,- -. a ',1" , '' .,'4' '',' , , ''.;,':,,,, j.'''', to " ,,. r ..':',.';':'7::;::,...;:!,..i., , ,.k ä on 'e : ,,., ' ' , ,,-g- , ,, . , 6..,.0 , ,, "''' - , 'Veit Of Mist' - ..,,,.. ; .. - 4. ;!. 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