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Show t Temperatures ; V r I New Hijh Low TorkT7rr;44..W 54 Vn Francisco.. 63 Washington, D.C. -50 o ? -- Atlanta Chicago Denver Los Angeles 48 43 30 . , .. - 0 . and High thin cloudiness this afternoon,-tonigh- t Wednesday. Slightly warmer afternoons with hlgfc temperatures 50 (o 55. Low temperature Wednesday morning 30 to 35. Yesterdays max, 49; min. 29; mean, 39; norm, 36. Sunset tonight, 5:02; sunrise '7:30. -- HijhLow 46 35 31 53 $S 42 48 .... 74 r - Price: Five Cents Weather Forecast . Salt Lake City, Utah, Tuesday Evening;, November 27, 1945 Vol. 340. No. 50. 96th Year A Censure Vote Is Demanded By Churchill - LONDON Brands Army Report Hull Win- - (AP) national-problem- tnfamour"thargethe"1nference'T re-p- edto m beq full-dre- ss Russian-dominate- BIVOUAC IN A CITYS CENTER-LJa- front of City Hall in Camden, . ed because.he-ria.ckedcollater- N. Mau rer, 26, IVorld War II veteran, pitched a tent in;v J. He said he is unable to find a home and has been ck rrZ A al. House Group1 Homeless Veteran I jTurns Down Camps in City Park Divers Vainly Search for Bus 1 JobzrMedsure WASHINGTON The (AP) house expenditures committee to- day rejected a proposal to re- sume consideration of the admin- - istrations Instead, the committee j voted 17 Ul 3 to continue study of a CHELAN.-WasfAP) substitute ' version as a ' federal U. S. Reclamation Service divers goal "a high level of employ-ment.-Tfrom Coulee dam recovered a substitute was draftsecond child's body, today be ed by an expenditures he fore the intense pressure at the depths to which they were div-i- ng forced them temporarily to t abandon the search for - the school bus in which the driver and 15 children drowned near here yesterday. The divers descended .to .200 feet in the giganticrevasse which is Lake Chelan, without finding a trace of the bus. They reported oil in the water at that depth and estimated the bus may feet below. be an additional-10- 0 Deep-se- a diving equipment, permitting work at lower lev-- " els, was asked .from the Puget Sound navy yard at Bremerton, but it will be tomorrow before ... . It can be used. The body recovered today. " from an underwater ledge on the . steep sides of the lake, was ten- -' " identified as Ronald ' tatively13. Ayers, Only state 'patrolmen and a few relatives of survivors of yesterdays tragedy watched the divers today. The bereaved fam- - Hies, all neighbors in the 23- - Chairman- Manasco " said the committee would - (B-Al- a.) meet, (AP) v- againtomorrow.- - but that -- he . doubted whether an agreement' would-b- e reached on the if gis-..- .. lation 'atethis week. j un' measure, by flip. Patman (D Tex.), would have enunciated a government policy of supplementing free enterprise, if necessary, to assure jobs for all "who' wanted' them. The subsUtuteversionsays the federal policy shaii be to create maximum opportunities for employment and to maintain a high level of employment . . . production, and purchasing power. J. Roosevelt-plat- a em full ed ployment- - bill, The pup tent set up in Cam- rien'r by'war veteran Jack Maurer to Duh- licize his hunt for a home and job brought partial results today.' The Maurer disclosed lie was offered two jobs as an automobile mechanic by persons who learned of his plightrThe problemof a home, he said7 remained 1 ; . m A marine vet unable to return to his prewar job as'a mechanic because of injuries received on "Guadalcanal, Maur- er pitched the tent yesterday, saying he would stay until I find a home for my family and a job." Butit got pretty cold last night and he went into-- city hall to get warm. There he met a passerby,' Albert Wagner,' and.Wagney took Maurer to his home for the eventing. He left this morning, ready to look into the job prospects7 - - , The former marine both of his feetwere crushed in- -a plane crash said eight applications for ajpan under the G! Bill "Of'Ri ghts 'were burned down because "I lacked col- lateral. He wanted to build a house in. Haddonfield, N. J.-- son are living with iriends herq.- His wife and year-ol- d 'CAMDENTTL-- h. A ! Officials DERTOIT (AP) of the CIO United Auto Work-- , en Union said this afternoon that in response to an Invitation from Edgar Warren of the U. S. Conciliation Service- - - for a conference Wednesday, they would go to Washington to discuss the strike of nearly 200,000 GenersfMotors Cerp. WASHINGTON l" (AP) The conference' --employes no had said d themselves: they They executive committee unanimous- -. Six persons, five children and ly adopted today an "Jidowledge of when the enrpor- woman passenger, escaped. ination resolution meet with the also atlon may applying bothgovernment officials. to conditions for employment Russia Lets Chiang and union membership. By The Associated Press The resolution read: Another breakdown in North theabor-manage-meResolved, .Fly Troops United between CIO conference urge on all ele- Automobile Works and General CHUNGKING (INS) ments and management Motors The Chungking newspaper-Curre- nt the broad democratic Corp., brought the posspirit of Affairs reported today tolerance and equality of eco- - sibility today of government intervention to settle the strike thatRussla had agreed to alnomic opportunity in respect to which, has idled. 225,000 GM emlow Chinese central governrace, sex, color, religion, age, ployes ment airborne troops ''land national origin or ancestry in deyou are now prepared at Changchun andMukden termining who are employed and to Unless your unreasonable to disarm Communist forces in who are admitted to union mem- wagemodify General Motors demands," Manchuria. bership. told the union last night, . . , . -- The resolution will now be we do pot think anything can submitted for action to the' full be Miners Vote to gained by further negotia-at this time. tions Miners at session of the conference. SEATTLE (AP) The union, before the strike, Anaconda Copper Company Dow-Jon- es filed charges of unfair labor Averages plants at Butte, Anaconda and MoHirh' Low Last Chr, practices against General Great Falls, Mont., voted 3389 Industrial 190 00 166 79 190 45 3 29 tors, and Walter P. Reuther, to 1021 in favor of a strike. In Rails ...... 4 79 63 83 64 26 .54 I Hi It tie UAW vice president, said the .53 36 63 36 07 36 41 y, a labor relations board-supBtmda -- re ...10? 33 -- vised National' Labor Relations Board election 106 .06 Commodities would be notified of this fur- Total 1.13ft 000 share. gional office announced today. -- anti-discri- - hego-tiatio- ns nt r -- u Strike ... er d -- Appeal of Blind Veteran Saves Brother From Prison n 1 1 FALL RIVER, Mass (INS) Court spectators wept openly-toda- y and crippled as veteran of World War II pleaded successfully for clemency . for his wayward brother. I just want one more chance for him, Cpl. Joseph SLLaw-yenc- e, of Johnston, R. I. told Judge Walter L. Collins. His brother,. Peter. St Lawrence,, was charged with robbery. I know I can make a man out of him. I learned cabinet making in the government school for the blind, the soldier told the court, and If you will give us both a chance Ill make r.the ' cabinets - and : my ' brother will deliver them. 26, 1941, touched the button that atarie d.ihe-Pacifi-c The fprmer secretary of state, testifying before a senate-hous- e committee inquiring into the. Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, assailed in vigorous language the interpretations made by the army board. I Sat under that infamous charge for months when every reasonable minded person knew that the Japanese were attempting at that time to get complete control of the Pacific, Hull declared. Somebody who knows little about what was going-o- n and who cares less,- - says Why didn't the United States make concessions and keep tis, out of war? he continued. Determined tq Firht ' "Any reasonable person knows that the Japanese were bent on attack and knows that we could not havestopped thenr unless we had laid down like cowards. Hull earlier testified he had only an unverified report of the attack-oPearl Harbor"Wheirhe conferred with the Japanese peace envoys at 1 p?m. Dec. 7. n- 1941. RESIGNS IbL PROTESTS Maj. Gen. Patrick J.Hur- ley, American ambassador to China, resigns position U. S. is under- with - miningcharges democracy in - sup-- " port of imperialism' and Communism. British File Protest With Hull resumed Jiis testis, Sovieton Iron Senator Lucas jBefore mony. (D-Il- said l) The brother of the soldier . who lost his sight and part of one hand in Europe burst into tears and told the judge, I promise to make good this time. Fll take care of this, wonderful brother of mine all his life. I wont fail him - - . again. He was given- - a Suspended sentence of five to seven years. ther violation ofqh Wagner Act by refusing to negotiate at all on our "Wage demands. Referring to a union proposal that -- GM's financial records be used to determine the com panys ability-tpay a 30 per cent wage increase, the manage ment declared, - it should be clear. . . that we wilt not negotiate with your union regarding our selling prices and profits.. Charges Hurled GM also accused the union of g, bringing forth :: a denial from Reufher. The General Motors dispute was the biggest factor jn keeping the national total of workers affected by labor 'disputes above the mark. r Management andimion ' differed in their estimates of the effectiveness of a demonstration" strike against Montgomery Ward and Company, which began yesterday and is scheduled to continue through Saturday. The union said 12,000 workers were out, but Ward's asserted 92 per cent of its 75,000 employes were on the job. Plant Closed A walkout of 2100 CIO auto workers closed McQuay-Norr- is Manufacturing Company plants t. Louis, Indianapolis ' and Connersville, Ind. A 30 per cent pay raise and improved working conditions are the unions demands. UAW members have voted to strike against the J. I. Case Comot farm pany, manufacturer machinery, and Thursday has been set as the deadline for the companys answer to the union request for negotiations on a general wage increase and other grievances. The Southern Railway reported 11,000 AFL machinists walked out yesterday in a jurisdictional dispute at (hops in Birmingham Ala.; Spencer, N. C.; Atlanta, Greenville and Hayne shop,- - S. C.; Macon, Ga.; Princeton, Ind, and at other points. o illegal-picketin- half-milli- on one-we- WASHINGTON (AP) Maj. Gen Patrick J, Hurley.je- as ambassador fo China today, bitterly assailed American policy in Asia, and declared that a third world war was soldier-diplomThe white-haire- d charged that the United' States was using its power undermine de mocracy and bolster imperialism and Communism in the Far East. -In diplomacy-today- r we are permitting' ourselves to he sucked into a power bloc onthe side of colonial imperialism against Communist imperialism,-- he asserted. "I am opposed to both.'I still favor democracy and free en; terprise. statement Hurley announced his resignation in a 1500-wor- d containing frequent charges that career diplomats and State Department officials were blocking attainment of expressed U. S. war aims. Hurley said the United States began the war with the l. zprincipies of the" Atlantic Charter and democracy as He added: We finished the war in the Far East furnishing lend- lease supplies and using all our reputation to undermine de. mocracy and bolster imperialism and Communism. Hurley expressed himself in full agreement with the Amert can foreign policy which at LONDON-- ... The (AT), called to exBritish government said today plain their interpretation of testiit had Informed Moscow it was mony by former Ambassador Jodisturbed to learn that Soviet C.Grew- - that the Hull seph military authorities haL pre- note "was- the "document that vented Iranian forces from touched. off the button that startquelling insurgent disturbances ed the war. Grew ln Azerbaijan hashalleng ed the interpretation. -A note handed - by British his discussion During of the Ambassador Sir ' Archibald board army report, Hull Clark Kerr to Foreign - Cofn- once to remark that if hepaused could missar V. M. Molotov said Brit-al- n express himseif-i- n the language; presumed that Russias ac- he would like to use, all religious,tlon was duetto some misun-minded persons and suggested derstanding, hve to leave the hearingwould room. that Moscow might feel able Was Not Called the Red " army to'lnstruct not to obstruct" The former secretary said 'commander xy' the future response to a Question by Lucas - Iranian forees-- 4 that he had not been called to TEHRAN (AP) A traveler from northern Iran reported to See PROBE 0 day that, forces of Azerbaijan Province Separatists had occupied Zenjan, 174 miles northwest of Tehran, in military operations'- thrusting "SOUllTAlbng" the .main railway liner He said gif government buildings itvZenjan, capital of Kham-sc- h Province," were In" SeparatWASHINGTON (AP) ists hands and that telegraph Senator Wheeler ' cut.the senate today this nation was lines were no official confirwas There backing both Russia and Eng- mation here. The Iran governland in a mad rush Into another world war that might end civi- ment previously had acknowledged that the Separatists were lization. The only aggressors today are operating in Hamseh, ' armed with weapons which were disour beloved and noble peace-lovitributed by "unknown people." westthe veteran Allies,? If the report is true, only two ern senator said in a prepared speech opposing partici- - principal railway stations now patiimia the. presenbUmled.Na.4 separatehe Azerbaijan forces from thejcapital.-Haltetions organization. admittedlv ,in By Russians gloomy review of recent world anian events, the veteran wester Iroopi which wexe.dis-patche- d last week to quell dissenator sharply criticized results of the war to date, the Interna- turbances in Azerbaijan were tional policies of the United halted by Soviet Russian au States leaders, and the United thorities at Kazvin and have not Nations organization. been allowed to move north. Russian- - troops occupy the tone. Hits Appeasement "I will not believe that Russia wants war, the senator, said. Trial " WASHINGTON We must quit appeasing Rus(AP) sia and let her know once and The navy today ordered a genfor all we did not fight this war eral courtmartial to try Capt. to let her enslave the people of CharledB. McVay, III, commanEurope. She agreed to our high der of yie cruiser Indianapolis principles in her hour of distress, which wks lost in the PhilipShe must abide by them now. pine Sea, July 30, 1945. U. S. Intervention UJrHeadsfor I n C. M. Stri ke Seen War, Says Solon - q JL in an army inquiry board s that the note hc ha.nded Jap.- anese "peace" ambassadors Nov, -- had-fail- (AP) Cor today branded as uan- -j dell-Hu- ll- s- Socialist projects The former' prime minister Tunched the Conservative first major offensive r gainst the regime of Prime . Minister Attlee. Churchill charged that th T.abof "cabinet ' deal effectively with reconversion, demobilization andir housing because of preoegupa-qtioplans-t- o with long-ter"nationalize industries. 4 - The motion was almost tainly doomed to failure' cause of the Labor partys overwhelming voting majority, hut it will serve to develop debate on the range ' of Britain's postwar a. plishments and plans. Lord LONDON (AP) ranhourne, opposition leader, told the House at Lords today the demarkation boundary between the western powers A i and the has become , ' part of Europe like a dividing line between two civilizations. Contactsbetween those two spheres are almost daily er, Lord Cranbourne said the opening of a two-da- y on foreign policy. On a basis, how can the world- or ganization succeed? nmpeiriaflDsimi, 9g13i WASHINGTON Stan ChurchilL asked Commons to censure the British ...tonight Labor government, charging that It was neglecting major I OHcy-iaac-K-s our-goa- an outlinedinhis Navy Day speech last months However, he contended that the realization of that announced - "professional diplomats In the lower echelons. no Hurleys statement-evokeImmediate comment from either the -- Whitt-House Department, nr' d tft Yhgennrt4sid-ttre-hiin- for what he described as .the d direction and confusion of policy in Washington, directly on the U. S. foreign service. ypstead of putting our weight behind the charter of the have been def- initely supporting the imperialistic bloc, he said. .At the same time, a considerable section of our State Department is endeavoring to - support communism generally as well as specifically . In China. Hurley said he had pursued two chief objectives in China: 1. To prevent collapse of National Chiang government and keep the Chinese army in the war. 2. To "harmonize relations between ' the Chinese and American armies and between - the embassy in Chungking and fhe. Chinese governhydra-heade- n - Miklnj Ordered -- v ks 1S. ment. ' These objectives, he said, had See HURLEY On Page 0 - - Come and See, Says MacArthur to Critics TOKYO (INS) Douglas MAcArthur took at critics of his occupation Gen. a rap poli- cies today when "welcoming the projected visit of the Far ng d Kai-she- Eastern advisory commission to Japan, he said, in effect, -- Come and see for yourselves. The supreme commander mentioning efforts of lovlet Russia to gain greater influence In the occupation, a p o k e of "misinformation" which has apparently been designed to Influence international opinion. -- U. S. Sending 700 Planes, China Claims CHUNGKING (AP) Chinese Nationalists today heard that some 700 American planea are being flown into China, pre etwnably-for-fhei- ruse;- as central drove to troops government within 90 miles of Mukden, vital rail center in the battle for Man:: . . ' , churia. Associated Press .Correspond -ent Richard Cushing, wrote from Shanghai that' virtually every flyable American plane in India end Burma was being flown into China in an operation which already haacost several American lives. There were 11 crashes last Thursday when 22 flying from Kunming to the Shanghai area encountered a weather front . Cushing was told the" flight was ordered by the War Depart ment and that the 10th Air Force was bringing transports and the 14th Air Force fighters. Banking officers told Cushing the aircraft undoubtedly will be given to the Chinese Nationalists. U.S.- - air .forces official said -it is. vital that the United States protect allied gains In China, Cushing wrote, but the men fly- - ' are debating ing the aircraft angrily whether they ought to be risking their lives three months after the end of the war. . L. , Chungking newspapers said -Nationalist forces advanced 40 miles along the Peiping-Mukd- tn railroad to Kowpangtze, 90 miles from Mukden. There was no re- - . port of opposition. Simultaneously, unconfirmed press reports indicated the Rus- - -sians will permit the Nationalists to- - garrison- - Manchuria. They as- - -serted a number of Chiangs had returned to Changchun, Manchurian capital. TheSovieta aiso were said to -have pledged the safety of Nationalist troops flown Into Changchun or Mukden. ' P-5- 1s ' Hostile At Mansfeldt Trial SAN FRANCISCO (AP) tility toward the baliff today s , Some spectators at the Mani-fcl- dt he i ref used to permit relatives murder trial disnlaved hos- - to embrace Mrs. Annie -- Irene Mansfeldt before court opened. You, Cant do that," a specer tator shouted at the baliff. cried. rageous Mrs. Mansfeldt. 45. charged with alaying Nurse Vada Mar- tin, 36, because she believed Mrs. V in Baltimore, the general said. Martin was stealing the love of It takes eight or nine years Mrs. Mansfeldt's doctor-iusto go through a complete medi- band, broke into racking soba. cal course and I was anxious She was iiv auch condition she to get him started as soon as was taken back to the Jail and the trial was delayed. possible." General .MacNider said his f A young woman from the request for Jacks discharge spectators stepped toward the was addressed to the marine defendant, and as comely Baliff John F. Kerrigan inter- corps headquarters, Washingvened - several persons - moved ton, and to- no individual. Now on terminal leave, the toward him threateningly and ere more angry words: general has two other sons who there enlisted on their 17th blrth-- - Finally calm was restored. The trial opened yesterday and days and now are out of servthe jury of seven women and ice. Tom, J9, was an airforce five men was 'selected before cadet. He was given an option Jo leave the service and did. adjournment. Mrs, Mansfeldt watched the selection without Angus, 17, received a medical outward show of emotion. discharge from. the navy. Generals SonLacks Points, But Him Out His-Father-G- at-S- GREAT LAKES, I11.-(- ets AP) Pvt. Jack MacNider, i8, son of Brig. Gen. Hanford MacNider, was discharged today from the marine corps, the navy public relations office announced. Young MacNider said he had a total of 38 points for his two years service on. Iwo Jiraa and other Pacific battles. The marine requirement is 50, but MacNider said he received a special order discharge. In Washington the marind corps said young MacNider was discharged at the request of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. The youth father is a for I- 'V , " , mer national coihmander of the "American Legion who fought" in both world wars. He com- manded the 158tH Regimental Combat Team in tne invasions of New Guinea and he Philippines and received several dec-- .. orations, including the Legion of Merit. General MacNider said in Mason City, Iowa, that Jack-ha- d enlisted on his17th birthday and "1 asked permission to bring him back (from Japan) ' with me so he might continue his studies. The youth intends to enroll at Iowa State College. Ames,. and eventually hopes to enter Johns Hopkins Medical School pre-med- ic Out-anoth- ' ' ' - - -- ji. ' j ' I j : j |