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Show -- lrr LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred Hthtr Measure New Evidence Approved by Committee. In Pearl Probe Short Unfolds Anti-Petril- lo WASHINGTON (AP) Legislation which Chairman Lea said was designed to restrain powera of Jamea C. Pe trillo, head of the American Federation Of Musicians, today waa approved by a 14-- 6 vote of the house, interstate commerce committee. Lea is author of the bill which, according to Jt title, la aimed to 'prohibit certain coercive practice affecting radio broadcasting." Lea told newsmen th bill grew out of demands made upon broadcasters by Petrillo. Lea said he coniidered the demands not within the legitimate rights qf any organization, and added that a government cannot afford to permit" them. The legislation would prohibit use of threats or force to coerce, compel or constrain" a radio station to pay or agree to pay" tribute for the prhn ilege of producing or using rec ordsr transcriptions or mechanl lf) MaJ. WASHINGTON (AP) Gen. Walter (C. Short today gave congressional investigators evidence which he said showed that two days before Pearl Harbor the chief of army intelligence did not believe an open split with Japan was near. The 1941 chief of Intelligence was Maj. Sherman Miles. at Short, army commander Pearl Harbor when the Japanese struck Dec. 7, 1941, read Into the record of the Senate-Houinquiry this message which he said Miles sent to Panama on se Dec. 8, 1941:- - -- rela"United tions strained. Will inform you if and when severance of diplomatic relations is imminent. The message caused a stir among members of the Senate-Houinvestigating committee. told reSenator Lucas (D-Iporters he thought It was "one of the moat important developments yet." jf Senator Ferguson said it was important in the inquiry to have messages Washington sent to other places than Hawaii. He said the message in question would have been most important In the of Miles, who has been a witness. , Short also handed another document to the . committee. It waa an extract from testimony by Maj. Gen. Hayes A. Kroner, 1941 chief of the intelligence branch under General Miles, at a previoua investigation of Pearl Harbor. This showed Kroner testified on Sept 1, 1944, that in preparing estimstes of the world military situation he did not have the benefit of intercepted Japanese messages. States-Japane- se se ' "Darling, dont you still hide your money up here? - ACCIDENTAL WAR OF ANNIHILATION SEEN WASHINGTON The of annihilation exploding accidentally from a defective feomb fuse or a maniac thumb jabbing a fatal button waa conjured up today by Major. Gen. J. F. C. Ful- (AP) - nightmare of an atomic war fully in event of another war, he said, but on account of the tension in which all nations will live, it is far more likely to be severed accidentally." Then he mentioned bad fuses on atomic rocket. and maniacs who might ler. gain abbess to control panels as The British military analyst instruments of such disaster. likened the atomic weapon to Writing in the service magaa iword ol Damocle auspended zine, Army Ordnance, Fuller gave his conception of the outover the worlda head. break of an atomic war: "Instead of cities being walled in as in the Viking age, we can picture whole countries girt about by radar sets, ceaselessly 'listening in for the first note (Continued from Page 1) of the broadcast of annihilation. "In the vicinity of these Instruments will be hidden away two tactical organizations of atom - charged and propelled rockets the one offensive and the other defensive.. The first will be ranged on every great foreign city In the world, because before war is launched (to 4 . i , declare it would be sheer madlatlon of union contract. ,, In Washington, Ross said the ness), no single nation iswill know its true administration (till had no' im- who among the rest mediate plana for further action enemy. "The second organization will In the steel strike. When asked by the radar sets, whether there were any plans be directed as they signal a .for Henry Kaiser to be brought and asof soon offensive rockets speedinto the picture in an effort to flight settle the steel strike, he re- ing toward them the defensive rockets will automatically ba replied, I know ftno such leased by radar to speed into the plans." and explode In whatKaiser last week signed a heavens contract with the steelworkers ever cubic space in the stratofor bis California steel plant. sphere radar decides the enemysat offensive rockets will enter 263.000 Idle In Strike , The meat strike has made a calculated time. packing house workers Entirely Automatie 0 263.000 Idle for eight days. "Then miles above the surface The presidential seizure order was made despite lack of def- of the earth, noiseless battles inite commitments from officials will be fought between blast and of the CIO unions involved in counterblast Now and again an the atrike that they would invader will get through, and order the workers off picket up will go London, Pans, or New York in a lines and back to the plants. The Labor Department said mushroom of smoke and dust; the CIO United Packinghouse and as nobody will know what Workers Union, whose 193,000 Is happening above or beyond or members are staking, had made be certain who is fighting whom let alone what for the war no promise it would call off will go on in a kind of bellicose the walkout. George A. Eastwood, president perpetual motion until the last of Armour Is Co., one of the laboratory blows up. major struck plants, said the company had not been officially advised of the governments intent to take over the meat packContinued From Page Ont ing industry. He said: Wa cannot see how such action in itself can settle the wage demands that precipitated the strike and closed the plants despite the paramount importance Other projects Include a -- to the livestock producers and stretch of 3.7 mllei of four-lan- e meat consumers." highway from the Draper crossPlans Completed road to However, the governments on Highway 91, concrete and plans to end the strike and seek bituminous surface, $510,000; 8 3 to restore the normal flow of mile from the Box Elder Coun1 fresh meat were reported com- ty line to Wellsville on Highpleted with either the army or way 91, grading, $400,000; 4 5 the Agriculture Department to miles north Farmington to Uintake charge pending settlement tah Junction, U. S. 89, bltumi-noof the wage dispute. 290,000; 7.8 pavement Elsewhere along the labor front miles Salt Lake City to Magna South St., U. S. there was no major developments via Twenty-fir- st 0, bituminou pevement, indicating settlement of the principal disputes including the $253,000; five milei Scipio canU. S. bituminous 91, pavestrike in the steel Industry. The yon, total idle throughout the coun- ment $211,250. Green S. U. River 166, bridge, try because of work stoppages 'remained a approximately 1,622,- -, steel and concrete, $201,000; 67 0, Salina miles, gradCanyon, 000, near an all-tihigh. 76 miles Ideal Although 750,000 are idle in ing, $176,000; the steel strike, some 98,300 oth- Beach toU-- Laketown In Rich gravel surface, er steel workers are at their County, $175,000; 7 miles, Delta to Nejobs In the Industry, an Associatvada state line, U. S. 6, bitumied Press survey showed.-Thes- e 13 3 include members of independent nous pavement, $150,000; unions and CIO steelworkers miles, Newcastle ,to Modena in have been offered acceptV who able wage boosts. The steel shutdown, spread to the allied Industries, causing By WARREN GOODRICH furloughing of railroad workers on some lines serving steel mills, slashing milk deliveries because of a container shortage in some cities and reducing output of railroad cars at the Illinois Central Railroads terminal in Memphis, Tenn. Mediation will be resumed in New York tomorrow between leaders of 20,000 striking CIO United Electrical Workers and Executives of General Electric and Westinghouse corporations. Strikes - - gh Roads - - ua 1 40-5- U-1- 3, Anin:;l Crcslisrs 'loaoiiow AiusM Deoendttbk JMfiGITABlt V J . UXATIVI tnA&i:x My, ; caLhemtcalLorelectrical re re-ee- iva Tokyo Bath Houses Win PrlcO Increase THE DESERET NEWS, Salt - Continued From Page One donated her eyes to the Blind Bank, which provides corneas or any other necessary parts of the eye, for operation. ImmeMiss diately upon her death Tobey's physician, Dr. Newell Gilea, removed her eyes and shipped them to New York in a refrigerated plane. Within a few hour Dr. Caatrovlejo had transplanted Miss Tobeys right cornea into Judy's right eye. The left cornea waa used a llttla later for a blind man, as only one eye can ba operated on at a time. Receives Blessing Prior to the operation Judy received a blessing from Elder Harold B. tee, a member of the Council of the Twelve of the Church of Jesui Christ of Latter-day Saints. . Only a local anasthetic was . TOKYO (AP) Inflation hit Tokyo's bath housei today. The bath house union wsi granted permission to Increase the rates from 20 to 60 sen (three cents) for adults, end from 10 to 30 sen fgr children. And It costs from five to ten yen (68 cents! to enter the baths. xrai sooni Dole Carnegie Course la fisMl Beetle, at ea4 Xtiaoa take used, end Judy remained cheerful throughout the delicate surgical manipulations. Mrs. Levine was not allowed at tha hospital during the operation. The graft took and the bandages wera removed In three weeks. Six weeks later an operation was performed on the left eye with another cornea, left o the Blind Bank by an anonymous donor. Infection appeared, the graft didnt taka, so a second operation was performed on the left eye. Results from this are still indefinite and not entirely satisfactory, Mr. La- - City, Utah, Jsn. 23, 1848 $ vln waited in New York for Dr. Cestroviejo, who had to go to South America for several weeka. Ha was immensely pleased with the right eye, but requested that Mrs. Levine bring Judy back to New York in four months for examination, and another operation, possibly been Despite all she has through, blue eyed Judy laughs, let her four and a half year old sister Lois and two year old brother Jay play with har, and grins when a light la turned on. Having been in the dark for a year aha seems to enjoy having her eyes opened at last it j t '.m-'- i ;t V Opeoe epportMnftfea as dro store owner or manifest,: pharmacy bone ulw, detail meat or ia Civil i Sendee,' 6ui Beard rMnUm he Pad 1MI Ini Mi m Uk tW Mmechesetta tie llt(itr4 Pturmeeirt bm M lhy ve 14 fear yar eipwwuu p 4m k4 i bum Mmh4iimm mlm mi Hqwfli -- a tl ym e)4 Couim la Pbanamy. ar PnrU Tutorin CaaM a Seda riwj fc4. Mm jfpaw yna W uLnMnuoa CMtaa tawjiil-- a Private taWna Conn MX CeontfeMi Aamm yew him la pMnmy ENROLL NOW OmaanS f Maaafi4 U . anqr am "lop" ia phatpary werid. WMTSsi TEACHER OF PHARMACY (Eat 1913) fredest (lades MENACES SCHOOL - or BUSINESS 4 I. 4warr, S. S. f 1117 Mata Street Springfield 1, Maaeoehueetts h) The slender thread holding that sword might be cut wil- 40,000-foot-hl- ng productions. A maximum penalty of a yeari Imprisonment and a $1000 fins la provided for violations. Moreover, it would prohibit use of force or threats to require a broadcaster to employ any person in excess of the number o employes the station wants. ' Radio station also could not ba compelled to refrain from broadcast of noncommercial or cultural programs in which tha participants no money except expenses. Baby-- on new-until-n- Rails - (Continued from Page 1) workers were about ready to accept arbitration pending final detail!. of their wage Issues only, leaving rulei changes in mediation, Arbitration would be bind ing on both aides. Whitney declined to estimate when a strike might be called, if authorized by the membership, adding that it would not be called if a settlement were reached meanwhile, "Then we will serve notice on the railroads and if we get no offer we will go Into action, Whitney said. Our -- committee - ehairmen from each railroad declined an offer of the national mediation board to arbitrate the wage issue. , "We felt it was necessary to kep tha two Issues together-wa- ges and rula changes. We received the boards arbitration proposal Monday but could not accept it," he r tinued. . V. v, Prejudice Charged "The board n become an advocate of the railroads by afa tempting to force us to relinquish our rules program. They have attempted to divide the wage and rules Issues." Johnston said the present situation waa the result of the failure of the mediation board and the railroads to meet our demands. ,, "They tried to force us to withdraw our rule program," he continued, "and made no honest effort to negotiate. Then they broke off, and the mediation board stepped In. At first the board aid it was hopeless, and then they suggested arbitration of the wage issue," 6, Iron County, bituminou one-ha- lf pavement, $126,000; mile, blue cut revision in Carbon County, natural rock asphalt, $120,500; 2.4 miles, LaSal Junction to Motb in San Juan County,' U. S. 160, bituminous surface, $50,000; Bootleger Wash Bridge in Grand County, conCreek crete, $38,000; Ferron In Bridge south of lterron steel girdEmery County, 0, er, $30,000. Another $53,110 is included In the approved program for statewide planning aurvey. 4 eMMeeMeeeeeemeeeeMeeeeeemKeeeKeeeeeeeeeiMeemeewjeseeseiewMWiHHiwMWMMttwtminffltt SEMI -- DRESS POLICE SHOES m LWv Famous Shockless Cushion for Adivs Children U-5- Moufded leather arch lilt furnishes Close grained calfskin dress shoe appearance. support. (AP) The news-pap- er Jijl Shimpo said today that 92 per cent of 2224 Japanese polled on the desirability of tha Tenno (emperor) ay item favored retention of the emperor. TOKYO The sturdy wing tip oxford that' ready tor school or a husky horsehld sole and strong brown !k uppar, tt will take all young Americana can give built on a special last for it, Super-fisxlb- l lining for extra strength and wear. Solid one piece in- "Wearproof play. With side leather backstay sup. porta lb upper . i . odd . sisal ehank added sturdy strength. Strong gives MI-SMOG- r.iEirs Sitst Ilk to 3. growing ftsL smooth comfort ins ids. U-1- Loyal to Hirohlto extra give rqnn shoes S Block or Brown O Brown Retan Leather ) shoe el Goodyear well construction with full leather midsole and raw cord sole and A good, lough heeL T r 3 " lisas Ilk la 1L TESETf 1 LACE-TO-TO- o And Stop Dosing Your Stomach With Soda and Alkalizer Dont expect to get rest relief from Lac doubl e Tops rubber construction give leather protection o cross alka-lize- he!. DILTVELL DELUXE the loot Triple sole; extra com- position half soles; elled-lanpe- ns and bad rt breath by taking soda and other if the true cause of your trouble is constipation. In tnis case, your real trouble Is not In tha stomach at all. But in tha intestinal tractwhera80 of yourfoodis digested. And when it get blocked it (alls to digest properly. What you want for real relief b not soda or an alkalizer but something to "unblock" your intestinal tract. Borne, thing to dean it out eSectively help Nature apt back on her feet. Get Carter's Pills right now. Take them as directed. They gently and effeo. tively unblock" your digestive tract. This permits your food to move along normally. N atures own digestive Juicee can than reach it. You get genuine relied that makes you feel really good again. Get Carter's Pills at any drugstore 2 W. Unblock" your intestinal tract fog teal rebel from iad.geuoa, headache, sour stomach, ch Stare economical plan lor distribution bring you those bn ehildrsnt shoes at such a remarkably lew price. Sixes 6 Ik to 12, all leather soles and upper; LOGGERS E upper. V MEN'S 0 White High Shoes QUALITY DRESS RUDDERS o All Sizes 6 to 1- 3STORE HOURS: 10 A. M. TO 6 f. Ityled to conform to the nat- ural P9 l normal foot Plain foet; ch luppoft luee Ilk M. IYERY WEEKDAY A A WXKW' V !,nr? ( , d) to 11. Mein et Salt Lake Cry L' !JiO t |