Show — -— -- -- -- - --- - - i irbt 5att gakt Zeibunt A March 30 1947 f 6- Sunday 'Dead' Volcano In Iceland Erupts Again Iceland March 29 (UP)--Heide which has been a "dead" volcano for 101 years erupted Saturday with a roar that shook the countryside and began pouring out a flood of lava and choking clouds of ashes and pumice sand On the south leeward side of the mountain ashes and sand fell at the rate of an inch an hour covering fields and meadows This was more serious than the lava or the great boulders the volcano was spitting out like peas Covers Pastures Farms When another volcano Mt Laid erupted in 1783 the ashes and sand belch forth covered so many pastures and farms that more than half of the island's livestock died and 20 of the human population perished in a subsequent famine The top of the main cone blew off at 6:50 am (12:50 am EST) As the eruption started the surrounding area was shaken by a strong earthquake whose shocks were felt at Reykjavik nearly 80 miles away So far no casualties had been reported The smoke billowed at least 20000 feet into the air from the 5108-fomountain and on the south side it was as black as night At noon two lava streams were pouring down the mountain and the sand north of the crater was steaming Indicating the great heat Inside the mountain Glaciers Black Now Glaciers to the south were already black with ashes as were the fields and pastures between the mountain and the glacier Red name was belching out of the crater and mingling with the REYKJAVIK - Mt a ot amoke Painil Mannessons a geologist said the eruption would cause havoc for miles around the mountain When Hekla erupted in 1845-- 4ts last activity before Saturday—the eruption lasted for months There was danger although not Immediate from flood Directly to the south are glaciers If the lava flows onto them in any quantity they would melt and pour torrents of water into the valleys This has happened in years past during Iceland's numerous volcanic eruptions Ship's Lifeboat j Found-Emp- ty ' - - i - 1 I 1 '1 I I i i I ! 3 HONOLULU March 29 capsized lifeboat from the tanker Fort Dearborn was found CGS of northeast Midway Friday ninigilhest but it yielded no trace of the 12 men who have been missing since the ship broke in two during a storm March 12 Thirty two others who stayed aboard the bowand stern sections ‘ were rescued The freighter China Victory en route from the Philippines to San Francisco reported discovery of the empty boat in a radio message to the Hawaiian sea frontier It said the boat apparently the one launched by panicky crew members- - when the Dearborn broke up was badly damaged its propeller was missing and there was no sign of life" The stern section of the wrecked 10448-to- n ship wallowed in the swells 370 miles north of this islAnd awaiting the arrival Sunday of a second tug to help tow it into Pearl Harbor for salvage -- - Ital3 Workers Strike 11(5ME March inatio Ilivin 1 GIFI—A 29 thirty-minu- (INS )—A te strike held In Italy Saturday In i agemt reported government inaction" over the rising cost of g r s ' t - - t- tt— i 1 r t 4 i I I 4) " 1 4 " 1 4 1 TOKYO March 29 UP)—Baffled by the Japanese 'people's inability to comprehend that their votes now will run a country once throttled by rbyalty warmakers and industrial barons Gen Douglas MacArthur's government experts are 4 - -1 LIZa - Easter Special $15 Cold Vltava 1 for Only SO 4 i m13 is a nat:ionally advertised Cold Wave —the permanent without Regularly priced at $15 for only $8 Make your appointment early and save 7 I heat I 1! I 101000 Tread Steps of Master Holy Land Custom week Today in Influx of Christians for holy March 29 CM— e - I! cal:001p e0 BEAUTY log A' SALON 1 MAIN AT BROADWAY I1 PHONE 2401 Paraguay Asserts Rebels in Defeat ASUNCION Paraguay March government commu(—A declared nique Saturday that rebel forces seeking to drive on Asuncion through the swamplands of the Jeui river valley had attacked government positions at Piripucti 22 miles north of San Pedro and met severe defeat riripucu is a pass through the swamp about 110 miles north of Asuncion Previous reports said the insurgents were trying to penetrate the swamp by means of the Pawns causeway The government communique indicated they now were trying to find less stoutly defended passages 29 AROUND THE WORLD - '' ' Deputies Miss at 25 Paces In Fizzle of French Duel PARIS March 29 (UP)Twe deputies of the French national assembly blazed away at each other with pistols at 25 paces in France's first postwar duel Saturday tight but both missed The duet was between former Information Minister Gaston the challenger and Paul Bastid publisher of the Paris morning newspaper "IlAurore" It occurred in a wooded area near the suburb of Rambouillet at 6:30 pm during a driving rainstorm A communique issued by four seconds said two bullets were fired without result and that - 'there was no reconciliation" "It was truly a duel 'a la Fran" Moro Glafferi one of the seconds told newsmen "Both - men were very chic calm cool- and Courageous" Bastid's newspaper had charged that Deferre was implicated in an old black market wine scandal De-re- m NEW DELHI March 29 (A'— 'The Vlet-nar- tt delegate to the interAsian relations conference charged the French Saturday with importing 25000 former members of Rommers Afrika a year ago corps to Indo-Chiand using them to fight the Tran Van Giau who said he was a former governor of Cochin Mina asserted that 2000 of the former nazi desert fighters had deserted or surrendered but were merely being disarmed by the Vietnamese He declared also that the French were using Japanese and British Guerkhas against who are in the revolt against French colonial rule na Viet-nazne- se - Viet-name- March 29 L— Moderate rains fed - England's floods Saturday but it was reported from most high water regions that there was no marked change in the general situation Eight villages were flooded at the mouth of thS River Trent in Lincoln- LONDON '44' r- '422 kt ta - 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- i' 5 1' 110r ' ( -' 0 ' -- '' tv':' '' 'Ir" ' - - t eft e) ': 3 -5- ri--- I (1) - -- 'IN - Q -'- 1 it6l''''':: ' A t : 1 ' k- -t '' e 4 1r: i -- 401 P1 ell ‘Jr P (OW ‘41 (i)4 k - I :-"0-E-- - No 0- i 11 --Ai- tiC: ' - :- N ‘CH' Atm 17-to-:' ' - - WI N - - a) c---- 1 -1 r------ -4 1000 U 'CZ ' -- tl - — o'''''' I e5 43 ' k MEXICO CITY March 29 (R)— - - ' !V - S M77710RE-Carrys17- rictit ''10 la 011 41' epicture” Er 0 1 'I -- 1 4-- t - ' ' 4"' 4'21 e 1 v ? ee drefeees"4- tims (Nuncio cosies I Ni k4 - d L t o e:4: re- t 7 ' A' 1! t - ik y i' t $ - t : (C9 '7 xi -- - Montt ) -t ' -A : ' - - LL-4-- ' - - - - T 0 - - ' 4 ' ) — 1 )i l' - i ea-F- 1 ' -- - I ' ) 1 1 4- : :ct 'd it ' ' :"4112146t ' il( e UP)-LSa- lih - y) ' ' ''''' ' " Ii OTTAWA March 29 (11P)—The Canadian government was pre paring Saturday to accept responsibility for 'the lifelong security of Igo Gouzenko the former Soviet embassy cipher clerk whose abstraction of secret documents from the embassy files led to exposure of an alleged Soviet fifth column in Canada A 'special measure which will the royal Canadian enable mounted police to details guards for Gouzenko his wile and two children is being drafted and will shortly be presented to parliament for ratification it was learned Gouzenko will shortly receive Canadian citizenship as part of the dominion's thanks for his role in the espionage expose Legislator's explained that his safety in Canada would thus become a challenge to since any action the nation against the safety of a Canadian citizen for service rendered his new country would be a matter affecting public safety r-- ' - ) Canada Shields Spy's Life lino — STREET FLOOR -- 1 - --401' 98 tel I st BEARING 11 'N - - ' - BLOUSES — ‘ Jeweled neckline' 'rayon- - crepe— tailored -front snort sleeves - sizes ' ' Follows Demand Dieclosure MacArthur's appeal to the council followed by one day disclosure that he had written to Premier Shigeru Yoshida a demand that the Japanese government tighten and improve it own economic and food rationing systems if it expected further aid from America Yoshida replied that the government would try and Saturday morning his agricultural ministry announced a plan for improving food collections plus a rural industrial education program The government's economic stabilization board announced it act in would push an anti-truthe diet t -0- detailed with new high neckliries You'll look as -excitingly feminine as your favorite movie star - — operation" 29 ' 3 CP r1 A beautifully tailored Judy Bond blouse is the right -- adorably answer for every new spring suit - ' — Royon Crepes Vyoke neck( sleeves sizes 32 to 38 t '' ' - ' the Japanese government had created the necessary measures "on paper but had not yet made tirse regulations effective In U S JAP RULE : — - CARIO American Legion Commander Paul H Griffith Saturday told an audience of IL S and Mexican veterans that the two countries "must stamp out these termites of communism within our midst" reSpeaking on lations at a luncheon Griffith said: "Our joint efforts resulted in the crushing of the monstrous pagan evils of nazism fascism and nipponism by force of arms Today a new evil ideology is rising in the world We must resolutely take a common stand against the march of this world-wid- e philosophy of destructions" X A kJ ' ''' '' ' ' 17 Arabs Rake U S 'Interference' SYDNEY Australia March (CTPS)—Australians Saturday renewed their complaints about American assignment of their occupation forces in Japan which they claim has resulted in Japanese ignorance that the British empire had any role in Japan's defeat The average now believes he Japanese was beaten solely by the United States and that the British empire is no longer a major power reported Jack Percival Sydney Morning Herald correspondent in Japan He added that the Japanese believe the British empire is disintegrating ' 1: ti ' t March 29 (P)—The shire and more rain was falling Arab league council said Satur'United States "interferbut this evening the water had day that ceased to spread Farmers had ence" in Palestine affairs and re-S cent tatemaents by Pres Harry time to move produce and had an extremely bad reaction and disturbed Arabs Iraq Cabinet Formed and Moslems the throughout world" BAGDAD Iraq March 29 In a memorandum sent to the of the senJabur a new Iraq cabinet United States the council said that ate formed president Saturday headed by himself He the American attitude would "afsucceeds Null Alsaid Dr Fadhil fect good relations between AmerJamall will continue as foreign ica and the Arab states" The league also demands that minister Jabur regarded as a "stop strong nationalist is the first the mergovernment Shiite Moslem to be designated support of emigration of Jews in memto Palestine" the formation of the Germany premier since the national administration in '1942 orandum said Heretofore all premiers have been Sunni MosIpms inter--America- 1 ' veg 44 t operations" The appended study commented that many "monopolistic nondemocratic features" of Japan's wartime system had not yet been abandoned despite directives from occupation authorities and that Blasts Communism se d - i pressing frank fear of "an uncontrollable inflationary situation" Gen Douglas A MacArthur asked the allied adcouncil visory Saturday for suggestions on establishing "a proper and stabilized wage-pric- e relationship" in Japan The request is to be considered at the council's meeting April 2 It was based on a study signed by the occupation commander's chief of staff Maj Gen Paul J Mueller Aggravated by Inequality MacArthur's communication to the council accompanying the study said the problem was "one of considerable difficulty in view of the great scarcity in Japan of practically every type of goods aggravated by inequal distribution of monetary purchasing power and deficit financing of both governmental and Industrial - - 7 ' ' : ' i-b- Floods Unchanged :— The Moslems will make a pilgrimage to an obscure shrine near Jericho where Islamic tradition says Moses was buried The Jews celebrate their holiest feast this week with the first day Passover which of the week-lon- g begins at sunset on Friday Latin Catholics predominate in the Palm Sunday procession from Bethany via the Mount of Olives and Gethsemane to the old city of Adherents of other Jerusalem Christian faiths—Greek Armenian Coptic and others—will worship in the holy sepulchre across the old city from Gethsemane i SPECIAL TILL EASTER! 1 - In the "before" cartoon the emperor was a large figure on a big wooden pedestal The nobility was a bit smaller and on a smaller block Still more shrunken was the man on a tiny pedestal The woman was a tiny figure on no pedestal at all The "after" cartoon shows a truck hauling away the pedestals and all figures even the woman are the same size Incidentally the man and the woman are smiling—but not the emperor and the nobility They look sort of glum JERUSALEM :- 1 — EX UPI 71Poiroprmry A1604r0201400r)4-y000PO- four-pow- er "the people" Hosts of faithful Christians will walk slowly down the rocky slopes of the Mount of Olives Sunday to commemorate in their traditional Palm Sunday procession the triumphal entry of Jesus Into Jerusalem nearly 2000 years ago 10000 in e Approximately women and children carrying palm fronds and church banners will make the pilgrimage A throng estimated at three times that number will line-thancient pathways historians say Christ trod five days before He was crucified on Calvary This colorful procession is the highlight of the beginning of Pusion week which ends with Easter seven days hence It is the start of a week of religious services by Christians Moslems and Jews in Jerusalem a Holy City for them all- For Christendom services commemorating events leading to the cruciflicion burial and resurrection began Saturday in traditional services at Bethany to recall Christ's raising Lazarus from the dead on the day before' He entered Jerusalem to start his week of agony Pilgrims from the Moslem world will arrive in Jerusalem for the annual observances of the feast of Nebt Musa (Prophet Moses) on Thursday The rites were instituted long ago by Moslem leaders to bring members of their faith to Jerusalem in order to balance the March 29 TOKYO 70-od- d1 IIITS TROOPS USE i- M'Arthur Asks Ideas to Stem Jap Inflation WE'LL DRAW THEM A PICTURE U S JAP OFFICIALS DECIDE trying to explain it with cartoons Allied artists have cut Emperor Hirohito down to a new size exploited women's rights wiped out the men who whispered advice from behind the throne and plunked the factory owner down at the bargaining table with his workers These colored posters—they are as simple as a child's picture book—will be displayed through the four big home islands in an effort to explain to the people that from now on it is their duty to take advantage of all the rights democracy and a new constitution have brought them Americans charged with reshaping Japan's government wipe fevered brows and hope the people will understand what it is all about by the time the four big April elections roll around They hope that at 'least the basic ideas will sink in millions will know what they are celeso the nation's new constitution takes effect 3 when the brating May At a press conference the other day Japanese newsmen listened dully as the constitution fair elections and political systems were explained: But when the cartoons were trotted out they came to life and chuckled and giggled appreciatively as their rights were explained in picture That gave the S CAP men hope it would be the same everywhere in the country A good example of the cartoons all of which are of the "before" and "after" type is one showing the relation oethe emperor the nobility and a man and a woman who constitute ‘ ' I 4 ' - 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