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Show DESERET NEWJ, Thursday, December MARMADUKE by Anderson & K 25, 1969 Leaning 4r &" 30c OFF JUMBO ' J. PACKAGE ir ji Controlled Sudsing Detergent t "I is, son . . . but, to me, he looks like the spirit of Christmas!" don t know WHO he J c Q iWar Haunts onn-Sovi- et ; w Negotiations BONN. GERMANY AP) -success of West Germa-nf'- s overtures to the Soviet Bjoc hinges on haw both tides deni with the German President Gustav Ifeinemann exchanged letters on the subject last week and Bonn Intends to probe whether the Communist demand Is as firm as it used to lie. of The main issue in tiie talks with Poland, due to start next Vprid War If. Both the year, is Polands present westBonn govera-mfern frontier, the Oder and and the Neisse rivers. This border, munlsts which puts parts of prewar hve in recent Germany into Poland, was set years softened provisionally by the victors of stands tlwir World War If pending the 0$ the perensigning of a peace treaty. nial issues that have blocked Recent West German govletter relations in the past ernments have held out no Bgt it will take time to deter- real hopes that Germany mine whether Bonns new would ever get these terriwith the Soviet tories contacts but Bonn has bade, GerUguon. Poland and East been reluctant to declare the many lead to an improvement border final without getting inthe political dimate. some political advantage in Chancellor Willy Brandt's exchange. It also is a touchy better would like government domestic Issue because of refRations with all Communist ugees from the casern terricountries and expanded diplotories now living in West Germatic ties with them. It now many who hope for some sort has full diplomatic relations of compensation. only with the Soviet Union. Brandts government tan be Romania and Yugoslavia. e It would also like to ex- expected to give the of some sort border change declarations renounc recognition, but it is unlikely ing ihe use of force with the to declare the border final Cemmunint states, and this is Before the Soviet invasion the central theme of the talks with the Russians which start- of Czechoslovakia. Bonn was discussing establishment of ed in December. with relations is issues central diplomatic the of pne recognition of East Germany, Prague. Here. 100. there is an the 1938 Munich pact tlie Communist state that has Issue come into being in the former that transferred the Germanspeaking Sudetenland from Soviet occupation zone of GerCzechoslovakia to Hitler's many. In the past, the East Ger- Reich. The Czechoslovaks demandmans and their allies have incited that Bonn accord the ed that Bonn delcare the pact which would free invalid, Ea s t Eerlin Czechoslovakia from any liar ( gime full i e c o g n bility for compensation to Germans expelled w hen the terriand diplomatic relations. tory was returned to Czechoslovakia after World War II. Brants Sod-algovDespite this, the two government has ernments were well on the farther gone way to working out a formula for establishment of diplothn any of its matic ties when the invasion p r edecessors in and the subsequent change in declaring that there are regime in Prague stopped evtwo German slates, but it still erything. West German nfles out international recogsay now they dont know nition. whether the Prague governpast German President ment is in a position to start Walter Llbricht and Wet new talks. Tk ligacy nt C-o- m Oder-Neiss- ls ofO-ria- ls 10 Million Particles Of Grit Per Gallon London a.a - The average Briton breathes in about 3.000 gallons of air ewery day in tlie large smokey low ns, each gallon contains of cj to 10 million particles pollution smoke, dust and git of harmful size. These are the cold hard foe the kind used by organizations like the National Society for Clean Air to batter a way for legislation to ensure t'tat air breathed in the future is at least a little cleaner. Xne great smog of 1952 killed 1.000 people in London the immediate suburb. What followed was the era of ti smog masks and a rash of t. al beat-th- e smug suggestions. It was a way of life for the next four years until tlie Clean Air Act was passed in 1956. Jbe legislation deals with tlie control of dark smoke, smoke from furnaces, smoke control areas and special cases of smoke emission, which include collieries, rail-Sv engines, vessels and crown premies. The most urgent problem in tho-- e early dark days v as un--d crab d 3 y domestic coal files. Vi-rpicitv to ioj. ai w if on a cold winters, night, hut. as turns out. a major contributor to tlie killer smog. Tlie Clean Air Act, however, lett it to local councils to ret target dates for their smokeless zones. Consequently, although there ate now over 3.000 smoke control areas in Britain, many councils have set dates as Late as 19$9. According to a government scientists report earlier this vear. killer smogs such as the 1952 one are unlikely in tlie future. The National Society for Clean Air said: Fine, now what about the fumes from the 18 .5 million vehicles on our roadsT In 1914 there were le" than vehicles on Bluish tOh.Od roads. The XSCA st s v elide fumes pollution as the next great hazard, and there are convincing figures to support their argument. By 130. there will be an estimated 26.6 million vehicles on British road. Government and local councils are well ahead w ith piaa for more trunk roads erd rroterv.,.- -. but the prdi'tm v HI ! ktr;t- jr.v it j .. 'p fv fr it f Is SUPER DETERGENT k |