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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 14

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Louisville, Kentucky
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14
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14 THE LOUISVILLE, KY THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 4, 1946. SECTION 1 Supply-Demand Clause Written Into O. P. A. Bill Eisenhower Asks Inquiry to Find Out If Officers Were Shielded In Lichfield Prison-Brutalities Trials Iran-Russia Agreement Would Satisfy Britain By HERBERT L.

MATTHEWS. By Wireless te The New Tork Times and Th Canrier-Jonrnal. London, April 3. If the Soviet Union satisfies the Iranian request to withdraw troops unconditionally by May 6, Britain's grievance against Moscow for violation of the 1942 treaty also will be satisfied, it can be stated Confidently tonight. The Iranian position throughout the controversy has been the British position and it remains so.

Washington, April 3 (AP) General Dwight D. Eisenhower today called for prompt information qn reports that the Lichfield brutalities court-martial in England is being mishandled to shield high Army officers. The chief staff followed up a London news dispatch which Continued from First Page. ticle "upon satisfaction of domestic demand therefor." 2. The President each month shall determine whether domestic demand for various commodities has been satisfied, and wherever he determines that the demand is satisfied "he shall forthwith certify that fact in writing to the price administrator." 3.

Upon receipt of this certification, the price administra i i 'i 1 jr Although the form that the 1 (KA 17 'If tor must act within 10 days to remove all price controls with respect to such commodity or class of commodities." as rents and maybe buildV.g materials, after June 30, 1947. It requires the President to report to Congress by next April 1 on any commodities, including housing accommodations, which are so scarce as to necessitate continued controls and to recommend a Government agency other than O.P.A. to administer thenl. The committee still has scores of amendment proposals pending including one by Wolcott that would limit O.P-A.'s new lease on life to nine months instead of the full year requested by the President. Voles to Repeal Order.

The House committee voted today, 12 to 11, to repeal on July 1 O.P.A.'s maximum average price (map) order aimed at spurring production of low cost clothing. The amendment to the act extending O.P.A. was offered by Representative Sundstrom (R. N.J.), who argued that ths "map" program is causing hardships on many manufacturers. The "map" program requires manufacturers to produce lines of apparel at average prices net exceeding a previous base 4.

The President is given the said Capt. Earl J. Carroll, assistant prosecutor, resigned on the eve of new trials with the assertion that conditions suggested deliberate effort to clear higher officers. A War Department spokesman said the headquarters of General Joseph T. McNarney, commander of Amrican forces in Europe, had been asked to in-estigate.

Eisenhower was confident, the" spokesman said, that McNarney already had taken steps to assure justice. 10 Are Accused. Th.e court-martial involves cases against 10 men accused of major responsibility lor decon trol, but the O.P.A. administrator may remove price ceilings on his own initiative. source quoted the letter as saying: "While the foregoing conditions may be largely accidental and coincidental, they nevertheless strongly suggest the deliberate creation of a condition that tends to assure the conviction of the enlisted personnel and a few junior officers; and the acquittal of officers of higher rank." Carroll Asks Single Trial.

It was further quoted as saying that separate trials for the enlisted men would extend the proceedings and "must necessarily impair the Government's case against the higher-ranking officers." Carroll was reported to have urged "nothing short of a single trial before a single tribunal" to determine "whether or not the large-scale mistreatments of American soldiers in confinement at Lichfield were due to a policy established by Army authority." Carroll himself said he was relieved as assistant prosecutor and had orders not to talk to reporters. Associated Press Wirephoto. COL. JAMES A. KILIAN Lichfield camp commander.

CAPT. EARL J. CARROLL Resigns as prosecutor. Door Left Open. 5.

Whenever the supply of a commodity or article, already decontrolled, falls short of demand, it may be put back under price control, upon certification of the President to the O.P.A. that supply and demand are out of balance. While decreeing a definite end of O.P.A., the Brown amendment would leave the door open for some controls, on such things tween certain of the great powers. "But I think it is fair to say that the Security Council came well out of the ordeal." Another widely held opinion was expressed in the Manchester Guardian's leading editorial this morning. U.N.

Failure Claimed. "Truth is," wrote the Manchester Guardian writer, "as was already obvious at the first meeting in London, that the Security Council is unfitted to deal with any dispute between the great powers. This weakness might be concealed if only there existed a common purpose between Russia and the western powers, but it is only emphasized by their present divisions, i "Clearly we cannot accept the Russian view that we should work the United Nations on her own terms or not at all, especially when her terms happen to be in our eyes so grossly immoral. But we are left with the problem of how we can work it on any other. The Charter has given to any one of the great powers the ability to wreck the United Nations if it wishes to do so and nothing can be gained by concealing this fact." Copyright, 1946.

dispute has taken before the Security Council has been purely a bilateral Russo-Iranian one, in effect it was a violation to the 3 942 treaty which provided the background for the whole quarrel. That was a tripartite treaty, and it, among other required Britain and the Soviet to withdraw their troops from Iran six months after hostilities ended or by March 2 of this year. Treaty Violated. when the Russians failed to withdraw their troops, they were violating the treaty in which the British had just as great a part as Iran. Sir Alexander Cadogan reported to the Foreign Office tonight on today's developments in New York and he will receive his instructions in time for tomorrow morning's session.

As fas as the general question cf faith in the United Nations is concerned, Herbert Morrison said today in addressing a meeting of the United Nations Association: "It is certainly a matter of regret that the opening meetings cf the Security Council should have revealed great differences cf opinion on certain subjects be mistreating U. S. soldiers who were prisoners during the war at the Lichfield, England, detention camp. Two of those on trial are officers. Carroll was reported in England to have submitted a seven-page letter of resignation detailing conditions he found ob-" jectionable.

An authoritative Senate Group Finally Passes Vardaman Anderson Made to Sign Cotton Order Continued from First Page. gust, 1945, to last February the price of cotton on futures exchanges rose 3.27 cents a pound, Reds Reported Arming Kurds For Revolt Continued from First Page. committee hearings and Donnell's arguments, asserted that in all this time Donnell had been able. Production Sets Record, Truman Says Continued from First Page. will be turned into economic chaos." Orally he amplified this with while during the same period the Civilians for Hearing G.I.

Complaints Urged average farm price of cotton to produce "not one thing connecting Commodore Vardaman climbed only' 1.68 cents. "There are strong indications," its statement said, "that the price advance is due in large measure to irresponsible speculation." U. S. Asks Russians to Leave O.P.A. had its regulation ready few days after Bowles' March 13 announcement, but in the the warning: The reconversion apple cart would be tipset if labor costs are included in a new meantime Southern Congressmen Its Oil Field In Himofar TV had asked Anderson not to sign the measure.

The Secretary held that his sians have been operating for about a year would be considered a violation of the armistice agree signature vas not required, and told reporters the Agriculture Department "will not be involved" in fixing higher margins. with one illegal thing." McFarland reminded Republicans that Senator Millikin Col.) also was a member of the subcommittee that listened to all the evidence and then voted unanimously for confirmation. Vardaman will be succeeded as the President's naval aide "by Capt. Clark Clifford, U.S.N.R., former St. Louis lawyer who has been Vardaman's assistant.

Vardaman will be sworn in by Associate Justice Stanley Reed of the Supreme Court at 11 a.m. (E.S.T.) tomorrow. Reds Again' Say Japs Shouldn't Vote Now Moscow, April 3 The Communist Party newspaper, Pravda, asserted today that conditions were unfit at present for elections in Japan and that many "reactionary" parties sought only to preserve "Japanese imperialism." This was the second attack within a week in the Soviet press on the Japanese elections scheduled for next Wednesday. Hedging Not Affected. But O.P.A.

and O.E.S. decided the order could not be put into effect unless approved by Anderson. The Attorney General's office agreed. Budapest, March 23 (Delayed) W) The American military mission has addressed a note to Marshal Klementi Voroshilov stating that the U. S.

Government wants all Soviet personnel withdrawn from the Hungarian-American oil fields in southwestern Hungary and the management of the wells returned to American owners. The note was sent to the Russian commander in Hungary March 22 and said the American Embassy in Moscow had taken the matter up with the Soviet Foreign Office. The American note said failure to withdraw Soviet personnel from the wells which the Rus Continued from First Page. training films on his rights and how to go about getting them. He should be assured no reprisals would follow a complaint, even an unfounded one.

I had been in the Army a year before I learned that I could take a complaint higher than my company commander." Had Opposite Effect. On discipline, he said: "I have been told that the reason for floods of admittedly senseless orders was to condition us to obey all orders without stopping to think whether they made sense or not. The effect on me was just the opposite. I never did get over the habit of asking myself: 'Is this order really necessary or is it something I ought to Kendall insisted there should be no disparity in food for officers and men. "Some of this disparity could be reduced," he said, "by getting the best out of what's available for the enlisted men.

Let some of the good cooks stay in the enlisted messes, instead of stealing them for officers. "In the Eighth Army we had 18 cooks for 1,500 enlisted men. farm-parity formula, as proposed in a Senate move hitching a parity amendment to the minimum wage bill. Truman has stated he would veto the bill if the amendment hiking parity prices stayed in. Debt Rise Checked.

"These are critical problems," the President added, "but they are being faced by a great country that is coming out of its war years as a strong and healthy He was optimistic on both labor and inflation problems, saying: "The public debt, which necessarily grew to give us our airplanes and guns, has now stopped rising and our revenues and expenditures are more nearly in balance. "The wage-price policy is being translated into action without ment. American sources charged recently in an interview that the Russians had ruined one well in this area and had caused damage estimated at $25,000,000. This charge is disputed by the Russians. The March 22 note called attention to an oil company complaint made to the Allied Control Commission March 6.

This complaint said the company had "suffered from rapid wastage of gas from a number of wells due to their operation under direction of Soviet engineers." After several days of dickering he got so good the officers took him. The 500 officers had 16 cooks and 16 bakers." Kendall also told reporters he had strongly recommended that the Army abolish "dog robbing," the system whereby enlisted men are assigned to officers as orderlies. "We had about one orderly for every three officers." he said. "If the Army had 1,000.000 officers, that means it had 300,000 orderlies. Or, in other words, 300,000 fathers who may have had five children apiece were drafted so that officers would have men to make their beds." Why Not, Indeed? Did he think that, say, a general should shine his own shoes? "Why not?" asked Kendall.

Kendall spent nearly an hour with the board. He left this thought with its members: "The human spirit has grown larger since the time of Frederick the Great, but Army discipline still is cast to the servile mind of the 18th Century peasant." No More K.P. Duty, Air Forces Decides Washington, April 3 (P) There will be no more K.P. (kitchen police) duty in the Army Air Forces, under a new program announced today. Soldiers will still peel spuds Continued from First Page.

regime was organized at a conference of tribal leaders in Baku. Russia, last November. He said, "The revenue and fighting men are provided by the leaders who attended the Baku meeting and who rule over most of the 5.000.-000 Kurds in the three countries" (presumably Iran, Turkey and Iraq). Flag Adopted. This government, he said, adopted a flag of "red, white and green, with crossed quill and sheaf of grain." It publishes an official newspaper, Kurdistan, on a press brought from Baku, said the chieftain, who brought a copy of the paper with him to Tehran.

The former Kurdish member of the Iranian Parliament said the center of the "greater Kurdish state" was at the Iraqi oil city of Mosul on the right bank of the Tigris River, 230 miles north northwest of Baghdad and 75 miles south of the junction of the Iraqi, Syrian and Turkish, frontiers. He said delegates to the organization meeting had mapped proposed borders embracing most of the Kurdish tribes of Iraq, Syria, Turkey and Iran, and that the borders would follow virtually the same lines as the Kurds proposed in the Treaty of Sevres August 10, 1920. The treaty, which would have wound up World War I affairs between the Allied powers and Turkey, never was ratified and later was superseded by Uie Treaty of Lausanne. with Anderson in the hope he would sign voluntarily, Bowles decided to issue a directive requiring the Secretary to act. Of ficials said this was what Ander son wanted, to relieve pressure on him from Congressmen.

O.P.A. stressed that only spec ulative trading in cotton futures was affected by the new order. It said so-called hedging an4 straddling transactions were exempt. Russian Assurances Are Expected To Lead to Iran Solution Today Bowles office said an execu tive order issued in 1942 gave him authority to require Anderson to sign the cotton regulation. losing vital ground to inflation, and many industries have signed labor-management contracts and are ready for uninterrupted production.

'More than 9,000,000 persons have received wage increases since V-J Day. This is a tribute to management and labor in many industries and companies, who have quietly composed their differences with wisdom and dispatch." was discussing the removal of about half as many cooks as the table of organization provides. We had one baker until and wash dishes, but those who Seven More Pay Contributions to U.N. New York, April 3 (U.R) Seven more nations paid up their contributions to the United Nations do will be permanently assigned to the task and will be called mess attendants. The an nouncement adds that they "will BUNIONS working capital fund today, the troops.

In support of this contention the Iranian reply said that on March 24 the new Soviet ambassador in Tehran had handed the Iranian Government three memoranda, one stating that the troops would get out in five or six weeks (he added orally, "if no unforeseen circumstances the second relating to the formation of an Iranian-Soviet corporation to extract oil from northern Iran, and the third suggesting a form of autonomy for Azerbaijan. be afforded an opportunity to make an Army career of -food service." Stock Farm Ex-Head Dies In Kansas Daniel Gunn Rowland. 87. former owner of Magnolia Stock Farm near Anchorage and breed Get thin quirk relief. Tift ho prMuir, oofh.

cushion the eni1tv pot. Coata but a trill. The old system of assigning all bringing the treasury total to $8,123,500, more than enough to see it through the next six months. China made a further payment of $600,000, bringing her total men on the roster to K.P. in turn is being abolished.

Army and Navy Need ject had added, that these troops would get out "if no unforeseen circumstances should occur." This was the significant omission. Cites What he did say in his reply, however, was that the troops would be withdrawn within one and a half months after March 24 "as I informed the Security Council officially at the meeting of 26 March last." In that meeting he specifically did add the phrase, "if no unforeseen circumstances should occur." Therefore some members of the Court--cil were inclined on this account to place little significance on the omission of the "unforeseen-circumstances" phrase. The Soviet letter then went on, however, to the most positive assurances about the withdrawal of the troops. The question regarding the evacuation of the troops "was settled by the understanding reached between the Soviet and Iranian Governments," it said, and added, "As regards the Reds Say Men To Go May 6 Continued from First Page. drawal will not be conditional on any other agreements being reached between Iran and the Soviet Union.

3. That it notes the assurance cf the Iranian delegate that he will not press the case if the troops get out of Iran by May 6. 4. That it will retain the case cn its continuing agenda and ask the parties to report by May 6 on conditions at that time. In his testimony before the Council the Iranian ambassador, Hussejn Ala.

stated that the Soviet ambassador in Tehran had advised his Government that "nothing unforeseen" would interfere with the departure of the Red Army troops, provided Iran agreed to oil and political concessions in northern Iran, but the general impression of the Council is that, through the intervention of the Council, the Soviet Money for Pay Rolls Washington, April 3 W) The Senate Appropriations Committee reported today the Army and Navy would not have enough money to meet all pay rolls in the remainder of this fiscal year, er of trotting horses, died Tuesday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Ralph Weir, Parsons, where he had lived for the past 10 years. Rowland trained trotting racers until his retirement in 1936. Funeral services will be held at H. Cralle's tomorrow or Saturday, and burial will be in Cave Hill Cemetery.

Survivors are two other daughters, Mrs. Herbert Brooks, Columbus, Ohio, and Mrs. Chilton C. Moore, Palos Verdes, two sons, D. G.

Rowland, Craw-fordsville, and B. Frank Rowland. Syracuse, N. 16 grandchildren and six thus far to $800,000, which is half of the full advance she has underwritten. France, Turkey, Canada, Honduras, Australia, Yugoslavia and Peru paid into the treasury their full commitments.

Reds to Leave Romania Bucharest, April 3 (IP) Romanian informants who credited the report to a "Minister of the Government" today said, the Russians would begin a partial evacuation of Romania within a few days. The informants said the development would take from Romania all but about 100,000 "administrative forces." ending June 30. Before!" If your nose ever fills 1 It recommended that Congress permit the Army to retain 435,757 and the Navy $400,000,000 up with 6tuffy Blent congestion in pay appropriations which the next time put a little House had voted to withdraw. Even then, the committee said the Army and Navy will have Associated Press Wirephoto. BERT M.

JEWELL Dissatisfied with pay award. nostril. Quickly con- pest Ion Is relieved, breathing Is easier. While stating that the Iranian Government could not agree to any conditions on the decision to evacuate the Red Army, "foreseen or unforeseen," the Iranian ambassador stated that in bringing his case before the Council, Iran was not animated by any hostile feeling toward the Soviet Union, but was merely hoping that the Council could find a "just solution which will promote friendly relations in the future." Byrnes Asks Question. When the ambassador had finished speaking, Secretary of State James F.

Byrnes, who has taken a leading position in this case from the start, and who had had a prior glance at the two replies, to say nothing of a talk with Ala, said he would like to ask the Iranian a question. In the light of replies submitted to the secretary-general by Tehran and Moscow, he asked, did the ambassador have any suggestion to make as to what action should be taken by the Council? 'deficits for the year in pay ap propriations. Union has changed its policy and now mxenas io carry out an un- tt 17 va-tro-nol works right where trouble Is to relieve distress of head colds. Follow directions In th packa-e. VICKS VA-TRO-nOi evacuation of all its -iivuy iirscms conditional troops.

Arbitrators Raise Rail Pay 16 Cents Hourly STOP under arm he said, the workers could re open the "existing agreement" on 30 days' notice, with the new de Credentials In Moscow Moscow, April 3 (A) Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith presented his credentials as new United States ambassador today to Nikolai Shvernik, chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet. "I am happy to renew again my acquaintanceships with the people of the Soviet Union, whom I learned to admire for the great part they played in the war," 'Smith said to the Russian mands subject to the same machinery which governed the PERSPIRATION sentatives; Rudd and Fort, carrier representatives. The three-man board hearing the demands of the conductors, firemen and switchmen were: Richard F.

Mitchell, chief justice of the Iowa Supreme Court, public representative: Goff, union representative, and R. W. Brown, president, eNa ding Company, Philadelphia, carrier and Reply Given to Lie. Moreover, the approval of the general terms of the declaration outlined above is intended to crystallize the Soviet Union in its statement to get out unconditionally and to bring the Soviet Union and Iran into agreement under the principles of the U. N.

Charter. The first indication that the Soviet Union and Iran would reply to the Council's request for information about the state of their negotiations came late last night when it was learned that the assistant secretary-general, Arkady Sobolev of the Soviet Union, had indicated to Secretary-General Trygve Lie that Ala Gives Reply. Ala replied promptly, ODOR but slowly original demands. Carl J. Gorr, assistant president of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, who served on the operating employees arbitration board for the unions, said the 16-cent hourly boost was "inadequate." He refused to sign the decision of the three-man board.

Says Men Entitled to More. "Engineers, firemen, conductors, trainmen and yardmen are entitled under the present economic conditions to a higher "If the representative of the Soviet Union would be willing WORRIES to withdraw the condition of unforeseen circumstances which he nonoperating workers' dispute, although signing the agreement, said the board had baselessly distorted "the stabilization policy of the Government" into a barrier against equitable pay boosts. A railroad spokesman said the wage increase was the third given rail workers since the beginning of the war and represented a total increase of 51 per cent over prewar wages. Cost to Total $101,000,000. The retroactive feature of the awards, a railroad spokesman said, would cost the railroads approximately $101,000,000.

The wage increases, he said, would raise rail expertses about annually. Membership of the six-man board hearing demands of non-operating employees included: Missouri Supreme Court Justice Ernest M. Tipton and South Dakota Supreme Court Justice Herbert B. Rudolph, public representatives; Felix H. Knight, president, Brotherhood of Railway Carmen, Kansas City, and E.

E. Milliman, president, brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, Detroit, union repre THE SHADES BOYS' CAMP For Speech Improvement Ac 11-18 All Summer Sparta, Inrl. Swimming Two S-Week Term. Rrilnnlnf July All-lnclnsfv Fee, 1150 Per Term WAVELAND. INDIANA FASTER! LONGER! SAFELY! Unions and Lines Raise Objections To Revised Scale Continued from First Page.

on the arbitration board hearing the nonoperating workers' dispute refused to sign the award. They were Ralph Budd, Chicago, president of the Chicago, Burlington Quincy Railroad, and J. Carter Fort, Washington, general counsel for the Association of American Railroads. Budd was not available for comment and Fort said, "I have nothing further to add." The 15 nonoperating unions included such groups as shop forces, maintenance and clerical employees, telegraphers and others not engaged directly in operating trains. The operating unions accepting arbitration were Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engine-men, Order of Railway Conductors and Switchmen's Union of North America.

Wage Board Not Involved. Throughout the arbitration board hearings, which began February 18, carrier spokesmen contended that wage increases AT ODO AWAY IN i-SECONOSt New other questions (oil concessions and political concessions in Azerbaijan), they are not connected with the question of the withdrawal of Soviet troops." Lacked Prior Knowledge. The Iranian letter, which was dated yesterday the day before the date on the Soviet reply, obviously was'written without any prior knowledge of the Soviet Government's statement that it would get out May 6 and that its withdrawal not connected with other political and economic concessions. The Iranian letter was a description of Soviet policies and actions which predated the new Soviet decision, and it came as Kennedy to Head had attached to the evacuation of Iran, and if his Government gives to the Council an assurance that the withdrawal of the whole of the Soviet forces from Iran, unconditionally, is effected by May 6 at the latest, then I would say that Iran would be willing not to press further at this time the consideration of the matter which it has brought to the attention of the Security Council, provided, of course, that these matters remain on the agenda of the Council for consideration at any time." Meets Informally. Rail Retirement Board DAY under arm pads give 1 to dava" protection from perapiratioo and odor.

BETTER 5 DAT pad an mokt with aa amazingly eSectiTe perapiratioa stoppo. KINDER to clothing and normal akin! FASTER Ear to dm aa a powder posT under arm dry ia eeoond! NEATER not meaer. pad are eaaily diapoeed of after uxoa- 4 Economical, toot Many womea aod get moolha protectMa ia a smile jan BLADDER TROUBLE Good Tatting MOUNTAIN VALLEY MINERAL WATER It a Neutral Aid In Helping to Stimulate kidney function. Soothe bladder irritation. Discharge ayatemlc waatea.

Neutraliza uric-acidity. Washington, April 3 President Truman announced today the nomination of William J. Kennedy of Cleveland as chairman of the Railroad Retirement Board. Kennedy will succeed Murray Latimer, who has left the post. xmi aae ir mmm mio ilimmu something of a shock to the As soon as the councji received packed Council chamber, whose.

this reply it adjourned and met spectators had taken the Soviet 3 informally later in the afternoon Moscow would reply, and Iranian officials confirmed that their reply had been received. The Soviet reply was handed to Lie at 9:10 this morning and he received the Iranian answer 5 minutes later. Consequently, when the Council convened for its 29th meeting at 11:13 a.m. the president of the Council, Dr. Quo Tai-chi, read the Soviet reply first.

Signed By Gromyko. He noted that the Council had requested the two Governments to answer two questions: first, what was the state of their negotiations, and second, whether the reported withdrawal of the Red Army troops from Iran was conditional upon the conclusion' of agreements between the two Governments on other subjects. The Soviet reply, which was figned by Ambassador Andrei A. Gromyko, was notable for one significant omission and one positive statement. It went back to the testimony Gromyko had given last week that his Government had entered into an "agreement" with the Iranian Government to get the Red Army's troops out of Iran six weeks after March 24, but it did r.ot add, as Gromyko's original statement and all other statements from Moscow on the sub- MOUNTAIN VALLEY MINERAL WATER 611 S.

1st St. WA 2411 Interesting Booklet On Request plus higher cost of materials and supplies would necessitate a "substantial" increase in freight rates. Both boards, in their formal reports, contended the wage awapd was "consistent with the increase," Goff said. "The award does not provide additional compensation to railroad workers to meet the increased standard of living. It does not eliminate gross inequalities resulting from the greater increases in wage rates in non-railroad industries.

The two union members of the arbitration board hearing the standards now in effect for the purpose of controlling infla assurances as a positive step toward a solution of the controversy. It started by stating that Soviet officials, agents and armed forces still were interfering in the internal affairs of Iran and particularly that they still were preventing the Iranian Government from exercising any authority over events in Azerbaijan, the Iranian province where pro-Soviet groups have established an "autonomous Government." Says Concessions Sought. It then went on to charge that the Soviet Union was negotiating oil concessions and political autonomy for its supporters in Azerbaijan at the same time it at the U.N. Manhattan headquarters to discuss ways and means of dealing with the case. It is understood that various suggestions were made at this meeting, and while no formal agreement was reached it was stated on reliable authority that there was at least informal agreement to settle it on the basis of a declaration similar to the one reported above.

The Iranian officials would, of course, prefer that the declaration should be approved at the Council table by the Soviet Union, but since he is not expected to be at the Council table tomorrow, it is unlikely that this condition can be met. Copyright, 1946. MUSCULAR ACHES A NEW RUBBER. BASE COATING FOR CONCRETE OR WOOD FLOORS. WATERPROOF, ACID-PROOF.

DOES NOT SOFTEN, BECOME STICKY OR WASH OFF. CHOICE OF COLORS. QUICK DRYING. EASILY CLEANED. MR GALLON $495 PEASLEE-GAULBERT PAINT VARNISH CO.

Downtown Branch 224 W. Broadway. WA 6897-8 STIFF JOINTS TIREO MUSCLES STRAINS STRAINS BRUISES tionary tendencies and is ap-provable in its entirety for purposes of price increases." Jewell said the award was not subject to further review or to approval by the federal Wage Stabilization Board, adding that the wage boosts would be put into effect immediately or as soon as mechanically possible. Under the Railway Labor Act, An eKediv Instdickia. Keeps SLOAN'S LINIMENT, children's heads Clean, not oily or sticky.

Onfy.S0c.Al Augflistv.

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