Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1947 — Page 11

ant enmmatity

sceived a cruel Hous Hughes * plcture

wring OS loose~ le Russell, was lly audience, something ~to it vith-sex should

heads off.

Indianabolls Times ally News, Ino,

nty's Down

Service ° Jan 6.~Divorce

as drawn after y licenses issued ity clerk's office mpared to ‘the actions filed, - that 690 couples licenses, while were filed. This of divorce suits than in 1045,

sss i

a

i ——

a

rete

hands full,

next 61 days. 20 Jou Rue wry ily you war: Poses? That's a joke, son. ; With the deadline for the general asseiibly three days away, the legislative bureau reports it has its

You see, since a 1945 rang all Mi ‘coming before

: the legislature must go through the bureau for ap-

i

Ww

Wid

proval of form. It's gottd be correct, right, O. K., ard according to Hoyle, Herbert P. Kenney, bureau director, showed ne an idea someone had downstate to be (he hopes) made into the law of the state. Oh brother. The brainstorm obviously was written under water with one of those new-fangled pens. It had something to do with a ditch that is going dry. This hoped-for law pro-: posed to stop it. “There was a dandy sketch made of the ditgh and sutrounding territory—on pink scratch paper, Pink is definitely not form; underwater penmanship is not form, but a drying ditch in Sleepy Hollow may be form which makes things pretty complicated, “We find up here,” Mr, Kenney said, “that persons want evgry“law that doesn’t concern them repealed

ACCORDING TO FORM—Wilma Siebert, typist, pounds the “new laws" by the bale for the Thursday ‘deadline.

Snipper Hunt

"MONDAY, TUESDAY, dada, a ee ra or Sr

-.Ing to be typed into form and a batch waiting to be

+. to the staff. That's the -day, Mr. Kenney explained, ‘when evéry man in the legislature who has a bill in| | . the bureau will want it pronto. One lawmaker re-| 1. .portedly. has submitted a total of 40 bills to the

a fine tooth comb to be sure it’s according to form.

sort of an advantage.” Screwball Legislation

“WHY WE HAD one person submit material for

Jaw iat Wola Toque all bulls to he Denied uj; An. other asked tabs nae of 8 made into a memorial lake ho: To f{llustrate what “form” sometimes entails, Mr. Kenney told how one word in a section bothered a legislator, He submitted the section for change, The bureau went to work and wrote in the ‘prescribed word but in so doing had to type over—not ne word, not one section but seven, That's form, It isn't uncommon for an “interested” party to get

hig dander up over a particular section of an act] passed say in 1933. 80 In due time Mr. Kenney re-

celves a beautifully writfen manuscript. . Upon inves- , Hgation, however, Mr, Kenney discovers that the ‘section was amended in 1939. . No go. been changed. The FORM here is to amend the amendment because the act was changed by the first amendment, That's the law. :

Take It or Leave It, That's Form

MR. KENNEY, his two attorneys, technical assistant, librarian and three typists are busy. Slight un-

derstatement but what else can you say? The bureau, §

has filed 130 bills up to date, some requiring quite a

and every law that does writen so 1t * gives them -

You can’t amend a section once it has|

bit of paper if nothing else. There are still 20 wait-

worked on. “If it looks like we're covered up now,” viral Kerz, technical assistant, said, “wait until the Boney eral assembly opens up for business Thursday.” The opening date of the assembly is a ar

bureau. You can figure out what he's trying to do. When a ‘brainstorm arrives at the legislative bureau it is usually given to an attorney to ‘develop ‘into’ a bili—in due ime ‘of course, The attorney then has to investigate other laws, check the constitution with

If there are no snags, which is unlikely, a rough draft is typed up and sent to the original thinker for approval { Just for expediency's sake, let's say it’s OK'd right off the. bat, Then it's prepared into the FORM of a bill. Eight copies are made, legislature _ gets four copies, the author one, two go into the’ bureau’s file and one is sent to the library of congress. That's the form, take it or leave it, that's the form.

| |

WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—A blond named Eunice sat at the desk in-front of me at school when I was 10, I didn’t like her. The ends of her pigtails somehow nearly every day by accident, kind of, found thei* way into my inkwell. I confess no more. Stop looking at me like that, coppers. That was 30 years ago, The barbarous barber who sneaks ip behind the capital's street-cgr-riding ladies and slices off their tresses isn't me. Just because I, too, ride the trolleys is no sign I'm your scissor snicking scoundrel. . Talk about crime waves! I'll talk about amputated permanent-waves. Nearly a dozen cuties ranging in age from 12 to 30 have had theirs chopped off in the last week. Plain clothesmen are riding the cars and busses, looking for suspicious characters with razor blades and gleaming eyes. Any female who's ridged in the crush is likely to scream. I am suspect. Any man is. Including senators. The long-haired ladies are piling their hair on top of their heads like Dolly Madison. Either that, or they're wrapping their noggins in shawls, like Mexican farm women. Get close to one and she jumps.

Watch Your Newpsaper

BE CAREFUL of your newspaper. Let the allpe + of the sports page graze a lady's coiffure and you're the center of a riot. Take out your pocket knife to pare your fingernails on the Mt. Pleasant: trolley and ladies for six seats around are battling toward the exit. I cannot understand why the special squads of flatfeet detailed to ride the streetcars until they catch the man with the portable barber chair have not yet done so. They have an excellent description of him. 8 A 17-year-old school girl, ‘Bernice Dyer, who lost & foot of her page boy bob on the car, reported the

Daffy Hollywood

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6.—You have to be a superegotist and glad-hander to get any place in Hollywood, a psychologist said today. And that isn’t news to anybody. The pitch came from David Rice. He has peered into the minds of the stars. He claims to know why they have fatter wallets and brighter names than the characters knocking each other around at the bottom of the Hollywood ladder, “You've got to be demanding, like knowing what table you want to sit at in a restaurant. You know— the one where everypne can see you,” he said. Then after you get settled and smile at everybody; he added, you order two telephones brought to your table if you're a big gun and just one phone if you're big gun, junior grade.

- Be a Bit Louder

“THE SECRET,” he confided, “is to attract attention and be just a bit louder and daffier about it than the next guy.” Mr. Rice handed this bit of 1947 advice to brown= eyed Jane Greer, She's starting out her New Year by starring opposite Robert Mitchum in R. K. O.s “Out of the Past.” The psychologist said Jane will be a star in 1947 if she'll be a Hollywood extrovert, too. But Jane, who's been shying away from the tabloid side of Holllywood life since she shed her husband, Rudy Vallee, said nuts. Shell just stay natural, thank you. Mr. Rice said that isn't done, not in Hollywood. People who want movie careers have to be startling, he said. Like the starlet, wearing blue slacks with a 180-degree zipper, who rode a scooter down Hollywood blvd. fOr the movie- struck wench who hung around newspaper offices for days with a mask hung on her nose. ‘Hoping somebody would -want to photograph what was underneath.

We, the o—

EVER SINCE A MAN in the business told women beauty-salon operators that women customers were tired of gossip in beauty salons and that the gossipping must go, I have been doing a little unofficial

investigating.

Now I want to know—what gossip? It looks as if the idea that women gossip in beauty salons is one of those notioms without foundation. It's like the ones that women are naturally poor drivers; can't keep a check-book- straight, go through their husbands’ pockets at night, are likely to be waiting up” with a' rolling pin ‘when a man comes in late from a poker game, ete. |

Small Talk, Not Gost

. I'VE YET to hear a juicy bit of gossip in a-beauty salon—either from an operator or from women in ad booths, - Bure, the women talk.

But “ies small talk—-not > They yk oo i kids, theft Bogsekeld

By Frederick C. Othman : h2

villain was a polite, fat man who. bumped into het } and apologized, Mary L. Sanders, a co-ed who was | parted from a thick hank of red tresses five iriches long, says a gray-haired man with a black overcoat | did the parting. (Honest, gents, my overcoat’s brown).

Look for An Indian

THE PERAMBULATING scalper, according to Miss Jeanne Thompson (who used to have a head of | light brown hair), was a handsome young fellow! will admit, but the night Jeanne with the light brown hair gave up same on the Mt. Pleasant line, I was at the banker's. I've.got witnesses. Other females, including 12-year-old. Diane Sklar-

sky who lost all of one black braid and part of the ¥ So eo pe alg ey Si pesision fugieh Fol HO.

_SEGOND SEOTION

nly

»

Er M— —ie— —— " - - TAX TABLE

rom until the line total Thon olan: ear shi miro oes Bond 1 pot tf $0 | $0] 50 $288 | 5103 | $08 | ss 1] of o] of 202 | 107 | 102 | R87 % © % % % 8) of o] of 200 | 201 | 106 |Q11] of of o] o 0 *¥ ol] of of" 800 | 206 {10 815] o] o o] o. i i of ol of 305] 210 | 11s [§20] of o| Oo} © : dq 18] o| of] o 309 | 214 | 110 |§2¢| o] o] oo] o 0 a |] as | 0] o}] o 313 | 218 | 123 [#28 | o]| o| of o 0 ol o}] 0 318 | 223 | 128 [§33| o| ol o| o 0 & ol o] © 333 | 237 | 122 |§37| of o| o] o 0 ol] o] of 326 | 231 | 136 | J41 of ao] o 0 ia] 26]. of © as | 517 Kz | 32) o 10 12] 30] of of 410 | 321 | 31] a] of © . ° / 1120] 3¢| of of 47 | 37 ar | 42] : 1341 3] o] of | 436 | 326 | 241 [Bes | 51] © of © o i 5.1 138 | 43] o| olf 445 | 344 | 249 [B54 | 59] of o] o 0 | 1,875. 0 142] 41) of] of 455 | 353 | 258 [Mes | e8| of of o 0 As “7 | 82) of off i] 464 | 361 | 266 [B71 | 76] o| of] o] 0 151] 6] of] olf “| 474 | 370 | 275 [B80 | 85] oo] o] 0 0 155] | of of 483 | 370 | 284 [B89 | 94] o] ol Jo 0 159] 64) of off 492 | 388 | 202 | Ro7 71 oo] of] “0 104) 601 of of" 502 | 307 | 301 | 16 } : AEIRIE] diego Bef) 8) 8 8 8 k ol 0 0 176 | 81] of o 530 | 425 | 326 41| of of oo s 181) 86] o iss | of of of pa] ie ssl ss] 8] 84 & i 189 | 94] of 0 odio 162. $7] 0 ol ‘0 W 0s | 9] 4| o 568 | 468 | Por |° 71] 76] o] o 0 | 198 | 103] s8| o 817] | 27 ; oF 202 | 107 | 12 0 {fi : al : 3 | 0 0 0 i 206 | 111] 18] o | a0 ‘a; wi] 6] 0 0 “1, 0) 211 | 116 21] o ©005:| 50% | 996 {:300.1 #06. 110] 15] o 0 | 215 1120] 25) off 615 } 510 | 406 A ng 0 | 219 | 124] 20 | 90 wml 1 4s id “197 } 3 of 8 hh 223 [128] 33|" 0 1633 | 520 | 424, 34 % 1 wl o 0 3 228 | 133 | 38 | o [fe 643 | 838° | 434 1 ala] o] o 1, 282 | 137 | 42] ‘0 : 082 | | us 343 153 1 8 0 iy 236 | 1411 46.1 o (Faj250" 062 { 867 | 351+ ‘16t.| ‘66’ 0 0 51 4,300 5 § Ja . 75 9

FIND YOUR TAX—Above, of Form 1040. There, in the 4-exem

the tax on John's $2990. 21

(with | exemption) i is $31. The sum of those is

(with 3 exemptions

return. There is no point to. filing separately. Harry Broune, who had’ $5073.19 adjusted” gross ‘income (fom 5 page |} and | a wife with no independent income, computes his tax (below at the bottom df page 3, using the ‘standard deduction. : $

w rs TAX SUMPUTAYION FOR FERIONS NOT-UMNG TAX TABLE ON ERG 4 * y

PERSONS WITH incomes noe. at NT Som eTIG TAX on shee

the’ Does ook up, their tax in: the ‘fable on page 4 tion Colne, they find that the tax on $3724.51 would be $257. If they filed individually, by the same method they. would find. that 3 is $226, and that on Ida's $734.30 | 257, exactly the satrie "as for a joint |

| spots—Iran.

New Agreomen |

¥.

other to a man with big feet on & bus, have de- 10. Eater Bere any income tax paid at source oa tax-free covenant bood interest.

scribed the traveling, tonsorialist va as Avid. |

‘Smatter, coppers? To keep out of jail myself, I Suppose I've got to do like Perry Mason and help you find your eriminal connoisseur. of curls, Listen carefully, gentlemen. The scalped ladies have pictured your man and he obviously is a Comanche Indian with & razor- | sharp tomahawk. But do not grab any old Indian you spy on a trolley, or you:may be up on charges of false arrest. Approach each Comanche politely, test the sharpness of his weapon and say™ “Sir, are you perchance the proprietor of a mattress factory?” If his answer is “Yes,” he’s your man and I wish you police kindly would get on with your work. I'm busy and my feet are tired from standing on trolleys because the seats are full of cops waiting to see whether I pull out of my pocket a wad of gum or a pair of neck clippers.

1. Eater amount showa in item 6, page 1. This is your Adjusted Grows Income. - $....5073...19. EB DEO Toot ems er Toe Shove ia 35,008 x ove a dolarsiias ass wo Seemisoly are Wt eapdard Sedition of $0) Bn 200 3. Suberace line 2 from lioe 1. Eater the difference Bere. This is your Net Income $...uo73_ 119 4. Eater your exemptions ($500 for each person whose name is liseed in item 1, page 1) 1000 DO S. Subtract line 4 from line 3, Eater the difference here $3513 [9 6. Use the tas rates in inseraction sheet to figore your combined tentative normal tax and surtax on amouat carered 06 : lioe 5. Eater the tentative tax here. | Of le 3 abows includes pully tax-<sempt iter, weg Ta Compuaeon Instructions). : $s. Th6 ho 7. te Bete’ peficat of anton whoared 6a Hae iit. 37 pL with curly hair of his own. This sounds like me, I| 8 Sbeeact line 7 from line 6. Eater che difference bere. This is your combined novmal tax snd surtaz. Cf ( 708 ho | computation is made 0a separate Schedule D, eager her tax from line 12 of Schedule D).........i 4s...708 119 I 108 WEED THE 400 STANDARD DEDECTIN 4 LIN 2 DSRERARD LIES 1 1, MAD 11, MD COPY 08 Lng 12 TR SAME FIGURE YOU ENTERED ON 4 # 11. Add the figures on lines 9 and 10 sod enter the total here - 12. Suberact line 11 from line 8. Eater the difference here and in item 7, page 1. This is your tax $ 708 [19

By Aline Mosby

1947 Income Tax Primer—

How to Use Printed Table For Making Out Return

Here's How to Compute What's Due

After You Know Your Net Income

Eighth. of

a Series

WASHINGTON, Jan 6.—If you

Another good idea is to live in a fancy house with | a bar, swimming pool, etc. Jane, who likes to oa | around her modest Hollywood home with her folks and her twin brother, disagreed. “But you've got to put up a good front,” the psy~ chologist insisted. Miss Greer, who once posed for a picture in one of Designer Rene’s eye-popping topless evening gowns, let that remark go by. ” Mr. Rice explained to us that he moved West to read the great*minds of Hollywood after five years of telling ambassadors and senators all about them- | selves in Washington. There he once predicted the future for a young photographer’s model turned band vocalist by the name of Bettejane Greer. He summed up her ex-pensive-logking clothes and sophisticated face. Then

...he decided that she was a rich socialite who would

marry an assistant secretary of state or something.

Just Wanted a Career

“I JUST happened to have my shoes shined that day,” Jane said. “I didn't have a cent in those days. All I wanted was a career, not marriage.” ‘Jane has kept her eye on Hollywood since she was 9 and tested unsuccessfully in Washington for the lead in the movie, “Alice in Wonderland.” Her big chance came when her picture! in a national magazine clicked in- Hollywood. Out she came under the wing of Howard Hughes.

But she got sidetracked in an off- again-on-again | 81ven as $297,

marriage with Crooner Vallee, After that died sin the divorce court two years ago, she signed with R.

_K. O, turned down society gal parts and. demanded

tough gal roles. Psychologist Rice thought things over and soncluded the Greer career has clear sailing. It was .to the relief of her nervous press agent—who by now was wondering why he ever agreed to have his budding star psychoanalyzed anyway.

|

By Ruth Millett

problems, their shopping experiences, the condition}

of their scalps, the advantages of one hair-style over another, ete. : That's no more. gossip than the talk that goes on

in barber shops—such as local business news, sports,

politics.

; Just a Fable

‘THE WOMEN talk about their every-day interests, and the men do the same, But for some reason or other, the fable persists that in any purely feminine gathering women do

‘nothing but gossip about other women.

To a certain extent, that is true of bridge parties —but it isn’t true of beauty salons, When a woman goes to a beauty salon she is interested in herself— and absorbed in her own problems, | - 80 95 per cent of her talk is about herself, a subject forever fascinating to any woman. And about

$5000, and who are reasonably sure

all the operator has a chance to do is to listen and make as SPIEL: apaibnie, o f ante eepotises:

.

But if you are preparing Form

By S. BURTON HEATH NEA Staft Writer

were entitled to fille the withhold-

ing statement, but have gone this far with Form 1040, you will waste all that effort if you stop now and use the tax table.

1040 because you were not eligible

to file W-2, at this point you have a choice:

ONE: You can go ahead, list your own deductions and compute your

{own tax, to determine whether it will be less or more ‘than that| shown in the table; or TWO: You can use the tax table | —if item 6 on page 1 is less than $5000—or take the standard deduc- | tion of $500 if item 6 is $5000. or more. » Tax Table Use Explained

For those whose Item 6 is under

that their deductions would: total less that 10% of Item 6, here is Thow to use the Tax Table: Turn to page 4 of Form 1040. In the vertical gray background columns, find your tax bracket. John and Ida Doe's Item 6 is $3724.61, so they choose the line “At least $3700 but less than $3750.”) :. On that line, under the number of exemptions listed by you in Item | 1 near the top of page 1, your tax | is shown. (The Does have four ex-| emptions ‘~~ John's, Ida's, their | daughter's and their nephew's. Un- | der the “4” exemption heading, onl the $3700-3750 line, their tax is

Check ‘Both Ways

But the Does want® to be sure that they will not lose money if they file jointly, So -they check. Why don’t you? John’s income is $2000.21. He is the principal support of their dependents. In the tax table, under 3 exemptions, ‘in the $2975-$3000 line, his tax is given as $226. Ida's income was $734.30. In the l-ex-emption -column, in the §725-750 line, her tax is $31. The sum of $226 plus $31 is identical with the $257 shown for a joint return.

Claim is Possible

As, Item 7, Page 1, they enter the $257 tax taken from the table.! Asem 8 (Ay-«they record the $213.20 that was withheld from John’s salary, shown by his withholding statement. They have paid nothing during the year with estimates, so for Item 8 (B) they write “0.” They add (A) and (B) and get $213.20 for the right-hand ool] umn, Subtracting tem 8 ($213.20) from Item 7 ($257) they find—Item 9— that they owe Uncle Sam $43.80. If their pre-payments had been bigger than their tax due, they would have subtracted Item 7 from, Item 8, ignored Item 9, and -en-| tered the. remainder as Item 10. ‘This would have. constituted claim for. refund, Lilt i 0

A taxpayer whose Item 6 is greater than $4099.99 cannot use the tax table. He can, if he chooses, take a standard deduction of $500. To do this, turn to the bottom of Page ‘3 under the black heading “Tax Computation.” .- As Line 1 copy the total income figure from Item 6, page 1. On Line 2 enter $500. Subtract Line 2 from Line 1 to get Line 3. Now multiply $500 by the num-ber--of exemptions listed in Item 1, page 1, and enter the product as Line 4. Subtract Line 4 from

Line 3 to get Line 5, which is the;

amount of your taxable income. The new form combines normal and surtax computations. The rate is shown in a table at the boftom of page 4 of the Instruction Sheet —20% of the amount on Line § up to $2000; plus 22% of the amount between $2000 and $4000; plus 26% of the amount between $4000 and $6000; and so on.

Line 12 Shows Tax For example, your Line 5, at the bottom of page 3, shows $3573.19 of taxable income. ‘Take 20%. of the first $2000 and 22% of the remain-

ing $1573.19. Add the $400 and the $346.10. This gives $746.10 as the amount to go on Line 6. But that is not your tax. 80 few taxpayers have partially exempt bonds that this item is ignored here. If you do have any, read the instructions or get help from an internal revenue expert. Otherwise, take 5% of the amount on Line 6. In the above illustration, 5% of $746.10 gives $37.31. Enter this on Line 7 and subtract it from Line 6 to get Line 8, Copy the same figure on Line 12. This is the amount of your tax. Write it once more as Item 7 on page 1. From there on, do exactly as though you had taken your tax from the table instead of comput ing ‘it, following instructions given earlier in this article. The method will be shown with tomorrow's article. Whichever way you derived your tax, answer the'six questions at the bottom of page 1,'sign in the space provided, and mail not later than midnight of March 15. If you owe anything, make the check or money order payable to the Collector of | Internal Revenue.

Tomorrow: wi Deductions.

|

Carburetor-less Motor Revealed

Engineers Hear New Innovations

DETROIT, Jan. 6 (U. P.).—A new electric brake for trucks, two-way radio equipment for commercial

truck fleets and elimination of the carburetor from the engine of light aircraft—these were among topics discussed today at the opening session of the annual meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers. The elimination of carburetors to be replaced with war developed fuel injection systems in light aircraft was recommended by Jay A. Bolt, of the Bendix Aviation Corp, South Bend, Ind. He listed the advantages of consistent fuel consumption, better flight instrumentation and reduc-

power plant.’ Controllable pitch propellors for light aircraft were supported by J. PF. Haines, General Motors Corp., Dayton, O. He said that substantial take-off and climb improvement would result from" the use of the automatic two-position design propellers.

lowa Isn't the Only

Tall Corn State

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Cal. (U. P.). -+Not all the tall corn grows in Towa, California Polytechnic college students have proved by growing, stalks 17 feet high.

tion in size and weight of the plane’s|to

[Tran and Egypt for two years, .

{of Iranian crude oll over a 10 fo | 20-year pefiod. {The official announcements stressed [that the agreement was “purely commercial,” They said that the 3ritish and American governments | nad no part in it although both gna were “informed” of ihe negotiations. ‘

Hold Most Stock

patches were these factors:

ONE: The British government holds 55.9 .per cent of the stock of Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. . TWO: The Anglo-Iranian fields are the chief fuel reserve of the British fleet.

THREE: The new agreement for|

the first time gives the United

States a. direct economic stake. It|

is estimated in the dispatches at “hundreds of millions of dollars,” {in one of the world’s No. 1 trouble

FOUR: Agreeing. to share its Persian oil with the United States, Britain, in effect, bypasses the Tehran government. Thus far the |government has stalled .off both ‘American and Russian demands for oil concessions through a parliamentary technicality which prevents any new oil deals until Iran’s elections are held.

No Russ Reaction

reaction to the oil arrangements. But it was anticipated that the reaction will be sharp. It will take the line that the oil agreement lays the foundation for basic British and American joint collaboration in the Middle East with all the military

jand political implications this would |

involve. The agreement to share Persian

of the elaborate understanding reached by the oil companies. Two enormous new pipelines will be built with Ametican capital. One will be under control of Anglo‘Iranian and will run from the head

“lof the Persian Gulf to a terminus

on the Mediterranean.

American interests from Saudi Arabia to the M

British Favor Gaza

The termini of these two lines has not been specified officially. However, the British are said to favor Gaza, the most southern Palestine port. The pipelines would serve to anchor American financial interests solidly across the complex and disturbed - Arab states and in Palestine itself. Gaza has been mentioned by the British as a possible site for their new major security base once they have withdrawn from Egypt. It lies in the proposed British zone under the British partition plan. Although attracting little public attention in the United States the tremendous implications of the new oil arrangements have not been lost to British commentators.

Effects of Agreement ~ They suggest that among immediate effects of agreement will be:

ONE: Strong new Soviet pressure effectivate. her agreement with Iran for joint Soviet-Iranian exploitation of Persia's northern oil fields, heretofore, untapped. But they are believed as rich as those owned by the British in South Persia.

TWO: A necessity to allay Soviet fears that the British and Americans are trying to monopolize the world’s oil reserves. About 86 per cent of the world’s proved oil reserves are held by British, Amer ican and affiliated Dutch interests, In’ the international field the maze of interlocking. corporate interest is almost impenetrable. The new agreements provide extensive [new tie-ins both between the. Brit-

SILLY NOTIONS

By Palumbo

Stake in One of Worl

United Press an - NEW YORK, Jan. 6,—Buried on. the fin Christmas was news of an event which Middle could produce more future headlines than all tr

The financial page stories sevesiat tint the {had agreed “in principle” to sell to American ol

Lying behind the financial dis-|,

." There has been no detailed Soviet |:

oil is only one of several features|

The other would be operated by!

3