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Wey $17.90 15.45 02.20 6.08 Standard Ol Ce. of New Jersey, 281 Constitution Ave. N.W. al 9032, National 1359. ‘Without obligation, send full ia- formation sbout the Esso Oil Bura- Private Groups Join } In'Studying U. S. Place In Post-War World State Department Goes Over Mistakes of Past, To Avoid New Ones By the Associated Press. Along with the State Department’s intensive survey of the problems of eventual European peace, it was dis- closed today that private groups of businessmen, bankers and professors are studying America’s place in a post-war world: ‘The State Department’s work is directed by a special advisory com= mittee headed by Undersecretary Sumner Welles, who returned re- cently from a confidential mission in Europe for President Roosevelt. Research organizations, universi- ties and business societies interested in public questions also are working independently on special problems. Although the State Department seeks to co-ordinate their efforts and prevent duplication, it does not su- pervise their studies. Secretary Hull's Advisory Com- mittee is divided into three groups. ‘The first, under Mr. Welles, is seek- ing varied information on European and world policies preceding the war and those likely to follow it, to guide general American policy. Disarmament Field Reviewed. Another group, under Counselor R. Walton Moore, is reviewing all that has taken place in the field of disarmament, especially since the ‘World War, trying to simplify the complicated problem. The third group, under Economist : | Leo Pasvolsky, is reviewing the eco- nomic history of international rela- tions over 20 years, for light on eco- nomic and financial matters. Hugh R. Wilson, former Ambas- sador to Germany, serves as liaison : | man between the groups. The work of the Advisory Com- mittee is divided into two parts: 1. A study of future arrangements among nations likely to have an effect on the United States when peace comes. 2. Current negotiations with for- eign nations seeking commitments that they will return after the war to policies conducive to an easier flow of trade. Mistakes to Be Recounted. Officials say the thing most sought by both official and unofficial ex- perts is to arrive at the logical im- : | plications and repercussions of steps taken in the past. What mistakes .| were made? Why were they made? Officials say that the United States has a keen interest in the answer because they may affect future American history. President Roose- | velt's year-old offer to take part in economic and disarmament (though | not political) discussions looking to- | ward peace still stands. All the researchers appear to take as their “base of operations” the economic interdependence of the world. They assume the nacessity for all nations to have access to raw ma- terials. They say there is no short- age of raw materials; the problem is to distribute them—and this is a problem of trade. The free flow of trade is, to officials here, a questicn of world choice among such pieces of ma- chinery as isolation, trade ments and monetary methods. Budapest (Continued From First Page.) — SNt garia a promise of a large British loan and a corridor to the Aegean Sea, a thing she long has wanted. The British plan was reported to include a deal involving Greece and Turkey, already on close terms, whereby the former would cede Bul- garia the Aegean Corridor in return for certain concessions. Britain's purpose in wooing Bul- garia, Sofia sources said, was to in- sure a land route for to Rumania should the necessity arise. Sofla Notes Turk Moves. The reports of Turkish troop con- centrations along the Greek and Bulgarian frontiers received official cognizance in Sofia, where opinion was expressed that the action was *in accordance with British desires and connected with England’s aims in the Mediterranean.” The presence of Turkish forces hear the Bulgarian border was said to be in apparent disregard of a mutual agreement between the two countries. Bulgarian officials said they had given Turkey no cause for such action. The circulation of reports, attrib- “=SMART? HE JUST SAID =WHY DOESN'T POP BUY AN ESSO . . 0IL BURNER” Serviced, Pueled by the Marketers of isse Gesslines THE EVENING *STAR, ‘WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, MAY 6 10, : Before Convention gateway for the entrance of allied troops in the event war comes to The Greeks deny reports of a secret agreement to let Britain and France, both of whom have guaranteed her independence, to use the port, but foreign observers doubt that Greece would offer any objecflons if war comes. Reports of the appearance of Rus- sian reinforcements slong the Ru- thenian frontier were regarded as & hopeful sign by some quarters in Budapest, which interpreted this development as a sign of Moscow's determination to forestall any Ger- man-Italian plan to divide the Bal- kans. Information furnished by the Ger- man Gestapo was said to have led to the spy round-up -in Hungary, which government circles said had smashed a huge organization en- gaged in espionage and propaganda activities. Most of the arrests took place at Kassa, Ungvar and Munkacs in the former Czecho-Slovak regions an- nexed by Hungary. Some uf those arrested were said to have possessed plans of the Arpad defense line, which Hungary recently built along her Ruthenian frontier facing Rus- sian-occupied Poland. Some observers saw the arrests as an indication of mutual distrust be- tween Moscow and Berlin. Magyar-Slovak Ill-Feeling. The spy hunt was accompanied by new expressions of ill-feeling be- tween Hungary and Slovakia. In a radio broadcast, Hungarian Foreign Minister Count' Stefan Csaky reit- erated a warning that his govern- ment’s patience over the alleged mis- treatment of the Hungarian minor- ity in Slovakia was nearing an end. Meantime, Slovak planes dropped pamphlets over Ruthenia reading: “Slovaks! The day of liberation is near! Get ready. Hitler is with us. The glorious Slovak Army will deliver you from the Magyar (Hun- garian) yoke.” In Belgrade, the Yugoslav gov- ernment rejected a German request for permission to send 10,000 “coh- valescents” into the country, but offered to take that many sick children under 15 years of age. To Draft Platform Easly Caucuses to Pick Committeemen Are Predicted By the Associated Press. Early caucuses to select members of the Republican Resolutions Com- mittee were predicted today follow- ing official word the group wuum1 meet a week before the national :onventlon to draft a party plat- orm., Chairman John Hamilton of the Republican National Committee an- nounced he was taking the initiative in assembling the members-desig- nate in Philadelphia about June 17, one week before the convention meets. This departure from convention routine is expected to develop much preliminary talk of presidential can- didates as well as of platform planks, since the Resolutions Com- mittee, which formulates the plat- If form, is msde up of a party leader not picked un meets. o Twen! already have chosen their delegations. Five more select theirs this week, and by the end of May all will have been chosen. Operating more slowly than their opposition, the Democrats have picked delegates in only 12 States, Five more State groups will be se- lected this week. National Chair- man Farley is expected to appoint ting to select a keynote speaker and a per-; manent chairman. The Democrats will hold their convention in Chi- cago July 15. 3 Mr. Hamilton proposed the pre- convention selection of resolutions committeemen two weeks ago in letters to national and State com- mittee members, He said he had re- ceived favorable responses from.36 States, the District of Columbia and Hawall, virtually all express- ing “keen enthusiasm.” By meeting on June 17, he sald, sufficient time would be allowed for the platform-makers to hear all who want to be heard, to consider the 100,000-word “program report” by the Glenn Frank Advisory Commit- tee, and to “outline the basis for a party platform.” “Many of those who have written Housewives— you want more time ® for rest and recreation ca yo Rugs Cleaned and Stored st Low Prices. \ / The Nitwit of the Il the Hub to handle ur Loundry. le 75¢ minimum—Shirts finished at 10c each. 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