OCR Text |
Show PAGE 6 "bSSSS'.!? StJNDAY HERALD Popular Song Many ICiiiS By ROBERT RICHARDS United Press SUff Correspondent NEW YORK, Dee. 8 (U.R) Song writer Abner Silver, author of more than a dozen nationally Jcnown tunes, today put the bite on all the lovely babes that have long made him lyrical. , Silver, who wrote ."No, No, a Thousand Times No" and "Fare- well To Arms," fell, off his snow-whlte snow-whlte piano and came up with a Union Rejects Truman Plea To End Strike ' (Continued from fate One) ilar corporations." he asserted. "Without the tight to strike at a .time chosen by the union you lust do not bargain collectively Iwith the kind ol management 'that runs the automobile Indus .try." Thomas virtually charged the president with a strike-breaking i movement when he cited the dif , ference" between the railway la Tor act signed by President Cool-: Cool-: idge and the new administration proposal. "President Coolidge broke no strike when he signed the railway labor act in 1926." he said. "There was no major railroad strike at that time. The proposal ' of President Truman is completely complete-ly and utterly different ..." The labor chieftain emphasized empha-sized that under the railway act there is no compulsory cooling- off period during which a strike is banned. Also he said, the act provides pro-vides no penalties on labor unions . . . i unaer provisions oi uie u- ministration's proposal, however, strikes called during the 30-day cooling-off interim would be 11- ' legal and strikers involved "would be subject to penalties" of other federal labor acts, Thomas said. "TlTere is no question that enactment en-actment of the bill will result in the breakdown of proper collective collec-tive bargaining," he declared. The corporations will refuse to bargain honestly, relying on the restrictive effects of President Truman's plan to injure our bargaining bar-gaining position." Charging that a comparison of the Truman proposal with the railway act is "deliberately misleading," mis-leading," Thomas sAd: "the railway rail-way labor act uses persuasion; President Truman's bill uses the policeman's club." Meantime, the white house has not acted on Mr. Truman's Tru-man's announcement that he would name a fact-finding board to InvesMtate the General Gen-eral Motors strike in the public pub-lic Interest. The presidential proposal for legislative authorization of such beards for major labor disoutes has been embodied in a bill introduced in-troduced by Rep. Mary Norton, D.. N. J., chairman of the house labor committee. Under this bill, the board would be appointed by the president uuon certification of disputes by the labor department. For 30 days after such certification, strikes in the dispute would le illegal. Press Search (Continued from Pace One) back that he saw what appeared to be a flare near Melbourne, Fla. A few minutes later, he said, he - - - - - 77 - - ' I saw what appeared to be a fire, and a man. Navy organizers of the 'search said that they were being investigated, but held out little hope that the blazes had been set by survivors. It was pointed out that no such flares or lights had been seen on Wednesday or Thursday nights, when there was more chance that survivors might have been active. A plane from the Banana River naval air station, the home base of the missing Mariner, also reported re-ported having seen "some men" in the same area. The fog hampered the search by land and air. A coast guard helicopter and 25 navy and army( plsncs were rushed to the region,' and a party left from the Banana River base by land. The search continued over the sen and Gulf of Mexico waters. Tht pilots of the five bombers had given no hint by radio that they were in trouble, and when last heard from their gasoline supplies were good for an hour's more flight time. An Officially advanced navy theory was that they had been forced off course by westerly winds which would have carried them far out to sea rather than over the land. MARY FRANCOM formerly of M. & M. Beauty Shop, will meet her patrons at the Verna D. Cloward Beauty Shop PHONE 1436-W 170 West Second. South AMERICAN LEGION BENEFIT DANCE! POST 72, OREM FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1945 LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL GYM Free Barbecued Elk Sandwiches Chances On Twenty or More Prizes ! STEINECKERT'S ORCHESTRA 1.50 Per Couple ' Extra Lady 50c rieinds typewriter. Now he'a written a book called "All Women Are Wolves." "I haven't even gotten the Ink off my hands," he said, "and it's already sold 75,000 copies." His cal secretary is sore, and bis landlady won't speak to him, but Silver is unrepentant. -It's the truth," he said. "It's a simple fact,, so help me." Sliver divides lady wolves into 27 classes. "They bite ithe deepest out in California," he said, "but they're not bad in New York either, live been on Broadway for 20 years, and I know, brother." Silvers classifications range from the blonde or "baby-face "baby-face wolf to the -sly business, girl whose favorite theme song It "Oh, now I Hate To Get Up in the . Morning." He's got an entire chapter on the "vacation wolf," or the girl who slips up on her man when he's doing a. little playing. He calls it, "summertime, and the loving is easy." "I'm tired of women claiming they're being chased by men," he said. "We all know that most of the girls are running so hard that they have to take off their corsets toMceep from panting.". Silver got 18 "character wit nesses" for his book, including Dale Carnegie, Milton Berle, Earl Carroll, Jimmy Durante, Ira Gershwin. John J. Anthony, W. C. Handy, Hildegarde, Tommy Man-vllle, Man-vllle, Arthur Murray, Wdy Herman and several others. Sixteen said. "Abner, you're right. ThatX the truth about womep." But not John J. Anthony, the man who solves people's problems on the radio. "He felf he had to stick up for the women," Silver said. "He told me, 'No, I just don't believe it. "Cleopatra was the first subtle woman wolf," Silver explained. "She thought up the trick of taking tak-ing a bath every day. And, boy, in those times that was really something." Does he still like women? Abner Silver sadi. "Hell, yes. love 'em. But they can still stand a little debunking." And he's going to keep on writ ing romantic songs about them. "After this expose," he explained, "the poor girls will need it." Pearl Harbor (Continued from Pate One) that their conversations were intercepted in-tercepted by the Germans." Marshall explained security was a consideration. He knew the message, as it was sent, would be in code. He was NOT sure, however, whether that was the -reason he did NOT use the telephone. He told the committee that every effort was being made not to give the Japanese a chance to claim that this country took the first overt action. Ferguson wanted to know howiycung Canadian girls across the using the telephone could have been called an overt act. "I think the Japanese would have grasped at any straw to prove to such sections of our public as doubted our integrity that we had committed an overt act," Marshall said. He added that the Japanese might have intercepted he message mes-sage if it had been telephoned. In this connection he added: "Mr. Roosevelt was in the- frequent fre-quent habit of talking to the prime minister on the telephone. He also talked to Mr. Bullitt (William C. Bullitt, then an am-bassador-at-largc in London). I intercepted by the Germans i 1.1.U11LI.L iijol liiudl inina recollect that those talks were Marshall said he had a test made on the trans-Atlantic cable and found that conversations could be intercepted. He said he urged Mr. Roosevelt and Churchill Church-ill to use a "scrambler" 'phone. But it was not until long after the war had started that a suitable scrambler was developed, he told the committee. Marshall said "a telephone is a very easy instrument to tap and a radio telephone is even easier." But in any event, if he had called anyone on Dec. 7, he added, he would have called Gen. Douglas MacArthur in the Philippines first. Instigator (Continued from race One) police in the Philippines from 1942 through 1944. Homma and Nagahama were arrested in Japan in September when the first list of war crimin als was made public. Both will be taken to Manila shortly. Saito and Tohei already are under arrest in Manila. The charges against Homma include in-clude the responsibility for the bombing of Manila Dec. 27 and Dec. 28, 1941, after MacArthur proclaimed the city open and undefended; un-defended; the bombing of general hospital number one on Bataan April 7 killing 69 Americans and 52 Filipinos, the artillery shelling of general hospital number two during April and May when the Australia Leads Rght For U. S. A. As U HO Capital Continued from rage One)' directly to the assembly floor without recommendation, giving the British more time to jnarshall additional strength to locate in Europe. V Australia's position was presented by CoL W. R. Hodgson, Hodg-son, who charged that arguments argu-ments against location In one of the big powers was In fact an accusation that the big .powers of the UNO were acting act-ing in bad faith. He said Australia .favored San Francisco as the permanent home for the UNO. Mayor Roger Lap-ham Lap-ham of San Francisco, who was present during Hodgson's speech said he planned to remain in Ion-don Ion-don until next Thursday, and possibly pos-sibly longer. Belgian Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak and the Dutch delegate, A. A. Pelt, argued against locating in the . United States. Both said the influence of the press and public opinion In the United States would be too great and that locating there would give the U. S. an advantage over other .countries of the Big Five. ' Unofficial polls meanwhile gave Europe 12 sure votes; the United States 28: nine uncertain and two the U. S. and Costa Rica, which has no delegation here, not voting Among tne uncertain votes are the six votes of the Arab states, Lobby reports said -they were seeking something in return for their votes, possibly concessions In other technical committees not at work. The U. S. needs 34 votes to carry the issue. Orem Couple Hurt In Crash Max Brown, 37, and his wife, Vessie Brown, 33, RFD 1. Box 398, Orem, suffered injuries in an accident ac-cident Saturday at approximately 5 p. m., when the car in which they were riding was struck by another machine as they were turning of the main highway near the Lincoln high school. The couple were treated at the Utah Valley hospital and later released. Mrs. Brown suffered a ruptured blood vessel on the right elbow1 and minor injuries, while her husband hus-band received minor injuries and and a laceration over the rig' t eye. Agents Round Up White Slave Ring NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y., Dec. 8 (U.R) With 27 persons already under arrest, federal agents moved swiftly tonight to complete the destruction of an alleged white slave rinar which lured border for immoral purposes. U. S. Attorney George L. Grobe said the case was an ''outstanding' ''outstand-ing' example" of the federal government gov-ernment cleaning up a "viicous situation where local authorities have failed to act." Four women and three men were taken into custody last night by FBI agents from Buffalo as the climax of several weeks of painstaking investigation. In rll 27 persons were in custody, 15 as defendants and 12 as material witnesses. Aroused by the "unscruuious manner in which this white slave ring operated. Grobe said federal agents woiild strike "again and again untlr every prestige of illegality is swept from Niagara Falls." His assistant, R. Norman Kirchgraber, will begin presenting present-ing the case to the federal grand jury next week. Kirchgraber said almost all of the girls in custody were Canadian Canad-ian citizens who were lured across the border by a French-Canadian woman who was arrested earlier this week. Most of the girls gave false information to immigration inspectors when crossing into the United States, the assistant U. S. district attorney said, making themselves liable to criminal prosecution and thus giving the heads of the ring a lever to force them into lives of prostitution. T tL. - beaten, starved, and forced to J submit according to affidavits in cur possession," Kirchgraber said. FILM STAR TO WED NEW YORK, Dec. 8 (U.R) Film Star Carole Landis and W. Horace Hor-ace Schmidlapp, theatrical producer, pro-ducer, will be married at 5:30 p. m. today at the apartment of Schmidlapp's mother, Mrs. William Wil-liam J. Sturgis, at Carlton House here. It will be the fourth marriage for the 26-year-old actress. Schmidlapp is a native of Cincinnati, Cin-cinnati, who recently has been interested in New York theatrical productions. Japanese deliberately placed their artillery on the hospital grounds to draw fire from the big guns of corregidor. PUBLIC INVITED FREE, To Hear GRACE NIXON STEWART In EVENING OF DRAMA SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9th 8:30 P. M. Joseph" Smith Building" Sponsored by Provo Stake M. I. A. Andrew Johnson Called By Death Andrew Johnson, 53, an em ploye of the F. H. McGraw company com-pany ht Geneva, and a resident of Provo for 43 years, dfed Saturday morning at his home, 196 South' Njtoth West -street, following a week's illness. . ' .;, He was born In Payson, June 3, 1892, the son of Mr.fand Mrs. William Johnson. ... The family 1 -j moved to Provo I in 1900 where he attended j public schools. ? He married .. OK- Jennie Nelson of Provo, .June 14, 1914. He worked as an electric welder for many years, Surviving are the widow, three daughters, Mrs. Robert Marsh, Black-foot, Black-foot, Ida.; Mrs. .'c'tartKtir Jay Jacobsen, and Mrs. De Var.Offeret, both of Fiovo; also the following brothers and sisters, John Johnson, Morgan; Mor-gan; Arthur and Freeman Johnson, John-son, Provo; Mrs. Dan Lewis, Spanish Span-ish Fork: Mrs. Alfred Larsen, Payson; six grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 1:30 p. m. in the Second ward LDS chapel, under, the direction of Bishop N. Halvor Madsen of the Second ward. Friends may call at the Claudln funeral home Tuesday evening and at the family home, Wednesday Wednes-day at, 10 a. m. until the time of the services., Interment will be held in the Provo Burial park. Mrs. Mary Westring SPANISH FORK Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Christine Weetring, of Benjamin who died Thursday in a Salt Lake hospital following an operation, will be conducted Monday at 1 p.m. in the Benjamin LDS ward chapel. Friends may call after 12 noon Sunday at the family home at Benjamin and until time of services ser-vices Monday. Burial will be in the Spanish Fork City cemetery directed by the Anderson Mortuary. Mort-uary. Joan Sore n sen Funeral services for Joan Sorensen, 5-day-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sorensen. who died at the Utah Valley ' hospital Nov. 29, were held at the Claudin funeral home under the direction of Bishop Marion Hinckley. Speakers were Bishop J. Earl Lewis and Carlos Miller. Vocal numbers were furnished by Inez McDowell and Mrs. Mamie Mad-sen, Mad-sen, accompanied by Mrs. Jennie Larsen. The grave in the Provo burial park was dedicated by B. Acel Johnson. Hyrum Swenson SPANISH FORK Hyrum Swenson, 75, a resident of Spanish Fork for 74 years, died at the Utah Valley hospital at Provo Thursday at 10 a. m. after an Lillness of several weeks. He was born at St. Joseph, Nevada, Nov. 5, 1870 to August and Bertha O. Peterson Swenson, who moved to Spanish Fork to make their permanent per-manent home when Hyrum was one year old. He was educated in 4he schools of Spanish Fork. He was a well known and successful success-ful farmer and stockraiser; he was active in L D S church work and was an elder at the time of his death. He never married. He is survived by the following brothers and' sisters: Albert, Joseph, Peter, James, George and Nephi Swenson, all of Spanish Fork; and Earl Swenson of Og- den; Mrs. Mary Christcnsen, Mrs. Maggie Williams, Mrs. Clara Shippee, and Mrs. Edna Smart of Spanish Fork; Mrs. Sarah A. Hayes and Mrs. Olerra Brockbank of Salt Lake City. Funeral services will be conducted con-ducted Monday at 2 p. m. in the Spanish Fork First LDS ward, by Arthur Grotegut, bishop of the Fourth ward. Friends may call at the home of his brother. Albert Swenson after 4 p. iru Sunday until time of services. Burial will be in the Spanish Fork City cemetery directed di-rected . by the Claudin Funeral home. Has Your Doctor Advised A Support? SPENCER will bo iaoiYida-tXLj iaoiYida-tXLj design!, cut and rnttU to moot your- special nocds. .Mrs. v.C. Thorpe Doaior in Sponcor Supports Phone Spanish Fork 10" -.M Provo. 1277-R r AkfMra. Bask sis rtl An t" 5A JC Ai: Mixmaster Sets Record (Continued tram Tago One army air forces and Douglas aircraft. air-craft. It was ready to be placed in production at the end of the war, and is the first bomber in the world to be rated in the 400-mile-an-hour class. The bomber has a wing- " spread of 70 feet, six inches. . It it 83 feet, eight Inches long and weighs 4t,15t pounds unloaded. It Is powered pow-ered by two Allison V-type Mould cooled engines mounted mount-ed in the fuselage. They drive Curtis counter-rotating propeller placed .behind the tail surfaces. The fact that Is engines are in-J side the fuselage, eliminating the need for nacelles on the wings, and that its Drouellors are be hind, the tail gives the ship what the army air forces call "maximum "maxi-mum aerodynamic cleanliness." The smooth strreamiining gives the plane maximum wing efficiency effic-iency and maximum air resistance. resist-ance. Aa a bomber, the plane can carry car-ry a full bombload up to 5,000 miles and is designed, to take almost al-most any size bomb used by the AAF. including a 4,000 pounder which no previous medium bomber bom-ber could carry. It has an inter-changeable nose so that it can mount several forward-firing .50-calibre machine guns as well as 37 and 75 mili-meter mili-meter cannon. Wing guns are mounted to fire toward the rear. The AAF explains ex-plains that this way: "Closing speeds between two high performance aircraft make nose attacks impractical. Deflection Deflec-tion shots do not pay off. This leaves only level and pursuit curve attacks frorn the rear. Furthermore, one pass is about all the conventional fighter can make. By the time he is back in position, the XB-42 is many miles away. In addition, its speed and maneuverability permit violent evasive action. To combat interception inter-ception the. XB-42 has remote-controlled remote-controlled flexible guns installed flush in the wings, aiming aft."1 Another ' feature of the plane. ill wm mnmrn It's today's best tire for your car "A miracle," some have called it! . Few be-licved be-licved that a tire could ever be made of synthetic rubber that would actually outdistance outdis-tance those made of prewar natural rubber. Yet, here it is, the new B. F. Goodrich Silver-town. Silver-town. And here are some of the reasons for its longer-thao-prewar mileage: New. better synthetic rubber A new rubber, so superior that for a long time it was a closely guarded military secret, was', developed "by B. F. Goodrich. Tires made with this rubber wear longer, run cooler. They have greater resistance to cracking actually arc more resistant to bruising and damage from accidents. But rubber is only one reason why the new B. F. Goodrich Silvertown outwears out-wears prewar tires. HUrtht kiUrkus utu B. F. Gtdrkb rdU qua, "DETECT AND COLLECT," 10 Killed In Crash of Big Army. Transport t Continued f root Page One) by the army and started its trip from-New York and had stopped at Fargo, N. D. " Ai police reached the scene they saw six army men and one of the pilots stumbling about in the flare of the burning craft. The other pilot was under an en Cine which had been torn loose. Police reported hearing screamsfl ox the dying and injured. With visibility reduced by the snowstorm, the plane approached the airport from the. east, circled the city and then, being too high to land, turned and came back for another try, Manager Logan said. On the second approach the pil ot was told , by the control tower, Logan said, that the plane was too low. It swung southward and its landing light disappeared from sight of observes in the tower. One of the observers then climbed; to the tower roof and saw the burning wreckage in a field below rimrocks near the airport. Police officers helped extricate bodies from the flaming Wreckage Wreck-age and reported three bodies had been thrown from the plane. They said one wing was found in a field immediately south of the field where the -crash occurred, and that it probably was torn off by the trees. made necessary by its unconventional uncon-ventional design, is a special emergency bailout provision. The propellors in the rear would prevent pre-vent a safe exit in flight, so a detonation switch is provided that blows off the whole propellor installation in-stallation if it becomes necessary for the crew to use parachutes. I As a civilian passenger plane, the XB-42 will offer several ad vantages over conventional planes. There will be no engine; nacelles in the wings to interfere with passenger vision and the location lo-cation of the propellors behind the tail1 wiy eliminate noise. Coming soon: new B. New road-level tread stronger body In the picture above, note how the tread is flatter puts more rubber on the road. This means that more rubber shares the wear, spreads it evenly over the whole tread surface. No more worn;out-in-the-middle treads. The result: more mileage, better traction, more skid-resistance and greater safety. The tire body is more rugged, too. 3. F. Goodrich developed a stronger cotton cord for this tire. And more cords are used than in prewar tires. Another feature that means more miles, greater safety for you. Nearly 17 million test miles Over 2,000 tests have been made with this new tire. Taxi fleets, sure police cars, and the B. F. Goodrich test fleet have rolled up nearly Republican national Committee Draws Up Plans For 1946 Elections CHICAGO, Dec. 8 (UJO The Republican national committee tonight wound up its two-day meeting' on plans for the 1946 elections with a program stressing full cooperation with other nations na-tions for permanent world peace. The G. Q. P. foreign policy Thomas Cv Hart, R-, Con., and Hugh R. Wilson, former ambassador ambas-sador to Germany. "Our main concern today, and for some time to come, lies in security our own security in par ticular and that of the world in general," Hart said in an address to the committee. Speaking on a National Broadcasting Broad-casting company radio program, Wilson; head of the G. O. P. committee's com-mittee's foreign affairs section, said: "The keynote of our foreign policy is complete support of the United Nations organisation Itself, and complete com-plete cooperation with other SONOTONE "600 I m... ,. m,, i fmt oJ" Like a tent over othor hearing aids !" (.ntJUb yiiiMC 1 ' CERTIFIED SONOTONE CONSULTANT ROBERTS HOTEL. PROVO MON., DECEMBER 10 O A. M. to 8 P. M. (Batteries for ail makes Hearing Aids) Permanent Provo Address 445 North 1 West Phone XJS4 '' SONOTONE THE HOUSE OF HEARINQ F. Goodrich synthetic ca , M Tburidsy, 9:30 P. M. Eatttru nmi. Amtrkm BritdcaUhig Ctmpswy Nttwri. 1 1 nations through all finWf national .orgajUaaUonal, On the same hmadeant ' Hart said. "There's no different 'tie twecn the major parties to their" ultimate objectives (in inter national affairs). Rut riifforeiteM' have developed as to how to at Partlclnation in UNO. assistant to other countries; and rejection of "great power dominion" over small nations were ineludedv in the party's 1946 platform present ea 10 me committee by Republican Repub-lican members of congress. Hart told th mmmlttM that the United States must aid war stricken European countries, but we must not exhaust ourselves too ereatlr in alleviating their Plight." More than S8.0nO omevrv wknrm closed during the war, according to the Bulletin of the National Confectioners' Ass'n. til CmZl' Kit. S. .:. . 1 f t I '' -i- y f : , ' : '' '. - , '"' '"' . . M- . f . -A. -, .1 yi million miles under all kinds of driving conditions. The new B. F. Goodrich Silver-town Silver-town gives longer tread wear . . . actually outdistances out-distances prewar tires. 'Cacked by 3 years' extra . synthetic tiro experience The first B. F. Goodrich tires containing synthetic syn-thetic rubber were sold to American motor ists 18 months btfort Pearl Harbor. That was three full years before any other tire manufacturer manu-facturer . . . three years' extra synthetic rubber tire experience. This three-year head start is another reason why you can count on extra mileage . . . extra safety . . . extra value from the hew B. F. Goodrich Silvertown. Supplies are still limited, of course, but we hope to have much larger quantities in the hands of most dealers within the next few months. Tbt B. F. Goodrich Company, Akront O&fo. 3 -!. it t ! J |