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Show 1C SUNDAY HERALD Sunday, June 19, 1949 : Governors Arrive For Conference In Colorado Springs COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., . June 18 (U.W The vanguard of! governors from almost every j ". state ln.the nation began arriving' here Saturday for the four-day t governors' conference beginning Sunday evening. i Colorado's chief executive. Gov., Lee Knous, will do the host) honors at the meeting. He was' here today making final arrange-) i ments for the conference, 41st to ' be held by the governors. I The official list was cut slightly! by last-minute cancellation from; the .governors of Puerto' Rico.i New Hampshire, Alabama and Mississippi. ' The White House . represen tive will be Lt. Gen. Walter . dell Smith, former ambassador to Russia. He will speak at the ban-; quet Sunday night which off id--ally opens the meet j x The first visiting governor toi arrive for the convention was; Rhode Island'sJohn O. Pastore About 22 governors were expected expect-ed to check in at the palatial . Broadmoor Hotel here Saturday withthe remainder arriving to- -i . The delegates will get an aerial I aatnto Siinrlnv afternoon from the I 86th flight wing of the air Na-j tional Guard now in training at Casper, Wyo. One-hundred! planes will take part in the flight.! Gov. J. Bracken. Lee of Utah; left Saturday to be in attendance! at the conference. . Dilemma On Liquor Prices State Faces SALT- LAKE CITY. June 18 (U.R)- Utah's liquor commission I took tne matter of liquor prices; "under advisement" today while ! . it decided which way to turn in the face of pleas both for reduced re-duced costs and a status quo. Governor J. Bracken Lee has; asked the commission to make a thorough study of the liquor retail re-tail price structure with a view toward a reduction, but without! jeopardizing revenue from liquor sales which goes to counties and municipalities. State Attorney General Clinton D. Vernon says prices can be cut any time under state law. Thousands of consumers favor a price cut. But the cities and counties, which realize as much as $l,(k)0.- 000 in revenue each year from the state's sale of liquor are against any lower prices. Surplus Last Year Utah laws provide that the first $2,250,000 of liquor revenue goes to the state general fund. The remainder, up to $1,000,000 goes to cities and counties. After last year's apportionment, apportion-ment, a surplus of $55,375 was, left. This means that under the; present system, a cut of one cent a $4 bottle of liquor would be .the only possible reduction without cutting into city and county funds. Lee told his commission to I "investigate the price structure with a view towards adjusting liquor prices downward so as to compare favorably with prices of sister states." But he added that the pre-, servation of the surplus for tities and counties must also be kept in mind. Vernon said his ruling was-based was-based on the fact that the federal excise tax of $9 per gallon has been computed as a part of the wholesale price of liquor. The, minimum statutory markup of, 55 per cent is applied on this price, Vernon said. Edgemont Mrs. Oiea Schumann and Mrs. Connie. Tucker were in charge of Edgemont's float entry of the "Orem Days" parade. Boys who were on the float include: Richard Rich-ard Davis, Marvin Dalton, Conrad Con-rad Tucker, Lewis Ivie, Clinton Long and Terry Richards. Betty and Bob Wright, Edge mont twins, were honored on i their fifth birthday anniversary Friday. Children present at 21 a' party given for them were Diane Chamberlain, Karen Brereton, Donna James, Joyce Davis. Joyce Mary and David Mecham, Paul. Janet and Mary Jackson and Rebecca and Guy Richards. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H cken and family are vacationing inl Yellowstone Park. Mr. and Mrs. Marion K. Johnson John-son have moved back to Edgemont. FLYING SAUCERS SEEN IN ENGLAND . LONDON, June 18 (U.R Two farmers in different sections of Kent claimed that they had seen flying saucers in the skies last night. Each described what they saw as "tailless blobs of light" spinning spin-ning across the heavens about: 10 p. m. Central Utah Motor Co. 410 So. Univ. Ave. Ph. 174S ATTENTION DAIRYMEN New Studebaker $1,342.40 f-ton Chassis and Cab BUILD YOUR OWN STYLE BODY 'Papa's Suffering, Mama's Suffrage' Marred rattier s pav, uriqinaior. aavs RICHMOND, Va, June 18 (U.R) -Papa's suffering and mama's suffrage started Father's Day, the woman who first started the cele-v cele-v bration officially said Saturday..-." Mrs. " K. H. Burgess of Tampa, Fla., was In Rich mond today to spend Father' Day with her own father, Edward A. Swineford, for the : first; time in many years Mrs. Burgess the" Kate Swineford, 16, pi Drewry's Bluff, Va. wrote a plea in 1919 to a Virginia newspaper for "our jear fathers who toil yearin and year out try ing to keep the home to gether." "In maaveases, she wrote, "Childrenthink more of their fathers than of their mothers because the women are trying try-ing to enter politics, and Consequently the home is left, the children have to care for themselves while their mothers moth-ers are pacing the streets." Readers liked the ioea. Their encouragement 1 e d Miss Swineford td found the National Father's Day association. associ-ation. It was chartered by the State of Virginia and, in 1932 Mrs. Burgess registered it with the U. S. patent office. ISpringville Man Speaker For Meet Held In Eureka 1 -' . . SPRINGVILLE Harrison Con- over was guest speaker this week at a luncheon meeting in Eureka of Kiwanis members. ; Subject for his speech was the history and significance of Flag Day. He also touched on the various vari-ous things that citizens of this country are allowing to become a source of danger to the true democratic government. SpringviUe Kiwanis contingent haye established a record of inter-club inter-club meetings. Thev have trav eled more man miles; to these meetings during the, past five years man any otner club in the district. Secretary Found Guilty on Charge Of Manslaughter RIVERSIDE, CaL. June 18 (U.R) Dark-haired Mrs. Agnes Gar-nier Gar-nier will , be sentenced Wednesday Wednes-day on her conviction of man slaughter for the shooting of her employer, millionaire realtor John E. Owen. An all-housewife jury returned the manslaughter verdict Friday night after deliberating seven hours and 14 minutes. The conviction- carries a maximum sen tence of 10 years in prison. The 53-year-old confidential secretary was charged with killing kill-ing Owen last April 22 because of jealousy over his attentions to actress Irene Rich. Mrs. Garnier maintained that Owen; who was 68. was shot accidentallv be thv struggled for a gun after he threatened her life in a drunken rage. , When the verdict was read. Mrs. Garnier blinked her. eyes in an obvious attempt to hide her emotions.- She said nothing, but Defense Attorney Sam Houston Allen announced he would move for a new trial when she comes up for sentence. "Women do not deal too kind- Mapleton Tops Last Year's Drive Total i MAPLETON Citizens of this community went all out this year with contributions to the. 1949 Poliomyelitis fund drive. A total to-tal of $99 was collected a sum which is four times the amount gathered in Mapleton during 1948. Roy Johnson was chairman of the event. ly with their , own sex," he said, calling the verdict an "obvious compromise Judgment." District Attorney William O. MacKey said he was satisfied with the verdict. Owen, president of the Na- association, was shot at the climax cli-max of a bitter quarrel with his long-time secretary in the bedroom bed-room of his luxurious ranch home. DEATH IRONICAL SANTA BARBARA, Cal.. June 18 (U.R) Col. Avery J. French, 62-year-old retired army officer, was electrocuted yesterday bya liveiwire which he had stretched across his garden to keep dogs away. Port jof Shanghai Reopened Again SHANGHAI, June 18 (U.R) The Port of Shanghai, closed for. a week by, the'. Communists be cause of a "mine-laying" scare, was unofficially reopened Sat urday. A Dutch ship arrived and be-can be-can unload ins car en. .Other for- Whangpoo river approach after an investigation showed the Yangtze channel at the sea en trance was salt. Illinois farmers last year pro' duced 13 of every 100 bushell of soybeans Brown in the world, and 35 of every 100 grown in the united states. 'US CASH ANP a . WOMEN'S RAYON PANTIES 30a Run resistant rayon Mastic waist! with ful price , TvTte 1 & a -v! white, i Piniir lyvb 79c Yrf 3eautiful summer colors -Vhite, Maize, Orchid and Pink! i.A- . V-u tYvesec i a s- - ! V hnr 1 IIII wi a iuu stamped. hemstitched am lemmed! 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