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Show 77 ' ' ' u X v 12 Sunday, October 16, 1949 SUNDAY HERALD Over the Nation 'Round the World CHICAGO , (U.R TFwo gunmen robbed a gem -importer of several hundred unset diamonds -worth $50,000 in bfoad daylight, police said Satur- day, -. y-. Philip Abrams, manager of Swirsky and Ehrlich. importers, said the robbers approached him from the rear Friday ,-' ,-' One of them displayed gun partially wrapped in paper, took his brief case containing the diamonds dia-monds ahd orclered him downstairs down-stairs to a! lower street level. When he looked back the men were 'gone; ' rf A ' ; JOHANNESBURG, x South Africa mR -Field Marshal Jan Christian Chris-tian Smuts announced Saturday that he had beenV dismissed as commander-in-chief of the South African armed forces, a command he has held since 1940. The wartime prime minister, now 79, said he received notice of his dismissal in a letter from F. C. Erasmus, minister of defense in the National party government of Prime Minister D. F. Milan. . BUDAPEST. Hungary . . (U.PJ Laszlo Raj k, once Hun-gary's'NoJ Hun-gary's'NoJ 2 Communist, andtwo .other men were hanged at dawn Saturday j for. crimes pinned on them in one of the biggest Communist Com-munist treason ' cases since the Moscow purge in 1838. y A Dr.-Tibor Szonyi and ' Andreas Szalai went' to the , gallows with Rajk, former Hungarian foreign for-eign minister and ace defendant in the mass trial before a Budapest Buda-pest People's -court which ended Sept. 24. 'A ' , . ST. I,OUIS (U.rRoy E. Davidson, spokes- man for' four unions on strike ' against ther Missouri Pacific rail-road, rail-road, said Saturday that about half of the. 282 grievances causing - the walkouts have -been settled in , direct negotiations. ... . The striker in progress for 37 .days, hal paralyzed the railroad. two Artameoa tacpun MV ' ' - ; urdayl aad Sunday V waday Braid PubttobaO Sunday A - atorotaa. ; - y V Published b Tb BnU Career. oo. SO 8otb nrat WmI IbMt, Prove; Utah ondat . tbe aet at March a 1S7S Subscription terms ' tor carrier la Otaa runty Si .00 the month 08 00 (o A mwtu ta tdTtnc SIX 00 the- vaav la advance By mafl-any where ta Gnltcd Stataa or Ita rteoa, ai.OO the month. $6.00 tar SU M the X TOKYO, Japan (U.R) Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced today that no devaluation devalua-tion of the Japanese yen is contemplated. con-templated. The yen now is 360 to $1. - ! OTTUMWA, la. 1 ,XU.R) Ottumwa 'marked fire prevention , week with a big parade yesterday. One of the floats caught fire. GUATEMALA CITY Guatemala . (U.PJ ; Torrential rains and winds - of hurricane force have killed 17 persons in the past few days, authorities announced today. to-day. TOKYO, Japan tU.R) Gen. J Lawton Collins, U. S. army chief of staff, said Sat urday he is cutting short a Far East inspection tour to rush back to Washington to give the army's side, in the unification disputes. Although General Collins did not say precisely when he would depart for Washington, he acknowledged ac-knowledged in a prepared statement state-ment that he had, been instructed by Acting Secretary of the Army Tracy S. Voorhees to return "immediately." MANILA, Philippines (U.R) Locomotive engineers and firemen of the state-owned Ma ils railroad went on strike today testing the railroad's rejection wage increase demands. LONDON R) The Duke of Edinburgh, Frineess Elizabeth's husband, left bv air for Malta at 10 a.m. (2 a.m. MST)Saturday to join the Medi7 terranean fleet as a first lieutenant lieuten-ant on the destroyer Chequers. MIAMI. Fla. (U.R) Safecrackers got only $400 from one of the biggest jobs ever pulled here--although their loot was worth $300,000. Most of the paper in a safe taken from the Miami Crushed Stone company was in securities which were no-negotiable. ' . ' Ettie Bettiers - v Funeral services for Mrs. Ettie Bathers. 68. widow of Frank M Bethers, will be conducted Monday Mon-day at 2 p.m. in the Valley mor tuary chapel. Mrs. Bethers died Wednesday in Grantsyme. Friends may call Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Monday until time of services at the mortuary. Burial wilt be in the Provo city cemetery. K- ' Military Rites Set For Officer Killed In Action MANTI The body of Lt. Earl Alder McAllister will arrive here from Japan Oct. 19 for burial in the Mantl cemetery on Oct. 20. The funeral services will be held in the Mantl North LDS . ..ward chapel . and military v honors will be conauciea oy ( -ST V A the American Legion Post. Lt. McAllister McAllis-ter is the son of John W. and Myrle Alder McAllister o f Provo. He at- y tended schools In Santa Marie and Santa Bar- ' bara, Calif. Lt. McAllister He enlisted in the U. S. Navy in Sept. i4Z ai Santa Barbara and took training in California, Kansas, Texas, New Jersey, Florida and Rhode Island. He was commissioned in December Decem-ber 1943 at Corpus Christi Texas. The lieutenant served with the 82nd squadron on the U.S.S. Ben- nineton in Task f orce an as a fighter pilot and' received the Air medal, the Distinguished Flying Cross and Silver Star. He was killed off the shore ou Shikokou in MarcK of 1945 dur ing a strafing run of the Japanese airfield there. Survivors include his former wife, Peggy Hamilton McAllister Cortez, and daughter, juinaa Jeanne; his parents, Mr. ana Mrs. John WxMcAllister; two sisters, Lucile Avi. Weenig. Elaine M. Harry; two brothers, Weils A. and Dale A. McAllister. EffoM. Williams Rites Set Monday rvrLiiAoAW X' vvf vjL x unerai services will be conducted Mon day at 1 p.m. for Mrs. Effa Mc- Kell Williams, 66, who died at her home Friday J following a stroke suffered earlier; in the week. The services will (be held in the Second LDS ward chapel by Reed O. Walker, bishop.l Friends may call at the family horde this after-; noon aad Monday prior to servl ices, Burial will be in the Spanish Fork cemetery. 1 1 1 t I T s" Dorn in opanisn iurK, ucc, d, 1882, she was one of twin daugVfe JJ ' i Ld Steelworkers l Steel Strike Victory Predicted By Two Top Officials Of Union Two top officials of the CIO United States Steelworkers union Saturday night declared here that the current steel strike .will be won by the union, and blasted the "We'll spend every dime of our union treasure to win this strike," he declared "and to see that no one suffers hardship." Mr. Thimmes spoke at length attitude of steel management as.on the pensions, most of them "vicious and arrogant." f non-contributory, awaiting Jiigh Their -assertions were made at a mass meeting in the Provo high school auditorium, attended by about 500 Central Utah steel- tworkers and their wives with' a scattering of other citizens. Speakers were James C. .Thim mes, national vice president of of Marten Rites Set Wednesday at S. F. SPANISH FORK funeral services for Jons Marten, 84, who died at a local hospital Wednesday Wednes-day will -be conducted Monday at 2 p. m. in the Fifth LDS ward chapel by Byron Geslison, bishop. Friends may call at the funeral home in Spanish Fork today from 2 to 9 p. m. and Monday prior toservices. Burial will be in Spanish . Fork city cemetery directed - by x Claudin funeral home. ! ' Mr. Marten was 'torn Dec. 26, 1864, in Sweden. He came to United States 65 years ago and met and married Matilda Fred-rickson, Fred-rickson, also from Sweden, in June of 1905. They spent their early, married life living in Thistle This-tle where he followed his profession profes-sion as a tailor. Their first child, Morris, was accidentally killed at the age of 9. In 1919 the family moved to Spanish. Fork and their daughter, tens of Robert WHson and Emma Eliza Jex McKell. She attended school at Spanish Fork and Brig- jham Young university. She was an active member, of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, especially in the Primary Assn. and Relief society. For 25 years she was a. visiting teacher of Pleasant GroVe Second; LrD S ward. She was married to John T. Williams June 11, 1904, in the Salt Lake L D S temple. Survivingare her .husband and five of six sons and daughters: Robert T. Williams, Layton Elbert, El-bert, M. Williams, Pleasant Grove; Mrs Ethan (AnnaV Peay, Amerir can Fork; Mrs. Niel ,(Ruby) Fu- gaL Pleasant Grove; Mrs. S. B. (Dale) Mundy, Layton; 14 grandchildren; grand-children; a brother, Dr. L. E. McKell, Mc-Kell, Provo, and a sister, Mrs. Merrill Bird, Ogden. i. Infant Coleman Graveside services were held Friday in the Provo city cemetery for Wayne Coleman, day-old son of Burr and Annie Belle Hend ricks Coleman. The Services were cpnducted by Dean yBuckner, bishop, of the Grandview LDS ward chapel. The child was born Thursday in a Provo hospital and died there early Friday morning. , Survivors include the parents; two brothers, Burr and Ronald Coleman, all of Provo; grandparents, grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hendricks, York, Pa., and Mrs. Sarah Coleman, TeasdaleT Wayne county. . I America, and Charles J. Smith, director of the seven western states which comprise district 38 for the union. Confident of Victory ' Both speakers were confident of victory in the current struggle wklch has closed Geneva and Ironton, idled about3500 of the workers in these plants, and re sulted in a total Unemployment of about" 5000 in the state of Utah. "You people support the com-s munity," Mr. Smith told his audi-ence audi-ence "and the community should support you, I'm sure it WHL If we have the support in this nation na-tion that I think wehave, we cannot can-not fail to win this strike, and when we win it, U. S. Steel will be a much better place to work. Speaking of people who denounced de-nounced "big fat labor leaders," Mr. Smith said: "Xvery one of these 'big fat labor leaders,' of which I am one," had his salary cut off Oct. 1, the date the strike started. There isn't a paid official offi-cial in the union right now. salaried steel company ' officials at retirement and blasted steel management for its stand in demanding de-manding a contributory pension in opposition to the recommendation recommenda-tion of the presidential "fact-finding board. - Mr. Thimmes declared the union was against a contributory pension because: 1. It means a reduction in take home pay. 2. He claimed a non-contributory pension was the most efficient because the money stayed in a pension fund and was used for that purpose, instead' of being withdrawn by workers when they left a company's emplojjment. Claim Biff Profits ; Both speakers said steel, com panies were "rolling and fat in the greatest profits they have ever experienced," and declared they were well able to ' pay the union's demands. They blasted top figures in the steel industry as "racketeers," and Thimmes singled sin-gled out Enders Voorhees, mem-berofthe mem-berofthe board of U.S. Steel, for particular attack. , Voorhees, he said, tolchvthe steel fact-finding board the ohljr thing it ought to recommend was a wage reduction for steelworkers, and declared that ir a steelworker needed a pension in his old-age, it would be because the worker had been a spendthrift. ' . S. Ex-Provo School Board President Dies In California Venard Anderson, former president of the Provo board of education, died Friday -night at the home of a daughter, Teressa Staker, in Los Angeles, according to word received; here. Mr. Anderson I formerly was manager of Bennett's Paint-store in Provo, was active in the chamber cham-ber of commerce and Rotary club, and served several years on the school board before moving to California four years ago. He was alsqi active in the LDS church in the. Provo Second ward. Arrangements for the funeral to Deeid, in provo, win be an nounced later. SHIPPED LOOT AWAY MINNEAPOLIS (U.P.) A 19 year-old . admitted he stole six jackets and a topcoat and then shipped them 1,900 miles away to a friend at Seattle, Wash-Police Wash-Police said they would recover the loot if they could find it. CRADLE SNATCHER ' CHICAGO U.f) Police decided that Donald Thomas, I, came pretty close to robbing the cradle. They accused Thomas of taking $3 from a three-year-old boy while the latter was on a shop ping trip for his mother. R. S. Bills, regional representative representa-tive for the union in this area who also spoke briefly. On the stand were state CIO leaders, in-i eluding President Clarence Pal4 mer, plus the presidents of the Geneva and Ironton locals, Jo- Million Workers To Get Raise Under (lev Bill - WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 (UiD Between 1,000,000 and 1,500,000 worker are infor a raise . J They will set the increase iw' der provisions of the 75-cent min. V ""win wagv uui w Hl.u LB dUBC M9 becoming law. The measure waa drafted yesterday by a conference. committee which ironed out differences dif-ferences between senate , and house versions. . Both houses are expected to approve the measure early next week and set it to the White nouse ior President Truman's Jflgriature.' ' Yt.iy; The bill will carry out Mr Truman's Tru-man's campaign pledge to boost the minimum for workers in interstate in-terstate commerce from 40 to 75, pent an hour. , The president suffered a setback set-back however,- when the confer ees refused to extend the coverage, cover-age, of the wage-hour act.yiiThelr final bill would add to the number num-ber of-workers exempt from, tha law. n- .. . - V r sen. i;iauae repper, u., -.ru, said the new version should increase in-crease the wages of -at least , 000,000. workers and pehaps of aa many as 1,500,000. Other workers work-ers would benefit as wage scales arm nriiiitft in maintain inY dif ferentials, i. There are 8,000,000 radio rt-ceivihg rt-ceivihg sets in Japan. The meeting" was in charge of seph Rowley and Fred Hedquist. was. 7,7 19,276, ' im.. U Dam' 1 1 Qi line poyuianuii ui I I ONLY THREE MORE IDAHO SENATOR TO BE ANNOUNCED r BOISE, Oct: 14 (U.R) Gov. C. A-Robins A-Robins said today he expects to anounce tomorrow morning the name of the man the is appointing to the U. S. senate, seat made vacant va-cant by the death of Sen. Bert H. Miller, D., Ida. Viola, died soon after He and ' his wife lived here until hec death April 18, 1935. He has no living relatives.. " im y - . x fasr lfionryr and mor bKrvtrfvl than rer iKofi the nFrigidoire Electric Rano that ha fvst orrivacM Com in and. sj HI Sm nS Mnooth-fkwtog hns, ttw rounded exMtMfSr th aUamtng chrom AND all th ' new exclimva features to help you prepare sneaU ecwier, beef, fasterl Spdy Hmvt Radiantub Svrfac Unit Fastest cooking uniaa in Frfgidoire history! Designed to put more heat into utensils oil over at all 5 cooking speeds from "skn-iner "skn-iner to "high." Cooks more evenly, faster; with less current. And each unit tips up for easy cleaning. f AH Theee and Many Other Feature All-Porcelain Inside and out. 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