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Show t Friday, October 21, 1949 Over the Nation 'Round the World DAILY HERALD I Oft C1 II lk Commissioner Job KANSAS CITY; Mo. (U.R Bob McKInley's grand champion steer was sold today "as feature of the American floyal Livestock and Horse show and the 16-year-old Dale, Okla., farmer ' said he was going to use the $1783 It brought to get married. .The grand champion Hereford brought $1.50 a pound for its 1190 prunda. ABILENE, Tex. (U.R) A tornado struck a "residential "resi-dential section Just . outside the north city limits of Abilene shortly short-ly after midnight today, killing one woman and injuring three other members of her family Police identified the 'oman as Mrs. Ruby Lee Persons, 37, a teacher In the Fair Park1 grade I school and breadwinner of a fam-" fam-" lly of four that included her blind husband and two children. OTTAWA. Ont ' (U.R -The average Canadian to- vaay xacea un pieaaing pruapcci ot a one-cent a gallon cut in fuel oil costs, a more plentiful supply of apple cider, and greater exemptions exemp-tions for stoc'- dividend income. '-.. These boons came as a result of last night's second edition of the 1949 Canadian budget delivered by Finance Minister Douglas Abbott Ab-bott to a crowded and generally enthusiastic hous' of commons. POCATELLO (ULKU-Pocatello's residents will vote on the question of outlawing or retaining slot machines in a special election on Nov. 22. There will be two proposals on the ballot under a decision by the Orem Man's Truck Sinks Down In Salt Wbody; James, Orem, 4 escaped Injury Thursday in an accident near Wendover, Utah, when the Eroduce truck which he" was driv-ig driv-ig tipped over. The highway - surface, laid cross fait flats, was weakened by washing away of salt by current storms and gave way under the weight of the truck. Family members at the James home today to-day reported that Mr. James continued con-tinued his trip with the truck which was extricated. . - city council. One would prohibit the machines. The . other would permit restricted operation. BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (U.R) Huge Percy Coplon, more than halfway through a proposed 100-day fast in a little house atop a steel pole, will make forced tending on Nov. 3. Coplon, who has slimmed down from 357 pounds to a mere 280 in the first 58 days oi his fast, has been subpenaed as a witness in trial involving his mother-in-law She is being sued on charges of nonpayment of a debt Percy said he would go back to his perch and finish the fast after the trial. : LONG BEACH, CaL (U.R) .The, Rev.-Ralph M. Grove complained today that the newly- installed earphones in his First Presbyterian church were giving ha rd-of -hearing parishoners po lice calls instead of his sermon. Roman Catholic (Continued from Page One) .. spiritual or Jurisdictional," the church document said. Can't Be Accepted "The bill as proposed cannot be accepted by any orthodox priest in his own mind, and even less can it be approved inwardly or publicly without sinning against his faith, his loyalty, to the church and his vow of obedience obedi-ence to his bishops." I In preparation for the law the government has swooped down on what it calls "reactionary elements" ele-ments" among the clergy and hustled them off to forced labor camps." CARD OF THANKS ; We wish to thank our kind friends, relatives and neighbors for -the expressions of sympathy extended during our sorrow, through the loss of our beloved husband and son-in-law, Paul Irlbeck. For the lovely flowers and all help and acts of kindness, we are deeply grateful. Mrs. Irlbeck Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Benthin America's Fine Light Beer . Jz ,v . fA v t v A- J ' - SALT LAKE CITY. Oct 21 (U.R) Twenty application blanks werej J 1L. 1 . A J - J . ' in uie iiiau iuay aaaressea 10 prospective candidates , for the Utah health commission's $9,000 a year job as "director of programs." pro-grams." Dr. T. J. Howells, acting state health commissioner, said , he would continue in his present capacity ca-pacity until the permanent ap pointment is made. The successful applicant must first be approved by the governor, gover-nor, then state board of health and the senate at its next session He also will v personally in terviewed by the U. S. Public Health Service, which has agreed to pay $4,000 of his yearly salary Salt Lake Stock Exchange Closing quotations from the direct wire of Ken-Lb Cor poration. 265 W. 1st N. Big HiU ........ Bullion .... .... Cardiff Chief Con Clayton Stive .. Colb. Rexall .... Combined Metals Cres. Eagle Oil . East Standard . . East Utah Eureka Bullion . Eureka Lilly Con. Great Western . Horn Silver ... . Indian Queen . Madison Mines . Miller Hill Mt. States Dev. . New Park North Lilly ...... No. Standard .. Ohio Copper . . Park city con. . . Rovston Coal. . . . Silver King Coal. Silver Shield Tar Baby Tintic Lead Tintic Standard West Toledo . SALES FOR DAY Clayton Silver, 100 at 32. Combined Metals, 500 at 20. Commonwealth Lead. 2S00 at 3; 1000 at 3. East Utah, 500 at 12. Empire Mines, 1000 at 2. Eureka Lilly, 1000 at 10. Leonora, 3000 at 3. Magnolia Lead, 2000 at 4.. Miller Hill, 1500 at 3. Miners Gold. 1000 at 2. New Park, 200 at $1.37: 1000 at $1.37. Ohio Copper, 1000 at 12. Park Premier, 1000 at 4y4; 1000 at AVa. i Royston Coalition, 1000 at 4; 1000 at 4. Silver Shield, 2000 at 2. Utah Wyo. Qil, 1500 at 25. West Toledo, 2500 at 4. Bid Asked .06 ,08 .04 .05 4 .20 .22 .90 1.00 .32 .35 .21 .23 .20 .21 .06 .07 .04i .05 .12 .13 .05, .07 .10 .11 .04 .07 .10 .12 .01 .01 .10 .12 .03 .04 .06 .07 1.33 1.37 .14 .16 .02 .03 .11 .12 .29 .31 .04 .03 3.00 3.30 .02 .03 .04 .03 .11 .12 .65 . .70 .04 .05 - Oldest. known legal code Is the Babylonian, code of -Hammurabi, according to. the Encyclopedia Britannica. m? Aftcmooa rfcotecpttnf SaV tjrday) and Sunday - Sunday Haraid Pubilabad 'Sunday Startling PubUshad by Th Haraid Corpora, ton SO South rtrat Waat Straat Prove Utah Cntarad aa lacond class mattat at tbs ooatoffloa la Ptoto , Utah andai tha act of Marco S 1879 SubaertpUos terms by carrier In Utah onunty SI. 04 tha month Stf 00 to r month In adranca S13 00 tha vaaa in advance By maU anywhere la ke United Stataa or Its poaaea . dona SI 00 the month. SS.00 for ' eU month S13 OO the year ta advance, Intruders Break Into Orem Store Nothing Stolen . OREM Burglars who entered the B & H Pharmacy in Orem sometime during the night, left empty handed, according to store employes. The broken glass in the front door was discovered by the paper boy at 6 a. m. today. Employes report that the file drawers under the safe were jimmied jim-mied but everything seemed in order and nothing was reported stolen. The Intruders left by the basement base-ment door. When You 'Scratch7 a Ballot Now, You Don't Draw a Line Utah Strikers (Continued from Page One) jobs at the plant or elsewhere, leaving 2000 idle. Local President Joseph Rowley said that morale of the men was "still good" and that "all indications indica-tions are that they are just as determined de-termined as ever to fight this battle bat-tle out to the end," He said a change would come only from economic pressure, although "we've already tightened our belts." Rowley and Bednar were distinctly dis-tinctly unhappy over a state welfare wel-fare commission decision now being appealed by the state CIO to bar relief payments to strikers in hardship cases. "We're getting kicked around on this," Bednar said. "We know oi cases where the state has denied de-nied necessary medical aid such as obtaining insulin for diabetics. Such kicking around strengthens our determination to make wel fare a part of our contracts with management" . No Local Conflict Rowley added that pensions were particularly important because be-cause "steel making is a young man's business our average age is only 43 and we know that we want to be prepared for our old age." 1 The two union spokesmen and Mathesius agreed that labor-management relations in Utah itself were "excellent." Mathesius said there is "no local conflict." In addition to the 3200 Geneva plant employes directly affected by the strike, there are nearly 1000 men idle at the company coal mines in Carbon county, 160 out ot work in iron mines near Cedar City and 33 idle in limestone quarries near Payson. Many of these are eligible for unemployment unemploy-ment compensation, since their unions did not vote to strike. Railroads also have made reductions reduc-tions in crews handling ore and coal. Service organizations have been hit by the strike Including closing this week of the Lehi refractory re-fractory brick plant and possible closing of the Republic Creosote plant at Provo. The loss in taxes includes about $20,000 a month that ordinarily would go out of salaries for sales taxes. Personal and corporation income taxes will also be down. Geneva Steel's property tax will not be immediately affected, but Mathesius said long strike will make a sizeable dent in the three per cent franchise tax based on net income that it must pay. 11 Communists (Continued from Page One) "If it wasn't for . the change in the statute, I would be thinking in terms of more than five years." The Smith act, under which Communists were indicted, pro vided a maximum penalty of 10 years at the time the indictment was returned, but one month later, in August, 1948, a re-codification by congress changed the maximum conspiracy penalty to five years. Tooth decay is the disease said in affect the human race more ex tensively than any other, accord ing to the Encyclopedia Bruan-nica. The simplified method of voting, vot-ing, written Into Utah law by the 1948 legislature, will again aid Central Utah voters as they go to the polls Tuesday. The election laws were amended amend-ed to make it easier for the voter to express his choice and easier to have his vote counted. "Scratching" of ballots in the previously accepted sense of the term, is practically eliminated under the new system. This does not mean that the voter is obliged to vote a straight ticket. It means that he does not have to draw lines through the names of candidates can-didates for which he ddes not choose to vote. Provo ballots for the city election elec-tion this year require the voters to make two small crosses only. Each Provo voter may vote for one candidate for mayor and one for commissioner. "Scratching" is impossible In municipal elections of second class cities, of which Provo is Provo Woman Called By Death Effie Margaret Talbott Bohart, 73, died In an Orem nursing home at 3:30 a. m. today. She came to Provo ;I5 months ago to be with her daughter, Mrs. D. L. Hutchcraft, 869 E. 4th S. Funeral services and burial will be in Bozeman, Mont, under the direction of the Berg mortuary. Born Dec. 18. 1875 in Graham, Mo., she spent most of her life in Bozeman since her marriage so Richard F. Bohart, Nov. 26, 1896. He died March 30, 1941. Survivors Include two sons, Seth F. and Paul Bohart. both of Bozeman, Mont., two daughters, Mrs. T. C. (Marjory) Sewell, Wilmington, Wil-mington, Cal., andj Mrs. D. L. (Virginia) Hutchcraft, Provo; one grandchild It's Moving Day For County Clerk . Movinff dav for the Utah coun ty clerk's office was a scene of utter confusion today. After weeks of preparation, all the files, records, desks and personnel per-sonnel of the county clerk's office tnrinv mnved from the third floor of the city and county building to the basement, into, tne rooms formerly occuDied by the Agri culture department. mi. .iLI.J 4 1 m2ma ...111 tinuf be converted into a court room. (one, because candidates are listed, list-ed, beginning this year, alphabetically alphabet-ically and not by parties or j tickets. j In cities below the second class, however, which takes in (all Utah county communities but Provo, candidates are listed by parties or tickets, and the new laws on "scratching" apply. Voting laws formerly required that in scratching a ballot, the voter must draw a line through the name of -the candidate for whom he did not wish to vote, then place a cross In the small square opposite the name of his favorite candidate. Under the amended v law, it is not necessary to draw a line through the name of the unde-slred unde-slred candidate. The cross. In the square by the name of the desired de-sired candidate i Is sufficient to indicate the voter's choice and to constitute a valid ballot. Scratching," the term which indicates that the voter does not vote a straight ticket, becomes much simpler under the amended laws. If most of the favored candidates can-didates are from one party, the voter may simply place a cross in the circle at the top of his party ticket and put crosses by the names of favored candidates in the opposite party. It is not necessary to draw a line through the name of the undeslred candidate. can-didate. If the voter mooses to vote for an equal number in each party, he does not put a cross in the top circle, but marks a cross by each candidate he chooses, regardless re-gardless of party, does not have to strike out the opposing name. The line-drawing rule boils down to this: Where there Is only one candidate for each office in each party, no line-drawing is necessary. Where there is more than one candidate in each Party (as in tne case of district judge candidates in the 1948 election) line-drawing Is necessary to eliminate the undeslred candidate. Football Injury Kills Boise Boy BOISE, Oct. 21 (U.R) Ada County Coun-ty Coroner Clyde Summers to day announced the death of 13-year-old Jerimiah J. O'Rorke as the result of Injuries suffered in a "touch-tackle" football game at North Junior high school. He said the death certificate in dicated , an attending ' physician found 'a basal hemorrhage of the brain caused the death of the seventh-grade student. Junior High school officials. after talking with teachers who supervised the intra-mural game yesterday afternoon, offered this version of the accident: "Jerimiah was playing in the line, and supervisors saw that he failed to get up after a play at tne otner side of the line. "They removed htm to the sidelines after wrapping him in a heavy coat, and the boy told them ha felt O. K. mi - - . Y-f m ai vac name prugi nnu, w i mian went nome. ' 1 Reports indicated v tha boya parents called a physician voon after his arrival at home. Tha child died about 10 p.m. : SOBERING MOMENT MINNEAPOLIS (U.R) The case of a tipsy driver who struck a tipsy , pedestrian ended soberly with a $11C payoff. A $100 fine for drunken driving was levied on Edwin Severston. A-$10 fina wai bald by Dedestrian Dennis Curran, who wasn't injured to any extent. ,H . CLOSED TONITE And Saturday THRU, SATURDAY THE PLAYERS' GUILD BRINGS YOU PENTHOUSE THEATRE! Newest Way To Stage A Play ! . . . The Actors are in the middle of the. room 1 You're a part of it 1 "PAPA IS ALL" A comedy in three acts by Patterson Greene . . . Starring Jean Reese Jones as "Mama" and Ray B. Jones as "Papa"! The Women's Clubhouse 8:15 P. M. TICKETS ON SALE AT: THE DOOR AND.... ALLAN'S PHOTO. SUPPLY UTAH OFFICE SUPPLY THE MUSIC MART Motor-Uu CLOSED FRI. & SAT. EERY MONDA t NITE 8:30 p. m. RIVERSIDE ROLLER RINK 551 West 12th North, Provo ' - -'X v, ""2 h- ' v u- s i C. W. (BILL) LOVE Independent, Progressive and Competent FOR A PROGRESSIVE ( ' and EFFICIENT CITY GOVERNMENT VOTE FOR C. W. (Bill) LOVE FOR MAYOR BECAUSE: 1 He is experienced and trained in efficient business methods. , 2 He is Progressive and far-sighted. 3 He is interested in the Youth of our City, and in the development of recreational facilities. 4 Through diligence and constructive thinking he will work for the lowering of our taxes. LET A MAN WHO "KNOWS HOW" MANAGE OUR CITY Pd. PoL Adv. By C. W. Love for Mayor Club NOW PLAYING Open 1:15 Last Show 9:40 3 RANDOLPH I till vtaoi JAN! I WILLIAMS -JORY-NIGH I .ilJDED: DISNEY CARTOOW Travel Talk; Novelty News r CD Tonight & SaturdayComplete Shows 7:00 & 9:15 .c '?0s0Ll tANW OF THE YEA 7 gnssA, V CttW Sr HOYS MCOW frWocW hr WtU.IAM Km.BCBa -V"4 SPECIAL KIDDIES MATINEE SATURDAY AT 1:30 "BUCK PRiyATES" Hilarious comedy starring Abbott and Costello; Plus: Cartoons and Serial Admission (this program only) 10c and 20c m comm. kuo vapottuD iijitrr on mroi...cnet. Melt lf lWIW m. BANG UP BAND BRpUGHT TO UTAH COUNTY Stewart ft 0ffl ORCHESTR A w Melodic variety is the keynote of the dancing in Tajk of the Town's beautiful and spacious pavilion. The crowd say A' J they love it! Join 'em 1 1 ! tX -I CM SATURDAY OCT. 22 At The TALK OF THE TOWN Admission $1.50 Per Couple. A Ends Tomorrow! A x WTKAX at EXTRA! "PIGSKIN PASSES' and I GREAT FOOTBALI-PAST it PRESENT BUGS Knutt Rockne Red Grange Army-Navy, Hit auniixi Ana List xears ureiun uimei I STARTS SUNDAY n ii s n i ai i ii i . n m y I BURT LANCASTER .y ! v aPAULHBEID-Ccrisst Cdvet "W V. niir ti??t V rm iaw 1 " - i ENDSTOMORBOW! STARTING SUNPAY t . , flZn I fcr Twenty Tormcntiiig: j Yesrs Thiy lived THJ I i IIATRICI PIAISON MIL FIRREt . s DMfiM x ' ' ! mm euotq mww f 1VEW TODAY! j US OPEN 5:45 35c . TIL 6:30 A Picture Every Woman - S K. U.'I....1J -M every onuum occ - - - HIT B " M W - -- if . mi'' si ii. some la mouth, tool- V VAenua X |