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Show m tf. ! It 1 4 I Husband of Strangled Wife Jailed On Perversion Charge ATLANTA, Ga., June 14 U.R Paul Refoule, French artist husband hus-band of a strangled Atlanta socialite, so-cialite, was jailed today on perversion per-version charges and a lie detection detec-tion expert said he believed Refoule Re-foule lied when quizzed about his wife's murder. Refoule was charged specifically specifical-ly with sodomy after allegedly confessing participation in wild sexual orgies,, giving the month-old month-old murder mystery a lurid turn that shocked Atlanta's fashionable set Around The World TOKYO, June 14 (U.R) U. S, army investigators have un covered evidence that two or possibly pos-sibly three nen in an American vehicle were seen near the place where Brocha Lvova, feminine employe of the war department, was shot to death, supreme head quarters reported today. The investigators have found both American and Japanese wit nesses who heard screams and saw the assailants leave the dark Tokyo street site a short time later. They also have discovered tire tracks and bloodstains at the scene. HONOLULU (U.R) James Moore. 16-year-old son of Brig. Gen. James Moore, commander of the south sector command, Hawaii, was safe today after a coast guard air-sea rescue from a drifting life raft six miles at sea. HONGKONG (U.R) A severe flood of the Pearl River in the Kwantung province of southern China has driven 500,000 Chinese from their homes, smashed 50 bridges and sunk 40 vessels, re ports from the stricken area said today. C. J. Golitz, Tampa, fla., lie detector expert who assisted Fulton Ful-ton county police to build up hevidence against Refoule, said he did not believe the artist was telling the truth when questioned about his wife's strangulation- slaying. Golitz added that the Indicator needle on his lie detection machine, ma-chine, with - which he had built up a strong reputation In Florida, trembled noticably when Refoule answered certain questions during a lengthy grilling last night. The needle should stay still when questions are answered truthfully, truthful-ly, he said. The news of the arrest spread rapidly through Atlanta's north-side north-side where Paul and his wife, Peggy, lived and were only a few weeks ago part of a gay social whirl. At 2:40 p. m., the plain and haggard Refoule. was booked at Fulton Tower, the grim county jail, on the sodomy charge that carries a possible life imprisonment imprison-ment on conviction. He waived a commitment hearing and the evidence evi-dence will be placed before the grand jury next Tuesday. Criminal Court Judge Clarence Bell set bond at $10,000 and Refoule Re-foule was expected to be released in bail shortly after the formali ties of booking and fingerprint ing. Refoule was met at the jail by a battery of photographers and he winced every time a flash bulb popped. He wrung his hands nervously. ner-vously. The arrest climaxed a series of dramatic developments in the case, starting last night when Refoule Re-foule went to the airport to meet his parents, Matre and Mme. Robert Rob-ert Refoule, who flew here from France to comfort their son. Fulton county officers, who have been watching his every move since the slaying, were at the airport right behind Refoule and they took him in custody after a brief reunion with his parents. At the authorities' request, re-quest, Refoule. agreed to submit to a lie detector test which was carried on through the night. KURE, Japan (U.R) Maj. Frank Kotches of Stamford, Conn., was sentenced to three years at hard labor by a court martial today for taking gifts from Japanese in return for helping them obtain American contracts. PEIPING. China (U.R) The booming of heavy guns was plain ly -audible in Peiping today as Communist forces struck at highway high-way and railroad hubs' only 20 miles from the city. The bold Communist attack was directed against the Tangchow area, 20 miles south of Peiping. Guards were strengthened around residences resi-dences of Chinese officials in Peiping. BUDAPEST (U.R) Minister of Justice Istvan Ries asserted today that Deso Sulyok, outspoken foe of the Hungarian Leftist government, govern-ment, was guilty of high treason for proposing international supervision super-vision of the next Hungarian election. it ft II .tftg Mflll m a-- : - i k i f - YYY$: : t I .:! I J t; SEARCH FOR BODY OF BOY ABANDONED BANKS, Ida., June 14 (U.R) The search for the body of Clifford Clif-ford R. Pay ton, Jr., 10-year old Nampa yoi'h believed to have drowned in Payette River here late yesterday, was abandoned today to-day by Boise County Sheriff Warner War-ner Mills. Mills said the body was probably prob-ably far downstream. Bachelor Hoover Gets Listed With Honored Fathers WASHINGTON, June 14 (U.R) J. Edgar Hoover's associates asso-ciates had a tendency to chuckle today every time they thought of his latest honor. - The handsome, famous, $14, 000-a-year, 52-year-6id director di-rector of the federal bureau of investigation had nothing to say about it personally. But his friends said his' "no comment" could be construed as meaning "highly pleased." Hoover's newest honor was inclusion on a list of the country's "best fathers of the year" issued by a New York organization called the American Amer-ican Mothers committee. Mrs. Katherine Newell is director of the committee. Among others on the list were Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Eisen-hower, Attorney Tom C. Clark, and baseball player Joe Dimaggio. Pleased as they were over his being placed in such good company,. Hoover's friends around the justice department thought there was one little fact that Mrs. Newell ought to know. So it was passed on to her in New York. , When she heard it, about all Mrs. Newell could say was, "Oh, dear." Hoover is a bachelor. One Killed, One Wounded InN.Y Gangland Warfare NEW YORK, June 14 (U.R) - One man was killed and another wounded today in Manhattan's westside Hell's. Kitchen area in what police believed was a gang killing. A sub-machine gun was used in -he slaying by a man who escaped in a buick auto mobile, police said. The dead man was identified by police as Vincent Wice, 33, of New York. The man who was wounded, believed by police to have been only a bystander, was George Schneider, 69, of New York. The gunman alighted from the automobile, police said, walked toward Wice and began firing a tommy-gun. ' As Wice fell, the gunman turned turn-ed and fled to the car where a companion waited at the wheel to drive him away. Nine empty shells were found near Wice's body. How to Build Your House . m . M M.T. mum , n-r Spacious, Livable Yet Small - o -' :rr.Y' "r ' ' ' y, . I " " S BED ROOM IbathI .BED ROOM1 I i2'xi' PlysI 12x12' I flOwfcrfr u,viNC ROOM JL I KITCHEN )l J u No. 129 "No 129 ' " " ' ' ,' " ftxZ&At- By PAUL T. HAAGEN. Noted Architect of Small Homes Released by NEA Service This romantic small house has a feeling of spaciousness and livability not always found In the houses todty where a compact plan, necessitated by economy, sometimes makes one feel crowded. crowd-ed. It has a unique floor plan that is very clever. The rooms are all of ample size, with the two bedrooms and bath entirely isolated at the rear and served by a small hall. This -is a very good arrangement 4s it separates and gives privacy to the bedrooms. The complete kitchen is plan-1 ned with an outside entrance door! at the rear and stairs leading to a full basement in which the heating heat-ing plant, laundry and a fine recreation re-creation room are located. There is no dining room, but note the unusual feature of the plan in this regard. At the living room end of the kitchen are built folding doors that may be opened wide when required, thus making a' full opening into the kitchen from the living room. Just beyond be-yond these doors is built a dining bar, which has now become so popular for informal entertaining. Diners seat themselves on small stools on the living room side, with the hostess on the kitchen side of the same bar, thus making it simple, direct and easy to serve the meals and later remove the used china and silver. A china cabinet is built near the dining bar with wood-paneled doors which become a part of the living room wall decoration when closed. The dining bar may be so built Hungary Leftists Asked to Prepare For Fall Election SUNDAY HERALD Sunday. June 15. 1947 Finally Gets Degree at 70 BUDAPEST. Hnnaarv .Tun 14 (U.R) Minister of . Justice Istvan Ries called upon Hungarian left ists tonight to expel dissidents from their parties, to change the electoral law and to "enlighten and reform the people' in preparation prepa-ration for new Hungarian elections elec-tions this fall. Ries made these sweeping demands de-mands after opposition leader Deze Sulyok. accused of "high treason" by the leftists, predicted that the leftists would falsify the elections and terrorize the voters unless the balloting was supervised super-vised by foreign observers. Before the ejections are held, Ries said, the leftist social so-cial Democratic party of which he is a member and the Communist party "must expel -those members who will not - " j LONG BEACH, Calif., June 14 Ries told a socialist conference I U.R) The U. S. junior chamber of 300 delegates that "elections of commerce convention today By BEN COOK United Press Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES, June 14 UE Seventy - year - old George F. Staat satisfied a boyhood ambition ambi-tion today when he marched into Los 'Angeles memorial coliseum to receive his bachelor of arts degree along with 2,349 other University of Southern California Califor-nia graduates. The gray-haired school teacher took 22 years to complete college, attending evening classes whenever when-ever he could get the course he needed. He celebrates his 70th birthday tomorrow. Staat majored in history, earned earn-ed 29 A's, and will be graduated cum laude, an honor reserved Jaycees Endorse Youth Training that it folds up out of the way when not in use, or may be divided di-vided in half and swung around against the wall so that passage is gained to the kitchen. If the bar is permanently built and nailed to the floor, then a lift-up section hinged at one side should be provided for passage in and out between the kitchen and living room. Of great importance in a small house is closet space, too often neglected. Note the extremely commodious closets provided in this house, which will be found most useful and practical. are inevitable and will take place in the autumn." "Changes must be made in the electoral l&w, but these changes alone cannot assure victory for the democratic parties," he said. "Intensive educational work is necessary, especially by the social democratic partv, to enlighten and reform the people." He said the social democrats were pro-Soviet "not only due to Hungary's geographical situation but because Soviet Russia is the first power to build socialism." Vilhelm Goehm, 68-year-old so-cial'democrat so-cial'democrat who was commander command-er of the Hungarian Red army in 1919 and now is Hungarian minister min-ister of Stockholm, said that as long as labor parties in Hungary collaborate "there won't be any counter-revolution." A spokesman for the ministry of information meanwhile denied that the Hungarian police force was being trained by Russian of- i f icers. GIRL DIES IN FIRE BILLINGS, Mont., June 14 (U.R) Yellowstone County Attorney Melvin Hoiness today has asked for an investigation of the Laurel fire which killed a small girl Wednesday night. Hoiness asked the state fire marshal to investigate the blaze which took the life of three-year-old Pamela Siegfried, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Siegfried. The couple's two other children were injured. JACK AND JUDY IN BEBLELAND By ROBERT ACOMB YOU CAN'T REFUSE ) Y-- feacta-. 15 THERE ROOM IN WE CAN WARE ROOM The Con8olette,, radio - pkonograpk from Here's a compact console radio phonograph that's small in size jtx big in performance. Has storage space for over a hundred hun-dred records yet takes no more room than an ordinary chair. PLUS THESE FEATURES: Automatic Record Changer Single Button Control S Tubes and rectifier , Standard and Shortwave Reception Alnico Speaker AmHobl m rkh wofcwf, mahogany and knotty pin. 189.50 Pratfvet f the ftBdlx Avtetton Cerpf ettn Intermountain Heating & Appliance Co. 440 West Center Provo, Utah ' HOUSEWIVES Atom-Smashing On High School Level EL CERRITO, Cal., June 14 (U.R) Atom-smashing, which not so long ago was a brain teaser for the nation's na-tion's foremost scientific minds, is getting down to the high school level. Physics Teacher Ben Sie-gal Sie-gal of El Cerrito high school announced today that an atom-smashing cyclotron is nearing completion by four members of the senior class. The school appropriated $500 for its construction and hopes to add atom-smashing to its curriculum next semester. endorsed compulsory military training and a freer world trade. "Unhampered travel by peoples of the world, full and equal access ac-cess of all people to raw materials and markets of the world, so that two-way trade between all countries coun-tries will reach its highest potential, poten-tial, establishment of reciprocal trade agreements, downward revision re-vision of tariff and fostering of a strong international trade organization," organi-zation," were endorsed ,-n a resolution reso-lution adopted by the convention delegates. Cpmpulsory military training was approved "as the best means to insure world peace until such time as the United Nations are in a position to provide an effective world police force," the delegates declared. Statehood for Alaska was approved ap-proved in a resolution which pointed out that iri the 80 years since purchase of Alaska, 29 ter ritories nave been admitted as states. The Convention also endorsed en-dorsed national reclamation and approved senate bill 1175 which would provide central Arizona with Colorado Hiver water. for students with a grade average z of B or better. "I always wanted to go to col " lege when I was a boy, but wY didn't have the money," he said. "It's been a matter of pride for -me to finish. And if it hadn't been for my wife's help, I jvould not have made it." As happy as any 21-year-old senior about to graduate, Staat quieted his excitement by taking the family cocker spaniels Pepper and Ginger for a walk last night after coming home from his day's work at South West Military academy, where he teaches mathematics. An expert linguist, Staat said he doesn't expect to take much more college work "unless I get the money." "I'm satisfied, now," he said. He added that he will continue working. "When I rest. I'm apt to rust. Born in New Brunswick, N. J., where he graduated from high school in 1894, Staat came to California and started teaching school at Julian, Cal., in 1905. He taught later at San Diego, Cal., and Pasadena. He retired from the public schools at 65. Ordained as a Congregational minister, he has never had a pastorate, .but his done social work at a Chinese Methodist mission in Pasadena for the past 25 years. He and his wife, Rhoda. still found time to raise five children Frederick, 44, Ironwood, Mich.; Arthur, 41, San Francisco; Bert, 36, Pasadena; Elizabeth. 34, Pasadena, Pasa-dena, and Mrs. Margaret Ver-milya, Ver-milya, 32, McGraw, N. Y. CRASH HURTS PROVE FATAL BOISE, Ida., June 14 (U.R) Funeral arrangements were being made today for 19-year old Sarah Sue Paddock, Frankfort, Ind girl who died last night of in-luries in-luries received in a freak auto accident Thursday. She was critically injured Thursday when a car in which she was riding crashed into tha side of a house here. ART'S RADIO SERVICE The name to remember when complete, reliable radio servicing servic-ing is desired. Phone 915-M 46 West 1st North ATTENTION! WHY WORRY about bottling fruit this year! AS A SPECIAL INTRO-DUCTORY INTRO-DUCTORY OFFER to our local friends we will devote part of; our pack of famous Utah County fruits for distribution direct to consumer! YOU CANT COMPETE with our machines or prices by home canning. SALES CONDITIONS: No deliveries. Fruit packed 24 to case in size 2 '2 (quart) cans. All fruit oacked in svruo. Cans stamped in ink instead of labels. Choice quality only. We will notify you as each pack is completed. A deposit of $1.50 per case is required with order, remainder to be paid on delivery! INTERMOUNTAIN FOOD CO., Inc. PROVO, UTAH Cut out order blank a nd mail with deposit. Intermountain Food Co. Inc. 300 East 6th South Provo, Utah IV ante . Address City Inclosed please find deposit of $ as follows: Item ' Price per case APRICOTS (whole) $3.60 APRICOTS (halves) 4.80 CHERRIES (Dark Sweet, extra) . . .7.50 CHERRIES (Purple, regular) ..... 6.00 CHERRIES (Light, Royal Ann)... 5.20 CHERRIES (Red Sour Pie, pitted). 5.20 PEACHES Elberta, sliced) ..... 4.80 PEACHES (Elberta, halves) . ; 6.00 PURPLE PLUMS 3.60 Phone . . covering my order for fruit Number wanted Cost Orders Must Be Placed in Advance of Packing All for housing 'privately built and privately financed FHA The 13-year Record of Accomplishment in the Utah Area Under the FHA Program in this area Better housing has been provided for 62,000 families. For this purpose private pri-vate capital has advanced ad-vanced $83,385,000.00. 17,000 . homes have been built or purchased purchas-ed under the FHA Plan for which private lending institutions have advanced $68,-675,000.00. $68,-675,000.00. 45,000 families have received Property Im-provement Im-provement Loans amounting to $14,-710,000.00. Since 1934, the Federal Housing Administration Adminis-tration has insured over $10,000,000,000 of loans under various phases of its program I ver 7,y,9 ! Mrsjage ! mm , kMM Md retal -tag prejeei! Over 2,e),, mt repair mm MWeraUsatiiL J4aM an mere than craelaresi ; -Berrewera have mmlm mM mr aaaertlaed well aver half mi thla tatal; Mvldeaa'c declare It fcerrewera are aaere thaa 4,5ta. FHA is elf-supKAmc;tWfro Income ia 1946 was almort $57,000,000- at income, after exceeded $24,000,000. ' Current FHA mme are over $137,000,000. Insurance claim, paid have been one percent net on property improvement improve-ment loan, and six one-hundredth, of one percent oa borne mortgage loan. We are prond to have played a part in FHA'. record of public service. We particularly recommend recom-mend FHA Insured Financing to invertora in rental beuainc, to proapective home .buyers and to property owner. wMbing to remodel mr to make repair. We shall be clad te explain to you aaytii detail, of FHA'. low-eort, long-term loans. the Farmers and Merchants Bank 290 West Center Street First Security Bank of UtahV'NA 94 North University Avenue ( |