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Show Sunday, Sept. 14, 1947 V ... , Citv Buildina Permit Charged in Riding Stables Answer t The Moun tai n s f d e Riding stables Saturday filed an answer and cross-complaint in its court battle with the -city, claiming it baa a legal right to keep horses in its present location because of prior-use privileges, - and - charg ing the city wiin irregularities -in issuance of building permits. , 5 The city charges the firm with violation of the .zoning law's by Unid entHied M an Found Deaa in Car PRlCEjSepti 13 (ch 4 State highwasrpatrolmen late Saturday werestill trying to identify a rnapkilled early Saturday mornr lv& when his car, apparently stolen, plunged off the road Into Price canyon.- -. - Officers received a report of a 'stolen car from Helper earlies-in the day. A passing train dew spied the lights of 4heVcaryMtill burning, after a plunge doAyA a canyon embankment aboutfifsix miles from Helper. -i' It -cwasthe car reported stolen from Helper The occupant had no identification identifica-tion of any kind on him, officers . said. Estimates Of his age varied from about 30 to middle-aged. Denham '(Continued from page One) In San Francisco next month. If Lewis stands his r ground, how ever, the council s action probata ly will remain unchanged. Lewis jperiment station. Dr. Otto Mac-as Mac-as well as all other officers of theikensen of the Louisiana state and AFL must sign the affidavits be-jor. w. C. Roberts of the Wiscon-f Wiscon-f ore any. AFL union can practice;. in station have now developed before he NLRB. equipment for close inbreeding Denham pointed out that a fed- that is ready for use by the lay-rral lay-rral judge in Texas had sustained man bee-keeper, his non-Communist affidavit rul- According to the department, ing in one of the first court tests i the aueen bee normally is not of the Taft-Hartley act The case ; has been appealed by the CIO Oil Workers Union. "This ruling is just as right to- Denham said. "I certainly have no intention of modifying it in any way." Denham said the five-member labor relations board, which the Tart-Hartley act set up as a SIT1" h" "irind mI d"b, filllimilesfone in the tense and unhap-i '"'"-- lion io nis non-communist ar fidavit ruling. eH said he was not certain thatwhen agricuitu'rists were larmeT417ra";Vtlons e board has the authority tdni th fast-declininB bee ro-r:.vWef "!"-is the board has the authority reverse his ruling even if a majority ma-jority of the members disagree with it. "The board members and I WSeJi"6 en,ial t0 Pllination oir together, he said. Were not farm croDs. ! having any trouble If the AFL and CIO go ahead with their plans to by-pass the ??? ' r?.r w"f limited largely to petitions filed ! ; uiuepeiiueni uqwds, empiuycrs ; and individuals. ' - The independent machinists union, un-ion, is the largest union to date to file non-Communist affidavits with the government. EGG DREAM BUSTED NEW YORK (UJS) When a Plymouth Rock chick with four legs and two egg vents was hatched hatch-ed from a double-yoked egg .at Murray Weiss' poultry farm in Brooklyn, he dreamed of a hen with super - productivity. The chfck matured, and with the price of eggs going higher, laid her first egg. It wasjust a plain egg, with one yolk. Sweet Corn any amount for canning: or table. We deliver. Phone 098-R-2 NUTT ALL'S GLAD VIEW GARDENS j A REX - 30 GAL GAS Watr Heaters FIRMAGE APP. DEPT. Lamar Maycock, Mgr. 1 Vi- Standardization that's th' results re-sults when all th' wimmen-folks goes to th' same beauty parlor! STANDARD QUALITY That's the result of when Yellow Cab Transfer handles your moving job. Call us for all your Local or Long-Distance Moving of All Types. s SUNDAY HERAU), ' , ' Irreaularitie keeping . horse in a residential zone. - Theanswer also- .declared thafan official of the board health" had okehed the prospective site for the stables t - before they were constructed. Concerning the matter of Jbuild-ing Jbuild-ing permits, the answer said .a written building permit was -not secured before the : stables were constructed because , of . "uncertainty "uncer-tainty as to exact specifications of the building's size and shape." The complaint charged, the city with Wrongfully refusing to issue the permit later'.- ' In this connection, the com plaint charged thaU "The plaintiff, (Provo city by. its r. previous -conduct haf allowed , and encouraged violation c thereof and has made H the . practice to issue permits after . . bailding s have ; been- coou ' , menced or even completed." , . The cross-complaint contended the use and keeping of the horses was-legal because the area had been used for keeping animals before it was zoned residential, and therefore bad ' legal rights under the prior-use privileges of the zoning law. Artificial (Continued from Page One) a. year ago by a staff of entomologists entomol-ogists at the Louisiana state ex- too choosy when she picks a! mate. Until artificial insemina-j tion of bees was made practical' several years ago,-it was almost impossible to maintain pure blood mica ui the city ana began tneir own It is through planned parent-, strategy meetings in preparation hood within insect families that or the three-month session con-scientists con-scientists develop pure blood V. sidered so vital to United Na- lines. iney can pick meir genes and weed out undesirable -traits lensxiCS. ine , iia iresuiicnip speeds up this inbreeding. Ite riiar-nverv came at a time ulation of the United States. En- jthe battie was the almost univer-tomologists univer-tomologists believe the new tech-,sal feeiing that the outcome may nique may 'reverse this trend, ; determine whether the UN is to which was alarminc because bees u. - i t : .K.in The department refused to in the assembly were accompan-speculate accompan-speculate about the potentiahUes , ied by these deveiopments: oi cnemicai ieriuuaugn miu- mals catUe, hogs, horses, or ; perhaps human beings. "But," a spokesman said "thn we never thought we could do it with bees." State Checks Up On Football Contract SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 13 (U.R) The state attorney general's gen-eral's office today was examining examin-ing the contract between the Utah State Fair board and the Salt Lake Football corporation. A question as ife whether the corporation is required, to fulfill conditions requiring them to give five per cent of the gross ticket sale to the state during the next two seasons was raised by J. Henry McGean, state finance commissioner. . CALLING ALL FISHERMEN SANDPOINT, Ida. (U.R) Conservation Con-servation officers actually .are begging for more fishermen in this section of Idaho. They report many smaller lakes need to be fished more heavily to reduce bass and crappie population. PENNIES PILE UP FORT WAYNE, Ind. (U.R) When Mrs. Herman Harter bought',. parts of the world. That pusb-her pusb-her new post-war stove she paid ed the total of arrivals to abdfit for it with 12,000 pennies and 47 h 300 with another 500 stiU'to silver dollars she had saved in!rlaPh here over the weekend and "an old sock' years. during the past five Every Afternoon rExcepting Saturday! and Sunday Sunday Herald PubUabad Sunday Mornins Published by the Herald Corporation. Corpora-tion. 50 South Tint West Street, Provo. Utah. Entered as second class matter at tha postoffice In Provo. Utah, under tha act of March S, 1879 Subscription terms by carrier in Utah county. SI. 00 the month. M OO for six months. In advance. S12 00 the year in advance; by mail anywhere in tha United States or its possessions, posses-sions, $1.00 the month. $6.00 (or lx months: . f 12 00 the year la advance 1 " ' Santaquin Trio Plead Hot Guilty To Battery Charge 'Russell Jarvis, Daryl Kay - and' Blaine Okander, all of Santaquhv entered pleas of not guilty . Saturday Sat-urday in Provo city . court : to charges of -battery. ' , 1 ' The charges was reduced recently' re-cently' from assault with a doaly weapon, and resulted from a fight involving Scott Bertleson. Their trial -was set for Oct. 8, and they were released to their attorney., o ;Cene Clegg, 27. Springville, Was in jail Saturday for lack of; 9iooft casn or szuuu property bail, after waiving his preliminary prelimin-ary on a statutory charge -involv-ing a 13-year-old girl. He was J bound over to. the district court to await trial. , ' v Jack Howe, Herbert Barney and two Indians, Jamie John and Joe Allen, were ail in Jail for varying periods Saturday ar a result of liquor violation pieas oi guiny. Howe was given 30 days for selling sell-ing it unlawfully, and Barney, John and Allen each got IS days for buying it from him. rHaroJd F. Moore waa released on bond Saturday after waiving his preliminary hearing on a charge of possessing liquor without with-out a; permit. He was bound over to the district court for trial. " Lewis M. Roundy pleaded guilty guil-ty Friday to not having a driver's license and was fined $5. ( . Other recent city court actions include the following forfeitures: D. Leroy Harris, Pleasant Grove, $5, no muffler, and $15, speeding; Vern Whatcott, $15. pulling away from curb without proper signal; V. J. Coyle, Spanish Fork, $15, speeding, Royal Ream, 780 North Fifth West, $5, burning rubbish after 3 p. m.; Harold Narval Draper, 135 North Seventh West, $15, speeding. Marshall (Continued from page One) ;,.ion Hinlnmate f rrm nthpr part D'f the world thronged into tiong and alt its members. The meeting shaped up as a py diplomatic conflict between Russia and the West, with the ttj. , c- . ..; ,h. ku 1 reiuT preprns Amr,n t Vueoslavia's foreicn minls- Stanoie Simic. obliouely sniped at the United States by charging in a pre-assembly statement state-ment that preservation of peace through United Nations machin ery can be achieved only if none of the members by-pass this or sranization 2. Spokesman for the Jewish agency for Palestine pinned their hopes for a Jewish state on the; United States, whose decision in the assembly Palestine debate, j they contended, will determine : whether the 55 United Nations approve or reject the Palestine investigating commission's plan for separate Arab and Jewish states in the Holy Land 3. The foreign ministers of i spiral is checked soon it will lead Czechoslovakia, Poland, Brazil "inevitably" to another depres-and depres-and Australia heightened their sion. He suggested stricter curbs campaigns for the important post on "gamblers" as opposed to "le-of "le-of assembly president, but none gitimate speculators" in the grain appeared to have won enough! market. backing. Top UN officials and I The congressional report, in as-some as-some big power diplomats report-1 signing blame for high food pric-edly pric-edly still were hopeful they could es, said flatly: draft Belgian Prime Minister i "Increased incomes and more of Paul Henri Spaak to serve for a them are the major explanations second year. j for higher prices for food, Al- 4. An estimated 300 assemDiy , delegates, alternates advisers and secretaries arrived here during the day by train from Washing ton and plane and ship from otn on Monday and Tuesday morning. Marshall's opening huddle with the American delegation began shortly after 10 a.m: EDT in the tained by -1 h e United Nations permanent headquarters maintained main-tained by the United States in five floors of a midtown Manhat-ton Manhat-ton skyscraper. . The agenda for the all-day meeting included all the political problems on the trouble-studded assembly agenda the great power veto. Palestine, the Balkans Balk-ans question, the Italian peace treaty, Franco Spain, the deadlocks dead-locks over atomic energy control and general disarmament, admission admis-sion of new UN members arid some less sensational matters. COLD See the New Post - War MOR-SUN Warm Air Furnace Before Installing Your Heating System Nothing Down ' Three Years To Pay GAS OR OIL - Crash ead Plumbing & Heating 56 NORTH 2ND WEST PHONE 1510 PROVO Veteran Tb Run for City Commissioner """" I 1 ' mi ii.ii n ii DELBERT L., OSWALD, Pelbert L. Oswald, 32, a veteran vet-eran of World war II and presently pres-ently employed as a construction engineer for 'the - Geneva Steel company, - Saturday announced bis 'candidacy for the' post of Provo city commissioner n the coming city election. Mr. Oswald is the second candidate can-didate to file for the post. Joseph H. Swapp, former city commissioner, commis-sioner, announced some time ago he will be on the ballot for that post this fall. Mr. Oswald, who lives at 167 East First North, has been a resident resi-dent of Provo for the past 10 years, with the exception of the time spent in the service during the "war, in which he served aboard the destroyer U. 9. S. Champlin. He received his master of science degree from Brigham Young university in- 1942. Mr. Oswald states he is prepared pre-pared to resign- his present position po-sition and devote his full time to the job of commissioner if elected. High Prices (Continued from Page One) sist on "unjust price increases." 4. Sen. Ralph E. Flanders, R.. Vt subcommittee investigating pric-l es in eastern siaies, announcea nis : group wouia oegm neanngs Providence. R. I., Monday. Its survey will extend from Manchester, Man-chester, N. H., to Atlanta, Ga., where the inquiry will be concluded con-cluded Oct. 15. 5. The Truman administration was confronted with an early decision de-cision on whether to continue large-scale grain shipments to Europe at the risk of shooting up domestic food prices. 6. The question of reviving ra Honing and! price control has been discussed. But Mr. Truman has indicated no intention of requesting request-ing such powers even If -congress 'is recalled. Nor Is there any in dication that congress would grant such powers even if Mr. Truman asked them. 7. The pivotal com crop was certain to fall far short of the 2,800,000,000 bushels necessary to meet minimum domestic needs. This means corn will be high and corn prices In turn will be re- fleeted in high prices for meat, poultry and dairy products. a c T .l lr T ... T XT i Y., predicted that unless the price mougn production nas Deen very high for most items, the demand under the higher incomes has resulted re-sulted in relative scarcity and correspondingly cor-respondingly higher prices. ..." It said the chief sufferers In this situation are persons whose incomes have not kept pace with i rising food costs the lowest-in come famines, and sucn salaried groups as teachers, nurses and office of-fice workers, and those who live on retirements, other pensions or fixed annuities. Only about 815,000 acres of the total land area of Arizona is under cultivation. Of these, 750,-000 750,-000 acres, are irrigated. COME IN. AND BUY YOUR Personalized ( Stationery TODAY Nike Selection to Choose From SHIRLEY'S GIFT SHOP 159 W. Center Street Lighting of tier Subdivisions Already Underway Hlf of ; the '- cement . bases for the 250 poles to light Provo's war-hutit subdivisions are now poured, utility department officials of-ficials said Saturday, estimating that the areas will have .street liahts by the end of this year barring "unforseen" delay sa .' ' Lights for the subdivisions - were ordered better than a ' ' year ago, but materials began , to arrive only recently; . . The steel poles will not. be set down in tho ground, but wiu oe bolted to a cement base. A new system of . four lightx to the intersection, with each light set some distance back into the block. is calculated to give more light along the entire block as well, as at the crossing itself. ,. Enlargement and improvement of Provo's ''white way" along Center street 'and University avenue .will also get underway soon, and is expected to be com pleted this year. The entire street lighting improvement program will : eost la the neighborhood of $160,009. Steel poles are 25 feet high for the subdivision lights and topped with the latest incandescent, type globe.: The wiring will be underground- wherever possible. The lights being used are designed de-signed so as not to shine on the homes located near them. Because Be-cause of the downward cast of the beams, the lights are calculated cal-culated to, make crossing intersections intersec-tions more Safe for traffic and pedestrians. With these directed beam lights, Provo will have the finest lighting possible, utility officials of-ficials emphasized. - Underground installation of the wiring will require getting rights of way to go onto privately owned own-ed property. When this is necessary, neces-sary, every precaution will be, taken not to damage the lawn, shrubbery or property, officials promised. Bowles (Continued from Page One) spirals if controls lapsed, the former OPA - chief declared, meat prices, which we said Republcians had their way, have actually gone up more than 80 per cent. Building materials, food prices, ; steel prices and the cost of living itself have already exceeded ex-ceeded our estimates." Bowles charged that the "Republican "Re-publican old guard is gradually developing a strategy" of blaming blam-ing high prices on oversas relief, a "ridiculous" theory. "During the war we sent vast quantities of food overseas and, on top of that, spent tens of billions bil-lions of dollars each year for war materials while mainting prices under controls at reasonable levels," lev-els," he said. "We could have continued to do the same thing if it had not been for the irresponsibility ir-responsibility of the Republican party." CARD OF THANKS To all the friends and neighbors who so kindly assisted during the illness and burial of our beloved husband and father. Adolf M. Myrup, for the beautiful floral offerings, the songs and music land the messages of comfort we wisn to express our thanks and gratitude. sincere MRS. A. M. MYRUP AND FAMILY. Partial Mineral Starvation The Profit Stealer often overlooked, yet essential to profits. Your job is satisfying satis-fying poultry, tremendous mineral demand. An egg is over 10 mineral of many kinds. A hen is an egg ma-chine. ma-chine. She lays because she has to. When raw materials (Minerals) are not adequate. ade-quate. She slows down. You lose money. x Keep them laying: with Watkins. Best & Cheapest Jos. H. Taylor 751 WEST FIST SOUTH PHONE 559-R Rural Dealer ANTED , ALL KINDS OF HIDES! Highest Prices Paid for BONES 4 WOOL HIDES PELTS FURS and dead and useless animals Pelt prices for dead and useless use-less sheep. Prompt Service. UTAH HIDE & TALLOW CO. 3 Miles West of Spanish Fork Phone 38 Lingering Illness? Proves Fatal To Senior High Girl v Vernefl Marie Roderick, 17, died late Fridav evening at the home oi her parents, George E. ana Marjorie -Mutctanore Roderick, Roder-ick, 155 South Sixth East, of a lingering illness. . A senior at Provo high school, Verneil came to Provo with her pa r e ni s in yw:ww?y-frtvy 1V4.S. 5ne en- tered the Far-rer Far-rer junior high schoo 1 , and gx a d u a t e d from that fn-; stitution in the spring Of 1945. While attending attend-ing .the junior high s c hool, she , served as president of her nln't h. grade class. She : was a' member of the Verneil Farrer junior high school orchestra, orches-tra, and after entering Provo high, she became a member of the girls athletic association of that school. She received her early schooling in Beatrice, Nebraska, where she was born Mar. 31, 1930. Surviving are her parents, one sister, Judith Ann; a grandmother, grand-mother, Mrs. Marie Mutchmore, Lincoln, Neb.; a grandfather and grandmother, Mr. and Mrs. George Roderick, of Wymore, Neb., a great-grandmother, Mrs. Eva Jimerson, and a great grandfather, grand-father, Mr Frank Mutchmore, both of Nebraska. Funeral services will be Tuesday Tues-day at 1:30 p. m. in the Provo Community church, under the direction di-rection of -Revi Mr.JBollinger of the Presbyterian church of Mt. Pleasant. Friends may call at the Berg mortuary Monday evening ices Tuesday. Interment will be 6 to 8 p. m., and before the serv-in serv-in the Provo city cemetery. FLIES ICE CREAM TO PARIS NEW YORK (U.R) An Air France plane bound for Paris stood by a La Guardia field runway run-way with propellers idling while employes frantically paged Charles Trenet, comedian singer, who was scheduled to depart. Trenet finally appeared, carrying a vacuum bottle filled with ice cream. He explained he had been buying it to take home to his mother and fiancee. More arrests of 19-year-old youths are made than in any other Be Careful Get ia proper lone before taming. 1 Vv ' FARMERS' AND MERCWAtJfS I : Central Utah Food Prices Up rercenr aince una ur ur a In the year following the demise de-mise of OPA on June 30, 1946 re-taU re-taU grocery prices in central Utah climbed 23 per cent, it is disclosed by a survey completed by Brig-ham Brig-ham Young university college of commerce. - . . Other significant findings ' of the survey, directed . by Professor Weldon J. Taylor - tit the department of market- ing, show that the average prices differ as much as five - per cent between towns and that most grocers - are. now taking smaller profit margins than they did a- year ago. The price study was conducted by 20 advanced students in a sum mer quarter class in economics of consumption, instructed by Prof. Taylor. It covered July, 1947 prices on basic food items in '54 retail stores in eight Utah and Idaho towns. , : Communities 'included in the survey and the number of stores checked in each were: Provo, 20; Ogden, nine; Price, six: .Spanish Fork, six; Lehi, four; Pocatello, three; Idaho Falls, three; Rex-burg, Rex-burg, three. Prices Increased over OPA levels on all bat one of nine meat and fat items surveyed, and all but three of 21 staple grocery Items, but decreased , on four items of produce surveyed. sur-veyed. Average increase on meats and fata was 32.4 per' eent, and on Other groceries 14.5 per cent, while the produce pro-duce items dropped 3L8 per cent. Average for all 34 items showed an Increase of 23.2 per cent To compare average retail grocery gro-cery prices between towns the researchers re-searchers totalled the prices ask ed for the 34 basic items On their list. Lehi was the lowest-price town, with grocers charging an average of $11.27 for such an order. or-der. Other community avers ges were: Spanish Fork, 311.41; Og den, $11.43; Provo, $11.49; Price, $11.82: Idaho Falls, $12.09; Poca tello. $12.36; Rexburg. $12.38. Considerable variation was found in prices at food stores in each community, the survey showed, with some merchants be low and some above the average of their community. Prof. Taylor added to the sur vey an analysis of retail mark ups made by Provo grocers in July, 1947 as compared with Make Barbizon Lingerie LIMITED KO. OF JOBS OPEN ON SEWING MACHINES ONLY, STEADY PERMANENT WORKERS WANTED Apply GENERAL DRY GOODS CORP, 149 NORTH FIRST WEST PROVO 5 There Are Plenty Of Reasons for the people of this district to carry their accounts with this bank, but one of the more important im-portant ones, is the friendly service. People like to bank where they are assured of prompt and considerate con-siderate attention to all their needs . . . where services are complete but inexpensive . where they have every banking facility at their command. These, the Farmers and Merchants Bank supplies. Of course it would be a privilege to serve you in any banking way. mark-ups permitted in June, 1946 under maximum price regulations 423 and 426 of the office of price administration. This analysis cov ered 21 basic grocery and produce . items,' exclusive of meats While wholesale prices on these items increased approximately 20 per cent during the year; the average merchant is making a smaller percentage mark-up than 4 tnat permitted under OPA, Prof. Taylor stated. -We conclude that the re- .- tail food merchant is not, the-source the-source nor a. contributor to : Inflation in the ease of hltb x food prices," (he research di- , .J rector declared. "His dollar and cent margin of profit is , still as low as It would have been under OPA regulations. - "To ascertain the amount of money which consumers might save by "shopping around", the survey compared food stores : of high, low and average prices in, Provo. Based on a $75 Aionthly food budget, the housewife would save $5.55 per,month by purchasing purchas-ing at the low price store instead of a high price market, it indicated, indi-cated, or would save $3.37 per month by purchasing at the low price store instead of the average price store. Recreation Classes Need New Leaders After school and Saturday recreation rec-reation classes for school children child-ren will begin Just as soon as trained leaders can - be found Jessie Schofield, city recreation director, announced Saturday. The classes will ' be held on school playgrounds and in school gymnasiums. Any person who has had training in physical education and recreation leader-ship leader-ship who wishes part time employment em-ployment as class leader, should' contact Miss Schofield as soon as possible at the city recreation office, 203 City building phone 2021. Topps Drive-Inn ' FAMOUS FOR FINE HAMBURGERS Breakfast-Lnnch-Dlnner 5th WEST FIRST NORTH |