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Show ft t i i Sunday, January 18, 1948 SUNDAY HERALD 'Reliefers' Leave Salt Lake: To Fihcl Rome In California" BY EARIT BLOOJT - . United Press Staff Correspondent LOS- ANGELES. Jan.-17 &1.H) The-. Brinks 12, strong, and S3.5Q among, them were .back . in Los Angeles today aboard the still-chligging still-chligging 1931 "LaSaile which has carried them-"half way across 'the continent -at 'least : twice - looking for, a, state that, will put them on reUei.. , ".t- -i-' ; ' The much-traveled Oklahoma faipily.shuffled-from Los Angeles Jury Acquits :EarrH''Rorried' Gteriif A.-. Marsh, 28-year-old farmer Was confident today that , he- would ' Joe acquittedof killing hisfvparaifrour8 father, juSt as he wasf acquitted last night of "mur- erftig her "husband. - :' f Aljury'of '.six men i and sErwp- men: 'found ,- Marsh.v Innocent A of killing- Yintent-;Xnd?rson, , 23- ear-old husband: ox 'Mr&rKather-ine.'tKit!' 'Mr&rKather-ine.'tKit!' Anderson, even thougli he confessed to thfe' charge, , . He still Places-trial ori' afcharec of,kiOing .Mrs, AHdersbrf s: father. of ,Nosi .7."There icas . no Imme-diate.announcement Imme-diate.announcement onr.whepthe case would be called, t : . The state charged that the pudgy farm "Romeo" killed the two men before he forced Mrs. Anderson to-accoht$iy iiinf on a' wua riae across, me-staie wnen she reneged n promise .Jto get a divorce and marrymm. . m "I'rae luckx .-manl; Marsh shouted.tc? bJa fellow,, prisoners ? when? he wa's.returnedio.hJs cell i faTttie Winnebago - county jail i after the- jury 'returned "ita velt5- rm sure now 1ha,t 01-be "treed I eritirelv ""'he M5d: . '' ? "The jury Had" deliberated five hours. The ..foreman, &rsv Mary i HurnpaV said. We lett-there was not enough evidence on. the state's side? 'r . . . yt knoty well be criticized, she . safdfbut on the basis trtostruc-. trtostruc-. tib'ns given' us, we" could Turing in no other verdict" - " . . ' bi-f or Treasure"; GREEN COVE SPRINGS, Fla., Jan. 17 VJJPJ A sounding pipe today to-day struck a solid object 28 'feet deep in Mobley's treasure pit and nearly 1,000 tawnsp&ople-Lgather-ed to see whether a chest full, of pirate gold. Contractor T. v' 'iCbfawayX said the object was strtick;shortlj after noon today by oheUof lhe sieve- tipped, hollow tubes-he drove into the bottom of the pit to draw out water ahead of the big drop snovekr .,;-..' -u ;r besidetlhe pavemenf i edge on tbej mamtfeMf: thTi!ipwn?.lp t0opl was feegunfnearly a-'.week :ago aor 80-year-old G. B. . ftlbley, who believesthere riOQg.OOaiy pirate pi-rate Treasureiuried below. "Whatever the pipe struck could not be a rock or any other natural formation," Conway said, "because there's nothing but quicksand down there." Prospector Mobley believes his calculations with a dip-meter prove that it is a chest full of gold bars. West, Tex., is in east Teas, ; 44i Candidate to Oklahoma to Salt Lake City, came back yesterday where they said "chances are better." - They, appealed -f to' A John 1 L. Richardson, f Lynwood "attorney, for aid" in finding lodging for the night After a fruitless tour of several auto. courts in the- district they said they'd sleep, in their car it necessary. - - The Brinks' headed their battered bat-tered sedan ; eastward - July , 18 after county -charity officers -offered vthem 'their? choice of a financed fi-nanced trip back to Oklahoma or a radically reduced -relief check. :Mrs Brink objected - at first that the $379' the xdunty offered wasn't' enough for travel expenses. But the sedan, crowded with children chil-dren -and top-heavy with paper suitcases, finally chugged out with $75 of the county's - bribe, The rest of -it was waiting along the route to give 'the "Brinks an incentive to : keep moving away from Los Angeles. - But their home state, refused to provide for , theni so-r they tried Texas; then Colorado; and In November No-vember moved to Salt Lake City where father James Brink found employment ' . "Things looked better,' "Mrs. Brink; reported, but her inability to "feed a family -of 12 on $50 a week started them roving again. The parents and 10 of their 12 children crossed the border Thurs day. "My, what a fine big family!" she said a border' inspector told her.-' . "Chances are' 'better in California Cali-fornia 'Mrs. Brink said, despite "persecution" by various state authorities. au-thorities. ?$urlntendent of Charities Arthur Will said their chances were no good at all. When the Brinks', return was rumored in November he ruled that Brink was "employable," a: legal resident resi-dent of Oklahoma who ought to be. supported by Oklahoma and not entitled to any more help. here. What Time Hath Wrought i ; i r , . J " 1 J 'I -1 i f i 4 j.o..j., ...i.. .--.- .-,,-.r v.'..,wr-.fl.-J..1M. ........4-.-j, kB'. f t Tma Iml.A A clattering wondei ot yesteryear , an - early Buick. ' comes to' halt r, before one of. today's transportation- woodersr-a; giant Constellate tion, as its bustled and dustered passengers gape m.swe, : Tbe -cast and vehicles will take part In the Miami. Flat 16th annual All- " American Air Maneuvers depicting 50 years of aviation 'progress. Outbreak of SunspotforJ948 May: Mean Epidemics, or More Geniuses BY JOE W. MORGAN United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Jan. 17 (U.R) The chances are that waves of epidemic epi-demic diseases will plague the world this year, Dr. WiHiam F. Petersen said today. And it is likely that more people peo-ple will die than in a normal year, Petersen said. But on the brighter side, more geniuses will newborn. . ........;,-4. . It nearly always works out that Camp ((earns Up for Sale SALT LAKE CITY. Jan; 17 (U.R) Want to buy. a city.?. . . The townsite once ranked as Utah's third largest city is on the market It . is the Camp Kearns area r which. was declared surplus several" mqnthS' ago now has been re-classified and 600 acres of the site are being offered to potential poten-tial purchasers tot development as a town site by the war assets administration. -.Under its' original classification. the improvements at the site could , be sold -only subject .to removal, re-moval, t . . r-Some 60 buildings, mostly ware houses, arejatill standing on the property as the possible nucleus of a residential district and utili ties include sewers inri nniM water system, and surfaced roads ana ,reeis--- . sf - is-', it' 1 ; t . - - r . ' ' v . . All tA Hejs Convinced People Honest FORT WAYNE, Jnd, , Jan. 17 (U.R) Robert L. Klemm said today he was convinced most people aire honest, at , Jeast. in Fort Wayne, Klemm, a 35-year-old business busi-ness man, took 40 billfolds ' from his store, stuffed them full, of ,$100 worth of dimes. Then he-walked through" the city's business district, dropping drop-ping all the billfolds on the sidewalk. Each had his name and address inside. . Today. Klemm reported that practically all were returned to him intact. He rewarded the finders with cigarets and and candy. . -," He; said he thought? up .the" stuht to- promote .the . '"March . of 'Dimes," and " that - he would -donate the $100 to Jjhe campaign against infantile paralysis. ' Government Fails To Settle Rail Dispute Over Pay CHICAGO, Jfti. 17 (U.R) Chair man Frank P. Douglass of the national railway mediation board announced today the government had failed to settle the wage dispute dis-pute between' the nation's railroads rail-roads 'and three key unions of workers who operate the trains. Douglass said the unions had turned down a proposal, for arbitration arbi-tration of the dispute. The next step in the controversy appeared to be appointment of a fact-finding board by President Truman in an effort to avert a nation-wide rail tieup. The unions have voted to strike if necessary to attain their wage demands. The unions involved are the Brotherhood of Locomotive En gineers, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Loco-motive Firemen and Englnemen, and the Switchmen s Union of North America. They have . de manded a 30 per cent pay boost with a minimum increase of $3 a day. In addition, they have asked a. large - number of changes in working rules. " way,; when - there, is an -.outbreak of sunspots, Petersen - said, ' and 1948 probably will be the biggest sunspot year in nearly two cen turies. i v Petersen, is director .of research at St Luke's hospital and former' professor of pathology at the uni versity or lumoiSi -.? - i He has Just completed a book. "Man Wflof hftr' . Run B iirftmAl7 ing his years of research '64 the link between the sun and ; the human being. ' When the sun starts, acting up with a flurry of sunspots.. man U likely to do likewise, Petersen has found. ' Sunspots, Petersen explained, are "areas of violent disturbance of the sun's surf ace,". something similar to cyclones on the earth They rile up the earth's weather, he said, and this, in turn, disturbs the balance of the "human or ganism." "With mental and physical fa' tigue there may be obvious reflections re-flections in frenzied states, sexual excitement dancing manias, religious re-ligious '. exaltation, crime waves, strikes, and revolts," Petersen wrote In his book. "And with all this, epidemics of disease." As evidence that epidemics increase in-crease with the sunspots, Petersen Peter-sen pointed to a current outbreak of cholera in Egypt. "It's one of the largest cholera epidemics since that of 1893 in Hamburg," Petersen said. "During period of sunspots with Lresulting disturbances of the wea therpeople are more unsettled and move around more. They have less- resistance because of the strain put on them by variable weather and they have more con-, tacts with other people, making possible the spread of disease." IDulIes Backs Marshall Plan In Address t NEW ;Y0RK; ' Jan.17" UE) John Foster 'Dulles,; Republican foreign policy spokesman," said today to-day the United States shou'd -.use "food and 'creative. Ideas- to com bat Soviet weapons of , propaganda propa-ganda 'and - sabotage" throughout the world. -' Dulles, a delegate to the" United Nations general assembly and ah adviser.- to Secretary w of 'State George C' Marshall at recent-Big Four ' meetings, ' told a luncheon meeting of the foreign policy as sociation, of New. York . that '.the Marshall plan was America's most powerful weapon - aeainst,: Soviet aggression. . j 'i'i "'"." ' '- ;'" Dulles said that Whew faced with making a decision at "the end of .the war , Soviet leaders, "chose to. call us enemy,-not friend.' He" said this ' choice : was .'made because Moscow, is .-"the- supreme authority of the Soviet Communist Commun-ist ; party 4" which is carrvinr on an ideological campaign through out tne world. - The Soviet weapon in the world struggle; he said, are "the techniques tech-niques of propaganda and penetration, pene-tration, of smear and ? strike and sabotage." The United'S; States should fight with, "food and fuel and with- creative ideas and lofty ideals.: Pcek-A-Boo 1 1 JACK AND JUDY IN BIBLELAND "1 FREIGHTER SAFE NORFOLK, Va., Jan. 17 U.R) The freighter Adrian Victory was reported ' "safe by coast guard headquarters- here today after her 40-man crew had moved tons of cargo: by. hand to right the ship froma dangerous list that yesterday yester-day had the starboard rail awash. The Adrian was reported' headed head-ed under ' its own power for Charleston, S. C "KTSOTWay &E CAREPUlM TvMEH I FIND' OUT WHERE TUEvkEl jp JACK", THOSE GOIN OL COME RIGHT BACK YOUR HORSE AND i STOP AT ? Y WE'LL PRAY FOR FOLLOW THOSE .ffl NOTHING YOU, JACK, ANP WE MENVWTOOK- jrS-Z? KNOW GOO WILL - i rtfm Mm & U 'take care of f THERE THEY ARE- Qil ItMERE'S THE HOUSE) NOW TLL JUST KEEP f WEU USEy "ft ; OUT OF SIGHT AND f ) ' ' Jf SEE WHAT HAPPENS jLiW 1$fk n'fH PiLHA IM AND U l L- 5f tblKJ A LITTLE TassrlfV1 ll CM AT WITH HwAgf S J' Cf X E"gQYS7KA.'wj, (NBA TeUphotot Bernarr MacFadden above , 80- l but-virile, .entered Florida's race j for governor on the Democratic ticket as a "businessman' candidate candi-date to promote further the state's health lure for the tourist dollar. Deafened Now Hear Whispers 5 Feet Away Tests by the American .Medl-c cal Association's Council "on-Physical "on-Physical Medicine show that science has now enabled deafened deaf-ened people to hear faint sounds, to easily understand whispers from 9 feet away. aided by a tiny hearing.-device Ilkt ..... k.jf.l' ' are wearing iL"With it ithou-sands ithou-sands now enjoy music, sermons, ser-mons, and friendly companionship. companion-ship. Finger tip controls let you adjust Jt Jnstantly to changing .sound"conditions. No separate battery pack, wires .orJharness. DUige 10 weign you oownv- ine makers of - Belton, Dept. 25, 1450 W. 19th St., Chipagq., are so proud oftheiTciiieye-ment oftheiTciiieye-ment that they wfll'gladly-sedd you a free descripti-ve booklet -and explain how you., may teat-' this remarkable device-irr-your own home without. risking a penny; Write 'Beitone today, a ill Ml? tH&l Sometimes farm chores become tiresome easy to shirk and put off. When that time comes why not try electrical help? At the snap of a switch, a small electric utility motor will do your chores and save you time and money. A farm workshop equipped "with electric powered Cools is a sound investment. It brings to the farmer at little cost a variety ofnechanical helpers to sub stitute for hand labor. Repair jobs at critical times can be done at once, saving expense and "time- uwng mps to town. Electrically operated tools geared to. the farmer 's needs are fast becoming available again. i" ' MNCH SUNBIHC NIUiKS l-Q 1 4JW A UTAH POWII ft IIGHT CO. MESSAGE r t Dalles said the first phase .of attaining peace ended with : the breakup of the recent foreign ministers conference in Europe. The second phase is now in full swing In the "straggle .between, east and k: west. . Failure of the U. S. program to combat." Communist sabotage would' mean a "major disaster,' Dulles said. ' But once it is apparent that "trick devices of minority penetration pene-tration an dsabotage" have failed they will be abandoned, he said. The third phase of peacemaking peace-making will then begin "at a more normal level, consistent with friendly Intercourse." Competition Com-petition will remain between proletariat pro-letariat dictatorship and western democracy, but "competition is good, provided its methods are decent and tolerable," he eai.d ' - j i ' I - I ' . " ' r I I ' ' I " --''. " . ' . , :: I '-.' -r , jrc;,-;, 1 lii in i ii in r f " xainnwf 1 California Winter Sunshine Backfires Into Bad Drought Judge Talking "To Himself SUSANVILLE. Cal., Jan. 17 (U.R) Harold Bradford, the new city judge, administers justice without favor. He levied fines totaling $12.50 for the third and fourth parking violations by the same motorist then dug down and paid. them himself because he was the violator. He. announced he would assess himself $20 for his next infraction of parking rules, and would keep boosting the rate on himself "until I learn not to leave mjr car too long. on Main street,": (SEA Telephoto) Look what a flip of the cord win do . . . That is, if you have a Venetian Ve-netian blind, skirt I Actress Mary Dugan who will attend the Venetian Ve-netian . Blind Convention in Bi-loxi. Bi-loxi. Miss with her novel dress, says if you get the proper slant, it -can also be very revealing. 3y PATRICIA CLARY . . United' Press Staff Correspondent LOS ANGELES, Jan. 17 0U9 The midwinter : sunshine that Southern; California - has .been bragging about for years today backfired 'into ;a disastrous drought. r- . - Two coastal cities were ration ing water, the $625,000,000 agri culture industry.: was. threatened and -there, was extreme danger of forest fires. .. All over the lush valleys that once were desert the land hadn't been" so dry since it was first wheedled into bloom by irriga tion. . .v ' : v ;., -. . . .-, ' The. year 1947 '.was the driest smce the .weather bureau began keeping records 70 years ago. It also was the year In which Southern South-ern California used the most wat er in history. Just when the parched land was ih Receives Dsrii Final Tributes RALEIGH, N. C Jan. 17 (UJft Josephus "Daniels, -5-year-old editor, former secretary ot. the navy and "shirtsleeve diplomat" was buried today in the red North Carolina earth he loved. Many- of the nation's great stood in a cold rain as the red clay tumbled into the grave of the editor' of the Raleigh News and Observer who guided the navy through eight' years and and the first world war, and who represented his nation nearly nine years in Mexico. The ceremonies were simple, as requested by the informal editor who died Thursday after a grim 12 - day battle against bronchitis and pneumonia - expecting : rain, . the ' weatherman! produced two heat spells.-- -The mercury hit 87 - degrees during - Christmas week, -and yesterday's 81 degrees in Los Angeles was the! sixth , straight day above i80-- It has not rained yet this yeaiu The Water shortage was severer - in cities which rely on rainfall and 1 wells: Santa Barbara, a city of 70,i 000, and Vehtura ; already - were distribting water for sanitation and household use only c Thousands of farm and-citra; groves were forced to .the expense of irrigation they s never beforftK. needed in wintertime. - ' - Los Angeles county's 13,000.000 f nay and grain industry and $10-,- " 000,000 deciduous fruit industry--' apricots, peaches and walnuts , are entirely dependent on ratn County Agricultural Commis- ; i, sioner uaroia j. yan saia ney would suffer heavy losses If it-doesn't it-doesn't rain soon, - , ' ! . The forest fire danger was as great as in any summer4 months forest officials, said. A1500-acrti fire tiiis week was blamed on thej dry weather. Mountain slopes were so barren that deer were foraging in foot- hill gardens. The society for pre' vention of cruelty to animals scat-" - tered 1500 pounds of hay from thev air to feed them and said it would - ' distribut 20 tons by truck. ' j Tasttr nf nil fTathnli('hiircn were directed to offer daily ,prayfrH ers for ram, beginning tomorrow, "until it shall have pleased God to. send us the needed rainfall. . There was little hope for-rain e in the immediate future and little' hope for much ram during, tne. year. Dean Franklin Thomas California institute of technology,' sal Southern California was second year of a seven-year dry. cycle. " jg the nology' l in the Husband Held in Slaying of Wife ALLENTOWN, Pa Jan. 17 (U.R? Thomas Hillegas ,24, unemployed unemploy-ed rooferwas held on a murder charge today in the shot - gun slaying of his 19-year-old wife, ! Marian, in a violent quarrel over who should prepare their two-month-old daughter's formula. Detective Capt. Forrest Kramer said Hillegas admitted shooting his wife yesterday with a single-barreled single-barreled shot gun he was shining when she asked him to boil some milk. The young husband told his wife that it was "a woman's job," Kramer said, whereupon Mrs. Hillegas Hil-legas started to berate him. Hillegas Hille-gas lost his temper "when she called roe names" and I fired at close range, according to Kramer and Mrs. Hillegas, mother of two young children, was shot in the! left side. CLEAN-UP SALE GIRLS AND BOYS PAJAMAS Two Piece Styles, slightly, soiled 1.50 BABY DRESSES & ROMPERS $3.00 Values to close out . . . A . 1.00 MEN'S ALL LEATHER WORK GLOVES Values to $2.00 For 1 MEN'S AND BOYS' CAPS A Clean-Up For CHILDS & MISSES DRESSES 7 Values to $2.98 f or ; , 100 BOYS' SUSPENDER PANTS Clean-Up Only 1.00 1.00 368 WEST CENTER PRoyo'. AVIATION TRAINING for OUTSTANDING YOUNG MEN OF AMERICA Hundreds cf opportunities j If you are 17 to 34, physically fit, and can pass certain mental examinations, you may enlist right now in the U. S. Air; Force. Once in the AlrTorce you will have an opportunity to qualify for one of the inany technical 'or specialized training courses offered bythe Au Training Command., In addition you may take courses under the United States Armed Forces Institute and complete your rJgh: school education. Then, 11 you are between 20 Vi and 28, you may compete for appointment to Officer Candidate School. Special CFportunitics for high ichool jraduates II you have graduated from high school you can enlist in the-U S. Air Force for .3 years and will be, accepted for an Air Force Specialized School of yto choice ; before you enlist, under the Aviation Career Plan. If you ate between 20' and 23 -you cko compete for appointment to Officer Candidate School." Single men between- 20 and,26V2 who have two years of college or can pass an .eTaJent;wam!ntiton!: may be eligible for Aviation Cadet Training. i- Specialepportsnities for nen with two years cf college er li eyjivalen! "' In -addition to the opportunities offered by the Aviation: jCareer Plan and Officer Candidate School, all unmarried male citizens between 20 and 28V are eligible to apply for Aviation Cadet Pilot Training Inext classes start Marcl 1 and July 1). Successful .graduates of pilot training win be rated as Air. Force "pilots, commls-sioned commls-sioned as 2nd Lieutenants, Air Force Reserve, and assigned to flying duty with the U. S. Air Force. These officers will have an opportunity to compete-for a Regular Air Force commission. 1 1 Mf3 Spetl opportunities for Veterins of tny of tht Arnei Forces . If you held art occupational specialty in any of more than 300 skills with the Army, - Navy; Air Force,- Marines or Coast Guard, you may be eligible for a grade as high as Technical Sergeant in the Air Force, depending upon your skill and previous experience, ' Former officers may apply to Headquarters, U. S. Air Force. Washing ton 25, p. C-, for determination of a grade In which they may enlist. -' . - .- , - -.. . v - P : V; - r' Sf ' i- " V- "'it ALL THESE OPPORTUNITIES AND GOODvPAY, TOO ! Ion t pverlook the money in an Air Force career. 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