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Show Sunday, March 28, '1948 SUNDAY HERALD Disbanding of Uniforined Communist Youth Brigades in Italy Demanded ROME, .March 27 ft'.R) Vice Premier Randolfo Pacciardi, the cabinet chief- in charge of public order during the Italian, election campaign, demanded today that uniformed Communist youth brigades be disbanded by force if' necessary. " ' Pacciardi charge -hi his news- Soil Conservation Idea Disclosed SAN FRANCISCO, March 27 (U.R) Dr. Hufh H. Bennett; chief of the U., S. soil conservation-service, today announced a "million-dollar "million-dollar discovery to prevent excess ex-cess rainfall from, running off hard-packed soil in the drought trltkeri California central valleys." val-leys." . Bennett said that .conservation service agents. had achieved. phe-J nomenal success by strewing taste, cotton boil hulls over the round. "We think we have foun the solution to a practical method of storing and saving great vol umes- of water which otherwise would be wasted in years of pre- cipitation for lack of storage fa cilities." he declared. "It may have a value of "hun dreds' of millions of -dollars across the years."1 Rape-Slaying Suspect Nabbed One Killed In Daring Holdup SAN DIEGCJO, March 27 (UK) One man was shot and killed and a policeman was' wounded in a daring holdup at noon today in the downtown offices of the Seaboard Sea-board Finance company. ' The robbery was staged by two bandits, both of whom escaped. R. E. Runyon, manager of the finance company, said two men, one tall and one short, entered the crowded offices at noon. The tall man stationed himself near - the door while the other produced a pistol and ordered a woman clerk to- give him the money from a cash drawer, Runyon said. While the short bandit war at the cash drawer, tbe-bther held off the i crowd of xustomers ,with a gun. At (his point a customer who had been transacting business busi-ness in a private . office opened the door and the short-bandit fired' fir-ed' two shots ' into ' the1 'customer's head. The customer, . Arthur Smith, Chula Vista, was killed instantly. in-stantly. '' LOANS for MA R R IE D ..V-Men and. Women . SINGLE Men and Women" 30 a inontn repays $300 'loan,, $5.03 monthly--.- repays. - $50 $10.05 monthly .repays. 11 00 $20.14 monthly;fepa&.-$200 a. ra. to I p. m. dally t a.-m. t I Utatdm Appointments may be mad for after hours.- Pbn.SS. . KEN HOUSTON Manager paper. Voce Eepubllcana, that the .police :'have,. documented evidence the brigades, were being used ' illegally and were intended tor 'violent action in the election campaign... Ow'. 'Therefore, en thl" JAt lee- torai eve,: it Is Indispensable to aisDana. tnem , by . invitation: or with force because h) a. Democratic Demo-cratic : reDublie 'onlv .the state must have armed forces," .the pat per - said. - - . .- v . -, . t 4 Air else is 'subversive Sot J: iU. legal.' . - .'.'m'vii'vj," Government .sources said Pacciardi Pac-ciardi was scheduled- iovcaU ' his cabinet committee on; publiCi order or-der intr session earty ? nxt -"cek to "study general sqtity rcondi r Although Pacciardl's V rharges we re? directed 'against? tBe-'youth brigades, government sources aa id tnat fUOmmunist ."action, squads ' also - have " been"' .-organized "",' in the; -offensive as ; soon., a orders. are issued by Corrynuhist head-Quarters'4! head-Quarters'4! Rome, r u The; charge was considered slg? nincani in view or a xecenx statement state-ment by Lulgi Loogo, Italy's No. 2 - Communist, that the Commuri-kts Commuri-kts would drfve the 'government out of v off ice; flf they,. do not cede to' us the power which the ma)ority""wili have given us."- The . government . source , said that Communist "assault brigade' headquarters had . been set up somewhere near Milan, where the most frequent riots or the Italian election campaign nave taken place. Labor leaders in the north have received instructions from Rome to "take more determined action with all mean;, including force if necessary," to insure a Communist Victory in the elec lions, these - sources said. Superintendents Okeh Four, Reject One Proposal SALTLAKE CITY, March 27 (U.R) Utah District SchooJuper-intendents SchooJuper-intendents yesterday approved all but one of five recommendations from the state educational board concerning the development of Uncertified teachers. The superintendents approved contracting uncertified teachers who have given enough evidence to show that they intend to complete com-plete credit requirements,- How ever, uncertified teachers should be replaced by certified teachers whenever possible. Teachers on the second level will . not be given certificates unless un-less they jneet the standards, sup- new temporary letters of author ization are to be issued elemen tary school teachers. ! ,The superintendents rejected the recommendation that teach ! era" 'contracts be granted only at the end of the year to tnos teachers hired on temporary authorization. i .1'-- V t l - 'i L Jr ;u STATE HIGHWAY OFFICER DIES PAROWAN, Utah, March 27 (U.R) ..Funeral services Will be conducted Monday afternoon for "Lawrence J. Adams. 61-year-old Utah highway patrol lieutenant. Adams, a trooper for 15 years, died Thursday afteran attack of influenza. He was' a native of Parowan and formerly served as athletic director and music instructor in-structor in Monticello and Parowan Paro-wan schools. A metal container large enough to hold two salt shakers and uti lizing a tiny electric lamp has been developed ' to keep salt dry during humid weather. .4 I ? i ' ' ' - " - (NBA Ttltohota) 'Sullen after putting up-stiff resistance, man bearing social security card of "La&zlo Varga" is taken Into custody by police at PeUluma, . . Calif. Arrested here after alighting from a Greyhound bus, the man is suspected of tying an Elko, Nev., minister's young wife to a bed, raping and then beating ber to death with a rolling pin. Slayer Suspect Held Without Bail for Trial 1 SANTA ROSA, Calif., March 27 (U.R) Laszlo Varga, 19, was held without bail today as a. fugitive from justice, while Elok, Nev., authorities prepared extradition papers charging him with the sex slaying of Mrs. Billee Rahe morning, mor-ning, 22-year-old wife of a minister. min-ister. . Three officers were required to carry Varga into .'court here yesterday yes-terday when' he was ordered held for preliminary hearing April 6 on the fugitive warrant. Authorities said Varga formerly was interned at the' Dachau concentration con-centration camp where he saw his father gassed to death, his mother fatally shot and his . brother burned alive. He was picked up yesterday at nearby Petaluma, Calif. In Elko District Attorney A. L. Puccinelli said he would seek to convict Varga of first degree de-gree murder and would ask the death penalty. The body of Mrs. Morning was found trussed to the bed in her ihome Monday, night by her hus band, the Rev. Richard Morning, 27. Authorities said she had been raped and beaten to death with a rolling pin. Tooth marks were found on the body, ' DAMROSCII SUCCEEDED BY PAUL MANS1IIP NEW YORK, March 27 (U.R) Dr. Walter-Damrosch, 86-year-old composer-onductor, was succeeded suc-ceeded today by sculptor Paul Manship as president of. the American t Academy of Arts and Letters. Dr. Damroscb, who became known to millions of radio listeners listen-ers for his music appreciation hour, announced his resignation yesterday in a letter to the academy's acad-emy's board of directors. 50,000 Unemployed In San Joaquin Valley District FRESNO, Cal., March 27 (U.RV More than an estimated 50,000 migrant farm workers were reported re-ported out of work in the San Joaquin Valley today, although four of the nation's richest farm income -counties. are in that irea. Most of the unemployed r -ork-ers were located in labor camps in Fresno, Tulare, San Joaquin and Kern counties, the same counties, reported by the U. S. department de-partment of agriculture to rank only behind Los Angeles in total farm income. Many of the workers were reported re-ported critically underfed, with relief organizations spending their entire funds to purchase food for distribution among them. Usual unemployment between harvests this time of the season in the valley reaches as. high as 30,000. The increase by 20,000 is generally attributed to the drought which has discouraged farmers from hiring large crews of laborers to till their fields. Engineer Sees His Son Killed In Plane Crash SALT LAKE CITY, March 27 (U.PJ Union Pacific freight train engineer George Fromm Jr. glowed with pride, crewmen said, when he noticed his son's amall airplane following his locomotive out of Salt Lake City late yester day. In the plane were Ronald G. Fromm, 20, and Harold D. Hert-zel, Hert-zel, - 20, both war veteran and crivate pilots from Salt Lake City. ... ,v 1 - The plane followed the train for ' "several miles" at an altlr tude of 500 feet. Brakeman Earl Dunstcr said it "frequently passed the train, circled about and came past it again." Sixteen miles . south of Salt Lake City, Pilot Fromm dipped the plane's wing as a Sign of bidding Engineer Fromm "so long." ' V , The plane, either stalled or Us smalt motor failed. , It went into a spiral and nosedived nose-dived Into a field. t Engineer Fromm slammed on the . air brakes and brought the train to a jolting stop. He ran 50 teet to the Wreckage of the plane and tore into the sntashed cockpit. cock-pit. "It's my boy, it's "my boy," Fromm sobbed. Other trainmen and farmers helped him . remove . the two airmen. air-men. Young Fromm had been killed instantly. Hertzel died an hour later in a hospital without regaining consciousness. Hercs That Man Aqain J W 1 IV x , - Unidentified Man Found Dead; Ogden Police Checking OGDEN, March 27 (U.R) The body of an unidentified man was found by a rock wall west of Ogden's stockyards viaduct. Police Lt. E. L. Shaw said the man had been hit on the head sharply and pushed over the wall or had fallen against the wall from the road 12 feet above. Authorities said an investigation investiga-tion to determine the cause of death would be continued the rest of today. HacArthiir Group Holds Convention MILWAUKEE, March 27 (U.R) Two leaders in the MacArthur-For-President movement today described the general as the candidate best able to stop Communism Com-munism and to win the peace. Wisconsin Secretary of State tred Zimmerman, told a national conference of MacArthur eluh iiiere today, that without Mae Arthur in Japan, "there is little doubt that Russia would have managed to infiltrate that coun try with communist propaganda." Zimmerman, keynote speaker at the meeting of MacArthur campaigners from some 20 states, referred to a United Press dispatch quoting Tass, the Sovl et news agency as saying Mac Arthur "is being put forward in the U. S. as the man who better than any other would be able to conduct an all out anti-Soviet sampaign." a iormer Wisconsin governor, Zimmerman is running as dele- gate-at-iarge pledged to Mac Arthur in the crucial April 8 pri mary in Wisconsin. Joseph Choate. Los Angeles at torney and head of the MacArth ur For President movement in California, declared that the gen era! is "the only leader of the post-war period who has accom pushed his mission that of win ning the peace." Choate said that MacArthur not only won the Pacific War. but al so laid the foundation for Japan ese aemocracy. r.c-v. - tr'V ; A' lit 'V- - Slide Maroons Over 50 Skier&i i . .1"'. . At Brighton - D BRIGHTON. UTAH. March lit (U.R) Between 50 and, 60 skiers marooned by a snowsllde were having - wonderful time 'today "skiing and dancing" at Brighton lodge in the tall and rugged - Wasatch, Wa-satch, mountains. j rhs, - The sportsmen from Salt Lake City, New England, and Call fort nla's Stanford university jwcrtnj too displeased about a few, extra days vacation. Road clearing crews were still ruttinir throueh huse drifts 'of snow and. boulders. Yesterd'ay. some fears were expressed ttftft three unidentified skiers, miK4i have been covered by the avafr J lanch Thursday. However, lodge officials said today that the three skiers probably got through be fore the slide. v . ', j1 About , dinner time last nisftlN the stranded Brighton visitors weren't sure that the food ordered irom Salt Lake City would Aget there. Earlier in the day, a toboggan to-boggan party set out to meet Salt Lake City , trucks. But the fotfd iinaiiy came .mruujjn. Christian Dior, Parisian fashion designer, is the mari who started the longer hemline "new look" craze. He's in again this time with stockings which match, or contrast with, the dress. Ther range in shades from peach to black, called the "Boulevard Bouquet" Five Killed When Plane Hits Buzzard; Crashes Into Hill REOPENING OF HELEN'S BEAUTY SHOP Formerly at th North, ftuv Wti Now at 70S West Center StreaVn Hlen Thomas Dyurt. Opcratet PHONE 18S5-J . j . IefJ ' (In the name of Ed I CoyteiK See It Work . Compare Its Quality! You'll Want a Sears KENMORE AUTOMATIC WASHER SAVES AND HOT WATER LOAD IT, SET IT, FORGET IT! SEARS ItOEBUCK & CO.-IS? W. Center NEWHAVEN, Ky., March 27 OI.R) A privately-owned Beech- craft airplane Struck a buzzard in flight near here today and five persons were killed when the plane crashed into a wooded hillside. hill-side. - ' The occupants of the plane when it left NaShville, Tenn., today to-day for Fort Wayne, Ind., were Joseph Martin West, 39, Nashville Nash-ville motorcycle patrolman, his wife, Mrs.. Margaret- West,;'39; Paul W. Venderly, about 27, first officer and co-pilot for Ameri can Airlines, his wife, Mrs. Atha Venderly, 25, and their eight-months eight-months old son, Paul W. Venderly Vender-ly Jr. Venderly held a pilot's license and he was believed to have been piloting the plane at the time of the crash. The party, left Berry field at Nashville, cleared for Bowman field at Louisville. An eyewitness. Ival Newton of near here, said the plane seemed to disintegrate after striking the large bird. Parts of the aircraft were found scattered half a mile from the wreckage. The scene of the crash is about 11 miles sWuthwest of Bardstowi Ky., in a thinly-settled area Venderley was a veteranflier and a first officer of the American Ameri-can Airlines with at least 2,500 hour in the air. The party was believed to have been on the way to Ft. Wayne, Ind for the Easter holiday. Stop at- .7 Topps Drive lit ; Giant Burgers. Giant Halts. Car gtrvlc Year 'Boon 4 5th- West A First Nerthw i . , . , Youthful Vigor Restored . You will feel years younger, S"V with a new zest for living 3 ' ' ttiici iihmuk oiuy it lew 1 ft I Itreatrnents with the Vitali- . , f'W V ' I tone Machine, usef in our ' i2& 'I shop.. Consultation without V ' Call for an Immediate I 1 Appdiiitmenr 'ifir'' '. "J Jreu Mliod Saloii KOVO Bldg. JRoorn ?fP. V Phone 2218 or 2751 W, it, --.iM''IrMeVieker8, Mgr. ' .v.'. . -..':.; ;;v. j . . w. mm mm Utah County As Best Source of GOOD FRUIT TREES GROWN AT OREM, UTAH Also a complete Assortment of Roses, flowering Shrubs, Shade Trees & Evergreen. 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