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Show Sunday, May 23, 1948 SUNDAY HERALD Utah GOP Reelects Officers; Senator Watkins Is Keynoter (Continued from Page One) strengthen the power in the executive ex-ecutive department ', so that no Ingle man like John L. Lewis can grab us by the throat and force us to our knees." . The convention, being held at the fairgrounds coliseum, attracted attract-ed 1044 delegates and several hundred hun-dred spectators. The meeting floor was covered with signs and ban- Fraud Charged (Continued From Page One) regular grievance and arbitration arbi-tration procedure. - v, -: i -"-. Wilson claimed that at most mass meetings held Thursday for balloting, ' the sentiment seemed jt be in favor of returning to 'work." At Albert Lea, Minn., the company claimed, the sentiment was so strong that union offiicals delayed the balloting until the following clay and then announced announc-ed a negative vote two hours before be-fore the polls closed; ' At Cedar Rapids, la., the company com-pany said, the ballots were taken to the home"of a man "free on bail for -an alleged criminal offense of-fense In connection with , the strike," and the vote tabulated there. '- N. Y. Governor ' (Continued From Page One) - conservation and development of western natural resources. , Warren E. Burger, In charge of Stassen's national campaign headquarters in Minneapolis, blamed the Stassen defeat In Oregon "to the most monumental cam- palgn we have yet been up against." Stassen had charged that a "combination of eastern interests" inter-ests" had spent a total of $250,000 to a Dewey-Taft alliance to whip Stassen In Oregon. - Burger . said Stassen's loss in Oregon "is not a mortal blow by any reckoning." ; I "At worst," he. said, "it is a temporary setback." Dewey visited Gov. Earl Warren War-ren in California today. Warren . will be a favorite son candidate at the Republican convention, and his state's 53 delegates' theoretically theoreti-cally could be released to either ; of the other tandidates after preliminary pre-liminary ballots. I While the Stassen-Dewey race drew most of the interest in Ore-agon's Ore-agon's election, President Truman -picked up 10 delegates to the Democratic national convention .on the basis of a large token vote. Oregon voters upset pre-elec-tlon predictions by giving state .senator Douglas McKay a sub stantial majority over incumbent S Gov. John H. Hall for the Republican Repub-lican gubernatorial nomination. ' Hall inherited the Oregon- state s evecutlve'a 1oh last October when 'Gov. Earl Snell and -next-in-line 'president of the senate Marshall Jcornett were killed together in a ' plane crash In southern Oregon. Hall had been speaker of the hous of representatives. ners with such slogans as "for industrial peace with justice, vote Reoublican. , ; To the rifht of the speakers' stand was a giant American flag and the stand Itself was packed with state dignitaries.. George Latimer, associate Jus tice of the Utah supreme court Watkins was Introduced by Na-tlonal Na-tlonal Committeeman G. T. Han-sen. Han-sen. The senator told the delegates dele-gates that "we as Republicans must stand on the record made by the Republican con- ; gress." , . i i "If we make promises," he added, add-ed, "and try to ignore the record we cannot possibly be considered honest by the people. I personnel ly feel that our record in con gress is a fine one." When the Republicans took command Watkins continued, "we were faced by tremenoo.us proo- lema we have met these proo lems fearlessly and have tried to work out a satisfactory solution. . Watkins said there la now a committee In congress whose put- pose' it is to "strengthen the hand of the executive department to protect the people of the United States from labor aicxaiors. . SALT LAKE CITY, May 22 (U.R)--New York Governor Thomas Thom-as E. Dewey's Utah forces claimed claim-ed at least seven of 11 delegates picked here today by a Utah Republican Re-publican organizing convention. The Utah Republican delega tion to the national convention was uninstructed. It generally does not vote as a unit Former Minnesota- Governor Harold E. Stassen was credited with several sev-eral of the other delegates. As Utah's delegates do not vote as a unit and are uninstructed, they still may shift support before be-fore the national conventoln.. 5! Finland Mining Stocks Salt Lake Exchange SALT LAKE CITY, May .22 (U.R) Mining stocks: (Continued From Page One) v the interior ministry " had been declared vacant. Trie decision re-duced re-duced the Communist bloc in the ' cabinet from five to four mem- bers. . I Leino had been under criticism , for forming' a mobile group of : .' police and a security force of 300 .. men but the official reason for t his ouster was a vote of censure .passed by parliament Wednesday . night. The vote was taken aftejr he was accused of turning owr 10 Fins and 10 foreigners to Rus-s Rus-s sia without formal extradition ? proceedings in 1943. Under the Finnish constitution, a cabinet member receiving such a vote fof non-confidence must resign. Paasiklvl had ordered Leino to do so by this morning. Bingham Metals . Cardiff Chief Con. Clayton Silver . . Colorado Con. . Columbus Rexall Combined Metals Crof f . . E. Crown Point.. East Standard .. East Tintic CoaL East Utah ..... Eureka Bullion . . Eureka Lily Con. Eureka Mines . . Horn Silver .... Kennebec ....... Keystone Mammoth ....... Moscow Naildriver ...... New Majestic . New Park ...... North Lily North Standard . Ohio Copper ... Park Bingham .. Park City Con. .. Park Nelson .... Park Premier . . . Park Utah Plumbic Silver King CoaL Swansea Con.. . Tintic Central . . Tintic Lead ... Tintic Standard . Victor Con. ..... Zuma Bid Asked .02 .03 .43 .44 M 1.45 1.55 .44 .48 .04 H -05 .29 .30 .21 .22 .02 .02 Yt .04 .04 .04 -05 .10 .17 .55 . .56 .15 .17 .29' .30 .04 .05 .36 .36 .20 .22 .38 .39 : .35 .40 ' .03 . .03 .50 .31 .03 .06 1.80 1.90 .48 .50 .05 .03 . .3a .31 .02 . .03 . .47 .48 .12. .13 .09 .10 3.00 3.25 )6 .08 6.50 7.00 .02 .03 .02' .02 .30 .31 1.27 1.30 .02 .03 .03 ,05 .05- .06 Evtr y Afternoon Saturday) and (ZxcapUaf Sunday ' Sunday Herald Publish Sunday Morning Publiihad by cne Herald Corporation. Corpora-tion. SO SoutH first Wit flU-Mt, Provo. Utah Entered at second class matter at the portoffice in Provo, Utah, under the act of March 3. 1870 Subscription terms by carrier In Utah county SI 00 the month. S6.00 for six months. In advance S12.00 the year tn advance, by mall anywhere ta the United States or Its posses, slons. SI ou the month. 16.00 for six months. 113 00 . the year la advance Deaths Jessie T. Adams . OREM Mrs. Jessie Townsend Adams, 71, Orem resident for 54 years, died Friday at 3 p. m. in her residence here of a heart ailment . f - - Mrs. Adams twas bom June 14, 1876, in Chesterfield, England, a diugnter of Henry and Ruth Morrison Townsend. She came with her parents to the United " States at the age of 11, residing In Salt Lake City until her, marriage mar-riage to William Wil-liam J. Adams. They moved soon afterward to Orem. ' She was an active worker in the LDS church, particularly In the Relief Society, where she served as a teacher. Survivors include five sons. Kenneth, Percy, Leslie, Lynn and Harvard Adams, all of Orem: six daughters, Mrs. Ruth Bezzant, Pleasant Grove; Mrs. Ada Brown, Taft, Cal.; Mrs. Jessie Peay and Mrs. Leola Peay, both of . Provo; Mrs. Iona Orgil and Mrs. Velma Vincent, both of Lacadada, Cal.; two sisters. Mrs. Ada Walker. Murray; Mrs. J. W. Miller, Salt Lake City; 52 grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren.- ' Funeral ' arrangements will be announced by the Fairbanks mortuary of Orem. . j Mrs. Adams William H. Davis EUREKA William H. Davis, 51, Eureka resident, ' died Tuesday Tues-day at a Denver hospital following follow-ing a lingering illness. He was born Sept. 30, 1896, in Goshen, Utah county, a son of William H. and Frances Finch Davis. He received his education in Goshen schools. ' He married Goldie Dodge in 1934 in the Manti LDS temple. She died 10 yean ago. , . Survivors include one son and three daughters, Lyman Davis and Mildred Davis. Eureka; Mrs. Wendall Kirk, Goshen; " Mrs. Stanley Hegstrom. Ogden; four sisters, Mrs. Gladys Rolf e, Mrs. Alfred Humes, and Mrs. Nick Staplos, all of Ogden, and Mrs. Howard Jensen, Totoele; two grandchildren. Funeral, services will be conducted con-ducted Sunday at 2 p. m. In the Eureka LDS ward chapel with Wilson " Lee," member of the Eureka ward bishopric officiating. officiat-ing. Military rites will be conducted by Eureka post 34 of the American Ameri-can Legion. Friends may call Saturday evening eve-ning and Sunday prior to. services at the Earl Potts residence in Eureka. Burial will be in the Eureka city cemetery under the direction of the Fairbanks mortuary mor-tuary of Orem. Elba Edward Lott LEHI .". Funeral services for Elba Edward Lott. 41. who died at home in Spokane,' Wash., Tues day of a heart attack, will be i conducted Monday at 2 p. m. in Lehi First LDS ward chapel by Ward Webb bishop. Burial will be in Lehl city cemetery.. Friends may call' at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben C. Lott, Sunday eve ning and Monday until time of services. Mr. Lott was born in Lehi Oct. 16, 1906, a son of Ben C. and Geneva Broad bent Lott.- He married mar-ried Anna Lewis Oct. "3, 1930. For the past 12 years he had resided in Spokane, where we was Washington state grain Inspector. surviving are his widow: two sons, Edward Lott, Spokane, and Gordon Lott, Lehi; his parents; two brothers, B. J. Lott and Keith Lott, Lehi; two sisters, Mrs. Freda Carter, Venice, Cal., and Mrs. Lillian Timothy, Lehi. Jennie T. Johnson EPHRAIM Funeral services for Jennie T. Johnson, 76. lifelong life-long resident and prominent civic, educational, social and political po-litical leader, will be held Sunday Sun-day afternoon at 2 o'clock in the Ephraim LDS South ward chapel. . Mrs. Johnson died Thursday morning. She had been critically ill two weeks. Burial will be inHhe Enhralm cemetery. Friends may call at the f m llv VtAtnat t4sv 4 f Va. 4 . a a 1 stvsiicc. v vi tv urn luiinai . Brvirt - - - ji Infant Bench Graveside services for Infant Bench, son of I. Grant and Al berta Howarth Bench, were held Saturday at the Provo city cemetery ceme-tery under direction of J. C Kind. red, bishop of? the Seventh LDS ward. 1 The child is' survived by his parents, pa-rents, one sister, Mrs. Neil (Phyl lis) Workman and three brothers, Bert, Jay and DeLoy Bench all of Provo. Burial was under direction di-rection of Berg Mortuary. British Express Jumps Rails f v. . V" V i" . w a - - CIO Attacks State Labor Laws; Asks National Internal Unity ; (Continued from Pare One) asked the. national CIO to do everything it could to end dis-sention dis-sention among members of its affiliated unions. , The resolutions and Saturday's Sat-urday's general unity discus sion centered around the sharp break among .various , units of the International union un-ion of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, the la r rest CIO rroup In Utah. Several miners' unions have pulled out of the international and joined -4he Progressive Metal-workera Metal-workera Council, anotherCIO un- 11 t . . " tJuLS)a44to3 ' fNKA Tmlmnhlmi Passenger ooaches Ua ta twisted tangle along embankment at Watb-On-Dearne, England, after express train went off the tracks while -making M mph. x were killed and scores Injured. EAKLY ACTION SOUGHT , ON RED-CURB BILL WASHINGTON. May 22 (U.R) Rep, . Richard M. Nixon. R., Cal., asked Saturday night for : early senate action on the ' house-approved- Mundt-Niyn bill to curb Communism. His request was made in a let ter to Chairman Alexander Wiley, R., Wis., of thy senate judiciary committee which will handle , the - bill in the aenate. Wiley was out of town and not available for comment, Largest glass container plant in the world is located at Alton, 111. M WASHER SERVICE MEN As Near As Your Phone v SENATOR ENDORSES SUPER CARRIER WASHINGTON, May 22 (U.fi) i A leading senate economy ad vocate vo-cate tonight endorsed navy plans for a 65,000-ton super carrier. Sen. Harry . F. Byrd, D., Va., said he is "very much in favor" of the . proposed .flattop that would be big enough, to accommodate accom-modate the giant atom-bomb car rying B-29 for takeoff s. It also could take smaller planes, loaded with other bombs, within carrier range of an enemy.- First manufacture of wool England was about .1185. in It, after charging that the IUM-MSW IUM-MSW is dominated by Communists.-. :'-':' However, President Clarence L. Palmer defeated attempts by International In-ternational members to obtain passage of a resolution that would have condemned the PMC for what sponsors claimed was inter-union inter-union raiding. i. The convention also has adopt he was :"cused of turning over Wallace Y.iird party and asking the senate to defeat the Mundt-Nixon Mundt-Nixon bill The Utah CIO said it opposed communism 'but thought the house-approved Communist control bil was an invasion of democratic political rights. . WALLPAPER SALE CONTINUING 1 -. - .- , . ..... ' . . -.. ... 12c -j 17c - 39c. ' PER SINGLEXROLLS Bundles 25cnd Up COMPLETE LINl OF GLIDDEN PAINTS SPRED FLAT AND MANY OTHERS Deseret Paint & Hdw. Co. w 124 West Center Phone 2349 Provo 7 r3 mm DMTIOIiip Is the 1 Attention! , . . . GRADUATES 1 BY High . Provo High Lincoln High ENTER NATE MORGAN'S BIG CLOCK CONTEST You Must Register In Our Store to Be Eligible...... i "YOURS TODAY A YEAR TO PAY" wvfu.cnccs of aeatinghooee gismic iMWCc NMt iWaal ifG0m Rfttice ye Mve atow or aistemttrtcafly. Yim earn 4Ut- ran lea everv ttsne. 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