OCR Text |
Show 12 . SUNDAY HERALD Sunday, June 27, 1948 Oakland Crash Kills Idahoan OAKLAND, Cal, June 28. (U.R) A Wallace, Ida., woman was killed and two others injured in a truck-auto crash at a downtown down-town intersection here today. . - Mrs. Helen Nelson. 32, wife of Vernon Nelson, 35, Wallace public pub-lic utilities executive, died from head and internal injuries after being taken. to an Oakland hos pKal. ; Her : husband escaped without injury. Driver of the car, Jack McKay, 32, Wallace oil company worker, suffered broken ribs and cuts and bruises. His wife, Elsie, 32, sustained a fractured right arm and broken ribs. Mrs. Ger-aldine Ger-aldine Holdridge, 32, Oakland, a passenger in the McKay car, had a fractured left arm and internal Injuries. . The accident- occurred, . police aid, when McKay apparently went through a boulevard stop. His car ploughed into a truck filled with 400 cases of fruits nd vegetables. The truck driver, Alton Hoover, Visalia, Cal., was uninjured although both vehicles ve-hicles overturned after the crash. Unions to Reject 12-Cent Offer of Kennecott Copper SALT LAKE CITY, June 26. (U.R) Progressive Metalworkers Council officials said today they will apparently reject a 1.2-ceot-an-hour increase offered by he Kennecott Copper Corporation. The council represents seven Utah and Nevada locals that recently re-cently bolted the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers after the company declined de-clined to negotiate with the international in-ternational on the grounds its officers had not signed non-; non-; Communist affidavits. ,; Locals stillloyal to the international inter-national gave notice a strike vote ; for recognition may be called be-' be-' fore the present contract expires ,with Kennecott Copper Corpora- tion on June 30. Albania Disarms Greek Guerrillas ATHENS. Greece, June 26. (U.R) Albania's Tirana radio declared declar-ed today that 17 Greek guerrilla soldiers who fled across the border from the embattled Pin-dus Pin-dus mountains in northern Greece have been disarmed and placed in detention camps. This was the first time in the history of post-war Balkans dissension dis-sension that Albania has made such an announcement. In the past, Greece has repeatedly charged Albania with sheltering guerrilla Gen. Markos Vafiades' soldiers. The Tirana broadcast said the guerrillas came from Mt Gram-mos, Gram-mos, where Markos is supposed to have his headquarters. Fare Play 'I Still Love Ya Daddy' I ; 4 - f . (NEA Telephotot ' Though beaten by his father with cat o' nine tails, three-year-old Jay Richard McClintock forgave his daddy. Here the boy and his father, Raymond McClintock, are shown in court, where magistrate told the father, "It's a good thing for you that the whipping post has oeen abolished." Battleship Set To Strike Colors NORFOLK, Vs., June 26 (U.R) The mighty battleship Wisconsh. will strike her- colors July 1, the navy said today. The great 4,5,000-ton ship will be assigned, to the reesrve fleet a the Norfolk naval shiDvard at iiearby Portsmouth. She will go into cold storage but can be readied for action if her country needs her again. The Wisconsin was the mighti est American ship afloat when she was commissioned at Philadelphia in April, 1944, at a cost of $110,-000,000. Her sister ship, the New Jersey, 100 Years Ago will be decommissioned a day ater in New York, leaving the navy only ttyo of the original four :5,000-ton battleships still in active ac-tive service the Missouri in the Atlantic and the Iowa in the Pacific. Pa-cific. The Wisconsin will join a smaller small-er battleship, the Massachusetts, already in the Norfolk reserve fleet. . Iqjr u i Ml Vacation time for Dudley Brewer Atlanta, Ga, means train-riding train-riding time. Brewer, who loves trains, is a fare-paying passenger, passen-ger, but he rides in the locomotive locomo-tive cab. He wrote to railbfficials and finally got permission f to peer over the engineers' shoulders, shoul-ders, thus satisfying a long ambition. (The journal of Eliza Lyman Apostle Amasa, her husband, has' come to say good-bye to his families, fam-ilies, before going west with the pioneer company. This was on the 12th of March, 1847. Eliza says nothing of their farewells, and her next entry demonstrates perfectly that life goes on, no matter what.) Tues. 13 Went to the creek and washed. Wed. 14 Bro. Lyman has gone , with the pioneers. We do not expect ex-pect to see him again this summer. sum-mer. I will take my turn with the rest of the girls in taking care of Sister Tinney for the rest of the month. (Eliza says! nothing of her duties as nurse, but she evidently .has no time for journals during the rest of the month, for there is no entry until) . May 1 I took some wool of Sr. Summy to spin on shares. I will do picking, washing, carding land spinning, for half the wool, I Spent a great part of the time ! making garden. Sat. 8 My sister Caroline' and I walked several miles over the. river bottoms hunting one" of our cows, but we did not findl her. . . ; Sunday, 9 Went to meeting. Mon. ' 10 Spun wool and worked m garden. h Friday 14 Carded and SDun wool. (And so it goes on, with no change but the weather.) Wed. 19 Visited Sr. Leonora Morley's with Sr. Eliza R. Snow ! and others. (Eliza and Eliza R. Snow were both widows of; Joseph Smith, and were conse- ' quently very colse friends.) Thurs. 20 I am engaged irv making clothes for Sr. Spiceri who is very sick. (The "clothes" Eliza is making is, of course, a shroud, and this is a significant indication of how they lived and died. "It is very pathetic to think that in such dire straits, they still must make the effort to bury their dead in new clothest and to anticipate the sad event by making them while the dying still lived.) (To be continued.) " HE'S FRANK ABOUT IT WASHINGTON, June 26 (U.R) Three months ago, Joe Kay scraped up $3000 and invested it in a paint business. But things didn't go so well. Joe just about lost his shirt but not his sense of humor. . Today passersby read this sign out front: "Joe's Paint Stor& opened by mistake." Dewey-Warren Ticftet Fails To Get Labor Support WASHINGTON, June 26 (U.R) AFL President William Green said after a White House visit today to-day that the AFL political league would never support the Repub lican Dewey-Warren presidential ticket. On its record and on its plat form, Green said, the GOP ticket will not get much labor support. Green- called at the White House to urge President Truman to name Keen Johnson, former governor of Kentucky, as secretary secre-tary of labor. Johnson was once undersecretary of labor and has been mentioned as a possible successor to- Lewis B. Schwellen-bach, Schwellen-bach, who died recently. As the AFL leader left, reporters report-ers asked him if his federation wbuld back the Republican ticket in theNovember election. Green, who already has announced that he favors the election of Mr. Truman, hesitated and gave no answer. Then he was asked if the AFL political league would support Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and Gov. Earl Warren, the GOP nominees "Never," Green replied quick ly and with force. Asked if he thought Mr. Truman could defeat the Dewey-Warren ticket Green replied. "That depends on the Republican Republi-can auxiliary, Henry A. Wallace and his party. The Republicans could well afford to finance Henry's Hen-ry's campaign.' The AFL political league was formed at the AFLsx66th convention conven-tion in San Franciscd.x lt was set up to work for the election of a liberal congress that would repeal re-peal the, Taft-Hartley labor law. The league is financed by voluntary vol-untary contributions from the' 8,-000,000 8,-000,000 members of the AFL. Green told newsmen that in his opinion a Republican ticket of Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, R., Mich., arid Harold E. Stassen, or a Vandenberg - Warren combination, combina-tion, would have had a broader appeal to labor jroters. Russians Comment On Dewey Victory , i MOSCOW, June 26 (U.R) The Tass news agency reported today that the presidential nomination of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey was bought with promises of high political po-litical posts, profits, and protection. Dewey was named after behind; the scene transactions, a Philadelphia Phila-delphia dispatch of the official Soviet agency said. Mother of Mrs. Dewey Was Avid Democrat In Texas RESEDA, CaL, June 26 (U.R) Mrs. Thomas E. Dewey's mother was an avid Democrat, one of her relatives said today. Clark Meridith, retired dime store operator who said he was a second cousin of the wife of the Republican nominee, told how he used to baby-sit her and her brother bro-ther 40 years ago in Sherman, Tex. "I can sure remember how avid Labor Unrest Mounts In Italy ROME,Italy, June 26. (U.R) Labor unrest mounted in Italy today as '120,000 food workers began a nationwide strike which government officias said will become serious if it lasts through Monday, The food workers' walkout was described as "limited," but it coincided with spreading strikes in northern Italy which are be- a Democrat Frances mother was," he said. "She was a relative. of Jefferson Davis, yOu know." WILBUR By BILL RUBLE 8th ANNUAL LEHI 4 NIGHT Rodeos 3w June -30 JsSgXf July 1-2-3 5 MAJOR EVENTS Bronc Busting Bareback Riding Bulldogging Bull Riding Calf Roping Miniature Parade June 30 ,July 1, 6 :30 p.m Western Stock Parade Two Clowns Two Specialty Acts Featuring Lou Cabrell Admission Adults $1.50 Children 75c LAST TWO DAYS "CASKAH" & "Adv. In Silverado" 2. STARTS TUESDRY GAY.. .TENDER... DEADLY! 'I 'Mr a.J ""w Ran mi 99 P BROADWAY ADDED EXTRA! Graziano s Tony Zale Every Knockdown in' Slow Motion ENDS TOMORROW Open 1:30, Last Show 9:50 Feature at 2:05 4:09 6:138:17 & 10:24 ALLIED ARTISTS RIP'ROARIII'EST STRIP III IL THE HISTORY & rod CAMERON ff VWffiK CATHYlOWNS REED, mill tJ 1 irlkimh N C WYNNE BLAKE EDWARDS ff LAWRENCE TIERHEY Double Show Value CP. TOE m W F MB 1 Winf 1 J - .am TED NORTH Mil LESLIE BETTY LAWFORD --w-AHDREW T0MBES r-tmm i numm xnum UkM N ma Fist jm rm turn bbi ' STARTS TUES. AT TWEY THE. WzA U ing iupported by Communist anion leaders. Although "temporary" food supplies were assured, government govern-ment officials threatened to curb the food workers' right to strike if the walkout continues. It was called because two workers were fired. f The food strike followed a half-day general strike in' Mijan yesetrday, 24-hour general strikes in Pisa and Brescia prov- Hnees, and three-hour stoppage in Venice. . Virtually all the strikes were called to protest management's right to fire workers for reasons of economy IDAHOAN RE-ELECTED AS VICE CHAIRMAN PHILADELPHIA, June 26 (U.R) The national committee of the Republican party today reelected Ezra Whitla of Idaho as vice chairrnan. Whitla, national committeeman from Idaho, has long directed GOP affairs in the far west. He is chairman for the western regional Republican conference. SWIM- SARATOGA TWO GRAND POOLS STATE OF UTAH'S OK A Perfect Place For Your Reunion or Party...... OPEN FROM 11 a. m. Till 11 p.m Starting Monday J CIO T0 "! MM l mm i liiiilpk scon BRITTON ! HAYES ! IH CHANEY RUSSELL HAYDCN CATHERINE CRAIG GEORGE CLEVELAND km t, m CLADtON POOOUCTKM and ."Mr. Reckless" William Eythe Barbara Bitton An entertaining story of adventure ad-venture and romance amid the California Oil Fields! CO HIT ICHARO i rci Paramount-L'inta nd Strand Ends Tomorrow ym JtANtTTt JOSf j MacDonald Ifurbi TIIIJI I; DARING DAUGHTERS IN nCHNKOtO Starts Tuesday r .1 , X CLARK I AM A lf TURNER EMS I BAXTIK I pnovo ORIVE IE! THEATPC PLAYING TONIGHT & MONDAY You Will Thrill As Never Before To l jftJ MOTQR-VU'S Mightiest Saga! i wdmri also short fT55 sgflJA w-wcro UNDER t , Box Office Opens 7:45 PLUS- CARTOON NEWS CONTEST m Ai contest!. St Co,nCthe lnn BIG HALF-HOUR LONG Independence Day Floor Show Acts Entertainers-Novelties Entertainers-Novelties Girls MON., JULY 5TII It's Cool and Romantic Dancing on the Moonlight Roof Garden 'UNIVERSITY OF UTAH THEATBfc SUMMER FESTIVAL PDC$ENT$ Muttc by Jrom Km Book n Lyric by: Otcor HammtrtH'm N Batod th mvoI by Edna fottf II II Starring Richard Charles With , PEGGY ENGEL GALE PAGE KENNETH SPENCER 14 Nights-July 14-27 STADIUM BOWL General Admission 75c Rewrved Section $1.20 Reserved Seats . . $2.40 & $3.60 (taxes included) Buy Reserved Seats for BOTH SHOWS and Save. Other seats full price for both shows. ' r lio -j f vum vm SSN ORDER YOUR SEATS NQW Mail Orders Filled Promptly tt-J- UNIVEISITY THEATRE i KINGSBURY HAU. SAIT LAKE CITY, UTAH Pleat tend me the 'following tickeltt SHOWBOAT No. Tickets Price Total Check night preferred: My (14) (IS) (16) (17) Wed. Thu." fit. Sat. ' (21) (22) (23) (24) . (27) Wed. Thu. M. San ? Twe. MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM No. Ticjiets Price Total July (18) (19) (20) (25) (26) Sun. Mon. Toe. Sun. Mon. Total Amount enclosed -',.-,.,, ,,,,. NOTE: Bargain price for both shows $3.60 seat for on show, $6 for both shows. $2.40 for one show, $3.60 for both shows. Nam i , 1 i i Address , ,,.,,.. r' ,.,,., ,,,., Enclose check payable to University Theatre. Enclose self ddrsssed, stamped envelope. |