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Show Sunday, August 8, 1948 SUNDAY HERALD Congress Adjourns Special Session Amid Bitter Feeling Continued flow iwtge one . , charges the Republicans had compiled com-piled a "do-nothing" record In congress and had 'failed to act forcefully to check soaring prices. Both parties have promised to carry their fight to the people in the forthcoming presidential campaigns cam-paigns - In the final hours senate Democrats Demo-crats force a show-down vote for the record on the - President's broad anti-inflation program. It was swamped, S3 to 33. On Republican, Re-publican, Sen. William Langer of North Dakota, Joined 32 Democrats Demo-crats in support of the president. Six southern Democrats voted with 47 Republicans against him. When the roll-call vote was over, ov-er, the senate passed the Republican Republi-can anti-inflation bill by voice vote.- The GOP housing" bill provides Incentives to private home and department house builders. It fell Minnie J. Haws Dies at Her Home Funeral services for Mrs. Min nie Johnson Haws, 63, lifelong resident of Utah county, and well-known church worker who j ; dipd Friday 0mmJ; nlarht at her v ho me of i a heart ailment after having one be d i . ai i:ju p.m. ' Tiiarlav In thp P r o v o Third ward chapel v.-J Jco.nductei II . 1 - Mrs. Haws ImDeachment Continued from page one attack launched against the president presi-dent stnee he took officein April, 1943. It came near the close of the special sesion of congress. "In sum, the president claims the right to don the cloak of absolute ab-solute executive immunity whenever when-ever in his sole discretion he desires de-sires to do so, and to extend it as he pleases to cover all other officers offi-cers and operations of the executive execu-tive branch," Ferguson said. Mr. Truman not only is trying to "override' and impede the work of congress, Ferguson charged, but he also is attempting to "impose a censorship on a wholesale basis" in the administration's adminis-tration's relations with congress and the country. 5 Ferguson denounced particularly particu-larly President Truman's veto of legislation to require FBI clearance for his nominees to the atomic energy commision, secrecy secre-cy in administration hearings on tariff reductions under the reciprocal re-ciprocal trade agreements pro gram, and alleged censorship in the library of congress and the U-S. U-S. office of education. "There has been an attempt to impose censorship on every single department and agency in the executive ex-ecutive branch," he said. Ferguson traced wh'at he called development of air-tight executive execu-tive department censorship and restrictions on information from early new deal days. Ferguson aald the issue of ' government secrecy and accumulation accu-mulation of ever-increasing, presidential powers Is more serious than the Issue of Com-munlsm-ln-iovernment. "The attempt of the president to have the executive department refuse to give congress information informa-tion necessary to its duties also flies in the face of the fact that all the executive departments are CTeatU-Alof congress," heaid. Ferguson ' said the dangers of Communist penetration- of the government demand a "far more alert congress." Presidential secrecy, he con-eluded, con-eluded, threatens the very foundations foun-dations of representative government govern-ment and poses an issue that eventually will have to be met "head-on." Only one president ever faced Impeachment. He was Andrew Johnson who as vice president became be-came chief executive when Abraham Abra-ham Lincoln was assassinated. Berlin (Continued from Page 1) reported today that Soviet labor crews were busily "repairing" a section of the railway linking Berlin and the western zones. The newspaper, Berlin Zeitung, said repair crews were working on the Magdeburg-Marienborn section of the railway, which was closed for "technical ' reasons July 18 after the western allies announced new currency for their zones. "After repairs have been com pleted, heavy and fast trains can Derate on this track," the news- DaDer said. Western allied transport officials of-ficials in Berlin were skeptical about the report. One British spokesman said "We have received re-ceived no official indication of any change. . . . Over the past six weeks we have received vari ous assurances that repair work is in full swing, but that is as far as it goes. far short of the president's de sires. Mr. Truman endorsed the controversial Taft-EUender-Wag ner long-range housing bill. But most Republicans wouldn't go along with its public housing and slum clearance program. . GOP leaders adopted an adjournment ad-journment resolution that will enable en-able them to ' recall congress if necessary. The president also can call congress into session, at anj time. Terms of tht adjournment resolution permit the GOP leaders1 to do so If they deem it wise between be-tween now and Dec. 31. The Republicans had rejected most of the president's legislative program in the two weeks since the special session convened July 26. They passed limited anti-inflation and housing bills, a $65,- 000,000 loan to the United Nations Na-tions for its New York headauart- ers, and a $17,400,000 appropria tion to get the new housing program pro-gram going and to buy automobiles automo-biles for disabled veterans. The Republicans gave President Pres-ident Truman a final-day rebuff re-buff when the senate by a vote of 53 to 33 formally re- -jected his sweeping program to put the brakes on inflation the chief, reason he gave for calling congress back Into session. The GOP gives the president authority until June 30,' 1949, to: 1. Require installment - plan purchasers of "hard" goods, such as automobiles and refrigerators, to pay one-third down and the balance in 12 to 18 months. 2. Compel federal reserve banks to increase the amount of money they have on reserve by four per cent on demand deposits and IVi per cent on time deposits. The theory is that this will curb inflation in-flation by reducing the amount of money the banks may lend. Democrats learned days ago the futility of trying to push Mr. Truman's Tru-man's entire anti-inflation pro gram through. But the 44 senate Democrats, led by Sen. Alben W Barkley of Kentucky, Mr. Tru man's vice presidential running mate, forced a record vote on it Republicans defeated Barkley's attempt to substitute the Truman proposals for the GOP bill des pite the Kentuckian's insistence that continued high prices will cost Americans $10,000,000,000 next year. Mr. Truman la expected to sign the few measures he did ret, probably accompanying his action with new denunciation denuncia-tion of this 80th congress which he has called the "worst" In history. The political bickering which has marked the extra session broke out again in the final hours. House Democrats charged that tne Republican eifort to curb in flation were "insignificant." "This bill is too little and tod late," said Rep. Frank Buchanan, D.. Pa. . Rep. Jesse Wolcott .R.. Mich.. chairman of the house banking committee countered with the statement that "the president and the federal reserve systen today nave sufficient powers to stabilize stabil-ize the American economy." "It would be foolish for us to reenact the powers they already have," he said. And in the senate. Republicans and Democrats were equally caustic. caus-tic. Sen. Robert A. Taft. R., O., attacked at-tacked the president's program. He said it would have given the chief executive "unlimited, com- jTHREE SOLDIERS p rbrary control to re-es- KILLED IN CRASH isDiisn ufA in ail Us details." Sry Afternoon (Excepting Saw urday) and Sunday. Sunday Herald Published Sunday Morning PublUhcd by The Herald Corpora tlon, South rint Weit Street, Prove,. Utah. Entered aa second claaa matter at the poatoffice in Prove, Utah, under the act of 'March 3, 1S7t. Subscription termi by carrier In Utah eoanty 11. the month; SS.SS for tlx months In advance; HJ.eO the year In advance. By mall anywhere In the United States or Its poanet-slons, poanet-slons, ll.no the month; for six months; S 12.00 the rear ta advance. by Bishop Ar thur D. Taylor. 'She w it born July 5, 1883, at Pay-son',, Pay-son',, a daughter daugh-ter of George and Mary Stevens Johnson. She attended elementary and high school in Payson. She was married in William Haws Jan. 18, 1908, in the Salt Lake temple. Following their marriage they made their home in theld Provo Third LDS ward until Mr. Haws' death Oct. 11.. 1936. Mrs. Haws then moved to the Provo First ward where she lived until mov ing to Orem a year ago. She was an active worker in the Relief society, in both the First and Third wards. She was member of the First ward Birthday club, and of Provo camp No. 2, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Berl Jacobsen, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Mark Cook, Spring ville: Mrs. Ray Johnson, Orem, and Mrs. Don Ostler, Provo: seven grandchildren, four brothers broth-ers and three sisters: Hugh J. and John A. Johnson, Provo: Charles Johnson and Mrs. Kelly Dusenberry,. Salt Lake City; Lee Johnson and Mrs. George Larsen, Orem, and Mrs. Charles Rawlins, Vineyard, Utah county. Friends may call at the Berg mortuary Monday evening from 6 to 8, and Tuesday prior to services at her home, Box 256, Rte. 2, Orem (three blocks west of the highway on Orem's 8th S., the Lincoln high school street). Burial will be in the Provo city cemetery. Offer Made To End Strike DAYTON.' O., Aug. 7. (U. Officials of the Univis Lens Co. plant, scene of a strife-torn 95-day-old strike, tonight offered to rehire all strikers except 11 and those guilty of violence. The four-point company offer was drawn up at an "explora tory conference late today in the office of Dayton Mayor Louis Louhrey. The meeting was called by Gov. Thomas J. Herbert. Arthur Garfield, international representative of the United Electrical Workers union (CIO), said . he . would recommend that the striking UE local at Univis reject the offer In a union meet ing scheduled for tomorrow morning. New British Continued from page one created a prince of Great Britain, Brit-ain, giving him the status of a soh of the ruling house. ' Her friends say Elizabeth is not worried about the titles of precedence prece-dence her baby will have. But it is a matter which the king's advisers ad-visers and the privy council will debate in due course. ' If the baby is a son, the advisers and the king must decide once and for all whether Windsor is to be dropped completely or retain -as an adjunct to Mountbatten. They must also decide whether the child, if a boy, shall be simply the Earl of Merioneth, which is the senior of the Duke of Edin burgh's other titles, or created a prince. It must also be decided whether the child should be created Prince of Wales, the title usually be stowed up on the heir apparent to the throne. If so, Elizabeth's child would be the first to have that title since the Duke of Wind sor gave it up when he succeeded to the throne in 1936. The same year lie abdicated to marry Mrs Wally Simpson. Joseph E. Foust Dies In Pocatello Joseph, E. Foust, former Provo resident, ' died Friday night in a Pocatello hospital. He was born in Tennessee and moved to Utah in about 1923, where he at one time followed the trade of blacksmith. He is survived by one son, J. Woodrow Foust, Salt Lake City, and two granddaughters. Wayne Kirk Snow Wayne Kirk Snow, 10-weeks old son of Kirk and Kaye Jen kins Snow, 468 N. 1st East, died early Saturday morning following a choking spell. The infant was born May 20, 1948, in Price. The parents came to Provo from Price in March of this year. The father is employed by the Pacific Fruit and Produce Co. He is survived by his parents, his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry E. Snow, and Mr. and Mrs Clyde Jenkins, both of Ferron, Emery county; great-grandpar ents, Louis P. Overson, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Georgtna Snow, Castle-dale, Castle-dale, Emery county, and Mrs. Ella Beach, Ferron. Funeral services will be in Ferron Fer-ron under direction of the Berg mortuary. Gladiolus Show Winners Named at Provo Exhibition I Four-hundred-and-f lfty entries from all over the state of Utah were ; registered in the gladiolus show Saturday and J. La Ville Thomason, private flower grower of Logan, received the top award. ! Beautiful and varied arrays of color reigned at the shows which is sponsored by the Wasatch chapter chap-ter of the Utah Gladiolus society. The flower exhibition Is being being held at the A. L. Duckett showroom, S12 S. University Ave., and will be open for the public until 9 p. m. today. W. Reed Nuttall, chairman of the show, announced Mr.. Thomason Thoma-son as exhibiting the flower which won four awards, the Queen of the Show and champion in its division, both earning local awards; and best recent introduction introduc-tion award, sponsored by the New England Gladiolus society, and an award sponsored by the National American Gladiolus council. Two awards, for growing the best seedling in the show went to R. B. Gorham, Salt Lake City. He received a New England Gladiolus Gladio-lus society ribbon, and a $10 prize presented by the Grand-view Grand-view Gardens, Provo. Mrs. P. W. Carroll, Orem, won the division grand champion of the special arrangement section. She was awarded a purple ribbon and the Nate Morgan cup. The three-spike division top award went to Dr. Wallace J. Vickers, Logan, 'and he received the Heindselman cup. The Mullett cup for the best basket division was won by Mrs. Arthur Shepherd, Orem, and Mrs. Tanna Bee, Provo, was presented with a $5 prize given by the Gladview gardens for the best painting of gladiolus. Lee Organization To Meet Monday A meeting of the J. Bracken Lee club of Utah county ' has been called by Chairman Jdhn F. Pinegar of Spanish Fork ' for 8 p. m. Monday, August 9th in the city and county Bldg., Provo; All persons interested in supporting sup-porting the candidacy of Mr. Lee for governor at the coming primary prim-ary election are cordially invited to attend. A special Invitation is extended to all women to attend this meeting in order that a wo-mens wo-mens organization may be perfected per-fected for each precinct in the county. American Fork By lrRS. DENA GRANT City Judge Terry Draper is en joying a trip east in company with his son-in-law, Edward L. Miller of Ogden. Mr. Miller, connected with the U. S. war department recently returned from a two year's stay in Honolulu and was called to Washington. Enroute they visited Mr. and Mrs. George Perkins (Nellie Draper) in Indi anapolis, Ind. and in Cleveland, Ohio, with relatives of Mr. Miller, In Washington Judge Draper' is the guest of his brother Glen H. Draper and family. Mrs. Martin Ambrose of this city celebrated her 81st birthday Friday in Reno, Nevada, with her son, Vern Ambrose and family. Mrs. Ambrose made the. trip by plane. They will enjoy a vacation at Lake Tahoe. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Beck, Mr and Mrs. James A. Kelly are vacationing va-cationing in the east. Included in the vacation itinerary are Chicago, Chica-go, Washington, D. C. and New York. Enroute home they will visit Dr. and Mrs. Jay V. Beck in Pennsylvania, Dr. Beck is State College staff member. Copper Strike (Continued from Page One) Utah alone. The Nevada and New Mexico production brings Kenne-cott'i Kenne-cott'i copper contributions to the nation's industry to well over one-third of the monthly supplies of the metal. Other Kennecott operations in Arizona, where tbe AFL has bargaining bar-gaining rights, and in Chile, Soutl. America, are not affected by the current dispute. In addition to the two IUMMSW locals in Salt Lake valley, Kennecott now deals with six other unions and has already signed new contracts, including filing of anti-communism affidavits, affi-davits, with five of them. SILVER CITY, N.MM'Aug. 7. (U.R CIO Mine, Mill Si Smelter Workers employed, here by the Kennecott Copper Corp. struck at 6 a.m. Saturday, but the effect of their walkout will not be known until Monday. Kennecott properties at Hurley and Santa Rita, near Silver, City, are operated on a five-day week and are not open on Saturday. Approximately 1,000 workers were taking part in the walkout. Picket lines appeared around the plants at 6 a.m. MST. A precipitating pre-cipitating plant at Santa Rita which operates on Saturday was the scene of the only untoward incident connected with the strike. Browder Continued from pare one Pigeon racing sport of Belgium. is a national head of one of two Red sky rings that operated in the capital dur ing the war. Koral was said to have been a courier who picked up the gleanings of the spies from Washington street corners and conveyed them to New York where they were put in the Com munist pipeline. The New York World-Telegram, which has been close to the spy ring investigation, said "it was believed the committee may have overestimated Mr. Koral's Cannon Argues, U. S. Case Before Danube Conference BELGRADE, Aug. 7 U.R) Cavendish Cav-endish Cannon, United State delegate, dele-gate, argued before the Danubian conference today that his 'country 'coun-try had a right to a voice' in the Danube regime because of its occupation oc-cupation interests in Germany and Austria. Cannon replied to an attack by Andrei Vishinsky, the Soviet delegate, on the American draft convention and charge that U. S. interest in the Danube was merely mere-ly political. "Let us not forget the direct interest of the United States, which occupies a position alone the Danube," Cannon said. "The German section of the Danube and the German . Danube fleet are inseparably connected problems. prob-lems. "Until a soverign German gov ernment is established and granted grant-ed full participation in the Danube Dan-ube regime, the United States will be responsible for representing represent-ing German riparian lnterestf." He added that the same applied to the United States position la Austria. Both the United States and Great Britain agreed to consider the Soviet draft of a new Danubian Dan-ubian convention as the "working "work-ing basis" of the conference. "" The Soviet plan would exclude Austria, Germany, Britain, France and the United States from a proposed pro-posed commission to administer navigation on the Danube. ability to 'break the case wide open.' " Before returning to Washington late today, the subcommittee also questioned Victor Perlo, whom Miss Bentley named as the head of the first Communist spy ring in Washington, and? Whittaker Chambers, a former Communist and now a senior editor of Time part in the spy activities and his magazine. Pricitia Yoshioka Pricitia Yoshioka. day-old infant in-fant daughter of Brownie and Harieko Yanaoka Yoshioka, died Thursday evening at the Payson hospital. The baby was born AUg.v 4. SIDNEY. O., Aug. 7. (U.R). Three soldiers were killed and three others were injured critically critic-ally today when the car in which they were riding smashed into the rear of a slow moving semitrailer' semi-trailer' truck 12 miles north of here. Five of the men were from Ft. C..-..1. , , . , IVIJUA. IJ . 1 lie p tA IN wan uuih "'"" miiuue me parents ra who have resided in Springville tor tne past five years, Mr. Yoshioka Yo-shioka being an employe of the Kddington Canning Co. of Soring- ville, and two grandparents, Mr.) ana Mrs. iwaxiscnl Yoshioka of Salinas, Cal. Private funeral services were held Saturday at Claudin funeral home in Provo. Cremation took place at Salt Lake Memorial mausoleum following services. CARD OF THANKS The family of Anna Martin wish to express gratitude for the many acts of kindness and sympathy given them following the recent death of their beloved mother. We appreciate the many kind acts, the words of consolation, the beautiful floral offerings. We deeply are grateful toward the bishopric, Relief society, musicians musi-cians and speakers who willingly gave their time and for all other friendly kindnesses. Mr. and Mrs. J. Virl Martin and Family Mr. and Mrs. Clyde D. Sand-gren Sand-gren and Family imp Breckenridge, Ky. WHAT A SAVING! Life Insurance At Cost! Cooperative IJfe. of America now offers this revolutionary Insurance program to you. In this new type of policy, savings are kept separate and draw 3H interest. They can be withdrawn any time upon 30 days notice and without losing your insurance. This wonder program is sponsored through the State Farm .Bureau Federation. 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