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Show Tavern Owners Vote Leonard Full Confidence SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 7. (U.R) The president of the Associated Asso-ciated Tavern Owneri of Utah, Harold V. Leonard today held a vote of confidence after hit application ap-plication for resignation wn refused re-fused at a board meeting In Salt Lake City. Leonard has been indicted by the Salt Lake county grand jury on chargea of conspiracy to violate vio-late state liquor laws. He tendered ten-dered his' resignation to 17 directors di-rectors present. Giving him full , confidence, the directors voted .unanimously to refuse his resignation. James M. Shulsen, secretary, said, that mere Indictment by the . grand jury didn't prove anything. . Meanwhile, Gus Weiser, vending vend-ing machine operator, was pleading plead-ing today to a grand jury indictment indict-ment charging him with perjury. The defendant surrendered a week ago. He is charged with giving false testimony In the Yank Haven slot machine, incident, inci-dent, under investigation by the Salt Lake county grand jury. Grand Jurors have not met this week. HIS HOME VANISHES TACOMA, Wash. (U.R) Harry Pitcher spent a year in a- local hospital. When he returned home, there wasn't any home. Pitcher told officers that someone apparently appar-ently had torn down the house for the lumber or simply carted the small stuff off. "There wasn't trace of it," he said. Great Salt Lake, in Utah, is about three and one-half times as salty as the ocean, according to the Encyclopedia Britannlca. Enrollment In Colleges' to Drop LOS , ANGELES. Aua 7. U.RV- Universities and colleges in all states' but California were warned warn-ed today to expect an eight to 10 per cent drop in enrollment this fall by the president of the University of Cincinnati. Dr. Raymond Walters said that graduation of senior G. I.'s and withdrawal from school of other veterans, along with selective service, would contribute to the decline. " "So many new families have settled in California recently that its schools should be only slightly below 1947 levels, Wal ters said. "Predictions of continued population pop-ulation growth in the state until 1963 indicate a sustained high attendance there." 63 Killed In Japanese Blast TOKYO. Aug. 7. (U.R) Air force officials announced today that two Americans. 11 Filipinos and 50, natives were killed yesterday yes-terday at Ie Shima island in the explosion of a tank landing craft that was loading ammunition for transfer to Okinawa. The gigantic explosion com pletely demolished the tank landing craft and also a medium landing craft (LCM) that was close by, Far East air force officers offi-cers said. Officers estimated that the blast killed 50 natives in a village vil-lage near the loading area. The village was heavily damaged. The entire crew of 13 men aboard the tank landing craft is missing, the announcement said. The crew included, two enlisted men and 11 Filipino sailors. The Mayor Pitches In I ,1 Blue Widows i m A . L: . ' -A'. , mi ' y " 1 c7 , - - (NEA TtUphoto) Two self-made widows meet In the County Jail in Chicago, 111., and discover they have much In common. 18-year-old Jacqueline Wiser (left), guilty of manslaughter for stabbing of her husband. Cyril, 24, and Veronica Elliott, 48-year-old Gold Star mother, sentenced to 14 years for murdering her. husband, Cecil, 56, both lament passing of their husbands, claim they are still in Jove with them, and will never marry any other men. The energetic garbage collector on the left is the mayor of the town. It happened in-Poughkeepsie, N. Y, when the municipal con tractor refused to pick up garoage noi piacea in specmcu ers. Mayor Horace Graham appealed for volunteers for a rubbish clean-up. Among those who answered the call were Mayor Graham himself and Everett Cady, right. CAttYOMOLP mama mm Maybe you won't believe it, but an old typewriter can talk turkey with us on a real typewriter deal. It can mean a generous allowance toward the purchase of a new Royal Portable. And, incidentally, there ia no portable in the world like the new Royal. Only Royal has Finger Form Keys, Speed Spacer, "Magic" Margin, and so many other exclusive features. Fill in the coupon at once. Or phone us today! Easy Payment As Low As Down Jfamtm i i i I'd Uka to laarn mora about ' how much my old typawritar ia worn. AaJrt j City. I JSlatt. I Mak of T?purUr ' J L-. ! Overseas Death Claims Deadline Set for August 9 The last day is Aug. 9, 1948 for filing claims for lump-sum death benefits under the Social Secur ity Act on account of the death outside the United States of a qualified individual after December Decem-ber 6, 1941, and before August 10, 1946. According to Shermau H. Ruesch. manager of the Provo office of the Social Security Administration, Ad-ministration, any such claims filed after that date cannot be paid. Mr. Ruesch pointed out that congress amended the Social Security Act in August 1946 to give special consideration in those cases, where servicemen or civilians civi-lians died outside the United States during and immediately following World War II by extending ex-tending the legal limit of two years ,as provided by law. How ever, the extension was for two years from the date of the amendment amend-ment and it expires on August 9, 1948. The survivors of civilians and servicemen, who died overseas and who had earned wages In employment em-ployment covered by the Social Security Act, are urged by Mr. Ruesch to Inquire as to possible benefits before the deadline. The office located at 163 West First North in Provo will render all possible assistance. Testifies , s i ' I r y r s "v j . y -a . S JV' -- t 7 J I i f (NEA Ttleohoto) Lou Kaplan, organizer for the United Electrical Workers (CIO), as he appeared before House Labor Subcommittee to testify on picket line violence at Unlvls Lens Co. in Dayton; Ohio. Kaplan charged that Governor Herbert (Ohio) was working in the interest of management man-agement when he sent National Guardsmen to the scene of the strike. 100 Years Ago (Continuing the Journal of Iliia Lyman, in Salt Lake Valley) May 7, 1849 Spent the day with Mother Shepherd. She gave 'me some tea for mother.' I bought some soap and cotton cloth, for which I am to sew. In the evening I went to Cornelia Lyman's (probably another wife of Amasa Lyman, Eliza's husband.) Heard from home (Eliza is in Cottonwood Cotton-wood at this time). Learned that my sister Caroline had . taken a school about ten miles north of us, because she .has nothing -to eat at home, and is under the necessity of doing something as there is nothing to be bought al though we have money to pay fori flour if there was any. (In March of this year, John Van Cott sold; a peck of potatoes in Salt Lake City for five dollars, which was considered cheap). Tues., May 8 Maria Louisa, daughter , of Amasa and Maria Lyman,, was born. May 10 Attended a sewing party at Mrs. Hakes. Brother Erastus Snow happened along and took dinner with us. May 12 Visited at Sister Crosby's. Cros-by's. She gave me some nice stuff to make my boy a cap. May 13 Went home in Bro. Flake's carriage. Found my sister Caroline there, but returning to her school in the evening. I have got my sister Lydia to stay with me till I can do better, or some other way. (No further explanation explan-ation of this situation). May 14 Washed, and lent Dimmick B. Huntington the spyglass, spy-glass, by Brigham Young's order. May 16 Visited at Wm. Walker's Walk-er's with my sister, Emily (Young) and Louise Young, and Sarah Ann and Lucy Kimball, also Presidents Yougg and Kimball. May 18 Cut and made a pair of pants for J. Holmes. Stayed at mother's all night. Came home next day but the wind blew so cold and hard that I went back to mothers. (Eliza is living in a wagon). May 19 Our tent burned down while I was away. Burned my rocking chair. (To be continued). To Head Hungary t; - Sell Home to Pay For 'Blue Baby' Operation Costs LA GRANGE, Ind., Aug. 7 (U.R) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Campbell said today they will sell, their home to pay for their small daughter's "blue baby" operation, They .will take two-year-old Judy to Chicago next month for the operation, the Campbells said. A specialist has said the child will live only two years unless she undergoes the surgery. Utah Plane Crash Survivor Sues LOS ANGELES, Aug. 7 (U.R) Mrs. Rosemary F. Preeg today charged in a $100,230 damage suit against Slick Airways, Inc., that the palne in which her husband, Herbert, died was ''negligently operated." Preeg, aviation editor of the Los Angeles Daily News, and two crew-men flying the plane from Denver to Los Angeles were kiled when the plane crashed into the Blue Bell Knoll mountains of Utah last Aug. 21. A 1 TYPEWRITER CO. T. E. O'NEIL'mGR. 265 West Center Provo, Utah t "Magic" la a ragwtarad trada-oaark of Royal TyvawrHar Co., lae. SIM G ai?9 Gm norms S'clj! Arpad Szakasits, approved by all parties, is scheduled to become president of Hungary. Szakasits, former deputy premier, will succeed suc-ceed Zoltan Tildy, who resigned when his son-in-law was ar rested on a charge of treason. The move is believed a Communist-inspired switch. CLEVER ALIBI LOS ANGELES, Aug. 7 (U.R) Howard Ledum, a 28-year-old la borer, was booked on suspicion of robbery yesterday after he attempted at-tempted to snatch $38 from a cage in a downtown branch of the California bank. "I thought the. money belonged belong-ed to anybody and all you had to do was reach in and take it," he told police. SUNDAY HERALD Sunday, August 8, 1948 Yiries Tal!(, French Expert Claims HOUSTON. Tex. (U.R If some of your favorite vintage French wine should talk back to you in the middle of the night, don't be upset. It's alive. That's straight from the shoul der of Henri Couvreur, 22-year- old Parisian who should know all about such things. M. Couvreur is a wine taster, and plans to make it his life work. ' In Houston on a tour of the United States, the dark-haired, smooth-featured Frenchman gave Police Identify Dead Bank Robber SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 7. (U.R) The- dignified bank robber who killed himself after an $8000 robbery of an Oakland bank Thursday, was- identified by police po-lice today as the "middle-aged gunman" responsible for several recent San Francisco holdups. The meek-appearing Isaac G. Fox, who grabbed an FBI agent's gun and shot himself through the head after his capture yesterday, was "credited" by San Francisco police with almost a dozen robberies. rob-beries. Fox has a wife and three children chil-dren living in Sacramentp, Cal., from whom he has been" separated separ-ated for more thsn 10 years. His police record also listed a prison term in Tennessee for bank robbery, a Florida grand larceny conviction, and a term in Pennsylvania for theft. U. S. navy regulations require that battleships be named for states, cruisers for cities, and big navy tugs for Indian tribes. Workers Sued For 'Slow Down' PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 7. (U.R) Coos Bay, Ore., waterfront workers and their wives faced $45,000 damage suit today file by five steamship companies. A "slow down" in loading and unloading at Coos Bay by local 1Z of the International Ixmg shoremen and Warehousemen's local was charged by the com panies. . The wives were mentioned, company attorneys said, because of Oregon's community property law. It was the second suit pf this type filed against wives and workers within the past 30 days out. a few startling points about wines, including the fact that wines "breathe." "Wine is a living thing, you know," Couvreur observed as he sipped a glass of Bordeaux. "It must be treated as if it were alive." That attitude, he explained, ia one reason the French people have won international acclaim for the delicate flavor they get into their beverages. Although Couvreur has only been at his work four years, hit family has produced French wines for generations. So, even though he is a beginner,. Henri feels qualified to lay down a few points that the. average 'wine- drinker never pondered: 1. Wine should not be agitated. because it needs to rest and gather gath-er strength. 2. Wine bottles should be turned turn-ed on their sides so that the win touches the cork.- Wine "breathes" through the cork. 3. Wine must never be heated,, but must be kept cool and quiet. 4. The oldest wine is not always al-ways the best. 5. The quality of wine is also based on the length of time it is allowed to remain in vats before it is bottled. The true skill of any wine taster, Couvreur added, comes in determining whether wine is ready for bottling. But it's really very simple. All you neea is a cooperative wine-one wine-one that will answer you, he explained. ex-plained. "Every two weeks,, the wine tasters go down to the vats in the cellar," Couvreur said. 'They taste the wine in every vat. Then they ask the wine, 'How old are you? Are you ready to be bottled?' bottl-ed?' " Texan Recovers His Lost Shoes BUHL, Aug. 7. (U.R) As Bryan W. Morris, Corpus Christ!, Tex., passed through Buhl last month, his shoes fell out of his automobile. automo-bile. He did not discover they were' missing until he stopped at Baker Ore. But a letter to the Buhl chamber cham-ber of' commerce brought results. re-sults. The chamber recovered th shoes and mailed them to h uncollect. un-collect. i, mm-tmim r A STIR I IHE new Easy Spindlier solves your rinse problem ooce and for all! Fresh rinse water surges up through the hollow cone, needle-spraying the entire load! At the sane time the whirling basket spins off mil the suds and scum. No hoc water Is wasted because you cotv trot the tap from start to finish. It's faster! Two tubs work at once to do your week's wash in less than en hour. One tub washes s full load while the other super-rinses end spins full load damp-dry. No wringer! No laborious wringer feeding. Instead, your Spindrier whirls out up to 2$ more water so clothes dry faster indoors and out! Compare m oft and you'll agree Easy gives you more than any washer at any prkel .aaaaa-aaUaaaaaaiaLa. I 'j unntzs ' 120 West Center J company . Phone v920 ooo ill .-SSfou TJnvA1 W y -5 rM- i V;A (r-: !v-v! 1st A . riy q kPfo-fo - t . r.j f W -LT Liu t . y J u '7 . . - , :' Yet, tHere's Rvtr iy ftrworV fa gasworkl The new Universal Gas Range incorporatei all the. features that you've demanded to make your cooking look bet;, ter, taste better. To bring out the best in food, use gas . . . and the best in gas ranges, is the Untvebsal! VMore Econoakd to OperciJi - , iCoek food Ovkktr, BtttcV R i c I TUMI Up 120 West Center compnnv Phone 920 7 |