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Show v f Elliott RcosevelJ Rsdio Firm; Assets W13aiNGT6NbeLf. June 15 UJ9 BrlgJ,, Gen." Elliott Roosevelt received a total of $33,438 In 1841 fa the distribution of. assets' of the Transcontinental Broadcasting System, Inc when it ? waa liquid ated it was disclosed today. Records filed, in Delaware chancery court showed! Roosevelt arm thm tarmct atAt1rhfl1df -In -the company, formed as a Delaware corporation in 1939 and placed in receivership year later. Accord ing to the records, he held 4,000 of the outstanding 10,000 shares of ciass .A, no-par siock.. When thft assets of the company were turned into cash, the records revealed, approximately $70,000 was available for pro-rata distribution. dis-tribution. The court records show-' ed Elliott Roosevelt received -$23,-488 in March, 1941 shortly after the court approved the initial distribution dis-tribution of assets to stockholders. Six months later Elliott received $7,852 additional. Court-appointed . receivers. Har ry Stehman, Pittsburgh and Daniel. F.-Wolcdtt, Wilmington attorney, reported that a total of $33.598 -of the-$94,443 available for 1 distribution when the firm's assets were turned into cash, was sent -to 19 stockholders. A New York law firm. Breed, Abbott and Morgan, received $5,000 fat fees. The' rest was in attorney's fees, The records revealed that fclliot Roosevelt was not included among petitioners for the receivership. A published report that a $4,000 settlement was arranged on a $200,000. loan Roosevelt received in 1939 from John Hartford, president presi-dent of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., was described last Tuesday asj "substantially correct" by Hartford. According to xn report tne loan was made to finance Elliott's radio interests in Texas. BOULTON LIBERATED . Cpl, Thomas R. Boulton, son of Thomas Boulton of Route : 1, Provo, is among recently liberated liber-ated prisoners of war in Europe, according to a release from the war department CpL Boulton was ; interned In a German camp before his release by American troops. A. F. MAN LIBERATED ' Sgt Glen A. Phillip?, son qI Kenneth G. Phillips, of 7' Merchant Merch-ant street, American Fork is reported re-ported to have been liberated from a Nazi prisoner of war camp recently by American forces,; according ac-cording to a war department release re-lease received here todays -t v s' CsnnansFind tlis' Truth Is Painful 'I 'V 4 L M' . . ?qr- Because townspeople of Buratofurt.f Germany, showed presentment against British occupation forces. Allied Military Government authorities ordered them mtOJthe local movie .theater, as pictured pic-tured ut top, to see "Village of Hate, documentary film showing Xrerman atrocities at the notorious' noto-rious' Belsen' and Buchenwald murder camps. Below, women emerge from the theater, grim-faced, grim-faced, sflna weeping, after seeing the filmed horrors. HsenhayEr Sees t!o TroiiIi!a For 4-Pov;er"Ccfitrc! Promotion Won By Local Serviceman George R. Judd, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Riley Judd of 230 North First East, has been promoted from the rank of corporal to that of sergeant with the U. S. army, according to word received from the Fort Sumner, New Mexico, public relations office. Sgt Judd entered the army in August 1942,. and has been training train-ing at camps over the United States during ithe past three years He is now stationed at Fort Sumner Sum-ner army air field as draftsman. A graduate of Nephi high school, the sergeant spent two years at the Agricultural college in Logan, before his entry into the air corps. His wife is the former Dorothy Robinson, and baby daughter, Ge gla Ann, are witn mm in New Mexico. A brother, Pfc. Kenneth R. Judd, now in England is also con- nected with the Eighth air force.. He has been in service two years. His wife, Mrs. Beth Judd, re sides in Richfield. a A large maple tree has a half- acre of leaf surface, and will manufacture about 350O pounds oz plant lood in a season. 7 HVPEAACD j DISTRESS , You. must get fast, effective relief with TEBSIN from miserable discomfort, or your monjNback. Get free Information Infor-mation on TEBSIN Powder or Tablets, in Provo at WALGREEN DRUG STORE thirst Settlement in Idaho Observes Pioneer Day Fete FRANKLIN, Ida.. June IS (U.R) Idaho, has a challenge to move aneaa ana ouua a prosperous ana progressive, state, for returning servicemen and ' women, Gov. Charles Gossett said today at the pioneer1 celebration Aere. Traditionally, the Idaho gover-nj5F gover-nj5F speaks at the annual Pioneer day celebration at Franklin, oldest old-est permanent settlement in the Gem state w "Vast resources lie untouched at the present time," said Gossett, "Only waiting to ad their portion to the riches of Idaho. Are we going to meet the challenge or are we going to drop Behind and ai low our more ambitious neigh boriria states to forge ahead leav ing' Jus plodding along in their enterprise: He pointed out that Franklin was the second Mormon settle ment in Idaho, being founded in ibou ttne zirsi was in iemni valley val-ley in central Idaho, later aban doned), and that irrigation was brought in from Utah. Joseph Wirthlin of Salt Lake City was present and spoke as a representative of the LDS church. The celebration included con certs by" the Preston and Fort Douglas military bands and a soft- ball game between gin s teams from Salt Lake City and Preston. PLANT CORN IN MOONLIGHT KOKOMO. Ind. (U.R) Howard county farmers, taking advantage of the brilliant moonlight in recent re-cent weeks, planted their corn an plowed their fields at night. The farmers quit their planting during the period between dusk and the rise of the moon, and then worked into the early morning hours to j heavy rains. Seabed Returns After 20 Months Nile R. Johnson, carpenter's mate 3c, of Qrem, is at home after more than 20 months in the Pacific, according to a pub lic relations release from the navy department ioe navy oeaDee was one oi 1400 to arrive recently from Guam, where seven construction battalions are stationed. Seebee Johnson and his com panions said that their worst problem on tiny Pacific islands was that of clearing areas adja cent to camps and recreation cen ters of Jap snipers. Every battalion bat-talion on Guam reported some casualties from' sniper bullets. An amusing incident aboard the big naval transport on which Mr. Johnson arrived, occurred when the men lined the rails of the ship for their first glimpse of San Francisco, in almost two years. One naval construction worker was heard to say, "Heck, men, there's no use of our stopping here. Looks like another seabee outfit has landed and built the place already." ' By BRUCE W. MUNN . V,, United i Press Staff Correspondent PARIS. June IS (UJD .Gen. rDwight D. Eisenhower -said to day ha la continent -the -four- power council. zor Germany will be successful and tat relations with Russia will be conducted on a friendly, basis of understanding. Tnesucreme allied commander held a press conference here oh the eve of his triumphal return UK-xne united states. "On my level I found the Indl-viduaLRussian Indl-viduaLRussian the friendliest person per-son in the world." - Elsenhower said. "He likes to- talk and laugh wiuj us. ne uxes us .as allies ana is. darned clad to seexusxl'talked with, the British and they feel the same way. j" . , Elsenhower, told newsmen flat ly that the complete destruction ox German ciuea by bombing had oeen enureiy lustuiedwr .j-- i fisennower wasi tanned and looking fit He wore a battlejacket with, the; left breast ablaze with campaign ribbons and decorations. "Feace lies with au peoples not with political leaders who may oe trying to direct the des tiny of ' peoples along this : line or that" ne said in typically outspoken out-spoken style. i Asked if he were looking for ward to returning to his home town, Abilene, Kans., -Eisenhower answered: "You bet But when I think of facing the 'first five days' schedule in the united States I do it with fear and trembling." " DEATH PROBED MOUNTAIN HOME. Ida.f June is oi.R) a board of army officers at the Mountain Home air base are investigating .the death of Pvt Andy J. Henderson, 23, who died yesterday as result of an acci dental gunshot wound. Henderson is the son of Mr; and Mrs. I Grant A. Henderson of Sharon Sorinas. Kan. He was in jured on the base about noon and died in the field hospital four hours fater. Heads Church A Two Hotels Pay For Overcharges In settlement for overcharges in rates, based on audits, two Salt-Lake Salt-Lake hotels made voluntary pay- Sents to the U. S. treasury totalis total-is $1,100, Merrill C. Faux, district dis-trict enforcement attorney, office of price administration, disclosed today. -Wilson hotel, 32 EasJ Second South, made - contribution of $1000, and the Elk hotel, 44 East Second South, paid $100 to the treasury and refunds to tenants totaling $40. Pellet-Piercer: -'1 id " in-vwwmi nil i niT Three months irtth an AWOL sol die- in wilds of Washington staU were enough for Mary Jane Young, It, who surrendered to Kent police on burglary charges. One deputy sheriff almost got them, and his shotgun blast caught Mary Jane Her soldier friend dug the pellets out ox her legs with a hunting Knlxe, the said, but some still remain In her back. Latest estimate of the number of stars in the Milky Way is 170,000,000,000. DAILY HERALD. ""ffjnSteTi. PAGE S Soldjci Loses: 3tegsinVar RICHMOND, Va- June 15 WJD- Tha legs of j;M-Sgt Boberjfc E. Scott, of New Orleans, La4must hold a fatal Attraction for Japanese Jap-anese bullets. The 38-year-old soldier has lost three legs in Pacific combat and is back in the states because he -has run out of .legs." Only one of . those, legs was actually his . own. The other two were , artificial, he explained. Scott is now at McGuire general hospital here being fitted for bis third artificial limb. Wounded in his right leg during J. B-17 bomber battle with a Jap ubmarine near Christmas island in 1842, Scott lost his original leg by amputation. After returning to the statesj for an artificial leg and a spare, he got an overseas assignment assign-ment as! ja flight engineer and inspector in-spector with tB-29's based in the Marianas. ! ' ' During a bombing flight against the Japanese homeland, Scott lost leg No. 2 when zeros attacked the B-29 and landed several machine-gun machine-gun bullets in his artificial leg? , "All I had left were splinters," he said, "So I did- the only thing left to do. I broke out with my spare leg." ' jj ' However, Scott related, the Japs had still another go against his legs. The spare was destroyed by another. : machineaun bullet during another bdmbina mission over Japan. Scott believes- he isf the only American GI to return to combat with an artificial leg. Caltler can, 'contract pulmonary tuberculosis ; from humans, who have the bovine type of the disease. dis-ease. The Federal Bureau- of Ani mal. Industry cites a case, where f our herdsof cattle were infected by one person. . . - Ccfcrc the CwCi: f:7 KHcn Hoofs, C:t rt",0,"""1 , . :... i I 0 ii 5.JO 1 AU Materials . All Labor Felly ' GUARANTEED HsresloaftodBgrfm wuj&ctJ Mphalt hiagi toot tt Stan wviurwunmui tt' FA N PrhtMn Ntnttd JustPhona 411 Buy an Sean Easy Payment Plan. . or on F JUL Terms W West Center New head of the nation's Chris-' tian Scientists is Mrs. Myrtle Holm Smith, above, of Waban, Mass., chosen,, president of the Mother Church at a recent meeting' in Boston of the First Church? of Christ (Scientist). She is chairman of Christian Science War Relief Committee. to: ;HGHTatO:COP.V.i.on 570 On Your Dial UOTA Jllllll mi 0! 0j m Bam TosJgki radio history win be marel iru wHltrave) to Europe tonight To EiSflfTirE&aTtSf five long years, millions of people lived Ja otter, darkness, in constant fear, in stifling silence.. You will bear how, little by little, the silence was shattered '. . . bow tiny beams of courage cour-age and hope drove , their way into the black horror. Thaw tnqr beams wen human voicca . . . free voices . . . giving precious pre-cious information to enslaved, freedom-loving people by radio. You will hear these voices tonight, broadcasting ; just as they did when it meant certain death to be caught! You will hear, too, how radio met the challenge of. total War here on -the home front thrilling true stories of how it became the Weapon of Decision that helped make the world's greatest fighting force out of the democracy that Hitler called decadent . . . and how it ' brought us within three seconds of our men in $e foxholes, v The philosophy that radio is a free Weapon cf Deeieion for the American People has been applied here in America for the past thres years. And it has been approved by you, the people. It has been applied by Amer- Ka's youngest network the Blue Network which was bora during and matured by our country's greatest struggle. Out of our experience during these tumultuous war years, , we developed de-veloped a whole new concept of radio. One of the foundations of this new concept vas "freedom of the air." We picked news men and commentators with experience and a aenee of responsibility and then let them have their say on the air. We set. a policy of reviewing their scripts only for good taste and for competent news authority not for censorship, because we believe that no man in this or any other network is wise enough to know what the public ought, or ought not, hear. ' Why did we take this unprecedented step? Because we trust America.-Experience America.-Experience has proved that, if you; the American people, peo-ple, are given all the facts, you wul make sound deci- . ..? ft jV Tonight's program marks a great event in the development of our young network. Today, we change our name front the Blue Network to one that we feel more truly expresses the reason for. our existence. From this day forward, your radio will say "This is the American Broadcasting Company: es oj s? a Exclusive Outlet for Utah and Idaho American Broadcasting Company tlGLV illliiiiiiiliii 1 3 - mmmxm T R U -GK TIRES No other tire, regardless of brand name or price, is made of finer synthetic rubber. 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