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Show Friday, September 24, 1948 DAILY HERALD Rites Set For Man Killed in Action Oh Leyte in '44, MT.' PLEASANT Graveside .services will be held here Sunday Sun-day at 3 p. m. for SSgt. Frank Ruesch, Jr., who was killed in action Dec. 14, 1944 on Leyte island. The young man was born in Mt. Pleasant Aug. 30, 1910. He was a graduate of North Sanpete San-pete high school and later attended at-tended the National school of practical training in Los Angeles. He enlisted in Co. D, Utah National Na-tional Guard and left for San Louis Obispo, Mar. 3, 1941, later going to Fort Lewis, Wash. In 1942 he enlisted in the paratroopers para-troopers and trained in North Carolina and Georgia. He served as an instructor until 1944. He was in New Guinea with the 11th Air Borne division for seven months, until the time of his death. i Survivors include Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ruesch, parents; three sisters, sis-ters, Mrs. Althea R. Perry, Thistle; Mrs. Virginia R, Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, Moroni; Mrs. Luise R. Rees of Wales; three brothers. Bert, Donald and Davis Ruesch of Mt. Pleasant. Military honors will be 0under the direction of the H. Merville Zabriskie Post No. 4, American Legion, with Col. Ernest G. Brun-ger Brun-ger in command. Friends may call at the family home Saturday afternoon and early Sunday. Bishop Arnold Stevens of Mt. Pleasant North ward LDS church will be in charge of services. Burial is under direction of Ursenbach funeral home. 11 Bodies Found From 5-Year Crash EDMONTON, AHa., Sept. 24 (UB Canadian and American officials of-ficials prepared today to bring out the bodies of 11 men killed in the wilderness when their military mili-tary transport plane crashed -on Mt Stalin more than five years ago. " Authorities also were investigating investi-gating "rumors" that a $300,000 fortune in currency and gold bullion was scattered around the wreckage . of the C-47 Dakota transport. Col. M., T. Brady, U. S. air force ' liaison officer at Edmonton, Edmon-ton, said U. S. and Canadian air force officers and British Columbia Colum-bia provincial police had reached the wreckage and were preparing a report , ' A party of Oregon hunters found the plane Wednesday in an isolated mountain country of northern British .Columbia, about ZOO miles north of Fort St. John, B. C. It presumably was' a C-47 that disappeared on a wartime flight from British Columbia to Yukon territory. ""At the time, the plane was said to be carrying $240,000 in currency cur-rency and 500 pounds of gold bullion bul-lion to pay U. S. army troops in Alaska. However, U. S. officials of-ficials refused to confirm the report. re-port. They said they were "investigating." ALIENS ENTER WITH UN CREDENTIALS, CLAIM WASHINGTON. Sept. 24 OJ.R) A high-ranking state department official said today there was "ample "am-ple factual basis" for his charge that several hundred subversive aliens had entered the United States under United Nations credentials. FSIIs dJeD 3dDs 0g3 Tonight If your head is so congested and stuff ed-up with a cold that you can get to sleep put s few drops of Vlcks Va-tro-nol in each nostril. Instantly youTl feel your stuffy note tart to open up. For Va-tro-nol's tpeciaUted medication works right tohert troubl U to relievo such congestion. con-gestion. It makes breathing easier. It Invites restful sleep. Try It Oet Vicks Va-tro-nol Nose Drops! (Adv.) Rites Slated For Elizabeth W. Booth Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth Eliza-beth Warren Booth, .74, well-known well-known Provd-matron and widow of Heber Thomas Booth, Provo contractor, will be held Monday at 1:30 p. m. in the Berg mort-u mort-u a r y drawing room chapel by R. Bliss Allred, bishop, . Pleasant Pleas-ant View ward. Mrs. Booth died Thursday of a heart ailment ail-ment at the residence of a daughter, Mrs. A 1 1 a Allred, Pleasant View. Friends may call at the Berg Inventories Of Steel Users Still Scant, Says Iron Age NEW YORK, Sept 24 Some items mide from steel may be easier tp get than they were a year ago.. But no general conclu- Crossley Poll (Continued from Page One) Mrs. Booth mortuary Sunday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Monday prior to services. Burial will be in Provo city burial bur-ial park. Mrs. Booth was born in Lancaster, Lan-caster, Durham county, England, May 27, 1874, a daughter of William Wil-liam and Elizabeth Trathen Warren. War-ren. She recived -her education in Lancaster schools and came to Provo four months prior to her marriage to Mr. Booth, April 7, 1898, in the Salt Lake LDS tem- 45 - 40; each of the following: follow-ing: New 'Hampshire, Connecticut, Connecti-cut, Ohia, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Mich-igan, Wisconsin, Iowa, North Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Wyoming, Wyo-ming, Washington, California. Twenty to 30 points apart, 61 electoral votes Dewey 60 -65 , and Truman 40 - 35; each of the following! New Jersey, Jer-sey, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Da-kota, Oregon. Thirty to 40 points apart. 8 electoral votes Dewey 60 - 70 and Truman 35 - 30; each of the following: Maine and Vermont. Absence from 'this list, of course, does not mean that tne state is likely to go to Truman. Some of the remaining states are established for Truman, some for Thurmond. The balance are piv otal i.e., less than ten points apart. Some of them may later be established for Truman, some for Dewey. New York,, for example, is considered pivotal on the Dewey side -for the present because be-cause Dewey is less than ten points ahead of Truman. Dewey's heavy lead in these twenty states is partly because the vote for other parties has cut into the Truman Tru-man vote. In addition, his lead represents a shift of previous Democrats to the Republican presidential candidate, can-didate, and also It means that many Democrats may stay home. Only one of the mountain states seems fafrly certain for Dewey. Generally, the northern farm belt is definite and so is the central section, but Missouri is not on the list, and Minnesota Minne-sota does not quite reach 55 per cent. In the east the fixed states do not include Massachusetts, Rhode Island or New York. A forthcoming article will review re-view the situation in less certain states in detail. be Rites Scheduled For Dr. Stewart PAYSON -Funeral services for drawn from this! Dr. L. D. Stewart, prominent pie. Mr. Booth died in Provo July 12. 1927. She was a member of Provo Fifth ward where she was a Relief Re-lief society worker and a primary teacher for many years. Survivors include two sons and two daughters. Albert W: Booth and Mrs. Alta Allred both of Pleasant View; Floyd W. Booth. Provo. and Mrs. Bessie Davis, Salt Lake City; eight grandchildren, a brother, Alfred Warren, Salt Lake City. sions can condition, according to The Iron Age, national metalworking weekly. Appliance sales have been used to show that the steel picture may be changing. It isn't. The growth if any in steel inventories in-ventories is negligible. Slackening of sales for certain types of home appliances when put in terms of steel tonnage is unimpressive. Steel users are a long way from having what they consider to be normal inventories. For the past three years it has been repeatedly hoped that things would ease. They haven't. And they won't from an overall standpoint, stand-point, as long as the demand from manufacturers continues as it is this week. Four reliable indicators prove at present that steel inventories are not heavy. These yardsticks are: (1) Nerve wracking pressure pres-sure on steel salesmen by consumers. con-sumers. (2) heavy and unsatisfied demand for ingot molds for con- version deals, (3) strong gray market in pipe and flat rolled steel products and (4) no significant signifi-cant drop in employment in industrial in-dustrial circles. Add to this hard earned cash being spent by steel companies com-panies to increase production. It seemed this week that no matter what action had been taken to increase steel production pro-duction demand had kept pace, so that no headway was visible. . Some headway has been made. But It Is slow business. Soft tendencies In one channel are offset by hard spots in others. ' Sheet steel inventories are no bettertoday than they were six months ago. A company may have had three or four days' supply last January. Today they might have six to eight days. This is a long way from a working balance in material supplies. The threat of channeling more steel for essential, es-sential, or voluntary allocation purposes is more than a possibility. possi-bility. It is a stark fact that keeps the regular, normal steel user in a constant state of anxiety let someone else get more than he does. Payson physician and civic leader lead-er who died Wednesday night, will be conducted Sunday at 2 p. m. in the Payson Third LDS ward chapel by Abner Baird, bishop. , Burial will be in the Payson city cemetery under the. direction direc-tion of the Fairbanks mortuary. Reese C. Lewis GOSHEN--Funeral services ox Keese u. Lewis, v, meume resident resi-dent of Goshen, who died in a Salt Lake hospital Tuesday will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. in Goshen. Friends may call at the home of Mrs. Meda Woodard, hla daughter, Sunday from 10 a. m. until time of services. Burial will be in Goshen cemetery under the direction of Claudin funeral home, Payson. He was born April 25, 1874, a son of Rufus and Ann Llewelyn Lewis. He was a fanner and livestock live-stock man and a member of the LDS church. He married Clara Jobb in Provo June 15, 1898. She died 25 years ago. Since that time he had lived with a daughter, Mrs. Meda Woodard, Goshen. Surviving, in addition to Mrs. Woodard, are another daughter, Mrs. Blanche Kay Goshen; four grandchildren a brother, T. J. Lewis, Provo; two sisters, Miss Nettie Lewis and Mrs. Mary Jas-person, Jas-person, Goshen. SCREEN ACTOR WARREN WILLIAM DIES HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 24 OJ.R) Screen Star Warren William, suave leading man of the 30's, died today of influenza complicated compli-cated by a blood disease. Truman Hits (Continued from Page One) cans, saying they were operating for "big business first" by turning turn-ing down his program for housing, hous-ing, control of high prices and expansion ex-pansion of the social security program pro-gram to include a broad national health program. Mr. Truman conceded thai there are "some people with true liberal convictions whose worry over the state of the world has caused them to lean toward ; a third party." "To these liberals, I would say in all sincerity: Think again." The president emphasized "think again" by slowine his usual machine-gun delivery to' pound this phrase home slowly. Commerce Heads To Visit Utah Representatives of the U. S. Department of Commerce and the U. S. Chamber of Commerce will attend a meeting of ownej-s of retail- stores in the Provo area, slated for the second week in November under the sponsorship of the Utah Council of Retailers. Clayton Jenkins, secretary-manager secretary-manager of the Provo chamber cham-ber and a member of the board of ' directors of the council, said the meeting is one of three to be sponsored during the week by the council. coun-cil. Other meetings are sched-.uled sched-.uled for Salt Lake City and Of den, he said. The exact date and place of the Provo meeting, which also will be attended by prominent retailers retail-ers throughout the state, will be announced later, Mr. Jenkins said. Main purpose of the meeting, Mr. Jenkins added, is to show the value and place " of retailing in the American economy and free enterprise system. The decision to hold the meet ings was reached Thursday at a meeting of the council, held in Salt Lake City. John" A. Anderson, Heber, was elected president of the organization organiza-tion at the meeting. Other officers of-ficers elected included James M. Armstrong, vice president; Wes ton E. Hamilton, secretary-treas urer; and Jennings Phillips Jr., Ellas Strong and George L. Nel son, of Salt Lake City. William Homer, oi Ugden, John Miller of Springville, Ezra Owens of Brig-ham Brig-ham City, and Ms. Jenkins, di rectors. At Its meeting the council went on record as strongly opposing the further extension exten-sion of city franchise taxes, I terming them , "discriminatory.- Mr. Anderson said the exten sion was opposed on the ground that the franchise tax is levied on business but is "indirectly paid by the consumer." The council also went on record as favoring repeal of all wartime excise taxes. They further voted in favor of the charge-back system sys-tem in the Unemployment Compensation Com-pensation Act. Russ Reject (Continued from Page One) Smith and Bevln's personal secretary, Frank Roberts. A demand to outlaw war among UN members was made by the chief Burmese delegate, Maung Ohn. In effect it was a revival of the principle of the Kellogg Briand pact after the First World War, which failed In Ita object ive. UTAH TO FURNISH 51 DRAFTEES IN NOVEMBER SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 24 (U.R) Utah will draw its quota of 51 draftees in the November draft from among 7,489 eligible young men who have signed up for the draft. BriB. Gen. J. Wallace West, head of the selective service for the state, said this sroup Included only men who wen unmarried, and non-veterans. TRuling Permits Absentee Voting SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 24 U. . A fear that ballots wouldn't be' printed in time for absentee voting vot-ing was allayed today when the attorney general's office announced announc-ed that ballots can be printed without actually placing th names of all candidates on them. The ruling stated that the emblems em-blems of minority parties may bo placed on the ballots, with blanks left for the names of the candidates. candi-dates. Thus, the ballots can actually act-ually be printed before minority parties file a complete list of can-' didates. . Under this ruling, voters can either vote a straight minority party ticket, or else write in the names of their candidates. "TV Washers Come and Go . . . . . but NONE have ever equalled FOR SOUND PERFORMANCE WORKMANSHIP AND VALUE! Over 5 million Maytags sold- far more . than any other washer Convenient Terms Model E2L Features: Square Cas,t Aluminum Tub, Sediment Trap, Adjustable Height, Oversize Balloon Wringer Rolls, Hinged Lid and the Finest Safety Features Remember Your Maytag is Built to Last. See Maytag in Provo at Utah Appliance Co. 32 East First North PHONE 2378 Taylor's 250 West Center PHONE 25 THRIFTWAY STORES BIG GIVE AWAY SALE! STILL IN PROGRESS SATURDAY SPECIAL! 10c BOXES XMAS ICICLES 6c Box Buy 'Em By The Dozen 7 SATURDAY SPECIAL! 10c Xmas Wrapping Paper PAPER 4c Each Buy 'Em By The . 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Salt Lake City Under appointment from Pepsi-Cola Company, New York TOMORROW, SAT. 25th 11 a. m. by Mendelssohn Chorus Ladies MAIN FLOOR TAYLOR'S not just white mhlrtt ... but -ii(B8 ,) tow i Van Heusen's own testing laboratory checked the high quality of these shirts from raw yarn to finished product. That's why we're proud to offer them. Smooth broadcloth -rich oxfordsdistinguished oxfordsdistin-guished by Van Heusen sewmanship. In many new low-setting collar models.. k IF o ) s STORES Values Values i . |