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Show ' r e ftBwjUtt. awa. nw November DESERET NEWS, Monday, 4, 1968 event mate. presidential election will be settled In the Electoral Col lege and not by the House of They may have to rnelx n deal to support me, Wallace said in a television interview. Representatives. Wallace planned to wind up his campaign today with a rally at the Georgia capitol. Gov. Lester Maddox has predicted Wallace will get 43 to 53 per cent of the Georgia vote. however, emphasized, that he has made no agreement to support either Republican candidate Richard M. Nixon or Democratic nominee Hubert H. Humphrey in the more effective Legislature will do a better job for you an electoral stale- ATLANTA (UPI) George Wallace predicted Sunday the He you a a Legislature which Jaasa6MNdEwMa a, flu of 1 5 cents per year per citizen STRENGTHEN YOUR VOICE in Vote FOR X No. industrial states. neither he, If, however, Nixon nor Humphrey receives the required majority of 270 electoral votes Tuesday, Wallace said, "It is my opinion that it will be settled in the Electoral College and wont go to the House. EXTEND FREEPOST Utahs Government 1 Wallace forecast a winning vote for himself on the basis of electoral votes from Southern and border states combined with three of four large The Electoral College convenes in December to ballot for presidential and vice pres- - and at a cost of only R iSUr. WSTHwtr and No. 2 Taid by Uuhn'i FOR Propoiitiont No. I and No. 2 Gut P. Bdckman. Chairman Neal A. Maxwell, Vice Chairman It ,) didate receives a majority, the House meeting In January, will decide the presidential contest and the Senate the vice presidential race. When pressed for his reaction to an electoral deadlock, Wallace said that whoever the president is becomes going to have to promise the American people what we if it have promised them happens to be somebody besides me. These promises, said the American Independent Party jandidate, are to restore pow ers to local government, "stop the little man to taxing death, stop the breakdown in law and order, put off foreign aid to nations that refuse to help the United States in Vietnam, crack down on American citizens giving aid to the Viet Cong, and make certain is the the United States worlds Cm strongest military power. QuoMiajco wm L. ALLEN COLLIER JOSEPH E. ALLEN RAY M. BOYACK DELBERT BRYSON HAZEL G. BERTAGNOLE EARL M. BAKER BROWER ' GEORGE B. BOYACK JAMES L. BARKER, JR. EARL L. CHRISTISON KENNETH A. CARLSON NORMA CHAFFOS J.BEVIN CHAMBERLAIN LEONA F. COX W. LOWELL CASTLETON NILDA ru XT S $ ,v : '' 'se if" v - '$ k-- v , compared with the results of the Sindlinger Survey last Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday bethe! fore Johnson announced bombing halt. Nixon dropped 2.6 per cent and third party candidate George C. Wallace gained 2.3 per cent. The replies by percentage, compared with the two previous Sindlinger polls were: G. D0K0S DORIUS GLEN T. DIXON PHIL W. DERN W. STERLING EVANS WILLIAM MARCELLA J. FACER EVA FRAKES ELDEN i Nov. Oct. JOEFAKLER GLENN L. GLINE3 11.0 16.4 33.5 1.2 6.3 10. FLORENCE GLASER GRIFFITHS -A. L. GRIMM DIETRICH K. GEHMLICH GLEN H. HANSON T. R. HIGHAM GEORGE HILTON BURTON HANSEN ALFRED HEWARD ELON S. HANSON McCOWAN E. HUNT OSCAR HANSON JR. RICHARD fj . JOHN 0. ANAHEIM, everal CALIF. A m Distinguished Utahn As Secretary of State 36 8 33.6 12 3.2 12.9 Democrat . Family man 8 children Businessman. leader Civic with (AP) cars slow-movin- g 364-561- Re-Ele- ct 4 t Pioneer heritage Cast a strong vote -S- Re-ele- . of the , ct SECRETARY OF STATE People-Movean elevated train at Disneyland, rammed together Sunday night. Twenty-fiv- e persons were injured but appar- JONES . ently none seriously. . Pd W 'but . . 1 . ' Advwbswant byfrwndt of Clydt Mill Conrnttt. - R. M. MHtar ,i MIsosSimelsS RUSSELL H. MAGLEBY R.B. MCALLISTER CS2 (801) Disney Trains Ram ., LEE MOORE SOPHIA MORRIS REED G. NELSON CAROL PULLAN RALPH PUTMAN IRENE N. PARSON MARY PETERSON J. COLIN ROWELL Oct. NOTE: Airport Transfers are NOT INCLUDED Prie per person double occupancy. Add f 15.75 Single Occupancy Prices slightly higher Friday, Saturday and holidays. FOR RESERVATIONS, CALL YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR any certainty. J. REX MACKAY C. WARREN METCALF JACK McLELLAND GRAHAM R. MATHER :v:J Room, 2 nights One Specie! Complimentary Keno Ticket e One Gourmet Buffet Dinner Champagne Cocktail Hour Dally a Midnight Show with two Cocktails e Five $1.00 Free Play Chips e Lounge Entertainment, dancing til Dawn e Golf (Club included) e One Hacienda Flight Bag One Split of Hacienda Champagne v Portage (in and out of hotel) Gratuities and All Taxes o Luxurious n was too close to forecast CHARLES G. JONES x JERRY KELIGREEN GREGORIA KOROLOGOS ' ELAINE KOROLOGOS MILTON W. LINDQUIST . LANA LUNDBERG EUGENE C. LUDWIG DUANE H. LINFORD EDWIN E. LUCK DOROTHY T. MICHELSEN O tions in the South. Vietnamese "The North need a breather and are using cur election to get it, he said adding that he thought the timing of the halt was more than coincidence. Soon after he was tapped by Wallace as the American Independent party vice presidential 'candidate LeMay toured South Vietnam on a mission. He said he hopes President Johnson knows something concerning this bombing halt he did r.ot know previously. 12.3 market research firm in suburban Norwood, said the latest results showed that only three days before the election the Humphrey-Nixorace RUTH JAGER ATHENA n presi- - Sindlinger, HILL KEITH W. JOSEPH mers n ed by the 1,292 persons who said they intended casting presiden-- ! tial ballots Tuesday. Humphrey gained 0.8 per cent CAROLYN ' ROSSET, Wales tis LeMay, Wallaces running at a local Welsh .pub the on mate also appeared their version ot a have staged program. He said he was tavern an protest the prospessimistic about a sit-iat the, bar staged pects of the Vietnam bombing to laws which prevent portest to halt leading peace. 'pubs from opening on Sundays The port of Haiphong is in some Welsh counties. Despite operating at full capacity," the managers plea of time, customers LeMay said. Everything has gentlemen, please. been repaired that was de- remained seated in the tavern from closing time until early stroyed when we w'ere bombof about Sunday an "inn-iing there. ' . four hours. North Vietnam is preparing to step up Its military operations, LeMay said, and the bombing halt looks like another stalling tactic to allow C2 them to recover from opera- urday about their presidential preference. The slight fractional lead for Humphrey was indicat- BRENT A. DAYTON L. DIXON WILLIAM C. DUEHLMEIER v Sunday Closing PHILADELPHIA -(UPI) Hubert H. Humphrey has overtaken Richard M. Nixon and leads by 0.6 of a percentage point, according to a nationwide pell taken after President Johnson announced the Vietnam bombing halt. The results of the pell were released Sunday by the Sindlinger Daily Survey which said that 2,019 adult Americans had been questioned Friday and Sat- ARLINE E. ATKINSON Protests Inn-I- n fact-findin- g Humphrey Gains Lead Over Nixon WE SUPPORT A UNITED REPUBLICAN TEAM FOR THE SALT LAKE COUNTY COMMISSION ' - (UPI)-Cns-to- idential candidates. If no can- Retired Air Force Gen. Cur , ''? towjBeiairaers-- lection Won't Go To House' Propositions 1 and 2 will give " a? 5 " ' o , DR. W. TRUMAN RK5BEY PARKER ROBISON, JR. JOHN RENCHER GRACE E. REES cv a RANDALL MYRE A. STEVENS HAROLD WM. T. SOUTH FRANK L. SANDBERG FRANK SPRINGER MARJORIE DON L. MARION SCOn G STOH STEPHENSON JAMES M. SIPKERD EMAUNE SACKAS JEAN THURBER RALPH A. TRANE DONALD S. TINGLEY MAUREEN T0TLAN0 ROBERT E. TAYLOR new RAYS. TUCKER L. TURNER BYRON NED L. WRIGHT CHARLES WELCH, JR. HELEN WATSON LA RAE B. WINBURN Fd. for & for ly Citiscnt Bismquist-Kunt- , Wm. T. Sooth, ChrriR. -t :. s WWflWi iK 'i, y iirtliim raffiirnijiiioe jgCMuuiJuiuuiJiiiii f m 'Tl nriaiiriin wniiniTnifreiiiiBiiiii nPi.w |