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Show ft 8 fi THE DESERET NEWS Salt Lake City, Utah The Youngest Generation Chain Store Tax Subject Of Ad Club r J (AP) David Katsujl Nnnomiya, ily farmstead Tuesday evening when the child was run over by a family truck operated by the father and mother. The boy was born at Ogden March 12. 1938. Funeral will be Saturday Salt Lake Girl Reports. . share, where they found the room had been ransacked. Nothing was missing, they said. However, pinned on the pillow of Miss Adamsons bed was a note which read, Lou Dean, I hate and I will kill you If it is the , EscdpeFrom ThrownKnife A Salt Lake girl narrowly escaped death last night at about 11 p.m., when a kpife, thrown at her as she entered herjnothers darkened kitchen to wash the dishes, whizzed past her head and lodged in the moulding of the door, inches away. The girl, Lou Dean Adamson, 16, daughter of Mrs. David W. who runs a boarding' house at 616 South West Temple Street, became frightened and ran out to the front of the house and waited for her mother to return. Upon the return- - of Mrs. Adamson, the two entered " the house and went into the bedroom, which mother and daughter Adamson, double-cross-er- s last thing I do no matter where you go. Although police had no clues to identify the knife thrower, Mrs. Adamson suspects a former boarder, but could give no reason for the act. Clerk To Sign ij' Purchase Order The County Commission today authorized Vera Burton, secretary in the county purchasing agents office, Ur sign purchase orders until5 the appointment of a new purchasing agent. J. E. Wiscomb resigned as purchasing agent last week, ofstating purthat the small number chases made through the office did not justify the employment of a purchasing agent. Levy l Utahs proposed chain-stor- e Cense law was the subject of a luncheon meeting of the Salt Lake Advertising Club today in ; the Hotel Utah. Si 11- -. i u Speaker for the law was Sherman P. Lloyd, secretary manager of . Inc-- , while Delbert M. Draper, prominent Salt Lake attorney, poke against the law. Mr. Draper denounced the highly - controversial No. 2 law as a bill, fostered by a certain few competitors in an attempt to drive a certain few chain store companies out of the state. He ridiculed claims of the bills sponsors that it Is necessary as a control measure, asserting that it would hit only 123 of the more than 6,000 retail stores in the state, exempting chain oil stations, large chain systems made up of independent merchants, chains of less than 10 stores, all individual merchants and other competitors of the 123 stores affected. He said, "Some competitors dont like chain store competl- lion. They want to raise prices. Si death-dealin- price-raisin- f 4- - g - I? I? Li 'ey -- out of Utah, then the consumer will pay the bill In higher prices and a higher cost of living. Tjiat Is why No. 2 is a tax on you." Mr. Lloyd said that the single issue is whether individual enterprise is to be preserved, or whether It Is to be sacrificed to unlimited expansion of! the corporate chain-storsystem. "Most people have had time by now to analyze the facts, he and they realize this law said, will not raise the cost of living, nor will it cause any present chain stores to close. This bill will keep the chains at their present size and prevent individual oppression in Utah. The speakers were introduced by Richard T. Harris, president of the club- e Authors Club Will Meet Wednesday li A meeting of the Authors Club will be held next Wednesday, at 10:30 p.m.- - in the Lion House Social Center. -- Mrs. Hyrum Heckstrand on The Life of Abraham Lincoln, and Mrs. Joseph Wirthlin will render stories and speeches of that president. Miss Aurelia Bennion is president of wlll'-spea- - i the club. Church Notices CENTRAL PARK WARD The Central Park Ward Conference will be held Sunday, Oct 25, in the chapel at Twenty-seventSouth and Third East Streets under the direction of the South Salt Lake Stake Presidency. The Priesthood session is scheduled to begin at 9:15 a.m., and the is Sunday School Conference scheduled for 10:30 a.m., and Sacrament Services at 6:30 p.m. MCKINLEY WARD Elder Nephl Jensen will deliver his popular address Prophetic Light On The World's Dark Night, at j sacramental services Sunday evening at 6:30 oclock. The i is , If chapel is located at Patterson and Bichard Standifird and all other babies one year old today. Thomas Robert Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Thomas Patterson, 65 West Girard Avenue, and Richard Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Standifird, 2195 Hannibal Street. BABIES WERE flORN YESTERDAY IX S. L. HOSPITALS TO: Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smoot 1369 Princeton Avenue, boy. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Damjamovich, Midvale, girl, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Diamond, 339 East Second South Street, . boy. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Young, 1545 Redondo Avenue, girl. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene McPhee, 47 Gordon .Place, boy. South Street, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mallory, 1075 East Thirty-thirboy. Mr. and Mrs. George Carter, G arfield, boy. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert B. Gillespie, Spanish Fork, boy. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Leggronan, 732 West Second South Street, boy. Mr. and Mrs. Therle G. Ostler, Nephi, boy. Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Holbrook, Milford, girl. Mr. and. Mrs. Waldo L. Macey, 664 South West Temple Street, girl. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Arnett, 917 West Seventh South Street, boy. and Mrs. Dan Densley, 167 Ooeitz Avenue, girl, and Mrs. Frank Swaliow, 235 South Second East Street, boy. and Mrs. Ralph Astorga, 83 North Fourth West Street, boy. and Mrs. Jack McCarty, 239 South Eleventh East Street, girl. and Mrs R. E. Harris, Evanston, Wyo., girl. and Mrs, Hendershot, W oods Cross, boy. and Mrs. Edward Brown, 1974 Seggard Drive, girl. and Mrs Dean Simmons, Farmington, boy. in-- 1 vited. NIBLEY PARK WARD Elder Nephi Jenson will be the speaker at the meeting of the Nibley Park Ward MlA at the chapel, 2400 Sixth East Street, Tuesday, Oct 20, at 7:30 p.m. 1 Subject Of Article About Conditions A former Salt Laker and Deseret News Washington correspondent, Maj. Joseph Conrad Fehr, is the subject of a biographical sketch in a recent issue of the Ft. Worth (Texas) Star Journal., Major Fehr is well known in Salt Lake, where, as the article says, he was for years a newspaper, man and later became a special writer and author of several books. He Is a lawyer by. profession and says his writing is his inHe was edutellectual hobby. cated in Salt Lake City schools and later went to Washington, D. C., where he received his legal training, beginning practice in 1921. He was Washington correspondent for the Deseret News. He is a veteran of World War I and saw active service He has held various overseas. among government positions, which was special assistant to the attorney general and associate counsel for the United States beClaims fore the American-GermaArbitration Commission. This work took him to Germany and other parts of Europe in 1924. At present, he is post intelligence officer at Tarrant Representatives of 12 Salt Lake womens clubs will attend a luncheon Friday at 12:30 p.m. in the Hotel Utah, to hear representative speakers discuss jail conditions in Salt Lake, and the proposed 'drunk farm" for inebriates. The luncheon will be sponsored by City Judge Reva Beck Bosone Dr. Foster J. Curtis, superintendent of the Veterans Hospital, will discuss the Psychology of the Drunk, and Chief of Police Reed E. Vetterll will address the meet on jail conditions and how to Improve them. Following the luncheon the club women will Inspect the city jail and also the old telephone building, 115 South State Street, to look over the prospects for a womens ward to be located on the third floor of the building.. Jaycees To Meet BRIGHAM CITY. Oct. 21. Wednesday, Oct. 28, was tentatively set for the date of the October membership meeting of the Box Elder Junior Chamber of Commerce at a recent meeting of the directors of the organization. ' T Field. ...You can spot it every time ... ... a plus to something extra make a reputation that everybody re Coca-Col- a got its reputation for qualispect!. It has always been made the because ty, of quality Ingredients. out way quality T TAKES new and glorious chapter of American history is being A adventure the written. It is a supreme advenchapter of Americans. ture of all time for young On its pages will be the names of millions of young men who now accept the challenge thrown in our free American faces by Hitler, Mussolini and Tofo accept it and ram it back down their cruel throats! Is an original creation with a very special something to offer, found In no other drink . . a blend of wholesome flavors a taste that creates for Coca-Col- a all Its own. Coca-Col- a LICENSES Salt Lake County Brant Hrllstrom Davis, 34. Salt Lak; Florence Ruth Dyer, 32, Salt Lake. Monitor Charles Noyce, 27. Salt Lake; Gladjs Hennckoen. 24, Salt Lake. Keith Alma Langston. 20. Salt Lake; Donna Hope Mann. IB Woods Cross. Leon Milton Smart, 19, Union; June Russell, 19. Union. LaMar Dellwood Scott. 31, Salt Lake; erna Thalman, 21. Sait Lake. George Evan Holmstead. 25. San Francisco. Calif.; Priscilla Annetta Malcolm, 34. Salt Lake. Kenneth Ear! Bishop. 18. Salt Lake; Donna Stella Birrell, 17. Salt Lake. Heine Conrad Timmerman, legal age Pelican, Alaska: Norena Barber Benson, legal age, Salt- - Lake. Frank Howard Nnhol, 19. Salt Lake; Lilly Bawden. 21. Salt Lake. Joe Gay Burns, 25, Pittsfield, Virginia Collison, 19, fait Lake. j Maj. Joseph C. Fehr Club Women Will Hear Statistics MARRIAGE Texas Paper Honors Utahn City Jail To Be Discussed 1740 South State Street The public is ; 21 son of Mr. and Mrs. Toam T. Nlnomlya of Kaysvllle, was Instantly killed at the fam- Views On 'i ! Farm Accident OGDEN, Oct. Both Sides Give ii Child Killed In Wednesday, October 21, 1942 There are many things for There's a place on those pages for your name , and Hie glorious achievements for which you will be honored all the balance of your days . thirst but only one stands out d for refreshment . . . Ice-col- Coca-Col- T, Wartime limits tha tupplr ef War Department has announced new enlistment opportunities for men of 18 and 19. You can now select and serve in any of 13 different branches of the Army. Theres a good reason why you young men and only you s are given that privilege. Men of your age make fighting men- - You learn fast You think and act fast and in battle that saves lives. Those times when you cannot get it, remembert Coke, being first choice, sells oat first. Ask tor it each time. No matter how short the supply, tha quality of CocCola carries on. Coca-Col- DIVORCES ASKF.U Bait Lake County Margaret Skillborn from Harry Stillborn. Cora Hays Van Dyke from Gerald Jobs Van Dyke Jr. DIVORCES GRANTED Balt Lake County Eva H. Holtman from first-clas- Arthur Harry Holiman. cruelty. Plaintiff awarded custody minor child. $25 per month ui port money. $75 attorney fee and costs, property settlement. ANNULMENTS GRANTED Balt Lake County Fannie Enquist from Jerome Grams n ground that defendant induced plain-.ti- f to enter marriage contract by fraud In that he had no intention of maitam-m- g Pick out the branch of service that appeals to you most. You may choose the Army Air Forces (including Aviation Cadets), Armored Force, Cavalry, Chemical Warfare Service, Coast Artillery (Harbor Defense or Antiaircraft), Corps of Engineers, Corps of Military Police, Field Artillery, Infantry, Medical Department, Ordnance Department, Quartermaster Corps or Signal Corps. Youll get action and adventure in every one of them. 'Youll he thoroughly trained, and youll learn technical skills that will be valuable to you all your life. The Army encourages qualified men of your age to apply for Officer Candidate Schools, where many ihave already won their commissions. The sooner you enlist the better prepared you will be, and the faster you will advance. Get full information about the branch in which you wish to serve at the nearest Army Recruiting and Induction Station. Talk if over with your parents and your friends. When you step out in the worlds most honored uniform youll know the thrill of sayingv This is my battle, and nobody else is going to fight it for me! married relationship with plaintiff. lt not anough for our Army to bo big and ( at tha In ago groups. Tha Army enemy's it should also ba as ' Invites American youth to answsr that challenge. "Tha privilege of electing their branches of tho service can safely ba given to the men In the younger age group for precisely the reason for which tha Army needs them their adaptability and ready responsa to x training. Lieutenant General Brehon B. Somervell I Men, Women Over Dont Be Weak, 40 tht? ctiqe ? phosphau and VlUmlo B,. A for patients, I took 8D22Jarti?,i: .II iwf. Jteeult were flne. Got special lntroduo-l- n . tr Tom Tbl- - V1!' iur mug n i1 PPPr. youfifar, this very day. v Ai gtl arua stores everywhere- - m $alt ft - take City at Piy Lett What drink do you find at tha Post of cossraa..-t- o changes? Icwcold Coca-Col- a, re oner pure, wholesome, taste-goofreshmen t. Ex- Old Feel Peppy, Nef, Yean Younger 25J 555K Coouim rMrl took, sfWr 49 uicklif Iron, cJ-- H- it & Walgreen'-Ad- The best is always the better buy! od wall-balanc- ed Commending IOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THl Coca-Co- la COCA-COL- COMPANY Y Bottling Company, Salt Lake City, Utah v. . A General, S.rvie ef Supply Z0 RECRUITING AIID INDUCTIOIf SERVICE X 179 Motor Ava. Salt Laka City, Utah |