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Show Page i. 8 ; The Deseret News. . Salt Lake City, Utali Wednesday, November ?0, 1940 - The Youngest Generation Driver Will The Deseret News congratulates Four Sentenced For Breaking Speed Laws Richard Stout all Salt City babies one year old today. Richard is the son of Mr. and Mrs. ' Stout, Wayne - 923 South Layne and other Lake t " A drunken driver and four speeders were sentenced todayd in the court of City Judge M. Burton. rr - Thomas - E. - Emmerton, - 862 South Eighth West Street: pleaded guilty tq the drunken driv-- ' ing charge and was sentenced to pay a fine of 100 or serve 30 days in the City Jail. He,, elected to pay the fine and ex-ecution of sentence was postponed to Dec.' 2. Emmerton wa arrested Nov. 3 at Thirteenth "South and Main Streets. Wagstaff, 20, of 132$ Murphy Lane, pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding and driving without a license. On the first count she was fined 7.50 and on the latter charge was sentenced to five days in the City JaiL Execution of the jail sentence was postponed for five WU--for- ! fT NJ t Fonrth East - Street t . .. days. ... Other speeders and their fines were: Don G. Lassup of 313 West Seventh North Street, forfeited 5; John McNeil of 2965 forfeited South State Street, bond of 10, - ; - - 7 Alice Madsen of MurrayTfor-felte- d bond of 10 for running a - red tight at Thirteenth South and State Streets. ft r ' d - - -- Jeppson, 20, Kaysvllle: Glen farmer, Farmington; Grant 29, farmer Ferron; Nor ma A. Henriott 21 caterpillar Hurricane; operator. George Flemett 21, shoemaker, Price; Hiram J White, 29, Clerk, Price; Burdett M. Turnbow, 32, rancher, Tablona; John C. Robbies, 23, quartz miner, Heber City; Lewis A. Carliie, 27, timberer, Kamas; Don William Prows, 21, salesman; Robert F, Morlarity, 25, quarry worker, Tooele; Derrafi F. Meeh-a21, student Salina; Lee Roy Mmampton, 26. laborer, Chester, Robert G. Hutchinson, 22, Horace S. laborer. Eureka; Brown, 24, blacksmith, Kanab; Harrison W. Justice, .21,, truck driver, LaPoint; Milo C. Morten-- , sen, 26, rancher, Parowan; John W. Murdock, 28, farmer, Beaver; Uai M. Marshall, 21, - student, Minersville; Christian F. Schuen-ma23, farmer, Brigham City; Shirley W. Mason, 22, truck driver, Tremojrton; George Fitts, 24. student Delta. Wyoming recruits were Joseph F. Doherty, 32, miner, Rock Springs, and Orville Dean Watson, 26. service station attendant Jackson. n, ' Newsies To Shout With Full Stomachs Tomorrow This Day In Church History BY ANDREW Tf 50 little merchants who "sell The Deseret News daily on downtown streets seem to shout their wares more feebly than usual to morrow, blame it to Thanksgiv- JENSON . . ing. As guests of the management of the News, the boys will sit down to two large tables filled Assistant Church Historian NOVEMBER 20 The women of Cedar Iron County, Utah, . organized a Benevojent . Societly, with Mrs. Lydia Hopkins as pres.1 :. , ident. 1871 Elder Caleb W. Haws, missionary from Utah, died at Barugh Bridge, near Barnsley, Yorkshire, England, jt" 1898 The southeast part of Chesterfield Ward, Bannock -- was organized- - as Bounty Hatch Ward by President Lewis S. Pond, with Peter J. Williams with turkey and all the trimmings tomorrow morning at Tea Room, First South and Main Streets. The dinner is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m., with the menu 1856 -- . City, ' as bishop. 1904 A new ward named -- Wal-gree- - cranberry-sauc- e, consisting of turkey, mashed ' potatoes and, gravy,' sweet .potatoes, vegetables, pie, cake, ice cream and candy. Accordion , selections will ' be Joa given by Don Marcroft Reese wjjl be blaster of ceremonies. Short talks will be given by S. Ot Bennion, general manager of the News, and Donald Weeks, veteran headline hawker. Heber Geurts, street circulation manager, will be In charge. Boys QuicklyTurn Soldiers FORTLEWIS,Wash.,Nov.. (AP) Its a quick transformation the Army is effecting1, for half a thousand young west " 20. East Garland was organized in Box Elder County, Utah, with John W. Larson as bishop. ejrners. . Civilians at home yesterday, soldiers at Fort Lewis today thats the story that Is being written this week as fast I as trains can bring the first contingents of Selective Service recruits to this reception center from Idaho, Utah and four other western states. , Monday night brought the vanguard of enlistees, 35 from Washington and 40 from Oregon. Yesterday they were .join To Address Shriners Col. Ralph Royce, commander of lhe Seventh Bombardment Group, Will address members of El Kalah Temple, ancient Arabic Order Nobles, of the Mystic, 7:30 'Shrine, this evening at in the Masonic Tem-l- e, 650 East South Temple Street. -- ed by 38 more from Washington, 29 Idahoans and an equal number of Utahns, and today ia expected to see additional arrivals from the latter two states. Wyoming and Montana are due later in the week, By Friday 485 men from th4 northwest will be at the recepK tion center, post officers said. Initial procedure in each case has been to issue uniforms and then interview the individual soldier concerning his particular qualifications. After basic train-in- g here, the troops will be assigned to regular army units ao- cording to their classifications. Mrs.-Fran- -- . . Mrs. Palmer Thirty four Utah volunteer and two Wyoming 'youths entrained last night at 11:25 for Ft. Lewis, Wash, where they will enter the reception center with draft recruits from other states and be assigned to Army posts for a years training. The youths were inducted at district recruiting headquarters here yesterday, bring the total to 64, the states first draft token quota. Thirty left Monday night for Ft Lewis where they will arrive today. From NIsqually, Wash they will be transported .by bus to the reception center. : Recruits - Inducted yesterday were: Ivan P, Hoppe, student 22, Bacchus; James L. Gibbs, student Bacchus: Nelson V. Catt, 27. cook. Salt Lake: Richard W. Ogden; Payne, 23, Raymond Raty, actor, Ogden; Douvlas A. Blakeman, 23, electrical mechanic, Rivecdale; John B, Arrington, 21, teletype. operator, Ogden; Dan R. Curtis, 21, bookkeeper, Ogden; Ernest N. Ogden; .Newey, 26, accountant Alva J. Young, 22, student Ogden; J. Frank Quinn, 29, newspaper circulation man, Ogden. Keith S. Artdersen, 23, farmer, Petersboro; Orson G. Kidman, 26, farmer, Mendon; David Glepn Bulst 23, farmer, Mendon; Thomas S. Riishforth, 31, accountant time-keepe- r BABIES WERE BORN YESTERDAY IN S. L. HOSPITALS: To Mr. and Mrs. Monte Carpenter, 916 Nerual Circle, glrL j To Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Wimmer, 541 Soiith West Tem" ' . ple Street, glrL To Mr and Mrs.. Ray Loertscher, 6523 Twenty-thirEast . Street, boy. r" To Mr, and Mrs. Franklin Wilcox, 2034 Fourth East Street, ' girl.. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Howarth, 1430 Blaine Avenue, boy, To. " To Mr. and Mrs. George Baker,' 857 East First South Street, " . boy,' To Mr. and k Redford, Bountiful, boy. To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson, 120 Canyon Road, boy. To Mr. and Mrs. Howard Russell, 612 Fifth East Street, boy. To Mr. and Mrs. -- Dwayne Pearson. Sandy, boy. To Mr.-- and Mrs. W. D. Loveless, 273 Wilson Avenue, glrL To Mr. and Mrs. Orlo Crittenden, Woods Cross, boy.' To Mr. and Mrs. H. Grant Christensen, 287 North West ' v , , Temple, girl To Mr. and Mrs. Aldon O. Hayward, Bountiful, gipk To Mr. and Mrs. James E. Henchey, 1140 Fifth-EaStreet, , boy. To Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Scott, 530, East Fifth South .. Street, glrL ' Volunteers Entrain For Camp Lewis Thirty-Si- x I st Dies On Coast - HearrAilmenl Falal To Former Utahn v ' Mrs. Alice Hooper Palmer, 68, widow of Col. Guy G. Palmer of the U. S. Army and also a mem- - ber of a prominent Utah pioneer family, died last night at her 7 home in San Marino, Calif., of a heart ailment t - Word of Mrs. Palmers death after a long illness was received in Salt Lake by a niece, Mrs. Nephl L. Morris. coi poimoi- Lake, the youngest daughter jot William H. Hooper, awho Capt. served for 12 years as, the sec-ond U, S. representative from Utah and also was actively iden- - " . . tified with civic and business affairs of Salt Lake. Her mother was Mrs. Mary Ann Knowlton Hooper, also a member of-- an early Iftah pioneer family. Mrs. Palmer was married to the colonel in 1894 while he was at FtrDouglas. Soon aft. erwards, military transfer took the couple away and they Jed extensively - untU Colonel Palmer s death about ten years The widow has lived in California since then. Surviving Mrs. Palmer are two daughters, Mrs. Porter Bruck and Mrs. Bryant Wells, both of San Marino, and two sisters, Joseph E. Caine of Oakland, Calif., and Mrs. Elizabeth Dun- bar of Santa Monica, Chlif. Funeral services and burial are scheduled Friday morning in For- Lawn - , , sta-tlon- 1 - geles. ' Cemetery . . atLos Los Angeles . An- - : Man Convicted On Dyer Charges Martin McGuire of Los Angeles, indicted on Dyer Act viola-tid- n charges, was convicted by a Federal Court jury which re' commended leniency today. McGuire drove a stolen car from Los Angeles to Salt Lake Dec. 8. 1939. He probably will be sentenced Saturday by U. S. Judge Tillman D. Johnson. The trial of Henry Bates, charged with possession of stolen interstate freight, was going to the jury late this afternoon. Late yesterday a federal court fury convicted Desiderio Ayala, 34, of Helper, on charges of pro-- . ducing marihuana illegally. An-- , other jury found Leonard Rus- sell, 36, of Cleveland, Ohio, guil ty of Dyer Act violations. Both will be sentenced Saturday. . : ; - ' Western Air Schedules Change Western Air Express winter " ' schedules were announced today by Arthur Kelly, district traffic manager, offering Salt Iake air travelers' new late afternoon departure for Los Angeles. Mr. Kelly said the new flight would depart at 4:30 p.ffi. arriving in Los Angeles at 7:45 p.m. Other Los Angeles - planes will leave here at 6 a.m, 1:10 p.m. and 10:50 Northbound planes for p.m. Butte, Helena and Great Falls, Mont, will depart at 6:13 p.m,. And .7 a.m. , ' . Tired Often Sleepless Nights Doctors My your kidneys contain IS mflei of tiny tubes or filters which help to purify the ' 'Wood and keejryou healthy. When they gel tired and dont work right in the daytime - Many people here to get up nighta. Frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning sometimes shows there is something wrong with your kidneys or bladder. Dont neglect this condition and lose valuable, restful sleep; When disorder of kidney function permits poisonous matter to remain in your Wood, it may also cause nagging backache, rheumetie pains, leg pains, loss of pep hod energy, swelling. puflfceM undo; the eyes, headaches and dmlness. Dont watt I Ask wuf druggist for Doan's Tills, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. They give happy relief and will help the lft miles of kidney tubes flush out poison us waste from your Wood. Get Doan s Fills. .... (AdTj -- TVDrrmf: Harry Zeiders Dies At 64 Kennedy Sleeps All Through His Stop In Salt Lake London Jhombs have apparently accustomed Ambassador Josto sleeping eph P. Kennedy tprdugh all kinds of noises, for :' Numbered aoundly through a stop in Salt Lake last night, while en route from Los Angeles to New York. Ambassador Kennedy had visited his son, John F. Kennedy, a student at Leland Stanford University at Palo Alto, Calif, and was en route to New York to spend Thanksgiving with his family at Bronxvllle, N. Y. During a stopover in Chicago this morning, he said that he had "no plans other than to take a rest and a Christmas Season holiday at Palm Beach, Fla. Mr. And Mrs. Collett ' Await Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Collett of Drive, Holladay. will observe their golden wed4190 Olympus ding anniversary Friday with an open house and reception for relatives and friends. Sons and daughters from other Former Pastor Was Active In Business Harry Tolbert Zeiders, former pastor of the Liberty Park Methodist Church, died last night at 9:40 oclock at his home, 1181 Whitlock Avenue, after a heart attack. Mr. Zeiders, who was 64 years of age, had been associated with the Capitol Cleaning and Dyeing Company for five years, previously having served as pastor of the Liberty Park church and also of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Price. - Born Dec. 17. 1875, at Harrisburg, Pa., Mr. Zeiders was a son of William H. and Amelia Stouf-fe- r ZeldersrHe was educated at the Central State Normal School at Lock Haven, Pa.; North University of Ohio, Drew Theological Seminary and New York University. Surviving lg his widow. states will attend. Both Mr. and Mrs. Collett are well known in civic affairs. -- Paul Robeson Wins Favor In S. L. With Folk Songs BY WADE N. STEPHENS Paul Robeson was given a prolonged ovation wlen he appeared on the stage at Kingsbury Hall last night. The audience remained fn a sympathetic mood throughout the program, and at the end demanded encore after encore. The program was well chosen to set off the singer's accomplishments. Most effective number was Ballad for Americans, for In its declamatory passages he was able to make use of Mr. speaking voice. Robeson is in many ways a good singer, but he is a great actor. I missed the chorus in this Singers, sponsors of the concert, learn the chorus part? The spiritual? and other Negro songs were interpreted with a sincerity and naturalness that could hardly be surpassed. Sometimes these are so over-actethat the musical values are lost, but Mr. Robeson preserved the simplicity and lack of that are essential to all folk music, especially the Negro. "Water Boy, Shortnln Bread, "Joshua Fit De Battle Ob Jericho, were outstanding in a program that was always amus"The Little-Wh- eel Runs ing, by Faith. in which the accompanist joined in an. enthusiastic if somewhat reedy tenor, was one of the best numbers. In all his songs Mr. Robeson displayed the full throaty resonance Uat. seems to be peculiar to fine voice of his people. Singers of other races try in vain to imitate it. s The few that were included in'tho. program were not quite so successful. The very qualities that make Mr. Robesonfs folksinging so appealing prevent him from being most artistic in other musical fields. He very wisely sang almost an entire program of he type of music in which he is su. preme. The theremin, an c instrument of comparatived ly recent invention, was d 7 electro-magneti- intro--duce- last night Jo.JSalt Lakers Miss by Clara Rockmore. a violinist, student of Leopold Auer, has devoted much time to the vworking out of a technique to 'control the new instrument. She has been so successful that single-hande-d she has transformed a novelty not unlike a musical saw in both Rock-.rpor- tong and capabilities Into an in Hunt. One Blackjear. One Long Cold Stretch One-Da- y strument that may have real solo possibilities. Its softer tones are like those of a cello or violin, and the louder ones have something of the quality of the human voice. The mechanical timbre of the loud speaker is noticeable, but less objectionable than in other electronic instruments. Technically the theremin must rank among the most difficult, since accuracy depends upon the judging of distance as it does in the violin, but there is no fingerboard to serve as a guide the hands never touch the instrument. ; Miss Rockmore plays both cello and violin literature. She has chosen to perform only compositions of a very high type, and she does them with fine musicianship, Imitating perfectly every detail of the technique, of stringed instruments. Her Inare artistic in terpretations phrasing and accurate in pitch, except for a slight tendency to sharp in the higher range just as a. violinist often, does, This may be caused by playing in. pure scale instead of the tern-- . .pered system used in tuning the piano, as Miss Rockmore has absolute pitch. for the Waiting Car. Yet one spin starts it! , HoWv Winter OIL-PLATI- maintains needed lubricant in advance NG The fastest runners in the world dont come anywhere oil-platin- near the finish as soon as the fellow whos clocking. rings and the like Sure, hes there in advance. And thats the Firm-fastene- g. big idea to cylinder walls, piston d as if magnetized! cant oil-platin- g for Safe Quick Starts this stead-fas- t, all drain down during all the . ' Both accompanists frequently-playetoo loud. The theremin was completely covered up in some places, and while Mr. Robesons voice always came through, the piano sometimes predominated. - BRONCHIAL COUGHS Dus for .Whiter starting . . . having lubricant far up the cold hours you park. cylinders in advance plated up to its topmost point in your engine your engine It oil-plate- faster than fast by having jt un-oile- The change to this patented oil oil-platin-g. is economical. Its done in the ordinary Change today Conoco station for you r Germ Processed oil way, but the extraordinary oil e substance in Germ Processed oil-plate- at once begins to clothe engine parts in sleek, rich s, gine into an HUSteroLF - c : oil-eate- r. Continental Oil Company i to ing, warming Musterole. Better than a mustard plaster! Actually helps to break up painful local congestion. Made in 8 strengths. i! that and keeps Winter from turning your en Chest Colds Need more than ordinary "salve for quick relief. Rub on powerfully soothI to Your Mileage Merchants: - man-mad- stays, oil-platin- g remains ready in advance to thwart the grind of L 1 i d " starting. : d. takes Conoco Germ Processed oil to give your engine Rather, O I L -P L A T E YOUR |