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Show 13 I 1 THURSDAY, AUGUSTS THE LEHI SUN, LEHI, UTAH PAGE EIGHT t Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Pack and family were dinner guests Sun day at the home of Mrs. Pack's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Leon Peet. The occasion was the birthday of Mrs. Pack. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Littleford visited in Pleasant Grove Sunday at the home 4f Mr. and Mrs. Ira Deveraux Visitors In Mgan Sunday were Dean Hunger. )ean Peck and Donl Peterson, Mrs. Francis Mitchell of American Ameri-can Fork and her daughter Mrs. Gordon Lee, Salt Lake City, were Friday visitors) at the Don C. Loveridge hom. Mr. and Mrs. Len Hooley also called. Mrs. Mildred Graham of Sandy was a visitor in Lehi Friday at the home of Mrs. James P, Christiansen. "Mr. and Mrs. Leo Richens of Provo were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Littleford. Mrs. Donna Gillis of Geneva, also called. Miss Petra Clover returned Friday after a visit of several days in Spanish Fork, at the home of a sister, Mrs. Don R. Coombs. Miss Patricia Pack of Lindon, visited a few days, this week at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Peet. Mrs. Sarah Reese of Salt Lake City, accompanied Mr. and Mrs Dena Powell, her grandson and daughter, for a week end visit at the Shirlef Powell home. The Dean Powells are now living in Salt Lake City. Visitors for Mrs. Theo Pierson Saturday were her son and his family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Garten and sons, Keith and Clifford. Miss Nelda Littleford returned home Monday after a visit of several days in American Fork at the home of an aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Deveraux. Mrs. Don C. Loveridge received word from her sister-in-law, Miss Alice Parker, who is enjoying enjoy-ing her . vacation in California. She is accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Leslie, Searle. Both are of American Fork., Mr. and Mrs. R. W. McCallister of St. George, were ' callers at the J. Freeman home Sunday. Mr. McCallister is a brother to Mrs. Royle. Both Are Blind Mrs. Stanford Shelley and baby son left Saturday for Idaho where she will visit with friends and relatives at Shelley and Idaho Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. Abel J. Eklns were dinner guests at the Sam Hilton home in Pleasant Grove Monday. Mrs.-Hilton Is the mother of Mr. Ekins. Mr. and, Mrs.' Edwin Circuit of Salt Lake Ciy were weekend visitors atfle David H. Carson home. ' , MisSj Jeanine , Hutchlngs left Monday for Washington State, irVorc cha tin II cnonrl cnma f 4m a "V. A T AAA UJJVAAVA OUlllt lAAliG with her mother, Mrs. S. L. Shambo, at Kelso. This will be the first visit since last Christmas. Christ-mas. Miss Ruth Shambo of Salt Lake City, accompanied Jeanine.1 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Garton and sons, Keith and Clifford, of Salt Lake City, were Saturday guests of Mr. Garten's mother, Mrs. Theo Pierson. Mrs. Clara Clover spent Friday in Salt Lake City. She visited "with her daughter, Miss Emma Clover, at the General Hospital AU.liiJ.lw liiliblUUCU ' the numerous polio cases and one 1 d.eath this year from the disease. i - - - " . :. .ft.:-: 1 J . 4 it sr" v A week end visit in Spr.gvllle ns nn unlovable vacatkln for Miss Joyce Littleford. Shfe was irnpst nf an aunt. Mrs. (Crville Bain. Guests at the Seth Littleford home Sunday afternoon, jwere Mr. and Mrs. Jack cnapman and Mr. and Mrs. Wesley jBush and their daughter, Miss Dat-lene Bush, all of Tooele. Mrs. Chapman Chap-man Is a niece of the Littlefords. li ml A Qrii iBMiPiS M- IK C ' I : 'Hi mm r ti;ii " NEW ORGANISATION IN THIRD WARD 77 New officers were recently ap pointed in the Third ward Sunday Sun-day School. Sterling Merrell is superintendent, with assistants, Marvin Jorgensen and Freeman Barpes. Former officers are Evan ColledEe. Jack Mitchell and Karl Jones. A junior Sunday School has been organized with Mrs. Frank Jones as supervisor. She will be assisted by Mrs. Evan Colledge, Mrs. Jack Mitchell, organist, and Nadine Jones chorister. The Relief Re-lief Society room will house .the new organization. Clarence A. Howe, blind operator opera-tor of a Topeka, Kan., newsstand, news-stand, has relied on Silver, his seeing-eye dog, for eight years. Now the dog is blind, too, but Silver still guides him through her sense of smell. "We're doing do-ing all right," says Howe. mm ml !)(!) on So i of GARDEN & LAWN TOOLS & SUPPLIES Tri-City Firestone 21 E. Main American Fork Phone S84 Cache of Gold Hunted in Reich U. S. Gets Tip on Existence Of Vast Treasure Hidden By Ribbentrop. NUERNBERG, GERMANY. A treasure hunt in search of millions of dollars in gold, perhaps as much as 50 million dollars, they believe was cached by Joachim Ribbentrop, Hitler's foreign minister, has been embarked upon by the American war crimes prosecution. They say the treasure probably wa buried in churches, on farms, perhaps still tucked away in forgot ten corners of former German em-J bassies abroad. ' Existence of the funds was tipped oft here by former henchmen of Ribbentrop in the Nazi foreign min istry. In guarded hints, they dis closed it during interrogations by Dr. Robert M. W. Kempner, who prepared the prosecution of the German ministers under Hitler. : Ribbentrop Banged.' Ribbentrop was hanged here as a war criminal October 16, 1946, before be-fore the prosecutors got on the trail of the hidden gold. American agents had done such a magnificent job of finding loot, Kempner said, that it never occurred to anyone to look behind be-hind the foreign office files. Ribbentrop had four funds a general budget, a "secret" fund of about four million dollars, a war emergency fund of unlimited amounts and a "super-secret" personal per-sonal allotment which held at one time at least 43 million dollars, according to Kempner. Starting in 1935, Kempner said, Ribbentrop began to ship gold in small bars to various embassies "in the event that war should come." Whether he wanted this as a personal per-sonal "nest egg" is something that remained locked in the minister's mind. Just Plain Loot. - In 1938, he intensified the shipment ship-ment campaign after he got control of the ministry itself by replacing Konstantin von Neurath. The first shipment was valued at $100,000, and It was the smallest of all. So much was sent to the various embassies that German ministers abroad objected to such heavy responsibility, re-sponsibility, the files show. Ribbentrop got some of the gold from Goering's four year plan setup. set-up. The major source, however, amounted to plain loot When a nation was overrun, Kempner said, Ribbentrop' s men reached the captured national banks before Finance Minister Hjal-mar Hjal-mar Schacht's bankers. In the final days of the Reich, Ribbentrop Rib-bentrop shipped truckloads of gold to southern Germany for hiding, Kempner said, and some of his trusted female secretaries accompanied accom-panied the convoys. At the same time, Ribbentrop paid many civil servants salaries as much as several sev-eral years in advance just to get rid of the surplus. In China, the Nazi embassy diverted much gold to what they called "needy Germans." rr, hoc lookina. most practical clothes in any class! That's how . , , " 0, you want your young scholars dressed this busy new season bo make us your dock ro acnuui neuuvjuunsia kiddies through to the college crowd. everything for kindergarten Elementary" prices! Perplexed Cops Discover For Whom Bridge Tolls PHILADELPHIA. A Delaware river bridge policeman figures he's seen everything now. A solemn-looking, slow-moving hearse entered the Philadelphia side of the bridge. The policeman saw a pair of feet sticking out the back door. He phoned the Camden sidt ti "stop taat hearse." At the toll gate, Sgt Joseph Mc-Williams Mc-Williams told the driver he was losing los-ing his cargo. "Oh, no," said the driver, "they're my friends." Sure enough, there were three young men scattered on the floor of the hearse, one with h.'s feet sticking out The boys University of Pennsylvania Pennsyl-vania students explained they had raised $300 and bought the hearse. They were out for a joy ride. McWilliams let them go, slowly shaking his head. ' Children's PRINT DRESSES Attractive Styles and Colors Priced 2.953.95 SPUN RAYON Large Assortment COTTON PRINTS Checks, Stripes and Floral Patterns Priced 49c-59c Guaranteed Corniroy SLACKS Sizes 6 to 18 Plain or Fancy 4.50-4.95-5.95 Flowered Patterns Ideal for School Dresses Regular $1.25 65c 54 Inch WOOL GOODS Formerly $2.95 Special 1.39 yard s Children's RAYON PANTIES Good Quality Priced 39c-59c Children's! Fine QuaAy ANKjrrs yJ paring 7Sizes .r 35c Bovs'ratUKB M By Campus ; Assortment Colors Priced 98c-1.29 Boys' "Fruit of the Loom" DRESS SHIRTS Fancy Stripes Priced 2.25 .' Sanforized Dungarees Tailored by "Lee" Sizes 2 to 16 1.98 SPORT SOX Sizes 8 to 10 Unusual B&y ! 25c Designed for Top Honors in Style and Wearability . . . are these warm, dependable de-pendable back -to- school clothes tailored to fit perfectly and comfortably. comfort-ably. Of sturdy all-wool fabrics, with many top-quality top-quality features. Come in today. We've a large assortment ,to suit any student. want fhese school-ovin' PETERS SHOES AND ' HAPPY HIKERS 4.50. up L yj MOCC1E TIES in brown smooth leather with sturdy-stitch welt construction! BUCKLE SLIP-ONS that wear end wear and are oh so comfy! Brown supple leather. DEPENDABLE SINCE 1872 George Clover returned home Saturday after a stay of several weeks in California. Hospital Notes Mrs. James Slater is receiving medical care. Vaughan Bennett, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bennett is receiving re-ceiving medical treatment. Mrs. Selma Edwards of Magna, Mag-na, was admitted for medcial care. Mrs. Glen Boren underwent a major operation Thursday. Julv 29. Albert Bone was admitted for surgical care July 29. A tonsilectomy was performed for Ralph Adams, July 30. Clifford and Dorothy Bennett have a new son, born Thursday, July 29. A baby daughter was born to Reed and Cleo Christiansen Miller Mill-er Sunday, August 1. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Miller and Louis Christiansen of American Fork, are the grandparents. Patricia Powell, 4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Powell, underwent un-derwent a minor operation August 2. A daughter was born to I and June Erickson Smith, J'; 30. Mrs. Myrtle Erickson is t maternal grandmother! A son was born to Mrs. Donald Gurney of Pleasant Grove August 2. The infant son of John A. and Patricia McMillan Noffsinger, born Friday, July 30, passed away the following day at Santa Margarita Mar-garita hospital in Oceanside, Calif. Burial was in California. makes Wool. Meat Leaiher. t i ' to .-n- A. ...-Xfcvci--- PREVENT A RAIVGEi FI RES 9 - Ia Pa Sen. |