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Show Mass Burial Held Fen Six Victims ? Of Circus Blaze ? HARTFORD. Conn.. July 10 tDJE) A mass burial, witlr interde- ' Tioinlnational services, was planned today Xor six unclaimed victims of f Thursday's circus fire which fcrought death to 158. The latest to die of burns suf . fered when the "big top" of the RlneHne Brothers and Darnum & Bailey collapsed in flames were iComu Sally Lapuk, of Hartford. "and Miss Doris Schinkel, 22, of -.Manchester. One hundred and 20 persons still "Were in hospitals, 20 of them in critical condition. Several were not expected to recover. Damare suits askine S120.000 t, were,( filed against the circus. caargins; it was "neeurent ana careless" in its operations, that exits had been obstructed, and that combustible and hazardous material mater-ial was used in construction of the 7 tent and seats, all in violation of J ttfartford city ordinances. r Missing In Action s r v & . - J t f . I . i i i - - ' J ? r ; I -' i O ( J K tPidnoer Farmer Oi Springvillc Vi Called by Death f - Levi Gregory Metcalf. 85, prom rlnent- retired pioneer farmer and i stockman of Snrinsrville. died Sun- day night at liis home, 158 East Second North street, of causes in-tcident in-tcident to old age. 'He was born in the Old Fort, IMarch 19. 1859. the son of Levi f Gregory and Melissa Guymon Met-TOIL Met-TOIL He grew up in Springville ?and married Margaret Llewellyn Jifetcalf, January 27, 181 in the t M VnAnarmant hsnia In Salt Tjlkp i Qty. They lived In Springville and C.1..U. ..! 1B14 nrVjtH tkan UMCMU UUUi Avl, UC1I WJ moved to Richfield. Idaho where he engaged in farming and stock raising. In 1930 they returned to Spring ville and moved to Provo two wears ago. i He was a member of the LDS church and has always been prominent prom-inent in church" and civic affairs. He was an accomplished musician In the early days and served as pianist for church and old time dances. Surviving are the widow, and the following children: Mrs. May Gud-munson, Gud-munson, Redlands. Cal.; Levi G. Metcalf. Berkley. CaL; Frank Metcalf, Met-calf, Springville; Mrs. Blake Pal-freyman Pal-freyman and Mrs. Hilton A. Rob-.. Rob-.. ertson, Provo; Bert and Earl Met-valf, Met-valf, Richmond. Cal., also 41 -randchildren and 48 great grand-'children. Funeral services will be an nounced later pending word from the children residing out of the state. First Lt. Joseph J. Gregory. Jr. husband' of Marva Hodson Greg ory, who is reported missing in action in France, since June 6. Lt. Gregory, of the U. S. engineer engin-eer corps, is a son of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Gregory of Elko, Nev., and he left for overseas duty in October, 1943. Retired Wrestler 'Gets His Man' i ear s or experience in man handling his opponents on the mat, came in handy for Dean Park, Orem cafe operator, and former big-time wrestler, when he cap tured a prowler -in his establish ment after closing time, Sunday morning. The prowler, Burnell Flanagan of Virgin, Utah,, was later ar restecrby deputy sheriffs who had been called after Park had clamp ed a secure toe-hold or something, on the intruder. Flannigan who had been seen by one of Park s waitresses in the cafe, was sur prised by Park as he was leaving Jthe place. I Sheriffs officers are 'questioning In regard to other burglaries including in-cluding one at the Pleasant Grove Cannery where $8 was taken and a considerable amount of damage-reported. G. A. Cullimore Dies in Burley i City Briefs Little Miss LaWana Pierce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bartle Pierce, 132 West Fifth North, has been hostess to her cousin, Betty Hatch, American Fork, for the week-end. The two girls have en-Joyed en-Joyed swimming theater parties during Betty's stay. Mrs. Clarence Downs and Mrs, A. Ray Ekins returned Sunday from a trip to tne guu region or Texas, where they visited Mrs. Pat Downs, the former Dotty Ramage. They have been away for two weeks and report a de lightful trip. Lt. Paul A. Simmons, who is stationed in Sacramento. Calif, and Aviation Cadet Paul W. Lar- sen, Merced, Calif., came by plane to spend Sunday in Provo with their families, Mrs. Dorothy D Larsen and son John, and Mrs. Virginia L. Simmons and daugh ter, Sue. Mrs. David C. Campbell (LJ1 lian Booth and six-week-old daughter, Terry Sue, arrived by plane Sunday from Portland, Oregon, Ore-gon, to spend three weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J Booth. Richard Harris underwent major operation at the Utah Val ley hospital Friday. He is report ed to be improving. Mrs. V. If. Franks of Milwau kee, Wisconsin, is visiting in Provo with her brother, Fred Pickles, and her niece and nephew Mr. and Mrs. Alma A. Anderson. George A. Cullimore, 65, form er Provo resident, died Saturday evening at his home in Burley, Idaho, of complications following a paralytic stroke, friends here were informed Sunday. Mr. Cullimore, a son of James and Clara Foutz Cullimore, was born April 1, 18.97 at Lindon, received re-ceived his ducation at Plasant Grove elementary school and Brigham Young university, Provo. After fulfilling a 2-year mis sion in the northwestern states. he returned to Utah county. where he continued to be active in the LDS church. On Nov. 7, 1899, he was married to Ailie McBridc in Salt Lake City. His first wife died Aug. 7. 1939. In 1925 he moved to Tooele, where he owned and operated the Tooele Cooperative market For the last four years he had made his home at Jerome, Idaho. On April 2, 1942, he was mar ried to Elizabeth Campbell. Survivors include his widow; 2 sons, Leslie G. Cullimore, Ogden, and Ferris J. Cullimore. Burlev: 2 daughters, Gladys Bello, Salt Lake City, and Virginia Lingren, Baltimore. Md.; 4 sisters, Mrs Lizzie Ash, Lindon; Mrs. Clara Kirk, Lindon: Mrs. Hattie Cluff. Salt- Lake City, and Mrs. Etta Greenwood, Ogden, and 2 broth ers; William Cullimore, LinSon, and Albert Cullimore, Provo. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 p. m. at the Berg Mortuary. Interment, will be in the Provo Burial, park. Mnleum JelJq Thh Wan Bpraad MoroUm between thumb and fF unr. liooc Van prove MoroUne'i fAVr kigl quality. Soothes dUper rMh. kj ebaSDS. Mntpof and minor barnt. x 3 .W kl. Mil. 1IU SDK. Mfspai and minor Duma. anTUM big trip! aU onljr 10. Noted Piano Team Playing in Provo ine nationally ramous piano duo of Helene Druke and Welter Shaw will be presented tonight at 8:15 p. m. in the Joseph Smith Duiiamg as part of the sixth an nual music festival of the Brig ham Younf university. Husband and wife in real life. this musical team has been hailed as "the exhibitors of flawless tech nique and spirited artistry." Helene Druke is a former Salt Laker. The program will include varied selections from Bach, Liszt, De bussy, Rubinstein, Gershwin. ' The Haven, Kans.. high school football team defeated the high school team of Sylvia, Kans., by a score of 256 to 0 in 1929. Dodged Draft Three Years, Says FBI i x ni i r-r h raf'Vvs (jr. A 7 Hi Ah 1 V Mrs. Jesse Stott has left for San Diego, Calif., to visit her son, Douglas, who is in navy training. P-t. Darrel Stubbs, who recent ly entered the army, is stationed at Camp McClellan, Alabama, ac cording to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Stubbs, 124 South Sixth West street. Sgt. Frois C. FroUland is home on furlough from nearly two years of overseas duty, and is visiting his mother, Mrs. Johanna Johan-na Froisland. He arrived Friday night, his first visit home in 31 months, and he will be here for three weeks. Proisland has been in Australia, India and China. Retired Railroad Man Dies at Home Luther Edward Bartlett. 58. died at his home, 895 North Sec ond East street, Sunday at 9:45 p.m., after a lingering illness from a heart ailment. Mr. Bartlett was born in Mas-1 on, Texas, April 26. 1886, a son of Columbus and Malinda Johnson John-son Bartlett. He was an engineer engin-eer for the D. & R. G. railroad company until retirement recent ly because of ill health. He married Minnie Carter, November No-vember 10, 1910, and she died Dec. 17, 1934. On October 2V, 1938, he married Nellie Chad- wick, in Salt Lake. Also surviving are one son and two daughters, as follows: Howard How-ard Bartlett, Las Vegas, Nev.; Mrs. Myrl Brems, Bell Fourche south Eakota, and Mrs. Alice Bavies, Helper; four grandchil dren, two brothers and two sis ters, Ira Bartlett. Salt Lake Henry Bartlett, Washington, and Mary Jackson, Hayward, Calif., and Mrs. Roxie Norris. Honev Grove, Texas. Funeral arrangements are in charge of the Valley mortuary. ARCHBISHOP DIES VATICAN CITY. July 10 a.E Edward Joseph Hanna, who retired re-tired as archbishop of San Francisco Fran-cisco in 1935 and came to Rome to be near the Vatican, died today to-day after a long illness. William Neff, upper left, and his wife, right, kept their son, Morris, hidden in their Miami. Fla., home for three years in order to evade the draft, according to charges by the FBI. Son is pictured, lower left, as he finally signed up at Miami draft board. Invasion (Continued from Page One a nossioie encirciemem manuvcr against the German troops hold ing out grimly in. the Fauborg ua Vaucelles suburb of Caen. The high ground capturd by the Imperials between Odon and Orne was the key to the great inland port from which the Nazis were hammered by main strength. In i the immediate area of Can, which fell yesterday, German strong points which had been by passed in the final assault on tne city were being cleared out sys tematically. To the northwest, the Germans counterattacked strongly in the area of La Haye-Du Pitts, captured cap-tured yesterday, but the Americans Ameri-cans beat off the blows and destroyed de-stroyed a noumber of enemy tanks. The Nazi command was reveal ed to have thrown in against the Americans on the La Haye sectof the second SS panzer group, which had been held in semi-re serve southeast of Caumont. Th new British offnsive, along with the Canadian thrusts across the Odon, also outflanked Ger man troops defending the indus trial suburbs of Caen on the south bank of the Orne, which turns sharply south after flowing east-west through Caen itself Front dispatches disclosed that Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgom ery's tanks and infantry, sup ported by warships and rocket firing planes, had cleared a six mile stretch of the north bank of the Orne in Caen and on either side of the city. , A headquarters spokesman said the final stage of the British ad vance into Caen yesterday were so rapid that the Germans were not believed to have had time to destroy all the bridges across the Orne. The British first pushed across the Odon river some five miles southwest of Caen nearly two weeks ago and so developed their threat to the Orne river that the Germans committed a major portion por-tion of their armor there. The line swayed back and forth during fierce German counterattacks, counter-attacks, but the British held firmly firm-ly to their bridgehead and paved the way for the offensive launch ed today from its southeastern corner. The American 1st army at the western end of the 111-mile front also was bending back the Ger man line, which was described by Allied headquarters as everywhere in a ' state of strain. One column pushed 2,000 yards south of the newly-captured com munications center of La Haye- Du Puits, another seized Le Desert De-sert and Savigny. three miles southwest and three southeast respectively of St. Jean-De Daye. and a third drove down the Car-entan-Periers road to within five miles northeast of Periers. Gen. Dwight U. Eisenhower announced an-nounced at 11 a.m. (5 a.m. EWT) today that British and Canadian armor and infantry, thrusting down all roads leading into Caen from the north and west, forced the enemy out of the city and back to the line of the river Orne yesterday. The liberation of Caen cleared away one of the strongest obstacles obsta-cles on the highway and railway from Cherbourg to Paris, 120 miles to the east, and gave the Allies a first-class port which had a peacetime capacity of 2,-000.000 2,-000.000 tons of cargo a year. Caen, the largest city yet captured cap-tured by the Allies in France, had a peacetime population pf 50,000 some 20,000 more than Cher bourg. Otfemanshi Slated To Report to Pope VATICAN CITY, July 10 (EE) The Rev. Stanislaus Orlemanski, Polish American priest from Springfield, Mass.. was expected to arrive in Rome within the next few days to repocLxo Pop Pius XII on his reecnt talks with Premier Josef Stal, regarding the possibility possibil-ity of new relations between Soviet Russia and the Catholic Church, usually well-informed quarters re ported today. It was reported that Father Or lemanski. whose visit to Moscow aroused considerable criticism in the United States, also would dis cuss with his holiness his confer ences with Stalin about relations between the Soviet and the Holy See. Myron C. Taylor, Presiden t Roosevelt's personal representative to the Vatican, was reported inter ested m Father Orlemanski's re port on Russia bcause he was un derstood to be doing his utmost to improve relations between Rus sia ana uie vaucan. The Pope, Vatican sources said already had instructed a pontificial commission, formed in 1930 by Pope, Pius X for improvement of Soviet-Vatican relations, to study the problem in connection with the forthcoming visit of the Polish American priest. Father Orlemanski.- the first Roman Catholic priest to cfoss the Soviet border since 1934, went to Moscow at the invitation-of Stalin. SPRINGFIELD, Mass.. July 10 OLE) The ReV. Stanislaus Orlemanski Orle-manski had "no comment" today on reports from Vatican city that he planned soon to visit Pope Pius XII and report on his recent conversations with Premier Josef Stalin in Moscow. DAILY HERALD KOTO. UTAH eOTJNTT. TJTAH MONDAY. JULY 19. T4 PAGE 3 Americans ; (Continued from Page One) yet taken in the central Pacific, the Americans gained control of two airfields- Isely and Marpi within 1449 miles south of Tokyo and 1470 miles east of the Phil ippines. The campaign on Saipan was prhaps the costliest yet suffered by the Japanese. Since it opened on July 14, the Japanese lost their key base in the western Pacific, together with the entire garrison, and more than 1000 planes and 100 ships destroyed or damaged. Nimitz disclosed that carrier-based carrier-based planes again attack Guam and Rota, south of Saipan, Fri day and Saturday, while American Ameri-can combat patrol shot down nine Japanese fighter Dlanes apparently apparent-ly attempting to fly from Guam to Yap. Six t w i n-engined Japanese planes were destroyed on the ground and probably two others near Agana on Guam. The Americans Amer-icans lost one fighter and one torpdo bomber in the two-day raid. (A Japanese Domei news agen cy broadcast, recorded, by FCC. said American planes raided Guam. Rota and Tinian yesterday and that "several" cruisers and destroyers shelled Guam.) Statistics BORN Girl, to Harold C. and Marie Holder Hutchings, this morning. Girl, to Edison C. and LaVieve Black Breckenridge, Sunday nigni. Girl, to Earl W. and Grace Vin cent Wagner. Saturday night. All Utah Valley hospital. CHILD DROWNS POCATELLO. Ida., July 10 (U.P Dennis Woodward, two-year old son of Seaman, and Mrs. Max E. Woodward of Pocatello, drown ed yesterday when he apparently fell off his tricycle in the Ft. Hall canal, authorities reported today His body was discovered by two youths and pulled from the wa ter but attempts to revive the boy were unsuccessful. MOM sends ail rntf clothes here for CLEANKG- cleaning removes spots, gives clothes a new-look! Mother knows what's best for you. She knows that you want to join the parade of young America looking shiny and fresh, ready to help out with a clean healthy appearance. r.lADSEf CLEANING GO. PHONE 475 V I '1 , k JTwiMl PML PM'S the way to end the day ! Wartime! busiest Pace-Makers find a Pre-war Miracle in this mellow blend of fine whiskies. Made to Please Mankind in a a. Otd-Faahiooed, Manhattan or Hifhbafll OU y MORE WAtrUEFOTlE WSa? The knee, not the heel, is the most vulnerable spot in the modern mod-ern athlete. City Court Norman Invasion Casualty Brought To Utah Hospital BZRIGHAM CITY, Utah, July H 10 OLE) Pvt. John J. Shorack of Pueblo, Colo., was undergoing" - treatment today at Bushnell Gen era! hospital here the first Nor- ; mandy invasion casualty to be re ' ceived at the. big Utah army hos piuu. PhaH Mlttflniis AfnMN I 4 - that Shorack was wounded in the left arm 17 hours after the firsts invasion wave hit the Normandy coast. Shorack had been in action but five hours when he was shot. Shorack received medical aid eight minutes after he was wounded, wound-ed, he told attendants here, was administered penicillin less than two hours later, was then evacu ated to England, sent to the Unit ed States and finally flown here lasf night. Early writers predicted the wild game of America would feed the whole world for eternity. Karl P. Weiler, 1036 East. Third South. Salt Lake, who had been released re-leased on S100 bail for reckless driving, forfeited bail, when he did not appear in city court this mor ning to answer to the charge. Ferris H. Larsen of Maple ton Utah, forfeited X7.50, on a charge of speeding. Reid A. Frandsen also forfeited his bail of $7.50 for speeding. O. E. Eiachelberger for failing to comply with traffic laws, for feited $2.50. DO YOU HAVE A SON or DAUGHTER IN THE SERVICE? If so. you are ligible to join the-American the-American War Dads, and your community should have a chapter of this organization. We now have better than 500 chapters in the United States and a real program for out sons and daughters in the Service. . If interested, write for full details de-tails to the American War Dads 710A Land Bank Bldg., Kansas City 6, Mo. I I I I (US 7 U J em Fast acceleration cuts gas mileage as much as 20-30 per cent. Accelerate gradually in first and second speeds. Quick starting and stopping wastes gas! Maintain even speed; anticipate traffic stops. Drive at moderate speeds; 20-30 MP.H. is the most economical. On the highway, don't exceed 35 M.P.H. Under-inflated tires increase rolling resistance and tire wear! Check tire inflation weekly. Dragging brakes waste gas! Keep brakes properly adjusted. For safety, have them relined if necessary. Have your car lubricated regularly make sure your oil filter is working efficiently. Replace if needed. Evaporation occurs faster in hot weather. Don't neglect the battery. Add water frequently as needed. A dirty or neglected cleaner impairs engine performance. perform-ance. Have the air-cleaner inspected and cleaned if necessary. Let the Man Who Knows Your Car Your Plymouth, Dodge, DeSoto or Chrysler Dealer Help You Care for it. Snp-p-pstion to Renair Shoos p5 iti ril 00 r 'nnn r- i i If you need parts of any kind for Plymouth, LMJ i lrX&G3 Dodge, DeSoto or Chrysler can, ae th 1 dealer who handles that make. For Dodga truck parts see a Dodge Daalar. aecisitaiss lSatioaal Dirtillcra Product Corporalioo, New York. 86 Proof. A Blend of Straight Whiskies.' Tmt ia Mar Inm ana Hi Aiatsan Taaneay. PJUL, I.WT, CIS Natarark JOIN THI ATTACK IU Y MOM WAt IONOS Chrysler Corporation Part Division Factory fngneered and Inspected7 Parts for |