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Show f v - ' 1 - r 1 " PROVO; tTTAH COUNTY. UTAH THURSDAY. AUGUST a. 1945 Othman Is Sad: Senators HaVe Gone Home DAILY HERALD PAGES i - Trie jf olloMfinj artiple was writ-! 5 ten Dy. MUton Bronner, veteran - forei jcoJwpotKient.and former-European- Manager oiNEA : Service,, who- hutched "jPririie . Minister, Clement Attlee's alow but, aweVlriae-'.f rom hia. Jwlyl . JUimehouse yeara to. the Dolitical neigntj. v ' By-TJX.TON BRONNER -; (Written for. NEA Service) - Clement Atlee might be iealledi 1 tne Truman of the British poiiUr ? Ileal upheaval nT as Truman got i the . .pemocratlc nomination for i ' vice-president . as the . result of bitter rivalry between Byrnes and S- Wallace, adherents anAttleeben : t came, tne titular, leader of "the Labor, party, because of the bitr v ter rivalry between Ernest Bevin r and Herbert Morrison. - . Just lU.Truman has Wallace and; Byrnes in hlS cabinet, so AtUee V is rore toname Be vin and Mor- risonr for -.high .posts in his new h administration: K While th bulk of the Labor ( . 5arty organization and much of r its voting strength comes -from I the actual laboring class in re lcent years; there has always been a considerable high brow eie ment which genuinely believes in socialist, doctrines. Attlee is one . .ot that category, being one of the r new muen woo- OAs enjoyed a I Pooular Candidate He was graduated from' Oxford university, 'taking .class honors in modern history. Afterwards he was called to the bar in the ' uamous Inner Temple. Soon he "became a lecturer on social sci vence to 4he London School of Jkonomics. Entering politics, he chose to "run; ih the L-imehouse district of London's crowded East End, a tyoical working class area, many, of -who residents- are if -dock workers. Chosen In 1922 a H "member of the House of Com- iiiuiu, ue nw . oeen "so popular with critical constituents that he has. been re-elected ever since. In addition he was elected to two terms as .Mayor of Stepney, a ttypical working class borough of greater London. As Speaker in the house of L, commons, Attlee had none of the. n pujmacuy 01 oevin nor uie lire of Morrison. Both men are great stump speakers, as are so many parliamentary labor leaders, hav- L ing. fought their wjry up in labor union politics, Attlee is rather on the dry side, but with the gift of solid exposition exposi-tion of labor's viewpoint. He has none of the romantic glamor that was attached to Ramsay McDonald, Mc-Donald, first Labor premier, with h is tall figure, handsome gray thatched head and delightful Scotch, burr. Attlee is of medium me-dium height, balding, with a dark mustache touched with early .fray. Avoid Communists As premier he will have in his 'cabinet many labor leaders, all tfjpf whom are prima donnas. They: will now have to change, put This is How It One day I got tired of roasting at home. . .an amrv.-a - r r -v mw , a So I invested fa 1 : Bingo! kimsul shut out neat Later, when winter came, nouse warmer And my fuel bill, thanks to c 'flu rscomm mi0 KIMSUL is one of the fflou efficient imuhocns you caa -buy. Euy to. iosull-you an do it yound Just apply It betwsea attic floor joists, ot- between ri&ess if a sloping rool, and uten both ends. Pscksgej in tight rolls and compressed to ljth ia wAmsl length; you hare fewer rolls to hig up to -we amo-ssTC as ouch as 80 fcgwotk. talMlnaisWl8ts,tt 187 WEST? CENTER PHONE Z 4' j V :" I VV "w vS' III San Francisco .younrstera who sourht Clement R.,Attlee's auto-graph. auto-graph. durtng the recent conference never realised he would soon be prime minister of Great Britain. into effect their oft proclaimed policy of gradual evolution rather rath-er than revolution. They may have, a harder time with Stalin than did Churchill. The Labor party has consistently refused all efforts of the small British Communist party to form a so-called popular tront sucn as was at one time effected in. other European countries. At each Labor party convention the Communists were always rejected reject-ed by an enormous vote. Attlee will have vividly in mind what happened in one of McDonald's terms in office. Just before the parliamentary election the opposition sprung a letter said to have been written by Zinovieff, Bolshevik leader. The Labor opposition charged this letter compromised the Laborites, resulting in their defeat. If Attlee has a clear majority in commons and seeks to put into law some of the party s declara tions op national ownership of various properties, it will result in one of the bitterest fights of modern times. The house of lords will only be able to delay it for some time, or until new parliamentary elections are held. There will be no trouble from King George who. as .constitu tional monarch, makes no attempt at veto. The value of farm lands and buildings in Missouri in 1940 was 11,16702,598. All Happened Arid I Installed it myself in spare time. Home was 10 to 15 cooler. I found kimsul kept my kimsul, dropped 30. Atfvaategas K1SUW 1. Will not sift, settle or -pick. Insults cssil, snd quickly 3. No wsste. may bk ctn be used m mh. 4. No special tools or previous experience required 5. Hichly resisuat to be ana moUnra. Lest Than 5c Sq. Ft. PROVO 411 r -.-. , . Two Killed In Train Crash PAINESVILLE, 6 Aug. 2 (U.P.) The fireman and engineer of the New York' Central crack passenger passen-ger train, the Knickerbocker Express, Ex-press, were burned to death today when the train struck a stalled tank truck. The dead were identified as Herman J. Keck, 63, Collinwood, O., engineer, and William T. Hill, 45, Cleveland, fireman. Keck was trapped in the cab when the speeding express smashed into a Standard Oil of Ohio truck con taining 3,765 gallons of fuel oil. Hill jumped to his death when his clothes became ignited, turn ing him into a flaming torch. The driver of the truck, George L. Zeleznik, of Cleveland, said he attempted to flag down the west bound Knickerbocker, but jump ed to the side of the track when he saw that it was futile. Payments Slated On Lamb, Mutton LOGAN Clinton f Anderson, secretary of agriculture, has announced an-nounced government action designed de-signed to increase ttle supply of lamb and mutton by helping pro ducers meet : increased costs through Commodity aC red it Cor poration payments tQi sheep rais-- ers and lamb feeders, J. vera Hopkin, member of the Utah state AAA committee, reports. -The payments will become effective on sheep and lambs marketed on or after August 5fs 1945, and through June 30, 194 and. are to be made through th? offices of the county committees of the Agricultural Ag-ricultural Adjustment Agency, Mr. Hopkin said. The Commodity Credit Corporation Cor-poration payments to the seller of lambs and sheep to legally authorized auth-orized slaughterers for slaughter will range from $1.5$ to $2.50 per hundredweight for limbs weighing weigh-ing 65 to 90 pounds; from $2.15 to $3.15 per hundredweight for lambs weighing over. 90 pounds: and they will be $l'.t)0 per hundredweight hun-dredweight for all other sheep and lambs. 100 Killed In Crash In India LONDON, Aug. 2 (U.R An Exchange Ex-change Telegraph dispatch from Allahabad said today that more than 100 persons were killed when an airplane crashed at Madaripur, Bengal, in the middle of a crowd ed market place. The plane hit telegraph wires while flying low over the Kumar river, the dispatch dis-patch said. The dead included the pilot and five others aboard the plane. BRITISHER DENIES TREASON CHARGE ' LONDON, Aug. 2 flj.R) John Amery, son of Britain's former sprretarv for India, nleaded in nocent at his preliminary nearingi today on a treason charge, and was ordered held for trial at Old Bailey. Amery is charged with trying to recruit Britons to . fight with the Nazis by telling them that the Americans had "occupied" north ern Ireland. I NOW PLAYING And 'BOMBALERO' A mu3i!cle featurette in Technicolor! Shows at 7-i0 & 9:45 By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent! WASHINGTON. Aug. 2 U.R The time has come to kiss the boys goodbye; The senators have nassed their last law until the cool of Nautumn. and I am desolate. JWberebut in the U, S. senate wbuld Theodore G."Bilbb of Mississippi Mis-sissippi spend four days explaining explain-ing why he. did not-lhtend to filibuster fili-buster . agaihsl .the fair employment employ-ment practice tpmmittee? Who but senators would call in for investigatioh. New York's leading specialist hrthesale of inlaid in-laid mother-of-pearl Ltollet seats? You get the idea. It's a sati day for Othman, The" bOya. have cleaned pit thetr desks, except for the silver sprinkler bottles of saftd tor blotting purposes, and halve begun two months and seyen days of rest from their labors. !' They , won t get back until Oct. 8 and. I have got to go to work. Until yesterday, when the sen- atdrs knocked off for the rest of the summer I could drop up to their joint any old afternoon and wait in .air-conditioned, -comfort for a story to drop in my lap. Every day something; verging on the' incredible .happened, usually about 4 p. m., and-what more could an efficient reporter, ask? All right, a lazy reporter. As There was Jake Goldberg; who testified with tears -in his eyes before the war investigating committee com-mittee that he did not cheat the government . when he" auctioned off 'some federal plumbing supplies- - "Including toilet seats?" in- 3 Nazi Prisoners Killed by Guard On Colorado Farm OVID, Colo.. Aug. 2 (U.R A military investigation was under way today in the slaying of three 'Nazi prisoners of war by their American soldier guard as they worked in a potato patch. Officers at nearby Camn Carson. Car-son. Colo., prisoner of war internment intern-ment center of which the Ovid camp is a branch, said purple heart wearer Pvt. Harold W. Garland. Gar-land. .Columbus. Ind.. shot the men yesterday when, he reoorted, thv threatened t "rush" him. Garland, wounded in the North African campaign, was guarding a wroup of 15 German prisoners s thy weeded notatoes. He reportedly report-edly fired with unerrinr accuracy, accura-cy, desoite a crionling arm wound, killing the prisoners instantly. in-stantly. . The victirrts were identified asj Cpls. Helmut Pfifferlin? and An-j tone Nfmer, and Pvt. Hugo Quaas. They were, among ap proximately 100 German war nrisoners engaged in farm work in this area. The shooting occurred, the Camp Carson public relations office of-fice said, on the secluded farm of Hulbert Richjel. Jr.. as other members of the detail looked on. Garland was quoted as explain-ine-: "The prisoners made tbreaten-ine tbreaten-ine remarks to me before I fired. I fired my carbine at them when it looked like they were going to rush me." Capt. Gordon Randolph. Camp Carson public relations officer, laid Garland probably would be held in military custody pending an army court martial. Randoloh pointed out. however, that the Indiana soldier had. a "good" armv record and was a veteran military policeman. Slaying of the war prisoners here was the second such occurrence occur-rence in the mountain states recently. re-cently. An American guard turned turn-ed a machine gun on sleeping Nazi POWS. killing nine and wounding 19 others at Salina, Utah, last July 8. at Park Ro-She RED CROSS Swimming Instructor Tues., Thurs., & Sat. 1 to 2 P. M. Closed Mondays ' n iinsTTE EDsn COLBERT MacMURRAY MITCHELL LEISEN ' NooucnoN 1 - .quired "Senv James Mead of New York. "Oh no," .replied Jake. "Mother-of-pearl seats were! a kind of what you might say a hobby of mine. I. dealt -in them privately." Another witness before another committee turned out to be R. S. Reynolds, Who. made his fortune putting foil around cigarets, and who displayed as one of his postwar post-war projects - a golden-colored evening gown,' woven of solid aluminum thread If A lady dribbled drib-bled grawy on her skirts, he said, she could turn ! the hose on it. It was a wonderful place, the senate. Sen.. Homer Ferguson of Aussies Knife Dehlndpanese Units By HUGH CRUMPLER United Press War Correspondent . MANILA, Aug. 2 (U.R) Australian Austra-lian patrols knifed behind Japa nese rearguard f .units today, threatening . them, with isolation in. the Balikpapan and Brunei Bay areas of Borneo. Thirteenth airforce bombers and Australian fighters aided the advancing Australian seventh and ninth division" .ground forces by attacking enemy airdromes and installations along Borneo s coastal areas. In New Guinea Australian 60th division units captured Alama, a village approximately six miles south of the huge enemy troop concentration around Kaboibus. Alama 's fall gives the Australians Austra-lians control of three other villages, vil-lages, Auaui, Kuniiche, and Gwa-lip, Gwa-lip, which are strongly held by the Japanese. , The Japanese Still hold the eastern bank of the Mivo river in southern Bougainville. First Australian attempts to cross brought heavy fife from enemy rriachineguns. The troops were forced to abandon- the attempt. Australian naval vessels bombarded bom-barded the eastern side of Buka island, destroying 30 buildings or huts and hammering four enemy troop concentrations. Despite bad weather the far eastern airforce spread its attacks at-tacks over most of the Japanese empire. Low 'flying fighters wrecked 10 locomotives, 74 Tailway cars, and numbers of motor vehicles. Among army vessels sunk were a 2,000-ton tanker, three medium freighters, two destroyer escorts, and a coastal craft. Seventh fleet partol bombers, flying over the Asiatic cost, destroyed de-stroyed 28 coastal craft in the Swatow and Hongkong areas. Aidrome equipment and navigation naviga-tion facilities were hit in French Indo-China, and a harbor craft was damaged near Singapore. P RO VO OLD A 1 R PORT MON. AUG. AT 3 & 8 P. M. Doors Open 2 & 7 P. M. Presenfmg on INCONCEIVABLY IMPRESSIVE ARRAY OF AMAZING ACTS & ARTISTS including THE WORLD FAMOUS RIDING CRISTIANIS FANTASTICALLY CLOU D STARRING LOVftY BEAUTIFUL NEW BALLET LA LOUISA Th. inimitable FLYING CONCELLOS ALA MING fU WHIRLWIND ACROBATIC O R T A N. S Forward Somersaulting Wizard, fi. th. Wlr PALLENRERO'S Wonder BEARS The KONYOTS A Th ARTUROS Eorth't foremott High School Horseman DAUNTLESS DICK CLEMENS KING O F .11 O N TRAINERS t HIS PERFORMING MAN KIltERS DAVISOS, EXCELLOS, WRIGHTS AND SCORES UPON SCORES OF OTHERS Poertea Performing ; ELEPHANTS CorgoMa Iwtredwctory Saganit Broathtaklng Now Grand FINALE HENRY KYES, "THE PAUL WHITEMAN OF THE WHITE TOPS" AND HIS NEW WONDER BAND i Supr-tducoted HORSES 4 PONIES CLOWNS G A L O R-E $ 0 P E a MEN AG ERIE Tickets on sale circus day at WALGREEN DRUG STORE Rearguard (3) Michigan announced- that the!) union suit situation was. so criti-; cal in Detroit his embittered masculine mas-culine constituents .were f dreed to buy ladies' - panties. Tem' rose colored. Trimmed in lace. . "For their own ' use the senator sen-ator lamented. ;-v.-'Sen Kenneth Wherry, of Neb:, investigated the Venetian blind crisis.' A dozen loud-voieed ladies la-dies and Ely 'Culbertson, the bridge teacher, denounced .the foreign affairs committee and the San Francisco peace charter. One of the ladies sneered so feelingly at Sen. Tom Connally of Texas that two. cops eised Jier out ' -; The man Bilbo, who. functions as chairman of the district committee com-mittee and .hence as the; nearest thing the capital has to. a mayor, campaigned to close-' the gayety burlesque theater. He said the nekkid ladies weren't nlce He also considered erecting- the world's greatest athletic stadium with a hydraulic roof. v ' Sen., Glen H. Taylor, of : Idaho, once a crooning cowboy, . said what the senate needed was more showmanship, loudspeakers, and a master of ceremonies. Now I weep to say it the place is locked, the official snuff boxes are gathering dust and my pals are far away. Enjoy yourselves, fellows, but hurry back. I need you; oh, how I need you. OPA Finds a Car For Released Vet SALT LAKE CITY A footsore and weary discharged veteran found his way to the office of price administration- Wednesday with the complaint that he had scoured used car markets in Og-den, Og-den, Murray and Salt Lake City, only to find that the desirable ve hicles on the lot were "already sold." - The veteran, Charles Knight of Delta, and his brother Sgt. Ralph Knight, had the car .they wanted a few hours later a five-passenger Chevrolet coupe, for the OPA ceiling price of $1188. With the help of the Utah Used L-ar ueaier ass n, wmcn is endeavoring en-deavoring to stymie illegal trans fers of used cars, and an OPA in vestigator, the transaction was completed. Cold water, under nressure from a hydrant, is one of the best mean 01 control 01 red spiders on ever greens, phlox and flame azalea. Cool As a Mountain Top! NOW PLAYING Open at 1:15 Last Show 9:40 cVia AicmM. fl ers she's got' '-. a wolf-tamine chore on her haredsl ROBERT Y LARAIIIE MNN rlARDING MARC CRAMER ANNE JEFFREYS GLENN VERNON LAWRENCE TIERIEY- BILL WILLIAMS PLUS: -JWSNEY CARTOON This ia America - Sport - News Doors Open 1:30 r if ! 2 EVP' '"' .rmf m ymrT''m, fi"1' . ..,:V; k eot Starts p-? w I v.i y.Mviwmrr I I n In I- I l; Ends Winv Powelli Slyrna ILot. "THIN MAN GOES -TONITE! HOME . i 2nd First Showing in Provol mr - -ir- J V ASr- - t Mil 1 CO-HTfl RIDIN ! Featuring WILLIAM BOYD f 'TREE MEN MTEXASV doors STARTS TOMORROW ! hi 1: 30 p.m. I H S U ! f I 1 K V 1 . "P1 mm . i W K jUT GEORGE 1 . NJ . HATFIELD 1 ; 'poNruREEDj m-rmmtBt n '"" m ;gg,iysasMiaiaaaBM jCo - Hit! 4 mSmm ITS MUSICAL BUSS WITH EVERY KISSI...- Hit: THREE'S A FAMILY" fji nm 111 MWWWWMM FIGHTIN' ! ! V- M l STARTS I i ... TODAY. . .'J Af DooraOpen . . I ' at. 10 p. m. I tnd Tonite! James Cacney in . T.LOOD ON : LJ :iiXns;suN- V I i ;: A mi. |