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Show PAGESIX PITOVP TUTAHY DAILY r HER'ALDV ' FRIDAY AUGUST - IT mi PROVO JUNIORS WIN OPENER ' Provo Junior .American Legion baseball team advanced into the semi-finals of the state playoffs by defeating Bingham, 15-7, in the opening round game today. : Ogden, one of the favorites in the, tourney, tripped Utah Magazine Maga-zine of Salt Lake City, 6-1, in another game today. . - ' . JAPAN (Continued from Page One) development when Gen. Raishiro SumiU, chief of the Japanese military mission to French Indo-ChLna, Indo-ChLna, said In an interview, with an Asahi correspondent at Saigon that 'Japan had completed ; Its construction of a 'new orddr . in East Asia with the occupation of IndOrChina in a joint defense program.' At 'the - same time some newspapers began to say that now Japan's "back-door"., had been secured against attack. ' - . It was .announced an agreement had been . signed by which three big Thailand banks would extend the Yokohama Specie bank cred its of about 15,000,000 yen ($3, 750,000) to Japan. It was believed the credit would be used to purchase pur-chase rice. . -- The foreign office announced Thailand had recognized Manchu- kuo, effective today, and spokes men, said this might be interpreted as a Thai decision to "forsake the Anglo-American camp and join Japan's program for construction of a greater East Asia co-prosper ity sphere." Diplomatic Informants report that since Germany attacked Rus sia, German influence in Japan has noticeably weakened, and the government has shifted gradually toward a. more independent policy, Informants say also that Gen. Eugen Ott, the German ambassador, ambassa-dor, is anxious over the situation. Roosevelt Plans Vacation Cruise WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 UE) President Roosevelt disclosed today to-day he plans to depart early next week for a cruise up the eastern coast off upper New England. The president said, however, that Ms vacation plans carried no implications that the international situation is better or worse. Three Englishmen originated auction bridge in India. Springville Man Called by Death SPRINGVILLE Thomas Grif fith, 60, vice president of the Springville-Mapleton Fruit Growers' Grow-ers' association, died Thursday at the family home, 1123 East Second Sec-ond North street, from a heart attack. " Mr. Griffith was born in South Wales, May, 6, 1881, a son of Thomas and Alice Lloyd Griffith. He came to Utah in 1888, and lived in Scofield, Castle Gate and Eureka, moving to Springville in 1810. He married Sarah Ann Rolf e in 1904, in Eureka, and shhe died In 1923. On Sept. 3, 1925, he married Annie Powell Jenkins. He was a member of the Springville Spring-ville volunteer firemen's association associa-tion and the I. O. O. F. lodge."' Surviving are his wife, three sons and one daughter, as follows: fol-lows: Thomas Griffith, Salt Lake City; .Fred and Rolfe Griffith, Springville; Mrs. Marie Wheeler, Lbs Angeles, and a step-son, Ray Jenkins, Washington, D. C. He leaves 11 grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 2 p. m. in the Fourth ward chapeL Friends may call at the family home prior to the services. serv-ices. Interment will be in the Evergreen cemetery. ROOSEVELT (Continued from Page One) sia could qualify for aid under the lend-lease act. Other sources disclosed, mean time, the administration is study' ing a plan to give Russia priority on deliveries of certain types of American munitions originally ordered by this government and Britain. Designed to encourage the Red armys stubborn resistance to Germany, the plan also includes steps to overcome some of the dlf ficulties of tranporting supplies from the United States to Russia. He said he has had virtually no communications from , Harry L. Hopkins since the latters arrival in Moscow. He explained his only information was Hopkin's report of his safe arrival in the Soviet capital. The second request for lend lease appropriations, which has been anticipated for several weeks, will not be sent to Congress until after Hopkins' return, the presl dent said. The waiving of British and American war materials priori ties for Russia was said to have won considerable support in gov ernment circles here. Obituaries DEATH CLAIMS JOHN FOOTE John Foote, 82, of 259 South Second East, retired school teacher teach-er and church worker, died early this morning of causes incident to age. ' ; , - " ' He was born at Nephi, July .19, 1859, the son of Thimoth B. and Nancy Jane Riley Foote. He married mar-ried Laura Young February . 28, 1884 ; in the Salt Lake City , En dowment house. Mr. Foote moved to Provo when a young man and ' received his schooling here. After his marriage mar-riage he moved to Nephi ; where he taught school. Two years later he returned, to Provo where he had since resided. For years after moving to Provo he , still taught school in the winter, at Nephi and several other places. He was a faithful and active L. D. S. church worker and was a high priest in the Provo - First ward at time of his death. ; Surviving are his- widow of Provo, one son, John M. Foote of Phoenix, Ariz.; two daughters, Mrs. Laural Shelby of Los Angeles, An-geles, Cal., and Mrs.' Norma Perry of Hollywood, Cal.;. and two grandchildren. - Funeral serylces will be Sunday at 1:30 p. m. in the Provo First ward chapel, with Bishop W. P. Whitehead in charge, r . Friends may call Saturday evening eve-ning and Sunday prior to the services ser-vices at the Deseret - Mortuary. Burial will be in the Provo City Burial park. Cranium Answers 1. Rudy Vallee has recently taken up ventriloquism, with a dummy called Sally Ann. 2. The "B" in Cecil B. De Mllle is for Blount. 3. Erroll Flynn Is making "Capt. Horatio Hornblower." 4. A slow-healing leg injury has forced Lionel Barrymore to p!.ay all his roles in a wheel chair for the past few years. 5. Marjorie Main's performance in "Barnacle Bill" with Wallace Beery indicated she might be long looked-for successor .. to Marie Dressier. Persons earning less than $3000 a year own two-thirds of all the motor cars in the United States. RUSSIA as 4A7 -J Check these values for ! your own wardrobe, for your children's! New ideas, too, for fixing up your home! Don't miss these savings! Come in today! Skwwas csSfasr Cbrr&ss FALL . FAVORITES at A Rondo Prints Sturdy Coverts " Hometown Prints Tremendously exciting group at one value- price! Prints and plains for every use!-Mirror-clear, tubbable colors for fall! a" viae. All-Purpose AVENUE PRINTS Huge variety! Tub-fast colors yd. JL C Priced for Economy Tubfast Ginghams. Mo-De-Gay fll-Prints, fll-Prints, yd.. Smart for school, play and the office! Timely values' Hemstitched Stamped Tubing Fine Quality, with Lovely New AAg Design ! A Penney Feature SET. . SlsJv Skyzves ess yf&4V0JS Check These Values! Crown Tested Peachbloom 2 Of rayon crepe in lovely colors! Prints, stripes, in sporty wool-like spun rayon. 39" Yd. wide. , . RAYON PRINTS Ideal for School Clothes Yr.. 33 V I Advance Patterns for FaUT5c7 Glamour for all occasions Rich Sorority Prints Heavy Panne Satin Rustly Evening Taffeta Dull-Finish Plain Colors Yd. Exquisite rayons for everything from street dresses to glamorous evening gowns! Select YOURS today . . . at this low Penney price! Men's Work GLOVES For protection on the job 'ask for Big Pay I , Pr. Men's WORK SHOES Ox Hide gives you extra miles of v : Ckf hard wear! JSf0U BIG PAY SOCKS Extra- heavy cotton . reinforced ! -. f colors. V-w ,i . Pr.A 3 V . Sanfortted Matched ' Outfits Vat Dyed! ; Advance' Showing! Small Boys' CORDUROY JIMMIES Sizes to 8 Fall Colors! 98c 1 MMMMMaBMMMaWr $2.17: Nation-Wide SHEETS Lab-tested! tfm 81"x99" UUC Terry BATH TOWELS Colorful stripes on white! Absorbent! Big- 22"xW..,; Terry Wash Cloths 5c Lace TABLE CLOTHS Luxury for a 4 SYfk little price!. AeWU Save on NOTIONS.' 4c PIlM 1 IVnoo. TALON FASTENEtts .to 49 .. 2' Depend. 8c ! Bnu Pin, TO Pat. 73cj Off. For factory,. . -f shop r , '. farm!' Tight-' weave herringbones. (Continued from Page One) with a German plane ; over, the English channel today. Peristent ' and fierce Soviet counter-attacks, ' particularly in the vital Smolensk sector, were reported today to have, stemmed forward movement of Nazi troops along the Russian front. In London Lon-don the Germans were thought to be reorganizing for a third offen sive to attempt to break tne stiff resistance of the Red army. , The Soviet air force was giving heavy support to- Russian land troops.. It blasted at . gasoline trucks rolling up to the front to refuel stalled. Panzer divisions, and at German ships in the Baltic, Bal-tic, reporting a German destroyer sunk and two other ships damaged. dam-aged. - ' The German DNB oficlal news agency claimed a Tat German victory had been scored in battle with 'e'ncircled" Russian troops south of Smolensk. It said the Russians lost . ten of thousands kiled, 33,000 men and 245 guns captured. - ? The :Nazi high command reported re-ported again all is going "favorably," "favor-ably," but German propaganda report made plain that Russian counter-attacks are beginning to dominate the action all along the front. German accounts uniformly uniform-ly - claimed - the counter-attacks have been beaten off. f There was lessening of the tension ten-sion between the United States and Japan, due to prompt and full Japanese apologies for the bombing bomb-ing of the gunboat Tutuila, and Tokyo indicated a quiet Japanese effort may be underway to improve im-prove American relations. ( However, London indicated soma concern over Thailand. Tokyo announced an-nounced Thailand has granted diplomatic recognition to Man chukuo, part of the Japanese Eastern Asia sphere and a Japanese Japa-nese spokesman attributed great significance to the action as indicating in-dicating Thailand is falling into line with the Japanese' bloc. British reports said the Japanese Japa-nese had offered Thailand the Indo-Chinese province of Laos and the ancient Cambodian capital of Angkor in exchange for military and naval bases and a virtual monopoly of Thailand's exports of rubber, rice and tin. However, a Thailand spokesman has denied any agreement with either Japan or Britain concerning military bases. ! , The British issued lengthy statements state-ments on reinforcement of their bases in Burm which would be threatened immediately by any Japanese move into Thailand and L S. Amery, secretary for India, speaking in Commons, called attention at-tention to danger of war spreading spread-ing to India within a few months - both from the east and the west. Japanese diplomats arriving In Japan from Moscow reported Russian Rus-sian troops are being moved east to the Siberian front as well as west toward the European front along the trans-Siberian railroad. After 40 days of the bloodiest fighting of the war the Nazi. wehrmacht still faced the task Of putting the red army out of commission com-mission while from behind the Ger man lines both in Russia and Jn the seething occupied nations of the continent came a stream of reports indicating the populace Is sirring in discontent at German occupation. That a British move .into Europe Eu-rope would riot be without support sup-port among the occupied peoples was evident from a stream of reports re-ports from various sources. Stockholm Stock-holm reported the Germans have been forced to declare a state of siege in the Aalesund area of the Norwegian coast, there was an other report of the execution of "communists" in Belgrade 90 this time and Turkey said the Nazis are moving 25,000 more troops into Jugoslavia because of per sistent guerrilla warfare. Modern telescopes bring about three hundred trillion stars into view. Peach Growers To Meet Monday Night All Utah county 'peach growers grow-ers are invited to attend a! meeting meet-ing Monday at 8 p. m. in the Orem seminary building, according accord-ing to Clarence D. Ashton, assistant assist-ant county agricultural agent. Ballots on the state peach marketing order have been sent to all growers and must be returned re-turned by Monday at 5 p. m. If two, thirds of the growers favor the order, it will be adopted. Results Re-sults of the vote will be reported at Monday night's meeting. AIRPORT (Continued from Page One) vide the site for the Provo airport air-port development. - ; ' A. bill originated by. Provo city officials and passed at the last special session of the legislature empowered the governor to dedicate dedi-cate state-owned lands at the proposed airport ' site to airport use. An appraiser employed by Provo Pro-vo city has just completed an appraisal of lands at the site, and Provo city expects to buy out the rights of private property owners oh lands needed for the airport. Where the land cannot be purchased pur-chased by. negotiation, 'condemnation 'condemna-tion proceedings will be instigated, instigat-ed, according to ' Mayor Mark Anderson. If hopes of city officials materialize, ma-terialize, the project approved today to-day will ; be the first unit of a vast development program that may eventually amount to a million mil-lion dollar expenditure. City Engineer E. A. Jacob said it is likely the runways will bo built with .a view to- accpmmo? dating the large bombing planes. This would require that they be one-mile to 6500 feet long. KIWAIIIS NEW TODAYJ First Hit Co-Feature STARTS SUNDAY! HIT No. 1 ..y. ACTION! OlmMinawmKumlY t -K WBUY 1 V '7 JEAN AXTHUX jZfCi ! ARTHUR. HIT No. 2 pjKkitC60K MitaGSMVIUi CtMKTNOtU kUIWn tu1111.1v m--i tftii fmiickI ill MMICti STARTS SUNDAY! 2 GREAT HITS You'll love Judy's brand of comedy ... Six great comedians.. .Smash song bits . . . Rejoice to its rhythm...a picture that'll have yon laughing and singing in the aisles. m m v .4..f , 't i ,k '; 2nd Companion Hit "Mr. District Attorney" with DENNIS O'KKEFE PETER LORRE Cool and Comfortable . ALWAYS! (Continued from Page One) , held at the Springville - art gallery gal-lery at which Mrs. Mae Huntington Hunting-ton of Springville, will present a discussion of art. v. Y Governor's Banquet-- ; V The governor's banquet will be Monday at 7. p. m. in the Women's gym. Governor Chase Clark of Idaho and Governor . Herbert . B, Maw of Utah will ' extend- greetings.- Hamilton ,; G . Park, the "Senator from Sandpit," will give an address. The governor's ball will follow in the, Joseph Smith Memorial building. ' Opening Tuesday's program will be a ladles breakfast at the Provo golf clubhouse at which Mrs. Arthur Gaeth of Provo, and Miss Marjorie Fisher of Keetley, will give : addresses. Bridge - and golf tournaments will follow. ,., , Addresses ' at the 9:30 a. m. general session at Strand thea tre will be given by Robert J. Watt of Washington, international representative of the 'American Federation of Labor, and J. Hudson Hud-son Huffard of Bluefield, Va., Klwanls International trustee. Boy Scouts of Troop 43 will present pre-sent a flag ceremony. Committees Commit-tees on- credentials and elections will report. The Utah fellowship luncheon in charge of Mrs. Fern B. Ercan-brack Ercan-brack of Provo will be at 12 noon at the Women's gym. Symposium Slated '. A symposium, "How National Defense Affects Each of Us," will feature the 2 p. m. session at Strand theatre. Arthur Gaeth of the B Y U faculty will be moderator. moder-ator. Peneliers will represent Church Notice SEVENTH DAY AD VENTISTS Sabbath , school, , 9:30;". Mrs. Charles . Smith, : superintendent. Adult bible class subject, "Moses the Fearless Leader.' Golden text: "By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's oaugn-ter; oaugn-ter; choosing - rather to " suffer affliction with the people of God." Heb. 11; 24. Sermon by H. A. Rentfro: "Witnessing for Christ," 11 o'clock. Welcome. Sunday morning, morn-ing, over KOVO, 8 o'clock, the Family Bible quarter-hour continues con-tinues the "Know Your Bible," program. The times demand . a personal knowledge of the Word of God. agriculture, capital, consumer, government, industry, labor and youth. Following- the symposium will be committee reports and election of officers. A boat trip to Bird Island, starting at 5:30 p.. m., will write finis to the convention. Special music,' water sports and a box luncheon are planned on the trip. Jacob Coleman, district governor, gover-nor, said today that in the event of inclement weather, the Sunday evening Klwanls convention meeting meet-ing will be held in the Brigham Young university Joseph Smith Memorial building instead of at the Theatre of the Pines. GILES SPEAKS TOROfARlls ' "We are all instruments, to be used for the preservation of our democratic ' heritage," declared Graver A. Giles, attorney general of Utah, in an address on the sut. ject "Let's All Get Together" de. livered at the Provo Rotary club luncheon today. "In ' the present crisis we can ill afford to be divided," Mr. Gilot f saia. -we muse stana logeuier." r j He quoted Washington, Theo- dore Roosevelt, Lincoln, Elihu .' Root, to illustrate the stand aa r Americans should take to preserve the free institutions of the United ' i States! t Patriotism demands that every I citizen -be unselfish; that he be fc willing to give his all; that coun- try be placed before self and all t other interests, Mr. Giles stated, f Birthdays Saturday, August 3 DAVID OPENSHAW EDWIN D. REED WENDELL M. RIGBY FERN KOPP Sunday, August S CARL D. SWENSON Spend a F e w Joyous Hours in the Enchanted Land of Fantasy, Far Away From the Cares of a War-weary World DOORS OPEN rsj 12:45 p. m. FIRST FUll 11 N CI H FR0DUCTI0N SINCE SNOWWHItEV, Uin .lli in itunmiuiuii JIMtHYCRICKETCCPPETTO 1W0RIHINCT0N FOUtFttLOW CtDtON'FIGARO'MONSTRO QR)IROMSeiUE FAIRY 2nd Big: Hit! Buddy Maureen EBSEN OUARA "THEY MET IN 111.. AKU1SNTINA Always COOL and Comfortable 20c ANY SEAT ANYTIME SATURDAY & SUNDAY Doors Open at 1 :00 ALWAYS THE BEST ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE WHOLE FAMILYJ ,ti Ai mmm .urri.( vALLACE BEERY MM-H Kim. with LIONEL BARRYMORE Ursine Day - Ronald Ktagaa Also JTi - 1 n .-tv. I . whole show full ogay floodtlmel inuiiv m GREENWOOD - f J m u 1 -Plus- , Chapter No.. 2 v . SKY RAIDERS"- NOW! ! Ends With Late Show Sat.! Mats. - - 25c Eves. - - 35c Children -10c jmrnmdmmr 2 ACE HITS! ... ONE TIP - TOP PROGRAM! ... itttt turn s Y V'hUOffl mi m auil QtlOM ui mnki nMM,(uini mwmiT . nunh . on mm n Hum I TERROR-STALXED'THtULtSl MMfflfaWJ I J;.7 II III tm J ' Qers-Dosaid Roods A COtUMtlA fICTUtt THE HITS AT THE PARAMOUNT NEVER STOPt COMING SUNDAY! The elamotir nosicd about the glamour town! 5l5&3iD0M AMECRE:- BETTY GRASLEl ROBERT CUMMINGS CbirUttt CrtMweei - ; lack Raleyl Ctr.I. liitfit Cafclia Wrlkt It. CO-FEATURE: 'THREE SONS O GUNS" nnr 9 TODAY and SATURDAY! and ' 1 WOTTA CUAWf . ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY . . FOR PRICES EVERYONE CAN AFFORD! First RIOTOUS ROMANCE! - evfe , Also Whenever Ifa a Hopalong Caasldy Picture . . You Know It'a the Best Action Hit Made! aa ; IIOPALONG CA8SIDY BUSSEL IXAYDEN. . Andy Clyde - Victor Jory 'FIGHTING DEVIL DOGS" Cl4f Qiirirf'llfl! They Oat-shot the' James Boys wlcll Id OUllUay. and Out-Rode the .DaltonsJ 4 17 , - |