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Show Tkzrshw, Jj.-.-o 27, ID tlhc linin' nf g'ljamn wrr. r y At Prvo, L by tfi IsAMtiw'a of Oiem. Prii.Wd by Cudi tst Mwt, Frovo, Ludt ui, , a , C Second under act of March 1, Si.aron Cooprtav Fsiuc atnnal F.efWt.atu Vl.ey pultl.iTUf Cun.;iij' 57 North imt y Matter, October 179. fc, H37, At ti. Think of Europe's Foot Office at Proro, refugees to nowhere"! Think Holland, Norway, Finland, Boland, France, moving to "nowhere. Will the devastation reach. England? No armored plate protects these refugees. No supply trains bring them food. No commander finds them a place to stay when night falls. No expert strategist tells them where to continue their vvearj trek, or how. Father and son are not there to help them. All hope is behind them; in front lies nothing lut horror end frightful uncertainty. War strikes the civilians first and makes them suffer most. Battles are fought in the streets of their small towns and on the fields of their small farms. Invading battalions crush their homes, shops ahd schools. Foragers seize thtir crops to feed soldiers, and confiscate their livestock to haul supplies. Nothing remains for these "refugees to nowhere". Kind hearted Canadians already are taking refugee children from England, Belgium, Holland and France. Leery Canadian home is being canvassed for invitations to send one or more refugee children, mostly under eight years of age. If invasion strikes England what hope if left even for children? SURRENDER OF PARIS The surrender of Baris, which was followed almost at once by the collapse of French military resistance, was more than a disaster for the French Republic, more than a great victory for Hitlers incredible war machine. i $ j '1 j S sj f Fruit Growers We are now stocking the No. 900 Ironclad Fruit Picking Ladder. This one embodies all the best features of all other makes. Made of spruce and fir, light and strong. A well balanced ladder that will never wobble. Steps riveted to side rails with pressed steel brackets which form a brace and wTap around rail, thus re-inforc- ing side. TOP STEP IS OF IIICKROY 10-Fn- ol S mm size i Con. Wagon & a State Freni Your ARE PROUD OF THEIR FIFTY YEARS IN UTAH - - - AND ARE PARTICULARLY PROUD OF THEIR LAST TWELVE YEARS IN PROVO. In order to celebrate this eient properly, and to reward and thank the many friends who have contributed so greatly to our success, we announce a Double Anniversary 25 West 2nd South Many a Year! Were celebrating TWO Anniversaries this year - the founding of the Shriver business in Utah 50 years ago by W. F. Shriver - - - and the Twelfth anniversary of the Shriver business in Provo. -- So, to celebrate this DOUBLE ANNIVERSARY are offering you birthday presents in the form of substantial savings on all your clothing and furnishings. we 650 Hart, Schaffner and Marx SUITS - Liberal COACH'LL. ,75 FRIDAY and SATURDAY JUNE 28th & 29th C. Sterling Cluff, with whom is associated Harold Peterson, announce the opening of their New FOOD M A R K E T in Pleasant View. They invite your patronage and offer you a complete line of Groceries, vegetables, fruits and meats. PROVO There is a SPECIAL Every Day! 1933 CHEV. Hasnt Seen in Such as Utah $33 An IGA Store Welling Buicli Company $179. Come in and Take Your Pick YbU WONT SEE PRICES LIKE THESE FOR YEARS TO COME! OTHER FINE SUITS FREE a Popsicle and Baloon to kiddie our if store, visiting every accompanied by its parents. Where Customers Send Their Friends PEAS BEANS o cror CORN TOMATOES ZoC V Mixed Vegetables TUNA FLAKES 100 GRISCO 51? SIMREEI,1E31 47? I. G. A. iant Ikg 47? Giant Bars for 23? F. H. Knickerbocker PROMOTIONS OF TWO west-- - 7 Meats ff. f r H. Guild, general the district, has Utah has 809 dairy herds composed of 8,455 cows in 13 dairy improvement associations ihioughnut the state. tS",0! it. 27? I BEEF STEAKS ! LUNCHEON MEATS to presi- ! I 1 PORK ROASTS-1- af 23? & 170 Slinr; BACON 44 i 14 i t 50 s 1 1 CORN FLAKES 170 Iop Corn 3 Packages CANDY BARS Assorted 3 for im A. I-- Quarts I. G. A. MATCHES 6 Box Carton 0R0 SHORTENING SUGARED...... nmm Economy iLUUH 48-l- b. Shirts - - taken from our regular steck bag LB. BANANAS LETTUCE y NOW GROUP No. 3 $4.00 Values QC0 GROUP NO. 4 Odds and Ends W-i-- t 4 y ''s- i r-- NOW 1 5c . 2.65 J GROUP No. 2 $3.00 and $6.00 Valtes $ mm MR uil Jill. u fm vlS JeliJ M Come in and Take Your Pick ..... 1Q0 5S 4 3,85 SHOES 600 150 23? U. 65 GROUP No. 1 Values to $8.95 5c . GROUP No. 2 ,$3.85 Values $2.00 Values. 31? 27? 13? 35? per lb. per head TOMATOES2,?,3. NOW 10-- 1 100 .ItORACLE WHIP SaM QT. Dress, IIATS GROUP No. 1 $5.00 Values s 20 Dozen Vegetables sonth-rentr- Knickerbocker, iuiiiant dent in the Parifie Northwest, has been named eeneral manager to succeed Gnild. 7Ii headquarters will hr in Salt Lake City. SIIIKTS All Day Saturday ! S23.75 $19.75 Specials for Opening Day Allowances on Your Used Car g na Pleasant View Food Market DEALER EUiCK hitere-un- More than 2,500 patents have 50 been granted In the past Tlie Junior Genealogical clus )( ars on schemes to replace Not one of Timpanogos ward will present wooden railroad ties. the program next Sunday night. of the devices has been as cheap This will be In the form of an or as good. THE OPENING OF THE Yen Set EETTER EUYS given. A program is outlined and all ward members are invited to come and see what these boys and girls have done in this work President A. V. Watkins will present the awards. vsrv MEASURES ANNOUNCING!! U. P. Rail Posts 255 W. Center Provo, Utah Ph. 244 Groo the Slate Capitol. It is expected that the new plan will increase the efficiency of the Patrol and with the addition of evelen new patrolmen in a with districts patrol the near future, Utah highways and of each, in charge sergeant motor-lu- g two Lieutenant districts to super- will be made pafer for the public. the vise them, one at Ogden and other at Trovo. are to he set up bv the State Road commission Monson Heads following recommendations subby National Association mitted to the commission Lieutenant Franklin M Kreml, of and Sergeants Theodore Loveless Secretaries Interthe of and D. C. Snedaker Tr. E. E. Monson, Secretary of national Association of Chiefs of announcewas elected unanimously an to Stat'. rolice, according ment by Chairman VV. D. Ham- to the office of president of the National Assoi iatlon of Secretmond. Districts are as follows: Dist- aries of Slate at the annual conrict No. 1, Box Elder, Cache, and vention held at Savannah, GeorDistrict No. -- . gia, Saturday, June 15th. This Rich Counties: Davis. North Summit, is the first time that thtB honor Weber, District has come to a Secretary of State and Morgan Counties: No. 3, Salt Lake. South Summit west of the Mississippi River Dr. Monson was secretary of and Tooele Counties; District No. 4. Utah, Wasatch, Duchesne, the Association in 1938, and at the Uintah, and Daggett Counties; elected Emery, 1939 convention. District No 5. Carbon He extende'd an invitation to Grand, and San Juan Counties; District No. 6, Juab. Sanpete, the convention to Fold its 1941 and meetings in Salt Lake City. If Piute, , Garfield, Sevier, Wayne Counties; District No. 7, the invitation Is accepted a deleMillard, Beaver, Iron, Washinggation of leaders in public life from all 4 8 Btates will come to ton, and Kane Counties. Lieutenant B. C. Hillis will Salt Lake City. The National Association of remain at Ogden which is his and will Secretaries of State held their present headquarters, have supervision o Patrol Dist- fifteenth annual convention in ricts 1, 2, and 3. Lieutenant Salt Lake City in August, 1931, was Milton H. Welling Dow, with headquarters at Provo, when will have supervision of Districts Utah Secretary of State. Dr. E. E. Monson, newly elect4, 5, 6, and 7. A third recommendation adopt- ed President of the organization, ed by the Commission wag the has been Utah becretary of State in for nearly four years, and prior assignment to headquarters Salt Lake City of a Staff Ser- to his election to that office servgeant whose duty It will be to ed in the lower House of the analyze all motor accident rec- Utah Legislature from 1932 to ords and work out an enforce- 1936. He is a native of Richment program to avoid like acci- mond, Cache County, but has redents In the future. Sergeant sided In Salt Lake City for a Rulon Bennlon of Salt Lake City number of years. was given this assignment. should be Under the reorganization plan Ample protection other Sergeant adjustments will provided to shelter young trees be made later by the Commission from the heat of the sun. SAFETY is occasionally sounded. Even victory in Europe, some overwhelming an wins if Hitler Co. In , Patrol' Superintendent any uealopy have been AWARD NIGIIT L. L. Fryre will conand SET UP FOR TRAFFIC tinueCaptain to maintain their offices at ar Promoted to High made and patrol tlie near future. 7 PATROL DISTRICTS W6One note of optimism a Mi. pre-w- t.ike G The im card annual ward reunion will la' held Saturday at 1 p. in. at lUiMiluwn. It promises to lie a grand hurt ess. All ward mrntliers are asked to arrange their woik so as to be In rs far-reachi- the hundreds of thousands of families in Belgium, l4- - hopefuls say, he vs ill r.ot be able to put his plans into effect. Ti is is lemed on the fact that all the unpins wen by eomp.ieM ,m the a.--t have invariably Cdllapn-of t!n:r own weight. Cunqumd people or sooiu-rare not coopt rut iv e a tremendous part of the cim;u and man power must be energies and in time, the conqueror And them. to policing given grovsh rich and suit. This seems sure toSo much for sjvculation. morrows world, no matter who wins this war, will be a lace than the world of today. There vastly dfiferent be famines, depression, coni the authorities, will, say staiit social and vmnomic upheavals. The future for all nations is far from bright. f the cataclysmic changes that arc It was a mknm plait- at a U w lidoring sjK'cd in the world we live m. Fur l.uis. with London, has long Util associated with all that democracy in nidi's nunds with ireeduni im .ms. And home i racy is what lLtler, as he said and wrote time and again, is out to destroy. Baris is or used to be a li mg example of all that Nazism abhors. Little by Lttle we are coming to realize that this is net a war in the traditional sense. It is, instead, a revolution with the most purposes imaginable. There hae alwavs been ietors and vanquished m war. But, once the peace treaties were drawn, the world went on much as it did before. The victorious powers did not attempt to force a government, a thiloso-ph- y of life of their own choosing, on the conquered. Fewr are able to believe that if Hitler wins he will be satisfied with such rewards as financial reparations, German colonies and the restoration cf the similar material gains. For Hitler, as Mein Kampf One vividly indicates, is consumed by two ambitions. is to make the German race master of all Europe and perhaps, in the fullness ol time, the world. The other is to destroy the capitalistic system, liberalism in government, and the democratic process. We have many an object lesson in the countries he has so far taken. In every instance, freedom of press and speech and all rights of protest, have been abrogated 100 per cent. While the forms of local government are permitted to exist, all important decisions and policies are made in Berlin. Revolt of any kind against Nazi orders is punished with the utmost severity. And racial minorities, especially the Jews, are ruthlessly oppressed. Men who have had contact with high German circles have lately been describing what they believe a Hitler victory would mean to Europe, and to the balance of the world. They say that the Fuehrer envisions a Germanic Europe in which only the German, the master race, would be permitted to bear arms. A Eurojtean customs union, completely German controlled, would be established. The smaller nations would disappear, or would exist as mere geographical entities, without power or real meaning. All currencies would be dominated by on Germany, and Germany would establish the terms which trade between peoples could be carried on. The would gold standard, of course, would cease to exist. It be replaced by some sort of barter system. The superior peoples of Europe the British, the French, the Scandinavians, etc. would command a high standard of living, while the "inferior peoples, sdich as the Slavs, would he much in the position of slaves, performing the hard labor and receiving in return just enough food and clothing and lodging and medical attention to keep them alive and able to work. So far as thiA hemisphere is concerned, there are two theories. One is that, after Hitler had consolidated with military Europe, he would attack the Americans such no has he plans which that is other The force is what he said in his recent interview with an American news correspondent." The second theory has many authoritative adherents. Hitler, they say, feels that the Americans would to have to come to terms with him whether they wished or not in order to dispose of their surplus commodities and manufactures abroad. The Americas, he reasons, would must have foreign trade and that necessitycommerce of whatever in system drive them to join have he establishes. Our gold and at the moment we s gold world monetary all the of cent some 60 per would be useful only for filling teeth and manufacturing - REFUGEES TO NOWHERE" of run voice of siiarcn Award nigh! Tlue awards ara Vineyard Ward to be glvin to fig it people. This is the fust time in Miuron Reunion Saturday awards fur Junior ID am mm |