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Show PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERXLD,, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1936 PAGE FIVE LINKS TRIALS STARTING HERE Tillintfhast. Noted Golf Architect. Archi-tect. To Inspect Course On Saturday. f' -'currently with the opening oi icuiiir greens on the Prove Municipal golf course Saturday A. W Tillinghast. golf architect for the P. ; A., will inspect the c.ur.se and make recommenda-tions recommenda-tions for the maintenance anc' future cr nstr uction Mr. Tillinghast is visiting courses thtoughout the country and Friday was at the Salt Lake Country (Info and Fort Dougla.' links He emphasized the .impor tance .f eliminating needless ha-! and making the game more ting to the average golfer Willes, pro on the Prove announced Friday that Mat Artist za r us in! en H:I! ( ' urst th- ten-man team trials wi ',:; due'ed Saturday. Sunday be and Apn! IK with a M-hole total The n.., k-up .f the team which i Will. represent Provo in the state , ::.' w.ll be determined in this' tn-.l The f::t professional sweep-: stake- : r the state are booked Monday at the Provo cour.se with 1 Mr. Willes at the host pro. All' pr t e-.-K'na Is of t he state will b 1 n hand I"! the ci.m petition MENTAL HYGIENE GROUP TO MEET h N-'Ison of Span- i . -. ' : ye ' ' I w i y 7 0 Merrill Croft. ( above i of Provo. is n his way to Bethlehem. Pa., to take part in the Olympic wrestling trials, the winners of which have a chance to make the United Stages Olympics team in Berlin. Germany, m the summer- Croft is in the 123 pound c'ass. As a member -,f the Brigham Young university team he won the Interim. Inter-im. untaiii A. A. I, title twice and the Rocky Mountain conference championship lh'-ee times. He also annexed fourth place in the .Junior' National A A. I" meeting in HO". WORKOUTS ON IN TIMP CAMP Judge .1. i. h Fork will be the principal ' speaker at a meeting of the I'tah county Mental Hygiene society. Monday evning. beginning at 7 MO p m at Springy .IK' high His-subject His-subject will oe "Problems ot .Juvenile Delinquency.'" Supplementing Supple-menting Judge Nelson's talk Professor, Pro-fessor, B. F Larson of the B. Y. 1' win speak on the current art exhibit The meeting is reported to bo especially interesting and the officers of-ficers of the organization extend an urgent invitation to everyone to attend. Members of the var-, ious clubs of the community are also especially invited to be present. ! TOO LATE FOR ! CLASSIFICATION ! FOR KENT H HMSHEI) ?, RM. basement apt. 155 So. 4 Y. Inq 17n W. L S. Ph. 1191. al5 3 ROOM modern apartment. 434 North 2nd East a 14 FOR SAL K MISC EL LA NECK'S GOOD used piano. See it at May-cock May-cock Appliance. 51 N. Univ. a12 FOIl SALE FARMS GO Back to the Farm! 320 A. Utah County choice land. Only .t40 S- owner- quick S Staik i ;.:: s V Temple. Salt Lake .)(; The first toimal ba.-eball woik-riu: woik-riu: of the season for the Prov Timps Thursday alternoon gave ( icdence to the story that Provo will havt one of its be.-1 team.s in history this season. Another practice will be conducted con-ducted this afternoon and directors direc-tors of the club will convene to-i night at 7:30 in the fire hall assembly as-sembly room to consider various problems of the team. Newcomers to the club this Mar were on hand Thursday night and .several of them showed rare promise. Adam Bengoschea Ogden high school athlete, looked good in a brief workout on second sec-ond base, and hs teammate. Norton, Nor-ton, exhibited a fast ball in a pitching warmup. Don Overly. Prove) athlete, is fcOikmg oy.t at backstop under the tutelage f Frank LaC'nmr. and is coming along in good otyle. while LaVar Kump. another. anoth-er. Provo rookie, is working in the infield. Sam Christensen. Clyde Greenwell. Frank La Comb, and Jim Hawkins, the formidable Timp pitching staff, .started then workouts Thompson, an All-America CCC athlete like Overly, looked good in the field, but not too strong at bat. Several other men will be on hand in today's practice, inducing induci-ng the two Dudley boys from Spanish Fork district, it i report re-port ed. Manager Otto Buk is m charge of the workouts Hadlock Seeks Another Bout With Harvey Ogden Fighter Booked To Fight Pierce Monday; Alien Al-ien Meets Mark. LaMar Hadlock, Ogden boxer who fights Arcade Pierce Monday night at Park Ro-She over the five round route, has mought both Jackie Burke and Truman Harvey and won a draw with the hard-punching hard-punching Harvey on one occasion. Hadlock is attempting to get further bouts with his fellow townsmen, and declares he is optimistic opti-mistic about beating Harvey. Hardened by his work in the Jericho CCC camp he is in fit shape foi his joust with the slugging slug-ging Springville man Monday. If he can get by Pierce he will be matched with Harvey. The other' bout is an attractive setup. Tony Mark, tough Italian fighter, is booked to go on with Glen Allen. Springville. a willing and talented boxer. Mark is regarded re-garded as a hard hitter in his weight. Two finish wrestling matches are also slated. JOKER SEEN IN AAA PROBE BILL 'Copyright 1936. by United Press) ahkmuton. Anril 10 (UP) Indications of a 'joker" in the senate resolution that demands information in-formation on all AAA payments of more than $10,000. suggested today that large disbursements to individuals and corporations may yet escape publicity. The joker if it is a ioU-er was inserted by the senate agriculture agri-culture committee, of which Sen. Ellison D. Smith, D., S. C. is chairman. It was proposed by Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace, who opposed the resolution reso-lution as it was originally introduced. intro-duced. The "joker'' e lsiin the clause stating that neither county nor program lines shall be crossed in complinig the list. That is, the cases .listed shall be only where an individual or firm received $10,000 in benefits for curtailment of a single crop on land lying within a single county. Thus, a corporation might own large farms in several counties, and its benefits would total $10,-000 $10,-000 or more. But if benefits on land Mr? -jmy rate cmwfty trtrt" nor total $10,000. the firm would not be listed. Behind Her Mighty Line of Forts, Invasion Fear Still Crips France SCOUT NEWS v4k :r:-.-'.-S-Y;A'-:"& v" '? 'S w. : s 4 ' j , r ,v .. ... ' j .... Right to the very edge of these grim concrete block . . . the grass atop the structures and the bushes ar flage. Every inch of the farmer's fields is measur the fortified line on which France depends for secur would be possible to get around the defenses by agai and Holland, instead of Belgium as in 1914. houses, a French farmer hopefully plows his acres ound them do not mean neglect; they mean camou-ed camou-ed and ranged for shell and machine gun fire. Below, ity. showing the "weak spots" on either end where it n violating neutrality, in this case of Switzerland ENGLAND I ;OJf . ' XJ " lj ' s ; W iP HAMBURG hBif ffltf) OSNABRUC K AHTRP ffi) SI D0RTMUN0 1 6E15ENKIRCHEn 1 lille BELGIUM ;p6ussELD0RP maubeuge ; J J RHTNKLAND I J RH)CCUP1ED area I CHATEAU THIERRY f LiXCEaiBOirTCt ! F R AN C E M0NTMrDY.;feM A N V ! PARIS VERDUN0 Cyy METZ WAKENE RG r LEfi-PTsrn I TOULO 'wochwald Q- JN-L STRASB0URG ARROWS INDICATE STRONGLY FOIPri tfZZZ i - TOWNS. EPINAL5 0 OP INVASION. I Ail GERMAN AIR BASES ' m iKP I8"! BELPORT- y&Z' - F0RTIPIED LINE COMPLETED .-"'Jr-' m OR UNDER CONSTRUCTION C,1' SCALE OF MILES l MAGIN0T LINE LCOMPLETPJ 150 o ioq ZOO I i 1 1 SWITZERLAND CLIPPER COMING BACK , SA.N DIEGO, Cal.. April 10 U.R) The Hawaiian clipper, sister ship of the China and Philippines clippers of Pan-American Airways' Air-ways' transpacific service, took off from the naval air station basin at 10 45 a. m. today for Alameda, Cal., on the last leg of i its hop from Miami Fla. Drive Through Swiss or Dutch Loophole Seen As Peril An ordinance passed in Waterloo. Water-loo. Neb., in 1910. reads: "It shall be illegal for- any barber in this town to eat onions between 7 a. m. and 7 p. m." 18 Years of Satisfactory Service PI; i -i mHim - u I 8 years ago today we served our first customers. Many of those who were with us at our opening are our customers cus-tomers today. We have grown with the years in experience, in service and in friends. Recently we completely remodeled and rebuilt. Now we pride ourselves in maintaining the finest restaurant in central Utah. natton Cafe Still "A Good Place to Eat" By NEA Service PARIS.- -The elaborate system of forts that stretches from the j Alps to the sea and divides Ger many from Fiance and Belgium is already a grave element in the European political situation. When Hitler, claiming equality with other European nations, faced the demand that he promise prom-ise not to fortify his .ide of the ,Rhine, he refused. And his answer 'was. "Look at the French forts! You don't think they're going to abandon them, do you ? Then why should we promise not to build any ?" France, which has spent $160,-000,000 $160,-000,000 building the most elaborate elabor-ate system of fortified defenses ever conceived, has no idea of abandoning them. For they are as perfect a defenst against in vasion from the east as money and ingenuity can devise. They are so perfect that it is highly unlikely that they ever will be attacked, at least by methods resembling those of 1914-1918. 1914-1918. Germans Scoff at "Line" There lies the catch. Unofficial German sources indicate that Germany, while insisting on its right to fortify the Rhineland, has no real intention of doing so. It is believed that German attack at-tack or defense on that front would be so different from the tactics of 1870 or 1914 that fortifications for-tifications like those of the French are regarded as not worth imitating. In fact, one ironic German Ger-man officer is reported to have said that the French are now perfectly per-fectly prepared for the campaign of 1914. From the fortified town and concentration point of Belfort near the Swiss border, ihe Magi- not line of fortifications parallels I the German border northward be If Your Hair Isn't Becoming You had better be coming to the Y BEAUTY SHOP A and PERMANENTS p5UU up. Y BEAUTY PARLOR 191 N. UNIV. AVE. PHONE 1279 6 REPORTING P O L D ? 0 C S rjpHERE is no more exacting news assignment than reporting politics. This is true particularly in a presidential year. United Press, with Its customary foresight, last June began its factual, unbiaSettHmpartial political coverage for the 1936 presidential campaign. Representatives of ten states met in the mid-West grass roots convention at Springfield, 111., at that time. Since then expert United. Press political writers have been moving across the United States covering the big pre-convention stories; making cross section surveys of various states; interviewing prospective candidates: watching new political movements and reporting day by day maneuvering. These factors insure dominant political news coverage for UNITED PRESS client newspapers with UNITED PRESS . . . ACCURACY . . . SPEED . INDEPENDENCE. j United Prett dispatches appear in THE HERALD O G yond the Luxembourg border in the vicinity of Montmedy. This Maginot line is completed and is considered impregnable under un-der orthodox methods of attack. It is named for Andre Maginot, who fought through the World War as a sergeant, and wound up a the minister of war who engineered en-gineered the forts. Forts Are Underground The Maginot line system is largely underground, as a safeguard safe-guard against high explosive shell fire. Elaborate labyrinths of tunnels tun-nels with entrances far behind the "front" are provided with every imaginable facility for gas defense, de-fense, storage of food and ammunition, am-munition, and living quarters. Steel-and-concrete casements are all that appear above ground along the 'front,' camouflaged and bristling with modern armament, arma-ment, from machine guns to heavy artillery'- The ground before be-fore the casements is all accurately accurate-ly surveyed and ranged. It can be swept by devastating fire at will. When Germany occupied the Rhineland, the forte were immediately imme-diately and effectively manned Residents of nearby villages are usually assigned to duty in them having been specially trained foi their jobs in each fort. Periling the effectiveness of the Maginot line is the situation of Switzerland, unfortified except by its mountains and with a small army. While this passage around the end of the line is harder than that through Belgium in 1914, it is possible. Belgium Fortifies Too Northward from Montmedy, the fort chain stretches to the sea. But it is not completed in this section. Hasty decision to increase in-crease the strength of the forts behind the Luxembourg frontier had to be made in 1930 when little lit-tle Luxembourg refused to fortify for-tify its territory. Belgium is working hard at fortifying for-tifying its eastern border on a line southward from a position in front of Antwerp. But the French, not satisfied with this protection, have gone ahead with further fortification of their own Belgian frontier as a second wall if the Belgian defenses failed tc withstand another attack. It is believed that tests of the plan to defend this northern frontier by flooding were unsatisfactory. Even Holland, basking in 100 years of peace, is growing alarmed alarm-ed over the mushrooming of new air bases across her flat frontier. An invasion across southern Holland Hol-land to strike the Belgian line south of the Antwerp defenses is regarded as a possibility. Hence a movement is growing in Holland to increase defenses of its eastern east-ern frontier. The building of an 80-foot bridge at Urdingen, wider than traffic apparently requires, is re- Reports from the various Scout troops in the district indicate that some excellent work is being carried car-ried on in this activity under the direction of the respective leaders. The Second ward troop did a good turn during the week by hauling haul-ing the ashes from the church. This act may incidentally set a fine example to other groups. The First ward troop very ably assisted in collecting "Red Cross funds the past week for ,the flood sufferers in the east thus gaining the appreciation of the committee in charge as well as doing an excellent good turn. The Fourth ward report progress prog-ress on their pack kits with some interesting tr ips made to get material mate-rial for the construction of equipment. equip-ment. A fine time was also had by the boys on a recent hike to Kolob under the direction of their leader J. T. Wheeler. Mother Accused As Poison Killer Among the outstanding enter- tainments sponsored by the scouts I was a recent banquet given by the First ward troop when Dr. L. D. ; Pfouts of Payson, gave a talk ot , construction of pack kits and also illustrated his talk with a display of this part of scout equipment Others numbers also featured tht program with a number of scout officials in attendance. ! Scout leader s ;md scouts may ex- ' pect some very timely information of scout activities from the scout 1 leaders who recently attended tht , regional meeting held at Provo ! Included in the group were J. F Wmgate, S. L. Mendenhall, Chat ie5 Boyer and C. G. 'Salisbury. ! I I ( i i- ;r 1 Murder by poisoning of her two daughters, Dorothy Mc-Causland, Mc-Causland, 13. lower left, and Billy Fae McCausland, 11, right, is charged to Mrs. Velma Patterson, top photo, of Commerce, Com-merce, Tea., said by police to be "Hunt county's liquor queen " County officials declared de-clared they were invest ideating deaths of six other persons, including in-cluding patrons of her alleged al-leged liquor resort and her second husband. RESETTLEMENT SL'l'-CEEIS , SAN FRANCISCO. April 10 j 'l l'- The success of reset t lenient communities having been estab- I lished thoroughly, the government without delay will convert them ! into self-sustaining corporate towns, according to Dr. E. E. Agger, assistant to Rex C. Tug-well, Tug-well, resettlement administrator, who is here for that purpose. garded by some Netherlander as ; ominous. i Rumors that all this expensive) fortification may be set at naught by unrevealed German technical j advances in war weapons, with i the known fact that Paris and London are within an hour and a half of modern bombing planes ' operating from Germany's new air bases, make the value of the fort system nil, so far as giving any feeling of security from attack. 'GOUGING' LAID TO CEMENT INDUSTRY WASHINGTON. April 10 I I" Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, D.. Mont., charged in a statement today that the cement industry "gouged" the government on a r erent 365.000 barrel contract and "has penalized the taxpayers of this country in excess profits an unbelievable sum." Wheeler, chairman of the interstate in-terstate commerce committee, which has been conducting hearings hear-ings on a proposal to abolish the so-called basing point system in figuring prices, said the contract was awarded yesterday by the interior in-terior department because officials offi-cials felt it would be "useless to throw out the bids and readver-tise." STYLES FOR YOUNG MEN your ideal choice for sportswear Am Investment In tfoo tl appei If yon Kant to know what's what in smart sports fashions, see these new Duncan Paige styles. Here are fresh ideas by the score... new designs, fabrics and colorings. You'll like the Cove, for one its sunburst effect is the very newest note in outdoor clothes. Kuppenheimer handcrafting guarantees its comfort and long life. Try the Cove on soon. nandcratted bo KUPPENHEIMER |