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Show KSGEr.FOTR- PROVO (TTT A H) E V Ett I N G HER X'LTf THURSDAY, JUNE 1 8, 1 93 6 Sensational Fireworks Show Planned For Celebration Here "Assault on Mars" ""the pyrotechnic pyro-technic display which will feature the night program .in Prvo-s Fourth of July celebration, will be one of the outstanding fireworks fire-works exhibitions vere staged in the state. Dazzling new displays with wierd heavenly effects will burst upon the spectators at the Brig-ham Brig-ham Young university stadium. The entertainment will also comprise com-prise a floor show and the presentation pre-sentation of gifts to members of the audience, including an automobile. auto-mobile. The Post 13 American Legion Every WEDNESDAY and Saturday to Chic Wilde and His Music Featuring Ralph Kirkham at the Piano at Vivian Park In Provo Canyon Admission 10c until 10:00 Regular Admission 40c-10c Extra Ladies Always Free Make Vivian Your Dance Ed Shields and Bert Wilder Proprietors ENAMEL Beautiful Colors Sf EAR . LUMBEBjCO. Sprinkle Your Lawn and Flowers with LI. S. QUALITY LAWN HOSE Xon-kinkable, Flexible, Long-life. 25 feet 5-8 in., 1-braid cotton-reinforced, rubber hose, coupled, guaranteed SPECIAL Other Grades ai Slightly Higher Prices s MaeMime . PROVO, UTAH I I T 2? 77 H Gilbey's Distilled London Dry Gin is made from 100 grain neutral spirits. The PENN-MAHYLAND DIVISION of MATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP., N. Y. CITY is outdoing itself this year to preside a top notch display of fireworks. With Hugh Rosa, pyrotechnic expert as the maestro, they have arranged for a complete com-plete set of fireworks units, included among the imposing list of fireworks: the message frorrrMars, which combines seven thunder and lightning flashes with a mad riot of colored scintillator beams; a grand set piece which may be a portrait of the president. presi-dent. 300 square feet in area; a grand salute to the president of the United States, which is made up of seven 12-inch thunder and lightning bombshells rising to a height of 600 feet; hands across the sea. a salute of guns with flags of all nations unfurling, a sight visible for miles. - There are numerous others, of all varieties, colors aod sensations. Titles such as the following only suggest what the pieces portray: Jove's Footstool, Hurrah for the Red, White and Blue. Jewels of King Tut, Venetian Sunset, Hang-ang Hang-ang Gardens of Babylon (never before exhibited) Grand Aerial Harlequinade, the Spooks parade, Golden Wheatfields of the West, Fight Between Airships, Music of the Spheres. Pah's Hair, Gardens of the Taj Mahal. A Night in Venice, Denizens of the Sargrasso Sea, and dozens of other. PROVO S WATER SETUP PRAISED (Continued from Page One) renewed enthusiasm for the Deer Creek project. He said that the Boulder dam is now operating and I Sou'.iern California is preparing j to take the benefits of the dam i and the lake Jjygetting new el-; el-; ectric energy and by irrigation of ' thousands of acres of land. '. It was brought out in connec- on with the dam that from the i time construction started until 1 the time most of the benefits ! can be realized, a period of 15 I years will have elapsed, j "I hope that all agencies will j cooperate in getting Deer Creek," he said. "It means everything to i the future growth of this sec-! sec-! tion and is a great opportunity for Provo." Mr. Whitehead said thai in one 1 of the convention meetings it was reported that Chicago had the 1 largest per capita consumption of water. 310 gallons a day. Provo's per capi.'x consumption is under t 15Q gallons a day. f" Chicago loses by waste 500 million mil-lion gallons each day. Keep vour lawn neat with A COLDWELL DEPEND-ABLE DEPEND-ABLE LAWN MOWER! Several styles and sizes priced a low as $639 $139 A MASK TO TRUST FOR QUALITY m ty - MtOOt III - Building in HORIZONTAL 1 WhatU S. A. building is pictured here? 7 The statue of topi its dome. 12 Finch. 13 English coin. 15 To percolate. 16 To heal. 17 Conscious. 19 To ogle. 21 Hops kiln. 22 To assume. 24 Golf teacher. 25 Northeast. 26 Couple. 27 Bustle. 29 Preposition. 30 To wade through. 32 Source of ipecac. 34 To lift up. 35 Te low as a cow. 37 Asiatic. 38 Public eating places. 40 Street. Answer to Previous Puzcle VlAl l&jt 5 MtTe E NT H UM5 JNEARLSORE E IlC ED JST L A CAGERlSOAR!! Rl M SUM AjNtVT D N A R A TR A RE 5 G S I P Ol USE CRAPtE GOYA -pt E F R gflS DOS RT STm A mTTTmo 0 fcR IaIrIch it(o1r1e1r1o1 42 Courtesy title. 43 Laughter sound. 44 Treluid. 46 Therefore. 47 Possesses. 48 Flying mammal. 50 Over. 51 Tiresome people. 53 Sketched. ES Washington laid the stone. jl T" - p" """"p?" lo' II 16 " """"""" """" 17 ' i e so I 55 atT " 27 se 29 mmmm Ho" 37 "35 35 " "7" 35 36 37 35 3cT " I . 44 45 TtT JL 4,7 " "35 49 "" - - 50 7" ' gtiBgi 53 Ml IIMII I II " ll -J- LEGION PERFECTS CELEBRATION (Continued from Page One) the grand parade will be repeated around the stadium track. Stadium Program Then comes the vaudeville pro- gram and the $1500 gift distribution. distribu-tion. Among the numbers on the entertainment program will be dancing specialty numbers by a group of tap dancing girls, directed di-rected by Miss Wilma Jeppson and Mrs. Aline Coleman Smith; a novelty acrobatic act by a group I of men under the direction of Professor Pro-fessor Heidloff of the University CESSFORD'S STORE NEWS Published Every Other Thursday Thurs-day by Gesaford's Incorporated 47 No. Univ. Ave. Telephone 53 June is always a month for wishing an unusual number of couple much happiness and a long and joyous life together. There is no nicer way to express ex-press this wish than with a gift that will remind them of you. We offer for your selection a large and varied assortment of gifts, such as "Poppy Trail" pottery,, Pyrex casserole and frame at $1.39 or a cooking utensil of Federal chip-proof enamelware. Shop here in a coo and inviting invit-ing store. There is no quicker or easier way to brighten up those basement base-ment rooms and apartments than to use Muresco which now comes in a new display of colors. Mrs. W. K. Anderson has recently decorated her rooms in a warm shade of buff, which is suitable for wall and ceiling alike. Still the finest finish of its kind, Muresco sells for 60c per 5 lb. package and we stcck it loose for those who need small amounts. The Provo Medical Building is now being painted on the outside with L. & S. cement paint, which has proven to be the finest and most durable paint for stucco or brick. This material resists fading to a remarkable re-markable degree, and if used on new stucco homes will eliminate elim-inate these unsightly hair cracks. Nelson-Lindler Company Com-pany were awarded the contract. con-tract. Otlfer brick buildings recently recent-ly painted with this product are the State Bank of Provo by Mark Kerby and Sons and the home of D. V. Harwood by Mr. Bird. DuPont paint was used on the woodwork of both and is sure to give long service to the owners. D.T. R. CO. AWNINGS VENETIAN BUNDS WINDOW SHADES For Home or Store Washington drama. 14 Rodent. 16 meets in this building. 17 Dry. 18 Grafted. 20 Its (pU is almost 100 feet in diameter. diam-eter. 22 Paralysis. 23 Sofa. 26 Acts as model 28 Slumbers. 30 Pine tree. 31 Ye. 33 Sloths. 35 Mother. 36 Either. 39 To jog. 41 Sacred interdiction. 43 Seraglio. 45 Young salmon 47 Valiant man. 49 X. 50 Queer. 51 Before Christ 52 Southeast. 54 You and I. 56 Cupola. VERTICAL 2 To entertain. 3 Harbor. 4 Anger. 5 Toward. 6 To let down. 7 Transportation Transporta-tion charges. 8 Corpse. 9 Snaky Ash. 10 Profound. 11 Musical of Virginia, teaching at the su mer school. Then comes the giving away of the Plymouth car and the other gifts in the climax of the day. Another dancing act, directed by Jack Reinhardt with 30 Spanish Span-ish girls follows, then comes E. L. Roberts with an act of torch j swingers which is certain to click. The mammoth fireworks spectacle spec-tacle "An Assault on Mar9," will wind up the stadium program and the dances at the Utahna and the Rainbow Gardens will close the celebration. Hurry! LAST DAY! Hurry! Eddie Cantor's Protegee "LET'S SING AGAIN" and DON'T GAMBLE WITH LOVE" TOMORROW la in CASH or And 2 Big 0MEMJ ith NORMAN FOSTER DONALD COOK lSHEILA MANNORS Directed by Lambert Hillytr A Coliiabla Picture Starts Saturday KAY . FRANCIS Tin IDAHO GIRL LUSOICTIM (Continued from Page One) ' choked until there was no resistance. re-sistance. "Das in slacks and a sweater. sweat-er. I disrobed her. I carried her to the bed. I ravished her." Strangled With Stocking Walter said he did not know whether the girl was alive or dead when he assaulted her. But "to make sure she was dead," he told police, "I knotted a stocking about her neck." "How did the marks come on her body?" the officers asked. Walter's confession came to a halt in the small room where his victim lay. "I put them there with my own hand,' 'he said "calmly. Police were struck by the fact that during his confession he referred re-ferred to choking the girl with my own hands "by manual strangulation." strangula-tion." .Suspected Other Crimes Due to his confession that he had made frequent visits here officers questioned him regarding regard-ing the death of Louise Jeppeson of Ogden, Utah, in 1933. Walter said he was here at the time but denied any connection with the slaying. Miss Jeppeson was found strangled and criminally attacked in Golden Gate park. Under further questioning, he said that at the time of the Jeppe- 1 son slaying he was being held at AJcatraz as an army deserter. Documents in Miss Cousins' room indicated she had been a bookkeeper at the Latter Day Saints hospital in Idaho Falla. Idaho. She was believed survived by her parents and at least two IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, June 18 t:.H Blanche Cousins, 24-year-old Idaho Falls girl, ravished and strangled in her San Francisco apartment by a companion she met on a bus trip .from Idaho Falls to San Francisco, was quiet and retiring and "her character was beyond reproach," Ct H. Trayner, superintendent of the Latter Day Saint's hospital here where the girl was employed for seven years, sai dtoday. Miss Cousins left Idaho Falls June 1 to improve her secretarial abilities, Trayner said. She intended, in-tended, after getting her schooling, school-ing, to find employment in San Francisco. She had saved a large per cent of her earnings and had ample money to tide her over until un-til she finished her education and found a job, according to the hospital hos-pital superintendent. Miss Cousins was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Cousins j 1st Prize - - - $25.00 2nd Prize - - $10.00 3rd Prize $5.00 Features! who live in the Woodville district, a few miles from Idaho Falls. She has three sisters and four brothers. broth-ers. Her father is a farmer. She had lived in Idaho Falls district all her life and her trip which ended in death was to be the change in her quiet, small town life. She keenly anticipated getting to San Francisco, Trayner said. Before obtaining employment at the hospital as a secretary, she worked for: the Idaho Falls Chevrolet Chev-rolet company. NEW YORK, June 18 U.P Mrs.' Angela Hoskins Walter, 28, refused to believe today that her husband, Albert had confessed strangling a girl in San Francisco. Fran-cisco. "He wouldn't do such a thing," she said. Mrs. Walter occupies a two-room two-room apartment in the building which Walter gave as his "permanent "perma-nent address." She said .they were married a year ago, but had a disagreement and parted two months ago. Both were in the restaurant business, she said, but she would not elaborate on their past. Mobsters Seek Negro Slayer El CAMPO, Tex., June 18 U.P Members of a mob seeking ten negroes suspected in the slaying of Tim Simmons, 30, special officer offi-cer at Wharton, today set fire to the cafe-dance hall where Simmons Sim-mons was killed. The blaze was extinguished quickly and damage was slight. The mob two hours before had surrounded the Matagorda eountv jail, shortly after the negroes had j been removed for safekeeping. The ten suspects six men and AIR CONDITIONED! flM'.liU'l'lilH LAST TIMES TODAY! "The Case Against Mrs. Ames with MADELINE CARROLL - ALSO- "NAVY BORN" w&v&s&s TOMORROW! -NIGHT at 9:15! Bigger and Better! ! Plus the . Amateurs MiTtMS or Alternate Award $100 LADIES' DIAMOND RING! Purchased from W. E. MITCHELL, Jeweler Vttend BUCK NITE at Either PARAMOUNT or PROVO! TOMORROW & SATURDAY 2 Grand Pictures of Youth, Love and Adventure in Their Natural Settings! 4 6t&1&4 A Praoaat Plet with FRANCES LANEFORD SIR GUY STANDING " ERNEST COSSART DAVID NIVEN SMITH. BALLEW Dirl4 j Akr7 8elt A WALTER WANGER RODUCTION Starts Sylvia .SUN. SIDNEY CHECK SIGNERS OF PETITIONS (Continued from Page One) than sufficient for the number needed and the checking may stop after the 757 number has been reached. LeRoy Tuckett, deputy county attorney, is acting as arbitrator, in case of . doubt on a signer. County Attorney W. S. Dunford gave the opinion that voters' names must be written the same on the petition as on the registration registra-tion sheet. The names wil lbe filed with the city clerk by Saturday afternoon. Mr. Worthen says. Mayor Mark Anderson, who initiated and is the moving force in the municipal power movement, move-ment, declared Thursday that an election on this one phase of the question is in his opinion an expensive ex-pensive and needless procedure. Within about 60 days the question ques-tion can be placed fully and conclusively con-clusively before the people for vote, he said. If an election is called for each principal phase cf the municipal power question it j will cost the city an excessive amount of money, he said. He pointed out that the city officials welcomed an election on the municipal power question, just as the bonding company does, but that such elections will cost the city about $2000. The budget has no provision for any such expenditure, expendi-ture, he said. A legal tangle on this question is foreseen by local observers, with the Utah supreme court as the probable final arbiters. four women were arrested during dur-ing the day for questioning. Sim- I mens was stabbed to death when I he souerht to stop a drunken brawl between negroes celebrat- that wil lremind them of you. ing payment uf the bonus. COMFORTABLY COOL! GEORGE BRENT CLAIRE DODD Plus the Amateurs The town's little 'good-for-nothing' makes the mountains ring with romance! VinSIHlAVEIDUR A Paramount Pktur with Henrietta Crbsman Leif Enkson , Elizabeth Russell "FURY" in Social Given For Visitors A delightful affair was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Child in Springville, Wednesday evening, in honor of Mrs. Herman Spurgeon of San Luis Obispo. Cal., and her brother, Sam Herman of Cleveland, Ohio. A tasty buffer supper was served serv-ed to the following: Mr. and Mrs Shirley Bee, Mr. and Mrs. Ed.' Rambeau, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Seethaler. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Jepperson, who had just arrived ar-rived from Los Angeles, the honor hon-or guests and host and hostess. !f Sfi Sf, STEAL KOCKING CHAIRS Rocking chair thieves, who are near relatives of honey bee burglars burg-lars and morning milk stealers, were at work in Provo Tuesday night. They stole two rocKirg chairs eff the porch of Henry Booke. 3C0 South Seventh West street. One chair was designed in pink, the other was painted lavendar. OBLIGING POUCESL. FORT WAYNE. Ind.. June IS U'.P Ralph Ormsby asked a policeman pol-iceman to identify him so he could get his soldiers' bonus. Obligingly the officer helped him collect the bonus, then took him tc jail on a fugitive warrant charging child neglect. Plav Broadway Handicap Every Wed. Nite at the Continuous from 2 p. m. Ending TODAY! "'Transatlantic Tunnel" Richard Dix - Madge Evans and "Your Uncle Dudley" Ed. Everett Horton FRI. and SAT. 3 Big Units! Bringing a Program of ACTION ! THRILLS ! and ROMANCE! ONE! A BRAVE LQVE IN A LAWLESS CITY ! with I I A HOPKINS E O W A I O G. ROBINSON i o I l . MtCBIA " tktm UMlTfO AITIS1V TWO! E3 THREE! "CUSTER'S LAST STAND" No. 6 FOX MOVIETONE NEWS Buck Nite Friday at PARAMOUNT or PROVO! $200 CASrAward $100 DIAMOND RING Purchased from VY. E. anTCHELL, Jewelet.. I I .11 AICS4-LI""11 11 samuel iifriifil COLOWYN tXt |