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Show w : f . 1 J9 1 PAGE FOUR PRO VP (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1938 SECTION TWO : '.-.f.'-i JAPAN FEARS WORE RAIDS TOKYO, Feb. 24 (U.E) Millions Mil-lions in Japan watched the skies anxiously for hours today, and an air alarm was sounded throughout through-out the southwestern area, in the belief that a Chinese war plane fleet was on its way to bomb the country. Twelve Chinese planes were sighted over the mid-China coast, headed eastward toward Japan; 10 Chinese planes were seen over the East China sea northeast of Formosa, on the direct route to the Japanese Islands. Nagasaki, the great Japanese naval base, and other populous cities, were in the danger zone and throughout the day a state of air alarm prevailed all over the Island of Kyushu. By dark, no planes had been seen and the air alarm was relaxed. re-laxed. People believed that Japanese Jap-anese planes had met the raiders at sea and turned them back after a battle. Although the last reports from Formosa said "all clear." it was not announced here that the danger dan-ger had passed, and it was understood under-stood that the entire air defense was constantly on the alert. SHANGHAI Feb. 24 T.l" Chinese air rorce headquarters said offically today that seven squadrons of Chinese planes took part yesterday in raids on Formosa, For-mosa, Japanese island off the southeast China coast. It was asserted that the raiding aviators saw 40 Japanese airplanes air-planes on the field at Taihoku, and that scores of bombs were rained on them. It was impossible, impossi-ble, headquarters said, to determine deter-mine the extent of damage. Observers speculated widely on the reason for the Formosa raid, a completely new development, in that it took the war to Japanese soil. Probate and LEGAL NOTICES Guardianship Notices Consult County Clerk or the j ' Respective Signers for Furth- j ' er Information. j .-. : SHERIFF'S SALE In the District Court, in and for Utah County. State of Utah. Home Owners' Loan Corporation, Corpora-tion, a co: poration plaintiff, vs. John Edward Verholtz and Iona Veiholtz. his wife, defendant--. To be sold at .-heriff's sale, at ten o'clock a. m.. Mar. 21. 103S. afthe front dooi )f Courthouse, in Provo. Utah, the premises, lo-catVd lo-catVd in Aforesaid County and particularly described as follows: The West half of Lot 7. Block 106. Plat A". Provo City Survey of Buildinjr Lots. Dated Feb. 24. 193S. E. G. DURNELL Sheriff. Utah County. Utah Publication in Prove Evening Herald. Feb. 25. Mar. 4 11. IS. 193n THANKS FOR YOUR RESPONSE! Many of our cars have been sold during our Price Slashing Sate! WE WILL CONTINUE OUR FOR SIX We still have some Wonderful Bargains! I Plymouth Del. Sedan Was $3.'io NOW IS3I I'l mouth lh. Sedan vVas S 4 Go NOW $395 I i3 Graham Super Sedan Was 5 750 NOW $595 All Other Prices Slashed on Cars and Trucks ... at OUR ON. BIG LOT! m0 150 North University Avenue u One Big Lot Ionian? cs3 toe jq3o:j tk 2 js3 besot BUICK and PONTIAC Dealer A Reliable Dealer Is One Who Does As He Agrees Regardless of Cost VINEYARD MRS. GEORGE F. WELLS Reporter Phone Ol-R-4 A pleasant and entertaining day is being planned for members of the ward over 60 years of age also widowg and widowers to be held Saturday. A snecl-al show will be given in their honor at 10 a. m. in the auditorium and at noon a hot dinner will be served in the ward chapel. A fine program pro-gram will be given. The committee in charge comnrise Mr. and Mrs. A P. Fillerup. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Williams, and Mr. and Mrs James T. Blake. Joseph JT Clpsrg was a business visitor to Salt Lake 'Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Axel F Andreason are spending a few davs in Eoh-raim. Eoh-raim. the guests of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Johnson. Mr. and Mrp Fred Mitchell of CTnton and their daughter. Mrs. Ruben Mo?s and her daughter. Juliana of Clearfield visited here Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs Crl R. Andreason and baby. Mrs. Mrs? and daimhtor will spend a week here with Mr. and Mrs Andreason before returning: home. Tavlor Allen. W. K. Allen. .Tov O. Cletrg and Leo Allen furnished several auartette numbers ;(t the TTt-b Poultrv convention held in Salt Lake Frjday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kinners- u.T- Mrs Elizabeth Tuckfield Miss I Clara Tuckfield. Jorenh Tuckfield 1 nnil Mr. and Mrs. Paul Swell all : nf c;ait Lake snent Washington's I birthdav here with Mr. and Mrs. Mdton Holdawav at their home. Mor than four hundred reonle , were entertained durine the after-! after-! noon and evening at the Annual ; War'' Reunion held Tuesday in ! the Vine-yard amusement hall. The ; children enioved dance, garner in'' refreshments in the afternoon i and a fine program followed with daneintr and refreshments j were tendered the adults in the evening. Mr. and Mr? Jov O. Cletre- and ' children visited with Mr. Clegg's : narents. Mr. and Mrs. T. Griffin in Salt Lake Citv Fridav. Mr. and Mrs S. H Blake. Mr and Mrs. Axel F. Andreason and ; Mr. and Mrs. George F. Wells at-i at-i tended the special temple excur-! excur-! s'- m to Salt Lake Wednesday eve-i eve-i nine sponsored bv the Sharon stake presidency the hinh council and their wive-:. I DFASK V((; CRIPPLES SAN FRANCISCO SAX FRANCISCO. Fob. 24 dM'1 A dense fop:, which caused six collisions, involving ten vessels, in ; the oast 24 houis. still nun?: over , the San Fiancisco bay today. Ves- els involved ranged from ocean liner.s and ferryboats to a four- masted steam schooner. The fop thickest of the year- additionally kept transcontinental i and coast wise airplanes aground. forced a trans-Pacific clipper to ! remain aloft for over two hours before it could land, caused numerous num-erous auto crashes and injuries to 10 pei sons. DAYS 1936 Ford Touring Sedan Radio. Hearer 6 AC Was 595 NOW VW?9 193.1 Studebaker 4-Door Del. Dictator Sedan Radio. -Rater, Was 5625 NOW $495 1 933 Ford Del. Tudor Trunk. Radio. Heater Was $36." NOW . V r D Phone 666 SIDE GLANCES KM v s t err com iia natf evict hoc "Gilbert added this little room cozy we never use the POULTRY COLUMN A, Bv W. O. K AM SHAW IMPORTANT SUGGESTIONS ON BROODING CHICKS In previous articles in thus column, col-umn, I have outlined the most successful brooding and feeding schedules for early hatched chicks from day-old to 12-week.s of age. However, there were several miscellaneous mis-cellaneous points on brooder house management that I want to cover-to cover-to complete the series. That is the purpose of this article. Train Chicks to Roost Early ! Once the chicks have been trained j to roost at night, the dangers of j crowding and sweating are past i So :l should be every poultry raiser's aim t get the chicks on ! the roosts at the earliest possible : age. Leghorns take readily to I roosts at 2-3 weeks of age. Heavy : breeds can be trained to roost at 4-5 weeks, although some poultry i raisers are successful in getting I ihrm on the roosts a week earlier, j To train the chicks to roost, build ; frames with wide, flat roosts. 1x2 1 inch slats with the flat side up, are about right. At first the j roosting frames should be set flat on the floor and then raised grad-I grad-I ually a.s all of the chicks take to roosting. Never remove the brooder .stove I heat from early hatched ehcks un-j un-j tli they have learned to roost. If ! temperatures are reduced gradu-i gradu-i allv about five degrees each week, .the heat can be lomovrd at eight PIKWCD Open Tomorrow! At 1 :00 P. M. with Another J5i Program! That Thrilling Mark T w a i n Advenure Story a Screen Mas-piece Mas-piece ! Our Action Filled Second Feature First Provo Showing - - - I NOVEL SHORT TREAT 0 MOVIETONE NEWS 1 OUR PMIPIIIilil!!!' prsnting The Screen fi iiiiilW Thrill.Of A Lifetimel ff Vwm The Prince r I pin The Psuper UiieJ by MAM fWAIN w It B ERROL FLYNN VW CLAUDE RAINS n HEN1Y STEPHENSON 11 I Will IAITON Mod AN t 1 Viitffl THE MAUCH TWINS I IliUii o uur 4 oeT II ALSO " Hi 7 W 15c Till 6 20c Eves. 191 By CLARK for his study, but it's so living room tiny more. weeks of age, providing always that the chicks are roosting at night. Cleaning the Brooder House For the first ten days, keep a thick litter ':n the brooder house. While the chicks are young, they do not soil the litter very rapidly. So long as the latter is kept dry, it needs not be changed until the tenth day. After that, change the litter and disinfect the brooder house once a week. The best litter is cut straw, alfalfa alf-alfa or peat moss. Sprinkle a little sand on the floor each time the latter in changed. This will make the house much easier to clean as the sand prevents dirt from staking to the floor. Plant Shade Early The best shade is provided by trees, with branches trimmed high so that the sun can get to all parts of the ground, underneath the tree, at some time during the day. I However very few farms are fort unate enough to provide both tree shades and clean range for the chick.s every year. The best substitute sub-stitute is to plant the shade. Sunflowers are best for this purpose pur-pose although many farmers use corn. However sunflowers can be planted early and wiil provide shade for the hot days of June, while com is still too small. or that reason 1 always recommcnu : sunflowers Talk Is Given On Social Diseases A discussion on the problems of social disease? was conducted by Dr. Stan Clark, county physician, in a Provo high school general assembly Thursday. A sketch of the history of two widespread venereal diseases was included in the explanation of the nature and effect of them. Dr Clark stated that there is a nation-wide campaign in progress to expose and wipe out these plagues through dissemination of information and the establishment of health standards concerning social diseases. 34 INDICTED IN PORTLAND LABOR WAR PORTLAND, Ore.. Feb. 25 U P The district attorney's office made preparations today for the prosecution of 34 persons so far indicted by county grand juries on chart s of terrorist i- ; vit;e. First trial of alleged, labor van- 'als seized in the month-long police roundup here and in other sections of tne state will eom-ir.f-.co Monday when Roy Hardin and Matt Klein, union shoemakers appear in circuit court. tU 1 Midnite Preview SATURDAY! Doors Open - - - 11:40 First Feature - 12:10 Regular Bargain Prices! I'll? v&'timjZ - . Also "Midnite Intruder" with TOO Ijfc ) Hayward 7lr j 1 Barbara 'tP , Read Washington Merry-Go-Roimd 'Continued from Page One) 5 rrpa m and butter, because the steel industry also is regulated. Steel prices today have changed little. i DEPRESSION CAUSE - The fact that the farmer can t buy as much, eventually comes back to hit the steel and shoe manufacturer. and this whole business of price divergence is one of the biggest causes of every depression. In 1928 prices were following the same general trend. In 1929 thev first began traveling in op- nosite directions, and hit their greatest divergence at the bot torn of the depression in 1932-33. Similarly they were in perfect line again in 1936, but began to get on opposite escalators in 1937. The officials who prepared the I president's statement discussed this in great detail, but decided that unless the country wanted to nut on the same economic strait- jacket into which Hitler has laced Germany, nothing much can be dene about price divergence. That was one reason their statement sounded so milk-and-water. One or two factors will help, however the farm program, tariff tar-iff reductions on high - priced manufactured goods, and antitrust anti-trust action against monopoly products. . ' f T HIGH COST OF GOODWILL In terms of dollars, the flight of the army bombers to Buenos Aires to participate in the inauguration inaug-uration of President Artiz was something more than a "gesture." To send the six bombers to Argentina Ar-gentina and back cost $34,000 in gas and oil alone. The flying fortresses eat up gasoline at the rate of 40 gallons an hour for each of their four engines. en-gines. The six planes with their 24 engines, consumed 960 gallons every hour of their 40 hours of flying from Langley Field to Buenos Aires or nearly 40,000 gallons, one way. The planes use a special fuel comes high in U. S., still higher in South America. Oil consumption was about 8.000 gallons at a cost of about $8,000. MERRY-GO-ROUND Department of Agriculture finds that its blindfold foodtasters have difficulty distinguishing between chicken, veal, lamb and rabbit. . . ij X5 ShebE THE BIG lvth IPIlaynimX A Grand Ail-Around Showl Laughs - Romance - Gayety Claudette COLBERTi ( Charles BOYER ) ! TOVARICH" ) I 1 1 CWioJ Tociarick' but definitely RICHn $f "ft fe JL HERE'S THE im FIRST OF , I--; ' "Jf 1938'a TEN BEST f n "cruREsr L 1 - basil rathbo.nt: I v i ANITA LOUISE 1 I " ; tau count isaul mss ff ; I i stou irffcn nwit (Ci 1 EXTRA ADDED The Most Talked of Short, Subject in Years Comes Here UNCENSORED ! The True European Picture MARCH OF TIME'S "Inside Nazi Germany" r "night r.iust Fair Next T Drama "Night Must Fall," a fascinating mystery drama by Emlyn Williams, Wil-liams, will be presented March 5 and 4 at Brigham Young university univer-sity by Theta Alpha Phi, national dramatic fraternity. Dr. T. Earl Pardoe of the university uni-versity speech department will direct the campus production of the former London and New York stage success. Lafayette Terry, Enterprise, is associate director. In tribute to the play's sinister atmosphere, the New York Eve ning Journal commented: "Drama presents no finer crop of goose-flesh.'' goose-flesh.'' Preceded by a courtroom prologue, the play has its setting in the rural English home of Mrs. Bramson, an old woman in her dotage. In the opening action it is revealed re-vealed that Dan. a bellhop, played by Wayne Rogers, Garland, has already murdered one woman near the Bramson bungalow. It ap pears certain that he will soon murder another the aged owner of the house, portrayed by Ruth Horr, Grand Junction, Colo. At the same time he manages to domi nate the personality of the old lady's niece, characterized by Veon Riggs, Vernon. Ariz. Other campus actors in the cast are: Jack Gibb and Fae Clark Provo: Bruce Wakefield, Salt Lake City: Gilbert Tolhurst. Og den: Merline Gardner, American Fork: and Alice Todd, Denver Colo. State Department is putting on the pressue to negotiate a trade agreement with Argentina before the coming campaign makes it uncomfortable to talk about agricultural agri-cultural imports. ... As the Army bombers flew over South American Amer-ican countries. South Americans read news of the flight which went by radio from the planes to Washington, then by news cable from Washington South America. . . Census Director William L. Austin, quizzed by a House committee com-mittee for his opinion of the controversial con-troversial unemployment census conducted by John Biggers "Gentlemen, "Gen-tlemen, I do not know," Austin said: "Frankly, we tried to dodge any connection with that census." . . . After three months of studying study-ing the figures, the extra staff taken on for the unemployment census is being liquidated. . . . The Bolivian government has said in a confidential memorandum to the State Department that they will be happy to cooperate in sending tin ore to U. S. for smelting, if smelteries are established here. (Copyright. 1938. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) PICTURES plZv SPECIAL TREATS The Screen Leaps Out in the Aurience in PETE SMITH'S New "AUDIO-SCOPIKS" Paramount News irzffr3 nn if, r In Opera Lead fT 1 LOGAN In the presentation of George Bizet's grand opera. "Carmen," March 7 and 8 by the music department of the Utah State Agricultural college Jerold Shepherd of Salina, sophomore student in the school of education will sine the baritone role of Morales, captain of the dragoons, according to Professor Walter Welti, director. Ch urch Notice SEVEN'TII DAY ADVENTIST 160 North First West Sabbath school, 9:45-10:45 Sat- urday. Preaching at 11 o'clock. All are welcome. O k I A J ,?5c : I'tah's Greatest Entertainment Bargain! MEW TOPAY! A New Type Action Story Blazing New Trails of Thrills from Arizona's Borders to Honolulu's Shores! ll ' M yW HEAR SMITl1 Jt- ' ' ' M4 V-Ix-ft Her On hr - A HEAR SMITH six; 'Ixft Her On The Beach At Waikiki" md Other IT'LIl GET IN II l VI ind Other Songs tVt I Racetrack romance leavina the barrier action! r with BARTON ..-::-": . v v -3 - m EwK'X -jpf x ' - .-'!;;:..:?:-::': -sc I I s .- -;tW nit A" - hffasry r ANN SHERIDA . , . - 4-PLUS-JOHNNY MACK BROWN in His Latest Adventure Thrills in "WILD WEST DAYS" LATEST NEWS SPANISH FORK MRS. EFFIE DART Miss Margaret Roberts wa hostess to the Pester's club Monday Mon-day evening. A tasty luncheon was served at the card tables at '8 o'clock, four tables of bridge followed. Miss Hannah Vicklund winning the High score for the club, Mrs. Blanche Jensen the second sec-ond high. Special guests included Miss Bethel Taylor, Miss Prudence Wride and Mrs. Frank Measom Mr. and Mrs. Lew Mar Price and their three children of Richfield. Rich-field. Utah, arrived here Friday evening to spend the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Ur.' Stewart Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Price spent Monday Mon-day in Salt Lake and Tuesday morning returned to their home at Richfield. Mr. Price is countv agent of Sevier county. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Roach entertained en-tertained as their dinner guest Sunday. Daff Bowen, from Lew-Angeles. Lew-Angeles. Calif. With Mr. Roach. James Bowen and the honov : guest they motored to Thistle during dur-ing the afternoon and visited with Mr. and Mrs. William Pace. Mr Bowen and Mr. Pace were fornu". schoolmates. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Clayson le:t Tuesday to make their home Idaho for a while. Today's Answers to CRANIUM CRACKERS Prohlrm on Page Two, Sec. Two Officer Tom Sheldon thought the machine had been stolen be- 1 , cause the rear license plate was : dirty. The auto was clean and j new. Therefore the license plate ! should have been new and clean, also. Songs ALSO- YOUR BLOOD! full of rousing , MacLANE 2-vtMi -v -wiuac 7 Walk mn BH I H I u 1 11 1 r |