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Show V 5 I . PEQyO-;(U.TAH.)V:EVENING HERALD,: - MONDAY; QCTQBERqt);.-1938 ; - PAGE THREE FIRE DANGERS POINTED OUT WAR IS A MONSTER ' Nazi Erosion Hi tsrr Czechs Again wm CHIEF T3: ASSASSilinp ..1 .11. , ,,i y. I f -,' I . , I: 1 I . VXI . .Tl I III I I I i f Si i i i . i- 'I 5 :? hi. ( I ' I i IL f ? 4 It la estimated that 10,000 persona per-sona in 1937 lost their lives in fires. The Fire Casualty Statistics committee of the National Fire Waste council makes a study each year of ways and means through which persona are killed or maimed maim-ed in fires. There is the usual, run of deaths from careless use of flammable flam-mable liquids. Some of the common com-mon causes are home dry 'cleaning, 'clean-ing, perking up a sluggish fire by pouring kerosene on it, examing the gas tank of a car with a match, and the inevitable crew of motorists who must smoke while the car is being refueled. Kerosene burns are terrible, painful pain-ful injuries so are the burns from gasoline, naphtha, alcohol and the like. Smoking in bed is another-Man-gerous and foolish pastime. In a seven-day stretch in one large city, fire engines were called to no less than twenty-four fires started by this practice. Contrary to a wide-spread impression, the great majority of casualties occur oc-cur either singly or in small groups and not in holocausts. The studies conducted by the Eire Casualty Statistics committee commit-tee conclusively demonstrate that the underlying cause of the majority ma-jority of all deaths and injuries is carelessness. The vast major-. major-. ity of all deaths reported took place in homes an other building build-ing of the residential class. A large percentage of those killed in fires are children under ten years of age. Guesses Turned In On First Snowfall Over 1500 filed their guesses at the Paramount theater yesterday yester-day as to when the first snow will fall in Provo this year, with the prizes being a pair of skates in black for men and shoes in white with skates for the ladies guessing guess-ing the closest date and time when the first actual snow falls. The shoe skates being given are autographed by Sonja Henie and are exact duplicates of the ones which she uses in her trick skating skat-ing in the picture "My Lucky Star" with which the contest is being conducted. Guesses may be entered at the Paramount either today or tomorrow while the picture pic-ture is showing and winners will be announced as soon as the first snow falls. Everyone predicts an early snow-fall, at least that seems to be the concensus of the first guesses. Less than 10 guesses in the number filed placed the; date late as December, and then most were in the early part of the month. No doubt it is the recent re-cent cold wave that is causing the early predictions in fact the Paramount management expressed express-ed fear Saturday that it would snow before he could even start the contest. Enough snow must fall to whiten the court yard lawn in order to decide the winner. fettdt vr w a In stop and go, In low and second, your engine makes up to 3 times as many revolutions as in high uses 3 times as much gasoline STOP-AND-GO driving fools your speedometer speed-ometer while your car is going a mile, your engine may go the equivalent of two. The number of extra revolutions your engine en-gine makes depends on how many times you stop and start how much of your driving driv-ing is in low and second gears. S Saas' Dergreichenstein 1 frffJWmteiberg M Even before the four zones given outright to Germany under the Munich "peafe settlement"' had ; been occupied. Reichschancellor Hitler demanded and speedily got a af th rone in Czechslo-vakia Czechslo-vakia from the international Sudetenland commission. On the map above, the four zones originally ceded to Germany are shown in black, numbered in order of occupation. Tne shaded areas show apj-proximate apj-proximate territory earmarked for Nazi occupation by October 10. At Leitineritz, thU latest "puUscb - into Czechoslovakia will bring Germany within 30 miles of the capital, Prague. T Rabbit's Eye May Bring Back Sight V- ,1 Ik? i il J. - f rhecornea from the eye of a rabbit, transplanted to the blinded blind-ed eye of Frank L. Hoffman, above, of Hagerstown, Md., enables en-ables him to distinguish between light and dark, and, it is hoped, will eventually restore full vision. vi-sion. The delicate operation on Ihe 61-year-old farmer was performed per-formed by Dr. Paul N. Fleming, who said success or failure would not be known for several weeks. It is an old custom in Sardinia to use dogs, cats, or other animals ani-mals as witnesses in court. The testimony is considered true if one of the animals hears it without with-out sign of dissent. 3 0$ (ssts&tk m K - MS--- r-" A"-7S r a mile S-T.R-E-T-CH-E-S Nowadays, no matter where you drive in town or country, you cant avoid stop-and-go. But you can do something about its cost. Shell -engineers found that getting away from a traffic stop can waste enough "undigested" "un-digested" gasoline to carry you Yy of a mile. To cut this costly waste, they rearranged the chemical structure of gasoline. They make every drop of Super-Shell "xnof or digestible" under all driving conditions. You can save on driving costs by the regular reg-ular use of Super - Shell. Try it. raunaii , O.PRAGUE Rokhni BOHEMIA icwujauw llumpolctz ... v - ' t 'J MO UNeubistritz iM.JKrumau 'itT I f I lit i il t r;ppMAKiv - Around the World With the United Press BERLIN, Oct. 10 (UJ? Adolf Hitler was understood today to have sent a special emissary to Vienna to investigate the attack Saturday night on the palace of Cardinal Innitzer. :0: EAU CLAIKE Wis., Oct. 10 (OR) Willis Kysor, 30, Nilea, Mich., died at a hospital today, the fourth victim of the crash Sunday of an airplane he was piloting. pi-loting. One of the victims was an occupant of a house into which the ship fell. The others killed were James Small, 25, "Marion, Ky.; Orley Berkeley, 24, aerial photographer photog-rapher from Lansing, Mich., and Robert E. Butler, 64, a chauffeur. chauf-feur. :Or WILKES-BABRE, Pa., Oct. 10 (U.R) Charges of the American Am-erican Newspaper Guild that the publishers of Wllkes-Iiarre's Wllkes-Iiarre's four suspended newspapers news-papers "failed to bargain in good faith" were pending before be-fore the national labor relations rela-tions board today. Meanwhile, the city was without local newspapers for the seventh day. :0: WASHINGTON Oct. 10 (U.D- Five million copies of a pamphlet entitled "A Ceiling for Hours, a Floor for Wages and a Break for Children" were made available today to-day as a short explanation of the wage-hour law which becomes effective ef-fective Oct. 24. The law will require re-quire all employers in interstate commerce to pay their workers at least 25 cents an hour and time and one-half for overtime in ex 4f 13 Landskran Ahdskran TYopnau ..i.-i:s Hultschin R A V I A Bruenn ,Auspitz cess of 44 hours per week during the first year. :Or VATICAN CITY, Oct. 10 (DP.) The Vatican plans to make ft strong protest against the anti-Catholic anti-Catholic demonstrations in Vienna, Vien-na, reliable church sources said today. :Or- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 10 (HE) John Couch, 23, southwestern southwest-ern desperado, today was sentenced sen-tenced to life imprisonment by Federal District Judge M. M. Joyce for the kidnapping of Peggy Gross and Daniel Cox Fahey, Jn, of St. Louis, Mo. CHICAGO, Oct. 10 (U.R) A special committee of the American Am-erican Bar association reported report-ed today that nearly half of the lawyers in the . United States earn less than $2,000 a year each. The report said less than two per cent of the ' lawyers have Incomes of more than f 15,000 a year. :0 . HONOLULU, T. H., Oct. 10 (U.E) The coast guard , cutter Roger B. Taney headed back into Pearl Harbor today after a "mercy tripf pvexOOmiles of ocean, watec, had failed to prevent the death of - a young Jarvis Island colonist. The colonist was Carl Kahalewei, 21, one of four Hawaiian youths sent to the island when the government gov-ernment claimed it early this year. :Or TYLER, Tex., Oct. 10 UI! -V Russ Finefrock and' W. . R.' MO Cullough brought their damaged airplane to earth today after setting set-ting an unofficial endurance record rec-ord for airplanes of less than 1,000 pounds. They landed at 6:07 a. m. after the covering ripped off the fuselage of their plane. They had been in the air 45 hours and 17 minutes. :0: SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 10 OLE) San Francisco's two major labor disputes entered another week today to-day with outside mediators holding hold-ing new conferences in efforts to find peace solutions acceptable to employer and employe leaders. TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION FOR RENT FURNISHED OR Unfurn. Apts. $12-$20-$30. 501 No. 3 E. Ph. 460J. o!2 ROOMS, and apts., heated, close in. 45 W. 2 So. o23 FOR SALE MISCEULANEOUS SINGER Sewing machine, good cond. reas. 278 N. Univ. Ave; 612 EXCFJi. upright piano, reasonable. Phone 534 or 681R. oX2 FOR RENT UNFURNISHED 7 ROOM semi mod. home, refer ences. Rt No. 3 Box 63 Pleas- ant View. Call before 10 a. m 0I6 WORK WANTED DRESSMAKING and alterations, ;W(W, 4 o. Phone li23W. o23 WANTED ailSCEIXANEOU RIDE to: Washington. D. C. by OcL- 15th. Ph.' 12S0W. oil M.'Truebau ii i ir ii i II I I lis i - 1 1 M l III l l l bt iu iiur : J' 4ULudenburg '? y i' - , ... WASHINGTON, Oct ; 19 (HE)-r-The !. Supreme court today refused to, review California State court decisions denying freedom to Thomas J. Mooney, serving a life prison sentence 'for conviction on chargevO .participating in San Franclscoa 191(1 r preparedneasi day bombing. ' ' Thft.hlgh court's aetloh' s.ppar enUyterminates finally legal action ac-tion in one of the moat celebrated Civil Ubertlrff fihta of the century., cen-tury., MooneyV; petition to the high court s was-., regarded as 'a last ' resort . In hla battle' to have the iiconviction ; reversi; ' ' deck. Iteed Dissent-: : The notation on the court order list,-denying the petlton, said that Justices rBlackr and Reed " dissented. dissent-ed. - ; - -u ; : N Sneclflcation of "the - dissents was almost unprecented in the recollection of veteran court1 ob-serverSL ob-serverSL vt- ' Onlr avenue" now remaining open to Mooney, It was believed, is a further lea to the executive execu-tive branch of the state government govern-ment for a -gubernatorial pardon. His petXion to the high court charged that the state supreme court refused to overrule his conviction con-viction on the grounds that it did net have Jurisdiction. The , petition peti-tion asserted that it had become an accepted fact that his conviction convic-tion wa brought in largely ; on the basis of perjured testimony. VINEYARD BtRS OEOUGK F. WELLS Ueporter Phone 01-R-4 The Sunday school superintend-ency superintend-ency with their wives were Joint hosts and hostesses to members of the Book of Mormon class at a social Friday evening at the home of Mrs. Ellen . Holda way. Table games' were played. Prizes were awarded to Austin Larsen and Iceland Ice-land Wells. Dainty refreshments were served. In attendance were: Mr. and Mrs. Harold Holdaway, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence N. Gammon, Gam-mon, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Allen, Dorothy and Ava Williams, The-ora The-ora Sunquist, Nellie Schroder, Mary Allen and Margaret Gammon, Gam-mon, Reed and Dal Stone, Dean Olsen, Floy Thacker, Keith He-bertson, He-bertson, Eldon Harding, Dwaine Williams, Ross Holdaway, Austin Larsen, LaVar Ash, R. L. Johnson, John-son, Stephen Bunnell Jr. and Iceland Ice-land Wells. Captain Nora Harding will be hostess to members of Camp Tamarack -ol tha J. iUVE-at her home Thursday afternoon. All members and those eligible to Join are urged to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond naramg attended conference in Salt Lake Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jens C. Andreason have issued invitations to several hundred -relatives and friends to attend the wedding reception of their daughter Maxdne to Orvil B. Davis which, win" be held Fri- day evening in the ward recreaj tional hall. The young couple will be married earlier In the day In the Salt Lake temple. Mrs. Joy O. Clegg entertained for a number of children at her home Saturday afternoon in honor of her daughter Marjean's birthday birth-day anniversary. Games were played and dainty refreshments served to twenty little guests. Several members of R dub motored mo-tored over to Springville Thursday Thurs-day afternoon and surprised Mrs. Wesley Maag at her home who was a former member of the club. Social chat and sewing was en-Joyed. en-Joyed. Delicious refreshments were served. Those In attendance were Mrs. Lowell P. Variey, Mrs. Earl Toone, Mrs. Kenneth Olson, Mrs. O. M., Stone, Mrs. Ray Holdaway, Hold-away, Mrs. Ellis Orme, Mrs. Ray Gammon, . Mrs; Antolne Bunker, Mrs. Clyde Holdaway and Mrs. Theron Whltely. John K.' Allen and Thomas Wells attended the home missionary conference con-ference in salt Lake Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Holdaway Hold-away and son, Howard attended the state 'fair Friday and visited with Mr. and Mrs. William Facer Jr. and baby at their home In Salt Lake. Mrs. Elmer Man waring of Roosevelt visited here Friday with her sister Mrs. Arvll Stone en route to Salt Lake to attend general gen-eral conference. If all of an oystw's progeny lived . and multiplied through six generations; the- pile - of shells would be six times the size of the earth. -si' V 1 War is a monster, with the deadly smoke of battle clouding its all-devouring all-devouring maw and, lest they be consumed, men, too, must hide their human features behind monster-like masks, as did the soldier In the photo above. He's only "playing" at war as he charges through a gas-blanketed field during maneuvers at Camp Dix, N. J., but he presents an ominous picture of the horror that so recently threatened threat-ened In Europe. Girl Killed In Automobile Crash YELLOWSTONE PARK, Wyo., Oct. 10 (HE) A snow-covered highway was blamed today for an automobile crash that resulted in the death of Helen Mongoviss, 19, Newark, N. J., and 'the Injury a- ...... A y-xK . -'.v;-:-y.v:?v' :: :-. a is-:-y-:- X . - V ' ' - N ' V , ' - : o 1 I W W ,1111 llll llll HIHf fri'jtwit-Mrlrani Doc, I bought these teeth at a bargain but I want you to put them in! IMAGINE the amazement of your dentist if you went to him with a set Of "store teeth" you purchased at a bargain and asked him to fit them in your mouth. Your dentist knows that your health, com-, fort and well-being depend upon his ability to select teeth which will exactly meet your individual in-dividual requirements perfect matching of the teeth to assure a natural appearance and expert fitting to afford satisfactory service for many years. Neither good teeth nor good be purchased economically "over ;the coun- - .Your Master Plumber can. recommend the r, ter". Plumbing fixtures too, musj be' of assured . S5tandardT ! Pltuiibing Fixtures besf -suited quality, carefully selected, to meet jyour re-. for your rexjuiremenrs; help jou plan a new' quirements,4iarmoniously. matched to enhance bathroom, powder room or kitchen, anil af .y : the appearance of your home and installed by . range the financing on low F.ILA.' terms.- And AV experienced hands to assure health protection, . remember, andarcT Plumbing Fixtures, : satisfactory service and real economy,; Good plumbing is -vital , tq.the health of yout family for it means die delivery of jure water and the safe removal of dangerous waste A of s ix others on Craig pass near old faithful yesterday. The injured were: Joseph Mongoviss, Mon-goviss, a brother, broken arm, his wi'e, fractured skull; Dr. O. E. Sheperd, college instructor; Otto Priekzas and Henry Hugo, Montana Mon-tana State College students, Bore-man Bore-man and Robert L. Stetson, Port-orchard, Port-orchard, Wash., minor injuries. The Mongoviss and Sheperd cars collided when the Mongoviss car skidded on the highway. matter. It can mean much more" than .the good health of your family alone, because water contamination, can. endanger the health of an entire community. Good pionibing is so vital that you should be sure, that your- present plumbing is good. Entrust ?yout. plumbing only to Master Plumbers. They have the knowledge, skill and experience necessary to' assure safe, healthful, economical plumbing. Buy your fixtures from them. Place upon plumbing can , .'. ity, as you would sold through Master Plumbers,' cost no more - than others. SOFIA, Bulgaria, Oct. 10 (C: Maj. 'Gen. Ivan Feeff, : chief cf staff of the Bulgarian army, wasj assassinated' in the street this afternoon. - ' " "' Vv Peeffs aide De Camp Maj. Soyanof f, also was assassinated by the 'same assailant.' .v ' The assassin then . committed suicide with a second revolver. He was identified as one - Vlasseff, from Stanimaka the same town as, Peeff. Vlaaseff waa released three weeks , ago after having served a eentence for murder. Christmas Soal Driue Cs PlanncJ If Utah county will conduct Its'; own tuberuculosis Christmas Seal drive this year, it will receive 60' per cent of the proceeds instead of 10 per cent as heretofore, Mrs. H. B. Mensel, state committee A member, reported on her return this week end from the, fourth biennial bi-ennial meeting of the Rocky Mountain Tuberculosis conference in Salt Lake City. ' . Formerly, the 90 per cent col- . lected and turned over to the' state' ' and national was used by them for their own educational and research re-search work. Now 60 per cent of -the drive money will be used in Utah county for examination and, educational work If local" drive-workers drive-workers take over the campaign, Mrs. Mensel Indicated. The drive will open the "day-after "day-after Thanksgiving. At Salt Lake; City Mrs. Mensel attended meet-' Ing of the sociological section and of the medical section, the latter being addressed by National TH-: rector Dr. Kendall Emerson, New York City.' Two Provoans On U. S. Grand Jury Jesse N. Ellertson of Provo and Ernest Halvereon, former Pro-voan Pro-voan now of Salt Lake 1 City, are announced as drawn for Un federal grand jury venire for the fall term or court by Judge Tillman Till-man D. Johnson, In Salt Lak City. ' i - i diem the entire responsibil- upon' your dentist. JPrisUent t - an , DMUm AMI J . ' . 4 1 - '-. -Vr.'. "1 f |