OCR Text |
Show li PAGE EIGHT -imOWOm HEffALIDf 1 FRIDAY OCTOBER r ' 1938 v Bixon Child C ; ;JEric3ror on - - .. 41 V! V : ft V 5 i i i 1 IS i ! ! t lilled by Auto Beth Dixon, 5, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley L. Dixon; of Ephraim, was killed in Ephraim -Thursday afternoon. Mr. Dixon r was formerly credit manager for Taylor Brothers store here. . The girl had been playing behind : a parked car and ran across the street to greet an aunt. Norma t Welker 13. She ran directly into the path, of a car driven by Elden Bartholomew, 18, Springville, who ' stopped immediately, picked up the girl, and in a car driven by Peter Peterson of Ephraim rushed her to medical aid. . She was dead on arrival at the physician's office; her injuries included in-cluded a crushed chest and lungs and multiple skull fracture. Deputy Depu-ty Sheriff Ulysses Larsen of Manti termed the accident "unavoidable," "unavoid-able," Bartholomew was being accompanied ac-companied by his mother, Mrs. Floyd Bartholomew and his small sister and brother. They were traveling to Gunnison. The girl's death brought Utah's traffic toll for the year to 149. She was born at St. George March 4. 1933, to Stanley L. and Maureen Elizabeth Welker Dixon. She is survived by her parents, two brothers, DeGray LeRoy and and an unnamed infant; three grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Welker of Ephraim and Mrs. Sarah L. Dixon, Provo. Hungary Galls Mobilization BUDAPEST, Oct. 14 U.R The Hungarian government tonight ordered mobilization of five classes of reserves. The. mobilization order followed breakdown of negotiations with Czechoslovakia for settlement of Hungary's minority claims and coincided 'with reports of spreading spread-ing terrorism in the Ruthenian and Slovak frontier districts. German Spy Pleads Guilty (Continued from Page One) military and coast guard defense secrets of the United States and transmit them to the Reich. i The four prisoners, facing 20-year 20-year prison terms if convicted, were suspected only of being pawns in intrigues directed from Berlin. The highest German intelligence in-telligence officers were named in ,the indictment and although this government never expected to leach them. They would toe liable . to arrest if they ever entered the United States. (Continued1: from Page One) r "r fleea' the United States ' and ' eeta himself up as ruler of the ignorant ignor-ant natives of a West Indies island, is-land, is Ralph Ungermann, Huntington, Hunt-ington, prominent Young university univer-sity thespian. ' ; Vernan Wilcox, Salem, Oregon, portrayal Henry Smlthers, ,a .Cockney trader,, 'An old ' native -woman- and Lem, :V; a native chief, other major roles are taken by Gwendolene Toland and Boyd Lake, Oakley, respectively. respec-tively. "Emperor Jones,' one' of : the most difficult and probably the most outstanding play scheduled for production at the 44 Y" this year, it a monodrama to be produced pro-duced in seven scenes. In it all characters are subordinate to the dominent figure of the negro whose, life tragically ends after its major events are called up before be-fore him through the operation of the psychology of fear. The remainder of the cast follows: fol-lows: soldiers, adherents of Lena, Julius Bertrand, Santa Monica, Calif., Faye X. Bybee, Portola, Calif., Afton Merrill Provo; Little Lit-tle Formless Fears. Gwen Colton, Salt Lake- City. Bernfce Kelly, Shelley, Ida., Lorraine Mason, Aurora; Jeff, a Pullman porter, Jerry Caldwell, Vernal; Negro convicts, LaVar Bateman, River-ton, River-ton, Frank Jex, Salt Lake City, Bruce Kelly, Las Vegas, Nev. Howard Dennis, Roosevelt William Wil-liam Baker, Vernal, Artel Ricks, Los Angeles, Calif.; Prison guard, Dan Peterson, Pleasant Grove; Planters, Refell Erickson. Miami. Fla.. Jack Trun-ell, Trun-ell, Whiting, Ind., Marvin Smith, Palmyra, N. Y.: Bells and Dandies, Dan-dies, Marie Bertelsen, Marysvale, Eleanor Farr, Washington, D. C, Bill Pardoe, Provo, Malcolm Booth, Provo; auctioneer, Ethel Hastings, Hurricane; men and women slaves, Artel Ricks, Robert Rob-ert Johnson, Lehl, Louise Weat, Pleasant Grove, Geraldine McFar-land, McFar-land, Pleasant Grove; Negro ship-slavers, Frank Jex, Robert Johnson, William Baker, LaVar Bateman, Howard Dennis, Roosevelt, Artel Ricks, James Andrews, Ogden; witch doctor, Claude Snow; Crocodile goddess, Tess C. Tyler; drums, Virginia Meiling, Lehi, Isabelle Romney, Colonia Juarez, Chihuahua, Mex. Members of the male glee club who wil be trained for the introductory intro-ductory prologue by Dr. Franklin Madsen will be announced soon. Topeye' Comic Creator Is Dead GEOLOGISTS Sg " m&"- A4&?1: 7 F-' tr ( ICLINABEDTHE. I AAGUNJTAINI PEAK. 9 BY AAOOMOC3HT 129 ) IN ORDER TO SEE gPEQES Gf THEECUPSE V 'p'ltSI-l J v. . J IN ROQSNT VEARS. SPEAKER. . ( JL 5n I SIVIN3 &X) A - I COM. 13i V MCA MKV1CC. MM. ANSWER: Fiction. There can be no moonlight near the time ! of a solar ecDpse, for such an eclipse, is caused By the moon pass- ing between the earth and the sun, and, therefore, the moon would be in the new phase. . ; s G. 0. P. Fires Opening Gun (Continued from Page One) This will point the way to greater employment he indicated. Chief Justice William H. Fol-land Fol-land of Salt Lake City, candidate for re-election, remarked that "I agree in the elimination of all personal per-sonal abuse of parties on the other side," adding however that "I heartily disagree with the leadership they follow in a national na-tional system of government. Court Independence T believe in the independence of the courts," he continued, for the safety of personal rights, for the rights of the courts themselves them-selves to be not subject to the mw-Poneve the inartr wtmg"1 C :th-fihieof (U.w Popeye, the xpir&mea.mE New D lto ..Hthout con- Itlca. ' . w . ... . .im... uic new ucai ' uv ntutuut vx aai nr t mi inmi in 'vv uinrrv. . ... It was believed that President , 1.. ' V:"i i. rii sultation even of the representa- X, , , fV ItHr. tives of the people but with a iopa, alleged messenger for German Ger-man agents; Erich Glaser, private at Mitchel Field, army air "base, accused of having stolen an aviation avia-tion code book; Guenther Rum-"Trich, Rum-"Trich, army deserter, and'Otto Voss, 1 mechanic at the Seversky air- plane factory at Farmingdale, N Roosevelt had the case in mind when he expressed concern over spy activities a week ago. He made the statement after a conference con-ference with United States Attorney Attor-ney Lamar Hardy, the prosecutor. lardy had just-i returned from Europe with more evidence, supplementing sup-plementing that which department of justice agents had been gathering gather-ing for almost a year. Never before had department of justice agents been so secretive about their evidence in a criminal case. Some of it was believed to be of such alarming and delicate nature that it would be withheld even from court. The four on trial were: Red- nairea jonanna noiman, a nair- nAW flrmv nurSt nlane dresser on the German Liner Etlu4 - Fourteen others were named in characters of "Thimble Theater" today lost their creator, Elzie Crisler Segar. The 43-year-old cartoonist, who popularized an odious vegetable for millions of children, died at his home last night after a lengthy illness of spleen and liver. He suffered a relapse last month after indications of regaining re-gaining his health. With him were Mrs. Segar and their children, Marie, 14, and Tom, 10. The family fam-ily had lived here 10 years while Segar's strip began to appear in more American newspapers than any other comic. the indictment, some of whom fled the county, others who had never been here. Among them were Capt.-Lieut. Erich Pfeifferl of Berlin, head of the German secret sec-ret service; Capt.-Lieut. Udo von Bonin of Berlin, head of the German Ger-man navy intelligence, and others Y., who allegedly stole plans for a of almost equal prominence A FOOTBALL SPECIAL EXCURSION via SALT LAKE & UTAH RAILROAD "Orem Line" To SALT LAKE CITY SATURDAY OCTOBER 15 th, 1938 Round Train Leaves Trip Fare PAYSON 7.45 A. M. $1.02 SPANISH FORK 8:00 A. M. .92 SPRINGVILLE 8:11 A. M. .87 PROVO 8:35 A. M. .77 OREM 8:55 A. M. .77 PLEASANT GROVE 9:05 A. M. .77 AMERICAN FORK 9:15 A. M. .77 . LEHI 9:25 A. M. .77 Tickets Good for Returning on Any Regular Train Same Day PLAY SAFE ' RIDE THE DIG RED CADS r . - i , , r m EASY 3?5 UHnLID) We Help You With PLANS - FINANCING arid CONSTRUCTION 195-WES THIRD SOUTH x PHONO S! small coterie of followers" work out the court reorganization bill. Dean F. Brayton, Salt Lake City, candidate for U. S. congress man, contrasted the opportunity of 30 years ago when he came to Utah with that of today and found the latter wanting, "because the constitution was permitting the life of the nation to run on in a smooth way apparently that doesn't exist today." But "the constitution will still work . . . send back 150 new rep resentatives and we will put that constitution back again," he stat ed. "Business will get "back on the job and people will get on jobs." Mayor Mark Anderson in his address' of welcome commented that "I should like to have you work for justice among all groups but in seeing that business gets a square deal do not, as in the past, ally the Republican party too closely with all types of big business busi-ness good and bad. "Leading political parties must," he continued, "in the immediate future, devote much consideration to the better coordination of federal, fed-eral, state, and local eovernments. This will involve more definite allocation al-location of administrative author ity and responsibility and a simplification simpli-fication of our complicated, conflicting con-flicting and overlapping taxing systems, if it is beyond our power to simplify government and make it intelligible to the majority of the people it will probably prove beyond our power to preserve our form of government" govern-ment" J. Rulon Morgan of Provo wan chairman and introduced county candidates for office. David J Wilson, national committeeman of Ogden was a guest. The Lieurance club of Spanish Fork sang two selections, as did Mrs. Lela Packard of Springville accompanied by Mrs. Fern Mor gan of Provo. Dearwyn SardonI Sundwall of Provo gave two violin numbers accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Sar- doni. Jesse Grimes of Provo. speak ing for a place for youth in America's Amer-ica's future, won the oratorical contest competition over Reed Cleeg. Grimes will . represent Utah county in the state compete? tion to name one to represent the state in the Washington, D. C, final selection. RAILROADS ACCUSED OF GREAT WASTE WASHINGTON, Oct 14 V)z Sen. Wheeler. D., Mont!., .told President itoosevelt's. rail .-..act' finding board today that the railroads rail-roads could save $1,000,000 a day by eliminating waste. Consequently, said Wheeler, they are not justified in proposing propos-ing the wage cut amounting to $750,000 a day. TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION ; FOR RENT UNFURNISHED 2 RM. apt. pri. bath, coal stove, . adults. 463 E. 1 No. 1318J. ol6 FOR RENT FURNISHED NICE furn. sleeping rooms. 174 North 1st East. . o20 FOR SALE iRHSCJELLANEiOUS 150 BLACK faced lambs 50-80 lbs. Phone 910W. ol7 HARDY Chrysanthemums in bloom, plant now. Burrows Adding Add-ing machine. 495 N. 8 W. ol7 BOARD AND ROOM GOOD board and room in modern home., Phone 696J. o31 FOR SALE HOUSES 5 RM. mod. home; choice bldg lots, So. front. 542 S. 7 E. o20 HELP WANTED MALE EXPERIENCED male stenographer. stenograph-er. Apply in own hand writing stating age, experience, education educa-tion and references. Apply Box T-7. o20 HELP WANTED FEMALE WOMAN for housework, go home nights. Apply eve. and Sun. 261 E. 1st North. ol7 Open Season on Ducks is October 15 it We have a New Stock of Shells, Hunting COATS - CAPS - Etc; Besriii HUNTING COATS'... $3.02 and up 0749 SINGLE BARREL STEVENS SHOTGUNS 12, 16, and 20 ga. . . Model 1897 WINCHESTER ' PUMP SHOTGUN (C)W jr Special:.... . . . VOU WESTERN S WINCHESTER Dependable Ammunition Don't .Trust Unknown brands ! Consolidate: OdpnGT.icclifnbGo.. , ; iV" "V PROVO, UTAH 3, " .'- PENNEY DAYS Featured DovsDnEsssclimrsi A closeout purchase. Vat dyed, fast color printed Shirts that there will be a stampede for.' Siz 6 to 14. Every ,one a, value. I -mm. MM PENNEY DAYS' Featiirel fast colon mm 36 Inch firm quality for winter quilts or gay frocks and aprons. This will be a sellout value. Come early Saturday! Yard .. c 1 PENNEY DAYS Featiirel EUJ FLOUn SQUARES Bleached and mangled, I fOT icauy lu use. n lb. quality. Bought espe- J cially for Penney Days J Saving. f ' PENNEY DAYS Featiirel Winter Weight Unions Savings for men. Rib knit cotton suits in roomy sizes. Extra warm s Irint i-rrvt Ulr fnrt W winter. Stock up now! I J J I M Sere's Proof . - tfiat Eterincys ring you 4helDil3:tiarains! sooiiAVcnonEPi 0 Goes On Sale 10 a. m. Saturday! Be One of f the First To Choose Froni This Group of SPECTACULAR BARGAINS! ' J. cR. &s I - mm Lustrous Rayon Taffeta Attractive- Serviceable Bargain Priced! Buy several now at a saving wear them all fall and winter! They're of a good, heavy quality that launders and wears well. Smooth fitting: bias cut style. prettily trimmed or strictly tailored. tail-ored. In tea rose. 32-44. New, Upto-the-Minute Styles;, incorporating all the features of Dresses priced twice this price ! Plain and Printed Crepes that are well made, and fit perfectly L We expect them to sell in twos and three so be here on the dot! Snnnui? lai-awaisi Sizes, 0 0 0 V ! N0 PHONE ORDERS! j Jj no MAIL ORDERS! U to44? Men's ALL-WOOL Soft Warm Flannel Wrap-iround'siyles HanP-(ringed Sash! Penneys scores a hit in bringing you real all-wool robes at this low price Choose from popular colors. col-ors. Each robe has a comfortable shawl collar, 3 pockets and smartly contrasted trimming! They'll sell fast come early for yoursJ BOUGHT SPECIAL FOR OUR BUSY N OTION DEPARTMENT! Four Choice SELECTED QUALITY HOTIOHS THAT SAUE Y(iU WOHEYH SAFETY PINS One dozen asstd. sizes to each card. Nickel fin ish 720 to go at, card Vi Inch ELASTIC 2 yd. hanks of strong washable Bloomer Elastic. 250 to sell Han't ...... Novelty Buttons Chic style, that every woman luces, ureat va riety. Save! .' 7 rL Sewing Thread 3 cord merceriz ed finish. Cloven brana mread In both black and white. Closeout 72x84 Inch DLAUtlETS Double, heavy jacquard deep nap. Same quality, some slightly soiled. f Come early .. 5pLr-P Men's Coat SUEATEQS Button front, heavily fleeced fleec-ed for warmth.' A special purchase. - $a Real savings .... ; V Vn . ..a T Jl!... Slid es - Marked down now. Rlght'in season when you want them. Jlanyciever stylesiiBrown. j m PUnCIlASIED SPECIE FOH SEMOTJUAIf PEnrjEV'tfATS - if f r- w & i i$ $ u .-POPULAR -PROVO STORE V THE' BIGGEST , n IU 1 U J ii VALUE WE'VE '.' SEEN AT , Ahead in. QiityJLow7 cr inPricel Pon't miss these Glen's Dress Shirts of v fine -;: count - fabrics ! Correctly sized . in the smartestfast color pat-- terns . Wilt-proof r : col-lars col-lars attached.;Tfiey'Il be y fast sellerscome early ! I ' 4 - f 1 j "V |