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Show 4 1 r PAGE - TWO Around the BELFAST, North Ireland, Dec. 22 (HE) The home office an-T an-T ' nounced today -that 34 leaders and j . members of the Irish Republican r ;: Army had been arrested on charges of plotting violence. To-? To-? . lice learned plans were prepared . hy the I. R. a. for attacks on ner- T . v.fi- Vlllll HI II, uons and upon government and i other property during the Christ-? Christ-? , mas and -New Year periods. WASHINGTON, Dec 22 i (U.PJ Rep. Louis Ludlow, D., ImL, said today he would seek to outlaw the government's Virgin Island prum business f on the opening day of congress. MADRID Dec. 22 (IIP) Christmas Christ-mas Eve mass will be celebrated in Madrid for the first time in three years Saturday night. Father Fath-er Lobo, a loyalist Roman Catholic Cath-olic priest, said he would celebrate cele-brate mass in his chapel, which, accommodates 200 persons. PARIS, Dec, 22 (U.R The government gov-ernment escaped defeat on a confidence con-fidence vote by only seven votes in the chamber of deputies today. to-day. Voting on Article Two of the revenue bill, authorizing new taxation, tax-ation, the chamber supported the government by 291 votes to 284 after the government had made the issue one of confidence. WASHINGTON, Dec. 22 (t) .R) Wage-Hp ur Administrator Administra-tor Elmer F. Andrews may coll a hearing soon to attempt at-tempt to cushion the effect of overtime provisions of the fair labor standards act upon permanent, well-paid employes it was Icnrned today. LONDON, Dec. 22 U.P) Sir Malcolm Campbell, automobile and speedboat racer, announced .through the personal column of yesterday's Times that he has withdrawn authority for his wife to incur debts in his name. WASHINGTON, Dec. 22 (U.E The Red Cross sought $600,000 today to distribute 3,000,000 bush-ls bush-ls of wheat among war impoverished impover-ished civilians of Spain. Red Cross Chairman Norman Davis said an announcement regarding necessary neces-sary arrangements for collection of the fund would be made soon. CHICAGO, Dec. 22 (UR) A unanimous opinion of the Illinois Appellate Court held today that picketing of an employer's business busi-ness by ' outsiders is unlawful if there is fno strike or controversy in progress. LONDON, Dec. 22 0J.R) Great Britain is abandoning as hopeless all efforts to afford af-ford 100 per cent prot?tion to all civilians from high explosives ex-plosives dropped Vrom enemy bombing lanes, it was revealed reveal-ed today. Instead, the govern ment win spend-$100,000,000 to provide protection against bomb splinters and falling debris de-bris In the streets of big cit DID YOU KNOW A Screen Comedy Was Filmed in Provo In 1923? It's Called IT HAPPENED IN PROVO' and You Can See It FRIDAY at the Paramount! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY . . . WILL GIVE ST THAT IVE IIAUE LEFT Kl OUfi TOY BASEMENT! BASE-MENT! IF THERE IS SOME TOY YOU STILL HEED! GET IT AT THIS nEDUGTIOli! the World United Press ies, the targets of aerial bomb-be bomb-be rs in "the next war." WASHINGTON, . Dec. 22 OLE) Director Robert Fechner ofthe Civilian Conservation Corps disclosed dis-closed today that 3,517 enrollees received elementary school diplomas diplo-mas during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1938. High school diplomas diplo-mas were awarded to 634 C C C recruits. Thirteen received college diplomas or degrees, and 8,817 illiterate enrollees were taught to read and write. DEATH CLAIMS FORMER OUTLAW PRICE, Utah, Dec. 22 U.R Matt Warner, 74, a notorious out law at the turn of the century but for the last 30 years a respected citizen of Carbon county, was mourned today. Warner, who claimed to be the last surviving member of the ill- famed Butch Cassidy gang which rustled cattle, robbed banks and express shipments in the Robbers' Roost region of western Wyoming, Wyo-ming, died here last night of a heart attack. He was born at Ephraim, but fled that town as a young man after a dance hall brawl during which he thought he had killed or seriously injured another man. Thinking himself in disgrace in his home town he became associated asso-ciated with the outlaw band. He changed his name from Christiansen Christian-sen to Warner and he kept his assumed as-sumed name for the rest of his life, both in notoriety and respectability. re-spectability. After Warner abandoned his outlawry he served two terms as city marshall and one term as justice of the peace and was a leader in Price civic affairs. He is survived by his widow, two sons and two daughters. Rebellion Grows In Spain Among Insurgent Ranks (BULLETIN) LONDON, Dec 22 OJ.R) Generalissimo Fra n c i s c o, Franco, leader of insurgent Spain, is seriously ill of in-fluenzza, in-fluenzza, the Daily Telegraph reported tonight. LONDON, Dec. 22 (t.P Reports Re-ports from the French - Spanish frontier today detailed a series of alleged developments in nationalist national-ist Spain which would indicate wide dissatisfaction in insurgent territory. The reports ranged from assertions asser-tions that hundreds of persons had been arrested to one that 45 Italian soldiers had been waylaid and hanged by angry Spaniards. Diplomatic reports from Spain placed the number arrested at nearly 1,000. One report said 100 spies and plotters were executed together about a week ago. British Brit-ish official sources lacked full information in-formation on reports that some British diplomatic attaches and servants had been arrested. ALL and IE PROVO (UTAH) Lincolh High ool News BY MARY JEAN SKINNER Music Dept. To Use New Addition LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL At the cost of approximately $20,000, a new addition has been built on the Lincoln high -school which is to be used exclusively for the music department. It consists con-sists of two stories. The bottom floor has a room for the glee classes with a seating capacity for 75 to 100 students. On this floor there is also a cabinet for- instruments and band uniforms and a director's office. The top floor Is to be left un-partitioned un-partitioned for use as a chorus room. The students at Lincoln high school are celebrating the Yule season more extensively this year than for many years. A contest between the different classes in securing the best looking Christmas Christ-mas tree, has resulted in every available corner being gaily decorated. dec-orated. The outside of the school has not been neglected. A huge tree with colored lights, furnished by the Orem chamber of commerce, com-merce, has been placed on the roof of the building. AH week the various classes are having Christmas parties or programs. Friday will climax the week's events with a gala program. pro-gram. During the day time an assembly and picture show will be shown to the students. At night there is to be a basketball game followed by a dance. The Girls' Organization of Lincoln Lin-coln high school held a meeting Monday, December 19, in the school auditorium. Myrth Liston, president, conducted the business matters. A report was given by Naoma Fergensen on a recent trip to South high school. The meeting was concluded by a song by Norma Dunford. Plans were made to hold meetings regularly in the near future. Christmas Program At Pleasant Grove PLEASANT GROVE Schools, churches, and the community in general in Pleasant Grove have joined forces to make merry for the Yule Tide. Foremost in the line of entertainments enter-tainments will be the "Junior Prom' Friday evening, December 23. "Peace on Earth" is the theme in decorating the gymnasium. gymnas-ium. The committee in charge of the entertainment are: Decorations, Decora-tions, Phyllis Gillman, Leah Phillips, Phil-lips, Mary Burns. Thelda Gardner; advertising, Lowe Howard, George Macmillian, Frank Newman, Reed Matthews; music, Beth Hooley. For the special Christmas assembly as-sembly program on Friday at the high school, members of the faculty fac-ulty will present the one-act play, "How the Great Guest came." Those taking part are, E. R. West, George Anderson, Lyean Johnson, Guy Hillman, Ellen Walker, Alfred Rogers, Edna Ed-na Gillman, Joseph Day with Miss Myrtle enderson, director. The churches will all give sacred programs on Sunday morning, morn-ing, ands of course, there will be the Community tree for the kiddies which is always sponsored by the chamber of commerce. FIRMAGE'S 0QQ EVENING HERALTD 4 Mrs. Vera C. Johnson and son Paul have returned from Hollywood, Holly-wood, Calif., where she visited for several weeks with her daughter daugh-ter and son-in-law, ' Mr. and Mrs. George Flick and baby son, who was born Nov 23. The new arrival ar-rival is the first grandchild of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Johnson. En route home, they visited another daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rowley of Panaca, Nevada. " Mrs. Levi IV fan waring has left for Los Angeles, to visit her chiK dren during the holidays. Mrs. Mary - Erekson and son, Ferron have left fotf Los Angeles where they will remain for the holidays. Marden Pearson of Maryvale, Utah, was a visitor in Provo today; to-day; , . Karl Peterson of Price, is spending spend-ing the day in Provo. ' , . ,. ' 1 Mrs. Hal -Johnson has returned to her home in Oakland, Calif., after visiting for three weeks in Provo with relatives and friends. i . . Mrs. C. W. Steven has been removed re-moved to her home here from the L. D. S. hospital in Salt Lake City, where she underwent a major ma-jor operation three weeks ago. She is reported to be doing well. Mrs. Ernest Chauvte (Katie Beardall) of San Bernardino, Cal., is here to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Beardall. Educational Plan VJill Go to Soions On Tobacco, Drink Designed to educate against use of tobacco, alcoholic drinks and narcotics, a bill will be introduced in-troduced to the legislature when it convenes in January, Mrs. Emily D. Aird, state representative, representa-tive, announced today. The bill represents the combined combin-ed work of a committee appointed by Mayor Mark Anderson recently recent-ly and which has spent many weeks combing official and private pri-vate opinion, clubs and organizations, organiza-tions, for suggestions on an educational edu-cational program. Mrs. Aird; J. W. Thornton, Utah .Educational association president and ex-state senator, and J. F. Mower, Dixon junior high school principal, formed the committee. "If the gains made by a (school) pupil in other phases of his health work are to be conserved con-served and if he is to be able to intelligently and wisely choose his habits relative to the use of alcohol, alco-hol, tobacco and other narcotics, it is necessary for the school to give him accurate knowledge of the facts about tobacco, alcohol and other narcotics as an integral part of health education," the bill declares. The program would be financed from the liquor control fund by payment to the state board of education of a sum equal to one dollar for every child in average daily attendance in the seventh to the twelfth grades inclusive in Utah's public schools. "Mrs. Aird and her committee have done a thorough job," Mayor Anderson comented today. "Theirs is the most practical temperance plan ever devised in Utah. I hope the Utah legislature adopts it. "The're is some objection on the ground we should not legislate legis-late morals. There is no attempt in this proposed measure to use police force to prevent drinking and smoking. The whole plan is educational," he stated. Ward Choir Plans Christmas Program An outstanding Christmas program pro-gram to be presented by Spring-ville Spring-ville Fourth ward choir under the leadership of Carl Nelson will be given Christmas night, beginning at 7 p. m., in the ward chapel. The choir has been working work-ing long to make this a specially fine entertainment and all ward members and friends are invited to attend. The program to be given is as follows: Christmas Tide by Marion Moore, the chair; Val-very, Val-very, by Paul Rodney, choir; O Come All Ye Faithful, J. Reading, Read-ing, male quartet; Finlandia, by Jean Sibeaulis, choir; ladies' duet; A Gold Prayer, by Ervin J. Sten-son, Sten-son, choir; organ solo, lone Av-erett; Av-erett; instrumental Irid, Condie sisters and lone Averett; Hills of Bethlehem, by Marion Moore, choir. SPECIAL FRUIT CAKE CHRISTMAS COOKIES t City Briefs CHRISTMAS MORNING STOLLEN A Fruited Coffee Cake EACH w THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22. 1938 Obituaries James F. Reynolds Called by Death James Franklin Reynolds, 59, died . Wednesday night at his home, in Orem, where he had lived for eight years" "He came rrom. scalante and had engaged in farming. He was a member of the L. D. S. church. He was born in Panguitch, Nov. 11, 1879. ! Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Martha Reynolds; his mother, Mrs. M. E. Reynolds of Tropic; three sons. Sterling Reynolds, Helper; Lane and Gale Reynolds, Orem; four daughters, Mrs. 1 Leah Rochell, Kaysville; Thella and H-letta H-letta Elizabeth Reynolds, Orem; four step-daughters, Mrs. Roy Henderson, Canonville, Utah; Mrs. Maud Reynolds, Escalante; Mrs. Nellie Baily, Escalante; Mrs. t Eva Heaps, Orem; four brothers, Jero Reynolds, Brigham:; Leonard Reynolds, Clearfieldf Scott Reynolds, Reyn-olds, Salt Lake City; Cliff Reynolds; Reyn-olds; Escalante; four sisters, Mrs. Minerva Worthen, Panguitch; Mrs. Ethel Hatch, Tropic; Mrs. Mae Johnson, Farmington; Mrs. Fern Harris, Salt Lake City; and four grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Saturday at la a. m. at the Tim-panogos Tim-panogos ward chapel, with Bishop Roy H. Gappmeyer presiding. Friends may ca-.i at the Hateh-Quist Hateh-Quist . Funeral home Friday evening eve-ning and Saturday morning prior to the sevrices. Harriet Nielson Mrs. Harriet Eloise Johnson Nielsen, 55, of Mapleton, passed away Wednesday night at the rayson hospital tollowing a major operation. Mrs. Nielson was - the wife of Loren A. Nielson, Nebo district school board member. They had oeen married since June 12, 1908. She was born in Mesa, Ariz., June 21, 1883, the daughter of Joel E. and Mary Hastings Johnson. John-son. All her early life was spent m Arizona where she received her high school education. She later attended Brigham Young academy at Provo. I-'ullowing her marriage Mrs. Nielson lived in Arizona one year and " Colorado four years before moving to Utah. She had lived in Mapleton since 1913. isne was captain of the Mapleton Maple-ton Daughters of Utah Pioneers and a charter member. Nine sons and daughters survive: sur-vive: L. Glenn, Guy, Ferr, I6ne, Jay, Ora and Alton Nielson, all of Mapleton; Ivan Nielson, Spring-viliejand Spring-viliejand Don B. Nielson, Albu-qd&rque, Albu-qd&rque, New Mexico. Also living are seven brothers and sisters: Edgar L. and Charles Johnson, Phoenix, Ariz.; Joseph W. Johnson, Chandelier, Ariz.; Mrs. Maude Clemens, Mesa, Ariz.; Mrs. Rose Ogden, Oakland, Cal.; and Mrs. Jeanette MacKay, Los Angeles. uneral services will be held Tuesday at 2 p. m. in the Mapleton Maple-ton ward hall. Interment will be in the Evergreen cemetery. Lantz M. Jackson SPANISH FORK Lantz M. Jackson, five months old son of Verl and Helen McKenzie Jackson Jack-son died at a local hospital Tuesday Tues-day night at 8:25, following a major operation. The baby had oeen in poor health all his life and the operation failed to relieve the trouoie. He was born at Pay-son, Pay-son, Aug. 20, 1938. He is survived oy his parents, one sister Kathleen Kath-leen ana two grandmothers, Mrs. Agnes Jackson of Spanish Fork and Mrs. Martha McKenzie of Springville. Funeral services will be conducted at Springville, the time and place to be announced later by the Deseret mortuary. Lantz M. Jackson Funeral services for Lantz M Jackson, four-month-old son of Verl and Helen McKenzie Jackson, Jack-son, will be held Friday at 2 o'clock in the Springville Third ward chapel, with Bishop William wmtney in charge. Friends may call at the family home, 259 North Second West street, Springville, prior to the services, interment will be in the Spanish Fork cemetery. The baby died in a local hospital hos-pital Tuesday following a major operation. He was born at Payson, Aug. 20, 1938, and is survived by his parents; a sister, Kathleen, and two grandmothers, Mrs. Agnes Jackson of Spanish Fork and Mrs. Martha McKenzie of Springville. N. L. Peterson N. L. Peterson, 38, of Goshen, died of bronchial pneumonia at a Salt Lake City hospital Wednes- . 51a- ib. $uB flYW Doz. JIOB .... 282 day afternoon. He had been in the hospital sln$ Monday. Mr.rpeterson was born at Span ish Fork June 20, 1900 the son 'of N. L. and Jane McLain Peterson. He was educated in the Spanish Fork schools and since had been working at the Goshen .Motor company. At the - time of his death he was assistant manager of the company. ' "He- married Virginia Okelberry df Goshen October 4, 1934 at Marrion,Iowa. Hs was' a- member mem-ber of -the Masonic lodge and the B. P.' O., E. No. 711, of Eureka. He was 'past exalted ruler of the Elks. Surviving, besides his wife, are his mother, Mrs. Jane McLain Foster of Spanish Fork; two half brothers, William and Robert GIFTS OF 'Tim ( ti mim run MATiONAi; BAMit. HO V Mt. A 's check is "good as gold" but you may suspect there's rubber in Mr. B's. The name counts! Crusader Worsted Suits by UUPPEUUEmER On a check or in a suit the name is important. Rely on the Kuppenheimer label. 61 years have proved this famous maker never skimps on quality. They're not adulterated these handsome Kup penheimer Crusader suits they're pure worsteds. Put value before price see these sturdy, comfortable suits! An investment in good appeaixince THE STORE OF Foster of Spanish Fork; two half sisters, Mrs. Leah Hollywood of Los 'Angeles and Altah Foster of Spanish Fork; and a grandmother; Mrs. Ottesen of. Spanish Forfc i Funeral services j wilt - be helI Saturday at 2 p. m., in the SpringvUie Fourth ward chapel and will be conducted by the Ma sonic lodge. Interment will be in the Provo Burial park. Friends may call at the Claudin funeral home until Saturday and -at the family home at Goshen prior .to the1 service. Mark Johnson SPANISH FORK Relatives here have been informed of the death at a Salt Lake hospital from pneumonia of Mark Johnson, and DISTINCTION ,5 O lH Kuppcnh The Finest Men's Gifts That Ever Grew Under His Christmas Tree Look at the Trade Names of the following Merchandise! Kuppenheimer Good Clothes . . $40.00 Hyde Park Clothes . $22.50 up Nunn-Bush Ankle Fashioned Oxfords $8.00 up Edgerton Oxfords $5.00 Knox & Mallory Hats $5 and $7.50 Portis Hats - $3.85 Arrow and Enro Shirts .... $2 to $3.50 Mark Twain Shirts . . . , $1.65 Hole Proof Hosiery 35c, 50c, $1.00 Swank Jewelry $1.00 up Pioneer Belts & Suspenders $1, $1.50, $2 Brentwood 'Sweaters $2.00 to $6.50 Cisco Mufflers ..... $1.00 to $3.95 Enro Pajamas $1.65 - $200 Enro. Mel Ip Glo Silk Pajamas $4 - $6.50 Rabhor Robes .... $5.00 to $15.00 Arrow Handkerchiefs . . . 25c up Cheney, Phoenix. Botony and Nor-East Ties ... 50c, $1.00, $1.50 Hand Turned House Shoes $2.50 and $3 Tom Sawyer Boys9 Shirts and Polo $1.00 Tom Sawyer Slacks and Cords . . $2.98 DISTINCTION FOR 52, formerly of this city, now of Richfield, Idaho He was born at Springville June 2, 18S5, to Quet and ' Martha Cook Johnson. The family moved to Spanish Fork when he was' a small child and lived on a ranch east , of the city until 1908 --when they moved to Richfield. Mr. Johnson married Grace Rowe of this city. Three sons survive him, Ross, Rowe and Glenn Johnson and one daughter, Mrs. Donna Lyons who- were in Salt Lake when death came. Two brothers also survive, Frank A. Johnson of Salt Lake and Aaron Johnson of Richfield. Funeral services were conducted conduct-ed Wednesday in the Richfield town hall by Bishop Orin Johnson. John-son. Burial was in the Richfield cemetery. I S MX 1 MEN and BOYS 4 - |