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Show PAGE SIX PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1940 Looking for the Wings of Death ml CLASS TO OPE! r 1 k - 4 n a O v. . L s j k - V, People who ,UJ nut register Thursday for the free adult education edu-cation program may do so Monday Mon-day night at the Provo high school when elasswork will begin, according to Miss Ruth Mitchell, county -supervisor. The instructors appreciate the interest shown in Thursday's r-i., r-i., train. ti. and are enthusiastically looking forward to the ensuing school" year, Miss Mitchell .says. The teachers have recently completed com-pleted special training; in their respective departments uf education. educa-tion. One of the featured classes will be "Current Hvents," taught by E. A. Mitchell in room 21 from 7 to 9 p. in. each Monday and Thursday. 1'urpose of the class, according to Mr. Mitchell, is to enable the people to gain an understanding of the meaning of history by noting not-ing and analyzing important Hig-rul Hig-rul leant current events, ascertaining ascertain-ing the causes which produce them, determining what they amount to, forecasting what influence in-fluence they will have on the future, and considering cause, ef-fect ef-fect and cure. Mr. Mitchell declares that- the present is the most important period in all human history, and that every citizen in a democracy should be deeply interested and concerned about it and do his full part to preserve the good and get much more. Merrill Named to Research Position Dr. Harry J. Merrill, elder son of the late Harrison R. Merrill of Rrigham Young university, has been appointed research engineer for the American Car and Foundry Foun-dry company in Berwick, Perm., according' to word received .In . Provo by his mother. Mrs. Edna J. Merrill. Following three years' study in physics at Columbia university in .Ww York, Dr. Merrill was awarded award-ed the Ph. D, degree last June. The young physicist was graduated grad-uated from the B. Y. U. college of arts and sciences in 1933 with a baccalaureate decree, and two years later was granted an M. A. in rhvsics. In his new appointment former Provoan is engaged in study of materials used in manufacture of armor plate the the the for tanks and other mechanized equipment equip-ment designed for national defense. de-fense. (Continued from Page One) place to house the pioneer relics and exhibits of the Sons and Daughters. He points out that along the middle of the foyer on the main floor of the building, five-foot-ivide showcases could be constructed con-structed over a length of some 120 feet, and that other nooks on the floor are "made to order" for display cases. Mayor Anderson likened such a plan to that employed in the state capitol at Salt Lake City. With the relics in the public building, they would be witnessed by hundreds of people who would not otherwise see them, he said. Authorization to display the relics rel-ics in the city and county building, build-ing, of course, would have to be obtained from the county and city commissions. SUBMIT TO OPERATIONS Two Daily Herald employes were convalescing at the Utah Valley hospital Saturday, following follow-ing operations. Lawrence (Lorrie) Young, member mem-ber of the carrier department, was operated on Friday night following fol-lowing an appendicitis attack, while Kendell Hasmuson, mailing clerk, underwent a hernia operation opera-tion Saturday morning. t BIG REDUCTIONS! Your Old Range Taken in As Part Payment FOR EXAMPLE: $98.75 MO NT AG RANGE $20.00 SET PREMIUM WARE CONSISTING OF 18 TUMBLERS .'52 PIECES CALIFORNIA POTTERY WARE 26-PIECE SET CARLTON PLATE SILVERWARE 0; Tola! $108.75- r . 310 WEST Call 21 for Expert Radio - Machine I ' German wui planes often attack eve s !-) Sm nvi inn sooner Dictuied above, keep constant vigil crew u atop a lowntown (Continued from Page One) industrial co-operation in the nation's na-tion's re-armament drive. On Rental Ba.sN Under thid provision, the president presi-dent will be empowered to take over and operate on a 'just rental'' rent-al'' basis, any plant whose owner refuses to accept a national defense de-fense contract. Conviction for such failure to co-operate would carry a fine not exceeding $50,000 and three years' imprisonment. The industrial compliance provision pro-vision - known ua the , Smith amendment and originally contained con-tained in the house version of the bill-was insisted upon by the senate after bitter debate last night. Senate-house conferees had rewritten re-written the Smith amendment. The .senate refused, 37 to 33, to accept it in the revised form, charging conferees had extracted "the teeth" from the provision. The conference committee wrote the rigid Smith amendment back into the bill in 10 minutes and presented it to the senate when it convened today. Both In Favor Both Mr. Roosevelt and his opponent op-ponent in the November elecUon Republican presidential nominee Wendell L. Will kie came out in favor of conscription, while congress con-gress still was debating the issue. The bill provides that not more than 900,000 draftees shall be in training in land forces at any one time. The navy may take some conscripts con-scripts next year. Use of the conscript con-script army is restricted to the western hemisphere and U. S. possessions pos-sessions and territories, including the Philippine Islands. The measure also carries a job-protection job-protection clause for drawees, nless it is "impossible or unreasonable'' unreas-onable'' to do so, private firms will be required to give jobs back to conscripts after they have completed com-pleted their period of "satisfactory" "satisfac-tory" service and proved that the draftee files application for reemployment re-employment within 40 days after completing training. If a draftee Ls not given back his old job, he may petition to the U. S. district courts. If employed by the government, his job is restored re-stored automatically. Galleries Packed When the final action came today, to-day, the galleries which had been packed during weeks of debate, were only partially filled. Many members of congress were taken unawares by the rapidity of the action. In the senate, Senaty Key Pitt-man, Pitt-man, D., Nev., the gray-haired, slender president pro - tempore, called upon the conference report for a vote 17 minutes after the members had convenes. There was no opposition to the swift procedure. In the house, the report wm 7 j iri .0 Vl.J cxr 7 i - -j CENTER Refrigerator or Washing Repairs WW J i ttlm J London from heights beyond the C CWS on roono us. ime uie iw with strong binoculars. This London office building. laid down at 12:10 p. m. Undtir its rules, an hour's debate was in order. No one seemed eager to use that much time, and the report re-port was approved in about 25 minutes. After the vote, senate isolationists isolation-ists held a "post mortem." Sen. Burton K. Wheeler, D., Mont., quoted an editorial that the draft should select "strong, fine, smart and brutal men exclusively." "You mothers of America," Wheeler said, "they say to you they will take your sons and train them to be young brutes. ' They will teach them that the Sermon on the Mount is wrong. They will teach them that the Ten Cora-rnandmens Cora-rnandmens are wrong.'' WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 U.R President Roosevelt today asked congress for $1,733,886,976 in cash and $207,000,000 in contract authorizations, auth-orizations, largely to finance the conscription program. WASHINGTON. Sept. 14 (U.P This is how the house divided in the final vote on the conscription bill conference reporF: For the report: 186 Democrats; 46 Republicans; total, 232. Against: 32 Democrats; S3 Republicans; Re-publicans; one American - Labor; one Farmer-Labor; fwo Progres sives; total, 124. There were 40 pairs and 34 not voting. There are five vacancies in the house. . WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 eD-Here eD-Here is the vote of intermountain senators on the conscription bill: For the bill: William H. King, D., TJTah; and Elbert Thomas, D., Utah. Against the bill: D. Worth Clark, D., Idaho; James Murray, D., Montana; Burton Bur-ton K. Wheeler, D., Montana ;"3ohn Thomas, R., Idaho. (Continued from Page One) from Berlin that London surrender or face destruction, it was said that British defenses now were as strong or stronger than prior to the start of his week's almost uninterrupted un-interrupted bombardment, centering center-ing around London. The toll of damaged buildings of historical importance in London continued to mount, and now includes in-cludes Buckingham Palace, parliament, par-liament, Westminster Abbey, the law courts (heavily damaged today to-day by high explosives falling in mid-London) and . South Africa house on Trafalgar Square. Nazb Ridiculed But British sources ridiculed Nazi suggestions that London should choose between the fate of Paris (which surrendered) or Warsaw War-saw (which was destroyed). Two developments in the Balkans Balk-ans indicated the southeast of Europe was not yet entirely pacified paci-fied by the Axis powers. In Sofia, the Bulgarian Communist Com-munist party issued a third mani festo denouncing Germany and Italy and demanding that Bulgaria make a mutual aid pact with Soviet So-viet Russia in order to frustrate attempts of the Axis powers to organize an anti-Soviet bloc in the Balkans. In Moscow, the official Tass News Agency published a government govern-ment comunique saying that the German newspaper National Zei-tung Zei-tung had printed an "obvious fabrication'' fab-rication'' by quoting a. Rumanian newspaper which said that talk of a Russian protectorate over Rumania Ru-mania had forced the Bucharest government to cede half of Transylvania Tran-sylvania to Hungary. CARS DA5LVGED An intersection accident at Seventh West and Third North Friday evening damaged two cars but injured no one, according to police records. An auto driven by Ted Brinker-hoff, Brinker-hoff, 17, 357 North Eighth West, traveling: east on Third North, overturned after striking the rear of a car driven north on Seventh west by George H. Hickman, 47, 293 North Fourth West, it was reported. A premiere performance, as far as Provo is concerned, or Doh-nayt's Doh-nayt's "Symphonic Etudes." a masterpiece composition for the piano, will be played by Dilworth Simmons, Provo pianist, who will appear in a joint concert with Miss Virginia Sellers, Chicago soprano, so-prano, at the Provo tabernacle Wednesday night, September 25. The Dohnayi number, highly difficult to play, has tried the artistry of many a wizard of the ivories. The composition features doubled filled octave passages and contrary motion at intense speed. Another featured number to be played by Mr. Simmons will be Robert ' Schumann's "Variations and Allegro on a Theme by Clara Wieck." He will also play compositions compo-sitions by Bach and Chopin. Mr. Simmons, with the promise of a successful concert career ahead, practices more than five hours daily in preparing for the recital here, which will be the first of a series to be given m the western states. Miss Kellers, talented radio and theater singer, will be accompanied accom-panied by Mrs. Alene C. Simmons', whose outstanding ability as a pianist and vocalist has long been recognized by Provo audiences. Tickets for the Simmons-Sellers concert are on sale at the Music Box, 104 North University avenue. Various organizations of the city, including some of the civic clubs, have pledged their support to the event, and a large audience audi-ence is expected present to pay tribute to the brilliant I'rovo pianist and the guest artist from Chicago. 0 R E D , TEHPANOOOS VVAKD ' I MLVRON WARD I Mrs. JlerriU Crand&ll I Importer l'iiyr.e C2S-1S.-3 The opening social of the Mutual Improvement association was held on the church lawn Tuesday evening eve-ning with the presidency in charge of arrangements. Zora Hansen, Vola Hancock and Alice Harris. A program was enjoyed, games played, refreshments served, and dancing enjoyed. M. B. Walker returned home Tuesday after spending the past ten daj-3 at Clarsholm, Canada, visiting his sister, Mrs. Ada Simmons. Sim-mons. Mrs. Hazel Gillman and daughter daugh-ter Phyllis spent Wednesday at Salt Lake visiting relatives and friends. Mrs. Rhea D. Lyon of Seattle, Washington, is spending a few days here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Drage. Mrs. Hulda Walker returned home Wednesday after spending a few days visiting relatives and friends at Spring City. Miss Carol Harris left this week for Beaver, where she will resume her school teaching position lor the coming year. Mrs. Anna Anderson lert Sunday Sun-day for Los Angeles where she will visit relatives and friends lor a while. WW li Jt Thousands of sufferers from such common complaints as Headaches, Head-aches, Nervousness, Constipation, Stomach and Liver Disorders, Bladder Disturbances, Heart Troubles, Trou-bles, Despondency, and general "Tired Out" feeling, have found their condition closely connected with Piles or some other Rectal trouble. In addition, there is medical medi-cal authority to the effect that rectal disorders do not ordinarily correct themselves and that delays in securing proper treatment may result in serious complications. MCQCMt JHtKVOUSNtSS teiuoic PH VSICIL WtAXNESi LIVf I H.ONf 1 lKUUHLit CWisTirnno A NO CfHOH 3 r So, if you suffer from any of the disorders shown on above chart, write today for a copy of large, illustrated Free book wliich will enlighten you on the serious nature of Piles and other Rectal ills. Send your request to Thornton Thorn-ton & Minor Clinic, Suite 116, 928 McCee St., Kansas City, Mo. one of the world's largest and oldest rectal clinics, where over 51.000 men arid women have been treated in the past 63 years without with-out general anesthetics, radical surgery or the usual hospital ex-j per icnce. Your copy of Free Book I will be mailed you in plain wrap- j per and without obligation. Adv, 7i- I Jf f TOW -ir i ' 1 1 Try I mt,t,c 1 SYlOU f 11 ; : - '- i ' ',.. y . .V i A i i fjw I !: t ' . t ," v-: " -. - ; ,-'.' I -. '.ve M-y' r 4S Of t h A iiz) L.jii Lny Ccoro CGIl 0 G. YA, I ) I 1 I ' . I ' 1 You can tret enough in a lia to make a quilt! 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Better Quality Ladies' 1- m mm La O m -m 1 U Beautiful Chiffons, clear and sheer! Every pair perfect quality, full fash- Ioned beauties! - L '' - , , . 32-inch Hemmed , J.Ien s Blanket Hemmed Terry P T""" ' 1 m LJJi l. wmIw r. kl r' 1 They are ready to Cut full, heavy Den- use! Bleached white For Wash Cloths or m im shell, with part 59 hemmed. Select a r , Face Towels they ' Q wool interlining for V i dozen or two! ; ' are bargains! Heavy I 1 comfort! - - q fOY Terry, hemmed - - Bargain! Finely Woven 44 inches wide, hemmed! r Lengths are 1 7-8 yd. to 2'i. Several shades. A manufacturer's close-out w savins:! ..... , 1 : - n r 1 1 i ! I M ' ' I ; I'M1 m M Larje For Patterns that are good looking- for dress wear yet sturdy enough for rough wear, too! Sizes 29 to 40 waist - - Weight Ladies' ' -it" l Ml ! ) C '? )G Reinforced seams; they (-will (-will give you extra wear! Full cut, tailored o'r lace trimmed - - - - - , I if I ; e 'I I! 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