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Show PAGE 6 FROVO, tJTXK COUWTf. UTAH VCKDAT. BEPTEKBER 10. 144 SUNDAY HERALD 51 New Teachers In Nebo District SPANISH FORK More than 25 percent of the teachers of -the Nebo school district signed up are married women who are returning to school teaching, according to Superintendent Owen I Barnett. There are 51 such teachers in the district. Four posts in the district remain to be filled before the full quota of 196 teachers are signed up. Twenty - eight new teachers have already been signed up, as follows: Catherine Wills, Grant school Springville; Kathryn. Sum-si Sum-si on. Junior high school, Springville; Spring-ville; Eva Greenall, Mapleton school: Ruth Goodrich and Lois Lybert, Rees school, Spanish Fork; Evelyn J. Williams, Josephine Anderson An-derson and Lela Crosby, at the Lake Shore school. Roberta Anderson, Louts Graves at the Santaquin school; Russell J. Cannon, Ruby Steele and Marie H. Taylor at the Goshen school; Mary Jewitt, Dorothy Bradshaw and Melba Powell at the Payson Junior high school; Bud Davis Evans, LaPriel B. Loveless, and Merelyn Brunson, at the Spanish Fork Junior high: Eva Poulsen and Los Menzies at ihe Springville Junior high; Leon Westover and Marls Olsen at the Springville senior high: Adelia Lindsey at the Payson senior high: Garlydene Robinson and Carol Oaks at the Spanish Fork senior high. Of the four vacancies yet to be filled two are at the Goshen Go-shen school, one at the Springville junior high and one at the Payson senior high. Teachers for the Spanish Fork schools are listed as follows: Senior high school: L. A. Anderson, Ander-son, principal: David B. Bowen, J. Angus Chrlstensen. F. J. Faux, Lois Leavitt, Garlydene Robinson Blaine Hansen. Zina Johnson. Gus P. Black. Milton A. Nelson. A Clair Thomsen. Farrell G. Olsen Mae M. Hvde, Martha Jones, Carol Oaks and NaeDan Sheen, clerk. Junior high: E. E. Knudsen. principal; Leslie R. Rees, Ed. M. Beck. E. F. Bonne, John F. War ner. Jr.. B. Davis Evans. Leo Hales, Allene Jensen. LaPriel B Loveless. W. W. McAllister. Rulon H. Nelson. Marilyn Bruson, and Mary J. Cornaby. Salem school C. Lynn Hanks, principal; Harman R. Hatch. Fern Olsen. Delia Chris- tensen. Ivin E. Gardner. Clara R Fillmore. Gladys Hansen and Edme Nelson. Benjamin school: Ralph C. Davis, Da-vis, principal: Winnona Thomas, Edith Selin, Verenicia Beck, Clara Cutler. Thurber school, (Spanish Fork) Arthur Grotegut, principal, Florence Flor-ence Stoker. Clara Skinner, Vessa Johnson. Afton B. Smith, Lydia Btahman and Lora Bowen. Rees school (Spanish Fork) Robert A. Nelson, principal; Ruth Goodrich Lois Lybbert, Rhoda Bonne, and Annie Hansen. Central school. (Spanish Fork) Willis Hill, principal; Wilford Johnson. Norma Larsen, Arvilla tt"homas, Ruth C. Anderson, Allle B. Oberhanslev. Angus Wood and Marie Roach. Lake Shore school: Raymond Peterson, principal; Evelyn J. vil liams and Josephine Anderson and Lela Crosby. . Domestic air express totaled fill. 850 shipments in the first half of 1944. compared with 721 J76 shipments in the "imilar 1943;home with him Italian Liner Sunk In Harbor ROME. Sept. 9 (EE) Riddled by 12 rocket-projectile hits, the rormer luxury line Rex lay on her side In Trieste harbor tonight. burning fiercely and apparently abandoned by German engineers who failed to sink the vessel to block the mouth of the harbor. Beaufighters of the coastal and Balkan air forces, in two attacks yesterday, toppled the 51,000-ton line on its side and sent a column of smoke more than 500 feet in the air. The Rex, 897 feet long ana witn a 97-root beam, was spotted Thursday by a bomber crew and yesterday mornine roc ket-carrying fighter planes made 59 direct hits on the ship. In the afternoon other planes scored 64 more hits. Women of Franco Up In Arms period, an increase cent. of 12.5 per Orem Society Mrs. K. W. Boulter and her sons, K. Richard and Terry arrilved home Monday evening from Chand ler, Arizona, where they had been visiting with Mr. Boulter. He will be employed there a few weeks longer. Mrs. Agnes Odd and Henrv Graham of Kaysville are visiting with their sister, Mrs. Eleanor Bishop this week. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Bishop of Payson visited with his mother Mrs. Eleanor Bishon Mondav. They were en route to Heber where their youngson had his tonsils ton-sils removed Tuesday. Pvt. Richard Wells is here from Camp Roberts. California to spend a furlough with his wife, Mrs. Susie Madsen Wells and their children, Lee Anne and Dixie, and his mother, Mrs. R. D. Wells and his sister, Norma. Mrs. R. D. Wells, who was making an over night visit with her daughter, Mrs. Anna Olsen in Salt Lake City Thursday, met her son there. He will go to Maryland at the end of his furlough. Lt. and Mrs. Stanley B. Prest-wich Prest-wich and their small daughter. Jerri Ann. .left Saturday morning for Lubbock, Texas where he will resume his duties in the U. S. army air corps, after a very pleasant pleas-ant visit with relatives and friends in Utah. A party in their honor was given at North Park in Provo during the week. There were fifty close relatives and friends in attendance at-tendance to greet the young couple and to enjoy the delicious picnic supper which was served at one long table. Lt. Prestwich is an instructor In the glider division. Lt. and Mrs. Stanley (Bruce) Prestwich with his mother, Mrs. Arneldo Prestwich and his sister, Mrs. Mark Bigler, visited with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Watkins in Salt Lake City during the week. Mrs. Flora Stevenson entertained entertain-ed members of the Better Homes club at her home. Mrs. Ethel Dickey gave the lesson and tasty refreshments were served to the following members: Mrs. Effie Millett. Mrs. Ruth Millett. Mrs. Katherine Elder. Mrs. Agnes Nel son, Mrs. Golda Mangum and the hostess. Geneve Dickey and Joan Mc-Ewan Mc-Ewan are visiting with Mr. and Mrs.1 A. E. Sutherland in Mona. Cpl. Kent Fielding is here from Camp Gruber, Oklahoma spending a ten day furlough with relatives. His wife, Mrs. Dorothy Stratton Fielding who had spent the sum mer near Camp Gruber returned During her visit i , i it - 1 MP r w 'ti vi u 'jMki i j L SU v ' ' 5s. v - - - - - f- CS Frenchwomen made the most of their opportunity to lend a hand in celebrating the liberation of Pans. They were well-armed, literally, to welcome GI's or to dispose of snipers. Open-armed welcome to GI Joe (top left) was as typical as the armload of vengeance in the submachine gun carried by a young French girl (top right . Trigger-finger of pistoi-totin' FFI girl (lower lift) is ready for any emer gency, while a corporal rates a caressing touch (lower right) from a blonde mademoiselle wearing an American helmet and a starred-and-striped blouse. A LADIES--Just Arrivedl- Over 30,000 Yards of Brand New Fall and Winter Materials Ma-terials Are Now On Display . . . Patterns, Fabrics and Colors of Every Description. WE WILL SELL THIS GOODS BY THE YABD GLOBE TAILORS 144 Went Center in Oklahoma she and her husband visited with Cpl. Fielding's friends at Shreveport. Louisiana where he recently filled a two year mission mis-sion for the LDS churrh. Wednesday Wednes-day Cpl. and Mrs. Fielding, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stratton, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Stratton and their grandmother, Mrs. Emma Stratton spent the day at the LDS temple in Salt Lake City. Cpl. Fielding will return to Camp Gruber. The patriotic eommlttee of Sharon ward sponsored a party honoring Herbert Stratton at the home of his grandmother. Mrs Matilda Vance. Mr. Stratton left Friday for Fort Douglas where he will enter the military service. Mrs. Agnes Bellows was in charge. lM HIT ft - - j. . w .m mm f:' 1 r V if " yJ j1 am1! 1 1. II Germans Head Petain Off Fro m Surrendering to De Gaulle By DANA ADAM SCHMIDT United rress war (jorresponaenv VICHY. France, Sept. 8 (HE) Aged Marshal Henri Philippe Pe tain wanted to surrender to an agent of Gen. Charles De Gaulle on Aug. 21, Just before the fall of Paris. He had a violent quarrel with Adolf Hitler's agent and called him "a liar." But at the last moment he gave in to a German Ger-man threat to shoot 100 Frenchmen French-men and was carted off to Ger many a prisoner. This correspondent reached the capital of collaborationist France through the assistance of the French underground the first American reporter here. Vichy is controlled by French forces of the interior Allied armies have not taken over. The regional commissioner of Gen. De Gaulle, Henry Ingrand, a former Paris surgeon who has been directing the Maquis in the massif central for two and a half years, told me the story of Pe- tain's last days in Vichy. After American forces broke out of the Normandy peninsula and began their drive on Paris. Pe tain opened negotiations with In-grand In-grand with the view of surrendering surrend-ering himself to the French pa triots. "If Petain had not been made a prisoner by the Germans on Aug. 20, I am sure he would have surrendered to me the next day," Ingrand told me. "I was still with the Maquis near Mont Dor when Swiss Minister Walter Stucks came to me with Petain's pro-; I heard the same story from ths posals. It was a question of .Irish minister and the Just ln- whether he should surrender un conditionally, be place under arrest ar-rest In his house or what. "I learned that on the night of Aug. 19, German Ambassador Dr. Cecil von Centhe-Finck called on Petain and insisted that he leave for an unamed city in the east, where he said Pierre Laval wanted him to form a new French government. "Petain had asked Stucks and stalled chief of police, a DeGaul- list who is filling three prisoners and two concentration camps with the officials and functionaries of the government of Petain and La-cal La-cal selected from a staff of 20,000 men and women. These 20,000 were honeycombed j with patriots working secretly with ve uauinsts and the rest of ths French underground. Top leaders of Petain's own bodyruard and me to be present to witness the' of Vichy's army, navy, and air pressure he was under. force were close to Petain and "At that moment an emissary i Laval who were plotting against whom Petain had sent to contact them. Laval the day before, returned I The Vichy ministers and most of with a letter from Laval statins: the other high officials fled dur-he dur-he had constituted himself a Arts the week ot Aug. 14 and ths prisoner of the Germans after re-' FFI occupied the town Aug. 21 fusing to form a government , without a struggle. FFI leaders anywhere. apreed that most of the minor "Petain called Renthe-Finck a government officials were honest liar and refused to leave Vichv. imen who did the best they could "About 6 a. m. the next dav SSj under the circumstances and many troops forced the door of Petain's will be sent to Paris for service hotel and demanded to see the. in the De Gaullist government, marshal. Told that he was asleep Instead of wreaking vengeance and could see no one, the troop? , on Vichyites. the FFI handled the broke into Petain's room and situation with gloves and especial- Saioan Commander Relieved of Post found him awake and full dressed He refused to leave. , "Renthe-Finck was called back ly took precautions for the safety of dinlomats. After the first occupation oc-cupation the partisan armed for- snd intimated violent reprisals ces were withdrawn and now only Petain finally gave in." a few hundred FFI remain to ss- From other sources, I heard jSist the regular police in making that the Germans threatened to i arrests, which now number mors shoot Frenchmen and bomb Vichv if Petain did not leave with them A few riavs later. 24 hours af than 800 but were expected to reach more than 2.000. Valerio Cardinal Valeria, Papal. ter the FFI occupied the town. Nur.cio to the French government Swiss Minister Stucks learned that j since 1936, told me that the ges-a ges-a German column was approach-itapo had arrested a number of ing the town from the west. He; high French ecclesiastics May 28 WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 (UJ?) Marine Lt. Gen. Holland M. Smith, commanding general of the Saipan operation, said today that circumstances cir-cumstances forced me" to relieve contacted the German commander and told him if he marched into the town he would cause useless for resistance activities. He understood under-stood they had been aboard a nrison train en route to Germany bloodshed. About that time the, that was stranded by Allies. He Vichv radio brodacast news of, was worried about their fate. The Cardinal added a little information in-formation concerning Petain. "The marshal once told me he regretted the anti-Jewish policy An Impromptu program was given. A vocal trio composed of his mother, Mrs. Nina V. Stratton, his aunts, Mrs. Melba Calder and Mrs. Dora Borquist sang several numbers and his grandmother, Mrs. Emma Stratton gave two readings. Games were directed by Mrs. Grace Fielding and refreshments refresh-ments were served. Mrs. Dora Borquist left during the week for her home in Tucson, Arizona where he spent the summer sum-mer with her mother, Mrs. Matilda Vance. Two Children In Salt Lake Killed SALT LAKE CITY. Sept. 9 (U.P) A truck struck and killed Jane' Trueman, 7, and Katherine Booth, 5, Friday as they were riding in a playcart on the busy North Temple street viaduct in the industrial in-dustrial section of western Salt Lake City. Investigation officers said the truck, driven by a serviceman's LIMA BEANS, TOMATOES CANNED THIS WEEK SPANISH FORK Lima beans and tomatoes are being canned this week at the local plant of the California racking corporation. While these two favorites are not ready in sufficient amount to keep the big plant busy they are being canned in conjunction with string beans and other crops. the liberation of Paris. The German Ger-man commander acceded and bypassed by-passed the town. This morlne I saw Stucks leav ing Vichy with his legation. At i which had been forced upon him lpn.t 1 000 Grateful Virhvites hut explained: 'I am not free. As army MaJ. Gen. Ralph Smith from cheered him and a French military soon as I am I will put .thoijft ma posi as commanaer or me .band played the Swiss anthem. .things right" he said army grouiiu iorcea oi oaipan. "As you well know," the Marine Ma-rine general told a news conference confer-ence today, "one of the many pre rogatives and responsibilities of a commanding officer operating under un-der the principles of unity of com mand is the assignment and transfer trans-fer of officers commanding sub ordinate elements in any operation. "Unfortunately, circumstance s forced me to exercise one of these prerogatives and I did relieve MaJ. Gn. Ralph Smith." Smith declined to elaborate further fur-ther upon his statement. "I am not givn to passing the buck." he said, "but as you seek details concerning this incident, I remind you that Gen. Smith is an army officer and I must refer you to the war department." The War department, however, refused to comment on the incident, inci-dent, referring inquiries back to the Navy department on grounds that it was in charge of that theater. Army General Smith, a native of Omaha, Neb., was in command of the-army forces on Saipan. No announcement an-nouncement has been made that he had been relieved. Rumors of a clash between the two generals have been heard since the Saipan operation, howver. wife, apparently mounted the curb hit the cart and dragged the children chil-dren 50 feet. FALL FASHION OPENING Smooth New Functional Fashions - - - due for a long run of endless wearability and smartness thru fall! SUITS $14.95 and up COATS $14.95 and up 3-PIECE SUITS with Matching COATS $29.50 each and up FUR COATS $79.50 and up MATCHING ACCESSORIES for ANY OUTFIT! GLORIA'S FROCK SHOP 66 NORTH UNIVERSITY ACVENUE 1 . a'rtevS Yon ao longer have to be rich to be truly comfortable. 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