OCR Text |
Show j Family Hears Son Helped On A-Bomb University-Community Concert Series to Start Here Oct. 10 LORAIN, O. diiJO A Lorain One of the greatest star-stud- i family recently received word ded seasons of the Brigham J that their son had been engaged Young University - Community ' for two years In the perfection Concert Association, will begin in land development of the atomic October, headed y the ' v world s greatest musicians and bomb, platform speakers, " it was an- , With the government releasing nounced today, previously withheld information Six members of the Metropol-on Metropol-on the newest scientific discovery, iten Opera company will be heard Stephen Kasunic took time from during the year in programs work to write his parents that he which begin Oct. 10 in the Pro- naa oeen secreuy warning m a vo tabernacle. fTr?"? m Offering a wide selection of at Los Alamos, N. M., on the new treats to patrons of the Dora- BYU-Community Concert series, The 32-year-old mechanic en- the program includes in addition glneer attached to the Army- to seven outstanding singers, a Navy ordnance wrote of the great violinist, a cellist, a vocal and a thrill that the workers at Los string quartet, a dramatic artist. Alamos experienced in learning four world-famous pianists, and that their two years work had nine authorities on world prob- brought forth such a great success, lems who will deliver an excep- In 1943, Kasunic went to work tional series of lectures. with the Atomic Bomb Project Heading the Metropolitan opera Laboratory, in a government- singers will be Helen Traubel, built city of 6,000. , ! soprano, who is considered the Rigid regulations were main- Number One American singer of tamed during the entire time of today. Other Metropolitan artists production of the bomb. Kasunic include Martha Lipton. contralto: stated. Few of the employees) Henen Olheim, contratlo; Mimi were allowed out overnight. 'None: Benzell and Eleanor Steber. so- of the employees knew what his prano; and John Baker, baritone neighbor's work consisted of. The calendar of events is as fol- "Los Alamos is located on the lows: October 10. Columbia Grand mesa, about one hour's drive fromjOpera Quartet, including, William S " " v I . v , . - . f - - ' t u , - fern :- . K.sT. J EGON PETRI Harthouse string quartet. November 19, Jerome Davis, outstanding author; December 5, Ellen Ballon, Canadian pianist; Decembci 10, Carey McWilliams, author: January 10, Cornelia Stabler, Sta-bler, "one-woman theatre;" January Jan-uary 21, Dr. NoYong Park, Chinese Chi-nese author; January 30, Lang-ston Lang-ston Hughs, negro poet; Februa- Santa Fe. Even the people atHoren. Miss Benzell, Mr. Baker tary o, lueanor aieoer: rewuary Santa Fe didn't have any idea and Miss Olheim: October 17 17. Hawthorn Daniel, authority on what was being made in their (tentative), Zra Nelsova. Can-the far east. Own back yard'," Kasunic wrote, adian cellist; October 25. Martha' February 18, Isaac Stern, vlol- : Lipton; October 29, Margaret . mist: February 20, Egon Petri, Culking Banning, author and j Dutch pianist; February 21, Har-novelist: Har-novelist: November 5, Helen irison Forman, author; March 7. Traubel; November 8. General Andor Foldes. soloist who will Russian m i litary abrear at the piano with the Y Aviation was first used commercially com-mercially in Mexico in 1924 to de liver-payrolls to isolated oil Yakhontoff. camps in the Tampico district. Legal Notices Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult County Clerk or the Respective Signers for Further Fur-ther lnf"ation. DELINQUENT NOTICE T1MPANOGOS CANAL COM authority; November 14 and 15. i symphony orchestra In the Joseph Snflth building; March 14, Bar- .dent of the Company.and will beflett and Robertson, famous piano iheld at 32 East Second South duo: March 20, Witold Mal-iStreet, Mal-iStreet, Salt Lake City, Utah, at cuznski. Polish pianist, and April ;4:00 P. M., October 6, "45. to amend 1. Bruce Bliven, world famous j the following articles of incorpor-j author and New York corres-jation: corres-jation: jpondent. ' Article 6, which is as follows:! ,The amount of capital stock of this Corporation is $1,000,000.00 I divided into 2,000,000 shares of jthe par value of $.50 (fifty cents) each. Article 6 when amended will Parents' Cars Aid n Teaching Driving AUSTIN, Tex. (U.R) Papa's and is going to PANY, principal place of business 'capital stock of this Corporation is! Mama s automobile rrovo uian uu mj, awc i, oo.OOO OO divided into 2,000,000 school. Utah Notice. There are delln-!shares of th nar VfliUfe of snsi ev,i Hie,-!.. -I i Z 1 " - i i u;v o cviiwj v j v v (five cents) each. Article 19, which is as follows: The capital stock of this Corporation Corpor-ation shall not be assessable for any purpose whatever and when issued shall be regarded as issued 13 $1.34 12 2.00 10.00 9.00 2 12 2 lA 18 14 .50 1.00 20.00 1.20 1.00 4.00 14 14 1 1 14 38 2 12 4.00 4.00 1.00 1.50 6.25 quent upon the following describ ed stock, on account of assessment levied on the 3rd day o." August, 1945, the several amounts set opposite op-posite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: No. of Nc. of Name Cert Shs. Am.t Denzil A. Brown 673 Rodger E. Berry 582 Ruth McDonald 421 Ruth M. Berry . 529 David and Geneal B. Beesley 505 Clara Burener . . 507 William W. Brere-ton Brere-ton 365 5 Alma -T. Dun-ford Dun-ford 428 30100 Fred E. Ray Pledgee of C. E. Despain 490 14 Federal Land Bank of Berkeley Pledgee of R. R. Ekins . ..540 11 18- 44.50 Erdman Fcnlcy . .645 112 .34 Rodney Ford 637 110 .40 Vivian Noble Hinckley 644 112 .34 Jos. & Cliff Hinkins 316 Harlon W. & Blanche Henderson .... 567 Harlon W. & Blanche Henderson .... 568 Winfield Ivers . .116 Amasa L. Ivers . . 578 John H. Jensen . .501 Parley L. Larson 539 Lynn R. LeVitre 607 W. Horace Lunce- ford 623 12 2.00 Mary Ann Caldwell Laurence 633 110 .40 Gerald David McKell 531 J8 .50 Henry Maurin . . . 263 Henry Maurin ... 344 Clifford Nelson . 546 J. A. & Emma Z. Olson 581 James" Phillips . .500 John W. Reynolds 558 Loren J. Roundy 616 Arlington & Nellie Snow 662 Nellie D. Snow . .682 Mary Terry Sauls 423 Federal Land Bank of Berkeley Pledgee ot Merne Schoney 445 Kenneth Soffe ..547 J.. Ed win Stein . .608 Stanley Taylor . .590 Stanley Taylor . .665 Evan Theobold . .689 F. R. Workman . 611 F. R. Workman . .688 Lloyd A. Workman Work-man 660 J. J. Weiaht ... .656 Karl Young 464 33100 1.32 and in accordance with law, and an order of the board of directors made for the 15th day of October, 1945, so many shares of each parcel par-cel of such stock as may be necessary, neces-sary, will be sold at Public Auction, Auc-tion, at the residence of the Secretary Sec-retary No. R. F. D. 2, Provo, Utah County, State of Utah, at the hour of 1 o'clock P. M. of said day, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, together with the cost of advertising and expenses of the; sale. WILLIAM ISAACSON Secretary. Published in The Sunday Her aid Sept. 30. Oct. 7, 14. 1945. aren't able to buy automobiles for dri ver-training courses, many are planning to make use of a plan in which the family car will be put to use. Two new safety handbooks for upon tne condition that it is full schools which will be released in paid and non-assessable. Article November will advocate the fam- 19 when amended will read as fol-1 uy car be used. The handbooks lows: The capital stock of this j are result of a two-month labor-Corporation labor-Corporation shall be assessable. atory conference held at the Uni-The Uni-The purpose of this Special ! versity of Texas by safety of-Meeting of-Meeting is to amend the above ' ficials and the state education de-Articles de-Articles and any other business partment. that may come before the meet-j Not only will the driver train ing. UNITED METAL MINES, INC. ing in public schools benefit the students, but officials believe that By J. H. Manson, President, some of the safety ideas will be Published in The Daily and absorbed by parents. Sunday Herald Sept. 19. 23, 26, 30,' 1945. (Newport Auto notic of1 special meeting Parade in 1889 Newport, r. i. u.r) - what pAodAda tt 1 ' probably Was the first parade of CORPORATION Notice is hereby given that a special meeting of the stockholders stockhold-ers has been called by the Presi- 1.00, f Ant nf ihm fnmnanv anri urdl ha ... . . . lino neio at az cast second soutn:"" horseless carriages in the United States occurred at this famed society so-ciety resort Sept. 7, 1899. There were 19 automobiles in with electric runabouts the 1.00,'street, Salt Lake City, Utah, temp-j"10?1 Ppul"r. The society matrons 2 2 12 1 '4 14 14 13 2 '3 1 1 10 1,2 orary office of the Company, at 2:00 p. M., October 6, 45 for the purpose of ratifying the sale of all of its property to the United Metal Mines, Incorporated, a Utah Corporation, for and in consideration consider-ation of One share of United Metal Mines, Incorporated, in exchange for One share of Comstock Lode Mining and -Milling Company, and for other business that comes be- 8.00 ! fore the meeting 8.UU 2.00 had pet names for their cars such as 'Puff-puff," "Toby," and "Angelica." Prizes went to Mrs. Herman Oelrichs and Mrs. Stuvyvesant Le Roy. BEATS DAD IN CALF-TYING CHEYENNE, Wyo., 0J.R) Like father, like son didn't apply in the case of King Merritt and his son. Dean, of Federal. Wyo.. who COMSTOCK LODE MINING, were here for the Frontier Days AND MILLING COMPANY, j celebration recently. Dean tied i By J. H. Manson, President, his calf in 17.7 seconds in that 1.00 Published in The Daily and! event while his father required 1.00. Sunday Herald Sept. 19, 23, 26, 30, 33.8 seconds to rope and tie his 1.00 1.34 2.67 .40 2.00 1945. calf. 12 112 210 19 16 110 410 110 110 110 2.00 .34 .80 .45 .67 .40 1.60 .40 .40 .40 NOTICE OF APPEAL Notice is hereby given that a meeting of the Board of Adjustment Adjust-ment will be held Monday, October Oc-tober 1, 1945 at 5 p. m. in the City Auditor's Office to hear the appeal of Mr. Ernest T. Hansen asking for variance to build an addition to his store at 297 No. 1st West. All persons interested will be heard at this meeting. IVA J. BENSON Secretary Board of Adjustment. Published in The Sunday Herald Her-ald Sept. 30. 1945. .Xtt -i Soft, natural looking rar!) tad warri W gQm in 2 to J hours. They're lorelr. 1 i jTlfcA h",,,e laewaaiTt. they'll tail V -Y -Mpt (iCA Booths and month. Heatlesa. ma- irCt i "A' Vi ' 1L 'oeles, comfortable. For every V Z At gfVXL n and ah ad of hair. Ideal tor -j,,. 4 ''gtYAk children, too. Try Charm-Karl Su- M0tH4t.B rS- :f?itlJ 1 preme today you mnM ba satisfied ' "tey or money back. Squalus Came Back PORTSMOUTH. N. No history of the U. S. fleet would be complete without the chronicle of the1 submarine that came back from a crushing disaster to scourge the Japanese in the Pacific. Pa-cific. The vessel is the submarine Sailfish which,, as the Squalus, sank off the New Hampshire coast costing 26 lives May 23, 1639. The tragedy- was caused when a main induction valve failed to close. However, the Squalus was rais ed, re-fitted and re-named. Under its new name, the submarine completed 12 war patrols and sank or damaged 20 Japanese ships, including two carriers. The Sailfish outlived a bomb hit, relentless depth-charging and an uncompensated trim dive. The submarine also ' rescued American fliers and captured one Japanese from a sampan. Angered Gl Answers Nurse, Critic b'fdnfrlVeii.aking 11-Year Old On Candy, Soda Spree KALAMAZOO, Mich. (U.R) A small boy with a large stomach and $4 "he found" amazed police officers as he told of gorging him-, self on candy and ice cream. The 11 -year-old boy was found on a spending spree and when picked up by the police he told of eating in an hour's time: 11 ice cream sodas and sundaes, one glass of coca cola, one -pound of peanuts, one bag of potato chips, a bag ot popcorn, eight candy bars and 30 cents worth of penny candy. He also bought himself a knife. And stiU he didn't get sick. He said he had found a small tin can in back of a store with the money in it. Editor's Note. " k( The letter of an anonymous army nurse to" the Cdnddn edition of Stars and Stripes; ; in which she said American soldiers were losing their romantic ro-mantic technique because European women succumbed too easily to, chewing gum, lipstick and.t other material . factors, stirred op a storm of: protest among. GI's, other nurses, and American women. SSgt Lea David J'who summed up "the Glrjilrvtfdnt for the United ; Press,' - said American men found no com-, petition from Europeans.. ' ' The original .letter writer,' warned the GI's that Amef- lean women would demand; subtlety from a lover.. She has been overseas a longtime. The reaction follows: Peak production of synthetic rubber is expected to be reached in 1946, with an output of 1,200- 000 tons. By STAFF SERGEANT LES DAVID Written for the United Press LONDON, Sept. 29 (U.lS This nurse from the 59th evacuation hospital moans to Stars ' and Stripes that all officers and enlisted en-listed men she's met luneed out with the "couchez-avec" technique techni-que without any preliminaries. She says she has gotten more passes hurled at her than at Notre Dame halfback, and with no preparatory signals. sig-nals. She says in short that she doesn't like to be swept off her feet. First of all, whats this babe sore about? The time to get really real-ly mad is when guys stop making mak-ing propositions. When that time comes, this nurse will probably knock off a scorching bit about the aloofness of American soldiers sol-diers and why aren't they friendlier friend-lier to a gal who wants to get like that. Next Does this gal think we are dummies? wo real smart won along. Women, ' lve- found' are is going to come out smack like that with , a proposition unless he's pretty sure of his ground, Any gal American or. any Other nationality who presents a reserve dignified a p p e arance might cause a howl to. rise in his throat, but, if by her action,- the broadside aproach will 'get - said wolf nowhere, only a ten karat jerk would proceed along such lines. In spite of this nurses' wail. an awful' lot of GI's have spent quite a bit of time in the build up and money, and effort: Does she think all the perfume bought in Paris is going back home? - Let's approach this argument from another tack. I have no doubt this nurse gets around a whole lot but so do some of us guys. Chewing gum and chocolate bars may get you into a really good league, but with 50 other guys in a barracks, good news travels fast. It takes something more, than chocolate to compete with your barracks mates when they get exactly the same rations ra-tions you do. So let nursie forget her worries about GI technique withering on the vine for lack of practice we get plenty of competition from eaeh other. Up to now there have been very few complaints about" GI technique. Such universal acclaim ac-claim must have some basis in fact. Wrigleys and Hersbey: aren't that good! Most of the r rench girls my friends and I know put us pretty much on a par with French prac-tioners" prac-tioners" of the art and that's something: English girls may not care for spam or dried eggs, but, there's something they know about Americans now that they re SUNDAY HERALD tjtah covntt. ot ah vtnciV Q ? i"t-nxVLa- SUNDAY. REPTXMRrR .VI iOAH XVVKM S Cosmic Confusion f w ft- - m ii .. , n " B"t l L . -y" y---"- -- " f :h 4' k- 'Tfi ft,iwi.r?m (NKA Telepkotoi Daily, 4,000 noisy, bonfire-ouilding "patients" of Roy Beebe. Long Beach. Caiii.. ouilaer ui cosmic ray machine, nave oeat an annoying patn to Bee-be Bee-be s doer, wnere tney stand in una all day to ootain cosmic bauu. drinks of cosmic-treated water tor varying ills, according to complaining neign-bors. neign-bors. City Council Pas decreed cure-aii cure-aii mcnne ano its reasearcn ciiem-ist ciiem-ist owner must move within 30 days. Ex-Jap War Dog Wins Discharge LOS ANGELES (UFO A Japanese Japa-nese war dog captured by Americans Amer-icans and retrained to obey Yank commands came home- and was honorably discharged with ' Pfc: James' Backus. . " - " ' The dog, Sake, is part wolf; H was captured on Attu during the fighting there JBackus caught him' after feeding two toy Japanese war dogs as "lures' and finally lassoing Sake. Retrained by the Americans to fight against his former masters. Sake was used to disarm and at tack Chemy soldiers in the South Pacific, as a medical dog to. bring in wounded, and to train other dog. Sake got his name from a rum maging trip which uncovered a hoard of sake wine. Previously he had been named Zero and Tojo. , - SCHOOL CLOSED FOR THREE WEEKS PAUL. Ida., Sept. 29 (U.R) Paul high school was closed to-' day for a three weeks harvest: vacation to enable students ' to help with potato picking, SupL Ralph McCIoy said. going to miss a lot more than lend-lease. The American soldier came over to fight. In his spare time he plays. He fought pretty darn well, 50,000 lassies here will tell you he plays just as well. Oh this OMdcnT vapor matbod that bring a ralief from the spaaaa of Bronchial Aathma. Full rafuad il not Mtiafiad. vi-J It'll It-'ll t- '4v l 7?OS WffiGR dssecMW&D dUAIL CTAITJG QCUACOTY (EASOtLOMG ' The Entirely New Type, Perfected Road Performance Gasoline The World Has Been Waiting For TAf IT'S HERE! The automotive super gasoline you've been promised would some day spring from the wartime research and the massive, new-day refinery equipment that made aviation super fuel for victory. This is the premium gasoline we couldn't announce couldn't even manufacture, except experimentally they'll children. There's no finer heme COLD WAVE Kit on the market than NOTICE NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF THE STOCKHOLDERS OF UNITED METAL MINES, INCORPORATED, IN-CORPORATED, A UTAH CORPORATION. COR-PORATION. . Notice is hereby given that a special meeting of die stockholders stockhold-ers has been called by the Fresi-j ejocfc U oofltsSRS fvll s ef Satoa-Tye COLD WAV! U. Mm, 40 Orian, NevMhnr. ' Ttataea, AepHcater, ad tmyte-da totfradtem. SUPREME GOLD UMl . HOME KIT - WITH TCUttlUM CUT DRUG and AH Drug Stores and Cosmetic Counters MfflF DUAL OCTANE QUALITY PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS C Caaapenent D Initial starting Fast warm-up Freedom from vapor lock AntMcnock at low speed Knock-free acceleration I I iMiNtai . -V- U Itanytaaat ShP 0- Anti-knock at high spood until completion of certain government commitments fust & few days ago. It is so new, so entirely different, that we gave it a new name: V -AroTase which signifies the two most important groups of hydrocarbons in aviation combat fuel, now re-blendedf or j you. Though these components are made by the equipment built ; to power our victorious air forces, AroTaSE is a premium automotive gasoline, blended scientifically for finest performance perform-ance in the automobile engines of today's cars and of advanced models not yet in production. DUAL OCTANE QUALITY. There are two recognized tests for measuring octane (anti-knock) performance. One alone is not conclusive of fuel quality. A gasoline must have high octane quality by both tests to guarantee top road performance under all conditions, in all cars, at all speeds. AroTahE'S measurement, by both tests reveals a Dual Octane Quality that does exactly this. Since 1935, Tide Water Associated has been the leader in pro' duction of highest quality premium gasoline. Today, WinviW you to try AroTane, a far finer gasoline than even we have.eveF made before. It's on sale today for the first time so . . . Let's Get Associated! TIDE WATER ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY ON S M TODAY-AT M ASS0OAH A , V |