OCR Text |
Show Search Made For Missing Plane Out of Boise BOISE, Ida.. Aug. 31 U.R A, check today of all airports andj landing strips from Gooding to the Utah-Idaho border has failed to provide any clues as to the whereabouts of a light plane carrying two Boise pilots and missing since 6:30 a. m. yesterday yester-day on a flight from Boise to Denver. The civil aeronautics administration adminis-tration here said the pilots. Jack Medlin and Arthur Lewis, instructors in-structors for the General Aircraft Air-craft service at the Boise municipal munici-pal airport, were flying a Cessna 140. license number NC 89960. They were to return a Waco plane to Boise left at Denver for repairs. Col. Leverett Davis. Idaho wing commander of the civil air patrol, said he was organizing a CAP search unit from members at Pocatcllo. American Falls, Lava Hot Springs and Aberdeen. The Boise CAA office said Medlin Med-lin and Lewis usually fly to Denver Den-ver by way of Pocatello, Lava Hot Springs and slightly south of Montepelier. Idaho. The pilots did not file a flight plan. The CAA said the Medlin plane, left Boise "sometime after 5 a. m.. yesterday and landed at the Gooding airport about 6:30 a. m. The plane took on gasoline and departed without notifying authorities. au-thorities. The gasoline belonged to Medlin. The plane had enough fuel for five hours, sufficient to make it to Denver. KAISER YARD TO BE CLOSED , WASHINGTON. Aug. 31 UJ The U. S. maritime commission today ruled unanimously that the Kaiser Co.. Inc.. must terminate use of the government-owned shipyard No. 3 at Richmond, Cal . on Sept. 30. It directed that the yard ' be advertised for competitive bidding bid-ding for use as a ship repair yard and for reconditioning, reconversion, reconver-sion, and scrapping purposes. Legal Notices Guardianship Notices Probate and Consult County Clerk or the Respective Re-spective Signers fo.- Further information. in-formation. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS OFFICE OF CITY RECORDER Provo City. Utah August 26, 1946 Sealed proposals will be received re-ceived at this office until 10:30 a. m.. September 3, 1946, for con-j structing pavement on streets andi walks in Provo City's cemetery,! according to plans and specifica-; tions on file in the City Engineer's office. j Sealed proposals will be neces-: sary for the construction of said pavement. Instructions to bidders, specifications specifi-cations and forms for contract! and bond together with plans' may be obtained at the office of the City Engineer upon deposit of: five dollars ($5.00;. I The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive defects. de-fects. By order of the Board of Commissioners, Com-missioners, Provo City. Utah. I. G. BENCH City Recorder. Published in The Daily and Sunday Herald Aug. 27, 28, 29, 30 and September 1, 1946. DELINQUENT NOTICE Upper East Union Irrigation Company, a corporation, principal place of business. Provo. Utah. There are delinquent upon the following described stock on account ac-count of an assessment for the year 1946 levied on the 1 7th day of July, 1946. the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective re-spective shareholders as follows; to-wit: Cert. No. Name Shs. Amt. 719 The Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, as agent for the Land Bank Commissioner, Pledgee of T. Earl Foote 3 $2.40 nl2 August Omansen and Addie Omanson fwife) 3 2.40 1 40." R. M. Boardman .. 3 2.40, And in accordance with law and an by an order of the board! of directors, made on the 17th dayi of .July. 1946, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may he necessary will be sold at the office of ihe Secretary at R.F.D. No. 2 Bo 323. Provo. Utah: on Thursday the 19th day September. Septem-ber. 1946. at 4 o'clock P. M.. to pa;.' the delinquent assessment.1 t"pether v ith the cost of advertising adver-tising and expense of sale. TRACY S. COLVIN, Secretary. Published in The Sunday Her-al'i Her-al'i Sept. 1. 8. 15. 1946. NOTICE OF HEARING No 1622 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. DIS-TRICT. UTAH COUNTY. STATE OF UTAH. In the Matter of the Estate of; WILLIAM NELSON. Deceased. The petition of L. G. Christen-; en for an order rcoperung said: estate, for the appointment of J. C. Halbersleben as administrator administrat-or thereof and for an order di-: recting said administrator to execute ex-ecute a correction deed to real estate in the Southwest quarter of SectioD 7. Township 7 South. Thriftway Stores Thrift Headquarters Fr Thrifty People OPA Expects Ho Rent Increases By GRANT DILLMAN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Aug. 31 (U.R Price Administrator Paul A.i Porter handed out the news to-. day that no general increases in rents are in prospect, either now or in the near future. Revealing the decision to hold rents at present levels in his weekly radio broadcast (ABC), Porter said landlords are making mak-ing more money now than they did during the prewar years 1939-40. 1939-40. Recognizing that costs of materials ma-terials and labor for home repairs re-pairs have risen. Porter said that actually landlords' total repair costs have gone down because they don't do the redecorating and repairing they once found necessary. "People are so avid for some place to live that they'll take the apartment or house just it it is finger marks on the walls, wheezy refrigerator and all." he declared. In addition he said landlords don't have the vacancies on which' they previously had to figure losses as high as 10 per cent. The price chief said the stability stabil-ity of rents would aid in the battle against inflation, in which he said "we are gaining ground." Feferring to Civilian Production Produc-tion Administrator John Small's recent rosy production report. Porter declared that "full production, pro-duction, with full pipelines once again, is the best guarantee against inflation that I know of." Meanwhile Secretary of Agri culture Clinton P Anderson nromispd tn tHl hnuscwivn wht!i...nv nHH it. r.root i.alr h in- i . iooqs win oe Kepi oi or taxen on me price control list in septem-ian ber. THIS SPEED TRAP SPRANG LEAK MALDEN. Mass. U.R motorists up on charges of speed-1 ing got a pleasant surprise when!aeainst six companies operating, police asked the judge to dismiss, them. By mistake they had been! "",Vfr,.;? - "i - I..ru - "ia 01 reguia-, tion 660-foot length. Range 3 East S. rlAcnri hrl in rvt i irr rn film in' M,u wu, wii'i" pennon is on the above entitled court, which!"" '' "lu iZ?ZirZ. petition is hereby referred to and ft1?.. ,Ld h J. l'f S expressly made a part hereof, is f J'VL "!" Wh,Ch hereby set for hearing at ten: oclock A. M. on Saturday the!nisnnni-n rincF 14th dav of September. 1946 a : PiEK-S CA'OS,fc the Court Room of said Court in the City of Provo, Countv of Utah, State of Utah. Witness the Clerk of said Court, with the seal thereof affixed, this 29th day of August, 1946. C. A. GRANT. Clerk. J. C. Halbersleben. Attorney for Petitioner Published in The Sunday Herald Her-ald September 1, 1946. I SEE BY THE HERALD (Tit AtDlTALS HEED I! j . f VOU MEAN I DIDN'T WllOSr11' JTtneei S ft "THERE 'C KNOW TDMnFD RuwfcYW ( ANOTHER J 1 1 HENRY FOPD PARKER PEN . . 8.75 Calcutta Rioters Carry Wounded Comrade to Safety if xxu f z.z if ii - h2m I Rioters carry away a member of their force after he was injured during the four-day battle between Hindus and Moslems in Calcutta, India. More than 2000 persons were killed during the rioting. Emergency health squads worked desperately to prevent epidemic in city. CIO Calls Off Shipping Strike nVTPfllT Aiiu 31 (UP) Th nn IMatirmal Maritime union vir- ' . . r. ping strike today ana announcea "all-out organizational anvei',v't'"' in iaw nnrt .today. NMU officials said that the .membership campaign would belwV"' V" Their statement followed dis- 'directed at the lske carriers as-! relatn:?s a vfIny afndlHosure that Gov. Ellis Arnall of Sevcnl,ocfation of Cleveland and the 17-ilv f..h" !flatC l lhciGeorgia had asked President Tru- da v-old strike 22 shios union ou?e leaders and 10 lines signed agreements provid-1 in fnr . 4R.hol.r ...orW at; isea and 14 hours in port - - . - The t ti L- u-91 -alll nff affaitict an l.. a. v m.. astner . cornpany which operates iftnh ctark Mill vwe nrfi. said the J SluRtS IM RIO RIO DE JANEIRO. Aug. 31 fU. """ f ,the cr"n tlnnnl , oi..4 uiv,'Jack Woolams. 29, chief test pilot Demonstrations against high.. .. , 'prices forced virtually all stores' K . . D. T . t and shops in Rio De Janeiro to close today, and scores of persons were reported injured. Six persons were wounded in a shooting affray, touched off when a group tried to break into a food Mast night while he was tuning it shop. Authorities were unable to up for the $40,000 Thompson tro-determine tro-determine immediately who didlphy race on Labor day in the the shooting. national air races at Cleveland. blue DIAMOND "VACUMATIC" 4 ' I '!'!'MIWIIIIH"II A GEM AMONG PENS . . . THE BLUE DIAMOND ON EACH FEN IS YOUR GUARANTEE OF LIFE TIME SERVICE PEN AND PENCIL . AT TAYLOR BROS. SINCE 186t FAST WATCH REPAIR SERVICE ALL WORK GUARANTEED I t I . ' &m III .III! I1' I Will Mil "-" 'M Male Relatives Cut Off In Spinster's Will NtWAKK. is. J . Aug. Ji U.ki Miss Louisa Strittmatter's last tr. chnw hor ttir - "VIh A court set aside her will that 1 J V ft .11 K mol k,..... o . Tne elderly spinsters ju.uuu, estate was partly in gold coins dug up from the cellar of her 'home in Bloomfield. N. J. I S ". " .uL , i imonev because sne coum noi una (a bank run by a woman. Bell Test Pilot V-lUbn Y II 1 1 m YOUNGSTOWN. N. Y.. Aug. 31 jOJ.R) The coast guard attemptea to recover the wreckage of a red P-39 Airacobra from Lake Ontarin tnriav tn determine the , , . , before he was scheduled to fly a rocket - powered plane faster than the speed of sound. Woolams' super-charged plane broke in two and plunged into the lake seven miles east of here By BILL RUBLE . . 12.75 I Klan-Bund Tie Possibility Seen WASHllNGTON. Aug. 31 J.R Responsible government officials said today it was a "certainty ' the German-American bund was uerman-rtmmcan dui Icrushed by the FBI early in the war and could therefore have no link with present Ku Klux Klan v" man for an immediate invest gation of a possible connection i0f the bund and the KKK Arnall was said to have asked specifically that the FBI and O. 'tt iV-. spe ecial justice de- - r" "rB' panmem pros' tor in the mass sedition trial, be assigned to the inquiry. During the eight-month sedition sedi-tion trial. Rogge brought out evidence of a pre-war link between be-tween the bund and the KKK. It was said that Arnall feared such a link still existed. While reliable officials discounted dis-counted Arnall's fears, they did not rule out the possibility that the Klan may have allied itself! to some other fascist groups. Arnall's Arn-all's letter to Mr. Truman may set off an inquiry into such possibilities. KIDS READY FOR BACK TO SCHOOL Children's White HIGH SHOES Sizes 61 j - 8 Priced 3.49 BOY'S BROWN HIGH SHOES... Sharkskin Toe Cap . . . Size 9''2 to 3 . . . Priced 4.65 j 'Dreamboat' Takes Off For Hawaii McCLELLAN FIELD, Calif., Aug. 31 (U.R) The Superfortress "Dreamboat" which will attempt to fly non-stop from Hawaii to Cairo soon, took off for Hickam Field at 6:24 PST today with Col. C. S. (Bill) Irvine at the con trols. Irvine took an 11 -man crew, including one alternate. Irvine said he planned to at- jtempt the Hawaii to Cairo flight as soon as weatner conditions per-1 mi. "ARE YOU TIRED HAIR?" T H E Vi Vettes SALON SUGGEST YOU CONSULT THEIR STAFF FOR Phone SHOES BROWN OXFORDS Moeasin Toe Sizes 12-3 Priced 4.60 SUNDAY HERALD ovo "tah county, utah pACJK JVJ"U" 1 "f SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. 1948 '" INDICTED FOR DEATH 1 OF WIFE IN BLAST PORTLAND. Ore.. Aug. 31 U.Pjj Steamfitter James W. Bowden.i 48, was under a county grand! Jury indictment today for the July 27 slaying of his wife in; a "pandora's box" explosion in; their home. Bowden told police he set a; dynamite - laden, electrically-! wired booby trap in a suitcase for his wife's "boy friend" be-i fore she filed suit for divorce. Rfar h e..niH t hh nt thetj explosives, he said, Mrs. Bowden pried into it and was killed by the resultant blast. OF Individual Attention in Permanent Wave . . . Restyling . . . Hair Shaping . . . Color Conditioning. LET YOUR NEW FALL HAIR STYLE COMPLIMENT YOUR NEW FALL WARDROBE 1053 3rd1 Floor Taj-lor Bros. Since 1866 AT Taylor Bros. Since 1866 Water Heaters ELECTRIC GAS OIL j At Bylund Plumbing & Appliance Immediate Installation Terms are easily arranged "Buy the Best at Bylunda" IMeasant Grove Phone 3941 YOUR Children's Saddles Sizes 12U to 8 Priced 4.45 |