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Show SUNDAY HERALD VSSRrTSSS'iltS PAGE 7 Englishman Yaits Year For Travel, Then Finds Fiancee Has Changed Mind MILWAUKEE, Sept 14 (U.P.) t American girl whom he fondly Norman Throp was a sad young! believed was his bride-to-be. Englishman today. , Because he had missed a letter After nearly a year of battling i in his wanderings, he did not regulations and red tape, he ar-know that she had changed her rived in Milwaukee to claim the mind, as women often do. And woman-like, his girl, Viola Well-"V. Well-"V. J D.--. I stein of Milwaukee, hadn't the VUpia DeQlGn 111 heart to tell him for days after n I iii. he stepped off the tram. battlC With Throp, of Nottingham. England. . met Miss Wellstein at a New ""fir ftf MfJCir York dance last October, when W4.ui wi itiujiv. she stjn wgg g Nurse Corpg n PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 14 CU.Ri ffigj w ,ive dyS Music Czar James Caesar Pe-j But he had to return to Eng-trillo Eng-trillo and Dan Cupid were feud-1 land, where he hoped to be dis-ing dis-ing today over the wedding of!char8ed- Instead he was sent to Utah U Defers Action On New Pharmacy School SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 14 (U.R) The University of Utah board of regents today had deferred de-ferred action on proposals to inaugurate in-augurate a school of pharmacy in connection with their medical school. Plans for establishing the new school were discussed during their regular meeting yesterday. musician Jules Benner but the South Africa. He kept his hopes i alive hv huvinff an eneacement little guy with the arrows was;rjng before he was sent home, on the losing end. i where he had to await his dis- Benner. a navy veteran and 'charge, member of Petrillo's American! Regulations delayed his travel Federation of Musicians (AFL)i plans for anxious days before he Openings Listed strike ends. learned yesterday that he may not be able to attend his own wedding because of a picket line. Benner's wedding was scheduled sched-uled Sept. 28 at the Hotel Warwick, War-wick, but three of the hotel's musicians walked out in compliance compli-ance with Petrillo's strike order against the Kirkeby, Hilton and Statler hotel chains in 12 cities. Benner was told that if he or three musicians hired for his wedding crossed the picket line, they would be suspended from the union for life. Guy Scola. secretary of local 77, telephoned an appeal to Petrillo in behalf of Benner but said the union head refused to make an excepttion. Benner said 350 guests, some from as far as California were in vited to the wedding. tven it, - k. the ceremony were held without rOT MimY music Benner couldn't cross the' picket line. 1 SAN FRANCISCO Former Since all other halls and audi- army nurses now residing in the toriums were booked. Benner said. sixth army area who desire fur-the fur-the only solution would be post- ther military duty may make ap- poning the ceremony until ine plication for reinstatement in the army nurses corps through the ' office of the surgeon, sixth army headquarters. Presidio of San i Francisco, the army announces. I Sixth army area states are (California. Nevada. Arizona. Oregon. Ore-gon. Washington, Utah, Idaho and I Montana. Major General Norman T. Kirk. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 14 (U.P surgeon general of the army, has Wilbur Clark, dapper "wizard of announced a need for 1000 form-the form-the west." cheated them out ofer army nurses corps officers for ownership of the palatial El Ran- ; extended active duty, cho Vegas hotel, which Clark' Nurse applicants must be ruled as king of the Las Vegas, single, have no dependents under New. gambling fraternitv. two 14 years of age. qualify for gen-men gen-men charged today in a $1,455.-;eral duty and be available for 000 damage suit. 'overseas service. They also must Los Angeles businessman G. E. have an efficiency rating score of Kinsev was named co-defendant '35 to return in grade of captain with Clark in the action filed by or lower, and a score of 40 for Walter Guzzardi and his son return in grade of major or Joseph, both of Los Angeles. higher. The Guzzardis charged Clark entered into a conspiracy with INCREASE TOBACCO YIELD Kinsey to force the $15,000,000: The average yield of flue-property flue-property into receivership and; cured tobacco in the U. S. has force them in turn to sell out I increased from 639 pounds per to the owner of the mortage for'aere for 1920-25 up to 1,137 $5,000 . ' pounds in 1945. Forest Service Demonstrates Strides Made In Conservation finally shipped aboard a cargo vessel bound for Montreal. He wired Miss Wellstein he was on his way. She sent him a message not to come. He got that, one, but thought it was a joke. He did not know about the letter she had sent earlier. Miss Wellstein met him at the train in Milwaukee. It was not until yesterday that she got up her courage after he had called a newspaper to announce an-nounce their marriage plans. She said she no longer felt the way she did in New York. Meantime, she's showing him the town. Cycles To N. Y. From Wisconsin GREEN BAY, Wis. (U.R) Charles De Larwell, a 16-year-old high school senior. pedaled from Green Bay, Wis., to New York on his bicycle this summer just for fun. Charles averaged about 70 miles a day on the 1,200-mile trip. He stuck to the two-wheeler all the way. except for a train ride . over West Virginia and Pennsylvania mountains. He came home by train to Detroit, pedaled across Michigan and took a ferry back to Wisconsin. PICTURES AIDED ALLIES More than 90 per cent of what the Allies learned about the enemy during the war came from aerial photographs. Friday The 13th Fatal Day For Oregon Murderer SALEM. Ore., Sept. 13 CJ "I never had any trouble on Friday Fri-day the 13th before, but I guess this ia it," Kenneth William Bailey, 27. said shortly before he died in Oregon state prison's! lethal gas chamber Friday for the April, 1943, slaying of state police po-lice Sergeant T. R. Chambers. Outwardly calm throughout. Bailey entered the gas chamber at 8:30 a. m. The air-tight door was locked at 8:34 and a half minute later the deadly pellet was released. Bailey was pronounced pro-nounced dead at 8:37 by Dr. L. E. Barrick of Salem. , Bailey died with a rosary clutched in his hands. He was convicted of slaying Chambers after the police sergeant ser-geant and three other officers had pinned Bailey and a companion, com-panion, William Duffy, in a schoolhouse near Ontario, Ore., following their apprehension In a stolen car. In the ensuing gun battle, Duffy was killed and Bailey wounded' four times before he surrendered. Stem rust control measures help stablize grain yields and keep up grain quality. $1,455,000 Suit Filed Against Las Vegas 'King' BOUNTIFUL PEAK, Utah. Sept. 14 'i n Within the space of a few short hours Friday 250 members of the American SocieU of Foresters were shown two widely separated field? of conservation conser-vation atop this 9.500-foot peak in the Wasatch forest. Conservation efforts of the U. S. Forest Service were demonstrated dem-onstrated in graphic, clear pictures pic-tures of the forester5. The service showed both it long-range and short-range conservation programs. pro-grams. The latter consisted of demonstration? of the latest, airborne air-borne fire fighting tactics, while the former is the soil control program pro-gram on the we?t slope of Bountiful Boun-tiful peak. Both demostratiohs showed a remarkable degree of scientific development, and daring innovation. inno-vation. The fire fighting demonstration consisted of a drop of four so-called so-called "smoke jumpers' from an old tri-motored Ford plane. The four men who jumped, two of them students at the Utah State Agricultural school at Logan, and two of them forest service personnel per-sonnel paid for full time airborne air-borne work, were dressed as they would be for a fire. . They wore their heavy flying suits, two piece affairs which rover them completely from the top of their head." to their ankles. They wore abdomen supports., developed by the brest service' and later used by the army for paratroopers, football helmets and face protectors. The men landed on a clearing in the middle of which was painted paint-ed a 20-foot cross. The first who landed was only about 30 feet shy of his mark, a remarkable feat considering the man had leapt at 1200 feet. The others landed within a radius of 100 feet of the mark. The second, long-range program pro-gram was not so spectacular. Reed Bailey, director of the Wasatch soil conservation project, pro-ject, showed the men how Bountiful Boun-tiful peak had been harnessed by man. First he showed the results of the devastating 1930 Perry Creek flood near Centerville. Productive farms wjre covered by huge boulders, a schoolhouse torn down, farms destroyed and several homes too damaged for use. Damage was estimated at at least $187,000. That flood was caused, Bailey said, by soil erosion atop Bountiful. Boun-tiful. He showed how the service eliminated this erosion through) terracing and countour plowing. 'The project has been successful," suc-cessful," Bailey said. "Last summer sum-mer we had a 10-inch rain here the rain which caused the Perry Creek flood was only four inches and not a boulder was moved, not an inch of silt was distributed over the valley from on top." NOTICE JUST RECEIVED A SHIPMENT OF GIRLS AND MISSES SCHOOL OXFORDS A ML" ST FOR EVERY TEENSTERS WARDROBE IN SUITABLE COLORS 4.95 and up WE SUGGEST A BROWN KID IN A MODERATE HEEL AND A BOX TOE 7.50 At Taylor Bros. Since 1866 litter n glamonr Gold sequins en rich fur felt . . . lovely lines for flattery your first Fall felt by Gage. 10.95 For every hour of the day or night, there is a right hat at Taylors. Let Mabel show you. TAYLOR BROS. SINCE 1866 t )?.( IY?TftViVI G4 Amtrito't t jpiorrvsr rrot King anevs ':?? j "Happy feet count so much on a job . . ." Sitting, standing, walking feet kick up die turbance if they're not contented. Give them good working conditions easy, well-fitted EmvA Jettkxs and just Jed their comfortable cooperation on any job! At ' ' V TAYLOR BROS. SINCE 1866 f ' ' v )shS Soddie-ttrtching crist-crosm tKe tiny wont coot . . . tHe flange fftel front flotttri...ond thi trim twowmt takes you anywhere in town ... for dating or duty I Contrott stitched pretty pastels in Janie special selected ell wool jersey by Frineeton Knitting Mills. Junior sizes 9 to 13. TAYLOR BROS. SINCE 1866 r Stop traffic anywhere in this glen plaid bolero suit done with draftsman's precision to draw approving glance to your slim, young figure. Sizes 10 to 18. $29.50 s if-? ) ye! I 1 " V.-V-5 r th Fashion ( s - 'jL " ? .-v Aenee t t - ft S Wool and rayon plaid by Fit pal TAYLOR BROS. SINCE 1866 Check the deep dolmen sleeves, the yoke bond, the skirt... double cheek the plastic matching buttons... and add a deep, dark matching tone for casual contrast. Adds up to the slickest junior suit of the season. Wonderful Won-derful oil wool (specially selected by Janie!) Jersey end check. ..in black or brawn with white. Junior sizes 9 to IS. 25.00 AT TAYLOR BROS. SICE 1866 Jaet a hint of Scotland's heather in this slender - glen plaid with its kiltie-pleated skirt The suit to wear when yon want to -make a special impression ! Sizes 10 to 18. . $29.50 5 4 ) C Appro' fl the Fashion Aea4aiy of Wool mod royon plaid by FUxpmtrictt AT TAYLOR BROS. SINCE 1866 |