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Show PAGE FOUR PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1939 -loGpiial Employes Ask Board For Improvement In Working Charges' that the staff of attendants at the Utah State hospital is too small to properly patrol the hospital wards, and that some of the employes are subjected to poor working conditions, con-ditions, were made in a resolution passed by Utah State Em ployes, Chapter 5, local 50-1 and called to the attention of the toard of trustees of the hospital hos-pital at its monthly meeting Thursday. Signed by George Mayberry, president, and Arthur D. Coleman Cole-man Jr., secretary of the state employes' union, whose membership member-ship includes a large number of the Utah State hospital workers, the resolution declared many of the attendants work in constant danger, especially those patrolling patrol-ling the violent wards. 'Incident Feared The communication pointed out that in 1938 a male hospital attendant at-tendant was severely beaten by violent patients, and that such an incident may recur at any time unless more employes are on duty. The trustees vere- asked in the resolution that at least one attendant be assigned each ward on every shift; that at least two attendants or nurses be assigned assign-ed to the violent wards; that better lunches be provided for the attendants, and that heat be provided in the hospital halls during thejiight to prevent drafts sXTuch assertedly make working, conditions uncomfortable and uitnealthy. " Kef erred to Committee Trustees discussed the resolu- FOITTHE BEST QUALITY 275 East Third South CANDY - NUTS CLEAR-TOYS - CRACKERS 2 Liberty Bell.. ,nAisins- SEEDLESS SEED-LESS . Sur-Mix CRISCO V J) Pounds nroo MAW GRADE l m m s. m 10 Medium Size . '. SMm GAUDY smm dots OlllOnS, Lg. Ho. GRAPEFRUITS THOMAS j' 20c Value i j. I CsTnTFn MARGARINES Avocados - Brussel Sprouts - Italian Squash Egg Plant - Cauliflower- Spinach - Chestnuts Better; Meats' MEAN Better Meals December 16th Pork Qoast Shoul der . . Bacon Square; LUlilU LiUdl der .. Dosf Qoost Shoulder Shoul-der . . . . Pork Loin Roast Pound 22S LAMB STEAKS Pound LAMB STEW FRESH ' P t'ouna Bulk Shortening Pounds M0 nr 3IISSION TENDER IN QHp j-;2L.:0 Whole or Piece ..... . .. b Condition o tion briefly, then referred it to the employes relations committee commit-tee which consists of E. A. Britsch, chairman; Mrs. Mae Huntington and Dr. W. R. Caid-erwood, Caid-erwood, for action. Dr. Garland H. Pace, hospital superintendent, indicated the charges made ty the employes' group were far exaggerated, and said he would be glad to assist the committee in .making'a' thorough investigation investiga-tion of the true situation. ' Dr. Pace in his monthly report re-port said there were 095 committed com-mitted patients, 45 voluntary and one observation, or a total of 1041 In the hospital "November 1, with 183 on visit. During the months 13 voluntary and 23 committed com-mitted patients - were received. Six voluntary and six committed patients were discharged; one voluntary and 11 committed patients pati-ents died, leaving 51 voluntary, one observation and 995 committed, commit-ted, or a. total of 1047 in the institution, and 189 on visit at the end of the month. - He reported that dry weather has given an opportunity for a very thorough clean-up. of the hospital grounds and roadway. Cemetery Authorized , Fees and collections for the month were $5142.10, and, expen ditures totaled $26,145.96, as fol lows: Salaries and wages, $12.- AND SERVICE CALL - Phones 129 - 217 - FRUIT CAKE CANDY CANES GINGER SNAPS o lbs.. Ort & PURITY :. . . GRAHAMS rri lbs. Cm EXCEL PUMPKIN Large : ' 2Vi Can .. Boz.22c .... . . . . . , . . . lb. 10c .2 lbs. 30c 1'sJ. 10 lbs. Jo BozMSo .. 4 for 20c n Xoin Pork Chops 6 Pound Fresh Side Pork Pound ........ PORK SAUSAGE 1152 Pound TAMAJ.ES CHILI Banner Day for Polish Communists ,4 i2S Delegates from new Polish "Soviet,' en " route - to Moscow, pack railroad station in Western Belorussia, section of Poland U; S. S. R. seized in recent partition. They parade banner showing Soviet soldier sol-dier as "liberator." extending helping hand to "oppressed" Poles. 941.13; office expenseT $100.44; travel, $116.37; maintenance, $10,730.77; . equipment, $306.30; repairs, $1977.95. Upon recommendation of Dr. Pace, theboard authorized establishing- a hospital cemetery on the institution's property for burial bur-ial of indigent patients, . The superintendent su-perintendent stated r most -r state hospitals in other ; states have their private cemetery, and reported re-ported that having one v here would greatly reduce expenditures expendi-tures connected with burials, v -It was reported Dr. Pace has been - appointed representative of the American Psychiatric asso-. elation for Utah,' Nevada and Arizona, and the' board complimented compli-mented t him on being accorded such an honor. The appointment came from William C.w Sandy, M. D.t of Harrisburg, Pa., president pres-ident of .i the association. .. : Radiologist Named Dr. M. Dowry Allen, Salt Lake City, was named radiologist of the hospital. He at present is employed part time by the Utah Valley -hospital. - An application of. Dr. James B. Overton, of Weston, Va.,' for a ' position on the physicians' staff was referred to the physicians, physic-ians, committee consisting - of Dr. Calderwood, Dr. H. : U Marsnall and . Dr.. Pace. ; ,; ; . brief . report'i'ori-H-i'CiiffOrd Bramble, arsonist- and " trrglar, who escaped from the . hospital November 4, 1937, was made by the superintendent. v Bramble, it was reported, is being prosecuted in Sacramento at present, having been captured in Kansas City some weeks ago. It , is, expected a California district attorney, will be here Saturday to gather data on the "firebug." Dr.- Pace may be called to California to testify. Party Announced . The annual party, for board members, employes 'and former employes will ; be held ' January 11, the next regular meeting day for the trustees, - it was decided. It was reported the Utah State hospital will : continue to - take electric power from Utah Power and Light company instead of I switcning w me municipal piani when it is completed, at least until the present contract with the power . company expires in about three years. . FINNS (Continued from Page One) explode. The . other Is a dud. Sometimes ' something I had never seen in nearly 25 years of covering wars a Russian shell bursts and instead of making a shell-hole, flares into a flame 5U to 60 feet high. Once in a while a shell bursts and, shoots out a shower of Russian propaganda leaflets reading: "Finland started start-ed the war." "We are not fighting fight-ing the Finnish people." '.' We are trying to liberate you Finns from the capitalists." "Your govern- ment instigated the war md the patience of the Red army is at 3 'Screwball' To Try -A 4 : 'A J i - Pat Johns, who styles himself 'The Screwball Flyer" is set to hop from Oakland,- Calif, municipal airport in a-nonstop flight to New York, " ' ' - . ... an 1 end." "You are hungry and we have bread." . . . Wasting Ammunition - r. The shells that click send up great brittle clods v of frozen earth, . slither througn the . ice-encrusted ice-encrusted , trees, snapping - off branches and sometimes entire trees. J " -: " The Finns . laugh and say the Russians , are wasting their ammunition. am-munition. : What they want to know is whether the Russians, are : preparing, pre-paring, for a new, 'offensive. For, the first cne, . my visit to -tne front has left no doubt, has definitely def-initely failed. - ' It ' was a strange, grim fight, fought in a part of the world where it gets 'light late and gets dark at 3:30 p. m., ' a land of lakes and forests, . of bitter cold and glaring ice and snow. ). In the" battle has figured the world's smallest " submarine, the Finnish Saukko, 99 tons,' with a crew ; of a dozen men, operating, oper-ating, on Lake Ladoga, - the tig-gest tig-gest lake in Europe, , at , the east side of the front. : . , ' ' The - Russians . have fired at the Finns not only frontally but also from the . flank." from their own gunDoats in "the", lake, 'v They., have tried v to send T men across the Taipale . river, into the Finnish line in small boats. The Finns blew the boats to ? bits and phlegmatically. methodically, methodical-ly, swept- machine guns, into the masses of Russian troops, struggling strug-gling and screaming, in , - then;, heavy overcoats, in the freezing river as j their marksmen picked off individuals - with their rifles. Thousands . upon thousands of men, day by day, have been thrown into the. f lght; and have been thrown back. ,.- The battle opened on the Finnish Fin-nish Independence 'Day, Dec. ' 6. It collapsed on the eighth day of fightingy Wednesday. For the moment 'it is a business of angry artillery fire,' an occasional burst of machine gun fire, ' the casual crack of a rifle - as i a .Finnish sharpshooter picks off an insufficiently insuf-ficiently careful Russian 200 yards away across the river, : r When I came to the front, Kattention was on the, fighting farther north. But I came to find that the biggest battle of the entire war - has teen fought here on this narrow front where big masses of men are opposed, and that the' Finns have won it. What . is to come remains tobe seen. RELIEF SOCIETY The : Utah stake . Relief society Union meeting will be held Sunday at 2:30 o'clock in the., Third ward Relief society room.. " Mrs. John T. Taylor, stake chorister, chor-ister, desires to meet - all members mem-bers of -the-chorus and all who are interested in joining at 1:45 o'clock. ' . One of Jupiter's nine moons is about 20,000,000 miles from the planet and requires about two "years for jme, complete revolution. Noh-Stop Jump Obituaries GnllcJ by C:aili SPANISH FORK J. Frank Johnson, 32, lifelong resident of Spanish Fork, died at 2:3 o'clock Wednesday morning at a Salt Lake hospital from complications fol lowing an injury which occurred Oct. 13, 1939, when he stepped, on a nail while working as a mechanic at the Del Monte Canning plant by which he had been employed the past fifteen years. He was born at Spanish Fork, Jan. 14, 1907, the son of the late John C and Gud- hy Sigardson Johnson. He received his education in the schools of Spanish Fork and Utah county and had iust ' recently completed ' a course in air-conditioning and re frigeration. He was a scoutmaster and ward teacher and a member of the Fourth ward male quartet and choir. He was a popular musician mu-sician and his services as an entertainer en-tertainer was in much demand at outings which he attended. He is survived by his wife, Juanita Pearl Lewis, whom he married April 14, 1926, in the Salt Lake L. D. S. temple; by five sons and three daughters , ranging in age from 14 to two years of age. They are Fred, Jay, David, Marvin and Mel-cin Mel-cin (twins), Geraldine, lone and Janet Johnson two brothers, John K. and Eystein (Ace) Johnson, all of Spanish Fork; Mrs. Sarah Noble of Ogden, Utah; and Mrs. Ellen Hutehings of ; Salem. Funeral-services will bcr conducted Sat-urday Sat-urday .at 2 p. m. in the L, D. S. Fourth ward chapel with Bishop David B. Bowen in charge. Friends may call, at the family home Sat- r Pint Quart Why Not Make the Snowdrift POUNDS . . . TO) NuCoa Carnival 3- DLEOMAffS&P.:KE J5 Palmolive Soap 3 bars II 7S CLEANSER , Sun Brite 1 Cm CANS , PUMPKIN Fargo Large Cans i for ,- 22 . BANANAS UnclassifieH tn POUND ....... ORANGES 288 Size Dozen iiWw Sweet Potatoes A Unclassified f rn tj POUNDS ; . . . ii LETTUCE Unci. 4-Dozen Size ' U HEADS GRAPEFRUIT Unci. Ipn Dozen . . . .... . . POTATOES No. 2 Grade 30 POUNDS ... . 9 R l JH'-' --s-Kt I Mm SKIBJGT0UB ; SLATED SUNDAY First skiinsr excursion- on the Timpanos-os Ski clua's winter pro gram will be held Sunday at Alt a. Little Cottonwc xi canyon, Salt Lake county, announcea Reed Bid-dulph, Bid-dulph, vice president. All members and prospective members are invited to attend.. They will leave at 9 a. m. from Tavern cafe in caravan. Anyone wishing transportation should meet there at the scheduled time. An expense-sharing fee will be charged. Skiing is reported good on the upper basin via the new forest service ski tow, said Mr. Bid dulph. - ' : At a directors' meeting this week Richard Passey was named director of competition for the local club. He will offer instruc tion service to ' novice skiers on the Timpanogos club excursions. SEA BATTLE (Continued from Page One) and its own complement of dad. It was 7:35 a. m, when the first of the Graf Spee's 36 coffins, covered with a big Swastika flag and guarded by two marines, was landed at the dock. .The others, similarly flagged, similarly guarded,-followed. . On the deck were 21 wreaths of urday prior to the services. Inter - ment will be In : the Spanish Fork City cemetery under the direction of the Claudin Funeral t home. .D) u n 71 East Center - Hay ward Markets Headquarters for Your Christmas Shoppiny? Crystal White SOAP Reff. Bars for ...... 29s H0 pounds. . ; ."62s 25 lbs CIOLIDAV Ohocolafo Peaks Oherry -Shoes., f I Peanuts,..;...:.,..... Ib. 10c WitK Peanuts 0 Without Peanuts-. . . r DEEP DOAST .;..!&. 15c Pe0i00ASTsu....;1b P0D00flS?SS..:ib.17G F0QI0PS Stents .:. lb. 23c F0iSSlSSDSP00....lb. ICb Sliced Bacon Sage om m mm ims Ua?SaaW Seasoned uiionOfiop w Rib Leg of LnmbSb.. lb. UCnLQaQO?:.:..... Ib. 22 flowers. One of them was inscribed in-scribed in English: "To the memory of brave men of the sea from their comrades of the British erchant service." A German band played the Get-man Get-man national anthem, Deutachland Uieber Alles, and the Nazi anthem, Horst Weasel. The coffins were put on a column col-umn of trucks. Police kept back the big crowd. Sailors from the refugee German freighter Tacoma reported to have served a floating base for the Graf Spee aided them. . ' A big detachment ' of xnarincs and seamen from the Graf Spee landed to accompany the coffins and f ie a final . salute over the common grave of their dead. KEPUBLiCANS (Continued from, Page One) tion the power in the first place and then voted to extend it," the Buffalo, ' Wyo., cattleman declared de-clared liorton, temporary, chairman and backer of the western G. O. P. group, urged the national committeemen , present to work together informally to promote their common interests. At the next convention we will have 133 votes out of 1003," Horton said. "If we sit back quietly we will have our chance to protect western interests when the right time comes for the first time I believe some of the best planks in the next platform can originate" In the west. I'm getting tired tagging along witn eastern blocs." Snakes have large scales on their under sides, and each scale 1 is connected to a rib. . As the I snake moves . his nb?, the scales move also, and thus the reptile progresses. 71 North 5th West HUBBWUM Blue Super Sud H8!.. 2Se SPEGSALS . . . .1 lb. 10c 1-lb. bon IGd 2 ILs. 2Cc 2 lbs. 35c 3 ircured .. !b.27c lb. 17c X Loin and .21 Cuts CCD EZaaring CO Date for public hearings for adoption of the 1940 and revise-1 1939 Provo city budgets were approved ap-proved by the city commiKslon at a special meeting with City Auditor Audi-tor Mary F. Smith today. Hearing on the 1940 budget, which was being- studied by the comml-ssion and auditor this afternoon, after-noon, will be December 2'J at 10 a. m. in the commi.sionors' room, while the hearing on revision of the -1939 budget has been; Bet for December 27 at 11 a. m. COPENHAGEN, Denmark. Dec. 12 (U.f) The Swedish i,tenrnshlp Toroe struck a mineinside Fwrd-ish Fwrd-ish territorial waters south of Falsterbo today. The ship sank but its bow - remained above w ater. a-ter. The crew was saved. The only time a driver may pass to the right of a car golnj; in the same direction la when 1 1 1 ether car is making a left turn. I TOO LATE FOR ! ! CLASSIFICATION ' FOR RENT la'KMKIHin 3 ROOM modern apartment, heat, hot water. 955 North University Univer-sity Avenue. d21 LOST COIN purse containing money at Kress Saturday. Ret tun 340 East 3rd South. dlft FOR RENT U N FURNISH 111 1 3 ROOM apartment, heated, ln.t water. 492 East Center. Thorn- 941-J. !21 fee Onm for PIRCOLATOa ,.. On for A iV .... 1Mb. .26c 2 lb. 47c Peet's Granulated SOAP Large Package ..... Seed-4 gT less ' ) J cliil Co ! 1 'f i T"3i2 Pound.' b ) Libby's DEVILED MEAT i)CANS iiw , Libby's CORNED BEEP illj -oz. Can ... Libby's 9 VEAL LOAF N CAN-. Libby's Corned Beef Hash CAN ........... DINAMITE HEALTH CEREAL Small 23 V 1-Ib. 2 lbs. AOr rr v. f't.ll ' V I ' flY:PJI9 Dcst Grade LAUNDRY BLEACH Quart Pints. - " .1 4 |