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Show page "four 'ekovo tutawaily" herald: friday, july 12, imp" SECTION TWO FLAVOR 70 tWO A0OU7 SAYS ELSIE- J v Bordutt' G Umour Cow " V I i V ' Ma rv about it in coffoo U4it A , " " I oieeliiim ovtr it in cooking babias K0 - grSL at it in boUUtl ' :; I W riiia Evaporated Milk madU : 1 t ( I by Borden'' - I , f f Offarad under tha fino Borden I -Sa1 ( A labalt St. Charles brand. Yn, I know . ,- 11 s'. what I'm mooing about wKan I moo... f J I I (V IF IT'S iBoTdzith trr'' "V . t;toJ Product. I xh. - C7 -Ycdunntcn rJcrry-Go-Rcimd (Continued From Page One) 1 -President, and Roosevelt heartily concurred In the choice. However. Secretary Hull previously had said 'he was not availaDie as a vice presidential candidate, though Jim was convinced that all Roosevelt had to do was to urge Hull and he would consent. Chip Robert also passed on the word that Jim Farley had told Roosevelt he was resigning come what . may, in order to accept some - business opportunities he could not afford to miss. Farley has gone into debt, and is counting count-ing on - another job, in addition to bossing the New York Yank ees, to recoup nis iinauces. , Roosevelt urged him to stay, but Farley was adamant. The conversation lasted for two solid hours, and never were the two men in more friendly mood. They were extremely frank, but parted , M A. Dm. "! T w I I . af fa ff L I: 1 3 Km guahahteed meats DEEP nOASTS Choice Shoulder Cuts Pound :17C SLICED DACOn SSSw' picnics Small Shankless Tound 15c nar.is . ' .. .-Whole or Half Pound . . . i:. ... 22c . ...Lb. 23c .....Lb. 25c FnAF0nTEnS...2lbs.2Cc ...Lb. 23c SPDKIG CIHCKHISSS. Lb. 21c pork noAST Shoulder . Lb. 17c GnOUUD DEEP .... . . . 2 lbs. 2Cc STEAIIS s:ri?in. COLD MEATS Srted tuS.r,S'Syi r-r-i Salad Dressing 1U LIU U,iiLLULJ Mayo 2 Iloyal Satin, 3-lb. can 44c Speedy Mix-Shortening , .. - .- r C Sleepy Hollow. Cane and byPUp Maple. 26-. can Pantry Pride- Pancahe Flour, 3-lbs. 15c PicWesrr.25-oz.iarl5c Baking Chocolate . " - Ilcpsheys, !i-lb. cake 12c Grapefruit ' JoiceSTs ST 7c Baby Food cerber.. .;... Can 7c Corn Flakes !! 25c PiiPtMP Sunmaid Seedless mr iiallll ,.15-OUNCE PKO. ........ 1 V r!arcariner,S?k.,. Lb. 16c Sugar- ILnd. 59c pnd ...574 Salnoa S3??.V...Ib.canl2c Pork a Deans ahTS Wc Povd. Sugar, 3-Ibs. 22c - FRUITS and UEGETADLES - DAHAHAS SWi:;..:'.Lb.:5c TOAT0ESr:;Lb.5c LETTUCES - 5c punch Ucgetables . . . 2. for 5c CArTALCUPESK2 for 15c cnnnessiSTi....5ibs:ico l7ATEnnELC:SEfadck"L-d...Lb.2c POTATOES w... 10 Ita. 15c f.'civ Gabtago Ai i. nnaise Base v Airvay .TOSr.:..Lb. 12c Lunch Dox SSff.iQt 31c UWU 20-oz. loaves 3 for Peaches ?Zc,:r. 15c Grapefruit gr.fST.e P-IIut DutterisJDR21c FIour.M......'48 Its. $1.19 Tea -19cgSW25c. WITH HAND re , V lf7C LOTION PkS- 5 INGHEDIENT pkg. .. . .32S Tissue d.rt . . . .: . .2 rcUs 5c 7bite r.!acicSQt. lCc Qinso 24-os. d&C 2Cc Soap ;5SSr :..;;2 tars Sc Scott Tissue JSShr2.fcr 15c rriJallbus '2fe .-. .Lb. lCc Cleanser SB;'.... ',"2 cans ?c f- .. " y Fr mlt '. . read Jvfla l Wright's artlcU "PaUM riatat" I thU wk'( family Circla t Mil At SAHWATI . Solid Heads Pound . . . .:. .2c SI To Lead Orchestra Here Glen Lee, above, orchestra leader and vocalist who has played some of the largest ballrooms on the Pacific coast, has taken over the KSL orchestra, which will play at the Ut-La-Par open-air dance hall near Utah . lake Saturday night. Mr. Lee has just fin ished an engagement at Hotel Utah. on the bet of terms, probably feeling more kindly toward each other ; than at any time In two years.. Chip Robert departed that same afternoon to complete arrangements ar-rangements " at Chicago. ? -2 ' : (VICE PRESIDENTIAL RACE - i It . becomes increasingly evi- cago is going to be over the vice presidential nominee . on the Roosevelt ticket. ' ; Despite Secretary Hull's reluc- tance to serve, ' many - think that in the end, he may be. the man. Justice ' Douglas ; thy consider admirably qualified, but not acJ ceptable politically to the conJ servative wing of the party. However, a compromise .'" vice presidential candidate f between! Hull and Douglas has been looming loom-ing in the : background. He is Lloyd Stark, hard-hitting Governor Gov-ernor of Missouri. Stark has been rolling up more and more support sup-port in the Far West , recently where several governors are re-; ported backing him. Stark's ; strength is itfhiefly , in agricultural areas, he . being' a nurseryman. Also his long career in the Army during the World War in the Navy after his graduation, grad-uation, from Annapolis fits into the national defense picture. Stark's chief handicap is that he does not control the delegation delega-tion from his own state of Missouri, Mis-souri, and usually it is hard' to nominate a man who . does not have the home politicians behind-him. behind-him. That is, it was considered hard until Wendell Willkie won at Philadelphia, with the -New York delegation pledged to Dewey. ": j .' j NO-WAR PLANK : . ! For the Democratic platform makers, ' litte the). Republican, the : biggest . headache is the for-' eign affairs plank. , . ' ' . The .same bellicose forces, iso-f lationist and anti, which made life miserable . for the Philadelphia Philadel-phia platform writers are giving the deep blues to the . Democrats. In fact, the rival . camps among the Democrats are even . more troublesome. ' ' The Republicans, 'while ? they squabbled hotly ' among themselves them-selves behind closed doors, were too conscious . of . party-interest to kick up an , open ruckus. On the final showdown, the boys worked out a compromise that' "gave each side a sop. The . re- suit was rather . ambiguous, but it left : the door open for the Republican - candidate . to move whichever way he wanted. . i ; But the prima donna Democratic Demo-cratic factions are insisting oii the whole hog or nothing. Sena- tor Burt Wheeler, backed by the; glowering John L. Lewis, is de manding an unequivocal, isola tionist, no-war declaration; and threatens to head a third-party ticket if be doesn't get his way, Anti-isolationists, , foremost among them Roosevelt Wmself, are flatly against such a plank. At the same time, they are acute ly aware of the powerful peace sentiment in the ,., country and they know they've got to watch their step. ; How to meet this problem) without too-obvious .pussyfooting, is the big riddle. A number nf lormuiaa are unaer consideratioo. The one so far most favored reads: 1 "We are opposed to any Am erican youth being sent to fight in foreign wars, we dedicate our selves to ' unstinting effort to build up. the defenses. of our own country to protect it and the Western Hemisphere from any foreign encroachments.! thirthe-mlin rTht atChl4 COMES EltEYOLUTIONt G-boss - J. Edgar Hoover and dynamic Walter. Wlnchell were discussins- the Fifth Column menace and the Government's measures ; to combat it. j "Believe me. Walter." remark ed Hoover, "I've got a personal Interest in suppressing subversive elements. If they ever got control, con-trol, I'd be the first one they'd shoot." ' "John," shot back Winchell with a broad grin, "you've got delusions of grandeur. I'm No. 1 on their list." - . :.'v. - : j , POLITICAL CHAFF . GOP ': master minds are . losing no - time organizing their campaign. cam-paign. Quietly, they already have begun buying up . billboard space all over' the country . . v m anticipation an-ticipation of being . barred from the ballot this year, California Communists are quietly making plans , to capture , the Progressive Party ; in . the forthcoming pri-mary pri-mary ... One Democratic leader to "keep an eye on at . Chicago is tall, fast-thinking Senator Lister Hill of Alabama. As chairman of the Alabama delegation, he will be the first to answer the . roll-call roll-call when the nominating speeches speech-es begin. Hill, who succeeded to the seat once held by his close friend Justice Hugo Black, is a strong third termer' and a Roosevelt Roose-velt favorite. : (Copyright 1940 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Pleasant Grove ANNA MAEE3 WALEI-U Correspondent Fhona iltZ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cobbley returned re-turned Sunday from a four day trip through the southern Utah parks and the Grand canyon.. Mrs. C. H. Carson of Fairfield spent Monday with her mother, Mrs. Fred Foutz. ' - Vard Johnson spent last week in - Idaho visiting relatives and scenic points throughout the state. , Elmer Foutz of Riverton, Wyo., left Sunday evening for his home after having spent several days of last week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Foutz. and friends here. On Saturday he and his parents, par-ents, his sister, Mrs. Ethan Allen and two small daughters, LaPreal and Marsele, motored to Logan. Mr. and Mrs. Bert L. Kirkwood (Wanda Adams) will leave Sunday Sun-day evening for a two weeks'- trip to the Pacific coast. They plan to visit Boulder dam, Los Angeles, Catalina and the San Francisco fair. Pauline Loveless of Payson is spending the week with her aunt, Mrs. C. A. Fugal and family. Ernest Clayton, Mrs. Clayton and two children, Connie and Jim, spent Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Stena Clayton. . Miss Effie Warnick of the B. Y. U. faculty spent the week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill N. Warnick. Allan Jones Seeks ' Custody of Child RENO, Nev July 11 (HE) Allan Jones, movie slneer. todav renewed his attempts to get summertime sum-mertime custody of his 10-year-old son, Theodore, now in New York. Jones is so busv In HYtflvwrra with picture work he can not visit the boy, sole custody of whom was granted to his mother. MaHori R. Jones, when she divorced the actor here July 25, .1936, Jones' attorneys attor-neys argued today. Jones, represented by attorneys, did not aDDear at the heaHnc. TS.'r accusations against the mother's conduct in reariner the child were made in Jones' motion, which seeks to .modify terms of the divorce decree so the boy could spend two summer months a vear with hi father in Hollywood. Volume Lists 32,000 Words of Chippewas MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., (HE) Earl F. Campbell, . a Minneapolis sign painter, hw completed a dic tionary containing some 32.000 words of the Chippewa Indian language. Campbell, who Is only one-six teenth Chippewa himself, began his laborious task four years ago when his father, George M. Camp bell of White Earth, Minn., died, leaving a huge file of countless scraps of paper on which Chipoe-wa Chipoe-wa words with their English equivalent were scribbled. To his father's collection, Camp bell added 8,000 more words which he picked up from Chippewa Indians In-dians in northern Minnesota reservations. reser-vations. . Here is an example of the Chip pewa language: O-donn-ah-kee-way o - dan - schoon - egun - chee - ga - na -way - gee - gaa dag gee, ah-bah -gee-too-wad-ode-nee, wayn - in - gieu-gay tay an-ah nob-haa." Campbell says this means "The language of the' ancient and honorable hon-orable tribe of Chippewa, Minne sota's true natives, has been preserved pre-served for posterity." " Cranium Answers , Questions on Page 2, 1. Thomas Jefferson lived at Monticello. 2. Napoleon Bonaparate was ex iled to St. Helena, died there. 3. George Washington lived at ML Vernon. 4. Thomas A. Edison worked at Menlo Park. 5. Adolf Hitler lives at Berch- tesgaden. - 77) ? ! nr&v An S: JE iced Schilling Tea -brings satisfying warm-weather warm-weather refreshment. Hot or iced, it's full-flavored and amber-clear. For finer, richei flavor, demand Schilling Tea. ,91 I S Vis 1 vV x JJ ) ScSilOiBg 11 D )ir r, 1 n hrlr Specials for Saturday, July 13, 1940 UIEHIJA SAUSAGE .... 2 for 17c "Red & White" 1-oz. Tins LGKCHEGi "Red & While "EAT ffe i GOOriED DEEP KedVjVle.- Resr. Tins EACH DEUILLED HEAT Reg, ' 3 for. "Red & White. Reg. Tins r ilU j W "Grand Teton" S . . Ho. 2 tin 10c CATSUP w- .....1S-oz. bitbIG nri "Cloverdale" White or ilU Yellow No. 2 Tins . . . 3 for 20c "Red & White" DADV FOOD a?.1??:?: 4 for 25s SLICED DEEP . 2-oz. jar lo Picklsd Pigs' Feat, W-oz. GIssslCc "Red & White" Prepared Spaghetti, IQ-oz. tin C "Red & White With Cheese 7UHA ur-...Uo.K tin 15s S0GAn ....10-lb. cloth bag 50c GyG0flj0i in?eredhl.u.T7. 12-Ii)s lEc WHEAT FLAUES. for 25s WHEAT CEHEAL Lg. p!tg. 17c PIAfJUT DU7TE0 Ecoh 23c ILK "Red &! White Tall Tins 4 for 27c PAHCAE FLOOR -rGa. Cs nrrrr rraniin "Red & white- Liilil i E-UUii Lai Large Pksr. ... Ea. 2 0 DAKIIIQ P0UDEni" '.!Ea. ICs ESQ HOPPLES t-Ea. s Prepared r.lastardnlbKEa. 10c sal soda ;r."r: ...Ea.1 17ASII0 . . . 24-oz. p!:g. 15 LAUiIDOV SOA! Giant Wrap-f fh ped Cars ... I 'Red & White" RED Ci VJIIITE EATS GHOOtlD HOUIID Lb. 25c ILK LAf.10 LEGS Lb. 27c POT 10AST ..Lb. 10c 4J10SA0i 2 Iu3a 00 LDi'JCH- HEATS, Ac:ori:J, Lb. 2Sc i UEAL nOAST . . . ' . . Lb. 22c UEAL POGIIEI .... lb. t& FOHti SHOULDER 00AS7, Lb. Kz ILK LALID choP"ldt.r. Lb. 25c Stewing Hens and Frying Chickens A. |