OCR Text |
Show PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. 1940 O - "- s i ii. i . j 0 I'y l Kf.I)J'.?:U Iv C. OECTISNER BERLIN. Sept. 12 T !' At least 40 persons were killed and 40 injured in the British air raid. hot r.:. it on Berlin, Hamburg and Bremen which caused "numerous "num-erous fires and damact: to hon.es and workers' colonies," th high; fommanj Paid today. J The high command said that "German bomber, pursuit and destroyer de-stroyer squadron.- continued reprisal re-prisal attacks against London, day and night," scoring hits on docks, harbor workn, gas and electricity plants, one - power and one amw lactory, "causing bright fires," Gerr.'.an ar.ger mounted becaue-of becaue-of continued British attacks. Tin; liih command said that yesterday in addition to buml. ing London the German air feree attacked at-tacked an airplane factory &t Southampton, destroying r-ix h ois- ars, and oil depots at Port Vic-j tot ia. i A communique also .'-aid that iiipfht attacks had bven directed against Liverpool and other west and south c oa.st harbors. "(Jerman bombers hurled them-t them-t lees upon a convoy in the Thames estuary and pet lire to one destroyer and four merchant ships and scored hits on two ether merchant ships," the high command i;aid. It claimed that SO British planes were destroyed yesterday, 67 in air battles over London, six by anti-aircraft fire in Germany, six by naval artillery on the North Sea coast and one bv naval artillery artil-lery on the English Channel coast. It said that only 20 German planes were missing. (The British claimed to have destroyed b9 German planes yesterday.) yes-terday.) The communique said that a U-boat U-boat commanded by First Lieutenant Lieuten-ant Jeni30 sank 40,000 tons of shipping from convoys during one voyage and that another .submarine .submar-ine sank a 7,000-ton armed British Brit-ish merchant snip from a convoy. British attacks on Berlin, Hamburg Ham-burg and Bremen marked the third straight night of intensified attarks on the capital and big provincial cities. In their Berlin raid, British bombers swept over the city in three waves. Though no bomb. explosions ex-plosions were audible in the centers cen-ters of the capital, a government statement said that in addition to the firing of a factory in the northwestern section, small fires were caused at various places in the inner city where incendiary bombs struck residential and buid-tess buid-tess houses. jolihe men NATIONALLY ADVtRTISID 9. S098 up ) Shoo Dept. VISIT PROVO Get a Bin, . ...... ........ 7 ' i y" 7fh ' ! ;iir 1 1- v -:!V . v ' h-.S- ( , c ..: '':..... : - ii hi, V 11.1 O with S2.90 Worth of Specified Fuller -' y n 3 3 '.a U T T 4 A . ' 4 M 11 OYT SPEAKS TO JAYGES With Dr. of accounti! k-t ration at vcrsity, as II . V. Ilovt. professor g nod business admm-Briiham admm-Briiham Youny uiu-guet uiu-guet Speaker, the 1 Co junior chsml''r of merce Wednesday night ci ed one ui' ils most rousing cum-aduet- llut't- hg's of tlie year. LaMar May cock was chairman of the meeting. Richard W. Mor- ri.; i if Hum, lulu, member of the at ronautios division of chamber of eon urn roe tented an illustrated Hawaii scenic center's, Trophy I'm sente'd Headed by their James L. Cwilham, a the junior there, pi- 1-cture of president, number ! Bark City Jayeees attended the meeting and presented Provo with the Jaycee traveling trci-hy. Eddie Ed-die Nicholson, Provo president, accepted the trophy from Harvey Dubling'Jr. of tlie visitors. Other Park City members attending at-tending were Vice President Bert Spec. C. I. Nichols, secretary, Boyd McDaniels and Par ley Blair. 'trophies won by the Provo club at the r ecent state convention were officially presented, including a beautiful public health trophy and the outstanding president's award won by A. Sherman Christensuii, immediate past president. Tom Barker, Utah state Jaycee president, and other state officers offi-cers were present. c.ynn u. Aloulton, dance club -i, lairman, reported the il.mrirn- sc. ah: ui will open in November, firinoum. ed that Jayeees He will o be ; den pecial guests of EaiuDuW Gar-: Gar-: at a dance Saturdav ninht Dr. J. Russell Smith's color ,u vision won an award for best attendance. at-tendance. A splendid musical program pro-gram included community tanging tang-ing and solos by Carl Martineau accompanied by Miss Joan Quist! It was announced that Jay C Newman, Salt Lake City, chief of the federal bureau of investigation investiga-tion there, will address the next general meeting September 25 at ilaase cafe, of which Calvin Bench will be chairman. Dr. Hoyt, in addressing the Jayeees, reviewed highlights of his recent travels through Central America, also discussing various other countries he has visited. Th largest painting in the world is said to be Michelangelo's "Last Judgment" in the Sistme Chapel of the Vatican at Rome. vry "glamour ctmui" with tKt xciting Hollywood ytriioni of ' gloriout (chool-tim fahiont. ( They'll bt popular at Ihm - t foolball Kero...lK motl tiihaj ' cf tubjcl in tfi ftyU curriculum. curric-ulum. (Horn today... they'll mat th"graf" In every wayl i n 12 West Center St. Provo S NEWEST SHOE STOItE Handy won nnou r its. v w n 1 P n i 1 1 ! ' ' ii ii U U L U U ii Lasts Only Until September 21st il P A R Busy - Berlin Gets Bombing I j i ' s (Jerniari soldiers in bomb. rs during the Berlin Ii. A. acarch thnar F.'s heaviest since the start of toe war. Caption, censors, ldentined trie picture a3 People's Home on A ugustast rasse bombs Radioed from Berlin to New ulilEdS RESCUE RAPPED lH! PARK CITY, Utah, Sept. 12 U.i: Nine miners had their freedom, today after being rescued last niht from a mine cave-in which held them prisoner for 21 hours. Cut off by collapse of a waste chute between the 800 and 900 foot levels in the Silver King Coalition rnin'a Alliance unit, the miners were missed early yesterday. yester-day. An opening was cut through the rock to the trapped workers and sandwiches were lowered dur- ing the clay, company officials said. The men climbed to safety after af-ter the aperture had been enlarged late in the afternoon. No one was injured. The trapped miners were Archie Maynard, Bete Rosilla, Ralph Garbett, Harold Locke, Ralph Brown and Henry John, Bark City; Lynn EoekhiH, Beoa; Archie Briggs, He!er, and Horner Murray, Mur-ray, Midway. p0 iCO! iO I jiiCl Every citizen is invited to avail himself of the oportunity to attend at-tend the free adult eoucation and recreation classes to be held during dur-ing the next several months at the Provo high school, ttceoniing to Miss Ruth Mitchell, county sup ervisor. hi I Registration will be held toui from 7 to 10 j). m. A shorthand class will be taught from ) to 10 p. in. each Monday and Thursday by Miss Mitcheil in room 31, Provo high school. The rest of the schedule waa published Wednesday. L'cgrcDs Charge SALT LAKE CITY, Sej.t. 12 '.!:. -D. H. Oliver, Utah council president of the National Negro Congress, today submitted a resolution reso-lution before the council convention conven-tion protesting conscription of negroes for military service unless it is on a nondiscriminatory basis. Oliver called for aid in the cause of negro youth in Utah, declaring de-claring that negroes in Salt Lake City were being discriminated against. He called for unity in an attempt to break their "economic and social slavery" in Utah. The council president demanded that industi scripted as and capital be con- Well i manpower. Birthdays FRIDAY, Sept. IS E DWARD SOUTH W I CK . W. STANLEY DUN FORD. KARL IL MONSON. MRS. H. P. HANSEN. MRS. HAZEL NI EL CLYDE STEVENSON. BOY PASSEY. MRS. ORVIL WATTS. it. Of Paints, Varnishes G n T I s u 1 'r1 (NBA Tclepln. to) ;h damage inflicted by British attack on the German capitol which was approved by German being taken in the Jewish Old extensively damaged by British York. The Italian newspaper II Mea-saggero Mea-saggero said in Rome today that Puul Kever was an Italian who hated the British, and was chiefly instrumental in driving them out of the United States in the War of Independence. . . . The paper taid the American hero's real name, was Paolo Revere, :f.d that he was born in Italy In 1735. . . . Police today attributed tfte suicide sui-cide of J. Borden Ilarriman, 36, a member of a wealthy family, to illness. . . . Young Ilarriman leapt from an eight-story window last night. . . . He left a note saying: "God's earth is kindlier than some men know." ... A noted Frenchman Is going home today to face voluntarily a . court which has chared him with partial responsibility for the fall of France. . . . He is Guy La i ' un.".r a.r minister in the first Dal.idier cabinet. . . . La Chambre has been in Washington. . . . The transfer of U. S destroyers l Britain was condemned best night in a nationally - broadcast .-pecr-h by Sen. Rolx-it M. IjiPol-lette IjiPol-lette of Wisconsin. . . He. charged that America is going down "the .same road we took in 1910-17." . . Kins; Gcorgo VI took time out from the war today to send birthday birth-day greetings to Gen. John J. Pershing. .. .The American wartime war-time commander will be SO tomorrow. tomor-row. ... Red Cross Chairman N'oi-fitaa II. I)ait announced today that me unve to rai.se 20,000,fXH) for aid to European war victims has exceeded its goal by nearly a million mil-lion dollars. . . . Sen. Henry Fountain Ashurst, tlie most colorful and eloquent figure of Capitol Hill, plans to return re-turn to Arizona to campaign for the man who defeated hinu . . Ashurst said he would donate hia Servki s to Judge Ernest W. Mc-Farland Mc-Farland "joyously and will.ngly." In Oakland, Calif., a politician named Edward lirernJreller ha3 been .served with a 12-'ear-old warrant charging him with violating violat-ing his parole from the Illinois state prison at Johet .... He was paroled from a murder charge, and violated the release in 192s'. when the warrant was prepared. . . . Where it haa been since that time no one seems to know. . . , Anion Carter, Forth Worth, Tex., publisher and trustee of the Will Rogers memorial commission, revealed today that the Rogers ranch in Sonta Monica will be converted into a public park, an actors' home, and a memorial museum. . . , . , Trainees Asked To Pledge Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (l'.i: All future enrollees in the civil aeronautic board's pilot training program must pledge themselves to join the military air service. Civil Aeronautics Administrator Donald H. Connolly said today. Connolly said that the 15,000 young men who will enroll in preliminary pre-liminary pilot training courses this fall must promise that they will be available for military service if needed. "The pledge is not intended to set the time or circumstances for entering military service," Connolly Con-nolly said, "but rather to provide ;i statement of intention to use this training in the national defense." de-fense." ,A11 applicants for pilot training, Connolly said, will be required to pass military physical examinations. examina-tions. Quaified students, who piss the preliminary pilot training courses, may take a secondary course in handling speedier and he.ivsfr planes. In the News Obituaries uAYOi IS D2AD I'AYSON - Daniel R. Fjeld rFieids) 53. former mayor and prominent resident of Eureka, died early Tuesday morning at the family home in Eureka. He was mining cb-ik for tlie U. S. Mining and Gmcltin- company at the time of bis death and had previously worked as shift foreman lor the Bingham Mining company lor a number of years. He was a member of the f.ehuol board in the Tin tic school un.trict and served as mayor during and 1921. He was also , a member of the city council in Euieka for six years, served as 1 il chief for tvso j ears and w as a member of K. of C. lod-e No. 1130. Mr. Balds v. as horn Dec. 27, 18,0 at Eureka, a son of tiebcr and Frances Hayues Field.;. He married Barbara Meudcnhall on June 17, Ball at Evanston, Wyo. Surviving ale his widow, and mother of Eureka; two daughters, Mrs. Frances Evans of San Ma-lino, Ma-lino, Calif, auad Miss Helen Fields of .Salt Lake City; a sister, Mrs. H. E. Wall of liireka and two brothers, Carl Field of. Eureka and Bert Fielda of Lark, also one grandson. The body was brought to the Claudm Funeral home pending funeral arrangements. Interment will be in Evergreen cemetery in Sprir.gvihe. Funeral services will lie conducted con-ducted Friday at 10 a. ni. m tlie Catholic church. The body will be taken to the home Thursday at G p. ni. for iewiug until time for ta-rvii es. Mass will be conducted at the home Thursday evening by Father Joseph I. Gosselm. Interment will be in Spring-ville Spring-ville Evergreen .cemetery unuer the direction of the Claudm Funeral Fu-neral home. Susanna W. Giles LEHI Funeral services for Mrs. Susanna Witt Giles, 79, who died at her home here Sunday, will be held Wednesday at 1 p. m. in the Lehi Second L. D. S. ward chapel, with Bishop E. N. Webb conducting. Mrs. Giles was born May 16, 1SG1 at Heber City, a daughter of John W. and Lavina Biglow Witt. She was married in tlie old L. D. S. Endowment hou.se in Salt Lake City to Heber John Giles, December De-cember 2, 1SS0, and has resided in Lehi for many years. Surviving are five children, H. L. Giles of Los Angeles, Calif.; E. A. Giles, and Mrs. A. W. Davis of Lehi; Mrs. Joseph Turner of Charleston, and M. W. Giles of Presenting Newest Fashions ( TAILORED u j i w Consider your appearance this fall ... it means so much to your complete success in your husiness and personal life. See Mose Lewis today! :V 1 1 ,:' ' '! New Collars set the style of f r tin1 new fall shirts. Now only tJ Stetson Hals will be tlie f clmice of most moil tin's fall - Hosiery tliat comple'mont.s ro your complete outfit. Priced atlv, Salt Lake City; 13 grandchildren, and 15 great-grandchildren. Also by four brothers and one sister: Brigham, Franklin L., and Jesse M. Witt, and Mrs. James Campbell all of Heber Citv, and M. M. Witt of Salt Lake City. Interment will bs in the Heber City cemetery. Raymond L. Whipple LLHI Raymond Leigh Vv hippie, hip-pie, 48, died at his home here Monday following a stroke1. He was born in Lchi, May IWJ2, a son of Nelson Gay Susie Wanlass Whipple, and always resided in Lehi. He served three years in United States navy, enlerim lti, and has the ' in 1108, and he was the second man tiom Lehi to enlist in the at my during the World war enlistment. He served in the army two years. Surviving besides his parents, are three brothers, William N. Whipple of Salt Lake City, and John G. and I'" red D. Whipple both of Lehi. Anna Chase lioundy ;il "-RING VILLE - Mrs. Anna Chase Koundy, b.2, widow of Hy-nini Hy-nini Round y and a former resident resi-dent of Spring ville, died at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Maude Little at Eden, Idaho, on Monday Mon-day of ailments incident to her age, according" to word received here. Born in Sprmgville, August 10, J S'S, She was a daughter of Solomon Solo-mon and Lydia Thorn Chase. She spent her early life in Springvilie and had visited here often in recent re-cent years. She is survived by eight sons and daughters, C. H. and Loren Roundy and Mrs. Little of Eden; Otto Roundy of Missoula, Mont.; Saul Roundy of Rigby, Idaho; MeOray Roundy of Sail Lake City; Almon Roundy of Eureka; Mrs. Myrtle Ford of Kanab; two sister's, sis-ter's, Mrs. Mary J. Finley of Springvilie and Mrs. Adlaide Dal-ton Dal-ton of Los Angeles, Calif. Funeral services and burial will be at Eden, Idaho on Thursday. Services Held For Mrs. Leavitt Funeral services for Mrs. Charles Leavitt were held Saturday Satur-day in the First ward chapel, Bishop Walter P. Whitehead presiding. pre-siding. Lowell Hicks played the processional proces-sional and recessional on the vibra harp, also one number during the program, which included a solo, "Wake Not From Thy Peaceful Sleep," by Mrs. Nola Nilson, accompanied ac-companied by Mrs. Zenith Johnson; John-son; invocation, B. H. Bower; solo, "No Night There," Murray Roberts, Rob-erts, accompanied by Mrs. Johnson; John-son; addresses, Don W. Conover and Bishop Whitehead; solo, "Go- the , j '" " ' j V . " " 1 f r-i k l.,illu,.i An outstanding event of th season will be the Fathers' and; Sana' outing of the Provo Fourth i ward to be held at Canyon Glen j Saturday afternoon and evening,! September 11. All male members J of the ward 11 years old and over, whi ther- they have transportation or Dot are requested to meet at j the ward house at 3 o'c lock or at i 4:30 a which times cars will leave, for the canyon. i An interesting program h.isj been scheiluN-d With games of' various hinds, a dehghllul lunch,, stories, songs, and other types of entertainment. Prizes will be! given for winners of various; events. It i suggested that the men and boys take only w-inie.'? and buns and the ward will fur-! ni; h the r st. j Wdl ward members who have j not returned their que.stionaires , do so i m me (hateiy or phone Fl ed j C. Strate (Phone No. 291) as to j their intentions regarding trip Re that full preparations may ho made to accomodate all w ho wish ' to attend. UTAH COniflGT ELD Ii! DESlVEPi DENVER. Sept. 12 U'.gi -James Paul Murphy, 31, escaped convict of the Utah state penitentiary who. ,; capture caused a clash .between .be-tween Denver and Utah officers, was held today by Denver police for questioning about .purchase of a revolver here last week. Murphy, who surrendered to Utah officials yesterday only to be taken at gun-point by Denver police, was serving a life-term sentence sen-tence for a Salt Lake City murder mur-der in 1935 when he escaped July 10. dnrrns Wright and Robert Harris, Har-ris, deputy wardens of the Utah ponintcntiary, ' said Murpny telephoned tele-phoned the prison offering to surrender sur-render if Denver police were not notified. They said he appeared at the appointed place yesterday and they took him and a companion, Miss Dorothy Hudson, 28, Denver, to a cottage camp to collect his personal belongings. Meanwhile. Denver detectives, after bring tipped-off of Murphy's location, waited outside the cottage cot-tage for his return. When Wright and Harris refused to surrender their prisoner the Denver officers chew tluir pistols. ing Home," Mrs. Nilsson; benediction, bene-diction, Walter Taylor. Interment wxus in the Provo city burial park, where the grave was dedicated by Bishop Whitehead. l i'A " " i. - " ' ' I ,' V j i - :- .. rr) . ' 1 jL? f t s i , I f V I . : i , - ' ... ' " -1 . , " .. . ..,.' TIlC Styles: Ihe fasciites for fall wi:i he the three button full drape model as illustrated . . . and the conventional conven-tional double breasted. All styles are cut for comfort. The Patterns! Diagonals, stripes, herringhones and the new G!tn Plaids will dominate the fashion picture for the Tall of 1910. These patterns will he featured" 'in all models. 0 Men:; and Hoy a9 OUTPUT iiEGOllO 3 New records for peak load and 21-hour output wre established at the Provo municipal power plant leteidly, reports R. C. Adams, sa;ioruiteiidcnt of utilities. Tile peak load on September 0 1 1 a bed 2i-"u kilowatts, highest lecoid. d : inee tie' municipal plant .'-taited operation in April. The pla.it was able td carry this load on one- of its two units, according accord-ing to Mr. Adams. tin tlie .-. i n.e day. the 24-hour oiitp.t totaled 31,.v0o 1 );. atts, also a record. During August tlie plant generated gener-ated fc':o.70d I- illowatts, which exceeded ex-ceeded the output of any other month. Tie; plant consumed 1.43 pounds of coal per kilowatt. A compute financial statement of oj,-i ation of the plant thus far will be issued about October 10. From all indications the report wil lie veiy favorable, Mr. Adams states. CLEARFIELD, Utah, Sept. 12 il l:) - Major K. L. Hastings, acting const rut t ing quartermaster at Hill Field, -aid today $2,100,000 appropriated last June has been made available for immediate use at tlie a irny air depot. Hastings said the money would permit construction of five major buildings in addition to those already al-ready approved. Buiioue.'S planned under the new appropriation inciuil: air corps reclamation headquarters, engine test shop, engine repair .shop, equipment repair building and an airplane repair shop. He sail specifications were being be-ing prepared and that bids would I e: advertised within a few weeks. Construction would begin about Dec. 1. A Nicaraguan woman has borne four sets of triplets, in 1930, 1933. 1936, and 1038, and all are alive and well. I Don't Neglect Slipping- 1 p.i falsf 0-"th limit, niip or w ;U I ! wlit tt v,mi talk. I.oith ,,r sh-, 7..-- li., n't I ,-i ii 11 , ,-.l :,ii1 ,-ir I a rr a s.i,-..l t.y -ti, h .;in-lii-n.s. I'A.-' I Til. rot iilku-lin iilku-lin i ii11!) - t ' I ) j.ow.l.-r tu sprir.kl nil your l lues. Oil't l-th tli"! c lirit.ly fi en.--, .-oia'nl.'nt ff-pline u( .-rm'ie .-rm'ie :i na 1 1 0 , . I ti.nt'-rt .S'.j ,'uml,i I , i-v, .i)-.f. f.i.Mtr ,,r ff.'Im,' Oft KAS- ' TKr:'!' 1 1 O'lliv at any tli uk stun.-. -a, I v. Wear POIjER |