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Show PROVO . (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1010 PAGE SEVEN it F li i - -JjL-. BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY You will find these Merchants and Professional People anxious to .serve you. It will pay you to patronize them. AUTO GLASS LET us replace your broken glass A Wander Mfg. Co., 476 South University. Phone 100. AUTO RADIATORS RADIATORS repaired and fPish-eO. fPish-eO. Afclandr Mfg. Co., 478 So. LTJv. 1'Lcne l'j'j. BEAUTY OPERATOR DOVE LARK EN, permanent.-? a specialty. Phone 131 oR. 05 South fith West. nl5 FOUNDRY WORK PACKMAN Foundry, general foundry castings. 888 West C South. Phone 1C98W. FURRIER fUR coats rostyled and repaired. Experienced service. Mrs. Helen Swenstn, 443 East 4th South. Phone 1179. o29 r URNITUilE REPAIRING 1 E F I N ISIIINO, re-u pi i ol ste r in g like new. D. T. K. Co. Phone 544. HAY 5 AILED and loose. Lay. Also straw. Delivered. Harold Maag. I 'hone 013R1. Lincoln Street, Orem. MOVING AND STORAGE TELLOW CAB AND TRANSFER CO. Local and long distance moving- agents for Mayflower Nationwide Moving Van Service. Serv-ice. Packing- Shipping. Phone 300. 312 South University. MONEY TO LOAN OVER A DEC A DE OF SERVICE JN PROVO LOANS $20 to 5300 cr newly remodeled office now equipped to extend a complete loan and finance service, in a private business-like manner. Call tod.iv. PERSONAL. FINANCE CO. 13 East Center (Over Walgreen) Phone 022. John F. Moore, Mgr. DO You Need Money? We offer private money fur private loans. We invite you to vLsit us and investigate in-vestigate our private loan plans. Van Wagenon Investment Co. 75 East Center street. Phone 516VV. Above Hayward'a. PLUMBING and HEATING P. L. LARSON. 313 W. Center Phone 574. Call U3 for estimates. esti-mates. SERVICE SERVICE all makes washers, vacuum cleaners. Guarantee on nil parts and service.-Free estimates esti-mates given. Maycock Appliance Appli-ance Company, Til North University. Uni-versity. Phone 7SW. STOVE REPAIRING AT the General Shop. 159 North University Avenue. Phone 915VV VENETIAN IJLINDS UTAH Valley Glass, 57 North University Uni-versity Avenue. Phone 6-.fi. MIS( F.LIANEOl S DRESSMAKING and alterations. Work guaranteed. Price reasonable. reason-able. Call 740 after 6 or Sundays. r.fi OJ'ILTS pieced and quilted as you like them. Call S2.S. Reasonable. li.X BOARD AM) liOOM POARD and room for men. 21S North, University. nil POSIT THOROUGHLY experience Auto Loan and Finance office manager, man-ager, shortly leaving present position as manager of Texas Corporation and wishing to make home in Provo, would like to correspond with local man or company noedinsr the services of a man capable of opening and managing a loan or finance office. Personal, ban! and busi-i busi-i . ! references furnished upon request. Address R. S. Hull, c-o State Auto Finance Corp., Ft. Worth. Texas, nl v-.9-M-5"(-?.V-s,E?....... f i;(OM modern homo, rood u-n-tion, priced reasonably. 1M South 1st West. nil I OR SALE REAL ESTATL' REAL ESTATE An Excellent Opportunity! Modern Mod-ern Brick House with excellent heat Fireplaces Built-in features fea-tures --Suitable for Office and Home Most wonderful location Close in City Paved street Business District Close MUST SELL AT SACRIFICE PRICE! Investigate ,ow, o Horn and Furnishing- All Goes! $2r00 Good Location Four Rooms, Bath Half Basement Ask about this bargain! o Farm JIoum Four Rooms Modern, Mod-ern, with Acreage Grandview Location $1500. o Own a Dairy Farm You can buy light, 1.3 Acre.-; Land with Home - - very close in to Provo Interesting Inter-esting if you like cows and poultry. poul-try. o Confectionary Business - Modern Old Home A chance to get started in business South of Provo Worth your consideration. considera-tion. o MANY GOOD BUYS - o--I'lione 10!f!) Willard L. So wards Agency Office: 39 West 2nd North St.," Provo, Utah I OR R ENT U n f u rnLshed .3 OR 4 room apartment, heat, hot water. 231 East 4 North. no' OR partly furnished, 3 room modern mod-ern apartment, couple. 170 West 2nd South. ' n!7 BUNGALOW house. 341 South 1st West. nS $125 equity in 1930 Chevrolet for $35. 80 East 2 North. n5 '2! OIIEV. coupe, just overhauled. Royal Hinder, 11th Nor tli 7th East. n.r lf36 CIIEV deluxe 4 door sedan. 1937 Chev coupe. 471 North 5th East. n4 C ROOM home. Stoker, hot water heater. Inquire 40 South 5th East. Phone 941-w. nfi ATTRACTIVE 3 room modern apartment. Heat, hot water. Adults. 150 North 1 East. n5 4 ROOM home on 5 acres. Lake-view. Lake-view. Inquire .'i'.JU West 5th South. - - - " nl 4 ROOM house & coops for 500 chickens. located on Carter-vine Carter-vine Road. Inquire 1020 West Fifth North. n4 1 1 ELI WANTED EM ALE EXPERIENCED gill for general housework, full or part time. rnone 4 in. nl GIRL for housework, hours short, family adults weak steady. Write Box X Herald. ho FOR SALE Miscellaneous DINING, table anil chairs, china closet. 170 North 1 East. n(J GIRL'S bicycle. Excellent condition. condi-tion. 959' North 5th West. n4 CHEAP Lloyd cart, bassinette, high chair, like new. 445 West 5th North. nl 14 INCH Oliver 2 way plow. 14 inch John Deere 2 way plow, spring tooth harrow, walking plow. Call 034 Itl. n5 CEDAR posts 15c and up. Building Build-ing lots $15 iMivn, small monthly month-ly payments. W. E. Hood. 3!0 North 13th West. n5 RANGE stove $10.00, Sanitary cot. 359 South 5 West. n4 FINE 2 year old colt. Weight 830. 255 West 2nd South. n7 LOST X DARK Jersey heifer, 2 years old. De-horned, will calf along about January. Reward. Phone 1G10. nfi I OR SAFE AUTOS 193S "; ton Chev truck. Sacrifice at $100. or will trade for light car. Phone 012R2. nt 1035 DODGE four door sedan. Good condition. 271 East 7th North. n4 TIRE Repairing and Hi Value Used Tires. Brimhall Bros. Phone 200. 121 West 1 North. Provo. n30 I Oil SALE OR BENT NEW brick home. $3.S0Q. 100 South Uh West. Inquire 80S West 2nd North. no jionT; y to loan $20 TO $300 ON YOUR CAR ty?:i to 110 mo,I. 1 enr nn.J lU;ht trucks c 1 1 1 1 1 1 jj f r,'f inn h d --i.h h aJfan fd, CONSUMERS CREDIT CO. onn.'.l I!y PACIFIC FINANCE 00 Cmlneneil llnnk I'.l.hj- S:ilt Lskw frk l'i , CiiW.-M ;ir:iit s 17 i VV.-.I ?n.l S.,.ifh FOR R ENT FURN IiHLD ! 3 ROOMS, bath, heat, hot water. Call 111SJ. 37; North University, Univer-sity, no 4 ROOM house. -?12. It's nice and ( lean. Thomas L. Kitchen, Orem. na NEW modern 3 rooms. Call before be-fore fi. 284 North 5 West. nS 3 ROOM modern apartment, heat, hot water. 172 South 2 East. nS MODERN 3 room apartment, heat, electrically equipped, close in. Adults. 243 West 1 South. Phone 91S. n7 OR UNFURNISHED, 2-3 room apartments, 1 heated, Phone 303-j. n!3 MODERN 2 large rooms. 133 East 1st South. n." LIGHT housekeeping room, gas equipped. 5S West 3 South. n5 2 ROOM apartment, bath, hot water. Adults only. Call between be-tween 4:30 and 7 p. m. 141 North 6 East. n4 LOWER apartment,- heat, hot water. wa-ter. Adults. 270 North 1 East. 1525 J. n23 SLEEPING room, with bath. New throughout. Air conditioned. Phone 1051. is 1 0 IGAL HOUGHS , Probate and Guardianship Notices CokhijII County I le. k or t.Jie HeNi.M'ctlv Sicner for Further Furth-er Inforniaf lent. I Constitutional Amendment Liability of Stockholders of Banks A OAT RESOLUTION rROPOS. AC TO AUESD SECTION IS, ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITUTION CONSTI-TUTION OF THE STATE OP UTAH, RELATINC TO LIABILITY LIABIL-ITY OF STOCKHOLDERS OF BANKS. Be it enacted iv fie Legislature cf ths r.. . ir- 1 . .T-i . fi.f I dilate of c lull, iB o-rmrjj or oil we members elected to each Louie cow cur ring therein : ' SECTION 1. That It Is proposed to amen J section IS, nrlido XII, of the constitution o the state of Utah to reaJ: Pec. IS. Tlia legislature may provide by law that tbe stockholders stock-holders In every corporation nnl joint stock association organized for banking purposes, or the holders hold-ers of any one or more of the classes ot stock issued by any such corporation in addition to the amount ot capital stock subscribed and fully paid by them shall be Individually responsible for an additional addi-tional amount equal to not exceed-in.? exceed-in.? the amount of their stock ia such corporation, or the amount ot their stock of any pi.-ticular class in such corporation, for all its debts and liabilities of every kind. Section 2. The secretary of State Is directed to submit this proposed amendment to the electors elec-tors of the state at the next general election In the manner provided by law. Section 3. If adopted by the electors of the state, this amendment amend-ment shall take effect the first day of January, 1941. I, E. E. Monson, Secretary of State ot the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing Is a full, true and correct copy of the Constitutional Amendment proposed pro-posed by the regular session ot the legislature of 1039 as the same appears of record In my office. In witness whereof, I have hereunto here-unto set my hand and affixed the Great Seal of the State of Utah, this 2Gth day of August, 19 40. Secretary of State. Published in The Daily Herald, Sept. 9, 1G, 23. 30; Oct. 7, 14, 21, 2H; Nov. 4, 1040. NOTICE TO CKKDITOUS Estate of L. P. Duke, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchors to the undersig nod at his residence, 20oiJ West Sixth South Street, Provo City, Utah, on or before the 30th day of December, A. D. lf' tO. Dated at Provo City, Utah, this 2Gth day of October. A. D. 1040. THOMAS W. DUKE, Administrator. A. L. Booth, Attorney. Publication dates Oct. 28. Nov. 4. 11. IS. 1910. Forfeits $100 on Drunken Driving Ted Baekhmd, 27, who gave his address as Idaho, forfeited $100 hail bond when he failed to appear in Provo city court Monday to face charges cf drunk n driving. He was arrested by shoruTs officers Saturday while driving between Provo and Orem. ;;ov; v o nm There are thr ee ways to proper- i ly mar k a ballot in Tuesday's election, elec-tion, as follows: 1. To vote a straight party ticket, j. lace a cross in the circle under the emblem of the party you are supporting, then vote on the constitutional amendment at the bottom of the ballot. 2. To vote predominantly for the candidates ofone party and for a few on another ticket, ti e simplest procedure is to place a cross in the circle beneath the emblem of the party you wish to support in the main, then place a line through the names of those candidates vou want to "scratch" (Continued from Page One) .seizure of the territory, however, emphasized persistent reports that the axis powers were planning a general Mediterranean offensive in connection with the invasion of Greece. Continue Attacks Berlin reported that German air fleets continued their attacks on British targets, including railroads rail-roads and military camps near London, despite extremely low clouds and generally unfavorable conditions. The results of the Greek operations appeared for the time being at least, to be a set back for the axis, chiefly due to the fighting spirit of Greece. The British reported they were consolidating bases on the strategic stra-tegic island of Crete. Military and naval headquarters have been established es-tablished in Athens and preparation prepara-tion of both air and naval bases was going ahead rapidly. Troops have been landed but there wis no indication of their number or whether tho5' were confined to a small force, of naval marines., Elsewhere in the Mediterranean-African theater there was increased in-creased activity. The Italians claimed to have bombed the island of I'erim in the Red Sea and to hav' attacked a British convoy in that region. The British reported re-ported Italy continued to consolidate consoli-date supplies in Libya for . the projected drive deeper into Egypt. London last night celebrated the first night in 5S on which not a single German plane came over to disturb the peace. Berlin claimed to have more British shipping. A marine was said to have sunk the auxiliary cruisers Laurentic, IS. 721- tons," and Patroclus. 11,311 tons. In addition a 5,370 ton freighter was said to have been sunk an 1 the 19,141-ton Windsor Castle badly damaged by an airplane air-plane bomb attack. (Continued from Page One) plane in the air over their dwellings dwell-ings as late as 5 a. m. All residents of the locality agreed that pdane was flying through the storm at a low altitude. alti-tude. One farmer said the ship appeared less than 300 feet over his house, which is in the Wa satch foothills and less than a i mile from " Where rugged peaks and sharp cliffs rise abruptly. If the plane continued east at the repor ted altitude it would have rertainly Clashed into the mountains. However, the plane seemcu to be ' circling and there was a possibility it might have crashed onto Great Salt Lake, 10 miles west of Farmington, Davis county seat, or into Salt marshes along the lake shore. An aerial search was directed by Richard Petty, assistant superintendent su-perintendent of flying for United Airlines, who took off shortly after 10 a. m. in a sister ship of the missing craft. The huge mainlmer left S-.n Francisco at 10 p. m. last night. It made regular stops at Sacramento, Sacra-mento, Cal., and Reno and Elk . New Then it took off for Silt Lake City, flying into the teeth of a raging snowstorm first this winter that was blanketirg the intermountain west. The last word from the plane was at 4:40 when Pilot Howard Fey messaged to the Salt Lake air control tower than he was coming into Salt Lake City on the norUl leg of the radio beam. Traffic Manager' Stanley Hal-berg Hal-berg said that at that time it was 10 minutes overdue. Residents of. Salt Lake, valley reported they heard the sound of a plane's motors nt 4 a. m. Hal-berg Hal-berg believed this was the missing miss-ing plane. Those aboard the plane 'were: Mr. and Mrs. IT. C. Muir, 4714 Berkshire, Detroit. Muir, an employe em-ploye of the Brings Manufacturing Co., was en route from San Francisco Fran-cisco to Detroit. Joe Oafiero, 1431 Jackson, Oakland. Oak-land. Cal.. en route to Chicago. E. A. Dybdahl, Fergus Falls, Minn., en route to Fargo, N. D. He had been visiting a son, Phillip Dvhdnhl. at Pittsburg. Cal. Dr. G. L. Stevenson, 2120 L. slrret, Sacramento, en route to Salt Lake Citv. Mr. and Mrs. L. Wilson. 1223 S. 18th Ave., Maywood, 111. Wilson a company employe, was en route from San Francisco to Chicago. Crew : Fey, whose home is in Oakland; Co-Pilot Thomas Sance-gren, Sance-gren, Alamedi; Stewardess Evelyn Eve-lyn Sandino. Alameda. It made regular .stops at Sacia-mo'Uo. Sacia-mo'Uo. Reno and Elko. Nov., leaving leav-ing Elko at: 1:32 a. m. PST or 2:32 MST. Kiiuivn as trip 10, the plane v. as i jijti til ilslu and cr -s after the rimer; of the candej.iu-s in the oilier party columns whom you wish to support. sup-port. 3. To vote a split ticket, that is, for several candidates of each party, ignore the circles beneath the party emblems and place crosses after the names of the four presidential electors on the ticket you wish to support for president, then go down the list placing' crosses after the names of the candidates you wish to support, sup-port, regardless of the party columns col-umns in which they appear. In each instance it is necessary to vote separately on the constitutional consti-tutional amendment. Obituaries Susanna II. Turner Susna Hysett Turner, 63, widow wid-ow of Thomas Turner of Vancouver, Van-couver, B. C, died Sunday morning' morn-ing' at the home of a daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Anderson of Vineyard, following a stroke suffered two weeks ago. She was horn September 19, 1S77, in BV'tbyshire, England, a daughter of Joseph and Martha Hatfield Hysett. She was married to Mr. Turner December 27, 189S, in Devonshire, England. She joined join-ed the L. D. S. church in England Eng-land and moved to Vancouver in 1921. Her husband died February 5, 1910. She had always been active in the L. D. S. church and served as president of the Relief Society at Vancouver. She came to Utah three weeks ago and was stricken ill while visiting at her daughter's home. , Surviving are three sons and four daughters. John Clyde, Roy and Marjory Turner of Vancouver; Vancouv-er; Mrs. William Thompson ami Mrs. Arthur Walker, Shell Water, Wa-ter, B.C., and Mrs. Howard M. Anderson of Vineyard; 17 grand-ohibiren grand-ohibiren and four brothers, Samuel Sam-uel Hysett of Nottingham, England; Eng-land; Albert Hysett of Doncaster, England; Louis Hysett of Mansfield, Mans-field, England, and Gulbert Hysett of Blackfoot, England. Funeral services Will be conducted con-ducted Wednesday at 1 p. m., in the Vineyard L. D. S. ward chapel. chap-el. Burial will be in Vancouver. Friends may call at the Berg mortuary mor-tuary chapel Tuesday evening and at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Anderson at Vineyard prior to the services. Kenneth Kay Konold Kenneth I -Jay Konold, six-month-o!d son of Ira II. and,Luella Keele Konold, died Sunday at a local hospital after an illness from pneumonia. pneu-monia. . The baby was born in Prove. April 20, of this year, and is survived sur-vived by the parents, four brothers. broth-ers. Clyde, Wayne, Theodore and Rudolph, and a step-sister, Mary Louise. The family moved here three years ago. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 1:30 o'clock at tl Berg Mortuary chap 1, with Bishop Bish-op Frank T. Bennett of the Fifth ward, in charge. Interment will be in the Provo City Bur ial park. G.ll.IPi'iluii (Continued fr om Page One) school, with Lawrence Nelson, state senator from Murray, a Democrat opposed to a third term, and A. X. Watkins. representing repre-senting Don B. Colton, as speakers. speak-ers. All county candidates are expected present. Also slated for tonight are a series of Republican radio parties and a number' ot ladies' teas. Besides voting on national, con-gi con-gi -moiimI, stale, legislat ive, ju-ineial ju-ineial district and county offices, trie voters will pass upon a proposed pro-posed constitutional amendment, pur pose of which is to permit legislation leg-islation placing state chartered banks on the same basis as national na-tional banks by eliminating the stockholders' double liability provision. pro-vision. The polls will be open from 7 a. m. to 7 p. m. Tuesday. on a regular eastward flight to Chicago and New York. If the pi. me overshot the Salt Lake airport this would be probable prob-able if the motor noise heard here was that of the missing plane it would be in territory even more dangerous than that west of Salt Lake City. The Wasatch mountains rise abruptly from Salt Luke valley, .sometimes for several thousand feet. From the Wasatch ran?.: on cast are the foothills of the K iky Mountains, then the Rockies t .un-scl .un-scl ves. It was into a peak of the Was atch mountains that a Western j Air Express plane flew on Dec. 15, : lt SfS, carrying five men and two I wo men to their deaths. The i wreckage of this plane was no I ' found until the following June. j In October, 1937, a United Air-I liner on the Cheyenne-Salt I-ake ! route crashed in the Uinta nioun- ' tains in southwestern Wyoming. : te ar Knight. Wyo., and 'killed 19; pi sons, 'phis plane crashed in a j storm similar to the one that-raged that-raged here last right. Wind ve- iofity that sent the 1937 plane plummeting into te side? of a elhii'f was officially recorded at ; in excels of 70 nules an our. SERIAL STORY MEW YORK J BY. VRAY WADE SEVERN YJISTr, KllVTi ftu-iioBii,K Mart iil. mt 1h. nhailoir Jr nindow, JlmltM ood dUcovf rg it Ma Adam. Hi.irl:i triN Hut 1beii. ft Adam' lorty: fisht sinin-t tin-narcotic tin-narcotic It nl.lt, It in victory, "il attempt to provr- liim-lf !! -i. A of f-i it in ritir- iiih ii ruined nil thai. had . r-i lo marry Aiat. lint :t ftnRKlp column I f ' m . nt tnii-nr tnii-nr of lirr T to rralv hini, l.fr Adnni lpil.flHBT '" :! liliiiu.lujjcti lilin. Ji- married at. t TAT EXPLAINS A 1 1 HE CHAPTER XVIII LAD in an orange houde suit end framed in the green chiubbery as she sat on a garden tench, riricia Langdon looked like a tropical bird. Even Brait-v.-ood admitted she was attractive. He thought Pat selfUh. Had she really loved Craig Gundrum she would not have married Adam. A professor's salary, while not comparable with a fortune such as Adam Lcngdon's, was still sufficient suf-ficient for two if real love were present. For Adam, he c".id not believe she cared the least. Nor did he believe that Adam would have married any girl, knowing h was a dru addict, had not that addiction addic-tion sapped his morale. An 'air of relief characterized Pat. As Sidney dropped into u scat beside her, he guessed rightly that she had been thinking, think-ing, of the fortune she would soon inherit.. The unpleasant iiotoiiity they must iill shoulder', but. that would pass and la r hort month S3 Adam I.angdon's bride v. oulci Le but a dark rneuiory. "I t:h a 11 live in Capetown when this is over," she told rsiuitwood. "The sooner an oeean separates mc from this blood-stained old house, the sooner I shall forget the i.nhnppiu'iss it has brought inc." "Y'our people are in Africa now, aren't they he asked. "Yes," she replied. "What legal formalities must a wife go through before an estate is settled, Mr. Era it wood?" For a few momenta they 'discussed 'dis-cussed legal matter;, then Sidney asked: "Did you 'know-'hat the autopsy had revealed. a considerable consider-able amount of morphine in Adam's system, Mrs.Xangdon?" OU I reared that might happen," hap-pen," she admitted 'in a stA tled Workers Credited For Bringing Food Stamp Flan Members of the Protective Order of Organized Unemployed (formerly (form-erly the Workers' Alliance) was the first organization to investigate investi-gate the merits of the food stamp plan, which will be put into effect ef-fect on or about December 1, according ac-cording to a. statement submitted to the press by officers of the group. It was found that the plan, when it was in its experimental stage in Rochester, N. Y., was benelicial to the farmers, food merchants, and the relief recipients, as well as creating a new income to the community, and the organization immediately went on record as endorsing the plan, according to the statement. After the plan was established in Weber and Salt Lake counties, the Protective Order of Organized Unemployed contacted the city and county commissioners and Retail Grocers' association, was successful in getting an open discussion dis-cussion at the public forum, circulated cir-culated pietitions among Trovo grocers, obtained signatures of the majority of the relief people, and forwarded copies of these signatures to the regional director direc-tor requesting the plan be installed in-stalled here. The organization then SLE way. "Adam had the habit. Or cid you know it?" "Recently I learned cf it," Sidney Sid-ney confessed. "I understand you Lad planned ' to send him to a sanitarium?" jJOR the first time, Pat lost her poise. Her crinvon pp3 qU;v ered and her hands inoked in an effort at self-control. She did not ask how Braitwood had obtained his knowledge. Probably she ;,s-L-umed that Adam himself had communicated it to his lawyer. "You have not much sympathy with me, Mr. Braitwood," she said. "Don't pretend. I hardly blame you. You were Adam's friend. But if you would try to understand under-stand what marriage to a man who was all but a maniac mfant, you would know I had little choice but to have him put away.'" "You think there was more than an excessive use of drugs troubling him?" "I don't know, really. I have never been associated with a person per-son who used drugs. But I do know that more than liaf the time he was not rational. When deprived de-prived of the drug he was like a madman. "Yesterday I had found his supply sup-ply of narcotics and burned it. I upset his desk in my search. That explains the charred papers you and Hugh found in the grate. He had tubes' of the stuff in cardboard Luxe::. Craig Say." there- may be stane way of telling what was burned from the a:;h." "Do you know where Ad an got the dings? Such habits often lead to unpleasant associations. ' -They may even have a bearing on the murder." "I don't know, really. I've heard him telephone New Y'ork and ask for the "doctor.' He's say that lie wanted his last prescription refilled re-filled and sent. clown. I remember the number." "Did he know that you: had burned his supply?" "Yes. He was furious. I was actually afraid. He locked himself in the Jungle and refused to go for a drive. When Nella went down to coax him, there was a scene. I believe- he struck her. When he realized where his fury had brought him, he became contrite con-trite and joined us. . . . That contacted the Provo chamber of commerce anil asked for its cooperation. co-operation. The statement pointed out that the Protective Order of Organized Unemployed behoves credit should be given where credit is due, and expressed appreciation for the t Kperalion oi the city officials, county commission, 'welfare department, de-partment, retail merchants, ciiam-uer ciiam-uer of commerce, Daily Herald and junior cham'oer. It was pointed out that the food stamp plan can be a success suc-cess only when the relief recipients recipi-ents and WPA wor kers are willing will-ing to participate ia purchasing the stamps. s uimio: ill Gun Icaiibni! Douglas Eloomqcht, 21, son of Mr. and Mrs Axel Eloomquist of Sglt Lake City, suffered a wound in the back in a pheasant hunting accident in the fields south of American Fork at 1 p. m. Sunday. A charge from a .410 gauge shotgun in the hands of Billy Graff, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Graff of American Fork, struck Bloorcquist when Gra tt turned and shot at a pheasant as it flew up, not knowing Bloomquist w as there. Deputy Sheriff J. J. Mercer, who WILLIAM J. Democratic Candidate for COUNTY COMMISSIONER A conscientious and honest public official, whose integrity integ-rity and ability in conduct-, conduct-, big the a f f a'i r s of Utah County hive never been questioned. j I (Paid Political Advcrti -e- lucid by Win. J. Johnson) C.1PYRICMT. 19". NE.A StdVICE. INC. may be how sl'.e got the bruise behind her car." npiIE sound of a do.-ing dooi chew their attention to the house. Hugh Lcngdon derc ended the steps tnd epproached them. He looked ill. The muscles about his large, kindly mouih bad tightened tight-ened into bitternes?; his bread shoulders sagged and he cppcaied to have lost weight in the short 24 hours since his cousin's murder. "Hugh is hard hit," Sidney ! in a low voice. A glint of sympathy troubled fU's bright eyes. "Hugh is a re-nvn re-nvn ksble person," she said. v. ith moie feeling than he had yet cen her i'. : ..y. "rio-vman in?ists Nda be :;-emmed :;-emmed for th.. .g-,tc by a doctor of his own thDo;-m!!i" Hu m told them. "I objected, thinking that in her condition, further questioning question-ing could only ag:.nuV;.to her trouble. What about tiie V v i side of it, Sid?" "Nella i3 under rge and, according accord-ing to Adam's w ill, you and I are v her guardians, Hugh," Sidney ex- V plained. "For a time, if the doctor we have selected agrees with via, we can prevent outside jutcrfer-tnce." jutcrfer-tnce." "I imagine Dr. Bowman will agree," Hugh said slowly. "It is my hope that she will throw oil the psychic dumbness when she awakens, -o Hint she can undergo questioning in Ircr normal mind." "As her lawyer-, I'll be with her, in any case. I'll see Plowman at once." CIDNEY found the cr.ptain in the chawing room. - After he had agreed to defer a consultation, Plowman revealed he had Boris: LeseneolT on his mind. "Could this fellow, Tsrnroff. have struck Miss I...n. i...u and then faked a dive and a rescue when he saw you, T.ir. BuiL-wood?" BuiL-wood?" he asked. "Impossible. I saw the entire business, and I swear that I savy him long before he saw me." "His turning up here is unusual. s I'll check on his alibi," the captain cap-tain growled. "As routine it is necessary, but in my opinion you may count him out," Sidney replied. "lie comes into this inquiry only as a man who rescued Nc'.Ia Langdon from possible drowning." "Yuu can never tell in a murder mur-der case. According to reports I have just received, Lcsencoff would have been glad to have Langdon out of bus way. I7e was in love with Miss Ilcmpf.eld himself." him-self." (To Be Continued) investigated, said Eloomquist was-treated was-treated at the Amer ican Fc rk hospital, hos-pital, then returned to his home. FATALLY IN-Jl RED LEWISTON, Ida., Nov. 4 (f.D Nez Perce county sh riff's officers today reported Ira M. Kenyon. 64, Kellogg, was fatally injured yesterday when the car in which he was riding blew a tire and overturned over-turned near here. He died en route to a hospital. His daughter, Mrs. Eugene K. Duff, and her husband and four childrrn, all of Spokane, wore uninjured. un-injured. Democratic Candidate for County niiOiuoy ARNOLD C. kOVIANOl ! Mr. Kovhuco appreciates the I loyal support I'n.vo has given ' htm in the p..s' aa.l ii lie is ! elected will continue to Taith- I; fully-' Kf'ive- Utah County and I ! the1 offia! of Count v Attonier I Paid PoiiLi'-d Advertisement hv 11 iends of A. C. Royianci ) |