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Show PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD.FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7,' 1941 PAGE THREE 0. of G. Election At Spanish Fork SPANISH FORK Election of five men, board members, to the Spanish Fork chamber of commerce com-merce for a term of three years will be held this week, according to Jex BoyacK, president. An official of-ficial canvas of the returns will Ibe held Monday, Feb. 10 by the Selection committee. The board will also have five one-year and five two-year holdover members. When ithe new members have been elect-led elect-led the board of 15 members will elect a president, two vice presidents presi-dents and a secretary-treasurer. Flans are under way to hold a : membership program and ban FOR THE BEST QUALITY AND SERVICE CALL THOMAS GROCERY 275 East Third South - Phones 129 - 217 PITT'TE'H Brookfield tfy ? m UUi ACiil First Quality OlEOriARGARIIIE - Gem ... Ib. 16s BEAII3 - Pink Eye ...... 2 lbs. Wz DAIiAEJAS - Fancy : lb. Cz C0RirSeaahmTr.a.u..,. 3 cans 25s PEAS SJ : ... 2 cam 19c GRAPEFRUIT JUICE S 15c TEXSUN f A r&rT???rffTT! Texas 70 Size BETTER MEATS BEEF ROAST iTI Young Meat nnnrr rrj?T Boston Cut nuns Fat Stewing MEM ROASTIIIG CHICKENS SLICED BACOUSE1. BACOII SQUARES IK ocrurrfece ....lb. 16c VEAL ROAST Ib. 22c EIAI'IS WhokTor Piece lb. 2?C GROUIID R0U1ID Fresh Ib. 25c HOCK CIIICIIEII LEGS .. 3 fcr lCc SIRLOIH STEAKS"1.. lb. 25c 1 .- , ...! - ! Iff . .4 : i. . ;M h . : ; - Regardless of the coffee-maker you have, Hills Bros. Coffee can be successfully used in it "as is." Thi Covudk Gf&nd produces the maximum of flavor and aroma those delicious qualities that make a steaming cup of Hills Hros. Coffee so enjoyable. LOOK! RIGHT THERE ON THE SIDE OF THE CAN ARE COFFEE-MAK1NO DIRECTIONS FOR ANY METHOD Thz CoVudt Gjund is guaranteed to produce best results In C2IP Q GLASS MAKER (g PERCOLATOR OR POT Q If directions on side of Hills Bros Coffee can ere followed quet sometime in March when officers will be installed for the ensuing year. The local chamber cham-ber of commerce has a membership member-ship of about 98 per cent of the businessmen, it is stated by Mr. Boyack, who will retire from office of-fice this month. Gus P. Back-man Back-man of the Salt Lake chamber ol commerce stated that this was an enviable record. Happy Hour Dancing Club The Happy Hour Dancing club Is holding a party at the Vineyard Vine-yard ward hall Saturday evening, with the Acadlans of Salt Lake City, furnishing the music. Pink 5C BETTER MEALS ....lb. lCc Tender lb. 20c lb. 19c lt 25c Fresh Colored Each 12c SHI : "Just look, at Jack drinking a second cup of coffee." HE i "VC'hy not I can't ever resist Hills Bros. Coffee." 1 -v. - LA -a Obituaries Dean R. Swasey Dean R. Swasey, 12-day old son of Lucius R. and Inez Durrant Swasey of Duchesne, died early t riday raoniing at the home of an dutii., lavs, uuy Latue Veach, at 17th West and Eighth South iiirtet, alter a two-uay illness. u.e cnuu was uorn January 26, 1941 in trovo. Surviving are uie aieius, tnree Bisters, Ardell, .i.iuiua and iJOniiu, a bruuivi, George Lucius; three grandparents, grandpar-ents, wirs. inaiy jeauette fawaaey oi L.onettt; jonn ii. tjia iua reu ruiciai sivitcs will be helu Sunuay at i.:u at tnc Durrant .ta.uu.e, i.0o vest i-irsi i(orun ouclu ii.tiiud may can a. uit. iei' mortuary, faaturuiiy eveiiiiij, u.. ui.o u.raia iiOme banua), piwi lu Lue ci ncvs. iniet iueiik m De in uie i-rovo uurial parK. Mrs. Edith Young Funeral services for Mrs. kuith May Anderson Young, wife ot William Young, Jr., were held In the Sixth ward chapel Thursday aiternoon, with Seymour D. Gray of the bishopric, In charge. The Murdock sisters' trio eang "The Green Cathedral," witn Mis. Fay Loveless at the piano. Peter M. Jensen of the bishopric, oflered prayer, and Murray Roberts Rob-erts sang, "One Sweet Solemn Mhought." Remarks were made by LeRoy J. Olsen and Pres. Herald R. Clark, and the Murdock sisters rendered "Lassie, O'Mine." Bishop Bish-op Terry J. Oldroyd spoke, and a duet, "Going Home," was sung by Mra. Anna Hansgen and Mrs. Oiga Cook. Ray V. Wentz closed with prayer, pray-er, and the grave at the Provo City Burial park was dedicated by Patriarch Andrew M. Anderson. Ander-son. Double Funeral Services Slated Double funeral services for Mr. ana Mrs. Clive Moss Roberts who were killed in an automobile accident ac-cident Wednesday will be held Sunuay at 2 p. m. at Woods Cross. Mr. Roberts is a son of Mrs. J. V. Wragg of Provo. Fathers and Sons Banquet Saturday PLEASANT GROVE A banquet ban-quet will be given Saturday evening eve-ning in thi ward chapel by the scouts of the Third ward, at which the parents of the boys will be guests. Following the dinner, served scout style, the parents will participate par-ticipate in various scout activi ties. A. A. Anderson, chief scout ex ecutive of the Utah National Parks council, will be a special guest in addition to the trobp comimttee and district committee. Scouts that head committees are Charles Christiansen, tables and dishes; John Hilton, serving; Stan Walker, table decorations .Arrangements are under the sup ervision of Calvin Walker, 1 nomas Walkerand Fred C. Schoell. (kden Livestock OGDfcJN, Feb. 7 iUX Live stock: . Hotrs: 800. few butchers on desirable quality, early Bales $8.00 on best 180 to 230 pound weighta or 10c higher, good to choice butchers under 180 and over pounds $7.50 to $7.75. Sheep 1050, no early sales. MARKETS at a Glance Stacks irregularly lower and quiet. Bonds lower. Silver unchanged. Metal Prices NEW YORK. Feb. 7 (U.R) To day's custom smelters prices for delivered metals (cents per lb.): Copper: Electrolytic 12-12 Vi; export N. Y. f.a .s. 10 '4; casting f.o.b. refinery 12U; lake, dehv ered 12. Tini Spot straits 50 ;. Lead: New York 5.50-.55; East St. Louis 5.35. d.-t.-o. annum 3 - sir -j.We Hrirtj? Samples to Your Home-Make Home-Make Your Drapes, and Hang Them All at Material Costs only! -j.Have Your Furniture Beautifully Slipcovered Slip-covered by Expert Workmen at Once-a-Year Low Prices! . All Upholstry Work Booked in January or February at Greatly Reduced Prices! Place Your" Order in January or February-We February-We will make delivery later as you wish I BHIGHIIZI (Continued from Page One) could no longer bomb Alexandria or Suez from north African bases. Tied in with the British success suc-cess In Libya, especially In view of increasing German pressure to force the Vichy government into in-to further collaboration with the Reich, was a radio speech from Algiers by Gen. Maxime Weygand in which he denied reports abroad that France would turn over her great nrval base at Bizerte, at the northern tip of Tunisia, to Germany. Speaking in the name of the French government, Weygand, commander-in-chief of France's north African troops, said also unoccupied un-occupied France would not permit Germany to use Bizerte for the landing of troops which might be used to bolster Italian armed forces in Tripolitania. Middle east headquarters of the Royal Air Force disclosed British air power had played an Important role in forcing capitulation of Benghazi. The city's airdromes at Berka, Benina and Jedabya were blasted with "several tons of bombs" on Wednesday night and early Thursday to facilitate the British attack on the capital and Benghazi itself also was attacked by British aircraft "with considerable consid-erable damage." While the army of the Nile swept to triumph at Benghazi, the British accelerated their cam-naign cam-naign in East Africa. Italian prisoners pris-oners in Eritrea mounted to 3.500 "with many more coming in," and British operations about Keren, onlv 35 miles from the Eritrean capital of Asmara, were reported developing "satisfactorily." Continued progress was made in the Ethiopian campaign, where Imperial forces and Ethiopians advanced on the road to Gondar, which lies north of Lake Tana, headwater of the blu Nile. And -lown in Italian Romaliland, Brit ish forces invading the colony were described a? extending the are of penetration on all fronts. British believed the fall of Benghazi must deal a tremendous blow to Italian morale. Then -vas rejoicing in Londan and Cairo that Italy's hopes to drive fo Alexandria fnd the Sue. canal had been definitely smashed. The Italian high command in Rnme virtually rnnoHed the Ics af Benghazi by asserting"a violent battle" was rarinsr south of Rerr. hazi between Italian and British troops. In Rome hundreds of trnnm vere called out to re-enforce the normal Carabinieri guard at the United States embassy and consu-'ate consu-'ate general, as university rtu-ients rtu-ients staged patriotic parades in h" ptrnpts. protesting the British aid bill now being debated by rontrress in Washington. It was reported in Athens that frr-of troons had broken ui) two Ttalian mechanized attacks in the Klisura sector of the Albanian front. Negotiations to settle the territorial terri-torial dispute between French In-do-China and Thailand (Siam) opened in Tokyo with Japan as miator. There was another conference m Rome among German and Italian Ital-ian delegates "seeking to synchronize synchron-ize their economy and bring German-occupied countries into their economic orbit. Tremendous interest centered on Paris, where Admiral Jean Dar-Tan. Dar-Tan. representing Marshal Henri Philippe Petain' Vichy government, govern-ment, was scheduled to submit to Pierre Laval and Nazi authorities Vichy's counter-proposals for reorganization re-organization of the French cabinet along lines of "collaboration with the Reich's new world order.' STMIIE (Continued from Page One) president of the Association of American Railroads, in an effort to work out an agreement. 'I know of no plans for a conference con-ference with Pel ley," Jewell said. "We expect to proceed as planned. plan-ned. We, of course, hope an agreement agree-ment can t2 reached without a strike. LOS ANGELES, Feb. 7 O-'.R) President William Jeffers of the Union Pacific railroad said today he was confident there will be no strikes on American railroads to hamper national preparedness. His statement followed an announcement an-nouncement in Washington that a strike vote would be taken Feb. 15 by 14 railroad brotherhood unions over a dispute between the railroads and the brotherhoods. Jeffers said he believed the issue would ba settled by . "mediation along well-defined lines." L I 1 I II I I KOVJ on ARL1Y TO PROD OOuOER CRASH LOVELOCK, Nev., Feb. 7 U.n The shattered bodies of eight army flierta, killed when their flying fortress smashed into a desert mountain and exploded, were brought into Lovelock today as the army prepared a formal inquiry into the mysterous accident. acci-dent. Army officers refused to speculate specu-late on what caused the big bomber, bom-ber, loaded with secret experimental experi-mental equipment, ' to come screaming out of the clouds in a power dive and flatten itself on the side of Ragged Top mountain. There was an unofficial suggestion sugges-tion of sabotage. 1'he charred broken bodies of the eight victims, strapped in their unused parachutes, were still hot from the searing explosion of 2500 gallons of gasoline and undertakers burned their hands as the bodies were loaded into CCC trucks and brought here. The plan, guarded by 12 CCC men, lay in a molten heap, with rivulets of metal on its sides attesting at-testing the blasting heat of . the explosion. The Impact of the crash would have generated enough heat to fire the gasoline tanks even if the Ignition had been"-cut, observers said. Army officers stripped off some of the plane's most secret instruments instru-ments which included the famed Norden bombsight although ev-ed ev-ed and melted almost beyond erything on the bomber was burn-recognition. burn-recognition. Study ers Dcot Allotment Ray Jordre of Washington, D. C, sugar assistant for the western west-ern division of AAA program at a meeting with Utah, Millard and Juab county beet growers here today. Because excessive stocks of beet sugar have accumulated following fol-lowing record production in the domestic beet area during the last three years, the 1941 national allotment al-lotment will represent a 16.2 per cent reduction from the 979.000 acres planted in 1940, a cut which Utah will share commensurately, Mr. Jordre said. Application forms for sugar beet allotments have been mailed from the local AAA office to growers. These must be returned by February 20. Any growers who failed to receive application forms must acquire these at the county office. s::ow upEi (Continued from Page One) cation building for Vivian park at 10 a. m. A figure skating exhibition by Jack Rambeau is scheduled for 11 o'clock. At 11:20 comes the men's skate race folowed by the coed skating contest. The men's three legged ice skating race takes place at noon. The men's relay skating race is at 12:15 and the girls do their relay racing at 12:30. The last skating event of the day, the men's skate jumping contest con-test is at 12:45. Following the sandwiches and hot chocolate at 1 p .m., the carnival queen picks up her "icy sceptre" and bids the students welcome. The afternoon is devoted to those who are happiest riding the wind on two strips of pin. The ski race down the mountainside begins at 2:15. The big event of the day, the ski jumping contest comes at 2:45. For those who prefer sports which Insure more safety to life and limb, there will be snow modeling mod-eling contests, sleigh riding, tobogganing, to-bogganing, sliding down snowbanks snow-banks on cardboard plus a warm fire and dancing to the nickelodian in the inn. GIIAL'OjZR (Continued from Page One) the workers. "The new program of the chamber will require at least a minimum of $11,000, and many workers have - expressed their determination to stay with it for the next few1 days until this amount is rawed. Of course there will be no further report meetings, meet-ings, but we are hopeful that many new members of the chamber cham-ber will be reported during the next few days. "The entire mobilization organization organ-ization has functioned admirably in every way. The new interest and enthusiasm in the chamber program has been of inestimable value and we are confident this interest will continue. "To the nPw members we extend ex-tend a hearty welcome and the hope that they will take an active part in chamber affairs. This is a community organization, and it is now receiving the whole-hearted support of most of the community. commun-ity. The tentative program for the chamber will be announced soon, subject to the approval of the membership, and we hope that every member will take part in formulating this program and putting put-ting it into effect." Elvela Mitra, the whispering fungus, makes .a sizzling noise, like whispering noises. Parking meters for automobiles now are used in 155 cities in the United States. GO (Continued from Page One) ings on the reorganization bill, asserting that "the people should examine it closely and be well versed in its provisions." Meanwhile, the controversial horse race bill reappeared in the house. l't was introduced earlier In the week but was withdrawn when one of its sponsors refused use of his name. While the governor met with the house reorganization committee, commit-tee, the senate debated two controversial con-troversial tax bills. A 'tax limitation bill which would have limited taxes on tangible and real property to 2 per cent was defeated 14 to 7 after heated debate. de-bate. Chief opponents were Sens. Grant MacFarlane, D., Salt Lake and William A. Dawson, R., Davis, Da-vis, who contended the bill was "all right in principle but impracticable impracti-cable in application." School Bill Disputed A bill which would permit Salt Lake City to increase its tax levy for school purposes was sharply disputed. Sen. Stanley Child, D., Salt Lake, contended the increase was necessary to build more schoolrooms to care for an increased in-creased school burden. Opposition senators suggested Salt Lake reduce re-duce its teachers' salaries instead, claiming the average Salt Lake salary was now $1,730 a year, compared with a state average of $1,325. The house scheduled a meeting at 2 p.m., when debate on the slum clearance program was to be resumed. Gov. Maw signed his second bill of the session. It was a measure to allow county recorders in counties where there are no rgular abstractors to perform the duties of such persons. , Hearing Granted Scott Thompson; : I Scott Thompson, who resigned I as Provo fire chief at Mayor Mark Anderson's request following a traffic accident in which he was involved and was refused reinstatement rein-statement a3 a fireman, will present pre-sent his arguments for continued employment in the department at a civil service commission hearing February 20 at 3:30 p. m. in the city commission room. The hearing was granted at Thompson's request at a meeting of the civil service ; commission Thursday afternoon. Members of the commission are Robert E. Curtis, chairman, Mark D. Eg-gertsen Eg-gertsen and H. V. Hoyt. ! AA -LAST TIMES TONIGHT I- Bing Mary Basil Crosby Martin Rath bone "Rhythm On the River" Dick Joan POWELL BLONDELL "I Want a Divorce" NEW TOMORROW! 2 TOP HITS! AT REGULAR BARGAIN PRICES! First Thrills! Heart -Tugs! You'll Say It's Great ! Dnv MHE in EUGENIE LE0NT0V1CH M AIT BETH HUGHES lobert LOWER! s-r J Plus This Second Hit! . f ... CQimr One man brings iustice ... to the most lawlo of VJr tgiwns! C c. Elooor; o Post Presidents The importance of membership in Twenty-Thirty was extolled by past presidents of the Provo 20-30 club at the second anual past presidents program Thursday night at Haase cafe. The past presidents, in the order they headed the club, are: Bob Bushman, now of Reno, represented at the meeting by Mervin Redden, past active charter char-ter member; Clarence Vacher of Ogden, represented by Hal Gadd; Don M. Innes, now president of the Provo Exchange club; Henry Falkner, Exchange club vice president; presi-dent; Dr. David Morgan, in California Cali-fornia in government service, represented by Max Andrews; George Shaw; Loyal Mortensen, represented by Clyde Ward; Arthur Ar-thur L. BMckett and Elmo Peters. Past achievements of the 20-30 ciub were reviewed, and the speakers speak-ers told of the opportunities afforded af-forded through membership in the organization. The Provo club pioneered 20-30 in Utah. President Kenneth Martin pre LAST TWO DAYS! THRILLING! A GREAT ACTRESS IN A GREAT STORY! e ran C3AUE mm EXTRA! Color Cartoon News FBI llllii J HERBERT MARSHALL JAMES STEPHENSON miMMiuon.uutwNKun.A WILLIAM WYLERM.wutiuiwtM Starts """""""""I -LsD as iho vast I western plains in I kHH tno turbulent era J of flaming feuds I and new frontiers! 'A "v? - ss - 1 - - - , L ANY SEAT 30 LAST 2 DAYS! J I I I Twin Comedu with Patricia f.! orison 1 1 Ricardo Cortez Chris-Pin Kartin & is the "Cisco Kfi" ia t Starts with MIDNIGHT PREVIEW SATURDAY at 11:45! FIRST HIT! Tki LittU Cl ' L wum't tier! - 4 bttWWb Uftt.ill.,.. 1. J H fit .J sided at the meeting. Three new members Max Jones, Lester Burningham and Vaughan Holdway were initiated by Vaughn Taylor and Vice President Presi-dent Harold Ward. Sam Pratt, Donna Ellertsen and Allen Jensen played a flute trio, and Miss Beth Pratt gave a reading. read-ing. Three past active charter members mem-bers were introduced Paul Rob-ley, Rob-ley, Leo Hales and Archie Jones. Scandinavians To Hear Stake Heads President R. J. Murdock of the Utah stake and his counselors, Herald R. Clark and Leon New-ren, New-ren, will be the speakers at the Scandinavian L. D. S. organization organiza-tion meeting to be held Sunday at 10:30 in the Seminary building, announces A. C. Andersen, president. presi-dent. The public is invited to attend. Vocal numbers will be by Viggo Christiansen and the Petersen sisters. sis-ters. - The humming-bird beats its wings about 50 times a second; the bumble-bee 240 times a second. sec-ond. Ends With LATE SHOW SATURDAY! SUNDAY! 2 ANY TIME! IT VToniirht and h UJUJ Sa Saturday! and Action Hits! With Your Favorite COMEDY TEAM VT 'V at Tuna vm trrr I' 2 ' VAUiTj J W- W - it FOR MORE FUN THIS CO-FEATURE! irSOPENHOUSI V ettheNU nut-hou:ei ! "Z - c y |