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Show JPROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD. MONDAY, JUNE 9, 1941 H m war . TM UMrtr bu . Vaaday RcrmM PaMtaaad ay ta Wsst Itml, Proro, Dah. Entarad m aeeood tltn matter t tha poatoffls ta Prora, Utah, sndar ts set Mwa t, UTS.- -' Ollmam, meal Italhman. National Advartlams rasra-'aantatWaa, rasra-'aantatWaa, Now Tork. M rrsnetaaa, Detroit. Boot on. Lea loa, Cnteara. Mam bar United Ft too, K. B. A. Serrtea. Bdltara lukun the Bcrlpra Uifoi of Newepapera and Aodlt Bareea at Circulation. ubaerlptlod tormi by carrier la Dtaa eoantr. eents tba month. S.s for ats mentha. in advance; 11.11 the rear, la advaaee: ay wall la eoasty. M : aatrtdo eonntr ll.tl taa jroar la adranpa. Herald will aa aaaaata flnAneial appear ta advertisement pasiieaea tba aaaa la at mail n wui rearms par .nv taa traofraphieai Mistake eecnre. Where Were You? ;; "Where were you when the Tuscania' went down ?" Soldiers in rough banter used to shout that at one another an-other in 1918 a gentle reproof from the old-timer to the new recruit. It was the soldier equivalent to "What did you 'do in the Big War, daddy ?" Some day, maybe soon, similar questions are going to be asked again. "Where were you," it may be asked, "when the United States was declared to be in a state of emergency, and the hard-pressed British waited for the planes and tanks that might have saved them?" Some, it would seem, will have to answer, "Oh, I was out on strike for $1.40 an hour instead of $1.35! I was listening 'to speeches by leaders who were interested in other things than the republic's success." Or, "I was fighting the Wagner act you know, that law that provided for collective bargaining back when the .government .govern-ment trusted to management and labor to have the wit to settle their differences without risking national safety. Or, "I was out to get something for ME. I didn't realize that if we all went down together there would be nothing either for HIM or for ME!" The Tuscania was a British troopship, carrying Michigan Michi-gan and Wisconsin National Guardsmen. She was submarined subma-rined Feb. 5, 1918, off the Irish coast. Those who had already al-ready answered their country's call at that time were always proud that they were in khaki when, this happened. Today's Tuscania isn't a ship at all. It is a national emergency of production. The national safety depends on turning out ships, planes, guns, war material of all kinds, with the utmost possible speed. On the fact that we face a grave emergency no one disagrees. Well, it is here and now. It is not a theory, but a fact. If this battle is lost, if this Tuscania goes down, there will be many a reproachful question, "Where were you in the Battle of Production?" Did you do your job, or did rivet and girder lie idle beneath be-neath your hand ? Did you do your job, or did the Defense bond remain unbought in the Treasury vault? Did you do your job, or did you find excuses? It is time to ask the questions now, each man and woman of himself and herself, and to get answers that can be repeated re-peated without shame at some future time when they might be asked by others in sorrow and in reproach. The unlimited national emergency is here! Where are ! Six Months, " This is how the Germans are plaving the game in Ecuador: Ecua-dor: PeODle in the market for machinery there are- heinr told that "if the United States can't deliver it within six months, better wait and order from Germany. By that time she will be able to deliver it." That doesn't suggest as much German confidence in winning the war quickly as you might think. German salesmen sales-men down there can't deliver now ; they have to say something; some-thing; similar promises last year were not made good. But it does suggest that the United States problem of production is greater than many realize even yet. Not only must we provide the sinews of war, but we must, in order to solidify our future trade position in the Americas, meet demands there, too. Remember the vital importance of this double task when you are asked to .do without some product you had vaguely intended to 11 . , 'Herald (Kxeaatta luwlu u Salter) Pabltah Bandar Mernlnv HaraJd Corporation. Soata raeponatblllt? e any errors wale m ni aoiainna. a iw " , t buy, but can do without. 5- Are Ya Listenin'? If 1 1 w - OUT OUR WAY ( KIUUKI' A SMAKE ? HE'S OVER BV WEU.,Wr DOM'T I THAT" SECOND ) tMzT, S$&M Z&Z&X.vov hit him With c tree an' r M JW vJM oWE OFTHEM Y CANT THROW I WZCk BK3 STONES THEM BUS JtM SK 5 AN SIT IT OVER STONES THAT ff with? dom't V far rk Vyomt tv Nf a stttvtcc . mc. t. m. f a o. t. mt. - Radio Frequency Modulation Shown Considerable interest In the new radio frequency modulation was stirred by a picture presented at the Provo high school Thursday night through the Provo Amateur Radio club. A feature of the evening was showing of a radio-controlled automobile which could honk its horn, switch the lights, turn in any direction, stop itself, etc. It was controlled by a transmitter located 10 feet from the car. The demonstration was the first to be shown in the intermoun-tain intermoun-tain area and the Provo Amateur Radio club was proud to be the sponsor, said Jack llalliday, chairman. chair-man. Cranium Crackers EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN The eastern Mediterranean was once known as a region of blue water and fine tobaccos, but now ,rAWAMJ-MJinjUPMr Euro- 1 noon hartla atAa Vf Wi H vrmr pean battle area. Mobilize your mental forces to repel this barrage bar-rage of questions about the lands and waters east of Greece. 1. Which island is the larger, Crete or Cyprus, and to what nation na-tion did each belong at the .start of the war? 2. Was the British battle cruiser cruis-er Hood sunk by dive bombers in the great air-sea battle off Crete? 3. What is the only British pos- J acaaiuii umvr - liih.ii an isuiiiu touching' the eastern Mediterran ean Sea? 4. What country ruled Syria before it became a French man date? 5. Where are the Dodecanese Islands and what country owns them? Answers on Page Eight 1. BOMBER, Off. Your Social New employee shows his social security account number card to his employer so that employer will be sure to get the number and name exactly as they are on the card. The money deducted from John Henry Worker's wages under the social security act goes to help pay for a monthly Income for him in his old age or one for his family in case of his death To get his full credit toward this insurance insur-ance he needs to make certain that his employer has a record of his" name and social security account number exactly as they appear on his account number card; because his employer has to give these when he reports John's wages to the government. Therefore, John shows his card to his employer. He gets his card from the social security board's field office. Editor's Uote: Many work ers are now changing Jobs or taking their first Job as a result of the national defense program. Most of these jobs are covered by, old-age and survivors bMcurance under the Social Security Act William Wil-liam B. Hayward, manager of the social security board's Salt Lake field office, has prepared a series of fight brief articles for the PROVO HERALD explaining the steps each worker should now take In connection with his Social Security account to avoid delays or difficulties when he or his family are ready to collect Insurance benefits. Following Is No. 1. Every Utah worker who has deductions made from his wages for old-age and survivors insur ance under the social security act snouia see to it mat each em ployer he works for has a record of his name and his social securi ty account number just as they are shown on his account number card. The first step he must take is to make certain that the social security board has a full record of his wages earned in employ ment coverea Dy this insurance system. The board keeps a rec ord of his wages in order to determine de-termine the amount of his month ly retirement benefits after age ta, or ms family's benefits in case of his death. Therefore, it is important that every day's pay oe credited to nis social security account. Each worker's account has a number the same number that is on the account number card issued to him by the social se curity board. The employer re ports the worker's wages to the social security board using the name and number the worker gives him. If these are not exactly as snown on the worker's ac count number card, the social security board cannot credit his wages to his account until the error- can be corrected. The best plan for the worker to follow is to show his account card to each employer he works for so that his name and account number num-ber will be taken1 down just as they are on the card. Each worker can properly have only one social security account number. Any worker who has re ceived more than one account number should get in touch with the social security board's near by Williams Security - corded in one account. He should also find out which number he should use in the future. A worker whose account number num-ber card is lost or worn out should get a new card (with the same number) at the social security se-curity board's Provo office. There is no charge for duplicate cards. Provoan Awarded His Ph, D. Degree Mrs. Edith B. Cottam 'has received re-ceived word that her son, Howard R. Cottam, was awarded the degree de-gree of doctor of philosophy, by the university of Wisconsin, at its mid-year commencement. . Dr. Cottam is now an assistant professor of rural sociology at Pennsylvania State college. He was employed last year as research re-search assistant at Ohio State university, and formerly served as assistant to the dean of men and dean of the summer session at the University of Wisconsin. Following his graduation from the B. Y. U. in '32, he was en gaged in research with welfare agencies in Utah, until Septem ber, 1935, when he accepted a graduate as&istantship at the University of Wisconsin. AUNT HET By ROBERT QUILLEN "I don't know what the country Is cotnin' to. plenty o people tell us we've got to have trigger families, but the oaes that do the talldn' : are all men." O SERIAL STORY - FOOTSTEPS IN THE BY EUNORE COWAN STONE " tnrlne haa bera alffcte Dbornh. trie tm than tn-ad cravrrnatlM bat err J "' r rtas tefca tkMMrkta bark tm war. II la father mem rider la 114. Jka bell rlava. Peborak mpeum the 'tmettp man. irk mi- Stethaa la Qenaaa. Yam i i '5 ?ot wii- aelaV Htephaa rcnliea. HATE OB LOVE CHAPTER VIII a moment, as Steohnn Came forward. iSohnrnVi ostishf her first real glimpse of tha man ene naa only half suspected beneath be-neath the bov With whnm aha ha1 played en older man, a little hard perhaps a little ruthless. "But it was necessary to come, Excellency" th littl man hur ried on before Stephen could stop nun. -xou, yourself, would have been angry not to know. It Is to be earlier than we thought A fishing boat will slip you out through the fog. The Coast Guard" "Enough!" Stephan Interrupted sternly. "Wait here. We will talk. ... I am sorry." He turned to Deborah, speaking again in English. "He is an old family servant ser-vant iWilhelm. I must talk with him, if you will forgive me." "Surely. Ask him to come in." "Thank you' but we shall do ery well walking about outside." Already he had found his coat in the closet where Bridgie had hung it, and was shrugging into it In those brief sentences he had gone away again pleasantly, courteously as always, but very finally behind his walL With crisp finality he stepped out into the night and closed the door. Deborah stood, straining her eyes to follow him through the glass of the door; but a few steps down the walk, his white raincoat arid fair head were completely engulfed in the mist. As if an unpleasantly clammy head had brushed her face, Deborah shivered. shiv-ered. ... So it had come then that time she had always felt must come some day. Confused impressions .raced through her memory: "They do be sayin that the crew of a schooner j that run in out of the fog tells of sightin' wan of thim furrin flghlir ships, skulk in' around off the coast," Bridgie had said. . . . Stephan's startled absorption, in the messages the Coast Guard cutters were flashing out. Could he read them? If so, what about them had disturbed him so much? And now that strange, breathless little foreigner: "A fishing boat - NEBO TO STAGE SCOUT DRIVE A one-day campaign to secure funds to operate the Nebo Boy Scout district for the year will be staged in Payson June 18 announces an-nounces R. W. Doman, assistant executive for the Utah National Parks council. Heading the drive will be J. S. Reece secretary of the Strawberry Straw-berry Water Users association, who has selected Vernal Twede and S. Roland Lindsay as publicity publici-ty and solicitations committee chairmen, respectively. Stanley Wilson, Don McCoy and Earl Brown are also members of the publicity committee, while Sid Corey, Henry Jeppson, Abner Baird, Vern Persson and George Cheever are solicitations committee commit-tee members. The publicity cqmmttiee, among other things, will have charge of the victory dance at Arrowhead the night of the drive, with Earl Brown as chairman. Ivan Hawkins will direct the drive in the Benjamin area, while Peter Carter will head the campaign cam-paign at Spring Lake. The drive will be concentrated in the business district. Banquets and other functions will be conducted con-ducted later in the year in the various wards. Birthdays Tuesday, June 10 N. GUNNAR RASMUSON J. C. MOFFITT DEAN LEWIS DOROTHY JANSON MRS. HANNAH ANDERSON Summer SNIFFLES, Sufferer from summer cold discomfort become Terr grate ful when they find bow quickly Menthol turn brings relief. You imply insert this gentle ointment oint-ment In your nostrils, and it begins be-gins to work with remarkable speed. Soon It checks the sniffling, snif-fling, sneezing, stuffiness, and running reduces the dee Ire to blow restores comfort. ,MS-.S.n..-S-T-SM-SMl will slip you out through the fog" Slip him out to what? . , . For what purpose? TT seemed like hours it was per- haps IS minutes before Stephan ODened the front door, huncr his raincoat jn the closet and came siowiy into the living room. He was Dale, and more rrava tnan Deborah had ever seen him. For a moment he stood silent, looking into the fire, his eyes wide and absent, as if. it seemed tn De borah, he were seeing for the first time wun complete clarity something some-thing he had always known, but had never quite recognized before ror what it really was. Finally he said without looking up. "You heard? ... I nm not sure how much you understood." "Enough," Eteborah said. "And not enough. 'So? . . . And the devil of it i that I cannot explain. I can only say that I did not plan it this way. I am torn between wan tin tr to kirk myself for coming here at all, aad unnappmess that I shall have so little time with you." "But if you must eo" Deborah cried, "why not eo onenlv. n hundreds of others have done. I could understand that. Why slip out throush the foa? AnH what nave the Coast Guard cutters to do Wltn it? . . . Unless it vnu that submarine the fishermen saw off the coast is waiting for unless un-less they need information that you can give them?" For an instant he stared at her incredulously. Then he gave a short, entirely unmirthful laugh. "Then that's what you believe!" he said. "I never drermed that you, too, felt this way about me that you could hate me this way." Hate Stenhan! But that was preposterous, when all that she really knew about him was kind and honorable and generous. Stenhan." sho stammcrri) wretchedly. "I I don't know what to believe except that I nm con tused and a utile frightened. . Believe me. it was not what I wanted to have it end this way. Yet it was . bound to come to the surface sooner or later all that I have never understood about vou: all that you did not want me to understand. It must be better this way than to leave it iust drifting there like a half-sub-J merged, frightening thing one tries ! to pretend isn't real." "PerhaDS ." he said irentlv ftr a while, "we should have talked more like this. I mean -at first But it was so pleasant just taJ nave run. Before long, I kept Pipe Plant Union Officers Elected Clifford Taylor of Springville has been re-elected president of Local 1654, Steel Workers Organizing Or-ganizing Committee, comprising workers at the Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe company. Doyle Curtis is vice president succeeding Ray Sorenson of Provo, Other officers elected or reelected re-elected include Paul Stewart, Provo, Pro-vo, recording secretary; Joseph' B. Hanson, Springville, financial secretary; Scott Wilkins, Provo, treaurer; Clinton Erickson, Provo, gkide; Don Knotts, Springville, guard. At the same election, ballots were cast for officers of the Utah state industrial union council, an election in which Ralph Peters of the local union is a candidate for vice president. Votes from mem- Fatlbieir?9s Pay Gift Suggestion Easy Rest Strong tubular steel frame. Comfortable shaped seat and back. Metal arm rests. Baked-on enamel finish in choice of cplors. Record-breaking value for Record Days ! . See Tomorrow's Paper for Another Father's Day Gift Idea! " '" mm mmm obi m FOG COPYRIGHT. IMt, NCA KRVtCK. INC. telling myself, perhaps I shall not have any more time to play. ... All the way up the Cape I thought over the things I wanted to say to you. Then I remembered, all the things I must not say to you. "Stephan," she cried, "but must you go?" "Believing-what you do, can It matter to you that I must go?" he asked. "You know it does. ... I think you even know how much." TOR an instant she was sure from the racing of her own blood that he was coins to touch her. When he did not, but continued con-tinued to stand there, his arms stiffly at his sides, his eyes grave ly searcning ners. she faltered. 'You said, a little whlln aev SteDhan. that there were thinea you wanted to say to me." "And you knew what I meant. You have known, almost frm the beginning, I think." "Then, if we both lirtderstanrt how can there be anything you must not say to me, Stephan?" "Because," he said somberly, "for more time than I run Innlr ahead, my life may be bound up with intrigue and violence. . . . And you were not meant for a life like that, my dear." How can vou be so sure?" De borah's fingers tightened on the edge of the table so that it Quiv ered with her own tremblin&T. "Through seven wars since my familv came to this rnuntrv alrmA not to speak of Indian uprisings the Lovett women have seen a good deal of fighting and violence." vio-lence." "If it were only that but the thins I am doin? could so vprv easily end in what many people might call disgrace." However it ends." Deborah said steadily, "I shall know that nothing noth-ing you do can be diseracefuL Stephan." And suddenly knew that she was speaking the truth. With an inarticulate sound that was half exultant lauchter anrl half protest, he took her into his arms. But there is so little time." he repeated. "And before I go, there are some things, at least, that you have a right to know." 'There is so much I want to know. . . . Oh, Stephan, I "really know so little about you!" "And there is still a great deal I cannot tell vou. But vou must understand enough so that if youJ read in the Da ners I mean if what I am trying to do goes, wrong, you won't have to think tht worst." (To Be Continued) 3 bers throughout the state must be in by June 15. The negotiating committee of local 1654, SWOC, has renewed negotiations for a signed two-party two-party agreement with the Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe company officials. Representing the SWOC in the negotiations are Varro C. Jones, state SWOC director; Mr. Taylor, president of the local union; Eld-red Eld-red Kay, Doyle Curtis and Mr. Peters. They will meet with O. H. King pipe company general manager man-ager ' and other company officials in a second negotiation meeting Thursday at 10 a. m. Meanwhile, a decision is being awaited from Edward G. Smith of Washington, D. C, who acted as trial examiner at a recent NLRB hearing here in which the pipe company was charged with violating the labor relations act by failure to sign a two-party agreement and by discriminating against an employe, Mr. Peters. Metal Chair Worth 3.49! Panel Arnis Tubular Steel Construction Phone 411 Provo, Utah I cum ra.Mi iirn all his past wages have been re est field office and find out- if 187 West Center St. |