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Show PRdVO "(UTAH)- DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 1941 PAGE THR&E Utah Exchange Gliibs To Greet National President A. Earl Washburn of Piedmont, Cat, newly-elected president of the National Exchange club, will be honor guest and speaker at a group meeting of Exchange clubs of . Salt Lake City, Provo, and Ogden Wednesday evening at Hotel Utah in Salt Lake City. Also a guest of honor at the meeting, which Will bring together members and wives from the three cities, will be Mrs. Washburn. Wash-burn. ' Active In Exchange ' activities for many years, Washburn . is a past national vice president, a past president of California state Exchange clubs, and a past president presi-dent of the Exchange club of Oakland, Cal. A graduate of University of California, - he- is a member of the American Legion and a former for-mer second lieutenant in the United States army with which he served during World War No. A large group of Provo Exchange Ex-change members and their wives will attend Wednesday , night's meeting, including President George I Young, Ted Braun, Paul Robley, Mervin Redden, Joe Perri, Dale Peterson, Max Bird, Blaine Hart, Don M. Innes, Shirt Black, Jim Tucker and Lynn J. Searle. Troop Committee Fully Organized SPANISH FORK A meeting of the Boy Scout troop committee commit-tee of the Second ward was held recently and Ezra Warner was chosen committee chairman. Andrew An-drew V. Nelson and James A. Measom were named committee members. David H. Jones was elected chairman of the Explorer committee; Walter H. Moore and J. A. Brockbank are committee members. Willis H. Hill is general gen-eral chairman of scout work in the troop; Bishop H. Eugene Hughes is finance chairman and Ernest G. Whitwood, song leader. Reed E. Warner is scoutmaster; Ivan Hall, assistant scoutmaster; Youell Warner is senior patrol leader; Henry Gardner is troop scribe and Stanley Black, Charles Char-les Keenan and Lester Ludlow are patrol leaders. SUTTON (Continued from Page One) positions, as well as purchasing agent, at the time of his death. He married Susie Jackson in Provo in March 1884. She died in 1900. and he later married Anna Schaper, who survives. He received his Master Maion'p degree in Story lodge No. 3 at Provo August 7, 1883. Two years later he became affiliated with Uintah lodge No. 7 at Park City. In 1903 he became a Scottish Rite member at Salt Lake City, and he was also affiliated with El Kalah temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, in Salt Lake City. Mr. Sutton, with his son, the late W. E. Sutton, started long ago the annual custom of providing provid-ing free Thanksgiving dinners for crippled children in the Shriners hospital. This practice was followed follow-ed 14 years. Surviving besides his widow are three daughters, Mrs. Edna S. Wentworth of Salt Lake City, Mrs. Emma Raddon of Alhampra, Cal., and Mrs. Susie Dopplmair of Oakland, Oak-land, Cal., a daughter-in-law, Mrs. W. E. Sutton; a stepson, Lawrence Schaper; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Lyndon Hooper, all of .Salt Lake City; two brothers, A. D. Sutton and D. D. Sutton, both of Provo; two sisters, Mrs. H. E. Sutherland of BakeiyfcddTg8anft. Mrs. F. W. Douglas of Los Angeles; 16 grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren. great-grandchildren. MARKETS a Glanco Stocks higher in moderate trading. Bonds irregularly higher; U. S. governments mixed. Curb stocks irregular. Silver unchanged. Cotton up. Wheat unchanged to 3-8 cent higher; corn off 1-8 to cent. This month we are celebrating s special event . . . "Customer Appreciation Month". To our Customers and Other Friends we say , . Thanh iot choosing us to serve you. . .Thanks for referring your friends to us. This confidence h er mest fncktts asset emd we shall de emrbest te centrum te merit it, FINANCE CO. 1 t rtoom 207 13 East Center St. Phone 2! Provo. Utah Over Walgreen Drug) Sahm Xmm Westea, Mar. n I 1 I I Umttntttm -i I I I -fry! $nmn aJT. 1 I Jaycc ss From Convention SPANISH FORK Jack H. Swenson,' president of the Utah state junior chamber of commerce, accompanied by J. Dean Fisher of Cedar City, and C R. Lomax of Nephi, Utah's national Jaycee directors, have returned to 'their homes after attending the annual an-nual meeting of the board of directors of the national organization organi-zation which was held in Chicago. Chi-cago. President Swenson reports that 81 of the 97 national directors were present. Mr. Swenson states that at the present time, there are 1087 local affiliated organizations composed com-posed of over 110,000 members. This is the largest group of young men's organizations in the world made up entirely of men between the ages of 21 and 35 years of age.fc&Xah alone has 27 affiliated clubs with 1300 members. Thespians Form Springville Unit SPRINGVILLE At the initial meeting of the nigh school chapter chap-ter of the National Thespians organization or-ganization Thursday night, Calvin Cal-vin Clyde was elected president for the current year. Prominent in high school speech and drama activities during the past three years, Calvin, a senior, will have charge of the various scholastic events in which drama students participate. Other officers named include: Junior Burgl, vice-president; lone Lewis, secretary; Wilna Brown, historian; John Strong, doorman. Miss Virginia Rivers is faculty advisor. The meeting was conducted at the high school art building, under direction of Reed Brockbank, retiring re-tiring president. Plans for the annual initiation were made, and the meeting was concluded with refreshments. Sewing Class to Start This Week PLEASANT GROVE Registrants Regis-trants are being accepted this week by Mrs. Marcelle Hawkins, American Fork, who is to conduct the WPA sponsored adult sewing class beginning' Wednesday at 3:30 p. m., in the Pleasant Grove high school. This course, which has been given for the past several years, oners expert free instruction to all women who are interested in learning dress designing, fitting or remodeling-. Individual helD will be given each enrollee, Mrs. nawxuu states. Class Officers Named at Lincoln Class officers have been elected at Lincoln high school as follows: Senior class Clifton Pyne, president; pres-ident; Bette Crandall, vice president; presi-dent; Faye Trunkey, secretary. Junior class Lloyd Worthen, president; Noma Loveless, vice president; Shirley Andrews, secretary. sec-retary. Sophomore class Louise Roh-bock, Roh-bock, president; Wallace Ferguson, Fergu-son, vice president; Helen Bunnell, secretary. Spraynozzle to Aid Evangelist Peter Spraynozzle, well known radio character, will speak tonight to-night in the art room of the Provo public library as an additional addi-tional attraction of the regular, sermon by Otis Gatewood in the series of meetings sponsored ty the Church of Christ. The services begin at 7:30. The public is invited to attend and to meet Mr. Spraynozzle personally. person-ally. No collections are taken. Another meeting is scheduled Thursday night at the art room. Ogden UvestockJ OGDEN, Utah, Sept., 30 (U.R) Livestock: Hogs, 120: Slow, talking steady to 15 cents lower or around $11.50 on good to choice 180 to 230-lb. butchers. Cattle, 280: Fairly active, best beef steers $9.65 to $10.50; about 10 loads Montana grass steers went to feeders at $9.35 to $9.65; medium to good slaughter heifers heif-ers $8.75 to $10.35. Sheep, 4,300: Nothing done early, "Monday's late sales steady on fat lambs, no feeders sold; six loads good to choice 83 -lb. local springers $10.75; odd small lots medium to good truck-ins $9.75 to $10.65. L. D. S. Conference Salt Lake City Oct. 1st to 5th, Inclusive EXCURSION RATES will be in effect via Salt Lake & Utah Railroad (Orem Line). Phone Local. Agent for full information informa-tion regarding DAILY and STOP-OVER rates. Safety Fir$t! Ride the Bis Red Cars Prof essor. Leatres For Stanford Fete John. C; Swensen, professor emeritus of sociology at Brigham Young i university left Monday night for Palo Alto, Calif, where he will attend a special celebra- PROF. JOHN C. SWENSON, tion at Stanford University in honor of students who attended the institution nearly a half century cen-tury ago. Professor Swensen attended Stanford from 1894-1898, at which time he received the A. B. degree. He joined the staff of Brigham Young university the same year, and during the 42 years intervening inter-vening has been a member of the faculty. He now holds the longest term of service at the university. ciiunciiiLL (Continued from Page One) for war aid in an all-out campaign cam-paign to divert American and other goods to the eastern front. 5. Berlin reported strong Russian Rus-sian counter - attacks on the Ukraine front (although claiming continued progress), while Nazi newspapers belittle American-British American-British aid to Russia and said that the Germans would get through the coming winter war in the east better than the. Red army. German sources disputed the British reports that shipping losses loss-es had been reduced, reporting unofficially that 662,000 tons of enemy shipping had been sunk in September, bringing total . war losses to 14,462,000 tons. Churchill's speech was the most cheerful since he became prime minister, although he warned of great sacrifices to come. In the course of his speech, Churchill said: 1 British shipping losses in the battle of the Atlantic were reduced in July, August and September Sep-tember to one-third of the total of the previous three months, and Britain (aided by the American patrol system) is confident that the expected intensification of U-boat U-boat warfare can be defeated. Axis sea losses have been increased in-creased 150 per cent in the last three months. 2. Britain will not hesitate to bomb Rome if the needs of war dictate such action in connection with the current heavy aerial, attacks at-tacks which seem designed to complete the cracking of Italy. 3. The United States war effort ef-fort has achieved "majestic momentum" mo-mentum" with the upward surge in American shipbuilding to keep supplies flowing to the foes of the Axis and materials already are pouring into Russia to aid in maintaining the "valiant" resistance re-sistance of the Red army. 4. Germany's "only shortage is in the air," but that 'is a very serious shortage," although Hitler Hit-ler still clings to the initiative in the war. 5. A new alliance will soon be announced among Britain, Russia and Iran, probably making Iran the key near eastern kingdom on the supply route to the Soviet union an active ally. The statement' of British position posi-tion came as British, American and Russian delegates to the Soviet So-viet war conference in Moscow met in technical committees to draft with utmost speed specific plans for supplying the Red army's war needs. The Royal Air Force carried out one of its heaviest attacks of the war on the German Baltic port of Stettin, supply base for German operations in the Russian Rus-sian Baltic. From 200 to 300 planes participated. Hamburg, Cherbourg and LeHavre also were attacked, and new raids were made on Italian air bases at Cafifiiari. Sardinia, and Ca tania, Sicily. The British admiralty admitted that the battleship Nelson suf fered some damage from an Ital ian airplane torpedo in the Mediterranean. Medi-terranean. Tokyo swung back to press at tacks on Britain and the United States and a sudden chill in Japanese-British relations was re ported. . The Turks were said to have refused to sell Chrome to Ger many. ROOSEVELT DEFENDS SOVIET CONSTITUTION WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 OLE) President, Roosevelt asserted today to-day that the Soviet constitution extends protection to religion and freedom of conscience essentially the same as the protections provided pro-vided in this country. " Four Prominent Utahns Succumb SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 30 (EE) - Utah today -mourned four prominent citizens. Attorney Adrian C. Ellis, former state Treasurer William. D. Sutton, Broker Louis A. Bailey and Mrs. Emily Traub Merrill, wife of Apostle Joseph F. Merrill of the L. D. S. church. All died yesterday, Ellis, 74,. a native of Nevada but a resident of Utah since 1892, gained national fame as a member of the law firm of Dickson and Ellis that figured in several famous fa-mous mining cases. He was' one of the men responsible for the organization or-ganization of the Columbia Steel company in Utah and was a director direc-tor of the Silver King Coalition Mines company, the First National Na-tional bank and the First Security corporation. Mrs. Merrill, 62, was a former instructor at the University of Utah and in Salt Lake City schools. She has been a Utah resident resi-dent 23 years and was active in auxiliary work of the Mormon church. Bailey, 76, was a retired broker but was best known in Utah for his active participation in charity and other works of the Elks lodge. Mr. Sutton's obituary is given fn greater detail elsewhere in today's to-day's edition. Giant Battleship Suffers Damages LONDON, Sept. 30 (UJJ) The admiralty admitted today the giant battleship Nelson had been torpedoed by Italian planes in the Mediterranean and that its speed had been reduced. There were no casualties. Thirteen Italian planes were shot down during the attack, made on a Mediterranean convoy, a communique said. It admitted two British fighter planes had been shot down but the crews had been saved. WAR IN BRIEF LONDON: Prime Minister Win ston Churchill warns Germany may switch from Russia to three-way three-way attack on Suez, Gibraltar and British Isles; says Atlantic sea losses cut by two-thirds, heavy sacrifices portend to keep Russians in field as first-class fighting foe of Hitler; RAF smashes Settin in 200-300 plane raid, bombs Hamburg, Ham-burg, Le Havre, Cherbourg; reports re-ports claim thousands arrested in Czechoslovakia, unrest spreads in Hungary, Bulgaria, Jugoslavia, Norway; admit Nelson suffered modest torpedo damage in Medi-t terranean. MOSCOW: Russians counter-at tack around Leningrad, claim 263 German planes shot down in 48 hours; report sabotage closes Czech Skoda plant three days. BERLIN: High command claims Italians defeat Russians east of Dnieper, taking several thousand prisoners; call reports of semi- encirclement of Kharkov prema ture; claim 210 Leningrad bunkers stormed; admit 24 Czechs, including includ-ing three former generals, executed, execut-ed, strict curfew enforced, all public assemblages banned. Interior Decoration Course To Be Given A course in interior decoration with practical value for Provo home-makers will be available at Brigham Young university each quarter this year, according to Professor B. F. Larsen, chairman of the art department. The class will meet at 11 a.'m. on Monday and Wednesday in Room 420 of the Education building, build-ing, and will carry two hours of university credit. The instructor will be Lynn D. Taylor, special instructor in art, who has had much practical experience in interior in-terior decorating, according to Professor Larsen. City Court Henry Jones of Provo, R. F. D, wrestling promoter, pleaded innocent in-nocent in Provo city court Tuesday Tues-day to a battery charge. His trial was set for October 16. Jones, the complaint alleges, used force and violence on the person of M. A. Brereton, Sept. 12 by bruising and beating the latter with his fists. Brereton was complaining witness. NEUTRALITY (Continued from Page One) of our citizens and the destruc tion of our ships wherever his armed vessels may find them; Connally said. "The Hitler ambition, the Nazi terror, paused at no boundary, hesitated at no sea, but with an ambition greater than Lucifer s, with a savage lust for power surpassing sur-passing that of Ghengis Khan, with a bestial appetite for loot and plunder, and mastery superior to that of Attila, hurled their swarming armies upon their neighboring nations in a campaign cam-paign of world conquest and world domination. "We should now re-assert and re-ordain our adherence to the doctrine of the freedom of the seas by modifying and amending the so-called neutrality act. me establishment of combat zones has failed." Hurricanes are the worst of all storms at sea. WPA tabor Use on Hospital Grounds Questioned Here A question as to whether or not WPA had the right to provide pro-vide labor for roadway construction construc-tion on the- Utah. Valley hospital grounds was being investigated today by W. D. Foster of the lands division of the U. S. district dis-trict attorney's office, Salt Lake City. .-. Mr. Foster, who met with the city commission, City Attorney I. E. Brockbank and City Engineer En-gineer ' E. A. Jacob, said the question seems to hinge on whether wheth-er the roadway is considered privately or publicly owned, and asked the city attorney to prepare pre-pare a - writtttr statement as to the city's position. Purpose of his Investigation, he said, was to determine whether there is cause for the government to sue Provo city for collection of about $2000, the amount WPA furnished in labor at the hospital hos-pital project. When the hospital was originally orig-inally proposed, Provo city agreed to donate $15,000 toward the project, this to be used in providing pro-viding a site and making the necessary public improvements. The city defftied the property over to the hospital board, although al-though the deed has never been recorded. The WPA project for the roadway road-way construction was duly 'approved 'ap-proved by the state WPA office, but after the work was done, an investigator was sent out from Washington" who reported back that the roadway was owned own-ed by a private Institution and Provo city should therefore reimburse reim-burse the government for the amount WPA spent. Mr. Brockbank and other city officials assured Mr. Foster that the city administration had acted 100 per cent in good faith in applying for the WPA project and that WPA had not questioned ques-tioned the project after thoroughly thorough-ly investigating' it. They declared that the Utah Valley hospital, is above all a public Institution, that not a dollar dol-lar goes to private gain, that the members of the board of directors which operate it are not paid, etc. "It is just as public as the Utah state hospital or any similar institution," they declared. Hall Is First to File His Petition E. J. "Ed" Hall Sr., retired railroad rail-road man, candidate for Provo city commissioner, this afternoon filed his nominating petition with mqre than the required number of ) signatures' at the office of City Recorder I. Grant Bench. Mr. Hall is the first candidate for office at the coming election to file his petition. He was foreman of the Union Pacific shops and roundhouse here for many years before retiring a few years ago. CONFERENCE (Continued from Page One) taries conference, general Sunday school conference. A special pageant, "Prepare Ye the Way," will be presented Wed nesday, Thursday and Friday nights in the tabernacle by the Aaronic priesthood. During the week, the various missions of the church will hold their semi-annual reunions. Nearly 20,000 persons are expected ex-pected to attend the various sessions. ses-sions. General L. D. S. Relief society conference sessions will be held Wednesday and Thursday in Salt Lake City, and all officers and members of local stakes are urged to attend. y Departmental work of the edu cational program will begin Wednesday Wed-nesday at 9:30 a. m., in the as sembly hall, followed by separate departmental- meetings. Thursday morning, an officers meeting will be held, and all stake officers are to attend. In the aft ernoon, a general meeting for everyone will be held, and music will be furnished by the Singing Mothers. Holand is the name of a country, coun-try, of linen fabric, of a city in Michigan and of a district in Lincolnshire, England. CONSTIPATION Simply by taking an oU-eef etable NR Tablet and a drink of water you are promised relief from constipation. See how different dif-ferent NR Tablets (Nature's Remedy) are positive action, yet gentle. Prove how dependable depend-able NR Tablet are for you. Candy coated or in the original uncoated form : that , millions use. Get the Coneincer Bex of 8 NR Tablets, candy coated; it's only a dime. Larger economy econ-omy sizes, too. Get tl CONVINCE ttr ill Government to . Day 14 Carloads Of Apples Here Fourteen carloads of apples will be purchased in Utah county prior to Saturday night 'by the Surplus Marketing Administration, it was decided at a meeting of the apple industry committee with Carl Payne, SMA representative, here Monday night, according to Clarence Clar-ence D. Ash ton, assistant county agricultural agent. The cars were allocated as follows: fol-lows: Provo-Orem area 10, and one each for Payson, Mapleton, Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove and Alpine areas.' The SMA will pay $1 per bushel for Jonathans and 95 cents per bushel for Delicious apples, Mr. Ashton said. The apples must be ring faced in bushel baskets and delivered .to the car. This is a good price, because the grade required is U. S. No. 1, 2Vi inches minimum, which is pretty small, Mr. Ashton pointed out. He declared that growers should demand a better price f rdm buyers seeking better and fancier grades. The better apples should bring from $1.15 to $1.25 per bushel. ' Growers should not get afraid and sell cheap, as t do so hurts not only themselves but others, he said. Under the present plans, the SMA will purchase apples in Utah county for three weeks. Growers between now and Monday night should make application for sale to the SMA next week. These applications ap-plications will be acted upon at a meeting of the industry committee Monday night. Applications may be given by telephone or personal contact to any of the committee, or the agricultural agri-cultural office in the city and county building. Members of the committee are Dewey Bennett, Alpine; Fred Scholes, Pleasant Grove; A. Ray Ekins, Provo; Clay Beesley, Mapleton; and A. C. Page, Payson. Turkey Growers In Convention SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 30 (U.R) The annual meeting of the Northwestern Turkey Growers' association continued today with members optimistic over an anticipated an-ticipated large and profitable crop. Herbert Beyers, secretary-manager of the association, predicted that there will be a shortage of the birds in November if the large consuming states observe Thanksgiving Nov. 20, as proclaimed pro-claimed by President Roosevelt but added there will be an extremely ex-tremely heavy crop in December and an even heavier one in January, Jan-uary, 1942. The three-day confab will end tomorrow. MBBM OIHIY ED AUDIT V tfOQOB SZatTE DSIV Si3K7E CABBED! Quality tires last longer important to yon. 2 Quality tires use less crude rubber per mile . important in rubber conservation. 3 Quality tires have a thicker, tougher tread that permits safe regrooving when worn smooth. 4 Quality tires have the extra carcass strength for an extra margin of safety. : '' " ... j O.S. COYAL T BASTEE I tin. , u. s. PHONE 62 PROVO SCOUTERS TO MEET OCT. 11 Selection of Saturday, October 11 as the date of the annual meeting of- the. Utah National Parks Council, Boy Scouts of America, Am-erica, was announced Tuesday following fol-lowing a meeting of the executive board sub-committee. Holding of the meeting in the autumn instead of the spring as in previous years will have the advantage of coinciding with the beginning- of scouting activities in this season, stated Dr. M. W. Merrill Mer-rill of Provo, council president. The October date also follows more conveniently the close of the council's coun-cil's fiscal year in September, he said. Traditionally the year's largest event for the leaders of scouting in the area, the annual meeting will be attended by scoutmasters, troop committeemen, district chairmen, scout and explorer commissioners, and other scout-ers scout-ers and their wives and partners. These delegates will come to Provo from all parts of the council, which includes all the state of Utah south of Salt Lake and Summit Sum-mit counties, the east half of Clark and Lincoln counties in Nevada, and the strip north of the Grand Canyon in Arizona. Home Destroyed At Spanish Fork SPANISH FORK Fire, believed be-lieved to have been caused by a spark from a passing train, setting the roof ablaze, completely complete-ly destroyed the four-room brick home of Mr. and Mrs. Moses Barney, Thursday night. The home was situated about a mile northeast of Spanish Fork on the Springville turn. Although the Spanish Fork fire department made a quick run no water except ex-cept the booster tank on the fire truck was available and a high wind was blowing. It was impossible to save either the home or the furniture. Mr. Barney and his wife were both at the nearby service station, which they dperate, and there was no one at the home. Chicken coops, sheds and outbuildings adjacent ad-jacent to the home were saved in spite of the wind. The damage-' is estimated at between $1,500 and $2,000. Snow Services Slated Wednesday Funeral services for William Arthur Snow will be held Wednesday Wed-nesday at 1:30 n. nw a't the Pro" vo Second ward chapel, with Bishop Earl ESwis officiating. Friends may call this evening at the Hatch-Quist funeral home and at the family home, 73 South Tenth West, Wednesday morning prior to services. Interment will be in the Provo city cemetery. From pur experience, the U. S. Royal Master and U. S. Royal De Luxe are the best quality tires you can buy. But, if you prefer some other make, we urge you to bay only top quality. qual-ity. It will cost you only a little more in the beginning and will save you money in the end. QUALITY IN TIRES THE KEY TO SAFETY t,,.,.,i.n i .i -liu m .( n mlUI'.'ni II null II II . HI. 1 1) 1.1,1 U ) I J Mil WE SPECIALIZE IN RECAPPING AND , EXPERT, TIRE REPAIRING: TI RE SI cs Group Schedule of meetings for the disaster defense institute to be conducted by the American Red Cross Wednesday in the county ; building at Provo was announced today by A. Sherman Christen- .. son,. chairman of the Utah county Red Cross disaster committee. Henry M. Baker of San Francisco, Fran-cisco, assistant manager of the Pacific branch, American Red Cross, will conduct the meetings, . which are open to present members mem-bers of the disaster committee, all those interested in Joining the committee, and the general public. pub-lic. The meetings, to be held In the ) large room at the north end of -the third floor of the county build- " ing, follow: i 9 to 9:50 a. m., rescue .and survey committee li to 11:50 I a, m., medical aid, publicity and , finance committee; 11 to 11:50 . a. m., transportation committee; ' 1 to 1:50 p. m., clothing committee; commit-tee; 2 to 2:50 p. m., shelter com- mittee; 3 to 3:50 p. m., registra- t' tion and communication commit- . tee; 4 to 4:50 p. m., food commit- " tee; 5 to 6:50 p. m., family re- i habitation. At 7:30 p. m., will be a public meeting in the" south courtroom county building. Mr. Baker will have as the subject of his speech . at this meeting, "Red Cross Dis- aster as a Social Force." TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS HEATING stove $3.50, bed and springs $7.50. Dresser, good, $10. Rocking chair $1.50. 726 North University. Phone 1S60J. ol MODEL T coach, round oak dining din-ing table. 375 North 8 West. o2- FOR RENT FURNISHED 5 ROOM modern home, 480 South 4 West, electric range, refrigerator, refrig-erator, hot air furnace, garage, part basement Inquire 456. South 4 West Phone 1067. o2 ROOM ' modern house. Phone 030R2. o2 2 MODERN basement rooms. 850 West 2nd South. . ,'o6 FOR. . RENT... UNFURNISHED MODERN A room home. North-East North-East Phone 932J. 06 BOARD AND ROOM NICE clean heated room .with board in modern home for working work-ing men or young men student Phone 061R3. ' 08 WW &S.BQYJU. CE LUXE i 1 478" WEST CENTER "STV rLm Mm |