OCR Text |
Show -PAGE TWO"' " PROVO (UTAH) DAILY 'HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1942 csting Friday I To Explain Hew Training v-1 t - V. The army and navy civil pilot training , primary. - and secondary training courses to be sponsored by Brigham Young university at tne i'rovo airport this summer will be explained in detail at a meeting Friday at 8 p. m. in room 115 E, B.-Y. U. lower campus. Everyone interested is invited. ;. The program has been expand ed to include all men of the age ran re 18 to 38.-Inclusive. And the bars have been lowered so that a college education isn't needed and high school graduates are .eligible. . . . ,: ' A ': t According toDr. Wayne B. Hales, coordinator for the ( CPT training program at" B. Y. U., the program offers a ; rare opportunity oppor-tunity for training to become ferry pilots, transport pilots, service serv-ice pilots in general,, glider pilots or flight ; instructors. Men who have failed to pass examinations for" training for combative service especially should find the.: CPT course a rare Qppotrunity. :: Men taking the course spend full time in training and are paid $50 a month plus expenses, in eluding insurance, -physical examinations, exam-inations, .ejc. ' : , I CATEGORIES (Continued on Page Two) fW be inducted in this order: Z 'Category ft. r- Registrants otherwise, qualified' for military service who have no ' bona fide financial dependents. .' ; "Category 2. Registrants otherwise . qualified - for military service who have financial dependents, de-pendents, other than , .wives . or children mentioned in categories 3 or 4. ' V ; "Category 3. Registrants otherwise qualified . for military service who have wives with whom they are maintaining a bona fide family relationship m their homes and who .were married prior to Dec.. 8, 1941. and at a time when induction was not imminent. "Category 4. Registrants otherwise qualified for military service who have wives and children, child-ren, or children alone, with whom thv maintain n hnnn f irtA f n mil v relationship in their homes who were married prior to Dec. 8, 1941 and at a time when induction was not imminent." There was no indication how long married men . or those with children would be deferred. Presumably Pre-sumably it would vary in different differ-ent draft areas some of which are already low on unmarried registrants. reg-istrants. Local draft boards, moreover, will continue to review individual cases. ji.nA judj;e-.w.keher Ujere are sufficient unusual' circumstances circum-stances to justify a departure from the general rule of priority or induction." fc STOP IS MOUNT EVEREST IN INDIR SWITZERLAND - INPO-CHlNHj Of THIBET? era 1777 u u u u u u u C3 o OVlL3U mm mm "3 5 At o mm 9 xirmo E, j mi i I r hih OBITUARIES DEATH CLAIMS: DAVID PATTEN David Wyman Patten, 64, died at the family home . in Orem Thursday ' morning : ' of . heart trouble. , He was born November 8, J877 in, Provo, the son of Thomas, "J and Joanna. Hollister Patten. He received his early' education in the Provo schools and attend' ed the .Brigham Young university. univer-sity. - A member of the L.D.S. church, he took active part on the old folks committee in the Timpan ogos ward for many years.' He was an elder at the time of his death. ' Mr. Patten followed the occu pation of farming. - He married Mena -Williamson June 6, 1900 in Provo. Surviving are his widow and two sons, Marion J. Patten of Salt Lake City, and Paul W. Patten Pat-ten of Orem: three grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Joanna Harris of Salt Lake City. Funeral services will be Monday Mon-day at 1:30 p. m. at the Berg mortuary with Bishop Roy Gapp-mayer Gapp-mayer of the Timpanogos ward presiding. i Friends may call at the mortuary mortu-ary Sunday evening and Monday prior to services. Edward H. Bowen Called by Death Edward H. Bowen, 69, resident of Coalville and a brother of Mrs. Sadie Shaw of Salt Lake City, recently of Lake View, died Tuesday Tues-day morning in the L. D. S. hospital in Salt Lake City, following follow-ing a major operation. - Funeral services and burial will be in Coalville. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Blanche Rishton Bowen; one son, Edward Bowen, and three daughters, daugh-ters, Mrs. Marie Siddoway, Mrs. Mabel Vernon and Mrs. Myrtle Shaw; one sister, Mrs. Sadie Shaw; and four half-brothers:. William T. Angeles Joseph H. Bowen, , Los Angeles; oJseph H. Bowen, Long Beach, Cailf.; and Arthur G. Bowen, Bow-en, Salt Lake City. C. L. Underwood SALEM Funeral services for Charles La Mar Underwood, 29, of Salem, who died Tuesday at the Payson city hospital, will be held Saturday at 2 p. m. in the Salem ward chapel. Friends may call at the home of his father Charles A. TJnderwood in Salem, Friday afternfcon, andSaturday priocja the services. " . Interment will be in the Salem cemetery under the direction of the Deseret Mortuary of Payson. Mount Everest is in the Nepal district of India . . . but in Provo the height of cleaning satisfaction satis-faction is reached by having the Madsen Cleaning Co. dry clean your blankets, curtains and draperies. TTT J j u u u u - m : m. m mm m 1 v o 1-uujjO IRi mmwm j n n W U) r r n rm W U- tm! V EVACUcES !f frvnlinue4 Yr;m-Patf;On l' Tih pVhj wnterit n ynliUon r- hard ; nimnn? that nd itrieii'.n.' A few" davs hffore th mHff)t liquor stores TrVr rir,p blackouts more rigid- Te-flc Burnt ' Tn. t r.' June 3. te it rtftf-lrft fir.: ! T 7r-d .their, number, at he wina'ffn. rnfted nf f our tt if vi fTi Afferent dl-?tthv. dl-?tthv. !- grour of the. Thev immAHii'itir ,ncn'in'wf a bar- irA a,m th b'rlriar njnA The Khf-v .TTae.re! ntlou nn.ont'" helivvi to be TTnlted ts -war vessel and 't. I'ofr?' to 'have teen sunk, fo""d hwlf crime tTTet.r 1 Th lane dived fo her, brav- insr heavy fire as thev, loosed hoiha stim?tv at f rom ' 500 to 2.000 ppnns In siZ". , 1 The shio' moved hway from shore," her p"uns forcing the planes imward." More bombs fell and al though some hit closes enough to shower decks with water, the transport escaped a dlrecthit. . ; An enemy, bomber, meanwhile, was baeged by the' ship's gunners and-f ell with a trail of smoke, behind be-hind the hills back of Dutch Harbor. Har-bor. A Japanese fighter plane staggered and plunged, flaming, into the harbor. Another fell on land. Good Marksmanship But ' most of the Invaders were still in the air and their marks manship.waa accurate. They hit an oil tank, blowing it 500 feet into the air. They blasted ware houses and barracks. Streets of Dutch Harbor and Unalaska were machine-gunned. Three sailors in a gun position were killed by a direct hit A machine-gun bullet pierced the hand of a young aviation machinist machin-ist and went on to kUl one of his buddies. " ' Women and children were hustled into cellars and dugouts, and some were taken to a secluded se-cluded valley. Workers for the Siems Drake Puget Sound company, com-pany, contractor for the navy base, made for open country. Panic ? Everyone said "no." They were excited and frightened, but they "could take it. If they weren't hardy tney wouldn't have been at Dutch Harbor. An officer aboard the transport told of the downing of the three Japanese planes others said more were hit, and one wounded soldier said,' "we got 17," but at least three were generally believed scored. i B. C. Duecan. 55-vear-old Slemsr-Drake brick foreman from Long-view, Wash., estimated that1 25 bombs were dropped altogether. D. W. Mitchell, 23, ship's cook first" class from Salt Lake tfty, believed the number was closer to 60. Another worker, Richard Hum-mell, Hum-mell, 48, a painter from Seattle, said he wouldn't return to Dutch Harbor "unless they give me a gun." "It's laying there on your back, not being able to fight, that's the hell of it," Hummell said. Mitchell, the cook, who came out to attend a navy school, said he saw nine bombers and about six Zero fighters come from different dif-ferent directions in squadrons of three". He said a direct hit was scored on the bow of the Northwestern, North-western, setting it afire. Most of the 60 bombs he believed fell, he said, landed wild in the waters of the harbor. TOO LATE FOR I CLASSIFICATION i FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS ALL , porcelain Monarch coal range. Like new. Utah Valley Furniture & Electric Co. 71 North 1st West. Jyl GOOD riding saddle. 145 North University Avenue or phone 338. J28 MEDIUM size Coca-Cola refrigerator. refriger-ator. W. M. Jacobsen, West Drive. Jyl FOR RENT-- FURNISHED NICE clean,' air conditioned sleeping sleep-ing rooms "for men. Plenty of hot water for shower or bath, good' location. 240' South 1st East. . - . . Jyl - WORK WANTED EXPERIENCED .typist and stenographer sten-ographer desires permanent po-I po-I sltion in town.. Phone 1298. J26 : . LOST ' ' " BAY horse, on "canyon road, 4 . white feet, white star ui head. Phone 057 Jl. Reward. J26 FOR SALE REAL ESTATE BY" owner,' 7 room modern brick home. Ideal location. Call Hugh . JoUey at 338. J28 . ' WANTED TP. RENT DESIRE to rent 3 or 4 room house in or ear "Provo. Will lease by year. Provo business man and lamily. Write Herald Box T17. ... .. ,. . ,.J28 BY; couple with no children furnished furn-ished 3 "of 4 room apartment , or furnished house.-Will give -excellent cara. Can furnish best of references.. 158 East 4 North. J28 BOARD AND ROOM BOARD and ' room for two men. 333 North 0 West. Phone 553R, Thrco Counties Lag Oehiod In USO Campaign To determine the status of USO donations and collections in the counties comprising the Fourth Judicial, district, Judge Abe W. Turner, district chairman of the United Service Organizations, has conducted a four-county survey, .. Wasatch county, according .to Mr." Turner, has completed its drive and has exceeded its goal. Other counties in the Fourth Judicial Ju-dicial district Utah, Duchesne, Uintah are still conducting drives with favorable results. . ; ' Jerry Bybee has beeii appoint ed chairman of the Provo .drive and has selected a committee to work with him in promoting prdl ects ,which will further USO ac tivities. : Chairman Turner recently', re turned from a tour, of southern California, where he determined the extent of USO activity on the cpast. He" reports that Calif orn-ians orn-ians are working enthusiastically toward entertaining boys in' jthe service. " Urging Utahns to emulate the Calif orma projects, Mr. Turner states, that the best way to maintain main-tain a high army morale is to keep the soldiers entertained, and that this can be done by supporting uso activities. ;: ; ; CHURCHILL (Continued from Page One) Britain's reasons' for keeping the bulk of its army at home on the British Isles. This conferee said that the prime minister fenced with his questioners on that point but had assured them of Britain's ability to hold Egypt. Rayburn said that the 25-min-ute conversations had covered the general situation in Russia, North Africa and the Pacific. United Nations shipping losses and the prospects for keeping the sea lanes open were also discussed, discus-sed, Rayburn said. The congressional leaders met with Mr. Roosevelv, and Churchill following war department announcement an-nouncement that a "European theater for United States forces" had been , established in London, possibly as an important step in the eventual opening of a second land front in Sjurone Shortly after the congressional conference, Mr. Roosevelt '. and Churchill convened an extraordinary extraordin-ary Pacific war council meeting, with Canadian Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King also attending. A Pacific war council luncheon was arranged to follow the formal meeting. Secretary of State Cor-dell Cor-dell i Hull and j Undersecretary Sumner Welles ' were invited to the luncheon. Later; Mr. Roosevelt Roose-velt and Churchill were scheduled Our Boarding House f. . iln Ail Tift.t VIC KC ALL. ULUM19 iX lSH WORV TO BUILD A PRODUCTION MCrANE TWKV WILL KMOCKTWH 1 .3 "Owned By Home Folks' ..NOW.. We Promised a Great LAUGH PROGRAM . . ; and HererIt Is! . . ALSO f i.ts:;.:,'. : ' Continuous Dally From 1:30 ' !S0o Till 5. 25c Eve. 10c Child. Spitfire 1:35, 4sl9, 7 KW, 9:54 'Spy? - 2:50, 5i31, 80, 11K19 EGYPT , (Continued from Page One) ing to close' on the oil riches of the . Caucasus. !. British mobile forces of tanks and armored cars fought desper-. ately to keep back the Axis spearheads spear-heads which thrust into their lines- to form openings for massed formations, and it was asserted that heavy losses had been inflicted inflict-ed on the enemy. But by last night, it was admitted, ad-mitted, the1 Axis advanced units had reached a position southeast of Sidi Barrani. Grave as it; was, the news did not mean .' necessarily that the British line had been crumpled. It had been hinted that Gen. Neil M. Ritichle, commanding the British, 8th army, might elect to make his big. stand in Egypt, to the east of the hurriedly organized organiz-ed frontier line. " Britain's defense in western Egypt is based "on Marga Mat-run, Mat-run, 140 miles east of the frontier, a railroad terminus to which mer guns and planes may" be moved quickly in mass. Thus as Rommel's advance from now on would lengthen and weaken.; weak-en.; his communications, Britain's would become stronger. But Rommel, pressing his army relentlessly and straining men and machines in hope of breaking the 8th army before it could be reorganized re-organized and reinforced after the Tobruk defeat, evidently was confident con-fident that he could continue. - . Marsa ; Matruh, where the big British stand may be made,, has long been regarded as probably the best defensive position not only east of the frontier, but in the entire 500-mile stretch to El Agheila,, in the Benghazi area of Libya. - Axis forces had not penetrated as far as Sidi Barrani since the Italians got there in December 1940, when the British withdrew before them to organize for their offensive which drove the Italians back to Benghazi and broke their field marshal, Rodolfo Graziani. Now it seemed evident that Rommel was making, his supreme drive in Egypt, hoping that the British could not regroup after their retreat from Libya. Allied hope was pinned in the air force, now strengthened by United States army air corps con solidated B-2 four-motored bombers, bomb-ers, and their intensifying attacks on enemy concentrations, com munication lines and shipping. . une planes are now handicapped, handicap-ped, however, by the British with drawal because they are compel! ITU .w "f,."8 we east, and the enemy air force is correspondingly moving eastward. Coming Events V Rotary, Friday, 12:15, Hotel Roberts. Speaker, O. R. Thomas. I? JBrockbank chairman. to meet separately with Hull and British Ambassador Lord Halifax. . Churchill also announced meetings meet-ings with Sir Girja Bajai, Indian agent-general in this country, and South African Minister Ralph !lose. STARTS TODAY! AltCtAfT PUNT OESTROVE0 Man-nod fury of flainat gulling dfn aritnckil w s IOOKOUTS . . . . IBjrtng en eur kty itftni peUli plotting lotei worl :, 4. m.. I'i-U, ll'llll! ljjSln whi mm , PLUS THIS OREAT SHORT ARRAY! Pete Smith's 'Victory Qnit "Puss . Toots" v- fjI Tom and Jerry Technicolor Cartoon . . y Land of Quints" - A Qem MOM World News BOOTH, SPEAKS TO KHVANIANS Americans must "replace words With solid action" and unite 100 per . cent if the United States is to achieve a speedy victory In the war, , John E. Booth of Spanish Fork, lieutenant governor for di vision one of the Utah-Idaho Ki wanis . district, told' Provo Kiwan ians today. , ; "We must be increasingly con scious that we are in a war and that every person, has a Job to do, Mr. Booth said. " He urged that every Kiwanian rededicate himself to the slogan, "Victory by United Effort by In dividual , Service." , , President Sterling Ercanbrack presided at the meeting, held at Hotel Roberts, and Dr. L. E. Mc Kell was chairman. Victor J, Bird, Provo chamber of commerce president, was a guest. A poll conducted by Bob Bul lock of the Kiwanis salvage com mittee showed the majority of Kiwanlaris have already contributed contribut-ed substantially to the scrap metal - and rubber campaign. ' By the name of each participating Ki wanian a miniature American flag was placed on the honor roll. " Members of; the club voted to act as registrars at the selective service registration Tuesday for Doys ao ana xv. Earl Graham and LaVerl Chris-tensen Chris-tensen .were., appointed , by President Presi-dent Ercanrack as committeemen for Kiwanis sponsorship of a candidate can-didate in the July Fourth ' queen contest. Deanne Merrill, daughter of . Dr. and Mrs. M. W. Merrill, was selected as the club's candidate. candi-date. . . EYEWITNESS (Continued from Page One) each, which later were described as 2,000-pound bombs. Two warehouses ware-houses were struck and one barracks. bar-racks. There were some casualties, most of which definitely could have been avoided if the men had remembered to lie flat on the ground. In the confusion of running run-ning for shelter they forgot the lessons taught them. Fires immediately broke out where the bombs struck. All this time a heavy barrage of anti-aircraft fire was going on. The sky was filled with bursting shells and puffs of smoke from each. Tracers were shooting up toward the bombers, falling juat short of their mark. However, the heavier shells were bursting above, below and all around the bombers. At this point, may I say that I was very much surprised at the enormous enor-mous size of ' the planes the' ' Japs were using in their attack. The results definitely proved that there is nothing wrong with Japanese eyesight. At the point they struck, the land is very narrow. nar-row. At the height they .were flying fly-ing their markmanship had to be good to hit anything on land. Ulrector Alfred Hltchcook . . . the Screen's Mamcr of ACTION 8l?SPE.VSR rilmax evry nmottnniil thrill of hla unforgettable 9 Stepit,' 'Kebocta.' Foreign CorriMrnlirt- ami '8uli(-ton . . . tr brlnK you the first mashing" atory f (bo Man-hind-Your-Baek! .? - 1 mm TRAITORS ... IN EVENINO DRESS Jftot trlklng' (torn behind lfc A RATTHIHIP DTNAMITEO ...(fo th torrifiod mt0 7f-lttaot City Briefs Mrs. Hans Miller left Monday evening for Tampa, Florida where she will visit her daughters, Miss N6rmarMnier. MrsC William A: Forsyth tDagmar Miller)," and her husband and little daughter Dixie Roe.' ?he will be .away a month. 1 Mr. and Ms. Leo Larsen,.Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Norton, and Mr. and ' Mrs.; Lawrence Sutherland spent the week-end at Navajo Lake lodge, located between Zion park and Cedar Breaks. They en joyed fishing, .hiking, riding and many other attractions at ' the lodge. The Provoana. were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Larsen, owners of the dude ranch.' j , - I Called due to the deAth4 of her sisterY Mrs. Sarah Moulton Smith, Mrs. W. F. Clegg has left for Idaho Falls, Idaho, where, funeral services are to be held. ' ii mm , ' News comes that Mrs. David Paine and 'two-children -have arrived ar-rived at their home in New York after spending two months in Provo Pro-vo at the ;hopie; of Mrs. Palne's parents, Mr,- and Mrs.. Joseph Nelson. Nel-son. Miss -Jliza Nelson -accompanied her sister as far as Denver and will .spend a few weeks with Mr. and ' Mrs! Stanley C. Nelson and familyl Guests , at the home of . Mr. and Mrs. W Monroe Paxman are their' daughter and grandchild, Mrs. Boyd H. PuUey (Beth Pax-man) Pax-man) and baby son, Douglas Boyd, of San Francisco, Calif. Mr. Pulley returned to the coast Tuesday. They came to attend funeral services, serv-ices, held last week in Logan, for Mr. Pulley's brother, Seth Pulley, who was' killed in Brookline, Mass., where he was serving an L. D. S. mission. Mrs. Pulley will remain here for several weeks. Mr. Pulley Pul-ley is in the coast artillery, as commanding officer of his battery, and. has recently been promoted to the rank of -captain. o Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bonnett: of Provo have returned from a, delirhtf ul triD to California. In . company with Mayor and Mrs. O. DeVere Wootton of American Fork and L. Stanford Wootton of Salt Lake City. , While there thev visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jay H. Wootton of Altadena, Calif. The Bonnetts also visited with Mrs. J. L. Aird of Manhattan ' Beach, and Chloe Broadbent of Hollywood. x j Mr. and Mrs. Kay Hardy (Helen This Truly Great Program! Ill V V - Doon Open 1:30 tp 1 air 1 1st tfit gresUst air drama avtr Pttromount pre trH D in w RAY WIUUIdSuAII KOUJEN WAYKE MORRIS-BRIAN DOMLEVY VERONICA LAKE . mf 9i9 mows AMf...?""' A Fwll-lonath f ooturo tew loon 1 '"---oaiS f MAX anitCNIR MM cm . A KEW WAINIR 1 Ml T JRSBtL g-i a TZMhtp rr, ,(,JA '"1 csfiSt DENNIS MORGAN BRENDA MARSHALL boors Open Maynard) of Portland Ore have returned to .their home after! a, vacation here with: Mrs. Hardy's mother, MrsC Delia Maynard,' and Mr. Hardy's parents," Mr. and Mrs. John Hardy of. Sprlngville. - Dr. Allen O.: Brockbank, dentist 81 East Center street, Telephone 438W. '.c'c;c " ,: dv. Jyis Thomas West and Harry Green, of Salt Lake City, visited in Provo today on business. '' : "' : " Pv : i : ' ' - ' After spending ,the past several months in Downey, Calif.; Mrs. J. E. Snydef 1 has returned to. 'her home in Provo She has' been with her grandson, Dean Clayton, since September, Mr. Clayton accompanying accom-panying her home for a visit here. He has been on the coast "for two years and is employed in an .airplane, .air-plane, factory. .' Miss Roberta 'Teddy'' Braufl, daughter of Mr. aid Mrs. G. T. Braun. is visiting relatives in Og-den Og-den for 10 days. , r . Word has been received by; Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert H, Field that their son. Herald Field, technical sergeant in, the Tj, s. army air corps, has been transferred ' to Brainard Field, In Hartford, Conn., from Alamogordo, New Mexico. Rereeant Field has been - in New Mexico only the past month, being transferred there from Geiger Field, Washington. " ';.. ' ; Dr. and Mrs. A. James FUlmore who have been' in Boisei Idaho, visited a few." days with his Jarj ents. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Fillmore. Dr. Fillmore, a captain in the medical med-ical corps, has Ueft . for . Tucson, Arts., for special training,-while Mrs. Fllmore and their , two children chil-dren will be in Logan for the summer. sum-mer. -. v . ' BRIGHAM. MAGNA GAIN PRIORITIES -' , WASHINGTON, June 25 (UP The war production board today added several new areas to the defense housing critical area list, making them eligible for priorities on building materials, including Brigham, Utah, and Magna, Utah. PIPE TONITE Opens at 6 NEW TODAY! fUiasdl 1 o: P1us:p- Mighty Achievement! i ...MAp.nA?rr pat.-. fAf 7CM?tOX . SVt HIIICMIt . AIAMOIMT rKTWtl f . J ALL IN TECHNICOLOR UOS. TRUMfM wHh 7:00 First Show 7:30 fflffll&$? . JNE FRAZEE MPfntWS ROBERT PAIGE s mr A " |