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Show 1 PROVO jUTAH) DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, ' IULY 29, 1942 PAGE FIVB Welfare Workers Gf Lccal Region To nest Friday Welfare leaders of the 12 L.D.S. stakes comprising: the local region will meet in the quarterly session Friday at 8 p. m., in the First ward chapel, President Charles E. Rowan, Jr., announced, today. . Those who are requested to meet are the chairmen of the bishops' council, the -agricultural and anti-tobacco leaders, presidencies presi-dencies of stake Relief Society, and the male and female work directors of the welfare program. It is expected that a representative represen-tative of the general church welfare wel-fare committee from Salt Lake City will be present. TWO DROWtl (Continued from Page One) and Zina Jorgensen Scott. The family lived in Knightsville for a few years and Kenneth attended at-tended school there later, in Lake View, where he had resided most rt his life. He married Adeline Sorenson October 3, 1931, in the Salt Lake temple. At the time of death, he was employed by the Concrete Pipe company of Salt Lake City. Surviving, in addition to his wife, are three daughters, Zina Jane, 10; Karen Rene, 7, and Linda Ann, 14 months. Also, his parents, and the following brothers broth-ers and sisters: Mrs. Zella Stur-gis, Stur-gis, Provo; Lewis and Hal Scott, Lake View, and Mrs. May Olsen, Wattls, Utah. " Clarence Lloyd was bom In Panguitch, November 189V. a son of the late Michael and Dell Lloyd. He was educated in Panguitch Pan-guitch and Vineyard and he married Olive Cordner, Feb. 28. 1917, in the Salt Lake temple. With the exception of two years on Provo bench," the family has lived in Lake, View. He had been engaged in farming and dairying. dairy-ing. He was president of the elders' quorum of Lake View for many years, and was a memt'sr of the Lake View bishopric at one time. He leaves his wife, and the following sons and daughters: ; Mrs. Evelyn Hicks, Springvllle; Carma. Garn, and Marvin Lloyd of Lake View; one grandchild; five brothers and four sisters, as follows: Robert and Frank Lloyd, Provo; Michael Lloyd, Springfield, Spring-field, Idaho; Dennis JJoyd, Spring-ville; Spring-ville; Allen Lloyd, Orem; Mrs. Ida Merrill, Grass Valley, California; Mrs. Rhoda Jolley, Blackfoot, Ida.; Mrs. Irene Sampson. Delta: Mrs. Florence Watts. Seattle, Wash. ALL SUMMER Values $4.00 to $6.00 CHOICE OF THE STORE All White and Spectator Pumps Nothing Is Held Backl MINAMAX SHOE DEPARTMENT 127 W. O o o ""V. o o o o o Quarts $1.35- ACME OUTSIDE Best Quality-r-GALLONS Special ACME QUALITY INTERIOR GLOSS Quarts, special 98c Gallons, special 3.49 - No Priority Required COX WAGON S MACHINE CO. Boy Suffers Bad Burns About Legs Clifton Snow, eight-year-old son of Mr. end Mrs. M or lan Snow, who suffered second and third degree de-gree leg burns when trying to put out a bonfire Saturday, is reported re-ported to be doing fine. Attracted by the scream of Clifton and two little neighbor girls, Mrs. Snow ran out of the house to find the boy fighting the flames on his left pant leg. The father was also immediately on the scene and the youngster was taken to the doctor. His left leg is burned from above the knee down palt the ankle. SLAYER (Continued from Page One) about 6 a. m. tomorrow approximately approxi-mately daybreak. It will be carried car-ried out by the Sheriff of Iron county, where the murder occurred. occur-red. Marksmen Selected p Five marksmen have been selected se-lected by the sheriff and provided with new rifles. Their identity is a closely guarded secret. ' Shortly before daybreak, the five riflemen will enter the prison vard in a closed van, jump from the truck into a doorway in a prison building facing the south wall. ; Five shells will be handed the executioners. Four of them will be loaded with regulation charges. charg-es. The fifth will be a Hank. The shells will be mixed. The theory is that each man can feel he used the blank and did not kill Condit. I Condit will be marched out into the yard and seated in a high oak chair, beneath the 15-foot high stone wall of the old prison. He will be blindfolded and a target tar-get placer over his heart. At a signal from the sheriff probably the wave of a hand the marksmen will fire. In previous executions, few of the bullets fired from the rifles have missed the target. The execution will be witnessed by a select group of newspapermen newspaper-men and authorities. Invitations were sent out today. Condit was convicted of murdering mur-dering Harold Thorne, Salt Lake Pty jam salesman, on the desert near Cedar City, Utah, early last year. Thorne had given Condit a ride. Condit admitted killing Thorne but said it happened during dur-ing a fight during an attempted robbery and whiie Condit was trying to get possession of Thome's car. Under Utah law, Condit had his choice upon conviction of death on the gallows or before a firing squad. He took the firing squad. Center -Gallons .... $3.98 HOUSE PAINT $349 o o o o Germans Closing Gateway to Caucasus '2r& V: msmMxte . we CAUCASUS " , .V: & GiltMN THMATi I " f - ' , J'V.V4 acsrrottfirlLiNts 1 Tt OOUtttTKACK - IRAN ' Itt'JVi Rolling on past Rostov toward the vital Caucasus area, heavily reinforced rein-forced German Armies are slowly closing the Caucasus "gateway be-hind be-hind them as their two-pronged drive makes a threatened drive toward Baku in the south and Stalingrad and Astrakhan in the north. Mapped bar to lh strategic battleground that may yield Hitler the oil for his war machine. ; , : (J : ! ' RUSSIANS (Continued from Page One) the river bend that curves to within with-in 40 miles of Stalingrad. A Russian communique admitted, admit-ted, for the second time in 12 hours, a Red army withdrawal in the Bataisk area about 15 miles south of fallen Rostov along the main railroad through the rich oil fields to the Caspian. Although the Nazis were said to be losing up to 50 per cent of the men of some of their units, they smashed forward steadily all along the Don front from Bataisk eastward to Stalingrad, the great industrial city on the Volga which is menaced by encirclement. The Soviet communique said that the Germans had thrown another an-other force across the Don, appar ently about 32 miles northeast of Rostov in the Tismlyanskaya sec tor, and also across the great bend of the river facing Stalin grad. Closer To Stalingrad The British reported that a threepronged Nazi drive is claw-: ing closer to Stalingrad. One is ae-alnst Kachalinsk. 65 miles northwest of the inausinai cuy, another at Kalach about 75 miles west, and the third against Novo- chirskaya, 110 miles southwest. The German high command said its forces had stormed across the Manych and Sal rivers, which join about 35 miles east of Rostov. The Sal lies 10 miles or more south of the Don and it appeared that the vital ? railroad from the Black Sea and the Krasnodar oil center to Stalingrad may have been cut by the advancing Germans. Ger-mans. Meanwhile, on the Australian invasion front, Allied troops have scored in mountain fighting, a success in thrusting back a Japanese Jap-anese land rush toward the Allied advance base of Port Moresby on the southern coast of New Guinea. Gen. Dqmglas MacArthur's headquarters announced that Allied Al-lied patrols had driven the Japanese Jap-anese back from the Kokoda area in the first clash with enemy ground troops advancing across the Owen Stanley mountain foot holds of the Papuan interior to within 55 miles of Port Moresby. The Allied troops, trained in jungle fighting, caught the Jap anese by surprise along the tor turous trails and forced them to retreat to their new Buna-Gona in vasion base on the northern New Guinea coast. On the Egyptian front, United States four - motor Consolidated bombers and British bombers struck across the Mediterranean and bombed the Axis base at Suda Bay on the island of .Crete, 500 miles from the Allied North African air bases. Allied torpedo planes hit a big enemy transport in.the Ionion sea between Greece Spirit of Poland Brawny Polish soldier, carrying refugee lad in Iran, typifies nation's na-tion's unconquered spirit. -in r hi - -i T sm (NEA Ttlephoto) and Italy, while other bombers end long-range fighters attacked Axis-held Sidi Barranl of the African coast. Land fighting on the Egyptian front died down to- wary patrol action following a. British withdrawal, with-drawal, under Axis" counterblows, to positions "held before the British Brit-ish Imperial advance Sunday to the west of El Alamein. RENT CHIEF (Continued from Page One) March 1 ceiling, must come down on August 1 to the March 1 level, he said. Apartments or rooms that were not rented on March 1, but have been rented since, must come down to the first rental, or the lowest rental charged since March 1, in case the rental has been increased in-creased since the property was first rented out No increase can be made after August 1. If a landlord accepts more than the ceiling rental, the tenant can sue for treble the excess or $50, whirhftvar In tha croater rklna nti torney fees and costs, Mr. Hal-- , i bersleben said. Rentals on property rented out since March 1 will have to be reviewed re-viewed by Mr. Halbersleben's office,- and if deemed excessive, will be reduced to what such property would have rented for on March 1. The penalties for violation con-rist con-rist of fine up to $5000 and one year imprisonment. DENVER, July 2911R Willis W. Ritter has been selected as OPA rent director for the . Salt Lake Clty-Ogden rent control area, Clem Collins, regional OPA chief, announced today. Collins confirmed that Joseph C. Halber-sleben Halber-sleben of Provo has been selected as director of the Provo rent control con-trol area, the only other area yet put under control in Utah. DIES IN CAR GLENNS FERRY, Ida.. July 29 OJ.R) A heart attack was blamed today for death of Perry Leonard Smith, Crescent City, Calif., whose body was found slumped over the steering wheel of his car. Smith was here on a business trip. He pulled up to the curb, fell over the steering wheel and was pronounced dead shortly afterward. aft-erward. i s Elalco your rags last race OUiclal booklet vi th Carp9t Institute of America an the A booklet that lists all the ways by which you can prolong the life of your carpet. Especially valuable today when conservation con-servation of what you own is a patriotic duty. Get your fr&cdjpy In our Carpet Departaaent. If it; is time to have your rugs and carpets cleaned, notify our nig' deaninoj department. For an investment of d few dollars dol-lars :theyjwill come back looking like new. Estimates without obligation.' " OBITUARIES Porter Services Set For Friday , Funeral services for Hyrum K. Porter. . owner - and manager of the Porter Potato Chip company of Provo, will be held Friday at 2 o'clock in the Fourth ward chapel, with Bishop Victor J. Bird officiating. Mr. Porter died Tuesday morning morn-ing at his home, after an illness of heart trouble. Friends may call' at the Hatch Quist Funeral home Thursday evening and at the family home, 72 West Ninth North street, Friday Fri-day morning, prior to the services. Leah Calva Greene SALEM Leah Calva tSreene, infant in-fant daughter of William and Sofia Minchey Greene, died Monday Mon-day - at - the home in Salem, following fol-lowing whooping cough. The 'child was born Dec. 12, 1941 at Spanish Fork. Surviving are the parents, two brothers, William and Eldredge Greene; five sisters, Georgia, Minerva, Louisa, Lillie and Tillie Greene, all of Salem ; a grandfather, Calvin Cal-vin Minchey of Salem. GERMANS (Continued from Page One) not only forced to rush troops to the Soviet front from western Europe but from as far away as the Egyptian desert. A noon Russian communique said that the Red army had been forced to withdraw deeper into the Caucasus in the Bataisk area about 15 miles south of Rostov, that the Germans had made new crossings of the Don to the northeast north-east and that heavy pressure was ting exerted against Stalingrad on the Volga. The Russians were fighting stubbornly to prevent the German tanks from lashing through to the rear and starting a rampage. (The German high command, in what seemed to be confirmation that the Caucasus offensive now is in high gear, said that Axis forces, were steadily advancing toward to-ward Stalingrad and had "broken" Russian . resistance . at several points on the Don. The Germans, it was said, crossed the Manych and 1 Sal rivers south of the Don. The Sal is about 10 miles below the Don.) (The British radio described a three-way drive on Stalingrad. The heaviest attack appeared to be against Kaluch, 40 miles northwest north-west of Stalingrad, where the Germans reported an advance. The Germans also attacked toward to-ward Kachalinsk, 65 miles north west of Stalingrad and Novochirs- . . n ii .A.l...rf i Ml iiU . "'ww (The Stockholm newspaper Dagens Nyheter's correspondent with the Germans on the Caucasian Cau-casian front said that the Soviet withdrawal across the Don had been "no Dunkirk" and the the Red army withdrawal had been orderly, leaving only a few tanks and other material on the northern bank.) The Russian high command, in describing the latest withdrawal in the Bataisk area (second with drawal announced in the last 24 hours in the sector,) said that the Germans advanced only after "hurling fresh forces into action." The Russians told of strong Red army attacks elsewhere along the 2,000-mile front around Leningrad, Kalinin, Bryansk and Voronezh intended to draw off German strength from the southern south-ern battle areas. CANNERY STARTS ON STRING BEANS SPANISH FORK The Spanish Fork plant of the California Packing Corporation has com menced the seasons run on string beans, and canning of that com modity is going forward rapid ly. Cherry pickers released from cherry picking, have taken over the bean picking job. i III9II9 Drive Begins to Collect Quota of Old Records Here The drive is organized by the American Legion, JPrbvo Post No. 13, to colect Provo'a quota "of -old records part of a nation-wide campaign cam-paign to get new music for the soldiers; sailors and marines. The Legionnaires have divided the city into four parts for the collection drive. Four squads have been organized, consisting of one car end six boys in each squad, according to L. A. Culbertson, Legion publicity officer. The drive will begin Thursday night from 6:30 ,to 9:30wp. m. in the northeast part of town. The southeast, -section will be canvassed Friday, the ' southwest section, Monday and the northwest section, Tuesday' at the same hours each evening. Residents are asked to have their records ready so the boys can make the colectlons .with the least possible delay. Fred Adamson is -ihairman of the drive for the Legion. Children's Class To Stage Recital Under the direction of Claude Snow of the city recreation dramatic dra-matic department, a demonstra-ion demonstra-ion of the children's summer work will be given at 7:30 this evening in the Little theater at the B.Y.U. Included in the program will be seven individual readings, two f lays and two choral demonstra-ion demonstra-ion recitations. The public is invited to attend. Hp PM .aJSH b. f -pi Ay? u luu ivtfJ si I Ififf fP! rr I b - ' i if; n "$nhi ' I III t t I v ?!Xr - I t,fi'i''' f ' I II mi -- Mil See them here in this advance collection all the beautiful suits yoii've been reading about , in the smartl fashion magazines! Long or short jackets, slimmer skirts, tricky pocket details, in the Mt fabrics of the season -mooth gabardine-types, "worsteds, wool combination .- plaids, 5 herringbones many with matching topcoats. Shop tomorrow 1 Sizes. for Misses, Women, Juniors. ...T Hea3s WarBnaes.n MFR Si FFFRS Mrs. Evelyn Kashuk, former New York model and wife of Corp. Jay E. KashVik, is president presi-dent of new "American War Brides," formed to foster morale of both soldiers and soldiers' wives. SLAYS ICS WIFE MINNEAPOLIS, July 29 U.E Carl H. Proehl, 44, who spent $37,000 in two and one-half years, fought for his life in General hospital hos-pital today after killing his wife, Marie, 35, "because I loved her." Proehl was wounded critically by police in a gun battle yesterday yester-day after he had shot his wife with a shotgun. i "I shot her because I loved her," he told police. "You only kill the ones you love." Think of your Fall Suit in terms of an investment look for careful tailoring, sturdy fabrics, lasting style I Find all , those qualities herel See our advance crdp of wonderful, wearable Suits more in demand than ever this busy Fall and Winter ahead ! Sound Fashion 9 . 3 GS'NbrthUniversity Avenue FATAL' HURTS STANDARDVILLE, Utah, July 29 (UP) Archibald Lyman Cox, 34, died here - yesterday of leg and body injuries suffered in an accident acci-dent in a coal mine here. Cox was working alone -when the mishap occurred, but it was believed he fell off the motor of a train of cars while descending an inclins near the surface of the mine. He was survived by his widow and one son. ) This Day. BORN Girl, to Vestal and Ora Wilson Empey of Idaho Falls, Idaho, Sunday. Sun-day. Word received by Mr. and Mrs. George S. Wilson. Boy ,to J. A. and Eva Christen sen Van Orman of Flushing, N.Y., Monday. . Word received by the grandmother, Mrs. Ellen J. Chris-tensen. Chris-tensen. Boy, to Charles and Ziritia Day Van Ronk, this morning, Utah Valley hospital. LICENSED TO MARRY Douglas Benton McMullen, 24, Provo, -and. Elizabeth Kindred, 21, Springvllle,- Tuesday. GIRL KILLED -BY TRUCK - - KALISPELLy Mont., July 29ILRJ An 11-year-old girl, Perthance E. Jane Mahugh, died on the way to the hospital this .afternoon of Injuries suffered when the bicycle bicy-cle she was ' riding-collided with a city gravel truck. Investment! and up Stop.. S.S jr t: ... f . ...( t.. |