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Show PAGE 2 frovo. ctah corrrrr. ctah THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 2. 194 j urem umctais Ash Agreement On Water Vith Provo The Orem city commission "-headed by Mayor V. H. Jolley, asked the Provo city commission "at their Thursday morning meeting meet-ing to permit the city of Orem to rearrange their water contract in order to get more water. : Mayor Jolley told the Provo commission that the. need for more water was acute in Orem 'and that something should done , before next summer. He asked that the city consider exchanging exchang-ing some water rights or even selling some of their rights to Orem. Mayor Maurice Harding refused refus-ed to consider the sale of any of Provo's water rights but suggested sug-gested that Orem could make use . of the water it is entitled to and that whatever it uses over that amount, could be billed to Orem. The Orem mayor was not favorable fav-orable to this sussestion and it was finally decided upon to meet Wednesday afternoon at 2 o clock in the offices of the Provo city commission, with each city being be-ing represented by their attor ney so that legal steps involved; . can oe taxen care oi. Provo Building Permits Issued For $17,390 Sum Building permits issued during the month of October totaled 11, and are valued at $17,390. according accord-ing to a report given Thursday by Thomas H. Latimer city engnieer. Provo ; I The Dermits were civen fonH. Jackson and M. Warner Mur- the following improvements and phy. directors. Holdover direct-building direct-building to be done. Four new ors are Dr. Allen G. Brockbank, residences to be built at the Clyde P. Crockett and James M. cost of $9800. 1 residence re- Fulkerson. modeled. $500: 2 new garages. Retiring vice presidents are $550. 1 remodeled garage. $40: Joseph C. Clark and George L. 1 new business place. $3500: 1 re- Young, and M. Warner Murphy modeled business. $500: 1 remod-: eled clubhouse. $2500: and 2 cases referred to the board of adjustment. adjust-ment. October's permits bring the total number issued during the en an active part in community year 1944, to 134 with a value of and church affairs. He is chair-$180,180. chair-$180,180. The number of per- ; man of the retail merchants' mits granted before October was ' committee of the chamber of 123 valued at $162,90. Mr. Lati-! mer reported. City Court Glen Larabee forfeited $10 in city court this morning when he failed to appear to answer to the charge of speeding. Robert Graham forfeited $5 for failing to comply with traffic signals. Carlos Roberts paid a fine of $2.50 for failing to comply with traffic signs. William i . I &rftttky, w proof," grain MfvtnipUiH : 'obooEKHAM wcrrs wo. FtoricCiniitwi I KB! n l t f O J I William Pcu I I 8r,. kt!l)Mnn(ie - I Perm DAILY HERALD Crockett Elected Kiwanis President ;. i . 1 It ... af . . , s CLYDE P. CROCKETT j Clyde P. Crockett, manager of. t r- unnv nmr.anv ctnr I t , ?f i' i . sit 3 I w0 I was elected president of the Pro-1 chairman Donald M. Nelson will vo Kiwanis club at the noon!"4""1 to China at President vo Kiwanis club at the luncheon today at Keeleys Mr. Crockett succeeds Peter M. Jensen. Other new officers are Clifton A. Tolboe and Richmond S. Young, vice presidents; Denzil A. Brown. Frank W. Canfield, Orrin has been secretary. The new of- ficers will appoint the secretary for the ensuing year. Since living in Provo the past nine years, Mr. Crockett has tak commerce, also, is a director of the chamber of commerce. Re-! Re-! cently, he was named Utah j county chairman of the War Fi-' Fi-' nance committee. Business Place, Home Burglarized Mrs. Bob Reusser. 170 East Third North, reported to the Pro- j vo police that her apartment had 1 been ransacked Wednesday after- ' noon and robbed of $18. The intruder got in through ; the front door which had been i left unlocked, and got ten dollars from a drawer. The eight dollars dol-lars was taken from a bank that was in another bureau drawer. Paul Westwood, manager f the A. ic W. cafe, at 125 South ; University Ave., reported to the '. police that burglars had entered : his place of business early Wed- r.esday morning and stolen $75. The burglars entered througn s screen at the drive-in cafe and took the money, which was kept in a money bag in a drawer. Some people have to be sick before they'll stand up and take their medicine. CAN'T KEEP GRANDMA IN HER CHAIR She's as Lively as a Youngster- I, -Now her Backache is totter . Many uifcren relirr cxin bckch 'jukkly, one they discover that the real cmuoe of their trouble my be tired kxin?. ) I he kidneyi are N aturc" chief way of taking tak-ing the excCT arida and vaate out of the blood. Tby help mow people paaa about 3 pint a day. .... V ben disorder of kidney function permits ' poiaoncua matter to remain in your blood, it ' may cauae nainf backache, rheumatic paina. leg pauta. loaa ol pep and twm , getting up nighta, aweUins. puuinees under the eyre. tedacbea and dimm-aa, Frequent or aeanty I with emarting and burning aome- titura aboa there la eomrlhing rung with ji- ir kidneya or bladder. 1ou 1 ait! Ak your druggrat tor Doaa PiUa. uacd eueceaefu.iy by miUiooa for over 40 j ear. Ttaev (ig happy relief and will help the 1 r--.e of kflney tubee flh out poiaon-oj poiaon-oj waaia Uam i uut blood. Oct Doas. Pttla. ( Adv ELECTRIC RANGES YES! just arrived: ...a shipment PRE - WAR A - B ELECTRIC RANGES 20" x 24" Apt. Size . . PRIORITY FOR REPLACEMENT I certify to the War Production Board and to the seller: I own or occupy the residence at It has the inside and outside wiring needed for an electric range, and my electric company has told me that electric service for range operation will be supplied. I do not have any electric range for this residence which can be used or repaired. ADAMSON'S 239 WEST FIRST NORTH Provo, Legion to Join With School In Armistice Fete Dr. Sidney B. Speary of the BYU faculty, will deliver the principal address at the Armis tice day program to be carried out Jointly by the Provo Post No. 13 and the Provo high school. Friday, Nov. 10, it was announced announc-ed today by John O. Beesley, chairman of the Legion committee. com-mittee. Mayor Maurice Harding will preside at the program which will be held at 10:20 a. m. Friday, rather than the following day, when the school will not be in session. Special music will be furnished by the high school -vo cal and instrumental groups un der the direction of Farrell Mad sen and Ernest Paxman. The public is invited to attend the program which wIU constitute consti-tute the only organized, public Armistice day observance in Provo. Donald Nelson To Return to China At FDR Request WASHINGTON. Nov. (U.R ormer war proaucuon war board Roosevelt s request to help reorganize reor-ganize the Chinese war effort and to set up a Chinese "war production produc-tion board," the White House announced an-nounced today. Nelson's return was requested by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, Kai-Shek, the White House said in a statement issued shortly after Nelson conferred with Mr. Roosevelt. Roose-velt. Nelson will take with him, as a deputy. Howard Coonley, WPB executive and chairman of the Walworth Co., valve manufacturers. manufac-turers. Also accompanying the former WPB chief will be Eugene M. Stall ings, an alcohol production expert, and a mission of five steel experts headed by Herbert W. Graham, chief metallurgist of Jones and Laughlin Steel corp. As the president's personal representative. rep-resentative. Nelson will continue his work with Chiang "on measures meas-ures aimed at strengthening the Chinese war effort and notably in organizing a war production board to increase the output of China's war industries," the an-nounucement an-nounucement said. Gunner Reported To Be Missing -Sgt. Bryan "Dell" Cox, 19. son of Mr. and Mrs. Bryan J. Cox, of 1735 West Center street, is missing in action over Austria, since October 16, according to word from Washington received Wednesday by the parents. The Provo youth is a turret gunner, with the 15th Air Command, Com-mand, and he was on his 15th mission, according to the last letter let-ter from Dell, which was dated October 14. Also, he told of his promotion to a staff sergeant. He went overseas the last of July and was stationed in Italy. He made his first mission September 5. A student of Provo high school, he entered the service July 24. 1943, and training at Buckley and jLowry fields, Denver, Colo., also, in Florida and Massachusetts, j He has two sisters, Mrs. Neldon don Smoot of Centerville, and Carma Jean Cox of Provo. $1,000 SCHOLARSHIP PRIZE IN QUIZ ON CONSTITUTION FORT WORTH. Tex. (U.R) A total of $2,905 will be given to the winner, of a quiz contest on; the f :ormtitiition or tne united States by the Fort Worth Star - Telegram. 1 before the accident. Eleventh and 12th graders from! Brandt rose to national promi-23 promi-23 senior high schools in Fort with the Boston Braves and Worth and Tarrant county are Pittsburgh Pirates. He pitched eligible to enter the contest.) with the Braves five years and which has as its top prize a $1,000 with the Pirates two years, four-year scholarship to Texas, He began his baseball career Christian University or Texas' at Grant school here and later Wesleyan. What this country needs is the sort of driving that will give the pedestrian his rights at last instead in-stead of his last rites. 95 Signature of Purchaser. PHONE 463 Utah 'Blocked-Out' by Nazis "'O-' 4C II 11 VAU Two Polish delegates of the Warsaw resistance group, one of them a woman, are shown above being blindfolded by Nazi soldiers before being marched through German lines after the premature uprising in the Polish capital was quelled by Hitler's occupation forces. This picture was radioed to London from a oeulral source. Yest Side Faces Loss of Improved Bus Facilities Provo faces curtailment transportation facilities in of the west section unless residents give more support to the revised bus schedule. Commissioner Joseph H. Swapp said Wednesday. Two weeks have gone by in the 30-day trial period, Mr. Swapp said, and in the remaining time more cooperation must be shown in order to keep the present bus schedule. Milton Jensen, manager of the Geneva Transportation Co., corroborated the commissioner's statement that passenger loads must increase more rapidly If the schedule is to continue. The revised schedule, arranged to cover the west section and make connections with the regular reg-ular buses to Geneva steel plant and to the east section of the city went into operation on Oct. 16. Mr. Swapp declared that the com- i LXia h .sic v.vi - missioners are anxious to have the people receive adequate transportation facilities, but resi- dents will have to patronize these facilities in order to make them permanent. T. B. Tests Slated For the Students ' Tenth and seventh grade stu-' rfu.Pted the Democratic party : dents of the high and junior hlghj that it is readily subject to cap-i cap-i schools of the city will be given! end the forces of corn- Tuberculosis patch tests at the , munism are, in fact, now captur-beginning captur-beginning of next week by pub- in ' lie health nurses of district four, The communists are seizing it was reported today by Mrs. control of the New Deal, through Carol Raile, public health nurse, which they aim to control the Financed by the Tuberculosis' government of the United States," Association, the tests will be read Dewey shouted. "If they should later in the week by Dr. C. M. succeed, the fundamental fre-Smith, fre-Smith, city physician. Any re-! dooms of every American would actors will be given X-rays and; stand in gravest jeopardy." any further attention necessary,' No Individual Life she said. Kindergarteners of the; As an exampe of what he elementary schools in Provo meant. Dewey painted the com- will De given tnc aame ""munist system tests during ine ween oi no vember 13. Ex-Big Leaguer Killed by Auto SPOKANE, WASH., NOV. 20J.Pi Edward (Lefty) Brandt, 39, of Spokane, former big league baseball base-ball star, was fatally injured when struck by a car at a downtown down-town intersection shortly before midnight last night. nrrUAp. l?r,-ti9i-H Dplanw anrl Glenn Atkison said Brandt was, standing in the street talking! when he was struck by a car . , . : T C 1 n t ariven Dy lt. J-OUi5 i. oantiiei. ui, ron oeorge yngni cu. was being held for questioning mH nffiror aia tnpv naa oeen I in pursuit of him for speeding Ditched for Lewis and Clark high school before going to the Seattle Raniers. Five years ago Brandt retired from baseball and returned to Spokane. He had operated a hunting lodge in western Montana Mon-tana for the past few years. COSTUME BALL A costume ball sponsored by the Timpanogos ward M. I. A. organization, organ-ization, will be held in the reception re-ception hall Friday at 9 p. m. Old-time Old-time square dances with music by the Steineckert orchestra .will be the feature of the evening. XMAS CARDS LOCAL SCENES - IN COLOR For Example Pictures of: TIMPANOGOS : PROVO CANYON B. Y. U. CAMPUS : ALPINE LOOP MEMORIAL PARK : UPPER FALLS GOOD SELECTION XMAS Personalized STANDARD SUPPLY 83 North University Ave. Phone 14 Dewey ( Continued from page one) i change our system of govern- ment. ! built for war workers in the. From Baltimore, Dewey goes ! Salt Lake area, are despite war-to war-to Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, ! time restrictions comparable in' Barre, Pa., for evening appear- lances. None of his three talks today were being broadcast. His Boston speech last night was the strongest denunciation he had made of the "cynical alliance" alli-ance" which, he told 25.000 persons per-sons in strongly Catholic Boston, the New Deal has entered into "with Earl Browder's communists." commun-ists." He charged that the alliance alli-ance was effected through Sidney Hillman and his Political Action Committee. Audience Boos Mention of communism, Brow-der Brow-der and Hillman brought a chorus of boos from the audience which packed Boston Garden to the rafters. Lashing out with the bitterest personal denunciation of President Presi-dent Roosevelt since the cam paign began, Dewey charged that i .1 " rVI ! W AAlfAll -k AAaa Roosevelt, in his """"'" c l himself in office for 16 years. -av f w v ma fan; vu wi m Ul. .iv'll block for sale to the highest bidder." He said the highest bidders were "the Political Action Commute Com-mute of Sidney Hillman and the communists of Earl Browder." Dewey charged that President Roosevelt has "so weakened and as one under which "the individual cannot worship, vote or think as he would, or conduct his life as his own." The price for disobedience, h e declared, " i s liquidation, either through violence or slow economic strangulation." "Everyone knows," he continued, con-tinued, "that communism is for state ownership of all property, including your house, your farm and the factory, the shop, the office of-fice in which you work. It stands for absolute dictatorship, the abolition of civil rights and total Political and economic bigotry ,. ULD MEETING yjj u'u "Be pension recipients . . . " riaay at 2 m- 161 West Center St. 1 50 East 1st North OF ALL TYPES CARDS or Plain rneu F pad Wife Offered to Supply Mistress, says Husband HACKENSACK, N. J., Nov. 2 (U.R3 Bernard R. Armour, millionaire mil-lionaire chemist, was in , court again today to rid himself of the woman he loved because she sought to return his love by proxy. Armour, 53, head of the Heyden Chemical corporation, complained that pretty, vivocious, 31 -year-old Martha S. Armour offered to find him a mistress to take his mind off his work and her extra-marital activities. She proposed, he said, to weave a wonderful matrimonial mat-rimonial tent "in the fashion of the French" that would house a mistress for him and a lover for her, where veryone would be friendly, and broadminided and homeloving. Armour was to resume his testi Housing Projects Meet Approval SALT LAKE CITY, NOV. 20J.R) Construction of new housing in Utah has been kept to a minimum by an unusually effective program pro-gram of utilizing available man power, Preston L. Wright, re-i gional representative of the national na-tional housing agency, reported today. Wrigh.t who is now inspecting war housing projects in the Salt Lake area, added that new homes; quality with moderately priced! pre-war homes. t Geneva Walk-Out Is Terminated Some 60 workers at the Ge-neva Ge-neva plant who had been off work for a couple of days because be-cause the north gate, formerly used by the Koppers company construction workers, had been closed, were back at work today, it was reported. The grievance will be referred to the company by the union at the plant, it was reported. The walk-out involved some 20 men on each of three shifts, principally in the coke plant and general maintenance shop. The over-all steel plate production was not affected. The workers objected to the sudden closing of the gate, with no advance notice, when the workers had been accustomed to using the gate from the first. The locking of the gate forced the men to go around more than a mile farther to get to work. MOTHERS CLASS A mother's class will be held Friday at 2 p. m. in the library building under the direction of Miss Naomi Zundell. public health nurse. All interested persons will be welcome to attend, she said. r 1j. V For Governor Be Safe- Tafce this sample to the polls with you Nov. 7th and you will not lose your vote. DEMOCRATIC FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT Vict liMBt HARRY S. TRUMAN . Tm rcnHftUi PARNELL BLACK ED. J. McPOLTN MRS. R0XEY S. ROMNEY CHARLES H. SEMKEN for UaiM SUiM hatur ELBERT D. THOMAS Swoa4 J. WILL ROBINSON 'Tor JiwUot of tJM SupnoM (1 Taw Taral JAMES H. VOLTE Tor Juatioa f Um SaprMta Court ' (DwM Tom at t Tan LESTER A. WADE Tm liowtaryW tolo E. E. HONSON Tm Aiory GobtoJ GROVER A. GILES Paid Pol. Adv. by Orson Hottinger, mony today after telling chancery court in the first session of his divorce hearing that he was a long-suffering man. It was In 1937, he said, that his wife told him what their Englewood, N. J., mansion needed was a touch of Parisian culture. That, he explained, could be acquired ac-quired if each of them found' a new object for their affection in the manner of the wealthy French she had read about. When he protested, she called him "mid-Victorian," so Armour decided, he said, not to complain any more about lipstick and to bacco and her reading material. When his wife pressed the sub ject, he told her that he was too engrossed in his work to seek a new flame, so, in order to keep Iron Lung Saves Life of Patient "The iron lung Isn't often used, but when it is needed, it is life saving," John Zen-ger, Zen-ger, superintendent of the Utah Valley hospital, declared de-clared when questioned as to the effectiveness "of the "lung" in the recent case of a Geneva steel plant worker brought to the hospital with a crushed chest. L. J. Eldred, who donated the machine to the hospital some years ago, may consider himself the saver of at least one life, he said. The man's chest was crushed to the point of making mak-ing breathing almost impossible, impos-sible, and he might very easily have died if Mr. Eldred's iron lung had not been convenient con-venient for use, Mr. Zenger said. He told of how the worker was In the machine for the "best part of a week," and later was taken out more and more frequently until he was able to breathe sufficiently for himself. The man is now discharged from the hospital and is recovering normally. Labor Recruited In the City Jail SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 2 (U.R) The U. S. Employment Service here recruits workers for critical industries everywhere, with no exceptions. The USES today reported it had secured 55 workers during the past month from among inmates of the city jail who were incarcerated for misdemeanors. 2 drops la each Bostril work swiftly to help you breath freer again. Omi-tioa Omi-tioa : Useoolyaadireetad. PCNETRO ROSE OlOrS (Adv.) DEMOCRATS! Here's How To Your Ballot For BRACKEN SigS Tor n DUUM n n Court J. DRACKEN n A. Democratic Chairman, District 75. Salt Lake City, Utah the home-fires burning, she of fered to find one for him, he said. Armour said his wife's sugges tions made him suspicious, and he set private detectives to watch ing her. For months, he said, he took the reports of the detectives to his attorney, who said they were no grounds for divorce. The detectives brought in new reports. The lawyers promised the court they would show why Armour should be given his freedom and named three men in their petition. peti-tion. Mrs. Armour, who lost custody of her children in October of last year when her husband complained com-plained in chancery court of her ideas on sex education, said that none of her husband's charges were true. Rally Scheduled At American Fork A Democratic rally will be held in the Cameo theater in American Fork Friday at 8 p. m. with Grover Giles, Democratic candidate for attorney general, and Calvin Rawllngs. prominent Salt Lake attorney, as featured speakers. Mrs. Frances Callahan, assistant campaign manager, announced an-nounced today. A free movie following the rally and special music during the program will entertain everyone who is interested, she said. HEAR RENDELL N. MABEY State Representative FRIDAY NIGHT on KSL 9:15 QUAYLE CANNON Jr. FOR CONGRESS (Paid Political Adv.) REPUBLICAN THOMAS E. DEWEY Tio 1 JOHN W. BRICKER O MRS. ROBERT L. JUDD JAMES A. KELLY DAVID R. ROBERTS J. PAUL THOMAS XI ADAM S. BENNION (linii Patriot) UAYLE CANNON. JR. Jaatieo of to Supremo Court 1 Tow Term) WILLIAM M. McCREA rof Juotic ( um swm" Court (Uoxro Itrm oi o JOSEPH E. EVANS 1 I Fo SMrataiy f Stat n GEORGE E. COLLARD 1 Cianl n PRATT KESLER |