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Show It I I - j PAGE'S- &g&ELl&m&M daily heraldj T Passes BilltoRoi State Salaries (Continued: from laga One) Vaikttltifr tindeth leasing D" Uflca or PUDjic scnoou. :The third measure would pro vide for a standard expenditure of $3,000 f or each classroom unit per year and $500,000 for trans- , portauon. - Sep. Joseph L. Newel, D Og-.- den. chairman of the hou uiir. ; lea committee, said ha also would v report -out favorably a bill to r bopsl the pay of health commis- f sioneratojBOOO. . r- Siua raisin salaries of city mayors -and district attorneys S were still in committee. Mean-while, Mean-while, Mrs. C L. Jack's bill to r fruaramee an state employees a U15 per cent increase wn J p rewritten and would probably be eyprovca. newer renorteeL ;The Ogden representative ex- - - piainea tnat nis committee was : rarai to equalize requested In .creases. . w m aw- rt mewm I iwm awam mmjm v Croup of commissioners came to retuw xore raise from $4000 to $7500, or 87 per cent. w asked them how much they had raised their employees, or expected to raise them. Now we ere. coins to adjust their raise to about what we can get for the rest of the employees." . The house yesterday passed the Lunt-Boyer bill to permit cities ana towns to participate in a federal fed-eral postwar airport building program. - Also approved were pension system for non-teaching em ployees ox the educational system, sys-tem, a bill raising the educational requirements for .beauty cultur- isis, court admission of enemies! testa for drunken driving, and a bill providing that the state vet- . ennarian might Inspect below-grade below-grade meats. - The senate, meanwhile, passed two oajuung law revision bills so complicated that Dean William H. Leary of the University of Utah law school spent an hour and a half trying to explain them. The upper chamber, after spending spend-ing the morning on plans for a non-partisan Judiciary, set the . problem over until Thursday afternoon, af-ternoon, while a four-man committee com-mittee examined the three conflicting con-flicting bills. . Also passed were the Boyer constitutional amendment to clarify the state's right to tax such federal property as the Geneva Ge-neva Steel mill, and a bill requiring requir-ing the licensing of fur dealers. Tonight, school and civic leaders lead-ers were expected to appear at a public hearing on school financing financ-ing at the Newhouse hotel. Some five bills based on the report of .the governor's committee have -been prepared for introduction within the next day or so. - Only two more days remain for Introduction .of new bills. QUAKE IN BOISE . BOISE, Ida., Feb. 14 OI.R) Southwestern Idaho resident experienced ex-perienced their second slight earthquake in eight months last night when a tremblor of only a few second duration shook houses and rattled dishes. No damage was reported. A slight earthquake was recorded in the area last July. SAVE Ration Stamps Don't throw away old shoes! Try our expert repair service. HEEL CAPS While Yon Wait! LOUIS KELSCH & SONS SHOE REBUILDERS - -'"At the Bopterie GLOTONE Chrome-Plated TABLEWARE Attractive modern pattern In service- aide, mirror -bribt iiMUiblnrUi and KarV price tar lower than you would expect to py. You will find many uses for this sturdy tableware. 24-PIECE SET Sen ice for Six 1.5.25 Knives S rerks S Taespeeas S Oval Senp Svoems Catalog Order i Department 187 WEST CENTER mm Allies Maintain Contact With Foe On Italian Front ROME. Feb. 14 UJD Allied patrols maintained contact with the enemy on both the Fifth and Eighth army fronts, headquarters said today. Patrols clashed with German units at several points in the west coastal sector, inflicting en emy casualties. Germany artillery heavily shelled forward positions. Brazilian troops in platoon strength, supported by artillery, raided a hill feature near Gag-glo Gag-glo west of the Fistoia-Bologna road and engaged defenders In a . minor skirmish. Further West other units re pulsed an enemy patrol which penetrated Fifth army positions. A small German patrol .was captured near Frasslnet in the sector south of Bologna. Patrols' were active on the Eighth army front south of Lake Comacchio and a heavy artillery exchange was reported to the southwest. , Strong forces of escorted heavy-) bombers nit communication targets tar-gets in Yugoslavia and Austria and harbor installations in north ern Italy. Manila (Continued from Face One) Nichols airfield yesterday after more than a week of savage lighting, and tnen pusned on along the shores of Manila bay to take the Cavite naval base. At Cavite, which was burned once by the Americans before they abandoned it in December, 1941, and now again by tne Japanese, Jap-anese, MacArthur's troops cap tured 10 enemy seaplanes and a battery of three-inch suns intact Armored spearheads ox tne u. S. First cavalry division, mean while broke through to Manila bay north of the llth airborne, clearing the Pasay district, and wheeled north toward the walled city. They also mopped up a small Japanese pocket around Nielson airfield, near Fort Mc-KInely. Mc-KInely. The 37th infantry division also was moving in on the walled city from the east and southeast, in conjuction with the First Cavalry. MacArthur announced that tne Japanese so far have suffered more than 68,000 casualties in the five-week Luzon campaign, against 9,683 American losses 2,- 102 killed. 192 missing and 7.38? wounded. Vandonborg (Continued from Fare One) hours the release of news that the Big Three in the Crimea had agreed on the pattern of the postwar post-war world. Members of congress, with astonishingly as-tonishingly few exceptions, still were speaking well if sometimes cautiously of the program when the San Francisco conference .delegation .del-egation was announced. WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 (U.R) Cdrdell Hull, "the father of the United Nations." probably will be on hand next April when the United Nations world security organization is chartered at San Francisco. Hull has been ill since Oct 3, but is expected to be well enough to take part in the conference when it begins April 25. The president called the 73-year-old statesman out of retirement re-tirement yesterday by inviting him to serve as a delegate and senior advisor to his successor, Secretary of State Edward R. Stettinius. Jr., at the full-dress United Nations conference. VETS GO TO WORK IN WAR PLANTS SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 14 (U.R) About 80 per cent of the discharged soldiers accepting jobs through the U. S. Employment Service here, go to work in war plants, Kenneth B. Johnson, USES manager, revealed today. He said that 619 veterans were placed in local Jobs during the past two months. In addition, almost al-most 1,000 veterans sought information infor-mation about new jobs or benefits bene-fits due them. An analysis of air shipment the country over shows that machin ery and hardware head the list ! comprising 23 per cent of all shipments, ship-ments, printed matter 15, store merchandise 13, valuables 9, jew elry 8, motor parts 4 and films 4. S I S. - !-. y it' t - Mil Ji W'' Sid Nfel Sprihgvillo Mdi Is Naval Aviator : CORPUS JCniliSTI.Tex. "iiEU don.Reo EwelL-on of Mrs;jWm. XweIU350 North Third 'East St, Springville, -graduated recently from lithe; naiv- r uair training bases, Corpus Circuit, and was jcommls-ttoned jcommls-ttoned . an en sign in the U, S. naval re-, serve. " Be is a form-. er student at the Los-Angeles Junior College, Col-lege, Los Angeles, An-geles, Calif. Each- naval aviator la an expert ' flyer. A navigator, aer- Ens. Ewell ologist, gunner, and radio operator. oper-ator. , . Naval aviators fly carrier-based carrier-based or land-based planes In combat zones, or at naval air stations sta-tions at home and abroad. Types of planes In naval avia tion include fighters, dive bomb ers, scout and observation, multiengined mul-tiengined bombers, patrol planes, and air transports. Coast Guard Man Home on Leave Leland E. Cook, seaman cook second class with the U. S. coast guard, and son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland L. Cook. 308 East First South, left Feb. t 7, to report to a coast guard base in New York, where he will be stationed. station-ed. He recently spent a 30-day leave from pa-troL pa-troL convoy and war-scouting war-scouting duty in the Pacific. Leland has two years of Over seas riutv to hf credit His bride, the former Maxine Child of Iowa, is visiting with his parents for a short time until she leaves to Join her husband In New York. Tickets on Sale For Y High-Provo Hoop Game Friday Because of the great interest inter-est being shown in the B. Y. High-Provo basketball game Friday night, reserved seats for the public will be sold at Hedeulst Drug No. 1, it was announced today by C. La Yolr Jensen, ticket manager. The game, will be played at the Ladles' tym Friday nirht Bleachers will be put in to take care of a maximum crowd for this game, Mr. Jensen Jen-sen said today. Veteran Shows He's Optimistic WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 The first veteran to get a ness loan under the G. 1 (U.R) Bill of Rights is an optimist. He's going into the meat business. busi-ness. The veterans administration announced today that what it believes be-lieves to be the first loan for the purpose of starting a business has been made to Jack Charles Bree-den, Bree-den, Falls Church, Va. The loan, for $3,000. was made by the Hamilton National Bank of Washington. Fifty per cent of it Was guaranteed by the veterans administration as provided in the G. I. bill The Veterans administration said Breeden was going to use his loan to buy a refrigerator truck. He plans to sell and deliver meat to some 20 to 25 retail butchers in northern Virginia and the Washington, Wash-ington, D. C. area. STRIKE HALTED SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 14! (U.R) A strike that tied up opera tions of the Cudahy Packing plant here thi morning for three hours, has been settled, temporar ily after intervention of the war manpower commission. The strike involved some 150 members of the CIO Packing Union. It was started when one; of the employees was suspended because he refused to transfer to another job. FEAST OR FAMIN FOR NEWS MEN CHEYENNE. Wvo.. Feb. 14 (U.R) With the S. C. Benners, it s either a feast or a famine. For weeks, Benner, a member of the Wyoming, Eagle News staff, had been looking for an apartment, apart-ment, which in this town is like trying to buy cigarettes. They're virtually non-existent. His wife found' one yesterday and rented it. Benner found another an-other and did likewise. Today, they're faced with the problem of disposing of the hordes of apartment-hunters who heard the news of their rare fortune. Sergeant Philip Gaugham, of the U. S. Marines, fired America's first shot in the Spanish-American war in 1898. lcfvous,Oos(lcss i a fcuuaitivai oi is Bvjtisi "-r" ' 1 roJ "i a- 1 I XT funcUonal periodic disturbances make you feel nervous, tired, restless, "dragged out" et such timet try Samoa Sa-moa Lydla X. Ftnkaam's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms, it aelst nature Pmkbam's Compound is also a trend stomachic tonic, follow label directlona. Worth trying! LYDIA L PINKHAM'S 25 Adv.) - - sLI : ' ' Sizeable Gams aKcedUpOn estern (Continued front page one) village and ran into two counterattacks" counter-attacks" which were handled han- Soth aides were throwing in creasingly heavy armored and in fantry forces Into the sodden Rhineland plain, and field dispatches dis-patches said elements of the seven -t Nazi divisions already had been identified m the battle. Far to- the- south, Lt Gen. George & Patton's American Third, army widened and deep- tn1 ita on rrlrfor thmutrh (h Siegfried line beyond Pruem and! added a few hundred- bitterly-contested bitterly-contested yardi to Ita bridgeheads on German soil across the Sure and Our rivers. On a front of almost 100 miles between the attacking Canadian and American forces, three other oth-er Allied armies still were poised pois-ed along the west bank of the Roer river waiting , to join the assault on Germany's west wall. Berlin spokesmen, after pre dicting for a week that the Roer offensive was about to explode at any hour, began boasting that their partial destruction of the Roer dams had completely disrupted dis-rupted the Allied timetable. Enemy broadcasts asserted that the Roer floods had not yet subsided and that the swampy terrain would hold up the expected ex-pected offensive for days or even weeks after the waters receded. Mud and floods already were hampering the Canadian First army drive In the north, turning the attack into a semi-emphibl-ous operation. At many points, the Canadian and British troops were moving forward in amphibious amphib-ious tanks and assault boats while artillerymen dragged their guns through waist-deep water to keep pace with the advance. Clearing skies yesterday and early today brought Allied war-planes war-planes out in great strength to support the attack with a series of smashing blows against German Ger-man troop concentrations and communications lines all the way back to, the middle reaches of the Rhine. Fighters, fighter-bombers and rocket-firing attack planes struck repeatedly at the enemy's immediate imme-diate support areas along a 10 to 15-mile arc east and southeast of the battlefield. Scottish and English troops attached at-tached to the Canadian army hammered out the biggest advances ad-vances of the past 24 hours, driving driv-ing four miles southeast of Kleve to a point three miles or less from Calcar. Hasselt, three miles southeast of Kleve, was taken after a fierce zignt ana tne urmsn were reported re-ported well beyond the town this morning. A second attacking column broke out of the eastern end of the Reich forest 54 miles due west of Calcar and struck overland over-land toward the town against heavy opposition. Five Motorists Lose Gas Rations More Salt Lake City motorists lost their gasoline rations for unauthorised un-authorised California trips, Ruth B. Robinson, chief clerk. Salt Lake City war price and rationing board, announced. C. G. Horman. has had his suo- plemental gasoline rations redetermined re-determined and the mileage limited. M. S. Decker, was required to surrender four of his "A" stamps, and was further denied the right to receive supplemental gasoline for a period of ninety days. Harry H. Dallin, was ordered to surrender five "B" coupons. A. Sieverts, had his mileaae redetermined and was ordered to surrenaer au of the "C" coupons remaining in his book For misuse of gasoline Preston R. Jones received a ninty-day suspension "A" book. F v oraer ana loss ol nts.rishtine was rasing in Lebus. on All five motorists were ordered to bring their mileage rationing record to the board so that proper entry could be made in this record. How Far Berlin? The nearest distances to Ber- ,In 'rm advanced Allied lines to- day: EASTERN FRONT 31 miles (from Zeckerick). WESTERN FRONT 295 miles (from north of Kleve). ITALY 530 miles (from north of Ravenna). Millions Switching To Mutton Suit And Medication "Old Reliable" For Relieving Chest Muscle Tighraess-cevgiiing, Kaon marie Pain, Simole Braises and Many Other Heme Uses. Grandma liked to "rub" miseries of chest colds and other simple fain. She medicated her rub but nslSted it contain mutton suet. She liked the way mutton suet disappeared disap-peared as it helped carry medication medica-tion to nerve ends in skin to relieve pain. Today science has modernized modern-ized Grandma's old-time pain relief principle to bring you Penetro, the salve that contains mutton suet plus 5 active ingredients. Mothers now thank Grandma for her old idea that created this newer relief. In this colds' season, Penetro is especially helpful in easing- chest muscle tightness, chest rawness. loosening1 phlegm, reiievinj coughs. That's because Penetro melts in stantly, Quickly vanishes to act 3 wavs (1) To relieve pain at nerve ends in skin. 2) To ease chest muscle mus-cle tightness by counter-irritation. (3) To soothe irritated breath passages pas-sages through inhaled aromatic vapors. va-pors. Penetro is so helpful, too, In easing rheumatic and neuralgie pain, taking1 sting1 from chapped Bps and nostrils, and as a soothmr dressing1 for bruises, miner cuts. Today get clean,. white, easy-to-use Penetro., Adv.) I Yanks Blast Jap-Ho!d Section of Manila t j- r -zL - One Of the first photos to come out of Manila since American occupation shows smoke rising from large fires started by Japanese demolition charges and Yank mortar fire in the Jap-held areas of the city. U. S. Signal Corps Radio-telephoto from New Guinea. Manila Civilians Greet Yan ks r":'"'""TW M" ';' " n ii mi in ii il ..-. " ,J ' ' W " .:!'. fcu?hwf. Manila civilians gather in the This is one of the first photos U. 8. Signal Corps Radlotelephoto from yew Guinea. Fruit Growers to Meet at Mapleton Marketing, labor and container problems of the Mapleton Fruitgrowers Fruit-growers association will be discussed dis-cussed at a meeting to be held In Mapleton, Thursday at 7:30 p. m., according to Clarence D. Ashton, Provo, who will be present to represent the Utah county egri-culural egri-culural office, today. The annual election for association associa-tion officers to serve during 1845 will also be conducted at that time, he said. Present officers include Cornell Mendenhall, president, and Clay Beesley, director. di-rector. Russians (Continued from page one) Russian army forces have established estab-lished a "major bridgehead across the Oder at Reitwein, 35 miles east of the capital and five miles southwest of Kuestrin, Nazi broadcasts said. ' Th nmuni also miH fr.t the west bank of the Oder 33 miles east of Berlin and five miles north of Frankfurt. These forces presumably had cut the Kuestrin-Frankfurt Kuestrin-Frankfurt railway at Lebus and were within a half mile of the west bank railway between the two cities. Northeast of Berlin, Russian forces advanced to within five miles of the Danzig-Stettin-Berlin railway. The Second and Third Ukrainian Ukrain-ian armies, meantime, re-grouped in Hungary under 73 generals for resumption of offensives aimed at Vienna, Bratislava and Bohemia after completing the liberation of encircled Budapest. Irritable, depressed moods are often related to constipation. Take Nature's Remedy (NR Tablets). Contains no chemicals, no minerals, no phenol derivativea,NI Tablets are difrerent act different. Purely vegetable combination of 10 vegetable ingredi-ents ingredi-ents foraulated over SO years ago. Uacoated or candy coated, their . action la dependable, thorough, yet a as millions of NRa nave Get a 25 box today . or seonomy eiie. All druggists Caution! Take only as dbeeted. ni fojitetfr, toMoaowAOtiGHt Alt-VEGETABLE LAXATIVE c:v;o:j)suggistio;i FOR ACID INSISSSTIOIf- lUleD v wives will ha ccr.3 hCn3 fO eee j Mrs."Gay"cr i.nTCXam't1 - - 44N x V- " - C . 3tH K - -etc x- ft. A: street to welcome American soldiers to reach this country from Manila Court Suspends Prison Sentence Fairmont, W. Va., Feb. 14 (U.R) Judge Charles E. Miller of the Marion county circuit court, at noon today suspended the one to five-year prison sentence imposed im-posed upon Benjamin Franklin Male, 74, on his conviction for a 40-year-old murder charge. Male had been remarkably calm and self-possessed throughout the trial and his internment in the mandatory one-to-five-year sen-county sen-county jail, but he broke down tence. -:'l iiWr WS: smii -- i fir 'I 'w tEtlil f I 0 D I l'lM I.. P L V. ft- - V -J ?;' . Jl with their occupation of the city. since its fall to the Americans. and cried when the Judgb nounced the suspension. an- The defense asked today . tnat the verdict of voluntary man slaughter returned against Male last week in the death of Walter O. Smith, a crippled school teacher, teach-er, in Hoult, W. Va., in 1905, be set aside. Judge Miller overruled the motion. ' then pronounced the Bcdier Beer it net eeJy e preJoct ef wertera aunefaefnre.-but aunefaefnre.-but ef weMera farm tYL For Utc fcartry eied in the brewing of this fameus beer i jpeeiaQy srevm by fsrmera ef the iMteraxmntaia by Becker's. Il rate in trowa sarwherc in the world. - To innire and maintain hi (best enalily ta its prodoct. the Becker Praductt Company epcratea iu own saalUBg plant. Thoa it controb every step ia the manufacture ef the bev erase told ender ita fanuliar labeL J''" The other logredienu SPjf yeast and die cboixat hop (rown. ''frj Add to these insredieBU. the will and the 4011 le make an eetataedias predect ... sad yea have the fall ttery ef the See reality end the The drink ef aiederauea . the brea4 el quality. C T $ COIf il l BaBy IGIIedBy 1 Family Bulldog LOS ANGELESTFeb. 14 (UJ0 Jealous of bis mistress affection for her 2I-month-old daughter, knIMna larf k .. I nn th hlM (hat had Hma hla playmate and killed her. The dog, Woof, grabbed little Marguerite Theresa Derdenger by the neck and crushed her spin before the mother Mrs. Drusilia Derdenger, could loosen the grip The child was rushed across the A A. A. ft t . sum 10 a pnyncian ou was dead when he examined her. Mrs. Derdenger said she had had the dog for five years and that he had been a playmate and guardian to the. child since ita birth. She said she had been ly- d ing on the floor and Woof made 1 playful overtures and tried to lick her face. She had Just ordered him away when little Marguerite toddled over to her mother and began to hug her. Snarling, suddenly the dog leaped at the child, sinking his fangs into her neck. An eight-year-old boy was frightened by a proposed anesthetic anesthe-tic injection at the university dental clinic , Human Tradition Versus God's Word Combatting Human Traditions What shall be our attitude toward human traditions? Some say Just leave them alone for fear of offending him who holds them. If Jesus and Paul had adopted that course they could both still be alive so far as their enemies cared. Jesus said, "But me it (the world hateth, because I testify of it, that its works are evil." (John 7:7). Yes, the world hated Jesus because he pointed out its false doctrines and unscriptural practices. Paul said, "Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather even reprove re-prove them." (Eph. 5:11). Read also 2 Tiro. 4:1-5. It Is not enough to keep ourselves free from human traditions, we must even reprove those who believe and practice them. Surely no one can object to our using the Lord's method of combatting human tradition. He said, "God said ... but ye say." (Matt. 15:4, S). He put the teaching of God in such contrast with human error that it was impossible for his hearers hear-ers to misunderstand or fail to see the truth and their duty. Now if we use this method on some present - day religious practices we will not be more unkind, or un-Christian than was our Lord. Take this one: God said. Buried and raised in baptism (Rom. 6:3; CoL 2:12), but you say, Sprinkle a little water on the head.. Can any one fall to see the truth here? Can anyone object to this method of approach? Our Lord used it (Continued) CHURCH OF CHRIST S67 E. Center, Provo regtea from feelgreed seed pievide42 quality with the facst Butting barley are pare artettaa water, pre-ilwre wide popelarity ef Beckers Asacricaa AMERICAN nil CCMCD nr I a w fc h Odd I T A t Adv. |