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Show i Parley Named In PhiliDDines cuds of seven ovemmeat dprt-jnents dprt-jnents and the oIn economic dminijrtration today were named acmaerr to the eight-man united 3 SUtes delegation" to the San Fran cisco-conierence. i Aaditant vsecretary of State .-James CDoa and aeven state de-- de-- partment -experts on world or- gantratlonwill form the nucleus ox a;Z4-man advisory stafL f,The" advisors: v ' SUU departmentDunn, legal adviser Green IL Hackworth, Leo i Pasvolsky Isaiah Bowman, Hanr-llton Hanr-llton Fish Armstrong, Charles W. Taussig, Charles P. Taft and John oHicjcersott. . 'War department assistant secretary sec-retary John J. McCloy, Lt Gen Stanley D. EmbicJc, MaJ. Gen. Muir 8, Fairchild and BrlgY Gen. Kenner P. Hertford. Empiric and Fairchild are assigned to the Anglo-American joint chiefs of staif; Hertford is with the operations opera-tions division in the office of chief ctstaff George C. Marshall. . Navy -department assistant secretary for air Artemus L. Gates, Admiral A. J. Hepburn, chairman of the navy general board; Vice Admiral-Russell R. Willson and Rear Admiral Harold C. Train. Treasury department Assistant secretary Harry D. White. Interior department undersec retary Abe Fortas. Agriculture department assistant assist-ant secretary Charles F; Brannan. Commerce department Frank A. Waring, special assistant to the . secretary of commerce. TEA Deputy administrator Oscar Fox. . Advisers from the justice and labor departments are to be named later. , German Civilians; Loot : Freig htfCars N it $ At A Farmer Cfiarges -Neighbors Attack I BLACKFOOT. Ida, April 4 (UJD An assault case continued here today in probate court involving Woodrow Strochein of Grandview, who cnargea eight neighbors with the attack. The 28-year-old farmer yester day, under oath, testified, that the eight men took him from a Grandview grocery store, struck him. then put film in an automo bile ancv.took him to the Joseph Cosgrove farm. - . . There, he said, the men . beat him some more -and forced from him a statement that he would withdraw a suit he had filed in Bingham county district court seeking a performance of contract from cosgrove in toe purcnase from him of farm property. MM. a. . . 'MM . . a. xno assault ioo mace en. iu. The eight men charged are Cos grove. Jack' ' Chandler. Robert Coper, Edward Harrington, v Luther Lu-ther Satterfield. Elmer Smith, Thomas Adamson and. Theodore Herbert. Strocheln also has filed in district dis-trict court a suit seeking $75,000 92;Jrip-PIa.es Blasted In Raid CHUNGKING April 4 (LUD-U. S. . 14th sir force planes,, striking at the Shanghai I airdrome P500 mites from Okinawa, destroyed 92 Jap planes and damaged 18 in surprise raids Sunday and Monday,' Mon-day,' it was announced today. Other P-Sls, swooping down on Japanese troops at Sinstang north of the Yellow river, killed 1200 of tne enemy, a communique said. Fignter planes ox tne u. s. China air force, attacking the Shanghai airdrome in blows co ordinated with the Okinawa in vasion, shot down six enemy planes and blasted the remainder on tne ground. j damages from nine men, Including Includ-ing -the eight named above, for Injuries sustained in the so-called -rioting." - Bees are helping in the 'war keffort. They honey helps con serve, sugar, and beeswax is used to coat shells and planes. PAGE 40 yHQvOi tTTAH COTJKTT. UTAH rAVJtl u WEDNESDAy. APRIL 4, 1945 DAILY. HBEIALD Pfltton Birthplace To Be Preserved LOS ANGELES, April 4 (UJ5 The proposal to preserve, pre-serve, the San Gabriel, Cel., home in which Lt Gen, George S. Patton was born, had to be altered today. The adobe house was razed in 1910. So County Supervisor Wil- . Ham A. Smith changed his suggestion to preserve the Patton birthplace as a historical histori-cal monument He proposed the adobe house be restored as a suitable museum in Patten's honor and donated a dejlar to start off a public subscription drive. More than 12 million miles have been flown and more than two billion gallons, of high-octane gasoline have been used by American aircraft in military operations op-erations since Pearl Harbor. Soviet Attacks Iceland Attitude By UNITED PRE SiS Af Moscow broadcast, recorded by the FCC today, attacked Iceland Ice-land for what it charged was Iceland's Ice-land's refusal to declare war on Germany. The Moscow commentator noted that Iceland had been saved from the Nazis by the United Nations, and that it had achieved independence inde-pendence "with the direct support sup-port of the three great powers." WAGE INCREASE DENIED BANK HELP DENVER, April 4 XUR) Tne Ninth regional war labor board has upheld the denial of wage increases of from three to 1V cents an hour for employes of the Idaho First National Bank, Boise, it was announced today. The Wage stabilization director had previously ruled that the bank was already paying the "sound and tested going rates." (NEA RaAia.Tlmnhittn J German civilians loot German freight cam cut off in Hanau, Germany, by American Fourth Armored Division. Divi-sion. Packages and food parcels are thrown to crowd surrounding car by man standing in open door as other eager Nazis climb inside. Signal Corps radlo-telephoto. " ' Civilians Threaten Revolt Against Hitler Rumors Connect Rundstedt Vith New flitler Plot stww. mnniNBOTHAM N United Press 8taff Correspondent LONDON, April 4 U.KJ A Stockholm dispatch of doubtful anfTianttoitv af1 trtriav that the Gestapo had discovered plans for a new anu-uiuer coup in oer-. oer-. many. ., An uncredited dispatch in the KtrwV-hnlm nfmrim&ner Tidninsen said Marshal Karlon Rundstedt. deposed German, commanaer on the western front, was executed by a firing squad following exposure ex-posure of the plot. - Other arrests were made throughout Germany and guards were doubled,, then tripled at Adolf Hitler's mountain retreat at Berchtesgaden, the . dispatch said. The plot, reminiscent of the attempt at-tempt in which Hitler was wounded-last June, was said to have called far coordinated attacks on the Fuehrer's headquarters, presumably pre-sumably near Berlin, and. on Berchtesgaden. Parachutists were to have carried car-ried out the attack on Berchtesgaden, Berchtes-gaden, he dispatch said. Swiss dispatches to the London Daily Express, while not mentioning mention-ing the plot said the entire Berchtesgaden Berch-tesgaden area of upper Bavaria had been closed off to all travelers. travel-ers. Other European reports told oi the wholesale removal of prominent promin-ent Allied prisoners to the Bavarian Bavar-ian alps, where diehard Nazis are expected to make their last stand. Among those moved, these reports re-ports said, were King Leopold of Belgium, former French Premier - Sdouard Herriot and Jakob Stalin, Sta-lin, son of Premier Stalin. Dentists often use "remove" instead in-stead of "extract" because it sounds less painful. But getting Sonny into the chair is still like pulling teeth. By ELEANOR PACKARD United Press . War Correspondent WITH SEVENTH ARMY, GERMANY, April 3 U.K Authentic Auth-entic reports of growing resentment resent-ment by German civilians against the Wthrmacht showed - today that the German people realize the war is lost and further sacrifices sac-rifices and destruction guseless. - The reports were furnished by two captured high-ranking German Ger-man army officers Brig. Gen. Paul Steinbach and Maj. Gen. Count Creola. They revealed that in some cases civilians have gone so far as threatening to take up arms against Nazi soldiers if the army insisted on making defensive positions outside their towns. The Germarf people have seen with their own eyes that defended towns are generally levelled by She's Got Rhythm J 1 American artillery and planes, while undefended points are vir tuaily undamaged. : While the outward signs of re' sentment are Increasing steadily. raccoraing to tne German generals, tney have not reached the pro portions of revolt. However, they are the first public signs of dissatisfaction dis-satisfaction with German authori ties. One town particularly cited by the generals for its hostility from civilians was Koenigshof en on the Tauber river, 18 miles southwest of Wuerzburg. Wife Jailed For i Husband's Death BOISE, Ida., April 4 (U.PJ Mrs. Thelma Stonebraker of Cascade, charged with the first decree murder of her husband, George Stonebraker, was to be brought here today and placed in Ada county jail by Sheriff Merlin Francis of Valley county. She was brought to Boise be cause no women's ward facilities are available in Cascade. Jurisdiction of the case will re main in VSlley county. She was charged with the mur der late yesterday by prosecutor Thomas Feeney after a coroner's Jury found that stonebraker "came to his death by gunshot wounds inflicted by a gun in the hands of his wife, Thelma Stonebraker Stone-braker . . ." The shooting occurred about 10:30 Monday night during a din ner party at the Stonebraker home. Testimony of witneses at the inquest, disclosed no particular particu-lar motive.' Deputy Sheriff Burl Kelley. who talked to the 32-year-old woman immediately after the shooting, said she kept saying: "I killed him and I don't know why." Anotner similar situation oc curred in Wuerzburg itself, ac cording to a German major who deserted to the American lines, Despite this situation, the two German generals insisted there would be no large scale surren der of German soldiers because of their "military honor." They believed fighting would continue until Germany was overrun and they guaranteed were were no preparations being made to use gas even-as a last resort. Drunk Four Years Lands in Court NEW YORK, April 4 (U.R) Clif ford Titus, 46, Brooklyn, whose wife said he had been drunk every day since spring, 1941 was held today on a charge of third degree assault. Mrs. Margarite Titus complained com-plained to Magistrate . Raphael Koenlg that her husband beat her Easter morning when he returned home drunk. . ."How long was he drinking," Koenlg asked. "Four years," Mrs. Ttitus- said "I mean on this particular drunk?" v "X our years, Mrs. Titus repeated. re-peated. "He's been drunk every day." MEETINGS PLANNED SALT LAKE CITY, April U.R) The Utah industrial acci dent commission plans a series of open forum meetings to. discuss industrial safety measures, Safe ty Inspector Edward Scherer an nounced yesterday. Scherer revealed the plans In a report to the regular meeting of the Utah-Nevada safety as sociation, attended by 90 safety engineers, here last night. If you think of -the organ as an instrument on which to produce stately, sonorous music. Ethel Smith, above, will change your mind. She has won fame and some degree of fortune by beating beat-ing out swing with a technique that employs "her fingers, her feet, her body and heart.", - n doWZ mitt I -TV TWO smart cooking utensiUin" f L f I to smart cooking utensils in one. The cover keeps food warm oa the table or serves as an extra pie plate. Bottom can b used as open baker. Comes in three sizes. Qt sire Pyrx Double JPA Duty Casserole. ..only JVr OR HERE'S A DANDY WAY TO GIT STARTED I If you haven't already tried Pyrex war, here's a good way to begin. The Pyrex Deep Pie Dish is swell for cooking and serving serv-ing individual chicken pies, soup, cereals, custards, apple 1 sauce. 8-01. (I cup) size V r GESSFORD'S Inc. 47 North University Avenue Phone 53 WANTED! WHAT CAK YOU SPARE THAT THEY CAN WEAR? 0 This month, from th clothes closets and attics of America's homes, must come 150 million pounds of serviceaBle used clothing, shoes, and bedclothes, to help relievo the pitiful suffering of 125 million men, women said children in war-torn European countries. Will 37) help? Then call your local UNCJG Commit, tee right now for fulj information. UrilTED NATIONAL CLOTHING COLLECTION For Oversees War Relief Henry J. Kaiser, Netiesd Ckdraa APRIL 1 fp 30 A member of the Provo Clothing Collection Com-mitte Com-mitte will call at your home and -pick up your clothing. Please have your bundle ready when' he calls. If You Live Outside of Provo, Please Call Your Local Chairman yWWSeyejssjiaisn-(i; .'v" . s' . M , - - , , T77 sUllT- t' I STORE HOURS : MONDAY, 12 Noon To 8 P.XM. Other Days: 10 to 6 Misses Cotton Drosses COS Cottons are the indispensables in every woman's summer wardrobe ! . . . They always look so cool and fresh with their full skirts and square necks, or trim tailored lines! Crisp, non-mussabla seersuckers, smart snappy stripes, dainty dain-ty eyelet trimmed ginghams. Dainty Summery Cottons in Sunshine Colors A Wide Selection of Flattering Styles r V 7 i Tempting Rayon Treats for Summer! They'll see you through bS6 your important occasions ' Tailored rayon faille frocks, . short sleeved, cut for comfort, many button-do button-do wn-the-front styles: Clever necklines. Is 1 |