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Show nn n IT' Spanish Fork Soldier With 44th Division Da vies, husband of Mrs. Maxine in "Operation Flag Hoist" on L. Davies, 65 W. 4th S., Spring-vill- e. I wo Jima were Calvin A. Peck. Vic. FORT LEWIS, Wash. Calvin J. Tippetts, son of Orland A. Tippetts, Routes 1, Spanish Fork, will move to the Yakima, Wash., firing center in jMay when the 44th Infantry Division partici- High School student, entered the Navy in March, 1952, and served aboard the light cruiser USSTHanchester before being as signed here. : pates In Exercise "Hfll Top." A mall clerk in the division's 130th Regiment, Pfc. Tippetts en tered the Army in April, 1S53. Orem Sergeant Joins 'Hi!! Top' Exercise Mr. DaviesJ a former Spring-vill- e Lehi Nayymen Serve Aboard Destroyers i boatswains mate first class: Navy Ens. Lynn Pendleton, and Richard L. Westerwelle, pipefit By UNITED PRESS ter tnini class, all of Provo.. Bank clearings: Dun & Brad-- " Mr. Peck is a son of Mr. and street, Inc., week ended April 23, Mrs. Oscar J. Peck, 183 N.. 3rd clearings in 25 leading cities E., and Ens. Pendleton is a son vs. $17,97744,000 (reof 'Mr. and Mrs Benjamin F. vised) in the previous week and Pendleton, .263 E. 4th N. Mr. $17,291,924,000 a year ago. Westerwelle's home address is Carloadings: Association 1 FAR EAST Serving aboard the destroyer USS Siockham here is Edwin D. Webb, seaman, son of Donald O. Webb. '687 N. 5th W. Lehi, and aboard the USS Heer-ma- n 2nd N. Marvin Higbee Serves Aboard Escort Ship a j : . i Provqan Promoted To Major in Reserves i ;.: : Elmet J. Storey of Provo has FQUr been promoted to the rank of FORT LEWIS, Wash. Re S. Force U. Air the the in are men among Utah County major serve, accordinz to word re members of the 44th Infantry Di ceived by the 942th Reserve vision who will move to the YakiSquadron in Provo. ma, Wash., firing center, this Mai. Storey Is a former pilot month to participate in Exercise of Air Force fighter and transport "Hill Top." , aircraft.! During the early part Thay include Pvt. Charles L. of World War II he ferried planes Peterson, son of Mr. and. Mrs. from the United States to Alaska, Charles A. Peterson, Route 1, and later piloted transport planes Lehi; PFC Carwin.C. Williams, In the theater. son of'Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. MaJ. Storey has been an active PFC Route 1, Williams, Payson; reservist since 194S, and has been GraritC. Meldrum, son of Mr. commander of the local reserve Mrs. Kenneth G. Meldrum, unit during the past year. In his and Route Provo, and PFC Maurice professional training he has spe Smith, 2,son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarcialized in the field of personne ence Smith, 999 N. 5th W., Provo. psychology r and now serves as director of personnel at the Utah All except Pvt. Peterson are married and j have their wives State Hospital, living with them in the are a. 4 . j At Korean Harbor ProYoans Participate In Island Operation , Korea Serving here i PACIFIC FLEET Among the, with Harbor Defense Unit as who participated recently men is man E. Seaman Lyle repair PUSAN. i Episcopal OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (UP) Dr. William G. Pollard, a atomic scientist who was jarred back to the faith of his childhood by the atomic bomb he helped perfect donned the vestments of the Episcopal priesthood Saturday. service of American Railrcads-wee- k ended In a solemn, two-hohe which at Church, St Stephens' April 24, 625,181 cars, compared with 612,884 in the previous week helped build in 1947, Dr. Pollard and 779,804 a year" ago; . loadings-to--d was ordained by the Ri. Rev. ?; ate approximated;. 10,286,058 Theodore Barth. bishop of the Diocese of Tennessee. cars vs. 11,718,053 last year. . ,; Steel: American . Iron & Steel The ordination climaxed nine Institute operations - this week years of study and effort in .the scheduled at 68.4 per cent of rated church study that began when the capacity or 1,632,000 tons vs actual atomic blasts jarred him into rerate , of 68.6 per- - cent of 1,636,000 turning to the religion he had tons, a week earlier and compared spurned in his youth. with 100.3 per cent or 2,262,000 tons a year ago; index of producBefore the election which made tion" (1947-4-9 100) him Pope Pius XH. Eugenio Pa average equals 101.6 compared with ' 101.8 last cell! was secretary of state of Vatican City. week and 140.8 a year ago. . ? I ur ! China-Burma-Ind- ia Lyle Davies on Duty 242 Farms Participate Atomic Scientist Dons Vestments bf Durina '53 in I imo ChurcK r.lOTHEIt'S DAY IS MAY Soil Conservation Work f S " r i FROM BEER FAVOMT: 9th Penney's own nil t 'Night Out' in Moscow V.-- . STRATFORD - ON - AVON, Eng land (UP) Scotland Yard sous- -t an American airman Saturday as a possible suspect in the strangling of a midwife jj jarua from William Shakespeare's grave. A. local taxi cab driver toa A total of 242 farms in the Tim as members of the district board. detectives he saw a woman ne panogos Soil Conservation Dis and elected Sylvester Allen, Map-leto- n, thought was Olive Bennett argnisg trict carried out land conserva-- l to succeed Frank Carnesc- - with an American airman near tion practices in 1953. ca, also of Mapleton. ' the gloomy graveyard of L.-These included: Leveling 714 Earlier, the state conservation century Holy Trinity Church 13 acres of land: construction of one committee appointed KarlrAlle- - days before she was murdered. irrigation pond, 182 small head man, Springville, and John Gill-- Shakespeare is buried la, the gajes and 2,632 feet of pipe line; man, Orem; to the Timpanogos church. seeding of eight acres of range: conservation board. jThe nurse was strangled in the of onei new farm irri-- j The farmer members of the yard. Her body, was weighted with setting-u- p gation system; planting of 529 board serve without pay. helping an old tombstone and thrown into acres to pasture; 7,270 feet of tne boil conservation Service, to the River Avon. The murder was canal lining; construction of .5 serve farmers within the district. committed last weekend during miles of open drains and 10,644 Timpanogos' district has some the 390th , anniversary celebration feet of closed drains for subsur land leveling machinery, granted of the bard's birth here. ' face drainage of; 210 acres and to the district by the federal gov- -l . 161 acres of some and has White Randall and Woodrow Aleminent; improved processed purchased water applications." additional equipment. len, agricultural engineers: LowTechnical conservation is pro- ell Woodward, soil scientist, and On . April 16, the district re elected G. M. Hinckley, Provo, vided to the district by Ray Little- - Ray Anderson,, unit conservationand Clyde Holdaway, Vineyard, field, farm planner; Francis Kite, ist, all employed, by the SCS. ill M Visiti rig 'Capitalists' Mix W ith Russians In t- Soun!r? In .lure!:: mm '; Four County Soldiers Await Army Exercise I SUNDAY 'HERALD 00 310 W. 1 Ilirjlillghfc 02 PEARL HARBOR Marvin Hie . sonarman E. Harold oee, is Christensen, cass,- - son tnira FORT LEWIS, Wash. Sgt of . ana Mr. and Mrs. A. son an. Hiabee. oi J. ait. Lamar Burningham, son of Clif- seaman, o is aboard the es Provo, tiaroia Serving W. 935 v, 8th nnsiensen, L. ford Burnlngham, cort vessel USS Walton here. N., Orem, will move to the Yaki- E.. Lehi. A Korean war veteran, Mr. ma, Wash., firing center this Excer-cise is a graduate of Lincoln In to Higbee month Fork Marine participate "Hill Top" with, the 44th Spanish High School, Orem. He trained for sonar work at the Navy's With Atlantic Fleet Infantry Division. sonarman school from January Sgt. Burningham, whose wife, to J FLEET ATLANTIC JUJy, 1952. Among Josef a is with him at Fort Lewis, is stationed here as a section the recent additions to the crew leader iwith the 44th Reconnais- of the battleship USS Iowa was sance Company. He entered the Marine Cpt. Roy P. May; hus band of Mrs. Bueia J May, 2au Army in 1943. E. 2nd S., Spanish Fork. 4 i SUNDAY. MAY 2. 1954 Utah County. Utah 17 n-- n 4 : (Editor's note: This Is another of a series on Moscow by with a rroup of U. S. press and! radiomen. This is the second George R. Turpin, Provo radio executive on tour of Europe of a series on Russia written for The Daily Herald.) .companion a drink. They de-By GEORGE B. TURPIN cunea. n turnea out, was a FROM MOSCOW In my pre- Russian e, and spoke only soldjer vious article I described the pre- Russian. Then, we chatted about liminaries. Now let's get down to clothes, the plane ride, what brass tacks, starting with a little were doing in Moscow. The we bit of what I saw and heard my seemea qune amazed tnat girl we sight in Moscow, were to here . with, begin After dinner Dr. Marcel Duri-,au- x Then she said: "You being and I decided to take a walk. from , America obviously are Crossing Gorky Street, .we were seem so nice, so you yet first impressed by; the large numfrom I thought a different what 10 of ber people about, even at We was," explained a p.m. Sunday. But Sunday in Mos- capitalist deal our about great work, and cow is like Saturday in the United she seemed impressed. States. It is a night for dining, theatre-goinand so on. Then a funny-thihappened. dancing, " ' Chatting gaily in English (nat- The waitress came up , with a urally), we were suddenly sur- bottle of champagne, set: down glasses and poured. We did not prised to be addressed by a middle- order it and asked who did. Our -aged Russians He said, literg taDle compan ally, "You Americans?" We said ion and. were we surprised. did, he and said; "Me Russian," yes which didn't particularly surprise especially since it costs 32 rubles ' a bottle ($8). All the time that : i is. we were talking, her boy friend Then he said,. "Me very much Eke American cigaret. You got did notning but smile, smoke j any please?" Since neither of us cigarets and smile. .smoke we had to turn the old boy All in all! it was quie a c'onver down. jDownheartedly he said, "I sauon, ano- - wnen iney left we like Lucky Strike,', I like Camel." felt that we had been lucky inAnd with that he waved a cheery deed to meet such an Interesting food-by- e and went his way. person so soon after arriving in Moscow. Mind you, this young Not a Ruse was some would very definitely pro- Now, iaay reporters make a lot of this. They would soviet. sne said little of a poli-aay It was a plot,; a trap, a ruse ncai nature, but she did tal-kto see we would attempt to sell that was the thing that impress '... to see If we "capitalistic smokes." ed, us. and Dr. Duriaux agrees. INosayoneno,knew we would suddenly dart out for a walk around the block, to ft was pure chance. Amusing but true.! After a fast tour we decided io have a snack at the hotel. Upon entering we noted it was packed. Not an empty table In SALT LAKE CITY, (UP)-U- tah the house,, Duriaux, mastejr of residents who visit state liquor six languages, fin ally got the stores after today will slightly point Over that we wanted to sit more for whiskey thanpay the during anywhere. few months. past The waitress said no seats. A new price schedule will go into Duriaux noted a table with only effect Monday, raising the markup two occupants but with four five per cent. The new prices chairs, so the waitress seated us by there. $uddenly Marcel asked the were supposed to become effective L but the boost was postponed people if- they spoke English. May a day because bookkeeping proce"Nyet" was the answer. Then the dures made it easier to start at girl said' in German; 'I speak the of . the week. beginning German." Marcel, a Swiss, im The is expected touring increase the conversation mediately got ; about . more $400,000 into, state cofgoing. At this point I want to say that fers each year. In terms of bottles, we had read before, and had been a pint of most popular brands will told, that Soviets do not' talk to cost 10 cents more than previously i Americans. I do not get it, but and a fifth 15 cents. I The these people spoke to us. price of wine will not be I The girl spoke of her school, affected, y , the University of Moscow. She Price increases were announced explained how lucky she was to by the Liquor Control Commission get an opportunity to study, add a few weeks ago to help erase an ing quickly that she knew this anticipated deficit in the state's .was not possible for "poor" girls general fund at the end of the presIn America. We Insisted it was, ent biennium. Most Utah liquor so the subject change'd. prices were slashed last July by orl. We offered to buy her and her der of the 30th Utah Legislature. i ' capi-talist- Sy ! g, ng (jrerman-speaxin- . - j i This slip beauty combines the best features of Dacron and Nylon ! It's soft as Lmm? silk, luxurious to the touch, yet extra strong and long wearing. 'Won d e r f u 1 1 y : LtEH Jlf.sltir' opaque under your sheerest Won't "cling," dress and it dries in extra quick time, shrugs off wrinkles, ... never ever needs ironing. skirt. White, Smooth - re pink. -- . I SHEER! 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