OCR Text |
Show . r Saturday, April 26, 1941 The Deseret News, Salt Lake City, Utah Isles Seizure. String Near Shore Exposed To Nazis Impartially ISTANBUL, Turkey, April 25. (AP) Foreign of(Delayed) fice circles at Ankara said to- Producers To!'1 They Must Be On Guard WASHINGTON. April 26 (AP) Vigorous and impartial enforcement of the bituminous coal law was promised by Secretary lekes today, as government ulation of soft coal prices, designed to stabilize the nations largest on a mining industry, embarked , new life span. , act exThe new Guffey-Bolanthe industry pended for two years old regulations which under the last statute would have expired ' midnight. lckes said the bituminous coal division of the Interior Department, now is in a position "to aid the industry etlectively m curing economic ills which have beset it for neatly two decades," and that, with the industrys cooperation, the' division would toe able to maintain stabilized marketing conditions so that, producers will be able to compete with each other on a fair basis, avoid the tremendous f inancial losses of the past, and serve the public Page 3 . Turks JExpect Coal Act To Be Inforced v f Children Play Innocently Nazi Air Ace With Dynamite, Detonators Dies In Battle (AP)-Chil- dren the tubes Others, realizing would explode, wrapped paper around them, struck matches to them and hurled them from hilltops outside the city. This went on until Jerrv Willis, 8. brought home what he called a metal firecracker and asked diis brother, Fred, 16, to lightMt. Fred did and lost a thumb and the tips of two fingers. Jerry said schoolmates wv?re passing the detonators around between classes, Mis Neva llagaman, principal, recovered 25 caps from giade school pupils. day ' that they 'understood the Germans momentarily expected , to occupy the Greek Islands of MytUene and Khios, close to the Turkish mainland If these Islands are occupied Germany would have a string of sea bases reaching almost to the Italians Dodecanese Islands off southwest Turkey from Turkish Thrace. Mytilene (Lesbos) frequently bombed bv the Italians; is only about 11 miles off the Turkish coast and 50 miles south of the a Dardanelles. Khios (Chios) is about the same distance from the Twkish 25 coast and miles farther south. It is understood here that Turis After that teachers parents key planning considerable exand police took J00 detonatois Germany pansion of trade-wi- th 50 from children. and countries, Police Chief F. M. Kisinger Isplanning to send fish, tobacco, sued a warning urging parents hides and olive cottonseed, nl, to seaich playthings for 400 othleather to the Reich, in return er detonators, which had horn for chemicals, industrial matetaken from a warehouse, along rials and trucks without tires. She hopes to get the tires from with 160 sticks of dvnamue. the United States. They recovered all but ten Sticks. d German-dominate- Blimp, On Rescue Mission, Gets IntoN. Trouble is d -- shown loading the A salvage crew from the naval air station at Sakehurst, J., gondola of the navy blimp L-- l after it made a forced , landing six miles from the soldiers, trapped by a sudden wind base. The blimp "was directing 16 developed in an expansion valve. Ideut. Hepry shift, to safety when trouble commander,- brought the airship dowrrfir a clearing with slight damage to-tgbndola. The trapped soldiers were rescued. fire-fighti- 4-- have beef Calif, 'April 26 in detonators and with large quantities heVe dynamite playing for days. for whistles, blowing into the ( Some used the detonators them to dinner tables with even A end. carried few boys open their parents unaware of the danger. NEEDLES, 26 April ago Robert w oi of 6 2 seconds da-- for a id 60 i ecord yard h Todav. hes going to trv to walk 100 feet If he does it will be a far greater triumph. 17 Shorttv after the then vear old student of York High in Elmhurst, 111, sped that 6 2, he came tojpali foinia for a vacation diveu into the sui f at I ong Beach and 1 broke his neck For vcais he lav abed, unable to move .Gfaduallv bis sense of touch ictuincd and finally he was able to sit up Recently , he s been walking a little on Com-munit- v crwtciies, - Youthful British Flier ' Kills, Then Dies LONDON, Real Estate- - y It will be necessary, he pointed out, to adjust the price structure continuously to keep it in line with changing conditions. Howard A. Gray, coal division director, informed producers that their membership m the bituminous coal cods did not expire but continues uninterrupted act. under the Guffey-BolanHowever, Gray said, any producer so desiring may present by May 2 a request for withdrawal from the code predicated upon the April 26 expiration date of - Best Housing Urged For Army Workers Selecting and Speaking on (Continued From Page One) Salesmen," Joseph T. Training of Los Angeles, vice piesident of Salt Lake, Butler, geneial the Ameiican Institute of Real agent of the Aetna Life InsurEstate that they Appraisers, ance Company and past president should not take advantage of the of the Utah Sales Managers Aspresent demand for homes as a sociation. said the publesult of the defense program, lics attitude requiresbuying higher caland unreasonably advance prices men sales and woik for iber ' either for rents or for new more specific and intelligent homes training one Mr. Shattuck said that KNOW LEDGE VITAL can expect prices to stiffen but v He pointed out that the trainthe job for realtors is to see ing must include knowledge of that prices are not increased to the real estate market and modsuch an extent that the governern constiuction The responment would step in and take consibility of creating and maintain-ingypublitrol. Rents should not be highapproval lies with er than owners could expect to management. The training objeccollect. In many communities tive with its many ramifications prices alieady have advanced, should point to the development he said, but care should be takof real estate salesman to the en to avoid the unreasonable point wherein he serves his pub Mr. Shattuck was speaker durlie so intelligently and well that ing the atfernoon session. Lieuhe is not just another real estate tenant Colonel Elmer G. Thomman, but is the one individual in as, constructing quartermaster town best able to handle their for military projects in Ogden housing pi oblems v icinity, who also addressed the A salesmans most Important .afternoon session, discussed the Louis S asset is his time, defense program and its effect DiEnes of Salt Lake, manager of on northern Utah realty. , the Capson Bow man Realtj ADVISES BlILDING told the realtors He uiged the salesmen to budHe pointed out that w ith the s get their (TineTn touting completion of military pi ojects, along the shortest distanca large number of civilians es, by making appointment-- , bv w ill be employed, w ith some w 01 at the Hill Field Depot, king only on live prospects and by alwavs having a reason should get and local realtors to call on prospect busy and prov ide homes for the DISlbSES SELLING many who will be brought in from out of state He said that Ray Dupuy of Long Beach, it is not expected that more than Calif, of the brokcivilian 25 ers division of NARFB spoke on per cent of the workers would be obtained from Stieamline Your Selling this locality Luncheon meetings weie held FOR BETTER METHODS tile noon hour. In the.. dunng lmbrOkeis division, President Bui- Urging Utah realtors to prove their business methods in len presided. Selecting and order to gain more construction Training Salesmen" was the subbusiness this year, Alan E Brock-banject discussed by Joseph T. of Salt Lake, president of Butler, Salt Lake, general agent the Federal Homes, Inc , told the of the Aetna Life Insurance Co, convention delegates to cooperate past president qf the Utah with the national advertising proSales Manageis Assentation In the grams of manufactm ers of home talesmens division, products. Rebel t G. Wilkinon, chairman He pointed out that despite the of salesmens division of the Saif Increase in construction costs, it Lake Real Estate Board, precosts less to build a home in 19s t sided. than 1929, but captioned the real Budgeting Your 'j'prte, an estate men that if they were to Aid in Selling was disobtain their share of national decussed by Louis' DiEnes, of Salt fense business they must Imof the Cap-soLake, salesnvafiager prove their sales tools, such as iaddress BowptAn Co. His llustrations and demontrations, was supported with" a sound and their knowledge of the conthrough courtesy of traction Industry. th United States Gypsum Com- "The public Is far ahead of the panv constructm industry and the suc WOMEN cesful realtor must keep abreast " 'Women SEE PROJECTS attending the convenof the buying publics desires. tion were entertained this mornZ'' he concluded. ing with a tour of the, Ogden air port at Hill Field, where they were conducted over the Miliunder constructary project tion by army officers. At noon the women returned to Ogden and were guests at a luncheon at the Ogden Golf and Country Club. Mrs S. E. Hinckley of Ogden was toasimlstress. d the old coal act. members are required to minimum prices and matketing rules- - Pioducers not members of the code are subject to a 19.5 per cent tax on the sale of coal, but may dispose of their coal at whatever price they Code observe choose. gp WASHINGTON. April 26 (AP) The bituminous coal division has set these hearings Siune 4, at Grand Junction, Colo, on a complaint which, the M. E. Stadivision said, chaiged ley, doing business as White River Fuel, of Rangely, Colo , with violation of minimum price regulations. June 6, at Salt Lake City, to de- terflvjne whether Linden D Whittaker) Salt Lake City, a registered distributor, had 'violated the bituminous coal act or regulations c under it. Com-pam- their-selve- 0 anor) nmmt -' k .ft 'Something new and batter. Small, light, easily concealed, and inexpensive to operate Four miniature Ofarion radio tubes, the smallest made, give It a new range of sound and clearer tone. n Otarion of Salt Lake DONALD Ill McIntyre G. LYMAN Phona Bldg. 9 4091 -POPULAR NEW "NOVELS THTE NEUTRAL Frank O. GROUND f7S Hough THEY CAME TO A RIVER AUu McKay , WALKING Inti h THE WHIRLWIND let) Brigt Knight ANOTHER MORNING WmmI Smittor. . . , BELIEVE THE HEART Raymond Holdon . M50 InSt BETWEEN TWO WORLDS fmer w Upton Sinclair THEY WENT ON TOGETHER , tnN Robert Nathan LONG MEADOWS Mlnnlo Hilo Moody RECKON Sugarhouse; Lumber & Hardware Co. PHONE M. 0. ASHTON. Frw. 1 74, 01 Isf South HORACE . RICHARDS, Mg 100 3 WITH' THE RIVER Clark McMoskln InSI lae ) Many German planes ranged over Athens this morning, strafing nearby areas, but the capital itself remained free from aerial attack The Greek ministry of home security indicated the luftwaffe had inflictqd heavy losses on shipping. A New Zealand antitank outfit fighting a rear guard action near Mount Oeta, just west of Thermopylae Pass, smashed 23 German t.anks jesterday and forced an attacking Nazi panzer column to retreat, reliable military quarters reported The New Zealanders, drawm up behind a swamp, were said to have poured a withering fire into the onrushing Germans as thev sought to cross the soft ground in an apparent effort to encircle Thermopjlae. Heavy 9?Wire Construction James Roosevelt Readies Hongkong On Observer Trip HONGKONG, April 26 (AP) Captain. James Roosevelt, and Maior Gerald Thomas arrived heie today bv clipper from Manila, by a ay of Macao, as "special observers from the Washington headquarters of the United States Marine Corps. N The presidents eldest son and Thomas were greeted at the airport by acting American Consul General John Bruins; O K Yul, director of the Central Trust, ren- resenting - Generalissimo Chiarig Kai Shek- and P N. Chungfhan-age- r of the Central Banjdof China, representing Dr.ffH. Kung, vice premier. Roosevelt sahp'they would re main here twXor three days and then fly tar Chungking to- - meet Chiangfliid other officials. Tlr tall, bronzed, uniformed mabine captain said he was hrilled to land here f.or the fust time by clipper and recalled that bis paternal grandmother, Mrs James Delano Roosevelt, now 81. first landed here by clipper ship when she was five 4 years old. . musical program included an instrumental trio by Mrs. Royal Darrell J. Green-wel- l Eccles, Mrs and-MrFred Frorer -- A one act play was presented undirection of Mrs. Ray der Piers The election of officers and selection of the19i2 convention city wtII be the closcing feature of the afternoon session. The annual banquet will be held at 8 pm, with Mr. Simpson as will the speaker. His subject be Why A Real Estate Board. Dancing will follow the banquet. A Balkan- - N, (Continued From Page One) only a serious menace to the British position in the Mediterranean but also a threat to s French- - General Maxtme position1 in North Africa. With a trained men as well as strong units of French the fleet at his disposal, WeVgand has generally been regarded here as more or less independent of the Axis so long as the Germans remained out of Spain. Reports of. Increasingly effective British resistance to the Italian-Germaoffensive at the Libyan-Egyptiaborder, mean while were greeted aa a basis for optimism In London. Wey-gand- half-millio- n n Seven Charged With Ration Cards Forging 26. PARIS (Via Berlin) April Seven (AP) persons have been arrested for selling 100,000 forged ration cards in the Paris area Police said the chief suspect Maximilian Desmarets, 504a who sold the forged for 17,000 plates to a printer photo-eng- raver francseach: The bogus raids were for "Sugar, bread and meat allowances. . Hel-mu- th Dundas was in a squadron of RAF fighter planes which sighted a large circus tf German 109s at 25,000 y feet. The Nazis dived at them "out still m formation. , of the sun In the first clash, the squadron leader heard Dundas shout into Ive go hi- - ladio: "Whoopee, 109 The use of silk in Belgium has been limited to the manufacture of tcchrucaLarticles. urchase! (Contmued From Page One) chanized forces wwe within 30 miles of Athens after capturing thev had Thebes, and leclared hemmed in British forces between that city and Thermopy- (AP) France- - he Greek- - 26. ed -- and satisfactorily. April air ace, Maior Wieck-reportshot down over the Isle of Wight last Nov. was have to fallen said today 28, to the guns of Flight Charles Dundas. who Lieut John was himself killed a few minutes afterward. This was the account. the air ministry news service gave of the acual combat It described as the last chapter of the story of the Nazi air ace who com manded the Richtofen Squadron and was credited with 56 victories over Spain, Poland,' and Germanys . , , J |