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Show "Hi THE PAGE FOUR. m and Nellie Lou Benson motored from Provo to Preston with William K. Dunklcy for a week end visit. All are residents at a Brigham Young university. Zcn-d-in Benson, who is employed Salt Lake Cily at the Utah Power office, acitunpanied the group. Miss Vfclene Dunklcy of Whitney has been elected president of the Amngus club of Kicks college, Rexburg. Arva Orme of Sugur-Saleis vice president, and Vera Cordingly of Ashton, secretary. m this week reas its apportionceived 1,770.9(1 ment of liquor taxes collected during the third quarter of 1941 and 3,041.91 for gasoline taxes collected during the same period. Liquor money is divided among the various cities and villages and gasoline taxes are used to pay principal and interest on road and bridge CViunty bonds. Lt. Lynn C. Reveler, a graduate of the Fielding high school at i i Paris, Idaho, and the Utah State Agricultural college, has returned to the marine corps school at Quantico, Virginia, after spending y a furlough at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. He Bqyeler of Fish Haven, Idaho. secwas recently commissioned a ond lieutenant after three and a half months intensive basic training. After three more months of training he will be placed on active duty at one of the marine ten-da- posts. Richard D. Anderson, son of President and Mrs. A. E. Anderson, who recently left for the Canadian LDS mission, has been assigned to labor in Fergus, On- tario. club achieveCache county ment program will be held tills evening at 7:30 In the Logan Junior high school. Pine will be awarded members having completed their projects, and special awards will club members of be made. All the county, and their parents, are Invited to attend, as well as any members of the general public who are interested. 4-- H 4-- c 4 Utah Accidents Claim Lives Of Three People bulldog, tries to look tough enough Buddy, under steel helmet to merit his position as mascot of U. S. Marine tecruiting station in Cleveland, O. ' : Douglas Almond of Logan was yesterday when he fell from a ladder while aiding in installation of electrical connections on Fourth North street. In the fall, hia arm was injured by a power drill which he had been Injured using. i ; i COACH ADDRESSES Dogs Cant Bark At o Hours Says City Statute Thus-and-s- RICHMOND WILDWOOD, N. J , Oct. 29 The citys law books today bore the following d'H) statute: "Dogs are not permitted to bark between 10 p. m. and C a. in. Witnout further explanation, the city commissioners adopted the law last night and listed a 50 fine for all owners who fail to stop their dogs from barking promptly at Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Smith of Providence are rejoicing over the arrival of a son their first child. It waa born Monday in a Logan hospital. Mrs. Smith is the of Escalante. former Ila Aly 10 p. m. invited. The law also provides dogs arc not permitted on streets unless accompanied by a person over 12. HERES MORE ABOUT STRIKES Theatrical Man Dies (Continued from Page From Bullet Wounds LONDON: Report Russians massing reserves for defense of Rostov with Germans to to 15 miles away; believe fighting still in progress at Kharkov; soviet counterattacks reported around Moscow and recapture of four outside Leningrad is villages claimed; German attacks resuming in Orel sector; British planes raid northern France. forces Kuibyshev: Russian launch counteroffensive in retreat slightregion; ly at northern end of Moscow front; Germans launch heavy artillery bombardment, mass tanks for new attack; losses of some nazi units estimated at 60 per DEATH East Fourth North, for Marie Pugsiey. daughter of Richard and Carol Daines Pugdied who siey, Tuesday at a local hospital. The bahy was born on October 24. 6(45 four-dny-o- ld 1) lefp 1 Cowley, Wyoming .... Ohe.yenne, .... Ol 10 V Wyoming 1 1 45 Casper. 11 Wyoming n50 Kansas City, Mo Toledo, Ohio 1U $30 U Turks Warned HERES MORE ABOUT ORMAN W. EWING (Continued From Page PIfd)TS hlLUEj) VISALIA. Lieut. John Ira L.thri 2 Monica, Calif, ,lml died yesterdev training plane cr.ish.sl in a cotton i 12 miles east "oi" here1" based at Tulare. Australia is closer to Canada than to Englund by direct line. 1) tinued, 1 waa awakened by a door slamming. Then my door was broken open, the chain snapped. Mr. Ewing came m wearing only his underwear. I said to him, what on earth is tne matter? What are you doing here? She attempted to jump out of bed, she continued, but Ewing pushed her back, placed his hand over her mouth and nose and warned her, she said, to shut up or be killed. She said she was so scared she couldn't scream but repeatedly attempted to fight him off and pleaded with him to let her go because she was .young and innocent. His only reply, she said, was that she was 19 "and old enough to learn. The criminal assault which foltM.IIKN 1.14 K STOCK lowed, she said, lasted 30 or 35 ss. IHIDKN, Oct. ; (I'PI minutes. Stnrng to 10 cent htahi'r, gooi choice The only other witness at the Ihh to 230 Jim. largely IHMj, few choice lots to $10 53. hearing was Dr. Meyer Stolar of rattle: 2x0 Slow, steady, little on Gallinger hospital who examined offr, good fed eteera nominally quot- the girl after she had related her able to $10 f0. hate Tuesday and today few Iota medium to good cows $7.10, story to police. He said there was evidence she had been raped; that load around 700 Hut. 7.20. Sheep: &U0. Steady, late Tuesday load his examination disclosed several good to choice 96 lb. Idaho lamha $11 00, scratches on her a. .... nd abrasion loud y 5 lb. Oregon Shearing lambs on her right thigh and other in$16 85, medium to good trucked-lfat lamb $9.50 to $10.60, odd fat ewes $4 23 juries. fi.-i.- 20 . MAKKKT (t P) The wool mutket was quiet today. Demand waa limit g moatly to small quantities of wool urgently needed bv mills and half-bloo- d ( ruded t a p o combing territory woola sold at $1.06 three-eightha 08 to $1 ami graded blood combing territory 95 to 98 cents; clothing wools 92 to 94 cents. WOOL Oct. 29 To U. S. Hallow $ Th0(lv h 25c TODAY ! A YANK IN T1IE RAF tlllMl l IU ntuii U1 v 4 sin M'1 incur FKEE Hats, Io,rn! NoisenuiUers For Everyone. 'I Extra Halloween Fun Features W Sui'liriscst First Logan Showing ITS A WACKY WOW.. of Out- - , LEADING MX his MISLEADING UK, ABOUT A Years Eve! side of New FRIDAY NITE! Networks NEW YORK. Oct. 29 , Tyrone Power Betty Grable The Biggest Party ASCAP Songs Return fc Gala Midnite Show For n BOHTON. Til 6 ALL NEW down. The American Society of Composers, rOTVTO FKHEri CH1CAOO, Ott. 29 (IF)-Arri- vals 81; Authors and Publishers announced on track 310; total shipments 645. sup- today a contract will be signed plies moderate; deman I moderate; mar- this afternoon with the National ket f rm . Ida. Husaet Burbanks, washed company and the 2 10-20. No. 2 washed, 165-1.6Mmu Broadcasting S y s te m and No. Duk. Red Kier Valley section Columbia Broadcasting th Bliss Triumphs, unwashed I 30. t'olo. ending their music war Red MK'lur , washed. 1.95; Neb. Hiisj with the radio chains. Triumphs, washed 2 15. nor CBS officials Neither NBC were available, but sources close UN AM.KI.KH IIKSTO K TiOS AXiSKl.HS. Oct. 29 tlP) Hogs to them confirmed the announce700, slow, stendv to 10 cents lower, ment. practical top 12.20. rattle: ldftO; slow, ASCAP songs, which have been little down on steers, other class, a (tout steadv; medium light steers lo..0. Sheep kept off the two networks since wooled iambs quotd Jan. I, will be available for pernone, 60. 411. formances beginning tomorrow under terms of the contract, it was DUMKK l.!tTrK DKNVKR, Oct. 2! pi rattle 340ft reported. The Mutual Broadcasting Sysfed heifers to 25c higher, others le f tem signed an ASCAP contract steady; beef steers cows 7.00-- 85 some time ago and has been using Hogs: 40. active, strong to 10c highits songs. The MBS contract con85. er. top 10 85; bulk 10 tained a clause granting it the Sheep: 6.500; native fat lambs weak 15 lower, f .it others stendv. lambs, right to change to the terms ac11 truckins tarloads 11.85: 35; corded CBS and NBC should Mutut. leeilet lambs 1150, ewes tual regard that as more favor- Doors Open 11:30 Show Starts 11 45 Feature At 12:20 3 GET TICKETS NOW Avoid Waiting in Line 50 SEATS WILL (meric; "1 1 Oj SNOW PLACt BF COCHt iLJ-lO- iva f In.l. VOLLEY All Tu 1 NEW TODAY! 7 3.011-- d 85-.- ; .1- , 51- . PLUS TEN-O-WI- TO NITE AT 9 P. M., $390 N 5 1 able. BROTHERS IN BANDITRY! The blazing drama of Halloween Fete Set three brothers who By Woodruff School shot their to The annual Halloween festival of the Woodruff school will be held Friday at 5 p. m. Features of the festival will include a spook alley, fortune telling, a fish pond, dancing an games. All parents and children of the district are invited. way law and order! ! Nb1 uLi-- Wr' LAJ I IS YOUR CARA DEFENSE PROGRAM PARASITE? Out-of-Tow- SUPER-COAC- Bring your car to us today. Here, expert mechanics cut oil consumption to a minimum, saving you many and the government Trips n NATIONAL IT USING TOO MUCH OIL? H DEFENSE I No telling, these days, how long yotir car may have to last. So its just good judgment to make trips by thrifty Union Pacific hus, and keep your car in good shape for times when you really need it. You'll help save vital defense materials, too. And the cost it far less than driving! dollars many quarts of oil. It takes but a short time to put the old motor back in first class shape. The better compression will save on gas, too. n How much will it cost? Less than you think! A few weeks fuel savings will pay for it. HOTEL ECCLES niONE Big-Cor- ll good-ch'dr- e Go by on Uncle Sams air force is growing and so are its members, judging from this pictuie of Sgt.. August Stackwell of March Field, Stackwells 385 pounds Calif. give hirn claim to title of gest Man in Army Air At Ankara President Isniet In. iu warned the turks that they live on "the very edge of a halocaust" and must be prepared for any sacrifice demanded by events. At Madrid official Spanish quarters believed all hopes of peace, even if Russia should fall, had been blasted by President Roosevelt's Navy Day address. The Spanish foreign minister, Ramon Serrano Suner, said Spain was prepared to send troops to the eastern front if necessary to aid in Russia's defeat. There were possible hints in brief dispatches from Berlin, Vichy and Vatican City that Pope Pius may have played some role in bringing Germany's decision to reprieve 100 French Hostages who had been scheduled to be executed in reprisal for the slaying of German officers at Nantes and Bordeaux. IS If. L--,.. position today. The Swedish foreign minister, Christian E. Guenther, told parliament at Stockholm that Sweden desires to stay out of the war and will meet any attempt to force her into it with armed resistance, if necessary. the American Federation of Labor, welders at three Ban Francisco shipyards were voting today on whether to join their who have walked out in four Puget Sound and four Los Angeles shipyards. Welders Essential Welders are essential in shipbuilding. Some yards already had been forced to curtail their production and will be compelled to close eventually if the welders don't return. Their grievance is not MtKKKTH AT M.AM K againsct management but against the AFL, which refuses to grant (Bv United Press) It in Htockg regular quiet trndlng them an autonomous union. Bonds irregul.tr. The Air Associates strike center(Mo b storks mixed. ed around a dispute as to whether Cotton up as mm h as 75 cents a bale - to S ents, corn up the management had lived up to Wheat up Sliver tun banged. the spirit of un agreement between it and the union under government K ( OT ATIONH SI ( 1 VKW Y li K. net 29 (IT)-V- o. "settling' weeks-olpressure, strike. The company hail agreed to ontrat futures closed uru hanged to Sales 150 tolls rinse nhire all strikers in their former 2 p4 ti2 f60 5 Nlower. tan 2 ftoll March 2 jobs and at their former pay. and No. 2 85- - 0(1. July 2 89V t at once. The union said the man- M Vo 4 central t sole 3.500 tons, rinse; I hc. 2 6 .Ian 2 .2 M.u.h J agement was not doing this. - 5) 2 Mav 2 51 52. July 3 Mr. Roosevelt revealed at a press it, ept. . conference lale yesterday he was 2 M considering a request to eongress for legislation to restrict strikes in defense industries und lo put teeth in mediation machinery. craft-comrad- Bishop Newell Daines was in charge of the services and music was furnished by the Fifth ward Relief Society chorus, directed by Mrs. Otto Mehr. E. B. Mitchell was the speaker. Prayers were offered by Mrs. E. B. Mitchell and Willard Gardner. Interment was in the Logan city cemetery under direction of the VV. Loyal Hall mortuary. The grave was dedicated by Parley P. Black. Besides the parents, the baby is survived by four grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Duines of Logan and Mr and Mrs. Roy P. Pog.sley of Rosette, Utah. next-to-to- that present German attacks were preceded by one of the heaviest artillery preparations of the war. Europe's few remaining neutrals gave attention to their perilous QCILle, Jim tmnk, h minded; hut v. hen u bro1' women have a . this and that, her,h.l except his own uHani umen cent. BERLIN: Claim Perekop isthmus approaches to Crimea breached, Russians said to be retreating after loss of 15,000 prisoners. 13 tanks. 109 guns in 11 days battle; admit weather has bogged down Moscow drive amt that heavy fighting still lies ahead; claim sinking of 14 British ships of 47,000 tons and destroyer from attack Gibraltar-Bntai- n convoy; sources of President Roosevelts navy day charges against razis.atROME: Admit British air tacks on Sicily, Benghazi. SHANGHAI: Report Japan massing forces in Indo China for moves against Thailand or Burma road. MADRID: Foreign minister Ramon Serrano Suner says Spain will send troops to fight Russia if necessary. het Robert By Market Quotations a management policy by which women allegedly are lured at lower wages to replace male employes. Work on ships for the nations navy, hard-h- it by a strike of welders in west coast yards, was further crippled by a walkout of 1,300 members of the Industrial and Marine Shipbuilders union (CIO) at the Defoe Boat and Motor Works, Bay City, Mich. Strikers sought closed ishop. A jurisdictional strike of welders, key workers in the metal trades, threatened to spread to additional shipyards crowded with partly completed war and merchant ships. This situation seemed to be grow-!n- g more serious along the Pacific coast, while in the east, Richard Frankensteen, head of the aircraft division of the United Automobile Workers (CIO) intimated a general strike of CIO workers in five eastern states in sympathy for CIO workers engaged in a controversy with the management of the Air Associates, Inc., at Bendix, N. J. Though the office of production management has demanded the welders return to work pending settlement of their dispute with NEW YORK. Oct. 29 r.D William Ortmann, 58, Detroit theatrical producer and manager, died in Roosevelt hospital today of bullet wounds suffered when a fugitive gunman shot him yesterday, apparently in the belief he was a detective. Ortman was standing at the window of his apartment in the Hotel Victoria when Abe Bitler leaped on to the terrace of the adjoining Hotel Abbey with police in close pursuit. The gunman looked up, saw Ortmann and fire . Bitler committed suicide. NOMINATION WASHINGTON. Oct. 29 l'Pi the Nibley ward MIA in the watd Ptesident Roosevelt today nominatAssistant Solicitor General hall, commencing at 9 o'clock. Ev- ed HOUSING CRISIS Charles Fahy to be solicitor general eryone is invited. p of the United States, the Oct. 29 IT WASHINGTON, Millville ward will sponsor a position in the justice depart- Nathan Straus, U. S. housing adHalloween dance Thursday night ment. ministrator, said today a "desperin the ward hall. The general pubate housing situation is threatenlic is invited. and impressions are based mostly ed in defense production centers the speech a person uses. because construction authority is Wllford Barlow, who has been upon Pointers were Riven on public dispersed among inexperienced govemployed in the J. C. Penney store speaking and good word usage. ernment agencies. at Preston since the first of the The program was under the directyear, has been transfeirod to ion of the speech arts department. Winnemucca, Nevada. A Halloween social will be held night beginning at 8:30. Thursday Miss Willa Daniels presented a The hall will he decorated mid a talk on the art of sptflking for the good orchestra has been engaged. assembly program of the Eighth Pumpkin pie and other refreshward MIA Tuesday night. She said ments will be sold, hut the dance is that speaking mirrors the mind. free. A da nee will he hekl tonight, by LIONS At the regular meeting of the Richmond Lions club Monday night Coach Heber Whiting of North Cache high school discussed the schools health and athletic program. Trombone selections were played by Lynn Bright, Jay Bond and Farrell Tippetts, accompanied by Mrs. Marva Tippetts. It was announced the club would sponsor a dance in the Community hall Saturday night, November J. with proceeds to be used toward purchasing new chairs and lights tor the club room. The public is PUGSLEY INFANT when Burrell's car struck a bridge at the Coalville city limits. Daniel E. Mathews, 60, Utah county, fatally injured Monday when the truck in which he was riding collided with a car driven by John D. Roundy, Pleasant Grove. Mathews was the second crash. casualty of the truck-ca- r The driver, Edward Darger, 34, of Salt Lake City, died yesterday. Officers investigating the Coalaccident ville said "excessive speed" apparently was to blame. The two men had paused at a Coalville service station a few minutes before the crash, which occurred about 12:30 n. m. Burrell was a wool and lamb buyer, and had been in the area several days. 1) 4 English aunt IN BRIEF more than two weeks ago that panzer formations had pushed on perhaps 100 miles east of Tula and possibly indicated these German formations had been cut off and disposed of by rearward Russian elements. The Russians admitted pressure on the Kalinin front but said German losses had been so heavy there, particularly to the 26th panzer division, that the nazis have been forced to ha and regroup their units. Artillery Barrage The Russians also reported a fresh German effort at the southern end of Moscow front but located it around Orel. 210 miles southwest of the capital. In contradiction of German claims that they have been unable to bring large artillery into action on the Moscow front due to terrain conditions the Russians said M Men leaders of both stake and SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 29 (U.R) ward organizations were reminded A collision with a bridge at meetsmash-u- p today of the division M Men Coalville and a truck-ca- r ing to be held Thursday evening at at American Fork today had 8 oclock In uie Logan stake house. claimed three lives and boosted All stake M Men supervisors, as- Utahs 1941 traffic toll to 165 BY sistant supervisors, athletic direc- an increase of 23 over the same tors, besides ward M Men leaders period lust year. and presidents, are urged to attend The dead: the meeting. Ten stakes are Services were held this mornO. A. Burrell, 65, and Tnomas in the division. Loveless, 40 both of Ogden, killed ing at the home of L. H. Daines Sheriff Jeff Stow ell and Chief M of Police i Hyrum Weathers ton have returned from the peace offii'l cers training school held recently in Salt Lake City. WAR NEWS claim TAKEN h i'il 1941. NAZIS BY LOUIS F. KEKMIJO The renewed drive on the Crimea Donna Forsgren, Twilit Smith, Loneta Hollingsworth, Adtle 29, Stacked Well MORE ABOUT (Continued From rage suggests another German pincers move, this time directed at the Caucasian oil fields. Tile northern arm is the drive towards Rostov arid the River Don. Despite the weather, it Seems to be making progress in face of fierce Russian resistance and the British fear the fall of Rostov may be near. The latter is the turning point south to the oil fields, 200 miles away. Presumably the Germans would thrust from there in two directions: South towards Krasnodar, Ike oil center, and east towards Astrakhan on the ( aspirin, lo Cllt Olf the CulM'USIIS Iroui contact with the rest of Russia. The southern arm would be across the Crimean peninsula towards the Strait of Yemikale, which connects the sea of Azov with the Black Sea. The strait is only four miles across from the heart of the Cuucasus. Crossing it would put the Germans within about 100 miles of Krasnodar. The Germans claimed today the Russian delense lines on the narrow Perekop Isthmus which connects the Ciimea with the mainland have been broken and the Russians are retreating. However, the same claim was made six weeks ago when the Crimea first was threatened. The peninsula is a prize for three reasons- - its accessibility lo the Caucasus; its important naval base of Sebastopol, and the Kerch iron ore deposits and metallurgical plants at its eastern end. Loss of the latter would be another industrial blow to Russia. Odessa having fallen, Sebastopol is Russias remaining Black Sea naval base. Us loss would he a considerable handicap to the Russian fleet, which Ls the Mile barrier to any German seaborne invasion aimed at the near east. Selgistopol Ls strongly fortified. It was the scene of the historic siege of 18.VI, when It took the British, French and Turkish 11 months to reduce it. Sebastopol lies south of the mountain range which divides the peninsula. Even if it held out for months, it would be no barrier to a German drive north of the range through Kirsch to the Caucasian mainland. If the German pincers movement succeeded, its object would be to invest the oil fields and establish a grip on the Caucasus north of the mountain range which runs from the Black Sea to the Caspian. This prospect raises the question of what Britain may do. The British are naturally deeply concerned over keeping the oil fields out of German hands. They are also concerned over preventing the Germans from establishing themselves so perilously close to the near east and the road to India. OCTOBER WEDNESDAY, HERES Moves Kdw&rd N. lU'id, formerly of Preston and for the past 20 years a resident of .Salt Lake City, has made his annual autumn visit to Cache Valley uml is a guest at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Mae R. Geddes of Preston. At the age of 82 Mr. Reid is in good health and enjoys working in his berry and fruit gardens in Sait Lake. While visiting his Preston daughters, Mrs. Geddes and Mrs. Elma Swann, he engages himself repairing their broken furniture and household gadgets. While living in Preston Mr. Reid was a prominent farmer and at one time served as hairinan of tin Franklin county democratic party, Bear Lake LOGAN, UTAH, L, Tell It to tKe Marines Todays War ABOUT TOWN Rans-botto- HERALD-JOURNA- 61ft BLAIR MOTOR CO. 55 WEST FIRST NORTH TIIONE 390 SECOND THRILLING IIIT! ROMANCE RIDES ON WIN0S OF ADVENT l! H E JEAN Tn! 1 J NILS ASTHER MARIE WILSON r 11.00 |