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Show JL 14' 191L THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON UTAH Kat! i n Betts tdu s contract budge club Piulav evening at l.ei home M Mrs. ChflUid IIuklun'c little son of Miiiij) hit imtl Tuesday Ida A Hmsh 1 1 . Hitler Gambled Hillman Pok'd Oultdanclmg On British Help Planer of A Wo District Spotlighting UTAH Quayle Dixon of Spmi-- h Folk was the speaku at tin- t ii rg service in the Fn-- t 'aid r pc last Sunday Ills f. milv vmk guests of Mis D. son's print 'STRICT" INSPECTION SEEN Mr. and Mis Hmiy J pp- n - 1 Nazi Documents Disclose Ha Expected England To Remain Neutral. , - cr rt ru ( 1 i i Mrs. John T. Lant a anangid most delightful surpiiso party last Thursday evening in lionoi of her daughter, Mis, Nancy Lant to celebrate her bnthday anniversary. The gioup of hqr young friends present for th happy occasion included, Miss Non lie Jones, Miss Joan Harney, Miss Evelyn Ellsworth, Miss Helen Steele, Miss Mary Jane Reece, Mrs. Gayle W. Olsen, Mrs. Noi-ee- Wignall, Mis. n O Maydeen Jones, Mrs. Faye D Angus and Mrs. Colleen II. Oiton. Mrs. Garth Belliston came fiom Morgan last Sunday to spe nd the t week with her parents and attend the wedding of her brother, Lynn Page. She entertained at a bud-a- l party Monday evening at the Page home in honor of the Miss Verdene Ellsworth Ageneral social evening was enjoyed and the guests spent the evening making tea towels which were preesnted to tthe guest of honor. Present were Mrs Joyce T. Ashworth, Miss Helen Powell, Mrs. Max Bigler, Mrs. Zella B. Crump, Mrs. Rosalind Hillman, Mrs. Louise Ellsworth, Mrs Giant Moore, Mis. Jean L Hancoc k,Mi s DelRay B. Hansen, Miss Nancy Lant, Mrs.1 Maui me C. Cheevei, Mrs. Bevei ley 1J Jameson, Mis Wilford J. Ellsworth, Miss Deanna Ellsworth, Mis. Eatl Page and the hostess and guest of honor. t bride-to-b- e, ti pn'int rr, nr bignway ecu Ltah li , about 170,000 dent, v ( mi 1 WILL BUILD MOTION PICTURE FILM LIBRARY Ti.c Utah department of publi City and indii kid development i, now (level ping a motion pic tuie film liln.il of Utah's major Recently the natiun.il ski event, held at the Snow Ba,m veeic filmed in color by the department which hopes in the neai hituie to be able to iiave for di,ti ilmtion it, ow n pub lie ity film on Utah's major sk e acta,. V, t n ' n ploted, the will be av ulable fai showing befoiC' ski clubs and otheis mleiestcd in w intci spoits scenic attiaemn. e e pic-tui- STATE TO MARK VETERANS' GRAVES The Stale of Utah has oi dcicd 5(10 bione giave maikeis to be used in m lining giaves of Utah veterans of all wais. The maik-ei- , will cost $10,750 CAPITOL INTERIOR TO SPARKLE It will cost $4,320 to clean seasons smoke and giime fmm the walls of the Capitol lepoits Seeietary of State E. E. Monson The walls and niuials weie last cleaned just be loie the wai. The cleaning job will icquiie sixty days and Will lje completed befoie the summer centennial tounst season begins. sev-ei- al DUP WEEK PROCLAIMED "Know your living pioneers week" has been proclaimed by Governor Herbert B. Maw. starting Sunday, March 151h. While no original pioneers of 1847 are still alive, the Daughters of Utah Pioneers estimate that of the 80,000 Mormon pioneers who emigrated to Utah between 1847 and 1869, fewer than 200 remain alive today. As a special honor to the present living pioneers, observances will be held during the "Know your living pioneers week" thru-on- t Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and California. VANCE MOTOR CO. 1 DODGE and PLYMOUTH CARS Dodge Job Rated Tucks Complete Automobile Service Texaco Products Marfak Lubrication Firestone Tires NGHT WRECKER SERVICE Call 65 N.W. Let Us Help You To Keep Your Car Running Until You Can Get A New One Fall Soaking If the soil in the fall is dry, be sure to give the ground around evergreen shrubs and trees a thorough soaking This Is to prevent injury to the plants In winter when the ground Is frozen and the plants cannot obtain moisture. - I yoing Ir id ti.en weekly Fnesiue cruisers Sunuuy night at the homo p and Mis Heed J. Mon-1.,- 1 discussion unci enlcitnin- nt weie under the dnection o! laid Money, Jr., Noel Dixon .iid Miss Guuldme Haiti ldge ! "i e z, Fust t WASHINGTON Recently raptured Nazi documents ltvtal th.it Hitler gambled right up to the de that Rritain would remain neutral or fight on Germanys side As late as September 1. 19i9 the day Hitler's army invaded Poland the fuehrer insisted that Britain would not enter ttie war. Two days later Britain and France were fighting Germany As a result, Germany never was prepared for a naval war and the "war was in one 6ense lost before it began," said one of the Nazi docum'nts made public by the navy. At one time the documents didnt say when Hitler even was "striving for a political agreement with England so he could concentrate on Russia," which he considered "the arch enemy of Germany and Europe." These and other disclosures were contained in three sets of captured documents. One of the most revealing of them was written by Grand Adm. Doen-itlast commander of the N izi navy and the man who became the fuehrer briefly after Hitlers reported suicide in the last days of the war. Raged Over Navy. The documents also revealed that: Hitler, furious because his surface ships refused to fight, ordered his battleships and scrapped in 1934 and tricked the Allies with a skeleton surface fleet of destroyers from then until the end of the war. German admirals, however, were able to save their big warships from the junk heap by one pretext or another. German plans to Invade England were cooked up by Hitler as a ruse for hiding his real plan the invasion of Russia. Hitler expected to conquer Russia In a few months. Germany entered the war with only 48 submarines. When the United States entered the war December 11, 1941, thq Germans were able to send only six to American waters for immediate operation. The Germans were prefabricating submarines In scattered areas over the Reich in an attempt to escape heavy Allied bombings. Ordered to Scrap neap. Hitler's order to scrap all surface units of the Nazi fleet larger than destroyers was issued January .1, 1943, after the Nazi admirals failed to deliver a promised great naval victory. "This means the passing of the high seas fleet," Hitler raged. "It Is my Irrevocable decision to do away with these useless ships." He ordered scrap from the ships used to make tanks and guns for his land armies. Only one German battleship ventured out into the high seas after the scrapping order the Scharnhorst, which steamed into a British trap off the northern coast of Norway and was sunk. Doenitz disclosed Hitler's false hope that England would remain neutral or fight on Germanys side In discussing the unpreparedness of the Nazi navy. He attributed this unpreparedness "to the fact that the German armed forces were designed for continental war, with England either neutral or on the side of Germany. C people of the c 'I ir - ttie W .tiul Mis " P m in , Mr. and Mis Walni G Pike t i. t f motor ve in p c inn and son Dick, of Ri.cixide, C..1 , ill f this t oi tae t,ini me ot have been vis, ting at ( turn ns n-t,o p md Mr and Mrs Eia Tannei. for a a M is 1. la and , nd ng June 15 few days, on then nn to Wash. pt I5 I, Djw of tni si ite high ington, D. C. Mr Pike ha, p.P.ul says that altei June had a piumitmn to tne ", 15 hi, men will begin ScPnvsic.i of Geneial attesting position ientist in the Buieuu of Standards all imnconfoi rni.,ts and will be making a new home 'lie law requites that all ve there. Mrs. Pike is a d lughtu c ,t ha h s in Utah li, let bear an in Mrs. Ezra Tannei, and Mr Pike ptiti n sti'kii netwun June 15 Kmc t and Scptimbii 15 B cnfoiung is a son of Dr and Mi tu. tm;1 'oil, tl e p itiol hopi s R. Pike East Woodstock, Conn u M, I r ft!? puljr "Pm every spot iaiin Water Nielsen of Vale, t'lound at Annie D. Wood ant s'nitaryT; s(, ni.il Folk, visitedMi hue and downed h" and i,.l a Mtu noon with phtoda lima Weiner h Ken I Mi O.t.un M FOR MOTOR VEHICLES -- l ii i i t TI M t ( t j , k and Mis Laban Ilniding a gioup ot fi lends at taineel lilt t nk 111,11 a chum party Satuida evening u m t ,m lioim Tulips weie used p, m i mi ate tne tables and Other en- p up il iweis bughtened the k Is. tenanting Piesent were looms Ul , ' u ot Mi ,.nd Mis Flint Dixon of Pio-Mi and Mis. Oila Stewait of all Mrs. Sid l, Sp.nish Folk, Mi. and I.t Mis. A. L. Cuitis, .did Dl on of Lola, Ml and Mis. Carf O. Nelson, Mr. lid ba ..ml Mis Elisha Wner, Mi. and U a. Pa', - Mis Geoige Q Spencer, Mr. and Mis Spuuei Snow, Mis Emma Wilson and the host and hostess. n n n b n c F i i i Over doll, n s M, t ei , i i I.1 is 'Ih more H . greater ur ; I V , 1 -- i. 111 t u, i ' ! I! . i 1 ( A ( c ii i Mil . i ' i , , Ml.rL ,Mimc OF a t in t t a, ale t,.l ,u ( up ii ,i g c.p alt ,t i .111 , I -- i , il t I c ( I I I C ARTS RADIO 1! t1 1 '1 1! ip t OF PROVO I .1 kept Ip k am-- , t1 l mi Ti i, p. i.i il'.l'i all i.i 'a m, game at jones SERVIQ Where your Radio gets the advantaged modern test equipment and skilled t i CL.nrn tm ANNOUNCES At the nt, . wiiks Du k J ! in the Spanish b c c i sc w Is ss a,, ith n c (1. ul i A it, i i tp 111 ,ii m md Ramie 1, comiiin.iti, n Ih It acini,, a Mji.au given men in t mint Join IN PAYS' i i... , SERVICE WEEKLY P- - ci..n h i a i AND VICINITY , Leave Your Radio at DASTRUPS I c .mi, 1 m xt man in points m c it tn., ciedit hn t.a t , n Gum cl spot-- , go I i D Bm in .x of Nt p.n .1 Ihl ! son, ct Spungs.lh 1 is c tsso of the m t a, , e, i tit scrappy dc lens, c ul Men ,s u Hal III s vision the best guaui n i. t a l ea this e.n li and as a s.utci .12 points tills Slat ing hi- - own me, t . , ncunbti ul m as pi j) gi.mes he was the main ilk si eond-state tom ties t ,u p I i, his expel lenee as a t m ., U, i t. r tw i lie has -- ' rir f Lffw. O.WB-BSL- BECRUSE L- GffVE IT ffriHUi TUNE-U- Cos P .. you COULO Oi OONE' WORSE imm , lit tsi i 1l in,-- s A ijH r wuSoit fwwr Kino O' tSUSNtSS IS eg, i solo r S7HoP? hl""r P t youGOOO Boswess, c soisfr hjtfa? oco. r ipmrosy if -- c ku .add- . m i , i I R. t di- id ' o,,.l t on , aid i u.is i i plajei all tm time, '( t i ,1 ti . , mi . ,iii n n WART, THE SPEED COP as t n t, i i.,ih i icni 1 quaitubaik d Government Has Surplus for 7 Months; Won't Last Long V WASHINGTON. - The govern- ment closed Its books on the seventh month of Its current fiscal year with a surplus of $685,498,000. Expenditures through January 31 were 21 billion 600 million dollars and receipts were 22 billion 283 millions. Budget estimates were that expenditures for the entire fiscal year, which ends next June 30, would be 42 billion 500 millions, and receipts 40 billion 200 millions. The present surplus in the face of an anticipated deficit of 2 billion 300 millions for the entire fiscal year is largely explained, officials said, by the fact that many heavy cost items have yet to fall due. Electrical Works in Berlin Taken Over by the British BERLIN. The British military government has taken over the vast Siemens electrical concern In Berlin, it was announced here, under provisions of an occupation law which deals with the blocking and control of property of interest to the United Nations. When it closed down late in 1948 because of lack of fuel the concern had 18,000 workers. Salvage Expert Hints Never Sank the Prinz Eugen A navy sahage HONOLULU. expert said the German heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, which sank nstensens long after its atomic bombing in the Bikini tests last summer, may have been scuttled accidentally by someone who opened a seacock without knowing what he was doing. A report is being prepared at n but the cause of the sinking has not been announced by rvy Kwa-jalel- ti , garage man can pound a dent out of steel fender and make it as good as new. almost anything except steel, your fender would a hole in it, or else ooM you would have to buy a new The gears of j your car can now stand five times as ear as the best gear steel of twenty years ago. And so it goes for thousands of things you buy. n safer automobiles, better watches, better shov tW tetter refrigerators -- all start with better steels mo out of the research laboratories of steel comp304 American Iron and Steel Institute 350 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y. |