Show 0 I - o vs 1 16 Thursday Morning 1 V:be 4 lakc 47tibunc (Salt ' Speech Tournament Opens TBoy Suffers Hurts When On B Y U Campus Today Hit by Auto Tribune Intermountain Wire Succumbs T 1 - PROVO—Senior high school students from more than 30 schools in five' states will gather at Brigham Young university to participate in the thirteenth annual BY U senior high school speech tournament and drama festivalwhich will open Thursday and continue through Friday and Saturday The oldest event of its kind 1111 the intermountain area the festi- In two classifications: Class A for e high schools enrolling 500 students val iis directed by Dr T Earl for schools enchairman of the B Y U speech or more class B 500 less than Only one rolling national department "Building school contestant from each may in morale and the school's part the local war problems" is the enter each event Question for the debate contest theme selected for the meet this is "Resolved: That every bear male citizen in the 'United The presence of Barrett H Clark tohave of the national planning committee States shouldof be required e military for soldier entertainment at the One year festival will add to the color and training before attaining the presvalue of this year's affair In ad- ent draft age" Subjects of oraextemporaneous speeches dlt:ort to giving two or three ad- tions other events also have been dresses he will meet with speech and with the purpose in view and dramatic coaches and high Chosen Ehikl principals in a special ses- of developing clear thinking about sion and plan with them a program the present world conflict in the and guests to help build morale and further minds of participants A number of the one-aplays also cultural education are of the will build that type help Throughout the thrte days of the festival students representing morale Utah Idaho Wyoming Nevada and California will participate in Sugar Rationing Set the following events: One-aplays °ratio n puppetry and TOOELE—Mayor Sol J Selvin marionettes choral speech dra who is also Tooele county adminriatiic readings extemporaneous istrator for distribution of comspeaking radio broadcasting re- modities has received word here told story pantomime debate that sugar rationing dates are to humorous reading and open forum be April 28 and 29 The plan is All contests except the debate that all registering be done in one one-aand play will be conducted day - a Everett A A I able-bodi- I ed full-tim- ct I TO) I : 1 i 1 T-F- ' t 't ' I '4t0' ' -1 71N 1 ''i ' i ' mooLao 4 1 L4J tanUmmooMai 1 I 1 110 -- N14 I ' l 'ime) - Progress is the watchword for America 4 - al - 1 r S i ' -- ' Our neighbár ' Mr Fife has into a new location and iwe also congratulate him on his ' Y 1 ' ': lk ' I 'i - $ p- - - 1 i I 1 i q We too have 'always felt rather proud of our beautiful store and yet we see the necessity of con- stantlymproying it Many of our friends come in and a beautiful store" and of course remark "You have ' t we naturally feel good over such comments After all fi is to make thought behind eautuixtures merchandise more attractive and greater convenience for our Customers The old saying is quite true: "Goods Well displayed are half sold" t Take our Ladies' Department We've made this department a cosy quiet' place for women to shop and they like It 1849 per-simn- - first Shoshone County Records Death' MILL CREEK—Two special bus routes cne leaving the Utah ordnance plant at 11 p m and the other leaving Twenty-thir(2300) East and Thirty-thir- d (3300) South streets at 6 a m Wednesday had been added to the regular schedule of the Airway Motor Coach lines for convenience of Mill y passengers d I 1 1I 11 take as much time as he wishes ' t AS 1 Ia TYPEWRITER You NEED your Throughout the whole store the arrangement makes it easy to find what you want and see at a glance ' Iia - ' 1'4 I ' cco - dantegyietco ' P & li : s I 1 1 I - if - 4 - -- "' fi - moo" if - j ( - Our Royal-traine- d Royal-approve- d cil p t ' ' : 4 ilf i( á 4 9 I - 1! - : - Royal Typewriter Co 169 4111"111 Inc East 3rd So' Dial Salt Lake City Utah J t "" ‘ - c 141641L s 4itiaLittomolus lika 4':-- - 4404"403"dougekames -' - ! -- vomemdmituatteuta - t - 1141s- -1 - - :3--Cr- ':''-''''- - s - -' — "' " ttlf - : 1 t i t: 4 1 ? - 4: "'4---- --' I our - ' ' - - 't -- s V:! --- 6 E 7) ) c---- i ii 1 - - i 1 : 1 i ' 'i - : ?''::-E:'':::- : i 3 ( iii:::: :::i:ii:1ia::::i'iii:::::::--::!:---::-::-::-::E::::::- i I rill:'411i31:N:):i21 1 Open Sundays and Evenings ii:A i L rr i - I i ! climate tUtah 1 -- 2 - '11"1"' - - 11 for 3 s ' ' ' A rim) :::i:: fir k - CS" '''1:' t ''0 V : :'': f: 10 c tvCI'l 1 tbe? 3Uill - at1K- - ' ti i actS ci W– i Attl N :- - ' ' - - ( t 10 0 -- i Lt ' -- t k 1 L : "' ylip 0- - "J:11 ' ' ' : :' f' '''" '?) ' ' N 14 ''''' -- -- 1 ' :I' f - - : k 0 p ke I 4' - ' ' (fie - ' 77--- - '' - - - : Z 's Ue0:' '''' I- - 4 '1" - i- - i4'1-- ::‘ :9t):0' 4 - i ' t Vi!:-!:f--- I:vi?-- - a4' Vat t CIL 4- ' II' p--' - a-:':- - it - ' ' I e1 - z : ist10 i tttle rek0 L - atte- xls ' 413t e1 shOeS 9 Ica ''':' -- - ' 47-- : iS0 st2tt t2 'ilote otStle - - "illAt- ' ''': - v -- 011f'''' tO ve) s s th e yill' 10 s : S 44116:11Sk f tirtlis :'4e1 P" - V 4 St-IPV- -- - V2 ste ' : c 4- rattt at k IN ittli-- - ' 4 -- - ct‘I 7Nk -- Il s I 1 t " ' i I'S ' 4 " i 4 ' - ' 51 z 31 z - :: ::--- - rotfheessour noivfercsivitiy1 - - -- 1 I :' 4:CHARGE IT AU7IRBACEI'S I z z tON Pv '''''' L '''' - ' - i tk il'''-s- ' enot- ' 't ''' '''' e''st- - ''' ' -' : '' ' '''444'" 07: - I' 'i'''!-- 1'- s' 1 r ' -(b - $ ' — ' 44t ' - 095 r' - ''''1-- -4 - '''1 Illiglasrsr t 2'-- 1 t i e ' - IO- A 'c 1 '"- W- 7" t Ad - I I '144110 P' - 1 sr----) I r CHARGE' - 7 07 ' 77 tL41 78th YEAR - - L 4 '2o-111)7 - J ‘eti lei- - ' l' l 'i ' - e Ati i r'N'N41-- t t Street Floor ' - 14gtotagtml - I' - ' ct000 i HOURS to 6 4 2 c:ib) a0 - DIAL 80 ' I 1"06r ' t 7 10 AT - slaotaot - AT - - t - 1 — - - - '' '4 Shoes—Auerbachts -:- r - !I '17'"-'- - - ' ' 2 ': 46S -' '''0 :'' -- ‘''''' fLo:'4''' i ' - E 1'' : : ss ! - '' i si - - : t - wrk' ' '' - - g ? botine ' 41--:1--'- 4 jiff ev s t :!: ' ' : ''-' r z The Salt Lake City planning and zoning commission will meet Thursday at p m in Room 302 of the city and county building to conduct an inforrnal hearing on a proposeechange of zoning osnt rtehe et west side of Eleventh East between Wilson and Hollywood - t 1 year field- eft grown roots extra tong Selected for ' I - -iZ '1 ' - hardy plant ILAIR-- '1101 s :: ! ' ' 4 7 i long-bloomi- Two 4 ' ""4-- 4 ' rk4 : - - ' '-:''-: ii 11 g 44itiwom- " '''' N ' liP) construction of re ifs wtphiTheb for buildings A - --- ' to0004:tou0640144 - 6 '' - i ' rss ow avenues A number of property owners have petitioned for the change which seeks reduction of classification from residential "A" to resii n order that redential "B-2- " modeling of ilarge homes into apartments May be permitted All property owners in tie area affected are invited to attend the hearing - ' - i too for Roy-typ- e ribbons and carbon paper—made and guar- anteed by the Royal Typewriter Company 1 I AU - Call us i4 4 : '4 :: V Commission Sets Zoning liearincrb and service ': t 1 5000 Eoses Shrubs ' : i ers run smoother and easier and they will require less servicing and fewer tepairs --- ':'- i - will make your typewrit- 156 MAIN ST ' ' i t 1 0 writer! But the Government the armed services and manufacturers of war supplies need typewriters too! That's all right you can make your typewriters last longer by letting us take care of Call us today them - 1 type-- - 4 f wshitohulbdozbotsheictoenreserans Dgiineefeenridnogrfapt "i 4 ' Utah told members of Utah section Americari Society ‘of Civil Engineers Wednesday night Professor Diefendorf lecturing on wartime protection construction at a section meeting in the Beau Brummel cafe illustrated the lecture with slides showing how engineers have solved protection problems in America and abroad '1 ' 11 he i '' the fine merchandise' we carry Come iin t o this Friendly Store and make yourself at home any time the urge strikes you f ' - :1 0: ' Engineers Hear Talk- on Bombs :erne: snei 501 : Shade Trees O - Dbmt hoi i ' ' ' 1 :: 1 Arbor Vitae O Hardy Shrubs O '' ' i 0 Climbing Roses 0 Lilac Bushes O Bridal Wreath O Vines Bushes 1 ii N Iltahns TAKE 'CARE OF YOUR Roses i e i delighted at the prices tities :ii :: 1 4 F 4 price of federal use tax stamps for motor vehicles' and large boats dropped to $125 Wednesday with the beginning of the new month On sale at all Utah post off:ces the stamps will remain at this price all during April They will decrease monthly until June 30 when owners will be required to purchase new stamps costing $5 and good for the full fiscal year ''' ' ' The ' 4 " You'll spend more time at home this summer so enjoy it fo the utmost by improving your grounds See the wide choices offered in all your gardening needs You'll be amazed at the quan- ' On Auto Stamps i 1 330 South Second East Street '' Iii - ' IA DRIVL'' IN " U'S Drops Price ff Creek-Hollada- 1 AUEFBACH'S f:''- night ' Police said' Golladay stepped a parked car into front of in from the path of ah automobile Utah Deaths iTotal) ' 32 To April 2 1942 34 1941 2 To April 205 Entire year W11 Weber County: 1 To April 2 1942'-:1 To April 2 1941: 13Entire year 1941'1 Idaho Deaths :(Total) 1942 18 2 T- April 31 To April 2 1941 181 Entire year 3941 - - Our Sports Department is one of the bright spots in our store Here the young fellows can come in meet their friends and shop at leisure The goods are so displayed that one can shop in a jiffy if he wants to or gested" 1 - Thomas J Golladay 56 employe of the Sullivan Zinc plant died of injuries received when he was step toward hit by an automobile Monday Add Bus Routes ' follows: Jio have been placed on gather- Don't WaitBe Sure and Visit it::$ 1942 s r I ber KIILLOGG Idaho April —Shoshone cOunty has had' its first automobile traffic fatality of ' r ings or parades within your state However where gatherings of large crowds or parades take place It is of the utmost importance that no arterial highways or other vital routes of transportation be CCM LT S highway 91 through the city In pointing out that no such parades on arterial highways will be permitted Governor Maw quoted regulations issued by Major General Jay L Benedict command k - 1 and paint-u- p the spring clean-u- p fix-u- p campaigre to start in Tooele was made Wednesday when Jack Clarke president of the junior chamber of commerce appointed a beautification committee for 1942 as follows: Vernon Shields chairman Glen Shields Grant Shields and Kay Hansen 9 of - el I to City also is residents act as evacuee as decent Japanese everything will be all right" Sheriff Charles McPhie declared Wednesday night as he allayed rumors that a Sunday dynamite blast several miles south of Keetley was 'ir:::: significant as a protest against A relocation of Japanese in Wasatch :':k county First reports indicated the dynamite blast resulting when a single stick of powder was thrown from a moving automobile on IL S 40 highway early Sunday had occurred on the George A Fisher ranch Mr Fisher former executive secretary of the state land beard offered to lease portions of his ranch to certified American-bor- n Japanese evacuees from Pacific coast areas Sheriff McPhie said that the blast occurred before any Japanese had arrived at the Fisher ranch t'l and said such blasts were "more ':':: c:: or less common occurrences" § He explained that miners coming off shift occasionally toss dynamite from moving automobiles "just for fun" Several Japanese families have arrived at the Fisher ranch since t Sunday the sheriff said He dis- t counted reports that "resentment" Is apparent in Park City and He- Beautification Drive TOOELE—The 12 of ing I send of Hollywood Cal Jay C Townsend of Bouse Ariz and Vil- liers S Townsend of' Inglewood CaL Towle Schedules '42 —19 in IIEBER--"I- f J from 1872 until the following year when he moved to Payson He engaged in the drug business He in Payson for many years married Alta Marie Hancock in the old Salt Lake Endowment - of Ogden be feaof all Sheriff Scouts Blast Protest ' Missouri He came west at the 'age ' of 21 and resided in Salt Lake City ' thhan - 14 Death Comes To Payson's Oldest Citizen d recently-move- al- most instantly Tuesday near midnight when tvehicle in which he was riding overturned on Cozydale hill about five and a half miles southwest of Ogden on alternate U 13 highway 91 Private Clarence 11 Beaver 27 who is alS0 attached to the infantry unit and three civilian occupants of the "Jeep" suffered shock and bruises in the crash The injured civilians are Harry Stark 55 his wife Mrs Emma Stark 41 and their niece? Helen Stark 16 all of Hooper Their conditions were reported Wednesday at an Ogden hospital to be "not serious" Details 'setting Sergeant R Smurthwaite who conducted the investigation of the crash for Utah state highway patrol indicated that the "jeep" was traveling toward Ogden on the diagonal highway when it overturned As there were no eyewitnesses who were not occupants of the machine the circumstances which caused the machine to overturn were not 'determined Officers of the infantry unit who indicated that a detailed army investigation is in progress said the speed of the vehicle remained in question andthat "it could have happened if the speed were but 20 miles an hour"7— After overturning the vehicle skidded about 30 feet on its back and landed atop a guard rail with its body still upturned Taken to Ogden Guards at Ogden ordnance depot were statbned at the scenee of the Crash until highway patrol-mp arrived The injured civilians were taken to an Ogden hospital Private in an Ogden ambulance Beaver was taken by army to an Ogden hospital for emergency treatment and then to the army camp at Hooper Private Meeker was rushed to an Ogden hospital and his body was transferred later to Deseret mortuary in Ogden Private Meeker was born FebIll a ruary 22 1917 in Casey'Meeker son of Mr and Mrs Virgil He enlisted in ithe army at Fort Cal on August 29 McDowell 1940 He had been stationed in Weber county with the infantry unit since January 23 1942 Surviving are his father of Merced Cal and one brother Olin Meeker who is stationed with the U S nav'y at Pearl Harbor T H Joseph LonkinE Townsend Oldest resident of Payson who died 1Vednesdays 9 1 f 1 :l ' s Private Meeker was killed pa- - Ogden have been Reason for the change from past years when two mammoth street1 parades have been provided was seen by the city commission in a letter from Governor Herbert E Maw pointing out that the army will not permit any parades that might obstruct arterial highways i4 1942 I - ' 1 -- :4 " I - beautifurnew! store i '4: t 1 vf4-- canyon Later it became their summer home The site is known now as Maple Dell Surviviner Mr Townsend are two daughtersnqrs Haynes and Mrs Marie Jordan of Las Vegas N M and three sons Bertram H Town- - limm i - house in 1875 She died in 1926 Summer Home ' Mr and Mrs Townsend homesteaded a tract of land In Payson 9 ‘ 1 t ty Pennsylvania August Mr Townsend was educated in schools and colleges In the east and attended the University of - Salt Lake can also with-equgood grace say we too have as beautiful and A fine stores as you Nvill find in any of the metropolitan cities In this connection we wish to congratulate the firm of Arthur Frank on their beautiful new store remod cled after the fire Mr Frank can well feel proud of his achievement and the clothing fraternity in gefferalI can feel a sense of pride in such progress and improve ment We wish him Success i c7 9 - 1 ": Born in 1849 Born in Canton Bradford coun- People passing through Sdlt Lake often comment on the beautiful store fronts and store interiors in Los Angêlcs f - 4 dent to age Mr 'Townsend opened the first high school in southern Utah in Payson in 1873 and for many years was a penmanship instructor at Brigham Young academy in Provo He was known to members of the L D S church for many poems and songs which he composed and in October 1940 was honored by the Deseret Sunday School Union at the general conference of the church in Salt Lake City I - Tribune Intermountain Wire funeral details were being arranged for Private Oscar V Meeker 25 of Merced Cal officers of an army infantry unit with which he was attached were 'piecing together the details of the midnight crash of an army "Jeep" which resulted in Weber county's first traffic fatality of OGDEN—While 4 MAGNA Assurance that a $250000 W P A sewer project will Tribune Intermountain Wire be completed in Magna was given — Joseph PAYSON Lonking to a group of community repre92 oldest resident of Townsend W P A sentatives Wednesday by The project is about Payson died Wednesday morning officials half completed at the home of a daughter t Mrs Amy Haynes of infirmities inci- D Wprit 2 - by c Get Sewer Assurance ct 11(171 ' was in an Ogden hospital Wednesday night with a lateral skull fracture and scalp lacerations suffered when he was struck by an automobile7shortly after 5 p m State highway patrolmen reported the accident occurred on private property The child was struck by an automobile in the driveway of the Riverdale tourist court Sergeant R Smurthwaite of the highway patrol reported The driver of the car who took the child to the hospital and later called at the Weber county sheriff's office for an accident report was known to officers only as a "man named Mr Johnson" The officers said the driver told deputy sheriffs he would file a report on the accident later He told them the glare of the sunset prevented him from seeing the child who was struck by his westbound automobile Mr McCullough Is 'a defense worker employed near Ogden and the family reside in the tourist court officers said ct - 4k 1 Par--do- i 471-- McCullough son of Mr and Mrs McCullough of Riverdale 31i-year-o- ld ' 4 t OGDEN—Robert ' - i Army Probes 1War Restrictions May Halt Parades Former Tribune Intermountain Wire Pioneer days officer the Ninth corps area rattility ill OGDEN—Celebration !vides routed theIwith along Salt Lake I headquarters Pioneer days this year may Car' main street Washington as city's prior Tuesday tured the elimination Military boulevard but this street "For your information an arterial highway the extension bitions parades 1 I ' - - 7 0040d - ttimatiaj-j- p ' |