OCR Text |
Show V PROVO (UTAH)gVENING HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1937 PAGE THREE Marooned Gamn Says Ail's Well 3 V RENO, Nev., Feb. 1 (UE A V message written in snow for the benefit of aerial observers flying overhead has dispelled fears temporarily- for the safety of 70 persons per-sons snowbound at the Buckhorn ECW camp, considered in the most .serious condition of 425 persons per-sons known marooned in six different dif-ferent camps on the barren Nevada Neva-da plateau. Ine message read: "Everything Ls O. K." It was seen by a Captain Anderson An-derson of the ECW division of grazing', flying with Pilot Newton New-ton Crumley, Jr., of Elko, and reported to Maj. Chester R. Hunt at the Reno ECW headquarters. Trucks and bulldozer-tractors today were trying to clear a trail along the desolate area from Eureka, 40 miles south, and give permanent relief. Persons in the other five snowbound snow-bound camps were believed un-endangered un-endangered immediately but strenuous stren-uous efforts were being made today to-day to bring relief as soon as possible. In auldtion to Buckhorn, the marooned camps and the persons in each are: Rawhide, 50; Sadler's Ranch, 160; Scossa, 80; Unionville 20; and Marysville, 45. Warmer temperatures throughout through-out Nevada today were expected to hasten rescue work. It was 30 above in Reno at 8:30 a. m., the highest it has been in several days. i ! Utility Rate Research Plan WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 Un -'I he Federal Communications commission desires to transform its $1,150,000 investigation of the American Telephone & Telegraph company into a permanent rate and research department, it was revealed today in testimony before be-fore the house appropriations committee. com-mittee. The proposal was made by Commissioner Com-missioner Paul A. Walker at a secret meeting of the sub-committee on independent offices appropriations for fiscal 1938. Walker told tne committee that A. T. & T. investigation in itself sr.ould not be continued after July 1, but should be developed Snto "a permanent set-up" aftei fat time. He estimated the anual cost of the proposed department at ' $ 0.00 declaring the expenditure expendi-ture was " reasonable" because the woi k would be concerned with operation! eT""a S5.000.000.000 industry." rhe Morning After-Taking Carters Little Liver Pills VOSS WASHER $59.50 and up Floating agitator washes only in top suds. GESSFORD'S Inc. 47 North University Avenue PAINT - WALLPAPER HARDWARE ft I Be -"rier.ds.. . J iU eelYtV" 6Very ader UflM rrVi0eItheh"3 th Poor ' ?NM ary. ypo. Cost i3 secoJ If c9P3-tto0eth;arirhanOU-t r 1 1 "S St rura: . .e t iythat JB I cu with any nV oe cm- II W giving tL I estalish- DEATH CLAPS ELSIE SPANISH FORK Mrs. Elsie Meiina Hopworth Knotts, 20, wife of Donald Knotts of this city, died at the family home at 177 East First North street Saturday night after an illness of only three days from meningitis menin-gitis of the epidemic type. The teh-months-old infant daughter of Mrs. Knotts is critically ill of the malady at the present time and funeral services were being held Sunday at Woods Cross for Nephi Hopworth, the father of Mrs. Knotts. Mrs. Knotts was born at Woods Cross, Sept. 17, 1916, to Nephi and Rilda Jepp-son Jepp-son Hepworth. She lived there until three years ago. She was a graduate of the Davis county high school. She married Mr. Knotts in the Salt Lake L.D.S. temple. Feb. 13, 1924. She is survived sur-vived by her husband, two little daughters, Annette and Beverly, her mother, two brothers, Robert and Dick Hepworth, three sisters, Faye, Iris and Delia Hepworth, and a half-brother, William Hepworth, Hep-worth, all of Woods Cross. Open air services will be conducted. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. VINEYARD MRS. GEORGE F. WELLS Reporter Phone Ol-R-4 i .. . Gerald Peterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Peterson of Amnion, Am-nion, Idaho, but former Vineyard lesidcnt, spent the week end here, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ray-mond Harding. Mr. Peterson left Monday morning for Salt .Lake, where he will enter the mission home prior to leaving for the Canadian mission field. Mr. and Mis. George Larsen and family of Spanish Fork were visitors here Sunday. They came to attend funeral services for her mother. Mrs. Mary E. C. Stevens Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. West Hill and small son spent Sunday here at tne home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rawlings. Miss June Gregory entertained members of her Sunday school class Sunday afternoon at a sleighing party, followed with refreshments re-freshments served at her home. Those in the party were: Lois Stewart, Luwana Burningham, Mary Lou and Barbara Harding, Barbara Anderson. Wilda and Wililam Wells, Harry Arvin, Kenneth Ken-neth Williams. Arlo Shumway, son of Mr. and Mis. Bradford Shumway, has received a call to the Western States mission, he will leave the first part of March. ! The Misses June and Maria ! Wakefield of Huntington spent I the week end here, the guests of I Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wells. ! Birthday Balls I At Spanish Fork SPANISH FORK- Two successful suc-cessful benefit dances were hekl Saturday night honoring the birthday birth-day anniversary . of President Rocsevelt. At both balls attendance attend-ance prizes were birthday cakes and the proceeds will be used to swell the fund to fight infantile paralysis. Dr. Joseph Hughes, chairman of the President's ball committee said it would not be possible tx give the financial report of receipts until Monday. The balls were held at the Palomar dancing pavilion with S. R. Beck manager and at the American Legion hall with R. S. Hughes and Fred S. Dart, mana-i mana-i gers. ART GIFT OKEHED WASHINGTON. Feb. 1 (u.R I President Roosevelt recommend- ed to congress today that it pass j legislation enabling the United ! States to accept the art collection i offered as a gift to the government govern-ment by Andrew W. Mellon. ICNDTTS Drake Left NINE-YEAR OLD GIRL MARRIED (Continued from Page One) a lew days before she was married. mar-ried. Oblivious tothe veiled antagon-,sra antagon-,sra of neighbors in nearby mountain moun-tain homes, Mrs. Winstead today began training her daughter in the duties of a housewife. Her approval ap-proval of the union, she said, was based on her liking for her new son-in-law. "I didn't have any idea they were so interested in each other until Eunice came and told me they had been married," she saiu. 'But now that they are married with Preacher Lamb saying the words. I believe in letting them alone. "They say they love each other, and Charlie is a fine boy and a hard worker." NEWPORT, Tenn., Feb. 1 r.P Solicitor General J. ,.W. Wolfen-barger, Wolfen-barger, supported by clergymen and social workers, today searched search-ed Tennessee statute books for a legal means to force annulment annul-ment of the marriage of Eunice Winstead, nine-year-old girl, and Charles Johns, 22-year-old mountaineer: moun-taineer: Employment Totals Gain in January Heavyl advances in private em-playment em-playment were recorded in January Janu-ary over the same month a year ago in this district, a report released re-leased Monday by W. Mildenhall. director of the National Re-employment service, indicates. Monthly totals for private em- 343. with 38 lor the opening montn a year ago. Total figures for 1937 are 44 above laL year at this time, with 388 now as compared to 344 in 1936. Dropoffs are concentrated in WPA employment figures with only three thus employed this vear as compared to 303 last year. Public employment has advanced advanc-ed to 29 this year wiih 3 for a year ago. Other placements for 1937thus fai number 13. Utah Woman Found Dead in Twin Falls TWIN FALLS, Ida., Feb. 1 r.P Mrs. Vivian Hustead. 24-year-old manager of a downtown rooming house and a bride of three weeks, died at county general gen-eral hospital early today from what police described as self-inflicted self-inflicted gunshot wound in the head. She was found lying in an alley early Sunday morning. Officers said no inquest will Frank C. Mitchell. SaitLake i r-itv fpthpr of thP riPari womaiirt Walter Mitchell. Park City, Utah, her brother, arrived here today to plan funeral services, which will be held Wednesday at Buhl, Idaho. He Fixed It! KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Feb. 1 U'.l'i - Harry Cook, automotive worker here, slept last night without with-out being annoyed by the constant "drip, drip, drip" of a leaky water aucet. He slept in a hospital after doctors doc-tors had taken three stitches In a cut in his hand, caused by breaking break-ing of the faucet handle. "I guess I pulled too hard," he said. . ANSWERS TO TKAFFIQUIZ ; 1 (b) ; 2id) ; 3 (c) ; 4 (b) ; ! 5 (c). I I'm so worried f Jean Here it is 1937 and we haven't paid last years bills FREE Haadr Social Sccarlty Racord Bka for 7n and yar fricads. Cmw In mmd get ymn, tdy. I 1 C 1 V Debaters to to right: Kathryn Coons, Jane Gib3on, Charles Browning and John Drake University Debaters To Meet "Y" Team in Provo DES MOINES, Iowa (Exclusive) (Exclu-sive) Drake university's debate team, making a two weeks, 5,000 mile west coast tour, will debate the men's team of Brigham Young university in Provo Feb. 11 at 8 p. m. Question for the debate is, Resolved: Re-solved: That the socialization of medicine would contribute to the public welfare. Upholding the negative side for Drake university will be John Simmons and Charles Browning. Traveling with them is Drake's women's team composed of Jane Gibson and Kathryn Coons. Last spring Misses Coons and Gibson, freshmen at the time, won second sec-ond place in Pi Kappa Delta national na-tional debate tournament at Houston, Texas. Leona Anderson, assistant dean of women at Drake university, is chaperon for the tour. From Provo the team will go to Greeley, Colo., for a debate with Colorado Colo-rado State Teachers' college. The debaters will meet Nebraska State Teachers' college at Kearney, Neb., Feb. 13 and will return home to Des Moines Feb. 14. The debaters left Des Moines Jan. 31. Schools included on the itinerary were: Kansas State Agricultural college, Washburn college, University of Oklahoma, University of New Mexico, Arizona Ari-zona State Teachers' college, University Uni-versity of Southern Calif ornia at Los Angeles, San Jose State college. University of San Francisco, Fran-cisco, Leland Stanford university. University of California and University Uni-versity of Utah. LiUU Children kllJOy Snow Sports Event Three-hundred children were entertained at Kiwanis and Bunker hills Saturday by WPA recreational directors in a winter win-ter sports program. Next Saturday a city-wide winter win-ter sports carnival is planned, weather permitting. Many events will be fostered with prizes "V each. All city children are invited in-vited to take part in the fun. Younger children those to the fourth grade will be invited to a special program at Bunker hill. Older boys and girLs from the fifth grade on will be feted at Kiwanis hill. Metal Prices NEW YORK. Feb. 1 H IM Following Fol-lowing are today's custom smelters' smelt-ers' rates for delivered metals, cents per lb: Copper Electrolytic 13; export 12.625 to 12.675. TinSpot straits 49.80. Lead New York 6.00-6.05; East St. Louis 5.85. Zinc New York 6.35; East St. Lotus 6.00; 2nd quarter zinc 6.10. Aluminum 19-21; antimony 14,4. Platinum- Dollars per ounce refined 58.00. Quicksilver Dollars per flash-92.00-94.00, nominal. The average citizen Is less baffling than the ordinary crossword cross-word puzzle. The humblest shopkeeper shop-keeper or even the newsboy can see through him. Prof. Charles Gray Shaw, New York University. ANNUAL SLIP COVER OFFER Exceptionally Low Prices if ordered during Jan. or Feb. PHONE 544 for full information D - T - R CO. fDon't let them get you aown.aear. see j j f.. Personal Finance like we did .They'll lend you the cash you need and ar- ( range the payments' to suit vou . Whv noi see them today ?) Over acaratnm-Johnson 8 nrortn university Ave. PHONE 210 JYur Uwa Friwi 4" SUN - PM- TASC j v x r s r II i Meet B. Y. U. at Diana May Get jfe. yS ' y-w i-.it 'yr I ' Jilr 2 l 'W ? r . - i&t A few days before the brilliant society wedding in San Francisco of Miss Diana Dollar and Joseph C. Hickingbotham Jr., the bride-to-be said tho nicest wedding present she could get would be an end of the West Coast shipping strike and release of one of the Dollar boats for a honeymoon vessel. Strikers countered that they, too, were willing to see the strike end-Now end-Now it appears that a settlement is in the offing and Diana may get her boat. She is the granddaughter of the late Capt. Robert Dollar, founder - of the shipping line that bears his name. Steel Companies Plan to Hire Tany Y cung College Graduates in 1937 Nearly one thousand college j The degree most commonly held trained men are expected to tind j0V)S open to them in the steel in- dustry when they graduate this spring, according to estimates made by the American Iron and Steel Institute. The number of such youths goinK into the steel industry this year will be larger than ever before, be-fore, reflecting the expanding operations op-erations and increased employment employ-ment in the industry. Most of them will be from technical and engineering schools. A number of steel companies have organized plans for recruiting recruit-ing college trained men, close contacts con-tacts being maintained with various var-ious institutions for that purpose. Likely candidates for jobs are selected se-lected from among the graduating classes. Some companies also are planning to offer opportunities for summer training in the mills to under-graduates. More than 70 per cent of the college men hired by one leading steel company in the past thirteen years have held degrees in engi-nering. engi-nering. About 13 per cent of them were bachelors of arts or of sci- i ence. were Included in bhe remainder! specialists in economics marketing, architecture, ceramics, business administration, journal ism and law. The men were grad- ing understanding of the indus-uated indus-uated from some 102 colleges, ' try's problems. Later the increas-universities increas-universities and technical schools, es were more rapid. k Three Days' Cough Is Your Danger Signal A cough, chest cold or bronchial Irritation today may lead to serious trouble tomorrow. You cap relieve them now with Creomulsiorl, an emulsified Creosote that la pleasant to take. Creomulsion Is a medical discovery that aids nature to soothe and heal the infected membranes and to relieve the irritation and inflammation as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Medical authorities have for many years recognized the wonder-fur wonder-fur fffprt nf Reechwood Creosote for treatimr concha, chest colds and bronchial Irritations. A chemist Erorked out a special process ox lending Creosote with other ingredients in-gredients so that now In Creomul sion you get a real dose of Beech-wood Beech-wood Creosote which ls palatable and can oven be taken frequently Provo Simmons Honeymoon Boat j was that of mechanical engineer, received by 149 of the men. Other degrees were in chemistry and cherical engineering, 97; civil engineering, en-gineering, 95; metallurgical engineering, engi-neering, 70; mining, 57; bachelor of arts, 45; electrical engineering, 42; and bachelor of science, 38. More" than 100 had specialized in or had received degrees in bus!- ness administration, industrial engineering en-gineering or affiliated subjects. A large majority of the college men chose "overalls" jobs at tne outset rather than "white-collar" work. Twelve per cent entered the sales department and three per cent entered the administrative administra-tive department, all others showing show-ing preference for the various producing pro-ducing divisions of the corporation. corpora-tion. Twenty-one per cent went into metallurgical work; 18 per cent into the rolling mills; 8 per cent into open-hearth furnace department: de-partment: and 9 per cent into combustion and steam departments. depart-ments. Other operating divisions absorbed the rest. "'fi " f'eci&tru I ciciLivci.y sn'w ly im me first three or four years of employment em-ployment while they were acquir- and continuously by adults and children. Thousands ox doctors now use Creomulsion in their own families and practice, and druggists rank Creomulsion top because xu this crenulne. original product you can get a real dose of Creosote So emulsified that it goes to tne very seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ-laden phlegm. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory satis-factory in the treatment of coughs, chest colds and bronchial troubles. especially those that start , with a J f ""I""" CU1U IU1U liOUK VIUuu vu. Get a bottle of Creomulsion. right how from your druggist, use It all up as directed and if you fail to get satisfactory relief, he is authorized to refund every cent of your money.1 Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) SPRINGVILLE WOMAN DIES SPRINGVILLE Mrs. A ma Johnson Reynolds, 47, wife of Edward Ed-ward Reynolds, died Sunday at the home of tier mother, Mrs. Johnson, following a prolonged illness. ill-ness. Mrs. Reynolds was born in Springville, My 10, 1889, a daughter daugh-ter of Edwin and Emma Johnson. She married Mr. Reynolds March 27, 1906. Her husband survives, also six sons and daughters. Lawrence Reynolds, Santa Ana, Cal.; Blake, Elaine, Geneal, Mack, Dale Rey nolds, Springville; her mother and four grandchildren; one brother and one sister, N orris Johnson, Springville, and Mrs. Catherine Hansen, Spanish Fork. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 o'clock in the First ward chapel, under the direction dir-ection of the A. Y. Wheeler mortuary. mor-tuary. Friends may call at the mortuary prior to the services. FARM MEETINGS ARE PLANNED Public meetings for explanations explana-tions of the 1937 agricultural conservation con-servation program are planned for American Fork and Lehi, Wednesday, Wed-nesday, and Pleasant Grove, Thursday, County Agent S. R. aBoswell announced Monday. Meetings Wednesday will be at 1:30 in American Fork city hall for American Fork, Highland and Alrjine residents; and at 7:30 p. m. in Lehi Memorial hall. "The 1937 program is adapted to small farms by what is known as non-diversion farm classification. classifica-tion. This enables the small farmer to participate in the program without throwing his farm out 01 balance," County Agent Boswell explains. In lt36 about 2,500 producers in Utah county joined and are receiving about $105,000 for their cooperation, an average of $42 per farm for the year. Every farmer far-mer is invited to join in the 1937 program. Representatives of the county committee anc extension service will be in attendance at these meetings, ad will discuss the different dif-ferent phases of thep rogram, Mr. Boswell states. Following the meeting, those who were not in the program last year may join by giving a 1936 crop acreage and filing work sheet. SEAMEN VOTE TO END STRIKE SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 1 ILP Union leaders today said early returns on the coastwide ballot of seven striking maritime unions showed the men favored returning to work. Three more unions International Internation-al Longshoremen's Association, Marine Cooks and Stewards' Association As-sociation and American Radio Telegraphists' Association started start-ed voting today, putting in complete com-plete motion machinery to end the 94-day-old strike which has cost employers and workers almost al-most a billion dollars. Louisiana has successfully introduced intro-duced trichogramme minuti, a tiny insect which preys on the sugar cane borer. IT'S HO USE The Secret's Out-All Provo Knows That This Picture is Great Entertainment ! j Yesterday's Crowds Just Can't Help Talking About - - - with ' the Sensational Young Star who acts as well as she sings, and that's saying a lot! Deanna Durbin RAY MILLiAND Bin rue Barnes-Alice Brady ONLY TONIGHT and TOMORROW 1 Willi SANDBURG TP TALK TOtJIGjIT "An Evening with Carl Sandburg" Sand-burg" will be that Ajruexican poet's address tonight before JJe literary minded in College hail 8 o'clock. Mr. Sandburg is appearing ap-pearing as one of Che features of the university lyceum program. Not only will he present some of his poems, but stories and songs with his famed guitar. Because as author of "Abraham Lincoln The Prairie Years" he is an authority on that president's life, he will also be asked to spend some time telling of the "rail-splitter," "rail-splitter," Dean Herald R. Clark of the lyceum committee states. Among Sandburg's other works are Good Morning. America." 'Smoke and Steel." "American Songbag," and "Chicago Poems." At 13 Sandburg began his pic turesque roamings, then later worked his way at Lombard college, col-lege, Galesburg, Illinois. Yeara in the Spanisn war were followed by writing including articles on Scandinavia during the World war. Christian Science Church "Love" was the subject of the lesson-sermon in First Church of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, Jan. 31. The Scriptural selections included in-cluded the following: "A certain blind man sat by the way side begging. And he cried, saying, Jesus, thou Son of David, have mercy on me. And they which went before rebuked him, that he should hold his peace: but he cried so much the more, Thou Son of David, have mercy on me. And Jesus stood, and commanded command-ed him to be brought unto him." (Luke, Chap. 18.) Correlative to the verses was the following from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" Scrip-tures" by Mary Baker Eddy: "Love for God and man Is the true incentive in both healing and teaching. Love inspires, illuminBS, designates, and leads the way. Right motives give pinions to thought, and strength and freedom free-dom to speech and action. Love ia the priestess at the altar of Truth," (p. 454.) Selling of Sword Perturbs Japanese TOKYO American Wire) There is the deuce to pay in Japan. Ja-pan. One of the historic a words of Japan was recently put on the auction block in London. It Is considered con-sidered an unpardonable breach of dignity to sell or export such arms to a foreign land. It was sold for $2000. Japanese in England will try to buy it and send it back to Japan. TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION v FOR RENT UNFURNISHED NEWLY dec. ground floor apt. Call after 5 p. m. 142 N. 1 E. a LOST LADIES' black purse. Reward. Return to 344 E. 4 No. f2 Tonite and Tomorrow, YOUR LAST CHANCE " To see and enjoy Will in his most home-spun lovable lova-ble role as a small-town Medic who uses some unusual un-usual cures! -iALSCt- Tnte Second Fast-Moving Fast-Moving Laugh Hit! o IDEMIY WARREli HYUEB Coming Wednesday The Secret of Those "MISSING GIRLS-' Is Revealed! , . 1 ' $ o n ran mm; K ' f . l i: ml |