Show m THE SALT LAKE TEH EXE SATURDAY MORNING JANUARY r JURY ACQUITS TRADE CHIEF Heads Finance ECONOMY BODY Group in City ATTACKS UTAH PRISON ‘LIFER’ PLEADS FOR IN RIOT TRIAL FARM BUREAU UTAHGOODS Verdict Holds Lack of Evi- dcnce in Support of Assault Charge President of Manufacturers Cites Support as Jobless Aid Nevtly Elected Jurors m District Judge James Wolfe's court spared the life of Delbert W Pfoutz life term inmate of the state penitentiary Friday afternoon when they found him not guilty of assaulting Deputy Warden Wilford Giles during an attempted prison break at the penitentiary on September 9 After the verdict was read Pfoutz manifested relief He heaved a sigh and his face was wreathed in a smile Judge Wolfe remanded him to the state prison to oontmue his term after advising him that he should appreciate the work done m his behalf by Frank A Johnson and Calvin Behle attorneys appointed by the court io defend him Defense Says Proof Lacking In arguing to the jury the defense attorneys requested acquittal on the grounds that the state had failed to prove the offense charged in the information Pfoutz was charged with assaulting the deputy warden and the defense contended that the evidence failed to show such an assault or that the deputy w'as even placed in bodily harm State's testimony showed that Giles was marched across the who Mr prison yard by the rioters in their fuunder elect- tile break for freedom whileMcTav-Ish fire from Guard Richard W H DIRECTORS CHOOSE FOUR OTHER HEADS Organization Sends Letter to Dern Favoring State Materials for Memorial Unqualified demand on the part of e the buying public for would put products immediately every unemployed man and woman in the state to work Vemer O Hewlett declared in a statement Friday following his election as president of the Utah Manufacturers’ association Mr Hewlett president and manager of Hewlett Brothers company and four other officers were chosen at Friday afternoon's meeting of the association directors at the chamber of commerce Mr Hewlett’s first official act as president was to forward letters to Governor George H Dern and each member of the Utah George Washington bicentennial commission urging that a Utah sculptor and Utah materials be ued in preparation of a statue of Washington for erection In the capitol grounds In connection with the state's observance of the Washington bicentennial Other Officers Chosen Other officers chosen by the directorates were E R Alton general manager of the Globe Grain & Milling company Ogden first vice president manHarry Ostler president-generager of the Ostler Candy company second vice president E W Bramard manager of the Brainard Dairy comsecretary and pany corporation James E Ellison manager of the Layton Sugar company treasurer Herbert A Snow secretary-treasurand sales manager of the Utah Portland Cement company was made an additional member of the board to fill a vacancy resulting from a tie vote recently Officers who served during the past year were Charles N Fehr president Mr Hewlett first vice president Mr Alton second vice president Mr Brainard corporation secretary and Mr Ellison treasurer to directed The communication Governor Dern and members of the commission follows: “Our atwntlon has been called to the fact that your commission associated with the educational departments of the state contemplates the erection of a George Washington statue on the capitol grounds during this year The money for the statue is to be furnished by the school children of the state Cites Development Work "As an association we are very much Interested in the development of Utah products and Utah people in We urge that Utah mategeneral rials be used in the manufacture of such statue and Utah granite in the base of same and that a Utah sculptor he selected in designing and ” building the statue Mr Hewlett also Issued a statement concerning the association lie inpointed out that the organization includes 154 leading manufacturing stitutions of the state employing men and women and doing an annual business of $250 000 000 He said that factories of Utah manufacture 1700 distinct articles and foodstuffs “The association since its organization 27 years ago has worked con sistently in the development of Utah industries” said Mr Hewlett Urge More Payrolls "Through Its untiring efforts In promoting the sale of Utah products the people in this state have learned that products made here are the best that can be produced that our factories aie the best equipped and most efficiently operated in the country that a dollar spent for Utah products will stay in the community and the purchaser himself In many cases will again have the same dollar returned to him and that the money spent here will keep Utah people employed “We need more payrolls in Utah This is especially tiue at present The association feels an obligation not only to Its members but to the entire population of the state In furthering the use of the products of our factories thus creating more employment “Fvery man and woman In Utah could Immediately be employed If the people of our state would accept no substitute for the products of our own manufacturing Institutions Expresses Confidence "Our association feels confident of the future as we ere getting reports from every section of our state showing e vital Interest in the development of our payrolls and industries “For number of years the association has devoted considerable time and effort in getting freight rates that makes it possible to manufacture profitably here Much time also has been devoted to sponsoring legislation that will insure the development and growth of payrolls end Utah industries "During the coming year we shall continue the same policies which have accomplished so much in the development of the manufacturing institu " tions of the intermountain country Utah-mad- Vemer O Heivlett Friday afternoon was ed president of the Utah Manufacturers ’ association JOB FINDERS TRY NEW IDEA al Decide on System of Part-Foo- d Part-Pa- y for Work Done er i 28-0- Decision to apply a system of vol part food ex change employment on one of the cuunty make work projects under di Howe as rection of Commissioner chairman of the county employes’ was reached Friday aftercommittee noon at a meeting of interested agenat the chamber committees and cies of commerce Attending were representatives of the city and county municipal and county relief organizacomtions L D S organizations munity chest federation of labor and unemployed council Under the proposal as adopted employment on a basis of part pay in supplies or of cash payment will be optional with the worker The county project — possibly the extension of Fourth East street— was designated because both food supplies and cash for wagea on county projects originate in the county or ganizatlon and by donation from its employes With additional donations received Friday R A Hart executive secrecommittee tary of the make-worannounced that the upper City Creek canyon project would be resumed Monday With work also being taken up again on the University of Utah campus and the Jordan River boulevard at the beginning of the week only the Hogle Gardens and lower canyon projects will remain closed for the time being Western Paper Products company through C P Castle advised the committee recently that due to part-timemployment being in force the employes of that concern would not be actively canvassed for donations but that the company would remit every month an amount equaling a blanket deduction of 2 per cent of untary part pay and e salaries Friday the company sent a check for $82 50 but in addition cam a check from the employes without solicitation for $64 80 Employes of the public library sent a donation of $100 which they reported would be duplicated every month until May From the Chris tensen Construction company through the state advisory council on unemployment relief to which it was originally sent come a donation cf $50 New Work Near For City’ Joble The woik of widening First South street from University street to Wolcott avenue will be resumed Monday it was announced Friday by Chatles E Forsberg superintendent of buildings and grounds of the University of Utah men from the Twenty-fiv- e civic employment bureau will be hired The work was discontinued week ago for lack of fundi Mr Forsberg expects to follow this project with widening of University street from Second South to Fourth South street MIST STAND TRI4L Jesse M Hoppl chat ged with robbing the Jacobsen market 329 American avenue January 10 was held for trial in Third dirtritt court Friday at the conclusion of a preliminary hearing before City Judge Donlel Harrington Coat of Paint Motorist Faces Many Charges Covers lilacs At City Jail Charged with having driven his car 42 miles an hour failing to heed a stop sign driving on the wrong side of the street and failing to slow down while driving through a school sone Dave Law 31 a laborer was arreslod Erday at 2 10 p m by Motorcycle Patrolmen Sherman Christensen and C J Larson The o'icer said thev saw Law drive past a stop sign at Fifth South and Thirteenth fast sheets and rtasad him to Thh teenth East and K n’h South streets Afer being hooked at the n'y jail Law' was re-under j0 bond pending court "Jallhouse blues" gave way to paintrri' white Friday at the city jail when the city kxk-u- p was given Its annual interior decoiatlng " The "blues" w ere represented In messages poems and names scribbled or acrati hed on the cell walla by prisoner who tiled to relieve the lediousness of confinement by writing The message i un the gamut of emotion from tiagedy to humor and represent the handiwork of all slratas of society 1 rUun I 23 1932 5 Meanwhile in Judge James W McKinney's court the state practically completed its case against Richard H Elliott charged jointly with Pfoutz of the alleged assault upon the deputy warden The case is expected to go to the Jury Monday Trial Repeats Testimony Testimony given in the Pfoutz trial was repeated before the jury trying District Attorney Elliott although Ray Van Cott produced through Dr Stephen H Besley additional evidence of injuries suffered by Mr Giles durThe state's evidence ing the break shows that Guards B S Christensen and David L Rees were knocked unconscious in the riot by six inmates but the court has ruled that this evidence is admissible only in so far as it may show an intent to assault Gitrs The prison break was allegedly participated in by Pfoutz Elliott F C Hertel George Dav Raymond Underwood and Lewis Deathridge who was killed by Guard McTavish as he attempted to scale the prison wall on a rope ladder Trials of Day and Hertel was Underwood are pendirg dismissed at the preliminary hearing DIKE PROJECT MS JACKING Engineer Board Supports Erection of Tno Walls Near Island One phase of a proposal to dike Gieat Salt lake to provide a fresh water reservoir was approved Friday afternoon by a board of engineers appointed by a general committee considering the project The action was taken In the Felt building offices of George W Snyder with Mr Snyder presiding it was announced afterward by R A Hart chairman of the committee Mr Hart said the board favored erection of dikes east of Antelope island one two miles long and the other five miles long He said such dikes would provide for a fresh wgter body 133 miles square at the east end of the lake The engineers arranged to survey the proposed diking area and to bore at various places along the line of the proposed dikes to determine the conditions which would be encountered In building The ultimate object Is to provide a much larger fresh water body Mr Hart explained that fresh water would run into the fresh water res ervoir from the Bear river and vari ous streams He said the flow of the Ogden and Weber rivers could be diverted to the area without making farmers now using the watei s of those rivers suffer from the change In an open letter to Edward A O’Neal president of the American I Farm Bureau federation here for the annual convention of the state organ-- ’ ization economy league spokesmen I charged that Utah farmers had lost in the bureau’s sincerity confidence j The letter signed by J R Peterson jj ”and Parley R Glover president and ij secretary respectively of the economy league came as a reply to a statement by Mr O'Neal m an address Thursday night that states with tax payers’ organizations “need the help of heaven” The economy league is affiliated with the Utah Taxpayers’ association and the letter defends the activities and program of the latter organization As elsewhere” an excerpt from the letter reads “we farmers in Utah E O Howard are groaning under an burden of taxation In spite of many promises for relief we have received none In view of this situation farmers in this state have made definite appeals to the Utah State Farm bureau to attack the extrava gance and waste in our state and local Much to our chagrin governments we discovered and disappointment there was no disposition on their part to act” The foregoing statement was folAssociation Names E O lowed by charges that the state farm was "petticoat managed and Howard as Successor to bureau either by virtue of the personnel or its financial standing unable or unCharles L Smith willing to offer the assistance farmers are demanding in their program for tax relief” E O Howard president of the With a common cause — lower taxes Walker Bank and Trust company — as their goal the league affiliated with the taxpayers' group the letter was elected president of the Associ states ated Bank and Trust companies of A delegation from 15 Utah counties Salt Lake Friday at the annual meet attended a special meeting of the league Friday at which it was de ing held at the federal reserve bank cided to draft the letter to Mr O’Neal Mr Howard succeeds Charles L Decision also was reached to preSmith president of the Security Na sent to the state farm bureau resolutions recently passed by the economy tional bank Other officers chosen are' George league calling for economy in all taxS Spencer cashier of Zion's Savings ing units of the state with a request Bank and Trust company vice piesi-den- that the bureau go officially on record A A James secretary treas- in favor of these resolutions as urer manager of the Salt Lake Clear- “voicing the demands of Utah agricul” reelected ture for reduced taxes association ing House secretary-treasure- r and the executive committee as follows Mr Howard ex officio chairman Poultrymen Keep Mr Spencer E S Hills president of the Deseret National bank Fred Market Director E Smith The offer of Benjamin Brown di president of the First Se cUrity Trust company and E A Cul rector of marketing for the Utah bertson vice president of the Con- Poultry Producers' Cooperative asso tinental National Bank and Trust elation to sever his connection with the association in the interest of company President-elec- t Howard said this economy was rejected at a meeting of the board of directors Friday An association was organized nine years ago and has performed much useful arrangement was worked out where Its pui by Mr Brown will be retained as service In the community pose Is to supplement the work of the market adviser for the association Salt Lake City Clearing House asso- but he will not receive a commission and its members include on eggs sold as heretofore ciation Mr Brown will spend part of his truBt companies and savings banks not doing a commercial business and time directing the activities of a re not identified with the clearing house cently organized poultry marketing for that reason cooperative Clyde C Edmonds general manager of the association left Friday for the east to reorganize the New York sales department and to attend the annual convention of the National Cooperative council of which he Is a BANKERS PICK NEW LEADER SUIT MENACES BONDING FIRM director Funeral Services Civil actions against Ben E Set Sunday for mon and Harry Price former bondsmen were threatened S James Swyers Friday by the county attorney unless Har- payment of is made by $500 on a defaulted bond January 25 The bond posted to guarantee Funeral services for S James Swyers president of the aviation service company bearing his name who was killed Thursday at the local airport when struck by the spinning propeller of a plane will take place Sunday at 2 p m in the Elks’ club Officers of Salt Lake lodge No 85 will conduct the ritual Opening prayer will be offered by lodge chaplain Harry Deardorff received a benediction and dedicatory remarks three high by the Rev W R Slomnn and music by the Elks’ quartet and John Bull the appearance Karl Bnnkman was forfeited by Judge James H Wolfe Brinkman charged with receiving stolen property appeared for the preliminary hearing but failed to ap pear for his trial in Third district court The failure to be present prompted Judge Wolfe to forfeit the bond and request the county attorney of to sue for collection Brinkman allegedly stolen automobile from school youths City Official's tenor SERGEANT TRANSEERS Master Sergeant Anthon R Thompson of regimental headquarters battalion 222nd field artillery received orders from the offuriof the adjutant general of Utah Friday to report to loit Sill Oklahoma to attend a communications s hnol Fcbuiarv I to June 11 lie will kate batiucUs I 4 44 Fight Urged for Equalization Fee Brother Dies Hal-lida- y 818 Alfred G will be the morning of heart disease Commissioner Lake left Salt Lake at 4 p m Friday driving to Boise to attend funeral services to be held there at 2 p m Sunday Archie W Lake was born in Salt Lake and went to Boise when he was a young man At the time of his ill nes he was engaged In the coal and insurance business and formerly was engaged in the sheep business Besides Commissioner Lake he Is survived by his widow two daugh-lerEleanor and Betty Lake one son “Ruddy" Lake one other broth er John C Lake and two sisters Mrs C W Crow ton of Salt Lake and Mrs H T Hilton of New York The Loyal Order of Moose will conduct services at the grave in Elks' Rest Mt Olivet cemetery The Fraternal Order of Orioles will have charge of the flowers Friends may call at Kingdon & Lee’s mortuary Saturday from to 9 p m and at the Elks club3pm Sunday from 12 noon until 2pm Officials at Airport said Friday they knew of no plan for investigation of the fatal accident Inspectors E E Mouton and Glenn Mecl of the department of commerce were ex pected to be in Salt Lake Saturday on a routine tour of inspection and Airport authorities said any investi gation would be up to them s Awaits C of C Plans For Traffic Safety Isles Tlans for establishing islands and safety tones In the business area will ba presented to the elty rommlsslon Tuesday by members at the chamber of commerce The safety and fire prevention committee of the chamber ot commerce Friday afternoon voted approval of establishment of “safety Islands” on Main and Slate streets between South Temple and fourth South street A subcommittee eonsistlng of Frio W Ryberg rbalrman I E Ifenaen and J If Sbrphard was named te meet with Gui P executive secretary of the chamber of commerce and Phil J furccll chairman ( th Rack-ma- n and fire prevention committee to formulate the plana Monday at ! a m Mr Rackman announced after the meeting Friday that the city make-worcommittee bad agreed to furnish labor for building the Islands and business firms had promised to furnish sand gravel and steel for the Islands The matter of stop sign on various highways waa considered at the session which wss attended by Police ( hlef W L Pavne and lira thief Walter K Knight t hief Tayne said he It making a study ot the situation and soon would ba able to make recommendations lor ciwoiti U deeaie jitslnJjl k i NAMES SAME STATECHIEF George Eden Body’ F Stalling of I Reelected at Annual Election NATIONAL OFFICER ADDRESSES PARLEY College Leader Paints Op timistic Picture for Agris cultural Industry of Utah reGeorge F Stallings of Eden was elected president of the Utah state farm bureau at a meeting of county representatives following the Friday afternoon session of the annual farm bureau convention in the Newhouse hotel Other candidates nominated for the position were State Senator T R Welling of Riverside and M P Brown of Ogden reJoseph Anderson of Lehi was elected vice president defeating J and M Ritchie of Wasatch county the following were elected members J H of the executive committee Burmngham Bountiful J L Weidand Mr mann Bear River City Ritchie of Wasatch county The directors were C G Adney Box Elder John Hansen Salt Lake and Irvin Burmngham Davis county Holdover committee members who are elected by cooperative marketing associations are' J M Macfarlane fruit and Salt Lake representing vegetable growers Joseph Anderson n Lehi representing poultry J W Orem representing sugar beet growers J R Beus Ogden representing dairymen and George Holt Clearfield representing the canning crops industry Mrs Iola Jensen of Weber county who was elected chairman of the home and community department ot the farm bureau automatically bea member of the executive Utah State Farm bureau officers elected at the an- comes committee nual convention Top George F Stallings (left) presiNational Speaker President Edward A O’Neal of the dent and Joseph Anderson lice president Bottom National Farm Bureau federation the L Weidmann members chief speaker at the Friday sessions J 11 Burmngham (left) and of the convention urged the of the executive committee of the state farm bureau farmersgeneral to light unitedly for the equalization fee equality for agriculture m tariff protection control of the national marketing and farm credit facilities stabilization of money and a coordination of state tax systems with the federal system He particularly emphasized stabilization of the purchasing power of money declaring that none of the remedies offered for economic depression would be any good without that “We must restore commodity valA R Worthen Agrees to State Official Report 42 ues” he declared “or nothing will work The money problem which so Solicit National Firms Inches on Level many people look upon with awe is the root of the evil and Is the most inRoad Closed in City tensely practical issue before the public today We have become slaves to a monetary system that is destroyBetween 70 and 80 inches of snow ing us a system that makes for rubA R Worthen purchasing agent of the American Smelting and Refin- with a water content of 17 inches has ber dollars and iron debts And withing company will be in charge of the fallen this winter near Monticello out restoration of the commodity price national firms division of the com- San Juan county it was reported Fri- level through some sort of inflation munity chest campaign for 1932 it Is day by K C Wright on his return we simply can not come back Snow east of He scathingly attacked what he announced by Harold P Fabian gen- from eastern Utah eral chairman Mr Worthen was as- Monticello is still about 42 inches on termed the imperialistic policy of the the level he said Mr Wright is as- United States and called upon agrisistant chairman m 1931 H I Price purchasing agent of the sistant engineer of the state road culturalists to rise up and demand a change Bamberger Electric railroad was seThe first three miles of the new Our Greatest Danger lected by Mr Worthen as vice chaireast state from Monticello highway Other appointments will be man “Our greatest danger” he said “is toward the Colorado line is heavily this idea that we are going to own madd soon According to Mr Worthen local blockaded by drifts in some places the face of the earth through investMr ments And if that ambition is ever members of the Purchasing Agents higher than the fence posts com- realized Highway association of Utah will support the Wright reported you can say goodbye forever firm's division work as a unit and munication with the Colorado state to tariff and protection to our home line be resumed bv may Wednesday market and living standards " team workers will be chosen from the 26 local members in this association but the winter road will detour off Mr O’Neal insisted that the future The division m charge of Mr Wor- the public right of way of agriculture is dependent upon coMr not does believe that the doWright then will solicit all national firms operative distribution and not upon maintenance of control of production It Is the ecoing business in Salt Lake Last year traffic will justify the over all this at winter traffic road 167 firms nomic law and the divine law he said guch $8629 was pledged by Contact with local representatives present should it prove to be as trou- that we farmers should produce all will precede the general solicitation blesome to maintain as say the we can and they who are talking Strawberry Valley road March 2 to 9 about restricting production are talkWork on highway projects at Moab nonsense near Greenriver in Grand county ingHis comments on this subject drew and east of Price in Carbon county a cheer from the audience will be resumed about the middle of A hopeful futuie for agriculture February the engineer said was by Director William PeAbout eight inches of snow covers tersonpainted of the Utah State Agricultural the eastern desert near the U S 50 college extension division The inroute dustry he said must undergo considerable readjustment but those who keep pace with the times can survive ’s He mentioned as vital to the future The county commission was inof agriculture In Utah fuller developformed Iriday by County Surveyor ment of water resouices administraof BUckensderfer that rights Joseph tion and conservation of public lands wav for the Airport Tooele highway to give the farmers and stockmen had been purchased and suggested added remuneration from grazing that the state road commission be Sir Oliver Baldwin son of Sir classification of lands to eliminate advised that they may proceed with Stanley Baldwin former prime min- that which is marginal adaption of ister of Great Britain will arrive in crops to class of land and proper diconstruction The highway Is scheduled to be Salt Lake from San Francisco on the versification the next federal aid link in Salt Lake Union Pacific railroad February 2 at Speculation Attacked county and the state road commis- 2 30 p m and leave the following Carl A Badger Salt Lake attorney sion has appropriated $125 000 for day at 2 45 p m on the Denver dc Rio attacked' speculation In agricultural immediate use on the new link It Grande Western railroad for Denver commodities and uiged farmers to is expected that construction will be railroad officials announced use their collective power to legislate no have Hotels here in 30 report they days the out of business gin The reservations for Sir Oliver It Is ex- greatspeculator The county commission spent need of he said is in securing rights of way for the pected he will rest a day in his travel the machineryagriculture to take the product and devote his time to sightseeing in from the farmer to the man who acturoad and about Salt Lake consumes them John James British vice consul said ally A banquet and vaudeville in the of comhe has no official word his Newhouse hotel at which Sam F ing Sir Oliver he recalled with a1 Kiefer was toastmaster concluded the son of the present premier Ramsay Friday program The convention will MacDonald visited here several years end Saturday with a apeclal taxation Oxford the debate with club ago session In the forenoon and training schools in the afternoon Snow that fell lightly upon Salt The presentation of resolutions Lake which is scheduled for the morning during Friday afternoon 01 of Inch of an brought only pre session immediately after the tax div clpitntion cussion is expected to atir up conA similar snowfall was noted in siderable debate other sections of northern Utah west and Idaho southern Wyoming ern Montana with fair weather else where In the west Temperatures here ranged between 14 above zero and 24 above The mean of 19 was 10 degrees below Supposing a city attorney has normal for the day held office for many years SupFuneral services for Hebcr n Unsettled weather was forecast Utah legislator who posing his cousin is elected pioneer for weather the bureau Saturday by died Thursday evening m a local hosmayor Supposing the mayor fail to nominate anyone for pital will be held in the Taylorsville Economist ward chapel Monday at 1 30 p m city attorney Supposing the The pallbearers will be members of city attorney advises his cousin Before U of U Clause Mr Bcnnlon’s Immediate family The that the mayor may not nominate nis cousin as city attorney speakers will be announced later Dr William Trufant Foster emiWhat to doT Joseph S L’cnnlon will have charge ( nent economist lecturer and author of the service and burial will take Thla is the question propoke to the economics sociology and place m the Taylorsville cemetery pounded to the attorney gon-pihistory classes at the Univetsily of George P Pinker by Abe Utah Friday morning studentsYifw film Murdoik city attorney for Dr Foster advised the students to "The Life of Riley” a motion picBeaver and one of the cousins think less about text books and more ture depleting life at Fort Riley KanMr Murdock wants to know about practlr and reality lie also sas waa ahown at the weekly whether the law antinepotism praised the courage of youth dollar of the University of Utah FriIs being violated ing it to be the means of bitnging day at 11 30 by the department of about a new kaUcuiua military uence A Gill-ma- Mi I J CHEST NAMES SNOW MOUNTS IN SAN JUAN DIVISION HEAD com-misi- County Secures Rights of Way on Airport Highway Son Ex-Premier- Active pallbearers will be D B Mernhew C W Simmons Clair Brunner O R Dibblee W C Miller Theo Marks honorary pallbearers Harry S Joseph Frank Nelson C C L Booth E Goff Wayne Faulkner W H Taylor William B City Naisbitt A E Konald Vern L Tipsy Driver City Convicted by a juiy in police couit Friday on a charge of di unken dnv-in- g Kenneth Prinre 22 was ordered to appear before Judge Nephi Jensen for sentence next Monday Patrolmen J E Daley and J P Ipson who arrested Prince on November 23 testified at his trial that he was driving his automobile In an erratic manner when thev arrested him at South Tempt and Eighth East streets 4 bureau fommi’-sione- r Jury Convicts 4 Officials of the Agricultural Economy League of Utah took issue Friday with policies of the Utah State Farm (T t Testinan Archie W Lake 52 brother of and E A Hedman Joseph H Lake Dies in Tyler Tex West North Temple street died at Gunn past exalted ruler his home in Boise Idaho Friday principal speaker — Utah Farmers Elect Heads Letter Charges Confidence Loss Toward State Organization Mrg Mary Word of the death in Tyler Texas of Mrs Mary Tcstman sister of the late Senior Thomas Kearns of Salt Lake and the late Mrs Frank J Westcott was received $ riday in Salt Lake She died Friday morning Mrs Testman is survived by three Mrs Virginia Dunnellv daughters Ontonagon Mich Mri Dorothy K Stafford Stotts Bluff Neb Mrs Ruth T Roberts Tyler Texas and a brother John E Kearns Reno Ncv Final funeral arrangements have not been made but the body will be taken to O Neill Neb foi services Monday or Tuesd ly FARM GROUP Plans $13-00- S L Visit 0 Snowfall Slight Throughout Utah State Faces Queer Angle Rites OnNepolism Set for Early Legislator Ben-nlo- lecture al |