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May July Open High Low ... ... ... 113 119 120 117 i2V 123 Close 113 119 120 117 122 123 Price Five Ceuta n liroub STRIKES Municipal Election Results Give Second Terms To Incumbents elatipns Between Termed Nations Critical MORRIS Foreign News EditorJapanese emissary speeded tolast-Was'iinftton today for to negotiations designed from rf th, world conflict area. ,ver into the Pacific From Bad To Worse that Saburo Kurusu ,ure route by ship and clipper JOE ALEX V L s"m.ne whether further in pre-- i would be useful the Japanese clash uth Li gtates came as the German 2 were report 'd throwing all attack on into- anot ir Si already ng by air the United a clip-'o- r States, will seek clarification on whet- uediate her to en route to board Japanese-America- con-iaoi- n u useful," the will prove said. tcv at once puese newspapers m kited their editorials regard-d was United States. was moderation the UK about by the direct request It k office. foreign Kurusu has been United States in view gravity of said eh the t Pncific situation. Rapid Change a more than 70 days since use - American negotiations ' Choice of Logan Voters Logan voters put their stamp of approval on the present city offiWill cers by Mayor Evans, Jr., and Commissioner Vei n B. Muir yesterday. Mayor Evans received a vote of 2129, as compared to 1524 for W. WT. Merrill, or a majority of 605. Muirs 2066 were 469 more than M. Car! Poulters 1577. Mayor Evans carried every voting district in Logan with thi exception of the Ninth district, in the Logan Seventh ward, where Dr. Merrill received a majority of 42 votes. Of the vote cast for mayor 58 per cent went to Mayor Evans, 42 per cent to Merrill. Muir led in all of the eleven Logan districts with the exception of three, the Second, Third and Ninth, where Mr. P o u 1 e r was leading. Of the vote cast for commissioner, Muir received 56 per cent, Poulter 44 per cent. Nearly twice as many voters, or more than 82 per cent more, went to the polls at the final election than at the primary two weeks ago. The campaign just closed was more than ordinarily clean, and few personalities entered into any of the arguments between the various candidates, even though some of the workers may have injected some personalities in the heat of the campaign. The candidates, the winners as well as the losers, appreciate the support that has been given them. They are all anxious that the campaign shall now be forgotten and everybody work unitedly for the best good of Logan city. The comments by the winning and defeated candidates are as ilozhaisk and Tula to put German famous Red the November 7 anni-1- 7 the Bolshevik revolu- - Kalinin, n mdesigned a Moscow's n on of reports said the me nazi had through. re e were now vithin but indicated that so been no important miles of Moscow 30 Fast Progress to about 30 miles Moscow, as reported by spproach to nazi claims On Page 8) (Continued C.T.U. AT INSTITUTE institute of the tan Temperance wd Won Union Friday, November Won, the first in a we institutes '5 will 7, si it has been N. E. Shaw of ' be in will be charge. held in church at 10 am. n ,um hoon will be sei church dining room at 1: n1 nit 'e will convene president: for an ex . 1 p- - m nt!nrVWnrkers - on CHE stake roi n "! Friday l'Vhe Hde Bf"v'n and while Frida I" the' unci, hw!l?d ,hir' oomn : bo,,. b ! Logan city I know you who live here desire. 1 shall continue to give my best efforts in that regaiu and to safeguard and protect everything of value to the city, and to strive at all times to make Logan the most outstanding residence community in the entire west. I hope all differences will be laid aside and that all citizens will unitedly work for the progress of our beautiful city. Vern B. Muir; I want to extend my deepest appreciation and (Continued on Page 8) BRITAIN ARRESTS TWO JAPANESE LONDON, Nov. 5 (U.Pi A strong indication that Britain is not contemplating any appeasement policy toward Japan was seen in an authoritative announcement today of the arrest of two Japanese, one ir. India and one in Burma. Those arrested were N. Suzuki, manager of the Karachi branch of the Nippon trade agency and Hideo Mabjnaga, at Rangoon. There have been suggestions the Japanese are engaged in espionage in India and Burma and it was rumored that the arrests were connected with these reports. ' Peery Makes Comeback In Ogden Municipal SALT LAKE CTTY, Nov. 5 CD Utah voters, .casting ballots In municipal elections throughout the state, todqy had named a former football star to the Salt Lake City commission and returned colorful Harmon W. Peery to the Ogden mayoralty. John. B. Matheson, incumbent Salt Lake commissioner, was reelected with 22,053 votes, but in the other commission race Fred Feets Tedesco, 32, a high school teacher and quarterback at the University of Utah, beat out the incumbent Pat Goggin and Candidate Richard A. Reid. Tedesco polled 15.238 votes to 14.150 for Reid and 12,515 for Goggin. Peery, whose radio campaign for the Ogden mayor's job had as its theme song, "Back In the Saddle Again, defeated the incumbent, F. M. Abbott, 7,879 to 6,842. Abbott unseated Peery two years ago. A Weber county legislator, W. D. Wood, Jr., was named commissioner over the present officeholder, William J. Rackham. At Provo, Mayor Maurice Harding was reelected, defeating Hilton A. Robertson. However, Commission Clarence H. Harmon was upset by a retired cattleman, Joseph H. Swapp. The vote was: Harmon, one-tim- e Selective Bl3hts. rePres has we rarrted WARDS Service Quotas Announced SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5 lPi Headquarters of Maj. Gen. Jay L. Benedict, commanding general of the ninth corps area, today announced quotas of selective service trainees to be inducted into the army Dec. 1 to 5, total 3665 for Franklin County Harvest Continues not prolonged, since the harvest climax has been reached. According to an approximate estimate given at the Preston office of the Idaho Employment Servire, harvesting is around 85 per cent complete. Because of the expected shortage at the beginning of the season Preston city and Franklin county school boards announced a three weeks vacation, in contrast to the usual two weeks harvest interval. School resumed Monday. November 3, with only a small percentage of students remaining in the fields. the area. California will furnish 2625 of 341; these: Washington Oregon 196, Idaho 167, Montana 136, Utah 116 and Nevada 83. will send Southern California 115 selectees to Fort McArthur reception center; northern California 1310 to the Presidio of Monterey: those from Washington, Oregon, Montana and 45 from Idaho will be sent to Fort Lewis, and those from Utah, Nevada and the remaining 122 from Idaho to Fort Douglas, Utah. The latest call brings the total number of men called from the ninth corps area to 90,006, of which state quotas included Montana 4173, Idaho 3885 and Utah 3340. , Fiorello H. LaGuardia Gains Reelection DWrtr- WILLIAM EV.A NSlR777T;7. For Commissioner VERN B.MmR M. CARLr rOULTER t- NEW YORK, Nov. 5 (T.D Tammany Hall was frozen out of New York Citys government fer another four years today as complete returns from yesterday's municipal election assured Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia. the little flower, of his third term. To make matters worse for "the hall the countrys best known and most denounced political organization, voters approved a proposition that abolishes most of the jobs which have kept it alive during the eight years LaGuardia has kept the municipal patronage faucets closed to it. William O'Dwyer, former policeman and the prosecutor who broke Brooklyn's gang of professional Killer, Murder, Inc., ran the British Ambassador Railroad Wage Raise WASHINGTON, Gets Cool Reception Nov. 5 (I'.Pl Lord District! Total 221256133.289161i229186 253115 2129 605 222,1261114115241 '.7.777147 125 134 255 145 310 167 235189215144 2066; 489 .7.771135133, 2111 89;iOO;i48,113,lOO 213;i63; 82;i577 Nov. 5 (V.P- U- that Calling his congressional lieutenants to a White House conference after hia return from Hyde Park, N. Y., the president made clear his approval of the senate foreign relations committee's action in enlarging the house bill which was limited to arming merchant ships, the conferees report- complaints and work out a solution to prevent future work stoppages. His plan called for reinstatement of all striking welders without discrimination. Day shift welders at the Consolidated Aircraft Corp., and its subsidiary, Vega Airplane Co., both of Los Angeles where strikes began last night. At Birmingham, Ala., Charles Price, president of the local Brotherhood of Welders. Burners and Helpers (independent) announced (Continued On Page 8) U. S. -- Canada Form Joint Defense Unit WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (IMP Canada and the Lnited States today set up a Joint committee to coordinate the industrial facilities of the two countries for production of war equipment in the battle against nazism. The White House disclosed that an agreement to set up the committee was reached in a week end conference at Hyde Park, N. Y., between President Rooseve.t, and Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie King of Canada. The group is officially described as a "joint defense production Its formation was committee. recommended by U. economic committee. Named to the new committee were: Milo PerAmerican members executive director of the kins, U. S. economic defense board, chairman; Undersecretary of Navy James V. Forrestal; W. H. Ham-sodirector of the production division, office of production management; Undersecretary of War e Robert P. Patterson; Administrator E. R. Stettinius, Jr.; H. L. Vickery, vice chairman of the Maritime commission. Canadian members G. K. Sheils, deputy minister, department of munitions and supply, chairman; director-genera- l, J. R. Donald, chemicals and explosives branch, department of munitions and supply; H. J. Carmichael, director-genera- l, munitions production branch, department of munitions and supply; R. P. Bell, director-genera- l, aircraft production branch, department of munitions and supH. R. MacMillan, president, ply; e merchant shipping; Walter Gordon, department of finance. Lend-Leas- r124:i27,122r88ill2!169:i24,196 FDR Asks Speedy Approval Of Ship-Armin- g Measure Recommend President Roosevelt today emphasized to his legislative leaders his desire for speedy approval of the pending senate bill to repeal all neutrality act shipping restric' best race of the three Democratic candidates who have opposed the little flower," but complete figures from the city's 4,059 election districts brought him up 133,841 votes short. LaGuardia got 1,186,-39- 4 votes; O'Dwyer. 1.052,553 votes. LaGuardias plurality was considered a small one. It had been a strange race. President Roosevelt endorsed LaGuardia, his chairman of civilian defense and of the U. joint defense board, who ran as a Republican, and also as the nominee of the American labor, the city fusion, and the united city parties. Wendell L. Willkie also supported LaGuardia, but Gov. Herbert H. Lehman, whom LaGuardia supand James ported for A. Farley, former postmaster general who remains state Democratic chairman, went all the way in support of ODwyer. CLEVELAND, As Rev. L. A. Talman, pastor of the Dutch Reformed Church at Hyde Park, N. Y proudly surveys his flock, little Beth Schuster, 8, presents a bouquet to Princess J ullana of Holland. In center. President on arm of Thomas Qualyers, his aide, smiles broadly. At left: Mrs. Roosevelt, Prime Minister W. Roosevelt, L. Mackenzie King of Canada Meeting .Hold Hillman said the appeal was WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 C.R) issued after he proposed a con- An emergency board established by FL leaders President Roosevelt to adjust a ference of welders. nd OPM, representatives to hear wage, dispute in the railroad. in- non-feder- al 1234567891011 .... !l57il35 the navy or the nation's merchant fleets. To Three More Plants As the announcement was made, welders strikes spread to three California aircraft plants holding $1,250,000,000 plane contracts for the army, the navy, and Great Britains air force. The OPM said the plea for a return to work did not cover the strikers at the aircraft plants, but that OPM representatives in Los Angeles would attempt settlement if the walkout is found to be hampering defense production. Associate OPM Director Sidney Hillman said Karl V. Morris, president of the United Welders. Cutters and Helpers, an independent union whose members are striking to win autonomy from the American Federation of Labor, fiad asked weUers to return to west coast shipbuilding plants and Other industries where sympathy walkouts occurred, i In New York Election Here Are Election Tabulations By V7wrMERRILLT: Race Halifax, British ambassador to the United States, was booed by a group of pickets, most of whom were women, when he and Lady Halifax arrived at city hall today to call on Mayor Bluthin. As Halifax and Lady Halifax started up the city hall steps they were ieered by ft crowd of about 200. Several pickets carried placards with Inscribed comments critical to the British and Halifax himself. Police said that most of the CACHE STARE AT TEMPLE women in the crowd were members Members of the Cache stake of the American mothers .some of are reminded that Wednesday is whose leaders were questioned by their day In the Logan temple. police in Detroit yesterday after Good attendances at. the day and the ambassador had been made the the evening session are cordial- target of eggs and tomatoes thrown by women. ly requested. HELSINKI RAIDED HELSINKI Russian planes attacked Helsinki yesterday for the first time in several months killing one person and causing minor damage. For Mayor PRESS .. today that leaders of a welders' independent union had asked their members to end strike? affecting shipbuilding plants with a total of more 'han $ 1,125,000, 000 orders for In the Salt Lake City auditor's contest, Louts E. Holley was the apparent victor over Gus Fernley, tlte incumbent. Nearly all of the state's municipalities chose mayors, commissioners or town board members. Franklin county fears of STAKE SHOW a Earlier beet labor shortage are sugar resented ' from Ogden, Logun are expected to att BY '1? THE UNITED -TheBY OPM Announced 2142; Swapp, 2191. TREMONTON Mm. Leaders of Welders Union Seek Peace 1 tfened . . . and since then follows: Malic relations have been ag-William Evans, Jr.: Again . I partly because of' the desire to thank the voters of Logan kan in the southwestern Pa-Iin- d for the expressed confidence they partly due to the rapid have in me as their mayor. I have fcp in the international situa- -' tried at ail times during the past Domei added. two years to do everything possible batches from Kuibyshev said to make of the kind of iird and greatest onslaught offensive which Hitler aim-- i: the soviet capital more than r.th ago was in progress on IN war-tim- Sponsor Major At High School Named Daphne Painter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Painter, has been elected sponsor major of the Logan senior high school ROTC, it was announced today by Captain William H. Killian. She succeeds Ruby Everton, who held the position last year. Miss Painter was elected by the second and third year cadets. Other sponsors include Dorothy Jeanne Nelson, Marjorie Naylor, Mary JeunLute and Venice dustry recommended wage increases for some 1,150,000 workers today, but the increases would be much less than the men had requested. The board recommended about 350.000 men of the "big five" operating brotherhoods receive a wage increase of 7 per cent against a demand by these brotherhoods for pay rises of at least 30 per cent. For the 800,000 employes represented by 14 cooperating railroad labor organizations the board recommended an additional nine cents per hour equivalent to an average increase or 13 per cent. These 14 organizations had requested pay raises of approximately 30 cents an hour with an hourly minimum wage of at least 70 cents and two weeks vacation with pay. The board rt commended a vacation of aix consecutive working days. All wage increases recommended n board, headed by the by Dean Wayne Lyman Morse of the Oregon law icho1, were proposed as temporary additions effective as of S.pt. 1, 1941, and terminating automati tally Dec. 31, 1942, unless extended by agreement of management and labor. The board farther recommended that on or about Dec. 31, 1942, the wage structure of the railroad inin the light dustry be of existing economic conditions of the railroad industry and of the country. fact-findl- Girls Body Found y, FLIER CONTINUES tions. .. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5 Searchers today pressed the hunt for the last unaccounted-fo- r flier involved in a series of army air corps mishaps which In 10 days . took 11 lives. Found last night were the bodies of Lieut. L. M. M. Walker of Salt Lake City, pilot of a flying fortress ed. Chairman Sol Bloom, D., N. Y., bomber which Sunday was torn of the House Foreign Affairs com- apart at 12,000 feet by a violent mittee said he had assured Mr. storm, and PilotS. Lieut. Robert Donalds, C, and Private Roosevelt of adequate house votes to pass the senate version of the Dan Fisk, San Francisco, whose bill. Similar predictions came from training ship crashed during the same bad weather. Speaker Sam Rayburn and Demowas Lieut. Richard cratic Leader John W. McCor- M.Still missing Long of the 57th pursuit squadmack, Mass. W ron from indsor. Conn., who disBloom said Mr. Roosevelt was when the flight broke appeared acto anxious get speeay "very tion on the legislation. He said formation over the Tehachapi during a heavy fog Oct. senate leaders told Mr. Roosevelt mountains . 24. the senate would complete action Walkers body was found in the on the bill tomorrow night. Bloom of the bomber cockpit said he expected the house would wreckage The eight other members of his act on the legislation Monday. to crew Bloom said the president made doomedmanaged andescape from the plane parachute to no mention of recent ship sinkings. The conferees also reported him safety. Ag-ne- as anxious that pending amendments seeking to legislate on the labor situation be postponed for consideration in connection with the price control measure due to soon. Mr. reach the house floor Roosevelt, they said, sought to have the neutrality issue returned deto the house for a clear-cu- t cision on the foreign policy issue, without reference to extraneous subjects. Senate leaders told the president they expected to win approval of the bill with at least 51 votes. In Michigan Woods 5 Submarines Prowl SAGINAW, Mich., Nov. 5 !M The body of a young girl who had been beaten to death with ft heavy club was found today in a lonely woods near here. The victim was tentatively identified as Miss Wands Wheat-le20, a Postal Telegraph company telephone operator who had been missing sincp Monday. The body, with the clothing disarranged by an apparently severe struggle, was found in woods about 195 feet from a little traveled dirt road. It was found by Alex La Drigue, Saginaw, while hunting. Sheriff Hugo Muchlenbeek said he was unable to determine immediately whether the girl had been criminally assaulted. HUNT FOR ARMY Coast Of America TORONTO, Nov. 5 (TP) Sub- marines are operating off the coast of Newfoundland, "actually within sight of shore." Navy Minister Angus MacDonald said today. "Naturally we are attacking them whenever we can find them," So are the MacDonald said. planes of the air force coastal command." BOND ISSUE REJECTED SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5 A $66,500,000 bond issue to tT.D dis- Ra'ilway Labor Study Completed By Board CHICAGO, Nov. 5 U.E) A special board's report, climaxing three months of negotiations and hearings on railway labor's wage demands, went to President fact-findi- Roosevelt today. The report was believed to recommend wage increases compromising management offers with union demands for payroll boosts ranging from 30 to 41 per cent. If Mr. Roosevelt approves the recommendations, they will be made public. Headed by Dr. Wayne Lyman Morse, dean of the Oregon University law school, the board left for Washington last night to deliver its findings to the president The committee has been preparing tho report since Oct 22, when it closed five weeks' of hearings on the dispute. Representatives of the 19 employe brotherhoods, other labor organizations and the railroads indicated last night that they expected the recommendations would offer a compromise formula. The unions have authorized a tribute municipally-generate- d pow- nationwide strike, which would er in San Francisco, was rejected paralyze rail transportation, if the by a 2 to 1 margin in yesterday's report is not accepted. However, election, despite the intercession the federal railway labor law for- of President Roosevelt and Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes. bids a strike for 30 days after the report is made public. Banker Describes Defense Effects In East The impact of the defense effort on normal business and peacetime industry is being inthe creasingly felt throughout east, and it is only a matter of time when restrictions, reduced inventories, and the effect of other governmental controls will be apparent everywhere in the west. This was the prediction made today bv Frederick P. Champ, president of the Utah Mortgage Loan corporation of this city, and president of Mortgage Bankers Association of America, upon his from Chicago where he Shall We Do With Them?", and later in the evening; talked at a at the association headquarters of- community meeting held in Kemfice. merer, held under the auspices of Mr. Champ stopped in Denver the Oregon Trail district. Cache on his return trip to address a Valley Boy Scout Council. Mr. luncheon meeting of representaChamp is president of the scout tives of the mortgage lending, council. In an interview, Mr. Champ dissavings and loan, and banking incussed the future of private buildstitutions of that city. Last evening in Kemmerer, ing, stating that obviously a sharp Wyo., he addressed a meeting curtailment is to be expected, he declared, "I have held under the auspices of the "However, Kemmerer Lions club on the sub- been impressed from recent obthat the tmmedinta ject, "The Resources of the Pub- servations lic Lands, Our Heritage Whut (Continued On Page 4) return was engaged in business matters . |