Show f a THE OGDEN ROGERS LEAVES $800900 WIFE IN INSURANCE IIOPSON FREED MILLIONS MAY OF QUESTIONS UNTIL F10NDAY Was Built of "Spare Parts' assembled UTAH PROJECT EVANSTON NEWS BE SPENT FOR FRANCES E SLACK MINING ROADS LOS ANGELES Aug 17 — (AP) — Although it was SATURDAY EVENING AUGUST 17 1935 STANDARD-EXAMINE- R from ' 111 COURT TEST Provo River Reclamation Two Complete Visit School Welcome: Work To Assure To University Center Water Supply Early Enrollment ' Supreme vBench Appoints v NEW YORK Aug 17- - (AP) — John J Kemp insurance brokers disclosed today that "SfUl Rogers named as sole beneficiary to about $800000 of life insurances his wife Mrs Betty Blake Rogers j In the event of Mrs Rogers death the humorist's thr?e children were to have! been beneficiaries according to the terms of tjie policies NO FLYING CJLAVJSK Kemp said the policies the last of which were taken out nine years ago did not contain clauses and that all money due the widow would be paid on demand "Had Mr- Rogers taken outr insurance five years ago afjter he had become an inveterate air passenger'' Kemp said "his premiums would what they have been almost double v were" He said Rogers had been insured for one million dollars and that during the last year approximately $200000 worth of insurance in endowment form had matured i 'non-flyi- ng - i ' WIDOW TO REST ttOME PONCA CITY Okla Aug 17— (AP)— Mrs Wiley Post abandoned today" her plans to fly toj Seattle to meet the body of her flyer husband killed with Will Rogers in an Alaskan crash Instead the widow of the intrepid flier will rest here toda going to the farm home of Posf s parents near Marysville tomorrow there to await the body of the man she married after an aerial 'elopement i MAY CAST MEDALS " 'V — j' WASHINGTON Aug 174 (AP) — Howard C Hopson millionaire utilities operator was granted la brief respite today from the questioning Winnie Mae was" Post told mechanics when the ship was completed several weeks ago in Burbank The Winnie Mae placed in retirehe has undergone in senate and ment by the flier was the ship in house lobby investigations which Post flew to aviation lame But Monday the directing force on two hazardous round-the-wor- ld behind the Associated Gas and flights i y Electric system will be recalled to Babb international dealCharles the stand to continue relating the er in used aircraft disclosed that part he played in the campaign to Post purchased the fuselage and defeat tie Roosevelt utilities bill wings of the new plane from him Today Chairman O'Connor of the WANTED SURFACE house lobby committee considered "Post said he wanted a wing with summoning an administration offi- a large lifting surface" Babb said cial—Frank R McNinch chairman assumed he knew what he was of the power commission — to have and it seemed logical when about contrast as in him tell whether he he explained that he was going to to Hopson lobbied for the bill put a Lockheed Sirius wing on a - Representative Lehlbach j(R-N- J) Orion fuselage saying this Lockheed who requested O'Connor to call would give him greater combination the McNinch asserted that power commission had circulated "propa- visibility more is Sirius of "'The practiwing ganda" advocating "destruction holding companies by trying to cal for pontoons and skiis also show that the sale of their securi- wheels and since there are more ties would not be affected by the lakes in the northern country on Wheeler-Raybur- n which to land than there are flying (utilities)! bill" senate as bill fields- I'll do most of my flying up the passed by (The ' provided for mandatory abolition there with pontoons' Post told me" of certain utility holding companies CAUSED COMMENT a provision which the house re Post's resolve to build his own jected) ' ship instead of buying a new standAnother administration figure ard plane' caused considerable com who may be asked to testify at next ment among fliers who believed week's session is Marvin H Mc- - limited financial resources influIntvrel a White House secretary enced the noted pilot in going ahead " a mem- with Senator Gibson (R-V- t) his plans ber of the senate lobby group said aeroJoe Marriott yesterday he would demaind that nautical Inspector supervising de here for the Mclntyre 'be 'called to explain his partment of commerce said Post's presence at a party Wednesday was operating under a renight with B B Robinson! Chicago plane utilities man who acted as Hopson s stricted license 'I - WASHINGTON Aug J7— (AP)- in wasnmgtpn Resolutions directing thi secretary representative of the treasury to strike off special gold medals "in recognition of the achievements' of Will Rogers and Wiley Post were introduced today a) by Representative Rogers HOUSE STUDIES NOTED PILOT (D-Okl- ARRIVE IN N YL'C 7— (AP) — NEW YORK Aug Mrs" Will Rogers and her daughter Mary arrived in New Yjork today after a hurried trip from! Maine en route to their California ijome to lay to rest the remains of husband and father ' " ' j COALMEASURE STARTS HOME WITH BODIES (Continued from Pare One) strewn Arctic shore after Dr Henry W Greistr the mission surgeon and Charles Brower grizzled "king of the Arctic" prepared them! for the Journey home ROUGH WAREHOUSE With Dorothy Stone daughter of Actor- - Fred Stone an intimate of the dead comedian the Rogers motored Into the city from Stamford where they left (the train which had brought them from OakIn this same rough frame wareland Me They will await the ar- house last May the bodies of 14 rival of the eldest sob of the Eskimo victims of an influenza epiphilosopher-humori- st W01 Jr ar- demic were laid out in plain board V riving by airplane tonight from the coffins west coast before completing plans Brower was the man wh$ Rogers for the trip to Santa Mobica said he was flying to Barrow to At the hotel where Jimfny Rogers visit For 51 years Brower! has opanother son was still registered to- erated a whaling station and trading day it was said he had not re post on the lonely northernmost tip turned of Alaska On the banks of the shallow ? PERMIT SOUGHT stream 15 miles south of here were WASHINGTON Aug 17 — (AP)— the fragments of Post's pontoon-equippThe state department today re ship which he flew north quested permission of the Canadian from Seattle August 7 on the "pleasfor- an American plane ure Jaunt" which was to include government 4— lu ny over uanaaa lo return tne a flight across Siberia to Moscow bodies of Will Rogers land Wiley The terrific impact so ripped the Post from Alaska to ihe United plane apart that it seemed doubtStates The plane was expected to ful if the exact cause of the wreck fly from Fairbanks via) Burwash ever would be determined) Whitehorse Landing Eskimos with whom Post talked Telegraph vreeK ana Jinnee aeorgel after landing to get directions to 4 Barrow said the plane took off rose 50 or 60 feet before the motor misfired the ship - slipped off on UTAHN OF -- one wing and then crashed nose first into the tundra an4 ground i -- ed a X TELLS looped An Eskimo breathless if rom 15 miles of running across the tundra brought the first word of t£e wreck to Barrow (Continued from Face One) "Red plane blow up Two men srave unturned nlane most elinstiv dead" the Eskimo mumbled to Staff appearance and our hearts rhWert Sergeant Stanley R Morgan United at- - mougnt oi wnat we might find States signal corps wireless operP FINDING BODIES j! j there - j "As we approached nearer plane we-so- § ator Hastily mustering a party Morgan engaged a fast motorboat and set out in the gathering darkness for Walakpi a tiny native settlement at Refuge inlet where ihe Eskimo said the tragedy had occurred Morgan's Journey was slow- realized no human could possibly survive the terrific crash The plane was but a huge mass of twisted and broken wood and metal i BODY EXTRICATED "The natives by this jtlme had managed to cut into the cabin nrf ed by floe ice extricated the body of Rogers who BODY REMOVED naa apparently been well back in the Eskimos " already had removed cabin when the plane struck and Rogers body from the wreckage more or less protected by the bag hut used ropes to pull the Morgan gage carried therein shattered plane apart beforef Post's "We soon learned we would have a body could be lifted from-- beneath difficult job freeing Post) from the the motor in two feet of icy water wreckage as the plane had struck bodies and personal effects The with such terrific speed it had forced taken from the were placed the engine well back into! the cabin in a native skin plane boat towed to and pinning the body of Post! securely Barrow "With some little difficulty we Morgan flashed the word managed to tear the plane! apart and bySergeant wireless to Col George E Kumpe released the of Post eventually body Both bodies' were then carefully laid In charge of the Alaska telegraph system neadquarters operated by and wrapped with eiderdown sleep- the signal corps in Seattle ing bags found in the wreckage and The signal corps notified Mrs then carefully placed on t the boat Post in Ponca 'City OklaJ and the ESKIMO BOYS SENG family in Showhegan Me "It is believed the natives felt the Rogers "1 wish to God I had been with loss of these two great men as keenwhen he crashed" Mrs Post ly as we and as we started our slow him cried when she learned of her hus to back Barrow one of the trip band's death Eskimo boys began to sing a hymn She was prostrated by shock for in Eskimo and soon all the voices whined in this singing arid contin- a few hours and then flew to Okla ued until our arrival at Barrow homa City on her way to Maysville when we silently bore the bodies tne fos& lamuy nome The Rogers family was stunned from the beach to the hospital where they were turned over to Dr Mrs Rogers said she would start Greist who with the klndjy help of for California with her daughter Mr Brower prepared anil dressed Mary Rogers 19 Will Rogers Jr was in California the bodies - v ? Tt is doubtful if a person in this but headed east In a Diane The little village slept that night all sat other son James already was in around the hospital with bowed me east Memories of the recent visit of heads with little or no talking" on i Final Vote Is Scheduled Monday Views Differ On Its Success WASHINGTON An 17— (AP— The key section of the Guffey coal stabilization bill declaring that the mining of coal has a "direct effect" on Interstate commerce was approved today by the house WASHINGTON Aug 17— (AP)— The house considered amendments fcto the Guffey bituminous coal stabilization bill today with " a r final Vote scheduled on Monday Proponents said the house would pass the measure opponents said it would be defeated President Roosevelt has asked that the legislation be enacted before adjournment and some leaders believe he will insist on senate and house approval The senate has not yet acted on the bill which would set up a "little NRA" within the soft coal industry to regulate wages hours trade practices and price fixing The senate was In recess today while its leaders shaped plans for a drive to adjourn congress next week Predictions were heard that several major bills including the utilities measure might be scrapped in the final rush Congressional chieftains will discuss the situation with President Roosevelt at the White House tomorrow night ADJOURNMENT MOVE Another step toward adjournment was taken last night when senate and house conferees reached an agreement on the banking bill They agreed to accept after weeks of negotiation the major provisions of the compromise senate bilL The legislation would among other things centralize control of the nation's credit in an open market committee of 12 members Including five bank representatives The senate and house lobby investigators did not meet today giving Howard C Hopson utilities magnate a week-en- d respite from questioning However he will be called back to the stand again Monday i f4 : — WASHINGTON Aug 17 —AP)— Representative Compton I White Clarksfork Ida Democrat said today President Roosevelt would approve the proposed allotment of for construction of mining roads throughout the west White said the proposal to con! $5-000- O - be used- - White said the president asked Robert C Fechner director of the civilian conservation program to request the forest service to work the mining road suggestion into its program for the constuction of fire protection roads through national conservation work law This would mean White said that impendent of the proposed road construction program at least part of the civilian conservation corps ta mining states would be used to construct such roadways Into mining areas where the roads also would be available for fire fighting purpose in the national forests $5-000- 000 NEVWSFOR YEAR RECORDED Roberjts was accompanied by her sister Mrs O B McKlnnon and three sons of Price Utah Mrs Sidney Kastner returned Thursday form a delightful four-wemotor trip through California Mrs Kastner visited the San Diego exposition and returned home' by the way of Arizona New Mexico ' and Colorado ek Miss Celinda Davidson of Ogden arrived in Evanston $Vednesday and Is the guest of her aunt Mrs W B Field FROM IIEBER CITY George Carruth returned Friday from Heber City Utah after motoring there with Mrs Carruth who will remain about a week Mrs H D Arms has left for her home in Omaha after visiting her cousin Mrs H S Alexander for a week She was accompanied by Miss Kate Alexander who will remain with Mrs Arms for two weeks Mrs Seth Thomas and Mrs Fred Carruth left Friday for Salt Lake City to visit Mrs Ida V Mills who is in a Salt Lake hospital BILLOFFERED - (D-Uta- h) Put For Canal 15c acres Any Time The Boise project as originally included this division planned which was not completed with the rest of the project- because of lack of funds Works already completed for the division include the Deadwood dam and reservoir the Black canyon diversion dam and the Black canyon Work remaining inpower plant cludes construction of canals lat erals and pumping plants Wyo Aug 17— school students are registering dally at the school office and all who can conveniently do so are being urged to enroll at this time The school office is open dally between nine and four for this purpose Those who cannot come In between these hours will be met by appointment if desired r H SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— (AP)— The state department of agriculture has been advised by Joseph Chez attorney general to go slow in its proposal of enforcing regula- tions establishing a universal registered store bottle and requiring all dairymen in the state to use this bottle for their store milk trade While it is within the power rf the department to enforce such reg- - THREE DEADIN SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— (AP)— Traffic accidents in Salt Lake fatal FriCity this week proved ' to three persons day Mrs Margaret Darlene Prout 39 died In a hospital "of "hi juries received Sunday when the car in which she was riding overturned west of the city Leland Clyde Duerden Jr 9 son of Mr and Mrs L C Duerden died of injuries received Monday in a le collision was Injuries received when she knocked down by a bicycle Thurs--daevening were fatal to Ellen Brewer 18 ' bicycle-automobi- ' - MISHAPS days is Caution Advised In Store Bottle Plan self-administe- red they should not be put in effect unless the present system of disposition of milk to the retail trade in the stores throughout the state is "inimical ot the order safety health morals and general welfare of the citizens" 4 Detours Used After Spans Washed Out U S highway No 91 near the town of Washington In Washington county A bridge was washed out when a torrent of water fed by a cloudburst poured down a gully An other bridge went out on the" high and Paro- way between St George wan Last night 200 automobiles were held up by the Washington county washout and it was not until high way crews were rushed to the scene that a detour was opened SALT LAKE' CITY Aug 17 (AP) —Traffic had been restored to normal along southern Utah highways following general rains and several cloudbursts which cluttered the roadways with debris and washed : out two bridges Motorists were using a detour on '':' 1 "" y LAST TIMES TODAY ' — " HIT NO 1 CHILDREN GET COURT V TOLEDO (UP)— When 5- - 10- - or old school children of Toledo violate school traffic "ordinances' they'll find themselves before a judge and Jury of their peers Plans for traffic courts in the public and private schools are being made by a safety committee 15-ye- JOAN BLONDELL and GLENDA FARRELL "We're in the Money" "3IAN ON FLYING TRAPEZE" fj Children 10c 2 HIT NO W C FIELDS ar U The REALLY COOL Theatre In Ogden STARTS TOMORROW Any Time V I A George Brent and Josephine Hutchinson j STflf!SBEAUTY$0HGSR0f1AflCE! —!': iiyin ——— — — —— mk cedure that resulted in his Imprisonment is based on the liquor control law which in his estimation is unconstitutional He cited two reasons for his belief One was that the liquor control act violates the "due process of law" section of the state constitution and second that it provides unlawful delegation cf power to the liquor commission by the legislature While officially not a corporation Mr King declares the commission actually is one "set up by the legislature in violation of constitutional provision prohibiting such an act" The supreme court delegated District Judge Allen G Thurman to hear Stevenson's petition for release and to decide whether the writ should be made permanent " - 2 — 000 Taken "The Casino Murder "The Right to Case" Live" TOMORROW "c ed Fisherman Bicycle Accidents - SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17 — (AP)— Utah's liquor law whichsets up a system of state-ownstores and prohibits sale by private dealers was believed near a showdown on its constitutionality today as result of action by the supreme court yesterday In granting a writ of habeas corpus for the release of William Stevenson 33 from tne county jail Karl V King attorney for Stevenson who was found juilty of contempt of court for alleged viola- ' tion of ' abatement proceedings argued his client was being held in jail unlawfully because the pro- reclamation project in Utah The project is designed to provide an adequate water supply for irrigation of lands in the Great Salt lake basin and the cities in the vicinity Work was started on the project with a public works allocation of $1000000 Total cost of the project is estimated at $10000000 Of the allotment approved today was said to be in the nature of reinstatement of a - public works allocation which was im$1-700- " ILast Times Todays Dine's Hear Petition s ORPHEUM S S Van District Judge To WASHINGTON Aug 17— (AP)— An allotment of $2900000 from the works fund was approved Friday by President Roosevelt for continuation of construction on the Provo river Early registration facilitates the work of getting high school under way and also gives time for careful consideration of student problems Superintendent Franklin E Shaw states All children entering the first grades of the Evanston public school this fall will have their birth dates pounded checked before being allowed more Works planned under the projthan provisional enrollment Sup- ect includes: Deer creek dam and erintendent Shaw states This has reservoir $3504000 Weber-Prov- o become necessary because of the canal enlargement $264000 canal marked tendency to enter pupils and structures $4069000 Utah lake before they reach the legal age for dikes $2000000 and miscellaneous ' school work which is six years construction $163000 The $2900000 allotment will enable the reclamation bureau to complete the storage reservoir and the Body of feeder canals forming a useful unit conservation and beneficial use To Home City offor water The cost will be repaid the water users by EVANSTON Wyo Aug 17—Ar— thur W Chester 51 of Salt Lake City fell dead of an acute heart Poison Employed In attack about six o'clock Thursday evening at China Meadows locatTwo Cases of Suicide ed Jn the Ashley national forest about 75 miles southeast of here SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— Roy E Bryan motored from here to China Meadows for the body (AP)— Despondency was blamed by which he took to Salt Lake City Fri- police today for the death from Death occurred poisoning of Mrs Mae Weed 27 day afternoon while Mr Chester was on a fishing here yesterday The officers who the trip'case said the woman Investigated had apparently Born In England Mr Chester poison came to Utah in 1906 During the taken children and several brothworld war he served as a motorcycle ersFour ' survive dispatcher For the past 13 years he had been a mail carrier He was police today were attempting to unmarried identify body of a man found Funeral services will be held Sun- yesterdaythe in the underbrush beside day noon in St Paul's Episcopal a road in City Creek canyon church Salt JLake City Either a Filipino or a Mexican the man apparently had taken his own life officers declared Several containers of poison were found nearby The dead man was described as weighing about 150 pounds having dark hair and a gold tooth in his ROAD tipper jaw He wore tan flannel trousers a panama hat striped blue shirt and shell rim glasses Two Young People Fall The bodytortoise is at the city morgue The man had been dead several Victim of i '1 - A fo:- r - r i' W A GEORGE WHITE'S 1 BOISE Ida Aug 17 — (UP) — on four highway projects which will cost approximately $315-0and provide employment for about 200 men were opened here Thursday by J- H Stemmer state director of highways ' X t - - - Bids ' 1 - x ' £ 00 V - Morrisori-Knuds- Co en ' Boise with a bid of $53839 was low on 126 miles of highway between Mesa and Fruitvale Adams county The bid of Dan J Cavanagh Twin Falls Ida $2620? was low on Z2 miles near Burley cassia county Triangle Construction Co Spokane Wash and Warren Northwest Inc Portland Ore were low treasurer on 179 miles of the Heyburn park highway In Behewah county with a plaining he would need the extra bid of $183616 to Donnelly In county girth if he ate all the fish Post was McCaHPayette Robto went the miles 125 to catch going Whether Rogers was to accom- inson Construction Co Twin Falls pany Post to Siberia was never def- Ida with a bid of $45525: f— initely announced Post obtained a passport at San Francisco on his Fined Post and Roarers brteht In thir way north to Alaska Rogers visitminds thousands of Alaskans join- ed Russia last year and his passport In ed in the mourning was still good Days - In FETE CANCELLED Intimated Rogers Fairbanks Nome sorrowfully cancelled ar that he would have to return to Los SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— (AP) rangements for a giant reception: Angeles to fill a picture engage- —Four convicted violators of an inRogers had said jocularly during his ment but said he wanted to return the sale of Inflight toward Alaska that he wanted to Alaska this winter to "den up junction forbidding were fined $100 to "rope a reindeer" and Nome cit- with some sourdoughs on the Yu- toxicating liquors to 30 days in sentenced each and izens had the deer ready kon" jail today by District Judge James sogers was making his first visit f W McKInney to the northlanrt vhl tnt t TWO RECOVERING were Izzy McGillls Jimmie They been In Alaska three times twice SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— McGillls and Mike on and her Hirsch Harry Kniffing on a hunting trip flights and later Mrs Bailey B Nowlin daughter Betty were recovering at A fifth man also cited for conand fishing apparently their minting home of suffered when injuries on a was refused a tempt were uppermost in Pnf mi car tree near writ of habeas corpushearing Into their a crashed District by making his nlana fnr tha h vw Woodruff Wednesday They re- Judge Allen G Thin-maHe held he said was to be culminated by a ceived medical treatment in Evan-sto- n the issues raised In the petition were ' wgc liuxiu m jsioeria Just a short identical with those in the contempt nop across Berinar Sea f mm Wnm a f citation against William Stevenson a Rogers bought rmir rf are of London Debutantes and referred Stevenson's case to taking sizes too big for him at Juneau ex- - up woodcarving Judge McKinney 4 i little daughter have returned to their home in Devil's Slide Mrs —— — INDIAN LANDS V& State Opens Offers State Chapter On Road Betterments ed VISITORS LEAVE Robert Alexander returned Thursday from San Diego after being the guest of Mr and Mrs A S Reeves (Continued from Page One) for a month Mr and Mrs George Veater of a new high for the year Toward the close profit-takin- g reduced the Salt Lake City are Evanston busigain Chrysler and General Motors ness visitors for a few days firmed in the early dealings and GUESTS FROM LOGAN sagged near the close Briggs also Mr and Mrs John E Moore have met profit-takin- g in the motor as their guests Mrs Oscar Winner-gree- n equipments and three children of Logan Outlook for further gains in the Mrs Frank Hurst and Mrs H H steel industry helped the steel shares Turner and children left today for U S Steel came within advance a fraction of Its high for the year a week's trip to Idaho 'i: j— H while Its preferred made a new high at 103 up Steel operations in the Chicago area were expected to rise from the present 57 per cent rate while Youngstown is scheduled to start next week at 63 per cent up 5 points OIL SHARES DULL Oil shares turned dull but most were steady around the previous Would Extend Size of Ute close: Atlantic Refining which had Reservation Provide an adverse report for the first half eased fractionally Purhcase Fund Copper issues advanced small amounts on the improved statistical WASHINGTON Aug 17— (AP)— Silver Representative Murdock position of the industry shares however were dull and low- has introduced a bill to define the er reflecting the house vote against exterior boundary of the Ute Indian elimination of the 50 per cent tax reservation in Grand and Uintah on silver that would have reopened counties in Utah the American silver markets It would provide that all vacant Silver metal advanced at Logan unappropriated lands within the debut was unchanged at 65 cents an fined boundary Including lands ounce in New York temporarily withdrawn by a 830 executive order would be made a part of the reservation and withdrawn from entry Mineral rights howAside Million ever would be reserved measure also would permit Digging theThestate cf Utah to relinquish lands within the area and would WASHINGTON Aug 17— (AP)— authorize appropriation of $650000 A works allotment of $1000000 for for purchasing lands livestock or to be reimbursed the Payette division of the Boise improvements reclamation project in Gem coun from funds accruing to the Indians ty Ida was approved Friday by by the addition to the reservation President Roosevelt With this allotment the reclamation bureau will start the main canal leading from Adttlts the diversion dam to the Irrigable 47000 to about lands amounting f-- f SALT LAKE CITY Aug 17— Mrs T W Whitelev Salt Lake Cltv was elected president of the newly-formUtah state chaDter of the P E O sisterhood educational so ciety at the final meetine of the convocation at the Ladies' Literary club Friday Other officers chosen were: Mrs C R Fergusson Price first vice president Mrs J T Abbott Ogden second vice president Mrs Eva M Senior Salt Lake City organizer Mrs J Howard Heginbotham Salt Lake City recording secretary Mrs M J Joy corresponding secretary Tooele and Mrs C J NeaJ Vernal " er Officers Elected By P-E- Ann to return home today from Laramie where they have been spending a Week with Miss Eloine Cook who is attending summer school at the University of struct roads through national forest After visiting her mother Mrs areas to isolated mining sites which Bertha Ingersoll and-hbrother have given indications cf becoming Kenneth Mrs Mark Roberts and paying properties was In line with the presidential : program and had met with his approval as a works' renel project Under the program as sponsored by the forest service In its request for $5000000 transient labor would STATE TO FACE FUND APPROVED Correspondent "spare parts" Wiley Post was proud Routes Would Also Be Used 3Ke and Daughter? Arrive Chairman of Power Group of the monoplane which To carried For National Forest May Be Summoned Will Rogers to In New York On him and " EVANSTON Wyo Aug 17—Mrs EVANSTON Fire Protection death in the Arctic Testify y y y E James Cook FranEvanston and Way Home! High daughter — —"She'll never be abused like the ces were low-wing- ed LIQUOR LAW OF ALICE A Fox Picture FA YE JAMES D U II II NED SPARKS LYDA ROBERTA urn "A vi — linen CLIFF EDWARDS - A If Bis O W w £$ Features riir u nuna a ii c ntmniio -i — u c i ii Mi rU iLHiJ i n 111 It — FAMILY FIGHT- - ss I r - I— H - - — Modern Daniel Boone To Break Rock Pile MULLINS S C Aug 17 — (AP) — Daniel Boone 1934 character was given some pioneering to do Mayor R J Williams Who convicted him l of selling illicit liquor handed Boone bis commitment papers and told him to report to the chain gang: camp j Boone walked away unaccompanied to find the place where he will spend SO days ' M— I More books have been written on Abraham Lincoln than v any other man Napoleon held the record Four $100 and Jail Thirty v - 7V irsncc::s i®s T) nan in scnmi wont i I u LiL-- YnX LlXjvS£A1aL1J 'V V h'- -i 1 V! X IJJ Lb Feature at 4-- globe-girdli- 'A PC 1:05 3:15 5:30 7:45 10:00 ng f Added -- n r '! t iz Last Complete Show Starts at 8:45 ' YHNQS OVER EVEREST" 1 Hollywood Hobbies Paramount Sound News 2 to to PRICES 2 6 Evenings Children 15d 20C 30c lCc 4 |