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Show .v V PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 4; 1939 PAGE SIX. Work Resumed Under NaiiohalfGudrd Guns x At Colorado Project v. ' "in.; ' GREEN MOUNTAIN DAM Colo ' Aug. 4 (U.EK Long lines of workmen moved through the main cate of i this re-opened $4,000,000 f ederal-s tate project today i under the guns of national guardsmen who had put down a striker "insurrection," "in-surrection," evacuated 100 square-mile area of strikers and -intl-sVrike vigilantes and X established estab-lished military. rule.V v Not All of them were tobe put to. work Immediately, nor was it certain that full operations would he resumed at once. A. K. Anderson, Ander-son, project boss said he probably would : rehire 1 only maintenance workers at first to repair equipment1 equip-ment1 damaged during a. 24-hour eiege by strikers The project-ordinarily employ about 250 men. uard Patrols Area "Helmeted guardmen, their rifles bayonetted, policed , the lines at the entrance and patroled the entire en-tire area from temporary bases scattered for 50 miles up and down the Blue River valley, n deep gorge through the mountains which one day will.be an artificial lake and an integral part of the huge $44,000,000 Big Thompson irrigation ir-rigation "and hydroelectric project; pro-ject; -v. - V Major Harold II. Richardson, state adjutant general, In- command com-mand of the troops, gave his tacit approval for reopening the tunnel, lie eald that Gov. Ralph Carr, In decreeing martial law and a state of Insurrection, had been merely following provisions of the state , la w which held the strike illegal. The military was the pnly remaining re-maining bIrtv of the turmoil and armed conflict, that had made the region a bloody battle ground throughout Wednesday night. It had taken 4 over, movingawiftly in from DenVer by authority of Gov. G&rfa proclamation afer a score of men had bjien wounded, one perhaps per-haps fatally.! In pitched battles, .Bnlplng and hand-to-hand club-bin club-bin sr. V V ; Richardson led the 300 soldiera In full battle regalia into the area early yesterday and by night had v- restored peace, and established v jrigidcdntrol over it and on all roads leading into it. 400 :i AT COriVEHTIOH VKRNAU Utah. Aug. 4 (UR hriiif. tmndred firemen from all "parts of the state began the second sec-ond dav of their convention here -- - Itoday with election of officers x and memorial services scheduled for the day. Annual report of John j.Cree--doni Bingham, secretary of the association, showed nearly 1000 . firemen in the association at 41 different flrtf-flghtlng Units. iA. balance on nana ui was reported by, Treasurer .Charles- A. Canning of Midvale, despite a heavy output for death ibeeflts arid grave markers. TOO LATE FOR I CLASSIFICATION FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS PICKLlNGy cucumbers. t. M!ay-! M!ay-! cock. Ihbne 013J1.FU. 2, Box 7.6. Si HOUSE trailer has 2 beds, cup- FIREMEN r board. Stove, sum. oov weavTaii nts me. and was a South, v 1 NEW and used vacuums. Granit Furniture, Hoove dealers. 1 Phone 194. a? '' Y LOT sriUNGER Spaniel dog, brown and white, i Phone 465. Reward. ' rv;Y : a7 IORRENT UNFURNIS1IED 3 ROOM apartment, partly furn-i furn-i ished, see George W. Myers, ; 468 South 6 West. Phone ?43. a6 ; (Vi . , WANTEP - - OFFICE workby experienced ) stehgraphe.; Phone 606J. al5 '' Introducing Dr. 0. f,i Thurman i': Chiropractor Jr., i , of rnoyo, utaii :Who Syili Open Office y"T7 in the , Chamber of . Commerce ;v-."Buildinff 2U W; Center St Ilohdayi Aiiff. 7th OFFICE HOURS: V ,to 12 and -I:S0,to,5:30 r QUI for Appointments ED 6 EF.10 HI JffiS. EVA , GILLESPIE Reporter- Phone; 040-J-a " MlssJVera Conder is .vacationing .vacation-ing at Yellowstone park c with : a groub of friends. 7 Mr. and Mrs. John Yeates and son Dallas of Olmsted are spending spend-ing a few days with relatives at Logan. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Pinegar returned Thursday after a 3 weeks vacation trip in eastern states. They visited the fair in New York, Washington, t. C, and attended the conleVence and pageant at the Sacred Grove at Palmyra, :New York. They also visited with, relatives rela-tives in Tennessee, altogether going go-ing through seventeen states and Canada on their trip. Mfss Ruth Meldrum of Salt Lake spent Sunday and Monday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Meldrtfm. v Mrs. Lydia Hogan and Mrs. Zelpha , Smith spent Tuesday in Salt Lake City. A special program has been prepared by the M. I. A. officers for conjoint meeting-Sunday evening eve-ning beginning at 7:30 p. m. All members of the ward and friends are invited to be present. Priesthood Priest-hood meeting will be held at 5:30 a. m., Sunday school at 10:30 a. m. and fast meeting at 12 o'clock. Dartce Deuiew Is Free to Public ProVo city's recreation department de-partment presents " its fourth annual an-nual , dance revue, "Dancing Tluoughs the Ages" tonight at 8:15 in the Provo high school auo!itoriurar1wlth th public Invited In-vited free pf charge. Mayor Mark Anderson will deliver de-liver "a brief welcome address, after which children who have studied dancing at Joaquin, Maes-er, Maes-er, Timpanogos and Provo high schools for the past several weeks will perform- .- Five hundred boys and girls will perform. The daijee personnel consists of Jena V.- Holland, supervisor; su-pervisor; Phyllis R. Brown and Margaret , S. Hansen, directors; Byron Jensen and Mary Wilson, accompanists; Lillie Stevens, costumes, cos-tumes, assisted by the" f ecreation Staff and N. Y. A. An arts and crafts exhibit will be displayed in the building, the arts and crafts personnel consist trier nf MoHnrla Vilngolr 'C,?it-i J White arid Hallie Tangreen, directors. di-rectors. COLONIZER (Continued nom Page One) Lake Endowment House. In 1877 he and his wife were called by President Brigham Young to go to Snowflakc, Arizona, to colonize. colon-ize. He came ;to Provo Bench In 1895 where he went into business, building theKartchner sloreand dance hall, and building up one of the first fruit farms. Mr. Kartchner moved to Provo in 1907 to bG closer to school. In 1020 he moved to Salt Lake to be a Worker in ythe temple. He has been active In the L. D. S. church musician and choir leader; along with his other workIlls wife died August 16, 1936. He is survived by three sonsj Mark E-, Jr. of Provo Bench, Ly-marr Ly-marr A Kartchner of Salt Lake, Jesse C. Kartchner of Butte, Montana; one daughter, Mrs. Ellpra k. Knudsen of Provo; 24 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchil-drw and the following brothers and sisters: John Kartchner, Salt Lake City; Oran Kartchner; Culver Cul-ver Kartchner Ynd Mrs. Minnie K. Stratton, Snowflake, Ariz. ' - Funeral arrangements are awaiting the return of his son Mrk, who is vacationing in California, Cali-fornia, and will be announced later by the Deseret mortuary. Palmer Graduate . r .'.u,i u 11 n in 7 S . 1 r'f V y - 'Flashes a: CAROL SUB3IITS TO OPERATION. . -, J ' HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 4 , (UJi) Carole - Lombard, screen actress, today, was -reported .recovering satisfactorily following, an opera tion to relieve an apute-appendix condition. ' The actress was' taken to Good Samaritan hospital last-night, by her film ; husband, Clark , Gable, after she, had , been, ill two. days. MOONEY LAID UP '; N IN THE HOSPITAL SAN FRANCISCO Aug. 4 U.R) Dr.- Leo Eloesser, physician -attending Thomas J. Mooney Jduring the former prisoners latestrtiu- ness, saia xoaayv Aiooney woum oe confined to Str Luke's hospital tfor several weeks. , Eloesser said the man who spent 22 years in prison before Governor Gulbert Olson pardoned him last January . was suffering . from - m m m "stomach disoraer ne s . naa xor years." CLOUDBURST TRAPS SCO CHILDREN LOS ANGELES, Aug. 4 (UE) Washed out roads and abridges in the wake' of a cloudburst today marooned 500 children and campers camp-ers in the San Bernardino nioun-tainsf. nioun-tainsf. J . The cloudbursts werean incident inci-dent of a freak day which saw "an earthquake, a snowstorm and muggy, humid weather of the easternvariety replacing southern California's unusual arid dryness. GERMAN ARMY NEAR PEAK STRENGTH BERLIN, Aug. 4 (EE) Germany's Ger-many's army neared peak strength today as tens of thousands thou-sands of serservists, called up for training during the last three days, settled down to the routine of camp life. It was estimated that when the last batch of reserves re-serves reported for training Sept. 9, Germany would have close to 2,250,000 men under arms. BRAVE CONFESSES KILLING GIRL GORDON, Neb., Aug. 4 UE) Investigators believed today that the white-man's f irewaterprompt-ed irewaterprompt-ed Irving Tail, 17, Sioux Indian, to kill Nellie Yellowthunder, 19, member of his tribe and said to be a. descendant of Sitting Bull. County Attorney Edward Hol-steifi Hol-steifi said fail had admitted he assaulted and killed the girl Wednesday Wed-nesday night. (Jurjng a drinking spree with several Sioux from the Pine Ridge reservation of South Dakota. CHINESE MOB WRECK BRITISH ESTABLISHMENT TIENTSIN, China, Aug. 4 (UJ A mob of Chinese stormed the British-owned Internationa Export Ex-port Company today, smashed windows and furniture, and hurled office equipment Into the Hal river. j ' The Chinese entered the company com-pany premises from the Russian concession. FRANCO-TAKES POLITICAL LEADERSHIP BURCrOS, Spain. Aug. 4 tl) Gen. Francisco Franco today affirmed af-firmed the Falangist (Spanish Fascist) party as the sole political party in Spain and personally assumed as-sumed its supreme leadership. tive Caught At Santa Barbara SANTA BARBARA, Cal., Aug. 4 (LLP) James O'Connell, fugitive desperado who escaped from sr moving train by flinging himself headlong through a window, was captured- today by Santa Bar- I bara police. He was apprehended only a block and a half from the place where he made his leap last night. A posse of 120 officers had surrounded the northern portion por-tion of the city. O'Connell was unarmed except for a cardboard replica" ,'of a gun which he had stuck in--his-belt. O'Connell, -33-y'ear-old robber and burglar, was being returned from Texas toN Oakland to face trial for a splurge of holdups and kidnapings he allegedly committed commit-ted after he fled a San Quentin road camp in June. He had been sentenced for a series of Los Angeles . crimes for which he was to serve virtually" the rekt of his life. . . . - ' ( CARD OF. THANKS .. We desire to express our sincere sin-cere 1 thanks and appreciation to the many kind neighbors and friends who consoledrand assisted us during the Illness and death of our- beloved mother, Minnie H. Buckley. To the speakers, musicians, musi-cians, those-who furnished cars and sent the beautiful flowers, we are truly grateful - THE FAMILY f . Each child born in Hungary receives re-ceives an official number which Is entered on all official documents referring to him, 5 from : birth, cer-tlflcate cer-tlflcate onward.; , . j,:t' ..r"..,?,.w '"': CHILDREN S THEATER PRESENTS 7' "STATISTICALLY YOURS' FIRST WARD7 V .--SATURDAY 8 O'clock J '- Children. IOcA at a Glance Stocks lower and fairly active. ' Bonds lower; U. S. governments lower. ' Curb stocks lower. , Call money 1 per cent. ' Foreign exchange about steady. ,-r Wheat unchanged- to off 1-8 cent; corn up 3-8 to 1-2. Sliver unchanged In New York. UTniirsiJG r-Salt Lake City; Aug. 4,-1989 Bid Asked Alta Tun. 5 .01 ; r.08 . .08 .35 .05 r .10 .02 .32 .34 .02 .12 .03 t 1.10 .00 4.30 .14 - .03 1.00 .07 .03 .20 .02 .05 1.90 6.00 .02 . .01 .11' 4.05 .07 Bingham Metals .07 Cardiff - .06 1 .04 . .07-.01' .07-.01' .32 .32 .00! 41 .02 1,00 .00 3.90 .13' .03 .95 .07 .03 J8 .01 .03 1.65 Chief Con. Colorado Con. Combined. Metals. East Utah Eureka Bullion Eureka Lily Con. . Eureka Mines ... Horn Silver ..... Lehi Tintic ..... Mammoth ...... Moscow .... . . . . Mt City Copper. New Park New Qtiincy .... North Lily .. Ohio Copper . ... . Park Bingham . . Park Cityv Con.. . Park Nelson .... Park Premier ... Park Utah ..... . Silver King Coal. . 5.75 Swansea Con. ... .01 Tintic Central ... .00' Tintic Lead ..... .10 Tintic Standard. . 4.00 Zuma .... 06 ' Metal Prices ' NEW YORK. Aug. A UEV Today's To-day's custom smelters pric$ for deliver metals (cent per pound); Copper: Electrolytic 10; ex-port ex-port 10.66-.71; casting-. 0. b. refinery 9.87; lake" delivered 10. ; :Tin: Spolrstraits 48.70. Lead: New York 5.05-.10; East St. Louis 4.90. ; Zinc: New York 4.94; East St. Louis 4.60. REFUGEE (Continued rom 3age One) death just a few minutes before be-fore a; mailman delivered the notification. iLanger received the letter at a, modest west-side hoteix where he and hlsfamily had lived since their arrival. He waited for "a I time .for . his. wife and children to .xeturh home. Then he became worried about their tardiness. Pblice found him pacing back and forth on the sidewalk in front of the hotel when they went to question mm. When they found he could speak only.Czech-oslovaklan only.Czech-oslovaklan they brought him back to police headquarters and summoned an interpreter. Becomes Despondent "Since -my wife had been in this country she has been " der spondent and constantly talked about wanting to commit suicide and aiso to take the children with her," he said. 'Yesterday, she asked me for $20 and I gave It to her beeause she said she wanted to go to the beach with the kids. She seemed to be in god spirits. They left and I didn't see them again." A man who said he was a refugee from Czechoslovakfa and a friend of Langer's . acted as interpreter. He gave trie alias of Eric Eisner and said he would not revealx his real name "be cause.I am a-refugee." Attaches at the . Congress ho-tel.V ho-tel.V where the death leap was made, said Mrs. Langer registered regis-tered with the children about 4 p. ,.m. CHICAGO, Aug. 4 (UJ? A coroner's jury found today that a refugee mother from Czechoslovakia Czecho-slovakia -"who- leaped to death Ith her , two small sons was a victim of temporary insanity due to "persecution PROGRAM (Continued from Page One) ter of ceremonies. The climactic dance will feature noise makers and souvenirs for everyone. Invitalpni have been mailed out to 1000 prominent county and state Democrats, . although everyone every-one is invited, apcordirig to Dean Terry of Provo and Beth Hutch -Ings of American Fork, invitations committeemen. .TWO ASJt DIVORCES Two Provo wives filed suit In Fourth district court Friday for divorce. Charging failure to provide, pro-vide, Florence Campbell asks a decree from Chelsea H. Campbell whom she married at Provo September Sep-tember 26, 1938. and asks $30 per month alimony and care of their child. I DeoTiTiLomas asks a divorce from William H. Thomas, alleging cruel ty They were married at Farmington, . September 10, 1928. She asks tare of their three children chil-dren and ; $50" per1 month alimony. Adults 25c 9 a ANY BUILDING PEStliTS ISSUE! Twenty , permits for .' building construction totaling $36,585,' were issued during July, . according to a "report released frbm, the. office of City Engineer E. A. Jacob, building ' inspector, Friday. This pushes construction for the first seven months of 1939 to $231,615 as "compared with $137,-8S5V-for the corresponding period last year, the . report shows, r Permits Issued during July are for . 13 residences, two . residence remodelings and five garages, " as follows: . y Ruel F. Jacobsdn, 235 East Fifth North, residence, . $4Q00; Clara Sutherland, 162 East First North, triple . garage, $175; Homer Band-ley, Band-ley, 612 North Fourth East, , residence, resi-dence, $3000; J. P. Gadd, 257 -West Fifth- South," to rebuild - residence, $600. 1 - QJifford Nelson -Eleventh East Eleventh - North, basement; $800; J. M, Cherrington, 256 East Center, Cen-ter, addition to residence' $4000; T. . Eugene Halladay, 747 . West First South, home,- $1500; H. Hurst,. 644 East A street, basement base-ment for . home $600 ; Elma Halladay, Halla-day, "1115 West Center, residence, $2500; Alfred M.. Carter, 48 South 10 Westgarage, $135. . , ; James Nelson, 1036 West Center, Cen-ter, residence, $2500; Doren . D-Boyden, D-Boyden, 445 North First .West, residence, $3000; Wallace Boswell, 235 West Third North, residence. $4000; , Clifton King, 540 South r I S 1 i t i V ilI 1 - lf WA k I - r Barinefte Satin 40 Inches Wide aw Colors : Black Peach - Rose .White - Blue Red ........ Yard Tfill Ends at Tremendous Savings! isi'tUTl- LOOK Reductions mm Y X ....... 30 Inches Wide Pictures of : ! - Nursery Prints , - -H ' and Animals -i ara t 36 Inches Wide f Fast Colofs-L -1' -"S," Reduced . f rom ; -' S 7 jri Higher, Prices;;, f )(L YARD ' ' V- Drives ;ngrc33 S: UJiidXlani jdepry - "I don't see why a handful of individuals should control the, oil fields and the railroads," the west coast' CIO director said., a "They stole them in the first place... . He qualified his statement" concerning con-cerning abolition of (private ownership owner-ship of property by saying: s "The big utilities factories and means of production . should, be in the hands of the 'government. "I 'favor government ownership of all those things. ' "There should also be a minimum mini-mum wage , guaranteed to, . all workers. The right to work ' should be assured them." . ' . . . " 'A '- ' Bridges deportation" is sought on charges; he Is a communist and an undesirable alien. . . He has "denied ; belonging . to the communist party, but- said .many of his wiews are similar to those advocated by communists. - ' . Seventh - East, " addition to home, $200; Litchfield and Menlove, 580 West Fourth South, new residence, $3500. ; ' . Clifford. ' V. Wilson, 575 East Sixth South, t garage, .5125 ; Blaine W. Farley, 575 Wesi 10 ' South, garage, $250;. Arthur IX -Coleman, 524 East First South; home, $2500; Robert Sauer, 65 East . Second North, residence $3000; ; William Cbnnell, 110 East Fourth ' South, garage, $200. ' . v ; "r; Onesixth of th'et world's known stony meteorites have been found within the borders of ; Kansas. ' i on 54 Inches Wide F uxl 1 ; Assort ments of colors , get in on these savingsc now . . . . To") raTV7T!7 A TVT FOR PRICE IN RED ; to i2 Jjegular Price! Genuine Needelized 80 Square, Fast Colors, 36v Inches wide '. . . . Yard This, Cloth - is The American ; Laundering. One-Day POEHTS 3 inches wide-Fast wide-Fast Colors Buy your supply now- for School VA r mm .1 4- s - 36 inches wide, Fast . Colors Reg. 15c yard, SaIe. Price ... Yard 'in PM3TED -;f EQOE; 36. Inches Wide 'A , - Fast Colors 1 . - t.r - m ; t- j ...... ? . ( Q Reduced from Prices YARD AXIS PARTMEnS LIEETf ITALY . ROME, "Aug.; 4 HD Totalitarian Totalitar-ian nations of Europe and the Far East embarked ; today on a campaign cam-paign to offset t the effects of United States denunciation of the American-Japanese trade treaty and the division by Britain and France to send i a joint military mission to Russia V . f i Announcement. by Uie - Japanese ambassadors ; to . Italy and . Germany Ger-many that they had met Cernob-bio, Cernob-bio, Italy, i to discuss . "adherence of the government of Tokyo to the Italian-German . military alliance" was regarded In diplomatic quarters quar-ters as attributable largely- to tlje American . treaty denunciation. - Even the' announcemeiit aside from, the possibility of; . actual Japanesev entrance . into an . alliancewas alli-ancewas regarded aa an import mm --Every Drop pf Water Filtered and Chlorinated- NEW PAVED ROAD ; LOOK! Ladies Swim FREE Eyery Sunday NishlJ A Swell Place To Hold Your Outing! - Picnic Bowery Ball Ground - Children's Play Ground . . v Shade and Lawns ; il 1 urapories Yard approved by Institute of : ' Sale of V Yard CO ' 7T ""1 ( )fp cL vix Higher; :;' igher ;;;oO . , . . - sC ant offset for Italy and Germany ; to the Russian negotiations. J - ; There were ' other indications that Italy was working hard to strengthen the "axis" position in Europe. , ' - . - . - Europe reveled in American to bacco.more than 125 years before . it recognized the value of Amerl- , -can potatoes. ; " ' If - : TfcU 2St Tui .fe Mulutude reffwi? - -Irora these dreaded ffliction report re-lief re-lief I pia nl . " trei.- SI-NOZE oofh- aids in this wiy : t Helpt dunmuh ccw -mulated dichrr. 2 Aid in draining ' of the inue. 3 Lessen iieeiiBf, nii-. .--a flin. blowine. 4 AisU m aoothmc - .. flamed tissues. 5 Haen more normal breathing. SI-NOZE contain oo narcotics - i nor babt-lonninr dror. Get a 25c bonla -v today on our Money-Back Goaraatee. f or Slbr .,. ....... , CITY DRI CS CO. . . . TO West Center . "' - ' - 3 jSm3 -and- 'EDS HE3(SE3 h Is !' Ii u '' : )Mli;"-' r-' tl't; . ' ' 1 - inn : nV II lr HEflteDnnE'ElsY: . . - ... . Regular $ij)5 Yard ; NOW- Heavypraperies of this type are now being used for recovering of your Divans and Chair Sets. Besides Draperies for Windows. 54 inches wide. " : GDQTAin .:SGPJL1 36 Inches Wide ; 7(3.' "- v Buy Now at These Sayings . snnrituiiGV -:- V36 Inches Wide ill Reduced from Higher, Prices 14 Different Patterns and Colors To Choose From , V A V |