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Show ' "' ' ' : , : ; -' ' V, : . .' v, : V y y.y a . V - ..' ; yy'' Call The Herald " ' The Weather UTAJI Fair tonight and Wednesday. Wednes-day. Little, change In temperature,; Maximum temp. Monday1,.. 01 Minimum temp. Monday ... 48 If yotido not receive yonr II?rr.-l promptly, call The Herald cfil 4D3, before l p. m. week days, t.: : 10 a. in. Sunday, and a y v. Ill I delivered to you. V FIFTY-FOURTH YEAR, NO. .ao-iggS, iD8Eg?Fcsl Z PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, - TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1939 UTAH'S ONL.T DAILY SOUTH DP ALT LAKfl PKICE FIVE CENTS Ll s a uuu ll 1-1. I U -T3 ; vr ' :y y W J . I 11 U ,1 1 t.,A-vv.ww::.v.vA.v.vX.v.v.vy.v.v. avvAi ,.. . y ,t . i-y--V-y " ('-- a'-' V-'"-. yy"; X-y X ;,m - - "- a a , " iX IW: Wo) IC A. 0) 43 COUilTY FAIR EES APPOINTED - All Communities fNow : x Represented Says r Manager Shaw ' - . " . Community committees for the Utah County Fair, bep-' bep-' tember 7-9, are announced by - Seth T. Shaw, fair director, as follows: X . Provo, J. M. Kilpack and Kenneth D. Craven;' Lehi, Mrs. Myrtle ClarkrJohn Bush- V man and. Rulon Fox; .American . Fork. C. A. Grant. Mrs. Ora Chip- man and William Storrs; Pleasant - Grove, Mrs. Vida Conway. Frank Newman and, George Larson. Alpine, Emory Andrews., Mrs. Lora Shiphard and Wendell Moyle; Orem, Erval Christensen, ' Roy ParkB and Clarence York; Spring'-ville, Spring'-ville, John Fox and Mrs. Adelbert Conover; Mapleton. Mrs. - Arlena Holley, Mrs. Ella Blrdand Mrs. Martha Whiting. . t ' Salem, Mrs. Ray Davis, Soren Chrlstensen, and Andrew Ottesen; Pays:n, Ray Wilson Blaine Win- " ters, Abner Baird and Mrs. Pearl 'Bigler; Santaquin, Alonzo Kester; Genola,GIen Davis; Goshen, David PoweUon. Amnion Ferguson and Jed Okelberry. , Queen of; the fair is Miss Mildred Mil-dred Williams of ' Spanish Fork. - Her aides will be June Nash, Provo; Pro-vo; Shirley Mendenhall, Spring-Ville; Spring-Ville; Dorothy Greenhalgh, Santa-quin; Santa-quin; Maxine Moyle, Alpine; Virginia Vir-ginia Bird, Mapleton; Betty Dixon, K Payson; , Gladys "Godfrey, Lehi; . Helen Haslam, American Fork; and Florence Davis,, Salem. ,- : . .A ' GO-ROUNE), A Daily Picture of What'a Going On in National Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN Government Incomes Totaling $56,500 Flow To Gene Cox . and Relatives; Cotton Loan To Franca Aimed To Buy - Him Off, Regain Seized Property; Never Kept Promise To Reinstate' In-ternational In-ternational Telephone, City Bank; Movie Stars Chip in nn t. , t, l r v. -t,Uw- cnm ; Boosting- FDR for 3d Term. WASHINGTON Several weeks ago The Washington Merry-Go-Kound observed that Representative Representa-tive Eugene Cox of Georgia, lead- 'oe,of the anti-sweatshop coin wage-hour act, was- king of congressional con-gressional nepotists, drawing for4 himself and six members- of his - family a , total of $27,600 In gov-l- ernment salaries. This was an error. , . . Cox is. not the king but the em-peror em-peror of-nepotists. Although he has excoriated the New ;Deal, he and: his "relatives have made a thriving business of ' it. New information discloses that . ' the 527,600 previously reported is - only about half of what Cox & Co. are pocketing this year. Their government . income exceeds by ..several times" the salary of any other federal official, with the exception ex-ception of the president of the -rTJnited States. - . . ' than the salary of Vice President Garner, nearly 'three . times that . -of Chief Justice Hughes, and more, than five . times the pay of the command ing4 officers "Of the army and navy.' ..!": - ; . The Cox gravy list as uncovered to date is as follows: - .: , -.Lamar Cox, son, counsel. of the Electric-Home and FarnT Authority Auth-ority .'. . . ; . ......... $4,800 . Ode E." Cox, brother, assistant dis-bursing dis-bursing clerk of the house 3,900 s Charles M. Cox, nephew, administrative adminis-trative officer, north - central . division of the AAA .... 3,800 AMrs. Jim Lou Cox Hoggard,' fiister (Continued xin Page Seven) Plan Outing The Utahcounty barbers' and beauticians will stage ' their summer outing Wednesday evening even-ing at Canyon Glen, with supper ' set for S P. m. i : ' v - . - " Plans Opening SUPT. J. C. MOFFITT j Vlofffitt Prepares For Fall Opaning Of Proud Schools Looking forward enthusiastically; enthusiastical-ly; to the 1939-40 school year. Superintendent J. . C. Moffitt - of the Provo city school district 'was at his office today, arranging details " preparatory . to the faU opening.. . '- .. . , - Superintendent ' Moffitt returned return-ed Monday from eight 'weeks of study.; at University of Chicago, where he has been working toward to-ward his 'doctor's degree." While in" Chicago he attended and par-; ticipated in - the annual confer-: ence' of school administrators. " : Prior to returning, he spent! a:week visiting the New York world fairer which .he classed as superior ' as a while . to the one held at Chicago A few years ago. "I wish every, .person' in . Provo could witness the . fair," Mr. Moffitt Mof-fitt declared, . praising its educational educa-tional offerings.- " . i School will ' start i j throughout theProvo district : Monday, Sep--tember 11 the superintendeht said. Techeralnstitute has been set for September 8 and 9, with general sessions scheduled ' the first day and- classes in the individual in-dividual .schools . the concluding day. It isTpIanned to hold one session during the institute in 'Provo canyon, : probably Aspen Grove, .according to -Mr. Moffitt. i There will be no abrupt changes 'in-the educational program, pro-gram, he said.- "11 am convinced wiu.t uic uct . euucauonai-pro- n? radi?kl depreajjsoyer; springville, president; Mrs; but rather improvement within the system where, improvements are needed." . . "With -improved facilities, the coming school year should be one of themosUsuccessful in the his tory of the' district, according' to Air. Moffitt. ? ' " . The school buildings are in splendid shape' due jto completion of the two new structures, ; the Timpanog03and-Joaqum, and alterations al-terations at the Maeser, Franklin Frank-lin ; and ' the high., schoollast spring, plus extensive building renovations - during the summer, he said. . - ' - ; . . BANK MESSENGER ' i ROBBED IN HOLDUP . : ; LONG BEACH, N. Y., Aug. 15 (UJiv A messenger carrying funds to a' post office "was held up by five men today and robbed ofv approximately ap-proximately $70,000. r The messenger from the jNW-tional jNW-tional City Bank of Long Beach was accompanied by a bank floor-man floor-man 'was a policeman, who was stripped of his revolver when the bandits threatened him with a machine, gun. r ;;-. Witchcraft Sti In- Itali ianV Go . OMAHA, Neb.," Aug. 15 (U.R) ; Omaha, thriving packing and igri-cultural igri-cultural center, learned today ;that witchcraft as introduced f into Italy centuries ago by invading Magyar tribes still is practiced by elders in its Italian colony. ' , Alfio Laferla, presidentof the Societta Risveglio-Americano, revealed re-vealed that his society's, auxiliary had expelled from, membership a "witch" who had. victimized his mother-in-law, Mrs. Gracia Trlno, 71. - ; ; ' - ' 'V - The. auxiliary, he said, voted to FMflfiS' PROTEST K I Objection ' To -Recent Raise' Lodged With Tax Commission " Protesting the 10 per cent assessed valuation raise ordered or-dered on all Utah county irrigated irri-gated lands and fruit landsby the state tax commissioners members of the county farm bureau met in the city and county building Monday night to plan action "to protect the rights of the farmers. - .. President Frank. G. Shelley, American Fork,' was in charge.. A letter written to the tax commission commis-sion by Tracy R, ; Welling executive execu-tive secretary,-state farm bureau, was read, .in which Mr, Welling pointed out the farmers' inability to pay Increased taxes due to" drouth ' conditions . and other ob-stacles.'x ob-stacles.'x . . . . -' Committees Named - v" 'Mr. Shelley, Frank Nelson ot Spanish Fork, and LeGrand Jar-man Jar-man of Orem were ; named ' asa committee to investigate comparative compara-tive valuations of various properties proper-ties in the county and. state, with a view to asking reconsideration of the tax body. Another committee commit-tee consisting of Mr. Jarman, Harry Har-ry Jerhlingrof Highland, .and George Stratton of Orem was named to study drouth problems. CLUB nORKEIlS I OUTIilG READY More than. 60Oare expected to attend the annual Utah county 4-H club outing - Wednesday at Saratoga resort, " according to Miss Bessie . Kirkham, ;hpme demonstration agent. ' . 4 C -r-: Registration at the lunch , pavilion pa-vilion will open at 10 a. m. A progranr is scheduled at : 10:30 in thedahee hall, after which a treasure-' huntvWiU , be held at 11:30 and a lunchat 12:30. . . To Elect Officers , - Afternoon events will include a county leaders meeting and election el-ection of officers at 1:30 p. m., swimming at 2 . p. nt, diving and comic exhibitions followed;bv a coin ' shower ; at vSjSO.varrbaseball game at 3:30 p.m., .and awarding award-ing of prizes' for v the V yarious events and a peanut and- candy, shower - at 4:S0 -' r?frora jn o v-Aw- ifabeliJehsen; Pleasant Grove, vice president; and Mrs. Yvonne Jones Perry, - Pleasant View, sec retary. Miss-Kirkham and Coun-J ty. Agent SR. Bos well are assisting; as-sisting; '?XVf".-? ; r Owners Restord f Use of Property The Fourth 'district'' court Monday Mon-day issued a writ of restitution ordering Sheriff John S. Evans to place Purvance-Car'ter,- Inc., in peaceable ' and- exclusive possession posses-sion of the Vivian park chalet and service station in Provo cannon, 8nd eiect LeRoy Hardy and Effie Hardy. . . . -' - ' , " On July 15 judgment granting Purvance - Carter restoration of their propertyrwas granted by the city court, following hearing on a suit which alleged the Hardys had broken terms of a' leaser. 'The 'case was"appealed to district,. court by the Hardys and is pending hear- & r ! II Practiced ony In Omaha expd the "witch" after a stormy meeting at which he and . his mother-in-law testified - that the "witch" and her husband had,' with bones, magic, powders and "the secret touch,',' led his ! mother-in-law to believe her flesh was-melting away. . . ; ..-' ' Mrs. Trino said she suffered a stroke as result of the ''bewitching.-' '.. -:::. :,v The "witch" was accused in a formal charge made by Laferla of having buried a . bone clustered - I (Continued on ptjfe EiRt) " IKE-IOCS MLUA Streamline Coaches Tangle inJNevada Rail Disaster i. X x a r - This Is only a portion of the " appalling: task facia g rescue workers at the City of San Francisco streamliner stream-liner crash at Carlin. Nev. ".These, five cars are piled up on the bed of the Humboldt River death scene . 1 n, 1 for Thanksgiving One Week N. Tj.. rrvnT'Ti tt?tt,.s ti . 'Merchants were generally . happy today over President Roosevelt's announcement1 that he was advancing Thanksgiving Thanks-giving day a week, because that. will enlarge the Christmas shopping period, but there was consternatiorixamong college " ' - " d football managers and calendar Gliange Aroccos By UNITED . PRESS. . ' .; Several Nanti- - new deal governors gover-nors announced today-they .would not string along1 with President Roosevelt in 'his decision to ad-vance, ad-vance, the - Thanksgiving :, holiday from Noj 30 to Nov.23 f Insisting that the right to issue Thanksgiving. proclamations 1 in their -.states . was vested Solely', in them, . the dissident governors made it clear ,.they thought the president ; was ' playing ' f ast and loose with tradition . ' ' Business men generally approved of the T president's action they said it would lengthen the- Christmas Christ-mas shopping : period but" calem der makers; turkey raisers tradi-tipn-lovers and college , football managers, were plainly disgruntled. Gov. Leveret Saltonstall of. Massachusetts Mas-sachusetts . thought : the ..proposal "more 'upsetting' thanl advantageous." advan-tageous." and Gov. ..Lewis p.. Barrows Bar-rows of Maine said his state would "refuse to be regimented." - V ' Gov. George Aiken ? of Vermont wondered " why - the V president "didn't change Christmas" . too, and Gov. Julius P. Heilvof Wisconsin Wis-consin said he , thought folks "shouldtespect- tradition." : Gov, WilUam H. Vanderbilt of Rhod Island said he .would .look into' the matter "more, fully" before be-fore deciding whether to follow the : president's , suit, but . Gov. George A. Wilson of Iowa said he would retain- the traditional date in Jus state-, V' . ' Sen.' Styles Bridges, R., N. H., wlshed the president "Xrould abol- ( Continued On Page Eight J - ' . ... . , T i : - : "- ' "A :',,. - - -. , , . , ; v Baseball Today -y ,.'-i NATIONAL LEAGUE New York A .... .030 001. 0015 Brooklyn . . . . .i .611 000 OQx 8 Gumbert,'Lynn (1), Brown (2), Salvo (5), and" Danning;.; Hamlin and Phelps. Home ; run: Kam-pouris, Kam-pouris, N. Y. x V ' ' ' Philadelphia . . .J idO 000 030-T-4 Boston i . . . , . .101 010 0003 Beck and Millies. Davis; Feete and Lopez. . " Pittsburgh . .200 000 Cincinnati ..... .100 230 . Bowman and Mueller; Niggeling and Hershberger.c Z ' . ' , :, Ai.-v'AA Vy".-"-. . ; A.: a, Chicago ... 01 1 St. Louis ...... .02 ' ' Lee and Mancuso; 8 Warneke and Padgett. - , j ardz:rican league Washington .. ...000 100 1002 New yoj-k . ... . . .010 000 1002 Chase and Giuliani; Gomez and Dickey. '-; Home runs: i Gordon, N, Y. Gelbert Wash. : ; Cleveland Detroit . . . ,.010 000 0 003 007 1 Dobscn and Hemsley; Newsom and Tebetts.' Jlome run: Trosky, Cleveland, v a score no perisnea in me rau oisasier. - r3h by At-Campobello, N. S., where he arrived yesterday on a . vacation cruise, Mr. Roosevelt said he had had many requstsvta move the &iday ahead, becausetit-caan-e toe near Christmas, and, that since there was nothing sacred ' about the customary date '-Vx the last Thursday of November ? and no federal law governing it, he would proclaim it for Nov 23 this year. Instead of Nov! 0. He 'said that henceforth, beginning, - in 1940 Thanksgiving' would be the second Thursday of November.: , , Wrecks Grid Schedule . It is a tradition among business men that advertising and display of Christmas goods is withheld until un-til -after Thanksgiving, and since that holiday would,- have fallen thisyear on the ' latest possible date; there would have been only 20 Christmas shopping days. - - However, , there had been . 35 football games scheduled for "turkey "tur-key day," some of them annual sectional classics, and now - that the schedules of most universities are completed, and Nov. 30 is to be just another school . day,some serious problems arose. - ' a . And at Seattle, Wash., Freder ick .; E. Baker, president of H." G. Brace Calendar Co., said the date changing would "raise hell".' with his business and ''cost ' calendar makers from . $5,000,000 to?10,-000,000. to?10,-000,000. . .'.-.'. ' Every president since Abraham Lincoln has proclaimed the last THursday of November Thanksgiv-; Thanksgiv-; (Continued On Page Eight) PresideniTMes ' Stop aH3aIifax ''.: ' ' - Halifax, N. S., - Aug. . 15 (U.E)- President . Roosevelt arriv.ed here today , on ' the cruiser Tuscaloosa after: a fast overnight run from Campobeilo, N. B. . v A 21 gun salute from the Royal Roy-al Canadian artillery battery on Citadel Hill greeted the vacationing vaca-tioning president as the cruiser entered the harbor. . ,' - 'A.- , S; MacMillan, acting premier pre-mier and Mayor Walter Mitchell were in . the welcoming ., party which boarded the warship. A---' "A ' ' ' ' '" ' ' ' " ii'-A: i '; - .j : 'A , .y . , - '.. Vv . ., New Yorker Comes " For Visit Here Paul ,S- Dixon, former Provoan and Brigham Young .. .university alumnus, arrived here from New York City Monday to spend two weeks visiting , friend3 and relatives. rela-tives. In New York he is in charge of real estate, for the Bank of Manhattan Man-hattan company . ' He is son. of Mrs. Electa S. Dixon, B3 East Seventh North, and the late LeRoy Dixon, former mayor. cf Fro vo City.-" ';'- - . PRI3IARY UNION MEETING Utah : stake - primary union meeting' will be held Wednesday at 7:30' p. m. in the Third ward Relief society room, - Advanced Roosevelt K1 WreckSuspect; 1 y Bob La Cuceur, a "man without ears," held at Reno, Nev. for questioning about v the train wreck in Eastern Nevada in which 20 were tcuiea aiiu more man l . '. 1. 100 miurea. TVA;BUYSOUT PRIVATE FIRM EW, YORK, Aug. 15 .OIE) The United; States government ie-canleV ie-canleV virtually the sole - producer and wholesaler of electricityhi' the state', Tennessee today - when Checks formore than $79,000,000 were hinded Wendell L... Willkie, president of the Commonwealth and. Southern Corporation. '' David E. ; Lilienthal,director of the -Tennessee" Valley Authority, turned bve'r atN the ceremonies' here, a government check fQr $45,193,960. Checks for, the bal anceofl approsdmately $34,000,000 were given WUlkie;by the heads of delegations representing the 36 municipal sections and. public agencies that will sell- electricity in Tennessee hereafterl "By 'this transaction," said Lil-ienthal, Lil-ienthal, ' "TVA has fulfilled its pledges to investors of .the Commonwealth Com-monwealth and Southern Corporation, Corpor-ation, to consumers ' of electricity and to the federal taxpayers." , POWER FAILURE ' STOPS BROADCAST . ." CHICAGO, Aug. ,15 (U.E) Programs Pro-grams on the networks of, the four major ! broadcasting- systems were cut off for six minutes last night from radio stations in more than half of ; the country, due to. a pow er failure at Ottawa, 111., j - -y Gahypn Area Development Taken Undeldikement 4 'A request for Provo city aid in developing recreational facilities at the American Legion-owned property at Spry Flat in provo: canyon was shelved .by the city commission Monday nighty a Commander W. L. Mildenhall and A. I. Daniels, chairman of the recreational project for the legion, representing Provo Post No. 13, were advised by the commission'; com-mission'; to write national : park service officials at Salt Lake City, asking Civilian Conservation Corps aid. - , . : : .- : A . . , A ' - - . . . V !JJ)( - By SETLIFFE s. unnea l'ress iaii x f; RENO, Nev., Au. J5 (U.R) The dpsert reaches: of Nevada Neva-da were searched ttdayj foa man or men Who might have deliberately wrecked the Southern Pacific's streamline train, City ofSan lrancisco, and filled 23 persons late Saturday. , Transients' by the score were picked up and caiestioned thrnncrhhiit the state.yJn everv case those so far (juestioned had said to authorities they charged oy railroad officials., ' v j,,,.. Three More BodI Oify Commission Olielis Contracts For Poner Plant Two more- contracts for equip ment and machinery for Provo's .inunicipat power plant were ap proved AionQay nigni py.ine ciiy commissiony ' Uponrecommendatlon of ' Ulen Contracting .corporation and approval ap-proval of j City Engineer E. A. Jacob, the fcommls3ion okehed the bid of Whiting Xcorporation of Harvey, III., of $2020for a 20-ton manually . operated traveling crane for the turbine; room, Five'Other Bidders (V Five other- V firms submittea bids as follows: Northern EngTin-eeingWorks EngTin-eeingWorks ' of Detroit $24,70 ; Conco Engineerings Works ot Mendota, III., $2213; Euclid Crane and Hoist company of Euclid', O., $2334 ; Chisnoim-Moore . Hoist company--of .TOnawanda, N Y,-$2523.S6;f Y,-$2523.S6;f and Shaw-Box . Crane 'and. Hoist Division of Muskegon, Michr, ' $2390. i : Contract 1 f or the : coal and, ash handling equipment lor the plant yiwas Awarded "the .Fairfield En-: gineerlngi company of Marion, O-, ior $10,tfpO. Other - bidders were Robins Conveying company of New York.r Gifrord-Wood , company com-pany ov Chicago, I Jeff rey Manufacturings Manu-facturings company of polumt'tis, 0is Columbus Conveyor company of Columbus, OJ, Link-Belt company com-pany of Chicago, and Stephens-Adamson Stephens-Adamson Manufacturing company com-pany pf Aurora, 111. - ', ; The coal v and ; ish handling equipment is to include concrete sno, vtrack hopper ; and7 4feder; bucket elevators" and drives, "weigh lorry and ash buggy; Erection Erec-tion lis to startv within 30 days and be completed withirt CO day3." i The bids were studied prior to the regular commission meeting toy he - commissioners and Henry C. vUlen, president of-, the Ulen corporation, who - has returned hei e if rom Lebanon, Ind. to push arrangements for plant and dis tribution -construction. ? : ; Ivan .T, Jacks, construction manager for - Ulen, states Uhat' bids for .wire,, poles v and Mother equipment for .the distribution systejm, ; will, be called . in7 the near future. , v , . , He declares Installation : of the municipal system Willnot "clut- (Continued oh igeIght r1 -f- ' This Day . . . j '" I ,. ,v A-', ' " BORN Girl, td Bernard and-Ruth Bench Dastrup Crane , maternityj early today. y.'-', " "' Girl, . to Kenneth and Eva ifuth Hutchlnga v Kigglns, . 15s5 x,West Fifth North, this morning. -x -i - Boy, to Ernest andy Thelma Stevenson Thatcher at Duchesne, formerly of , Provo," Monday. i LICENSED TO LRRY Maurice Ellis Jones, 25, Payson, andykelba 'Moffitt, : 22, Panguitch. 5- v ' It may oe possible, the commia-sipn commia-sipn suggested, that the CCC camp to be assigned the Utah lake harbor har-bor and recreational devc'lopmer.t project could be used also, at Spry Flat. ' - - a" -y a .The Legionnaires - envision a project that will provide a publje picnic ground with a large pavilion for . dancing and luncheons, construction con-struction of bridges across Provo river, erection of bath houses, and installation of swings, teeters, camp fctovea, tables, and other equipment, . 7 '' " mm Offie m v? i, r If. BOURNE j orre?tpniut-i. . . .. f . were innocent of r sabotaKV The bodies . of three additional victims bringing thi death toll lh the $2,400,000 train' to 23 ". were taken to ElkO, today. They .Were 'identified as Mi s. ilenry Pepper Pep-per Vaux, Rosemont, Pa., her daughter, Su-san,. and Henry iJprck, 35, cook on thj dining car. Meanwhile'a man with dcfacVd ears who had been, sought a a suspect was questioned and released re-leased j in Sparks. He grinned 'at police ' and said, "I knew you'd get me," but' Gf-men who questioned ques-tioned him said he had proved he was' at Pyramid Lake, , 300 mi!e3 fromv the ' scene, at the hour the train plunged through a broken rail at the Humboldt river bridge, .iust west of Carlin. Early arrivals arriv-als at the scene had reported Bf-e-lng a man without tars watching rescue work from a nearly hill. He fled when .sheriff's deputies called to him. ' i Nothing To Go On . FederaUlureau f investigation men heresald they had "noLhir;; to go on" to support reports or snbotage, and closed their office; early lafit nlht - -One of the clues cited by railroad rail-road Officials as evidence that (1a-train (1a-train was .deliberately wrecked, was the presence of a spike puJl r at the scene. They said one rail had - been, moved Inward oh u, curve so the speeding streamliner--v.-ould be derailed.. A crowbar rst the scene, It developed today, hid been dropped from a. relief train, v A. D. McDonald, president of the Southern Pacific, said hLvepec-ial hLvepec-ial agents had "some evidence," (Continued on Pape EIght) FARMERS STO ' -: F.1ILK FOR J, UTICA. N Y.,. Aug. 15 ' im--The DairyFarmers union todav enforced a; strike npralnst milk shipments to NewYork City, the nation's largest city. The", union demanded higher prices for milk and blamed the "niilk trust"' for keeping:, the prices .xjowrt The strike yvns supported bythe congress of industrial organization.'?. or-ganization.'?. A r - Thdxgeneral organization com-mitteeahnouriced com-mitteeahnouriced niilk would be supplied Xo New York City hospitals hos-pitals and to the 'city's children. The-union Claims a membership of ,15,000 producers in the milk shed comprised of upper ' Nev York; and .parts of j Vermont and Pennsylvania wh'ieiv supplies the millions of 'gallons fu.sei daily in th metropolitan areai which has a population of 7,000,000. , AH members were instructed to withhold milk from dealers until the price rise to $2.35 per hundredweight hun-dredweight for fluid milk delivered in '.August' September and .Oc to-ber.yThe to-ber.yThe current price is $2.23. AUNT IIET "Fclks talk about equrJ'.ty of Hexes, but you never :-.r r man ,lrageinV.lK.-aUH hf ct one of bin f ons marri; 5 off." A .. A ' ' : !T V y |