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Show WHAT FOLKS SAY "Hating people is like tearing down your bouse, to get rid of the rats." Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, clergyman. Herald fOUR NEWSPAPER With no private axes to grind, ne selfish personal interesta to serve, and no financial strings leading to any other source of power or influence. influ-ence. veme Phones 494 495 f FORTY-SIXTH YEAR, NO. 240 ' PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 2 8, 1 9 3 2. PRICE FIVE CENTS lPIL0(SE TODAY By-Arthur By-Arthur Brisbane (Copyright, 1332) Bloc Against the U.S.A. Poor Old Capitalism. Men Die Strangely. KARL II. VON WIEGAND cables from Berlin to Universal Serviceabout the "Anti-American b16c," just perfected in Europe. Germany has joined and it includes France, Great Britain, Italy, Belgium, Bel-gium, Poland, Jugo-Slavia and Rumania. Ru-mania. ir. Von Wiegand says "British-Foreign- Secretary Simon and Premier Pre-mier Herriot of France have planned plan-ned to isolate the United States if Washington refuses to cancel war debts." Boycotting is easy, sometimes unprofitable. un-profitable. Eight merchants might unite to boycott their best customer cus-tomer an4 not be happy when the customer stops buying. Canada, according to the New York Tunes agrees to drop one quarter of its coal importations from the United States if Brituin in ieturn will buy Canadian lumber. At this moment the United States buys from Canada more than is bought by the whole British empire. em-pire. Ten lines in a new tariff bill and the United States would buy tioin Canada NOTHING. Boycotts are dangerous. This one may be good for our country. Success has been too easy in the United States. Difficulties might da us good. TILE "UNITED FARMERS OF CANADA," ' through their Saskatchewan Sas-katchewan president, demand "An end of the capitalistic system," the farmers Bay: "Competitive production, for profit, under private control, is in its dying hours." It mignt be well to watch Russia for a while before deciding. The fiogs got rid of the bull frog, their i uler, and .aiUjuirfttklor king-u long-legged long-legged bird that devoured them. They wished they had not complained. com-plained. Capitalism is not perfect, but it has ueen a fairly good-natured old ruler. It certainly has increased waives, bath tubs, automobiles, radios and vacuum cleaners. It might be wise to try it a' while longer. WHEN MEN DECIDE TO DIE, usually a decision more or less cowardly, tfiey" do1 H : in strange wavs. one jump? Into a volcano, taking a girt with him. Another ' goes over Niagara, some . jump in front of locomotives, some hang, shoot or drown themselves. Roscoe Griffith went about it deliberately. To ambulance doctors, called by his wile, to find " him eating a hearty dinner, he said, "My wife is mistaken, gentlemen, I have taken no poison." And he smiled. They took him to the hospital, he walked from the ambulance to the uutir, brill tell dead. So many pleasant things can happen, so many interesting things are sure to happen, "gigantic troubles" meet so quickly that it is silly not to wait as long as pos-sible pos-sible and see. George Bernard Shaw, 76 years s old yesterday, does not like to have it mentioned. When he is 96 he will be proud of his age, and tell every- J ooay. ne says i am overworeeu and have that all my life." That H whv he retains good health at 76. Mental work keeps the body lit.-' Men, like trees, die; at the top. The Russian Gorguloff, who murdered Piesident Doumer of France, says that he wants to be executed, and the French will probably" prob-ably" bbrWe him. He want8to""leave; thts-'Vanh," and predicts "disaster for all-of us. He liked the old earth so little that he wanted to be seiit in a rocket to the moon; be-fote be-fote h? killed the French president: Those that expected' to find in Goguloffsrlnia new proof of Bolshevik wlckedness ; are disappointed. disap-pointed. It turns. oyt .that he murdered mur-dered Doumer to rebuke Bolshevism-"in the name Of an enslaved Russian people.? Rudy Valiee is studying law, against a time when, "I shall sing no more. He will find that very pi of i table crooning is done in his new profession. ' The Weather 4- . t UTAH: Unsettled , AiMtorlght JuiX prob- " AAotiiwesi iporttoo tonlffht. . LMaxtoram Ump. Tuesday ... 5 Minimum.' Aemp. Tuesday W. . , -48 Beaming his satisfaction with plans for the Olympic games. Count de Baillet-Latour, president of the International In-ternational Olympic Committee and member for Belgium, is pictured pic-tured here as he arrived in Los Angeles and began the work of inspecting in-specting credentials of contestants, fiom all parts of the world. 2 BANKS OPEN FOOUSINESS Bank of American Fork andKishoI the Lerance Ladies State Bank of Lehi Opened Thursday . ,. , After having been closed since to January 16, the Bank of American Fork and the State Bank of Lehi opened for business Thursday moi ning. Final approval of the set-up worked out by the officials, exam-iner-in-charge and depositors' representatives rep-resentatives was given by Judge George W. Worthen in the district court, Tuesday morning. Wednesday was spent by the bank attaches in cleaning up odds and ends pieparing for Thursday morning's opening. Both banks have cash reserves on hand to meet all demands that might be made upon them and to maintain" legal reserve requirements, require-ments, said Walter H. Hadlock, state bank commissioner. "They aie, in fact, good solvent institutions." institu-tions." Some Things Happen Altho a good many power con cerns boast about "customer own ership," the customer-owners us ually have nothing to say about running the corporation. Here's why: The usual set-up is to have vot ing control centerea in one sman block of stock, usually owned by insiders and never on the market. A typical setup, for example, shows $4,500,000 worth of bonds; S2,0OO,,O0O wbrt'a of preferred stock, and $100,000 worth of common. ; The', preferred stock carries one vote for each $100 share or 20,-000 20,-000 votes. But the common, at $1 pai; carries 100,000 votes which means control. Plans Progressing For $take Outing i' , . Flans are being made'for the an nual Utah sta"ke 6uting to be held at Geneva August 17 with an entire en-tire day of. entertainment, according accord-ing to Mrs. Achsa E. Paxman, stake Relief Society president. Unusual interest is being shown in the contest to Win the $5 prize offered for the best five-ininute program feature or stunt to be presented by each ward in the stake. , .The Sunday school and Relief Society. officers in each ward will have charge of the feature from their wards. Three judges of the contest Have been appointed and wm be announced later. fThe officers offi-cers state that each program can 'not exceed five', minutes in length. WHY Kiwam tans Plan Convention In Provo DELEGATES COME FROM TWO STATES Elaborate Plans For Entertainment Scheduled "Progress in Kiwanis" is the general theme of the Kiwanis Ki-wanis district convention Which will be held in Provo .Thursday, Friday and Saturday Satur-day of next week with Kiwan-ians Kiwan-ians from Utah and Idaho attending at-tending District Governor Frank B. Mum-ford. Mum-ford. Caldwell, Idaho, will deliver the governor's address at the First ward chapel on Friday morning in the program beginning at 9:15 a.m. with group singing led by F. J. Faux of Spanish Fork. The addresses ad-dresses of welcome will be iven at tViis meeting bv Mayor Jesse N. Elleitson and President Jacob Coleman of the Provo club. The public is invited to the two morning sessions. Walter Adams, past district gov ernor, will deliver the principal address at this meeting; a talk on "Citizenship." Music will be furn- irio 01 opamsn ruin. Reports of the district secretary and teasurer, Jess B. Gowen will be given also. Following the morning meeting will be a fellowship luncheon at the . . , ,n lintel h?nhil'Tfl U T IV'XH 1 rti Registration for the convention will take place all day Thursday at the Roberts Hotel and at the First ward amusement hall with breakfast conferences of four groups to take pace Thursday, beginning be-ginning at 7;30. The groups are the executive committee, past governors, international inter-national representatives and special spec-ial guests as one, club presidents and district presidents, the latter with Dr Joseph Hughes, Spanish Fork, presiding.- The fourth conference con-ference is that of the club secretaries; secre-taries; all four are to be held at the Roberts hotel. To Name Candidate The second business session is to be held Friday beginning at 2 p. m., with the naming of tViree governor nominations as one of the chief items of business. Singing at this meeting will be under tdircciion of the Helper club and reports will be given by the chaUmen of the standing committees. com-mittees. This meeting will adjourn at 3 p. m. in time for the Kiwanians to start around the loqp drive, up throui.i American Fork canyon, across the Alpine loop' and down Provo candn with, stops at Tlmp- j ' i. l (Continued on Page Six) Sheriff Durnell Files Demurrer Sheriff E. G. Durnell Thursday filed .a demurrer to the complaint against him filed in June by Richard Rich-ard Carlisle, Alpine, whhJh charges that -Carlisle andfiis 'fr ..'ly suffered suf-fered damages when the ilicriffs deputies made a sea rtm o. Cat-lifele Cat-lifele piemised for liquor in June. A' 'small still ' hut no liquor was fuurid in the search. The sheriffs demurrer charges that the complaint fe ambiguous and uncertain and does hot state whether1 the damages are for malicious ma-licious prosecution," for' 'Violent conduct,- for abuse of process or whether the damages are to be recovered re-covered because of mental suffer-ing. suffer-ing. for implied slander, damaging of property or for the -wounding of the famjly pride. CALLS 1 Git PRISONER Sheriff Cail Theobold of Millard county called at the office of Sheriff E. G. Durnell Thursday morning to take RoyLarson, wanted want-ed "on a petit larceny .charge back to Mlllai'd cpunty. Larson twas ap piBhended by -'Sherllf "5 Durnell'if ifoxce Wednesday. v NEWS WIRES Bv UNITED PRESS WARFARE THREATENED ASUNCION. Paraguay, July 28 tl'.ln -The threat of immediate warfare war-fare between Paraguay and Bolivia Bo-livia over tlie disputed Gran Cruco territoiy was admitted officially in a foreign office statement today. CALIFORNIANS WIN SEABRIGHT, N. J.. July 28 U'.l! Two Californians, Miss Helen Jacobs of Berkeley and Miss Josephine Jo-sephine Cruickshank of Santa Ana, moved into the final round of the women's singles in the Seabright tennis tournament today. Miss Jacobs defeated Miss Carolyn Caro-lyn Babcock of Ios Angeles, 3-6, 6-0, 6-3, in the first semi-final match, while Miss c ruickshank defeated Miss Virginia Hilleary of Philadelphia, Phila-delphia, 0-1, 4-6, 6-2. 1 ORGANIZE AGAINST TOBACCO LOS ANGELES, Julf 28 l'.l! -Olganization of u national anti-cigarette anti-cigarette and anti-tobacco congress was perfected here today by members mem-bers of an international congress of the same name now conducting a convention. WHEAT CONTINUES RISE CHICAGO, July 28 ai.V The rise in whfciit prices kept up a steaUy fctreerttig pace on the Chicago board of trade today and at 11:30 a. m. the advance over yesUrday's closing clos-ing ligures was l',4 to 1 3 8 eenui. Old September wheat touched 52 7-8 cents a bushel. SLASHES, KILLS CHILDREN OK CM RIGHT, Okla., July 28 U 1!) The s-tory of a blasted romance was reconstructed by officers today to-day as they investigated, the axe murder of two children and a suicide sui-cide near Oilton. George Thomau, 50-year old Oil ton oil Held worker, killed himsell after slashing with an axe Hutu-ads of his two children, -Jimmy 3, and Buddy, (j. DENY SUB SINKING MOSCOW, July 28 IU; -The reported re-ported sinking of a Soviet sub marine off Gotland was nullum- ; tatively denied today. i I 17 MINERS TRAPPED , TERRE HAUTE, lnd., July 28 ' (U.P) Seventeen night shift woi k- ers were trapped in the Dixie P.ee ; coal mine near here today when more than l.uoo union pickets c..n verged on the shaft. ' MILL OPENING PAILS HIGH POINT, N. C, July (U.y.y Mill owners failed today in an effort to reopen 24 hosiery mills when only 30 workers out of 3,000 who walked out last night, responded respond-ed to a call to return. DGUMEK SIJ1YEK CONVIiTED PARIS, July 28 (L'.Hl-Dr. Paul Gorgoulotf, fanatical Russian " assassin as-sassin of President Paul Doumer, was found guilty by a jury Wednesday Wed-nesday of premeditated murder without extenuating circun'istancs4 and was sentenced to the guillotine. His head will be chopped off some day soon at dawn, after President Presi-dent Albert Lobrun has waived his right to pardon. Former Resident Called By Death George V. Wheable, C9, rormer Provo resident, died Wednesday .in Susanville, Cal., from the effects of a paralytic 'stroke which he suffered suf-fered Tueaday. Mr. Wheable was borri in Provo and lived here until 15 years ago when he moved to Salt Lake. Five years ago he moved to California. He was a drayman in Provo about "30 years ago. Surviving are his widow, Julia :Whea"blev three daughters and two sons. A daughter, Mrs. Elliott Whestphal of Salt Lake, left immediately im-mediately for California on larn--ing idf her father's death. He also leaves s a sister, Mrs. Perry Pierce ojf Pleasant View." He was a brother-in-law of James Chappell and W. HRay'oProyot.; ' Funeral services ' and 'Interment will ba "at Rlchinpnd, Cal, Sunday. Aw. Pull-ese , :: ..::-X t i i ! Any boy at U. S. c. who asks Irn.a 1 Leamon: ' Aw. kid. lei s ankle down i th main stem and blow into a i 1 ilium," is going to get a glassy j itaie. Irn.a lias started a movement lin.a lias started a movement at the univeisitv asking girls to iefuse dates with lads who can i i ,ie oiru, i English. Shi 's ores. dent i of Epsilon 1'hi. English hoiioiary . rate : mty. LOOSE PLEADS GUILTY; FINED Dean Loose, arraigned before ' j uuge muui ii r i huumi 111 ni.- . icjr court Thursday morning on the complaint of County Attorney I. E. liiock bank of drunken driving plead guilty to th' charge was fined $299. and was given a six-months suspen-Jeu jail sentence by Judge I larding. The i harge against Loose formerly former-ly "ne of reckless driving, was recently re-cently amended by the county attorney at-torney to one of driving while intoxicated. in-toxicated. The charge grew out of an auto- j mobile accident on June 3 in the I early morning, when Loose's car i collided on the highway between ; Lindon and Pleasant drove with a car driven by Elda Williams, l;, , of Murray. ! Elda and hot sister Margaret, la, ! were inj'ueo in the accident, and a civil suit filed by the girls and ( I heir father after the accident ask- . ing a total of $00,000 was settled out ot court, when Mr. Ijoose, through he; attorney.;, gave the gills $1:50 t - - y j iach and putu their h ;spit..! bills Another suit by B F. llar!csty, Salt Lake, who was slightly injured in th- accident, as Ire was ridir,V in the Williams car, was settled out of lourt for the same amount. PROVO SCHOOL CJOSTS LOW Operation and maintenance costs in the Provo city schools in the season of 1931-32 was lower per capita than most of the districts in the state, it is revealed in a school i eport jUst released The per-capita cost in the Provo district was $57.43. Provo Resident Collector Of BY RAY McGl'IUE The sale of his first large collection, col-lection, a valuable find of old newspaper news-paper stamps, the completion of a second collection and the beginning of v. third mv the highlights in the stamp collecting experiences of E. E. Wells., 543 West First South, Provo Utah. Mr. WelU; began collecting stamps in ZlQ, when stamps and stamp collectors, like taxes and tax collectots, were less numerous than they are now. "This is the twenty-second year he has been engaged in the hobby, and he is still collecting. A'The fact that I was working in the postoff ice, and a friend's collection col-lection helped me start," he states. And with this as an opener, he can interest, one for hours with the ro-jnaricettod ro-jnaricettod Intricacies of his hobby. His "valuable find occurred in V UTAH AS S I0IYF0R PROJECTS Water Commission Sends Message to Utah Solons Urging immediate transfer of $50,000,000 from the fed- j eral emergency construction I fund to the reclamation bu-j bu-j reau at the rate of $10,000 ! per year, telegrams were dis-! dis-! pitched Thursday to Senators Reed Smoot and W illiam II. King by the Utah state water storage stor-age commission. It is understood that $10,000,000 of the amount will Oe allocated to the Boulder dam pioject, the re- ' w.. projects in the west which have , r ,,,tr,.tinn -i ie possibilities of getting some (,f these funds for Deer Creek on- ytiuction l:in;res entirely upon the ubilitv of various inteiests t ricerned to if t together, it wad learned. Adjudication of conflicting and overlapping rights on the Provo river and Utah lake must be-wolear.ed out ofVfaie way and other obstacles removed, according to the officials. A cooperative agreement between the state and the U. S. reclamation bureau providing for a stady of how to utilize all Utah lake waters, assuming that vie Deer Creek icservoii is to b- built was allowed al-lowed to stand as it is providing the cost will not exceed $5000. The work wiH be?. in immediately under i direction of E. O. Larson of Salt Lake office. I A request by the Hyrum water users' association that the Hyrum ' project be approved for 13,000 acre ; feet instead ot the original 14,000 ' acre-feet was approved. The origi nal goal cannot be reached, it is held by Cache val'ey inteiests. The Utah lake investigation will be made to determine the feasi- l ! bility of diki-- te lake across the , south end from Lincoln Beach to j Mosida and also across Provo hay. Test holes will be dulled to una th.- character of the subsoil. Herald Ad Brings Return of Purse i ' Ccngi atulat ion:; to m1 A. P. Simmons the Herald." , Wednesday. ! I "Thn cn,.r,n,l d in vour want ad ' i columns brought me my lost purse , I and contents. Put don't take all the ! i 11 " "H uul honest hands, there might have necn a uiucicm aiui . ed up by young Stun lioyden. 10. and handed to his father, T. A. Tab" Boyden. 281 North First West street who saw the ad in the Herald and returned it to me promptly. "If there had been two Boydens in the city of Sodom and Gomorrah, it would not have been de;stroyed," cciushided Mr. Simmons in appreciation appre-ciation of the honesty of the finders. find-ers. Is Veteran Postage Stamps 1918. The scene of the find was Cedar Foit, west of Utah lake. But let him tell the story. "A company of California volun-teeis volun-teeis was stationed in Salt Lake city about the time that Johnson's army occupied Camp Floyd. These volunteers were extremely anti-Mormon, anti-Mormon, and published a little paper caller the 'Utah Vidette.' "Because they were anti-Mormon, they did not mail the paper in Salt Lake. Instead they would carry the papers by mule to Camp Floyd and mail from there. Fairfield was then the canteen of the camp. "They hac newspaper stamps in those days, and after those troops and the army left the state, the only.-jpost office out there was at Cedar Fort. The Cedar Fort postmaster post-master still had some of those newspaper stamps in 1918. They (Continue, on Page Six) High, Low In Congress Tally ' o5x ''' ''' A ' vt n di. i f fa i i Getting busy with tin ir pencils when congress, adjourned, score- keepers found that Ileprcsentative : Scott Leavitt t Rep.. Mont.) top i photo, held the recoid of being i the house memlx r to have the most , bills bearing his name become laws, j a total of IT. Of the 13.000 bills in- 1 irodueed in the house, Representa- i tiye (.'lay Briggs ( Dem., Tex.),' center photo oi'feied not a single ; (.lie while Repres'-ntativ" Joe (Vail (Iii'i Calif.), bottom, topped the bill int i oiin ini- list with 533. Officers Boat Warn Haiders rum -ion.; comj :nnts of vandal- ! , J 1 " boats in Utah lakf mar Provo ism and pi opei t y beach has led Sheriff 1.. (.. Dur- nc 11 and Chief of Police Otto Bilk ; to announce vigorous pioseeution in ; ll cases where an ai;est is made ; following a rcpoi t of this. kind, j The two ofli- ts issued the fol- j lowing statement, Thursday. On account ot numerous corn- ; nluints from owners, the public is heteby notified that all boats, launches and yachts anchored at or near Provo Beach art- private property prop-erty and must be given the same consideration as the eais parked alt tig the beach by visitors and bathers, (.'limbing on : to them, Breaking in to them, interfering with their moorings or machinery will subject the oflemierj; to arrest and possibly severe punishment. One would be very indignant in deed were he to return from bathing bath-ing to find his or her car had been used for a diving platform, that the interior had been messed up with wet bathing suits and muddy feet, that the motor had been meddled with and probably the car moved to some other point. Such action against one's automobile would be considered as nothing less than malicious mischief justifying arrest, ar-rest, conviction and suitable punishment. pun-ishment. Exactly the same thing obtains to these boats and others but their owners must keep off and out of them or take chances of serious trouble. Parents will so inform their children. Boating is a clean wholesome sport and those people who own boats should be encouraged in their efforts to develop it. We hope this warning will suffice and that we will not be called on to take.serious action. In other words KEEP OUT OF THE BOATS, LEAVE THEM ALONE AND AVOID TROUBLE. r OTTO BIRK. Chief of Police. E. G. DURNELL, Sheriff. ' ! ICftl I OH" CAVALRY II RIOTS Policeman Wounded Critically In Fighting WASHINGTON, July 28 (U.R)U. S. Cavalry was summoned sum-moned to protect property today to-day after gun fire in which police killed a bonus veteran in bonus camp near capital. One veteran was shot to death and two others wounded. wound-ed. One policeman was struck and critically injured by a brick and is not expected to live. District ot Columbia commissioners com-missioners appealed to the war department for aid and two troops of -cavalry were ordered to the disorder area. The shooting followed "re-" possession" of government properties occupied by the veterans. During this encounter en-counter the veterans rushed police lines and bombarded them with bricks. The shooting started when the policemen shot his way out out a group of belligerent veterans-.- WASHINGTON, July 28 UJ - The federal government today undertook un-dertook the evacuation of the bonus ' army from government owned -property. At 10 a. in. treasury agents, supported sup-ported by police, moved against the bonus barracks on Pennsylvania Pennsyl-vania avenue between Third and Fouith streets, where several hundred hun-dred bonus marchers- were quartered. quart-ered. Some 800 veterans swarmed out and were addressed by Walter Walters, the commander of the bonus aimy, who urged them to leave peaceably. A small group estimated "t from 16 to 100. op-posi op-posi d Waters' counsel and returned return-ed to the buildings saying they would remain until "someone puts us out." One man stationed himself on the roof of an old building, waving wav-ing a cotton American flag and crying to others to join him. BARNES RITES y TO BE SUNDAY SALT LAKE CITY Funeral services for John G. M. Barnefi, bu&iness and industrial leader of Kaysville, who died Tuesday will be held Sunday at 12:30 p. m. in the Kaysville L. D: S. tabernacle. Interment In-terment will follow In the Kaysville cemetery. Fellow members of Mr. Barnes on the Utah State Water Storage commisson paid high tribute to his memory at the meeting held Wed- . nesday in the state capitol. The commission appointed a special committee to represent the group 1 at the funeral and to draft resolutions resolu-tions of condolence to the family. Mr. Barnes was associated with -numerous industries in Utah, prin- . cipally canning, milling and irrigation. irriga-tion. Mrs. George E. Barton of . Provo is a sister. LIONS OUTING SET The Lehi and American Fork Lions clubs will stage an outing in Vivian park, August 3. The after-, noon will be spent in a program; of picnicking and the evening In dancing. Partners of the Lions will , be honored guests. Members may invite as many guests as they wish. STEAL GAS The service station of Jim Powell. on the Saratoga road in lower Lehi,' was robbed of 10 gallons of gaso- ' lino WutnAcitov ntcvHt if la . v . ed by Deputy Sheriff John Evans.; A HC UHI UUC( CT1UVUUJ .UOU A IJ v that fitted the gas pumps accord-" ing to Mr. Evans. . THREE HUBT IHHIOT. A riot a.t the pnuhtv outdoAr rft- : t m police in iwhich three persqns erej injured, Wednesday. |