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Show t r i r i c 71 r TV -C7"A; T7- i r There's No Place UXa VLak County to live I Watch U Grovr! HERALD PHONES Bvslness ;..... .....4C5 EdiWrlal. ......... ... .......... .194 Society.. i.... ..; CI : FORTY-FOURTH YEAR, NO. 168. PR O V O, U T Ail COUNTY, UTAH, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, ,1.9,3 0, EIGHT PAGES. TODAY PRICE FIVE CENTS 4- They Dodge "Big Wedding' t no rnifi M It! U II If I J 1 1 I JL3.-.:U,i.U u w ' V. 7. ... c -r in Xf - i :r ' "hi J r r x - It 3 U r I I'k i I . III I ' 1 I " I i n u n f L unuu m : ; Artftuf- Brisbane Not 'Glitlers, But Air- ships Wanted ' Another Attempt To Kill (Copyright 1929 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.) iOL Lindbergh continues his work with air cllders.. travci- ,lng .without engines, tbey seem to fascinate the treat pilot. He has, tried flying gliders before day-JiKhjU, day-JiKhjU, to .expcrim,'ent with ' early morning winds, and .recently ficw 13 miles in a plane with no engine. Reporters say he means .to try for the, glider. Jong distance and endurance endur-ance record. That Is. all interesting and courageous, cou-rageous, but has 4 little to do with the important part of flying, still in 'its, Infancy, .Ships that 'will not crash pilots, trained to think only of. passengers' safety, not so much abxHit?.. proving, that they axe not yellow" are needed. The pilot that wijl "go through in any kind of weather" needs to be replaced by the .man who will take passengers phly in perfectly safe weather. After that will come planes and flying methods to which no weather weath-er will make any difference. ... . The glider, . Interesting toy,' goes with air currents, teaching, perhaps, per-haps, a little"about flying. Butvit has as little to do with great airships air-ships of the future as the Hawaiian - surf board has to do with improved ocean steamships. ' " LINDBERGH commands the attention at-tention and respect, of capital and. industry- What he recommends will be tried. Even the government might wake ' up' and "cease leaving the flying, future to chance, if Lindbergh Lind-bergh urged it. His mind should be pn, weather , defying airships for 1000 passengers, not on a cunning MUe board that will skim on the air with a man sitting on it. Xf you"6ay;ljhat a man.rwho knows nothing about flying should not presume to "advise one, who . knows .all about, flying; please remember that "the inventor of the sewing 'machine did hot know how to sew. ANOTHER' attempted murder, among ' bur Latin-American friends. An attempt, fortunately a failure is made on . the life of Mello. Vianna, vice president of BrazUL As in the., recent Mexican outrage, the man attacked was making a,, political address and the would-be murderer was moved by political hatreds. Only, harsh sever ity can meet such an assassination epidemic. SAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 10. IL0-t-Pollc today believed they, were on the -track; of the two" young men who brutally.beat and' criminally attacked Miss lielcn. Golden, 19,, In a deserted stone!v quarry near Daly City Saturday night., The girl and -"her;,--sister. Lillian. 18,".-wero .lured in, the flashy roadster,, road-ster,, of two young men .who called thrrosclvcs. -Twig; and "Fred."-, "Fred."-, j The youths f. promised the girls that - they: would drive .them straight home ,' but Instead drove through deserted" streets" 6f the city: after leaving, the ; girls club where the . sisters-had been to a dance. ... . . 'Lillian escaped. by leaping to.the pavement and Incurred " a badly bruised. leg' V '- "r; 4 Helen, was forced to continue the trip to Daly City and the old quarry where the boys dragged ; her from the car, pummeled her 4 with their fists, kicked her - Into submission and then -attacked her. . r Several-hours later, Helen dragged.' drag-ged.' herself-, to a Daiy City home from ; which', she.: telephoned her widowed mother. , Her clothing.was torn to shreds ' and her f acer head and shoulders lacerated 'from the beating administered. . Improvement Of . Taft j Gdhtmues . WASHINGTON. Feb. .10. (CJ?)-Continued (CJ?)-Continued Improvement wa noted today in : the conditloa." of - William Howard Taft.'.who has been gravely grave-ly HI at his hpmeherel." ' : - . Although the former justice is not reearded ; as out of danger, physicians appeared encouraged regarding re-garding his condition. He is able to sit in r cha.iror.a.feve. minutes each day and his appetite seems to be increasing. .' Taffs condition has changed but little during the last few hours, it was understood. but he ias ' Improved Im-proved vastly since he returned, Tuesday, ..from Asheyllle, N. C, where he w-nt f;r'a cc . 'etc rest. Here is a striking picture of Margaret Couzens Chcwniris, 19-year-old dauehter of Senator James Couzens, the richest member of the U,. S. senate, and William Jeffries Chewnirig, Jr., 25, who eloped from Wash-- Ington and were quietly wed ih Baltimore because of. an aversion to a "big wedding. They are -spending their honeymoon in Norfolk, Va., radiantly happy because the bride's parents have approved the match. Mrs. Chewning is onc of , AmerjcaX richest "heiresses, her father's fortune for-tune bins estimated at -$50000000, an Mr- Chewning comes ; from a prominent Virginia family and is a clek in a Washington bank. : ; r , . ' . . ' 3UGEACL0H0k RIG IS FOUND Nationwide Conspiracy . Has ; Diverter) Million Gallons Gal-lons a Year. CHICAGO. Feb. 10 ILE The federal grand jury today indicted 1 corporations and 156 individuals juv disclosing . the operations ,ot.a nationwide alcohol ring which, ac-carding ac-carding to the charges, ha3 been djvertlng industrial alcohol since 1923. . The government charged that 1,-000,000 1,-000,000 gallons of alcohol a year has been diverted into channels for seven ye-s. bootleg The indictment, returned' today after a year, of undercover investigation, investi-gation, covered 96 typewritten pages and cited 297 overt acts. The' seven-year conspiracy, ' the government charged, extended from New York to Los Angeles, having branches in Philadelphia. Detroit, Cleveland, St Louis, Minneapolis, St. Paul and North Bergen, N. J. the cchter . of the bootleg ring,., -the ' .indictment charged was in -Chicago. The . government estimated that the - ring diverted between $50,000,-000 $50,000,-000 worth, of alcohol in the seven years of its existence. - K A. F. 'Paper Hanger' :e$ His Plea Caxl Chadwick of American Fork changed his plea from not guilty to that of guilty when he appeared in the Provo city court Monday morning, for a hearing on a charge of issuing, a fraudulent check. Chadwick was also arraigned, on another charge of tlic same nature when he appeared , on Monday. He will enter a' plea on the second sec-ond charge on f February 14, and Will be sentenced by Judge Maurice Harding- on the first charge issued against him on that "day. ard Recommends New Site For Larger City Library The following communication Bubmitted to the library board from its president, JTV BL Jenssn, ' relative to the need of a more adequate building Is. printed herewith. . EDITOR. , , . ., : .;. Provo. Feb. 6, 1S30. To tne Public ibrary Board, ,' Provo City, . ' 4 Ladies, Gentlemen: " On , January , ij, 1S08, the Provo public library was opened - to f the public in the - basement of the court-house.- Th a library grew in popularity, and it was soon felt that more desirable quarters should, be secured." Andrew Carnegie being appealed to, contributed $17,500 for" the erection of a library - building. The city added something . to the amount and the site was presented by interested citizens. Under these conditions the library building was erected and has been of high service ser-vice to the . city and surrounding counrty. ' ' ' : For some time, however, it has been apparent that the present quarters are quite inadequate to the need3 of the library. Two meth CEKTRALWOL AGMY FORMED New- Plant of , Marketing Wool To Return Greater Share To "Grower. . SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 10. UJD Handling-of "wool through a central cen-tral marketing agency, ,for years the dream of -wool- growers: has he Corrie'a' reality with Ihe inauguration inaugura-tion of the federal plan,, of wool marketing, worked out byhe federal fed-eral farm board" and its affiliated organizations, the National Wool Marketing corporation,- 1 and. State Woolgrowers' associations. " ; When ; the. National. corporation cast about for an experienced agent through which wool could be marketed mar-keted under the cooperative plan, eliminating the middleman and turning additional profits to ; the grower. It chose Draper-and Co., Ir6., of Boston, as the agent on a one-year trial basis. . r. - """" Clai m Two-Thirds , - -, - Preparations to handle this year's wool have already advanced to such a point that "Draper and company predict two-thirds . of the entire wool produced in the United States .this year will be marketed through them. according to Dan J. O'Lough-lln, O'Lough-lln, local representative.. ; : " The plan under which - growers will be permitted to market their wool, either through the rstate. associations, as-sociations, or Individually,, is, briefly, brief-ly, this: ': , V--" : .; The government agent, .which under agreements in the arrangement arrange-ment cannot buy . or sell wool for Itself, takes the grower's wool, markets it and gives the grower the profits. An advance, ordown payment pay-ment of 90 per cent of the estimated esti-mated value of the producer's wool may be obtained from the agent before be-fore the sale . is accomplished. Later on, when state associations are organized on a financial basis, the advance will be made by those bodies. A handling charge of 2 14 "cents a (Continued on Page Eight) ods of relief have been under advisement. ad-visement. At first, it was thought that a satisfactory solution of the problem lay in building an addition to the library at; the. rear of, the present, structure, : and a 'small piece of ground was purchased with that . plan In mind,1; But the. rapid growth of the city and .the crowding, crowd-ing, of business on the cramped quarters of the , library have ' suggested sug-gested that, more liberal and comprehensive com-prehensive ' plans should I be considered. con-sidered. It is now highly desirable that a new site should be secured, one With room enough for future e"pansion and permitting the planting plant-ing of trees and shrubbery, on which to erect, a structure of which our citizenry might feel justly proud. If the city and county will unite In such a project the greatest good to all concerned will be attained. If a joint course of action isnot to be secured, the city should take independent in-dependent action. The reference of this matter to the city commission' is earnestly, recommended. - , ' Respectfully submitted, J. M. JENSEN, PresidentLibrary Board. JBir&jM.; ;. Goal c - - i - . . SI ' - , I - ' , ' PB011I0 State! and Federal - Officials Hope To Determine Cause . of. Disaster Which Claimed LivjDVof-23 Mine Workers. HELPER, Utah,, Feb. 10 (UP) An official investigation investiga-tion of the Standard'coal'mirie disaster, which' ' claimed 23 lives was launched by state and .federal -officials : today, With ' the hope: that the cause of 'the. explosion, wauld-.be definitely determined, and Asteps .taken ' to ; prevent future occurrences. occur-rences. ' , . The probe is -In', charge of. O. F, McShane, state industrial commission, commis-sion, and John. Taylor, state coal mine inspector. "We hope to . determine," McShane Mc-Shane declared, "the cause of-the explosion; -amount of property damage, 'whether there was any evidence of A violation' of safety Iregulatlons.what.part rock dust and water played in localizing tne explosion, and ""whether any improvements im-provements 'r In safety measures may be possible." . The last Victim of the explosion recovered from the mine Saturday night, was Tobe Wimber, whose body was badly burned, indicating that he was caught in the -full force of the ' blast which spread poisonous gasses through the mine and . snuffed out the lives of his comrades, Only nine men in" the mine escaped alive. . " :yy 'Funeral , services for the . victims were started yesterday. . Thre was pp. public : service for . the . 'entire group"famlies. arranging individual individ-ual funerals for their men who were, killed? v-v-V " r - Quiet reigned'IrKSrandardville", in direct contrast to sthejr: activity which surrounded rcscuo' work Friday and Saturday. . 1 HUGHES GKEHED WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.. OLE) The nomination ; of , Charles Evans Hughes, to.be chief, jus- -tic.e ;of the, supreme court, was. -' approved. 10 to 2, ' by . the senate sen-ate judiciary commit.tee.today. - Chairman , Norjris, Republican, Republi-can, Nehraska, and Senator " Blaine, V Republican, Wiscon-. son, voted against Hughes. Ail the Democrats . favored, confirmation. confir-mation. - The committee action virtual- ' ly assures Hughes' confirmation confirma-tion by the senate. Many Students ' : Are Iridjculaf cd Almost 1000 school students of Provo Bench, Lake View, - Vine-, yard' and. Lindbn received the vaccine for typhoid fever, accon ing to Evallna Reed, Utah county health supervisor. Practically all of, the; students took , the v three , inoculations, dur-. ing the campaign, as prescribed by the health department of the county. coun-ty. At the Lincoln high . school 137 students, were inoculated, 12& at the Sharon school, 118 at . the -Lin-don school, rilS at the Spencer school, 116 - At the Lincoln junior high school 3 at the Lincoln grade school and'jf at the Lake- View school. " ' McBride- Rites, To Be Tuesday Funeral services forMrs.. Louisa McBride, will bethel d Tuesday at 12:30 o'clock in the Fifth ward chapel.. JFrienda may view the body at ,the' family home, 115 East Third North street "between 10 a. m.. and 12 o'clock nnorr. Interment will be in the Provo city cemetery. Mrs. McBride died Saturday, afternoon aft-ernoon at her home in Prove. ; LORDS 03F. WAR- MOULD, SEE , T5y R, F, A CROSS 40 miles of a neighborin jr. peopled once, fairyland fore, t'he great German "push" in the spring; of 1918; a long, wide strip of man-niade desert ; Hell blasted its way across it in blood ankle deep. ' That huge pyre of smoking ashes had been a " pleasant hamlet shining, white in the sunlight.' t Its - humble little churoh spire iiow noses in the blacken- , ed mud. Those smoking uprights, pointing like accus- f - ing ...fingers ' toward heaven, were .the . props of - homes wherein mothers happily nursed their babes and husbandmen hus-bandmen found their peace and rest from hard labor. Those blood-stained trenches were once lanes in which children played on their , way to school. ;,The flowers . lie black and flattened in their wrecked gardens. The i. trees of the groves are torn and leafless. All that was green and waveq in the breezes,or that sustained. am-, rmal(:-bifd or insect life is dead, aiid ,what vas, once grain field or pasturp is now a shell-made crater breathing horrible odors. , ' ' v ' All due to the ingenuity of civilized man in the -A natter ot killing. 1 ATA PAUSE in the , "push.V a jGerman officer-, officer-, wrote to his wife this, which in English, is going the rounds of that part of the wrorld that reads and thinks: -, '' ' " , " - ' ' - This country should remain as it is, as an ever-lasting lesson. No street, no well, no house should ever be built in it. Every head T)f a state, every leading statesman, every president, instead ot an oath on the law, should be compelled to lake " a trip .oyer .this, county. . From, now until eternity etern-ity there would never be another war." - - - . . -, : - HPHERE'S a suggestion in the above Ws have inXondon a formal gathering of most distinguislied representatives of most important peo- -pies, peoples most concerned in that "push" of hell into the vitals of, civilization. It. is proposed to shorten short-en Mars', bloody sword by two or three inches, fill cemeteries by use of cruisers instead of battleships. Let those, limited-war representatives visit the military mili-tary cemeteries o Europej and stand in the midst of those acres and acres of white crosses to FEEL what war is. Those crosses stand over the youngest and best of mankind, and they cry out against the aftermath after-math of; '-war: widowhood, orphanage, childlessness, the mutilation, the. gas-blinding, the cheapening of human life, the waste of every sort. How could those who sit in the high places but never see war as it is! Kelp but'conclude that solution of the human problem is not in the reduction of "war means, but in full con- -trol of war thru courts of; justice possessing absolute power to enforce their decrees ? ' Scouts Mobilize In Record . Time; Jamboree Success More. Than 150 Provo Boy Scouts Participate. Ir Demonstration; Demon-stration; Recommitment Exercises and Jamboree Held At North Park Are Impressive Youth Deprived of j Driving Privilege Charles Thomas, 17, of Provo.' was sentenced to pay a fine of $10 or. serve. 10 days in the Prdvo city Jail when . he entered a plea of guilty to a charge. " of. speeding, when 'arraigned in the juvenile court Monday, morning. . Judge Joseph Nelson also: ruled that .Thomas wouid not be permitted permit-ted to. drive, a car in Provo for 3Q days.. He was arrested Sunday by-Lyle by-Lyle 'Davis of the Provo city police po-lice department. " MAltKlIABI, BETUIINS. Fred. Markham returned to his home in Provo late Saturday night after spending,, seven" months in Boston where he completed :a four year course, in. architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Tec! nology. Utah Fair tonight to-night and Tues- i lay? little change In temperature. ' 3 Maximum temp. Saturday, . . . . .56 i Minimum temp. 1 Saturday 28 Maximum temp. C.:n day .SO Q-1 : - I Mint e IDi&miet IT PAINE . . . By MAURICE A. JONES The cannons roared and the" whi$tles shrieked, as almost 150 boy. scouts from all sections of Provo hurriedly mobilized at the city and; county building Saturday evening.! The , occasion was the twentieth! I anniversary of lhe: boy scout orga-. nizauon in. the united States. ; During the afterfioon a French 75 of, Battery C was placed In Pioneer-park Pioneer-park and exacUy at 7:15 p. nu it roared forth its first charge, by the time that anothjer . .shell had been! fired, the factory Whistles J of ;the Knight Woolen kills ' and Startup! Candy company commenced shriek-1 ing. It. really' felt as if thetlty n l . . A A J 1 -t X. 1 l wm tit uicav uisircsa, vcir tnougit, the citizens were wamednot to gei. excited over any -unusual noises Saturday evening Hundre' of. people telephoned the Herald office,! the police station ,and the fire de partmen't to find out what it was. alf about. ; , . " Frompt Keionse- ; It took only 15 minutes for. the! scouts to mobilize, and following a short address by. L. B. Harmon.' chairman of the Provo district. In rwhlch he complimented the scouts. (Continued on Page Eight) LIQUOR CHARGE DENIED Kimber Larsen entered a plea of not guilty when he 'was arraigned; in the Provo 'city court Monday morning on a" charge-of being under un-der the influence- 61 intoxicating; liquor. ' Date of trial was set for. Tuesday morning by'. -"Judge Maurice Hard- Lixigr and bail was fixed at $50. Lar sen - was arrested Saturday ' niht by Police .Officer James Saoj. Moves To Make r " Traffic Safer f ;',v-' r i i ,7 . ) "sJ""'-' -4' GOV. GEORGE H. DEItN BERN, OPENS; STATE CONFAB ",- , ., ' -i ', Traffic Laws May. Be Revised As a Result of State Conference : ' SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 10 U.P) - Representative Utah ' citizens gathered at the . capltol today to meet with Governor ' George H. Dern on the matter of automobile fatalities , in this state. " ' The :. program u which .Governor Dern. asked to be adopted, called for formation of a state-wide traffic traf-fic safety association, which would devise a plan of cooperation with peace' officers,, simplify and standardize stand-ardize traffic laws through legislation, legisla-tion, and conduct a steady 6am-paign 6am-paign to ' Educate" drivers , and pedestrians. ,-. Traffic, accidents In Salt Lake City are among the highest of any, city in the country, and 'Utah as a state ranks high in fatalities. w s ires By UNITED PRESS IIERRERA ELECTED; , 1 BOGOTA, Colombia, Feb. 10. (U.H) , Enrique Olaya Herrera has been elected president of Colombia by a large majority early returns on the balloting indicated today. -. ' POSTPONE MEETING . V WASHINGTON," Feb. 10. W.V.)- The; scheduled meeting ot the' tecl-cral tecl-cral - farm aboard to , .consider authorizing au-thorizing creation, of & J25)00,000 grain " stabilization corporation to AM 4 Hnr Ik. n . . 1 . . 1 . H -' r i T 1,l"wlK,tproViding a steroscoplo effect has been postponed tll tomorrowT Frknklln hailed tJrf.rtlon r It was announced today. veteran; BOMOTED - vWASHINGTC Feb. l6., U.n)T- The . war department ' today announced an-nounced George 'Ared White of the Oregon national guard; had f been glvenederal "recognition as major tional guard division composed of Oregon, Idaho,, Washington,. Mon-tana Mon-tana and Wyoming troops."' . White served in France and- slnce"1923 has commanded the 82'nd brigade of the 41et division. GALES TAKE TOLL TOKIO. Feb. 10. U.nK-Gales off Bonins, Izu Islands and other Japanese Jap-anese points took a frightful toll of lives during the week . end, a check revealed today; ' 5 At least 21 persons have been drowned, including one Bailor, and 13 fjshermen are missing. " Twenty fishermen were drowned off Bonins and one sailor met death when his launch was swamped. INFANTS PERISH OROFINO, Idaho, Feb. 10. (U-R) Left alone in the house while their parents attended a party riext door, two infant sons of Mr. and Mrs. John Moffatt were fatally burned when the home caught fire yesterday. yester-day. Moffatt and William Rose-brought Rose-brought ''were ' burned : when 'they rushed Into the house attempting t2 eaye the boys. MeMmM 1100 lilib ftRRESTEO It! DEIIl' Higher Ups in Gangland Fall v. To Show Up in Drive When Offensive, Is; Tipped Off; Sifeet Kiliings 'Persist. . ! CHICAGO, Feb. 10 (UP) A strategic viptory ' ytu i claimed by police today in their offensive against, gangland, gang-land, although of the approximately approxi-mately 1,00Q persons' arrested not one was a ranking officer in the host of underworld denizens , who have made k the t city streets their No Man's land,,, ' Two murders and two shootirKa occurred as police literally picketed picket-ed the city, rounding ; up .hoodlum, known .criminals and gusplcloya characters. ' Two Killed ' ;. The eighth and ninth ; kUUna In 10 days of street waf. came wh'n an. automobile load !ot lntoxicat 1 youths aroused the Ire of a rr.a-chlne rr.a-chlne load of. negroes." "'Gum blazed from the negroes'. car f I Anthony A KIJburg,j, 20, and Herbert Her-bert Oers, 19, .., were, mortsi? wounded. ,' " Under the arc lights at the d-tectlve d-tectlve bureau, Sunday, 41 prison-era prison-era pasqed in parade,. The remainder, remain-der, of the 917 had satisfied authorities auth-orities they had no connection with the. crime wave and were. released re-leased Immediately; ,', , Of the suspects who .-walked through the gigantic "showup" whilo police, newspapermen , fln i victims of holdups, robberies, kiJ-napings, kiJ-napings, sluggings and aseulU looked on, there were! 271 with, police po-lice records, v ' ' 1 : But, generals, colone!fl, rnajorsi and captains of the gang armies were . conspicuously absent , . pprts from gangland said they had learned of the police drive as ear! as last Thursday and, had beat a hasty retreat to other cities or entrenched en-trenched In some hideout. ... ' . " ! " ' : . ' :,- Newest Film To BeShown LOS. ANGELES. Feb. 10. (UJ! The, new grandeur film which gives depth to motion pictures, Will have its premiere here Feb. 23, Hard 1 ,B. Franklin, manager of Fox. Wet t Coast theaters announced today. Development of the llm represents repre-sents a cost of $4,000,000 and five years'; work by motion! picture experts, ex-perts, Franknir'sald, The netype film la said to I e twice aswlde as that now In Uiy glvinga picture covering the entlrn proscenium of the. theater whiia Franklin hailed perfection of th grandeur film as the . third , gr..t epoch In the history of (motion pictures, pic-tures, their discovery and development develop-ment of sound being the first two. The "depth" picture, also a talkie, will be "Happy Days." ' i Bureau Bulletin A RE YOU watching the list f bulletins, that will be furri!ftbt to every Provo Eveninir Hcml 1 reader, frM of charge, on rcu- A to the llrrald'a ' Washington t j-reauf j-reauf '- Some valuable and . InstrocUts material 1 offered in lhe ba!" tins, and many reader 'havo tZ-ready tZ-ready taken advantace of tlwwn. Tor instance, in the currrr t f - ue, on ' t!;e . editortal pasn r - nouncement Is made of. a t; v packet jOf four bullotlns d with the rrefcldcnUxOf ,th t'..' States, winch arcof peci.4 l.-i est to boys and girls , In 1 :. work, as wKl as to !u!fi. Turn i to - the ditrol;4 ' i : r watch thse bulletins, r . .taking aJvanUje of tl.n c. and answer department n t as you wt&U. Washington |