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Show 11 4 y- r- hi. HERALD ' PHONES TETV 1 9 x - TIF7V- T :' ' ." -.-. . c : ' ' ' . . " . ; . - Art- &xlaiiti DOLLARS SPENT In Utah County Means .Utah County Prosperity. Business . , . . i - Editorial i- Society . . FORTY-FIFTII YEAR NO." Art hiir Brisbane (Copyright, 1931 The Virgin Islands Remember;,; en-Soldiers Rise, return- n ed from the Vireln Islands de- i-pressed about that territory J 1- IT. ,-purcnasea irom ijciiiiuhk. xc He said the islands, looked like "a poorhouse," and could have no value except a possible usefulness In protecting the Panama Canal. Such" usefulness in itself might justify buying the islands. Their "poor house" condition ia not tKfilr fault, but bursl The islands y were prosperous ; manufacturing manu-facturing rum from their sugar cane; Our prohibition killed their : only industry, and impoverished them. ; It Is .4 as though .Denmark had bought the southern states rom us,,, and forbidden them to raise cotton, or' had bought Detroit, and forbidden manufacture ot automobiles. H6wever, - nobody kn6ws better thanitr.VHobyr, who developed weaith'.from th? ground, iall over the world, that you can't condemn any p, iece of -land, frpm surface indicaiibna. .When? Seward bought Alaska fron JRussla'. for eight million mil-lion dollars(..UMittransAcUon wm called -Seward'. ,)Foliy." r". . We bought Alaska. ;really to have an excuse for handing some money to corrupt Russian officials, ; disguising' dis-guising' the transaction aa 4 , busl-niwav busl-niwav affair.. The 'Russians y: had. valued. Alaska for its" catch of seal otters, prized by nobles as a lining for their- coats, when theptter catch fell off, they were willing td sell and. Seward : was laughed at for .buying. REA!D these, figures, provided by ; 1 C. E; Garfield : of the Seattle chamber f of commerce,, . as to what the United States has got out of that Alaskan $8,000,000 purchase: - vVe Jiavelakfn .from Alaska, .in gbld, " silver, copper, tin, lead and other .metals $63885,659 fince we bought the land in 1867. We have .Ukcn in fish products $861,603,353. We have taken in furs- $1J4,8B4,772: Other? m'mions ifi miscellanebus.' A grand total of ONE BILLION SIX HUNDRED AND THIRTY-TWO THIRTY-TWO MILLION SEVENTY NINE THOUSAND, 4 TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY THREE DOLLARS of iS.000.000. And. vwi.nK nf lht irreat territory t -rHivN.n'!ratched : Get Teai estate, a corner ioi, wu locatedrbr a great c country like Alaska and take care of it,: you won't regret it- ' , v ; V : There is; no knowing what ;we Will find . in those Virgin IsUnd when : the .well diggers, and others, attack . them. ? ;v A T Easter lawif Iresident Hobt V Vver: un before the sun, attend. ed services at the tomb of the Un- known Soldier. The world will neyer Identify any of those unr known 1 soldiers. , purs may; haye been 'forn ln Italy, Scandinavia, Germany, Irelandv anywhere.. And, whoever he is, h'e might be surprised sur-prised ' should he ;arise at midnight and' see all the' wreaths onhls tpmb.-,. ' ' ' Perhapa'; atthe ' last day ail the unknow soldiers, respendentln the glory ' of heroism, will stand, side by side betor ,their. Judge. their names, origins and deeds related as they receive- the, .homage i. all .that have -died; since the beginning of the-earth. ' - . ' ..It would be a strange gathering, assuming' hatour, pugnacious ancestor: an-cestor: of : the earlier, periods be among -those, present. ,4 I The . DT AllFair -tK night and Friday; little v change in temperature. , . " Pi T-Taiaxlmmn temiJ. . Wednesday .73 Wednesday y . 83 -r------- ' ; : r : ; . ,t. . ' - " 'V4'-- - - J.rA.'..ili: - Fv s. v-Jr., - 4-4 : r - t XI T T T ftTrilWf ! -. - . " . I T A R AV gaiter uongworzn ; hawk: UtMlllft Weather I mm 1 V A . .495 1 494 , .496 162. . Imous ConsrrssiQnat ! SuccumbsvTo Brief; Pneumonia Uln -I- WASiuMoWrlim yt fyoeident Hoover will attend '"the funeral ,of-. Speaker Nlch- ola LongvorthV at Cincinnati - Saturday, it wa announced at the. White llue today. The ice .Ujbe held at the Longwoitli'jnctrinati horn? . nt 1 oVloj.Saidy afternoon, " it wa announce! t ho speak-. -' era of floa after a telephone call ' from Mrs. Longwoi th at Aiken. AIKEN S. ,';April 9.. (UJ! Nicholas LpngorhJk4jPalfer of tne house of representatives in the 69th, 70th and 71st congresses, died today. to-day. . !v Sii' '' 111 Only Two-Day-;" v ; ': Death came j'jLb;iQv44y.''lLft-, er Longworth's seriouanlns with pneumonia had' beipon)e knowh. , The speakera ..'powerful figure in the Republiciaftv pjartyandV 'beloved 'be-loved by political ; fiends land"; foes alike was stricken whileal 'gjest at the home ot Mrraiid Mrs.'j'ames F. Curtis at the winter re6rt; Tuesday night , his J ; ilnesV Iwas diagnosed as' pneumonia? and 1 Mrs. 'Lbngwcrth; '"PlpinHess "Allee''Rbose-' velt,"' 'was. summoned .from Washington. Wash-ington. ' - ' ..r ' ' For; a time, the .doctors were hopeful,' hope-ful,' butaoon their bulletins became increasingly alariiiin. " At 10 J52 a. :irt. toxlay Dr. Robert H. WUds,. chief -oY the medical staff attending Longworth came to a window, in the Curtis old colonial mansion.' , He raised- his hand In one slow gesture to the waiting newspapermen. It was a signal to the world . that the speaker, of the United States house of representatives repre-sentatives was dead. Hour ; after hour Longworth had inhaled air artificially richeneJ with, oxygen, A phystcian VfitooA , almost 1 constantly ty his 'bedside.. .within, the, oxygen tent the, labored breathing . continued,. ; butV at last Longworth'' was not equal to the strain of his illness forced upon himi - V Age Is Factor- , Longworth waa 61 years old and his.age was abactor in' the rapid progress; of , the pneumonia tondi- ,to. ;rne, strenuous snort ana concluding con-cluding session of the 71st congress tWs wi:ittr imposed a. severe strain on Longworth, not only because of his ' official responsibilities . - ns -tneaker.vbut owing to his Informal rota b conciliator among embattled jnembers of hia own party. Copper Quiet , ; Gh? Exchange NEW. YORK? Aprfl 9.-Cbpper for domestic delivery continues tp be offered, at9, cents- per poun' tty 'a "custonv smelterj' while other custom smelters are offerings the netal at, 9 cents per, pound. .. r Producers are -still out'. of the market, as little buainess'.is being puts' through, despite, the lowest price 'levels .lnyeara. " ' Selling predominated - v on ".the stock market t today; -a sharp .break occurring neartjie close of the day,-. A.oecnne was general, ai thoi' eh soxne' lsauesr. notably, t oUa end l9W-prtced tobaccos, held gains. i -0.. ""ww SnSS: , : .WI.RE5; u hssb sii Eirn: esT - I Utah5 Art I'libVers FIocfeTb Vitw. Sprrihille Eihibit . . v.- ,11.1 f That' the annual art exhibit of the ' Sjrrngvllle high' school, has be come ;an event, of inestimable life portance, to the. state as well as to the. town was showp- by the hum-berofput-oMown vlsltqrstothe gallery on : EasteV; Sunday . as - well as bnUhe' other day-since Hbe "exhibit "ex-hibit opened :Thi interest Is ;btit; hatuVal . since" the aisplay offers to Utah audiencesraii'ppportnntty to yiew"'7theworki'fefl'jXmerica,3vtQlre most artists. This year's exhibit hai" been commented -upon - as 'hblding . . ' . ' t ... X PRO VO, ,UT A H. CO U PersoalitykenUtJNick" Woh: Many Triuinplvs ; Always Popular ,(By Unirr Press) -Speaker, Longworth's death 'occurred 'oc-curred 'far from ' the t-cencs 'bf his political and 'social triumphs. Ilia triumphs were those of ja personality whlcht cut through the fai?t" thai; ho was a son-in-law of the dynamic"; Theodore Roos3velt1he husband vtOf .he;f8moruaAlce. Ildos'evort, 'i 'dU rich iaan's: sdh' an epicure fond of spats, an artist, on tyhole load enough lo blight the arveragejTpotical.x;a!rf!j:' ' ... Fought5 n& Way rCp- v 1 Yetllhef blight Hiway uti' lii tC nban'e garrt' :wnere"-the txiiigH'and tbmbld goes tothe strongestrand quickest; v-lfe ' not - criv won Xtts F i-' i ml.! I ' ii.. ""J.-J- speakership But .urdmptly- made it again -hv -force :'6Y'nis'Vtersohaf!tv much .tlfe same'vpowerfu. office 'it was Jn theftlaya offteed'andCan'-' noh "though , without the aid of the olcl-tjnie 'rulesV.'Whlc-h made their rzardom eas1Sfk;i''' .i Had ' Longryir'oHh Keen ' a tiora sornbeV- :haracttfr this achieve-: mnt ' yrould " tiaVe "t),een ' mbst prtmi-indntW prtmi-indntW linked wth- Mm. V But k the good-fel6wlnhimV:' the'ipt'iybo$ sigingrieninii5:4piaW cranrand ihe,piadHn iho drawing i i vyiiw ., vv Jt3n.nig".oa, , ne , enaiess anecddtes-tlhese: so'taboinaVd fhe capita! by their contrastTwUh tae dull, 'ignorant w-itjess rulfTof "hacE xpoJiticianS!: that Longworth : probably prob-ably will have to ait Ifor histor laris to fix his rank' as a parliamentary parlia-mentary figure. ... . h Jnthe. "elections i tastV Novnbr Longworth Md his troubles in the J liret Ohio, ciisticict ,an Jjike somj ether H Republican leaders of .congress .con-gress lie came. ..through, but with- ( Continued On Page . Five) ;" CinciGCf ; Aprils 9 U.R)-The Change . in municipal leadership which Chjlca'gpans'. decreed, M.bv a reqord shattering vote came sbout today with' amazing swiftness as t Mayor-Elect AntOh n J. , Cermak mq ved , without ceremony Into -the city hall; ;whereB!g- Bill Thompson DreviouslV) had ruled. Vf It wa a 'grWt 'dayand aausy i one for Cermak, marking as it did the elimaV of Jilaoady-rlsp''jrrom immigrant boy and hime porker to; the mayorship of the world's fourth largest city. - Tii "i ' Lead errs in the city's1 business, profesisonal -knd r church ' life4 declared de-clared it was a? "b-a'day for Chicago; as ;it was' for Cermak I Cermak madeT ft 'plain -be'; would turn out of pff ice ,;ail raeobers of the old TbompsohpcabinetV'i ' . : Tt is expected,V? he said lethal all bjureau heads vriliyh'ave -their 'iesig7 nations in by the'- time 'Trtake, of. fice." None failed :tb lake the hint and the. rgreaiexodUs," left the city hall practically barel ;: - iermak 'announced tliat'. Acting Commissioner, ,'of Police" John A. Alcock- '-would 5 remain'- i "for. a while.".. He "Indicated 1 he" wouli select a J new chief, but;nehtioned no! names. In mahy' 'quarters, the name of Pat Roche,. th ; detective credited -with. solving' Jthe - Lingle murder, was jnentlone . - its ? own," If . not" actually Surpass- nglri some: respects, those of ther yearst. Early criues, expresa.tnpr satisfaction ' that the . committee bn selection has kept up.the usual high .standard -f- PviOtts 'ishowsVand haa succeeded-.ialthehercnlean lak of nanging' a great exhibit a very capable :and pleasing ;fmanne.i. ; ; Xn lnt6resilngl attdfaluabi rai-jflitiblt rai-jflitiblt tb the' gallery since the opening open-ing date '4s-a - large canvas sent' by ' f Continued On Pa;e fXxJ' appcar4e nattplu&ty in taste almost anvoilettante the N T-Y; TJiT A Hi; TrHUREA Y; APR IL- -9, 1-93U) CNTRAT-IS AWARDED SALT LAKE.CIT.V, April 9. Uit Surfacing of 13.4; bsilea of Jhigh-way Jhigh-way in-Seviercdunty between Venice Ven-ice and Salitja will' be -done by W. W. Clyde and; eorapany and J. W. Whiting. SpringviUe, who sqbmit-tted sqbmit-tted the lowest of, -nine offers when 'bids were Opened- late yesterday by the state road- commission The successful bid was $ 13,308.30. NARCOTIC LAW CHARGES BUTTER '--1UK. Denied U wrlf 6T habeas' corp"usVDr." T. X VGrigg, Butte; phylfciafa ' tharg'Sd ' vHh vte lation of th-? nar-cotle-nis, wa'vat' liberty 'today pending an appeal Atflr IheU. S. circuit cir-cuit court at SanrFrancisco. - " i turRey'bOsinesb 'good ! ? SALT LAKB' CITY, ApHl 9. UBl J The Northwest Tttrkey Growers .asoxsiattowlaifgestWganlUbliibr 5'litUftl VrV.liX:T'..V51l its1' klnaih th"e7wcIdwill:inari0t: turkeys thii year, it was pVeiicted !by association's executive jCommi.-tee jCommi.-tee in session here today. 4 . CjliEEll 'CASE '.DECIDED KE sYORK,, April "9. ttSRAn in born child' is. ''bdrn"V from -vhe-i tirn ."ors conception, r within .the ;.meanjwg , of. the law.1 .Surrotfatej ..kj.i..-n: . J. s- '! ' ..:v,rJ. ;. .. : .juogi, 'vvingaa.e so ruiea-. wuen "ns -handed down aV declstdtf, that-Ja child b6i n k seven: an"a U orie-half nionths'after'Vthe. .'death hof a tesr tat'or r,was entitled- tb share equally ih'an estata-witK the-rhildren- bom and living at the" lime of thV testator's tes-tator's death. , . - CREW IS RESCUED .. NEW ORLEANS, La.f. April . (lin The crew of the r disablfc Newipuhdfcbd - f ishmt schbonel; Harry imd Verna, "has-been reicued in ntifAJjanttc fry, the Vterw Orleans7 steamship oapiriero: ; - RnJRDER CHARGE fADE , CNfEW:YORK? April 9Amfetttff Stein. 32L;. known -to v poiica ,aa a1 Broadway Tacketeer;,-;dope'.'peddler and petty ..thief, was Charged today with the' murder ;Vlvlan' Gordon Robbery vwai ith motive - of -he slaying, police said. - ' - OPERATE ON HAROLD. LLOYD LOS ANGELES, AprlU9(ttE Harold Lloyds scr?en cotp;ediansiic- cesstuuy unaewenx , Mi pperatwn for chrbnic: appendicitis at'Jthe Good Samarllan,- hospital;- 'h-ere v today. Lloyd . was bn the - operating table 30 minutes. . MONTEj CARLO, ;Monaco; : Aprjl 9 . (ftiurMary - Gardebvi)pera stoger, war serlouslyv ill -With bronchitis today; to-day; Sb cancelled an engagement to 6lng ."La- Tosca" at. the opera house here.- ;. . : BEERY BIOTHE)i"'DEApS-HQLLYWOODCah,? BIOTHE)i"'DEApS-HQLLYWOODCah,? Jpril 9 (ttP) -nMrs.vNoah ' BeeryIi, m6ther of NoaTi - and i Wallace ) Beery; fflni actors, died? t&biit hdme here toi-day.J,No"ah toi-day.J,No"ah fBeery'ttras1 at the !bed- sidev"; while wailac warf reported soniewhereftnAhe middle west on an airplane tour..- .'; TheD.as: mm it T NEW-YORK, ' April 9. feEHThe1 Tiaanwbo-waa 4nstrumental. in' converting con-verting Sjyr Arthuri Cban "Doyle tb Spiritualist ; .abandoned J, the ' ;busl-ess ;busl-ess of Jteinga.:medium;toc,ayjcon. f!&sed he' wa$X fkeftafid threati' ened to become a cementileman s.he.could roakejdemt1lving.2 What fs lmore; Nino .Pecoraro demonstrated , ast night.- some, of the "tricks , wVth which he i. baffled audiences in, more thaii 1.0CO .se-ancejr; .se-ancejr; 4 called forth Paladlno,; his latoou jEpiritvoice" and jpybduced a- messagafrp'm iliwy fTHaudlnl.fii S" Explaining Uhat peworr business, 'had driven htin ojit'jf the:;nieaiunt business, Pecoraro said he was torn between being p a, feemfest salesman 1 or 4'p6rtraitrpaihter. r-'flcf "tathet j leaned toward selln cement, be cause - the turnover -is quicker. iml there isnTfany initial investment." Salutary f: Finds" Inspector: Board . of ITnsanitary From Health Condi tion; To Replace Pipe. LThe presenco' of a number .of c Jerking- 5 and - oyerflQwing cesspools in th est pari of Provo toiislibites J positive ihenacW- to rthehealth ibf the entire community in the opirP ion -ot: Q. O. Pickel. sanitary engineer' off th.eV- UtaltA-statd board ! Of 'health: Whd made an inV spectibh. here r Tuesday and " Wed- Increasing1 Menaces E I The 'danger from these conditions will increase a hundred-fold with the pproachr of the fly season, acf cording tof the .inspector who considers con-siders the 'situation fraught with serious consequences -In ease of an outbreak "of typhoid. : ; ' . Th. number -of overflowing cesspools cess-pools irf this section -.which is, not served! 'with sewer facilities ; is. bound - Jo- Jricrease steadily,' Vather thknKdimltiish. says- Mr. PckelThe Utah cbxmty jair was-, pointed bvj oa vuT. jiuisg iwiivic tiuuuic ia, iiKeiy to Voccur before long through' the filling trp 'of t the. cesspool there. . Following his Inspection of the area; embraced In the proposed sewfeH'distriet JMr. Picket was irt conference with -Mayor Ellertson' and one-jjof the other-members of cussed details ' in .ootinectlon with theclty .waterworks' system with Commissioner Whitehead- and Xnark KevreU, superintendent. ,.une section or. iyu reet or 15-mcn vitrified pipe near Spring Dell,, part of the flow line which supplies the city? 'system was condemned as unsatisfactory un-satisfactory because of a vitrified sewer-Dine from the summer home W-'Dr-.de'Brfmhali-hlch crosses -above the- water . pipe. This section '.wiir be'replaced immediately immediate-ly r.wlth 'cast Iron pipe, "according to Commissioner " Whitehead. Mr.'3 Picket IS a 'strong advocate of chlorinatioh fqf tity water systems sys-tems ; and ' while v hereJhnrged this xnethqd bf. purification, before the city officials. The newer method of chlorination, by. means . .bf ammonia am-monia s chloride, he Heclaredv to 1 be' ideal' because of the absence of the i peculiar chloride, taste' so noticeable in .the. present method of chlorin-atlon. chlorin-atlon. - . " ; Drawingjot a jury venire to serve1 for the April' term, of ,the court has been" completed 'y the, county clerk's bf Oct. Th3 following .Utah county' Scitizenshave, ' been summoned' sum-moned' to appear Jlonday, April 20 at lOvxn.2, jrohn'Beck, yern Lar-sen;" Lar-sen;" : American ITork; P, , W, ' Jlad-settr1 Jlad-settr1 Lake- View; Fred Kopp, Lloyd Gray;:.J. HLd Arznltstead, Pleasant Grove; ?Claly Beesley, Wilford Lar- sen, laplcton. .- ' Saraft- iA: Williams, : Annie : C. ' Bradford, ; Edna Lossee, ' Jessie - G. juariuiam,' izra warner .., u. Rovfe, Spanish t .Fork ; Cheste'jr Steele,, uoanen ; uesszora, Rhoda C, Rowlands, Carl . C. Nel- sont Don W. Conover, Anton B.' FoUand "Violet -ftX Aird,VBeulah .OverleyProvb1; JWattie Palfreyman .'fTheH-::' J Vnh'n?s& nringvPlr. ipra w, Zimmerman, ts. 1 x .; w.ui-liher, w.ui-liher, JLehl; "J.R.. Peay'BenJamln Jame 'A: Gardnery -Payson;1 Bessie AV CbleJphh CardelL- Santaquin: j- Joseplv 'fivana? Orem yWells : vO. siecnamr fieasant .view. ; DIS5HSS CASE . A casef against, ; Ella;: DksteacL charglng;'poesessnw I1' was 'ordered disniissed by .Judge i Maurice Hard ing, , Thursday'. ,Th&4 woman irwasn arrested July 28 by Si A Willis; formerly for-merly a deputy?.Sheriff.':'." ' - ' . i l s) y., .,i rfo-tttV-y ' v 'iipTORISX ia FUfED-i ... v Graydon Robinson was sentenced to" pay a flne.of $25 Thursday in the city court on a charge of reckless JteVENlREv J. JEIGHT Guarding ; Western ' Pupils " : r - ., rair - 1 -f -tern) , j. y?rrA' w S' mm iiiVX f' H' ?r Like a "Foreign Legion" is the Seattle 'schoolboy patrol. " Here is a representative patrol listening to' Sergeant G. W;3&fmhalt. The oatrol ih- l JlbJ) Japanese, , Spauesian, JheedUncgrq; 7 The patfol-plah" not only has reduced the danger of 'automobile accidents, which was the original crisis that brought about the project, but also plays an' important part in prevention of Juvenile crime and delinquency. Today, 1260 schoolboys are included in the patrol ranks. KG. SPEAKS AT T t i i-.i University ! Students Hear Talk About Utah State Road System .. In. 1909 when the state road commission, com-mission, was. organized t he sum of $27,000 was' appropriated to be spent on the roads. The esUmated expenditure for 1931, is $5,560,000. So stated Preston G. Peterson of the state . road commission - in an addres to the students of Brigham Young .universit on Wednesday. The --subject ; ; of Commissioner Petftrsbns address . was the road work' of the state but in'beginnlng he could not forbear, making a few con3rnients,"tfn tJieTdaysgone -by whin he was a student of the Utah State Agricultural college j and me the 'J student :rft Brigham Young. uniWrsirylli athletic con .tests, and later, pome 21 years aero. whn he was a member, of the fac-f Wty rof B. Y. Ul 'Hi6ppke. or the firsft abbreviated costumes worn by basketball &en jas being , the occasion occa-sion of a sekTnorj ff onr the rostrum. Road Expenditures--- - , ' ! J . ..' : y J The expenditures on road work in Uta'hHBald-JiltPeteson.. are greater great-er than ..those of he university;, the agricultural e6llege, nd other pub lie Jnstitutipns jof the iTtate. . Commissioner Peterson" paid a glowing compliment. ' to.vBrigham Youngt for the plendid,.work done by the' pioneer' leader in beginning the; road Twork ; of v th staled T many., places evidences are to b fouhdV'the speaker; said, of the ex cellent judgment of Utah's first governor... The wide- streets of oui MtContinued On Page Five) PETERSON First Awards Announced In ( Spiiiiisfe Forfe' Steck EixhW SPANISH. FORK, April 9. Wlt)i clear skies adding -to the pleasure and agreeableftess of th&uevenJL the seventh . annual. -Utah county livestock show, opeh.td-' its v - gates Wednesday-"' morning. .Placing., of exhibits and getting them ready' for the Judging occupied the morning hours. Six, high school judging, teams took , part :'tf ia- lh? Judging during, tb morning ruAder the,.su- pervlsion of J' F; Skinner of tho Spahfsiv Fork, high fechooL - " v Outstanding ExhiblW n A f ; ; . . Strrfnrtia wirtlrf n ttnr oth TT 3b Vi t PAGES TODAY & FT' RM CRIME FADES Criminologist Wants $10,000 More to Complete "Investigation SALT LAKE CITY, April 9. US'.) The mystery, of the murder of Mrs. Dorothy Dexter Moormeister, beautiful doctor's wife, in the late winter of 1930 will probably be relegated rel-egated definitely to the limbo' of unsolved crimes. E. O. Heinrich, noted Berkeley, Calif., criminologist, will complete the investigation of the Moormeister Moormeis-ter murder for $10,000 $100 a day for "100 days, 4the VhVrif fs of flee has' revealed.. For $1000 he Will tell the sheriff's .office all' about facts gleaned .during hi - investigation, shortly after the crime. took place. " Sheriff Grant Young- indicated that the offers would not.be accepted, ac-cepted, . t , , MrS'. Moormeister, ' wife"' of, Dr, Frank Moormeister, was brutally murdered on a suburban Salt Lake road. Apparently she was first knocked unconscious. Then the murderer dragged her body onto the road arid drove an automobile back and forth across her body. . Heinrich was hired to solve the mystery. He has indicated from time to time that he had strong suspicions of the identity of the -actual" perpetrator but hasn't publicly pub-licly revealed his findings. - SherifYotingt takes the position that the criminologist is obligated to give the sheriffs office a complete com-plete report of his investigation, so far without extra compensation. t ; American Fork', Pleasant Grove! Lincoln, Spanish Fork and Paysoni icuuita o& m? juumg ana xne fWioning teams wiU be announced later, - ii . - :-u Outstanding; tyOiiblts were SelbV and.: J.: F. "Dixon's Hereford ?herd IV.'Nuttall of. Pro vo -with Ws .Jersey string jvO-C. ' Doke of Eph-raini; Eph-raini; with "his Vtringf.of Aberdeen Angus catUerGebrge HerietC-o'f SpingvilIe;.VIth his string of Aber deen Angus catUe; ' Ivan Ballard, MOO EISTER XContfnulSrolnVag 5 PRICE "FIVE 'CENTS 4 - ' r Ly .1 Coal Miner ? Fatally Injured V , -ruf iajw f-.vyerv .tun banjkmenV Spanish Foxk; Canyon; Three Are Unhurt ' Mike Boionac, 40," sometimes some-times known as Mike ?Utah?.7 coal miner "front the Sweet mine hf Carbon' county,' was killed . Wednesday' evening ' when his car a light roadster, ( went over a ten-foot embankment embank-ment arid" overturned after colliding with another car pn a curve in .Spanish ; Fork canyon, j ' Three; hikers who Vwere. riding with Bozohac escaped unhurt. '. I ; & ii. r 't. gi"- i wmm: uracturea Skull ;: . ' The mah " sustained a4rractured skull, broken, neck and crushed i chet He died a few minutes after - ' the accident v v. Bozonac was identified byheriff -E. Q. Durnell by means of 'papers and lattoo (narks found- . on . ths maa4teriblodyf5rM to the Hatch mortuary In Provo. . - The ;ttatalf crask:becurred Bozonac who was traventhg'up ihe canyon collided; with a ear driven by O. P. Senior, 40, bf SpringviUe who was jrplng west, dpwn the can-, '. yon. Riding with the latter .were . Mrs. Senior, C. P Ward,; 20, and v Floyd Steward 30, - aH.bf Spring" ' . ville. None of the occupants ot this" car were hurt . ' 1 . '. , . , The hikers who ,were riding 'ri , me aeatn car were Edward-, and. Lloyd Steel and' Earl Nell, "all Kenil worthy The license number -' on the car shows that the' machine A was registered in the name of Mrs. H. W. Gentry, Sweet . Mine., z . The accident- was - reported . to Sheriff Durnell by JohniUayiQr, pt Sunnyside who was travelling behind be-hind Bozonac' car. He went back to Thistle where he phoned to the sheriffs office. x - . ' ;. " " Sheriff Durnell and Deputy . J. P. Gourley went to the scene bf the v accident, ,10 miles above Thistle to investigate the crash :' .;' t -. ; A , No inquest will 'he held, accord-' ing to County 'Attorney-1. E. Brock- bank. .' . ;!Nlce,lookih,iha,t"yoU got there, said . BUT. thej;Barbert as , he. made thf customer comrortaDie jnv tie cnaic "Yes,- thought I : would get me one' of the hew spring shades and . .. A.,. . ., .. iii ji ri i- "it 'Vh' rn 'mTl''- Biilihe-Biril ' ' Discusses Awnings --, - t ' ;- - -.. ue up. wjaaie ior once,; re mieortn customer. "Don't suppose though, 'that it will stay new-looking' for" very long." j. j i What you goin' to doj ;go.to: a : baseball game and use your hat for - ,a pennant?" asked BxlL "No, not that?. replied .tteui:' tomec, ; tBut if . you've ever .walked down Center - street an4; forgot to duck; your dom,e when iy outwent" --under some . of ; the awnings, you know,: that- the old: lid is due for acleaiilnjg after the s$con4- trip.' f -, . am sure jne owners ; jor-tne buildings f have - neve? 4 thought of ' . it, but it pertainly;is , a nuisance The edge of the iwnlngs'are Covered Cov-ered with soot and- smoke And dirt . i -' ?. ... - . (Continued On Page'Flva) , ( X - i Water Shortage? ; ! In UtaKFearefc sal Slake city: aptS 9. :.54-utah ;-'.. is. . faced, ,this "summer witli aierlouswater ' shortage unlesst.heavy late: spring t:ndjl: early v summer..: rainfalls alleviates the sltuta- -i itioo."1 '.'ir " X;: AT formal;. weather;, bureau 't jreport:on meuntain snowfall -; reveals ' that ' snow 'depth' at t- - irus time ; is ; oevween u - p er , . cejitana. u per- cenv 01 nor-. - maLv According . to resent - indications the A sum njr ' ""water supply will . be " at ils . " lowest point in over 15 yeara. |