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Show o 4 . . . , , , WHAT FOLKS SAY: "There r afe .no ladies any more, since worrienkind became so mascu-Hne.'-Mme. Luiza Tetrazzini, Italian operatic soprano. ; v , .:- HAVE YOU SEEN The Springville Art Exhibit t Sunday is , your last opportunity to view the marvelous display of masterpieces by America's foremost artists. J s J - t Phones .494-495 PRICE FIVE CENTS FORTY-SIXTH- YEAR, NO. 182 F,R0y:O, UTAH COUNTY, U TiA H. FRIDAY APRIL 29, 1 932 : i. CO TODAY' ArtRUf Bdsbane , -MCotfyrighC;W32 They Spin, arid Chop ; Heads - ; Pound Drops, British Smile". Brigham Young's I.O.U. DR. STERLING AND FELLOW EXPLORERS for the Smithsonian Institute .have been visiting the Ji-varoa, Ji-varoa, strange, undersized South American savages that live- near the heaawaters or tne Amazon. , Those savages would not understand under-stand you If you- quoted : "When Adam delved and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?" for amdngJlvates, women do the delv-lng,. delv-lng,. digging, all .hard labor, whUe men 4 sit -an -day,-and spin cotton used i to make their dainty skirts, of which they are r very proud. , They have one -"manly'' occupation, occupa-tion, head-hunting. - . The most im portant Jivaro Is he . that shows the 'greatest- number of i heads chopped from the enemy. One old chief, much honored in the tribe, possesses sixty skulls. , tiWt airaayonstrou3 that even tne lowest savage should collect neaaa or otner .men, or.no use io the collector . ;? V -,,To a future generation it will seem equally mdnstrous that even A. 1. A- - 1J' -!tAAfc me luwesii Bavage nuuuiu vuucyi and accumulate money, of no use to him, and needed . by others. , I ft 2 5' I.f.'f.: - HAViS IUU WUriUJXU x xx Ja. BRITISH POUND STERLING? IT SLIPPED? BAJDLYi PAT jBE-FORE jBE-FORE YESTERDAY AND AQAIN YESTERDAY. And the British do not repine.; According to some of our wise financiers, Great Britain1 would like the pound tto -go lower, for reasons" Mcfef shail ttft,r ex-i pounded. .'iThe BriUsh - have recently established estab-lished a special emergency rund of tn'e. hundred. and fifty million pounds,' seven hundred. and, fifty nilUlon dollars at par. Those that ought to know say 4 tne urmaft axe , VsJng this' money to buy AnTeri'can gold doJlarsr The V pound 'allpptog "nikea'that Vena irpobalSleliWhef tc nation uses (ts money to buy, another an-other kind of nidney its own money Perhaps that buying of dollars 'means that the Bfitlah are getting to . the United, SUtea, t eh. -the rrtoratoTlum - ends; , If. so,v three v cheers ! '. , r ,;i . 1 When any nation is deeply In debt,. It helps government to make its money cheap.: t1, s France, after the war, owed four hundred billion francs, eight billions bil-lions of dollars. A debt that could .never have been paid. z -v The : French deliberately cut, 80 irom thf value of, tnerr rranc, re-, rducing It to leaf than four cents. mid reducing ; their ; public . debt -itrcm eighty billion dollars to less than twenty billion' dollars. EngT .land -atttir-jdttieriii&itrilr lent francs,: at the, old value, to France, itxad to take payment' at twenty & rs on te dol Ar. - Unfair Practices In Be Avoided. A prop was placed under the tbtter&& dairy industry in Utah county Thursday evening eve-ning iwheivgrocers and dairymen dairy-men of Provo met u and decided de-cided to icease selling: butter, milk and cream. : Jelow cost, and ton quit? jusinjtnese com-modltlesiatt com-modltlesiatt low-price leaders in their selling campaign.. The meeting was called by the' chamber c cominerce'attth instigation insti-gation of Jacob Coleman, chairman chair-man of the Trade-at-Home committee, com-mittee, and - included 5. representa-tivea representa-tivea from dairies, groceries,, , the chamber of commerce and county farm organizations. Plan Is Propose! According 4to-the plan, grocers will be notified of the market price of better, to be based oh current cur-rent quotations,, and will cease', using us-ing this conodity as a "football," as it was expressed by W. R. Butler, But-ler, president of the chamber of commerce, and selling it under cost price. Mils: and'Cream, it was de- tcided, will come under . the .sanle regulation.. ' , i . ., . The action of the assembly Thursday was not thought to have any immediate effect of giving thtf producer any higher price for rus products, ; Dut win iena 10 nan. ; a situation which is. threatening to wipe out one of the biggest industries indus-tries in the county. Mr. Coleman anDointed a com mittee-of five to draft a resolution, regarding the sale of butter and farmvJroaucts. The committee -is comorised of W. J. Thay ne,' chair iriAn- fIVi TTansen. RalbK HavJ waWraTey' andClaytbn' Jenkins. . . - , . ," . The chamber ' of commerce ' will contact other civic clubs - in cities Land, towns throughoutthe. county and attempt to have .the entire cqunty fall in line with the JJiove- ment. . ' Industry Threatened ).ine assemoieu , grocers usu agreed to quit the sale of .oleomar aarine In order to give, a boost to the local industry and thus bene fit everyone, including the buyers, (Continued On Pae Twor WtiM Has $5t00dM&eliet Plan Done For farmers. Senators Asking )t (UikM, ill . I I I Uu. t iZJt II ZZI ' "FARM PRICE dF WHEAT odJy r n L 1 r l- - t i .1 CCNTS PCM tUi 29 221 19 177 155 133 III 68 1910? ' 1 ' "St J- V 13 If 1 'Mi X' Si"', r ' A - .i. 66 OFFICER HELD FOR KILLING ! St Anthony Night Watchman Facing .Formal Charge. Fluctuations in the price of wheat since the Federal Farm Board Starte'd its unsuccessful $102,000,000 attempt to halt faUlng prices u199 Is fthcHv' ill chart above. The chart is baaed on data compiled com-piled by tho U. ."Department of .Agriculture on farm prices for. wheat since i910. Inset shows Senator; George V Norrts, sponsor of peridlilg senate' investigation of the Farm Board. Janfes C. Stone, arj feoai chidrj ; ' ' " i i ' Senate Probers to Determine If Federal Farm Board Shoufd 86' Continued : IriT Existence ; Charges Investigated mm ' . t m m m . - as m . .. ;o?KWKeacn tne irutn, iMoms says 4-f 1 v Great Britain! internal debt now ainountfl tnlrty-five billion i dollars, a heavy load. . If the value tct the" pound can be cttt in two, and the debt paid With cheaper i.ioney, that debt will be reduced to about Seventeen t billion dollars, i f Great Britain can reduce the val-: val-: ue of her pound by printing plenty ;ef nife! bank f notes and using them via ouy American aouars, wmcn i means American gold, . and thua 3 two ' birds will be killed' with bhe 4- Continued , on' Page Six) CleavLiiptfay7 For PtVS&fctora In Stony Ford BY t KENT WBIOIIT - Special Ccrreapondent STOKX 5QROt Aria April 29-The- annual spring clean- -up on. ,'here.;. Instead of cleaning up the town, aa most burgs do; Etony:. Ford sends 'dut sfor ita. corps of : desert prospectors and cleans .them. The rospectora are very - pict'ures4ua and In favor with , - tourists, biitthey: have to be cleaned ;p every spridg or they get hidden? behind) their; ; facial :oUag-;;1y'sv.;y - The vVrospectbhi i are first , runiJover T with i lawn : mowers rto reojove ihbst i of j their' wlnakersThen J tbeyar ; loakjBd;in? lye fdr a day add , ' gone; over with: currycdmbs. Nlne layers "of "dirt are , re- moved,' leaving two " - layers, so that the, men .won't catch cold. r:.:v- . .v'. r, Following this, the prospec- - tors . are hosed down t by the -fire department and gone ' over'i with ', sandpaper to . , smooth the at 'off.. ;The are then rpady for exhibition dur- ' ing.Lha. summer months. WHf Some Things Happen With copper prices . 'way down and huge supplies pos sible at cheap rates in foreign nations. Vou'd think; American copper barons would be ask-; intr congress for a tariif. uut they're hot, and nere ar wny : : American concerns .control not only American ore bodies, but also tne ioreign iiem where cheap productfoft xules. Thus. Anacbnda Copper is heavily interested in Chilean and - Mexican . fields. Kenne- cott controls Utah Copper and is tied in with South Af rican concerns controlling the vast African supplies. ;It doesn't matter to these h u g e, almost - monopolies WHERE they get copper ; if they, jban get . it cheaper abroad, they merely shut down American mines anddet American- miners ; go .jobless EDITOR'S NOTE: Following is the first of three authoritative authori-tative stories cn the history of the Federal Farm' Board, which optjf will be under investigatilqn r by special U. S. .Senate cpteinittee. r,, V ? BY JRODNEY DUTCHEB . - Vvu NEA Service Writer , (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) WASHINGTON, April 29. The Federal Farm Board, which has lost an estimated $200,000,000 in public money during a three-year attempt to avfth farmers, is about to -cro on trial before a senate committee which LwlUtry to decide whether it should beoverhauled or simply junked. 4.1 represenis a. sovwumcm m-vs Vestment of a half billion dollars in a move.ihat was designed tq stop: L tne termic price aecune. ; . The board and the Agricultural Marketing Act under whicH it operates oper-ates will be probed and prodded, assailed - and ; defended. Private dealers in grain? and cottons lead those who propose, abolition of the whole system, whereas the larger national organizations . of farmers insist that .it be preserved and be given greater" powers to become useful to agriculture. .Price Slump Scores bit charges have been hurl ed at -the board and its methods, but the underlying impetus to this lnvestieatloh by the Senate Agri culture committee was furnished by the board and the 500,000,OOU act were - recommendea,v,by tne Hoover administration as the Desi possible farm reiiet: measure, wey have been .almost utterly, impotent in the attempt to check toboggan ing farm prices and have cost the taxpayers a nuge. suiu ui. wwucj. , Senator jQeorge w. xs orris oi Nebraska, Ne-braska, sponsor of the in'vestiga- U6n. says the Senate- "only wants to make an absolutely fair investl- eatloh for the tnith" He so framed his i resoluUoh ; that private grain and otton dealera, will also be in vestigated, with, especial reference to their alleged attempts to' hinder or wrecx ine .r vm oqaru. . ? - Ten big' Questions' Norns ana other farm state senators want to I determine are these: 1 Vhethet tne board, regardless of its (200,000,000 losses, nasneipea or hindered the farmers. 2-Whther it sKbukL be abolished or continued with activities re- I stricted Id encouraging co-operat ive marketing and making loans or continued with power to use the equalization j fee or. the export de- ucutui lay- - f J i i' (S-rWnether the costly - stabiliza tion operations were in accordance with the law: . " 4 Whether the act has had fair tryput or whether its success- lur operation was renaerea impos (Continued on Page Six) n y::o:-j.x.:-:-:-v:o.:-:w.ii-.;-:.:.:.:.:-:.:: ivji ikc WM jAGif Bachrach ' 7 J I N EWS WIRES By UNITED PRESS 8 OREM C.0FC. CALLS MEETING Vital Trade Problems To Come Up For Discussion M. I. A. FINALS Pleasant View ward made a clean sweep of the musical events at the Sharon stake honor night, neia Thui"sday evening at the . Lincoln high school, winning first places in the; ladles' chorus, male chorus, and mixed chorus, sterling ciuii was director and Mrs. Leora Ashton ... - A 1 was . accompanisi. tor an irw groups. Lake View ward tooK botn puDiic speaking events, Ada Jorgenson winning for the u leaner giris ana Weldon Taylor for the "M" Men. Viola Madsen, also of Lake View, won the retold story for the Junior arirls. while Leo Rowley, of the Timpanogos ward won In the Van guard division. . The. prize drama was "The t'lorai ShopA presented by the Sharon ward under the direction of Mrs. Cornelia Green. In the contest danc two couples were 4 chosen. Erma Jones and John Rowley of tne Timpanogos wara, nrsi ana Donna Madsen and Howard Anderson, An-derson, pf the Vineyard ward, sec-and. sec-and. The basketball . trophy was awarded , to the Pleasant View ward , f The concluding event of the evening eve-ning was a dance for the members of the stake given by the officers of the Young Men's organization as a- forfeit for losing .the contest in attendance at union meeting which has been running throughout the season. . -' Kavachevich Rites ' ' Set' For ay Marriages Drop; piydrces Iricreasln.vltan .fifounty Marriages In Utah, rcounty . fell . from; 439 4n 1930; to 409 in 1931 for a decrease of nearly seven 'percent, according to figures released recently re-cently from- the U. S. Bureau of Census at Washington. -.Divorces, on the other hand, have Increased: in -Utah county to 87 'in 1931 from 68 4n' 1930 for a Jump of nearly 28 percent Tlxe figures for Utah county were ! population was. 2.01 w in 1 1 1931, obtained, by the census" bureau through . Frank., Salisbury, ;."Utah county clerk. f , N In the state of kUtah there were 5.7S3 marriages performed in Utah as compared with 3,649 in, 1930. rep- percent. In . 1922 there vwere 1L233 A L- marriages performed, vf - The 'divorces 5 increased in the .state in. 1931- over, 1930 by. 1 per-centf per-centf or 1,028 over ,1,016. In Utah there were 24 marriages annulled in 1831, one' of which was annulled in, Utah county., - In the atatethe number of marriages' mar-riages' per" .1000 population in 1931! was 11J2 as against 11.1 in 1930. The number of, divorces per 1000 of the as aealnst 2.00"iHi93t: t)?THe least number of divorces re-' corded in any county In the state were) in Wayne - county ' with 20 marriages and no" divorces Tecbrd. ed. The "grealiE"nUme' weie mar- resenting an Increase ; of .89 .or .1.61 ried th Salt Lake county, which re- 1. xecorda Z K; ma r rtages aqd 579 divorces. 'rftti Funeral services for Mrs. Helga Buntldg, .Kavachevich, 47 will be held Sunday at 2 p. m. in the Provo Second ward chapel. Friends may call at tho family : home, Seventh South and Ninth West streets after 10 a. m. Sunday and Saturday eve- nlng at ;the " Hatch ; Mortuary. ,s All Rebekahs are requested, to attend at-tend the services of Sister. Kavachevich Kavache-vich in' a .body and to wear the white1-dresses.. Members are asked tq meet at the home: ; : . All members of. the Neighbors of Woodcraft, .lodge'are asked to meet at 1230 Sunday at the Kavachevich home to attend the services in a body. 5 ' Qrem chamber of commerce is launching on the. second phase of its farm-improvement project next Wednesday evening at a 'mass meeting to be held, in the Sharon stake seminary building. Four major problems of farming and marketing are scheduled to go under discussion. The program, which will begin at 8 p. m. is under the direction of the industrial committee' com-mittee' of the , chamber with J. Erval Christensen and Ray Gill- rtiart In charge. Marketing Is Topio-- The chief part of the project is a cooperative measure designed to bring about better marketing conditions con-ditions for farm products Under the direction of Roy Park, the problem of - making leaders out of farm products in Provo stores .will be brought outi with a Provo merchant mer-chant leading the discussion. T Hand in hand with this project Is the one headed by Ray Glllman which has as its aim the featuring of community, county and state products by, retail stores. Bos and girls farm projects will Be explained by Charles H. Davies, agricultural insructor at the Lincoln Lin-coln high school, who has this third unit of the meeting under his manage man-age nient. Mr." Davies will make a detailed -explanation of the various 4-H club activities undertaken by boys , and girls, on farms here and point "out the value of these projects. pro-jects. Farm Planning Ivan Burr, ex-president of the Orem chamber has in charge the project of better farm planning and management. One of the coun ty agents will discuss this subject, according to Mr, Christensen, and a personal visit of the county, agent. Lyman H. Rich,' is planned to complete com-plete this activity. The county agent will advise each farmer as. to how he can improve his methods and Increase his. income. -; . i hi The complete project was planned plan-ned - by' the Orem' chamber - at the time'of the membership drive last -month , and the details have been worked out inmeetings since that time.-. " " . j- J - u " Clifton Pyhe iuid Mervel Walker chairmen .!;" of " the entertainment committee; ; have in charge the musical program that will go along with - the rest of the evening entertainment. The Weathei ST. ANTHONY, Ida., April 29 (U,R) Grant Powell, town marshall of St. Anthony, was today free under $2500 bond after his arraignment late yesterday on a charge of in-vountary in-vountary manslaughter. Powell is charged with killing kill-ing Harold Helgeson, 25, Logan painter and " interior decorator, early Tuesday morning. The complaint com-plaint against the officer was filed by County Attorney E. H. Hillman. Hillman takes the position that Powell had no justification in believing be-lieving that Helgeson had committed commit-ted a felony and hence should not have discharged his revolver. Respected Citizen ; Late Monday night two women reported to Deputy Sheriff Jess Jackson that they had been insulted in-sulted by a man. Jackson notified Powell and, together, the two officers offi-cers set out in search for the cul prit. Eventually they came on to Helgeson and ordered him to halt for questioning, it was said. In stead Helgeson fled, they claimed, whereupon Powell allegedly opened fire. He told authorities he intended in-tended to fire over Helgeson's head, but the second shot struck the Logan man in the back of the head. Helgeson died a short time later. Investigation revealed that Hel geson possessed an exemplary character char-acter and reputation; that he was married and the fattier of a small child,, and that he was reported to be the brother of Johannes Eden raegewttrWrgfalSsisuTpTb came to thi' country from Norway five years ago arid had been a respected re-spected citizen of Logan. Authorities said that at the time of the shooting, neither Powell or Jackson were In uniform. KIMBALL PASSES AWAY SALT LAKE CITY. April 29 (UJR Six weeks illness irom an organic organ-ic disease from which I'here could be no cure, claimed the life last hight of Albeit E. Kimball, 67, prominent business man. Kimball was president of the Utah Fire Clay company, director of the First National bank of Salt Lake and also director of the First Security Trust company. R!1 i? 1 1 " ' HEAR PLEAS BOMBS WOUND JAPANESE SHANGHAI, April 29 (U.R-The (U.R-The five Ugliest Japanese of-ilclal of-ilclal at Shanghai, who played the most important roles in the recent Sinoapahese engagement engage-ment were wounded today by a bomb explosion aimed to annihilate an-nihilate Japan's Shanghai leaders. lead-ers. The bomb wan thrown on to tho reviewing platform at a Japanese military parade. Fifteen thousand Japanese celebrating Emperor Illrohlta's birthilay auiv a bomb explode at the feet of officials on the reviewing' stand. Where they were easy target for the bombers. bomb-ers. The ci-owd Was singing the Japanese national anthem, "Kimigayo.' MARINES IN FIGHTING MANAGUU, Nicaragua, April 29 (U.EV Nicaraguan national guards-ment guards-ment led by United States marines captured tine main insurrectionist camn near the Honduran border today and killed 10 insurrection ists, including Florencio Silva, chief aide to Augustino Sandino. TWO PROVOANS V. . HURT IN CRASH Mrs. Cora , "Wilson, 284 East Fourth North, suffered a broken collar bone and. a number of cuts and Bruises Thursday afternoon, when the car In which she was riding rid-ing driven by Bill Wilson, 19, was struck In the rear by a car driven by Mrs.- L. T. Whitney, Salt Lake. Toung Wilson was bruised and cut and the car was demolished. BbthriMrs. . Whitney and Mrs. C. C. Neslen, a passenger, were uninjured. unin-jured. .. i The accident happened when Mrs. Whitney attempted to pass the Wilson car hear the Point-of-the-Mountaln. She turned her car too far to the left, then as she attempted attempt-ed to right it, lost control of the car and struck the other machine. E. Loveless, motorcycle patrolman, Investigated the accident. Mrs. , Wilson was rushed to a physician in American Fork by James Parker, Salt Lake, who was passing. r She was "moved to Provo later. "Mrs. Whitney's car was not damaged. 4 BAIL LOAN APPROVED WASHINGTON- April 29 (U.R The interstate commerce' commission today approved the application of the Salt Lake and Utah railroad to borrow for two years $300,000 from the Reconstruction Finance dorp-oration. dorp-oration. The road originally requested a three year loan of - fS00,0u-- u PAY CUTS REJECTED WASHINGTON," April' 29 ' 0LP The House late Thursday rejected an amendment to the Omnibus bill providing a five-day week, month's furlougn at half pay and a five percent salary cut for all gov ernment employes with salaries above $1,500. The vote was 118 to 172. Browii Services : - r ' Set ; Fo; Sunday l Funeral services for - Mrs. , Louisa Jane Brown, 81, will be held in the Third Ward chapel, Sunday at 12:30 p m. Friends may call prior to the services $ at the family home,! 279 frorth Fifth West street. . -.I Mrs. . Brown died Wednesday night after a brief Illness. - y v . , ' - ' - v. Utah ' Fair and warmer. V . -" f-" Maximunv temp. I Thursday " : .4S V -Vl-Jl- v.'' - '' J Minimum' temp. 'U Thursday ' iV s ,2S ViNEYABD MAY DAY The- Vineyard ward Primary association as-sociation .will holdsa May day festival Saturday at 2 p. m. at the ward meeting house. PORTLAND RECALL ASSURED PORTLAND, Ore., April 29 (UJ?)- A recall election against Mayor George L. Baker and City Commis sioners John M. Mann was assured today when auditors checked petitions peti-tions and found more than 16,000 voters names attached thereto. The number necessary to force the re call vote was 15,781. FOBIPPI Provo Club Members Urged To Appeal To King. "Send a barrage of tele- a r a Tf ! grams to aenator rving uhu get him to change his vote on .. i it mi. copper, on ana coau mwc remain two days for the senate sen-ate finance committee to put over the tariff on copper we have been working for, and unless Senator King changes his vote, the copper tariff will go down in defeat." Such was the conclusion of the dramatic plea for a copper tamr made by H. A. Smith, consulting mining engineer of Arizona, before the Rotary club Friday noon. Mr. Smith, who is a member of Governor Gov-ernor Hunt's Arizona tariff com mission, founded last year, briefly described the history and the con dition of the copper industry in his plea for protection. "It is of vital concern to Utah and to this Rocky Mountain section sec-tion that we get a tariff on copper," cop-per," Mr. Smith told the assembly. "The mining districts in this state are big consumers of our farm products pro-ducts and are vastly important in the growth of the-territory. In Utah, he stated, there are 17 copper districts, only one of which had been developed to a great extent. ex-tent. Th owners of the big mines In this territory are not fighting for the copper tariff, he pointed out, because they are Interested in the huge mines in Africa and Chile. M. Smith snowed that the reasdi the copper tariff was defeated 1 the senate ' financed committer j Thursday was that Senator Reed 61 - Mjchleanshifled -hla . vote for'uw . protection' of copper because Sena tor King refuse a- "to-vote for local protection. - . ' ..... Winner T-resented , Paul Vincent, Rotary president introduced the speaker, and. also introduced Morris .Duke, Prdvor high school, who recently won first place In the state band contest in the class A cornet solo-divisions Mr. Duke played two eornet solos, accompanied by Helen Penrod. r "J." Clifton Moffitt, principal of the Provo high, thanked the club for-contributing for-contributing enough funds t6 send the Provo high band to the contests, con-tests, held recently In Price., 4 H. A. Dixon made an appeal In -behalf of the chamber of commerce for more memberships in the organization, or-ganization, .which is conducting a drive next week. IS PERISH IN WRECK TOKIO, April 29 (U.R Bodies of IS paaengers on the coastal steamer Kurenal Maru number 5 had been . recovered today and 37 were missing after the ship collided with the Nagato Maru ahd sank off Hirohlma. Thirty passengers were rescued. 46 VOTE FOR REPEAL. NEW YORK, April 29 ILE Forty-six or the 48 states voted for repeal of the 18th amendment, according ac-cording to final returns in the national na-tional poll conducted by the literary liter-ary digest. S. F. PRIMARY SET SPANISH FORK A Democratic primary will be held here Saturday, Satur-day, April 80, at 8 p m., at the city pavilion for' the purpose of electing delegates to the state convention, con-vention, to be held 'at Salt Lake May 28. A chairman and secretary will also be elected. -- Sibbett -Lauds Activities Of Rrdyo Chamber 01 Commerce V : BT GEORGE E. SIBBETT ' Vlcte; President, Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe Company f Under conditions as trying as' these. It is necessary for companies and Individuals to adjust their budgets, and to support those institu tions only whose" continuance is necessary for the common good. It is s veryjgreat temptation to let others carry this burden when the going is hard, with the idea it will again be assumed when' the' load is not so heavy. When it was necessary for our company to decide this question, we realized the . Provo chamber of commerce should be continued. ; During . our i few", years in thia city we saw it at work? when conditions were goodi Its efforts were directed Jtoward making the city a better' place in'whihh'to live and'its beonle more prosperous. - 1 " vWa are very glad' to see liowever, that- when conditions became the reverse Its organization was anfficiently' flexible to change7 its activi ties to. more pressing ohs. The efficient handling, of the unemploy ment. prpniem in useu more tnan justinea our support or tne chamber of commerce; This 'could not have been better taken cafe of by any existing agency -in . PrOvo. Its work affected not only those who ; re ceived- help: hut -practically every; other citizen, and placed everyone under obligation to-the chamber to assist in? whatever way" possible . This is but one Of the many activities which, were carried on -suc cessfully, and we feel'very sure that under its present1 very able manage ment It will continue -to "perform-the many duties which it alone can 'perform,"'' ; - .'tU -" w - ' ' HONOLULU JURY IS DEADLOCKED HONOLULU, T. H., April 29 .CDX) -The mixed blood jury trying four Americans charged with the honor' slaying of a young Hawaiian entered en-tered the second day of deliberations delibera-tions today, apparently deadlocked along racial lines without hope of. a verdict; Circuit Judge Charles S. Davis ordered thajury. locked up for jthe night after defense attorneys ,had failed to win the prosecution's -agreement to. accept "an 11 to lior 10 to 2 vote for a verdict. -"-r- --: . Nobody knows better than -Wash TubbsT that nobpdy can scrap better bet-ter than , 'V , GUESS WHO!. - - - Can you recognize the figure- in black? 1 - ' . - ': This doesn't mean that he's merev ly. sr shadow; of hla old self.-- NO,' SHtEEf He IS hi old self i ' Turn- to . the comic ;'page,f read "Wash Tubbs," and meet an old friend! ; -J t ft- 0 3 a: |