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Show . ... v.- PAGE-EIGHT CentesMiiicil Exposiitioe !e Cm Utah MieMioraitioEi 's Birth of FavorGdl vpRovn yutahu i evening: ;herald Monday, :february2o, i939 OURBOAfcDlNG HOUSE : . -WlTH MAJOR HOOPLE V Measure Introduced Today Provides For Appropriation To Begin Plans For Cultural Exposition in 1947 SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 20 (UP.) Accompanied by a letter of transmittal from Gov. Henry H. Blood, a bill proposing propos-ing creation of a Utah Centennial commission to arrange a world's fair in Utah in 1947 was submitted to the state legis-latur legis-latur eSaturday. The bill embodies recommendations of the 75-man Utah Trail Centennial commission named in 1937 by Gov. Blood on authority given him by a joint resolution passed by the 4 22nd legislature. A copy of the commission's report was appended to the bill. Set Aside 9100,000 To finance the early stages of the work, the bill would set aside $100,000 from the general fund for the Centennial commission's use in arranging purchase of grounds, erection of structures and general preparation. The trail commission's report recommended that preparation for the fair be started immediately, and that it be financed over the years before the Centennial year. It proposed the' Centennial Ex position center in Salt Lake City, but that the entire state and other states in the intermountain region be Included, and that all the fea tures of the area be included in the fair through side trips and special exhibits. Cultural Exposition-Headed Exposition-Headed by David O. McKay, the investigating commission strongly recommended the fair be a "cultural "cul-tural exposition," and "that the nature of the Centennial observance observ-ance be not like the conventional world's fairs, not merely an enlarged en-larged Pioneer's day celebration, but that it be a great natural, historical, his-torical, cultural and spiritual exposition ex-position and commemorative celebration." cele-bration." T The intermountain exposition would open May 1, 1947. and continue con-tinue until October 15, 1947. Fifteen members appointed by the governor, with consent of the penate, would be named on the Centennial commission if the bin crp re enacted. The commission would have powers of a corpor ation in handling funds granted it and in expending anticipated reve nues from the exposition. its members would be named for 10 years without regard to political affiliation, and subject to removal by the governor. Site To Be Selected Scope of the fair would include all communities and scenic, historical his-torical and recreational centers of attraction from Yellowstone park on the north to Boulder dam on the south, and from the Salt Flats on the west to the dinosaur quarries quar-ries on the east, according to the bill. It would authorize the com mission "to hold and maintain an exposition on some appropriate site to be selected by it.'' Purpose of the exposition would be "to portray fittingly the natural natur-al resources and scenic wonders of Utah, the prehistoric culture of the west, the development of irri-eration irri-eration farming, mining, forestry, transportation, culture and the arts." The Trail commission rec ommended this be accomplished through a 19-point program. Utah State Agricultural college at Logan would be charged with preparation of an "Unparalleled exhibition" of the development of irrie-ation. while University of Utah would demonstrate the devel opment of the mining industry. The bill recommends the ex pense of the exposition be kept within resources available from appropriations, private contribu tions, admissions, concessions and other sources. He's a Judas WORTH MILAJOWS: MILLIONS? awo bus -AO-vni i drcvp h wv out: AWJKk5 A AAILLIOMAIRE r I t W ' I al W MStl CSAVE HlfA "THE AIR? A LITTLE WHILE AGO VOLS WERE CROWINS ABOUT HOW SMART -VOU WERE TO WP "THE. HOUSE OP HIAw AS FOR HIS AAOWEYiVOUR TOUSsTIVES ALL, BLOW ' ABOUT HOW -MUCH HOKJEY -thev MAvVE.-STOREO IW-THSiR: HIVES HOW WAS "X TO KMOW THAT THJSOWE' VVASWT TJUST AtJOTHER HOOPLE PROWE WITHAL UMCLE BRUMO WAS THE OMLV HOOPLE WHO . -TOCTTEPAOOLO HORMi AKIOTHBV BOOTED HIAA OUT OF THE ORCHES TRA I C3j O 1999 BY ! INC. T. M. EEC. 0. 6 '' 0 12.-20 BRUr40 WAS A MU3SET I M -THE ROUGH - o- Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued From Page One) Ths Morning AfterTa king Carters Little Liver Pills $&h. XS V i - i m. f f ( IS-.' f'l2 denounced Mussolini's anti-Semitic drive as a cheap "imitation" of Hitler. This so infuriated II Duce that many Vatican leaders antici pated an open rupture and another assault on the church's temporal Dower, regained in 1929 after a 60-vear rift with Italy. Accordingly, the Pope believed that the support of such a power ful country as the United States would be a safeguard against Mus solini's wrath. Fair Monarch of the Mardi Gras , -t -'5 h A 5 E-f ; ::(::::' I - ?y ; $ f. i Record-breaking deceiver is "Billie Borgia," white angora goat. During his time at the Los Angeles stock-rards stock-rards he has led some two million sheep to slaughter. I PRO-AMERICAN Several other factors favoring an American Pope were in Pius' mind, according to those who vis ited with him in recent months. He was influenced by the argument argu-ment that the 20 million Catholics in the United States were the largest group never to have had a papal representative. Further. the church In the United states is the Vatican's chief financial sup port. Also the Pope was extremely fond of the United States and its people. This grew chiefly from a deep respect for American freedom of religious worship. Once Pius remarked to an American visitor: "You ought to cherish your liberty of religion. Over here we are not so well blessed.' Again, when asked why he had not sought a church-state concordat concor-dat with the United States, as he had done in so many other countries, coun-tries, he replied: "Why sign a treaty to gain rights already enjoyed en-joyed by law " ""If ; i 1 r. s - :::o:ra.ii I SUV k v.'.v;.v.'.v.v.X !1 In the News BT UNTTCD. PRESS Rep, Martlii X Kennedy; d.. N. Ytlaming the "chaotic situation' In Mexico on American Ambassador Ambas-sador Josephus Daniels, announced announc-ed today he would urge the ambassador's am-bassador's . recall in a resolution he will introduce jn congress within. a few days , . . Pat Malone, often called "Peck's bad hoy of baseball" for bis vio lation of rules during" his major league pitching days, lias retired from baseball to open - a cafe in Altoona, Pa. . Eugene Legett, 36, executive officer of-ficer of the national -emergency council -and former newspaper correspondent, died. in Washington, Washing-ton, D. C., yesterday . Wendell Berge, special assistant assist-ant to the U. S. attorney general told a Rochester; N. Y., audience that the United States is "determined "deter-mined to escape the twin evils of private economic regimentation and political dictatorship. " . . Franklin Waltman, puMicity director for the Republican national na-tional committee, suggested that politicians whcr subscribe a twin code of Communism and Liberalism Liberal-ism be dubbed "Communocrats" . . North Pacific Regional Forester Fores-ter C. J. Buck has been named as special assistant in major phases of the forestry service and will be stationed in Washington. D. C. Buck will be succeeded by Lyle F. Watts, who will make his headquarters at Portland, Ore . . . Mrs. M. Hartley Dodge, president presi-dent of the Morris & Essex Ken nel club at Newark, N. J., said if a till before the New Jersey legislature compelling anti-rabies inoculation of all qogs was passed, would cancel the club's annual show, largest outdoor dog show in the world. . . Dr. Charles Francis Potter, author and humanist pastor, charged that in representing only three faiths, the temple of reu-gion reu-gion at the New York World's fair will be placing "an invisible but official sign on the front door reading, 'No heathen allowed, " . . John J. Pershing, Charles G. Dawes and James G. Harbord, whom Americans once looked for safety but who prefer now to be known as just "old friends," held another annual reunion at Tucson, Ariz., over the weekend . . . .'.v.'Av.v.vf.-.v.-.-.w... : " U - x v v- J - - S- . . oyW: CI6se;Eeports On Benefit Receipts j Final disposition of the funds r raised in the ; CorbeU-Thatcher benefit has been made and the ; checks covering the proceeds from 1 the benefit dance and the solicitation solicita-tion turned over -to' the survivors, according to : Mel Close, general chairman.-- The total proceeds were $546.54, of which one-half was turned over to Mrs. Louise K. Thatcher, to be : held in trust for her. daughter. The other half will ba placed in trust for the three Corbell children. The final donors reported by Mr. Close were as follows: Hamilton Manufacturing company, Minneapolis, Minne-apolis, $20; Mills Novelty company, com-pany, Chicago, $10; Superior Prod- : ucts, Chicago, $5; John Anderson, ! Heber, $2.50; Bally Manufacturing : company, Chicago, $10; Fred : Fields, Seattle. $5. CHAIN STORE TAX BILL FOUND INVALID HARRISBURG, Pa.. Feb. 20 U.R-The Pennsylvania chain store tax "enacted by the 1937 legisla- J ture during the regime of former Gov. George H. Earle's "Little New Deal,' today was found in- r valid by the Dauphin county court. ; In England, every woman prisoner pris-oner serving more than six months has a complete outfit of clothes dresses, aprons and underclothing un-derclothing made to 'her measure. Ambassador's son at large is husky Joseph Kennedy, Jr., son of U. S. ambassador to Great Britain. Young Kennedy, pictured pic-tured with arm in sling during skiing holiday at St. Moritz, Switzerland, bobbed up in Spain's shell-torn Madrid when his father returned to Europe from U. S. .vacation. WARD PLANS REUNION PLEASANT GROVE Bishopric Bishop-ric members of the Pleasant Grove Second ward, C. R. Clark, Ray Merrill, and Guy Hillman form the executive committee that is planning a ward reunion for Wednesday, February 22. The children of the ward will be entertained en-tertained in the afternoon by the officers of the Primary organization organi-zation with the president, Mrs. Margaret Meeks in charge. The social in the evening will begin at 7:30 p. m. .,.i..M-tii i k I ... a.ty.rtn.fc , !--"-' - : utk. 'l l i (IB III i t in 1 ACT NOW! Feb. 20 to Feb. 25 only! CSaticnal HlltlH SUndS 3 FACTORY SALE of Venetian Blinds! Best Quality 1 7-8 ineh Slat National Blinds Regular Price During Factory Sale S Square V Foot Installed Complete Saturday is the Last Day! Call for full information nD.TT.IKL- (2. She reigns in merriment and mjrth!, Debutante Charlotte Hardie, daughter of an old Louisiana family,' is Queen of the Carnival of Mardi Gras at New Orleans. . er, subjects: thousands of revelers. PRO-ROOSETELT - 17E HANDLE WITH CARE Fragile Garments Need Expert Care! You can trust the flimsiest flim-siest jfabrics to Madsen, for1 fragile garments cleaned the Madsen way receive the extra attention atten-tion so necessary for their preservation. Each fabric is cleaned according accord-ing to its own special requirements. re-quirements. Each dye is treated individually to bring out its color to the utmost. Thus your garments gar-ments are cleaned thoroughly, thor-oughly, yet safely. Phone 475 for Pick-Up 1 and Delivery DE LUXE CLEANING Pope Pius also had a deep admiration ad-miration for President Roosevelt, and spoke most affectionately of him to Cardinal Mundelein and other American prelates. He considered Roosevelt an outstanding out-standing ally in the battle which he, and Pope Leo XIII before him, had waged for the underprivileged. To Pius, the Roosevelt program was the economic embodiment of the principles which he and Leo had championed in their religious writings. His encyclical on the social or der (Quadragesimo Anno) spoke eloquently of this, and also gave a clear indication of the harmony of views existing between him and Roosevelt. In that encyclical, Pius declared: "Every class then must receive its due share, and the distribution of created goods must be brought into conformity with the demands of the common good and social justice, for every sincere observer is conscious that the vast difference differ-ence between the few who hold excessive wealth and the many who live in destitution constitutes a grave peril in society." FATHER COUGHLIN union dos DEPOT First North First West UNION PACIFIC STAGES Local Service to Salt Lake, Ogden and Intermediate Points. Fare to S. L. C ..... 90 Cents Special Excursion to the San Francisco World's Fair! 3 Daily Runs Leave. .Provo South 2:51 A. M. 11:56 A. M. 8:56 P. M. North 5:28 A. M. 2:13 P. M. .7:40 P. M. Nation-Wide Bus Service! For Information PHONE 310 JESS SCO VILLE, Agent , " : . -:i ' 7 The Pontiff's one headache in the United States was Father Coughlin. The Pope never was enthusiastic about Coughlin, even in the beginning, when the radio priest was widely popular and an ardent supporter of Roosevelt. Coughlin was consistently hammering ham-mering on one topic monetary reform and Pius had misgivings about this. The Pote is quoted by American churchmen who talked with him, as commenting on tougnima monetary ideas: "No mechanical solution will solve our problems." Twice the Pope . intervened vig orously with Father Coughlin. The first time was immediately after the 1936 Townsend convention in Cleveland when Coughlin called Roosevelt a "liar and a double-crosser." Pius Immediately sent word to the radio priest's then superior, Bishop Gallagher of Detroit, and there was a sharp crackdown. Then irt 1937, Coughlin again assailed Roosevelt personally, and added that it was sinful for a Catholic to join a CIO union. This time Archbishop Mooney of De troit, who had succeeded Galla gher, not only rebuked CoughluV, but banned him from the air. Meanwhile Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli, papal secretary of state, had hastened to the United States from Rome with a vigorous repri mand from the Pope. Coughlin was told that he must cut out his disrespectful references to Roosevelt Roose-velt if he wished to continue his radio oratory, and also that his condemnation of the CIO was a contradiction . of church docerine defined, in the encyclicals of Pius and Leo, namely that the organ ization of labor and the rights of Catholic workmen to join unions of their own choice should be en couraged by the clergy. : $ ygars he never lost the human touch. His reading also gave him a broad liberal outlook. He was a noted archivist, well versed in history his-tory and economics. Finally, he was well traveled, lived for a time in Poland and England, where " association with the people of those countries broadened his perspective. Pius went to London to study at the British Museum, but his chief memory of the city had to do with another experience. "I am the only Pope,' he sometimes some-times boasted, "who ever rode on top of a London bus." (Copyright 1939, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Cranium Answers Question on Page Four The monkey made 19 ar,m movements move-ments between the top and bottom bot-tom of the pole, and if he had not slipped back each time would have traveled 19 feet. MAN OF PEOPLE American churchmen who knew Pius well will remember ; him for his deep-rooted liberalism, which they ascribe to three things. He sprang from simple peasant stock and spent his early years on a small farm near Milan. In later ' 0 Xv; ; , I e M6N0EIAL5 CLASSIC SIMPLICITY We design and execute the carving carv-ing of Monuments whose notable characteristic is classic simplicity that chaste, unvarying beauty which endures and wears pleasant" ly through the years. Which, simple as it may sound, is not the most simple of accomplishments aall. It is In the doing , of great things that Art finds 'its expression, expres-sion, BEESLEY MONUMENT. CO. 51 W. 1st SO. Phone 1064 Not All Pioneers Carried Long Rifles Without the courage and vision of Utah's daring pioneers, much of what we have today might have been losL That pioneering spirit extended into pvprv filrl. inr-ltirlincr thai of electric service O They, were true pioneers who many years ago organized . the electric system which now serves Provo. They took great risks because they believed in the future of Provo O Electric rates then were 10c per kilowatt hour today the average residential rate is less than 1lic. Service was poor and. uncertain, today it is equal to that of any city in the Intermountain territory regardless of size O Following the example of those early pioneers, we have continued to improve service and to reduce rates. I f j I i f i i m. - inr-i iiii-wiiinMii " - - ' " ' ' |