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Show The So They Say! Communism and Fascism, by open attacks and by the more effective method of insidious boring bor-ing from within, are seeking to overthrow democracies John D. Miller, president. National Cooperative Co-operative Council. Heirald. VOL. 14, NO. 30 PROVO, UTAH- COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1937 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS PRICE FIVE CENTS TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVIClfl 'Ruby Taylor' Job Her Thrill LEGISLATORS SEE NEEDS OF INSTITUTION MERRY GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs Lions Aid Child Welfare Cause SENATE BLOC FIGHTS COURT Heavy Majorities Cast in Favor-of Water Districts - mm REFORM PL By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN Weather Forecast UTAH Snow Sunday; colder south portion. Max. temp., Friday 63 Min. temp., Friday 31 Max. temp., Saturday 49 Min. temp., Saturday 36 Suiiadaj Alfred P. Sloan Gets Brass Ring As Boy Who Made Good Guarding duPonts ; He Heads General Motors For Skill as " Financier, Salesman and Watchman ; He is Born Economic Royalist, Roy-alist, Tireless, Colorless, Hobbyless, Careful ; Mild Reactionary, Never Lost His Temper Until John Lewis Got His Goat. WASHINGTON According to all Roosevelt definitions, Alfred Pritchard Sloan, Jr., head of General Gen-eral Motors, la a deeply hued, dyed-in-the-wool economic royalist. He was born, like Franklin D. Roosevelt, with a silver spoon in his mouth. That silver spoon ladled out $2,297,000 when his father died, and Alfred Pritchard has been able to roll it up to a round $50,000,000. (Roosevelt's father left only $500,000. virtually all enjoyed by Mrs. James Roosevelt, Roose-velt, not Franklin). Sloan had all the advantages of a careful, un extravagant schooling. school-ing. Educationally, he was a pol ished product of planned economy, against the Roosevelt brand of which he and his duPont col leagues have kicked so violently. Born in frugal New England nearly 62 years ago, his father sent him to the Massachusetts In stitute of Technology, most care ful engineering school in the coun try. There he worked fairly hard, led an unspectacular existence, joined Delta Upsilon fraternity, which had not yet obtained the prominence since given it by Chief Justice Hughes, and did one other thing which was to influence his entire life. ! COLLEGE CONTACTS ! sje At M. I. T. he met the duPonts. Pierre S. duPont. later to be head of General Motors, was in a class ahead of him. Pierre's brother Irenee was two classes behind him, while the younger . brother,. Lam-mont, Lam-mont, now head of General Motors, Mo-tors, followed three classes after that. This, and some other fortuitous circumstances, fixed Alfred Pritchard Prit-chard Sloan for life. After graduation Alfred went to work for his father, who was a large owner of the Hyatt Roller Bearing company in New Haven, where Alfred was given the job of manufacturing billiard balls. Later came the development of automobile automo-bile roller-bearings and the Hyatt company grew arge and prosperous. prosper-ous. In 1916 it became so important import-ant to the motor Industry that it was bought out by W. C. Durant, then the big shot of General Motors. Mo-tors. Sloan continued with Durant. and when Durant was taken over by the duPonts in 1920, Sloan transferred his allegiance to his old class mates as smoothly as the roller-bearings he once produced duPONT WATCHMAN Thence began an association (Continued On Page Three) ELLETT CHOSEN AS DEMO HEAD A. O. Ellett of Spani.sh Fork was elected chairman and Robert McFadden of Provo. vice-chair-7mah of the Utah county Democratic Demo-cratic central committee to succeed suc-ceed Dr. Hugh M. Woodward of x Provo and Wallace W. Brock-bank Brock-bank of Springville, respectively, here Saturday night. Ellett won over William Stanley Stan-ley Dunford of Provo 34 to 21; McFadden led George A. Brown. Provo by 33 to 19. At Brown's request re-quest the latter vote was made unanimous. Robert L. Elliott of Pleasant View was named chairman of a committee of nine to determine vote allocation in the county pertaining per-taining to both central and executive exe-cutive committees and report its findings. Serving with him are Emil K. Nielsen and Mrs. Algie E. Ballif of Provo, Victor Frand-sen Frand-sen of Springville, Jordan Law of Payaon, Francis S. Lundell of Benjamin, Rex Daniels of Spanish Fork, Thomas A. Barrett of American Fork and Arnold Ri-chins Ri-chins of Pleasant Grove. The committee was named on three north, three south. two Provo, one Springville distribution. distribu-tion. Cooke Resigns WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 U.P Morris L. Cooke, rural electrification, electrifi-cation, administrator, resigned today. to-day. President Roosevelt accepted the -resignation. The Provo Lions club once more demonstrates its support of worthy causes by presenting a $100 check for the child welfare medical fund. Dr. Sidney Sperry, child welfare chairman, right receives the check from Victor Hedquist, left, chairman of the projects committee com-mittee while Oscar Bjerregaard, chairman of the club welfare committee looks on. Provo To Begin School Building Improvement Work Every Local School Building Included in WPA Work Project. Repair and Improvement work in city schools will beg-in soon on an approved WPA project contemplating con-templating expenditures of $7.-834.32. $7.-834.32. Superintendent of Schools H. A. Dixon reports. Provo high, Farrer and Dixon junior highs. Franklin, Parker. Maeser and Timpanogos schools will be benefitted by the work. The school board will allocate estimated funds of $1,959.32 for the approximately $8,000 project, rnctudmg $300 for superintendence and the remainder for materials. Labor costs, figured at $5,298, will be paid by the federal government. govern-ment. One - hundred-seventeen man -months of labor will be provided by the project, which Moroni Cot- tain u ui vivi , -J j . . ..ww. The work is detailed as follow: Provo high school, repair stage, ' construct bleachers. clean and ! paint library and auditorium, and construct 300 feet of concrete sidewalk. Farrer junior high school: construct con-struct 12 cabinets and calsomine gym. Dixon junior high school: Calsomine Cal-somine gym. Franklin school: gravel lfJO.000 square feet of grounds, construct 170 feet of concrete sidewalk. Parker school: gravel 160.000 square feet of grounds, construct three bookcases. Maeser and Timpanogos schools: construct playground equipment Two-hunured-fifty desks will be repaired, cleaned and painted also in the city schools. In a report received from the WPA of fire, school bid pledge.! on W PA projects a3 of January 5 total $13,395.46 made up as follow: fol-low: Nursery school, $650; school lunches. $4,611.46 and $6,746.18: and school improvement project. $1,387.82. Error Corrected In the article found in section two, page three, of this innue of the Herald it is erroneously stated that "the total estimated cost of the Deer Creek project as now planned is ... $7 per acre-foot of water." The correct figure is $71 per acre-foot of water. The Sunday Herald is glad lo correct this typographical error. Physicians Strong Supporters Of LD.S. Hospital Project By BETTY BROOKE Editor's Note: This Is the second sec-ond of a series of articles giving expression to local opinion concerning the proposed pro-posed L. D. 8. hospital in Provo. Provo physicians give wholehearted whole-hearted praise to the movement for a hospital in Provo. The L.D.S. church proposes to erect a $150.-000 $150.-000 structure here if the city will contribute $60,000 locally. City officials announce $15,000 is available for the work. The remaining $45,000 must be raised by popular subscription. To the question "How and why in your, opinion will the proposed L. D. S. hospital benefit Provo-ans?" Provo-ans?" the following replied: Dr. Fred W. Taylor: "In my opinion the most necessary thing Old Age Pension Advocates Score 10 to 9 Victory Senate Votes 10 to 9 in Favor of Appropriation For Pension SALT LAKE CITY. Feb. 6 ttJ.R) Old age pension advocates in the senate late Friday won a 10 to 9 victory when they voted to include in a liquor measure that $50,000 be appropriated monthly from liquor revenues to an old age pension fund. The old age pension fund bill is provided for, not in the liquor bill itself, but in a pension bill introduced intro-duced by Senate President Herbert Her-bert Maw, yet pending before the senate. S. B. 71, by Holbrook, thebill amended to include the appropriation, appropria-tion, revises the president liquor administration. Senator J. W. Thornton of Provo Pro-vo voted against the measure and Senator Eldred M. Royle, Elberta was reported as absent and not voting. The Democrats divided 9 to 9 on the vote, the lone Republican, Re-publican, William H. Griffin of Logan, casting the deciding vote in favor of the appropriation. The senate amended the same bill to provide for the administration administra-tion of the state's liquor business by one executive, and to give that official a salary of $5,000 per year. Under the same amendment, amend-ment, t'-e administrator would (Continued on Page Eight) FREE LECTURE HERE THURSDAY Speakers of established reputa-tons, reputa-tons, equipped by experience and training to discuss the problems of the times, will be presented in a series of lectures to be given at the Provo high school under the sponsorship of the free adult night school. Dr. Christen Jensen, professor of history and political economy at the Brigham Young university, will be the first speaker at the lecture to be presented Thursday, February 11 at 8 p. m. in the high school auditorium. He will speak on the Spanish Revolution and Its World Significance. Musical numbers will be presented pre-sented under the direction of Ernest Er-nest Paxman. The lectures are free to the public and everyone is urged to attend. that Provo and Utah county needs at the present time is a modern well-equipped hospital. "Such a hospital should be fully manned by physicians, surgeons, specialists and nurses. A complete com-plete modern hospital means that all departments are amply provided provid-ed for so that all the needs and requirements of the sick and injured in-jured can be properly and scientifically scien-tifically attended to in the hospital." hos-pital." Dr. Walter T. Hasler: "The people of Provo are not hospital-minded. hospital-minded. They have to be converted convert-ed to using the hospitals except during an emergency. Dr. Aird has a good emergency hospital. "There are a whole lot of ex penses, outside of hospital expense attached to every case that goes to Salt Lake City, that could just (Continued on Page Seven) Battle Lines Formed To Oppose Roosevelt Move On Court BY JOE ALEX MORRIS United Pres Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 U.R) An embattled bloc of conservative Democratic and Republican senators began today an historic battle against President Roosevelt's request for power to increase by six justices the membership member-ship of the supreme court. Acting in the midst of a national nation-al labor crisis and on the eve of supreme court argument on the New Deal Wagner labor relations act, the president with a single swift move, brought congress to grips with an issue affecting the fundamentals of the governmental government-al system. With the same speed, I he started the house on passing his judiciary reform bill, embodying embody-ing the supreme court changes, without apparent effective opposi tion. Storm Broke But in the senate, a long-gathering storm broke with a fury of historical significance. The upper chamber, rich in the tradition of debate that has guided the nation's na-tion's course for 50 years, began laying down the battle lines. The administration leadership in the senate emphasized the need for reforms, particularly to reduce re-duce uncertainty frequently resulting re-sulting between the time of lower court orders restraining enforce-mentof enforce-mentof an act of congress and finalsupreme court decision. Opponents of the program charged that it was an indirect attempt to "pack" the court and to extend so-called dictatorial methods at the expense of the judiciary. Conscious that their action may bulk large in the pages of American history, the senate opposition op-position admittedly was at present pres-ent . a .minority but not without hope of victory. Into the frojrt ranks strode such veterans as democracy's Carter Glass of Virginia; Vir-ginia; Republican Leader Charles L. McNary and Michigan's Republican Re-publican Orator Arthur Vanden-berg. Vanden-berg. Expected to bolster their ranks was the senate's powerful William E. Borah of Idaho, and, possibly, Independent George Norris of Nebraska. Ne-braska. Enlisted in the opposition ranks, on the basis of a preliminary prelim-inary poll of the senate, was a total of probably 30 members, with many others still undecided. The controversy echoed across the nation with former President Herbert Hoover, former Senator James A. Reed of Missouri, Bain-(Continued Bain-(Continued on Page Eight) D. T. R. Employes To Share Earnings Under New Plan Employes of the Dlxon-Taylor-Kussell company shared with the firm the earnings in 1936, ac-coiding ac-coiding to a plan which has been in effect for some time. Each employe em-ploye who has been with the company com-pany for one year or more received receiv-ed a bonus of one month's pay, plus a service award depending on the length of service. Those with less than a year were compensated compensat-ed under another schedule. With 80 employes on the payroll pay-roll the total amount of the bonus bo-nus was a considerable sum. The company operates seven stores in southern and eastern Utah, maintaining a trained and efficient personnel capable of completely furnishing a home in every detail. An upholstering shop and fur niture refinishing and repair shop at the Provo plant serves all of the seven stores. The plant in conjunction con-junction with the window shade shop has been working to capaci ty during the past 12 months. The increase in business in 1936 over 1935, especially in floor coverings was exceptional, according accord-ing to Arthur D. Taylor, general manager. A highly trained and efficient personnel in this department depart-ment is kept busy constantly as the demand for home furnishings is growing. Franklin P.-T. A. Study Group To Meet School patrons of the Franklin district are reminded of the meeting of the Franklin P.-T. A. study group to be held Monday night at the school library, beginning be-ginning at 7:30. It's "social night" and a talk on "Good Citizenship" will be given by Oscar A. Spear, president of the board of education. edu-cation. Refreshments will be served. serv-ed. All school patrons are urged to attend. ; m Playing the part of Ruby Toy-, !lor.with Amos 'n' Andy is the biggest thrill young Actress Elinor Harriott, above, ever has experienced, she told inter-j i-Viewers at Palm Springs, Calif, . wbere'she appeared with the luminous lu-minous radio comedians. ' (lyrum S, Harris, Sharon Patriarch Called by Death Veteran Educator, Mexican Colonizer Dies After Short Illness Hyrum Smith Harris, 77, patriarch pat-riarch of the Sharon stake, died at his home on Provo Bench Saturday Sat-urday night, following an illness since Monday of influenza and complications. His death came unexpectedly and many of his friends were not aware that he was ill. Patriarch Harris was born at Smithfield, Cache county, Utah, October 2, 1860. When he was two years of age, his father was called call-ed to help settle the Dixie country. coun-try. In 1868 he was released be-Wauae be-Wauae of ill health and moved his ftfihiiy to Iron county. Later they moved to Monroe and pioneered in the resettlement of Sevier county. coun-ty. In 1884 Mr. Harris was graduated grad-uated . from the Brigham Young academy and the following year taught the first grade school in bis home town of Monroe. fn the spring of 1885 he was called to fill a mission in the Northwestern states. After being released, he was called for another three months to assist in the opening of a mission among the Bicker tonites, and Cadamanites, off-shoots from the Rigdonites. This mission became so important import-ant that the headquarters of the Northwestern States mission was moved to John Kansas. After returning from his mission, mis-sion, he became principal of the Payson school for two years and of the Richfield school for one year. He was graduated from the law department of Ann Arbor, Michigan Michi-gan in 1S94 and in 1895 was called call-ed to Mexico to study the language lan-guage and the law of that country. coun-try. While there he was called to become agent of the colonization company for the Mormon colonies colo-nies and later became president of the Mexican mission. After finishing the six year law course in the school of Jurisprudence Jurisprud-ence in Mexico City he was released releas-ed and returned to the Colonies in the State of Chihuahua. In 1907 he was made first councilor coun-cilor to the president of the Juarez Juar-ez Stake, which position he held until the Exodus of the Mormon Colonists from Mexico in 1912. In 1913, Mr. Harris went to Col umbia for the second time. After eight months in South America he returned and accepted the principalship of the San Luis stake academy. Six weeks later he was made president of the stake, which two positions he held until 1919 when he moved to Provo Bench. Mr. Harris is survived by his widow, Mrs. Lexie Curtis Harris, four children, Mrs. Frank Woof- inden, Cedar City; Dr. Joseph Harris, George Harris and Waldo Harris, New York. B.P.W. Club to Hear Mrs. Gaeth Mrs. Arthur Gaeth who hs spent many years in Czechoslovakia, Czechoslo-vakia, will be the speaker at the monthly dinner-meeting of the Provo Business and Professional Women's club, Thursday evening at 6:30 o'clock at Hotel Roberts. An International Night pro gram is being featured. Mrs. Qaeth's topic to be on Czechoslovakia Czechoslo-vakia and International Cooperation Cooper-ation and Peace." Also, she will entertain with Czech folk songs and other numbers are being planned plan-ned by tije group in charge of arrangements. Junket Brings Legislators To State Hospital Saturday Afternoon Thirty-eight senators and representatives of the Utah legislature, some of whom were accompanied by their wives and legislative attaches, attended a luncheon in their honor at Utah State Hospital Saturday. William H. Boyle of Provo of the board of trustees, welcomed the guests on behalf of the board .and introduced Drs. Garland H. Pace, superintendent, and J. J. Weight, who presided at a clinic. Trustee Jones Speaks Needs of the hospital during the new biennium were related by John E. Jones of Salt Lake City, trustee. Dr. Pace told of the hos pital's progress during the last few years and explained budget requirements. Mr. Boyle and Mr. Jones were the only trustees who could at tend. Dr. W. R. Calderwood of Salt Lake City is ill. Dr. John R. Llewellyn is in Mexico, and Mrs. Frances G. Callahan in New York. E. A. Britsch of Manti was detained professionally, and a sis ter's illness kept Mrs. Mattie W. Harris of Ogden from the lunch eon. Four hundred and seventy-six nearly nair or tne inmates were presented, to give the legislators an understanding of the patients treated, both males and females Types of the mentally ill were pre-sented pre-sented by Dr. Pace and their deficiencies de-ficiencies explained. Speaking on behalf of the trus tees, Mr. Jones emphasized that their trend had been to remodel and improve the existing hospital plant without an attempt to add to the existing plant. "Service for the state and for these poor unfortunates here" prompt the trustees' interest in their work, he explained. Dr. Pace also pointed out that the hospital improvements had been in the direction of improving tne existing plant, detailing their remodeling program. The hospital, now with approxi mately 1,000 patients, has a capacity ca-pacity of 1,066, he stated. Although the budget for the next biennium is $50,000 over the previous one, $17,000 of this is for capital expenditures, he outlined. (Continued on Page Eight) Former Treasurer Of Utah County Dies In Salt Lake Mrs. Ellen Lee Jakeman Sanders. San-ders. 79. former Utah county treasurer and resident of the Provo Pro-vo Fourth ward for many years, died in Salt Lake City, Friday. Mrs. Sanders was born in Beaver, Bea-ver, March 7, 1857. She was the first woman ever to be elected Utah county treasurer, this being in 1896. She was prominent in newspaper work in Manti, Beaver and Cedar City, and had written many stories and articles for the Juvenile Instructor, the old Young Woman's Journal, Improvement Era and Deseret News. She moved to Salt Lake from Provo 13 years ago, and had been engaged in temple tem-ple work. Two sons survive: Franklin Jakeman, Los Angeles; Spencer W. Jakeman, Pocatello, Idaho; 23 grandchildren and several great grandchildren. She is a sister of Mrs. Rose Lee Sutherland, wife of Justice George Sutherland of the U. S. supreme court. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 1:15 o'clock at the Deseret Mortuary, with Bishop Ft. J. Murdock in charge. Interment will be in the Provo city cemetery. Seven Children Orphaned at Heber Husband and Wife Succumb to 'Flu' HEBER Seven children, ranging rang-ing from 19 to two years in age, were orphaned Friday when the father, Walter D. Young, 41, succumbed suc-cumbed to an attack of influenza-pneumonia, influenza-pneumonia, two days after his wife. Marguerite Giles Young 42, passed away from the effects of the same malady. Responsibility for the rearing of the little orphaned family falls on the shoulders of Max Young, 19 and Doyle Young, 17, the two oldest children, both students at the Wasatch county high school. The other children surviving are Phyllis, Joyce, Margie, Blaine and Kay who is only two years old. Double funeral services will be held at the Wasatch county high school today at 1:30 p. m., burial to be in the Heber cemetery. Lehi, American Fork, Pleasant Grove, Lin-don Lin-don Register Heavy Majorities in Favor of Metropolitan Water Districts Results of Metropolitan water district dis-trict elections: Lehi 203 for, 53 against. American Fork 303 for, 61 against. Pleasant Grove 128 for, 46 against. Lindon 73 for, 10 against. Voters in four Utah county municipalities Saturday cast a heavy vote in favor of the creation of metropolitan water districts, legal steps deemed necessary before subscription of water can be carried out in the Deer Creek reclamation project. At Lehi the proposal to create a metropolitan water district dis-trict contiguous with the corporate limits of the city carried by a vote of 203 for and 53 against the proposal. The voting there was considered fairly heavy for a question of this kind. At American Fork the majority in lavor oi tne metro-politan metro-politan water district proposal was even stronger with 303 for and 61 against. Pleasant Grove registered the smallest majority in favor of the nroDOsition with 128 for and 46 against. The town of Lindon voting on a proposition of creating a joint metropolitan water district embracing Pleasant Grove and Lindon jointly, cast a vote of 73 for and 10 against. As a result of the vote in Saturday's special elections, three new metropolitan water districts will be created in Utah county, at Lehi, American Fork and one of Pleasant Grove and Lindon jointly. Provo and Orem voters have previously approved the creation of metropolitan water districts there at elections held last year, with overwhelming majorities in each case. The results of Saturday's elections seem to indicate the sentiment in Utah county is pretty definitely lined up in favor of a progressive program of water development as proposed pro-posed in the construction of the $10,000,000 Deer Creek project. AGGIES LEAD IN HOOP RACE The Utah Aggies took the lead in the western division basketball basket-ball race Saturday night by turning turn-ing back the dangerous University Universi-ty of Utah team, in a hard-fought encounter. 41-39. The victory gives the champion Aggies a full one-game lead in the race, with the Utes in second place. The "Y" Cougars were relegated rele-gated to the cellar position when the Montana Bobcats swept the series at Bozeman, defeating invading "YM team 55 to 44. the Boyer Named on Grower Committee Selvoy J. Boyer of Springville was elected vice president of the Utah State Canning Crops' association as-sociation at the annual meeting held Friday in Ogden. He succeeds R. W. Creer of Spanish Fork. Mr. Boyer is chairman of the Utah county canning crops committee com-mittee and a member of the executive ex-ecutive committee of the Utah County Farm Bureau. George E. Holt of Clearfield was re-elected president of the association. A. V. Chambers, Smithfield was named secretary and treasurer. Unanimous opposition was voiced against the sieve size grading grad-ing of peas at the viners. Peas sold by the association in 1937 will be the same grading as in 1935, the pressure test method used by the California Packing corporation cor-poration and a hand-grading method used by all other concerns. con-cerns. The "flu" first struck the Young home two weeks ago, when five of the children became ill. Ten days ago. Mrs. Young contracted con-tracted the disease from the children chil-dren who were recovering. She died Wednesday and Mr. Young succumbed Friday. Aware that she was dying, Mrs. Young told her husband, "You must stay and take care of the children, Walter." Mr. Young was born in Heber, April 6, 1895. a son of Brigham J. and Sarah McDonald Young. He was engaged for a time in the cattle business with his father and had always lived in Heber. Mrs. Young was born in' Heber. August 19, 1894. a daughter of Thomas G., and Rachel Cummings Giles. Provo Bench Canal Stockholders Set Vote For Feb. 19 The question of whether the Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Irriga-tion company is to subscribe for water in the Deer Creek project will not be determined until February 19, it was decided at a meeting of the board of directors following a stockholders' meeting, held Saturday afternoon at thex Although the meeting held Saturday was generally supposed to have been called for the purpose pur-pose of giving the stockholders an opportunity to vote on the matter of subscribing for Deer Creek water, the move to defer the voting two weeks hence met with general favor after a question ques-tion had been raised as to the legality of the meeting for the purpose of voting on the matter. A motion put by Emory Mc-Kellip, Mc-Kellip, mayor of the Orem town, to authorize the directors to call a meeting of the stockholders for the purpose of voting on whether the company should buy Deer Creek water and how much, was passed without any opposing vote. At a meeting of the directors held following the general meeting, meet-ing, it wg,s decided to call the stockholders' meeting for February Febru-ary 19 for the express purpose of ascertaining the wishes of the stockholders in regard to the matter of buying water from the Deer Creek project. Saturday's meeting was a rather stormy session with considerable con-siderable wrangling over the matter mat-ter of supporting the Deer Creek project. Several stockholders opposed op-posed to having the company mortgage the present holdings of water rights ' to buy adidtional water in a new project spoke against the proposal. W. J. Cordner, president of the company, was in charge of the meeting. Squaw Creek, Feb. 6 Provo Newspaper , Mush Hank feeling mighty ashamed of himself today: Felt hot all over yesterday and lumber camp boss rushed a doctor up from settlement. Doctor said Hank had temperament of 104 degrees. Hank had a relapse when he heard the news. This morning found out he was all right. Hank had put two suits of red flannel underwear on by mistake. PIUTE JOE. Piute |