Show Local Metal Market The Weather I Gold UTAIJ— Cloudy Sunday Monday IDAHO— Local showers WYOMING —Unsettled Sunday NEVADA— fartly cloudy m I Lfrd4 -- "VOL I37TNOT5 JT Still Face Two f ' wmcnptln ttua year a vtsDali--MLho“Kfrid-Wyomt advance tUl alawhar la JU daily and Sunday daily and Sunday mo a mo SALT LAKE fl 25 CITY-UTA- H They re Principals in M I A Conference o s uiiWL'Jsmui1 aT- Parties A Primaries Thus Far Merely Indicate Trend x Week’ primary campaigning which still has more than half its Course to run their preferences a week from Monday North Dakota primaries will shars attention a week or so later with a Republican nominating convention In Indiana That fills out the political calem dar for June Up to now only nine of the 48 states have had primaries selecting state- party tickets for the Candidates for 26 fall elections senate seats are still to be nominated and 28 state tickets headed by nominees for governor are yet to be picked Nominations have been made thus far for only 112 of the 435 seats in the house Less Than Third Actually less than a third of the g 1938 has been accomplished since the campaign curtain-raiser in ‘Illinois last April It Is far too early and the results are too Inconclusive or conflicting as yet for more than trends In pubUc sentiment to be discernible There have been trends encouraging both new deal Democrats on the one hand and Republicans and anti new deal Democrats on the other Major interest has centered in Democratic primaries thus far That has been true first because of the clash within party ranks over new deal policies and second because all of the nine states in which there hav been primaries have been unde? Democratic control Four Out of Nine In only four of those nine states— Florida Pennsylvania Oregon and Iowa— was thers a reflection of the Democratic party split It was not a direct and open contest for and against the new deal in any of those Administration aids count four heavily on that fact If any Democratic primary candidate has yet run under an ticket-makin- ut bannerthey say the fact has failed to attract the news attention it deserved They view the reluctance of candidates to risk any direct criticism of the president as Important evidence of his personal popularity They are banking on the silent vote the vote that never turns out In the primaries and cares little about its registered party labels on election day No Exception Primaries thus far for both parties have proved no exception to the rule Half or less of the registered party vote in any state came out And tn every case except in Oregon it was the active party worker element that dominated to give primary slates backed by state party machines epsy victories The same conditions gave Republican state machine candidates victory in Pennsylvania and Iowa of RepubThe primary turn-olican voters has appeared to the Republicans in quite a different light They held their own in Pennsylvania and Iowa getting out the vote without benefit of state or federal and despite the fact that national interest centered on the Democratic contests Both states are still heavily Republican by regBoth voted more Reistration publicans than Democrats in the primaries To national Republican leaders that Is heartening evidence that a succession party defeats national and local has not disrupted party organisation It may be rusty but It’s still In good working order And It Is Inspired from top to bottom Republican politicians believe by the highest hopes since 1932 of party recovery this year and In 1940 The high hopes rest upon Democratic discord in Washington and the new economic slump Still Another Trend There Is still another trend about Republican primary results that Is having an effect on national strata Republican candigy Straight-cu- t dates hoping for anti new deal Democratic support but not compromising party lines on deolared principles to obtain it seem to be favored by Republican primary voters overwhelmingly WASHINGTON June 11 CD-- The capital wondered Saturday night if President Roosevelt was baking a dove of political peace Into the luncheon pie he will serve Sunday afternoon to Senator Gillette (D) Iowa The White House announced the Invitation Gillette accepted and neither made any comment to reut office-holding- porters - The forthcoming meal Is Important because Gillette was renominated In last week's Iowa pri v mary defeating Representative Otha Wearln who had received in- (Contlmid on Pare Eight) (Column Four) ' v A 12 1938 - Imiad vnr mom(n Entand at h poet offtra at Balt Laki City aa aacoud elnu mattar under act ot Hatch 8 JS73 SZZifh'-' A jf i i 4 ’ Industry ure predicted it would be approved there quickly and sent to ' the senate for final passage early in the week The threat of a filibuster against the measure by southern senators Who have been fighting for a geographical wage differential appeared eliminated by the compromise draft There remained however the possibility of opposition from a section of organized labor The committee capitulated to the demands of Senators El- Louisiana and Pepper (D) Florida in writing the lender wage section of the bill It inserted a classification clause that went far toward meeting the southerners’ objective of lower tive In carefully-worde- d phrases Mr Hull told reporters that this government's repeated condemnation $ of the bombing of civilian populations was directed especially at the manufacturers of military planes the general American public as 4 and well as foreign powers The repeated damning of ruthless warfare would discourage sales to vlBKa' U regions where planes were being L D S Mutual Improvement associations conference principals Left to right Augustus D used to bomb civilians he predicted Other such condemnations would Zanzig who directed the music festival Miss Myrtle Leonard soloist and Heber J Grant be voiced in the future he said church president Namee No Nation Though Mr Hull named no nation specifically It was obvious that Japan would be phiefly affected If his policy were successful Shipments of war material to both sides in Spain have been banned already by invocation of the neutrality act The neutrality law has not been invoked against sales of planes or Welfare Agencies Should End Rivalries bombs to Japan or China jhowever It was reported reliably that some Meet Association Tells Educator Four Men Woman manufacturers already have shown a willingness to reject contracts for Thousands Join in M I A Music Festival Die When Craft the shipment of bombing planes to regions the secretary has in mind to Farm Plunges Japan whose war planes have The time has come for all people and agencies concerned with killed hundreds In Canton China the welfare of children to join hands m a cooperative program became the United States’ best cusWORLAND Wyo June 11 CD-F- our and eliminate antagonisms tomer for war supplies in the last men and a woman were killed This was the essence of a messix months Sunday Program Saturday when a private plane sage brought Saturday to the thirty-sixt- h Spent $6091090 M L A annual conference of the L piloted by William 0 Bashaw 34 8 a m— Seattle crashed on a root cellar D S Primary association by Dr meeting of From December 1 to June 1 Japan of a farm near Worland In north Jean Betzner of Teachers’ college the M I A In assembly hall $6091090 for war equipment spent 10 a m— Y M M L A session in the United Sttaes Columbia university central Wyoming compared with M Y A hall in Barratt in W I China's $5818733 fit purchases AirThg dead In addition to Bashaw “'Dr Betzner's address at an afhall and ternoon session was one of the highassembly were: youth assembly craft and parts commercial as well lights of the second day of the on roof garden of Smith memorial as military comprised the bulk of Miss Helen Brattus Renton church’s impressive gathering of building the exports Wash who was traveling with 12 m — Patriotic service by In May licenses were issued to exyouth leaders in the Primary and Bashaw M I A auxiliaries George Washington tree on tem$1334608 worth of arms to port 28 Paris Worland Lloyd pilot Others included an address on ple grounds of which $599490 represented Japan 28 Bard Wesley 2 p m— General session of M Spokane leadership by Dr John A Widtsoe military aircraft and $528900 comWash member of the first council of twelve I A and Primary association mercial planes and equipment For W B Bledsoe Valley Falls directed by first presidency of the month however Brazil led of the church at the morning genKan eral session of the M I A and the church in tabernacle Japan with $1494824 of purchases 7:30 p m—L D S convocation musical festival Sheriff John Nicola said reports famed church-wid- e Altogether American manufac tabernacle of in scouting from witnesses to the crash indi- in the tabernacle Saturday evening turers sold to all nations $31090054 cated the plane's motor failed and worth of war material In the ei Over 700 Sing PRIMARY caused it to go into a nose dive month period 8 a m—Session for stake presiand crash onto the cellar on the The musical event a project of dencies in Barratt hall In using moral pressure against farm of Charles Cavanaugh at the the M I A was participated m by 9:30 a nt — Tabernacle choir the sale of bombing planes the ad more 700 4 than of Worland about edge people and directed broadcast from tabernacle p m ministration is pursuing a course by Augustus D Zanzig of New (mountain standard time) 10:30 a m —General session In similar in one respect to Its action “The plane after taking off from York City director of music for the conflict An in the Recreation association tabernacle the airport here circled over town National embargo was clamped down then and as it passed over the poet office Guest soroist was Myrtle Leonard on exports of specific war materials the motor sputtered and the ship contralto of the" Metropolitan Op- at the general session of the Pri- to either nation and the state de2 in association m at p Kingsmary went into Its dive’ the sheriff said era association partment undertook to supplement The plane was flying at an alti- - Dr Betzner who addressed two bury hall University of Utah cam- this with an appeal to exporters to tude of about 300 feet at the time departmental groups during the pus She emphasized that numerous limit to "normal” levels their sales (Continued on Pag Six) When it went out of control Bashaw morning was the featured speaker of gasoline copper and other ma (Column Six) cut off the switch to the motor terial having commercial as well as Sheriff Nicola said The plane did military uses not catch fire after it crashed The attempt to limit these shipments was not a notable success On Flying Tour since no mesfns was available to Bashaw a former Seattle automoapply quotas to Individual shippers bile dealer who left Seattle last month on a flight to Chicago arrived here Thursday with Miss Brattus LONDON June 11 (AP)— An earthquake born in the North sea Paris an orchestra director and front from five nations Saturday rumbling Over a 400-mipilot was the son of H B Paris jolted former mayor of Worland and Bard England to the Rhineland whose mother Mrs Mildred Bard WICHITA Kan June 11 (INS)-BusThera was scattered damage wall killed a bricklayer at Cruy shautem will show the first signs operates an art studio at Spokane surprise alarm even and panic Two children were injured se- of a “pick-up- ” Wash had been painting pictures in September PostIn Belgium the among countryfolk here and at Greybull Wyo Little and northern France who riously at Hazebrouck northern master James A Farley believes dropped France anij In several continental In an Interview published by the was known of Bledsoe who was to their knees In prayer as chim- towns there were injuries from fall- Wichita Beacon he said identified by slips of paper found winwalls cracked neys toppled in “his clothing ing bricks “Business will pick up In th aubroke dows end furniture jumped The plane an Orange Buhl four-plac- e Three Damage was minor but extensive tumn After the adjournment of London Paris capitals— most serious in Belgium congress when the enactment of cabin monoplane bearing liBrussels— felt the Shocks apparently was estimated the damage there the It cense NC 3311 and the words and present program of legislation which some seismographs recorded ‘Washington Air College Tacoma as having a duration of ten min- might reach a million dollars The and the new relief act have gone of wall of frontal the palace justice into effect business will begin to Wash’ took off from the Worland utes London felt the first shock port shortly before 4 o’clock The at 11(59 a m (5:59 a m E S T) at Ghent split and a wall of the show a revival of activity It will Liege citadel barracks shifted four be gradual of course but the first crash occurred a few minutes later Brussels a severe tremor at 11:57 feet- - Heavy motors were George Nagata and Bobby Kirksigns of business revival should be Three persons were killed and moved in somefactory places of the members American about 20 injured lft 'Belgium In patrick apparent In September and graduGermany and the Netherlands ally increase during the next few Legion junior baseball team prac- Brussels & frightened man leaped ticing In a field two blocks from to his death from a balcony In felt the shocks along with England months France and Belgium th Cavanaugh farm were the first Ghent an “The president Is entitled to the streetcar The quake was described as the d (Continued on psg Seven) t support of the killed a pedestrian a crumbling most severe In Belgium’s history (Column Four) of the nation” Farley thoughtful Brussels boulevards were auddenly added “and iuch support and cothronged with frightened crovtds operation would be a great assistFactories ftd homes alike were ance to business” evacuated as root tiles crashed to earth end windows were shattered Reports from all parts of the counCreates try told of a “thunder-lik- e rolling Congress noise” accompanying the shocks EVANSTON III June 11 (INS) In'arew minutes lined up at The shocks were heavy through- Forest Committee —“Oh what a crash” Jo Savlno the accident scene were' out France's northern section At WASHINGTON June 11 (INS) exclaimed Saturday as he sadly A police squad car Roubaix people were knocked off shook his Injured head An ambulance their feet Telephone and telegraph The bouse Saturday adopted a resolution creating A fire truck service was Interrupted for an hour Trying to dodge another car Joe drove his delivery truck into A wrecker Scenes were similar in the Nether joint congressional committee on a telephone pole shearing off the A telephone company truck lands and In Germany's Rhineland forestry to be composed of five A power company truck pole a street light and power England felt what was described senators and five representatives wires A city street light repair truck The committee would have broad by J L Shaw seismologist of the A witness who was lighting a In fact It was qaite a traffic West Broiilwich observatory as “ power to investigate all prCblems cigaret near-b- y tossed the match jam good big shock for the British related to forestry including the Joe taken to a hospital was reaway and ran to help Joe Th Isles” The quake’s epicenter was question of extending both federal match ignited gasoline spilled leased after treatment for head said to be in th North sea about and state ownership of forest re from the truck 250 miles northeast of London serves Injuries Plane Crashes All Must Cooperate to Aid Killing Five in Youth Primary Hears Wyoming Area lioiiy' Italo-Ethiopi- an le Farley Sees Trade Pickup in Fall mess whole-hearte- ‘What a Crash’ Says Joe hut That’s Putting It Mildly senate-a- pproved Bedrock Scale 25-Ce- nt WASHINGTON June 11 (AP) — A thoroughly compromised wage-ho- ur bill including a provision for pay differentials within a given industry received unanimous approval of a i joint congressional committee Saturday Chairman Thomas (D)Utah announced the conferees would draft a formal report on the bill at a meeting Sunday so that it ‘ could be taken up in the house Monday Advocates of the meas- WASHINGTON June 11 ID— Secretary of State Hull undertook Saturday to halt the sale of American-made bombing planes to Japan He chose public opinion as the means of accomplishing this objec- North SeaTemblor Rocks Five European Nations 82 PAGES— TEN CENTS Compromise Bill Provides Wage Differentials Within Given A - 5e Measure Wins (Conference1 Approval Secretary (Seeks to Block Bomber' Exports to Japan r‘'r“Un it Lfttal Settlement Price OOo Copper (Cathode) Pay-Ho- ur V’ No further glimpses of 1938 trends In voter sentiment will be obtained until Maine and Minnesota express JUNE' Htill Strikes At War Plajie Sales iV June 11 (F) will be a lull next in the turbulent party WASHINGTON re SUNDAY MORNING x tfmmt' By KIRKE L SIMPSON f- $3300 Silver (newly “mined) L464o Silver (foreign) 4275c Copper electrolytic delivered Connecticut valley c Lead 400c Senator Elbert () D Thomas Sees quick wage bill passage wage rates In -- the south than in the industrial north Under this section boards which G-M- en will be set up for each industry will be empowered to classify the units of that Industry as to size and other factors and set a varying scale of minimum wages which each classification must pay Must Consider Costs After Jail in County Georgia Officer Put In arriving at these minima th Denying He Beat Spouse to Death boards will not be permitted to fix the pay rate solely on the geoWas Club Used Golf Claim Investigators graphical basis but must consider also transportation costs prevailing COLUMBUS Ga June 11 (UP)— The government charged Sat- wages taxes operating costs such as light heat and power rates and infantry instructor at Fort Benning other economic factors urday that a took a No 1 iron from his golf bag and beat his wife to death with The ban against considering only geographical location ot the units it last Wednesday Federal agent charged the In- within the Industry was considered structor Major John R Brooke a concession to northerners on ths with murder and put him In the committee but the jubilant southerners said the other factors counMuscogee county jail Arraigned late Saturday before terbalanced this Largely because the classification U S Commissioner N A Brown Major Brooke pleaded not guilty clause was Included four conferees and waived a commitment hearing voted against adoption of the wage The body of Mrs Brooke mother section of the bill They were Senof three small children was found ators Borah (R) Idaho and Walsh y (D) Massachusetts and Repreat the fodt of a stairway In her CLYDE Texas June 11 (UP) Welch (R) California sentatives Fort near home Spanish-typ- e National guard troops Saturday Her head was bloody and and Hartley (R) New Jersey SenBenning night aided in the search for addi- battered from “blow with a blunt ator Murray (D) Montana did not tional victims of the tornado which instrument" the official report said vota All however joined in final killed at least 12 persona in this -— Elaborating privately on the re? approval ot the bill west Texas town Friday night port Investigators said the “blunt A F L Objection Seen The Red Criws extended aid to Instrument" was a golf club Hang the 20 Injured and arranged ahel on the banister of the stairway There were hints that the Amering ter for those whose homea were a few feet from the body was a golf ican Federation of Labor might not bloated away with a devaatating The No 1 Iron showed evi- be agreeable to the wage section force similar to that of an artillery bag dence of being the Implement of and might provoke a fight on it bombardment Of the score injured death officers said later Committee Chairman Thomas several were In cirtical condition The federal bureau of InvestigaUtah predicted however quick Chairman T Baulch of the Red tion entered the case shortly after (D) of the bill by both Cross committee said that some of discovery of the body J W Vin- acceptance houses them probably would die The more cent FBI agent directed the InThe wage controversy in the comseriously hurt were in hospitals at vestigation mittee was settled by an agreement Abilene on the following formula: It culminated Saturday in his a murder complaint against A "bedrock" wage of 25 cents an Account for Missing Commissioner with hour in all Interstate commerce Fob hours after the tornado Major Brooke Brown struck searching parties dug He had been under military guard effective the first year and to 30 cents the second year through debris of 25 shattered at the army post since his two Thereafter an Independent adhomes for additional looking 11 and Caroministrator In the Jabor department bodies Red Cross officials an- daughters Barbara body He was would appoint boards for each internounced late Saturday however line 7 found the (Continued on Page Eight) state Industry These boards would that all missing persons had been (Column Two) be charged with increasing the accounted for minimum wage to 40 cents an hour The known dead were: as rapidly as possible Mrs J B Easterling 60 Mrs J F Bonner 75 The board would classify each James Johnson 1$ industry and fix minima for each Melvin Kniffin 20 Once their orders class’ 'lcatlon ve-- e Jesse Rutledge 25 and his approved by the adr’-'-trat- or wife they would stand until he reconJ E Graham 60 and his wife vened the board to reinvestigate Leased Wire Tribune By Marian 53 conditions In the industry 11— Dire BERLIN June punishJ E Sullivan 60 Minimum Scale ment for “preparation of high treaMrs Margaret Ross 35 son" is threatened for Germans William Dale Despam 4 of seven years’ operathe end At who listen to the Moscow radio sta- tion of the law all existing wage Blown From Tracks tion according to the Deutsche be wiped out autoAn unidentified man who was a Justiz official periodical of the orders would and a minimum scale of transient on a Texas & Pacific nazl lawyers' association Death matically 40 cents an hour would go into freight train was blown from -- the by the guillotine is the penalty protracks He was white and about vided In the German penal code for This would shift tho "burden of 25 years old those convicted of high treason To obtain The spectacular nature of the According to the paper which proof’ on the Industries have to show storm probably saved many lives bases its statements on a decision exemptions they would could not pay their emDarkness had just set in when th$ of the people's court of July 26 that they 40 cents an hour without ployes funnel-shape- d cloud started moving 1937 listening to the Moscow radio in from the northwest Brilliant station can be considered prepara- curtailing seriously tho opportuniflashes of lightning silhouetted the tion for high treason "if the lis- ties for employment dminous cloud against the sky and tener does so for the purpose of Here again however the southresidents seeing approaching dis promoting the aims of the com- erners won a point They obtained a provision that all of the factors aster ran for shelter munist party of Germany" considered by the boards In their classification of Industries must be considered In determining wheyiep the wage would bring Charge Army Major With Murder of Wife broad-shoulder- Texas Troops Rake Debris For Gale Dead two-stor- -- A ad-var- -'-g Nazis Threaten ‘Red’ Listeners nt NATIONAL GOLF Ralph Culdahl successfully defended his title in the national open golf tournament af the Cherry Hills course In Denver Saturday finishing with 284 In second place six strokes behind’ was Dick Metz and two strokes behind him were Harry Cooper and Toney Penna NATIONAL BASEBALL Meer provided the baseball feature SatVander Johnny n urday He pitched a no-h- it game against the Bees as Cincinnati won 0 Pittsburgh downed Philadelphia 3 and the New York-Louis game was called at the end of the eighth because of rain In the American league Detroit and Philadelphia won the only games played The Tigers triumphed over Washington 2 and the A’s took the measure of St Louis 4 no-ru- 4-- 3-- St 7-- 5-- INTERNATIONAL TENNIS The United States thanks to the sensational play of Mrs Helen Wills Moody defeated the British in Wightman cup competition and Don Budge captured the French hard court title by defeating Roderich Menzel Hour provisions of the bill were settled by the conferees without long bickering’ The hour maximum for the first year of the law would be 44 a week Most interstate Industries workfng their employes longer than that would be forced to pay them time and a half for overtime Th following year the maximum work week would decline to 42 hours The goal of 40 hours would be reached the third year Exemptions to cover collective contracts where the hours might be longer but the pay much higher than the minimum were drafted into the bill The committee made provision for industries which guarantee an annual wage by permitting them to fix “reasonable” work weeks as long as they stayed within 2000 hours a year It ‘also excused seasonal Indus ' (ContlnuM on Pie Stven) (Column Four) t $ 4 u ' f xi m g iJt I & 3 H |