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Show miaday Service If you do not receive yoar copy of The Herald by 6 p. m., telephone 494 and a copy will be sent you. era PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2 1, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. 12, NO. 12 GRANT COMES TO SPEAK AT SHARON MEET Speaks Today Mollis ons Taking Early Lead In Air Race To Australia COLORADO U SWAMPS T; SCORE, 48-6 PJ1ERRY GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN Weather Forecast UTAH: Fair Sunday; slightly warmer tonight northwest portion. Maximum temp., Saturday . . 60 Minimum temp., Saturday . . 24 Precipitation .47 of an inch. Id I he m ' .... P si 'i WASHINGTON The fa- hious Blue Eagle which a little lit-tle more than a year ago swooDed down upon the na tion with all the ballyhoo of wartime frenzy, now may go Lhe wav of its creator. . . . The question of its future late is now before inner administration admin-istration councils. Some favor complete UDanuonmem, some i- tvor restriction to coaea indus tries. Probably a decision win riot come uniu me penuwian tlan of the NR. A is agreed upon. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Agricul-ture M. L. Wilson is displaying with much gusto a prized momen-to momen-to of his farm belt inspection trip. It consists of a rubber $5 bill. Wilson says he is going to present pre-sent it to Secretary Morgenthau. . . . Big Jim Farley is one of the most approachable men in Washington, but there is one class of visitors he flees. He has a standing order with his doorman not to admit -philatelists. Keason ng a big row among themselves over the first day distribution ot new stamps, and Jim does not want to become embroiled in the wrangle. I YUUNCi BOB I Illinois' bewhiskered Senator J. "Ham" Lewis is chairman ol the Democratic senatorial campaign cam-paign committee, but apparently not in the confidence of the admin istration's inner political councils. . . . The other day Ledis predicted pre-dicted the defeat of Wisconsin's 'young, independent Senator Bob La Follette. It so happens that Bob s Democratic opponent, a Tory anti-New anti-New Dealer, is getting no help from either Farlev or the presi dent. Privately they are believed to be sympathetic to Young Bob. Real credit for the presi- ,'r order slashing work-hours "the cotton-earrnervt industry by lj) per cent without a decrease in wages belongs to canny Sidney Hillman. member of the new NRA -board, and president of the Amal gamated Garment workers. It was Hillman, who, in August, persuaded per-suaded Johnson to recommend such a step to the president, and then supplied the data to back it (Continued on Page Four) DEMOCRATS TO HOLD RALLIES A novel plan to bring the Democratic Demo-cratic nominees before the voters of Provo will be carried out here Wednesday, with meetings conducted con-ducted in all five of the municipal wards simultaneously. The plans are being perfected under the direction di-rection of A. B. Kemp, chairman of the campaign committee. The meetings, which are scheduled sched-uled to start promptly at 7:30 p. m. will be held at the Maeser school building, the Dixon junior high gym, Fourth ward recreational hall and the Farrer junior high gym. The place of meeting . in the second municipal ward will be announced later. Chairmen in charge at each place will be as follows: Tom Ward, first ward; Don Vincent, second ward; Loring Harris, third ward; Harry. Butler, fourth ward end Edgar Barton, fifth ward. . The candidates for the county and legislative positions will be rotated in groups of three around the five meetings on the same order as the M. I. A. road shows. Musical numbers will intersperse the four-minute talks by the nominees. Special efforts will be made to get the voters registered on Oct. 30, the final registration day. Plans for a colorful, "old-time" campaign are being shaped by r. Kemp. f Set For Flight h , BRISBANE, Australia, Oct. 20 If CUR) Sir Charles Kingsford Smith A and Captain P. G. Taylor were , ready to take off at 4 a. m. to- naorrowd p. m. today est.) in their American Lockheed altair low wtng monoplane for Suva, Fiji Is-lands, Is-lands, a dot in the Pacific 1,700 miles away, on the first of a ftnree-stage tiignt ror tne united States. - '4 T j nappy Dirtnaay The Herald extends congratulations congratu-lations to Mrs. Julia A. Leavltt, one of Provo's oldest women who f ls91 today, and Mrs. Fabiu J. .teitch, who observed her eighty- ifirfchirtbday anniversary Sat- All Sessions To Be Held At Lincoln School Auditorium President Heber J. Grant will be the speaker at the two general sessions of the Sharon stake quarterly conference con-ference today to be held at the Lincoln high school auditorium audi-torium at 10 a. m. and 2 p. m. Elder Reed Stnoot of the Council of the Twelve, who was the assigned as-signed to represent the general authorities at the conference, was unable to attend on account being one of the speakers at the funeral services of James H. Anderson today. to-day. Elder Smoot spoke at the Saturday evening session. More than 100 boys nolding the Aaronic priesthood were jiven special honors at the meeting Saturday night for accomplishments accomplish-ments in quorum activities. President Presi-dent A. V. Watkins was in charge of the meeting. The Sunday evening meeting will be in charge of the M. I. A., and will commence at 7:30 o'clock. Pres. Grant will be the speaker, and remarks concerning the 'Improvement 'Im-provement Kra" will be given by President A. V. Watkins. Two trombone duets will be rendered ren-dered by Sylvester Clark and Sterling Clufl, a retold story will be given by Evan Perry, and the M. I. A. slogan will be presented by Joan Murdock. SCOUT LEADERS TO MAKE TRIP The Timpanogos council Boy Scout officials, A. A. Anderson, chief executive and Merrill Christ-opherson, Christ-opherson, assistant executive, will leave Thursday for a trip through the southern part o fthe district in the interest of the boy scout program. Meetings will be held with scout-ers scout-ers at Kanab, Hurricane, Moapa, Overton and on the return trip at St. George, Cedar City, Beaver, Fillmore, Delta and Nephi. The work to be discussed includes in-cludes registration of troops, re organization of districts, leadership leader-ship training courses, and the representation uf all troops in the council at the Silver Jubilee Jamboree Jam-boree to be held in Washington, D. C. in August, 1935, to commemorate com-memorate the twenty-fifth anniversary anni-versary of scouting. International Affair The jamboree will be international interna-tional in scope and boy scouts will be present from every nation in the world and every state in the union. The Timpanogos council has been granted the privilege of sending send-ing one scout from each troop, a total of 181, if a complete representation repre-sentation is obtained. It is estimated esti-mated that less han $100 will be required to send a boy to the jamboree. jam-boree. The scout officials will urge as complete a representation as possible pos-sible on account of the wonderful opportunity the jamboree presents not only for the representatives to obtain contact with scouts from the rest of the world, but for the publiciy the Timpanogos council will receive as well. Mr. Christopherson who has recently assumed his duties as assistant as-sistant executive, will be introduced intro-duced to the scouters at each meeting. BALKAN POWERS JOINFORCES BELGRADE, Oct. 20 (U.P) The little Entente and Balkan aations banded together today to investigate the assassination of King Alexander at Marseilles and, in the interest of peace, to adopt "proper measures" to prevent similar sim-ilar crimes in future. A joint communique announcing announc-ing the decision was signed by the foreign ministers of Jugoslavia, Czechoslakia, Roumania, Turkey and Bulgaria. The cabinet formally offered its resignation today, the reason being the accession of King Peter II and his regency. It was expected the regents would askthe cabinet to continue in office. OVERHEATED FURNACE An overheated furnace at the residence of Mrs. N. H. Nelson, 341 East Third South, set fire to the lint accumulation causing a scare which brought the fire department de-partment Friday night. No damage dam-age was reported. ii i v-v. -at '."".'-.lv,rfej' HEBER J. GRANT TAX SALE CASH APPORTIONED County Treasurer Apportions Tax Sale Receipts of Third Quarter Apportionment among the Utah county taxing units of $84,295.04, received for tax sale redemptions for the third quarter of 1934 was completed Saturday at the office of John C. Taylor, county treasurer, treas-urer, as follows: Lehi. $1123.43; Alpine, $319.26; American Fork, $887.11; Pleasant Grove, $812.08; Lindon, $334.59; Orem, $1605.59; Provo city $7877.89; Springville. $829.13; Mapleton, $289.37; Spanish Span-ish Fork, $1110.40; Salem, $463.99; Santaquin, $334.47; Goshen, $5.91; Nebo schools, $6231.92; Alpine schools, $9330.57; Provo city schools, $7350.41; Springville Irrigation Irri-gation district, $516.31; Mapleton Irrigation district, $229.32; state, $17,389.65; state roads, $3344.04; Utah county. $19,817.92; total, $84,295.04. The total received includes taxes and interest due. DEATH CLAIMS J. H. ANDERSON SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 20 James H. Anderson, 77, writer, Churchman and prominent Republican, Repub-lican, former U. S. collector of internal in-ternal revenue, died at his residence resi-dence last Friday night of causes incident to old age. He was born in Salt Lake City, February 11, 1857, the son of James and Catharine M. Cowley Anderson. He learned the printing print-ing trade and became an expert book and job printer, later serving serv-ing as city editor of the Deseret News. He was elected county commissioner commis-sioner in 1901, was made chairman of the Republican state committee in 1903. He was a close friend of Senator Reed Smoot and accompanied accom-panied him to Washington when he took his seat in the senate. He was active In church work serving as a member of the Y. M. M. I. A. general board. He was a diligent writer, author of many tracts and manuals for the church. Provo One of 1 5 Winter CCC Camps Provo is one of 14 CCC winter camps for reforestation purposes authorized by the government. The others are located at Hyrum, Kanosh, Duchesne, Willard, Cedar City, Mt. Pleasant, Springdaie. Brigham City, Veyo, Milford, Manila, Ma-nila, Ridgeland, and Huntsville. The Provo camp will be located at the Utah county fair grounds. The barracks and other camp buildings are ready, but the men will remain at the Hobble Creek camp until snow flies. Wool Is Stronger BOSTON, Oct. 20 (U.f The Boston wool market has shown a decided improvement the past week, according to today's report of the U. S. agriculture department. depart-ment. A demand was received on quite a wide variety of greasy combing domestic wools. Fleece and various lines of western grown wools were included in the demand. Mollison Pair First To Take Off; Three U. S. Planes in the 11,000 Mile Race; Turner Tur-ner and Panborn in Boeing: Plane Jim Mollison and his flving wife, the former Amy Johnson, arrived in Bagdad tonight, far in the lead of the other 18 planes entered in thje race from London to Australia for the Mac-Robertson international air race prize. They had travelled the whole 25.10 miles without a report of their whereabouts. ATHENS, GREECE, Oct. 20 (U.R) The Netherlands plane No. 44 in the England-Australia air race arrived here at 3:30 p. m., G.M.T. (10:30 a. m. E.S.T.) today, apparently leading the classic. .MILDENHALL, ENGLAND, Oct. 20 (U.R) Airplanes, ranging from giants to midgets, streaked across Europe toward to-ward Bagdad today in the Mildenhall-Melbourne race, greatest great-est in aviation history. Twenty planes, three with'S " American crews, started from Mildenhall within 17 minutes today, to-day, and soon were over Continental Continen-tal Europe, bound for Marseilles, Leipzig, Rome, Athens or direct to Baghdad first compulsory stopping stop-ping place 2.530 miles away. Amy and James Mollison, heroes of many flights, were first away at 6:30 a. m. (1:30., E. S. T.), headed for Bagnuad in their De Havilanted No. 63 Comet. Head For Ainens The Americans were Col. Roscoe Turner and Clyde Pangbom, in a Boeing transport, headed for Athens; Miss Jacqueline .Cochrane and Wesley Smith in a Granville monoplane, headed for Bucharest or Athens; John H. Wright and John Polando, bound for Marseilles Marseil-les in their little Lambert mono-coupe mono-coupe Baby Ruth, smallest in the lace. Baby Ruth was the first American Ameri-can plane reported. It arrived at Marseilles after a halt at Lyons due to a defective feed pump. te j.o a aerecuve leea pump. i Wright and Polando, arriving ntn iz:iy p. m. at i seres airdrome, Marseilles stin in excellent position posi-tion and went to work on the pump. The planes were well scattered scat-tered over the continent. No. 58, British Air Speed A-S-8, landed at Abbeyville, France to wait for rain to sunslde. No. 31, Britisn Miles iralcon, landed in a field five miles from Le Bourget airdrome, Paris, in a storm. No. 35, New Zealand, Fairey Fox, landed at Wierre Au Bois on the French coast of the English channel. None of these was scheduled halt. But other were roaring into airdromes on railroad time. Sorenson Heads Workers Union Walter Sorenson was re-elected president of the Provo chapter of the Civil and Relief Workers Protective Pro-tective Union, at the meeting held Friday night in the city court room. Other officers were elected as follows: E. E. Homer, vice president; presi-dent; L. Raymond Nelson, secretary; secre-tary; Don Vincent, assistant secretary; sec-retary; G. N. Larson, treasurer; Andrew Goodsel, sergeant-at-arms; R. R. Clifford, L. E. Waid, Henry Nunery, grievance committee; Wesley Robey, delegate to the coun ty con ven tion . It was decided to take a vote at next Friday's meeting on the matter if incorporating the union under the laws of Utah. A decision was made to conduct an open meeting, Thursday at the city and county building for the discussion of political topics. Four new members were introduced at Friday's meeting? Walter Sorenson, Soren-son, president, was in charge. Inventions Can Bring Nation Out of Depression Is Claimed OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., cU 20 U.P Albert C. Barns of Oakland, Oak-land, Calif., president of the national na-tional inventors' congress today directly opposed those who believe advancement of the machine age is responsible for the world's economic ills by lying down these three principles: 1 A workless world is coming, a 2 Inventions will life America out of the depression; 3 Solution of the machine age's problems is more machines. Burns was here for a short meeting with members in Okla IOWA SENATOR TO SPEAK HERE Republican Solon To Speak At Rally Monday, 2 P. MM Rowe Announces. United States Senator L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa, will be the speaker at a Republican rally to be held in the Provo First ward recreation hall Monday afternoon, October 22, according to announcement announce-ment of Ed. M. Rowe, Republican county chairman. The rally is sponsored under the direction of the Women's Republican Re-publican club of Provo and the county central committee, it is said. Senator Dickinson is reputed to , Af w ynnat mtfartanding statesmen of the country, having had a long and interesting career in public life. After having been graduated from Cornell College (Iowa) and the University of Iowa, be took up the practice of law and became active in politics. Is Noted Orator He is said to be a man of pleasing pleas-ing personality and an orator of note. He was elected to congress in 1918 and served twelve years in the lower house. In 1930 he was elected United States senator, and immediately became a recognized leader of that body. Among the senator's important committee assignments in the senate sen-ate are: Appropriations, military affairs, pringing, public buildings and grounds, and rules. He is reported to have few equals as a public speaker and is in great demand throughout the country. He is temporary chairman chair-man of the Republican national convention in Chicago in 1933, and delivered the keynote speech of that convention. Senator Dickinson will speak in Salt Lake City early Monday evening eve-ning and at Ogden at It) p. m. the same evening. LEGION CHIEF DEFENDS VETS MIAMI, Fla., Oct. 20 (U.R) National Na-tional Commander Edward A. Hayes of the American Legion cannot agree with President Roosevelt's Roose-velt's assertion that the average war veteran is better off than the average American citizen. The World war veteran, Hayes said, was "set back of the average citizen" by loss of time in war time that was donated to the gov- ment with resultant interruption ! of careers, loss of earning powers and loss of priority. Hayes said the status of the4,-000,000 the4,-000,000 men wno served in 1917 should not M judged by the status of 1,000,000 members of the legion. S) - homa to discuss possibity of hold ing the congress' annual meeting in Tulsa next year. "A heavy accumulation of invention in-vention has not been given the world," he said, "because the creators have not been able financially finan-cially to patent them. When available, avail-able, these devices will provide work for hundreds of thousands of persons. "Inventive genius will lead the procession to a new prosperity. There is no reasbn to believe that typeof fenius has died out". Boulder Team Scores Five Touchdowns In Last Quarter At Ogden BY J. R. PAULSON OGDEN, Oct. 20 Featuring Featur-ing deceptive reverses and end runs, Colorado University ity team 48 to 6 before 5000 fans here Saturday. The game was hard-fought in the first half with both teams showing powerful offense but leaky-defenses. leaky-defenses. The Boulder team went on a rampage in the last quarter, scoring scor-ing 34 points. Bill "Kayo" Lam. substitute quarter, broke through the entire team for several sensational sen-sational runs, one of them for 90 yards and a touchdown with only two minutes to go. The Cougars' gained 145 yards on rushing and 133 yards from passes while the Coloradoans amassed a yardage of 424 on rushing rush-ing with 75 yards on passes. The B. Y. U. line was opening holes nicely, especially in the first half with off-tackle smashes and end-runs. The Cougars were stopped stop-ped in the first quarter on the one-foot one-foot line after Colorado had scored but they drove right back on line smashes with Woodward and San-ford San-ford alternating in carrying the ball. On the eight-yard line, Hutchinson Hutch-inson smashed through center for a touchdown after shaking off two Colorado tacklers. Warner's kick for the extra point was wide. Colorado scored a touchdown before be-fore the game was five minutes old on a reverse counter to Staab from the eight-yard line. Another touchdown touch-down came in the second quarter after a brilliant drive featuring Lam with Neighbors, Colorado, end, going over on an end-around play. In the third quarter Colorado attempted at-tempted a field goal, but the B. Y. U. line held. Score Five Times In the fatal fourth quarter, Lam dodged through right tackle for a touchdown in the first minute of play, but Neighbors' kick for the extra point was wide. Staab, half back, contributed the next touchdown, touch-down, after a 46-yard gain aided by smart blocking. Neighbors' kick was good. Lam scored the next one, intercepting inter-cepting Wodward's pass to Oaks, running 50 yards along the sidelines. side-lines. Neighbors added the extra point with an accurate kick. Late in the final quarter, Lam passed to Anderson over the goal line for another touchdown, and Lam made the score 41 to 6 with the extra point. Cougars Stopped The final score came after the Cougars' scoring threat was stopped stop-ped on the Colorado 10-yard line. Simmons passed to Gillespie to put the ball on the Colorado 15-yard 15-yard line. The next pass by Simmons Sim-mons was intercepted by Bailey. On the next play, Lam ran through the whole B. Y. U. team 90 yards for a touchdown. Cheney plunged through center for the extra point. Captain Max Warner stood out as the best lineman on the field. Favero, Waldo, Hutchinson, Hart and Woodward also acquitted themselves well. Wagner, Lam, Staab starred for Colorado in the backfield with Ritchard and Drain showing up well on the line. FOOTBALL Colorado U. 48, Brigham Young & Utah Aggies 19, Wyoming 0. Utah U. 7, Denver 0. Las Vegas 25, Payson 0. Minnesota IS, Pittsburgh 7. Ifordham 9, St. Marys 14. Colorado Aggies 56, Mines 0. Teachers 21, Colorado College 0. California 3, U. C. L. A. 0. Oregon State 6, U. S. C. 6. Carnegie Tech 0. Notre Dame 13. Oregon 18, Idaho O. Georgia Tech. 2, Michigan 9. Holycross 26, Harvard 6. Yale 37, Brown 0. Penn. 27, Rutgers 19. Alabama 13, Tennessee 6. Iowa 14, Iowa State 0. Nebraska 6, Oklahoma 0. Stanford 3, San Francisco 0. Tulane 7, Gqprgia 6. To Dig Carrots All F. E. R. A. clients holding turnip and carrot orders report at community farm Monday, when digging will be resumed. COURT DEER HUNTING Probate matters and other court hearings set for Saturday were postponed one week. Judge M. M. Larson, F. M. Alder, court reporter, report-er, and many of the attorneys joined" the deer hunters. Hauptmann Goes To New Jersey Heavily Guarded Strong Precautions Against Suicide Attempt Thrown Around Prisoner; Arraignment Monday; Court Denies Appeal FLEMINGTON, N. J., Oct. 20 (U.R Bruno Richard Hauptmann will be arraigned Monday on an indictment charging him with the murder of the Lindbergh baby, and will be tried before Nov. 15. it was understood today. He was brought to this seat of Hunterdon county within whoso border the crime took place, last night after he lost his appeal ap-peal to prevent extradition from New York state. Extraordinary precautions were taken to safeguard trie . . - 'prisoner, who was led through u Ask Grand Jury To Indict Three InStoll Kidnap Dillinger Captor Directing Search For Robinson, Hunted Kidnaper. LOUISVILLE, Ky.. Oct. 20 r.E Federal prosecutors today asked a grand jury to indict Thomas H. Robinson. Jr., his wife and his father for violation of the "Lindbergh" law in the kidnaping kidnap-ing of Mrs. Alice Speed Stoll. They' denied any truth in the charge of youthful Mrs. Frances Robinson that she was "double crossed" after working with the millionaire Stoll family and federal fed-eral agents for safe return of the victim. Purvis In Charge Even as the grand jury convened con-vened in special session, an army of federal agents directed from Cincinnati by Melvin Purvis, the man who trapped John Dillinger, combed the entire country for the young former college student and insane asylum inmate who engin-ered engin-ered the abduction. Around Kane, Pa., and Wilmington, Wilming-ton, Del., state and city police forces continued unremittingly a search instigated by reports that Robinson was sighted in both cities yesterday. Simultaneously Washington authorities ordered a watch placed on California border routes and investigated a host of rumors at dozens of intermediate points. In the last 24 hours Robinson has been reported seen or trailed in Pennsylvania, Delaware, New York, Tennessee. Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois and Kansas. Currency Shows Up-Federal Up-Federal agents are sure only that he was in Springfield, O., Wednesday morning. The fact was established by discovery of a $5 bill, part of the $49,500 ransom ran-som money with which he escaped Tuesday from the Indianapolis apartment where Mrs. Stoll was held captive, and of an automobile bearing his finger prints. Investigators of the kidnaping beileved it probable that their quarry still was east of the Mississippi Missi-ssippi river, but refused to commit com-mit themselves further . "I don't know where Robinson is any more than you do," Purvis said when he arrived in Cincinnati. Cincin-nati. As the huge manhunt widened, U. S. Dist. Atty. Thomas J- oparKS uuiiuuiiueu timi. iie win ujj- pose any attempt to reduce Mrs. Robinson's $50,000 bond. Two hours, he said, will suffice to place evidence against her and the two men suspects before the grand ; jury. ! FINAL CATTLE SHIPPING SET! Shipping of six mor? ears rf cattle under the emergency drouth aid program this week will exhaust ex-haust the present allotment, Lyman Ly-man H. Rich, councy agents, said Saturday. The care will be shipped ship-ped from the fo!l -w'ng points: Lehi, Monday, one car. Pleasant Grove, Wednesday one car: Spanish Span-ish Fork, Thursday and Friday, three cars; Pines, Spanish Fork canyon, one car, Saturday. There are only 245 head left out of the present allotment. During the past week the county has shipped out 678 head at a cost of $9954. In previous shipments more than 500 head of cattle were purchased pur-chased at a total erpenditurj of $70,000. If another allotment is authorized author-ized from Washington, the larger towns, Provo, Springville and Spanish Fork wil be served. The sheep buying has also been completed and no mre applications applica-tions will be received, according to Mr. Rich. mob of booing and shouting farmers farm-ers and townsmen when the heavily heav-ily guarded motorcade that brought him from New York City arrived. State troopers stood ' guard inside and outside the jail I regarded as txth escape proof and I mob proof. The possibility of an attempt at mob violence was discounted dis-counted by all officials. Prepare For Trial There was a possibility or Hauptmann being arraigned today. But Attorney General David T. Wilentz said there was "no hurry." hur-ry." and that "everyone concerned" concern-ed" could take a week-end rest. Preparations for Hauptmann's trial, underway even before he had lost his fight against extradition extra-dition from Bronx county, New-York, New-York, where he is under indictment indict-ment for extortion, were redoubled. Jury Commissioner Charles H1-combe H1-combe expected to appear before common pleas Judge A. O. Rob-bins Rob-bins today or Monday with a list of 48 talesmen from which the jury will be selected. Hauptmann was non-communicative in his new surroundings. Hauptmann's transfer to New Jersey began two hours after the appellate division of the New York state supreme court denied his appeal from a decision of the lower court denying his applica tion for a writ of habeas corpus which his attorney sought to prevent pre-vent extradition. Confident of Conviction Wilentz expressed confidence that the state had sufficient evidence evi-dence to convict Hauptmann and send him to the electric chair. Although he appeared nervous, smoking incessantly and constantly constant-ly pacing the floor of his cell, Hauptmann occasionally joked v.ith his guards. He was particularly particu-larly amused about a spoon he is supposed to have fashioned into a suicide instrument in the Bronx county jail. But the possibility of suicide was accepted as no joke by jail authorities. They divested him ot his belt and shoe laces and thoroughly thor-oughly searched a small bag he brought with him. The bag was round to contain a photograph of his cell in the Bronx jail, group pictures of himself, his wife and their baby, and several pictures ot Mrs. Hauptmann and the infant. He fell asleep at 2:30 a. m. Previously he had complained his cell was uncomfortable "too much heat." HANK GETS HIS DEER Among the first of th? Provo deer hunters to report his success was Hank Smith, prjprietor of Smith's Billiard hall, who returned return-ed Saturday morning with a fine buck. Smith invaded the Dia- i mond Fork area in Spanish Fork canyon Say: LAS VEGAS, Nev. Oct. 19 The madame and I just been visiting "Hoover dam." That's not a typographical error. It's Hoover dam; there must be some justice left among us. Well, you should see it under construction. It will be finished finish-ed in less than a year, two and one-half years ahead of time. They have done a great job. If they decide to plow under every third dam they are going go-ing to have a tough time with this one. Found the best way I ever went to Ariiona, by a cable and a bucket. The dam grows a foot high a day. That sounds like Oklahoma weeds. One old boy got fired from down in there the other day, and as he walked out he got on a high peak and declared: "I hope she leaks." That sounds like a rich Republican's wish to the new deal. They "hope it leaks." Yours, O ft iTTHcKaSfh I ?yn3icU. Im. ROGERS |