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Show ' r , " . - , . -!', . i . ! - " - , - V ' i - ' - , n 1 , i - , ' "r - - - 4 ' . '. "V-.- V ' :v t- " . - -.' "-" , v ,'- . - "i herald;1 phones : .:;t"-d L -vvl f;y-.,;-;, If your paper is not delivered, call The HeraliPbet'weeii 6 and 7 p.' ta, and one'will be sent to you. If you do not live in Provo, notify this office Editorial .494 Business 495 Society V. Either Number 1 1- .i K and the paper will be sent the net day, ' .' i FORTYSIXTH YEAR, NO. 120 PjOVOivUTA ff' C D IT NT Yr U T A.HIR I p, A Y, ' J A NU A ft Y; 2 9,-1 9 3 2 V PRICE FIVE CENTS "ri.n- I I crl G3)' V. I N to D AY Arthur Brisbane - a - (Cbpyrigfiir-1932) A Mother's Seen Words Teaching Talkies To Talk v To Stay On a Gold Basis How To Catch Squirrels t LOS ANGELES A FEW words t may -save' a lif e.V Ruth Juddac-cused Juddac-cused of ' murdering two': women, : and -! placing . their ' dismembered bodies in a' trunk at first confessed. Lawyers are fighting "for -her life against . her confession. Crowds gather to hear. Witnesses supply reasons for., 'the' alleged ' crimes. - Then, an old woman comes to the witness chair, .'tells the Jury "My daughter Ruth was a strange little - girl, not quite right.' Tears roll f down her wrinkled cheeks and turning turn-ing to the Judge, she says "Excuse me, but I can't help it." ' 'Those seven words . might have more effect on a Jury' than all the ; eloquence of lawyers and testimony of jexperts. - ' ' "l i - i " - -; in THE METROPOLISv center and factory of. the moving picture industry, even now one of the three greatest. In America, mechanical genius has made it possible to put Into: the mouth of a "talkie" actor, who knows ' no language but Eng- : llsh.' any other language that may be desired, perfectly synchronized. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.most suc-; suc-; cessful among producers of .moving pictures, ctnauied this writer to see an admirable performance In which s Norma tiUet and ' Lionel Barry-more Barry-more appeared. The language was German, and a inost beautiful performance, per-formance, although the picture had ' been madi In English only, German ixtists of high ability . a . man ' and; :. womaiv had '"talked the film " 'supplying German voice for the v American artists, - tfaey ' themselves. ' not photographed, or making" any appearance except lh sound. - - : ' V r This means an end of the hope . In foreign countries that "the talk- - les 'win kill American competition abroad. The pictures will- be made here, they will talk. German in Berlin. Ber-lin. French" in " Paris, - Italian in SoW. . 1 -': r 1 So admirably 5 was. the language mibstitution accpmpUshed "that it L -- : 1V1. ' KallaM "that was ; impwaiuie . . w . -, Norman Shearer, sitting in the prisoners pris-oners box, or Barrymore,the lawyer, law-yer, pleading for her life, was not talking German.'; 4 This industrial accomplishment, ' in future win ' mean " hundreds; of millions in profits for an American industry," : 1 VU ' , " - . THE WHITE HOUSE DENIES that there is any "policy of" Inna-tion Inna-tion In the administration reconstruction recon-struction program, ; wnich willend two thousand million dollars, as a starter tof big folks in . need . bf itv tv,o tho- tiroj?irtcnt' and his ad- Vvisers do not intcndjnflatlon-is cer- jtaizL' But lnnauon comes as ouier, diseases come; of. tnemseives, not planned. ... A ' ' v i ' - This country Is ,on a godbasw now and means to'stay there. But we hand our gold to anyDouy ;xaai asks for It.- with a certain .plece of paper in hla'hanL " American Fork Man Seriously Ray Coddington has been brought to his home 'from-near Topliff, where he- met with a' serious accident. acci-dent. ' Mr. Coddington " with two hther' men was rlifting logs , in a sheep . corral when in some, man ner he feu and the log be was neip-Ing neip-Ing carry fell upon him." ' ' - nr. V. f: Houston his brother-in- law' was summoned from here late Monday night and left immediately immediate-ly with Foster " Nicholes fot'Jthe I It was ' found that vMr Coddington Codding-ton had sustained broken, ribs; 6ne jof which had punctured a lung. Barring, complications : he has a chaJicd for recovery; ; The WfeatHer l Utah Occasion al show taniffht and nrobably Saturday: some what" wanner In south portion ' to- nig r maximum temp. -Thursday -Si I llnlmnm temp. V Inmred 'ft " ' S - m - s-: Tremendous "Destruction In City from Japanese Bombs;, Foreign Settlement JVigi-lant; JVigi-lant; Long Truce DoubtfuL SHANGHAI, Jan. 29 (U.R) (Copyright) -An armistice brought at least a temporary lull in thejjattle of Shanghai tonight after the Japanese had showerVoTfhe, native city with bombs from the air, causing tremendous destrucr mission and other property within and without the international settlement. set-tlement. " The armistice was in full effect early- today although there was much skepticism over how lofig it would, last, authorities of the .foreign .for-eign settlement, - within which bombs had been dropped, continued their vigilance and there was much uneasiness, although there was some- easing of the tension' when reports re-ports . to - the United States consul general of supposed violations of the truce by . the' " Japanese turned out to be less serious thahx at' first believed.' - v... " ..- .' Irropeirty Endangered . J The " American '. property endangered endan-gered ' included the young J. Allen missionary group. of-Vbulldings in the foreign1 settlement,' the Chenju radio station owned by .the, Radio Corporaupn of America' andT; the Chlnesetand " the "Texas OH company com-pany staUon at WoosUng. - ? -r - A bomb was dropped in Young J. Allen . coiirt, . ; around - which the American missionary buildings are grouped; and which is under American Amer-ican 1ease The bomb did Moderate damage' and there were no casualties. casual-ties. 'The incident was'' reported to Edwin S." Cunningham;' XJV S.' consul general, alter the armistice. It led him4ralate ; that : the - Young J. Allen, memorial had 'been . bombed after he truce had- gone Into - ef fect'but investigation developed, that such a Violation of the truce had not occurred and all bombings in the district had taken place before be-fore the armistice. J -' The armistice "; provides -".for suspension ' of hostilitiesr With' a final, solution; left' for. further dl cussions. ' - " . , The Britlsli and Americans Tioped the r armistice would not he en dangered by inflamed Chinese feeling, feel-ing, over the ' burning tf Chapel. They, also hoped that the Japanese, when ? reinforcements 7 arrive, , wiu not be. tempted' to further excesses. There was ; danger, too, 5 inai . uw Chinese," encouraged by "the funex-pected funex-pected success of - their resistance would want vengeance - Anti-Foreign Troublp S If was -hoped also that the gen- eral strike paralyzing the acUyltiesabove previous closing, levels. Trad of the city would n6l develop WV general k anti-foreign D trouble, yn event theitruce is maintained, the Chinese crobably will be busy teai ine holes in the Japanese' excuses for attacking tne city, in view the Chinese surrender jto their de mands. .Undoubtedly millions oi Chinese will continue the boycott against 'Japan indefinitely. . EBUNENT MEN BROADCAST , The Saturday evening national broadcast on Asoects,.. of the " p& pression and on Psycholosy "Today will be heard tomorrow ' at' 6iS0 p. m. over station KSL Salt Lake City.' , Two talks - win ds given, "Resoonsibility and EconomicxDis- tress'. by Kexf ord Tugwell, pre- f essor of economics, uoium out university uni-versity and" "Personality ', in " Our Changing ! SocJety,7 by Jfioya ? iu AllpdrtV professor . of;; psychology. Byracuse .nniversiiy. S- Air Hope Of Rescuing Men lii Snhmnrinp LONDON, Jan. 29 (ttE Hope lias been abandoned for rescuing the 60 men: aboard .the 'missing submarine submar-ine M-2, an admiralty - statement said today; although a pair of sub-riiarine'hand sub-riiarine'hand flas has beenfound by mine sweepers seeking the' lost vessetjr;' -y . ; . iThe statement was based on in-formation in-formation received from the commanding com-manding T officer of submarines definitely admitting There is - no hope, now of caving life." . ' T . ' . r- Bank On County s Future . (Editorial) i There is one unfailing I :, tinue ifs; march of progress. V -t,'-i s..?.. . ? nav way is ior ns.ciuzens 10 nave commence ana to DISPLAY that confidence, in the future of Utah v3 -county. 1 - Sound investments in Utah county1, in Its resources) i industries and its institutions', are just as sound today; as they everlwere. :The jpersons who have taken the worst losses m "hard times", are those whp have specu- lated, who have, gone the limit on "paper . values" far i from their own firesides. " ' i Utah county is a hundred pet cent investment today. to-day. Those who place their reliance, and their cash, , in some substantial phase of Utah countydevelopmetit, I'wfll not be' crying ' th -the -World is cominy; to in end. " " And. aU that Js needed to make Utah county pro3-i pro3-i per is to have enough of its. citizens convinced that it will prosr 1 1 I v ' v ; ". ' Those who "sell short" on Utah county willdo plenty of weeping and wailing in years to come. Rail Presidents t Reject Workers' -Wage Gut Plans , CHICAGO, Jan. 29 (UJR) David B. Robertson, spokesman for the railway rail-way unions,' announced at 2:30 pT m. today that the niAa rairpresi-dents rairpresi-dents had reected. four 'counter wage . proposals , advanced by the workers as substitutes ' for the 10 per cent reductionreguested by the jrailroadsC. i t '--; vThe f6ur counter proposals to the railroads' proposal df VlD" per cent wage "reduction' Were made - by ' the labor group.,,. - - 4 The one differing most, radically, from the president's suggestion provides: "Six and one half per cent td be deducted from each pay check, for a period of one year, the basic-rates to remain as at present and 'the 'arrangement to' terminate 12 months after going, into effect" Another labor, proposal provides for a " six and " one half per cent dutright reduction, "with ' an addl-J;ional addl-J;ional three and onehalf: per cent reduction ' to Te repaid in " monthly Installments during the following year' to individual employes or their heirs' - . . ; NEW, YORK, Jan.-$9 ;IE Swamped by a' series of overnight developments ; of adverse "; nature, the stock market ran into a wave of! selling that carried leaders perilously, peril-ously, close to their bear . market lows. r rjt ;n ' : " " : ' A recovery set in during v the afternoon. It was impressive; but the list failed : as a' Whole to ; get ing I slowed " down -on the recovery with- many operators remaining aloof from Hhe markt. 'v '! The ; chief -incentive for. the late recovery was a sudden Jump in the price , of wheat r which took ' other grains up with it. Wheat closed with gains of 2 to 2 lc a bushel. ":0 STORY noun , - , ' The Misses Virginia ' .Bowles, Fawn - McConkie y and ; Maurine Johnson will tell the stories at" the weekly-story hour at - the public Ubrary" Saturday at 2 o'clock. - All children of -Provo are invited, I . SALT IAKER NAMJEB , -WAHmGTONjan. 29 (KE) ' Wilson.- McCarthy, Salt' Lake Isity banker was named' by President Hoover lae .today asy the' seventh' director "of 4 the ' recohstruction'" : fi nance corporation. . -;V7 The submarine was - last- heard from in the English Channel off Portland Tuesday. The "admiralty statement said: -1 . , f "Ari "obstruction 'discovered six taUes north arid"; 5 degrees ;west "ct Portland Bill 'was an old wreck. ' We shall sweep the vicinity, be cause an earlier sweep, which parted,' part-ed,' brought Up'a pair of submarine hand flags in . a canvas case. t "The' ' general" EearcU" wnicon-- U4US -3 . . . AnSnnnnrl Twray for Utah county to con- ' - v ' Increase In Federal Funds Urged , An effort to obtain an Increase in the appropriations for federal aid and national forest highways. Is being made by Preston G. Peterson Peter-son of Poyor memoer of the state road commission ..who is now in V Washington, D CL- . Mr. Peterson has Conferred with. Senator Reed Smoot and Chairman Jones 'of the senate appropriations committee regarding the, possibility possibil-ity lof avoiding the cuts in the road appropriation? bill made by the house.t-.4 '"'v'. Particular objection has been made' by Mr. Peterson to the i taking" tak-ing" of $16,000,000 out of the federal aid, fund to rnake an annual pay-rnent pay-rnent n the mohey advanced s& year for emergency roSd' construe tion- maintaining" the'tinie- of '.repayment '.re-payment should le deferred,' t : ' Thr, $3,000,000; cut in1 the forest highway appropriation madeon the assumption that there", was an emergency j repayment: duef is er-rbrieous, er-rbrieous, says-; Mr;,: Peterson," inasmuch inas-much as there was no emergency appropriation fori, forest roads last nessionl I ' i HJi'c-:. If this additional $19,000,000 can be v added to ; the amounts . appro, priated by the house,' Mr. Peterson jthihks the west will pull through in fairly satisfactory - shape. ' ii mii m ii. 1 n m m i jm ' BUltheBirb er 4nd ? the Road Plows ... i "Say Blrf," 'observed the custom er, "have you noticed how.the fttatft road -commysJon is f keeping vthe cnow'seraped off ihe mahf roads? Nice' Job huh?" " . - - v v-. - t v-oure.v x noucea u,-; answerea BilCfl thinfir its1 a! fine thing. But did you happen to y drive Into the main 'highway -from; a" side; street after' the road ; plows had -been raorig? ? .'' rv H . .KoT'v Welt if you do, be sure and have ,f you shock absorbers -iri w w. v wMnAawwA auv . naa uag been; pushed up in a big wall all across the (,. side streeV crossings unurits like'aski-hIirtake-oiT.: T would' think that while i the plows were' there' 'they couid '. clear vthe crossings and push' the snow back to the sides of the' cross streets. That 5 would make " a better Job ' of a -good Job." t."-r i"Maybeit's Just an oversight," suggested the customer.-: ' 1; -. -f - ?I suppose 'so,"7 - replied Bill, -Either that'; or: they 'think their work is confined to 'Main "Street'." 'Anywayltf6ugh to "be done."- License ?;: Platies ' , VfS" OriSale M6n3dv ;T, Motor (.vehicle owners - of Provo and; Utah' county "Witt Vsv able -to procure their 1932 license plates at the' clty and -county building, ginning r Monday when branch office-will' be ( opened "under,-the direction of :V.' HGore of TJenola. Heill be assisted by E. C. Hen- richsen, of. Provo and Jack Petersen Peter-sen of 'Pleasant Grove:1 " - rV " TMotorlsls drel reminded that ' the property ?tax -un-'the 'machine "must have1.' "been; paid,' and a" receipt 6t- t&inid from, the -assessor before a license can tlrracito Xh$ 9tner;;A. " ",r "JC ' 1 i ;!"!'':;"" " i - ; - ....... . , n r m. mm - I loviii ii :;:EtftiBt Countess ; Alexandra Tolstoy Says EIB i Relief To Russian ' People ; r Tells of Father's Philosophy I "The peopleof Russia have Substituted slavery for a former for-mer life of tyranny," declare Countess Alexandra Tolstoy, daughter of "the late Count Leo Tolstoy, ii? her lecture here Thursday night. " In contrasting ' the "Conditions "Condi-tions in Russia with former times, she made It" plain that the masses are no' happier under the Soviet rule, than they were years ago un- ; ef the tyranny " of the czarlst regime. ' , The countess was introduced by another 'daughter of a famous sire -rMrs. Susa Young Gates, daughter daugh-ter Of" Brighani Young. ' Dr. Lowry j. Nelson, director ' of ;the extension division of 1 the Brigham Young university and chairman of the general committee of ' the Leader ship week activities, was In charge of the evening's event. " Huge Crowd Present The lecture was held in the stake tabernacle before a crowded house, the attendance being byfar1 the largest of "an of the week's eve-nmg eve-nmg - entertainments. ''' ' 'The : Brigham Young university symphbny Orchestf arsfsented a shcu0de1Sgfitf ceding 'Ihtriecture" under' the? direction direc-tion of,Profv LeRqy Robertson.-The audience extended; the syquthfnl musicians and its conductor an. ovation ova-tion at ,tiie 'end of. - the , masterful presentation i of Uhe famous ""Nutcracker ""Nut-cracker Suite by Tchaikowsky, ; In her : introduction of the countess, coun-tess, Mrs: Gates. referred, to some correspondence' which' she ' carried, on 'with-tlio iaW lieTpiatoyr'fa; moiis . thinker and novdlisi! ; J Mrs'. Gates Hrdiind" that Tolstoy was greatly;- Interested in the - Latter- day-faints during the persecution in1 the" islghtlesv5 ' l "vr,r; i r Madame ' Tolsltdy's lecture giving Intimate sketches of heir father and tnie cdndiUontf of life' in IRussia, was followed with ' close attention. Although the? stay of the countess in the. United1 States has been of less than six -months' duratibn, she showed a : remarkable mastery of the language and there was little if any difficulty in following her remarks.' : Father's; Philosophy--.. ; Her father's , phllosophjr; of non-resistance non-resistance was not In "sympathy with the tenets of the Soviet revolution, revo-lution, she declared. ' : His avowed faith : in the principles of Christianity Chris-tianity would also have ' clashed with the anti-reilglbus policy of the present' regime, had Ke been living now.' t ' ' ,'..'. ' V " " 'i"rueto the persecution- of, religious re-ligious " societies' many groups . pro-1 fesslng the r Christian faith -have gone into the ."underground" in tne larger centers, she! declarfed. "It.Would .be far better .that the youth "of Russia were not educated at ' all," f she "said; ' "than, to teach them immorality." rSTour idea that there Is no unemployment un-employment in Russia is all wrong.. Pew of the workers receive a wage above 92 per- month and are . com- '! (Continued on -Page f Four) 'Frozen Rivrj ; Is Taken Out For Repairing i , n i - , By L KENT WRIGHT ; Special Correspondent f STONY" FOUD,' Ariz Jan. , . 429.-r-The 'Gila ' river .froze : ;isolld .'last r night-a Jid two. .miles of it were hauled, out . tonto the bank today for re? pairs..;; , " -:r t; ) " The empty "bed of the;rlyer ; "also is being cleaned of -rocks ' ' and sand, accumulated dur- ' ' ing the summer; l' V r4 Lem' Hanks, proprietor of.,. the ' ice ' company,'' was ar 'rested for - grand f larceny , when it Was 'found he ' "had , 'sawed off about, 20 feet of ' 'the frozen river 'and was at-t at-t tempting to' drag It away to his ice-house. "- The river, two miles long ; t and 50 feet square,' is leingr r " guarded 4 by sherifrs pbssls. I : until It's time to put it baClt -r .fntn' service': - ' ' -" Pleads For I- - ';f-t V?P?i$ .S. CW, t J- - GOVERNOR GEORGE H. DERN ADULT SCHOOL OPENS MONDAY - - . t . Courses Outlined For Night School To Be Given By District. TJjQ firatcmeetin who are , interested in the adult school for unemployed will be held Anday, February!, Febru-ary!, In the high school audi-tprium, audi-tprium, according to Dr. C. A. Smith, superintendent, who is in charge of the work. In addition to the courses which have ' been' announced previously, the ' following : classes ' will be of fered through ; the ' high school : English, history 'economics, sociology, sociol-ogy, world "problems, all types of shop and industrial work, all -types of home making, all types of commercial com-mercial work, all types of art, and all types of physical education. - These courses are offered by the following teachers r J. W. Thornton, Thorn-ton, Ross Jensen, A. H. Fisher, Lenore Rasmussen, Elizabeth Gillespie, Gil-lespie, Ethel Spencer, Maude Jacob, Ray Stewart, H. R. Slack, Glenn Simmons and E. R. Collins. ' The, following extension classes at the B. Y". U.f will be open to . the unemployed!. Psychology," Prof. M. W. Poulson; . chemistry. Dr. C. E. Maw; 'world literature, Mrs. Christen Chris-ten "Jensen r English, Mrs. Christen Jensen; sociology and social work. Dr. Lowry Nelson f public speaking. Prof . ' T E. Pardoe ; 1 metallurgy, Mr. :Geo D. Ramfeay; world myths, Mrs. Ida S. Dusenberry. " ' Complete mimeographed ' sheets will: be furnished all -people inter- estedL V' ;''"'v ' ' '. ' ' -It is sincerely Urged that all unemployed un-employed avail ' themselves of opportunities op-portunities for courses of this type given by the local" churches; for example, the M, I. ' A.' of the L. D. S., church1 is giving a high class course in personal and- public health' in ;every ward in - the city. Not "only' the ' unemployed; , but everyone else ought r. to take these courses; they1 are; iven under the ''direction of local physicians. Other churches and organizations1 are carrying; car-rying; on similar types of .' Work. State . Bbiards -1 v1 -. ( r The state aboard , of insanity; and the board in charge , of the state training 'school at ' American Fork held a; joint session, Thursday, at Salt Lake ta&rork' out a policy of Tcbdperation 'between' the two insti- tutlons. , v.Anv-'-v 4 ' i ThQ' most vexing. prpblem; with which ; the state Institutions have to contend Is the. sending? of patients pa-tients from ' ouUying counties' wh6 rightly belbhg , In ;.county'infirm- aries. ! V '",r, " v - -' V State Treasurer A. - E. Chrlsten-seq Chrlsten-seq Jof ' the ' board'- of insanity,, and Trustee ; TL,t. Thatcher; L of ;; the training ' sfch'o'ol we're' named 'as1 a committee to work out a means of discouraging, this ' practice In , the Jointly Social Justice '.'!',"' ri vi-' t'l f . BAM OPPiiQ Budgeting' Committed: i'li Charge of JFridLay 3es-sion 3es-sion of Rptary. ' r The 'proposed plan of .'reopening the Farmers and Merchants bank was extended the imanlmdUs ' sxip-'l port of the Provo Rbtaiians, "Friday. "Fri-day. - " A motion by I. E. Brockbank that the club members use their Influence Influ-ence to facilitate' the reopening by urging depositors ' to - sign . the pledges on their deposits was passed pass-ed 'without a dissenting vote.- The meeting vsras lh chargrofvG. Merle Taylor, chairman of; the club budgeting committee. Open discussion dis-cussion with almost every member of the club taking part' took place during the meeting: Budgeting: for the year including the student loan fund project sponsored by "the R.O-; tarians ' were the principal items that came up for discussion. Essay Winners Are Announced Winners in. . the various school, grades in the essay contest sponsored spon-sored by the American ': Legion' auxiliary have been announced by Mrs. Walter lVeist, chairman:" The contest Was conducted in r connect tion with the 'safety program outlined out-lined 'during ' the past months'1? ' Fourth and fifth grades wrote on the subject,'" "How to 'Safely Cross the Streets." Jack Gordon Lmde of the "Maeser fourth grade '"was the winner' in this -dlvisioni- . ' "How to: Keep Children Safe in Traffic," the contest subject for the sixth and seventh grades was won by Zelma Olsen, a student ih the Franklin slxth'grade M .? Norma Taylor, a ninth grade Farrer junior high student -was the winner for the eighth and, ninth grade division with her essay writ-tea writ-tea on "Methods of Traffic Protection Protec-tion for America's ChUdren. . ; .; Mrs. Walter Weist and. Superintendent Superin-tendent and Mrs. C. A. Smith were judges in the contest. The -prizes will be awarded at the n Legion auxiliary meeting to be held. Wednesday Wed-nesday night. i .'- ;. -S ROTARY BACKS Uriemplbyment" Relief Bill : r l Is Passed In Wisconsin MADISON, Wis Jan. 29 OLE) An , $8,000,000, unemployment . relief bill that more than halved i Gov. Phillip ' LaToUeiteV origlnaJ, proposal pro-posal : today ended .'a' bitter ? eigiit, weeks' debate in the,Wscohsui legislature leg-islature cllmaxedf by arrangement' of a irduer " and f death;: threat letters; "J. , J-.." . ''"The: relief measure' was a 'cnv promise between' the LaUetti prVaX gTssives''and' "Republican regulars. It doubled the normal state income tax' but did 'nbC provfde whait erieM mles'bf the legislation "termftd cbtS-flscatory cbtS-flscatory rates on high Income.:;-' 5; Cblnc'Ident with "passage Df! the relief bm the youthful Wlscdnshs 1 governor, ecioft ot the powerful La- i- I .T.l.ll"--! f W- -U-f t- t - '- f DEPLORES 1 : EVILS 0 soc J. "Social Justice of Tomorrow Theme of Chief Executive; Ste onf e-rence of fiqcU& Work Meets at University. The regional meeting of the Utah state conference of so- cTal-wofFwsW ham Young iversltfn' Friday Fri-day ihjuhctiohwitli'the Brigham "'Yotuig runiversity Leadership weekV ' with Hon. - Geoi'ge'Hj ''Dern? governor-of Utah, as the speaker at the after-" noon general 'session. His 'theme was "Social Justice of, Tomorrow.", . At the previous sessions of the c'on-fetehce; c'on-fetehce; "addresses were made by F, A. MoH,er4 secretary Salt Lake trades" "council on the . subject, "Inadajuacy Vol Emergency Re-Uef,,, Re-Uef,,, f Barney . Qulnh, ' Bait Lake, county commissioner, on "Charity Relief "lif Salt Lake County;? Dr. George Thomas, 'president' University Univer-sity 'of UtahV!fTh XsbiLi : Range View on - Unemploymentj Joseph J.Cannon, editor Deseret News, dis- ' cussion, stressing" the need of a shorter work period. ' ' ': Music was furnished , by the mu b1c department : of the university. Prayer was 'ofTered ; by -! Presldeht emeritus ' George I H Brimhalt l Miss Elizabeth McMechsnf -vice IETY president . Ofitha, organization, was introduced byrectoir"lwr3r;N"ir" son as the chairman of the sessioiL. Slle vrtsehUd.'GoteTnor': Gtct&tt H. Dern, .'inuch .belo'vei"" ttJfian and.. surrounding' states- as " the' Speak-v -t-- -f.-v .'ii;.. t..-.'i:'-"i-; Governor Dern announcedi Mi beginhlng''"tiiatf he made nb;. prei ' tense ofpropheci' and "t'ould,' jonly'. gtfess as to social justice of tornor. rowi He f iil boweyer, f mucfc'ih ; sympathy, wiUitne appealfpr' i&n f cial "Justice. :-. A worl can .mardry be called: civnidUT.heMBiajBSf, injustice to man causes "'countiess-tuousands "'countiess-tuousands to mourn.' ' ; . The governor did not wish-- to4 jSive 'countenance to the laissesf aire doctrine but he did-hold to ' the view that the man who had special ability to earn was entitled to fcll--joy the results of. bls earning.' - He greatly 4 deplored, however, the social injustice of the , present , day, when unemployment and distress dis-tress are so prevalent' 1 It - is. important: im-portant: vto':think : "of 'these ; things , and 'keep on"1 making- ' effortij"tp Wardlinp,rovemeriV'- .v-'-'i The governor confessed he Had lost some of his youthful enthusiasm, enthus-iasm, and was ' hot so sure 'of; the old motto "Truth Is mighty and .-' . . . . ; -- (Continued on Page Ftxar), V..., Mr :. VvV- It : has . been-found- sary to discontinue delivery of free copies of the Herald lo allj irsohs ot per thahi adveN tiserho-wjut nbeTfeuplieii witli page; proof of their ad-' vertisements; . v f ; vThe regular subscription price ol the Evening Herald is1 fifty ceAts'the month; or. $5 the . year when. paid, in ad vance.: -e-v , ; -heces- Foliette dynastv .affixed, his' iilg--nalure' to a bill niakin- Vconsin the first stats, to adopt unemploy- .- ment lnsursjticV. t f "The dou1bred'?tsjt ; is ffective ' on 1831. incomes. .The emergency tax is levied on : dlvidends1' .of ;Wiscbn-' K sin corratiofls, hitherto; exempt, aiid 'prevents-deduction of capital Iossesi'"Th.,ees. corporation t s ihc6me taac'ls notVincreasfld.- Wo; year,; tax" on chain' stores also wai passed: The unemployment -insurance -plant lst.tuntsilt-lto,06d''wrki ? ers'are placed "withlni its icopeT by -, their employers before June "lt23 otherwise ' the ". law" becomes ' com- tpulsory, ' ' . .vt S "V |