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Show R 0 1T0--UT 'A-H)'-J! V E N ING.THE RAIiDr M O N D AY, A U GUST 28,-1 9 3 3 PAGE THREE Salt Lake Stoek At Jtindahfed By I BfeUMHAIX y- Broker SlOtfDAV, AttS. 2S, 1933 Alta Tunnel .03 $ .05 Amagit Sugar, pref. 59.00 , 61.00 Big Hill 10 .12 Bingham Metals . . .02 .02 Bristol Silver 09 .11 Bullion 00 .01 Cardiff 09 Cell. Standard 00 .01 Chief Con .50 .70 ' Colorado Con. ,,.02" .02 Columbus 'Rexal .M -02 Con Wagon .... .. Combined Metals . Crown Point Crescent Eagle . . . Dragon ... . East Crown F. '. . . Eureka Lily Empire Mines .... East Utah East Tin. '-Con. Eureka Standard . .70 .90 .07 .10 .01 .02 .03 .03 .03 .05 .01 .02 .20 .25 .03 .05 .03 .03 .18 .24 1.40 1.50 .01 .03 .65 .70 .08 .12 .00 .01 .00 .01 .00 .01 1.00 1.25 .25 .34 .08 .10 .024 .03 .56 .60 .01 .02 .00 .01 .02 V4 .03 .19 .21 2.75 3.05 .02 .03 .06 .07 .20 .35 .10 .20 .03 .03 I Great Western Horn - Silver Iron King Indian Queen .... Lehi Tintic Little May Mt. City Copper. . . Mammoth Moscow New Quirfby North LHy No. Standard .... Opohongo Park Bingham . . . Park City Con. "... Park Utah Park Nelson ...... Park Premier" . Plutus . , Provo . . -...v ..... Sacramento .."... Schramm - Johnnon Pref ; 50 no 00 00 Silver King Coal. . 5.80 0.10 Silver King West. . .9 .71 So. Standard .. . , .05 .10 Tar Baby . . .. .00 .00 Tintic Central 01 .02 Tintic xLad 28 .30 Tintic Standard .. 4.05 4.25 Utah Met. & Tim. . 1.15 1.50 U-I Sugar Com. .. 1.60 1.70 U-I Sugar Pref. .. 5.00 6.00 , Utah Fir Clay . . . 18.00 25.0r? Utah Hofaie Fire Ins. 60.00 70.00 IHb Power & Light . Co., $6 Prefr 21.00 26.00 Ulali Power-& Light : Co.v $7 -Pref 26.50 20.00 iWab.Power & Light Deb 56.00 62.00 TiCtor Con. .02 .05 Walker Mining ... .99 1.02 Vankee Con 01 .02 Z. Q. M, I. 19.00 21.00 Zuma 05 .07 SALES Bristol Silver 1000 (r 10c. Mt. City Copper 100 n $105-200 rw $1.02. North Lily 60 it 50c. Park City Con. 600 f 20-20 c. Silver King Coal 50 rt $5.90. Silver King West. 200 ',1 70o. Walker 700 r $1.00. OTHER SECURITIES-Am. SECURITIES-Am. Smelting 37. A. T. and T. 129. A naconda 18 . Kennecott 22 1 4. U. S. Steel 48 V. Siver 36. Canada and New Zealand have more motor vehicles per capita than any-other country in the world except the United States. - .. , - r. '- la: .mm ML. J '(Show Doivn" '- TVT wbnder- Dodge owners say thii trtrmw Six -IN saves them $150 or more on running expenses ' 1-' alone. Every modem, advanced engineering feature V - in this sepsational Dodge is planned and built to assur .2-1 th greatest operating economy. . V to prove that Dodge can "take it" to prove " It' i' tough end ragged as it is good looking this rier Podge is subjected to punishment that you would " : never give it no matter how many years yott drove it. -' rjodge oflert you ' 7 definite point V, -i'XMC PATEMTgD 310 Weif Center St. - t 4 J T K l Ul I'l IT MX I 1 1 Jdhn L Bourne ' -Galled-By Death M. A. Bourne received word Sunday Sun-day night of the death of his brother. John I. Bourne, 62, .who died in Loa Angeles, Calif., earlier in the day. , Mr. Bourne lived in American Fork until he moved to Los Angeles Ange-les 15 years ago. He was station master for the Santa Fe railroad company. His wife survives. Mr. and Mrs. Bourne will leave this evening for Los Angeles to attend at-tend the funeral, which is planned for Wednesday Vaccinate Stock Against Anthrax Vaccination of more than 150 cattle at American Fork and 200 at Provo has already een completed com-pleted as a protection against the further spread of anthrax, according accord-ing to Dr. C. L. Jones, U. S. veterinarian. veter-inarian. The outbreak at Springvilte was very light and since vaccinating about 12 cattle in that district that were not vaccinated earlier in the year, the disease has been practically prac-tically cleared up. Approximately Approximate-ly 25 cattle died of the disease during dur-ing the past two weeks in Provo and American Fork, Dr. Jones stated. 68 PICKETS IN CARBON JAIL (Continued from Page One) ! a compound on the county fair grounds. Hearings Tor them have not been set. One hundred-fifty pickets were reported to be lining the portals and tipples of the mines in the t Spring Canyon area, which includes in-cludes the Peerless, Spring Canyon, Can-yon, ;Standardville, Latuda and Mutual Conditions in this .district are reported quiet, though tense Knerr Keeps Tab Although a visit from the deputies depu-ties into this district was expected expect-ed today by the plcketers, no violence vio-lence was looked for. William M. Knerr, state industrial indust-rial commissioner, is in HelpOr ready to treat with the strikers and operators when they indicate a tie-sire tie-sire to settle difficulties. Meetings were held in Salt Lake, Provo and Park City Sunday at which action of officers of Price,-particularly Price,-particularly Sheriff Bliss and Mayor Rollo West, were denounced by .members, of the communistic union. At the Salt Lake'meeting Paul Crouch, organizer for the National Na-tional Miners' union, who is being sought on a warrant of arrest issued Saturday, was one of the speakers. Patient Missing From Institution Utah county officers are still searching for Mrs. Gurtie Koven, 22, a patient at the Utah State hospital, who disappeared with her six-year-old and two-year-old children chil-dren last Thursday, after attending attend-ing a birthday party for her son, held at the home of relatives in Pr'ovo. , Mrs. Koven is 5 feet 8 inches III vet S 1 r tA rim Out comet thtj big mw Plan proves it. of eebnomy that ; umm is FLOATIMG POWER ' ENGINE MOUNTINGS . ML ALLEY OOP Z -t-,.,-.M , ,. w-v r Stt4. I-JUST--' - - y f'A ft CTWtfE-,V CAN'T .RUNOUT y fe"fi7 TO WEAVE THAT) . y" ( ON VAf HE'S , THE FIRST J MO-H$ ( BIG BWBO AU7 X HELPLESS h,lA &G M0NSTERJ J iVJ:T?NtA -" V; . jy?s .along will-V : ! ; 1 s - : ; t rnrv -xmW mmHf' ' V MAYBC m A SOFT HEAfcTEfr - MWm 'PJ? ST 1 SAP - BUT I CAN WHACK OFF if p tif JS&E: A COUPLE OF THE BIGGEST ' $. MW -; , jm9 1 11. 1 , 1 . 1 Tir 11 ir V. Wftt S 1833 BY MCA SERVICE. INC. - , . - - : TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION - t WANTFP JflSCELLANEOtJS TWO furnished apts. cheap. Inquire In-quire 41 West 1st North; a29 . - ; FOR SALE OK LEASE A GOOD brick Borne, and business, on paved hifrhjpay at Provo, Utah. About, two A... flowing well, apple products plant, steam equipped to manufacture tl kinds of apple products; an opportuniTy for enterprise, en-terprise, owner quitting; write D. Kinnear R. No. 1 Box 96 Provo Pro-vo Utah. s3 SITUATION WANTED YOUNG man (B. Y. U. student) will work for board and room. Herman Day. Phone 15. 264 No. University Ave. a30 ..Mr. and Mrs. Jjpel. 'Bunnell .of Vineyard . have, 9. daughter, born Friday at the family home. Mother and baby are doing nicely. tall, weighs 175 pounds, and is of medium completion. She was wearing a light figured .dress when she lefC She formerly lived in Beaver. Roosevelt Garner of Maryville, Tenn., voted for Hoover, he asserts. as-serts. : : 'w-:.;.:.:.x-f:-w,.-i:x- Dodge "6" ftt 00 tar in tke "Pumakmtmt Pa" Ask your dealer (0JGRATIJLATIONS save you up to $150. These points help to cut down gas, cat down oil, cut down running expense in every way. Yet with all its ruggednesstr with all its smart ; style . . . with all its money Tsaving features , this big new Dodge costs only a few dollars more ihan lowest-priced care.: ; , .;'-'" ; Prove these facts for yourself. Ask your .dealer fot the sensational "Show Down" Plan. It's a new easy way to compare Dodge with other cars. You test it .try it make it sell itself to yon! Ask for theireo . . "Show Down'? Plan and Score Qird now, . it N 0 U Py F.O.B. FACTORY, DETROIT -4Mb A. W-V v7 i aiiy First Aid! .... - Zj" If utD CFQi? uHO (2M, &m& f fg uuU UUIA!JLU U o n PWS i ABOVE A. M. WILKINS, air-mail pilot for Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc., has flown the night air mail over 150,000 miles. It takes healthy nerves to hang up a record like that I RIGHT AT THE END of his night run A. M.Wilkins joins a fellow pilot, VV. Niedernhofer, at Newark Airport, the Eastern Terminal of TWA, for a chat and a smoke. "Camels never ruffle or jangle 'my nerves," Wilkins says. ...... r- - -.t: ,,,m -.3 J a Tm.i :oivw(wiwvNiC" v f j .',v.v .w. w j n nritMrww rrm rr iii iif 1 ,-;ki?N :P EVERNOnCEHOWairplanepasscngerssmoke jf A JfK i at each refueling stop? Camels never get on your i ) nerves, no matter how much you smoke, and there's t Js ' more real enjoyment in their costlier tobaccos. fL hxQi. ' f rtt By HAMLIN IT Blind Residents Form Organization C. M. FroUtand of Provo was elected president of the Utah Coun-tyjtapter Coun-tyjtapter of the State Association fqor the Blind, which was organized in Provo Saturday night. OtruVij officers elected at the meetinjvwere C. L. Giles, Nephi, first vice president; William P. Freckleton, Provo, second vice president; Mrs. Hannah Froisland. Provo, secretary; Mrs. William P. Freckleton, Provo, treasurer. Mrs. John Burton ,Nephi and J. W. Carter, Car-ter, Provo, were made auditors of the association. H. W. Jenson. president of the state association ,and M. B, Allen, state commissioner of the blind, were speakers. They declared that an organization for trne blind brought distinct advantages in the way of legislation and social betterment. bet-terment. Meetings will be held monthly, it was decided. The next meeting will be on Tuesday, September 2G. CARS COLLIDE A mild automobile collision that involved 'a greenhouse occurred Saturday at 11:30 when an automobile auto-mobile driven by J. A. Joyner, 707 Houth Second West, Provo, rammed into the rear of a car driven by Mrs. Pearl Nelson, 549 26th Street, Ogden. As the two cars collided a piece of the bumper from Mrs. Nelson's car flew across the street and crashed into a glass of the Provo Greenhouse, according to L. C. Davis, traffic sergeant, who investigated. investi-gated. IS MORE FUN TO Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. They are milder, richer in flavor. fla-vor. They never tire your taste or get on your nerves. A UTO CODE IS NOW APPROVED (Continued from Page One) with violators of the codes andt agreements. Collect Evidence He said trie government would collect evidence against violators and present it at a public hearing. "We shall use every lawful and proper means to protect the pub-lioc pub-lioc and their competitors," be declared. de-clared. "We shall go the whole distance. Wherever the Blue Eagle flies, we shell keep his wings clean and his talons sharp." The automobile code raised the question of "what will Henry Ford Do?" Ford dia not participate in the conferences which evolved the code, and he did not indicate his attitude toward it. He is not a member of the National Na-tional Automobile Chamber of Commerce, which was set up by the code as t'he body to administer it, and he always has insisted on non-union labor in his plants. Clause Tests Code The code gives his emptoyVs. and those of all automobile plants, the light to organize and bargain collectively col-lectively rough representatives of their own choosing and fiees them from any interference, restraint or coercion by the employers. A tempering clause was added, however. It is expected to be a basis of a test of the code, either in appeals to thp National Board or the court. The clause read: "Without in any way attempting to qualify or modify, toy interpre Copyright, ill Y A. M. Wilkins, air-mail ace, says: "It's a steady grind, all right, being a night-hawk-on the air mail. A man has to have healthy nerves to live up to our tradition that the ma ll wvst go through! That's why 'I smoke Camels. And I smoke plenty! Camel's never ruffle or jangle my nerves, and I like their mild, rich flavor." Steady smokers turn to Camels because the costlier tobaccos in Camels never tire the taste never get on Your taste dnd your nerves will confirm this. Start smoking Camels today and prove it for yourself. It is more fun . to knowl tation, the requirements of the Na tionat Industrial! eCovryxHa;t, employers em-ployers Id thj Mdu&try,-mayJ exercise, exer-cise, thgir . tight to, select, retain or advance employes on the basis of individual merit, without regard to their membersliip'bf non-mem- bership in any organization1." VISION To anticipate your needs to make the last services as perfect and impressive as possible is our privilege and our sacred trust. The services serv-ices of the Berg Mortuary are within reach of all. The Berg Mortuary Provo's Pioneer Funeral Directors UP TO You my repy in ont month, j iKree months, six months, ten month, or a longer lim if you wish. Personal Finance Company (. I'. Sk)tS IlldK. Second Klor "" K. enter, Provo. I'tih l'hoiu- I'rovii 210 I'mlt-r Siipt 1 vi.siji of :State of Vt.lh 1933. R. J. Reynokis Tobarco Compsjir the nerves. v.. i $ 30 |