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Show day lira OH. Stoir Weather JJTAH Unsettled tonight and Wednesday. Probably shower north and east portions. Cooler south portion tonight. Maximum temp. Monday ... HO Minimum temp. Monday 41 FIFTIETH YEAR, NO. 202 KING FAUD I DIES; PRINCE TO SUCCEED Monarch, Passes Away At Critical Time For Egypt Nation CAIRO, April 28 U.R) King- Fuad I, ninth sovereign-of sovereign-of the present Egyptian dynasty, dyn-asty, died today in the 15th year of his reign, at 68 years of age. Prince Farouk. his 16-year-old son. about to leave London fox.- Cairo, automatically succeeded him, to reign under a regehcyJlfiaded by Prince Mohammed Mo-hammed Ali, his third cousin. The king's funeral will be held Thursday. Strain Weakens King Fuad died after a long period of ill health, partly due to the great strain of the political situation, with leaders battling always al-ways over relations with Great Britain the dominant Nationalists National-ists demanding absolute independence independ-ence and asserting that Britain dominated Egypt because of its vital importance in the Mediterranean, Mediter-ranean, commanding as it does the approach to the Suez canal running through it. Death wasdue to stornafvt (inflammation of the- mouth), complicated by gangrenous tendencies. ten-dencies. lapses Into Coma Fuad lapsed into coma yesterday yester-day after summoning his daughters daugh-ters to his bedside, where Queen Nazli was constantly beside him. Prince Farouk was summoned to Cairo bv telephone late -last night. He has been living in a reat home in the London environs, envir-ons, under close guard, to be educated by a selected staff of tutors and "disciplinarians. The king's death came at an inopportune in-opportune moment for Egypt, while rival political factions are struggling for power and unrest is seething as result of alleged (Continued on 1ik' Two! MERRY GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT 8. ALLEN Hoover in Nomination Kace for Revenge on FDK, (jOi Leaders; Old Guard, Liberals Lib-erals Both Spiked His Chance For Residency; Now Unlikely Even to Choose Candidate or Dic tate Platform; Still Fight-; ing for Delegates, But He Is On Long Road Back. EDITOR'S NOTE: This in the fourth of the Washington Washing-ton Merry-(io-Kound Mrie on the candidates for the Republican nomination for president. The fifth articie will appear a -ek from to- , day.) WASHINGTON Herbert Hoover is in the Republican nomination nom-ination race chiefly for one pur-pse pur-pse revenge. Before 1928 the cfrrtrolling motive mo-tive behind Hoover's, presidential ambitions was an urge for power. Since his defeat in 1932 the ruling passion cf his life has been retaliation. re-taliation. He wants revenge hot only on the Democrat who ousted him from office but on Republican Republi-can leaders, both Old Guarders and Progressives. Hoover Is furious with the Old Guarders because of their open disparagement of him and their refusal to treat him as the titular leader of the party. He hates the Progressives because they either bolted or did not lift a finger to aid hirruiJi 1932 also because they have taken the lead in opposing his attempts to stage a comeback. Next to humbling the Democratic Demo-cratic president whose refusal to reply to his caustic attacks he (Continued on Six Sec. Two) i AN l.VDKI'ENDENT NKVVHPAPKK mm Ruler Passes; Son To Ascend Throne King Fuad ot Egypt- Tm- ;-,-. CtowD Prince Farouk ot Egypt. HOUSING LOAN OFFICIAL HERE Provo and other Utah county XESidents interested in Federal Housing administration loans are urged to see V. F. Olson, field representative, who will be here all this week with headquarters at the Utah Power and Light company office. Mr. Olson calls attention to the fact, that under a new ruling it will not be necessarv for the mortgaged mort-gaged property to be located within with-in the corporate limits of any town of village as heretofore. Requirements for loans on low priced homes for $2000 or less, have been made liberal in many others ways under a new ruling which concerns itself with the small borrowers who are oftentimes often-times in greater needs than the borrowers in the higher bracket. B. Y. U. Band Plays Concerts In Tooele Brigham Young university's concert band, under direction of Professor Robert Sauer. left Provo at noon today for Tooele, vherethey will present two concerts. con-certs. ' They planned to visit the Garfield smelters on the way. All school children of the city will attend the afternooti concert. The evening program is 11 sponsored by the M. I. A. The band members will return immediately after the evening concert. ' o The Evemim PROVO, UTAH Cooking Experts To Demonstrate; Awards ToTBe Given Away Cooking School To Be Held In Old Penney Store Building Four Days; Baking Contest, Style Show, Saturday Provo' s big free cooking school,sponsored by a group of local dealers and the Herald, is all ready to open Wednesday Wednes-day afternoon at 2 o'clock in the old J. C. Penney store building. Clayton Jenkins, secretary of'- ' the chamber of commerce, will be master of ceremonies. Mrs. Jean Nelden, local home economist, will be featured during dur-ing the school with daily demonstrations demon-strations in the latest wrinkles of the art of cookery. She will demonstrate dem-onstrate a broiled dinner, some cakes and surface cookery, Wednesday, Wed-nesday, emphasizing the economy and time releasing features of electric cooking appliances. On Thursday afternoon, J. Glen Blanch, representative of the Globe A-l Flour Mills of Ogden will make bread and give valuable information on the proper use of flour to obtain the best results. Oven cookery, pies and the thrift cooker will be featured on Friday. The baking contest will be featured fea-tured on Saturday, the final day of the school. Mia-- Nancy Finch, well known cooking expert of Salt Lake City, will be present to demonstrate at the cooking school along with! Mrs. Nelden. The food which the demonstrators use is furnished through the courtesy of Duke's Market, Third South and Seventh East street. . Prizes consisting of electric roasters will be awarded to the woman who enters the best loaf of bread and the best cake and an electric mixer for the. best pie entered. The cake must be a white butter cake and the pie must a tun-rmsted with any kind of filling Professi? )ks will he barred. Besides these prizes, 15 baskets of food products will be distributed distribut-ed as attendance prizes each afternoon aft-ernoon The contents of these haskets are furnished by the fol lowing concerns: L O. Taft, Breakfast club coffee; Jacques Manufacturing Co., K. C. baking nowder: Globe Mills, Globe A-l flour; Kellogg Co., General Foods, (Continued on Page Two) GEORGIA MOB LYNCHES NEGRO I ROYSTON. Ga., April 28 (U.I!) Lint Shaw, 50, negro who escaped a 74-vear-old iudge deputized a mob at Danielsville April 11, was killed today" by a mob which broke into the jail here. A coroner's jury decided Shaw came to his death "by gunshot wounds inflicted by person unknown," un-known," indicating the belief he had been shot and then strung to the tree. The rope was under his arm and across his neck, with his feet trailing on the ground. Sheriff T. L. Henley said the negro had more than 1,000 bullet wounds in his body. The lynching lynch-ing and the inquest were held where the negro allegedly attempted attempt-ed to assault a young white woman wo-man April 10. Symphony Selections To Be Demonstrated Gail Martin, music editor and j critic of the Deseret News, will give a music appreciation lecture and demonstration in College hall Wednesday at 11:30 to the students stu-dents of the Brigham Young university uni-versity and the public. Records will be played of some of the selections se-lections on the program of the Philadelphia Symphony orchestra which Is scheduled for a concert in the Salt Lake tabernacle on May 5 at 8:15 p. m. ANNOUNCER WEDS NEW YORK, April 28 U.R Ted Huslng1, radio announcer, and Celia Ryland, film actress, were married at Harrison, N. Y., last night, it was disclosed loday. COUNTY, UTAH, jT 5 MRS. JEAN NELDEN LIONS BACKING ROAD PROJECTS PAYSON A dinner session of the Payson Lions club was held Monday night at the Payson hotel with President John C. Car- ! lisle in charge. guard reported that the war department de-partment decided last Friday to place the 65th Field artillery brigade bri-gade battery in Payson and that Sergeant F. B. Dostal would be here Tuesday for recruiting purposes. pur-poses. Forest Ranger Christensen reported re-ported that the federal project for improving the road in Payson canyon had started and would be carried along during the summer months as rapidly as possible. He suggested that a bill be prepared pre-pared and presented asking for the building of a bridle trail from the present recreational area in (Continued on Page Two) OREM REPUBLICANS TO MEET WEDNESDAY The Orem precinct Republican primary will be held Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in the Sharon stake seminary for the purpose , of electing officers for the precinct as well as for the two districts of the precinct. , Another item of business is the selection of three delegates to the state convention in Ogden Saturday. I Expect Democrats to Abrogate Two-Thirds Nomination Ruling WASHINGTON, April 28 (IT.R Chairman James A. Farley of the Democratic national committee predicted today that the rule requiring re-quiring nomination of Democratic presidential candidates by a two-thirds two-thirds majority will be .abrogated by the national convention which convenes in Philadelphia June 23. Farley emphasized that he was notattempting to speak for the convention, but said: U E S D A Y, APRIL 2 ROPER COMES TO DEFENSE OF NEW DEAL Secretary Puts Re-employment of Jobless- Up To Big Business WASHINGTON, April 28 (U.p) Responsibility for getting get-ting the government out of private business rests solely upon business itself, Daniel C. Roper, secretary of commerce com-merce told the 24th annual meeting of the United States chamber of commerce today. Answering An-swering previous speakers who had charged the government with invasion of private industry, curtailment cur-tailment of private initiative and competition with private business, Roper said: "The best way to take the bureaucracy bur-eaucracy out of government is to J place more responsibility on nongovernment non-government agencies. "While it is true that during the emergency period the federal government gov-ernment assumed many or the responsibilities of individuals, industries, in-dustries, and municipal and state governments, it does not mean that thpsA rfsnnnsihilities nroner- W ly belong to the federal govern- Sibley Answers Challenge-Roper's Challenge-Roper's defense of the New Deal and its policies was made after Harper Sibley, president of the U.S. chamber of commerce had given an inferential answer to the administration's challenge to industry in-dustry to take up the slack of 4 unemployment. Sibley told the convention 5000,-000 5000,-000 persons had been returned to the payrolls of private enterprise by the end of 1935. Roper answered charges of interference in-terference by proposing a ten point program of co-operation between be-tween government and business which, if carired out, he said, would lead the nation out of the depression and return all employable employ-able persons to gainful occupation. occupa-tion. Roper advised business and industry in-dustry to put its own house in order and to obtain correct and scientific information regarding unemployment and the prospects of reemployment from its own ranks, rather than waiting for the federal government to obtain this information. Roper bluntly warned that "if a substantial measure of increased increas-ed reemployment does not take place, the taxation for relief purposes pur-poses will come largely from business bus-iness earnings. Thus, facing the problem frankly there must be re-employment or a longer period of increased taxation." PROGRESS MADE ON swinmriG pool Work on the bath houses at the North park swimming pool will start immediately after the floor of the pool is cemented, it is reported re-ported by City Commissioner J. P. McGuire. ' Mr. McGuire states that the pool will be ready for use as soon as weather permits its use. It should be completed about June 15. The walls have been raised and renovated, mak;ng the pool 6 feet on the deep end for a distance of 12 feet, then sloping up to 3 feet. "It is my personal opinion that the two-thirds rule will be abrogated abro-gated by the national convention which convenes in Philadelphia June 23. The rule long has been a center of dispute among Democrats. It has served to give the south or any other numerically inferior section of the country a limited veto power on candidates advanced advanc-ed by other areas. Herald. 8, 1 9 3 6 Stratosphere Pictu res Show Earth Curvature Everybody Looking Forward to Illustrated Lecture of Balloon Pilot on May 6 Had Captain Orvil Anderson made his sensational flight j into the stratosphere before the days ot uoiumbus, tnat hardy sailor would have had better proof than he had that the earth was round, according to Dr. George H. Hanson, geographer at Brigham Young university. That statement was brought forth by the fact that when the Utah number of the National Geographic magazine appeared last week, it carried with it a photograph show- ing clearly the curvature of the earth, a pnotograpn wk- en during the stratosphere flight. "I am eager to meet this great explorer of the ozone," Dr. Hanson said Tuesday, "The Columbuses, the Drakes, the Magellans, the. Pearies, and the Byrds have sailed all of the seas of the earth and have gone from pole to pole. Explorations are now going forward in Chat great ocean of air which surrounds our spinning earth. Captain Anderson, Jrone out exDlorincr space. tionally famous is among the gone exploring space. : "Many of us have said we would have enjoyed meeting : Columbus or Pfeary or Byrdv All who have a curiosity about I the unknown will enjoy meeting Captain Anderson and seeing his remarkable photographs and movies. i "I am grateful to the American Legion, Provo Post No. 13, for making this visit of the famous explorer possible i on May 6, in the Utah stake tabernacle. SONS OF LEGION TO GETCHARTER Officers of Provo Chapter To Be Named After Meeting Wednesday Presentation of a charter to the Sons of the American Legion chapter, sponsored by Provo Post 13 of Provo will feature the meeting meet-ing to be held Wednesday night at the Armory club rooms, according accord-ing to George S. Ballif, commander. com-mander. The charter will be presented by B. K. Farnsworth, Morgan, chairman of the department of Utah committee on the Sons of the American Legion. Officers of the new ciiapter will be elected from among the chartr members. The post committee in charge of the new chapter sponsorship spon-sorship consists of L. A. Culbert-son, Culbert-son, Lyle Bel land Stanley Bon-nett. Bon-nett. Final plans for the reception of Captain Orval Anderson who comes to Provo on a lecture tour May 5 and 6 under the auspices of the Legion will be discussed. Reports will also be made on the plans for the Fourth of July celebration. cele-bration. BASEBALL TODAY . NATIONAL. LEAGUE Philadelphia 000 430 002 9 17 3 Pittsburgh 402 001 000 7 12 2 Zachary and Wfilson; Blanton, Bush, Brown, E. Moore, Johnson and Todd. Boston 000 210 20 Cincinnati 000 001 01 Benge and Lopez; Derringer, Hilcher and Lombard!. AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 000 000 0000 4 0 New York 000 Oil OOx 2 9 1 Brown and Sullivan; Ruffing and Dickey. Chicago . . 003 010 130 8 13 1 Boston . . 023 303 OOx 11 16 1 Stratton, Phelps, Chelini, Tietjen, and Sewell; Welsh, Wilson, Grove and R. Ferrell. Philadelphia 000 222 OOx 4 9 1 St. Louis . . 001 000 010 2 6 0 Andrews, Knott and Hemsley; Keeley and Hayes. Detroit 010 104 1 Washington 000 010 0 Sullivan and Cochrane; Linek, Coppola and Bolton. COMf'LETK INITKI) IMilOSS TKLEHRAFH NEWS SEFtVICK RJ uj in r''.TT fr' ra;; t: N CAPTAIN ANDERSON foremost of those who have I Two-Day Fete For July 4th Proposed Here Highway Designation Recommendation Recom-mendation Referred To Roads Committee The Provo Fourth of July celebration cele-bration will become a two-day affair this year if the recommendations recommen-dations of the Provo chamber of commerce board of directors are accepted by the Post 13 American Legion co-sponsors. Jesse N. Eilertson, president, suggested that the celebration include in-clude both Friday and Saturday July 3 and 4, and this suggestion will be carried to the Legion committee com-mittee Wednesday night. The board oppropriated $300 of the $750 advertising fund for use by the retail merchants committee commit-tee the next three months, mainly for use in advertising the July Fourth celebration. Much of this fund will be used for advertising Provo, establishing it as a shopping shop-ping center by various means, including constant radio broadcasts. broad-casts. Facts and figures about Provo will be presented in these broadcasts. A recommendation by J. A. Owens, director, that the chamber cham-ber unite -with the Association of Southern Utah civic clubs in advocating ad-vocating that Highway 50, which Lgoes through Price, Helper and Spanish Fork canyon, be desig-( desig-( Continued on Page Two) NEW DEAL IN PRIMARY TEST By UNITED PRESS Pennsylvania and Massachusetts Massachu-setts elected delegates to the Republican Re-publican and Democratic national conventions today in primaries many observers believed would reveal the trenfi of political sentiment senti-ment in the industrial east. While President Roosevelt was virtually assured of pledged delegations dele-gations from each state, and while election of unpledged Republican' delegates seemed certain, both states provided means for the voter to state his preference among candidates for the presidential presi-dential nomination of his party, and these votes will he watched with the greatest interest. f : W i i I So They Say Sell anjd regret! Expect to be wrong three time out of ten. And always expect to miss the best prices. Trust your pessimism; pessi-mism; mistrust your optimism. L. B. Angas, English economist. PRICE FIVE GENTS REPUBLICAN OPPOSITION PETERS OUT Two Minor Amendments Fail; Roll Call Slated Early Wednesday WASHINGTON, April 28 (U.R) The house cleaned up its tax bill job in less than four hours today except for a final roll call on passage defeating minor opposition amendments and leaving the measure ready for immediate immedi-ate passage and transmission to the senate tomorrow. Failure of organized Republican opposition to develop unexpectedly unexpected-ly cleared the way for perfunctory perfunct-ory consideration of the bill. Only two amendments were offered in addition to these revisions approved approv-ed by the Democratic leadership. The opposition changes were beaten beat-en down without record votes. The 236 page bill was read in sketchy fashion as house members mem-bers appeared to recognize that the bill, supported by the ways and means committee, could not be amended without committee backing. WASHINGTON, April 28 (U.R The hew tax bill survived its first test vote in the house today when the Democratic majority voted down an amendment to give employers em-ployers tax credit if they increased increas-ed payrolls. The proposal, offered by Rep. Harry Sauthoff, Prog., Wis., was defeated on a standing vote, 67 to 22. First Amendment Offered The amendment was the first offered to the bill by opponents. Previously the house, hoping ,to speed the bill through to roll call stage today, accepted perfuctor-ily perfuctor-ily two revisions sponsored by Democratic leaders. All major controversial sections of the bill were tacitly approved by midafternoon, except the windfall wind-fall tax provision. At times there were less than half a dozen Republicans on the floor. It appeared Republican leaders were as anxious as Democrats Demo-crats to get the bill out of the way with dispatch. Under the program a Republican Republi-can roll call vote probably will be forced when the house convenes tomorrow on some major amendment, amend-ment, followed by the roll call vote on final, passage. The house later aaopiea wuuuui a record vote a ways and means committee amendment having iVmocrsf.ic backing, placing a flat tax of 224 per cent on earnings of foreign corporations doing mere than 85 per cent of their business in this country. The rate in the original bill was the game but affected corporations doing over 75 per cent of their business here. The bill was being read so fast that members with amendments had difficulty offering pem at the proper time. The house defeated on a voice vote an attempt by Rep. Allen Tread way, R., Mass., to kill the tax publicity provision requiring the treasury to submit annually to congress a 'blue list of citizens citi-zens receiving $15,000 a year or more from corporations. "Y" OOLIUEtlGEUEOT COMMITTEE NAMED Edward H. Holt, professor of office practice and secretary of the faculty, has been appointed chairman of the committee in charge of commencement at Brigham Brig-ham Young university, announced President Harris Monday. T3ie baccalaureate sermon will be preached in the Utah stake tabernacle taber-nacle on Sunday evening. June 7. Alumni reunions are being arranged ar-ranged for June 8. The sixtieth commencement exercises will be held in the same building Wednesday Wed-nesday morning, June 10. Other members of the general committee, appointed to asfist Professor Holt, are , E. H. East-mond, East-mond, head of the art department, Richard Condie, professor of music, mu-sic, Ed M- Rowe, associate professor profes-sor of English, and Charles J. Hart, assistant professor of physical phys-ical education and athletics. |