OCR Text |
Show So They Say We teachers should be ashamed that we are not called radicate more often. Dr. J. R. McGaughy, Columbia University-, New York City. UTAH Unsettled tonight and Wednesday with probable showers in north portion. Little change in temperature. Maximum Temp. Monday . 56 Minimum Temp. Monday 40 Precipitation since Sunday 1.48 in. FIFTIETH YEAR, NO. 226 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1936 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVICE PRICE FIVE 0ENT3 Weather The Herald. MERRY GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN Chester Davis Finally Out of New Deal by Joining Sears Roebuck; He Had Fired Liberals Who Helped Him; Wallace Wanted His Scalp. WASHINGTON Chester Davis, diminutive, nervously cigarette-smoking cigarette-smoking administrator of the AAA, is now definitely out of the Roosevelt agricultural picture. He- is accepting $50,000 a year with Sears Roebuck, chief sellers of mail order goods to farmers. Davis's' knowledge of farm problems prob-lems and his prestige with the farmers. Sears Roebuck thinks, is worth that salary. Behind all this is one of the most paradoxical hidden by. plays in the New Deal. Chester Davis, when he joined lhe AAA, was not an imposing figure. fig-ure. He was an assistant to George Peek, then chief administrator, admin-istrator, v But General William I. Wester-velt. Wester-velt. cx-army officer, soon cropped crop-ped up as the real executive. He pretty much ran Peek and the whole show. Davis was very much on the side-lines. T LIBERAL AID About that time, Jerome Frank, AAA legal counsel, Gardner Jackson Jack-son of the Consumers division, and other liberals, put their heads together to-gether to help Davis. They felt that General Westervelt was easing eas-ing him completely out of the picture. pic-ture. But Westervelt soon joined Sears Roebuck; George Peek re. sifned. and little Chester Davis proved capable of taking care of himself. He stepped up and up, finally became No. 1 man in the AAA. And the minute he stepped into real power, Chester fired Jerome' Frank. Gardner Jackson, and other liberals who had once tried to help him. This purge of the AAA was the first incident to get Chester Davis in wrong with Secretary Sec-retary of Agriculture Wallace. Wallace remarked to close (Continued on Page Two) REGISTRATION AGENTS NAMED Registration agents were appointed ap-pointed Monday for most of the districts in Utah county by the county commissioners. Appointments were made on the endorsement of precinct committees, com-mittees, and where three were endorsed, the first named was taken. Only one district endorsement en-dorsement was submitted in Provo, there were none for Lake Shore and only one for Spanish Fork. Chosen on the basis of the majority vote for United States ..representative in the last election, every district but Colton was required re-quired to choose a Democrat. In, addition to the following, others will be added as the endorsements en-dorsements reach the county commission com-mission : Leola Harrison. Salem: Zalie ' Hunter, Alpine; Elsie Cornaby, Benjamin; Mina Elmer. Clinton; Drucilla Madsen. Provo; Earl Hathenbrook, Soldier Summit: Delia Kirkendall. Dividend; Laura B. Jones, Elberta; Clara Fowler. Goshen; Eva Jensen, Genola; Mrs. Hyruxn Groesbeck, Highland. Mrs. E. A. Adams, Lehi; Mrs. Lucy Hill. Thistle; Inez Peterson. Lehi No. 1; Mrs. E. Booth Soren-son, Soren-son, Lehi No. 2; Mrs. Frank Sharp; Lehi No. 3; Mrs. Elva Allen. Al-len. Lehi No 4: Mary L. Ferguson, Fergu-son, Spanish Fork; Pearl Chapman, Chap-man, Santatjuin; Nellie Cushing. Santaquin; Gwen Baxter, Esther Harmer, Retta R. Harmer, Millie M. Sutherland, and Rufus Aver-ett. Aver-ett. Springville: Maud D. Glazier and Mrs. Jesso Stott. Provo; N. A. Jacobson and Sam Hampshire, Orem Townsend Wants To Go To Jail LOS ANGELES. June 2 (UP) Dr. Francis E. Townsend. founder of the old age revolving pension plan, may go to jail to show his defiance of the Bell investigating committee, Sheridan Downey, his i counsel, declared here today. The attorney, also under subpoena sub-poena by the congressional committee, commit-tee, said that the elderly Long Beach, Cal.. physician would de- .whether to post bond if he is indicated in-dicated for contempt of the- committee. com-mittee. "I bekeve he is inclined not to post the bond," Downey said. "In that event he would go to jail and his imprisonment would be a monument to the justice of our position and the oppression of the committee." LABOR READY TO ASK FOR E Feeling Grows In Ranks of Labor Constitutional Amendment Needed BY JOHN A. REICHMANN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON.-Jwie 2 U.R) Organized labor seized the supreme court's 5 to 4 denial of states' rights to fix minimum wages and hours for women and children today to-day as an added weapon in demands for a constitutional amendment giving congress powers pow-ers over industry. Leaders of the American Federation Fed-eration of Labor, headed by William Wil-liam Green, saw the minority opinion opin-ion as a basis for their demands. The majority opinion was the fourth severe blow to labor from the court in a little more than a year. The court knocked out the NRA, railway retirement act, the Guf-fey Guf-fey coal control act and, yesterday yester-day the New York minimum wage law. All were supported strongly by organized labor. The decision brought the controversy con-troversy over the supreme court to a new high point. Whether the fight for a constitutional amendment amend-ment would be carried into the coming political campaign remained re-mained uncertain. President Roosevelt has given no direct indication in-dication he will raise the issue. Minority Opinion Significant The minority opinion, written by Justice Harlan Stone, was regarded re-garded as of especial significance. Some saw in it an implied invitation invi-tation for a constitutional amendment amend-ment defining congress' power over industry. Stone intimated that the majority ma-jority decision, written by Justice Pierce Butler, was based upon "personal economic predilections." Joining with Stone were Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, Justice Benjamin Cardpzo and Justice Louis Brandeis. Hughes, in a separate opinion concurred in by the other dissenters, dis-senters, said: "I can find nothing in the federal fed-eral constitution which denies to the state the power to protect women from being exploited by overreaching employers through the refusal of a fair wage as defined de-fined in the New York statute and ascertained in a reasonable manner by competent authority." The decision seemed to controvert contro-vert any claims that the court as at present constituted is more liberal lib-eral than that which held office more han a decade ago. It also served in the minds of observers to line young Justice Owen J. Roberts Rob-erts up definitely with the conservative con-servative group on the court. The decision closed the present session of the court. The justices just-ices put away their robes for a four months vacation. The last two sessions of the court made the past 18 months perhaps the mcst important in the court's history. his-tory. BOYER SANITY TRIAL OPENS Boyer. the physician said, was sent to him by an executive of the grocery chain which employed employ-ed him. The meat buyer at that time, he said, was suffering from minor epilepsy. He told how he j warned Boyer he might have a severe breakdown unless ne uvea moderately. The doctor's testimony follow-that follow-that of six Winnemucca, Nev., i residents who testified variously that Boyer looked "rum dum, like a ' man in a trance'' and that he had a "far-away look in his eyes" when he was arrested in Winnemucca, after a series of automobile au-tomobile accidents. Mrs. Roberta Robinson, negress, who said Boyer ran into her and knocked her from a bicycle she was riding was one of the witnesses. wit-nesses. John Durante, policeman who arrested Boyer for driving while intoxicated after he had run down a women and her two children, chil-dren, said the defendant "looked like a dope or a hop head." Mrs. Dorris Hawkins testified that Boyer had attempted to run over her and her two children. He rode around the block "about 10 times,'' she related. Others who offered similar testimony testi-mony wereTTSfijah Robinson, Mrs. (Continued on Page Eight) Vocal Recital Vernon Lea Master, bass-baritone singer of Provo will be presented pre-sented by his teacher. Miss Margaret Mar-garet Summerhays in a vocal recital re-cital at the Art Barn, Salt Lake City tcmiKht, at 8:15 o'clock. Mrs. Willma Boyle Bunker, pianist, will assist. AM WENT Missing Heir Found Selling Magazines CHICAGO, 3une 2 V.P. William Webster Theile, 15. missing heir who disappeared from his home at Mamaro-neck, Mamaro-neck, N. Y., a month ago, was found today living in a $5 a week hotel room on Chicago's north side, the Daily times said in a copyright story. Policeand private detectives detec-tives had sought him. A reporter re-porter for the newspaper found the youth living under the name "Jay Webster." "I was fed up on society life and decided to make my own way in the world," the boy, a direct descendant of Daniel Webster, was quoted. "Now I guess I'll have to go back to bieakfast-in-bed and chaufeur-driven autos." He had 15 cents in his pocket and holes in his shoes w- School Editor Dies Following Tonsil Operation John Domina, Aberdeen, Ida., Victim of Hemmorhage After Operation Students of the Brigham Young university today mourned the unexpected un-expected death of John Domina, 24, of Aberdeen, Idaho, editor of the "Y" News and a popular member mem-ber of the senior class. The young man underwent an operation for the removal of the tonsils Monday morning at the Clark clinic. A severe hemmorhage hemmor-hage set in, causing his death at 8:10 a. m. Tuesday at the clinic. He had developed a touch of rheumatism rheu-matism some time ago and the operation was decided on as a possible cure. Universally Loved John pomina was held in the highest esteem among the students stu-dents of the university. Possessed with a kindly, pleasing personality personal-ity he made friends easily and was loved by all who came in contact con-tact with nim. His passing is especially keenly felt by the members mem-bers of the "Y" News staff who have worked with him under the most pleasant and friendly relations rela-tions during the school year, now drawing to a close. Majoring in Spanish and journalism, jour-nalism, John had completed all requirements re-quirements for the bachelor's degree de-gree which he was to receive at the commencement exercises in the stake tabernacle on June 10. Before matriculating at the Brigham Young university five years ago he had been employed on the Aberdeen Times, Idaho weekly newspaper. He performed all the work incident to issuing the paper for several weeks during dur-ing the absence of the publisher not long ago. His experience in newspaper work attracted him to the "Y" News staff when he entered school. His ability and leaderishp was recognized by the students when they elected him editor of the paper last spring. He was a member of the Viking social unit, the Blue Key, honorary honor-ary service fraternity and the Omega Nu, honorary journalism fraternity. He was a graduate of the Spanish Fork high school. His father, P. C. Domina, Aberdeen, Aber-deen, Idaho was notified of his son's death this morning and will arrive late today. Mrs. Domina has been staying at Spanish Fork with friends for a visit prior to the commencement exercises which she had planned to attend. John had been living at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Strate, 733 North University avenue. His body was taken to the Wheeler Mortuary in Springville. Funeral arrangements will be announced an-nounced later. WILSON SERVICES SET WEDNESDAY Funeral services for James Curtis Cur-tis Wilson, who died May 31, in a local hospital, Will be held at the Hatch Mortuary chapel Wednesday Wednes-day at 2 o'clock. The Rev. Edwin Ed-win F. Irwin will be in charge. Friends are invited to call at the home, 128 West Fourth South, from 10 a. m. until 1:30 p. m. Wednesday. Interment will be in the Provo City Burial park. ! BASEBALL TODAY .j. AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 20 Washington .... 32 Detroit 103 000 010 5 Philadelphia . . . 000 130 000 4 Chicago 020 303 120 11 New York 710 001 000 9 Cleveland 210 001 101 6 Boston 605 001 02x 14 NATIONAL. LEAGUE Boston 000 100 30 Pittsburgh 020 000 12 t i when discovered living with $ a roommate, Charles J. Fritz, J 21, whom he met three weeks j ago when he got a job selling ; magazine subscriptions from door to door. "I didn't care to have my breakfast brought up to my ; room every morning by a maid," he said. "And I got tired of having a chauffeur drive me to the . field whenever I competed in an athletic meet." He was reluctant to return home, the Newspaper said, but agreed to the trip when informed his mother was ill and under care of a physician because of grief over his disappearance. dis-appearance. "I was just starting to get by,'" he said ruefully. Principals To Hold Seminar At Aspen Grove Last Year's Meeting To Be Repeated; Blood, Skid-more Skid-more Coming More than 200 high school principals prin-cipals are expected to join in the second annual seminar to be conducted con-ducted next week at Aspen Grove, according to J. C. Moffitt, principal prin-cipal of the Provo high school and president of the Utah State Association Asso-ciation of Secondary School Principals. Prin-cipals. Arrangements for the week's encampment are in charge of Mr. Moffitt and Mr. Farnsworth of the state department of education. Panel jury discussions and talks from leading educators will occupy occu-py the time. Four subjects will be stressed; Curriculum, credits and marks, guidance and extra-curricular activities. Greetings will be given on the opening day by Governor Henry H. Blood and Charles H. Skid- more, superintendent opublic. in 1 struction. Among the visiting edu cators will te President F. S. Harris, Superintendent L. John Nuttall, Dean Jacobsen, Logan, Keith Wahjquist. The novel encampment, proved immensely popular last year and attracted wide notice in educational educa-tional journals throughout the nation. na-tion. 9 BANDS FOR CELEBRATION Nine musical organizations have been obtained to take part in the Fourth of July parade at Provo this year, it is announced by Dr. M. W. Merrill, publicity chairman of the event. Included among them is the Thirty-Eighth Infantry band of Fort Douglas, one of the outstanding outstand-ing bands in the west. Others are as follows Richfield girls drum corps, Provo high school band, Post 13, American Legion drum corps, Springville high school band, Spanish Fork high school band and drum corps from the Parker, Franklin and Maeser schools. A detailed program for the celebration, cele-bration, which is expected to surpass any of previous years, will be announced within a few days. The Provo Legion has already al-ready made arrangements for a pyrotechnic displayed that will excel ex-cel anything provided heretofore. Drive Starts On Auto Inspection The campaign against uninspected unin-spected automobiles went forward in Utah county Monday and continued con-tinued Tuesday. All motorists whose cars do not show a red Utah-shaped inspection inspec-tion sticker are liable to arrest, according to Sergeant Elmer D. Loveless of the state patrol. More than 50 arrests were made Monday and drivers paid fines of $2 for failure to abide by the inspection in-spection law. Practically every garage is an accredited inspection agency. Cyrus H. McCormick, Retired Harvester King, Passes Away KAE FOREST, 111., June 2 (HE) Cyrus H. McCormick, retired chairman of the international Harvester company, died at his home today. He suffered a heart attack Saturday. Sat-urday. McCormick, who celebrated bis COUNTY GETS DELINQUENT TAX PROPERTY Real Estate Valued at More Than A Million Goes To The County Utah county has approxi mately a million dollars worth of property in its own name and off the tax rolls today fbljowing the completion of ;the auction sale Saturday and Monday m which only 26 parcels par-cels of property were sold. Descriptions of approximately 2700 parcels of property were read t,by County Clerk Clarence A. Grant and Deputy Orville Larsen during the two day sale. This is now tabulated in the county books ready for disposal. To Notify Owners The county will proceed as it has in the past in attempting to sell this property. Ammon Tuttle, former county auditor, who is acting act-ing as agent for the county in disposing dis-posing of the property, will write to each of the former owners of the property, giving them a 30-day 30-day notice. During that time they have an opportunity to redeem it for the amount fcf taxes, Interest and penalty or for some stipulated sum on which the county commissioners commission-ers agree. If they do not come in within the 30-day period, the county will attempt to sell. Much of the land is not worth the total of taxes, interest and penalties which the county holds against it. Most of the property that was worth more than the taxes against it, has already been redeemed. The commissioners will naturally natural-ly be forced to sell much of the property for less than the amount of taxes against it. This will probably prob-ably be done in many cases, otherwise other-wise the county never would be able to sell it. The county owns practically half of such districts as Alpine, Cedar Valley, Bay View, Mosida, and Siberia and a good portion of other out-of-the-way rural sections. sec-tions. Taxes in some cases are double what the property is worth. An appraisal will be made to ascertain as-certain the true worth of the property for purposes of sale. Property has gone for eight years without tax payment in some instances. This resulted because be-cause of the four-year moratorium declared by the state of Utah during dur-ing the toughest years of the depression. de-pression. Ordinarily, the property is sold for auditors' tax deed after taxes are defaulted for four years. NEW SCHEDULE FOR DANCING Due to the unusually heavy registration for dancing, more than 500 boys and girls being registered, a new schedule has been drawn up to begin Tuesday morning as follows: Third and fourth grades, daily at 9 a. m. Pre-school children Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a. m. First and second grades Mondays, Mon-days, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 10 a. m. Seventh and eighth grades daily at 11 a. m. Ninth, tenth and eleventh grades Daily at 1 p. m. Fifth and sixth grades daily at 2 p. m. Advanced creative dancing (Continued on Page Eight) FIRE SWEEPS CHICKEN COOPS SPRINGVILLE Fire resulting from an explosion in the furnace pipe, destroyed a chicken coop, 1600 baby chicks and 300 spring fries, at the home of Jacob Felix, Springville poultryman at 9 a. m. this morning. Diligence of the Springville fire department saved an adjoining coop and a grain shed, although both were scorched by the flames. The fire had gained a substantial substant-ial headway before it was discovered discov-ered by a chance passer-by who turned in the alarm. 77th birthday May 16, resigned from active participation in the company last September. He was the son of the inventor of the reaping machine. His widow and Cyrus H. McCormick, Mc-Cormick, Jr., of Santa Fe, N. M., were at the bedside when he died. Brothers Accused - -Aw--A "&f : ' x v Y L fi. . L With a supercilious stare, Ray Ernest, left, faced arraignment in i Jackson, Mich., with his two brothers, Clarence, center, and .Glen, right, both wearing worried looks, in the probe of alleged Black Legion outrages. They were held under $10,000 bond, accused in the flogging of Harley, Smith, WPA worker, at Norvall, Mich Ray alsa Was placed under $1500 bond on a concealed weapon rhare. t?e was susDended as a Jackson prison guard after it was alleged th?t be was a "brigadier general' in the black-robed . A . ...14 lenur Robed Clansmen Shoot Victim In Cold Blood Details Of Slaying Told By Detective In Crowded Courtroom Trial Scene DETROIT, June 2 (U.P.) Charles A. Poole, 32-year-old nctim of the hooded and robed Black Legion, was shot down as he started to protest his innocence of wife beating charges and never had a chance to defend his conduct, a de- Sective testified today at the ex RECREATIONAL SETUP PRAISED Major Brad en Lauds Play Setup Here; Program Expands Through West "I am frankly astonished and greatly pleased with the comprehensive compre-hensive and rich recreation program pro-gram which is underway for this summer in Provo." That was the statement of Major George W. Braden, western ! representative of the National Recreation association, who spent Thursday as guest of the local recreational board in review of the summer program. and meeting the summer supervision staff, the executive supervisors and two or three classes at the Brigham Young university. "Size of the city considered, Provo will have one of the finest services of any of our western cities. "It looks as though more than 2500 young people and adults will participate this summer in unit activities, covering a wide range of sports, many phases of music, nature recreation, special study of bird life of Utah lake and vicinit fine arts, handicraft arts, speech arts including dramatic interpretation interpre-tation and coaching, rhythmics and general supervision- of kindergarten kinder-garten centers and playgrounds. "Superintendent H. A. Dixon and his associate workers should enjoy the fullest communtiy support sup-port and adequate financial assistance assist-ance in undertaking such a valuable valu-able piece of civic and social work. "While not directly a phase of recreation, the summer job placement place-ment service under direction of T. W. Dyches, is outstanding.'' Mr. Braden came to Provo from Salt Lake City and is going through to Portland, Oregon. He reports a vast expansion of recreation recre-ation through the entire west and believes thfct 50,000 additional people will be served this summer. KING OPENS TAX BILL ARGUMENT WASHINGTON, June 2 (U.R) Sen. William H. King, D., Utah, opened the senate battle today for a $829,000,000 compromise corporation cor-poration and income tax bill in preference to the New Deal's 'reform 're-form levy or undivided corporate profits. Arising at his front row seat as debate on the tax bill opened, the tall, silver-haired Utah senator contended that the compromise measure would meet for the first year. President Roosevelt's request for $620,000,000 permanent and $517,000,000 temporary revenue in three years. King spoke slowly, in a low voice that hardly carried to the crowded galleries watching the final big conflict of this session. Around him were groups of friends and foes of the compro mise bill, including Sen. William E. Borah, R., Idaho, who intends lumimueu on -age niignt; as NighfRiders tun- amination of 14 men charged with the slaying Detective Jack Harvill, homicide homi-cide ace who "cracked" the case against Detroit's vigilante night riders, recounted to a crowded courtroom how Poole was taken on a one-way ride the night of May 12 and shot down by two legionnaires as he stood facing seven members along a west side road. Based On Confession His testimony was based, the detective said, on the alleged confession con-fession of Dayton Dean, "trigger man'' of the legion who fired two revolvers at Poole while the victim vic-tim stood a foot or two away. Dean s story implicated "Colonel" Harvey Davis, head of the Detroit legion, as the instigator of the slaying. At a legion meeting, Harvill testified Dean told him, "Colonel" Davis charged Poole with having administered a beating to his wife, an expectant mother. Legionnaires demanded that Poole be beaten up. Some screamed scream-ed for his life. Dean and two companions com-panions picked the unsuspecting victim up at a saloon, took him back to the meeting place. There, the detective said he was told, a motor cavalcade drove Poole to his death. On a country road, Colonel Davis told his lieutenant: "Get Poole out of the car, Dean." "Then Davis said "Poole, you've beaten your wife for the last time," Dean told the officer. "Dean explained that by this time he had started shooting," Harvill continued. "He told me he had shot six times and that Edwin Ed-win D. Lee, another defendant, had shot three times.'' After the shooting, the seven legionnaires who had attended returned re-turned to town in two automobiles, automo-biles, leaving the body in the ditch. Dean said he took the guns to Edison lake where he tossed them in. POSSES HONT PILOT'S BODY SALT LAKE CITY, June 2 U.P Led by two department of commerce com-merce aviators who scanned the area for weeks from the skies, ground parties resumed their hunt today for the body of Major Howard How-ard Stark, department of commerce com-merce "blind flight'' expert, missing miss-ing since Jan. 16 in the rugged Wasatch Mountains. Despairing that Stark could have survived the rigors of the blizzard which forced down his trim monoplane during a flight from Rock Springs, Wyo., to Salt Lake City, searchers expected to find his remains somewhere within with-in a few miles of his disabled, overturned craft. They pointed out Stark was clad only in a business suit, light topcoat and low shoes and doubted doubt-ed that he could have progressed far from the ship in the deep snowbanks prevailing at the time of the accident. A sheep man found the craft Saturday in a small clearing on a ridge in the Devils Slide district DEER CREEK ITEM PLACED IN NEW BILL Senate Tries Again to Get Irrigation Amendments Amend-ments Passed WASHINGTON, June 2 (U.P.) Appropriations of $57,-000,000 $57,-000,000 for reclamation projects proj-ects were written into the $1,-425,000,000 $1,-425,000,000 relief bill by the senate. The projects had been authorized au-thorized by the serrate in the regular interior department appropriation ap-propriation bill but the house refused re-fused to accept them. Sen. Carl Hayden, D., Ariz., said the house preferred to have them attached to the pending relief re-lief measure. The projects were: Gila project, Arizona, $2,500,-000; $2,500,-000; Salt River project, Arizona, $2,300,000; Central Valley project, California, $16,000,000; Grand Valley Val-ley project, Colorado, $200,000; Boise project. Idaho, Payette division. di-vision. $1,800,000; Boise project, Idaho, drainage, $160,000; Carlsbad Carls-bad project New Mexico, $900,000; Deschutes project, Oregon, $450,-000; $450,-000; Owyhee project, Oregon, $400,000; Grand Coulee dam, Washington. $20,000,000; Columbia Colum-bia Basin, Washington, economic surveys and investigations, $250,-000; $250,-000; Yakima project. Wash., Roza division, $2,500,000; PROVO RIVER RIV-ER PROJECT, UTAH, $1,750,000; Casper-Alcova Wyoming. $4,000,-000; $4,000,-000; Riverton project, 1 Wyoming, $900,000; Shoshone project, Wyoming. Wyo-ming. Heart Mountain division, $1,000,000. PAYSON CLOSES BAND CLINIC Payson's first annual band clinic came to a most successful close Sunday afternoon with an musallv jtom band, . cogncejt in tfie junior nigh school auditorium. Inclement weather prevented its being held in the Memorial park as planned. Under the baton of Professor Glenn Cliff Bainum of Northwestern University, guest-conductor guest-conductor of the clinic, almost 200 boys and girls from 14 communities commun-ities in southern and central Utah presented a program of 12 concert con-cert selections in a manner that surprised and delighted the large crowd. Many visitors from communities com-munities supporting the clinic were present. The clinic was planned as an annual event by Armont Willard-son, Willard-son, director in the Payson schools. Other directors in attendance during dur-ing the week included William Ballard, Goshen; Delmar Dickson, Springville; J. L. Jamison, Eureka F. M. Paulson. Pleasant Grove; E. B. Terry, Lincoln high; Frank Wanless, Nephi; K. J. Bird. American Ameri-can Fork; Basil Hansen, Lehi; Clair Johnson, Provo; M. L. Perkins, Per-kins, Gunnison; Parley Thorder-son, Thorder-son, Castle Dale. General arrangements were in charge of John C. Carlisle high school principal and Mrs. Pearl Bigler, Mrs. Iva Chase and Mrs. Sylvia Page of the band mothers' organization. During the program intermission, intermis-sion, remarks were made by Mayor P. C. Wightman, Mrs. Pearl Bigler, Big-ler, Dr. L. D. Stewart of the school board. Superintendent Owen L. Barnett, Mr. Willardson and Prof. Bainum. The organization of students and directors, city officials and sponsors spon-sors expressed pleasure at the result of the clinic, a hope for its continuance and a desire for Prof. Bainum as guest conductor again next year. ZIONCHECK GETS HIS BRIDE BACK WASHINGTON. June 2 tE Rep. Marion A. Zioncheck, reported report-ed as "resting comfortably" at Gallinger hospital, got back his vanished bride today. His wife, the former Rubye Nix, paid a secret visit to her husband's bedside and then returned re-turned to the hiding place which she sought when Zioncheck's pace finally became too much for her. Though physicians were reticent reti-cent about the visit, Zioncheck was reported much relieved to see his wife again. Mrs. Zioncheck was . nervous when she arrived at the hospital but attendants said she appeared much reassured after the visit with her husband. She had no com ment to make, however; on Any of the Zioncheck developments since she fled to the refuga of .a friend's home last Friday. Hospital attendants saidivJSJon- check was improving under care, |