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Show So TheV SaBi! No sensible employer will be misled mis-led by, the charge that people on relief are shiftless and Incompetent. Incompe-tent. The relief rolls are a cross-section cross-section of our people. New York Public Welfare Commissioner Com-missioner William Hod son. The Weather UTAH: Showers tonight and Wednesday, Wed-nesday, little change in temperature. tempera-ture. Max. temp, Monday 80 Mln. temp., Monday . . 89 .era , 7 FIFTY-FIRST YEAR. NO. 238 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1937 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS PRICE FIVE CENTS TELEGRAPH NEWS 8ERVICB rXiAOj fo) UV1 M i5 ME PICKETS ARE DISARMED I STEEL STRIKE Republic Steel to Reopen Plant; 63 Percent Vote to Work CLEVELAND, June 8 (U.R Local authorities today ordered or-dered the disarming of steel strike pickets in Youngstown, center of the teeming Mahoning Mahon-ing valley steel producing district dis-trict in which more than 20,-000 20,-000 mill hands are idle - This development coincided with preparations by Republic Steel Corp. to reopen tomorrow its subsidiary' sub-sidiary' Newton Steel Co. plant in Monroe, Mich, where 63 per cent of the workers voted in an election elec-tion to return to work. Election Results Given Republic announced these results re-sults of another election held in Canton, O.. under auspices of the chamber of commerce. The chamber cham-ber mailed out 6,405 ballots. It said 3,888 "genuine" ballots were returned, and 2,516 -'counterfeit.' Of those said to be "genuine." 3,633 were marked in favor of returning re-turning to work, 216 against, and 36 were blank. Frank Purnell. president of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co-declared Co-declared that company would reopen re-open plants around Youngstown "when the authorities give our re-. re-. turning workmen and their families fami-lies full protection." Police Chief Carl Olson of Youngstown ordered pickets to cease carrying clubs or other weapons. Sheriff Ralph Elser said the "time is close at hand when I may have to issue a similar order throughout Mahoning county. He said that meantime he would cooperate co-operate with Olson in enforcing the order in Youngstown itself. Elser said he had seen several pickes carrying revolvers and that he had received many reports of families of non-strikers being threatened. "I will keep order in this country (Continued on Page Five) MERRY GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBETKT S. ALLEN Roosevelt Thought U. S. Should Openly Condemn Al m e ri a Bombardment ; Cautious Advisers Urged Do-Nothing- Policy, Awaiting Await-ing British Lead; Hull Opposed Op-posed Invoking Neutrality Act As "Taking Sides" in Battle. WASHINGTON Inner council discussions about the European crisis nave shown the president to be much more critical of the Germans and te Italians than his state department advisers. He felt that the German bombardment bom-bardment of the civilian population popu-lation of Almeria was something against which the United States should take a firm and openly condemnatory stand. In fact, he seemed open-minded toward the idea of invoking the neutrality act and putting an embargo -on Germany and Italy. But Cordell Hull and Norman Davis were the height of caution. They .believed that the United States should do nothing. Davis, particularly, believed in a do-nothing do-nothing policy, especially anything any-thing which did not follow the leadership of the British. In conversations with the German Ger-man Ambassador, Mr. Hull intimated inti-mated in mild diplomatic language lan-guage that any repetition of the Almeria incident might force the United States to take action under un-der the Neutrality act. Ambassador Dieckhoff cabled this to Hitler; no word of it leaked out to the German pub- lie. -it HULL. ON SPOT y "' Secretary Hull, always the heigW of cautious graciousness, had a hard time maintaining it during the visit of Democratic andFarmerLabor congressmen to demand tne invocation of the Neutrality act against Germany and JtaryV.3 Hull can be one of the most lorcri3dfid.tallr$ in toe world when he - wants te avoid an is-suetThli-r.tane -he talked about fishJ5:Trancssee.:the days when be waV- in congrress, and almost (Continued o& Page Two) - , , . , . Valedictorian ir fcvr' fit - t & -' CLIFFORD E. YOUNG Utah Strawberry Day Celebration To Open Thursday PLEASANT GROVE Strawberry Straw-berry day Pleasant Grove's out-Handing out-Handing celebration of the year, is dated for Thursday, June 10, and from reports from Mayor Lyean Johnson, Lee Peterson, president of the chamber of com-.merce com-.merce and other officials, this sixteenth annual celebration will eclipse all others. The twenty thousand visitors expected are assured a hearty welcome and a day of fun. A feast of free strawberries with sugar and- --cream, is prom- y lsed to every guest and along .with luscious refreshments, this is the time of the day when old friends meet and renew acquaintances. ac-quaintances. Vilace Radmall, chairman of the parade committee, says this event which is scheduled for 10 a. m., will be magnificent. The floats will be of miniature size outstanding in beauty and originality. orig-inality. The gay procession will be led by a tiny queen and her retinue; followed by a historical section depicting outstanding scenes in American history, and also other nations. There will be the flower section, - nursery rhymes, rhy-mes, months of the year, noted fairyland characters, and an enlarged en-larged comic section. The afternoon's stellar event will be the rodeo at the ball park at 2 p. m. McBride and South-wick, South-wick, with their wild horses and Fort Hall Indians, have a program pro-gram that will entertain even the most sober ones. The carnival grounds are larg: er than ever. New features have been added that will thrill the vast crowds from early morning until midnight. Concerts, sideshows, side-shows, vaudevilles and an official dance at the open-air pavilion have all been planned to keep the people happy. ONE HELD IN S, L. SHOOTING SALT LAKE CITY, June 8 (IIP) Salt Lake City police today were holding Robert C. Nuckols as the alleged assailant of De Wayne Jarrett, Portage, Wis., who was shot Sunday night. Police said Nuckols admitted that he was handling the gun at the time but insisted that it accidentally discharged. Baseball Scores NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 4 9 1 Boston 0 4 0 Grissom and V. Davis; Fette, Smith and Lopez. Pittsburgh 8130 Philadelphia 1 6 0 Bauers and Brubaker, Todd; La Master, Jorgens, Pettit and Grace. AMERICAN LEAGUE Philadelphia 0 1 2 Detroit 6100 Kelley and Hayes; Auker and Tebbetts. Boston 000 1 Cleveland 110 0 McKain and Desautels; Allen, and Pytlak. New York 4 91 Chicago 5 13 0 Broaca and Dickey; Lee and Sewell. Washington at St. Louis, postponed post-poned rain. DEGREES TO BE AWARDED AT T RITES 340 Graduates to Receive Degrees, Diplomas at Y Commencement Diplomas will be awarded to 340 graduates of the Brig-ham Brig-ham Young university at -the 60th annual commencement exercises Wednesday, scheduled sched-uled to begin at 10 a. m. in the stake tabernacle. The presentation pre-sentation will be made by President Heber J. Grant aCter the graduates have been presented by the various deans. The address to the graduates will be given by President J. Reuben Reu-ben Clark of the First Presidency. Clifford Young of American Fork will give the valedictory address. It is expected Oat President Grant will also speak during the exercises. exer-cises. There are 255 candidates for the bachelor's degree, 24 for the master's mas-ter's degree, and 61 for normal diplomas. Perhaps the youngest graduate of the class of '37 is Clifford Young, the valedictorian. He turned turn-ed 20 on April 21 of this year. He was also valedictorian of his class at the American Fork high school. It was not until his first year in high school that he attempted public speaking. He was selected for the varsity debating team of Brigham Young university during his freshman year. Since then he has participated partici-pated in more than seventy-five inter-collegiate debates and has been active in extemporaneous speaking and oratory. Last year -he -received theEgiiertv medal awarded to the most outstanding debater of the year. He is president presi-dent of the Theta Kappa Alpha, national honorary debating fraternity. fra-ternity. ; Colorado, Montana, Washington, Oregon, California and Utah are states in which he has debated, and he has contested with teams from the additional states of Idaho, Ida-ho, Wyoming and Iowa. "I have grown up while attending attend-ing the B. Y.," said Clifford in an interview. Standing five feet four inches in his stocking feet when a Freshie, he is now five feet eleven inches. At first speaking in a high soprano voice, he now has a well modulated tone and power of delivery. Water Election Slated Saturday Ballots for Highland Conserva tion district voting are being printed for the election Saturday, County Clerk C. A. Grant declared de-clared Tuesday. Voting will be from 7 a. m. to 7 p. m., at the D. A. Adamson home; Highland, and Lehi Third ward L. D. S. churches. Eligible are land owners and corporations holding property in the area. Acre feet of water held will be the vote-determining vote-determining base. Harry Jerling, Orville C. Day and Isaac W. Fox are suggested directors if the voters approve the district. Other -names, however, may be written in at voting time. Judges are: At the Adamson home, Lue Emma Groesbeck, David Da-vid H. Adamson, Lot Robinson; at Lehi church, Margaret F. Andey son, Joseph E. Smith and Charles B. Colledge; at the Highland church, Stephen F. Beck, E. M. Strasburg and Kenneth White. Three hundred thirty - seven pieces of property are to be voted. Merchants Urged To Assist Cause Criticism of local merchants who are failing or refusing to distribute tickets on each 50-cent 50-cent purchase in connection with the Fourth of Julv ahow bein? sponsored for the Commonwealth Fund hospital fund was leveled from several quarters today. Merchants are urged to cooperate co-operate with the American Legion Le-gion and chamber of commerce in putting out tickets. Available for prizes including a Plymouth automobile, the tickets have been given out to practically every merchant mer-chant In the city. Buyers are asked to . demand their tickets if not presented to them at the time of purchase. Inasmuch as all net proceeds of the, show go to the hospital fund, the success of the venture will go to the benefit of all the sponsors spon-sors of the plan point out. . I Wreckage Of i) p; W' .- fir . ii.. ' - fk ' Small bits of wreckage such as these searchers are viewing was was discovered in the Lake Hardy peak country between Alpine their deaths. None of the bodies have been recovered, yetr jiL nc- . -- Changes In Provo Zoning Proposed In Board Report Widespread changes in Provo's zoning districts are recommended, to city commissioners by the board of adjustment in a new ordinance submitted Monday night. Only the industrial area would remain much the same, if thej changes are approved. Mayor Mark Anderson stated Tuesday, however, that the commisson will not come to any conclusion on the ordinance for at least a week. Plans for Class A, A-2, B, and C residential, commercial and industrial in-dustrial districts are included in the new plan. Previously but Class A and B, commercial and indus trial areas were specified. Mayor Anderson indicated that a seventh, or unclassified, district might be included by commissioners. In the new section Class A would include first-class resi dences; A-2, residences and apart (Continued on Page Five) Allen Services To Be Wednesday Friends will pay final tribute to the memory of Mrs. Inez Knight Allen, beloved and highly respected respect-ed Provo matron, wife of R. E. Allen, banker, Wednesday at 2:30 o'clock in the Utah stake tabernacle. taber-nacle. The body will lie in state Wednesday Wed-nesday from 12 noon to 2 p. m. in the rotunda of the First ward chapel. Services will be in charge of Bishop- W. O. Facer of the Fifth ward, and Doctors Franklin and Florence J. Madsen have the music in charge. Mrs. Louise Y. Robinson, general ., Relief society president; Pres. T. N. Taylor, Dr. F. S. Harris and Stephen L. Chipman of the Council of the Twelve will speak. Deer Creek Debated in Compromise that will clear the way .for final arrangement . on Deer Creek subscription cbntracts was indicated Monday as local sponsors conferred with Washington Washing-ton department of the interior officials there. Following the sessions held .in morning and afternoon Governor Henry H. Blood asserted that although not all . controversial points have been cleared, an ultimate ulti-mate settlement is . evident. Both sides wish to iron out difficulties he reported. " ' Legal and technical points are ; : Missing Plane Found In Alpine J0X;.f - iit , : r- TV-".. - 1 i . 3 More Hospital Proposed Three proposed sites for the new $275,000 hospital are being platted by Prows and Haws, j real estate brokers. Tne first site is on rweirxn i una ueiwccn uiuvciojtjf avenue ave-nue and Fifth West, the property prop-erty of Mrs. Alice Clark and contains more than 20 acres. The second is at 1060 North on Fifth West, the east side of the street and is the property of Minnie J. Haws and Alice Clark containing more than 20 acres. The third, also containing more than 20 acres, is the opening of Eighth North between University avenue and Fifth West and belongs be-longs to the estate of W. W. Haws. All sites can be served with gas, sewer, water, and public utilities. Farrer Services To Be Wednesday Funeral services for Fred C. Farrer, son of Joseph T. Farrer, fcrmer Provoan, will be held at the Berg mortuary chapel Wednesday Wed-nesday morning at 10:30 o'clock. The body of the young man, who was killed in a bus accident Friday near Redding, Cal., arrived in Provo this morning. The father, and the youth's sister, Mrs. J. B. Tucker, have arrived from Santa Ana. Dixons Return Superintendent of School H. A. Dixon and family returned Monday Mon-day afternoon from Los Angeles, where Mr. Dixon received the de gree of doctor of education from the University of Southern Cal- ifornia. The Dixons will leave shortly to make their home in Ogden, where Mr. Dixon will enter his new duties as Weber junior col lege president. - Contract Washington involved which must be cleared before 1 bids are invited on the project. Discussions went forward Tuesday. Present at the hearings r are Governor Blood, President J. W. Gillman and Legal Counsel A. V. Watkins .of the Provo River Water Wa-ter Users association;1 Represent tative J. Will Robinson, Attorney Fisher- Harris of Salt Lake City, ;E. O. Larson and. J. R. Aber- cromble of the Salt Lake City office of the U. S. reclamation bureau. all that was found when the WAE and Draper Sunday morning. The W 7-:- . : ; -: FIREMEN ASK FOR PAY RAISE Presented by Provo city fireman fire-man with a petition requesting $15 monthly pay raises "to meet present living costs which have advanced greatly during the past year," Mayor Mark Anderson pointed out Tuesday that on the whole, all city employees' wages are too low. "The city commission is aware that nearly all city employees are underpaid and several departments de-partments are undermanned,'' the city official announced. No official actio was taken, Commissioners Walter P. Whitehead White-head and J. P. McGuire both being absent. Turning, following the meeting, to city wage figures, the mayor pointed out that many family men in the city service receive wages of only $100 monthly, that the highest-paid city officer gets but $175 per month. Two Provo police officers receive re-ceive but $100 while several firemen fire-men draw $115 monthly, he specified. speci-fied. Among city department heads the wage scale is but little higher, with $90 to $175 the range. "Wages and salaries would have been advanced at the be-( be-( Continued on Page Five) U. C. T. Delegates Go To Convention T. H. Heal, M. Howard Graham Gra-ham and John P. McGuire of Provo chapter of United Commercial Commer-cial Travelers are en route to Helena, Mont., to attend the grand council convention of Montana, Utah and Idaho members, Thurs- day Friday Mr. Heal is junior councilor of the grand council and will be advanced to grand councilor this year. Next year he will be sent to Columbus, Ohio, as delegate to the supreme council. Mr. McGuire is delegate to the convention. He is a past senior councilor of the Provo chapter. Mr. Graham is a member of the grand council and also past senior councilor here. Provo was host to the convention conven-tion two years ago. U. S. Labor Agent Coming To Provo Anders Larsen, national labor relations board representative from San Francisco, will meet with Pacific State Cast Iron Pipe plant workers Wednesday at 8 p. m., in labor hall, announces James G. Thimmea, SWOC representative repre-sentative of the Amalgamated Association As-sociation of Iron Steel and Tin Workers," who 'ls stationed here. . Mountain Crags j plane missing since December 15, craft carried seven persons to i: GCC Boys Start New Side Camp in Lake Hardy Area Provo CCC enrollees today began be-gan establishment of a side camp in the Lake Hardy area adjacent to the crash site. It will be outfitted out-fitted and serviced through the present Upper Millset camp Captain Cap-tain Alvin Sessions reported. Advisability of taking the bodies bod-ies out through Little Cottonwood Cotton-wood canyon routes has lessened followng surveys by Allan Bar-rie, Bar-rie, WAE vice president, and partv vesterdav and todav. The trek today was in search of a route higher up Little Cottonwood Cotton-wood canyon. If the Little Cottonwood route is abandoned, bodies will be removed re-moved through the Lake Hardy and Upper Millset camps. Pack trains can move easily from the base at Alpine power house to Upper Millset. Some trail construction con-struction will be necessary between be-tween that point and the Lake Hardy side-camp the captain indicated. in-dicated. This will be ready probably prob-ably by tonight. The CCC staff will outfit both camps until the government's work in recovering the mail and bodies is fulfilled Captain Ses sions, reported. CCC will take no part in salvage operations, even if these are attempted. WAE and its employees alone will continue con-tinue this work if it is done. The severe impact however will make recovery of anything on the plane of value improbable. A temperature gauge found yesterday read "-2," but whether this was the reading at the time of the accident or not is uncertain. uncer-tain. About two feet of cable was wrenched loose with the gauge from the plane. It was the first instrument reading from the plane. Eight CCC men the original party are working. Donald 1 J. Dyches is in charge at the field camps with Val D. Hicks in charge of ground crew operations. Both are supervised by Captain Sessions. Ses-sions. Major work now, the captain explained, is in pushing to the new camp establishment, following follow-ing which more concentrated work In getting out . the bodies will begin. Dyches believes by blasting a descent may be made Jnto the canyon where the plane lies buried In deep snow. This would obviate derrick preparations for negotiating the precipice to the top. Utahn Dies WASHINGTON. June 8 ttr-David ttr-David E. Hempstead, 67 special assistant to the attorney general, died today, of a cerebral hemorrhage. hemorr-hage. He was a native of Salt Lake City, Utah. FIND CABIN, PART OF WING IN THE SNOVJ Route Sought on Which to Bring Bodies Out Of Mountains (Bulletin) SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, June 8 (U.P.) Western Air Express officials said today that they had received word that crews searching: in the huge snow bank under the brow of 10,650-foot Lake Hardy Har-dy ridge for wreckage of the ill-fated WAE plane, had uncovered un-covered part of the cabin, a portion of the wing, and what appeared to be a bodyv Tne parts of the fuselage were sighted by E. O: Maxfield, operator oper-ator of the Utah Light and Power plant in American Fork canyon. Maxfield said the wreckage was suspended on a spur of granite about 200 feet below the peak which the plane struck Dec 15. It was possible that bodies of seven occupants of the plane might be found there and not buried in snow at the bottom of the cliff. The spot was so isolated it could not be reached immediately. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, June 8 U.RA party led by Allan Barrie, Wejstern Air Express Ex-press vice president, picked its way thru perpendicular walled canyons today in an attempt to chart a route by which bodies of seven victims brought out from the north side of Lake Hardy peak. Meanwhile a rigid guard was maintained at Alpine and at Millset camp to prevent persons who have climbed to the scene of the crash from removing valuable mail and parts of the plane. Bodies of the five men and two women who were aboard the ill-fated ill-fated Los Angeles-Salt Lak plane still were covered with snow. But with the finding of a human shin bone and an empty shoe, officials hoped to be able to locate the bulk of the wreckage, wreck-age, with a minimum of digging in a huge snowbank 1000-feet under the brow of the peak which the plane struck, only 20 feet from the top. The shin bone was found near the top of the ridge, wedged be- tween two granite boulders. La ter a party making a perilous (Continued on Page Five) U. S. HEARINGS ON PLANE CRASH SALT LAKE CITY, June 8 (& . While crews labored to locate more wreckage of the Western Air Express plane which crashed into Lake Hardy Ridge December 15, an official board prepared today to investigate the accident for the U. S. Department of Commerce. Com-merce. Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper in Washington appointed appoint-ed a board headed by E. D. Yura-vich, Yura-vich, chief airline inspector, to fiold open hearings. Other members mem-bers named were Robert I. Hazen, aarline inspector stationed at,-Newark. at,-Newark. N. J., and James A. Read, inspector at Los Angeles. W. D. Hammond, chairman of the Utah Aeronautics commission commis-sion and Preston G. Peterson, member of the state commission, will be associated in the investigation. investi-gation. Bevey, Andrews To Get Reward SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, June g nj a J10O0 reward for finding of the wrecked Western Air Express will be divided between be-tween Melvin Devey and Emery Andrews of Alpine, Utah, WAE officials said today. They said, however that the decision de-cision was not final and the money would not be paid until all claims had been considered. Devey and Andrews found bits of the 'wreckage Sunday.. They said theylwre, willing to split the reward with Wilt Healy and Frank Bateman, who discovered letters a week ago whichr ledAo the. new search. - .rV ' Devev and Andrews had searcn- : ed for 21 days prior to' the fmcltog i or tne plane, . ., -v . -r-vV i'' |