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Show PAGE FOUR PROVO (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY DECEMBER 3, 1 9 3 3 I The Herald Brery Afteraooa except Satarday, aa4 iaaflay Maralas Published by the Herald Corporation, 60 South First West Street, Provo. Utah. Entered as second-class matter at the postofflce In Provo. Utah, under the act of March S. 1879. Gilman. Nicoll & Ruthman, National Advertising representatives, New Tork. San Francisco, Detroit, Boston, Zxs Angreles, Seattle. Chicago. Member United Press. N. E. A. Service. Western Features and the Scripps League of Newspapers. Subscription terms by carrier In Utah county, 60 cents the month; 2.75 for six months In advance; 15.00 the year, In advance: by mail in Utah County, In advance, $4.50; outside Utah County, $6.00. "Proclaim Liberty tarvas-h aU tke laa" Liberty Bell The Price of Mob Terror The direct result of the three lynchings of the lust few days is the death of a small Philadelphia boy the victim of a lynching game. Certainly this event should have a sobering effect. It is evidence of the brutalizing effect mob violence always has on the youth. It is perhaps true that lynchings occasionally do justice-to their victims. When this is true, however, it is evidence evi-dence of woeful weakness of law and incompetency or dishonesty dis-honesty of law-enforcement officials. There are crimes which arouse the primitive instincts in man. Kidnaping is such a crime. Certainly no American would hesitate to urge the most seyere penalty for kidnapers, kidnap-ers, but no thinking American would deny to each and every suspected person a fair, open trial, where all the truth could be brought out. It is well known that police make mistakes, that innocent men are sometimes accused. At the San Jose lynching the mob brutally beat, and almost hanged, an innocent man. While there is always the chance that the police may arrest the wrong man, there is little chance that he will be convicted. When a mob makes a mistake, however, there is no acquittal and mobs have made mistakes. .. Law is the will of the people. Orderly enforcement ot law is the guarantee of justice, the very opposite of mob ' terror. Lynchings strike at the very foundations of democracy. democ-racy. - Muzzling the Fact Finders Interesting but somewhat ominous reports from Washington Wash-ington indicate -that General Johnson and Secretary of Agriculture Agri-culture Wallace possess a vast amount of influence. For in-stance in-stance The October bulletin of the Federal Reserve system contained FACTS about declines in industrial activity where certain codes, and processing taxes, were effective. The FACTS came from government sources officers whose job , it is to collect accurate statistics. They are published be-: be-: cause it is the business. of the Federal Reserve to tell the plain truth about business and economic conditions in this country. A ... Well General Johnson and Secretary Wallace complained. com-plained. 'They did not challenge the FACTS, they simply 'argued that unpleasant things should not be told. As a result, the November Federal Reserve bulletin -confined itself to printing selections from the presidents i The general and the secretary were unduly excited. Un- favorable reactions must be expected sometimes Temporary setbacks due to codes were expected in some industries. It t was well known that the processing taxes would slow up other industries. Both the general and Secretary Wallace i knew these facts. When they presented the argument that i ,t-ki font shnnlH rw suDDressed thev permitted tnem- uc yxtc) in thp realms of to know the unpleasant facts 1 uniy Dy reasilul"6 uaugwo c. 1 1 JnnirDiM can progress be maae. . . The fact that these two men, high-minded and sincere though they are, have sufficient influence to throttle a worthwhile official business and financial review ol iacts, is somewhat sinister in itself. I. - - - - iMiss Erma Stubbs 5 Home From Mission , Miss Erma Stubbs, daughter of ' Mr. and Mrs. Wilf ord R. Stubbs of Edgemont, has returned home from the Western States Mission field, where she has been laboring f for the past 25 months. 'She worked In Denver, ' Council I Bluffs. Lincoln, Omaha and Grand f island, and before leaving for WHO SAID THE NATIONS COULDN'T AGREE? 1 feW 1 11 davits-1 itt -a r:rni . i I.' : . . 1; . " t - I I mmr .:. " - nonsense. It is as important as it is to know the pleasant, j -mil tllKUlKCS illlll WlUIiVt UCUUO i , 1 v, oho viyitpd her manv menas 117111V U v r in these cities. Miss Stubbs will speak at the Edgemont ward chapel this eve ning REPORTS ACCIDENT J. M. Grovel , 39, of 232 South ii-Ht Kasv, ngurea in an a uiomo- bile accident at First West and Center street at 8:55 p. m. Thurs day, it is stated in a report at the police station. No one was in- jur ed in the ' collision and thd driver of the other car was not discovered. OUT OUR WAY r '. VOU COME ( THAT'S RIGHT, BlB- HE'S I yHzYPu 19 a white flXrVlPSSS? Vvou- Ithenake' gKLLS?&3R j-sVSS? ' JuliS- I MILES GOOD BE BIG TOO Howdy, folks! Thousands of readers well, a couple of them, anyway have asked this department de-partment for its plan to control the consumption of liquor after December 6. Here it is 1: Make people -drink cocktails thru a straw. 2: Reduce drinking among flappers flap-pers by announcing that gin is fattening. 3: Compel whisky manufacturers manufactur-ers to flavor every quart with spinach juice. - v Li'l Gee Gee says she is so poor she is thinking of buying a jellybean jelly-bean on the installment plan. LATE NEWS I . I . . FLASH 4 A law prohibiting musical saw solos on international broadcasts was urged today by Simon F. Spongecake, Sponge-cake, as a means of promoting universal peace. Photo by Ed Evans The horse has one advantage over the automobile. There is no 6-cent tax on an oat. CIVIC NOTE Officials have decided it is too much trouble srivine- nmtninent visitors the key to' the city. They're leaving it wid .ide open in- stead. It is now proposed' to place college col-lege football under the NRA. Yes, and as a final step, football players play-ers should be prohibited from ' .5) ' washing their faces in the drinking drink-ing bucket. Li'l Gee Gee was a college girl. She says she quit Colgate after she lost her toothbrush. Afld then she laffs and laffs and laffs. THEME SONGS The telephone company song: "Somewhere a Voice is Calling." The rent-a-car song: "My Phaeton's Phae-ton's in Your Hands." The Mae West song: "Hippy Days are Here Again." , T . Now, if they could only find a way to heat the wife's cold supper with the husband's hot temper. Out to lunch. Back at 5. "Continued rrom :age One . . Grau is anxious to get it in. . . . Wayne Johnson contributed . $7500 to,, the Democratic , cam paign, was active at K?5!5 headquarters. So also was Bob Jackson, sceretary of the Democratic Demo-cratic National committee. . . . Jackson is representative of revolutionary revo-lutionary forces trying to get Grau out of the presidency. His triend Johnson has been trying to get Grau recognized. Justice Brandeis, following the example of Justice Holmes, has a new secretary secre-tary every year. Tliese secretaries secretar-ies are chosen by Professor Felix Frankfurter of the Harvard Ijaw school from the graduating class. To work for Brandeis is considered consider-ed one of the greatest class honors. hon-ors. Brandeis thinks it is worth the trouble to break in a new man in order to be able to send out a youngster imbued with nia liberal ideals. Wholesale drug manufacturers and allied interests are going to any length to sabotage tae Tug-well Tug-well pure food bill. They even dug up a poem written by the professor profes-sor in the days of his visionary Legal Notices ASSESSMENT NOTICE Indian Queen Consolidated Mining Min-ing Company, principal place of business, Room 6, Roundy Building. Build-ing. Provo, Utah. Notice is hereby given that at! a meeting of the Board of Directors Di-rectors held on the 25th day of November, 1933, an assessment (No. 7) of six-tenths of one mill per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation, payable immediately to R. E. Allen, secretary secre-tary of the company, atRoom 6, Roundy Building, Provo, Utah. Any stock upon which this assessment as-sessment may remain unpaid on Tuesday the 26th day of December, Decem-ber, 1933, will be delinquent and advertised' for sale at public auction, auc-tion, and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 10th day of January, 1934, at 10:00 o'clock a. m. of said day, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon together with the cost of advertising advertis-ing and expense of sale. R. E. ALLEN, Secretary Room 6, Roundy Building, Provo, Utah. Pub. Dec. 3, 10, 17, 1933. NOTICE . . j Notice is hereby given that after December 15, 1933, the cards for 1 free beauty work, distributed by us throughout Utah county, will be null and void. PROVO SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE. Pub. Dec. 1, 3, 4, 1933. ' LEGAL NOTICE ... REPORT OF GENERAL ASSETS AS-SETS COMPANY, an Affiliate of a Member Bank made in compliance compli-ance with the requirements of the Banking Act of 1933. . Report as of October 25, 1933 of General Assets Company of Provo, Utah, which, under, the terms of the Banking Act of 1933, is af- u ft iLiJJ3 BY WILLIAMS -SIZE . Vj 3'outh by which they try to prove he is a dangerous person. . . . Here is the poem: "We begin to see richness as poor ness; we begin to dignify toil; 1 I have dreamed my great dream of their passing, I have gathered my tools ond my charts; My plans are fashioned and practical; prac-tical; I shall roll up my sleeves make America over!" BIG VICTORY - Knoxville's two-to-one vote approving ap-proving a $3,225,000 bond issue for the erection of a municipal power distributing system was more than a local victory. ... It was also an urgently needed boost I for the Tennessee Valley Authority. Author-ity. Senator Norris had planned j the distribution of cheap Muscle , Shoals power throughout the 1 south, but the TV A found that i private power companies had blocked distribution lines. . . . ' Had the Knoxville vote gone against the municipal project it was likely that the TV A power program might have been curtailed. curtail-ed. . . . Since March 4 Postmas ter General Jirti Farley has pard ' airmail contracts from $20,000,000 to $14,000,000. . . . Jim's great ambition is to put his department on a self-sustaining basis. In its entire history the postal service has so far only three times finished fin-ished a year out of the red. . . . President Roosevelt's two weeks absence in Warm Springs was , used to retint and refurbish the j lobby and ante-rooms of the executive offices. The boys in the breadlines are going to feel like doughboys where bully beef is. concerned. The federal fed-eral emergency relief adminiotra-tion adminiotra-tion has just bought 25,000,000 pounds of it for distribution. . . The Daily Worker, official organ of the American Communist party, par-ty, did not print a line about the banquet tendered Commissar Maxim Litvinov in New York City by big business leaders on the eve of his departure for Russia. (Copyright, 1933, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc) filiated with Farmers and Merchants Mer-chants Bank of Provo, Utah, Federal Fed-eral Reserve District Number Twelve. Function or type of business: Company operated for purpose of holding title to, managing and liquidating slow assets sold to it by Farmers and Merchants Bank: Manner in which above-named organization is affiliated with member bank, and degree of control: con-trol: Farmers and Merchants Bank owns entire outstanding stock of affiliate with qualifying shares issueu in the name of certain cer-tain officers of the Bank who are also officers and directors of the affiliate. Financial relations with bank: Stock of affiliate bank owned (None) Amount on deposit in affiliated bank $139.03 Loans to affiliated bank (None) Borrowings from affiliated Bank $6,564.83 Other information necessary to disclose fully relations with bank: (Blank). I. V. J. Bird, Secretary of General Gen-eral Assets Company, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. V. J. BIRD, Secretary. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 2nd day of December, 1933. J. ELMER JACOBSEN, (SEAL) Notary Public NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Benjamin Wheeler, deceased. Creditors will present cJahns with vouchers at office of Brock-bank Brock-bank and Pope, 8 West Center St., Provo, Utah, on or before the 27th day of January A. D. 1934. M. B. POPE, , Administrator of Estate of Benjamin Wheeler, deceased. Brockbank and Pope, Attorneys for Administrator. Pub. Nov. 26, Dec. 3, 10, 17, 1933. BANK CASE IS DECIDED HERE (Continued from Page One) the bank would become reorganized, reorgan-ized, were given a judgment for the return of the money they paid for the stock and for costs of court, against the state bank commission: com-mission: They are: E. Dean, $200; A. C. Page, $300; Arrowhead Resort Re-sort company, $500; Dave Bigler, $1000; and L. D. Stewart, $500. In addition, Ruth K. Fraser, administratrix ad-ministratrix of the estate of D. A. Fraser, was adjudged not lia-'e lia-'e for the assessment because the claim had not been properly made according to the probate code. judre Larson's decision brings to light many angles of the sensational sensa-tional case which revealed the former for-mer state bank commissioner in the light of a protector of big banking interests, while the small stockholders "held the sack." Evidences Evi-dences that officers of the bank broke faith with the stockholders and the citizens of Payson are set forth in the review of the evidence that was brought out in the trial. Defendants in the case charge "a collusion between the big banking bank-ing interests and the banking department de-partment to allow the big banker .0 unload on the unsuspecting defendants de-fendants before the bank was closed." The "unsuspecting defendants" fell into a cleverly designed trap, it appears in the evidence brought out in the trial. When the state oank commission saw that the bank's assets were impaired in 1f31. it is said to have aided three big interests the T. F. Tolhurst esvate stockholders, holders of the Armstrong, or Smith and company com-pany stock, and the Whitmore stockholders, to unload their stock v) rrra he Evening Herald A GREAT MAGAZINE & NEWSPAPER BARGAIN! The Evening Herald and America's leading magazines have united in offering of-fering you a great' opportunity to save money by buying your favorite newspaper and magazines in combination. For the payment of $1.50 in advance, plus 11 monthly payments of 50c to the collector, youcan obtain this fine offer. Out old subscribers, as well as new readers, can participate. partici-pate. It's very easy to subscribe simply choose the three magazines you like the best from the big list which we have provided and fill ouC -the coupon below. BOee's 3 Fine Magazines and THE HERALD 12 MONTHS r i Check 3 Magazines Desired Motion Picture Magazine, 1 Yr. C ollege Humor & Sense, 1 Yr. H1 Modern Mechanic? & Inventions, 1 Yr. Pictorial Review, 1 Yr. f'j Screen Play, 1 Yr. Screen Book, 1 Yr. Oelineator, 1 Yr. Movie Classic, 1 Yr. Pathfinder (Weekly), 1 Yr. - j True Confessions. 1 Yr. j Hollywood Movie Magazine, l Yr. Sunset Magazine, 2 Yrs. j Better Homes & Gardens, 2 Yrs. j Needlecraft, 2 Yrs. "Pen Road (Boys), 2 Y,rs. j Woman's World. 2 Yrs. FT Junior Home (For Parents and Chifd), 6 Mos. j Parents' Magazine. 6 Mos. You Can Have Your Choice of Any FAMOUS MAGAZINES Motion Picture Magazine . . 1 Year College Humor and Sense. .1 Year Modern Mechanix and Inventions In-ventions 1 Year Pictorial Review 1 Year Screen Play 1 Year Screen Book 1 Year Delineator 1 Year Movie Classic 1 Year Pathfinder (Weekly)' 1 Year Mail, or Bring Coupon, to The Herald office or phone for order. t ALL MAGAZINE RENEWALS WILL upon residents of Payson under the guise that a pool was to be made to reorganize the bank, that it was desirable to get rid of "outside "out-side interests," and that the bank would then oe in sound condition. Bank Is Closed As soon as this stock was unloaded un-loaded and purchased by Payson buyers, the last of it being sold in December, 1931, the bank closetl on January 2, 1932, the assessed stockholders complain. Further, they assert, the money was not held in va trust fund as they were told, but was turned into the prone pro-ne and loss account of the bank and used for various purposes. They assert further that Cashier Ray Monson "unloaded" some ot his private stock and escaped stocK assessment. "The handling of the State Bank of Payson during the period from May, 1931, to the time it was closed in January, 1932, seems to reek with bad faith on the part of some of its officers," it is stated in the decision. "The conduct of the state banking department in the handling of the bank up to the timu of its closing certainly did not comport with the spirit or the wording of our bank statutes," Judge Larson states. TURKEYS STOLEN Thomas Spalding of Vineyard reported the loss of a number of turkeys from his flock Friday night to the office Sheriff E. G. Durnell. An allcmpt to sieal some of his turkeys was made Wednesday Wednes-day night also, he told the officers. MELLON RELATIVE DIES PITTSBURGH, Dec. 2 l .!: Richard B. Mellon, 75, died at his home here Friday from pneumonia. pneu-monia. He was a younger brothel of Andrew W. Mellon, former secretary of the treasury. Famouiis Magaziines and YOUR NEW or RENEWED SUBSCRIPTION To WBnaii Youa Sett! ALL Use Coupon Subscription Blank for NEW or OLD SUBSCRIBERS Uate 193.. THE HERALD, Provo, "Utah. I hereby aree to subscribe to, or extend ex-tend my present subscription to The Herald for a period of 12 months from this date, and also for the THREE magazines maga-zines I have checked on this coupon. I am paying $1.50 cash and agree to pay your regular collector 50 cents per month for 11 months. It is understood that this contract cannot be cancelled without immediate im-mediate discontinuance of the magazine subscriptions. Signed Address . Apt. No. Town True Confessions Hollywood Movie Magazin Sunset Magazine Better Homes & Gardens Needlecraft Open Road (Boys) Woman's World Junior Home (for Parent and Child) Parents Magazine Oratorio To Be Produced Production of the oratorio "Messiah" "Mes-siah" is announced by the music department of Brigham Young university for some date during the early part of December which has not yet been definitely decided de-cided upon. The performance will take place in the Utah stake tabernacle tab-ernacle and will be under the directorship dir-ectorship of Dr. Franklin Madsen and Dr. Florence Jepperson Mad-sen. Mad-sen. Chorus and soloists are now adding the finishing touches for the performance, which promises to be even more enthusiastically received than the performances given last year. The Brigham ioung university symphony orchestra or-chestra under the direction of Prof. LcRoy J. Robertson will furnish the accompaniment for the production. All performers of the occasion will be individuals affiliated affili-ated with the university and is mainly student talent, Dr. Mad-sen Mad-sen announces. ADULT SCHOOL AT S. F. SPANISH FORK- There will be a meeting held at the Thurber school Monday, Dec. 4 at 4 p. m. for the purpose of organizing classes in "'adult education. It is proposed to offer classes to adults, of the community on music, speech, social problems, agriculture agricul-ture and other subjects. There will be no charge for the instruction, a grant irotn the government for adult education taking care of the) financial part of the project. FOUR ONLY Cents Per Month For 11 Months and Advance Payment of $1.50 This PEAL" I State. 3 of These .1 Year e 1 Year .2 Years 2 2 2 2 Years Years Years Years .6 Mos. .6 Mos. 495 and carrier will call BE EXTENDED |