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Show - TV- .-" 5 1 s r PAGE TWO i PROVO - (tf'FAH) SUNDAY- HERALD SUNDAY,- DECEMBER 1 25, l1938 DUf nPTf Voir ii noo'-i " - .SECTION THREE: 1 v ... 4v BABE WEDS WRESTLER - ST. ' LOUIS, Dec. J?4 UE ; Mildred (Babe) Didrlkson, once -. the outstanding amateur woman athlete in America, ma : married last night to George Zaharias, Pueblo, Colo., heavyweight wrestler,- . f Christmas Joy! It's With Sincere Pleasure and Cordial Good Will that We Wish You a Merry Christmas! We value your friendship and loyal patronage! SANITARY MEAT CO. 82 WEST CENTER ST. PHONE 84 j& AS) Ml It's With Sincere Pleasure anH Cordial M Good Will I? That We Wish You a Merry .Christmas . We Send to you the high regard in which we mM A - i treasure your inendsnip CLAUDIU FUrJERAL HOME 240 NORTH UNIV. AVE Utah Power & Lidht Co- easoii Greet in Electricity Is The Biggest Bargain PLATER IN HOSPITAL 1 -' , NEW YORK, Dec. 24 (HE) George Myatt, third-baseman of the New York Giants', was operated oper-ated on for appendicitis late Tuesday, the club said today, t and loyal patronage. PHONE 74 Extends and reminds You that (Oozxtmued from Page OmI er on any .commission have a hard time agreeing, but: when into the hopper are dumped an. ex-governor ex-governor .of Rhode Island, a politician poli-tician from Mississippi,' a retired naval officer, an - ex-tax oommis-sioner. oommis-sioner. of, :Kw York, a college professor from Oklahoma, and a Hoover 'campaign manager in' Ohio, the resultant chaos is understandable. un-derstandable. . ' NEW CHAIRMAN To Frank R. McNlnch in 10S7 fell 'the lot of straightening out the" kinks in the tangled s&em of federal communications. It was a' tough job, ' and he was picked for it because he had done somewhat some-what the same job for the federal power commission. Appointed to the body by Herbert Her-bert Hoover in 1930, when the federal power commission was the subject of a. congressional investigation, inves-tigation, McNinch revitalized it, made it one of the most effective in Washington. Hoover had rewarded McNinch because, although a Democrat, he had helped defeat Al Smith in North Carolina in 1828. But Mc-Nintfh Mc-Nintfh turned out to be more of a new dealer than a Hooverite, and Roosevelt continued the policy pol-icy of putting him in responsible places. COMMANDER CRAVEN Jf ; Chief obstacles to any internal deodorizing are Commissioner George Henry Payne and Tunis Augustus MacDonough Craven. These two make an intriguing pair. In fact, they carry on more intrigue than all the rest of the commission. T. A. M. Craven is a 46-year-old former naval officer who made an excellent record as c"hief engineer en-gineer of the FCC and was elevated eleva-ted to the post of commissioner. ngineer, he had been a tnorn fn the side of Commissioner Payne and once gestured to trash him. It was this enmity which caused Cravenspromotion to the commission. He was considered a good man to checkmate Payne. And what particularly gripes those responsible for Craven's promotion, is that he has now turned around and welcomed Payne to his bosom. These to are the Amos n' Andy of the FCC. Craven is encumbered with two vital handicaps the trass hat ideas of his navy days and an inner antipathy to anything savoring sa-voring of real regulation. As a subordinate technician, Craven was excellent, but as a policy- In The Home I They Fought for i 4 i 0 First of the homecoming Abraham Lincoln Brigade, which won acclaim ac-claim fighting for Loyalist Spain, arrive in New York aboard the liner Paris. making executive he is beyond his depth. I EBULLIENT MR. PAYNE I George Henry Payne is a charming and impish little gentleman gen-tleman who never is happy unless he is causing trouble. As such he has a definite value, for root-ers-out-of-evil are rare in Washington. Wash-ington. But George Henry is not disposed dis-posed to cure the evil; he only likes to root. i DEADWOOD That, "however, is no great recommendation when the character charac-ter of the other commissioners is, examined. They are pure dead-wood. dead-wood. Two of them are carryovers carry-overs from the Hoover adminis tration. First of these is Eugene O. Sykes, a cigar-smoking Mississippi Missis-sippi politician, with big ears, a long nose and a solemn manner. He is not worried about the danger of monopoly or .mismha agement or bad taste in the radio industry, declares it is sound and clean. His middle name is Octave, and he ranges up and down the scale of radio, finding absolutely noth ing wrong with it. He is responsible respon-sible for bringing most of the eld radio commission's personnel and practices over to the FCC. , Thaddeus Harold Brown was Hoover's Ohio campaign manager in 1928, was rewarded with the job of .chief counsel of the federal power commission, then got , the same post on the radio commission. commis-sion. Cherubic and likeable, Brown's ideas of radio regulations are not vigorous. He is ponderous in thought, non-committal in answer. an-swer. CONCILUATOR Chief conciliator of ungentle-manly ungentle-manly strife within the commis sion in Norman Stanley Case, for three terms Republican governor gov-ernor of Rhode Island. If you "had to decide which one of the seven commissioners came from Mayflower May-flower stock and knew it, you would have no trouble picking Case. He is handsome, erect, arfstocratic. Aside from this his chief qualifications qual-ifications for the FCC are plenty of money anad a strong disU3te for work. An old friend of Roosevelt's, Roose-velt's, he keeps 'his job chiefly for the social and official entree which goes with it. Next to McNinch, Paul At lee Walker stands out from his colleagues col-leagues as the man with the most pungent ideas on the ills of the communications industry. Born in a family, of Pennsylvania Quakers, he migrated to Oklahoma, became-a became-a high school principal and university uni-versity ! instructor, then - was ap- II- S ' 'J and our BEST WISHES for the HOLIDAYS! . , , .. -;; i , .... ". . (eral Mop 159 wthUnin Avel PHONE 915.W toyalistfSpdin c $;;: i. f pointed to the Oklahoma Corporation Corpor-ation Commission. Here he did a crusading job, but formed a none too flattering opinion of piVllc service commissions, including the one on which he now serves. Walker was a flat failure in conducting the $750,000 senate telephone investigation, and has been a weak and ineffectual member mem-ber of the federal communications commission. (Copyright 1938 by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Metal Prices NEW YORK, Dec. 24 (UP) Today's To-day's custom smelter's prices for delivered metals, cents per lb: Copper: electrolytic 11; export ex-port 10.45; casting fob refinery 10.77 V; lake delivered 11 3-8. Tin: spot straits closed. Lead: New York 4.85-.90; East St. Louis 4.70. JkZine: New-York 4.84 f East .St. Louis 4.50. A Merry Christmas to All if? - M mm ins id-irarv . . ', .i.n.. ii. t JThe following:, three books on family life are on J the Selief Society So-ciety study ' course. , 'THE MODERN FAHLY AND THE CHURCH-By Regina: Wes-cott Wes-cott Wlem'an, The author Is well qualified to discuss- the issues that confront the family and the church today. Her' ideas for the, coopera tion of church -and family are worthy the - careful consideration of parents, teachers. and religious leaders everywhere. ; . "FAMILY LIFE TODAY Edited Edit-ed by Margaret 'E. 1 Rich. This is an expert study of family' life by outstanding authorities. THE AMERICAN- FAMILY By. Ernest B. Groves, who is one of the leading authorities on the subject. An earnest, comprehen sive discussion. . COLTER'S HELL By Grace Johnson, a dramatic story of the Yellowstone. Grace Johnson is a Utahn, born in Ephraim, and educated edu-cated at the University of Utah During her college days she work ed for two summers as waitress and lodge maid at Old Faithful. Later she became hostess at Canyon Can-yon lodge where for seven years she absorbed the history and traditions tra-ditions of Yellowstone and met thousands of people. The book radiates the atmosphere of the place and it written with power and charm. It has received very flattering reviews. GREETINGS n 5 Wev; B6o!is In 1 w r a t t I? Ky i$(TPm!iCTt& Sfamm resv&tifoiti LJ No other holiday has the cheer, the warmth and the charm of Christmas, For no other holiday inspires such deep feelings of reverence and peace. Perhaps that is why Christmas is the last and the happiest holiday of the year the climax of all the days of the year on which we have worked and planned arid hoped the ONE day when the eternal ideal of good will to all men finds haven in the hearts of all, . , .. . - - . To you and to all the people of Prow, and Utah County we msh a very Merry Christmas! OFFICERS ALEX HDQUIST President FRANKLIN S. HARRIS Vice-President V. J. BIRD Vice-President J. H. C ALDER Cashier FARMERS & MERCHANTS - Prtivo, Utah memoer t eaerai Member Federal Bie$! LIN DOW I Mits Lawrence walker - j I ; ; Reporter c , r : ' .V.' , -Mr. and Mrs. Vance Smith and children of Magna visited Sun day with Mrs. Anne R. Wright. Members of the Relief society enjoyed a " Christmas social at their room Tuesday. Social service lesson was first presented by Mrs. 4 In Grateful Appreciation of Your Patronage JVe Offer Our Sincere Best Wishes for a Merry Christmas! P00U0 DMEOY 57 NORTH FIRST EAST PHONE 334 i 9 ft To All Our Friends and Patrons We Send Many Good Wishes for the Christmas Christ-mas Season, and May Happiness Happi-ness and Prosperity Be Yours Each Day in the Coming Year. BOARD OF DIRECTORS ALEX HEDQUIST JQHN T. TAYLOR FRANKLIN S. HARRIS J. ELMER JACOBSEN" JOHN O. BEESLEY V. J. BIRD J. H. CALDER neserve smtem Ruth Lovell after which the. time lme i' -ere mti was- enjoyed 1 socially. Gifts w exchanged -t and- candy and tfli enjoyed. Twenty-eight were in at- ' lir. and Mrs. ' W. G. Carlson of Salt Lake spent part of the week guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse -Thorne. Bishop Burton Adams 'and John C. Coulam of Pleasant Grove were the speakers at the sacrament service Sunday inght. ft 1 BANK it t ft i . . |