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Show -vl PROVO (UTAH)VUNDAY-r HERALDS' SU . m FRANCISCO PEARS STRIKE SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 25 OLE) Mayor Angelo Rossi, fearful est a prolonged " strike cause publicity - adverse to the Golden a y International exposition, roueht representatives of em- lovers and cargo clerks together oday for negotiations he hoped ?ould restore normal shipping ctivities. : In the harbor here and at Oak- ind 29 ships lay at ancfhor un tie to load , cargo while 3lio Dngshoremen and, warehousemen ere idle. The tieup itself was in Ispute. The clerks, who charge mployers with "chiseling" on irms of a written contract, said was started by the employers nd was a "lockout.'' The employ-rs employ-rs said it was a "tieup" insti- fcted by the clerks. - The workers are members of ie Ship Clerks' association, an I filiate of the Congress of In-ustrial In-ustrial Organization maritime ion. The employers belong to je Waterfron Employers' asso- .auon. four Debaters to Make Long Tour Four debaters from Brigham loung university win leave Provo londay morning for a week s lur of high schools and colleges northern Utah and southern aho. Demonstrations of various jennies in treating two vital fcnerican civic problems will be fe principal business of the unt, according to Reed Clegg Provo, forensics manager." I Members of the debate team e Joseph Strickland, Norfolk, Irginia; Voyle Munson, Escal- te; Charles Fish, Provo, , and ir. uiegg. A. Smith Pond, in ductor in economics and mem- Ir of the forensic council, will company the team as coach. t DJSATft'ON; THEIR "WINGS ... A c - "A 1 ' it 1 ft' . ? Zooming out of the sky to give' you a supreme screen thrill are David Niven, Errol Flynn and Basil Rathborne, who have the leading .roles in "Dawn Patrol," at the Paramount starting today. Gamble Manager At Convention Plans for continued expansion in the retail merchandise field were discussed at the annual convention con-vention of the Gamble stores, held this week at Pocatello, Ralph E. Swenson, Provo store manager, reported on his return. The keynote of the meeting, he states, was the promotion of sales as a prosperity aid, putting men to work, increasing the flow of money, and stimulating buying. Managers and agency owners from the entire territory attended attend-ed the convention which was one of eight similar gatherings held THE AMERICAN LEGION Post JVo. 13 Announces With Pride the World Premier of mm with Dianne Calder Ted Ftlaynard Hilma Henrie - and a Cast of Over 100 Clever Entertainers Don't Mss This Outstanding Stage Attraction This Is THE TALK OF THE TOWN! arch 1st and 2nd Tickets On Sale Now At the Paramount Box Office -PRICES ionsX 2ot 1 m. a M -4 i.j - . MATINEES (Sots Reserved As To Sections) 25c - 35c - 50c EVENINGS Reserved 50c - 75c - $1.00 -PERFOI JklATINEES Doors ErENINGS Doors 7:30 v.MANC'E TIMK-V-..1:30 CuV tain Curtain reserved 35c 2:15 8:30 1 fihmii hilAJiilhsliL 1 PROVO through police lines todav and I " - who were hurt tQ Laramie hos. Biiiasiiiiig ixii g i uuiiu liuui wui' dows. The outbreak in various parts of the United States. The convention was the 14th annual meeting of the Gamble organization. Since the first store was opened in St. Cloud, Minn., in 1925, the organization has grown to include 275 employee-owned employee-owned stores and over 1400 individually in-dividually owned Gamble age"hcy stores, located in the northwest and middle west. At this meeting managers were urged to request the cooperation of other merchants in offering exceptional values and in eliminating elimin-ating unproductive costs. It was pointed out that this would increase in-crease the amount of merchandise sold, stimulate factory operations, purchases of raw materials and farm products and increase employment em-ployment throughout the country. coun-try. During, the summer and fall of 1938 Gamble stores made extra large additional purchases from factories, over and above their ordinary requirements. Although this necessitated a strong merchandising mer-chandising plan and exceptional values in order to move this merchandise, mer-chandise, results in the form of increased employment were so successful that the plan will be continued In 1939. This is expected ex-pected to result in many thousands thou-sands of additional man-hours of work and a substantial increase in purchases of farm products and raw materials. STUDENTS STONE GERMAN EMBASSY WARSAW, Poland, Feb. 25 (U.K) t ... .t TR1AIN WRECK ; A (Continued From Page One) . t vrlth Gus Palmquist " of ' Larainle aachgtaeer.t ' ?"Y ' Among those hurt was Mrs.. W.- Jager, wife of a vice president of the i Banker's. Life, Insurance company, Des Moines, la. 4 Jager was slightly injured, .oth. were sent to a hospital In Laramie, 20. miles east, along with 15 bar 20 other injured passengers. ; A sketchy account of the wreck was obtained from those in Laramie, Lara-mie, They said the train was traveHnar at terrific apeed and that the last seven cars of it be came tmcoupled, bounded down the right-of-way behind the main train for a quarter of a mile, then plunged down a 20-footvemoanK ment. C. H. Saunders, Negro Pullman porter, who was on duty in one of the overturned cars, said tney "bounded along behind the "train, hitting about every 30 or 10 feet" before they left the right-of-way, carrying with them great sections of tracks and ties. The wreck occurred after most of the Pullman occupants had retired re-tired for the night, and soma of the injured had to be pulled from their bertha and carried out by ambulance attendants and doctors summoned from Laramie and "by townsfolk aroused by noise. First persons to reach the scene found passengers in night clothes attempting to administer to the injured, whose cries from within the cars attracted aid. The most seriously injured were placed n the Laramie ambulances and carried to hospitals there. Try less seriously hurt were taken aooara a train immeaiawiy oemna permits large Utah cities the wrecked one. This train then I C u,r,r 6thoHHM to detoured around the uprooted feral fung and construct dwellings to house families now living in insanitary slum conditions. con-ditions. It also gives the authorities authori-ties right to condemn slums. The agriculture fair trades practice prac-tice act, hailed in the house as "bill of rights for the farmer," provides for regulation by the state board of agriculture of production pro-duction and marketing to prevent price discrimination and acts injurious in-jurious to farm producers. KINGt fOF. THE MADMEN: Jt.'.-::'. . - r. - J :-v--f .'..: ..'-. . .1 -' ' t ' 1 rf ' , ' x -- - t t - - - t -f f, : t , f " , - " V " i - ' n ' jfvT A1 - Eves. Humphrey" Bogart, after playing . the villian is such . pictures as "Racket Busters," -"Crime School," and "Dr. Clitterhbuse,". is Been as the star of his newest picture, "King of the Underworld," which opens today at the Uinta. Spencer Tracy, who was chosen as the Academy Award winner for the best performance in 1938, heads the cast of "Man's Castle," co-starring Loretta Young, which makes up the other feature on this big program... i K I -7- . . . '. O ' SENATE (Continued from Page One) track and continued toward Salt Lake City, Utah, the next city on the main line west. Five of the injured persons were taken off for treatment at Rawlins, Wyo., 100 miles west of Bosler. Hospital attendants said this group suffered onlv minor injuries. The greatest number of injured were from Des Moines. Employes of the Banker's Life company had chartered two Pullmans for a trip to San Francisco and the Golden Gate International Exposition. Jager and his wife were along as chape rones. SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 25 (U.R) Union Pacific's crack passenger passen-ger train, the Pony Express, arrived ar-rived here at noon today, five hours late as a result of derailment derail-ment of its seven rear cars last night near Bosler, Wyoming. Most of the passengers who paused in Salt Lake City were unaware of the accident until tKeir cars were halted -about a mile from the accident. Several walked back through the snow to the derailed de-railed cars and reported none had tipped completely over. They said they saw few injured persons SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 25 (U.P) A toill which may soon come before be-fore the Utah senate was today characterized by Rep. Wayne N. Mason, D., Box Elder, as "a step in the direction of equal rights with labor and business for agriculture," agri-culture," The measure, backed by Mason in the house of representatives and approved by that body, would give farmers a lien against canneries can-neries to the extent of the unpaid price, of produce delivered to the cannery. It is now in the hands of the state's sifting committee. Both workers and contracting ANDERSON WINS FORT WILLIAMS, Ont., Feb. 25 UR Setting a fast pace . to beat out a field of approximately 60 runners. Reider Anderson of Norway won the downhill championship cham-pionship at the Dominion ski meet today. A heavy favorite, Anderson sped down the tricky 4700 - foot run in one minute, 49 and 4-5ths seconds. He finished fully five seconds ahead of Punch Bott of Montreal. Bott is Canadian ski jumping champion. DEFENSE BILL PASSAGE URGED WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 CX) The senate military affairs committee com-mittee urged the senate today to pass the house-approved $358,-000,000 $358,-000,000 national defense bill as a means of carrying out President Presi-dent Roosevelt's pledge to protect this hemisphere "against storms from any quarter." If An Academy Award Was Given For the Biggest Show Value -.-f-'This Program Would Win Itt The Biggest Star Studded Double Feature Program Ever Shown m rrovo $ i: ty$i u ... Y A?'i-vtf fs t ? DEnCQvQOLlE LY! " poors Open 1 P. M. Academy Award Winner in 1937 'in "Captains Courageous" Academy Award Winner in 1938 For "Boys Town" iSerHi Him a Star! u ' Jfc and that ambulances arrived on . business firms already enjoy such ISte Irfineatoe (Springville) SUNDAY and MONDAY - Feb. 26 and 27 CONTINUOUS SHOWS SUNDAY Starting 4 P. M.; Admission: Sunday Matinee 20c -Evening Shows 25c ThisPictureWiU Positively Not Plajr n Proro ! coincided with the arrival of Count Galeazzo Ciano, foreign minister of Italy, Germany's partner in the Rome-Berlin Rome-Berlin axis, and with anti-Ger- man demonstrations by students at all principal Polish universities. the .jscpjie,., quickly. ,tn.,taitfr,tfcn.a. who 1 pitals, AMERICAN DIPLOMAT DIES IN BERLIN BERLIN, Feb. 25 (U.E) Prentiss B. Gilbert, charge d'affaires of the American embassy, died suddenly sud-denly last night of a heart ailment. rupted br fail to pay off Mason said. He believes the bill would establish a precedent for extension exten-sion of rights of the producers along such lines in other fields. It is estimated that more than 1,000,000 cars from the United States enter Canada annually. WOW 9 WARNER BROS, present Errol Hynn "XT fu " 1 11 i L f IS" r ' Last Times Today I QBig Units! Here's the First of Our Greater Double Feature Program's: , - ,-r. 0 it with aduliig aqyviion olplnfn onsiL mvrnnorjE bnviD nivEn DONALD CRISP VUlrWm Cooper Barry Fitsgtreld Cart XUmond . A :v.?:.:'V . ' f f BAND ACT 4 ' f j 3 Air ommjli xjuiuwu y 'j PARAMOUNT NEWS Come Early Doors Open 1:00 p. m.; STARTS. TODAY! wrnmm M Feature Starts: 1:15 - 3:20 5:30. - 7-5 9:45. p. nu Together again: i Lor iSdtt.v-;,' . J With 3 of the Year's Top Tunes! Hit No. 2 THAT LUNATIC LLOYD flJk AGAIN! a- P-'V CRANDEST HitNo.3 "MARCH OF TIME" Featuring ; "YOUNG AMERICA' The Story of h Boy -Scouts .Hit No. 4 MOVIETONE NEWS with -: . LEW LEHR 'A Bigger Shawl But the Same Low Prices: '15eTU 6 - 7 20c Eves; Doors Open 1 :00 p. m. Soul-stirring in its warmth, everlasting ever-lasting in its appeal, the love story starring Academy Winner Tracy and lovely Loretta Young ! AHD THERE'S HOHE! Second Feature On This Program First On ANY Other Program ff&j f" f n't f ' jr ..j I -v d nur.ipnnE7 Now Blasts His Way To Stardom As The Ruthless, yidous,jrhrilIIng v ,i-f"f rii-wsse. b . "-5 fSffl ( - V 1 gaY'FKMIClS j ' J 1 r i- it , -A. |