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Show 1 ' Call The Herald If you do not receive your HeralA promptly, call Tha Herald office, 435, before 7 p. m. week days, and 10 a. m. Sundays and oupy will be delivered to you. 77ic Weather ;' ' ' . v u V UTAH: Tartially cloudy. . warmer . ni4ltii AU4 cj. ......... . . .. t ,A - iviiuiikii UUilUJ jr. . 'V' ",,' '.v, ( 1 it" iMln, temp.,. Saturday. '. I VOL. 1G, NO. 48 ,,DtS MAY 28, 1939 Member Scrippa JLagTi or Wewepaper and Ni&A. JfKICE FIVE CEN'la ! 1. 11 "v. mmm for MOPMDAY If READiISS Veterans Sponsor Program Pro-gram at Cemetery ' Memorials, Day Plans are completed for the Memorial, day services at the Provo city cemetery at 10 a. m.v Tuesday, announces ,V. L.i Mjldenhall. general chairman. chair-man. ; ' V . Sponsors of the program are the Disabled American Veterans of World War, assisted by the Provo American Legion pbat. the , Veterans , of . Foreign "Wars and Provo city. Dr. KeUy to Speak The eulosy will be delivered toy Dr. P. M. Kelly of Provo. He will be Introduced by Commissioner Jesse Haws. Solos will be sung by Mrs. Doyle Dastrup, "God Bless America" and "Old Glory," accompanied ac-companied by Mrs. Zenith - John son. Harold Candley will SQund taps, 'and the salute honoring the dead will be given by the state rnil-itia, rnil-itia, according to Mr. Mildenhall. Benches for seating a large audience will be arranged at the cemetery by Provo City. The pub lie is invited. . MERRY GO-ROUND A-Dally Picture of Vrtiaf Golns On In National Affair By DREW PEABSON a IlOnEIlT R I' FDR Peels he "Shouldn't be Asked" to Run Again But Odor's Still Open; Inner Circle Thinks He's Only Man mdp:a vvmjiTnerwjaa New Deal's Done ; Farley WouldcStar Loyal ; Garner Out Because FDR Won't Campaign For Him ; President Presi-dent Aims to Keep-Party, Congress Guessing Till Eve of Convention. WASHINGTON ..A White House caUer, who must be nameless name-less recently summoned 'his nerve sufficiently to put point-blank to Roosevelt the biggest political question asked by the country the third term. The way he phrased phras-ed It was that, according to the vray events were shaping up, rRoosevelt Would have no alternative alterna-tive but to run again. , But the President demurred. "After eight years of carrying this load," he said, "I'm entiUed to a rest. I don't think I should be asked to do more.' V This, Roosevelt's friends believe, was a sincere answer. Left to him-eelf, him-eelf, the President will not run .again. " -x- Yet the visitor who queried him departed .from the WhiteN House with the feeling that the aoor was not quite shut, i As he pointedS out to associates later, Roosevelt said that- he "'.".should not be asked to do more.' Whith is a lot different frora saying "rwlll not do more." ' It Is this Jeavtng of the door .slightly alar that has helped to re- new both the speculation, that he W)uld run, and the drlveamong his ' friends to Jockey him into funning. , Today third term speculation, both pro and con, has hit the high peaR of the past six years. Behind most of this Is the. determination Continued on Page 8 Sec. 2 Mrs. Nancy Beebe Called by Death 'I At Los Angeles Word has been received here of the death of Mrs. Nancy Diana Smoot Beebe 80, formerly of Pro-vo. Pro-vo. In Los Angeles, Cal. Mrs. Bec"e died Friday at the home of a son, Xalvin Beebe, of causes Incident to age. She was born at Salem, Utah, June 7, 1858, ; a daughter of Abraham Owen and ' Diana Eldridge Smoot. . ' ? Except for the last four years, Mrs. Beebe ' had ' lived in Provo. Her husband, David Rv Beebe, died ' ee veral . years ago; ' The , couple , were married September 1, 1881. , ; Surviving are two sons,; George Becbe of Provo and Calvin Beebe- vt Los Angeles; & one daughter, Mrs. .Reva Lisonbee of . Nevada; the following .brothers1 and sisters, Mrs. Olive S; Bean of Teton, Idaho. Ida-ho. Mrs. Vilato S. v;Plerpont COf Berkeley. Cal- William Smoot of J Provo and II. A. Smoot of Farm-Ington; Farm-Ington; : several . half sisters t and brothers, seven grandchildren,; and six, great-grandchildren. Interment will , be In . Los An- Quint' I -it J:--:' , ,v.fA'::.:" V...-:'- (,',' - ' f : t -.-"ii.i-o-'ri-. ' - w - . - r - .v ; . . , : .w4' yf I - -Ji . ' - - ' - .r, ,wHt iHri ;i; m M - MM Mi - il ' ' . - Five years old, history's most famous five the Dionne quintupletsand their five cakes, each decorated with five candles. And there i were five different ideas on'how Ithose cakes looked,4oo, according to the girls' drawings, in which they demonstrate. theirj art ?aptitude : and newly-found Sunk Submarine, 26 Bodies to Ce Taken From Ocean BY GARDNER FROST PORTSMOUTH, N. H., May, 27 (U.E Two navy experts ' arrived today from Washington . with . instructions in-structions for raising the sunken submarine- Squalus and the 26 dead men of her crew from the bottom , of the Atlantic," 15 miles off the coast., ' .-. They were Commanders Ai R. McCann- and A. t Mo- , -of th disaster yesterday, r morning and held hurried. . ; conferences with ranking na-val na-val authorities at the capital, and came back , with a plan a forone of the most difficult. V salvaging jobs the navy ever '' linT o ffikmnf A1 .'" '--- as WktVtUIll y - The plan , decided upon as "quickest and safest" was to have divers attach hose lines to the flooded after-part of the submar-ine'through submar-ine'through Which air 'could, be pumped in to force " the water out, then attach pontoons to, give the: 'hulk more buoyancy. v. '' McCann is the inventor of the diving, bell in which the Squalus" 33 Survivors were raised to safety through '240 feet of water. Capt. WilWm Amsden has forbidden for-bidden any of the survivors to discuss the sinking even among themselves, and warned that any infraction would be punished. A new theory, lacking any other confirmation, cropped up in Buffalo, N. Y.t where Miss Dorothy Doro-thy Balcom, a waitress, received a letter from her sweetheart, Jack J. Rodstrom, a seaman aboard the submarine Sculpin, saying his ship and the Squalus had been having "deep diving races." The Sculpin was first to reach the scene of the Squalus mishap Tuesday which is located by means of a buoy released by the Squalus: a Salems Postof f ice Burglary Reported Burglars, believed to be boys, recently took 410 to $12 in; pennies, pen-nies, rolled in red wrappers, from the Salem post office, Deputy Charles W. Mitchell reports. Provoan Heads p I I I " '- f - r ' ... , - . N ''';;'! r - ! I I " , - I I : ; ' ' ' k i - ;' I " . ' f ' I! I v f t .. . -DR. M.;,W. ; MERRILL I Studyirf'.FivesrBi ability to draw their own vn initials. -8- - STRAWBERRY DAY CELEBRATION JUNE 7 AT PLEASANT GROVE PLEASANT GROVE "March of Nations," a colorful pageant of 100 floats will open . Utah's eighteenth annual Strawberry Day at Pleasant Grove, June 7, at 10 a. m. Immediately after, the parade, comely maidens,jwill be King and Queen to Eat Strawberries ICoiihty " By UDELL JOLLEY k. Fresh,' lucious Utah county strawberries, rushed to . vWashing-ton, vWashing-ton, D C, by air express will grace the table of their majesties. King George and Queen Elizabeth at the royal breakfast to be tendered tend-ered them at the White House June 9 by President and Mrs. Roosevelt. ' ; 1 Robinson Aids Plan-In Plan-In response to a telegram ' received re-ceived Saturday from Congressman Congress-man J. Will Robinson, Provo Junior' Jun-ior' Chamber of Commerce officials, backers of thes plan to advertise the Utah fruit, together with the Senior chamber, began negotiations negotia-tions with the Orem Chamber , of commerce and the Orem, fruitgrowers fruit-growers association, to prepare a large pack of fresh ripe strawberries straw-berries to be sent directly to President Presi-dent Roosevelt Butler Back Plan W. R. Butler,, local merchant who has been actively interested in stimulating wider Interest in this Utah county product, last week started the movement which resulted in arrangements at the White House by Mr. Robinson. It is planned to provide engraved cards at the plate of each of the loyal party expressing the compli ments of Utah county, states A. Sherman Chrlstenson, Provo Jay- cee president hong recognized for their supe rior quality, size and texture, the Utah berries. will thus make their own bid for greater distibution in national markets? according to statements or Sjeth T.Shaw, chair man of the Provo chamber of commerce agriculture committee luraunuro ion rge lagnii Utah Dentists OGDEN, May 28Dr. Madison W. Merrill of Provo was installed as president of the A Utah, State Dental association at the closing session of' the state convention, Saturday afternoon. Dr. Merrill was advanced to the presidency, .having; been elected elect-ed first flee -president; last year. Dentistry must , not : be allowed to pass from , the control of the profession despite need for offering offer-ing low cost dental work, delegates dele-gates of the Utah State Dental ; association were told at the ' meeting. "h ' . J i , "ma 'nVif rtrt'nt o HpfJ r fa " T . -. , - ing to Dr. Herald R. Clark, . dean r inlte 'dentistry program - for low ofthe colle&ft- of commerce; . income groups. or indigents but , Both students will be gradu-4 gradu-4 they served notice .that a program ated at commencement exercises administered by ethical groups June -7. Mr.. Pardoe wiU receive ; within dental societies would. - af- a degree of bachelor of . arts and if ord the strongest safeguard for HrJ Stevens the degree of ;bache- the people. ' - - - ,,; . lor of science. f -. - - ' 1 Candlps, Art, Left; to right: Emilie, Annette xvonne,ecueiviarie. r : . m ' u at the city hall park . ready to serve 10,000 people with free fcer-ries. fcer-ries. The growers state that the luscious fruit for which Pleas an Grove Is noted, is more luscious than ever this year and will be at its best In size and flavor - on Jure 71 .vr.,... f;; Vliarl :Banks, one of the . general chairmen of the day's , ; events; ; stated that the "Air Circus" with Thompson, the human, bullet, per forming hair-raising stunts in the air will draw the crowd to , the ball park at 2 p. m. 'Ray Merrill, in charge of the sports and games said, "beginning at 3 p. m., never a dull moment on the park. Races of all kinds and descriptions with, prizes for the winners; ball games between the strongest teams in the . state, both men arid women, promise plenty of excitement for all visi tors." . . The parade is scheduled to' march again at 6 p. m.; and after that there -will be a ball game on the lighted park between, a Salt Lake team and Pleasant Grove's champions. The popular dance at Strawberry Gardens with prizes to be given away will be the clos- ing event. S Workers' education classes will' be held In the" city court room. each Monday at 8 p. m., during; E. A.- Mitchell, of 'the WPA edu cation program, who is in charge. Registration begins Monday eve ning. Everyone is invited to at tend, free of charge. ' u Courses to be studied -will be:: (1) Current Events; (2) Philosophy, Phil-osophy, Theory and Tactics-of the Labor Movements; and (3) Journalism Jour-nalism and Public Speaking. National Award Won by Butler's Ike John, display manager at Butler'sr Inc., is receiving congratulations, con-gratulations, on bringing to .. hls store the first prize in a nationwide nation-wide competition to. determine the most unusual and attractive window win-dow display of. Loma Leads dress-. es. The first-prize won by Butler's : Second v prize" went to a store . in I Connecticut and a New York store won third place in the contest Pardoe, Stevens , Get Scholarships ? William E. Pardoe of - Provo and William Stevens of El' Paso.. Tex., commerce students at Brlgham Young- university, ' have received scholarships" to study 'next year at New. York university, accord- Starting onday 4 1 (Copyright. 1939, NEA Service, Inc.)i puintupbte ;-too : po!sbi:qtQ - Fifth Dirllidays'-Today CALLANDER, Ont., - May 21 OUB-The Dionne V quintuplets -will celebrate. -their f if th- birthday tomorrow; to-morrow; They have "developed so much . during the ? last ' year ithat their inurses-can "easily- Identify each one by ; her voice.' . : ; i Their personalities) , show : definite def-inite development. Yvonne - is still the leader but, she is. runnlng into competition:., from Annette ? and The 1 latter-" is " theViCom-ediah', theViCom-ediah', Marje ' and .the tinost wana-hearted, wana-hearted, Annette . the ? most - de tei mined, Cecil, the 'most .precise, and Yvonne the. bossiesL v Dr,, Allan jRoy ' Dafoe ' said ; the girls, who 'now have a . fortune of nearly . $850,000 have received "hundreds" of birthday cards. They will . have a big cake for their ibirthday ' arid ; all will-' take a hand : in - cutting- it.'. . . Mama . and Papa Dionne ' and their seven i brothers and sisters will be their guests "at the party tomorrow.. ' - , (WIN RELEASED ON S5000 DOtID " " . ; NEW YORIC May 27i (HE) Free on $5,000 bond,? Fritz Kuhn, head of . the Nazi German-American 4 Bund, said ; today that the charges of " Larcenv and . foreerv against him, jcarryingl a : possible 50-year prison sentence in case of conviction were "a lot of nonsense."- - '' v''-. '" - -:- -.V-" He is charged with - stealing $14,548.59 from the Bund:, v ' After - pleading- not arullty: to all 12 counts In . his indictment, e was confined in the tombs for six hours, until GustavApmer, national organizer, for the bund arrived; with' a sack fun of $5 and $10 bills for hW bail. Warden William Adamsvtook an hour to count the t money. Judge Cornelius ' F. Collins, before be-fore whom lie 'was arraigned," set no date for "trial. ' ,: Blum . Sustains Political Defeat . MANTES, France. , May, 27 UJI Leon : Blum, Socialist leader and former .premier, suffered the. worst . political defeat of his ca- rr tnriav when the National So-, i clalist congress .voted - 3.302' to 1,116 to debate the so-called JPaul J Faure ; doctrinal reports -t Daughters7 of Utah ; Pioneers; . To! Stage Jubilee- at Payson The Daughters ot the Utah Pio-, neers will stage their annual Jubilee Jub-ilee in .the Payson city park' on Fridav. June 2. with an all-day celebration : program, according to Mrs. Sarah Fassey 01 x-rovo, county chairman. " The daughters will assemble at 11' a. '"m." with the dinner call at 12:30 p. . m. The program begins at 2- p. m. Each camp is to arrange ar-range its own group picnic. The Orem is running a special train from Lehi to Payson, leaving leav-ing Lehi at 9:25 a. m. and due in 4S K kill L.nibll3M Gloria Simmons, Keith ' Ercanbrack V i n f Scholarships, f ; ; , Qlimaxing three years . of high school study "and , extracurricular extra-curricular activities, 245 grad-f uates : of Provo high Friday evening received diplomas at " I 1 " " " ' A. impressive ? com mencement exercises in the !. D. S. stake tabernacle. P are n t s and friends of the a students crowded the building . to overflowing to witness the i exercises. A Win Scholarships , . Highlights of the program was awarding ; of ; the annual ICnight and Mangum scholarships . respec tively to Gloria Simmons, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Almo B. Sim mons: and Keith Ercanbrack, son of Mr. and Mrs.- Sterling Ercan brack.; ; Declared most outstanding , in scholarship during their- three years in high, school Miss , Simmons Sim-mons ;and : Mr. Ercanbrack each received a year's tuition to attend Brlgham Young : unlversltyr . the gut . of members oi . ' ine j esse Knight, and W. Lester Mangum families. . Mr. Mangum presented the scholarship to c Mr. : .Ercanbrack .Ercan-brack and Mrs. Mangum "to Miss Simmons. , .f - ' Each of the honored students had . a straight A . grades average throughout their three years in high school. , . . m : : Students Speak - Speakers, in addition to Mr. and Mrs.; Mangum,.; were Roma Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, ' who :gave . the address of welcome; Enid Pendleton . and Frank . Gardner, .who ; delivered . val dlctory. addresses ;tPrincipalK;E. Weight,' "who - presented the graduates; grad-uates; : and wBert ; Crane, ? president of the . board of - education, j who awarded the' diplomas.,, '. "In -1 the valedictory - talks. Miss PeridletonVand lilr-. Gardner'. eni pheisizedthat If bur-democracy is to. be saved it ' must be ' done through universal education. ; IJLiss Pendleton said: 'Not- only learn ing to read and write. is Import' ant but learning to ' formulate opinion . ; .'arid -it 'is riot only. Important Im-portant to- learn to form 'opinions but to learn tolerance:' of the opinions opin-ions of others?. Mr. Gardner outlined the opportunities oppor-tunities or ."youth today,: stating ' (Continued on Ycg Eight) ; ForamioEisauGS ; ';Jc83dM' Proud ; What : does i Provo-- heed most? Is it a civic auditorium, a sewage disposal plant,; more "paved streets, a municipal power plant ?r" ' - This question , will - be . answered Thursday evening in the i - little theater of the-Provo high school building, at the regular .public forum for-um meeting when Mayor : Mark Anderson, , Mrs. -. Fern - Ercanbrack, vice-president' of the Utah-. State Federated ' Women's r clubs, and Clayton j. Jenkins, ' Provo chamber of commerce secretary-' discuss the topic, What Provo Has and What Provo ; Needs.'" . - ; ':. -i Forum meetings, will .be held, in the Uttle theater during: the sum-jner; sum-jner; reports Director, Jesse Johnson. John-son. T r - - Car Inspection : ; : Deadline, June 15 . ... ,-V.-- .;-,:-.. .. Motorists f are ; reminded that the deadline .for state inspections of automobiles Is June -15. Unless all cars v and f trucks operating on the y highways carryv an official inspection take ; before that, time, drivers . will r be subject to penalties.' penal-ties.' State patrolmen have orders to enforce the act after - June 15. Local . officers will probably assist also ; In "picking up offenders offend-ers after that" time. - ' , Most of the .' standard -automo- bUe : shops, are licensed by : the state aa official inspection-sta- r t T" TZ Provo at 10 :08. A special found trip fare of 35 cents will be charg ed from Provo. From lake View, north, the fare " is 50 cents. The special train will return at 5:30 p.m. -( Sun bonnets i3 the official head dress for the daughters participating. participat-ing. A prize will-be presented to the camp with the highest percent of its membership present. Each camp is to present a number on the program. All pioneers, all eligible eli-gible . daughters and interested friend3 are invited to attend. Mo men ifoaubuhm its Tmc. Revision-, To- : . '" Con Undistributed Profits Tax Lapses Favored; . " - Wants: Reduction of Surtaxes on v Exceedingly High Incomes ; V 1 BY JOHN R. BEAL ,y t - - ' United' Press Staff Correspondent - WASHINGTON, May 27 (U-PT-Secretary, of . Treasury if..... irA.Anf Wqh t fnrlnv cnhmit.t.pfl to cortcrress altema-. a at, 111 w mvitvliuM v rf By. UNITED PRESS MOSELY TO TESTIFY AGAIN WEDNESDAY . WASHINGTON, May 27 - (HE) The Dies committee investigating lav American activities announced today that MaJ. Gen.. George Van Horn Moseley, - retired, will testify tes-tify Wednesday.- -- . He will be 'questioned about a proposed Fascist -;movement in the United States' described by previous pre-vious witnesses who had sug gested thatr.be j head it. IDAHO -YOUTHS . . . ESCAPE REFORMATORY ST. ANTHONY, . Ida, May 27 OLE) Three inmates , of St. Anthony's An-thony's ? state t reformatory for bovs .were sought today -by auth- .orlties who ' said ' they. - escaped in 'a stolen car. . -. ; Tbe youths reluded guards, stole a dark rreen sedan and disappear- 4; d.:-They ; all were . federal . pri son- ers. The- boys were jonn i.veiier, 19:. Kenneth Meane, 18, inaian, and WUUam Kalesbv 17. ; QUEEN MOTHER MAKES RECOVERY ' LONDON. Ma v 27 11E Queen Mary's- condition was sufficiently satisfactory ? today - for ; physicians to announce that.no further bulletin bulle-tin ..would . be issued Until Monday She suffered bruises, including an njured eye.. and,shock when her motor car; was struck by a truck. ' - J IT.-. .: PER3IANENT WORKS PROJECT PROPOSED WASHINGTON, May 27 HIE) Sen- James E Murray, D-MonL, has introduced a bill which would establish , permanent . works projects administration with a roll of 3,000,000 persons. - The 'measure provided a minimum mini-mum wage of '30 cents per hour or y the .prevailing wage and ?36 per month. ' PADEREWSKI SPENDS .-. CXJMFCkTlTABLE NIGHT . r NEW YORK, May 27 ' (UEr-Ig- nace Jaji;Paderewski, was reported report-ed , today " to have passed a comfortable com-fortable night in his , hotel suite. He -was stricken wltb a heart attack at-tack shortly, before- a . scheduled piano concert; Thursday' night.- ; : ENGINEER, FIREMAN 4 " KTLLED IS 'WRECIi JEFFERSON CITY; Mo., May 28 IE) The engineer -and fireman of a Missouri-Pacific freight train were killed shortly, before mid night when . 23 cars of a Missouri Pacific f eright train were . deraUed by .a- "flash" : flood: The . engine overturned crushing to death Ed Love. 52, engineer, and Paul Lack ey, 42, fireman. , ; Yankee Clipper V Completes Trip ; PORT WASHINGTON. N. Y May ; 27- (HE) Pan-American ' Airways' Air-ways' Yankee Clipper ' landed at its port Washington - base at 2:48 p. m-. 5 EDT., today, . completing com-pleting the first round trip commercial com-mercial flight to Europe. . . fuze Bay,.. BORN Boy, to Cecil V. and Kalet Jaccbson Pollard" of Austin, Tex., ::?.y 12. LICENSED TO MARRY Willis James Freshwater, 21, Provo, and Vyla Julia Millett, 19, Orem. . Albert ' Tanner Mott. 18. Jackson, Jack-son, Wyol, and Doris Inez Ruddy, 19, Park City. . tive suggestions fqr tax revision, including asugsestion that surtaxes on exceedingly - high incomes be reduced provided congress removes tax exemption from . governmental se curities. ' -. " ' ." . - -: x Morgenthau told the house. ways and means, committee as it opened its hearings on tax revision that "a fundamental ' - - objective of 'sound finance clearly TXT Pta ns Group sress , - . is a balanced budget' 5 . ' - He then presented a discussion of federal tax problems which he suggested that - the ."committee would desire to re-examine." Her classified the taxes under examination in three groups: -X L Those "likely to hinder busi-nesai busi-nesai expansion and investment." As examples he' cited the lack of a provisltja la tax law. allowing a business xtoicarry over a net losa from deduction from profits of future , years tax exemption of governmental securities, removal 'Of which, he said,. would make it - m m m . X Ij . rair ana logical" to consiaer reduction re-duction of upper, bracket surtax rates.---;'"';. --v- 2. T&x Irritants." Here he lifted lift-ed the undistributed profits tax. which he described as producing Tittle revenue - and "having liCtle effect" on business. He; intimated that ' the treasury would ; not oppose op-pose ; allowing it , to lapse at the end of the year. The capital stock and excess ; profits tax, ' he said, operated ?very ' erratically. . He Intimated -that, congress might allow al-low taxpayers to declare their capital stock value more frequently frequent-ly than every three years aa at present.1; y : v-;--.,t: - 3.' Miscellaneous taxes such as the present limit on deduction: of corporation capital losses. The deduction de-duction of. losses allowed over capital capi-tal gains, is : nowlimited to 52,003 Morgenthau-i did not' specify any particular revision of this tax. tut said' changes ; might -be "advisable -at a .Iater. '-session'of;' crongress after further studies.-' . ; 5n - consideration of ? ,: possible changes ; in ; the parts of : the tax structure just .: mentioned, Mor-genthau; Mor-genthau; said,'; it. Is " " eentlal to bear'to mind that. most of them would resultv in 4 reduction -in 'the revenue-producing; capacity of. the tax system.;-- ... . - v 5 "I have' already emphasized the Importance - of- not permitting the Tevenue-producing ; power of the tax 'system ; to be reduced at thU time. Accorflingly," with the adoption adop-tion . of any such, changes involving involv-ing r loss of ? revenue, there should' be associated revenue - producing revisions." ' . " Driiain Rejects ; Japan's real .. LONDON, May I 27 CLE) Foreign For-eign ;off Ice experts today prepared pre-pared a strong note to Japan, understood to .reject -' Japan's threat to resort to" force; to ensure;, en-sure;, her program against all opposition in. China ; .-. The . note : was said to reject Japan's claim to the. right to enforce a - - naval ; blockade off China, and - to . rebuff the Japanese Japan-ese claim to control of international interna-tional settlements in China. The note v was p repared af te r Uie British embassy at ' Tokj-o reported that the Japanese government gov-ernment had -'assumed responsibility; responsi-bility; for a foreign office spokesman's spokes-man's " statement . threatening to resort .- to force to bring about a change in the administration of foreign settlements.. ; AUNT. HET: BY ROBERT QUILLEN "Folks ought to marry in their own c 1 a s s. I don't know . any arrangement worse than a- daily-bath woman married to a month ly-bath man. : 5-. 4' V |