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Show 7 .v ' T. T t . i treat nor Call The Ilcral i J Y 1 .- ! . UTAH: Partly cloudy Sunday, little lit-tle change in temperature ;'lx temp., Saturday . . ..... 83 -Hn. temp, Saturday S3 VOL. 17, NO. 13 WVi, ai, V ',.1 4 m J m 11 li !.11U Salt Ln!:e , Business Man "To Succeed J. S. Moffitt Junius M. Jackson, of Salt Lake- City, member of the class of 1922,'has been elected president of the Brigham Young university Alumni association as-sociation for 1939-40, Cornelius Cornel-ius R. Peterson, general secretary, sec-retary, announced Saturday. He succeeds J. C. Moffitt, superintendent su-perintendent of Ptovo city schools, who remains on the board . cf directors or a year ex-officio. President of the Jackson Motor Mo-tor company,Salt Lake City, Mr. Jackson is also a director of the national automobile association, a member or the Salt Lake Rotary Ro-tary club, and a member of the Yalecrest L. D. S. ward bishopric. bish-opric. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson of 476 North 2nd East street. Miss Angelyn M. Warnick, Salt Lake City, class of 1930, Ls cew vice president, succeeding Dr. Wayne B. Hales, Provo. She is director of home economics education, edu-cation, in the state department of public instruction, and a member mem-ber of the junior committee of the general board. Y. M. M.' 17 A. J. Hamilton Calder, cashier of the Farmers and Merchants bank of Provo was re-elected treasur-jerrTand treasur-jerrTand Miss Heen Ann Waspe, Provo, wcls renamed recordihg Secretary. Miss Waspe is an in- atrdctor of office practice at B. Y. U., and a member of the Beehive Bee-hive . committee on the general toard. Y. W. M. I. A. - ..The B. Y. U. Alumni association associa-tion board of directors" is as follows: . 1933-40 Hazel Brockbank, Frederick Ft. Hickley, Don B. Colton and Donald P. Lloyd, all of Salt Lake Cityr Kiefer B. Sauls and Mr. Moffitt, Provo. r 1033-41 R. J. Murdock. Lorcn . C. Bryner. . George S. Balllf, .U. W. Oaks and Herald R. Clark, all of Provo; Mark Allen, American Ameri-can Fork. . : s Mr. Peterson' will . be - retained as general ' secretary. . ' MERRY : GO-ROUND; A DaU j Picture of What's Goins On in National . ; Affairs Dy DREW PEARSON anf, ROBERT 8. AIXEN . WASHINGTON Several highly high-ly ' placed businessmen ' close - to the New Deal are sending out quiet word to industry not to over-expand as a result of the - war; boom. - - . The situation, as they see It, is that most,business leaders are counting cn selling to Europe, therefore are takings on men, turning outv products and building- up Inventories. . But more cautious economists, in "a posi-Uon posi-Uon to know believe that purchases pur-chases from atroad may not be able to come fast enough to take - vcare ofthls sUmulated produc- Uoh. . . ':. ' Foreign -countries may have, as - reported, seven or eight" bUlions - to fpend, but they can't possW , spend more than a billion a year because of - the simple fact it takes time to spend money, , To get an idea of the danger of tusiness over-expansion, look Tat the inventories as of July 1, 1939, and compare them with January 1, 193S. . In , January, 1933, industry was entering on the kids. production had been too great and inventories were - (Continued on Page 3; Sec. 2) fenseris Welcome, Grand Daughter While students were registering reg-istering at Brigham Young university Friday. the first . .granddaughter cf acting, president Christen Jensen enrolled at the Utah Valley; : hospital, it is reported. Six pounds of potential, scholarship, the one-day-old newcomer -said Saturday that she would postpone enrollment en-rollment at B. Y. U. until about 1956, according to her parents. Dr. and Mrs. B. F. Harrison. Dr. Harrison is chairman of the university botany department, and the future student's mother is . Lorna Jensen " Harrison, daughter of ; Dr. and Irs. Jensen. In keeping with her educational edu-cational heritage, the girl i3 to have the distinctive name of Linneae, after a-world-famous botanist. Dr. , Harrison revealed. a 1 1 r ' fil P JIM m mymw( i in ll ac aia i UTAirS KOUTH OF Cutting Slices; Off' Polana r-c-rrr-Jv LITHUANIA f S EAST K, CUROPB'S rterALS ,WARSAWtMLS CONTROL ft S -ww- , , - , . . .., -j. .. . ,-. . .. ,y . ... . . : i CONTROL. "GCRMAHY Slovak ; H U NGARV : Here's how approximately - the Russians and Germans figure in cutting a couple of slices of Poland, their price for victory. Definite De-finite lines of demarcation are laid down with what . the victors stand to win, on spoils shown. , --: v;. - Ground Broken For . New E. Y. U. Building' . Launching a project designed to offer many men em ployment under the Li D. S. church welfare program, and ultimately fulfill a long-felt need at Brigham Young university, uni-versity, ground was broken Saturday afternoon for the new . , . . B. Y. . U. chapel and : religious nntiAn iiKMAMi REPORTED LOST LONDON, Sept.-23 UJ! Britain today disclosed the loss of another merchant vessel and its crew with announcement that hope had been abandoned, for the freighter Royal Sceptre, attacked by a ' German submarine on Sept. 6. Rescue vessels have been unable to find any trace of the Royal Sceptre's crew. , '. , The ministry of information announced an-nounced the Royal Sceptre : sent out on SOS on Sept. 8 while about 300 miles west of UshantT- . The distress calls . indicated the freighter. fas being shelled by a German U-boat "and later the master radioed he had ordered his crew to take to the boats because the ship was sinking. . -.. r V ' ... y . OSLO, Sept. 23 LTJ!) The Finnish, Fin-nish, steamer Martti " Ragnar was sunk by a German submarine to day 13 miles off Areadal oi the Norwegian coast. -r---! : ' ,' The crew was taken by the submarine sub-marine to a polht six miles off the coast where' rescues were afr fected by fishermen. , BERGEN, Norway, Sept. 23 (UJ!) A - torpedo boat landed "the crew of 26 men of the British eteam-shipAkenside eteam-shipAkenside here last night. The sripTiad been halted by a German submarine, and the crew ordered to ake to boats. It was indicated that after the crew left the ship was sunk-- - This : LICENSED TO 3LVRRY Clarence Edward Tope, 22, Orem and Blanche Irene Bushman, 18, Lehi. . . ,- v.- Billy Johnson Vincent, 18, Provo, and Venna Averett, 18, Spring-ville Spring-ville y Howard Frandsen, 22, Provo and Erma Davis Schow, 23, Lehi. -" Maurice David Larsen, 23, May-field, May-field, and Norma Hannah Jensen; Jen-sen; 22, Center field." Glen G. Young, 24, Provo, and. Anna Leona Jasperson, "20,Goshen. -5- ' .' ."-v- ' : DayYi: State Tax Commission Denies Utah County Assessment Cut The Utah tax commission Friday Fri-day denied the request of Utah county farmers that the' commission commis-sion . rescind its former action in raising by 10 per, cent the assessed assess-ed valuation of irrigated farm lands in the county. Chairman Irwin Arnovitz of the tax body said the increase had been made . to offset a decrease de-crease made earlier by the Utah county assessor, and declared the boost was necessary to put farm land values in the county on a" basis with those In other counties. He stated that even after the 10 per cent increase the total value of irrigated - farm lands in X' -y jy 1 . -x - " . : " " ' - -is i x"' , tk. ." - . .- ONLY DAILY PROVO,1 SALT LAKE (education ha.1. Major project under the East Central division L. D. S. church- welfare program, the building will cost between $160,000 and $200,000, ' announced J. Wyley Sessions, memberVof the central committee in charge. X " McKean - In ; Charge ' j The centratrcommittee ,is: com posed or Harold B. Lee, - man aging director-of the church wel fare program; William. Ryberg, also a member, of the - general welfare., board: President A. Car los Schow of Lehi stake; Presi dent Emmett Bird, Springville, of Kolob -stake; and Dean Herald R. Clark, : William H. Snell - ana Mr. . Sessions of - Brigham Young university.' , Howard X McKean, of Salt Lake City, memt-er. of the . gen reral welfare f-'ljoard, - has . been named superintendent of .... con structiori, and Bert Russell, Salt Lake" City construction foreman. James H. Gardner, Lehi, arid John C. Taylor, Payson, are labor la-bor relations '' committeemen, Wil- ford Storrs, Provo, regional work director, and JW.. Lester. Mangum Provo, " accountant ; .and : time keeper. x; ' .-' Fred L. Markhani, -Provo, is architect. , - . - According to Mr. Markham, the" two-story ..building- will be ot light gray brick. Trimming . will beof cast stoned v '- To Seat 1600 ' ' 'The chapelXin which B. Y. U. assemblies and programs! wilibe held, will seat 1600XAn adjoining, adjoin-ing, social hall , may be opened, providing seating" for - another 600. Therefore the-'' total-, seating capacity ca-pacity will be 2200, more than double that of the present College Col-lege ' hail.--- - . . ' ' - : : The building - will contain - a large reception room and lobby, i . class rooms, including two club rooms and a banquet hall, a kitchen, a room with special equipment for picture . projection, faculty office, etc. The floors wUl b2 of reinforced -concrete, t .To be-Iocated east of the Brim-hall Brim-hall building on - University hill occupying the " central portion of ture will be of an: H-shape; Dimensions .will be 201 feet jeast and west by 196 feet north and south. . .', ? Includes 12 Stake- ' ' . X The - welfare program of the East Central . division, under which the chapel will be con structed, extends over 12 stakes Alpine, Timpanogos, - S haron, ( Continued on Page Eight) Utah county Is $500,000 lower than that of last year. . The request had been made Thursday by members of the Utah county farm bureau and individual in-dividual farmers at a meeting with the tax commission and Governor Gov-ernor Henry H. Blood . at the state capitol. ' Pleas had been made by the . farmers that the tax burden -is too high, and that agriculturists are unable to meet their expenses. .. . The commission, in denying the request,- declared It had made a careful study of all the facts bearing on the question and saw no reason to change its original action. - - s& y r"'' RUMANIA j UTAH COUNTY, UTAH; SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1939- SHiMt French Report German Counter - Attacks On West Front By JOE ALEX MORJUS y Foreign News KdJtor- j ' Coincident with disclosure that Fuehrer Adolf Hitler had moved his field headquarters from Danzig to a point north of Warsaw, the German army high command in Berlin an nounced the death of Col. Gen. Verner Von 4 Fritsch, out standing German strategist ana former commander-in-chief. v ,4 Blilltary Funeral - " ' r "S-A state . military . funeral tot fritsch -was ordered, but - beyond etatingthat he was lulled on Sep tember 22, the army gave no de tails of his death. Whether he was killed in action, by Poles or whether death occurred in another manner was not revealed. W h i 1 e interest centered in Fritsch's death, . the .French war office in Paris announced heavy G e r m a n counter-attacks had thrown the entire western front from the Rhine to the Moselle into activity. German : - shock troops were - thrown 1 back ; three times from the French line east of the Saar, the 'war office said, . and French aviation ; V disclosed that French artillery fire has caused heavy damage to the Siegfried line fortificaUons. A., In Rome, Premier,; Benito Mussolini Mus-solini broke a self-imposed silence of -four and one-half months by discussing the international situation situ-ation with Fascist party -leaders from Bologna at Venice- palace. He reiterated that Italy abides by her decision to remain neutral, although since that decision was taken on Sept. 1 Soviets troops have invaded Poland, t Conquest Claimed - : The German high command, continuing to give only scant attention at-tention to the .western front, announced an-nounced that the Polish" army; ex cept for, the defenders . of. Warsaw, War-saw, has been conquered' There was speculation as to' .whether Hitler's action- in joining his troops north of Warsaw presaged a final offensive; agrainst: the Po lish , capital or whether . he .leu the Danzig area because of the death of Gen. Von Fritsch.' ' , ' - Radio - Warsaw announced that the city's resistance ,.to German attack continued strong. In a dis patch to United Press direct from Warsaw, Mayor Stefan Starzyn 0H,th.Hrinit. tn.i.tmn of tens of ' thousands of civilian m m. - m t casualties the troops were holding firm and morale was high. ' army forces of; occupation in east Poland were confiscating'capital-istic confiscating'capital-istic enterprices and that,pheas-( that,pheas-( Continued on Page Eight) V Southern Calif ornia Heat Wave LOS ANGELES. Sent. 23'U.R) -Southern California's record heat' wavevhich had shownxsome signs of abating, took o: sudden turn for the worst' at noon today wheri the temperature in Los AngelesutiOl degrees. N ' LOS ANGELES, Sept. 23 (U.R) The worst heat -waveYn California history, was abating todajhafter causing an estimated esti-mated 74. deatns since Sunday. . . n . ; , The weather bureau said this afternoon would be "some what cooler'? and by- Sunday or Monday the temperatures would be back belowluO degrees ' The peak of ,103 degrees yesterday yester-day . in LosAngeles was three degrees de-grees below that of the day be fore. The ' minimum, however, never dropped below 84 yesterday and :l all the . night v before, which was an dll-time record. " - x After a week of the continuous heat and oppressive humidity, the death -toir rose faster despite the slight v relief. ; In Loa Angeles alone 13 more deaths were due to the heat. The toll for .; southern California was 65, and lor the rest of the state 19. : ' More schools and business establishments es-tablishments closed. ' The big Northrop Aircraft factory in In-glewood In-glewood stopped work on war planes when the , temperature inside in-side the plant reached 112. Two hundred Los Angeles postmen post-men collapsed. San Francisco faced an ice shortage. Numerous cases of food poisoning poison-ing flvere reported to city health officers. RUSSIA JIOUILIZES MOSCOW, Sept. 23 U.E The government radio announced tonight to-night that all of Russia's troops had been mobilized since Sept. 7 and would remain so indefinitely indefinite-ly "owing to external conditions.? Assassin Victim . f: : Armand Calinescu "The Fearless,?" named premier of Rumania after he smashed Rumania's Nazi-like ; Iron O u a r d, reported assassinated in Bucharest. - - J .HER KILLED, .'ANOTHER NEAR EATII, CAVE-IN 7 - PRICE, Utah, Sept. 23 U.R One miner was dead; and another In : critical condition " today after a shaft cave-in late last .,. night at the Blue - Blaze Coal company mine, 18 miles southwest of here. Fred" Perdue, .45t.. a driller at the "mine, was crushed : beneath several tons' .of rock, and coal,, and William" Lamph, 35, cutting machine ; operatofwas reported hear death at the Standardville hospital.-He . suffered head : and internal injuries. - Albert Shaw, mine,- superintend dent; said the men were at work, when the roof of the mine caved in.. ' ' . ''' ", - 4. it. w w L- w - w i U kU- 'Plan Barn Danes Junior. Democrats of . Utah county coun-ty will' celebrate in the good old fashioned - way when they, stage their, first11 annual ha- ride and barn dance - Friday r at 8 p. - m. ' at the Utah county fair grounds barn, Chairman Dean J E. Terry an nounces- y Committees .working under 'Mr. Terry are . as follows: 'Arrange 1 m ontc I tA ments. Douglas Phillips, ' Provo; invitations, ' Ruth Olsen, Spring-vine; Spring-vine; tickets and advertising, Darwin Dar-win Ellett and William jJex, Spanish Span-ish Fork, and Floyd Loveridge and Beth Hutchings; American r Fork; refreshments, Bertha Durnell and Bina Carter, provo. 7 rty-, . - Comes Music Federation Convention to Be Held in Salt Lake ; : Mapping of an 'lS-months' program pro-gram to make. America more music mu-sic conscious will occupy attention at the annual meeting . of the board of directors of the National Federation'Of Music clubs at Salt Lake City October 4-7, inclusive. Mrs. Vincent Hillesi: Ober, Norfolk, Nor-folk, Va., federation president, will preside. ' ' -; .- ' .: A number of social interludes will be interspersed with the heavy, business schedule, one of which will be a tea at the man- sion of Governor and Mrs. Henry IL Blood Wednesday, October 4 at 5 p. m. Mrs. D. D. Moffatt, president' of the Provo chapter, Pro Muslca, and" Mrs. IL B. llen-sel, llen-sel, an ardent, backer of music culture movements in Provo, have been asked to .be assisting hostesses hos-tesses at ; the governor's mansion event;. '., Adam S. Bennion wil speak at the banquet in the Hotel Utah, the evening of October 6 to be featured by music from a string quartet, directed by Professor Le Roy J. Robertson, assisted by Mrs. Dearwyn S. SundwalL .. Harold Laycock, and Giistave Buggart. 7 v - -' 7 ' ' s x ' ' ,7 ' . VJEM 2S-T0 0 AR ii George Wing Leads "Y" To Easy Triumph In Firs Tilt FLAGSTAFF. Sept; 23 (UP.) Brigham" Younguniversity Cougars let lopse powerful passing and 'running attack Saturday to swamp the Arizona Ari-zona State college football eleven under a 25 to 0 score. The". Cougars took an early lead with three; rapid-fire touchdowns touch-downs In the first quarter. The Arizona eleven strengthened after the disastrous ; first .period and kept the. score- at 19-0 at half-time. half-time. ' ' x . . , f After a see-saw" third " period in which neither team was able to score, the Cougars came back with a hard drive in the closing quarter to make their' fourth and final touchdown. : x The game -.was only four minutes min-utes old when Roland 'Jensen, B. Y. U. left -end, blocked a Flagstaff kick and the Cougars took the ball on the Lumberjack's Lumber-jack's 37. Two -plays later left half , George - Wing ran 44 yards for B.. Y. U.'s first scpre. Lloyd Brink, .rglht half,, kicked the exv tra x point. ' . . - . - Flagstaff took the k'ickoff : and advanced to midf ield . where B. Y U. Quarterback Ken Jensen intercepted a Lumberjack- pass and returned It to tne Anzonans 22-yard line. Wing again carried, the ball over forv the second scdre The conversion attempt failed Wing scored the third B. YU. touchdown Bt few moments before the. first period ended..The conversion con-version attempt again failed. . No more scores were made until un-til the final period'when . Bk Y. U. " drove down to the Flagstaff 36-yard mark. 7 A penalty took, the Cougars to the 31 from where a series of passes from Wing to George Jackson resulted in the Cougars . last score. The try for thft-extra -point Was no .good. -f'' Flagstaff made a lone .threat to score ; in . ; the second period when it advanced to , the six-yard line -but the Cougar line stiffed and the Lumberjacks lost the ball on downs. ; The line-ups: Flagstaff- . --: 7- B. Y.U. BlairXi - k . . s Je; , rteeve Browri x. ...... .It . VBateman Puhara . . . . . .le. Miller ..ii... rc. Gilbert Hess i Fagan .;. ..,.rg West .jet Leavitt Hlghtower .yf.re. Feather v . . Jensen K. "Jensen Maskie - ..... .lh Brink Sutherland : . . , rh Wing Akerx if . . ".'.. . Gardner Score by periods: ' . V " Flagstaff .v.....C 0 0 0X0 B. Y. U. ; . . . 19 0 0 6 25 Touc;icrowns1 Wing 3, Jackson 1. Points . after touchdown. Brink 1. Substitutions, Flagstaff, . V e i t, Newberry, Ragan, Carter, Foster, Hickman Saunders. C. Miller, Mc-Fadden, Mc-Fadden, Sadler, K Smith and Knight. B. Y. U., Johnson, Anderson Ander-son Weenig, Whitney, Riska, Gardner, Rajek, Threet. Chamberlain, Chamber-lain, Turley, Blackham, .Skousen, Jackson,' . Chipman, . Maynard, Evans, Christensen v and N Seegmil- ler.' ". 7- ' Y ' ' OfficialsReferee, V. C. Wal lace. Umpire, Karl'Mangum. Ilead linesman, Joe ' Sacham. judge John Knoles, Jr , - ' ' ' Postmaster Wins V ' ; Reappointment ?. , ! Formal presidential approval o Jabez W. Dangerfield as postmaster post-master of Provo-was reported 'Sat-urdajrby 'Sat-urdajrby I. A Smoot, Salt Lake .City - postmaster. 1CC0 Already Registered 7' ;-VAt'B.Y.tJFir,st Two Days . Completion of the first two days of registration at B Y. U. brought the autumn quarter enrollment total over the 1,00Q mark,1 it was revealed Saturdayy university of ficials.-, ficials.-, Students from more than 30states were among those 7. v - ' A V . signing for; classes Friday and Two Movie Ships1 Abandonflour HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 23 UJ! y . - Because Nebrjska. Missouri and Kansas'fearec for their- bridges, the-125-ton movie ships "Dog Star" and "Ruler of the Seas" abandoned abandon-ed their dry-land voyage. of the country. ' - The ships stepped In Provo last Saturday and v as on exhibition at the state falrtn Salt Lake City for several days. - - RAPIX NEW3 SEKVICi: X iHVU I lVii iO 76 'Mb'jjun-Cuton'i . J ', i H 1 H I, ' 1 1 7- : . V . ' .. ' ' :. m'Lim 7. 7, . 'x - . , y . ' y 7 it n ' W .' . ' Ly -nnl O r.?f ' r7 , 7 ii f ii i i w i j - s y s IL U7 cy w u v u 7 . -7 y-' . V '-. 7 Judge Tillman D. Johnson Dismisses Utah , Power andXight . Against Provo City m S. L. , . Holding that the intercsrof ihc Utah; Power and "light company under, present conditions l'too indirect," United States District JudgeTillman 0, Johnson . Saturday denied the pQwer company jipplicatioh6r an injunction to prevent Provo ' City and XJlen- Contracting corporation from continuing continu-ing municipal power plant construction . ' The court dismissed the power 'company's complaint "without-prejudice to bringing another action in the future - .y . - .. . , . .Minder changed condition.'' eecYouth Killed In Car mishap BRIGHAM -dlTY; --X Floyd Blanchard, " 20,son ofMr.and Mrs. Lester' 7). Blahchard of Toledo, OhioT died in a Brigham City 1 hopsital Friday of injuries sustained .Tuesday whenhe attempted at-tempted to leap f rorn a loaded gravel truck.-. Tills death brlujrht7 UtahTsli)iiy highway", death toll?io , 103 and! Box Elder 'county's N to five; t the same number killed during the entire year ' of ' 1938 county.v t- ; , at 'ATlCCenrollee. Blanchard re portedly leaped fromthe , truck when he feared 4t 'would 'overturn. He suffered a broken back, fractured frac-tured pelvis, fractured ribs and internal injuries when'rerushed Into a Juh - embankment ' by the4 rear end or tne- trucK. , N- ' - X . '.'"'- Brigham : Cty CCC camp officials of-ficials said the heavily-loaded truck- started to slip from- the road and Blanchard attempted to leap to saf ety. He was driving thetruckat thevtime of the accident, ac-cident, which occurred five miles west, of Brigham City, on the Bear, itiver bird refuge "road. ' v 7 Goal r.lcnCPauor ... PRICE, Utah, Sept. 2 i;.D itlnir an anfarsnt business UD- trend. B. P. Manley. executive sec retary of the Utalv-CasI operators' association, tpldjcoa retailer at their cohvention' today that; repeal of; the arms embargo law would increase the Memand for Utah coal, Manley saidthe coal demand micht brine: all rnjnea In the state to full operation ifv the neutrality law Is revised. Petition Filed For R. Elliott 7 . Frieinds of Ralph Elliot East Milton avenue, f iled.a nominating nom-inating petition in his behalf with the city recorder;, Saturday, affi-cialiy affi-cialiy making hi ma candidate' for the -city ' audi tor'sr position in the primary election October 24. ' , The petition contained appr9xl-mately appr9xl-mately 150xslgnatures. 7 sentation from . Utah and nearby statC3, the student body included 4n ,th . . umuargoxiicpsui sy , . - v 7 71 t. 726 many from the east and - west coasts, from Canada, and ; from Mexico. -7 7 '-: - '7 ' 'A Talented freshmen entertained in the second of the v'new student" stu-dent" programs staged Saturday evening' in College hall. To a capacity audience, Dr. .Wesley P. Lloyd, master of ceremonies, announced; an-nounced; that the presentation was a cross-section Of freshman musical and dramatic abilities. 7 Hear Reminiscence-' . . vJohn C. Swenson, Veteran faculty fac-ulty member, gave students a picture of the ' university as it had grown during hi 41 years as a - teacher on thevtampus. - The (Continued on Page Four) If you do not receive vour I": r: '1 promptly, call The lleriilj fri: , 4., before. 7 p. in. we,k days, t. I 13. a. m. Sunday, and a copy v.; Z , bftf live red to you. Compaity's Action Legality -'Not- Confide ml ; , Judc? Johnson made his tifclsi-m after studylng briefs of the pla!n-tiffn pla!n-tiffn 'and defendant for the pa?t few weeks. He held that the court could not assume to pass upon' tin lawfulness of the Provo city commission's com-mission's procedure,' or the validity of the . bond.? , sold by . it, or" th validity of Jthe contract entered toto-.WithUien.': :''.' t' N Utah iPpwer and Light company had based Its case on three main allegations: 71, That the city commission was depriving the people of constitu-tioftal constitu-tioftal and statutory riRhis to ' vote, ori pi-oposed repeal, of the.-Nuvecn and Ulcn ordinances by refusing to, call a . special election and proceeding pro-ceeding with sale of reventif hmvH and construction of the munir ipnl plant which. the repeal ordinances were designed . to prohi hit. , ' 2sThat the 'commisslonerf. after having-done all things -possible un der theXre solution t)f June 2'J 1939, repealed the resolution tt prevent, a referendum alreadj 'commenced apainst it. 3. That the commission delivrr-ed delivrr-ed . to x and . authorized .Ulen to Spend hundreds of . thousar.fl.H . er dollars in, advance, of "recclvii ;t I nnvthlnrT, In rplurn fnr mffSi r x- pcndltures. N . Judge John-son said the light f the power company to continue operations of its Provo .plant after January 27,x 1910, date the pre r . franchise expires, was "tof uncertain uncer-tain to permit the court to gtuiran- (Continued on 2'age Four) 161 EXECUTED COPENHAGEN,; Rept 23 U i:i -Executions 'of. Iron Guards in Rumania Ru-mania to a ventre tho a.r"'asi;inatirt of Premier' Armird ; Calinescu td- tal 340, according to private advices ad-vices received here today. .BUCHAREST, Sept; 23 u;r -Arrests and executions of In n Gpardists continued- throughout Itumania--today. It; wo n indieat t i thenew government intended to .avenge 7 . the --'"assassination oi Premier. Armand " Calinescii 'hy executing all remainjlng leaders and sub-leaders" of the outlived pro-Nazi organization.. It was understood 161 men hd been executed for participation (r complicity in Calinescu's death. including 44 held at one conceu- trauon camp and 32 in another. Earlier, reports had put -the tot. -a much higher. In - anycvept executions exe-cutions were, understood to b'i continuing. ' - ; . , ; , - Arests tan well into the tliou s-ands, s-ands, and ' it, was estimated morn than 1,000 had been arrested in Bucharest alone. ' ., ;. x Arrested men, and tlio.se - i" : ! in .cpneentrationcamps were h-lng h-lng weeded out the - leaders for execution, lesser members of the old Iron . Guard for early n:!- . AUNT HET hv iaonnnT itit,i,zn ' '7 " - - A "Old UII1 llkea hLh h religion and his liquor, b .he doesn't" want Vin mixr When the preacher. C Tiounces the evils of aire! Bill calls it talkin' pc.'itS-: : 7? AM ; ACT; F : y sifr-'.i A :iy7 |