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Show ,v-"V. V.." SECTION TWO DA7!T? . TYYTrP . V. A PPAvh- YTTTATTV HATT.V TTFRATX MOMDAV TVTAV 9Q 1QQQ 1 .-.-.r ai;-?, V : r lob Vice: . This Is -orto ojf a; aeries of articlesexposing "white slavery"' trafflq ,ln;the. Pacific northwest, which has increased alarmingly "in recent months. -7 AS a lasting: warning to parents, recently, solved; caves are presented, with fictitious names, exactly as . reported by G-men. . " ' y -V :x ' - - . tV. . ' , , From F. D.X Files ' ;v- . : The orchestra had changed its pace from hot music and was play-lng play-lng 'Moonlight and Roses." Th,e lights above winked out, and a (tingle rose-colored spot played over the weaving crowd in the hall; it was a warm evening-in JUiy, : The - . and the orchestra : was good. It j jwaslin a downtown Uance hall in (Seattle. , 4' ; ; U' ,"" But, to one side ' of the room a i' girl stood' alone. -The .world was f- far frbm; rose-colored for her.1 The dress she Wore was. two years old, ' tthe was alone because she had no escort. And-she, had . only come . because Ladies were ; allowed in ;freei - v'.v ' V 'l -. : ,'Bhe wM -Harriet Dawiom Her parents were nearly destitute, and : altiio she bad just , passed - her : 17th birthday, she had tried for : nearly , a ' year to find jjaJob to ; get a little spendlngmoney and " to buy a few new clothes. Girl Near Tears happy, dancing couples swayed by . her tr the rythm of - the soft music, and Harriet was t: near tears. Life without even a I - dollar tp buy h new dress or shoes f f;an be very, unkind to a 17-year . old jgirl, - "May I have this dance 7" It was a; young man. asking her to dance. She drifted in his arms. Later he introduced her to ' After the dance they went out -with he others for a midnight supper, and then he took her home. . 1 She learned his name was Frank Howard Hayes. He was a gentle man, and he treated - her like a lady. He asked if he might call for,her again." ; Didn't Know Pant : .Frank called for Harriet h num- ber of tlmej. He took her t6 dances and to the movies, and always al-ways he treated her with respect. In the course ofi the next three weeks she got to know Frank rather well , . Except, she did not know that he also had the names of Francir Danahue, Harry Rice, Bunny Dana-hue Dana-hue and several others. , Or that he "had been arrested 11 times by various law enforcement agents on the west coast. Harriet told Frank her troubles. She told him how she had searched search-ed in vain for a Job. "I'm going to Alaska In a couple of weeks. I think I could get you a job there in a cafe. I know a woman who runs a place. She's in Seattle right now on a vacation. I'll taks you to x see her," Frank told her. V Offered Job . - -. He took her to see Mrs. Fannie Weis. Mrs. Weis said that she could hire Harriet, but she didn't men tion that the place she was to work was one of the most notorious notori-ous houses in Alaska.. ' "You'll have to get some clothes." Mrs. Weis told her. Til buy them for you and you can pay me back later." For the first time in her life Harriet uad an abundance of new clothes. She was outfitted from head to foot. In Juneau, Alaska, a month later alone, without money ant in debtv for" the clothes Harriet learned the kind of a job she had taken. For six months she worked work-ed in the house, of ill fame until she saved enough money to buy a ticket and return to Seattle. When she told her story to ber parents, they called , in the G-men. It wasn't long before the federal bureau of investigation had both Mrs. Fannie Weis and Frank Howard How-ard Hayes in jail. Mrs. Weis plead guilty and was sentenced to 2Y months' in the United States industrial reformat tory for women at Alderson, W. Va. Hayes plead not guilty, but was convicted and sentenced to 21 months in the penitentiary at McNeil Mc-Neil island. He appealed the conviction, con-viction, but died in an automobile accident at Merced, CaL, on January Janu-ary 18, 1939, before the appeal could be heard. Sports Heroes Knocked for a Loop by Cupid! - -mwiiiiwii.w;.w.;.w:.ijwwmmmwwm Ufa ytBtAw-Mw-srrr--" r V. r - . - i - ' , I - - ' -Tj r tYs v I - L ; - ; i .','- ' I - -- ' ' - i s I i " - - hi- : : i Shell Company 1 Presents Maps A For ' the ' guidance of . visitors to . the Golden Gate Exposition on Treasure Island. Shell, Oil company, incorporated,' has , prepared pre-pared a detailed map -showing the location of all buildings on the island, according to Mrs. C. G. Wilson, local manager, for the company here. - Prepared in color,.- thia attractive attrac-tive map reveals V at a, glance which buildings are .free and which . reauire admission fees. . V'.AV1ian'.n1annlnep. B. tiT the. Exposition," all motorists are invited in-vited to make use of . Shell Touring Tour-ing Service ! for maps and suggested sug-gested routings. -This - service is free and may be obtained - con veniently through neighborhood Shell dealers. - The potato originated along the Pacific iCoast of South America and was introduced to Europe by the Spaniards. V ' -V r 4l - t Cupid is taking, its toll from among .American sports heroes. Jackie Weatrope, one of. the turTsIeadmg jockeys, recently wed Nan Grey of the movies, shown with him at left. Joe DiMaggio, ill - f i 1 Merry-Go-Round hero " of the " world champion : New York .Yankees, is shown at 4iSuv niui:iua unuc-ij-uc, iwromy Arnoiu, Dionae actress. uoin-cidentally, uoin-cidentally, both actresses are featured by UniversaL ( Continued From Page One) ed while command of the Fourth) Corps Area, with headquarters ati Fort McPherson, outside Atlanta. One of these was the belief that his young child was Jin imminent danger of being kidnaped. To safeguard safe-guard against this, he ordered the child's nurse to carry a" loaded riding crop everytime she took the child outside the house, even if only for a walk within Fort McPherson. Retiring Teachers Honored at School it SPRING VILLEJ In honor of Wayne Johnson, high school art instructor, andvHarold Alleman of thehigh" schools, mathematics department, de-partment, who haye retired from the teaching profession 1 after 42 and 40 years service,1 "respectively, faculty Amembers, Jtudents and patrons joined irf a testimonial program Friday, atythe high school. . In behalf of the faculty and students, each teacher was pre sented! with tt fine gold watch, by had the program in charge. Miss Floss Harmer. Howard Salisbury Salis-bury paid tributes to the lionored guests, who not only have been kpopular members of the high school faculty for many years, but have outstanding records of punctuality and attendance during dur-ing those years. J. F. Wingate gave reminiscences Of his teaching experience with the two retiring faculty members. The Misses Aleen and Carol Con-die Con-die and lone Averett gave an instrumental in-strumental selection; Hannah Rowland, Lela Packard, Elmo Coffman, gave vocal solos and Mae Groesbeck and "Jessie Dalton, a vocal duet. W. W. Brockbank Another eccentricity was a fear of dogs. This fear led to anJn-44 CiUCilt wiuvii uauocu uiuvit w laughter among the officers V the post. Strolling aboutthe past in civilian civil-ian clothes one evening, Moseley encountered a small fox terrier puppy owned by a lieutenant. A popular pet about the place, the five-months-old animal let out a friendly yelp and bounced playfully playful-ly tovtard the General. He threw a near spasm, yelling at the top of his voice. The puppy, apparently thinking it was a game, barked and scampered scamp-ered "around him in great excite ment, which only infuriated Mose- order was posted barring all dogs from .the -Fort, and thereafter newly arriving officers were notified noti-fied that they could not keep pet dogs. . : I TOO MUCH WIHTE HOUSE J : i . Vital weakness of the New Deal was tragically illustrated the other day in the Argentine meat dispute the fact that one man in this Administration does most of the running with the ball. Exact opposite was Cal Cool-idge. Cool-idge. No matter what you may have thought of him, Cal was a past master at passing the ball to other members of his team. He called the signals, let members of his cabinet, buck the line. It saved him a lot of body -bruises, and if ey fumbled; iJie- didn't get the blame. v Roosevelt was wiser in this respect re-spect during the early days. For instance, the Tugwell pure food and drug act which caused such a furore was inspired by Roosevelt, but Tugwell deliberately stepped out to stop the bullets. This is sound political tactics in' any administration. ad-ministration. The President, like the chief of staff of an army, has to protect himself politically behind be-hind the lines; FpR, however, has drifted far away from this strategy. In the Argentine, scanned beef controversy.. controver-sy.. V. CAAMM.. . - Al. ley more. Finally he suceeded in ' lb u K VI ,iiL v, Qwnv and.should have carried the ball. It Dobie of the University, of Virginia Vir-ginia Law School as federal judge. Roosevelt met Dobie while v"isi-ing- his son's honie in Charlottesville, Charlottes-ville, later appointed him without -r- f consulting either Senators. Glass or Byrd. ... ' ..t.. (Copyright, 1939, by I United. Feature Syndicate Inc.) UNION TRUCK TERMINAL - -- SHIP. BY TRUCK Connections Everywhere nIOVING - Bonded and' Insured - Yellow Cab Co. Phone 300 - Prbvo, Utah ; Everything to, Uire Your Elonie! Guaranteed Switches and Plugs . .15c Heavy Split Knobs . . ........ 2 for 5c 4 Extra insulated Wire No. 14, 100 ft. 70c "We Do Contract Wiring PEGU ELECTEES .99 46 orth Uni v. Ave. Phone 418 driving the puppy away and rushed off: An hour later, the post adjutant telephoned the lieutenant lieuten-ant who owned the pup to get rid of the "vicious dog" by 8 o'clock the next morning. Next day an NH.'Ss Men's Shirts , lit tH.'.liif:4,tl .HIl Skilfuly laundered only EACH VVe know how to launder a man's shirt vito riot only look its best r but feel like a million, too. Critical Criti-cal men swear by our special method that- form-shapes collars, shoulders, and cuffs. . . ' "1 was his Navy which bought the beer, it was his naval bill which was affected by . the amendment prohibiting, future purchases. ' However, Secretary Swanson is not in good health, is not active around the Navy Department. Also Roosevelt; apparently bias' developed de-veloped a fondness for running with the ball. - ' . " Result was a fiasco as. far as domestic ; politics : was concerned, also as far as Argentine relations were concerned; Real facts in the fiasco were easy, to . understand, but the public 'never got them. INSIDE BEEF FACTS " 1 ; 1 OnlV 21 tons of canned Argentine Ar-gentine beef had been purchased by the Navy. Simultaneouslv the Argentine Navy had purchased 17 tons or American frozen beef. Each nayy needed- a tfticular kind of beef. Furtherfore.N Swift andAr mour m TJhicago were bidding against their own branch factories factor-ies in Argentina. The canned beef bids they submitted on behalf of their Argentine branches was 40 per Cent helow their American branch bids, and the law permits purchase of foreign goods if they are 25 peircent under the cost of American goods. - Finally, American meat packers do not ordinarily can beef. Almost none of it is canned in this country, coun-try, the hot dog and hamburger market absorbing this grade of meat instead. "Argentina however, how-ever, having -a. large surplus of beef, cans a finer grade. In general gen-eral its beef is no better; it merely mere-ly selects excellentrrades for canning. ' AU of these facts, if properly explained to Congress, would have saved a lot of domestic and Pah American headaches. But the President, with a thousand important im-portant things to do. did not take time to go into all this, and should not have been asked by the Navy Department to do so. MAIL BAG --W. I., New York The President Presi-dent was - empowered by the government gov-ernment reorganization act to appoint ap-point three-new. White House' sec retaries. One., of them will- fee Lowell' Mellette former1 Scripps-Howard Scripps-Howard editor and -Director, of the National Emergency Council". . . . S. C. Columbus,-0 Best authority author-ity on Nazi propaganda' in: Argentina Argen-tina is Dr. Davids Efron of the Council for" ; Pan --American - Democracy, De-mocracy, 15&v- Fifth -Ave., New York.' , v .C -B.",- Chicago Rows between Presidents and the U. S. -Chamber -of -Commerce are not new. Coblidge also disliked the Chamber, re buffed; it by refusing an invitation to speak. . S. ILf Richmond, Va. Franklin -- D. . Co mv Xs X ft .. fy M Prove High Scbovpl Audlitorium 2 P. JUNE 1-2-3 A'DMISS 101 FREE Featuring Miss Evelyn;Hlansen,elKn6wnHomb Service Supervisor FREE PMZES! FREE FRIZ Sfnd Prizi- 1939 Udsf inghoass ; Ec3trjc0oaster i : .;. V M BE 3 .';'ID)a EE Roosevelt, , Jr.; . had something to -1 1 , do with, the 'selection of Dean t i |