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Show A TV, -' o o Fa . 7 ueJyc f? U. U; O Call The Herald O 77 o-7 r ; x XXD F t 7- v 1 7 ) ) IL TVte Weather UTAH Fair-tonigut and Thursday Thurs-day jeoHer southwest portion to- Maximum Tcmn. Tuesday ...93 Minimum Temp. Tuesdajwrv-. 44 FIFTYFOURTH YEAR, , r ' '' F .tolkJ,.;.:.l-U-., ( - "-' ": ' " ' s - ' ' : t : L--, ,' " " 1 , L l NT I , h f U rO , U I ! Wii::: '.We hff Hitler :Reses;taW (EDITORIAL) r . Almighty important "lesson forUnited States comesout of European, moves in the last 48 hours. - . Cojnmunist Russia has fallen into, the open arms of Nazi Germany, f Adolf Hitler has "signed, a Tade treaty and f a non-aggression pact ,vith the na-on na-on the democracies had-been counting" on as a bul-vark bul-vark to stem the rising tide of dictatorships. V ' ; Coming at a time when Britain is doing its best . to lure United States into joint-precautionary action in the orient, this demonstration of European "diplomacy" "diplo-macy" should be all that is needed to iiake ( Uncle Sam forsake his foolish idea that it's up to us to save the world. ; v ? , - ' x ? - We tried that once. And the sun nevei sets on the graves of the men we lost 'in. tryirigf-and failing : to do it.: . - ' ;. 'v;;--:4;;i-:--'4V 'F-:iy:F The Russian-German pact should surprise no-. no-. body. Russia has merely gone to the highest bidder ' in line' with modem European diplomatic methods, 'v Japan would do the same. So would Britain. V v ;:We may have our sympathies for v Russia, or China, or England. But let's stop'there. - ; FF-- '-'NeTergairtsHotJltriaifiAm ' - a rifle to take part in a European 'or Asiatic conspir-acy. conspir-acy. We should be prepared to defend. our owli fron- . tieis. but hot to change those: oft aspiring strangers. . -rSv Foolishympathy for the siren songs of foreign . .4." i. ... 1 .1 ? . 1 auiuciaus snquiu. never again - move us to irenziea tears. Let's keep our eyes- f RooseyeltlG :ABOAKD U;S. LANG,.AUff.23 (U.R) President Roosevelt, because of the European sitiiation, decided today to cut short his seagoing vacation and return immediately to Washington. ; - r :.' - ' ;: ;.; . : r" "' : , "-. . ; . ' ' ." - '"' l TMThe' president cancelled plans for p -MERRY Ftf GO-ROyND; A. Daily Picture of Whar ; Goins On, in National , ' Affairs ' ,'-FF' - . V By DREW PEARSON and' ROBERT S. AULEN , a- WASHINGTON The JusUc Department has been trying " to keep it a secret, but when FranK i Murphy, forthright attorney gen-"eral, gen-"eral, visited Alcatraz some time ago, every cell was unlocked. J , As Murphy walked down ..the r cell block, he was greeted first with absolute silence. Then as he passed, a quive of rage went through the penitentiary. Men pounded on their bars, spat " into the aisle, howled and cursed. They did not know who Murpriy was, but they always show their "rcsentment against- any visitor. 4 .What they also did not know ras tnai ineir ceus wer? uu x lacked. This . happened by accident. acci-dent. It wa3 the noon hour, at which time they file down to the dining room. The, cellsare- unlocked un-locked simultaneously V by an automatic time signal, A.and- in this case the time signal 'had unlocked un-locked the cells but the bell, wait-. wait-. Ing for Murphy to finish his' ln-spection, ln-spection, had not; rung. : - , Thus with the bell silent, the convicts did not know that they could have rushed into thftcorrt-dor. thftcorrt-dor. There was nothing . o-. restrain re-strain " them.; r - Murphy, came out of Alcatraz with his soul stirred at the hardened, hard-ened, hopeless attitude of the prisoners. That was why -he -startled Washington with his ' statement that the penitentiary should be abolished. . : ' ' Murphy's belief is that n6 man 'should have all hope removed. Once he reaches that stage he (ContinuedVn Page Eigbt) N- NO. 36 teiSqraph NKwsDr,ERvEfB PROVO, and pur powders-dry ! a leisurely fishing trip down the gulf-, stream aboard the -cruiser Tuscaloosa, on which he has been vacationing in North Atlantic waters.-. - K F- ' . The Tuscaloosa will; put Mr. Roosevelt ashore tomorrow morning morn-ing at Sandy Hook, N; Jswhence he " will spee(0yspecial .train to the capital. . r" - ' " V " " He . expects io arrive at" the White House shortly after noon Thursday. Previously, Xhe , had planned to end his vacation Friday at Annapolis, Md. . x. ; iF. . A' . constant stream of, radio messages from the 'state 'department 'depart-ment has kept Mr. Roosevelt Informed In-formed of developments In Europe. - .The Tuscaloosa; was about 80 miles southeast of iNahtuckett Light today when Mr.. Roosevelt changed his plans. ' , 14-Year Old Cfiminal x His Playmate, 13, .VENICE, Calif J J Aug. 23 (tlE) Richard Jensen, 14, wanted at Los Angeles for slaying of ' Billy Williams. Wil-liams. 13, was arrested here today. -The Red-haired youth was barefooted bare-footed when apprehended by a posse of 15 deputy sheriffs. Police quoted Jensen as saying he killed his playmate "because "he was teasing me about being an ex-convict."j F LOS ANGELES, Aug. 23 . (O!) The highways north of Los Angeles An-geles were watched by state police po-lice and t sheriffs deputies today for Richard Jensen, a curly-hair-de juvenile delinquent . who "melodramatically "melo-dramatically .calls himself "The Hare." He. was wanted as the murderer of his' 13-year-old pal. Late yesterday Richard, who at 14 has a long record in juvenile courts, jshouted to his mother from Vv k7 . ii . i I' v. ;. ,- i v F; Kiieeu vvuriiUiLii u&ni yi By Great LONDON Bri tail) senda personal message toxHItler - that she will fight if Poland Is y attacked; parliament meets tomorrow' to give cabinet emergency' powers. . " ;. - -"V .F MOSCOW German Foreign Minister RIbbentrop i arrives to negptiate non-aggression pact which Nazis hope1 vfill - neutralize Russia and leave ' Poland helpless . . -F F . v", CANBERRA, Australia Prime Minister' says .Australia will fight if Britain does.' ' ' ' . ' ''-.JL . BERLIN Nazis expectVon Ribbentrop back from Moscow with non-aggression treaty by week end; then they'll settle with Poland. v PARIS State of f;war alert" pervades, all Europe with 10- 000,000 men under arms.: " SLIATCII, Slovakia Slovaks Germany readjusts" frontiers. . V RQ3D3 All Italian merchant' ing. Warsaw Poles consider Russian negotiations j -they; ; await eventualitiescalmly.i, . ;J -Brussels Oslo nations confer on ways; to remain; neutral. F-"'- TOKYO Newspaper reports Japan may recall V German - and Italian amblissadors .for report on. German-Russian negatiations. ; WASHINGTON Five government' departments draft European report for submission to President v Roosevelt on his return Friday. ,7 AUCKLAND New Zealand pledges support to-Great Britain,.; ' ' - j : 'r' -', : ' "Ft" iFFrsifVth'PteM Foreign News Editor ' ,4 . . . Great Britain prepared- hastily, for; the worst-' tonight after Adolf Hitler had fold shouldered a last-miriute personal n.Atmi'n f Vml n Tq7i' of foot nil Pnlnn wnnlil mpan war kv , Climaxing the long - war- 01 nerves "Between inejoian-tananxpowers inejoian-tananxpowers and the European; security i.frpnt, , developments develop-ments thrdust the big powers toward a showdown , with machine-gun rapidity. They included : ; . '. . .' F, A-visit by British Ambassador Sir Neville Henderson to . Berchtesgaden - to deliver . io(s Hitler personally the British warning warn-ing that, : while theyx hoped the Polish quarrel could " be settled peaceably, any use of force would be resisted to the "uttermost" because be-cause Britain asd . France would stand, by their pledges. Cant Stop Hlnt- . TT In reply, it was announced officially of-ficially by the D. N. B. agency, HiUer left no doubt inHenderson's mind that the British government could not cause Germanyxto renounce re-nounce "the pursuance of her, nat tional vital interests" in this case the - return " of Danzig v and presumably .also V the return - of other former German territory , in order to wipe out the stigma of the Versailles treaty and give. the Reich "living room." F'F The result of the brief Henderson Hender-son talk with HiUer spurred the British : government to immediate cctionx r .' : ; - F : F: : , - , Local authorities of .London and all other towns ; were ordered to make full arrangements for "blackouts". ;of aU. lights-tonight and every other night as precaution precau-tion for any emergency; .The board of trade - prohibited, except under license, the export of yaw materials , which might, be used as war materials a move intended to cut' off such supplies from Germany, v " King George hurried from Balmoral Bal-moral Castle to reach.. London by (Continued, on Page Three) ' Slays underneath his house: ."Don't come under here, Ma.- I've just killed Billy Williams.'! ; ' Then he crawled out and pedaled ped-aled frantically away on his bicycle.. bi-cycle.. ' . - His mother rushed to the neighboring neigh-boring home of her son's chum, Billy .Williams, and called, "Come quick! Our boys, have done something some-thing terrible." ,f xx Billy's mother crawled under the house and found himrHIs head had been crashed with' a hammer. His chest stabbed with a butcher knife and a pair of sheep 3hears, and copper wire was twisted twist-ed around his neck. He, was. alive, but he was unconscious. Frantically Frantical-ly she untwisted the wire and tried to bind his wounds, but Billy died in a doctor's office a few minutes later; . - . ' x - . ;. . , .; Escapes UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST y23, ; 1939; . -4-1.. ' r -. - , BY-UNITED PRESS ' X ' - r' ' demand,' share . of Poland when. " " , , ships made subject to requisition- X- I. .: situation unchanged :by German- Employees To Meet - - - - ' . A. special meeting will, be hel at f 8 o'clock, tonight in the Labor Temple of the local chapter No.yjfo, Utah State Employeesaf filiated with the American Federation of State. County, and Municipal Em ployees. Community X Opening Slated Sunday '. A community art sgallen of the "ner.public library, will be .the latest Provoi cultural acquisition to become a reality, following the public opening Sunday. 7' - x . . .' . ' : N : Tv The work of Prof. B F. Larson f" Nl -li rpN" 3 ' ; - oYiProvo' will be featured in the DSLS6D3.il" 1 1 OdaV fl"!fltlt- ? be op,eftn to , . , -1 . x J I public Sunday from; 2:30 to 6:30 NATIONAL, LEAGUE ' First: r A' .: - - Pittsburgh Boston ... v Brown and Lopez.- , : .." Cincinnati . .. 000 000N000- 0 .... 000 000 01x- Susce, Posedel - and oio 020'3 v.. OOO .OOO 00CH-. o Philadelphia Derringer and Lombard!, iBeck and Millies. FFy ' - ' Chicago'' . .7 . . 000 430 001 8 New York . . 1. . L ; 000 300 000 3 Lee, Root (6) Hartnett ' Gumbertf Lynn (5) Coffman (5) Danning.; . St., Loul3. i 000 001 101 3 Brooklyn ?04 000 02x--- 8 Coper, Shoun (3) "Bowman (6) Sunkel (8) and7 Owen Holllngs-worth Holllngs-worth and Phelps. , Second : Pittsburgh . . ; 000 001 000 1 Boston ,..;.,. 000 300 OOx 3 Helntzelman, SeweU (4) Susce, MacFayden - and Masi.:. , AMERICAN LEAGUE First: -'- - 'v ,- -New ork . . .;. . 022 210 00O 7 Chicago . f. ...... 000 000 200-. 2 Donald and Rosar, Smith, Dietrich (5) Schlueter. , Philadelphia . "001-121 000 Detroit . 102 000 020 Hayes, Hutchinson Pippen and and Tebbetts Second: i ' . New York . Chicago V :. 210 .. oio Ruffing and Dickey, Lee and Ren- so. S CAPSIZES IM HEAVY SEAS Only Three Of ' Those Aboard Were Saved V From Slnlrinc Sri5r BAHIA, BrazilAug. 23 (U.R)r-Thef National Telegraph agency said today that (53 per sons- 46 passengers and ,17 mempers . of the crew -perished when the coastal steamer steam-er Itacare capsized in' heavy seas and sank at the entrance to nheos Harbor, south of Bania. Only three of those aboard were saved, accordine" to National Tele-. graph. ' , ''F'F . iney were me capiainfine iirst officer and a child. . V - y The Itacare was owned bythe Etricbeiro company and traveled regularly betweenhere and Jlneor, Smiles south of here,!'' Ilneos is a noted cocoa7 port. . ; First reports said Jthat the steamer' fighting :. mountainous waves In an attempt to make the shelter of ' the. harbor, was en-? gulfed by a tremenodus.wave. Business in ' the cocoa port was suspended as rescue crews put out Cor the scene of the tragedy.- - OOLIL'IAt! CHIEF r mm it "'LA' PAZ, Bolivia, Aug. 23 . (U.R) President Gen. German Busch died today of what doctors said w,as an accidentally, inflicted bul- . In' accordance with a: decision of 1 the cabinet and military leaders, Geh. Carlos Quintanilla, comman der in chief of the army, became provisional president. Details of , the shooting not revealed in the offici mcnt. Doctors' said : the was self-inflictedj. A rt Gallery. to be housed within the walls o'clock. There will be 20 paintings, paint-ings, 17 oils and 12 water colors. The gallery is to be a permanent feature of the building, one which Will grow and develop tnrougn various side issues in the federal art project, announces DelMar Nelson, director of the Provo. gallery.' gal-lery.' ,v v , For' some time to come, local artists will i. exhibit - their work in three-week schedules, in order- to stlmulate an added Interest in the new community, attraction. The federal : government's traveling exhibit will be hung in the gallery in six weeks, and will remain for the people's pleasure for, three weeks,- at which time it. will be replaced re-placed by a new group of pictures, possibly the work of a local artist; The federal exhibits will arternate with the local showings, also in three week schedules, MrNelson reports. . . : ' F 7 As an ' added - feature,, a federal exhibit of black and white' prints will be hung in the gallery in the F ' F ' ( Continued on Page Three) Free Dance Set Thursday Night v X -7 Sponsored by the local summer recreation staff; an tpen-air dance will be held Thursday night at 8:30 on the concrete tennis courts at - the North park. Good music has been secured and the dance is free -of charge. 111? CULL E were ai-vstate- - wound " jyUo' J : : L w Howfm IDoih'Doc? V : " :. , -. . . . . , :Mae West, famed "come up and see. me sometime" star, is shown playing hostess to Dr. Frank Buchman,. leader of the Moral Re- Brmormont 'fry 1 carlo 't'nm -. all "--fni iha ,' Moa ny , rpnrtrtprll V -friTrl ' kirn at her Hollywood apartment y v that philosophy.'! mi ombined efforts of the' If . v , - F Traffic F yy -'- 1 1 1 ji 11 state hicrhwav DatroL in an intensifiedxdri v6.in rod rim TTtnh county's traffic death rate,; were pledged at'a meeting called by Preston G." Peterson, state road commissioner vice chair man, in charge of the patrol, here : - r - - today.'-, -x J . .i eres to be held witlf the enforcement enforce-ment agencies in. what Mr. Peterson Peter-son declares will eventually become be-come a ; 20-county drive against traffic deaths. y . Denying there has been any "bad blood" in the,' past between - the highway patrol and. the sheriff's officers memoers present today informally agreed; on. the "following "follow-ing as means of reducing traffic accidents: 77 ' 1. That . the patrol and the sheriff's ' department . cooperate fully " in keeping vigil over the highways. N . 2, Soliciting the support of the various towns in the county'in the safety drive. v x, 3. Establishing of a better system sys-tem 'of accident investigation' and of making reports It was agreed all accidents r investigated by "the highway . patrol will be reported to the sherifrs office, in addition to , sending a report , to the state road commission : 4. Encouraglng traffic education educa-tion in the-schools and other galh tag's.; '. -A,; y - The discussion? wasled by Mr. Peterson, and Sheriff John S. Evans, with sheriff's deputies, highway patrolmen, Captain L. L. Fryet of the state highway patrol, and JohnO. Beesley, recently ap-pouited ap-pouited to the governor's highway safety committee, takingpart.o Deny "Bad Blood" S . ,77 At the outset Sheriff Evans dchj nied inferring that the highway patrol was not fully cooperating or that there' had, been any "bad F (Continued on Page. Three) Tins "Day BORN Girl, to Robert Jr and Dea Frazier Eyre, this morning at the home of -the grandparents,. 1 Mr. and Mrs.: Lorenzo Frazier. y- F Girl, to Stanley and Helen Hed-quist Hed-quist Innesj thisTmorning, Crane maternity. - x' . N X x LICENSED TO MARRY7 Leland Montague, 18, Payson, and Frace Frisby, 17. - y. ' James Boyd, V 25, Los Angeles and Margaret X Lambert," 23, Los Angeles. x . ' . ' . DIED -F : , : Robert Kinnear, 75, Tuesday afternoon aft-ernoon at hi3thome on West drive, heart trouble. y - UTAH'S , ONLT - BAinY KOUTJI OK SALT UA.ICJ3 PTi r-J FF fFF r ': . ; ' '- . " F An yT-.--.-. . 'V ;-. ... ,- ' r 7- ft' "n fact, I owe. my success to "CoiitroJ sheriff's department and the CRASH BRIIIGS ANOTHER DEATH v. RICHFIELD, Utah, Avg. 23 U.t Mrs. . Nannie D. Heritage;- 52, Virginia, Minn., died in a hospital here last nightof injN'riosr suffered suffer-ed nine days ago when a car in which she was riding, driven by Paulo Hasslocker, commercial counsel of the Brazilian embassy at Washington, overturned hear Panguiteh. , 7 y Mrs. Heritage had ' received a skull jpracture - Mrs.' ' Joyce E. Booth, also Virginia was killed instantly. Hasslocked was injured but wa3:releasedfrom a Salt Lake i hospital : Monday f ter treatment. The party was ehroute to X Salt Lake City from Zion- park on a transcontinental tour when the ac cident occurred. - v - yF The death' brought Utah's traffic toll to -88 for the year,. as compared compar-ed with 125 up to theSame date last year. ' 7 y y x F DatsBzss in 7 X r :.'. .-.-.V, ' X . . ' - Idaho Fails Fire v- XIDAHO FALLSi Ida Aug. 23 (U.Tv -A carelessly - thrown match was. blamed todayfor a fire that destroyed the home of Leslie Fair-less Fair-less here and smothered to death a two-months-old baby, Hugh Marvin Fairless, late 'yesterday. The7infant ws sleeping in a second-story bedrpomywhen the fire broke out Two other, children escaped. Mrs. Firless, suffering from shock angrief, was In the care of a. physician. x' Coming Events ; KIWANIS,-' Thursday, I2;15 p. m.. Hotel Iloberts, speaker, George C. Larson, Uinta national .forest supervisot, , Conserv'atlon-' and Fire x Problems in the National Forests." ; . . X 20-30, Thursday, & p. m Riverside River-side X cafe, luncheon -meeting. Speaker, Congressman J. W. Robinson, Rob-inson, "Utah ,Lake Harbor Project." Pro-ject." ' . -, ;- -i y y If you do not receive 3'our IleraU promptly, cull Tho IleralJ offlr, 433, before 7 p. m. week tlaj-s, an ". 10 p.. m. Sunday, and a tsopy will tddlverod to. you. - - r PRICE I1VE CENTS ENGLISIM IS CROITI SPED It Londoner Boosts Wcrld'c Speed Record By -More Than 11 Miles x Ky LLOYD TUPLING r Uidted PrfH Correspondent BONNE VLLIiE SALT FLATS, Utah, Aug. 23 (U.R) Burly John Cobb of London and his Rail ton Red Lion today to-day climbed onto the world's land speed, throne when they dashed through the measured mile of Bonneville speedway twice for an average speed of 368.85 miles an hour. X This breaks jby. more than 11 m.p.h the 357.5 m.p.h. record mtidc last year by. Capt. G. li. T. Eyston and is In 'every way the fastest man has ever traveled on land His speed for the kilometer -slightly shorter than the mile was 369.74 miles an hour, far above the old record of 350.07 m.p. h. This kilo record is the fast(. t mark of any kind recorded by wheeled racers. Fulfills Ambition 1 Cobb accomplished the phenunt-inal phenunt-inal epeed a speed that was only dreamed of "a - few y car3 & 'o - hy flashing through the south-n'ortit flying mile at 370.75 iti.p.h,, an ! making the southbound run at 36Q.97 m.p.h. ' It,, was Cobb's Hocond .crack at the elusive record in slightly jnoro than 24 hoursYesterday, he was plagued by motor trouble and, after going northward at hi. p.h., could not, make , tho econi lap within thehour allowed by international in-ternational rdcing rules, ' - When Cobb: came to the Eait Flats this-year .with his 200')- (Continued "ri Page .Three) Potvct Printing osfs Qo W Vi v . -a. lnccity. commiawion'a f'xpi'ii'ii-turcT, f'xpi'ii'ii-turcT, for legal advertising, j?b printing; and. ''educational publicity' public-ity' in eon'hcfctlonwith the munlri-pal munlri-pal power project totals $1142.02 according to' a resume prepa red by Mrs. Mary F. Smith, city an-ii-tor at the request of the commission, commis-sion, following Monday's open letter let-ter by a group of 22 citizens, x The-Daily-" Herald has received $484.50, or 42 per cent of this amount during the period of 35 months from September 24, 1936. tothe present. This covered the publishing of -ordinances as required re-quired by law; The Valley News, a weekly, haa received $657,52 or 58 per cent during a period of 14 months, from June 2, 1938 to the . present, the report shows. This was for ordinances, or-dinances, circulars, extra copies of. the paper, cuts, and job work. During the same period that th Valley News received $657.52 th aily Herald received $197.10. AUNT HET MV KOIIEKT UVilslEH "lljey 'lttT.-firnd tliHr money to Itrlp poor Imvs Lcuvin' t ht I r u si I h fa Junior won't make Urn Kitfc lf ignorant men villi ti t wrong kind o' r.n!.lj' :;n outvote him." f . - - . .. r . ..... V i v 'F. , t-rv-. y . X X |