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Show Call The Herald The Weather i If you do not receive your i:rr:" 2 promptly, call The Herald ot:i:c, 403, before 7 p. m. week days, t.:.l 10 a. m. Sundajs, am! a copy will be delivered to yon. . UTAII: Generally fair tonight an Saturday. Little change In temperature. temp-erature. Maximum temp., Thursday .. . SO Minimum terSp., Thursday . 54 I FIFTY-FOURTH YEAR, NO. 38 -gffiSSJSH news service PROVO, UTAH COUNTY,- ! UTAH, FRIDAY, AUGUST i 25, 1939 - UTAH'S ONLY DAILY SOUTH OP SALT f JIIC, PIUCK FIVE CENTS e SOVinTKUSSLV rnc IN DirLOMATICCOITRTSIIIP OF ,3 "1 ' ! the Winner andtbser n iv 1 i : i - . . ... ' ... cDjo) J Li Li JWW' An . " " J i- 5- - J- V.--J : ; 1 - mm II -tl it r I i I . - V on ronccQ in ;iloo iu GOiWEtlE IF' Prove CongressrrYan Is 7 Speaker At Two '-- V Club Sessions y - If "warvis declared in Eu-: Eu-: rope, President Roosevelt will ealbslspecial session of con--r gress to pass a new neutrality . lawi opined Representative J. Will Robinson, speaker at the ' Rotary club luncheon today. . Explaining1 in detail 1 the: provisions pro-visions of the neutrality: act, the '" congressman said the present law . provides that the United States cannot " sell munitions of war to beUigerenttfXThe new neutrality , measure would provide that the : - nation could sell anything it manufactures man-ufactures to - any nation who , comes to America, pays cash in advance and takes the f goods " in its own ships at its own risk, he : explained. - . :. -- Mr Robinson said 161 members . - of congress have seen actuaf-flghl-? ing and that congressional: .senti-: .senti-: jnent is overwhelmingly ; against war-'rhere will be na' American entry into war unless the masses rise up and demand of , the gov- - ernment.such entry, he predicted. Answering a question he has ' been frequently asked since returning re-turning to Provo, Congressman Robinson said: . "I do . not , believe - President Roosevelt wiJj:un for a ihird term." ' j ' Congressman Robinson . express-; express-; id hs keen interest in the boat Sarbor and recreational project at th rnouth of Provo - river, and "outlined Te"nets"CT -the" 'project -io the people. He urged that the " ; MERRY go-rouie A Daily Picture of WhatV - . Going On in National : - Affairs 1 By DREW PEARSON ami v. ROBERT S. AIXEN - France, Britain at Military - T Disadvantage Despite Huge - A Army, Fleet; Reich, North Italy Well Fortified ; Bnt-h Bnt-h Afraid To Enter Baltic; ' vi Hitler Well Set For Raw . Materials, Including Fran-- . coW U. S. Cotton; Poland 7 Cortipletely Surrounded By German Troops -wmrKeas in Uiiing. . v - x ;;Vv -,. ' w. SHINGTON U. S., mill- tary. d naval strategistsJ have - been airinp- some secret -studies of Bfitlsh- and French strengtn against the dictator powers,' and theiri conclusions r ha'e baenpes- ctmU'J if. . -" ' kjt. ca -0 , Ar-hough the': French, and "- Brit li h are in better shape than V" during - the Munich crisis, they are la long way from being . able to' Kox HiUer. Inx fact, it looks as IX Miner can vu. uicm. ,- itain and , France ' have two . bigfassetjs the greatest navy in; thef woria, ana ine Desi xrainc-u sxTify in the world. But the prob-; prob-; c lenl is how to use them. " V T?ie French army, for instance, "Ma up againsCa tough proposi-:ticli proposi-:ticli If it tries to help Poland." XTlfi- logical move would be. to : " tt lack Germany thus shift Ger-' Ger-' rr.fi ny's drive from Poland to a dftence of the Fatherland. ut the French army is sty- rni ?J by the famous.German Sieg-4fnid Sieg-4fnid Line, built facing" France's ir Vinot Line. The Biegf ried Line is i cheaper than the Maglnot t Lf - e, consisting v of concrete : pill ), xea spaced at1 regular Intervals. ',aese are so small that it is al-X.-.ost impossible- for artillery to it them,- but they house machine run nests capable- of mowing dowri-the, French army. s , , Between lhe--pul boxes are Vuried electric mineswhich: can :e exploded . under advancing French troops at' the touch of a button. . -- : : : : t . FRANCE VS. .ITALY. ' , : 7-. jvnuother natural move for. the French would be to drive into Northern Italy. However, France rtow has to keep 10 per cent or Tst army-along the Spanish border bor-der (thanks to Franco appeasement), appease-ment), and this leaves only 25 ptr cent ' of the Frencn army . to (Continued on Page 1, Sec. 2). Prouo Uisitor , . r.lcalG Deaf li Jn Colorado Crash Husband of Provo Woman Is Fatally In j ured At 1 c ' : f.. Craigr, Colorado t t A 10-day vacation trp to Provo ended in tragedy when Cart William Wil-liam Mickley, 41, of Chicago, husr band of N' Erzel Johnson -iMickley, formerly of 805 North Fifth West. street here, ' rwas killed "instantly m an automobile accident .near Craig, Colorado, Thursday. Mr. and .Mrs. Mickley and their two children, Weston; 19, and Hope, r"" 10, after "visiting: with friends and relatives here, had left for Chicago where Mr. Mickley was -employed in The' Wriggley Gum - company & office,' at 6 a. m. Thursday, Hi ; - . -; ' . WTord of , the accident was received. re-ceived. by,Mr. andj.Mrs. J. Joseph Johnson, ' parents" of. Mrs. Mickley, in a telegram from their daughter. Mrs. ?f Mickley and her two children chil-dren suffered only minor in juries. The accident;occurred following a blowout. 1 -- t ' : - Mrs. Mickley's father, Joseph J. Johnson,1 a brother. Earl-Johnson and -his wife', and . cousins,-, Mr. and Mrs. Dee Brown,-all of .Provo, left at midnight for. the accident scene. V , .- -' '-' Surviving Mr.- Mickley, In addi- - ,., iMn Vi4B-ay when the. driver, Mr. tion to his wife and children, are) " fv ' f1 v.a three sisters and a brother, ; all of Chicago. . . '. . : r i- ' ' Heal Estate Hen To r.at Saturday Provo real estate- men and their, wives, headed?, by Denzil Brownj president ' of. . the . Utah State Realty . association - Were headed forlLogan today where the semi-annual -convention will ' be h eld Saturday. - -; . v 4 Three sessions will be held with Mr.' RroWn in charge of the morning" morn-ing" meetinng and the evening banquet. Herschel-Bullen of : Logan. Lo-gan. . vice president, will . be in charge of the iafternoon meeting. . Art Mnteresting program of - interest in-terest to, all real estate men will be carried out. Entertainment for the ladies has t been provided as well. , -V' r - Jl- , , City -Commissioner Jesse Haws of Provo is one .v of vthe judges at the . f' Realtors querio," j a Vquizz contest at "thevening . banquet . i V ArinounceCOpening1 ,;of Pr oyo Community v rximar ' Nelson 'director1 of Ptcv'o's new Community art gallery is gallery in the public library ,SundayaXternoon. .; t CRASHES IN UTAH KILL THREE MORE Ca 1 i f o r n i Couple r Sevier ... County 1 Youth Die . SALT LAKE CITY,ug. 25 (U.R)--Tliree ; more ; victims today had been7 added : to Utah's 1939 : traffic death toll, bringing .it to 91 since Jan. 1. By f Aug, 25; 1938 there had been 127Utiahf highway fatalities.-. : X; : ' The latest victims were Mr., and Mrs. Walter J. Mills, Santa Maria, Calif., , and William vV. Cowley, Venice; Utah.' . Fatally Injured" Vv ' ' Mr. andj Mrs. ..Mills were, fatally injured when their. automobile plunged from the highway east of Disco, Utah, and . tolled over into a dry wash. Mrs. Millsr died instantly. in-stantly. Mills was taken to a .Grand Junction; Colo., hospital, and succumbed several hours laten Mrs. Joe Cox, Cedarwood, Colo., a. third ! occupant- tfihe. car, is in serious.-, condition In .the . Grand Junction hospital. , VThe Mills car careened off the. 1 wheel. Highway officers said the f A. - I 1 . AAA- .4 1 car iraveieu ouu lecu ttioiis . ur-rowpif ur-rowpif which parallels the road before dropping- into the wash.'r v Joseph Maxwell,. Salt Lake City salesman; discovered the crash in the remote desert country t and helped drag the injured .from the demolished" car. . ... , - , i; J- V; Cowley, 18, wai'; "crushed when his - car .-ent .out., of antrol - and overturned a mile from his Venice home. 1 His body was found pinned pin-ned s under - the machine after a searching party" had been organized- by his father, Ray, Cowley, who became alarmed when his eon had not returned at 2 a." m." Thursday.' Thurs-day.' v - T High to Hold Pre-School Dance A pre-s,chool dancefor 'he B Y.vs high school ; studentsWill be held FridaySept1. in 'the .Women's .Wo-men's ' gymnasium. All former, as well as present , students are invited in-vited to attend, ' according to Norman Nor-man Parker,' student body "president. "pres-ident. - -VK' ' " , ':. I ' :-'. , . . . x- - . y i full I iiiii'i.uj!iiJU.I V S " " """" ' 1 ' CHERBOURG; FranceAug. 25 (U.R) Naval authorities issued an order-tonight forbidding airships" except French warships, to come ,wij,hin six miles, of theNorth Cptentin coast at night, underpain of -, being shelled '. BERLIN, Aug. 25 (U.R) The German News Agency an nounced that Polish. destroyer outside of Polish territorial waters had fired on a7 German v. X . WARSAW, Aug.;25 U.R)Polish official quarters here denied; tonight German reports' that Polish troops' were concentrated con-centrated and ready to start7an offensive in Upper Silesia. . - '' ' IX- . - t . -. n - PARIS, Aug. j 25. (U.R) -"Adolif Hitler was reported in authoritative sources tonight to have told the British French and Japanesee ambassadors that hi patience was almost exhausted ex-hausted 'by the alleged proybcati on & of Poland.' : -1 v. t '' BERLIN, Aug. 25 (U.R) All German newspaper men ex cept one official News Agency representative, have .left Poland, Po-land, it was announced tonight. . '- ; PARIS, Aug. 25 (li.R) The semi-official Radio Agency announced tonight that the . which failed to negotiate a mutual aid pact with Russia, had left'Moscowxfor home. ThreeSikiis. Pending gidinstEp Attorneys rerjresentlncr Provo city will have plenty to do during the next two weeks, defending the power plant:-cbnstruct5on-rl: three different suits; Saturday' they1 "Willi ; appear Bef ore' the federal district court at Salt Lake City to : . ; ..' .-v." ' r ' nliAiir ncA xirVr A - tornnnrQ rtf tn junction to half- furlier pendf- r.,j th. .MFM?nmi. ect should not be granted. Utah Power and Light company, is the plaintiff. - . '-... . One Hearing Monday ' r . Furtherhearing" on the suit instituted in-stituted by a group of Provo citi zens in ; Fourth ; district court here has been tentatively, set for Mqif day1 by Judge - Dallas. H. .Young; On August 1 the judge, sustained the demiirrer of the. city officials, in. the caseNbut since "that time the plaintiff iizens : have filed an; amended 1 complaint, the city officials 'an answer and demurrer, and the. citizens a 'reply to the citjr's answer: ; ,N - V On September.7 the city offi- 1 i -', it t . displaying one -of the posters announcing the opening of the new . - . . ;'.-.. X " ,". ,.X 1 "X seaplane. v.-. British and French ' missions wer cials again must appearin distH court, this time to show cause Why a, permanent injunction should not be issued agairTst them, restraining, them from constructing construct-ing a municipal plant at Seventh North and ' Third ".West streets. The suit was filed Thursday K by Frances M. Gee, owner of proper l LVnJ!El t Groneman ,; company ; also-; ' are named defendants. " The order was signed by . Judge Young and served on the city of ficiais by. Deputy Sheriff George Loveless. George W. Worthenf iled the complaint for Mrs.1 Gee. An answer, to the UtaJrPower and tijonunuea onfage six) .; Art ' Plant yjc . 1L, KN il llill PITGtl Hitler's WorH On War . Or Peace, Awaited '-y By England ; : : Bulletin: BERLIN,-Aug. 25 (U.R) ST e 1 e phone communications with all foreign and -i Europ- ean capitals were cut of fto- nightat 9:45 o'clock. Bv JOE ALEX MORRIS United Press IForelgii rNeuirlSdltor . Adolf Hitlerswordon war orpeace in Eurprje was believed be-lieved delivered'ionTght at almost al-most thesame hourvGreat Britain signed a;far-reaching treaty- vithv Poland defying the, Nazi ' Fuehrer demands fora free hand n , Eastern EurdpeX ..-., . . . X Hitler's Vviews," given toj the British ; ambassador in a secret conference at Berlin, also under-' stood to", have -been attended by the French and Japanese ambassadors, ambassa-dors, was believed td be so important im-portant that it could not be trusted trust-ed to ordinary transmission routes. Dash To London y : ' . Sir ' Neville Henderson,; British ambassador, arranged - to " dash "to London- .tomorrow by plane . for what- the foreign office, said was a report to Viscount Halifax, but which was believed to be for the purpose of relating the views expressed ex-pressed by the Nazi fuehrer,- ' i ' . : Whether Hitler gave the ambassadors ambas-sadors an actual message or merely mere-ly outlined Germany's-plans ' for. J" (Continued on Page Six) X SEVEN KILLED ifl COLLISII AN ANGELO, Tex.; Aug. 25 OIESeyen ' 'persona . were . killed and three , Injured " seriously when a truck and an automobile col lided riear Texon. V- The dead: M. ECokek 34, Of Crane, Tex.; Gayle Boyntbn, 34, of Goldsmith,' Tex", t Mrs. Boyntori, 32; Mrs: W. L. Thompson, 30of Goldsmith: Mrs: Thompsons t daughters; Jackie andL Jerry, about 6 or 7 years old; Cahy O'Neal, o,; tieiion, -iex. - .' - j ' i' ' ' BORNX - y , Girl td E. Harold and Bessie Harding Henrlchsen ofSalt Lake City, formerly, of Provo, Clloly Cross hospital, Wednesday even- mg. Girl, to Thomas V.;. and . Lucy Shelly ReynoldsCrane Maternity, Thiirsriav. X . . ' Hiller-Valter Wv and . Audreyi Jackson Hiiier, gin, .crane Matetv nity; Thursday.' "' ; '. y y Stark Frank G. and Freda Rasmussen 'Stark; ;girirXcrane maternity, Wednesday. r y '. LICENSED TO MARRY, ' . . 4 Dean Elwood Paxman Spring-ville, Spring-ville, . and' Bemice ' Pierce, 21, Roosevelt,' . marrlec uy county clerk,' XX r " --:l1 Baseball Today St V r AMERICAN LEAGUE First game.- . 1 - y;,j New York- ...501 202 01 - St. Louis ; .x. ; .-. . ooo. ooo oo X Sundra and Rosar; Kennedy, Trotter Trot-ter x-(l) Harshany. Homeruni Gordon, New York. . Washington i . 1 . 010 000 '. Detroit s 031 000 . " Haynes and Ferrell; Newsom and Tebbetts. ' ' . X . ' ; Boston , . . H: v. . 000 OlO ' Chicago .'. 200 000 - Grove and Desautels; Knott and Schlueter. . Home . run: Vosmlk, Boston. ' " , . ' PhiladelphiaX1 . .'. JOOO 000 000 0 Cleveland ' .;. . . 300 010 llx 6 Nelson and Hayes; Eisenstat and Henmsley. Home I ; run : Trosky, Cleveland. : ' f .. NATIONAL LEAGUE . Chicago at Boston, postponed, rain Pittsburgh at New ' York, postponed, post-poned, rain. . . ..... z . , Only games' scheduled. - IN EUROPE : ' . A Victor and vanquished Hn the diplomatic little forHuH.sian kup-port kup-port 'meet in amiable moooV, But thatWas efore Germany . agreed with 'Russia on non-aggression. The picture shows , arch-diplomat von Ribbentixrt?,. Nazi Foreignlinister v welcoming prime . Minister Chamberlain' to the fateful M unic h conference. - . ,A Flashes f rom . BERLIN Hitler in attack; -deny receiving. Roosevelt's at uerman v airuner; : , . ' WASHINGTON Roosevelt messages Hitler and Moscicklurg-ing Moscicklurg-ing direct negotiations arbitration o mediation; has hope wr may be averted. . X. . " ' X . .- ' - LONDON- British : take faint ."hope" - from " Roosevelt message merchant Bhipa commandeered, fleet at battle stations ; ptowds si in streets dollar-sterlhae- jtradirig suspended; bomb shelter ready for, royal family. - X 7 ' K-'': PARIS--War factoriesXand personnels equisiUonedj DklaUipr' plans emergency cabinet changes, swamp railways.. ' WARSAW -Women and menNdig air raid trenches; polish army lalieved to be fully mobilized; profit' to Gernianax alleged violation of polish territory. v - ' 1 . , MOSCOW Supreme Soviet counclncallcd for Monday; Jlolotov, .to;, explain ."treaty. - y " - . V 'v : - L ALIG Q ?rjn3 nttilnln , rsl;ipA4.rYvxsiixUci;; qui c t and closed; reported two Polish soldiers shot and killed by Danzig guards; , OTTAWA Canada to mobilize I trade and Kidustry for self defense de-fense and aid to Britain, i. . . X r STOCKHOLM War crisis refugees, many . Americans. ruili to jsweaen. - - v , ..UJSNlsyA British Jews drop Palestine policy, rush home tor fight for her If war comei planned." -. y -4 '- JERUSALEM Hundreds ""of on.-move:-f ''-X :, , TOI-YO Japanese, denounces ?KTi St'f THE HAGUE Emergency Mnllarirl molntoln l.tiitui BUCH AREST-XKlng Carol II Understood' to ; havs decided Rumania Ru-mania will remain neutral In . event of war, provided Rumanian territory ter-ritory is not7 attacked. . . X-. - - (CANBERRA Australia accumulates lare-e stocks of food beimf stored. t' , ; - y 1 CATRCH-Brltish ; military authorities ; take. widespread precau- uonstnrougnoui iugypi;. unuerstooa ROMErNewspapers Include :h are "undivided; in their; newspapers said, was Germany, againsKGreat Britain, the United L DV. Mission :SerW SALT LAKE CITY.Auq-. 2ri'(U.R)Mo,ri . JD. S. missionaiieshave ,the;rr. rjosts in Germanv. empbrary refugein general authorities . was''"descrlbed as. a. precautionary measure In line with church policy not to endanger en-danger the health of Nits foreign workers- X' The evacuation from Germany; France 7 and England will b in charge of Joseph Fieldingl Smith, member of the. Council of Twelve Apostles -now tourings Europe. The affected missionaries will besent to Norway; Sweden, Denmark jjnd the.- Netherlands ! temporarily. Later. ' they v probably will be returned re-turned 1 to the. United States to complete : their missions. " I'Jallsburg Plans ur'iey Day;8Don WALLS BURG Wasatch coun ty's "(Second, annual .Turkey ' day will - be held here7 Saturday, with entertainment .scheduled all afternoon after-noon and evening," announces Mrs. Mae Fordv president of the fete-X .' Mrs.' Ford Invites everyone to attend, and assures an outstanding outstand-ing 5 celebration. A program Is slated at 2 p. m., after which hundreds hun-dreds of turkey sandwiches will be given away. ; i f : ., Otherjevents Nwill include ia concert con-cert by "the Wasatch county band, softball game and rcdeo In' the afternoon and a climactic dance in the evening." ; Prizes . will be awarded at the clance, according to Mrs. Ford. - L .A world capitals war cquncil; Nazis say polish army eager to peace" appeel; charges Polish fire ' speaks to nation tonight; .troopa . ; - - - .league . protests against British . -" -; . .- ; -y-:'1. - ..m German Nazis flee; British troops ; , ;- ... f' -. - ; ; Russian-German treaty,, will iact cabinet ahake-un manned Ilxpect nin1lt. l . i mat in. event of war a military Russia in alist f five powers Ideology." The Xolitlcal iineu! the 'Russia Italy. Jafian and Kmin States, France and il'ol.md. ries To Leave been'orflpi-ovl tflvnrii'X . PVanop nTir.Rnfrinn,i . "neutral" countries. .' IRISH JILAMEU- FOlIlXifJsVc) JVBRO WNG ATE, Coventry, England, Eng-land, Aug. 2,5 (U.R) A heavy explosion ex-plosion attributed by police to Irish Republican army- terrorists, .occurred here, today ' X ;AUNT IIET y - "They'll mss on lier bwauso hhc'a a woman, Lut I tell you al!g- liard wvnian with" the meanness of hell Ltt her Is more daiigerom than three men." ' dxx li T X " ufjE: |