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Show -PR0V.0 (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 1939 page Fiyn . IV 1- X I a asmnfrcoa r.Isrry-Go-Rcimd (Continued From Pae One) collapse, of private economic enterprise en-terprise there. As a matter of fact, private enterprise has almost g-one already , in Germany and Italy, and entirely in Russia. Private Pri-vate economic enterprise is a luxury in this age of super-nationalistic powers. . ; " - ; . I SOVIET REVOLUTION : -"The Russian revolution .set in motion , forces ' and . Influences that are sweeping the world. In the '20s, l Italy went. Fascist: in the 30s, Germany went Nazi. Suppose Sup-pose all of Europe shifts from a system of free private enterprise - to these other systems. This is certain if there is a War, and, it - ' . may happen anyway. ' X - . - . "The United States could not escape the effects of such a . change, either politically, socially , ' :. or. economically. We would be confronted con-fronted with a titanic ' war of - ideas, f We have millions of dis-, dis-, X possessed, Jobless ; and hopeless -people. They would be easy prey ( 'to the illusions and promises of , 'these nationalistic systems. Look V what happened in Italy and Ger-. Ger-. X many. ' ,- y - v ; - 'lirl - "We have to put , our house in ordeiyto, meet the ataack of these . foirtfnsystems.We have got td give our peoplea-stake - in; our systvin of free economic enterprise so they will be willing, to defend ' it and fight for it; ,We must pre- pare to meet 1 the great test that is approaching. , y - X' "That is hywe can't sit down Tand fold our hands and take things -. casy. To do that is to invite cer- - . s tain . destruction of vthe .liberties X-X'we cherish. If we want std pre J . 'serve Americanism aSj we know " V" it arid want it, we have.'got to take ' -pTotectiye measures now. Stand-X Stand-X ing still or turning back the clock XX- won't do." ' ".- 1- -1 WAJR. CONFERENCES r - ' The secret conferences being -held at the state department with the. vhead3 of different government bureaus deal chiefly with soften- - ing the effect of 'war upon the United States. when it-breaks in Europe. .- .- ' . ' .'': : ' One important plan is to protect pro-tect U. S. "stock exchanges from the immediate withdrawal of European Eu-ropean , cash, r which would send stock and bond quotations to record rec-ord lowsy-To , offset this, stock exchanges will be- closed immediately immedi-ately irt case of war. : . . - Another important question is the movement of U.JVnaval vessels, ves-sels, hovmany ships' to send fur-' : ther into the pacific; "and how many to leave around the Panama Canal and TJ.ys. islands in the Caribbean. V1 :-'rU ' X; . The navy probably will send y ships" immediately to stand jfuard over Be-muda,Xthc, Bahamas, Jamaica, the.-French , and JBritish West -Indies-not for the 'purpose vf helping-' the French and British, butto prevent Italiin and German Ger-man 'bases ''from being established on any of these," islands. ;X ",; In- the event of war, the president presi-dent expects to Call congress with-in with-in six weeks, or less, to ask for revision' of the neutrality law" to 'permit, among other things, the shipment of airplanes to .France and Great Britain-. ' I:".- . K MERRY-GO-ROUND I . Colonel 1x3 ui 3 Johnson, slave-driving'assistant slave-driving'assistant secretary of war, has done so well' his job of plan.-ning plan.-ning for. the mobilization of industry indus-try in wartime -that very" little work remains. The plan should click into, action almost automatically. automati-cally. . Whether right or wrong,- -the British are not, , particularly worried about- submarines '-this time.- They place great confidence -S ?e1LSU?,a5rine fdete,ctors irt IM & X Will W J V W shipment will be. far more worYi-eome. worYi-eome. ... Diplomatic dispatches received here report ' thatHitler is placing, chief reliance on the . war advice of General Goering, who tells him -Britainand France can be broughtyto " their kneeV:by quick, air. raids. lie alsoadytses that ..the , Germatc air ' f orce could sink the Brith merch&Cfleet, ... War department . surveys show thatthe-vneed .Af sklled mechanics'm the event or war will "be' the chiefproblem - facings t-he United-Estates. . - ' ' - . . C. !f T ARGENTINE TREATY -. f ; r . 1 f" Most important . trade treaty negotiation as far as the West is - concerned has just been announced . . by the state department - the pact-with Argentina - - ; . 'The tariff .schedules" to "J be imposed im-posed under this , new-'treaty are supposed to be secret until all U. S ' interests have been " heard, y Ac-i ' tually,- however, . they ; are fixed .pretty well in-advance, and from inside sources it can be stated that the Argentine, treaty will include in-clude the following- general tariff reductions on farm products: y: The tariff on flaxseed -will be reduced in favor y of Argentina yfrom 65 cents a. buhel to 32 v cents! This 'is the maximum re- A Ep.flIIHlM(G V v Any Size Roll -'-x DEVELOPED and PRINTED for 35c X and vice-a-Day Service x; 4 . 10 Discount on Eastman Film TTTT!T7T7nTTT!T(C1,7rl TTMTTTTni He Sews Up Russ 5 yi x I- if; 1 i Handling the ' Nazi-Russian nonaggression treaty, which has tossed the world into greater, turmoil was the latest mission. of Joachim von Ribben-trop. Ribben-trop. German foreign minister. "Radiophokx-shows him at German airport air-port ready to fly to Moscow, and is resporiding to the cheers of an en- ; ' . - i I t thusiastic German crowd. - v ; . '. : l- . : . )- duction permitted - by - congress, and - Will hit Dakota and 'Minnesota 'Minne-sota farmers. It Is to be granted because' the XTnited States already imports . more 'than j half its flaxseed' flax-seed' from abroad. - t . Canned beef will be reduced from' the present cents a pound duty probably to 4 or 4 cents. This is the famousf product that- the president praised as "infinitely superior", to U. S. canned beef.In order; to , win tariff reduction "in the face of domestic opposition, it may - be necessary to impose a quota! Imports in the past three yearsYhave reached 30 and 40 million mil-lion pounds a year. j y There will be a tariff reduction on , Argentine corn, but this , also will be restricted by quotas. ' And the tariff will be graduated be-? tween the present 25 cents a" bushel bush-el and 121 cents, the higher tariff applying when imports are crowding crowd-ing in fast. '. " - t , (Copyright, 1939, by United ? Feature Syndicate, Inc.) . X Position Offered To Era-r.Iarldiani A former Spanish Forker- and graduate of BrighamYoung versity.vlra J. Markham, instruc tor inythep department - of- bust ness-'- administration at -Weber college, Vias been offered -the post of ; deparlmentdiTector-. for - Utah by : Joseph DeBrum; of thex de partment of i husiness education, National ; Educauon association Markiiam: participated in the associatioa:--convention: , in. '"jSan Francisco . July-' . 3yr.liirecting round -table discussions, dQring the departmentar . sessions ;r"The" positioTK entails direction of ; membership activities 'in ' the state, servhtg as special reporter for the publication, "National Business Education News,"4 and ma king of -.suggestions Xto the president v and executire X;omniit-tcebri, X;omniit-tcebri, the department's .service program. - .- : .:;'.X . . -r. V Before ioinine1 the ;Wehr teaching stiff, Markham I spent nine .years in-'-business--in ' New, York City, where he rtook ' his master's degree at New 'York uni versity. " 1 . i I' 'Y ' Man Slated For Convention Talk ' Drl Thomas L. Mftiri,;deah of the ; Brigham ' Young university college of applied science; will be a speaker at the ' third International; Interna-tional; Congress for Microbiology which will . be held in New York City from September 2 to 9, according ac-cording to the program ' of the conference just released.' ' Title of the .paper which Dr.' Martin will give is "TheAlgal Population- of . the :"SoiyXwhich will be part' of a panel von soil microbiology in Section VIII "of "the congress." XDiscussion .leader of the panel will be Sir John Russell Rus-sell of Harpenden, England. Scientists Sci-entists who will bepresentx'come from all parts, of , the world. . :'" XAt the; present iime,wDr. Martin is in Washington- D. C, in the course of an extended tour.';. He will bev in New York in time for the opening of the conference next Saturday. - . - '. .-'Xi 1 in M.UMJII - Nazi Peace Pact .1 r, Gattle Auction if It Spanish Fork SPANISH FORK Preperations are complete for what promises tq' be ..the most outstanding -livestock auction sale that has taken place in Spanish Fork, which is to be held here at the livestock barns Saturday Sept. 9, v With i ; Frank Coffey, auctioneer.' Mayor. R. CJ Swalberg . and the Spanish ; Fork City - officials have directed ' the construction -of the finest auction livestock sale coliseum in - the Ves-Tho. barns will) be arranged so thatall livestock hnndled dur ing Auction sale ..'Will be confined Under one roof, in order that sales; . may . , be . carried out in" all "kinds of weather. The finest arrangements arrange-ments ,and equinnient for handling and weighing' all ' livestock - has been installed to meetthe de- jnands or botn buyer and .seller. "TRaih-6ad facilities tor shipment by rail to and fronythe sale barns have been constructed at -the live- Lslock - show grounds. ' All neces- cdi v euuiuiuuut iui iiiiiiuixiiu live- Stock by. tnttu. f hayeybeen', made DOssibIe.r - " The new coliseumwill 'be eqifip- ted with an amphitheater with uni-Veapng1 capacity of 500 persons This amphitheater-will "be heated Iduring-the cold vfeather. ' " ; - The first sale- will' have : ap proximately y500anim'als, including stocker , cattle, fat cattte, feeder cattle, and f a - and feeder hogs as . wel ;! las other kinds ' of live stock, rl j'.'n - .The sale, is under the" direction of .-Alex Patterson., one of the out standing commission . merchants of - the ,'intermountin territory The opening sale is scheduled for Spot 9 at 9 a. m. . . r - -. . - - - . ! ' - Connected with this, auction sale but not a part of it, ! will ; be a horse sale to be held .Friday,'.- Sept. 29, at the Livestock showgrounds with Frank Coffey auctioneer; It is -planned to' hold the auction sale3 each ; Saturday y during -the fall and : winter months. Youth Injured In HighyaysAcciderit AMERICAN FORK In a two- car- collision between Pleasant Grove - and American Fork-early Sunday morning .Raymond ,Niel sen,- 21, son of Mrs. MartinNiel sen v of . American Fork, 1 suffered cutaiand bruises about the - face Driving -on : the state ' : highway jat -3 :55 a. ' .m., his . automobile crashed into a car driven by Byron Orton, . IS, of Lehl,' it was report-edyXTljey'Nielsen report-edyXTljey'Nielsen car landed on the Uhionx Pacific railroad .track, making; Hxriecessary,, to flag a (rain .while the car was removed. - : i, MetaiPrices NEW, YORK, AugX28x tf.l!) - Todayrs custom ' smelters v prices for delivered metals cents per pound): . . " . . ' x Copper: Electrolytic lO; ex port 10:50-10.70 (dolldr basis). Casting fob, ' refinery 9.87 tt: lake, delivered 10 5-8. yX Tin; Spot Straits 47, nominal. Lead: New York' 5.05-.10; , East St. Louis 4.90. - ; Zinc: New York 5.14 J -East.Sti Louis 4.75. v - U. S. TAXES TOTAL - WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 lin The treasury estimated today that federal, state and local tax collections represented $114.09 for each man, woman and child in the country during the 1938 fiscal year. .v Total tax collections ' in that year amounted to $14,811,000,000, or 21.8 per cent of the average of the estimated national income for' calendar years 1937 and 1938. J.IRS. EVA GILLESPIE Reporter Phone 010-J-2 j - Mr, and Mrs. Wilford R. Stubhs spent Friday in. Salt Lake with their - brother, Albert. Stubbs of Boulder City, Nevada, who is at the L. ' P. , S. hospital if ollowing a serious accident while . fishing on Lake Mead. He was with friends on the .'ake Vhen one , of the fish ooks in being throvTi Etruck him in the eye and lodged there. They immediately started i for help but had motor . trouble and , he was forced to remain on the lake for fourteen hours with the hook lodged in the eye. .He was immediately rushed to the hospital in Salt Lake and" every effort will be made to save his eye. . ; , .. -.-yy Mrs, Ella Bailey Reed of Park City, a former Edgemont resident, resi-dent, visited with Mrs.. Margaret Pulsipher this week. , T y " Miss Rowena Clinger of Salt Lake is visiting here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, ' Rowe . E. Clinger,;. ,r r;y:. -'cT':' Mark Bigler, who has spent the past year working ini Nevada and Colorado, is visiting here with his mother, Mrs. Flora H. Bigler. 'Mr and Mrs. Albert Conrad; Mr.- and Mrs. Roy Pehrod, ' 'Mr. and Mrs. Wilford R. Stubbs and children and Mr. and". Mrs. Stanley Stan-ley Stubbs and children attend-, ed the . Penrod Family , reunion held at Luke's Hotpots at Midway Mid-way on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad are attending the family temple excursion in ' Salt Laketlo-3ay. Laketlo-3ay. 7 . Mr. and Mrs. "John Allen and two, daughters, Vadaand Jane of Fillmore, visited 1 withMrs. Margaret Pulsipher the "fore part of the weekland ; also- aLlhe B, Yi . U. where Miss' Vada is plan- mng to attend this season. V The following Y. W. M. I. A', officers were released' at 'sacrament 'sacra-ment meeting with a vote of thanks f or their fine work in the past: iMiss Lorna Mecham, , coun selor, ' Mrs. Bernice . Stubbs, sec retary and- Mrs. ' Berths '. Salisbury, Salis-bury, junior classleader. The fol- - . . -v y. , Will Be ' f X x 'x . - yf - A -x-y-'-, - ' . . -' -' - .x X . ; , . i w XXbli " I Xx.i titttV ; :- ! ', yxJ lxnvsBmte - . ; r r . 2 If vou ans wered; Yes to tsotn You naturally : want- automatic heat and ' you-know; that Gas heat is automatic in every! sense of the. word. s ; sXlt requires' no Work on your part at alL For.clean-r nessana convenience, n is m a ciass uy useii. ' x:: Toimay.howevery think it .costs more thari' any' othervmethodXlf vouidn't think-so you'd have had Gas heat loner aero, wouldn't you? (We find people" install Gas heat as soon as. they learn the facts. about its cost) t -xx; y .. v - L.X v .I '-XX ' uas is the only fuel that can be used fopthe .y xXh old jobs-r-heatinp;, cookmpr, . water-heating, and re- ; '"x-f rilreration. When yourxGas bill is bills; iiKpne, covering the cost of cookiiie;, . vx ; ing and ref rigeration as well as house-heating. . .A X" X X . XX X . ' X X-v - XxX-. -. X j V ' " : :X" . -x V x: - Christian Science Church "Christ , Jesus" was the soibject of the lesson-sermon in First Church of Christ, Scientiston Sunday,. Sun-day,. August 27. ' The Golden Text was: "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among- us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father), full of grace and truth" (John 1:14.) Among the scriptural selections was' the" following: "The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me; because be-cause the Lord hath anointed . me to preach "good tidings unto "the meek; he hath sent me to bind up the j broken-hearted, . to proclaim pro-claim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound" (Isaiah 61:1). Correlative readings included the following; from "Science . and Health with Key to ' the Scrip-tures?by Scrip-tures?by Mary Baker Eddy: "Jesus established his church and maintained main-tained his mission - on' a spiritual foundation of Christ-healing. .He taught his. followers that his religion re-ligion had a divine principle, which would cast out error ancV heal both the sick and theu sinning. He claimed no intelligencesaction, nur life separate 'from GodV(p lowing-young ladies were sustained sustain-ed to take their places, Miss Wil-ma Wil-ma Wiscomb, counselor to ' Pres. Effie Pinegar, ' Mary, Gillespie, secretary and Mrs. Ellen Bellows Bel-lows and a Mrs. Glena Ivers as classleaders:xMrs. Olea Schuman. played organ nusic andMr. and Mrs. Jas.; E. Pinegar gave 'some of the interesting : experiences of their recentxtrip east, Mrs. Pine-' gar telling of the sacred pageant held at the; -HilKCumorah at.;Pal-H1y and. Don 'Albert Conrad were on-firmed on-firmed after their baptism inthe afternoon interested . ' sr ' r X' FOUR, BILLS IN ONE vx y x y- vou use Gas forthese four not just' a heating ?bill.J It's . S'n Xfnr'.ramTilp. when Tom, Xriot use Gas his fuel , bills are less thah Dick's . each .winter, remem ber that . other ; bills water-heating and re- frigerationbillsy Add;" 135 west center di. . . -. . SERVING. TWENTY-THRE. JflPfltJ JQ IfiiUE-.' I!E17 OAOItlET By II. O. THOMPSON United ' " Press Correspondent . TOKYO, Aug.'2S (HK.'w-The J emperor em-peror summoned Gen. Nobuyuk-iabe Nobuyuk-iabe today, presumably to ask him to x form a cabinet irt succession to that of Baron Kichiro Hiranuma which resigned because of the change of policy' necessitated by the Soviet-German non-aggression pact. '','-', Gen. Abe was formerly vice-minister-of war. He i3 generally believed to favor closer- cooperation cooper-ation between Japan andx third powers, particularly "the United States and Great Britain. . In the midst of the cabinet change, ' heavy fighting, between Japanese and Russian . forces ' was reported on the Manchukuo-outer Mongolian frontier, x ' ' It was ' asserted ' 5,000 Russian troops had- crossed the Khalka river on . the frontier .-and H that Japanese troops were attempting to encircle them. Dispatches said the biggest artillery . duel . since border clashes' started was how in progress. ' . ; Japanese dispatches t asserted that 130 Russian tanks and" 19 Russian planes had been destroyed by Japanese gunners.. . . -' The seriousness with which Japanese viewed the situation - re sulting from the NazisrCommunIst pactwas apparent. 1 . x OF THANKS V x We desire to express our sincere appreciation anoy thanks to all who so kindly, assisted us during the illness and death of our beloved mother, Mrs.- Ada Pelkey Johnson. We" especially desire tothank the Relief society ladies whoXso kind assisted us;, also-fthe speakers lyv music and ' beautiful floralxof-ferlngs. floralxof-ferlngs. ' ' , , - , THE FAMILY,'. CARD' in these t facts r. ' ' x - N.y ' tnose otnc ahythincr I Si that most quanity of four house-. for all four services. really four water - heat - ' vantage 01 ' i; 1 x Gas ; furnace.XXPay just asmall deposit then' ' - convenient who does says that X GasJbills m onthlyy payments. Comein and talk it. oyer before Tom: ha 7 der any fuel cooking, ing equipment. ' If- 135 West Phone f v. UTAH ' y, : 'X- xx ". x 'x- ' . . x" , .;- xy-:x. x . ' . . ,VX'-'X- . f hone oZU x S , y . . :-y . . ' , ' ,' Chemistry ManTp Attend Convention .'Dr. Hugh W. Peterson, assistant professor of, chemistry at Brig ham Young univei-sity, will leave Monday Mon-day to attend the convention of the American Chemical society at j. " During his four-weeksy&tay in the ekst, Dr., Peterson will also investigate chemical industrial work- in the interests of the L. D. S. church welfare program. Since industrial chemistry and chemical engineering have been Dr. Peterson's Peter-son's major studies, he was selected se-lected by the church welfare com mittee of Sharon stake three years ago, to aid in developing a lime-sulphur lime-sulphur spray for. control of fruit pests.- i. '. -v ; , The B. YytT. professor will return re-turn in time for; the opening of autumn, quarter, September, 26. Wasatch Tax Levy a Serat-27v Mills HEBER Tax levies for Was atcli countyunits have been set at 29.4 , mills for 1939 x as" compared com-pared with 27 mills for xthes;ame purposes in 1938. .-. y In aadition thereWill be special taxes- as follows: State bounty on sheep 'and goats, 5. mills; range horses and cattle, 2 mills p tuberr culosis controiy on all range cat-tle'Xl.J cat-tle'Xl.J mills; Bangsdlsease on all cattle - otherwise' - assessed, S mills. N.' 'N Siv , - ' ' ' ' CrariiumxAnswers xQueslons OriNpage Two :-v liCJounCianoA Italian foreign minister.'- . .Xl" X 2. Sophie TickerXpresldentrof the American federation os ' Ac tors. 3. -Gdynia Polls 'seaport" ndwj being fortified ' 4 Gariin. -Nevada'.- scene.: of streamliner train wreck. questions yo u v- yV-- -, X Wis ih,and see- if Tom is T" . '.'XX x . .x yAs' a matter dl fact, man v usersof service pay Jess;pBr "year for house heating, cooking, : water heatin or and ref riEreration than families ofyfiim- ilar. size living incimilar houseshave X THE COSfGOES DOWN7 , . X -xx ( ; ,, ., - Xx X- r ' . . i : One of thereasons fprthi& is thatGas gives you the benefit of a progressively lowet iate based on .the , Gas used. It's economical puipbses The moreGas you . Mayepu'fe paying forGasj heat without having it. . Wenowmake it easyxf or you to have. it. Take ad- xne xuy onxa new y- rxv n m' i x-. j ux x i'x ,XXC3GAT( ' . youxpr- or heat Center St. 820 COMMUNITIES -" . ... . x - : V ' X., XX ; X ", ;. . X' , fiRT GflLLEPiY ope!i;ig :: Fcaiurjng pnilntins, wivlptur-' ings, etchings, .ntnograpns ana block prints, Pr'ovo's conimunity art gallery in the new public library li-brary was officially opened Sunday, Sun-day, and scored;; heavily -with the hundreds whoattehded;' ' - xyi x Dedicated to . serveyjvs a background back-ground for all things cultural aris-ing;in aris-ing;in the community, the gallery Is a combined . project of he city commission library board and the federal art unit. ' " - , - 7 It will be open on Mondays, Wednesdays 'and , Saturdays from 1 to. 9 p. m., on Tuesdays, Thursdays Thurs-days and Fridays from 1 to 7 p.,' nr.;'- and on Sundays from 2 :30 to 6:30 p, m. ' ' Housed In nfe spaciouv beauti fully-decorated, basement room in the southeast, corner of the new library, the gallery attracted hun dreds ofart lovers Sunday. Larsen Featured The opening exhibit featured the work of Professor B. F. Lar- sen, head of x the department of' rt at Brigh am: Young university. Two pieces of sculpturing by Mau-riceBrooks Mau-riceBrooks and etchings, lithographs litho-graphs and block prints by artists of the federal art project were also al-so displayed. ! : EJ. Bird, of Salt Lake City, , state director of the federal art,r projectikwas in attendance. It H planned, he said, to change the exhibit every three weeks altcr-nalthg altcr-nalthg a local and federal arts show.. . ' ' . ' ... Defmar Nelsen, Provo, will act slocai director of .the gallery.. v I In addition thousing , the art center, the . southeast ; basement ' room of the library will bemused for meetings of various 'committees 'commit-tees and organizations pf the city, according to Llbirarlafi Mallne , 3. Bandley. Reservations must be made in advance iictuallyx s;wing complete Gas to pay! for' other to use one fuel use the less it' . v X ' ' '. . . '.. X , -fc |