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Show - . O c 0 o 0)1 x I li 1 I ; i il i l . V Y The Weather Ca The Herald It you do not receive your IZtrr, promptly, call Thft Ilcmkl -ff:r 433. before 7 t. m. vr It da vs. t" A UTAH Partly cloudy, tonight and Friday.. Little chance In temperature. temper-ature. Maximum temp. Wednesday. . . 01 Minimum temp- Wednesday ... S3 U LJ L fx1 I0a. m. Sundays, ami a copy v. w uruverfxi to you. FIFTY-FOURTH YEAR, NO. 56 UTAH'S ONLY DAILY SOUTH OP SALT LAKiS PROVO, UTAH COUNTY; UTAH, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1939 OOMVLKTR IT.NITKD TEUSQUAPir NEW3 CEKVICU PRICE FIVE CENTS Z! At 1 1 ,10 4 i ( X V-l) TV ; H- X - X, I i i IX V x x , , y . ml I mi i w , J "P - - Bin K id I - I k .1,1 XVI! I I J I. I S I V - - n v . io(5)-ili).iW S X- YOUTHS HELD GUILTY OF SLAYING' Premier Clainescue Dici Victim of Bullcti From Assassins BUCHAREST, Sept. 21 U.R Two of the asa.ss!ns ot Premier Amand Callneseu -committed suicide by shooting tonlg-ht when surrounded In a mid-town store. Guards cut off their escape. . By FERDINAND C M. JA1VX - "United Pres Correspondent v-- - - r (U.R) Six youthful assassins shot ltl& killed Premier Ar- oi me pro-iNazi-irun uiwiu organization; this af tarnoon ' while he was driving. by auto mobile to the royal palace." , The shooting occurred at 2:16 p. m., when it waa understood that the 46-year-old premier wa3 en-route en-route for an -interviewwith King Carol, whose governnteTit. had sup--pressed the Iron Guard organiza tion on charges of terrorism. . . - ti , - The assassins approached Call- nescu 3 auujinutiiie num uciuhu a. -parked car on a main' street of .Bucharest. - ' " : The premier's automobile apparently appar-ently was blocked for the moment ally by a large truck. Oneof the bullets entered his ch&at on the right side. The other fired squarely at his face en- (Continued on Page Eight) " MERRY f GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of WhatV Going On in National Affairs Br DREW TEARSON afl ROBERT 8. ALLEN American Fleet To Be Shifted To Hawaii As Japanese Get "' Tough Again ;x Ham Fish Bawled Out By Colleagues Abroad For His "War Truce Offer: Isolationists Expect Defeat On Arms Embargo But Won't Filibuster: Fili-buster: Will Aim To' Keep Congress in Session .Longer Than Month WDR Intends. WASHINGTON Naval, circles are keepLng It under their hats for the time being, but the president presi-dent isplanning to move the United tates fleet to Hawaii in the near future. The fleet is now in California, and official reason -for its shift will be the fact that Pearl Harbor is an excellent winter station. Unofficially, however, the move will serve as a client but powerful notlcetoJapan, indirectly also to the dictators of Europe. It will be similar, to the sudden transfer of the fleet from the Atlantic to the Pacafic last spring when the Danzig Dan-zig crisis first began to get hot. : For a week or so after Stalin and Hitler signed their alliance, the Far Eastern situation waa in a state of flux. The alliance was a terrific blow 10 me Japanese, particularly to the "military clique which rules Japan, and it looked a3 if the civilian group might, get the upper hand and follow a more peaceful policy. But now the 'new friendship patched up by Hitler between Japan Ja-pan and Russia have removed any doubt of Japan's future belligerency belliger-ency in China. On top of this, inside reports are that, following their new truce with Russia, Tokyo's militarists vi!l head for the. Dutch East Indies, In-dies, wealthy source of oil, to British Brit-ish Hongkong and perhaps to French Indo-China. With their fleets tied up in Europe, the. French and British will be powerless power-less to head off Japan. This Is (Continued on Page 1, Sec 2) V ICeen o r Cornp Seen " in Pioneer League, : Logan Delegation To Make Strong Bid For " Franchise Sought By Provo; League : - Moguls To Meet On September 29 - Frovo will have Iceen competition, from; a dumber of Utah and Idaho cities in her efforts to land a franchise in the Pioneer baseball league, at, the meeting of the moguls in ocatello, September 29 according to reports. - , Local interests at i the meeting will be represented bj Bob Bullockr president ' of the Utah State Industrial semi-rofesslonal semi-rofesslonal league, as matters stahd at present. Mr. Bullock participated 'in the organization ofthe league last year, and at-that time Provo had the firsts opportunity of landing the fran chise later awarded torBoise. Many Applications . Applications . for franchises have, been placed by a dozen cities in Utah, Idaho, Montana and Nevada, Ne-vada, the strongest contenders appearing ap-pearing tc be Provo, LcTgan, Idaho Falls, Burley, Nampaand Butte. In the event the Pioneer league Is expanded to eight teams, three franchises will "; be awarded, two new , onesf r and one . to , replace Lewiston, which is withdrawing, However,, should, a six - teatnQjnecjngfggtiygj in honor of leasrue be . maintained, only one franchise will be available,- andNit likely, will go to the city , making the -strongest ' bid, according to Mr. Bullock. . - ; t Logan is going after a franchise tooth and toenail, according to re ports drifting from that city,' and moters and civic of finals, headed by Mayor A. G. Lundstrom, plans j to attend the September .29 confab in Pocatello... . . - - ". : ,- ' - ; Field 'marshal' of the ' energetic Logan group Is Henry Laub, chamber- of ' commerce, athletic chairman, who launched action early In 1939 when Logan baseball enthusiasts, e'neouraged by the success of. the new-born Pioneer circuit'. beg-an . agitatingfor al r place, should a rumored expansion materialize. . - : 'VU'X With such competitionrMr. Bullock!, Bul-lock!, states, Provo must , make a determined -appeal' for entry in the Pioneer league or It will - be .. (Continued on Page Eight) - Convicted EJcre A Fourth district .court jury Wednesday afternoon found Robert Rob-ert Gardner, 39, of Provo, guilty of his second drunken driving of- ense an Indictable misdemeanor. juuuwiug it , iwo-uay ueanng. ,-e will be sentenced Saturday at -ID a.; m.' in Judge Abe W. . Turner's court. - ' ( ..' ''. ' '. -Gardneron July 12 had pleaded guilty in city court to his first drunken driving charge, and was arrested the second time byjeity officers July 2S. - . . . ' C .: - Magnus Rosenberg, 25, of Cen-terfield. Cen-terfield. pleaded guilty in city court Thursday to drunken driving driv-ing charges. '. Judge LeRoy Tuckett sentenced him to pay a $100 fine or serve 30 days in the. county jaiL" Rosen bersr was arrested -, by Deputies William' T. Lewis and Arthur Winters following an accident acci-dent on highway 89 at Thistle Wednesday at 6 p. m. According to Deputy Lewis, his car struck the guard rail as he at tempted to negotiate a ccurve, and tipped over, taking out three rails, War!' 11 noN tONDOff , MONDAY niSONAJL DrunkeiuDriuers rasoNAL . '" ;. -. ' ' ' ..-'-J x .. On Monday, Sept. 4, the day after London Times appeared as pictured .the tpp of the page to classified ads, etitiori ran cmse .; EUREKA READY TO CELEBRATE Eurekawill' be host to hundreds of visitors ' Friday and Saturday during one of the greatest celebrations cele-brations ever staged there. , ' Tho oocnslon : is. a -'mftnimoth completion of the hard-surfacing of highway No. 6 to Eureka. " y. , Rodeo, carnival, dance and-Other festive events will comprise the celebration, v states - P. J. J Fennell, chairman . of the arrangements committee..' ' ' -A Mr. Fennell extends an In vita tlon to everyontUo-attend, and assures 'two v big days of enter- will, be inspection, of :theTlntic mines. yY ,1-:.-:'- -' ; R. A. Hart, of the public , relations rela-tions department j of ; th&ulenver and Rio Grande railroad has been asked to bring' the. company's miniature engine " and strain to Eureka . for j the celebration. : ' RADIO STATION OPEMS TONIGHT .x Inaugurating radio j broadcasting broadcast-ing in Provo, KOVO,, voice of central cen-tral Utah, was scheduled to begin broadcasting from Jts studios, 108 West Center, at 5 p. m. today. -However, the radio station will open officially at 7:30 p. m. when from College hall at Brlgham Young university It broadcasts its Srand inaugural program. KOVO invites . every- citizen of central Utah to the special program pro-gram at College hau, according tj Arch L. Madsen, manager, who will act as master of ceremonies. . The program will ' feature outstanding out-standing musical talent from this area, and will bring to the microphone micro-phone 7 dignitaries from many parts of the state, : including the mayors of Utah county communities.- - ; v . v ' -Clifton A. Tolboe of Provo is owner.and builder of , the KOVO. W . ' . . - T . FIND GERMAN PLOT IN RUMANIA v A BUCHAREST,' Sept: 21 (UE)-Reports (UE)-Reports received today said that Rumanian police at Cernauti had raided the "German house", there and found material outlining outlin-ing the attitude' which German residents were to take in event German troops : should - arrive 'at' the Polish-Rumanian frontier, a s'hort distance" away, Whispers the Thunderer 5viX3aK nr iTT TT ) ff57TEMBE 4 lf3 KMrxcrscr adomsses J M lb. . 1 tVBt,idSns Great Britain declared- war on Germany, the front page of the above. The Times, popularly known as "the Thunderer," devoted with the war announced in three words of small type in. the upper right, hand corner. " - . Nazi Wounded 4 V 1' i t At Stettin, Germany, two Nazi r - y' a comrade - wounded- iitJLha- PoIiaWlghting asliore.yf rorrt the.hospitat ship Stuttgart. " - -Acme Radio-photopassed by censor) , 7 - w REMAINS FOUriD 0R10ST FLIER SALT 'LAKE CITY, Sept. 21- (L'.D A three-and-i-half year bid mystery was solved today - with discovery of the . body' ot. Major Howard Stark, department ; of commerce, pilot ' wherrdisappeared while., on- a flight from Rock Springs, Wyo., to v Salt Lake City oniJan..l6, , 1936. . ' . : ' The body wasound in a rugr ged mountain area: 40 miles north east of here ata point about mid l Evanston, Wyo. It was found by a sheepherder and brought out today to-day by Morgan county and federal officials. A . - Stark's wrecked ' ' airplane had been located In May, 1936, but efforts ef-forts of authorities to find the body had been unsuccessful. . . lying- blind tnrougn v a raging snowstorm. Stark apparently f t,",, . ,rr; omt" - . fu C y 7 iz1 . eTmea uie body said the veteran pilot appar- ently was not injured in the tlon and exposure after, walking &. iuum cMt uuouga several i Signals To Be Installed SALT LAKE CTTYV Septf 21 (U.R) The State public service com mission today ordered Installation of 75 automatic warning signals at grade crossings .in 13 countries as the - next Astep' in a campaign to ; prevent school dus accidents such as the one near Midvale Dec. 1, 1938, that claimed 24 lfves. Installations ordered included 18 in Salt Lake county, 16 in Utah. nine in Cache, eight in Weber and three in Box Elder. O BRITAIN "AT. WAR IHiLJ X TjiTr.T nhv ' - :m .VT'. .""-"';'t .h. MICE 24 DOMESTIC SmjATXNS VACANT (dwiO HAMr Wt AT Crossing; Li J u HoAie From Wars '-4t --- 'Mff .'.'n 'r.'.' 1 1 . V"'i jsoldlers carry a stretcher bearing Lr Shoots HP Mil IU UliU Lovers' Quarrel . SALT. LAKE CITY. Sept. 21 U.p 'Following what police de scribed as a lovers quarrel, .'1'6-year-old Thelma Hadley today shqt and killed herself at- her home in a fashionable Salt Lake City residential district. ' , Detective Captain E. A. Hed- man said the girl left two notes. 'one to her sweetheart, the other Baseball Today NATIONAL LEAGUE First gamer 1. " RnMf nn . 000 001 003 4 J Pittsburgh up uuz uux m Viegel, Callahan (3) and- Masi; Gee and Susce. . -. " J- New York . i 020 00; 401 10 . I Lohrman, Melton (1) and ,Dan nine:; Passeau and Mancuso. i Home:run: Leiber, Chicago. , Brooklyn 101 v St. Louis' '200 - ' - Hamlin and Todd: - McXJee and Padgett. . V y Home runs: Slaughter,, St. Louis --.(Hamlin Brooklyn. Philadelphias- . 000 010 1 Cincinnati . ; . . . 000 032 2 Pearson! and Warrenr Derringer and Lombardi. '. ' . Home run: Frey; GincinnatL' Second , game: . . Boston ...... ... 000 000 Pittsburgh .. ... 100 20C Posedel and Lopez;' Swigart and Mueller. 1 Home run KleinPittsburgh. ' v . ' AMERICAN LEAGUE Chicago X. v. - 002 000 000 2 NewYork ...X- 005 000 OOx 5 Dietricn, uro wn x 1 4 ana a resn Russo and' Dickey. " x Home runs: Dickey, Gordon, N. Y. Detroit . . ... . . , 000 220 012 7 Philadelphia .X 112 200,000 6 Pippen, Trout (3), Rowe (3) and York; - Becgman and 'Hayes.,' Heme, run: York, Detroit. ' v St. Louis : . . . . . 001 000 100 2 . Boston . . . , .'. . . 000 102 21x 6 Kramer and Harshany; Gale-house Gale-house and Desautels. v Home runs: Kramer)' Neighbors, St. Louis; Cronin, Boston. ' y Cleveland . . Washington Milnar and Ferrell.' . . . . 000 000 . . . .000 000 Hemsley; Bass and L! J I.1; : ' r- X i l V r V ! I I r - - "-j"', ' - ' t?--. '- ... " - - ' ' pulls a 15 c MAJORITY x F02 REPEAL United Press : Poll Re veals Small Frlargin . For Revision V , WASHINGTON, Sept. 21 (U.R) President Roosevelt and Republican .said .Democratic leaders, , who conferred for nearly two.and6ne-half hours yesterday, agreed unanimous Ivthat their- Dnmary and I ' ' 1 " J .1! Z - - J. non-partisan ODjecxive was to lkeep the United Stated neutral and at peace, - , Mr. Roosevelt felt out the conferees con-ferees on: outright repeal of the whole neutrality law and .was ? strongly backed by Vice Presi dent John ; N. Garner. . The president . and vice president presi-dent weretold that" 'not more than live members oi tne. senate foreign . relatjlons v committee would support such; aY proposal. But : a United Press pollmdicated a. committee majority to amend the neutrality , law . by repealing the arms embargo and establishing establish-ing acash and carry policy on the sale of American goods to Belligerent ; states. The embargox repeal margin is slim but . appears dependable. Thq line-up on the basis of votes and expressioni - of-opinion- is believed believ-ed to be as follows. , . For arms embargo , repeal yandf cash-and-carry ( 12 ) - . Pittman Harrison, . Connally, N Van Nuys Wagner,-Barkley, Murray Schwel-lenbach, Schwel-lenbach, . Guf f ey. Green, Pepper and Thomas, ox Utaft. : . Against v RepeaL(8'-Clark, of Mo. Borah, Jonnson, . " Capper; Vandenberg, 6 Follette, Ship- stead and George - , ; Dout'tfuK (3)7-Gillette, nolds andT White. - -, : Some'' r administration . 1 ders hopeOeprge will switch Re- puoucan iront aireaayytias been f hroken' ' and aianv anti-NeW. leai ' Democrats aje rallying to the7 Roosevelt program. Among Democrats whohave bucked the administratio: other . issues but who. wi vote to abandon the embargo Sens. Pat Harri- son, D.yMiss., Carter Glass.D.; Va., sind Alxa B. Adams, OD., coio. , . yAlf M. Landon 1936; Republican presidential: nominee, emerged from xthe White House conference declaring the . United States shniilH arm irsAlf ' at Vino TJa j said presents national defense wa Inot adequate He thouaht confi-ress ouirht. tr remain in . sessionxthroughout thej emergency. Mr. Roosevelt was said - to have suggestedxthat 'con-gress'' 'con-gress'' s speed its work but that house and senate 'Republican and Democratic leaders remain' here. This Day... "V BORN - sS y . Boy, to Roy and Myrtle Orom Painter of Eureka, " Utah Valley hospital. . Girl, to Orvln D. and Mozclle Hunter FranComutali' Valley hospital. hos-pital. - . X 'v x , f Lunceford of Orem, Utah Valley hospital. ,-y- - -' - y . x x . Boyto Spencer and Eunice OI- sen .Young. Utah Valley hospital.' v ; LICES'SED TO MAKRY D. DaCosta Clark, 33, Provo, and Hazel Jean Cook, 32, Logan.: Charles Henry Springmeyer,' 21; and Lucile Palf reyman, 19, Provo. r s rK on are 150 L. D. SMissibnariesXo ' vX - "'V. - . y.y i - -' '"- SaiJ From Cdpennagen Friday COPENHAGEN. Sept. 21 (C.K) A group'of 150 mormon missionaries from Salt Lake. City will sail for New York Friday on the Holland- American x line's Scant'ann. , ' They gathered here from all parts of the continent and Scandinavia, o Another group of 100 will sail next week, leaving but 21 out of Mi l li I - ; I I ' I , I ' nth J Li I 1 LJ, A JLjui . ("- ' n sri- '";; '.' ' X X-', : Prcs - r ik 'Tl i Oiit ofWar; Wants Congress To . i .: . - : -r-- ' iiajourn, icaacrs 1 o itcniain Xr : WASHlNGTQNSeptl day asked congress to substitute a cash-and-carry, system for the embargo on arms; rTlineVith "one single hard-headed thought keeping 'America' out f this war? r A ; Afjeiv repeal of theembaroVovi$iott--banning hip-ments" hip-ments" of American arms, ammuniioiijand implements if war to Europe's; warring nations hasSlJeeri accomplished -Mr.' Roosevelt proposed thes further 5tep5 : : " l. Authority. to fixwar zonein whicfi American mcr- rhant vpRspla m.nv'not enter. 2.-r-Broader authontyXQ4)rcvent American citizens from' 177 UllG;:'' Ilnii. DoiieS. , -..: --vyly: y. PARIS fFrance completes gen eral mobilization; country's entire man-powef ready at poncentra-tiop poncentra-tiop points or other duties; local activity ana aruiiery , aueis re ported : on estem ippont. i -C ONDON: Warrsaw, radio citv still 1 fiehtint' af terX13 of seigre. ciaimsPblish infantry re captured Uraga . and Wola sub urbs fromGermans f:. reports say BriUshcapturedBremen, shap now iSxBritisn port as prize oi warXHoyal Air.' Force planes res- e Crew of tramp steamer sunk . .i . . . s BERLIN : High command an nounces Polish army aestroyea except at Warsaw and near Lwow, claims . eight French planes- ana three captive balloons shot down on Western front; travelers report heavy ' movements of German trooDSv and airplanes from east to west fronts. Goebbeis -denies ueicn rnntemnlatea vdnv violatloria of Belgium or, Netherlands. , - MOSCOW; Soviet "army com mand announces capture of 60,000 prisoners, 280 Polish artillery gun.fr and 120 airplanes, claims capture ofx Lwow, and - Grodno' and- an nounces, soviet troops at all points havereached limit of , line agreed upon, with Germany. n BUCHAREST: Thousands of Polish 'Jewish refugees terrified bv llumanian government order thatall "undesirable" aliens must leave, countryx within A10 days. ', ANKARA: Turkish Foreign Minister Saracogul sails forconferences forcon-ferences in Moscow : after radio btm!aaH fiisisirt.lnV- tliat- neetlatlons fpr mutual y assistance treaties with France and Britain progress Initisf actoriljCA.y. ;,; X( -" BtKHEST, Premier rmaiidpalihsecu, foe of pro-Nazi . Iron guard, . shot and killed by syc outhf uKssassains. ' WJliNGToVori venesV-Presldent Roose veltasks substitution of cash-carry system for an arms embargo with' thought of keeping America Jut'ofwar. ' XX Coming Events , ROTARY CLl'B - 'Sidney W. Russell and Clayton Jenkinswill be speakers , at the Rotary , club, luncheon Friday at 12;15 p. m. at llotcl Roberts, discussing dis-cussing "Competition and Business Busi-ness Management,"' X ( V 300 who had. been serving a membership mem-bership of; 3,500 in Europe. Ten will remain in Copenhagen under leadership of Joseph Fielding Smith, seven . will remain y'ln Sweden and seven in Norway and Germany. . --,v. , - . Among those sailing tomorrow is Ellwood Rasmuson of Lonan. Utah. I in X- 'A.' V r i a t-t i m -r : : f X U.R President Roosevelt to & traveling in vessels of belligerent nations or in -danger are;is. '3. Provision .that bellierent.i purchasing commodities in this nation must take "title to tho.-jf ftommodities prior to fehlpjncnt fpom U.'i S:- shores. 4, A bajXon war credits to ligerent nations, ; "The result of the last two ( provisions'" pro-visions'" said Mr. Roosevelt, "will be to require all purchases to Ik-made Ik-made In cash and .cargoes V t carried In the , purchaser's own ships at the purchaser's, rt&k.". He proponed that after fj.".ct-meht fj.".ct-meht of thin program I-that cti-gress cti-gress adjourn, subject to Jmmji-ate Jmmji-ate call by the president in eytnt European war requiring attention. "These perilous days,", said Mr. Roosevelt, "demand -cooperation between us without trace of partisanships par-tisanships . : XOur acts.must be guided -by one single hard-headed thought-keeping thought-keeping America out cf this war.'' Personal Pica Mr.; Roosevelt made - his , plea personally to a joint cbnvocatlnn of the house and senate which a.s-embted a.s-embted In' ' the crowded house chamber less than two hours after formal convening - of congress at noon. His words were carried around the world by ra d io. y EVery gallery in the chamber was packed. Several lwjncirel capitol guards arid, District, of C - Jumbla police patrolled the capitol.. Special - passes were required for admission to Ihe building and barricades bar-ricades were' established in. corridors corri-dors to cdntrol the crowds. Seated before" the president i he spoke were his cabinet advin-ors. advin-ors. In thoXuiplomatic gallery Were the" uniformed and limijc i representatives of foreign nation -i In Washington. , ; Sees Long War l- i Mrt Roosevelt offered no hope that the European conflict would be ishort or that. the outlook wm for brighter times ahead. - "I should like to be able to offer-the hope that the shadow over theWorld mlp-ht suiftJtr r.r. . -.. " said Mr. Roosevelt. "I cannot. Th acts compel my .stating, with candor, that darker periods may Jieahead. - : s 'The disaster is not of pur making;; mak-ing;; rioact of oura 'engendered the forces which assault the 'founda-( 'founda-( Continued on Page Eight) AUNTvHET ' 'Jano thiniiH hVia. Jealous, hut If her 1;:: r wa to givrt hons ot.L1; man a bad rolJ.-Kl.w . h't bo ,atif5ed tifl one J:x,t like, it." y ' IIY ROBERT .-- y jfv i X ' . J ft- ' ".'! ' i " I - .. t ';l ysy y-y y |