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Show not & lk a fW writ a dime. f at us j good very ry at LI I? are aot ii want new! sometime! CIRCULATION That I, Prot, U STRIKE NOW Tennis Tourney mUlliniJe. SlrUPiE MiNfc NO. Maiy roiident? Gate wcre , "Castle threatened national now been po.t strike has rf suden bVl hTIus 2 Winners Proceed Trr "1 5, 193 TH& Helper Ball Team Defeats Price Twice "Unsaker of price won the touted ball u-- 6-- 0. nh 3-- nj -- 6-- 6-- ol 6-- 1, 6-- 0, 6-- 4, I i Speed Limits For Safety Zac-cari- 7-- 5, of the Central Utah league and knocking the neighbors back to fourth place. Although the insistence of the Price followers ' to nlav th mv. vt uiu m eacn town on the s;im iuyit riav was conceded by Helper, the effect 01 me pian woiKed out miserably as to a Price victory and as a fin. ancial loss to both teams. But despite the differences, the Railroaders enjoyed considerable respite in view of the fact that the Price nine handed the locals their first defeat of the year a short time ago. George Sluga held the mound duties down in remarkable style in the first game at Helper, striking out 9 batters of the invaders and commanding a cool control of the infield situation. Luke Carmoni banged out the longest drive of the day with a three baeaer in the third from which the locals ac quired a score on a bunt from Shorty Maulsby. In the second feature of the day's playing at Price, Helper power houses drove- in enough winnint?o hits to pile up 7 runs to 5 for Price. Shorty Maulsby crashed out the best hits in this encounter for Helper with two three baggers. J. Paur of Price knocked a homer in the fourth but its effect was not telling enough to threaten the supremacy of the railroad nine. J. Tezak pitched the game for Helper, allowing but six hits. tj-- - Cedar Breaks National Monument ' how-Bonac- district per cent wage increase reduction of working hours to six a day. The basis fceven low is $5.44, and the highest is $6.80. Utah membership represents Carbon Legion Aids in Celebration Momhers of Carbon post No. 21. American Legion, participated in sals, all but four of which are Fourth of July ceierjrauuii in the Carbon county coal the ctnaoH nl Consumers. E. R. Cnss- man, adjutant, announced Monday ceremony A formal dediwas conducted by the post to steel flag pole new a cate OUSE and a handmade flag secureo. im FOR the city. t flag-raisi- iPER'S LIQUOR OPENED ng 60-fo- ot Liquor Control house No. 8 Tuesday, July 2 under nanagership of F.; P. Fisher ith the assistance of State In-- r : GrlsTSoftball t.uc toes and a supply of liquor About 500 different brands of liquors and wines are now ie at the store. The building just recently completely through-oand the win-habeen frosted without isplay advertising whatever, i Bonacci and Lawrence the present time assist- about $15,000. of 139 re-l- ut ed ve Bo-rc- at fiUiams while will remain here a to supervise the of the sales and hand- ad-Mi- on larcest business hand le any 0f the stores in the far was taken car eof Tues- Kle a still bigger day was M on Julv a - ystenuitic lia H out for fiwcuuic the purchases. The Wis ou his order from a st provided at the writing He list. m. hunt and price of the par- brand v.n viaiiii uuu ....... pis to cashier who transfers s'uo to purchaser upon pay-the money. The cashier claim to vendor who fills out of the f mr of 'livers Presentation of th rtuhb. No s will be accepted by the so ' for the first time in pev- ars, residents of Utah may 'alk Ollt- limn ihn tnVil( HIV rrvmmissioner W. E. En- - were gle and --Jack Loftis, Jr., ntntivps at the regular Associated monthly meeting of the . Civic Clubs of boumern uu and Satur last Friday Panguitch n- day. Mr. Loftis witn J. nm the Carbon county di rectors to the organization. w- -. A most interesting meeuns thf members to which in attendapproximately 100 were were matters routine ance. Usual auu atternoon handled Saturday and vi- of Panguitch the problems cinity were careiuuywas on display a cnenir booklet xamina- in w? original proof The booklet dat. of all Con- southern and eastern Utah. maae is iderable comment About 50,000 of the as printed and used the of b0.s.fl Darts Thc publicity for eDOrts that united ef clubs and orvarious fort by the in packing ganizations of Helper projects more major one or ThlSmat. sought by the body. local confor up taken be ter will sideration. Car-- Z t; SSSSS fr .... ClasseTToBe Taught At Swimming Pool dates of the annual Although the the hand and look a cop Swim week are not yet set, in me held in Juiy be will eye. annual week time. Anyone some and Mrs. D. K. Downey and of the classes with each registering for any at is urged to see Cliff Memmott an vacation tour of the swimming pool and receive The Downeys application blank. w England and cen- The following classes will Be 12, under taught: Beginners -' "",ginners over.. 12, uwua in junior e,!mmini Robcrt Ellif,t and T an J and senior life saving for bojs . . ..!!. be ""uueu visit in girls will taught. returned Mwo weeks' , m Npw lli Irs- - !"8 'or an fliia L - This is one of at series of articles to appear in this newspaper, civic clubs of sponsored by the Salt Lake Advertising Club, associated southern and central Utah, and chambers of commerce; part of a so that resources locl people will Utah's out program to point "Know Utah Better". Carbon Represented At Southern Meet n.nv 1 nilttoe, in a prelim- inary report, asks that laws be enacted to do these f things: Senator Ny 1. Prevent "eollu sion" lu bidding for navy construction Jobs, 2. Prevent American patents from getting into the hands of foreign powers. 3. Limit profits to 5 per cent of the total cost to the government, in cases where the government assumes the rlsdis of the enterprise, or to 10 per cent where the government does not. 4. Requiring the shipbuilders' "lobbyists" register with the government and disclose their Income and expenditures. The committee finds, in the matter of collusion, that there was "telepathy" among whipynrd officials so that in bidding for many contracts each concern was able to get the contracts it wanted at profits that ran as high as 3d per cent It says the navy has been at the mercy of the shipyards In preparing plans for war vessels and also In determining what were fair prices. "A series of bids are put before the navy," the report recites, "and the navy has to take the low one and the taxpayers have to hope and pray (hat the low one Is somewhere within a few million dollars of being reasonable," Construction of naval vessels la declared to be more costly In private yards than in government yards. "While the evidence Is not all In," the report snys, "the Indications are that the private yards cost the government from one to two million dollars more per cruiser-thathe navy yards." The committee charges big shipbuilders with breaking up the Geneva naval limitation conference in 1927 and Immediately launching a campaign that "made profits of 35 and 25.4 and H6.9 per cent on the cruisers." Mrs. Clyde Jones motored Salt. Lake City Sunday eveninj, to program to the reso"nuilution extending the sance" excise taxes, thus speeding it through the Washington legislative fnctory in four days, suddenly disclaimed any Intention of such procedure, and let the $500,000,000 tax extension ride along unappended. Congress will consider the new taxation program during early July. This program Is expected to produce some $310,000,000 in new revenue, principally from Inheritance and gift taxes, Increased taxes on the highest Income brackets, and corporation taxes graduated from 10 per cent to 17 per cent. The program has been held up as a sweetmeat to placate the sugar palate of Louisiana's Klngfish. Actually, a wealth of $310,000,000 shared among 120,000,000 Americans would amount to about $2.83 a head all of which would be applied to a public debt of $29,000,-000,00- 0 and a budget of $8,500,000,-00anyway. The net taxable worth of the 133 estates which paid taxes based on a valuation of $1,000,000 each in 1933 was $284,000,000. If the government had taxed these estates 100 per cent, seizing them entirely, they would have been worth only $2.37 a head to the American population. If the government confiscated nil Incomes of more than $1,000,000 In 1933, it would have taken an army of trucks loaded with small change to distribute it, for each American would get only And the general opin45 cents. ion of administration leaders In the senate was that the taxes obtained from the rich might possibly eliminate the necessity of the "nuisance" tnxps after another year, h ! opening of the store was ged by the arrival by truck Therefore the conn frenzy ed ; pocketbooks." ' of anxiety to hitch the President's Pirls' soft ball obtain went able at the time The Journal R. D. Williams. The build-locatw. oaie Castle. were: to press next to The Journal it? nnA mini 12; Kusuers 10, premises formerly occupied Helper Devils 15. . e Helper L. Drug company. acting as assistant man-rit- h Ange Martell as cashier. NYE of North Dakota committee on munitions do not have a very high opinion of American shipbuilders and they feel that strong lOtjlnlatlon Is needed "to keep tbeia irom confusing public defense needs with their private SENATOR By MARION r C. NELSON is historic Cedar Only a day's dr.ive from the farthest point in Utah, Zane Grey's colorful stories ot of of many setting the picturesque City the West. Today Cedar City is the key to the mystic Wonderland that , characterizes southern and central Utah. to test If you want a thrill, if you like mountain roads, and want road that leads dithe take car's and performance, nerves your your bus route Is so arranged that this rectly east from Cedar City. The down hill, for Cedar Breaks is be taken road of may tortuous stretch 23 miles away- -a climb of a full 4.500 feet higher than Cedar City only : mile. feet 200 every nearly Cedar CanImmediately east of the town the road enters rugged of conifers and aspens. The forests fine with covered yon its slopes ilis assume impressive castellated forms that are especially striking distant. Ashdown Gorge nt the mouth of Ashdown Gorge, eight miles rift in the plateau, and tortuous precipitous narrow js an extremely furrows ot Cedar vast the from stream a rushes sparkling is Kaks About a mile from the mouth and high up the precipice feet and a span ot about a natural bridge with an arch of about sixty ever upward, the road presently occupies Plateau. The whole sweep of a shelf won the shoulder ot Makagunt is visible. Some twenty-fivsouth the to th Terraced Plateau country of Kolob Plateau are taa hrectly south, slashed into the green the Grand West Temple of Zlon, and towers miy temples opped peaks are ln the trac-fioSnTtlne the scene. Several extinct Volcanic of the strong a one is of visibility Th s immense range sees one again and again in of the Terraced Plateau country; of hundreds of miles of features salient the aspects, new and startling SeVeFonowing Coal Creek, e fore-Jrou- At Miaway iuc ly t. named series of level at the rim. JWs gr eai w. formation cBnr without warning to the abyss you to the very brink ot this abQye gea. anffi MOO feet into Pink Cliff . National Forest, Is lle8 ,0butte9( cliffs, pillars of " Tlit?A" 9(f0 The blunted volcanic 'feet higher affording a panorama ot prac- Nevada and northern Arizona. Along the theM PInt SUPrem6' P0'nt VJ?Z'' crest of Brian "frn llLn miracle not only of color, but of n to eep at tne grandeur nnture here n know bee Men have rflteanv ,0fter coiora are subtly blended, veals. Unlike Zlon of Us high scenic in this glgant PCtIn;ZrePh?sLoTkkedUta sieWw llat and The Indian Si .ucl m dedicated name is ff,r e"";1 v '.Ti Jt &SZ"" M"?' the high plateau Within the C tdar procia,i,at,on ent!ai ,t "Crcle of painted .erles of broken down frora M lg Breaks, the sloping side walls m 0, VOUTII between sixteen and will be served for a nntlon-wldJob hunt and further training of young men and women to hold Jobs after they get tbem, through President Roosevelt's new "national youth administration," Itself administered the works-relie- f program by Miss Josephine Roche, assistant secretary of the treasury, and Aubrey Williams, assistant to Harry L. adminisHopkins, twenty-fiv- e e nn-d- works-progres- sort ot pinkish-refrenuently found here, a of h(J Red Is the color most orange. 1 into yeUow, lavender, flat sometimes dpen mor. than sixty tint, in .cattered pis v wau. and purpla. .. Cedar Breaks. bright colors jjnted s trator. The ntnv organization will en' deavor to s 1. Find employment In priyat man dow n ISHOPPS.R m a who whispers well About the goods be has to sell never Will make the mighty dollars Moral It pays to advertise! sumcKnoNAEAir COITION hdmi Nevs Revier of Current Events the World Over administration LEGI SLATIVE for n while In a " d here I The fmt to fvtm price-increas- e BUSINESS le JOUKNAk DCLivmco Helper's rang up of Helner ai d llly singles tenni s tourna- -' a U ment W,n over last ce' tradltion-Cowle- y week by defeating Mont shock hear al diamond rival. last Sunday by of Spring Canyon in three i, iu-- a, scores 1, and Fri- and Both Hun-iln- e Gate. ? thus ey met ln the final clinchinS more'firmly the first half mat! ? Lc Willi lent John L. Lewis oi tneNa 2 mine , h y uu cor- - tion of America schedule Mine Workers w h , jwv.ui as- btewart with . his comrade was Pirants in the respective brackets. ;l3y untu ju j Dacts of the miners 1ust lnaHins tVlo c , tJ? Hunsaker wa? mmif the oper- last year. by agreement when the car fing dropped jshift In the as wen. ine rails and catapulted toward , nnH T!r,.. o;n came as a result him, crushing the victim . LlVinptAn ulIilluJ, iveaioro. 01 against Ilea from President Roosevelt the wall of the room in which he Spring Canyon upst the dope buckf j et by handin? R ihe miners remain was working. Xk until the Guffey bill now Stewart has been a resident of House, 1934 county champions, a 3 congress was voted upon by Castle Gate since 1928 at which decisive trounsing 1, in one Illative branches for which time he first started work for the quarter-fin- al match. Livingston 'Xdicted a favorable ballot. It Utah I uel. He was a, graduate of au xveuiora win meet the winner Ccted that definite action on the Grand county high school of , Aaron Hanson-Lew- is Hunsaker Cislative demands of the min-- f Moan, and was known as! Kiuoyle always a be given early this month. a likeable fellow to fellow work- - uarter final match for the title. . t rl T:i 1 are glad the strike has been ers. naiiicie anaiwrcudy Zar-car- ia u"a be it may defeated Bob Jones and Dick 1 off even though He is survived by his parents of ad-- 1 to win the junfrary. If matters can be Mr. and Mrs. Mel Stewart; Ricci Moab, without a strike, we will be his Laurel Hyatt Stewart, ior boys' doubles title. Donna Rae L Strikes bring trouble and and widow, three daughters, Donna Lee, Miller meets Maxine Dodge for the fhip to both sides, and the Diane, and Marilyn. A brother and junior girls' singles title. Results in the first round of the Is hope one will be averted." sister survive as well. ft was the united statement of singles are: Mayme HanFuneral services were conducted women's Frank Bonacci Moab last Sunday under the di son defeated Donna Miller, Kathe-rin- e at Street defeated Josephine 1 board members of the Utah- - jrections of the Deseret mortuary, Martinelli, Peggy Flynn defeated ling miners' union made to Mary McConnel, Marjorie Mem-mo- tt "ribune Saturday nigm. now Set defeated Elaine Heck, and Rnrci added: Alice Bene defeated Margaret a. I To Back Decision New J. wm abide by the decision of The HelDer chamber nt lent John L. Lewis. , If in the In nn effort to curtail the in- merce is of the sponsoring the tournament an $0 days adjustment creasing number of accidents on and will furnish medals for each tilties can be made, we will be the highways throughout the state, of the respective winners. fed Bobby We are fully organized, state road commission has now Mullins, Raymond Weeter, Richard the hichever way the decision specified certain speed regulations will be 100 per cent with aside from the regular state speed Greener, and Fred Gardner are the survivors in the small boys' tourinnai organization." - laws. New signs will be posted ney. These bovs will fieht it out ho nDinlon of Carey, the exand the new order became effec- for this title. fn is "for the best interests of tive July 1. Lcemed." Three thousand T.ocal srjeed regulations include miners- and 4000 otfter umon Fork Can. jn trs in Wyoming, stood ready 3. I away their tools at midnight n aiwod bv , the present state law; from Colton No Halt At Mines overhead bridge to Castle Gate in ro will be no interruption 22 junction in Price canyon, 35. inci fork at the mines now, state were the in roads said. The miners of canyon in the new blanket order. are cluded 18 I t rti ADVERTISING That Brings Result HELPER, UTAH JULY ith is i coroe. 004 jfOl735aX"NONIBER"49 kg a 10 I 11 pjFSl'ITE Germany's promise never again to engage ln unrestricted submarine warfare, France entered an immediate and strong protest to the retch's bilateral pact with Great Britain, permitting Germany to Increase naval tonnage. Capt. Anthony Eden was hurried over to Paris to explain the British Industry for unemployed youth. action and justify It. Premier Laval 2. Train ami retrain for industrial, technical and professional em- told him that the French national' doctrine was nnd would continue to ployment opportunities. be that organization of collective 8. Provide for a continuing attendance at hlli school and college. security must precede any legalization of German rearmament. 4. Provide work-relie- f projects Captain Eden then went to Home to meet the needs of designed and Mussolini told hlra flatly that, youth. he sided with Frame and could not The average payment for youth the manner in which the approve on relief work will be $15 a month; accord was reached, those going to high school would without consulting Italy and France, he given $fl a month, and those atNo more success did Captain Eden tending college $15 a month. have In trying to get II Puce to sub"I have determined that we shall mit to a compromise allowing Italy do something for the nation's uncertain concessions in Abyssinia In employed youth," said the Presireturn for the guarantee that there dent, "because we can ill afford to would be no war with the African lose the skill and energy of these monarchy. Mussolini refused to young men and women. They must talk about It. Great .Britain was have their chance In school, their faced with two remaining choices: turn as apprentices and their op- To Influence the Abyssinian govportunity for jobs a chance to ernment to accede to Italian dework and earn for themselves." mands in toto or simply give up and The problem of what to do with let the apparently Inevitable war go on. The feeling ln diplomatic circles the youth who finishes school, supposedly equipped to niakn his real is that England would rather waive her protests than have Italy withstart in life, and finds what there fire are given to older and draw from the League of Nations married men and women, as well as n result. as the youth who Is unable to finish school because of poor circumCONGRESSMAN MARTIN DIES stances, hat been one of the most of Texas has before congress a discouraging aspects of the entire bill the enactment and enforcement depression. The NY A will attempt of which would evoke cheers from to remedy it by divisions set up millions of citizens, for to work with private Industry and It provides for the deportation of schools in each state, about 0,(HH),0()0 aliens who are ro-- . by national headquarters In eelvtng or holding Jobs that should be held by citizens who are on the relief rolls. A campaign to get con-- i most Utopias, the new one gresslotiul action on this inensurei LIKE Alaska's Matanuska valley has been begun by 155 organizations, has been reported a nest of disconestimated by Mr. Dies to represent 5,000,000 tent; the disillusionment apparentpeople, and he says at1 ly was manifest even quicker than least 150 congressmen have promusual ln this case. Minnesota, Michised to support the bill. Outlining, igan and Wisconsin farm families the provisions of the measure, Mr. who made up a large share of the Dies said: recent expedition to begin life anew "First, It bars nil Immigration of in the North i'uelfic territory draftwho do not1 pltineer Immigrants ed a list of grievances for the have relatives In this country. FERA trouble shooter, Eugene "Second, It makes mandutory de--i Carr. portntlon of 3,500,000 aliens estiMany of them said the project was misrepresented, that the land ' mated of Illegal entry. "Third, It gives about 4,000,000 is poor and that housing Is not what they were led to believe It aliens legally In this country 12 citizens' would be- - - Neither are medical months In which to become """' "" " or go home." " service," school facilities, seeds disbursed for planting, the climate "Fourth, all aliens must secure Labor department permits to work and prices for groceries measurand permits would be Issued only ing up to advance when employers show they can't There is considerable jealousy over the distribution of farm find United States citizens to do' land. And to top It all off, the the job. Utopians want government pay for "Fifth, it provides1 for gradual the work they are doing to make reunion of families not likely to benew homes for their social and ecocome public charges when the eco-- ' nomic rejuvenation. nomic situation Is Improved." Trotests would get no sympathy unless he found them justified, were urged CITIZENS everywhere said Eugene Carr. General Cummlngs1 to assist the federal government down" on bucket shops. once GEN. HUGO S.to JOI1XSON, which are swindirect the the public public works program, dling was named to direct a compnra-tlvel- y out of millions of Anglo-Germa- n few-job- s word-picture- L'ISk "k f small dollars. part of the President's ew $1,000,000,000 works-relie- f n-wide As director of In New York city, he will works-relie- f i the prothat area, With the famed fighting jaw determinedly set, he revealed the four conGen. Johnson ditions tinder which he accepted the new Job: He will get no pny, only $7,800 for a year's expenses. (He got $6,KK) a year for this purpose during most of his time as keeper of the Blue Eagle.) Ills job will end October 1, unless he and the administration agree that It shall continue. He will devote a minimum-ofour days a week to his official duties. And he will consult with. Mayor Fiorello II. La Guardia as far as possible, but will be responsible to Harry L. Hopkins alone, I gram de-- i natio- chain Is operating. Most of their victims are, doctors, lawyers,, professors and busi- sched- ule. ! He clared that a ness men, he said. "We know the, In Atty. Gen. Cummlngs will take names of the rlng-- ( leaders," said Mr. Cummlngs, 'but It of both the, public and legitimate brokers to put' them where they belong behind the . bars." Most of the victims believe thnt they have lost their money legitimately, he said, and are afraid of: complaining to federal officers be-cause they are ln debt after they have been "cleaned." 1 iitL ABOR policy In a democracy; is not a program conceived by a government It Is a program of action which the people who: earn their living as wage earners and those who employ them In, Harlem and its must enterprises negro populations work out together." throughout the land resounded in So asserts Secretary of Labor jubilation, with chicken an' ham Frances Perkins ln her annual reIn ebery fryln' pan and juniper port to congress, and she sets forth Juice flowing freely, as Joe Ixui, these six specific duties of the gov-- , the first great brow n hopeof pugilism ernment In this respect: since Jack Johnson, established 1. To do In its power himself as a real threat to the to establish everything minimum basic stand-- , world's heavyweight boxing chamarda for labor, below which compionship. petition should not be permitted to Showing ring generalship far beforce standards of health, wages yond his brief professional expeand hours. rience, boxing ability conspicuous 2. To further peaceful settlements from Its the absence by heavyof controversies and relieve labor weight ranks since the days of of the necessity of resorting to Corbett, and a wallop like the kick strikes In order to secure equitable' of a cotton-bel- t mule, the dusky conditions and the right to be heard, Detrolter cut Primo Camera, Ital3. Through legislation and foster-- ; ian human skyscraper, to ribbons Ing between employers for five rounds, knocking hlra down and workers to make every Job three times In the slxlh, and was best (hat the human mind can de- -, declared the winner by technical vise as to physical conditions, ho-- i knock-ou- t In a bout nt the Yankee man relations and wages. stadium. Louis, former golden gloves chamMr. and Mrs. Harry Nichols of pion, will probably meet Baer and Martin announce the birth of a Scbmellng before getting a crack at Champion James J. Braddock's baby girl born last week. All concerned are reported as doina title. well. NEW YOKK'S profit-makin- g te |