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Show TELEPHONE US I'M el your regularly? If Mt, telephono 15Htr before I 'dMk and paper 1U a delivered. Herald Telephones Basinets Otnet Editorial and Nm Dept. . Society Editor -- F'KOVO.IJTAH, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1927. JOBTYFIRSTYEAR,:NCr. 219: .....14 IT PRICE TWO CENTS NATIONALISTS REFUSE DEMANDS -o- oo o-l oo oo BIRDMEM PLAN-T- o; . REAGpMRIS WITHOUT O Governor Is Under Fire SUtlDAY CLOSING MOVE fill HEX! o o AROUSES EXGITEF.1ET acosta and Chamberlain Rest After Shattering Sustained : Flight Record; Others May Seek Trans - Atlantic Goal f ' r York-Pari- lused Injhe non-sto- p y irtas ' 1 BROADBENT IS SPEECH VICTOR t , - 'ir.'- writt,., "The Trapper" Is Subject Of Winner of H. A, Dixon Medal Award York-Pari- -- Prinel-pal-lh-- d -' WeatherllU rT Church j i Episcopal I 'RVlir'?s!SVl'. 50. West Second No. St. rHh.t Sat- The ; I - : . . Easter Sunday, April 17 Sunday urday, probably ' & JlxSt. IIm hool, 10 a. m. ; Easter celebration showers; warmith address by the Rector 11 a. er tonight, . r. r. ana waster taiK :30 p. m Maximum temp. 11 are cordially Invited. ...' Thursday .,..59 Monday, April 18, the Ladies Minimum t.tnnj 7 BWHult' I Juild will meet with Mrs. 0.TH. 'v, reast day of St. Paternus. King, 4ft Ho. 5th East. v Birthday anniversary of John VEN. W. F. Bn.KI.EY, , . Motley, historian. Rector; .'. ; v MP -- i:Z V W' "j 1 . As far as- - go, i low-dow- n : at this rather ticklish and tuv familiar job will be to start at the top and go right down the vlines, if you follow. Sx let's took at the hats first: t That a bitge British and U. 3. Reminded percentage of fenseless Nanking ;Mi Inter national Body Suggested the' ttab nstote bosjatal suffering from various forms of mental dlseaso, and especially those affllctd with degrading and debasing tnbitn,Tire cured through the operation of asexualization, was the statement of Dr. Fred W. Taylor, house phjisclan, at au Informal of the question by menilsjrs or .rue. board' of lusaulty and hos- . pital staff Thursday: Survey Is Planned The iim'stlon of imikiiiK a thor- otiBh imrvey-t,- ? the "feeble-mindesituation : throughout tlie state through the publlCin hooL'cen8us euumerarors was thought by board uienibers and offlcltfls of the lit stltntion as the most practical way of gaining Information that would e be helpful state In solving this vexatioiui problem. Governor George H. Ilern stated that .i he would take the matter of such a plan of., making a survey up with SHANGHAI, AprillS (UP) The nationalist fovernmeut baa replied to the Hleutie note of America, Britain, Japan, France and" Bar' protesting the Nanking rjots by falling to agree to! any of the powers' doiuaud. The reply' proposed that be ap- an luternatWnal.Tommlsslon -- w poiniea to revise unequal treacles and Investigate the Nanking af- - d .. Vv;-- i ..... rairsr Eastern in. Princess Bluiuk's country is nota matter of how much you can take off and still appear well dressed. The princess la shown In O. the costume she wore upon arriv of public instruction, with a view In Seattle, Wash., from Nome of obtaining the desired informa. ing the other day. It's one of the latest tion turougn-Uil- s medium.' That stPs for the asexualization models and worth $800, of persons w ho commit serious social whether the are coiuiuit- offenses, r. a irl nospitai "... . or not leu in mei Mine should 1 taken In the opinion of Dr. luna, who, declare that the has brought happiness into the lives of a great number of persons who- - were taken to the hos pital lira serious condition, and biter discharged. We're going to celebrate our further suggested; that ' i fc , the sterilization law Kho1ildbejiQ -f- ifth bMhdajLSundajrJ BiBOTdeaTbaflT person's in Die The Herald DAILY wfllfba Petitions are coming from around the wjorld to Gov. Alvin T. Fuller of state who are legally proven to be five years old Sunday, April 17. Massachusetts (left) .that he spare. the lives of Nicola Sacco and Bartolo- - encogeuics, (that Is," potential parFive years ago, on the after-noo- n ents- of offInadequate nieo Yanzettl. Sacco (al)ove) and Vuuzettl are pictured in the insts. of Monday, April 17, 1933, spring) regardless of whether such the first issue of the Prof persons are Inmate of the state, or in the population atiarge,'gbould Daily Herald (later, changed to SACCO-VANZEHI lie equally subjectable to eugenlcal the Evening Herald) was print. stcrilizalion. ' rd and distributed In Provo- .At Thursdav's meeting of the That first v issue of Preve's boardr" tPiituftve rpluhsforinwoh dally newspaper will ba 'dupU-- . rated as exactly as possible In K.tprjnlldJ.oitwllhbajsenientln which to house the njiops were ac- pag( typographical dress in the Fifth Anniversary HerCohn Cene a structure will be erected t "cost By ald Sunday. E. . Rodgers, who of $11,000, and the upper story w;iU was editor and pirttlLslicr of the SEA Beok-e- . Writer for be used dormitory purposes. Herald wt en H was transferred DEDH AM, Mass., April 15. In WorTTTm the new sTructureTIl from the weekly to the daily old town, sparkling this romuipnce as soon as Architect newspaper field in the spring white In its 'new; spring coat of Claude S. Ashworth .completes the of 1933, and who now is presipaint, two men' await' the coming plans and pe4ficatlotis. Most of dent of the Herald Corporation, of a certain sinister date in July the' work, will be done by patients the duy when they are-tpulillsiier ef the livening Herdie.. . t' GREENVILLE, April 15 and; attendant, of the institution ald, returned to Provn this One is an .Italian fish peddler, 4 addition in 4 more ban hours After to these In (UP) improvements week from San Luis Obispo, Bartolomeo Vaujtgttl; the. oher a coma, Earl 'Carroll, who Frederick Dunn collapsed Superintendent Calif., that he might assist in factory hand," SicoTa Sacco, Over on liis way to Atlanta penitentiary was authorized to. enlarge the kitchthe preparation and editing of their plightr Dedhani. betrajra- - little Wednesday,- was still unconscious en- mid install a more complete foiMhefta-anmver- sa if un'y'roncilrn. Brit the rest of the: in venttliittng-Tiyteiu'the oifiiy but- appeared to lie constantly edition. ,wyrld is flustered as two such nien improving. and dining room. An Important article in the never succeeded in flustering it beInstallation of ueiv machinery in The Ne w York rev tie producer, fifth anniversary, t edition will fore. i who was convicted of perjury Ikj kitchen .and laundry, and the re- ne a Voice of Millions cense he testf Wleydidj phi cement of orchestral music with vo's progress written by E. 8. A voice that began with, the whis- e in a bath tub of ciiam- - a large -the ProHincklcyjeeretaryjftf imthe are and amusements, among ve Chamber of Commerce. the corridors of the papue at his VjishiiigtjmL birthdiiy the made lust lit 1925, rested peacefully kst provements during . Boston, state houscaiid ruuprhuiiny Tarty andthis morning he apiK'ared mouth at the hospital. inJhe earsoT tin- - state's chief exec-utiv- niglit Governor Alvin T. Fuller a much improved. Carroll stirred from time' to time Voice that is the chorused cry liter-- , and when, tie was ally ofinilllons of men aud wonfeii during sla ken muttered unintelligible is pleading that Sacco and be spi.red from the fate de- sounds, showing he wns recovering A. J. Clarkson, Navy recruiting creed for them by the Massachusetts Some control over hla muscles. JJr'C.-'OBates, heading Jhe Staff officer who has been In charge, of "' courts. physicians, went home all Provo applicants and who has It Is the voice of the '"public Reports of the Itotary distrlc conscience," whose who have de slairtly before midnight and did not enlisted many .'boys Hi aud around jutuference at Boise were given at return indicat until this morning, Provo, has announced that the tVSi fiflie luncheon' of the 'Provo. Rotary fended Sncco and Vauzetti suv ic no longer is.voe voice soieiy. ing that lift lielieved Carroll was be Navy Is taking in young men again luti at noon todi'v by Dr. Fred li at the age of 17, who In all other Taylor and Paul Vincent.' of KiVmpathizers, lileralists, yond the danger .point resiKH-tand such; ,ltls the voice of college A violin selection was played by pass the physical examina tion. Any young man who wishes to Ifussell w'elker of Montpelier, Ida JONES VISITS PROVO professors, ministers of the gospel, men and women of wealth, conservJ. Milt Jones, well known In bust take advantage of Navy enlistment ho, accomiwnied by Grai-- Sorensen ative citizenry, socially and finan im'ks circles of Provo, whd Is mw is requested to write to A. J.Clark- - or Moroni. folk'; bankers engaged in business . at Preston, sin. Nafy Recruiting Station, Salt cially prominent Following "the, luncheon, the club meiuliers of the parliaments, law- - Idaho, returned to' Prov today to Lokil City, .'or to chief of police, Pro members attended the funeral ser attend the funeral services of Mrs. vo court house, and receive any in vices of Mrs. AYyiuan Berg at the ' (. (Continued on Page Two) .. formation desired. . Myiuan Berg. Boimevll'e ward chapel. to-th- , 'Defenseless Nanking"'' In five different but similar notes handed representatives of the pow ta at llflukow yesterday. Eugene Chen, foreign minister of the na tionalist government, refused to ad out. responsibility of the national lsts for; attacks on foreign citizens and consulates at Nanking. He fur ther called attention in the British and American notes to the boiulwrd n.ent of ''defenseless Nanking" iiy gunboats of those nations., in the British and French notea he refer red similarly to the bombardment . Our Fifth Birthday i ; 1 i:;CM Herald Scoop I'M Is Effective That the Evening Herald's Vop' story on the selection of Provo as the site of the Union Pacific athletic meet- - proved effective, Jg evidenced by the response of t'. P. athletic leasue. officials who were in Salt Iir-JJui- iu C0NVIQ10N AROUSES PLEA OF BULLIONS when Thursday's Herald ap peared...' Congratulations for' a complete and comprehenriveSory on, the meetere received by the ma nag p-nwnt from f. W. Neville, athletic league seeretarj'i Thursday evening. and sixty-fiv- e issues of this paper were secured by the organization for distribution on au points of tne I'niott Pacific System. Likelihood that the Herald will be distributed throuKlwut Hie sys-te- n until the completion of thr v inn naa isits, who ipxrct to use a large num ber of subscriptions for that pur pose in the near future. rn d ay Community Church j Corner 2nd No. and UnlvrAveji Sitecial services will be held next ;, , Sunday at the Community church, North and lorner of Avenue in observance, of Easter.. The service of ipomlng worship will lie? he'd at 11 o'clock, st which time the pastor, Rev. E. E. Bachelder, will deliver the Easter message, assisted by. the choir. will render the anthem. Lift Cp. Your Headsj O Ye Gates" - by Emerson. There will also be 'a re ception of members at this time.. At 10 a. Hi. ' an Easter program will be presented by members of the cnurcn scnooi, to wmcn parents and friends are cordially invited. lni-verslt- y Se-on- .'Hats-aregoing, to be small in Provo. They are sort of little round bowl-likthings that slide s'ickly down over a hob. Some of them haven't any brims. Others hnve Just allttle edge of a briim silk They're made out of straw,-'tiand satin, and the. round tops are n With some sort usually-press- ed d of a crease that runs v-;across them. I didn't see any artificial cherries on any of them, nor any Merry Widow hats With dig sloppy brims. It looks like the modern woman takes, good rare to keep her face at- e . V tractive so doesn't need ginicracks on her hat to set her off. Coats are loud and snappy.- The.v are rather fluffv nrettv thliics. iiiosl of then! in gambles' checks. I think they re called on these checks are lii' all sbades, partreularly a sort of purplish-pinPut a and white. good looking girl InJne of them and sued be a knockout.;; . 1 k as to dresseiCi It sort of seems like there aren't any just ordinary dresses any more. A dress Is either a sport dress or A party dress. These sport dresses Tsrw made out of nil kinds of other Now ..JL f EARL CARROLL Jjjoimis--rhTou- ! int TrtHybe4HmrdLTrow Ike i - IS IMPROVED gh Navy Recruiting Age Limit Lowered tbo-nig- ht Van-zett- ' l" ROTARY CLUB AT LUNCHEON ;' lalr s - SPRING STYLES:GERTAINLYGOINGTD.,B QH,'GIRLS!. this liere ladlcs'"flothes and -- Ft! Asexualization of IoientiaI frents of Socially Inadequate Children Discussed at Meeting of State Board. - 'ri., York-Pari- spring season is going to lie a wow. I f!ured.that the EVENING HERALD readers would he Interested In what they will see In Easter's bU parade, so 1 strolled through several of the stores 4n rrovo the other on 'the day to pick np the And ' I certainly can say I styles. i jaey are uanny. i cenaniy( can. I figure the best way to gel I fll IIS BV PHYSICIAN v Lynn Broadbeat- - was the winner of the,H. A. Dixon extemporaneous, speaking contest which was held at the Provo high school Friday morn- .!'.' ing TIis subject wasThe-TrapperBarr Washburn took second " place with "Andrew Jackson--five topics tyiJfylugsomephase of "The "Spirit-o- f the West" were chosen a week ago, and the topics of the five contestants were drawn by lot one hour prior to. the contest. jThe speeches were judged in - terms of pstemporaneous values, not "CATHOLIC CHURCH ' ' oratory. : H. A. Dixon was present and A special Easter Sunday service awarded the medul to the winner at which Easter high mass will be at the close of the contest, Haeinon-presidesung, Will be given at the Catholic at the church, according to announcement contest while the judges were S. P. of Father J. U. Delaire. The mass Eggertseii, Ray Stewart and La which will be sung by the church Vleve Hultih: . choir, under the dlre'ciion of L. Ho- Other speaker, aud their subjects vorka, will be rendered at 10:30 follow; Claude Snow; "Escalante"; 'c'HtMii Sunday mornliiB. and is (Sou- Jomes Poiilton. "The Contribution are qt Utah"; Bliss Brimhall, mod's Mass In C. The welcome. Ordinance of rtST-- 'i tonight and ' , W the-requir- York-Par- is 'r . - , 'll city has found the number of names sufficient to fill ments of the law, he must send to the city attorney a copy of the Jaw proposed for referendum.'" Thevat within .ten days provide and return to the city recorder a ballot title for the measure. The recorder shall have the title thus certified to him printed on the off IciaT ballot. According to the theater Tnanagers of the city, attorneys are how preparing the necessary petition sheets for circulation throughout the city. flight would atart "early in May" in the same planeT"' He said Acosta 1inT Cham berlain "probably" would pilot the mSchtrie, and toifideritly be Uered'he would not break up ft personnel combination which had, once At least it proved jso successful, was fell' certain that one of the two would make the flight, although U might be necessary to substitute a trained navigator for one of them, firs To Start . .It seemed probable today that the Bel la iua plane w'outi le the first to atart of half a dozen planes plan- non. Ding to try the New York-Pari- s stop flight for the $25,000 Ortelg prise. All that is needed Is a new motor .to replace the one which, " though it still worked perfectly at : the end of the long flight yesterday, must have beeiL ba Jly worn by XM grind. j Commander- - Richard Byrd,--- w ho flew over the North Pole, and Floyd Bennett, his aide on that expedis tion, are planning a New flight, as are Noel Davis, V. 8. N., and Pilot Jindherg,. ofS,U: Louis. Rene Fonck, Frencn , flyer whose plane crashed and burned last year when he' attempted to take off on s a New flight, was understood to be planning to try again, It wag believed other foreign flyers were preparing for similar 'efforts. ed theNew - - , f EW YORK, April ,15 (UP) Bert Acosta and Clarence D. Chani- berhtln, juliit holders of the world's;--; sustained flight record, got up this uioruiug with ?l hours 11 minutes and 20 seconds of kinks stretched out of their legs and started discussing "plans for a flight to Paris. Must Duplicate Feat The feat of Acosta and CJianilier-Ia- i In flying a Wright Bcllanea . monoplane for six hour longer than flewa; planeljcfoeeT any niair-evenwde tbeiu sudden favorites In ths s . 125,000 New derby. All they have to do is to L' duplicate the 38 hours or so of their line I7 flight In a more or less straight electioii at which a governor was elected. Since 4313 votes instead of following the monoton- were cast in the 17 voting districts of Provo in 1924 for Govouge lrcular course used for the recernor George H. Dern and his opponent, Charles R. Mabey, ord flight which ended on Long ! "...:" ' land yesterday, 540 signatures must be obtained to the petition before any 0. M. Bellaneaf- - designer - and action must be taken by the city commission.. bulluVr ot the sturdy little plane recorder has received the petition and he After the -- . - bv-man- mum f Easter Outfit IS ADVOCATED Nothing has created such a stir and caused bo much comment in Provo for a long time as did the newfof the new city ordinance forbidding the operation of moving picture shows on Sunday after May 15. Wherever groups of men or women have congregated since the news about the ordinance was printed in the Evening Herald Thursday afternoon the main topic of conversation has been the.proposed ordinance. In public places,- such as cafes and hotel lobbies, the flow 'of oratory has been mining freely and arguments, be- fittinsf the highest tribunal of the state, for and against the new law were heard on every hand. Most of these arguments seem' to be aeainst the ordinance and for Sunday movies. The announcement that the, city commission may-b- e peti tioned to refer the ordinance to a vote of the people,was nailed as .a stepin the' right direction. The sentiment seems to prevail that the people of the city desire the show houses to be open on Sundays and that lor that reason tne city commission should not have passedfsuch an ordinance. Others maintain that without the city commmsjon passing the ordinance, there would be no opportunity Tor the people of the city to demand a referendum vote. '! v 540 Signatures Are Needed According to the referendum law,L a petition against anyj:ity ordinance must be filed with the city recorder within thirty days after the passage of such an ordinance. The law. specifies that a referendum petition in cities, to be mandatory, must be signed by 2 P? ceht of the number of legal voters who cast their votes for governor at the past preceding M j so ago, but the girls wouldn't materials with fancy names. . They are cut. along simple; lines as the down it dropped stand for it, fashion editor tells me, "simplicity-iagain. ' ts the keynote" and they . hang There's one thing: I don't of these dresses have thousand's straight up ami dVwn '.without n.v ii ruffles or sleeves or of tiny gleats all around Jheuu If any of those deoiirs.' These straight it takes a man half en hour to press UneHi inake women lok' like, sweet his trousers how long would it take little,: glrlsr which1 ls-- 1 he Intention. a girl to get all those, little things It's a good gag, all jig.ht." end a bt pressed inf - I'm all against it. is to be banded to the" fellow who These party dresses, now. They . . sure aW figured put the principle.. prettr.' Little fitmy things The waist line of these dress of blue and yellow, shining out like at (he hips, a tales-lad- y tender roses. Some, of the-- have t is down told me. She said tbey skirts .shaped Just like alttle Hed to shore it im a season or have, sort of gyiwy skirts - llke--lo- leg?of-mutto- . '"'i..,'". ..: . - - " io mem mat nang aown au uneven like a torn edge, which Is considered Ug league stuff, I'm told. Ob, yes one thing . more' aUmt the sport cli(thes-r-soiof them are Just like men's .clothes only, a littje short skirt takes the place of the trousers .On th dummies they wear vestsregu'ar men's vests, t mean and men's shirts and ties, guess men cant complain when they see. now buying step-in- s themselves to "keep that schoolboy pep." Skirts are going to he as short as ever, striking somewhere within six inches of the knee. Plenty of ue j . '. .I.- - .' ' ' v. stockings will be shown they cost st much you can't blame the girls' for showing them. . 1 looked at some,, of these stockings and they seem thinner than the skin on a billiard ball I declare to goodness I don't see where the, girls get any warmth' out of them, but I guess thej know their owii business. They don't seem to be showing any ; cotton stockings! 'Shoes are like millinery,' always different. .The heels seem about as high as usual. Jl few alligators hare given up their lives that Miss Prove may walk in class if she ' of defimstlfscahJuataea-iyunUoa- or i nose, nations. , - v,; ' The powers had demanded, reoa- lation for foreign lives lost and property damaged at Nanking; apology from" General Chiang' Kat Bhek, mmander of the Cantonese army, aud a promise from him that no r si rnilar incidents would be permit- d teg, jh the iitfnisnment for officers in command of the nationalists during the Nanking riots find for such soldiers as might be convicted ef participating. is Almost Defiant As predicted by the United Press Wednesday 's, Chen's reply to Brit Sin and the United States were firm and almost defiant, and his note to Japan was ntoreneiuatory. :-.luture-an- - '' rt SHANGHAI April 15 - (l'P)-- J Moderate nationalists In party meet lugs at Nanking today impeached the nationalist government, at Ban jresolution de-- l mandlng (he arrest the nationalist miulhters at Hani kow. The moderates, styled the cen tral control committee,. also demand ed that Michael Borodin, RusslanJ adviser to the paty, be ousted, liniieacbiuent of the Hankow gov ti nine nt by the. Central control com mitte, dominated by Marshal 'Chiang! Ival Shek, at Nanking, was In de fiance of the ist element among the party. i Veteran Mirier Leads Trapped Men to Safety HENRYETTA, Ok'a..' April 13 s While thi'ir- and families stood at the mouth of the "Old Wise" mine, fearfnl they would never come out alive, 23 miners 'who were imprisoned by water in the shaft were. led to safety late yesterday by.' John Cameron, veteran ' miner. Thai, shaft by which the men entered the mine was floodeO with a quick rush of water from an overflowing creek and the imprisoned men ran to another shaft to escape drowning. ; For eight hours fellow workers" vainly tried to sink a shaft through the mountain side- to save them. ( CD fellow-worker- : cares to. J Colors f Don't let them fool yoi 'milady' (is the fashion editor culi the. Provo girls) Is going to be i; regular riot of color a regular panic of it.' Reds and blues an pinks tomatoes and peaches sunsets ; and flames am' fleshes all the fancy named co'oi (Including, I hope, my duck's breath"), will I worn when the girls trip down t'ei ter street or University avenuo o Easter morn. , j favorlt-"froste- I certainly hope I sight until then. is Veep my eyt ' |