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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH REDMOND Economic 'Headlights ... Industrial News Review While no By Special Correspondent general upturn has yet teen felt, stimulation: along certain basic lines is resulting i.n a decided bettermerft of sentiment throughout the industrial field. Col. L. P. Ayres, of the Cleveland Trust company, expresses this feeling in a current bulletin in which he points out that much progress has b&en made during the past month' in creating a solid financial foundation on which business improvement can be made. Col. Ayres is .of the opinion that the summer months will continue to be a difficult period with business at low ebb, but that' the financial foundation having been 'laid, business will be in a position to take advantage of a settling of conditions here and abroad to effect a recovery. . Loeal Couple Wed. Miss Bessie Hayes, daughter of Mrs. Beatrice" Toulson, and Jewel Poulson, son of John Poulson, were married Saturday afternoon in Salt Lake City, Bishop George Graham officiating. The young couple are well known and they were both prominent in social activities: The marriage pro.ved to be & surprise to many of their friends. After the ceremony they returned here and were accompanied by Miss Ilene Poulson, who has been employed at the capital city. Thursday 'evening, Mrs. Arthur Draper, Mrs. Frank Thurston and Mrs. Albert Poulson were hostesses to the members of the American Legion Auxiliary, Post 106, at the Poulson residence. The social was in honor of one of the members, Mrs. Elery Christensen,- who Is leaving to make her home in Sanpete county. Progres. A sharp temporary upturn 'was sive cooty. was the pastime 'of the caused in manufacturing and produc- evening and a dainty lunch was serving communities in anticipation of the ed to fifteen ".members and nine ' .. new taxes on manufactured products guests, ' int'o stocks as effect. Inasmuch . going Ernest Frandsen and daughter, ,cn hand before June 21. are not subin ject t.o taxation, producing .and buy- Lois, are. spending a fgw Provo. Mr.' Frandsen is attending ing experienced a flurry. Petroleum Limitation of produd-tci- n summer 'school and Louise is visiting reflected in further steadying of with her grandmother, Mrs! James ' Fituidscn. ' . ; . . price. . Rubber products- t--' Increased proAlt-aBills" . 'Mns. of Salt Lake City, in duction with steadying influence, ' ' is with her . visiting parents, Mr. and prices.. Mr& Ephraim Jensen, this week- Copper Inactive. . Zincand:. lead .."Show upward Mr. .and Mrs. Niels' Frandsen and trends. ' Retail buying! increasing, with family, of Salt Lake, are making from Southeast, their home here with. Mrs. FranJsenV repor-t. Pacific Coast and New England. mother, Mrs. Anna Nelson. Newspaper advertising shows slight Miss Francclla Jensen, who has gain over previous month for ..first been employed at. the capital efty the . time since 1029. past several years, spent the Fourth Tonnage on Groat Lakes ' of what it- w'as last year. Steel mills with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas! through" Central West operating at C. Jensen', in .Redmond: ' 17 and IS per cent of capacity. ' Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Rasmussen .While- U. S.' exports for May were motored to Fishlake to spend Inde' day. . 2J per cent lower than ip April-- , the pendence ; . . v'dli-thtotal volume compares favorably Miss Both Cli'n'ste.nsen; of Bingham, same .period, last year,, when the .decline vfas 5.3 per cent. Due to great- is j guest .at the home Qf hot sister, Mrs. .Lon Smith. ly decreased .imports, the. trade. tal 4 ance is. ICO per cent hotter than in the Mrs. Katie Smart' in Lake, is previous month and the decrease with Mr. her 'and parents,visiting less business is than tota.l foreign ' slack experience iu re- Mrs. N. L. Peterson, and friends. . spring ' . . cent years. Merchandise imports Mr. M. Mrs. P. and end Chris'tens.Sn to$112,000,000, the lowest dropped Mr. and and .Mrs.: Whe.adon Clayton low. figure in. 23. years. The previous was $103,000,000 in January, ' 1909: family, of Bingham, visited with relatives "and friends in Redmond JndeT Exports were valued in May at pendgnee "day. or $3,236,000 under April. . . Cotton exports for 'the. first, five , who lias been. emmonth? of the year Were well ahead-'ofih California for the past six those of last year both so' far as' ployed here price and' volume are concerned. 'AH months, .returned to his. homo ' . 'important' foreign markets took more last. week. in ift the than cotton correspondMay Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Nelson "entering month last year, though Jess 'than, tained a group of ?riends at.lheir. April .this" year. hn.me last week in honor of Mr. and Mrs.. Niels Frandsen. Covers wefe laid, .Sugar, one Of the firs commodities at. dinner for twelveguests. 'tor undergo a severe depression, has durshown marked signs of recovery Nath Miller of Harrison, Ark., reing the past few' weeks. Raw sugar found in his desk a letter his experienced an almost steady decline cently wife him to .mail 18 years ago. gave '.in the 'past ten years, 'reaching a low 50 in. May when it sold for about per Mrs: I T. Fraser of Nev York, recent of production cost. It is estimated turned that for the first time since 1925 found .unexpectedly from a' trip and her maid entertaining ten guests world "consumption this year will .ex'at dinner. inceed production. Even' granting no crease In consumption,' it will be ne- After exclaiming thats not jusceseary to' draw on surplus. stocks .when sentenced to prison for tice, this year t'o fill orders.. Low . prices an automobile in Chicago, anstealing and normal seasonal "influences are other- year was added to the sentence cause demand a brisk expected 'to . of Frank Vincent. . during the- next- few month's. 'An outstanding recent .Cuban' deIn a petition for divorce filed at velopment, "which will, probably be Trenton, NJ., Mrs. Bertha C. Carter is taken up- in other ' that her husband sprinkled the proposed crop curtailment. A' charged her corsets with itching powder. presidential decree- has- been. enacted Decem--be- r to provide that the carry-ove- r 31 next,. be exported during 1933 ' and the .total U. S. quota for the' latter year be ' .equal' to . the amount . sftippMthis year. " . . . - - - s " one-ha- lf - Jury Finds Draper Guilty of Murder The jury, sitting in the trial of Mendon Draper, who had been charged with the slaying of Andrew Bjerre-gaard, the Ephraim banker, on the night of April 12, brought in a verdict of guilty Sunday morning at 2:30, after deliberating over the evidence more than eight hours. The jurys verdict was accompanied by the recommendation that the young man be sentenced to life imprisonment. Judge Dilworth Woolley, district judge, and who heard the case, will sentence Draper Wednesday, July. 13. Lewis Larson, attorney for the convicted man, has indicated that he will carry the case to the state supreme ' court. . The murder of Mr., Bjerregaard was, perhaps, one of the most heine-ou- s ever perpetrated in the county. Draper, who was infatuated with the bankers daughter, Mrs. Ivadell Jensen, the evidence showed, was at the Bjerregaard honie on the night the crftno was committed. The preponderance of evidence also showed that Draper attacked the aged banker and that in the 'scuffle, alleged to have followed weds, Draper struck Bjerre-gaarover the head with a club. The evidence also was proven that Draper had secured a can of bil and that he attempted to .bum the body of the banker and destroy the building .in which the .crime was committed to ' cover, up the deed. Mrs. Ivadell Jensen,-daughte.slain hanker, and sweetheart of Youve Got To Keep On il r , of-th- Draper, has been charged with first degree murder for allpged complicity in the' murder of hef father. Mrs. Eleanor I.anglols of Chicago, got a. divorce after she told a judge that' her husband was crraT in trying to cure hef- of backseat driving. ' IJ. E. Sheehan of Balmaiir, Australia, is wealthy, but he sued the municipal council for 12 gents overcharge on his tax ball and won. If you . explosion revealed a home brew plont in the state prison at Joliet, 111., in which two convicts, Roy Knight and Edward Nelson, were hurt. An- - - - $123,-000,00- 0, . Edwin-Sorenson- - - " - - - , - sugar-countries- - - ...... Tor-far- lost when the senate voted to. recommit the bill proposed by Senator of Oregon to the agricultural committee'. The McNary bill would empower the federal farm, board-- ' in its discretion to invoke the debenture scheme, the equalization fee, the domestic allotlment scheme, or any combination of them," to raise farm, prices in face of' surpluses. Opposition to the bill developed chiefly because of the domestic allottment scheme which many leaders held to be unconstitu' ' tional. -- The feeling on the part of American food manufacturers that Great Britain offers a' poor field for the introduction of new lines at the present time appears to be open to question. During the past six months American tomato juice has been gaining in favor with the British public to a marked degree. Grapefruit, also new to the British public, is enjoying a like growth in popularity. The high quality of American food specialties is generally recognized by - After declining to the' lowest levels in more than forty years, hog prices have made sharp recovery, carrying prices to the highest levels in about .throe months. Some seasonal advance had been anticipated in hog values but the most optimistic had not looked for the rapid recovery that has featured the trading during the past two Further improvement in the hog market may generally be expected at this season of the year, as the trend of hog prices over a period of many years shows that the peak in prices generally is reached in August. Government reports indicate that marketings for the balance of 1932 will be. smaller than the large receipts of last year, while private reports indicate a considerable lessening of pigs for 1933. Many farmers have found in the sale of hogs practically their only the British public, and this is ticularly true of canned goods. par- ' George Lester skipped from Michigan four years ago .to avoid--, paying alimony. Neglecting to change Jiis name,, and also forgetting . the long reach of- radio, he asked a Tennessee station, to play I Cant Give You Anything But Love, which. was done after due. announcement of the name of the requester. His wife was listening in, and now George is going back to give love or whatever the judge thinks is right.. Every merchant is a fisherman, Business is the brook, The right kind After traveling 200,000 miles over the world looking for dangerous adventure and not finding it, Joe Man-ni- x of Minneapolis, suffered a fall in the 'bathtub. When Edward C. Foss of Cleveland sought a divorce, he charged that his wife had not spoken, to him for six ' . years. means of 'raising immediate cash. Those who are in close touch with conditions throughout the middle west are of the opinion that many hog owners have sacrificed breeding stock as a means of paying current expenses and taxes. Another bullish feature that is giving many ift the trade great concern is the breaking out of hog cholera in many sections! These outbreaks have been the result of lack of immunization. Many farmers have no-- felt justified in the expense connected with vaccinating their pigs and serious consequences are possible. History shows that periods of abnormally low prices generally bring about sharp curtailment in production, with abnormally high prices a3 the usual result. It remains to be seen whether or not thi3 will be true. Nevertheless, the'outlook for hog prices is favorable and it would appear that the purchase of good brood sows at prevailing prices be a good investment. t And work to catch a limit, Cause you get out of'fishin Just what you put in it. Mr. and 'Mrs. J. Oakes of Richmond, Vd., recently became the parents of their seventeenth child. . -' Mc-Na- Youve got to whip the stream d Situations relief legislation at the present session of congress was . Prisoners in jail at Richmond, Mo., to leave, explained as follows: We didnt want to lose three meals a day, with . a" roof over our heads aftd no work to do. ' Livestock: All hope And then hunt a shady spot And sit an read a book; When he wrote to the' government asfcingfor a pension,' William Brown of Fall, River, Mass., explained he intended to use the money to buy false : teeth. . yho-refuse- expect to catch any fish You can t just Bait a hook of-Sa- l the-usua- :U 51: Is his . of advertisin baited hook; And if he expects to fill his basket From out the perpetual stream, y Hes got to keep on fishin He can't just sit and dream |