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Show r A Dally i'v r tulrt VMM tt TbcuIit lr. to SALT. LAKE CITY UTAH ' THURSDAY MARCH Horse Trade Air; Liner Still Defies Salvage Crew 12,-00-0 said. face; Cables Break AfalsiW, ana reinforcing the lifting equipsteel cable heavy looped around both motors and securely fastened to the tail ol the big ship as it rocked in the waves on the lake surface Finally, shortly after 5 pm wort was given to pull up the main hoist Chlass Proves Prophet Mebbe string break. Charlie the Chinas railroad cook said, thr caatlng a critical arc over complicated arrangement of ropta f A and A cables. And sure enough, when the ti, crane wheels had moved a hM something cracked like a pb.i' shot the huge cross-ba- r above the plane stood on end and the hjq oozed on back ship the auxiliary supports, water gurgling Into the cabin and the damaged right wing sagging May Be DUaMutted K future attempts to raise the art unsuccessful plane it wu: probably be dismantled from the surface of the water. With the motors and the wings removed, the fuselage could probably be raised without difficulty. The mo tors are the heaviest metal on the plane and the water parts filled wings add a great deal of weight Several small objects, including a seat cushion and cover. Were removed from the pilot' cabin Art yesterday by Walker, of tba ship The emergen-cdoor over the pilot's seats is open and it is feared that loose objects may float away when the plane is lowered to the lake bob tom. Walker wu regularly assigned U fly the huge Douglas with R. 8. Allen, chief pilot, plane A. Lent, whose body wm found in the lake last week, took his place on the fright to Silt Lake: October 5, when the mysterious crash occurred. co-pli- a BURGLARS GET Mt Breaking a basement window of the Walsh Pluming company, 1130 Second avenue, burglars last night took a cash box containing $40 in checks and $30 In currency and silver, police were Informed goday. Investigation was made by Patrolmen Thomas M. World and Joseph P. JSmery. In Semi-Official- ly Message; Farm Leaders Agree With Near Broad Interpretation Western reclamation will play a major role in America's new agricultural conservation policy, it is indicated in a paper released in Salt Lake today by. M. L Wilson, assistant secretary of agriculture, Washington, D. C. the administration's The paper, setting do n reclamation pohev, w as read at todays session of the Institute of Irrigation Agricultures fifth annual conference at the Newhouse y Hotel. 11 was read by L. E. Freudenthal, conference chairman, for Mr. Wilson who has been in Salt Lake for the institute and toil conservation conferences. After explaining the Decertify of an agricultural policy for the lure baaed en soma production control and land conservation. the aistant secretary wrote: "I stand with those who refuse to think of reclamation solely in terms of expansion. I stand with a those who regard reclamation course of action which must be weighed in the light of other agricultural facts and policies of this period. Mr. Wilson asserted that the conservation concept in the new policy should not be "narrow. "I believe," he said, that we must begin to think of what we might- - call human conservation. We have to consider the land in terms of Its soil but more expressly in terms of the family which depends upon that soil." a u Veteran Church Official Puts In Usual Shift On Birthday railroad crane but has defied all efforts to lift it above the sur ment Administrations Stand Given Pres. Gawson At Work At 79 For the past three days the big ship has been lashed to a huge yesterday strengthening . The old horse traders may be gone, but Sait Lake baa Commissioner P. Ifc Goggtn, who today was given authority by vote of the city commission to trade soo animals. The first "swap" made by the trader was one Salt Lake citys elk. crated Lo.b. Salt Lake In ex-endone change for two bay lynx female baboon, crated f.o.b. Fort Texas. Worth, The trade was witir the Fort Worth park commission. On the Salt Lake books, the elk is valued at $25 and lynx at $30 each and a baboon at $50. The paper assets of the soo yo up $05 Perhaps at Fort Worth the elk are valued at $200 or more, so both soo can trade themselves Into prosperty, saya Mr. Goggtn. The part of the contract that brought a chuckle was the f o.b. feature as the freight on an elk will be paid by Fort Worth. Commissioner George D. Key-e-r did not like the bargain. If Pat was a good trader be would have given Fort Worth four instead of one elk, he said. The hav for elk must come from the city water departments farms m Mountain Dell, where Mr Keyaer wants to build more parks. Another attempt to raise the Standard Oil airliner sunk In Great Salt Lake at Colin, on the will probably not Lucin cut-off-, be nude until Saturday. H. H. Hall .company chief engineer said today. Yesterday an unsuccessful attempt was made to swing the ship from the water onto the Southern Pacific trestle. Hr. Hall said that more than 10 inches of salt is caked under the cabin floor and that the soundproofing material throughout the plane is soaked in the heavy brine. The plane now weighs about 30,000 pounds of its normal Weight of pounds, be explained. has Additional equipment been ordered from the Douglas factory on the coast and will be attached to the ship tomorrow, con afternoon, after specially strutted slings cracked under tee strain of lifting the big ship. twpsy CTgawwtflpwB Wilson Outlines Governments Views On Soil Reclamation DaysRevived To Build Up Zoo Plane Return To Lake Bottom As Cables Again Break he 1936 12 yjaater Council of the Twelve Apostle, on his 79th birthday today carried on the duties of his office as usual and attended the regular weekly meetand the ing of the First Preaidency J r cultural leaders present at the Institute conference seemed te agree that Mr. Wilsons remarks pointed to a continued redamaUon policy where denimbie in the program to conserve toil and rakzeimral Bring Twdi hr the Wetwpte standards. At the beginning now of bis Hair Called Fa eightieth year, he to alert and vig"Here in the west where reclaorous and looks to each day for the mation is an Integral part of tho performance of the work It entail. conservation picture. It will devei. He travels far and wide in the the of in fulfilment op under the new act," Mr. Wilson assignments stakes of the Church and sounds , predicted. "It means study, it IT Ui means planning, it meant the most his voice in sincere and kindly ad "f- OCeiey consideration of reclamamonition tor the living of gospel To Leave For careful tion in connection with the policies principles. His associates In the Faculty of conservation and with the facts over be which Council presides Capital Friday of the requirements of our man look to him for the leadership In which he has never failed. Dr, Arthur L. Beeley, bead pi kris,. he added. When the work and duties of the University of- - Utah Sociology Mr. Wilson mentioned there ere two different views on reclamation, the day are over for a blrthda-cannointerfere where a lifes call department, will leave tomorrow one regarding It aa a policy of exD. where C., for pansion. and the second, looking at Washington, ing Is concerned, he said he will night conservation. be honored at a family dinner. next Monday he will address the it In terms of the wort in Its broad sense. With Mrs. Clawson he will be guest school conducted by using police training In reclamation "To think of of his children and grandchildren the U. S Department of Justice. terms of expansion alone is to exwho live in Salt Lake. Present will The adDr. of Beeleys subject factor be Mr. and Mrs Hyrum B. Claw dress will be "The Contribution of clude from consideration and the Social Sciences to Police Work which I believe we would be wise son, Margaret Gay Clawson should Mr and Mrs Lorenzo Clawson, and Law Enforcement He to one "f1 ? with five of President CEawson's of 20 " and police off - J criminologists eight grandchildren. One son. Sam- rials invited to take part In the uel Clawson, is In Chicago, and a school and the siUnt only me from s' a naked rd strips. Tbe present raaways are shaded la tbe center Above la sees gait Lake's proposed airport at I be fatare. The of submarginal Mrs. daughter, Lydia Clawson western university. The invitation that retirement at the proposed raaways. The plan calls for complete drainage, Hoopes, is in Washington. D. C. was extended personally last De- land should go on as part of tba tm tartaded In tbe outline Is tbs atae at tbs conservation program: "In conand Installation of a water system to permit planting of gram sod , President Clawson wu born In cember by J. Edgar Hoover, chief Salt Lake City. March 12, 1857, son project compared with tbs preeeat airport shows In and shrabs la all the emtlrs airport area excepting the enlarged sidering places for occupants toof continue la agriculture where opB Hvrum and Margaret Gay Dr. The enlarged runways, each to feet wife are shown In raaways. Beeley to well known for importunities are better, area suited Judd Clawson. He has been a memand in work research criminotogy on an economic ba- ber of the Council of the Twelve writing on considered. ghould since October 10, 1898. when he has done considerable A New Construction Will Provide Facilities All in a He the a spent year subject Trade Med wu ordained to that calling Y 1 London in 1933, continuing hit stu In hisForeign thesis, ( Mr. Wilson President Lorenzo Snow Transcontinental Plane Types dies under a grant from the outlined tbe nation's new agricul. American Social Science Research turn! policy and cited reasons why 3004ool concrete aprons m front of Council. the hangars, the area will is illustrated (Continued On Psgs II Col I Other noted authorities in ths prepared by city engineers to go to dustless with a beautiful park .field who will address the school Washington with the application sod and shrubs. are Dr. J. J B Morgan, professor Furnish Aid County signed by Mayor E. B. Erwin and The boundary will be lighted 111 SllOW'8 City Recorder Ethel MacDonald for At Work Municipal jUniversity; Colonel I.ynn C. Black, the largest WPA' project to be hghtoso That PthTronsyr needed superintendent of the Ohio highaccording to the wind, may be sponsored by the city. Net of the Utah Building proceeds Copper way control. Dr Felix Frankfurter, The future of the city, said May- - flooded with light to guide a plane 1935 for the of the Harvard Law School and Dr. amount 'company year Erwin, In the rapidly developing to its landing at night. While another w ed to $4,649.722 1 1, according to the Earl C. Arnold, dean of the Vandercommerce of the air and in the The City Commission voted autb .scheduled for this meeting afternoon. It bilt University law schooL Conferences relating the WPA military defenses of the nation, ay lhat Dr. Beeley plans to remain In program of adult education in tha may depend on an airport adellm th was held today by Miss Jenit to agree to furnish the sponsors tv side of the ? ,th' ? the capitol several days before re- state quate tor all purposes. Cltysnd Vntyi . L Lununis, parent education speEven now, the mayor has been share of the project, which will be Building will continue 1936 assessed valuation rPf8' the ltun?tn'Zt f?r who arrived today from cialist, university. Informed that the giant air cruisers Money, said CorruniSMoner B by the company Washington. D. C. The present area of the airport Quinn, was or.gHally appropnat mine to estimated shortly to fly on the trans-cont- i 13 , 9491 comnar M tine 6633 Thoae conferring with Miss Lunv The ed only to nental route will require concrete will be more than doubled provide for work until wilh $10 532 240 last rear' mis Included Mrs. Ruby & Garrett, runways, ,300 feet wide. The plan cost to the city for the land w ill March 15. The is eone The, state director of women's and prm Vi.i 'ronUnue. ofeneedeS calls for construction of such con not be great fesskmal projects; Mack Nicotoysen. thick to ex Crete runways and aupervtoion state director A professional and to tend In three directions for $900 er tracts have been deeded to the mat rials. service projects, and R. F. Homer, feet. county,- - which to expected Jo do-- ' WPA worker were notified jes state supervisor of WPA education COU Vastness of the project Is shown nate such land. 0perllng to terday that they would be id off were $7,867,252-19- . projects. tt for the calls for The calls fact that additions were but all as plan large by today, working At noon, Min Lumtnto was enman months of labor. The pro- and improvements to the Admrnts- - usual, 0 J Schaar. 44. 1719 Michigan tertained at a luncheon at the Civic Avenue merchant, was fined dou ject would employ 2,000 men for trstxm Building. nm the state WPA RBGBTRATION SET almost 10 months. The project as s whole was com c D RcoklidgeandlCMcMUIanlble Jor uveirarkmg injhe dwn :(nter directed by Reginald The entire area must be tile pleted on paper today and a map. University in uri of t tali freshmen were police Beales,' piaved tor MissLummto at today on the monthly ltown district todayH drained. It must be graded and lev prepared by the engineering de- - will register for spring quarter salary placed EHett. list of the water department 'Barrett Hall, after which she de- City Judge A. BORA ATWOOD KK1CHT eled. then underiayed writh water ipartment, which will be forwarded rlasswork Saturday morning. Dean by vote of the City Commission to a an Uvered with line in an address on Parent This policy run-jtthe WPA officials jn Washrng LeRoy E. Cowles of the lower di Roth men have been employed on a ' nounced by Judge Ellett Tuesday 'cation in ths New Program of pipe. Except for the and the taxi strips and the ton, D. C. vsion announced. day labor basts. when he announced that merchants .Adult EducsUon." Sirs, Knight, Who way would be fined and business-meTomorrow, Mias Lummto will Grossed Plains double for overtime parking at the hold an open forum for WPA edu 'cation same time explaining that parking supervisor project Passes space should be reserved for shop teachers at the Civic Center, after be taken for a tour which will she per. A long life of Church devotion On the ground of Insufficient of nursery schools at the Untverv was closed and community service of reckless drlv sity of Utah and the Neighborhood Because men consider the pro- A monument stands at Utah noticed that married women are i women, she said. Men of Jm-- f evidence charges today with the death at 230 a.m Andrew W art. Id, was House, and for s visit to lire meet. against ing of Mrs. iaura Atw discriwiimed m other and she counts a great dismissed. State Agricultural College which against portanre, ing of superintendent of education number among her acquamt-ar- e pioneer resident of Salt Lake City are impersonal in their treatmakes Miss Gubler well known section of the country. D. H. McNamara, 6, and Walter at the Capitol. and mother of former City Com ment of salesmen and saleswomances. much io to Women easier new are entering mtosioner John M. Knight. Mrs. en alike, they are cosier to sell to even the newest zoology stubusiness with than those In pet- H. Hiller, 28, each forfeited bond PAINT BRUSHES of $5 on speeding charges. to than women, said Miss Helen dent. In the zoological section fields to greater numbers as each Knight died at the family borne. Go ty 'she authority. said. peases, day bier, widely known saleswom 144 Seventh East Street. She had Five alleged gamblers arrested BRING WARDING of the Rocky Mountains finest collection of the museum, People Her own Miss field particular been in failing health for die last an in an interview here tOdvjT. are much less formal than those last night by police morals squad-men- , mounted birds, including a Gubler recommended to A native of Santa Clara, Utah. highly trials OF BADLUCK DAY of other sections, she has notic-T- h six months: of great beauty, was pre women pleaded not guilty and seeking careers. Mesr Knight-- was born Oct. 27, , Miss Gubler ha been vacationing eet for next week.- - Arrests women dfr pot drrjn "T Consider women Utah more in a Aa for a 1848, In Mansfield. Conn. She wu well, in fact, she said, women were made at 28 East Second South fortnight. Cubler. Paint brushes sloshed staff adapted to this type of selling of this area dress lnapporprtete-l- y Street and 129 South Main Street the daughter of Miner G. and Mary member of the circulation Comnear the entrance of the Tee Whils recalling her school than men. Men sue inclined to of the Curtis Publishing to Guide Atwood. business. for It a Common i career. Miss Gubler commented pie Grounds this morning. overlook the opportunities In the Whefi two year of age, the pany, rite ha spent tha past 20 women for to seen on be after Sergeant Golden Soon thing on the recent action of the Colfield and consider it only a the tha Democratic years throughout traveling of Lake Salt streets crew had League thrown City Haight's Cot. lege Board of Trustees to excludmean to an end, while women, without a bat. (Oontlnaed OoPafe United State. their street barricade of red ing married women,mri whose hu who have had to find satisfacMiss Gubler began her career Schedules Meeting .muwaBrt For me. she would "I said, errr laxd sold mLjmI IDV protective WKB KIIUUI) tion in W YuipiUCu H less important while she was attending school as feel of eat place a I should Dr. H. M. Woodward of Provo tones shoos with wide pedestrian stzlpea of 3,-careern recognize dignity, beauty If I were A tract of city land waa aoM at the Utah State Agricultural from tbe faculty. to walk the brilliant and fire along yellow, police "When the ward made that dea be and worth in the work. to Dr. Frederick J. Pack, geolo- College, Logan, from which ah will guest speaker tonight at street without shoes. alarm boxes glared to readiness ' cision tt was a step backward vm enduaud. Mtoa Gubler has found great , gist of the city; Mias Gubler left today for Po- meeting of the Democratic League Wi t?M?rr?h The land te oa Seaond South and "How do you do. Madam, I'm far th whole state of Utah," Mtoa differencea in attitude toward catello, ' Idaho, where the will of Utah at S oclock at theNew- and strips of curbing drew out Gubler declared. between Twelfth and Thirteenth working my way through eoilego saleswomen in different sections spend several days. Sha intends house HoteL their bright- - rad that' can help me bjr subscrib . "They should recognise that East Street and - era of the country and also varia- to' return to Utah again as soon acquired and A musical program " will Include parking there wouldwarning be unlucky. -this dtoerimtoatkm will be of tions to the wav she to received as she completes business many year ago aa a source of ing Jar this magazine,' numbera by Bob Bteckner, cowboy there. It be a might just Spring petot sexes and classes. grsveL Dr. Pack said he intends to by Miss Gubler to year tong b A B P W. campaign will bring tenor. S. J Mlckelsen, lasting Injury to the state.? by president, job, but doniH look now,' but v - Women for U became a cliche: Miss Gubler said tbe ha not build, a homo on the land. dont seem to triad her buck to her home state. will be to charge. isnt tomorrow Friday th 13th? , .-- t n vl i, Af t " nA r TOJCCIS Will Continue U For Pioneer Dies Of j t Net Proceeds ? T. Utah Copper GaW Year Education For Adults Subject Of Conferences WiiSffitart SisTion tS .Tthepit " ! Court Fines mSbSB Merchant Double ,u'! For UVCrTdrRIDg 19.-29- - j,, , uurmiiinis I g o bora In Sales Expert Finds Men Easier To Sell To Than Women 1850, Native Utah Woman Says Rocky Mountain People Unusually Informal FIONEER LEGHORN CHILDER S CHICKS Ihtoueh cuiistBiit sflort ts pew-coc- Vigor-Due-l- Our i ASST It H TEST - saw-horse- s, to-da- v SEND FOR CATALOGUE f wi ncurai )oqde was. m ' iV, y as xto m f |