OCR Text |
Show wm The Deseret News, Salt Lake Gty, Utah Saturday, April 26,1941 Audience Delighted With University Play Driver Dies Former Sugar House As Cars Hit; Bishop Dies lit East in Four Injured Friends here were notified today of the death, Chicago 'of William L. Hansen, 73, patriarch of Chicago Stake and former bishop of Sugar House W'ard. He died, unexpectedly of a heart attack yesterday morning. ' Journey To Jerusalem Proves Welcome , Diversion From Stress Of Times e South highway 91 at Sixty-firs- t State Street Dead was Jim Makrakis, 53. Injured seriously was Pete 20, also of Bingham. Mr. Makrakis died at 5:15 a m. today at the Bingham hospital. A basal skull fracture Was the cause of death, attending physif T cians, said. Suffering from severe lacerations on the nose, cheek and forehead, Barnardo was reported 'in Bar-nard- o, 'Mourned 9; ' Fathers, Sons Banquet Held jr Seventy-Fiv- e Attend Edgehill Ward Party ' Seventy five attended the Path-n- s and Sons Banquet of the Explorers ot Edgehill Ward at 6 30 pm last Thursday in the Ward musement Hall, Fifteenth Eas, and Blaine Avenue The banquet w ill hereafter be conducted annually, it was decin ed Charles Robinson, representing the Salt Lake Council, presented the Explorers with th.e 1941 charter and congratulated the group, largest in Highland Stake, on winning the Retries ers Ribbon , two yeais in succession W. P. Vanfleet, Oscar E. Low-de- r and James M Smith, ward Explorer committeemen, and Ernest VV. Hagen, Exploier leader, attended tne banqquet. Civil Service Tests Announced U. S civil service examinations will be given for several jobs in the national defense setup, H, A. Goodfellow, local secretary, announced today. The jobs, salaries and closing dates are:- -' Automobile spare parts experts. $3,200 per year, needed at once; classified laborers for military centers in the Salt Lake Ogden area, $4 40 per day, needed at. once: war department coal inspector, $3,800 per year, Dec. 31, 1941; quartermaster laundry superintendent, $3,200 per year, April 28; regional agent and special agent In trade and industrial education, $4,600 and $3,800 per year, assistant until further notice: curator, U. S. National Museum, $3,200 per year. May 14; social ..worker In veterans and prisons bureaus, $2,000 per year, May 14. William L. Hansen, patriarch, dies in Chicago. Petroleum Retailers Elect New Officers Price of gasoline and oil for automobiles is expected to rise because of additional taxes which will be levied by the federal gov ernment for the national defense program, nearly 600 members of the Utah Association of Petro- leum Retailers were told last night at their eighth annual convention in the Newhouse tel Iverson of Salt Lake, president of the association, said national levy being planned included a 60 per cent tax increase on gasoline The convention elected a board of directors which included Mr. Iverson, Paul Hedges, I. R. Morrison, O. C. Allen, Charles E. Solomon, Wendell D Wagstaff, J L. Robins find S, G. Paxman and Allen Bucher, of Salt Clarence Rackham and Winn Fer-ro- rt of Ogden. Police Chief Reed E. Vetteili was scheduled to make a talk on highway safety, but was called from the assembly hall befoie he delivered the speech. German-Bor- n Citizens Held Good Americans Geimanborn citizens of the Unitedl States are intensely loval to America and are performing efficient service in the national defense program. sas Capt C. F. May ot San Framsoo, president of West Coast Ixical No 90, lasteis, Males and Pilots of America . Captain Mav, who served with the U. S. Aimv transport service during the World War was last night by United- - Air Lines to Washington. D C to attend a national defense confer , ence in the capital. We w ho are American citizens of German birth came to America to get awav from the type of government we , disliked. us Democracy means more to than to manv of the citizens born here because we know what the other type Is like, he said. We are glad to be Americans and will fulfill everv obligation and dutv of citizenship in this our adopted country." Garment Workers Plan Organization Pesotta, vice president and organizer of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, announced today that her organization, an AFL affiliate. or-Is a campaign to about ganize garment workers In Salt' Lake and Ogden ateas. Miss Pesotta, en route from Angeles.to Atlantic City, N. J. spoke at a meeting Thursday night at the Labor Temple, 151 second East Street. v Rose I-- ? FOR BUILDING FOR BUYING FOR REMODELING VE OFFER EITHER 7 st Loans C ome IlnanciM plus a friendly cooperative, helpful and above aU In numerous Instance' our service. ttntterstandinf ol loan noods and proceduro has meant homo eons true den. rSpnfBca I 'V. WHATV$t Commission Accepts Second Low Bid i i U : o TI 1VT I 3Wi asignm. 5111 VO, Dies At Home in excess of $5 000 in 1915, w obiamead by the Countv Cqfnmi'Sion for a prem'W! when it accepted ium of SJ'viJ the next Vo the low bid of Ed- ves-terda- v & ward M Companv. also saved The Commi-Mo- n almost a hundred dollars on fue and theft and compre-hen-uv- e roveiage hv accepting the penultimate low hid of bv the Kolob Coiporation. representing the Geneial America companies of 'seattle. Athlon A Companx's successful bid on property damage, pubwas lic liabihtv and collision wntten through the Home Indemnity and New Brunswick Eire companies. The combined col of the total 1941-4was $9,203 96 coveiage for which compares with $$4 b02 SI for the same insuianre last ear a saving of neailv $.1,500. tax-pave- is 2 In Salt Lake Tests As Grade A Whether ou buv vour Ice cream at the corner grocery or an ice cream stoi e a di iv pallor, vou can count on it being grade V" according o statistics releas'd today hv the Salt Lake City Board of Health. Sample tests at 38 retail establishments, during March, showed the average bacteria count to be? 7.000 which Is 43.000 below the maximum set bv the Salt Lake department. said Dr. Louis R. Curtis ehKl sanitarian The average bacteria count for "A" grade milk, with 34 dealers being tested, was 3000 for March, the same figure as in 1940. Maximum count that "A" grade milk can reach under the Salt Lake department is 20.000 for pasteurized milk. n P. Gives Eight Pictures To Legion U. , C. H Saltmarsh, general agent passenger department Union Pacific Railroad, representing th Friday Union Pacific Railroad No. 2 presented Salt Lake Post American Legion with 8 beautifully colored pictures of scenic grandeur of the national parks of southern Utah, Yosemite National Park. Green Lake. Colorado, and the Columbia River Gorge. These pictures w 111 be hung In the lounge and main auditorium In the Legion's new home, 404 South West Temple. Commander Birney K. Farnsworth accenttn ed the gift on behalf of ' - Nair. Final lnspectlon of South High School cadets and officers has been scheduled for May 5, when an Inspecting officer from The Presidio ip San Francisco will review the entire battalion, announced SrgL James R. Mc Cereipoies will be under the direction of Cadet Lieut CoL Bartley Day. The South Junior Drill Team and Junior Medical.,, Corps will perform for the offi-cer- - r this mam Proclaims Cleanup MIDVALE, April 26 Annual week In Midvale City has been set by" Mayor C. J. Welsh for April 28 to May 2, inclusive, according to a proclama-- . clean-u- p tion issued Friday by the mayor. fering under Roman domination, ervlng out against the brutat Frederick G Rich Was 81 Years Old of Jj30 Frederick.IL. Rich.-8-LStreet.- - nativ resident xif died at his home from Salt an illness incident to advanced He was the father of Maj. age H. Aronld Rich, feting director of the Selective Service program In Utah. Born in Salt Lake, July 19, 1859, he was the son of late Elder Charles C. Rich of the and Couneil of the Twelve, Sarah D P Rich, he spent part of his early life In Bear Lake, Ida." E'or many years he was foreman of the Silver Brothers. Iron the Works, and was guide at State Capitol for eight years., Mr. Rich served as a counselor to Rishop William Wood of the Ward Twenty-fourtfor 17 years He is survived bv his widow and seven of his eight children: Ben C. and Major Rich of Salt Lake, Mrs H. Raymond Bingham of Weston, Ida : D. Chase Rich of Angeles; Mrs James C. Smith of West Hartford, : Conn Charles O. Rich and Mrs D Harris Berkinshaw of Salt 30 grandchildren; five Lake, great grandchildren; and the follow ing brothers and sisters Dr. Ezra Rich and Dr. Edward I. Rich of Odgen; Alvin Rich of Alberta. Canada, Joel H. Rich of Calif ; Morgan Rich and Walter Rich of Pans, Ida , and Mrs Drusilla Streeper of Salt Lake E'uneral serv ices w ill be conducted Tuesday at 2 p m. In the Twenty-fourtWard chapel with Bishop 0car M ODen in charge. Butial will be in the City Ceme-te- i -. WH h v . Ei lends mav call at the home, 6.90 Wall Sheet, Tuesday from 10 a m. until 1 p m. Advises Employes Take U. S. Vacation In Utah T All Ice Cream f; -- ing. In the play the Jews are suf- os fleet Insurance Vehicular which co- -t Salt County well Wllii'"!i First Scj:iij'itv;"?l'riKLi it r; smasms? dies at home. Are vou worried Du vou have the jitters, suffer from 'insomnia or are vou generally discouragIf so take a vacation. ed if not take a vacation to Utah and the West is the advice given by the United States government to its employes in Washington, D. C. The federal government is also trying to get defense industries "to urge their emploves to a follow the same advice as moiale builder. was Such the Information bv Randall brought to Salt I Jones, special representative Railroad of the Union Tacific Companv who returned today from Washington, D. C., where he has lectured on Southern Utah Parks for the seventh consecutive year for tne National L Parks Service. Newton S. Drury, director of the National Park Service and Bruce Macnamee, director of the U. S. Travel Bureau. $re both In optimistic for an Increase travel in Utah during the year, Mr Jones said. He said advance bookings Indicated a gigantic swing In tourist travel to the West. anv-wa- v materialism under which their has traditionally so religious-lif- e been suppressed, and looking . eagerly for the long- - promised Messiah The --Messiah. Is among them, yet they see Him not. They want a triumphant, conquering splendor, a leader of heavenly armies to wipe out the Roman scourge; they cannot see that the spirituality of true religion Is the weapon bv which the Roman materialism can be defeated. In the foreword, the author points out that long thought and study have convinced him that there Is no answer In the world to Hitler and his philosophy save that of sniritualitv. Only In great arts such as poetry and great religions snrh as Christianity, has the world found the courage to go on a purpose in life, a personal dignitv and reason for existence - and onlv there - can thev find hone and courage again If a man admits nothing hut material standards, savs Mr. Anderson, he has no answer to Hitler and can have none. Tn pointing out these tMngs the author notes ttyat he himself has not been a "nraotleing Christian In his life though a believer So much for the nhilosonhv of the nlav Anvthing we mav sav here Is Inadequate anvwav. 4s for the technical side the excellence of casting and directing of makeup and seenerv was rv for anv amazing. It critic to look hack-tthe good old davs for the hotter things In anv field hv side of which modrn counternarts look shnd-riv- hut more and more we become convinced that w'e saw nothing in th v av .of amateur theatnr hereabouts five or ten "nr fifteen, or twenty-wear- s ami to eomnare with offerings of the last two or thnoe vpirs Dr Toseph F. Smith head of the university speech department and director of "A Journey tn Torusalem did an exceptional job; with more than 40 peoin the east, the directors ple task must have been appalling, vet the tourh Is sure throughout The individual actors w'ere competent and the performances of John Fetzrr Tr. as Joseph of Nazareth, Parley Baer as the Harrv Allen as Herbd Antipas and Glen as voung the Stephens vOung Jeshua were memorable. Bovd Sheets as Shadraeh and the four members of the Sanhedrin, D Agnus Bover. Max S Banks, Francis Urrv and I Clair Likes were unusually good in secondary roles. The and job of costuming makeup was well done The assortment of heavy anij trick beards, unusual faces and1 strange costumes might easilvTiave made a farce out of the play had thev been poorly done, but the heavily made un actors looked like real people Of course, they should" look like real people, hut in amateur theatricals thev so selmoney-graspin- 1 BIG 6.2 CU. FT. g Tsh-rfla- robber-prophet,- dom do. Naturally there were a few eomparativelv weak spots here and there, things that needed touching up and changing, hut In the Mght of the plav as a whole, even the critic feels no Inclination to dwell on them, or even to think of them What is brought awav Is the Impression of the whole, and It Is an impression which will stay with the plavgoer for many years to come. J. EL' T. Over 97 per cent of the molt produced in the United States in 1939 was used for industrial purposes, chiefly by makers of Compare with Others to $12t)! (o) (o).M BALANCE MONTHLY, Down $4 Strong All-Ste- Usual Carrying Charga Cabinet el Goldex Insulation Cold Control Rotorite Current Cutter Tip.proof Rustless Wire Shelves Automatic Electric Light Seamless Porcelain Interior White Dulux Exterior ch The B i g B a rg a i n Bombshell of 1941! The big bargain bombshell of 1941! Think of itl Sensationally low priced yet offering you famous Coldspot dependability! A big 6.2 cu. ft. Coldspot with all the features above, and priced way under $100! Compare with others up to $120! Here's the value that's too good to miss! ! Tloar Equipped! Not Stripped! Big 6Vi COI-DSPO- Cu. Ft. T 50 EJOEiEiflBS FOB BERTH1 CA T Buy , Buildy Remodel Your Hoiiic Monthly, Quarterly, Semi " Annual or Yearly Payments. all-tim- U modern methods el C. Rich h For their outstanding part in a high the . raising to an Post-Nomembership In Salt Lake 2. American Legion, eight membership committee members will ber warded pen and pencil sets, according to Andrew L. Jimleson, first vice commander. -- e Tbev are; William Ytora) We specialise Frederick I amazingly effective. Thd play Is a presentation of the University Theater, put on by Theta Alpha Phi, national honorary dramatic fraternity, and Is the final offering of the season by both. It is also the best. The play, a Sincere gnd reverent portrayal of the boyhood of Christ, would be an excellent thing in and of itself, viewed merely as a piece of theater; in the light cast by the 'author' preface, read to the audience before the raising of the,curtain by Ned Williams, the pertinency to current events is astound1 Passes To Reward Lccion n Drive Committee OR OUR OWN Low-Co- County Saves On Insurance Post F. H. A. Home. Loans- - First Security nt C. M . j r Oil Price Hike Is Hinted Headquarters for F. H. A. Loans 90 and Resanna Jenny Hansen. - He here and served on a three year mission, to Germany. Upon his return to Utah he vis made supervisor of Church coal interests in Coalville. Summit Stake Sunday School superintendent in 1901 and held the position unul he returned to Germany for another there year mission. He returned to Salt Lake in 1911 and became bishop of Sugar House Ward, a position he held until 1919. He served on the Granite Stake High Council unul 1922 when he moved to Chicago. In Chicago he became superintendent of Sunday Schools for the Northern States Mis&ioh and had charge of all mission genea- logical work. He was also a mem. ber of the presidency of the Chi- cago branclLWben Chicago Stake was organised he was or darned patriarch and named president of the High Priests Quorum, a posiuon he held until the tune ot his death.. , He engaged in the real estate business m Salt Lake and in the "apartment house business in Chicago, havmg originally gone there - as represeniauve cd a -- radio, company.' Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth Walker Hansen; a daughter, Mrs. Ehese Hodgen of East Mill Creek: four brothers, .Nephi J. Hansen, George, Alvin and Fern Hansen, all of Salt Lake; three sisters, Mrs. Luella Hardv of Salt and Mrs. Bessie Burgon and of Union Mrs. Either Forbush and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday in Chicago and additional services will be held Inter-fnein Salt I,ake next week. will be m Salt Lake. f was educated toBingham driver wag dead In motorist another and day Salt Lake "poor" condition at atwo-cacolr hospital, victims of a lision late last night on U. S. Physicians said the Hospital. young man would probably lose his right eve. Also hUrt in the crash were Charles Howard V. Darlmg,-1Storbuck 36. and his wife, Agnes, of Bingham, and Devon 3L- Beckstead, 16, of Midvale. Darling suffered minor cuts about the head, the ethers bruises State Highway Patrolmen George Pazell and John Visser said Darllng'was thr driver of the car which rammed into the back of the machine being driven by Makrakis, as the latter attempted a left hand turn on Sixty first South State Street. were Mr. and Mrs. Starbuck passengers in the car driven by Makrakis, the officers said. Suffering from a probable Pictured hip, bruises and cuts, Mrs. Lena b n,scandon, 6b, of 319 Ea-- t Thirteenth South Street, widow of Alex S Escandon, today at the Holy Cross Hospital as reported in "fair condition. Mrs. Escandon was injured at 813 p m. yesterday when struck by a car, driven by Rulon L. Perry, 25. of Murray, as she was crossing near 825 East on Thirteenth South Street The machine that struck Mrs Escandon wag traveling about 15 miles an hour and swerved nearly into the path of another car in attempting to avoid the impact, a witnesg reported to Several hundred Salt Lakers last night found an amazing fcalm to the nerves that had been shattered by months of reading headlines on the European War. Others who are suffering from the same thing and vtho did not attend the opening performance of Maxwell Anderson's "Journey' to Jerusalem" in Kingsbury Hall are urged to do so tonight for the treatment is Mr. Hansen was born in Salt Lake. May 22, 1867, a son of Peter A Officer Will Review Cadets" - , Other Accidents Reported By Page 5 f Our Own 90 Low-Co- F.H.A. st Lo" Loans- -, ' nnAkl UwTT 11 Balance Monthly Usual Carrying Charga 2 Famous Foode) Drawers .1 ' EQUIPPED , daspito, thla low, Coldspot with price! Big G'a cu-f- l. "Bonder-Ized- " 2 EOODEX DRAWERS all-ste- interior, cabinet gleamina white Dulux ex- other s. |