Show Giant Telescope Base Arrives BANKHEAD HAS FORTUNE CLOSE FARM PROGRAM OF 350 I MILLION i llouisiana Senator Will ntroduce l Legislation Perhaps Tuesday WASHINGTON ' jf Jan I ' :f ' " - "— ' t :ir - -- - i I Diversion of Weber River FJpw Recommended by Board "The Jungle Books" Alone fi i — : Brought Huge Revenues To Cremate Body J —v' v H i said these would include d "di- - h The steel base for the telescope' mirror to be erected on Palo-mcrop adjustments and soil building'' southern California is shown on its arrival at Los in mountain The senator said his bill which harbor The base which weighs nearly 19 tons and is 19 feet he hoped to have attached as an Angeles 6 inches in diameter Was taken to Pasadena where the mirror will be amendment xo we iirsc polished (Associated Press photo) tion measure taken up hv the senate would authorize administration of the farm program through the present AAA organization ar 200-inc- " iinancea ijananeaa saia mai wouia be decided later adding "We want to keep this entirely separated" Earlier today Secretary Wallace fixed February 15 as the date when the new program should become effective to apply to crops grown in - Green's Mother Will Ask S on's Reprieve (Continued from Page One) pardons know he Is Insane now and FIRST PRESS PARLEY was then Experts have said he has child I In his first press conference since the mind of a AAA was invalidated Wallace said still have confidence in the governor and the pardons board and I separation of legislation was a function" but" he added: don't think they would want to see "The important thing is to ex- - an insane child shot to death "I always have felt that it was pana ms aeuniiMJii oi uie sou act to include specifically Davis county prejudice that caused soil conservation and preservation the juries there to convict him of nf fprti!itv and not merely erosion first degree murder I can't understand why those people should feel ' Administration leaders have said that way Delbert was bcrn at Lay-to- n be would act soil conservation the and many members of our the basis for a new program calling family also were" Mrs Alexander said she hoped to for cash payments Wallace said he believed the ped-p-ie be able to get a friend to take her of the United States would be to Salt Lake City if she got her check so she could buy gasoline CHILD IN HOME processing taxes paid the treasury the interview Mrs Thelma During Botn tne $1000 ooouuu couectea ana Green Coleman a daughter by Mrs the $200000000 impounded by court Alexander's first marriage and a full-sist- er of Delbert! as well as th same status also expressed Alexander Dolly Public opinion he added "would their grief 'S not tolerate" refund of these taxes Litte Dale Alexander 8 and 6 which he asserted have been passed Lorraine Fay on-t- o the consumer by processing ran in daughter and out of the house freXirm3 quently while Mrs Alexander was Wallace called attention to & sur-- : telling her Story vey made by department experts On each appearance of the little I which Classed 33000000 acres plantgirL Mrss Alexander 'Jowered he'r ed in Com cotton and wheat as tone explaining the child knew "D" slopes which he ex-- 1 nothing of the slaying and they had "C or should be planted only in tried to keep it from her Mrs plained Alexander explained that all of her Wallace saia tenancy ana iana children by her second husband speculation problems should be in were with her Mark 19 the oldest cluded in a permanent farm pro- Dolly Delia Dean and Dale In addition she has three children In gram M cluding Mrs Coleman Delbert and another daughter all by her first 1936 fll cun-seryati- on v " Del-bert- - -- husband Born May 5 1908 Delbert Emery Green will be 23 years old in May of this year unless the 'state takes his life in the meantime His daugh COURT ter present at the time of the shooting lay unharmed in bed between the bodies of her mother and (Continued from Page One) grandmother The baby was born who September 11 1929 and was only Alabama power company old when the tragedy restrain that utility from 3 soughtto TVA occurred to lines transmission selling Mrs Hanna- - Green s & grand The government won in the circuit court of appeals at New Orleans af- mother also present when Delbert ter an adverse district court rming opened his deadly fire still resides OTHER LITIGATION at Layton His other grandmother Other litigation scheduled for and the mother of Mrs Alexander consideration today with announce- Mrs Ellen DeMott resides at (543 East Fourth South street) Salt ment probable Monday included: A request by the Hoosac mills corLake City The latter is 78 years the old Massachusetts that cf poration GOVERNOR'S VIEWS ruling holding AAA unconstitution-inal go into effect immediately Mrs Alexander's latest decision to stead of allowing the government call on the governor was made at the 25 days to ask for reconsider- the suggestion of Arthur Woolley ation and John C Davis who said that A petition by the Louisiana rice tha action of the state supreme millers asking that the decision or- court in refusing a certificate of dering refund of Impsunded process- probable cause pending argument of ing taxes take effect at once in- the newest appeal had threatened stead of giving the government 25 to terminate In the execution of days to seek reconsideration Green before legal questions are de — Tl'A RULING OF READY? -- nths - cided N Y State Woman Convicted of Murder NEWBURGH N Y Jan 18 — (AP) — Mrs Dorothy Sherwood 27 was convicted today of murder first degree In the "mercy drownson Jiming" of her my The jury recommended -- two-year-o- ld A first degree murder conviction In New York state carries a mandatory sentence of death In the electric chair Only Governor Her bert H Lehman can grant clem ency 4- - They said the governor could a reprieve the board of pardons might commute the sen tence to life Imprisonment or the sheriff of Davis county might call a sanity hearing Governor Blood said yesterday he had nothing before him in Green's case The governor a lifelong resident of Davis county has known Green's family for years At the state prison Green maintained the stolid attitude that has characterized him throughout his fight for life "Oh I feehall right" he replied to a question "Sometimes I sort of spin around inside though 1 cant tell exactly how I do feel" Asked If he could face the firing resquad without assistance-Oreeplied: "I can take It" Issue six-ye- ar n NEWS and VIEWS (Continued from Page One) order" to succeed In this new en- " Pauline Frederick Slightly Improved vironment he must have training One hundred twenty-fiv- e young HOLLYWOOD Jan 18 — (AP) — Jews are to be the vanguard of the Pauline Frederick South American venture and they stage star are to point the way gained slightly today attendants reported in her struggle for If half a million of them settle recovery from an emergency abIn Brazil or Argentina then in the dominal operation performed yesyears to come their gates may open terday Her condition while improved to all the persecuted and sorely was described as "still criticaL" distressed The actress best known for her rThen South America win prove to stage and screen portrayal of "Mabe their land of promise instead of dame X" in the play of that name Palestine where the Arabs stand was born in Boston August 12 She made her debut when opposed to them and where fierce she was 18 and has been in the religious battles have been fought theatre or motion pictures ever 'Jews from the time of the since Pharaohs have felt the sting of - Htfr fifth husband Colonel Joseph persecution and have been made A Marmon of Washington D C wanderers upon the face of the died last year " calling for new water sources The program submitted' by Board Director Phil J Purcell recommends the diversion of Weber river flood waters now owned by Salt Lake City to the Provo river with Salt Lake City in putting the municipal distributing system in first class condition exerting every influence that will result in the diking of Utah lake and purchase of Silver sons King Coalition Mining company greatest water which would be diverted OWN WISHES TO RULE Kipling's" own wishes for his bu into Provo river and Utah lake Purcell set the Initial cost of his said probably will rial place friends be the t only- program at approximately $1420-00- 0 deciding The program would add 43000 his life he shunned national honors refusing knighthoods acre feet of water to the available several times and this attitude it supply was pointed out may also have' led him to prefer burial in soma quiet spot Pinal arrangements will be PR made tomorrow The British museum disclosed that Kipling shortly before his death gave it the manuscript of OF UTAH "Kim" probably the greatest as well as one of the most popular of his longer works The poet who has been called the Heart Disease Fatal To Wil"favorite author of the Prince of liam T Benson At Wales" asked the museum not to make public announcement of the Age 71 gift until after his death SALT LAKE CjTY Jan 18— (AP) BODY TO BE CREMATED -The body will be cremated the — William T Benson for thirty years president of the American family has announced It was taken Bank Note company here and prior to a chapel from the hospital bed where he underwent an emergency to that time head of paper and concerns diedof heart disoperation Monday for a perforated printing ease today at Coronado Beach Cal stomach ulcer His American born wife and their daughter were at relatives here learned He was 71 years of age the bedside when he died Because of failing health he Kipling who was 70 had lived in moved to California in 1934 He is seclusion for many years in the vil survived by two daughters Mrs J Burwash of Sussex lage H Mrs Church P Parker Many tributes were paid to the Castle both and Mrs Benof this city writer whose tales and poems of son x 1921 died in India made him one of the world's " f4 most widely read authors of all time PASSES VOTE ON BONUS IS DUE MONDAY (Continued from Page One) many senators who previously had favored a similar method of pay ment in last session's vetoed Pat man bill including Senator Borah voting in opposition Only three Republicans 22 Demo crats and the two Farmer-Labmembers voted for the amendment Nineteen Republicans 44 Democrats and the progressive LaFollette an swered "no" A viva voce vote shouted down another proposal by Thomas to make an outright appropriation of $2237000000 to discharge the debt Two other amendments went down to defeat without record votes —one by Ssnator Hayden (D Ariz) to deduct from the payment bonds any debts other than bonus bor rowings owed by the veterans to the government and another by connally (D Tex) to give bonus benefits to provisional first and sec Ond lieutenants in the world war ACCEPTANCE SEEN It appeared certain that the sen ate bill would reach the house by The bill already Monday night passed by that branch did not specify a method of payment but lead ers reported it likely that the sen ate proposal would be accepted -- or PACT DESIRED ON RAIL LABOR Executives to Meet With Union Chiefs On Terminal Mergers GIRL WOUNDED BROTHER HELD them on June 16 1937 or $1270 if he held them for nine years before MONTICELLO Jan 18— (AP) — asking cash Walter Jones Navajo IF VET BORROWED Indian was held in jail here tonight The veteran who has borrowed In connection with the critical the limit of 50 per cent against a wounding of his sister Disdean $1000 certmcate would receive just Jones 16 half as much Sheriff Lawrence Palmer of San A veteran who borrowed the limit Juan county said the two had quarof 22 per cent which was in effect reled over a period of two years oeiore the 50 per cent loan law Friday afternoon Jones approached of 1931 and who obtained no fur the cabin of a squaw where the girl ther loans after that law was en had been living and asked for his acted would be able to cash in for sister $780 less varying interest charges Informed she had been sent for snow to melt for culinary purposes unpaia oerore octT 1931 The holder of a $1585 certificate the youth' went into the hills Sherthe largest issued would receive iff Palmer said a few minutes later irj bonds and $35 cash If he a squaw heard a shot and found the neia tne bonds until maturity in girl with a bullet wound in the ' 1345 ne would be entitled to $508 in terest or a total of $2058 besides The aged Indian hurried to Ship-roc- k five miles away and obtained the $35 cash help Indian officers were sent on LEAVES SICK BED Jones' trail Sheriff Palmer Joined ator them and arrested Jones when he WASHINGTON Jan 18— McCarran got reached a ranch where he had been but of a sick bed today to vote for working Sheriff Palmer said no charges the cash bonus bill and then didn't would be filed pending the outcome get a chance In 1933 McCarran was up in of the girl's condition 44Maine when the senate suddenly agreed to vote- - the next day on a Snowball veterans' bill and the lineup was so close that the Nevadan's vote was old 50 ab-doiri- - -- Yet they persist and at seem to thrive on adversity en (API-Sen- v) -- needed By chartering a special car and then flying from Boston McCarran got to the capitol just in time for the vote His trip today was shorter but more difficult Recovering from an illness that required hospital treat ment McCarran had been sticking close to his bed : v- - Just a Necklace? Oh Yeah For $2000 " MALVERN Pa Jan Strikes Candidate In Eye DINGWALL Scotland Jan 18— (AP) — Malcolm MacDonald's effort to re-ent- er parliament brought him a black eye tonight The son of former Prime Minister Ramsay JMacDonald was being cheered by his supporters at a meet- knelt on a thick mantle of murmur prayers for the of the stricken monarch bearded man with deep-stired eyes whose gentle reign of more than a quarter of a century has captured the devotion of his 450000000 subjects As lights of the residence twinkled on the slender figure of the Prince of Wales the king's only bachelor son and next in line of succession to the throne was seen passing nervously back and forth in front of an The Princess Royal the Countess cf Harewood the king's only daughter and one of his favorite companions arrived at Sandringham House late today and went immediately to her mother Queen Mary The departure of the king's two little granddaughters the Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose for London emphasized the concern felt residence snow to recovery the small et upper-window- — -- 18—f AP— William Duffy's wife and daughters didn't think much of the necklace he brought home and Bill says he didn't either He found it in the gut 44 — — 4 Killed in Alabama By 3-r- W 44- Weber Defeated By Dixie College ter ST GEORGE Utah Jan-18(AP) — With Denbv Wade baneine the hoop for eight field goals the Dixie College cagers defeated Weber of Ogden 36 to 31 here to college matter day The Malvern machinist's helner Watts stellar Oeden forward ransr Kot the reward vesterdav ond th the round iron for 12 points but the Duffys — ten altogether — r "too southerners rallied to win in the excited to eat" ' final period Weber was ahead 11 to Mrs John Barnes Townsend whn y the first period but Dixie took Nearly half the wine exnnrtpd lost the necklace near the Panli theatlead 21 tn 20 t th half At th times from Bordeaux France last year railroad station Dlaced a value of third period the tally was dead- was snipped to the United States $30000 on it locKea at A lost advertisement offering $2- 000 reward for the return of & necklace— 71 pearls and a diamond ciasp— put a different lieht on the - - a-- aii ed ( fun-dresse- d" T( ager IK BARE MINIMA A masculine minority with the abstract business man's viewpoint saw the girls in their bare minima —brassierejs silver slippers and pink heard a frank dispetticoats--ancussion cf fthe feminine-silhouettthe In beauty and scant-attirlingerie rriodel3 rival tne chorus of a Broadway revue A 'few "stylish stouts" are called ln to show how the 200 pound figure should be dealt d e e -- with j The spectators conclusion after two big shows was that more women will wear corsets this season and the garments will be lighter and stronger SATIN CORSETS There are colored satin corsets to match (evening gowns garments that fasteh up the side with a zipper and festive "foundations" of white netj Some of the blouses that will be worn with! the new spring suits are made of the mbst transparent marquisette qaintily pleated with frills at the wrists The gahnent district says "this will be the greatest suit season in s years" are :!shorter sometimes with Skirts - : s one small slash in the front hem and suits fhug the figure Many of the dark blues have white waffle-weav- e pigue accesscries and are worn with white hats — I— — —44— ——'— ' CHILD FREEZES mm NTAINS Boy Is Found Dead During Extensive Search Four-Yja- r DOUGLAS Ariz Jan 18— (AP)— ld Roy Rogers lost in the rugged Guadalupe mountains along thej Mexican border for four davs was found dead today The child had frozen to death at the bottom of a ledge two miles from the franch home of his grandfather LW McDonald from which he wandered Wednesday The body was found by Herschel Long stat highway department employe as nearly 500 persons searched the mounfainous region on foot and six airplanes droned overthe hills V Pruitt who led the Sheriff searching parties said the boy ap in his parently 4ad frozen to death sleep the tfirst night he was lost The child had crawled under a protruding: ledge laid his head on Four-year-o- from exhiustion -- TELLS HOW HE IIOFFLlflN FOES CHEATED DEATH ASK MM TO HOT Truck Driver Snatched "Hasn't Got a Thing" Is From Icy Death By IHu- Opinion of Those Who man Chain Talks Opposed Reprieve DENVER Jan 18— (AP) — Larry Knolle 36 a truck driver whom a By DALE HARRISON "human chain" rescued from an TRENTON N J Jan 18— (AP) icy death beneath frozen Evergreen —Critics of Governor Harold O' lake yesterday rested at his horn Hoffman openly skeptical of his today "new - evidence" in- the Lindbergh He was driving a five-to- n truck lose watchfully wailed tonight for pulling a snowplow over the heav- - him to show what he's got ily covered mountain skating spot "It's up to the governor to prowhen the ice gave way and the duce" was the sentiment of those truck dropped Into 12 feet of water wno siaea wnn Attorney uenerai Knolle was caught in the cab David T Wilentz in the belief the COULD SEE WATER BURST executive "hasn't got a thing" chief As the truck went under The attorney general who not Knolle said T could see the water says no new evidence has been only bursting through the floor boards produced but also that the governor I had only a few seconds before the lacked legal right to grant the cab filled so I tried to break the reprieve which he extended to window glass with my fist That Bruno Hauptmann two didn't work and I had to butt my days agoRichard conferred with Col H head against it before it would Norman Schwarzkopf head of the break T remember crawling out and state police STUDY FIERY DEFY coming up under the ice It was two men major actors in efThe cold and I was beginterrifically ning to feel numb I dived down fecting the conviction of Hauptand felt my way to the truck Fi- mann gave careful study to the nally I got on top of the cab and fiery statement "in which Governor Hoffman defied his' foes to impeach got my head out of water" him and expressed doubt as to ROPE FAILS TO AID Half a dozen fellow workers un- Hauptmann having been the only able to approach Knolle closely person ' involved in the Lindbergh enough to lend assistance because kidnap-murdof the precarious condition of the After their conference it was Jagged ice around the hole threw learned they had agreed that "no him a rope but he was too numb to grasp it controversy with the governor on They brought him to safety by his theories or points of view" ' This attitude was quite general forming a "human chain" reaching over the splintered ice and hur- among the governor's political foes ried him to Denver 30 miles The talk of asking his impeachment He suffered from shock andaway exquieted in keeping with the unposure butjphyslcians expected him certainty many legislators felt as to to recover just how strong the governor's posi44tion might be LOOK TO LEGISLATURE The next legislative session on Monday night war awaited eagerly howeve- rThe canny - ones among his opponents were hesitant about voicing strong criticism fearing that the SPOKANE Wash Jan 18— (AP) governor might have something to strike back —Forgotten and grizzled prospectors with which The fate of Hauptmann whatever are prospecting for old-aside issues may develop rests upon these days leaving their pensions hillside the ability of his counsel or the hermitages at the lure of state-suppli- governor to produce new evidence stakes to warrant either a new trial com- Several applicants were tors until they became tooprospecold to trek thr hills others include trap- ceivably a pardon C Lloyd Fisher chief defense pers or woodsmen who became hill counsel hermits Mrs Lucy Schoenrock dis- fense wasasked1 tonight what the dedoing said: "We're doing trict pension supervisor disclosed now" nothing right today New Mrs Anna HauptYork In told" She of one ancient applicant mann was said she "looking into" from the wilds of Ferry county reports that Egbert Rose-cra- ns who said seen a bathtub published of defense counsel had exIn a quarter of a century and hadn't belief in her husband's pressed a had haircut for years Roseerans and Fisher Both guilt This old prospector Mrs Schoen- denied that Roseerans had said any rock said had become In fact a forsuch thing gotten man All official records of 44 his existence had vanished An investigator found his shack SCORES POLO GOAL secluded behind a rock ridge in DETROIT Jan- 18 —One of the rugged country more 'than' a mile longest scores ever recorded in polo from the nearest winding rutted was made by Volney Bayley star of little-use- d road Hats indoor trio Bayley :theGo!d 44 in-- a game against the Freebooters Rising prices of silk cocoons rice found his teammates so well covand wheat has increased the income ered that he had to shoot for the of farmers of Japan $106400000 in goal His drive traveled 85 yards bethe last year fore bouncing in for a score - 30-d- ay er -- MINERS QUIT FOR PENSIONS ge ed he-had- n't D - " 44- Declafes Operations In Silver 'Fantastic —— 18 — (AP) j -- PHILADELPHIA Jan a speech bristling with anti-ne- w deal criticism Ogden L Mills former secretary of the treasury — In Tornado charged tpnight that the federal reserve system is under political pressure and warned that inflation is inevitable! unless the administration ceases to 'manufacture credit" Mills cilled President Roosevelt's recent message to congress a "stump" FORT PAYNE Ala Jan 13— (AP) — A tornado dipped at three points on the populous slope of Sand Mountain near here today killings four persons injuring several others and Inflicting extensive property speech called operations in silver loss "fantasticl" and declared: "we are The Sand Mountain tornado prea dangerous road at a ceded by several hours two that traveling pade ignoring all the warnstruck in east central Alabama in- rapid ing signals with which experience juring five persons lined the way" has The tornado that swept ' Sand He spoke to the Banking club of Mountain "hedge hopped" over a the University of Pennsylvania 44- —i distance of about ten miles The twister struck the Portwood home first demolishing it and pinning Calif ojrnia Flood the couple -- in the debris then liftIs ed to dip again four miles further on at the Rowell home Five miles away it dipped again to destroy all COLUSA Calif Jan 18 — (AP) — but one residence-i- n the village of The flood danger passed today Rainsville when the Sacramento rler began 44 to recede because of coldej weather upstream! and a levee break The stream dropped six inches after wafers flooded nearly 50000 J : Passed Danger Actress Will Never See Salary Checks HOLLYWOOD Jan 13— (AP)— June Travis will continue working in the movies but she will never see her salary checks A unique financial arrangement made by Miss Travis her parents and her studio (Warner's) whereby the actress will live on an allowance was completed today Her salary checks will be sent to lier parents Mr and Mrs Harry Grabiner of Chicago They will send her $75 weekly which she and they agreed is adeopuate and bank the remainder Miss Travis' salary now ls said to be about $350 old di-rec- — -- un-drfess- s acres of grazing and agricultural Worknien guarded the weakened levees and repaired smaii jeaics Water stll poured through a break in a dike 10 miles north of here residents The 500 of nearbl Butte City were relieved by the receding waters For a time it appeared Butte city would be isolated - Detective Accuses S L Pair In Holdup SALT LAKE CITY Jan 18— (AP) — City Detective Lester F- - Wire filed a complaint in city court today charging LeRoy Nash 20 and his brother Louis Nash 19 with robbery in connection with the slugging and attempted robbery of F K Gilroy garage manager Gilroy was slugged into unconsciousness by two youths Thursday night while he was taking $100 from a dance hall soda fountain to a garage nearby The thugs fled lootless when dancers 5 !miMu mm 500-fo- ot j flood-threaten- ed 1 -- ty ing when a snowball flung by a member of a rival party hit him In a week On her twenty-fift- h the right eye breaking his spectacles birthday June's money will be turned over to and cutting his nose ' MacDonald's eye was heavily her when he addressed the bandaged later meeting "" earth - - (Continued from Page One) -- (D-Ne- By MARY j ELIZABETH PLTJMMER Associated Press Staff Writer NEW YQRK Jan 18— (AP)—The women in the counbest try paraded this week in Manhattan and few men ' were permitted to see the show be It The "best known arej the girls who model lacy brassieres jand pink foundation garments before the country's corset-buyers-qualify for admittance a man must be a merchandise? man- ! HORSE GR OW CHICAGO Jan -- 18— (AP) — Two committees of (railrcad executives were organized here today to seek a compromise with rail labor groups on wage and employment issues involved in forthcoming terminal consolidations J J Pelley president of the Association of American Railroads announced appointment cf the committees at the end of a two-da- y conference Negotiations will soon start Pel-le- y said with representatives of the Association of Railway Labor executives — organization of 21 rail labor —on the "controversial section WASHINGTON Jan 18— (AP- - 7crafts of of the emergency transportaHere are rough estimates of what tion act of 1933 under which Coworld war veterans would eet un ordinator B Eastman was der the e&alltion bonus bill up for authorized Joseph to unify carrier facilities passage in the senate todav: to cut expenses A veteran who has a $1000 bonus 44certificate against which no loans nave been made yould receive twenty $30 bonds for which he could oatain $1000 if he cashed them between June 15 1936 and June 15 1937 The same veteran would get $17030 for his bonds if he cashed $1-5- ForlDealers ING GEORGE V 44- -- -- HTER FORMER - old "con-srrGKsion- — The day to study a tentative program AP) factor-Throughou- PRACTICAL APPLICATION In practical application SALT LAKE CITY Jan 18 — (AP) —The metropolitan water district board of Salt Lake City voted to- fortune of the late Rudyard Kipling was estimated at 750000 pounds (approximately $3750000) tonight by the Sunday Express Books" alone "The Jungle more of an income him brought than 10000 pounds annually the paper said Kipling Great Britain's poet and story teller of Empire who died early today may be buried in West minister Abbey among the nation's a) Bank-hea- Jan LONDON 18-(- GirLs Don Scanties STUDY FAVORED TOS3J50000 8— (AP)— announc- -' Senator Eankhead ed tonight he would Introduce — new $350000000 farm program representing his interpretation of the administration's views Explaining his bill would "broaden and enlarge' the 1835 soil conservation act Ban the ad declared it would "accomplish in a large measure the same results that have been secured under the AAA" The southern senator said an appropriation of $350000000 would be sought to finance "drafts to farmers based upon their" compliance with plans promulgated by the secretary : of agriculture" (D-L- l Corset 'ATER SOURCES RATE KIPLING'S 44- Couple Injured As Machine Hits train - I — — RIVERTON Jan — RE station-to-statio- n Rates on person to person calls are also reduced from 7 pm to 4:30 am every night and the same lower rate applies at -- -- 18 — (AP) — Reed Timothy! 21 and Miss Verda were i8 both of Riverton seriously finjured tonight when their car skidded Into a Salt Lake & Utah freight train near here The iriipact hurled the machine into a borrow pit where it caught fire and was destroyed Two bystanders! Ben Merrill and Joseph Park pulled the couple from the machine! -- DISCED Long Distance rates which caUs after 7 on pm each evening are now extended to include all hours on Sundays (" But-terfie- ld 44- Thief (Kills Bird lAnd Steals Clock LONG BEACH Calif Jan 18(AP) — The burglar who broke into Mrs M jj Ellett's apartment must have befen rather peeved at only getting i ome small change and a clock Mrs Ellett told police tcday he broke all the strings of her steel guitar and killed her canary - ! all houra Sundays ( ' ' This generally includes all calls on which the n rate is more than 35 cents day station-to-statio- J You can now enjoy more frequent contacts with members of your family living elsewhere with the folks back home 'sons and daughters y at college friends Call them Sundays or any evening after 7 pm far-awa- For any additional information on these re due-tiojust call our Business Office ns -- 1 |