Show V a v v THE OGDEN I'flMCA STANDARD-EXAMTNE- R I'JILL '©§ PULL TOGETHER OPINES - ir F D R x- A- VT Republicans Scarce As Members of House ’ v By D HAROLD OLIVER HYDE PARK N Y Nov 4— reRoosevelt (AP) — President elected to another four-yeterm in the White House rested at his mother's home today after telegraphing Governor Alf M Landon that he was confident “all of us Americans will now pull together for the common good" y NEW YORK Nov 4— (UP) — hi A - f r: V' t 1 M I £- V '7 £ Mc-dell- an - I ) Lj v E E MONSON MARTIN 3L LARSEN’ State Supreme Court Justice af JOSEPH CHEZ Secretary of State Re-elect- : Attorney General ed REESE 31 REESE State Treasurer ' ""4n ! l - Ifi J!V v t ry - i' y It ’ ? 7 I ' 7 lj$ M A s v j 'JS aX X X ' x j? C J - V-- ' ''t ' Re-elect- LESTER A W’ADE District Judge District Judge ed Re-elect- DEXTER FARR ’ State Senator from Weber County WADE 31 JOHNSON District Attorney Re-elect- ed ed S rsV Floor Strewn With Landon Sunflowers :7V' it if v 's CHICAGO Nov 4— (UP)—The four floors that Republican national headquarters occupied in the Railway Exchange building were strewn jwith thousands of landon sunflower buttons today L Downhearted but philosophical 'party workers plucked the yellow 'symbols from lapels and let them drop into the litter of paper cardboard coffee containers and cigar ' " $ f ' ’'v y ¥ £ - j obvious - Mt PERCY HADLEY JOSEPH W JENSEN State Eeprescnta-- - State Representative From Re-elect- Weber County 3HLTON B TAYLOR State Representaj tive 3IAW State Re-elect- ed Re-elect- WILLI A3 1 D WOOD State Representative From ed Weber County V Woman Dean Of Demos ‘X " V 7 t FOR VITA HMB "l t" A 5 4i VV XA" $ r f t: ' 'i r- - t GEORGE Re-elect- ed F f SIMMONS V to Board R McENTTRE to Board Re-elect- ed w s’ ? x' pt: r t? re-elect- V ' v By SIGRID ARNE WASHINGTON Nov 4 — (AP) — s Success came to the dean of the Democratic women in the bouse but failure was meted out to the dean of the Republican women in their campaigns for Rep Mary T Norton (D) of New Jersey won her campaign but Rep Florence P Kalin (R) of California was defeated ’ The two women took their oath of office the same day March 4 1935 and ever since have been two of the most colorful opponents in the house reserving their political quarrels however for the men of the opposing parties Both rose to positions of' power Mrs Norton became the first woHYRU3I A BELNAP man chairman of an important house committee her assignment as City Judge chairman of the pistrict of Columbia committee earning her the title “mayor of Washington” Mrs' Kahn was the first woman appointed to the appropriations committee She was the first widow to succeed her husband in congress The two Kahns Florence and Julius served continuously since 1899 except for two years early in LEIPZIG (UP)— A new scientific the century ‘ Women of the west coast losing beauty treatment that avoids artificial mediums and surface appli- Mrs Kahn as a representative cations and attacks the problem however gained a new member of below the surface has been Intro- the 'house through the election of duced here Mrs Nanny Wood Honeyman of It is based on electrical radia- Oregon a Democrat an ardent suption A soothing relaxation is said porter of the new deal — to follow the applications of the 7 xl ? - ' ' In House Wins 1 - - A 'v JOHN A HENDRICKS County Attorney -- ' ng Hart D Crowe Illinois — Arthur W Mitchell (D) Raymond S McKeough (D) Edward A Kelly (D) Harry P Beam (D) Adolph J Sabath (D) Thomas J O’Brien (D) Leonard W Leo Kocialkowskl Sehuetz (D) M Mason N (R) Leo E Al(D) len (R) Chester Thompson (D) Lewis L Boyer- (D) Everett M Dirksen (R) James A Meeks (D) Hugh M Rigney (D) Scott W Lucas (D) Frank W Fries (D) Edwin M Schaefer (D) Laurence F Arnold (D) Claude B Parsons (D) Kent F Keller (D) Lewis Long (D) E V Champion (D) Louisiana— J O Fernandez (D) Paul Maloney (D) Robert Mouton (D) Overton Brooks (D) Newt D Mills (D) J K Griffith (D Rene De Rouen (D) A Leonard Allen’ (D) (R) Maine — James C Oliver Ralph O Clyde H Smith (R) Brewster (R) Maryland—Wm P Cole Jr (D) Vincent L PalmisanO (D) Mississippi — John E Rankin (D) Wall Doxey (D) W M Whittington (D) A L Ford (D) Ross Collins (D) W M Colmer (D) Dan R McGehee (D) Missouri — Clarence Cannon (D) Nebraska— Chas F McLaughlin (D) Karl Stefan (R) New York—Robt L1 Bacon (R) Andrew L Sommers (D) Charles D Millard (R) Hamilton Fish (R) E Harold Cluett (R) Francis D Culkin (R) Clarence E Hancock (R) James W Wadsworth (R) Walter G Andrews (R) Alfred F Beiter (D) James M Mead (D) North Carolina — Lindsay C Warren (D) John H Kerr (D) Graham j A Barden (D) Harold D Cooley (D) Frank Hancock (D) Wm B Umstead (D) J Bayard Clark (D) Walter Lambeth (D) Robert L Doughton (D) Alfred L Bulwinkle (D) Zebulon Weaver (D) Oklahoma — Wilburn Cartwright (D) Lyle H Boren (D) R P Hill (D) Jed Johnson (D) Sam Massingale (D) Phil Ferguson (D) Will Rogers (D) Pennsylvania —Leon Sacks (D) James P McGranery (D) Michael J Bradley (D) J Burrwood Daly (D) Frank J G Dorsey (D) Michael J Stack (D) Ira Walton Drew (D) Oliver W Frey (D) Patrick J Boland (D) Albert G Rutherford (R) Guy J Swope (D) Francis E Walter (D) Harry L Haines (D) Rhode Island— Aime J Forand (D) South Carolina — Thomas S McMillan (D) H P Fuler (D) John 4 t C Taylor (D) G Heyward Mahon (D) J P Rickards (D) Allard H Gasque (D) Tennessee — Richard Atkinson (D) Herron Pearson (D) Walter C Chandler (D) P ALL TEXAS DE3IOS Texas (D) Wright Patman MOUNT WILSON—The Martin Dies (D) Morgan G San- ment of new instruments developfor tha ders (D) Sam Rayburn (D) Hat- scientific added has study usually ton W Summer (D) Luther A to man’s knowledge Johnson (D) Nat Patton (D) Al- greatly An example of what new instru- bert Thomas (D) Joseph J Mans- ments can help reveal was cited field (D) James P Buchanan (D) Dr Edison Pettit of theMount W R Poage (D) Fritz G Lan-ha- m by Wilson Observatory of the Carne(D) W D McFarlen (D) Institute of Washington in & Richard M Kleberg (D) Milton H gie commencement address He said: j West t (D) R E Thomason (D) - "Another classical problem of as- Marvin tronomy was that of measuring the Clyde L Garrett (D) Jones (D) George H Mahon (D) radiation from the stars and plan Maury Maverick (D) Charles L eta by its heating effect Thirty South (D) years ago heat from the stars had Vermont—Charles Plumley (R) just been detected with the radioVirginia — S Otis Bland (D) meter but hardly measured TwenNorman R Hamilton (D) Andrew ty years ago it was successfully J Montague (D) P IL Drewry attacked with the vacuum thermo- - t G T Burch (D) A Willis couple and today we have nu(D) Robertson (D) Howard W Smith merous 'good measurements with" (D) this instrument New York—W B Barry (D) 4 Jos L Pfeifer (D) Thomas H ’ Cullen (D) M H Evans (D) John J Delaney (D) Donald L O’Toole (D) Eugene Keogh (D) Emanuel Celler (D) James A O’Leary I (D) Samuel Dicksteln (D) Chris D Sullivan (D) John J Boylan (D) John J O’Connor (D) JosTOKYO — Production of Perilla oil eph A Gavagan (D) Edward W in Manchuria has attained such Curley (D) Charles A Buckley proportions that traders Japanese M (D) J Fitzpatrick (D) are asking steamship companies for Pennsylvania— Herman P Eber-hart- reduced freight rates on large ship-men- ts (D) oil promises to be- - 1 Perilla New York— W T Byrne (D) come the most important second Bertrand H Snell (R) W Sterling oil outranked vegetable only by J Cole R) George B Kelly (D) bean oil From soya the 4 perilla — Maryland Stephen W Gambrill oil is extracted for food seed "inand David Lewis (D) J (D) 4 dustrial purposes Rhode Island— John M O’ConM nell (D) Kentucky— Glover H Cary (D) BIIXED WEIGHT BOUT Edward W Creal (D) Virgil M PUEBLO Colo— (UP) — Young Chapman (D) Noble J Gregory Joe Louis Rocky Mountain chamBrent Spence (D) (D) pion and Buster ’ (Kid) Cannon ' California — Frank H Buck (D) Idaho welterweight - and middleR J Welch (R) A E Carter (R) weight title holder meet in a bout B W Gearhart (R) Charles here Nov 19 in municipal auditor’ Kramer (D) ium 1 J ( 3 -- S' MINNEAPOLIS (UP)— More extensive use of Vitamin B compound for human consumption is forecast in the present issue of Modern Medicine published here as a result of recent discovery of Synthetic Vitamin B Production of the artificial vitamin was achieved by Dr UR R Williams according to the publication Among other scientists who helped perfect the process the magazine said were Dr J J Cline Prof H T Clarke Dr E R Buchman and RT E Waterman and A E Ruechle The process of making artificial Vitamin B the first vitamin discovered requires the combining of a drug which puts people to sleep 'with a sulphur-containisubused to vulcanize rubber stance j Synthetic production of the vitamin eliminating the costly and longer method of extracting the pure substance from the vegetable in which it is contained will open a new field in medicine the magazine predicted Vitamin B discovered - in 1896 even before the word “vitamin” had been coined promotes health And well being in the body It also ' is a factor in growth of the body T 'Tt is effective for the treatment of certain nervous ailments and lack of it causes a dropsy disease known as “beri-ber- i” J WTL3IER ed tive WIDER USE SEEN - u J Dt ' Eugene D Finley H Gray D William H Larrabee D Louis Lud' low D UTAH — J Will Robinson D Abe Murdock D VIRGINIA—Otis Bland D Norman R Hamilton D Andrew Jack-so- n Montague Df P H Drewry D T G Burch D Clifton A Woodrum D A Willis Robertson D Howard W Smith D John W Flannagan Jr D OHIO — Joseph A Dixon D Her- bert S Bigelow D Thomas A Jenkins R Robert T Secrest D William R Thom D Lawrence E Imhoff D Martin L Sweeney D Anthony A Fleger D Dow W Harter D NEW YORK— Frank Crowther R Fred J Douglas R Mathew Merritt D Caroline O’Day D Sol Bloom D William Sirovich D Theodore A Peyser D M J Kennedy D James J Lanzetta D Philip A Goodwin R Charles D Millard R OKLAHOMA— Wesley E Disney D Jack Nichols D NEW YORK— Daniel A Reed R John Tabor R WISCONSIN — Harry Sauthoff Prog Gardner R Withrow Prog MISSOURI—W I Nelson D Richard M Duncan D C Jasper Bell D Joseph B Shannon D FLORIDA— J Hardin Peterson D "J Mark Wilcox Joe Hendricks D WASHINGTON— Warren G Mag-nusD John M Coffee D THREE REPUBLICANS CALIFORNIA—Prank H Buck D Richard J Welch R Albert E Carter R John J McGrath Dt B W Gearhart R Henry E Stubbs D Charles Kraver D Thomas F Ford D John M Costello D Charles J Colden D Ed V Izac D OREGObf— James W Mott R Walter M Pierce D Nan W Honeyman D NEVADA— James G Schrugham D WISCONSIN— Merlin Hull Pro Gerald J Boileau Pro Bernard J Gehrmann Pro' Raymond J Can- non D Thomas O’Malley D Michael K Rilly D f i OHIO— Brooks Fletcher D y OHIO — Frank C Kniffin D MASSACHUSETTS — Joseph E -Casey D Wiliam P Connery D Arthur D Healy D Charles Ri Clasen R Pehr G Holmes R s Edith Nourse Ragers R George 4 ' J Bates R— v KANSAS W P Lambertson R U S Guyer R John Houston D i - -- Elward INDIANA— William T Schulte D Charles A Halleck R Samuel B PettingiU D James I Farley D Glenn Griswold D Virginia Jenckes D Arthur Greenwood D B i At nine p m Chairman John D M Hamilton was closeted in his hotel suite with radio microphones “on his desk one telephone Ringing while he talked excitedly Into another One-ha- lf his face was shaVed the other half sprouted a day’s reddish beard He kept in frequent communication with telephone Topeka D j NEW JERSEY— Mary T Norton® ? f They clung to them until word was flashed early today that Gov Alf M Landon had sent congratulations to President Roosevelt Not until then would party leaders ad mit what rapidly was becoming nn (Prog) on i t butts O 1 J J D " I EUGENE E PRATT P Lambertson Rep Guyer R Rep John Houston D IOWA— Lloyd Thurston R Fred Gilchrist R John G Wynne R Cassius Dowell R William Jacobsen D - OHIO— John D McSweeney Harold G Moiser D Michael J KIrwan D James G Polk C Dudley A White R Arthur P Lam- neck D H K Clay pool D Byron B Harlan D John Hunter D Frank L Kloeb D NEW HAMPSHIRE— Arthur B Jenks R Charles W Tobey R VIRGINIA—Clifton Wood rum D John W Flannaga Jr D MASSACHUSETTS — Allen T Treadway R MISSOURI —C A Anderson D C J Bell D J B Shannon D M A Romjue D W L Nelson D R M Duncan D R T Wood D Clyde William D Odville Zimmerman D T C Hennings Jr D J J Cochran D Dewey Short R NEBRASKA— C G Binderup D Harry 'B Coffee D ' PROGRESSIVE WINS WISCONSIN—Bernard J Behr-ma- D Ill iff A" $ tR Kansas —URepS W John W Boehne Jr GOP OF ILLINOIS - Cy 4f IV" CHARLES IL SKID3IORE State Superintendent of Public Instruction A" 7 aJaa: - 5yV 1 ' ' ed V J ' a -- J $ v 1 jl (D)J k" V f JOHN W GUY State Auditor k ’ i House members elected Alabama —Frank Boykin (D) Lester Hill (D) Henry Steagall (D) Sam Hobbs (D) Joe Starnes (D) Pete B Samian (D) W B Bankhead (D) John J Sparkman (D) Luther Patrick (D) Arizona—John R Murdock P) Arkansas — William J Driver (D) John E Miller (D) Claude A Fuller (D) Ben Cravens (D) David D Terry (D) John L (D) Wade Kitchens (D) California— Harry L Englebright (R) Franck R Havenner (D) Connecticut— Herman P Kopple-ma- n (D) Wm J Fitzgerald (D) James A Stanley (D) Alfred N Joseph Smith Phillips Jr (D)jfWm L Citron (D) Florida — R A Green (D) Millard F Caldwell (D) Georgia — Hugh Peterson (D) E E Cox (D) Stephen Pace (D) E M Owen (D) Robert Ram-spec(D) Carl Vinson (D) MalC colm Tarver (D) Braswell Deen B Frank Welchel (D) Paul (D) Brown (D) iiawrriti"— Dictated shortly after his Republican opponent had sent congratulations the president’s message long-plann- v -- D ar said “I am grateful to you for your generous telegram and I am confident that all Of us Americans will now pull together for the common I send you every good wish” -goodSIGNED TELEGRAM 'ALP The chief executive’s telegram was addressed to "Gov Alfred M Landon” The governor had signed his first name “Alf” saying: "The nation has spoken Every American will accept the verdict land work for the common cause of the good of our country That is the spirit of democracy You have my sincere congratulations’’ Mr Roosevelt will remain here until" tomorrow night returning to Washington Friday morning Because of the maritime strike his plans for a vacation cruise in southern waters probably will be held in abeyance for the present Reports that there will be several pew faces in the second Roosevelt cabinet brought no official comment from White House sources although several persons- - close to the president have indicated the reports were true WILL DRAFT MESSAGE This is hne of the important questions the chief executive undoubtedly will ponder once he bevacation He gins hi? also has his annual message to the seventy-fift- h congress to consider and a score oft important appointments to make in the lower brackets of officialdom such as a new comptroller general under secretaries of state and the treasury and an ambassador to Russia Harry H Woodring of Kansas was named secretary of war only temporarily to succeed the late George H Dern ' It is regarded as virtually certain this will be one of the cabinet u offices to be changed ’ MICHIGAN — George A’ Adowski D Clare E Hoffman R Andrew J Transue D Jesse P Wolcott RD Fred L Crawford R George O’Brien D Louis C Rabaut D John D Dingell D- - and John Les-ink-si President Sends Landon Wire of Thanks and Good Wishes Re-elect- ed t ’ Bombs Threaten Spanish Paintings TO BE OUTLINED NEW WAGE LAW WASHINGTON D C'— While citnearly a million of izens Madrid bve been exposed to the threat of sudden death from bombs and shells other famous "citizens” of the Spanish capital on canvas by Spanish artists rePrado posing in the world-famoart gallery' have also beln endangered says a bulletin from the Washington' D C headquarters of the National Geographic Society “These unofficial diplomats from Spain have traveled afar and become familiar to many foreign as colored prints and flesh-and-blo- NEW YORK— (UP)— New York state is scheduled to begin study November 6 on substitute legislation for the minimum wage law denied a rehearing by the United States supreme court State Industrial Commissioner Elmer F Andrews first will meet with representatives of employers civic and employes consumers welfare organizations to map a new program In letters to representatives at the conference Andrews called for “advice and cooperation” i ‘T should like” he said “to discuss with you the question of imBIG CATTLE SIHPMEJfTS 1 mediate procedure to consider the CHEYENNE Wyo— (UP)—Cattle of new state legislation drafting shipped from Wyoming from Januseems desirable to and if that to inclusive totaled ary September the question of constitu29720 head according to figures discuss t compiled by George Knutson feder- tional amendment” al-state “we are asserted Andrews that statistician agricultural The total included 84631 steers definitely faced with the question 74519 cows 23452 heifers- - 37657 I of how to proceed in order to give calves and 3401 bulls j effect to the urgent demand - for - ' od us stay-at-hom- es illustrations for art and history books” continues the bulletin “To many who have never visited Spain they are no less living than the actual Madriienos of today 4 state action which has made itself felt throughout the state ever since the adverse decision last June” YOUNGEST MONARCH LEADSJCJ1VE LIFE VIENNA — (UP) — The world’s1 youngest monarch King Peter Ilf of ’'Yugoslavia who celebrated hiS 13th birthday on Sept 6 leads a v strenuous life Upon rising from his late father’s bed at Dedinye castle at 6:30 a day begins for him full of exciting tasks He has his meals together with his mother Dowager Queen Maria and his younger brothers Tomislav and Andrew His school curriculum includes four foreign languages Russian English French and German mathematics physics history ' literature military science and a generous measure of gymnastics King Peter’s interests are numerous ’ ranging from various sports to literature chemistry andf Among craftsmanship English writers his favorites are Dickens and Stevenson whom he reads in the original 4 Science Looks Into Proverb About Beauty electrical current and the circulation of the blood is quickened The face to be treated is covered with a silk mask over which are laid specially constructed skin Cheek and forehead electrodes enabling the current to penetrate to a considerable depth' below the skin’s surface The amount of electricity applied is carefully regulated The new process is based on the familiar proverb that beauty is more than skin deep Scientific tests of the electrical beauty treatment have been carried out at the ‘ 5 Leipzig fair’ Phonograph Calls Many To Worship i LONDON— The Rev Eric ’ Robson vicar of St' Andrew’s West Kirby England has placed a record of a peal of bells on a phonograph to call his parishioners to worship He dreamed he heard bells ' from his 'church awoke to find it his radio But the dream gave him the idea' of the record with loud speaker attached His church tower is not strong enough for real bells New Instruments Aid Star Study ) 4 New Oil Industry Seen In Manchuria ‘ er 4 |