Show SUNDAY MORNING MAY 21 THE OGDEN 1939 STANDARD-EXAMINE- S WILL SEEK COUNTRY DANKER WORLD COTTON LOANS HOMEY ON qU fBig ACREAGE LIMIT THRIFT ABILITY Production Countries Sounded Outj On Conference Farmers Don’t Want Money For Improvement But WASHINGTON May 18 (UP) — Controlled world cotton produc-CJtio- n and division of export markets jwili be the goal sought by the United States in an international invention it hopes to assemble tt fall Tremendous increases in cotton surproduction and unprecedented pluses have swamped markets de loralized prices and ptic condition that sandal ruin to millions bf growers Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace believes that two things jre mostrlikely to grow out of the situation: World agreement 0reseht control and division of markets or a price war hat would leadto economic suicide ff the cotton industry g Other principal — oiintries Brazil Egypt India and Soviet Russia — have been approachcut-thro- at cotton-producin- ed regarding an international cot- proposal for such a conference has freen made believes that there is ittle hope of a world agreement as ng as the United States govern-en- tcontinues in effect to peg Amrican cotton prices through loans at which QILbove the price are willing to sell he They will "talk elieves only when) competition om the United States forces them o do so As long as they can undersell with ettoonj produced by heap labor they will insist on that advantage he has said In recent years American cotton growers have lost half of their ex- ort market — declining from 6500-- 0 bales to 3300000 —while a record urplus of 14500000 bales has piled igh in warehouses and on wharves “Certainly” Wallace said “other roducing countries cannot expect ur cotton growers in effect to ubsidize them— to hold an um- over them with programs of re-aini- ng C&rella fuotas adjustment marketing and loans Opinion Sounded Out “Our government is already sounding out other interested countries as to their attitude toward a world cotton conference The ultimate vobjective ought to be world agreements to stabilize world markets and prices I hope that before long the other big exporting countries will be ready to join with us in an effective plan" On either course— international or competition— the United States government faces an indefinite aid pro- cut-thro- at farmers that OTram befora southern continuing drain of at least $300000000 - a year on the treasury is pledged govIf ernment payments must be made 4 5 er z J i jf § BOISE May 20 (AP) —More less were were but persons injured killed in automobile accidents in the first three months of 1939 than in the same period of 1938 the statlT law enforcement depart- ment's safety education bureau f reported- - Saturday bureau listed total accidents three months of both fVThe asfirst 230 but said 27 were 30 in year compared-wit- h 1938 Injuries in 1939 numbered 6 compared with 144 last year and property damage this year I was $6l938 compared - with $41365 a year ago 5- - t Grads Deprived i Of Ceremonies r"tOUNTAIN HOME Idaho May ln0— (AP) — Seniors at Mountain (1 Home high school will get their diplomas without commencement baccalaureate exercises the por fc school board ruled Saturday after E members of the class assertedly refused to present a public pro-1- 1 gram last night The board said in a prepared y statement that the events were cancelled because of a “demonstration Friday when the senior ? class refused to present its class h night program due to' the failure ’of one student to receive credits S enough to pass” ' AVV BABY WITH BABY order to get a fair return on land Investment very valuable land is used for apartment house land building while lower-price- d fhas detached homes VVSVV V Shown above with a nurse holding her son is Lina Medina Peruvian Indian child whose baby wras born by Caesarean operation in the presence of 60 astounded doctors at a Lima maternity hospital The mother’s reported age is upheld by the fact that she still has her first teeth Peruvian authorities are said to be considering making both mother and child wards of the government while a concession at the New York world’s fair is reported r to have offered the pair $1000 a week to be exhibited six-pou- Nazis Prepare Model Menus Barley Coffee Recommended BERLIN (UP)— The Nazi party which has made it its task to guard and guide the German peoand ple from cradle to grave from breakfast to bedtime has also taken it upon itself to give advice about proper nutrition For this purpose the party’s women’s department through the which party’s news agency reaches all newspapers and almost all homes in Germany is - day issuing a weekly day-b- y menu This menu carefully selected it is said as to calorific substance serves a double purpose It is to enable the German housewife to budget the pay of her husband into which taxes compulsory insurance dues and the many contributions for party Labor-froand relief are making deep inroads It also is to advocate the use of such foodstuffs that are plentiful here at the moment and to prevent an undue and ‘ undesired demand on less available edibles A recent weekly menu in which “malt coffee" is toasted barley ground and then brewed listed the following: t Sunday — Breakfast: malt Coffey with milk bread with marmalade lunch: braised beef Brussels sprouts potatoes choco late blancmange dinner potato-sala- d celery-salad- s fried pork sausage bread and tea Monday — Breakfast: oatmeal soup lunch: celery soup potato dumplings and dried prunes dinner: green-sala- d fried potatoes and herring Tuesday — Breakfast: malt cof fee with milk" bread and mar malade lunch: dried green-ry- e soup fish hash rolled in cabbage leaf boiled potatoes dinner: potatoes with junket radish tea made from apple blossoms Wednesday — Breakfast: bar ley soup cooked with milk fruit or marmalade two slices of bread lunch: mixed vegetables caramel pudding dinner souffle of tapioca and junket nt to compensate growers for reduced acreage A world cotton price war on the part of the United States would have to be financed through government subsidies if growers were sot to be reduced to abject poverty Acreage Vastly Cut Acreage already has been cut 5 from 42000000 to 27000000 acres "Ht an annual cost of nearly $300 iooOQQ for benefit payments par ity payments and loans That acreage is calculated to produce 12000-00- 0 bales in a normal year That allows for normal domestic consumption of 6000000 bales and exports of 600000 bales a year— the goal set by yallace Other means must be found for disposal of 9000000000 bales of surplus cot- down to ton to bring the carry-ovlevel the desired 5000000-bal- e Wallace has suggested that some of the surplus perhaps 5000000 bales be exchanged for rubber tin and other “strategic” war materials o be stored as reserve supplies in Thursday — Breakfast: malt yie 'event of an emergency coffee rye bread with marmalade or synthetic honey lunch: cutlets made of dried green-ry- e - jackets and musHIGHWAY DEATHS IN tard sauce salad of raw carrots dinner: potato souffle with meat IDAHO ON DECREASE hash bread and haw-berr- y tea - y Mexican Character Actor Is ‘Most Frayed for’ Film Man His Household of Guardian Angels Watches Over Successes By PAUL HARRISON NEA Service Staff - Sons Do HOLLYWOOD — Chris Martin personally doesn’t have much By EDWARD CURTIS time for prayer but he is the actor in movie-tow- n CYRIL Okla May 20— (AP)— mbst prayed-fo- r Banker T D Call is holding out the lure of rural gold to keep boys The 22 members of his vast and girls down on the farm household take turns on their Banker Call a big and hearty knees asking the supreme casting small town financier director for jobs for him because when Chris is working there is plenty of food and vino for everybody From time to time the stout Mexican actor has Invited brothers and sister cousins and inlaws to share his big house They were all so busy praying that they didn’t do much work so Chris hired a maid Recently her husband died so Chris said to bring the three kids and move in as members of the family She did this and right away she began praying too In fact she had a vision She said It had been revealed to' her that Chris would become famous through his role as the fat innkeeper in “Stagecoach” Sabotaged But Got Part Sure enough From a one-da- y them There we were going around trying to give them money to build bit part the job stretched through up their herds They didn’t under- two weeks and the beaming Chris stand what we were trying to do was hired as Gordito in “The Re“So” Call related “we decided the turn of the Cisco Kid” the charway to a farmer’s heart was acter he had played in the original “Cisco Kid” with Warner Baxthrough his boy” Call executive vice president of ter But Director Herbert Leeds the practically one-ma- n bank of wasn’t sure he could handle the conferred the with Cyril president part so Martin was told to learn lines that night J R Stallings who heads several hisChris was very worried because banks in this district Here’s what never had had a whole script he did: they “We gave the school $500 to help before and he never had memorhire a vocational agriculture teach- ized lines in advance When he er in 1932 We told the teacher confided this to his wife and all to name the project and the boy the guests in the house they locked him in a room and said he and we’d finance him “All the security we wanted was would have to stay there until he thrift and the ability to do things learned the part Pretty soon the telephone rang Two Boys Failed “The first year we had three season We loaned $9200 boys Two of them fell down but 1937-3- 8 the one who completed his proj- to finance 111 livestock feeding ect did a fine job and we decided and farm projects of all kinds to go ahead We really don’t count “We had only 86 projects and that first year In our program loaned $6500 In the 1938-3- 9 season We lost the vocational agriIt was just a starter “The next year we loaned $1100 culture teacher we started with last on nine projects The idea kept spring and with a new teacher building Our peak year was in the we kind of got off our stride” T ton conference although no formal -- 9-- B R JAIL SENTENCE FACES REPORTER OLYMPIA Wash May 20 (UP) jail sentence faced Lester M Hunt reporter for the Seattle Sar today because he declined to tell the Thurston county grand jury the source of his information that the grand jury had unearthed evidence of graft on the state liquor board and that “investigators” had discovered facts connecting state officials with a stock promotion scheme —A Malad W W Thomas Correspondent Great Northern Hotel Phone 94 Willard Anderson Circulation Phone 25 ' COUPLE MARKS WEDDING DATE 10-d- ay xh '$' i T1 Z (X A V ' - Farmers Receive Greater Income WASHINGTON May 20 (AP) American farmers received cash income of $553000000 from sale of products and government benefit payments in April the ag BUSINESS HEADS SPEAK OUT FOB TAX President Is Cool Towards Revisions Suggested By Tycoons By KIRK L SIMPSON WASHINGTON May 20 (AP)— Politicians pondered over a paradox this week — big business parading corporate tax revision ideas in a spotlight provided by a president seemingly cool to the proposals tThe politicos are interested because as they point out tax policies often dominate presidential campaigns and 1940 is just around the corner The arguments that changes in the corporate tax structure would stimulate private Investment and thereby recovery were presented by spokesmen for a large segment of business to the temporary naThe tional economic committee committee was created by President Roosevelt who called on it for a formula to get idle men and money to work again The heads of three outsize American corporate giants Owen D Young of General Electric Edward Stettinius of United States Steel and Alfred P Sloan of General Motors testified in support of the very tax revision program that thepresident thus far has failed to approve All three contended such Roosevelt administration corporate levies as the remaining undistributed profits Impost and the capital gains tax were chiefly responsible for those “stagnant pools” of idle money to which the president called the committee’s attention And all three insisted that it was lit- tie not big business which suffered for lack of “risk” capital that it was new enterprise which was tax' stagnated and needed government fostering if the nation Ms to have ‘ ’ the national i at which the president riculture Saturday department has aimed This brought the total farm period last year 9 tTTttj t fi to-cla- lly New Gas Ranges have many features that help women get better results in cooking with less time and attention seven of them living now The are D M Alfred and Chester Edwards and Mrs Lavern Jones all of Malad Mrs Clem Hatch of Ogden Mrs Victor Thomas of Salt Lake City and Mrs R L Hill of Los Angeles All except Mrs Hill and Mrs Thomas were present They have 32 grand children and 10 great grandchildren "O GOVERNOR INSPECTS NEW PRISON LOCALE Boise Advertises Spare Buffalo Pay Offered for Market Restraint Hearing Set In Labor Dispute BOISE May 20 — (AP) — Imme- FOODS TASTE BETTER cooked with If results count with you — if you’re looking for ways to prepare MORE TEMPTING MORE SAVORY MEALS— come in and gee the new gas ranges They For cooking controlled boiling heat plus use of small quantity of water make possible the retention of valuable vitamins and mineral salts No violent boiling Food cells are not broken and coloring is not washed out offer the advantage of low temperature oven cooking Natural nutritious juices are retained in the food No excess shrinkage i ve O w And you’ll be proud of the sleek beauty of your new gas range You’ll welcome the ECONOMY of gas Accurate maintenance of low temperature of 250 degrees for period of time plus even heat distribution in all parts of the oven make possible low temperature cooking any-desir- top-of-sto- ed cooking time-savin- g and the work- saving automatic J In broiling smoke and excessive odors are eliminated No firing of fats or greases Broiled meats are more palatable more digestible when prepared with a modern gas range features Come in and see the various models i DENVER May 20 — (AP) — A hearing on a complaint of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen against the Utah Copper Co and the Kenne-co- tt Copper Corp will open June 1 at Salt Lake City The complaint accused the two companies of “failing to bargain collectively in good faith” on the union’s claim to representation of firemen and enginemen working on ore trains lOUIlTAItl FUEU iUPPLY COMPANY V5y 2336 Washington Blvd Phone 174 B Serving Twenty-thre- e Utah Communities estimated in- come for the first four months ol the year to $2240000000 compar- : ed with $222700000 in the like a Mr and Mrs Edwards were married May 14 1889 in St John They began farming in the St John district and have made their home there since They became the parents of eight children in- come goal 3 May 20 — Mr and Mrs David L Edwards of St John celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary at a Golden wedding party at their home Some twenty-fiv- e guests were present to enjoy a supper served at a long table centered with lovely bouquets of cut flowers The evening was spent MALAD SALT LAKE CITY May 20 — (AP) — The Jordan Narrows site for construction o a new state tj prison recommended recently by the Utah advisory commission was inspected Saturday by Gover" nor Blood He was accompanied by William Peterson Utah State Agricultural college extension service director The college had been asked to on soil and water Friday — Breakfast: buttermilk availablereport at the proposed site soup bread or hardtack lunch: which must be approved by the fish with sauerkraut and mashed before July 1 in order to governor tea use $100000 dumplings with marmalade appropriated by the and bread with junket legislature Saturday— Breakfast: malt coffee with milk bread lunch: thick with vegetables potato soup skimmed milk with junket dinner: noodles with tomato sauce In addition the party's women’s department gives recipes on the more intricate dishes Here is the one for the “cutlets made of BOISE May 20 (AP)—Who wants dried green-rye- ” that sure to form a buffalo? ' the high points of the Thursday “Andy” and "Madame Queen” lunch fare: the Boise park’s pair of the shaggy “Take kilogram of dried animals are anticipating a “blessed green-ry- e groats — liter of wa- event” but District Judge Charles ter one chopped onion spice T Winstead park board chairman salt one stale roll one egg some says the zoo doesn’t need any more fat Put the groats with cold wa- buffaloes ter on the fire boll while stirring In addition to the the zoo to a paste until you can lift it out contains two youngerpairbuffaloes of the pot mix paste with spice both sons of “Andy” and “Madame into flat dumplings put them Into Queen” Two years ago another of the frying pan fry until they are a yellow-golde- n hue on both sides” pair’s sons was slaughtered to make barbecued sandwiches during a community celebration here diate cash payment of 7 cents per bushel “storage allowance” will be made to borrowers in 11 southeastern Idaho counties who to keep their wheat off the agree market another 10 months Philip E Bishop state wheat loan supervisor for the commodity credit corporation said Saturday The 11 counties affected are Bannock Bear Lake Bonneville Caribou Cassia Franklin Free-mo- nt Madison Oneida Power and Teton five-year-o- ld nd and it was his dear friend Leo Carrillo “Leo is giving & party and says I must come right over" recalled Chris “I say I must study lines but finally I say I will come So I call my wife and tell her I must go see my good friend Leo and she says no word but unlocks the door “Well I take a shower and get all dressed up and get in my car But the tires are all flat and the sparkplugs are all gone Igo back and call up Leo with this sad news Then I study the lines and go to bed and in the morning my wife says ‘How you feel?’ and I say ‘Fine!’ “She says ‘How you feel if you had gone to your dear friend Sen-o- r Carrillo’s party? And I say ‘I would have very bad head’ She says ‘All right now you go to the movie place and do not forget what you have learned I go out and find the car is like new and Is even polished So I go to the studio and I get the job She is one smart woman my wife” All his dependents prayed hard and Chris did fine in the picture Now he is in demand and at present is happily working in “The Dove” with jAmigo Carrillo He is so Important that he has a stand-i- n and a portable dressing room Reached Hollywood As Stowaway Chris Martin arrived in Holly wood back In the silent days when Universal imported a bunch of In dians from Arizona Chris wanted to come so some Indian friends stowed him away between the seats of the day coach and divided their crackers and canned salmon with him He went with them to the studio and- began his movie career work Ing for a dollar a day and living in a tepee on the back lot Then he became a free - lance casting director and for years supplied the studios with Mexican character actors and extras He Those helped direct them too were prosperous days BIG |