Show fait £nkt Srilmnr LOCAL NEWS PAGE 19 ny DROP TO 1500 State Charts Training of Delinquents -- 50 of Utah Nisei Return to Coast Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINGTON Aug 24 — More than half the persons of Japanese descent who were domiciled and working in Utah during the war years have “pulled up stakes” and returned to the Pacific coast according to the war agency liquidation unit of th Interior department which superceded the old War Relocation Plans to Call Meets To Formulate New Trade School Plans were under way Sunday to call emploje and employer representatives to a conference with the state welfare commission in an attempt to find a prepram ‘for the training of juvenIe delinquents in private industry John Farr Larson atate welfare ui WA °L tlihld T41 ' eorrmlsson'a director of children's services said It w as hoped meet-l-- g could be arranged in the “near future" in order to set up a substitute for the program formerly carried on at the Tooele Orttraree depot which was abandoned at the army s request in April 1947 Jb reec grut ion of the success of the TOD plan termed by Mr Larwm as ‘ore of the most suc- authority Exact figures are not available but WALU reports that thi3 Japanese element in Utah that numbered 2210 persons in 1940 and rose to around 10000 during the period 1943 to 1945 has now dropped to about 4500 Being nearest to the Pacific coast they say that Utah first felt the heavy migration “A large part of those leaving” says the report “have been farmers who either had farms on the coast to return to or were dissatisfied with climate and methods of farming” In the vicinity of Layton Kaysville and Syracuse there has been less disposition to migrate than in other parts of the state The present population of Japanese Americans in this iW 4 Ok cessful methods of treating Juven-l'- e fen delrouency yet undertaken a short-terbasis” the 1947 legislature appropriated 140000 to continue a andar plan Legal Specifications The law specifies It should be a program "to care for delnquent youths who have been removed from ther home by action of the Juvenle court and who do not reel -- re the type of care provided at the state industrial school ” The TOD plan was begun Au-jr194 6 It provided means boys participating whereby wculd be allowed to save part of their earnings which were made at alakle to them upon rtlease f mm the camp A portion was used to defray the cost of boarcLrg and supervision Although a peak cf 60 boys participated in the program the cost to the state was less than $3000 Mr La rson sa d Mr Larson en phaszed that the sumers and existance of a substi- te program depended entirely uton the cooperation of industry and labor f o W 1 Tribune j Convejing a hearty thank to her horse Pal for hi i part In helping Carol Bruno her win the queenshlp of the Salt Lake county fair 16 who won the title for personality dress and riding ability st TO RULE COUNTY FAIR te Jordan High Girl Wins Queen Tryout Honors area is about 1400 as compared with 950 before the war and 2300 at the peak Farming conditions in this vicinity are comparable with those on the coast and the evacuees remaining have become well established Most of the evacuees who intend to leave already have Water Sewer Discussions Near in Price m gone wd Hire PRICE — Registration will begin Tuesday at 2 pm in Price city hall for the fourth annual municipal water works and sanitation conference opening Wednesday under the sponsorship of the civil engineering department of the University of Utah engineering division of the Utah state department of health and the Utah municipal league The meet featuring discussions on municipal sewers will precede Utah municipal the three-da- y league convention beginning Thursday at Price Chairman of the water and sanitation conference will be Lynn M Thatcher neer state sanitation engi- New Approaches The Utah will The Saddlier Piding club With the help of her obedient municipal league meet horse Pal Carol Bruno present novel ‘‘chariot races’’ will accent new approaches re-to old Jordan high school student nightly at the rodeo a unique city problems resulting from search and practical experience emerged victorious from queen feature at Utah rodeos cortest tryouts Sunday afternoon Featured speaker will be Mayor at the Murray park rodeo ground Fletcher Bowron Los Angeles who to become queen of the Salt Lak will address the league’s 40th annual convention on “Cities Must county fair 14 Training Frogram other Competing against Hang Together” He said earher it w as hoped that contestants In personality dress Registration for the convenand Carol a traru rg program for delinquent tion will begin Thursday at 9 am displayed riding ability al-- 1 her equestrian ability before a and opening league sessions will be girls couJ be set up in Manti Re-1 committee of judges by mounting held in the municipal auditorium them to work in the at 2 pm aree Manufacturing Co plant trotting stopping her horse and Thursday skills riding there Ths however was ruled out testing other Expected to arouse considerable BINGHAM — Donald Christen- interest a The brown-haire- d is a discussion of “City queen ky company officials m the east He aajd he hoped central housirg daughter of Mr and Mr D A sen 19 Copperton was slashed Manager Form of Government for and L’en'ison for a group of not Bruno West Jordan will reign Sunday when he interrupted the Utah Cities and Towns” by Dr mere than 25 persons could be set over the county fair rodeo siesta of a sleeping man G Homer Durham director of the Wednesday through Saturday’ Utah institute of up rear Salt Lae City on L line University ofDale Entering a trail shack Chnen as attendants to the James Tooele Urder the plan the youth would government be arpreriuei out to the varous' youthful queen were Kern Hinnen dump at Kennetott Copper Corp city manager will lead a discusIS daughter of Mr and Mr works here at 10 am Mr Chris- sion of the application of the city tra lea where they could learn Claude Hinnen 46oS S State and tensen tickled the ribs of a man manager w ear-ir- g He said that a in' form of city government he Taylor 16 daughter of sleeping in the shack Ue TOD plan part of the youths' Jacqueline in Utah Mr Ira Taylor Murray would be taken for board ' Mr and earning Shouting objections the sleeper Address by Mabey Events Monday at the faira - d room a rd part set aside a a to his feet at the same jumped will at e under avaii-ah'way State get ground Rep Renriell N Mabey R avsrg fer them to be made Mr at Christensen time striking noon when contenders for the nawill talk on “State and Sait after ther re ease Lake) a a knife with gaping Government Relations” The iate wn1! furnh trans- tional horseshoe pltchirg crown wound from chinlaying Municipal to ear and right from wrrk and will go through preliminary trials exposing the vital jugular vein at a noon luncheon for mayors portationonto trials are set from noon to 6 to be held in the Carbon colat the certral housng The pern reported John Householder Salt only cafeteria p m and from 8 to 11 p m location lege county deputy sheriff At 1 30 p m Monday Judging of Lake Prior to the address bv the Los John Bowen and Guy Young club girls’ handiwork and Kennecott saw mayor Gus P Backman Angeles said they MACIllNF AGK? awardmg of ribbons to winners a man run employes from the shack throw executive secretary Salt Lake City in the women’s home economics a knife into a bonfire and continue Chamber of Commerce will speak divion will take place down the hill They found Mr on “Utah's Place in the Industrial The rodeo u being produced by Christensen on the floor The Development of the West” at the Earl Hutchison w’ho in 1946 fur- wound was stitched at Kennecott Friday afternoon session n nished more stock for lntermoun-taiwas and the victim Copper hospital rodeos than any other westto his home ern producer said F James Silver released in Salt Lake county jail Held assistant manager for investigation of assault wnth a deadlv weapon was Luiz Martinez 27 Puerto Rico itinerant 5 Short-Change- d worker at Bingham t 16-yea- r- I t-- i vrj i ri 4-- Equine Upsets Injure Four rerene-5 it Lae e- -er d e- - cv t rca t t r-- er Drum Titlists Head for N Y On $23730 Trip t Five victim of a profiteering F ’'t reported Sunday to police ris! serous'y was Jerry that a man who accepted $237 50 tv the -rq j - q’arfrt t 14 1 57 Upton f i He to drive them from Vallejo Cal w fractured wrist lo Chicago disappeared in Salt trea’cd Ur took his car eUferel t 6 “'I pm when he City after he ” rear hs resi- away "for Jumped off repairs He One of the victim who reported M stepped cn dence ir d later wa transferred to St Mark sj to polce identified only as Cpl kn p taL Bitter Minnesota and his four Ilneroe L B rd 41 Midvale fell compiamon departed via bu Sunerr hi mount at 7 50 p m day afternoon to complete their He journey a poasble head mju ry w a held for observation At Hcgle Garden at 8 p m five- F— chard Buchi buT Coats-- j RoIilfV aear-oi- d lO Hear Golfer v ! ave- - fell from & cart pulled Lake Salt Rotary club will meet by a pony sufferirg laceration Tuesday noon in Hotel Utah to rd bruises He was released to hear Jack Keenan executive vice home S estern of the Golf Mr Heo Van Carrpen 32 631 presided Alan apeak W 3rd Ncrth reportedly wa Ge-er- a- al hr-pt- al Mwt rai ket 1 ke b'-r'- e I ia j j re at 21t So-t- h rep the ar imal rd-- 1 ti rred and ran lrto her wa'th rg a- - i 3rd Crr y a h e w lacerat'r and rausrg She waa face the pnv ate phv can brurxes ofj referred to a Melal Union LKts Meet Delegates A group of Utah member rf In- ternational I'iin cf Mme Mll and Smelter Wcrkers CIO have been named to attend a meeting cf the unon e’enng Monday in 1 St Paul M rn he group included local em B Reese Magna-Arthu- r C E Berger smelter local M-rr- Max II H-ru- ay Baker Midvale Jordi n Tooefe local local r res- ident WeGey J Madil and Burt J f V e Garf eld local and Victor local Brhre Magna-Arthu- r Scheduled for d wlw on at the c r'errnre are the Hartlev Taft latvr t '! ard ’he reent alleged! t reach w’hn the I U M M S Wj -- i r SL Boy 5 Thirty-seve- n Injured In Mock Hanging ld -- Contribute to Area The report says of this locality: "The persons of Japanese ancestry during the w’ar period definitely contributed to the economic wellbeing of the communities where they settled Without the Japanese farm labor the area would have been hard put for manpower to carry out the agricultural demands placed upon it This may be one of the basic reasons why social and economic discrimination in this area has been one of the lowest of any region in the state” In the Brigham City area where 270 persons of Japanese descent lived before the war only about 50 evacuees remain of nearly 700 who at one time were residents The report says of this group: “Because a number of the newcomers were better able financially to buy new machinery and to manipulate other factors necessary in farming operations than the old Japanese-America- n residents relations between the new and old Japanese population became strained Superiority Complex Another factor making for ill feeling between the tw’o groups was an unwillingness on the part of the newcomers to “take the advice of the old residents as to what to raise how to farm and w’hat to do in order to get along in the Caucasian community” As one older Nisei a native of the Honeyville area put it: “After all we had become well established in our lommumty we were accepted people knew us and lespected us The Californians moved in and they soon outnumbered us two to one They did not know how to act They thought they were better than we were We didn’t like it After they were here for a short time they began to understand and along toward the end of their stay they began to be better able to make the right kind of adjustments “Economically most were able to compete favorably with the other members of the community and many of them made “good money” during the war years They aided materially in building up some of the fruit and vegetable industries in the area” The report of WALU makes See Page 19 Column S Spanish Fork Worker Touches Wire Dangling 2200-Volt V r Vi Tribune Special — FORK SPANISH Wedged in cross members at the top n of a power line pole Dell Olsen 26 Spanish electric Fork city power department lineman was electrocuted at 2:45 charge which passed through pm by a 2200-vo- lt Sunday his body before other workmen could switch off the power Mr Olsen a veteran of World War n and a city electric department employe six months w’as working on emergency high-tensirepairs with W P Shippee city electric superintendent The superintendent told officers the lineman climbed to the cross members and was bracing himself against supports before fastening his safety belt It was then he apparently touched the dangling wure Mr Shippee said Throw Master Switch Mr Olsen cried out and other workers were dispatched to throw the master switch while Mr Shippee called the Spanish Fork fire department resuscitation 35-fo- ot high-tensio- on Ini —I To seek David A Affleck reelection to city commission Affleck Asks Reelection To City Post squad was taken from the The David A Affleck incumbent top of body the pole and firemen atSalt Lake City commissioner in tempted resuscitation for an hour and 45 minutes before Mr Olsen charge of the water department was dead by Dr his announced candidacy Prestonpronounced formally Spanish Fork Hughes for reelection Sunday His anphysician nouncement’ said he w’ould seek The death of Mr Olsen is the reelection upon his record with fourth death by electrocution the water department and outlined throughout the state within a an improvement program which week Other electrical deaths were: he proposes to carry out during Mrs Norman Waagen and her the next four years daughter Barbara killed Lake Salt City Lynn tenure in office” “During my a radio fell into when Thursday Mr Affleck said “Salt Lake City the bath tub where they w’ere has experienced an unprecedented bathing and William Young 38 growth in population and in in- Altamont Duchesne county a lineThis growth man for a Uintah basin power dustrial activities w’ould not have been possible if company electrocuted Wednesday tension charge while there had not been sufficient water by a high on a utility pole To working and distribution facilities of meet the needs the future the Spanish Fork Native city immediately must undertake Mr Olsen was born In Spanish extensive enlargements and im- Fork Nov 10 1919 a son of provements in its water distribu- Iee and Priscilla Williams Olsen tion system For our city and its attended Spanish Folk schools industries can grow no larger or He and graduated from Spanish faster than the limits of its water Fork was While attending high and distribution facilities the high school supply he joined the school “Water from Deer creek should of the naFork Spanish battery be available to the city in the tional with the and left guard latter part of 1949 In order to unit when called into active was it utilize this additional supply in 1940 for present and future needs the duty He served four years in the commissioner of the water departand married Dawn Sanders ment should have: first an inti- army in 1915 Oklahoma in mate working knowledge of the are his widow and Surviving so new the present system supply Fork a brother can be coordinated with and used parents Spanish Bud L Olsen sisters and three in the present system and second Mrs Verl Debonish Leone and a knowdedge of the improvements Pearl Olsen and a grandmother that wall be required Such knowl- Mrs Sena Olsen all of Spanish edge I have acquired during my Fork term in office I have also made definite plans for a program to meet the situation” The commissioner listed the following major improvements as part of that program: New feed lines to the Park reservoir to bring Deer creek water into the city system new feed lines to the northwest part of the city’ and either a water tower or reservoir in that vicinity to increase supply to distubution system new terminal reservoir south of the Tark reservoir to receive some of the Deer creek water new reservoir on the northeast bench to supply Children's hospital city and Catholic cemeteries and homes in that area new and larger feed lines in many’ sections of the city’ and in the near future a section of a filter plant for water from Deer creek Big Cottonwood and Little Cottonwood A native of Salt Lake City Mr Affleck was engaged in business here for 4 0 years before his elecHe tion to the city commission is married has six children and ave the family resides at 624-3r- d He is an active member of several civic organizations Auto Injures Sailor Donald Mattson 21 U S navy suffered a fractured collarbone and other undetermined injuries Monday at 1 :05 a m when struck by an auto on 9th South between State and Main streets Driver of the auto failed to stop Mr Mattson was taken to the Veterans hospital for treatment ICEBOX RAIDER PROWLS AGAIN A “Dagwood” midnight snack lose artist who apparently can't food from the his appetite for boarding house icebox of Mrs h East early Fay Draper Sunday made another in a recent series of successful forays she reported to police She said her icebox has been prowled frequently since Aug 1 She gave the name of a former border whom she suspects 57-6t- - cials Monday Meanwhile a sister ship of the Slick Airways Co craft waa scheduled to leave Cedar City Sunday to take the bodies of the victims to Los Angeles for funeral services and burial Returned With Bodies A search party of about Jo members headed by George VV Vaughan superintendent of flight operations for the company returned to Richfield Saturday at 11 p m with the mangled bodies of the pilot first officer and a Los Angeles newspaperman Killed when their cargo plane "cartwheeled” and bounced several times along Point Buchanan a ridge of lava rock jutting from Boulder mountain were Capt Marvin George Vaughan 32 Santa Monica pilot: Robert Frederick Hume 28 Los Angeles first officer and Herbert Victor Preeg 47 aviation editor Los Angeles News The bodies were taken from a Richfield mortuary Sunday at 10 p m to the waiting plane in Cedar City to be accompanied to Los Angeles by Robert Vaughan Omaha brother of the victim pilot who participated in day-lon- g ground ill-fat- search operations Saturday Strewn Over Wide Area V R Moreland public relations officer of the airways company said the plane apparently bounced a considerable distance along the sheer face of Point Buchanan after a wing tip caught on a rocky crag Wreckage and bodes were strewn over a wide area The crash occurred early Friday morning during a heavy ram and thunderstorm which blanketed a large region of Dixie national foiest on Aquarius plateau Boulder mountain situated m one of the most rugged and isolated regions in the state rises to an altitude of 11250 feet The cargo craft a payload of 10142 lbs carrying was en route to Burbank from Denver Thursday It checked into the Hanksville Wavne county airport Thursday at 4:5S am but failed to make a scheduled report to the Bryce canyon airport shortly afterwards two-motor- ed Climbers Fiml Hodies Of 2 Girl Fliers Hlr two-passeng- er instantly One Wing Broken Sheriff Les F Outzs of Blaine county said considerable work was necessary to remove the bodies from the wreckage Both were mangled by the force with which the small plane ramnVd Into the mountainside Officials said one wing of the plane was broken from the fuselage and the other wing badly crushed the engine waa pushed back into the cockpit pinning the pilot Because of the ruggednes ef the Sawtooth mountain area it w’as Impossible for the rescue group to reach the plane Saturday night and they camped approximately four miles dowm the mountain until daybreak Sunday The wreckage was reached about 9 a m and the bodies returned to MORE DEATHS HIKE UTAH’S TRAFFIC TOLL TO 108 Hailey after noon ol Return i HperHU C-4- Iribuoa jubilant members Lu-Car- Tribune RICHFIELD — Preliminary inof the wreckage of a vestigation 6 cargo plane that ploughed into a jagged Boulder mountain peak Thursday with three aboard revealed no evidence of engine or radio trouble or a lack of fuel James A Peyton Los Angeles chief inspector Sixth region Civil Aeronautics board said Sunday He said a final report of the tragedy would be- filed with Civil Aeronautics administration offi- TWIN FALLS Ida— The bodes of two Twin Falls high school graduates were returned here late Sunday from the rugged slopes of Mt Hvndman 20 miles northeast of Hailey where their Aeronca plane carried them to their deaths Friday The girls Virginia Walker 17 daughter of Mrs C C Walker Hansen and Joyce White 17 pilot o the plane and daughter of Mr and Mrs E E White Twin Falls W’ere believed to have been killed drum and of the Magna-Garfiel- d bugle corps left Salt Lake City Sunday night en route to New York to defend their title a junior champions of the nation The corps sponsored by Cyprus post 38 American Legion won first place in national competition Oct 1 1946 in San Francisco Cal third place in 1938 and 12th place in 1940 The contest scheduled for Aug 29 at Van Cortland park the Bronx allows each competing band only nine minutes in which to “trot out the tunes” The corps members hope to return to Salt Lake City by Sept 5 with another national title tucked in their in- Modeled after the necktie party of the early west a boys' game Sunday endangered the "life of a Salt Laker Donald Dean Shadon 339 E 3rd South was the victim In a mock hanging he was ’’strung” to a tree by a wire around his neck hia hands tied behind him Neighbors saw him and cut him down then called police Officers referred the “hangman” — a 14 year-old boy — to juvenile authorities Their report said the boy had a welt around his neck strument cases where the wire had tightened The youthful corps directed by The victim made T R Colombe and Roy Jones and him (hoking a quick recovery chaproned by Mrs Roy Jones and Mrs LaFawn Mayberry consists of: Joyce Aldrich Bob Archibald Russell Beavans Fred Buckner 5 Carma Cammans Carol Cromer Frank Driffill Dorothy Drown 17 Merrill Duckw’orth Max Fullmer Gloria Furrow’ Dolores Hansen Gloria Harkness Donald Justesen Three fatalities attributed to motor vehicle traffic during Sally Latham Harry Klekas the week ended Saturday midnight raised Utah’s total for Carolee Mayberry Nancy McMas-te- r 1917 to IDS just 34 short of last gear's 122 highway deaths Orville Mohler Norma Perkins Jill Plattner Lucille Reeder through Aug 23 Lois Shaw Shirley Shaw Shirley The fatalities occurred in Iron Utah and Salt Lake Allen Simmons Sheppick counties increasing motor vehicle deaths to five 16 and 17 Simpson Anita Singleton Joan Spenser Joan Turner Udell respectively in the counties for 1947 During the correspondVance James Velotis Nancy Wilin Utah 1946 occurred deaths six traffic of week ing Melba Wing Arva Wolsten-holm- e liams Traffic deaths during the week included Charles Leon and Jim Zogg Nelson 15 in Cedar City last Sunday Donald William Smith 8 in Spanish Fork on Tuesday and Miss Aarlan Johnson 19 DAY Delegates 2314-St- h East who died Wednesday in a Salt Lake hospital Salt Lake representatives of Disin of injuries suffered Salt Lake county last Monday abled American Veterans Sunday Another death that may be attributed to traffic i returned from the weekrlong national DAV convention in LaS that of Herbert Craig 18 who died Tuesday in a St George hit-ru- n Vegas which ended Saturday The what a been have accident hospital following may Salt Lake delegation was led by near there Th Craig jouth was a resident of the Moccasin Joseph Jerry Jeremy commander Indian reservation in Arizona Arjonne chapter No 2 five-year-o- ecxrocmue PAGE THIRTEEN SALT LAKE CITY UTAH MONDAY MORNING AUGUST 25 1917 SECOND SECTION Power Lineman RADIO LOG 4 THEY’LL DEFEND MAGNA-GARFIEL- All set lo “shuffle off to the Bronx” In defense of their national junior championship won in 1946 are from left to right Arva oNtenhoime Shirley D HONORS Sheppick and Lu Carol Simpson three pretty toot and tap artist who left with 34 other drum corps member for New York City Sunday night Graduated in ‘47 Miss Walker also held one of the top 10 scholastic records in the graduating class of 1947 She was born Nov 17 1929 and was a member of the Methodist church of Hansen Other survivors include five brothers and sisters Bruce William Wayne Dorothy and Sally Waler all of Hansen Miss White had received her pilot's license here Aug 20 and had 50 hours of solo to her credit The plane was owned bv the Flying club of Twin Falla 6-- R |