| Show " ferrAJura) MUfc y4 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE TUESDAY MORNING JULY 24 1934 OGDEN PARADE RECALLS OF day CAST VOTE ON PMNEERS (Continued from Put One) nets plumed hats and ringlets were much in evidence as the modern women and girls returned for a time 4b the days of their grandmothers Fuf-fleand billowy sleeves h gowns and high shoes denoted the nc plus ultra of styles of another day Visiting Floats Colorful Then the floats of visiting delega tions appeared Brigham' City was represented by a beribboned float with three of the community's fairest representatives to remind onlookers that soon the northern Utah city will hold its annual Peach day celebration There also were other floats from other communities contiguous to Ogden Pride in the past and hopes for the fuhire were depicted in three floats Portraying the development expected upon completion of the Pine View dam reclamation project expected to increase ot Weber coun ty agricultural lands The Weber county farm bureau was represented with a horn of plenty spilling crops of vegetables fruit and melons upon the rich soil Then the floats of lodges and clubs 'fharchedpait“AImost evgry Ogden The organization was represented Ogden Chinese society and the Japanese society were represented by exotic floats showing the colorful bean ty of the two nations and the religious note was struck by the ladies auxiliary of the Police Benefit association whose float represented s ankle-lengt- 1 First Mayor Portrayed Another float represented Lorin Farr Ogden’s revered first mayor and his family and the commercial entries contrasted the manner of life between yesterday and today To the pageantry was added music of the eight bands in the parade Comedy relief was supplied by clowns and gargantuas who wandered from the line of ma'rch into the crowds which thronged the streets Cowboys also hurled lariats into the massed onlookers and now and then their ropes hit their mark and tugged into the street some fair lass struggling against the rope To heighten the semblance of reality a group of horsemen at various intersections would ride- upon a stagecoach firing blank pistol shots and uttering raucous screeches and a frontier holdup was staged even to the fainting' of women and the trembling of travelers Rearing Horses Thrill Crowd Exploding firecrackers contributed to the noise of pistol blanks as the festival joyousness of the three-dawas accentuated rearing horses excellently trained lent action to the line of march and women riding sidesaddle served further to recall pio' neer life The mammoth parade ended with a troop of youngsters on bicycles clad in costumes which again contrasted yesterday and today Some girls were dressed in long flowing gowns of pioneer gingham their heads covered with sunbonnets while others were clad in the shorts of today Visitors were welcomed in ceremonies on the city hall steps by Mayor Peery who declared that the patent success of Ogden's first extensive celebration led city officials to decide to hold an annual celebration of Pioneer day “We want an annual show" said Mayor Peery “Next year we hope to put on a celebration which will excel even this one” Cheers Greet Announcement The mayor’s announcement was greeted by cheers from the assembled multitude which thronged city hall park many of the spectators still were dressed in frontier garb and most of the men wore heavy beards indicating the cooperation which all Ogden gave the affair Senator William H King who was Introduced by the mayor congratu- lated the city and its officials upon the success of the festival although he expressed the hope that “the growing of whiskers may not be epidemic" He too shared Mayor Peery’s e for- - an annual Pionear day pel bration and asked “Why shouldn’t Ogden take the lead in perpetuating these celebrations on the 24th of July the memeroable day when our forefathers came into this territory and laid the foundations of this commonwealth?” The senior senator also paid tribute to the pioneers who “animated by a strong religious conviction were led into Utah by Brigham Young He praised the Catholic fathers who entered the valley from the south years before 1847 That visit was stressed Sunday night in the pageant which was presented at the stadium Appeals for ‘Pioneer Spirit’ "The spirit of the pioneers must continue” said Senator King “if we are to carry forward their policies and principles which are imbedded In the constitution” He urged that -- y o de-rr- -- I HAY FEVER SUFFERERS Get Relief With AIR CONDITIONING Br yy (Continued from Pate One) Br Associated Press - yt n S’ one-tim- r1' mm 0&n - wUR ' “ d e - — - Ife'ndTT“' 'Irli Ik ftWSWS?'- v&rs 'hyMS Ji J Atoec t it — s vrr:t -- MODERN WOMEN j As Rodeo Riders Perform -- Throngs Thrilled by Spectacular Exhibitions Days three-quarte- Austria Sent War Defy 20 Years Ago Tuesday - grass-covere- d he 1 s ms-manager saddle-buckin- VA l ' I mi PudUller BOISE Idaho July 23—Critical of lis truck drivers’ strike teetered un“federal experiments” which he said held as employers certainly today aloof from negotiations to settle the have done little'good James J Davis United States senator of Pennsyldispute: An informant said the employers’ vania voiced his opposition here to-arfviQorv'oTpmAtt“e pfoposkl'of 'the’Tle'v FFancis Haas and E H Dunnigan federal media- in some sections of the country untors for an employes’ election to der N R A” determine if the latter wanted to He stopped here to spend a few be represented by'the union in negohours en route from Portland Ore tiations with the owners The committee publicly refused to to Pocatello where he will address divulge its attitude on that ques- a Moose lodge convention tomorrow tion Indications that the truck ownThe major problems which this ers had decided to standfast ih hopes for the last of breaking the strike were strength- country has been facing ened by their announcement that of five years are not solved today” de2653 drivers employed by 110 firms clared the former secretary of labor only 225 had failed to report for "Unemployment" the extension of work or advised that they were unbank credit foreign trade private V available Strikers also had not replied to the war debts liquor control crime lawlessness-still are with us conciliators’ proposition Pickets Resentful Bureaucracy Rapped H Added to them are others which Openly resentful at movement of trucks pickets in automobiles fol- threaten the established order — bulowed commercial vehicles but did reaucracy the monopolies that are The trucks not try to stop them A the A A A ' were convoyed by heavy guards ot growing under the N R and the tremendous cost of govern- armed police National guardsmen still were bil- ment leted in the city most of the force Many experiments have been ' Ibw"'v e iron"puddler being' quartered in a’ downtown ar- tried” said the mory ready if needed for any out- 'and none of them has giyen even a break of violence halfway promise of solving any one i wVfclf Mayor A G Bainbridge refused an of our national problems week-entruce by "What the future holds for our extension of the which no armed convoys would be people no one can now predict but it must be evident that general busisupplied owners City garbage truck were prevent- ness Interests of the wuntry--haved from moving but strike leaders not sufficiently profited by governlater said that was a “mistake” and ment efforts to- permit them to give that no attempt would be made in their enthusiastic support the future to halt them The ingenuity the matchless courTaxicabs still remained off the age and the Indomitable push ot the streets though ice milk and beer American business man can alone trucks operated bring this country back to prosperity They Jiave done it in the past and they candoit agalh if they Oiling of Highways handicapped by the intrusion ot too many government clerks ih WashingStrike Delayed by ton No thinking man wants to revert H Stemmer BOISE Idaho (AP)— to the abuses of monopoly the coerIdaho of said director highways :& cion ot labor or the destruction ot Monday that five Idaho highway oil- the small business man ing crews are out of work because of “I intend to lend my energies opthe longshoremen’s strike on the west posing such abuses and infringements" coast Coma From Coast "The walkout " said Stemmer “has came directly from The senator ’ ¥ ’ ' Vf effectied 4Ti ri up the road oil supply as i ' JJP f where coast strikes recently settled 1 tively as can be Even In the east- have been in progress for weeks but ern end- of the state where supplies come qverland from Salt Lake City he said “he felt there was nothing unusual about them” companies won’t ship anything out of fundamentally ' "We have had strikes for years altjjfr home territory because of the growthough general strikes have not been ing shortage there Z’ “As for road oil In the north add highly successful" he pointed out un-“I 'yjyyyyy'y £y west it’s simply out of the question' am in favor of orderly procedure staff fhcttos “A large share of the oil the state der the principles of ourhegovernment concluded settling difficulties” isssit ordered was to have been used In in He tyv& JL w J y Is the dictator of the itzimmmtmmsm! repair and maintenance work" he Loyal Order ot Moosegeneral the organizaexplained Ford-sham Scenes at Ogden’s Pioneer days ceseora-tio- n tion he will address in Pocatello bein pioneer dress to represent James right) Pommy Worch Emeline Neamon and The department also had planned left here to- child Raymon George Paragooin Griffin oiling 10 miles of the Horseshoe Bend fore continuing east He and wife Ogden pioneers Mr Ford-sha- m ‘ Top left— Senator William H King night road in Ada county 17 miles in one of the guests of honor addressing the was a watchmaker in the early sixties Peyoope Jim Neamon and sons Loe and Boundary county 12 miles from Mosmiles from MosTinio Lower right the float entered by Salt cow to Troy 3 Lower left Mayor Harman W Peery shakthrong in front of the city hall Top right cow toward Pullman 12 miles south Not M monthly pnin rad dAy duo to Fordsham clad and Lake Elizabeth Owen and chambers of commerce George of Lewiston to Tammany 12 iniles Nt4 Ogden ing hands with a group of Indians (left to City colda nervous strain exposure or similar esuses Dismond Brand Pills sreaffoctiva south from Coeur d'Alene and sev relisble sad five Qtkk Relief Sokiby celebrated cowboy clotfn entered the Buck Peterson on New Moon fol- eral smaller jobs spirit be kept alive so that’this world elidruggisUiorovef 46yearsAibw Settlement of the strike recently 'arena astride the champion bucking lowed suit may be brought into unison under Idain situation not will the remedy God so that His will may be done on isteer of the Richter stables The Sterling Rides officials ho for some time this earth as it is in heaven” clown's antics were redoubled when Leo Murray and Oral Zumwalt of said because the highway 'TMI PIAMONONy supply has been ex ' City Commissioner Fred Williams Wolf Creek Mont also gave their hausted thanked Ogden citizens for the enrides the broncos sterling sticking thusiastic cooperation afforded city Gist left the chute astride the bolting mounts for the required ten officials and civic leaders in making seconds 'steers neck firing blank shots as the festival a success He praised Red Allen pickup man for the he was tossed up and down Although the leadership of Mayor Peery and he lost his hat he rode the steer Richter shows deserved credit for professed he was “thrilled” at the across the stadium before he was the manner in which he rescued the cordiality shown visitors by Ogden In rapid succession came bronco busters from their wild thrown “the city of hospitality” bareback riders astride broncos and mounts after they stuck the saddle for Congressman Abe Murdock deled by Mrs Andrew Bingham of the steers Fly By Night first saddled the allotted time Aller never once By STAFF CORRESPONDENT scribed the festival as “the finest celeof the old Ogden Horse and Mule Commission bronco leaped from the chute like a failed to pull the rider from the buckbration ever presented in Utah” He OGDEN July 23-jumping jack His rider was thrown ing horse urged participants to keep ever in west recalled by the pioneer festival company Three experienced cattlemen B After the grand march the rodeo! within a few feet mind the historic words of Brigham here were revivified in fact Monday Was staged in quick time with bare-- ' Ted McQuafry of Broaddus Mont M Fox of Tulas Wyo Rufus Inger-so- l Young— "This Is the Place” Helena Mont and Irby Mundy night when the rodeo opened at the back riders bronco busters bulldog next tried Fly By Night with the Extols Pioneers’ Courage The first of three gers ropers and trick riders follow- same luck stadium Santa Fe N M judged the rodeo Ogden was thrown McQuarry He added that if Living folk had the the roundup captured ing upon the heels 'of one another to the turf after sticking a few yards events performances courage and fortitude of the pioneers the spirit of frontier days and offered There were 120 minutes of closely the wind knocked out of him Stub Irwin Collins rode the hard bucker “we wouldn’t be suffering today” to the youth of the city a taste of the packed thrills with an event each Barthelmus champion bronco rider I’m No Angel across The chief advantage of the pioneers wild west to their elders a touch of minute of Canada gave Old Faithful a great the ring before the pickup men could over their descendants the congressCattle when roamed the The show opened when Pinkie Gist ride sticking the horse until relieved reach the bounding horse man said was that current farmers earlier days were forced to meet interest pay- range Calf Roping a The rodeo contained remarkable ments He drew applause when he Calf roping followed the bronco of expert riders masters of the array said: "What America has to do is to riding with cowhands demonstrating lariat crack sljpts and fearless get out- of debt and stop having to The thejr ability with the lassoj indisstadium raise interest” With pensable tool of the roundup abounded with 'thrills during the eveCurrent experiments in governprecise grace the cowboys swirled the which was climaxed by a firening ment were praised by the congress- works ropes overhead hurled the spinning display which illuminated the man and compared to the courage npose and caused it to fall accurately Texas steers Longhorn night sky of pioneers and-fTatherS of the were thrown around the calves’ neckS'’" skilfully by the per(Continued from Pie One) United States constitution were formers broncos and ridden After the calf was roped the rider "We have not been as progressive flwbpys wbadidn’V know the wond ering wb ile itl(kedLtftW3Jd calf The ability o! the horse tonofd leather” In addifriehdly noa in its distress This was in order for the ancient in scentific affairs because of the lack meaning or "pulling were trick riders Indians the rope taut after the calf is thrown capital and for the young capital in order for the big nation-starinof experimentation” he said which tion there and cowgirls who performed brilat the small as the giant placed a huge thumb on the apd being tied is fully as important is necessary to “perptauate the conih the event the ability of the beneath the floodlights pigmy’s nose stitution the American tradition and liantly roper Whisker Contest Further dispatches appeared in the afternoon editions The American ideals” During the first section of the calf Austrians were ‘mobilizing their river gunboats in range of BelBefore he rodeo began the Ogden-iteVisiting Speakers roping contest John Bowman cowwho defied convention for the grade mobilizing troops on the opposite bank ready if Serbia Other speakers during the afterboy recently returned from a rodeo said no to the ultimatum noon were Mrs Lettie Manning past 60 days and suffered valiantly to tied his- calf in the fast in Austria’s show of force also was in order She had made it timeEngland chairman of the arrangements com- advertise the gala festival by raising of 20 seconds flat He made the before when there was trouble in the cantankerous Balkans mittee for the pageant Harry Willia- hirsute adornments on otherwise best time of the group ’of eight — notably in the Balkan crisis out Vf which' she wtm the annexaef the rodeo Mayor clean faces- - received their "reward ropers 125 of Juncthe residents than More asof Now tion in Bosnib and the J Wesley Horsley of Brigham City evidently Grubb on Golden Fan apHerzogovina Pete sassination pf her crown prince she had- - another strong card to and Sam F Keifer of Salt Lake City tion city linedup in Ihe center of the peared first in the stadium' in the After the afternoon of patriotic ad- stadium to have their beards judged exhibitions He second play to get another bite of territory in her expansion to her dresses the festival moved into its The group presented a wide variety raked the mount from shoulder" to goal of Salonika more spectacular stage at the Ogden of beards popular when the pioneers flank rode it to a standstill and Those who gathered around American news bulletin boards stadium There prizes were award- reached the valley and carefully nurforced the horse to leap the fence were there for the baseball scores aside from an occasional asIn the tured hereatter to yCars ed the men who produced the best The loose bronco caused momentary Serbian or a man descended from one of the races in the were Yan goatees semblage of dykes consternation among the onlookers crop Whiskej3for the celebration polyglot Austrian empire We learned from thfe bulletins that as well as for the most novel sideburns mustaches and just plain ‘all crowded around the fence but was in were the of chancellories preoccupied foreign Europe were whiskers frontier rough Judge growths shortly caught customary diplomatic secretiveness But it always was in order A rodeo recalling the days of the J M Mann Salt Lake City Mrs Ray The evening's events came' to a fob diplomats to be grave and busy when there was another Hoover S Fife William Provo and with the dangerous exhibiopen range when cowboys "busted climax European war alarm This was a part of the picture that gave broncos” and threw steers with bare Brigham City The intion of bulldogging steers First prize was won by W Maurice atmosphere to the dispatches hands climaxed the day's events riders would leave their galtrepid Stellar examples of roping and horse- Hart of Ogden who received $25 in United States Not Interested loping mounts to grasp a rampant Texas longhorn by the horns then manship were exhibited by skilled cash The second prize went to Elton o We paid less attention to the activities of Great Britain’s W Wardle the and third wentj-triders while expert shots displayed head until it was prize foreign minister Sir Edward Grey for peace in Europe than to twist the beast's D E Moyes Fifteen dollars cash their talent with pistol and rifle thrown the news flash that the Irish conference in London had broken was awarded to the second prize winFestive Night Celebration down That seemed the last effort to prevent civil war in IreSENTENCES SUSPENDED The festive spirit of the celebration ner and $10 went to the third place land Shooting might begin at any moment between the Ulsterwinner were Prizes the awarded by sentences of six months was given full play at midnight Suspended men and the nationalists each were imposed on Michael De when dances were held In all the city of Ogden Nineteen minor prizes But Russia? Her enormous shadow appeared on the horiOrchestra strains also were awarded Chester Younger Lange 18 1055 East Ninth South city’s ballrooms zon Would she send her soldier masses to Serbia’s defense? street and Le Roy Pederson 18 928 wafted through the night air until won the combination prize of $5 for best costume and beard Then came This headlines an edition’s mighty possibility held First avenue when they pleadeR the first flicker of dawn when Ogword that Russia advised Serbia to ask Austria for more time S den and her visitors prepared to con- - After theR- beard judging the rodeo 'guilty to petty larceny in police court of B'rhter Bozeman by The youths were arrested Surely Austria would give it That would be the first step tlnue the celebration Tuesday on the Monday “ !Mo!" :°?ened witha jrandmarrh toward another European compromise which would put the by Patrolman A H Vogeler at First eighty seventh anniversary of the latest war scare off the front page in a week The public quesavenue and P street Sunday alleged D S pioneers’ entrance into Utah As jing the afternoon and evening tion at the end of the day was not whether’ there would be a ly in possession of radio equipment The Pioneer day celebration will on Monday a night fireworks stolen July 17 frorp the shop of F C with a repetition of the parade play will be staged to be followed European war but whether the gallantry of a FreneJi jury “THRU THE ROCKIES NOT AROUND THEM ! Carmen 1323 East Sixth South street to be followed by another rodeo dur- - again with holiday dancing would acquit the charming and dashing Madame Caillaux Baitve Call W H BINTZ CO Wasatch 4805 Ex- ' T the-- t vmea The women too delved deep into garrets and trunks to recover the finery of times gone by Pioneer bon- Arbitration Jim Stops at Bojse En Route to Lodge Sleet at Pocatello Coast Longshoremen pected to Approve -- bearded gentry were clad in various picturesque costumes ranging from the rough garb of the farm and range to the somber blaclrot stovepipe hats and cutaway coats worn by the can-o- RAPS FEDERAL PEACE PLANS ‘EXPERIMENTS’ Past ami Present Mix in Procession on Second Day of Fete I SENATOR DAVIS SHIP WORKERS Rio GtandaWestcfnBsiltcd Scenic £ine qf ihc 'World r - |