Show r 'Local Metal Market The Weather UTAH— Fair Sunday Monday IDAHO— Fair south ekwdynorth WYOMING— Generally fair find - — - r--' wanner NEVADA — Generally fair ry - V as lat 7 he ite he he ng - hll he CoSalt Lake Ci'ty attorney elected president of the yas Utah State barlorthe next year It was Announced Saturday afternoon following the concluding session of the organization’s seventh annual meeting Balloting was by mail and the results announced after the votes were tabulated by the bar commissioners -The new vice president is George ee im w- les se ell wn ii- as n- - - he Jte ice 5S- 12 ke he terms Musser Chosen Burton W Musser of Salt Lake City was the selection of the Second district to gqpceed Frank A John-°so- n and LerpyB: Young of Ogden was ’ ‘named ’ to succeed Royal J Douglas retiring president of the organization Highlights of Saturday's sessions Included adoption of section reports by the full bar an address on the obligation of lawyers in making the parole system more satisfactory by Sanford Bates former director of the bureau of federal prisons and now director of Boys’ club work of America a discussion of social security legislation by Attorney General Byron G Rogers of Colorado and & discussion of fair tradeprac-tic- e acts by E F Richards of Salt Lake City attorney for the state fair trades board The report adopted by the judicial council Friday was approved by the bar in toto with the exception of a recommendation that district court judges wear judicial robes This proposal met with substantial opposition from judges and attorneys particularly those from the less populous counties Doubts Result Judge Will L Hoyt of Nephi declared that the public is opposed to formality ceremony and trappings and expressed doiibt that robes would add to the dignity of the district courts Judicial council proposkls which :h - ns on a ch- ild he ud les nt er 's - ic- of ht he ich in m ib- - ay he ed he a3 ic- - iff M aa im he' m - le- 3e ad ns Were adopted ?e IV state in astudy of the desirabii- ity of adoption of uniform district thO a in— -- nd ns fe w- WiU bead bar Coast Lawyer Lauds U S Code of Living Banquet Speaker At Ogden Meet Cautions Changes nt le g- " Tribune Intermountain Service Dec 4— The current American attitude toward the American governmental and economic systems Is one of the most difficult things to understand in the opim ion of Charles A Beardsley guest speaker at the banquet which con' eluded the sevenfh annual meeting of the Utah State Bar here Satur day night Mr Beardsley past president of the California bar a member of the executive committee of the Amer ican Bar association and a probable nominee for the presidency of the national association at the next con vention did not oppose change but he did voice strenuous objectionTo rebuilding the American structure at the risk of destroying the foundation of that syetem Traces Prosperity Under the American - system he said "we have prospered more than any other people under liny other system at any other time since the beginning of history Seven per cent of the world’s people consume 25per cent of the WQjj'g sugar use 32 Tier cent of the railroads consume 33 per cent of the coal enjoy 36 per cent of the developed water power have 44 per cent of the world’s radio sets consume CO per cent of the world’s copper rubber and coffee use 58 per cent of the telephone and telegraph facilities drive 7S per cent of the automobiles and wear 75 per cent 9f the world’s ‘ ' OGDEN court rules throughout the state To Study Proposal 3 Appointment of a committee to study a proposal that counsel for litigants be required to make exceptions to court instructions to the jury prior to the delivery of those instructions to the jury In case exceptions were then properly met by the court the litigant eould silk" not then later make exceptions 4 A recommendation to judges Warns on Rebuilding of all courts that they do not perIn view of such a record of mit taking of photographs in a achievement Mr Beardsley held courtroom or courthouse of any- that this country is not justified one involved in 'a pending proceed- in a rebulldLng-jotr- Tr undertaking of pro- the rebulIderge-'TBbC'understanings and that broadcasting ceedings of trials by mechanical the soundness of as radio be prohibited andappreciate foundation the existing natuw&s one The exception made The subject of his address was ' ralization proceedings" "Some Things I Do Not Know” 5 committee Appointment of a out that there are numer- to study proposals for simplifies- - Pointing' (Continu'd on Part Fifteen (Column One) of service summons on tion of parties outside of the state 6 A recommendation that justhe supreme court wear Fails in Verdict tice judicial robes while the court is in OKLAHOMA CITY Dec 4 session Judge Clarence' Mills discharged a jury deliberating a charge Adopt Resolution of embezzlement against Leon Mele-ko- v The session also adopted a resoformer head of the Donieon lution- presented by the insurance Oil company after it reported late law section calling for the bar to Saturday further consideration of take a more active part in traffic the case was "futile” - accident The prevention work resolution after citing the tremendous loss of life and property refrom traffib accidents com- sulting mended the press of the state public officials and citizens who have taken ‘an active part in this cru- -' sade It then called upon the bar to outline and carry out a prevenDec 4 CD— CARLISLE tion campaign of its own during Farmhand JackPl March— spending 1938 to extend an offer of cooperahis 20th day in jail for refusing fa tion toi the 7 vac- “"V governor and law en- have his son forcement agencies of the State in cinated— ’’allowed11-Saturd-Eugene ay that working out suitable traffic legis by gracious I’ll stay here ’till I lation for presentation to the next rot first" 'session f the legislature It was the third time March was A recommendation by the' comarrested for a similar offense in mittee on Selection of judiciary four years and the second time that a nonpartisan judiciary reso he was sent to jail for it Last time — ° — rlutiort which failed to pass the last he was in for eight-montuntil— legislature be Introduced- - next-se- acourt forced the' vaccination sion was adopted without aAis-sentin- g of one of his children vote This resolution pro- It’s all because his niece went (OontlnuM an P Fifteen) blind after a vaccination some ' Column 8 Lx) - a he in as in ny ist ro-i- w " UP-Di- strict on he a lis lit he ntf on ar ce 87 es aW -- in- - me alt of via ng- v)' hs - n V- A i v t ' V 'vv A? ?A Soon to End Financiers Aver V f i CHICAGO Dec 5 (AP)— The nation’ leading bankersreply- Ing to a questionnaire Saturday expressed belief the current slump in American business wiU run its course ior four months or more but will not develop fiito another major depression A majority predicted an upturn a speech-makin- ia 1 Western Bloc Maps Silver Mining Fight -- one-ma- U S Bombers U S Asks Loot Called Best Hunt in River lstant e Father Prefers Rotting in Jail To Having Son Vaccinated ' Tells Chamber ment for Europe was reported auDec 4 UP)— The WASHINGTON thoritatively Saturday to have been senate wound two weeks of up hit even before the conversations wordy debate on the farm bill Satbegan to limit future While French Foreign Minister urday by agreeing g on the measure killed the steamer Siushan’s Chinese Yvon Dejbos was entertained corOn motion of Senator Barkley chief officer and wounded-the dially by Polish statesmen sailor and several passengers leader a unanimous conmajority The attack turned back the res- French embassy staff worked be- sent agreement was reached to cut cue attempt led by a British consu- hind the scenes with Polish officials on amendments to the bin lar officer E R Boothby and a to iron out the diference of opinion debate to 15 minutes for each speaker French Canadian missionary B’ath-e- r over the Po20 with minutes allowed on the bill complex relations of Adrien SanSoucy The nine itself nuns have been marooned three land Germany and Czecho-Slovaki-a Senators will be permitted to months on the Yangtze estuary Hopeful Sign ' speak only once on each amend( Island Delbos’ talk with Marshal Edward ment and only orjee on the bill Try to Keep Peace Barkley told the senate the two y inspector of the Polish had given full The incident came as Interna- army however was considered a weeks of debate opportunity for discussion and it tional Settlement officials attemptto avoid any uned to keep peace with the Japanese hopeful sign The length of their was desirable further delay necessary was to conversation taken indicate conquerors of Shanghai who demanded freedom to enter the Inter- the ‘Franco-Polis- h military alliance Substitute Program national Settlement at will Twice had been strengthened — A substitute farm program proAmerican and French troops have Authoritative reports from both Senator Lee (D) Oklaposed balked their entry French and' Polish sources agreed homa by was exempted from the deThree Japanese staff’ officers France had insisted Poland’s rela- bate limitation agreement after to Brigadier-Generbe in- Lee'had apologized tions with Czecho-Slovakprotested he had no opporJohn C Beaumont United States cluded in the discussion of ways tunity for a full discussion of his marine commander for their troops’" toward general Europeap peace measure intrusion on the American defense Poland replied she was accustomed Lee’s bill differs from the pendsector Friday after a hand grenade to smoothing her difficulties alone agriculture committee measure Poland also said Delbos’ brief ing disrupted a Japanese "victory pain that it would be entirely volunrade” talk at a Berlin railway station tary In addition Barkley agreed to Friday with the German foreign Brush With French minister Baron Konstantin von exempt any- - other substitutes that In a brush with French authori- Neurath had introduced a new may be offered He also said the ties five Japanese army trucks element into the talks This neces- limitation would not apply to any were prevented from entering the sitated a program revision motion to send Ihe pending farm French concession but later were measure back to the agriculture Warsaw First Stop allowed to pass through under committee French military guard Warsaw was the first stop on The agreefnent will go into effect It was learned authoritatively Delbos’ round of visits to France’s Monday afternoon Japan would launch her biggest of- central and eastern European alDemocratic leaders expressed fensive against Nanking next week lies The trip generally was ac- hope the bill would pass the senate k and that Generalissimo Chiang next week cepted as having two aims has mobilized 300000 seasoned 1 To assure Poland Rumania There was sentiment however to defend the Czecho-Slovaktroops city and Jugoslavia for recommitting the bill to comChinese were massed along a 25 that Britain and France had no in- mittee for further study Some mile front between Chinkiang and tention of granting German claims senators argued objections to the nowof the miles 30 hast Kuyung to a sphere of influence to the south legislation raised by Secretary Wallace could be more expeditiousemptying capital and east 2 To find out what guarantees ly met by committee action Hint at Mediation they would requite in a general set ‘Monstrous Says King authoriChinese It waareported tlement that conceded aome of Gerties had ' apprached the German many’s demands for colonial and With the house In recess until ambassador Dr Oskar Trautman economio expansion Monday the senate heard Senator who came from Hankow to Nanking King (D) Utah denounce the pendon an undisclosed mission to use ing farm bill as a "monstrous meahis good offices as mediator of the sure” which "will make the secreChinese-Japanes- e conflict tary of agriculture a dictator over were said officials the farmer” Japanese army to look with disfavor on any media"We will have a Stalin” King tion at least unbl Nanking is capshouted "If thus keeps on we tured woq’t have a republic any longer — The demand for unrestricted enn we' will have a government" try was made to the Shanghai council as an army repSenator Vandenberg (R) Michimunicipal resentative demanded police take gan broke “In to compare the poli4‘?0p)—Ld WASHINGTON such Dec occurrences cies of President Roosevelt with steps to prevent as marred tile Friday parade Japa- by Representative Murdock (D) those of President Vargas of Brazil closed was Utah western congressmen moved nese said the incident Quoting newspaper reports tellSaturday to oppose projected at- ing of the dissolution of Brazilian Pass Demands On detempts to revise or repeal mine political parties andthe burning It was understood the Japanese pletion provisions of the corporate fff Brazilian state flags Vandenberg to the income tax law demands would bo passed on said: The congressmen also turned their “That is very interesting in the foreign consular body for reference finally '’to’ Washington and attention to silver sending to Presi- light of the fact that when the disdent Roosevelt a resolution urging tinguished president of the United other' capitals o (In Nanking Arherican citizens him to continue the present domes- States visited Rio ds Janeiro on — were warned to be ready to evacu- tic silver policy his good neighbor journey last year ate- on short notice '"possibly Sunaccording to the New York Times Calls on West Bloc adthe Japanese he said that two people invented day'' in the face of on Pko Eight) (CAtitlmied Murdock calling on colleagues the new deal— the president of (Column Six) (Continued on Pin Six) from western states for aid said (Column 8lx) depletion provisions were vital to the mining industry because they permitted companies to offset depletion of ore by deducting 50 per cent of their net annual revenue before figuring tax bills “It appears to be the attitude of the administration and the treasury - WASHINGTON Dee 4 department that the mine depletion — 'N K W Deer— 4 — 7 U P Secretary of War Louis section ShaultT’he of the that Postal Johnson reported Saturday ’'Saturday asked inspectors d e aaid He added it the-army’s newest planes were "In gen was only fair that the police to drag the East river government beet lower and eral the harbor for six bags of should recognize a mining com- mail in the world" stilKmissing after a $50000 was reduced by conpany’s capital of recent a share one of the strangest of Ascribing major robbery— ore advances to altered methods of pro- tinued removal of its kind in New York crime history The chairman of the house Rocky curement adopted by the war deinspectors sought police aid bloc said he would call 'after several hours qf quiet investipartment he said in his annual mountain to "go over Jhe his Monday group report: gation during which they refused “Not only have speeds ranges and whole situation" The American despite the evidence draggedTrom mining congress’ tax expetV&nd A the river by an eel fisherman ceilings markedly increased but G minMacKenzie Salt Lake-Cit- y bomb capacity is now in excess of admit a robbery had taken place man have been invited ing' other Even then Chief Inspector James that possessed by any military aircraft” J Doranf said the 11 hags which Silver Resolution Johnson reported the war departvanished from a locked and heavily At the request of representatives ment was J’making marked progguarded mail truck might have fallress" in preparing for any future from Utbf' Colorado 'Wyoming en out He added however that he Ari-zoMexico New Idaho Nevada conflict i couldn’t "quite picture” that hapAnd Montana Murdock sent pening without Some other nations he noted have “some honest perto resolution the on thriilver some president distance the sons" seeing it "proceeded road toward completely organizing Friday Doran said one bag contained basis” ut The resolution said renewal of the $7000 in cash consigned from the industry on a war-tim- e issued belief measures such presidential proclamation he expressed Philadelphia reserve bank to the were unnecessary in this country April 24 1935 fixing the price of Mt Jewett Pa National bank The domestic silver at 77 cents an ounce rest of the loss included a piece of Was “necessary to the existence of jewelry Valued at $400 and checks the mining industry of the- United and securities for' the most part States” unnegotiabie Senator King (D) Utah said conferences with treasury officials had "satisfied” him the silver program would be continued "indefinitely” years ago he protested MIAMI Fla Dec '4 (—PresiPhysicians asserted the blindness was not due to 'the vaccina-tio- n Seven Convicts Escape Roosevelt started the first' dent but March said he "knows - a— of — trip— by— sei leg better" Prison in lllinois and land back to' Washington March refused to send his son to school when the teacher said PONTIAC III Dee 4 UP)— Seven Saturday Interrupting a fishing he would have to be inoculated convicts escaped from a farm dormicruise to return for dental treat' g the authorities charge gum tory of the Pontiac branch “of the ment1 of a nloifn-taiIllinois state penitentiary Saturday The vacationing chief executive They went up into the deemed it advisable to cut three and brought him back id nighty re ported 4he j sentenced hi Warden dT jail to five days -- March would not men fled from the prison and stole In view of the delay In The clos“give in" and drew five more' an automobile a block away ing of the wound where an’ inNo- That’s the way it has been ever Report to state police said the fected tooth 18 men apparently were since -- - a 4 j -- slow-healin- ' ed - ' in 1938 This was a consensus of the presl- dent’s and chief executives of J25 of the most lmportant banks In --44 states having aggregate deposits of more than $12000000000 The survey was conducted by Reuben A Lewis Jr executive yice president of the Metropolitan Trust company — ofChicagor Rise Late in Spring Lewis said the opinions of the individual bankers could not he made public but the majority expressed the belief an upturn in business could not come before late spring h About said the upturn would not “be felt before next fall five said in 1939 chief executives- - of two banks among the ten largest in the country declared the upswing would come during the first quarter of 1938 Lewis said the replies indicated bankers believe an upturn in business is dependent upon a demon-strate- d change in attitude on the part of the administration toward business Ranking first amOng recovery measures suggested Lewis said was repeal of the undistributed earnings — tax next balancing of the budget third lowering of taxes on capital gains fourth increase in rail rates Texas’ Representative Joseph J Mansfield here affixes the to provide reasonable return on inBlack-Connevestment and fifth encouragement 218th signature needed on a petition to free the bill from the house rule committee Spectators to to utilities to promote expansion wage-ho- ur the procedure here are left to right Representative Mary T Labor Problem Cited Norton New Jersey chairman of the house labor committee Replies also stressed necessity of" satisfactory settlement of the Speaker Bankhead Alabama and Representative Pat Poland alabor problem Lewis quoted tha Pennsylvania head of a large middlewestern bank as saying "the responsibility of is still a major factor which retards recovery" Another banker said a chdfhge in govern- mental attitude' toward the labor question was necessary Lewis said “in view of the recent p announcement as to the administray tion program to bring about revival of building on a'broad scale it is t WASHINGTON Dec 4 (UP) — William Green- significant that bankers did pot of said Federation Laboh Saturday he think this would be as important a president of the American still nourished hopes for a labor peace with John L Levfis' CIO factor as the other measures in promoting business recovery” Emerging from a- meeting- of the One banker was quoted as layfederation's executive council where "I am fearful that the housing — ing with his futile peace negotiations program tnight be extended too Lewis Friday night were discussed greatly by public grants which IGreen said he hoped some conclus think would be- - an unnecessary stimulant and might peact in too sion would be reached but cduld not much of a building boom and the ' anticipate what would happen HAVANA Cuba Dec 4 (UP)— Consequent reaction" The Lewis-Gree- n personal peace The state department announced Factors Lacking negotiations which broke up Friday Saturday night the Cuban govern- Depression to The of a big southern executive the be will back reported night ment Would press for extradition of bank Said "our principal reason for full negotiating committees Decem- former President Gerado Machado believing the current recession in ' ber 21 Some 'labor experts trying to esti- from New York an seven charges business is not to assume the charmate the effect of the council meet- alleging embezzlement and murder acteristics of a general major deing on the course of the Lewis-Gree- n J D Morgan Washlngton attor-ne- y pression is that none of the nione-tar- y influences exist today which conversations said they bewill represent the Cuban gov- have lieved there was a noticeable stiffenusually existed prior to preing of the federation’s settlement ernment at extradition proceedings vious major depressions terms “Bank reserves excess reserves in New York where the When Lewis and Green parted is under technical arrest “Machado smoother banking funds for lendWithout being able to reach an at currents ow rates of interest Hill hospital in New ing e are at a high point is agreement 'labor"experts8aid“lhe ts'Tnldiirray aila York from kidney suffering federation still was adverse to a plethora of funds for apparently ‘ uses at spreading the AFL mantle over ment Seven criminal accusations on building and other legitimate rates all the Lewis Industrial unions reasonable exceptionally to will be his return sought Xewis was described as agreeable which There has been no serious trial in this capital were listed to an autonomous or semiindepend- face W feel of credit follows: ent status with the federation but as1 ratber is the that largely slump of funds Embezzlement public due to the reaction from an oveunwilling to leave his 20 new industrial unions to the amalgamation and homicide in the August 7 1933 ranticipation of business inflation "massacre” of expected buildoperations of the AFL leaders 2 Assassination of Colonel Bias and to the failure Meanwhile both sides are going ing activity to fully develop" Maso ahead with organization work 3 Assassination of Baldomero Halt in Relapse —Green Said the AFL was EstabDumenigo canRodriguez cement in the unions lishing Head of an Iowa bank said an - 4 Assassination ofFrancisco ning and cereal industries upturn in business will not take Jaime a Venezuelan poet The CIO said it was pushing 1938 5 Assassination of Julio Pere place prior to September work in ahead "While we aVe likely to have a Rodriguez steel and other mass industries 6 Assassinations of Claudi Bru ’halt in the £urent relapse’ ia the spring by reason of the usual zon and Noske Yalob ex7 Assassinations of Margarito seasonal improvement I do not Wins Court Post Felix Ernesto Alipzar Jose pect it to last through the summer Iglesais nbt BISMARCK N D Dec 4 UP)— Domingo Machado ani— Miguel on & normal basis We have r yet seen the effect of the decrees-in- g Attorney General P P- Sathre was Angel Hernandez employment and I see no reason named a justice of- the North The remains of the four to any Dakota supreme ’ court Saturday victima were found buried in why this will until spring and in the meannight by Governor William Longer the stables of a Tares fortress fol- extent lower have reached filling a vacancy treated by death lowing ’the overthrow of Machado in time we will business index figure" — of Judge John Burke August 1933 ' one-fift- fib ry AFL Head Holds Hope Of Peace With CIO r-unions -- mild-manner- — - Cuba to Press For Machado - -- and-ther- last-nam- -- - at Roosevelt Begins 1450-mita- — ns 2119 SSc Copper Current Slump ia - )W WARSAW Dec 4 (A5)— A sudden talks on snag’in the Franco-Polis- h a new collective security arrange- Bill Monstrous Sen King Kai-she- -- - he iO- W Q Van Cott for next year 11 tOr Warsaw Indicates Desire to Iron Out Own Troubles al pooo 96 PAGES— TEN CENTS u Rydz-Smigt- C Heinrich of Logan who succeeds Mr Van Cott in that position L M Cummings of Salt Lake City was retained as secretary and Calvin Bchle of Salt Lake City as editor of the Utah bar bulletin were elected for Commissioners the Second and Third districts to fill vacancies left by expiration of ti- - I "V ' 1050o 'BOO® 505a Local idtlemcnt Price Issued every momtny Entered t the poftofflc at Salt Lake CUv eecond class matter under act of March 8 1870 1837 5 -- y My 22- Dec 4 (AP)— A British nqpey ship was sprayed with bullets Saturday while unsuccessfully attempting to evacuate nine French Canadian nuns from Japanese-occupie- d Tsung-min- £ island near Shanghai Gunfire from an invisible source SHANGHAI By O N MALMQUIST Tribuno Stiff Writer OGDEN Dec 4— W Q Van g el- Gunfire Kills Ship’s Officer Forces Rescue Attempt Halt DECEMBER $3500 Bankers Farm - Adopted at Meet lis SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNbAY MORNING Mystery Shots Poland Balks Rake British At Delbos Mercy Vessel Security Plan Judicial Council’s Resolutions Iry ice - o!lrErSE& New President - n- )ld 44750 — Lead Utah Bar S L Attorney at- SltverTforelgn) Lead Nai (of re- - 7787a Copper VOL 136 NO 52 I' Gold Silver (newly mined) Return to Capital 1450-Mil- e Officials still Insisted his general condition was good and that made-sole- ly being for the purpose of resuming treatments believed "to have hd left when been aufficient Washington the night of Novem- ber 27 A radio message to temporary ’hite "House headquarters' from Secretary James Roosevelt Said the yftcht Potomac with the president and his seven guests aboard got unde r way for Mi- - aml at i p m Saturday from the Dry Tortugas islands 300 miles southwest of here in the Gulf of Film Actor Succumbs To Crash Injuries L5S I - r ANGELES Dec 4 UP-Tr- affio injuries proved fatal Satur- Mexico day' f or Ralph Lewis movie charin a The boat is expected to dock acter actor who was involved ' here around 2 p m Sunday 24 collision' October 24 He was 65 houra ahead of original schedule years' old Half an hour later the president Physicians said the shock of the crash and Lewis’ general health Will be on the way to Washingcontributed more to his death than ton by' special train -- not ' make- -' The president-wi- ll The stops at Warm Springs and bones he suffered when his maGainesville Ga he' had planned chine collided with th(£ of Ahdui He-wi- ll 'reach Washington late Maljan valet and trainer to Jack Warner movie producer Monday afternoon - 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