Show 1 Local Metal Market Tlie Weather 1 tnt3500 Cold 64 94c Silver (newly mined) 4273c Bilvtr (foreign) Copper electrolytic delivered 11 ?’a Connect- l- valley 610 ®315o Lead Prkteal adtlcfneat Xetd 810c Copper (cathodal 1080 warmer Monday nAHO— Cloudy light rains WYOMING-s-Generalfair NEVADA— Fair Monday Tuesday UTAH-'-Fa- ir ly VOL 138 NO 31 q? CK& ifuafgSS ' JVetc SALT LAKE CITY UTAH MONDAY MORNING NOVEMBER Channel for German Commerce To Attend n 4 " i ' - )- one-eigh- th ot le In a statement prepared for the convention Chairman Lewis declared the door to peace was still open If the existence of industrial unionism could be assured BuJ while waiting for the return of peace and unity Lewis pushed on with his plans for a permanent CIO and outlined a broad program of economic planning by govern- ment higher wages and taxation of speculative wealth which he said would lead to a stable economy Along with his proposals Lewis shot a brief criticism at the Roose- -' velt new deal ecoonmio program saying: “One of the serious defects of the economic measures of the present admiinstration has been the failure to coordinate and plan Its economio program over an adequate period" The C O chieftain’s economio program was contained li$ his report to the conyentlon which opens Known officially as the Eighth In ternational Conference of American States the meeting is expected to discuss economic affairs consol! datioft of peace machinery in the new world labor matters and other subjects Hopes for a successful conference mounted among officials here with the ahr- - ncement Saturday that Mexico had accepted Secretary Hull’s proposal for settlement of claims for American' owned farm property seized by the Mexican government There had been apprehension that the two countries miht go into the Lima meetings at odds over this ques-tiolong-standi- MW Where Hitler stood to dedicate Germany’s new Midland canal which will enable vessels to leave the Elbe at Magdeburg and continue their'jburney to Berlin and Silesia The great ship 1 hoist which is part of the canal system is shown here President Roosevelt attended special peace con fcrence at Buenos Aires in 1936 which was called at his suggestion but the meeting of the new congress early In January will prevent his attendance atXlma The delegation probably will nof return from the conference before mid British Study Nazi Demand Farm Unrest Turns' Tide For Return of Colonies Chamberlain Faces Strong Opposition Among Own Party to Bowirig to llitler Peril to Empire’s Vital Trade Routes Cited j Nov 13 (AP)— Great Britain is completing a study of Adolf Hitler’s demands for return of Germany’s 1000000 square-mil- e colonial empire in anticipation of diplomatic visits considered “ likely to touch on the colonial problem Oswald Pirow Union of South Africa defense minister is to go to Germany Thursday' but it was not disclosed whether he would make concrete proposals to the German government or merely sdund out German officials on their demands! Since his arrival in Europe October 25 Pirow has conferred on the colonial situation with and British officials Portuguese PARIS Nov 13 UP)— Finance Similarly Prime Minister ChamMinister Paul Reynaud served no- berlain and Foreign Secretary Vistice on France Sunday that the 32 count Halifax will have an opportunity to discuss the issue with Predrastic laws announced Saturday mier Daladier and Foreign Secremay be regarded as "only the- first tary Bonnet in their trip to Paris rebuild to the 5 government November step" by the nation's economic structure Accord for Eager a came The statement during press conference at which the minChamberlain has been described ister went into detailed explanation as eager to reach a colonial settleof the new laws issued two days ment with Hitler but to be facing before expiration of the Daladier strong opposition from imperialists government's semldictatorial decree in his own party In addition widepowers spread indignation over Germany’s was Reynaud announced later that new outburst of two additional decrees would be not calculated to make the quespublished Tuesday tion of return of German’s war-loThe first would oblige foreign colonial possessions more popular merchants doing business in France The British government’s investito obtain a special license gations meanwhile have centered would The second permit groups on the possibility of reaching some of public employes and semipublic agreement with France Belgium organizations to organize coopera- the Union of South Africa and tive buying groups for wholesale Portugal to give back to Germany purchases of food coal and other a place in the colonial sun in rehousehold necessities turn for a German promise to mainAnother prospective act which tain the present equilibruim in Eu" — government con- rope — r-Reynaud said-thcreation of be the would templated a committee to halt immediately British Plan In official British quarters it is any increase in the number of government employes stated Britain Would not oppose he said move is necessary This turning the former German to reduce state employment lists over to an international body which at present total 960000 civil which would include Germany but on Pane Five) (Continued Hitler has stated such a plan would (Column Three) be unacceptable The German view Is that colonies should not be a subject for barter that the colonies she owned before the World war should be returned to her outright and without the mention of a European settlement It was pointed out ev$n in offilater served as a second mate cial British colonial quarters that for the Panama Pacific line “Jobs got scarce for men of a strong and aggressive' Germany and bases t in my age" he said “so 1 went to with possessions England a couple of years ago to Africa might be a threat to the of the British empire settle up some inherited property I used the proceeds to purchase Reasons Advanced the Girl Kathleen a former fishThose opposed to returning the to sail back ing cutter and decided colonies gave three reasons for their home" “I sailed from Southampton Au- stand: Germany could use her old to establish air and naval gust 18 and reckoned to make it colonies in two months but due to storms bases' across Britain’s vital trade and hurricanes it took about routes Britain could not ethically support the transfer of millions of three "Last week foqnd me eating African and Pacific Island natives to the nationalistic policies of Geronly beans Part of my provisions has misrepresented spoiled after getting wet in a many Germany on Paxe Thret) (Continued gale” (Column One) LONDON France Plans New Laws to Aid Finances Bean Diet Ends for Seaman Who ‘Soloed’ Across Atlantic (AV-Fra- ' CIO inter-Americ- 23-2- m st colo-nie- inter-Americ- to all-nig- ht - Recognize Rights of Lewis Group Spokesmen Warn CIO U S Lending Riot in Munich Program for Labor Truce Must WASHINGTON Nov 13 UP) -PPrV r resident Roosevelt has appointed Alf M Landon his Republican opponent in the 1938 presidential race to the delegation which will rcprc' PITTSBURGH Pa Nov 13 (AP)— John L Lewis’ Comsent the United States at the comconference re the American of ing mittee tor Industrial Organization boasting a membership of V! publics in Lima Peru workers and serving notice that any This was disclosed Sunday when approximately 4000000 the state department announced the 'abor peace must recognize the rights of militant industrial names of the 12 delegates chosen by unionism moved into Pittsburgh Sunday night to set up a new the president Secretary of State and permanent Cordell Hull headed the list as Many of the C I O union chiefs who will be among the 500 chairman and other members included the Rev John F O’Hara delegates at the opening of C I O’s first constitutional conventiori president of Notre Dame university a general hope for labor peace with the and Kathryn Lewis daughter of Monday reported of Labor and said “anything might happen” Federation American Labor Leader John L Lewis ' The conference meeting Decern after the convention rolls into action her 9 has assumed great potential Key to possible peace maneuvers was an expected message from Importance in view of the recent crisis In Europe German economic President Roosevelt There was no advance Indications of its content advances in South America' and this but delegates recalled the government’s appeals for continued chief executive sent a similar mei- - ” solidarity and its sage to the A F L convention Urging promises to help defend the entire restoration of peace in the labor western hemisphere from any threat movement of attack ” Door Still Open Hopes Aroused Adams Visions Checks on y3 S- - Lima Congress tr BERLIN Nov 13 (AP)— Assessments up to 150000 marks —$60000 — were levied on individual wealthy Berlin Jews Sunday to repair the damage done last week by Aryan window smashers and store wreckers seeking revenge for the fatal shooting of a German diplomat Those assessed were told the assessments did not exempt them from also contributing to the 1000000000-mar- k ($400000000) penalty decreed on German Jews Saturday for the murder of Ernst Vom Rath the Paris embassy secretary One per'son who was summoned to the meeting at which tssessments were presented estimated the number of Jews convoked by the' president of the Jewish community “on govern“ ment orders’ at about 100 These wealthy members of the Jewish community received special delivery letters summoning them to a meeting in the Jewish Brotherhood houSh on Kurfuerstenstrasse late Sunday morning The summonses were signed by President Stall who stated he was Acting on government Instructions When those called assembled they National Bankers’ were each given slips informing them of their assessments payable Head Says Monday i a of those were cases Specific Poll Insures Changes widow assessed 60000 marks ($20 manufacturer rich a of and 000) HOUSTON Texas Nov 13 UP) — Whose quota was 150000 marks A session of 160tJewish leaders President Orval Adams of the continued all Saturday night as American Bankers’ association de devise to made were frantic efforts a plan for payment of the $400000-00- 0 crying government lending said fine Imposed by the government Sunday night last Tuesday's elecfor the slaying tion indicated "checks and balances A spokesman for the group said are on the way in and personal they wanted to suggest a plan of government is on the way out" their own before the government The Salt Lake City banker who decided how the levy Is to be paid will formally open general sesJews expected the finance minis- sions of the A B A convention exacttry which is charged with Tuesday asserted “government ining' th penalty decreed Saturday trusion into business and floating would announce Its plan for collec- of the(r bonds have made bank detion some t’me thisweek(4 posit interest rates abnormally low “The victims of this Situation” Whether the Jewish leadert h said "are the savings depositors peached a decision in their The and life Insurance policy holders council was not disclosed ‘““lea-tio- n who are after all the forgotten spokesman woul? Rive nor would he say where the people” meeting was held 800 Million Losses Raids Ended Adams estimated savings depositors an 4 life insurance policy holdThrough thi Jewish community raids word that ers are losing between $500000000 Sunday night ran in which Jewish men were arrested and $800000000 annually in interest had payments because of the low inthroughout Saturday night It also became known a terest rates ended “This is in a sense” he explained number of those arrested returned home Sunday Those released were “an invisible income tax It is the penalty imposed upon these peopled over 30 years old Before the government began its Jews who managed tq escape police nets were advised by fiscal policies he said bank defriends to be cautious And continue positors were paid an average of 3 per cent Interest and life insurt hide several days Information indicated the arrests ance and annuities policies were had been made on a quota basis figured on the same basis “Due to low money rates" he for each city in Germany Berlins total was said to have beeii 2000 said “forced by the fiscal policies bank interest and apparently was reached early of the government rates now are 1 to 2 per cent Sunday which means an average of Resume Training depositors in this country are gov- losing the difference on their savJews were notified by the com"Jewish i ings" ernment that munities ’’ which do relief work and Asked what he thought the resof checks and balances train persons leaving for Palestine toration (Continued on Pape Three) could resume their activities (Column Three) Anxiety over a future they could not foretell seized Jews when they learned of the heavy money pen- Anti-Catholi- cs von alty for the slaying of Ernst Rath German embassy secretary Polish Jew by a 17- - year-ol- d There was cohfusion as to the exact status of Jews in the absence of clearer government orders as to MUNICH Nov 13 (A1)— Anti- What is to become of them Jews Catholic feelings flared again Sunfeared that something similar to day when a handful of rowdies the middle ayes ghetto— a district whistled and jeered as 5000 worship-er- a to which Jews were restricted—was Intoned a hymn in St Mary’s In store for them although one high square intended nazis that denied official The disturbers then knocked sections into specific to herd Jews down lighted candles and trampled of cities floral decorations arranged for the occasion raperVrropoMil A few minutes after the disturWilhelm However Hermann National bances started a flying squad of ponewspaper Goerlng’s lice cleared the square by then d ' "ZEitungr'inlbltshed iitEssen-eaicompletely acpupIed by' tM antisomething similar to the ghetto Catholics must bei established While police watched a youth not Financial experts said the $400 in uniform climbed the pedestal of 000000 fine which would amount the historic column “Mariensaule” the each of more for or to $668 erected in the square In honor of ' 600000 to 600000 Jews in greater the Virgin and systematically of Jews every tore down Mary Germany would strip the remaining decoraforce and tions pfenning of ready cash the sale of holdings on They estimated that the cash hand of all Jews in Germany would come nowhere near the total amdunt of the fine The bulk of Jewish wealth was believed to be in real estate some of which might have to be sold to satisfy demands Jewish wealth in nk SAVANNAH Ga Nov 13 greater Germany Including Austria Edward Clark broke a at and Sudetenland was estimated week-lon- g diet of beans Sunday about 8000000000 marks a flowing beard grinned through making the fine and explained his solo voyage the total we<tu from England In a battered boat was made “just for the Collection Methods devil of It” What will have td be sold and the In good health after his three-mont- h degree of property ownership rejourney but will for Jews upon depend maining short of provisions and money how the government levies the pen- the n How seaman made: alty among various classes plans to sell the the fine will be collected has not sailing vessel and return to New ypt been disclosed York his former home He made OnevWpalthy Jew after hearing of port Saturday the decrees which Imposed the fine Clark said he was born in Lonand prohibited Jews from conduct- - don but settled in New York after on (ContlnuM FaxaViucj) the war became naturalized and (Columa Three) English-Amerlca- of Peace On Eve of Meet Foe e 18 PAGES— FIVE CENTS CIO Nation’s Head Picks Landon For Peru Meet One-Tim- Individual Assessments Levied As High as $60000 in Addition to $400000000 Fine 4000-mi- Lake imtias every morning Entered et the post offire at Salt City aa tacood clue matter under act of March a 1878 14 1938 to For Riot Losses ($3200-000000- ’ l Monday It covered the organisation and development of the O I O since he began the Industrial union movement three years ago over the objections of the graft unionists in January Delegates Listed The delegation appointed by the president is as follows: Corn Belt Reaction Highlights v Republican Trend Secretary Hull- Former Governor By KIRKE L SJMPSON oter WASHINGTON Nov 13 defection from Democratic Kansas Adolf A Berle retary of state al I cotton-produci- Republi-(Continu- on Page Two) (Column Four) ed Jr assistant of sec- 1 on Page Three) (Continued (Column One) UP)-V- Progressive and Farmer-Labo- r standards in nine of the dozen north-centrstates which comprise the wheat and corn belt is the outstanding and perhaps most aignifi-cat- n element of the Republican advance in the 1938 elections tide It turned an that reached its crest in 1936 in the farm belt In the seventy-fift- h congress then elected those 12 interior states gave the Democrats an over-a- ll majority of 43 of the total of 137 votes in the house from those states Democrats Progreswho sives and Farmer-Laboritusually teamed up on farm policy had 102 of those 137 votes while Republicans held 35 When the new congress the seventy-sixth tackles the farm problem next year the Republicans will have aq over-a- ll majority of 23 of those 137 farm state votes Their total will be 80 against 54 for the The Wisconsin ProDemocrats gressives retain but two seats and the Minnesota Farmer-Laboritbut one South Still Solid That just about tells the story of the farm vote shift of 1938 But for the traditional Democratic solsouth idarity in the it is only conjectural what the full sweep of farmer reaction might' have been as reflected in party realignment In the house Low farm commodity priceaand gigantic crop surpluses still to be disposed of have caused as much farm unrest in the cotton south ks elsewhere although it could not express itself in the final elections there due to the “solid south” Democratic bulwark that has never been shaken seriously except in 1928 Some consolation for the Democrats can be drayn out of examination of the margins by which in 1936 they captured many of the congressional districts they have now surrendered to the Landon Distillery Fire Loss Set At $2000000 OWENSBORO Ky Nov 13 UP)— Buildings destroyed in the $2000000 fire which raged six hours through a section of the huge Glenmore Distilleries plant will be rebuilt at once officials announced Sunday Officials said operations would not be impaired seriously by Saturday night’s blaze which burned six buildings and consumed 32000 barrels of whisky 225000 wereum touched by the flames ' At the Louisvile office of the com pany Raymond Deateale general manager and Arthur Bondur&nt advertising manager who estimated the loss fully covered by Insurance said the cause of the fire was unknown They placed the total value of the plant one of the largest in the country at approximately $20000 000 Plant Manager John A Bolger gave the alarm after discovering smoke in one of the two bottling plants Fire departments from: Madison ville and Henderson Ky and EvansvilleV'lnajoine(I' Owensboro firemen in battling the flames Approximately 85 firemen assisted by C C C workers from a near-b- y camp and other volunteers brought the fire under control at midnight The flames laid waste the bottling plant two of the 12 large warehouses a shipping warehouse and a small storage warehouse So intense was the heat from the burning buildings that firemen were unable to get close to the structures and relied largely on throwing water on other buildings to prevent spread of the flames the American Federation of Labor The CIO started building a new labor movement he said only after-i- ts unions were “driven out" of V'’ j: the AFL Ready to Explore His organization the CIO leader stated was ready to explore the possibilities leading to a united labor movement and added the corn vention “Is likely to prove one of the most effective steps yet taken in the direction of labor unity” : "Once the representatives of the A F L are ready to recognize the facts and deal with the C I O on a basis of equality and justice” he added “they will find the representatives of the CIO more than receptive to any proposition which will restore unity without Impairing the rights of the workers which are our first consideration" The CIO leader said however he was unwilling to make his organization ‘'another Czechoslovakia to be dismembered and destroyed by such powers as seek peace at v our expense" ' Membership Claim Lewis" report claimed a total membership of 4037877 as compared with a per capita tax membership of 3450385 reported last month by the A F L at the Houston convention Subsequent to thd writing of Lewis! report the C I O lost 250000 members by the refusal of the Garment Workers’ union to support a permanent C I O Out of the three years’ total receipts of $3540385 Lewis said the CIO spent $1760838 for organizational work and advanced $1310173 to affiliates during the period of expansion In the treasury was a balance of pbout $30000? Most of the advances he reported were covered by notes payable to the CIO which Instituted a per capita tax system in June 1937 By Mine Workers Labor men have estimated a large part of the organization’s funds was supplied by Lewis’ United Mine Workers' union TOKYO Nov 14 (Monday) UP)— iA Japan Monday rejected (he representations of the United - States Great Britain and France protesting the closing by Japan of the Yangtze river to commercial navigation The three powers delivered their representations to the Tokyo foreign office November 7 that the principal navigable river in China was closed to al) but d Japanese traffic Aforeign last week r office spokesman said that the protests were The C I O leader’s r three-yea- that summary covered a wide range of affecting legislative eco"Japanese vessels were used for topics and labor activities military purposes only not comme- nomic He placed heavy emphasis on the rcial” problem of technological advances and suggested the federal committee now Investigating monopoly look into the "undesirable Bocial control” over technological changes In production exercised by bankers and Community house Monday after- industrialists through patents and noon” The sisjters who are survived devices to protect monopolies by a brother Robert and “a fosterOutlines Program daughter Mamie both of Grand Lewis’ suggestion for attaining Lake will be buried Monday in a bleak hillside cemetery which and holding a balanced economy were Incorporated in a seven-poithey passed almost daily program: Kitty was born in Leavenworth L Economic action by organized Kam Annie in Brownville Neb With their parents they went to labor to raise wages and reduce Denver in 1889 The family came hours 2 Planned government contributo Grand Lake In 1896 and the to keep sisters then in their twenties tion to consumer Income Pax Siva) (Coattnud took up adjoining homesteads ' (Columa Pouf 1 “based bn misinformation" Death Unites Sisters Inseparable in Life GRAND LAKE UP) — The Colo Nov 13 Harbison inseparable sisters homesteaders of a hardy era joined each bther in both victims of pneumonia Kitty 66 died Tuesday While Annie 70 lay gravely ill of this mountain-hemme- d death-Sunda- fesi-dents village read the following notice lh the Grand Lake post office: "Funeral of Kitty Harbison postponed until further notice" Everybody here knew the "Harbison girls” and so did thousands of tourists who had visited their homesteads north of Grand Lake They wondered if Kitty’s death would separate the sisters-Whbecame homesteaders in 1896 never married and preferred hard work and frugality to substantial r 400 acres sums offered of land Sunday night the sign in the post office was changed to read : “Funeral services for Kitty and Annie Harbison will be held at the for-thei- nt |