Show T Local Metal Markets The Weather UTAH— Fair Tuesday IDAHO— Fair Tuesday WYOMING —Generally fa'ir NEVADA— Generally fair Gold 3500 Silver (newly mined) 6164e Silver (foreign) 4275c Copper electrolytic delivered 1125c Connecticut valley Lead 510 S515c :8 ) tfil Lead VOL 138 NO 39 Hubscnptljo rates: Utah Idaho Nevada $12 eiaewhere la $105 year lutadvanc Wyoming 8 dail U Supreme Court Will Rule on n Strike Sit-Dow- Grants Request Of NLRB Action Taken for ByUS Review of Case WASHINGTON Nov 21 ( AP) —Hot issues raised by strikes will be threshed out beThis fore the supreme court became certain Monday when sit-do- the high tribunal granted® a labor board request for a review of a federal circuit coupt decision at Chicago The latter court upheld the Fan-steMetallurgical corporation's action in discharging workmen who had participated in a trike The review had been opposed by the Fansteel corporation a North el sit-do- two of whose Chicago concern buildings were seized by employes In February 1937 and held until poliee evicted the strikers nine days later The national labor relations board contended in its request for a review that the strike resulted from the corporation's refusal to bargain collectively with the Amalgamated Association of Iron Steel and Tin Workers of America (C I 0) The board said it had authority to order reinstatement of the employes "ddspite any acts of violence” because of Fansteel's “unfair labor practices” Opposed Review Opposing a review of the circuit 'Court ruling Fansteel attorneys arstrike was illegal gued the and therefore justified the dismissal of those engaged in it In another labor case Monday the supreme court dismissed an appeal from a decision of the Maine supreme court which upheld constitutionality of a state statute prohibiting conspiracy to Injure property or business Leaders of a strike at 17 shoe factories in Lewiston and Auburn Me had been sentenced to jail under the law- They admitted they organized shoe workers in the two cities and that as a result of the strike the business of Charles Cushman company was injured The supreme tribunal ruled that no "properly presented substantial federal question" was before it in this case Acting on another case Monday o the court reaffirmed in a decision its May 2 ruling that a patent holder may restrict use of a device after its manufacture and sale by the terms of a license sit-do- - ! Contrary Opinion This opinion was contrary to that of the justice department which had expressed apprehension that it would interfere with enforcement of the antitrust laws The case was that of Western Electric company and against General Talking Pictures It involved the latter’s corporation use pf sound equipment for purposes other than that for which it Was licensed Justice Louis D Brandeis "liberal” member of the court delivered the majority opinion holding that the amplifiers in question "did not 'pass into the hands of a purchaser in the ordi nary channels of trade”’ Justices Black and Reed President Roosevelt’s appointees to the Black’s opinion court dissented contended the majority was departing from the “traditional judicial interpretation of the patent laws” others Roberts Not on Case Justice Roberts did not participate in this decision Brandeis said that American Transformer company which sold the equipment to General Talking Pictures was specifically licensed to manufacture and sell the amplifying device for use only in the private field but instead made and old it for commercial use "The question of law requiring decision is whether the restriction in the license is to be given effect" he said “That a restrictive license is legal seems clear "As the restriction was legal and the amplifiers were made and sold (Continued on Puce Two) (Column Six) Daughter Tries Vainly To Save Father NEW dally and 8unday mo and Sunday mo $125 SALT LAKE CITY UTAH TUESDAY MORNING Stahd Out States to Test Liberalism Of GOP Rule Agreed to review a lower eourt decision that the Fan- steel Metallurgical corporation was justified in discharging employes who took strike part in a Reaffirmed a decision that a patent owner may restrict the user of his product after manufacture and sale' by specific license Denied a request by the CIO and the American Civil Liberties union that the fedsit-do- eral circuit court at Philadelphia he prohibited from acting on their controversy with Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City Dismissed an appeal from a decision of the Maine supreme court- which upheld constitutionality of a state statute outlawing conspiracy to injure property or business - Executive Sees Good in Profit Sharing Sears Roebuck Head Favors Security Tax Exemptions WASHINGTON Nov 21 UP) — Robert E Wood president of Sears Roebuck and company suggested Monday that corporations be eng couraged to establish systems by granting those that do an exemption of their social seprofit-sharin- curity tax payments Wood a frequent counselor of congressional committees on business questions was one of three corporation executives who deg scribed systems to a subcommittee of the senate finance committee The subcommittee was just beginning a study of the application of such policies to American business M B Folsom treasurer of the Eastman Kodak company opposed the establishment of tax exemptions or the granting of tax rewards in order to encourage g systems and Richard R Deilpree president of Proctor and Gamble said such exemptions company would ‘‘be very nice to have” but exceedingly difficult to write into law and to administer As described by Wood the g system is to encourage designed employe The employes participatsavings ing contribute 5 per cent of their wages to a fund and the company 5 H to TVj per cent of its profits After contributing for 10 years the is entitled to make withemploye drawals from his account The fund is invested in stock of the profit-sharin- ' profit-sharin- Sears-Roebil- profit-sharin- (Continued on Pape Two) (Column Five) Senator Fights Recount INDIANAPOLIS Nov 21 UP)— U S Senator Fre'derick Van Nuys reelected in the closest contest in a decade of Hoosier politics asked state supreme court writs of prohibition Monday to halt recount proceedings instituted in seven counties by his Republican opponent Raymond E Willis Will H Thompson tof Indianapolis chief of the Van Nuys counsel argued the United States senate is solo judge of its membership and holds final and exclusive jurisdiction in any contest for a seat Circuit courts he said lack power to determine the winner in a senatorial race Nazis Eye Area off-ye- nned 21 of German cheered Monday night at the second big antlnazi mass meeting jit Madison Square Garden since the start of the recent campaign in goods were anti-Semit- Germany The city's largest auditorium was packed to its capacity of more than 20000 and pelice estimated that 8000 more jammed near-b- y streets in the Broadway district More than 200 mounted and foot police were assigned to handle the crowds Carpatho-Ukrain- Julius P Heil nor-elect Wisconsin and Neither Mentioned Neither ha a place in the speculative lists of Republican dark-horsfor 1940 Heil is' ineligible Stassen is too by foreign birth young and many political prognosticators would consider him too little known nationally Time could correct both of these handicaps But he is also considered too remote geographically from the electoral y stage on which the drama of presidential politics is played out Time can do little about that Yet these two new governors get the first chance to demonstrate the major thesis on which the Republican party has fought its election battles in recent years Thpjf is that the new deals national or state lacked administrative skill and judgment however worthy their social or economic objectives or however desirable some of their enactments “Let us do it and do it right" has been the Republican motto Wisconsin and Minnesota voters have taken' them at their word I£hey have confided to Heil arid Stassen and their associates the administration of little new deals that in some respects predate the Roosevelt national new deal and from which stemmed some of the inspiration and even the working models for national policy For the voters of the nation Wisconsin and Minnesota afford an immediate laboratory test of which has happened in years of political adversity to liberalize Republican councils and leadership The contention of Roosevelt followers that gover- That answer could deeply impress the nation as an answer also or at least a significant indication to the biggest question 1938 Republican trends have raised That is: What would a Republican national administration do with an inheritance of new deal's social reforms and economic experiments if it came to power two years from now? Any survey of the heritage of or Progressive-mad- e laws in Wisconsin and Minnesota which now pass to Republican hands- for administration modification or repeal makes the special claim of the two states for national attention during the next two years crystal clear From Wisconsin for example came much that was worked into the new deal utilities policy The most striking evolution of that policy and of regional Farmer-La-bor-ma- national re- sources is the Tennessee Valley Authority Its present guiding spirit David Lilienthal Was recruited from Wisconsin A lohg list of Wisconsin and Minnesota laws sfariiped with wider extremes of Progressive or Farmer-Labo- r liberalism than most of the Roosevelt national enactments could be drawn up The Heil and Stassen administrations take them over Among them all none is more advanced from the liberal standpoint than the labor laws Wisconsin started on unemployment compensation in 1932 before the federal social security act had been more (Continued on (Column Pape Oije I Three) William Weiner presidcrit of the Jewish People's committee Who called for a boycott absolved the German people for “Hitler's program of mad brutality" Paul J Kern president of the municipal civil service commission assailed Prime Minister Chamberlain of Britain as "the head of Mr Hitler's London bureau" and said the "persecutions" n were the result of the settlement at Munich Many Broadway entertainers participated in the rally Anglo-Germa- well-know- n (Rut hen ia) Some observers interpreted the demonstration as evidence of German irritation1 over efforts by Poland and Hungary to establish a common frontier by severing from Czechoslovakia The regioni as part of Czechoslovakia is dominated by Berlin and eventually might become a convenient cofridor for Germany’s “drang nach osten"— march to the east two-part- Big? Question -- Remote Germany Nazis Nettled es Republican protestations of liberalism are mostly political sheep's clothing to conceal conservative wolves might be quickly answered in those two states 21 UP) Hungary wants to annex fast is becoming a major European trouble spot as undercover negotiations for Czechoslovakia's eastern tip grow in intensity Hungary quietly was strengthening her military forces Monday night to "forestall border incidents” Thinly veiled indications were that Hungary and Germany were in complete disagreement as to the fate of the region Budapest received belated reports that in Sopron a Hungarian Tity near the German border southeast of Vienna nazi demonstrations occurred Saturday night Crowds were reported to have shouted for annexation of the Sopron region by man’ ‘self-ma- c Nov which m Boycott on German Goods NEW YORK Nov for a boycott N steam-rollere- 20000 NYrAiitinazis Urge YORK Nov 21 by a fall Charles Abbott lay helpless on the subway tracks at Eighteenth street D6wn the tunnel Mrs Monday Rosalie Steurer his daughter saw the lights of the oncoming Lexington Avenue train The Stratford Conn woman ran down the platform waving her arms and screaming Waiting passengers unaware of the situation eyed her curiously while the train's rumble mocked her cries The train rolled into the station struck the aged man and killed him A former New Yorker he had come to the city to apply for his old age pension Pv BUDAPEST self-ma- of 22 PAGES— FIVE CENTS House British Rises Over Rutlienia Fate N azi Fight on Jews Offers Colonial Haven Farm-er-Laborit- use 10 90 Hungary Arms Border as By KIRKE L SIMPSON 21 WASHINGTON wo Nov of the 11 Republicans who will take over governorships soon from Democrats Progressives or rate special attention although presidential bees are not buzzing' in their vicinity They are: 'Julius P Heil govenor-elec- t of Wisconsin a small-tim- e business tycoon widely publicized as a man who has paternalistic social impulses toward his employes Harold Stassen half Heil’s age a "young" Republican both in years d and outlook who remnants of the party old guard-isto win his nomination and beat what amounted to coalition to become governor-elect of Minnesota planning for Issued every morning Entered at the post office at Sait Lake 1879 City as aecond class matter under act of March NOVEMBER 22 1938 Settlement Frteen Copper (cathode) New Discord Two Governors Get Chance To ‘Do It Right’ UP-T- High Tribunal 5 10c New MinneHarold Stassen sota governor is no “old guard" 50 Concerns Ask Repeal Of Profit Tax WASHINGTON Nov 21 (UP)-Fif- Another report was that Hungary had sent a note to Berlin describing alleged disorderly conditions in as "untenable" Although the government did not comment bn these reports it permitted newspapers in Budapest to publish a dispatch from Warsaw saying such a note had been sent (Reports to Prague of demonstrations by youths and legislators in Carpatho-Ukrain- c described them as displays of loyalty and resistance to further cession of territory to Hungary (Government circles charged invading foreign terrorists were attempting to foment unrest in the region and declared they were doomed to failure) Dispatches reporting artillery and machine-gufire near Ungvar and Kassa near the Hungarian frontier and that conditions were “fast approaching revolution against Czechoslovak authorities” were played sensationally in Hungarian n ty representatives of shippers bankers business men and transportation interests meeting in an attempt to draft a program to save the $26000000000 railroad industry demanded from financial chaos Monday night that all business be newspapers Face Privation Ruthenians were said to be facing starvation and epidemics because of an alleged breakdown in CzechO' Slovak government services Telegraphed appeals for help purporting e relieved of the new deal’s undistri- to come from 56 Carpatho-Ukrainreceived Monday villages were buted profits tax The thrust at the tax which has raising the total of such requests been championed by President past 150 It was agreed here however that Roosevelt personally came as the would be unable to approdelegates all members of the 1938 Hungary priate the province in face of detransportation conference consid- termined German opposition Hunered a proposal that the railroads however was believed to be only be relieved of the tax so that gary on Italy’s support and to they could lay bysurpluses in pros- countingJthat Italian Premier Musso expect to them through carry perous years lini would prevail on Gerhiany to depression periods allow Hungarian expansion to the Unanimous Vote north Both in Bucharest and by diploAfter brief discussion President Arthur M Hill of the Atlantic Grey- matic activity here Rumania manihound corporation chairman of the fested a lively interest in the rneeting said the proposal waS situation Diplomatic circles said amended to declare that all busi- Rumania in the event of detachfrom ness should be "relieved” of the ment of Carpdtho-Ukrain- e tax Hill said the vote was un- Czechoslovakia would insist on getting the extreme eastern tip animous Bucharest has its eyes on 12000 Roosevelt’s dissatisfaction Mr with changes in the tax was one of Rumanians valuable salt mines and the reasons why he refused to sign a railway connection to Warsaw the tax bill enacted by the last there congress and he let the measure become a law without his signaradio ture He made a nation-wid- e speech in defense of the tax and explained why he was withholding his signature Six points of a broad rail rehabilitation program won unanimous approval from the delegates COLORADO SPRINGS Colo Nov but the most controversial propos- 21 (2P— Dejiuty Sheriff M J Vas-seals — including demands for revision shot and wounded a woman g rule to give who resisted the efforts of three of the the railroads a "fair return” on the officers to evict her from a potato value of their property arid for re- cellar in which she made her home moval of the federal government on an abandoned ranch from the barge line business— were Undersheriff Roy Glasier said Vasseur shot the woman Zona Pat-til- o postponed until Tuesday after she pulled the trigger Other Requests of an old pistol three times while In rapid fire order the delegates aiming at Vasseur' Cartridges in also asked: the pistol evidently were so old land-grastatutes Repeal of the they failed to fire under which government traffic is Glasier Vasseur and Deputy Sher' hauled at lower rates iff Jerry O'Driscoll acting on a Relieving the railroads of the ex- complaint to remove the womari pense In excess Of net direct bener from her squatter home routed her fits— tolhem lo- r- elimination of WH-- a tear gas bomb railroad grade Glasier said she came out brandnew for loans of government After she was ishing the gun equipment purchases presumably slightly wounded the officers seized sewith the equipment' serving as her gun curity A lunacy complaint was filed agains't her Sheriff Sam Deal said complainApproves Nazi ants asking her eviction reported Pact the woman subsisted on corn she gathered from shocks in the fields TOKYO Tuesday Nov 22 (UP)— near the dugout Neighbors comThe privy ’ council" Tuesday ap- plained she threatened them with a cultural pistol whenever they came near proved a Japanese-Germa- n pact providing for an‘ exchange of professors and other cultural ' Cellar Recluse Shot in Melee Hitler Angered At Plan for Former Colony Reich Protest Looms On Refugee Plan LONDON Nov 21 (AP)— The British house of commons with rare unanimity adopted a motion Monday night deploring infuriated Germany’s treatment Germans Jews Astonished By Britain’s Move New Persecutions Feared BERLIN Nov 21 UP! — Both Germans and Jews were amazed Monday night at the British plan for Jewish refugees to settle on fopmer German colonial soil — a project to which Germany is strongly opposed There was talk that Rieischs-fuehrAdolf Hitler wouldsum-irio- n the reichstag quickly to' protest impressively against allotting former Germah territory to Jews German — officials referred to newspapor comment in the last few days in which the press unanimously said Germany would protest most sharply against any settlement of Jews in her former possessions Jewish leaders acclaimed as "wonderful" Chdfiiberlain’s atate- er the Jews after the govern-Imehad announced plans to the pros- - lereate havens for the refugees in British in Afriea- and British Guiana of ment which opened up pect of Jewish havens Guiana and Africa includirig’ Adolf Hitler was reported angry Tanganyika the former German at Prime Minister Chamberlain’s African colony announcement Jews would be sent But like the Germans their to a former German colony in Afriattention quickly was focused on ca Tanganyika as well as to British the problem of German opposiGuiana in South America and led tion to their settlement on' soil to unconfirmed reports here that which Germany lost in the World Germany’s ambassador to London war and insists she must have might be recalled again The Tanganyika project was re“Won’t Hitler be so enraged garded in Berlin as a “plot" to avoid about Tanganyika that he won’t returning the colony to Germany let any Jew out of Germany?" Bitterly Assailed one leader asked Another said the nazis already drive was Germany's had informed German Jewry that bitterly assailed in the- house of Hitler would not permit any Jews commons debate which disclosed with visas to emigrate to Tan- - that already Chamberlain’s hope of (Continued on Prr Four! reaching an- - appeasement settle (Column Five) 7ment with Germany based on Mu-niaccord had been struck a se- sh Business Wins Mexico Urges Farmers to Praise for Bettering Ties Drop Claims vere blow gjf Labor members of parliameaw proposed taxing of German products controlling of German assets in England and strong diplomatic action as methods of forcibly drawing Germany’s attention to British disapproval of the persecutions r SEC Head Lauds Cooperation Willi Government NEW YORK Nov 21 UP)— A revival of "good business judgment" was cited Monday night by William O Douglas chairman of the securities arid exchange commission as "the real story behind this encouraging improvement in the relations between business and government” Telling the National Association of Accredited Publicity Directors in a prepared address that admin2 istrative agencies such as the SEC are "here to stay” Douglas said the choice of whether those agencies shall develop as business forces or police forces rests with business itself He received the association’s second annual award for outstanding Fred E Baer service In publicity made the presentation Chamberlain said Britain intends Cardenas Terin Laml Sacrifice ‘High Moral Duty’ MEXICO CITY Nov 21 UP) -Mexicans whose lands have been expropriated under the govern- ment’s agrarian program received an appeal Monday from President Lazaro Cardenas to fulfill a ‘“high moral duty" by sacrificing claims for Indemnification Cardenas issued the appeal in con section with Sunday’s 28th sary of the revolution which over threw the dictatorial government of the late Porfirio Diaz 'It is a high moral duty that good Mexicans out of devotion to their fatherland should renounce com' pensation to which they are en titled for lands attaphed" said the appeal which appeared in afternoon papers Monday Cardenas' action followed the In Common Cause November 12 settlement of about "The tidal waves of intense na- $10000000 worth of claims by Unitionalism" Douglas said "the ex- ted States citizens for farm lands over by the government since plosions of racial and class emo- taken tions and the violent economic 1927 “If the with the Unit agreement enworld which swept the swings listed all of us in a common cause ed States to pay United States of making democratic government citizens for lands expropriated has placed a heavy obligation on Mexwork “The vehicle for performance of ico it should be understood that this daily work has been more and out of such sacrifices will come the more the administrative agency— definite independence of Mexico" that thing which lawyers some- Cardenas said Under that agreement Mexico times delight in painting as some sort of legal mon- will make an initial payment of $1000000 next May ster" The administrative agency he explained "is the mechanism of democratic government whereby capitalism can discipline and preserve itself Jt is equipped to meet business on business terms’1 Declaring that the “elbow room" which congress grants such an LONDON Tuesday Nov 22 (UP) agency is a boon to both business and the public Douglas said “realiz- —Reports that Chancellor Adolf ation of this fact points to the de- Hitler is considering the early resirability of business and govern- call of the German ambassador to ment working cooperatively” London Herbert von Dirksen as a ' protest against British condemnaGuides ‘Own Destiny’ tion of the nazi drive Business men who take the lead were splashed in big headlines in in suggestions for regulation of London's morning papers Tuesday their own enterprises fare best at The Daily Mail Daijy Express the hands of government he said and Daily Mirror reported the probciting the New York Stock ex- ability of the recall' of the Gerchange as an institution “which man envoy has firmly taken its destiny Into Prime Minister Neville Chamberits own hands” lain’s statements in the house of The operations of administrative commons Monday and bitter attacks made during the agencies he s ' do not alter the nation's democratic system for the debate which followed it were said ultimate power still is vested in the to have been partly responsible for voter the move i d Reich to Recall London Envoy anti-Jewi- -- crossings-authorizatio- Tokyo Culture Former Official Dies It was understood one result of GOLDEN Colo Nov 21 UP- )the agreement would be that in William L Boatright 62 former the future only German instructors Colorado attorney general and Reapproved by the nazi party would publican candidate for governor in be admitted in Japanese schools 1928 died at his home hers Sunday Navy liispector Resigns Says' He Doesn’t Really ‘Inspect’ CLEVELAND Nov 21 UP)— Raymond Kennedy 37 Monday resigned his job as government inspector of navy ma tcrial at the Aluminum Company of America declaring “a man can stand pretense only so many $200Q-a-ye- years” nt anti-Jewi- ’ -- three-hcade- ' "I make out reports down here saying I've seen things when I haven’t been any closer to them “To than you have" he said carry this pretense any farther would be incompatible with my oafh of office and the dictates of my conscience "I am supposed to inspect about $1500000 worth of propellers airplane engines and submarine parts a year To do It according to spfecifications I would have to be in five factories at the same time" Kennedy said there were 12 other inspectors in Cleveland and that those he had talked with said they operated like he did “They just 'take the manufacturere's word for it" he declared to lease “on generous terms" at least 10000 square miles in British Guiana and as much land in Tan" ganyika northern Rhodesia Nyasa- land and Kenya colony as economically and climatically suitable Britain accepted the plkri to of fer a nomeland for Jews In defiance or warnings in the controlled German press that settlement of Ger' man Jews in Tanganyika which was German East Africa before the war would be considered “a transparent maneuver" to dodge Germany’s colonial demands Tanganyika now is mandated to Britain U S Capital to Aid was learned on unimpeachable authority that Britains backed the plan with the understanding that private capital in the United States would raise $100000000 to help the Jews reach Bettle and lease their new homes The plan acceptance of which marked an unprecedented policy was originally drafted by' United States Ambassador Joseph P Kennedy who started working on it almost immediately after the current broke out wage of in Germany November 10 After the prime minister had spoken the house adopted unanimously a motion of a labor memwhich atber Philip J tacked "the deplorable treatment suffered by German racial religious and political minorities in Europe" and suggesting “an immediate concerted effort amongst the nations including the United States to secure a common policy" It m Noel-Bak- er Voices Caution Sir Samuel Hoare home secretary in announcing the government accepted labor’s motion cautioned that the plight of the refugees was an international problem which should be handled by all 32 members of the Intergovernmental committee formed at the conference at Evian les - Bains institgated by President Roosevelt Sir Samuel said the committee was meeting in ten days with Myron C Taylor a vice president of the committee The house cheered his announcement that arrangements had been completed with religious organizations to sponsor wide immigration of children into Britain from Germany and adopted unanimously a motion to give the house members an opportunity to express views on Germany’s campaign Warns of Move non-Arya- n anti-Jewi- Sir Samuel cautioned against large scale immigration saying that "there is the making of a definite I have to a nt J ewish m ove ment be careful to avoid anything tri lhe nature of mass immigration that would inevitably lead to the growth of the movement we all want to see suppressed" admitted under Chamberlain questioning that part of the area proposed for settlement jn Guiana was refused by a league of nations commission as an Assyrian home three years ago He indicated settlement in the African lands would be limited Chamberlain As for Palestine said it was generally recognized that this country “could not in any case provide a solution of the Jew- ish refugee problem1 "In conclusion" he said "I must (Continued on PrfM Four) (Column Ail) ‘ |