Show S L News Of Week In Review Section B Classified Ads r r’ Local and Financial News Five Pages of Opportunities Part 2 SALT LAKE CITY UTAH SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 27 1938 Present Social Vision City’s Future Role in Defense Network Art Center’s Collapse Opening Seen by Group Draws Many Observes 82nd Birthday Central news figure of week Heber J Grant L D S church head 82 Tuesday the beloved Mormon leader received good will birthday wishes from thousands was honored guest at tribute-payin- g fetes ranging from a family dinner to a huge civic he banquet — Deeply moved Technocracy Inc brought to commented: "No ianguage can Salt Lake City Saturday night a express what I feel" battery of statistics to show why existing social institutions are was Too Two — other doomed to collapse and how Tech- Eager school children who didn’t the difference between an etching and lithograph and sedate art critics who understood every brush stroke of a Lewandowskl or t” l dt 1 er estimated at Death $3000 Chimes Toll — Death John Harrison Deming 76 mining and financial teader Thomas W Pinder 78 Le Grand L D S ward organist n Mrs Jeanette Sharp 79 prominent church worker Dayid C Dunbar 80 of Los Angeles former Utah claimed Ben-nio- Bourbon leader 69 of Ephraim 'D C Jensen noted Beehive Marion C Nelson left Major General Walter C Sweeney and A J They look into future Hale munch popcorn while they talk over military possibilities of the Salt Lake valley Advantages as Western Supply Center communications Ideal in Any Schpme “In any scheme of military ae-- it tivity” said General Sweeney “the Great Salt Lake valley is the ideal place to locate the great supply depot where will be contained all the food ordnance and military supplies necessary to maintain forces all along the western coast”The general met Saturday night with the Utah men perhaps most le Traffic 4Trap' Hits Drivers Continuing their blockade camagainst faulty brakes and unlicensed lights driving and drunken driving police Saturday night and Sunday morning stopped cars t passing on North Temple street between Eighth West and Ninth West streets Sergeant Harvey C Peirce head of the traffic department conducted the blockade from 11 p m to 1 a m Several hundred motorists have been haled into police court by blockade officers since the practice was adopted several months ago paign the-city w-a- 28-ni- Sait take- City hmyever at —fortunate — compared with -- other intermountain' Every 100 Deaths was some points: an even Tintic10 Recordings shortly before Saturday midnight included 17 at Locomotive Springs Utah 13 at Coalville 13 at Delta 15 at Rock Springs Wyo: 15 at Helena 16 at 15 at Idaho Falls Mont 16 at 'Pocatello- - abd a Milford frigid 10 degrees at Butte Mont Prediction for' Sunday con- tinued-t- o tie change in temperature" RFC Reports Utah Loans Only $3050451 of R F C loans remain outstanding in Utah of $18403609 lent to Utah corporations by the government agency These figures were reported as of October 30 to Allen T Sanford state director of the national emergency council Saturday Mr Sanford said since February 2 1932 230 loans and investments were made in and to 143 corporations in the state Of $7331098 made to 55 banks and trust companies $4428276 was made to receivers for redistribution to depositers of closed banks Two livestock credit corporations received loans totaling $3477443 twenty loans totaling $792145 were made to' 16 business enterprises? $800300 was loaned to seven projects $637500: to 12 irrigation districts and 23 loans were authorized for a total of $458600 for refinancing debts of real business properties Also $932497 was authorized for purchase of 256 mortgages insured by the FHA according to the report nine-mont- Dutch Couple Visit Here -l- it— L (Bud) ' ar Had Been on Parole The youth was on parole from the burglary sentence the early morn- ing of May 1 when he allegedly Albert I (Bud) Freenian Wins mistrial in Utah’s first traf- - crashed a stolen car into another machine killing Mrs Stella Mccase Henry Edwards' 36 of Murray Freeman's companion Brady Wayne Poulsen 18 also was' Injured fatally in the collision The jury returned to the courtroom for the last time Saturday at 4:30 p m and the foreman Steve L Love of 2135 Twenty-secon- d East street informed the court thatvin his opinion the jury was "hopelessly deadlocked" and that "this Jury will never reach a verdict" "I see nothing that I can do but Rate Association declare a mistrial” Judge Schiller responded "I dislike the necessity of having to do so as a trial of this kind is very expensive to the taxSessions Monday payers I am very disappointed that you have failed to reach a verdict The fourteenth annual meeting of but this court will never compel a the Utah Citizens’ Rate association jury to concur merely for the purof concurring on a verdict" will be held Monday November 28 pose Retrial Date Set at 12:15 p m In the Newhouse er Meet Will Hear Employers’ Relations Talk to Hold Annual hotel Harold H Ellsworth assist- - The judge expressed his appreciaant secretary announced Saturday tion to the jury end to attorneys Officers for the coming year wlil for state 'and defense declared a be elected and addresses and re mistrial and set the retrial date Young Freeman watched the proports will be given flanked on Louis C Callister principal guest ceedings nervously speaker will discuss “Employment either side by his mother Mrs Daisy Relations” His address will in' M Freeman and an unidentified elude of proposed young woman' who accompanied discussions changes to the Wagner aot and Mrs Freeman to court dally duroperations of the wages and hours ing the' trial Freeman was noncommittal on administration— classed the biggest subjects before the American busi failure of the jury to reach a ver- diet saying only that: ’Things went ness man today about as-expected" Official to Talk Defense Attorney James Rolla Ward C Holbrook chairman of Thomas was jubilanJLat the jury's the state public service commis failure to convict his client and sion and president of the Utah State declared: “No jury will convict Farm Bureau federation will dis- him because he isn’t guilty of first cuss importance of operations of degree murder” the Utah Citizens' Rate association Prosecutor Disappointed and Clyde C Edmonds president Assistant District Attorney Brigand C B Haiyley treasurer will reham E Roberts who with Assistport on the past year’s activities The following nominations for di- ant County Attorney H D Lowry prosecuted the case expressed disrectorships have been announced Ogden zone (two to be elected for appointment that thd jury had failed in 1941)— M- Si Stone to reach a verdict but said he was a Charles Empey and James Scow-cro- ready to again present the state’s version of the fatal collision and the events which preceded it Salt Lake Zone On several occasions during the Salt Lake zone (eight to be elect- jury’s deliberations Judge Schiller ed for term ending 1940) — Verne A recalled them to the courtroom in Tracy J D Campbell G A Rog- effort to speed their decision ers Lester F Hewlett R W ButIt was in February 1936 that term-endin- g Elderly Salesman Near Death From Crash Injuries Hitler’s “quarrelsome attitude” Is being reflected in reduced trade between Holland and Germany with a consequent increase in trade between United States and Holland business man Thomas E Jacobsen insurance salesman was near Henri J said here Satur- ler Adrian B Pembroke Holland Leiden of A E death in Salt Lake General hospital early Sunday while police Eberhardt Edgar G Gibsdn Wilday accident of pressed investigation into an automobile-pedestria- n and his bride of liam G Lambert George Mr which he was the victim three weeks are in America bn a atid T R Ellerbeck Six to be elected for term endMr Jacob sen according to officombined business trip and honeymoon ing in 1941— Clyde C Edmonds C cers was running ‘ south across' Both visitors were of the opinion fi Hawley Byron W Butler LesFourth East street at Ninth South that Hitler eventually will precipi- lie Squires Charles L Wheeler J street to board an e'astbound bus tate war in Europe Guests at the E Jones Lester T Wright Ernparked at the curb when he was Hotel Utah they plan to leave Mon- est Toronto George E Burton W drivstruck by an automobile being inof S Barwick and John Elliott Clark Fearing danger becoming day continuing their tour en west on Ninth South street by Frank Plott 20 of 238 West Third volved in a European war Sweden is spending large sums strengthenNorth street The victim who resided at 127 her army air force Curt Rosend-bla- d ing West First North street suffered of Stockholm Sweden said fractures of both legs severe scalp lacerations cuts and bruises and here Saturday shock Mr Rosendblad a scientist and Traffic Patrolmen E N Olson C inventor is manager of a company F Pierce and R T Anderson who Efforts of Mary Bailey to collect Election Polling Places which manufactures apparatus used on said the $25550 for injuries suffered when marks on investigated Page for heat recovery in chemical struck by an automobile July 9 1937 pavement showed Mr Plott skidded There can be no yotjng in the at 3191 Highland drive failed in the tires of his automobile 26 feet 'processes such as sugar refining and metallurgical w’ork in attempting to stop Third district court of Judge Clar“Economic conditions in- - Sweden forthcoming school elections by ab ence E Baker Mr Plott said Mr Jacobsen had General good" he said Mr Rosendblad sentee ballot Attorney The jury returned a verdict of “no started to cross the street when arc is a guest at the Hotel Utah Joseph- Chez said Saturday he became confused and turned causeof action” against John Flagg In a letter to Durham Morris of who admitted he drove the automoback into the path of the automor bile Cedar City he pointed out that when bile' in which he and Lloyd Jackson the absentee ballot law was first were riding but denied that their Ernest F Voelkcr 45 of 2792 enacted it applied only to general machine had st ruck the woman Thirteenth East street was arrestLater it was broadened Jackson had been abs'olVed preelections ed Saturday for ignoring a traffic to include municipal elections viously when Judge Baker directed light after his machine northbound He said that apparently the legis- a "no cause of action" verdict in on Eleventh East street collided Annual election of officers and lature deliberately excluded the use hris case with a car being driven west on Mrs Bailey alleged in the com- Twenty-firSouth street by Willis directors of the Utah Sugar Beet of absentee ballots in school elecMost districts in the state piaint that the defendants v’ere in- L Woods 19 of 1178 Third East Cooperative 'association will be held tions "hold mg'scKooTTiTe cTTo ns and" on toxiCated and speeding at the tjme street at p m meeting Wednesday in are December 7 Salt Lake City will elect of the accident in which she sufNeither driver was injured al- the offices of the Utah State Farm fered a fractured left leg though both machines were dam- Bureau federation J R Rawlins five new school board members aged Traffic Investigatory Lee announced president Saturday Rogers and T W SouthwortV reIn addition to the election memThe mishap (occurred at bers of the ported organization will name ai)outI2:20p m two delegates’ t6 the hatiorial assoMeanwhile condition of Mrs Al- ciation to hold its convention in bert T Druce 62 of 3367 Eleventh Colo December 15 Mr Greeley East street was reported improved Rawlins will give his annual report: hosSaturday at Salt Lake general ' siort might need more time to' pital where she is being treated Hope that the Salt Lake City decide upon the issue for a possible skull fracture and decide will Meet commission to definitely Group Baptist Several civic clubs and the head lacerations suffered in an acmeters whether Tuesday parking The B Y P U Fellowship comcident Thanksgiving day mayor's traffic safety committee in busito be reinstalled the are Her husband also injured in the mission of the Immanuel Baptist have'urged reinstallatibn of the meters asserting thati they will collision of their automobile with a church will meet Tuesday at 1:30 ness district was expressed Sattree at Seventh East and Thirty-thir- p m at the home of Miss Grace urday by Mayor John M- Wallace relieve downtown traffic congestion provide more parking space South streets was reported in Christ and Miss Gladys Christ of Mayor Wallace said the matter revenue fair condition at the same hospital 1119 Emerson avenue R J Grayson for shoppers and probably would- - be presented to “" provide He suffered in jurier nn hrrThest icaiter wilt be in charge of tha mect-in- g Ihe'confrmSSrdh' TdrmaJry'nT'Tliat T“t‘6 "Tinance a detailed traffic and shoulders time but said that the commis- safety program W ft Sweden Joins Arms Race Aliment Votes Ruled Out Jury Refuses Damages B - Utah Sugar Beet Group to Elect st Pueblo Colo reported zero minimum Cheyenne Wyo 6 Denver Colo 8 Modena Utah 8 6 Yellowstone park'Vyo Elko Nev 8 Rock Springs Wyo 2 Burley Idaho 8 WendoveP 10 10 Reno Nev 10 Milford ) for 232 in highly-develope- Much of Interest Albert for second degree burglary- - He is the first Utahn ever to be charged with first degree murder as the outgrowth of an automobile collision JP-tf Nine The Great Salt Lake valley “should he and can be” the center for the United States army’s western supply and communications lines Major General Walter C Sweeney commander of the army’s ' third division said here Saturday Salt Lake City on Stopping his way to Washington D C from his post at Fort Lewis Wash the former Fort Douglas commandant said he was more convinced than ever of the potential greatness of this vicinity as a military center On the back of his hand the feneral illustrated the strategic position of the Salt Lake valley With Salt Lake City at the center of the hand he used the fingertips to represent the Mexican- - border Los Angeles San Francisco Portland and Seattle— each within 600 miles of the valley by direct aird line and each connected by road rail air and wire public from 2 p m to 6 p m Sunday it was announced by Elzy J Bird state director of the art project Hours on week-day- s will be adjusted according to the number of visitors Mr Bird said but probably will e from 10 a 9 p m next week Novices and experts In the art world alike found much to interest them Saturday in the four galleries Exhibits Included the Utah state permanent collection contemporary oils by members of the WPA art project six centuries of fine prints a plumbing display demonstratMonths Show and ing "art in use” "Claude Renoir" a nineteenth Births cciiury lithograph of the artist’s son by Auguste Renoir famous French artist attracted the particular attention of connoisseurs This Utah’s birth rate already one of is one of a collection of prints loaned by Lessing J Rosenwald of the highest in the nation appears Philadelphia to be going even higher Trained attendants stationed Statistics prepared Saturday by throughout the building gave interpretative information to school chil Mrs Hope Sanford Bronzonie dren and others unfamiliar with the statistician for the state board of exhibits health show that in the first nine To Be Changed months of this year there were Except for the Utah slate perma282 live births for every 100 nent collection exhibits will be deaths The average for the five changed every three weeks Mr Bird These will include not preceding years was 259 births explained for 100 deaths only the best works from private h In the period there and public galleries throughout the but Utah art such as that 9907 live were births and 3511 nation of school children and the early deaths pioneers Mr Bird said Not only has Utah one of 'the In response to numerous Inquiries in rates nation birth the highest made Saturday regarding art but also' one of the lowest death classes the director stated they rates For a number of years it will be started in drawing painthas had the highest ratio of births ing sculpturing and allied arts over deaths of any state next month Instruction like While Utah has two and a half early the exhibits and lectures will be times as many births as deaths free to the public Mr Bird said California actually has more Donald B Goodall formerly of deaths than births and her popu- the Chicago Institute of Fine Arts lation would decline were it not staff is director of the center for the heavy influx of population from the outside Utah’s actual increase in population is smaller than the natural increase The reason for this is the heavy migration away from the state Former Tort Douglas Commander Stresses With No Change Indicated higtr-pressu- Record Year Looms for Utah’s Stork Sweeney Terms S L Valley Ideal Spot for Army Base highly cognizant of Utah'j possibilities as an army center— Salt Lake City chamber of commerce leaders attendad a dinner dance given at the Hotel Utah by Marion C Nelson chamber president: J A Hale vice president and Gus P Backman executive secretary government Eflch of 100 occupational divis- and other civic leaders ions he explained would have its Visits Old Station head on the continental board of In the afternoon he visited his control which would in turn choose former post at Fort Douglas and the continental director The board there listened to a radio broadcast of control would be the political of the Army-Nav- y football game government besides operating the He will leave Sunday afternoon economic structure for Washington D C for three Other Provisions weeks of temporary duty at war deEach person who contracted to partment headquarters labor within the system for 20 years of his life would be guaranteed a d- As Freeman fidgeted nervously In his chair facing the court District Judge Herbert M Schiller late Saturday declared a mistrial In the young Utah state prison convict’s first degree murder trial when a jury failed to reach a verdict after deliberating 25 hours and 45 minutes The new trial was set by Judge Schiller for December 12 at 10 a m in Third district court Freeman was returned to ljijs cell in Utah state prison where he is sentence serving a one to street! So gieat was the interest in the new project sponsored jointly by the Utah State Institute of Fine Arts and the W P A Federal Art Project that directors kept the doors open from 10 a m to 9:30 p m to accommodate hundreds of visitors The galleries will be open to the Cold Retains Grip on S L? CC New Action Tolcgian rubbed shoulders Saturday at the public? opening of Utah’s new state art center 59 South State abolishing all existing' institutions including the Constitution the 48 states political parties and all governmental subdivisions The persons engaged in physical production would be the proportional amount of the production of the country with all persons receiving equal amounts he ex(Technocracy organizers Ice Ska(er9 Whirl plained how get $15 a week each regardless of rank) His payment would be in energy certificates and On Local Rinks the price of each article would bd Ice skating began on Com- measured not by supply and demissioner P H Goggin’s newly mand but by the energy required created ponds as cold snap con- in its production The certificates Shivers hit high mark would be noncumulative tinued nontran on Thursday When mercury ferable and all debt and credit stayed below 30 entire day with would be eliminated Un minimum of 19 degrees About 95 per cent of crime would like N Y C however S L C Health he contended disappear had no snow would also improve because medical care would be compulsory rather Here and There— Scouts ob- - than purchasable served rcdedication week FireMr Scott and his staff will leave men frolicked at anpual ball FriBarbara Naughton won Sunday for San Francisco day Tribune - Telegram and Utah Lieutenarchitects’ playhouse ant Colonel Maxon S Lough popular Fort Douglas official received orders for transfer soon to Washington D of C reported 13000 celery gifts sent outside stat Work started on rq The-colare memorial to George H Deirh milch of the west that gripped forone time wap secretary and throughout the latter part of the mer Utah governor John W week showedfiiT sign 'Saturday” Griffith faces murder trial Monas Salt night of diminishing Carbon and Emery coun day Lakers continued to shiver and to ty residents storm SL C again predict “a long hard winter” Saturday for football fracas Minimum temperature at the Last week they passed through Salt Lake Ctty weather bureau en route to game in Ogden early Saturday was 19— one deLieutenant Colonel Reese M gree above the previous day — and Howell former Utahn honored maximum was a chill 37 up three to government by appointment degrees from Friday The Salt war college fV Lake City airport reported a low of 16 degrees and about the same recording early Sunday was exAuto Looted pected as mercury at the airport Theft of a fpuntain pen flash- slid to 21 shortly before midlight and gloves from an automonight bile owned by Delos Boggess of Mean official temperature in Midvale was reported to police SaU below nor- maL urday state educator Court Sets Date for ’ know he explained and to Hounds— foxes were still roaming Murray fields Saturday a week after 79 escaped from the William B Erekson farm A giant community fox hunt acLoss counted for the other 68 Driver Gains Mistrial in Murder Case v Exhibit Holds Interests of Old and Yonna good-nigh- o No Decision Technocracy Presents Future Picture churchmen were also accorded nocracy— as the application of Investiture cerehigh honor to science the physical organization monies elevated the Right Rev Monsignor M F Sheehan and of North American 'production— the Right Rev Patrick F Ken- -' proposes to supplant them nedy to new Catholic ranks And it brought a grim and Ironic by Pope Plus XI- - speaker Howard' Scott its continental director to paint from the Holiday Hullabaloo — Spirits statistics a vivid picture of present Of gratitude and generosity min- decay and future regeneration The gled as Salt Lakers observed one audience that saw the picture and holiday prepared for another then questioned Mr Scott at length Gatherings in churches homes for more details filled the Lafayette and amusement centers marked ballroom of the Hotel Utah From a perplexing discussion' of Thanksgiving day Thursday Lighting of yuletide signs by Jun- “kilogram-calor- y consumption ’per ior C of C Friday night heralded capita per day” Mr Scott reasoned that by 1942 fewer Americans would approaching Christmas be engaged in physical production a than would be on relief Then he said America “can kiss its ecoPark Meiers Provide nomic political and social institu tions Subject for Debate Tfafffe talk for week centered Predicts Collapse on fiery discussion of parking Such collapse must come he said meters with Mayor John M Walbecause in order to support the preslace for Dan B Shields against ent debt structure approximately 5 — Judge Peter C Evans sug- per cent of new debt must be added gested state traffic control board each year But debt cannot be pyraof ‘experts — Mayor’s committee mided that fast he reasoned beurged creation of city traffic cause without a geographical fronc om m i s s i o n Elden Koplin tier and an expanding population Wollshleger 20 died after auto the business structure cannot grow crash that fast As a result the governa a ment relief program with its accuPolitics Again — Approaching-schoomulation of debt is created to fill board election December the gap 7 renewed political whirl In “Business is picking up now only terest centers in successor to because the government has inBoard President A E Eber-har- flated the credit structure” he conresigning after 15 years tinued ‘‘Every business in the Election survey showed DemUnited States is ori relief just as ocrats make up 75 per cent in much as are the men on WP A or state house more in senate P W A The only difference is that a a a business man is too the Visiting Celebrities — Educator dumbaverage to know it” German Wolfgang Hallgarten But with a vast relief problem and exile said new war crisis brewwith 13000000 people receiving an in Scott Howard ing Europe family income of only $471 Technocracy Inc director fore- average has cast price system collapse soon a year the incountry of the greatest many comhistory surpluses however were modities including cotton butter Optimistic four Chicago bankers and two eggs and meat he pointed out D & R G W R R company of' ficials who predicted continued Attacks Plan business upturn “And what do our political soa a' a cial and economic experts propose to do about it? They propose to exUtah State Art port the surplus To whom? To aliens who haven't money to buy Center Opens it So what do they propose? To lend to buy Drama and art rated high dur- aliens good American money in this With If that’s patriotism week the State Utah ing pew damn that kind of Art Center- 59 South State street country then that kind of charity If patriotism annual the opened Friday to is try elsewhere enough good winter-lon- g of run puppet shows it’s to try here” enough good besponsored by WPA and city Then he turned to a discussion of Cornelia Otis Skinner gan how the technocrats propose to deal famed monologuist performed such problems as debt unemAlsp for art’s sake Utah's Gar- with ployment relief and surpluses They den clubs launched war on highwould set up a functional society way billboards Tally-H- I t Ilebcr J Grant Honored I al - d Mayor Hopes for Decision On Parking Meter Plans (Continued on Page Ranch Offers Buffalo Pets Any Sait Laker whojvould like a nice shaggy buffalo for a household pet or a playmate for the children may still have one— though he'll have to go a little farther afield than when the giant buffalo herd roamed Antelope island The offer of buffalo for the catching — but' not for killing— came Sat' urday night from the historic Trinchera ranch near Denver purchased recently by Mrs Ruth McCormick Simms of Albuquerque N M Reasons Given It seems according to an Associated Press dispatch from Denver that the ranch is well stocked with members of the species bison bison (some zoologist liked the beast so Simms well he named it twice)-Mrdoesn’t care to have the buffalo around— and 'besides poachers 'Who like nice? juicy buffalo steaks arc quite a nuisance So R G Parvan director of the Colorado game and fish commis- sion said the ranchwould give the buffaloes to anyone who wodld cap- ture and take them All- of which might arouse fond memories inthe minds of those' Utahns who participated in the last big buffalo hunt on Antelope Island when t jis herd there was thinned to where finally no more are allowed “to be taken off— Except there’s one catch In it Parks Preferred “The rahch prefers that the ani fnals go to zoological parks and Similar places” Mr Parvan said "so they will be preserved and maintained "They don’t want to butcher them except as a last resort" He didn’t mention any objection to taking1 the animals however - away to keep them aa pet f |