Show -1' 4' I L i 1 1:: 1 I 41 The Weather ' 7 I a Utah—Partly cloudy Idaho—Partly cloudy 'I Wyoming—Partly kevada—Cloildy mild I '1" gt cloudy - C "" ! AR 4 Loral Metal Markets i '11) A I ik ' ' ia o' A " 1 Nifr ' NI Lead 4 139 No 107 :Vol Utah Salt Lake City Sunday Morning July 30' $35 00 Silver (domestic) 7111c Silver (foreign) 35(1 Cooper electrolytic delivered Connecticut valley 10375n Lead 485C490a 1 ' 1 God A Isecal aettlement Copper (cathode) 4Kot 1939 9 900 76 Pages—Ten Cents t t ':' s ' goat 4 t ' ' :'' - ' r-i' t' ''--' -- -' t-- friction flared anew Saturday night in an incident which brought Japanese with fixed and British 1 bayonets troàps face to face on a disputed InterAational Settlement boun! dary I ' N' I1': ' 11 7 N t t '' '' ":' :: ''''"''':' : : ' I i I ' ' - ( !: i i I :''J'':: ' i' " k To Pi ''' ' ' :' i ": i t 9' : : : 1 i ' '1! ' 1:I"! ' t - ' '''': '' '' ''''''''''''''' : ' i r: i - ' — Drastic Bill To Curb Aliens Wins i I1 — 1 : ' :: : :' t s' : - t :: : I '''' A '''‘-'- 1 ' 'x'N' : '4tt 1 '''''''''' '' 1 f i '' 1 Long Barricades The barricades extended along the entire length of north Kiangsi road from Soo chow creek to the northern limit of the British area The fresh friction occurred as the P nti Br itish campaign in north China spread to Pghtaiho seacoast resort northeast of Tientsin with the parading of paid Chinese dem- ' te: 7 Repa 1r rarty The trouble started when four Seaforth Highlanders in a military truck entered the Japanese defense sector to repair barbed wire Brit ish said they were under the impression the territorywas British Japanese forces trickly blocked off the alleyway in which the British were working by stretching barbed wire across the exit and held the Highlanders and their truck for two hours and a half as British officers negotiated with the Japanese for their release The Japanese in- the meantime working at top speed strung three strands of wire along the length of north Kiangsi road nee Chinese this Chinese living in the Japanese sector fled across On seeing the roadway to the British side in scenes reminiscent of the 1937 exodus into the settlement from Chapel when Japanese were attacking Chinese had been advised that the road would be blocaded in prep aration for a census announced by the Japanese for August 10 and barricades without wires already lied been erected but this failed to relieve the panic everything movable Carrying beds to Chinese from food streamed through rapidly narrowing gaps in the barricades and piled their goods high on the British sidewalks ti Left Lights On Many fled so rapidly that they failed to turn off their lights which could be seen shining from deserted rooms Saturday night the Japanese side of the barrier was nearly deserted while the roadway and British sidewalk were crammed with terrified homelesa Chinese British charged that the Japanese defense sector extended only as far as the eastern sidewalk and that the Japanese infringed on British territory by placing the barricades well mit in the roadway and sending patrols inside the British sector Troops Rushed were s f or t h Highlanders rushed to the scene it93ve1 firmored trucks and for twoeifours the Brit- Se ish and the Japalese with their bayonets brushed elbows in the thronged roadway until the Japanese were withdrawn The Japanese commander issued a statement that the barricades were erected "for better demarcation of the Japanese area" in preparation for the census The zone 13 populated chiefly by Chinese reftigees who formerly lived in Chapel and Hongkew The French and Shanghai municipal council police doubled their guards along "Newspaper Row" Avemie EdwarchNII as a precvalion against terroristic outbreaks like the one last Saturday in which an American and three Chinese were killed Tanks were stationed at frequent Intervals and riflemen stopped all taxicabs to question their occupants 'Minister Named — The IIONOLUIU July 29 Japanese consulate announced Sat- Kosaku Midlusawn consul to Honolulu has been so 'pointed Japan's first minister to urday grno rm I i'anntna P t v 1 ' e t i t 1 1 't ' A c '''4 4 '1' i f' ir ' '' 4 N I i' ':: ” 4' ?PFth! '!' 4 ' "' 0i'' ' f1t :4 - i ' -''''' : '4 '' 'ik t '''''' t '''''A t k'i:'''-'5C-- :4 1 't 1 - In Celebration At American Fork t ' i'1 --- 4 '' :J t'' V 6: 4t 15000 join Fun 4 - Itisil 4 Great Crowds T11111 Out for Poultry Day - ''S'irr ''' ' '' e 4--- - ' : ' - 4- - '''"- '‘: - t t ' ' 't t:: ' ' f ' ' ri 'L s - WASHINGTON July 29 (UP)— The house late Saturday by an vote passed the overwhelming drastic omnibus antialien bill sponsored by Representative Edward W Smith (D) Virginia This bill was a virtual edition of the most drastic provisions of the more than 100 alien bills that have been introduced during this session of conIt was not expected howgress ever to get action by the senate at this session The hill as sent to the senate by a roaring voice vote after Ft motion to recommit offered by Vito: Marcantonio Representative New York was smothered ' f i1!I '' A-- By Arthur to 273 S Winton AMERICAN FORK July 29-Mr Rooster Mrs Chicken and young Tom Turk ruled the roosts 48 Specific flans The bill is specific and bans those aliens who advocate overthrow of government those guilty of moral turpttlie and those who become public itarges within five years after entry One of the definitive sections elaborates on these classifications in one sentence that Is four pages long Deportation is provided for those aliens who enter the country illegally who engage In espionage for a foreign who carry weapons government illegally who teach talk or write any advocacy of overthrow of the government by force or who advocate illegal destruction of property and those who had been sentenced for crimes involving Moral turpitude and those involved in prostitution and the white slave Saturday at American Fork It was the Utah poultry center's N 42 t dawn to ' annual Poultry day----II "' 1 !"'s midnight mingling of pageantry and flare of fiesta that paid color4:' ful tribute to one of the states '' ' 4:: 1 c'' ' I ' roost important industries Birds '' 1 of a feather flocked together to i render homage in fashion fitting 'i i the gala day ' ' ' ' and evening program An 1 ' with a thundered salute starting 4i — at dawn and ending with the last ' I i I oe i: : 1 waltz of the official Poultry day 1 dance kept the nearly 15000 Nisi-o4 0 1 on the qui vive every minute i: t of the day and night ' '77 4 4 Entertainment Galore trade 4 : I Another section imposes penalgaily-huein hands Parading to 10 years in pris-- :1 ! 14: ' : g t:A drum ties ranging up 1 uniforms on and $10000 fine for those aliens ' I of blare and 7 ) l' trumpets majors ''' jI 1I who counsel a member of the beat of drums : stunning floats armed forces to disobey orders 'j44ezl'' 1 k? with cargoes of beautiful girls ( It t :::1 Ed V Izac (Di :' '11 4 ii 0 I baseball and softball for sports Representative ' ' : 1 i this seccharacterized California 11 1 ' free chicken sandwiches lovers Ik and navy wet :': ' I the as ' 0 tion army f: for thousands carnival rides nurse bill of 1939" during debate : ' V : 1 1 k - kk a climaxing dance and shows t ' Only one major change was made 1 attended by hundreds on the house floor and that was :r celeT successful the Pmee Six) Highlighting (Owl 110d 01 Five tr— ft i bration r6himn were the morning and CN ee long proning parades—two-milChickens and turkeys ruled the roost Saturday when Amercessions that the man on the street ican Fork celebrated its annual poultry day Above—The —and the woman—pronounced the queens float winner of second prize in competition that best in American Fork Poultry day units attuned to Below—Miss annals Marching brought a half hundred floats on ilarade the city's day of days vied with a Levee Hunter poultry day queen in regal array half hundred beautifully decorated floats for popular honors Many Splendid Floats First place in the float competition went to the A W Pulley and WASHINGTON July 20 (JP— Sons company of American Fork The W P A stopped dismissing winner of top honors in Salt Lake long-time1pl9yes Saturday pendon action Covered final Wagon congressional days City's parade lug The float carrying Miss 'avec proposal to modify the relief act s Hunter queen of Poultry day was roquiretents that they be laid cut WASHINGTON July 29 (AP)—Admiral William D Leahy accorded second honors The Des- by September 1 eret News float won third rating retires from the navy Tuesday confident that the billion-dolla- r Colonel F C Harrington comfolannounced the missioner Judges telegraphed all state tvinurs fleet expansion which he helped engineer will meet the nation's NAork relief administrators to suslowing the evening parade line defense needs for many years first The Pulley float pend action in dismissing persons won salvos of applause along the v‘ho had 1S consecutive months or The graying chief of operations EIeven icotoinii1 n Pn v‘'Ithout ot vacation he will take more Of W P A employment Coliimi Four predicted Sattirday that "if we carA provision Of the new relief act the civil of On dministrative out set have we the job up program ry said called upon him Ilarringion we should he equal to any defense being governor of Puerto Rico He to drop approximately 650000 persons other than war veterans by problem that is likely to confront intends to devote two weeks to per- sonal matters before sailing Sep- September 1 Under the net they us" could apply for recertification afA for San Juan "Only Great Britain has a com- - tennber interval hut would be ter a President Roosevelt' s n'nexpected parable fleet now or building and relegated to the status of new reaward of the distinguished service lief applicants we have no reason to expect trou 29 CD CYNTIIIANA Job priority would be given to hie from the British" he observed medal to Leahy on Friday for "ex An nd kiUrri was aged Fits prediction Wail conditioned persons certified for relief for traordinary qualities of leadership seven menpoliceman wounded Saturday night three months or more hut who upon other nations making no radi- - and administrative ability" capped to rout R man from a never before had been on the work ('Al spurts in warship construction career that included participa- attempting while barn reports a relief payroll Because of the genduring the 10 years estimated nec- tion in virtually every American young girl investigating had been enticed into eral program of relict reduction essary to rotilace obsolete Amen- - war or campaign since the 1838 the building n can essels and increase total na- conflict Harrington said this made chances M Dickey Police Chief George vat tonnage by 20 per cent slim that long-terThe retiring admiral is as mat-employes once of the force here for more dismissed ever would the end of a colorful be taken ter of fact as a dirt farmer in his 7g head 27 years was killed when a than back naval career Leahy will turn over native Iowa—and as little like the in the him struck hotgun charge his high post to the younger Ad- - 'ordinary conception of a military Harrington's action followed a back The seven wounded men miral Harold It Stark senate vote Friday night Then man in speech or manner or the posse were either members an amendmfmt by Senaadopting surrounding the barn or bystandtor Murray (DI Montana to the ers administration's lending hill UnNight Patrolman Chester Hart der amendment no longsaid the barn was on the property termMurray's W P A enrollee would he disof Charles Allen It was not known missed if he could not find another immediately if the girl was a pris- lob if prolect on which he oner but police were exerting ex- worked the would he Impaired or if treme eaution in efforts to oust the the worker BOSTON July 29 tin—Mutterwould suffer personal pained the paint made the sidee man walk "look pretty" and kept the ing something about "unartistie dismissal To behardshipthrough Into were thrown bombs Tear gas come law the amendment still woman who dust down cops" a the structure but the imprisoned must be acted found 3ou can't paint this town After some conversation with upon by the house 's was a blast from his red Saturday scrubbed off part the law during which a statute man answer Harrington declined to say Ima bystander felled which shotgun of a brilliant crimson coat she mediately whether employes alforbidding delaying public prop applied to the sidewalk in front ready dropped would be reinstated erty was mentioned the sideof her l'incon Hill home durThat decision he sold could not be walk artist twgan removal proPath Clear Bilrg reached until congress filially dising the early morning hours ceedings with a scrub brush Police were not at 1 a m WASHINGTON soap and hot water July 29 tin - P(WA Of the Murrav amendment of the woman's work with the The commissioner likewise would Hours later the paint had just The bowie rulem committee grAnted brush and Liutpnnnt John Foley about disappeared—the feet of legislAtive Siiturilny not attempt to estimate the numbill Authorizorderer' two patrolmen to nsk ber dismeoed to date MIN' the pedestrians having blacked Out to ot She did having ber to stop what the woman couldn't scrub ing the crumus bureAu ti Includo relief act It probably kkas negligifinished the 'sidewalk—And ex off ble he sold (WA on hou3ing in its 1940 census i '' ' - '4 'e- ' I" f '8' s' 4' 1: j A ' 4' '4 a ' 4 ' ! - 46 4 5p: '6t ''' '' 4e '''' : ': i 'i ' : ss:'' - s '- — all-da- y " -- 4 s ----- r rs - : - '')1:7:' i !- t : d ::: lt' baton-swingin- "': I g' J -- T' ' V ' : r':'' 4- r kt t - ' :i "1:- WPA Delays Dismissals Of Workers Navy Fit for Any Duty Says Leahy in Adieu e white-feathere- d Officer Slain In Gun Fight y A Spanish-America- 5 Stodgy Boston Police See Red Make Woman Scrub Walk right-ot-wA- y 1 Sir i House Gioup Backs Air Base Item 00-de- n -'- '3 'f 1 ' Ogden Chamber Stand Lauded By Chief of Staff ' Senator ()'Mahoney bill rifler won Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINGTON July 29—The for es- of $3515900 appropriation tablishing an army air supply depot south of Ogden has the blessing of the house subcommittee on ap- Lending CCC Men Die propriations that is framing the third deficiency bill but the item and all others in the hill must yet run the gauntlet in the full appropriations committee must get by the house and then the senate As in the case of the former appropriation for air bases the new appropriation will he a lump sum $17000000 vvhich Four Trapped by of approximately amount asked by will Include the the war department for the air Racing Flames depot in north Utah The money not be specificalFifth One Missing for this depot will ly earmarked in the bill any more than the $3000000 was earmarked In the previous bill but members Tribune Intermountain Service of the Utah delegation are satisWINNEMUCCA Nev July Four C C C enrollees were burned fied that if the $17000000 is voted to' death in a forest and brush the $3515900 asked for the Ogden fire and 30 members of the Para- base will be used for the purpose dise Valley camp 50 miles north intended and will not again be In Nevada Forest Blaze of Winnemucca combed the diverted There are two inmvilate dancharred area Saturday for a fifth gers confronting tli6 deficiency enrollee reported missing bill which carries these funds for The (lead: Ernest It Tippin 21 son of army air construction There is a pronounced sentiment in the house Raymond Tippin of Oswego appropriations committee in favor hon of sidetracking the entire third George 1 Kennedy 12 of 330 West Eleventh street New York deficiency bill on the ground that many of the items proposed by the City subcommittee are not truly emer1Valter dames of 102 Woodgency appropriations and can well ward avenue Ridgewood N Y be delayed until the next session Barker 20 of 1021 Frank (emit 111 opicre Ten) Remsen avenue Brookksn N Y 1410 V (Coiymn 3lissing: Frank J Vitale 20 of 189 Clifton place Brooklyn N Y The party was trapped in flaming underbrush and tim- her in the Santa Rosa mountain range when a sudden shift in the wind changed the course of the fire They were members of a crew of 20 enrollees from the camp summoned by U S depart-Aneof grazing officials to assist in fighting the blaze which was sweeping OW an area four miles long and three toilet wide In attempting to escape when the flames were turned against them by the sudden wind of gale the four men were proportions caught in n circle of flaming underbrush and trees officers said nt Roosevelt Son Says Leivi Harms Labor FORT WORTH July 29 (UP)— John L Lewis may have damaged the cause of labor by hie attack on Vice President John Garner Elliott Roosevelt said in a radio address Saturday 'Mr Lewis' blast against Mr Garner may have done irreparable damage to the finevtause of labor advancement in this country" the president 's! son said in his regular commercially-sponsore- d program Lewis appearing before the house labor committee in Washington characterized Garner as an "evil senate to the house banking committee duing the day bringing ebout an $850000000 reduction in the measure group's hands at-th- it CurtailefrBill 'pie banking committee recommended house passage of a curtailed Nil carrying a total of $1950- 000000 The bill before the senate already had been cut down by a coalition of Republicans and Democrats to When first intro$1640000000 duced by administration leaders the legislation carried $2800000000 Before it recessed the senate accepted by a voice vote an amendment by Senator Tydings (Di Maryland to prohibit political contributions by labor union(' or other organizations except with the foreknowledge of their members Tydings indicated during debate that the amendment was aimed at such loans as the $470000 advance made to the Democratic party in 1936 by John L Lewis' Urfited Mine Wokers Long Debate Acceptance of the O'Mahoney deproposal came after hours-lon- g bate during which Senator Norris (Ind) Nebraska charged that its practical effect would be "to make it absolutely impossible for a municipality to construct an electric light plant" The O'Mahoney amendment pro-- I vides that none of the proposed $350000000 of public works loans could go for projects in any field which private enterprise already was serving adequately It provides also however that if the owners of a private business refuse a "reasonable" public offer to purchase then government funds could be used for the construction of a competing enterprise &Mahoney chairman of the government's Monopoly investigating told the senate that committee "there is no solution" to the nation's business ills along the course of relief spending "The solution lies rather in the stimulation of private enterprise" he added Give Them Signal "Ninety per cent of the" huminess 'men in the United States want to go forward" O'Mahoney shouted to the chamber "Give them the signal Adopt this amendment" Several senators went to O'Mahoney's desk and shook his hand after he had completed an address lasting more than an hour Before approving the O'Mahoney proposal the chamber rejected a similar amendment offered by Sen- ator Danaher till Conneeticut The Danaher proposal differed from O'Mahoney's in that it would have permitted the courts to decide whether public offers for the purchase of existing private enterpriees were "reasonable" Under O'MaOthers Escape that decision honey's amendment Other members of the crew esvvould be made by the commissioner of public works Economy forces caped withmit serious burns Forest officials vvere informed predicted the bill sent to the house that the crew of 20 men hod diby its banking committee would vided half working on each side old man who plays poker drinks he trimmed additionally when it wes considered there probably next of the fire et the time of the whisky and baits labor" week Chairman Steagall in United tragedy Bodies of the four victhe few a people "Quite tims were found St a point ap- States don't happen to agree with Alabama of the committee told reproximately five miles from OroMr Lewis" Roosevelt continued porters: vada Nev "It will be found that most of the "and a great many people who are Officers said the bkize was start- straight-thinkin- g Amerimisunderstanding and hesitation patriotic and originoted cans are beginning to get slightly on the part of members in the suped by lightning near Orovada encircling a large irritated at people such as John L port of this bill will not exist after underarea of bush and trees outside Lewis' and Representative Dewey the measure is read and of the Humboldt national forest Short of Missouri who get up on stood with the reductions and reDepartment of grazing their feet and scream personal in- strictions we have put in it" boundary g The roll call on the amendment officials supervised the vectives at the heads of our state detachments until the flames Roosevelt said Lewis was "the (restricting P NV A financing of were brought under control Satczar of the Congress of projects in competition with priurday which vate enterprise) found five interIndustrial Organizations The fire reported under control represents m4Ilions of mountain senators in the affirmad Woldhliod nn Ng Eight) 1 tive and one in the negative Those workers" ofloinut I hree Clark of Idaho Ill favor were 4 &Mahoney and Schwartz of Wyoming Pittman and McCarren of Thomas Nevada all Democrats of Utah Democrat voted in opposition Senators King of Utah and Borah of Idaho were not recorded fight-tightlo- d high-minde- Jersey Police Save Film Star omen VFrom Trihune Leased Wire JERSEY crm N 1 July 29 actor Ori—treorge Raft WRM mobbed here late Friday hy women ndmirert who ripped By his clothes tried to kiss him tied up traffic in Journal square and forced him to seek the protection of police The crowd met him when he r pd from the Stanley thriller to enter Ilk enr niter altrntling the premier of a film btarring ok v 1 WASHINGTON July 29 (AP)--T- he senate approved Saturday night 45 to 24 an amendment to the administration's $1640900000 lending bill designed to prevent government interference with exist ing private enterprise Soon after adopting this proposal by Senator O'Mahoney (D) the chamber agreed to limit debate on the lending measI Wyoming ure and recessed until Monday The agreement limiting senators to speeches waS i A obtained by the administration leadership after many previous at- ' tempts to hasten a vote had proved futile 1 Sentiment for reduction' of the 1 lending program spread from the f N d Policemen on duty freed him him from a woman who flung her arms around his neck The actor retreated into the theater Raft tried to leave hy a side door a little later hut another mob of about 1000 fans was waiting I here l'olice reinforcements then were summoned They formed a wedge wit h the actor in I he center and got him into a police car In which he was driven to New York ' k k I P 1 1 ' it ' ' ' ''' ii t 'i'''' ' ' s tt 'T ' ' : f 't ? I' ' i ' ' - t ::::'''':: : ': il' rt iy onstrators ' ' (The British government In4 structed its ambassador in Tokyo to make new representations against continuation of anti-Brish demonstrations in the Orient Iii Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax announced Monday the Japanese had agreed to try to control the demI onstrations) it ? 4cr- i ' t' ::: r t lf ': :: - Approval 01 Measure '1 :! z2:-- ' I Chamber Appros es Amendment Barring Use of Funds to Interfere With Existing Companies - :7 I !''' t 1 House Shouts ' A' Butsipes I t : 1 1 I- D ' :- - f''' t1 :7 ' - 'S' :: r' ' ' ':- t' A ' 0 6k'tt ': '' ' i!'" ''-'- ' ' 't - ' 7 ' : :! ' 1 t ": A ' 04'h'11 4 ? :) - t 1 ' - q t -i ' 17 ::1 I ' '"1''''' d " t 1 ' :' i'! 'k: f '''i k l i f: 'I- lb - ' ''' 4 fF "':""'" k :"§1 :': I ''- P The affair—produced no actual clash but the Japanese temporarily ' 1 4I detained four British soldiers and 11 kt!:33::':: threw up a barrier along& the Brit' 4:' '''' :4 'i' ish defense zone which drew a t - ' '0 4: 4V ''s' '" '':': strong British "military protest as 4 ! an encroachment on British-guarde- d 1 territoryThousands of terrified Chinese fled into the British area before a Japanese naval force of 200 closed vo Sn' the gaps between the barricades on the boundary between the Japa nese and British defense sectors I ? tft :Y14 '''-t:: '"''' ' ''Li ' 4: ' 1 ' s 11- ist :":' ' 1 ?' t :: ' ? '' '0! ':::'--' i i k o' i' :i i' I' 1 - ' ' ' :' ' ' " t : ' ' - '' c '' i 04 ' t : '''''' ) 1 ( 4 0- - se r ' '! it )1 t y ' 1 ) i ' ' ' It - A' b '' 4 '! ' " ':g!''' k riI ' ' ' ' lo fr ' 1 SHANGHAI July 29 (AP)- -Shanghai's intermittent British-Japane- 'i 1 f I Friction Flares Anew in Shanghai Area i q' 1 oettalL(1 :: :' ' z 1 - ''' ! ? h (- AAte s :Loans 11E American Fork Has Colorful Celebration Japan Seizes Four Britons In Near-Clas- Fourteen Approve Representatives said 14 members includof the benking committee ing one Republican voted for the $1950000000 bill and 10 against The loan authorizations which measure the committee-approve(Aeries and the amounts of reductions it mites in the administration requests are as follows: $2N0000- POO (or railroad equipment (reduce(I $'2l00o0o00): Paiti0()000 for $100- roads (reduced $250000000) toeiteetei Tso) d Column 1 1 ' |