Show t A" 4 0—0 Nio'0 - 0'—-'- v— "I e A 4 -- '44-- 44 61440 '444 44 ' '10 40 '41 466040 e —eovioqleewwo 4 4A - - t 3 2 I t I 1 I 9 1 all gakr Zi) C Sunday Morning -- ribunt July 30 193 ! I 1 Congress' Tilts Leave '40 Issue in Doubt 1 1 Mitts Figures Show Extent of Nipponese Trade With Lk S I estern 1 UNITED STATES L 1 ti By Kirke L Simpson WASHINGTON July F9 UPI-Seven rnonthm of strident political uproar in Washington aimed primarily Rt rallying the nation for the 1940 presidential contest end next week—possibly in adjournment of the first session of the seventymixth congress From the hour it convened in January this congresx hriA been dominated by inter and intraparty for in preparation maneuvering Most of the next year's struggle h billions of words uttered houses and in their committees have been spoken for their influence on 1940 politics Most actions of either house—and most failures to act—have involved 1940 political considerations Yet the session nears an end with the political scene little clarified new It has provided no dear-cu- t pattern by which to forecast the major issues of the 1940 campaign nor any new figures to strut the political stage as serious contenders next year for presidential: nomi- ! I 1 4 I 1 I 3 Raw 0- 11111111- - t XC mew di- -- $ t trti r4 r ()1 :00c ' Flit $ iteir4sit 4001-- p 1 ClalICI 14688000 Foods Itscolt 1 ii I etc) $10405000 ysmn Chinaware dishes etc $ 3714000 Miscellaneous Miscellaneous $22054000 $ $239620000 TOTAL 14362000 TOTAL U S $126820000 $126820000 worth go goods in worth 000 for rural Nazi-Japanes- Pact Seen As :Nippon Expected to Itu‘h Orders to Beat Scheduled Date of Paces Annulment No 1 Customer for Fiber to Profit by Bounty NEW YORK rt r Treat foreign trade circles said July United States' notice to Japan of abrogation of the commercial treaty with that country might prompt some immediate expansion of Japanese purchases here of such things as iron and steel petroleum and automobiles So far this year Japanese purchases have been- - somewhat less In the earlier months of this than last year but it was thought year Japanese sales to America the Nipponese might take advan- - actually showed a little higher notice to in- - dollar volume Through May they loge of the crease supplies of materials for amounted to $50250000 up $2406- which they look across the Pa- - 000 comparc1 with last year but cific in preparation for the posst- - this was due to higher prices for bilities of less favorable trade con- - silk resulting from curtailed proditions under such new treaty as duction The outstanding trade between may be negotiated Although Japan bought only 77 America and Japan was long the per cent of total American exports swapping of cotton for silk But last year it was individually the in 1938 Japan bought $5285000C of cotton and 'sold Uncle Sam worth third best customer Sam $83651000 worth of raw YR to n here Its total purchases silk both figures showing subexceeded $239620000 only by stantial shrinkage from earlier United Kingdom and Canada years Japanese purchases of such things as iron and steel machinDeclines Buying ery automobiles and petroleum In the first five months of this came to substantially more than year Japan took only $96267000 her cotton buying of American products ss hich was chief Stock In Trade $13371000 less than in the same Silk howvr remained Japan's months of year The decline reflected somewhat smaller pur- - chief stock in trade accounting of her sales chases of cotton petroleum auto- - for nearly t mobile parts and airplanes here SOMA teNtile nien say the Japan has been buying much recent deelopment of new fibres mire from Uncle Sam than Uncle by riron reamitiketurers here American with suffiriint strength and Sam buys from her from Nippon totaled 'troy to perplit use for purposes only $12682A)000 in 1938 leaving heretofore tAerved for silk may an excess of American exports to make a smci dent in Japanese that country of $112800000'This silk business in years to conic IA as more than offset however The first rei dion of the silk by shipment of $168739000 of market to news of abrogation of Japanese gold iAhich was sold to the treaty w Rs a decline of a few the U S treasury thus providing cents a pound but buying soon apJapan with dollars to make pur- - peered and prices came back tially Saturday-th- 29 (AP)--So- me e electrification Tribune Leased Wire WASHINGTON July 29—Thurman Wesley Arnolchief of the antitrust division of the department of justice is to pay with his official head for the collapse of the administration's antitrust campaign it was reliably learned Saturday t Since the recent defeats the goy- ernmeot has suffered in its antimonopoly drive Thomas G CorWhite House viser who has taken over the running of the department of justice hex been sharpening his ax for Arnold Saturday it was reported that Arnold who is on a leave of absence will ask to be permitted to return to his classroom in the Yale university school of law at the end of the rummer By this procedure he would be spared the ignominy of an outright discharge I ) Corcoran on Warpath ' ' Corcoran has been stalking Arnoldonot only because of the poor shovJing in the antitrust drive but because he is a hangover appointee from the regime of Homer S Cum- (re- rt maid the committee also eliminatedi authority for the president to permit construction of streams bridges over navigable without consent of congress and provided that $230000000 should be used to "unfreeze' road money which the federal government has already allocated to the states but which the latter have not been able to match The revised bill provides that the states may borrow federal funds to match the previous allocations and that beginning in 1943 the federal government will begin collecting these loans out of regular federal road payments Another provision placed in the bill members said was that ultimate borrowers should pay an inof one per cent terest rate higher than that which the government pays for the money involved r ' ) Soften Shock Over Action by U S TOKYO July UP—The initialing in Berlin of a German-Japanes- e new trade treaty was interpreted here Saturday as enabling the Japanese government to save face domestically after the shock of Washington's abrupt denunciation of the 1911 American-Japanes- e trade pact The agreement with Germany was initialed Friday and Saturday the foreign office gave the development unusual attention by issuing a statement stressing the as of the pact significance th a anticominstrengthening tern front "Japan will be able to get an augmented supply of articles from his in times of Germany required peace es well as war" the statement said The agreement brings Japan into still closer relationship with her collaborators against the comintern Policy Still Holds (Germany Italy JaparQ ManSenator Barkley calling attenchukuo Hungary and Spain are bound together to combat com- tion to a statement he was authorized by President Roosevelt to munism) "It is a matter of congratula- make last year when the P NV A tion that through agreements such appropriation bill was approved by as the trade agreements with Man- congress said thia policy still held ehukuou and Italy and the present The gist of this statement was that German-Japanes- e the the government would not seek to agreement enticomintern axis is being steadi- compete with privately operated lY strengthened in economic and utilities whose rates were reasonable unfess it made a reasonable other spheres" Some circles interpreted the spe- offer to buy out the utility Consideration of the lending cial mention of Japan's new ability to get articles "required in amendment begun at 11 a rn times of peace es well as war" when the senate was called into es a hint to the United States that session an hour earlier than usual for nearly two steps thereby were being taken to was suspended soften the blow of any arrne em- hours shortly after noon when Senator Nye (RI North Dako I took bargo quoted the floor to criticise the adminisnewspapers Japanese Major General Eugen Ott German tration 's unsuccemsful effort to reIt Loki City ambassador to Tokyo as saying peal the arms embargo provision "the new agreement is an ex- of the neutrality act —July 30 1939— Nye spoke to an almost empty pression of the will of both naremained tions to promote their relations senate' but galleries diem at Reviews and cominents on current in the fields of not only econom- crowded Cache V alley centenarian books and nCVIS of literary folk ics but also of politics" Providence home Page 10 Senator Holt (DI West Vir7 Page 6 Weller county conunianioner anMany observers considered the ginia blocked an agreement proaction a swift posed by Barkley to limit debate nounce" for Ogden maYorsitY Photo contest winners Bridge German-Japanes- e Corner Kathleen Norris Page 7 maneuver clearly linked With the on the lending measure The Wee Page 10 Virginia senator said he feared American Institute of Public Opini- American abrogation of the SECTION It apanese Wednesthat ft limitation agreement might lest ontreaty 8 Page Loral in some way Jenable administradSy SECtION A drouthS to 1110VPS assist F It was stressed that the Impor- tion forces to reinstate the pronitl 'Visitors" 1 page picture strieken areas in Utah Page tant question for Japan was posed $500000000 road program in Front Cover hether the United States would the menwre County commission unanimous in Society and nuptial news starts on follow her denunciation with any criticking detention home Fear Pocket Veto Page 2 other step such as an arms emPage 1 Holt 'aid he also WAS desirons Club calendar h(ate weddings and bargo I A ends policy of discharging of keeping congress here mill the engagements too I tah worker s a day Page 1 Page 3 time expired for Preaideat noneIt omen's clubs oppose layinK oft Ogden and Logan oriel) news velt to act on the Hatch hill 6 Page nivel by state Page 4 nv-kinpolitical ectivities by most in Social activities Price Provo and orNews of nillitary and veterans' government employee '-7 It par-chas- In Today's Salt Lake Tribune for the ConLewis spokesman gress of Industrial Organizations the vice president returned a "no comment" answer and chuckled SECTION A also Whatever its ultimate political National Impact the Lewis attack on Garner gave the 1940 boom for the Senate alters lending bill to pro- 1 tect private business Page Texan an immediate boost rather than a setback It set off a Wave Subeominittee Doors Ogden a r of Democratic plaudits for Garner bane fund Page 1 I hat crossed the party policy cleav- Omnibus antialien hill passes lower age house Page Mystery Remain resard of $2504o0 for Deury iirges Hut it left more uncertain iha n Page I capture of gangster ever the real intent lOn of two Defeated "trust bilter" In he political strategists seemingforced out capitol hears Page 2 other in a ly pitted against eat silent duel to influence tairty ('ongresa puts brake on good neighand presidential bor policies Page next yror That duel repreelec'49 on concentrate1 sented in the Roosjelt third term Congress tion but foils to clarify issues and the Garner booms Is the major Page 2 pohticat product of the 11010t1 of Nobody Treaty ciineellation' expected to tongress just ending knowo with any more certainly cause spurt ii 'Japanese trade now than in January whether either Page 2 mon actually wants the OtttillOttriter think4 ittP poim41 met Farlt Ion nor how far either might go ey Page 4 to rplit the porty in 1910 rather then compromise to ive pre4ident Attorney general Page 5 report on Hatch bill 1 I plot-for- ticket-nutkin- (z r' s r ' ' g Ennikli lonniurunt r to Co Back :W'rantA t SACRAMVXM Cal fitly 2t) On —Herbert Harrod TT who said he was from Liverpool walked Into police headquarters turday 'I want to give myself up" SerMirheel Strazto geant quoted him 'The United Statea IA ton tough I rant make a go of it so please send me bark In England" Ponce started on inveetigation of hie statement that he entered othin rountry illegally from Canada fv :f : i ' ' is 1935 American-J- ganliations Church news of Salt And liiidh Page 6 Page Buff:do 'Times Quits Business ben-rin- and comment about art and City News music BUFFALO N Y July 29 c(ri — Pages 810 Page 8 Times evening nod Vt hat's to be seen on litaKft and The rtuffnlo SECTION screen 9 Sunday newspaper published since Page reit Southeast Europe reis 1879 announced So torchy night it MAGAZINE SECtION Italian inroads Pogo 1 would CeRSe publication Sunday You're paNing through Real estate building gardening hay fevert morning the nose for the pioneers in bill and landscaping Pagel 23 Editor ceorge II Lyon declined rotor Page 1 to amplify the Announcement Vouth activities Page 4 There's profit In the prophets In No authoritative estinutte could SECTION C full color Page 2 be obtained of the number of emSenator Nye urge curb on prentIke" who's "Idaho Ira the making dent poner to 'make Sports ployes affected although unofficial IIICIINiliCS CliCk at Treasure sources Page 6 Parker McNeill gain finals in placed it at between 200 1141allti'll 3 exposition Page meet Foreign These included 60 edirags 1 and 300 contore up the 61000690 torial workers and 65 componing Britieh apatieee troops tiear clooh Emig hove one day left to select So they tract Page' 4 room mployen In Shanghai area Pinner r Puge I Paga 1 Science mechanics and Invention The Times was founded as a SunNewt of Boy Scout organi7ation4 France order tonatine for babies Page 5 by the hoe Norman Page 5 Credit ratings for suitors Paize 6 day newspnper Page 7 E Mack national Democratic Local Gobi' to town ssith Mark Hettinchairman who directed William 7 in Page die CCCworker ger Nealla forent 's presidential t'amLake nt fire Turnin g the home of the "wild Jennings ItBryan Page 1 vias ItIll'it a daily in Pio paigns fit es try In a itiiord into national bunch" park ittirtd socooit Stair t 19 29 Ma ck sold the Ilisj pn1 nifir full color Page 9 Timen o i le i4111 pi7i4 Bower iindr act of or- American Fork lits s rim hoet to Scrippm I CONIIC SP:(110N hich turned over the at Poultry 4lay fete Page I Hahn No Ulith Soloori in ion tato: ganizatilitn "1 $'n14v "1"th Sisteen pages of full color cartoons propettick to Lyon and Business Wyoming filitV Program for I fah fireetien'n horo in art' $12 1 Cli ( 11 announced U Btindia In arta ) inrtth 11411 bY leading erthde et the Mitten Manager Earl J Ggille3 last xear l'uge oatly iLak Sea-brig- ht ro-tibu- morni1-fio- m thou-anti- — — 1 eon-io- n )r ati tord m i g' turman W Arnold critics take to warpath 1 : 2 I '' rr 4-- 1 - :f - Ills Bridges Girds For Start of Defense Case Counsel Plans For Lengthy mings Cummings a Yale man offered the post upon the elevation of Robert Jackson to the post of solicitor general in March 1938 to his old friend Professor Arnold of Yale and a Yale man although he attended Harvard law school Corcoran a Harvard man has been doing all he can to promote Harvard men in the government and to wipe away the influence of Cummings in the department since he was assigned from the White Ilouse to tell Frank Murphy how to run the department of justice Already Corcoran has put a Harvard classmate O John Rogge in the place of Brien McMahon Connecticut protege of Cummings in the criminel division of the department He also succeeded in promoting James W Morris head of the tax division upstairs to a judgeship 'Trust Busting' Fails The antitrust drive under ArS Answer to U nold culminated in a staggering series of defeats in the past three SAN FRAVISCO July 29 UPI weeks The first blow came at Chi- -' against 14 —The Harry Bridges defense be-- j cago when indictments and 43 individuals for corporations gan drawing its forces together an alleged milk monopoly were Saturday night for a prolonged at- thrown out of court July 13 The second came here Wednesday tack on government evidence dewhen against four proceedings CIO coast west send to the signed associations and 21 indileader back to his native Austra- medical doctors vidual charged with violalia as an alien communist Sherman antitrust act of tion the Bridges' attorneys indicated their dismissed And the third side of the case would be a long were also when the circuit one possibly longer than the 19 came the next day court of appeals set aside convicdays thUs far used by the labor tions obtained by Arnold's predecesdepartment to present its eV- sor against oil companies and indiidence violations of the Meanwhile the trial was in re- viduals for alleged and Trial Sherman act cess until Wednesday All three decisions are being apExaminer James M Landis was pealed privately st udying what he termed A fourth ease built after months a potential "knotty little problem has not been of investigation of law" It is Landis did not divulge the nature pressed by the department that brought' against moyie proof the "problem" but there apducers for violating the antitrust peared possibilities of complica- act in connection with the booking reover the (ions government's of films ported Intention to call Bridges to own d witness rather James Made Good as st its the let the defense present thanJames Roosevelt son of the preshim as The gpvernment has as yet made ident left his father's employ for that no torn al motion to that effect a White House secretary Goldhut Lat lis conceded the matter of movie producer with Sam The defense wyn one of those named in the had been discussed proceedings Son James also was has objected to the Idea In ordinary deportation cases the made a defendant Nothing has been don" on the governments (141111 all wit neliSeS case for several months The only is if he defendant including the used on the stand at all and the development has been that James trial examiner aNes also ast at- recently had his contract renewed to 850000 a year for torney and judge But this is not and upped In promoting Goldwyn an ordinary dvportation hearing good work One tradition was shattered when int nest a Into the A fifth investigation Anit was opened to the press other went by the board when the housing industry is still under way are looking into the hearing took on some of the as- Investigators of building contractors law in of court a a operatione of trial pects Theonly success that the anti—each side having its attorneys and the examiner sitting as ref- trust drive can boast of is In its auto financing investigation which eree And with only the government S was launched by the president In side thus far presented the case return for stipulations made by' companies they agreed not already is the longest of its kind several to do certain things to which the on record contended new deal objected Arnold decided The government-haalien and not to institute antitrust proceedundesirable is an Bridges that he was a member of an or- ings ganization advocating the overthrow of the United States government by force and xlolence Jackie Coogan Faces 1 i 1 1 I 1 t I 11 t t t 1 1 't ) 't 9 i i i t I t - s Bridges has denied all such allegations The hearing opened July 10 Divorce Action Under nip recent Strecker deLos AMELES July :11) CD — cision of theUnited States supreme court defense counsel contend the The romance of Betty Groh? and cracked up again government Is required to prove Jackie Coogan or establish the presumption that Saturday for the second time this Bridges was a party member on year for the films Betty March 2 193S the daiseof issuance AS the "girl with the million-dolla- r of his arrest warrant 4 legs" sued for divorce Jackie who doesn't believe in divorce said he would not resist the action "I still love Betty" said the former child star who rose to silent film heights with Charlie Chaplin "I won't contest the suit although I ant very sorry it had to asserts turn out this way" had bonded Rosenthal that it repaid the Allyn company for the losses Now thmsurety House Approves company wants Its money badi vdth 5 per cent Interest The putt names as the men Revision Study who won the money Witham J WASHINGTON July 29 (Al— Iloysgeard and Carl Iloysgaard The house Saturday approved a It does not say they are handbook operators but aceuses them resolution permitt itig the ways and of unlawfully receiving bets en means committee or a subcommitthorses Ve In consider tax revision legislation between lessions of conThe bill was filed tyy John P gress Ile declined to disHampton Chairman Dough ton (Di North cuss the case eiscept to say that Carolina said he would tisk for Kosent hal ne‘er has been arrested 4The Al n company gax e $W10 for the study hilt rerontlied that the last lime the committee no information regal ding him had that amount it Used only In escept that he Is no $1545 ils employ press-agente- d Suit Seeks to Regain Cash Stolen Then Lost On Races fly Tribune Leased Wire -- CHICAGO July Money lost on the horse races neednt in be lost forever the opinion of the American Surety company of Nev York The company brought suit in federal court here to compel two men to &lye hack $33834 which the comthey won from a bookpany tweper The boolAreper Is Andrew G flosentimi Jr until recently employed by the investment firm is of A C Allyn & Company The suit says tie took he motley from the Ally ii f1111(11 (loin Mit) to last May— and lost it all on the horses The surety coinpany which I 11 Tax I 1 l Iunr 0 0 A 4 amendment O'Mahoney told the senate that it wa-- s designed to "give notice to the people of the nation that it is not the intention of congress or the government to do anything that will interfere with private enterprise" "Ifeel that the time has come when we ought to make it clear that having won the objectives of maintaining the rights of popuwe should not lar development proceed to crush private enterprise" he declared "The unfortunate faet is that a feeling is growing in this country that the purpose of till government is not to encourage private enterprise but to crush it and to aubstitute big government for business" Senator Norris (Ind) Nebraska champion of public power development demanded: "Is there any other 'object to this amendment than to prevent municipalities from acquiring municipal electric light plants?" When O'Mahoney denied this Norris replied that in his opinion if the amendment were adopted loans for municipal plants would be "out of the window" Senator Tydings (D) Maryland Mid he thought the amendment did not go far enough asserting he believed that since the lending program Was designed to help huffiness and to create jobs he did not think any money should be lent to take over some existing industry offering - ' lf Notice to People e Face-Save- Fails in 'Combine' Probe One) duced $150000000) $100000000 for bank to finance exAmerican of ports goods Committee members said the re-- vised bill would not permit use of funds for the construction of toll y roads as the administration Export-Impo- In of4reaty Abrogation May Spur Japanese Trade Viewed as Boon to Nippon and bought 1938 $239820000 Cotton Subsidy Notice rage 000000 for farm tenant aid (reduced $200000000) $350000000 for pub- By Waller Trohan lio works (unchanged) $350000- - one-ha- Japan America's third best customer under the treaty of 1911 which Uncle Sam plans to scrap in January sold the From New Deal Commanders Whet Guillotine as Arnold pro-The- (crabmeat tea -' sector' That Republican interpretation of WASHINGTON July 29 sweeping Democratic defeats in the This government's new policy of 1938 shared is middlewest in widely It lent special subsidizing cotton exports may be among Democrats boon to Japan to the extent of interest to the surprise selection by President Roosevelt of Paul V $1000000 to $10000000 officials McNutt of Indiana for the new job of the agriculture department said Sat urday of federal security administrator They explained that a It hough the stale department had given Significance of Move That elevation thrust McNutt for- notice Of Its intention to abrogate ward aa a potential Democratic the 1911 commercial treaty becandidate of both middlewestern tween the United States and Tokyo would continue in effect appeal and party harmony possi- that pact for six months and make it imposcanbilities Short of a third-tersible to deny Japan the export subdidacy by the president next year or a word from Vice President Gar- sidy benefits granted other nations Whether such benefits would be ner himself that he Ls actually in the race McNutt turna into the taken from the Japanese after terhome stretch for the 1940 primaries mination of the treaty next Janover uary would depend the officials with a distinct head-Maother actual or potential Demo- SB id upon developments between now and then cratic favorite sons for that year rhe state department has taken However on the two 1910 mications uppermost in the minds of the position that negotiation ofde-a new commercial treaty likewise everybody during all these months of congressional wrangling neither pended upon developments indicatthe session nor any word or ges- ing that Japan must show inture from either of the men chiefly creased regard for American rights involved has thrown a bright light in China if she wanted a new pact Under the export uhsidy policy The twin mysteries — President attitude toward the designed to increase foreign purBooseveit's third term boom actively waged by chases of surplus American cotton come of hia aids and Vice Presi- - buyers abroad will he able to purraw fiber at prices ahout (lent Garners exact intentions as chase the $750 a bale below domes6e quotato the rival boom in his behalf—retions the American government main' unsolved paying the difterence For many years Japan has been Keep Own Counsel Both the president MI the she one of the major buyers of American cotton Her during president have defeated every effort the past II monthspurchases totaled 815523 by press or politicians to "smoke bales or more than twice the purthem out" To the most recent question at chases of either the United King a conference as to whether he dom or France However ordinarcould indicate when he might speak ily Britain is the number one torreturned a eign buyer out the president chuckling no To the fiery attack made upon Garner by John L 4 83651 000 $ cicIA has changed the political relativities for at least three men whose hopes for advancement to the White liouse may have been strengthened definitely by events of the All three are from seven months the middlewest and all three moved forward in public attention in a fashion which increased the possibility that both parties may seek in the their 1940 standard-bearer- s rnidwest Unquestionably due to their own activities in the senate and those of their friends at home Senators Vandenberg of Michigan and Taft of Ohio approach the congressional adjournment hour ea more formidable claimants to Republican nomination preferences in 3940 theft They apthey were in January pear outstanding rivals to head a Pepublican ticket built around the conception that resulta of the 1938 elections point unnitatakably to the middlev'est as the decisive political 4 (Continued Other textile products $49019000 cadea- Protecting 1rivate Firms Wins 45 to 2 t Raw silk 1 Machinery including automobiles and planes It : 52850000 $66038000 nations r cotton $49659000 Aids Three Men 4 - r t Ironrsteel and other metals - -1 r' JAPAN SOLD TO UNITED STATES Petroleum Gasoline Lubricants in-k- I 121 1 As Candidates i - 7 JAPAN: - Men Loom I TO SOLD -- Senate Guards Defeated 'Trust-BusteWill U S Businêss Be Forced Out In Loans Bill Capital Observers Report Clause I I |